PONGARE AT AMERICAN CAMP President of France at Persh- ing’s Headquarters. HE REVIEWS THE SAMMIES Leader Of the French Nation and | Commander In-Chief Of the Army Inspects the Camp Of the American Force. Paris. — President Poincare, Painleve, the Secretary War, General Petain, the French manderdn-chief, visited the headquar- ters of the American Army They | were received by Major General | Pershing, commander of the American forces, with whom they imspected training camp President Poincare reviewed American troops. He said he had lected this date because it Was a ble anniversary of the birth of Lufay ette and of the beginning of the bat tle of the Marne, in which the of freedom ti back the on of autocracy, The eral Pers ing of the that event America The American France had tion tire and t vagaries and in acies of rolling bar rages, annihilating mbardr minnenwerfers £ & matter of deeper impress the delice perfect rtai ¢ Fire fr 3 arb rench mot nt raing in Y ica fir ] the fic Le zation of ' : 1 Paul and | COixn- of } nl [a etme FIRST OF DRAFT ARMY IN CAMP ———— the | the | qo Qou forces \rew sl tugnt Presid congratulated Gen the ent Five Per Cent. of Entire Quota Has Left Home. 18 on plendid show American troops, 5 were drawing Fr 30,000 CALLED TO COLORS ever clos together soldiers their second of fire by of fa today artill an en French 4 regimen learned something Forty Per Cent. Of Entire Quota Will Then Leave For Cantonments nents, J To Prepare For Grim Work Ahead. Washington Approximately 10,000 nfs men their homes Wednesday at ers « rr wal a " ce, Report ploding in r near the sractice | marshal trench 1 ernor dr an i" al ime most proceed was rific ! hem comin The Next Cali September 19. be calle as 1 r Bieep Buns are « WILSON TO YOUNG SOLDIERS A Message Of Affectionate Confidence Scildiers Of Freedom.” Washin tional Arn nation's with a fidence and under 16 drat started from thelr | ine + homes for the trainin { ts on nas as vet made — . w ednesd { handle thes The Pre } and comrad in the great straight i ghat | laure] The Appeals Pending men men mobilized on orders gw fe y for ge from pending. These rejected 1 pe de, but the men are ¢ Mr Arrang em to the President no & appeals. the them as § i for NDroY that 1 hat 1 iding I war to ke upon them the men must go 4 ling en ® General Crowder also issued s fled of § A standard so Inn it 1 1 A . add he while dra f America ge follows men may crown o camp he district board with ated, to undue expens where local which they White House Washington, To the Soldiers of the National You are undertaking a great The heart of * country you. F i you watch with t by the » wi you, | by the For The tered lo¢ prevent hard in len would have to make to the original be permitted to ship and Cage a certain long journeys to return jurisdiction ti may transfer to the loeal board where and ge ey do will deepest interest and itude not only | and dear to whole nation besides. | war us all to- | gether, makes wus comrades ard | brothe s, as all Americans felt | themselves to be w hen we firdt made | 800d our national independence The of all world will be | upon because are in some | special sense the soldiers of freedom Let it be vour pride, therefore. to show all men everywhere not only | what od soldiers you are, but also what od men you are. keeping vour self fi! ind straight in everything and pure zd clean through and through sot set for ourselves a standard #F big that it will be a glory to live | up to and then let us live up to ‘it and acd a new laurel to the crown of America. My affectionate confidence goes with you in every battle and every | test. God keep and guide you! WOODROW WILSON. WILSON BUYS FARM BONDS, be they now are y to the camp where the quota of that local board {a mobilized solic aeepes O are near HOUSEWIVES AND THE BANKERS. great draws Markets For Sale Of Home-Baked Bread Planned By Government, trie Washington, he American house. wife is going to battle the baker for a S5-cent loaf. The Government. will help her. Government officlals here plan a system of street markets, life home-baked bread may be sold. he Department of Agriculture will teach home baking methods In every part of the country The high cost of living will force the return of home cooking in the Ameri can kitchen, experts say, eyes the you you Europe's, where $200,000,000 MORE TO ALLIES. Britain and France. Washington Loans of £100,000,000 each to Great Britain and France were made by the government, bringing the total advanced the Allies up to $2,268. 400,000. The total thus far advanced Entente governments follows: Britain, $1,105,000,000: France, 000,000; Russia, $275,000,000; Italy, $200,000,000; Belgium, $63,400,000 and Serbia, $3,000,000. President Invests $10,000 In Rural Loan Issue, Washington ~Fresident Wilaon hae invested $10,000 in farm loan bonds, The President recently took $10,000 ot the first Issue of Liberty bonds, - NEXT BOND DRIVE Liberty Loan Campaign From October 1 to November 1. M’ADOO WAITS ON CONGRESS No Details Of Plan Yst Foreign Language Organizations Up Big Campaign, Ready, Being Lined For 18.000.000 pe i WILSON'S NOTE A TEXTBOOK Chicago Children Will Us Pope As English Lesson. $ Reply To Chicago Students Park High School, son of the fall the ¥ i handed coples for in President English, were Wilso reply to the peace proposals of Pope lenedict XV. They will textbooks for several leaflets containing “President Wilson's reply should be clearly understood by every high student.” Principal H. B term i's of use as their printed in full t to the Pope davs the note school said Loomis DUTCH MISSION ARRIVES. Will Make Plea For Slackening Of U. 8. Embargo On Supplies. An Atlantic Port.—Holland’s special commission to plead the cause of the Netherlands in connecting with the American food exports embargo ar. rived here. In the party are Van Elde, former head of the Dutch grain bureau; J. B. Van Derhouven, Cordt, former president of the counell HAAS THE TORPEDOPLANE, i | Disposal. New York.—In an effort to develop the torpedoplane as a weapon against battleships, Godfrey IL. Cabot, of Boa Fiske, U. 8. N,, retired, to Carry on ex. perimental work, it was announced here by the club. Marches With Cabinet Congress Up Avenue. and Procession Moves Up Pennsyl- vania Avenue-—Selected Men Act Like Soldiers Already. PRESIDENT ENVIES MEN GOING TO FRANCE. A ison, Washington, DD. 4 from. President made public addressed to Thomas L. Chadbourne Jr., of th Mayor's Committee on Nutional Defense, New York, reac i Sept 3 letter Ww today, t & lows “Please say 4 how of th House probably OCCA on i, ID came moat e men in flaver in and ar they nate have the me any this on years since country became a nat When he the White President left the on House and took Wilson reached ranks ice in the stand by Mrs vas the second time he gone afoot over Pennsylvania avenue The first was when he led the preparedness had war. Most of the members of the Cabinet, the Japanese mission, Ambas eadors Spring-Rice, of Great Britain: Jusserand, ofgFrance; Minister Calder. on, of Bolivia, and dozens of officers in the uniforms of the nations that are \ Germany were in the stand All stood for the hours with eyes steady on the gpec- tacle. * The President sat grim and ungmiling most of the time, watching intently while all trappings of war came hy. oO with them, TOBACCO SHIP TO FRANCE. Record Cargo Of Virginia Product To Go To Sammies. An Atlantic Port.--Virginia tobacco for the American soldiers abroad will of a four-master schooner that sailed from here for another port to take aboard its cargo, Smoking sand chewing tobacco will be included in the shipment, which, it is said, will be the largest of the kind ever sent from the United States to France, ity the halds ARE CHEAPEST by the State Bureau of Markets OFFERS THEM IN CARLOADS au Is to Bring the Consumer into Direct Touch With Producers—Community Ship- ping Arrangements Made. One hund bushels, of p peach ¢ ln ecountie in Pennsylvania the Bureay ' wl red districts ablishe For Peach crop has growers have the Bureau It is the p ) the week a TT Val been Tg 23 } Hated t f Markets af ite] O urpose consumer producers, and Thrift on Toll Roads The Depart Was in Philadel; that in advertise: roads of warning for the advertisemen tan tie atiention the bearing merchandise, cal on the | part of sutomobile and re sult | in accidents i It is stated that it has been the aim | the department to eliminate all | advertisement from the rights of way | along State highways: but the signs | in question are along toll roads. over which the department has no juris a ’ ta of culated to cause car sjergnees 0 drivers i i { { i i Several years ago the men in charge | were directed to tear down.any ad. | vertising signs found on the right of | way of any State highway, and there | has been no report of the orders being | ’ Motor Licenses Jump. Revenue from the {icensing of motes vehicles in Pennsylvania for the first eight months of 1917 will pass the $3,150,000 mark, according to est’. mates made at the State Highway Department, This is $250,000 ahead of the roy. enue of last year, and far beyond the income to this date of 1916. The revenue to the close of busi ness was $3,145.057.50, and the re coipts have been running from $3000 to $6000 a day. The number of solid. SH FERRE ssn 7 The Pennsylvania Raliroad an. nounces 540 of its employes on eas! of Pittsburgh have entered of ithe Un : States as volunteers They have granted f that 2 ines t and army navy 1 oh ’ tb ral 4 urioughs from ralir JAG former mine where ore experien ried a large viel ng three-quarters Other home gardeners angounce formerly of hambersburg, aged vears, died near Musselshell, Mont, He owned a ranch of over 1.100 acres and his esiaie ja estimated to be worth 350.000 As he was married, ther, Mrs. Rebecca Kriechbaum, widow, inherits all his estate A sordid story of degeneracy and brutality was told by Mrs. Annie Dal. linger, in the York County Court. in the couree of which she frankly admit. ted the killing of her husband, whose treatment she declared she could no endure She picked up his Kriechbaum, cdward TT a0 more never longer his back toward her, she said, “and it, went off.” The woman, after a vain effort to arouse neighbors, remained all night in ths house with the corpse and her two young children A. grasshopper pest and white pota. to grubs have ruined a large percents Fearing a coal famine, florists of Philadelphia have written to Hale tonlams, asking them to use their in fluence to have them supplied with sufficient fuel A severe wind, hall and ralnato~m passed over Lock Haven and vicinity, causing serious damage to growing crops, particularly the tobacco. Clin. ton county tobacco growers were pre. paring to harvest a high-grade oron but the damage dy wind and hal will delay the work, as well as entail a eavy loss on an especially good crop. In Lock Haven lttle damage resulted, although the rainfall was heavy.