THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURG, PA. KEYSTONE STATE in Thlo Dopor-tmont Our Roadors In Fulton )ounty and Elsewhere May Journ Camera on the Troll apponlngs. RAILWAY CARS FOR SCHOOLS IN GERMANY UtestNewsHappenlngsG&ther ed From Here and There. Around tho World AAIth -the of History Making OLD AND THE NEW IN AMERICAN NAVY TOLD IN SHORT PARAGRAPHS Celebrate Anniversary Of Lookout Mountain Nitroglycerine Blows Man and Team To ,' Bits. for News Readers SHORT ORDER : - , -V-du n11' 4V America's first battleship, tho ConHtitutlon, and the navy's luteHt acaulMltlonn. tli mihmnrinn K.K .n.i K'.fi ijinj iuu u ornc iu ma i uuru'muwn navy jura. KHAKI-CLAD TURKS MARCHING AGAINST RUSSIANS ft C A. it. I- a t if v. i mm iii J 1 J R'sniHiit of Turklnh rcRiilar Infantry, drilled by the Germans ond wrarlnir tltolr now khnkl unlfornia. tnnrrh- Hrruss iho dpscrt to moot tho Russian troops on the Caucasus border. TARGET FOR TURKS' "FRIENDLY" SHOT ) f3 , 'K.t ' i , ,i i', j ;'ii acq r-i - - a ;? 1 .fc f TERROR OF NAVIGATORS r la tlio hump!, nf tlitt TT a a Ton noauna nt n-lilrh n Tnrklwh fnrt In t. .. ut IIIU U hJ. Vi V v.i'i'i w ...... ... T.."f s,,1'r"a "red a nhot. which afterward was declared to bo only warning that the harbor was mined and closed to alien vessels. FRENCH SOCIETY WOMEN AS NURSES Wr&X I.. 'I ll.l.l.ll, . 1 . M KH 'l.l.lll l t y v, j Ji iy Y?- ww t a y a ' . ii iimiWb I ... J At 4 j.Tv vJ -"".n-7'i 7 -iJ .aw.A. ii stjim 1. ..... iiiv ' we" known ,n ooloty, attending woundod oiUleri at I ""I'd M Ihev arrtva from tha bntileflulda. This blR steel ball Is one of tho deadly mines that ore feared by all navigators. It was wnhhed ashore at Slzewell, Sulfolk, nnd Its explosives were removed by a torpedo Instructor. Many of these mines have been beached along tho const of Kngland. WARNS KING OF ENGLAND V-.; J' 1 to T ' T-rift :H-. MfgfL:. Vf v. '. V ' f.. t Jt f . r ' A , .iTI. . Wt To accommodate the wounded soldiers who ore brought bock from the battle lines, the schools nf fiermanv have been converted Into hospitals; and In order to provide for tho children, whoso studies otherwise- would be interrupted, railway cars are being used as classrooms, as shown In tho photograph. RED CROSS WORKERS IN NIEUPORT'S RUINS -. ii ii.iilihhu Shells from tho German guns were still falling Into Nlcuport when this photograph was taken, showlug IteJ Cross workers senrchlng the ruins for any who might need their help. GREAT BRIDGE DESTROYED BY AUSTRIANS HAD SHOES FOR HIS BABY Aitrologist Tells George to Beware of Evil Days In March of Next Year. Host on. That King George of Eng land must beware of evil days next March Is the prediction of Culharine H. Thompson, astrologlst Miss Thompson bases hor prediction on the fact that Jupiter enters Pisces, a watery, unstable sign, next March, and afntctg the kind's radical sun, and sick ness and trouble should increase rather than diminish. While Jupiter was passing through Aquarius this year, she says, trouble for the king was allayed. Something extraordinary will happen, she predicts, such as the slego of London, the full of Westminster ab bey, St. Paul's cathedral or Ducking ham palace. mMfMmWi xiMm A Thorough Soaking. "Some of those soldiers righting along the Alsne must lead a dog's life." ' "I. should think that lying In a trench half full of water day after day would be more Ilka a frog's life." 1 During the recent lighting In Gallcia, when the Russians were driving the Austrluns before them, the Austrians destroyed this magnificent bridge to retard the progress of the enemy. HEROIC SACRIFICE AT SEA Sailors Drive Their Boat on Mine to Save a Warship Six of Seven Perish. London. The correspondents of Finnish newspapers report the heroic sacrifice of the crew of a Russian picket-boat In order to save a Russian cruiser which was unwittingly ap proaching a mine In the Gulf of Fin land. Realizing that It was too late to signal the danger, the boat deliberate ly rushed at the mine at full speed. A terrific explosion followed, and six out of the crew of seven perlshod. The survivor, who was severely wounded, has been awarded the deco ration of St George. Four Sets of Clothing. Paris. AQorman spy, captured near Paris and shot, had tour sets of cloth ingthe Urltlsh uniform, the French soldier's garb, his own and a woman's dress over all Two littlo shoes found In tho pock ets of a mortally wounded Helglan sol dier touched tho heartstrings or the nurses In the French hospltul to which he was token. With them was a let ter to his wife, from whom ho had been separated since tho destruction of their home In Terniondo, saying ho was sending a pair of shoes for their three-ycnrold baby, bought with money he had earned na a scout In King Albert's army. The shoes were hung nbovo his deathbed. London Vagrants. The nightly number of vagrants tak en care of by the city of London aver aged more than a thousand during the year ended March, 1913, the nightly number of casuals dropped to an av erage of between 600 and COO, and dur ing the next year the average was about 300. Since that dote on only two night have there been more than 300, and on June 19 the number fell to 175. This Improved condition Is due largely-to a systematic effort on the part of the municipality and char itable organizations to relieve this condition. Founder's Day at Susquehanna Unl verslty was observed by the decoration of a slxty foot flag pole. Dr. F. P., Manhart, dean of the school of theology, was orator of the day. Th Hag was hoisted by Dr. David II. Floyd and Joseph Lumbard, local veterans who fought In the Unttlo of Lookout Mountain, of which conflict Tuesday was the llfty-Qrst anniversary. Three thousand quarts of nitro glycerine exploded In a magazine bo- tinging to the Ctipler Torpedo Com pany, TitiiRVille, killing Ralph Tubbs, aged thirty-nine, on employe of the 'ompnny. The building the team driven by Tubbs and the man himself were blown to bits. Nothing was found of Tubbs or the wagou be bad driven to tho magazine. A etntotnent made by Schuylkl county banks shows that the Christ inas clubs of Schuylkill county bav wed six hundred thousand dollars for Christmas. This Is on averago of three dollars for every man, woman and child In tho county. The Schuyl kill Trust Company alone has $150. 000 on deposit by these clubs, which will be distributed this week. Droz Snyder, the fourteen-year-old son of Senator Charles A. Snydor, of rottsvllle, was serluosly burned when he lit a match to loo& Into a gasoline tank on an auto. The tank exploded. Although Snyder Is painfully burned about the face, physicians say he will not lose his sight Mrs. Anthony Tremko, twenty five years old, of Taylor, stood over the kitchen stove at her home In Scran- ton and poured kerosene on some wood to which she had touched a match. Her body, burned to a crisp, was found by her husband. For "beating" his way from Totts- own to Norrlstown on a train, Wll- lam Smith, a Civil War veteran, who lalms that he Is eighty-two years old. was sent to Jail by Magistrate Clark. .Smith says ho was trying to get to jthe Soldiers' Home ot Hampton Road . Flro of unknown origin, descovered In the basement of tho department toro nf County Commissioner J. Vnny O'Nell, McKeesport, destroyed hat building and damaged buildings on each side, entailing a loss estl- mted nt $177,000. Caught with a basket containing two dead geeso August Ott. thirty-one cars old, of Rending, told tho pollen that he had stolen to keep his family from starving. Officers Font to his house found that tho family have sub- Isted on a loaf of bread for several days. More than a carload of fond and lothltig nnd almost $300 In cash were sent to Philadelphia from Shamokln, to bo added to donations from other .centers for the relief ot the Belgian ar sufferers, ' Virgil Hunt, of Stroudsburg. and Howard Denuind, of Delaware Water flap, patients at the IllUorsvllle State Hospital, escaped by using sheets, from which they made a rope to get to the ground. Fire destroyed the barn on tho farm of William Oyler, near Camp Hill, burning seventeen cows and all the crops and wagons. This Is the third born owned by Mr. Oyler to be burned within a week. Miss Nellie M. Cronln, of St Davids, and Joseph M. McGee, postmaster of South Itethlehom, were married In the Church of the Holy Infancy. Rev. U. J. McGettlgnn, the rector, per formed tho ceremony. Just after expressing a desire for a sandwich, which a son hastened to prepnro, Georgo J. Hyde, of Fullerton, a Civil War veteran, fell dead. Ho was clghty-stx years old. James MeArdlo, one of tho many ap plicants for the postolllre at Nesque honlng, which carries with It a Balary of $1,700 per annum, has been noti fied of his appointment Walking on tho Lehigh New Kng land track with head lowered against the wind John Berock. aged thirty-five years, did not hear the whistle of an approaching engine ond was killed. There are two cases of children with enlargement of tho tongue, a rare die easo, at the Allentown Hospital. In i ach case tho child was born with a tongue double normal size. Rev. William Strohelmer, pastor of the Schoenock Moravian Church, Eas ton, fell from a ladder on the church property and fractured an arm In two places. Daughters of a West Scranton clergyman and a prominent physician, along with several other young women prominent In social circles, have rol unteered to undergo operations where by cuticle will be taken from their bodies and grafted on ten-year-old Anna Miholk, burned by the explosion of a lamp at Taylor eight weeks ago. The names of the young womon ar being withheld from the public for th present A companion of the little girl allowed some of her skin to be grafted to the body of tho sufferer, but mors Is Deeded.