13 APPEAL , BY JOSEPH MACQUEEN. THEY were talking- of the delight experienced In wearing pink silk socks, but differed sharply as to glories of shades and colors did two stalwart-looking young men of this city recently. You would have thought they were discussing politics, football, baseball or boxing. But no. These young men were rich, carefully dressed and mani cured, in the latest fashion of some idle-rich Americans. They lolled on their club sofas and yawned. "Tell you what it Is," said one gay "bird of leisure, "let's go for some exer cise in the open air. Let's go to the ball game. They bought a fresh supply of cigar ettes, and exercised in the open air that eunny afternoon by sitting on a base ball stand watching and applauding a game of ball. They ate so many pea nuts that the dinner that followed didn't taste good. More lolling on the sofa at the club. ''We have spent a patriotic day I don t think," said a six-footer. Glad It's bedtime. I'm afraid exercise in the open air don't suit me. S'long!' This is no fancy sketch. I have nothing against baseball. It's all right in its place. But we have too many soft-muscled, flabby, stomach laden, anaemic young men particu larly in our cities who don't get in the game, who aren't growing into strong men. able to take part and excel in the battle of life. Such young men would talk fight if you questioned their Americanism, their patriotism, but at the same time they would decline, probably, to obey any order that didn't suit their convenience. They have no idea of the blessing of real discipline., or working gladly in a Hi. as. for the benefit of a. whole. If you tried to curb them, they would Accuse you of wishing to impose cruel militarism on them. They would bridle up and remind you that they are free-born Americans who insist on looking another man between the eyes and telling him to mind his own busi ness. Discipline? Drill? Huh! m Employers are beginning to size up healthy-looking, stalwart, clean shaven, neat, well, but not expensively, dressed young fellows among their employes for promotion: men who obey orders, as if on the crack of a whip; men who gladly do teamwork; men who don't carry a chip on their shiulders; men who are so healthy that they don't waste business time by being ill often; men who are examples of high-class but not noisy efficiency. "Bluffers" and "soft-snap men" who work best when the boss is near, men who work by the clock, men who snivel: "Let George do it." when rush orders come In machine shop, office or bank, need not wonder that promotion passes them. They have been found wanting as employes. Their bodies and minds are not in tune with business efficiency. J "What's all this about? J Just National service. t J Not European militarism, i Xo. sir. I mean military drill In the Oregon Xatlonal Guard. To be exact. I want - to interest you in the big guns of Bat tery A, field artillery, with headquarters at the Armory, Tenth and Couch streets, - where the men of Battery A, Captain Charles W. Helme, commanding, meet lor drill every Friday night. Young man, if you have no bad habits, if you are sober, if you are healthy, if you will be persuaded that cane military drill in reason will make you a better man and a better Amer ican, if you love horses, why not think About joining Battery A. Not next year (you may be too lazy then, or married to a wife, mother-in- EXTENSION WORK OF O. A. C. FAR-REACHING Co-Operation Is Keynote in Many Activities That Are Undertaken for Benefit and Knowledge of Farmers. . OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL LEGE, Corvallis. March 25. (Special.) The work of the ex tension department of the Oregon Ag ricultural College last year reached out into every county in Oregon, aiding farmer, housewife, business men en " gaged in industries allied to agricul- ture, teachers, school children and even professional men. according to the an nual report this week, submitted by Kalph D. Hertzel. director of exten sion. - The extension service is distinct from -the college experiment station work, and the resident instruction in that it is directed to the instruction of those not able to receive the resident work and In that it aids the experimental service by carrying the facts discov ered by the research men to the people of the state. The work is carried on co-operatively with the United States Department of Agriculture, according to the rneasures of the Smith-Lever act providing funds for extension work. 7 Work Is Far-Reachlns. . The extension department has been organized to include county agent ser vice, boys' and girls' club work, cor respondence courses, lectures and in stitutes, press bulletins, movable schools, field and farm demonstrations in co-operation with individual farmers. Judging at fairs, co-operative field dairy work, general correspondence, educational exhibits, the bureau of or ganization and markets, and the annual farmers' and home-makers' exercises on the college campus. The two latter lines of work were added to the field of extension service during the past year. Hog cholera con trol and demonstration work was be gun during the year under the direc tion of an expert from the United States bureau of animal Industry, but due to the outbreak of foot and mouth disease in the East, which required the services of the entire available Gov MADE FOR ENLISTMENT WITH BATTERY A BIG GUNS Military Training Improves American's Standards and Instills Idea of Patriotism, Says Joseph Macqueen. 1 Jt 1 . law and a bunch of new relatives) but now. Intending recruits, there will be an artillery officer at Battery A rooms. Armory, every night this week, wait ing for you. See him. He will explain gladly all you want to know. It won't cost you one cent. Do as much for yourself as an American, and for Unci Sam. Take warning from my case: I re gret deeply that years ago I did not Join the National Guard. I wasted my youthful time. Had I then known mili tary efficiency; military drill and the willingness to obey discipline I would have been a better American. What, then, has changed , me from my former peace-at-any-price views? The big war in Europe. Oratocs like David Starr Jordan and Rabbi Stephen S. Wise talked so eloquently in my presence of universal peace and against the .horrors of war that they persuaded me there would never be another world wide war. "The world is too civilized tiow. The bankers and democracy of the world would ne,ver permit another big war. Aroitrate everytning. Love your enemies. Melt your cannon." and so fonth, were the peace arguments. I believed such talk up to July- August. 1914. But. biff! Europe became blood-red. ernment staff, the project was tempo rarily discontinued. The extension service occupies the entire time of 33 specialists in various lines ,of agriculture and home econom ics. Members of the regular college staff to the number of 31 devote a portion of their time to their part of the extension projects. Boys' and Girls' Club work, which is carried on by the extension department in co-operatiori- with the State Depart ment of Education and the United States Department of Agriculture, has been very successful during the past year. Various projects were outlined for different localities and different in clinations of the young people. The following numbers were enrolled in the respective projects: Corn clubs. 625; potatoes. 798; gardening. 2210; canning. 1020; poultry, 1043; pigs, 272; bread-making, 1620; sewing, 2750; handicrafts, 500 ; dairying, 225; seed grain, 98; fruit. 25,. and advanced agri culture. 21. Exhibits Made Daring, Summer. The work of the extension service in club work has been in charge of Pro fessor F. L. Griffith, who recently re signed to accept similar work in con nection with Cornell University. Pro fessor H. C. Seymour, formerly of Dallas, will carry on the work this year. Miss Helen Cowgill is assistant in charge of the home economics work, and Leonard J. Allen, a graduate' of the college, has been placed in charge of pig-club work. The ciub work was carried on during the Summer under the direction of the extension staff, and exhibits were pre pared for the various county fairs and for the State Fair by the club members. While no spectacular yields or results were obtained, many of the club mem bers produced from two to three times the average yield for the state in growing corn and potatoes. Many unprofitable dairy cows were sent to the block as a result of the records kept by club members, and sev J V" fill raMI TITE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, POTITLAJTD. : 1 : f ' T:, 'If 5. 2?3f 'the 7&roZs: Big nations began to gobble up little nations. Seas did not prevent inva sion. "Kings can do no wrong." Our America is vulnerable, but it is worth protecting, worth carmg for. Ocean distance from envious nations won't save us when the kings, the emperors-get land hungry. We are rich, the only one of the big powers not wasted by war. We are a business peo ple, not a military one. But many of eral of the club members demonstrated that pork could be produced at a cost of 4 to 5 cents per pound. Interest Is Wideiipread. Widespread interest was manifested in the home-canning projects as relat ed to both home cosumption and the market. Such work is expected to have a direct bearing upon-the marketing of by-products and the elimination of waste in seasons of overproduction. The farm demonstration work, which is carried on through the county agri culturists, is the largest single branch of the extension service. The organi zation for the past year included 12 county agents and a state leader and assistant. Since the report for the past year was compiled, four more county agriculturists have been added to the number, and several counties have the employment of an agriculturist under consideration at present. More than 30 direct lines of work are taken up by the county agents, the variations in the work being due to different climatic and crop conditions in the different sections of the state. Individual assistance both by personal visits to the farms and by correspond ence is a branch of the jvork which reached thousands of farmers. Demonstration AVorlc Done. Co-operative demonstration work was carried on with 821 farmers. Cow testing and breeding associations, drainage district organizations and co operative marketing enterprises were other projects taken up by the county men. They assisted in the conducting of farmers' meetings, demonstrations and movable schools, co-operating -in this with the extension field Special ists of the college. The revival of several county fairs and the conducting of acre corn contests were other branches of work carried, on by the county agriculturists. Very fayorable results were obtained from the Introduction of grains and grasses new to a number of localities in both ' Eastern and Western Oregon. It was conclusively demonstrated that alfalfa could be grown in rows in the semi-arid districts for the production of choice seeds. Corn Yield Is Increased. A large Increase in both the acreage and yield of corn was obtained throiiKh the introduction of adapted varieti&s and the testing and selection of seed, in Malheur County corn was not for merly grown, but as a result of the campaign of the. extension men 12U f ' '"to, 4. - . us say we won't fight for America except when we are Invaded. In that case we must remember that it takes six to nine months to train a soldier, and that the trained enemy who lands in our America won't wait until we train our soldiers. , Therefore, I believe heart and soul, not in greedy and cruel militarism, but In sensible preparedness. Train all bushels were produced on a single acre and the yield averaged 80 bushels to the acre in a county contest. In Tilla mook County, long thought to be poorly adapted to corn growing, 60 tons of silage was produced upon the best acre devoted to corn. Average silage yields were satisfactory. Interest has been aroused in the benefits of drainage in the Willamette Valley. Individual farmers were aided in the establishment of private drain age districts. Union, Marion, Malheur, Lane, Lake, Klamath, Wheeler, Harney. Tillamook, Coos. Crook and Jackson counties had agriculturists last year. Multnomah. Wasco. Yamhill and Josephine counties have this year employed county agri culturists. As far as is possible, grad uates from the Oregon Agricultural College who have lived on Oregon farms prior to their college days and who have since been engaged for a few years in agricultural w.rk in the state, are appointed county agricul turists. Forty-four Bulletins Are Issued. The bulletins and circulars of the extension service issued during the past year numbered 44 and covered most of the branches ot agriculture and home economics. These publications were prepared In non-technical form, in a manner to be readily interpreted by the farmer and housewife for whose use they were published. The bulletins ranged in size and scope from two-page circulars' on some special phase of an agricultural prob lem to a 48-page bulletin. More than 200.000 of these publications were is sued. An elgh-column press bulletin containing timely articles and news stories was sent weekly to the news papers and agricultural press of Ore gon and other states. During the year the extension staff held meetings ranging in length , from one day to one week, with a total at tendance of 112,580 persons. Meetings were held In every county. Movable Schools Conducted. This includes 91 days of movable school work at which there were reg istered 15,065 persons. '''hese schools are heldby from three to five mem bers of the extension staff of agri cultural srecialists and are usually ar ranged so 4hat each day. or a portion of each day, is designated for instruc tional work in some special phase of agriculture and home economics, there by permitting the farmer and house wife students to gauge their attendance STARCH 26, 1016. 1 Ir-rtTw, : f.; .:::'; our young men. at home, to be soldiers. In Battery A recruits have to drill only one night per week more if they want to. They will be supplied free of all charge with uniforms and general equipment. A.t the Armory there are four three inch guns, or cannon, 1904 model, weighing 835 pounds each, with a maximum range of about 7500 yards, and each gun, made by the United States Government at Watervleit arse nal, N. Y., costs $10,000. These guns are lent to the State of Oregon by the National Government and are cared for -at the Armory by jblo. expert mechanic, Charles M. Pickard. These guns are as closely attended to as your watch, or kitchen range. The Government instructor and .drill master is Sergeant William Petrick. The "life" of these big guns lasts, ex perts say, until 3000 to 8000 rounds are fired. At Clackamas, Or., is the state rifle range, including the artillery depot. There are 28 artillery horses there, in charge of Sergeant Elkins and four by their, individual interests. Field work by the extension men usually preceded or followed these schools. The central staff of field specialists, consisting of J. E. Larsen. agronomist; E. D. Pitts, dairyman; Ralph E. Reyn olds, animal husbandryman; C. C. Lamb, poultry husbandryman; W. S. Brown, horticulturist, and G. V. Skel ton, highway engineer, -held 192 demon strations in various parts of the state. Included, in these demonstrations were pruning and spraying, road repairing, livestock judging, laying out of drain age systems and the handling of poul try and poultry products. Associations Are Formed. Two men are employed continually in co-operative dairy work with the. Unit ed . States Department of Agriculture. One has headquarters at the Oregoi Agricultural College and the second is now located at La Grande. These men aid in the formation of co-operative dairy organizations, organize and di rect dairy herd record clubs, deliver lectures at farmers' meetings, and aid in the building of silos in addition to carrying on other branches of field demonstration work. New cow-testing associations were organized last year to include 216 farmers, placing 3715 cows upon test. The tests so far have proved that from 33 to 50 per cent of the cows in the average herd are entirely unprofitable, and that the net returns from the five best cows in such. 'herds amount to three to four times the .net returns from the five poorest cows. Assistance has been given in the organization of a co-operative creamery, a cream shippers' as sociation, and a co-operative cheese factory. . Record Keeping; Organised. Dairy record keeping was organized In 45 rural schools and in many of the schools Judging teams were organized and directed. Emergency ' veterinary work is a feature of the service ren dered by.the dairy field men. Educational exhibits were prepared by the extension service for display at the Panama-Pacific Exposition, the State Fair and the Portland Land Show, in addition to several county grange and community fairs. The Farmers' and Home Makers' In dustrial Conference Week was taken over by the extension department last year. Several farmers' organizations were formed at these annual one-week courses and are meeting with growing success. Among them are the Ore gon Drainage Association and the I Lf v ; ac"-"- I assistants; and Sundays Battery A boys go to Clackamas and enjoy horseback rides. They drill, eat a Government lunch, and their railroad fares to and from the city are also paid for by the Government. You see, there is no ex pense to Battery A men. Everything is "found." . July 16 this year Battery A leaves this city to attend a two-weeks' in struction camp provided by the United States Government near Monterey, Cal., on a range of 40,000 acres leased to the Government at a yearly rentat of $5000. The men will be conveyed from this city by a Southern Pacific Railroad train and this year the artillery camp chosen is to be near to the famous golf links and Del Monte Hotel, Monterey, Cal. Artillery officers of the regular Army will "boss" the encampment and there will be a good time in the open air for all. Strict sobriety and good behavior are insisted on at every Bat tery A event. Last year at the Monte rey camp there were 170 trained artil lery horses, and the big guns were fired 947 times. For the Monterey camp in Oregon Field Crop and Seed Growers' Association. During the year the Bureau of Or ganization and Markets was organized under tho direction of Professor Hec tor Macpherson. Business forms, con stitutions, methods of accounting and bookkeeping have been outlined and distributed to persons Interested In co operative organizations of different types. Correspondence In reply to requests for information exclusive of that per taining to administrative work, and schools and lectures amounted to 15,096 letters. UNCLE SAM, STORK KEEPER Physician Urges Government Repre 1 sentative at Every Birth. MILWAUKEE. Wis.. March 17. "The day is coming when we shall want to use the scientific knowledge we are acquiring, so that every child coming into the world will have at birth the presence of a Government physician to see that it is guaranteed life." declared Dr. Carles Zueblin. of Boston, in a lecture at the library under the auspices of the Milwaukee Ma ternity Hospital. "The mother may have as many pri vate physicians and as many other people as are within the command of her pocketbook, but the Government will guarantee a decent entrance into the world. That is a perfectly legiti mate requisite on the basis of the sci entific knowledge we have. Does that seem Utopian? "We already Impose penalties for failure to report a death. Surely it is more of a crime not to get children into the world properly. Once in the world, the child is tie offspring of the Nation, as well as of the mother and father. As we inspect the chil dren coming from Europe, we must inspect those coming from nowfhere." Wheat Is 40 00 (Years Old. DALLAS. Tex.. March 21. When the late John Cardwell, of Austin, was United States Consul at Cairo, Egypt, he sent to his eld friend. Colonel F. P. Holland, of Dallas, a small, quantity of wheat that he had taken ' from the tomb of one of the ancient kings in newly-explored ruins upon the banks of the Nile. This wheat was known to be more St m? Up,. There;. July. 1916, a few more recruits can b accepted, if you enlist now. Battery A can be recruited up to 133 men. field artillery acts as a unit with Infantry and cavalry, but especially with infantry. The war in Europe shows that to win a modern battle a preponderance of artillery is neces sary to batter to bits the enemy's trenches, to prepare for an infantry at tack with bayonets. The famous French, field gun Is 75 millimeters, or 2.95 inches, while in the German and British armies the field guns of this type slightly exceed three inches. The field gun of the United States Army is three inches he same as the guns of Bat tery A. I have nothing against the infantry, cavalry, machine gun men or naval militia, but I whoop it up for the bis field guns. Why? They appeal to me. In action the big guns speak first, and in this country artillery batteries are. weak. There are only 70 of them in the United States National Guard. Too many recruits pass by the artillery. This should not be. than 4,000 years old. Thgass con tainer which holds the grain is her metically sealed. To all outward ap pearances the wheat is Just as sound as the day it was flayed from the head in the long ago, when the earth, was inhabited by a civilization that is now forgotten. The grains are plump and large. "I have been told that the gralna would probably germinate if planted, but I have never tried any of them," Colonel Holland said. COMFORT BABYS TCfllNGSKIN VITH CUTICUM SOAP BATHINGS They are so cleansing and soothing. If his skin is irritated or rashy, anoint gently with a little Cuticura Ointment. , Sample Each Free by Mail "With 32rp. Skin Book on request. Ad dress post-card "Cuticura. Dept. 16GS Boston'! &uld througlioufc th wocld,