rescesccsnne ret, Opel, ter Fike, rs, John igar Gna~- , Miller, humaker, Tressler, uth Com-- . Shumace, right and f Council! er of the been vis- last Feb- rt of the e he will | then re- t Summit vedding of ¥ Amanda eo wedding thurch on of Dunbar, iends. Stark and heir homes vening. aturday ‘in 3aylor, and le visitors. nily loaded | rarstory to inday at his ~ TET 5 =. CONFLUENCE. May 13—Miss Elizabeth Cameron went to Connellsville on Monday, where she will visit for a few days. Mrs. Fannie Moore returned from Rrockwood, where she had been vitit- ing her daughter, Mrs. Irvin Wolfe. Frank Oritchfield and daughter of Pittsburg, visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Critchfield, Saturday and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Watson were guests of friends at Connellsville on Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Andersonspent several days at iConnellsville, last week. Hogan Yeagley of Connellsville, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Yeagley, recently. Mrs. L. Roy Holliday spent several days in Pittsburg last week. Roy Greer of Rockwood spent Sun- day here the guest of his mother. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Goughnour en- tertained Mr. and Mrs. G. W. McPhall of Connellsville. : Leo Wagnor of ConnelisvilleZlspent Sundey here with his family. Miss Amber Clark wasfjthe guest of Miss Leora Young at Rockwoodzlast week. Miss Ida Moan of Johnstown is vis- iting her sister, Mrs. RusselljjClouse and her parents, Mr. and j§jMrs. Har- rison Monn. Mrs. Maggie Burgess has returned home after spending severalgweeks with her soniCharles Burgess and her daughter, Mrs. Ray Bell in Pittsburg. eee pe —— ROCKWOOD. May 13—Howard Snyder, youngest son of Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Snyder, of South Rockwood,zwas badly burt on Sunday when hejifelllZdown the back stairs of their house.@His left arm was fractured andjin addition was severely brnised abont the head and body. After spending] several daysfjlast week in = Baltimore, Mrs. W. |R. Wadsworth, and daughter Elnora, have returned home from visiting Mr. Wadsworth, who representsjthe engineers and firemen of the Con- nellsville division on [railroad mat- ters. Mrs. Sarah Walter, wife of §B. & O. agent Walter of Holsopple, was the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Snyder, over Sunday. George Holtzhouer, and Frank Fellers were Sunday visitors at Somerset. D. E. Miller spent Sunday in Mey- ersdale renewing old acquaintances. eee eee “‘Generally debilitated Sfor years. Had sick headache, lacked ambition, was worn oub and all rnn down. Burdock Blood Bitters made me a well woman’’.—Mrs. Chas. Freltoy, Moosup, Conn. COUNTY FAIR AT SOMERSET. At the meeting of the Directors of the Somerset County Agricultural Society held at Somerset, Pa., on Saturday, it was decided to hold the Agricultural Fair at Somerset on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, November 10th, 11th, 12th and 13th, 1913, in the Assembly Room of the Court House for fruit, vegeta- bles and the domestic arts andjat Holderbaums ware-house for stock exhibits. The Fair has grown larger and larger each year, and as the directors said on Saturday, it is up to the Agricultural Society, within the next year or two, to purchase grounds or erect a building of their own,f§but as this is expensive, the Society has de- cided to put off doing so for a little longer. It is highly important for all farmers in the County to use their interest in a genuine farmers fair, and we hope every good farmer in the County will prepare to send some- thing for exhibition. All information can be secured from the Superintendent of the Fair, A. B. Hoffman, R. F. D. No. 6, Somerset, Pa. emer reeeseesseeeene Bilious? Feel heavy after dinner? Bitter taste? Complexion sallow? Liver perhaps needs waking up. Doan’s Regulets for bilious attacks, 25 at all stores. ad NEW TELEPHONE COM- PANY. A new telephone company has been organized in Middlecreek and sur- rounding townships in the vicinity of Trent and Champion. The company has been organized principally by the farmers in that section and to be used by them. They have purchased the poles and are erecting them for the line. Wire and ’phones have been ordered and shipped and the company will be ready for business within a short time. The organizers are: W. J. Hamilton, president; William Reese, treasurer; W. G. Hostetler, secretary. The company expects to | connect with the Economy Telephone company in the vicinity of Trent, where the new line ends. { | | i CHURCH ESTATE BILL PASSES Flynn Measure Provides For Title According te Canens RELIGION ENTERS BEBATE Charge That Law Would Be First Step to Bring State and Church To- gether—Will Affect Biilion Dol- : lars in Property. (Special Harrisburg Correspondence.) Harrisburg.—The Flynn bill, pro- viding that title to ehurch property shall be vested according to the canons of the respective denomina- tiens, which was defeated in the Sen- ate by a vote of 24 #0 12, and them reconsidered, was put through by a vote of 27 to 12. The three additional votes were furnished by Alexander, of Clearfield, and Huffman, of Mon- roe, who did not vete originally, and Buckman, of Bucks, who originally voted against the bill. Endsley, of Somerset. and Giger, of Chester, who voted against the bill did not vote at first. Sones, of Lycoming, and Miller, of Lehigh, who failed to be recorded on the bill ‘at first, voted against it. Senator Hoke, of Franklin, made a bitter attack on the bill, charging that it would be the first step to bring the State and . Church together. He de- clared that it was not true that the Roman Catholic Church was arrayed solidly in support of the bill, and pre- sented a petition from a number of members of that church opposing the measure. He sald that a billion dol- lars worth of chureh property would be affected by the passage of this bill and that legal chaos would result. “I hope it will not pass,” said Senator Hoke. “I am told that an agreement was made to effect its passage in con- sideration of the enactment of the measure requiring the reading of the Bible. Any Senator who votes for it under such an agreement would be recreant to his duty as a citizen and as a legislator.” The bill was sup- ported by Senator MoNichol, of Phila- delphia. He denied the statement made by Senator Hoke that other denominations than the Catholic Church would be affected by the bill. John (. Johnson and George Whar- ton Pepper, he said, had given an’ opinion that only the Roman Catholic Church would come under its pro- visions. He declared that he was sur- prised at the attitude of Mr. Hoke, who had been so greviously pleading for justice in the submission of wo- men’s suffrage. “This bill has as much justice in it as the other, and it affects two million inhabitants of ‘this ‘Commonwealth. | Our church has relations with the government abroad, and has no desire to affect the same arrangement here. If that were true, I would be the last man to ask for its passage. It aims to be a comstructor of morals, so to teach the young to be good citizens.” The vote in full follows: —For the bill —Alexander, Beidleman, Buckman, Catlin, Crow, Daix, Earley, Gerberich, Graff, Hall, Homsher, Huffman, Hun- ter, Jarrett, Kline, Kurtz, Magee, Mc- Nichol, Moore, Morgan, Nulty, Saltus, Sheatz, Thompson, Vare, Washbers. Against—Cooper, Dewitt, Fisher, Hea- cock, Hilton, Hoke, Judson, Napp, Miller, Senseich, Snyder, Sones, Ab- sent or not voting—Clark, Endsley, Gyger, Herbst, Jones, Martin, Mec- Ilhenny, Mills, Sproul. The Humes bill, giving the initia- tive and referendum to ‘second and third class cities, was sent back to the Senate Municipal Affairs Com- mittee from the second reading cal- endar, after one of the hottest parlia- mentary battles of the session. Demo- crats and Republicans gave vent to some very tart criticism of the man- ner in which bills are handled by Lieutenant Governor Reynolds, and Mr. Reynolds apologized. When the motion to recommit was made by Sen- ator Salus, and seconded by Senator Vare, objection was made by Senator Jarrett, of Mercer, who demanded a roll call. Senator Huffman, Democrat, of Monroe, started to urge defeat of the metion, but was stopped by a point ef order raised by Senator Crow, who said the Chair had already de- clared the motion carried and that the bill was no longer before the Senate. “As the motion te recommit was made and seconded and I declared it car ried,” said the Lieaterant Governor, “I must sustain the point of order of Senator Crow.” This surprised friends of the bill, as none heard motion put. Less Liquor Licenses. Completed figures show that there are 57 less liquor licenses in Luzerne county than there were last year, one brewery and one distillery having sus- pended business. The gross liquor l- cense income to the county was $413.- 525, of which the State got $125,896.37, including the brewery, wholesale and bettling fees, which run about $67,000. 'Phene Hearing Opens. The State Railroad Commission met here to hold a hearing on the tele- phone rate question in compliance with the Coniff resolution, recently passed by the House. The Commis- sion has failed so far to appoint an auditor to examine the beocoks of the Pennsylvania and the Reading lines on coal rates. The commission will ghortly act, but did not care to move pending the agreement of the railroad companies and the complainants re garding the person to be®selected as | examiner. STEEL COMBINE WAS DEFENDED Farrell Says Corporation Noi Organizedto Stifle Competition WM. E. COREY CONTRADICTED ‘Says Corporation Has Extended Coun. try’s Commerce to All Parts of the World—No Agreement With ~oreign Manufacturers. New York.—The United States Steel Corporation was pictured by James a Farrell, its president, as a combination organized not to suppress competitors, but to develop the sale of steel in foreign lands, a develops ment which could not have been ac complished, he said, if the corpora- tion had not taken the various com panies competing for foreign business under its wing. He was testifying as the first witness for the defense in the government suit to dissolve the cor- poration as a combination in restraint of trade. ; : The witness traced the growth of the steel corporation’s export busi ness from 292,000 tons the first year it was organized to 2,246,000 tons in 1912, and from $31,000,000 in value ifi 1904 to $92,000,000 in 1912, and said that the efforts of the corporation to push its foreign trade had been ‘“‘con- tinuous and indefatigable.” The re- sult had been that 90 per cent of the country’s foreign trade in steel was done by the corporation, he said. “We have made the strongest effort possible to increase our foreign trade #s compared with out domestic trade,” Mr. Farrell declared. “Our competitors have only been concerned with foreign business when domestic trade has been insufficient to keep their capacity employed. @We have Eept alter the foreign trade continu. ously. If we had not, it would have been impossible to develop it.” Contradicting the testimony of Wil liam B. Corey, his predecessor as pres- ident of the corporation, that there had been “understandings” between the corporation and foreign manufac- turers as to prices and a division of territory, Mr. Farrell said: “We have never operated under any pools or agreements with foreign man. ufacturers either as to prices or loca- tion. We have never entered into any contracts or agreements with for- eign manufacturers to stay out of their market provided they would stay out of ours.” He denied also that the corporation ‘“made a prac. tice” of selling its products lower abroad than in this country. ‘In fact, some of our commodities higher,” he said. .Before the corporation was organ- ized, the witness recited, seven steel companies were competing for for- eign business. On being taken over, their foreign offices were combined under one office and their operations systematized. In 1904 the United States Steel Products Company was organized to take charge of the foreign trade and push it. Exhaustive studies were made of foreign markets in order that business could be done according to the usages and requirements of each particular market, and “at an enorm- ous expense” the processes of manu facture at the mills of the corpora- tion were adapted to meet these re- quirements. The corporation established agen- cies from ‘Iceland to the Fiji Islands,” 268 in all, Mr. Farrell said, and as a ‘result the export business of the sub- sidiaries had greatly increased, in the case of the Carnegie Steel Company to 24 per cent, of its whole produc- are sold! pieyed DY The 69THOratlion In manuiso caring steel for export and 15,000 more in making the steel sold to manufac. turers of goods sent abroad for sals, the latter amounting to $30,000,000. “Wo do correspondence from our office in every language,” said the wit- ness, “in English, French} German, Russian, Chinese, Japanese and Hin- dustanese. We have to get the busi- ness. Our office is an encyclopedia for American manufacturers on trade conditions in foreign countries and we often lend them our salesmen te do their business for them.” Havoc Wrought by Storm. Tulsa, Okla.—At least five men were killed by lightning, many oil tanks and wells set on fire, power plants damaged and other havoo wrought by a terrific electrical and wind storm that swept the Tulsa oil district. British Steamer Hits ice Berg. Montreal—The fate of the Titanic was narrowly escaped by the steamer Chiltern Range in a collison with an iceberg on her voyage from Hull to this port, where she arrived Sunday. The bow-plates of the steamer, a Brit- ish freighter, were badly dented, and only the fact that she luckily slid off the ice mass and escaped contact with any shap section of the underlying portion of it saved her from disaster, in Captain Rea’s opinion. The berg was struck in the track of the ocean liners. ie nines Farmers, mechanics, railroaders, la borers, rely on Dr. Thomas’ Eclectic Oil. Fine for cuts, burns, bruises. Should be kept in every home. 25c and 50c. ad BOSWEL FIRE CAUS- ED BY CIGARETTE. : Say REE "i sath we ol otame a? 2 3 { 1 The interior of the supply house of the Merchants’ Coal Company, in Bos- | well, was damaged by fire about & o’clock on Friday morning. Consid= erable of the contents, consisting of cement, pipe, electrict fittings, and other mine supplies, were ruined, and the loss will be about $2,000, The fact that the sides of the build= ing and the roof are covered with tin, probably prevented a bad fire for Bose well. The blaze was confined to this one building and proyented from com« | municating to the powerhouse, ma= chine shop, and a large supply house of the company. { | | The fire, it is believed, started fromx a cigarette or cigar thrown into a box of sawdust during a meeting last night in the first-aid room of the supply house, where baseball fans met and organized a club. The saw dust box, partly burned, was found on the ground beneath a hole that had been burned through the floor of the build- ing. PORTABLE ACETYLENE LAMP POSTS. By means of a new portable acety- lene lamp-post, described in the May Popular Mechanics Magazine, parks, squares or other open placs may be vividly illuminated for special occas- ions, such as band concerts, and the like, the time taken for the erection or removal of the posts being negli- gible. All that is necessary is to force | the pointed base of the pole into the ground, place a pail of water beside ¢ 8a i} tion. © A diversity of products en- it, drop the acetylene box in the abled the corporation to meet all de- C AS I OR I A water. and make the required hose mands from bed-springs to steel For Infants and Children, connection between the box and the bridges. No single subsidiary with one or two products, he said, could have maintained thesg agemcies on such an extensive scale. Forty thousand men are now em- The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the % : z Signature of piping in the post. rn strats are, Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S rn ® SUITS, $10 TO q Oppenheimer fabrics are dependable and styles are authentic, but it is the inside hand work which you can’t see that gives to Oppenheimer Superior Clothing its more distinguished character and its great value. To get the full import of this statement you must know something of the Oppenheimer organization which for 58 years has stood for honest wormanship and high- est standards of quality. q No skimping or slighting or glossing over of defects is permitted in this organization. 2 fo 2) 5 “, 7477 7% % 7 7% _ 7 {J i VA bs LA 4 rir _ 4 Ik % 0 7 i 7 rs ress, he \ CASTORIA q It is a mistaken notion to suppose that to get the finest clothing you must pay the highest price.. {| Price cannot in any sense be accepted as a guarantee of quality or of service. € Nor can assurance be placed in outward ap- pearances. Style and good looks are necessary but in determining the real service value of cloth- ing you must get beneath the surface. q Oppenheimer Superior Clothing is not the highest priced clothing in the world. q It occupies the great middle or popular field. q In every essential of style, quality and work= manship it must be compared with the best. $28 SEPARATE TROUSERS, $2 TO $6 7, 7 eos 7 q All garments are inspected at every stage of their construction and then, when finished, they undergo an- other rigid inspection before being sent to the shipping department. q That is why Oppenheimer Superior Clothing never _ disappoints— q That is why it does not have to yield precedence to any other ready-for-service clothing sold at the same or anything like the same price— q And that is why we can attach an iron-clad guaran- tee to every Oppenheimer garment. (Read insurance clause.) quibbling or delay. INSURANCE CLAUSE q Every OPPENHEIMER garment is in- spected rigidly and then offered for sale with ABSOLUTE INSURANCE against defect of any kind whatsoever. the slighest irregularity be discovered, the makers will correct it without argument, € Our Spring Style Book will be sent free upon request. Write for it or, better still, look up the dealer in your community who handles Oppenheimer Superior Clothing and note how fully it makes good our ‘every claim. M. Oppenheimer & Co. Wholesale Exclusively 115-123 SEVENTH STREET PITTSBURGH, PA. Should SIRS btn fn iron