REE BRETT RE GRIST FROM THE WIRES latest Dispatches Ground Dow™ For Hasty Consumption. WHOLE WORLD IS GLEANED Fhe Four Corners of the Earth and the Seven Seas Are Made to Yield a Tribute of Inter- esting News. t Washington ARUN ss sds ont EEE, HI The investigations growing out ol dhe lobby disclosures made in The Worid by Col. Mulhall last June is re. gumed before the Senate and House 4ommitiees, beginning with a cross @xamination by the attorney for Rep gesentative McDermitt of Illinois. The House majority caucus, aided iy Secretary Bryan, defeated the foes i the Administration's currency bill. The ncmination of Francis Burton Farrison to be Governcr-General of fhe Philippines was confirmed. 3 President Wilson nominated Fran- gis Burton Harrison, Representative from New York, to be Governor Gen- wa! of the Philippines. AIEEE : P ersonal Tears of sympathy were shed by Jghn D. Rockeieller as he stood at the door of the Baptist Church in Cleve- kud, and shook hands with 200 s:embers of the National Association &f the Deaf as they filed past him af- #r the services. Lord Stratncona, Canadian Highway fLommissioner, has signified his in- dention of resigning. He will probably 3e succeeded by the Hon. Clifford Sif- wn. Mrs Miller French of Tarrytown, N. Y., met her father, 84 years old, a civil war veteran whom she had given up fcr dead, for the first time in 50 years. James G. Shepherd, retired million- gire of Scranton, Pa., has sued fo divorce ‘n Reno, Nev., on the ground that his wife objected to his going to ghurch. Sporting nn A world’s record for 1tu miles on & dirt track for a motorcycle was made at Columbus, Ohi.o, by Harry Goudy of Chicago when he rounded the loca! mile track 100 times in 52 minutes gat. The previous record for 100 miles on a dirt track was 55 minutes Oscar Egg at Paris broke the world’s @ne hour bicycle record, unpaced, b; wovering 43 kilometres 280 metres 26.92 miles). Norman Elberfeld. known as the *Tobasco Kid,” who for many years teld dewn the far corner for the Yan- Xees, will manage the Chattanooga tcam of the Southern League in 1914 Tord Northcliffe gave $10,000 to the British ulympic Games Committee and many others, including several American firms in business in Lon- don, have contributed. General pg rt HN Alleging violation of the live stock ¢ransportation law, 16 suits for $500 damages each have heen filed in Chi ago against six railroads. Mayor Gaynor will lezad a third ticket in the New York city election. Bdward E. McCall having agreed tc accept the Tammany nomination for Yayor. The Public Service Commission of Maryland, authorized the Pennsyl- vania Railroad to purchase and take aontrol of the Central Railroad of 3 aryland. Vernon L. Whitney, Governor of Jo- fo. was slightly wounded when attack- ¢d by two Moros at a camp on the land. He killed both assailants. Harry K. Thaw won a week's delay ¢. his fight against deportation or ex- traditicn from Canada when Justice g&oblensky at Sherbrooke postponed %caring argument on the writ of hab- 2s corpus. John Noonan, sixty-two, a farmer amployed for twenty-six years by Thomas Henry Grant, of Middletown Township, near Red Bank, N. J., was gored and trampled to death by a bull qn the farm. The Collector of Custcms at St. Faul has unearthed a smuggling plot by which many valuable horses and cattle were being smuggled across the Lanadian border annually. Raymond E. Smith, who is accused ef having misused $358,000 of the funds of the Roseville Trust Company, # believed to be in Canada. Miss Anna McCarrack, to whom he once paid attention, says she has not seen fim for months and knows nothing of Bis affairs. Representative Murray, of Massa- ghusetts, urged a favorable report on ais resolution calling for a joint in- vestightion of the anthracite industry. Pasquale Sirico and James Mahon gere held in $10,000 bail each by wnited States Commissioner Hitch- gock at New York, on a charge of white slavery. The Assembly Judiciary Committee With two Governors the affairs of the State of New York are almost at a standstill. Fire swept four blocks in Jersey City, destroying eight factories and seventeen dwellings. The Administration decided to go back to the policy of non-interference in Mexico. President Wilson went “scouting” with some Boy Scouts in the White House grounds. Five sticks of dynamite were found outside of Mayor Gaynor’s office in the New York City Hall Raymond E. Smith, the missing Treasurer of the Roseville (N. J.) Trust Company, was found to be short $358,000. Wearing overalls, Governor Major of Missouri and Governor Hodges, of Kansas led an army of 350,000 good roads workers in Missouri. Senator Jones, of Washington State, introduced a bill setting aside a space near the Capitol for erecting statues and memorials to women. : George W. Griggs, missing million- aire bachelor and grain dealer, was found in the Miss.. .ippi near St. Paul The police say suicide. Robert C. Ogden’s will was filed. His two daughters and his brother get the bulk of the estate, which totals from $2,500,000 to $3,000,000. Too intense interest in the Thaw es- cape drove Freeman Lylarger of Kerr- town, Pa., insane, and he is now con: fined in an asylum. The explosion of a soda fountain in a drug store in Providence, injured five persons, including Mr. and Mrs. Hugh T. Kennedy, cof Boston. An edict has gone forth from Suffra- gette headquarters in Washington calling for a boycott of theatres which permit stage jokes on the cause. John Boden, formerly prominent in newspaper work and as Secretary oi the State Racing Commission, died at Spring Valley, N. Y. Christopher Gsanger of Brooklyn at one meal ate thirty-nine lobsters, six zreen peppers, nine potatoes, two ‘oaves of bread and drank ten bottles of beer. Preston C. McGoodwin, of OkKkla- homa, nominated as Minister to Vene- suela, will be allowed to answer charges before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Assemblyman Arthur A. Quinn, of Perth Amboy, was chosen president of the New Jersey Federation of La- hor in annual convention at Trenton. The convention adjourned. to meet in Newark next year. The body of Nan Secor, who was drowned from the yacht of her father, George F. Secor, a New York broker, vas found not more than a dozen feet ‘rom where the accident took place. Judge Bell of Yonkers, ordered a chicken placed at nightfall midway hetween the coops of two claimants. “The coop it enters will decide own- arshop.” he said. The chicken roosted on a fence. Harry K. Thaw announced he would start a campaign of newspaper publi ity, belleving that people outside of New York do not know the merits of ‘he case. His lawyers in a long con- ference decided to make a fight against deportation. James I. Gay of Kentucky, a direct or of the American Saddle Horse Breeders’ Association, has been ap- pointed by Secretary Houston of the Department of Agriculture as saddle- horse representative on the depart ment’s committee to assist In the se- lection of stallions. X Katherine Packard, the ten-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William L. Packard, was drowned in Seneca ake, N. Y., while bathing. She sank without being seen by her younger sister and a nurse nearby on shore. The Senate committee rejected the President’s Currency bill A sheriff's jury assessed damages of $100 against Sigmund Greenberg, a house owner, because the disposition of a little daughter of one of his tenants was spoiled when the jani- tress accidentally threw an ash can on her. SHIH Foreign The Pope received in private audi- ence the Rt. Rev. J. M. naval, AuX.. iary Bishop of New Orleans. The-King and Queen of Roumania were shot at while automobiling near Sinaia. King Victor Emmanuel and Queen Elena of Italy will visit Montenegro in September. President Poincare, of France, cele- brated his 53d birthday at his country home at Sampigny. The first woman judge to be ap- pointed in Norway is Ruth Soresen, 36 years old, of Christiania. “Jack” Johnson, the American col- ored pugilist, has arrived in London. He declares he will fill his music hall engagement despite the protest of the Variety Artists’ Federation. Dr. Piacenza, the Italian Alpinist, scaled the summit of Mount Numz- kum, a 20,000 foot Himalayan peak, in India. London Music Hall artists refuse to perform if Jack Johnson is allowed to appear at that theatre. Pegoud, a French aviator, made a successful 900 foot parachute drop Three men were killed and five oth- ers seriously injured when a naval gun exploded while be’ng tested at Pola, Hungary. Lady Constance Stewart-Richardson is booked to sail on the Olympic from Southampton September 3, arriving in New York September 9, to begin her first tour of America with the Hoff mann-Polaire-Richardson company. fecided to ppush the investigation | from an aeroplane at Paris. meant to show Governor Sulzer was The novel it of an airship towing she author of the charge that four | ner disabled anion was witnessed Republical Assemblym d voted | at i when the Army “throu improper infiluenc > to im- | a nava geach him. i : | ‘ am— THE BETTER BABIES CAM- PAIGN. The ‘Better Babies’’ show has at last reached New York, and awakened the greatest interest. This is not confined to the East Side Mothers whose babies were contest- ants for the prizes awarded, nor to physicians and speicalists who most fully realized the educational im- portance of such shows. The gen- eral public eagerly pursued the news of the new form of baby contest, where all are measured up to the same scientific standard and mere prettiness scores few points. Pictures of the winning babies and their mothers, were printed, and inter- views reporting the methods used presented prominently in all the lead- ing papers. What is now known as the ‘‘Bet- ter Babies’”” movement began in ag- ricultural regions, as a feature of state and county fairs, and was in- augurated to induce farmers to see that their children were reared at least as scientifically as their live stock. Well known physicians were the judges, and the scores employed for marking points were similar to those used for passing on prize horses, cattle and dogs. When a farmer’s baby scored low- er than his live stock his pride rose in arms, and the child was placed under the care of a baby specialist, and brought up to standard. Gran- ges discussed child life, and better! babics began to count at items in the farmer’s standing. Physicians and agencies that deal with children in the cities at once saw the value of this movement for the education of city parents, and it is being used wich telling ef- fect in many centers of population. Municipal authorities, pure milk committees, child ‘welfare associa- tions and woman’s cluba all co-ope- rating in holding better baby econ- tests where all classes and con- ditions are judged by the same standard. THE DENVER SHOW, Early in January of this year a Better Baby show was held in Den- ver under the auspices of the Na- tional Western Live Stock Associ- ation. Three hundred babies were entered representing many walks of life, and many different nations in the ancestry. The show lasted five days, and five thousand per- sons turned out to do homage to the winners, when Col. Cody (‘‘Buffalo Bill)?’ rode round the open arena of Denyer’s famous stock yards with the two prize winners perched on the saddle in front of him. Beneath all the €eremonies ran a mighty undercnrrent of parental pride and anxiety. The wife of the White Wing was just as anxious to secure a practical education in motherhood as the wife of the law- yer, civil engineer or shopkeeper. “Better Babies’’ had become a slo- gan alike on farm, ranch and in city dwellings, though the more ir- telligent mothers entered their child- ren for the purpose of securing a score card and profiting by the ad- vice of experts rather than for honors and prizes. IN NEW YORK. Realizing the value of the wide interest excited by the New York Better Babies Show, a prominent department store arranged a recep- tion for the wanning babies and their mothers where all who were interested were welcome and throngs of people took advantage of the opportunity to see what experts ful and scientific handling make it fit for the child’s use, all the various agencies in the cities co-operate to reduce that appalling slaughter of the innocen‘s which results from every hot wave. Mothers in all cir- cumstances are apprehensive at this season of the year. Cows milk, while the nearest thing to the natural food, needs to be properly modified, pure, perfectly fresh, and to be obtained only from inspected healthy cows. Condensed milk of the best grade is favored by leading specialists, as a safe baby food that has many points in its favor. No preservatives are em- ployed for the best brands of this product, and only the purest high grade milk goes into the condenser, as any taint would result in ruining the whole product. The natural fluid is heated in a vacuum, which makes it perfectly sterile. and carries off the extra water, leaving the thick, creamy residuum, which sealed in air tight cans, remains sweet and wholesome under all climatic con- ditions, fit to nourish the most del- icate digestion either at the tropics or the poles. COMMISSARY SUPPLIES. Eagle brand Condensed Milk which went with Peary to the North Pole, is specified for governmental use, in camps, hospitals and army posts as well as for forestry stores, and forms an important part of the commis- sary outfit of travellers and explor- ers all over the world. Properly diluted this makes a safe, inexpensive and nutritious baby food, obtainable everywhere. Tle formula for dilution can be had on request from the manufacturers or obtained from any trained nurse or recognized standard on infant feed- ing. One of the most vital things for a baby’s welfare is the avoidance of sudden changes of temperature, diet or surroui lings. When it is neces- sary to trav:l the haby’s food should be unchunc ed either in kind or qual- ity, anc tae little body carefully protected. rom excess of heat or undue excitement. If these precau- tions arc observed even a long jour- ney can be safely undertaken. Jeanette Van Reypen. ITCHING IRRITATION. WORST FORM OF SKIN TROUBLE QUICK- LY RELIEVED BY INEXPENSIVE TREATMENT. When you suffer with any skin trou- ble, even though the itching seems unbearable, do not think that it is necessary to use some disgusting, greasy ointment. Try Hokara, a pure and simple cream, that is guaranteed to contain no grease or acids and which is so cleanly that it does not soil the linen. Its power to instantly relieye any irritation of the skin and make it soft, white and beautiful is almost miraculous. Not only do minor skin trouble like pimples, blackheads, acne, barber’s itch, ete., quickly disappear, but the worst ulcers of cases of salt rheum or eczema are clean- sed and healed by this wonderful skin food. In order that any one may try Ho- kara at small expense at S. E. Thor- For Your Baby. is the only guarantee that you have the Genuine RRNA TAO CANN NNN NNN prepared by him for over 30 years. YOU'LL give YOUR baby the BEST Your Physician Kiiaws Fletcher's Castoria. Sold only in one size bottle, never in bulk or otherwise; to protect the babies. oy The Centaur Company, ZA Tze Pres't ONY h RNY ND 2 NN mA ma ab = NAN NS NS NINA TB NN Be Pe gy" T'S A CURE! THAT'S SURE § Jones’ Break-Up €or over 20 years has Cured RHEUMATISM ; Sciatica, Lumbago and Gout you have Rheumatism [any form) get Jones’ : Broa Up, twin cure you as "nh has oh others whe FOR SALE AT Oct. -3m COLLINS’ DRUG STORE, Meyersdale, Pa. rr Another Big Price Reduction ! SUNBEAM MAZDA LAMPS . Buy National Mazda lamps for every socket in the house now while prices are lowest. Replace wasteful carbon lamps with efficient National Mazda lamps and get three times as much light without additional ex- pense—BLFORE Y0U PAY YOUR NEXT LIGHT BILL. THESE PRICES NOW EFFECTIVE. 10-wabh ..:....:. 35¢c each 0 wath............ 35¢ each 15 watt re nied 35¢ each 60. wath .. ..... 00. 45¢ each 20 wath .......... 35¢ each 100 wabh........... 80c each i 25. wath... nie 35¢ each : Put a National Mazda Lamp in Every Socket. Buy them in the Blue Convenience Carton—ke Use them as you need them. Spa Stock on hand, Telephone orders filled. BAER & CO. ley’s the City Drug Store are selling a liberal jar at 25 cents and in ad- dition guarantee to refund the mon- ey if the treatment does not do all that is claimed for it. ad ———ee ees Lifting a Stream to the Farm. pronounced a perfect baby. One of the. most encouraging feat- ares of this movement for better babies is that children counted out as unfit for entrance at one contest frequently qualify as winners later on when intelligent careland feeding have developed the lacking points. The need for a standard score card, uniform . everywhere, has at last been supplied by the co-operation of lea ing specialists. ESSENTIALS. air and food that properly nourishes the little growing bodies, are the primary essentials for babies as they are for other young animals, coupled with constant intelligent care. That many luxuries are unnecessary, or even harmful, and that nothing takes the place of motherly, human coddlings, is proved by the fact that the majority of the prize winners come from plain homes. Institu- tions filled with eyery scientific ap- pliance, and run by trained experts, haye shown such an appalling mor- tality, that other means of caring for their charges has been found necessary. Placed in the care of poor mothers, under a certain amount of supervision from the nurses of the babies thrive. Italians proving especially successful in rais- ing the ‘‘bambinos’’ entrusted to their care. As summer adyances, and the milk in some form must be given to the youngsters, is so easily con- taminated that only the most care- Out mn a certain section of the far west, where the rainfall is very scant during the growing season and some form of irrigation absolutely neces- sary, a farmer uses an electric motor |to raise the water from a nearby creek to the surface of his farm. The motor is one that was purchased to 4. | operate an ensilage cutter, a barley crusher and to do other work about the farm. This farm motor is mounted on a Gleanliness of surroundings, fresh |heavy truck so it can be readily hauled from place to place about the farm where its services are needed. | Connections are made, at suitable points, with an overhead transmis- sion line by a long, flexible cable. Electricity is secured from a nearby central distribution station which makes a practice of supplying electric current to farmers in that section. When it is desirable to irrigate the fields the motor-wagon is backed up to the bank of the stream and belted to a six-inch centrifugal pump which raises the water from the stream level to the irrigation canals. PR— Hives, eczema, itch or salt reum sets you crazy. Can’t bear the touch of your clothing. Doan’s Oint- ment is fine for skin itching. All druggist sell it, 50c a box. ad children Cry | FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA A AS AA NI A ASN NINN NNSA NSS NINN PROFESSIONAL CARDS A HOLBERT, | . ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, SOMERSET, Pu» - Y So @-Uflce in ook % Beerits’ Block, up sta Gasolines No Carbon A Plenty of Power Save trouble and expense. They're true Quality, not HARVEY M BJ&REKLEY ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. SOMERSET, 2A Omcewith F. J. Kooser. Esa. VIRGIL R. SAYLOR, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, SOMERSET * )0%.29-03. crude, compressed gas. FREE—320 page book—all about oil. 6: GRO TICE OF\THE PEAC WAVERLY OIL, WoRES C0] . 3 y a ACE. . > CONFLUENCE, PA. Pittsburgh, Pa. @ = Deeds, Mortages, Agreements and all Log. LAMP OILS LUBRICANTS Papers promptly executed Vv. -6ma7m et | | BUHL & GATESMAN, Distiiiars of Pure Rye, Wheat, Ma and Gin, Distilling up-to-date. MEYERSDALE, Pa. Nov.is-tf. U Ought to Use Foley Kidney Pills: What They Will Do for Veg They will. - r your backaché strengthen r kidneys, sos rect urinar. .. . gularities, bulls ap the Wis. wu® tissues, am eliminate the excess uric ack that causes rheumatism.“ Pre vent Bright's Disease and Dia The Commercial Press Handles It bates, and restore health apy atrength. Roedua« | eb rrovas | FOLEY:KIDNEY PILLS FOR BACKACHE KIDNEYS AND BLADD Special Was bers o Secret Secret in Sa weeks 7 over t is to b openir gentle extent indica which way, Both expres Diego greate comm sighte tion 1 years Expos of a I tal pl as flo being great on the dening under veyed work; by Pr drawi , appre ties «© scapir where semi-t air tl recent gadie: the ne Repul that b to ins exhibi Expos The: States vice 0 cellen aviati maint begin on the San ] super? chief Expos averaj an ho tice of planes enable juncti £3 climat year 1 practi intere Presid an ent the st air sh featur will k tions, will ts of gre: ] The Reside Our points of its Mrs. street, in poc from had c Readis Kidne They 1 cont impro Doan’ people a case prove Pills E nent i had n i during i willing dorsen tas Ik ff of all f For {icents. > ew i United L a Rem : \Gake ne Sera | slice tl t water # thorou put in salt a with h them. ft vegeta