fHE FULTON COUNTY NEWS. McCONNELLSBURO. Pa. ALL DRAFT MEN MUST ANSWER Will Be 2,000,003 Men in the First Class NEW RECRUITS EVERY YEAR Congress Expected To Provide For Tcklng In All Young Men As They Attain The Age Of 21. Washington. Beat available esti mates Indicate that the first of the five classes into which all army draft registrants are to be divided will con tain more than 2,000,000 men, subject for duty with the colors berore any man In any other class will be called OP. The five classes Into which the 9, 000,000 men registered and those who ere registered hereafter are divided and the order in which they will be called for service was officially an nounced In the Provost Marshal-General's questional, which every reg istered man must fill out and file. It does not exempt married men as a class, but It does place married men with dependent wives and children far down on the list of llables. In fact, the queotlqnalre Indicates that only men of the first claes will be called to the colors, except In the gravest emergency. The 148 questions, many or all of which the registrants must answer, constitute a searching Inquiry Into each man's life and fitness for service, and. If he claims exemption he must show why In minute detail. Failure to answer within seven days after a man receives the questions renders blm liable to a year In prison. It Is regarded as' practically certain that Congress will take up the ques tion of extending the draft law to cover men who have attained the age of 21 since it was enacted. Should that be done and provision made for the registration thereafter of every man as he reached that age, It is probable that perhaps 600,000 would be added to Class 1 automatically by next March. In. that event no pres ent plans for the army would reach the men In Class 2. Officials have already considered the possibility that Congress will decide to take In these additional young men. Some fair system by which they may be registered, classified and assigned to places will be devised. New reg ulations to be published shortly prob ably will set a way In which this can be done. New regulations governing pass ports for registered men become ef fective November 20. After that date the nearest local board may issue passport permits without reference to district boards as Is now required. Passports are not necessary to enter Canada. Following are the classes In the (tr ier In which they are liable to the call: Class 1. Single man without dependent rela tives. Married roan, with or without chil dren, or father or motherless children, who has habitually failed to support bis family. Married man dependent on wife for support. Married man, with or without chil dren, or father of motherless children; ' man not usefully engaged, family sup ported by income independent of his labor. Unskilled farm laborer. Unskilled Industrial laborer. Registrant by or in respect of wr.om no deferred classification is clalrred or made. Registrant who falls to submit qus tlonalre and In respect of whom ho deferred classification is claimed or made. All registrants not included In arty Other division In this schedule. Class 2. Married man, with children, or fath er or motherless children, where such wife or children or such motherless children are not mainly dependent upon his labor for support for the rea son that there are other reasonably certain sources of adequate support (excluding earnings or possible earn ings from the labor of the wife) avail able, and that the removal of the reg istrant will not deprive such depend ents of support. Married man, without children, whose wife, although the registrant Is engaged In a useful occupation, Is not mainly dependent upon his labor for support, for the reason that the wife Is skilled in some special class of work which she la physically able to perform and In which she Is employed, or in which there is an Immediate opening for her under condltloni that will enable her to support hersolf de cently and without Buffering or hard ship. Necessary skilled farm laborer irj necessary agricultural enterprise Necessary Bkllled Industrial laborer In necessary Industrial enterprise. Class 1 Van with dependent children (not bis own), but toward whom be stands In relation of parent JUNK DICTATOR NEXT? $1,800,000,000 Can Be Saved From 8crap Pile. Washington. The advisability of a national Junk dictator has been called to the attention or the Council of Na tional Defense. Conservative estl ' mates are that more than $1,500,000, 000 can be saved by reclamation of scrap Iron, scrip metals, woolen rags. Man with dependent sged or infirm parents, Man with dependent helpless broth ers or sisters. County or municipal officer. Highly trained flromen or poller man, at least three years in service of municipality. Necessary custom house clerk. Necessary employe of United States in transmission of the malls. Necessary artificer or workman in United States armory or arsenal. Necessary employe In service of Un'ted States. Necessary assistant, associate or hired manager of necessary agricul tural enterprise. Neceimry highly specialized techni cal or mechanical expert of necessary industrial enterprise. Necessary assistant of associate managor of necessary Industrial enter prise. . Class 4. Man whose wife or children are mainly dependent on his labor for sup port Mariner actually employed In sea service of citizen or merchant In the United States. Necessary sole managing, control ling or directing head of necessary agricultural enterprise. Necessary sole managing, control ling or directing head of necessary Industrial enterprise. Class S. Officers legislative, executive or Judicial of the United States or of State, Territory or pistrlct of Colum bia. Regular or duly ordained minister of religion. Student who on May 18, 1917, was preparing for ministry in resognlzed school. Persons In military or naval service of United States. Alien enemy. Resident alien (not an enemy who claims exemption.) Person totally and permanently phy sically or mentally unfit for military service. Person morally unfit to be a soldier of the United States. Licensed pilot actually employed In the pursuit of his vocation. Member of well-recognized religious sect or organization, organized and existing on May 18. 1917, whose then existing creed or principles forbid its members to participate In war in any form and whose religious convictions are against war or participation there in. SAMMIES GET REVENGE. American Troops Ambush Large Ger man Patrol. With The American Army in France. American Infantrymen exacted a part revenge for a trench raid during a recent night by ambushing a large German patrol in "No Man's Land," killing or wounding a number of the enemy. The American patrol, In which there were some Frenchmen, arranged the ambuscade near the Ger man lines on a shell-ruined farm. WALL CRUSHES FIRE CHIEF. Two Others Injured Fighting Blaze In Morgantown, W. Va. Morgantown, W. Va. One man was killed and two injured in a fire which virtually destroyed the Hlrschman Building on High street. Fire Chief James Kennedy was caught under a falling wall and killed. Policeman Clyde Vitt was struck by falling tim bers and Is In a serious condition at City Hospital. John Hare, City Street Commissioner, was cut and bruised. U-BOATS BEING CURBED. Britain Loses But 1 Large, S Smalt And 1 Fishing Vessel. London. Only one British merchant vessel of more than 1,600 tons was sunk by mine or submarine last week, according to the weekly statement of shipping losses. This la the low rec ord since Germany began her sub marine campaign. Five vessels of less than 1,600 tons and one fishing boat were sunk during the week. , THE COUNTRY AT LARGE A suggestion that the degree of Bachelor of Military Science be con ferred on men who have left college to enter war service rather than the regular college degree, Is made in a letter from President E. M. Hopkins, of Dartmouth College, ' to the Yule News. Texas coal operators have- been 'granted an Increase in the price of coal at the mine as a result of a con ference held between Wiley Blair, state fuel administrator and mine owner. Armed guards were thrown around the coal mines in the southern part of Jefferson county, Ohio, as the result of an I. W. W. outbreak. The annual convention of the Na tional Grange, Patrons of Husbandry, sent a telegram to President Wilson p'.edging support In the prosecution of the war. Enemy aliens are barred from the streets along New York's waterfront under orders posted by United States Marshal McCarthy. Five men were burned to death and two others seriously injured when fire destroyed the Phillips House, a hotel of Many, La. cotton rags, old rubber, paper stock, bags and bagging, cotton and wool waste, mattress fillings, bones, hair, scrap leather, bottles, broken glass and celluloid. Many of these articles can be remade Into needed implements to help win the war. The advisory committee of the De fence Council and the War Industries Board have considered the matter, "Winning the war means cutting out the waste," it was declared. Some scraps . contain items valuable anf sorely needed. , Stars and Stripes in Europe I SHELL HUE WELL Lieutenant Who Braved German Barrage Tell of Experience FINE FIGHTING SPIRIT SHOWN Mumps Played More Hob With Bat talion Than The German Sheila According To The Com- , mander. With the American Army In France. Aryerlcun troops are bearing up splendid under their first experience of being shelled by the enemy. This la the unanimous opinion of the offi cers of the second battalions entering the trenches. "That is one great thing this first trip to the front is teaching the men," said one battalion commander. "Of course, we have not had a lot of It only an' occasional dozen of high ex plosive and shrapnel but the men get so they don't mind it much more than they would the pelting rain drops of a hard shower. As a matter of fact, the mumps played more hob with my battalion than the German shells. y "Twelve men had to go to the hos pital on account of the mumps, but there was not a casualty from Ger man shells. The commander of the company at tacked by the Germans In their trench recently made similar statements, as well as the young lieutenant who sus tained a minor case of shell shock during the raid after making three brave attempts to penetrate the Ger man barrage to bring up reinforce ments. This lieutenant, who is now fully recovered, said that despite the vio lent cannonading of the German artillery on the night of the raid not one of his men was hit "It Is wonderful how many shells can break all around without hitting one," said he. "On the night of the raid it seemed as though the Ger mans were turning everything they had in the artillery line against our sector. I stepped from the dugout and ran down to the trenches under their barrage, but I had no sooner started than I was knocked down by the ex plosion of a projectile on the parapet Just behind me. The sensation was Just as though I had received a pow erful blow in the. back between my shoulders. I picked myself up and started on another route, but I had to go back. But this time another shell struck the parapet Just in front of me. It seemed as though I was surrounded by a huge ball of fire. I thought that sparks were spouting out of my shoulders and the tips of my fingers. "I started running and bumped Into a private whom I knew. We stood still a second and then I turned to make off in another direction. I had taken only one step when a shell burst right behind me, knocking me senseless. I couldn't have been out very log. I picked myself up and found my helmet missing. Then I started down the trench looking for It and stumbled over the body of the private I had been talking to only a few minutes before. He had been killed by a German raider while I was lying unconscious a few feet away from him." The commander of the company at tacked by the German raiders said that the attack had put a fine fight ing spirit into the men. In his words, it was "the best thing in the world for them." The following night the very same company that bad suffered the loss begged to go out on patrol duty. Tlie men said they wanted one more chance to get back at the Germans. LEGISLATOR INDICTED. Florida State SenatoY Accused Of Op-J posing Draft Pensacola, Fla. State Senator J. L. Sheppard, charged with opposing the Army draft law, was indicted by the Federal Grand Jury. ALL SET FOR THANKSGIVING. Huge Shipment Of Mincemeat And Turkeys Reaches France. American Headquarters In France. All set for Thanksgiving! A huge shipment of turkeys, mince meat and sweet potatoes for the Sam mies' dinner on I November 29 was received. The food Is sufficient to feed every man In the main training camp area. Other consignments along he snine lines are due In a few days for the scattered "iipeclalty camps" AMERICANS S AND THE PRESENT IS (MIC III President Tells Why a Teuton Peace Cannot Be Agreed to ADDRESS TO A. F. OF L Talk Warmly Applauded Demands Cessation Of Strife And Honest Support Of All Classes Tribute To Gompers. Buffalo, N. Y. President Wilson made a personal and eloquent appeal In this city for the full support of or ganized labor for the Government in the conduct of the war. Speaking before the thirty-seventh annual con vention of the American Federation of Labor, he declared the war could not be won unless all factions united In a common cause, sinking their differ ences. The President paid warm tribute to Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of 'Labor, and virtually called upon Federation to give him united support. He de nounced pacifists and critics. He ap pealed for co-operation. Discussing Germany, the President declared flatly that Germany had started the war and that he was will ing to await the verdict of history on that statement New Instrumentalities for better co operation between labor and capital was one statement by the President which was of prime Interest to the delegates to the convention. The President alluded to the pres ent war "as the last decisive issue between the old principles of power and the new principles of freedom." "I believe," he said, "that the spirit of freedom can get Into the hearts of Germans and find as fine a welcome there as It can find In any other hearts. But the spirit of freedom does not suit the plans of the Pan-Germans. Power cannot be used with concen trated force against free people if It is used by free people. "You know," he continued, "how many Intimations come to us from one of the Central Powers that it is more anxious for peace than the chief Central Power, and you know that it means that the people of that Cen tral Power know that if the war ends as it Btands they will in effect them selves be vassals of Germany, not withstanding that their populations are compounded of all the people of that part of the world, and notwith standing the fact that they do not wish in their pride and proper spirit of nationality to be absorbed and dominated." Referring in another part of his speech to Russia, the President said: "May I not say it is amazing to me that any group of people should be so Ill-informed as to suppose, as some groups in Rusla apparently sup pose, that any reforms planned in the interest of the people can live In the presence of a Germany powerful enough to undermine or overthrow them by Intrigue or force. Any body of free men that compounds with the German Government compounds for Its own destruction." NOW FLY UNDER U. S. FLAG. All American Aviators Fighting In France, Commissioned. American Field Headquarters, France. All American aviators now fighting in the French Army were formally commissioned officers in the United States army aviation service. The famous Lafayette Escadrllle of Americans was Included. Some of the new American flyers will continue temporarily with their present commands and under French direction until they are called upon for active service with the American expeditionary forces. A great many airmen, however, will join the Amer ican colors at once. The transfer of this big body of aerial fighters gives the United States a nucleus of veterans of the air which will be of Incalculable advantage when the American forces get into action. Trouble In Oil Fields. Houston, Texas. The first trouble of the oil field workers' strike was re posed Monday, seven strikebreakers In the Goose creek field having been attacked and beaten. Producers In the field have asked that martial law be declared. The production of fuel briquettes In the United States last year exceeded 295,000 tons and was the greatest on reco d, being an Increase of 33 per rent, from the vear before. IE IS TURNING IN ALL RUSSIA End of Bolshevik! Regime Is In Sight REVOLUTION IS DISSOLVING No Separate Peace la Now Expected Washington Officials Encour aged By The Turn Of , Events. Washington. The tide has turned In Russia. The fungus revolution against the provisional government la dissolving and, while II Is Tar too soon to determine what the future holds for that unhappy country, It Is not too soon to foresee the end of the Bol shevlkl regime. This la the substance of a aeries of rumors, reports and facts which have filtered through to the Government In Washington dur ing the past 24 hours. The dispatches bearing these tidings are coming from sundry sources, some of them from Moscow by way of Persia, some from Finland by way of Sweden and some through the censored lines of com munlcatlon out of Petrograd. Notwithstanding the fact, that these messages have originated at points far from euch other, they seem to agree upon the vital circumstances of the revolution. They differ some what as to details, which is to be expected, but they are In accord upon the more important phases of the sit uation. And It can be stated upon authority that a feeling of pronounced hopeful ness has been aroused In' official circles In Washington. This does not mean that the Administration has pro found confidence In the success of the Kerensky counter-drive or that it looks to any of the personalities now In the forefront of Russian affairs as that country's deliverer. But It does mean that the news is of a far more encouraging character than any that has been reported officially or unoffi cially to the State Department since the Maximalist coup last week. The general burden of the messages from Russia Is to the effect that no separate peace will be negotiated by Russia for a long time to come, If at all. In other words, no party can live for long In power there by advocating an immediate surrender to Germany. And as long as-no truce Is consented to by the Russians Germany dare not withdraw many more of her men from the eastern front. Advices from Ber lin Indicate, moreover, that no faith Is placed by Germany In the new out fit and no move has been made to deal with It. It Is regarded here as likely that the Germans have a more Inti mate line on the exact status of af fairs in Russia than any other nation. It remains to be seen If Kerensky can develop enough strength to re store the provisional gove,-nn'rnt swiftly or If It is necessary for Rus sia to go through the turmoil an! strife of a prolonged civil war before a stable government may be set up. RULES FOR ALL BAKERIES. Returns Forbidden And Weight re strictions to be Rigidly Enforced. Washington. Following the isnu- ance of the general orders licensing all bakeries, the food administration made public the rules and regulations under which bakeries will operate The most Important provide. Licensees must keep products mov ing to the consumer without delay, and resales designed to secure higher prices will be considered unfair. Licensees must not speculate in food products or attempt to create a monopoly In them. Destruction of bakery products is forbidden. All brend returns are prohibited. Weight restrictions must be rigidly observed. Sugar, milk and shortening must be used only according to the established regulations of the administration. Extension of the unwrapped plan of furnishing bread without delivery is to be encouraged. Wherever possible all necessary de liveries shall be reduced to one a day. U. S. FLYERS IN ACTION. Army Aviators Participate In Raids, Dropping Bombs. With the American Army in France. American army aviators have pa tlclpated in bombing raids over Gen many and have been doing observa tion duty ut various points of the bat tle line. The aviators are officers of the regular army, some of whom had been flying before the United States entered the war. Others ol them are men who have been on duty at training centres. RUSSIAN ARMY TO GET SHOES. United States Shows Faith In Repub lic By Ordering Many Pairs. Washington. Despite the chaos In Russia, the government showed itc faith in that nation by announcing awards for 2.000,000 pairs of shoei for the Russian Army. The money, about $6,000,000, will come from Amer lean government loans, HELPED GERMAN TO ESCAPE. Charleston Publisher Of German Pa per Is Convicted. Columbia, S. C Albert Orth, pub Usher of the Deutsche Zeitung, ol Charleston, S. C, was convlc'.ed l Federal Court here of aiding Oer map prisoner to escape from the Fee eral Penitentiary at Atlanta. ' Judgt Smith announced he would await th i nrrlng of four other charges In th- indictment against Orth before past Ins (sentence. WOULD DRAFT MEN FOR FARM WORK Bourse Says This Is Only Way to prevent Food Famine Next Year. BOYS CANNOT DO THE WORK Grown Men Nesded, but Munitions Plants Lure Them Away Farmert May Refuse to Plant Maxi mum Crops. Hofrlsburg. The Philadelphia bourse urges the conscription of farm and general la bor in its weekly statement. Unless the government takes drastic action before spring to Insure farmers a sta ble labor supply and particularly suf ficient hands for harvest, the bourse asserts, the food production of the country next year and especially that of this section will be far below that of this year. For the past six months the bourse has been co-operating with the Unit ed States employment service through the emergency farm labor clearing nouse established by the federal serv ice on the bourse floor, and 1U advo cacy of conscription is the result of a survey of the farm labor situation made by officials of the bourse. The statement says: "While organized labor may by voluntary efforts make conscription in the shipbuilding and other war in dustries unnecessary, it is certain that the government must take steps without delay for the conscription of (arm and general labor and Insure farmers and other producers a suffi cient supply of experienced hands for next year. We believe that unless the government acts' before spring farmers will refuse to plant the max imum acreage asked by the food ad ministration, i Laborers Lured From Farms. , "We have been advised by farmers of this section of the country who this year 'did their bits' in planting to capacity that they will not do so next spring without assurance from the government that they will be given sufficient labor for the harvest ing. Despite high wages and charges for fertilizer and other production factors, they are willing to plant maximum acreages again, but only with the guarantee that they will be given labor to harvest the crops. Too many planted heavily last spring and made heavy investments only to Bee their extra crops rot upon the ground In the summer and fall for lack of la bor. In the meantime the military draft and high wages offered by the shipbuilding, - munition and other plants and by the cantonment and other government contractors not only took away many of their work ers, but depleted the small surplus, so that they were unable to harvest crops In many instances. "This depletion of the farm labor supply Is continuing. Eleven men sent by the federal employment serv ice to a New Jersey, farmer last week were Immediately snatched from him for cantonment building, and these 11 were to replace skilled hands who had been drafted. This case is typical of many others. "Nearby Pennsylvania. New Jersey and Delaware are especially suffering because of the number of shipbuild ing, munition and other war plants and army cantonments near by and because the character of the farming In this region requires for the most part skilled farm hands. "Many of those workers whom the farmers are now obtaining' refuse to stay long in employment and leave after making a considerable sum by a few days' work. This aggravates the situation, as farmers frequently at tempt more on the strength of the employment of these additional men, upon whom they rely for the comple tion of the tasks concerned. Must Have Adult Labor. "The government must quickly per fect and put into operation a scheme whereby farmers will be assured that their skilled hands will not be draft ed for military service, whereby those now employed will be made to con tinue wages and living conditions, of course, being fair and proper In service and whereby they will be as sured that thelr help will not bo tak n from them by other industries at a time when it is most needed. Agri culture should be placed upon a basis similar to the military, with supervi sion over the labor to Insure its con tinuance on one hand and Its fair treatment by the farmer on the other. "The allies and our own armies are dependent upon our farmers for food, and food production must be organ ized as quickly and thoroughly as possible. Our farmers are patriotic enough." More Motors Than Ever. The state highway 'department's automobile division issued a state ment that registration of motor vehi cles in Pennsylvania from January 1 to October 31 had reached the num ber of 542,528 and that the revenue derived therefrom was $3,246,144.60. This breaks all records, and the fact that more than 5,100 applicants for 1918 registrations have been received in a day, yielding $40,833, Bhows that there will be heavy registration next year. Draft Figures Incomplete. Efforts are being made by state draft registration headquarters to ob tain figures from the local boards to show exactly how many more men are to go to the three camps to which Pennsylvania is tributary. Some boards have reported that they have sent all of the men required from their districts, and others have Bent all but one or two. There are 63 districts In the Camp Meade territory, however, whose boards have not reported their status. iiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiitiiiniMi in nun I PENNSYLVANIA i 1 BRIEFS I lilllllllllllllllllNIIIIIIIIIII A respite has been issued st... ' e electrocution of Frank the Wendt Blair county, to n Illl.no.L to permit an appeal to the tate h, I of pardons. m South Connellsviiin i,.. I AAA 1 u.er neaa or cattle were i, ! by Dr. K. O. Werley at the J '! Bale ever held at Hamburg highest price waa $180 for a cow h calf. - na A "dry" campaign will be waged , Montgomery county. Candidate- f ! state senator and the legislature win ha noma1 j Chester county farmers are con ; plaining of thefts of corn and not. toes from their fields. ( ' The average price per bushel 0f no j tatoes throughout the Lehigh valley Although dying In the county home , the funeral of Freddy Klahr, aMd' j elghty-Blx, held at Rehrcraburg was ! one of the largest attended for 'some i years. . Klahr was of a roaming dU position and was widely known In upper Berks county. When seventy five years old he walked to Ohio to I visit a brother with only 25 cent on n is person ana on the return trip Htm iihu me money. Serretnrv nf A (rrl.i.K,... r. .. . call to the farmers of the state to Have double the ordinary amount of seed corn this winter so as to provide com j for farmers whose crops were ruined oy rrost nan Drought a number of re sponses, but more requests for the aid of the state In providing hands tc help get In corn not yet husked. While cleaning house Mrs. A. It. Sassaman of Island Park accidental!) burned up $1,300 In bills which the family had saved to purchase a house. Allentown Is conducting a cam paign to find homes for 4.700 local men employed at the Bethlehem Steel works. Extensive forest fires are prevail ing in the Blue mountains in a terri tory of about 20 miles west of Ham- I burz. Hundreds nf acre. nf valiuM I (tK,kn. I., 1 .... . Wlvea oi Hungarian miners of Bea ver Meadow, Coleralne, Tresckow and Audenried have formed a union and want a minimum wage scale of y. a day from the farmers of the Hudson- dale-Quakake-Rush valleys section. Where for years they have done har vesting work for $1 and $1.25 a day. Mra. William McCann, aged fifty- one, mother of John McCann, who was killed at Bast colliery, Ashland, died heartbroken. Her husband and one other son, William, were killed at the same mines years ago. The Hazleton Dentists' association will give necessary dental attention to the teeth of all men there certified for military duty. The Cumberland county exemption board, as a result of district board ex emptions, has been compelled to tissue an additional draft call Because he Is so largo, though but seventeen, Philip Sherman, Hazleton, was arrested in Pittsburgh when be could not show a draft registration card. The Blair county commissioner! have re-elected John B. Riddle county Jail warden for the eighth term Daniel S. Keller, a lieutenant it Camp Meade, has been granted leave of absence to be examined for admis sion to the Lancaster bar. Wood cutting bey are the rage la farming towns norm or iiaziewn. where entire communities turn out to chop up dead timber for winter fuel. The annual fruit exhibit of the Mif flin County Agricultural and Horticul tural society at Lewlatown U said to be the best in the history of the or ganization. Farmers in the Berks potato belt are having trouble In obtaining can enough to ship their crops to market Kutztown has sent 60 of Its youM men to the army, and as a result many of the manufacturers are short of ! bor. Arrangements for a second win'" of revival services in the Lansdale "Glory barn" have bee abandoned. Au a matter of safety, John J. Stl lor, mine Inspector of the Sixteenth anthracite district, has recommendei that one man shou'd not te employ1 alone in any working chamber. Norrlstown consumers must pay cenls for milk. What amounts to an offer of Pc tically as many eggs aj the people Philadelphia want at the rate o cents a dozen wos made to the I supply department of the Pennsyiw nia Committee of Public Safety M combination of holders of large qu titles of eggs, through W. J- Henff. Philadelphia dealer. ... aiuie uniciais aru w"'o Ulueball presence of smallpox at Clearfield county, and PhUIIP Centre. it. Appeals were made to the state partment of agriculture by far living in some cenirm v. help to get in their corn and P' ... i .u... cnlintl" in a numoer oi nrmem -- potatoes have Just been taken m. ; nf the i,,t' in me souuiern pan - ire where the season Is later, th er many potatoes to be 8atberf " Mpf i- . - .1 nr iiiD ot neavy loss are exprea""- . .. . . . . uandS. of those asking ror iarm - ... w It Is eaid that 60 houe " erected at West Marietta, "ractuj rennsyivania raiiryau u i one of the biggest railroad America. 4 ,ne The governor's office annu u appointment as memoers u. free library commission of rf. Magee, Pittsburgh, former pu ice commissioner, .to succeed W. Carver, resigned, and Hj 5. hart, Hanover, to succeed " Hayden, deceased. . of The H. C. Frick Coke Connellsvllle announced tM ei 000 employees would eiu wage Increase ranging froB1 . Ifji per cent. This is the second given the Frick employee' months and the sixth vtt In two years.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers