THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURG, PA. OF BARRY STATUE n This Department Our Readers in F"u Iton County and.Elsewhore May journey Memorial to the Father of the American Navy. Around the VAorld NAith the Camera on the Trail of History IVIaUSng Happenings. WILSON'S STIRRING ADDRESS FUNERAL OF MEN KILLED AT VERA CRUZ WHERE THE MEDIATORS ARE HOLDING SESSIONS President Wilson Defines Patriotism At Not a Mere Sentiment, But a Principle Secretary Dan iels Presided. UNVEILING Events mmmmikriW 5j Ft WPZt n ffinafo lit i M. wnrr i irrt i Au Impressive tribute was paid the memory of the seventeen buIIois and marines who were killed at Vera Cruz on the occasion of the funeral services at the Hrooklyu navy yard. This photograph shows the cortege mov lag up Hrondway, New York. GIGANTIC ICEBERGS IN PATH OF ATLANTIC STEAMERS r- .,, , ,,,.,. ,miii,i, .v,,n"r" i W!'W.V:-!:-yX' f - 4 ' " - v Tlip United States revenue 'cutter Senecn, which is patrollinB the North Atlantic, recently reported Blunting iminpiise Icebergs that were moving rapidly southward in the path of ocean liners. They were about one fc'jnilnd and twenty-live feet high above the water lino. 4 FIGHTING IN TAMPICO'S OUTSKIRTS v -tea's vy " W r! " Advance trendies of the federals outside Tamplco repulsing an attack y tin. ciiiiHtltiitionallBts. These soldiers and their mates finally were driven Ti'iu 1,10 city and (led to the south. PROTECTING THE PANAMA CANAL MISS JANE DELANO . f-V"':V.'.W.fc.- '.'.V.' 'I ' h, 1 - 1 1 141-11 f x Xi t-xl tation HUnrtl agalnBt any Possible attack on the Panama canal there 1b now Tl,e . j al each of the locks one company of United States Infantrymen, ""olograph shows gome of the soldiers and their tenU at Pedro Miguel. :" te. ! hlll!lii:l!IU!illi!IIIIIi!!!i!!lilll!!ili;!Ii!n Miss Jane Delano Is the edlcient head of the four thousuud Red CroBS trained nurses, some of whom already have been sent to Mexico. She servos without pay and her olllclal title Is "chairman of the national committee on Ited Cross nursing service." Miss Delano Is a graduate of Dellevue hos pital, New York city. Plea for Cleaner Statues. Country cousins, visiting In Loudon, demand to know what is wrong with London monuments, or many of them. Well they may, for quite a number of our bronze effigies are, at this mo ment, In a most unsightly condition as a result of what is said to be "cleaning." The Gladstone figure In the Strand, the Shaftesbury memorial fountain at Plcadilly Circus, and many another, are coated In verdigris, the dried swllliiigs of some noxious fluid which has run down onto the Btone below and made It green also though not with envy, ono would think. The whole producoB a most bilious and sickening sight. Why cannot theso bigger bronzes be kept as clean and "bronzy" as the two Herculean ath letes In the Embankment Gardens the best and best-kept figures In Lon don? London Chronicle. M ill A, s'j&Wy I'll X4."i5 3 -fW Sc - :::t. ' .......3 This Is the Hospice at Falls View, Out., where tho A.-U.-C. mediators are holding their seoKlons and endeavor ing to settle the Mexican trouble. TWO WASHINGTON SPRING BRIDES r ' Among tho spring brides In Washington two of the prettiest are Miss Nora Topper (left), daughter of Charles W. Pepper, who Is to wed Dr. George W. Calver, U. 8. N., and Miss Sybil Scott (right), daughter of Congressman Scott of Iowa, who Is engaged to Dulo Moore, a well known newspaper man, formerly of St. Paul. f IN THE FEDERAL TRENCHES AT TAMPICO Scene In the trenches of the federal troops who put up a desperate but unavailing fight In defense of the city of Tamplco. Herrlnjj Di Luxe. A writer In a London papnr asks tho question: "Did you over eat the fish called a bloater In a first-class restau rant?" And then he answers the ques tion: "I did tho other night. It woe quite an Inferior specimen, but they called it 'lmreng grille a la maltre d'hotel,' and It took 35 minutes to pre pare it which name and preparation added greatly to the price charged. The bloater Is a herring, and the an nual yield. In Norway, Sweden and on the British coast Ib about four thou sand millions of this fish, or about that number of pounds. When It comes to serving fish to a patron, whether la a European or an American restau rant, the proprietor with malice afore thought proceeds to treat the patron as a malefactor, bo far aa he can, by levying a special tax upon him. Kven at our lakesido reports, where it may be supposed that fish should bo abun dant, tho resorters are discouraged from asking for this article of diet and are switched off to beef and bacon." DR. A. C. MIILLER fr -if A pi v i Dr. A. ('. l Miller of San Francisco was apM)inted a member of the fed eral reserve board created by tho uew currency law. EDWARD T. STOTESBURY P 1 V I - ' A s - - Irishman'! Wit. "The Irishman Is not nmictod with the Englishman's dreud of finding him self In a social Impasse. Ho knows he will bo perfectly well ablo to extricate himself, whilst the EngllKhman Is pain fully aware that ho will not. The Eng lishman's first thought, on entering a stranger's house, Is how he will be ablo to get out of It again If ho wants to. The Irishman Buffers no such qualms, secure that his native wit will help him to a successful exit." From Sheep Track, by Nesta Webster, Edward T. Stotesbury of Philadel phia, a member of J. P. Morgan & Co., has been elected president of tho Phil adelphia and Pending railway to suc ceed the late G. F, liner. Stotesbury Is sixty-five years old and entered tho firm of Drexel & Co. nt the uge of sev enteen years. How Khaki Is Dyed. Khaki Is an Invention of the Hin doos. The word means "earth-color." It was at first produced by Immersing the cloth In a bath of manure. Other dyes used In India have been burnt chicory, catechu and diamines. The modern khaki Is produced by dyeing In a mixture of oxldo of Iron and oxide of chromium. It can bo obtained by dipping the stuff Into a bath of fer rous sulphate and spreading out to dry In the air. In practise the proc ess Is more complex, solutions of fer rous sulphate, pyrollgnlte of Iron, ace tate of chromium and alum being em ployed In combination. Tho tissue takes up a large quuntity of the me tallic precipitate. Washington, D. C In the presence of several thousand persons, including members of the Cabinet, senators, rep resentatives, Army .and Navy olllclala of high rank and members of Irish American organizations from all sec tlons of the country, and with Presi dent Wilson the principal speaker and Secretary of the Navy Josephus Dan lols presiding, a bronze statue of Com modore John Harry, "Father of the) American Navy," was unveiled la Franklin Park here. After an invocation by Rishop Alfred Harding, Secretary Dunlels Introduced President Wilson, who, drawing Infer ences from tho Ufo of Parry, gavo bin views on what constitutes real patriot ism. "Patriotism," he said, "Is a prin ciple, not a mere sentiment. No man can be a true patriot who does not feel hlnipclf shot through and through with a deep ardor for what his country stands for, what its existence means, what Its purpose Is declared to be lu its history and In Its policy. Need No Alliances. "John Parry fought like every other man In the Revolution in order thnt America might bo free to mako hen own life without Interruption or dls turbance from any other quarter. You can sum tho whole thing up in that that America bad a right to her own self-determined life. "There are Just as vital things stir ring now that concern the existence of tho nation as were stirring In tho tlmo of the Revolution and every man who worthily stands In this presenco should examine himself and seo whether he hus the full conception of what It means that America shull live her own life." The President referred to the creed of the revolutionary heroes by saying that Washington and Parry were tho men who first saw that America must live her own life without "entangling alliances." . THEY FOUGHT FOR A WIDOW. Both Duellists Killed and the Lady Wounded. Lexington, Ky. Word reached here that Hubbard Miniard, aged 17, son of County Attorney J. II. Milliard, of Leslio county, and Joseph Hensley, a member of a prominent Leslie county family, had killed ench other In a pistol duel at Coons' Creek, near llyden. According to tho report, Miniard was escorting Mrs. Daisy Adams to a social function when tlio couplo met Hensley. A quarrel en sued, both men drew pistols and the firing ended with tho death of both, while one of tho bullets bit Mrs. Adams, but the latter's wouud Is not considered dangerous. HOME WRECKER SLAIN. Virginia Farmer Shot By Wealthy Lumberman. Wythevllle, Va. Hen Wilson, a farmer of near Max Meadows, Va., was shot and killed here by Samuel Davidson, a wealthy lumberman Davidson charged Wilson with ruining bis home. A few moments before the shooting Davidson purchased a shot gun, and approaching within a few feet of Wilson, where he leaned against the horse upon which a friend was seated, deliberately fired, tho shot tak ing effect near the temple. ACCEPT NO FAVORS. The Mexican Delegates Decline To Be Uncle Sam's Guests. Washington, I). C Iluerta's media tion envoys, Llguero, Rodriguez and Rabasa, have llatly refused nil courtesies proffered by the government of the United States. After much hesi tation and many conferences prompted by Insistent offers from American gov ernment officials, tho Huerta trio, In cluding the inscrutable Kabnsa, with his great round, black goggles, mado it plain that they would pay their own way and caro for themselves all the time they are In this country. GUNBOAT FLEES FROM AIRSHIP. Mexican Ship Morelos Set On Fire By Bomb From Sky. Durango, Mexico. The vulnerability of war vessels to the ottack of aero planes was demonstrated Saturday, according to a message received here by General Carranza, when the Federal gunboat Morelos, which lins been one of tho effective defenses of Mazatlan against Constitutionalists' attack, was forced to put to sea with her upper works on fire to escape the bombs of the Constitutionalist aeroplane fleet $5,000,000 FOR DIPLOMACY. Appropriation Bill Ae Passed By the House. Washington, D. C Tho dlplomatlo and consular appropriation bill ag gregating $5,000,0UI) was passed by the House. It provides for the acquisition of embassy sites and buildings al Toklo at $150,000; in Berne, Switzer land, at $140,000, aud in Mexico City at $150,000. During the debate on the Mexico City Embassy, Representative Wlitgo, of Arkansas, protested U would be a wast of money.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers