THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURO, PA. Events fo r Mews deader 'n This Department Our Roadors In Fulton County and Elsowhore Mayjourney Around tho World Alth the Camera on the Trail of History CVSakiino: Happenings. 2 1 ' l 1 Kins Victor Emmanuel of Itiily watching the progress of his troops from n vantage point lilh in tho moiin- ns. 2 Arrest of suffragist pickets who displayed objectionable banners In front of the White House. 3 Now pho- jia;ih of Ci'iH'i-ni inmert i.yamey or r ranee, s uenerni rersmng leaving me notei aes mvauues in rnna. COAST ARTILLERY OFFICERS AT WAR GAME I Coast artillery olllcers playing the war game at Fort Andrews, near Boston. A large relief map" represents the ton hurlinr. A naval expert maneuvers the "enemy fleet" while tho curtain, shown at the right, is drawn. The rain Is pulled aside and each officer, who represents a battery commander, is asked to give a decision on his course taction wlililn a certain number of minutes. LAMPBLACK ON ALPINE FIGHTERS ; ' 1 NELLIE, BELGIUM'S MASCOT s ifaJ' .site J 1 Err ji --Mglt m f f,)vl';' flRlitliis ti H... 1 . 1 1 . 1 1 . 1 1 . f 1 . niiAnf,ia4 nnikmloa Lu . "! "a,ls- To protect themselves tho troops smear their faces and f"s Uh a blackened grease. WITH YALE'S AERO CORPS UNIT i I 1 -..,T 1 , rrw X.TJF .VS. Ilfaeh LUtl,,tts wll l),!lo'B to the aero corps are busy training at Hunt- filn8 on 'i,MmS lul"1, The Photograph shows several members of the unit ir" Myht In a seaplane. Nellie, the mascot of Belgium, hns been the constant companion of Major Osterlcth, a member of the Belgian commission to America. She has been twice wounded when In the trenches. TAKING A MESSAGE HOME The carrier pigeon Is stilt found use ful In the war, despite oil the new In ventions. One of them Is here seen leaving the trenches with a message. Safer Near the Ground. One evening, In the cardroom of a certain club, a mnn was caught cheat ing, and exposed before the whole com pany, whereupon the Indignant mem bers rose In a body and kicked mm from the top of tho stairs to the bot torn. Rising painfully and full of wrath, he hobbled owy to the resi dence of the president of the club, and there complained of the treatment he had received. "What would you do' tn my place?" he asked. "Well," said the president, "I should play on the ground floor In future It's safer." THOUSANDS JOIN IN TRIBUTE TO GARIBALDI yimin p MIiijiu,. y3i?i y m M 'jJ View of the great throng at the Garibaldi mtMuurlul at Ito.sebatik, Statoh Ltlaml, oa the occaHton of the visit of the Italian war coniinlnslon. HARVARD ATHLETES ENLISTED FOR THE WAR ' ' Left to right: E. A. Tesehner, captain of tho track team and sprinter; C. A. Coolldge, football player; J. B. P. Morgan, nephew of J. P. Morgan and captain of the hockey team ; N. E. Burbldge, manager of tho football team, and O. E. Abbott, captain of tho basebull team. The most notable feature of tho Harvard commencement exercises was the variety of uniforms seen in the procession. Nearly all of tho graduates have enlisted In some branch of Uncle Sam's service. EMMET STATUE UNVEILED m This statue of ltobert Emmet, the Irish patriot, was unveiled the other day in the National Gallery of Art In Washington In the presence of Presi dent Wilson and many other notnbles. Jerome Connor Is tho sculptor. White Man' Justice. A native was charged before a Capo Town court a few days ago with house breaking, but although the evldenco was strong, the Jury found him not guilty. In discharging him, the Judge snld: "The Jury has exemplified on another occasion how the white man deals with Justice. We moy nil feel you are the man who broke this place open, but we are going to let yon go rather than break our own law, and our own law is that the evidence must be conclusive against tho man ; other wise he Is not convicted. You are dis charged." , Probably Warmer. Tho vicar of tho parish, when out walking ono day, met n former lady member of his congregation. After exchanging salutations, he ob served; "I don't seo your husband with you so much as when you were on your honeymoon; has ho grown cool?" "Not if what you preach be true," was the reply. "Ho Is dead!" Lon don Tlt-Blts. PHILADELPHIA'S RED CROSS PARADE in i i it ilk JifbJ 4 V-1 V X v phln. Some of the Interesting flouts In tho great Hod Cross parade In Phlludel- AERIAL FIRE DEPARTMENT IS LATEST ,r,3E f Sun llego, Cal., Is laying claims to being one of the most progressive com munltles on tho map. San liego has everything any other city in the country has, and In addition has the first and only aerial municipal fire brigade In the United States, and, It Is believed, In thi whole world. The picture shows the aerial flro patrol, with the chief and his uvlator. (Conducted by the National Woman' ChrlitUn Temperance Union.) . "DEAD MAN'8 HILL." I have seen a picture Inexpressibly sad of "Dead Man'i mil In Trince" with its 800,000 graves and as many wooden crosses. Far as eye can reach are the figures of black shrouded wom en; they bend themselves above th graves; they lift themselves with out stretched hands toward the unrelent ing heavens. Bnt for them there la sv pitiful compensation: They have th trinkets of the Legion of Honor and the memories of heroism that will never die. Powder-blackened and dis emboweled, their sons were hurled' Into long trenches, but above them . float the trl-color of France and th flag of the fatherland and they will live forever. . I seo today another dead man's hill a hill that rises in my own land, and from this 'proud, Imperial city. The picture of this hill Is Infinitely sad.) Women crowd it with their forms and ' cover It with their lamentations and for them there is' no compensation, no flag to drape above tho picture, no cross of honor to press Into the baby' hand, no memory but one of Infamy and shame. They weep and through, their tears no rainbow ever shines, for their dead have died In vain. Who speaks for these women, for these who mourn the unnumbered slain of alcohol, who have followed their sons to tho drunkard's grave and their daughters to the stako of man's (alcohol-fed lust? Who speaks for them? By the blood of the Innocent and by the flag of the free, we speak for them! And wo will speak, until, by the grace of Ood the God of Wash lngton, and Lincoln, and Lee until by tho grace of tho Lord God of Hosts nod the votes of the American peoplo we have consummated a saloonlesa nation, a sober people and a stainless flag 1 Daniel A. Poling. FIGURES AND FIGURES. The number of bushels of grain coo sumed annually In the manufacture of alcoholic beverages has been variously stated by tho press, but the figure most generally ued has been 000,000,000. The distillers and brewers now are calling the attention of the newspa pers to the fact that they use only the trltllug amount of approximately 135,000,000 bushels. Tho Interesting point In tho case Is that the Inflated figure, 600,000,000, originated with the liquor Interests, some years ago and has been used to Impress tho men engaged In agricul ture with the Immensity of the market for grains afforded by the liquor busi ness and the calamity that would necessarily result to the farmers front prohibition. Not a word of protest was ever ut tered by the liquor Interests concern ing the use of this figure until the war prohibition question loomed large. Then It was made to shrink In aston ishing fashion. The figure now named by the liquor Interests Is approximate ly the farae as that which appears la W. C. T. U. literature, notably In Prof. John Nlcholl's booklet, "Docs It Pay?" The Union- Signal. SALOON REVENUE NOT NEEDED. After the saloons were driven out of Kansas City, Kan., the state's larg est city, for the first time In 20 years that municipality made no debt for current expenses. And this without suloon revenue, as Its mayor at that time, U. S. Ouycr, has recorded In a. signed statement The first year the saloons were effec tively suppressed In Kansas City, It la recorded by a former attorney general -of Kansas, that the cost of public pros ecutions, which the public had to bear, fell off $25,000. Another saving of 125,000 was made by a reduction of the police force. How much was saved the merchants in the better col lection of accounts, and how much was saved the people In other ways, can not be estimated. LIQUOR LIES ANSWERED. Through the misuse of statistics, through cribbing brief statements of fact from official reports and adroitly stripping them from their qualifying clauses, the desperate saloon Interest still Is trying to fool the nation into believing that prohibition Is harmful to Kansas, where the peoplo voluntar ily havo Just added the most stringent bone-dry law In existence to keep liq uor from seeping acrtss the state bor der from the outside. Capper's Weekly. SAVE GRAIN FOR BREAD. On March 8 the Berlluer Tageblatt asserted that the suspension of all beer brewing In northern Germany was Imminent, "due to the desire to save maize for bread and malt to take the place of coffee." DECREASE IN NUMBER. Tho report of the commissioner of Internal revenue for tho last fiscal year (ending June, 1910) shows do crease In tho number of liquor deal ers as follows : Rectifiers. 29 ; retail ers, 5,751; wholesalers, 178; brewers, 32. THERE'S A REASON. One of the largest breweries In Colorado has been turned Into a malt ed milk fattory, and its owners say they have greatly Increased their profits. FARMERS NOT AFRAID. The destruction of the markets of the farmer by the coming of prohibition Is still one of the hackneyed sophis tries of the llquorltes. Strange that If prohibition Is so Inimical to the agri cultural Interests of a state the farm ers of North Dakota In electing a gov ernor last year should have put In power so enthusiastic an adherent of the policy ns. Is Governor Frazier. RULE OF REASON. The common sense of the country Is banishing the legalised liquor traffic. 4