M. M. tion held at Wheeling, W. Va. » { Redondo Beach, Cal.,, veted “wet.” | More than half the votes polled were | cast by women. | President Wilson has appointed Ar- thur Yager, of Kentucky, as Govern- atest Dispatches Ground Down °F of Porto Rico. i The lumber yard of R. B. Ruby, at For Hasty Consumption. | Oneida, N. Y., was damagéd by fire to | the extent of $200,000. The tug Rohio passed through Ga- WHOLE WORLD 15 GLEANED) [2 kot Sof roms te remaets ns wat ar To nin | William Schryer, an Adirondack | guide, was shot and killed in mistake | for a deer by a party of New York | hunters at Raquette Falls, N. Y. Chinese, numbering 153, the largest consignment ever brought to San Francisco for deportation, were sent | back to China. Henry Lane Wilson’s letter of res- ignation a- Ambassador to Mexico was i Washington ; . made public and proved to be a bitter While it was said that delaying the | attack on Secretary Bryan. €urrency bill until the next session of | pp go Fischel, of Brooklyn, who €orgress would postpone President | introduced the baby incubator into Wilson’s anti-trust programme, Sen- thijg country, died suddenly on his &tor Stone expressed the hope that it bridal night. | he Four Corners of the Earth and i the Seven Seas Are Made to : Yield a Tribute of Inter esting News. Be alll ped on the carpet, cover it thickly with salt; then both may easily be | | To get the full nutriment from al : : | | potato it should be cooked in the 102 Maimed as Train Falls! i | skins, as valuable food sits lie juss) Through Tresis in Mississippi | . % | | wm Neeley, Democrat, was | Household Notes. | 9 | | Dl FRS | 2 oh < | elected to Congress in a special elec- nn | = a | If by accident soot should be drop- D [ IN A WRECK | ER ————_., sui swept up. | inside the covering. A few pieces of gum camphor kept | | in the boxes in which silver is packed 0 The Kind You ave CARS IN 60-FOOT PLUNGE ark | i] 2 Always Bought Tooth powder is excellent for clean- Men Pinned Under Wreckage. our, ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT, 4 . ing jewelry. Rub it on with a nail| Officers Hurt—Coast Artillery Men AVegetable Preparation fir As. brush and then rinse off with scalding| Were On Way from Fort Morgan, similating the Food and Regula. Bears the Woator. Ala, ‘to State Fair. ting the Stomachs and Bowels of o To keep the teapot sweet and clean, | Mobile, Alas-Twontyfive enlisted | wipe it out dry after using and put a men from Rort Morgan, Ala, were | lump of loaf sugar inside, leaving the | killed and more than one hundred Signature NJ INFANTS “CHILDREN — S— Would be passed at this session. The Rev. James Haslop, a Holy President Wilson is expected to an- mounce a new Mexican policy, said to mermit the revolutionists to obtain | Roller preacher, of Gadsden, Ala., al- lowed a rattlesnake to bits him five times to show he was immune from ®rms in the United States, a refusal of such permission to Huerta and a eontinuance of the interrupted rela- tions with Huerta. President Wilson called Senators ©’Gorman, Reed and Hitchcock to the White House and urged on them the mecessity of passing the Currency bill at thiS session. Senator Pomerene, of Ohio, in a Special statement, told how the Ad- ministration Currency bill would re- move the causes of panics by its re- serve-bank plan. harm. He was buried two days later. The race track at Havre de Grace, washed in gasoline, add a few drops| p. m., and was made up of ( Md, owned by the Hartford County | of oil of cedar. The disagreeable odor | coaches and a baggage car. Most of was dam- aged by fire to the extent of $50,000. Agricultural Association, It will be rebuilt. Cranberry growers at Middleboro, | barrels of unpicked berries were de- | able odor less noticeable. | lid open. were injured when the cars of a spe- promotes Digestion Hoeft of k £ soi cial train in which they were travel- Opium Morphi x Miteral. There should be three pairs o scis- Ying ‘went into a esp avis OF toe I pium Morphine no sors in the kitchen—one for dieing| p00 00 oo trestle, sixty miles north | NOT NARCOTIC. vegetables, one for trimming fish, and of this city. ; ee one for general use. The wrecked train carried 175° en- Recpe of 7 Se Thinly sliced bananas moistened ste ned from the 1950 and Tory Bris Seed i naise and placed between | Seventh companies, Coas Tillery, Rochelle Sulls- N mayo of — make excel- | Stationed at Fort Morgan, and four | asedeod + cg officers, on their way to the Alabama: Bi Judes lent school sandwiches. Mississippi fair at Meriden, Miss. Sm Sond i When garments of any kind are| The train left Mobile at 12.03 o'clock three + — i Use Aperfect Remedy fos ons ni i ir 1i i tion, Sour Stomach, Dial ri iced. those killed lost their lives by being | » k IL Will not be Dotige . crushed to death when the coaches! Worms Convulsions. Feverish: 1g Ver Salt thrown into the oven imme | truck the bottom of the ravine, ! ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. b diately after something has been which is sixty feet deep. The train r= . Mass., estimate that more than 50,000 | burned in it will make the objection. | was running at moderate speed. The FacSimile Sign; engine passed over the trestle safely | : YR Ir y e drs NEW YORK. weather. Representative | stroyed by recent storms and cold | Ink stains on mahogany can be re-| but the three coaches plunged to the Clark, of Florida, | urged that the State Legislature pass > a law to prevent Japanese from be- |8 teaspoonful of water. bottom when the trestle crumbled un-' TY AGT ORR TTI moved by painting them with a solu- NE aL tion of six drops of niter mixed with i Then rub! gE TTT py coming landowners in the State. 2 . : Martin Savern and Peter Simons BJ re > * - » £ ersonal miners, were killed after they had HOTT in l Hil I ic hild fF es : rescued two children from the path of Charles Teller, the inventor of the a locomotive near Pittsburgh. oold storage brocess, died penniless ®t the age of 85. Hie misery was re- Heved by subscriptions raised for him By the Cold Storage Company a short fime before his death in Paris. The stork is expected to visit the Bzarina again. Representative Ansberry of Ohio presented to President black-thorn stick which was used at the Donnybrook Fair. The New York State Suffrage As- sociation, in session at Binghamton, elected Mrs. Raymond Brown of New President Wilson’s physician, Dr. York City president. : €ary T. Grayson, was heartily pleased James Ottery, the colored political @&t the President's decision to aban- pogg of Atlantic City, N. J., recently don his plan of seeing the battleships convicted of maintaining a gambling &t target practice on the drill grounds house, was sentenced to ‘a term of off the Virginia coats. Mr. Wilson from 18 months to three years. # somewhat run down after the hard Julia Kasson, a nine year old girl, grind of the summer in Washington. of Passaic, N. J, got into a school Henry C. Frick has settled upon his house after hoffrs and when she son, Childs, $12,000,000 as a wedding found only two cents to steal, cut present, while his son’s bride, who of the tails of a dozen goldfish, which was Miss Frances S. Dixon, of Balti- died. more, received a check for $2,000,000 Julian Hawthorne and Dr. W. J. 8S a present from her new father-in- Morton were released from the Fed- law. eral Prison at’ Atlanta. Both criti . cised the feeding of prisoners, and 3 £ started for their homes in New York. i General £ F. Augustus Heinze, in answer to ’ { a suit in New York on a note, charges The University of Vermont's stu- Edwin Gould of defrauding him of #ent council has banned the tango. nearly a million and a half, through Julian Hawthorne and Dr, W.J. Mor- Charles W. Morse and’ others, in Mer- . Yon, released from Atlanta Prison, re- cantile National Bank stock. turned to New York. | A Mobile & Ohio special train load- , The Cooper Ice Co.’s plant in Troy, | ©d With 179 United States soldiers Y., was destroyed by fire at a from Fort Morgan, Ala, on Toute to loss of $100,000. | the Alabama-Mississippi fair at Me- The Cigarmakers’. Union ol Penn. | Fidian, Miss., crashed through the sylvania has asked a NaS Roane Buckatunna trestle between the State : : | line and Buckatunna, 60 miles north of of $1 per 1,000 cigars. | Mobile, killing 25 men President Wilson nominated George | ~ : 2 Stewart Brown as general appraiser | of the port of Baltimore. | = Ss ortin g Ralph Rose, amateur champion shot | E p g : putter, is dead at San Francisco, : : from typhoid, | While organized baseball men say | they take no stock in the Federal a Te ae wee ee League’s threat to declare war upon Virginia capes, including the cotton | BSE, BY Ayu Ive on. ti eargo, is estimated at $1,740,000. [ox hind : re ra The sheep growers near Montgom- ! DD and for meeting outlaw apposi #ry, Ala, have offered a bount of 7 2 3 $300 for the head of a wolf which le Packoy MePariang hag fried 10 Bad destroyed 300 animals, put all his strength into his punches The Sulzer Court of Impeachment | he would have put Harlem Tommy Yoted, 39 to 18, guilty on Articles I| MUPhY to sleep in the :°n round bout and II; guilty on Article IV, by 43 to | 1 Madison Square Garden, New York. 34, and not guilty on Article III by | He outclassed Murphy to such an ex- ananimous vote. tent that the latter was a pitiful sight, Many trunks, containing valuable | The War which it was rumored that Property belonging to Mrs. ad A organized baseball would wage Thompson, the former Miss May Van | against the Federal League next sea- Alen, were held for inspection by | Son. wil Je declared by the inde- Boston customs officers. | Pendent circuit and will be fought to The release of 110 convicts in the | & ish. s Eastern Penitentiary at Philadelphia, | Freddie Welsh, the English light whose sentences range from two to | weight champion, has cleaned up forty years, was affected in one day | €Very boxer he met in the West. under the new pardon law. Grieved over the sudden death of | y his wife, a bride of seven months, | Foreign who died last January, Dr. Thomas | ~ ; ! Dunlap committed suicide at Pratt.| The rebels in Puerto Plata, San ville, Ala. Domingo, have rejected Deace terms Governor Foss of Massachusetts | 80d resumed war operations. ennounced that his independent can-| The London Board of Trade has didacy for re-election was no joke | ordered an inquiry into the Volturno end that he would stay in the fight | disaster. and win. The Manchester express ran into a An order issued by the Police Com:- | local train near Liverpool, killing ten missioner- of Detroit re@ulted in the | Passengers and injuring many others, closing of 167 disorderly houses and | More than $950,000 death duties depriving more than 500 inmates of | Will be paid on the $5,899,155 estate shelter. left by J. P. Morgan in England. C. J. Leland, a druggist of Roswell, | The Duchess of Fife and Prince N. M. accidently shot and killed his | Arthur of Connaught were married friend, Professor Hammer, a govern- | at Londen. While on their way to ment entomologist, while hunting | the wedling, King George and Queen deer in the Capitan Mountains, Mary were mobbed by suffragettes. The estate of Timothy Woodruff, | Sir Rufus Isaacs was appointed #brmer ' lieutenant-governor of New Lord Chief Justice of England. Fork, is estimated at $10,000,000. A Japanese cruiser has been or- The Nebraska Supreme Court up- | dered to Vera Cruz, Mexico, to pro- | field the constitutionality of the recall | tect Japanese Citizens. . law, passed at the last legislative ses- Two German aviators, Eitung and | sion, Lubbe, were fatally injured when | At®ibany the High Court of Im- | ‘[eylsuueyoor 12 qo] suridorse Jory | peachment, 43 to 12, with Chief Judge | The minister of war of the green | Quillen and Senator Wende excused orders for a review of from voting, removed William Sulzer | Pp Mayo in honor of from the Governorship, and Martin H. | ! ; : | @lynn took the oath of office. Mr. Sul- Wing to C Situation, the | ger issued a statement calling his re- Chilian Goy "THI nf has decided not | moval “political lynching” by “the to participate in the Panama-} acific High Court of Infamy.” | Exposition at San Francisco. Hin IHN, g —— — ® Wilson a | | ett with a damp cloth and polish with a dry one. | | . | —_— | Fashions and Fads. | ™ | : . | | A new feature of evening gowns is | the bodice of beaded net. | Yellow fur holds the central posi- tion among fur trimmings. Coats of black caracul have collars and cuffs of yellow fox. Eggplant purple is a much-tavored color for this season. Net in some form can be used to freshen up last year’s clothes. The stiff wired bow at the side is a feature of the new millinery. All kinds of bird plumage lend their beauty to the autumn hats. Panther is a youthful fur, and trims many of the new costumes. Many gowns of white satin have short tunics of pleated black tulle. Wear your aierets with a difference not the full bunch as of old. One of the newest combinations to Dame Fashion’s wardrobe is the net blouse with touches of plaid. White collars and cuffs give the necessary touch of freshness to the young girls school frock of serge There are many service coats made from double.faced rough cloakings | that do not require any lining. Every well-selected wardrobe re- quires a loose wrap suitable for wear- ing over afternoon and evening gowns. | Milliners are combining the follow- iug colors:, Brown and purple, blue | and green; amber, Bordeaux red and olive green. The four-cornered sailor of black | velvet, with puff balls of black ortrich fronds poised on three corners, is the ve y latest innovation. —_———e Th: Suffragists. Otis W. Butler, of Lowell and Charles L. Underhill of Someryille, | will not return to the next Massa- chusetts Legislature; they were de- feated for renomination through the efforts of woman suffragists. Both Messrs. Butler and Underhill voted at the last session against submitting a proposed suffrage amendment to the voters. Mr. Underhill had represent- ed the Somerville district for eight years. The Board, of Trade of the 2ist ward, Philadelphia, accepted an in- vitation to attend a suffrage meeting addressed by Miss Jessie Ackerman, the travel lecturer. The Board at- tended in a body. At Pottstown there was a large suffrage meeting recently arranged by wives of several of the professors of the Hill School, one of whom Mrs. F. L. Lavertu,, is a daughter of the great Greek scholar of Harvard, Pro- fessor White. Mrs. Helen Hoy Gree- ley of New York was the speaker. Charles N. Potter, Chief Justice of yoming, says absolutely that woman suffrage has purified Wyoming poli- tics to an extent that would not have happened with male suffrage only, He says, too, that he and his wife have voted side by side for thirty-six | years and that Mrs. Potter is as womanly as ever and, in her hus- band’s opinion, somewhat more so. nt a RE A lazy liver leads to chronic dys- | pepsia and constipation—weakens th whole system. Doan’s Regulets (25 | 5 | tne si he famille | per box) act mildly on the liver and | te size of the family. ' bowels. modern American tendency to limit || riving in Baltimore 6:55 P. M. | {| Also train leaves 1:20 A. M. arriv- | FOLEY KIDNEY PI |§ ing in Baltimore 8:10 A. Mm.’ FOR BACKACHE KIDNEYS AND BLADDER | At all drug stores. ad der their weight. | 18 I] SOIR ¥ Be ¢ Engineer R. C. Deasley of Meridian, 7 3 hy LES 3 35 CENTS | PoE Miss., was in charge of the engina fru EE and S. V. Pruett was the conductor hs Ki) Guaranteed under the Fo og 0B | in charge. Every member of the train Ral os : , crew was said to shave escaped except | one, who was only slightly injured. { | heroically but many of their comrades | dren, including infants in arms, as-| maculate Conception here as a de-| monstration | The campaign was conducted by Jes-| | uits, who have been conducting a mis- | sion in the parish. sermons the priests denounced. the A THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY. Exact Copy of Wrapper. The survivors of the wreck worked who were aught in the wreckage wera he / rescued w'th difficulty. The cries of = or ana AMS T macs So the injur were pitiful. | RADE 2 mane IT'S A CURE 3 THAT'S SURE § Specia! ‘ 1ins bearing assistance. » from Mob: = and Meridian reached the \ ] scene of wreck about the sama Jones Break-Up time. Svr-cons, physicians and others For over 20 years has Cured RHEUMATISM Sciatica, Lumbago and Gout 1? you have Rheumatism [any form), get Jones Break-Up, it will cure you as ‘it has ail oth have taken it, Guaranteed to “cure rs are at work relieving the sufferings of the injured. 2 The train jumped the track on what is known as Rube Burrow’s trestle, | the scene of a big holdup back in the early ’90s, and the three coaches and a baggage car composing the train! went into the ravine and piled up on top of another: The commissioned officers on the train were Capt. Bernard Taylor, Sapt,| Greer and Licuts! Calvin Smith and | Edwin Barlow. All were injured. | Frightful scenes attended the res. cue work. One private, whose hat bore the name Allen, lost both legs, | which were torn off almost at the hips, his body, being hurled clear of! the wreckage. For some moments the | man, conscious, lay in plain sight of | his wounded comrades. Death en- | sued ' shortly afterward. Allen stoi cally said he felt no pain, but wished he had time to smoke a cigarette. Two men who apparently fell or, jumped through windows were found BEOISTERED mas?37 SALE AT Oct. -3m COLLINS’ DRUG SORE, ‘Meye-sdals, Pa. — Another 8ig Price Reduction ! SUNBEAM M‘ZOA 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—BuFORE OU #.Yy YOUR NEXT LIGHT BILL, rn c———— under one car, their bodies flattened . THESE PRICES NOW ¢FFECTIVE. upon each other. ! 10. wagks 0 35¢ each Owati.. 35¢ each The railroad officials here in {order 15 watt 35¢ each 60.wats .. .... 45¢ each to provide for the numerous wounded 20 watt .... 3bc each 100 watt... ....... 80c each were compelled to call into service | 25 wath. ........... 35¢ each wagons of the Southern Express Com: | Put a National Mazda Lamp in Every Socket. pany, motor trucks of the wholesala| houses and big delivery wagons, im Buy them in the Blue Convenience Carton—keep a stock on hand. Use them as you need them. rovised cots bein laced in them. » - go Telephone orders filled, BAER & CO. TTT rt a J. 5. WENGERD SELLS No. 1 Roofing Slate, Steel Roofing, Felt Nails, SULZER GIVES OUT PLANS. Will Accent Nomination from Progres- sives in Old District. Albany, N. Y.—“T’ll be back in this house in a year and three months, ag Governor of this State again.” This remark, made by ex-Governor William Sulzer to an intimate friend in the executive mansion, shows what plans the deposed chief executive hag for regaining the power which the Court of Impeachment took from him, Here is the way he is going about it: He- expects to accept the nomir-- By the time this issue of the paper reaches you we will be installed in our new home, where we will be better pre- pared than ever to attend to your needs in Grocetis, tion offered him by the Progressives Valleys, of the sixth assembl district in Man. . Ridging anc hattan. N t d Spouting, He is certain that he will be elected | 0 IONS an p i to the Assembly. He thinks that tha body will surely be dominated by Pro- gressives and that his election as Speaker of the House will be easy to accomplish. Once elected speaker he plans to wage a continuous battle for all of tha! popular measures of the day. As the exponent of these ideas, Mr, Sulzer thinks that his elevation from the speakership to the governors chair next fall ~11 be assured. The crowd of _ ;J0 hurrahing Sulzer partizans who invaded the executive | mansion to present the ex-Governor with a big silver loving cup and tell him they considered him a greatly | Our new wronged man, did no small amount of | . damage. to the furniture. In their | Fruits and Vegetables zeal and eagerness to see their idol | - ; i some of. the crowd climbed all over|| arecoming in. Everything plush chairs and couches. 200d to eat at as I osona- € prices as possible. Stock always on hand at Meyersdale and at my mill in Elk Lick Township. See Me Before Buying Elsewhere R.F D. No.2 Meyersdale, Pa. Light Hardware. The time is near when you will need heavier | Sacques, Toques apd Hose for the children. ——————— ep lle Western Maryland Lines SE ———— THROUGH SERVICE TO Chicago and Pittsburgh TE ————— The Chicago Limited leaves Mey- ersdale 4:19 P. M., arriving in Pittsburgh 7:30 P. M., and Chicago 7:59 o’clock next day. Train with sleepers also leaves 4:08 A. M., ar- riving in Pittsburgh 7:35 A. M. Modern Equipment Observation Parlor Club Car and Coaches. | | IN GOING TO | et CHILDREN FIGHT RACE SUICIDE. | Thanking you for your past patronage and asking for a share of your patronage in the future, I am, Respectfully J. L. BIDDLE, URSINA, PA. Jesuits Organize Unique Demonstra- tion in Montclair Church. Montclair, N. J.—One thousand chil. | sembled in the Church of the Im-| against race guicice. BALTIMORE Use the Baltimore Limited which [} leaves Meyersdale 12:10 P. M., ar- In their mission —— ee HATS AN Go-as-yo! limited where- Skirts .- Hats a Toppe Bean § ' 5486 5481 ®. The ab Company, Makers of Only th dressed saves her look, in t of costun ionable + Waist li from just curve of every eff girth at the straig makes f Blouses ¢ out at th and skir full at t from the draperies rowness slashes Pinay V CONT Petticc present greater relied u color co toned s since so these ga small pr many that in t silk skir Fur trim the new on the n skirts. popular Ruffle! or ‘‘vole winter g any whe skirt in models, formed The mo is from lend jus and oft to pro houte”’ modis « fichu d away f standin the po in the coming softeni lace tri and th except HATS Velv y favorit or sha; up-stas ribbon in reg ually as the pandir ‘paint ostrick fashio: thoug] sorts modis 3 but a ! Moi: trimm wired angle = gnd v Mer