THE FULTON" COUNTY NEWS. McCONNELLSBURG. PA. Pictures Word for lews Readers jn THIo Department Our Readers In Fulton County and Elaewhe Around the Aorld Alth the Oannera on the Trail of History IVIalcIng HapponlnE. PASSENGERS WARNED TO AVOID THIS VESSEL s : - w.-' Vim mm ' L i i n iwnwTfhejth wfrma in in Av,a - .... 1 '. JNlay Journey SCENE OF GREAT RUSSIAN 'victory ovfr Turks Spit iiiiilPifeSn 'i ue French liner Espagne, which may be one of the 11 st victims of Germany's new announced policy of sinking all enemy armed merchantmen. Americans booked to sa I on the Espagne from New York received anonymous letters warning them not to embark. BERGEN, NORWAY, AFTER ITS GREAT FIRE 1 U.1A . 1 i i 8 View of Erzcrum. the Important city which the Uusiiuim, under Grand Duke Nicholas, havo captured from the Turks, together with many thousands of prisoners and hundreds of guns. HIGH SCHOOL BOYS LEARNING ABOUT WAR f f Vhls view of liergen. Norway's great llshlng centei and seaport, was taken after the recent conflagration which dostroyed a largo part of tho city. Thousands of persons were made homeless and the damage was estimated ut more than $20.000. 000. WITNESSED MASSACRES IN PERSIA i i 15 It ' 1 ITU' s. s "Hli 1 1 1 . ik wi aft ataart ititWi hwm W Tj T r ri inn .1 r , nn i v nil - n W nY fi' 1 1 'rt Mr. and Mrs f aul Shlmmon, after a harrowing experience In Urumlah. Persia, finally reached America by devious ways and are now cooperating Vith the American committeo for Armenian and Syrian relict. Mr. Shlmmon Is an American citizen rind a graduate of Columbia university.. During the BiaesacrcB or the Christens In I rumlah by the Kurds and Turks, Mr. Shlm mon. by advice of the American missionaries, (led tc Tlllis, leaving Mrs. Ehimmon under the protection of the American flag. She was an eyewitness to the atrocities In I rumlah and the surrounding district. Her aunt and undo I were shot and their bodies were burned. Her cousin, a young girl, refusing to marry a Moslem, was made the victim of horrible abuse by the Kurds and tuen bcr body was burned Mr. Shlmmon returned with the Russians. REVIEWING TROOPS AT ZATUN, ; EGYPT ARCHIE ROOSEVELT IN KHAKI Lieutenant Sitcver, U. S. A., assigned from Kort Mcr, a, mHtructlug cuduts of tliu truunljn high schuul of WaHliuiKion. Tho boys are receiving object lessons from a war map TRAINING THE FIREMEN (f s f f ' IS f v, i V t f i J A M At "i4 i i i : .. i . t it I H IT" f t S3 I MRS. PANKHURST'S WAR BABIES As. n 1 i& y Archie Roosevelt, son o' the former president. Is one of the leaders of the organization of Harvard students for military training. He Is here noon lu his uniform. AJf 'this pboioKiaph, laheu uunng a leview 01 tnu unlish Mouulud Kitles at tUll. ITrruril e V. n . - I . f t n lh Hnn L? I A Uynnrln, r.nillH CI- II........ HacMahoa and Sir John Maxwell, commander of the Iirltlsb forces In Egypt BENEFIT IN "BROWN STUDY' Concentration of Mental Energy Makes for the Production of One'a Best Work. "If tho 'br.jwn study' were nore often cultivated many pocplu would be happier, and more tlcnr thinking woutJ be dene." says the London l.ancot. "li Is in such a Htuto that truths dawn sudilttnly and clearly upon the uncloud ed Intelligence. It la In such a slate that mighty actions are conceived, poems born at a stroke and mankind cnlightoned through the enllglituient of the Individual. . "In this date of mind there Is such a concentration of mental ennrgy that the b)Jy Is Ignored. The mind, on the nthor hand, la so working upr.n tho subject which concerns It, it so Intunt upon ItB own affairs, that tho external world Is obliterated, and any bodf'y discomfort that bay have been pro existing Is now negligible tn unno ticed." The Lancet says the relationship he twtjon mental activity and the bodily state Is nut realized with aurtcler.t fre quency or with sufficient Ihcraughness by thi European -i today. 'Tho av erage ixian Is too engrcBHol with his bodily pabulum, and In caring fr the needs of tho boJy he tcglicts the noeiis of the mind." Mrs. Emujeltnu I'ankhursl. asido from her activities In the muse of equal suffrage, loves children more than anything elso. The photograph shows her fjur "war l.nhlcs." tho Misses Joan. Elizabeth and Mary, six months oil each, and Kathleen, one year old. They were adopted by Mrs. Pankhurst i This photcgiaph shows ibo llretue:i of Niw Orleans being trained t; light flames by modern methols. They art climbing a tower cr-nstructed for the purpose. COME TO STUDY AMERICAN HOTELS ' Race of Woman Warriors. The word Aa-azcn Is lireek and wax used thcni8.ir.d3 of y:urs burore Amer lea was discovered. According to tra dltlon. It was applied tc a rate 01 fi taalo warnori who had the fi-rm tui nardiy any tf tl.o attrlliUtca cf wpra en. la order that they might hurl u Javelin ir aim an arrow myre effec tlvely, tho right breast was ronn-vod to give proator fruodyn, to the atto.. honca the nau.M Amazon (rem a-ruaios. without broasts. In works of art. sculpture and pnlntlng. tho Ar.ax.xis wer6 represent! d with the ri;ht side, tne plact. of th rcn.oved briaitt. Cvv ered. The Auuzcn river In llmri. was so called by tno Spanish explorei who dlsccvcrcd It bcciiu?- h. and hi encouatored fighting wonun there. Not Opinionated. R.i mv dm. Rhter has consented to become y :ur wife Have you fixed the day of the weddlngT" "I will U-ave that to her. "Will you have a church or a pri vate wed.llng?" "Her mother can decide that. "What have you tc live cn?" "I will l-vo that eutlrely to you. air." Yalo Record. . HI.' V 1 The hotels of Japan are uiouo.u. .. uquippcu and tnoir sorvine ts con sidered timpleto. Neverthnlcss the many thousands of foreign guests. (.Apucinlly Americans, demand tlnse personal attentions and niceties that go to s.akn the betels of this country n.i attractive Alsaku Hayasht is said to be the leading boiilface of Japan. He Is chief director of the Imperial hotel t T'.kvo. He U here ti study the hotel methods of this ibuiury and lamillarlze himself with all that contributes tn the comfort and etijoymout of his ('tests. Mrs. llaya-hl aecocipatiln blci. (Conducti ii by tlifl Nntlonnl Womun's cnimtian Temperance Union.) LIQUOR MEN AND LACOR. Uofore the convention of the AmerJr can Federation of Labor there was ft demand by the liquor interests or or ganisations identllled with them, that the American Fedorutiou of Labor line up with the liquor tuon In their fight a,, Mlnst prohibition. Mr. Charles Stelzlo. writing In the Continent, says that tbe atmosphere of the convention was so decidedly unfriendly to sucn action that the liquor men "were easily persuaded to drop the entlr question. Throughout -the conven tion," continues Mr. Stczlo. "the liquor men wore strangely quiet, refraining from toklng any part In any of the discussions, for fear of arousing the enmity of anybody whose opinions might be controverted. "A mass meeting for the purpose of discussing the relation of labor to the saloon was held on the first Sunday afternoon of the convention, and was attended by about one thousand per sons. With tbe use of government statistics and logic which appealed to the workers, facts were presented which battered down the arguments of the liquor men that the abolition of the saloon would create a labor panic "The statement that tho labor men In England had not only organized a labor officials' temperance fellowship with which the best leaders were Iden tllled, but that bartenders, brewery workers and others In the liquor In dustry were not considered worth or ganizing by tho Orltlsh Trades con gross, had a marked effect ou the au dience" f i WAY DOWN IN ARIZONA. A traveling salesman who goes Into every nook and corner of Arizona, vis iting the W. C. T. U. booth at the Fan-ama-Paclflc exposition, asked what we knew of the results of prohibition In Arizona. Miss Brown, the director, re peated some of the statements which had come to her from residents and travelers, not at all knowing his atti tude In the matter. Then he told her that he had been In all parts of the Etato, having gone over the territory for fourteen years. He said: "You cannot exaggerate changed conditions. In the mines tho accidents have do creased 83 per cent, tho edlclency has more than doubled, and the physical appearance of the communities has greatly Improved. The faces of men look far fresher, healthier and happi er. Huslucss has Improved greatly. Merchants and other business men who formerly opposed prohibition on the ground of injury to business are now Its greatest boosters and would not allow a return to old conditions. Prohibition lias enrao to stay In Ari zona." The visitor admitted that he had always been accustomed to take his glass of boor and liked a glass ct wine with his meals, but declared there Is not ono argument for the con tinuance of the liquor traffic. THE TEST. A Birmingham (England! employer, who is a stanch teetotaler, recently advertised for a foreman for one of tho departments of bis works, and a largo crowd of men called at the fac tory. When the employer saw them outside he said generally: "Well, we might as well go and have a drink." pointing to a tavern opposite. He suit ed the action to his words and led the way across, tho men following. When he reached tho swing doors of the pub lic house he turned around and saw one mnn loitering behind the others, and called out to him: "Aren't you coming In?" "I'm a teetotaler, thanks," was the response. "Well, you're the man for me." the employer promptly rejoined, and he thcro and then engaged him. while all the others wero sent about their busiuess. THERE'3 A MORAL. From the Sacramento Union comes the following: A well-known resident of Sacramento the other day met on a train two men and their wives who had come from Kansas seeking farms in California. He asked them why they did not Investigate the country around Sacramento, as It offered many opportunities for the home-seeker. They replied that they had spent three days In this city and had been much Impressed with what they saw. "But," said one of them, "Sacramento has entirely too many saloons for us. and the farmers' roads are lined with roadhouses. so we docldod to go ebewhere to locate." , A GOOD TYPE. Hockford, 111., Is a prosperous, com fortablo Interior American city. A part of Its population Is of aller birth or par ontngo. Thus It represents tho type of American life and very favorably the American scheme; n small city with a high avorago of Intelligence. Chicago Tribune. And Rockford Is dry. PRODUCES CRIMINALS. Gentlemen, your trade cannot be treated liko any other business, for It is unliko any other. The liquor traf fic tends to produce criminality In the population at large and law break ing among the saloonki epers them selves. If the American j eople do not control It with a firm hand, It will soon contiol them. Theodore Roosevelt. SAILING OVER BAR. "Many n young man has lost his rud der wliilo trying to sail over the bar." AFFAIRS IN TENNESSEE. Colleague Schumacher, -ipon request by the presldont, described the state it affairs in Tennessee, Wfiee prohi bition ts crippling the brewing Indus ry to an extent most mischievous. (acob Faude, Secretary Brewmasters' issociallon, Chicago. EFFECTS OF BOOZE. "Booze," says T. Alexander Cairns, give, you a red beak and a black eye, nd a white liver and a y-allow Btroak, iml a green brain and a lark brown oieaih and a blue Monday."