TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT, NOVEMBER 20, 19x9. I from the time they were thrown in, terrible and costly blunders in ¡June 1, on the very end he says: "Infantry officers have told me that rarely have they seen an American AIRCRAFT PRODUCTION. aeroplane over them when it was 'needed to chase away enemy machin­ repeatedly came As Revealed by America’s “Ace of Aces’V in es, over and them that at Huns low altitudes, strafing the troops with machine gun fire to His Recently Published Book. ■Lì. l jtlieir great danger and demoraliza­ By Clarence B. Miller, former mem­ • aviators who were called upon to tion.” We know beyond all question that ber of Congress from Missouri. perform prodigies in the air, respect- ------- o ( J ing the failure of their country prop­ lin that terrible hand-to-hand fight- (Continued from last week.) erly to equip them. Speaking of this, ling when our men took Bellou Wood, Torcy and Bouresche, and also when We must not overlook the fact that on page 228, Captain Rickenbacker I they first went in a little later to our American boys ut that time, and says: German “The fighters on the front can nev­ I break the German attack for three weeks, had been fighting heads of ¡aviators flew low over the the very cream of the German avia­ er understand why the authorities our men, raking them with machine tion service. We were fighting the back home denied them necessary I gun fire. arms and animunition. The air fight ­ Flying Circus, wliich represented th. Major Lufbery, the beloved of the acme of perfection in equipment and ers cannot understand why we can­ ¡beloved American aviators, and at skill of aviation. This Flying Circus not have parachutes fitted on our 1 the time of his deatli the ace of aces, had been developed under the famous [airplanes to give the doomed pilot idied the horrible death of being lone possible means to escape from Baron Richtofen, who proved to be I burned alive. He almost saved him­ the Gertnun genius in aviation dur­ I this terrible death.” self. lie manipulated his plane with ing the war. Against these highly I In the above quotation Captain all the skill at his command, making |Rickenbacker calls attention to an trained, picked men of the German a valiant Hight for his life, and kept ¡appliance with which all the German aviation force, equipped with every­ (lie flames away from him for a long thing that science and genius and 'planes at that time were equipped, lime, but at last, and just before he money could provide to make them in appliance which was found extra­ ireached the ground, a burst of flames etl'icient, were our American boys, ordinarily valuable in saving human I consumed him, and his machine. Had ¡Jives. A man whose machine catches whose experience had been extremely his plane been equipped with the ap- limited, most of them not having any |on fire ten thousand feet in the air I pliant e with which all German 'and whose engine is completely dis ­ at all, and all of them equipped with I planes »were equipped, namely, the an out of date and greatly Inferior abled and whose wings are perhaps little parachute, he and many others weapon. While the 49th squadron to destroyed has no chance to live. He would today be alive. w hich Captain Rickenbacker belong­ is already dead. If, perchance, he Speaking of this attachment the dies by the air route the death is one ed was equipped on August Sth with German aviators enjoyed. Captain of the most horrible the mind of man Spads, it is not to be inferred that all Rickenbacker, on page 318, in the of tile Americans at that date were can imagine. Living flesh and blood following language, described how thus equipped. The great bulk of becomes a flaming torch, speeding beautifully it worked. He says: them were not. Most of them contin- through the air. Fighting pilots do "I was almost equally gratified to ued on, fighting with the same old, not want to die, but they are not see the German pilot level off his discarded Nieuports. It is much un­ ¡afraid to die. Not a one, however, machine and with a sudden leap over like equipping an army with pitch ¡who does not feel his soul shrivel board into space let the Fokker slip [when he thinks his death will be a forks, cythes and sickles, and sending safely away from him. Attached to them forth to battle with a compact ¡flaming death. That is the one horri­ his back and sides was a rope, which army equipped with repeating rifles ble thing about which aviators trem- immediately pulled the parachute Ible. Our government was not only and high-power artillery? from the bottom of the seat. The um­ But the American people should ¡not equipping planes with such life- brella opened within a fifty fool drop demand to know those who are re­ |saving appliance, but it was not and settled him gradually to earth ¡even equipping our men with planes [ sponsible for this humiliating failure within his own lines. I was sorry I of American preparation and this tre­ [at all, they depending on second rate i had no time to watch Ills spectacular mendous sacrifice of American life, planes discarded by the French, and decent, 1 truly wished him all the British. On page 228 Captain Ricken- I due to inefficiency and graft at luck in the world. It is not a pleasure home. When the men responsible are backer makes the significant state-j to see a burning aeroplane decending found out they should never again ment in reference to the death of [to death, bearing with it a human be permitted to lift up their head [Major Lufbery, who was at that time I being who was being tortured to among decent folk. The hand of .the American ace of aces, the most death. Not unmixed with my relief in scorn should ever be pointed at them famous of American airmen, and per­ witnessing his safe jump was the and Just retribution for their crimes haps the most beloved aviator our wonder as to why the Huns had all service produced: heaped upon them. "Lufbery and a score of other these human contrivances and why Incomprehensible to the Fighters. American aviators might have been our country would not at least equip It is difficult for Americans, es­ saved to their country if this matter them for saving American pilots pecially now that the war is over— of aeroplane equipment had been left from being burned to a crisp.” Americans who were in the midst of to experienced pilots.” As Captain Rickenbacker above comforts and secure in their homes— So much for the fighting planes pointed out, no American made fight­ lifficult, I say, for them to visualize with which our men were equipped. ing planes ever appeared in the war md understand the heart-racking On page 283, speaking of the total zone. : No American air fighters ever eeling that followed our American lack of aircraft to aid the Americans : fought in an American made plane. Motor Truck Repairs % All Motor Trucks eventually have to be repaired. Friction still exists. When figuring cost of repairs remember they are in direct proportion to first costs. All units of a six thousand dollar truck are based on its list price. And every one of the six thousand dol­ lars must carry its share of high produc­ tion overhead—high sales cost. Every rc placement part carries that same bur­ den and its necessarily wide profit mar­ gin also. Bethlehem Motor Trucks are neither underbuilt io meet a price nor over­ built to justify a price. They represent the middle ground — the point where price and quality balance — the place where greatest value is reached. Their low repair cost is due to their stamina and to the low cost of repair units. Buy your Motor Truck on Facts. I1 J-Ton Chassis $1965 * 2 J-o-Ton Chassis 3 ’_-Ton Chassi* $2365 $3465 F. O, B. ALLENTOWN, PA. BETHLEHEM MOTORS CORPORATION ALLENTOWN, PA. Buy Safely • Buy Bethlehem Sunset Garage, Tillamook, Oregon. I In America we had been tinkering and tinkering and experimenting and experimenting to produce something new in the way of fighting craft, Military experts and common, ordi- nary experts had the satne thought, Great Britian and France had been in this war now almost three years, The kind of planes with which the war started were out of date within six months, nearly every six months had seen a new type of plane with marked superiority over its predeces­ sors, but at the present time both countries had developed an extraor­ dinary highly efficient and service­ able plane. Why should not the Unit­ ed States take the best of the types that thus have been produced and fight right, manufacturing them in great quantities, and at the same I time keeping up its experiments in the present effort to produce better planes? They should start right where the allies were when we enter- ed the war and not start where the allies began three years ago. just behind them and a little above, were four very fast moving Fokkers. I stuck up my nose and began climb­ ing for the sun." Thus it is that Captain Ricken- backer began his account of the gril­ ling fight he had with these four Fokkers, Notwithstanding the tre- mendous odds he outmaneuvered them and outfough them, and, after destroying one plane with its pilot he got safely away. These four Fokkers were part of the Richtofen circus and were four of the greatest air fighters in all of Germany. opportunity for rascality and, In at dit ion. caused this mammouth fail­ ure. Unless a republic protects itself by thus punishing those who so In- tray it no republic can expect to litt This colossal failure is didectly due, first, to the secretary of war, ani. secondly to those other officials ii the war department whom the Presi­ dent of the United States and tin secretary of war brought into thia aircraft business. The administratioi can blame no one but itself. Let the American people never forget those boys that thus died in vain and ever forget those who so basely At The End of the War. betrayed America in her hour of A few more of these bombing peril. planes made in America, equipped with Liberty motors, made their ap- Participation Prohibited. r pearance in France at the very end of the war. They were only there a few days, but in that short time they Judge J. M. Humphreys, of Atoki had received the sobriquet of "flam­ Okla., calls attention to chapter 111 ing coffins.” They were tried, of Page 913, Statutes at Large, to u| course, but a limited number of times act of March 4, 1913, which says: solely as bombing planes. "Hereafter the executive shall not| On page 337, in the very last mo­ extend oh accept any invitation U The Aircraft Production Board. ments of the war. Captain Ricken­ participate in any international con­ But that is not what the adminis­ backer thus speaks of the situation gress, conference or like event with­ tration did at all. An aircraft produc­ of the clumsy liberty machines. out first having specific authorityol tion board was formed and six "Thousands and thousands of Ger­ law to do so.” Mr. Humphreys de gentlemen placed upon it, nearly all man troops had been unloaded from dares that this act specifically pro­ of whom were automobile manufac­ trains during the previous night and hibited President Wilson from going turers. It has new been well estab­ were now hidden in Grand Pre and to Paris as a participant in the con­ lished, and we acknowledge it to our its neighborhood. The enemy fight­ ference which formulated the league selves with a sinking at the pit of ing machines were out in force to of na.ions. It is not clear why our stomaches, that our valiant sec­ defend this spot against bombing ident Wilson’s authority to partici retary of war placed on this aircraft planes until these troops had an op­ ¡pate in a world congress for the for­ production board men who formed a portunity for moving and scattering mulation of a world constitution hi> plan to produce a new type of engine ¡themselves along their front. From not been challenged. It was a legis­ different from any other kind in the I every quarter Fokkers were peeking lative proceeding, ' not ligitimatelj world. In other words, these men be­ iipon the clumsy Liberty machines, connected with the process of forme- came interested, not in making types which, with their criminally con­ lating a peace treaty, since the po’| of planes perfected by the British I structed fuel tanks, afforded an easy ers with whom we were making th and the French, not in utilizing the target to the Incendiary bullets of treaty of peace are not members ! efficient motors then in use but in the enemy, their unfortunate pilots the league of nations, and this pro­ making a brand new plane with a called this boasted achievement of vision does not apply to them. W brand new motor, both different our aviation department their “flam­ President Wilson not only participt- ing Coffins”. During that one brief ed in this conference without le from auything else in the world. It is to be observed at this time fight over Grand Pre I saw three of authority, but boasted that he woulr the British and French planes were these crude machines go down in tie the covenant and treaty so close both largely equipped with motors flames, an American pilot in each ly that it would be impossible » that were not made in Great Britian flaming coffin, dying this frightful ratify the one without swallow!« France. The common type of mo- [and needless death." the other. tor then most servicable in fighting I The extreme need of air fighters to ------- x------- x planes was the Hispano-Suiza, which aid our boys when they were first is an engine that was purely Spanish, 'thrown into the gap to stop the huge ALL WRONG. it having been Invented originally by German drive did all but crush civil­ a Swiss engineer, who had it manu­ ization appears from the testimony MAKE WORK EASIER. factured in Spain. So these men who of very experienced witnesses. were interested in aircraft produc­ This is the end of our aircraft ef­ Tillamook People Are Pleased t» tion stumpled along in perfecting fort. A few flaming coffins represent Learn How it has Been Done both a type of plane and perfecting a the effort of the mightiest nation in ' It’s pretty hard to attend to dun | type of engine. We sit back now and the world and the largest expendi­ With a constantly aching back, blush to ourselves when we think of ture of the largest sum ever expend- With annoying urinary disorder»- j Doan’s Kidney Pills make wort j how these men and our government ed on aviation of any nation i in the utterly deceived the American people 1 world. - - A - more complete and humili­ easier for many a sufferer. in reference to the character of the ating failure never occurred in the They’re for bad backs. engine and In reference to the state history of man or war. Remember For weak kidneys. Here is convincing proof of merit of this production. The truth is the we started out early in 1917 to place Jack Mott, 818 Hayter St. Dall* ] Liberty motor, whieh all the adver­ on the firing line the 1st of May, tising which our government gave it, 1918, twenty thousand fighting craft. Ore., says; “I took Doan’s Kldne! was never a servicable engine before We promised this to our allies; we Pills several years ago when I the war ended except in the restrict­ ,promlsed this to our people. Our peo­ having backache and other kidney ed field of bombing planes, and never ple did their part. They gave of their disorder. I blame the trouble to tM will be any good for a fighting ma­ money without stint or delay. Con­ nature of my work. Constant strata chine. gress in all appropriated for aircraft and neglect caused my back to i1’ The clumsy contraption our war during the war upwards of two bil­ out. Doan’s Kidney Pill« relieved department finally sent to France to lion dollars. There was ample funds finally. My back soon felt as .«trow I serve as bombing planes early attrac­ to put the prodigious sum of twenty as ever and my kidneys were •*'’ | ,. I planes in the mal.” ted the attention of everybody be­ [thousand fighting Price 60c., at all dealers Do»» 1 cause of some extremely imperfect fighting area. The extent of failure features connected with them. They is complete. The American people simply ask for a kidney remedy -*• | almost at once received the name of should never be content and never t Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same th*1 I "flaming coffins." Captain Ricken- rest easy until they separate out Mr. Mott had. Foster-Milburn Co- J backer, on page 239, thus speaks of those who performed criminal acts In Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y.—Pd. Adv. •x------- ------ X---------X them: connection with this failure and "They had come! A large flotilla prosecute them to the fullest extent says the Count Bernstorff — «- — of American flaming coffins, as their of the law.. American people should scoffed at American InterventK* pilots called the Liberty engines, never rest until they have picked out early in 1917. Maybe were coming home at 12.000 feet those whose procrastinations, delays, some of those after a bombardment of Metz. And inefficiency and extravagance gave War” posters.