BIST OF THE ~¥ront Page Stories Retold in| ro | Paragraphic Form. | ANTERESTING MINOR EVENTS was sold to Dr. D. R. Hand, of Scran- “By Telegraph and Cable Roll in the Important and the Inconsequen- =~ tial, but to Each Is Given 3 its Proper Space. se | under control. Gevernor Sulzer signed the bill, re stricting the sale of coeaine im New | WEEK'S N EWS | York Sisto The Berlin Lumber Company’s plant | at Berlin, N. H., was destroyed by fire. Loss $500,000. { are Japanese. The first group of submarines have | been ordered from Newport, R. IL, to Norfolk Navy Yard. A six weeks old Holstein bull calf ton, Pa., for $3,000. A bill regulating child labor in the canning factories of New York was signed by Governor Sulzer. The National Association for the study and prevention of tuberculosis opened its meeting at Washington. The Albion, N. Y., High School built I , Washington amendments and the prospect of as anany more to come. Ambassador Chinda presented Ja- ipan’s protest against the California ~alien land laws. The Tariff bill was passed by the “House, practically unchanged, by a vote of 281 to 139. President Wilson went to the Capi- ‘Rol in a motor-car and, after consult- dng with Senators, made many nom- ‘dnaticns. £ I Personal 5 President Wilson, accompanied by Mrs. Wilson and their daughters, mo- tored to the Mount Vernon Tomb of Washington, at Mount Vernon. This was the first visit to this historic spot ‘by the President since he came to Washington. “Uncle Joe” Cannon celebrated his «<seventy-seventh birthday. Theodore Roosevelt entertained the Foreign delegates arranging the cele- bration of the Treaty of Ghent at Buncheon at Oyster Bay. E. B. Thompson ef Amenia, N. Y., ‘was elected president of the American Poultry Association in session at Dan- | ville, Ill. I Sporting | The New York National team’s trou- ®les are the result of livelier and im- Proved playing this year by several ‘of their rivals, The Phillies, Brook- dyns, Cards and Bostons are playing with more life and the Cubs are as troublesome as they were a year ago. Charles Webb Murphy insists that ke got the long end of the new famous Tinker deal. He points with pride and | Harms, of North Tonawanda, N. Y., satisfaction to Mike Mitchell, Art| was discharged. Phelan, Red Corriden and Humphries, ell former Reds who have made good Secretary of the Treasury, on his first 4n Cub uniforms. | Imperator wen the Breeders’ Fu- ‘urity at Lexington, the richest of the year for two-year-olds. It was worth -$5,668.50 to the owner, J. N. Camden. The Meiji University of Tokio ca- ‘bled an invitation to Washington Uni- versity, St. Louis, asking the baseball aine to visit Japan and play a series of games. J A garage In Chicago was destroyed. with 56 automobiles. Loss $250,000. Cornell barred the turkey trot, tango and similar dances. Lestershire, N. Y. citizens voted for Sunday baseball. Governor Sulzer signed the Cole bill providing for the licensing and bond: ing of commission merchants. The New York congestion commit- tee discovered that one family in every 150 is evicted each year. Frank Kesmowski committed sui- cide in Buffalo after he had been de- feated in a local election. Joseph Hosford, a negro taxi driver, was sentenced to six months for run- @aing down a man in New York city. The 1,490 employes of the Superior Bteel Co., of Carnegie, Pa., have gone @n strike, tying up the plant. ¢ Senator O'Gorman, of New York, introduced a bill appropriating $66,- 900 to reimburse those who ransomed Miss Ellen M. Stone in 1901. The United States Senate reported favorably the eight hour bill for wo- men workers in the District of Co Iumbia. Lieutenant J. D. Park, a United ‘States Army aviator, was killed at “®live, Cal, when his machine crashed 4nto a tree as he was leaving the ground. Each sentenced to a year’s im- «prisonment and to pay a fine of $500, -former New York Police Inspectors : Bweeney, Thompson, Murtha and Hus- sey were taken te the penitentiary on Blackwell's Island and placed in the ' striped uniforms of convicts, Police Commissioner Waldo of New York transferred eleven police cap- General Judge Emerson of Watertown, N. Y,, “forbade reporters from printing evi- ~ dence in divorce cases. The Illinois Senate passed a bill giv- ing women the right to vote without «& eonstitutional amendment. John Purroy Mitchel was appointed by President Wilson as Ccllector of | the Port of New York. H. 8S. Marshall, of O'Gorman, Battle | t w «& Marshall's law firm, was sworn in | #8 United States Attorney in New | York City. g The Wisconsin Legislature tavors | 5 woman suffrage. | President Wilson has signed the or- | C der requiring that 37,000 fourth-class Ppostmasters submit: to examinations wnder civil service regulations. — -“ SAI aa | a alti 89 years. sailors were drowned when a pinnace capsized off the Island of Syit. tinue the tariff reductions heretofore granted to American products. night was found near the high altar in St. Paul’s Cathedral, London. ceived an anonymous letter warning him that Blenheim Castle is threat. ened by the suffragettes. large mansion in Lancashire. at St. Petersburg. ences. of the crew of discovered before it could explode. troop trains collided near Drama. | strike at Beuthen district near Berlin i kave ret | at a cost of $75,000, was damaged by | fire to the extent of $30,000. Miss Elizabeth M. Miggs was ap- pointed assistant court clerk of the Washington Supreme Court. President Wilson will attend the Central Presbyterian Church during his residence in Washington. Donald G. Perkins, a lawyer, and his wife were killed when their auto- mobile overturned near Branford, Conn, : Fire destroyed thousands ef acres of timber land and several farm resi- dences in the West Egg Harbor sec- tion of New Jersey. More than 200 prisoners appeared before Federal Board of Parole at Leavenworth, Kan., and made applica- tions for freedom. Physicians of the United States Health Service declared the Fried- mann vaccine for tuberculosis un- worthy of the public's confidence. Robert Brinkley, ten years old, af- ter running ten miles, flagged a train and prevented it from running through a burned bridge, near Weston, W. Va. Governor Sulzer signed the Wagner bill permitting proceedings to dis- DPosses those occupying property for immoral purposes. Worcester, Mass., merchants turned off the lights on their signs in pro- test to the authorities for a better lighting service. Ten wild deer, grazing in a field adjacent to the famous Colwell man- sion at Weymouth, N. J., attracted much attention. The New York State Market League plans to build sixty market buildings in Manhattan, each to cost $250,000 M. W. McLaughrey, of Kansas, de- clares that Henry Lee Moore, a mur- der maniac, killed twenty-five persons within fifteen months, always using Lan axe. Mrs. Catherine Knople, sixty-five years of age, accused in court of prac- tising witchcraft by Mr. and Mrs. John Skelton Williams, Assistant visit to the New York Sub-Treasury said the outlook for currency revision was very promising, i School girls have gone out in a sym- pathy strike with the boys at Cam- Forest fires In the Adirendacks are THE FASHIONABLE Fully 10,000 of the 30,000 pupils enm- lled in the Hawaiian public schools —BUTTONS. The above design is by The McCall Zompany, New York, Designers and Makers of McCall Patterns. New York, May 9. in any fashionable crowd assembled for ‘‘the dance”, wedding or the usually includes dancing, since all the world has gone dance crazy Even the staid middle aged men and dowagers, are includes in the ‘‘one step’ which is the polite name for “Turkey Trot’ and its allied dances. NEW COLORS. In a season when every color of the rainbow and modifications are ram- part it would seem difficult to pick out new shades but we have them in ‘“‘Parrot -blue’’ that is at once full and delicate, duck-green verging on yellow, and ‘‘Vase’ a neutral shade neither gray nor green yet verging on both, and which is a refreshing change from the, ubiquitous biscuits and putties. Mahogany-brown which is particularly successful for more general wear, in eponge, velours-de- laines and serges. ‘‘PEG-TOP’’ SKIRTS The skirt sent over from France that has clearly been modelled after the baggy peg top trouser worn by students in the Latin Quarter is rather too outre for fastidious wom- bridge, Mass. They ask shorter hours. The strike has spread to Molden and Somerville. A trusted witness for the defense in the trial of Patrick Quinlan, an I. W. W. leader in Paterson, N. J., admitted that he was a detective for the manu- | greater fullness at the hips. It is facturers. hearing. He fled after the day's Because, as she says, her “Jewel | rot, ruffles at the neck to vision the silhoute of a popular fancy dress costume. . of a cook” was enticed away from her, Mrs. Poulson, in Red Bank, N. J, built a spite fence thirty feet long and fourteen feet high between her house and that of the winner of the cook, Mrs. West. Foreign Sinn Hmm of the Turkish war. Grosvenor Gallery, London, died aged A German navy lieutenant and two It was reported that Brazil will con- The Duke of Marlborough has re- Suffragette “firebugs” Count Cassini, ambassador to the Bulgaria and Servia have accepted h The suffragette “bomb squad” placed | Waters that rival the best French a bomb in a theatre at Dublin. It was [goods and at less cost than the im- ported articles. These form an im- soldiers | portant part of the sets of match- One hundred Bulgarian ere killed and 300 injured when two in The Paris courts have ordered the | ause of a deficit of $400,000. 2 The Portuguese Government is ne- | fluffy and fragrant. otiating with Panama for a cable ser | ice between Portugal and Panama, | The 60,000 coal miners who were on | failure. th _o oa - ian] terns are becoming increasingly pop- nlar as the season progresses. At first these were a bit dubious of ac- i | ceptance by authorities, now the The battleship Tennessee arrived at only trouble Is to supply the demand Algiers on its return from the scene | {OF them. With these and brocades and the fashionable crepons a rath- Sir Countts Lindsay, founder of the | er severe little bodice is used that needs a novel treatment of belt or girdle to give the note of style. Belts are either narrow with one falling side of the front, or extremely deep and folded or else in ‘Turkish’ form. Skirt and bodice of odd ma- A bomb timed to explode at mid- | terials in one tone with the sash in vivid contrast is a faddish arrange- ment just now. FRENCH FASTIDIOUSNESS FOLLOWED burned a | toilet appurtenances is made a spec- ial study, lavish use of toilet water is customy for both men and women. United States from 1898 to 1905, died n fact in many families abroad and ere this use has become a daily this chorus. Russian arbitration of their differ | habit. The refreshing quality of the small amount of high grade alcohol Hemmed in by flames, six members employed in fine toilet waters stimu- the steamer Ophir, [lates which sailed from Vancouver and tied oiliness up near Ladner, B. C., in the Frazer haps most lavish users River, were burned to death in a fire . : “tains for the good of the service. | that destroyed the vessel. The Ophir scented waters, which they find heal Was a wooden river steamer of 200 ing and refreshing after and so fashionably endorsed. A little en here. A decided slit up the hem front and back helps the illusion, the material at the top being laid in flat pleats, either regularly placed, or arranged, in groups to bring intolerable, NEW YORK CROWD. pleated maline and lace will be ad- renders wrapping of the the throat the pretty fixings of ded to dresses er suits. A scheme DELIGHTFUL COLORS— QUAINT | that many clever people employ is to yd ] SILKS, CONTRASTING COATEES | match up the ruche with the hat trimmings. Thus a black tagal hat with ostrich plume shading from blue to greenish yellow, will be worn with a full frill of blue ma- IGASTORIA For Infants and Children. line with inserts of green and tan in its make-up, or with a red straw hat, the ruffle will be black, white and red, always with the darker shade IRIAN FAB The Kind You Have A fine place to study clothes is day afternoon tea at the hotels that outside and predominating. BUTTON FANCIES. buttons form a decorative item and Balgarian embroideries enliven all sorts of summer frocks. Verona Clarke. {| 3 bi £70 :| NoT NARCOTIC. EMERGENCY - HOSPITAL Bove of ld Do SATELPTER TO BE ESTABLISHED Papin Sond - AT GETTYSBURG Bells Harrisburg, Pa., May 3.—Arrange- ments have been completed for the establishment of an emergency hospi- tal of 175 beds to care for the thous- ands of visitors from every State in the Union who will attend the fiftieth anniversary celebration of the Battle of Gettysburg. The hospital will be conducted by the State Department of Health and will be under the per- sonal supervision of Commissioner, Samuel G. Dixon. The State G. A. R. Encampment begins on June 26th but the greatest crowds are expected on July 2, 8, and 4th. Itis estimated that there will be 55,000 visitors in addition to the 32,000 Union and Confederate veterans who will be present. Governor Tener has ordered the Commissioner of Health to take all necessary steps to safe-gnard the health and add to the comfort of the visitors. The emergency hospital will con- sist of 30 hospital tents and accommo- dations tor the 16 doctors and 18 nurses who will be on duty. It will have a commissary department, a fully equipped operating tent with a consulting surgeon constantly at hand. There will be in addition two hospi- tal cars in order thatserious or opera- tive cases may be transferred daily to the hospitals in nearby cities. In addition to the main hospitals| ~~~ there will be two dispensaries with | FacSinile Signature of on LW. YORK At6 months old Ci Exact Copy of Wrapper. BEGISTERED Naa?37 5 Always Bought ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT, Buttons of porcelain, crystal, carved AVegelable iyory, amber ball and jet are among Similating the Food: : the most popular and there is quite a HVE ok, a craze for Roman pearls which + INFANTS Ch i . IN a 4 NS v i) come in all colorings. Tiny diamante hil 4 AY) Li] 1 i Promotes Di . tion Cheerft ¢ iH remanent], of | Opium. Morphine nor Mineral. : Aperfect Remedy for Consfips- il: | tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea ji | Worrs Convulsions Feverish- ll | ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. | Thirty Years, em al “0 DosEs -35 CENTS GA a a | Bears the ! Signature Use For Over | ORI THE CRNTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORR CITY. Jones’ Break-Up For over 20 years has Cured Sciatica, Lumbago and Gout Brsak-Up. 1 ay matiom [any form) got Jones’ have taken it." G ‘SALE AT COLLINS’ DRUG STORE, Meyersdale, Pa. others whe six beds each with a nurse and physi- cian in charge. One of these will be located at the railroad station to care for any visi- tors who may be ill upon arrival and one located near the great assembly tent where the meetings are to be held. : In addition to these dispensaries there wiil be six emergency stations at points where the crowds collect in order that first aid may be adminis- tered promptly. There will be auto ambulance service to convey patients Standard” “Occicent” Bath moreover daringly short, and all that is needed is one of the big Pier- QUAINT SILKS. Silks figured in quaint chintz pat- end looped over the left HERE. In Fravoce, where g toilet articles now so popular to the main hospital from the dispen- saries and emergency stations. ed at convenient points and these will be in charge of male and female attendants. burg will be augmented by specially installed pumps to insure an adequate quantity. Flowing fountains will be installed about the city and grounds. All of the wells in Gettysburg and A HOLBERT vicinity have been examined and|‘** So analysis made of the water and those | @#Ufoce in « cok % Beerits’ Block. up stai which are not safe will be closed. tions and public comfort stations will all be connected by telephone with the State Department of Health head- quarters at the general hospital. AND MANY ARE THE VOICES OF MEY- grand chorus! ber of American men and women who delicacy of | are publicly praising Doan’s Kidney Pills for relief from backache, kid- ney and bladder ills. They say it and Gin, Distilling up-to-date, to friends. They tell it in the home papers. case. Meyersdale, Pa., the skin and controls undue Kidney Pills are not a new reniedy or moisture. Men are per-|to me, for I have used them seyeral of these |times during the past two years and they have given me great relief. I shaving. | was troubled a great deal by kidney chs. American makers now produce toilet Nine comfort stations will be erect- POINTS ON PLUMBING Good plumbing is necessary to good health. Graceful fixtures are necessary to bathroom beauty. BAER & CO Good plumbing throughout the house means comfort and sanitary security. If your plumbing has not these qualities, let us replace with Standard” guaranteed plumbing fixtures and thus have plumbing which is safe, durable and satis- factory. d to'cure all case 3 A 3 & i ji g The regular water supply of Gettys- PROFESSIONAL CARDS, RT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, MERSET, PENN The dispensaries, emergency sta- HARVEY M BERKLEY ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, SOMERSET, P @Omce with ¥'. J. Kooser, Esq. VIRGIL R. SAYLOR, ATTORNEY-AT-LA eee estes. Ww, SOMERSET » 300,000 VOICES! 00%.29-08. G. G- GROFF, . JUSTICE OFy\THE PEACE. ERSDALE PEOPLE, CONFLUENCE, PA, Thirty thousand voices—What a And that's ‘th Papers promptly executed bs at’s € num- Deeds, Mortages, Agreements and all Leg: ¥. -6ma’m BUHL & GATESMAN, Distillers of Pure Rye, Wheat, Mal 5 MEYERSDALE, PA. Meyersdale people are in Nov.18-tf. Here’s a Meyersdale Mrs. John J. Bowser, 31 Broadway, says: ‘‘Doan’s Foley Kidne: complaint and dull nagging backaches. Sometimes I had pains in my sides and loins and this conyinced me that my kidneys were disordered. Hear- ing Doan’s Kidney Pills highly rec- y ato ing or soy 3 toilet water, in the final rinsing after brought relief. seizure of a Parisian firm’s books, be- shampoo leaves the hair delicately | Kidney Pills as RUFFLE BEGUILEMENTS. ommended, I commenced using them strengthen ¢ and it was not long before they Pills: What They Will Do for Yeg They will & your backache r kidneys, sos Fe Only the best lamp oil can give you the bright, clear flame you should have. Family Favorite Oil No odor No soot FREE—320 page book about oil WAVERLY OIL WORKS C0. Pittsburgh, Pa. GASOLINES LUBRICANTS U Ought to Use merit for kidney disorders.’’ rect urinar, .s.. gularities, bull ap the Wom wut tissues, and eliminate the excess uric acl¢ For sale by all dealers. Price 50 | that causes rheumatism.® Pre I recommend Doan’s a remedy of great All manner of overtures are made | cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, | vent Bright's Disease and Dia to beguile one into wearing dainty | New York, sole 2 tty | United States. rned to work. The strika was neck ruffies and these are so Pretty | United 8S at few resist their allurement. For take no other. ad! agents for the bates, and restore health and Jett Refuse substitutes F. B. THOMAS. Remember the name—Doan’s—and The Commercial Press Handles It —_ RIDN | FOR BACKACHE KIDNEYS 2 ND § C = DDES ~~ Our k have g1 politica knocks few ye: Socialis “fad, | Recall How desire elect © our re then ti anothe cate t which “Wh The d But The «¢ Howe cause * yon we on ‘suc litical . TH Down to remi a 10 ye: to serv tentiar; of pop After days, t reme OC of Geo must the ser Great Propert the last many Such v respect tiful th rich an poor lit on wit] and wil stuff. talist, s the Uni Then write newspa fying talist »; of a bo bottle o stole a Recal call th anew o1 AN. Feudi ported Suprem no hesit citizens a stiff b the mir and dr slavery. Due 1 from al uncondi Jones, solutely except and or; Ors. He bb vy dom of confisca of twogl Charlest icising actions and edit throw t prison out tria The 1 and our the peor alter or govern ries wit the sar evident]; the prof er’s ass Our og weapon
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers