l) Jiiltott VOLUME 18 McCONNELLSBURG, PA., SEPTEMBER 21,1916. NUMBER I RECORD OF DEATHS. Sort Sketches of the Lives of Per sons Who Have Recently Passed Away, Milburn Axon. Milburn Axon died at his home in Wells Valley, Friday, Septem hrl5. 1916. of typhoid fever, aged 38 years. The funeral con ducted by his pastor Kev. U. . avise of Three Springs, took place on the following Sunday, and interment was made at Hope Well. He is survived by his wife and seven children. George Adams. , Mr. George Adams died at his home in Wells Tannery, Wednes day, September 13, 1916. His remains were laid to rest in the No. 1 cemetery on the anniver sary of his seventieth birthday. The funeral services were con ducted by Dr. James R. Dallingf of the Presbyterian Church. Mr. Adams is survived by his wife and two sons. Mrs. H. C. Wishart. Mrs. Howard C. Wishart died at their home in Camden, N. J. on Monday, September 11, 1916, ofDtomaine poisoning, and in terment was made at Hunting don. Pa., on the following Wed nesday. She is survived by her husband and two daughters. A Pretty Dome Wedding. Avery beautiful home wed ng was solemnized at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. F. Laidig of Huston town, Pa., when their daughter, Miss Lou Emma was united in holy wedlock to Mr. Michael Holland of Philadelphia, at 10:30 September 9, 1916. Rev. Geo. Reidell was the officiating minister. The oride was becomingly gowned in white conventional veil, and car ried a beautiful bouquet of Brides Roses, Lillies of the Valley, and Jaiden Hair Fern. Miss Kath 7nDunlap, of Center county, vas bridesmaid, and Mr. Lewis icLean of Philadelphia was best nan. The wedding march was eautifully rendered by Mrs. H. 1 McClain, sister of the bride. The house was beautifully dec rated with evergreens and flow is of the season. The bride m the recipient of many pretty is well as useful presents. Re 'reahments were served, and at 1;30 the bride and groom left in an automobile for Chambersburg enroute to Philadelphia where they will make their future home. fill Stewart Dad Wheel Smashed. A few davs asro. while Mr. W. N. Stewart and his wife were driving on Sideling Hill, a heavy arfrom Latrobe ran into his buggy from the rear and knock fid a lot of spokes from a wheel. Congested traffic and a low bright sun caused confusion and the con sequent accident Dr. William A. Jamison, owner of the car, promptly assumed responsibility nd gave Mr. Stewart his ad dress and requested a bill for re Pairs to the bucrcv when the work was completed. No one was hurt in the crash. Mr. and Mrs. Stewart are residents of Trenton, N. J and are spending uir vacation at Will's old home 1 ween Hill. New Cemetery Fence. The Presbyterians of Green "ill and vicinity held a meeting on the chu and removed the old fence "nich enclosed the pemererv and Placed it with a neat wire struc "ire. Dinner was Rprved to the Workers on the ground. Pastor ftev' J. L. Yearick attended and listed in the work. The con fection is to be congratulated lur tneir pride in keeping up the Rrounds. ThA niemhprHhin in Very small, and anything that v.im ior expenditure of cash it & 8,aifice on the part of the "uut remaining members. Miss Ruth 7J. w,ted in the homes of Franklin wunty friends last week. , McCONNELLSBURG TO THE FRONT. Citizen "Civic" Would Tate Advantage of Opportnnity to Impress Travel ers With Our Civilization. The Lincoln Highway has help ed to a great extent to put Mc Connellsburg on the map. We live in the midst of one of the most beautiful mountain regions through which the Highway pass es. Tourists passing over the Tuscarora Summit cannot help but exclaim over the beautiful view from the top of the moun tain. Naturally they would ex pect a clean up-to-date town that has the advantage of being sur rounded by such enviroment. How they are disappointed on entering our town to see almost every vacant spot marred by a growth of weeds and a place for debris to accumulate; buildings unpainted and unkept; streets and crossings in an unsightly con dition and alleys scarcely pass able. Have we no pride in our own home town, the town of which we should all be proud; can we not make it a beauty spot, one in which every stranger will want to stop a second time? It is not enough to keep our own properties in repair and pre sentable but we should extend our domestic pride into civic pride and interest ourselves in our whole vicinity. How much better for our chil dren to grow up in the midst of beauty than surrounded by slov enliness. Our lives are influenc ed to a great extent by our sur roundings and surely we should take pride enough to give our children the very best we can af ford and our community can af- ord. We all have our love for the beautiful, and our love for the beautiful helps us love the pure and divine, but we must be train ed in what is really beautiful. Each one can contribute his little to make our environment what it should be to give us this train ing. Our Civic Club is yet very young but even in the short time it has been organized it has cre ated an intense interest in com munity improvements and, we need the cooperation of every citi zen of the town and vicinity. Let us help putMcConnellsburg on the map not merely as a stopping place for travelers but a town made beautiful by the interest and help of its residents. Contribute something either in work or funds to bring the town to the front and make it as Wil liam Penn said of the city which he founded, "a fair green country town such as I delight to see." -CIVIC. 5000 Bushels of Tomatoes. Robert M. Renfrew,- ex-pro- thonotary of Franklin county is now in the midst of packing and canning a crop of 5,000 bushels of tomatoes, which he has raised on eighteen acres of his farm near the ' South mountain. He has forty people engaged in the work and the crop will make six carloads. Mr. Renfrew is demonstrating beyond doubt that it is not nec essary to go south to raise toma toes, and establish a profitable canning business. The soil, cli mate, and other conditions make Fulton county an attractive place for just such enterprises; and with the completion of the rail road to McConnellsburg, the question of marketing the pro duct will be solved. Dickson Porger. At the Smithfield Street M. E. church, on Wednesday, August 30, 1916, Rev. J. T. Pender, unit ed in marriage Mr. Emmert R. Dickson, formerly of Philadelphia and Miss Lela Porger, of Two Harbors, Minn. Geo. Skiles, wife and child, of Taylor township, were guests in the David Forner home in East Extension, one day last week. ;' .'...- --: . ' ViT v i 9 p&s FRANK DIXON. Frank Dixon, whose picture is shown above, is the lectur er at the Chautauqua, Wednesday evening, October 4th. It is a great family, that Dixon family-A. C, now pastor of the Metropolitan Tabernacle of London, successor to the great Spurgeon; Tom, novelist and playwright; Frank, lecturer. Don't lose a minute getting your ticket and selecting your seat in the auditorium for the Chautauqua. Three days after noons and evening, October 3-4-5. It was a splendid success last year, and we have the promise of a much stronger program this year. Season tickets only $1.25. For Sale at Seylar's Drug Store. An Appeal to Town Council. Again has the News been re quested to act as mouthpiece for an indignant public. This time the complaint is against the use less, diabolical noises made by leaving open the cut-out in auto mobiles while they are being driven through our streets. An other source of bitter complaint is the testing and speeding of engines while the machines are standing along our curbs. No conversation nor business trans action can take place while these noises are going on. Times with out number, business men have to wait for them to cease. The noise of engine testing has been kept up for as long as ten min utes at a time when it was nec- esssary for somebody in the neigh borhood to converse, and the cut out nuisance seems to be chronic with some drivers. There i3 scarcely a day that the speed limit within the Bor ough is not violated, and this is more frequently done byourpeo- r.1o tVinn hv strancers. If the speed stunt and the cut-out rack et were practiced in Chambers burg it would cost just .fiiz.&u ior each and every performance. Our Town Council is expected to see that the citizens of the Bor ough have conferred official hon or upon them. Then, Gentlemen get busy. Don't wait until after the funeral of some child run down by a reckless driver. Autos Collide. Last Saturday afternoon, a Dodge car from Pittsburgh was descending Sideling Hill, and at Lady's Turn, the driver either slowed down or stopped to in quire of Rush Cline the. way to some point south of Saluvia. Just then a Ford from Pittsburgh dashed into the rear of the Dodge and both cars were damaged. While the cars were being repair ed in McConnellsburg, the Ford driver sued the Dodge driver be fore Justice Peightel, who gave judgment for costs six dollars and two dollars and fifty cents damage. We are of the opinion that the best part of the whole affair is that at least two drivers will use their brains next time they drive over a steep, winding road. The Ladies Did The Work. Europe is not the only place where women have taken the place of men in the fields. Right here in McConnellsburg the la dies of the several churches, tired of waiting for the work to be done through other channels, got together recently and cleaned up the churchyards of the town. They managed to secure a little help where the use of the scythe was necessary, but in many in stances, the growing rubbish was cut away by means of sickles, butcher knives and shears. And where hoes, rakes, lawn mowers and wheelbarrow were necessa ry, the ladies did not hesitate a moment to blister their hands in the manipulation of these instru ments. Some of them gave a day and a half to the work out in the hot sun. We want all the world to know that the ladies of McConnellsburg "are too proud to fight" with the other sex when it comes to a matter of choice be tween letting the last resting Dlaces of our friends grow up in the disgraceful manner recently indicated, or whether they will put their Lords off with " a cold dinner for a day or two while they remedy the grievance inde pendently of stomachs. We have not heard, nor do we expect to to hear, of any stomach trou bles" due to foregoing reasons. All honor to ladies of McConnells burz. After the blisters heal, they will be found again superin tending the affairs in homes of refinement and culture, where weeds of a far different nature are never for a moment permit ted to find lodgment in the fami ly circle. From away out in Santa Rosa, California, came a dollar post of fice order a few days ago, from Mrs. R. A. Hockinsmith to pay her subscription to July 1917, We are expecting our first frost for this fall, while out where Mrs. Hockensmith lives they are getting ready for a pleasant Bea Bon of mild weather. Miss Sallie Reeder, of Altoona, was a i ecent guest of Mrs. Net tie Trutx for several days. Open Sheds for Sheep. Sheep sheds may combine effi ciency and economy. The Penn sylvania State College has dem onstrated that sheep wintered in an open shed having a south ern exposure, free from draughts and affording a dry bed, are in better physical condition than wintered in a warm, ill-ventilat ed barn basement. During the lambing season, of course warm er quarters are necessary. Ewes may then be removed to warmer quarters and later replaced in the shed. After lambs are three days old they will not suffer in the open sheds, even during zero weather. The shed used to house experi mental ewes and lambs at State College adjoins the south side of a hay shed. The sheep shed is 60 feet long and 30 feet wide and cost $200. Its capacity i3 100 mature sheep. It was built of hemlock lumber over a super structure of oak posts. The roof and west end are covered with tar paper. An alley bix feet wide runs the full length of the inner side of shed. The hay shed at tached affords a place for storage of feed and lambing pens. The shed is divided into seven pens for experimental purposes Three lots instead of seven can probably be more desirable un der average farm conditions. Un der such conditions, also, breed ing sheep in winter quarters should be divided into groups with reference to age and condi tion. Breeding sheep should be separated from fattening sheep. An exercise yard thirty-two feet wide adjoins each pen. They should be well drained and dry. The Governor's Visit. Next Tuesday afternoon, Sep tember 26th, between three and four o'clock, Governor Martin G. Brumbaugh accompanied by rep resentatives of the Agricultural Department, and the State High way Department, expect to visit McConnellsburg and Webster Mills. , The object of the visit, as given out some time ago, is to collect information concerning agricultural needs and conditions in the State. For this reason, the party was asked by the peo ple of Fulton county to tarry a little longer inside our borders than was at first intended, and the trip to Webster Mills result ed. It now remains for the Cove people to point out to these men local needs and conditions if we are to have our share of what may be recommended for future legislation in the State. Every farmer in the County is request ed to hear what the Governor may have to say in his ten-minute talks at McConnellsburg and at Webster Mills. Important Decision. An important decision handed down in Common Pleas Court at Pittsburgh, Pa., by Judge Davis, holds that the State is not re sponsible for accidents arising out of negligence on the part of employees of the State Highway Department in not keeping state roads in proper condition. At the last Legislature a num ber of enabling acts were passed permitting individuals who Buf fered such personal injuries to bring actions against the Com monwealth to recover damages; but the Court has held that even in these cases the actions cannot be maintained. The question was decided in a suit filed by William G. Dietrich, of Indiana township, who was authorized by an act passed June 8, 1915, to bring suit against the Commonwealth to recover any damages due him from injuries suffered while driving along a State highway in the county. Fernando Decker, of Lickirig Creek township, has a six-acre field of Silver Hull buckwheat that averages three feet high, but much of it stands five and a half feet. The hot Bun did not affect it and it is well filled. YOUR MAIL. Little Talks on Health and Hygiene by Samuel G. Dixon, H. D., LL D., Commissioner of Health. Do you read your morning mail at the breakfast table? Have you ever used a knife or fork to open your letters? It is not an uncommon practice and yet an uncleanly and dangerous one. The post-office is essentially a public utility and it is universally used by all classes of people. A common point of destination may put my lady's dainty note beside a dirty scrawl from the viles of slums. Millions of pieces of mail mat ter are handled. A certain num ber of these come from people who are suffering from all kinds of diseases, some of them loath some and infectious. Stamps and envelopes, contra ry to hygienic rules are for con venience sake frequently licked. Despite quarantine precautions mail sometimes comes from the houses where cases of communi cable disease exists which have not been reported. Mail bags are not subjected to regular disinfection, and are not so cleansed as to make them safe from the danger of becoming a factor in the transmission of dis ease. During the recent epidemic of infantile paralysis many of those working on the disease formed the opinion that it may be car ried by a third person. It is not unreasonable to presume that the disease may be carried through the mail. Alfalfa. BY B. W. TRUAX, D. V. M. Burr Oak, Kans., Sept 16. It is with much gratification that I note the" interest being manifest ed in my county, concerning the production of one of the most prolific, as well as nutritious of our hay crops. Being located in what is known to be one of the principal alfalfa growing regions of the country, I am in position to know its limi tations and possibilities. Thou sands of bushels of seed are pro duced in my vicinity, and the hay is one of the main reliances of the region. However, alfalfa, like anything else of value, is not strictly of unalloyed perfection as a feed, and I wish to acquaint those, who are unfamiliar with its feeding qualities, of two dan gers in connection with its use. First; Under no consideration must cattle be permitted to graze upon the green alfalfa, as it very often results in fatal bloating; but the well cured alfalfa hay, when fed judiciously, never af fects cattle seriously in this man ner. Second: An exclusive diet of roughage in the form of alfalfa is just as preposterous as substi tuting an exclusive diet of cake for bread by human beings, 88 both are too nutritious. Alfalfa should never form more than one third of the roughage consumed by stock of any kind. Access to all the alfalfa hay which an ani mal can cousume, is very liable to result in digestive and other systemic disorders of the animal organism. Keeping these two disadvantages in mind it is prob able that no other crop would prove more profitable than a small yield of alfalfa upon Ful ton County farms. Tag Day. Under the auspices of the Civ ic Club, McConnellsburg is to have itsfirBtTag Day October 4th. The purpose is that every man woman and child will wear a tag not an "automobile tag" but a neat tag that the wearer may Bhow his or her hearty approval of this worthy work. The tags will be sold by a number of our young ladies. The price what you choose to give. The proceeds to be used for the improvement of oar town. Subscribe for the Nsws. ABOUT PEOPLE YOU KNOW. Snapshots at Their Comings and Goings Here for a Vacation, or Away for a Restful Outing. Miss Lydia Martin, of Berkley California, is visiting in the old home south of town. J. D. Hoop, of Ebensburg. visited his lather, J. D. Hoop, Sr., near Andover, last week. Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Stewart of Trenton, N. J., are guests of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. James A. Stewart, on Green Hill. Marie Keefer, of Chambers burg, was a guest in the Morrow Kendall home, in the Cove, last week. . Miss Jennie Stewart of Green Hill, was a guest for dinner in the Watson Lynch home last Sat urday. Miss Mina Alexander, of Ayr township, visited in the William Cline home, at Fort Littleton, last week. Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Spangler. of Hancock, were guests of Mc Connellsburg friends a few days this week. Paul Bricker, of Harrisburg, called on his cousin, Mrs. Ray mond Paylor, in the 'Blue House' last Saturday. Daniel Clevenger and wife, of Ayr township, were recent guest3 of William Bivens and family, East Extension, Miss Lottie Starliper, of Fort Loudon, was entertained in the D. E. Little mansion in McCon nellsburg from last Saturday un til Monday. Dentist Geo. S. Edwards, of Greencastle, passed through Mc Connellsburg a few days ago on his way to visit his former home in Wells Valley. Mrs. John Sheets returned home first of the week after hav ing visited her daughter Mrs. May Miller in Hopewell, and in the home of Dr. Hanks in Ever ett Mrs. Winifred Kendall and Mrs. Ben Shimer and the latter's two children, went to Mercers burg last Friday to visit Mrs. Kendall's daughter, Mrs. Mar tin Myer3. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Jackson, of Brush Creek township, were guests in the home of the form er's brother, Attorney J. R. Jackson, in McConnellsburg, last Saturday, Miss Ethel Logue returned to Baltimore last Saturday after having enjoyed McConnellsburg hospitality and good pure air for about four weeks. Mr. Merrick Stoner and two daughters, Mrs. Annie Davis and Mrs. Carrie Russell, all of Bed ford county, were guests of Mr. Stoner's brothers Albert and William in McConnellsburg, last Saturday. Merchant Andrew Witter wife and son, of Waterfall, in their auto, accompanied by Mrs. Mac C. Kerlin, near same place, and a nephew, Pryor Witter, were among the shoppers in McCon nellsburg last Monday. Mr. W. R. Berkstresser, Leona Berkstresser, and Margaret and Marian Wright all of Taylor township, recently, inspected the News printing plant Mr. Berk stresser brought us a box of peaches that will be hard to equal for 6ize and quality. Mr. Richard W. Swope, a for mer Fulton county teacher, and for the past twenty-one years a trusted employee of the Penna. R, R. at Pittsburgh, visited for mer home scenes in the Licking Creek Valley last week and spent a day calling on friends in Mc Connellsburg. Harvey Helman and family, of Mercersburg, and Irvin. and fam ily, of Newville, were guests lat ter part of last week and a few days this week in . the Helman home on north First street and on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Mowen, of Mercersburg, were entertained in the same bomct