Stows. M II IV1 VOLUME 17 McCONNELLSBURG, PA., JANUARY 27,19If. NU31BER 19 THE GRIM REAPER. Short Sketches of the Lives of Per sons Who Dave Recently Passed Away. Mrs. Alexander Mayne. Mary Hoover, wife of Alexan- Mayne, passed away sudden j at their home at Fort Little ton, Wednesday evening, Janu ary 19, 1916, aged 78 years, months, and 15 days. The fu neral took place Saturday after noon, the services being conduct ed by her pastor Rev. A. S. Lur ing, of the M. E. church, McCon r.ellsburg, and interment was maJe in the cemetery at Fort Littleton. With the exception of having been troubled some with neural eia. Mrs. Mayne was in about her usual health and Wednesday evening was resting on a lounge in the sitting room. Noticing a slight call Miss Annie went to her mother and found that she was passing away. It is believ ed by her physician that she died a3 a result of an attack of neu nalgia of the heart. Besides her husband, Mrs. Mayne is survived by the follow ing children; Mrs. Minnie Buck ley, and J. Frnk Mayne, Shelby Iowa; George, Altoona, Pa., Tho mas and Samuel, Duncannon, Pa Rev. Charles. Griswold, Iowa, and Miss Annie at home. Mrs. Mayne has two brothers living John Hoover at Hustontown and Christopher, near Eurnt Cabins. Her sons were all present at the funeral; although, on account of delay in travel, the funeral ser vice3 were partly over when Charlie and Frank reached there. Mrs. Sarah Garland. Mrs. Sarah Garland, widow of Benjamin Garland late of Belfast rnunahin fcpcawr tec at flip u home of her son-in-law and daugh ter bull well and Lttie Iruax on the old Preacher "Correll place near the Brethern church in Bel fast township, on Tuesday even ing, January 18, 1916, in the 72nd year of her age. The - funeral services conducted by Eld. J. Calvin Garland, took place on the following Thursday, and in terment was made in the ceme tery at the Sideling Hill Baptist church. Her death was entirely unex pected. She went to bed a little earlier than usually, and soon thereafter some of her women friends called and Mrs. Truax told them to just step into her room as she was just resting in bed in an adjoining room. As her bed was approached she threw up her hands, and passed away apparently without a strug gle. The deceased was a daughter of the late Isaac Mellott, who year3 ago lived on Pleasant Ridge on what is now the John Bard farm. She was married to Ben jamin Garland, who passed away a few years ago, and the follow ing children survive, namely, Liz zie, wife of David Garland, Need more; Jennie, widow of David Hill, near Sharpe; Ettie, wife of Stillwell Truax, at whose home Mrs. Garland died; and John Gar land and Charlie Garland, both living in Belfast township. She is survived by one step-daughter Emma, wife of Mason Mellott. Mrs. Garland was a consistent member of the Christian church for many years, and her first thought in life was to be useful to those about her, and she was never more contented than when able to do something to add to the comfort of those with whom she mingled. Gilbert Mellott. Gilbert Mellott died at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Har ry Mellott, in Ayr township, Wednesday, January 19, 1916. The deceased was subjeet to epi lepsy all his life and a few days ago was attacked by grippe, which was the immediate cause of his death. If he had lived until Feb ruary 9th, he would have attained the age of 17 years. ' Besides his father and mother OUR DISTANT FRIENDS. Interesting Extracts from Letters Re cently Received from Former Ful ton County People. Sadie Buckley Coolidge, Smith Center, Kans. Here's a draft that will put me in the '17' class. As you know, I am one of Fulton County's daughters, and I am always glad to get the News and learn about my old home people and their doings. It is the first paper I pick up when the mail is brought to our house about noon each Sunday. Miss Elizabeth Comerer, Philadelphia. I am enclosing a money order to advance my sub scription into 1917. We look for ward to the coming of the News each week with eager anticipa tion. Kindest regards to all our Fulton County relatives and oth er friends. Harry Dawney, Chicago. -The News is a welcome caller every Saturday morning. What is the matter with our friends up about Hustontown that nobody seno.3 in the happenings any more? Get busy. Good way to let the people know you are still on the map. We have had some very severe winter weather. Love to all our Fulton Countv friends. Much Sickness. The many friends of Mr3. M u. Mainias wm learn with sor row that she is lying dangerous ly ill at her home at Hustontown She has pneumouia and conges tion at the base of both lungs, She has the care of a trained nurse and Dr. Robinson, and it is hoped that she may speedily recover. All Fulton County is in the throes of grippe and pneumonia. It was said Tues day morning that thirty-five per sons in McConnellsburg were con hned to their rooms on account of grippe. Aaron Martin, who has pneumonia in the Cove, is holding his own, with the hope that he may soon be on the road leading to recovery. Our good friend W. S. Mellott, of Sipes Mill, called at the News office for a little chat while in town Monday. Of course, a "7" on hi3 label will look good to him for a year. he is survived by three brothers and three sisters, namely, Rosetta, of Chambersburg;Viola, of Shade Gap; May, Ernest, Donald and Rudolph, at home. Funeral services were conduct ed at the home Friday at 10 a. m. and interment was made in Union cemetery. Henry Trott. Henry Trott, the last of the name of one of Fulton County's old families, died at the old Trott homestead on Cove creek, just below Dennis Everts's Mill in Thompson township, on Tuesday of last week, aged about 75 years For several years Henry had liv ed with his nephew George W. Bishop on the old home farm, and death came as a result of a complication of diseases incident to advancing years. The funeral conducted by Rev. A. R. Carland of the Christian church, took place on 'Thursday, and inter ment was made in the cemetery at Antioch. Laura E. Deneen. Mrs. Laura E. Deneen, wife of Albert Deneen.died at their home in Belfast township, January 15, 1916, of tuberculosis, aged 39 years. Interment was made in the Buck Valley M. E. cemetery, ser vices being held by her pastor, Rev. John B. Artemas. Besides her husband, she is survived by the following child ren: Ada, Roy and Cletus, at home, and by two brothers, Charle3 J. Deneen, of Panama, and Edmund G. Deneen, in the West. Mrs. Deneen was a daugh ter of David D., and Samantha E. Deneen, of Union township. HOW TKEY COUNT A MILLION .-'V:: . I IVMf" 'MN .r..u i iu uiiuii juai vmw.i. l i. .n ul i uimuiu you i.jiinicu :it i lain every minute Thorn nthor nlnnn. .... Uu;u,:o mese pmces is in imu t-iaie l-epartmcnt or Health. I'crlmpg you have noticed the bacteriological analysis of milk or water In which It wns stated that there are so many bacteria per cubic centimeter, 800,000 perhaps, or l.LT.O 000 A cubic centimeter, by tho way, is about half a thimbleful, in the laboratory which Commissioner of Health Dixon baa eHtahlhihed to clve free Kt rvien tn tlm nhvaioinnn nt in .i.t j .1 , . ... " huiidr! siieclmeiif, of water or other lui.i.ne irui nro hoi even vismie to urn naked eye. According to the um muu.: juu. u umiu-.r oi kui- i.iu.uH wuit.i an- useu 10 Krow LUl " u''u imu small "'""' " uuureu covf"-eil CHURCH DYNAMITED. Mormon Church in Buck Vallej Totally Wrecked In Early Hoars of Last Thursday Morning. During the past forty year?, Mormon Elders have made peri odical trips through this section of Pennsylvania with the purpose of sowing the seeds of doctrine peculiar to Mormonism, or the Church of the Latter Day Saints, as they prefer to be called. It was in the beautiful little valley in the southwestern part of Ful ton county, that the seeds shower) the first signs ,of germination, which was about U5 years ago. So delighted were the Elders at this sign of life, that nothing was left undone to care for the tender plant, and to broaden their field in that section. At that time the field was oc cupied by Protestant churches the Christians, the Methodists, the German Lutherans, the Pres byteriansall having comfort able houses for public worship, and the introduction of Mormon ism in a field already occupied, wa3 looked upon with disfavor by a very large number of the in habitants of the Valley. It was not, however, until last summer, that it was decided that a Mor mon church should have standing room among the other churches of the Valley, and the few fami lies who by this time had become bold enough to take a public stand for the new faith, contrib uted of their means, and a build ing about 28x40 feet was begun. It was located near the post office of Lashley, and near the old Grange Hall, on the road leading from Lashley to Ilarmonia school house. The building of the new church progressed without inci dent until last Thursday morning about 1:30 o'clock, a. shock like heavy thunder caused windows to rattle, and its rever berations rolled sullenly from mountainside to mountainside, causing the peaceful citizens to arise in fright. With the dying down of the distant reverbera tions, everything was quiet and nothing to disturb the darkness of the night. Those living in the immediate neighborhood of the new church were led to what, in the evening was an almost completed struc ture, and there they found that a quantity of dynamite had been placed so carefully, that when it exploded, the building wa3 blown 1 W"WTl''W iiuw long n wouiu i.iko you to count a mi iwi'iiiy-iour nuurs Rceauny, ao you " "xc1""" 1 ' or e.ieh twenty-four hours for seven days, you will Just about reach that fleure CJ , . t rr- - , . . . ;, oiiiTi, mm mo ifeuhury wuero Dig ounc, cyc-ijt uuy material, which require tho counting of i.ici, uKo i oiumuus' egg triclc, it is simplo me colonies of bacteria In the incubators sinarcs, so many to the Inch. Under a high are counted, tnen trie number is multiplied by the total PROTECTION IS WIDE. Constables, Jurors, Witnesses and All Other Persons in The Employ of State, County or Township. The Workmen's Compensation Board adopted a ruling requiring the State to pay all compensation liabilities caused by the injury or 1. it 1 li n . ueatn 01 puoiic omcers in any county who are on the payroll of the State. County officials who are paid directly or indirectly by counties or by any officer thereof for services to the countv are to be paid by the county. This rul ing includes all deputies, clerks, assessors, constables, jurymen, witnesses ior tne state in crimi nal cases and like classes of em ployes. Another ruling adopted is that the owner of a threshing machine doing work on a farm not his own, for hire, is liable to his engineer and those helpers whom he .em ploys to run the machine. This ruling is also to apply to the own er of an ensilage cutter or any similar machine. The first two cases under the compensation law to bo settled without the assistance of a ref eree were reported by the Mid vale Steel Company. In the first case Ashby Pearly will receive $6.38 a week during disability for not more than five hundred weeks, and in the second case Fred Purchap will receive ten dollars a week for not more than five hundred weeks. Both were injured about the legs. E d. J. Cal Garland spent a few hours in town Tuesday and called at the NEWS office to say "Howdy" to the editor. to atoms. The steel shingles covering the building were scat tered over acres of ground and the timbers were shattered into kindling wood and scattered to the winds. , ' In order to bring the perpetra tors to speedy justice, bloodhound were secured and placed upon the job; but when they followed a trail to a stream, they could go no farther, and another trail fol lowed to a much traveled high way was lost It is said that there are about thirty persons in the Valley that are willing to admit their identi ty with the new denomination, and just what steps will be taken to punish the dynamiters and re- bi ild the church, we are not in- foimed. milllonT Suppose you started In and tliinK tnat would do It? No, Indeed! If ngures are in constant use. One of mere are uimiy.eu riom eighty to a several hundred thousand of these table which we have set out above, this enough when you know how The are taken out and placed on . a piece of - power magnifying glass the bacteria number of squares OLT-D00R SLEEPING. Little Talks on Health and Hjgiene by Samuel G. Dixon, M. D., LL D.; Commissioner of Health. That which i3 looked upon as a fad to-day becomes the necessity of to-morrow. This is largely the case with out-door sleeping. With the beginning of the ac tive campaign against tubercuto sis but a few years or so ago, out door sleeping was recommended for those suffering from tubercu losis and others whose general physical condition seemed to war rant it. These pioneers were looked up on by their friends and neighbors with interest and they openly ex pressed belief that if they sur vived this exposure, which was doubtful, they would soon tire of the experiment anyhow, As matter of fact there are a hun dred open air sleepers to-day where there was one a decade ago and it is no longer limited to those who are in i'l health. ah wno nave tried open air sleeping are enthusiastic about it and they constitute an ever grow ing group. A sleeping porch is coming to be looked upon as an essential part of the home. Whole fami lies have taken to sleeping in the open and have been so benefited by it that they would never con sider anything else. mi 1 ine proper garp to insure warmth despite the temperature is essential. With a warm room for dressing accessible there is no reason why this invigorating and stimulating custom should not continue to grow in popu larity. Many men and women who of necessity must spend their work ing hours in-doors can obtain dur ing their rest at night, at least a portion of tho out-door air that Nature intended us all to have. Sleeping porches can be con structed on the most modest homes at a comparatively small cost; and, in the majority of in stances they can be guaranteed to save their cost in doctor bills. The change from sleeping in closed warm rooms to out-door sleeping must be brought about gradually, giving Nature time to meet the new conditions. The very old or very young demand more protection than the adult in the prime of life. Subsci e for tr e News. FARMERS' MEETING. The Institute Held at Clear Ridge Last Week Was Much Appreciated by That Community. As was announced in the News, the first sessions of the Institute were held at Clear Ridge on Thursday afternoon. Owing to the unavoidable absence of the County Chairman, Frank Ranck, the institute was called to order by W. R. Fields, chairman of the local committee, who made a short opening address, and after ap pointing Mr. C. R. Shore to serve as secretary of the meetings, he introduced Mr. M. H. McCallum one of the State workers, who spoke on the Forms and Uses o Lime. The speaker imparted great deal of information in such an easy, practical way, and an swered a number of questions so entirely satisfactorily that every one present felt very greatly re paid for the time spent in attend ing the session. Mr. Umholt, another of the State workers, spoke upon the subject of Getting Eggs and Car ing for the Layers. Mr. Umholt is an expert poultryman and not only knows how to do the thing himself, but he knows how to tel others in such a way that they are not afraid to try for them selves. Thursday evening, Mr. Umholt discussed the subject, The Farm er and the Farm Flock, or Possi bilities of Poultry on the Farm. If only people could realize what they miss by staying at home when there is such a feast of good things for them free, without even having to ask for them the house would be so crowded that an overflow meeting would have to be held. Things Worth While on the Farm was then discussed by Mr. McCallum, who was followed by Mr. D. H. Watts, on Education. At 9:30 Friday morning was ta ken up the subject Legumes; Their Relation to Crop Produc tion. The next subject, The Farmer and Good Roads was ta ken by D. H. Watts, and Mr. Umholt finished the session with Failures or Mistakes in Chicken Farming. At 1:30 Friday afternoon Miss Heintzman of Harrisburg was in troduced, and spoke on Woman Suffrage. She is a fine speaker and her address was well receiv ed. Another address on Progres sive Poultry Farming by R. M, Umholt; one, on Home Mixing of Fertilizers by Mr. McCallum and one on Soils and Plant Growth by D. H. Watts, ended the Fri day afternoon session. Friday evening, after a Round Table talk, Mr. D. H. Watts gave his popular lecture on Farm Build ings and Blunders after which the institute adjourned sine die. The instructors are all men who understand their business, and should they, perchance, come this way again bearing similar messages, they will meet with a hearty receptihn from those who heard them. Those who did not hear them, of course, do not know what they missed, and where ignorance is bliss, ,tis folly to be wise." The attendance would have been much better if it had not happened to strike a period of such unseasonable weather. Ev erybody had the grip, and the roads were just abominable. The sessions were much enlivt ened by good music furnished by an orchestra composed by C. R. Shore, Miss Minnie Grove, and loyd Fleming. The Chairman of the Commit tee extends his thanks to those who so generously assisted him, and to Mrs. B. S. Winegardner and Calvin Baker for boarding the lecturers. Mfcs Katie Fore had the mis- brtune to sprain one of her an kles last Saturday; while not a serious accident, it will somewhat impede her usually active loco motion for a few days. , SALL'VIA SLMMARIZINGS. The Woolly Worm Indicates That We May Get Enough of Winter Before the Season Ends. Many people-in this section base their weather predictions on the appearance of a certain woolly worm. Last fall there were thousands of these woolly worms crawling on the ground. All of them that your scribe ob served closely were similarly marked, v iz., a narrow black belt at the hep.d, a narrow white belt in the middle, and a wide black belt at the tail. In the parlance of the weather prophet, the black belt at the head indicated quite a rough cold spell at the beginning of the winter such as we had the last of November and running well through December. The white belt in the middle indicated a mild, warm, rainy, soft spell such as we have had through January, with the exception of a sudden, sharp injection of a cold wave which we had last Monday and Tuesday. The wide black belt at the tail end of the worm tells us to look out for bleak, rough, cold, severe wintry weatli er during February and March. Mrs. Bert Hann visited Mrs. J. A. Stewart's family last Fri day. Charles W. Schooley had a dan gerous attack of heart disease last Sunday, but was a little tet ter Monday. A. J. Sipes is busy hauling limestone from the Big Cove for a kiln this spring. Mrs. Beckie Mort, nee Daniels, formerly of Saluvia but now re siding at North Point, is report ed as dangerously ill of Bright's Disease and Dropsy. Her broth ers Mason and Oliver went to see her last Saturday. While during the winter, Ful ton County people are ice-bound much of the time, and may ex pect to be snow-bound before ploughing time, a correspondent of "ye scribe" writes that truck ers down at Miami. Florida are planting potatoes, and have al ready marketed thousands of bas kets of. strawberries. A great country, this ! The revival services at the As- bury M. E. Church as noted in the News last week, were con tinued nightly during all of last week, and Sunday and Monday nights of this week. Sinrers are apparently taking no interest spiritually in the wooinga of the Holy Spirit or the earnest calls of the pastors or the pleadings of friends. We fear that it will be, as with our antediluvian friends who scoffed at Noah's preaching for one hundred and twenty years; when a certain storm came along, there was not standing room on the tops of the mountains and a mighty bunch of them drowned. May God's Spirit move mightily upon our friends; and may the day not come when they shall cry out in their anguish, "The harvest is past, the summer is ended, and I am not saved." Tracked The Trackers. ' During the skiff of snow a few days ago, a constable of Belfast township discovered that a deer was being tracked by certain bi peds who like the odor of stewed venison, and he proceeded to take the trail of the trailers near Frank Layton's sawmill, and fol- owed it cautiously away into tho fastness of Town Hill, when it became necessary for him to re turn home. Had the constable overtaken the trailers it mizht have been embarrassing for them to give a very satisfactory ex planation of their purpose in fol- owing the deer. George Fegley, of Pleasant Ridge, was in town a few hours Monday. His brother John went down to Waynesboro with the sawmill mandrel to have it over hauled preparatory to moving mown on the John Garland tract where they will cut out a nice lot of lumber. ...J.....