5 M 1 JOBLIZING WAR-FOOD MOVEMENT IN WHICH EVERV ONE CAN TAKE PARTBr Frank G. Carpenter. WVvrrtrkt. lets, br Frmak O. CutMUf.) 'ASHINQTON. D. C Do 70a want to help win the war? Do 70a want THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, JANUARY 13, 1918. . sih"x yyv x II I UUR :: -1 wa v- . . : r t . ".' - - to cut down your meat bill and at the Nni Tim add to tba food sup plies of oar allies la Europe? If so. why don't 70a aat fish? Tt will give you mora brain and Just a good muscle. It will, digest quite aa easily and fit 70a for yoar duly In these attiring times of oar Nation. The Japan people, who ar among-th braveat On tarth. ara fiah eaters. Tha Chine, who ar aa strong aa w are. live largely upon the same food, and sjntil th war broke- oat nearly every an an la Northern Europe waa eating twice, aa much fish aa w do. Our present consumption of neat la about 17 tlmea aa great aa otrr consumption f fUh. and every pound of fish w at will release that much beef, mutton -nd pork, for shipment abroad. Herbert C. Hoover, th food admin istrator, la advising that every Amer ican add to th fish on his table. This la th adrtc also of Hugh it- Smith, th United State fish commissioner. Dr. Smith la oar' world authority on ftah. and under him la a large corps of scientists who ar always studying- th possibilities of sea food as a National Asset. Their recant experiment show that fish meat will build up tha body as well aa beefsteak and that men can replace all other meat with fish erery day in th year without 111 effects. They adTls us to cat fresh fish If we ar near th source of supply, and salt fish and smoked fish wherever w ar. The bureau of ftaheriea haa a book of recipes for preparing salt fish and smoked fish for th table, and If you will write Dr. Smith be will aend It to you. He will tell you also how to can fish and smoke It. and about other ways In which' to put up your supply lor th Winter. . ' t i f ' " f ' f ' Si IVki Canned 300.000.000 Juncfc Ol . 1 2.00 9 men ther who ar catching hundreds of millions of pounds of sea food every year. W hav 14.000 fish ermen farther south la tha Pacific ocean and about 20.000 In th Great Lakes and tha Mississippi River. We hav 22.000 fishermen la rew England, 1S.0A0 along- th Gulf of Mexico And more than 70.009 working- along- th Atlantic Coast from New England to Florida. Altogether ther la an army of 1(6.000 engaged In fishing aa a busi ness and the capital Invested la nearly ISO. 00 0.000. Th number of vessel em ployed I more than 7000 and th total catch run high Into th hundreds of million of pound. Bat I want to tell 70a something about our fisherlea aa a National asset. Th waters of the sea and land con tain D.00O different kinds of fishes, and those in and about th United States have ao many varieties that you could start a a 1-year-old baby and eat a nw fish every day until you were old enough to hav bablea yourself, and not reach th and of th list. W ar now producing more sea food than any other country. The value of ail th fish caught by man in one year is esti mated at less than li'JO. 000.000. Of this our product Is fully one-fifth. It Is twice aa large as that of Russia. 10 time that of Great Britain and more than (0 times that of Austria-Hungary. It la about one-third again aa big- aa that of Great Britain, which ranks sec ond a a national fisherman, and the same la true of Japan, which catches fal. 000.000 worth of fish every year. The sea food of Germany ha been cut down by th war. Th Baltic Is a poor fishing ground, and until now the most of the Kaiser'a fish has come from th North Sea. which he haa so peppered with mines and submarines thai thousanda of fishing- boats and tens of thousands of lis fishermen ar out of a Job. Th North 6e Is on of th beat fishing grounds upon earth. During th year prior to the war It produced about S.S0O.00O.0OO pounds of sea food, so much that, if It were loaded on wagons the fish train containing It would reach all th way from New York t.lty to baa t rancisco. via Galveston, and back. The amount that Great 1. main got from It waa mora than 1.000.004.000 pounds, and this meant 22 pounds of sea food for every woman and child In that country. 1 Th Nnrth ,ti nr. 1 1 A 1 great part of th fish for th British. bat It vu the main source of sea food for Holland. Denmark. Belgium and ranc. and also for Switzerland and German jr. and other countriea of Inte rior Europe, where th fish were sent smoked, salted or dried. Most of th risnj eaten la Europe la salt fish, and - - - irnvvai ok sucn xooa win t con sumed by th soldiers. Th supply from th North Sea haa been greatly reduced, and th food loss there will hav to b replaced by fish and meat snipped in from other part of the wona. . . W do not pretend to b a nation of nsnermen. but oar waters ax so fat In sea food that we could multiply our product an hundred-fold. He hav not oniy to intted Mates proper, but we v our colonial possessions, about wnicn ar fisheries now Draducinr III .. worth of sea food every year. The Filipinos ar Ilk the Japanese In that they live largely on fish, and our islands nave many klnda of fishes, from those that live In the sea to some that win about la th mud. On of th ft he In which ther la bound to be a great shortage In Europe 1 th herring. This forma a large part of th catch of th North Sea. amount ing In some year to about 3.000.000.000 flahea weighing on th average about one-half pound apiece. We hav vast schools of herring In th Northern At lantic and they swarm In the waters of Alaska. They are dried and smoked In vast numbers and there Is hardly a small country store anywhere In the United Statea that doe not keep them on sale. We hav on kind of herring: which I so abundant that w catch more than 1.000.000.000 of them every year so many that their weight would ex ceed that of three or four million men. or more soldiers than we are likely to end fr soma time to the trenches of France. This la the menhaden, a palat able food fish, so abundant that our fishermen catch It In order that It may be turned Into oil and fertiliser. The fish Is almost as fat as the famous rand! fish of Alaska, which when dry will burn Ilk a candle. Just before the war began the Bureau of Flaberlea Investigated thla Industry. It estimated that the catch of that year produced . 500.000 gallons of oil and nearly SO.000 tons of fertiliser, and that the number of fish caught were so many that If they were laid end to aid tbey would reach In aa unbroken line six times around the earth at the equator. We have mors fishermen catching menhaden than any other branch of the Industry. The fish are taken In seines, hundreds of thousands being sometimes pulled up In a single net. They swim about In Immense schools, their heads close to the surface, and often tier above tier, packed almost aa rlosely together as sardines la a box. They are of a bright silver, and ar phosphorescent at night, so that a school then looks Ilk a moving bed of flaming fire. As they swim below the surface la th daytime one may see their glittering backs down tinder th water and th boats seem to be gliding over a floor Inlaid with blocks of sil ver. This statement cornea from one of the reports of th Bureau of Fisheries. The menhaden Is good not only for man. but for many of the other fishes w eat. It Is th principal diet of th mackerel, th blueftah and awordflsh. nd many other fishes prey upon It. It Is caarftt a:i along tha Atlantlo Coast from Main to Florida. Th industry Is well organised and could b easily mobilised by th food administration. Oar most Important fisheries Just now ar tho of Alaska. Puget Bound and the Columbia River. Thla I on ac count of th salmon, which la pat ap In can so that tt can easily be shipped to tha soldiers. Salmon bag become a popular sea food all over th world. It la known to avery nation and eaten In every country. Last year we took out of the Pacific ocean enough salmon to fill (.000.000 eases, each holding l on pound cans. In round number the amount waa 100.000.000 pounds, or more than th weight of th first 1.S00.OO0 men we shall send to th -war. Th whole catch waa almost enough to rive a ran to every man. woman and child In Europe or three can to every cltisen of the United State. It was worth more than $70,000,000. In- addl Hon to this an enormous amount of salmon haa been salted or smoked. This also can be shipped abroad for th us of our allies. Th same Is true of hall but. herring and cod. The coast of Alaska winds about to such an extent that If It wera stretched oat It would be 1000 mile longer than the distance around th world. Nearly every part of it swarms with fish, and we have caught ao many since we bought the territory of Russia that the amount received 1 40 tlmea aa mnch as we paid for th country. It Is now close to f 300.000.009. and th bu reau of fisheries says that with prop er care the product may be mad con tinuous for all time to come. Nearly every part of tha Alaskan water swarm with fish, and ther are certain banka or bed of th ocean which ar paved with halibut and cod. W used to get most of our halibut from the Atlantic and It haa been on of th chief sea foods of th eastern part of our country aver sine Captain John Smith wrote of it In his history of Virginia. Now four-fifth of our halibut comes from th raciflo ocean and tha ullc of it from th waters of Alaska. Th fish ar caught with hook and . put upon Ice as soon as tbey come out of th water. They are ahlpped over th United State by fast train of cold storage cars. Bom of tha halibut Is salted and put up In hogshead for shipment abroad. The Germane have been laying- in a stock of such fish for their army, and I doubt not we could us some in th same way for our sol diers. The Germans imported the fish In hogsheads of 850 .pound each, at a ooaLof $100 per hogshead. I saw them curing halibut thla way at Prince Rupert, In Canada. Th aver age fish used was aa heavy as a srood-sixed man. It was sliced In two, the back and front forming two slabs of snow-white meat. It was then hung up ' lika side of beef, and the back bone waa cut out. The slabs wer then aalted and laid on on top of another In tho hogshead until It was full of what was practically solid meat. . . Another fish from Alaska which could easily bo shipped aa food for our allies Is th cod. There are grea.t banka about th Aleutian Islands, where th cod swarms as thickly as it once did on the banka of Newfound land. We are now catching; millions of pounds- of Alaska codfish every year, and the amount Is steadily increasing. Wa take a great deal from the waters of the Atlantic and wa ara planting cod eggs and cod iisn in those waters tq Increase the supply.' About 10 years asro more than 100,000.009 little cod wer planted by the United 6tates bu reau of fisheries during on season. Th cod la prolific Ten million eggs hav been taken from a single female, weighing- 75 pounds, and it is a poor cod that will not lay a couple of mil lion eggs. Th ced I raor popular In Europe than here. It Is greatly relished by the French. Italian and Spaniards, and it baa formed one of the chief commer cial dishes for hundreds of years. The Rom-ns and Greek both ate It, and also the Anglo-Saxons, who gave It tne name of gad, from which the word cod cornea, gad representing the rod on which it was dried. It is claimed by gome that when the Danes came from Iceland, along- about the year 1000, and discovered North America they were looking; for new cod-flablng r " Sit : I iiriumi ifiMfciirrulii iKrWiwi iffn I nni Bin in- aaSJSW I m I ni li I limn -ir-iM ;.,, ilffr--AaBrtigwaft . ln-i.in.li,., i- fii iKnl . i. 11.1 i. innViSHaS Abou i 31CO0, 000,000 ervny Z.i'-? 772ese3r& grounds, s.nd It Is said that the banRs of Newfoundland had been visited by Spanish fishermen Ion? before Colum bus crossed the Atlantic r, ' ' The codfish come to the shallow banks of the ocean to feed. They pas ture on the bottom of the sea, eating almost every sea animal smaller than they. They eat fish of many kinds, and also crabs, starfish and lobster, and even the great sea clam.. In browsing along the bed of the ocean they pick up all sorts of things which have been lost from the ships, and fishermen record the finding of sclesors and oil cans in their stomachs. ; The heel 'of a fisherman's boot was once found Inside a cod caught off New foundland, and about SO. years ago a wedding ring was found inside a cod. The ring; belonged to Mrs. Pauline Burnam, an Englishwoman, who was lost when the steamship Anglo-Saxon went down. In 1861. The fisherman traced the ownership of the ring and sent it ack to the son of Mrs. Burnam, who is said to have rewarded hira with a present of 50, or $250. i In connection with the planting of codfish and cod eggs it. will surprise some to know that Uncle Sam now hatches fish as farmers hatch chickens, and that he plants the young where he pleases. Within . late years he has been greatly adding to our food sup ply by jiicking out the best kinds of fish and scattering them through the Waters of the United States especially fitted for them. Just now his fiBh scientists ares devoting themselves en tirely to work along the lines of the war, but in the year before it broke out he planted three or four billion eggs or tiny fish and turned loose in the waters 20,000,000 fingerlings, yearlings and Adult fish of different varieties. The bureau of fisheries has now 34 permanent hatcheries and more . than 100 sub-hatcheries, and egg-collecting stations located in 31 different states and In Alaska. , It has a floating hatch ery In- the steamer Fish Hawk. The Alaskan hatcheries distribute great quantities of salmon in the rivers and streams where the fish swarm, and they are planting shad eggs in similar places along our eastern seaboard. They are planting white fish in the Great Lakes and are setting out oyster beds where the oyster has never grown In abundance before. Some of the best oysters I have ever eaten are those which grow in these artificial beds In the Gulf of Mexico and along the coast of that. Pacific Ocean. In San Fran cisco you can now get excellent oysters, whose forefathers came from the At lantic Ocean across the continent in refrigerator cars; holding 200 barrels each. The oysters are planted inside stockades to protect them from their ZxurrFiTh of Our- HalzbiA Come 7 zisn enemies, ana axcer two years uiey begin to produce for the market The bureau is nlantins: fish not onlv in the waters along our coast.) iruf ' in those of our streams, Jakes and ponds. Tou have all heajd of the carp. That is an aUen-rderman subject which has been Interned in our American ponds since his first coming In 1877. He has grown rapidly, and, according to our last fish census, is giving us more than 43,000,000 pounds of food every year. There are now millions of carp in the United States, and the number mlRh-t easily be run high into the billions. Tho fish are raised on the farms of differ ent parts of Europe, and in Germany almost every farmer has his carp pond. We have something like 6,000,000 farms In the United States, and If one farmer in six should start a carp pond the in terior of our country would have more of this food than It could possibly eat. Some may object to the taste of .the carp, but that is because they do not know howto cook it. The fish has been sometimes called the hog of the waters. It likes to wallow in the- mud, and when It is first taken from a mud pond it is apt .to have a mud taste. This disappears if the live fish is kept for a few days in clear water,, and then the meat will be found to taste as fresh as that of our fish from the lakes or the seas. If a carp is cooked the right way it is hard to distinguish It from some of our choicest sea food. ' A few years ago 200 members of the American and Canadian fish associations met together for a fish dinner. They were supposed to be experts on fish, and they ate what they thought was red snapper and called it delicious.' -After the dinner was over they were told it was carp, which had been prepared by a chef who understood how to cook it. In protein food values carp meat Is equal to mut ton and almost to the best of sirloin steak. The bureau of fisheries can give you simple recipes how to fry, boil and bake it and how to make carp pickles, carp salads and - . carp ' cro quettes. . t ffodem Poultry 'Culture n Th poultry ld of farming has been aadly neglected. Moat farmers hav not made money from their fowl. As a rul tbey hav not tried. Tbey hav kept a few scrubs which prove poor layer and table fowls. With meat growing scarcer and war price prevailing for all klnda of foods, th day haa com to grade up th farm ben and mak her a paying proposition. r Oar bt fishing ground In propor tion to th number of mea employed ar th waters of Alasks. W hav BT PROF. JAMES B. MORMAN. . Farmer Expert for the United state De partment of ASTtcnllar. TIE last census figures show that th average annual value of eggs produced on each farm was a little lea than $iS and of poultry raised at $42 aa average total value of poultry products of $100. When th expense of feeding and marketing Is deducted. the net profits ar therefor small. Thla showing I poor la th fac of th natural advantage offered by th farm for poultry keeping. Th farm hen usually haa fre rang. Thla la an advantage which can be mad to yield dollar and cents. Th feed bill for tha grain eaten la th cost of production only. This la aa additional advantage which makea the cost of producing egg less, therefor It should Inerease the farmer' profits. Lastly, th farm hen can procure a greater aounaacc ot natural food. Thia la not only cheaper. but more satisfactory than th com mere ial feeds sold to take th place of grub and Insect. With these natural advantage to her credit the farm hen ought to excel her competitors. But sb ha not don so. Th average egg production la (4 egg a year for each farm hen. Th average weight of eggs laid by th poorest grade of farm fowl I about 20 ouncea to th dosen: by th better grade of mixed barnyard hens, largely of Plymouth Rock origin, about 21 ounces, and by hen from pure-bred flocks of specially bred Leghorns or American varieties, 24 to 35 1-5 ouncea per dosea. Evidently, th kind of fowl kept baa much to do with thia poor showing. , Farsaera Lack SysteW Th day of th livestock scrub oa th farm I rapidly passing. Th farm hen should be Improved by cross breeding or be displaced by a standard breed. Th progressiva farmer everywhere recognise th Importance of Improved or pure-bred stock. Ther I no rea son why this progress should not In clude poultry. It has been shown by th Illinois Experiment Station that many farmer ar keeping cow -with little or no profit; other at a down right loss. It 1 th asm with farm er who keep scrub hens. A wis farmer will discard scrubs of all klnda Th great trouble 1 too many farm ers lack system In th management of tbelr hen. Thla Is particularly true In the middle Atlantie and many Southern statea. The experiment stations have called, attention to this fact Mm and again. Th most important suggestlop made Is th Improvement of farm poul try stock. Thar Is too much) Indifference about maintaining the vigor of poultry. The farmer who let th vitality of his flock run down will not succeed. Farmer should be more careful In culling their young bird and selling them for table use. Bulletin 221 of th North Carolina Experiment Station haa pointed out some of th practice of farmers In that stat. aa follows: "Th firmer very often makes a seri ous mistake In taking th largest and best developed chicken for market and keeping th smaller and poorer, chick-1 ens for his own use. . This may bring better money returns for the time be ing, but a few generations of this prac tice will bring th whole flock to the level of the culls." Not long ago a prominent mine owner or Virginia called at the writer s poul try plant to purchase some fowls. He said that the farmers in his vicinity had paid so little attention to the effects of inbreeding on the vitality, development and egg-laying powers of their fowls that many flocks had degenerated Into puny mongrels which wer not fit for profitable marketing and of no value egg producers. Too many farm flocks' In all parts of the country have had -the alio and vitality of the hens reduced to a low level by this lack of system in poultry management. By keeping a better grade of poultry the farmer will profit In three ways: (1) The broilers can be sold at a higher price: (J) the hens will lay a greater number of larger eggs; and (3) they will make better table fowls. These point all mak for Increased income. Better BrUers Needed. Th maintenance of a vigorous line of fowls la th first consideration of a broiler trade. Tha pick of the flock, both male and female, ahould be kept on th farm for breeding purposes. For grading up th farm hen. th introduc tion of new blood every two or three years la necessary. In a generation or two thia practice will result in a race of broilers which will grow larger and more' rapidly. As they eat little more than puny chickens, the gain will be on th farmer' side of the ledger. A now generally practiced, the far mer succeeds in cheating himself. Un der a better system culls of little or no value for maintaining the vigor of the flock may easily be turned to profit able account. They should be fattened for a broiler trade. .This can be done without much additional labor or ex pense. Broilers are usually sold live weight. The farmer need spend no time In killing and dressing, which is an important factor. The prevailing high price of all kinds of meat has affected the price of poul try. If the farmer is so situated that he can build up a private broiler trade, selling live or dressed broilers, he has a chance to make still greater profits. Private trade prices are frequently 6 cents a pound higher than the best retail trade prices. The profits In sys tematic broiler raising are sufficient to attract attention at this time. Mere and Larger 'Ega-s Alsa, The mainenance of a vigorous flock by a frequent change of blood also af fects the number and size of the eggs. Many teats have- been made to show the advantage of high-grade hens- In egg production over hens of low vital ity. ' The average egg production of my own flock la more than double that of the average farm flock. Suppose a farmer makes a little profit off the eggs his hens now lay every year. If I he can double bis annual egg output from the same number of fowls, his profits will increase greatly. " If , he keeps 0 or more fowls of a high grade, the net increased profit would amount to a nice turn at the end of each year. There is no difficulty in doing this if the farmer will pick out his best birds 1 - ' kV .1, " AT . . ,iV Ititlll Sl.GLE-COMB BROWS LEGHORN S. LIKE, other of the Leghorn tribe the'single Comb Brown Leghorn Is a heavy egg producer and a non-sitter. Breeders must depend upon the hens of other breeds or use artifi cial means to hatch and brood the chicks. Because of the rich red and green-black colors of the male and the soft brown plumage of the female this breed is much admired. It la popular with the fancier aa well as with the farmer. ' Several of our popular American breeder ow their quality of heavy egg production to the Brown Leghorn, which has been used extensively as foundation stock. Brown Leghorn egg are white and larger than those laid by other vari eties of Leghorns, and find ready sale in certain markets. The chicks grow rapidly and reach maturity early. Full-grown Brown Leghorns are usually larger than any other Leghorns. Th'e hens weigh from 44 to 5Vi pounds, while the males welg'h as high as 6H to 6 pounds. They are active, are good foragers, and thrive on open range. They are also ideal for backyard flocks and keep the table well supplied with eggs. for mating and will Introduce new blood occasionally. .". Better Table Fowl Wanted. . '-But the farmer who will really take pride in his hens should consider the advantages of a better grade of fowls as it affects the meat supply of the country. The average scrub farm fowl is a poor table bird. It is true that many farmers only raise hens for their own use. But even in that ease a nign grade hen will furnish nearly double the meat of the ordinary farm hen. So this will be an advantage to the farmer. For utility purposes there are several good breeds, such as Plymouth kocks, Orpingtons. Rhode Island Reds and Wyandottes. When dressed for market ing, the White Rocks take no second place in appearance with any of the above breeds. They are deep in'the breast, yielding a large quantity of fine white meat. A well-kept White Rock hen has a nice yellow skin which gives the dressed fowl a nice appearance, at tracts the eye of the buyer, and when cooked delights the palate of the con sumer. . . . 1 When It comes to the quantity of meat the advantage is plainly with the high-grade hen. The difference is fre quently from two to four pounds. Here is an opportunity for the farmer to per form a-duty for his' country and reap financial rewards for doing so. If he is going to' keep, fairly heavy birds, let him raise .heavier ones and contribute to the meatsupply., ' It is to bis regretted that .farmers have not paid more heed to -the poultry side of farming.- By selling chickens for broilers without regard to the good of the flock, ',by keeping small or scrub breeds of fowls.a.hd by a lack--of. atten tion to the maintenance of the. vitality of their bens, many farmers are today cheating"" themselves oot of legitimate profits. Surely these plain facts and figures ar worth considering. of youth. .Every girl and every man should find the one big love, and there is no reason why it may not happen on. the big, wonderful. Pacific" How tho "Sea Chaperon' Watches Cupid. r CUPID, a regular passenger oa big ocean liners, no longer is allowed to shoot his darts with all the reckless abandon of the past. On the honeymoon route across . the tossing Pacific to the alluring Hawaiian Islands a rival has appeared. A "sea 'chap eron," the first in the world, has been appointed, and now the little god of love is responsible to her. Cupid's guardian is Mrs. Vein Latti more. a charming young . war widow, who followed her youthful soldier hus band to the battle line in France and who is now in California with rela tives. She is a thoroughly competent. Inde pendent sort of person and quite nat urally desired something more than a social existence to occupy her time, so she invented her Job. She went to a steamship company with her idea and now sails regularly on one of the big liners. Though not In uniform, she is rated as an officer of the ship. She signs up regularly with the - rest and at the end of each month receievs a pay envelope like the captain, purser and mate and the others who help to make each run a success. . , It was from Europe and its war or phans that she brought the idea. The little widow scouts the idea that she prevents anyone from having a good time. "You see, I make It easier for the passengers to get acquainted," she says. 'I plan dances and tea parties and all sorts of deck games. As chaperon, too, I very frequently have young girls entrusted to my care whose guardians are unable to make the trip. "Tou don't think that sea voyages are conducive to love marriages r "Oh, yes, I do." she replied to the question. "I have had ever so many splendid men on our boat. Love is the blessed right , CiTY OFFICIALS SHOT DOWN Federal' Officer : Draws Revolver Daring Quarrel Over Money. MT. STERLING, Ky., Jan. 1. Follow ing . an argument over . the proper amount of change he should have re ceived upon purchasing a- sandwich. United States Deputy, Marshal Porter C. Eubank shot andiinstantly killed Henry M. Bingo, City Clerk,, in his rafe here. Eubank was placed under arrest and confined in the county jail pending his examining trial. Feeling against him is high, as Ringo was -popular in the community. Ringo was unarmed when killed. Only one shot -was fired by Eubank. The bullet penetrated Ringo's heart. The tragedy was unexpected. Eubank who had been attending a dance in a room over the cafe, entered and asked for a sandwich. When the change was tendered he claimed it was insufficient and that 30 cents was still due. Ringo, who was slicing bread, told the waiter to give him the money claimed. As he turned' from the bread board, Eubank Is said to have drawn his revolver and fired. Ringo was SI years old and unmar ried. a He Is survived by two sisters. Mrs. Dan Priest, of Fort Worth. Tex. and Mrs. John A. Judy, of Mt. 6terling. One brother. H. B. Ringo, of Mt. Ster ling, also survives. The body will be burled Saturday afternoon following funeral services at the Presbyterian Church. . GIRL MAY ENTER SERVICE Miss Doris Kay Passes) Examination . for Ambulance Driver. . MINNEAPOLIS, Jan. 7. Ambitious to do her bit in the war driving an auto mobile in France. Doris Oonroe Day, lS-year-old daughter of Burt W. Day, Hutchinson, recently pased a rigid ex amination before the State Automobile Examining Board with a mark of 100 and received a state chauffeur's li cense. "I know Tm saying something for a young girl and I'm nothing more, not even a young woman yet but I do want to go to France and drive an ambulance as my little part in the big war," said Miss Day. "That will not be much, but it will be something and I know I can do it as well as anyone." Carrying the license and introduc tory letters from state officials. Miss Day left the Capitol anxious to make application for a place in an ambu lance corps on the French front. VISITORS TELL OF . RIOTS (Continued xrom Page 2.) starts the soldier on his -self -authorized "furlough." Among the vivid remembrances of the Stancliffs is the .cannonading of the Winter Palace at Petrograd. Their hotel was less than a quarter of a mile from the palace. ' The Russian war vessel Aurora, from the Baltic fleet, approached within a half mile of the palace and sent hundreds, of shells through the great building, and firing continued from 3 P. M. until 3 A. M. Food is very scarce all over the em pire. Meats of, all kinds are, almost negligible. At the best hotels breakfast consists or black coffee, minus sugar, with occasionally aj single small slice of black bread. Fish and fowl are occasionally served for din ner, but by no means regularly. Sugar is not on the market at any price. I tried to get Mr. Stancliff to give me his opinion about the proposed peace between Russia and Germany, QUI 11 (3 WOU1U HUb BAlil QBB -4 (Wf Wfi opinion. The nearest he would -oome to it was to say that he believes th Russians are getting their, ex.es open, and that If the allies play their cards well they may hold Russia to their cause. He thinks that the Influence of the United - States wl!l -count for more than that of any-other,! country in the Russian decision. - ' j - "": As I was bidding the Stancliffs good bye at the depot as their train departed, Mrs. Stancliff said to me: "Mi1. Bennett," whatever you say in ypur article about us or about Russia, do not forget 'to. emphasize what we have said about the Red Cross work and the work 'of the Y. M. C. A. These two organiza tions are the leaven we both believe that will have more to do with settling the Russian troubles than any other mediums, and, after the war, when peace comes, their work will be far greater than now, and then their ex ample will bring all to a better under standing of right and wrong, and through them a lasting peace will be made and the world will be a better place for all than heretofore. Tell your readers that the money given to these two organizations will bless the re ceivers through its benefits and doubly, trebly a hundred-fold bless the givers." EARLY HANGINGS RECALLED Thirty-Eight Sioux Indians Killed in Famous Uprising. MANKATO, Minn., Jan. 7.--01d-time residents are recalling that 05 years ago 38 Sioux Indians were hanged here for participating in the famous Indian uprising and massacre of that long ago period. - Colonel George W. Mead, . then a member of E Company,. Ninth. Minnesota, stationed at Judsoii, still-, lives here and tells a vivid story of., the execution of the redskins. Benja-, min P. Day. the only-pioneer surviving Sheriff of that day, . also has many , thrilling reminiscences of the affair. ; Brothers Sent to Prison. ATLANTA - Ga.. Jan. '4. Will ' and ' Henry Granneman were each sentenced to serve 10 days in the county jail for contempt of court by Federal Judge' . E. S. Farrinsrton. Thev refused to be .' sworn or give the age of their brother, ' Mel Granneman, who was found guilty; by a jury of refusing to register under the draft law. He will be sentenced ' today by Judge Farrington. . Mf Feed and eptra are worth too much monev this season to let your hens loaf on the job. Keep tho Hens Laying with n "SI Great for Breeding Stock Tones up the system and strength ens the productive organs. Puts health and hustle, vim and vigor into hens. a great money-muter u uiea repaiariy. Use it for young, growing, molting end - laying stock. No filler no eeyenne peppev-iuetaooa lOMe. wcaauwo. taifil.eO. CON KEY'S ROUP REMEDY' S0e.eOc.rt. 20. G-lb. cmn 17.00. jojt pot.it in tne annmng wtor . oector iiifnenw. Bontledee Seed Floral Co., 145-147 Second Street. 145 WTISt. Postiamd Ostc. New Poultry Supply. Catalogue Free