THE MORXIXG OKEGONIAN. MONDAY, JUNE 17. 1918. WAR VICTORY FIRST DECLARES MOO CLUBWOMAN, OF ROSE CITY PARK, WHO WILL BE ENTERTAIN , MEM CHAIRMAN AT COMING LAWN PARTY AND ROSE SHOW. Director-General Sets Forth Purposes of Railroad C Administration. ' ARMY OFFICERS PUBLIC WILL BE SERVED WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED A SHIPMENT OF BWnnMsWlnM8nl Sympathy and Understand!!! twccn Managements, Employes and JPatrons to Be Promoted. Be- WASHINGTON. June 16. In a com prehensive statement of policy made public today, Director-General McAdoo declared that the Railroad Administra tion's aims in order of importance are to win the war by moving troops and war materials promptly; to give effi cient service to the public; to promote sympathy and understanding between the railroad managements, employes and patrons, and to apply sound busi ness policies to railway operation. He said he hoped future development would "humanize the science of rail roading and negative the idea that cor porations have no souls. Director Names Purposes. "The policy of the United States Rail way Administration," said the Director General, "has been formed and shaped by a desire to accomplish the follow ing purposes which are named In what I conceive to be the order of their im portance: "Kirst The winning of the war, which includes the prompt movement of the men and material that the Gov ernment requires. To this everything else must be subordinated. "Second The service of the public, which is the purpose for which the rail ways were built and given the privi leges accorded them. This implies the maintenance and operation of railway properties eo that transportation facili ties will be provided at the lowest cost, the object of the Government being to furnish - service rather than to make money. Good Keeling; to Be Promoted. "Third The promotion of a spirit of sympathy and a better understanding as between the administration, railways and their 2,000.000 employes as well as their 100.000,000 patrons, which latter class includes every individual in the Kation, since transportation has be come a prime and universal necessity of civilized existence. "Fourth The application of sound economies, including; "(a) The elimination of superfluous expenditures. "(b) The payment of a fair and liv ing wage for services rendered and a Just and prompt compensation for in juries received. "(c) The purchase of material and equipment at the lowest prices consist ent with a reasonable but not an ex cessive profit to the producer. "(d) The adoption of standardized equipment and the introduction of proved devices that will save life and labor. "(e) The routing of freight and pas senger traffic with due regard to the fact that a straight line is the shortest distance between two points. "(f) The intensive employment of all equipment and a careful record and scientific study of the results obtained, with a view to determining the com parative efficiency secured. Taik Declared Great. "The development of this policy will, of course, require time. The task to which the Railroad Administration has addressed itself is an immense one. It is .as yet too early to judge of the re sults obtained, but I believe that great progress has been made toward the goal of our ideals. "All those who have had a share in this great work, including especially the members of my staff and the offi cers and employes of the railways, have shown intelligence, public spirit, loy alty and enthusiasm in dealing with problems that have already been solved and attacking those that still await so lution. "With their continued co-operation, I feel assured of a future in which the lessons of our accumulating experience will be effectively employed to human ize the science of railroading and nega tive the idea that corporations have no eouls." HUN MURDERS SCORED GERMAN SOCIALIST DENOUNCES CHIMES OF HOI UK SOLDIERY. m '"""t 4 s S ::: : ') ' ' ::: ::: ; . .r jt - - f::: zzz i . , ' it" zzz - - - I J V . ' I - -- " i - v ' "" '-v i ZZZ IzzhK V. , ' . - I::: ::3- --'- .." -WW zlzl . zz: 1 ' v "; im EE . " " . : - . EEE i ' ' EEE EE 1:EE EE J " "v ' . , EE: J. - "- ?" ' -sc i : : : mmmM saiiJ MRS. TV. P. RICHARDSON. The rose, queen of -the garden, will be present In profusion at the combined rnn show and lawn nartv to be held at the Rose City clubhouse on Friday evening, June 21, at 7 o'clock, when the charming little suburban district will Mrs. W. P. Richardson has been named general chairman of the entertainment committee and the committee comprises the entire membership of the cluD. Thcra will be a lawn nartv. with dancing and refreshments. Several of the riannoa will he hv irraceful little folk, attired in costumes. The rose show will be devoted chiefly to the choicest blooms of the many varieties but other flowers are not to be excluded. A prize list is to be announced. AUSTRiANS GIVE WAY Offensive on 100-Mile Line Against Italy Fails. ENEMY GETS ACROSS PIAVE Defenders Report 3 00 0 of Assault ing Forces Taken Vienna Offi cial Report Claims Capture of 10,0 00 Prisoners. (Continued From First Psce.) ments encountered an attacking: group which had been prepared during pre vious days, and before whose counter thrust a portion of the captured terri tory was evacuated. LONDON, June 16. Italian head quarters, according to the official re port received here, claims the cap ture of 3000 prisoners in the battle now proceeding on the Italian front. British Hurl Back Foe. The Austrian troops that penetrated the line held by the British on the Italian front have been driven back and the British line has been com pletely re-established. Stetson 150 Regulation $.00 i OH ARMY OFFICERS1 HATS $.00 Members of Center and Conservative Parties In Reichstag; Leave When Maaucrci Are Exposed. AMSTERDAM, June 16. A scene was caused in the Keichstag Friday by Dr. a socialist memoer, when, ac cording to the Cologne Gazette he de clared: j.ne Doraer states nave become a Oolgotha, where lie bleaching the bones of the best in the land who have been slaughtered by the misled German soldiers. - An uproar followed this declaration and Deputy Cohn was called to order, but he continued: "The entire war has become a family affair of the Hohen zollerns. It is possible that we may fi nally remain tne only warriors in Eu rope and the entente will have to sub mit, but Europe will have become continent of beggars and we shall all suiter tne consequences or such a peace. Lieutenant-General von Stein, Prus sian Minister of War and State, in re ply, asserted: It is not one family in this country which is waging war, but the German people, under the Kaiser, is waging war tor its existence." According to another account of the excited debate, several independent So cialista shouted: "Robbers! Murder ers!" when Dr. Cohn said that people were being "slaughtered by the misled German soldiers." Members of the Center and Conservative parties there upon left the chamber, it is reported. PINE SOUGHT FOR PLANES Jvlamatli Lumbermen Learn of In vestigation to Be Made. KLAMATH FALLS. Or.. June 16. (Special.) That the War Department is planning to use pine lumber in cer tain parts of the airplane construction and that Kenneth Ross, a special repre tentative of the airplane service, will probably visit Klamath Falls in the near future, along with other Oregon lumber centers to see about securing supplies of timber, is reported by prom incnt Klamath lumbermen. The pine now being sought is fo "wing beams" of the airplanes, it is de clared, it being necessary to have the highest grade of the lumber in strips -0 feet long and about inches wide ROME, June 16. (Havas Agency.) The Austrians, after a violent bombardment, attacked the French positions, but the very efficacious fire of the French broke down' the thrusts of the Austrian infantry. Enemy Losses Heavy. The enemy casualties were heavy, and, in addition, he left numerous pris oners in the hands of the French. The battle is in progress along the whole front. LONDON, June 16. The opening of the latest Austrian oitensive in Italy is described by Reuter's corre spondent with the British army in Italy. British Pcsitions Attacked. The correspondent's dispatch under date of Saturday-afternooc follows: The Austrians opened a heavy bombardment at 3 o'clock this morn ing and attacked the British positions on Asiago plateau at 7:30 with a di vision composed of Austro-German and Bosnian troops. "The enemy's objective, apparently, was to reach eventually a line of hills about the plateau and Cima Di Fonte, some lour kilometers behind our front. "The enemy reached our front lines, but made very little progress. They were repulsed on the right completely but gained a few hundred yards near the left of our center. Original Line Intact. LONDON. June 16. The British offi cial statement says of the battle: "The pocket in the British front men tioned in the communique of last night has been cleared of the enemy during the night and the early hours this morning and we are now again eatab lished on our original front line." (Four Austrian divisions attacked the British line Saturday and on the left penetrated the front to a depth of 1000 yards along an extent of 2500 yards. There the enemy was held.) The official statement continues: "More than 350 prisoners have been counted and we have in addition cap turea two mountain guns and a con siderable number of machine guns. Italian Aid Effective. "In the early hours of yesterday when the hostile attack was first launched, invaluable assistance, both in infantry and artillery was provided by the Italians on our left, and this as sistance was largely responsible for bringing the Austrian infiltration to an immediate halt. "Heavy fighting is continuing in many places along the Piave, on the eastern end of Montebello Heights and astride the Brenta Valley. "Three additional enemy airplanes were destroyed in air fighting yester day, seven having previously been re ported. The clouds remained low and distant reconnoissances were impossi ble. ROME, July 16. There were scenes of great enthusiasm in the Chamber of Deputies today when the Minister of War, General Zupelli. announced the success of the Italian troops and the repulse of the enemy, despite his nu merical superiority, on the greater part of the front. The whole house rose and applauded. The war minister said that the capture of 3000 prisoners was proof that the Italian troops were truly heroic Great Battle Described. The text of the Italian official state ment reads: "A great battle has been in progress on our front since yesterday. "After artillery preparation, which was exceptionally intense on account of the violence of the fire and the number of guns employed, the enemy has begun his expected offensive by launching large masses of infantry to attack our positions in the eastern sector of Asiago plateau, at the end of the Brenta Valley and on Monte Grappa, by attempting at several point to force the Piave. and by carrying out heavy local demonstra tive actions on the remainder of the front. 'Our infantry and that of the allied contingents fearlessly bore the tempest oi destructive rire, and. supported by a Barrage of their own artillery, which had already prudently anticipated the enemy s preparation with a timely and deadly counter preparation bombard ment, bravely sustained the enemy's on slaught In the advanced defensive area. Front Line Position Taken. 'On the ISO-kilometers' front tnnr intensely attacked, the powerful storm ing columns of the enemy occupied in their initial rush forward only a few line positions in the Monte dl Val Bella region, in the Asolone area and at the head of the Monte Eolarola salient. Some troope succeeded in cassinar to the right bank of the Piave River in the Nervesa area and the Fagare-Muslle region. "During the day our troops Initiated along all the front energetic counter attacks, which succeeded in holding back the powerful pressure of the en emy and in regaining a good portion of the positions temporarily yielded in some of which, however, isolated de tachments had with great valor con tinued to remain at all costs. Fee Being; Pressed Back. "The struggle did not diminish in vio lence during the night and is continu ing fiercely. But our troops are firmly holding the front along the Asiago plateau; have completely reoccupied their original position on Asolone and at Monte Solarola salient and are very closely pressing the enemy infantry which has passed to the right bank of the Piave. "The number of prisoners so far counted is more than 3000, including 89 officers. , "Our own and the allied airmen are taking a strong part in the battle by bombarding the crossing points on the Piave and by attacking the enemy's massed troops with machine gun fire. Thirty-one enemy airplanes have been brought down." GOLD SUPPLY IS NEEDED ALASKA DEPENDED IP OX TO PRO DUCE LARGE AMOUNT OF WEALTH. Secretary McAdoo Urges Necessity ( United States Accumulating All Precious Metal Possible. -WASHINGTON. June 16. The neces sity for a maximum supply of gold from Alaska during the war was emphasized in a letter from Secretary McAdoo to Delegate Sulzer, of Alaska, which wa read in the House Saturday In the dls cusaion of an appropriation for contln ulng work on the Alaska railway. The House approved the $5,250,000 appropriation for the Alaskan project after Delegate Sulzer told the House that completion of the railroad was needed to bring gold from Alaska, but other members insisted that the $5, 250,000 was sufficient for the project next year. "At no time has this country so much required the largest possible produc tion of gold as at present," wrote Sec retary McAdoo. "Next to food and am munition, gold is one of the most need ed war essentials. In order to plan the enormous amount of Government bonds required to finance our war ex penditures, a large credit structure will inevitably be erected on our gold re serves. And it is necessary that those reserves, which are the foundation of the structure, shall be maintained on the broadest possible basis." Bend, Or., are well under way. Will iam Davis, potentate of Al Kader Temple, has just returned from a visit to Bend, where he conferred with Shrlners In regard to the coming cere monial, which is set for June 29. A large number of Shrlners will attend from Portland, Klamath, Burns, The Dalles. Baker, Eugene and Albany. The Mystic Shrine band of Al Kader Temple, the Arab Patrol and the Chan teers will attend. MUSICIANS GO TO FRANCE Walter Damrosch Leads Company of 50 on Tour of V. S. Camps. NEW YORK. June 16. With tnelr salaries paid by Harry Harkness Flag ler, president of the Symphony Society of New York. Walter Damrosch and BO musicians have sailed for France to make a tour of the American rest and concentration camps in the country under the direction of the overseas di vision of the T. M. C. A., according to announcement here. Phone your' want ads to The Orego nian. Main 7070, A 6095. With a Victrola Hours Go by Like Minutes Those few days when the boys are home on leave for the party for any function nothing else brings quite that sense of complete en joyment as a Victrola. Arrange with us to have a Victrola sent you on the easiest of easy terms. G.FJohnsonPianoCo. 140 th. Near Alder. MEHI.IN PACKARD BflVD PIANOS, ICTUOLAS AMI RECORDS. Rend to Plans for Entertain Slirinor. a Shrine ceremonial In rtistfaseliiMS H0LSQM 1 WAR BREAD 40 nutritious subsidies L RE CK With ONI Waste in NG ADVERTISING Newspaper advertising offers the manufacturer the best pos sible way to eliminate waste circulation, for it enables him to advertise where he has and can get distribution. To sell goods profitably depends largely on ability to reach the max imum number of people at the minimum cost. Newspaper advertising is the quickest and surest means of getting retail distribution. It shows the retailer that a wide spread demand is being created. The dealer is always ready to sell products that sell easy. He is a reader and an advertiser of the daily newspaper, and is sold on newspaper advertising, for he knows what it will do. You prove to the retailer you are doing the utmost to help create a demand for him; this is real distribution. You can expand at will, adding steadily to your markets making each a permanent stronghold. PREPARED AND SUBMITTED BY The Newspaper Representatives' Association of Chicago an organization of advertising representatives for over 700 leading newspapers of the United States and Canada. This association is ready to place at the dis posal of General Advertisers the resources of these newspaper organiza tions, through the central office in Chicago, to furnish trade information, local or national, trade surveys and other assistance to help start right and continue successes in advertising. The Newspaper Representatives' Association, 1118 Peoples Gas BIdg., Chicago. Linked With Portland's Manufacturing Manufacturing is the backbone of a community. Increased manufacturing means in creased payrolls increased prosperity. It is the aim of this bank to en courage manufacturing in all branches. We invite manufacturing ac counts and accounts from individuals large or small. J fie United (States jVational S3 an.fi. I Capital and Surmlu 2.500.000.00 Ik-;!; ;!';; j: -- " ... " M.' 1 V " ' ' ' ' " , I VACATION VICTROLAS For vour country home At the mountain camp On the houseboat A Victrola will be ever ready to entertain and to furnish dance music. Two Vacation Styles, '' $2250 and $3250. Others $50 to $400. Convenient Payment Terms Sherman Jlftay & Ca SIXTH AMU MORRISON STRKKTS (Opposite Poatofflee) PORTLAND SEATTLE TACO.MA SPOKANE n 4 -J A N 1 ZV The Last Expression of Love and Cremation In a walk through the colum barium of the Portland Crema torium may be seen in the niches, wonderful urns, each expressive of love of the memory of the de parted which formerly was involved in the erection of a tombstone. Many of these are of the costliest metals and represent the labor of hours. These urns may also be most inexpensive, a feature which of course, carries weight in the growing tendency for civilized countries to cremate. Write, phone or call for booklet. Sellwood Car to Visitors 14th and Bybce 9 to 3