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Show NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Department of the Interior. U. S. Land Office at Salt Ijike City, Utah July 27, 1918. Notice Is hereby given that. Robert R. McGinty. of Nada. Utah. who. on March 1. 1915.. made Homestead Entry. En-try. Serial No. 013957. for N V4 . Section Sec-tion 9. Township 31 South. Range 12 West. Salt Lake Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make three-year three-year Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before Herbert Nichols. 1". S. Commissioner, at Milford. Mil-ford. Utah, on the 7th day of Sep-1 Sep-1 temher. 191S. Claimant names as witnesses: John E. Rambler, L. A. Culmsee, R. C. McGinty. Clara B. Culmsee. all of Nada. Utah. GOULD B. BLAKELY. Register. First publication August 2. 191S. Last publication August 30, 1 9 1 S . bombs, made from artillery shells, on concentration camps and cantonments. canton-ments. Showers of small steel arrows ar-rows were spilled sometimes on convoys, con-voys, troop trains and bodies of massed men. The Germans began day by bombing of cities in 1915, and the Allies bombarded Karlsruhe in reprisal later in the same year. Since then evolutionin organized bombing developed rapidly and the French began be-gan night bombing, but this was not undertaken by the Germans until August, 1916. At the present time large groups, including several squadrons of bombing bomb-ing machines go over the lines from time to time and completely destroy their objective,' be it a city or a camp, a column of troops, of a trench system. Unfortunately the allies' air forces have to travel for many miles over hostile territory defended by anti-aircraft guns to attack German cities, while the enemy can attack French cities by flying only a short distance beyond the allied lines. The allies are developing large bombing planes which carry sufficient suffi-cient fuel for long excursions and armament to protect them when they are attacked by fighting airplanes. air-planes. Bombing squadrons are escorted es-corted usually over the lines by fast fighting squadrons of eighteen planes to a squadron, and then left to their own devices for the fighters seldom carry sufficient fuel to permit them to accompany the bombers on the round trip. The dropping of the bomb is similar simi-lar to shooting a rifle. First, you set your sights and wind gauge, you hohi the rifle properly, and- finally you pull the trigger at the proper moment Tf vnnr nmmnnitinn io standard, your sights correct, you hit the taget. So with bombing. If you set your sights correctly, fly your plane correctly over the objective object-ive and drop the bomb at the proper time you will hit the target. |