THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS. McCONNELLSBURCr, PA. Pictures In Thlo Department Our Readers In Fulton County and Elaewho Around the Aorld AJtn the Camera on the Trail of History IVlalclne Happenlnga. Wi lwmm. It Thla unique photograph wan taken liy nn amateur aboard the ship ut the moment she was hit by a torpedo fired from nn enemy submnrlne. The committee on public Information, which authorized Its uho, will not permit the print ing of any further Information regarding thla photograph. Soma of the brarc Ilelglan coldlera tert, their fighting king, who led them AMERICAN ARMY HIGH EXPLOSIVE SHELL FALLS IN AMIENS chinaman sets commission garland N nW role wpER m m MACHNE.GUN NESTS J V -v . ; " lty'- s-':''-" t I I I I 'iti 1 I I This Is one of the snmll Uritlsh tanks that (In suih vallmit service In H fffi M--x $ 3 . .mtmf, wiping out the machine-gun nests that the enemy relies on to imike good his SP 1 f i 11 A , This photograph, taken whn Amltna was still uuder the fire of the Oer- f V1 f -'f';! I '4 ;il f' , ft TO THE MEMORY OF BELGIUM'S DEAD man artillery, khowa a high exploalva ahell exploding on a roof. y,' ;i f"M . f is ' 4 VwfiWMiifirwiWwmtiiiiiaaai Kartirrtfciiray An American steam laundry going close to the lines to clean and sterilize the ini'lerweur and uniforms of our soldiers. The big drums behind the etiglno filled with boiling water are needed to give the Vunks a decent nppeurunce nKiiln after their buttles. TAKEN FROM EXCHANGES About QO,'WK acres of lurid Is glv- en over to tobucco cultivation la the world. 1 of Word JUST AS THE TORPEDO STRUCK THE VESSEL BELGIAN TROOPS AND THEIR FIGHTING KING esr u' -J: who are driving the Huns from their In their offensive. STEAM LAUNDRY New Zealand has an annual death rate of less than 1 per cent . Portable electric machinery has been Invented to screen coul and load It 1" wagons. BEXGiwn u.t.A. ornciM. photo V country, and the lutcnt portrait of At Kdvvurd C. Chew of Sun Francisco Is the first Chinaman to receive a com mission In the United States army. (,'hj'W was In bis third yeur In civil en gineering at the University of Cali fornia when be enlisted In tbo coast artillery. On account of his good record In college nud recommendations from tho fuculty of the university he was placed lu tho school for specialists at Fort Hcott. After having made good there he was sent to the urtlllery of ficers' training school ut Fortress Mon roe, Virginia, where be received his commission us second lieutenant. Yanks Must Eat Feathers. Hitter words passed between two battulloim of American troops In France over n stolen goose. Tho bird was missed from a little farm In the area occupied by one hutlullnn hut the feathers were found In the district oc cupied by the other. To protect the property of tho na tives In tho area occupied by the Amer ican regiments I ho colonel bus pre scribed the following penalty: "Any man In my coimmd who lays a bund on a fowl that Jias not been bought and paid for will have to eat the feuthtrs." for A mllitnry train with supplies for the allied nrmlea, from Slbcrln, arriving American soldiers In front with soldiers of all the allien. HARBOR OF DURAZZO, RAIDED BY M mJ'isMf Y. has,-- View of the harbor of Durazzo, Albania, which wus tun-red by u uuval base being destroyed and all enemy vessels sunk. 0 'nr . : a. . '. -xjz . Charles Garland, an American mil lionaire, served with the Ilrltlsh cav alry and wus honorably discharged. IIu became a naturalized Itritlsher and Is a candidate for parliament us representative of tho (flKharged sol diers of tho Wurwlck division. This photograph was taken at Mr. Car land's home In Warwick. This Dog Bites. When F. O. Hock of lien Avon, n baggageman employed by tho l'ennsyl vunla railroad, has any more French poodles In his custody for idilpmcnt he will be very careful with his lan guage. Itecently Itock received a crate con taining a French poodle consigned to Itetrolt. The canine refused to slop barking, llock had a grent deal of fig uring to do, and the dog annoyed him. "Shut up, Kaiser, or I'll give you a Yankee wallop," he yelled. The poodle only set up a louder series of yelps and when ltock passed by tho crate the poodle stuck Its head out between the sluts uud nipped him on the ankle. Keforo culling (ho dog Kaiser Itock said It lfe'kcd his bund and was very friendly. Detroit Free Tress. News Reader ro SUPPLY TRAIN FOR THE ALLIES IN iti i Widirfni ii rriirrr nli-iiifir'nnifiYn'tilnftr'niimfiKtrtrfiriwm 1,1,1 ' ' 'nw n m iH-5sw i 4ii The dedication of this mausoleum, erected to (lie memory of Itclglun soldiers who fell In the fight to protect their country from the Hun, took place In the ShornelllTe Harrison cemetery. Tho muusoluum Is the only one of Its kind In all Kngland. BRIEF BITS Kngland's prison population before the war was 18,000; It Is now O.WK). New Zealand has an annuul death rate of less than 1 per cent. IVlay Journey MANCHURIA In Manchuria. The photograph shows THE ALLIES vl- force of the allies, the Auxtrlau navul Woman suffrage, was Indorsed at the annual convention of the l'cnnsylvanlu Slate Federation or Labor. The Inventor of a pulley with depres sions In Its surface contends that belt will not slip when It I used. j October 6, 1018, The following telegram, w h Ui, is self-explanatory, relates ton',, .emergency medical ami aurMn,, relief work furnished tlmiiitii the U. S. Public Health Servw, to communities unable to ci,i with the present sllumiua even with State aid: "To all State Health O.Ticerir Public Health Service will m billze with aid Volunteer M edlcal Service Corps all outside mcj. leal aid required in combatting present Influenza epidemic. Crow upon specific request from this Service will mobilize nun lng personnel and furnish nir.-n. sary emergency hospital suapU, which cannot be obtained other, wise. Inform all city anil coun try health officers your state tint all appeal for aid must be malf to State Health DcpHrtmont which will make request of Km. geon General Public lleulih Sorvlce whenever local neeils re. quire. Whenever necesnury pub. 11c health service will chUIjIhi, district officer to cooiieiatc with state officials and dlHtrilmit medical and nursing personnel, (Signed) Blue, Surgeon r,,n eral U. S. Public Ileulth S.tv ice." Tha Horsa Transport Tlcondcro ga Torpedoed. 233 ARE BELIEVED LOST Cubmarlne Shelled Dead And Dying-. 20 Survivors Out Of 250 Men Aboard Reach Atlantic Port An Atlantic Port. Scores of Aiikp leun sailors and soldiers were 1. il.i d or wounded by shrapnel flnl li i German submarine after It lud tor pedoed the steamship Tlonilero;;u 1,7'ji) miles off the Atlantic coast, an unhnj to the story told by 20 survivors, h arrived here aboard a Iiriti.sh In l::Mr. There were 250 men aboard the TI conderoga, an American steam liiji ot 5,130 tons, and all but the 20 uho ar rived here ure believed to have n:r isheJ. The survivors got awa;. in t: only boat which was not deimil 'lnd by the shellflre from the submarine, they said. Seventeen of the men uho reached poitf were members of a i tachment of soldiers detailed in can for hoists which were boiii' Iran ported. The Tlconderoga was attacked, pre sumably, on October 2, when flu.1 Ml behind her convoy because of ns!n trouble. According to the story of the sur vivors, the submarine was not sllii'J until she had sent a torpedo ci.i-Ii.bi into tbe side of the ship. The Ioik-Io did not strike a vital spot, Iiowcht, and the captain crowded on full steam in an effort to escape, at the same time ordering the gun crew Into aciim against the submarine, which uiipeartJ about a mile off. "Our gun crews did not fir more than five or six shots," cno of the f vlvors said. The forward gun " shot away almost at once. The after gun and Its crew were done for almost as quickly. Then the men went to tin bouts, but It was no use as the fly'" shrapnel was spraying the1 decks anJ men fell In scores, either killed or badly wounded." Another survivor declared that all of the Tlcomlcroga's eight life I""" with the exception of one, w rf" rlk- died with shrapnel before they ruiiU bo launched. A number of men who tried to get Into the eighth boat were killed by shrapnel as they claiabenJ over the sldo of the vessel, he said- "Finully," this survivor coal in"1 J. "one of our men, in desperation. anl close to the submarine and hailed olllcer, asking him In God's name lo stop firing. One of tbe survivors said the sun marine was of tho cruiser tyi"1 an(l had the largest guns bo ever had ,,f11 on a submarine. One of the engineer officers, he said, whose room pierced by a shell from the subinarm'. declared that the shell was nn elKt Inch projectlht. Heretofore only Inch guns have been reported on v& marines. CADET FLIER KILLED. Mississippi Lad Lose Life A Texas. Fort Worth, Tex. Cadet I'0 f.yons, of Vicksburg. Miss., was kHM In an airplane accident hero, while r celvlng formation drill. He Is survive by a mother In Vicksburg and ','',,' brothers In sorvlce In France. BARNETT IN FRANCE. Bafe Arrival Of The Marin Corp' Commander. Washington. Arrival In Franc "J Major General Harnett, comniaiulain the United KUites Marine Con, Hrlgadler General McCawley, qua" master general of tho corps, wa nounced by Secretary I mulcts. TO CONTINUE DAYLIGHT SAVING- Senate Pa.ee. Bill Keeping Clo Turned Up. Washlngton.-The Dnyllgl'l savM law would remain In effect uai sclnded by Congress under a passed by the Senate The which was Indorsed by !' . Ilaruch, of the War Indunirl. s H In the Interest of fuel goes to the House. Under llio I r f. the clocks would be turn! b an hour on October 27. AMERICAN SHIP SHELLED BY U
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers