1 U. S. TO CO-OPERATE that the service can be revised as to place Portland more nearly on a parity with Seattle, and give Portland a through service, which Is badly needed. "Through service from Seattle re mains unchanged since the Government took over the railroads, while the serv loe from Portland has been curtailed and restricted to the extent that the through train from Portland to Chi cago over the Union Pacific has been discontinued. This same equipment leaves Portland on train No. 10 at 10 A. M., however, and the train runs to Pocatello, from which point the ob servation car runs to Salt Lake and the rest of the train goes to Green iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinii i Stetson Hats Public Service Commission and Mr. Aishton Confer. WATER GRADE DISCUSSED 1 1 FT TIIE MORNING OREGONIAN, FRIDAY, JULY 19, 1918. Routing of rreight to Columbia itlver Iorts to Relieve Conges tion .Elsewhere Considered by Regional Director. Assurance was given the Public Serv ice Commission oot Oregon of the close co-operation of the Railroad Adminis tration and of the desire for the great est possible harmony between the offi cials of the Government and the com missioners representing the power of the state, insecurlng the highest effi ciency of service, at a conference held yesterday afternoon at the office of the commission, at room 252 Court house. All the members of the com mission were present at the conference, and Regional Director Aishton ex pressed the hope that he might be called upon at any time to advise and assist in any problems that may arise. The advantages and desirability of use of the water grades along the Co lumbia River for the movement of the grain crop of the Columbia Basin was discussed, as well as the routing to Columbia River ports of freight that could be handled with greater dispatch through terminals that are not con gested, which Mr. Aishton promised should have consideration, and declared I River, where the portiana Sleeper is R. H. Alahtnn, Korthnrentern Re gional Railroad Director. the matter had been given thought. Likewise the question of adequate through train service between Port land and t-he East was gone into dur ing the cession. Commission Retains Authority. Authority of the Public Service Com mission in matters of an Intrastate character remains unchanged, and the control of grade, underground and overhead crossings, depot and station accommodations and kindred affairs will continue practically aa when the railroads were under corporate con trol. The new crossings designed to I t.-iqqv. rnniv KnlliUnir Tvn attached to San Francisco train No. for Chicago. "Seattle has two through trains daily over the Chicago. AlllwauKee '. Paul line and one over the Northern Pacific and one over the Great North ern. Portland ought to have at least one through tnaln. and we urge that the train which was discontinued be re-established." ROAD WORK PROGRESSING contribute to public safety at Divide and Votaw will be completed as previ ously intended. The conference was conducive of a clear understanding of the relationship that will exist between the railroad administration and the state. In the party with Mr. Aishton, which j arrived from San Francisco yesterday morning, were J. G. Woodworth, traf fic assistant; Ralph Budd, capital ex penditures assistant; H. E. Byram, .f ederal manager of the Chicago, Mil waukee & Puget Sound lines; W. P. New Surfaced Highways. KLAMATH FALLS.. Or.. July 18. (Special.) That work on the new cut off road from the Shlppington Highway through via Pelican City to the Fort Klamath road will be started within a few days Is the opinion of County Road Supervisor Thomas Dixon, who inti mates that this will be the next road construction undertaken. The new road via the Pelican Bay mill will go over, an entirely new route Kenny, Federal manager of the Great j .,i tt t v Northern Railway, and Judge George olnder8 making It an all-year-round i. Keia, or xacoma, or the Northern road. This road will give the mill em ployes at Pelican City access to town during the Winter months and cut out an extensive strip of the old road over the hill. Supervisor Dixon states that the big county, road grader is now at work In the Swan Lake valley, where a five mile stretch of new road by way of Edgewood, Hibbard ranch and thence south, is being graded. FOUR BROTHERS IN ARKIS Pacific Thromgh Service Agreed On. At 10 A. M. Mr. Aishton and Mr. Woodworth kept an appointment to re sume the conference on traffic mat ters, at which were present representa tives of the Port of Portland. Public Dock Commission, Chamber of Com merce and Portland Traffic and Trans portation Association. The comanittee had requested the establishment of the North Coast Limited as a distinctly Portland train, in accordance with what seemed to have been Intent when the designation of the different rail- valiant Sons of Sirs. Mary Pietrok service for each of the Pacific Coast I Answer Country's Call cities nad Deen made, it was agreed that thrnuirh trnln aAf-v1sA nliniilH a established bv the oneratlon of North ALBANY, Or., July 18. (Special.) Coast Limited trains Nni l nri 2 frnm A family In which there are four boys Portland. of draft age was discovered today by Transportation facilities and the Bit- Miss Mae Tillman, clerk of the local u at Ion of Portland was gone Into con- exemption board. In working with the cerning the ability of the port tto draft records of Llnn County. It is the handle traffic and desirability of the family of Mrs. Mary Pietrok. of Stay- river route, transfer of cargoes to I cv.irva oth its riionntch th hnrti I Joseph Ben Pietrok, aged 28, Is route to destination through the mouth of the Columbia. Late In the af ternon the visiting Fed class 3. Philip George Pietrok, aged 26, was drafted July S and sent to Fort McDowell, California. Paul Ben Piet- eral railroad officials were taken for rok- aged 25. was drafted June 24 and a trip on the river, to give a better sent to Camp Lewis. Lawrence A. idea of the facilities of the port and Pietrok, aged 21. who enrolled in the recent, region clliuii, w txi vcu u.11 vnxiin for deferred classification and is In the relationship of the railroads to trip occupied the members of the party class 1 and also will soon be in the until a late dinner hour. service, Mrs. Pietrok has three other sons. two of them being under and one over the draft limit. HOOD RIVER HARVEST ON THROUGH SERVICE IS ASKED Mayor Urges Placing of Portland on Parity With Seattle. Appealing to R. H. Aishton. district Yieia of Cereals Will Eclipse That Administration, for the placing of Port- of Any Former Year land on a parity with Seattle on h rnn irVi train aonrina - thA Vaat Mow- r Baker, in a letter yesterday directs HOOD RIVER, Or.. July 18. (Spe .ttprtinn rn ,h frt tht tv,. tnrni.rh clal.) Harvest of Hood River grain train service to Seattle has not been crops Is beginning. With many tracts disturbed since the Government took P anted to oats, barley and wheat, th over the railroads, while the service to Jleld of cereals will eclipse that of any Portland has been curtailed. former year The p-ain acreage In The letter to Mr. Aishton Is as fol- th UPPer Valley is especially heavy lWl : . ; . Manhattan Shirts Clothes for Men in War Service and Business We are all doing our part in this great world war. Some of us in our civilian clothes, others in the Army service. Our store is in a position to keep you well dressed in whichever capacity you follow. Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes are made of all-wool fabrics, which last long and give service. There's no better way for us to prove it than have you in one of these suits. Suits for Business $25, $30, $35, $40 and Up Army Uniforms $30 and Up to $50 We Carry a Complete Line of Service Hats and Caps Sam'l Rosenblatt & Co. The Men's Store for Quality and Service Gasco Bldg. Fifth and Alder CHILD LIFE PORTRAYED MISS ANDREWS, AT HIPPODROME. CAPTl'BES SEW HEARERS. picture la "The Red-Haired featuring Roy Stewart. Cupid,' lows: "I wish to can to your attention the question of through train service be tween Portland and Chicago in hope BUILD UP YOUR BLOOD AND ENTIRE i SYSTEM BENEFITS When vou feel badly all over but with no particular organ of your body notice ably out of order, you need a tonic for the blood. You require a medicine that will benefit the whole system. The blood reaches every part of the body and when it is built up the whola system quickly benefits. Let the blood become deranged and deficient in needed elements and the nerves 'will be badly nourished pad headaches, neuralgia, sciatica, func tional paralysis and a host of other dis orders may result. One such trouble is nervous headache and the success of the tonic treatment throueh the blood is described by Mrs. J. H. Morgan ol Correctionville, Iowa, who says: "I was in a terribly nervous and run- flown condition and suffered greatly from nervous headaches. Mv head, Eeemed as though it would burst, and 1 had freauent dizzv srells. I was in despair of getting well until I read about Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and be rrnn tabanir them. A few boxes proved that thev were an ideal remedy for the treatment of nervous disorders and since then I have used them as a family medicine. The pills have done more for me than anything else and I tpmrnmeiiif them heartily." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are a tonio for the blood and nerves. They be gin at once to build up the system , rreakened by excess or overwork. They are sold by all druggists, or sent, post paid, on receipt of price, 50 cents per box ; six boxes for $2.50, by the Dr. Wil li ams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. this season For years the planting of grains here was so light that no threshing ma chine was operated. An old outfit. owned by Hans Lage, an East Side rancher, was repaired year Before last and this machine and two others will harvest the crops of local orchardlsts this season. Clever Impersonator Talks and Tells Stories That Her Audience Kever Geta Tired Of. Child Imitators who really express th,e happy little voices and mental background of real childhood are so rare that the occasional ones, like Ce celia Loftus and Irene Franklin, stand out. It has remained for Undine An drews, a clever Impersonator on the new bill at the Hippodrome, to lift the Imitations Into the realm of sincerity again. " . Miss Andrews simply walks onto the stage and talks a bit with the audience. telling her hearers that she doesn't sing and doesn't dance, but that ehe knows a few children's etorles. The audience is willing to listen, and ehe Immediately gets Into the character of some little girls and boys everybody knows. Her 6tories are fresh and new, but It's the little chuckling note of childish confidence ehe expresses and the amazing Information she puts into her eyes and wagging forefingers that captures her hearers. They applauded every story and could have kept her there Indefinitely. Frank Gardner and his company of three present a military musical skit called "An Aeroplane Elopement," which is replete with fun. Nell Claire, a vivacious girl, appears as the heroine in the skit, and Mr. Gardner, Billy Link, Junior, and W. J. Gardner all add ma terially to the comedy with jokes and dance and drumming. The drum ac companiment was one of the clever novelties. William Morrow gives a brilliant characterization of the seven ages of life. Imitating types from the cradle to the grave. . He sings nicely, too. Nance and Taylor appear in a smart satire called, "'Corsets," In which they chat amiably about erything and finally return clad In bathing costumes. the girl In smart, cute costume, and the man a caricature. They occasion much hilarity. A dainty dancing pair are Joseph Cole and Gertrude Denahy, whirlwind steppers. Miss Denahy's frocks are gorgeous and smart. The Theodore Trio closes the bill In a comedy gymnastic act In which one of the Theodores, a strong girl, ably supports her two partners. One of the partners provides the comedy. The Kelso Minister to Do War Work. KELSO, Wash., July 18. (Special.) Rev. H. E. Greening, pastor of the local M. E. Church for the past two years, has passed all examinations for T. M. C. A. work overseas, and ex pects to be assigned to overseas duty sometime after September 1, when the conference year and his local pastorate ends. Mr. Greening was summoned to day to go to Camp Lewis Monday to attend a ten-day school of instruction for Y. M. C. A. workers. Pendleton Minister Resigns. PENDLETON, Or.. July 18. (Spe cial.) Rev. R. E. Clevinger, who has been pastor of the First Baptist Church here for the past four years, has re signed his charge here and expects to be relieved before September 1. He has made no plans for the future. PASTOR LIKES ARMY WORK Dr. McLeod, of Minneapolis, Re signs Pulpit to Join V. 91. C. A. TACOMA. Wash.. July 18. (Special.) Rev. Dr. Murdock McLeod. of Minne apolis, formerly pastor of the First Presbyterian Church. Tacoma. will be hut pastor for the V. M. C A. at Cam p Lewis hereaften, Dr. McLeod came West on a vacation and was so Im pressed with the cantonment that he decided to accept an Invitation to re main thre. He Is widely known to TELEPHONE OPERATORS WANTED Telephone operating offers many advantages to young women who are seeking employment at a good salary with opportunities for advancement. Good Pay $9 per week paid beginners. jF Rapid and frequent increase in salaries. - ' Permanent Position Work is steady and permanent. Many opportunities for advancement. Interesting Work Pleasant, clean, fascinating. Associates carefully selected. Pleasant Surroundings Light and well ventilated offices. Comfortable lunch and recreation rooms. Special Advantages Annual vacation with pay. Sick Benefits, Death Benefits, Pensions, without cost. Good Character and Good Health are required. Young women between the ages of 18 and 26 are preferred. Previous experience is not necessary. Our employment office im. located on the Sixth Floor, Room 601, in the Telephone Building, Park and Oak Streets, and is open from 8:30 A. M. to 5:30 P. M. We invite you to call at this office' and meet Miss Thomas, who will gladly discuss the matter personally with you. An appointment may be made by calling Broadway 12000. The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company Room 601 Sixth Floor PARK AND OAK STREETS HiiiimMiimiimimiiiiimmiiiimiiimiiiiiHiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiimii Portland rresbyterlans. having often spoken In that city. "With its regular prograi me of mil itary drill end discipline, its ample provision for every- comfort and de velopment of the physical man, the y. M. C. A. and Knights of Columbus, with their religions, social and educa tional work. I think Camp Lewis af fords the best to be obtained for the men of the National Army." Dr. Mc Leod explained. -Kelso Red Cross Klects Officers. KELSO. Wash.. July 18. (Special.) Officers for the year were elected at a meeting of the Cowlitz county neo Club rooms last night. George Kerr, chairman of the chapter, presided, and the following officers were elected: O. IX Easton. chairman: Mrs. Eugene Mc Corkle. Lexington, vice-chairman: Mrs. Grover Thornton, secretary: E. A. Knight, treasurer: M. J. Lord, chairman board of managers: E. M. Adams, C. A. Pauley. C. J. Shlplay and C. H. Olson, members board of managers; Grover Thornton, chairman civilian relief; B. M. Atkins, chairman military relief; George F. Plamondon. chairman board of finance; J. P. Buford. chairman membership, and Miss Ceclle Hanslckie, publicity agent. Phone your want ads to The Orego- Cros chapter tn the Kelso "ommenr-!al nian. Main 7070. A 09S. St. LUMBER STOCKS CUT DOWN Heavy Shipments Leave Moldings Lowest In Years. SEATTLE, -Wash., July 18. Western Washington and Western Oregon lum ber mills will on August 1 have the lowest stocks on hand that have been noted any time during the last two years, according to the prediction to day of leading operators. In May and June xhe mills here have shipped out 65,000,000 more feet of lum ber than they cut and there is no sign of a letup In the volume of orders. Ostrander Section Man Drowns. CASTLE ROCK, Wash., July 18.- ( Special) -Gust Jeannises was drowned In the Cowlitz River near the George Smith place south of town, at about 12:30 P. M. today. He belonged to the Ostrander section crew and was un married. Two boys of the crew were near swimming. The man could not Bwlra and they saw he was drowning. They went to the rescue, but were un able to get him out, and were nearly pulled under themselves, so had to let him go. At latest reports the body had not been recovered. 4f Montesano Awards $9 75 Damages. MONTESANO, Wash., July 18. (Spe cial.) To Dora C. Titus, of this city, has been awarded $975 damages against the city for damages she re ceived when a plank on a sidewalk sprang up and she stepped Into the hole opened. Injuring her foot. Stolen Saddle Costs $100. PRINEVTLLE, Or.. July 18. (Spe cial.) Harry Cayton was fined $100 yesterday in Judge Bowman's court for the larceny of a saddle from E. C. Wolke. Cayton la serving the time In jail because he is unable to pay the , An. . . r5. - ' The nicest Dlace that you could possibly spend the Warm Days . and Moonlight Evenings Is at COLUMBIA BEACH The Ideal Rmort for Women and Children For Kverybody. The Beach was never better nor the swimming more delightful than at present. The safest place for ladles and children to have a day'e outing. Let the men folk join them In the evening and enjoy the four hours' daylight. DANCING EYERY EVENING ROLLER SKATING MANY OTHER AMUSEMENTS FREE SWIMMING LESSONS Ladies Mondays, Wednesdays, 10 to 2. Children Tuesdays, Thursdays, 10 to 2. H. P. Terwllltger, Instructor. SPECIAL ! BATHING GIRLS' PARADE NEXT SATrHDAT 4 P. 3X $150 In Cash Prlseav Seven Award. OPES TO ALL NO BXPKJfgE. . Make Entries Now at Portland Knitting Company's Broadway Store. Sandy's Kodak Shop, 328 Washington Street, SAMPLE SHOP 360 MORRISON STREET, CORNER PARK Genuine Clearance Sale of Suits, Dresses, Coats, Skirts and Waist :s Our Motto Is Money Back if You Find You Did Not Get the Best Bargains in the City -;--.-r.:t.-na r prt.rq Most beautiful Fall styles in Coats, Suits and Dresses to induce early shopping. Hundreds of Samples just arrived. We will place the Fall Samples in this Genuine Sale HALF PRICE. Do not fail to make this inspection. Hundreds of Suits and Coats You would hardly believe this statement. Such beautiful Suits and Coats, all sizes and shades, at Genuine Clearance Price ( Your Money Back If Not Satisfied Some in ThU Lot Would B Clveap at $37.50 $16.95 $14.95 3 Silk Dresses and Serge Dresses to be cleared out at once. Some in this lot run. up to $32.50. At the Genuine Clearance Sale Price and $12.93 also Hundreds of new Fall styles in silk and Georgette crepe waists, which arrived a little too early, will be placed in this lJO QE Genuine Sale at only.... i)d.ZJ Hundreds of Fiber Sweaters QC at only PO.UiJ Minn i. """ "- ana- " ' ,r '- T -T- $8.95 $12.95 HUNDREDS OF PURE SILK SWEATERS AT HALF PRICE ELAN1 SAMPLE SHOE 360 MORRISON STREET, CORNER PARK