THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBUftG, SA. iciures i of wor Events for Mew Headers This Department Our Readers In Fulton County and; Elsewhere May Journey Around the NAorld Aith the Camera on the of History INIatclng Happenings. rail GERMAN YACHT CAUGHT BY COAST PATROL : jkff illll ' Vk Aft' 1 4'nmp of tin' .NiiiIiiiiiiI Service school, tin military p -i purcdneKS camp for womcii, conducted liy tlit Navy league ear-Washington. '- Miss Kdwardliiu Lnvole, buglerof til First field artillery bund of the New York National Guard. Loading ammunition on the light railway that follows c'.osely the advance of the allies In France. 4 Itnymon Me, president of runuina, whose country In standing by the United State. FRENCH GUNNERS WATCHING FOR A SUBMARINE 3 f. I A..J; VJ . i mini I 11V1TM iTMUlir lllnl'fli' II il i liTfrtMlfcfcHitl Cjniiers on a French destroyer photographed us they wvre watching for a Ciernmn sulmmrluu whose locution had fl slginilcil hy an aviator. THEY ARE THE FIRST TO GET THERE e r.cniliinR cry of the marine corps is, "We are the first to get there." n,.. r"'1'1' !,h"W8 " l'liKlunent of these soldiers of the sea on board a - iiannKi,t , ,ll)0Vl (he islgnlu of thevorps. SUBMARINE CHASER AT TOP SPEED I ... II, . ; I "f "U! I,1UJ' lx the fleet of pubmarine chasers, small vessels of : lying a gun and WropS3 outflti CAPT. G. H. BURRAGE The German yacht Sparrowhawk, which was raptured b; the American coast patrol. OFFICERS OF PRIZE WINNING TORPEDO BOAT HEAD OF CANTEEN SERVICE I M 1 ((s 11 ! V uO,v" Llltlll) 111 Hi I I Illll J i The I'nlted Stales toinedo boat Patterson Is the wlnmv of (he prize for battle elllclency from marksmanship to cleanliness. Left to right : Meat. S. S. Lewis of Texas, Meat. (). O. Hiigen of Minnesota, Knsign C. W. Johnson of Mis sissippi and Capt. J. II. Newton of Pennsylvania. Capt. 0. II. Burrage of Winchester, Masi., has been assigned to the battle ship Nebraska. CUTTING THE BANDAGES tit k Miss Helen Heed, u Ked Cross work er, using an electrlcul machine for cut ting cloth Into bumiuges. LEFT BY THE RETREATING GERMANS 1 . Mrs. Donn Barber, acting chief of the commissariat organized by 250 women to - provide a canteen service for the troops. They are to net In co-operntlon with the regular nrmy and the National Guard. The eerv Ico Is officially organized for three kinds of service emergency, tempo rary and permanent. The women will go to where the men are encamped, set up their canteen with Its full equipment nnd be ready to serve food and hot drinks. Germans' Qiant Periscope. One of the most Interesting of the devices which have been produced dur ing the war to amplify tho range of human vision Is a giant periscope which the French captured from the Germans, says Popular Mechanics Magazine. With this equipment an ob server need not seek out some tall tree or high tower from which to spy on the enemy, for this collapsible steel mast enn be reared nt any desired point In a few minutes. At Its upper end are a conical tube nnd lenses by which horizontal light rays nre deflect ed downwnrd to the observer stationed below. Tho apparatus Is strongly built nnd the carriage Is so made as to form n wide spreading bnse. Sup ported by the carrlago alone, the mast can bo raised to a height of 50 feet. When It Is extended to .Its full length, which Is SO feet, guy ropes nre required to steady Jt. Salvage corps of British soldiers collecting rltles, helmets, cartridges, chair ing and other impedimenta from a buttlelleld near Bapaume, France, the scene of heavy lighting. Scenes such as this greet the eye nt every turn on the great wide area over which the British have advanced, crushing back the Germans. to..-., i -fnv-mYn.Mitvt' virlHiliyvaVi-i.ilrt'iThiftJrftvi;.-vi;ii'v"J tfinVVi-irffliiii'i' rVMtf"irft'WTftniirtigfrr-''r .lean Mitchelle, private In the One Hundred nnd Twelfth regiment of the French army, reflecting the smile of a United Stntes mvvnl ofllcor, both happy In the relationship of their respective nations In the uphohllngof justice and human rights. The French soldier Is In tills country on n four months' furlough and Is (pending part of that precious time In helping the United Stntes navy In Its recruiting campaign. NOT NOBLE ANIMAL Man Not Such Finished Product as Imagined, Says Savant Human Body Ha Points of Decided Inferiority to Despised Mammals, It la Asserted. Investigation Is proving, declares Dr. F. Wood Jones, professor of anat omy at tho university of London, In his new book, "Arboreul Man," thnt the hu man body Is no such finished product of evolution as we havo fondly linaf Ined. It has points of decided inferior ity to the physical frames of mammal upon which we look with disdain aa less finely formed than ourselves. Some of the lower animals are tnor capable of exquisite adaptations than aro we ourselves. Their bodies are more splendid Instruments than ours nre, more complex, Indicative of a higher stage of evolution on the physi cal plane. Tho upright uttltude of man hus been employed as an argument In favor of his superiority to the four footed beast physlologlrnlly, although the evidence makes such an urgument ridiculous. It would tend the other way, says a review In the Lon don Lancet. If we compare man's body with th body of so-called "lower organisms" we nre astonished to find that his points of resemblance nre with the lowest in the scale of conscious being. Man Is oddly unlike the noble beasts of the Jungle; but he Is amazingly like the creatures of a primitive type that Infest tho bog, the pond nnd the Kwnmp. Ills relatives are not tho lorda of the forest, not tho kings of tho Jungle, nor the mighty eagle, but the creatures of tho slime. How Is It that the various elements of the remote ancestral llnil) have been preserved In human limbs? Professor Jones' answer Is thnt the primates broke away from the early land living; mammnllnn stock while the primitive bones and muscles were still preserved. In thnt stock. These primitive ele ments proved useful and were pre served In that particular form which ndoptcd nn arboreal life nnd used tho hand nnd foot to grasp with. The prim itive plan on which the hands of mnn nre built can be accounted for only by supposing that man's ancestry spent n long pilgrimage In the trees. It was during man's arboreal phase of exist ence that the vast majority of those anatomical characters which we re gard as adaptations to man's upright posture were evolved. These anatomi cal traits Indicate how low we ure. -Current Opinion. Dirty Windows and Poor Eyes. The factors largely responsible for poor Illumination nre small, narrow windows, low power nrtlllclal lights placed too far from the point of opera tion, nnd neglect of facilities at hand for obtaining light, according to tho Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry. By this neglect Is meant lack of cleanliness. This applies llrst of nil to the windows. There 1.4 scarcely n single Industrial locality which does hot contain at least one building, and all too frequently sev eral buildings of the same type. They are built with a supply of window space sutllclent to lllumlnato amply the Interior. Tho dust und dirt accu mulated upon them, however, destroy In large proportion their usefulness. The snme condition Is found In arti ficial lighting. The electric light bulb, dusty or streaked with dirt, tho result of hurried nnd Incomplete nttempts nt wnshlng, often shaded with a fixture meant to be a reflector, but which In reality Is anything but thnt, faintly illuminates the work und Impairs tho health nnd tho elllclency of tho work er. Sclent Iflc American. His Fables Were Classics. Jean de In Foutidne. tbe seventeenth century French genius, who ranks among the grentest fabulists of nil time, died 2'J2 years ago, at the nge of seventy-four, and to the last he was as nnlve, Improvident, reckless nnd good hearted as a child. He wns the son of a magistrate, and In his youth , proposed to become a priest, but abandoned thnt project aft er eighteen months In n semlnury, and thereafter, for several years, led an Idle and dissipated life. His early ef forts ns poet nnd dramatist were of little worth, and It was not until ho was forty-four that he gained fame with his "Contes pour Klre" tales for laughter. La Fontaine's masterpiece, his "Fables," were published between 1(!(3 nnd 101M, the last book having been completed shortly before bis death. In these he satirized the whole range of human nature In lis animal counter parts, nnd produced a work that will nlwnys rank ns a great classic. The Eccentric Chinese. Petroleum mny be n thing for which one's taste has to be cultivated. At any rate, the Chinese dislike the smell nnd touch of it so badly that they are much In tho situation of the peoplo who seventy-five years ngo had salt works n western Pennsylvania they abomi nate the petroleum and abandon a well when the proportion of oil to brine gets high. Their repugnance for crude petroleum may be measured by tho fact that In China It takes from one to three generations to bore a well! For the reflncd products of petroleum they have no such aversion, or even for the tin cans In which they get It from tho United Stntes, making out of the latter a source of almost ns many of the necessaries of life as a South Sen Islanders finds In his favorite co conut palm. The Nation's Business. A Helping Hand. Decker (watching the game over her shoulder) Gee, Miss Oldglrl, I'd like to hold thnt hand of yours I Miss Oldglrl Oh, Mr. Decker, this Is so Budden I Low Postage Rates. The cheapest postal service In tho world Is uald to bo that of Japan. Let ters travel for two sen about seven tenths of a penny. '4 Hi