.' v THE OREGON DAILT JOURNAL, PORTLAND, MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1917. INFORMATION t (WW DiTOr 1917) Coming Event Case frodael Sbow, Portland, bafiasinf OetUwr o. i . Today's For3 ca. Portland and Vicinity Tonljht aad Toes day. fair; northerly srlnda. Oreaon-sad Washington Tonlrht aad Tues--T lair;, moderate aorthweaterly wtnda. Weather Conditions An extensile blah praaasra area cos-era prae. t trull? tb entire country, there being only allaht da-raalon crrer Arloxna and northers Saskatchewan. rapctlely. Llgbt precipl tloo haa eetrorred la portiuna of Alberta, th Rocky Mountain and Central Plaine atatcs, Tennessee and PcunsjWiinla. The wMthH ' decidedly colder In. tba central portion ot tba country, and It Ta rorreapoodlngly warmer Ir. Interior Western Canada. Temperature are soot-h below normal In the Central State and nearly normal on the Pacific Slope. Tna Indications are for continued fair weather In tbla rlilnlty durlna the next 36 to boura. T. FRANCIS tRAKE. Meteorolot. Observations f iTemtjeraturea STATIONS i 12 at ! c 1! Abilene. Texaa Baker, Or. , Bolaa. Idaho , lary, Alberta Ct.lcaao. Ill Detirer, Colo. Pan Molneat Iowa ... Lewlaton. Idaho .... Lioa Anelea. Cal... Ma rah field, Or. Medford, Or New (rrleana jl . ... New York. M. Y. ... Nrth Mead. TV'nab. . Oklahoma. Okla. ... Phnenli. Aria Tortland, Or lUwehnra, Or. rVcramento, Cat. ... Ran IMeao, Cal Ran Francisco. Cal.. Seattle. Waah Spokane, Wh. Taroma. Waib Vancourer. B. C. ... Victoria. B. C Walla Walla, Waab. Washington. D. C. 62 40 48 40 M 2fl 44 M M) M) 52 ftO 44 04 A3 4 00 64 BO 40 52 42 4 M I 7 SO ) 62 ftrt 72 7n 2 HO 00 64 'X' m M MO Ml 72 74 100 74 2 100 70 62 40 4 40 84 84 20 44 M 48 40 62 48 88 44 64 S2 46 38 60 82 M i ftO 0 0 r 0 .04 0 .22 0 0 0 o o o o 0 .02 0 0 0 0 0 o 0 0 o 0 o 0 0 Ham Weika, ZO. a mechanic, Friday night drank a hall ounce bottle of arsenic solution, in an attempt at sui cide. An interne from the Emergency hospital attended him at his home, 64Sft Washington - street. Weika quickly recovered from the poison. Weika . Informed the interne that a dashing young soldier had captivated the heart of his sweetheart, who then turned him down. Columbia, KlTer Highway . Stage. Two round trips. Multnomah Falls to Portland, daily. Leave Multnomah Falls 7: JO a. m. and 1:19 p. m.; leave 8t Charles ho'el. Portland. 10 a. m. and 4 p. m. Saturday and Sunday eventnr. leave Multnomah Fall :30 p. m. and Portland II p n. (Adv. Steamer Jessie Kartt&s for Camas. Washougal and way landings, daily, except Sunday; leaves Washington street dock at 2 p. m. (Adv.) Steamer Zralda for St. Helens and Rainier, dally at 2:30 p. m., foot of Alder street; Sunday, St. Helens only. l-.JO p.- m. (Adv.) MeCarger. Bates ft lively. Fire, casualty end automobile tr.purance. Yeon bldsr. Telephor. Main 168. Adv. Tonljht Prise Dance, beautiful new Arbor Garden, 2nd and Morrison. Ad mission 28c. (Adv.) Or. S. C. Brown, Eye, Ear. Mohawk building. (Adv.) HUNS MURDERED CREW OF SHIP; DETAILS GIVEN (Continued From Page One) Afternoon report of preceding day TOWN TOPICS Father a 1111s to Speak., A patriotic program commemorating the discov ery of America by Columbus will be given under the auspices of the Knights of Columbus at the Lincoln high school auditorium, Friday eve ning. Columbus day. The knights have secured aa the speaker of the evening Father Olllls of New York. Father Gtllls is known throughout the east as an drstor of ability. Several numbers by Portland's leading musical talent will supplement the program. The pub lic Is cordially Invited. The admis sion will be free. Beeeptloa at First Methodist. The official board and members of First Methodist Episcopal church will hold a reception for the blnhop. Dr. Matt S. Hughes; district superintendent. Dr. W. W. Youngson. and the pastor. Dr. Joshua . Stansfield, at the church. Twelfth and Taylor streets, this, eve ning at 8 o'clock. All members and friends of First church are Invited, and a special Invitation is extended to the pastors and members of all other Methodist churches in Portland and the surrounding country. Alberta Camp Xonse Warming. Al berta camp. Modern Woodmen of America, will give an old fashioned house warming Tuesday evening in the hall, Williams avenue and Skid more street. The chief amusements will be cards and dancing. Prizes will be given and refreshments will be served. The committee in charge M. A. Hendjx, George Macafee, Fred Grapp and Joe Poffenberger say that every minute will be ful of amusement. Olaat Beans OetheradL John Ivle of 845 Greenwood avenue has some beans that his family uses by the yard. A yard and a third Is enough for a fam ily of two. Two yards are ample for a family of three. These beans are of the pole bean kind and they taste like asparagus beans. Each pod, which ranges from 12 to 14 Inches in length, will weigh about three ounces. Mr. Ivle planted them some time after h4 - lid his potatoes and they are prime for tatlng now. Game Wardens at School. To fa Silllarixe themselves with the law and to learn what their duties will be, 25 leputy game wardens, who have been appointed for Multnomah county bv State Game Warden Shoemaker, and who win serve without pay, will meet ' ' m the game warden's office this eve ling at 8 o'clock. The meeting was tailed by Mr. Shoemaker. All points if the law, the duties of a game war en and the methods of cooperation r ill be explained. Cooper to Address Botarlens. C. V. Cooper will speak before the Rotary club Tuesday noon at the Benson hotel n "The great war as prophesied in Biblical history and the fulfillment or the prophesies as far as the war has progressed, with an interpretation of what the end will be." Mr. Cooper talked to the club on the same sub test August 14. 1814. and is now to rive his present conclusions. Weed Arsenio as Heart Balm. Seek ing a balm to his wounded heart, Wil- cept our captain being huddled up to gether on her forward deck. "She thus steamed about for prob ably an nour and a half, during which time I noticed the water was rising slowly on the forward deck and It came up on my feet. I also noticed s6me little time before this the con ning toWer had been closed. - "The water continued to rise around my ankles, and when the water got six Inches up orr lny legs I pulled my life belt out quickly, threw it over my shoulders and Jumped overboard. The other men did not seem to know what was going to happen. Some of them were saying, "I wonder if they are going to drown us,' etc. About 10 sec onds after, I jumped X heard a suction as of a vessel sinking, and the subma rine had submerged entirely, leaving the crew of the Belgian Prince strug gling in the water. Swam Toward Belgian Prince "I commenced to swim toward the Belgian Prince, which I could see faintly in the distance, it then being very dark in this latitude at this time of night. I am a good swimmer and swam practically all night on my back and In other positions. One of our crew who was without a life belt I don't know his name kept about five yards from me for about half an hour after the submarine submerged. "This man finally became exhausted and sank. I heard numerous other cries for help from our men, but could not see them. Later' I heard a whir ring noise, something like an air plane, and smelled the odor of gaso line, which I thought was the sup marine returning towards the Belgian Prince to pick up her four men. When ; day broke there Were lots - of dead bodies of my old shipmates floating around me. Then, abriut 6 o'clock as; near as I can Judge, I made out the : Belgian Prince end four mere, coming over her side. They bad been lower ing some stuff of the Belgian Prince Into the boat alongside. Zrnore Cries for Kelp "I cried out: Help! Help!' but they paid no attention to me. At this time, the submarine came to the surface about SO yards from the Belgian Prince and the four men from' the Belgian Prince approached the submarine in their boat and hoisted some stuff out of the rowboat and put on board the submarine and about 10 minutes after ward she submerged, leaving one man in the lifeboat; the other three having gone on board the submarine. "As the submarine submerged, I heard a great explosion and the Bel gian Prince broke in two and sunk. I saw a vessel approaching from a far distance and the gradually approached me. She came within a hundred yards of me. close to where the Belgian Prince had sunk. She passed me, pro ceeded some little distance, turned around and came back and picked me up, at which time I was just com mencing to lose consciousness. "It appears that the men whom I mentioned as having been left In the rowboat when the submarine sub merged, was picked up by the British patrol boat after I became uncon scious, also the chief engineer of the Belgian Prince, who had gotten hold of a log after the submarine first sub merged and thus had saved his life, was picked up. We were taken by the British patrol boat to Londonderry, irejana. Boy Bungles Theft Of Gar, Is Captured J. C. Walsh looked? out of the win dow of his house at East Twenty-third and Taylor streets Sunday afternoon and saw someone trying , to steal his automobile. The would-be-thief. Homer Myers, 17 years of age, seemed to be having trouble in starting the ma chine. Walsh ran out of the house, ordered the boy to stay in the car and drove with him to the police station. Myers was later removed to the county Jail. His case will be disposed of in the juvenile court. FEDERAL BOARD WILL TRY TO ADJUST ALL TROUBLE AT SEATTLE Representatives of All Con cerned Will Be Heard Dur ing Progress of Inquiry, OREGON BOY ON WAY TO AVIATION SCHOOL f.HAZELWOODJ HAZEL WOOD BREAKFASTS are very appetizing and moderate, in price. Seattle, Wash., Oct. 8. (I. N." S.) Hopefur of bringing about m early settlement of the strike in the ship building and kindred industries in Se attle and other coast cities, the fed eral labor adjustment board, - which arrived here yesterday from Washing ton, D. C, today began its investiga tion of the local strike situation. Representatives of the shipbuilding plants and the Metal Trades council, which called the strike two weeks ago, were summoned before the board to give testlmonyr.V. Kverit Macy, chair man of the board, said today that all of the hearings would be open to the public The federal commission found the situation in Seattle much brighter than it had anticipated. Almost co incident with its arrival In. the city. local No. 1184. Shipwrights and. Join ers of America, called off the strike In the wooden shipbuilding plants. This action removes the 10 hour lum ber issue entirely from the strike con troversy and the only question that the federal board must now decide is the demands of the unionists - for a praise in wages. . wooden shipbuilding plants today re turned to work, but the big steel ship, yards are still idle with about 8500 men still on strike. dered to the Presidio, where he has been for several wtfeka. With two other boys from the Agricultural college he was detailed from the Presidio to the aviation camp. The young man Is a nephew ot Mrs. B. F. Irvine of this 1 city. SPECIAL' BREAKFAST No. 4 30c Served 6 to 11:30 A. M. Two Eggs, any style Toast or Rolls with Butter Coffee The Hazelwood 388 Washington St. Broadway Hazelwood 127 Broadway Instant service in our Coffee Shop 126 Park Quick Repair Service! When you break your glasses, "let the COLUMBIAN OP TICAL CO. be the first thing yOu think of. Because, of our complete modern equipment and pro gressive experts we are in position to give you not only the most accurate re pair service, but also the quickest. If we have your pre scription on file, just tele phone us your name. If not, we will send a messen ger for your broken lens. Ready in 60 minutes! COLUMBIAN 1 vkj 1 ?rx Daniel Webster Held In Jail for Cutting Daniel Webster, editor an J publisher of the People's Bulletin, a Portland J paper for negroes, is in the city jail " ' 1 M I . 1 f . t cnargcu wuu naming ariiawcauy j carved J. D. Lewis, a negro tailor, with a pocket-knife, after Lewis had broken a billiard cue over Daniel's head in a row Sunday afternoon In a pool hall at 101 North, Park street. I Mr. Lewis and Mr. Webster came 1 to words over the game they were i playing, and words led to the use of the billiard cue, which In turn moved ' Daniel Webster to take out his knife. Webster is held without bail. Lewis was allowed to go on promise that he , would return and be a witness at the trial. una imexr.::-w X j Portland Boy Must Stay With Canadians Washington, Oct. 8. Enlisted in the Royal engineers' corps in Canada, with the understanding, his father says, that, he could obtain a transfer to the American service later if American engineers went to France. Ouy A. Cooney of Portland. Or., rated as a Second Lieutenant Irvine French, the sapper, has been refused a transfer. Crook Plays in Hard Luck While Escaping Tohm O'Connor Take atolaianB- Qua Away, But Others Come to Bine. coat's Beeooe, Cuedne Ba-Ooaviot. After attempting fo burglarise the house of William L. Miller, c patrol man living at Sixteenth and Everett stteets, and later taking the police man's own gun away from him and holding nim up with it. John- O'Con nor, an ex-convlct 22 years of age, was arrested Sunday by Miller. The policeman, going home early Sunday morning, approached hta house through a back alley instead of from the front. As be reached thai houik ha a w a man rllmhtnr In through a rear window, and ordered the Intruder to atop and throw- up his hands. The man raised bis hands above his bead and started peaceably enough in the direction of the poll se-man. Several neighbors were arouaed by the noise and thrust their heads out of windows. Miller called to some of them tw . telephone for the patrol wagon, and the man leaped on him. seised Miller's revolver, turned it on its owner and ordered the policeman to put up his hands. Instead of obey ing. Miller grappled with his oppo nent, and with the assistance of sev eral neighbors, succeeded in handcuf fing him. Lieutenant Irvine French 28-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. French of Enterprise, Or.( is In the city en route to an aviation school "some where in California, after a month's visit to his parents. Lieutenant French was born at Joseph, Eastern Oregon. He had two years of training at the naval academy at Annapolis and was in his senioiyear at O. A. C when or- He enlisted at Vancouver. B. C. lsst April and was last heard from In a hospital in Kent, England. His father Is D. J. Cooney of 263 Seventeenth street north, Portland, Or. Represen tative McArthur has taken up with the war department the possible transfer of young Cooney to the American en-gineera We can deliver green or dry slsb wood in any quantity promptly. Albina Fuel Co. Broadway 3000. A-11U. Adv. Uncle Sam Expects Every Man To Do His Duty You should do your duty to your faithful wife and dependent children by tak ing a policy ir New World Life Insurance Company CHRONIC DISEASES Moat b. eared by Nature. Asthma, broaebltla. ImUrMtloB, cuoatlpailun. rb.umatlam. axnta. diabetes, kkloer. bemrt. li.cr. avr.t troafcls. tc. moat b treated bj correct diet. BUMfr. vibrstiou. brdra and eleetrotberap. Draft will aiwar fall. DR. VIRGIL MACMICKLaV 07 Dckuia bldf.. sses salami pbealologleal lethoda-TeL Mala SCea Treatment at . flee or aaDttartaia. Ont-of-eft patlenia aecoaa mdatert. Tall or write for. details. 2d Floor Stevens Bids;. Stomach Diseases and Goitre Wish to see the case I eaa't euro t" (No drugs) - - DR. A. S. DOUGLASS CHTJfcO TMA OTOm. Tel. Mas. 1798. 204- O reroutes Bldf. OPTICAL CO Floyd F. Brower, Mgr. 145 Sixth St. 1 Big Price Concessions Enabled Us to Make Some Wonderful Buys -You Will All w Veiling Reap the Benefit WVU Ee . l adies' Ready-0 Because We Are Ji-4 Sale Starts C 1 1 5 Tomorrow, 9 A. M. OGlling OO JLOW We have tut one reason to give for of f ering at such an early date such high-grade apparel at such drastic reductions, we overbought to such an extent that we are swamped with merchandise that is why. i WE HAVE TOO MANY COATS WE HAVE TOO MANY SUITS WE HAVE TOO MANY DRESSES WE HAVE TOO MANY SKIRTS WE HAVE TOO MANY WAISTS WE HAVE TOO MANY FURS Tomorrow, commencing at 9 A. M., we demonstrate the positive proof that this is the great est sacrifice held in Portland this year. Thousands of dollars' worth of wonderful garments acquired at big price concessions, will be offered to the public at a tremendous saving. The magnitude of this stock compels us to take this drastic action and dispose of this great surplus stock at once. Our price cutting is always genuine and this time the knife has gone deep. Read on profit. SaleStartsTuesday,Oct.9,9A.M.--415Washington Prices Look Like We Will Get Some Action At Your Service Eleven officers, one hun dred other employes, and our completely equipped banking institution. The consolidation of THE LUMBERMENS NATIONAL BANK with this bank increases our resources to $25,000,000. Liberty Loan Bonds Subscription Taken Here The United States National Bank Sixth and Stark Sts. Portland, Oregon omcuiii J. O. AZirawOBTX, VresldeaV . O. OBAWMKB, nrst floe Preside. B. USA BAXXTX8, Tic President ?yORTH. Tlee President m. W. BOZaUES, Vice President aad CMhler l FS?. President . . M. wiWI. Tlee Preffdeat . J' Al-Foi,Ti Assistant Cashier P. S. PICK, Assistant Cashier O. BTJXXXAXT, Assistant Cashier O. t DTUTTIS, Assistant Cashier . M. O. SAXXOXS, Assistant Cashier These Sale Starts Sharp "9 A. M. Be Here When the poors Open SUITS 3 1 4.9 S For Values to $2450 $1-7.0-5 For Values ao $29.50 $1.9.08 For Values to $35.00 $2 3.0 5 For Values to $40.00 $ 2 S.9 S For Values to $47.50 EXTRA SPECIAL FURS HALF PRICE DRESSES $.10.95 For Values to $18.00 $ 1 2.0 5 For Values to $21.50 $15.05 For Values to $26.50 $1 S.05 For Values to $30.00 $21.05 For Values to $40.00 EXTRA SPECIAL WAISTS HALF PRICE COATS $8.95 For Values to $15.00 $12.05 For Values to $22.50 $14.05 For Values to $28.50 $ 1 0.05 For Values to $35.00 $24.05 For Values to $4450 WHMHMMMaaasfsi.fMHnMa.faW EXTRA .SPECIAL SKIRTS HALF PRICE Store Closed Until Tuesday, Oct. 9th, To Remark Entire . Stock, i Wanted, Salesladies. Nudelman&Garber 4I5Washiiigt Ladies' and Misses' Suits. Coats. Dresses. Skirts and Furs JUL