fHE FULTOJ COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURG, PA. tores of Wor Events Trilo Dopartmont Our Readers In Fulton County and Elsowhoro May Journoy Around the Aorld Alth the Oomoro on tho Trail of Hlctory Malclnfs Happenings. TUFTS PROFESSOR INVENTS WIRELESS VONDER WORKER RIGA AND KOVNO THREATENED BY GERMANS T if 0i T i vv?.m. ret ! ""SVPKM tTTy " MMtV. JTW T--7-. . r J 71 -. ' ii M i' ' ' ----- :vm I'lip 1: imfm 0 r iipl ! ; I li:; I'rof. B. K. Shepard of Tufts college a.id the small wireless machine with which he oporates a seven-foot boat, steers an automobile, fires a cannon, blows horns, rings bells and does many other things. ' The machine has no pound wire. . 'BUSINESS MEN'S MILITARY CAM F AT PLATTSBURGH -:w . : -f - ' ' - View of tho camp at Pittsburgh, N. Y., where hundreds of business men from every Btate in the Union are receiving military training. Among the recruits are many men of great prominence and wealth. All undergo the irlot training and discipline of the regular army. At tho right Is tho commander of tho camp. Capt. Halstead Dorcy, aid to Gen. Leonard Wood. hnlb. rA.. UhVAolAItU bT ILUUUbUKbl i.sf' r r ,. . - : ' , , Hi I f i ii i ' 'Urn i i 'i i i ii I 1 1 1 1 ii il i n i .1. I I Scene In French street, in Erie, Pa., Just after the cloudburst and flood that caused the death of more than n Rrnrn nr mrsnn and the destruction of a ra.it amount of nrnnertv In that cltv. It was alone thia street that many of the victims wer caught and drowned by the rapidly rising waters. HAITIAN NAVY TAKEN BY ADMIRAL CAPERTON r ' ' ' ' ' 1 . - - - ' ill H v 7n 4 re" iff irw iir i-y-b i -jr. i - , v.- y 7n i i i i mi ii mi m ..ha. m. cor , it-vrri -- 1 ' f .Kmv uu ". This is the gunboat Paclflque. the entire navy of Haiti, which Admiral Caperton "capturod" at Port au-Prlnce. POLICE AS WIGWAGGERS ponce department of New York nas a now signal corps tnat is being roniki. ....... ... . ....... . . . lt irainoa. At present ina men wigwag ineir communicaiions irom cilQneys of stations and the roofs ot high buildings, but later a wireless will be installed. RANGE FINDING ON WARSHIP SftnfirtBiiiiiVlllif iffl i'ii Wlfjriinnrnii.ii n " " Olllcer on the American battleship Utah opuratlng the range finder dur ing maneuvers. Getting Down to Essentials. "As a matter of professional con tldonco,"' said the lawyer, "are you guilty?" "What's the use of wasting time on a minor consideration like that?" re joined the up-to-date prisoner. "How do you think I measure up for Insanity?" IIolow is a street scene In Kovno, thd northern extremity of the new line of RusHlan defense which the Ger mans are striving to capture. Above, the Dunnburger railway station at Riga, Russia's moat Important port after Petrogrnd, which also Is In danger of capture by the Teutonic armies and which was attacked a few days ago by a German fleet. The chapel In front of the station was erected in memory of the escape of Emperor Alexander III and his family from death at Ilarkl. FIRST AERO SQUADRON OF THE U. S. ARMY m rim; The first photograph of the First Aero squadron, U. S. A. It Is the first organized corps In the United States for Bervlco in the field. Tho squadron consists of 15 Junior military aviators, 90 mechanicians and eight 100-horso-power military aeroplanes, or speed scouts, capable of flying 83 miles an hour with pilot and observers and six hour fuel supply. PRISONERS FROM RIVAL ARMIES INDIAN BOY NAMED FOR T. mi muMnianwi swHitrr twiiiiiiitiiiiiMiiiiiTiritiHliTiriiTriiiWMiffr .WaF I fj J Above aro seen Russian prisoners taken lu Poland rear-guard actions and being marched back to German concentration camps. Below Is a scene during an Inspection of German prisoners In a French camp In Alsace. Gen eral Joffre was there, and as they passed him the Germans, by command of their officers, respectfully saluted him by "eyes left" During Col Theodore Roosevelt's visit to the San Diego exposition hu was much Impressed when an Indian boy, born two hours before the former president arrived at the "Painted Desert" on the exposition grounds, was christened Theodore Roosevelt. The colonel took part lu the ceremony and seemed to enjoy It Immensely With his customary emphasis he de clared "This Is the finest Indian boy I ever looked at" The photograph shows tho mother, Haria Trujlle, an Acoma Indian, froMIng the Infant In a blanket while the former president adm'.rca It. Matting. Rub every two or three months with Bait water, lukewarm, and dry quickly with a clean cloth. POOR QUALITY OF GRAIN IN STATE Professor 8urface Heart Unfavorable Weather Results In Deteriora tion Of Crops. Harrltiburg. Rains, cold nights and generally unfavorable weather condi tions are going to cost tho farmers of Pennsylvania many dollars In de terioration of grain, according to Prof. H. A. Surface, State zoologist, who has been receiving reports from demon strators traveling through the eastern part of the State and who now are Investigating conditions In the West ern counties. "In many cases the grain started to sprout while In the field. Consider able wheat has done this and I afu In formed that quite a quantity of rye suffered from the damp and the gen erally bad conditions." says Prof. Surface. "The oats crops, which we all thought was going to be such a valuable one and so much larger than usual, may be diminished more thau other grains because of the damp. I have learned of large fields In which the oats have been cut, but which are wet through and through. This not only will make It difficult to handle, but unsalable In some sections. "The most serious feature of the conditions will be that the grains will not command good prices, except where everything wss favorable, and there may be a shortage of cattle feed In tome sections, although In others they will feed the unsalable product "Weather conditions have been bad and the frequent storms have caused much damage, more than we are aware of as yet." Lose Funds If Not Acknowledged. Hospitals and other institutions, roted appropriations for permanent Improvements by the Legislature, stand to lose thousands of dollars by falling to file acceptances with the Auditor General. Under the Act of 1911, If Institutions fall to file ac ceptances within sixty days, the ap propriation reverts to the State Treas ury. Judges File Nomination Papers. Four of the Judges appointed to fill vacancies on Common Pleas Court benches In the last year filed petitions to be candidates for renomlnatlon. They are: R. W. Irwin, Washington, appointed by Governor Tener; R. 8. Oawthrop, Chester; W. H. Shoemaker, Philadelphia, and E. II. Reppert, Fay ette, appointed by Governor Brun-baugh. Russian Official Studies Farm Method Secretary of Agriculture Crltchfleld was visited by Maximilian Groten, engineer of maintenance of way of the Imperial Russian Railways, who is la this country for the purpose of report ing to his Government on the Improve ment of agricultural conditions m Rus sia. He went over methods used by the State Government for the spread of farm knowledge. State Educators Off To California. Dr. J. George Bccht, Secretary of the State Board of Education; R. B. Tletrlck, Deputy Superintendent or Public Instruction, and Thomas 8. March, State High School Inspector, have gone to San Francisco to attend the National Educational Association. They represent the State's end of edu cational work. Arsenal Contract Let The Beard Construction Company, of Lancaster, was low bidder at $38,- 4S0. for construction of the new build ing at the State Arsenal. Ten other firms bid. The appropriation for th work Is 110,000. To Stop Granting Of Grade Crossing. Publlo Service Commissioners an nounced that applications for grade crossings would not be granted unless very strong reasons were given. The announcement was made during the bearing of the protest against an ap plication of the Allen Street Railway Company for a grade crossing over the Lehigh & New England Railroad at Bath. Notice of Injunction proceed ings brought against tho Allen Com pany was given and the trolley com pany rejoined that to avoid a grade crossing would require an outlay ot $10,000. To lnpot Erie Damage Highway Commissioner R. J. Cun ningham and Chief Engineer W. D. Dhler loft for a tour of northwestern counties to inspect damage done by the cloudbursts In Erie and to look ' over places where State aid has been asked for Improvement of roads. ' The Inspection will be the first fof Mr. Cunningham In some eectlons and Important engineering details will be looked over In the northern tier coun ties and In the western border. Contracts Let For Building Of Road. The first contracts for building of roads on the State aid plan were awarded by Highway Commissioner Cunningham, as follows; Stroudsburg, Monroe county, from 22 to 67 feet In width, 4,871 feet, to Franklin Construction Company, New York, at $45,623.64. Muncy, Lycoming county, 5,843 feet, to Dwyer & Co., Philadelphia, at $41, 877.07. Milton, Northumberland county, 4,940 feet, to Fogel & Co., Uollldays burg, at $28,144.43. Uses For Township Fund. A fast as accounts are certified to the Auditor General, the Bureau of Township Highways of the .State Highway Department Is sending out to the Township Supervisors the amount due them from the State as a bonus on the cash tax basis. Ac companylng the remlttnnco to tho supervisors is a letter from Joseph W. Hunter, First Deputy State Highway Commissioner, In charge of the Bureau of Township Highways, in which he informs the supervisor what use may bo made of this money. ,: