VtiE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURQ. PA to V - ? - ' i 1 1 1 1 1i i ii nm Till mi I m . - . ' ATW - o-- 1 , . When forty mothers, each with a baby, descended on the I'niverslty settlement temporary nursery at tho emergency workshop for women In New York, the problem was where to put the babies. It was solved by the gift of a number of wicker clothes baskets, which were fitted with email mattresses and pillows. VICTORIOUS CARRANZA TROOPS vWmim :- tew v... . fl ... ll.ll.idfriiiiyMViiff?iw:f-ft-l j. i" - .V...IH1M Company of I'arranzistas who heroically defended one of the trenches r.ear the Rio Grande at Matamoros against the attacks of Villa's troops an! captured four of the enemy's flags. REPUDIATE PLEDGE NOT TO FIGHT r fc '1 i IV Hmitih prisoners of war, captured by the Kronprlnz Wilhelm, beinjj transferred from a tug boat to tlie dork at Newport News to take tho Ilritivh ship Cassandra to England, where tliey planned to enlist and go to the front despite a promise given to Captain Thi(rfel(!cr not to do so. They averted the pledge was given under compulsion and so not binding. NEW DAREDEVIL 1 I Art Smith, the young Indiana aviator, who bag been doing most sensa f onal stunts In the air at San Francisco Btnce the death of Lincoln Beacbey. lie recently made 22 loops In one flight. GREED OF THE CUTWORMS Most Dreaded Robbers of the Garden That Work Only In the Night In Farm and Fireside a contributor writes about cutworms. The ravages of cutworms are fully described and definite suggestions as to how to get rid of them are reported. Somi of the remarkable facts about cutworms are Included In the following extract taken from the article: "SAMPLES PACKED SEPARATELY" f V OF THE AIR "Cutworms are true burglars "As long as the day lasts they re main In hiding under sticks, stones or trash or even below the surface of the ground; and as soon as night falls they come forth to steal the lives of tender plants. "It is a wise precaution on the part of these insect burglars to hide during the day. for they are smooth and plump and Just the sort of food titbit birds are always looking for If these night prowling rascals uld only stop and satisfy tbelr hunger by eating (he V.I I L KARL BITTER'S LAST WORK 4 I I , I H ! t - This heroic ptatue of Henry Hud son, which will be erected on Spuyten Duyvil hill when cast In bronze. Is the last completed model by Karl Hitter, the sculptor who recently was killed In an automobile accident WILLIAM BARNES, JR. William I'aiiHs. Jr., Kepublican po litical leader of New York state, as hp appeared at Syracuse when his libel suit against Colonel Roosevelt was called for trial. Thoughtless Explanation, "You Bay this will be your farewell appenrance?" asked the Interviewer. "Yes," answered the eminent ac tress. "I shall detlre from the stage, never to return to It." "Wbut Is your reason for such a decision?" "My manager thinks It better for business to make every other tour a farewell engagement." A Catastrophe. "There was a terrible trail wreck In our neighborhood last night." "What was it?" "Some boob at the party stepped on my wife's fish-tall party gown." plants as they cut them down, they would be less rascally. Rut no I They go on appeasing their voracious appe tlteB with merely' what they bite out In cutting down the plants; thus a dozen plants lie Hat and wilted In the morning sun, sacrillced for one late dinner. "In ihlB respect the cutworms re semble dogs which kill more sheep In a flock than they can eat." You can feed anybody flattery U you keep a sober face. SMNEWS BRIEFLY1 TOLD The Latest Gleanings From All Over the State. TOLD IN SHORT PARAGRAPHS Jacob L. Weitiel Diet; Shot Self. Mystic Circle Of State and N. J. Ends Sessions Cattle Plague Near Corry. The Grand Ruling of the Fraternal Mystic Circle, embracing Pennsylvania and New Jersey, adjourned at Allen tcwn after Installing these new ofll cers: Grand ruler, S. L. Scbroeder, Greencastlo; vlcei?rand ruler, Henry S. Roth, Jr., Philadelphia; grand chap lain, Victor E. Grim, Allentown; grand recording secretary, E. S. Miller, Al lentown; grand treasurer, C. F. Kuhns, Waynesboro; grand warden, J. II. Joeller, Altoona; grand .marshal, Dr. A. F. G. Paetzel, Erie; grand guard, Mrs. Elizabeth AppH, Plttston; grand sentry, II. S. Thatcher, Lancaster. In connection with the third State encampment of the Veterans of Foreign Wars at Reading, there was a parade of all the military organiza tions of the city. General John R. Itrooke, U. S. A., retired, was a spe cial guest of honor. At the conven tion of the order Adjutant General Tobias Wlngard reported twenty-five posts in good standing. They have a membership of 3,000. The proposition to pension widows nnd orphans of for eigners was indorsed. At public vendue conducted by Sher iff David Jones, at his office In the courthouse, West Chester, several properties went under the hammer, among them the famous Devon Inn, In Easton Township. The four-story building, containing more than 200 rooms, was sold for a debt of $108,153, and was knocked down to David C. Leech, the plaintiff In the execution, for $70,000. There are about fourteen acres of land In the tract Martha Seliultz, the fifteen-year-old dang" ter of a well-to-do farmer, was attacked by two masked women near a coke plant in the outskirts of Con nellsville. One of the women held Miss Seliultz while the other pressed on each cheek the uncorked neck of a bottle filled with acid. Her face was badly burned. Several weeks aco Miss Schultz received a letter ordering her to place 1,000 and a gold watch In a secluded spot. In his sermon on "Moral Cleansing" in the tabernacle at Chester, Rev. Wil liam Nicholson deplored the fact that Chester people could not be brought to a realization of their extreme need of salvation, declaring that his wnrV had not only been denied the support It had received in other places, but had been subjected to ridicule, unjust criticism and condemnation from men and women who should have flocked to his aid. Howard O. Dibble, head of the schools of Lambertvllle, N. J., was selected as the principal of the Har rlsburg Central High School to suc ceed the late Prof. W. S. Steele. He wns the unanimous choice of the com mittee and was formeily head master at Staunton Military Academy, In Vir ginia, and had charge of schools Id New England. Seven cases of foot and mouth dis ease were discovered on the farm ol Ernest Fiteh, In Wayne Township, the entire herd will be destroyed by Fed ernl and State officials. The cases were discovered by Dr. Wlll'am Ross well, local Inspector for the State Live Stock Sanitary Donrd. Jacob L. Weltzel, well-known Read ing baseball promoter and former business man, died In St. Joseph's Hos pital there, having been unconscious since Tuesday afternoon, when he was found by strollers in Mineral Spring Park, wuero he had attempted suicide by shooting. The barn of Taul Unper. of Coopers- bute w ns burned Rt a loss of $1,500, and officers are looking for a tramp wlio is sutpectcd because he became angry when Mrs. Unger offered him only cake nnd coffee when he demand ed that a meal be cooked for him. Despondent over the death of his wife, James Shaffer, fifty yenrs old, of Allentown, slashed his wrists with a razor, and lost so much blood that his death Is feared by the surgoons at the hospital. Edward and Charles Uhler,. In Jail at Allentown, for looting a number of express oflices In tho Lehig!i Valley, have applied for a pardon, being rep resented by State Senator Horace W. Schantz. John StileB, a page In the State Iloune of Kepresentatlve at Harris burg who was accidentally shot by his father, Michael Stller at the fam ily home In Cunibola, died In the Potts vllle Hospital. The farmers of Welsenberg Town ship, Lehigh county, met at Selpstown and organized a grange, the sixth for the county. E. S. De Armldt, thirty-four, a di vision superintendent for the Mon ongehela River Consolidated Coal & Coke Company, and Joseph Darshott, twenty-two, were killed by. a fall of rock In the Knob mine of the com pany while on an Inspection trip. Clarence Holllngsworth,- son of B. C. ITolllngsworth, of Waynesboro, was almost instantly killed by an auto mobile driven by Mnx Uarlup. The boy, who was thirteen years old, wa playing on the street and ran In front of the automobile. Ik CRIPPLED WITH RHEUMATISM CURED BY YAGER'S SOME TESTIMONY My wife wns snrrlpplnd with Bhu matiHui th it nlinuuuM liunllrwulk. After trjrmtf evi-rjrlhlnu ttm without vnttuiir any ri-lif 1 wiw M'i-miuiU U to try titfiV Liniment. The flrxt bottloai-lwl liken cburiA and ftffirilml ImmtHluite relluf and aftur UM..tf 8 bottles she wu eniroly w:i, ami lining Lor work With perlott eon and cotiifurt. " Not limn wncoKhehafl another attack fntnflhouMor,incnire I n"l Yntcer.' Liniment witb the Mime reeult. We are never without hot tlx in tho hoiuui. 1 recuinuieud It Boot highly." THOMAS MOOEE, Proffit, Va- YAGERS' IINIMENT 13 THE GREAT PAIN ALLEVIATOR Only wrnic In I.arrn (nr. Tlottlos at all deulertt, l'i Himn-U by GILBERT BROS, k CO.. INC. BALTIMORE, MB. WAS WILLING TO COMPROMISE Ernest Wanted Increase in Wages, Though He Stood Ready to Make a Concession. Ernest was very big and very black, and when it came to sleeping and eat ing fully Justified his name. Ernest did not fancy steady work, but he was apt to be avaible when spring came for odd jobs at a dollar a day and his dinner. One spring he came In with a sheep ish griu. "Miss Sally, I been hearin' In do lodge meetin' 'bout deso hard times, and I 'low I better raise my Bal'ry to a dollar an' a quarter a day." "You're not worth that, Ernest, and you know it. Dusldes, I can't afford to pay more." Ernest scrutched his head; this was matter for more thought than ho had anticipated. "I flggered out when doy wuz tnlkln' 'bout dem hard times dut I couldn't 'ford to work for no less. Hut" his black face gleamed with a sudden thought "I won' eat so much." Making the Tour. "Do you know your way around Eu rope?" "Yes; you can go by way of Spitz bergen to the north, or through the Mediterranean to the south. 1 don't blame you for wanting to go around." Kansas City Journal. Proper'Caper. "So you've been making changes at your broom factory?" "Yes a clean sweep." Some men fail to get rich, and some fall to become poor. ummm Cheery CIIIZI "Good Morning" When the breakfast includes Pst Tastks and cream These toothsome bits of carefully cooked Indian Corn nave glorious flavour that meets with favor most everywhere. . . t No cooking necessary ready to eat direct from packages. Ask your grocer for Post Toasties. 'CATCH' NOT SUCH A BAD ONE 8ome Method in "Madness" of Nice Looking Old Man Pictured by Representative Gartholdt. Representative Bartholdt said at a German-American banquet in Milwau kee: "Those people remind m of the old man. Yes, they remind me very much of the old man. "Me had a soft, daft look the old man I'm speaking of and he sat on a park bench In the sun wi,th rod and line, as if he were fishing; but the Hue, with a worm on the hook, dan gled over a bed of bright primroses. " 'Daft!' said a passer-by to himself. 'Daft. Ilughouse. ' Nice looking old fellow, too. It's a pity.' "Then, with ' a gentle smile, the passer-by approached the old man and said: "'What are ycu doing, uncle?' " 'fishing, sir,' answered the old man, solemnly. ".'Klshlng, eh? Well, uncle, come and have a drink.' "The old man shouldered his rod and followed the kindly stranger to the corner saloon. There he regaled himself with a large glass of dark beer and a good five-cent cigar. His host, contemplating him in a friendly, protecting way as he sipped and smoked, said: " 'So you were fishing, unrle? And how many have you caught this morn ing?' "The old man blew a smoke cloud toward the ceiling. Then, after a pause, he said: " 'You are the seventh, sir.' " Made It Unanimous. "Have you any militant suffragists in Crimson Gulch?" "Nary," replied Bron co Mob. "When the school teucher dropped a hint as to how she'd like to vote we'd have been glad of a chance to shoot up anybody that 'ud Interfere with her. Hut by common consent we turned the polls over to her an' nil stnyed away so's there wouldn't bo any chance of her belli' embarrass? d." Washington Star. Stand Mere Hugging. Patience You know an Eskimo maiden can stand more hugging than we American girls. Patrice I wonder why? "Oh, the fact that Eskimos have two more ribs thnn any other human race has been discovered by an Eng lish scientist." , What Worried Him. "What made you so nervous while you were carving the turkey, John? You never were that way before." "I Just happened to think that the material I was knifing up so recklessly was worth anywhere from 60 to 75 cents a pound." Not Interesting. "Millions of ger.ns can lodge on a pin point," said the man. who Is al ways getting excited about some thing. "Well," replied Mr. Growcher, "It doesn't concern me. I never encour age anybody to swallow pins." Largest In the, World. Stella From what college did she graduate? " Bella Other people's business. Treatment for Cats. Flatbush Do you think cats should be muzzled, too? Bensonhurst No, throttled. WOMAN COULD JOT SIT I Now Does Her Own wj Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg J ble Compound Helped l) Tronton, Ohio." I am enjoying; ter health now than I have for u, years. When 1 frantotakeLydu rmKnam s Veg ble Compost could not sit or' had female trotj and was very J voua. I used! remedies a year J i can ao my .: and for the last d months I hi worked for otJ women, too. 1 cannot praise LydU Pinkham's Vegetable Compound enc. for I know I never would have ben well if I had not taken it and I retj mena it to suitenng women." Daughter Helped Also, "I gave it to my daughter whet was thirteen years old. She wm school and was a nervous wreck, J could not steep nights. Now she kl so healthy that even the doctor spJ of it You can publish this letter if J like." Mrs, KEN A BOWMAN, 161 S.1; street, Ironton, Ohio. Why will women continue to in1 day in and day out and drag out a aid half-hearted existence, missing tht- That fourths of the joy of living, when th can nnd health in Lydia E. Pinkinr. Vegetable Compound? ii jmi iihv mo HlllTlliesi ann that Lydia H. IMnkliatn's VegfJ mii. xywui ririiiMt n ill iii-i t j UU.Wn to Lyllu,H.llnkliain Medicine! (confidential) Lynn, .Mns8.,torel vice. Your letter will le openJ rend nnd answered by a wonJ anti uciu in strict, conuueiiee. Vague Assertions. "When will the war be over!" quired the Impatient citizen. "I don't suppose there's any wi; telling," replied the querulous q bier. "When the fiercest kind of f. lug was going on they said the had not really started. Maybe war is over now, only they don't k: it." Extra Pay. "Willie," sitld his mother on return from a shopping expedition told you if you were good while 1 out, you might havo a piece of car. and now I find you've taken all lb- was in the box." "Yes, mamma," replied Willie, you've no idea how very good been." Book Pretenses. "The kind of books people r now-a-days is rather startling." "Yes," replied Mrs. McGudley, "! I have my doubts whether folks r dancln' long enough to read V When I was young we used to r books and pretend we didn't. N people pretend they read em tlr don't." ' No Cheap Kisser. Pcrclval I'll give you 5 cents fo: kiss. Penelope I'll have you to wi stand I am not In the Jitney bus tineas. c XT- -Jolin lliese hcall inq ious I the ;ber. Tl it tr renc rlstla God, and and it tea ferln, par It of oocll mal w c el d( i ( e ar -s of trut ion? !a th n b Ho 7 bi a i aicti :.t m t to 119. ally nge rmai nen Idui hi estl( at,t er t iitiV eg, th t! ort savi R' rsu: li aer 1th As ve i In mc e oi jch uls lesi elr aim xiks ch ans on rou In bo pi at aa Sht i w Ii her Su bse on 'e, on. arp efo svo H tl Tl '8 he ian sblli S, Ion dfu crei T