AR For Good Roads. The eampaign to pull Pennsylvania out of the mud and to give the State a system of roads that will connect with and compare with those built by its neighboring commonwealths is now fairly begun and the issue is squarely between those who desire good roads and those who for politi- cal reasons, lack of progressiveness, prejudice or ignorance are opposed to the constitutional amendment to per- mit the State to borrow $50,000,000 for construction of highways on the system laid down by the Legislature two years ago. Two points made by those in oppo- sition to the amendment have been most effectively answered from the rostrum by several of the eminent men of Pennsylvania who spoke at the big roads convention held last week in this city, and as they form the main features of attack they can be summarized here. The Legislature will not be sum- moned in extra session to pass laws to enable the bonds to be put out. Governor Tener, who has the power, said squarely that he will not call an extra session, but will allow the Leg- islature of 1915, when a new adminis- tration will be in power, to deal with the whole question. The fixed charges, interesti and sinking fund, will not be $3,000,000 a year, but less than $1,000,000. The life of the bonds will be from thirty to fifty years and the interest from 3 to 4 per cent, depending on condi- tions. Appropriations made for in- terest and redemption purposes will not be allowed to lie idle, but will be put on interest and the interest com- pounded every six months. The bonds will be issued as required from $5,000,000 to $7,500,000 a year. It is admitted everywhere that the payment for road building, no matter by what administration, out of cur- rent revenue, can not be undertaken without curtailing appropriations to charities. The bond issue amendment, therefore, offers the only solution. Extension of the highway system, condemnation of toll roads and tak- ing over of new highways will in- crease the annual charges for main- tenance, and the demands for appro- priations for State aid in building are now far beyond the ability of the State to comply with, Only the ap- portionment of a definite sum an- nually will enable systematic con- struction of main highways to pro- ceed without hampering the State aid construction, the maintenance and the assistance to township. New York, California, Massachu- setts and other States have issued bonds for road building as the cities of Pennsylvania have done for years for paved streets and sewers. DEATNI35 CA NNOT BE CURED By local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitution- al remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When the tude is inflamed you have a rumbling or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirelyjclosed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflamma- tion can be taken out andjthisftube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are camsed by catarrh, which is nothing but an in- flamed condition of the mucous sur- faces. do . We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for cir- culars, free. ; F. J. CHENEY, & Co., Toledo, Sold by Druggists, 75 cents. Take Hall’s Family Pills for con- stipation. ad enemas eeteeem memes Curious Condensations. Philadelphia now has 298,000 chil- dren of school age. Russia’s export of eggs exceeds 1,500,000,000 a year. St. Louis aldermen have passed an ordinance forbidding tipping. A mirror which reflects true colors is said to have been invented. Swinburne is said to be the only red-headed poet who ever achieved fame. / The Atlantic’s greatest depth is 27,363 feet, and its area 34,000,000 square miles. Taking the country at large, there is one automobile for each 110 in-|’ habitants. From 1876 to 1910 more than half a million persons left Norway, mainly for the United States. . Many worked-out coal mines in Pennsylvania are being filled in with sand and other waste material to pre- vent their surfaces caving and damag- ing valuable property. {sree t—— For croup or sore throat, use Dr Thomas’ Electric Oil.» Two sizes, 25¢ | | and 50c. At all drug stores. ad | Destroy the Railroad Worm of Apples Now. Throughout the northern part of Pennsylyania, and, in fact, extending southward to the centre of the State, there is to be found a very serious pest of the apples, especially of the summer apples and sweet varieties, which bores through the pulp of the fruit in winding tunnels, and is, there- fore, called the Railroad worm or Apple maggot. Itis the larva of a fly with spotted wings which flies nround the trees in the. early part of the summer, and lays its eggs on the fruit. Shortly before the fruit is half grown this pest could be destroyed by spraying with a sweetened arsenical spray upon which the adult or winged fly would feed, but after the larva enters the fruit and commences to feed in it, there is no remedy. The thing to do then is to be sure and gather and destroy the fallen fruit, or pasture the orchard with fowls or pigs that eat the fallen rruit. The larva will remain in the fruit for a few days after it falls, and this gives the grower an opportunity to destroy it. After the fruit has remained on the ground for some days, this larva bores out and enters the soil, where it changes to a pupa or ehrysalis, and passes the winter there. When infested fruits fall where they can be washed into a stream, they are carried downstream, sometimes great distances, and thus the pest is spread. It is also spread by shipping infested fruits from one region to another. In the fall of the year is the time | to watch for this pest. Many apples contain the Railroad maggot without this pest being observed by the per- sons using them, because it is incon- spicgous; yet the brownish winding tunnels show its presence, and indi- cate that all fallen apples in the vici- | fi nity where it occurs should be gather- ed and fed to stock, or made into! cider, or otherwise! disposed of promptly, so that the pests will be destroyed, and there will be none left to continue their destructive work another year. MUST NOT “PUFF” TOO HIGHLY | lowa Supreme Court Hands Down an Opinion of Some Interest to Real Estate Men. The legal view of “puffing” in the sale of real estate is expressed by the supreme court of Iowa in Wakefield vs. Coleman, in which the court rules that language which might be considered expressions of opinion or mere puffing will often amount to representations or warranties when the property is at a distance and the buyer relies on the seller for the facts. The court, in re- versing a judgment of the trial court dismissing a complaint to set aside a contract for the sale of real estate, sald: “It is quite likely that the court below reached its conclusion upon the theory that Coleman's statements were within the limits of the allowable of opinion, in which a seller may indulge with reference to the property pro- posed to be sold without becoming l- able for false or fraudulent representa tions; but we think the circumstances. here appearing will not justify the, application of that rule. The prop erty he was offering to sell was in a distant state. Not one of the pur- chasers had ever seen or had any knowledge whatever of its condition, quality or value. Language which might well pass as expressions of opin- fon or words of mere praise were the property present, in view of both buy- er and seller, will often amount to rep- resentation or warranty when the prop- erty is at a distance and the buyer must rely upon the seller for the facts.” GOOD QUALITIES DYING OUT? Men in High Position Declare Senti- mentalism of Present Day Is Fast Leading to Decay. Cardinal Bourne, Roman Catholic archbishop of Westminster, England, in a recent sermon favored enforced military service for all men over twen- ty-one who had not, prior to attaining that age, trained to a required stand- ard of physical manhood. The Ameri- can Army and Navy Journal, in a striking editorial deprecating the sen- timentalism of the times, quotes Doc- tor Inge, dean of St. Paul's Cathedral, London, as follows: “The modern Englishman is an in- corrigible sentimentalist in religion, in politics, in charity and everything else, and like all sentimentalists he hates doing or witnessing anything painful. He is fast coming to think all punish- iments unjustifiable and he sheds maud- ‘Hn tears over the wastrel and the ‘criminal.” The Journal applies the same state ment to affairs in America, and with good reason. Luxury is become com- mon and hardship unusual. The hardy pioneer of the west has practically dis- appeared with the wiping out of the frontier. The trend to the cities with ‘their enervating luxuries and licenses is more pronounced. The luxury, softness and sentiment- alism of the age are sapping its man- 'hoed. The Journal quotes Price Collier, ‘writing in Scribner’s, in which he fa~ | the en- | vors for the United States forced military service of Germany, ARDOLPH L. KLINE a IRA A AR BAA RAIN eB fo ian Tn RT RDOLPH L. KLINE became mayor of New York on the death of the late Mayor Gaywor. Mr. Kline was vice-president of, ® the board of aldermen and suc- ceeded John Purroy Mitchel, BERLIN.—An official bulletin is. sued at Munich says the wife of ex- King Manuel of Portugal is. improv- ing slowly. Manuel is also quoted as emphatically repudiating the rumor to the effect that his bride had told some friends that she was determined not to return to her husband. ROME.—Rumors are again in cir- culation that the state of the Pope's health is not satisfactory, and that his condition is causing anxiety to his physicians. He is suffering from no specific malady. LONDON.—The Standard in a long editorial hints English capital, repre- sented by Pearson & Son, will give Colombia a chance to avenge herself .ocean-to-ocean canal by way of the Atrato and Cupica rixers. JOHANNISTHAL, Germany.—Lt. Schulz, a German military aviator, was killed, when” his monoplane cap- sized and fell with him to the ground from a height of 150 feet, while he was flying over the aerodrome here. BERLIN.—A most important de- posit of uranium and pitchblende, from which radium is extracted, has been found om the German side of the Erzgebirge, a range of mountains between Saxony and Bohemia. TO SELL ANTHRACITE COS. Officials Offer No Explanation of Startling Announcement by Presi- dent Rea. Philaaelphia, Sept. 27.—That the Pennsylvania Railroad intends, at a very early date, to dispose of its en- tire holdings of Anthracite Coal Ceom- pany stock was the startling an- nouncement made by Samuel Rea, president of the Pennsylvania. No explanation was forthcoming as to why the railread was separating itself from a syndicate of coal companies which mine approximately ten per cent. of the available anthracite in the United States. LINES OF SULZER DEFENSE Albany. The Sulzer defense, as at present outlined, will be:— That all contributions received in his campaign were personal giits from friends and admirers. That 300 such gifts were “re- ceived by the candidate in addi- tion to those now known to the impeachment managers. That twelve of the large checks were used by Mrs. Sulzer in stock market deals without the knowledge of her husband. That Sulzer offered to repay both the Schiff and Morgenthau contributions when he learned they were regarded as other than personal gifts. That the $500 contribution from Superintendent of Public Works Peck was also a per- sonal gift. That the impeachment pro- ceeding was Irregular and part of a plet inspired by Tammany Hall leaders to protect them- seives against prosecution for graft and because Sulzer would not bow to their dietates. William Sulzer will be the chief witness In his own de- fense. It ie not the present in- tention of the defense to call Mrs. Sulzer. , ter Jones, 20 years old, in the negro against Panama by constructing an' continually killing white | = | UNREPAARRRERNRSENENSE ERNE NERORURENNUINRNERRRNNNES r——a— TTT RS fa Ra 3 Gali DEADLY RACE WAR FOUR WHITES AMONG THOSE KILLED BY DRUG-CRAZED MU- LATTOES IN MISSISSIPPI. POSSE LYNCHES 2 BROTHERS Arrival of Militia Prevents More Trouble—Sheriff Falls as He Leads Charge—Railroad Depot and Train Fired On by Brothers. Harriston, Miss., Sept. 29—Twe Irug crazed mulatto boys, brothers, >egan a reign of murder here that :nded only after four white men, ‘our negro men and a negro woman 1ad been killed, several persons wounded and the two boys lynched. A clash between the races was pre- rented by the arrival of a special rain of a company of national suardsmen from Natchez. Twenty persons were injured, six een of them negroes None of the legroes was dangerously hurt. The trouble started about 2 o'clock n the morning and continued inters nittently for eight hours when Wal. ier Jones, the older of the two boys who started the firing, was lynched lust after the soldiers arrived His srother, Will Jones, had been shot ind killed by citifiens earlier in the lay. > Citizens of the town who had bare ricaded themselves in their homes began cautiously to emerge at 10 d’clock from their hiding places, and by noon the town was quiet. No more trouble is feared. The Dead. 3. B. HAMMETT, Sheriff of Jefferson county, white, shot when leading a posse to where the Jones brothers were hiding. FRANK KIENSTLY, former. cons stable, white, shoe in his home af ter being called to the door. CLAUDE FREEMAN, white, of Faye ette, Miss., shot in the railway sta tion while awaiting a train. JOHANNA AIKEN, TOM WEEKS, JESSE THOMPSON, THREAD GRAYSON and TELLER WAR. REN, negroes, killed in promiscu- ous shooting. WALTER and WILL JONES, ne goes, lynched. The Wounded. Orrin Gillis, former Sheriff, white, shot in shoulder and may die. BE. B. Appleby, white, conductor, of the Yazoo and Mississippi Valley Railway, shot in breast, leg and arm; condition dangerous. William McCalleb, white, shot in leg and thigh. : William Kienstly, white, son of Frank Kienstly, shot in hand. William Dennis, white, shot in leg We C. Bond, white, shot in: leg. The shooting was started by Wale quarter, where the negro woman and: Thead Grayson were shot and killed. Walter then went to the home of his mother and aroused his brother, whe was 18. Together they proceeded through the main street of the little town, firing at every one in sight. Sheriff Hammett, heading a posse, surrounded the Jones, barricaded im an old house from which they fired citizens who were attempting to take the house by assault. Fully 3,000 shots were fired on the building. The front and side of the house were riddled: The Jones brothers and whatever other negroes were in the building were saving their ammunition to resist any rush the meb might make. Finally Thad Grayson, an ante-bels lum negro, under promise of $10 boldly entered the house to induce: the negroes to: surrender. A few minutes afterward he appeared at. the door and signalled that his mis sion had been successful. Will Jones, Johnson Prophet and Bob Patterson came out and threw. up their hands. Their supply of ams munition had been exhausted. Seeing his companions throwing themselves at the merey of the posse Walter Jones crept from his position under the cotton oil mill and beat a hasty flight up the railroad track. A hail of bullets was poured upon his retreating figure. One grazed his head, inflicting a slight flesh wound. He dropped and the posse was upom him. The special bearing militiamen from Natchez arrived at this time. The soldiers were politely but firmly told to stand aside and they drew up in military order while the lynching was" done. Governor Brewer reached here 7). find everything quiet. - Will Jones was 21 years old * Walter 17. Both were releasec .. m jail on shooting charges only last week. I. R. RULES AT CONVENTION Dietates the Nominations of Judges Hand and Seabury for the Court of Appeals Rochester, N. ¥Y., Sept. 29.—Theo- dore Roosevelt dominated the State Progressive Convention here and dice tated the nominations of Judge Learned Hand amd Justice Samuel Seabury, who were named by the con vention as candidates for the Court of Appeals. Judge Hand, mow of the United States District Court, a Progressive, was named for Chief Judge and Jus- tice Samuel Seabury, a Progressive Democrat, for Associate Judge. Both are residents of New York City. Before You Buy a FIRST SEE AND TRY A DelLAVAL, Cream Separator J. T. YODER, THE BEST SEPARATOR MADE Office 223 Levergood St, Johnstown, - Penn’a. SPICES! SPICES! Tumeric, Allspice, Both Phones. The time of year is here for canning goods We handle a full line of spices. Cloves, Seed, Curry Powder and Ready-mixed Spices F. B. THOMAS, Leading Druggist. Opposite Citizens National Bank. Pepper, Mustard Meyersdale, Pa. ANNAN A A A NA Il mar Ooms All, Misses’ and Growing Girls’ Kicker Low Heel School Shoes bome All Sizes 113 to 2, Sizes 2% to 6, ‘‘Shew yer made for Pretty Maid.” Gun Metal, Tan and Patent Leather $2.00, $2.50, $2. $2.50, $3.00, $3. IN STOCK 75 50 TOM or Ad HR THE PLACE FOR ~~ GRADE FOOTWEAR. SSNS PROFESSIONAL CARDS A HOLBERT, He ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. SOMERSET, PB - a Uflice in ook * BeeMts’' Block. up ste VIRGIL R. SAYLOUR, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, SOMERSHET 0%. 29-08. i G G. GROFF, JUSTICE OFTHE PEACE. ; CONFLUENCE, PA Deeds, Mortages, Azreefnents ana all Ley Papers promptly exacuted v. Smarr BUNL & GATESMAN, Distiliars of Pur: Rye, Whent, Mx and Gin. Distilling ap to date MEYERSDALE a, Nov. ed-tt STEWART’S HEALING POWDER for a ge cuts and a= sulfites uperior to salves or: liriment. Feels ood, heals quickly, keeps away flies, E Red als an® 50 coats, At or harness The Commercial Press U Ought to Use drug sto: ¥.G. Stewart & Co., Cilcago, Handles It ou le perfect lubrication Act Quickly Don’t wait until you have some ail- ment caused by poor digestion, biliousness, or by inactive bowels which may lead to a serious sickness. Immediate relief is afforded by that best corrective and preventive BEECHAM'S PILLS I Sold everywhere. In boxes, 10c., 25¢, without carbon thin---pale--feeds freely Free--320 page book--all about oil Waverly 0il Works Co. PITTSBURGH, PA. Gasolines Lamp Oils : Lubricants Foley Kidney, Pills’ What They Will Do for Yep DIAMOND Theywil.. = «your backache - o&t strengthen :. .r kidneys, sos: eos pe fect urinar .= Cularities, build cov J ap the we... ..* tissues, and LADIES { GoLp metallic boxes, sealed with Blu Ribbon. TAKE NO OTHER. Buy of Four | Druggist and ask for OHI.CHES.TERS DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, for twenty Sve years regarded as Best, Safest, Always Reliable, SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS mE EVERYWHERE Joss TRIED TESTED Ask your Druggist for CHI-CHES-TEP 3 DIAMOND BRAND PILLS in RED and eliminate the excess uric acid that causes rhauinatism. Pre vent Bright's D.: case and Dias bates, and ress: -c health ard Girength. Reus: substitutag F. B. THOMAS.