FA. ty le Depart- samples of than four: ng affixed ly printed, sh, certify-- nd the full e grower, Tr corpora- >, together: nts in pay- ve named 7 with the ts the ven- ine of not an twenty- 3 Se y to soedS are shipped hant vo be fore being 5 in storage Fashions and Fads. Se wv Coats, skirts and gowns have much fur trimming Blouses are flat and have the drop- ped shoulder line. Mustards and yellow are colors not used for street suits. Separate wraps for street wear are three-quarter length. Purple and yellow are the most fashionable cqlors for dyed fur. Fur, lace net or plaid taffeta trim “ the separate blouses of chiffon. The frocks of serge are brightened by sashes of Roman striped ribbon. Skirts are widened by all manner of drapery, tunics, flounces and ruffles. Gowns and wraps are adornediwith fringe of beads, silk or metal thread. Some low-necked evening fgowns are outlined with flaring frills of tulle or lace. Afternoon frocks are inclined to be very short, with draped panniers, short tunics and many pinked or scalloped ruches. : A few coat suits are cut collarless, and some are cut quite low in in the back. Stocks are worn with the col- larless coats. Children’s coats are charming ‘with their trimming touches—girdles of bright ribbon and corded shirrings ang fur and braid. Among the new frocks is one show- ing a knee-leigth tunic, which hangs in deep points as if cut from a square piece of cloth. Furs are not only dyed in two colors, but two kinds of fur are used «for sefs. If harmoniously combined, the effect is most artistic. Smart suits have the modified blouse coat; also popular is the coat that is a combination of an eton jack- et and cutaway back. POINTS THE WAY. The Statement of This Hyndman Resident will Interest our Readers. Our -neighboring town Hyndman, points the way in the words of ome of its most respected residents: Mrs. D. F. Bartholamew, Water street, Hyndman, Pa., says: I was in poor health and suffered greatly from pains in my back and sides. had chills and was often dizzy. Reading a great deal about Doan’s Kidney Pills, I began using them. They brought prompt relief and ts 1 continued using them, I steadily improved. I have recommended Doan’s Kidney Pills to many other people and 1 have never known o a case where they have failed to ove of benefit. Doan’s Kidney ills made a complete and perma- nent cure in my case and 1 kav had no need of a kidney medicine during the past several years. IL willingly confirm my former en- dorsement of Doan’s Kidney Pills, as I know that they are deserving of all the praise given them. For sale by all dealers. Price 50 édnts. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no others. DEAD LETTER LIST. Roy Hostetler, card; F. I. Laminer, card; No Name, card, Miss Smith, Samuel Queer, John Flyran. Noy. 1,1913, J. F. NaUGRE, P. M. ree eee Even Cures Ulcers. 3 the dog show, the millinery show, the Ada SOMERSET GOUNTY SPELLING CONTEST. Somerset County Boys’ and Girls’ Spelling Contest, List No. 5. “F” Obstacla, oracle, observa- tion, occult, oblong, oricle obscure, ostrich, orchestra, orthodox, ozone, Omaha, operation, omnibus, obviate, optimism, orthography, ordain, out- rageous, ovation, obsequies, obliga- tion, opposition, obtuse. osculate, opera. ornate, opaque, omelet, oner- ous, ordeal outweigh, ornamental, obstinacy, obnoxious, obliterate, om- inons, opulence, obituary, obtrusive, optician. “Pp” Precede, panel, proceed, par- allel, promissory pasturage phonics, plumbline, parsley, participated, pen- insula, palate, pension, politics, pe- tition, policy, parties, pressure, pre- cisely presume, pvnctuate, previous, primary, president, physiology pre- cinct, prosecute, product, peeyish, probable, precipitate, prospectus, prism, punctual, panacea, precious, ‘precaution, preys privilege, pugilist, precise, “pretense, anic, ' perfume, property, plea, pillar, picnic, Puritan, parasite, purchase, pulsate preface, portable, purify, phonograph, pirate, perspire, pyramid, poultice, pulleys, Pentateuch, partial Pilgrim, pungent, performer, preliminary, pigeon, pal- try, platinum, parachute, plasma, permanent pineapple, proxy, pu- mice, proverb, pursuit, procedure, picturesque, pendulum, plurality, pshaw, prévalent, pulpit, percepti- ble, plateau, polygon, pathos, poly- gamy, prisoner, pneumatic, perfidy, propel, Pueblo, punctuation, percent- age, partition, ponderous, prohibition, panorama, plenteous, plurisy, patri- cian, pioneer, prairie, permeate, pa- triotism, peasant. “Q’? Quorum, quiver, qui®scence. query, quinine, quire. *‘R’” Revenue, reference, rein- deer, raspberry, resources, raisins, relieved, rarity, recede, receipt, rep- ertory, rein, ravine, rascally, rural, reverse. raze, rosin, rulable reten- tion, respite, repel, rogue, ridicu- lous, ransom, rescue, revelry, re- enforce, routine, reluctency, rendez- vous, rostrum, reimburse, razor, royal, robin, rumage,, recipe, russet, rectify. ‘8’? Suet, sensible, specimen, schedule. ~~ D. W. SEIBERT, County Superintendeut. For any pain, burn, scald or bruise, . appl, Dr. Thomas’ Electric Oil—the household remedy. The sizes 25c and 50c a: all drug stores. ad remanence Too Much Competition. | “Hang it!” “mutters the enraptured | youth. “What chance have I to get her alone? She has to go to the auto show, the food show, the flower show, "and .show and—Oh, well, there’s no show for me!”’—Judge. : ee Birmingham, Ala., F. L. Willis, saffered greatly from asthma and | b-oncnitis. He writes;—‘I got no relief until I took Foley’s Honey and | Tar Compound. It entirely removed those choking sensations and neyer failed to produce an easy and com- ‘f rtable condition of the throat and 11ngs”’. ~~ eee eee peer eees. Laws of Physics. Caustic Calkins dropped his watch on the sidewalk. “Did it stop?” in- queried Solicitous Jones. “As the flag- ging is four {inches thick,” replied Calkins, “it did. But I think, if I get a heavier watch it may go through next ‘time.” ! tober 14. show that Mrs. IRS. EATON FREED JURY ACQUITS HER OF CHARGE OF POISONING HER HUSBAND, THE REAR ADMIRAL. BACK IN THE OLD HOME Jury Out Over Nine Hours—Learned Much in Prison, She Says, and Wants to Make Everybody Happy. Rockland, Mass., Oct. 31.—Mrs. Jennie May Eaton, who was found not guilty of the murder of her husband, Rear Admiral Joseph G. Eaton, at Plymouth, was brought to her home in Assinippi in an automobile. Her daughter Dorothy met her in Plymouth and on the two reaching the house there was a happy reunion. The first person to greet Mrs. Eaton when she opened the front door of her home was her daughter, Mrs. June Keyes, who arrived a short time before the widow put in an appearance. Next Mrs. Eaton greeted her mother, Mrs. Harrison. After considering the evidence for nine hours and twenty-five minutes the jury reported: at 5.10 o’clock a. m., ‘in the courthouse at Plymouth. The spectators" arose to their feet and were restrained from making a dem- onstration only by a sharp order from Sheriff Porter. Mrs. Eaton smiled joyfully as she heard the verdict, She had sat up-in a private room at the court house un- til 2 o’clock a. m. Then she was per-. mitted to go to the Judge’s lobby, where she slept on a couch until awakened at 4.30 and summoned to the court room. After the foreman had announced the : verdict Chief Justice Allen wafned the jurors to keép secret the proceedings in the jury room. Nearly two hundred persons, some of whom had remained all night, were present to hear the verdict. Among them were a few women. After Mrs. Eaton had left the court room the jurors, through their fore- man, asked to meet her. The permis- sion was granted and they formed a semi-circle in the corridor. Mrs. Eaton came out from the Judge’s lobby and thanked them indi- vidually. As she did so she burst into tears for the first time since her trial started. Mrs. Eaton’s trial commenced Oc- The Government sought to Faton poisoned her husband by placing arsenic in his bev- .erages and his medicine and that she was jealous of his attention to other women. Mrs. Eaton’s counsel contended that the Admiral’s death was due to self- administered drugs, but did not at- tempt to show. whether the alleged overdose was taken intentionally or by accident. Her chief counsel, Mr. Morse, said: “It was Mrs. Eaton’s appearance on the stand, an unusual event in any capital case. and a remarkable one where a woman was on trial for her life, which decided the defendant's innocence -in the minds of the jurors. The verdict frees an innocent woman, but leaves as a mystery the end of the Admiral, her husband.” STYLES HIT COTTON MILLS Fall River Concerns Report Losses During the Year—Elimination of Heavy Underwear Cause. Fall River, Mass. Oct. 31.—At the annual meeting of the Parker and Hargraves Cotton Mills, respectively, both of them reported losses during the year. They had suffered more than the average fine goods conceriis, ponderance of narrow looms. The change in styles of women’s clothes, eliminating voluminous un- derwear, had caused a great decline it was explained, because of their pre- ERE RT BREE —— / pr op Before You Buy a Cream Separator FIRST SEE AND TRY A DelLAVAL, SEE THE BEST SEPARATOR MADE. J. T. YODER, Office 223 Levergood St, Johnstown, - Penn’a. ENATOR THOMAS P. GORE of Oklahoma has been sued for $50,000 damages by Mrs. Minnie E. Bond, of Oklahoma § City, who charges that the Sen- & ator slandered her. : FLASHES FROM THE CABLE PARIS.—The Fall styles as dis played at the Auteuil races have dis- tinct masculine features. The hats VINOL For Men and Women Who Work Too Hard. Builds You Up. Makes You Stronz., Does Costs You Nothing. F. B. HOMAS, Agent. Both Phones. Leading Druggist. Opposite Citizens National Bank. You Good—or o Meyersdale, Pa. are black velvet, modelled on the lines of a man’s top hat and distinguished by a single feather rising two inches above the crown. BERNE.—The Swiss government is preparing to spend $7,600,000 on the electrification of the St. Gotthard Railway, as the first step in the elec- trification of all the Swiss national railroads. PARIS.—The Ministry of Agricul- ture in a statement issued says the wheat crop is one of the heaviest on record. PARIS. — Financial circles here heard with surprise coupled with amusement the report that Mexico has negotiated a $25,000,000 loan here. LONDON.—What, it is stated, is the largest purchase of radium ever made in this couniry has just been completed by the London Radium In- | stitute, which has acquired 2,000 mil- ligrams of the precious substance— nearly one-third of the world’s supply for this year—for $30,000. LONDON.—The first step has been taken toward a strike of school teachers in Herefordshire for higher pay. One hundred headmasters and headmistresses are sending in their resignations, to take effect on Jan- uary 31. SELF-SLAIN PAIR FOUND The Bodies of James F. Bly, of Pitts burgh, and Girl Wife Discovered Near Northfield. 5] Atlantic City, Nov. 3.—Stumbling into a clump of bushes in the woods back of Northfield Harry Pierce dis "covered the bodies of James F. Bly, eighteen years old, of Pittsburgh, and his girl-bride, who was Miss Rose ' Herring, of this. city. gr Bullet wounds in the temples of both and letters revealed that they had died in a suicide compact last September. | RIFLE FIRE CHECKS MOB - Strikebreakers Send Many Shots Into Crowd at Night and Kill One of Their Own Men. Indianapolis, Nev. 3.~—In an attemrt to rush the street car barns where imported sirikebreakers are quart:red, Isaac Fleisher, 24, a strikebreaker from Philadelphia, was shot in the neck and died on the way to the City 100 & JIN SHOEN C= ~~ our shoes. look about them and a of refinement. ! hese — next time ? nn Arana A step in advance—guaranteed satisfaction _“T)>—that’s the keynote that sells so many thousand pairs of TOM & JIM shoes in a year lar men wear our shoes The young folks find an exclusive {Senabled us to build the om & [im reputation. If you have never worn them, why not try them Particu- Particular women wear more conservative touch distinctive features have ss TOM THE PLACE FOR HIGH CLASS FOOTWEAR. & JIM—— Rm oi [HALLOWEEN i TS is near, and as usual ill go .BIDDLE’S for Pretty Faces, Confetti, Tin Horns, Cow Bell Horns, Dancing Tops, Pumpkin Faces, Squeakers, Slappers and everything for noise and amusement, with plenty of Fruit," Nuts and choice Candies. We will have a fine line of choice (Canned and ‘Evaporated Fruits for the home. : Have you tried Crisco, the great- est can of shortening for baking or cooking the market? Mince Meat and Pancake Flour is now in season, as well as Lemon Peel and Citron, with all kinds of Spices for your fruit cakes. While looking for this kind of goods, take a look at our Cotton and Wool Blankets and Comforts. Cotton Blankets from $1.00 to $1.45 er pair; Woolen Blankets at from .25 to $5.50, extra large; Com- forts at $1.10 and $1.45, good size— good to wear and good for warmth. YN NW wr Ser Arne ® 1 uu Ought to Use The Commercial Press Hatrdles It x Zoological Ta . Children’s sets, Muff, Cap and Bh. : : " in demand for the styles of goods Hospial t Mloishop wes shot by oe of |} Scarf, that are nice and dressy for Remarkable Results from Skin Reme- { : AS } made formerly by the fine goods mills, he en Sue a v Das x the file tots. Children’s Sacques, = dy That Costs Almost Nothinge i and forced them to turn to other -stor:” |} assorted colors, 50c. Special wov- CHICHESTER SPILLS is Noth- . No Mnatter how bad a scre throat} For Infants and Children, styles. window. The strikers fled. en Jacquards for the crib, assorted colors, different animals woven in, neat and warm. Don’t forget to ask for your cou- or ulcer afflicts you, -it is believed that Hokara, the pure skin healer, will The Kind You Hate Always Bought | Nic PLAGUE IN maNiLA | MERGURY TABLETS KILL HiN : a Bears tue fi f Talki Machi or children cure it, but if it doesn’t cure, the Signature of Edgar Lewis Takes Five in Dark, Ds you pig in. Youwwill enjoy eee %ae "and colds parchase price will be refnnded. Two Deaths Have Been Reported Thinking Them an Indigestion the music these long evenings. oo" ' their little S. E. Thorley, the local agents for A Rusmuer of 1ntesied haw ve Remedy. Zink Wass, TDS Bo LADIES N . good No oa 8, 35¢ ov- ley’s Honey Hokara, who have sold hundreds of | .Machinery Saves Bulgaria's Crops. Trenton, N. J, Oct. 31—Edgar els, Pokers. Dampers, Stove Rakes, s need. No . no consti- tuffy colds s ind croup: erywhere. t? g as they rked pathet- terrible to a. a woman!” is response. sympathetic lalmed: “If ld ever have d there came as he thought alth. ne like Foley 1th to many ler, 625 Wil- S., was seri- and bladder writes: ‘‘My > her health to the use of ywhere. Cp packages, say they have yet to find |, any form of wound or disease affect- ing the skin that Hokara, does not heal, and its relief comes so quickly that those who try it are simply delighted with it. Pimples, é¢zema, blackheads, acne, barbers itch, and all skin troubles are quickly believed by applying this sim ple skin healer and tissue builder. It contains, no grease or‘acids, and is cleanly to use. !s. E. Thorley, is selling a large package of Hokara' for 25 cents. Would Make Them Better if They Could. The makers of Foley Kidney Pills know that they have absolutely the combination of curative and kidney and bladder ailments and urinary irreg- ularities that it is possible to pro- That is why Foley Kidney Pills are the best medicine for the best healing medicines for duce. purpose you can buy. Sold by all Dealers Everywhere. ad The French vice-consul at Bourgas, ‘Bulgaria, reports that notwithstanding ‘the conscription forthe war of all men ;between the ages of eighteen and for 'ty-six, this year's crops in Bulgaria ‘nave been planted about as usual, the acreage sown to wheat, for instance, {being within five to ten per cent, of last year. This surprising condition, .he says, is due to the introduction of ;agricultural machinery on a more ex- ‘tended scale than formerly, brought about by the necessities of the case. merece No More School Slates. Remember the old school slates; bound in red flannel tv prevent the noise of slate rattling that used to be- come unbearable, until manufacturers found how to muffle them? Stores selling school supplies used to carry great stocks of them, for it was a rare day in a room that did not see a slate or two broken; but where are they all now? Since the boards of health de- cided that they were insanitary and decreed against them, the whol. t:ibe has disappeared. FOLEY FAMILY WORM CANDY San Francisco, Oct. 31.—Correspon- dence from Manila reports two deaths there from bubonic plague, one of them being that of William : Crosier, managing editor of the Daily Bulletin. A number of infected rats have béen found and every effort is being made to rid the city of them. Washington, Oct. 31.—Surgeon-Gen. Blue, of the Public Health Service, sees no great danger in the sporadic cases of bubonic .plague reported from Manila. SENATORS FOR FOUR BANKS Senate Committee on Banking and Currency Make Radical Amend- ment to Owen-Glass Bill. Washington, Nov. 1—The Senate Committee on Banking and Currency agreed to reduce the number of re- giomal reserve banks to be authorized in the currency bill from twelve to four; but agreed to provide that the Féderal reserve hpard may, in its discretion, raise this number of twelve after two years. The “banks have strongly urged the reduction in the Always Successful ~ Children Like It number of the regional reserve banks. ee Siti - Lewis, of No. 136 South Broad street, died in St. Francis Hospital as a re- sult of swallowing five bichloride of mercury tablets taken October 21 in mistake for medicine for indigestion. Lewis was lying on a couch in a dark room. He reached to a shelf and grasped a bottle containing the poison. ADMIT BIG LOSS TO EXPRESS MEN Boston.—Since the introduc- tion of the parcel post one of the big express companies has lost 40 per cent. of its suburban busi- ness out of Boston. This fact was submitted as evidence by the representatives of tw) express companies at a hearing before the Public Ser- vice Commission. The two companies, which handle the bulk of the express business between Boston and Canton, opposed the admittance to railroad privileges of a third company which is seeking to es- tablish- a business in the same Flue Rings, Clothes Baskets and Tinware. We have just put in a new line of Horse and Cattle Powder, Poul- try Powder, Lice Exterminator and Disinfectant for poultry and stock, as well as for use in the home. Come in and let us talk it over with you. “Highest market prices paid for Butter and Eggs. Trading Stamps with every purchase. BIDDLE’S,. URSINA, PA. territory. Ad GoLp metallic xes, seal Ribbon, Tax=z pm ed with Bl 3 0 OTH ye | years regan, SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS sar EVERYWHERE F31= TEST, White Flame Full, clear—never flickers : FAMILY FAV ORITE P i The Best Lamp Gil At Your Dealers. For the sake of the family’s eyes. FREE—2320 page book—all about oil. WAVERLY OIL WORKS CO. Pittsburgh, Pa, Gasolines Lubricants for Backache, heumatiom, Kidneys an ~ Bladd er: