SA ————— Belletonte, Pa., December 7, 1917. LINES TO HALFMOON VALLEY. Sweet valley of my childhood With your gardens and your vines, Nestled in among the mountains Covered o'er with birch and vines. Yes, I love you, quiet valley, I love your meadows green, And your murmuring crystal water, As it runs the hills between. O! Valley mid the mountains, Thou’rt fair as thou wast, when A happy girl I wandered Through meadow, glade and glen. Gathering the sweet wild flowers That grew in beauty there, Or wreathing apple blossoms For Anna's soft brown hair. We picked berries ripe and red, And chestnuts rich and brown, Apples too, and black walnuts The autumn winds shook down. Thou’rt not changed! Not so with me, My hair is turning gray Most of the friends I loved so well Have left thee, gone for aye! By Margaret Gray Dorsey. STRAIGHT FROM HEADQUAR- TERS. (Concluded ‘from last week). To her combined gratification and mystery, he didn’t presume, when the second act began, upon her concession made during the first; and out of her mature discretion she refrained from: further overture. To the best of her recollection, it was eight years since any man had neglected a similar oc- casion; she was at once amused and touched by his forbearance. She was glad that he had confirmed her opin- ion of him. But had she erred in her assumption of how he regarded her? She glanced appraisingly at him, and saw that he was abstracted; his eyes were still blurred in thought, but his boyish chin was extraordinarily square, and his mouth was set in a hard, straight line. She touched his a rm. “Don!” she said gently. “Don!” “What?” He came back to earth so precipitately that for an instant he was dazed. “Oh! It’s over, isn’t it?” “What were you thinking, Don?” He exhaled slowly, and looked down at her. “I was thinking about one night a year ago,” he said. “Some actresses from Paris came out and got up a show for us, and a mighty poor show it was, too. And there was a piano . and two violins; they played the same thing this orchestra played when the curtain went down, and while they were playing you could hear heavy gunfire all the time—they were shell- ing one of our hospital "units. . . . Let’s get out of here.” As they emerged into the late after- noon, Frances was subtly distraught and apprehensive. She realized that she wasn’t suitably gowned for the time and place, and she dreaded the conception of dining, or even of ap- pearing on the street, in the theatre district at this hour, or later, in her present costume. “Tea?” asked the young man in- vitingly. Frances pondered a moment. “Well—I’ll be perfectly frank, Don! Would you rather we had tea togeth- er, or would you rather I'd run home and slip on another gown and meet you somewhere for dinner? I--7 “Good lord!” he ejaculated, halting in his tracks. “It’s a quarter past five!” “That isn’t late.” “It is for me,” he said ruefully. “Jiminy! The afternoon’s gon2 fast! Why, my train leaves at haif past eight! We can’t have tea and dinner too! That’s only three hours!” “But if you don’t mind. I—" “But I like your dress,” he protest- ed vehemently. “I want you to—but please don’t pay any attentioa to what I say!” “Why not?” “Because,” he explained, “you’re doing a wonderful thing for me, a wonderful thing; and it’s none of my fool business—" “Instead of tea, then,” she suggesi- ed, “why don’t we walk siowiy up the Avenue to the Plaza, and then decide what we do want to do?” “The Plaza? That’s a thought! I’ve always wanted to see that hotel! We'll eat there!” It took the last ounce of her cour- age to hold her tongue. She could reasonably expect to be seen by at least a dozen friends and acquaintan- ces in the Plaza dining-room:. ‘There were countless other restaurants where she might be safe from obser- vation, and there were countless bet- ter fitted to the young man’s purse. “Would you particuia!y like to go there, Don? Isn’t there some quieter place—"’ “I certainly would,” he said cheer- fully. “The best’s none too good to- night. That’s what I’ve been saving up for all day. Everybody’s heard of the Plaza. We'll go there! There's no other place you'd rather go, is there?” His exaltation at the mere idea was so obvious that she couldn’t bring herself to deny him. “No,” said Frances faintly. “I’d— 1d like to dine at the Plaza with you, on.” “We’er off!” he cried, swinging her into step. To her profound relief, the table he commandeered was in an out-of-the- way corner; and his circumstances, added to the fact that they were din- ing a good hour and a half in advance of the conventions, revived her brave- ry. She became increasingly respon- sive; so that the young man glowed to her vivacity and to her transcend- ant loveliness. In return, he spared no effort to please her; he even en- larged upon his autobiography, and this, to a man of his extraordinary modesty, was the greatest concession he could have made. “But,” he protested at length, “do you realize you’ve hardly told me a word about yourself—Frances? Here I've been ranting along—” “I couldn’t,” she said quickly. “It would sound terribly futile, Don, after the things you’ve been through. And, besides, I don’t think you’d like it.” He looked perplexedly at her ey drummed on the table. Quite by ac- ! cident, as he was struggling to inter- pret her remark, his eyes fell upon her left hand and he started percept- ibly, held his breath for a moment, and forced a wry smile. He was very tense and very much chagrined. “I am a fool!® he said slowly. “I— 0 you’re—married ?”’ “Yes, Don.” He compressed his lips and appear- ed to be swallowing hard. “Well, most nice girls are. . .. I never noticed your ring!” He tried to relax, and failed dismally. “Tell me about it.” “I—I can’t Don. Please don’t ask me.” “That must mean you're not so very happy,” he blurted without thinking, and added instantly: “Ex- cuse me; I shouldn’t have said that. It just slipped out. Only I’m sort of stunned for a second. Please don’t be angry with me, but is Frances Put- nam your real name? It means a good deal to me—" “That’s what my oldest and best friends still call me,” she said rally- ing him. “But let’s talk about some- thing else, Don; I’m not worth the time. You've had a life!” Nevertheless, it was a quarter hour before he fully retrieved his spirits. She understood, and she was distress- ed at the possibility that she might have neutralized all the joy he had previously accumulated. “And yet,” he said suddenly, “that makes it all the more splendid of you.” “What does?” “To have you married. It takes away some of the sentimental part of it, and then gives it back again. It changes the point of view, that’s all. You must have all sorts of important things to do, and you've given up a whole long day—" “What’s one day out of so many!” she scoffed. “For you, yes. But for me it’s one day out of so mighty, mighty few. Just imagine eight hundred days of fighting, and then today, and tomor- row I'll be on the rolls again for the duration!” “It doesn’t really seem possible,” she admitted. “It’s hard to believe there is such a war, and that we aren’t just telling stories; it’s so peaceful here, and commonplace. All but you.” “Not to me, either. But when I realize what you must have given u ? “Do you know why I did, Don?” “No. I wish I did.” “Because of what you said on the 'bus, and at lunch, too. Do you re- member? About your not having anyone else? And needing some en- couragement? I'm not very unself- ish, Don, but somehow I couldn’t let you go away like that.” The boy fumbled with his glass, and finally looked at her with abso- lute candor. “Then maybe you won't mind if I tell you I’ve loved you all day? And I haven’t stopped—even if you have got a ring on.” She leaned toward him, and replied with equal unaffectedness. “Don, ~I hoped you would. That may sound queer, but it’s perfectly true, and Tm not disloyal to my—to anyone in the world when I say it. You made me consider what you need- ed; and most of us haven’t consider- ed what soldiers need, we've only thought about what we cared to do. It’s been incredibly selfish of us. But after I'd talked to you—" “I’m not ashamed of stoutly. “Neither am I, Don. I’m proud of it. If it ever gives you the tiniest lit- tle spark of pleasure to remember this—"’ “Im twenty-one,” he said, lifting his head, “and when I'm nintey-nine, if I live that long, I'll remember. Be- cause I was going back into service without one single bit of anything to carry me through. . .. I won’t pre- tend it isn’t a hard job—I don’t want to be killed! But you’ve made it so much easier for me. I can pretend I’ve got somebody who was interested. And the hardest part of this whole business, for me, anyhow, was in hav- ing it so awfully impersonal! That's why I was so silly about going past that house this morning. They call us ‘defenders’ and I didn’t have any- body in particular to defend! It was just a job, a nasty job that had to get done. And now—well, I’ve told you that already. You’ve put yourself in the place of all the friends I haven’t got.” : “I’ll try to think so.” “Will you have to try? believe me?” She couldn’t question the sincerity in his eyes. “Yes, Don.” He glanced at his watch and mo- tioned sharply to the waiter. “Just thirty minutes left; it’ll take twenty of them to get to the Grand Central and get my bag out of stor- age. I've got my ticket already. I'm afraid I'll have to say good-by.” Frances put out her hand toward him. “But I'm going to the station with ou! y He reddened and inhaled with ec- stacy. “Will you do that, too?” “Of course! I don’t send a to the front every day!” “No,” said the young man, count- ing bills, and Frances saw that he was able to retain but two for future uses, “but you ought to. Well, I'm afraid we'll have to get going.” Once on the Avenue he took her arm; and again by intuition she was sentient of the delicacy of his regard for her. He held her almost fearful- ly as though she were too fragile, and yet she knew that if he obeyed the im- pulses of his youth he would be hold- ing her convulsively; and her heart was filled with an emotion which was maternal, and not maternal, because of his chivalry and his longing. “You'll let me write to you,” he said gruffly, after they had traversed half a dozen blocks in silence. She shivered, and felt his grip close protectingly. “Don, I—I’'m sorrier than I can tell you, but—" “You don’t need to go any further,” he warned her. “I was just going to take it back myself. I don’t believe I it,” he said Don't you godson could write to you, after all.” “I know,” she said. “Do you? Are you sure? Will you mind if I talk to you about it from here to the station? I won’t if you say not to.” “Tell me whatever you want to, Don.” He drew a long breath. t “Well, the reason I can’t write to you is because I couldn't say what I want to. You see how that is. I wouldn’t feel right about it—now that I’ve seen your ring. I don’t believe you would, either. And if I wrote anything else, it would be worse than nothing at all. Because this day has been—perfect. And I'd hate to think of you in any other way than this way.” “Yes,” she said slowly. you would.” “And it holds good for you, too. I wouldn’t want to have you send me the only kind of letter you ought to send me; and you musn’t send me “I know the other kind. So the best thing is for us just to say good-by, and let it go at that.” “You may be wise, Don.” “But I'm going to think of you pretty often,” he said soberly. “And even if I don’t write to you, I hope you won't think I've forgotten all about this—or stopped appreciating it” “I won’t Don; I’ll understand.” He convoyed her safely across the | Avenue at Forty-fourth Street. “By and by,” he said, “you may get to wondering if it’s been worth while —wasting this day. For you, I mean, not for me. So I want to tell you this: If you call it worth while to have given me a feeling that I never had before in all my life, then you’ve done it. I don’t know exactly how to describe it to you, but I feel as though it’s all mine.” He embraced all points of the compass in his inclusive ges- ture. “I feel as though these people on the street belong to me, and you do, too; I mean, as though we're all one big crowd over here, and every- body’s working and fighting for everybody else, and everybody’s sort of related to everybody else, and there isn’t any such thing as a stranger. I’m not sure if you get that, but—” “And still,” she said, “you're going I’m not sure if you get that, but—" “And still,” she said, “you’re going why I’m going! I’m going to shoot as straight as I can, so there won't have to be any danger of shooting and killing after this war is finished. You can’t stop to argue with a high- wayman, you know. You remcve him —s0 he can’t hold up anybody else. And I don’t feel related to the Fritzes. they’re the highwaymen of the whole world. Even a minister wouldn’t try preaching to a thug that was strang- ling him! And everybody I can see now looks like an old friend of mine; and men can fight like tomecats for their friends! I suppose that sounds like awful rubbish to you.” “No, not at all; on the contrary, Don.” He swerved her down the wide stairway into the ramp, and around to the parcel-room. A moment later, burdened with a shabby suit case, he led her to the waiting-room and chose an unoccupied bench. “You wait here a second,” he said. “T’ll be back in a jiffy.” He hurried away, and left her men- tally numb with the problem he had stated for her. When he returned he bore a slim sheaf of white rosebuds, which he dumped unceremoniously on her lap. “There!” he said. “And there’s only ten minutes more!” She was almost crying as she held the flowers to her; she knew that they | must have cost him the very last of his remaining bills. “Oh, Don!” she said unsteadily. “Oh, you dear boy! You shouldn’t have done that! It’s sweet of you, but—" _ : “Nonsense!” he said, coughing. “Wel; . .. She stood up, and together they walked out to the train shed. At the brass railings they halted, and simul- taneously stepped aside from the traffic. “You must wear one of these—for me!” said Frances, selecting a flaw- less bud. He bent toward her, and with fingers that trembled in spite of her resolution, she tucked the tiny flower into his buttonhole. He remov- ed his hat, and stammered: “Thank you ever so much . ..” “Don’t, Don’t! It’s all right.” “You’ve been an angel,” he said with difficulty. “No, no, no! If I’ve helped you the least little bit—"? _ “You’ve given me—” He flushed, and shifted his weight restively. “Well, I'll think of you over there— every day. I’ve got to get aboard!” “Good-by Don.” She knew that her eyes were wet, and she couldn’t con- strue this uncharacteristic weakness. What was the lad to her? “Good-by, dear,” he said, with utter simplicity. “I'm mighty glad I found you instead of those folks up town. Good-by!” He had taken her hand and he was looking straight into her eyes. “Oh!” said Frances, with a dry lit- tle laugh. And without deliberation or demur she lifted her face to him. “Thank you,” he said gravely, and kissed her only once. Unwittingly he released her and picked up his batter- ed suit case. A whimsical slogan of the trenches came to her, and she spoke it uncon- sciously. “Carry on, Don!” Half through the door, he turned and sent her a glorious smile of un- derstanding and gratitude, and some- thing else that twisted her heart, and choked her. “You bet I will!” said the boy, with indomitable purpose in his voice. A gray-clad official slammed the twin doors shut behind him. It was long past midnight when a portly, jocund gentleman in freshly wrinkled evening clothes, dismount- ‘led from a limousine before a huge stone house on Riverside Drive and suffered himself to be steered by the chauffeur up the steps to the vesti- bule. Thereafter a butler took this gentleman in tow, and subsequently deposited him with a valet who did for him as insolently as he dared. “Mis’ Vryling home?” queried the jocund gentleman. “Not that I care damn— just for conv’sation. Ig she?” (Continued on page 3, eolumn 4). Health and Happiness “Mens sana in corpore sano” Number 29. PASTEURIZATION OF MILK. Fig. 5. A home-made pasteurizer (Russell) I'lat-bottomed tin pail in bottom of which is an inverted pie tin punched with holes or other device bottles during to serve as a stand for the heating process. Quart bottle of milk (left), pint bottle of milk (right) bowl 1m text. Pasteurization.—This process first used by Pasteur (from whom it de- rives its name) in combating various maladies of beer and wine, has now come to be widely used for the treat- ment of milk. Milk that is pasteuriz- ed by heating to 140 degrees F., 60 degrees C., for twenty minutes has enhanced keeping quality and is con- sidered a safer food inasmuch as this process removes the danger of trans- mission of specific disease germs. It does not destroy all germ-life in milk; it affects only those organisms that are in a growing, vegetative condi- tion. That the bacilli of typhoid fe- ver, dysentery, diphtheria and tuber- of pasteurization, constitutes a strong argument for the process. Although there is not entire una- nimity of opinion among sanitarians regarding the relative merits of pas- teurized milk and raw milk, a strong belief in the advantage of pasteuriza- tion is growing up. The American Medical Journal, July 28, 1917, in dis- cussing a paper by the bacteriologist Rettger, of Yale University, on milk in its relation to public health says, “If any opponents to the pasteuriza- tion of milk still remain, they will find little consolation in Rettger’s conclusions: Pasteurizing or boiling for a short period does not destroy the nutritional value, as numerous experiments have without doubt demonstrated, although physicians have from time to time claimed that heated milk as a dies for small children is conducive to scurvy. Where any doubt concerninz this point has existed the feeding of small amounts of orange juice has been sif- ficient to allay fear. So long as raw milk from tubercu- lous cows still continues to be used by thousands of consumers daily, this statement cannot be reiterated too! often.” CONDITIONS THAT DETERMINE TEURIZING LIMITS. (1) The pasteurizing temperature should be limited to the degree of heat that can safely be employed without any danger of imparting a cooked or scalded flavor to milk. If the exposure is made for any consid- erable period of time, say fifteen to PAS \ twenty minutes, this change in taste appears to be quite permanent when the milk is heated to 158 degrees F. This condition, therefore, determines the maximum limit that should be used in pasteurizing, if we wish to avoid the production of a cooked fla- vor. Even below this temperature a slight change in flavor occurs, al- though it disappears upon chilling the milk. When access of air is excluded during heating, this cooked taste does not develop so markedly. (2) To be of value in increasing the keeping quality of milk and to in- sure freedom from disease bacteria, it is necessary, in all cases, to exceed the thermal death-point of at least the actively developing bacteria in the milk. For most bacteria this limit is constant and quite sharply defined, ranging from 130 degrees to 140 de- grees F. where exposure is made for fifteen to twenty minutes. Where ex- posed for a briefer period of time, the temperature limit is necessarily high- er. The’ organism that is invested with most interest in this connection is the tubercle bacillus. On account of its frequent occurrence in milk and its high power of resistance, it is tak- en as a standard in pasteurizing. It has been conclusively proven that if tuberculous milk is heated in closed receptacles where the scalded surface pellicle does not ferm, the vitality of this disease germ is destroyed at 140 degrees F. in 15 to 20 minutes. If the conditions of heating are such that the surface of the milk is exposed to the air, the resistance of bacteria is greatly increased. When heated in open vessels the tubercle bacillus has survived an exposure of at least an hour. This is a point of great prac- tical importance in the treatment of milk and necessitates the use of meth- ods that will prevent the formation of this surface film or so-called “skin.” SANITARY ADVANTAGES. OF PAS- TEURIZED MILK. The beneficial effect of the use of pasteurized milk has been unquestion- ably proven in the reduction of infant mortality from diarrhoeal disturbanc- es. This is exemplified in the results that have been obtained in New York city through the liberality of Nathan Strauss, who, for a number of years, has furnished the poor children of that city with pasteurized milk. The placed to equalize the level. on an inverted Described favor with which pasteurized milk is now regarded by sanitarians and physicians is seen in the opinions, from various authorities, already quoted in these articles: viz, from the National Milk Commission; from the American Medical Journal; Pro- fessor Rettger, of Yale; Dr. Jordon, | of University of Chicago. The sub- ject, as it now stands, is well sum- med up in the following quotation from Jordan’s Text Book: “If milk before pasteurization con- tains many millions of bacteria, heat- ing will not remove entirely its dele- terious qualities. of the New York Milk Commission in- culosis are killed at the temperature | d¢ate that pasteurization of dirty milk is a questionable proceeding and may be followed by harmful results. It must be remémbered, however, that in any case pasteurization greatly di- minishes, if it does not altogether prevent, the likelihood of specific in- fection. The bacilli of typhoid fever, dysentery, diphtheria, and tuberculo- sis are killed at the temperature of pasteurization, and this constifutes a strong argument for the process. Objections to pasteurized milk on the ground that it favors the develop- ment of scurvy and rickets have been shown to be unfounded; the enzymes in raw milk to which nutritional im- portance is attached are not destroy- ed by exposure to a temperature of 60 degrees C. for twenty minutes; the argument that pasteurization conceals the presence of dirt is open to the re- tort that since the bacteria that come from dirt are largely resistant spore- forming varieties, it may be possible, after the ordinary lactic acid bacte- ria have been killed off by heating, to determine bacteriologically the pres- ence of dirt in pasteurized milk more readily than raw milk. Finally it must be again emphasized that one im- portant advantage of pasteurization is that it removes the danger of trans- mission of specific disease germs—a danger by no means absent even when milk is collected from healthy cows and in clean stables.” PASTEURIZING APPARATUS. The equipment necessary for the pasteurization of milk designed for direct consumption may be divided in- to two general classes: 1. Apparatus of limited capacity designed for family use. 2. Apparatus of sufficient capaci- ty to pasteurize on a commercial scale. Dealers who contemplate the pas- teurization of milk on a large scale for commercial purposes should ‘be ‘thoroughly informed as to methods of procedure and machinery before at- tempting the process. There are re- liable books to be had on the subject but it would be best to consult the De- partment of Dairy Husbandry of The Pennsylvania State College, State College, Pa., (or of any other State Agricultural College) for information and instruction. In preparing milk for human use, fulfillment of sanita- ry conditions is the first requirement. Unfortunately milk dealers frequent- ly lose sight of this requirement in their attempt to secure apparatus that will handle large amounts so as to re- duce the cost of operation. Pasteur- izing involves considerable time and’ trouble, and it is better not to have the milk treated at all than to have the process imperfectly performed. With the excellent opportunities af- forded at The Pennsylvania State College, only twelve miles distant and easily accessible by bus-lines and rail- roads, it" would seem that the dairy- men and farmers of this community should: be the best informed and equipped men in the profession in the State. The regular three-months course in Dairying began there No- vember 15th and can be attended with comparatively slight expense. Dur- ing Farmers’ Week, Deccember 26-29, valuable lectures and demonstrations on the subject are given and this every farmer, dairyman, and wives as well, could and should afford time to attend. Until our producers give us cleaner milk or until all milks are commer- cially pasteurized, the safest plan is to pasteurize it in the home and for this purpose the following simple direc- tions from Russell’s “Dairy Bacteri- ology,” are given: DOMESTIC PASTEURIZERS. “In pasteurizing milk for individual use, it is not desirable to treat at one time more than will be consumed in one day; hence an apparatus holding a few bottles will suffice. In this case the treatment can best be performed in the bottle itself, thereby lesseming the danger of infection. Several dif- ferent types of pasteurizers are on The observations | | | the market; but special apparatus is by no means necessary for the pur- | pose. The process can be efficiently | performed by any one with the addi- {tion of an ordinary dairy thermome- | ter to the common utensils found in ithe kitchen. Fig. 5 indicates a sim- { ple contrivance that can be readily ar- i ranged for this purpose. | The following suggestions indicate the different steps of the process: 1. Use only fresh milk. 2. Place milk in clean bottles or {fruit cans, filling sametoa uniform level, closing bottles tightly with a {cork or-cover. If pint and quart cans jare used atthe same time,an inverted bowl will equalize the level. Set these in a flat-bottomed tin pail and fill with warm water to same level as milk. An inverted pie tin punched with holes will serve as a stand on | which to place the bottles during the heating process. { 3. Heat water in pail until the | temperature of same reaches 155 de- gres to 160 degrees F.; then remove from source of direct heat, cover with {a cloth or tin cover, and allow the { whole to stand for half an hour. In the preparation of milk for chil- {dren, it is not advisable to use the | low-temperature treatment (140 de- grees F.) that is recommended for ' commercial city delivery. + 4. Remove bottles of milk and cool them as rapidly as possible without danger to bottles and store in a re- frigerator.” This is the last article in the se- ries on the relation of bacteria to milk published in the Watchman as follows : Aug. 17—The Bacterial Content of Milks Supplied to Bellefonte. i] Aug. 24—How the Number of Bacte- i ria in Milk is Determined. What Are Bacteria ? Aug. 31 and Sept. 7—Environmen- tal Influences upon Bacteria. Sept. 28—Sources of Bacteria in Milk. Oct. 5—Influence of Temperature upon the Growth of Bacteria in Milk. Oct. 26.—Effect of Bacteria upon Milk. Nov. 9.—Relation of Disease Bacte- ria to Milk. Nov. 23.—Preservation of Milk and Significance of the Bacteria Count. Dec. 7.—Pasteurization of Milk. Thanksgiving Dinner at Camp Han- cock. Camp Hancock, Ga., Nov. 29.— Turkey, suckling pig, candied Geor- gia yams, sweet corn, creamed peas, cranberry sauce, coldslaw, asparagus salad, stewed tomatoes, spinach, cele- ry, green olives, watercress, fruit, mixed nuts, assorted cakes, ice cream, coffee, near beer, ginger ale, cheese and crackers, and cigars and cigar- ettes summarizes Thanksgiving day 1 in the Twenty-eighth Division. The dinner, with an abundance of trimmings consisting of oyster, herb and chestnut dressings, was the one thing which stood out prominently in the day’s celebration. “I cannot eat any more,” said the private, the corporal and the sergeant. “I have had my fill,” said a Pitts- burgh lad of the One Hundred and Eleventh Infantry (Eighteenth Penn- sylvania), who could barely amble away from the mess table. : i It was the greatest day the lads here have had. Sports had been scheduled, but these took second place to the dinner. In fact, so many of | the boys forgot the sports that by far the larger part of them enjoyed the afternoon by staying in their tents taking an afternoon nap. “Banquet table,” would not describe the abundance and lavishness of the layout. Menu cards had been printed by many units, but these were with- held from the boys because of the War Department order which arriv- ed during the last 48 hours prevent- ed the issuing of printed menu cards. Enterprising mess sergeants had their mess tables looking like over- laden sideboards. Georgia near beer resembling in looks palatable thirst- quenchers of Pennsylvania stood on the tables in profusion. There were flowers, too, in abundance. At every man’s plate, in some companies, were celery and olives, Candy was placed in dishes down the whole length of the tables. From large containers, the menu was served to the lads who lined up in their customary way and marching to their places with their heavily laden mess kits viewed the white meat and the dark with eager eyes. There was little hesitation or “formality. Since dawn this morning the pon- derous motor trucks of the motor sup- ply trains and supply and ration wag- ons of the regiments had been convey- ing turkeys from the field bakery. Thousands of turkeys were roasted at the company kitchens. More than 25,000 was roasted in the field bakery. The bakery also supplied the division with 3,800 mince pies. Stung Again. He came into the office with a busi- ness-like air that deceived the clerks, and they let him walk right into the private room of the head of the firm. “I have here,” he said, diving into a capacious pocket, “a most valuable little book. It tells of the most love- ly spots within a hundred-mile radius | of Cleveland, and how to get to them. ! It contains road maps, ete. It—”" “It’s no use to me,” interrupted the boss, decisively. “Strange as it may appear to you, I do not own a car. I ido mot drive. I cannot use your : book.” | And you think this worried the book agent. Think again. For the little book was all a bluff, and the pre- tended book agent was an automobile salesman. And he promptly took ad- vantage of the best opening he had had in weeks.—Cleveland Plain Deal- er. Put your ad. m the “Watch- man.” my, vp