TOE SUNDAY OKEGOXIAy, PORTLAND, MARCH 10, lfris. PfTCff OfiR APHS VIVIDLY DESCRIBE GREAT EUROPEAN WAR Dogs Arc Man's Best Friends on Battlefields-German Contrivance to Stop Tanks Is Failure-Patch and Teuton Officers Closely Examine British Prisoners. 1 . r-i ii -:;. . .... . iJ...'v..i : '' i .r i riv.-iui . 1.1 III i ' '-'"J LVr'..KV?f:.4 I ' La V 7 -fill I I" " " 1 irn-roed a' -i III . - jr w . 1 - - - -r , d . .Ill :. . ;.:r' i'--: - II if k-: "' l . ' rri : ; f .r-rtr- -.".3 -r.r..-,...tvv :VM r ; tT? !. v . : -.rc , .v i-n :: ?'1.y'k -..v. J l:-rr: iT"7r:: 7 ----- v: ; Cretan 72Sj-2szAr Pun. ' yr : ' ' , 7,' : vW'R: ' .. pr; ;,r r:y. ,7 ilfv Vmrklak Pilmcn la BM4a. IN th valley or tne tupnrntxr-i" Turkish prisoner captured In tha mat British drlv through MosDpo- tamla wen marched through the an cient city of Bagdad, while the enlbu-. .fa.iA av whn Hiud the Htxee. cheered ,the British. The British bW a prison compound in jaeopoiMU' where the horde of ajtured Turks .te confined. In a British official photo rraph the Turkish prisoners are shoWn marching on New street, at "Picadilky Circus," under Briosn escon. . ma puv tograph animates the oia arawiujio entry of the famous citadel centuries and centuries ago. Real Den of War on Dwty. b.oIa nftin tnllr nf tha "dOITS Of war." but the dogs they think of re far different irom tne reai win now playing a wonderful part In the trenches. The releasing of these dogs Is not the sign of conflict. tut of suc cor, for those who have fallen. Dogs are used extensively to aid the men of the medical corps find the wounded. Often they act independently Jn brings Ing aid to the hurt until there can be J k.k tn hj4r own lines. Afl everywhere else in the world the dog has proven in me mouifli u m man's best friend. A recent photo nh ihnvi tha does in a Dortlon of trench on the Marne front. The pollua are holding tnem in leasa unm wj get the opportunity for searching the wastes of no man's land for the wound ed and the dying. Vf .bin Pint to Help Hoover. w t. 1 n nnjtU Ram. and rtl n baflTS in the trenches a great .lishlns fleet will bring upwards of 3,000.000 'pounds of llsh to shore every week. This fish will enable Americans to go without beef and pork that are needed to feed our soldiers and our alfles if we are to be victorious in this war. The work the Eastern Fisheries Company has un dertaken in securing this fleet is a direct help to Hoover in his efforts to conserve the food of the country. The Kingfisher Is the first; stream trawler owned by the Eastern Fisheries Company to be completed. The com pany has invested $10,000,000 to the project, and will have 10 ships like the Kingfisher constructed. These steam trawlers are unlike any other kind of fishing ship. They are built with curved bows that will give them twice the speed of the ordinary fishing ship. Instead of taking months for a cruise these ships will leave port and be back again with a full load of fish inside of a week. One of them with a crew of S3 men will do as much work as six schooners and 140 men. and will catch as many fish in a week as the ordinary schooners, catch In six months. The new boats will ply to the Great Ameri can Banks that extend off the shore from Boston to Newfoundland. They will go after cod and haddock prin cipally. , A recent.photograph shows the King fisher on the .ways before the launch ing. see Girl DUpatchera Training. -Women will soon have, another man's Job and it ,1s a mighty good one, too. They have made good at every position that has been opened to them so far, so the Pennsylvania RatlroaV is giving them the opportunity to learn to be train dispatchers. Of course, they won't step right from the school to the Job of guiding trains through the Intricacies of terminals and yards. They will first have to serve apprenticeships Just as the expert men dispatchers did. as tele graph operators along Uie une ot vum Pennsylvania system. Grrasaa Aati-Taak Genu The British tanks have the Germans on the Jump trying to create a force or contrivance that would stop them. The latest thing they, have produced Is a heavily armored turret which appears as a small blockhouse on the battle field. A gun Is mounted in the tur ret, but the tanks have swept by these armored blockhouses as though they were not there. The first photograph to arrive In this country showing the new anti-tank gun shows one that has Just been captured by the Anzacs, who are shown examining It. To get Inside it Is necessary to get down on hands and knees and-crawL a British Prisoners In Holland. A remarkable photograph shlwing British prisoners of war In the hands of the OermansNrecently reached the United States. It shows a group of prisoners arriving at the railroad sta tion of Venlo, a city in the Province of Llmburg, a southern province of Hol land, near the German frontier, having their papers examined by German and Dutch officers. The British are lined up on the right of the photograph, while the officers scrutinise their pa pers carefully. The soldiers are In terned for the duration of the war In Holland by treaty. ! No other photograph of this kind has arrived in the United States since the beginning of the war. German Raider Crew Caprared. In a recent raid over England by a number of Gotha machines, two of the German planes were brought down and six occupants captured, despite the fact that the raid was made In the early morning hours. In a British official photograph one of the captured Ger man pilots wearing the Iron cross rib-, bon is shown leaving the car which brought him to the detention camp. German raids over Great Britain have ceased to hold terror for the people and the protection against the air raid ers has been so perfected that usually the enemy Is stopped before any dam age can be done. The damage done in the last month through raids has been extremely slight. L'aited States Aviators Use New Aere Camera. The United States aerial observers have learned the art of snapping the' ' enemy trenches with the new aeroplane graflex. The eyes of our Army are no longer human eyes, for the camera has taken its place in war and is being ef fectively used by our daring airmen in photographing the enemy's lines to in form the gunners of the range. pi . ...... , v.. ...iv " " . ' 1 3s-.vw.y:; v-yvt;..;;;-:-g.-,iij,, . - l , ' 'lnderwoad S 7 jeSaDojrS OfiYa7--&S7vj- UndcrwoodVX " " JN ' . I "nrfrrWOOd ft I . 7 1 ' ... - u l1 UnderwoodMY Bs-sfA Jsss or; esjs 7?Jvo a net- v .1 ii ilifsv ' - - r II I H ; rT .: . - '- . - - - "rr i 1 : s .Vr vr PiihJic In forma - 1 a. a. ii . - a-' rn m