araiVFOitn ivtatTj trttutne.- MrcnForcri. ot?fxiont. rum ay, w5iynroKR 2.v.in.n' PAGE FIVH 4 J- 25101 CHANCE FOR U.S.TR00PS SURVIVAL Five to One Against Being Wounded tyedical Service . Most Danger ous! . Engineers Second, Infantry Third, Artillery Fourth and Avia tion Safest Service of All. YOUR CHANCES IN FRANCE ARE: Twenty-five to one iifjuinst Ijuiiij; killed in one yeur's time. Five to one nuiiiiist . beinn wounded. It' wounded Four elmnces to one nninst beinu; hurt badly enough to be unl I, ,,,,., Four chances out of ten of recovering -'eomplelely und re- I iii'iiimi' In tli I'iriiifr ini WASHINGTON, Kept. iiS.Tbc American soldier in France litis 25 fliniH'es to be ulive nt the end of Ms first years service at the front, tn one of being dead. Four men out of every hundred who reach the firing line will be killed in one year's time. This figure gives the lie to the de liberate misstatements circulated in print and word of mouth by German agents or pacifist fanatics. Order of Danger. The order of danger in the various ImAches of the army is: 1 Medical and sanitary service. 2 Kngineers, miners and sappers. 3 Infantry. 4 Artillery. 5 Aviation. : The doctors have the most danger- our job, tlie ainuen the safest. Cav alry iVfe no longer used, unless as in fantry. , , These yarns about the average life v of an officer at the front being le.s Vthan ''two weeks, .or a surgeon les than u month are of a piece with the laniasue stones or men iiciug drug ged to' make them fight, or of tin French army refusing to fight, cir culated at the outbreak of the war in crank anarchist circles. Tho war college figures and esti mates indicate the total los in om year of nil the belligerents is about 4 iwr cent killed in action, died of wounds and died of disease. Loss Only 4 Ter (Vnt, These figures, compiled from cas ualty lists ohtained both from the nl lies and the central powers, are prnb ahly too high for the fighting on l!u wem front, where the arts of pro teetion, cover, trenching and burragt fire cut down the number of slain. tThe average is fattened by tin heavy losses on the Russian front where the officers of the czar fre quently drove unarmed men to storm German trenches, enfilading their own troops in the rear with machine gun fire to force them forward. The estimates also include the ter rible heavy losses of the first month) of the war .on the western front when the lighting was in the open and large masses of men were ire (piently caught by machine guns or subjected to direct shrapnel bom bardment. There is reason to believe the wes tern front losses were twice as heavy easier in the war as they nre today I'rovMl by Iteeorris. This conclusion is supported by figures ot insurance companies which insured Canadian regiments nnd the records of (iennan trad unions and professional societies 1'igures trom the records o a i ter mini Typographical union, n Teach ers' society and a Berlin Bur associa tion reveal early losres as high as S per cent, later reduced by half. Pen tli by disease at the front Jess likely than at hniue in time of peace, thanks to fre-b air, hard work nnd good food. J)eath li'om woiiihN is heroin im: veryrnie owing" to the skill of the surgeons. About IS per cent of the American nrmifs will be wounded. ; This i li ? tlian one chiwice in five, or five chances of coming out with a whole skin against one chance of a punc ture. , 40 Per Cent Wounded IWover. Of the wounded, 40 per cent re cover completely and rctnVn t the fight. About 40 (H-rcent are patehitl up so that tliev can do work behind the lines uHi policing, construc tion work and garrisoning depot. About -0 'T cent arc permanently incapacitated tor military service, but over half of these are able to do light Work i" civilian life. A I he Mur huw gone on and ull the MONEY THROWN I A Dollar Invested in Aerial War Fleet Is Dollar Invested in Air Transportation After the War Country on Eve of Transportation Revolution. WASHINGTON', Set. 28. "Kvery dollnr invested in war aircraft is a lollnr invested in air transportution after tbe war. The I'nited Stales is. on the eve of a trnnsiortution revolution which will follow the war. and the aircraft hoard will probably pinv as impor tant n part as the shipping board. The air plans, as fur as possible, are being made to facilitated transforma tion into industrial equipment when ace comes." This is the statement of Senator Morris Shepard, author of the ad ministration aircraft board hill which has passed the senate and is pending in the-house. Long before the war Sheppard had proposed a department ot aeronaut ics, the substitution of the plan for an aircraft hoard was the result of the pooling of ideas between the army, navy and the aero societies. Commercial Air Fleet. The young officers who have de veloped the army's air program have from the very first modeled, their plans with the view to an immense in- lustiial air fleet after the wiir. Just as a mercantile marine is nec essary to maintain a fighting navy by mirtui'ing the constructors, so will that nation excel in air warfare which has the most highly developed air fleets in commerce. Much of the work being done to day is permanent. The aviation training camps will be tniining cen ters niter the war. The first air mail routes will probably be between these camps. I he factories now turning out air- aft parts and the assembling plants will produce coiiimericiiil aircraft Since the government has almost absorbed the industry, it will prob ably remain in government hnnd.- just as the new mercantile marine. Posiofftce Service First. Undoubtedly the first commercial service will be in connection with the postot't'ice. A new fast mail service carrying bank checks and speeding up the clearing operations of the federal reserve system is already be ing planned. A treasury department const pu trid in connection with the revenue -ivstcm and the life-saving service is already being mapped out. At the end of the war thousands r air chauffeurs will return from the buttle fronts ready to enter the new business. Many engineers predict the com mercial development of the airplane will sid-pass that of the automobile. Thanks to the war nnd the necessity of investing hundreds of millions of government money in aircraft, the industry has passed thru experimen tal stages which would have occupied years if left to private capital. America to IxmhI. The entry of the' United States into the war in time to profit by the mistakes and successes of the other nations, with unimpaired resources and credit, insures we will be in the lead at the nening of the era of air plane transportation. Xo one today can set any limits to the possibilities of the air routes. Passengers, mail and light freight are already in sight, also a tremendous use of the airplane as a pleasure craft. . The new aircraft board is to con sist of the chief signal officer of the army, the chief constructor of the navy and seven civilians to be nam ed bv the president. The salaries of the civilian members will be $7.'ll(l per year. They are put in entire charge of all aircraft activities until six months after the war. new weapons like yas nnd finim ir jt'clnrs hiive been nutteheil liy new defensive measures, the j ten-en t, -me of lnses has ptne down steadily. It hns now reached ahout Ihe atne proportion n the l-s.. of the eivil war, and the tendency N Mill down iv a rd. Tho well-known, tried nnd reliable pen etrating preparation, "Mother's Friend", Is prei-aird especially for mother. It Is a natural mid to nature In Its work nnd 1; obsolutrly and entirely iiafo. y its wfc th abdominal muscles expft'l easily when buby la born nnd bearing down and tntchiflf pal&a during th ptrloU art M AIRCRAF TO" COME BACK MEETS DEFEAY NEW YARK, Sept. 2S Japan is in tho war "to make herself as un pleasant to the enemy as her phy sical make-up will permit or her in genuity conceive.'' declared Viscount Ishii, head of the imperial Japanese commission, at the New York-chamber of commerce today. Iiis coun try, he said, is an ally and partner in the war which can bo brought to an end only by the utter physical defeat and humiliation of Germany," and Japan will do her share "In Biich manner as to justify her in claiming a place In the company of honest men." His nation and this, he said, have been friends for 50 years, and "we propose to strengthen that friendship." "This Is the day,'' he concluded, "of the gathering of the clans of the East nnd of the West. The day has dawned In which the yesterday is for gotten; when old prejudices, old misunderstandings, fade and you greet us as we greet you old friends and new-made brothers in the strug gle for human liberty, human free dom and national existence." LONDON, Sept. L'8. Viscount Mil- ner, minister without portfolio in the llritish war council, speaking today at the American Luncheon club, de clared against any peace with the un repentant German rulers. Touching on the cntrv of the United States into-the war and the moral signil'i cance of it, Lord Milner evoked i tremendous outburst from those at the luncheon when he said: "I feel that your country nnd mine are now united by something far stronger than any written pact or al liance, namely, by an absolute unity of motives and aim." AMSTERDAM, Sept. 28,-The con stitutional coninilttco of the reich stag, according to a dispatch from Berlin, by a vote of 15 to 12 yester day adopted a proposal to cancel the concluding sentence of article 9 of the Imperial constitution which de bars members of the federal council from simultaneous membership In tho reichstag. Tho committee ad journed after passing an order of the day which declared: "The reichstag will co-operate In the event of the conclusion of peace. " WASIIIXdTOX, Sept. '28 The slight wounding of First Lieutenant llowurd I-'. Keating of I'hiladelphia, medical corps, during an air raid on the night of September 24. was re Mirtcd to the war department today by General Pershing. The death of Private .lames Tracy of Philadelphia as a result id' "an accident in Ihe line of dutv," also was reported. ST. IM IS, Sept. 2K Announce ment was made today thai, ef fective next Monday, station agents, npent telegraph operators, telegraphers and other station employe-, of the St. Louis & San Francisco railway and yard clerks and clerks in the t-eneral oftiees who have not received an in crease since January 1 will hi anted a wau'e increa-e of S to 111 per cent. a voided. "Muther's Fr'T.u" been used by thour.'.l j of won-.r-n i- r thrco KnTtiKon and fn'wcman tlrmld fn II to ..ty It rlfjht nnd nirnlnir. (;-t a battle tr,!ay from your drufu'l.-t nd write for II Jimtratfd (ruide- book, "ilotherho'id nnd th Pnby". It M fr. Ad.irees The PiradflcM PC'itfltrr Co., T'ei't. it, 100 Uiwar liuilJlLtf, Atlanta, Co, REVOLT LAUNCHED I P1JTROGRAD, Sept. 28. The last army order Issued by General Kornlloff as commander-in-chief, re printed iu the Novala Zhlzn from a Mohllev newspaper, tends to show- that Kornlloff was compelled to launch his revolt largely in an effort to thwart Gorman Ipans. The order says that It had been learned that German agents hud brought about the great fire In Ka zan, had expended millions of rubles In disorganizing the coal mines In tho Itlver Don region and that the Ger mans were proposing a general of fensive along the whole front for the purpose of forcing a disorganized Russian retreat. The Germans also had planned to blow up the bridges across the rivers Dnlther and Volga and wero organizing a movement of Maximalists In Petrograd. General Kornlloff, the article adds, had reason to suspect treason among Irresponsible Russian organizations In German pay. The general, not doubting that irresponsible Influences had the upper hand In Petrograd, and that Russia was on the brink of an abyss, took an extreme decision for the purpose of saving tho fatherland. WILSON'S Closing: Out I he Bargain Flood Gates are Down Your Cash is King Here Down Goes the Prices With a Thundering Crash A Whirlwind of Bargains. A Bargain Carnival Cast Your Eyes Over This Startling Price List It Means Dollars to You Shovels, JIocs, Rakes and Grub Hoes and all kinds of Tools, while they last, tfoing at 25 6 Commodes going at, oaeh 25 3 Second Hand Trunks, each $1.00 Men's Dress Shoes, luit ton and lace, worth $4 and $4 .50. Hint wfi have been selling for $J), going at $2.65 One lot of Hoys' Shoes, sizes 1 1 to 13, going at $1.49 Another lot, sizes 1 to fit $1.98 25 below cost. Dressers, Tables, Couches, Chairs Baby buggies Time and Space will not permit a complete Tabulation of Special Lots and Prices Special Snaps Will be on Sale Every Day During Sale No Article in This Stock will be Allowed to Remain if Bargain Prices will move it It Will Pay You to Come for Hundreds of Miles to This Sale OF' SAX FRANCISCO, Sept. 28. The return of 0-0,(100 striking iron work ers engaged on the government's merchant marine program, who were scheduled to resume work here today on a temporary wage increase, was blocked by the refusal of the Iioiler mnkers' union to accept terms stip ulated in the agreement after a ma jority of the unions had voted favor ably. The Itoilennnkers' union, which is affiliated with the Iron Trades council, refused to assent to the agreement, ultho the cminuil indorsed it. Approximately 100 of the shops, which had not received the notice to remain closed, resumed work early today, bat wero notified by the em ployers' associations to shut down until the differences with the boiler makers were settled. A force of liOOO ealliered nt the gates f tK, iTjon Iron Works, where government shipping contracts to the extent of $100,000,000 are being fill oil. The plant was not opened, how ever, and the men turned uwuv. One Gas Range almost new $4.50 electric heat near ly new, worth $20 going at $5.50 25 pairs 10 inch high tops going at $2.75 Men's Sweaters ....98 Flannel Shirts 85 Mackinaw Coats $7.50 Overcoats 98 Men's liliie Serge Suits and all-wool mixtures, going at. $9.98 COl'KXII.UiF.X, Sept. 28.-Under orders of the military party, the l'nn-Germiui Dcutsch Zcitung of Herlin has been supptehsed nnd the socialist Volkswacht of Uant.ig bus been placed under preventive censor ship. In connection with this and other recent suppressions of news papers in (ierinnny, it is interesting to recall the ultimatum issued by the main committee of the reichstag nt its session in August. The commit tee gave the government four weeks to reform the censorship, restoring it to its proper place in the control of publication of military news. Cen sorship of political newspapers by the military has never been more ac tive than at present. P05TUM instead of coffee helps thousands to sleep nights 'THERE'S A REASON" One Lot of Bed Springs each 50c Any Ladies Hat Big Assortment going at 25c Men's caps 25c Boy's Caps 25c Men's hats 98c Men's work and dress shoes worth $3.50 $4 at $2.50 $15 suits, late style well made going at $7.50 Infants-Mothers Thousands testify Horlick's The Original Malted Milk Upbuilds and sustains the body No Cooking or Milk required Used for Vi of a Century Substitutes Cost YOU Sura Price. 50OOOOC0OOOOO0O0OCXOOOOOO0 SPEAKING OF DIAMONDS The Most Important Engagement ot One's Life Is that one sealed by the plac ing of the right engagement ring on tho right finger of the LEFT HANI) OF TUB RIGHT G1IU,. For the right kind ot an en gagement ring, at the right price, come right here and see us. KTEIIXAI, 8KCRF.CY ON Oflt PART GUARANTEED " WITH THE PURCHASE SEE OUR UIXOS ' 91.00 to $1000.00 MARTIN J. REDDY QUALITY FIRST. Phono One.O. Visitors Always Welcome. QOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Sale 2 Wood Heaters each $1.50 All kinds of Dishes, Cooking Utensils and Tools on 5 and 10 Tables. One lot of good warm 2nd hand suits at $3.50 Men's Khaki Pants, well made, side buckles, belt loops and cuff bot toms, very special 98 All Trunks cut to tho quick. Good New Trunks going as low as $3.50