Mb (Ml "SOMEWHERE IN FRANCE" EMPEY FIRST HEARS THE BIG GUNS BOOMING. Synopsis. Fired by the sinking of the Lusitania, with the loss of American lives, Arthur Guy Empty, an American living in Jersey City, goes to England and enlists as a private In the British army. CHAPTER II. i Blighty to Rest Billets. ! The next morning the captain sent for me and Informed me : "Empey, as a recruiting sergeant you are a wash out," and sent me to a training depot After arriving at this place, I was hustled to the quartermaster stores and received an awful shock. The quartermaster sergeant spread a wa terproof sheet on the ground and com menced throwing a miscellaneous as sortment of straps, buckles and other paraphernalia into it. I thought he would never stop, but when the pile reached to my knees he paused long enough to soy, "Next, No. 5217, 'Arris, B company," I gazed in bewilderment at the pile of junk In front of me, and then my eyes wandered around looking for the wagon which was to carry it to barracks. I was rudely brought to earth by the "quarter" exclaiming, "'Ere, you, 'op It; tyke It aw'y; blind my eyes, 'e's looking for 'is batman to elp Mm carry it." Struggling under the load, with fre quent pauses for rest, I reached our barracks (large car barns), and my platoon leader came to the rescue. It was a marvel to me how quickly he assembled the equipment. After he had completed the task, he showed me how to adjust It on my person. Pretty soon I stood before him a proper Tom my Atkins in heavy marching order, feeling like an overloaded camel. On my feet were heavy-soled boots, studded with hobnails, the toes and heels of which were re-enforced by steel half-moons. My legs were in-' cased In woolen puttees, olive drab In color, with my trousers overlapping them at the top. Then a woolen khaki tunic, under which was a bluish gray woolen shirt, minus a collar ; beneath tills shirt a woolen belly band about six Inches wide, held In place by tie strings of white tape. On my head was a heavy woolen trench cap, with huge earlaps buttoned over the top. Then the equipment: A canvas belt, with ammunition pockets, and two wide cnnvus straps like suspenders, called "D" straps, fastened to the belt In front, passing over each shoulder, crossing in the middle of my back, and attuched by buckles to the rear of the belt On the right side of the belt hung water bottle, covered with felt ; on the left side was my bayonet and scabbard, and Intrenching tool handle, this handle strapped to the bayonet scabbard. In the rear was my in trenching tool, carried in a canvas case. This tool waB a combination pick and spade. A canvas haversack was strapped to the left side of the belt, while on my back was the pack, also of canvas, held in place by two canvas straps over the shoulders; suspended on the Dottom or the pack was my mess tin or canteen In a neat little canvas case. My waterproof sheet, looking like a jelly roll, was strapped on top of the puck, with a wooden stick for cleaning the breach of the rifle pro jecting from each end. On a lanyard around my waist hung a huge jack knife with a can-opener attachment Tne pack contained my overcoat, an extra pair of socks, change of under wear, hold all (containing knife, fork, spoon, comb, toothbrush, lather brush, shaving soup, and a razor made of tin, with "Made In England" stamped on the blade; when trying to shave with this It made you wish that you were at war with Patagonia, so that yon could have "hollow ground" stamped "Made In Germany") ; then your house wife, button-cleaning outfit, consisting of a brass button stick, two stiff brushes, and a box of "Soldiers' Friend" paste; then a shoe brush and a box of dubbin, a writing pad. Indel ible pencil, envelopes, and pay book, and personal belongings, such as a small mirror, a decent rator and a sheaf of unanswered letters, and fugs. In your haversack you carry your Iron rations, meaning a tin of bully beef, four biscuits and a can containing tea, sugar and Oxo cubes; a couple of pipes and a pack of shag, a tin of rifle oil, and a pull-through. Tommy gen erally carries' the oil with his rations; It gives the cheese a sort of sardine taste. Add to this a flrst-ald pouch and a long, ungainly rifle patterned after the Daniel Boone period, and you have an Idea of a British soldier In Blighty, Before leaving for France, this rifle Is taken from him and he it Issued with a Lee-Enfleld abort trench rifle and a ration bag. , In France he receives two faa hel ) A VJL ANAiWMSOLDDl WIIOWENT AfflUBGDYDlPEY MACHINE! R(BYING IN FRANCE: 1917 BY mets, a Bheepskln coat, rubber mack intosh, steel helmet, two blankets, tear shell goggles, a balaclava helmet gloves and a tin of antlfrostblte grease which is excellent for greasing the boots. Add to this the weight of his rations, and can you blame Tommy for growling at a twenty-kilo route march? Having served as sergeant major in the United States cavalry, I tried to tell the English drill sergeants their business, but it did not work. They immediately put me as batman in their mess. Many a greasy dish of stew was accidentally spilled over them. I would sooner fight than be a waiter, so when the order came through from headquarters calling for a draft of 250 re-enforcements for France, I vol unteered. Then we went before the M. O. (medical officer) for another physical examination. This was very brief. He asked our names and numbers and said "Fit," and we went out to fight. We were put into troop trains and sent to Southampton, where we de trained, and had our trench rifles Is sued to us. Then In columns of twos we went up the gangplank of a little steamer lying alongside the dock. At the head of the gangplank there was an old sergeant, who directed that we line ourselves along both rails of the ship. Then he ordered. us to take life belts from the racks overhead and put them on. I have crossed the ocean several times and knew I was not sea sick, but when I buckled on that life belt I had a sensation of sickness, After we got out into the stream all I could think of was that there were a million German submarines with a tor pedo on each, across the warhead of which was Inscribed my name and ad dress. After five hours we came alongside a pier and disembarked. I had at tained another one of my ambitions. was "somewhere in France." we slept In the open that night on the side of the road. About six the next morn ing we were ordered to entrain. I looked around for the passenger coaches, but all I could see on the sid ing were cattle cars. We climbed into these. On the side of each car was a sign reading "nommes 40, Chevenux 8." When we got inside of the cars, we thought that perhaps the sign painter had reversed the order of things. After 48 hours in these trucks we detrained at Rouen. At this place we went through an Intensive training for ten days. The training consisted of the rudi ments of trench warfare. Trenches hud been dug, with barbed wire en tanglements, bombing saps, dugouts, observation posts and machine gun em placements. We were given a smat tering of trench cooking, sanitation, bomb throwing, reconnolterlng, listen ing posts, constructing and repairing barbed wire, "carrying In" parties, methods u&cd In attack and defense, wiring parties, mass formation, and the procedure for poison-gas attacks. On the tenth day we again met our friends "llommes 40, Cheveaux 8." Thirty-six hours more of misery, and we arrived at the town of F After unloading our rations and equipment, we lined up on the road In columns of fours waiting for the order to march. A dull rumbling could be heard. The sun was shining. I turned to the man on my left and asked, "What's the noise, Bllir He did not know, but his face was of a pea-green color. Jim, on my right also did not know, but suggested that I "awsk" the sergeant Coming towards us was an old grli ilcd sergeant, properly fed up with the war, so I "awaked" him. "Think It's going to rain, sergeant)" He looked at me In contempt and grunted, " 'Ow's It a-goln' ter rain with the bloomln' sun a-shlnln't" I looked guilty. "Them's the guns up the line, me lad, and you'll get enough of 'em be fore you gets back to Blighty." My kne seemed to wilt and I squeaked out a weak "Oh 1" Then we started our march up to the line In ten-kilo treks. After the first day's march we arrived at our rest billets. In France they call them rest billets, because while In them Tommy works seven days a week and on the eighth day of the week he la given twenty-four hours "on his own." Our billet was a spacious affair, a large barn on the left side of the road, which had one hundred entrances, ninety-nine for shells, rats, wind and rain, and the huudredth one for Tom my. I was tired out, and using my shrapnel-proof helmet (shrapnel proof until a piece of shrapnel hits It), or tin bat for a, pillow, lay down In the straw, and was soon fast asleep. I must have slept about two hours, when I awoke with a prickling sensation all over me. As I thought the straw had worked through my uniform. I woke up the fellow lying on my left who had been up the line before, and asked him: "Does the straw bother you, mate? It's worked through my uniform and I can't sleep." In a sleepy voice he answered, "That ain't straw, them's cooties." From that time on my friends the "cooties" were constantly with me, "Cooties," or body lice, are the bane of Tommy's existence. The aristocracy of the trenches very seldom call them "cooties," they speak of them as Seas. To an American flea means a small Insect armed with a bayonet, who is wont to jab It Into you and then hop skip and jump to the next place to be attacked. There Is an advantage In having fleas on you instead of "cooties" in that in one of his extended jumps said flea Is liable to land on the fel low next to you; he has the typical energy and push of the American, while the "cootie" has the bulldog tenacity of the Englishman; he holds on and consolidates or digs In until his meal is finished. There is no way to get rid of them permanently. No matter how often you bathe, and that is not very often, or how many times you change your underwear, your friends the "cooties" are always In evidence. The billets are Infested with them, especially so If there is straw on the floor. I have taken a bath and put on brand-new underwear; in fact, a com plete change of uniform, and then turned in for the night. The next morn ing my shirt would be full of them. It is a common sight to see eight or ten soldiers sitting under a tree with their shirts over their knees engaging in a "shirt hunt." At night about half an hour before "lights out," you can see the Tommies grouped around a candle, trying, in Its dim light, to rid their underwear of the vermin. A popular and very quick method Is to take your shirt and draw ers, and run the seams back and for ward in the flame from a candle and burn them out. This practice Is dan- The Author's Identification Disk. gerous, because you are liable to burn holes in the garments if you are not ci:ful. Recruits generally sent to Blighty for a brand of Insect powder adver tised as "Good for body lice." The ad vertisement Is quite right; the powder Is good for "cooties;" they simply thrive on It The older men of our battalion were wiser and made scratchers out of wood. These were rubbed smooth with a bit of stone or sand to prevent splin ters. They were about eighteen Inches long, and Tommy guarantees that scratcher of this length will reach any part of the body which may be at tacked. Some of the fellows were lazy and only made their scratchers twelve Inches, but many a night when .on guard, looking over the top from the Are step of the front-line trench, they would have given a thousand "quid for the other six Inches. Once while we were In rest billets an Irish Hussar regiment camped In an open Held opposite our billet After they had picketed and fed their horses, a general shirt hunt took place. The troopers Ignored the call "Dinner up," and kept on with their search for big game. They had a curious method ot procedure. They hung their shlrU over a hedge and bent them with their en trenching tool handles. I asked one of them why they didn't pick them off by band, and he an swered, "We haven't had a bath for nine weeks or a change of clabber. If I tried to pick the 'cooties' off my shirt I would be here for duration of war." After taking a close look at his shirt, agreed with him ; It was alive. In th next Installment Sen. geant Empty tell of tha reallxa tion of hit ambition his ar rival In a first line trench and of how he wished he were back In Jereey City. (TO B CONTINUED.) Cheap notoriety la dear at any prlca, WORLD HAPPENINGS CURRENT WEEK Krifit KflSUme MOSt mDOrtant r I Ua V News liemS. ' I COMPILED FOR YOU Events of Noted People, Governments and Pacific Northwest and Other Things Worth Knowing. Milton bebastian Lansing, HO years old, a nephew ol Kooert umsing, sec- retary of state, enlisted in the navy at Los Angeles Wednesday. Whan the flarltnpsH nf t.h AclinRe rwrit. nvr Yakima. Wash.. Saturday, scores of Indians wnrkin? in hon fields near the city hastily sought their rerry uuicn, ai xne west enu oi neu camps and covered themselves under gate canyon, in the Helena forest; on their hlnnlcpt. Deep creek, in the Lolo forest; in the . l Married 13 times, "Uncle" John Dempsey, oldest resident of Marion, 111., died Tuesday, four days before his 100th birthday. He purchased his coffin seven years ago and married his 13th wife five years ago. Lowell, Ind., a town of 1800 people, will close up its business houses two days a week during July and August, and most of its merchants, clerks and professional men will help the sur rounding farmers harvest their crops, because of the shortage of labor. Two hundred soldiers Tuesday night were rushed in auto trucks to Little Creek, three miles north of Newport, Ore., to fight a forest fire. After working ail night, assisted Dy a neavy shower of rain, they got the blaze un- der control. About zuu acres were burned over. ims,miam ,;n Wo chant marine of 25,000,000 deadweight tons, Chairman Hurley, of the Ship- nine- board, declared at South Bend. Ind.. Tuesdav n an address giving the - ' . . . - Mmnu tof0mnt nf , . w vt iuui maH mi hit J r ,w' A blasting hot wind for two days with the thermometer at 97 degrees in the shade has given a setback to the wheat crop outlook in Northern Mon- lana. 10 tne norm oi ureal raus me situation is reported as very serious, while to the south the winter wheat may yet be saved by rain, An appropriation of $1,761,701,000 for the American merchant marine is provided in the sundry civil bill re- ported to the house Wednesdav bv the ' . .. ... " annronr at nna eomm ttae. The meas- ure carries a total of t2.862.752.237 in direct annrnnriatinns and the house is expected to add upwards of $50,000,- 000 more. - Germany's submarine raiders, which some 16 days ago made their first ap- tarance in American waters since the Sniartinn nt war nrntw r0 t,n fi, a tuu no reports of additional sinkings had been received at the Navy department late Tuesday night to add to the official toll of 18 craft sent to the bottom. Workingmen of the United States will be satisfied only with a peace brought about by the complete over throw of the German military ma chine, according to President Samuel Gompers, who made the principal ad dress Tuesday at the opening session of the annual convention of the Ameri can Federation of Labor in St Paul. federal court decrees prohibiting newspapers from publishing articles held to embarrass the administration of justice, although not acts com- mitted within the presence of the courts, were sustained by the U. S. Supreme court in upholding judgment against the Toledo Newspaper com- pany, publisher, and N. D. Cochran, editor-in-chief of the Toledo, Ohio, News-Bee, for contempt of court. President Wilson has written a sec ond letter to Governor Stephens, of California, urging the pardon of Thomas J. Mooney. The President asked for clemency for Mooney in March, but Governor Stephens replied that he could not act until an appeal for the convicted man had been passed The courthave upon by the courts, refused the plea. Traumatic neurosis is "shell shock," it was explained at the meeting Thurs- day in Chicago of the American Med- ico-Psychological association, and it is as apt to strike the grandmother as the soldier in the trenches. President Wilson sent a message of sympathy to the family of former Vice President Charles W. Fairbanks. Praise for Mr. Fairbanks was given also in the house by Representatives w i oi,i:.. .-a n; n ... W - of the Commercial TeleirraDhers' Union of America, announced on his arrival in inicago irom Washington that a date had been set for a nation-wide strike of telegraphers to enforce their demands for recognition of the union. A resolution calling lor congres sional investigation of accidents at avi ation camps was introduced by Repre sentative Hua ted, of New York. Acci dent in the last nve weeks, the reso- muon says, snow uiai some nave Been due to defective construction or negli- gent inspection. MONTANA FORESTS ABLAZE Early Start Believed to Portend Much Damage Town is Threatened. Missoula. Mont With scores of fires, some covering large areas and blazing unchecked, others small and yet within control, burning in dry for- Aota r,t Waafam Mnntnnn nnri Northern Idaho, the fire situation in the terri- , . XT- 1 t vory emDracea wiuiin uiairici. iiu. i ui the Forest service is the most acute it - - x i i, M4. u : nt uiul 11 uaa ever ueeu ai tins uutc u the year, forestry officials declare. Indications point to a tire season worse than that ot 1917, tney saia, since it is starting fully a month ear lier. More than 500 men are fighting fires in the national forests of this district, 150 of them engaged in an effort to save the town of Essex, in the Flat head forest, on the Great Northern railway. One hundred others are fighting a fire near Belton, at the west end of Glacier National Park. Two hundred and fiftv men are still fio - hr.ino - the fire on Marble creek, near tne St. Joe forest in Northern Idaho, where thousands of acres of valuable privately owned timber land are being burned over. The blaze was declared to be the worst in the district. Other hres were reported on Lanyon - ri rt .i i l i J 11.11 Bitter Root mountains and in the Cab inet forest. RUSS-SLAV FACTION ASKS AID OF ALLIES Formal Appeal Made to America to Send Expedition Halt Huns Cadets Send Message. Washington, D. C. An appeal to the United States and the allies to send an expeditionary force to Russia to repel the German invaders, forward- ed by the central committee of the Cadet party in Russia, was transmitted to the State department Wednesday by the Russian embassy, It is asked that the expedition, if sent. be Put under .International control w u 7 8 - i Th Cadet party, as it is popularly iij : u r-rto4-;,v ca"c"' ' 'yu tional Democrats who were tirst in power after the overthrow of the Ro- manoff dynasty. It was removed from l Dii Mr: uuvvct uv me jjuiducvim The United States has not defined jts attitude toward the allied desire for iolnfc action from the East, al- though it is understood the government holds that t wou d be nopportune to attempt to check the Germans in Rus sia, unless it is shown the Russian people wish it and that the move would not be misunderstood. The message of the Constitutional Democrats declares the situation in Russia can- be ameliorated by the ac- ... :J ii 1 1 : rr-l "ve iu ui uie nines. uuvouco ui the German armies, it ia declared, Otherwise cannot be halted The appearance of a strong allied iorce in uie r,asi, it is aeciareu, win have a decisive bearing on the issues 01 war' .... . .... ., . If an expedition IS sent it IS asked that every means be taken to safe- guard Russian interests and rights. U .has pointed out that there " "--' way f the P'8 f allled and Ame.r" ican troops in Kussia proper, save in the small sectors on the Arctic ocean where the British and French flags are now seen. Technically that is a part of the ter ritory now under the jurisdiction 'of General Foch in his capacity of com mander-in-chief of all the allied and American troops. If he desires to risk starting a cam paign at such a remote point, it is said that he may use Americans for this purpose in his discretion. The other avenue of approach by an army to European Russia would be bv way of Siberia, and unless the allies are willing to turn that task over to 'Japan alone, which it is feared the Russians would resent there is no transportation available for the plac- ing in Siberia of the numerous Ameri can and allied army that would be re quired for a successful campaign. Cars Enter Firing Zone. Camp Lewis, Tacoma, Wash. Five times Wednesday automobile drivers endangered the lives of themselves and passengers and interfered with "at- acks'.' on GeJman advance Psts ich American imaniry were approacning. It was the first time the B target range was used and the motorists somehow got past the sentries who were guarding all roads and drove di rectly into the line of lire. They were seen in time and the field telephone flashed the order "stop firing," so no one was hit New Star Loses Brilliance, Pasadena, Cal. Astronomers at the ,( i ... i . i . uul " ooservawry, near here, were of the opinion Wednesday that the new star which appeared Sat 1... A, .11 . I .11 Iuruay nigm in uie consignation AquuiB and rapidly grew in brilliance, reached ' luminosity early lues- day. The spectroscope indicated had dimmed slightly. At its brightest, it was said, the new star was exceeded in brilliance by possibly but one fixed star, birius. Berlin, la., ia No More. Berlin, Ia. Berlin, Ia., will be no more. As a result of a meeting heae of the mayor and the city council it was decided to notify the postofTice officials in W ashington that the citi tens here have changed the name of I the town to Lincoln. u. S. WHEAT CROP S BILLION BUSHELS ederal Forecast Shows Second Largest Crop on Record. OTHER CROPS RECORD Continuation of the Recent Favorable Growing Conditions May Yet Put. 1918 Harvest in First Rank. Washington, D. C A bumper wheat crop this year, which before harvest may develop into a production of 1, 000,000,000 bushels, was forecast by the department of Agriculture in its June crop report giving the first indi cation of the size of this year's spring wheat output. Basing its estimate on June 1 condi tions, the department forecast a total wheat production of 931,000,000 bush els, which would place this year's har vest as the second largest in the his tory of the country. In June of 1915 a total wheat pro duction of 950,000,000 bushels was forecast and the quantity gradually crept upward until the final figures for the year showed the crop to be 1, 025,800,000 bushels. The acreage sown to spring wheat this year is larger by 2,000,000 acres than ever sown before and 21.5 per cent larger than last year, aggregating 2,489,000 acres. The condition of the crop on June 1 was 95.2 per cent of normal, or 1.5 per cent better than the 10-year average. A production of 344,000,000 bushels was forecast. That is 11,000,000 bushels more than harvested last year and only about 7,000,000 bushels less than the record spring wheat harvest of 1915. Winter wheat, growing on the sec ond largest acreage ever planted, showed a condition 3 per cent better than the 10-year average, with 83.8 per cent of a normal crop. A" produc tion of 587,000,000 bushels was fore cast, which is 50,000,000 bushels more than forecast from conditions existing May 1. Such a crop would be the third in size grown in this country. The oat crop also promises to be of record proportions. On an acreage 2.1 per cent larger than last year, when the record crop 1,687,000,000 bushels was grown, June 1 conditions war rant a forecast of 1,600,000,000 bush els. Only last year's and the crop of 1915 exceeded that quantity. Rye production will be a record, the forecast being 81,000,000 bushels, which is slightly less than was fore cast in May. Last year's crop was 60,100,000 bushels, which was a record. HOOVER STRIKES AT PRICES Administrator Orders Nation-Wide Re form in Food Staples. Washington, D. C. A country-wide move to reduce the cost of food to the consumer and standardize methods of compelling the observance by dealers of "fair price lists" was ordered Sat urday by Food Administrator Hoover. Lists will be published in every country, town and city, and consumers will be asked to co-operate with offi cials in forcing merchants to bring their prices to a uniform level. In carrying out the new standardiza tion plan, the administration will es tablish price-interpreting committees composed of representatives of whole salers, retailers and consumers. The board will determine fair retail prices on basic commodities that com prise a large part of the nation's diet The published lists will give the range of maximum Belling prices, showing a reasonable price which will reflect the prices that should obtain in "cash and carry" stores, and a higher price rep resenting a fair price for the "credit and delivery Btores. The local administrator for 'each lo cality will act as chairman of the price Doard. bach board will have detailed reports of actual wholesale prices and win ascertain fair margins of profit the retailer should be satisfied with. Newspapers will be asked to co operate by setting aside a particular position weekly for publication of the lists, with footnotes on the food prob lem and the use of substitutes for the foods most needed abroad. A close check will be kept on ob servance of the lists. Consumers will be expected to report to the local food administrator any store charging more than the established price for any com modity. Governor Lister Is Weak. Olympia, Wash. Governor Lister returned to hist living apartments in Olympia Saturday afternoon and an nounced that he would handle state business In his rooms for the next week instead of at the capital. He is still under medical treatment which began in Chicago two weeks ago and is forbidden physical exertion. The na ture of his illness was not announced. The governor was absent from the state nearly a month on his Eastern trip, when he originally expected to return in two weeks.