THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS. MeCONNELLSBURG. PA. KEYSTONE STATE iT In This Do part moot: Our Readers In Fulton County and Elsewhere May journey Around tho Aorld XAith tho Camera on the "Trail of History IVIaPcing Happenings. Latest NcwsHappenlngsGa'her ed From Here and There. TOLD IN SHORT PARAGRAPH! PARIS RECEIVES CAPTURED GERMAN STANDARDS AWAITING A CHARGE OF GERMAN CAVALRY PltUburgher Sends State $15 Hunter Killed By Gun When Stump Falls Two Killed In Auto Crash. s i Pictures of ran ij lVBO cs for News i mi ORDER in 1 rffcfc . ''-...f:'xsv.. f4 ? Li 1 1 ri n f p 1 i A a " l 5 ' t'?fc til Sttf II It " f w . , iji- 7 i PliiMI l;Cif5 m I fern IBteS ipiwS r 1 '1 IV'I (in-at ceremony attended tho occuslon of the eonveylnB of seven captured Genium wur standards to the inu wuin of tho Invalldcs In I'arln. Tho photograph shows tho Hags being carried ncrows the courtyard. MANUEL OFFERS TO KELP ENGLAND "jr -"J tit. ?: f 31 t ' f ' " - S " :: . . V;'-jm- "Vt bl CARING FOR DYIPJ3 SOLDIER llrltlnh Infuntry behind barbed wlro calmly awaiting a charge by a detachment of tho kaiser's cavalry. BRITISH IN THE TRENCHES AT LIERRE DR. MARY CRAWFORD Pathetic sccno of Belgian peasants caring for n dying French soldier after bis regiment had passed on. FRENCH TOOK THIS ELUCHER . umaasffig Ks-Klnt; Manuel of Portugal, here shown with bis wife, who In a Hohen "Hern princess, has offered to servo Kngland In any capacity In accordance the ii'lliince between Great" Britain und Portugal, and has advised bis "O'alift friends to be loyal to their country. It U sa'.d plans are on foot to "stem liim lo tl1Q throne. FRANCE DEGRADES A TRAITOR S L ' 11? ":ft.T ,v 1 w y. W1 4." -X s I ISl M, f. :,.A i . i :. : v -: :- 1 .-..1 f; i rt. r. trt ff rft rc n ni. t tn 'rif if .rrf 'rr it v ( t.i. J I ' ; -i x . . -t . . . . , . j- .-, . ; GOAT'S MILK FOR THE SIKHS IN FRANCE .... ,- .. yni lei i.njor von Itlucher, a great-great-grandson of tho famous Prusslau gen eral who fought at Waterloo, was cap tured by tho French at the Battlo of the Aisne and taken to Bordeaux, lie Is here seen (left) showing his papers to a French official. WAR TO COST TEN BILLION 1 MM II ?X " nem"al CrUttn' of the French Infantry was d.soovered trying to sell to Hi Wm y documents regarding the wiielofcs Installation on the bliTel tower. 0c4 "'"Charged from the army with ignominy, publicly degraded and seu uv.. , life lmnrlnnnmont Tho tih..i,,pranli nh..ws the traitor beine . ... u M " j-MW. o --- ui or the barracks after the ceremony of degradation. French Authority Thinks It Will Last Seven Months and Check Eco nomic Progress. Paris. Paul LcroyBenulleu, the economist, estimates that each of the grcr.tor belligerents Is spending on av erage equivalent to $200,000,000 month- In presenting these figures to the Academy of Moral and Political Sci ences ho said that he considered It probable that the war would continue tevru months from August 1. Accordingly the five greater powers engaged were committed to an expen diture of $7,000,000,000. Each of the smaller states, Including Japan, will hav expenses of $000,000,000 to $S00, 000,000 to meet. M. Leroy-Beaulleu continued: "One might say that the war will cost the fighting powers roughly $9, 000,000,000 to $10,000,000,000. "These figures, which do not take Into account the losses of revenues during hostilities, will be met. first, by tho Issuance of notes against tho accumulated gold In the government bunks; second, by the Issuance of short term treasury bonds to which all governments are having recourse during tho war, and third, by delaying payments for military necessities. "The larger part of the savings of the world will be ubsorbrd by the tak ing up of national loans and economic progress will be seriously checked." 1 1 Thousands of goats have been gathered at tho camps In Franco where the East Indian troops are stationed, because the Sikhs drink only goat's milk. IvarTtFpI kL'-"..'c'- Dr. Mary Crawford, the only woman ambulnnce surgeon of Brooklyn, N. Y., who sailed on tho hteainship Kochnin beau with a party of American phyi-1-clans who have volunteered for Bed Cross work in France. FIRST TROOPER IN 0STEND v.. 5; . V :"K6r.,;'j;r.,.ir;. . f'i - Thirteen men were taken to Pitts burgh hospitals as a result of two auto- mohllo accidents in which W. O. Stev enson, of Lecchhurg, Pa., and David Nicolas, of Hltes, Pa., were killed. Tht machine in which Stevenson and Nic olas were riding, collided with a street car and a police patrol summoned to their assistance ran Into a rapidly mov ing automobile when near the scene of the accident. Among the Injured were Police Captain Hubert Enimett And three policemen, all of whom weru seriously hurt French troops marching through a valley of the champagne country, whera the peasants are picking the grapes for the famous sparkling wine. Decorated with the Iron cross that was promised tho German soldier who came tho nearest to entering F.ng land, this uhlun is one of tho most en vied men In tho ka Iter's cavalry. Dur ing tho earlier raids of the uhlans he penetrated to the very heart of Os-tcud. Maxims for German Soldiers. According to Harry Hansen, corre spondent of tho Chicago News, these ten maxims have been laid down for tho German soldiers: No soldier can lead w ho has not first learned to obey. The character of tho discipline lu an army augments or weakens Its nu merical strength. A Boldier Insufficiently fed may be overcome without recourse to the sword. Courage Is worth more tlmn cohorts The bravery and rosoun oru!nesg of an officer Inoculates u thousand men. A soldier should wish to tcuch the enemy, not learn from him. A good soldier defeat rather than reviles tho enemy. The soldier's worst enemies are pru lumpluousnesB and pride. Tlallly Umholtz, of Valley View, while out hunting. Accidentally shot himself and before medical asslstanco could be summoned, died, t'mholtx and Edward Conrad w ere hunting on the j mountains, near Valley View. Urn holtz was standing on a decayed stump with his gun corked. The stumn wan not strong enough to sustain his weight and when he felt it giving way ho grabbed for the branch of a treo. Tin gun, which I'mholt. carried, exploded and tho contents entered his abdomen. At tho homo of tho bride, nt Kut. town Miss Clara Belle Schmchl, daugh ter of Nathan Schmehl, a hardware merchant, and II. S. Walker, of South Bethlehem, were married. Tho bride Is a graduate of the Kutztnwn Statu Normal School. Tho bridegroom Is a master mechnnlc at tho Bethlehem Steel Works. Falling off the running board of an automobile nt Berwick, Arthur Bower, a rural mail carrier, was picked up apparently little Injured. He covered his rout in his car and then with no recollection that he had been working became desperately 111. A physician re moved a three-cornered stone from uka head. Mrs. Nancy Overpeck. seventy-three years old, died at MHtun from the ef fects of an accident, when she was run down by an automobile which frne tured two ribs and Internally Injured her. She leaves a son, Dr. John VL Overpeck, of Philadelphia. At a barn raising seven men fell twenty-five feet when the frame work of the new barn upon the Jacob Krlck farm near Lewlstown collapsed. Fr?4ik lln Slpe was Internally Injured and Melvln Krepps bad tho bones of on leg broken. In an effort to discover the contents of a dynamite cap. Luther Smith, aged twelve, of Davlclsbnrg, proceeded to dissect It In school. There was an explosion which blew off three fingers and the thumb of his left hand and created a panic In the srhool. The Twelfth Keglrncnt brnd, N. O. P., was mustered out marking the end of that fanious musical organization. Tho orders were due to t lie fact that thu Twelfth was disrupted when half of Its companlis were turned Into other branches of the service. O. K. Law-son, of Celeron, N. Y., was killed on a Pennsylvania t'allrosd rrosf luff four miles from Warren, when an automobile, In which he end his wife were riding, was struck by an engine. Mrs. I.awson Is in a hospital and not expected to live. Helen Green, colored, eluhtecn years old, who was cbargrd with kidnapping the eleven months' rid lai'i!Mr of Dr. and Mrs. li. E. Heacock. of Bethlehem, niil who wns caupht at Calasauiti.i with the Infant, was sent to Jail for six months by Judge Stewart. Cyrus II. Meredith, aced SI years, died at Newport. For many years Mr. Meredith was a boatman on the old Pennsylvania Canal, and for twenty eight years he was a lock t.'iuler on the canal at Thonipsiintown, Juniata county. Miss Eunice Eves, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Evis, of Mlllville, be came the bride of Dr. Joseph W. Shaf fer. of EllzahcthvllV. ltev. Dr. E. P. Manhart, of Srllnsrove, performing tho ceremony. John H. Shlssler, sixty years old, ex-treasurer of Sunhury, died at hia homo nfter a long Illness of Brlght's disease. More than fifteen years ago ho fell under a train and suffered the loss of an arm and leg. Georpo Pelrce, Harry Mellet. James Ctimmlnps and P. T. Klagh, were hurled from a touring car when a Pennsylvania passenger train struck It cm a crossing In Mt. Cartncl. The men were not seriously hurt. Fifteen dollars In bank notes waa sent to the State Treasury by some one in Pittsburgh, who gave neither name or directions. It was passed to the conscience fund. Five cases of diphtheria have been round in Milton. Mrs. James Wnlls and er four young children being tho victims. Strict quarantlno was at once enfomd. As n result of drln'.tlng turpentine last Saturday, Clarence F. Khoads, "lvr-wr-rld F'-n e! Lyma'" Vlhuada, of ';ilb"vtsvllie, died Wednesday'. While golns;. from West Berwick te Cocarnnvn B rch of wnr. Karle Hartao, an '''gh.teen year-old Slavon ian boy, was caught between ears.