THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX. PORTLAND, APRIL 21, 1918. UNCLE SAM SEEKS YANKEE DAREDEVILS FOR TANK SERVIC Recruits for Land Battleships That Are to Carry Stars and Stripes in ""Big Smash on Berlin" Must Be Not Only Mechanical Experts, hut Boys ""Always Spoiling for a Fight . a a : Germany Stole the Tank Idea From the British, and the Result Was That in the Recent Fighting It Has Been a Case of Tank Against Tank, Both Sides Being Equipped for Armageddon With the Latest of War Monsters. ' WASHINGTON. D. C. Swivel-chair oldlrra. or "bcTo-bor." a they call tbera In Washlnston. where Vncle Joe Cannon rises to remark that the spurs worn by non-combatant offi cers are "to keep their feet from sliding off their desks." will hardly fill the bill when It comes to putting craws aboard the powerful tanks that are belnc at tached to General Pershing's army In 'ranc and made ready to loose against the Hun when the big American drive la set In motion, whether that bo this t all or the Spring of For it Is now only too apparent that ths lumbering tank with Its Cyclopean eyes and dragon dimensions Is an In atrument of warfare that has passed out of the experimental stage and has come to stsy; to bo developed, however, and mado even more potent as the war continues. Furthermore, It Is no secre either, that L ncle Sam has turned to the tank and Is not only preparing to add whols fleets of land battleships to Ms troops "over there." but speculatln further on how the tank may be devel aiong tne line or the tanklet." an individual form of armament that takes wsy back again to the knights of Old wno tared forth to battle clad In shiny habiliments of steel. In the re incarnation, however, the anight of to day Is an Iron-cased locomotive unto himself, who operates on caterpillar wheels and constitutes a combination of Infantry, artillery, cavalry and navy all la one: Wen ' l-ee Fight." Tnly men who love to fight." to get eaca to tne recruiting for tank regl mrnts. are wanted this Summer for the American tank service. "The kind or men we are looking for are the ones who are anxious to go over the top and et the Huns the kind of men who are spoiling for a fight." says Captain Jienry it. ueorge. in charge of tank recruiting In New Tork City. One has only to mlnsle among the boys who are enlisting in this branm or the service to learn that they are a "distinct" type in every way. characteristic "Yankee daredevils." who will form an Amer ican fighting family as unique as Itoosevelt s Hough Riders or the Astor Battery or any of a number of famous fighting units developed In the various American wars. At Camp Meade. Mary land, where are mobilised the boys of j'ennsyivsnla. Maryland and the PIs- inc 01 i-oiumbia. the tank recruits have adopted aa their coat-of-arms a great black cat atandlng on guard ready to "claw the enemy." and with It tne legend. "Treat "em rough. When the first call for volunteer for tank service was posted In the various cantonments about six weeks ago there was a grand ruh to get into line. Post ers reading. "Wanted, volunteers for tank service." were no sooner put up than the recruiting officers were be sieged by thousands of eager youths. There are very special requirements ror this branch or service, however, and Dot all the willing youths have been ac commodated. Men of daring and ad venturous spirit who are unafraid in any dilemma, who are cool and calcu lating and willing to "take the long rnance. are demanded In every case. The big requirement, however. Is for men who are skilled mechanics, for the chaps who man these movable forts must Include expert tractor operators truck drivers, derrick and steam shovel men. machinists, machine gunners, chauffeurs and the Use. Their officers are drawn pretty largely from the en gineer corps of he Army. Reports from virtually every canton ment in the country show a "big drive" to get into the tsnk service. When the "big push" broke In the latter part of March and It became known that the tanks were playing such an Impor tant part In the battle. Interest here in tanks was only Increased the more. At Camp Pevens. In Massachusetts, for In stance, the recruiting officers were lit erally swamped with applications. At Camp Meade lit men were enrolled in one day. Many American boys enlist ing in tank service are likely to see service this Summer against the Hun. for It is known that some detachments already have gone across, while still others are known to have participated In the first two 'weeks' fighting In what is to be known in history as the Battle of Plcardy. In the Middle West, where the tanks have been heard of and talked about but not yet actually seen, as in the Kast. where several Eng lish tank veterans bare been on parade this Spring, the Interest Is no less gen eral among all the enlisted men. The great automobile manufacturing sec tion of the Middle West Is going to send many regiments of skilled mechanicians to operate Uncle Sam's new fleets of tanks. The "suicide club." as the tank de tachments are known In the French army, attracts many men who have been In service whose terms of enlist ment here expired. This applies par ticularly to the ambulance men. Very many men from the ambulance service have gone back Into the allied armies after serving their terms on the west ern front or In Italy and Invariably these men strike for either the avia tion service or the tank regiment Just how the French came to term th tank regiment "the suicide club" hss not been revealed, for It Is certain that this branch of service Is less dangerous than many other forms of modern fighting. To fight from th shelter of a tank Is much less denser ous than the warfare of the trenches, where men are exposed continually to the danger of machine gun and rifl fire, gas attack or shell fire. When It keeps on the move the tsnk afford a shifting target for artillery and I: Immune altogether to machine-gun fire. In fact. It wss In an endeavor to devise some protection from ma rhlne-gun fire and particularly air plane bombs, that the English first hit upon the Idea of evolving a tank out of the American farm tractor. Service, In the tank division, how ever. Is a very exacting grind that re quires pluck and nerve. Any man given to fits of "blues" or "grouches" h no business In the tank service. It re quires a very sunny disposition to ride bottled up In the dsrk interior of tank. Jostled from side to side and suf fering from the heat and Inconvenience of cramped quarters. Tank service In this respect Is not unlike the sub marine service, where men have to spend long, wesry hours huddled to aether In the dsrk Interior of the hull. hearing only the Incessant rattle of machinery and seeing only the mechan- mii Intrusted to their care. The mon ster caterpillars are a great drain on the constitution. A man must be on the alert every single moment and must be prepsred to stand a terrific nerve strain all the time. Athletes, experienced warriors, trsv el era, animal trainers, men who have seen active service in perilous fields of endeavor, find the tank service Just to their liking. Here Is an afternoon's roster oi recrulta at a New Tork head quarters: Two gold miners, three Boer War veterans, three professional pugilists, six members or last years varsity football team at Williams Col- ege. six former United States marines. hree men who had won the French Croix de Guerre, a filibuster, an Argentine cavalry man, a dancing master, a lion tamer and 40 men from he University of Chicago who had enlisted as an ambulance unit and then ransferred. Athletes, specialists and men who love a fight get the pref erence. Recruits for the United States tank service are being drilled In a monster raining ramp being established near he historic battlefield at Gettysburg. Pa. Hbat would Pickett have done with a score or more of the modern anks In his drive against the Union nes In that famous charge more than alf a century ago? As a matter of fact, while the tank Is a direct product of the present world war, who shall say that the first tank was not that Ittle cheesebox a floating tank that Ericsson contrived so wonderfully to lis part against the Merrimac In the famous naval duel of the Civil War? Just as the armored turret of the Monitor turned aside the Confed erate fire and proved Itself Invulner ble before the rattle of musketry and small arms, so the tank today is valu- ble for Its protection against machine un and rifle fire. Bursting shrapnel makes no Impression on the tank and takes a direct hit from a piece of powerful artillery to dent the modern Horse of Troy or put him out of busi es. As th tractor has come more and mora Into general use In the Army the horse hss been dethroned, and it would not seem Improbable that the time would come when even the famous old rmy mule would be displaced by the gasoline motor. Experiments con- One Farm Tractor Can Do as Much Work as 20 Horses and Is, Therefore, a Boon to Civilization Owing to Scarcity of Man Power and Unprecedented Demands for Food, ducted In our West several years ago brought th tractor Into use for heavy hauling even before Great Britain had taken hold of the American farm tractor and transformed it into a modern battle tank. Today the tractor Is as essential as the big gun. for the big gun could not be moved at will on the battlefield except for the cater pillar tractor unless hundreds of horses or mules were employed. Eater the "Taakleft The "tanklet" Is being considered by the War Department. Henry Ford, who is building the "Eaglea" .or the Navy Department, believes the two man tank suggested by ordnance experts is every bit as feasible as the new anti-submarine device named the "Eagle" by order of Secretary Daniels. Two men would fit into one of the "tanklets" and Ford would put them on the bat tlefields of France by the thousand. Each of the large tanks is held by he British to be the equivalent of 00 fighting men. Ford holds the "tank let" would be equivalent to 150 men at least. They would be produced at the rate of 1000 or 2000 a day. and once production was under way 90,000 could be turned out In three months. They could be distributed along the battle front, he maintains, 18 feet apart. In each tank two men, shielded by amor- plat with a machine gun, would have the offensive power of 0 soldiers with rifles. Tanks Here to Stay. Regardless of the fate of th "baby' tank. It la certain that the mammoth tank in use now in the titanic struggle In France Is destined to remain a per manent fixture In the implements of warfare and to be enlarged and car ried forward to greater things. The estlny of the tank was settled at Cambral. when a great fleet of British anks smashed their way through the famous Hindenburg line In what was p to that time the greatest surprise ttack of the war on land. It is re corded that In two days the British accomplished more than they had in two months of the Somme offensive. In those two days they advanced more than six miles on a front eight miles lde, and were partly instrumental In the capture of 10,000 prisoners and 150 guns. In the recent fighting the per formance of the tank has even mora startled the world. Just as Germany "stole" the sub marine Idea from this Nation and per fected it as the most ruthless weapon of all wars, so she "stole" the tank from the British soon after its ap pearance on the western battlefields of Europe. The surprise of the "Tom mies' at the initial appearance of the tank, when they went laughing Into battle behind lta cumbersome propor tions, expecting the way to Berlin to be "ironed out before them, was no mora genuine than the Germans when they first beheld the huge steel ele phantine monster crawling upon them. And when In the course of events some of the monsters fell into the hands of the Germans It did not take Frits long to copy them and Start building them Krupps and elsewhere beyond the Rhine. The result was that in the re cent fighting U has been b case of tank against tank, both aides being. here In the United States and the Do- equipped for Armageddon, with the minion of Canada, where the food sup latest of war monsters. The tank Is only getting under way as an instrument of warfare. Certain It Is that as the war continues the tank Is to be developed on a marvel ous scale. Who will deny that it is only a step from the dreadnought tank that now disports upon the mottled landscape of France to the terrific grinding machine rending its way through cities, crushing huge build ings like eggshells, the awesome ma chine depicted on the covers of the popular science magasines and in the books of the novelists? If modern ar tillery has been perfected so that It shoots 80 or 90 miles; If the battleship of the Spanish-American War period is but a gunboat alongside the super dreadnought of the world war; if the torpedo that Farragut "cussed" at Mo bile is but a percussion cap alongside the depth bomb of today, then may not the tank of 1918 grow into the great steel dragon menacing whole cities In a few more years? In bright contrast to the tractor as an implement of war is the tractor as an Instrument of peace. The food tractor today Js even more powerful than the tank of the battlefield, for plies of the allied nations are being produced, the food tractor la a god send In a time of farm labor scarcity. England showed the way and now the civilised world is following suit. Last year more than 6000 huge food tractors were worked 24 hours by sunlight and electric light producing foodstuffs for the United Kingdom. Standing orders here for foreign shipments are greater than can be accommodated because of th scarcity of shipping. Canada buys 25 a day In the United States, and would take more if she could get them. In the United States there are approx imately 250,000 gasoline tractors In use this Spring, with all the tractor fac tories working day and night on rush orders. One company is manufacturing 100.000 food tractors on one order. Great as was the invention of Cyrus McCormick's harvester and Eli Whit ney's cotton gin, the farm tractor is destined to go down in history as one of the most valuable contributions to the science of agriculture. Probably no other scientific offering of the last century has offered more toward the hoDe of developing our natural re source on a comprehensive scale. The tractor now is hauling out the THE HOUSEBOAT ON THE STYX (Continued From First Page.) William?" asked Napoleon. "Trying to stampede Anne Hathaway into starting something?" "That is not mistletoe," reiorieu ShakesDeare. "That is laurel." "O. indeed!" said Napoleon. "Latest thing in Spring bonnets up your way, I presume?" "Not at all." said Shakespeare coldly. "I always wear the laurel as a matter of right on my birthday.' "O I see." said Napoleon. "The far famed spinach of Parnassus, eh? Fine! If vou nut a little mayonnaise on it it'll be mora dressy. Bill." "So today Is your birthday, t it. William?" said Homer. "Well, well. well! What a. big boy you are getting to be!" "Must have reached his second child hood," said Aeschylus. - "I am 301 years old today," said ShakesDeare. with frigid dignity, "as you might have known for yourselves if you had ever read about anybody but yourselves in the latest edition of Who's Who in Baaes v "Congratulations, William, congratu lations." said Homer. "We had forgot ten. Nepenthe had us In her grip; but we stand ready to make amends. Gen tlemen," he added, rising and address ing the large group of those present. today is the natal day or our Kara oi Avon, the dulcet voiced swan or btrat ford. the sweet singer of soft suspira tions that stir the soul and make the pulses throb like a gibbering Jitney on an unscaleable slope." "Three cheers for the spark-plug of letters!" cried Raleigh. "May his tire never deflate!" Shakespeare bowed In acknowledg ment of the tribute. - '11 eeuu to me, gentlemen,- con tinued Homer, "that today being the anniversary already alluded to, this club will honor itself by doing honor to the greatest dramatist of all time." Shakespeare lif ted his hand in depre cating assent. "I repeat," said Homer, "that our brother's connection with the stage makes it fitting that we should drain a cup to the health of that master of bis craft, of that rare spirit who has touched nothing that he did not adorn, of that great genius whose wit has the keenness of the razor, and the tem pered flexibility of the. Damascus blade, whose knowledge of human weakness withal " "Aren't you piling It on rather thick. Homer?" whispered Herodotus. "Just wait don't interrupt," said Homer, sotto voce. "In short, gentle men," he added aloud, raising his glass, "I give you the greatest dramatist of all time " -- Homer paused, possibly for dramatic effect, and then turning to the blush ing Shakespeare, he finishing In ring ing tones: "That greatest dramatist of all time, whose name I doubt not has already suggested Itself to ypu Mr. George Bernard Shaw!" There was a roar, a rush, a sound of tinkling glass, and a splash. Shakes peare had dived through the window into the river, making the black waters of the Styx fairly boil as he swam madly up the channel. "Hi Bill," cried Homer, leaning over the rail, and calling to the puffing poet. "You've left your life preserver behind you!" And he tossed the laurel wreath. which in Shakespeare's angry flight had fallen to the floor, into the seeth ing wake of the hero of the day. i big lumber resources of the West. One has only to consider the fact that one tractor is capable of performing the work of as many as 20 horses or more to realize the importance of this adjunct to farming and forestry. -With the tractor it is likely this Na tlon will turn to agricultural pursuits upon a hitherto unattempted scale. At one move the problem of farm labor seems greatly relieved, in view of the fact that one tractor is capable or doing as much work as half i dozen men. The "back to the farm' propaganda is likely to be benefited in that the tractor abrogates much of the toilsome drudgery of farm life and makes the business of producing food more attractive for the lad who is not at all averse to tinkering with a gaso line engine or driving an automobile in the furrows. Automotive engineer intr in the agricultural schools is very apt to prove a fascinating proposition for the American boy both in theory and practice. After the War. In the affairs of the world, then, the tractor occupies a unique position. So long as the war lasts the tank is going to be developed as a more powerful death-dealing engine of destruction. If the war goes forward to 1920 or later we shall probably see land navies of monster proportions indulging in mortal hand-to-hand combats upon the soil of Germany as the allies smash their way to Berlin. Development of the tank may bring about the elimina tion of trench warfare altogether and. land fighting may resolve itself into the duels of these gigantic fleets of tractor battleships freighted with heavy ordnance and moving to battle under a barrage of massive artillery having a range of a hundred miles or more. Wild dream? That's what they sard when Jules Verne wrote of the submarine and Alfred Tennyson of the battles in the air and H. G. Wells of the tanks. But here they are! After the war, however, the tractor will do more toward mending the fear ful devastation of man than possibly any other agency. Nations turning; from their artillery and machine guns will take up the latest evolutions of science and use them to the repair of all the horrible injury inflicted upon mankind and upon Mother Earth. Food production will be resumed upon a more elaborate scale. In every na tion there will be a great development of natural resources. Italy has learned that she must develop her waterways in order not to be depend ent upon foreign shipments of coal for production of power. France and Eng land will move along the same lines, making themselves more resourceful in the production of foods, fuel, lights heat, etc. The future looms up in won derful proportions the great futura when man shall turn again from de struction to construction! C. W. D. 'i RMtowd Iri 4 to 8 Days fi ' IX'y Iot djd bat pwtored to its original X color! Kuj T. Goldman'! H&lr Color Jf Itt Rtoiw ia porecolorleaa liquid. olea (ft ' and da intr as water. You simply Mmk if l SC !t tfero&gfe th balr and taa ra? dia- A VY ) appears. D Send For Fro Trial Bottfe V" U U Xsptnjwtlt.U7a'rlwlrvbhnlttaTw6 f g ftmTtalMk, dark brarB.Mdlw bnraasUghtfcm A Aitttr,nlcMUakwttk7vrUtU. ' W. .Ill MBd 7 tb. ial tottte Mi apMbl Mb Vfthwkkti tompplj 1L k lonvut tlnftlv llHlgf (uplitdhtdfrwUlf fU Bkt MM f kuj fiosi J.Di dluQ.M. Miry T. Goldasa, SoldntB Bldr. H St tul. Miss. Sit it.) I ti d m Stars Simple Way to End Dandruff There Is one sure way that has never failed to remove dandruff at once, and that la to dissolve It, then you destroy it entirely. To do this, just get about four ounces of plain, common liquid arvon from any drug store (this Is all you will need), apply It at night when retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub It In gently with the fin ger tips. By morning most, if not all. of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications will completely dis solve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no matter how much dandruff you may have. Tou will find all Itching and digging of the scalp will ntop instantly, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glos sy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. Adv. TODAY'S BEAUTY HINT I t It Is not necessary to shampoo your hair so frequently If It is entirely and properly cleansed each time by the usgj of a really good shampoo. The easiest to use and quickest drying shampoOi that we can recommend to our readers is one that brings out all th natural beauty of the hair and may be en Joyed at very little, expense, by dis solving a teaspoonful of Canthrox, which can be obtained from any drug; gist, in a cup of hot water. This makes a full cup of shampoo liquid, enough so it Is easy to apply it to all the hair instead of Just to the top of the head. This, when rubbed into the scalp and onto every strand of hair, chemically dissolves all impurities. It is very soothing and cooling in Its action, aa rwell as beneficial to both scalp and hair. After rinsing out the lather so created, you will find the scalp la fresh, clean and free from dandruff. while the hair dries quickly and evenly, developing a bright luster and a soft fluffiness that makes it seem very. heavy. Adv. - ?