Pictures of World Events for News Readers 2fc In TT-ili p m r"trT- nt Our fZ9mclir-m In F"ulton County and Els Around the NAorld With the Gamora on th o-f History IVIalclncz Happonlng. FOR CANADA'S NFW PARLIAMENT BUILDINGS mil n ! y Journ EVIDENCE OF A MIRACULOUS ESCAPE v c r- av -m. w w- v a --m. r sr . a asBisr- a i '.u. in ) ,,vj" '""""""i"'"r-r-u'.'!".' J .'!3 !i??!fgf , 1 l.uui. .....I ..I Lom.u.1.. ju.s. uiuT the Inyi.u ; il.f h-r m-w .m.llm. ,m.Um.,t ,)n,t.t.rl(,(t.d Kn-mh army .uto W'Mih proof Hut the ..Ke of .ulrarl.-H i.h no. Tl... ..r .-..rri.il bll.lliiR ut Otlaxvu. Tl.o .lulie M..I.I the c.rn.-rHt.me. I.U brother, the Into kn; of bnislnnd. Living first sot the. ,i11I1B,.ri,II zone of the S . fld.ilne front, (ior.n.in h.ill-ts .l.-r.-.-.l It tl.m.l. . f t tt -. , none when the old piirlli.iiii-nt l.ulllln(.'H, recently (leHtro.ve.l hy Are, wore In the course of erection. ELEPHANT BUTTE DAM SOON TO BE DEDICATED nn.l through. nliiltiR the tires to pieces. The olllcers reuche.l llielr (lewliiintlon nnln.liirel. llintik to the wott.lerful couruije mid coolness of the French cluiulTeur. who Ktiie! to hl lrlvln wheel though severely woiinileU. GREAT CAMPAIGN TO MAKE BETTER CITIZENS Klephnnt H.itte .him. which will he for.ui.lly ileilki.te.l Dcloher 14 ly l'lesldent Wilson, Is the largest Irrlgn tlon Uurti built tiniler the direction of the United St.ites r-clnnuitlon Rervlcn, nn.l the largest muss of masonry In Hip Vorld. The .him Is il.-stlncl to rtK-ltil.ii nearly 200.0 HI acres of fertile land In the vulley of the Klo Grundo In New Mexico and Texas anil 30.000 acres of bind in old Mexico. TOO POWERFUL FOR RESTRICTED TERRITORY Nlp-w - , S it ? J . t. v.h - , I V'" - . If, i I l-& . if. --.'.-.t It :'- ' "V ;7J' bi.llan Head, M.I.. may be ahandonod by the United States navy us i. Proving grciunil for sliells and tirniament us a result of the rlcochetlii -of 1 "hell In recent test. The missile wits tired from, it ir.-lml. gun and pierced " heaviest iirmor plate used hy the navy. After It passed through this "MriM-Uoii It plowed through u sand hank, and thence through the house of Kunner who lived several hundred yards uwuy. This photograph shows "if hole ini.de by the shell's entry, uud, below, the gunner's little diiuyhter "liiK astride the big projectile. v THINGS THAT ARE NEW ,n o new electric fan the blades ',,lrl h irb.ontnlly to avoid causing "fidts uud 1 1,,, Ur pusses over water ""'I Is cooled. A iii.'cl.aulcat device, largely coin H)II of rubber, has been Invented to ,hti. n person's sculp to Mllniul.ite ", K'"th of h.ilr. H.iitd '.H per cent of Ilium- I "ft" K'm M """''i'ltl "oik-. J U per cent in Ireland und 30.0 lu Knglund. Nigeria has been added to the lands In which valuable deposits of coal lu. ve been discovered In recent years, A new stopper for milk bottles has .. spout at one side for pouring, n valve within the device closing against llie admission of air when it bottle to which It Is attached Is held upright. A sergeant In the United States ma rine corps Is the Inventor of u port able topographical map that enables aviators to make quick unit accurate reports of their observations .nude In night. CROWN PRINCE RUPRECHT On September 1 the United States bureau of education begun Its nation-wide campaign to make better citl.nis. The slogan of the campaign Is to be "America First." Th;- llrst und most Important step Is to Induce 3.mkumh non-Kngllsh-speaklng Immigrants to attend night Rchools. TIil- commissioner of education has designated men .b-iillng with every brunch of the Immigrant problem to serve on u committee of one hundred to further the purpose of the nininiiltrn. American einnlovees throughout the country nr.- volunteering their services to net us teachers to the foreigners. The photograph shows n large Industrial establishment employing thousands of Immigrants with Its English-teaching school assembled. The factory Itseir nas uimenuuen u.e iusk oi t-n.igi.ieiiig .iiiiiukiihh em ployces. The teachers etui be seen ut the blackboards. fl I tk strikes after 50 years TWO GREAT MEN OF THE TEUTONS ) I ft ' ft Uf- A v?f i i r w r . 7 . ,i -. Sin vi: $ i - ii-1 - ? '14, , vvl ''ii k ' ' t I " v V i niiri"-"iil'iMfWfiWui i' New photograph of Crown I'rlnce Ituprecht of liavarla, coa.mamler of the Germair forces in the Som.ne re gion, where the allies lire conducting a grout offensive. Holidays In Danich Islands. The natives of the Danish Islands (West Indies) apparently celebrate the national holidays of all countries with complete Impartiality the Fourth of July In honor of the country that wouldn't ti.lopt them; the fourteen I. of July because It Is celebrated In Mar tlnl.iue. and It would never do to let the French negroes get iihea.l of tliein; the birthday of the king of Denmark: because the Islands belong to him; the birthday of the king of Kugl I. because .the Islands once belonged to him; the birthday of the Cerium, em peror In honor r the lla.n'uirg Ameri can, line, and ibe birthdays of all the royal fulillles. I presume, as well :-s many local and linpn.tiirtu holidays or their own. They ulso are very scrupu lous tilko.it observing the Xxhtmth, ut least In Its negative aspect. Among the striking street cur tueii In Now York is Matthew .1. Murphy, seventy-two years old. who has boon in the emplcy of the traction company more than 50 years. The Flying Lunch. We are Informed in a In line news Item that guests to u luncheon given by the Harlem b.K.rd of trade llcw to the place of outing In hydro-iieropliines. Twenty years ugo such an event would have been chronicled on the llrst page with the largest he... ling of which the paper's type supply was capable. There Is it reason. Twenty yours ago such an Incident was m. impossibility. Now so much more wonderful things have been .lone In the ulr. and they have become so ordinary, tli.it n feat which would have been deemed ti crazy notion two decides ago bus arrived ..I the stage of the comiuonplace. . So fur have we traveled In aviation In 20 years. The kaiser und General von lliu.leuhurg the directing geniuses of llie Teuton n 1'inlos. In their hands lie the future destinies of the two groat empires of Germany and Austria. Germany's need for her strongest uii has brought Von Hln.lol.burg to the front uud placed hlui next In uutl.orlty to the supreme war lord. ALL AROUND THE WORLD Itet.ill food prices In the United Kingdom are about -I! per cent higher than a year ago. After three yours of work n govern ment committee has reconiineiid.il u uniform system of weights uud meas ures for nil India. I'olson bike, so-called, lying nenr Douglas. Arlr... has been found Im pregnated will, nothing more danger ous than epsoin salts, ami it company has boon formed to extract that medi cine from Its water. There .ire but few wild at lit mil In In the neighborhood. China offers u good market fur American leuther. BREWERIES NOT ADVERTI8CD. At the recent national convention of advertising men held ut I'hlladclphla the delegates from Milwaukee conspic uously omitted till reference to the product which made their city famous. A immimntl. banner stretched In front of their hc.ulfiunrtcrs Informed the public that Vilwuiikoe produces $70 000.000 In if,,n, steel nnd machinery each vcat j l.'.OOO.OOO In Ducked uud prepared .neuts; $ C.OOO.OOO In leather und leather products, unit various other useful coiuiiio.liti.'s but there was nothing ubout its breweries. "Talk to the forty delegates from that city nod you'll notice the same thing," says the North American of I'hihidelphla. "They'll throw up their huts over their 'largest tanneries' and not a word ubout beer. They'll become enthusiastic over their S.OiK) i.miuifuc turiug plants without mentioning the breweries. Talk to a member of the Milwaukee Ad. club, und he'll fill your ears full of the wonderful ucl.evemcuts of not full-page booze uds, but a church advertising cuinpnlgn." The same thing was noticeable In the literature distributed, liauks published folders advertising the city us a homo for business and omitted mention of the breweries. There w as not a placard or it printed page In evidence ut the convention on Milwaukee's luuclt- vaunted "teinporiiiice drink." MODERN NEWSPAPER MAN. The -InO newspaper correspondents' attending the nntiouul Democratic con vention In St. Louis were Invited by Mr. August A. Itusch, bead of the An-heuser-Il'.isch Hi-cuing company, to a mint Julep function lit his home. Less il.an UK) ucivptcd, und u score of uu romobiles the host bad engaged for the occasion went away empty. One of those who declined the hospitality wrote Mr. Iiusch us follows; The time has passed when news r H per in. n can keep the pace ot ti i fust est men lu tl.o world und meddle with even the mildest of intoxic;'.i.ts. This fact Is recognized In the most pructical way by u large majority of the craft. During lust week ut Chi cago, when the pressure of work was tremendous und the wentln-r nhoin inable, I was In constant contact with the same body of correspondents who nre here today, nnd In all that time I did not sec even one under the In fluence of drink. I hope to kce the time come when men of my culling will no longer be exposed to the dan gers which besot the now recognized standards of hospitality, but that the open-handed friendliness which I know you feel toward your friends uud mine will find some other form of cpivs-slon." HAVE NO USE FOR LICUOR. "The position of our organization If well known,'' says Mr. W. S. Slono, grund chief of the Urotheiliood of lAf cou.otive Engineers. "We fight the litpior evil perhaps ns hard us any of the churches. Liquor has no place in our modern railroading. There Is no class of men in the world of w bom more Is required und who hould have clearer heads than the men In charge of the transportation services of this country. Those of us who have been In the railroad game for years knor the infinitesimal space of time that spells the difference between safety nnd disaster. There Is no question but that liquor does slow down the brain action und the man In the cab of the locomotive nnd the man in charge of the train, even though he has no re gard for bis own safety, has no busi ness to use it In tiny way; by so doiuj he endangers others." eulieved in prohibition. The late James J. IIIII, the rallwny magnate, was tin advocate of national prohibition and would shortly have made a public statement Indorsing It, wns the assertl-.m made by l'rof. Irr Ing Fisher nt St. Louis, when he brought before the resolutions commit tee of the Democratic party the matter of a prohibition plank In the party platform. "I received a letter from Mr. Hill," said I'rofessor Fisher, "In which he declared that the greatest factor in the promotion of crime, dis ease and poverty In this nation win the liquor trallic, nnd that he delleved national prohibition was the best solu tlou of the problem." 'BEER SMELL IS OUT." This is the sign, In big display typs, over a shoe shop In the city of Den ver. Tho proprietor occupies one of the buildings vacated by a saloon keeper on January 1. He calls him self "the shoe merchant extraordinary of Denver, Omaha and Lincoln," and he urges former saloon patrons "not to cry over spilt booze." but to rat ronize Cudd's Shoe Shop. PLEA TO SOLDIERS. Circulars hare been sec; to tho Aus trian soldiers urging them not to dr'tiK alcoholics, "tls they make men s'ug glsl. nnd Inc-.ipable of marching, Inter fere with good shooting, nnd render one more susceptible to Infectious diseases." CECR CONSUMPTION. During 1915, Americans drank 2, Ud.5;;7.JT2 fewer pints of beer than In 101 1. These bottles would make column .103.4-17 miles high, according to the Michigan Cuinpuign Muuui LIFE IN MOSCOW. Life proceeds much as nsual In ' Moscow, the commercial capital of Russia, and despite the .rise In prices, trade In general Is good and the buying power of the people was never so great this latter tact being accounted for generally by the prohibition of vodka. Associated Press Correspondent MAKES THE DRUNKARD. It la not the Inst drink that make the drunkard but the llrst, nnd the first drink la almost alraya beer. 0
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers