in the United States for the legal pos- | | session of explosives, ! [ing explosives and not holding a li- Bellefonte, Pa., December 7, 1017. Sms WEEKLY WAR NEWS DIGEST. Stories of Activities and Conditions | Throughout the United States and on the Battle Fronts, from Washington, D. C. : WARTIME DEMAND FOR COTTON 1S | ENORMOUS. Recent investigations in the usé of i cotton in war show:. A 12-inch gun disposes of a half | bale of cotton with every shot fired; | a machine gun in operation will use | up a bale in fifteen minutes; in a na- | val battle like the one off Jutland over ! 5,000 pounds a minute are consumed | by each active war-ship; more than | 20,000 bales a year are needed to pro-! vide absorbent cotton for wounds of | the injured; one change of apparel! for all the troops now engaged in the war represents more than a million | balés. EVEN FOOD ADMINISTRATION MEN CAN'T GET THEIR SUGAR. Members of the Food Administra- tion at Washington, D. C., now have an added personal reason for urging | conservation of sugar. A recent canvass of retail stores of | the city showed that of 22 stores 156 | had no sugar. Three had only a; small supply of cube sugar in pack-! ages. Every store had less than 100 pounds and none had prospect of an: immediate supply. Of three whole- | salers and one jobber, two had no su- | gar. One had a three-day supply. No relief is promised for at least th : six weeks, and Washington will be on on ® Ay a short sugar ration until after | Christmas at least. In the middle west and on the Pa- cific Coast, where reserve stocks are heavier, dealers generally are re- sponding to the cry for help by plac- ing the same limit on sale in use 1n the hard-hit Eastern pounds to a customer, providing other purchases are made. GERMANS HELD IN THE UNITED STATES NUMBER NEARLY 2,800. Two classes of German prisoners are now detained in this country. One is comprised of sailors taken into cus- tody when the United States entered the war; the other consists of “alien enemies,” civilians who have been ar- rested and are now being held under governmental regulations for various reasons. The principal detention camp is at Fort McPherson, Ga., where approx- imately 850 war prisoners are held; at Fort Oglethorpe, Ga., there are 165 alien enemies; at Fort Douglas, Utah, there are 517 prisoners of war and 80 interned Germans. Small de- tachments are now temporarily quar- tered at Army posts throughout the country, but their number is relative- ly small. Altogether there are 2,364 actual prisoners of war in the custody of the War Department and about 400. in- terned aliens held at the request of the Department of Justice. ; It is estimated that Germany 18 now holding 150 sailors taken from American ships by commerce raiders and other German vessels. : EACH INFANTRYMAN GETS 62 OUNC- ES OF BRASS IN HIS ORDINANCE EQUIPMENT. Included in the equipment furnish- ed each infantryman by the Ordnance Bureau of the War Department are 62.7 ounces of brass. Tais is exclu- sive of the uniform equipment provid- ed by the Quartermaster Corps. Used in the haversack are 1.8 ounces of brass; in the bayonet scab- bard, 0.5 ounce; in the canteen cover, 0.2 ounce; cartridges (100), 474 ounces; cartridge belt, 10 ounces; gun sling 1 ounce; oiler and thong case, 1.5 ounces; pouch for first-aid packet, 0.3 ounce. Equipment from partment Bureau for the Ordaance De- 100,000 infant- rymen contains almost 196 tons of brass. PERCENTAGE OF SICK AT ARMY CAMPS LESS THAN 2 PER CENT. ' Returning from inspection trips to 10 Army and aviation camps, Col. Weston P. Chamberlain, of the Sur- geon General’s office, reports that the per cent. of sick ranges from below 1 per cent. to slightly below 2 per cent. oa : Among the conditions leading to treatment in hospital are severe colds, tonsilitis, slight injuries, and other comparatively slight ailments. About the only serious disease found at any camp was pneumonia. Each national Army camp has a thousand-bed hospital, equipped in ac- cordance with most approved modern practice. AMERICAN ENGINEERS INSTALL EN- TIRE RAILWAYS IN FRENCH WAR THEATER. The Corps of Engineers of the American Army since April has not only been supplying the Engineer equipment for more than 1,000,000 men, but the members of the railway section have undertaken to transport and install and put in operation over- seas a complete railway equipment. The cost of materials ordered to date is approximately $70,000,000, in- cluding some hundreds of locomotives, more than 100,000 tons of steel rails, more than 3,000 complete turnouts, 500,000 ties, 12,000 freight cars, 600 fill and ballast cars, 600 miles of tel- ephone wire and apparatus, and vast quantities of construction- and repair equipment. A duty imposed upon the engineers has been the purchase of the necessa- ry Engineer equipment for more than 1,000,000 men. Within 15 days after the Engineer Corps, following the declaration of war, advertised for equipment, awards had been made covering the requirements for this of $5,000 and imprisonment for one sive is to be used for when obtaining | his license, and will be held accounta- | ble for its use as stated and the re- ‘turn of any that | prevent explosives falling | SANDWICHES districts—2 | any person hav- cense therefor being subject to a fine year. The purchaser of dynamite | must state definitely what the explo- | © Turtle’s Choice. | The auto had skidded and upset. { An Irishman came up and said to an- | other in the crowd: | citment, Pat?” Only citizens of the United States | ! “Sue, an automobile has turned ; maid like her?” . ta i and friendly countries may obtain li- | | censes. ” “Turned . turtle, is it?” «Bedad, that must be the | it chose a mud puddle.”— | Boston Transcript. to the “Watchman” office. ewcomer. rayson Oh! “Why does she lean forward so when she walks?” “That’s stylish.” “But why does she do it, an old “What's the ex- “Qh, she is matrimonially inclin- said the | ed.”—Florida Times-Union. ——For high class job work come may be left. | With the strict enforcement of this | law the Federal authorities hope to: into the! hands of evilly disposed persons, and | » put a stop to all further dynamite ! ots. | Newton D. Baker, Secretary of | War, estimates the losses up to June 1 of the British expeditionary forces | in deaths in action and from wounds | at 7 per cent. of the total of all men | sent to France since the beginning of | the war. He adds that the ratio of losses of this characeter today, be-! cause of improved tactics and swift- | ly mounting allied superiority in ar-| tillery, is less than7 to every 100 | men. i = i AND COFFEE FOR | FRENCH AND AMERICANS AT | BASE CANTEEN. ! American Field Headquarters in France.—Upon the ancient glass and | age-stained gargoyles of a thirteenth | century church the harvest ‘moon | threw wierd shadows as two corres- | pondents picked their way along a| blackened street in a city within the | army zone. There was silence every- | where. Now and then a faint light | through the crack of a shutter indi- | cated life within the house passed up- | It was nearly midnight, | 8 o'clock this city, as all | others and indeed villages throughout | the zone of the army, was in dark- | ness. Three times during an hour’s walk | we passed poilus of France, their hob- | nailed shoes echoing upon the cobbled | way. A turn in the street revealed | the outline of a viaduct and beyond it railroad tracks and the vague form of a station. The street here took a sharp down-grade, and as we descend- ed we came upon a French sentry, ! who mechanically saluted. Entering | the wide door, through which we | could see a smoking oil lamp hanging upon a grimy wall, we passed to a vast waiting room, where a similar | light revealed a hundred forms hud- | dled in sleeping postures upon hard | benches. They were soldiers in ho- | rizon blue, with a few peasant women waiting for early morning trains to | take them to their destination. We | passed out and to the platform of the station, where, after stumbling over piles of cinders and the whole para- | phernalia of a battallion of French in- | fantry, we saw an open door. It was | wide and barred by a canvas curtain | weighted at the bottom with an iron | rod, thus permitting brilliant lighting ! within and throwing but faint shad- | ow without. i Eentering we found ourselves in | the first American Red Cross base | canteen in France, only recently open- | use i. It will give you more satisfaction per gallon, better ligh€ per lamp and greater heat per stove. that cause smoke, smell and charred wicks are removed. All the qualities that give a clear, steady, even heat are retained. Perhaps you've thought that kerosene is kerosene and that's all there was toit. There’s a lot more to it. You should see our expert chemists testing and experimenting to produce the highest refined And they have succeeded. That's why it is called Rayo- in every home, such as cleaning bathtubs and windows, ¢ polishing furniture, ete. have told us their experie have put all these illustrated booklet for the use of our customers. A copy will gladly be sent upon request. The next time you need kerosene look for the store with the sign: ‘‘Atlantic name. inferior, nameless kinds. THE ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY "LYON & COMPANY. Mark Down Sale! — EXTRAORDINARY —— © All the impurities mellow light and a We have kerosene’ in the world. light Oil—to distinguish it from ordinary kerosenes. to 52, values $1.50 and $1.75, mark down price - - - o08¢ Besides heat and light, Rayolight Qil has manyother uses Crepe de Chine Waists, in white and flesh, special - - $2.50 Judas of thrifty housewives ces with Rayolight Oil and we helpful suggestions in an attractive, price” - yolight Oil for Sale Here.” Then ask for it by The dealer won’t charge you a cent more than for the Philadelphia and Pittsburgh PERFECTION Smokeless Oil Heaters Never smoke, soot or cause un- pleasant odors. Keep any room in the house warm and comfortable with its cheerful radi- R SAY ht RT For perfectresults,al- ways use Rayo lamps. The ideal light for all purposes. Made of best materials. Designs for every room dealer. Price, #1.90up. ating heat. Ask 8 jour ealer. Price, y 50 to $3.50. special Rayo Lanterns Your best friend on dark, stormy nights. Never blow out or jar out. Construction in- | sures perfect oil com- | 8 bustion. Ask your i dealer, Price, 50c un. Ask your We are going to help all Christmas buy- ers by making big reductions on All Coats this season’s styles that sold from $18.00 to $65.00, Mark down price $12.50 to $40.00. All sizes in Coat Suits, all this season’s make that sold from $25 to $45, now $12.00, $15.00 and $20.00. Children’s Coats, ages 6 to 14, that sold at $12 and $15, now $8 SPECIAL PRICES ON SHIRT WAISTS. These will be sold at special low prices. Waists, new large collars, Our silk department was never so complete as this season. 36 in. Silk in Taffetas and Messaline, qualities $1.75, mark down 36 inch Poplins, regular price $1.50, now - ~- - = - A large assortment of stripes, plaids and silks, 36 inches, regular values $2.50, mark down Price - = - = - = Crepe de Chines, 40 in. wide, all colors and black, $2.00 qualities, mark down price.» = = =» os eo- os One lot of Mercerized Satin Petticoats, all colors, regular vale $1.50, now priced at =. - = >i en eo. ee Bath Robes and Kimonas. ‘This season wanted articles. blanket cloth in beautiful colorings, regular price $6.00, Crepe and handsomely A visit to Our Store Lyon & Co. --» Bellefonte. all Merchandise. COATS AND COAT SUITS. just opened a new line of Waists for the Holidays. One lot of fine Voile lace or embroidered trimmed, sizes up SILKS. SILKS. SILKS. $1.35 $1.00 $1.75 $1.50 PETTICOATS. 98c we have made special preparations for these much Bath Bobes for men and women made of heavy $4.50 Flannelette Kimonas for ladies in plain and bordered and silk trimmed, from - - $I.00 up. Will Benefit the Economical Buyer. ed, and which we were told never be closed at any hour of the day | or night during the war, evén until | the last American Sammee returns | from the trenches after final victory | over the Boche. | | FRENCH INVITED IN. The room was crowded with Sam- | mies, several hundreds of them. Their | kits lay in bundles and heaps in va- ried corners. They were en route from one point in the zone to another, and their train would pull out in an | hour. Meanwhile they were forming in rows before a white tiled counter | with their mess kits in hand. Behind |. the counter were gentle-faced Ameri- can women in whit caps, embroidered | with the cross of red, and great white aprons. As fast as lightning they | were pouring coffee and handing out | sandwiches of white bread and sliced | ham to the khaki-clad. There was the | silent rumbling of many voices and | the steady munching of food, with the | occasional touch of cup to cup. | A French troop train passed and stopped beyond the station for one of the inexplainable waits common to the transfer of fighting men along the line. In a few moments the poilu ter- ritorials from the train looked within the canvas-covered door and were at once invited totake partin the re- freshments offered. They entered in a silent wonder and mechanically took coffee as it was handed them. But their eyes opened wide when they saw that the sandwiches given them were of really truly white bread, for white bread in France, aside from the pro- duct of American army bakeries, is a rarity indeed. { Presently the French troop train whistled and the poilus departed with many thanks expressed in many ways. And then the Sammees were given or- der to fall in and entrain. In 30 min- | utes the canteen was deserted save for us two men and the white-garbed women. Instinctively we saluted them as we heard their tale and their names. Names are taboo in connection with correspondence from the army, but the rule applies only to the brown- | clad, be he private or colonel or brig- | adier general. But these women from home do not come under the ban. Also, they have had their names in many a paper: before, but always in the society columns. Here, “some- where in France,” as simple waitress- es, it would seem to me their names should stand out in bolder type and in nobler connection than when associat- ed with teas or receptions or balls or | any society function. For they have packed away their evening gowns and left them at home in exchange for the white uniform of the American Red Cross, voluntarily exchanging comfort for the hardships and inconveniences connected with vast force—a total of 8,700,000 arti- cles, including among other items 5 miles of pontoon bridge. The Engineers have also undertak- en the work of organizing and equip- ping troops for special service, such as lumber supply, road construction, sanitary construction, camouflage service, gas and flame service, mining work, and mapping. USERS OF EXPLOSIVES MUST SECURE FEDERAL LICENSES, A Federal license is now required humbly serving food and drink to the Sammee from over the sea, or the poi- lu from the North and the Midi. They are patriotically performing their share in the great adventure, and it goes without saying that their work is appreciated to the extreme by the American. army, individually and col- lectively.—By Henri Bazin, in the Pittsburgh Dispatch. ——For high Ir 38 3 ob Work c to the “Watchman” Office. ae would | == PA SR SR i DE ER HE 2 RRR IRE, The Master Mind i Sl 5 © 1917 STROUSE & BROS. INC. BALTO. MD. A review of the styles we are Winter, many of them of the military type, will forci- bly bring home to you the reason for the unique post- fion of these very serviceable clothes in the world of men’s apparel. BELLEFONTE’S LEADING CLOTHING STORE. F TE STARE Ee N every industry — ‘Some one manufacturer stands at the head of the field and what he does 1s interestedly waited for by the rest. Where clothiers gather, are the absorbing topic. REE there is an infer- red leadership. new designs of High Art Clothes Made by Strouse & Brothers, Inc., Baltimore, Md. showing for Fall and AUBLE’S. BREET ad RR