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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 26, 1917)
MEDFORD MAIL TRTBTTNT3, MEDFOBB, OBEfiOX, TUESDAY, JITKE 26, 19t7, PAOE THREE WORLD FAHE DESTROYS BASIS OF FOOD SUPPLY Country Being Stripped of the Basis for Future Fat Starvation Threat ensSituation Is Desperate and Must be Met Quickly if We Are to Escape Disaster. our flocks and herds, Tecse, the ducks, the By HERBERT QUICK, (Member of National Farm Loan Board.) WASHINGTON, June 26. There Is food crisis In the United States. Any one who denies this, shuts his eyfc to obvlpus facts. Food scarcity js not the absence of food. In any civilized country food scarcity always shows Itself In the high prices and never in the absolute absence of food. The laboring people of the United States, and people with small Incomes are pinched today in the matter of food, What is famine? It is nothing on earth but high prices carried to the point which makes It so hard to buy food that any large body of popula tion cannot buy enough to properly feed themselves. What Is Famine? Food was exported from Ireland during the worst periods of the great Irish famine. Food has always been exported from India during her worst famines. What is the basis of our food sun- ply? It is the seed from which crops are grown, and the breeding animals of the hens, the turkeys, the sgvs, the cows, the goats and the ewes. These are the seed of our food crops and our food animals. This country is today being strip ped of the basis of its future food supply. The situation calls for rigor ous governmental control of the breeding basis of our flocks and herds and the seed basis of our farm crops. Fat Is Necessary. Milk and eggs contain a substance which all young animals must have or they cannot grow. Take away from our children the fat which Ib found in niilk and in the yolk of eggs, and they will die, or "they will be stunted, I have seen young animals which have been almost full grown kept down almost to their infant size by being deprived of this mysterious and wonderful substance which is found dissolved in the fats provided by the mother element of nature. We hear of fat-starvation in Ger many. : This comes from the fact that the dairy cows of Germany were .very largely killed off after the first year of the war. An expert In foods told me the oth er day, at Memphis, Tennessee, that ho expected milk to be 20 cents a quart next summer in the south, and I hear predictions of 40 cents a quart in various parts of the industrial north. Starvation Threatens. When such prices arrive, the fat starvation of Germany will bo repeat ed In this country, and when the dairy herds are reduced to the point of such scarcity as this, It will take years to build them up again. Our dairy herds are being depleted In just that manner. Whole regions are being stripped of their breeding qiws, because the high price of beef tempts the cattle owner to sell. He thinks of his $100 or $150 per cow today rather than of conserving his part of the future meat and milk sup ply of the country. These cows are going for beef. They are going by the thousands (o slaughter houses to bo canned. The heifer calves are be- ng killed for veal. Famine in SeIs. There is already a famine in seeds over much of the country. In the south, the committees In charge of in creased production are searching high and low for a bushel here and a bush el there of soy beans, cow peas, vcl vet beans, seeds of the various sor--Khums, California black-eyed peas, and many other seeds. They are par celing them out to the farmers whom they are Inducing to plant as thinly as possible, so as to make the seeds cover the maximum amount of ground. A project Is on foot to sow a million acres of wheat In each of the three states of Tennessee. Mississippi and Arkansas, hut the southern wheat has been sold ahead of the harvest to the millers for food. That wheat Is now going to market, and If the farm ers of the south are to have the varie ties of seed wheat which they must have, they must buy it back at starva Hon prices to seed their fields. In & trip over nine other states recently Totind only two sorts of seed which were not scarce corn and cotton, Poultry INvnwInn. Go to any country railroad station In the United States, and yon will find on every platform crates full of laying hens, ducks and other poultry. If the j country were actually starving, there: is no one way in which so much ani mal food could be produced quickly; as by multiplying our poultry flocks, I make the claim that if a census were made today of the poultry of the country, it would be found that It Is decreasing Instead of Increasing. Power must be lodged somewhere in the government to take hold of tills matter with a strong hand, otherwise the present scarcity of food may reach the point where it will have to be called by a stronger name. Some one must have power to seize the seeds. Some one must have power to control the selling and slaughtering of female animals. We are setting up machin ery for the control of a food adminis tration. Unless seeds and female ani mals are conserved, this food adminis tration will not save us from things which one dislikes to predict. The cows, hens, ewes and sows, and other breeding animals, are being turned Into meat, in an endless and Increas ing stream. Suck of World Famine. The seed wheat of the south Is al ready moving to the mills. The tre mendous suck of a world famine has caught the germinal elements of our food supply, and Is sweeping it Into the world's hungry maw. The way out ia thru plain, prompt, effective, strong and wise administration of the seed elements of our fields, gardens, flocks and herds. There Is no time to be lost. AMERICA PLANS AIR PROGRAM 10 WIN WAR reat Aviation Fields Both Here and in France Hearty Ready Congress Asked for Six Hundred Million as a Starter Only Four Months Re quired to Train Aviator. WASHINGTON, June 26. Hear ings on the government's $600,000,000 aircraft program beffnn today before lie senate military committee's sub committee with Secretary of w ar Baker on the witness stand to advo cate its adoption. A bill to authorize the program will be introduced in congress during the week. COCCHI CONFESSES IRE DETAILS OF CRUGER MURDER BOLOGNA, Italy, June 26. -The poliee'authorities who are investignt- ing the history of Alfredo Cocclu, the slayer of Ruth Cruder, in New York, brought' to light the foihmin; additional "details concerning him. : When he left Italy , for. the United States he was in love with Maria Magrina, a servant in the Coceiii family, according to the police, boon after his arrival in New York CoecM tiiey say, wrote her that things were going well and promised to mar ry her at once if she would come to him. -Notwithstanding the liesitition of her relatives the girl insisted on go ing to Now York.... A few weeks ufter her arrival, according to the police, Coechi's bride wrote home, charging Cocchi with unfaithfulness. He was upbraided by his own relatives and those of his wife for failure to inend his ways. - He wrote home humble confessions of his wrong doings, but urged his people to induce his wife to be less- jealous of him. Ilturn a Surprise. When Cocchi recently returned to Pologna, the police say, his relatives were surprise dand even feared that something serious had occurred. In reply to questions, Cocchi satd he had left New York bceanse of the jealousy of his wife, and also that he desired to join the colors. Iiortly afterward a letter arrived from Coechi's wife in which she is aid to have asserted that Cocchi had eloped with a girl 18 years old, after borrowing Mrs. Coechi's tola! possessions, fifteen dollars. Cocchi denied the allegation. lie told, however, about Miss Cnigcr go ing to his shop to have her skates harpened. During the examination, when Coc chis aid he had sailed from New York on Feb. 17, the judge asked him to e.fiilnin what he had done during the two days after his disappearance and time of sailing. Sailed on Merchant, Cocchi said that he had sail aboard a British ship ns a mechanic The judge then pressed Coevlii more closely, and the prisoner even gavi some details about the crime. H said he had partly smothered Miss Cruger to prevent her from shriek- inc. but ns she had struggled he struck her. In falling, he added. Miss Cruger must have struck some vital spot because he suddenly dis covered that sue tras dead. In nn attempt to conceal the crime !) carried the body into the cilia and buried it in a hole that had been used to store gasoline. Later, according to the police, Coc cbi said he spent two days and one night before sailing for Italy in (he house of a priest m Carlton street New York. Riehi High Gun for the Day, roRTLAXD, June SS, E. J. Chin grcn of Siokane, shooting from the 22-yard line, was the big star ia the first day's shooting of the 33rd an nual registered tournament of t( Sportsmen's association of the north west today. In the amateur class. Frank Troeh, of Vancouver, Wash broke 143 out of 150, with Chlngren dropping six and finishing with 14 F. C. Riehi of Tacoma, u high gun for the day with 14? out of 150, with U H. Held of SesUlo turning In 146 out of 150. By HOWARD B. COFFIN. Chairman, Aircraft Production Board of Council of National Defense.) WASHINGTON, June 26. Ameri ca's aviation program, which Is being planned oa a scale sufficient to sweep he German flyers out of the air and literally blind the German army. Is already under way. Congess will within the next few days be asked to appropriate $800,- 000,000 to carry out these plans, but in the meantime the various branches of the federal government that deal with aviation are pushing the work of preparation on a large scale with money already appropriated. Three Fields Being Constructed, Three of the great aviation fields which the war department has plan ned are actually under construction; sites for the other six fields have been chosen and work on them will soon begin. Cadets are now in training at the preliminary training schools es tablished in six representative engin eering colleges . and universities. Training planes have already -been ordered and will be ready by the time the aviation fields are completed, and the Instruction of the first group of 800 aviators will begin not later than August 1. France and Great Britain, as well our own experts, have made it plain they expect aircraft and aviators to be one of America's greatest con tributions to winaing the war. .-The government can now say It Is actually embarked on the task of overcom ing its -present deficiency tn military aviation. We believe the outlook promises a quick development of the enormous latent air resources of the United States which may be unprece dented in the military history of the world. Up to America America Is responsible for the In vention of both the submarine and the aeroplane. In the development of both she has allowed Europe to out strip her. It is for us to show we can yet surpass both our enemies and our allies In the development of these site and let contracts for construe- tlon of a duplicate of the American standard two-squadron flying field In Franca, to receive the first flyers graduated from the Amerieaa fields. It takes only four months to train a flyer. As America's new airmen tints their training they will, em bark for Franco. On French soil un der French . Instructors and with French machines they will complete their preparation for work si the front. i Four Months Training, .v This training field fa France will ba entirely a product ot American brains and American energy. 'The buildings will be constructed and tbe plans prepared by an American con tracting firm with materials shipped from the United States. Thousands ot men are now. en gaged In preparation at the aviation fields at Dayton, O., Champagne, IU., and Detroit, Mich. The government has made tliera emergency projects and nothing Is being permitted to hamper their rapid construction. The work on these Is being separately con ducted and they wit! In no way Inter fere with the new army cantonments, Work began more than two weeks ago on iho big four squadron Held at Dayton. It la significant that this field of 2500 acres, the largest ot all, is on the site of the oirginal field on which the Wrights developed their first successful aeroplane. 'The mod est field of 88 acres to which the Wrights carried out their experiments is within the boundaries ol the big, new government field. Aviation Introduced, The Dayton field, which Is twice as big as any of the others, will ac commodate 144 aeroplanes and 300 flyers can e trained there at one time. As the training period Is just four months this means that this one field should graduate nearly ;1000 flyers within a year. Including offi cers, enlisted men, Instructors and mechanics, there will is 1700 or more persons at the school. The Instructors for these schools wtl be members of the aviation sec tion ot the regular army who -have been at the Mexican border, and as fast as the cadets are trained a tew of the most promising will be otiliied for training newcomers. America Is launched on the. great est and most inspiring enterprise In the world's history, that of winning the war in the air. There are enor mous obstacles In the way, but J am confident they can be surmounted. Th great American aerial iavy.,,! a certainty and Ha realisation is not far distant, FINN VOLUNTEERS ran GEii PETROGRAD, June 24. The Rus sian Volia says that 3000 Finnish volunters who formerly served In the German army are expected to attempt to enter Finland shortly. The bor der guard has been Increased and strict orders have been Issued.. The newspaper regards the release by Ger many ot 3000 flghlers in view of the trout nised of human material, as evi- two great Inventions which Americans jdence ot Use very suspicious charac- flrst conceived. It wilt surprise many neotrte to know the United Slates has not only rushed plans for completion of a largo number ot aviation training schools in mis country. lu h . ter of this emigration. The central committee ot the Fin nish social democrat workmen's par ty has protested strongly against the non-admlttaaee of the Flans to Fin land, Children like Krumbles and it builds tikem up. J Ready to Eat Ready to Et j J"j'liliiCTtfi7"l AB Wheal Ready to Eat Ail Wheal Ready to Eat Ail Wheat Ready to Eat J rt-M rt41 t UWCOOrA U I with For Sals by Medford Furniture & Hdw. Co, Garnett-Corey Hdw. Co, Crater Lake Hdw. ' Company, Now fa the time to consider kitchen comfort this summer now is the time to buy an oft cook-stove. . Look for the specially-decorated win dows of the merchants listed at the left. The orange discs proclaim a message welcome to every housewife. They teB how the New Perfection drives out the drudgery and discomfort of summer cooking, and at the same time givesbeiter results than your regular kitchen range for all-ihe-year-round cooking. This is New Perfection Oil Cook Stove Week, Ask these dealers to explain how the long blue chimneys of the New Perfec tion Oil Cook -Stove prevent all smoke and smell Learn the comfort and econ omy of cooking with Pearl Oil, . MW PERFECTION OIL C GDK STOVE Low Round Trip Fares to Many Points ia July INDEPENDENCE DAYJULY 4 On Sale July 3 and 4, Return July 5. lift ween all Southern Paifi stations in Oregon N. E. A. ANNUAL CONVENTION t , Portland, Ore,, July 7-14, inc. On Sale July 8-13, inc. Return July 18. ; - from all Southern Ijnifie Oregon stations to Portland EASTERN CITIES via CALIFORNIA On Sals on various dates in June, July, Aug, and Sept. Liberal Siopovei's. Limit 3 nusjitha Newport and Tillamook Beaches , " On Sale Daily. Eeturn Limit Oct. 31 Week End on Bale Saturday and BuiuUrr, Kvlnrn Monday 'j Bee rrtir loeal agent fu information John M. Seott, Oencral Passenger Agent, Portland, Oregon. SOUTHERN PACIFIC LINES -x