gia Sd." Sra -¥&%led when 5 mmsting overturned near Indianapolis. ~wgark for Panama eooers, Zi reaving for arz=ived at the battle on July 1, 1863. oh oh RS TO URE Sawn BIST OF THE WEEK'S NEWS #mnt Page Steries Retold in Paragraphic Ferm. SIETRESTING MINOR EVENTS| EX eo “Telegraph and Cable Roll in the @eiportant and the Inconsequen- &tiad!, but to Each is Given its Proper Space. ec EHR TG ERR HTH Washington SPATIAL ACLLOPONTRIMNN Hd MALL ELLER ws Senate TFismauce awmwended the Undeswoed bill se as to Swewvide 2 (ax om gambling im cotton BRT ee. SHIT 2 Senate passed the new bill to | gers ent railroad strikes, providing for ew ® ational emsfimtion and Arbitration. Zsnate Democratic caucus adopted Worse sugar and wool by votes of 40 to snd 41 to 6 respectively. En debating the situation in Mexico, #% empator Fall urged that arms should Fhe sorwarded to all factions there at #fss sender's risk.” Senator Bacon de- awsamr=1 there were enough “white men” | #ax. Mexico City to restore order eSapozghout the country. 3 Personal : Puesident Whisem decided to accept @¥we invitation to speak om the Gettys- iibanpy battlefield, July 4, despite pres- capa «of business. i®waaident Wilson and family left Wirgabington for Cornish, N. H. Wragident Polmocese, of France, was © @m guest at a luncheon given by the Tams smayor of Lendon. “F%r John Murray Scott, who left $5, SEERD00 to Lady Sackville, acted like ver slave, his séster testified in the emssisational will case in London. i Sporting Sars off to Whisk Breom II., great- HERI aamm racer of the day, and the first | Yisweme in any country to run a mile yal ‘a quarter im 2 minutes. The big eaximeginut son ef Broomstick—Audi- ssn carrying Marsy Payne Whitney's waxing colors, wen the Suburban Han- witap, wtih 139 pounds up, at the Bel- =xwont Park track, breaking this re- wmv. “Ive referee im a twenty round fight wows Paris France, between Frank Man- cadas, Aan American lightweight, and ~2%%yert Badoud, 2 Swiss, was mobbed iit zthe ring by the spectators when he efemclared the bout a draw. The crowd | wmsms&idered that the American was en- #3vied to the deeision on points. i@ansas City was awarded the berth ‘fiz the Federal Baseball League made wracmat by the withdrawal of Coving- Emm, Ky. Committee + 3oard of Mediation, Con- | Themes Jefferson’s portrait will ap- | pear en the new issued postal card. | Geerge Giles, an Euglish engineer, was deported from New Yerk as suf- fering with religious mania. John Lester Barstow, once gever- nor of Vermont, died at Shelbourne, aged 82 years. The Iilineis atterney-general held that the suffrage bill, recently passed, is ceonstitutienal. Philadelphia authorities neotified the the residents to beil their drinking water in order te prevent typheid, which is increasing. More thar 250 volunteers have of- fered to supply skin for the victims of the Housted Mills explosion in Buf- falo. ; Minnie Bristel was drowned and H. | A. Gregory, a circulation bureau man- ager, seriously injured when their au- tomobhile went through a bridge rail- | ing at Chicage. Joseph A. Bimm, a director of the | Dayton, Ohie, National City Bank, cemmitted suicide as the result of heavy lesses sustained in the recemt floods. : Buffale physicians have issued a call for 10,000 inches of skim to replace | thet burned on those injured in the | fire at the Husted Mills in that city. More than 15,000 miners in the West | Virginia coal district have been er- dered to strike on Julyl by the United Mine Workers, of America. Harry Daniels, a banker, of Upper Sandusky, Ohio, was drowned when he drove his ‘autemobile through an open bridge at Port Clinton, Ohie. A cyclone struck Kaseta, Minn, blowing down a grain elevator and | several smaller buildings. Loss is es- timated at $150,000. | Appraiser Coggey reported that Mrs. Caroline F. Butterfield, who be- | gueathed the bulk of her fortune to | her granddaughter, Dorothea Ballard | Smith, left $969,159. The will says | Miss Smith is not to get the estate if | she weds either son of Mrs. Sedley | Matt J. Sullivan and Thomas J. Hayden were apointed special prose- cuters im the Caminetti-Diggs white slave cases. At a meeting or independent demo- crats in New York, J. Hampden Dougherty said he was for Theodore Roosevelt for Mayor. But other men there showed strong Whitman senti- ment. Charlotte Walsh, 11 years eld, of Baltimore, was cured of cerebo-spinal meningitis by the injection of ocarbelic acid. It is the first time this treatment has been applied. Secretary of State Bryan in en edit orial in the Commoner defended At- torney-General McReynolds for his mt- titude in the Diggs-Caminetti ease. Additional allegations of cases beimg delayed or dropped were filed against the Department of Justice. | Members of the Burley Tobacco So- ciety, tobacco growers, of Kentucky, have begun suit against the soclety’s directors, charging they appropriated $600,000 for the purchase of a tobacco factory without consulting the stock- | holders. Foreién : Dominion Park, Moutreal’s Coney Island, was destroyed by fire. | The French aviator Parisot was in- President Charles W. Somers of the ; 3 © jured and his passenger killed, when «wiZleveland Naps has called on “Rube” | his machine . at Liege. WEwans, the sensational Southern Lea- | TL ERTe Pieans, te report immediately. d I General : A total of 3,870 marriage licenses ES@troit will be held on July 8. +Cheyenne, Wyo., has adopted the exysoymission form of government. Jeorge W. Thatcher, a noted min- sswrzel, died in East Orange, N. J, o « ZADcer. fiJarry Martin, 8 mechanician an esutemobile he was was < mlopel George Goethals left New where he will re- ##mewin until the canal is finished. -Ciuigens oi Hewuet, Ca.., uw epTicet picking crew of Japanese from wipe town. William Rcbinson, a negro, indicted 4 %er the murder of two men, was Yggmched at Lambert, Miss. Attorney General Carmody, of New “gwork, declared it is contrary to law to zyme convicts to build State highways. rovernor Goldesborough issued a wgroclamation making July 5 a legal | Gwollday in Maryland. The jury disegreed in the case of | Bridgetown, Barbados. «"Einseppi Pomare, at Cleveland, charg- The northern amd southern divi- &sions of the Detroit, Toledo & Ironton igroft for $1,650,000. A raft ferry, carrying 65 passen- : senk in the Kiskiminetas River | soymar Leechburg, Ps. Ten persons wmrere drowned. Dr. C. C. Sater, a Civil War veter- sam, died suddenly at Atlanta, when the Getiysburg celebra- im, from the effect of a wound re- "he small wheat crop in Kansas is saxtd to be the result of the deva sz habits of cinch bugs. he Batavia, N. Y, Preserving ., plant was stat- rainstorm $100,0 + is estimated that fift) the total as the result o in the Buffalo grain ele ywernor Foss, of Massachu ited a commissien to Ir s and recominend new al with it. Wallace F. Johnson, of Philadelphia, lefthand pitoher, with New Or yas defeated in the English teanis Eight Italians were killed in a dyna mite explosion at a railroad construc- tion camp near Parham, Ont The Argentine rifie team sailed from [toutes at Wimbledon, England. | | Buenos Ayres for New York, to take warere granted in Chicago during June | port i the international rifle contest. An aeroplane race from Chicago to | Earthquake shocks, believed to be | 2,000 miles to the eastward, were re- | corded at Florence, Italy. | drove an | | he sailed. The members of the American Seo- ciety of Mechanical Engineers arrived at Berlin from Dresden. A conference for the purpose of preventing. infant mortality will be held in London next August. The Cuban House of Representa- tives approved the budget for the com- ing fiscal year. Robert Slack, an aviator, flew from Paris to London with srench news- papers for President Poincare. William Clare, a Gerr an, was sen- tenced to five years’ imprisonment at Winchester, Eng., charged with being a 8py. Angered because his wife prevented his hanging himself, John Salfek, a tax collector, killed her and their four children at Budapest. A number of cases of war munitions were seized by the government at They are be- : : 13 enezuela. «3 with sending threatening letters to | s¥ed to.8e {or 92s &.V: a rresident Wilsen. | a bull fight at @antander, Spain, in A crowd of 10,000 persons witnessed which 18 bulls were killed end ome Fiallroad, were gold at auction in De- | matador gored. The Duke of Connaught has acoept- | ed an extension of one year in his term of service as governorgenesal of Canada. | Jack Johnson, the negro pugiliet, | sailed from Montreal for Havre om | board the Allen line steamer Co®in- thian. The immigration authorities were prepared to deport him unless Juan Edwards, the wealthiest at Santiago. at the Guanta- | unearthed | in Chile, d imen exca | reported to be me er airship, which | naster Is the privilege As a result, 800 le chance aad | ostmaster gen- each couple a eral to act as best mar OVER THE ELEC- trified. miles. caught messages from Argentine. that district its first electricity. installed in York. in communication with the surface. famous by Crusoe. to run the Panama-Pacific Exposition. The farmers in Ottawa, Canada, have co-operated to bring electric transmission line so they can tap and secure cheap power and light. A company has been organized in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil for the purpose of utiilizing the Paulo Al- Alfonso Falls of the San Francisco River to generate electric power. The North Eastern Railway com- pany has decided to electrify its line between Shildon and Newport, near Middles borough, England. This distance is 18 miles. The first telephone was exhibited at the Centennial in 1876. 1t was hardly noticed by the visitors until the Emperor of Brazil picked it up and was surprised to hear it talk. In the electric furnace gold boils at 2,400 degrees centigrade or at twenty-four times the temperature of boiling water. Wireless train dispatching is to be tried out on the Lackawanna be- tween Scranton and Bingamton. Each train will be equipped with a wireless outfit. While the production of steel in electric furnaces is not yet large, sta- tistics show a steady increase in the output throughout the world, Germany and Austria, the United States and France being the most active. In 1911 the output of these four countries was placed at 132,000 tons. Germany takes the lead. A new invention which melts lino- type metal by electricity instead of gas has been given a trial at the Government printing office. It is stated that the process handled the day’s melting without = break and turned out solid slug. The eost of melting by electricity as against gas has not been given out, but there is one distinct advantage in tha no gas fumes are to be contended with. GENUINE ECZEMA REMEDY. NEW REMEDY THAT HEALS ECZEMA . QUICKLY. 8. E. Thorley sold hundreds of jars of Hokara, and although he offered to refund the purchase price to any dissatisfied purchaser, not one jar has been returned. While this is surprising in itself, yet the most marvelous thing is the reports of chronic cases of eczema that haye been cured by this simple skin food. People who have suffered with scales, scabs and even bleeding itching have fouud relief in Hokara. No matter where the eczema, pim- ples or other breaking out occurs, whether on the face, hands or legs or body, the application of Hokara should give quick relief, and even the worst or most chronic cases should be cured in a short time. You can buy a liberal jar to-day at the very low price of 25 cents and with every package goes S. E. Thor- ley’s guarantee to refund the money if it is not satisfactory. Sold on guarantee by 8. E. Thor- ley, at the City Drug Store. ad epee eee Use of Electricity. The copper cent is a product of electricity. Almost pure copper isused to make our only copper coin. This pure copper is secured by an electric process. In the old days it was a very expensive process to reflne copper ore and the resultant copper was far from being pure. Now this refining is done by electricity, much the same way as electro-plating is accomplished. The copper ore is placed in a tank near the positive | and 50c. plate of a battery and the electric current turned on. The copper is rapidly broken up into minute parti- cles, called atoms, which are carried through the water by the passage of eposited on the nega~- electricity ar TRIC WIRE. The Panama railroad is to be elec- The new wireless record is 8,000 The navel station at Newport The harnessing of a waterpower neat Yorkshire, England, will give An electrically-driven talking and moving picture machine has been four theatres in New Divers are now equipped with a telephone so they are at all times A wireless station is being install- ed on Juan Fernandez Island—made the story of Robinson It will require twenty-thousand horsepower of electrical energy daily in an COURT NEWS Orphans’ Court Proceedings, Real Estate, Marriage Licences, Etc. REAL ESTATF. A. Kent Miller to Calvin M. Ank- eny, Somerset twp., $225. Austin Yutzy to Perry A. Brugh, Milford twp., $13,000. : Margaret Scott to James F. Scott, Ursina, $5. Ada Lowry to Calyin M. Ankeny, Somerset, $300. Charles Landman to Boswell Lodge, No. 565, L. O. O. M., Boswell, $2,600. Jackson Fait to Sarah Stoner, Stony- creek twp., $375. Henay Columbus Shaw’s adminis- trators to Frank Larus, Elk Lick twp., $130. Wm. Shaw to Brothersvalley twp., $660. . A. W. Cook & Co.,” to Sheridan Shuser, Addison twp., 1. J. M. Olinger’s executor to Marga- ret Meyers, Meyersdale, $400. "| Etta Matthews to Charles Rishe_ barger, Addison twp., $200. = David Mostoller’s administrator to Edwerd Mostoller,Stonyereek, $1,860. James McClintock to John Hudes- ky, Addison twp., 1. Mary Hndesky to James McClin- tock Addison twp., $1. Milton R. Walker, to Greek Cath- olic church, Jenner twp., $300. Edward M. Mack, to J: C. Harding, Windber, $3,700. MARRIAGE LICENSE. Harry Clifford Kimmel, of Kimmel- ton, and i. Jdda June Woy, of Stoyes- town, Milford ©. Failing, of Frederick, Md., aud Mary Jane Craig, of Gar- rett. Marcicri Tokacz and Mary Weng- lase, both of Jenner twp. George Mikla and Julia Baratea, both of Wiudber. Wilbert H. Custer, of Stoyestown, and Ellen J. Rininger, of Kantner. George Vass and Rose Condas, both of Hooversville. Adam Benoni and Emma Gelmini, both of Ralphton. Ross C. Schrock and Harriet Flor- ence Beck, both of Barronvale. Jacob Robert Stufft, of Boswell, and Rose W. Berkley, of Johnstown. Noah H. Bruner and Amanda A. Kooser, both of Jefferson twp. Royer E. Galbreath, of Vintondale, and Mabel E. Fish, of Holsopple. James R. Davitt, of Allentown, N. J., and Anna B. Blubaugh, of Con- fluence. WILLS. The will of Henry J. Wilmoth, of Meyersdale, was probated. He left the sum or $1,000 to each of his sons, as follows: Alfred, Fred and Ber- nard D. Wilwoth. Each of his daughters is bequeathed $500 as follows: Ciara May Wilmoth, Mar- garet, wife of Ralph Quillman, Flor- ence Wilnoth, Mary Lydia Wilmoth and Gretchen Jane Wilmoth. A life interest in the balance of his estate is devise¢ to his widow, Jenner BH. Wilmoth, who is also named as ex- ecutrix. The will was dated March 6th, 1913, and witnessed by D. J. Fike and C. F. Uhl, Jr. ORPHAN’S COURT. Letters of administration have re- cently been issued to John P. Lape, in the estate of Jefferson Lape, of Shade twp. Bond $50. reeset ———t——— CORROBORATION Of interest to Meyersdale Readers. For months Meyersdale citizehs have seen in these columns enthusi- astic praise of Doan’s Kidney Pills by Meyersdale residents. Would these prominent people recommend a remedy that had not proyen re- liable? Would they confirm their statements after years had elapsed if personal experience had not shown the remedy to be worthy of endorsement? The following state- ment should carry conviction to the mind of every Meyersdale reader. Mrs. W. C. Burket, 315 High 8t., Meyersdale, Pa., says: “I gladly confirm’ the pubile statement I gave praising Doan’s Kidney Pills two yeass ago. This remedy was used in my family in a case of kidney trouble and the relief it brought has been permanent. I have often recommended Doan’s Kidney Pills to other kidney sufferer and I know of cases where they have been used with just as great benefit.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 tive plate of the tank. The result is e rigid than | known as ‘electrolytic copper’’ which | | is the purest known in the metal in- | dustry. eel preeeeeeeene: A household remedy in America | ’ ~ . | for 25 years—Dr. Thomas’ Electric | cuts, At all Drug Oil.* For sprains, burns, 25c | ad Stores. | take no others. cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, | New York, for ’ the | United States. | Remember the nam sole agents e—Doan’s—and ad 7 wha CARR AN WAY Zo and Flatulency. BECISTERLD Wea?37, NNR NN The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which hos been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his pere sonal supervision since its infancye ’ + Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and ¢ Just-as-good’’ are bub Experiments that trifie with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiments What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Iarae goric, Drops and Scothing Syrups. contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation It assimilates the Food, reguiates the | Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleeps , The Children’s Panacea—The NMother’s Friend. cenvine CASTORIA Always Bears the Signature of A AAAS AT NINN NSN SALE AT COLLINS’ DRUG STORE, Meyersdals, Pa. It is Pleasant. IC $< The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CENTAUR COMPANY, 77 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY. A NAA dl SPINS INSIST NAAN SS as all others whe Oct. -3m th to cure all casesa ITS A CURE! THAT'S SURE § Jones’ Break-Up Ear over 20 years has Cured RHEUMATISM Selatica, tumbago and Gout I? you have Rheumatism [any form) get Jones Break-Up, it will cure you as | 1 have taken it, * Guaranteed 0 wath............. 35¢ each 15 wath... ...... 35¢ each 20 wath........... 35¢c each 25 watt............ 3b6¢ each Use them as you need them. Telephone orders filled. —r PROFESSIONAL CARDS. A HOLBERT, - ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, SOMERSET, PEN