THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURG. PA. FREES SUMMER RESORT HELP Blrls In Short-Term Hotels Granted a Seven-Day Week by Industrial Board AUTHORITY OF 1917 ACT Aleo Issues a Rule Prohibiting tho Employment of Minors in Estab lishments Where High Explo- . . sives Are Manufactured. 'Harriirburg. Tho State Industrial Boarr" baa an nounced new regulations for employ ment of women In summer hotels and Imjued a rule prohibiting employment vt minors in establishments where high explosives are manufactured. The order In regard to the employ meat of women, which was made undei authority of tire act of 1917, is as fol lows: "That the Industrial Board grants to the short-term hotels, operating ap proximately four months In the year, the privilege of seven days a week on It he basis of a seven-hour day; it being understood that the employees In such hotels working more than seven hours per day shall not be scheduled under the terms of this ruling, but will be classed under the terms of the wom an's law of 1915; It being further un derstood that the schedule of hours of labor shall be posted, as called for by law." The ruling on employment of minors In high explosive factories prohibits them from places where thore are made picric acid, smokeless powder svnd trinitrotoluol, a dangerous explo live used for shells. Bound to Be on Ballot T. P. Twiblll and George Sterner, Philadelphia, brought mandamus pro ceedings In the Dauphin County Court to compel the Secretary of the Com jnon wealth to place their names on the primary election ballots as candi dates for Judge In Common Pleas Court No. 5, Philadelphia. . They found the office closed on the evening of the last day for filing peti tions and threw their papers over the transom. The papers were found next morning and rejected. Each one of the 169 candidates for Judicial or Congressional nomination filing a petition for the September pri mary at the Department of the Secre tary of the Commonwealth will receive a notice. The names placed on record were certified to the commissioners of thirty-two counties for the printing of the ballots for the primary. The Attorney General's Department will look after the State's end In the suit brought by General V. J. Hillings to require receiving of his nominating papers for Congress In the Twenty eighth district. The question arises for the first time because a blank peti tion furnished the General contained an extract from a law repealed by an act of 1917. Not on Volunteer Basis. State draft headquarters gave outa telegram from Provost Marshal Gen eral Crowder, In which local boards are warned against making up quotas from only those men wiio declare will Ingnees to serve In the new National Army. It Is said by him that such practice Is In effect making up the quotas from volunteers. The newly appointed boards In the middle district organized at Harris burg and Scranton. The State headquarters draws atten tion to the dates for calling the next two quotas of 30 per cent, each of the total number of men drafted, Septem ber 19 and October 3. The district boards are asked to be careful to draft men In the regular order as they ap pear on the lists, so that men drawn late shall not get Into the service be fore men whose names were drawn earlier. Asked to Fix Urban Roads. The first application to the State Highway Department for construction of State highways through boroughB to whose borders such roads extend was made at the capltol by a delega tion from Susquehanna county, which asked that the department Improve the highways In Montrose and New Milford. These towns are about nine miles apart, and on the main highway from Scranton to Binghamton. . The delegation Included Judge H. A. Denny, Senator E. E. Jones, Represen tative Allen D. Miller and the county commissioners. They stated that New Milford had voted the money to co operate for its share. The State will make a Burvey at once. Only Barefooted Recruit. Barefooted and wearing only over alls, blue Bhlrt, sweater and cap, Mil ton Chreimer, a Lancaster county farm hand, hiked 16 miles over the mountains to Lebanon to enlist in the United States army. Chreimer was pronounced by the xamining surgeon to "be eligible, but there was a question as to his being 18 years old. He proved his age, and asked to be assigned to the field artillery Ber vice, to be near horses, of which he Is particularly fond. Pneumonia Most Fatal. The following is a statement of the principal causes of 10,473 deatliB in Pennsylvania In May, as report ed by the Bureau of Vital Statis tics: Pneumonia, 1401; Brlght's disease and nephritis, 979; early -infancy, J550; tuberculosis, 198; cancer, 880; tuberculosis of other organs, 198; can cer, 583; accidents In mines, 75; rail way Injuries, 110; other forms of vio lence, C58. The number of births In May was 31,205 t i m 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 r j 1 1 1 1 1 ! 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 j 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 r 1 1 1 : 1 1 5 1 PENNSYLVANIA I BRIEFS aiiiiimiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiummMiiiiiir. For the first time In the history of the Lehigh Valley Railroad In Shcnun doah and section, four young women, Misses Delia Shucavage, Anna Slnkca- vage, Belle Kowoskl and Jcanette Can cosky, 17 to 19 years old, were em ployed as section hands, and were put cleaning up about the local station and tracks for a beginning. Products from "war gardens" are to have a place In a number of county fairs and agricultural exhibitions of the State this late summer and fall i Premiums In fairs this year are greater I than ever 'before. raised a two-pound two-ounce potato. .Forty raspberries, each three-quar ters of an Inch In diameter, were picked from a foot-long end of a bush by Dr. G. A. Rudy at Summerdaie. To meet shortages In teachers In some rural districts in the State schools are consolidating, and auto trucks will take most distant pupils to school. ' while Norristown pays 50 cents a hundred, for lco, It may be purchased at Green Lane ice houses, only twenty miles-away, for 10 cents a hundred retail. The 'war has caused a shortage of male teachers In Lancaster county, many having enlisted. In several dis tricts the directors have been unable as yet to get such teachers. Clarence' Baskes, the young man of Fern Glen, who shot his wife In the breast and badly wounded her at the close of a Sunday school picnic at Rock Glen, Is dead at the State Hos pital from self-inflicted Injuries. Jeal ousy Is ascribed as the cause. The prosperity of farmers In the Hazleton region was shown when the commissioners of Butler township de cided not to levy any poor tax for the current year and the School Board cut down the school millage from 10 to 8. The Anthracite Forestry 'Protective Association, composed of the coal, tim ber, water and land . companies of northeastern Pennsylvania, will build three fire towers In the Hazleton dis trict' at once between Hazleton and Pottsville, Hudsondale and N'esqueho ning and on the mountain lying be tween Wilkes-Barre and Hazleton Miss Mabel Krall, of Harrisburg, has accepted the position of secretary of Danville's fine new Y. W. C. A., made possible through the generosity of Mrs. Abigail Gelainger. Three families were made homeless by a fire which destroyed a century old famehouse owned by Frank Qulgg at Port Kennedy. Roy Hawkins asks $1,000 and Elmer Whitman 500 In a suit against George B. Bortz, of Temple, the former for a broken r!,b and the laiter a broken fcot, sustained In a collision between an auto and the plaintiff's motorcycle. Boy Scouts encamped at Green Lane unearthed wireless apparatus, and a search Is being made for spies. The Eagle Silk Company will Install nineteen additional looms In Its I'hoe nixville plant, making thu total 115. The Berks P-d Cross expects Its members to knit 4,500 each of sweat ers, mufflers, socks and wristlets. The Berks County Public Safety Committee will arrange that all the potatoes raised in Berks county shall be stored within the county limits, for consumption by Reading and Berks county people. The historical relics of Governor Pennypacker have bcec removed from his late heme at Schwenkvllle to Phil adelphia, to be sold at auction. John M. Groves has resigned from Norristown High School faculty to act as chemist at a Conshohocken indus try. William Car was elected to suc ceed him at a salary of $1,200. The Heine Boiler Cpmpany, of PhoenlxvIIle, will construct a two-Btory clubhouse, with all conveniences, for fifty new employees who are unable to secure lodging and board in that town. The Stafe Highway Department notified the Franklin County Commis sioners that the State had taken or would take over the highway from Fulton county through Mercersburg and Greencastle to Waynesboro, 32 miles, now a toll road. Steps were taken to organize a Chamber of Commerce for the new city of Bethlehem, which will have at least 800 members. A campaign to this effect will take place In Sep tember similar to the one which raised $1,000,000 for the nilltohill bridge. The Pressed Steel Car Company, Pittsburgh, is employing efficient women for its heaviest work. As both William and John Mlnnlch, Hazleton brothers, could not be ex empted from draft to care for their widowed mother, William, the younger, goes to the army. Parents of John Dellaven, of West Conshohocken, who ran away, have learned that he Is In France, having enlisted in the United States Marine Corps. The Mt. Penn Fire Company has netted $401 from a festival. The State Department of Forestry has given' twenty-five of Its foresters and wardens, or one-third of Its force, to the United States Army.- John H. O'Neil lias resigned as a letter carrier in Norristown, after twenty-seven years' service. He has become assistant superintendent of an industrial plant. Harry Wender and Albert Steuffert, of Philadelphia, are In Norristown Jail, charged with the theft of 400 pounds of wire from the Bell Telephone Com pany. Crlsman & Quillman were awarded the contract for wiring Montgomery County Almshouse property, that elec tricity may supplant gas, for $1,303. Finding it required more of their time than they could give, the High way Committee of Conshohocken Council refused to continue the grad ing of Tllrd avenue and has asked for bids. An ambulance truck from Allentown, en route to Betzwood to figure In a sham "movie" battle, was damaged at Norristown when It struck a Reading Railway locomotive at a grade crossing- , PRESIDENT SETS Federal Government Cuts Into Profits of Jobbers. ALSO NAMES ADMINISTRATOR Next Step Wilt Be Regulations For Distribution and To Fix Anthra cite and Bituminous Re tail Prices. Washington. Government control of the coal Industry was made almost complete, when President Wilson named Dr. H. A. Garfield, president of Williams College, fuel administrator, fixed anthracite prices for producers and jobbers and set a limit on profits to be made by bituminous wholesaler. The next and final step will be to make regulations for coal distribution and to fix anthracite und bituminous retail prices. This will be done whi-n a distribution program is perfected and when the Federal Trade Commis sion ban completed a plan under which retail profits may be fixed. , The anthracite prices fixed effective Sep'ember 1 are virtually the same as those now charged at the mines under a voluntary arrangement made by the producers with the Trade Commission. The prices that may be charged by Jobbers, however, will reduce present costs shari'ly. Bituminous Jobbers' profits, too, will be cut by the new price scale et for wholesale trans actions. ' The Scale. The anthracite scale for railroad owned mines, which include practical ly all the big producers, follow: White Ash Broken, $4.55; egg, $4.45; stove, $4.70; chestnut, $4.S0; pea, $4. Red Ash Broken, $4.75; egg. $4.65; stove, $4.90; chestnut, $4.90; pea, $4.10. Lyken.'i Valley Broken, $5; egg, $1.90; stoves, $5.:;0; chestnut, $5.30; pea, $4.35. Other producers may charge an ad vance of 75 cents a ton of 2.240 pounds over the figures set for the railroad owned mines. Those who Incur the expense of rescreening It at Atlantic or Lake ports may add an ndditicnul five cents, a ton. Anthracite Jobbers delivering coal at Buffalo and points east of that city will be allowed a maximum profit of 20 cents a ton of 2,240 pounds, and those delivering it west of Buffalo may charge nn excess of 30 cents. The combined gross profits of any number of Jobbers handling a shipment must not exceed the limit of profit set for a Blngle Jobber, except that a screening charge of five cents may be made on water shipments at Atlantic or Lake ports. Bituminous profits for jobbers are fixed at 15 cents a ton of 2,000 pounds and the parr.e restrictions that govern dealings by a number of anthracite Jobbers apply to bituminous trans actions. Restrains Railroads. The President's order forbids rail road-owned mines from selling to other mines and prohibits dealers from selling coal produced by railroad-own ed mines on a basis of prices fixed for other mines. The bituminous Jobbers' prices be comes effective Immediately, us did bituminous mine prices. The coal administration will be or ganized as soon as Dr. Garfield has completed his work of recommending to the food administration a govern ment price for the 1917 wheat crop. Dr. Garfield's price-fixing committee, will be ready to announce a price within a few days. T. R. ENTERTAINS BELGIANS. Colonel Tells War Mission His Views On Peace Terms. New York. Members of the Belgian war mission were entertained by Col. Theodore Roosevelt at his home at Oyster Bay. In a short address to the Visitors the Colonel declared the great est menace to civilization at this time was "talk of an inconclusive pence." "We must have a peace that la Just, and no peace will be Just which does not give to Belgium a heavy In demnity," Colonel Roosevelt said. "No peace will be Just that does not estab lish a great Bohemia and a great Slav commonwealth In Austria, and which does not join the Roumanian and Itallan-Austrlans to their Roumanian and Italian brothers. Such a peace must force the Turk from Constanti nople and free the Armenians." ' 1 62,690 ASK EXEMPTION. Young Men Of New York Apparently ' Not Eager To Fight New York. The first official figures of the draft In New York city, which do not Include 21 of the 189 exemp tion boards, show that 122,257 young men have been examined and that of Jhis number 82,494 have been declared physically qualified, of whom 62,690 Claimed exemption. Roscoe Conklin.?. Demitv Attorney General In charge of the draft here, Bald it is estimated that but 8,374 men were needed to ccinplete the q-iOta for the city of 38,6.11. Fifty-six boards have filled their quotas. LEAVES "PENNSY" FOR FRANCE. W. W. Atterburr, Vice-President Of Road, Gets Leave Of Absence. Philadelphia.-Vice-President W. W. Atterburv. of the Pennsylvania Rail road, was granted leave of absence. It Is understood that he will go to France to assist In the construction and opera tion of railroad lines there for the transportation of troops, munitions and supplies. Elisha Lee, geAeral manager, baB been appointed acting rl coresident. THE FRIENDLY ENEMY LWrorNrTDHoA4 f HALT (Copyright.), SECOND DRAFT LOjGIf OFF No Facilities For Training Sec orfd Army Until Spring. ALL CAMPS WILL BE FILLED Provoct Marshal General Crowder Says That Question Has Not Even Been Given Con sideration. Washington. A full statistical re port on the operations of the draft law will be prepared by the Provost Mar shal General's ofliee as soon s the mobilization of the first increment of 0S7.00O men'of the National Army has been completed some time early in Oc tober. Pending the preparation of tho re port and careful analysis of tho con ditions it discloses, no steps toward calling a second increment to the col ors will be taken. General Crowder said that the call for tlie second increment never had been considered at any conferehce at which he was' present and that he had no indication that it had been taken up in any way by President' Wilson or Secretary Baker. Next Call In Spring. The first Increment will fill all the training areas 16 National Guard camps and 16 National Army canton ments to capacity, and there will be a surplus of men besido those assigned to the regular army. The regulars are now 12.000 above full authorized war sti.ength by voluntary enlistment and the National Guard is in a similar situation. Training facilities already are taxed to ninke ready for the front nun now available and Jt in regarded as very, unlikely that organization of an addi tional 5u0,(.00 men of the National Army can be bercun until the early i spring of 1918. Neither quarters nor personnel to train the force will be available before that time. May Amend Regulations. Iniquities of an unavoidable nature will be shown in the statistical report. There probably will be some amended regulations based on actual experience with til-.; first increment, and some amemlments in the law may be thought desirable by Congress. It is possible that some provision will be made whereby all the sons of one family will not be taken. A new definition of the status of married men may be one of the things acted upon. President Wilson's recent letter to Senator Weeks Is taken by many to Indicate a feeling that a more liberal policy may be found desirable. At present, under regulations, a condition of actual dependency must be estab lished to obtain exemption. The con dition of marriage In Itself is not con sidered. Another matter to be worked out is the status of aliens. Still another Is the status of men who have passed beyond draft age since being drafted and that of those who have become of draft age in the meantime. NEGRO TROOPS IN RIOT. 24th Infantry Mutiny and Kill Twelve White Men. Houston, Texas. Twelve white men, civilians, police officers and national guardsmen, were killed and more than a score of persons, men, women and children, were wounded in an outbreak here of negro soldiers of the Twenty fourth United States Infantry, sta tioned here to act as guards during the construction of the camp where the Illinois troops will train. It is not known how many negroes are dead. ZEEBRUGGE BOMBED. Vicinity Of Submarines Raided By British Airmen. London. The Important submarine base of Zecbrugge and other military objectives In Belgium were attacked by British airmen, the Admiralty an nounces. Some hits were obtained. RULES DRAFT LAW IS VALID. And "Tom" Watson Gets Setback In His Defense Of Negro. Mount Airy, Ga. Federal District Judge Speer held the Selective Draft law constitutional In a decision here in the case of Albert Jones, a negro, represented by Thomas' E. Watson. Watson contended that the law is a contravention of the Involuntary Bervl tuue provision of the Constitution. The co-operative warehouse Is gain ing In popularity in the South. OF FIXED' BY Will Affect Public as Well as the Government. TABLE SUBJECT TO CHANGE Range Frpm $2 To $3.25 For Run Of Mine and From $2.15 To $3.50 For Prepared Sizes To $1.75 To $3 For Slack Or Screenings. Washington. President Wilson an nounced provisional prices for bi tuminous coal at the mine While it is said that the prices are "not only fair and just, but liberal as well," it was declared by men In close touch with the coal situation that the figures would prove a severe blow to the producers. The prices are fixed ty States, and range from $2 to $3.25 for jun of mine, and $2.15 to $3.50 for prepared sizes to $1.75 to $3 for slack or screenings. These prices will affect the public as well as the government, although machinery through which costs piling up through middlemen may be cut down, has not yet been r-elccted. This will be the next step taken by the executive. . Provisional Only. The oflicial announcement from the White House follows: "The following scales of prices is prescribed for bituminous coal at the mine in the several coal-producing dis tricts. It is provisional only. It is subject to reconsideration when the whole method of administering the fuel supplies of the country shall hava been satisfactorily organized and put Into operation. Subsequent measures will have as their object a fair and equitable control of the distribution of the supplies nnd of the prices not only at tjie mines, but also in the hands of the middle men nnd the retailers. "The prices provisionally fixed here are fixed by my authority under the provisions of the recent act of Con gress regarding administration of the food supply of the country which also conferred upon the executive control of the fuel supply. They are based upon the actual cost of production and are deemed to be not only fair and just, but liberal as well. Under them the industry should nowhere lack stimulation. MOVIE IDOL MUST FIGHT. Bryant Washburn Refused Exemption Because Of Family. Chicago. Bryant Washburn, a widely known motion picture actor, must serve in the national army, Major B. M. Chipperfield, representing the Provost Marshal General, ruled. Wash burn, who had. passed the physical ex amination, claimed exemption on the ground that he had a wife and child dependent upon him. Secret Service agents learned, Major Chipperfield culil that Wnshburn had a bank ac-4 count of $5,500 and that his wife, who was Mabel Forrest, an actress, had ap peared In pictures before and after the birth of their child. GERMAN SPY NABBED. One Of Fourteen Working Here For the Kaiser. . Richmond, Va. William F. Nain, 36 years old, arrested In Louisa Sunday as a suspicious character and rearrest ed Monday, charged with being a Ger man spy, told the police he was one of 14 spies working in the United States at the direction of the German govern ment. GERARD UNDER GUARD. Former Ambassador To Berlin Gets Threatening Letters. Chicago. Two detectives are guard ing James W. Gerard, former ambas sador to Berlin. He has' received many anonymous letters showing deep feeling held against him by persons whose sympathies are with Germany. MOBILIZATION TO BE DELAYED. Dates Changed For Second "and Third Increments Of Draft. Washington. Mobilization of the second Increment of draft troops was changed from September 15 to 19 and the third increment from September 30 to October 3. Mobilization of the first increment will be as previously an nounced, September 5. The postpone ments are said to be due to delays In the local boards In getting their quotas ready for service. WISH I Advance Made on Front of More Than Eleven Miles. ' GERMANS QUIT TAL0U RIDEG Drive Forward More Than Mile. Prisoners Number Over Four Thoueand Aviators Help In Victory. Paris. A smashing French victory on the Verdun front la recorded In a late official report Issued by the War Office. The French have captured the enemy defenses orl both sides of the Meuse over a front of more than 11 miles, penetrating the German line at divers points to a depth of a mile and a quarter. More than 4,000 un wounded German prisoners have been taken. , 4,000 Prisoners Gathered In. The text of the statement reads: "On the front north of Verdun our troops captured on both sides of the Meuse enemy defenses on a front of 18 kilometres and to a depth which ex ceeded two kilometres at certain points. On the left bank of the river we hold in particular the Avocourt wood, the two summits of Le Mort Homme, Corbeauf wood and Cumleres. On the right bank we have occupied Talou Ridge, Champ, Cbampneuvllle, Hill 344, Mormont farm and Hill 240, north of Louvemont. "On the right our troops have ad vanced considerably In the Bols des Fosse and the Bols de Chaume. "The number of unwounded prison ers taken Is more than 4,000. Foe Strikes Back In Vain. "The Germans' carried out violent counter-attacks in the Avoucourt wood and against Le Mort Homme and Hill 344, but our fire everywhere broke down their efforts and inflicted heavy losses. Our aviators took a brilliant part in the battle, turning their ma chine guns at a low height against enemy concentrations and contributing also to the repulse of counter-attacks. "Our pilots brought down 11 Gorman airplanes on the battle front, while two other enemy machines were brought down by our special guns." Objectives In 80 Minute3. The Temps says that in one hour and 20 minutes after the French Infantry advanced to the attack at Verdun the first objective had been attained and German prisoners were going to the rear. Talou Ridge "Abandoned." Berlin. The War Office announces that the French, without lighting, have occupied Talou Ridge on the Verdun front east of the Meuse. The German high command says that Talou ridge was given up by the Teutons because this line of defense since last March had only been occu pied by outposts. GIVES GUARDSMEN MORE PAY. Comptroller Of Treasury Rules On Status In Federal Service. Washington. Officers and men of the National Guard, the Comptroller of the Treasury ruled, Ire entitled to pay in the Federal service at the rate of their service in the guard. A third enlistment man in the guard, for in stance, is entitled to third enlistment pay from the Government. Thousands of officers and men will by this ruling receive more pay than they expected. BRITISH CASUALTIES 14,243. Nearly Three Thousand Killed During Past Week. London. British casualties reported in the week Just ending total 14,243 officers and men. Of this number 2,873 soldiers lost their lives. The detailed figures follow: Killed anil died of wounds, officers, 325; men, 2,548: total, 2,873. Wounded and missing, officers, 846; men, 10,524; total, 11,370. Total casualties, 14,243. GERMAN EDITOR JAILED. Interned For Publishing Article En couraging Violation Of Draft. Little Rock, Ark. Curtis Acker mann, editor and. proprietor of a Ger man language paper published here, was Interned In the county jail here at the direction of United States At torney Genereal Gregory. RECOMMENDS IMPEACHMENT. Governor F-i mon To Be Presented To Texas Senate. Austin, Texas. The House In com mittee of the whole reported a recom mendation that a bill of impeachment against Governor James E. Ferguson be presented to the Senate. The vote was 81 to 52. WAR COMMISSION ENDS. One From Belgium Has Completed Duties In This Country. New York. The Belgian War Com mission officially has come to an end. Baron Moncheur, head of the mission, announces that a few days will be spent in New York In an unofficial capacity 6,627 BRITISH SAILORS LOST. This Number Does Not Include Men In Government Service. London. Since the outbreak of the war 6,627 officers and men of the Brit ish mercantile marine, exclusive of those in the pay of the Admiralty, have lost their lives, according to a state ment made in the House of Commons this afternoon by Sir Albeirt Stanley, president of the Board of Trade. Negroes in the United States have a taxable -wealth of about $500,000,000. FRENCH Of VERDUN FRONT BILLION 1015 fif SHIPPINGJL S. M Many Ships Planned &w Those Commandeered, TOTAL COST . $2, Nearly Eight Million Toni Of can Shipping Propo.ed In Ad 10 nearly iwa Million N0w . Building In Yardi. Washington. The mt,tn shipbuilding program calls for.!!' of 1,270 ships of 7;h.ooo toniJ , was revealed in estimates the shiT, Board haB sent to Secretary s:cu on which to base a request for. $1,000,000,000 appropriation. i This Is in addition to nearly j J 000 tons of shipping now buildlat American yards, which nan been J mandeered by the Emergency p Corporation. A large part of ih(!. ernment fleet and of the comnm! ed fleet will have been cotnpletce the end of the fiscal year, m 1918. Building, commanderim purchases of vessels will t0:a z,uuu,uuu,ouu. SENDING MAIL TO SOLCIESl now ueiiers i-or trie Boy n th U tional Army Camps Should Be Addressed. Washington, Au'. 2:!. Before It-- several thousand young mmnj- In the various cantonment can,; -the National army, and tln-lr ri!i' and other friends will wih lor. to them. In order to expedite ;h, . livery of their mail and cue tin-'. the best service possible, tlie w olllcinis instruct their cone.-ioiVi If they know In advance the mv. and regiment to which t!u ..!; assigned, to addn-- ;nall mtnit:.: this sample: PRIVATE JOHN JONES, A Company, First Infant:, ("amp (indue, Ioti If the company and r-K:nn-si : I known, the mail should be jlte-. thus: PRIVATE JOHN JONES, of MiMe-tfi, Camp l'iiil;.e. Ion When all troops jip nrsaniwT: mail for each man will ( di!r,t:- direct to his company and refis- Until then it will be d iiu-n-d tl:o.. his t-tate section. FRENCH TAKE FAMOUS HILL I With Brilliant Dash They C;r-j ll Storm inportint Strorjhcll Grand Headtpianeis of die F.v Army. Hill 3M, th" tost nzv.-A lmpoitant stronghold of t!ieG;l fronting Verdun, ti ll ir.t-i I hands. The Frene.i .nfrntrj, t;i almost encircled tin; hill in fr attacks, charged the Herman pS- In a brilliant dash and carried :i: storm, capturing the remainder o!: Germans entrt -nclu'd tln-re. . Not content villi tlii? achievement, the 1-Vndi advatJ further 2,000 yards and made p sion of tho hill doubly ffurf. I 304, together with I.eMort Hrc: commands all the ravines tad - proaches as far rs Pouaniont Tl loss of these positions difrvet- Germans of all observatories fr j which they could watch tlie T' movements. THE ITALIANS PRESS F0RWA!: Capture Sixty Gun and Send &j From Front 20,000 Prisoner Rome. Tlie War Cilice repo"!"Jl . ... . ..... (nil! f;l ine Dame on me - tinues and that about t,u FJ"'"' hn rnTitlll-pd. Ceneral Cadorna aanounrMtWi Italians stormed new Autr:aa r tions, broke up violent tanlfC mil.lB hv the t ncW a""' l.riro nnmher of Austrol!--?l'll prisoners. uuice siKienit-iu . - , moved from the Austro-Italitf l by the Italians. STOLEN STATUARY F0U1 U. S. Secret Service Me" "t! Head Of Hyjeia. i tercet Washington. i lie recovered a famous pl,(,(,,,i statuary, "the head of H.11 ; " , lant December from the "' . Tegeft, Greece. Mr. ourus ; r the Creek legation here, I months ago sought .J United States in tracing ,J the statue, was notiftwl that , been found In the ro an in New yorK una over to him for Oturn i" SUFFRAGE PICKETS ail an Give o a m J PnHina ucl Motion For NevTn The six wo""?. Kanncr.hoororH nrrCSteO I" , -jl """"" tmeffl " A White House were , police court to pay Him ' f orvo an rt;,v In Jail. J" '..wH ' .'..,.. nil bonds pending acu- a new. trial. GOV. FERGUSON REM . jI . ....on"' I Suspended Pending Act""' Of impw - rrifr Austin, Texas..' . -aa ernm the on-' ..p; W H H . mix IltrilUHTVl . .ir f T, when theW munntrpra named by the H011 u' .ml to " ,A resentatives piesrw- yr 51 - rutins of imneacliai"- official misconduct. ,lci,r lieutenant governor, a"" f ceeded to the governor , ii HiiiiniLiuu Senate.