Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 07, 1918, Page 3, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    T'AfiT'j THREE-
E
r
is
F
SO SIMPLE A CHILD CAN UNDERSTAND IT
MATERIALLY HELP
FOR SEAPLANES
MEDFORT r.ML TUTBITXR. ArEDFORD. ORKCOX, FlilHAV, ,11'XK 10IS
NOTHING HIGHBROW ABOUT THE FCLiPSE
TO GO TO FRANCE
The Portland Orcgonlan contains
the following regarding Miss Pauline
Greaves of Jacksonville,. yeomanotte,
V. Si. navy, who enlisted from Med
ford a year ago: ;
"Again our men have uphold the
liost tradltlorii o the' navy."
Time after time has this short hut
meaning message been flashed .by
wireless from a United States war
ship after a 'brush at sea. It Is the
clarion note of exultation over an
othor victory for the Stars and
Stripes.
"And now women havo upheld the
best traditions of the navy."
This is the cry to battle which cnn
now be sung: for witness the hopes
and longings of two young women of
the navy yoomanettes, If you please.
"We want to do more than our
( 'bit,' and we won't feel that wo'vo
filayod our part in this big war unless
they send us over to Franco. Wo
uro dead anxious to go overseas as
quickly as possible."
lioth Arc Oregon Girls
This was the wish the one big
hope expressed ' yesterday by 31iss
A. G. Crossly, yeomanette, U. S. X.,
and Miss Pauline Greaves, yeoman
ette. U. S. N.
They have been In the service just
long enough to learn and love the
traditions of Ihe navy since the days
of John-Paul Jones. They are proud
of their arm of the service, and
they're prouder still of their trim uni
forms of navy blue. And why not?
Haven't they given up their friends
and home surroundings that they
may 'hotter serve the colors?
Yeomanettes Crossley and G reaves
are In Portland with the recruiting
forces for the naval reserve, which
opens an intenslvo drive in this city
today. They will have charge of the
heavy office work Incident to the ro
fruiting of young men to the service,
and during their spare moments
which are mighty few. they Intend
to go "out into the city and help with
the recruiting themselves.
Yeomanette Greaves is a Medford
girl, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John
Greaves, well-known residents of
southern Oregon. The fire of patriot
ism burned within her even before
this country entered the great world
War, a year ago last April. One week
after war had been declared, she en
listed as a yeamanette. At the time
she did not know what her pay might
he, or whore she might be ordered to
duty. She only knew that she wanted
to serve her country In any capacity
which might bo offered.
"Why, I wouldn't leave this work
for anything in the world," she de
clared with emphasis yesterday. "It's
a fine llfp and it's something to know
that you are serving your country.
Iuty Overseas Apjieals
The two young yoomanettes arc
honest and slnccro in their desire to
bo sent to duly overseas.
"As soon as wo heard a rumor that
somo of the girls were to bo Roiil
f across, wo sent in our applications,"
ill Miss Crossley.
"And we aro anxiously awaiting
some official word that wo will be
among the lucky ones to go," chimed
in .Miss Greaves. "Of course, wo are
doing everything wo can hero at home
but It doesn't seem llko we are doing
all wo could. Wo want to get over
closer to whero thoy are fighting. We
want to be as close to the front as
they will lot us."
Yeomanettes Crossley and Greaves
are the first In the northwest to be
fent out on recruiting details. Thoy
have been with a recruiting party
since April 15 working northward
from Ashland and southern Oregon.
TURKS. BUTCHER
I.HNImiN. .lane 7. A hitter stru
).. i- b.-in:; wiiued in the Caucasus
lu'lwccn (lie new Caucasian govern
went !' ,n0 Turks, says an Kx-(hiH)L-''
Telegraph dispatch from Min
ed. Tlie Turks are reported tc
biivc niii.-aeretl more than 10,0(1(1 Armenian-
within n fortnight.
The ('atieasus government has or-
oYrcil Hie iii"ilizalion of all men be
tween ihe ages ol !l nnd 412 and
Hi'1.
Icraied t auea-ian detach
jiicnt- " '
district.
eiinei'iitruting in the Til'li-
To tho Public - ,
have resumed the practiceof law
in Medford and may be found at my
old location In the Medford National
,,.v building. Any business Intrust-
dl to me will receive careful and con
Klntiom consideration.
Be!p,- (fully, W.M. M. COT.VIG.
,ll(,Ut. !!MS, or
MIC 10 INDIA
LONDON', Juno ". Tho uin-Ger-ninn
scheme for tvm:; domination
through a "Millcl-Kurimii." unon
which the kaiser put the soft cdnl
while he was t'celinjr tint the allies for
1'iace, hits bloomed forth again in
the minds of German statesmen.
liuthcr than having been mndilicil,
Ihe plan for a world empire has been
extended until i I now embraces a pro
posal for Teutonic control of I lit
trade routes from the Art-tic Ocean
to 'the Indian Ocean lroiu Koln to
Bombay.
Four recent events have influenced
the German mind in this aniazing ex
tension of Ihe scheme for world con
trol. Thev are:'. ,
Significant KvcntM
1. Signing of Ihe IrNily wilh Aus-.
Iria by .!iicii Kniperor Karl's do
mains become a Vassal stale of Ger
many.
2. Conipiest of Finland and (lie
pro-German campaign for the occu
pation of Kussiaii Karelia and Mur
ium! railroad, running from Kola lla.v.
on the Arctic Ocean, lo retrograd.
o Kstablisllment of a republic of
1 ranscaiicasia, which is in accord
witli the German scheme, and Ihe
Turkish capture of- Itatimi, principal
port and rail center of Transcau
casia.
4. Kstalilislimcnt of a pro-Ger-n.an
govornmejit in the I'kraine, giv
ing Gcriuaiiv the port of Odessa anil
control of the lllaek. Sen.
The original plan for a "llittcl
Kuropu" embraced only a railroad
from Hamburg to Constantinople and
thence-to Kg.vpt and llagdnd, giving
Ihe teutons control of the trade of
Africa and Arabia.
The new scheme adds to this
comprehensive program fur seizure of
the all rail trade roules froin the
Arctic coast of Finland through Rus
sia and Turkey lo Ihe heart of Ju
dia. Win ('mil i-ol of llalklns
The first plan, created in the
brain of llismarek fill years ago anil
credited wilh being the primary cause
of the world war, was lo domiiijiic
the nations of cenlral Kurope by
means of u trade route I'rtim Hani
burg mid Merlin lo Constantinople,
(hence (o Uugdail and Ihe Suez Canal.
This required control of (he Bal
kan states, chiefly llulgaria, Kiiniauin
and Turkey. This much Gcannnny
accomplished early in (he war.
sccoiularv route was lo run
from I'erlin through Austria, (ouch-
ing Cracow and l.einhcrg-, and trav
ersing Rumania lo Constranlza, it.
principal port on the Itlack Sea.
is, too, liim become a fact
through Ihe subjection of Austria lo
i-year compacl, embracing econ
omic, military and political control
of Ihe empire by Germany.
llrlllsli Halt Progress
The conipiesl of .Mesopotamia and
northern Kgvpl was all Hint remained
lor Ihe coiiiplclimi of Ihe plan. Hal
Ihe victories of Gelicr.-ll Maude's
irmy in Mesopotamia ' closed, tem
porarily, at leasl, the way to Itagilad.
while Ihe collipicst of I'aleslinc hy
Ihe lliilisli shuts Ihe avenue of ap
proach lo Kgypl.
At the time those luipes of the pan-
(icrinnns were being shattered in
Asia Minor, their eyes were turned
lo new aspirations by Hie Russian
revolution and Ihe peace Ircalv ol
ISrest-I.ilovsk.
If they could not force their way lo.
igdinl. the pan-Gcriaans saw Ihe
opporlifhity In win Iheir way to the
Orient through the utilization of IIii-m
political victories in Russia. .
Finland's Part in the Plan ''
It was wilh this in mind that the
Germans set up a dictator-hip in the
I kramia add encouraged the people
in Transcaiieasia to proclaim a j-e-
pulllic "under German protection."
I'has the way was .opened for a
new roule to Indie.
It would hnve llirce western tor
initials Odessa, Conslaiil.a, nnd Se
oasiiipiu, m the t iimca. I mm any
one of these ports the Germans could
establish a line of freight vessels
crossing Ihe Hlack Sea to Katun, pri-
eipal port of I riinsi'aiicasin.
From liatiim a railroad runs aeros
the narrow stretch of land betweei
Uic lllaek and Ca-pian seas, touching
the important oily of litlis and end
ing nt the Caspian port of llaku. At
Knku another short water traverse
win in necessary across the t aspiaa
Sea lo Kruno! odsk. V , :
With the cxecplinn of these Iwo
water traverses. Ihe Germans would
hnvc an all rail route from Merlin I
India. The oro--ing of the Itlack Sen
mighl lie avoided hv Ihe construction
ol n railroad around it froni Ode
to Tilliw.
Al Kru-novod-k is the terminus of
an excellent Nnlniad which Hi,
Knru-Kun desert, in .the. southern.
n ot part of Asiatic liu-siii, and runs
lo Herat, one of the chie feitics ol
Alghani-lan, and knuwn or yean; us
"the gateway lo India."
The fae Ihnt German propagand
oilD v""0
MOON y -
lMagi-aut showing liuw rays 'of the
suit aro KtopptMl by (ho mmiii m that
tho shadow of the moon is rtiNt iihii
tiio oiirtli.
Tin; "totul solar oclipsc" honltctl
by Da ine Natari1 for loinorrow is not
u hihlirow pt'i't'onnuncn which only
an aslronomcr can nndcrstand. A
child can jrrasj) its important details,
i' the child is uld eunuch to observe
that a loaf casts a shadow when it
cuts off the ravs of the sun fnjm the
earth.
If a hov holdn a baseball in the
sun, a round shadow falls on tin
ground. If the Imv- were to walk
alnnir and uinrk'the ball's shadow, it
would leave a broad (rack on the side
vlk: ,
ToiuornMv afternoon, the moon will
orep between the earth and the sun.
It will cut oft tho ray of light d'rom
I be sun and will make a shadow on
the earth.
If the shadow cone which touches
the moon al its small end were a
huiro pencil, it would make a sweep
ing curve of darkness across (be
railed States from the State of
Vuhiiit:foii to Klorida.
iVroiis standing in this path,
ir.i, ..r i-.t j,!,- i.-;n
the sun shut off from thir view hv is Wa dKk nai,,Nt ,,m M,n 1,11,1
the moon; that is, the sun will lc!,,,M," k is a hl,, ,,r 'onHUI r Ii,,t
"eclipsed." The observer will be"itU 10,1 "" u"m h
lonkinr at the moon's dark distf lnidi4''0, -
JORDAN DEFINES HOSPITAL SHIPS
HUN AMBITIONS
STANFORD UXIVH1K5ITY, Cal.,
Juno 7. Germany's efforts to extend.
her holdings inside and outside of
Kurope aro due mainly to the activi
ties of a single society culled the
Pangermanist union, said David Sltarr
Jordan, chancellor of the university,
in an address hero today on "German
Ambitious in Iloth Hemispheres."
"Tho purpose of this union," Doc-
tor Jordan said, "may bo summed up
nationalism, monopoly, exploltn-
tion and war. Its aims at tho best
wero those of cutthroat competition
and the highwayman. It is proposed
to extend Ucnmin control nnd Ger
man business by ive lines of opera
tion: Under-cutting,", government
partnership, double citizenship, bri
bery and force of arms."
'Annexation lust," continued Doc
tor Jordan, "was the nvowed inspira
tion of the league. In America, ac
cording to Doctor Jordan, there were
thrt'o pliasns of l'nn-Cicnnanie ambi
tion: to control the sentiments and
nets of the I'nitcd States thru its
population of (ierman descent; lo
on trot loudness, especially in Mexico,
Chile and Argentina, by linking these
great corporal tons with the German
government and to encourage actual
revolts la German settlements in
South America.
SCHWAB TO BEAT
IP BOIL!
I'lilt.ADF.I.IMIIA, June 7 Charles
M. Schwab told tho members of the
Hog Island Shipbuilders club today
that ho had been Informed that Kng
land was going to build 12 new ship
yards with ono hundred ways to in-
creaso ship construction, and that ho
had'enough sporting blood In him to
speed up Hog Island and beat Amer
ica's Kngllsh ally In the race to build
ships. Ills speech created much en
thusiasm. lie had succeeded in gettlnn govr
eminent consent to permit the New
York Shipbuilding company lo extend
its yards by an expenditure of $l'i,-
oon.oipi.
is active in Afghanistan indicales (be
preparations the Minis tire ninkiii':
for exploitation of the country.
I'Vof Herat the railroad extends
to Kandahar, i the border of India,
and oro-s.es the boundary of Ibiltiehi
stun for a short di-tam-e, but suffi
eicnt to tap r.ritains great colony of
its limitlcsii re-ouroos.
All-ltall to India
It would rcipiire onlv the buildinc
of a few miles of railroad to eonneei
this line wilh Khclat, capital of Hal
iieliistafi. ' The road is now iiinler
Iriitt-h control, hut to Ihe Gcrinnti
iiiind that is a lucre detail,
en Ihe face of (lie sun. .. If weather
conditions are good, people In iag in
0 cities and towns of 'the Vuitcd
States will be able to see the famous
coioua or halo ol light nboiii the
moon, and perhaps a rod slrcatncr
flaring from one side.
The mysterious eoruua rind stnvuu
er which astroiiomer-v travel niiies to
study have' inleresled liian since the
beginning, of time. They appear ,iii
ancient I'Vvotinn and Assyrian .art
on the "winged disk." This syiiihol
of deity is considered merely a skjloh
of a total solur eclipse. .
Tolal eclipses have iihvinfi been llio
most' stupendous spectacles of th?
skies, and vet it is seldom that
man has vhaw-v tu tsc mmv than ,
mir tn a litotiinr. two of tncat oc
cur in cVfry year, at least, hut the
shal4iv 4l'U'ii falls tin; nrcan or
PiiiKnitii showing tlie sun in eclipse
ns vlenl fixml (In- eaclli. The moon
CARE FOR SICK
I.OXI.ON, Juno
-(Correspon
I denco of the Associated Press.) There
aro eleven hospital shlpK In tho Hrlt-
Ish navy, these being entirely distinct
from hospital ships employed by the
army. In addition there are a nutn-
her of private yachts, fitted out by
their owners, which have been taken
over by tho admiralty for tho trans-
port of wounded over short distances.
A great deal of medical and surgl-
cal work has been done in hospital
ships, both while, acting as mobile!
Ikiko hospitals to the various fl-ets
and whilo carrying wounded Tho
employment of hnspltnl ships as mo -
bllo hase hosnlliils onnbles n fleel iol"f "le llmo lioard said ho favored
use suitable bases without regard to I
the question of disposal of tho sick
and wounded, the long transport or
acute cases being reduced to a min
imum. Hut the hospital ships do not
go to sea with Its fleet, bccaiifo II Is
not practicable at sea Ip transfer sb k
or wounded men from a fighting ship
ow-ing lo dangers of mine, submarbie
or rough weal her.
In all ships of I be navy (he sick
berth is sltualeil In too exposed a
place to he used during action. ci,.
sccpionlly In wartime the main drcss
tUs, Instruments and oilier appara
tus, except barn necessaries required
IVoni day lo day, are distributed be
tween two dressing stations below
ihe watcrline, ono forward, Hie oilier
aft. These slatlons hnvc special ven
tilation, lighting and equipment, and
arc supplied wilh hot and cold waler.
Here the medical officers are station
ed during action, the wqunded 'being
brought to them by stretcher parlies
during pauses in the figbilng. ;
In the baltle of Jutland a dressing
stal ion was completely wrecked and
tho entire benlli stnff and the chap
lain wero tilled. Tho medical o:'le'ir
In charge was knocked down anil In
jured, hut he pulled himself together,
"cleared" (be station to tlie other
side of Ihe ship, and worked without
sleeping for fnrly-olht hour.'.
Afler treatment, the wounded ui"
pas.-cd on to (ll.-poBiil stations fitted
with special accommodation Mines
for cols and stretchers. Large mod
ern fighting craft all possess a fully,
equipped operniing room, w hli li con
bo used. If still available, uft-r an
action. During tins war gas respira
tors and masks havo be n provided,
and alter Ibo battle of Jutland, when
the need arose for ihe prcv
ntlon and
t roji (in en! of Imiiiih, fncp-inaskH hii'J
Klovofi wi.(. Issued for tlie, ne at ihn
nrnwa. Thcrii win iiIto Inlnnliii ort
an Improvod mnllinil of treiiiliii;
burns lili piiinfflu wax. '
Tho t'liiil ar'-nminoiliUlon prmMi-rt
by tbi foiinlrv'n navnl hnnit:ii. tn.
'abniit 1 ii. OdO beds. Tim loliil forco
of navnl medical offirorn In 1:i;,s,
KlBhty-llircp havo bocn killed or
drowned slnro Die war hran.
. During Jho war (hn hAlt h of tlio
navy liafl been remarkablv'Hood, In
fart, probablv better than In pre-war
yearp. '
l-iuuinir of luiim'(l 1Nk, nm lriit I
symlxil or doity wiiif to lo iln-ivwl
fiom tho mui in orlipso.
w ine mifmmonU'U iirt of lln wirlh.
Si'Hioiif' of oilil totul ('(Jipscs woro
v'isihlo' in l!u' I'iiUcmI Sliilos in-, t It f
luiu'ici'iilh fi'iilnry. ami tho siihh1
ruunhi-r will lie visihlo .this ci-ntury.
-Ki'fipsos. Iinvo i-iiroors ami piny '"o-ti.rti-'
onmiinMiu'ii. "Tin' shimc
i iw linsfrt run their stcailv nvt'lc' Tin'
1( .Vn .f ,.J, to a scrUw
l uliicli avt a luTloriiuim'O JS yi'jirs
ago. Slav -S. H.llll. and which will
play 11 return engagement IS years
llenoc, June 1!); I'.lilti. Last lime it
was slaged on Ihe Atlantic, Hie ends
touching; Mexico, aiij Africa-. Next
time' it, will be pulled, off across
soul hern liussia and Asia-.,,
The entire circuit: of il Family of
eclipses covers iibout 1 .000 years.
The interval between !ippcnraneoslH
years and It days, is .culled a "sa-
ros. j lie saros was iiseo rougiiiy oy
the ancients, often to prophesy Coil-'
fusion to an enemy, bill modern as-
troimiiicrs have ligured il out so er
aetly that they can vciifv or dis -
i rcdii ancient hisri-:tl ilnto. They
have nroved that '."the rdiirkncss rf
the Crucifixion was .not an eclipse."
While ancient astrohollfcrs could
foretell the date of an eclipse, I hey
could not,' like, aslromuueVs loday,
l.,y out its plan irti earth.
STATE!
E
SAMC.Yl, Ore., Juno 7. Tho stain
llmo-board met hero Thursday and
decided to proceed with work on the
stalo llmo plant near Gobi Hill
tho
' board acting on tho recommendation
of A. II. Cordlcy; flenlon Powers and
j Warden Murphy, t'omprislng the comM
! mlite, which, Just .returned mini
i visit to the llmo plant,
Governor Withyeoinbe advised the
llmu hoard members that a meeting
' the emergency board will be called
"' Probably to consider lac
j' punilontiuxy defleiem j vand that tho
"! board inay then renew its ro-
! '1'ierft for funds. Chairman Cordluy
asking for only $ o li 0 0 lnsteall of
$111,001), as requested before, when
(ho oniergency board failed to .moot
for want of a quorum.
Air. Cord ley said ?:!0h0 would com
plete tho lime plant and $2(IIH) more
vvoilld suffice until un'Income would
be dttaiiicd from Ihn sale' of liinc.'llc j
iilso took the maltor Up with Assi.'i- !
taut Attorney General Van Winkle, t
who advised him that tlie llmo liuard I
Would not violate the emergency
board law II' it incurred indebtedness :
on terms under which payments i
would not fall due' until after the
board would have funds Prom reve
nues of the plant to meet the obllga- j
lions. This might, It Is held, make It. j
possible fortlio board to complete Ihe I
llmo plant, and put agricultural lime I
on the market, even ir the emergency
board does not authorize the defic
iency appropriation.
PARIS, .limn 7. The tw)?lrih H-r-t;i
victory of Second ldeut"iutnt
riank Haylies of Ncvv Hedi'ord, Maris,
and Mi'' sixth of S-TKe.uit Dtivld I'.
t'littiiun of ftrookllne. Mans., was an-t
noun od hy the tn-wspaiMjrs. Mot li '
Americans ori attached to I'mm-li J
flyir.K fqijadroiiR. t i
It Is reported also that Lieutenant, j
MaMon ha pained Jils tbirly-ferfud I
victory. Captain I'ensard won his'
iitnetef itlh iiinl Herond lifcutenant
I ,if,.VJ,,t lin fourteenth. . J ,
ARROW
ot COLLAPvS
I'osil F linivd mnrit:!.
rfti'Tf II i"rm ."irn ivc'M.itn
Ity .Milton lli-oiiner.
'ASHI.'0T0, Jdno 7.N"o
American man or woman reading the I
war news this evening tint yearns to
help our boys who aro standing shoul- i
der ty shoulder with Frenchmen audi
Ililtona nnd Italians In facias the
Bray hordes of the Huns.
Well, Herbert Hoover, national
food administrator, says every Amer
ican hum, woman and child can dir
ectly help.
lict'raln from eiftlng somo wheat
products today. .. ."
I'nt out aoniothlng today from your
dally meat consumption.
Ily so doing you enable Hoover to
cnd just that much more Hour and
nie it to Franco and Itiily and Britain.
Its part of Hoover's job to help feed
not only (ho armies of oar allies but
tho self-dcnylus; men and ;w,oinen
mailing cannon and shells nnd pow
der. I'ul off food and you destroy hior-
alo.
Destroy morale and you have
nations ready to quit tho fight for
human liberty.
Herbert Hoover says when you vol-
untanly place yourself upon rations
and cat out wheat, meat and sugar
j from your ordinary daily meal, you
1 help fight ih hun. To save this
J food is as direct an action ns it you
wero transported across tho seas and
personalty iiamled a half loaf of
bread to a hungry French soldlor.or
a pioco of moat to a woman worker
In n llrltisli munition factory.
The Tact tho department of agri
culture expocts u great wheat crop
this year should not makers relax.
Hoover has rond IiIb Old Tcstnment,
and he remembers that when tlie
young Joseph Interpreted tho drenm
of Kgyptlnn rhnrnoh, ho set forth the
need of storing tho grain of the seven
fat years so there would he no star
vation when the seven lean years
CillllO.' , 1 1
- Tho war may ond suddenly, but It
Is the part of wisdom, ns the admin
Istralion boos it, to provide for a long
war.. And thpt means providing for
food In ease the crops go bud'. ;
A very bad crop next year In Amor.
ica -wiia no loot! reserves would
nieiui not only short radons hero, but
fainlno for tho allies
and
fainlno
would' spell disaster.
This
is not
rholorlc. It's cold, hard fact.
- We eat too much. Our allies get
too .nine. Hut wo aro beginning; to
do dur duly. .
In this eoniieiillon It Is to be ro
meniiiered.'nrniy men say baron Is
ihn foofL thut. koeis tho soldlom'
strcnglli and "pep" up tho best,
, - :
i Annapolis, Mil. Seven, ensigns
who received diplomas at hands of
Snerolnry Daniels wero married 'Boon
al'torwyird.
If urcTond
of Coffee
but know it Harms
you. ns il doos many
oihers.you will find
INSTANT
POSTUM
aJi ljhtful & eco
nomical bcvcrci?.
Made instantly in
the cup, no boiling.
Delicious flavor,
e-A chet'rin hot
drink for pcopIi
of every ne. en
COAL
Wo nspncl In supply t new low
ratn local coal of tirst-fll.iaa qual
!t', free from lato.
l or Information regarding de
livery nnd xirlcos Apply to
CokerButtcCoalM'gCo.
Itooin L'n:t, Mrt Nnllimnl llnnk
IIM. V. II. runlet, i'res.
T'llimn tat.
ti
- ' - If
3iSaji'-.'.!&iiti.iii'fc!; '
T
WASHINGTON', June 7. A six-
,,,,.
million dollar appropriation for
est:ibliliing balloon upd seaijrafte sta
tions guard the J'nilcd States;
again.-.! submarine ami air attacks
was asked of congress loday by the
w ai' dopurtiiiciil.
. The dciartineiil desires to establish
lli station, lit ol theiii on the Allan- "
tie eo:ist and three ou'tlic. Gulf coast.
Iietinitc locations wore not given.
. 'flic con.-tf iletcnse plan as Kuhmii
ti d by ihe ileiiurfinciit also calls for
the establishment of fortifications '
along- the coa-.ts hv winch guns could
be Iraiisfcrnd on railroads from one
pn'iit to another lo meet possible at
tacks..' . The bouse appropriations commit
tee, lo whom the reipicsf. went, was .
informed thai Ihere arc in operalion
u siil't'ieienl number of aircraft lo
defend 'Ihe coasts adcipialcly but Hint
Hie sliilions are needed. The only,
possible airplane ivtiacks iluit could
be made, ' it .was said, wjould eomo
from collapsible airplanes carried by
snuibariiics.
Operation of observation balloons
would be largely for signal purposes.
Scqbel To
Love For Doff
lilaf-rnil 7nctinct Greatly Developed hf
XoatL'!?g Children to Lore their DolU
The little child's doll Is mother to tlie
mn.-ft rbmanlla fairy. And in tho years that
puss, tho (till fades- Into tlio pctnlg of e
Juno rtc, to fivolvo tho most wondrous of
nil transformations.
And now comes ft moro prrlmn poriod
when the joy of ri'iil m tlicrlitK)d uluiuld
be na tr;ii:iiil n licst cftorM c.;n provide.
1'liifl Is ilCLinnullslicd villi a wonderful rcm
nly kwnvii cn MjUkt'h I ricr.d. An external
ppllrnlirn w p?nidrnii:iff in its nature ns ,
:.j tlK'fmipldy Inlirlcnto tho myritifi nrt-orh
nf aird:;, t'.'nd'Min, nerves nrd musclri just
beneath tlio Ekiji of llio abdomen.
It rrlievoii tH tension, prevent tcndcrncut
nnd puln ;.t tlio crisis n:id enable tlio nh
doiiien to rp,uid pmltr. Tho inunc!''!! cm
tmct iiittni:il!- afler huhy, arrives and tlx
form la thus prwcivcl.
v tt'shoitl't he npp'lr-l dully, ntrrht nnd morn
ing. durir.T t!io period of c::pertancy By
irfriiliir iro it coable.i llio nhdomcn to cr
paiul lvtthnit tlm ui'iial ctndn wli-n h:-hj
is txirn. Nuturully, p.iin and danger at 11k
crisis is UfS. '
You v.-HI find MolVcr!! Friend nn fnlo nj
every (In:;: hture. It ftt prepared only h
tlio Brji'lileld Ili'Ruliitnr C., 1-fimnt
Illdir.. AMnritn, 'I'liry win nrnd yna od
Intrueiivo "Motherhnod Ikmk williuut fli.irpe.
Wrilo thim to nnd It t, ynu. po not neglect
for a si"t:!o ninrninst or nipht to u;o Mother!
Friend Obtain n. h-iUto from ynnr dniwrlst.
tn-i iy hy nil moiins, nnd thu.i (ortlfy youracll
iieaiiiEt pnln o:id tli scum fort.
Smith IJought First
"Then Investigated
SMITH I'Alll OVKIt HIS MONBY
Rill A IKII'SI'I, TIIH.V WKNTTO
I.OliK' AT 1 1 IS IIAIKIAI.V.
If YOU VOI'l,l III; SUItH Ol''
SATISI-'ACTION AM) I'KKKECT
I'UOTKCTIOX IX TIIM .MATTKll
oi- Yorii i,ii-i-; ivsriuM'i-:,
KIIIST INVKSTIIiATK, TIIHN
YOI 'I.I. rNlJI I-lSTIONAHLY IX-
NEW WORLD LIFE
Sii-vniM lllilc, l'ditlnml.
L. E. Wakcman; Gen. Agt.
.mi, muitii
I'll
4- If-
Coming To
Portland Soon?
! Vlienovcrvnii(loeom,Hil
nil', romfttrtnb c.hoine-likfl
j hotel will hclptoiuakcyour.
lav enlovnlile, A hotel1
whore you will want your family
hmlly'
lo itop. Lots of hf, dinner-dancing
I t uaji, o .) to tt. ramouiti'auu:
ri oon -day luncheon, DUc
tttom, $1.60 snrf mp.
)
PORTLAND HOTEL
KulitrlV.ttli:'.Mr.
PORTLAND, ORIOON
WK'-I
. 9 '
If 'S. ', '. i " u '".,'j.W
Ma
i
!
1