It X - - .1 . eSIOflE STATE m Reader: I May Journoy ' I. . . ' ' 1 ' . I SO ORDER In TjLio; Depiirtment'O f lowhoro Latest NewsHappenlngsGather ed From Here and There. . ' TOLD IN SHORT PARAGRAPHS , ' ' Aroun' Ao Trail iirniaam rtaiiAl . ft nil" ay rf . rti..- rr DICftT Tfl PflilOPDI DTIflM , wmm w - y Mm ; . ' l 1 1 ' ' ' : A IV . IJlLess ;J. JH fl r X Federal authorities In tbe East believe the alleged plot of Paul Ko.wlg, head of the detective bureau of the Hamburg-American line, to blow up the Welland canal Is only an Incident In a vast conspiracy. The Illustration shows part of the canal, which connocts Lake Ontario with Lake Erie, At the right la Koenlg and at the left R. E. Leyen docker, an art dealer, under arrest as one of the alleged conspirators. INTERIOR ! JT- 'A V ,WA'-I. . P "Qt ' n y Interior view of Turkish fortifications on tbe Uallipull penliiBUla, with a Grst-llue trenches. SHARPSHOOTERS IN WHITE AND ON The mountain fighting In which the Germans are engagod" has, made It necessary to draw on those German soldiers who are snowshoe adepts. . The photograph shows a patrol of thtae men, garbed In white uniforms to make them almost Invisible against the white background and equipped with their tnowshoes, taking a bead on the enemy In the Vosges ntbuntalns. KING OF ITALY WATCHING HIS SOLDIERS M. I A striking photograph titknn on the heights of Cadore while the Win? of Iy, accompanied by bis mlnlnter of war and the commander In chief of the linn armies, was watching the movements of the fighting forces. King tor Emmanuel has his eyes Died to the great (laid glasses. v : L-- Tai HT' it,"' OF, TURKISH FORT ON . i iLwiiii .. .. Ok. 4Wl W.' $itt . GALLIPOLI r f 'wmij'i body of troops about to move to tbe SNOWSHOES r GIVEN TO HER DESCENDANT A beautiful statuette of Pocahontas, Indian maid famed In history and an cestor of Prosldont Wilson's bride, was presented to the White House couple by the Pocahontas Momorlal associa tion, an organization made np of Washington women. It Is In bronze and Is a replica of the statue that will bo erocf.ed at Jamestown. Vs, - The statuette Is 18 Inches high and the sculptor, William Ordway Partridge of Now York. 1 "-fc-v- , -jJJi I'lillJlllMll -.vi'W.;,(f1w n r.7 i'-Tr-Tvj 1 V7-f W vF i rr-'"t,L .U. :,mm,'. II :r-:yl'. lP Tra A scene at a meeting at the SmtthQeld market. London, where a great tlfrong gathered several days at and vehemently expressed their sentiments against conscription and against the proposal of the government for the early closing of saloons. The photograph was taken when the speaker, who, making ose of a carriage aa a plat form, asked all those against the proposals to put their hands op. WINTER - r-Hvc-'n.- -""i"t. 'r'l?Q. rP ,'fVl.T-X "'?xA w7fc' ' ii 1 M ! iSy 4, ' ,3 t Winter has come again to most of the fighting millions of Europe and their problems are tremendously In creased. Transportation becomes especially difficult. The photograph shows part of a long line of motor truck's In Prance laboring toward the front. AUSTRALIANS EAGER TO FIGHT FOR THE EMPIRE 3F1E A very Interesting story Is told In this picture. The enthusiasm of the Australians for the allied cauHe Is un bounded, and this Incident furnishes proof thereof. Thirty men of the town of Gilgandra, In the interior of Australia, organized themselves Into a band of volunteers, and decided to march to Sydney, a distance of 320 miles, to ofTor their services. Residents of Gilgandra contributed nearly U.000 towards the expenses of the march. All along the route the men were cheored and lavishly treated by the patrlotlo Australians, while new recruits foil In line by the score. PRETTY WASHINGTON BUD isn R PI ,11111.1. I: Miss Anita Kite, daughter of Su geon I. W. Kite, U. 8. N., retired, and Mrs. Kite, has JUBt been presented to Washington society. She Is one of the Dretties-t of the season's buds, and as K. - Hi i mvj ''k popular as she Is pretty. . U -s EIW(rfi.rrirV ,r REIGNS ON FIGHTING it HE AMERICAN DOCTORS H' IX I . v Sxaxl lire. A. M. and P. II. Zlnkhan of Washington are shown here In the uniforms of lieutenant colonels of the Russian army, therank conferred on them for life by the czar for their work In the Russian gr hospitals They have left Washington to sail for Russia on the oxplray - 'eir furlough. -m -cs trip 'i'" n n n FRONT 1 0 IE 3C RETURNING TO RUSSIA Lost in 'the dense smoke of her burning home, at Reynoldsvllle, after she had rescued four of her children, Mrs. Anna Adelnon was suffocated. Hugh Haggerty, pitcher for the Erl Central League Baseball Club, dis covered' the Ore and ponii'ded on the door to aroUHO Mrs. Adi-ltton. She found that eHcape by the stairway was cut off and dropped the children from a window to Hagny who caught them. In al templing to tiave beraelf, Mrs. Adelnon collapsed and was dead when rescuers finally reached her. Payrolls In Industrial plants In thefc Turtle Creek and Monongahela River Valleys last week were the largest In the hitttory of the companies. Be cause of the great activity In various lines of the steel Industry, employes received over $3,000,000. Approximate ly 150,000 men are employed In th valleys and every factory has been working to capacity. War munitions are being manufactured at many plants. With the Ire bending beneath bis feet, flveyear-old Ivan Lynn Ashcraft, son of Homer E. Ashcraft, of Folsom, Delaware county, slowly made his way to the edge of a hole through which three-year-old David Scott Ward, his companion, had disappeared, and with strength and presence of mind beyond his yeurs, dragged the half-drowned playmate to sufety. He is the hero of the village. The East Pear Ridge colliery, on Broad Mountain, was purchased from David, William and Benjamin James by Sumuel G. Cook, of Baltimore, and J. H. Brooks, of Scranton. There Is an output of a thousand tons of coal a day. but this will be Increased great ly. The colliery operates the Mam moth Vein which is worked through tunnel driven by the Girard estate. Two months ago a Jury awarded Michael Wislockl, nn employe of the Eastern Steel Company, $10,000 dam ages because he had three fingers torn off in machinery, whirh, It was al leged, the company failed to protect Tho steel company asserted the award was excessive and Judge Koch sus tained this contention, awarding a new trial. Martin Hartlgan. fifty years old, a steam shovel watchman for the Girard Mammoth Colliery, Shenandoah, was found burned to death ten feet away from his shovel by William Myers, an other watchman. It Is thought his lan tern exploded which Ignited his oily clothing. He was a former resident of Philadelphia. - With all bones In his body broken and his flesh ground to a pulp, William-Kemmerer, thirty-six years old, of Bechtelsville, met death when his clothing caught and he was drawn Into the revolving shafting at Staufrers" Flour and Feed Mill near his home. Kemmerer was alone at the time and It Is believed he was oiling the ma chinery. A carriage containing Mrs. Ina Kofs. sixty-three years old, and John Rice, her son-in-law, and his wife. skidded and upset on the Locust Mountain Road, hurling the occupants down a twenty-five-foot embankment, Mrs. Nofs' injuries probably are fatal, but Rice and his wife escaped with slight injuries by londing in a clump of laurel hushes. Rulings In regard to State standards of safety and sanitation will be made by the State Industrial Board early In 1916. The board has several codes under consideration and will meet on December 2S for further discussion. Two fore handed farmers have asked the State Employment Agency to see J that they get hands for spring work. The bureau Just now Is trying to find men for the Jobs which the manurao-y turers are offering on every hand. , Miners in the Philadelphia & Read Ing Coal & Iron Company's Bumslde " Colliery found the body of Andrew Tarsaw lying under a huge pile of coal which had fallen on him after he had exploded a shot In a breast, . More licenses for the sale of oleo have been Issued this year than ever before, the total amounting to 2,817. Three hundred applications have been filed for 1916 licenses. chasing presents for her son, Alex ander, he and some comrades played with a dynamite cartridge he found at home. The cartridge exploded and Bodusky's arm was blown off and ha was internally Injured. Attorneys for Joseph Gamberetta, Shamokln, filed suit In Northumber land County Court against the Susque. banna Coal Company for $10,000 dam ages. He alleged be fell 100 feot In Luke FIdler Mlno, and was crippled permanently. ' Yardloy Council has passed an ordi nance "restricting domestic fowls which Includes chickens, ducks, tur keys and geoso from running at largo elthr on public or privnte property," and tho peualty on any poultry owner who permits a violation will be $5 and costs for the first offense. A fall In attempting to mount horse was the primary cause of the death of Ell D. Smith, a farmer, near Martinsburg. Ills leg struck a stump, resulting In blood poisoning, whit superinduced pneumonia.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers