THE" OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, AUGUST 4, 1913. Hen rosit This If ear SECTION TWO-PART TWO. IN REVIEW Iswites Disaster s IFifuo Drive on west W : : M ' . : ; ! i I BY FRANK H. SIMONDS 'prttit1. 1W18. by th Tribune AmoclatloD, th Nnr Tork Trtbiln) THE fourth year of the world war for the western nations, the gloomiest 'of "the whole struggle, was ended under conditions which arc jnore favor able and give more real cause for optimism than any that have existed in the past 12 months.' We are entering -the fifth year of the contest not with any rrospect of peace now r even, within the period of another year, but under circumstance's strikingly recalling the situation after the first battle of the Marne. The second arid we may believe the final blow of Germany, Jias been parried, if not broken. If we have not broueht the new Namileionic edifice j to thecuin of a Waterloo, there are signs that the recent jjefeat may prove! In soma degree suggestive oi Leirsic. GENERAL MARCH CONFERS WITH SECRETARY OF WAR BAKER The i'JO' 'f the fourth yfar of the Struggkf is measured !y two major vents :M he collapse of Russia and the T the coming 3 of tine I'nltedl ritates. Whii the ye.;ir ripened m, e were, all of us, still hoping ngainHt hyp that the Russian operations In G alii Ma might prove the firm s.ign of rfnHtwanr of Russian republic might repeat the achievement of the first Krenrh republic, and. In defending the liberty of the Slav world, brilliant but foredoomed Brusiloff offen sive Jn Gallcia faded Into the shameful and lndlscribntle flight of -the Russian troops from the field of victory into the darkness of demoralization ; and disinte- I gratlon. There was a moment when it ! seemed as if lumbers was again in j . danger, we read the old names of towns ! and rivers, the scenes of victories by the I Russians in 1314, but In a few brfet j hours, the Russian offensive in Galicia : contribute mightily to the salvation of succumed to the internal (disease of the western civilization. But before the campaign had come to n end Russia had ceased Jo be a mili tary factor; treason and sViadness had donei their work and henceforth the dis integration, within was to be rapid ; while German troops, released from the . east, were to carry peril to the very Russian nation. After August, in point of fact, Russia was gone. T j Meantime, In the west the British of fensive in Flanders pursued Ksunlucky road to complete failure, jit had been the conception of Haig and Robertson, striking north from Ypres and out 6f i the famous old salient, to "break the edge of Paris and threaten Kir Douglas German line, cut off the troops on the Hair's mighty force with the fate which had been prescribed for the "contempti ble little irmy" of Field Marshal Sir John French In the opening days of the war. Race for Supremacy The world. particularly the allied j Belgian seacoast or compel their retreat. free Ostend and Zeebrugge, abolish the submarine bases on this coast and, press ing eastward throw the Germans behind the Scheldt and "Compel their later re tirement out of Franca from the Lys to the Meuse. ; In this effort Plumer i had made a brilliant beginning in June at Messines. wor.n. ai mow in perce.vm tQ dlfl as a result of the Picar(,y to be the consequences , of the Riinilin deat of h nt ha(J RO han. collapse. When the full German storm , second Uon had broke in March of the present year it , ended cog and when Plumer took the allies by surprise and brought ,,. , , ,, ,v, n unready coalition within measurable ,.,,, v,V A ,K , . . . , i weather was already changing and the alfltance or one oi ins (crfai mudnicm of human history. But when the March niow ' " yZ already sure to fall, for German troops danger wa. perceived. then he r were hastening westward from . Russia, came a race between America and Ger- doggedly and grimly, the , British many a race between our yo ,ng roops a Q heJr taflk hurried across a submarine-infested ... . v , ,w t,,,,.u ast flower of German - , , . j ., . . lready changing golden moment had passed. In point of fact, the campaign of the British was ocean, and the ete'rans thrown upon the allied lines In offensive after offensive, seeking a decision before America came. As early aa June of 1917, when Nl velle's Alsne offensive failed. It became . clear that unless America came to the rescue the war would be lost to our allies and Germany would win on the continent something recalling Napo leon's success against Austria in 1805, In Flanders rivalled If It : did not pass that of the Somme the previous year, while great hopes, excited bi a brief but brilliant success before Cambrai, gave way to new developments when j one more opportunity was sacrificed. Ypres Again In Peril On the map there was proof of German ('f " - cij! " i X , Ur " nl II II llm Vr.w- . l4y--& r rtj I I wmmfiwwm j i "s&gS - " U4JW u -1 J Zz8k rBRm. ki j . II m General March, chief .of staff, and Secretary Baker in conference upon receipt of daily communique from General Pershing. hypnotized by the long period of posi tional warfare In the west. Using all of his advantages, the Ger man seems to have decided upon me following course : At the outset of the campaign he planned to throw an enor mous, force. , a host' as great as he hart employed at the Marne, against 50 miles of the British front between th Oise and the Scarpe, crashing the army which buckled the British to the French front and opening a gap between the British and French armies. Thereafter he purposed to throw the British -back upon the channel and the French In upon Parta and, holding the one with relatively small forces, containing him behind the Somme or the Olse. settle with the other. In this conception it is still open to debate whether the German Intended to strike his second blow against the Brit ish or the French, to seek Parts or the channel porta, although I think recent events have proven that hia Intention was to contain the British and destroy the French. But in any event tnls was the course he chose when the British had not been exactly contained, not in the least separated from their French allies, but subjected to the severest de feat In British military history and brought within sight of ruin. Germany On Offensive passed and the allies had been allowed time-to study the German method and prepare an answer Ludendorff was abla in late May to duplicate his March suc cesses, and. sweeping across the Aisne and the Vesle. the victorious - German troops reached the bank of the Marne once more, after nearly three- years of absence. Nor was this all ; the British positions in Plcardy had lacked any " dominating military strength, but the French positions at the Alsne were among the finest on the western front. And, as at the Somme, Ludendorff had In a week regained all the ground lost In the months of the British offensive of 1916 and the German retreat In the spring of 1917, he now in three days retook all the ground gained by Nlvelle In his Ill-starred offensive of 1911. and In addition drove south between Rhelma and retook Soissons. French since Sep tember 12. 1914. The British defeat In Ficardy waa tha greatest in British military history ; the French reverse on the Alsne surpassed the disaster of the first days of the Ver dun campaign. As a result of the two successes the German waa once more within striking distance of Paris, and had thrust wedges forward toward the French capital down the Oise and the Marne valley a June was only : Just come and America's forces were still too weak to exercise any decisive influence. There remained the relatively restricted-tasks of eliminating the Comniegne and , Rheims salient, the one a menace to the ! continuity of his nnorativ front lie- On March 21 the German struck be- tween the Oise and the Marne, he other tween the Scarpe and the Olse. 40 di-j a threat to the rear of his front, and visions against 15, swiftly dstroyed the j then he could undertake the final ven Fifth British army, swept over its ruins i ture. a drive straight south upon Paris, to the outskirts of Amiens, opened the I which, even if It failed to take the city, road down the Oise valley to Paris as j might bring his heavy' artillery within far as Noyon and took Montdldier and bombarding distance and enable him to cut the main road from Parts to i destroy the city if it refused to surreh- Amiens by artillery fire. Only the swift- i der. and with this de-truotion he hoped est possible work on the part of the t French rushing to the. aid of their Brit- Prussia in ln and against Russia in ; retreat. The Tpres salient disappeared the British troops seized (the whole of the Passchendaele Ridge j and critics talked of the advance from; this vantage ground in the next year to Ghent and to Lille,- little dreaming that a few days of battle would then suffice to compel the surrender of these hills, won by so much sacrifice and . effort, and that Ypres Itself was again tp; be in peril, in pern as deadly as that of October. 19H. In this autumn the French army was passing through a period of reorganiza tion and renaissance. Its defeat in May had shaken, it to the very foundation. For a' few brief weeks Its morale was lower than at any time since the war begin. To Petaln, who succeeded Ni velle. was assigned the grim task of re storing confidence and discipline, while behind the army the nation, under Cle menceau, cleaned Its high places of those who had conspired against victory and held secret conference with the foe. A few minor successes above the Alsne and about Verdun served to prove that the task was being accomplished, but for the balance of the campaign of 1917 the French army was limited to the de fensive, or to operations which were but local offensives. JH07. But what was not perceived at that time waa that it was going to be a narrow question whether France. Brit ain and Italy could hold against our .coming, and, blind to the real facts, our allies continued to ask of us material and money rather than men until the bitter awakening of March transformed the whole situation. The Russian revolution and the result ing anarchy, which led to the demorali sation of the Russian army. In fact produced a situation In which France and Britain could not win the war; It , A ' ,11. J klnV. Y. proauccHi a. cuuuiuuji in wuivn li o- nihility of a German success was patent, at least, to Germans and neu trals. It brought back the old problem of 1914, and In the next 12 months there waa to be repeated the German effort cf the Marne campaign. From August, 1917, onward the German problem and the German hope was to organize a new Mow which should crush France and Britain-before America could arrive, as Germany sought to crush them in 1914 before. Russian operations In the east should demand attention. Eastern Front Abolished In a word, we went back suddenly to the conditions of the opening days of the war. By the end of last year Ger- and holding it carelessly and with little thought of danger. In a few short hours this Italian army was destroyed in exactly the fashion Radko Dlmltrieff's army had been de stroyed at the Dunajec, and with conse quences to other armies equally griev ous. One day advancing and seemingly on the; eve of decisive victory, Cadorna's armies on the Lower Isonzo and about Gorizla found themselves on the next with their rear and flank Imperilled, condemned to a swift and costly rush backward, behind the Tagliamento and then behind the Plave. The invasion of Austria was over and the Hapsburgs once more occupied at least a wide sweep of their old province of Venetia, while it was the fate of Venice, not of Trieste, which was now In doubt. Thanks to an Italian rally and to the rush of British and French troops to their stricken ally Venice was saved, and the retreat ended at the Piave and not at the Adtge, but Italy had suffered one of the great defeats of history and was henceforth condemned for long months to the defensive. She had, in fact, been on the edge or ruin : her es cape had been by a slight margin, and at the moment' the question of her fu ture capacity to fight, brilliantly an swered at the Piaave the other day, was to give her allies grave concern. Thus the calendar year and the cam paign of 1917 ended amid the most gloomy of all possible circumstances. British successes in the early months had been dimmed by the failure, the bloody failure. In Flanders. The French army had not merely seen Its hopes come to nothing at the Aisne, but had, for the first time, been shaken in its confidence and was only beginning to give signs of renewed constancy and ef ficiency. The Italian army had suffered one of the great disasters of the war. The minor efforts in the Balkans had been without even the smallest material benefit. To swell the balance on the wrong side Russia was sinking to a hapless derelict and Roumanla was obviously soon to quit the war. All hope of an offensive in 1918 had . now to be sur rendered. ; The allied high command did not perceive that the defensive which was its role would be one beset with difficulties so great that disaster might impend, but K did recognize that there was no longer any chance of victory In 1918 nor at any other time until Amer ica should be able to replace Russia in the battle line. As for the German, he could look for ward to a return to the west now with his armies victorious In the east ; he could look forward to superiority in guns as a result of Russian and Italian successes and to advantage in numbers as a result of the suppression of the Russian and Roumanian fronts. For him the new year dawned brilliantly. For his enemies it was the beginning of a time which they already foresaw was to be one of grave trial, but how grave It was to be they could not suspect, and, not suspecting, failed to provide against. Superiority Of Numbers German strategy for the campaign of 1918 has already been fairly clearly re vealed upon the battlefield man had some forty-odd divisions more than his opponents, exclusive of the Americans. He had an Interior posi-: tion, a unified command and a homo- j geneous army. He had devised a new j ish allies prevented the separation of the two armies. The blow was checked at the moment when further German progress would have meant separation and separation approximate ruin. Rarely has any defeat taken the van quished more completely by . surprise. Suddenly the French and British alike were aroused to the ract that their po sition was critical, their numbers insuf ficient and bound to be insufficient. The Ger- i They had expected to maintain' a - suc- I cessful defensive until America delib ! erately accomplished her military pro gram. They saw themselves condemned to a desperate defensive, while America feverishly rurhed to France those di visions without which a Ludendorff vic tory seemed Inevitable. By April 1, 1918, the allied nations at last knew the system of attack, which Included the element of surprise and the use of gas extent of their peril and recognised also to paralyze the rearward communica tions of his foes ; he had a new small knd mobile gun. which made rapid sup port of swiftly moving infantry waves possible, and he had generals who were trained In Eastern warfare and not French nerves and French spirit would at last break and the army, after th civil population, abandon a struggle which had cost France so much and still held out the threat of even worse suf fering without any promise of ultimate victory'- ; It may be that this . German success, which took the kaiser to the Marne, will prove the high water mark of the pres ent campaign : it may be that when the German troops returned to the Marne they were the advance guards of the ultimate advance of the Germans n the war. It is too early to prophesy, but in any event when this June fighting wu over Paris was plainly menaced, allied fortunes were In a desperate state. Ger man victory, so far as the European phase was concerned, semed no longer tmjiossible. At best the possibility of the loss of Paris and of a retirement to the south had to be considered. Fourth Drive Is Made The first months of the fourth year of war saw Italy winning considerable successes alone the Tunnm ahora many was free to strive for Paris again ; two vears Itaan soldiers had been before the campaign of 1918 was well ; struggling to break throng the gigantic opened the peace of Brest-Lltovsk and . Thermopylae between the Julian Alps cf Bucharest had elim nated Russia and t and tne Adriatic hy whi(.n, ran th rad Roumanla abolished the eastern front. t,, Trleste and tne Austrisn apltaI far giver, to the rman. the mastery of he beyond thf road N Iebh had takpn Baltic and Black Seas placed the ; more tnan a cent M kaiser's generals In control of the colos-j larit carnpai(?ri of 1787. B3. October the r ' I , . J , Prate seemed forced; Austrian recoil was the eastern flank of a completed mitte- ; Fenera, north and and " Been IDoingl Sino i fr TTS i . f T; Supplied W' 1 I -.-.V - v.. -.-.;.v..-.v. - -. I that at least four months must pass . - . . . . .. . . ( u 1. r . . ... . " umwir wune wa over me tiae-naa By his first attaCK i.udendorff, for ! changed. "Seeking to sweep the French his had become the master mind In the ; out of the Compiegne region, open to the German high command, employing the j lower valley of the Aisne, insure the con method of a brilliant lieutenant. Hutier, tinulty of tho right wing of his oper- had succeeded where all predecessors ative front between Soissons and Mont- uropa; the immediate ana apparently even an eventful menace of Slavdom. I ne leuion wrmru m nvt won nis failures age-long name wun ine siavn, nis way to the Pacific lay open, while he still commanded the Constantinople bridge to the nearer east. When the campaign of 1917 was over the German could calculate and did cal culate that he had. w'lth hands free and resources, concentrated on the western front, another chance to win the war In the largest possi-Me sense, to dispose of aot- tals. looking southward, saw in Italian success at least consolation jfor their own Italy Meets With Reverse But in November Italy I suffered her first great reverse of the war. Her population and her army, like those of the French nation, had been corrupted by enemy propaganda and by defeatist and pacifist efforts. The. taint of Bol- France and Britain before America was ; shevism was alreadv beginning to do tt ready, ana then to negotiate a favorable ; work in Italy as U had in;Russia. Sud peace with the American foe. j denly. along the Upper Isonzo front, out The story of the campaign of 1917, of the- mountains about 'iCaporett'e, a after August 1. 1s briefly told. For our., German army appeared ahd struck "an allies It is a history replete with mis- Italian army holding the 'tlank of Ca fortune. In August and September the dorna's main forces to the southward. William Atherton Do Puy (Copyright, 191, by Otis Wood. Inc.) " THE United States is today "in produc- tion" on its stupendous artillery pro gram. The classes of guns it is to make are determined. A thousand factories have been established to turn them out. The gauges have been made for quantity production, taking care of such vital requirements as that of interchangea bility. So has a peaceful nation been cuiivcrira imo a worKsnop ror wars I in a brief 16 months. So miraculous is I the transformation that there is a weird j interest in turning back the calender to that first of April, 1917, when Ameri ca still stood on the sidelines. There were but half a dozen of them, j gunmen of the U. S. A., technical work ers in a little office in the war depart- ment at Washington. They were given to pouring over diagrams and charts, figuring ballistics and trajectories. They were paper men. dealt chiefly in theories because their government was doing little in manufacture. Nobody was in terested in their work because their minds were full of rifles and "ATy little girl is Subject to sudden JL A attacks of stomach and bowel trouble and Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin al ways relieves her quickly so she is soon play ing about as usual. I have used Syrupj Pepsin for three years and would not be without it now at any price." fv.: .i. - 1n&?J2f-sc&tijk, : -:.-:. x.v. j ' eegani had failed. He had pierced and broken an enemy front on an extent of 50 miles and to a depth of 35. After three years and a half of war of positions, of stag nation, of siege and trenches, he had carried an offensive Into open country I beyond all defense zones. For the mo ment, at least. It seemed as If the con ditions of "warfare of the Marne time were to be restored and the strupjiie in trenches was at an end. Heavy Browning machine gun, one of the "finds" of the war. Gig'antic Profo Is Solved materially increases accuracy. It also gives a better look through the peep hole which makes it easier to find the target. It is regarded by experts as being a great advantage over other rifles. These improvement? could all be adapted to the production of the Enfield In the plants developed by the British business. The huge contracts from the British had already paid for those plants and American manufacture need not bear that initial expense. American rifles would cost a third less than had the British pieces. The adjustments were made by August. 1917, and produc tion waa under way. Three months had been lost but 10 months would have been required to prepare for quantity pro duction of Springfields. The ordeal of the interim with no production had been distressing but the circumstances were held to Justify It. Labor Is j Secured aiddier by clearing the French, out of strong ground and carrying their line into the open ground south of Senlis, Ludendorff launched a fourth blow be tween Montdidier and Noyon. between the Avre and the Oise. This time thera was no surprise, no collapse ; the German machine ground its way forward for a short distance, cleared th I.Mimv i hcirhta and some valuable gro"ud along the Otb. But by the third day it waa j checked, and Mangln. the deliverer of Verdun, was striking a counter blow nn the Gerrran flank, which paralyzed th offensive Complegne was not taken; at a staggering cost the German had gained a little ground, but his fourth venture had been a failure. When ludendorff prepared fV th fifth stroke his Austrian colleague. Bo revic, struck on the Plave and sought by a supreme stroke, with the largest and Quick Move To Flanders Checked in Picardy. Ludendorff car ried his offensive to Flanders and again achieved swift and substantial victory. Breaking the allied line south of Ypres he pushed forward 15 miles to ward the channel ports, won back all the lost ground of the Passchendaele cam paign oi me previous year, iook i.em- j nuouiwr y wnicn naa yet ap- mel. which looks down upon the rear of i peared In Italy under his command, to Ypres, and threatened to reduce this re- crush the troops who had been beaten so stored palient. which had for the Brit- t terribly at the Isonzo six months before, ish Empire the same significance Verdun I But tn Austrian offensive failed Mis carried for the French nation. This j mally, a brif advance, a short desperate greater success was not attained, and a i period of days when Italian counter at sharp repulse on April 2a closed the '. tacks held up the advance, then floods Flanders battle, but this second episode an1 nw Italian attacks, and the Au had served to demonstrate anew the ef- ; tr'ans were driven In disorder across ficacy of German tactics and the ad- ,ne f'iave. losing a quarter of a million vantage of German numbers and Interior i ot men. Innumerable guns and having position. It reopened the question of the "uttered in a few brief days a defeat an arrival of the kaiser at Calais and em- j destructive to their plans for this year phasized again the greatness of allied i as Verdun had proved for the Germans ; peril. ! In lSlfi. i Already American troops were begin- j And now. last of all. checked on the I nlng to cross the seas in great numbers ; j Olse and at the Complegne salient we ' Foch had succeeded to supreme com-! have seen Ludendorff in recent days I mand : France and Britain were repair- j launch his fifth offensive, a colossal at Ing previous errors, but henceforth, as '- tack from the Marne to th- Argonne he awaited the coming of the Amerl- uter restricted to a local operation to cans to save a new Waterloo. Foch was break In the Rheims salient and clear , bound to recall frequently the words of his flank and rear against the day when Wellington, the Impatient longing for I h -hould reaiim hi. irtv. f- t.i i v. ri - - - ' " ' One of these guns is discharged and the ; ernment plants, were the chief source of train is sent skuttling half a mile down supply and were incapable or large pro- tjroblem of labor had been most cannon i the track to take un the recoil. ' ductlon or quick expansion. To make ..( k,nnn. fn, i. and this was a nation imbued with the : Let us make all these guns right j gauges Indispensable to large production j Ance. there had been a demand for 40 -ideas and ideals of peace. In fact they awav and make them In ouantity. Call ! itself was a bigger task than the produc- i Lion liseu. An inuusir? wumu oc i 13; jn the nation Huns Reach The Marne The third German blow was in the or I he should resume his drive The results of this venture are bHng written on the map at the present hour." Its failure was lmrH!ito nr.A -. : sector complete. Its failure !n all sectors was complete when Foch launched his (S From a letter to Dr. Caldwell written by it. Jai. F. Smith, 600 Virginia Ave., Pittsburg, Pa. ) Dr. Caldwell's j Syrup Pepsiki The Perfect Laxative j Sold by Druggists Everywhere 50 cts. QZ) $1.00 were made to feel themselves Interlopers, discordant elements in an otherwise me lodlus symphony'. They were an Incre ment left over from th time when force ruled the world, useless pensioners of a' benevolent government. Where War Breaks Then in a day war came. America was called upon ttself from a dove cote to Constipation is a condition to be guarded against from infancy to old age. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is as safe and pleasant for children as it is effective on even th strongest constitution. A trial bottle can be obtain ed free of charge by writing to Dr. VV. Jo. 458 Washington St. Monticello, 11L Caldwell, Uer night to convert an arsenal. There must be haste, imcomparable haste. The musty half dozen men who had been studying guns ! Let us summons them. Let us ask them what are the weapons with which an army must be equipped . to fight. What is the snap shot, of a line of battle with its guns in place? Half the men must have rifles on their shoulders, the specialists said, they are In the front line. Then there are the machine guns, also sticking out into No-Man's Land- Machine guns are vastly important. Then, half a mile or so back, are the 75's. That means that the bores are 73 millimeters, or about three inches. The French 75 Is the backbone of their fighting ability a simple, portabje, all-around field piece in the gunmen of the TJ. S. A. and have them get busy. Bring those bloodthirsty killers back from Elba, Ordnance Expert Available So they called. In the first place.; Col onel John T. Thompson, who had ': been Instructor of odnance and gunnery at West Point and who was the gunman who knew more than any other Ameri can about the manufacture of that gat-den variety of rifle with which the infantryman goes forth with a belt full of cartridges and a sticker in the end. His .had been -the guiding hand- in the development of the Springfield rifle. To be eftire Colonel Thompson has grown tired of studying designs aid being cursed as a madman when he asked congress for money for rifles, of ad ministering ordnance plants that j were not allowed to manufacture, and! had retired and gone up to help the Reming ton people make rifles for the British, j He himself had created a vast plaint at i Eddystone. He has been getting experi ence in production. Would he come- back and become manager for the government In the production of small arms. He would. He started with a desk J .. 1 1 T. . V. 1 J which backs up the fantry On this , - g an(J amunlton -for line also ara 4 J r'es- an army of 2.50.000 and production was lUKtcri . men i n' ' ' - 1 1 ' . 1. . v 1 .7 and six Inch howitzers. The difference between a rifle and a howitzer is that the . former points straight at its target and blazes loose, while the latten -throws Its missile way up in the air and drops it on the enemy. developed ; before adequate Springfields could be made. There was ah alternate possibility. A great capacity for producing rifles had grown up in the three years of war through their manufacture for the Brit ish government. But these plants were equipped to manufacture the British En field. It would take 10 months to change them over to Springfield production. Should we try to make Springfields or should we go over to the English gun? It was a vital question to decide. The world was burning up. What should we do? Rifle Design Determined Then a mile or so farther back are the six inch rifles and six Inch howitzers, the eight-Inch pieces and even the 9.5 calibers. These are the. busy bees on such occasions as that f starting a drive. The Germans use, them for in stance, in drenching our trenches with mustard gas before a drive. ;Then finally, way back are the 10 tnch, 12-Lnch, 14-inch,- even bigger guns, that fife- from' emplacements or .from arriaarea arranged en railroad trains. 8000 rifles a day. He can increase pro- l duction as fast as the government wants ! him to if he can but get his orders a 1 1 little inadvance. i ; There was the question, for Instance. of what sort of' rifle should be made for American troops. The army was using the Springfield, a rifle developed by the United States army, and held to be the best such rifle in the world. At any rate representatives of the United States had gone with it into contests In marksman ship with 19 nations and had In every ! case come off with the top score. I The army took pride in the Springfield. But there were no plants developed for quantity production- The Rock' Island arsenal and the Springfield arsenal, gov- Our gunmen acted. Action is a spec ialty with: most gunmen. They tried to do the right thing. No one can ever know If some other procedure would, have been better. They said : Go ahead and make all the Springfields possible at the gov ernment arsenals. It's a fine shooting gun. Then use the rifle capacity de veloped fpr .the British. Make British Enfields in those great factories at Ed dystone, pa., Ilion. N. Y.. and Winches ter. Mass; Put two types of gun in the army, which is bad, but get rifles and get them fast. Make this sacrifice on the altar of speed. But In jthe Enfields we will make a few changes.! We know the world is burning up and ' the Springfield hose Is a bit weak. We must have high pressure at the earliest possible moment but we must also retain the other elements of maximum efficiency. We will not swal low the British gun whole. We will de lay production for months, maybe, but we will get under the wire in time. We will add all the good points of the Springflild to the Enfield. Then jthe Americans introduced an other nojvelty in their rifle. They moved the rear sight back about a foot brought j it that much nearer the eye. That places a greater distance between the nlndj sight and the front sight which There were such deli cate problems as that of obtaining barrel stralghteners. A barrel straightener is a creature born, a genius, a phenome non. He looks down a gun barrel and has the accuracy of eye that picks out any defect in Its straightness. If there is a bend some place, indiscernible to the eye of the ordinary mortal, he sees It. He taps the barrel with a hammer ever so lightly. The ' infinitesimal bend is straightened. There were but seven bar rel stralghteners in the United States. There was no need to insert advertise ments or look for them in the ordinary ways. The genius with this rare capacity must be found by other methods, and was found. Colonel Thompson has caught up on rifles and Is not hurrying now. Any good day the United States is likely to produce as many rifles as do the British and French combined. The weekly pro duction of rifles 10 months after the war broke out was 10 times as great as that of the British 10 months after war came to them. There are today 200 commis sioned officers -of the gunman -variety working on rifles alone. Including am munition, 80,000 workmen are employed on the task, together with 10.000 woman workers. Then there is the matter of the woven web cartridge belt of the American. It has many advantages over the leather belt of the German. When the leather belt gets wet it draws up and fails to function properly. The American car ries 220 rounds of ammunition with him 12 pounds of it. The German soldier carries but 120- rounds and 30 of these cartridges are In his knapsack. Obvi ously the American has more than a 10 per cent advantage In shots up his sleeve, and a rifle that will operate one third faster than that of the enemy. The automatic is another arm which the American Insists In taking over the top w-ith him. This has -been an open country where men - used pistols much more than - they did in Europe. And the guns they handled were not of the ' iCooUudad a ffcea SWtaIais Seetioai larger sense even more terrifying than j ver orable counter attack. In which the first. Although two months had (Concluded on Pg. Fifteen. Thi. lirtioo)"" Lift Off Corns! "Freezone-' is Magic! Lift any .Corn or Callus right off with fingers No pain! ! A TO Drop a little Freesone on an aching corn, instantly thai corn stops hurt ing, then you lift . it right out. It doesn't hurt one bit. Yes, magic i Why wait? Your druggist sells a tiny botU of Yzttuoat lor lew cents, sufficient to rid your feat of every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and eaHuses, without so ra nees or Irritation. Freezone is "' the jnuctf talked of ether discovery o Cincinnati genius. ' -j ' " ... ':