1 : THE FULTON COTTNTV NKWS. McCONNELLSBUBO. PA. Pictures of World Events for Mews Renders In Thlo D opartment Our Readors In Fulton County nd El Around tho NAorld Altn tno Camora on th of History INlaUInG HappenlnR. whtr- IN1 say Journey 'rail TYPICAL MEXICAN OUTLAWS VILLA'S DANDITS ON THE UNITED STATES BORDER ty 'AZ Z'JP jm-- w..-; ", 1 "''""' ". ''', I AN AMERICAN TOWN ON MEXICAN BORDER LAUNCHING OF DESTROYER SAMPSON j m&'X (fid slJuTX , X PRINCE JOACHIM AND HIS BrIdTtoIe v Vi 1 1 A' r 11 NEVER LEARNED THE TRUTH Callow Younostera Miflht Have Re pent id of Their Condemnation If They Had but Known. Youth and presumably Innocence were waiting at a French goods coun ter while the clerk wrpupod up Jam of pink Muff which they dldnt noed. Each was audacious In the matter of short skirts, a. id both wore chewing gum. On a stool at the same counter sat another customer, a woman just facing tho agony lino which separates beauty from vundal Age. And YVnith and In-. nocence felt called on to disstict lior. They bandied impressions as to the woman's looks, and giggled over bcr desperate attempts to retain her com plexion and age. Their sharp young eyes took in tho nobby dress that was a' rnoflt shabby, and their 'sharp young voices would have stubbed her to tho quick except that bIio seemed to bn walled in by some concentrated thought that cioluterc-d her from their blows. "I betshees bad." The gum stuck verdict came from Innocence, whose lawful p ace at that mlnuto should have been in some eighth-grade schoolroom. "Uceorae. Anybodyk'n tell that Whodjespose would lookatarole mut like her?" Then Youth at d Innocence, without examining how they came to be so sordidly enlightened at their callow years, suddenly switched Interest to their wrappod-up stu.T, and That was all there was to it. Except that the woman, having bought and paid for her own little b x of something, got up and hurried to t va storo entrance, where another womva stopped to congratulnto her on sco.e appointment obtained by her son: "Isn't It splendid! Pupa and I are so proud of hiaj I'm especially glad for papa, because ho has been so de pressed ever slnca his last attack Ned's going to send him to Atlantic City right away Imagine! After all theso poverty-pinched days " "Well, you surely deserve all the good luck that's coming to you Don't seo how on earth you keep your color after all tho nursing you've bad to do" "Rouge, my dear. Pnpa'd be too wretched for words If he knew my completion had gono yellow but Ned says I shan't need It after this" This isn't much of a yarn, of course, but we have Plutarch's word for It that truth Is always worth considering. And this Is true. Washington Star. v , v i&xmmrz- Mite n 'j. -1 In me presence 01 a luuileU numuer ol invited guests the United States lorpetlHoat destroyer Sampson was launched at CJulncy. Mass. Miss Marjorle Sampson Smith (at loft), a granddaughter of Admiral W. T. Sampson, the hero of the battle of Santiago acted as sponsor The shipbuilding company expocts to deliver the Sampson to the United States government April I. This will be sjven months ahead of the time allowed In the contract Her contract speed Is 29 knots. She has a displacement of 1,126 tons and will cost $793,01)0. She is to be equipped with four 21-Inch "W. T.'s" and four 4 Inch rapid-fire guns SUCCESSFULLY RUNS BRITISH BLOCKADE t .t7J" w i . ,A -1,J.... 1 I - . .v.- . -- . jVyt. w nt&xv. .." g w-wwwwMfrr: mlWHHAH.-inlftftllthH-- 'i he Uernun raider Moewo after raiding the enemy'a comtuorce for months put Into her norae port with her prisonert and spoils of war. The Moewe captured 15 ships. 33 British naval officers, IbS members or crews ami l.aoo,ono marks In gold The kaiser personally confurred upon the commander tue uruer four le menie. MAJOR GENERAL FUNSTON jjkSHHMNHaaMtk COL H. i. SLOCUM fk. ,...Min. f Prn,.u innrhiir.. i li vounp.est s.iii of the ...Iscr. tn Prim es i Marie Auguate of Anhalt win UKe place at Potsdam. Cormany. on March It. Princess Marie, whose photograph Is shown at the left. Is a favorito at rourt. Prince Joachim has actively followed all moves of the war on the eastern front, whore It was reported lie had been wounded. He Is shown In the photograph at the right, seated oircniy oenina me ur.ver -a. to make a tour of Inspection of the snow-covered lines In Poland In a motor sled BEAUTIFUL MODEL INDICTED , . ' lit , 7, -vfXMw. . V p i A sV. i -a. x . 1 1 i'7 airy at Columbus, N. M., who sent sol diers across the border In pursuit of Villa and his bandits. . Miss Anna K llolch. reputed to he the most beautiful model In the conn try. Indicted by the government tor failure to declare valuables, phoiu uraphcd w th h"r Itusslan wolfhound. Scraps. She Is alleged to have foiled to declare certain goods wnen sne r rived In this country from Kurope last vear. Her employer. Hern.an P. Tappe. a millinery Importer. Is also imdor indlctuieut for i lleged false declarations FRANCISCO VILLA Two Kinds of Eggs. There are only two recognized brands of eggs eating and throwing. Nothing Doing. Lady of the House Will you chuck that cord of wood In the cellar? Ihe Tramp thaughtilyl-Madam. I may bo a beast, but I ain l no wood chuck. V '' ' .: ':- :--v ' .j C . , f, ,TK j' ','. ?. ' J - ' " , . A ; :.; I- : - ' ix'-'." s.';V .'.T'-'. v'i I ... " . -- . t." v-'.yi,Sr : . V " , i r 5-. j tw1 t.N ; ' V I iff - ' S ' ' - " HA . A . . Scientists Study "Flying Sicknets." "Flying sickness" in Its more essen tial particulars Is deserving of care ful and scientific Investigation, ac cording to the London Lancet. It ra'Bcs matters of Interest In connec tion with so-rnlled mountain sickness. Edward Whymper states from his own experience of this condition that the ibldlng symptoms are pro'ound lassi tude. Intense headache, fevcrlshness, accelerated respiration and occasional spasmodic gulping of air. "Just llko the fishes when ti ken ont of water." palpitation and f ialtus. The latter two symptoms. 10 UouLt. occur also with great frequency at relatively low levels. "It Is clear," says ttie Lancet, "that flying sickness Is not comparable In the strict sense with mountain sick ness. In splt5 of tho fact that somo of the symptoms arc more or less Identical. Mi'Iierlo we have had Mttle d.rect evidence of what occurs' as a result of rapid transference from high to low n'tltndos. for the laborious as cent of the mountaineer Into rar!Hed air Is very different from a speedy re turn to normal pressures, while the climb of a flying machine Is hardly so ranld ns to cause any III e!Tect. The pilot who is ll'ted from his machine. 'ter a fast volplane. In a semlco'i iclous condition, falling thereafter Into deep sleep, shows a phenome non not met with either In mountain sickness or In caisson disease" To Promote Safety. The newest museum In New York Is called the Amertcnn Museum of Safe ty. It contains collections of models, charts and photographs, actual ma chines safeguarded In full slzo, to gether with models of snfetv do-Ices nrd sanitary anpllanres. The mu seum Is free to the public. Py special arrangement It Is oncn In the eve nlnirs to classes and societies. The nctlvltrs o' the museum of safetv are devoted to the safety, health an! wel fare o' Industrial workers and the ad- icenient of the science of Industry. The EOc'ety .lives yearlv medals to those which make notable achieve ments In devices for the pecurlty of human life and to Arms that make "ntaMe proirress In te nromntton of hvcriene and the mitigation of occu pational dlsepoe In their Industry, a to rallronds that promote safety for the traveling public. Japanese Turn to Dve Making. The Japanese are apparently eolng to take nn dye making, now that f!er man products cannot he obtained and te plan hos been taken up by private enterprise, assisted by government A number of business men were Inv'ted to the department of agriculture and commerce one day lately and shown the draft law for the encouragement of the mnnufactre of drugs and dye stufs. The vice-minister of agrriil tur and commerce reported particu lar regarding the enrourar;ement taw, and Invited those present to give their views, without reserve, regarding the establishment if a company, it was susbseouently decided that those pres ent should consider the matter, and. give their views later. Treatment of Walls. If a molding Is liked from which to hang the pictures that do so much to make our rooms honeUks., the best height for the molding Is-In line wltU the top of the doors. The modern Ides, seems to he to bring the window wood work to the floor by using a paneling beneath the sill, and to carry the tops of doors and windows to a fixed line the molding line. Thus the walln are divided Into rectangular spacf. nt the decorative effect of a koo' paper Is enhanced A plain paper nas (be dignity of a ianel when so ui'id. Lninrprprprr.-nrrTTT