Ctfr THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURO, PA. pictures for Readers Ifl 1 wM. - in ij i con wounxy aria bisownoro May journey Around tho World With the Camera on the Trail of History Making Happenings. EXPLODING GERMAN SEA MINES IN PALESTINE l-Mi'tubcrs of tin' Belgian mission to the United Stu.es reviewing the cadets ut the Military academy at West ., view In Trieste, the Austrian city menaced ly the Italian advance. .'J Mrs. William Leonard Davis of i Turk who has formed on Amerlean Godmothers' Leag'to for American Soldiers on lines similar to those of Hrltl.sh ;FMi''h organizations. CORRECTING CLOCKS OF THE NATION WHEN THEIR BOY LEAVES i ft': 1 fK t'f'jltyjffi'i$wtyr' ill $ sfe J HI ' - -l V- a Af- ,1,(1 'f; 1 , 3 , 1 t ! I 4 '?.i When sons ami brothers leave for the front It Is hut to lie expected that mothers nnd sisters will feel downcast and sorrowful. A lump will rise In the throat of even the strongest, and tears well up into eyes that Mink hard to keep them hack. This mother who has Just seen her sun pass hy on the road that will take him to France, Is striiKKllug steadfastly hut unsuccessful ly to keep the sulis that are forchiK their way to expression. Her daugh ter hesldo her is made of sterner stuff. She Is sad, the expression on her face shows that, but Is keeping hack the sobs ami the tears. f- ? ' ;: ' & & WA 1 Many CJerinan sea mines have been fouml along the coast of I'alestlne, ami the Australian soldiers there have grent sport exploding them after partly burying them In sand. ONE OF GERMANY'S SUBMARINE BASES L r .- 4 A view of the mouth of the Klhe river at C'uxhaven, the (ierman submarine base. I I it I - l X' AMERICAN KITE BALLOON I 4 -i i r-"fCi VI I "PRIVATE HARRY" MlKcrviitiims of the man who is giuslng through this six-Inch transit , CLv -J,nt In t. ThIumI States naval observutory at Washington correct the1 ,f1f-V'" V : jfJ!nSj F 1 "tlie lutlloii. Nearly every night the passage of known stars across i Jr''j -il ' I "t.liim Is observed. From the mean of a number of such observations 'B? jrCUWv ySSA i 7"f'if the standard clock Is calculated and the docks are regulated to li l&L0Z$r y i I tr 1; GERMANS TAKEN FROM ELLIS ISLAND . kM !,l -Fi tVv. 1 ( -I r4 iib"'-": ' -I 9 ft :, fa "-i- -3 I'.. !.:' - A ,Lrii))ii'ir"-.il . '!' Q'T. m Jlf " SM-agna, iiiiiiiiiniiim n i;aap ; FRENCH WOMAN HIGHLY HONORED An American kite balloon nnd Its hangar at the army balloon school at Fort Omaha. JUDGED BY HER PERSONALITY int '" lib, til, ''rtiiaput nt Kills Island affords opportunities for securing In- ,lt outgoing ships In New York harbor, the Germans who have mrn ..... ,. .. . 1 mi.i ..t .. il. , p " iy uemg iransierreu. iins picture snows somo oi uie fimui.s being placed lu police patrols after being removed from SCRAPS ,r,pi Is noted for Its benutl- ""'t liiiown bird Is n Cen liuinialng bird that Is ki "'ue-i)ottlo tly. ' tl' snnKa nnve becn So I! nill"ns ,he Pp"l,le of 'otll Curolinn nnd Tennes- Ameriran nutomoblle busses hnve been put In operation with success nt Merlda,. Yucatan. I'luiis arc being made to clear vast tracts of lnnd In the Strnlts Settle ments for tho production of bananas. Th population of Imperial valley, California, Is now estimated nt 53,000. These, are new peoplo In California, nil having come In within the last fif teen years. Private Harry Windsor of the Kton Hoys Oflleers' Training corps (indi cated by X) Is here seen looking out of his tent. At the camp he Is known ns Harry, but around Buckingham palace nnd other resorts of royalty he Is addressed as "Your Majesty," for he Is Prince Henry, third son of King George of England. Private Harry Is suffering nil tho rigors of camp life nnd Is amenable to military discipline. His officers show him no favoritism. The Whole Thing. Young Arthur was wrestling with a lesson In grammar, "Father," said he, thoughtfully, "what part of speech Is woman?" "Woman, my boy, is not a pnrt of speech; she Is nil of It," returned fa Daily Thought And fearless minds climb soonest unto crowns. Shakespeare. Prudence the Better Weapon. You compter better by prudence than by passion. Physical Tests Are No Longer Em ployed in Making the Selection of a "Perfect Woman." The British perfect woman hns been discovered. She Is forty nnd the mother of Ave children. There are no statistics ns to height, weight or bust measurement. The physical features are not tho most important part, though they nre to be taken for grant ed from nn nrray of social nnd spirit ual qualities. Here is what ninKes her the perfect woman: She Is In happy circumstances, living in a benu tiful pnrt of the country, n few miles from n big town. She Is the center of n good home, In which there Is a standard of cleanliness nnd comfort nnd where good taste Is everywhere visible, In furniture, carpets, curtains, wall paper, ornaments nnd clothes. And then the description goes on to say : "Tho Ideal woman Is sensible nnd businesslike nnd her home Is a place of pence. She Is patriotic nnd Inter ested In politics. She takes walks, rides, bicycles, .climbs, dances, skates, rows nnd plnys games. She can ride a horse and drive a motorcar." Thus It Is the personality, not the person, that makes the perfect woman. One often sees where the grace nnd benuty brenk through the fashion nnd form nnd mnke even n plain person nt tractlve. The latest test of the per fect woman Is spiritual, not physical. Columbus (0.) Journul. Bad Language. "Tho kaiser is not much on spelling." "Yes; nnd when he uses the word 'kultur' he Is ns fur wrong on defini tion ns ho Is on spelling." vJS Mine. C'harlotto Maltre, wife of the deputy from the district of Saone-et-Lolre, has been made a chevalier of the Legion of Honor for her services ns a lied Cross nurse to the wounded on the Alsatian front Previously to this honor she had received the Croix de (iuerre with two citations for bravery. She also was awarded n gold medal for fighting epidemics and has received the Insignia of the wounded. This photograph shows Mine. Maltre transport ing a wounded soldi' r on a mule litter aided by n member of the Ited Cross, who Is lending he I. !!e. COALING BATTLESHIP AT SEA ft fx Ks&ab -A r VT! ix jimS: - : w frji An Interesting' picture showing the method of coaling a United States battleship at sen. Temperance motes (Conducted by tho National Womu'l Christian Temperance Union.) THE FOOD QUESTION. The paragraphs here given are from portions of an open letter to Premier Lloyd-George, written by Mr. Arthur Mee, leader In the "Strength of Urit oln" movement. The subject mutter la pertinent to any warring nation which permits the sale, tnauuf act tire. Impor tation or exportation of Intoxicants: "It Is only the food question thut trembles In the balance," days our minister of agriculture. "Once we de cide that In our favor peace will be nearer." Then what Infamous treach ery is it that turns this vital scale against us? We want D.fNMi.iMH) loaves a day, and brewers destroy l.'iO.OOO of them. If waste Is u crime, who Is the criminal here? "You stopped the Import of rum because we have enough to last for years, but a ship that might have brought In rilO,()()U loaves has just brought In 130,000 gallons of rum for 1920. "A ship from n great wheat country has lately arrived with space crammed with brewers' vats. "I5read costs life, you tell us; but you have allowed the brewers to Ira port, at the risk of life, grnln for H'i.OOO loaves eery day since you camo into power to destroy It for beer, and export the beer at the risk of life. "It Is not safe to Imperil the health of our poor, while brewers grow rich by destroying bread. It Is not safo to let poor people wait In queues for sugar while cartloads pour Into brewers' destructors. You think It Is not snfe to deal with drink; but Is It safe to fool with food? "You talk of the workman, but have you asked him to give up his beer that wo may have more to cat? Too have not. You asked for his son and he gave him, and he will give you his beer If you nsk. Our workmen ara not Germans that they should drink us Into famine, but they go on because they think you will say the word, as you have always done, when the vital moment comes." BIG WAR PROBLEM. "I have found In my forty-two years experience with young men In the army camps that booze Is responsible for H3 per cent of nil the trouble they get Into." Thus Hpake Col. W. J. Nich olson, commandant at Fort Sheridan, III. "When a young fellow with $15 In bis pocket comes lnid a city for tho Ilrst time ho thinks he has to blow It In to be a man. And when he gets three or four drinks his whole view point changes. My business Is train ing men for the United Stutes nrmy, ami In all the time I have been en gaged In this work I have known of. very few cases where liquor did not play an important part In causing the misdeeds for which men nre disci plined. A soldier who gets drunk Is only 40 per cent efficient nnd men of that type nre not the ones this coun try Is looking for to defend It." FOR SOCIAL SAFETY. It Is, ns I conceive It, tho duty of health departments to teach, tench, teach, persuade, demonstrate, exhibit, exhort, prove that ulcohol ns a bever age or In patent medicines Is a men uce to personal nnd community health, is n common source of sickness and death. Is blocking the path of preven tive medicine and Is a menace to the physical and social development of tho nation. lr. Haven Emerson, New Yuri; City. Health Commissioner. The recent claims that lecithin, or "nerve fat," has been discovered In beer Is Interesting, If true. If It has despite all the painstaking negntlve analyses of tunny generations of chem ists It Is quite safe to estimate that the total amount contained In four car loads of beer might approximate the quantity concealed about the person of oue vigorous fresh egg, which would give it a nutritional value almost as high us that of the hole In n doughnut Dr. Edwin F. Bowers. THINK IT OVER. W. D. Haywood, general secretary treasurer of tho I. W. W. In an In terview In the Chicago Tribune said that tho strikers In the lumber camps In the states of .Washington, Idaho, Montana nnd Oregon nnd In British Columbia hnd made a record that he wanted the people to think nbout. We quote him: "We have nbout the rlghest, most) uncouth crowd In the world In these lumber camps that Is what our ene mies sny nbout us, anyway. But I want to call your attention to the records : Not a single ense of drunk enness hns been reported from the L W. W. strike zones among the lumber jacks In our movement. Think that over." Washington, Idaho, Montnnn, Ore gon and British Columbia nre all dry. CONSTITUTIONAL PROHIBITION. Constitutional prohibition for the nntlon fur from conferring upon the federal government new powers will take from the federal government power which It now has the power to tax liquor. And It strengthens the po lice powers of the stntes to deal with Internal affnlrs by adding to them the active support of the federal govern ment. From being the milliner of state laws, the federal governmen will become their supporter and a poslthre assistant In their enforcement Dan iel Poling. PUT3 ALL ON SAME LEVEL. A license law Is renlly a prohibition law. It prohibits the sale of Intoxl ennts hy everybody not holding n li cense. Nation-wide prohibition simply denies rheso special privileges to the few nnd puts all citizens on the same level. MUST GIVE UP BEER. Prof. Itudolph Eucken, the great German philosopher, declares that his country must give up beer, which "breeds the wretched type of beer-Phil-Istlne with which everyone Is familiar.'