119 THE MORNING OKEGOMAX. MONDAY, APKIIj .i0, 1917. PINIONS DIFFER Oil EFFECTS OF DRAFT PORTLAND NEWSPAPERMAN, NOW WITH AMERICAN AMBULANCE HOSPITAL CORPS, WHO IS SERVING IN BRITISH-FRENCH SPRING DRIVE ALONG THE MARNE. Stimulation or Retarding of j Recruiting Problem to Of ficers of Army-Navy. MARINES WANT 30,000 Special Week Designated for Big I Effort Conscription May Call One Out of Every 10 for Xew Land Forces. MARINE CORPS TO TIE RE CRUITED TO 30.000 MEN. The following: telefrram was received by The Oregonian yes terday from General George Bar rett, commanding: the United States Marine Corps: "The Marine Corps today reached its full authorized strength of 17,400 men. The pub licity given our needs by the newspapers, which resulted in making known our slogan 'first to fight,' quickly brought the needed men to the colors. A further increase of the Marine Corps to 30,000 men. has been recommended to Congress, and sincerely believing that the in crease will be granted for the period of the war. I am going ahead with recruiting. "Red-blooded young men wish ing to be first to fight prob ably will not have long to wait. On behalf of the officers and men of the Marine Corps. I wish to express our hearty apprecia tion of the able assistance and hearty co-operation rendered by The Oregonian in recruiting corps to full strength. Portland has responded splendidly to our call. I am going to ask further assist ance and co-operation to recruit the additional 12,600 men whom we need and I will address you a letter on the subject of a spe cial Marine Corps week, June 10 to 16, Inclusive, when we will make an extra effort to fill our corps to 30,000 men before the close of the fiscal year." T v "i - ill -. V - y - v - . , ? x .' V. , : .-ff--rw; I ? . . ffi; mm, , ; - v s t? ?m FOOD WORK SPURRED Campaign of First Few Days Shows Some Results. GARDENS BEING PLANTED Will recruiting in the regular Army and in the Navy and Marine Corps be stimulated or retarded by passage of the selective conscription bill? Army and Navy officers in Portland have conflicting opinions on the sub ject and it will be difficult to tell just what the effect will oe until after the scope of the measure actually is agreed Committee Is Ready to Answer Any The Navy recruiting stations have experienced a spurt in the last few days, which, by some, is attributed to the prospective early passage of th draft bill. Most recruits in the Navy are of the draft age 19 to 27 years. Congress, it is expected, will fix the draft nirp limits at 21 Ani 30 vears. so the effect on men of that age will be oy me rood preparedness cam- Problems That May Face City Grower Lectures Are Be ing Booked Rapidly. The first few days of service ren- watched with interest during the next few days. Officers are agreed, however, that men who rush to the recruiting stations to escape draft are actuated by noth ing but motives of highest patriotism. There is a lurking suspicion among . many youths that men who are con scripted into the Army will get little chance to see active service. By going Into the Navy, regular Army or Marine Corps they hope to get into some ac tual fighting. No official information has come to either the state or Federal officers re garding plans for the proposed draft. Civil Authorities May Act. It is presumed, however, that actual eonscriprion will be placed in tne hands of Civil authorities to relieve the military force as much as possible. A day will be set aside when, every man of thed raft ace will be required to register. He will have to give his age. his birthplace, his nationality, if horn in a foreign country; his educa- paign bureau, under the direction of the Oregon Agricultural College and the Department of Agriculture, have been of incalculable benefit to the cause of increased food production through the stimulus afforded. While the work Is at its outset, and definite records cannot yet be given of progress made, it has been noted by the officials in charge that a first great effect has been to combine all endeavors along the line of Increased food production under the operations of the new bureau. Serious Problem Faced. In a statement made yesterday by officials of the bureau, a comprehen sive sketch of the bureau's labors to date, its aims and the nature of the work projected is afforded. We have been called upon for serv ice of every kind in connection with the big food drive," said W. H. Craw ford, of the food preparedness cam paign. "The seriousness of the situa tion and the evidences of the help that we have already been able to give V2 r " - S W S.c IS 1 ".jDLwJfc .i', m.u. ss-ty . i : Joseph raHerMon, In Ffeld Uniform, AImo With Gas Mawk and In IiUK'out Afar Jh irlner Line. tional acquirements, his occupation helpful in guiding the military authorl- "btlle 8 r'ght '" """ "VtUsuufedhlten who are "The amount of free farming advice ....iii-j vr i r,itis nlants. that is now being put forth in the ehiobuilding yards or other industrial newspapers should be helpful if prop Institutions whose operation i3 essen tial to the successful conduct of the war will be exempt from military duty. hut that they can bed rafted into in dustrial service. The proposed draft system doubtless will be applied on the same basis as the volunteer system formerly was ap- erly understood. There was a particu larly good supply In ne Sunday pa pers. Perhaps more than could be read when the actual work had to be crowded into a few short hours. Labor to Be Difficulty. "We suggest that any particular problems that may confront you be rjlied. Each state will be allotted us taken up Wjth us at once. If you do Quota of men, based on its population. I not understand what you have read or The state then will be subdivided I i. vou have something snecial to take Into voting precincts and each precinct up (or tne goo,j Df the cause, or lor will be required to produce its propor- your own persona.1 help, call on is at tlon. Just how the names will be se- 513 Oregon Building, telephone Broad- lected has not been determined, but It way 440. Is probable that they will bed rawn "Labor seema to be looming up as a by lot, I big problem. However, there is One In JO May Be Taken. hopeful indication in the possible en Army officers have estimated that listment of Individuals and organiza onlv one man out of every 10 subject tions in the work of increasing the -h awtri on the first land output. We are at work on sev- call Some of these doubtless will be eral combinations that will bring good weeded out on account of physical de- results. Our lecture staff is also fects and other causes, and other names booking engagements as fast as pos- wlll be drawn to tatce tneir places um.11 1 the entire quota Is supplied. yesterday was that all men enlisting HIGHLAND SOLDIER HERE In the regular branches of the service I after the draft bill is signed Dy tne . Armotron? in Kilts Is Re. President will be subject to draft all Sergeant Armstrong in Jsuits is e- the same, but Army officers consider I auch a -provision improbable. I As a matter of fact, they look for considerable competition among youtn cruiting for Scotcli Regiment. "Sergeant Armstrong" in bold hand of military age to be among the first I upon the register of the Portland selected. Hotel, tells of the passing through here Despite the Sunday holiday 14 men I yesterday of one of the vanguard or applied for enlistment at the naval re- the recruiting officers who are coming cruiting station yesterday. seven 01 1 irom Canada to can uritisn subjects to them were mustered in and started for the service of their country. the Goat Island training station. Sergeant Armstrong was a striking The marine corps recruiting office picture in the lobby of the hotel, for he also had a busy day, receiving nearly was in Highland uniform, and, a veter- a score of applicants. an of the trench warfare of Flanders. The regular Army recruiting station He was a grimly warlike feature in the was not open for business on Sunday. quiet civilian surroundings. He is out to recruit for the Scotch Canadian reeriments. and left vesterdav $15,000 SU S NtAK tIMU afternoon for San Francisco, where h ' I is to begin his work. Mrs. Tillie Bergen Seeks Damages for Drowning of Children. ROAD DATA TO BE GATHERED Society of Engineers Discusses $6, 000,000 Bond Issue- That the public may be acquainted CHEHALIS, Wash., April 29. (Spe cial.) Taking of testimony in the dam age suit of Mrs. Tillie Bergen against Lewis County for ?i&,uuu was complet ed last evening. Only the argument of the various attorneys to the Jury and I with different pavements, their dura the charge of Judge Reynolds are to bllkty and cost, the Oregon Society of be heard before the case finally goes Engineers has authorized its president to the jury. 1 to name a committee of five members Mrs. Bergen's suit is brougnt to re- to prepare data, that committee to eo cover monetary damages for the loss of I operate with the one appointed recent her three little cniidren oy arowning y Dy the Portland Realty Board. The In the Cowlitz River at Rlffe, May 29, action was taken at the regular raonth J915, owing to alleged improper hand- iy meeting of the society Saturday ling 01 tne county leriy 11 piace 1 night In the Oregon building. by the ferryman, an employe or the The chief subject of discussion at county. More fatal tramway accidents occur In London on Sundays than on any other day. the meeting was the $6,000,000 road bond issue. A debate on the bond Issue was held, O. Laurgaard championing the Issue and J. P. Newell opposing him. Three minutes were alloted oth- " ' c X-Y " . :'- V , v If s ' I H k: v ' 1 "i Y r " JY - 1 j Cv- V "1 PORTLAND WRITER -IN FRENCH DRIVE Joseph Patterson Sees Serv ice With Ambulance Corps on Marne Battlefield. DEAD FOUND EVERYWHERE er speakers for the discussion of the bond issue. Among those who spoke on the bond Issue were, besides Mr. Newell and Mr. Laurgaard, E. J. Adams, a member of the tate Highway Commission: J. W. Cunningham, consulting engineer: A. G. Johnson, statistician of the Department of Public Works; John R. Penland. City Engineer of Albany; Dr. F. G. Young, head of the department of economics of the University of Oregon: W. L. Archambeau, formerly connected with the Warren Construction Company; W, ti. craves ana J. 11. Thompson, con sulting engineers; J. D. Brown, presi dent of the Farmers' Union; Mr. Mc- Mullen, assistant city engineer; C. T. Rice, C. J. Hogue. R. W. Price and Her bert Gordon. RAILWAY UNITY URGED BlULIXGTOX ROAD CALLS OX ALL EMPLOYES TO "DO THEIR BIT." freaiuent says Line Tbroithont the Country Will Co-ordinate to Ex pedite Ration's Dullness. Employes of the Burlington railroad system In thls and other parts of the country have been urged by Hale Holden, president of the company, to 00 tneir Dit In their daily work, not only "that the military forces and sup plies may be handled expeditiously, but so that fodstuffs, materials and sup plies of all kinds directly and indirectly necessary in carrying on. the prepara tions the Government has undertaken may be handled with minimum of fric tion and delay." President Holden calls attention, in a circular leter Just distributed among tne employes here, to the resolution adopted at a recent conference of rail road executives in Washington in which they pledged themselves to co operate "with the Government of the United States, with the governments of the several states and one with one another, that during the present war they will co-ordinate their operations In a continual railroad system, merg ing during such period all their merely individual and competitive activities in the -effort to produce a maximum of National transportation efficiency." "This pledge," says the Burlington president, "can only be carried out by the co-operation of all the forces of the company, and it was given unhes itatingly because of my confidence that all of us would wish to assume, our patrlotio privilege of supporting the Government to our utmost and to lend in every way our services to a suc cessful termination of the war that is upon us." German Graves Are Marked and Are Tended by Foes Girls Keep American From Losing Way 'In Paris at Xlght. Joseph Patterson, formerly a news paper man of Portland, is seeing active service with the American Ambulance Hospital Corps in France, and his work has taken him so close to the firing line the last month that he and his co-workers have had to make use of the gas mask. Mr. Patterson, who for more than seven years prior to 1916 was a mem ber of the local and field reportorial staff of The Oregonian. Joined the American Ambulance Corps in Decem ber, 1916, sailing for Paris about Jan uary 1, 1917. For a year prior to leav ng for Paris he was engaged as a special agent of the Carnegie Hero Fund Commission. In an uncensored letter which Mr, Patterson mailed at sea. Just before ar riving in Paris, he told of the proposed British-French drive on the Germans, now In progress. The Ambulance Corps was at that time being heavily recruited to take care or the situation when the drive started. Great Drive Forecast. They expect to lose heavily, but are prepared for it," Mr. Patterson wrote. and this will be the last uncensored letter." Mr. Patterson's Information proved true, and after a brief training period in Paris, during which time he lived in the chateau once occupied by Empress Eugenie, now a hospital base, while he was undergoing severe inoculation against disease, he was dispatched to the second line in the battle of the Marne. A letter dated April 14 gave the in formation that his division would be sent to the first line about April lo. Mr. Patterson is with a group of col lege and newspaper men from his home city, Pittsburg, at whose head is one of his former city editors. Extracts from Mr. Patterson's letters follow: 'I am writing from a basement, and it was so cold we are wearing overcoats gloves and caps as we write. The Marne battlefield is Just outside the door. We cross the Marne battlefield when we go to Meaux to get the wounded for this hospital station which is at Jullly, and which is sup ported by Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney. Plain Is Now Cemetery. "We usually are called but at 2 A. M. The nocturnal sensation is marked. We went for 20 wounded last night at 2:15 o'clock. The Marne was the high water mark of German Invasion and is almost a level plain, an . ideal bat tle ground in a way. But already the battlefield is under cultivation. The cultivation is broken by trenches and small plots, the latter about six by eight feet, surrounded by a single wire. "In each plot, marked by a white cross over which flies a French flag, a sol dler lies buried where he fell. The cross bears the name, rank and some times the photograph of the dead, for the identification tag attached to his wrist preserves his identity. As the soldiers dropped everywhere these graves are scattered over the farms. The little plots are spared in plowing and crops are raised all around them. Occasionally you see a white cross with a black center, and then you know it is the grave of a German. The German dead were treated as well as the French dead. 10O Hurled Together. Where the men fell In great num bers trench-graves were dug and the dead burled together. Some of the trench-graves contain 100 dead. Above them are many crosses and ornamental designs, artificial flowers and govern ment notices stating that these men died for their country and that the plot was purchased by the government to preserve the remains. -The single graves are usually kept up by the farmers on whose property they are located. "Ferman soldiers, under guard of a sentinel and receiving French soldiers' pay, assist the peasants in their farm or other work. Wounded Soldier SInfrB "There is a wounded soldier in this hospital, whose name 'is Buffo, and he is an operatic tenor. He sings for us every few nights as he is now about well. He will . soon go back to the trenches. The soldiers come from every walk. The rich and the poor, the ig norant and accomplished all rank alike and look alike in uniform." The humorous side of the life of an American abroad in war service has not been overlooked by Mr. Patterson. Of one episode he writes: "The other night some of the Amer ican boys were at a function, and It fell to my fortunate lot to escort two French girls home. The metro (sub "''.y) stops at 10 P. M. except on Satu days, Sundays and Thursdays, opera nights, amusements being closed to save fuel. When I got them home I couldn't get a taxicab to get back, and the street lights were out, and I couldn't speak much French. The girls realized my plight and insisted on walking back to our station with m about as far as from the top of Mount Tabor to the top of Portland Heights. That's what I call courtesy, but I'll bet the next time I offer to take them home, they'll decline." The extent of the Paris provisions for handling the wounded is realized In Mr. Patterson's statement that the Am bulance Corps serves more than 300 hospitals in Paris. "The wounded are brought In at night so that the civilians, especially the women, do not have to see them transported across the city or hear them," he says. SB NOW YOU CAN BUY SNOW FLAKE SODAS BY THE BOX Everybody is anxious at this time to buy in the most economical way in a way that really saves and does not waste. When you buy SNOW FLAKES in this big wooden box you get BIG VALUE for your money, and SNOW FLAKES are good till the last one is gone. Your grocer will recommend your buying SNOW FLAKES in our new ECONOMY BOX because he knows that you will be pleased with the saving you make and the excellent quality of the crackers. THIS BIG WOODEN BOX OF DAINTY SNOW FLAKES can be bought from all grocers for $1.15. Ask your grocer to show you this box you will be surprised at its size and the quantity of crackers it contains. Have a box sent home TODAY. SNOW FLAKES always have been popular, and they will be more popu lar still now that they are sold in this big wooden box as well as in the familiar red packages. PACIFIC COAST BISCUIT CO. Portland, Oregon out aslc lor Cracliers Drill in military tactics has been be-1 structlon from former members of mil gun here by an organization comprised j itary companies, of members of the Bend Amateur Ath- lectic Club, styling themselves the Teachers Salaries Raised. Bend Rifles. A number of old Spring-1 BEND, Or.. April 29. (Special.) field rifles have been obtained for the! cause of the increase in the cost of llv- orjran ization. which is receiving In-I Inc. the School Bonrd of District 12, Oregon City Wife Charges Crnelty. OREGON CITY. Or.. April 29. (Spe cial.) Suit for divorce on grounds of cruelty was filed in the Circuit Court here yesterday by Mrs. Marjorle Pier son against A. Romeyn Plerson, Jr. "Bend Rifles" Are Drilling. BEND. Or.. April 29. (Special.) CASTOR I A For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears the Signature of TVpolto (Hub SPRING CONCERT TONIGHT LIBERTY THEATER. PrlM Sl.OO. 50c. 254 Aio teeata Reserved. - Including the City of Bend, has volun tarily raised the pay of the teachers in the district $5 a month. For the coming year Miss Gertrude Hanks has been se lected by the Board as superintendent of primary work. Read The Oregonian classified ad. 1 fe'isEoi ! n Test srasolrL "The specific gravity test is worthless, as a test of gasoline quality." So says the U. S. Bureau of Standards. Boiling points comprise the only real test, be cause easy starting, quick acceleration, maxi mum power, depend absolutely on boiling points. The gravity-hydrometer tells you nothing about the boiling points of gasoline. RED CROWfcl ifie Gasoline o Qua(y is straight - distilled, and thus has its boiling points in a gradually rising, unbroken chain low boiling points for easy starting, medium boiling points for quick and smooth acceleration, high boiling points for power and mileage. No mixture can contain an unbroken chain of boiling points the hundreds of intermediate points are missing. Be sure and get Red Crown, It's pure gasoline not a mixture. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (CALIFORNIA) lACbidntuoiis Chain of Boim Ibiirfs a I r i; 1L3J1 WilUK 5 I formeToiSeaj? t Medina Bo2u$ RSs l S ior Qakk and smaomj t i acceleration Pomls sfartin