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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 18, 1917)
BEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORECSONT. WEDNESDAY. .TTTLY 18. 1917 WHAT TO DO EXPECT TEUTONS TO STRIKE WITH HOW UNCLE SAM IS TRAINING HIS AVIATORS Y AT SEA J. SWJtXU 11111JJJ1' tfj lift AIIAArAAI Tf - 1 . NU oUbbtobUKIU ! WHEN DRAWN 1 . H H H 4 V 7 ll i i in i iii m .Mi .n r i un i t id VHUIUIl ULUIlbllllll f ZIMMERMAN GHOSEN THE ARMY NAV Find Out District You Are In, Watch Your Number, Get Blanks From Exemption Board, and If You Seek Exemption, Swear to Them Before Notary Public Up to Local Board. (By Oilson Gardner. Washington Corre spondent.) WASHINGTON, July 18. Did yon register for the selective arniyf If so, you have a number of tilings still to do and to do at once. Remember, it is up to yon. Do not wait for tlie mails to bring you any notice or directions. What exemption district do you live inf If you do not know, find out." Where does your exemption board have its offices?" Go there and ask for copies of blanks and forms. You have some to fill out. . Whntis your number? Go to the board's office and find out. Every name must have a number, and as soon as the board has done' its job of numbering, you will be able to find out what your' number is. . t Watch Your Number. If the board has not yet completed the numbering, find out when they will, and go to see them again. Then watch the papers for news from Washington as to the "drawing." The numbers are all to be put in a wheel or into something to be drawn by lot. In this lottery your number will either be drawn or not drawn; then the lucky number will be posted at the headquarters of the board, and published in the Daily Mail Tribune. Anyway, it is up to you to watch the bulletin board or to read your paper and find out whether your number has been drawn. Yon may get a letter notifying you that you are drawn, but do not wait for the letter; watch the bulletin , board and the newspaper. ' 1 Your local board will next exnm ine all men whose numbers are drawn, to determine whether they are phy sically fit. Must Show Up for Exams. You must present yourself for this examination, whether you think you are fit or not; even if you hnve only one leg, do not neglect to' present yourself. You are not excused until you have been examined and the board gives you a written certificate to that effect. The same is true as to exemption for other causes. It is up to you". You may be a postal clerk or an employe in nn nrsenal, but you are not exempted until you hnve set out these facts on one of the official forms and had it made into an affi davit before a notnry public and then presented this affidavit to the ex emption board. Those entitled under the law to exemption must go thru the same forms as those seeking ex emption on the facts. If you have a dependent mother, this fact must be set out on one of the official forms and sworn to and the affidavit filed within seven days after you are called before the boafd. If proof is required, you may have to get an affidavit of two neighlors. householders, and file this with the board within the next ten days fol lowing the first seven days. Must make Affidavits. There will be a land office busi ness in swearing to affidavits. The notary public will ninke more mjnev than ever before. What will happen after you have filed yourclnim for exemption f Your various affidavits will be determined by the exemption board. After all these boards have their sny at least the first say; the second say is in the bands of the appeal board, which is another story. If you seek exemption on the grounds of occupation your nppenl must go to the district appeal board. Candidates' for his new citizen army, who are anxious to go to the front, and hnve no home ties which should not be broken, need only pie sent themselves for the physical ex amination. If this is passed, their nnmes will go into the record ns ac cepted rookies and in due time they will be called to live in one of the cantonment cities where their first training will he received. That cnll will probably not come before Octo ber. LA FAYETTE'S BIRTHDAY TO BE CELEBRATED IN U. S. NEW YORK, July 18. A cnll for the celebration of the birthday of I.n Fayette on September 8 wag issued from here today. Municipalities were World's Greatest Naval Battle Will Come Should Germany Try Last Desperate Effort for , Victory British Warships Ready Uncle Sam's Battleships Also Prepared. By KENNETH W. PAYNE. (Passed by Chief Admiralty Censor.) BRITISH BATTLE CRUISER BASE, July IS. Watch out for the greatest sea battle of all times! i . A thunderous naval clash In the North Sea may yet bring a terrific cli max to the war. . The U-boat campaign, sooner or later. Is doomed to failure. And then, when that fact of failure has filtered thru the Germans' consciousness, what will they do? Last Desperate Effort. Will they not hold true to their cry of "world power or downfall," and hurl their high seas fleet out for one last desperate stab at Britain? . This Is the question lately heard In the forefront of British hopes. And the. British navy Is getting ready for the answer. Prepared It has always been, of course. Yet a tour of the British bat tle cruiser base has Impressed me that the royal navy is making itself ever more ready for the day the day when the kaiser, beaten on land, beaten In the air, beaten under the sea, may make a gambler's final bid for victory and attack England at last in fair fight on top of the waves. "Then," say those predicting this possibility, "would follow a naval en gagement, or a succession of them. In comparison to which most other acts of the war would be child's play!" Uncle Sam May Fight. . And there is reason to hope some of Uncle Sam's warships might be In on this greatest sea fight of history. . Those foreseeing the possibility of a final naval tight are accused by some of sensational speculation. They answer the British navy is the allies' backbone. To try to smash It, when all else is lost, they argue would be German logic. ' We came to this port for a glimpse of the fleet hopefully ready for its chance. '. "Unfortunately," said the officer who met us, "the fleet is at sea to day!" The fieet at sea! And yet hero, under our eyes, lay the sketch of a whole armada! Our first lesson In tile British navy's magnitude was this: When the British battle cruiser base Is "comparatively deserted," it still harbors sn array of warships re minding one almost of Uncle Sara's whole North Atlantic squadron an chored In the Hudson! World Scope of Navy. Here were more battle cruisers than we could board In one morning, a dreadnaught or two, destroyers and all complementary craft. The War- spite, which Germany sank In the bat tle of Jutland so she says was here. After climbing over this mag nificent floating fortress, with her 15 inch guns that fire shells weighing a ton, I begin to wonder whether the Germans really sank her after all. iNear her lay one o( the two battle cruisers which In the Falkland battle wiped out all but one of the German Admiral von Spee's warships. So here was another reminder of the world Bcope of the British navy. War vessels in Mesopotamia, In the Adriatic, in the China seas, all up and down the Atlantic! Besides many big men-of-war, 600 smaller craft In the Mediterranean. Thanks also to the navy, the vital nerve of the English channel com munlcatlon haB never been touched by the Germans, tho nearest their bases. And while carrying on this world wide work of policing the seas the British navy Is also still holding here and at other northern bases a force big enough to crush the entire Ger man high seas fleet, It It ever again dare to come out. no PARIS, July 18. Anatole de Mon He, the newly appointed undersecre tary of maritime transports, has ob tained the cabinet's approval for the Institution of a general control over the mercantile fleet. The decree In stituting the measure lefers to the increasing diminution of tonnage due to the submarine war as nwomltst Order and Efficiency In Teaching ' Make Men Proud to Display Flying Insignia in Red, White and Blue. WASHINGTON, July 18. The happiest men on the allied battle front today are the daredevil Ameri cans forming the famous Lafayette esadrille, the American aviation corps. , They're happy because they are now flying for Uncle Sum ns well as for France mid England and de mocracy. To prove it they point io their airplanes. On the bottom, on top and behind are the insignia of Uncle Snm a five pointed while star with a red circle in a blue background. The star is painted, according to Secretary of the Navy Daniels, or der, on the outside of the bottom and top planes. A red, while and blue bar takes the place of Ihe star on Ihe rudder, the red being nearest the tuil and the while in the middle. These American airplane daredevils are proud to show their colors, be cause they are proud of the training that is fast making Uncle Sam lend in aircraft warfare. 'Look at the plan of the United Stntes army signal corps for its nvi- gJ7 a cool, fren 9ly to bacco in the pipe means cool, j genial thoughts 111 ONLY Kentucky's "Blue Grass" soil could put that full bodied flavor into VELVET. Only kindly Nature could have brought out that flavor to the full with an age mellowed smoothness. VELVET is Kentucky's and Nature's best pipe to bacco. You won't find its 6c Bmi 10c Tim 1 lb. CUu Humidor. star r""cev;r- w ,11 : Ulrdscye view of an aviation f iold, and, below, Uncle Sam's Insignia on the bottom of one of his airplanes. ntion school flying fields. Every thing is included in tho training that will produce the best flying men in tho world. Each field is half a mile long and 400 feet wide. Included are 12 hang ars, ench-120 feet wide nnd CO feet long, a hospital, club house, school, postoffiee, four large barracks for cadets and enlisted- men, separate officers' and non-commissioned offi cers' quarters, additionnl barracks, repair shops and other necessary buildings. ' All this excludes the expansive field nearby, where lessons nre given daily by Uncle Sam's experienced flying officers. . The whole field is a model for or der and efficiency in flying. STEAMER CREW WERE SAVED BY 0. S. BOATS NEW YORK, July 18. The British steamship Cranmore, previously re ported sunk by a German U-boat, was saved from destruction by an Ameri can destroyer which was convoying her thru the danger zone, according to members of her crew who arrived here today from England on an Amer ican ship. The Cranmore was attacked, they said, June 7, about 180 miles wost of Ireland, five of her plates being stove In by a torpedo. The U-boat that fired it did not appear and did not press the attack owing to the presence of the American warship. Under protection of the. destroyer, the vessel was aide to proceed to an Irish port under her own steam. On the Ledger of Life will bo written the story of yonr existence. What you have done with the material at your-1 command, and what you have failed to do. '; ' There will appear in letters that all may read, elthor,:' Success or Failure. Even now, the sum of your lire to date Is on one side or -or the other. If It Is the wrong side, your financial habits need over hauling. Drop iiv Now and we'll talk It over. ' r 1 The Jackson County Bank Established 1888 For Your Summer Vacation : , ; Or Week-End Trips The Rogue Elk Hotel On the Crater Lake Highway, will give you per fect satisfaction. , 'A strictly Up-to-Date Resort, and the Host T c turesque spot in Southern Oregon. For rates and reservations, phone Valley Oarage, Mcdford, or ." The Rogue Elk Hotel W. O. McDONALD, Proprietor. The Portland Hotel PORTLAND, OREGON Tho Rose City's world-famed hotd, occupying an entire- block. All outside rooms. Superior dining and grill service. An atmosphere of refinement, svith' a service of courtesy. , European Plan, $1.50 and Up COPENHAGEN, July 18. A suc cessor to Foreign Secretary Zimmer man had not been selected up to to day, according to advices from Berlin. Leading German papers continued their campaign for or against various candidates. The danger of the candidacy of Ad miral von Hintze, minister to Norway, as a victory for the Pan-Germans, navy and junker elements, is steadily, clear to the socialist organs, which concentrate an attack on Vol) Hintbe's record in the Russian revolution in 1905. They claim he encouraged; Nicholas' reactionary . counsel and later offered the emperor refuge on a German warship. "! Count von Reventlow, military wri ter tor the Tages ZZoltung, says that Count von Bernstorff, former ambas-t sador to Washington, Is impossible), because he is now, as from the outset;-; an advocate of a peace of renuncla Hon and a flat opponent of the subs marine war. IE AMSTERDAM, July 18. The Neues Tageblatt of Stuttgart, Ger many, reports that on Saturday a great explosion occurred at the Wll helin Weiffenhach factory. The build ing was destroyed, neighboring hous es were damaged greatly and windows were broken In the nearby village at Suedhelm. of -- 1 I LIFE ' --:-'