THE FULTON COUNTY NjffrS, McCONNELLSBUEO, PA. V, for Mews Reader l1 This Department Our Readers in Fulton County and Elsewhere IVlay Journey 'ConJucled by the Nntlonnl Womaa'a Clirlntlun Temp-runc Union.) Around the Aorld VrVith the Camera on the Troll of History IN1 alpine Happenings. TROOPS IN WARSAW READY FOR FIGHT SIBERIAN TROOPS ARRIVE "TO DEFEND WARSAW Pictures of World Events In this photograph, taken In Warsaw, tlie Russian troops aro soon preparing to go out to the lighting lino, and singling with them are their mothers, wives, sisters and sweethearts. Mm WEATHlSlJrTHE BRITISH TRENCHES w?tl& A,"- wm 4 M I III m . I .1 III i i British officers, privates and Red Cross men in the trenches trying to keep warm around a fire while tuelr food I being prepared. WAR DELAYS THEIR WEDDING -.: V--v:? .. .;... Y -.' I JR f ' .V Iff; i-.. . . 4,- -J It- fc' vi jasrvtf Ail F LUXURY IN THE TRENCHES I T T X srf. 4 .1 9- .jmtt ," r. t .1,' ' r v. it yww " i ! .11- b. 1 F m y -1 7 . .. J MM . 1 U 4 .w.- HoaxiEBCxiiassBBCsaBHBaaBEaBaBaiiiH Siberian artillery and (Inset) Infantry photographed in Warsaw Juki after tiielr arrival there to !u:lp defend tht city against the German array. BARBED WIRE ALONG THE FRONTIER VWJti'A - All along tlio GiTmun-Husslan border barbed wire entanglements have boon erected by both the Germnns ami the UuHslnns as a protection aKalnut raiding parties from either side. Tfco photogrnph shows one of tlip.se barbed wire entanglements and bnrrirados. All along the road, on both sides of It, are hugn stones, painted white. Guurds have been placed along the lines to give alnrm when a raiding party Is seen. These guards are dressed so that they take on the nppearance of the wayside rocks. Undur the tree In the foreground may be seen one of these guards wearing a white great coat PROCLAIMING THE HOLY WAR ft Elizabeth Reld Rogora, a society bollo of Washington, and Prince rtstian of Hesse, nephew of the kaiser and a captain fa the German navy, engagement has been announced. The prince says ho will renounce "tie to overcome Imperial objections to the marriage, the date for which """"Is on the fortunes of war. ON CAPTURED COSSACK HORSES . kj m fetolcn f the German landsturm patrol on the East Prussia frontier CRmp on Cossnrk hnrnoa panfured from the riUSBlana. riding J ! 3 I ft M C few I i f . i . w . ,.r.i To keep an army personally clean Is ono of the immonso tasks that con front the commanders. The photo graph shows a shower bath contrived in the French trenches north of Sols sons, only a hundred yards from the German lines. Novel Means of Communication. Wounded Hrltlsh soldiers In the bands of the Germans havo hit upon a novel way of communicating with their families and friends at home. Tbcy subscribe small sums of money to the Gorman Red Cross society, but as few of them have any cash they till up a draft or sign a check to la sent to London and honored. On the back of the draft tho banker In requested to communicate tho news of the drawer's safety to bis home. Tommy Atkins thinks It Is well worth a dollar sub scription. New Phonograph. A New Jersey inventor haa adapted a phonograph for use wltii various kinds of records, such as those In which tho groove is laterally undulat ing, and those In which tha undula tions are vertical, by supplying a plu rality of reproducers, any of which may be brought Into oporatlve posi tion and communication with the in terior of the sound conveyor. IMIttfeiMMAlMBlMMt li HCIll I 'l lui Sheili-ul Islam. Turkish high priest, proclaiming tho holy wnr against tho allies, in front of the Mosque of Faith In Constantinople. WITH GRAND DUKE NICHOLAS Russian Commander In Chief Directs the Great War Machine Like ( Clockwork. Pctrograd. "What I saw at tho headquarters of the Russian com mander in chief. Grand Duke Nicholas, would convince a blind man that Rus sia has mado great strides In ten years," writes a correspondent of the Russkoc Slovo. "At headquarters there Is not an Individual who is not abso lutely necessary for the work to be dono. The silence of a monastery reigns tliero, and you can distinctly heir the pulso beats of tho army. Work begins iu the early morning, frequently before daybreak. "I dined with tho grand doke. It was a truly spartan table. There was no lutoxlcatlng drink only water at this quick, quiet meal Everybody wore the sort of expression whtoh In dicates that there is not a minuto to bo lost, that all tho time most be uti lized to tho full In spite of this, the atmosphere w. I dumocrutlc, there was no air of official importance about any one "It is clear that in our army there have boen revived the resourcefulness of Peter the Great, the Iron will of Souvaroff and the dash of Skobeleft." RUSSIANS NEAR CITY OF CRACOW Russian officer with Cossack scouts making observations of the position of tho Austrian troops in tho vicinity of Cracow. FUNERAL OF BULWARK'S VICTIMS . ' 1 2 i Mur.nes In tho funeral procession of the victims of tho sinking of tho Uritlsh battleship Jlulwark entering tUj cemetery at GUllngham, E'ugland. FOUND TWO BILLION DOLLARS. A sura way of solving the problem of tho high cost of living Is forcefully Indicated by Dan Poling in an appeal to the voters of the country. "Have you ever stopped to consider," he says, "what two billion dollars would do toward solving that problem? "Do you think that It would help If we cculd find two billion dollars some where? "We havo found two billion dollars! Two billion dollars worse, than lost! In round numbers, the drink bill of the United 8tntes represents an In vestment In body, mind and soul de struction of $91 00 for each family In tho country. When we remember that there ore unnumbered families that have no drink bill at all, we tx-gln to form a hnzy conception of the drink ing families of the nation. Liquor money Is generally bread mowy. meat money, shoe money, and money that ought to bo spent for clothing. Somo stomach goes hungry for bifad. som feet go poorly shod, some body gofw Inadequately clothed. In order that the liil'ior traffic may gratify tho unspeak able appetite It creates for nnnrces Fary strong drink." DESTROY THE DESTROYER. In Ms book. "Man's Value to Soci ety," Rev. Dr. Newell Dwlght Hlltls says: "Statisticians reckon the'aver ago man's value at ffiOO year. Karti worker In wood. Iron or brass stanAa for an engine or Industrial plant worth $10,000. producing at 6 por cent, an Income of $000. The death of the av erage workman, therefore. Is equiva lent to tho destruction of a $10,000 mill or engine. The economic losa through the non-productivity of 20,009 drunkards Is equal to one Chicago fire, Involving $200,000,000." This does not tako Into account the cost of tho crlmo and pauperism which 20,000 drunkards entail upon the public, nor the degeneracy of drunkards' offspring which adds enor mously to the economic loss through nonproductivlty and direct criminal ity, lly the license system this nation Is deliberately destroying each year Its chief assets. The liquor trafflo must go! OUT OF A JOB. The cry is sometimes made that If salcons are voted out saloonkeepers will lose their Jobs and their families will suffer. Did It ever occur to you, pertinently aBks an exchnngo, that it the saloons are not voted out. hun dreds of tho putrons of tho saloons will lose their Jobs and their families will suffer? When n saloonkeeper puts a man out of a Job, ho disgraces the man and his family, and unfits him for an other Job. Whon prohibition puts a saloonkeeper out of a Job, ho be comes a more honorable citizen, Mr' family becomes more honorable and tho community secures a wealih-pro-duclng workman instead of a wealth destroying workman. AUTHORITATIVE TESTIMONY. West Virginia's secretary of Btate testifies to the success of prohibition In that state. In a public address bo said: "The manufacturers aud mine own era, who opposed prohibition so bitter ly during the cnmpalgn, are now en thusiastically in praise of iL The leaders of organized labor and many of the rank nnd file who were likewise strongly ngalnst prohibition now de clare thnt It has proved a boon to tho working man. The stnto labor com missioner after a canvnss of all In dustries says thnt labor and capital both agree that the efficiency of the working men has Increased at least 2." per eenL" NEW COMMANDMENT. The voice of science speaks with greater authority than ever before; ond the average man Is beginning to believe that It Is the voice of God speaking o his children. Science. Industry, philanthropy, patriotism, re ligion and common sense are today thundering from a hnndrcd Sinnls tho divine command: "Thou shall not use alcohol In any form, neither thou nor thy president, nor thy army, nor thy navy, nor thy physician, nor thy pas tor, at tho communion table, nor thy teacher, nor thy ruilrond engineer, nor thy chauffeur, nor nnyono who dwells within thy borders." Rev. Henry Stauffer In Union Signal. SELLING PASSWORD FOR DRINK. Surgoon General Kvatt, speaking in Ixmdon, not long ago, dwolt upon tho deplorabloneas of drink among wom en, adding "for a woman to drink la like soiling tho password in tho field of battle." ThlB Is a unique and powerful way of describing the effect of drink, not only on women, but on wen. Alas, how many have lost in tho battle of life by selling tho pass word of success and happiness for strong drink! Lillian M. N. Stevens. INJURIOUS WORK OF BEER. It la Just this precious beer which lowers the Intellectual capacity and will power of thousands and thousands of people ond makes them old before their time; ruins stomach, liver, heart and brain; brings them Into the poor house and prison, hospital and asylum, and early puts thorn under the earth. Max Gruber, M. D., president Royal Institute of Hygiene, Munich. NOT ONE OF GOD'S GIFT8. There Is one argument I ask you not to use, and that Is that one may nso nil God's gifts and that wlno la ono of them. We might as well say that God's gifts are consumption, cholera, typhoid fevor. as to say that alcohol Is. Dr. Sims Woodhead, pro fessor of pathology In the University of Cambridge, England.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers