THE FULTON COUNTY NEWS. McCONNELLSBUB 0. PA. DANDRUFF SHVVV,VVVV' 1WHEN FUR MEETS FABRIC THE DREAM SONG FALL OUT By MILDRED WHITE. MAKES 1 A small bottle of "Danderlne" keeps hair thick, strong, beautiful. Girls! Try this! Doubles beauty of your hair in a few moments. Within ten minutes after an appli cation of Danderlne you can not find a single trace of dandruff or falling hair and your scalp will not Itch, but what will please you most will be after a few weeks' use, when you aee new hair, One and downy at first yes but really new hair trowing all over the scalp. A little Danderlne Immediately dou bles the beauty of your hair. No dif ference how dull, faded, brittle and scraggy, Just moisten a cloth with Dan derlne and carefully draw It through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. The effect Is amazing your hair will he light, fluffy and wavy, and have an appearance of abundance; an In comparable lustre, softness and luxu riance, (iet a small bottle of Knowlton's Dnnderlne for a few cents at any drug store or toilet counter, and prove that your hair Is as pretty and aoft as any that It has been neglected or Injured by careless treatment that's all you surely can have beautiful hair and lots of It 'if you will Just try a little Dan derlne. Adv. Frenchman Invented Zeppelin. How iniiiiy people are nwure that fount Zeppelin was not the real lll venlor of the Zeppelin? As a mutter 'if fuel, u Frenchman, Muurlco Ohov reujf, conceived the Idea, and It wus from his plum that the first monster airship wus able to fly. Chevreiix, who wns a naval engineer, linn recent ly died; since the commencement of thf war he had practically lived the life of a hermit; Home say because of his grief at being the Innocent cause of placing In the hands of the hated enemy such a terrible machine of war. Ho resided for some years In Germany, and was employed In the Zeppelin workshops, and while so engaged de signed the six-cylinder motor, by which Count Zeppelin wus able to eventually triumph over the dllllculty of making a dirigible airship that would keep up for hours In the air. "Cold In the Head" i an acuts ltack of Nasal Cntrrh. Per. sons who r subject to frequent "colds In the head" will find that the uie of HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE will build up the System, cleans the Blood and render them leas liable to cold. Kept ted attacks of Acuta Catarrh may lend to Chronic Catarrh. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE Is tak en Internally and acta through the Blood on the Muroua Surfaces of the System. All Druggist 75c. Testimonials free. IIOS.OO for anv cane of catarrh that WALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE will not curt. r. J. Cheney t Co.. Toledo. Ohio. Noblesse Oblige. ' "I didn't think I'd live to see It, but I have," remarked the old-fashioned gentleman. "You've often heard men ny their wives made them?" "Certainly." "Yesterday I heard n suffrage ora tor reverse the compliment In favor of friend husband." Rlrmlnghum Age Herald. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CAS'fOUIA, that famous old remedy for Infants and children, and see that It Dears the Signature ofi Ul USA rnr nr HI) Vmir. Children Cry for Fletcher's Custoria When Conditions Are Right. Hoarder Didn't you tell me you could sleep under blankets at night In this placet Owner So you enn, 'When It's cold enough. San Francisco Chronicle. Sooths Baby Rashes That Itch and burn with hot baths of Cutlcura Soap followed by gentle jnolntlngs of CuUcura Ointment Nothing better. For free samples ad dress, "Cutlcura, Dept. X, Boston." Sold by druggists and by mall. Soap A Ointment 25 and 60. Adv. Defining It. Why do they cull (he big waves In e oeeun nt the seaside breakers, par 'Itecmise they're the excuse for the hotels, my son." Keep It to Yourself. Keep y, troubles to yohself," sjdd i nch' Kltcnj "nieanln' tint If ym's got au grip, don't siieezo In a crowd." ".Ti'r.? ?Mf w" 0"l",',' r Has "irce't 1'li'nnuut IVlluti. AdT. to mi"'!'" wn" 0,10 nf I" t"JS " p,,,',0,ni't of women as ( ) M 1 4m I I it aaaaVl 1 1 Ruins of the benutlful cutncdral of Albert as the Uermuns left It, and, 2, which the Americans are striving to save In their bombardment of that city. from America to Siberia to take command of tho Czocho-Slovak forces there. BARROOM IS NOW USED BY Y. M. C. A. French Town's Most Popular Drink Emporium Is Bought at Auction. SODA INSTEAD OF ABSINTHE American Qlrl In Sky Blue Uniform Attends to the Wants of the Thirsty Soldiers and Sail ors. By ROY DURSTINE. Paris. In the very heart of a French port town, where trnfllc Is thickest, there stood a barroom. It was Just nt tho point whore a sailor's or soldier's thirst was greatest as he trudged up tho hill. It did a rattling good business, such a good business that the authorities kept a special eye on It Whenever a military policeman hnd nothing better to do, ho would stroll np to this bar to see how many men were draped over It. Accordingly, Its trnde languished, for there nro more deslrablo things to do than to be n consistent drinker In the most conspicuous place In town. nefore long the mndnme found that her business hud fallen on evil ways. ITer success had been bo grent that It it had fulled I Bids for Y. M. C. A. A public sale was announced a sale of all the, oh, so beautiful fixtures. Without thought of price, everything would go beneath the hammer of tho auctioneer. Everyone In town knew of it ' And when you sny "everyone," you Includo Arthur S. Taylor, who wed to be a newspaper man In Phila delphia, and who is now the head of the Y. M. C. A. in the district of the port town. So he went to the sale. And when the bidding fell off, and the miidame WEARING "FLU" MASK Iff Chicago strvct sweeper wearing an Influenza mask, by order of tho health department 1 i:' j"$r i 7 A? INTERNED GERMANS WATCHED Close Attention Paid to Their Con versation In Order to De tect Plots. Camp Wadsworth, Spartanburg, 8. C There is someouo at all times among the soldiers guarding German prisoners here who can understand German, paying strict attention to their conversations, to detect an plou wrung her hands because the price was so low, then up stepped Mr. Tay lor, and bought all the fixtures for tho Y. M. C. A. After that ho dickered with the landlord, and enmo to an agreement which permitted him to leave tho fix tures whero they were, to leave tho bar where It was but to cbango what passed across the bar. That was only a llttlo whlln ago. Hut todny, as you mount the hill of the town, as you see tho doors of the tar stretching ouf their invitation to bring In your thirst and have It quenched, you will see a strange thing. Over the door you will see In large letters the words: The Red Triangle. Inside, behind the bar, you will see tin American girl In the sky bluo uni form of the canteen worker. And you Will see sailors and soldiers leaning their elbows on the shining mahogany and hear them say things like: "(Ive us a chocolate milk-shake." "Make ndne pineapple." "How's the Y. M. speclul today?" "Pnckago of cookies and two straw berry sodas." Think of It I Sodas, In Franco! And yet this Is only one of three plnces In YANKS DIE WITH FACES TO THE FOE Valiant Spirit of Fallen Men Is Typified in Attitudes of the Dead. TROOPS EAGER FOR BATTLE Ever Crouching Forward With Their Faces Toward Germany, Im patient to Make World Safe for Humanity. Purls. C'liaplalns of two Ynnkeo regiments that stormed the slopo above the Ourcq river camo wearily back at sundown from tho task of burying their dead. They were two men spir itually uplifted und their eyes were shining as they mado their brief but i loipient report. "In nil that battlefield." they said, "we found, without a slnglo exception, that every one of those boys died crouching forward." That short dramatic story a patri otic eulogy that was an epitaph for American heroes camo first under my cy when, after a three weeks' Journey ot 4,000 miles, I reached Tarls. Faces Ever .Eastward. Stories of tho valiant American spirit nro old. Yet tho proud words of tho chaplains were tremendously Im pressive. They Interpreted the spirit of America on tho fighting line In the same terms as I hud seen It among the fiesh troops In the convoy across tho Atlantic, U Knglnnd, In the French port and In the trip across Franco troops yet to face the Hun. Thousands were in thut convoy. And their faces were ever toward (lormuny. They were grim faces of serlous-inlnd-od, silent men during the tedious ocean trip silent, strangely, until actually on French soli. Then they underwent a change. The curtain of solemnity seemed to lift Tho frown of Impntleneo at delay was gone and, In contrast to tho silence In which they had received tho homage of Urltlsh crowds, they sang rollicking war songs, laughed and cracked Jokes and replied with n Yankee roar to the chorus of welcome French crowds gave them. Their faces were away from the set that might be hatched to escape, and sucuro other Information. Hut it would seem that such pre cautions nro hardly necessary. Tho prisoners have repeatedly expressed themselves as being very well content to remain here until the end of tho war. They reallzo that it would bo foolish for them to try to escape, as few of them apeak English nnd they could not get very far beforo being de- In shnrp contrast, the cathedral or Mots 8 (Jen. Jules Junlu, now on his way Prays That God Will J Damn German Empire I T Cleveland. Not Irreverently, but with much feeling, Dr. W. i II. Crawford, president of Alio- X gbeny college, brought "Aniens" f from the throats of 2,XK) Metho- (list divines In this city when he 9 prayed fervently for "God to A damn the Cermnn empire." He J hud Just returned from a yenr ( and a half service with the Y. M. f C. A. on the western front. i!r-r-r-r-G-a-66-a-f-ft-r-r- that one port town where tho Y. M. C. A has a soda fountain. Itesldo. the bar sits another Ameri can girl selling soda checks and, In tho lulls, changing the record on the phonograph. Nothing old about those locords, either. With S'ew York Just "r few days away," the supply of tunes Is kept up to tho minute. In the hack room there are small tables und chairs. Thoso who prefer to rest as they drink may do so. And many do. "You see, I figured it out this way," said Mr. Taylor, as he looked over the bluo-und-ollve-Vlrnb shoulders packed along the bar, "I figured It nut that half the attraction of a bar Is the so ciability of drinking slowly and gos siping while you do It. And, you see, It Is!" ting sun as they waited In the French port for tho trains to tako them to France. Their eyes gazed longingly to tho east, and they eagerly strained for vard as If to hear tho far-off boom of the guns. Every one of these Yankee soldiers, fresh from the homeland, was crouch ing forward as did-the heroes the chaplains told of with their faces to wurd Germany. A complete division, commanded by an American major generftl, disem barked. And It was Just one unit, ono convoy of tho unuudlng stream that Uncle 8am Is sending ucross. Chafe at Long Walt Tho only worry was whether It would bo a long wait before It was their turn "nt bat" against tho Hun. Submarine rumors hadn't frightened them on tho way ucross tho ocean. They hud (billed dully, ns best they could In tho cramped ship's area. They bad taken dally exercise to keep them healthful and fit. And they hnd stood guard, In turn, with eyes "peeled" for submurlnes mostly hopeful that ono would turn up Just for the delight of st-clug an American destroyer bomb It out of all urn-fulness. There was a bout drill dully on the convoy; each man answered roll cull In bis allotted placo besldo n lifeboat. And constantly, save In sleep, each ninn had to wear a life preserver strapped about bis chest and buck. Now they're at the end of the loug Journey In France along with a mil lion and n hulf. fighting men from tho I'nlted States. They're showing early that great American spirit crouching forward, with their faces toward Ger many, Impntlent to iniiko tho world unsafe for Huns. It's a pity Knlser Kill couldn't have stood on the dock at that French port whoa they landed Just to seo them. Dead Men Convicted. St. Louis, Mo. When u decision reached the court of criminal correc tion here recently from the supreme court alllrmlug the conviction of Israel Schucurt, for adulterating soda water In violation of the pure food law, It was found that both Schucart and his bondsmen were dead. Schucart died a year ago, while his bondsman passed away five months ago. tected. They have been heard to ex press the hope that they will never be exchanged for American prisoners In Germany. Tho prisoners nro willing workers, and they do a great deal of work about camp. They nro given humnno treat ment, get plenty to cat and the snmo medical attention as is given to sol diers, but they are not by any mentis treated as guests of tho nation, us has been dono at some other prison camps. The German prisoners here nfore than earn their keep- Woprlsht, 118, Wtatars NewtpaiMr to loo.) Elizabeth left her place beforo the typewriter on the doctor's desk to wel come a timid patient, who waited In the doorway. Hut presently she was back again, telephones and buzzers seeming to cull her on every side. And one could not know that the girl who resonded so tirelessly and cheerfully was longing In her very soul to be away from It allaway from tho re cital of aches and pains, from the hurry and noise of the business world. As If borne on a drifting breeze came n sweet memory of grandmoth er's home in a country town. Her child ish vocations had been spent there, nnd Elizabeth hud never forgotten the mnglc Joy of those times. Somo time film had hoped to go back to brighten, perhaps, her grandmother's declining years, but word camo that grandmoth er hud passed beyond that need. So tho old homestead would be desolate forsaken. Elizabeth supposed that the sale of tho property would burely cover a well-remembered mortgage, after nec essary debts were paid. Hut today as she returned from encouraging the timid patient a long envelope lay face upward on tho doctor's desk. It was addressed to herself iftid when Eliza beth had perused Its Intricate word ing Fbo found this same old property to be hers absolutely by grandmother's will. There hnd been extra money, It ap peared, to meet those other demands. Elizabeth, her dark eyes widening be neiith the gold-brown hulr, stared ut the written document and moved Im pulsively towurd tho doctor's private office. "You must let mo go," she told him, when ho had read tho paper. "I want to see what I can do with grandmoth er's old place." "liaise chickens nnd live by your self?" laughingly queried the physi cian who had been her father's friend. "Oh lo you think that I could?" she asked. Later when alio passed down tho vil lage street Inquiring glances followed her graceful figure. Itut Elizabeth was all unaware. She was living again In fancy the happy days In that square old house ut the end of the road. Hut as she passed Inside, regarding nil those funillar objects which were now her own, Into tho girl's heart camo a passion of longing for posses sion, to live here, to have u real home. Some ono would give her com panionship surely If she could but keep the old pluce up. "How could thnt bo doner' she asked herself wearily, sinking Into tho soft depths of one of grandmother's chairs. The dreams and longings of that confident girlhood camo poignant ly back In the atmosphere of grand mother's home the great house re paired und beautiful, the garden won derful to seo with sun-dlul und foun tainus they used to be und In grandmother's drawing room, herself, Boated beforo the piano playing, com posing the harmonies that had never quite ceased flinging themselves through all her busy years. In tho background of tho very young Elizabeth's fancies a man's figure had hovered. Must not every happy maid en have her lover? Elizabeth now bud forgotten the lover I All nt once her typing lingers were eager, Insistent to touch the piano keys. So In the shad ows floated a "Song Without Words," the unspoken dream, perhaps, which had lain hidden so long in her heart Through the diamond panes the sun turned tho musician's hair to a golden halo. On und on she played. When her music had reached Its lust vibrant note the man arose and unhesitatingly passed Into tho room. "Repeat that last passage," ho com manded, and Elizabeth, glancing about absently ns though still under u spell, obeyed. When Hhe turned around upon the piano stool tho strange man stood over her searching her face excitedly. "Your own composition?" he asked. "Why yes," Elizabeth replied won dering. Tho man's tone wns still abrupt. "What will you take for it?" "I am nfrald." Elizabeth replied, "that I do not understand your mean ing, or," sho added, ."who you are." The man laughed and his low laugh ter hud a pleasing sound. "You must overlook my Intrusion nnd my abrupt request," he said. "Enthusiasm nnd the Joy of discovery carried me away. Tho namo of Lawrence Harry may not be unknown to you. Todny I have been visiting the town of my birth. Soon I return for my concert tour.. In vain I have searched for new melodies, sweet haunting tunes to tho themes I love. Each writer disappoints; his music Is stereotyped. Rut yours tonight Ah 1 yours!" Tho great singer smiled. "If you would but sell that last ex quisite fancy to me," he said. "You might name an extravagant price." Elizabeth stood before him, she wns trembling, but she laughed softly. "My playing," she said, "was but the expressing of a wish to keep this piiiro my homo; home I Po you know what that means?" "I know," the man answered de cidedly, "that I will buy up everything of thnt sort that you can compose. And so Elisabeth's dream all came true. And whn Lawrence Harry is singing nt his best you may be sure thut he Is thinking of n wonderful old placo he calls home and of Elizabeth, the gifted wife, who Is his Inspiration. Taken on Trust "Our product Is thoroughly tested before leaving the factory. No man can sell Btuff today that has not been tested." "Wo mnnnge to sell our product without testing it" "Thut's odd. Whnt do you scHT "Dynamite." Got Her Attention. "I tried to flirt with thnt girl yes terday." "Make any kind of an Impression r "Yes, alio called a cop." A splendid fabric appears at Its best In the rich nnd stately wrap which Is shown In the picture above. The d(f sign reveals an understanding by Its creator of the fitness of fur fabrics to the mnklng of ample and luxurious garments. This one Is a long and beau tiful draped cupe to which sleeves have been, added. The fur-fabric Is an Imitation of brond tall and It Is finish ed with n mnrten collar nnd cuffs. Each serves to set off the other; the fur nnd the fur fabric are rivals in benuty. This Is one of several very hand some wrnps In which furs have been made up with fur fabrics with an ef fectiveness not equaled In the past. Among them there nro long conts, In which very wide borders of genuine fur form half the length of the skirt portion and collar and cuffs are very large. A variety of plushes which is the other nnme for fur fabrics made up with a variety of furs, have result ed In some entirely new and very liuirl somo conts,but nothing finer In de sign has been offered this season than Winter Hats For some reason the millinery of nildwlntcr Is more colorful nnd some what moro elaborate than that which ushered In the fall season, although the simply trimmed hut cannot be outclassed. Rut variety Is the spice of millinery as well as of life, and some of the latest arrivals In the assembller of midwinter hats are far from simple. The hat ai tho center of the picture is an Instance of this new departure. In the face of a voguo for sedate col ors and meager trimmings, its design er has chosen to be uuduclous nnd has vindicated her cholco by making a beautiful hat. It is a picturesque model with a wide brim, faced with rose-colored crepo and edged with a double frill of velvet In thnt cool brown called "elephant." Tho brim Is ui.ti.r nt tho left side tlinn elsewhere and has as many graceful turns nnd curves ns the edge of a flower petal. A wholo company of small curling ostrich heads which Is the millinery name for little plumes finds n resting plnce on It nnd they tiro of the same shade of brown. The crown Is rather high and lifts nt tho loft with a baud of tucked belting rlhbun about It in rose color. Just to show that quite a lot of trimming can be used successfully, rather large brown bonds are sot at wide Intervals about the upper edge of the ribbon, and even the lovely llttlo ostrich plumes are not loft alone In their glory brown Japanese ai grettes spring up among them. Another lovely mtdwluter hut, at the right of tho picture, brings visions of theater parties weddings lind all sorts of bright assemblies. It is of taupo velvet fuccd with silk in three A Beaded Blouse. Ono of the smartest blouses noted recently owed Its charm chiefly to the trimming, the blouse itself being of the simplest shape Just a long, loose blouso reaching down almost to the knees, opening only to tho waist. Tho sleeves were loose and straight From the bust down to three-quarters of Its length the blouse was ornamented with small Jet beads In a spider web pattern nnd weighted at tho hem by n brond frlngo of the same beads. A narrow band of embroidery to match edged tho regal wrap pictured. It covers rr wearer from neck to shoe top, looks warm and Is warm, and It Is really a splendid achievement of the cloth man ufacturer nnd the designer. Ono wonders where all the pelts come from thnt go to make up ever present furs. It seems as If many species nf anlinuls must become ex tinct before long. In the meantime fur fabrics are showing their ability to take the place of skins and may grad ually replace them; nt any rate they are already Joining forces In making wraps that are everything we could wish for. A Slip-Over Blouse. A pretty slip-over blouse Is of whlto dotted Swiss with deep circular yoke of white organdie, to which the (lotted Swiss blouse nnd sleeves are attached. The organdie yoke Is rounded out at tho throat and finished only by a cord ed piping. CufT.s are of organdie and the long sleeves of dotted Swiss. Swiss nnd organdie nre. Joined throughout the blouse with lines of hemstitching. More Colorful, colors, pulo rose, blue and lavender. In bands Inside a bonier of taupe on the underhrlm. It Is one of the few very wlde-hrlmmed hats thut bare -flourished In the midst of much more numerous small ones. At tho left a brown beaver hnt with a crushed collar of velvet about the crown has only a fancy pompon of uncurled ostrich for ornnment. Tlfere Is a furore for beaver hats and there fore It Is sure of as much considera tion as Its more trimmed rivals. "2 Feel New Shoes Rule Soon. The government ban on fancy shoes, which will limit the stylos nnd delight ful tints of milady's footgear, will be gin to make Itself felt In a short time, Cutting of the new shoes, according to classification, height and style, Is said to havo begun In factories throughout the country. Retailors and wholesaler! are given until Juno 1 to dlsposo of their present stock of shoes at the present prices. After that time shoe dealers will carry only the regulation grades of shoos, ranging In price from 'i to $12, nil of which will benr the government stamp, classifying them In the three grades, as follows: Class A, from $9 to $12; class It, from $( to $3.50 ; class C, from $3 to $.'.!0. Fur and Beads. An (Stonlsblng Parisian turban, de signed by Lucie Ilaimir, has a crown of kolinsky fur, while the rest Is made up of gold beads twinkling through thin folds of crepe In soft brown, to mato red, and white. the open portions of the front, and a wider one encircled the sleeves below the elbow. Narrow black satin ribbon used as a finish nt tho wrists was loosely knotted on the outer sides.' White satin ribbon was used to hold In place the fullness of tho blouse at the waistline. Silk Plus Wool. Sntlns and silks, plain and figured, ojmihluo effectively and scrvlceably with the wool of an old gown or t small amount of new material
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers