■MVPHNSM MM NEED TECHNICAL TALENT IN NAVY latest fad among University of Iowa co-eds, the string constating of 20 pol- iahed walnut beads with an oval pendant. The beads which represent the fumed HUto suggestion methods of 1 Emile Coue. are coming to be potent factors In keeping up courage before Officers of High Rank In Favor of un exam, burtaad of u lust flustered glance over the notebook before the Premium to Keep Men for final quia, each fair co-ed calmly counts off her "Day by day, In every Long Terms. way. my freshman English Is getting Washington.—Despite the attention better and better." Some fears are expressed In sorority attracted In recent months to the ques­ tion of gun elevation on battleships and | circles that the chant may come to take the place of the nightly "Now I modernisation of the fleet, the problem of biggest concern to the navy today lay me. Is personnel. In the recent fleet maneuver, rank­ ing naval officers made every effort to emphasise that the question of enlisted personnel Is the main consideration In the maintenance of the 6-5-3 naval ra­ tio of the Washington treaty. It Is estimated that 80,1X10 of the fW,- 000 provided by law will lie due to re­ tire at the expiration of their terms of enlistment, while the navy will be lucky to get 40 per cent of these to re- •nllst. This constant turnover from year to year Is regarded as the weak feature of the fleet NEW BALLOON TO FIGHT GYPSY MOTH FROM AIR Agricultural Department Bor rows Army Machine. Washington. — The gypsy moth, which long has been playing havoc In the forests of New Englund mid else­ where, must watch its step from now on. Early In June experts of the I'e- pertinent of Agriculture will start a tight or. thia tree pest from the air For this campaign the urtuy air service has turned over to the depart­ ment the M-B, a new-type motor bal­ loon built for the specific purpose of spraying and powdering with chemi­ cals peat-lufvstad forests. The M-B la capable of hovering over a specified point, and this characteris­ tic Is expected to prove highly valuable tn the campaign. It has been thorough­ ly tested by the engineering division of the air service at McCook field. It Is •quipped with two 75-liorse azower mo tors and carries five passengers. Au army crew will navigate the M-H dur­ ing the campaign against the gypsy moth. New York state appropriated ll.vi.- 000 for combating the gypsy moth along ths border from the St. L hw - rence river to Long Island sound, but it Is feared that any measures con­ fined to application from the ground will prove inadequate. First Dean of Yale’s New Nursing School [ F- I In stressing the problem In Its rela­ tion to personal efficiency naval experts point out that the British enlistment term Is twelve years, while the Japa­ nese term Is ten years, thus assuring these countries a ¡lermanent ¡tersonnel of trained men which the United States cannot hope to hsve at the rate of the present yearly turnover. Doing away with the war enlistment periods of two years and three years and going back to the four-year period will help to some extent, but even at that It Is estimated that. in order to have a personnel sufficient to maintain the efficiency ratio of the 5-5-3 treaty, the United States should allow Itself at 1 all times a larger personnel than Great Britain has. while at the present the total British personnel is 20.000 men greater than of the United States. » T : * the city this week looking afttH settlement of the estate of his I,, . a the late Webster Holmes, formrln attorney of this city. a THE.DISTlLLBDjOIL* DULLTH Her husband, W. H. Powell, Pr* her here a few days. The Mz will make their future home I» Í mook country. Mrs. Carl Cloverdale accompanied .Mrs. pw to Tillamook to meet the visitor T MARSHALL-WELLS COMPANY I: Miss Bessie Hunter who spent a day or two in this city visiting with friends, returned to her home in Cloverdale Saturday. F. A. Wood who has been working in the Garibaldi mill for some months past returned to Portland Saturday evening. Miss Mary Nelson, who recently finished a term of school in H >pner„ Oregon, and who had just 1. shed a visit with her parents at this ¿ace left Sunday last for Monmouth where she will attend Summer Normal classes. Mrs. Nellie Gardner of Kalama, Wn and her sister Mrs. Sarah Gardner of Portland came in together Saturday to visit in the families of E. N. Large and A. J. Anderson, suth of this city. W. C. Kessler passed through town Saturday for his home in Cloverdale. Mr. Kessler was working at Mohler where he got hurt and will take a lay off until he recovers. Mrs. Harry Gilliam left for Port­ land last Saturday where she will spend a few days of this week. W. H. Crowell, one of the leading architects of the state, was in from Portland Saturday looking over the new school house now being construct ed. He returned home the same day. Mrs. Florence Higgins and two small children who was here visiting her parents Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Don­ aldson east of town, returned to Port­ land Saturday where she will spend the summer. Mrs. W. H. Monroe, a grand daugh­ ter of W. M. Powell and wife of Bea­ ver, arrived from Montana Monday. STUDEBAKER BIG-SIX TOURING CAR » TJOR town or country r trucking-under medium weight«, at moderate «need, U. o. Regular Solid Truck Tires have become the meaeure of tire economy among experienced truck owner*. There U a U. 8. Tire equipment suited to every trucking condition. Ws can supply you. --------------- f ’ Check for Two Cent« : F ------ Settles Man’s Estate John W. Connell of Hillsboro spent Thursday in this city, returning to his home in the evening by ante. Arnold Howard and wife who have been stopping at the Van Patten apartments moved to Coates camp Sunday where he has a job in the camp. '■’rs. Van Patten is we. ■ in Portland visiting with rela­ tives. Wm. Tinnerstet is visiting with relatives in Montesano, Wash., this week. Harry Martin, who has been in this city for some time past, returned to Salem Saturday. There are six types of Sunoco—all wholly dis­ tilled. One of them is best for your car. Ask any Sunoco dealer for booklet, "What's Happening Inside Your Motor?” 0 X Paris.—More than 10 per cent of tbs population of France bas reached ttie age of sixty. In other words, the re­ public has nearly 5.000.000 men and women traveling toward three «core years and ten. Germany, according to the same eta ' tlstlcs, with a population one-third greater than France, counts only 5,113,006 persons, or 8 per cent. In I this same age category. Ps ■ 112. Itn" PERSONAL MENTION You will safeguard and prolong the life of your car by using Sunoco; get more power and quiet efficiency; reduce motor troubles. We discovered these facts from our tests. We know. oí Many Sexagenarian« In Franos. J London. — English hostesses who hsve been vying among themselves to have the ;>opular Prince of Wales dine with them have been dismayed to find that hl.- royal highness has very ate stomloui tastes and eschews sll except the simplest dishes. One nt London's most aristocratic and wealthy families set a regal ban­ quet before the prince lately, only to find that their guest passed it all by and chose a plate of cold hum und beans. English physicians attribute the prince's good health to his frugal diet, abstention from all rich, highly sea- sound dishes, especially flesh foods, much outdoor exercise, and a cheery, optimistic disposition. SUNOCO It hl U/ New York. — Jimmy Maralgllano, three years old, fell five stories from the Are eocape at his home to a cement- paved court yard. His parents re­ turned from the city hospital and smiled, as they said they bail been told bls Injuries consisted of a scratch oa sn arm and another on the nose, but st the hospital Jimmy was reported in • serious condition. A network of clotheslines from the back windows of the tenement where Jimmy lives, to a pole In tbe rear of tbe courtyard, saved him from being ''rushed on the pavement. He bad climbed on a box to watch a ball gam« I d tbe yard. He elutebed a clothesline and It snapped, but th« roi* unwound through a pulley, swinging him Into the railing of the flr« «scape off th« first floor windows, from which be dropped to ths pavement. Tokyo.—Because a few of their fel­ low students In a Tokyo school were “plucked" at the recent annual ex­ amination, 40 successful candidates went on strike, announcing their de­ cision to the directors In u letter writ­ ten In blood. The writers declared: “It was the fault of the students of the whole class that these unfortunate students did not pass the examination, and out of sym­ pathy they refuse to attend school until the school authorities reconsider their decision und declure their friends pursed You wouldn’t think of using plain water in your batteries 1 certainly not. You always get distilled water, because all impurities are distilled out of it Mia* Annie W. Goodrich of New York ban Just been up;n>iutetl dean of the new school of nursing of Yale uni­ versity. Miss Goodrffh Is at present assistant professor of nursing st Teachers college, Columbia university, and director of nurses at the Henry street settlement. She was superintendent of nurses at the Neu York Post Graduate hospital from 1803 to 1000. and since that time has served with St Luk««, Bellevue, New York state educational depart­ I term of years. ment and the Army School of Nursing. In 1024 Mount Holyoke college gave her an honorary- degree and the War Coue Beads Latest Fad department recently awarded her the of University Co-eds D. 8. M. She has been described by Iowa City, la.—Coue beads are the the secretary of Rockefeller Founda­ tion aa “the outstanding figure In nursing education in America today.” President Angell of Yale says: “It would be impossible to find anyone more competent to undertake the dif­ ficult work of organising th» new in­ stitution ” .. Boy Falls Five Stories; Clothesline Saves Life id ir i. Prince of Wales Picks Beans at Big Banquet Distilled oil is best The constant turnover Is particularly felt In the bigger and more technical phases of naval work. As an example of tills It Is pointed out that the navy today Is unable to maintain anything like the requisite quota of radio teleg­ raphers, although radio communica­ tion Is the very nerve center of naval operations. It Is estimated that there should be enough of these to take care not only of the fleet but of every shore station under »he American flag. Development of expert gunnery also Is severely handlcapi>ed by the sam« situation as regards personnel shifting, Down In the fleet It la not at all nn- usual to see officers of a battleship throwing dice to decide who shall get an electrician newly assigned to duty. The demand now Is that congress put some kind of premium on technical ability In the navy and allow compen­ sation which would enable the navy to keep this class in the service for s long i Japanese Students Write Defy in Blood Longer Enlistment Periods. Not Enough Radio Men. i FRIDAY, JUNE 22, i¡ TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT L4 A L" 2 .»1 WILLIAMS & WILLIAMS ( the Dit ma he I ths pre the ing a tl T its gua oft uph «lee feel blai he