ee Put EY ir - A cn ho er ee PITH OF THE WEEK'S NEWS Latest Telegraphic and Cable Intelligence Epitomized. OLD WORLD AND THE NEW Bolitical Pot Is Bubbling Furiously— { News About Wars That Are Rag- ing and Rumors About Wars to Come. i Washington Chairman Glass conferred with the President on the Currency bill and it was decided to push the measure to @ vote of the Democratic members of the committee rather than send it to eaucus. George Carroll Todd, of New York, was nominated Assistant Attorney General to prosecute Sherman law violators. President Wilson nominated L. E. Pinkham, of Hawaii, to be Governor of Hawaii. Voting on separate paragraphs of the Tariff bill was begun in the Sen- ate, the progressive republicans unit- ing with the democrats for reductions, But opposing increases. : Personal King George of England, received BC members of the Scott Antarctic expedition and gave medals to the | survivors. ] A sack of earth has been taken to London from Lisbon and will be used for ex-King Manuel to stand upon when he is married to Princess Au- gustus Victoria on September 4. Director Cooke, of the department af public works of Philadelphia, ap- | pointed Mrs. Edith W. Pierce as a street inspector, as a salary of $1,300 a year. Cardinal Gibbons celebrated his | seventy-ninth birthday anniversary quietly at Union Mills, Md. A membership in the Stock Exchange was sold for $38,000, the lowest price since 1900. John KEggoero, Monticello, N. Y., was killed when a playmate accidentally discharged a | shotgun. Attorney General McReynolds filed a civil action in Portland, Ore., to dis- solve the so-called Pacific Coast Tele- phone Trust. The two months’ old daughter of Policeman Curls, of Mt. Vernon, N. Y., died from suffocation while sleeping with its mother. More than 15,000 copper miners near Houghton, Mich., struck, declar- ing they were dissatisfied with work- ing conditions. L. W. Dutro, former postmaster, of Memphis, Tenn. was drowned in the Mississippi while attempting to res- cue a woman. The first payment of $250,000 to Panama for the annual rental of the canal zone has been made by the United States. Members of the Women’s Home- stead Association of Boston will carry canes and whistles as a protection against mashers. A special investigation committee in its report to Secretary Houston urges the complete reorganization eof the weather bureau. John Everitt, 35 years old, was blown to atoms near Rochester, N. Y., when dynamite, which he was carry- ing in a basket exploded. Ada M. Rocuri and Catherine Mec- Gowan, of New York, were drowned and much property damaged in a gale which swept Clayton, N. Y. Eleven players of the New York National League baseball team agreed to go on a world’s tour with the Chi- cago White Sox next winter. The body of Lena Cage, 15 years old, who was missing from her home one week was found in Ten Mile Creek, near Waynesburg, Pa. Howard Elliott, president of the Northern Pacific Railroad, was elect- ed President of the New Haven sys- | tem, to succeed Charles S. Mellen. Mrs. Anna L. Gardner, of York, Pa. bequeathed $400,000 for the erection and maintenance of a home for aged unmarried women of Pennsylvania. Earl Horsely, editor of the Elmwood (Ill.) Gazette, was killed and his two | companions injured when their auto- | mobile overturned near Elmwood. A herd of 17 mules attacked and wrecked an automobile near Greens- burg, Pa. The driver, J. F. Haddock, | of Wilkinsburg, was seriously injured. Sporting English lawn tennis critics are un- gtinted in their praise of the game played by M. E. McLoughlin, the American champion, in the match for the Davis Cup. They gave the credit for playing the greatest tennis ever seen on the Wimbledon courts. Ban Johnson, president of the American League, formally dismissed the protest filed by the New York elub on the trade by which Hal Chase went to the Chicago White Sox in ex- ehange for Rollie Zeider and “Babe” | Borton. Both the New York Giants and the Philadelphia Americans are stronger than when they met in 1911. McGraw has better hitters, a stronger infield | end a formidable pitching department, but all things considered the Athletics will be hard to beat in the opinion of Frank Chance. Harvard’s track and field athletes will be coached during the next two years by William F. (Pooch) Dono- | van and J. Fred Powers, and the Crimson cross country runners will | work under the direction of Alfred | J. Shrubb. | | : | | i General Anna Mannagan, of Chicago, while wearing a slit skirt, was bitten in the ¥eg by a bull dog. Edward Horner, a steeplejack of | The New York State Legislature has taken a recess until August 11. Governor Sulzer announced that he | considered the Legislature to have ad- journed. The Senate directed the Interstate- Commerce Commission to inquire into the reasons for the proposed bond iz- ste of $167,000,000 by the New York | Central Railroad. Alexander Barris, a Brooklyn youth, was fined $27.50 for forcibly kissing Miss Bessie Searle, of Nutley, N. J, and his friend, “Jay Goold,” who got no kiss, was fined $12.50. Balie P.. Wagener, a millionaire railroad man, footed all the bills for a picnic to Atchison, Kan. to 20,000 children from various points in the State. Governor Hodges attended. A jury of Webster Springs, W. Va., ! convicted Dr. H. F. Asbury, a member of the West Virginia Legislature, of having accepted a bribe for his vote | in the contest for a United States Senator. Items aggregating $5,803,724 in the the general appropriation bill were | vetoed by Governor Tener of Penn- sylvania. He must lop $22,000,000 from bills still before him to keep within the State’s income. Mrs. Mary Hubson, 97 years old, was burned to death when her daugh- | ter’s home at Halls, N. Y., was de- stroyed by fire. Mrs. Huson lived with her daughter and granddaughter. The two younger women escaped in their: night clothes. $£t. Louis, fell 110 feet and landed on a steel roof uninjured. To mark the graves of 40 confeder- ate soldiers who died at Mingo, a ghaft was unveiled at Elkins, W. Va. The Wisconsin Senate passed the Bill, prohibiting monopolies, restraint of trade and unfair business prac- tices. The last of the Paterson silk mill workers who went on strike five | months ago decided to go back to work. { A public funeral was held for the | twenty-one unidentified victims of the Binghamton (N. Y.) Clothing Com- pany’s factory fire. Frederick A. Whelan, vice president of the United States Cigar Stores Company, died. A boil caused com- plications that were fatal. Infantile paralysis was declared by @ doctor in St. Louis, who had closely studied the disease to be largely due to the spreading of the germs by files. There were indications that the Re- publicans were weakening in their tariff opposition and that a final vote would be reached earlier than ex- pected. The government has secured 100 acres of land in Fairfield, Ohio, for use as an aerial testing ground. The American Agricultural Chemi- eal Co.’s plant at Weymouth, Mass. was destroyed by fire. Loss, $500,000. " Secretary Daniels will direct that €he battleship Oregon lead the fleet through the Panama Canal. Donald A. Kenney, a chauffeur, and Christopher Gustin, an iron molder, were shocked to death by an electric current received in an initiation at Birmingham, Ala. Sixty ringleaders of the riotous | convicts in Sing Sing were transferred to Auburn, N. Y., Prison. They broke | some windows of the train. Sing Sing Prison quieted down. : TIT TTR SR PS {| Bar Association Foreign Mulai Hafid, ex-Sultan of Morocco, visited the Vatican. King Alfonso and Queen Victoria, of Spain, arrived in London. Chinese rebels were repulsed with loss in a night attack on Shanghai. Greece and Servia rejected the Rou- manian proposal for a provisional armistice. Two cancer patients at Berlin paid $65,000 for two half gram mesotherium treatments. Hurricanes swept the Italian lake district near Milan, deyasiaiing prop- erty and crops. The Italian authorities have made arrangements to straighten the lean- ing tower of Pisa. The Imperial troops repulsed an at- tack made by the rebels on the gov- ernment arsenal at Shanghai. A crowded train with emigrants for America, was wrecked at Esbjerb, Denmark, killing 20 persons. Charles B. Dixon, United States im- migrant inspector, was shot by Mexi- can federal soldiers at Juarez. All the Balkan belligerents have agreed to send representatives to the peace conference at Bucharest. A army of non-militant suffragettes marched into London. The Mexican rebels captured Ter- reon after three days’ fighting. The French Chamber of Deputies approved the 1913 budget providing for expenditures of $1,000,000,000. Of the 10,291 passengers carried on the regular passenger service dirigi- bles in Germany during 1912, not one was killed or injured. The committee of the American announced that ex- President Taft will address the com- ference of judges at the Bar Associ | | at all Drug Stores. ad ation meeting in Montreal. | New York five years old, of | Cold Storage Law. Dairy and Food Commissioner Foust iss ed the following statement: On August 14th, an act important food consumers goes into effect—the Cold Storage Act of 1913. Here are some of the more important provisions of the law and the corresponding reg- ulations. Every person operating a cold stor- age warehouse must do so under a State license. Every artificially cooled place where any food is held at 40 degrees faren- heit or under for 30 days or more is a cold storage warehouse. Fresh meats, fresh products there- from, fresh poultry, fresh food fish, eggs and butter are the articles of food affected by the act. Any such food entered in a cold storage warehouse thereby becomes at once cold storage food. Each warehouse must officially ex- amined before a license to operate it shall be issued; and no license can be be issued; if the warehouse is unfit in sanitary condition or equipment. No food that is unwholesome may be placed in a cold storage ware- house. The owner of the unwholesome food is held primarily responsible for such entry; but the warehouseman is not absolved from the exercise of reason- able precautions in accepting food enteries. All cold storage foods, or their con- tainers, must bear the date of their entry into and their withdrawal from cold storage. Cold storage foods sold at wholesale must bear the label “Wholesale Cold Storage Food’’ printed in large type, and the date of original entry of the food in cold storage. Such foods exposed for sale at retail must be accompanied by a .similar label, and when sold, must be deliv- ered in a wrapper bearing a similar statement in large type. Addition to or the changing or ob- literation of any legally required mark is made a penal offence. Foods withdrawn from cold storage for sale may not be returned to a cold storage warehouse. Foods in cold storage fonnd unwhole- some upon official examination, will be tagged with a red tag ‘‘Unwhole- some Food, Unfit for Use as Food.” Foods cold-stored beyond certain limits of time thereby cease to be leg- ally saleable for food purposes. The time limits are: veal 3 months; beef,4 months; pork, sheep and lamb, 6 mos. dressed fowl, drawn, 5 months; un- drawn, 10 months; eggs, 8 months; butter and fish, 9 months. Cold storage warehousemen must keep records of all food enteries and withdrawals, and report them peri- odically to the Dairy and Food Com. missioner. Agents of the Commissioner will maintain an inspection of the sanitary conditions, the accounting and mark- ing of foods in cold storage warehouses, as well as examinations as to the wholesomeness of the foods offered for and kept in cold storage. The Dairy and Food Commissioner is authorized to close werehouses not complying with the sanitary regula- tions. The penaltics are, for first offence,a fine of $500 maximum; for a second offence, a fine of $1,000 maximum, or a jail sentence of 30 to 90 days, or boehs The commissioner suggests that the adoption by wholesalers of cold stor- age foods, of a system of supplying to retail dealers the required large labels would do much to protect the retailers and prevent needless injury to them and to the cold storage business in general. renee fee ee. Philosophical Facts. During the conversion of ice into water one hundred and forty degrees of heat are absorbed. The human car is so extremely sensitive that it can hear a sound | that lasts only the twenty-four thous- anth part of a second. Deaf persons have sometimes conversed together through rods of wood held between their teeth, or held to their throat or breast. At a depth of forty-five feet under ground, the temperature of the earth is uniform throughout the year. Lightning can be seen by reflection at the distance of two hundred miles. We want live and intelligent solici- tors in every city, borough as well as townships to get subscribers for The Commercial. Sunday—Is so call, because it was anciently dedicated to the worship of the sun. Monday—Means literally the day of the moon. Tuesday—Was dedicated to Tuisco, the Mars of our Saxon ancestors, the deity that presided over combats, strife, and litigation. Hence in Eng- land Tuesday is assize day; the day for combat, or commencing litigation. Soho gl Any skin itching is a temper tester. The more you scratch the worse ib itches. Doan’s Ointment is for piles, eczema—any skin itching. 50 cents 1 For Good Roads. | The action of Governor Tener in cutting the State Highway Depart- ment appropriation from $8,067,708.92 to $4,667,708.92, for the next two years, means that the reconstruction of the highways of Pennsylvania will be continued on virtually the same restricted basis as in the past. Advocates of the proposed amend- ment to the Constitution to permit the State to borrow money for road building are pointing to this incident as constituting one of the strongest arguments in behalf of the approval of the bond issue plan by the veters at the polls in November. Officers of the Pennsylvania Motor Federation have been contending all along that there could never be anything like a comprehensive road improvement program so long as the highway build- ers must depend on money available from the ordinary revenues of the State. From the beginning of the discussion of the bond amendment they have insisted that no Legisla- ture could be expected to resist the demands for State money for hospi- tals and other local institutions to such an extent as to allow sufficient funds for the building of State roads. This condition has been illustrated in all the legislative sessions in recent years, and it is only emphasized by the latest experience. Under the bond issue plan such dis- appointing situations could not come about. An assured, steady and con- tinuous supply of money would be obtained through the sale of State bonds, and the road building cam- paign could be pushed along in a prac- tical and effective manner. The Leg- islature, having authorized the var- ious issues of bonds, backed by the good faith of the Commonwealth, would be required to provide for the carrying cst. This would be much less than i) - amounts now appropriat- ed direct 10r road work, which latter amounts, inadequate though they be, are obtain..ble only at the sacrifice of appropriations to charities and other worthy o! j-cts. The bouu issue plan,in a nutshell, is that suflficient money shall be bor- rowed to do real highway building, and that the burden of cost shall be spread ligntly over periods of 30 years if need be, so as never to tax heavily the revenues of any particular years. Under the restricted appropriation for the next two years, much of the road builair g that had been planned will have to be deferred until the Legislature of 1915 has passed the necessary enabling act .to carry out the provisions of the bond issue amendment, in case the voters ap- prove the latter in the coming elec- tion. The Suute Highway Depart- ment has the whole care and main- tenance of 8,000 miles of State road on its hands, and this will require so much money that the great majority of the comniunities that have been petitioning for the reconstruction of | their important highways cannot be | accommodated. el ee CORACBORATION Of interest to Meyersdale Readers. For months Meyersdale citizens 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 St., 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 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no others. ad re LC For dyspepsia, our national ailment, use Burdock Blood Bitters. Recom- mended for strengthening digestion, purifying the blood. At all drug stores. $1.00 a bottle. ad VERSAILLES CUSTARD. Cook a cup of granulated sugar over a hot fire until it becomes car- amel. Turn quickly into your baking dish, moving it so as to coat the sides and bottom with the mixture. This must be done quickly as the cara- mel hardens rapidly. Make a custard as usual, turn into your well-coated dish and bake until firm in he cen- ter. Chill thoroughly. To serve, turn out on a g:ass dish. The caramel gives a delicious flavor and makes a splendid sauce. ORRIN The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 80 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his pers ZZ me sonal supervision since its infancye . Allow no one to deceive youin this, All Counterfeits, Imitations and ¢ Just-as-good’’ are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiments What is CASTORIA * Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pares) goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. I$ contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcoti@ substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. lt cures Diarrhcea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. , The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. cenuine CASTORIA ALways Bears the Signature of NARA The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CENTAUR COMPANY, 77 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY. " A A I SASSI £) ¥A%t IT'S A CURE! THAT'S SURE?! Jones’ Break-Up For over 20 years has Cured RHEUMATISM Sciatica, Lumbago and Gout 17 you have Rheumatism [any rer get Jones eC Break-Up, it will cure you as it has a others Ww SeoiSTERLD mearsy, have taken it, © Guaranteed to S Wi FOR SALE AT Oct. -3m COLLINS’ DRUG STORE, Meysredalis, Pa. Another Big Price Reduction ! SUNBEAM MAZDA LAMPS === Buy National Mazda lamps for every socit in the house now while prices are lowest. Replace wasteful carbon lamps with efficient National azda lamps and get three times as mueh light without additional ex- pense—BEFORE YOU PAY YOUR NEXT LIGHT BILL. THESE PRICES NOW EFFECTIVE. 10 watt .......... 35¢ each 40 watt ... . 35¢ each IBbwatt .......i... 35¢ each 6a wath .. ....... 45¢ each 20wabh........... 35¢c each 100 wath. ........... 80c each 25 wath. ..... vies 35¢c each Put a National Mazda Lamp in Every Socket. Buy them in the Blue Convenience Carton—keep a stock on hand. Use them as you need them. Telephone orders filled. BAER & CO. A HOLBERT, mr A A Nd A A Ad NIA NS NS NSN Sd NS INS Ima PROFESSIONAL CARDS. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, OMERSET, PBN: a Ufce in ook % Beerits’ Block. up stai HARVEY M BERKLEY SF Omcewith F. J. Kooser. Esa. Gasolines No Carbon Plenty of Power Save trouble and expense. They're true Quality, not ATTORNEY-AT-LAW SOMERSET, F. J IRGIL R. SAYLO ATTO RNBV-AT-LAW, Papers promptly executed dons SOMERSET » crude, compressed gas. ; FREE—320 page hook—all about oil. G. GROFF WAVERLY OIL WORKS CO. . JUSTICE OF,THE PEACE. Pittsburgh, Pa.® «¥ CONFLUENCE, PA. Deeds, Mortages, Agreements and all Leg» Vv. -6ma7m LAMP OILS LUBRICANTS Cre nl BUHL & GATESMAN, Distillars of Pure Rye, Wheat, Mal and Gin, Distilling up-to-date, MEYERSDALE, PA. Nov.18-tf. aaey ianey Pills: What They Vill Do for Yew They will .« © your backache strengthen §...r kidneys, sos rect urinar_ ... gularities, build up the worm wa* tissues, and eliminate the excess uric ack that causes rheumatism.” Pre U Ought to Use The Commercial Press Handles It vent Bright's Disease and Dis bates, and restore health aps strength. Refuse substitutes ‘F. B. THOMAS. FOLEY:KIDNEY PILLS FOR BACKACHE KIDNEYS AND BLADDER ant ed diy is not wit wit bef itr Sod up ed Sm wil pre rug the oug and the a cl and any Le she] coo 3 oll