THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBtJEO, FA'. INTERESTING PARAGRAPHS W 1 ocil ind Qenenl Interest, Gathered t Horn or Clipped Irra Exchange!. our CONDENSED FOR HURRIED READERS Read Shapiro's new advertise ment found elsewhere in this pa per. Bov No. 3 arrived safe and sound in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Huston in Saltillo on January 22nd. There will be an Oyster Supper in the Hall at Dublin Mills on Saturday, February 6th. Bene fit for the M. E. church. Every body invited. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Keefer, of ' Thompson township, were calling on friends in McConnellsburg last Thursday, and doing some spring shopping. Attention is called to Thomas T. Cromer's advertisement fcr fruit trees. Mr. Cromer expects to be at the Farmers' Institute most of the toe and will be glad to receive orders. Miss Rose Fisher, of Cham berspurg spent the time from Saturday evening until Monday morning in the home oi her un cle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. S. B, Woollet High School pupils will debate Woman Suffrage next Friday afternoon. Debaters for, and against, Woman Suffrage are leaving no stone unturned to get "points." Holstein Friesian Bull Calf for sale; 5 months old, choicely bred. Good individual-largely white. For price and pedigree address Wm. S. Ker, Kersville, Cumber land County. Pa. Samuel Pittman, one of Todd township s wide-awake young farmers, called at the News of fice a few minutes last Thursday to renew his subscription. Mr. Pittman owns the George W. Wagoner farm. Miss Katie Fore attended the funeral of Mr. J. Allie Phiel at Chambersburg last Saturday, Mr. Phiel was the husband of Miss Katie's niece, Bessie La master and was aged about 38 years. The cause of his death was pneumonia. , Mrs. Margret C. Richards, of Big Cove Tannery, spent a few days last week in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie Gordon, just south of town. She and Mrs. Gordon and the latter's little daughter, Hilda, called at the News office a few minutes last Friday morning. Claud Cook, of Lanark, 111., in a letter to his aunt, Miss Mollie Seylar, says that a herd of cattle valued at $22,000 was killed on the ranch adjoining his on ac count of foot and mouth disease. Fortunately, Mr. Cook had mark eted his just before the outbreak, and he doubtless, escaped great loss. We learn from our Wells Val ley correspondent that they are still making cider over there, and in large quantities, too. You should have heard the boys in the office smack their lips when they read that Think of the quality of cider made in Februa ry, frorif cold, mellow apples! Yum, yum! An old lady who had lived in squalor and clothed in rags, was found dead starved to death in New York last week. When search was made of her miser able rooms more than $12,000 were found. What a splendid occasion for some politician to howl about the way our govern ment is being run! The society events reported to this office since our last issue were: The Misses Dickson enter tained a company of ladies on Friday evening of last week; Mrs. Wilson L. Nace chose last Saturday evening for a like event; Mrs. Ellis L Lynch entertained on last Monday evening, and Mrs. Nettie Alexander on last Tues day evening. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Mark Dickson, Buffalo. N. Y., a fine daughter last week. About the same time a little son came to live with Mr. and Mrs. Remington Patterson in Philadelphia. Also, on last Friday, an eleven-pound boy was left by the stork in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel F. Trout, near town, and his name s Daniel Fore Trout, Jr. i Dorothy Eckman. Dorothy, aged 10 years, only child of Mr. and Mrs, B. F, Eck man, of Carlisle, died Tuesday morning, Feb. 2, 1915, of Brights disease. Funeral Thursday Feb.! 4, 1915, body taken to Lancaster for interment. Mrs. Eckman the child's mother, is a sister of W. E. Bair of Green Hill, this coun ty. Mr. uair leit on the noon hack yesterday to attend the fa neral. George King. George King, a native of Mc Connellsburg, died at his home in Saxton, Bedford county, Pa, on Wednesday of last week aged about 80 years. His funeral too! place at 3 o'clock, Friday after- noon, and interment was made in the cemetery at that place. The. deceased was a son Squire James King, who was hatter and many years ago lived in the house now the residence o Mrs. Emma Robinson, west Lin coin Way. George was married to Miss Louisa, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Banner Graves, of Bethe township, and she died about four years ago. For several years after he was in the mercantile business in McConndlb!nrg first in the no tion business id the room nowoC' cupied by Trout's drug store and later conducted a general store in the room now occupied by Sey lar's drug store. Elected State President. From Lake City Leader. "Dr. C. S. Shore, of Lake City was elected to the office of Presi dent of the Minnesota State Veterinary Medical association in session in St Paul. This se lection came as a surprise to Dr. chore as he was not present at the meeting, and did not know that his friends had decided to honor him with the election. i irrti m ine omce is not only an im portant one, but one that requir es both executive and medica acuity, as me association is now one of the largest in the profes sion in the northwest. "Dr. Shore had made himself popular with the members of his profession because of the various papers that he has written and given to the State association. The selection is recognized by everyone who is acquainted with the doctor and are in the least fa miliar with the work that he has done since coming to Minnesota and locating in Lake City. lie wired his acceptance on , Thursday evening and expressed his appreciation and thanks for the confidence extended to him by his brother veterinarians Minnesota." in Scott, as he is more familiarly known among his old schoolmates and friends up about Waterfall, is a son or the late Eli Shore, a brother of Bruce at Three Springs and a cousin of our townsman Clarence B. Shore. He was born and grew to manhood, on a farm 2k miles from Waterfall, and at tended the home school until he became of age. Having decided upon a professional life, he atten ded a summer normal at Orbi- sonia, then took a three-years course in the Veterinary Depart ment of the University of Pen nsylvania, graduating with honor being third in his class. Shortly after this time, he went to Lake View, Minn, where he has been successful in building up a large and lucrative practice, and now stands at the head of the organi zation in his state. Scott did not have any money to start with, but he believed that where there's a will there's a way." Do Yon Know of a Blind Baby.' In May 1913 the State of Penn sylvania passed a bill providing for the care, maintenance and in struction of blind babies and chil dren known as Senate bill No. 50 of the laws of 1913. This law gives the State Board of Educa tion power to provide for the suitable care, maintenance and instruction of babies and children under school age, having power to contract with any Institution furnishing facilities for such care-paying a dollar a day for the same. Pennsylvania has six children in the Arthur home for blind ba bies, Summit, New Jersey the only institution i n the whole United States that will take any blind baby from any state and give it proper physical care, and mental training, until it is the N ew Subscribers, and ed Their Subscription to.the Fulton Coun ' ty News During the Month of Jan uary. Is Your name "Print ed" There? Mrs. Dayt.MellottJr.Feb. 1, 16 J Frank Deavor Feb. 1, 15 Chas HMellott Feb. 1, 15 H A Divens Jan. 21, 15 M J Sloan May 9, 15 Walter E Lynch Jan 14.16 Ben Slacker Jan 14, 16 Amy S Wolford Jan 14, 16 T H Walters Jan 14, 16 Fred S Fisher July 15, 15 Mrs F D Matthias Jan 14, 16 Mrs. Geo. Condron JanJ 7, 16 A A Fisher Jan 1, 16 Mrs C B Alexander Jan 1, 15 F D Young Jan 1, 16 Jno. E Campbell Jan 1, 16 E O Garman Feb 15, 16 C M Lodge Jan 1, 16 D B Mumma Jan Harrison Hoover Jan Allen Wright Apr Ella M Sipes Jan 1, 16 1, 16 1, 15 1, 16 W H Barton Dec 25, 15 Mrs M A Kelly Apr 1, 15 GW Sipes Mar 1, 18 J M Hockensmith Jan 1. 16 J K Patterson Jan 1, 16 C C King Jan 1, 16 Luther Bishop Dec 17, 15 Mrs Wm. Grissinger Jan 1, 16 Geo. W Wagoner Feb 5, 17 Clark Bergstresser Jan 1, 15 James Barnett Jan 1, 15 Mrs Anna Fulton Jan 1, 16 WH Duffy Jan 1,16 H H Clevenger Jan 1, 16 Harry Hohman Apr 18. 16 John Carbaugh Mar 1, 16 David Gregory May 1, 16 Shade Pittman May 8, 15 Remmie A Sharpe Jan 11, 16 W E Litton Apr 13, 16 Mrs Nellie Davis Jan 1, 16 A S Brant Feb 14. 16 M D Matthias Jan 9, 15 Albert Plessinger Sept 11, 15 Anderson Mellott Jan 9, 16 Frank Spade Dec 3, 15 Mary Butts Jan 2, 16 Rev A Dotterman Feb 1, 16 N H Peck Feb 15, 16 John McClellan Mar 19, 15 Margt. O'Rourke May 18, 15 R C Dixon Dec 1. 15 D Mellott Mar 8, 15 W B Stigers July 12, 15 P Fisher Jan 6, 16 Mrs Howard Hill Jan 10, 16 Oliver Hill, Jan 2, 16 Geo. S Mellott Jan 22, 16 Joseph Truax May 8, 15 saiah Sipes Jan 8, 16 T S Metzler Jan 1. 16 RR Sipes Jan 2, 16 John Hann Sep 2, 15 O Mellott May 8,15 proper age to enter the State in stitutions provided for the older blind. Fourteen states are already represented, and one little boy rom Cuba, forty children being the total number now in the home and as many more have been graduated. If you know of a blind baby or you have one, write promptly to Mrs. Cynthia Westover Alden. 96 ifth avenue N. Y. City, founder of the Sunshine Blind Baby In stitutions and she will give you all information. She maintains that the public has no right to assume that be cause a baby is blind it has no brains. Her ten years' work in behalf of the baby blind demon strates that the blind should be cared for from the day they are blinded and one should not wait until they areot school age, when blind children in the past have been eligible to State Institutions. She declares that the blind be come feeble-minded from lack of brains, and if the children are given attention from the day of blindness few, if any will be re used at the State Schools at the age of eight, because of being too backward or feeble-minded to take advantage of the training there prepared for them. It is your duty, therefore, since he State now makes provision or the care of the baby blind to report such a child if you ever see or hear of one in your state. Runyan Looks After Eyes At Neelytou Feb. 9, a. id. At Shade Gap Feb. 9, p. w. At Orbisonla Feb. 10. hree Springs Feb. 11 to 1 p m Broad Top City Feb. 11 p. m., to eb. 12. At Saltillo Feb. 13tb. Other dates later. Subscribe for the 1 News' only 1.00 year. . Those Who Have Renew J A Keefer G W Swope H H Cromer John Everts W L Shaw Mrs Mary Wooster Frank Ray Gertrude Morgret H E Stailey Jan Jan Jan 2, 1, 1, Jan 25, Sep 21, Feb 1,16 Nov 23, Jan 1, Sep 23, Jan 1, j W F Trayer Rhoda Keefer Eph. Pittman E S Clevenger . Mrs. B C Dawney Mrs C C Spencer C S Keebaugh F II Barton Jesse H Daniel3 Mrs A M Seavey Martha Lamp, Mrs Harry Taylor Jan Jan Jan Jan Jan Dec Nov Sep Sep Feb 1, 16 8, 16 1. 17 1, 16 6, 16 1, 15 5, 15 6, 15 7, 15 1, 16 Oct 21, 14 Mar 1, 15 Feb 1, 16 Jan 1, 16 S Bryson Gilbert R Rice E C Whitehill Mrs Etta Rudolph, G E Brant Steve Tenley Isaac Bolinger A F Cutchall Norman Everts J C Akers Wm Comerer D E Fore Miss Anna Irwin Thomas Johnson Lydia J Martin Mrs A M Shimer Rebecca Stenger Cloyd Stenger C P Tritle Catherine Vores G P Atherton J. F. Barton, E A Buckley Jan 1,16 Sep 21, 15 Oct 20, 14 Mar 15, 16 Jan 28, 16 Jan 25, 16 Jan 24, 15 Jan 1, 16 June 15, 15 Oct 4, 15 Aug 26, 15 May 15, 16 Oct 8, 14 Sep 21, 15 May 8, 15 Jan 1, 16 Feb 10, 16 Mar 1, 16 Aug 20, 15 May 22, 23 Jan 1, 15 W M Cunningham Tobie Glazier Ben W Fisher W S Greenland T E Johnston Ella Lockhart D B Mumma J C Metzler Roy C Ott J G Patterson Martin L Peck Mrs G W Peters Mrs J. H Porter M C Peck Prof A C Palmer H P Palmer , P E Seaman Rev C W Summey P Scheidelman Isaac B Wolf Ross Mellott Feb 1, 16 Jan Jan Jan Jan Jan Apr 1, 16 1, 16 1, 15 l; 16 1, 16 9, 15 Feb 12, 16 Apr 1, 15 Feb k Jan Jan Dec 2, 15 1. 16 1, 16 1, 15 Jan 16, 16 Mar 22, 15 Nov 17, 15 Sep 1, 15 Mar 21, 15 Jan 14, 15 June 12, 15 Teach Better Reading. If teachers, parents, and all who have anything to do with the education of children could be impressed with the importance of training them to become good readers, this branch of the com mon schools would receive the most attention during the child's first years in school. We claim that the ability to read readily is the foundation of all education. Give a big boy a problem, and if he has to lay the book on his left arm, hold it by the top, point to the words with his finger, chew his tongue half off while painfully spelling the words, he will get about as much meaning out of his reading as the baby when it tore up the News last night before you got to see it We know whereof we speak when we state that half the fail ures in recitations are due to the pupil's inability to read the les son readily enough to "sense the subject Turn a boy out of school before he has learned to read readily, and right there you forever shut the door of progress to that man. It is not the multi tude of rules and formulas com mitted to memory that enables him to copewith the world, but it is the power to extract facts for himself by reading, that fur nishes the material for his edu cational structure. If the en deavor to read is laborious, the man will do as little of it as pos sible, and when he is not at work you will usually find him among a crowd" of his calbre telling sto ries, or worse yet gossiping. His mind was originally active .enough, but he was robbed of his facility for improving it when he was turned out to make his way in the world before he could read well enough to make read ing a pleasure. And this good old world is full of men handi capped in this manner. Geo. W. Reisner & Co. 16 15 16 A Large Assortment of Sum mer Dress Stuff's Just In. 16 15 14 16 15 15 Ginghams, Seersuckers, Madras, Silk and Cot ton Mixtures that are beautiful for early Sewing. We have these things all in. See them and you will want them. Muslins are Cheaper. Muslins are cheaper than for some time past. A good unbleached yard-wide Muslin for 6 centswe say a GOOD ONE. Cretonnes for Comforts Cretonnes for comforts a yard wide for 10 cents a yard. Come in and see these Goods. We know we can PLEASE YOU. G. W. REISNER & CO. McCONNELLSBURG, PA. The Thrice-a-Weel Edition of NEW YORK WORLD Practically a Daily at the Price of a Weekly. No other Newspa per In the world give o much at so low a price. The year 1914 hag been the most ex traordinary in the history of modem timet. It has witnessed the outbreak of the Great European war, a Btrug (fie go titanic that it makes all others look small. You live in momentous times, and you should not miss any of the tre mendous events that are occurring No other newspaper will inform you with the promptness and cheapness of the Thrlce-a-Week edition of the New York World. Moreover, a year's subscription to It will take you far in to our next Presidential campaign. THE THRTCE A-WEEK WORLD regular subscription price is only tl.00 per year, and this pays for 156 papers. We offer this unequalled newspaper and THE FULTON COUN TY NEWS together for one year for 1.65. The regular subscription price of the two papers is $2.00. FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McConnellsburg, Pa FARM FOR SALE. 113-acre farm, 65 acres cultivated, balance good timber. uooa produc ing land, o-room bouse with porches, summer kitchen, woodhouse, bank barn with shed overbarnyard. 2-story Implement shed. Wagon shed and wiuuriU) uuKimui uuiu&uu uuuw, I U -V. I u sprlnghouse. All buildings have on worked sldlDg and are well painted Good running water close the house. Close to store, school, and church. f lentv of fruit, la acres in wheat. A good stream of limestone water runs through the farm. The farm is situate 'i miles north of McConnellsburg the County Seat on State road, and it can be bought for almost what it cost to put up the buildings. Will sell stock, farm implements and household goods with the farm if desired. Possession given April 1, 1915. My reason for selling Is that I am greatly afllicted with rheumatism. If you think you would like to have the farm, get busv. for I mean to sell. Call on, or ad dress. J. C. FORE. l-2f-8b Knobsville. Pa. NOTICE. I hereby give notice that Emma Yeakle, my wlfo has left my bed and board; and I will not pay any debts contracted by her. 1-14-31. Jacob Yeaklk. M. R. SHAFFNER, Attorney at Law, Office on Square, McConnellsburg, Pa. A II legal baineae and eoUeetlone entrnnted ill eoelre oarafal and prompt aitentloa L W. FUNK -:- DEALER IN -:- High Grade Plain Pianos, Player Pianos, Organs, Victrolas, Rec ords, and Professional Tu-' ner, McConnellsburg, Nothing adds more to the refinements of home than good music. To have good music you must have a good instrument. There are good bad and indifferent instru ments, and to the unskilled eye they look much alike. The unprincipled dealer is likely to make you pay a first-class price for a fourth-class instrument. I have lived in this county since my birth, I am a taxpayer and in a position to make good any business transactions. Buy your piano, organ, or victrola trom me and if it is not all right you can come back at me. There are families in every part of this county that have purchased instruments from me. Ask them about" me. perhaps you want to trade your organ for a Piano, or Player Piano; or your Plain Piano, for a Player. See me. Let's talk it over.. L. W. fr. M. COMERER, agent for IHh. GEISER MANVFAC WRING COMPANY, BURN! CABINS. PA. for the sale of Traction and Portable Engines, Gaso line, Separators, Clo rer Bailers, Saw mills, &c. Engines on hand all the time. FUNK Western Maryland Railway Company. In Effect September 27, 1914. Trains leave Banoook aa follows : No. T 1.40 a, m. (dally) forCumberland. Pitts burgh and waat, alto West Virginia point. No. 8 S.ffi a. m. for Hagenaown, Gettysburg, Hanover, York and Baltimore. No, I S.80 a. m. (dally exoept Sunday) Ex preae forCumberland and Intermediate point. No, 4 9.0T a. m. (dally exoept Sunday) Ex freaa for Hagentowo, Gettysburg lanover, Baltimore and Intermediate Inghin, eto. puinui, new York, Philadelphia. Wab- No, p. m. (dally) Cumberland Western Express for ia, vi Weat Virginia points and the Wet. No. t S.07 p. m. (dally) Express for Hagert i town, Waynesboro, Chamberaburg, Frederick, Baltimore, New Tork, Phila delphia, Waahingoa. A. L. WIBLE Auctioneer, KcConnellst, Fa. Prompt attention to all Ir-smes In tbla line. He Bray be found at tola soma on Went Water itreat where he eoudifctaa, earber, and shoe mending shop. 6-211 f