kK WEEK'S NEWS BY | TICK AND FLASH What Interests the World Cio -Icled by Telegraph and Cable. | GLANCE AT FOREIGN AFFAIRS Washington Looms Large as a Center , of Interest—Legislatures Busy in Many. States—The Lights and | Shadows of the News. i Washington . Francis A. Reilly, secretary to. Sen- #dor Bristow, of Kansas, shot two weeks ago by D. H. Shultz is/sitting ®p in the Casually Hospital. No trace &as been found of Shultz. | Senator Newlands gave assurance that despite his objections to the wool and sugar schedules of the tariff bill Sie would vote for the measure on final passage. The Mexican situation flared up in €ongress again. Senator Bristow of Kansas voiced the belief that the Uni- ded States should recognize the belli- gerency of the Constitutionalists and allow them to procure arms from this eountry. | The House Banking and Currency €ommittee rejected 10 to 8, a demand #rom Representative Burke of Penn- sylvania, one of the Republican min- erity, that a hearing be given to the Legislative Committee of the Ameri- gan Bankers’ Association. : Personal William Kennedy, 62, former mem- Per of the New York Asiembly and sne of the foremost members of the HHI ®nondaga county bar, is dead after a ¥rief illness. Mary A. Fitzpatrick, formerly pri- wate secretary to Mrs. Mary A. Yerkes nd widow of the traction capitalist, 3 at $30,000 from the Yerkes se an H. Ross, uncle of Charley Ross, who was stolen when a child of 4 years from Germantown, now a part of Philadelphia, scouts the idea that Bis missing nephew has turned up after thirty-nine years of wandering. | Old-time friends of Eugene Field, the poet, learned with surprise that his grave, after 18 years, is still with- out a monument. Sabon date ! Sporting Norman Elberfeld, manager of phe Chattanooga club of the Southern Lea- gue, has signed a contract as playing Tiamager of the New Orleans ¢lub for the 1914 season. President Murphy, of the Cubs, an- pounces the signing of three new play- ers. They are J. J. O'Connor, Willia Ye landingnem Hieronymus, and Chas. Pe the King of Spanish bull fighters, announces his coming retire- ment after a career of fifteen years, during which he has killed 3000 bulls and amassed a fortune of $60,000. He | is thirty-four yea=s old. Eddie Wallace, of Williamsburg, | stopped Larry Wells in the third round of their carded ten-round bout at the Military A. C., Brooklyn. Wells was on the verge of being knocked out when his seconds threw up the sponge. £ F. Drew Caminetti was found guilty of violating the White-Slave law. - Woman suffragists slept in hangars given up by aviators, awaiting the suf- frage rally at Hempstead, L. IL John Kupschutz, operator of a big’ | machine, peered inside it at Walling- ton, N. J., and was caught in power- ful jaws and twisted to death. After Harry Thaw had been ques- | tioned five hours by a Canadian board | of inquiry, his lawyers said his fight against deportation was hopeless. The hearing before Supreme Court Justice Hasbrouck at Kingston on the | habeas-corpus writ granted on behalf | of Joseph G. Robin after the Warden of Blackwell’s Island Penitentiary re- | fused to honor Gov. Sulzer’s pardon has been postponed until Monday. The Administration has received as-| surance that Lind mission to Mexico has been a success. Mr. Lind and Nel- son O'Shaughnessy having been in frequent communication with Huerta government since Mr. Lind left Mexi- co City concerning new basis for peace negotiations. Officials of the Interstate Com- | merce Commission announced that a searching inquiry of the wreck of the Bar Harbor express on the New Ha- ven Railroad would be conducted without loss of time. Further informa- | tion regarding the wreck was refused by the railroad. An attempt was made to assassin- ate Mr. Moritaro Abe, director of the Political Bureau of the Japanese For eign Office. | J. P. Morgan & Co., served notice on the New Haven’s airectors that they would cease to be fiscal agents for the road and its two subsidiary | ines after ninety davs smn The Womens Store - Hartley, Clutton Co, , round of the Quaker Ridge General i The Caminetti white-slave case - go to the jury today. Mrs. Pankhurst intends to scaden a militant campaign in the United | States. Ex-President Taft was elected Pres- ident of the American’ Bar Associa tion. . This year may end the trans-Atlan- tic steamship pool, says a spetial ca- ble despatch. A new basis for peace negotiations in Mexico has been diseovered, it is said in Washington. A woman in purple tights was roughly handled om the beach at At- lantic City. She is now in retirement, suffering from bruises. By a court decision four iegatees of Colonel John Jacob Astor saved $12, 000 on the inheritance tax. Henry E. Moore, known as the “millionaire alimony dodger,” died in a Hackensack, N. J., hospital. Miss Marie Wagner, national indoor champion, reached the semi-final tennis championship. Thaw was ousted from the jail in Sherbrooke, Canada, and taken by im- migration authorities to Coaticook to | await deportation. The Lord Provost of Glasgew, D. M. | Stevenson, cited municipal ownership | as an ideal that Chicago might attain, in an interview with Mayor Harrison. John Bartell, of Audubon, N. J., and | William Waller, of Philadelphia, were | drowned in the Delaware River when | a squall ‘overturned their sail boat. Three men suspected of being ban- dits who robbed employees of the | White Construction Company in Col- umbia, S. C., of $16,000 Friday, have been surrounded by a Sheriff's posse. Henry Bottorff and William Cheek, his brother-inlaw, were killed and | Mrs. Cheek was mortally injured in a | race between motorcars at Ottumwa, | Iowa. John Kilbride, second-degree mur: derer, was missed in Sing Sing. No trace of him was found. The Warden ! thinks he is hidden somewhere in the prison. Sulzer strategists hope to show that phone charges rolled up when Charles F. Murphy was ordering legislators to impeach the Governor have been paid by the State. The steamship Oceanic reported that her just-ended voyage a crazed seaman leaped overboard and was drowned and a somnambulist was res- cued when hanging from the outer edge of a portholo. That horsewhipping ig the only cure for a wife who stays out late at night was the declaration of Thomas Wil- liams, of this city, before Magistrate Boyle in Philadelphia. He was held in $800 bail Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA ; here made equal to that of the man. | leet this duty is to invite punishment THAT SOMETHI Show iag A \ J TORSTEN a = eager to help you in any Solos Our aim is to k ep steadily abreast of the trend of New Thiags. extremes, but those new things that even the most coaservative Always feel free to m ike our store your stoppin place when over towa, aad our sales force ara tions of styles or materials. Not the frgaks, Or ultra- can waa: with imounity. TANGO GIRDLES The New Fad $1.25 Newest Ribbons and Tassels for Girdles. The New Things in Dress Goods Ottoman, mercerized stripe, brown andgarnet........... or. 25¢C Silk Ratine, brows, old rose, ting Olive, ; isi on) Binion. oui 50 and 75c You'll Silk Striped Crepe,” staple and fancy : colors, 27 in.,........ Tee. 200 4 Enjoy Brocaled Crepe de Chine, in grey wg only. .......... ....L 60 Cc i Silk Poplins, terra cotta, and staple Seeing shodes.. ........ Jeu % 1, 81 50 The i Brocaded Messalines, pink, white, blue, b copenhagen. ....... 90 and $1 50 New § Black Brocaded Messaline, beautiful: ‘ iy pattern, 42 in.,....... ....$1 50 Things Silk Crepes, Big assortment of colors, vio 3 on Lo 75¢ and $1 25 Coming z greps, Meteors, 24 in., pink, Dey In g alice, ...... ; eh ea 8 Messalines, 36 in., in 2 gil colors. $1 00 Everyday 4 Newest Trimmings in Per- sians, Bulgarians, Cube and Plaid Silks. ists Watch This Paper Next Week For Announcement of 3 1 ‘ | b £2] Sits, [MOST COMPLETE Showing of Coats, Dresses zs The Womens Stor © ERR | to, every crime in the calendar. | molishes the moral sense, wrecks the | body, brings a hell of remorse, misery | and despair, | from heaven, I Cor. 6:10, 11; Heb. ¢ with the sacred rights of possession. { to another | This is perhaps the most severe re INTERNATIONAL SUNDAYS(HHO0L LESSON {By E. O. SELLERS, Director of Evening Department, The Moody Bible Institute, Chicago.) a ad LESSON FOR SEPTEMBER 14 THE TEN COMMANDMENTS. LESSON TEXT—Ex. 20:12- 0:12-21. GOLDEN TEXT—“Thou shalt love the Lord thy God, with all thy heart, an with all thy ‘soul, and. with all th strength, and with all thy ind; and thy neighbor as th;self.”—Luke 10:27. Every commandment contained in this s€cond table of the law is condi- tioned upon and rooted in that which is commanded in the first table, and all has been reiterated in the New Testament. V. The Fifth Commandment, v 12. The word “honor” while confined to this commandment—the relation of child to parent—is predicated upon man’s relation to God on the one hand and on the other it flashes its light upon every subsequent command. Our duty to God is pre-eminent. If we neglect or disregard God’s rights, the rights of man will soon be lost sight of. A due and proper regard for those to whom we owe our being is our first obligation and is here placed before those laws that deal with our rela- | tions to outsiders. Respect, esteem, obedience and support are all a part ' of that honor which is commanded, see Prov. 1:8; Eph. 6:1-3; Matt. 15:4-6. | | Notice also that woman’s place is It is Paul who emphasizes the fact that this is the “first commandment with promise,” and also that to neg- (Eph. 6:2. 3). It is the business of the child to honor the parent, no matter what may be his character; he must not sit in ‘judgment. On the other hand, th« nerent has an obligation to the child, “ph. 6:4. Funan Life Sacred. VI. The Sixth Commandment, v. 13. This is a revelation of the sacredness of human life. God alone has the right to take away or command to take ‘away human life. One reason for this is because we are made in his image, Gen. 9:6. Vil. The Seventh Commandment, v. 14. This commandment deals with the sanctity of the married relation and indicates the sacredness of parent: hood. There is no other sin that so speedily undermines human character and overthrows families, tribes and nations. It is the source of, or leads It de- and effectually bars man 13:4; Rev. 22:16. Vill. The Eighth Commandment, v. 15. Here is a statement which deals To take that which rightfully belongs is to steal. It does not matter if it be done “within the law” by withholding a just compensation or by gambling, it is just the same, Deut. 24:14, 15. This works both ways, The employe who steals his employ: er’s time, the buyer or the seller wha cheats, lotteries in ‘the church or out of it, these are forms of stealing in that they take something without ren- dering a just equivalent of value. IX. The Ninth Commandment, v. 16. This conimandment recognizes the sacred rizhts of character and insists upon absolute truth as a standard of judgment. Reputation cannot be passed on from father to son; it is much harder to secure than money and is far more valuable. Backbiting, false slander are not compatible with love for your neighbor. To give wings to a bit of scandal you have received is to violate this law. The Most Severe. X. The Tenth Commandment, v. 17. quirement of any in this second group of laws. The man who keeps this will readily and easily keep the four which immediately precede it. All desire for those things that belong to another is inconsistent with true love, and in the light of this law such a desire is sin, yea, more, it is idolatry, Col. 3:5. Hard as it is there is, however, a way to observe it, viz., to “love your neigh- bor as yourself.” Such love will de- sire that he shall have the best things and consequently makes it impossible for us to covet his possessions. The effect (v. 18) upon the people of this manifestation of God's glory and the giving of the law was that they were filled with fear and besought Moses rather than God to speak with them. This is a comm=ntary upon the words of Paul just referred to, and an illustration of the need of the law as a revelation of sin. Moses respond- ed (v. 20) to their fear with words of assurance, and explained to them that this fear was to prove them that they should not sin. Life that is truly rooted in religion expresses itself in morality of the highest type. Without right relations with God we cannot expect that chil- dren will properly honor their parents, that human life will be safe, that the marriage relations will be held as sacred, that the rights of property will be recognized, that truth will be the basis of judgment, or that covetous- ness and envy will not be the inspira: tion of fraud and wrong doing of all kinds. On the other hand, wherever God is supreme. The lives of men harmonize with the professions of RESOLVED, THAT THE SOONER YoU LEARN To DEAL WITH . US, THE SOONER YoU’LL LEARN To GET THE RIGHT STUFF AND SAVE MONEY. PUSTER BROWN. > Ba brs od ( 4 ) 5 ; RFE “Fil > { ! IT’S ARITHMETIC To DEAL WITHUS. WE WILL SAVE YOU MONEY. WE WILL SELL YoU THE BEST QUALITY FOR THE PRICE ASKED BY MANY FoR INFERIOR GooD.S. WE SELL ONLY REPUTABLE FURNITURE, CARPETS: WALL PA- PER AND MUSICAL GooDJS, SEWING 'MACHINES AND PAINTS, IF YOU ARE IN NEED oF ANY OF THESE GooD.S, COME AND LooK. No TROUBLE To SHOW GooDsJs. COME To THE FAIR NEXT WEEK AND MAKE OUR STORE YOUR HEADQUARTERS. BOTH PHONES, FUNERAL DIRECTOR S AND EMBALMERSS. QUICK AND EFFICIENT SERVICE RENDERED. e R. REICH & SON, 130 Centre Street. ~~ Funeral Directors and Embalmers. All Telephones. Misses” and ies Girls’ Kicker [.ow Heel School Shoes “, home nll, ome All Gun Metal, Tan and Paten: Leather Sizes 113 to 2, $2.00, $2.50, $2.75 Sizes 28 to 6, $2.50, $3.00, $3.50 ‘“‘Shew yer made for Pretty Maid.” TOM & JIM THE PLACE FOR HIGH GRADE FOOTWEAR. IN STOCK — a d——————— a tr——————s ce What is Eye-strain? Eye-strain “is not a disease to be overcome 'by drugs, butis a mechanical defect, caused by t eyes not being perfect in shape . How Can Paople Tell When They Have Eye-Strain ? When troubled with headache, dizziness, indistinet vision, in- flamed eyelids, sore or tired eyes, pains in or around the eyes, or down the back of the neck, or eyes tiring and print blurring and running together after read- ing a short time. How Can Eye-Strain be Corrected? Only by perfectly prescribed and fitted glasses. ~——CONSULT--— M. D. Goldstein, EYESIGHT SPECIALITS AT COLLINS’ DRUG STORE, Tuesday, September 23d Remember I visit Meyersdale at Collins’ Drug Store every two weeks and guarantee all my work. I will make all necessary corrections? and change the [lenses any time within two years absolutely free. Eyes and sight examined free. Special attention to children’s eyes. tnelr 1ips. from $2.00 up. - Glasses fitted re a Ti resin] i 4 fr 1 ~ nT TE sony yay = PE i FRR TR a nlie a ET skill ¢ one schoc is tha trying retur: A fi at tk inquiz told. t the c that s quirin A fe called work- a me: He sj . and his de which ignorsz All uneasi and al Mrs. CA] Mrs. Misses bara, iting brothe Mrs. FE left la the no will 8] will re they Ww Bedfor