ENTENTE NEEDS MASTER HAND TO DIRECT FULL USE OF ITS POWER r - . i-vv ts-A .? ;y TEANSPORTI NO- 3 ENTENTE ALLIES PREPARED FOR SEASON OF CARNAGE While Thoughts of Peace Have Been Actively Aroused, a - Year of" Unprecedented Slaughter Is i : Expected, ' n Intmitlml . Y"RESIDKNT "WILSON'S peace over- rtures, if not productive of the hoped for reaulta lit the present time, have definitely turned the minds of men ahd - women In all belligerent tatea In the direction of peace, and have thus brought about a revolu tion of thought the Intensity i Which can only be . appreciated In the midst Of the warring peoples. , Six weeks ago peace was still a far Oistaot vision which men with the most acute perceptions only - dimly ; foresaw; now everybody Is able to grasp the prospect of peace as a solid and. not too remote blessing which must Inevitably ensue "when military men can no longer say that arms r'hava not had a fair chance to decide ' the Issues of the war. That .time will not come until the end of next ' autumn, according to the shrewdest opinion In Franoe. 'While 191? ' Is .certain to be another year of war. It , may also be expected to witness car nage far more terrible than the laughter of the Tser, the;' massacres before Warsaw, the ghastly sacrifices of Verdun or the Hectacombs of the - Somme . . ZadloaUoas of Blaugliter. ' For it is a little realised fact that at this moment . something like 12, ,' 000,000 people are engaged In the manufacture of guns and shells, rifles and cartridges, .bombs, air torpedoes and other deathdeallng material of . war, all of which are to be directed -against some 12,000,000 troops.' For every soldier in the field there is at least one civilian working om the. agents for his destruction. It Is n6t difficult after 28 months of war to grasp the fact that armies of vast slae are in the field; what la ' not so apparent, even in the big cities of belligerent countries, is that . .civilian, armies equally Immense are " forging mortal weapons for the un formed legions. ; Present proportions have only lately been reached, though the tendency has for some months those tn the field. This state of things can only result In an appalling ' orgy of death and destruction in -SILT. It is likely to come by sur prise and to begin In France, with the entente armies taking .the of fensive. As the fine weather opens uptt 'Will spread out over a much larger area than that of any previous offensive, and crescendo to a pitch of -unimaginable. fury till one side or - the other is exhausted and admits de feat. The dramatic munitions race now silently proceeding throughout Kurope and in a large part of America Is only a prelude to titanic fighting next spring and summer Military men here look confidently to Nivelle and Halg to retain the ' Initiative on. the western front. Ger man reserves have lately been massed at various points behind the line in , Frahce. I gather, however, that they r are not in sufficient force to enable , Htndenburg to begin anything like' a . big drive Just now, but are more probably Intended to be thrown in -at : points menaced by the French and British,-while the Germanic comman " der is working out strategical prob lems on the Russian and Roumanian . fronts.; :: . .'-'Oenaaa Quiet Ominous- There .has been relative idleness in the west during November and ueoemDer, , out we nave had many sucn ; periods in the past two years. . and they - have always terminated with, some sensational stroke. , - In Paris the ; Germans are ;- being credited with plannfng various bold moves. For Instance, the hypotheses or an Invasion of France via Switzer land is regarded as a possibility -for 7r 4 v 1 Hi 1 1 ii iff ' in. y Hi. 1 Nwi Serrlc. next spring. ' Military experts point out that the invasion would come through the Doubs valley by way of Basle in conjunction with another in road by way of Soleure ami Neucha- tel, both marches converging on the French frontier, town of Pontaller. To the north of tms town the Chaumont chain of mountains constitutes France's defenses against such an in vasion. Bescancon being the main base; while to the south rise the for midable Juras. Critics say these ob stacles are so serious and the like lihood of the Swiss army putting up a sturdy fight is bo certain that Htndenburg need not be expected to go forward with the plan, although it has recently been reviewed by the German staff. Another possibility foreshadowed here is a German irrup tion into Holland, the object of which would be to establish more favorable bases on the North Sea for the sub marines campaign. England, it is said, is .closely watching for developments in this quarter. But the consensus of well informed opinion is that Germany and her al lies will continue to concentrate their attention otv the main eastern and western fronts, where they, will need all their resources to fight off strokes now being secretly prepared in France, England. Italy and Russia. These very real menaces to Germany and Austria-Hungary exist now in more pressing form than at any previous time in the war, and Htndenburg is not likely to divert any considerable fraction of his reserves to secondary fronts where no such decision could be obtained as would influence the war as a whole. I find a well grounded feeling that he is likely to work off his offensive proclivities at the expense of Russia and Roumania. whlle trying- to hold the French. British and Italian fronts intact. Odessa Coveted lort. The final object of his plan outlined years ago by Von Bernhardt is sup posed to be the capture of Odessa, the Black Sea, port, which Is just under 100 miles distant from the scene of the present fighting in Roumania, It would call for the manning of an of fensive front of, 150 miles and the strategical tasks before these armies would be the occupation of the whole of Moldavia- and the crossing of the Sereth, Pruth and Dniester rivers. Entente experts aee. all kinds of difficulties in the way of such an un dertaking. To begin the Roumanian army continues intact. It has accom plished the fifth great feat of the war wnicn has ended in the retiring with out aesirucuon, ana it is said, in con junction with the Russians, to hold strong ' defensive lines consisting of ine marsny region or tne ianube delta ast of Galatz and the Sereth river, with Its confluent, the Putna. From the Danube to the Black Sea. this line, which entente experts pre dict will be very difficult to force, la 100 miles long. Its defense is aided by three railroads one running down the Sereth valley and ending at Foca sani, a second from Jasay whicn branches out at Barldad and finishes at Galats. and a third fronv Klc ni ne vn to . Reni. On the German side three railroads converge on Focsanl, Ualatx, and Bralla from Buseu. There is a' conflict of opinion as to Whether Hlndenburg. . deferring : the march on Odessa, will swing down to Macedonia for the purpose of driving Sarrail back - to Saloniki. Witb the Junction of the Roumanian army and Sarrall's : forces the Macedonia . front again becomes a ' secondary one.' Op erations on either side ate very 'diffi cult owing to the mountainous nature of the country, the lack of railroads. If strategical reasons alone could" de cide the matter,- it is felt certain that THE OREGON SUNDAY- JOURMAt, 'PORTLAND, 1 j 'S A Hlndenburg would leave MacecVmla alone, but Bulgaria may demand the retaking of Monastlr and Fiorina. This would reopen direct communication with Greece and embarrass the entente allies in their transportation prob lems by forcing them to divert more shipping to the Mediterranean. Emtemte Experts Differ. There are still two strong currents of opinion in entente countries regard ing the direction grand strategy should take one figuring that the German Drang Nach Osten (for which the Kaiser is believed to have begun the war) can best be checked by over-' whelming offensives on the main east ern and western fronts, and the other that they can be still checkmated by direct 'action . In the near east. If the latter is adopted next spring will see a great move against Turkey converging from Armenia, Mesopo tamia and Egypt, the success of which would isolate Germany from the east. ' Such a campaign would probably re quire at least 100 Russian and British divisions and would. throw a big strain on. the entente nations, resources for over-sea transportation. For thes reasons, far seeing experts, I find, be lieve the campaign will not material ise. It is much more likely that Rus sia will resume her march towards Constantinople from Erxerum and Trebizond, whilst England contents herself with small diversions from Egypt and Mesopotamia and that the biggest Franco-British effort will be made In France. It is difficult to see how any other policy could affect the clearance or northern irrarvce and Bel gium or enemy troops wnicn tne west ern allies declare to be an essentia prelude to peace. Every week the scales are tipping more and more in favor of the entente allies on the western front, both s regards - effectives and munitions. for It is not believed that the Ger man civilian levy will enable Hind en burg to balance matters. General Fonvill states that today France has thirty times more cannon than in 1914, .the increase being mostly in heavy guns; she Is making 200 times more rifles, 170 times more machine guns; 40 times more howitzers; aun 40 times more heavy shells and still the upward movement of production la accelerating. Munitions Output Unormous. In Great Britain, where the output is now heavier than in France, the figures are still more' striking, as an Off Lc'.&l statement issued last year-end' snows, xnree to live times more guns are now being made in Britain in-on week than during the whole of the first year of war," the increase beinr mainly in heavy guns ' and those of medium calibre. Forty-three - times more 16-pound shells were produced in one week last November than in the average week up to June. ltl6, forty six times more fed howititer shells, sixty-six times medium calibre shells and 883 times more heavy gun ahell For every. ten of explosives used in September, 114. by Great Britain, ISO tons were used in July. 1915. and 12.000 tons in July, 1916, and the in crease has since been going on at, an even greater pace. - But - the entente allies still suffer from the Inherent weakness of bavin no one big brain to guide their grand strategy, and with alt' their millions of splendidly trained - and equipped troops and their magnificent reserves of munitions, they sorely feel the need of a modern Napoleon to use these huge resources in such a masterly way as to bring about a quick decision. -Dark stains from, tan boots: Apply methylated spirit with a flannel and when dry polish in the usual way,. 1 1 I, "JW'IW " Key to the Pictures 6 THE photograph above at the left shows two English-brothers on the western frqnt The elder is helping the younger to safety after he has been wounded. Note that the wounded brother has held on to his captured German helmet Above in the middle are shown Austrian troops in the tops of the Carpathian mountains trudging through the thick snow. The Italian army engineers are constantly constructing interesting little barracks -such as the one above at the right, perched on the crags of the mountains where most of the fighting between the Italians and the Austrians has taken place. The lower photograph- shows British soldiers examining machine guns captured from the Germans on theSomme. ART OF FLYING MUCH SINCE THE WAR BEGAN American 'Aviators in British and French fyrnies Have Added Much to Skill of the Game as 'Played in Air on the Battlefronts, By Lord Northcliffe. (Capyrisbt. 1817, by the TJalW Press Associations. Copyright 1 Great Brltaia.) THERE is little bitterness against the enemy among the Canadian and British aoldlers. They admire him in ma fighting and for his' ma-cthlne-like discipline, but they hare no use for him in the kind of warfare now going on, "You will find the Canadians a thinking, independent army," remarked a dlsting-uUrhed Britten general who had,, given me permission to spend a very interesting day and so I found them to be.- They had brought to the stock of vitality and knowledge em braced in the wonderful dtixen armies of France and ' England the qualities Inherited by generations which have spanned the North American continent with its railroads, chained Niagara, linked up the world's citie and armies by the telephone, lit dugouts with in candescent lamps, cheered" them With canned music," and brought a thou sand other mechaiiclal ideas to per fection, . . A. pectade la Air. I confess, indeed, that, although I have epent many weeks at war, the spectacle of winged fighters high in the sunilght is one that holds my at tention as nothing in the world ever has in peace times. When one was younger one has been thrilled by a close baseball or football mat oh but when, sheltered, perhaps, in a trench, ene eeecr two epecks approaching each otner and with a pair of strong glasses gradually realises that one of the specks is an American, who has given up everything home, prosperity and probably life to throw himself Into a foreign army, and that the other is a brave German, doing what ho conceives to be his duty one real lie that here are two combatants worth watchta. Very rarely do the- Germans venture over our . lines and one has to be very far. forward nowadays to get a good view of a right between the allies and the enemy in the air. I have bad that good fortune several times. The air fighting In 1914 . bears .as much re semblance to the air fighting of 1917 as an old steam automobile to the six SUNDAY.-MORNING, FEBRUARY -4, 1917. ''0 J 1 DEVELOPED cylinder of today. There is a per petual match in speeding up between the enemy and the allies. Four os five miles an hour extra pace means every thing. Its not an fticrease of engjne power to over 200 horsepower that brought about the change so much, as the wonderful progress in ttie art of flying Itself, and it is Just here that the ' Anglo-Saxon and tne Frenchman beat the slower-minded German. It is Just tibia reason why German soldiers' letters are now. so full of complaint about over-cautious German aviators. Tricks of ths Aviator. When Pegoud invented looping the loop the people asked, why? What's the use of it?5 Pegoud was a very con siderable inventor, a well as a flyer. Is the answer. Looping the loop la a useful maneuver and It has been suc ceeded by the extraordinary develop ment, the nose dive in wMch an airman seems to fan like a stone for a thousand feet tlU the spectator's hair rises from his head in horror then suddenly the machine flattens out and scoots away and you find it only a trick after all. I i talked with one of our wounded boys he was Just 19 Who had fallen 8000 feet owing to his rudder wire con nection being ehott through;, By a miracle his machine straightened it self out automatically within a hundred yards of the ground and the boy Is alive and will fly again. I asked him tils : sensations. He is probably 4he first man in the world who has fallen 8000 feet more than 10 times the height of the Woolworth building. He said that for a long time what seemed for hours ' he knew he was falling at a tremedous speed and then he rost consciousness. As. in a dream he found hjanself being picked up out ef the wreck of his machine by peo ple who thought he was dead, : At the beginning of an air fight there is maneuvering for positions and feinting as in boxing. There are. as a rule, two men in each machine, a pilot and an observer, except in" the smaller type, in which the wing are clipped 4 ft '4 f X 4 Tv S. A rlftum f Tint H4tvev in SAt Y trt smMI(1 and climbing power. Knowledgeof the engine and plane power. quiekSSs of decision and accuracy of shooting with the Lewis gun are essential to the pilot. His observer is provided with some form of a piatoi and often with bombs. X4ke Ctiant SaWks. Rival planes, like giant hawks, hover around above or below each other till one, more expert or more daring than the other, maneuvers his opponent into a position from which he has either rot to fight or flee. The knockout mow is usually a suaaen aeeceni on the enemy, accompanied by accurate machine gun fire. Sometimes it be come a duel with Browning pistols. in whlclh the men are so close that they can see each, other's eyes. - The thing Is over before you realise it. One machine la Off and away and the other whirls and crashes down to earth. The British army does not permit the names of its flying heroes to be published. In telling you, therefore, of American flyers I must deal with those American with the French army. Lieutenant Thow of Pittsburg was one Of a number of Americans who en tered the famous foreign legion of th French army at the outbreak of the war and is now senior American flying officer in France. His name and that of his colleagues are better known In Europe tbaui in their own country, In giving a list of those Whose names are known, some. I r ln eni cave man. alas, tying beneath a wooden cross,! Hereafter the pictures of all wlfe I can say no more Chan that they are I beaters, with their names and record worthy representatives of a great na - tlon. American jnyers la Treneh Army. Lieutenant Thaw was followed by Bert hail from Texas, Jame Bach, D. Massoa. Silas-Lufberry, James McCon- neli of Chicago, Chouteau Johnson of j New Tork, Elliott Cowdln, Klffin RockweUi Clyde Balsley ef Texas, Dud- )ZL0t N T- Victor Chapman. The I policy of American aviators servina with the French army Is that of the British and French to attack. They have played a goodly part in the invention ef constantly changing tac tics orrientins. An engine run by sewer gas is the invention of an Auatralian engineer: NOSE CLOGGED FROM ! , A COLD. OR CATARRH Apply Cream . in Nostril : Open Up Air Passages. lo f i Ahf What relief J Tour clogged bob trlls open right up, the alp passages of your head are clear and you . can breathe - freely. No more hawking. snuffling. mucous discharge, head ache, dryness no struggling for breath. at night, your cold or catarrh is gone.. ' l -.' Don't stay stuffed up! Get n small bottle of Ely's Cream, Balm fromsyour druggist now. Apply a little of this frasrant. antiseptic cream.ln voui nos trils, let it penetrate through every air. passage of the' head; "soothe and heal the swollen, inflamed mucous membrane. "giving yoS instant relief, ETs Cream Balm iafust What every cold and catarrh sufferer has been seeking. It's Just splendid. . V BRITAIN'S CONTROL OF SEAS ESSENTIAL NORTHCUFFE SEES AIRMEN IN ACTION v t V) .'T'J -A rsOi BRITAIN'S SEA CONTROL mm. SAFEGUARDS HER ALLIES Besides, Her Wealth, Industrial Resources and Dogged De-' termination Give Untold. Strength to the Entente : in Great Stmggje. By Sydney (Copyright 101. by 44 HERE is one thing." said Mr. Lloyd George at the Guildhall on "his return from Rome, f"that struck me. and that strikes me more and more each time I attend these conferences and visit the contInrit I mean the increasing extent to- which the allied people are looking to Great Britain. They are trusting her rugged strength and great resources more and more. -She is to them like a great tower In the deep. She is becoming more and more the hope of the op pressed and the despair of true oppres sor, and I feel more and more con fident that we aha.ll not fall the peo ple who have put their truat In u." And that is the bare truth. Thoae who looked at the war with discerning eye knew from Jt-very beginning that we In Great Britain were the pivot and mainstay of the whole alliance. But it has taken long foY that elementary fact to sink Into the general con sciousness. America, I should say, ;s only just beginning to realize It. No doubt it is very largely our own fault. If we were not "too proud to talk, if we had even one-tenth of the German genius for self-advertisement, the world would long ago have understood that without British power the allies could never have withstood the Ger man onset and that with British power an allied- victory, complete, smashing and final, is as certain as the rising of tomorrow's sun. What has given Great Britain in this war her extraordinary position as the Fines Wife Beater AncT Shows Picture rarest weeping' Tallin of Effect in Humiliation Judge Orders Ficture of Offenders tn JPubllQ Flaes. Kansas City, Kan., -Feb. J. (I. N. S.) With the novelty worn off the plan of shackling wifebeaters and mak ing them sweep the streets of the city. Judge Joseph Brady has hit on a new lan to humiliate, those who . practice 1 In bold, black type, will be placed in a public rogues gallery in ths lobby of ths elty ball, exposed to the gase of all. "It aeems to me my plan of publicly exhibiting wifebeaters on the streets has lost its effect." said Judge Brady, when a wife showed a swollen and dis colored eye and testified It was a habit of her husband to beat her. U"ot hU WlfZ The husband admitted be occasion- Tou are fined $600," said ths court. 'And you are going to be the first ex hibit in a public rogues' gallery in the lobby of the city hall. It will let the people know what kind of a man yon are when they see you on the street." Aviation School at ; Peruvian Capitol Washington, Feb. . (!. N. S.J The state department is informed that the Peruvian congress" has passed an act appropriating 15000 Peruvian pounds, approximately 1X5,000, an nually from 1917 until 1920 for ths es tablishment of - a civilian aviation school at Lima. Ths military also will be admitted hut the government Is es pecially anxious to forward aeronautics among civilians, t Most of the equipment for the new aviation school is expected to be, ob tained In the United States. Scout Cruisers May Exceed: $5,000,000 I Washington Feb, J.-(L N S.) The navy department has nof abatt- dotted the hope that it will be possible to award contracts for the construction of the three remaining scout cruisers, despite the fact that the bids received are in excess of the limit of sost specl- 7 Brooks. Sjdftey Brooks.) axle on which all depends is, first, her naval power; secondly, her wealth f thirdly, her Industrial . resources, an 1 fourthly, ttaat grim doggedness in the. national character which in two and a half years has converted an .unarmed. commercial and easy-going nation Into a military power of the very first rank, and that animates all her allies with the knowledge that Great Britain cad be relied upon to. the uttermost. - - I like to think of aome future Matian using the history of thia war to point the deadly realities of sea power, t. Ha will need no other example. Every thing that naval aupremaey means or can' ever mean has been taught tn the last SO months in a fashion that hi who runs may read. Because of the British navy Germany Is a beleaguered garrison, her strength steadily, cease lessly sapping away. Because of the . British navy ttie allies are free to draw on the entire neutral world for what ever they require; Great Britain is able to conduct simultaneously half a doa en campaigns In widely separated the at res of war; France, though her Penn sylvania la in the enemy's hands, is still for purposes both of war and , peace a great manufacturing nation; Russia can be supplied with munitions indefinitely; the Belgian and Serbian forces' have been rescued and .re equipped; while Germany languishes physically under the stress of the blockade and financially and economi cally under the total loss of her- for eign trade. . v fled In the appropriation act, where a -definite sum of not to exceed tMOO. 000 each exclusive of armor and arhia ment was named. Secretary Daniels has under consid eration a project of appealing to con gress for" an increase in this limit, pro vided !tshall appear to be advisable to do this as a concession to the demand of the shipbuilders and In lieu of hav- - ing the vessels built at navy yards that shall be specially equipped for the purpose. " - VHEN FEET HURT TizM for sore, tired puf fed-up aching, calloused feet or corns. "VsUS! x use' TOP every time for. amy foot troubls. Tou can be happy -footed in a mo ment. Use "TIs" and never suffer with tender, raw. burning, blistered, swol len, tired, aching f see Tlx! and-only "Tlx" takes the pain and soreness out of corns, callouses and bunions. As soon as you" put your feet in a "Tis bath, you just feel the happiness soaking in. How good your poor, old' leet feel. They want lordasjce for Joy. Tlx Is grand. "Tlx instantly draws out all the poisonous exudations which puff up your-feet and cause sore, in fiamedv aching. aWeaty feeC Get a tS-cent box of Tixw at any drug store or department-; store- Gel instant foot "relief. Laugh at foot suf ferers who complain. -Because your feet are sever, never going, to bother or make you limp any more, XA4.TJ CAN'T BEATTIZ"