THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS, McCONNELLSBURO, PA. ! Pictures of Word Events for tows Readers Temperance (Conducted bf th National Woman' Cbrlatlan Temperance Union.) 111 Thlo Department Our Readers in Fulton County end Elsewhere May Journey Around the NAorld With the Camera on the Trail of History IVI oklnc Happenlnga. REMARKABLE AIRPLANE VIEW OF THE CITY OF REIMS LIQUID FIRE MACHINES CAPTURED BY AMERICANS IN RAID lieu' is :in imiisuiil airplane photograph of Helms. France, whore the allies put up a desperate defense against the 1r!ve ni' ilie.croviii prince's armies. In the center of the picture Is seen the famous cuthcdral, which has been made u t.n'.nct h.v I he German urilllery for a long time. TRAINING SCHOOL FOR ARMY CHAPLAINS AND ITS COMMANDER t ii & y fjk fzrr v w k uti "a fi , th ' ' ;,h f A? s i A i C:iiiip .iicluir.v 'J'ay'.or, Louisville, Ky there Is a kcIiooI where the men who look after the Hplrltuul welfare if our IIkIiiIus hoys are trained. Here they gain the neciressary knowledge of military routine, and upon qualifying : I'm miiiuilssloncil ax olllcers. The pliotogruph kIiowm the cluiplain students In the mess hall, and Inserted Is a por :n:lt of SlaJ. A. A. I'ruden, comiuander of the school. PRESIDENT WILSON DRIVING FIRST RIVET i t. fyA -j.s mmjmm&$& , .'resilient Wilson Is here seen driving the tlrst rivet In the keel of a 10,000- l' ii raruo currier, this being the llrst keel to lie laid In the steel shipyards at Alexandria, Va. SERBS BUILD CHURCH OF EMPTY BOXES 1 1 1 f! -.i"-Y.WfcV ' . . . " . jj.i .;; Iulldlng innterlals are ralHcr scarce where the Serb forces are cnnipnlgnlns " "ie Ualkans, so the soldiers had to use considerable Ingenuity when they set '""lit constructing a church. Nothing else being available, they gathered all ,e empty boxeg ubout unfl erected the church, shown here partly completed. AMERICA'S VALOR CROSS When the American troops iiiako a raid' Into the trenches of the Iluns they always carry back trophies of some sort, risking their Ijves to obtain them. These men are shown carrying liquid lire machines which they captured In u rrild. , BATTERY OF ITALIAN ROYAL MARINES ON PIAVE FRONT n yi 1 il n This photograph shows the sum II -caliber guns of the Italian llovul marines under a remarkable caiiioullage en IMave front. the SONG DIRECTOR FOR A. E. F. ' MILITARY RAILROAD HAS RIGHT OF WAY This Is the new distinguished serv ice cross of the I'nlted States. It Is the highest military honor that can be awarded by the president. An Ameri can soldier can win but one higher decoration, the inediil of honor, which can only be uwanled by congress. Barnato'c Dilemma. "Harney" Iiarnato was n member of the C'mpc Town assembly and wns de lighted In scandalizing t ho members of pnrllament. During a debate on the Cape liquor law, which prohibited the sale of Intoxicating drinks on Sunday except as nn accompaniment of a sub stantial meal, he said : "A few Sundays ago I walked some distance from Cape Town, and being busily engaged In mentally reviewing the course of business In the honorable house I went further than I had In tended. I retraced my steps, and be ing hot and thirsty went Into n most respectable hotel for refreshment. I wanted to quench my thirst, but according- to law n drink could only be supplied as nn accompaniment to a bona fide meal. Mine host set beforo me n bottle of beer ond a leg of roast pork, lie had no other eatables. What was I to do? If I ate the pork I brokj the law of Muses. If I drank the beer without eating I broke the law of tho land. ISetween the chief rabbi nnd the chief Justice I stood In a very awk ward position." Then the lee Formed. She (tenderly) When did you first know you loved me? He When I began to get mad when people said you were brainless noil unattractive. "Send the best song director avail able," cabled General Pershing to the powers that he In Washington, so Washington picked W. Stanley Haw kins of Albany to send over there. Ho has been the song director at Camp Dix, where his stirring march melody, "Keep the Glow In Old Glory." Im bued the men with the martial spirit that will lead them Into battle, and be fore going to Wrlghtstown he was the song director at the l'lattsburg officers' training camp. 1 "li - '';;;':'t - I Military railroads have the light of way on the western front, so a ruined house was not allowed to block this line. The engineers pierced both walls of the house and arched them over, and now the ears tilled with troops run right through the house on the way to the front lines. EXAMINING A CAPTURED GERMAN SOLDIER Talismans and Amulets. The truth Is that deep down In the complex nature of most of us there Is a certain regard for the occult, of which, however, our higher Intelligence may disprove, we find It difficult to rid ourselves entirely, While the word mascot has long been common In Provence and Gas cony to denote something which brings good fortune to a person or household, It Is only within the last 30 years or so that It has pnssed Into common use In Iliitnlti. It owed Its Introduction largely to ICdmund Au drnn's well-known comic opera "Ln Muscntte." I'.ut only the word Is modern. The use of talismans, nmulets and charms, whlcli were really prototypes of tho mascot, goes hack to a very remote nge. The ancient. Egypt Inns woro nmulets fashioned In the shape of gods, men, animals, and Insects. The stones In the shape of beetles often found In Egyptian tombs gave cpur age to the wearer. Figures of frogs were nlso held In particularly high repute. w i .in i.mui Mimflffqn . mii "u u'& ar - --r KKuM These Intelligence officern will learn from the captured Hoche all he can tell of tho movements cf tl.e enemy before they send him to tlin prison camp. MANY DRINKERS FOR PR0HIBI. TI0N. As on example of liquor-users who acknowledge the evils of drinking end re helping to vote out the traffic Is the millionaire packer, Patrick Cud uhy. He Is, doing fine antlllquor eda catlonal work In his packing plant at Cudahy, Wis. In an open letter pub lished In the Milwaukee Times he thus describes some of tho effects of a world-wide prohibition as be sees Uiem : "If some all-powerful person wero to appear at the present time on earth nnd perform a miracle, changing all tle 1)007.0 In tao world back to water, and Issuing a decree that any person who attempted to mnke another drop f It would bo struck Ueud by an elec tric bolt from heaven, Just Imoglno If you can tho chonga that would take place In tho world, snjr ninety days nfter this event. See the red noses changing to white; tho fat beer bloats shrinking to their natural size; tho man whom alcohol niudo a bruto of, returning to his normnl condition; his wife, whose life this alcohol brute sad dened and almost destroyed, returning to her normal condition; the wrinkles nnd tear furrows In her faco being smoothed out; the color coming back to her cheeks; her ryes becoming bright again; her saddened and wretched ace becoming Joyful and happy. "In short, tho homo that alcohol made wretched Is now Joyful and happy. "We also see tho saloons changed , Into places of usefulness somo of them tco cream and sodu water par lors. A great ninny of thera are used for bonk stores, for the men who spent their time ln saloons are now reading books. "The saloonkeepers themselves have gone back to their trades and are now lseful citizens. And by doing away with alcohol we do not need nearly so many policemen. About seventy per cent of the policemen have been discharged and are engaged In other employment In tho shops, nnd on tho farms, changed from Idle men to use ful producers. The prisons, such as our house of correction, are changed from prison to recreation halls. Tho grounds about them nro converted into benutlful parks. People aro now saving the money formerly spent for booze. Savings banks nro springing up all over the country. In short, tho drunkards nnd crlminnls of the world, mnde so by alcohol, of nil classes, nro now Industrious people nnd living happy lives. What a glorious change. If this could be brought about, nnd It may be partially brought about somo time by prohibition." Mr. Cudrhy confesses be drinks both beer nnd whisky, yet seeing tho evils of lntemprnnce ho uses his Influence against tli saloons ln his own town. A friend oMils, Mr. J. P. Iienscher, In a letter published by the same paper, says : "I am nit a prohibitionist. I drink beer, although I have never touched whisky, btit I have seen the misery which It has created, nnd I shall do everything within my power to wipe out tho thirty-eight bum factories which we now have In Cudahy." Many thinking men, rich and poor, are taking the same attitude. EVEN BREWERS HATE THE SA LOON "No one understands the saloon bet ter than those engaged In the business. They live as far from It as their means will allow; they know that no saloon can llvo except as It draws money to the bar that Is needed by wives and children 'round about. They know that the saloons In the city can be traced by the raising death rate among little children that dlo from neglect because the money to which they are entitled Is squandered at a neighboring bar. They know, too, that when tho alcoholic habit Is once fast ened on n man or a, woman, It travels In tho blood nnd that little children have the door ot hope shut on them be foro their eyes havo opened to tho light of the day. NINETY PER CENT DROP IN DRUNKENNESS. Drunkenness lh Ogden. Utah, during flvo months of prohibition decreased -approximately 00 per cent. During the first seven months of 1017 thero were 010 arrests for drunkenness as against (12 slnco August 1, 1017, ac cording to the report of the police de partment. The Salt Lake City News records the fact that more of the stock men than ever beforo brought their wives and daughters or other members of tho family with them to the conven tion held In that city this year, and tho dryness of the state Is said to bo tho reason. WE'RE WORKING FOR JUST THAT. This is our Ideal a land where you meet no drunkard staggering on the rond towards his doom, a land where you have no slums for humanity to rot In, a land where you have two thirds of Its prison cells empty, a land with Its workhouses vanished, a land with Its children well fed, well clothed, well sheltered, well trained, with their merry laughter ringing through the 6trccts, a land where the curso of drink shall be driven from all hearts. Right Hon. David Lloyd George. THE RISING TIDE. Lost veor. Wavno H. Wheeler tells us, a church wos built In the United States about every thrco hours, and saloon closed or given notice to leave by the adoption of prohibitory laws about every 30 minutes. Any business man con see which way the tide Is going. The whole nation will bo In dry dork In the near future. BEWARE OP BEER! Deer means bod blood, beer fat, beer heart befuddled brains. It means clumsiness and accidents-