Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194?, April 26, 1918, Page Page 8, Image 8

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    OLD AUDiTORiUM
AT CHAUTAUQUA
TOBEDESTROYED
Extensive ground Improvements
for the Gladstone Chautauqua park
were planned at a session of the ex
ecutive committee of thj assembly
Friday afternoon.
The old auditorium, which has
seen 24 yew's service. Is to be torn
down at once. It was at first thought
that with the completion of the fine
new audiorium last year, that the
old structure could be used as a
play shed but the storms of the past
winter have rendered the old building
on safe.
A system of ground walks from the
main gate to the new auditorium will
be planned and laid out, either of
crushed rock of gravel, ths upper
auto gate Is to be moved northerly
about 60 yards, and a new entrance
to the grounds will be constructed for
Ihe convenience of autos, ths fence
will be moved out along the road line
providing an excellent parking site
for machines. It la also planned to
run aditional water mains Into the
grounds.
Ths keynote of the coming assemb
ly will be Americanism, according to
Secretary Tom A. Burke who stated
Friday afternoon that a fitting pro
grant will mark the 25th anniversary
of the founding of the Gladstone as
sembly. The session will be held for
13 days beginning July ninth. Stock
subscriptions made last year are com
Ing in splendidly, acocrding to the
secretary, and with these funds on
hand the work planned will be prose
cuted rapidly.
President Wilson, In a letter, dated
December 17. 1917. asked aU Chau
tauqua In the country to continue
their work this year, aa never before,
on the grounds that the assembly is
one of the great morale-building in
stitutions of the country.
Ontario lets part of contract
new 1100,000 water system.
for
F
IF SHIPS ARE READY
WASHINGTON. April 24. Amer
ica can put 3,000,000 men on the fight
ing front in France within a year if
ships are ready, according to Adju
tant General McCain before the house
military affairs committee.
"I do not see any reason. If we
could get the ships, why w could not
send over 3.000,000 men after giving
them sufficient training in this coun
try," he said.
"If we have to have 5,000,000 men
and get sufficient ships, could we
have 5,000,000 men over there In two
and one half years?" asked Repre
sentative Morin.
"I think we could do It before that,
if we are willing to take a chance
here and there willing to go in with
out fear of making a mistake," re
plied General McCain.
He said his estimates were based
on giving the men three months' train
ing In this country and about the same
In the "war atmosphere over there,"
as he called It.
Questioned as to his opinion of In
creasing the draft age to 40, the adju
tant general said he saw "no objection
to it."
Other testimony before the military
committee revealed that America is
to build 375 hospitals of 1000 beds
each In France and the United States.
The cost of each, according to General
Black, chief of the englnjerg, will be
about $350,000. Based on Franch and
British experience, this number will
suffice for an army of 1,500,000 men.
El
E
ALBANY, Or., April 24. Albany
Commercial club at its niBeting Mon
day night decided that every able-
bodied man in the city should work
and the matter will be taken up by
the city council at the next mesting.
Members of the club believe that all
should work at this time regardless
of the amount of money they possass.
The Commercial club also decided on
a cleanup day for the city and resid
ents will be asked to assist the street
cleaning department of the city in
putting Albany in a clean condition.
BIG GERMAN WAR LOAN
AMSTERDAM, April 22. Subscrip
tions to the eighth German war loan,
says a message irom Herun, nave
reached a total of more than 14,550,-
000,000 marks, Including amounts from
former loans offered for conversion.
Further small subscriptions remain
to bo reported.
Oceans of W h i s k e yj
Booze worth $6000
Owners Not Located
TACOMA, April 24. County dry
squad officers Monday seized 79 cases
of whiskey In an abandoned barn
near Ardena on the Indian reserva
tion. The booze is estimated to be
worth more than $6000 at present
prices. The seizure followed investi
gation of a wagon seen coming from
the vacant barn. The owners have not
been found.
W. II TATT WOULD
RAISE ARMY TO
FIGHT 3 YEARS
BOSTON, Mass., April 21. "I am in
favor of amending the draft law so
that we can raise an army of fire
or alx million men in two years," said
ex-President William H. Taft in ad
dresses at two liberty loan rallies bore
Saturday.
This is to be a three year war. two
in which to send our boys across and
year to win the war.
"I cant fight in the trenches be
cause they say I couldnt get in them.
But I can do my share and will do it,
too, ever here. We can't make ome
lettes without eggs; neither can we
fight a battle without men. We wont
win until the nation is a house of
mourning. Well hare to go into the
Valley of the. Shadow of Death, but
the result will be worth the cost"
AMSTERDAM, April 24. The Het
volk announces that the German min
ister to The Netherlands has left The
Hague for Berlin, and that the Dutch
minister to Germany Is on his way
from Berlin to The Hague.
WASHINGTON. April 24. General
Pershing has cabled the war depart
ment protesting against the nomina
tion of a number of brigadier geuer
als whose names were sent to the
senate last week.
Pershing declares his recommenda
tions wera disregarded in the war de
partment and that some of the briga
dier generals nominated against his
wishes were not as capable men as
could have besn selected.
OSWALD WEST SAYS
AI
COTTAGE GROVE, Or., April 24.
Oswald West is the third to answer
negatively the question of Editor El
bert Bede as to whether or not he was
flirting with the Non-Partisan league.
Mr. West Is dreadfully surprised to
learn that his name has ever been as-,
sociated with that of the league, says
he has no idea what the league stands
for, has never been Invited to join It
and has never solicited its support or
had its support offered him. He says
he will endeavor to l?arn more of its
activities that he may judge whether
or not they are in the public Inter
est. Candidate West expresses the
hope that the interest in the question
of the Non-Partisan league will not
overshadow the Interest in his can
didacy. E
AGITATORS OF L W.. W.
WALLA WALLA, Wash., April 24.
Hundreds of members of the Paf
riotic league from all parts of this
county mat last night and denounced
the Non-Partisan league as disloyal,
appointed a committee of 50 to ''drive
all organizers away forthwith, in
cluding Russellites and Industrial
Workers of the World, particularly
those now in Jail, if they should by
.any misfortune be set frse by
the
courts."
Delegates from farming sections re
ported that many farmers had joined
the Non-Partisan league under a mis
apprehension and were wondering
how they could get back their $16
initiation fee.
FIGHTS HAND TO
HAND ACCOUNTS
FOR SEVEN HUNS
WASHINGTON. Anril 24. Fiehtlne
nan(j t0 nand wlln a horde of Hun8
on the Picardy battlefield, Lieutenant
John David accounted for seven of
them with his pistol and then fought
over their bodies with his empty rifle
until finally he was struck down by a
boche from behind.
The account of David's heroic death
as contai:
; Lieutenant Daniel C. Roper, Jr., to
his father, commissioner of Internal
revenue.
FIRE IN KLAMATH FALL8.
KLAMATH FALLS, Or., April 22.
Shock resulting from a fire which at
noon today practically destroyed the
Mongold frame building on Fifth
street, just above Main, caused the
sudden death of Miss Lillian Stilts,
senior member of Stilts Sisters, a dry
goods firm in this city.
Heart trouble is given as the can's
of her death.
J"
MM Bill
IS ON HIS WAY
Fii'iTim
NEW FINANCIAL
PLAN WITH BRITAIN
WASHINGTON, April S3. A rear
rangement of allied credits by which
the United States will lend large
amounts more directly to France,
Italy and the other allies instead or
through Great Britain, Is under con
sideration by the treasury. This would
tend to lessen Great Brttaln'a obliga
tions to the United States and de
crease ths demands of other allies on
her.
The United States has now extended
credits to the allies of $5.3S5.000,000,
ncludtng ltSS.000.000 still to the
cvdlt of Russia and naa paid out
$4,900,000,000. Great Britain has re
calved $3,720,000,000, France has re
ceived $1,565.00,000 and Italy $55,
000.000. The priuclpal difficulty of arrang
ing the loans direct to other govern
ments than Great Britain lies In the
accounting and In determining what
share of purchases are ultimately In
tended for the various nations. The
allied purchasing commission Is mak
ing an analysts of allied purchases to
assist the treasury in rearranging Its
credits. The practice of landing to
allies through Great Britain was a re
sult of Great Britain's world wide
purchasing system built up before the
United States entered the war.
J
L
Fl
SAN FRANCISCO, April 23. "The
ress of this country Is rendering the
test service to the nation that any
government ever enjoyed," said Q. H.
Powell, chief of the division of perish
ables of the food administration, at a
conference Monday with Commission
er Merritt and members of hla staff.
He said in part:
"One oi ma great problems of ths
food administration In Its infancy was
to make 100,000.000 persons under
stand ths reasons behind the rules and
regulations, the whys and wherefores
and the economic and military nec
essities of food conservation, and the
changes in policies regarding the re
stricted foods and days.
'The newspapers and wire services
jumped in and carried to the four cor
ners of the country tha gospel of food
conservation. lending freely their co
operation, without which the food ad
ministration's efforts would have been,
insofar as conservation is concerned,
a failure."
E
PENDLETON. Or., April 20. Dell
Blancett, famous all around cowboy
and one of the best known frontier
show performers of the West, was
killed in action on the western front
on March 30, according to a telegram
rsceived here this morning by the Am
erican National bank, from the di
rector of records at Ottawa, Canada.
Blancett was with the Canldlan
mounted service and had been in
France only a few weeks. Blancett,
who since the earliest days of the
Pendleton Round-Up has made this
city his headquarters, was one of the
organizers of tha Pendleton company
of cowboy calvary, and was first to
enlist. However, he was later reject
ed for physical disability and left ira
mediately for Canada where he was
accepted in tne mounted ser e.
iCE
SECRECY OF BALLOT
AMSTERDAM, April 22. According
to a telegram from Budapest, a half-
hour demonstrated strike took place
there yesterday.
All the factories stopped, tramways
ceased service and workmen signed pe
titions demanding the appointment of
a cabinet which would carry out the
demand of secret suffrage.
LATE TELEGRAPHIC
GENEVA, April 19. When Edith
Cavell was executed in Belgium by
the Germans, a girl friend, Miss Julia
Wyss, aged 20, of Geneva, was sen
tenced to 25 years penal servitude for
the same ofense. She is now in a
Prussian prison.
A petition for a pardon, signed by
3000 women of Geneva, was sent to
the crown princess of GFermany near
ly a year ago. A cold, almost brutal,
reply, signed by Baron Von Stulpen-
zei, secretary to the crown princess,
nas just been received. It states
briefly that the petition cannot be
taken Into consideration by the crown
princess.
NEW YORK, April 19. No essen
tial relief for food conditions In Oer
many may be expected from Ukraine
aunng the present economic veur
said Privy Councillor Von Eynern, of
the state food commission, In discus
sing the food supply situation at a
meeting In Berlin, according to the
Cologne Gazette, of March 21, a copy
of which has bean received here
Germany, he added, must continue to
ave and husband food as heretofore
I ployed in the Portland ship yaras.
MEN Or MONTANA WILL II
COMPELLED TO WORK S
OAY$ A WEEK
HELENA, Mont, April It
The State Council of Defense of
Montana today mads a rule re-
quiring all men, mentally and
physically able to labor, to do
five days' work a week upon pain
of prosecution under the broad
powers given the council to pro-
tect the people of the state dur-
Ing th war and do everything
necessary In lu view to bring
about the victory of the United
States. )
) 4
CHARLES REYNOLDS IS
J
GRESHAM, Or.. April 80. Funeral
services were held this afternoon at
Greshaiu M. E. church for Charles
Reynolds, whose death occurred on
Columbia slough last Wednesday.
Rev. D. M. Cathey officiated, inter
ment being made In Douglas cemetery.
Mr. Reynolds was born in Ackworth,
Iowa. September S. 1850, and came to
Oregon with hla parents In 1S63. His
family located on 160 acrea of land,
where the deceased had lived ever
since, one mtl east of Gresham on
the Powell Valley road.
CHINESE PARADE
FOR LOAN RALLY
THRU NEW YORK
NEW YORK. April 22.-Memben of
Chinese clubs and organisations In this
city, headed by Chinese boy scouts, a
Chinese fife and drum corps and a
company of Chinese women carrying
American and Chinese flags, paraded
through Chinatown Saturday night and
held a loan rally, at which many sub
scriptions were recorded.
American boy and girl scout acted
as an escort
E
LOS ANGELES. April 22. All
Southern California and part
of
of
Western Arliona were shaken Sunday
t 3:33 p. m.. by an earthquake which
wrecked practically all buildings and
residences In Hemet and San Jacinto,
two inland towns 45 miles southeast
of Riverside, and caused minor prop
erty damage in practically every
town and city.
August Carlson, who lived on San
Julian, street In this city, was found
In hla room at a late hour dead, with
tut any external marks of Injury.
Another man was killed In a panic at
Santa Monica, when he fell off a pier.
A woman waa injured by falling from
a second-story window at San Jacinto
and a number of persons were Injured
there and elsewhere, none seriously.
Three men entombed In a magne
tite mine tunnel near Hemet prob
ably were saved by fellow workers,
who drove an air shaft to them.
The severity of the shock seemed
greatest Inland, but it was distinctly
apparent at almost every point over
California south from a line from
Barstow to the coast and In some
parts of Arizona, although no dam
age was reported there.
In Los Angeles and vicinity the
lamage was apparent mainly In
broken windows. Hundreds of large
plate-glass windows here were shat-
ered. Several large buildings showed
cracks or bulges, but' the extent of
uch damage to buildings could Aot
e definitely ascertained.
Homes all over Southern California
were shaken, dishes rattled, furni
ture moved and in many places the
shock was such as to cause the occu
pants to tumble out hastily. In Ari
zona the shock was reported to have
extended as far east as Sellgman in
Arizona and Mllford in Utah.
Two small buildings collapsed at
Whitewater, west of Indlo, on the
Southern Pacific.
Hemet, about 25 miles east and
south of Riverside, and San Jacinto,
the next town north of Hemet on a
branch line of the Atchison, Topeka
ti Santa Fe railroad, were reported to
oe practically destroyed.
At San Bernardino the shock was
said by old residents to be the most
severe In many years. Scores of plate
glass windows were broken, a hun
ired feet of brick wall from one low
bulldlne fell into the street and
Riverside suffered a shock of slmi
ar Intensity.
jracks developed In several other
walls.
SALEM GRANGE
DEAD AGAINST
NONPARTISANS
SALEM, Or., April 22. Because of
reports circulated to the effect that
the Grange has taken a favorable at
titude toward ths Non-Partisan league,
he Salem Grange, at a meeting Sat
urday, passed a resolution disapprov
ing combination with any league or
political party. The resolution fol
io wg:
"Resolved, That this Grange go on
record as not favoring any combina
tion with any political party or league
whatsoever, and that we Instruct our
representatives to bring the resolu
tion to the attention of the state
Grange at Its next meeting."
LENROOT TAKES OFFICE
WASHINGTON, April 22. Ir-
vine L. Lenroot, of Wisconsin,
Republican, today was sworn in t
as 'a member of the senate as
successor of the late Senator
4 Hustlng, Democrat.
)
jcoimcnimuu uu
hard
An
COMPELLED 10 KISS
FLAG THREE TIMES
ALBUQUERQUE. N. M., April 83.
"I havent bought any Liberty bomls
and havent any intention of buying
ny. aa the war Is nothing to m," W.
Faust, a Santa F freight conductor,
I alleged to have aald today when
asked to buy a bond.
Faust was seised by a committee
of railway men who were at first de
termined to tar and feather him, but
arter giving htm one swipe with the
tar brush, It waa decided not to hu
mllate htm further Tn this way If he
would proclaim hla loyalty.
The crowd first compelled Faust to
kiss every atar in the flag at the
round houss. Ha was then brought
to the depot, where he was compelled
to mount a baggage truck and address
the passengers on Santa F train No.
1. He waa also required to kiss ths
flag again. After this he was marched
through the main street of the city
with a large American flag wrapped
around htm. Arriving at the. Cham
ber of Commerce building, Faust was
made to kiss the flag a third time and
Ign up for a $50 Liberty bond. He
then was marched back through town
followed by a howllnf and Jeering
mob and was released without receiv
ing bodily Injury.
ARE TAKEN OVER BY
I
LONDON, April It All of the prin
cipal railways in Ireland have been
taken over by the British military
authorities, said a Cork dispatch
printed la the Chronicle tooday.
The dispatch added that the post
office and telephone lines also have
been taken over and that all the guns
and ammunition have been removed
from Dublin gun shops. It Is supposed
that similar action will be taken In
other Irish cities.
The action of the British military
authorities in Ireland la evidently a
precautionary measure before the en
forcement of conscription. Strong
hostile feeling against the Irish draft
has developed in numerous localities.
AMSTERDAM, April II. Stream
of wounded Germans from France and
Flanders, says the frontier correspond
ent of the Telegraaf. continue so great
that all the hospitals, monasteries,
convents and schools, not only In Brus
sels, but In many towns, are filled to
overflowing. The Germans have even
requisitioned private houses for hospi
tals. Forty ambulance trains entered
Brussels daily last week. Many of
them were made up of cattle cars, In
which were litters of straw for the
wounded men.
SEAMEN FROM DUTCH
T DEPORTATION
AT SAN FRANCISCO
SAN FRANCISCO, April 22. Immi
gration officials today quartered at
Angel Island station 160 Chinese and
Japanese seamen, taken from Dutch
ships seized in New York by the gov
ernment. The men are waiting deportation to
the Orient at government expense, and
while held are being paid their regular
wages as seamen by the government.
PLOT IS HATCHED
TO
LONDON, April 22. According to
he Dally Telegraph' Rotterdam cor
respondent, a plot is being batched In
Berlin deliberately designed to compel
Holland to participate In the war.
The writer intimates that the Ger
man's first move has been made in the
attempt to find a pretext for complaint
that Holland departed from neutrality
by acquiescing to the entene's de
mand for her mercantile fleet.
CALLED KAISER
GREAT MAN NOW
FACES DIVORCE
BAKERSFIELD, Cat., April 22.
Robert H. Hilscher, a Civil War vet
eran, 71, has applied to the superior
court for a divorce. He charges that
his wife made unpatriotic remarks
about the government and called the
kaiser "the greatest man In the
world."
The Hllachers have three sons In the
American army and a daughter Is In
France as a Red Cross nurse. Hilscher
alleged hi wife la of German birth
and came here when she waa 17.
LONDON, April 24. Fifty thousand
persons at Strabana, North Tyrone
and East Donegal and 12,000 at Water
ford have signed the antl-conscrlP'
tlon pledge, It waa stated in dispatch'
es here Tuesday.
mriAiiT a
IRELAND'S RAILWAYS
WEAR UNIFORM
OR STAY IN BED
TOLD ROOKIES
CAMP LEWIS, American Lake,
Wash., April 30. "Wear a uniform or
stay In bod," Is ths ultimatum bauded
the CO conscientious objectors attach
ed to the base hospital of the Wild
West division yesterday. And all of
the CO nou-reslster chose to clothe
themselves In the ollv drab gar
menu. .
Orders were Issued to the objectors
yesterday requiring that everyon ap
pear In full uniform before ooio
In the afternoon, and the few who
thus far had objected to donning the
regulation clothing hurried to obtain
the necessary garment and make the
transfer from their civilian clothing
to which they clung since coming to
camp, None of the men refused to
exchange their clothing wbon the or
dor was taken to them officially.
ES
WASHINGTON, April 20. Undr
the classification tt men tor selective
draft service Provost Marshal Gen
eral Crowder haa advised the senate
military committee approximately
3.000,000 will be placed in Class 1
from which It Is expected alt future
calls will be taken. These t.000.000
according to General Crowder, are ex
clusive of between 500,000 and 1,000,
000 more annualy, who, it la esti
mated, will be made subjuct to mili
tary duty under the bill now In con
gress subjecting to registration
youths reaching their majority.
From the 2,000,000 men In Claaa 1
nearly 30 per rent of the total regis
tration of tho country and the addi
tional number secured by new legis
lation. General Crowder has advised
senator that tt will ha Improbable
that calls will go outside of the high
est class. Of youths reaching 31
years of age under the new Initiation
It Is believed that at least 90 per emit
will be placed In Cins 1.
HUNS WAGERED
WOULD END WAR
IN FORTNIGHT
LONDON, April 20.-llefore the
present German offensive began, Ger
man officers lu ne.itral countries
were prepared to wager that the Ger
mans would succeed In dividing the
forces of the allies within a fortnight,
Lord Robert Cecil, minister of block
ade, declared In a speech Inst night
at Hltrhln.
"A month has passed and the Ger
mans have not succeeded," Lord Rob
ert continued, "but we would be wick
edly foolish If we believed the battle
had ended. We have an Indefinite
poriod of terrible and strenuous
struggles before us. We must not un
derrate our enemy, who has had the
great advantages of 50 years of prep
aration) for war, favorable geograph
ical position and unlteM command."
Yakima to have storage and 1c
plant.
LITTLE DAMAGE IS
DONE BY LONG
RANGE GUN NOW
PARIS, April 20. Yesterday' long
range bombardment, which consisted
of three shots at wide Intervals, re
sulted In no casualties and did little
damage. One shell went through the
roof of a house, penetrated a work
shop on the sixth floor and passed
through the back wall, crossed the
courtyard and into a building In the
rear, finally bursting on the staircase.
A number of people were employed
there, but all Imd loft the building a
few minutes before the shell fell.
Marshflold Small amountB of riv
ed spruce are now being shipped
from Coos county.
Yc. U UnJ s
hnntk of tktm
r(fAffkrArt
dnrpti mi
Crmfe"
NO MEN TO BE TAKEN
IS EXPECTATIONS
He Needs Somebody to Send Hint
another pouch of
Real GRAVELY Chewing Plug
Uncle Sam' Boys don't ask for much in the way
of comfort but good tobacco they must have.
A few cent spent for Real Gravely will buy
more tobacco satisfaction than many times the
money in ordinary plug.
Cive any man a chew of Real Gravely Plug, and he will tell
you ihat'i the kind to send. Send the bait I
Ordinary plug is false economy. It costs less per week
to chew Real Gravely, because a small chew of It lasts a long
while.
If you smoke a pipe, slice Gravely with your knife and add
a little to your smoking tobacco. It will give flavor improve
your amok.
SEND YOUR FRIEND IN THE U. S. SERVICE A POUCH OF GRAVELY
Dealers all around here carry it in 10c pouches. A 3c.
stamp will put it into his hands in any Training Camp or Sea
port of the U. S. A. Even "over there" a 3c stamp will take
it to him. Your dealer will supply envelop ana give you
official directions how to address it.
P. B. GRAVELY TOBACCO CO, Danville, Va.
Th Pattnt Poach kpt it Frank and Cfeafl and Good
it It not Rtal Crawly without tkit Protection Stat
Established 1S31
LABOR CHIEF
SAYS RADICAL
PARTY BRANCH
OF
CLEVELAND, 0 April 83 Social
ism tn America wat branded a pois
onous German propaganda by Samuel
Gompnrs, president of the American
Federation of tabor, In a speech In
behalf of the Liberty loan at the City
Club this afternoon.
While the tabor chief wa excoriat
ing socialism and calling on labor and
capital In Cleveland to Join hand In
speeding up the city' subscription
race, Douglas Fairbanks, moving pic
ture actor, was making a loan appeal
before a crowd that Jammed the larg
est theatre In town.
"There Is no such thing as an Am;
ertran Socialist party," Mr. Oompers
said. 'The American Socialist organi
sation I merely branch of the one
In Germany It Is a part of German
propaganda."
Mr. Oompers declared he had been
changed from "the most active pa
cifist In Amnrlca to a good fighter,"
and he said that labor will not meet
In a peace movement until the war
Is over and labor parties of all coun
tries can be represented.
SAYS TREASURER KAY
HALKM. Or, April 2J.-The Oregon
rural credits law Is virtually a dad
letter, according to Slat Treasurer
T. B. McKay, because of the more po
pular national rural credits act. Fur?
(her, the drop tn the bond market d to
to the war has put a complete damp
er on any operation of the state taw
for the present
Another niin-i easily available
source of money for the farmer, al
though the interest charge of per
cent Is 1 per cent higher than called
for In ths rural credits law, la the
MtntA school fund In which there I
plenty of money to meet the demand
for farm loans.
The reason given for the greater
popularity of the federal rural credit
enactment la that the government'
appraisal of land I Invariably higher
than that of the state. Of the ap
proximately 3450,000 that ha been
raised by the state through bond Is
sues under the state law, the greater
part of the bonds were taken over by
the stste treasury to avoid a sale be
low par.
GOVERNOR CALLS ON
TO ASSIST COUNTRY
SALEM, Or., April 22. Governor
Wlthycombe yesterday Issued another
call upon all able-bodied men In tha
state to engugo In some occupation
tli tit will be of benefit to the country
In carrying out the war program. The
repeated call is mado because of the
shortage of lubor In. numerous pur
suits and the pressing need of maxi
mum production.
"This Is no tlmo for idlers," said
the governor, ' and no man, who la
able physically to employ his particu
lar talents, has a good excuse to offer
If ho Is now found Idle. Certainly
every mun In tho state can find some
thing to do that will add to pro
ductivity or help In some Incidental
helation to win the war."
Brownsville Seven sawmills oper
ating near bora.
HU
ORDER