G THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. TUESDAY, JUKE 24, 1910. 5 ARRIVES IN 1SCITYM0IAY Soldiers of 318th Engineers and : Two Casual Detachments Stay Until 1 o'Clock This Afternoon SIX HUNDRED DURING DAY Reception Committee Is Still "Going Strong" aSsEver When : Day Is Ended; Dinner Novelty -ta-jhe bright light their faces shone. . j. iirjr aure were nuppy. w neri luey- uuri out with applause they applauded with . their mouths, loo. for tAey could hardly restrain themselves, 'Who? Why, the 27poldiers of the tl8ti engineers and the Camp Merritt ' . and -Newport News casual detachments that ; arrived Monday in Portland at 1:15 a. m. and remained here till 1 a. m. ; Wednesday before coins on to Camp Lewis. It was the last bunch that came in Monday, bringing the total ar rivals for the day up pat 600, and the reception committee. Instead of being ' It was all worth while, for the 318th engineers served with that hard-boiled from any Boche, and it was a typical - western regiment that grot complimented all the way from General I'ershtng down to the lowest buck private In the army. It left Vancouver barracks April , 22, 1918, for Frarce. Until August 12, It worked as a construction division, and on that date marched to Brlcon, .FriBM. x'hpm thai Rlr-1-h rifvl.lnn xjl-u assembling. About . September 1 the regiment got into action In the front lines and from then on showed what the stalwart huskies from the Wild and Wooly West could do by way of build' ing roads under shell ffre, putting in : - mines, etc. - CSttEW MOKE DARING They kept growing more daring until November 5, when they started out from Orandpre aiftd almost ran to keep up with the fleeing Boche. November 6, 7 and - $ were strenuous days, the order to move to the rear coming on Novem ber t, followed almost Immediately by orders to proceed to Verdun for another spell of activity. Then the armistice was signed and the regiment went back . to ' . road work and the commonplace . tasks. ' So Portland- was specially glad to wel . come them. Lod by Campbell's band they marched from the Union station to he Benson hotel for dinner, and then to Cotillion hall for the monster dance given in honor of the many soldiers who .were the city's guests Monday. A novelty was introduced at dinner In the War Camp Community Service airls' .1. . wktnk ....... , 1 -J . iivihoi vvauit vwtxa IUV Ul Willi lUCStfc Mrs. Ethel Chase Christie. With. Mrs, Tct na T- urna "A tViart ton a . started the meal off in flno fashion by singing to the boys as they entered the dining-room. They were received by sturms ol applause. The jaxs singers, including Walter Jenkins, Walter Hard wick and J. H. Mc- Coy, and accompanied by Mrs. Walter flardwlck, seemed also to have a spe cial snap for the occasion, and their new and catchy words to old tunes were im mediately popular. CAPTAIN XINDS1EY COMMANDS Mayor Baker addressed the boys while hey ate, telling them how welcome they : were to the city. In the course of his remarks, he mentioned that Portland, was going to raise S250.Q00 for the. Salvation Army, and the applause that followed - lasted . several minutes and was padded witn cheers that broke out spontaneously. - Captain Norman D. Ltndsley was in command of the detachment He is a mining engineer, whose home is in Se attle. - The chorus and the jazz singers also livened the dinner at the Benson at 6:30 for the boys of the Twenty-third and Twenty-first engineers and the casuals who were in the city for the day. GREETERS WELCOME MINE HOST (Con tinned From Pan On.) use of the West to relieve the conges tion Of the -Eastern cities. - It. D. McFadden of Omaha, national president of the Greeters, responded with a tribute to Oregon and C. Fred Braend lin. first president of the Greeters, na tionally organized in Denver in 1310, NEURALGIA AND HEADACHES HAVE ; BEEN CORRECTED Another Indiana Woman Is Glad to Recommend Dr. Williams' Pink Pffls ? "My illness started from a cold," re lates Mrs. A. J. Renshaw, of No. 310 South Fourth street, Terre Haute, In diana "It left me with bronchial trou ble and I paid HtUe attention to It at first, but my illness kept getting worse. Gradually neuralgia developed and there was a. sharp, intense pain that seemed tb make me short of breath. When the pain was at its worst I became very nervous and couldn't draw a long breath without pain. - .. -"There were also frequent headaches and ! worried a great deal. My sleep did not seem to refresh me and I was always tired! Nothing- hinut mA ami1 n day after readings about Dr. William's Pink Pills, I decided to give the reme dy a trial. In a few days f was con vinced that the pills were helping me and continued the treatment until the pain entirely disappeared. I no longer have headaches and feel well able to do ray work I am no longer nervous and feel better than I hjKe in months. I cannot speak too highly of Dr. William's Pink Pills." ' - , -Dr. William's 'Pink Pills are sold by all , druggists, or. direct from the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. X,.. .t,60 cent per box, six boxes for 52.50, postpaid, on receipt of price. A booklet on .-nervous disorders win be mailed free on request. Adv. told how the organization had grown. Mr. Braendlin lately became connected with the Portland hotel.- ;.-. - -- A touching- trlbuta was paid - Wi A. McDonald of Columbus. Ohio, member of the national board of governors, who recently died. David Olmstead; was chosen ...to fill the- unexpired term." " . .: Luncheon was . partaken by the men at the Portland -botet and by the women visitors at the Nortonla. f The after noon the Greeters devoted to their busi ness sessions, while the women wer entertained .with a theatre party .at the Hippodrome by the ladies' auxiliary of the - Oregon Greeters. THEATfeE PABtY TONIGHT Tonighti the . Shrlners : and J Elks , will entertain their delegate members, and a theatre party; will be held at the Al cazar for the other delegates and their wives. : . ; . It is estimated that about 300 Greet ers are in attendance at the convention. The previous estimate of 600 fell short because of the rush of post-war busi ness that prevented many hotel men from leaving their-posts. The three delegates for the. national presidency are running nip and tuck. W. Hammond .Williams, president of the ureeters or Ban Francisco, wno is with the Fairmont hotel, is standing on a platform of a six-day week for hotel clerks and prohibition of hotel proprietors from holding office in the Greeters' association. "Ham" is con fident of his election, as well as is Leonard Hicks of Chicago, owner of the Grant hotel, who put the boxing" bill through the Illinois legislature, o the great benefit of the hotels. Leigh Fuller of Los Ang-ele. the third candi date, is working for the educational betterment of the profession through the process of evolution, the uplifting of the occupation upon a more solid foundation. COLORADO WANTS CONVENTION Colorado Springs and Peoria, 111., are working for the next convention. "It rightly belongs ' to Colorado TSpringe," says J. G. Hilliard, editor of the Amer ican Greeter of Denver, "because next year will mark the tenth anniversary of the Greeters' organization In Den ver. As the association was first or ganized in Colorado, it seems fitting that the state should be the seat of the celebration of its decennial anniver Omaha already has its eye upon the 1921 convention and its delegates are distributing badges among the dele gates to interest them In the second next meeting place. DELEGATES JOYOrS Among the delegates to the conven tion are Francis Patrick Shanley and Joseph Clarence Furness, owners of the Continental hotels in San Francisco and Los Angeles. Mrs. Francis P. Shan ley has the distinction of being voted the most beautiful woman in California. Robert E. Gould of the Rands-New port hotel in Newport, N. H., the first national vice president of the Greeters. journeyed the farthest of any. to at tend the convention. V. S. Warrlner, national secretary from Denver, arrived with his family In his automobile after 30 days on the road. Greeters almost thought they had lost their secretary, but he got here Just in time. BUSIEST HOTEL George E. Wolf, assistant manager of the La Salle hotel of Chicago, is also in attendance. The LaSalle is the busiest hotel In the I world, insists Mr. Wolf. It is so busy that they take the register away at 8 o'clock in the morning so that no one else 'can register. It claims the distinction of being the largest hotel west of New York with 1172 rooms. "I don't know what we will do," said Mr. Wolf. "The city won't let us build up anjl higher and we can't get the space to build out.' Mr. Wolf is de lighted over the Northwest and says he would not have missed the conven tion for 31000. George Van Buren, of the Jovlte ho tel at Los Angeles, is an old time Portlander, being formerly traveling pas senger agent on..the O-W. R. & N. Mr. Van Buren never stays long in one place. "I was bom on a train," he said, "and have been on a train most of the .time since." HARDEST WORKER Harry M. Eastman, managing editor of The Hotel Bulletin of Chicago, is the laboring man of the convention. Mr. Eastman it is, who handles all the transportation problems for the dele gates. J. R. Dumont, secretary of the Hotel Muehlebach at Kansas City, one of the livest hotels in the middle West, is also attending the convention. Among the most active Oregon outside of Portland workers is R. Scott Weaver, third vice president of the Oregon Greet ers, from the Hotel Umpqua at Rose-burg. CASHIER CHARGED WITH F, PLACED ON TRIAL Entire' Morning in Federal Court Spent In Futile Effort to Get , a Jury in Jerome B.Mann Case SPECIAL PANEL IS CALLED Defense Will Try to Show That Former Bank of Linnton Offi- . . - - 'cial Only Used Bad Judgment On a charge of falsifying a report to the comptroller of currency on the con dition of the First National Joank of Linnton, Jerome B. Mann, formerly a cashier in the bank, was called for trial in Federal Judge Bean's court this morn ing. . , " -: The entire ntbrnlng was spent in a fu tile attempt to secure a jury. Wallace McCamant, chief counsel for Mr.- Mann, excused five jurors and United States Attorney Bert Haney excused two. De fense and prosecution dismissed one man upon agreement. NEW PANEL CALLED The excuses exhausted the old and new jury panels and a- special venire was called for by Judge Bean. Selection of the jury was continued at the after noon session. ., Jerome Mann, son of -Dr. S. B. Mann, was cashier of the Linnton ' bank on January 6, when he is alleged to have falsified in a report of the bank's con dition. The report covered certain tran sactions of J. A. Pattison, head of the lumber concern bearing his name. The defense, according to the questions put to the Jurors today, will endeavor to show that Mr. Mann was guilty of a mistake in judgment rather. than fraudu lent action. DANK UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Mr. Mann is not now connected with the Linnton bank and the institution Hs in solvent condition, under new manage ment and with new officers. The list of depositors is on the increase and the bank, drawing on a Tich and thriving agricultural and Industrial section, is facing a prosperous era. H Burglar Escapes With Loot After He Is Fired At Carl Keller's pistol failed to stop a masked burglar early this morning when Keller was awakened by the noise the Intruder made as he was leaving; the Keller home, 295 Ainsworth avenue. Keller told the police today that he heard the man's footsteps and saw him in the hall. When he fired, the burglar darted out the door and escaped, taking three stickpins and 36 in cash. Miss Pearl Rawden, of the Emerson apartments, Williams avenue and Em erson street, reported that ' someone broke in during the night and stole a gold locket and bracelet and several dollars in sliver. 91 Casuals ; Are to Arrive in This City Atl2:30 Wednesday "Ninety-one soldiers from Newport News, Va.,' 1n a casual detachment. will arrive Wednesday at 12:30 o'clock at the Portland union station. These men are from various detachments not known here. They will be In the city tHl 4 o clock, when they will proceed to Camp Lewis . for their discharge. They will be welcomed by the United Auxiliaries reception committee. , The 146th field artillery, which served in the same ' field artillery brigade ' as the - 148th. is en route to Camp Lewis over,- the northern route, stopping In -SpOaane and Wall Walla for receptions. Casual ' detachments from Eastern camps now routed through Portland on their way to Camp Lewis, include : Seventy-three men from Newport News, who left Monday u 63 men 'who left Camp Mills Monday, and 47 men who left 'Columbia, S. C, today. ,. INCREASE OF WAGES REQUESTED BY GRAIN AT HANDLERS DOCKS Conference Between Max . H. Houser and Union leaders on Subject No -Strike Threat. Readjustment of the wages of grain handlers- employed on Portland docks has been asked by Grain Handlers' union, local No. 4. A conference between the union leaders and Mas H. Houser of the grain corporation of the food administration was held today. The meeting was the first Of the kind held and thus far no definite announce ment of the result is obtainable. Other meetings will be held to discuss further details of the request, it is said. At the present time the dock workers are getting 75 cents an hour. Some 1C5 men are employed on the docks and their chief duty . at present is handling products for the government. Under the Shumaker award, as dif ferentiated from the Macy award for the shipbuilders, stevedores were allowed 80 cents an' hour. The grain handlers have their separate organization, how ever, and their request for a wage re adjustment is made on their own ac count. . Possibility of a strike was denied at union headquarters, where it was de clared a satisfactory arrangement would probably be made. Victim of Practical Joke Is Still Alive Ray Stark, 25 years old, the victim of a cruel trick last Thursday at the -Columbia River Shipbailding plant, was still alive ai St. Vincents hospital today but In a molt serious condition. An air hose contacting 90 pounds pressure was placed against his body, the force of the air causing serious lacerations. Stark resides at 211 West Polk street. District Attorney Delch investigated the case with the police and interviewed the man who held the hose, but as Stark admitted he started the affair in a spirit of play, no further action was taken. - , Rostfs WiU Be Sent To Returning 'Vets' Due Here Thursday Packed in damp paper with their tips sealed with paraffine to preserve them, roses have been sent to Hunting ton to be distributed to the boys of the 148th field artillery when they! ar rive in Oregon. Including the men Of other units traveling with the detach ment as casuals, there will be two roses for each man. Besides the roses for many of them will be letters carried by Capptain Lee Clark who left this morning td meet the special. On the : present schedule the boys should arrive here about 8 o'clock Thurs day morning. There are 161 from the 148th field artillery and 78 casuals, and they left Camp Mills. L. I., last Friday. Thfey will be given a rousing welcome until they leave, which is expected to be 1 o'clock Friday morning. RESOLUTION TO STOP SALE OF SHIPS NOW BEFORE U. S. SENATE Senator Would Have Government . KfepAII Except.ThOse Unfit . for ForeigQ Trade. Washington,- June 24. (L N. S.) "That in the judgment of the United States 'senate it is not advisable for the United States shipping bord to sell at this time any of the, merchant ships of -the government to foreign in terests rxept such as cannot be suc cessfully employed by this country," was set forth by a resolution introduced in the senate this afternoon by Senator Fletcher, Democrat, of Florida, ranking Democratic member of the senate com merce committee. It was also declared in the measure that '"efficent merchant ships of the gov ernment should not be sold at all at this time, except such ships as are un desirable for overseas trade and will bring a price approaching their actual cost or more, and then only with a view of replacing them with better ships and in order to properly balance the (merchant marine) fleet." Fletcher asked that the measure ; go over for a day or two, as he proposed to express his fJpoeition to the Hurley plan ' for the - sale of government con structed ships to private Interests in a speech he was engaged in preparing. Stuart Bly the Is Here on Vacation Stuart Oakes Blythe, associate editor of the Country Gentleman, who former ly was a member of The Journal's edi torial staff, is here from Philadelphia for a short vacation. Mr. Blythe left Portland more than two years ago to join the staff of the committee on pub lic information at Washington, D. C, and subsequently was attached to the Emergency Fleet corporation's publicity department. He took his new position with the Curtis publications in January of this year. Man-Who Poses as Health Officer Is Sought by Police Residents of St. Johns have notified the chief of police that a man posing as a health officer ia bothering young girls. Two mother reported that their girls had been insulted by a man who, License Inspector Files Complaint Complaints alleging failure to secure a license to engage in business In the city were filed in the municipal court this morning by K. S. Hutchinson of the license bureau against Emily New man, chiropodist in the Broadway build ing, and Fred L. Kelly of the Kelly Ad vertising company. Judge Rossman is sued warrants. GOODBY, WOMEN'S TROUBLES The tortures and discomforts of weak. lame and aching back, swollen feet and limbs, weakness, dizziness, nausea, as a rule have their origin in kidney trouble. not f emale complaints." Tnese gen eral symptoms of kidney and bladder disease are well known so is the rem edy. Next lime you feel a twinge of pain in the back or are troubled with head ache, indigestion, -insomnia, irritation in. the bladder or pain in the poins and lower abdomen, you will find quick and sure relief in GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules. This old and tried rem edy for kidney trouble and allied de rangements has stood the test for hun dreds of years. It does the work. Pains and troubles vanish and new life and health will come as you continue their use. When completely restored to your usual vigor, continue taking a capsule or two each day. GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules are imported from the laboratories at Haarlem, Holland. Do not accept a substitute. In sealed boxes, three sizes. For sale and guaranteed by the Owl Drug Co. Adv. Convention Xotes Hotels are ablaze with yellow and black .today In the form of banners and badges of every sort with which they are bedecked in honor of the Greeters of America, who "blew in" this morning to hold their eighth an nual convention. The Greeters like badges, and no army veteran has any thing : on them in the number of medals and ribbons with which theirl fronts are plastered. Aa the Greeters' special stopped at a small station in Canada, - Leonard Hicks of Chicago, who' is running for president, strolled off the platform, and got mistaken for a United States pres idential candidate. "Do you think Wilson is going to run for a third term?" asked one native of another. 'No," reflected the second Canadian, "I don't believe he will have much chance, from what's going otj in fc-urope. ' Chicago Greeters are certain of elec tion of Hicks, who has a hotel record beginning with bellboy and extending through all the various positions of hotel life to the ownership of the Grant hotel.- Hicks is an all 'round athlete, with the achievement of put ting through the Illinois legislature the law that permits boxing in the state. These boxing matches will bring great crowds to Illinois, Bay hotel folks, and incidentally swell the profits of the' hotels. "I foukht all the ministers in Illinois" said Hicks this morning, in speaking of the campaign, "and won out with the assistance of the army and all the real redblooded people." Hicks is also a baseball fan,' and likes to try the speed course drive. "I think this country Is wonderful." said Mr. Hicks. "The only trouble with it Is that 4t is too far from Chicago. I have never been in Portland before, although I was In Oregon In 1898 when, while visiting in Idaho, - I crossed the Snake river Just to say I had been in Oregon. ; ' The Imperial hotel greeted its Greet er guests with a big bouquet of Port land rosea in each room thte morning. Four Can Be Floated London. June 24. ST -NT a m ... . ... -j. tur oi the big German war vessels in Scapa v " . " "mu, junaen, 'Tanarort and Nurnberg, can be floated If pumping tun reach thm fn tim. . an admiral! ty announcement today. . Bank' Bandits Get $6000 Detroit Mich..' June 24 i T m a . Four , unmasked bandits robbed the Rouge' State bank. River Rouge, of about Sfpoo Tuesday boob. . . .i ; '-i The Sign of the Steaming Coffee Cup stands for Pure Food,-Service and Value. See the Open Kitchen where food is prepared in view of our patrons. A branch of the IGHTON DAIRY LUNCH AND CAFETERIA at Broadway and Washington streets, the two most talked of and best thought of eating places in the city. THERE'S A REASON I On June 24 we will donate our entire day's sales and all our employes will donate their day's salaries as well as their services for the SALVATION - ARMY DRIVE being staged by the Elks. - Our way of helping this worthy cause. The Coffee Cup Lunch Room 133 PARK ST. AT ALDER r BELOW CORNELIUS HOTEL NEXT DOOR FROM WOODARD & CLARKE'S WONDERFUL DRUG STORE claiming to tbe a health officer, wanted to see if they had smallpox and forced them to partly undress. Both mothers were away from home at the'time. Difficulty has been experienced lately, ay the police, in apprehending men of this character.-as the mothers watt too leng to notify "the police. Two motor cycle men are kept on duty day and night;' at police headquarters to answer emergency calls such as these. On cases aimilar to these the officers have made the tuii to St, Johns or Mount Scott in 11 minutes after receiving the calL Ahvayr reliable You can RELY on "'Redi Crown' for steady, dependable power and long mileage. It is high quality gasoline eyery drop. "Red Crown" U straight-distilled, all refinery fasoline, with the full and con tinuous chain of boiling- points neces . saiy for easy starting, quick and smooth acceleration, steady, depend able power "and lone mileage. Look (or the Red Crown sicn before you fUL STANDARD OIL COMPANY (CabJoraia) v f is 3 J 7 " . ... . V . i. :l.-ri!ii:i:M-:!;.::i I 1 I vilSli: Gasoline Qualify Most Every Person With Normal Eyes Must Sooner or . Later Wear Glasses,, When you have to hold your paper or book or sewing off at an un comfortable distance to see, fOUR time for glasses has come. Then you should come to me for a thor ough examination of your eyes and let me add to your comfort ani peace of mind by making you a pair of Perfect-Fitting. Glasses. DR. WHEAT Eyesight Specialist 207 MORGAN BUILDING Washington at Broadway ifiL PIANOS PLAYER PIAfcOS BRUNSWICK PHONOGRAPHS PATHE AND OKEH RECORDS SOULE BROS. 166 Tenth St., near Morrison if not the superior of any other cereal beverage you ever .tasted I 1 Hero St on of the moat clannir offers made. - If we are wrong we stand to lose a fortune. If we are right, our product should recelv your; preference. We ap point yoa judge and jury. Your decision will be final. Yoa wul accept will you not? OUR STARTLING PROPOSAL! Go to any eWbr la soft drinks and bey tw bottles f RAINIER SPECIAL. Jake tfcaa noma. Property chill tbsm. 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If RAINIER SPECIAL is found inferior, yon got ovary ponny of your money back. If snporior, yon are onligbtonod as to tho proper brand of coroal bororageo to demand. You win oithor way. Yon tako no risk who terror. Yon will find RAINIER SPECIAL whorovor good things to drink are sold. Tho largo eleven-ounce bottlos contain two standard siae glasses of bonarago. This daring offer holds good for frvo days euhr. ' eee Rainier Prosoets Car, Soattle, U.S. A, M of RaiBior assets i, aw neck, atelt Coroei. Srro mm AleekoL K - ' Mi rty ' - 4 ' The Rainier Product Company relieve retailers and consumer of the '.- necessity of paying Revenue Taxes on Rainier Beverages by paying ALL taxes thereon direct to the Government. LANG & ;C0i, PortlanrJ, Or., Dis rihutos 1