-A. THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS. McCONNELLSBURO, PA. STATE NEWS BRIEFLY TOLD The Latest Gleanings From All Over the State. n Thlo Dopar-tmon-t Our Readers In Fulton County rand Elaowhero May Journ Around the Aorld VrVI-th the Corr-iora on the Trail of History Making Happenlnga. TOLD IN SHORT PARAGRAPHS AMERICAN SHIP BLOWN UP BY GERMANS ARGENTINE BATTLESHIP IS NOT FOR SALE Pifty Autos Disabled In Nail-Strewn Streets Hovertcr Gets Five Years In Lebanon Bank Looting Sold To "Dead" Men; Goes To Jail. for eturss i of World Events ews American tank steamer Gulflight, which was blown up by a German torpedo or mine off the Scllly Islands. Bo low, at the left. Is Its commander, Capt. Alfred Gunter, who died of heart failure; at the right, Charles C. Short of Gbioag, wireless operator, who jumpedcrbordji GREATmANTIC LINER SUNK BY THE GERMANS r i -' w ' V - .'1 , 'I, hct a i "war-1 - iy.-r: iausil Mat'nlflcent Cunard Hnor Lusltanla torpedoed and sunk by the Gerranns In the center, Is the captain of the vessel, W. T. Turner; at the left and right, the Americans aboard, respectively Charlos Frohman, the theatrical manager, DRIVER OF SUFFRAGE AUTOMOBILE fa ycmJwm Miss Virginia Watrous, daughter tional American Woman Suffrage association, Is to drive a big automobile carrying suffrage campaigners through paigners will be her mother. Mrs. Medlli ud Mrs. Martha S. Kimball. Another "ill tcrrter. who rejoices In the name picture. SINKING OF THE IRRESISTIBLE fid ;v lip ,. 7n ;,M, itt.f j . V, , ..I IMi own iMLiJirH-BaV 1'TtnVi'!rlrtB-'J' luTh'" remarkable photograph shows the British warship Irresistible as It M 'Inking in the Dardanelles after striking a Turkish mine. -----7 n?s:-f v,y.- -PHTIHIftfllTf of Mrs. Antoinette Funk of the Na New Jersey this summer. The cam McCorniick, Mrs. Winston Churchill of the party will be Miss Watrous' ot Votes, and Is to be seen In this a off the coast of Ireland. Below, two of the most distinguished of and Alfred G. Vanderbilt COL .CORNELIUS VANDERBILT Col. Cornelius Vanderbilt, chairman of the mayor's committee In charge of the welcome of New York to the officers and men of the Atlantic fleet during the May maneuvers. Where Religions Flourish. There, Is a church for every thou sand Inhabitants in the large citleB of the anthracite region of Pennsylva nia, and nearly the same proportion In the rural communities. Scranton, with Us 129,867 citizens, has 129 churches, representing 22 different re ligions. Wilkes Barre, with Its 67,105 citizens, has 66 churches of 14 de nominations. In Hazleton, with 25, 452 Inhabitants, there are S3 churches of nine different denominations. Among the 175,000 mine workers there are Russians, Austrlans, Irishmen, Germans, Italians, Welshmen, English men, Hungarian, Scotchmen, Swiss, Canadians, Swedes, Turks, French men, Greeks, Roumanians, Danes, Norwegians, Dutchmen, Belgians, Finns and a dozen minor races. , n 'I"1'" tniini i " ii i "iiwiliwii mum ii im, Ownwoiwunmi 1 mniiiini1' An offer of $6,000,000 profit did not tempt the Argentine Republic to sell this new superdreadnaught Moreno, the largest and strongest afloat, recently completed at the Camden ship yards of New. Jersey. The offer was made by Greece through an agent in this country. Greece was willing to pay $18,000,000 for the vessel, the cost of which to Argentina was 112,000,000. Insert is Capt. J. F. Gallndez, commander of the vessel. , , SIX MILLION DOLLAR CANAL OPENED IN OREGON 1' " saMAi-.' mm,-, -mmmm Sciaasac i swbb i ansae i zamac awe i smmztsmmstsaamatsmMaatzaat: Since the days of the Lewis and Clark expedition to the section of the country now known as the states of Washington and Oregon, the Celllo stretch has been known as the most dlfllcult piece of water on the Columbia river. The completion of the Celllo canal, which, was opened May 3, clears a steamer lano from Astoria to Lewis ton on the Snake river. Construction work on the canal, which cost $6,000,000, was begun In October, 1905. It has a minimum depth of eight feet with ten passing basins and five locks, overcoming a total fall of S2 feet at low water and 60 feet at the high stage of the river. The photograph shows a viow near the upper end of Celllo canal. LEVI P. MORTON CELEBRATES Levi P. Morton, vice-president of the United States from 18S9 to 1893, for mer member of congress, governor of New York and ambassador to France, has Just celebrated his ninety-first birthday. This snapshot of him was made recently as he left his resi dence in Washington for his daily walk. Olives Pained Conscience. Seventeen years ago Miss Delia Ubeldt, clerk in the store of I. Shan Ifelt, Qojfax, la., stole a bottle of oliveB, Today L B. Shanlfelt, son of her employer, in business here, re ceived a letter addressed to his father, who died seven years ago In Sunny side, Wash., acknowledging the theft and remitting 50 cents in payment. Miss Llboldt said that the Holy Ghost has convicted her and shown her that she ought to pay. Pendleton (Ore.) Dispatch Los Angeles Times. I r TWO POPULAR DEBUTANTES ENGAGED Misses Marie Taller (left) and Margaret Andrews (right), popular debutantes In eastern society whose eugagements have ' been announced MIbs Taller, whom the Grand Duke Mlchaelowltch, cousin of the czar, called the moBt beautiful woman In the world, is to be married to S. llryce Wing. Miss Andrews' future husband is Morgan Belmont, son of August Belmont. Precedence to Militarism. Usual road Improvements in the relatively nonmllltary parts of Great Britain will not be carried out at present. Proposed public Improve ments to relieve unemployment also are in abeyance. The object is to concentrate available labor on objects of military Importance. Roadmakers from places where improved highways are not needed by the military will be transferred to places where such high ways are needed, notably the southern and eastern counties. Workers so transferred will be housed together while away from their homes. They will receive 13 cents an hour. Hut accommodations, with blankets and rugs, will be provided free. All forms I 9BSZS I SUUB I rnHUBCi . ' , .r .nr y of work that keep able-bodied men ol military age out of the army or re strain competent Workers from sup porting the munition industries will be discontinued. Intoxicated Fish. A wounded officer who has arrived at Petrograd from the front recounts an amusing inutance of the benefits of teetotalUm. The commander of a company or dered 800 casks of spirits found In a captured German village to be poured Into a fish pond. The fish became In toxlcated and floated to the surface where they fell an easy prey to the Russian soldiers. The supply lasted some days. Accuxi-d of preying upon the cre dulity of bereaved praons, William H. Chapln, alias B. V. Biown.i Co., alias D. N. Walters, of Harrinburg and Lewlstown, pleaded jiuilty before Judge Wltmer in the United States Court at Sunbtiry to sending parcels of cheap Jewelry addressed to dead perrons and then receiving from thels eHtates payment when they had neves been ordered. Tho Court told him that he was a hard-hearted man to prey upon the estates of the dead, and then sentenced him to three mouths In the Lewlstown Jail. Unknown persons exploded dyna mite on the front porch of the rec lory of the Mother of Consolation Church, one of the largest Roman Catholic churches In Ml. Carmel. No one was Injured, but the house and and adjoining property occupied by David Ilennle, a mine bofs, were badly damaeed. There are two factions in this church, and the rectors, Rev. M. -5. Retka and T. J. Mauleckl, recently appealed to the police for protection, fearing violence. Fifty automobiles were disabled on the streets in Chester, punctured tires causing the trouble. The police are investigating. It has been learned that "hobnails" of peculiar design had been strewn along the streets traversed by automobiles, and the supposition of the police is that the vandalism is the work of parties who are trying to drive the "jitney" cars out of business. Arthur J. Hoverter, the Lebanon in surance agent, pleaded guilty to com plicity in the wrecking of the Schaef ferstown National Bank. Judge C. B. Wltmer, In the United States Court, ?entenced him to five years in the Lebanon Jail. A plea by Hoverter's counsel saved him from serving his term in the penitentiary. F. N. D. Ruchman, secretary of the College Y. M. C. A., at the Pennsyl vania State College, will spend the dimmer in Europe ministering to the spiritual needs of the troops In Tenches and the injured men in hos nitnl. Mr. Buchmnn goes to the front, probably with the German army, at the request of Dr. John R. Mott. A romance that started when they went to school as children, resulted in the wedding of Miss Isabella Shields, of Allentown, and W. H. Dodge, of Rorchester, N. Y., the cere nony being performed In the Church f the Immaculate Conception by pather J. J. Mahon. Active operations were br gun on the Irst State Institution in Union county, vhen ground was broken near Laurel on for cottage No. 1 of Pennsylvania '.Milage for Feeble Minded Women. 'Vork on this building, which will cost '25,600. will be pushed as rapidly as tosslble. With a gash In the head that re Vilred fifteen stitches to close, both 'rms broken and other Injuries, Mrs benjamin R. Koch, fifty-eight years -ild, of Wvft Hamburg, is in a critical -ondition. the result of a fall down tnirs while answering a telephone call it her home. In his semi-annual report, Charles S. Foos. superintendent of the Read ing schools, calls attention to the necessity for an addition to the Girls' High School Building; the nord of ad- lltional funds to maintain the even ing schools and the general financial stringency of the school department The eighteenth annual comrcence nent of the joint Upper Saucon and Lower Milford High School took place In the Union Church, Center Valley. Thirteen graduates, the largest class In the school's history, were given diplomas by County Superintendent Alvln Rupp. Her preference for her stocking as a depository for her money, proved costly to Mrs. William Townsend, of Reading, when she lost a roll of $100, when her stocking wore a hole while she was shopping on Penn street. Anthony Brill, n'ne years old, Is in a critical condition at the ' Home opathic Hospital, Reading, the result of a fall from the Reading Railway bridge on South Hlghth street to the street below. Fifteen accidents In which Jitneya figured characterized circus day In Ilarrisburg, but no one was Feriously hurt. Three Jitneys hit trolley cars, and two crashed Into fences. Over 100 Jitneys were operated. Taul Dammrlch and Lloyd Miller, of Allentown, have started to walk to the San FranclBco Exposition, expect ing to get there about September 1. Secretary J. II. Edwards, of the Reading Y. M. C. A'., was summoned before the. Board of Directors and In formed that he had been granted a vacation to attend tho ranama racific Exposition, with all his expenses paid. From injuries received two weeks ago while roller-skating, eight-year-old Evan Davtes, ot West Catasauq.ua, died at the Allentown Hospital. Albert H. S. Cantlln addressed the electrlo light workers In Allentown on "Efficiency in the Public Servlca."