THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURO, FA. ftlay Journoy I niu ' opur bill 7 I 1 m va r nuciU(3l K hi I 1 w w wa a , bow wr we (Conducted by tho National Woman's WirlHtlun Temperance Union.) Around the AorlcJ NAith -trio Oamora on tho Trail Pictures of World Events for News Read of History INlatclnE RUINED RUSSIAN DEFENSES AT JAROSLAU FRENCH SPORTSMEN AS WAR AVIATORS Tbis photograph, taken at an aero base In northern France, shows a number of celebrities In the French sport- ' . 'J$ "f MSJZ"? l!! "V . ' '-C" -world who are serving their country as army aviators. The second man from tho left is Georges Carpcntler. y.-V 'rvwWi 24 - -tfC1! ' ' X : ' ' Pk J( famous boxer, and the third is Somes, French champion cyclist, who bad brought down a German aviator Just ' ' - y5s' f y CT 'p5fSJ jACCwl.,8! '-e Plct was taken. Vj Rfe-? NVWJ ' MOHAMMEDAN TROOPS AT PRAYER IN ENGLAND I " n " fi " " " " " l '1 2 -Y In an effort to check the Germans, the Russian forces Intrenched themselves In what they believed was an Impregnable position Just behind Jaroslau, a fortified city In Gallcla, The Germans forced these positions, however, and compelled the Russians to flee before them. In the upper photograph a group of German soldiers are seen ap proaching the scene of death wrought by their guns in driving out the Russians, while In the lower photograph two German officers are seen contemplating the havoc wrought by their forces In their successful forward movement. GALICIAN JEWS RETURNING TO THEIR HOMES 3E 'i n 1 7TTT A picturesque scene which was wltnesed at the mosque at Woking, near London, when a large number of Mohammedans, principally British Indian troops, assembled for prayer. The picture shows the "prostration," 'ifh worshiper with his face to the east. PROTECTED AGAINST POISONOUS GASES k4 WJ1 i X3 I fcA"dtiii'ii'i"iiafcMi.iix---v-'v"" Iri-i'-rhVitfifrrrrriaii THEY INFRINGED DISCIPLINE Group of French infantrymen in the trenches equipped with respirator! "4 toggles as protection against the poisonous gases used by the Germans. DEAD AT THEIR POSTS IN A TRENCH Sczzzkc: -r- bid KEC '"Ian kttuiiaiy ouiueis luuptcliiig a copiurcu ouiumu ireutu iu uicu 11 "nbrukea line of dead soldiers who were killed as they fought. n-mrsMr-i " - J UNDERWOOD UNDERWOOD -"V "ifcar j i- In the rear of the Gorman army which triumphantly made Its entry Into Gallcla and Russia were thousands of Jewish refugees who had fled from their homes before the soldiers of the czar. Believing that they would be permitted to enjoy privileges under the Germans which were denied them under the rulo of the czar, the Jews looked upon the triumph of the German forces as another of the blessings heaped upon the "Children of Israel." NAVAL HONORS FOR TWO KILLED IN HAITI I HEAV Italian artillery Discipline in the British military camps at Alexandria, Egypt, Is very strict and those soldiers who have committed petty infringements are confined In a compound surrounded by barbed wire. Some of these of fenders are here shown loaving the compound for their dally tasks. SNAKE CHARMER IS BITTEN Circus Employee Breathes by Means of Tube as Result of Swollen Tongue. Pocatello, Idaho. George Horner, who is employed by the Campbell Carnival company as a snake charmer, went out into the hills near here with a companion, and captured eight rat tlesnakes. Horner wanted to extract the fangs of the reptiles, and had succeeded .by using his teeth on the first few, when a particularly squirmy one bit him on the Up and tongue. As a consequence he Is considering himself lucky to be breathing, even by means of a tube put through a bole in his windpipe. As soon as he was bitten, Horner was taken to Dr. A. F. Newton. The doctor administered antidotes and la bored with the man for three hours. Horner's tongue became so swollen that he could not breathe and Doctor Newton found it necessary to cut a hole In the man's windpipe. Indian 1pear Found. Eugene, Ore. On Indian spear, es timated to bo from fifty to one hun dred years old, was found recently by forest service guards on the Mc Kcnile river, 60 miles east of here. The shaft Is of cedar and In a good state of preservation. The shaft ' about twelve foot long, and has a tip ot flint 0 b . y ,i.x r a. ?4 4 4 N '? Cl S7Vf l n . .. s ; .-. ... i i i' m, Boston accorded naval honors to William Uorupors ot Brooklyn, N Y a nephew of Samuel Gompers, the president ot the American Federation of Labor, and Carson W'hlteburst ot Norfolk, Va., both members of the crew of the V. 3. S. Washington who were killed July 29, when some Haitian rebels resisted the landing of the American sailors at Port-au Prince. The picture shows sailors firing a volley over the flag-draped coffins on the pier at Charlestown navy yard, Roston. WHISTLING BURGLAR CAUGHT Bandit Who Went About His Work Quite Merrily Now In Jail. Redding, Cal. John Hooper was ar rested at The Dalles. Ore., charged with being the "whistling burglar" who compelled Gordon Jacobs, mana ger of the Jonea company store at Hornbrook, Cal., near here, to march from his home to the store, open the safe and permit the robber to take with him cash, and gold dust to the amount ot $700. While taking Jacobs to the store and on his way out of town with the loot the robber whistled merrily and aroused no suspicion. The robbery was committed on June 23. Hooper, according to the police at The Dalles, was paroled from Folsom penitentiary last year. The Italians, having found the Aus trian frontier well fortified, are now making uso there of their heaviest ar tillery. One of the big guns is here shown. "DEAD" MAN WALKS TO COURT Identification In Chicago May Be Only Trick of the "Heathen . Chinee." Chicago. As the Jury was completed to try Harry Eng Hong, charged with the murder of Mock Chung in a Chi nese gambling house in 1913, an Ori ental walked into Judge Barrett's room in the Criminal court building and announced that be was Mock Chung. His announcement caused a sensation. The attorney for the defendant told the court that the roan who was killed was Jung Long and a marriage li cense also would be Introduced In evi dence to prove that the supposed mur dered man is among the living. According to Assistant State's At torney John O'Brien the slate hopes to prove that Mock Chung was really murdered and that the man who ap peared In court possesses the rame name as the dead man. WATER FOR CHRISTENING. There Beems to be some confusion on the purt of certain good people con cerning the attitude of the W. C. T. U. with regard to the christening of ships with champagne. The Outlook said editorially: "The opposition of ex treme temperance advocates has at ways been difficult to understand." II contends that Inasmuch as "a bottle smashed on the bow of a battleship lk one bottle, that can never be drunk, such an event ought to be regarded aa another blow to the consumption of liquor." Miss Anna A. Gordon, president of the National Woman's Christian Tem perance t'nlon, being asked to give the whlte-rlbboners' viewpoint, said: "Out friends, the 'nonextremists,' are taking a narrow and superficial view of the question. They are losing sight of the symbolism of the rite Itself. Consider the root meaning of the word christen ing. One of the dictionary definition of to christen is, 'to name, as a ship by a ceremony likened to baptism.' Al ways baptism in the Christlun econ omy has been with water. If In dayi gone by spirituous liquors were sup posed to give long life and to bring good luck, the revelations of science have thoroughly exploded that theory. Water Is a symbol of life, alcohol a symbol of disease, destruction and death, the enemy of life and of effi ciency; hence the christening of any ship with champagne Is an absurdity and an anachronism." FUTURE OF KING ALCOHOL. The Russian minister of finance of fers $302,500 in prizes for the discov ery of new methods for utilizing alco hol. Three prizes totaling $25,000, will be given for the discovery of new de naturing substances, the improve ments to such as will guarantee a general use and make alcohol abso lutely unfit for use as a beverage. Twenty-one prizes, totullng $337,500, are offered for suggestions for adding to and Improving the uses of spirits for heating, lighting, motive power and in the industrial branches of chemical technology. The largest single prize of $37,000 (supplemented by two other prizes totaling $50,000) Is offered for an invention relating to the utilization of spirits In internal combustion engines; the production of such substances as vinegar, ether, chloroform, dissolving agents, fuel, lighting, etc. Russia's wise and practical policy with regard to King Alcohol points to the time when that most powerful en emy of the human race from the begin ning of time shall be transformed into valued servant and friend. Thus do we become "more than conquerors." STUDY OF ALCOHOL. That the dangers of alcohol should be emphasized in every school in the land, was the opinion voiced by Dr. G. D. Cameron of Ohio, speaking be fore the bureau of sanitary science of the American Institute of Homeo pathy. While the schools had touched upon the subject somewhat, he said. It remained for the European war to set forth "the true relation of this demoralizer of human efficiency." "The utter desolation alcohol cre ates in the home makes it like war," be asserted. "Like war, It digs the untimely grave. It pauperizes. Through heredity it creates the neu rotic. It damns and degenerates wherever it comes in contact with the human tissue. It paves the way for tuberculosis and Is first assistant In disseminating the diseases of vice. Yet tho schools do not manifest the strong interest in this subject which Its importance In social science de serves. Let the forces of enlightenment nrray themselves where the enemies of society are making their strong est attack. The schools should teach that good health la life's greatest asset." CONDEMN THE SALOON. The Catholic Total Abstinence union at Its annual convention In Mil waukee voted to Join hands with the Dry Chicago federation and appoint ed a committee to co-operate wltb that organization. "The saloon," de clared the Catholics, "is engaged in destroying civilized society. So long as it confined Its destroying Influence to the male portion of our population temporizing remedies and expedients were first to be thought of, but since the alcohol octopus has enmeshed the) whole family In its slimy tentacles with commercialized vice, a symptom of the alcoholic blight, with woman hood dishonored and motherhood de stroyed, the manhood that remains un sullied must arise In defense till the whole bad business is Bwept from our land." . SOCIAL AND CIVIC PROBLEM. William A. Plnkerton has said that all of us are more or less potentially criminal, and that this Innate ten dency is kept submerged by most men through habits of temperate self-control. That the city and state are respon sible for deliberately breaking down the resisting power of their citizens there no longer can be any question. In other words, the problem of crime is not merely a matter of Individual responsibility. Its prevention Is a question ot Boclal and civic obligation. NO INTOXICANTS ALLOWED. ..For the first time In the history of Pennsylvania's National Guard,, a sweeping order affecting the use and sale ot intoxicants in camp has been Issued by the adjutant general. The order comes through the regular mili tary channels, direct from Governor Brumbaugh. RUMMIES' FRIENDS. "We are the friends of the rum mies," she said. If we rid this coun try of rum even the saloonkeepers will live longer." Alary Harris Armor.