THB FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNgLLSBURfl. PA. THE NEWS TOLD I PI III D nThla Dopartm6nt Qur Roadors , F-ulton Coutv arfEI Around the World With the Camera on the Trail Latest Happenings Gleaned From All Over the State. of History Making Happenings. KIKG ALBERT HONORS FRENCH REGIMENT LIVE NOTES AND COMMENTS.' WANAMAKER CHEERS HIS MERCY SHIP ON ITS WAY Made Own Tombstone; Diet Working en Coffin Hotel Wrecked; 8uepeoU Held Slatington Mill Resume Work Teacher Fights Madman. Vents for lews JDIiPDIIDUC HE!?. TlT ft""! M Albert o, l.e.gium oecorated the Seven,, recent of ' V ' V ?r ' " " VIUU1 Ul Ijt'fMllllfl. .AT lit at lTf A Mw,. I.. ..I . w I P r Pl . M X "1 l"". M. -, 'V -'." J' - i' f , .' " . TV. U &Jm a ,v -. - ' r- mt .uua congratulating the commander of (be rest-1 rfW!'-'' ' ' ' ; t? ' ; rnriinil nm nin n .. . ... r? Z 1 i I ' f ' J.SW rnr ui.h i mi nn ini v hall i ir m a HTTinif i r. ' v vr. ".a.1 vvtjBda . . w i . . .A ia.., . . : ' tfc:.v-v-..i , " i,,,,vy John Waunmakem nwrrv aiiin TI...I.... o. .nii. t.,.., . . . .... Ins I3olKlaua. and at the r.,ht' t. Z' ' ' " ' " lp" a "n ",!r of euppHce for ,he auifer o- 'vimu vucci ins uiti vcshui on uer way. r. wncnc lunACl IVIMT dlKIKt Al tNliLANL) p .. ni ir'" i"i 1 " . -r Tbli nliuloKraDh M duuei u' v-miii uii iuu rrenca coiuuiuih cntrencned la ANOTHER TERROR OF THE SEAS iouT CrulBer Bremen, which, eince the dcblrurtlon of the Emdun, la the . , '(,r vesacl on the aena. She has done Immense, damage to the -wmis or me allies In the I'ucijic ocean HER LIFE IS IN DANGER V I V r V'i , .i,.y.T5c SPIKED PITS AND BARBED WIRE W"t2-& it'?&$ A VQ: 'tmmmm m. f way ho .i ground. dotted with pits with splkos In them and crossed "ire Mltnn.t . . . .. .. 1.. J I Cc '""Rle,,le"'n. prepnrca Dy ine neiK'u"" io iiiiprue 1110 bu r lit, a rnmn. gives some Idea of the fields over which the troops in - yei:iea to cnargo. One of the brave American mission arie8 In Turkey for whose safety great anxiety Ib felt In this couutry. They always run tho risk of attacks hv iiru. audi and others, but their nerll la Rreatly Increased by the entrance of luruey into tno European war. FRENCH SAVE BRAVE FOEMAN Colonel Spares Life of Airman Who Slew Three of His Assail ants. Paris, France An example of (be good sportsmanship among the French was shown In a letter written by a Ger man aviator to bis parents. Flying high over the French trenches, the Herman pilot was killed and the avi ator was severely wounded. The avi ator, however, succeeded In bringing hts machine safe to earth within the French lines. He was Immediately attacked i.n nil sides, but (hrowlng himself under the wing of his machine for concealment, ho succeeded In ktlllna three of hin sallauts before bis revolver was empty. vncn no ceasea nring the soldiers rushed up (0 bayonet him. but fl,..ir colonel stepped them, saying. "Don"t Kill him; be Is a brave man and worthy ontrii.y!" Thus the aviator's life was sparod. V ' It Entrance of the Suez canal at Tort Said. Egypt, with statue of Ferdinand de Lesseps In the center. MUs Grace Jones, of WashlnctooJ teacher of a country school near there. risked her life when Uobert Dreamer. a young man of the neighborhood, said to be demented, rushed into the school room, waving a corn cutter above hl head, and declared he was koIiik to kill the teacher and every pupil In thai room. The kill, after a bad half-hour. succeeded In forcing Dreamer from the room and locking the door upon him. As tho teaeher risked her life In the struggle with the youth the forty pupils In the room huddled In the cor ners and bid under desks. Mlns Ann McClure. of Felton. near Chester, routed a colored assailant af ter a desperate fiKht, stabhlnt bin three times with a hatpin. The man, . sprang upon her along the roadway on ' JJiKle street, above Ninth, on the out skirts of Chester. Miss McClure Jab bed blm In the face with the hatdn. Ho cursed and grappled with her again, seizing her wrists. Wrenching herself from his grasp she stabbed him twice In the body with the pin. The colored man then fled. Women for the first time In the his tory of the Protestant Episcopal Church were recognized on one of th eight boards of that denomination when the synod of tho third province. In session In Pittsburgh, decided that the Provincial Hoard of Social Service shall hereafter be composed of on bishop, four presbyters, four laymen and two women. 1 Charles Chltnel, landlord of a hotol at Exchange, was in a rear room at his place of business when the bulldln was wrecked by dynamite, said to have been dlRchargcd by Joseph Parke wlch and Frank Warsack, enemies of th hotel man. The suspects were sub sequently arrested. The Slatington Foundry and Ma chine Shopa, started work after being lilln for the past year. The Slatlnr rolling mills started tin acnln after several months of Idleneess and are employing mnny hands. The Post & Sheldon silk mill resumed operation Monday. Andrew Crossler. a veteran waron- mnker, of Dloomsburg, who several years ago made his ow n tombstone and expected to make his own collln, only to be Interrupted In the work by sick ness, died at the age of eighty-two years. DRIVING THE GERMANS FROM THE COAST I Shooting a pheasant. Edward Houtx. aged eighteen, shot his playmate. Charles Shover, while hunting near Mlfllln. Iloutr declares that be did not see his friend concealed In the bushes near the bird. The shot which entered Shover's face may prove fatal. This photngrnnh. taken from a nntwlni? tnnur iimU.. .i. m..h..i. ...... Germans In tho Itei.l.n nnrt. h.7h -7,,n ' . . " "f"" T"afiPU n oomnaruiiig the r W --.v-j-.cu miiu uh.cu until irom ine Bea oy ine lintisn shells. iShGlu7T7GlEAf "aV mm ';w.h W$s, Mlsa Mary Decker, daughter of Cap tain Decker of the U. S. S. Tennes see, whose launch was fired on by the Turks at Smyrna. la helnlns thn women of Washington to collect a "mile of pennies" for the relief of the ueigians. Gives Savlnni for R.N if. London. A London servant clri xx.hr, had $25 on deposit In tha nost am Savings bank wrote to the postmaster fccnerni: r'leaso, sir. close my account aud Bend nlf to the Prince of Wni... relief fund r.nd the rest f the Hoi- glnna. m f -9 7 Mayor Stratton of Readinr Issued an order prohibiting the soliciting on the streets of funds for Christmas din ners for the poor by persons disguised as Santa Claus. It was found that last year the solicitors got Dfty per cent of the proceeds. Jacob Haussman, of Glen Carbon. was found unconscious near Uuckley Station. He died live minutes after being found. A severe wound at tho ba.so of bis skull led the police to be lieve that ho had been murderously as saulted. . Aaron Selfert, seventy-reven years old, was the plaintiff In a suit In court in Reading against Sarah Trate, seventy-five years, a sister, to recover damages for alleged violation of contract. ? i t V. t George Endy, aged forty, employed as a battery runner at the Lehigh Coal & Navigation Co.'s No. 14 colliery, Tamaqna, was caught by a rush of coal In a chute and Instantly killed. His neck was broken. The Hoard of Managers of the Ches ter Hospital received a donation of 1100 from William W. MacMnrlane, vice-president of the American Dye wood Extract Company. Harry Walters, thirteen years old, died at Milton from the effects of a fall he suffered when be stumbled two weeks ago. Spinal meningitis develop ed from the accident. While endeavoring to secure coal from a moving tralu at Coal port, for a little hut which he had built, Stephen I'trata, aged fifteen years, was thrown under the train and killed. a truin or bulges and two tugs, laden with tiOO.000 feet of Louisiana reu gum and onk, recently completed the record breaking trip of 1,500 miles from New Orlenna to Chicago via the Mississippi and the Chicago drainage canal One of the barges is here seen In the 40-foot lift lock at Lockport, 111 It cost Jacob Smith, Demncratlo Representayve-elect from Carbon county, $306 to be elected, according to his expense accounts filed In the office of the Clerk of Courts. In court at nellefonte, six Germans, two Austrlans, a Polander and an Italian applied for American citizen ship. Four of the Germans, one Aus trian and the Tolander were granted naturalization papers. They all wore nniclniiR in pnt thptr nanprs so as to avoid being recalled for military duty. Fred Nansteel, accompanied by three companions, killed a five-pronged teer at Tobyhanna. It was killed fifteen miles from the nearest house nd had to bo carried home by the . hunters.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers