THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURQ, PA. if Word Events for ictures N KNOW LITTLE CARE SHANTY BOATMEN. CERTAINLY" LIVE A HAPPY LIFE. This Departmont Our Readers In Fulton County a Around the Aorld With the Camera id' Elsewhe n the Trail VI oy Journey of History IVIaklns Happenlh headers ews HUNGRY WOMEN BESIEGE NEW YORK CITY HALL o V 5? ft 0 (1 ? 0 T "i. -. T TN"V:?X V. 1 Ci j '1 v' Scene fit New York city hull showing the food riuter-t, ncnily nil women, mounting the oteps In their effort to iuyor Mltchel. The first of the police reserves have arrived oncl ore stopping the first rush. Thousands of worn fom the East side and other sections of the city openrd a crusade against the high cost of living and started by ng push-cart peddlers who hnd raised their prices. They then marched In a disorderly body to the city hall to X the mayor's aid In their fight against the rising cost of necessities. IVERNIA SURVIVORS AFLOAT ON A RAFT 'W-m4k ml vv --mi, rnn iir-ii 'i-'-irVrr- 'tTiiWi1iiiiii1imW(trififB'irMin iim. imnii i ' I jtttiii HORSE MEAT NOW ON SALE IN NEW YORK Crowded together on this small raft, these survivors of the transport Ivernla faced the Mediterranean In her best mood before a trawler camealong and rescued them. The Iveruln, a Cunard liner of 14,000 tons, was i by a submarine la the Mediterranean recently'whlle carrying Troops. One hundred and fifty-three men, In Ing 33 members of the crew, -perished. The last man to leave the ship was the skipper, Capt William T. Tur who commanded the Lusltanla when she, too, was torpedoed by a German submarine. FIRE ON BATTLESHIP IN MIDOCEAN A1 !.V.. r jninwiiTitoijt .lint " - 1 I -j--- ; -! Ui. .. ......... ... ... . . . . on me unTtiPBJiip Wyoming at sea which was quickly extinguished Be perfectly truiued crew. Each nmn rushed to his arranged station, the 9 compartments were closed and preparations made to flood the maga l If necessary. EAMER THAT WILL BRING GERARD HOME 9- I ; rH i li J 1 II IWisHwi ' 1 1 ENLISTING IN THE NAVY The possibility of seeing actual service In the navy has speeded up re cruiting In that branch of the military. The photograph shows an applicant In the Brooklyn recruiting office under going medical examination. L!,8e)t'.'l!?,el, tllllt A"'lHadiii tlenird unil Ills suite will cojne buck to '-a on mis steamer, tho Tn From Foreign Lands. ' The sea-faring young man had writ ten his mother an unusually affection ate letter. . He was coming home, be said, and was bringing her a number 1 of presents, among them a striped Japanese kimono. The mother got the sense of most of the letter unaided. I but, finding herself unable to grapple i with all her son's big words, she hand 'ed it to the visitor for a second perusal. "A striped Japanese kimono I" the visitor exclaimed, when she came to that part of the letter. "How nice!" "Nice!" exclaimed the perplexed old Imiy. "V'ou may think so, but will you kindly tell me uluit I am to do with Niich a thing? I suppose I can keep It tied up In tho backyard, but wlint on earth am 1 to feed It on goodness only knows 1" A store solely for the sale of horse meat has been opu-ued In New York city aud ulready Is doing a brisk busi ness, chiefly with Europeans who learned to eat horseflesh before they came to America. The slaughtering of the itilmals and the shop itself are uuder the supervision of the health department. CENTER OF THE CUBAN REVOLUTIONARY MOVEMENT --ri fi tVf1 Cmitlf, J "Wt I- It? Tier,' - 1 .1 1 1 This Is the city of Santiago de Cuba, where the liberals started a revolutionary movement after the recent election. WILLIAMS' NEW GRANDSON tlliijlilpllplli Joel W. Bunkley, Jr., Is the latest grandson of Senator John Sharp Wil liams of Mississippi. The youngster Is living, with his parents, at Senator Williams' homo In Washington. His father Is a lieutenant In tho navy, now In charge of the only naval recruiting station in Washington. Mrs. Bunkley was Miss Sallle Williams, for several years popular In Washington society. Don't Trifle With Truth. When you repeat something which someone has told you, be careful to give It the same meaning as the one who Imparted the Information. Often the change of one word puts an entirely different meaning to a story, which leaves a wrong Impres sion. If you hud a cataract on one eye, and you contemplated a simple opera tion In time which would effect 0 cure, how would you like to hear that you had "gone blind?" Perhaps your father has moved his business to a distant city where there Is an asylum for the Insane. Under these circumstances how would you like to bear In a public place that your father had "gone crazy?" Yet this very thing happened. An Incor rect Intonation gave the . Impression that the man hud gone to the asylum and a stupid friend misconstrued the Htotemeut Some people, too, tike to add Just a little sensational touch to whatever they repeat. They think it gives "pep." Satisfy your vanity In some other way than perverting the truth. I'ltts burgh Dispatch. I pledge allegiance to my flag and to the Republic for which it stands; one nation indivisible with Liberty and Justice for. all MB OFFICIAL INAUGURATION MEDAL This official mediil of the second luuuguratlon of President Wilson ha been designed by Miss Loretta Lowenstcln, ft Washington artist. - , . Will 8omtlme Work, Though Pleae lire Is the Real Business of Exist ne Not Bothered About Rent or Taxes. . If a man were privileged to choose1 his own manner of living, sorting over the whole collection of life's various forms of existence, and choosing the one he liked best, no matter what any body or everybody said, It is likely that In all that strange collection he could And nothing more charming than the life of the shanty boatman, remarks) the Indianapolis News. The shanty boatman Uvea anywhere, according to his Inclination and the season. n lives, anyway, according to his de sires. It sets you dreaming of all the faraway places to think of him. He moors his little house ou the cool northern streams In the summer, and drifts down the warm blue southern rivers during the winter. He Is not averse to a bit of work now and then, enough to keep htm In coffee and ba con, but he can choose his work as be goes, and leave it when he grows tired of It Work Is his avocation, and, as an avocation, work Is not an unpleas ant thing. His real business Is liv ing, smoking, fishing, drifting. He pays neither rent nor taxes. He owns only a bit of an old shack, somehow made watertight and balanced so that ; It will float. It Is even possible, you, i must understand, for Lira to enter Into the life of city men, entering Into It, hovjver, with no sense of necessity or re .tralnt A shanty boAtmnn was not so long ago a resident of this very town. With a proper sense of the fitness of things he tied his boat to a fence, In line with the houses on the shore and even painted a number over the front door. It was a Jolly looking little home, with the smoke coming out of the pipe In the roof and lamplight shining from the edge of the curtains, and, for all we know, he may have a regular Job aud have taken to city life very con tentedly for a while. The advantage he had over the rest of us, of course, was that to get away to the faraway places, he had only to untie his boat and drift, accepting now and then a, bit of a lift from a friendly craft The thing that la likely to bother us, however, In choosing this sort of ex istence, Is the question as to wheth er we should really be a shanty boat man, or Just pretend to be oue. Steven son was a sort of shanty boatmun. At least, ho did drift about through the country In a boat and lived very con tentedly and lazily on the way. But Stevenson has written a book about his wanderings, and he was not reully a shanty boatman at nil. It Is Just the difference you may say, between art and vagrancy. Vagrancy has an Idle sound, and art Is a tempting thing. The very point In being a shanty boat man, however, Is In not having to try to bo anything else, and, perhnps the best thlug about it la tho fact that It Is so far removed from art as to, be very nearly reuL - The Lowest Office. " ' Grant Whlstlar brings this one to, town : "Boss," said Ras Llghtfoot, the otlw er day. "I gotta git off tomorroh." "(Set off tomorrow?" "Yessah." "But I can't spare you very well. "I gotta go. It'a lodge business. That new lodge you Joined V "Yessah." "Why are you so badly needed at the meeting?" j "Ah am do sublime king." ' "Sublime kingr "Yessah." "You have been a member of tiiat lodge only two weeks and you tell me you are sublime king already?" ; "Yessah." "How does that comeT" "You sec, sab, In ouah lodge de su bllme king am do lowes' office what doy Is." Youngstown Telegram. ' War's Convictions. What has happened Is that out ot the blackest, most Infernal experience through which, as far as we know, the race has ever passed there hat seemed to como literally to millions of men a redeeming conviction, a heal ing and transfiguring assurance, that brotherhood Is not a delusion ; that life has a meaning; that resolution end courage and discipline and simple faltn In fellowmen and loyalty to Ideals are now, as they have always been, with in that meaning; that these things are, as they will be forever, within ninn's heritage, to be displayed In war until the better way Is found. E, T. Devlne. "Fourth of July" In March. ' Fireworks on Independence day are denied the children and grown folks of Alaska for tho simple reason that the July nights are almost as light as the days and It does not pay to attempt pyrotechnic displays If there Is no darkness to show them off by contrast Consequently It has become the cus tom In many Alaskan cities, Including Fairbanks, to hold a "Fourth of July" celebration on March 4, whon the nights are still very long. Then there Is abundant opportunity for displaying fireworks of every variety. According to Rules ef the Sea. A sailor who had landed after a long voyage, and having been paid off caiiea a can, uirew 111 b lugKHgv luoiu, and Jumped on top himself. "Beg pardon, air," said the aston tslied cabman,, "but you should get la side and put your boxes on top." "Steer the craft ahead, sonny. Pat sengers always go on deck and lut . gage In the hold," was the reply from, the top. London Tit-Bits. Danger In Artificial Eyes. Explosion of thoir artificial eyes la a risk patched up war victims should hardly expect As the ball Is niude up of many grades, colors and thicknesses of glass, proper annealing la difficult, and It Is found that one eye In a thou-, sand files to pieces even on the factory; shelves.