2-.-,..v..:::.:.; ' ...j: ....'.,; j " . ......';'.----: this oiwocojf BTATBgMAWrTrKfAv. jAxrAnY-gtrio e r -. - - ' ' CHARGES GIVEN LONG REPLY BY WAR SECRETARY America to Have Half Mil lion in France Early This .Year, He Says MISTAKES ARE NOT RULE Big Question Is Ships to Car ry Forces Abroad; Many Facts Told (Continued from page 1) submitted document to prove, that France and Great Britain were "up- plying artillery and machine guns for the first forces at their own ur gent request' In order that ships might be u seed for other purposes. In all that was done prior to the departure of the first troops, Gen eral Pershing shared in the delibera tions and approved the derisions reached, Mr. Baker declared? and bow surrounded with a staff of trained regular officers, Pershing Is In France as the "eyes of the army." . Cantonment History ftlven. Kvery step taken has been founded on his long dally cabled reports of what Is going on at the fighting fronts, ' ' - , ( - ' "' . . i . ' Tables were cited to- how that over-crowding In the camps and can tonments had not been general and that the sickness had come mostly In the camps where medical opinion had agreeed it was least to be expect d. The history of the development and building of the cantonments was given in detail to show that every precaution possible; had been taken. Analysing the efforts of the ord nance bureau, the secretary said that General Crozler had urged for years a great artillery preparation; that he at least had realized the time gun-making required. Hut even- France herself "with the enemy at - her throat,!' he added, "had not been able to e?what vast gun programs the war would lead Into, During hi general statement of the war plan and bow it was devol .opend, Mr. Baker wa rarely Inter- , rupted. lie said! . "Now, gentlemen, about the plan of.thu war. It will be remembered that this war broke out In Augnst, 191 4.' We went into It In April. 1917, so that for two and one half years, or moreth n two and one half years the war had been going on. ' It was not as though war had broken out between the United States . and some country, each of them prior to that time having been at peace with one another and with everybody flse; so that an Imtnedl- , ate plan should be made In the United States for conducting war against Its adversary,' but we were coming into a war which had been going on for two and one half years. In which the greatest military ex perts, all the inventive genius, all of the industrial - capacity of those ' greatest countries In the world had for two and one half years been solving the problem of what kind of war it was to be and where It was to be waged. ClrcumMtanceN Face V, 8. V "It was nothing for us to decide where our, theater of "war should be. The theater of war was France. It was not for us to decide our line of communication. Our line of com- - munlcations was across the thousand miles of ocean, one end of It Infested with submarines. It waa not for us to decide whether we would have the - maneuterlng- of large bodies .of troops In the open. - There? lay the antagonists on opposite sides of No Man's Land In the trenchjes at a death grapple with one ah other. Our antagonists were on the other side of that line and our problem was and Is to get over there and .get him. , "Its was not the problem of doing It our way and letting everybody else take care of himself. In the .first place, we were going to fight in France, not on our own soil and not on our adversaries' soli, and ,t therefore at the very beginning. It was obvious that the' thing we had to d was not to map out an Ideal plan of campaign, not to have the war college with Its speculative stud ios of Napoleon irtid everybody else, map out the theoretically best way ,to get at some otber country, but It was the problem of studying the then existing situation and bringing tho financial. Industrial and the mil itary strength of the United States Into cooperation with that of Great Hrltaln and France In the most Im mediate and effective way. That' problem could not be decided here. I fancy in this audience there are men who have been In the trenches. The altogether- unprecedented char acter of that problem Is the thing wl.Uh 'every returning visitor tells u. cannot bo described In words, , cannot bo put down in reports; it is a thing so different from anything else that' ever went on In the world, so vast In Its desolation, so extraord inary In its uniqueness that it must be seen and studied on the ground In order to be comprehended at all. Study Held Essential. " "It is easily" imagined that we BLIGH THEATRE XOTK KIIMMKH 5c MATINKKH 10c ON ALL PICTVItK IHOGHA.MS might have perfecteed an army over here and carried it across the ocean and found It wholly unadapted to Its task, and it might well have been that the array that we sent over was Jut one thing that they dia not neea, nd that some other thing which we might have supplied would have been the thing essential to tneir ihv- "go 'that from the very beginning It was not a iuellon or ausiratj speculation here, but a. question or . ihir. m rind out where our shoulder to the wheel could be put. Tiiev resided that. And so Great Britain sent over to .us Mr. Balfour and General Bridges and a start oi experts. They came over here and you saw Mr. Ualfour in the house of congress and at .the White House and In public meetings at one place and anojher, but the group of ex perts whom they brought over with them yon did not see much of, and vet they distributed themselves through the war department, and their ordnance experts sat down with General Crozler. their supply experts with General Sbarpe and his assist ants, their strategists sat down with the army war college, and all over this dtr there were these confiden tial groups exchanging Information, telling how the thing was over there, what we could do, what they advised us to do, what experience they had had in developing this, that and the other implement or supply; how cer tain plans which one might naturally have evolved out of the past experi ence cf the world had been trie! there and found not to work at all. i Joffre' VVIt nrcalled. t'Th'f were exchanging Informa tion, giving us all that they thought waa helpful. And then came Joffer, with his wonderful reputation and bis Treat and charming personality, and he made a great figure here and we welcomed him. It was a tremen dous Inspiration to see the hero of the Marne; but with him came this unobserved staff of fifteen or twenty or twenty-five young men, the most brilliant men in th French army strategists, mechanical experts, ex perts In arms, experts In supplies, ex perts jln Industry and manufacture, and thev told us not merely the for mal and military problems, but thy brought i over with them men who were In from the beginning, In their reorganization of their Industrial plants, and we sat down with them in little groups until finally we col lated and collected and extracted all the information which they could give us from their respective coun tries, I And every country which has been ' brought Into the war has brought us that sort, or sent us that sort of a staff of experts, and it has been necessary to compare note and with tbia as a basis, to form such an Idea as might be formed of what was the thing for us to do over there. " M -War Not IMatlc Things "But that was not enough. They admitted that It was Impossible to draw f that picture. They could de scribe to us and bring the specifica tions and drawings for a piece of ar tillery, but they could not tell us why the British theory of the use of ar tillery was by the British preferred to that of the French. They could not picture to as a barrage of heavy howitzers as compared to a barrage of 7' mm. guns. They could not plc tare to us the association of, air craft, balloons; and mobile aircraft with artillery uses. They could tell us about It, but even white they tlod us the story grew: old. "The one thing they told us from the very beslnning to the end .was that this war, of all other, was Aota static thing: that our adversary was a versatile and agile adversary; that every day he revamped and changed his weaoona of attack and his meth ods of defense; that the eotrles they were telling us were true when they left England and France, but an en tirely different thing was probably taking place there now, and they told us of large supplies of weapons of one kind and another which they had developed in France and Eng land, and which, even before they got them In sufficient quantity man u fact u red to take them from the In dustrial plants to the front, were su perseded by new Ideas and had to be thrown Into the scrap heap::. "They said to as. this Is a moving picture; it la something that nobody can paint and give you an Idea of. If Js not a, static thing. . ' Observation Is Purpose. ! Therefore, it became necessary for us .to have eyes there In instant and i Immediate communication with us and we sent over to France Gen era! Pershing, and we sent with him not merely a division of troops to that; I shall refer In a moment but we sent with him. perhaps I can say safely, the major part of the trained. expert personnel of the army. You know the else of the official corps of the regular array In this country when the war broke out. It was pitiful handful of trained men, and yet it was necessary to divide them ud and send over t -France officers of the highest quality so that they would be at the front and see In the workshops and in the factories and In the war offices and In the armies, where consultations would take place immediately back off the front so that they could see the things with their own eyes, and send us back the detail by cable every day of the changing character of this war. "General Pershing's starr of ex perts' and officers over there runs into the thousands and they are bnsy every minute and every day that the sun; rises I get cablegrams from General Pershing from ten to sixteen pages long, filled with measnrments and formulas and changes of. a mil limeter In size, great long specifica tions of changes in detaila of things which were agreed on last week and changed this week, and need to be KVKXINUS 15a changed again next week, so that what we are doing at this end Is at tempting by using the eyes of the army there to keep up to what they want us to do. "Already you will find in yout further examination Into some of the bureau work of the department, some of the divisions,: when they come down, you will find that schedules which were, agreed upon . weapons which were selected and which we had started to manufacture, bav been so far discarded, that people have forgotten the names of tnem almost, and new things substituted in their place, and those forgotten and sew thing in the place. , JtaMibie IMity Faced. ' "So that if one gets the idea that this is the sort of war we used to have, or if he gels the idea that thlrf is a static thing It is an. entirely er roneous idea, and when you remem ber that we bad to divide this little handful of officers that we had' and send so large a pait of them vo F rance, and then think of those who remained at home, you will reaIze, I am sure, that those who remained here had the double duty, insuffic ient for either aspect of it, in num bersand they still have this double duty they bad to go forward with manufactures, work out industry and industrial relations; they bad tu see about supplies of raw materials and manufacture finished products, and make from day to day alterations and changes that bad to be made, and they bad to be Ingenious with these suggestion, to see whettir they could devise, on this side some thing which bad not be thought of over there. "They had to be hospitable to su gestlons which came from the other side; they had to confer with the foreign offlcters who were here and were constantly being changed, so that men fresh from the front coul 1 be here to advise with us, end In ad dition to that every one of them bad to be a university professor, gol 113 out into the life of the community and selecting men who had mechan ical experience and knowledge and training, but not military mechanical experience and knowledge and train ing, and adding to his original equip ment their scientific training, that finishing touch which made un available for use as a military sclent ost. ' ' . 1 . Uttlo iirtnvp Doe Bfnch. "As it consequence, this lltt'i group which stayed here have built the great special departments of tne army. The ordnance depart tuur.t, starting, I think with 93 or ( of ficers, has now, us 1 recall the fig ures, something Uke 3000 of fleets. Tbey have bad to be trained ; thev bad to be specialized, and that ha had to go on contemporaneously with ' this tremendous response to the changing conditions on the otbei fclde. - "In the meantime, when we start ed Into this' war, I think .t was com monly though throughout the coun try that our 'contribution at the out set might well be financial and In dustrial. The Industries of this coun try were largely devoted at that time to the appropriate Industties, anl n any converted Industries were largely devoted to the manufacture of war material for our allies. "As X suggested this mornliiff. when we went Into that market we found it largely occupied, so .that problem was not going to a shoe fact ory and saying 'make shoe for us.' but It wa going to a factory which never made shoes because all the frboe factories were busy making shoes for our people from whom we could not take them, and saying learn how to make shoes In order that you may make them for us.' ; "Now. of course, that is not true of shoes, but It is true of -machine guns; at Is true of other- arras; It Is true of ammunition; it is true cf forging capacity, -which was the greatest defect in the country and all of this time we had not merely to disturb the program of allied manu facture in this country, but we had not to cut off the supplies of raw ma terlal to our allies, and we had not to disturb Industry of this country, to such an extent that products upon which they depended for the success of their military operations would be interfered with both agricultural and commercial and Industrial product. - Karly Idea, Financial. "At the outset the idea was that we would be a financial end indiikl. rial assistance toour allies during tbe year 1918, and I think you prob ably can read from the Metropolitan scaztne for August a Suggestion wen win show what tho current ex petation of this country was. Th i f dilor of tbe Metropolitan Magazine was protesting against what he be lieved to the. the Intention of the government at that time." Here enator Week Interrupted to &k If that was the magazine of which Theodore Uoosevtlt I as- rociate editor. Secretary Baker rc- piiea tnat Mr. Roosevelt was a con trlbutlng editor, and continued: ; "Thla magazine came, out In Aug use. 1917. and tble editorial savs: " 'Since it Is our war, w want t put everything Into It so as to finish It in the shortest possible time, so mat tne world may be restored. Tr our mind the whole plan of the war department has been flavored with a aesire to hold ofr until the allies finish the war for us "You see, the editor was dealing with what he supposed to bo the in tention of the war 'department it that time, that we were holdlnf of' ao far as actual military operation.! were concerned and letting the allies do the fighting. "What he Lsays we should hav done and I ask jour particular at tention to it, is this: Military Ideal HurpassewL ' 'We, should have strained every energy to have. gotten from SO.OOo to ivv.uvq men to France thff. year.' "That Is. the year 1917. I tell no secret bult Is perfectly well known to everybody in this group that we have far exceeded what in August,. 1917. was regarded as a program so Ideal that the editor t this magazine refers to it as a thing wnicn we ought to have strained every nerve in a vain but boneless effort to accomplish." in res pone to a question hr Chair- tan Chamberlain the secretary said tbe United States did not have more than the minrmunx number of mea in ; - , " ! w Utii Lniinf po A HEAR THE TRUTH OF FIGHTING IN THE TRENCHES THE LIFE OF THE BOMB THROWERS AS ONE OF THE "SUICIDE CLUB" - Every Man, Woman and Child Should See It Positively the greatest Official War Film ever made 3 Op erators lost their lives in getting this marvelous film COME EARLY DON'T MISS IT. .ALL SEATS 30 CENTS A. France in Augusta, 1917. He con tinued: "And then the editor goe on: "I3y next year. 1918. we could have 600,000 men to send over, or any part of 600,000 men which we could ship.' Half Million hon In France. "Now, instead tf having 60.000 or 100,000 men In France in 1917, we have many moiw "men than that In France, and 'instead of having a half million men whol we could shin to France If wo could find the way to do It In 1918, we will have more than one half million in Franc early In 1918, and we have available. If the transportation facilities are availa ble to us, and the prospect Is not unpromising, one and. ono half mil lion who in 1918 can be shipped to Frahce." , Senator Weeks asked whether the secretary knew who wrote the lic t0tl.1l and Mr, Faker said he thoughi it was attributed to lr, Wlgglh, the editor In chief. i "W by," asked Senator Chamber, lain, "have you not felt it proper ti lt the public Into your confidence with refereuO to these things that yon arc telling now?" : IHndenburtt K Quoted. A "Senator, I confess I have hesi tated an I I stilt hesitate." replied the secretary. "I have hero a state ment from Field Marshal von Hlnp d en burg, in which he is quoted as saying in a German newspaper. In contcmrtuous fashion of us. that we hav advertised our pieparaUoti for thi war in ar'unwoithy manner." "Do you think for a moment. Sec retary Baker." said the chairman. ?that there has been anr time within the last year that the German secrt service has not been fully advised a to everything we bnvo done?" "Yes. 1 knew. If I mar roly unon tne confidential information which wo, get from confidential sources. tne uerman government is t-till mys tified as to tbe number of men we nave in France, or have had there at any time." - The chairman said he doubted this After tome discussion as to the pol icy of governments in announcing mimary secrets, Mr. Haker raid it was not ,the policy cf the American or other governments to dc so and addfd: T'l am 'saying this now, benause you have asked me why I hav- held back these facta until now, I am saying to you that yon could not get from Great Britain at this moment I don't know whether I could get th number of soldiers Great Hr tnin hai in j France or at home. 1 could aet an approximation; I could set what ever information might rr,. dVme.t helpful to the immediate m'litary object to be lictompllshed. but I could not act from Great Hrltaln "or V ranee cither one. the actual num ber of troop they have at the front. fit may be that that precaution is unnecessary, and yet that is the pre caution which military men have ob served, and I have no further point to make In the matter of the number of troop there than to show, as I wss showing, when I read that ex tract, that our original intention was to make our military effort in 101?: and in A 11 pud of 1917. a sealous ad vocate of Immediate military activity laid down as the maximum obtaina ble program, a thing which has since oeen muitirold exceeded. Joffn? Tell Kit nation. "Why did we decide to send noma troops to France in 1917?' It is no secret. When -Marshal Joffre rm to this country from France, when he British mlnnion France, they told us of a situation which we hd not tin to that time fully appreciated. There had been in ranee recently conducted before that an unsuccessful major offensive. "The French people had suffered, oh, suf'ared in a way that not only our language is not adapted to de scribe, but our imagination cannot conceive. The war Is in their conn- try. The wolf has not only been at their door, but he has been gnawing for two years and a half at their vitals, and when this unsuccessful offensive in Franco had cone on three weeks, a spirit not of surren der but of late, about the French ".,0 -ri; '. BATTLE OF JUTLAND BATTLE OF SOMME BATTLE OF YPRES BATTLE IN CLOUDS DESTRUCTION OF GERMAN ZEPPELINS IN A RAID OVER LONDON people, and hls mighty military en gine which they had seen prepared to overcome them for forty years was at them, and their attitude was that no matter whether every Frenchman died in his tracks, as they were willing to do. or not, that it was an Irresistible thing, and jo they slid to us 'frankly. It will cheer usi It will cheer our people if you send over some of your troop. "We did send some troops. IJHtUh Kamle t'nwlev "At that place we had a choice. We eonld have sent over, as Great Hrltaln. our regular armvr d In a very short preparation have put It Into action and suffered exactly what Great Hrltaln suffered with her 'lin temptlble little army, a It' waa called by their adversaries, f Our arm would have given a good an account of Itself as the British army did, but It would have been destroyed like the British army, and there would have been no nucleus on whlchlof lied Cro nurses and doctor and to '1 ltd this new rmy that wa. to orderlle and attendant In hospital come over a little later, and it was deemed wiser to send over a regular division, bnt not to send over our whole regular army at that time. "Then what" happened was that that regular division went over and the people of France kissed the hero of their garments aa they-marched np the streets of Paris; the old' vet erans, wounded In this war, legless or armless, stumnlns along- -on crutches, as they went up the streets of Paris with their arms around tbe neck of American soldiers. Not a single man in that division wart" un accompanied by a veteran. America had rone to France and the Freneh people rose with a sense of srratltude and hopefulness that had never been In them before. French Morale Rlwe. "Of course they welcomed the British, but their need was not so arrest when the British went. Of course they welcomed the British, but there were ties between them and ui which there had not been between them and tbe British and o when our troops went there was an Instant and spontaneous rise in the' morale ef the French, but ao equally instant and spontaneous In sistence that these soldiers who fame from America should continue to come in an Unbroken stream. "And so we made the election. We decided not to send the regular army as t whole, hut to send regular dl vfslor.4 and national guard divisions, wftofJd according to the state of thflr trpeparatlon and keep hack ner som part of our trained forc In ordrr that it n.fxht Inoculate with IH spirit anU Its. training; these raw levies .which! we were' training and mne after another ilhese division have ron over until in Franca there is a ruhtliia army, an army trained In the essentia and In tbe h?Kln nlns of military dlsclplie and prac tice, and trained, spawned fighters in this kind of a war on the actual battle fieids where it Is taklnc placs. V. K. Knjtliiecr Work Heroically. "Karly In this war, when Joffre was her and when IJalfo ir wa here lhy sal 1 to us 'It miy lae you smJ time to Ret over to us a flghtlns; ar my, but yon are a great Industrial country; our man power Is fully en gaged in our Industries and in our military enterpM-. send over arti sans, special engineering reslvents.. and troops vt a technical character although It was not contemplated at the outset, and i-nly a phrase In the emrgensy military legislation showh that th If thing was thought of ps a possibility, yet. In 4 very short time we had orranlrcd ienineerlng recim nts of rallrond r.in and sent them oyer there and were rebuilding behind the lines of the British and Freb the 'railroads which were be- ig carried forward with their -ad- vacne, reconstructing their broken englnea and cars, building new rail roads, both back of the tench and British lin-s. and those regiments were of such quality that at Cambrai arcault. carried on by General Byng, when the Germans made their coun-ter-ataek our engineer ' regiments ; threw-down" their plcke and spade I and tarried their rifle Into the bat-. Z LIBERT BY SPECIAL PERMIT 07 6000 FEET 07 OFFICIAL OOVEENtlENT WAE FILMS ' AND SPECIAL LEOTUEE BY . Private W. C. Gollirige THE ONE-AEMED HERO OF FESTUBERT AND YPRES f S . BATTLES " If' " ' ' ' ' yx ' tie and distinguished themselves by gallant action In tbe war lUolf. "Very early in this war Great Drit lan, through Balfour and his assit ants, and Fjance, through Joffre, said to u 'send u nurse and doct or.' Why before we were scarcely In the war American unit organized in advance and anticipation by tbe Ited Cross, which wa taken over In to the service of the United Starea through the surgeon, general, were on the battle field and there are Un of thousand of men in England and in France now ho bless the mission of -mercy upon which ' the flrjl Americans appeared In Fiance. Great Task I ItealizeO. .' -"Our surgeon have set up hos pital immediately behind the line. They have been military In every sense or th world. They have not been especially fortunate In escaping attack from the air and our early losses in this war were the Iossjs I and ambulance driver whe were sent over to assist our amca in tncee necessary services, thus not only rendering assistance, but acquiring skill and knowledge of the circum stances and surroundings, so that when our own troops came in large number they could render like serv ices to our own forces. But that wa not enough. It was suggested that further -groups of mechanics ffnigh'. be needed. Nay, we began to see that we were going to be over ther In large force, and the question that then had to be answered was, how will maintain an armv In frtnu.' Special studies had to be made ol', that problem and this Is what they showed. They showed that the rail roads and the facilities of Franco had In this war been kept inan ex cellent condition; far better than any other aupposed possible under war conditions. And yet, that those rail roads were used to the maximum to take care of the needa of the French and tbe British themselves and that when our army became a great army, it would be necessary for-us to build back of our own line an independent line of communication." . BANISH CATARRH Kreatbe If rael fr'Tw Mlaea aa tarre i s lea Villi Get Heller. If you want to et relief from ca tarrh, cold in the head or from an ir. rltatlnic nvuiih in the shortest time brth Ilrnmet. It . will r1n out your head f n to minutes and allow you to breathe frcv ly ttyoml wiy mil a rM In one day. It will rellv you f dlKKurtlnir uriui-fl'-a. hawklns-., apltlina -and fftnie breath in a week. - -.' . Hyomei Is made chiefly from a jooth int heallna:. term killing n t l-nt lc. that romea from he eu-a)ptua fore'a or inland Autrlm whcr ratarrh. ant h ma and rnnnumptton were nvtr known t eslut, llynmel Is pleasant- and easy to hreathr. Jut nour a few. rfrnon Into the hrd ftiblwr Inhaler, un aa rilrcct- 1 M (1 11 r run tm nir,t.n i im.ii, A eomnUte Ilyom-! outfit. Imludlnar; tnhalr and one bottle of llyomei. mam , but llttl at rfruKlla evrrywhre and at Panlfl J. Fry. If yoi alrrady owi an inhairr you ran al an extra i.wtl!i v.c 7 "(".' v- i iiyomel at drusgiats. Ifryrup is also being produced, la CHIPS FOKf HIXK khi:ads. "Is Mabel still devoted to that young man who owns the twelve rylinder car?", "No. She passed him up for an army aviator.',' -Detroit Free Press. "As a politician that man was disgrace to the city.- "Well, he ha risen In the political world since then. Now he a disgrace' to the State." Puck. "That man," said Sherlock Holmes, Jr., "haa no daughters, and hs wife doesen't dance." "How do you know all that ?" asked Dr. Watson. "Have you ever een him before?" "Nevei. I Just overheard him ay that he could 'see) no harm In the tango or the trukey trot," Houston Cbron lcle. Plana are under discussion for an appropriate observance next year of tbe. centenlal anniversary of the birth of Mrs. E. D. N. Southwortb, tbe popular novelist. Wednesday II Thartday CANADIAN GOVERNMENT V 1 .,V t NEW FOOD RULES TO BE ENFORCED Steusloff Lays. Down Law io Gathering of Groccri ' Last Night At a meeting of Salem grocer ljut night, President F W. teusloff of the Salem Commercial club and who I also Marlon county food administra tor, declared that he 1 going to en force to the letter th sew food regu lation of the government and that an example would be mad of any me, dealer or consumer, who falU to comply with tbe rules. " "This 1 no time for profiteering Tyr:;tii9 V"!'.1- Uher pro-Ciinaa said Mr. Steusloff. He declared that or a tightwad. Th new .rules are effective In Sa lem, today. On cards furnlshea by the commercial club, the dealers are to keep, record of sales of the at tested foods and turn In the name of purchaser and' the amount pur chased once each week. This is to serve as a protection of tbe uev ccants - against purchasers who might attmept to violate the rules. Queries ar constantly being made at the office of the federal food ad ministration in Salem as to why the price of cornmeal. despite the big corn crop, 1 so high; many persons a,?want t0 kn0'w why l.here a difference In the market price of corn, as quoted . In tbe press, and the figure at which cormeal Is to be had from the retailer. Assistant Federal Food Adminis trator. W. K. Newell, who has Just teturned from Washington, looked Into the corn situation thoroughly wh!!e ln the east and report that while the corn crop throughout the corn belt waa very large peculiar weather conditions caused a very heavy percentage of 1 "soft" orn, which Is unfit for mlllng. "Only the first gfade corn, en tirely free from moisture and known to the trade as No. 1, can be milled" raid Mr. Newell. "That Is one reast n why cornmeal remains at uch a hlga figure throughout the country. The still higher price of cornmeal ln tho Northwest Is due to a distance from the producing point and the trans portation difficulties. As to the ap parently excessive difference between the quotations of corn In the market and the price of cormeal. It should be understood that the com quotations are based on feeding corn, rather than on the milling grades. "A new and very valuable food product, however,, has been discoyer d through the necessity of finding a way to -uso the great qua'ntlties of soft corn that was produced this year This new product 1 corn oil, which Is proving to be one of the heft . ( . ( . om m discovered, and which la given hlrh rank among the different Cottonaeod. nil and nlher ,,,. - w ' ' ' 7. -m greater quantities." AS INHRFINITK tJAHlMTY. A true story about a citizen whose daughter is about to be married and who haa been trying to get a line on what the expense of the rather elab orate ceremony will be. He ap proached a friend of his. seeking in formation, a "Morris." he said, "your oAet daughter va married about JTIve years ago. wasn't she? Would 70a mind telling me about how much tns wedding crst you?" "Not at all, Sam," was the snswer. "Altogether about $50t)0 a year." Cleveland Plalndealer. If each of the 10,000 bottler of "soft drink" In the United Statei can find a way to save Just one ounce of sugar a day, it will mean a saving of nearly 200,000 pound a year. - The recenf election in Stockholm resulted in the choice of"! wo . women to become member of the town council.