'! * r PETROGRAD MENACED REMOUNT DEPOT SOLDIERS LEARN HORSE-SHOEING OF CURRENT WEEK Brief Resume Most Important Daily News Items. COMPILED :v LV ' X j i ',. K This pnotugruptt snows u class of soldiers of the remount ue|H>t, No. 3U8. stationed at tam p llaiicoca, Augusta, Ga., learning the not very gentle art of horse-shoeing. These men use the hoofs taken from dead horses to practice on; each man is hoidiug a hoof In his hand. They will eoou sail to France to shoe Uncle Sam's horses over there. RECALLS FAMOUS RECORDS OF SEA Shipbuilding Program Renews * • * • * • * • * • * • * • * • * • * • * • * • * • J FATHER IS WILLING TO • Interest in the Performances * SACRIFICE HIS FIVE SONS • of Old-Time Vessels. •k ------- • PROUD OF OUR FAST SHIPS Slippers That Outsailed Steamers Showed Us How to Gain Mastery of the Sea— Some Remark­ able Voyages. a * * J * J * J * J * * * j * * ★ Washington. — When George Walter Plants of draft age, pre- sented himself before the oxernp- tlon board with his father It was shown that he had two brothers already In the service. “ No, sir," replied Plants Se- nlor when asked If he wanted exemption for the third son. *T have two boys In the army and I am willing not only to seno George Into the service, but have two more boys at home you can have If you need them.” J ♦ * • • ♦ + • • * -k J • J k •★ •* •★ •* •* •* •* •* •* •* •* •* • The Dreadnought made many fast passages, however, In the total of sev­ enty to eighty credited to her. On sev­ eral occasions she maintained a uni­ form speed of O',4 miles an hour from shore to shore. Her host eastward voy­ age was 13 days S hours from port to port, and her average speed for Atlan­ tic voyages was higher, probably, than that of any other sailing ship. The record of a clipper ship for crossing the Atlantic belongs, how­ ever, to the Red Jacket of New York, which crossed In 18&4 from Sandy Hook to the entrance of the River Mersey In 13 days and 1 hour. The best passage In the opposite direction , was made In 1860 by the ship Andrew ' Jackson, 13 days from the Mersey to ; New York. GIVES HAIR FOR COUNTRY Washington. — Much Interest has >ecn shown by the public In the United States shipping board's program of building many fast vessels for carry- Ing supplies to France during the war. »nd to transport freights, mall and passengers as the vanguard of the In a single day. which exceeded by 42 great merchant marine that Is to be miles the best day’s run made by a maintained when pence returns. steamship up to that time. National pride, say shipping experts In 26 consecutive days, on this voy­ here, has always found strong expres­ age. the Flying Cloud sailed 5.912 sion over the ability of the United miles, an average of 227 miles a day. or States to produce fast ships. It Is miles an hour. For four days, when therefore nothing new for Americans . . , .... ., she made her best speed, she averaged to watch the Products of their ship- 314 mlIes „ „ or , 2H knotg „ „ hour yards with swelling breasts. j The shlp.s „ plolt wns ^ bnte<1 ln Half a century and more ago the gRn Franclsco w(th reJololng an(J ^ whole country took pride In the rec-, n(?wg Qf (( pleasure to every °r" \ 0f,A,mer C'1r per T fleets * of S, the ,P k ’ which led the Can merchant world. American shipyards then produced vessels which made long voyages at an average speed equal to that of the steamships of their time. The sailing records they established were never '»qualed by the ships of other nations. These vessels were the direct prod­ uct of daring experiments by Yankee builders, who were never content to rest on their laurels, which were many. Each year they excelled their previ­ ous efforts, turning out flyers that challenged the attention of the mari­ time world. The Flying Cloud. One of the most notable American vessels ln the heyday of the clipper ships was the Flying Cloud of Boston, which ln 1831 made the run from New York to San Francisco, around Cape Horn, ln 89 days, 21 hours, establish­ ing a record that has stood since. On Its voyage the ship sailed 374 mlles WEIGHING FOOD SCOUTS a / “Boys, you look bully 1” said Col. «Theodore Roosevelt to twenty-four boys of the diet squad of New York Public School No. 42, who are Indulg­ ing ln an extra meal each day ln an effort to gain weight. The youngsters like their Job, that of eating the spe­ cially prepared meals of the food ex­ perts. The kiddles are being weighed after their first week’s diet; In anoth­ er month they will change from the lightweight class to the heavyweight doss. The colonel la showing the keenest interest ln the weighing of each member of the diet squad. American who heard of It. The next year the ship Sovereign of the Seas—from the yard of the same builder, Donald McKay of East Bos­ ton—In the course of a voyage from Honolulu to New York excelled some of the dally runs of the Flying Cloud. ! In four days ln the South Pacific she logged 1.478 miles, an average of 378 miles a day. or 15H mlles an hour. In 1 Samson listened to a woman, cut off 11 days, between March 10 and 21, she his hair, and lost, literally, the sinews logged 3,562 miles, a dally average of of war. Now cometli a modern wom­ 330 miles, and an hourly average of an, harking to the call of Uncle Sam's 1314 miles. At times she sailed at a sons, and cutteth off her hair to pro­ speed of 19 mlles nn hour, which few vide said sinews. History simply sets freight-carrying steamers today can at­ new music to old woi Is or vice versa. tain. Her best day's run was 424 The photograph shows Florence Mans­ mlles. and showed an average speed of field, Boston's patriotic daughter, ready 17 2-3 miles an hour for 24 hours. to snip off her lovely hulr to provide The Sovereign of the Seas also had material for rope to be used In the the distinction of having beaten a making of a submarine tiller. Her steamer on five continuous days of | patriotic Impulse was original, spring­ sailing, while on the passage from ing from the neisl of rope In the navy New York to Liverpool In 1853, and as outlined to her by friends In the also of making the unique run of United States Marine corps. She has seven days from land to land, having very long tresses, and she can amply sighted Cape Race, Newfoundland, at spare some. She believes every girl 6 a. m. June 24 -and Cape Clear, Ire­ In the country ought to sacrifice a land, et 6 a. m. June 30. lock of hair. She believes there is an­ Her best dny’s run wns 344 mlles on other use for hair more Important than June 28. In five days, June 25-30, the wearing It herself—that Is for one of ship outsailed the Cunurd liner Can­ our fighting men to wear It, In a wrist­ ada, which wns mnklng the eastward band or ring. Then, when our boys passage from F >ston to Liverpool, a get real lonesome "over there” all they total of 325 miles. The best day's run have to do Is to take one long, linger­ of the Canada was 306 miles. ing look at that strand of hair, and, ns Greatest Day’s Run. they gaze, the winsome face of the girl The greatest day's run ever made by back home will rise before them, and n vessel under sail wns accomplished all will be right ngalnt Now, how by another ship of Donald McKay's about It girls? Who will volunteer build, the Lightning, on her maiden for such a worthy cause? voyage, from Boston to Liverpool, ln 1854. On the first day of March, when ap- SMALL BOY KNITS SWEATER ; proachlng ond rounding the north of Ireland, In a strong gale from the Ten-Year-Old Youth Gets Yarn From Red Cross and Turns In Fin­ south, the ship logged 18V4 mlles nn ished Garment. hour. Her lee rnil was under water and her Jib and fore-topsail, new, Chicago.—A “Sammle," “somewhere strong sails, were blown ln shreds from their bolt ropes. Such an exhi­ ln the United States" or "somewhere bition of sall-cnrrylng rarely has been ln France,” Is today wearing a nice recorded as that on the Lightning that warm knitted sweater and In all proba­ day; and It wns d me prayerfully, for bility dreaming of a beautiful girl her master. Captain Forbes, was a "somewhere ln the United States,” who knitted the sweater. strong churchman. Clifford Hammerherg, ten-yenr-old At the end of the 24 hours the ship's log showed that she had made a day's schoolboy, wns anxious to help the run with parallel, of 436 sea mlles, or boys fighting for Uncle Sam, went to the Red Cross headquarters, obtained more than 500 land mlles. This entitled the Lightning to the some yarn and went home and knit­ proud distinction of being the fastest ted the sweater. It was returned to ship that ever sailed the seas. There the Red Cross and sent out with other was no steamship of her day that sweaters for boys In the service. could approach her record for a day’s mileage by 100 mlles, and 25 years NEW USE FOR PERISCOPE passed before a steamer was produced, 4 the Arizona, then rated as an ocean Pennsylvania Man Installs One In Hie greyhound, that equaled her maximum Chimney to 8pot Approaching speed per hour. Street Car. Best remembered today of the Amer­ ican clipper ships Is the Dread­ Knoxville, Pa.—Albert R. Ballard nought. She was a packet ship, run­ has Invented and Installed a periscope ning on a regular schedule with pas­ I d the chimney of hie home. When sengers between New York and Liver­ ready to travel Ballard sits In his (lin­ pool. There Is a tradition that In 1859 ing room with his eye at the periscope. she created a record of 9 days 17 hours When the periscope shows a car from Sandy Hook to Queenstown, but speeding over a nearby hill Ballard the story has been decided to be myth­ dona coat and hat, strolls to tba corner ical and meets the car just as i( arrive. FOR YOU Events of Noted People, Governments and Parifle Northwest and Other Things Worth Knowing. There are numerous indications in Germany of a systematic campaign to promote a new general strike, says a Berlin dispatch. Vernon Booth, of Chicago, of the Lafayette Flying Corps, in France, brought down a German airplane in a tight several miles inside the German lines Monday, Nelson Morris, of Chicago, chairman of the board of Morris A Co., packers, 26 years old and unmarried, has asked exemption or deferred clsssifleation of appeal board No 1. The Carnegie Corporation has pre­ sented McGill University, at Montreal, with $1,000,000 in recognition of the institution's devoted service and sacri- lico toward Canada's part in the war. The American and Japanese embas­ sies and the Chinese, Siamese and Brazilian legations are leaving Petro- grad for Vyatka, or Volnogda. If necessary1 they will go to Vladivostok. Walter Best, of Fairfax, S. C., a negro, was taken from the sheriff and two deputies by a mob and hanged to a tree by the roadside, a short time after he had killed W illiam Weston, a young white man. A loyalty resolution including an amendment condemning Senator La Foliete for his attitude toward the war was adopted by the Wisconsin state senate late Tuesday night by a vote of 26 to 3. The resolution will now go to the lower house. Crrmana Advance Regardless of I'enre Agreement Citizens Ordered to Dig Trenches for Defense. I’strograd — Blaring airena awoke eleeping Betrograd Tuesday evening, signifying to the inhabitants that the Germans had entered Bakov, The blaats of the whialiea also served as a summons to begin digging trenchea for the defense of the rspital. The district soldiers' and workmen's councils of Betrograd were informed over the telephone at midnight that small German detachments had taken possession of I'skov and were moving toward Betrograd. A general mobilization of the work­ ingmen who are supporting the coun­ cils was ordered, everyone being di­ rected to report to the Semolny Insti­ tute, the Bolshevik headquarters. Motor cars were requisitioned and the tramcara were kept running all night. Ailed with soldiers and members of the Red Guard, who were dis|>atehed to the various railroad stations. Betrograd An official proclamation issued Wcdneaday, calling upon the people to defend the capital, saya; “ In spite of the fact that the gov­ ernment has accepted the peace condi­ tions imposed by the German and Aus­ trian governments, the Imperialist as­ sassins are, nevertheless, continuing their monstrous advance into the in­ terior of Kuaaia. “ The cursed minions of W illiam and the German Kaledmes, together with the White Guards, are advancing agninat and shooting the sovieta, re­ constituting the (lower of the land- lirda, bankers and capitaliata and pre­ paring for the restoration of the mon­ archy. "The revolution is in peril. A mor­ tal blow will be atrurk against Red Betrograd. If you workers, soldiers and peasants wish to retain power and the power of the Soviets you must fight these hordes, who now are seeking to devour you to your laat gasp. "The decisive h>ur has struck. Workers and all oppressed men and women, you must swell the ranks of the Red battalions. To arms, all of you! That the struggle may only cease with your laat breath.” Camps and Mills Go On 8 Hour Day Basis March 1. DISQUE TELLS PLANS Oregon and Washington Are Affected by Order, Operators Are Told Batrlotlr Support Bromised. Absolute control of ths spruce Indus­ try of the states of Oregon and Wash­ ington has been taken over by the gov­ ernment. March 1 the logging rami ng camps and all the lumber mills of 1 .her stales fir, spruce and all other* ami milla—went on a basic elghf'^m., eight day, presaging a government move to take absolute control of the entire lumber industry of the two states. Announcement of the basic eight- hour day was made in Bortland Wed­ nesday simultaneously with the decis­ ion by the War department, announced from Washington, that the government had commandeered the spruce industry of the two Banflc Northwest states This announcement was made by Col­ onel Brice B. Bisque, commanding the spruce production division of ths Sig­ nal Corps. United States Army, to ap­ proximately 200 members of the Lum­ bermen’s Broteetlve Association, com­ prising operators and millmen of Ore­ gon and Washington, following an ail- day executive conference. Direct from the shadow of the White House. Colonel Disque, who returned from Washington recently, made thia announcement, which hitherto might have been considered revolutionary, and men who for years have even fought the mention of an eight-hour day applauded vociferously. Batriotiam marked the prorgesa of the meeting and the startling an­ nouncement from Colonel Disque wan received with enthusiasm. A number of the operators declared they would willingly turn their buaineaa over to the government, or would operate their pro|N>rtiea on any basia whatever as long as the war lasted. ” 1 am not in a poaition to give any reason for this announcement,” said Cot. Bisque, following the conference. Resolutions were adopted by the lumbermen expressing absolute confi­ dence in Colonel Bisque and in any ac­ tion the government might take. At the conclusion of the conference shortly before midnight. Colonel Bisque announced that a meeting of the workers in the logging ramps ami the lumber mills would be held in Bortland early next week. At this meeting he will he will pre­ sent the problems of production and other details in connection with the work of fulfilling the government's aircraft requirements. A thorough discussion of various problems between the representative of the War dcjtart- ment and the workers will lie taken up at this time. Colonel Disque declared that his ac­ tion in establishing a basic eight-hour •«y wss impelled largely through a desire to show the members of the Loyal legion of loggers and Lumber­ men the government’s appreciation of their loyalty and patriotic endeavor in the production of aircraft material. Alleged to be an agent in the United States for German interests which THREE AMERICANS GASSED have been seeking to comer the world’s wool market. Eugene Schwenlt, a wealthy wool merchant of New York Sammies Do Effective Work Against Enemy Take Many Briaoncra. and Boston, was arrested Tuesdsy as an enemy alien and will be interned. W ith the American Army in France The navy’s appeal for "eyes” for — Three American soldiers were killed the watch officers has brought more and nine badly "gassed” in two form­ than 20,000 binoculars, spy glasses, idable gas attacks made by the Ger­ telescopes, sextants and chronometers. mans on the American positions in the Assistant Secretary Roosevelt stated Toul sector early Wednesday morning Tuesday. One day’s receipts amounted with projectors. to 3000. However, more will be The enemy also heavily bombarded jT-^.ded. the American batteries with gas The former Austrian steamer Lucia, shells, but without results. Only the excellent preparatory train­ equipped with a new “ non-sinkable” system, has sailed from a Gulf port ing in quickness by the American with a cargo. The steamer is equipped troops prevented the projector attacks, with more than 12,000 air and water­ the first experienced by them, from tight cells, which the inventor claims causing more casualties. The attacks were made within 10 will keep the vessel afloat even should minutes of each other and were dierct- she be torpedoed. ed at a certain wood. Seventy five Meeting at the call of the govern­ eight-inch shells of 80 |ier cent gas and ment, representatives of capital and 20 per cent high explosive sheila were labor began conferences in Washington fired by German minenwerfer. TW.1 Monday to reach an agreement de­ flight of the projectiles was track'd signed to prevent strikes and to assure through the air, the gas shells burst­ a maximum production during the war ing in the air and the high explosive of materials necessary to maintain the denotating when they came in contact American armies in France. with the earth. Large fragments of John Purroy Mitchel, ex-mayor of shells flew from both missiles. The gas caught some of the men be­ New York, now a major in the avia­ tion Bection, Signal Officers’ Reserve fore they were able to adjust their MAY HAVE TO FIGHT ALONE Corps, arrived in San Diego, Cal., masks and overcome others while they Monday with Mrs. Mitchel. Major were asleep in dugouts. Kaiser Balked hy Austria in East — Mitchel came on orders of the War de­ Turkey and Bulgaria Restive. Germans Lose 75 Blancs. partment to report for flight duty to Ixindon— Seventy-five enemy aircraft qualify as reserve military aviator. Washington, I). C. — Further evi­ One hundred and fifty-seven soldiers were brought down by the Royal Fly­ dence of the growing strain in rela­ — mostly Germans and Austrians — ing corps on the western front from tions between Germany and Austria have been taken from the troops at February 1 to 22, according to an an­ over the refusal of the latter to parti­ Camp Greene, Charlotte, N. C. Some nouncement by the British air minis­ cipate in the renewed attack upon will be interned and others assigned to try. During the same period 39 enemy Russia is given in an official dispatch troops which will not have service aircraft were driven down out of con­ received here Thursday from France. It quotes the Austrian premier as overseas. Some are old men in the trol and six were brought down by service and others recent volunteers. anti-aircraft defenses. Against these formally reiterating on February 22 120 machines of the enemy, says the that Austria-Hungary would take no They come from almost every state. statement, 28 of the allies are missing. part in military action against Rusaia A site at Sacramento, Cal., has been On the Italian front, since the arrival or Roumania and would not send her approved by the War department for of the British airmen to the present troops into Ukrainia. an army aviation school. The fact is strongly indicated thHt* time, 58 planes have been destroyed. English naval airmen continued to the kaiser's other allies, Bulgaria bombard docks, airdromes and other and Turkey, may adopt the Russian Tremor Felt in Montana. targets in Belgium, and have account­ Rismark, N. D.- The Northern Ba- policy of Austria and leave Germany to ed for four German airplanes, the ad­ cific operator at Glendive, Mont., Tues­ proceed alone and unsupported in her miralty announced Thursday. day evening reported a violent earth­ invasion of Russia. Miss Martha Van Rensselaer, of the quake of three seconds’ duration. Flyers Need More Room. department of home economics, New Large buildings quivered, he said. Washington, D. C. — Immediate Weather Observer O. W. Roberts York College of Agriculture, Cornell University, has been appointed head here is inclined to believe the quake stejis to reduce the number of collis­ of the division of home conservation of was caused by the breaking up of huge ions by student aviators by spreading the United States Food administration. masses of ice in the Yellowstone river. out the training areas are about to be The shock, he reports, is frequently of A German guardship stationed in sufficient severity to cause quakes ex­ taken by the War department. It is planned to Iny out flying fields in vari­ the Baltic near Langeland Island tending over a limited territory. ous directions from the training camps (north of Kiel bay) has been damaged to which the student aviators will fly striking a German mine, according to New Serum is Discovered. each day in a regular schedule. It is a dispatch from Copenhagen. About Baris—Brofessor M. A. Vincent, of believed this will prevent crowding in 20 men are supposed to have been the Academy of Medicine, who became the air. All things taken Into consid­ killed. widely known through the discovery of eration, however. War department offi­ An agreement for revision of the a serum for the treatment of typhoid cials feel that the number of accidents two most important provisions of the fever, almost eradicating the disease has not been unduly large. in the French army, announces he has bill for a war finance corporation to found a curative and preventive for Mexlean Trade Bromised. aid in the financing of war and con­ Malta fever. This fever is a type of St. Louis — BlanH to take over the tributory industries was reached late malaria prevalent in South Africa and hardware trade with Mexico, which, Thrusday by Secretary McAdoo and along the Mediterranean. before the European war, was almost the senate finance committee. entirely in German hands, have been The Austrian premier. Dr. von Corn Trading is Halted. made by St. I^iuis firms, it is an­ Seydler, speaking in the reichsrath Chicago — The Chicago Board of nounced by Baul V. Bunn, secretary of Wednesday, entered into a long de­ Trade late Wednesday afternoon the St. Louis chamber of commerce. fense of the original treaty of peace stopped all trade in corn for delivery Four wealthy residents of Monterey, with Ukraine and announced a subse­ in store by grade alone in Chicago in Mexico, visited St. I,oufs recently, quent treaty appointing a commission the month of February. The settle­ said Mr. Bunn, and stated that a large to define the frontiers of Ukraine and ment price for this delivery was set at corporation to control the hardware Cholm. $ 1 . 28 . trade would be formed at Monterey. - .4