oc-plain-dealer 1925-02-17
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OPPOSES UNIFIED AERIAL SERVICE
(Continued from Page One)
"These ships we have up at Lakehurst (Shenandoah and Los Angeles) are toys," said Mitchell.
"Why, great fleets of air craft could be sent over and attack us and we could not stop it except from the air. We have practically no naval air service," Mitchell added "and any battleship built, or that can be built, can be destroyed by aircraft." Unified air service will help the navy, not hurt it."
WASHINGTON, Feb. 17. — Esaying the role of prophet, Theodore Roosevelt, former assistant secretary of the navy, told the house aircraft investigating committee today that "no battle will ever be fought out alone in the air," and advocated keeping aviation "an auxiliary service."
Roosevelt opposed a unified air service, such as Brig-Gen. Wm. Mitchell proposes, saying "It would be a very great mistake."
"Our greatest trouble with aviation is that we treat it as a developed science," said Roosevelt.
"To my mind it would be a very great mistake, from the point of view of defense, to take the air services from the army and navy and unite them under one branch."
"Separating the services from the army and navy would damage their efficiency and be very expensive.
"I can't imagine any battle being fought out alone in the air. Aviation is an auxiliary branch and should be kept so."
"Aviation performs two prime functions, first, observation and second, harrassing. Observation and harrassing are different in the army than in the navy. Therefore, the army and the navy each differ in air forces."
PROHIBIT IMPORTS
WASHINGTON, Feb. 17.—Prohibition of importation into Canada of live chickens, turkeys and geese, without a certificate of inspection by the bureau of animal industry, has been extended to apply to Indiana the department of commerce announced today.
The restriction already applies to New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania and Connecticut.
SITUATION TENSE
BERLIN, Feb. 17.—Diplomatic tension between Germany and Roumania was near the breaking point today; it was said in diplomatic circles.
Roumania has been deporting scores of Germans. The German government has threatened reprisals.
The most economical little salesman is a Class Ad in this paper.
The argument that greater economy could be practiced by uniting the air forces was assailed by Roosevelt.
"While some money might be saved in purchasing supplies, I think it would be far more expensive if the efficiency of our airplanes were lessened," he said.
Roosevelt said the bombing tests did not prove the superiority of airplanes over battleships.
"It must be remembered that the battleships were stationary, they were obsolete and they had no guns to fire at us," Roosevelt said.
"No airplane now known could cruise to any American city and destroy it. The planes would have to be brought on airplane carriers. Therefore, keep the navy and the planes could not be brot over. But let the navy go down so that an enemy could establish a base and our cities would be open to airplane attack. The army and navy must pave the way"
De Young Funeral Services Tom
SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. Simple rites will mark the death of Michael H. De Young, guished San Francisco pu who died unexpectedly her day night.
The services will be held row morning in St. Mary's dral. The burial will be Archbishop Edward J. Harold officiate and the Rev. Chas. A. Ramm, will celebrate mass.
Interment will be at Hoover cemetery.
Expressions of condolence regret at the sudden death De Young have been recited his family from thousands plea throughout the world.
AID FOR L. A. HAWK
WASHINGTON, Feb. new $43,000,000 rivers bors bill was favorably dated by the senate committee which added a projects to those already by the house.
The principal waterway provement included in the $6,500,000 authorization survey ordered include Colorado river in Wyoming rado, Arizona, New Mexico and California with its utilization for navy harbor at San Francisco umba and lower William between Portland, Ore., sea, with a view to deepen widening the channel Columbia River from Astoria.
All the surveys order be carried out during fiscal year by army engines ports would be submitted greet at the next session mine whether the project be carried out.
"Separating the services from the army and navy would damage their efficiency and be very expensive.
"I can't imagine any battle being fought out alone in the air. Aviation is an auxiliary branch and should be kept so.
"Aviation performs two prime functions, first, observation and second, harrassing. Observation and harrassing are different in the army than in the navy. Therefore, the army and the navy each need separate air forces, different personnel, men who understand the peculiar and separate problems of the army and the navy.
"Granting that aviation is an auxiliary arm and that the great battle will be fought with airplanes as supplemental units, our flyers should be trained with the branch with which they are to fight, the army or the navy," said Roosevelt."
"It must be remembered that the battleships were stationary, they were obsolete and they had no guns to fire at us." Roosevelt said.
"No airplane now known could cruise to any American city and destroy it. The planes would have to be brought over on airplane carriers. Therefore, keep the navy and the planes could not be brot over. But let the navy go down so that an enemy could establish a base and our cities would be open to airplane attack. The army and navy must pave the way for airplanes.
"Aviation is important, absolutely so, but it must be kept an auxiliary arm of the army and navy to reach its maximum efficiency."
Roosevelt urged greater appropriations for the airplane development. Roosevelt further urged federal aid in developing commercial aviation."
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Animals, pound ...24c
Fig Newtons, pound ...20c
Grahams, pound ...19c
Oatmeals, pound ...19c
Crackers, fancy, small, pound 20c
Soap Chips, 2½ pounds...
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249 E. Center St.
Two Army and Navy Aero Leaders
Face Court-Martial Over Testimony
Brig. Gen. William Mitchell, assistant chief of the army air service, and Rear Admiral W. A. Moffett, chief of navy aeronautics, may be court-married as a result of their testimony before the house aircraft committee. General Mitchell continues to openly defy his superiors in his charges against air service chiefs. General Mitchell (left) is seen above with his chief examiner, Rep. Randolph Perkins of New Jersey, before the house committee; below are Admiral Moffett (left) and Captain A. W. Johnson, who told the committee that General Mitchell deliberately disobeyed orders in the bombing tests held in 1921.
Brig. Gen. William Mitchell, assistant chief of the army air service, and Rear Admiral W. A. Moffett, chief of navy aeronautics, may be court-martialled as a result of their testimony before the house aircraft committee. General Mitchell continues to openly defy his superior in his charges against air service chiefs. General Mitchell (left) is seen above with his chief examiner, Rep. Randolph Perkins of New Jersey, before the house committee; below are Admiral Moffett (left) and Captain A. W. Johnson, who told the committee that General Mitchell deliberately disobeyed orders in the bombing tests held in 1921.
HOUSEHOLD HINT
BY MRS. MORTON
MENU HINT
Breakfast
Oranges and Bananas Sliced
Oatmeal with Top Milk Sausages
Cornmeal Pancakes Toast
Coffee
Luncheon
Novel Luncheon Dish
Lemon-Apple Pie
Milk Tea
Dinner
Vegetable Soup with Toast Strips
Hot Ham Sandwiches Beet Salad
Suet Pudding Coffee
TODAY'S RECIPES
Novel Luncheon Dish — Bake large smooth potatoes. Slit lengthwise and lay open like a book. Scoop out inside; take half and mash. Season with salt, pepper and butter. Fill one side of each shell with this mixture. Lay on top a strip of bacon. Have ready, spinach cooked and dressed with white sauce. Fill the other side of potato shells. Set in oven till bacon is crisp, then serve.
Hot Ham Sandwiches — Cut bread as for sandwiches, using whole wheat or graham bread. Spread one piece with butter and the other with finely chopped ham and dip in slightly beaten egg. Fry a golden brown in hot fat.
Plain Southern Waffles — Mix and sift together one and three-quarter cups of flour, two and a half teaspoonfuls of baking powder and half a teaspoonful of salt. Have ready three-quarters of a cup of rich milk; add the beaten yolks of three eggs and one table-spoonful of melted butter and gradually combine with the dry ingredients. Beat the batter hard, fold in the stiffly whipped egg whites and bake in hot greased waffle irons. The extra eggs used in this recipe give an especially rich waffle.
Lemon-Apple Pie — Grated rind of one lemon, two tablespoons of lemon juice, one cup sugar, one egg yolk, one tablespoon melted butter, two tablespoons bread
MENU HINT
Breakfast
Malaga Grapes
Corn Griddle Cakes and Bacon
Coffee
Luncheon
Squash is Green Peppers
Cabbage Salad
Thousand Island Dressing
Dates Macaroons
Milk
Dinner
Candied Sweet Potatoes
Cranberry Jelly
Corn Bread
Club Sausage baked in Red Apples
Wax Beans
Apricot and Tomato Salad
Marguerites Tea
TODAY'S RECIPES
Club Sausages in Red Apples — Core generously large red apples, sprinkle with sugar and lemon juice, and set in a shallow pan with a little water. Stuff each apple with a small club sausage and bake until tender, turning the sausage once.
Apricot and Tomato Salad — On crisp lettuce set a canned, firm apricot. On this place a tiny fresh red tomato, slightly cut open. Top with mayonnaise.
Fig Pudding — One cup chopped figs, one cup shredded suet, two cups breadcrumbs, one level cup brown sugar, one egg, milk, one cup finely cut citron, orange and lemon peel. Mix all the dry ingredients first, add the egg well beaten and milk to consistency. Mix all thoroughly and boil or steam for four hours.
WHOLESOME FOODS MAKE STRONG BODIES
Teaching a child to form good habits is the keynote of building a healthy body. Children like wholesome food if that is the only kind they know. It is a mistake to let them taste of dishes that are highly seasoned or over-sweetened, for then the more mildly flavored dishes are disregarded.
The foods which a child needs for growth energy and to regu-
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MAKES, 2 for...15c
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TER (first called "Santa
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cup of rich milk; add the boaten
yolks of three eggs and one tablespoonful of melted butter and
gradually combine with the dry
ingredients. Beat the batter hard,
fold in the stiffly whipped egg
whites and bake in hot greased
waffle irons. The extra eggs used
in this recipe give an especially
rich waffle.
Lemon-Apple Pie—Grated rind
of one lemon, two tablespoons of
lemon juice, one cup sugar, one
egg yolk, one tablespoon melted
butter, two tablespoons bread
flour, one-fourth cup hot water,
two apples pared and grated, one
egg white. Mix grated rind of
lemon, lemon juice, sugar, egg
yolk, butter, flour, and hot water.
Then add apples and fold is stiffly
beaten egg white. Line pie pan
with pastry, fill with mixture,
cover with pastry and bake.
SUGGESTIONS
A woman who objected to the
additional labor involved in lifting
a heavy iron on and off a stand
while ironing conceived the idea
of buying a square yard of asbestos from the hardware store. She cat a piece large enough for the end of the ironing board and finds it saves her a good deal of work. The asbestos is very inexpensive, and a yard fasts for some time.
A clean pipe cleaner is a
thing to use to clean the cloak holes in the teapot spout.
All of us have struggled conentiously to clean the baseboard woodwork of our homes. It is one of the duties we do not enjoy doing. Crawling along on one's knees has no joy for either the thin or stout housewife and we always feel ourselves more or less heroines when we do a thorough job. One lively young woman solved the problem in a manner not very dignified, we admit, but none the less practical. She sits on her child's kiddle car and pushes herself along, scrubbing as she goes.
As you are getting ready to move get a number of boxes and number them, and as you pack the boxes have a sheet of paper near and write the articles you put in each box with the numbers on the paper, too. It is so much easier to find the article you want instead of unpacking all the boxes at once.
The most economical little salesman is a Class Ad in this page.
WHOLESOME FOODS MAKE STRONG BODIES
Teaching a child to form good habits is the keynote of building a healthy body. Children like wholesome food if that is the only kind they know. It is a mistake to let them taste of dishes that are highly seasoned or oversweetened, for then the more mildly flavored dishes are disregarded.
The foods which a child needs for growth, energy and to regulate the body functions may be grouped into five classes. The first group comprises fruits and vegetables, which supply mineral salts, regulating substances and vegetable acids. In the group of starches are potatoes, cereals, bread, cakes, macaroni and starchy puddings. Proteins are provided by milk, eggs, meat, including fowl and fish, nuts and such legumes as peas and beans. Sugar is supplied by sugar and various foods containing sugar, such as cakes, candies, preserves and syrups. As much fat as children need generally is afforded in the butter served with bread, the cream with cereal and in whole milk. Bacon is another good source of fat for children.
The daily diet of a child should include food from each of the five groups. Effort should be made to choose different foods from the several groups from day to day so that the child will not tire of them.
The business woman who keeps house or the housewife who has many outside interests may prepare appetizing meals with little labor if she uses her head to help her heels in her kitchen work. Sweet potatoes may be parboiled the previous evening—while washing the dishes, possibly—to be fried and served with the steak next day. Noodles may be boiled to be browned and served with the chops the next evening. Baked lima beans with bacon, soup, various kinds of stews, etc., do not lose any flavor by being partially or wholly cooked the previous evening. Gelatine may be prepared and served the next day with the addition of cream or fruit. Pie crust can also be made in quantity and easily rolled out in a few minutes for the dessert. For a change ice cream is always a welcome dessert and may be used with chocolate or fruit sauce.
SUPER - SAVINGS
Pepperell
SHEETING, SHEETS
and Pillow Cases
1 DAY ONLY
Wednesday
Eight Pertinent Points regarding
Pepperell Products
1. The construction of Pepperell never varies; every yard is absolutely uniform.
2. It is light in weight but very strong.
3. Successfully withstands the hardest wear.
4. Is the greatest popular priced sheeting.
5. It is fully guaranteed in every respect by the Pepperell Mills.
Pepperell Sheets
For the well appointed home
regarding
Pepperell Products
1. The construction of Pepperell never varies; every yard is absolutely uniform.
2. It is light in weight but very strong.
3. Successfully withstands the hardest wear.
4. Is the greatest popular priced sheeting.
5. It is fully guaranteed in every respect by the Pepperell Mills.
6. It is not loaded with impurities to give it weight.
7. It is honestly made of high grade cotton.
8. It has an unusually soft and pleasant feel.
Over 60 Years
the Standard
This fact alone assures you that Pepperell is MOST DEPENDABLE, buy sheets and cases of proven worth.
Pepperell
SHEETS
—free of all starch or dressing—perfect snow white bleach.
72x90-inch; $1.65 value–Sale……$1.29
81x90-inch; $1.75 value–Sale……$1.39
Pepperell
SHEETINGS
—a wonderfully pleasing quality of sheeting, full wide, guaranteed to give satisfaction.
UNBLEACHED
Full 72 inch. wide; 60c grade……42¢
Full 81 inch. wide; 65c grade……48¢
PEPPERELL Pillow Cases
42x36 inch. …… 35¢
45x36 inch. …… 39¢
BLEACHED
Full 72 inch. wide; 65c grade……48¢
Full 81 inch. wide; 70c grade……52¢
PEPPERELL SHEETINGS, SHEETS AND PILLOW CASES are woven by experts from high-grade cotton. Over 60 years of experience and strict adherence to policy of first quality backs the brand Pepperell. It has always been uniformly high in quality and always of dependable worth.
PEPPERELL SLOGAN IS: "Light enough for easy washing
PEPPERELL SHEETINGS, SHEETS AND PILLOW CASES are woven by experts from high-grade cotton. Over 60 years of experience and strict adherence to policy of first quality backs the brand Pepperell. It has always been uniformly high in quality and always of dependable worth.
PEPPERELL SLOGAN IS, "Light enough for easy washing—heavy enough to stand the wear."
Towels
19 x 37 Medium Heavy Bath Towels Worth 39¢ now... 29¢
22 x 41 Medium Heavy Bath Towel, 4 colored stripe borders interwoven Worth 45¢ now... 33¢
18 x 40 Heavy Weight Bath Towels—Worth 45¢ now... 33¢
22 x 45 Heavy Weight Bath Towels—Worth 59¢ now... 39¢
16 x 34 Glass Towels in Red or Blue Stripe; all over and neat border ... 15¢
18 x 36 Heavy Huck Towel, red bor.ders, Worth 25¢ 17½¢
FINE MUSLIN
Hope36in. Bleached Muslin 17½c—the standard grade of muslin thruout America, strictly dependable and desirable.
32 in. Dress Ginghams 29c
TOILE DU NORD
—35¢ quality in the newest and best spring patterns; Toile Du Nord, the best wash fabric your money will buy.
Pamico Cloth 45c
GUARANTEED COLOR FAST SUITINGS
—Carried in every color you can name, and we guarantee the colors, subject to replacement plus the dress making cost if it fades.
Yard Wide Percales 17½c
PATTERNS SUITED FOR DRESSES AND SHIRTS
—a wonderful assortment of patterns suited for dresses and aprons and shirtings; 25¢ quality.
Winsor Plisse Crepe, all colors 25�c
—Plisse crepe, fine soft quality crepe in colors of pink, blue, lavender and white.
Damask Table Cloths $1.39
58x58-INCH MERCERIZED
—Standard quality damask, beautiful floral designs, linen finish, hemstitched edges.
Sebastian Brothers
the Seemore Center of Prospect