V ft FATE OF WOUNDED AND SLAIN III WAR Work of an Army Medical Stall In Battle. HOW DEAD ARE REMOVED. Whtn Ltft Behind Nonoombatant Bury Thtm Modrn Army Burgeon Baaea Hit Equipment en Eatlmat That 10 Par Cant of tha 8oldir En gaged Will Stop Bullata. WIiii t liiH-omin of Hie grlevouHly wuuikIihI Hint nro fiilllnit In the l'.nio peaii 'rV Ala what become of Hie Itri'iit lifii of tlio aliiln, piled Ova deep In long windrows? Are they nil burled, or lira many left to He where they fell? Those (locations lire answered fully lu "The' War Manual" edltlou of the Worlil'a Work. And the following ex trncti are made In litrite part from It: Every soldier of every army carries In aottled tin box flmt aid packet coimtnllliK of liuinliiifo, antiseptic Btiuxo and adhesive plimtor. A part of the training of Die soldier la bow to UNn these, end If the wound la slight nd In an aoceaalble place he may ap ply the dntug hltnaolf; If mure se vere, comrade may apply It for hint. The wounded aoldlor, with or with out Orat aid dressing, If he l able to walk, paia hack to the roar to the field hospital, which la alwaya more or loss sheltered from the tire of the nrmloa. If he la unable to walk he la carried back on a litter by the boa tilinl coria. Aa 'hhi at ho cnu atand trniiHportntlon he la passed on to the general hospital and thence In flue time to the convalescent camp to re-cujx-rnt. The Zonae of Leaaaa. The medical Muff of an army la quipped upon tiie theory, baaed upon pnt exKrlcnce, Hint 10 per cent will tie killed or wounded In each battle. If the number of cnmmltlc la 18,000 the eatlmato la that fully 20 per cent, or 8.(XX), will be dead on the livid; 8 per cent or I, WO, will be to severely wounded that It will be Inadvisable to wove them; 40 per cent or 7.2i0, will be able to walk, one-half of them to the atutlon for the ellKhtly wounded In the rear, the rent to the field hospital, nd 82 Per cent will require to be car rled off the field. lu deciding iiHin hla arrangement! fr a bnttle the chief auriceon leara In mind Hint the wounded wilt be dla trlbuled In "fconea of lonaea," The UNtml proportion of wounded In 20 per cent up to l.Otio yarda range; from I.imiO to hiO yards rting, 00 t cent; In tho fluul nuh. 10 per cent; la pur ult. 10 per cent The field hoxpitul la not pitched till the tactical situation develupa and the point where the mnln attack Is to be la made known. Then a alto l chosen beyond the range of the enemy'a fire, acccNMllilo to front and rear by rond, yet off tho route of uiartii of advancing troops, convviilent to wood and water If poHHllilo, nenr building which may bo UHcd for the overflow of wounded. The chief aorKcou haa under him a corps of surgeons for amputating the llmba of the wounded ond dressing wounda and a corpa of litter benrera and ambulance men. Many acta of hcrolatu Hint are not recorded In the annala of the battle are performed by the men of tho hospital corpa and of the Ited Cross, who go out often In the face of terrific firing and gather up the wounded. Where an army la Intrenched or fighting In the cover of a wood or In any other protected place which It holds for a long period of continuous fighting tho gravely wounded are gath ered up aa they full by tho litter bear era, aHHlsted by the soldiers, and are passed buck to tho rear. Burying tha Daad. When a fighting army la driven out of Ita position and tho advancing enemy rustic over tho fluid and on lu pursuit tho niedlcnl corpa then ha an opportunity to gather In tho wounded left In tho wnko of tho two armies, and often the niedlcnl corpa of the two op posing nruiloa work together upon the field, each carrying off lta wounded. Often an armistice la taken ao that the wounded may be picked up and the lead buriod. The hint service rendered to tho sol Jler by the medical stuff la to see that those killed ore promptly buriod after the battle, Thore ) no ceremony about It It la all a matter of the cold, hor rible business of war. One aquad col lects the dead In piles, another digs long, shallow trenches, and the bodies are packed In the trenches and covered with earth. . Often an army Is driven from lta position and must leave the deod be hind. Thon they are aoraetlmes burled by the enemy which occupies the posi tion, but more often, in the present wnr, the dend of both armies arc loft . to bo burled by tho noncombatants. Fifty Zeppallna Ready, Tho London Times prints extracts from a letter of two American engi neers who reached London from Rou ninnln vin Berlin. They visited the avlntlon stations In Germany and es timated that fifty Zoppclins ond hun dreds of aeroplanes wore rondy for ac tion. Thore was Immense activity In the construction of now air craft ond the training of men. Tho Sky Battleground How will history tell tha story of tha bat tles si I in mill gory That ars fouiiht a mil toward haaven whei tlie sllant air man dla? Uuw will battlefields, besiiuttod, hi th tracklasa air be plotted T Who will keep th fearful death roll of tha aoldlvra of lha akyf There will be no fifes and drumming; In their place tha asvava humming Of a thouannd tnotore spitting cluurta of laiernallotial tint. There will l no sliluld or oover where th fearlaaa mudly hover, llurlln lmm In through misty apaeea Willi the accuracy of fut. Who run fno the xhsntly wonder of an nlinhlti torn aauiulnr, Fallln limply throukb abysses of five thousand font or more? Tet th war Soda never fuller, Buper hroal On th altar Of the akle their live they error aa a au'Tlllc to wur. New York Bun. PITIFUL SIGHTS OF THE FLIGHT FROM PARIS. Drama of th Mlddl Agee, Say M. Brleux Women In Cattl Car. I)spntclus from Paris to the London Chronicle picture the misery of tho refugeca fleeing before the Uermuu ad vance on Purl. Kugene Ilrleui, the dramatist wit nessed tho arrival of a train full of fugitives at t'hartre aud described but XMrtenco In the Figaro, "Children weep or gaze wide eyed," be any, "woudorlng what Is the mat ter. Old folk alt In gloomy silence; tha women, with haggard cheeks and di sheveled hair, accuied to belong to an other ii Ke. What I see is a drama of the middle ages or even farther back lu the times of the Huns-days when whole population fled before wild horsemen clad In the skins of beast." One of the fugitives explained to blm why, after the first hour of their flight they hud bad to carry the eldor a well aa the younger children. Bhe allowed him a pair of boot. "I felt the Inside with my fingers. The nails hud como through the soles. I looked at tha child's feet They were dirty with red brown clots. It was blood." Lines of cabs, many of thoai Oiled with household good, raced through the boulevards to the southern and western railway stations. A woman who had arranged some time ago to leave 1'arl for Blarrita bad to be content at the last moment with a seat on a rough bench In a cat tle truck, Into which thirty passengers or wore were crowded, without glim mer of light The odd thing Is that there waa an Inflow aa well a an outflow, though not on so large scale. First there waa an uninterrupted stream of refu gees from the Immediate scene of the fighting. More then 20,000 of these poor people were landed at the Nord station, many of them carrying odd ments of property, and some of the children bud been allowed to bring favorite dog or canary. Mortality Decreaie In Q. A. R. As reported at the annual O. A. R. encampment In iH-trolt tho present membership. In good standing. Is 17L 3.15. Liurlng the year the mil was cur tailed by the death of 11,187 old sol dlers. which wna 151 less than died doling the preceding year. FORWARD, MARCHI X That the first effect of a snd- I den great war eliould be to shock J 4- aud stun even neutrals 1 nab- ural. ; ; Dut It Is high time for Amorl- con bualnns men to brace and build for the future. It'a awful, war Is, and It knocks old plans galley west Hut we're out of It and we're not ', nuliit. tn I in i1i-uu.fi tfifn It anil 41 i It's therefore plumb foolish to X go around wtth Jaws down In- j st end of working In a bravo, bold ! ! way toward tho aunllght ahead. We're reminded of this by a '. ! Z statement from one of the big- T f gust authorities In the country ou X X advertising. T J "It Is inconceivable," he says, I "that any merchant or manufuc- x t turer should cense or even cur- 4, tall his advertising Just when t r tho country Is on the threshold ? ... ...... t j, oi a iroiucuuous uouoio uurvesi J, T the natural harvest of our own T unprecedented crops and the X t logical harvest consequent on t me war in u.urupe. it is unuur t auch conditions as these that ad- f vertlalng reaches the icnltU of X lta nnn'ii. - 10 an my clients i nave sent . 1. 1. MnBannA. e ... .. . ... . , IU1B UIVD0HHQ, " 'lveep tne columns or me dally newspapers bristling with X your announcements and thus J open wide your doors for the T flood of prosperity that la bound to rush In. Make hay while the ', sun shines.' " J J , A wave of prosperity the like ! ! ; of which nobody now living has J J ever Been is getting ready to ',, ; ; sweep over the United Status. J J It cannot be otherwise when nnra la tha nnlv litar nntfnn left T i free to do the buHlness of the n-nr-M ft'e nntnlniT na anra n T X Thanksgiving and Christmas it's Just bound to como. Therefore, owny with doubts, t X crawfishing ond funk, .pnd for- X wnrd march! J Arms out for opportunity! i J Cincinnati Post J OREGON NEWS NOTES GF GENERAL INTEREST i " 1 Events Occurring Throughout the State During the Past Week. Fall, Fishing Season On. Astoria. The full fishing season on the Columbia river has opened and every cannery on the lower river, with the exception of those at Altoona and I'lllitr Hock, will be in operation, while the cold storage plunts will handle fish ulso, but probably on a limited scule. The prices which are to be paid for , raw flab are as follows: Bllversldes 2 I cents a pound,' dog salmon 5 cents j each, eteclheads 3 cents a pound, tul-1 Ilea and fall chlnooks 1 cents a pound. Demented a Re.ult of Exposure. Rom-burg. Kdward Peudura, an employ of a telephone company In Portland, Is here In a demented con dition. I'eudura was on a hunting trip In the Camas valley district, with some companions, when one night, be coming 111, he arose from hla bed and wandered Into the woods. Ills com panions searched for him all night and found him aome time the next day In a serious condition, due to expos ure. Immigration Will Be Pushed. Bntnm. With a view to Inducing Im migration from the east and middle west, the Bulcm Commercial Club la making arrangements to launch a letter-writing campaign. The plan Is to have residents In the city and sur rounding country write letters to their relatives and friends, describing the country's climate, resources and ad vantages, and urging them to visit this section with a view of locating. Eggs Laid on Sunday Pay Pastor. Dallas. The women of the Baptist church of this city have Inaugurated a novel plan to assist In the payment of the pnstor'a salary. Each woman member of the church having chick ens will contribute all the egga ber hens lay on Sundays. These will be turned over to a committee who will ell them, turning the cash Into the church treasury to be applied on the mlnUslcr'a salary. BY-PRODUCTS PLAN ASSURED Northweat Delegates at Portlagd Meet and Indors Recommendation. Portland. A central organization of a cooperative characater for the by products Industry In the northwest is now assured. Representatives from practically all of the fruit and vege table producing districts of Washing ton, Oregon, Idaho and Montana, to gether with representatives of a ma jority of the canneries and evaporat ors In operation In those states, at a meeting held In the Portland Commer cial Club rooms, Indorsed, without a dissenting vote, the plan of the by products committee appointed by the lust National Apple bIiow. The final report of the committee waa in effect that regularly appointed delegates should meet in Spokane dur ing the National Apple ahow tUHs fall, and at that time should form a cen tral organization which would act in an advisory capacity to districts seek ing the establishment of plants, em ploying expertB in this work, and would provide a common selling agency tor all such institutions includ ed in the association. It would have among lta functions the standardizing of the grade and pack of by-products, and would play an Important part In establishing the Industry In other ways. Contracts at U. of 0. Are Let. Eugene, The contract for the erec tion of the new administration build ing at the University of Oregon waa let to the Boyajohn-Arnold company, of Portland, for $89,750. The contract for the rebuilding of the heating sys tem on the campus waa let to the Kendall Heating company of Portland, and that for the plumbing In the new building to Flegal, Long & Co., of Springfield, for $3185. Evaporator at Hood River. Hood River. The Hood River Vine gar company, that now manufactures about 100 carloads of cider and vine gar each year, will erect a large apple evaporating plant In connection with tho vinegar factory. It is expected to build the evaporator with enough ca pacity to care for all the apples of the cooking and C grades as well as the regular cider apples. Baker Pioneer Celebrate. Bnker, The first Pioneer day cele bration ever hold in Baker county waa held at Halfway, in Pine Valley, at a largely attended and notable gathering of pioneers, many of whom came to Baker county In the early 60's, when the lure of gold caused cities of from 6000 to 10,000 to spring up in a day nnd to wither almost as quickly. A TRIAL Subscript! TO evening! Il 4 From Now Until Jan. 1, 1915 War The only afternoon paper in Portland that gets the Associated Press News This is the largest, best and most reliable news service in the world A Trial Subscription rill Convince You! Crook County JOURNAL AGENTS Prineville Oregon ion THE MAM News! !ProfosstCtal Cards. Lake M. Bechtell LAWYER Crook County Bank Building ( Pilneville, Oregon HOWARD GOVE DENTIST Crook County Bank Building Bennett, Sinnott & Galloway Aitorneys-at-Law General Practice The Dalles. Ore. N. G. WALLACE Attorney-at-Law Room 3-4-5 Kanutra Bld'g Prineville, Or J. B. Bell A. W, Sims Crook County Abstract Co. (Incorporated) PrineTllle, Oregon Abatracta Insurance Prof. A. W. Grater, Divina Healer Office in Morris Building three doors sontn ol Journal office. Prineville, Oregon J. Tregelles box M. R. C. S. Eng; and L. B, A. London; Licence Oregon State Medical Board. Hpecialint in Burtrerr: HrKiene: Ali mentary Canal, women and children' dinense. etc OBIee snd rwrtdenc Third Mreet, near Court Huqk. Tel.: Hooeer. Calla answered promptly, nlabt or day. Charges moderate Vfr Hm s tMm' VW S9Hm mm Vfmim iff. PrimfltU. Ormfm. OCCtJ LISTS SSelicnap dt d wards rJkjfti'imu mt durftmn. (County Physician.) T.E.J. DUFFY Attorneat-Law (Suooeaaor V W. A. Bell) Prisiviixi Oreook Qt C. SSrix lttmrng-mt-Cmm S?tat ttal0 Cornett Building, Room 6 D. a PEOPLES Civil and Irrigation Engineer Room 11 Adamson Bld'g Prineville, Ore. CAUS A1CSWIR1D POKm.Y DAT OB NlB1 Oprici on a Dooa Sooth or aoahbok'i . Daoa bTOBK. Both office an real denoe telephouea. PrintmHU. W. A. BELL Lawyer The Dalle . Orefron si. cm, JtHmrmtf-mt-jCmm 6. SSrinM Cawyr 7t trf. iPriniwilt; Ormfm. Willard II. Wirtz District Attorney Office in Crook County Bank Bid); Pkineville Oreqos l DC RECEPTION" Champ Smith, Propr Imported and Domestic Cigars Famous Whiskies Old Crow, Hermitage; Red Top Rye; Yellow Stone; Canadian Club; Cream Rye; James El. Pepper, Moore's Malt Porter, Ale and Olympia Draft Beer on Tap. 4 Imported Wines and i 5 Liquors.