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Show THE SPANISH FORK PRESS, SPANISH rORK. UTAH taw CHILDLESS HOMES MADE HAPPY Presence of little Ones a Great Blessing . 'rv. V l , ' Four Interesting Letters . CortbM. IyH E. M.T.-- "Ik MnfchMi'a Vef.tnbls Compound 1 Mk nnd Wanted 10 nw IIIMf tu Oild bin I child. J'f vV -- - eW-- shout ' and thought iuutdnfdrJ husband v bm. H In he-M- M Iff Uwtodim II might hlp 1 tw b did for li Mruinly BWlUiO Af leea bo old ho MMMMd Lydia E. ITnt ham's Vereubi Coo. pound M y f floods ud rod coo Uli); im of leeUreoolaJ la W lit Us MliUc aswspapsra, m ft might bslp to malt oomo other ohlld Wee home heppr br the prweee of UlUo onoo M II MI dooo Bllos." y Me. Quids T. CAttrrru U Ado. 1 toll i toll-bur- U, Cortland, K X. A Meouf to Motlmf b Ifomnioa. Ohio. I ksra boot Lydia E. finkkamo VcroUblo Compound slnra girlhood; artnr taboo It whsal wsoyuongscandsul faring from a mimm and back Lately 1 boro taboo It again ottbM mo before the birth of troubled with palna mjr child, oo 1 la my bark and a lifeless, woak faW trr. 1 think If mothera would ooty taka your wonderful modldno they aid not dread childbirth aa they da nJ the Vegetable Com ovsry woman." Mrs. Jo. , Ja, 52 & 11th Street, I too. Ohio. tu I CHEMISTRY 1- . 1'inkbsm'a Vegetable took Lydia aad after being married sixteen yearn bocama the mother of o tweet utile girt 1 pow hero four lovely chUdrew three too boya and the flius girt ala yeera old. I bad longed for children all tha while aad wept many a day and eaeied erery woman with a child. I Wat 56 year old whoa mr firat baby waa bora. X recommend Lydia LlUik ham a Ve. etaU Compound to any womaa who It ailing with female weaineoeL Mra. J. Natauuot, Ull lie atom EL, Compound St Louie, Mm Wu Weak azu! Run Down St fouls Mo. My mother took Lydia it llnkham Vegetable Goo 1 wee a and wbea X girl, pound whet waa troubled with cram re 1 took it, and later wbea 1 married I again took It to make ma strong aa the doctor aald 1 was weak and run down and could not here children. 1 took It and got along too aad now I bare three girls. bo you know why 1 keep the Compound la the boose, lam a wed woman and do my work and aewlnw Mrs. JnJi? Harm am; 25C4 W.Doaerbt,t too." Most men with swelled beads wear email bain WOMEN CAN DYE ANY MOTHER! GIVE SICK BABY -CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP" GARMENT, DRAPERY TO MAKE Harmless Laxative ta Clsaa Liver Dye er Tint Worn, Faded and Bowels ef Baby er Child. flew for IS Cent - IT BLOODLESS BUT EVEN MORE AWFUL- - War Is a aerlous and the ant war I hamoet eerloue of aflproblem liaMUnelde will problems became blood lee and Ibe aeon jr of mueelee will be CoL ihe mind br of repleoed J. g. C. guller, ncunjr la TDe Reformation of War.1 By JOHN DICKINSON A man who la good only oa (ha sur face la no good. I war! to UQ ym (St fools, Mo. what Lyda - link ham's Vegetable Compound did fur mo eevea year egOb 1 was rua down and had a weak mm ouch ae womeo often hsva. X SHERMAN T IS to be aetamed that aobody bow wants another world war. But tha poastbtltty and tha dread of It are erer with ns. Professional auldlera art studying tha last one In search of guidance for the next one. The United 8tates War department Is preparing a eohiprehennlve plan for the loduatrlal mobilisation of tha nation In ease of war. Nations are experimenting openly with airplanes and bombs and, doubtless. In secret with gat. The presses are kept busy printing books on the next world war." Abroad, nations seem to be running a race In developing the airplane ae the coming weapon of war. The United States aeems to be lagging behind In this development to such an extent that the American Legion has proposed to ask President Coolldge to call an International conference to halt thla race by limitation of air armaments If our aviation accomplishments ore comparatively of little Importance, what must be the development! abroad! Unite! States naval seaplanes bombed and tank In short order two battleships elated for tha scrap heap. Twenty-thre- e United States army airplanes. Including sixteen huge bombers, made a flight of 800 miles from Virginia to Maine and gave the Atlantic coast an object lesson. A transcontinental aerial mall schedule of thirty hours from coast to roast shows that night flying, an essential of military aviation. Is practical. A navy Curtis racer, piloted by a naval officer, traveled at the rate of Diory than four miles a minute and again at the rate of 255 miles an honr. The Barling bomber, the world's largest airplane. successfully completed Its maiden trip at Wilbur Wright field. The bomber haa a wing spread of 120 feet. Loaded, It weighs twenty tons It has six Liberty motors of 400 horsepower each and two pushing and four pulling propellers. It will stay In the air twelve bonrs and fly about 90 miles an hour. The United States naval dirigible ZR--1 successflight of COO miles over fully Siflde a twelve-hou-r New ork, Philadelphia and cities of the Atlantic s sea boTCd. Now all of these feats In air travel were Immedi' ately translated Into terms of war. For Instance. Commander Ralph D. Weyerbacher, U. S. N dedeclares In a signer and builder of the ZR-printed statement that bad the aerial superdrend-naugh- t flown over New York on a warlike errand It would have been an easy matter to have destroyed public buildings, smashed great holes In the crowded streets and reduced the metropolis to a state of panic. "Had she carried the five tons of high explosives the Zl.-- l can float, we could have wrecked the guns oi Forts Hamilton and Wadsworth and lifted the seagoing Aqultanla from the water, to say nothing of the lesser craft In the harbor, he wrote. "I could not help thinking as We circled Manhattan what grievous destruction may be wrought by aerial bombing over large cities tf such floating battleships as the ZR-- 1 can be developed to a point where they can successfully resist counter- attack. Commander Weyerbacher translated the possi- Into terms of explosives. bilities of tbe ZR-Others talk about gas. Whole armies put to sleep and taken prisoner in gas warfare Is by no means 1 an Impossibility twenty-fiv- e years hence. Col. Raymond F. Beacon, chief of the technical division of the chemical warfare service, A. E. F., says In a description of the possibilities of tbe future art of war made public by the American Chemical society. He says : To say the use of gas In warfare must be abolished Is almost the same as saying that no progress must be mode In the art of warfare toward making It more efficient and more humane With the use of gas It Is possible to saturate a piece of ground so thnt no troops can cross it, and thus make an artificial barrier for ths flank or protect tbe lines of communication. flfi7?r7Tfr BTMTfTT? Maj. Victor LeTebura la his work. Tha Rlddla of tha Rhine," predicts that the next war will b a war particularly of chemistry. Da dwells oa tha possibilities of ths combination of gas and aircraft, and ha warns that no prohibition or agraw mrnt Is going to stop the nsa of aocb weapons whan national ex I at race la believed to be at stake Hut It la CoL J. r. C. Fuller, D. 8. O, who carries Ibis talk of a chemical war to Its logical coo clualoa la his new book, "The Reformation of War. lie Is aa Englishman and a professional soldier who knowa war both la theory and practice. Ilia book gives ns pen pictures of war as It . will be fought wbea the lighting airplane, tanka and gaa reach the full maturity of their terrible power Colonel Fuller's basic proposition to that "war la of the Inevitable." Ha has the utmost contempt for peace talk, disarmament propositions, and tbe outlawing of certain weapons and certain methods of fighting. lie believes that when war cornea nations will one the moat efficient weapon available, be It what It may. He asserts that the traditional soldier Is doomed, that In the coming war our present-da- y armlet and navies will be valueless, that the World ear will be the last of Its kind Up to near the end of tho last great struggle he says, war waa of two dimensions The airWhat la the plane made war three dimensional use of armies fighting. If airplanes can leap the armies and carry the war to the heart of the enemy's country. The airplane, however. Is a mere means of transportation for gas, the most efficient means of destruction tbe world haa yet seen. He says 7,300 bullets a minute can be fired In shrapue! from a field gun and then says: . Gns Is, however, composed of cnemlcal molecules each of which can disable; consequently, the projectiles of a gas bombardment cannot be reckoned by thousands per minute, but by thousands of trillions. In fact, so Immense a number that It Is not even necessary to know tbe position of the target; all that Is necessary Is to know In what area It Is, and then to Inundate this area. Unlike a bullet, the effect of gaa does not cease once the force generated to propel It Is spent, for, while the bullet Is 'dead' the gas molecule Is ' alive, and may remain alive for days after gas has been projected. If the reader can Imagine a machine gun which can fire millions of bullets a second, each ballet drifting on after the force of the original discharge, has been spent, creeping through trees and houses, wandering over walls and Into shelters and dugouts, then he will have ' some Idea how gas can be used to economize mlll- ( tary time." Colonel Fuller says the traditional soldier will be succeeded by the war scientist, whose strategy will be to attack the nerves rather than the bodies of the enemy. "The brute force theory of warfare will go; In its place will be , traditional "the direct attack on the source of all military power the nerves and will of the civil , popu- He says: latlon. A nation which destroys the economic resources of its enemy, destroys its eventual markets, and thus wounds Itself. War must entail some loss, but the less this loss Is the greater will be the victory; consequently, the military object of a nation Is not to kill and destroy, but to enforce the policy of Its government with the least possible loss of honor, life and property. If the enemy can be compelled to accept the hostile policy without battle, so much the better. If he opposes It by military force, then It should never be forgotten that the strength of this force rests on the will of the government which employs It, and that, in Its turn, this will rests on the will of the nation which this government represents. If the will of the nation cannot be directly attacked, then must the will of the army protecting It be broken. In the past this will has been attacked by attacking the flesh of the soldiers, and so consistent has this been, that tbe Idea has arisen that the military object of war Is to kill and destroy. Thus, In the popular and military imaginations, the means have obscured the end ; consequently, the prevailing idea of all parties In the recent war was destruction, to destroy each other, and so blinded were they by the means that they could not see that In the very act they were destroying themselves, not only during the war, but In the peace which must some da 1 follow the war. "I believe that the world U slowly learning this OtOrMwAffco Even eoattlpa fbilious, feverish, or sick, colic Babies and Children love to taka genuine "California Fig Syrup." No other laxatlvo regulates tho tender little bowels Ii nicely. Things eed, lesson, and that, as la my opinion wars art Inevitable, tha old Ides of warfsra based on deatruo-tlo- a will b replaced by a new military Ideal tba Imposition of va 111 at tba Inst posslblt general Iocs. If this be so. then tba means of warfara most ba changed, for tha present means ara means of killing, mnns of blood; they must ba replaced by terrifying means, mnns of mind. Tbs present Implements of war must ba scrapped, and tbeaa bloody tools must ba replaced by wnpoos tba moral affect of which Is so terrific that a nation attacked by them will toss Its mental balance and will compel Ra government to accept tha hostile policy without further demur." This strategy will endeavor to "petrify the human mind with fear" and will send great fleets of airplanes to auks gas attacks on tbs nerve centers of the enemy nation. Colonel Fuller says: "A few years ago armies alone went forth to battle; today entire nations go to war, not only aa soldiers, but as tba moral and piaterial suppliers of soldiers. This being so, we And that, while a short time back It was clearly possible to differentiate between the military and ethical objective of nations at war, today this differentiation to becoming more and more complex ; so much so that both these objectives are likely to coincide, and, rhea this takes place, to attack the civilian workers of a nation will then be as justifiable an act of war as to attack Its soldiers." Colonel Fuller then points out that the first gaa nsed In the World war was of a lethal nature. But at the third battle of Tpres the Germans used mustard gas and disclosed to the world the possibilities of gas warfare. He says. "Respirators to a great extent were now ns Icssor the persistent and vesicant natureonof thla end, chemical rendered whole areas, for days uninhabitable and dangerous to cross Men carried the oily liquid on their clothes, on the mud of their boots, and infected dugouts, billets and rest camps far back on the lines of communication. Few died, but many were incapacitated for months on end. Here, curious to relate. Is the true power of gas as a weapon It can Incapacitate without killing. A dead man says nothing, and, when once burled. Is no Incumbrance to the survivors. A wounded man will spread the wildest of minors, will exaggerate dangers, foster panic and requires the attention of others to heal him until he dies or Is cured, he Is a military Incumbrance and a demoralizing agent Gas Is, par excellence, the wenpon of demoralization, and, as It can terrorize without necessarily killing, It, more than any other known weapon, can enforce economically the policy of one nation on. another. I believe that In future warfare great cities, such as London, will be attacked from tbe air and that a fleet of 500 airplanes each carrying 500 bombs of, let us suppose, mustard gas, might cause 200,000 minor casualties and throw the whole city Into panic within half an hour of their arrival. Picture, If you can, what the result will be! London for several days will be one vast raving bedlam, the hospitals will be stormed, traffic will cease, the homeless will shriek for help, the city will be In pandemonium. What of the It will be swept government at Westminster? terror. Then will the of avalanche an by away enemy dictate his terms, which will be grasped at like a straw by a drowning man. Thus may hours and the losses a war be won In forty-eigof the winning side may be actually nil I Colonel Fullers conclusion Is this: "That sxde, he says, which gains supivmacy In Invention and design Is the side which Is going to win tbe next And again : If mechanically both sides are war. equal, then on valor, obedience and of the soldier will victory depend. But tf one side relies on these virtues alone, and neglects to safeguard them by the most powerful weapons obtainable, then will they be of little value as little as all the valor of the Sudanese at ... d ht self-sacrifi- sweetens Diamond Dyes Dost wonder whether yon can dye er tint successfully, because perfect homo dyeing Is guaranteed with "Diamond Dyes" even If yon have sever dyed before, Druggists have all colors Directions la each package the stomach end starts bowels acting without griping; Contains no narcotics or soothing drugs. O Lonq-Llvs- d Family. Say "California" to your druggist and avoid counterfeits! Insist upon genGreat Britain lays claim to what la uine "California Fig Syrup" which believed to be the longest-live- d family contains directions. Advertisement. In tha world. They are seven In number five sisters and two brothere All Population of Canada. are married. They reside on the Island Tho population of Canada to about of 8kye tha largest of the Inner equally divided between city dwellers Hebrides, Iovernessblre, Scotland. All and country dwellers. Tbe total urban receive the old-ag- e pension from tha population to given as 4352,773 and British government, and their com- the total rural population 4,433,710. In Prince Edward Island and SasLlght for Water Pictures. katchewan the rural population runs In an attempt to find a way to enabout 73 per cent of tbe whole. able divert to take motion pictures In any depth of water, experiments In The coquette finds more to Interest spraying chemicals unher in the sttentlons denied her than der water have been undertaken at ibe does In those lavished upon her. tbe Lehigh university swimming pooL g What an awkward angel tbe average A good fighter manages to dodge a man would make. . lot of trouble. tike risk? MANY have found by their own that coffees effect is harmful. Health authorities warn . against risking the growth and development of children with the drug element in coffee. Why take chances with your health, and thus risk comfort, happiness success? Theres both safety and satisfaction in Postum as your mealtime drink. Youll thoroughly enjoy its delightful flavor and aroma. Postum contains nothing that can harm you. As many cups as you like at any meal with no penalties to pay in wakeful nights and daytime dullness. Your grocsr sails Postum In two forms: Instant Postum (in tins) praparsd instantly in tha cup by tba addition of boiling watar. Postum Caraal (in packages) for tboao who prefer tha flavor brought out by boiling fully 20 minutes. Tha of either form to shout one-ha- lf cent a cup. 'A n. History shows, of course, that warfare has been "revolutionized a score of times by various Inventions In the ascent from clubs to range cannon. But Invariably the offense has been later matched by the defense. Perhaps the airplane has already temporarily been rendered useless a story from London says that the explanation of the forced landing and confiscation of thirty French airplanes in Germany Is that the Germans secret method of putting them out of are using action. Will every gas have Its antidote? ' 75-ml- F.Q 3 OGgei!!) . |