THE FULTON COUNTS NEWS. McCONNELLSBURG. PA. ALIEN ENEMIES RESIDENT IN U.S. PUT UNDER DRASTIC RESTRICTIONS President Wilson Issues Proclamation Restricting Evcrv Alien in the United States Washington. President Wilson eU a smashing blow to .the enemy lien -within the boundaries of the United States. AJ1 alien enemies are required to register and to obtain permits for travel under a proclamation issued by the President. Enemies also are prohibited ap proaching within 100 yards of water fronts, docks, railroad terminals or storage houses and are forbidden to tnUr or reside In the District of Co lombia, Only Germans will be affected by Ik proclamation, as it specifies "ene taiet" and not "allies of enemies." The proclamation, Issued as a sup tement to the one declaring a state ft war with Germany,, provides fur ther that an alien enemy shall not, except on public ferries, be found on Vny ocean, bay, river or other wa ' rs" within the United State. They V forbidden to fly in aeroplanes, tsUoons or airships and to enter the anama Canal Zone. The proclamation orders registra tions as follows: "All alien enemies are hereby re Wired to register at such times and places and In such manner as may fce fixed by the Attorney General of the United States, and the Attorney Ceneral Is hereby authorized and di rected to provide as speedily as may be practicable for registration of all alien enemies and for the Issuance of registration, cards to alien enemies and to make and declare such rules and regulations as he may deem necessary for effecting such registra tion. "AH alien enemies and all other per sons are hereby required to comply with such rules and regulations; and , the Attorney General in carrying out such registration is hereby authorized to utilize such agents, agencies, of- ' fleers and departments of the United States and of the several States, Ter ritories dependencies and municipali ties thereof, and of the District of Columbia as he may select for the purpose, and all such agents, agencies,- officers and departments are hereby granted full authority for all acts done by them In the execution of this regulation when acting by the direction of the Attorney Gen eral, and after the date fixed by the Attorney General for such registra tion no enemy alien shall pa found within the limits of the United States,' Its Territories or possessions without having his registration card on his person." The restrictions were Imposed on frete travel In the following section: "An alien enemy shall not change his place of abode or occupation or otherwise travel or move from place to place without full compliance with any such regulations as the Attorney General of the United States may from time to time make and declare; and the Attorney General Is hereby authorized to make and declare from time to time such regulations con cerning the movements of alien ene mies as he may deem necessary in the premises for the public safety, and to provide In such regulations for monthly, weekly or other period ical report of alien enemies to Fed oral, State or local authorities; and H alien enemies shall report at the times and places and to the authori ties fixed." Germans will be barred from em ployment on all vessels on the ocean or the Great Lakes and even from traveling on private motorboats of their own, under the following pro visions: "An alien enemy shall not, except on public ferries, be found -on any ocean, bay,, river or other waters within three miles of the shoreline of the United States or Its territorial possessions. ... or on any of the waters of the Great Lakes, their con necting waters and harbors." The section forbidding alien ene mies to approach shipping centers is a follows: "An alien enemy shall not approach or be found within 100 yards of any canal, wharf, pier or dock used di rectly by, or by means of lighters by, ay vessel or vessels of over 600 tons rross engaged in foreign or domestic trade, other than fishing, nor within 100 yards of any warehouse, shed, ele vator, railroad terminal or other ter minal, storage or transfer facility and adjacent to or operated in con nection with any such wharf, pier or cock." The Attorney General Is given addi tional authority to declare prohibited ones about other establishments whenever he deems It advisable to do o. The proclamation does not inter , fore, however, with existing regula tions forbidding enemies to live with in a half mile of munition plants, shipyards and other Government es tablishments, though all previous peclal permits to allow aliens to ig nore toe zone restriction are revoked. Where It Applies. The proclamation applies to con tinental United States and to the Philippines, Porto Rico and Alaska. LOCKED CASHIER IN VAULT. Armed Men Then Take $3,600 From V Bank Near Kansas City.' Kansas City, Mo. Armed men en tered the Liberty State Bank, at Lib erty, eight miles southwest of here, locked the cashier In the vault and aacaped in a motor car with $3,600. Fosses were immediately formed and t chase began. The bank's vault was Mown open and robbed seven years . ago- The penalty for violation will be in ternment for the war. Officials explained that the Govern ment's action Is not intended to be vindictive and that Germans who mean no harm to the United States will not be molested. Under regula tions now being framed by the De partment of Justice all Germans may not be 'required to report periodically to officials. The regulations will be promulgated within a few days, but the terms of the President's proclama tion become immediately effective. The administration of the restric tions will be under John Lord O'Brien, special assistant to the At torney General for war work, and the enforcement will be carried out largely with the assistance of the De partment of Justice's Bureau of Investigation. WOMEN TO GET PAY OF MEN. War Department Ruling Favors Those Working In Arsenals. Washington. Women who do ' a man's work in government ordnance and quartermaster work should have a man's pay, the War Department has ruled. Suggestions forwarded to arsenals by the chief of ordnance rec ommend the eight-hour day for wom en, suggest at least 30 minutes' lunch time with two ten-minute rest periods per day; the Saturday half-holiday, and further declared that women should not be required to lift over 25 pounds in any single load, while their tasks should be adjusted to their strength. 3 U. 8. SOLDIERS DIE IN FRANCE. Wound Kills One; Accident And Dis ease Cause Others' Deaths. Washington. The War Department announced the death on November 13 of Valentine H. Newton, of the Head quarters Company of the Marine Corps in France, from a self-inflicted gun shot wound. His next of kin. is his mother, Mrs. Margaret Newton, of I Arkville, N. Y. Other deaths reported are Corporal Samuel Parrott, Marine Corps, died November 16 of "mylltls transverse," of Newbern, N. C; Sergeant Oeorge E. Merkle, Signal Corps, accidentally killed November 17, of Philadelphia. WARNS OF FOOD CANVASSERS. Hoover Calls German Agents Crooks And Confidence Men. Washington. Agents of the German propaganda, who have been going from house to house and posing as representatives of the Government to commandeer food supplies, were de nounced by Herbert Hoover, United States Food Administration, as "crooks," "thieves," and "confidence operators." ' Mr. Hoover advised persons upon whom these pro-German agents call in the future to notify the nearest po liceman and have the man arretted. 265 PASSENGERS RESCUED. Taken Off Steamer Mariposa, Wrecked Off Alaska. Seattle, Wash. The 265 passengers of the steamship Mariposa, wrecked on Straight Island, off the Alaskan coast, were rescued by the steamship? Curacao and Ravelll. Removal of the passengers from the wrecked steam Bhlp was accomplished without the loss of a single life. World War in Brief General Pershing reported that two men were killed, three severely wounded and three slightly wounded In action on November 13. Berlin announces that Quero and Monte Cornelle, on the northern Italian front, have been taken by storm and the Italians have been driven from Monte Tomba, the War Office announced. .Italian forces have begun an of fensive on the Aslago Plateau and have occupied advanced elements of trenches, the Italian War Office an nounced, adding that further attempts of the Austro-German troops to cross the Plave have been stopped. Artillery fighting of great Intensity Is in progress along the northern and western front from the coast to the Ypres sector, according to the German Army Headquarters. Fedor F. Foss, mining expert on the Russian mission to the United States, has requested that firms making labor saving machinery for use in mineral industries send catalogues and descrip tive literature to him. An anti-smoke campaign in Pitts burgh Is reported to have reduced its famous smoke by at least 75 per cent., thereby saving on property alone $7, 500,000 annually. MOLLY MAGUIRES AFTER MAYOR. Threatened Because He Aaked Cashier To Leave Town. Coatesville, Pa. Mayor Albert H. Swing's life has been threatened be cause he asked Arthur Hoopes, Quaker bank cashier, who refused to aid the sale of Liberty bonds, to leave the city. Letters written to the mayor saying the "Molly Maguires" are com ing back, have been turned over to the federal authorities 1 HINDENBURG LINE III London Proclaims the Bril liant Achievement fAKE OVER 8,000 PRISONERS British Now Believed To Be In Pos session Of The Complicated Tun nel Which Was The Feature Of The Hindenburg Line. London. In one of his longest com muniques, Field Marshal Sir Douglas Halg, commander of the British troops in France, thrilled the British nation with news' of perhaps the most strik ing victory yet achieved on the West a front, and certainly, ow'ng to the novel phases of the British attack, a victory reviving hope at very gloomy period. The Hindenburg or Siegfried line, which was thus breached, was be lieved by the Germans to be strong enough to hold back the world armies. Its triple cordon of three separate trench systems had a central line with t great tunnel, with openings at fre quent intervals, making it unnecessary for the troops to move above (found, thus keeping the garrison safe under the heaviest gunfire. It is believed that much of this tunnel now is In the possession of the British. Pershing At The Front General Pershing, commander of the American forces in France, was present at the British headquarters as the guest of Field Marshal Halg, the British commander, to witness the British offensive. The American com mander followed the novel battle with the deepest Interest. Haig's Report. The report from Field Marshal Haig's' headquarters on the British drive in the Cambral sector reads: "Important progress was made west and southwest of Cambral, though rain has fallen continuously. "Reinforcements which the enemy hurried up to the battlefield to oppose our advance have been driven out of a further series of villages and other marked with evident success and moved along regularly, according to schedule.. The resistance offered by the dazed Germans was negligible and by noon British pioneers already were at work laying roads across the old front line trenches, while prisoners in consider able numbers had begun to come back from various directions. The casualties of the attacking forces thus far have been light. Great numbers of German dead He before the main Hindenburg trench, where the bewildered enemy, taken un awares, made a half-hearted attempt to stem the onrushing Britons. The battle v was an innovation for the western front, for it was begun without any preliminary artillery work. Upon the army tonka rested the responsibility for victory or de feat, and they fulfilled all expectations. The iron giants went through the tre mendous line of barbed wire entangle ments in front of the main Hindenburg positions and on over the trenches, as though they were on parade. The tanks started forward at 6:20 o'clock and by 11:30 the British In fantry, which had swarmed into the holes made by the mighty engines, was engaging the enemy in open fighting along the Hindenburg sup port line back of the main defenses at many points. O. K.'S HOME CANNING. Government Expert Says Such Goods Are Safe. Washington. Reports that there is danger of poisoning from vegetables preserved by the cold-pack 'method have been placed in the category of enemy propaganda by Charles Lath rop Pack, president of the National Emergency Fo6d Garden Commission. "The cold-pack method has been in use for five years and neither death nor serious illness has resulted from food canned according to directions," Pack said. "Home canned goods are safe and necessary." MASSES EDITORS INDICTED. Charged With Conspiracy To Violate Espionage Act New York. Indictments were re turned by a Federal grand Jury against the Masses Publishing Company; Max Eastman, the editor; Floyd Bell, man aging editor; C. Merrill Rogers, busi ness manager; Henry Gllnterkanvp, cartoonist; John Reid, Art Young and Josephine Bell, the last three being contributors. All were charged with conspiring to violate the Espionage act through the radical periodical. MEDICAL OFFICER KILLED. Illinois Man Falls In Fighting On Flanders Front , Washington. One American Medical- Reserve officer attached to the British forces was killed and one wounded in flghtln- on the Flanders front on November 6, General Persh ing reported to the War Department. B DEATHS IN PERSHING'S FORCE. Four From Diseases And Four From Wounds During Week. Washington. There were eight fieaths In the American expeditionary forces In France during the week end ed November 9, according to a report by the Surgeon General made public. Three deaths were due to wounds re ceived in action, three to pneumonia, one to heart disease and one to ac cidental gunshot wound. BRITISH ROUGH Reason Enough J I tils wm- wmm LEADERS CONFERENCE The American and British Com missioners Meet GOOD PROGRESS IS MADE Earnestness And Unity The Keynotes Of The Gathering Lloyd George Thanks United States. London. None of the numerous Al lied war councils which have occurred in the past three years have occa sioned the same Interest as Tuesday's historic meeting of the American War Mission and the British War Cabinet for tightening the links that chain the Anglo-American war efforts. The scene was the dingy old residence in Down ing street, which has served the Prime Ministers of many generations as both home and office, and the room was the council chamber where the cabinets meet and where the destinies of the empire have been shaped since the days of the American Revolution. The conference lasted an hour and a half, the members having frequent re course to the mass of statistics and official documents at their command. There was little formality about the proceeding. Lord Reading, the Lord Chief Justice, who was the presiding officer, started them by explaining the purposes of the meeting and a general discussion followed. At the close the conferees reported that satisfactory progress had been made. Premier Lloyd George opened the conference with a speech which the conferees described as having been an important statement The full speech, like the rest of the proceedings, is be ing kept secret, but one conferee said the spirit of greatest earnestness and unity permeated the meeting and that the most important practical results were achieved. The American representatives were Gen. Tasker H. Bliss, chief of staff; Admiral William S.' Benson, chief of naval operations; Thomas Nelson Per kins, members of the priority board; Dr. Alonio Taylor, representing the Food Controller; Bainbrldge Colby, of the United States Shipping Bonrd; Oscar T. Crosby, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, and Vance McCor mick, chairman of the War Trade Board. Colonel House was not 'pres ent The British representatives were Premier Lloyd George, Foreign Minis ter Balfour, Viscount Mllnex, George Nlcholl Banes and Earl Curibn, of Kedleston, constituting the War Cab inet; Lord Reading and Lord North cliffe, the Earl of Derby, General Sir William R. Robertson and Lleut.-Gen. Jan C. Smuts, representing the army; Sir Eric Geddes and Admiral Sir John R. Jellico, representing the navy and Major John L. Balrd, Baron Rhondda, Lord Robert Cecil, Walter Hume Long and Dr. Christopher Addison, repre senting, respectively, aviotlon, food, blockade, petroleum and munitions. FROWNS ON ALIEN SLACKERS. A. F. Of L. Favors Deporting All Who Refuse To Fight Buffalo, N. Y. The American Fed eration of Labor went on record as favoring the deportation of all Allied aliens in the United States who re fuse to enlist here or under their own flags. During the two-hour debate of this resolution Delegate Black, of Toronto, denounced the United States Conscription Law as "that dastardly act" and brought upon himself a sting ing reply from President Gompers. $300,000 FOR REVOLT IN MEXICO. German Agents Seek To Incite Upris ing Against Carranza. Washington. Felix Diaz has been offered $300,000 personally by German agents in Mexico for a counter-revolution against Carranza, it was learned authoritatively. Additional sums were promised for his followers. Diaz is re ported to be hiding In Mexico. SETS KNITTING RECORD. , Mlsa Hancock, Of Baltimore, Make Sweater In 18 Hours. Atlanta, Ga, Of Interest to the vast army of women knitters throughout the country is the record established here by Miss Jennie Gwin Hancock, of Baltimore, who, within 18 hours, knit a regulation army sweater. The only record here that approaches Miss Han cock's is 25 hours. MIbs Hancock is the guest of Mrs. Wallace Boyd. SHIPMENTS TO ' RUSSIA HELD UP No More Supplies Until Situa- tion Clears KALEDINES COMING FRONT Hetman Of Don Cossacks Holds The Master Hand In Control Of Coal And Bread. Washington. No shipments of sup plies will be permitted to go from the United States to Russia until the sit uation In that country clears. The American Government, before allow ing the export of goods already on the docks, wants to know Into whose hands they will fall on their arrival. The cessation of shipments Is tem porary, if a stable government Is formed which the United States can recognize. If the Bolshevik! gain con trol and pursue their program calling fdr a peace with Germany, the em- fbargowlll be permanent. A protract. ed civil war would also work to keep the embargo tight, ns the United States would then fear that supplies might go to the Bolshevlkl faction. The Provisional Russian Govern ment was given credits amounting In all to $325,000,000, of which $191,000, 000 already has been advanced. Much of this money has been spent for supplies now awaiting shipment and the Russians have been given vessels for its transport. Shipments will be held up by denial of bunker coal to the ships. Thomas D. Jones, vice-chairman of the War Trade Board, called at the White House and conferred with Pres ident Wilson. No statement was forthcoming, but it was believed the Russian situation was discussed. Conditions in Russia still arc far from clear. The State Department had no additional dispatches from Ambassador Francis at Petrograd, but unofficial messages coming from Sweden were that General Kaledinen, hetman of the Don Cossacks, who held the mnster hand in Russia through domination of the country's coal and bread supply in the Don Cossack region, was marching with an army on Varonez, 200 miles south of Moscow. Passengers arriving at the Swedish frontier from Russia also reported that soldiers were parading the Petrograd streets bearing banners demanding a constitutional assembly of all Russia and declaring that the BolshevikI regime was more tyrannical than that of Nicholas. The passengers believed the present revolutionary government must fall Thimigh lack'of support of the principal parties. $49,209,411 FOR "Y." War Council Gratified Expects Final . Total To Exceed $50,000,000. New York. The National War Work Council of the Young Men's Christian Association announced that the grand total of the nationwide War Fund campaign is $49,209,411. This exceeds by nearly $15,000,000 the $35, 000,000 goal set at the beginning of the campaign on November 12. President Wilson, on being informed that the fund was greatly oversub scribed, telegraphed congratulations to Dr. John R. Mott, general secretary of the council. "My heartfelt congratulations on the remarkable and gratifying results,"' the President's telegram read. "I think It is a national blessing." The Eastern Department, with head quarters in this city, collected $20,091, 6G5. Its quota was fixed at $15,500,000. The Central Department, with head quarters at Chicago,' according to in complete returns, was second with $18,380,733, as compared with a quota of $12,500,000. ' The totals and the quotas'for the other departments are as follows: ' Northeastern, Boston, $6,368,925, quota, $5,000,000; Western, San Fran cisco, $1,773,500, quota $1,250,000; Southwestern, Dallas, $1,387,000, quota $1,000,000; Southeastern, Atlanta, $1, 207,688, quota $1,500,000. NEARER TO JERUSALEM. London. The British forces in Palestine are now 12 miles northwest and 15 miles west of Jerusalem, the War Office announces. The announce ment follows. "General Allenby re ports that our mounted troops occu pied Belt-Thhta, 12 miles northwest of Jerusalem, on Sunday. Yesterday our Infantry, advancing Into the highland of Judav, reached a line 15 miles west of Jerusalem." SHELLS Rl ON : U. S. Fighting More Lively and Amer icans Again Suffer Losses 15 AMERICANS ARE LAUDED Sammies Pay Foe Back With Interest French General Cites 13 U. 8. Officers And Men For Bravery In Raid. With the American Army in France. The artillery fighting in the sector held by the American troops has be come even more lively and there have been ' further casualties, shrapnel wounding some men in the trenches. An enemy shell hit an American gun and caused casualties., . Soma of the men wounded in the last two days have died. The American batteries have been firing rapidly in return. The visibility is becoming better and it is consid ered certan that more damage and casualties have been caused in the German lines than the Germans hare inflicted on the Americans. The American . troops witnessed their first aerial encounter. Three enemy airplanes appeared overhead. Soon all of them except one fled at the approach of five French machines. One of the French' outmaneuvred this German and "got on his' tall." The German aviator then bolted. The rattle of machine guns finaUy died away as the two airplanes disappeared to the westf The French general commanding the sector has mentioned in the dis patches 15 American officers and sol diers including three who were killed, for excellent military qualities and for bravery displayed in the recent trench raid. A note accompanying the citations says that between 8,000 and 10,000 shells were used In the attack, which had been in preparation for three months down to the finest details. The results obtained by the enemy were very small, he having been un able to penetrate more than the first line, trenches because of the resist ance of the American soldiers with rifle and pistol fire and hand grenades. The enemy had to content himself, the citation continues, with carrying off a few prisoners. RED CROSS EMPLOYES. Statement Iss.ied Showing Number Who Receive Salaries. 4 Washington. Three employes get $5,000, or more, 18 between $3,000 and $15,000, and 402 other employes receive between $600 and $3,000 annually at National Headquarters of the Ameri can Red Cross, Its war council an nounced. In addition ' there are 88 volunteers working without remunera tion. The staff at National Headquar ters has been decreased from 700 paid officers and employes four months ago to 423 now. The reduction is partly due to decentralization of administra tion, which has transferred much routine work to 13 divisional offices whose payrolls are not Included in this statement. NOT EXECUTED, IN GERMANY. Mrs. Couch, Alleged Pro-German In Trouble In America. Mount Vernon, 111. Mrs. Catherine Couch, who was reported last summer to have been executed in Germany for criticizing that Government Is under guard in the village of West Salem, her former home, where she delivered an address Sunday night which was classed by local authorities as pro German. SherifT Naylor, of Edwards county, said ha anticipated no vio lence, although feeling was high in West Salem and that Mrs. Couch would be guarded until Federal offi cers arrive. TO BUILD UNSINKABLE SHIPS. Construction Of Score For French Government Authorized. Washington. The Shipping Board has approved the building of twenty 4,000-ton nohsinkable ships by the French Government In vthe United States. By so doing it has waived the rule that no foreign construction should be permitted at this time. The nonslnkable ship, developed by French experts, is said to have with stood torpedo attack in a test in which four shots were fired into the hull and the only effect was to destroy the car go immediately surrounding the point of attack. BOMB IN CHICAGO POST OFFICE. Found On Floor Of Parcel Post Room. Chicago. A bomb was discovered on the floor of the parcel post room in the Federal Building, starting Fed eral agents on a search for its maker and an explanation of how it came to be In the post office. A fuse 18 inchei long, wrapped around the cover, burned slowly when it was detached for inspection and a powder with which it was packed emitted a nau seating gas. TO CUT TAILORS' SAMPLES. Washington. More than 67,000 sol diers can be clothed with the materia' which will be saved by cutting the sizes of tailor's Bample 21 per cent., and this has been arranged at confer ences between the Council of National Defense, the National Wholesale Tall-' ors' Association and many large clotl dealers. Nearly a quarter of a mlllior yards of cloth heretofore used as sanr pies will be devoted to elntblnc TROOPS STILL TIE TO FORWARD GIRS War Department Will Transport vm louiids ravages for Boys in France. LAST SAILING DATE DEC. 5 pfflclal Statement 8,ue(, bv - K...,cni io Elimlniu Confusion Regarding Reg. Ulationi. By EDWARD n n Washlngton.-From all 0Ver .k United States queries come to Wat .Ington concerning the exact rule. In, ernlng the sending of parcel, to Z members of the expeditionary force. France Confusion seems o p i , everywhere. It Is due to a nunl causes the principal one of which iceras to be that the Instructions we ,k v""1 on that some of . utco were amended Here is the official statement 01 the subject which I have Just scare? u yum omce aepurtmcnt: Western Newspaper t:mn Gentlemen: In answer to your lnnu with reference to parcel post packai. for the American Expeditionary Fore I beg to advise you ai follow: x-arcei post lor soldier and clvttlan. i; "",pr,can EPodltloi ".nee, wncn carefully packed and properly addressed will b. accepted by all postmasters for direct transmission through the malls, guck im'vc. .i,jr wiKn up to seven poundi i-nrucia lor me soiuiers and clvllltni connected with the American Expedi tionary Force may contain anythuu that Is admissible to the domestic par cel post except parlshnbles which may .... .mu ' h juurney in Europe Parcel post for the American c... flltlonary Forcea need Hot be pneked In wooden boxes, but should be carefully cnncu ma mrungi'si Kind of paMf uuaru dux 10 assure its lafe arrival i me ironc. In addition to this parcel post service to the troops, the war department wl! undertake to carry Christmas nnrr.i. for the American Expeditionary Ynnn provided such parcels are sent "car the LorrmandlBfr General. Port of Em barkatlon. Pier 1. Hoboken. New J.r ey," and are packed In wooden hoi not more than two cubic feet In vol well strapped, and with a hinged or screw top. buch Christmas hoxei may pe sent to tne (bmmandlng Officer. Port of Embarkation, either by expresi or through the malls, and must not exceed Z0 pounds In weight. The army will In spect the contents of each box and un dertake Its delivery from Hnboken to the addressee. The war department will receive Christmas packages up to De cember Eth. Tours very truly. OTTO PHAEGER. Second Assistant Postmaster General. Parcel Post Limit Seven Poundi It will be noted that parcels welfh inc seven pounds but no more can be sent through the post office department! all the way to France. The twenty-pound parcels which are intended for Christmas gifts nnilwhk nro f be delivered on Christmas w are sent by the wnr department from its Dort of emhnrkntion nt ifnboketi, N. J. These parcels, which must notl exceed twentv pounds In welctit. cm lie Rent to the address given In IfoboJ ken in' nny way that tlie sender chooses. Of course the Dost office depurtmet has been handling the smaller Christ mns pneknges all the way tlinmpn v France, but In order to Insure tnwof llvarv tin Christmas morilitlC it w necessnry to mail them by Nnvembn IR. However, the fact thnt the msnm was too late for delivery on Christ mrs day does not mean thnt pneknff cannot still be sent by parcel post They enn be sent nny day in tne j" of bo rnto nt 19. rents for each po"11' sent, and this rate holds from whit ever point in the United Stales u nnckace Is sent. How Packages Must Be Adore I'ucknges for the soldiers must addressed to the Individual, with W company and his regiment and ft must be added the words "AmcrlW urn Forces." It Is not. B essnry to add the nnme of the country It will be noted thnt In m tlons given above and prepared In uw..i nuuiatonr nnKinuister general offlce nothing Is said specifically H cernlng the kind of things m - be sent to the soldiers and cl connected with (he tWal"'""l forces. It Is perfectly proper to w sugar, provided It Is properly tm." ' la loioken of " Alio ri-Hmm mi."" ' j, Is because there seems to have w gome misunderstanding anmu u. r-.i. .... ),. sent horjo JMUICIies mum ii"i . .,.i.... ..nut anjt&M cumstances. m-min Influmnmble, except, of 'A nftry packing material, w nor must there be any rresii rruit in me .1.. riroleced 11 enn go u proi'i-". ' - ,m l.. .. i ni other v"uf masning up nuu nrppfri In the mall.- -.mrs " " , " ' m sealed and protected ngalw j ' nge can be sent. NolWW 0 plosive nature must ie rl". parcels. ne It is necessnry that the I"' packnges weighing P . 1( (, pounds shall be wrapped w -post offlce authorities may & their contents. The rules packages which tne "' 'he 8M 'sends are given explicitly AmAt..1 MATvimimlrntlon. t. ill to accentuate the fact tnnw M to seven pounds In en, ()me a it maI rn4i n . . the year, but that which are to go by tne tWi department at the n,,(Irl:, art r will not be forwarded ' pnj celved at Uobouen , ber Q. at.M..f It is said that e'tr'ofH Tented during the ean; - pe XIV of prance. In 1V " prlvte Ivor ostnlillshed a -r 01 1 t placed boxes at opes that were sow - t p. llshed for that J likely, however, that en", ? use before this perl J opes so used in FrnoC fcost-pald envelopes- flrt W "J what year Is marked W tion of envelopes 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers