VOL. XIX. NO. 11. McCONNELLSBURG, PA., NOVEMBER 29, 1917. $1.50 A YEAR. i i i . iuc iflUUAK BURL. Ijd Sketches of- the Lives ol Pef ims Who nave Kecenny , .Passed Away. Dewey Scheidleman. wtomn illness of six years jased by typhoid fever Dewey' iidleman passea peaceiuny ; - - Ure be hail been one year ror Wment, The deceased was the youngest of Peter and Mary Scheidie- ... nf near Maquon, HI. He Lorn May 14, 1898, at Knobs- a Pa., and departed tnis me 1 m s f the early age or. iy. years, o Us, 1 day. Dewey was a member or the Lperance Union of De Long i a faithtui sunoay scnooi i church worker until poor Jilth prevented his attendance. 3p Ipaves to mourn his loss be lle bis father and mother three m and one brother, and an w erandmcther of Knobsville, V His sisters are Mrs. Allie Iwavof Knoxville, III: Mrs. Kerlin of Knobsville, Pa., Miss Helen, at home: and brother William, of - Maquon, les a host of friends and rel 9. )n Sunday, November 13, at LOorayerwas offered at the of Rev. Thomas VVillstead, 'which the body was taken lieMaines chapel, near De I where the funeral services held, Rev. Thomas Will- W pssfor of the Gilson M, E, rch, officiating, assisted by MaU! Swift. Tlie singing a quartet from the De b U. E. church, who sang Jrffully "Jesus, Lover of My .""Sometime We'll Under- Id" and "We Will Never Sav i-bye." A large company of mot; friends were present ier their svmDathies to the pveil family. The body was my in the Haines chapel stery. MiIlerSipes. tie home of the bride's prMrs. Lula Sipes on No- r 21 1917 a very pretty m was solemnized when I Graver Miller and Miss pipes' of Saluvia were d in holy matrimony by W. Croft. Miss Clomo ' o.i baitnio served a s mi and Benjamin Mill- Mr of the crnnm. an man. "Those present Mrs. Lnla Sines. Mrs. tes, Rev E. J. Croft and wemSiDesand wife. Mrs. P Foreman. Mrs. G. B. K Maud Grpon Paulino pna Hollenshead, Ethel Beatrice Sipes, Mildred Evelvn Sln.i Tutha. Lester Croft, and Harry These are excellent 'People and will be at home , "ffianv fi-ion, - nr.t.. j tuvuua near vraier- fh lieutenant McKibbio. - --wi 1CV.CIVCU I1CIC Jarshall McKibbin, who 1 J months in an Offi- nfla hoon award. iionaa First Lfetitan. '"fantrv 1,,,-fU - 5(1,1 'or & Cflntainnw Mar. ; Wad hand. The "pull" rattle nrizfi wns hnrH irshll j . L e Kailwav Mnil a year to takechan- i .a commission ana , -"uiouimi is a nauve ana is a son or 13. Geo. McKibbin. of lital N'ntR irk, son of Hon. and ,te Mcuonneus- WPerated uPn at the ijf hospital for en- iJHykesofAyrtown- C ? has returned Vk Chambersburg j(e8he had been for Cy' wter having had a , --Valley Spirit Car Burned on Sideling Bill. Last Tuesday evening a prac tically new Chalmers-6 Sedan was destroyed by fire on the Lincoln Highway, about a mile east of the top of Sideling Hill mountain. The car was owned by Sam Thomas, proprietor of Hotel Lenox. Allentown. Pa.. who with hi9 wife, and Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Henry, of the same town, were returning home from a trip to Pittsburgh. While descending the moun tain, they discovered something wrong with the working of the machine, and when they got out to look for the trouble, the interior of the car burst into flames. The theory for the fire is, that a rear spring had broken causing a tightening on one of the brakes, which caused undue friction. ' Garaeeman Ernest McClain was summoned and he went out to the fire and brought the tourists to town where they spent the night at the Fulton House, and went on to Allentown next morning by train. The Chalmers bodyless, tireless, anti radiator-less was purchased by Ernest McClain, who expects to make a dandy buckboard out of it. Fortunately, the owner carried an insurance of $1,200.00 on the car, which will help out some even if it did cost him $152.00 a year, it paid. Back from Chicago. After having spent two weeks with the Dawney boys in Chicago, ex-County Treasurer C. , Stevens returned to his home in this place last week. Charlie says, "Chicago is some 'town, and don't you forget it" The Dawney boys John, Mont Scott and Harry are Bons of the late Benjamin M. Dawney, who sev eral years ago, was a leading farmer in Taylor township, The boys all "left the old farm" and went to Chicago, and have prov ed that Taylor township can grow boys big enough to hold their own in a city even as big as Chicago. They showed Charlie a good time. Cbilton-McGehee. Sergt, Alfred W. Chilton and Miss Ruth Elizabeth McGehee were married in the city of Nor folk, Va., on Friday, November 16, 1917. The ceremony was performed by Rev. John Roach Straton of the Baptist Church. Sergt Chilton was stationed at Camp Meade, but left for France last Monday. and the bride re turned to the home of her father. Mr. Charles McGehee at Burnt Cabins, where she will await the return of her husband "when this cruel war is over." Before entering the army, Mr. Chilton was a prominent insur ance man of Tyrone, Pa. Nice Trip to Pittsburgh. George K. Nelson and family. and George's mother, Mrs. D. A. Nelson, motored to Pittsburgh last Wednesday where they visited Mrs. D. A. Nelson's mother, Mrs. M. Louisa Hull, and .Mrs. Hull's daughters Susie and Miss Mary. While Mrs. Hull will be eighty years of age next month, she is very well. Her daughter Susie is the wife of Mr. J. W. Moore a successful hardware merchant, and Miss Mary is teaching in one of the City Schools. They were accom panied on the trip by Jack Snyder. . sAlma to Baltimore. Fleets of automobiles and trucks passing over the Lincoln High way from the great factories in the Middle West to eastern cities are so common as to attract. but little attention. Thirty Republic trucks en transit to Baltimore from the factory at Alma. Mich igan, passed thru town Tuesday morning. They left Alma, Sun day noon, November 18th and would reach Baltimore the even ing of the 27th, covering a dis tance of 1000 miles in a little less than 10 days. is Cnba Annaaifj Contributes More Than One-Sixth of all the Sugar Produced in the World. Three Million tons of sugar! A ton Of BUCrar Wfiirhs 9. 9A( pounds, so that the 3,000,000 tons estimated annual output of sugar from the little island of Cuba amounts to 6,720,000, 000 pounds or, more than 60 pounds o sugar for every inhabitant of the United States. tuDa, home or Havana cigars and famous for its tobacco, ex pons annually eight times as many dollars' worth of sugar and molasses as it does tobacco. Although only about as large a.s the state of Pennsylvania. Cuba is producing more than one sixth of the world's total output of 40,000,000,000 pounds, the av erage annual production since 1913. Cuba's possible su gar acreage is said to be only one fifth developed. If all the sugar lands available were under cul tivation, it is estimated that Cuba could easily supply one tnird or. the demand for sugar from the entire world. "The World's Sugar Bowl" a well-merited title for Cuba. THE HIGH PRIC9 OF SUGAR. An explanation of the present price of sugar, the highest since the Civil War, is given by a prominent sugar anthority who is quoted as saying: "Stocks of sugar In United States and Cuba amounts t o 69,032 tons, against 200,844 tons at the same time in 1916, a de crease of 131,812 tons. The shortage of stocks is due to sev eral factors, the most important of which is the export by Cuba to tho United Kingdom of 262,- 647 tons more than in 1916, and 207,543 tons less to the ports of United States north of Hatteras in the same year. "Shipments to New Orleans increased 84.881 tons and the op ening of the new Savannah Sug ar Refinery, at Savannah, Ga., increased shipments to that port 16,852 tons. In addition to this. consumption of sugar during the first half of 1917 in the United States showed an increase of 200,- 000 tons compared with the cor responding period a year ago. This is attributed in part to a large amount of canning and pre serving, and in some instances. possibly, to hoardings." In the United States the con sumption of sugar per capita has increased more than fourfold since 1850, in which year it was figured each person consumed 19.8 pounds. In 1870 the per capita consumption was 32.7 pounds; in 1890 it was 50.7 pounds in 1900, 58.9 pounds: in 1910, 79.9 pounds. In 1913 it was 89 pounds. But it will be seen that the in crease in consumption has far outstripped the increase in pop ulation of the United States. In the decade ended with 1912-1913, the total, consumption of sugar RED CROSS DRIVE. Nation-Wide Christmas Campaign to Raise Membership of American Red Cross to Fifteen Millions. Mrs. B;. Frank Henry, secretary of Fulton Chapter of the Ameri can Red Cross, represented this county at a meeting of the Har- risburg Division, held in Harris burg last Thursday. The Red Cross is the Nation' right arm in winning the world for Democracy and'this arm must he upheld by eyery Aaron and Hur in the land, if the end o the great struggle is to, be has tened. Strong speakers were present who outlined the plan of a na tion-wide Christmas campaign to raise the membership to 15.000. 000. Of that number, an allotment of two thousand is made to Ful ton County, which means about one person to each family. Not every one may shoulder a mus ket or carry a knapsack, but every one-man, woman and child can be a member of the Red Cross, and thus feel that he or she is really enrolled as an ac tive helper in the winning of the greatest war the world has ever seen. While you nay be enrolled at any time the g. t drive will be made during the ?ek just before Christmas. "He i! at is not for me is against me." There are no neutrals in this war. Fulton County Chapter already has a membership of something more than five hundred: hence about 1500 persons muBt be enrolled before Christmas. Taylor town ship is leading" the County in ac tivity just now and the names o the persona added to the Taylor auxiliary since the last published list are: Ruthlless. Marv Brat- tan, Clara Brattan. Eliza Hess. Rolla Laidig, H. Frank Brattan. Ed Brattan Blanche Winegard ner, J. M. Houck, Mrs. J. M, Houck Mrs. John Thomas. Kate Wilds, Kate Alloway, Mrs. Frank Thomas, Olive Shaw, Mrs. M. W. Houck, Robert Mosbey, Will Wakefield, Hartman Anderson. Anna Anderson, Nellie Davis. E. A. Horton, A. G. Edwards. Alice Edwards, Ruth Edwards, John Stunkard, Rebecca Edwards, Rachel Edwards, Joseph Wood cock, Howard Tice, Harry Zern, G. W. Alloway, A. O. Griffith.' Mrs. A. 0. Griffith, Stella Horton, Mrs. W. W. Cessna. BELFAST AUYILIARY. R. C. Dixon, Mrs. R. C. Dixon. Mrs. A. P. Garland, Mae Peck, Rev. E. J. Croft, Mr3. Harrison Hann, Mrs. H. L. Peck, Mrs 'rancis Truax.Mrs. BerthaTruax Mrs. T. W. Peck, J. J. Palmer. W. R. Palmer, Mrs. W. R. Pal mer, Lessie Bard, Cleo Bard. ANNUAL MEMBER. Miss Lydia Martin. was 42 per cent, greater than in the preceding decade, against an increase of 21 per cent in population for the same period. DEMAND FOR SUGAR INCREASED FOURFOLD. Within two short generations we have developed a national de mand for sugar equivalent to four times our former supply. The 'sugar production of the world is equivalent in market value to three times the value of gold mined annually; four times as great as the production of pe troleum; three times as great as the production of tobacco; four times as great as the production of rubber; and is greater than the entire cotton crop of the world. It has been figured that if the demand for sugar increases in the next fifty years as it has in creased in the past fifteen, facil ities for the production of sugar must be increased to at least sev en times their present capacity. Sugar haa long since ceased to HOW WOMEN WON NEW YORK STATE be considered a luxury, although Uncle Sam's candy bill alone ex ceeds $500,000,000 per year. Sug ar is one of the best elements for a balanced ration. Its heat and energy producing value is as great as that of lean meat. The nitrogen retention of proteid food such as meat fish, eggs and milk is said to be increased 25 per cent when consumed with sugar. Sugar isgnow widely regarded as an ideal medium for the in vestment of funds. It is a basic commodity one Of the -necessities and what is of even more importance, it can be produced at a good profit even at the lowest market prces recorded in the previous history of the industry. There is no satisfactory substi tute for sugar and, since the world demand for this commodity continues to increase more rap idly than production, there is little danger.of the sugar market ever being over-supplied, a con dition which indicates good market prices at all times with consequent opportunities for handsome profits for the com panies engaged in the production of sugar, . . Interesting Article from the Pen of Nellie Skinner Crisswell, Former Folton ConotjGirl. With 193 presidential electors in the hands of the Empire State, it will make a mighty Bicht o ainerence as to whether a candidate for President of the United States carries New York or not. This great change has been brought about by the addi tion of two million voters when it was decided by the men of New Youk state at the election, that women should have in that state, the same rights at the polls as men. The following is Mrs. Cnsswell's article: Him A... - wnermvoman Suffrage was defeated in New York State in 1915, we realized two things: (1) In order to win the next time, one man out of every nine i be induced to change his mind: and. (2) that our first big work was with the women. ' So many men have said:' "No: I didn't vote for suffrage; the majority of the women don' want it; my wife isn't interested. my mother is opposed to it. etc." And so we decided not only to go after that ninth man. but to nterest the women all women from the mistress of a Fifth Avenue mansion, down to the humble foreign-born laundress. Many women would not come out to meetings, and would not read our literature. How then would we reach them? Only, by a house-to-house canvass, personal interview, and that we set out to do all of last spring and summer weary work some times, but intensely interesting and well worth while; for this fall, we could present to the skeptics the signatures of one million, thirteen thousand, and eight hundred New York wo men who desired the erifran chisement of their sex. We have a really wonderfu organization here city officers, boro otneers, a leader in every Assembly district, and a captain in every election district; and, because of this well organized body of trained women, from the day the United States enter ed the great world war, we were asked to do a tremendous amount of patriotic work. We had al most entire charge of (he State military census in June; we sold hundreds of thoupands of dollars worth of Liberty Bonds, we canvassed the City with the Hoover Food Conservator pledg es, and we are taking an active part in all branches of the Red Cross work. We have never turned down any patriotic job, and we have always ''made good." During last summer, the politi cians for some reason best known to themselves, changed the bound ary lines of all election districts in Brooklyn. In the new ar rangement, the 23rd election dis tricts of the First Assembly was assigned to me. It is what we call a "silk stocking district," in cluding several of t'.i finest res idential blocks in' tti; City; but, also, embracing a small section of a totally different class. So, in my voters' list I had "all sorts and conditions" of men from Bank Presidents and Wall Street Magnates to some poor speci mens of human driftwood lodg ed temporarily in the cheapest of rooming houses. The real work of our campaign began with Kegistration Week, when I Bpent every evening and all day Saturday at my polling place. As the men registered, I put down in my little book their names, addresses, business, and registration numbers., In my lesiure moments, I knitted at my gray navy sweater while the men smoked. I was pleased to find a very marked change in the attitude of the men on the board. wo years ago. they were courte ous enough, but it was plain to be seen they considered me an out sider. I was merely a woman who bad forced herself into Borne from Colorado. Mrs. W, D. Myers spent the time from Wednesday until Sat urday in the home of her brother Geo. W. Hays, West Lincoln Way. After having sold their property in Hancock, Mr. and Mrs. Myers went to Colorado in July, where they then had two sons living. While the country was beautiful and the scenery most attractive, the climate did not agree with Mrs. Myers, and she was ob liged to return to the East. Her husband soon followed, and he is now at Norristown, Pa. Mrs. Myers is expecting a visit from one of her sons who is in the army, after which the will join her husband at Norristown. Pa. .1 ll 1 I . -. .A wnere meir daughter Miss Bess is a teacher in the public schools. and they will reside there indef' initely. THE VALUE OF fUY. Little Talks on Health and Dvgieoe bj Samuel G. Dixon, M. LL. D., Commissioner of Health. rieasant Reunion. George Suders went to Altoona last Wednesday and spent the time in the home of his son Harry until Sunday, when Harry in his automobile, brought his father and mother (the latter with her children Mary, Marshall and Eva, had been in Altoona two weeks) to their home in McConnellsburg. where they found Clem, of Philadelphia, and John, cf Pitts I . ourgn; ana tney also found a sumptuous dinner awaiting them a dinner that had been prepar ed for the occasion by Pauline. who had been keeping house for her mother during her absence It was, indeed, a happy occasion. for it was the first time in twelve years that the family had all been at home at one time. More Turkeys. . The odor of roast-turkeys fills the air since the advent of the season on the 15th inst. and the hunters down about Webster Mills and the Tannery have been getting their share. John Rasp killed a 16i lb. gobbler; Hayes Richards, an 8-lb. hen; Henry Hann, a 20-lb. gobbler: George Keefer, one that weighed 11 lbs. ; George Fittery, one that weighed 12 lbs, and George Williams, one. the weight of which our reporter did not know. ' their domain; but this year, they recognized my right to be there: was one of them an intelligent human being and I was even consulted on matters of ' impor tance. When Registration Week clos IV. . - ea, i felt that every man in my board was friendly to me and most of them to my cause, and I had my precious little book with its 387 names and 14 others in the National Army at Camy Up ton. My first duty then was to write a long chatty letter to each of the latter, for a soldier appre ciates his mail and knew those letters, at least, would not be tossed aside unread. Then I called upon the political bosses in my district Everywhere I was received with respect and encouragement although I can't say I found much enthusiasm for 'or our cause rather call it "res ignation." it s bound to come soon; why not now? Yes. I'll help you, were the usual ans wers. Two big stumbling blocks in my way in my district were Congressman Jeanette Rankin's vote against war and the Wash ington Pickets. Its funny how many men who didn t want to vote for Suffrage, hid behind the petticoats of those pickets. Over and over again I explained, pati ently, that Miss Rankin was only one woman and did not represent it all, and that the New York State Suffrage Party was oppos ed to the picketing. We have had all along a fine Headquarters for the Borough of Brooklyn, but a month before the election, we opened a Cam paign Headquarters in our As sembly District I was chairman of the committee in charge and here I spent many busy, inter esting hours, the pleasantest be Continued on pg i, Most people would say that play's first requisite was, that it should consist of something one doesn't have to do. Play is in reality, however, of all sorts and descriptions. Those that produce something useful besides giving rest are greatly to be preferred. There are many sorts equally stimulating to the mind and to the body and productive of valu able results. One essential to beneficial play is that it ,bo wholesome and be performed in a healthful envir on .nent, that is, where we have pure moving air of the right tem perature and preferably sunlight The body should be maintained in such a position as to permit an even circulation of the blood and normal respiration. The object cf the exercise would otherwise te very much discounted. The air carries food to the blood which it furnishes to the tissues, and the blood in turn takes away the de bris and returns it to the out3ide atmosphere. This will make plain to any reader the necessity of what has been said about the proper environment in which to exercise. Unless the blood is supplied with what nature has provided for her normal function, the di gestive system will fail and the body will be wanting in nourish ment When this condition takes place man becomes susceptible to the disease germs that are ever present in the atmosphere. The greatest safety is to be found in keeping up the resistance. It is much easier to battle against the germ organisms before they ' get established in the system. Once they establish themselves in the tissues they generate pois ons which interfere with the nor mal working of the body and en able them to nourish themselves and increase, often at an alarm ing rate. In fact some of them reproduce themselves to the ex tent of thousands, yes, hundreds of thousands in a minute of time. Variation of types of work properly adjusted will often sub stitute for what is generally known as play. For instance. one's brain center may become weary at a monotonous occupa tion and a decided change of oc cupation, notwithstanding it be what we usually call work, will permit the first brain center in volved to rest while another works. ,But we come back to the fact that what most people regard as play is an occupation that they are not required to perform, and. it would seem from a psycholog ical standpoint to give greater rest if it be an occupation that is particularly useless from the standpoint of producing economic results. Therefore there should be time set aside in the work of the day, no matter whether it be varied or not. when the environment may be changed and play should be taken up. I speak of games in a broad sense. For instance, after sitting at a task for a given number of hours, a walk in the open air, the body held erect and the limbs swinging so as to produce circu lation, and attention given to surroundings so that the mind may be occupied and contented. constitutes one of the best kinds of play, preferably performed.in company. In these times it is well to re member the simple saying of the old days that all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy. Scott Brant and wife and Clem C. Brent spent last Sunday in the home of the former's Bon-in- law and daughter Mr. and Mrs Geo. King at Hiram. In the evening Mrs. King and daughter Margaret accompanied them hnmn ini) nn 'Tnacon all nrant 'to Chambersburg. t V 1 V