The Meyersdale commercial. (Meyersdale, Pa.) 1878-19??, June 12, 1913, Image 6

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    GRIST FROM
i
For Hasty Consumption.
WHOLE WORLD IS GLEANED |
| Brooklyn Sunday School Union.
¥he Four Corners of the Earth and
the Seven Seas Are Made to
Yield a Tribute of Inter-
esting News.
i Washington :
The problem of a remedy for the | conferred an honorary degree of doc-
tariff lobby remains unsolved, but
there is a move to keep ex-members
fren using the floor as paid agents.
Professor William H. Taft arrived |
at Washington for a short visit.
The Mexican Minister of Foreign
Affairs has protested against the anti- | eral Symod of the Reformed Church in
alien law recently passed by Arizona. | America $400,000 each.
Japan’s rejoinder to the American ;
reply to her protest insisted that the
ebject to the California Land law was
to discriminate against the Japanese.
E Personal
Anning
United States Ambassador Herrick
gave a dinner in honor of the explorer
Peary at Paris,
Prince Albert Frederick George, sor
of King George, of England viewed
Niagara Falls.
The French Academy has awarded
fs grand prize of 10,000 francs, te
Rolland, author of “Jean Christophe.”
Justice Goff, in New York, gave Mrs.
Abigail Bishop her decree of absolute
diverce from James C. Bishop, giving
THE WIRES
Latest Dispatches Ground Down |
| letic League, teok part in the physical
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the banker the custody of his daugh- |
ter Murlel and allowing $15,000 a year |
ailmony.
RINNE
E Sporting
The old timers whe
alemg by managers as being mear the
pagae point whe are hitting well up
were passed |
among the elect are Kling and Leach. |
American lawn temnis players
stared two points toward the recovery |
of the Davis international challenge
p, a8 Maurice E.McLoughlin and R.
Norris Williams swept the Australians
freosa the first of the singles matches
efi the turf courts in New Yerk.
The German team defeated the
French team in the contest for the
PBwight F. Davis international tennis
trophy at Wiesbaden.
Manager Frank Chance of the New
York Americans has offered $5,000 for
the immediate release of Frank Hosp,
shortstop of the Venice team of the
Pacific Coast Baseball League.
: General
IRR
The “laundered” bills are said to be |
winning favor with Treasury officials.
Samuel Gompers, labor leader, un-
derwent an operation for mastoiditis
im Atlantic City.
James M. Thompson, a retired busi-
mess man of Hartford, Conn.
estate of $1,438,380.
More than 1,500 lumber workers in
Buluth, Minn., are on strike for a 10
per cent wage increase.
Mrs. Woodrow Wilson distributed
flowers from the ‘White House Conser-
vatory, among various hospitals.
A hearing on the alleged “baseball
trust” will be given before the House
Rules Committee within a week, ac-
eording to Representative Gallagher,
of Illinois.
Mrs. Jere Knode Cooke obtained a
divorce in Hartford, Conn. and paved
the way for Cooke, former clergyman,
eventually to wed Floretta Whaley,
with whom he eloped in 19067.
For denouncing the Paterson police
fer their conduct in the silk strike,
left an |
| killed two deputy sheriffs and es--
| caped.
{
| made by Benjamin and James Duke,
|
{ing of triplets, born May 8, at the
| January,
Alexander Scott, editor of a socialist |
paper there, was sentenced to serve |
ene to fifteen years in prison under a | other member.
law against “preaching hostility to the |
gevernment.”
The Dunkards ir. session at Warsaw,
Ind, voted that members of that
church must refrain from use of to-
Bacco in any form.
The Pemiscot County Bank at Ca- |
rathersville, Mo.,, has been closed. A !
deficit of $250,000 is reported.
Mayor Bennett, of Asbury Park, N.
J., refused to close the beach on Sun-
days in answer to a protest by four
pastors.
Frank McLean, editor of the Union
City (Pa.) Times, was killed when
kis automobile was struck by a freight
train near Erie, Pa.
The International Association of
Masters of Dancing of the United
States and Canada propose to place a
ban on the turkey trot.
The Department of Commerce’s re-
port shows that 189 steam, sail and
wnrigged vessels were built im the
Wnited States during May.
Many cases of typhoid fever report- |
ed from Philadelphia are said to be |
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due to vegetables raised on filthy
soll.
Kikalacka, the eldest inhabitant of
Hawaii, died at the great age of 108 |
years. His father remembered Cap-
tain Cook’s visit to the islands. |
The steamship Harry Morse arrived
at Galveston with 108 American refu-
gees from Mexico. |
Charles Wightman, a cripple and
deputy county clerk at Dayton, Mo. |
was able to walk for the first time
im 38 years after being stung in the
ankle by a wasp.
ich...
{
| tion of the beef trust.
about
others ill frc
militazy mano
The “Grasshopper” plague has
struck Texas. Much damage to crops
is reported.
ream
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“Night riders” are again threaten-
ing the tobacco growers near Hender
son, Ky.
Georgia will be the first State to
elect a Senator by popular vote. That
State was one of the few which re-
| fused to ratify the direct election
amendment.
More than 150,000 children took
part in Sunday School parades in cele-
bration of the 84th anniversary of the
A contributiom of $1,108,000 was
of Raleigh, N. C., to Trinity College’s
endowment fund.
Former Chief of the United States
Secret Service John E. Wilkie was
elected vice president of the Chicago
Railways Company.
Hugh E. Walker, 17 years old, was
pulled from a boat by a large fish and
drowned in Lake Erie, near Cleveland.
The University ef North Carolina
tor ef laws on Vice President Mar:
shall.
Under the will of Mrs. Mary B. Pell,
who died in New York recently, Co-
lumbia University will receive $1,200,-
000 and Rutgers College and the Gen-
The strike was renewed at Ipswich,
Mass., Hosiery Mills, when an I. W.
| W. organizer called out the 600 oper-
atives to fight for a 20 per cent in-
crease. " ©
W. L. O’Brien, State Labor Commis-
sioner of Kansas, declares that 10,000
men from outside that State will be
needed to harvest the Kansas wheat
crop.
A jury in the New York Supreme
Court awarded to the widow of
Charles Thompson, am iron worker,
killed by falling from a building, a
verdict of $10,000.
More than 10,000 school children
of the New York Public School Ath-
training and athletic demonstration
After deliberating for eighteen hours
the jury which heard the dynamite
| conspiracy case acquitted President
| M. Wood ef the American Woolen
Company, reported a disagreement as
regards Frederick E. Atteaux, presi-
dent of the Atteaux Mill Supply Com-
pany, and found Demnis J. Collins, a | low yessesls, either close the larger
container,so that it will be practically
airtight,or, in the case of the granary
spread wet blankets over the grain,
so that the fumes will be held down.
Keep the vessels closed as tightly as
possible for at least two hours, and
longer time will not be objectionable.
Cambridge dog fancier, guilty on two
of the six counts im the indictment.
The first cargo of Argentine beef
ever breught to New York was landed
and put on sale. The meat was sent
by speculators in London.
Queho Half, the Piote Indian who
killed six miners in Arizona after go-
ing insane, was killed by his brother
and uncle whom he tried to slay.
Joseph Tovens, arrested at Sault
Ste Marie, Mich., for a stabbing affray
slipped from his handcuffs, shot and
A celebration attended by the nam-
home of Louis Isler, in Brooklyn. In
1912, Mr. Isier’s four chil-
dren were burned to death.
‘Following the indictment of Unitea
Mine Workers’ officials on the charge
of violating the Anti-Trust law, the
West Virginia coal operators, on the
eve of a Congressional investigation,
allege a conspiracy between outside
operators and union officers to re-
strain their trade.
Foreign
QUIT
Latest statistics show that 4,247,360
Irish have emigrated, mainly to the
United States, since 1851.
Demanding a five per cent wage in-
crease, 60,000 employes of Scotch ship-
building firms voted to strike.
The first bigamy prosecution in
China resulted in sentencing to jail for
80 days of a Chinese who had married
a native girl and later an American
white student at Shanghai.
Chinese pirates boarded the French
steamer Robert Lebaudy, in the West
River, China, killed a passenger,
wounded several of the crew and es-
caped with $30,000.
The Spanish royal family moved to
a summer palace in the mountains at
La Granja te await the arrival of an-
President Poincare, of France, wit-
nessed the naval manoeuvres at Tou-
lon.
The Pope congratulated the Kaiser
on his twenty-fifth anniversary of
reigning Emperor.
i
| verted into sanitaria for the treatment
| of tuberculosis.
A Russian agricultural expert will
visit the United States for the pur-
pose of studying cottom experiment
work.
Emily Wilding Davison died in Ep-
som Hospital of injuries received in
trying to stop the Derby to call at-
tention to the cause of the militant |
suffragettes.
All of the great meat companies,
except the two North American firms,
notified the Argentine government
that they may be compelled to close
their factories owing to the competi-
The Federation of Transport Work-
ers at Newport, Wales, decided to re-
fuse to handle all munitions of war, |
declaring that armed conflict’ was a |
crime. |
Valter H. Page, the new American | E
Ambassa got a great reception |
Pilgrims Society at their
diner in IL.ondon.
te “firebugs” destroyed
r in London, doing |
age. |
re dead and nineteen
t exhaustion at the |
euvres near Aires, Ger- |
many. i
dor
the
frem
Five
ment is to kill the pest,
the insect but does not injure the
seed for human food. However it does
kill the germ so that it will not grow,
and thus it is ruined for planting pur-
poses. Where the object of treatment
is merely to kill the pest and keep the
seed for food for mankind or livestock
the heating or baking process is all
right; but where the seeds or grains
are to be kept for planting the life
germ must be preserved.
ment consists in fumigating the seed
with the liquid known as carbon bisul-
fide. At least one pound of this liquid
is needed for eyery one hundred
bushels of grain. It can be used with-
out detriment to its germination. The
seed should be plaeed in a closed ves-
sel or one that can be closed tightly.
A wash boiler with a tightly fitting
lid will do for a small quantity of seed
or a barrel with an oil cloth top by
means of a hoop placed around it,and
over the barrel,
granary,
After putting pans, like pie pans, on
in Central Park. it, and into each pour a quantity of
the carbon bisulfide.
these fumes are explosive or inflamm-
able the same as those of gasolene or
benzine, and fire should be kept away
from them.
a comparatively small quantity should
be placed in a shed or outbuilding, so
the fumes will not escape in the house,
After two or more hours remove the
coyer and permit ve: tilation by nat-
ural means.
ed in this way for the chestnut worm,
which if not killed would bore through
the nuts and disfigure them,althrough
larva, and consequently, does
render the nut any more apetizing to
the consumer.
MANY A MEYERSDALE READER WIEL
bad way.”’
Pills.
worth.
street, Berlin,
had no
opinion of Doan’s Kidney Pills and I
recommend them just as highly to-
day as I did in October. 1907.
not had to take a kidney medicine
during the past several years.
severely troubled with kidney and
bladder complaint.
cretions were irregular in passage and
were not acting at all.
ed from
When
recommended to me I began using
The Italian Minister of Marine has | them.
ordered three old warships to be con- | sented and it was not long before
I had relief.
kidney sufferers is to give Doan’s
Kidney Pills a trial.”’
cents.
New York,
United States.
eczema that had annoyed me for a
long time.
Hon. S. W. Matthews,
er, Labor Statistics, Augusta, Me. ad
ews, Richard Norgest, Livengood &
| Statler,
| —Kavie Luka, Cartose Jos.
For Insects Injurious To Stored
Grain And Seed.
Many questions are asked of State
Zoologist, H. A. Surface, Harrisburg,
concerning the treatment of insects
injurious to stored grains. and seeds.
As his practical experience in treating
such pests has been considerable, Pro-
fessor Surface has prepared a general
circular of directions, which is as fol-
lows:
The treatment for insects in stored
grain and seeds depends to a great
extent upon the qnantity to be treated
and the purpose to which it is put
afterward. In many seeds, such as
peas, beans, ete.,the customary treat-
such as
weevils, by baking them or heating
them to a temperature that destroys
For this purpose the proper treat-
or a tightly closed
may serve the purpose.
Remember that
After putting the liquid i in the shal-
In fumigating seeds, the vessel for
Chestnuts may be treat-
of course, it does not remove the
not
“IN A BAD WAY”,
: I
FEEL GRATEFUL FOR THIS INFOR-
MATION.
If your back gives out;
Becomes lame, weak or aching;
If urinary troubles set in, *
Perhaps your kidneys are ‘in a
Don’t delay—use Doan’s Kidney
Here is good evidence of their
P. T. Miller, retired farmer, Main
Pa., says: ‘I have
reason to change my high
I have
I was
The kidney se-
t often seemed as if my kidneys
I also suffer-
acute pains in my back.
Doan’s Kidney Pills were
They acted just as repre-
My advice to other
Price 50
Buffalo,
for the
For sale by all dealers.
Foster-Milburn Co.,
sole agents
Remember the name—Doan’s—and
ake no others.
ee
““Doan’s Ointment cured me o
The result was lasting’’
Commission-
DEAD LETTER LIST.
Jos. Asklin, Arthur Colter, Chas.
{anning, Lemuel Kerns, H. A. Math-
Charley Tenerened. Foreign
Protect The Birds.
As the industries of mankind in-
crease the natiye haunts of the birds
decrease more and more, and espec-
ially are their natural food plants re-
moved. Thus the native birds, which
are among the most beneficial species
from an economical standpoint, are
pushed farther and farther away from
the regions of populuous settlement.
One scai cly realizes the great im-
portance of bird life until he becomes
a practical farmer, fruit grower and
trucker, and sees for himself bow con-
siderable is the number of foes that
destrey his crop.
Mice and rabbits are ever ready to
girdle the trees both winter and sum-
mer,insects are ready to destroy one’s
plants by attacking them at the roots,
the stems, the tops, or the seeds. Be-
cause of the partial decrease in bird
life the effects of the enemies of birds
in reducing their numbers are becom-
ing more and more preceptible. The
loss from destructive insects in Penn-
sylvania alone can be safely estimated
at from thirty to sixty million dollars
ennually. This estimate is given by
Professor H. A. Surface, State Zoolo-
gist, Harrisburg, who has based his
estimate upon reports received from
the entomological inspectors who have
seen conditions directly as they exist.
If the enemies of insects confinue to
decrease, it is certain that the pests
themselves will increase. and the loss
from them will not be proportinately
great. It is time now if ever to at-
tempt to check this increasing and
alarming destructiveness by pests,
which adds so much to the high cost
of production, and consepuently to
the high cost of living now agitated
the public.
Two species of imported birds are
increasing in this country. One is the
English Sparrow, which is known
very well, end is a nusiance of the
worst kind, because of its destrurtive
ness to garden and farm crops, and to
fruits, also its propensity to destroy
the nests und eggs of other birds
wheneyer ossible. The other is the
English & iurtling, which is in some re-
gards res -:ubles the Blackbird, but in
habits and methods of living there is
not a great deal of difference between
the Startiing and the English Sparrow.
Its introduction can be viewed with
alarm from the agriculturist. It is in-
creasing along the eastern shore of the
United States, and should be destroy-
ed. With these exceptions all other
birds have their place in nature, and
should ‘be preserved.
Recent legislation has placed the
Dove on the permanently protected
list. It can nolonger be killed as a
game bird at any time of year. The
Shrike or Bluebird is also a beneficial
bird, feeding on the English Sparrow,
Mice, Grasshoppers, Locustgand other
small mammals and reptiles.
It also has recently been placed on
the permanently protected list in
Pennsylvania. As a matter of fact it
is not safe to shoot any kind of wild
bird in this state without being in
danger of killing a species that is pro-
tected, and for the killing of which
there is a penalty. Several species of
hawks and owls are permanently pro-
tected by law, as they should be on
account of their great value in destroy-
ing mice, which are increasingly injur-
ious in girdling fruit trees. The lar-
gest orchardist in Pennsylvania has
but recently written to Professor Sur-
face asking what to do for nearly two
hundred apple trées of’ bearing age
which had been girdled by the mice.
Recent legislation in this state also
protects the skunk excepting during
‘the months of November and Decem-
ber, when it can be trapped, but it is
illegal at all times to dig it out. This
is because of its valve as an insect
feeder.
The sale of Aigrette tips will become
illegal after this fall, and it is to be
hoped that it will be unpopular to
wear those emblems of murdered
mother birds upon the heads of per-
sons who by such tokens indicate that
they are either cruel or ignorant as to
where such tropyies were obtained.
In protecting the birds not only
should nesting boxes be erected for
such as bluebirds, wrens, martins.fly-
catchers and others, but certain plants,
shrubs, vines and trees can be planted
to furnish them food at various times
of the year, in accordance with the
directions published in the monthly
bulletins of the Division of Zoology
at Harrisburg, Pa.
eee.
Quick Graham Bread.
Delicious Graham bread, which
requires but two hours for the ma-
king, can be made by the following
receipt: Dissolve a yeast cake, two
tablespoonsful of sugar and one-half
teaspoonful of salt in one and one-
half cupful of water. Stir in one-
quarter of [a teaspoonful of soda,
then four and one-quarter cupful of
Craham flour, which will make the
dough as stiff as can be stirred.
Do not knead it. This receipt makes
but one loaf of bread, and it should be
June 7, 1913. J. F. NAUGLE, P.M. |
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
| | long enough.
| put to rise in the pan in which it is
to be baked—aboutan hour is usually
The pan should be one
| and one-half inches above the top
is raised.
decreas-
| of the dough before it
[Bake in a hot oven, with
ing heat.
=B 101 5
F-1 g
SLi]
* EE
££
wr a
TT
eal 3 PER CENT.
| i | getable Preparation fords.
J(0%|| | simiiating the
ilk [| ingle Simic sas
RET
Promotes Digestion Teed
:| ness and Rest.Contains neither
8 Opium Morphine nor Mineral.
| NoT NARCOTIC.
Aperfect Reme For Consfipe
Spe Sour ey fo Diarrhoea
Worrus Convulsions, Feverish:
1B! | ness and Loss OF SLEEP. |
| FacSinile Signature of
Zo
NEW YORK. |
Atb months montlis old
| Er Lahr Meld DosEs 3
Guaranteed under the Fouad OG.
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
~~,
ot
Break-Up,
BeoisTs BED Was?3?
Signature
it will cure you as it has a
Have taken It, © Guaranteed to
OR SALE AT
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought -
Bears the
oe [ASTOR
of
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
—GASTORIK %
THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK SITY.
{
get
a
wae" 17'S A CURE! THAT'S SURE 3
Jones’ Break-Up
For over 20 years has Cured
RHEUMATISM
Sciatica, Lumbago and Gout
if you have
Rheumatism [an fal get Jones’
i others w whe
Oc, -3m
COLLINS’ DRUG SORE, Meyercdale, Pa.
home.
of a new home.
and durability.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
A. HOLBERT,
. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
RSET, PRN.
4% "Uffice in ook © Beerits. Blook, up sta
HARVEY M BZRELEY
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
SOMERSET, ¥
S&F Omce with F'. J. Kooser, Esa.
VIRGIL R. SAYLOR
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
29.05 SOMERSET
OL.28-03.
G G. GROFF,
. JUSTICE OFy THE PEACE.
CONFLUENCE, Pa
Deeds, Mortages, Agreements md all Leg:
Papers promptly executed Vv. -6ma’m
and Bath
When building a home for renting purposes remember
the charm, the potential force which these two words have
to the seeker of a comfortable, convenient
A pleasing bathroom may easily be
the deciding factor in the renter’s choice
: For the small home or richest
residence we recommend “Standard”
plumbing fixtures for pleasing appearance
BAER & CO. 2
|
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]
“Standard” ‘‘Majestic”® Bath
Auto Oil
perfect lubrication
without carbon
thin---pale--feeds freely
Free--320 page book--all about oil
Waverly Oil Works Co.
. PITTSBURGH, PA.
Gasolines Lamp Oils
Lubricants
BUHL & GATESMAN,
Distillers of Pure Rye, Wheat, Ma
and Gin, Distilling up-to-date,
MEYERSDALE, Pa.
Nov.is-tf.
Rey
laney
Pills:
What They Will Do for Yee
They will: eyourbackache
strengthen « r kidneys, sor
rect urinar. ... gularities, bull
ap the won wut tissues, and
eliminate the excess uric acl
that causes rheumatism.“ Pre
vent Bright's Disease and Dis
bates, and restore health apy
strength. Refuse substitutes
‘F. B. THOMAS.
U
Ought to Use
The Commercial Press
Handles It
———
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