AY - Pemorraiicy atdpan Bellefonte, Pa., August 24, 1917. mean PLAY EASEBALL IN FLANDERS Canadians Take the Great American Game Over Sea and Introduce It in the Fighting Zone. The baseball season has opened in Flanders. The roar of cannon can be ‘heard above the crack of the bat and ball, and spectators and players have a lively time of it. The great American game has been taken over to Europe's fighting zone by the Canadians. Each major unit of the Dominion forces has its team, and a series of games has been scheduled. Prolonged battles or great advances will, of course, interfere with the schedule, but nevertheless the games have been arranged for and are eagerly antici- pated. The baseball outfits including uniforms, bats, balls, masks, gloves and all the rest have been sent over by patriotic Canadians. The news of victories on the diamond behind the lines travels quickly to the men in the trenches, where many a cheer has gone up, to the astonishment of the Germans, who on frequent occasions have taken this outburst of enthusiasm to be the forerunner of an attack. Un- doubtedly our boys in khaki will go over to Europe well provided with baseball kits, and there will be some lively battles going on behind the lines while the other more deadly contest is fought at the front. CITY GIRLS LEARN FARMING After Period of Training They Are Taking Places of Men Who Are Needed in War Work. There is a 200-acre farm in West- chester county, New York, where 50 girls are learning to be farmers. As soon as they have a knowledge of any kind of work they hire out to the neighboring farmers for 20 cents an hour, to take the place of the men, who are needed for other kind of work in this busy war time. An employment bureau to supply women for this kind of work in New York state is being established by the standing committee on agriculture of the mayor's committee of women on national defense, and it has been proved that there is not only a demand but a supply of woman farm workers. Some of the girls at the Westchester camp are college girls and they all wear blue shirts and overalls, except the dieticians from Teachers’ college, who wear white. They get their board and rooms at the Westchester farm while learning amd 50 cents a day. Next year these girls will be compe- tent to start other agricultural centers. They begin with a few hours of work each day and increase it until they can work up to the hours of a man of nor- mal strength. Hurled Into Sunshine. “I was in Petrograd during the first appraisal of the new assets,” writes Isaac F. Marcosson in Everybody’s. “Like prisoners long immured in the dark and suddenly hurled into the sm shine, the people blinked in the strange light of their unfamiliar emancipation. The onetime bailiwick of the czars was a study in scarlet—animate like an American city during a national con- vention. Its great thoroughfare—the Nevski Prospekt—once the Street of Sacrifice, was now the Highway of Happiness. Never was there such glad reunion. It was like the meeting of lost tribes after. much wandering in the wilderness. Exiles streamed in from Siberia under the general am- nesty; Jews came forth from their long restraint, for creed lines were down; delegations of troops flocked from the front. Equality was the password that loosed every tongue.” Gunfire and Rainfall. Investigations to determine whether intense and prolonged gunfire really influences rainfall, as is so often as- serted, have beem proposed by the Paris Academy of Sciences. Ioniza- tion of the air is produced in various ways by artillery discharges, and it is regarded as theoretically probable that this may lead to precipitation in air charged with moisture. It is believed, however, that the influence could apply only to small falls. The effect of even great battles must be merely local, and heavy and prolonged rain can only be- explained by the action of large atmos- pheric currents. Siberia Adopts Gregorian Calendar. Viadivostok journals announce the abolition of the “old-style” calendar; all dates have been set forward to the “new style.” The Japan Chronicle as- sumes that “this reform will carry with it an abolition of religious holi- days hitherto enforced in Russia.” A working year in old Russia consisted of about 200 days; heavy fines were imposed for working on réligious holi- days. Those restrictions are now gone forever. Receive Equal Wages. The fourth Irish Teachers’ congress was held recently in Dublin and it is Jnteresting te know that the woman teachers of Ireland receive the samé ‘pay as the men for the same kind of work. English woman teachers have tried to obtain the same pay but Ire- land was first in having the demand for fair play backed by the entire or- ganization. ——If you find it in the “Watek- man” it’s true. LETTER SENT TO WRONG MAN One of Least Familiar of Gladstone Stories Is Recalled by Death of Irish Lord. The death of Lord Clonbrock recalls one of the best and perhaps one of the least familiar of Gladstone stories, says the New York Herald. The late peer was a remarkably venerable per- son and much more sympathetic to the tenants’ cause than most Irish tories, When the agrarian question was at its fiercest, he made a pacific and moder- ate speech in Ireland partly approving Gladstone's land bill. Gladstone saw the speech and, always eager to gain a recruit, wrote a civil letter, begin- ning “My Dear Lord,” expressing his gratification at this unlooked-for sup- port and begging his correspondent to waive the ceremony of an introduction and to dine with him in Downing street to discuss some knotty point in the bill. He handed the letter, as was his custom, to a private secretary to di- rect and post. The private secretary misdirected it to Lord Clon——, an ab- sentee landlord and an Irish Tory of the hottest type, who was sober only at unprecedented intervals. The peer came to dine in due course. As soon as the women had left the table the G. O. M. drew up his chair and opened the subject in the most earnest tones. “] was glad te see that your lord- ship took a more sympathetic view of the subject than the bulk of your or- der. You have unequaled knowledge of the Irish tenant farmers. Would you favor me with your opinion of them and of the condition of Ireland generally?” . “Condition of Ireland?” stuttered the wine-charged visitor, “— awful. Ten- ant farmers? The dirtiest set of rascals that ever cumbered God's earth.” Only one observation was open to the discomfited host: “Let us join the ladies.” CENSUS TAKEN BY DENMARK Little Kingdom Counts 2,920,000 inhab- itants, an Increase of 163,000 Over Figures of Five Years Ago. Very few European countries have been in a position to proceed, since August 1, 1914, with their normal quin- quennial census. Denmark is one ot the exceptions. On February 1, 1916, the little kingdom couated 2,920,000 inhabitants, i. e., an increase of 183,000 souls over the census of 1911. The distribution ratio is 75 inhabit. ants to the square kilometer. The Copenhagen Frederiksberg county con- tains 605,000 inhabitants, i. e., more than one-fifth of the total population. The 74 other cities number 604,000 peo- ple. Rustic population, 1,711,000. The three principal cities, besides Copenhagen, are: Aarhus, 66,000; Odense, 45,000, and Aalborg, 38,000. The present war increased the import- ance of the seaport town of Esbjerg (19,000 inhabitants), which hardly ex- isted 50 years ago. The “Why” of the Swagger Stick. These cute little “swagger sticks” that officers in uniform are carrying oan the street are the reverse of military in their appearance, says the Boston Transeript. Odd little affairs, some- times not more than a foot and a half long and more suggestive of effemi- nacy than of masculine swagger. The swagger stick, as nearly as its origin can be traced, came from England, where, in days of piping peace, the soldier's very tight dress uniform made it almost impossible for him to dispose of his hands when walking about off duty, and it apparently be- came necessary for him to have some- | thing to carry and twirl. In England the private soldier carries a swagger stick as well as the officer. They are incongruous with khaki. But put a tight, red tunic on a man and a gay little pill-box on the side of his head, and the stick becomes logical enough. However, swagger sticks are not car- ried in the trenches. Learn to Rule the Spirit. There are very few of us but have reason to know that a well-ruled spirit would have saved us a world of sor- row. Dickens, that reader of the hu- man heart, touches upon this point with quaint simplicity when he makes Mr. Meagles mildly suggest to his daughter’s maid when her fits of pas- sion came on, “Count ten, Tatty- coram,” and when they were unusually violent, he pleads: “All'T ask of you, dear child, is to count twenty-fiye.” If we would quench fires of passion. a pause, a silence, may change the whole course of events and save a life- time of misery.—McClure’s Magazine. Convicts Make Good in Road-Building. ‘The investigations of the national commission on prisons and prison la- bor into the reliability. of convicts at work on roads and farms shows that the vast majority of the same and able-bodied men row confined in penal institutions, if properly handled, can be depended upon to perform the tasks set for them without the slightest fear of their escaping. In Colorado prisoners in six large camps are con- stantly employed inythe construction of roads. Purchasing in Season. With fruits.and vegetables the price is often determined by the season. A vegetable ott of seagon is much more expensive than one in season, but it is no more nutritious. In order to pur- ¢hase to best advantages; the house- wife should understand such things and should also be familiar. with gen- eral market conditions.—Exchange. 3 “Trench Traps” of the Germans. “What do you think made that wound?” asked an officer who was conducting me through one of the ad- vanced hospitals on the Somme, pointing to a badly swollen and lacer- ated ankle of a soldier that was just being dressed. The puffy and discol- ored flesh might have come from a severe sprain, but two or three black punctures on either side indicated that the injury was a more aggravat- ed one. “If there was a tropical river about,” I replied finally, “I should hazard a guess that the man had step- ped into the mouth of an alligator, or had been nipped by one while swim- ming. As I have never heard of alli- | gators in the Somme, I fear I shall | have to give it up. What did do it?” “Trench trap,” was the laconic re- ply; “or, to be more exact, a wolf trap. Ever since the steady pressure cf our advance began to tell—since the Boche began to realize that he would have to continue backing up before our attacks—the Germans have been leaving them behind in the | trenches, or laid in inviting little run- ways through the wire entanglements. Not many of our men were caught after the first day or two—we have only had two or three cases here— but several scores of traps have been | discovered, along with a lot more of | diabolically ingenious contrivances de- | signed to hamper our advance or to give us pause in the matter of occu- pying abandoned dugouts. In fact, | the dodging of the trench traps has | added quite a new interest ard zest to our latest attacks.” Scientific “trench trappery” is in- deed a new development of modern | warfare, and, iike so many other | things, it has taken the methodical and thorough Teuton to bring out its refinements, to make a fine art of it. The wolf traps were only the first of a series of many devilish little devices left behind by the oust- ed Germans to deliver a last blow at the victorious “Tommy” or “Poilu,” a sort of modernization of the famous Parthian shot. Obviously, “trench trapppery” par! excellence is only practicable in the face of a slowly and steadily advanc-' ing movement; just such a one as that | on the Somme has become, or as Ver- dun was in its opening phases. Obvi- ously, too—since the proverb that a once-burned child is twice shy applies with equal force to the French and British soldier-—it must show a pro- gressive development to stand any chance of success, must be constantly varied, constantly carried on in a new way. That the general scheme has been a flat failure is principally due to the fact that the Germans have not been able to vary their devices suffi- ciently to baffle their wary quarry, who, meeting guile with guile, have as often as not trapped the would-be trappers and “hoisted them with their own petards.””—September Popular Mechanics Magazine. ——California newspapers an- nounce that a chemical compound has been perfected, by a man in that State, which will take the place, in motors of all kinds, of gasoline. Ex- periments] runs Lave been made, it is said, in which tea cents’ worth of the compound, dissolved in water, has propelled a six-cylinder car, carrying seven passengers, 100 miles over country roads. The automobile own- er who has been compelled to pay re- cent prices for gasoline would proba- bly have about the same sensation, were he able to run his car at a cost of one-tenth of a cent a mile for mo- tive power, as a housewife were a gro- cer to offer to sell flour at $2 a barrel. se vee Experts Both. “How do you feel, killing a man?” Colonel, after “Oh, I don’t know, Doctor; how do you feel ?”’—London Opinion. War Has Killed 250,000 Horses. “I have lately come into possession of authentic informaiion on the waste of horseflesh,” writes the editor of Truth, “and it is calculated to excite the greatest horror and indignation.” Leaving out Mesopotamia and Af- rica outside of Egypt, he writes that more than 250,000 horses have died during the war up to about the end of May, and in addition 30,000 have been sold owirg to old age and disease. He continues: “The most significant fact of all is that 33,000 animals have died in America while awaiting shipment, while 6,000 have dicd at sea in the course of transit. Here we have 39,- 000 animals purchased for military purposes, not ane of which has heen available for that purpose owing to their previous disease. In this is pre- sumatly to be found the explanation of the greater part of the scandal— namely, the culpable negligence, or worse, with which the animals have been bought. “I am told that some which have survived the Atlaniic voyage were found to be over thirty years old. Some are even said to have died upon the gangway at the port of shipment under the exertion of walking aboard. It may almost be taken for granted that the rate of mortality on this side of the Atlantic has been aggravated by neglect, ignorant horsemanship and tc some extent downright ill- |! treatment. On all of these points men who have served at the front can give evidence. I have myself heard many lurid statements on the subject. But the figures show that the root of the whole scandal lies across the At- lantic, where the wretched beasts are bought.” Upward of 1,000,000 horses and mules, the writer says, have keen pur- i chased by the British Government i during the war, so that more than 25 per cent. of the -animals purchased have died. With regard to deaths of horse: or mules, due to “enemy ac- tion,” he says that in one week, out of more than five thousand deaths in France, only 118 were due to gunshot : wounds—a trifling percentage. About 42,000 of the animals have died in England. German Railroads in Bad Shape. A well-informed neutral observer writes that traveling on a German passenger train nowadays is by no means a pleasure. “The carriages vie with each other in dirtiness and bad repair. Everything indicates neglect. This 1s not surprising, for the de- mands made on the German railways are enormous. Almost everywhere in the territory occupied by the Central Powers in the Balkans German loco- i motives and other railway material are exclusively employed. They have to be content in the Fatherland with old rolling stock which was already set aside for less exacting work. The coaches are pretty well played out, and one 1s often surprised that a rick- ety carriage does not suddenly fall to pieces.” Side by side with the defective and inadequate rolling stock goes another great difficulty due to the lack of grease and train oil for lubricating purposes. The substitutes which must be employed are of very infer- ior quality, and do no harm to the rolling stock. The number of women guards increases steadily. In very many cases they are badly acquain- ted with their duties and have no bet- ter answer to give than “Es tut mir leod, mein Herr; ich fahre die Strecke selbst sum ersten Mal” (I'm sorry, sir; it’s the first time I’ve done this journey myself.) One sees women employed on railways not only as guards, as formerly, but as brakemen and artisans. ——Put your ad. | in the “Watch- man.” CASTORIA. CASTORIA. AATAR RR RR EER RRR RRR RRR The Kind You Have Always = _———— Bought, and which has been in use for over over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his per- TY sonal supervision since its infancy. . 3 oY Allow no one to deceive you in this, All Counterfeits, Imitations and '‘* Just-as-good ”’ are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Qil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use fer the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea ; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALwaYs o Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY, 59-20-e.0. EVERYTHING ™* iia” All the goods we advertise here are selling at prices prevailing this time last seascu. MINCE MEAT. We are now making our MINCE MEAT and keeping it fully up to our usual high standard; nothing cut out or cut short and are selling it at our former price of 15 Cents Per Pound. Fine Celery, Oranges, Grape Fruit, Apricots, Peaches, Prunes, Spices, Breakfast Foods, Extracts, Baking Powders, Soda, Cornstarch. The whole line of Washing Powders, Starches, Blueing and many other articles are selling at the usual prices. COFFEES, TEAS AND RICE. On our Fine Coffees at 25¢, 28¢, 30c¢, 35¢ and 40c, there has been no change in price on quality of goods and no change in the price of TEAS. Rice has not advanced in price and can be used largely as a substitute for potatoes. All of these goods are costing us more than formerly but we are doing our best to Hold Down the Lid on high prices, hoping for a more favorable market in the near future. LET US HAVE YOUR ORDER and we will give you FINE GROCERIES at reasonable prices and give you good service. SECHLER & COMPANY, Bush House Block, - 57-1 - - - Bellefonte, Pa. L— Lr I " Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. Shoes. Shoes. YEAGERS SHOE TORE Shoes Shoes Shoes $1.98 $1.98 $1.98 Your choice of any pair of Ladies’ 3 SHOE For $1.98 These Pumps are of this season’s goods, made in many styles, Patent and Gun Metal. A Rare Bargain. SHOES SHOES SHOES $198 $198 $1.98 YEAGER'S, The Shoe Store for the Poor Man. Bush Arcade Bldg. 58-27 ° BELLEFONTE, PA. [ 0) / X Present Your Wife With a Check Book! You'll be surprised at the system you'll inaugurate in your ‘home if you PAY ALL YOUR BILLS WITH CHEEKS. You can tell HOW MUCH IT COSTS TO A PENNY TO RUN YOUR HOME. It will give your wife a sort of business education. Start an Account Today In Your : Wife’s Name THE CENTRE COUNTY BANK, -66 BELLEFONTE oy 4 4 “or