THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURG, PA. pictures Word Events for News n Thla Department Our Readers In Fulton County and Eloowho Around the NAorld NAltKi the Camera on the Trail of History Making Happenlne. IVflay Journey GERMANS IN THE EAST PRUSSIAN SNOWS KING OF GREECE AND HIS FAMILY r - rat rll) tJW rf A 7 . W I t: ...v. It- 4 at 1 ' Jfc,' E Lfaf'E-aj wu ostf MiLiea lira ii h i " r : , 1 J i0 9 7 V 53 I m- - .-.'.,51 ... ' i , . b . ,ai-JT " V - liflow, General von Bulow (In cap at left) holding a consultation with hla taff offlcera In East Prussia, Above, a Gorman advance guard marching through the snow to Przasnysi. DISMOUNTED AUSTRIAN HUSSARS CHARGING ... 1 MUU-iJIJ J.JIJMUIII IMHHI IIDIMIIII HItlIMIII'lllirlIMltjrMIlMil fill j 'mim'H''''pm'mmmTtm''mmtmm' .... laten at llio liat oi the lihototraimo i Hie, boiug uu actual cUurge ot hussnra on a buttle field In the Carpathians. They are soon advancing to the attack with their rifles clubbed. One of their number has already been hit. CARRANZA LOBBY IN WASHINGTON I yfcaNy. yifc ...c v. . v .y iWi "V ..-:t:'t.- j Yr8''-v''"1 y " - t&i)i.-XVj,KWV' f ' 'IM t ?! ft 1 L 5 "'""' 1 iLii ILKy r i A ....... - . )i..N v.i., ...x 1 1 f iv.. 5 1 - Vv, This One residence, formerly occupied by the Mexican embassy in Wash ington, is now in the hands of the Carranta junta, the head of which, Senor Eliseo Arredondo, Is shown in the Insert. Though not recognized officially y our state department, Senor Arredondo directs the doings ot all the Mexi can, consuls In this country. RESCUE WORK ON THE F-4 AT HONOLULU :''' .iiiin,M "ty-ji mi . Ti Heroic efforts were made to rescue the crew of the American submarine hlch sank in Honolulu harbor. The photograph ahowa a diver being ctdred into the sea to search for the vessel. FROM KAISER'S GREAT GUN This photograph of the Greek royal family Is unusual because It was taken without any formality or cere mony and shows the king and his wife and children In civil costume. Left to right: Prince Paulos, Queen Sophia, Prince Alexandros, Princess Irene, King Constantlne. Crown Prince Oeorglos. The queen is a sister ot the kaiser and has promised to leave the country if Greece becomes Involved in the war. WITH TROPHIES FROM THE GREAT VICTORY 35$ 1 j" Ti. t i ill i w : i ii t r . 1 r,,T''M,"u.A.r p. ik'i hmiriwin mmmm'M..i-wm ATATATATlwATlfATATAT British soldiers, wounded In the fierce battle of Neuve Chapelle, wearing German helmets brought by them from thebloodyflelds Mill cm tuc OTCAMCD cm ADA UAC TnDPCnncn I BRIDE OF NAVY OFFICER llllL.li llli. oiuniiiuii iriLnun ung iwiii uuuuu ....... A .. tain il ii n i imhi. 'llim tremendous' shell is one ol those fired by the giant 42-ceutimeter howitzer ot the German army. It fell in soft dirt near Verdun without ex ploding and was dug up by the British Beside It, on the left, is a French 75 nira field gun shell, and on the right a German 77 mm shell, each of which Is about three inches in diameter. The big shell ia five feet long and weighs almost a ton. WHO SAID ZEPPELINS? Woman looking out of a root win dow In Paris during the recent raid ot German Zeppelins on that city. V 1 X if' DiSC D Am o lr n lit a Kknt t.1,... fMUil tlA flAlr ftf fh Pttlflha hV fill Hln?. llshman when the steamer was torpedoed in St. George's channel by a Ger man submarine. It shows the lifeboat which capsized when the torpedo exploded, with the passengers struggling In the water. WHERE A ZEPPELIN BOMB FELL B" -IS j ( k&a 1. Hi y , Mr ' I J ft Hi I. ,1 "'rSn r v a : i m ra or.-' i t 1 n 1 vl-i r" LJU-.. 4.,. nouse In Paris partly wrecked by a bomb dropped from a Zeppelin dur ing the recent airship raid on the French capital '7trTltss N ' -i-' Mrs. Emmet C. Gudger, who was married recently to Paymaster Gud ger, U. S. N. She was Miss Genevieve Walsh, daughter ot Senator and Mrs. Thomas J. Walsh of Montana. Gardens In Palestine. Gardens In Palestine are found mainly in the environs of the larger towns and owe their existence to springs and fountains whoso precious waters give life to fruits and flowers, orchards, parks and pleasure grounds which enter into the oriental concep tion of Paradise. Where no running stream exists they depend for life up on capacious cisterns which "drink water from the rain of heaven." They are always carefully Inclosed and pro tected by hedges, wa'ls and ditches, and the traveler is surprised amid the heat and glare of , the Syrian sun 10 enter their pleasant pathways and find retired and shady nooks under embow erlng greenery. Their secluded re cesses have alwaya been a favorita resort for purposes of devotion. They are often the gathering place ot fam ilies and friends and the token of peace and security la when a man may sit In safety under his own vlna and fig tree. Christian Herald. (Conducted by the National Woman's ClirlRtian Temperance Union.) WHO IS RESPONSIBLE? Judge Pollock of North Dakota, pro nouncing sentence upon a man con demned to spend the remainder of hla natural life In the state penitentiary, made a scathing denunciation of the liquor traffic. The man bad murdered his wife while under the Influence of liquor procured across the river in Moorhead, Minn. "I do not know, and under the pres ent state of our law I never want to know," said the Judge, "who sold you the liquor under the influence of which you committed this unnatural crime. Let that man's conscience bring such remorse that Its energizing power will never let go, until the largest possible reparation be made. Whoever he was, and wherever he may be at this sad moment; whether his place of busi ness is in the well-adorned and highly decorated room where tempting viands appeal to the taste, where sweet muslo delights the ear and lulls to sleep the reaxonlng faculties; or whether It waa In the lowest, dirtiest, man-abandoned. God forsaken and death-dealing char nel house of despair, where only abides the thoughtless and sullen greed for guln, It matters not; be fore the bar of God, If not of man, he stands alike with you morally re Bponttlble for this horrible crime. The trouble is he Is not here with you to receive a merited punishment. "If your partner In this offense were here he would plead by way of de- funse that he did not 'by fraud, con trive or force' occasion your drunken nessa plea which would have to be sustained. An enlightened and long- suffering public will some day, and that day very soon, rise in the majesty of Its power, and demand that the leg islature strike out the words 'by fraud, contrivance or force' and 'for the pur pose of causing him to commit any crime,' and boldly declare that be who in any manner sells Intoxicating liquors to another, under the Influence of which a crime, whether of murder or of some lesser offense Is commit ted, Is equally guilty as a principal in any auch crime committed.'" BREAD OR WHISKY? "What shall we now plant, barley or poison and kill our citizens, our young mothers and the unborn, or wheat, to grow bone and brawn and blood and brains and bravery for Britain?" asks Dr. C. W. Saleeby. F. R. S. E., the not ed English medical authority, In an article in the Dally Chronicle of Man chester, England. He deprecates the worse than waste In raising barley to make beer and whisky, and turning food material Into poison. He quotes the words of the czar of Russia to bis minister of finance, "It Is not meet that the welfare ot the exchequer should be dependent upon the ruin of the spiritual and productive energies of numbers of my loyal subjects," and urges bis fellow-countrymen "In this epoch-year of 1915" to "plant wheat in stead of whisky; bread Instead of beer; life Instead of death," adding that "never, perhaps, was there a more fateful choice for the English nation." WHEN IS A MAN DRUNK? Judicial authority In Topeka has ruled that a man Is drunk If a police man can detect the odor of liquor on his breath. If, In addition, he talks and laughs boisterously he Is drunk and disorderly and guilty of a breach of the peace. If this standard were ap plied to the city of New York It Is es timated that 750,000 people would be arrested as drunk and disorderly every day. In Chicago the number would be 400,000; Jn Philadelphia, 300, 000. The claim of the llquorltes that Topeka has a high percentage of drunkenness will not hold water or any other kind of liquid. In this connection It may be noted that Topeka, with a population of 47, 1"S, has 29 policemen. The average for 20 American saloon-Infested cities with a population of 43,000 to 49,000 Is 46 policemen. SALOON VS. MODERN BUSINESS. "It Isn't the crank who Is putting the saloon out of business," remarks the Wichita Beacon. "It's the busi ness man, the railroad man, the bank er, the lawyer, the merchant, the men who have to depend upon someone else for efficiency in the various depart ments of the Important work and who have observed the killing effect of booze on the men who have to be responsible for Important work. "They are the men who are getting the goat of the distiller. "The saloon Is up against the mod ern business age. It Is up against an x enemy that it cannot throttle or buy or browbeat or bluff, and It might as well save what it can and go out of business." , THE ONLY WAY. "The question is what to do with the chronic Inebriate," says Dr. A. M. Wtckerstron in the Illinois Medical Journal. "It seems that there Is only one thing to do. and that Is not to license the saloon where they can go the boy and the girl and get in jured, and then to take the taxpayer's money to build a hospital to cure them. I have studied the question In Europe and elsewhere, and it seems the only way to treat the questions is this: To simply prohibit It, absolutely prohibit the manuticture and sale of the toxin which causes the elogeneracy of the race." LIQUOR CAUSES TROUBLE. "If It were not for Intemperance our troubles would be very few," said Ma jor Miles of the Chicago civil service commission. "More than 95 per cenl of all the complaints against police men brought before the commission are the result of drinking liquor." FUTURE RULE OF CONDUCT. The aaloon must go. Sobriety must be the rule of conduct for tha future. Senator Albert B. Cummlna.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers