T i TITE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, JULY 22, 1917. DRAR MASTER LIST " GIVEN TO PRINTER FOOD GOIITBOLBILL PROVIDES ISflOCH'PIE' Tally Sheets Compared and Corrected for Sending to Exemption Boards. FIRST TO GO ON TUESDAY Registration In Porto Rico Exceeds Estimates, bat AVork in Alaska Is Slow and Results Will Not Be Ready for Some Time. ALL MEN DRAWN SHOULD FEEL HONORED IN BKt.(i SE LECTED. SAYS SENATOR CHAMBERLAIN. WASHINGTON, July 21. Sen ator Chamberlain, chairman of the- Senate military affairs com mittee and joint author of the draft law. who drew the second number for the selective draft, today issued the following state ment: "Everything went off with ab solute precision, testifying to the care with which the admirable plans had been formulated by the President under the skillful man agement of Provost Marshal-General Crowder. It will prove to the country that the selective draft plan for securing an Army Is the fairest that could have been devised, distributing the burden of the war so far as man power is concerned equitably, evenly and Justly among all young men ofthe country be tween 21 and 30. 'It is not a conscript system, nor does it provide a conscript Army. On the contrary, every man drawn ought to feel hon ored, and, I believe, will feel hon ored, that he has been selected to serve his country." "WASHINGTON, July 21. Despite the fact that officers and clerks of Pro vost Marshal-General Crowder's office worked all last night to complete the drawing that fixed the order of mili tary liability of 10.000,000 registrants, the tally sheets had been compared and corrected before dark tonight and the master list was in the hands of the printer. Copies will be mailed to local exemp tion boards beginning not later than Tuesday and the summoning of the first draft of 687.000 men can begin. General Crowder tonight issued the following statement: "The drawing is complete and has beTi apparently successful. The offi cial tally sheets have been compared, sent to the printer and the proof is being received. Final copies will be ready for distribution not later than Tuesday. Certification Is Next Step. "The next step will be the certi fication of the results of the drawing to 4557 local boards and the applica tion by each board of Its chart to its serially numbered list. This need con sume but little time, and when done the -order of priority of the nearly 30,000,000 registrants to report for ex amination will be revealed. "Such additional drafts as may be or dered by the President will be filled by calling men in the order of this established priority and no further drawing ever will be necessary. Each local board, upon receipt of Its chart and upon notification by the Governor of the quota to be raised by it. may proceed at once, under regulations al ready promulgated, to summon men for examination. PresM Praised for Assistance. "We have now passed the stage in the execution of the selective service act when we must have concert of action by the states. In raising state contingents the race is to be the swift est. "I cannot let this opportunity pass without adverting to the very great value of the assistance which has been to earnestly and efficiently rendered ky the press. "Without the systematic campaign of public information that prepared the country for the registration, the en rollment of 10,000,000 men on June 5 would have been impossible. The gen erous support of the newspapers throughout the period since registra tion day is appreciated and only the most thorough efficiency could have placed upon the streets, within a few hours after the first number was drawn, lists for each registration dis trict, showing the names of the per eons who would be summoned for ex amination on the first call of the local boards. Regulations Made Public. General Crowder also made public the text of the regulations for their application which will accompany the master lists. The only new feature shown is the plan for handling cards that are found to have duplicate num bers, or are otherwise confused, and also of dealing with those received July 10, when the local boards closed their lists to begin numbering. By the plan worked out these add! t ional cards will receive an order of their own by lot, and then will be add cd to the lists of the districts from which they come, and be affected by the drawing precisely as if they had I been received and numbered before the board lists were closed. Where several cards bear the same Ferial number, one will be drawn from the group and retain the duplicated number, while the others will be re garded as unnumbered, and the process of adding them to the lists be followed. District Boards Appointed. . Another step accomplished during the day was the appointment of the dis trict boards of 32 of the states, and announcement of the names of the five men who will compose each of them. Borne states have six or eight boards to ease the task. Federal judicial dis tricts, the areas used for geographical distribution of the boards, are divided Into two or three sections for that pur pose, and a separate board named for each. These district boards will have no function until the local boards In the! territory have begun to certify to them the men found fitted for military duty physically and not burdened with de pendents. The higher boards are courts of appeal, either for the individual o Tor the Government, against the find lngs of the local board. Missing Number la Found. The question of Industrial exemp tlons has been turned over to these dis trlct boards. They will be sole judges of any registered roan s field of great est service to the Nation, whether In the Army or in the munitions factory, business house or other civilian occu pation in which he is engaged. The first purpose today in checkin the tally sheets was to discover one missing number. A blank capsule was found in the drawing. At the time notation was placed on the tally sheets SOCIETY GIRL THRILLED BY AIRMEN'S FEATS. . 11 fr " - u - V--v xxvvi I h&S Yi vW?X - . fA h : x; ii - -I ! I Xrs JU. - lt 1 i t : . I N-X-? ?Xl- l- i Senate Rejects House Plan of Civil Service Requirements for Employes. $2,500,000 IS INVOLVED Photo Copyright by TJnderwood. MISS FLIU WHITNEY. Miss Flur Whitney, daughter of M r. and Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, was ntenselv interested in the daring stunts of the airmen who took part in a ball game played by Army and Navy aviators at Peacock Point, the Summer home of Henry P. Davison, for the bene fit of the Red Cross. before the game, as the airmen arrived at the foint, they circled around the place In single file, making a most unusual sight. Several of the fliers hen made spectacular flights, penorming every daring stunt Known in the category of thrillers. Mr. Davison, new head of the war council of the Red Cross, generously lent his Summer home to the cause. About $5000 was realized by the event. J 'SJI showing that the blank had come up No. 10,004. 1 The drawing was carried througn. however, without regard to the blank, the next number announced being placed as No. 10,004. It appeared more likely that an empty capsule had been placed in the Jar inadvertently than that a numbered slip had been lost. One of Numbers Changed. W on nu. -ber 10, .9 had be rawn. however, the empty capsule was all that remained in tne jar, and it was known that one slip had not been placed in the drawing. Today's check ing showed the missing number to te 4664 in the serial lists of registrants. That number will be placed as No. 10,004 in the .liability lists on the of ficial records, and all numbers drawn after that will be moved down one point, so that the present last number. 3217, now posted as No. 10,499, will be come No. 10, SOU, completing tne draw ing. There will be also other minor cor rections to make. Until the official list Is published, however, no definite statement of the probable number of revisions can be made. Tally Sheets Carefully Kept. Indications are that it will be very small and that the tally sheets were kept so carefully that a practically perfect result was obtained immedi ately on the discovery of the missing number. Registrants will not be, advised of ficially to appear for examination be fore local boards until the master list of the drawing has reached the local boards. The names of those to come forward will then be posted and any man who fails to appear when notified ill be promptly hunted down and the penalties imposed for attempted evasion exacted. Word of the registration in Porto Rico came today from the uovernor, who reported that it would far exceed es timates, 104,550 men having registered when the count was made and addi tional cards expected by mall will bring the final figure perhaps to 110,000. - Registration in Alaska is proceed ing slowly and the total may not be available for some time. MEN DRAFTED RUSH TO ENLIST Walla Walla Battery Open. Until Noti fication Is Official. WALLA WALLA, Wash., July 21. (Special.) Major Paul H. Weyrauch announced last night, after a telephone conversation with Adjutant - General Thompson, that recruiting will be held open for the field artillery battery be ing organized here. It is expected that the young men whose numbers were drawn yesterday will make. a rush to join the Walla Walla battery. In fact more than a dozen either joined yester day or said they would today. The officers hold that until the young men drawn are officially notified they can still pick any branch of the serv ice they desire. Major Weyrauch will go to Spokane tonight to organize a battery there. Lincoln Tliinks Quota Is In. NEWPORT, Or.. July 21. (Special.) Citizens of this county are wonder ing who is responsible for the insuf ficient credit allowed for recruits from among its young men. Only a credit of 11 Is allowed for the entire county, leaving 23 to be drawn from those registering. The little town of Wald- port alone furnished 11 recruits. New. port 6, Toledo 6, Siletz 5, Rose Lodge 1, Otis 6, with an additional 6 or 8 from scattering precincts, making more than 40 Lincoln County boys already in the service, six more than Its quota. NAVY ASKS $137,366,177 ESTIMATES MADE FOR SUPPLIES AND YARD IMPROVEMENTS. Senator Chamberlain Upholds Plan to Provide Places for Democrats, Holding That Civil Service Is Impracticable Now. ORBGONIAN NEWS BUREAU. Wash ington, July 21. Two million five hun dred thousand dollars' worth of jobs were placed on the Democratic pie counter by the United States Senate when It voted, 38 to 24, to strike from the food conservation bill a provision Inserted by the House requiring that all salaried employes of the food con trol office or bureau should be ap pointed through the civil service. This was the largest morsel of patronage that has been dangled before the eyes of hungry Democrats in many a day and the temptation was too great to be resisted. As it is clearly understood that this patronage is to be parceled out to "de serving Democrats," it was not sur prising that 33 of the 38 Senators who voted for the spoils system were Dem ocrats and that only one Democrat, Reed, of Missouri, voted against the elimination of the House amendment. Chamberlain Favors Spoils. Thus it appears that Senator Cham berlain, a. strong advocate of civil service when President Wilson was placing postmasters in the classified service, turned up in favor of the spoils system when it came to making provision for $2,600,000 worth of food control jobs. He went further, and, having charge of the food bill, actively opposed the House provision and cham pioned the Senate amendment doing away with the civil service require ment. The senior Oregon Senator objected to the civil service requirement in the first place because he said the food control offices were only temporary and the House provision would place them permanently on the Government payroll, something the law does not provide, for civil service employes have often been dropped in the past when their services were no longer re quired. But going further, Senator Chamberlain said: ' "There are not enough men who have stood the examination and are now on the classified register to fill the requirements of - this act," Tet the Civil Service Commission has all the machinery necessary to hold new examinations on a day's notice and could provide all the force Mr. Hoover will ever require inside of 10 days; It could provide them faster than the food controller could put them to work. Civil Service Value Questioned. Senator Smoot pointed out that there are large numbers of both men and women on the civil service register today who have passed the civil serv ice examination and are eligible to appointment. To pass them by and fill the food control office with de serving Democrats" with a pull, he ar gued, would be a gross Injustice. But Senator Chamberlain was obdurate and took a decidedly advanced stand when he stated: "I feel that it would not do very much harm to repeal the whole civil service act, because it does not work with justice and equity among those who are in the employ of the Government." Senator McNaryk of Oregon: Senator Borah, of Idaho, and Senator Jones, of Washington, .voted to place the food control positions under civil service. After the vote had been taken Sen ator Penrose, who had been a facetious critic of the Senate amendment, went on record as predicting that "before the expiration of the present Congress the President by executive order will convert these places into the civil service that have been filled by Dem ocrats." l. m.H iinn'is ' ' ' '',Wr lui .m. Suits for Slimmer Seas or Shady Shores Here are soft, cool clothes in fabrics that temper July suns; they will give you ease and comfort. Clothes of unimpeachable style, flawless in workmanship; colorings that are in complete harmony with the season. $15, $18, $20, $22.50, $25 and upwards Morrison at firarth1 CABINET HAS STORM Kerensky Criticises Ministers for Not Quelling Mutiny. MEETING ENDS AT DAWN BERKELEY MAX, FORMER PORTLAND ER, TO PREACH HERE. f W-UwWav AvvSfc. lath. ,.;.- iajSw Rev. Frank R. Kennell. Rev. Frank R. Kennell, for merly of this city, but now of Berkeley, Cal., is a visitor in this city. On Sunday morning he will preach at 11 A. M. at the Church of Our Father, on Broad way and Tamhill street. Amounts Cannot Be Explained In Let' ter of Transmittal, for Obvious Reasons, Congress Advised. WASHINGTON. July 21. Secretary Daniels today submitted to the House estimates aggregating J137.366.177 for war needs of the Navy, including am munition, ordnance supplies, improve ments of yards and docks, clothing and enlargement of the Navy-yard and gun lactory here. Secretary Daniels explained that these and other estimates recently sub mitted are "imperatively necessary for the public service," but for obvious reasons cannot be explained in letters of transmittal. The largest estimate is $105,566,177 for -the naval establishment." This in eluded $12,446,000 for ordnance and ordnance stores: $25,000,000 for ammu nition; $22,000,000 for batteries and outfits for vessels: $30,000,000 for re serve and miscellaneous ordnance sup plies, and $2,650,000 for clothing for marine corps. A separate approprla tion of $23,400,000 for yards and docks is asked. For extending and equipping the ma. chine plant at the naval gun factory and lor improvements of the Wash ington Navy-yard $2,500,000 and $5,. uuu.uuu, respectively, are asked. Dishonorable Discharge Ordered. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, July 21. Private Walter A. Birch. Company M. Forty-fourth In fantry, Vancouver Barracks, is ordered discharged for fraudulent enlistment. TRACTOR MERGER IS MADE Minneapolis and St. Louis Imple ment Firms ' Unite. Of interest to local implement men is the merger of the Bull Tractor Com pany, of Minneapolis, with the Whitman Agricultural Company, of St. Louis, and the selection of the latter city as the future home of the tremendous organ ization thus formed. Announcement of the merger was made yesterday. The new organization will be known i the Whitman Bull Tractor Com pany, with an authorized capitallza tion of $1,500,000. In the tractor In dustry the Bull Tractor Company occu pies the unique position of having more of its tractors sold and In oper atlon on American farms than any other company. The company has only been in the selling market since 1914, CANADA GRAIN PRICE FIXED Maximum for No. 1 Storage Is $2 Northern In .40. TORONTO. Ont, July 2L The Board of Grain Supervisors for Canada has ruled that, dating from August 1 next the maximum price of wheat, basts No. 1 Northern, in store at Fort William, shall not exceed $2.40 a bushel. This holds until further notice an applies to the rest of the present crop. Hair Often Ruined By Washing With Soap Soap should be used very carefully if you want to keep your hair lookln its best- Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkali. Thi dries the scalp, makes the hair brittle and ruins it. The best thing for steady use is Just ordinary mulslfied cocoanut oil (which Is pure and greaseless). and is better than the most expensive soap or any thing else you can use. One or two teaspoonfuls will cleanse the hair and scalp thoroughly. Simply moisten the hair with water and rub it in. It makes an abundance of rich, creamy lather, which rinses out easily removing every particle of dust, dirt, dandruff and excessive olL The hal dries quickly and evenly, and it leaves the scalp soft and the hair fine and silky, bright, lustrous, fluffy and easy to manage. You can get mulslfied cocoanut oil at any pharmacy: it's very cheap, and a few ounces will supply every member o th family- Xer months. A4.V, I too late. The locomotive struck her and threw her far into the air. She fell in front of the engine and was struck again, to be thrown clear of the track. She was dead when trainmen picked her up. Mrs. Crowder was the daughter of Mrs. Matt Englert. who lost her hus band and brother through death in the last few months. Russian Soldiers and Sailors With Machine Guns Arrest Thlrty-slx Maxlmillsts More Troops . Arrive From Front. PETROGRAD. July 21. The Cabinet meeting leading to the announced res ignation of Premier Lvoff sat until dawn yesterday and was somewhat stormy. Minister of War Kerensky criticised the ministers and military authorities for not rising to recent events and for not using their powers to suppress mutiny. M. Tereschtenko will remain in of fice as Foreign Minister. M. Keren sky, besides succeeding M. Lvoff as Premier, will continue for the present his duties as War Minister. PETROGRAD, July 21. Detach ments of soldiers and sailors with ma chine guns have arrested 36 Maximilist (radical Socialist) delegates and con veyed them to the Baltic fleet on board the Russian destroyer Orphei. which was lying at a British quay. The resi dents participating in the Petrograd disturbances are being disbanded. More troops are arriving from the front. BEACH TRAIN KILLS WOMAN Bride of Few Months Is Walking on Track When Struck. Mrs. Blanche Crowder, a oride of a few months, was struck and almost instantly killed by the Clatsop Beach special on the Astoria division of the North Bank road yesterday afternoon, as she was walking along the track a mile east of Scappoose. Mrs. Crowder left her home on the West stock farm, two miles east of Scappoose, where her husband is em ployed, to walk to Scappoose, along the railroad track. Two tramps be hind a thicket along the road evidently alarmed her, for she turned and started back toward home. Her parasol, which he was carrying to protect her from the afternoon sun, cut off her vision Evidently she did not hear the train. as she was slightly deaf. The engi neer apnUed the emergency brakes, but ALEXANDER WRIT HEARD Case of Dismissed Principal Is Be fore Judge Gatens. Arguments on the petition of Mrs. Alevia Alexander for a writ of review of the action of the Portland School Board, which dismissed her from the school service, were heard yesterday by Circuit Judge Gatens and continued until Monday morning. Mrs. Alexander formerly was prin cipal of the Benson Polytechnic School, but was transferred to another school. She then appealed from the action of the School Board, but the Board was upheld by Circuit Judge Gantenbeln. The Supreme Court, however, reversed Judge Gantenbeln. The School Board then gave her a hearing and dismissed her from the schools, and Mrs. Alexander Is now ap pealing from their action. U. S. WANTS HOTEL COOKS Army Asks 58 Association Presi dents for Loan. WASHINGTON, July 21. The quartermaster-general's department has sent out telegrams to presidents of 68 hotel associations throughout the coun try requesting the "loan" of 3840 ex perienced cooks to superintend the kitchens in the 16 cantonments for the new National Army. The bakery unit to be put in at American Lake will require the serv ices of 160 men. Read The Oregonlan classified ads. IVERSIDE PARK J lVThe Wonder Spot of the Willamette Announcement Extraordinary Portland's Newest and Most Beautiful Outdoor Amusement Resort Will Open Saturday, July 28 Accessible by automobile, Oregon City and Milwaukie street cars and by boat. Among the many successful attractions Manager Montrose M. Ringler will present is the indoor natatorium, the huge open-air dance pavilion, the clubhouse and its beautiful ar rangement, the pontoons for the bathers in the Willamette, two augmented orchestras and continuous dancing. Admission to the grounds. Picnic grounds. Landing and parking. 5-Cent Fare on All Streetcar Lines FREE Riverside Park will be opened to the public at a cost of $50,000 as Portland's amusement mecca, seeking especially the patronage of women and children. AN THEATER WASHINGTON ST. Bet. Park and W. Park nrrriAV monday, 1UJJAI, TUESDAY USE OUR NEW ENTRANCE ON WASHINGTON STREET Continuous 1 to 11P.M. Daily New Show Every Sunday and Wednesday Present JACK MULHALL A Story Packed With Pep, Zip, Go and Heart-quickening Action "HIGH SPEED" in VAUDEVILLE AL HALLETT & CO. In "Dream" Yr4n of Comedy. SHELBY SISTERS Classy Harmony Dnetlsta. SHAW & SHARP Comedy. Son and Patter. WILLY KARBE The Vp-Si de-Down Marvel. Children when accompanied by their parents admitted free to matinees, except Saturdays and Sundays fC?1 1 03.2