C0ttttf VOLUME II McCONNELLSBURG, PA., DECEM13EII 9, 1909. NU31UER 9 MISSION WORK IN KENTUCKY, Miss Martha Kendall Tells of Conditions as They Exist Among the Mountaineers. As was stated in the News of September 9th, Miss Martha, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John p. Kendall, of Ayr township, went to Kentucky to work as a ' missionary under the auspices of tbe Associate Presbyterian church. Miss Kendall is a grad uate of the McConnellsburg High School, and of the Cumberland Valley State Normal, and had she chosen to engage in the work of teaching in the public schools of her own townsttip, could readily have gotten a salary of fifty dol lars a month. But her heart was Miss Martha Kendall. Oood Porkera. George W. Glenn, at Webster Mills, butchered four six-months old pigs last Wednesday that made him 568 pounds of nice pork. The largest one dressed 169 pounds. That's the kind of pork that makes choice "eating." Harry Duffy butchered two on Friday the ages of which we have not been able to get, but will risk our reputation as a guesser, that they were under thirty-nine years old, one of these hogs weighed 403 when dressed, and the other 880. S. S. Hann in forms us he killed two wbich weighed respectively 801 and 803 pounds. Scott also imparted the information that his son in law, Thos. Oliver killed one that weighed 837 pounds. Fernando Decker butcberad a pig last week for Eld. Ahimiaz Mellott. The pig was, oniy four teen months old, but dressed 406 pounds. Mr. Mellott will likely remember that pig tbe balance of his days: for when Mr. Decker shot the pig, it tell over into a de pression, and Mr. Mellott seized the animal by one of its front egs, when the pig began to struggle, and one of the pig's hoofs struck tbe back of Mr. Mellott'a hand peeling almost all the sum off it. Noxt! touched by the stories of the con dition of the "poor whites" who live in the mountains of ' eastern Kentucky, and she chose to leave a comfortable heme, and go among those people at a salary of twenty dollars a month, trusting that the consciousness of being an instrument in God's hands in assisting those unfortunate peo ple to rise to a higher plain of right living, would more than compensate for the difference in salary. The following letter from Miss Kendall, telling something of the conditions that surround her, will be read with interest: "Our mission is on Turkey Creek, Breathitt county, familiar ly known as "Bloody Breathitt" This is one of the largest counties in Kentucky, being ever sixty miles in length. It has become notorious on account of the many bloody deeds committed within its borders. Smouldering flames of ancient feuds still exist, which occasionally burst forth in the perpetration of some new crime. The cause, however, of most of the crimes, now, is intoxication. Whiskey must be used freely on all occasions, the mountaineers think. Just this week a'"Dartv" was given at one of the homes aoout three miles down the Creek from our cottage; drinking was indulged in; this brought abou quarreling, and as a result, one man was shot and very seriously wounded. The people of this section make their living by farmiug corn and cane being the chief crops. Their food consists, pnncipally.of pork, cornbread, beans, sweet potatoes nd scrghum although a few other vegetables Much weaving is done both for bedding and for clothlntr. The homes are in a most de plorable condition. Thev con talu from one to five rooms, are neaied hy fireplaces, and only the wrest necessities exist in the wy of furniture while they are oid of anything pertaining to uiy and culture. A great uiwy Houses have no windows at all; hence light must be admitted through the odaii Anrtr. e,van in ths coldest weather. But of the J'P'e, It must be said, they are Kindest and most hospltabl 8 hkVB fvar f of Th...... Jotch-lrluh decent, but have hved a the mountains so lorn tcb literate and indlflerent-that Miss Harriet Alexander is vis iting her brother W. A.- Alexan der, in Everett the sterling characteristics of their ancestors have become al most extinct. Education is sadly neglected. In Breathitt county alone there are 5,500 school children. Only about one-fifth of these attend school. Hundreds of as bright, promising boys and girls . as could be found anywhere are growing up in ignorance, because they have never been led to see the need of an education. The teachers are very often wholly incompetent and tbe school house is many cases scarcely bet ter than a shed; hence nothing but an innate desire for knowl edge could attract the children to school. Compulsory attendance laws are not enforced; in fact, no laws are enforced in the moun tains, as you probably know from the accounts many of you have read, of tbe fall election in Breath itt county. It is said that news papers reports are sometimes exaggerated, but conditions were anything bnt flattering during tha election season. Yet we are glad to say that but little blood was shed. Tbe mountaineers are a very self satisfied people. They em phasize morality to a great extent; yet their ideals are, indeed, very low. So many of them think that morality will effect salvation. This is a hard barrier to break down. The native preachers are illiterate and immoral their lives being anything but models- for others to pattern after. The county of course is very mountainous. The mountains are not in a straight range, but are very Irregular, rising more as peaks, which aie situated on all sides, unsystematically. Be- tweed these peaks flows the creek which is also the road. While the autumn leaves hung on the trees, the scenery was magnifl cent, and Is, still; although the leaves added much. All roads are in tbe creek bed and are very rough. No buggies are ever seen here. There is very little level land. Farming land is ob tained by clearing patches on the mountain side. These are so steep that very often cultiva tion has to be carried on by means of hoes. While tbe mountaineers live in an uacouth style, there is no rea- s m why they may 'not attain to better things. They need help and enlightenment; and when they get this, surely there will be a change. Maktka Kendall. Houston, Ky, THE MAN WHO MADE THE FIRST STEAMBOAT The First of a Series of Incidents of History Written for the News by Prof. G. W. Ashton. It may bo of ii lerst to some of the readers of the News to know that the real inventor of tbe steamb at was not Robert Fulton, but John ('"itch who was born at South Windsor, Connecticut, Jan. 19, 1743. And it is doubtful if history has a sadder page than that on which the life, struggles and death of this strange, poor man are recorded. A bard hearted, close fisted father, and an elder brother of the same character,, made the boyhood life of poor John Fitch one long d ly of grief, privation and humiliation. Attaining his majority, he learned the trade of watch-making and settled in Trenton, N. J. The war of the Revolution breaking out, he be came a gunsmith, making arms for the defenders of his country, till the British destroyed his shop. He then entered the army in time to suffer the horrors of Valley Forge. From the army he went about in the country a tinker of clocks and watches, but in 178) was Bent by Virginia as deputy surveyor to the then wilds of Kentucky. In the west he was captured by the Indians and kept a year before he could es cape, in poverty ana want ne returned and settled at Warmin ster, Pa. It was at this place and period of his life that the idea of using steam as a motive power for vehicles and boats took possession of him. He made a model of a steamboat identical in principle with that which has now become universal in practice. He went to Philadelphia and there constructed a steam engine, with a three-inch cylinder, and ap plied the same to a skiff. An authentic historian records, This was without doubt the first steamboat ever constructed by man." Vainly did Fitch appeal to the Continental Congress, tbe Assembly of Pennsylvania, and tbe learned and wealthy men of his day. Time went by and FUch got the reputation of being a crazy man. He finally formed a company which reluctantly fur nished the means to build a boat 45 feet long, 12 feet beam, inch cylinder engine. The inventor agreed that his boat should make eight miles an hour. August 22, 1787, the boat made her trial trip on the Delakare and was success fuL The members of the-Con stitutional Convention, with Geo. Washington at its head, adjourn ed on invitation and went down to see the strange invention on its first voyage. The members shook their wise beads, left the crazy man with his craft, and went back to building tbe Ship of State. A regular Packet line with schedule was established on the Delaware and was maintain ed for about three years. But the steamboat business was not a financial success and Fitch's boat was fioaliy wrecked by a storm. From it tbe inventor went forth into the world penni less and a beggar. Aftflr wan dering in this country, and in Europe to find financial support for bis steamboat scheme, and finding none, he wandered again into the far West, Kentucky. There in a little room of a tavern in Bardstown, with not a penny in tbe world, prematurely old from despair and' strugnle, his clothes worn to tatters and rags, bis face wrinkled and haggard, on tbe night of July 2, 1798 he lifted a cup of poison to bis hps, drank the deadly potion and lay do-vn, unhonored and unwept, to die. No stone marks bis grave aad his last resting place Is now obscured. Here are. the words he left in a letter, "Tbe day will come when some more powerful man will get fame and riches SWIFT JUSTICE. Steals an Automobile, Qets Away Wl h It, la Captured, Tak;n Into Court, Gets His Sentence, and Lands In Reformat ry in Less Than a Week. Some time during Tuesday night of last wee't, Janes W. Rittsr, who has tee l han. ing around the garages in Ciamters- burg for several days, pried a side door open with a crow bar, entered Sjhaal'a parage, and helped himself to Drugixt Skin ner's 40-horsepqwer Pullnan touring cvr. Putting five gallons of gasoleue into the tank, and ap propriating a pair of fur gloves, he opened the front doors of tl e garage, "cranked up," swung out into the street, and throwing the throttle w ide open, like a streak of greased lightning, he sped out the pike toward St. Thomas. On he went, thro ugh Loudon, across the mountain, through McConnellsburg, and had it not been that there were a few things about running automobiles that James did not know, be might have been going vet; but when he ran up against Sideling Hill mountain, the machine began to suspect that it was not under the skilled guidance of Harry Skin ner, and began to make trouble for its new master. By the time the "Crossings" were reached, the machine lay down flat on Ritter, and he had to wait until Salkeld came along with bis mule team carrying tbe U. S. mail, when he prevailed on Uncle Sam's servant to tow his craft into Everett. As soon as the skilled eyes of the Karn boys at the Everett gar age fell on the machine, they saw that Ritter had been trying to run the machine without oil, and that he had burnt out several im portant bearings. " It was half past ten o'clock, be fore Mr. Skinner found out that some one bad borrowed his car, and he at once got busy. Tbe telephone soon brought him word that his machine was going through Harrisonvllle, and soon after noon, Harry, with a party of Chambersburg friends, passed through Mc Connellsburg in pur suit. When they reached Everett, they found tbe machine and the man; but the constable, who was new in tbe business, fooled a round until Ritter got away in the direction of Bedford. Officer Charley Beegle, of Bedford was notified by phone to be on tbe lookout That was enough. They don't pet away from Charley, and the next morning he tele phoned the Chambersburg party to come to Bedford and get their man. They went to Bedford Thurs day morning, got Ritter, return ed with him the same day to Chambersburg, and placed him in jail. He went into Court Mon day, plead guilty, and Judge Gil an sentenced him to the Hunt ingdon Reformatory, reserving further sentence, until it is seen whether the Reformatory will' work a reformation in bis character. Bazaar sod Fish-pond. The Ladies' Aid Society of Asbury Methodist Episcopal church of Harrisonville charge, will hold a bazaar and festival and conduct a fish-pond at tbe Mann House, along the pike, near Sa luvia, Thursday evening, Dec. 16. Come and buy a nice Christmas present for your friend and try your luck at the fish pond. Committee. from my invention; but nobody will believe that poor John Fitcb can do anything worthy of at tention." Robert Fulton m the 19th made the steimboat a suc cess; John Filch in the 18th cen tury invested it and died a pas per and a suicide. Moral: The world does not always rightly bestow its honor. Wichita, Kansas. THE LUTHERAN CHURCH. ABOUT PEOPLE YOD KNOW hm?; & (ft m iDp-v. ' s. -, JL ft,... i trT ' fWwin ,...rMf " ' -f, t " Snapshots at Their Comings and Oolnji Here lor a Vacation, or Away for a Restful'Outing. NAMES OF VISITORS AND VISITE) The above is a picture of the St. Paul's Evangelical Lutheran church of McConnellsburg, and will awaken many recollections of the past in the minds of those who have gone out from McConnells burg, but who attended that place of worship in their younger days. Dunug the more than a hundred years of its existence, twenty three pastors have served the congregations, and the church is now in a flourishing condition. The names of the pastors who have serv ed, and the time each was here, is as follows: Jonathan Ruthiauff, 1804-14; Ferdinand Cramer, 1814-20; M. Schultz, 1826; Reuben Wei ser ; Diefenbaugh ; Samuel Rothreck, 1835-7; Peter Zahn, 1837-43; David Smith; 1843-5; V. A. Kopp, 1845-50; Martin M. Bechtel, 1850-54; Solomon McHenry, 1854-9; G. Roths, 1859-G4; A. M. Whetstone, 1864-9; Philip Doerr, 1869-71; J. B. Anthony 1871-3; Joseph R. Focht, 1874-6; H. B. Winton, 1876-80; B. b. Kautz, 1880-88; D. S. Kurtz, 1888-90; J. O. McGaughey, 1891-94; D. P. Drabaugh, 1895-1900; A. G. Wolf, 1900-06; J. C. Fassold, 1907 to December 1, 1909. The congregation is without a pastor at this time. ANOTHER WARNINQ. CLARENCE SHORE Well Knows Liveryman in Bedford Near ly Loses His Life from Mistake Made in Giving Him Medicine. The number ol accidents that have occurred on account of the carelessness of housekeepers in keeping drugs and medicines about the house without having them labeled properly, should be a warning, as will be noticed in the following account taken from last week's Bedford Inquirer. The Inquirer says that Ross A Stiver, the well known livery man, of Bedford, was poisoned last Friday evening by taking a dose of horse medicine in mistake. He had been out in tbe country buying horses on Friday and' stopped at the home of his broth- er-in-law John Williamson in Bed I ford township for supper. He felt ill and was given what Mr. Williamson and his wife supposed to be medicine for cramp which was in a bottle with a label on it to that effect. In some manner, Hess's Colic Cure, a horse medi cine, composed principally cf chloroform and Indian hemp, was put into a bottle with a label similar to the bottle containing the medicine which Mr. William sod wished to give Mr. Stiver. He took three or four tablespoon tuls of this, about four times tbe usual dose for a horse, and then ate his supper. He became very ill and started at once for Bed ford, accompanied by Mr. Wll liamson. Oa the way he became unconscious. He was taken at once to his livery stable where foar physicians worked with him for several hours before be began to show anv signs of recovery. For a long time his body was rigid with scarcely any percepti ble sign of life. The persistent efforts of the physicians, aided by his naturally vigorous constitu tion, at length overcome the, ef fects of the poison, and be begau to rally. Mr. Stiver is now thought to be out of danger, but it was a close call. We are pleased to note that at tbe recent convention , of the Maryland State Christian En deavor Society, Mr. William M. Robinson, of Baltimore, a former McConnellsburg boy, was cbosed president lor tbe ensuing year. Wnlle Mr. Rib lnsoo is a successful business man, be finds time to make him self very useful in the several branches of Christian work In which bis church is identified. Tells of His Visit to Clear Ridge During His Vacation in the Hunting Season. As the annual Thanksgiving vacation comes around and near ly every one takes advantage of the sam e. I decided to spend mine back on the old happy hunt ing grounds among the hills of Fulton county. As I started on my homeward journey my attention was turned toward the busy industries along the road over which I traveled, and I find that prosperity has al most returned to Its normal state or as it was, before the panic of 1907 cast its shadows over our country. Traffic of all kinds has been in creasing daily; and, of course will continue to do so until after the holiday rush. The "Pensy" reports that within twenty-four hours it handled more than 7,500 cars over the M'ddle Division. Upon approaching nearer to the village of Clear Ridge, I was reminded as the Indian terms it, that it was several moons ago that I had been an eye witness of the beautiful picturesque scenery of Fulton county. The beautiful foliage that clustered on the vari ous trees had disappeared, and this brought to my mind that winter was near; and by looking around, -quite a number of inci dents arose before me that brought me back to boyhood days when I used to roam through the wooded lands and over the hills. Next, I found myself within the village; and after taking note of some of the changes and im provements, I find the Patrons of Husbandry is erecting a two story lodge and storeroom which adds to the appearance and pros perity of tbe village. General Merchant J. Wine gardner is still behind the count er doing his usual amount of business; and, of course, still smoking occasionally. The live and up to date Post master and notionman is found at his usual place attending to the nice little business that is comiog to him; and, the con tinuous odor of skunk will not let one forget that the fur dealer Bert Winegardner is still In that business. N. B. Henry & Son,' contrac tors and builders, with a large force of men, are still as busy as ever; and now, are doing tome work in Or bison la. Hence busi ness is still flourishing here as well as abroad. I then strolled into the Me- Mrs. S. B. Worlletand Mrs. J. W. Mossr spent Tuesday in Caambersburg shopping. Lucille Grissinger, spent a fe v days lat week with the family of Harry Stevens, near Mercers burg. Miss Martha Funk, of Need more, spent a day last week with Pearl and Hazel Garland, at thoir home near McConnellsourg. Miss Lillian Dellart returned home from Chambersburg, Tues day, on account of her mother's illness. She will remain at home until after the holidays. Geo. W. Sipes and grand-daugh ter Esther, and his brother Lew is, of Whips Cove, were pleasaut callers at the News office while in town a few days ago. Mrs. J. L. Garland, accompa nied by her mother, Mrs. Har riet Deshong, ol Mercersburg, were visiting friends at Huston town this week. C. J. Wink, of Plum Run, came to town last Saturday, and on Sunday returned home, accompa nied by his wife, who had been spending the week in the home of their son-in-law and daughter, Ex-Sheriff and Mrs. J. G. Alex ander. Daniel Naugle and wife, of Huntingdon county, spent a week in this county during the deer hunting season. Part of the time they were guests of their brother-in-law, Randolph Pulmer, and part of the time with the family of Geo. W, Sipes. Druggist and Mrs. W. II. Ir win, of Altoona, spent the time from Saturday until Monday, in the home of the former's brother, John A. Irwin, cl this place. Will and bis wife and been visit ing their daughter who is a stu dent at Wilson College, Cham bersburg. Last Saturday evening as Mrs. Mary A. Kelly was quietly sitting with her mother she was greatly surprised by Mrs. C. J. Wink and Mrs. J. G. Alexander and Master George Barton, entering and showering 172 post cards down upon her. Mrs. Kelly wishas to thank her many friends for so kindly remembering her on her birthday. Miss D. Viola Hixson, daugh ter of John N. Hixson, of Brush Creek valley, left on Monday of las; week for New York City, where she will be employed as a profecsional trained nurse, in tho New York branch of the Flor ence Crittendoo Home. Miss Hixson graduated last May from the Washington, D. C. branch of that famous institution. Clayton Troglor, of Denver, Colo., was a guest m the home of J. L. Garland and wife, from" Sat urday until Wednesday. Mr. Trogler left Mercersburg live years ago m company with his parents, to make his home in the city of Denver, which lies at an altitude of a milo above sea level, and from his personal appear ance the climate has agreed with Clayton. chanics Hall and spent the re mainder of the evening listening to the sweet straius of musio rendered by tbe Mechanics Band under the leadership of David Fleming. A series of revival services con ducted by the Rev. Harry Moyer was in progress, and was well at tended both by tbe people nearby and of the neighboring towns. - As my vacation draws to a close I have to retrace my . steps and return to the busy little city where I am employed, and if this letter does not find its way to the waste bsiiret I may in the future give yon through, the columns of the News a description of the aame. A Vjkitoh,