THE tfULTON COUNTY NEWS. McCONNELLSBURG, PA. Pictures of Readers MLSON SEI5 PRICE FOR PEACE ur Readers In Fulton County and Elaewhe id the Aorld NAlth the Camera on the Trail of History INlaUInc Happonlnffa. lYlay journey In Thle Department Arou i Bargain or Compromise Impos sible With Huns REAFFIRMS U. S. WAR AIMS BIG NAVAL GUN OF ALLIES ON THE ITALIAN FRONT TO ews mm li jiji ijiiyjuiiiini in i.m ihi;ihii 'HI'1 mi-1 r inn- n up r n - in miiiii in iii mil q'iJJ'i'',1'1' n l "V; r n ,,.m.aM 4 j": 4 i tl I i ' I v - "waA" , .w.-.v,.,, ., Itl- inrrlnnw ' ' - " ' 4"1' a..,,.,,,, ... ...,..,,, . . ; -IFI. m ornciAL photo lFirst photograph showing the actual landing of Amerlcnn forces In VliHllvoxtok ; army trucks liclnj hoisted from hold of ship. 2 Dr. Anna L. Sholly of the Wora-cn's Ovithcuh hoHiillul, awarded the Croix de Guerre and commissioned a lieutenant In French army. 3 American olTlcers pluming a tiuSj 0:1 the grave of Lieut. Quentln Itoosevelt In France v.hllo Bishop Wilson offered a prayer. VIEW OF METZ, WHICH THE AMERICANS ARE SHELLING I 9. .V J. XT" 1 fc.J t Wtiffr"tfyi,i 1 iTi'iVfflii if n '-WW ifti iiaftAmrifrrf -iVift timfn iit-Mnifiii'ifMifff wt This la one of the huge naval guns with wliloh the attics hammer the Austrluns on ttie fraiian front. YANKS GO INTO BATTLE WEARING GAS MASKS View of the city of Metz, which 18 now under Are of the American artillery. This Is the most powerfully fortlQcd city In the world. LAUNCHING NEW TYPE OF SUBMARINE "SAVE HER FROM THE HUN' The IminchlnK of the V. S. A. H-21 nt I'.rldgeport, Conn., recently nuirked a new era In the (hlplmlldlnK progrnm. It is a submarine of the latest type. WOUNDED BUT HAPPY BUNCH OF SCOTS i vJ' 1 y 4iW ft- J- r'.i'ivTi Here we hnve the first nctunl iihotogrnph showing pis-mask-clnd Americans going Into the battle of Cbatean Thierry. They were passing through gas-niled towns In the wake of the German retreut. It was at this critical point that the Americans defeated the Germans In their drive for the French capital. soldier "cops" in capitali M'CORMACK SINGS FOR SICK SOLDIERS MMHK mM3f .;7: ,j i- t p - 'AVh-'A' T ' . " ' Xv--.VV V. v--J .v-:r.'i'' to Wrn-rn NwBiiiiier i:iil..n From a photogrnph posed for by Miss Frances Falrchlld, a 1018 debu tante of New York, In behalf of the fourth IJhcrty loan. Foreign-Born Whites In America. In 1!)10 tho foreign-born whites by countries were: England, 870,45fij Scotland. Sr.l.ttM; Wales. 82.470; Ire land, l,r.2.1"; Gernmny, 2,501,181; N'onvay. 4iO.Ra8; Sweden, OtH.183; Denmnrk. 181,025; Netherlands, 120, 0..3; Itelgtum. 40,07; Luxemburg, 1.IMV8; France, 117.2.'W; Switzerland, 124.8.T4; Fortugal. 67,023; Spain', 21, 1)77; Italy, 1.34.1.070; Russia, 1,002,752; Finland, 128.000; Austria. 1,174.024; Hungary, 405.0(H); Itouninnla, 09,020; Itulgnrln, Serbia and Montenegro, 21, 151; On-ecp, 101.204; Turkey In Eu rope, 32,221; Turkey In Asia. 50,702; Canada French, 3X5,0513; Canada other nnd Newfoundland, 810,003; Mexico, 210,802; Cuba and other West Indies (except I'orto Itlco), 23,100; all other countries, 50,701. These wounded but cheery Scots ore being transported from the firing line to the hospital by menus of a light railway. Earliest Malt Service. We arc told by historians that the Persians under Cyrus had mall serv ice In the sixth . century before Christ. Soldier "cops" are nil the stylo In Washington. They are soldiers quali fied for limited service because of minor physical disabilities and are loaned to the city by the coinmundltig ofilcer at Camp Meade. They are used mainly to direct trallle. This picture shows a soldier policeman on duty op posite the United States treasury. He Didn't Understand. Tho company quartermaster ser geant frowned at the ruw recruit. "What Is your nnme?" he roared. "William Weaknob, Blr," . sul.l the Tommy. "When did you enlist?" "Last Frldny, sir." "Are you leaving an allotment 7" "Yes, sir." "Who to?" "My mother, sir." "How much?" "All of It, sir." "Yes, I know.-' F.ut what Is the amount of your allotment?" "Oh, not quite half on acre, I should say "London Tit -I'.ltsj. She Knew History. In one of the large parks there Is n log cabin, In which people eat their lunches nnd make coffee. One day, when we happened to be In this pork on a picnic, my aunt suggested that wp make coffee In the little log cabin. i Hazel Immediately piped, "Is that tho cabin where IJncoln lives?"- Chicago '.Tribune. M.'CormncI;, famous Irish tenor, sang for the 200 convalescing ''is r n Ilase Hospital No. 1 on n trip up Long Island sound on the nit .... Surf. The men were transported to the ship by the women's motor i under command of MaJ. Helen r.fisledo. The photograph shows McC'oii. nek on the dock singing to a very attentive audience. MADE HAPPY BY MAIL FROM KOIE .at"'.:. j ' t ..:"..y.:ryf. I 4- "ft Oil JXkid . W r-l ! Hell very of letters from homo Is a great event "over there." Here an shown the happy countenances of American Hed Cross chuuffeurs upon the urrlvul of the mall wagon In Furls. The Prica Of Peace Will Be Impartial Jmtlca To All Nations And Ger many Will Have To Rcleem Her Character. New York. The price of peuc will be impartial Justice to all nations, the instrumentality Indispensable to se cure It Is a league of nations Conned not before or after, but at the iKt conference; and Germany, us nn-m. ber, "will have to redeem her cliar octer not by what happens at ths peace table, but by what follow." This was Fresldent Wilson's an swer given before an audience, ol Fourth Liberty Loan Workers lure, to the recent peace talk from the On tral Powers, although he did not ru ler specifically to the uttcniiiieg of enemy leaders. Shortly before the President s'urtnd speaking news of the further sue. cesHes of American, IlrltiMi nnd French offensives on the western front reached the meeting at the Met. ropolltan Opera House, and this dramatic point to Mr. Wilson's par. oration that " 'peace drives' can lio effectively neutralized anil silenced only by showing that every victory of the nations associated again!-' Or many brings the nations nenicr the sort of peace which will brim; mm-up Ity and reassurance to all peoples and make the recurrence of another -uch struggle of pitiless force ami blood shed forever Impossible and that noth ing else can." "Germany is constantly Intimating that 'the terms' she will accept; and always finds that the word does not want terms," declared the President. "It wishes thef final triumph of Jus tice and fair dealing." Peace was not a question, declared the President, of "coming to terms," for "we cannot 'come to terms' with them, 'as they have made it Impos sible.' Peace must be guaranteed, for there will be parties to the pence whose promises havve proved untrust worthy, and means must be found In connection with the peace settlement to remove that source of Insecurity." "It would be folly to leave the i;uar antee to the subsequent voluntary ac tion of the governments we have peon destroy Russia and deceive Rumania," continued the President. The President emphasized that the justice to be obtained by the lcaitue must Involve no discrimination to ward any people. This he set forth explicitly In a set of five piinclplox, which he enumerated as "the practi cal program" of America's peace terms, and for the maintenance of which "the United States Is prepared to assume Its full share of responsl bilify." These principles were, he said: "First The Impartial justice nirtod out must Involve no discrimination bp. tween those to whom we wish to ho Just and those to whom we do not w ish to be Just. It must be a Justice that plays no favorites, and knows no stand ard but the equnl rights of the several teople concerned. "Second No special or separate In terest of any single nation or any group of nations can be made the basis of nnv pa-t of the settlement which Is not consistent with the common in terests of all. "Third There can be no league or alliance or special covenants nnd un derstandings within the general and common family of the League of Na tions. "Fourth And more specifically, there can be no special, selfish eco nomic combinations within the lea'-'tie, and no employment of any form of economic hovcott or exclusion, exnpt ns the power of economic penalty by exclusion from the markets of thf world mnv hg vested In the League of Nations itself as a means of disciplino and control. "Fifth All International agreements nnd trent'es of every kind must be made) known tn their entirety to the rest or the world." Mr. Wl!on restated the Issues of tho war as follows: VShall the military power of nny na tion or group or nations be suffered to determine the fortunes of peoples over whom they hnve no right to rule except tho right of force? "Shall strong nations be free to wrong weak nations and make them subject to their purpose and Interest? "Shall peoples be ruled and domi nated, even in their own internal af fairs, by arbitrary and Irresponsiblo force, or by their own will and choice? "Shall there be a common standard of right and privilege for all peoples nnd nations, or shall the strong do they will and the weak suffer without redress? "Shall the assertion of right be hap hazard and by casual alliance, or shall there be a common concert to obllK the observance of common rlgths?" He added: "No man, no group of men, choose these to be issues of struggle. They ARB the Issues of It." NAVY WANTS MORE. Asks Congress for an Additional $125,497,960. Washlngton.-Congress was asked bv the Navy Department for an acim flonal "approbation of WWSO W expenses during the remainder of toe 1919 fiscal year. Construction of train Ina camps and providing for their li'ulpScalllngfor $28,660 800, wa8- the largest Hem of the estimates-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers