THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURO, PA. STATE NEWS BRIEFLY TOLD fMlffMAff WW )n This Department Our Readers In Fulton unty and tHoowhe mora on the Trail INlay Journey The Latest Gleanings From All Over the State. Around tho VrVorld Alth the of History IVIalcInc: Happenlncs. rOLO IN SHORT PARAGRAPHS AMERICAN TROOPS FIGHTING IN HAITI ONE OF UNCLE SAM'S GOOD SUBMARINES Transplants Bone From Leg To Vrte brae Apprentice Schools Reor ganized Councilman Killed As Auto Goes Over Bank. of WW Events for s Readers pictures r won? mM i i"ii rt-rtt"TT'iffii fi niir r n r' if rr'"-ini -i i i i i - ' rili rr - - -"rr if 'f n i n'r -i i f- i-r r T'' ' ' 1 '"rrrniiiYrrr ' 1 ,iTiiiiMir-'frO- Bluejackets from the United States ship WaHhlugton are here shown ashore near Fort-au-Prlnce, Haiti, attacking t party of rebels lu the bush. The American forces have now about restored order In the black republic. CZAR OF BULGARIA AND HIS GENERALS Minn "W &n I -fil s i A ill i T i'll f i m r 1 .i : I! . i, 1UI i A m : .m ! i rn-fi-ii rimmrirt''r Kurdinand. czar of Bulgaria (In the right foreground), and the leading generals of the army with which be Is attacking Serbia. LORD AND LADY ABERDEEN, IN AMERICA ' V-....-A -i-miiii.winMiiaMiMa nlnlWlmmlllllll Al,rtlllhwftlllftnmlllllllll " 11 The marquiB and marchioness of Aberdoen are now making a tour of the I'nitecl States and Canada for the purpose of attending various meetings and delivering lectures on social topics. Lord Aberdeen, who has twice been vlcnroy of Ireland, was nii.de a marquis last January. The marchioness Is Pfsldent of the International Council of Women. PANAMA CANAL BLOCKED BY SLIDES NEW BRITISH GAS HELMET V. This 1b the latest gas helmet Is sued to the British troops for pro tection In the trenches against the deadly fumes from German gas bombs. '..- 4 v. . - V iJ-wi r' t S"V:' This photograph shows dredges working; on the latest slides that have 'xked the Panama canal Just north of Gold hill. Slides occurred on both Jnki and the land pushed up formed an Island In the conter of the channel, "'e canal may not be opened again to traffic before the end of the year. Activities of Women. The women conductors on the Glas gow tram cars wear green straw hats and black watch tartan skirts. Thirty-five per cent of the women In Now York, Pennsylvania, New Jer sey and Massachusetts have to work for a living outside the home. The threatened grand Jury Investiga tion of'the Juvenile court In Chicago Is said to be a direct attack on Miss Mary Bartetme, assistant judgo of the court. The majority of the boatmen In Wales having gone to war, their places have been taken by women, who take people out for a sdll or a row In the Bame safe way as the men did. Women munition workers In the Vlckors factory In England are earn ing from $4 to $5 per week of six shifts of 54 hours. They wear overalls of butcher blue, caps to match, leather gloves and strong boots. Thoy all live together In a bouse close to tho factory. Our Friend, the Doctor. A doctor is a member of the greatest and most beneficent and unselfish of all the learned professions. We Jest at the doctors In our hourB of health, but when disease seizes upon the strength of manhood, when even the mighty Caesar cries like a sick child, when the hour of pain Is upon us, then, In the hushed chamber and by the lonely lamp of the watcher, we Invoke the merciful ministrations of the doc tor, and with willing feet he comes through the storm and darkness, and with skill and patience and courage he battlos with disease and beats back death from the house of life. I'Mti in i n iniM.rii - '"-irfi 'vxmimtiiu in - n mt ' - - -"'"" "" f""lfl " This photograph, taken during the submarine maneuvers at Newport, shows the United States submarine G-l as the sailors were clearing her deck preparatory to submerging. MARTIAL MUSIC UNDER DIFFICULTIES 1 Shmihk 4 . W-rA Kt. " s? i,..: fv "w..swyirw--, 1 A highly Interesting and unusual picture Just from the Argonne district. The crown prince has boon making attacks along this front In which poison gas was extensively used. Entire regiments go about constantly masked against the deadly fumes, and when during a lull In the fighting the regimental band got together for re hearsal In the ruins of a village they presented thin grotesque scene. ANOTHER INTERNATIONAL MARRIAGE ll " f .J &H&lM3f&t.i. 'rT ,.HK i .. ,.--r-r--- WWMW'''M mAissii nun n in 1 1 aifc-Jt Lieut. John H. Towers. U. S. N.. assistant naval attache to the States embassy In London, and Miss Lily N. Carstairs, daughter of S. Carstairs of Mayfalr, whose engagement has been announced. United Charles AMERICAN OFFICERS IN HAITI jtA'iijjllllllBllllM'llillllllMllMlllllllll,IIBWM rate Ei VsaWttd J Those olltcers of the American forces now occupying Haiti are stationed at Jacmel Loft to right, they are: Captain Green, Lieut John Qulncy Adams and Lieutenant Miller. GENERAL ARLABOSSE " ' i 4i,ii, li'yt' V'jaj General Arlabosse, one of the French commanders, standing In front of his "mansion" In the Fronch line3 In eastern Franco. Right Way to Drop a Hook. Ono of the most common faults of amateurs In the realm of seamanship is to let go the anchor whllo tho vessel is still going ahead, says Outing. This Is not only sloppy and unseamanllke, but it Is very likely to Involve ono in difficulties later on, becauso when the vessel settlrs buck over her "hook" she is opt to catch a turn of tho anchor-rope around a fluke or arm and then the anchor will drag under at the least provocation. Tho proper method of coming to anchor Is to round up to the wind or tide (according to which Is the controlling forco), bring the vessel to a stop, and even have slight sternway on her before singing out "Let go!" Then the anchor will go down fair and its chain or rope will tall out straight as tho vessel swings off before the wind or tide French Traces In Hungary. The Banat is a province of southern Hungary that forms part of "Unre deemed Uoumania." But there are bits of It that are not In the least Rouma nian In character particularly cer tain bits with neat litlo farms and poplar-lined roads and trim villages nes tling round pretty Gothic churches. Both villages and villagers have French nainen, often distorted al most out of recognition, and a few old folks still have a dim memory of the French language, which was the current speech In these villages sixty years ago, but has slues been damped out of existence by the Magyars Dr. J. C. Diddle, Burgeon-ln-chief and superintendent of the State Hospital, at Fountain Springs, performed an un usual and delicate operation In a cllnlo before leading physicians and surgeons of that region, at the hospital, when, with the use of an electric saw, the surgeon sawed a piece of bone from the leg of Elizabeth Flail, two years old, a cripple, and transplanted it to the vertebrae. It Is one of the most difficult operations known to Burgery. The surgeon believes that the child will be cured. ' The Huston boy who wrote to Presi dent Wilson, conKratulating him on his engagement, and asking him to order the schools closed on his wedding day, was Konrad Gesner, twelve years, Hon, of Rev. II. M. Gesner, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, formerly of Atlantic City. Konrad received a letter from Secretary Tumulty saying: "The President asks me to acknowl edge the receipt of your letter of Oc tober 7, and to thank you for your kindness in writing him." The Atlas Powder plant, controlled by the I)u Pont Interests, located at Webster, Is preparing to turn out large war orders. Work has been started on a big addition to the acid plant and mechanics and laborers are employed as rapidly as they apply, nearly 400 men now being at work. As an Inducement to secure help, the com pany hns had the Reading Railway Compnny run a special train night and morning from Tamaqua to the plant, a distance of six miles. Seven-year-old Anita Broden, daugh ter of Albert Rroden, superintendent of furnaces of the Reading lion Com pany applied the match which started the fires of the giant furnaces at Tem ple, Idle for over a year, one of the most Important Industries of the East Penn Valley. The stack will produce one hundred tons of iron a week, and, because of the boom in the Iron busi ness, was gotten ready In a hurry. Flossie Montnin shot his wife after they had quarreled at their home in Erie and then shot himself. Mrs. Montain died while being taken to thu, hospital and physicians said Montaln( could not recover. No one witnessed the tragedy and Its cause Is not known. Mrs. Montain Just had re-, turned from the grape belt east of Erie, where she had been employed. A suit was brought by counsel for Mrs. Sara I). Frankenfield, a milliner, Allentown, against Phaon P. Franken-, held, her husband, for the recovery of $2,1"8.06, which she declares she lent him at various times. The Items Include $1.50 for tickets for a theatrical per formance, $1 for a hair cut and shave, 65 cents for shoes for his baby and $.36 for nine ducks and a hen. Apprentice schools, operated by th Westlnghouse Interests, the Carnegie Steel Company and othel large cor porations in the Pittsburgh district, will be recognized by the State Depart ment of Public Instruction under the new child labor law, according to an, announcement by Miller A. King, State Director of Industrial Education. James Fitwitnmons, aged forty-five, president of the Scottdale Council, was killed instantly, and Ora Mauk and Frank Moorehead were Injured slightly when Moorehead's automobile, in which the men were riding, went over an embankment on the road near Scottdale. Typhoid fever Is raging In various sections of Lancaster county. At Fal mouth, there are a number of cases. At Ephrata, seven members of Henry W. Witwer'B family are 111 with the disease. Rev. Wlnfred H. Ziegler, who spent the past three years os an Kplacop&l Missionary in Alaska, has been ap pointed vicar of All Saints' Episcopal Church, Lehlghton, to succeed Rev. A. A. Uresee. Nathaniel J. Lefevre, of TaradlBe, sixty-two years old, while attending church services, was stricken with heart disease and died within an hour. He was a retired tinsmith. Mrs. Sarah Finney, seventy-six years old, of Nickel Mines, while engaged In cleaning house, fell and was fatally injured when a balcony broke against which she was leaning while Blinking carpet. She was picked up In an un conscious condition and died within on hour. Mrs. Amanda Eshelman, a native of York county, who went West thirty two years ago, Is visiting her sisters at Wrigbtsvllle and vicinity, whom she has not seen for that time. Worrying over being out of work, Augustus Miller, a railroad Creman, of Bethlehem, .attempted to commit sui cide. He fired two shots at his head, the first hitting a bone and glancing off and the second missing Altogether. He probably will recover. Miss Ella Mann, of Mountville, was dragged some distance after being caught in a Bpring of the buggy In which she was driving. Hor sister, Ada, was thrown out, and escaped In Jury. The horse became frightened at i an automobile.