Newspaper Page Text
2D
Chief Signal Officer Declares Brigades of Avia
tors Will Threaten the Enemy’s Transporta
tion and Blind Their Artillery.
Continued From P;q- 1.
the methods of instruction now used
will be continued,
Rebel Against Strictness.
The gravest fault with the Ameri
can civillan, so army officers have
dound. is his rebelliousness against the
strict regime of military WWfe, Intel
ligent, accustomed to do his own
thinking and to guide his own actions,
Be finds it hard to grasp the idea that
he is a minute cog In a vast military
machine-~that he must not think for
himself or act for himself.
OMcers declare that it is more dif
ficult to reconcile their civilian pupils
to the idea of military discipine than
it is to tcach them to fly.
" But by infinite patience and ap
peals to the unselfishness of the stu
dents they have succeceded in drilling
these lessons into the first aeronauti
Fighting in Air Is Main
Part of America in War
WASHINGTON, July 21.—Discuss
ing the $640,000,000 appropriation for
air fleets, Brigadier General George O,
Squier, chief signal officer, made the
fcllowing statement
To develop all the possibilities of
fighting in and from the air in this
present war will by America's great
part. Burope is war weary and ex
hausted, The personnel of our allies
for the most effective military avia
tion has been used up, killed in the in
fantry, cavalry and artillery. | mean
the young men between 19 and 25
years of age—the period of life when
men are at their best for aerial work.
In Germany this class of personne!
has certainly been exhausted. So it
remains for ue, coming in with a fresh
viewpoint, to end this thing the first
possible minute,
Nothing else counts. Saving a week
of this war would be cheap at any
price. And the United States alone
ean make this contribution to her al
lies and the world. We can outman
&other countries involved, friends
foes, and we can surely outbdild
them. 8o we should make this a great
national plan to win, to make our
contribution to the cause something
that will be distinctly American in
conception and in magnitude.
Promptness Needed.
And there must be promptness at
any cost, for the sake of our own peo
ple as well as for the people of Bu
rope. To win quickly by the sheer
weight of the number of our machines
means the sending of the minimum
number of men of the United States
to the trenches,
We can train our men for actual
War service in the alr In seven
months, comprising eight weeks of
mund work and four months of fly
at the training schools in this
country, and then a month of inten
sive battle plane training work in
France. 1 don't know how many will
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ATLANTA MINERAL WATERS (0, "' Edgeweo
cal Instruetion class,
A certain number of newly-fledged
puplls will be retained at the flelds
for the instruction of those who come
after them. Thus the army and navy
will establish a sort of “endless
chuln” system of practical teaching
whereby the graduating class wiil
undertake the improvement of the
“freshmen.”
Within a year this country will
have turned out 20,000 pllots, at the
lowest estimate, With mechanics, ob
servors, nachine gun operators and
photographers thls represents an
aerinl force of some 70,000 or 0,000
men.
The estimated cost of a trnnm:
aeroplane of standard type is $6,000,
A battleplane, it has been estimated,
will cost from SB.OOO to SIO,OOO,
be needed. That, again, depends upon
Von Hindenburg.
But we want enough to operate in
regiments and brigades if necessary,
to make all Germany unsafe, to force
her to demobilize her air forces at the
front and send the men and machines
back to protect the cities. This will
blind her artillery and render it help
less by depriving it of the range find.
ers.
Can Destroy Transportation,
Furthermore, our regiments and
brigades will be able to destroy all of
Germany's interior lines of transpor
tation for the movement of troops and
supplies. They will be able to rob the
enemy fleet of the security it now en-
Joys at Klel, .
An alrplane can now carry and drop
1,000 pounds of explosives, If that is
not enough to sink a dreadnaught It
certainly can disable it for three or
four months, and then it can be dis
abled again in the same way after re.
pairs. We can make the Kiel Canal
itself useless,
These are some of the things that
American can do if she has a sufficient
preponderance of machines. In addi
tion to all that we can carry on the
more conventional aircraft warfare
along the front, working on the three
levels, ranging all the way from the
altitude of 19,000 feet of the solo ma
chines down through the one-mile
level of the range finders to the bomb
dropping machines flyine as low as
circumstances call for or admit,
Waste No Time.
We will waste no time in experi
menting with battleplane devices of
our own before we begin the work of
construction. On the contrary, we
will call on our allles to furnish us
with their best plans and specifica
tions, with which we can rush our
building program. ~
It will require necromancy, how
ever, to enable the United States to
carry out an effective aviation pro
gram within a year. Though war was
declared more than three months ago,
the great aviation plan is still on pa
per and was not even conceived six
weeks ago.
No one understands the colossal
difficulties confronting the United
States in its aviation program better
than Captain de la Grange, of the
French army, who is here to give the
Administration the benefit of his ex
perience in developing the flying
forces of France.
Aviators Quickly Made.
The formation of a large aviation
section by the United States, he said,
is only a question of money. It takes
three to four months to train a pilot.
We already have seen how quickly
sturdy young men can be turned into
excellent aviators.
In less than a year it would be pos
sible to have more than 5,000 pilots.
These pilots would be trained for the
first few mgnths In the United States
and for the last months in the Ameri
can schools that is now being created
in France at Issoudan.
The important question is that of
meaterial. If the Government wishes
to. before April 1, 1918, it can have a
tremendous aero fleet. Suppose it de.
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IH'INARS'T'.\' SUNDAY AMERICAN —_ A New.naper for People Who Think — SUXDA"‘, JULY 722. 1917
AMERICA UNDER ARMS--A GERMAN VIEW
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Against This Array of Talent Germany Can Oppose Only Soldiers.
: From Lustig Blaetter, of Berlin
cided to have only 5,000 planes and
10,000 motors. In order to keep that
number of aeroplancs always at the
front it will be necessary to build 2,600
planes and 4,000 motors per month,
viz.: 158,000 planes and 36,000 motors
during the next nine months. There
fore, between January 1, 1918, and De
cember 31, 1918, the United States
must build 22,000 planes and 44,000
motors.
Factories Must Do Big Work.
This means a great el'fo}t on the
part of the American factories, They
can make this effort, as they have al
ready the buildings, the workmen and
yart of the machinery needed. They
have also a large number of the best
scientists and technicians, The size of
the orders given them will insure ob
taining the money necessary to organ
ize the plants for their construction,
Two difficulties will be met at once.
The first that of skilled labor, In
constructing airplanes, machinists are
not sufficient; very good engineers are
needed and a great number of them.
The necessary steps should be taken
to recruit these men as soon as possi
ble, and, in view of this, the board of
production is sending a commission
composed of skilled workmen to
France, so that they should study the
methods used in the facgtories there.
When finished they will return to the
United States, will apply all they have
learned, and will be able to train
workmen as well.
20 Motors Each Month at Plants,
The second difficulty is that of man
ufacturing quickly enough the ma
chines and tools necessary for build-
Ing such a large supply of planes and
motors. Although the best American
engineers are giving all their atten
tion to this, it will be impossible, I am
afraid, to build these machines fast
enough so that on January 1, 1918,
each factory will be able to produce,
not ten motors a month, but twenty
and thirty.
In my opinion, there is only one
way in which this difficulty can he
surmounted. It is to reelize that the
work must go on night and day, and,
in consequence, to organize night
chifts so that the machines will never
be idle.
I am convinced that the quickest
way in which the United States can
help the Allies is by aviation. In nine
‘months from now, on April 1, 1918, 1
am sure it will be possible to have a
corps of 5,000 aviators trained, equip
ped and armed.
W War Workers
Can Spoiling Cabb ‘
pouing ge
(By International News Service.)
NEW YORK, July 21.—There will be
plenty of bottled cabbage next winter if
the work begun at the New York City
rnnnlnf and dehydrating kitchen, under
the Willlamsburg bridge, is kept upn
Miss Nellie Johnson and a corps of vol
unteer workers got busy upon seventy
ear londs of the vemetables which ahd
been saved at the food plerg on the pre
vious day by Boy Scouts,
The discolored outer leaves of the
cabbages were cut away and the erisp
white leaves within were steamed, ster.
ilized, boiled and sealed In glass jars.
Kvery volunteer worker who alded,
either at a pler or at the canning sta
tion, got a card punched for every hour
worked. These cars will be redeemable
next winter in canned foods. Many of
the volunteers who did not need the
food themselves plan to give their cards
to war rellef organizations.
Everybody present strenuously denled
that the produet of the cannery Wwas
“sauerkraut.”
CORONERS' JURIES SMALLER,
LONDON, July 21.—Coroners’ juries
are now sitting with less than twelve
jurors for the first time for a thousand
years, according to the statement made
by the Westminster P@nor last week
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WEDDING INVITATIONS
Barbers
Tailors ’
Rigid War Diet in
Big New York Hotels
War Bread Made From Stale Bread
and Toast Trimmings, Makes
Appearance.
(By International News Service.)
"“*NEW YORK, July 21.—War bread,
made with a percentage of stale bread
and toast trimmings. has found its way
into New York hotels, and has proved
so successful that it was included in the
suggestions to Food Director Hoover on
behalf of the Hotel Association of New
York City,
The chief endeavor of the hotels will
be to conserve wheat. Extra bits of toast
as garnishes will be discontinued.
The recipe for “war bread" is as fol
lows:
On the basis of a butter tub of
stale bread and crusts add ten
quarts of weter and ten ounces of
salt; soak thoroughly, and strain
through a flour sieve. For this quan
tity use about one-half pound of
yeast and enough flour to make a
stiff dough.
The hotel men will urge that their
Ruests eat no veal, lamb and suckling
pigs and observe two “beefless days” a
week. (Cheese will be discontinued from
free lunch counters.
Individual portions of bread and rolls
or butter, each portion accurately de
termined by weight, was another sug
gestion of the hotel men.
In making every kind of bread they
have decided that the utmost economy
will result if the 10 per cent of substi
tute flour is rye, potato, banana, rice or
some other flour which does not result
in a rou'(h .w-jaoed slice of bread. The
bread with the rough surface, the hotel
men have found. temgt- diners to use
an extra allowance of butter.
Those bits of toast which were al
ways coming to light unexpectedly at
the bottom of dishes served with a sauce
are to vanish utterly., The ordering of
fresh pork is to be discouraged. Broil
ing, roasting, hraising and stewing are
to be encouraged and frying regarded
with disfavor.
The hotel men purpose to encourage
the eating of fish and fresh vegetables,
It is their intention to have this legend
printed on all hotel menus.
Mr. Hoover urges the use of less
wheat, pork, pork products. butter and
all fats, also beef, and to substitute and
use freely sea food, fresh vegetables and
fruits, Economy in the nonrestricted
foods is not necessary or desirable at
the present time.”
.
To Keep Fit, Walk
A ‘Parsec’ Each Day
DETROIT, July 21.-—~Enter another
word into Webster's already cumber
some volume, It is “parsec.”
Professor Alexander Laing, promi
nent astrologist and a former resi
dent of Detroit, speaking at the meet
ing in the Y. M. C, A. on “Things in
Heaven and Earth Worth Knowing,”
said that “parsec” is a term adopted
by astronomers within the last few
weeks for the measurement of dis
stance between stellar objects, and
that it is equivalent to 19,000,000,000,-
000 (19 trilllon) miles. To show the
enormousness of our stellar and plan
etary system, Professor Laing said
that it is 10,000 parsece to to ths sun
cluster of Hercules, or 190 quadrillion
miles.
Jailed After 97-Mile
Trip to Bail Friend
STONEHAM, COLO., July 21.—-H. N.
Schlaman, a rancher of this district,
drove 97 miles over wet, muddy roads to
Greeley to go on the bail of Barl God
dard, only to be locked Inflijnll himself.
When Schlaman present himself at
the jall to provide bail for his friend,
Sheriff Finch served a warrant on him,
charging him with similar crimes. The
flherfff i\ld been looking for Schlaman
for several days and thanked him for
coming to the jail
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Charge Mother ‘Lost’
Little Crippled Boy
Pitiful Case Is Revealed by Children's
Society Agents in New
York Court.
(By International News Service.) -
NEw YOREK, july 21.—Before Magis
trate lroyie In Yorkville Court were
brought two persons. One was Mrs.
Agnes Cusick, twenty-four years old,
of No. 225 Eighth street, Brooklyn,
charged with abandonment of her four
year-old son. The other was the little
boy, a vietim of last year's infantile
paralysis epiaemic and still hobbling
about on a leg brace. It was his pic
ture, which was published in a news
paper June 26, which led to the dis
covery of ihe mother by an agent of
the Children’s Society.
The only information which the boy
could give when found on June 21 was
that his name is “Jimmy" and that
he is a ‘‘very, very good boy."”
“Did you make any effort to find this
boy?’ Magistrate Doyle asked the
mother.
“l looked about the neighborhood
where I lost him,” she said. It was
her story that she lost him in a crowd
and did not abandon him
“A dumb animal would have done
more than that,” exclaimed the magis
trate. A dumb Dbeast would have
}ooked everywhere for her lost, Here
8 @ cripple that requires a mother's
care and love, and you made no effort
to go to a police station or to make
inquiry for him.”
“I did ali 1 could,” sobbed the wo
man,
Upon testimony, however, that when
first shown the photograph of the little
boy she had denied being his mother.‘
the womamn was held in bail for trial.
At Jap Girl's Burial
LONG BEACH, CAL., July 21.—An
urusual! ceremony occurred here when a
Christian minister and a Buddh.st priest
jointly officiated at one funeralp and
took part In the obsequies at the same
grave. |
Buddbism and Christianity shared the
services at the Motfell funeral establish
ment over the body of Yone Meifu, the
18-year-old Japanese flower girl of Sig
nal Hill. who committed suicide by tak
ing poison.
The girl, who came to Long Beach
only a year ago from Japan, had at
tended the Japanese mission at the Cal
vary Presbyterian Church. The Chris
tian pastor of that mission, the Rev. K.
Kobayaski, at the request of a number
of friends of the girl, conducted in part
the funeral service,
Immediate members of the Meifu fam
ily are of the orthodox Nipponese faith,
80 they called to officiate at part of the
obsequies the Buddhist priest of the
Japanese colony of Los Angeles.
|
Pastor Defends Those
- Who Marry Now
COLUMBUS, OHIO, July 21.—" Young
man, go ahead and get married today.
' Don’t mind what the public has to say.”
That is the way the Rev. John L.
Tait, local clergyman, feels about the
war bridegroom. Mr. Tait, who has
‘maried several couples since the United
‘States entered the war, dislikes the way
newspapers have featured marriages in
the last few weeks.
‘At this critical time,” he said, “when
the outlook is darkest, we should not
discourage marital ties. The slaughter
of thousands of our young men is not
among the impossible happenings. We
know not what the future has for us.
En?lnnd had her marriage proposition
to face after the war began. So let's
not call the young man who marries
now a ‘slacker.’’’
He said that those he married prom
ised to go to war if called.
LIGHTNING CHIMNEY SWEEP.
VINELAND, N. J., July 21.—Lightning
struck the chimney on lLewis Mason's
house and after throwlng bricks nrgg.r)\d
the vard, cleaned the chimney of L
throwing it lr;'ghe cellar theater and
through the oke pipe hole into the
kitchen.
Former Congressman and Hero of the Navy De
clares Pact With Asiatic Democracy Would
Enable United States to Take the Dardanelles.
Continued From P_n_go %
could throw into the scale of war, in
the manufacture of munitions, the
production of supplies and equipment,
a 4 vast Chinese man power that the
Teutons can not match. It is impos
sible to overestimate the importance
such industrial superiority would
have upon the outcome of the war of
the world.
I can bear first-hand testimony also
to the high moral standards of the
Chinese. The individual Chinaman
has all the elements for making a
good soldier. He is not afraid
of death. He is honest, loyal and
absolutely reliable beyond any other
man in the world. He is patient and
persistent and uncomplaining. It is
true the lack of national feeling, the
exclusive prevaiance of the family
and clan spirit have discredited the
profession of the soldier for many
centuries, during which time the few
soldiers in China were mercenaries,
China’'s Spirit Awakening.
But the remarkable acme\l')mont of
the Chinese soldiers in the ill-advised
boxer disturbance, even with the
meagerest equipment and preparation,
gives an index to the Chinaman's |
capacity as a soldier when equipped
and drilled and when animated by‘
principle, though in the Boxer dis
turbance he may have been mis
gulded. ‘
The readiness, particularly in the
southern provinces, to rise against
usurpation at Peking shows that the
modern spirit of nationalism that has
been swept over the world for a cen
tury and a half has reached China.
Let an American commission gq.to
China and pave the way for organ
izing and equipping a big Chinese
army to throw into Europe. The man
power of China on the side of the Al
lies thrown into the field, the work
shop and the trenches would leave
no doubt as to the ultimate outcome
of the war. Furthermore, it would
articulate China with the rest of the
world in advancing the cause of de
mocracy. It would add to the power of
self-defense by China, and thus re
move the greatest future cause of war.
The “Big 3” Nations. ‘
As a concrete proposition, let China
join America to organize a great ex
pedition for the taking of the Dar
danelles and the relief of Russia.
Nothing would be so mighty for the
double cause of democracy and of
peaca in the world as Russia, China
‘and America standing shoulder to
shoulder bringing the great war to a
victorious end.
~ Let us request Russia also to send
'a mission to China, and China to
'send a mission to Russia. Let one of
the first changes of free Russia be in
'revolutionizing Russian policy toward
China. The Romanoff autocracy, like
the Japanese autocracy, always
sought to encroach upon and prey
upon China; let the policy of Rus
sian democracy be only that of friend
ship, mutual help and of co-operation
in the cause of universal democracy.
Both Russia and China recognize
America as their true, disinterested
friend. We can bring about this
quick rapprochement. Holding as we
do the keystone Jzosmon in the arch
of the world's democracy, America
must not drift with the current and
have her vision circumscribed by the
clash of arms in Waestern Europe.
History will reveal that this titanic
clash of arms is important chiefly be
cause it permits vast sociological re
adjustments ripened by the scientific
age, the greatest of which is not
found in the death grapple of the
British and German Empires, or even
in the great struggle between western
‘autocracy and western democracy, but
is found in the awakening of a new
nationalism in Russia, in China and
in America—a nationalism that not
only causes the nation to “find itself”
in the exercising of a new freedom at
home for all its masses, but also to
rise with a new inspiration to services
for other people, paving the way for
triumphant democracy, the reign of
peace, and ultimately the co-operation
of all nations and all races in the
brotherhood of man, under the father
hood of nature and natyre's God.
Alliance Proposed.
Instead of simply drifting along
deeper and deeper into the fighting
under the direction of the narrow
vision and necessarily selfish vision of
European statesmen, let America for
mulate a definite world policy and
proceed with the measures necessary
to its achievement. 7 i
With the approval of our present
allies, which approval, of course,
could not be withheld, let us proceed
openly to form a defensive alliance
with Russia and China, into which
e other allies and the other democ
racies of the world would merge as
the war subsides. The basic princi
ple of the alliance should be united
action for the protection of each and
all the members against robber na
tions, against foreign spoliation and
oppression, guaranteeing the free
course of evolution within each na
tion, and the just, reciprocal com
merce and intercourse between mem
ters, and thus establish the founda
tions for peace and brotherhood.
Russia and China are in sore need
of such an alliance to point the way
and give objective to their new na
tionalism. America is in sore need of
such an alliance to crystallize into the
nation's life the permanent principle
of world service.
Autocracy, especially Oriental au
tocracy, would no doubt try to inter
pose covertly, if not openly, but we
nmust expect to meet the obstacies of
autocracy.
| Plan for Quick Victory.
America can execute this plan and
direct the happy course of the world.
Toward this end I would recommend
the following measures:
1. Let us quickly pass the aviation
bill; let us gain supremacy in the air
at once and throw this weighty con
tribution into the war scale. Let us
adopt a definite policy to maintain
permanent supremacy in the air, con
secrating control of the air to the
cause of democracy and humanity,
2. Let us gain supremacy upon the
sea; let us continue and further ex
pand the naval building program. Let
us plan to keep in the Atlantic Ocean
a fleet superior to the navy of any au
tocracy of Europe. Let us plan to
keep in the Pacific Ocean a fleet su
perior to the navy of any autocracy of
Asla; let us adopt a definite policy to
maintain permanent supremacy on the
sea, consecrating control of the sea to
the cause of democracy and humanity,
3. Let us gain supremacy under the
sea; let us expand our submarine
service with new types-——submarine
battleships, submarine cruisers, sub
marine mine layers and mine sweep
ers, submarine fuel and supply ships
and submarine traneports. As a war
measure let us build ships to the limit
and let us throw submarine craft—
usual craft and craft of special de
sign, co-operating with air craft—
against the German bases to help
shake off the U-.boat grip on the
throat of England, our great ally. But
let us adopt a definite policy to main
tain permanent supremacy under the
sea, consecrating control under the
sea to the cause of democracy and hu
manity.
Then Attack Dardanelles.
America’'s supremacy in industry
and in wealth permits us quickly to
place supremacy in the air, supremacy
on the sea and supremacy under the
sea at the command of democracy and
humanity. Since all the earth is cov
ered by air and three-quarters of the
earth’s surface is covered by water,
these gifts must of necessity insure
ultimate triumph for our holy cause.
If we seize the opportunity, the crisis
of the great war to act and act quick
ly and wisely, we can advance the
cause far upon its road ere peace and
routine settle upon the world.
4. Let us speed up the readjust
ment of Russo-Chinese relations; let
us send a commission to China to help
in the reorganization of that nation
as an ally, especially preparing the
man power of the nation for industry
and for armies. Let us help to finance
the organizing of Chinese armies, and
prepare for joint American-Chinese
operations next year for the relief of
Russia.
5. LLet America and China prepare
for a joint expedition against the Dar
danclles next vear, utilizing subma
rines and alrcraft more than they
have ever been used before, in con
junetion with naval and military op
erations. Let America and CChina pro-
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ceed upon the determination that as a
revman-ont result of the war demo
cratic Russia shall henceforth have
. vatt 1o the Mediterranean,
6. While sending troops to the wests
ern front let us dispatch troops to
Russia by Archangel and Viadivos«
tok; let us help China also to dis
pateh troops to Russia. Then next
yvear let the combined forces proceed
against the invaders in Roumania,
then against Bulgaria, then against
the invaders in Serbia, finally mak
ing juncture with the American-Chi«
nese expedition against the Darda
nelles, Let these All-Democracy ar
mies unravel the Pan-German knit.
ting In the Balkans and Asian Minor
before the peace conference starts to
make the new inventory.
(Ganed
\nunul
S’
K
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