OSTOF THE WEEK'S NEWS front Page Stories Retold in Paragraphic Form. WIEREST!.G MINOR EVENTS BR Telegraph and Cable Roll in the fmportant and the Inconsequen- Zal, but to Each Is Given Its Proper Space. : Washington & life job as director general of feds, with a salary of $25,000 a year, & x Colonel Goethals, builder of the Bsnama Canal, is provided in a bill #wroduced in the House by Represen- #ilve Whitacre of Ohio. While the Currenoy bill was amend- al in the Senate Committee so as to eat down the numuer of regional re- @rve banks to fcur, it was believed Be bill would be put in shape satis- Mctory to the Pres.dent. Representative Gray, of Indiana, a Memocrat, was rebuked by Minority Beader Mann, for opposing, on the floor of the House, the plan to give Miss Jessie Wilson a wedding present. & new postal convenience planned Br the Post Office epariment, is a Emp book containing twenty-four emecent and twenty-four two-cent stamps to sell for 73 cents. : Personal Instead of a joint presentation, the Fenate will pay tribute with individual @ifts to Miss Jessie Wilson on her marriage to Francis B. Sayre. At the conclusion of an address by ‘Theodore Roosevelt at Sao Paulo, 200 xls sang the Brazilian and American amthems. Fire at Knoxville, Pa., destroyed 13 business houses and the postoffice. Dorothy Eisley, five years old, choked to death on a piece of apple in the yard of her home at Newark. Edward Lewis, of Trenton, N. J., is dead as the result of swallowing five bichloride of mercury tablets. President Wilson received by ex- press a fat possum from Joe Farrow, colored, of McFarland, N. C. A proposition to eliminate bachelors as legislators received thunderous ap- plause at the Pennsylvania suffrage convention at Pittsburgh. An armored automobile to protect money bags has been completed for the Bethlehem Steel Company, by M. J. Kneur Company of Newark. The United States revenue cutter Manning arrived at Seattle, having completed a 16,000-mile cruise among the Aleutian Islands. Mrs. Jennie Eaton was acquitted of the murder of her husband, Rear Ad- miral Joseph G. Eaton, at Plymouth, Mass. Clarence Altes and Charles John- son, of Mattoon, Ill, were burned to death when fire destroyed their boarding house. The Falmouth Bank at Falmouth, Mich., was broken into by burglars, who blew the safe and escaped with $5,000. Mrs. FP. A, Griswold, of Litchfield, Conn, is dead from hydrophobia, re- sulting from a dog bite received last August. Mrs. Johanna Peet and her four- year-old daughter were killed by =a train of the Susquehanna Railroad at Jersey City. E. R. Jacquith, of Chicago, was ar- rested at Hammondsport, N. Y., charged with shooting ducks from a flying air boat. Mitchell Day was celebrated in the anthracite fields of Pennsylvania in honor of the anniversary of the suc- cessful strike of 1900. It was said that if too many changes were made in the Glass-Owen bill by the Senate Committee on Banking and Currency, President Wilson would re- pudiate the measure. Ida von Claussen, who threatened to sue Roosevelt while President for $1,000,000, is in the Tombs, New York, on a charge of blackmail in threaten- ing to shoot Lawyer Charles Strauss. Ignace Paderewski, winning a libel mit against a London impresario, who ! Billed another as “one to be classed | with Paderewski,” refused to accept | money damages. | Benjamin F. Keith, of New York, | wwner of Keith's vaudeville circuit, | amd Miss Ethel Bird Chase, of Wash- #egton, were married on Mr. Keith's meht Nahmeyoka, anchored in the Po- tamac River. The bride is 26 years old and the bridegroom 67. HHH i General The Carnegie Hero Fund Commis- aon made seventy-seven awards. The Nashville Democrat has been wold to Senator Luke Lea's paper, The Bennessean and American. George Cay, of North Adams, Mass., Mad his neck broken while playing #aotball at Phoenixville, Pa. Houston D. Bickman, president of ®e Commercial Bank of Bogalusa, Xa. which failed recently, was assas- @minated. © John C. Schildknecht, the 23-year- ald clerk of the Washburn-Crosby Flour Company, who absconded with 855,000, was arrested in Brooklyn. E. C. Smith, of St. Albans, Vt., was alected president of the Central Ver- mont Railroad, to take the place of R'). Chamberlin, resigned. | John Magill, employed in the Lovy- #Bgton mines at Decatur, Ill, found a @etrified human foot embedded in the muck 1,000 feet below the surface. The main building of the Moravian @ollege and Theological Seminary at Bethlehem, Pr., was destroyed by fire. ‘Bhe loss is estimated at $100,000. | . Joseph Howarth, retired silk work- | ar, of Paterson, N. J., committed sui- | alde. His act wipes out his imme- | ate family, which numbered four, all | ~4 whom committed suicide. _ @orporation Commissioner Davies, & a speech to the Nati. nal As ocia- $lon of Hardware Dealers at Atlantic @lty, said President Wilson would start an inquiry to decide how trusts @an best be regulated. Inquiry into the wreck of the Gilt- dge Express at Westerly, R. I. ught out that the New Haven Road ®8 not use the rail recommended > the American Association of Rail ¥ Engineers. | &rchie Bathrick, 18 years old, and Ballas Palmatier, 265, were killed when ® motorcycle on which they were widing crashed into a touring car driv- of by Miss Helen Pine . near Red Hook, N. Y. Joseph Mack, arrested at Boston, @harged with malicious mischief, threw a brick through the window of “8 restaurant because they charged &im 15 cents for a plate with 43 baked Beans on it. The Falrmount Park Art Associa- don will receive $500,000 for the erec- #on of a statue in Philadelphia, under é&he will of Mrs. Ellen Samuel, “after ghe deatn of her husband,” J. Bunford Samuel. Bractically the entire business sec- don of Jackson, Ky. was destroyed By fire. Policemen and firemen of Paterson, WW. J, have received an increase in mages of $100 a year. Commissioner Smith announced that | sne of the greatest dry-docks in the | world to accommodate the “thousand- | fot ship” will be built by New York ity in Brooklyn. Lawrence Lindbloom and Fred Hro- @eck, of Chicago, charged with mur- @r when their automobile ran down asxd killed Joseph Weiss, were sen- | #enced to 14 years each. | | was taken up by Yale to defeat Har- | exiled Vice-President and Mrs. Thomas R. Marshall left Washington for Arizona to visit friends for eight days. If the currency situation demands {it Mr. Marshall will return at any time. A $500,000 trust fund held for five- year-old Harry Dwight Dillon Ripley, great-grandson of Sidney Dillon, was released by a decision of Surrogate Fowler of New York. As a reward for serving an enlist- ment in the U. S. army, John F. Phil- :ips, a private in Troop H, 15th Cav alry, will receive $25,000 by the will of+ a relative. At a meeting in Chicago of dele- gates representing over 45,000 rail- road employees on the lines west of the Mississippi, plans were formulated for a demapd for higher wages and better working conditions. Because the Senate Committee on Banking and Currency began by mak- ing changes in the Glass-Owen bill to which he is opposed, it was said that President Wilson might ask that it be taken from the committee and put through a caucus. Sporting A wave of returned confidence has swept over Princeton since the over- whe.iming victory of the football team over Holy Cross. It is proposed at New Haven to abandon the English stroke, which vard on the Connecticut Thames, and return to the Americanygtyle of row- ing. The unconditional release by the New York National League team of Wilbert Robinson, the veteran coach, was announced. Robinson, it was inti- mated, was negotiating with Federal League officials to become manager of a team to be placed in Baltimore. It was thought that with spheroid, leather, oval and pigskin, the stock of synonyms for football had been ex- hausted, but the Dartmouth comes to the rescue with ellipsoid. NHHIHE Foreign Reports from San Salvador show 54 persons were drowned by floods in va- rious parts of the republic. A French memorial to Captain Scott, the Antarctic explorer, will be erected on the Col du Lautaret, the Alpine pass, where Scott conducted experiments with his motor sledges. A revolutionary plot, based on the assassination of the President of the Republic, Adolfo Diaz, and prominent Cabinet Ministers, was discovered and frustrated at Managua, the Nic- araguan capital. The Argentine Social Museum is sending 10,000 letters to American ed- ucational institutions and newspapers asking them to exchange publications with the idea of establishing an American library at Buenos Aires. Charles Dean, accused of robbing the Bank of Montreal branch at New Westminster, B. C., of $27,000, has been acquitted. : ICKED U IN |] ICKED UP IN (Western Newspaper Union, Special News Service.) Clearfield. — William Caldwell, the last survivor of Gen. Custer’s brave force, is dead here, where he had been a resident for several years. When 18 years old he was with Gen, Custer. He was sent with a message for aid to Gen. Reno and aside from another man sent on a similar mission was the only survivor in the famous fight with Sitting Bull’s Indians 38 years ago. He is survived by a wid- OW, one son and two daughters. Columbia.—The Conestoga Traction Co. is making a survey of a proposed. trolley line from Lancaster to Mec- Call's Ferry and it is rumored that a line may be built, owing to a break in their relations with the York Fur- nace trolley line that now reaches that point. The new line would pass through a half-dozen towns along the route. Pittsburg.—Success in the produc- tion of delicious fall strawberries has been attained by Jacob Leibold on ‘his farm in Shaler township, and a portion of his crop was exhibited here. His plants are of the fall-beari g va- riety, and, according to Mr. Liebold, who has been a farmer in this vicinity practically all his life of 50 years, his are the first edible strawberries ever grown in the neighborhood of Pittsburg in the fall. Huntingdon. — Put through the “third degree” process in his cell at the county jail, Lloyd Hampton, aged 25, of Petersburg confessed he at- tempted to wreck the evening train of the Pennsylvania branch road on a high trestle spanning the Juniata river, 12 miles away. Hampton’s mo- tive, he said, was revenge because the Pennsylvania railroad had re- fused him a position owing to physi- cal deficiency. Grampian.—Frank Rafferty was fa- tally burned while attempting to res- cue his children from his burning home, two miles from here. Three children were terribly burned, one dying. The fire followed the explo- sion of a kerosene lamp. Erie.—At the fourteenth annual con- vention of the Pennsylvania Congress of Mothers, held here, officers were chosen as follows: President, Mrs. George Knorr Johnson of Philadel- phia; vice presidents, Mrs. E. E, Kier- nan of Somerset, Mrs. Kieffer of Wil- liamsport, Mrs. John P. Green of Phil- adelphia; treasurer, Mrs. E. V. Mec- Caully of Philadelphia; corresponding secretasy, Mrs. Mary S. Garrett of Philadelphia; recording secretary, Mrs. Henry Ferrin of Germantown; auditor, Mrs. G. M. Studebaker of Erie; board of managers, Mrs. Her- man Birney of Philadelphia, Mrs. Charles Stone of Philadelphia, Mrs. George Cutler of Chester; Mrs. George Wheeler of Philadelphia, Mrs. Bertha Lyster of Lansdowne, Mrs. Robert KE. Stevens of Erie, Mrs. Howard Lippin- i COURT NEWS Orphans’ Court Proceedings, Real Estate, Marriage Licences, Etc. = REAL ESTATE. Charles W. Staniford, “to Mary J. Schrock, Somerset, $625. Mollie McClellan, to Frank Tarr, Windber, $3,500. Ernest Braesecker, to Samuel - | Bockes, Meyersdale, $1,800. Donald Craig, to Grace Oraig, Gar- rett, $1,000. . Albert C. Eicher, to Peter L. Phil- lippi, Addison twp., $305. Lottie Merrill, to same, Addison twp., $200. ; Mary C. Comerer to Edmund R. McVicker, Windber, $,000. Elizabeth Rogers, to Joseph Pe- rits, Paint borough, $150. Julia A. Berkebile, to Carl Wag- ner, Shade twp., $2,000. Daniel Saylor, to Wm. Clark, Jen- nertown, $21. Isaac Hoffman to Wilmore Coal Co., Paint twp., $1. Katharine Woy to Millard W. Walker, Somerset; twp., $3,650. #Lewis Haupt to Samuel E. Hersh- berger, Elk Lick twp., $1,250. Silas C. Keim’s heirs to A. M. Lichty, Salisbury, $1,000. JaBob W. Walker, to Salvatore Guida, Conemaugh twp., $125. John Stahl, to John L. Livingston, Conemaugh twp., $1,700. Sarah Willard to Jcseph Strode- man, Southampton twp., $600. Adam R Kreitzburg, to Ephraim Boyer, Summit twp., $70. * Valent: Hay, to Charles E. Will, Stonyer: e'- twp., $230. Dayid M Alston to G. J. Beachy, Northan. ton twp , $110. SME 1 ir to W. H. Coughenour, Confluence, 650. Emanpw 1 1. Meyers’ administrator to Knickerbocker, Smokeless Coal Co., Quemuhoning twp., $150. Perry J. Blough to Cairnbrook Water Co., Shade twp., $1,000. Edward J Cramer, to Lydia M. Cramer, Meyersdale, $I Henry oau-man te Jasper Augus- tine, Addison twp., $5,000. G. A. Frantz, to Lucy E. Ringer, Confluence, $550. MARRIAGE LICENSE. ; Crant V. McCiellan and Florence H. Grant, both of Windber. cott of Philadelphia, Mrs. Charles Ringsdorf of Wilkes-Barre, Mrs. Ed- win J. Cummings of Philadelphia, Mrs. George Spencer Morris of Phila- delphia, Mrs. Jennie Griffiths of Eas- toni Mrs. E. C. Emerson of Titusville. Many prcfitable addresses were given by speakers of note from all parts of the country. Uniontown.—Claiming she was so affected by a refusal of marriage. which was to have occurred last March, as to require the care of a phy- sician, Miss Margaret Adams institut- ed suit for $10,000 against William Gen. Jose Manuel Hernandez, the Venezuelan, known as “El Mocho,” arrived in Trinidad from St. Thomas, Danish West Indies, and was | enthusi i cally received by friends | and adherents. The Russian Government has intro- duced in the D bill imposing drastic penalties refusal of assist- ance to ships in distress at Sea. This is one of the indirect results of the | Titanic disaster. Brown, aged 30, a well-to-do man of Uniontown. The plaintiff claims she made loans to Brown, who failed to repdy, and that at his request and with her own money she purchased him neckties, socks, hats, undercloth- ing, gloves, etc. Lewistown. — Two of the oldest hunters that have taken out licenses to hunt in Mifflin county are John Gantz, 88 years old, and Obadiah .Um- berger, 84 years. Charleroi.—George Seracko, a sew- ing machine agent who, on October 13; swallowed three bichloride of mercury tablets by mistake, is back at his work again. He insisted he was not going to die. According to Dr. H. J. Rep- man, who has been attending him, one tablet would be enough to kill an ordinary man. > Wilkesbarre.—Dr{ Nathan C. Schaef- fer of the state department of public instruction in an address on “Bible Reading In Public Schools” before the opening session of the forty-sixth annual institute of the teachers of Luzerne county de- clared that the Catholic teacher has as much right to read the prescribed number of Bille verses of the Douay version as has the Protestant to read from the King James version. Washington.—Charged with the theft of a Bible, which he was trying to sell, John Vertovic was placed in the county jail to serve a sentence of ten days. Sandy Lake.—The “Sandy Lake grange, at its regular meeting went on record as opposed to the $50,000,- 000 road bond issue, although declar- ing in favor of good roads. Marysville. — Trailing arbutus in full bloom was found by a class in botany in the high school, while out on a chestnut hunt. Mont Alto.—The first borough coun- cil met in special session and passed upon the following: Three ordinances were drafted, one prohibiting riding, or driving at a fast or unreasonable | pace within the borough limits; one | prohibiting all loud, unruly, boister- ous and disorderly conduct, fighting, | stipation. ad : | drunkenness, etc., in the streets, and | er prohibiting animals, horses, | p and swine, from running at! large in the public highways. | John Veskoskt, and Julia Obana, oth of Acosta. George W. Beal, of Brothersvalley Wp., and Clara Bennett, of Stony- creek twp. John ~ Joseph Gasper and Anna Agnes Sotuk, both of Windber. Patsy Dunno and Angelina Leon- ard, both of Windber. Frank Kerch and Mary Amelia Hu- dak, both of Jerome. Michael Boksan and Mary Hritz, both of -Windber. Arthur W. Pletcher, and Elsie G Presuhn, both of Somerset twp. John Hoskins and Anna Watkins, both of Boswell. Joseph N.cola, of Ursina and Mar- garet Whuley, of Lower Turkeyfoot twp. August Possik and Mubner, both of Windber. Arthur Bethel, of Pittsburgh, and Bessie Elizabeth Kimmel, of Somer- set. \ LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION. Wm. Long, estate of Granville W. Moser, late of Wellersburg. Bond $400. Adam Nicholson, estate of Jacob Nicholson, late of Upper Turkeyfoot twp. Bond $10,000. eee eee. State of Ohio, City of Toledo ! 9 ’ Lucas County, 88 Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS foreach and” every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of HALL’S CATARRH CURE. Elizabeth : FRANK J. CHENEY. Swora to before me and subsecrib- ed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886. A. W. GLEASON, Notary Public. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken iater- nally and acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. .F J. CHENEY, & Co, Teledo. O. Sold by all Druggists, 75 cents per bettle. Take Hall’s Family Pills for con- ¢ is the only guarantee that you have the (Genuine babies. Nl A AAAS ANA. BECISTERED Mes?27 "prepared by him for over 30 ye YOU'LL give YOUR baby the BEST sag O B= Your Physician Knows Fletcher's Castoria. FREE . @ Sold only in one size bottle, never in bulk or otherwise; tO SALE AT COLLINS’ DRUG STORE, Meyersdale, Pa The Centaur Company, ZA TZ Pres. EE E———————————— get For Your Baby. The Signature of 3 NN protect the w= f Jones’ Break-Up For over 20 years has Cured RHEUMATISM Sciatica, Lumba if you have Rheumatism [any jormi Break-Up, it will cure you asit hasa have taken it. Guaranteed to go and Gout Jones" i others wi cure al) — Oct. -3m prices are lowest. Replace wasteful 0watt ... .... 35¢ each 15 watt . 3be each 20 watt ... .... 85¢ each Phwath............ 35¢c each seme ermememmemamiesean FOLEY Ei 1 TORRHEUMA™ ISM KITN Ba ID Trae DAILY Use them as you need them. Telephone orders filled. Another dig Price Reduction ! SUNBEAM M'Z0OA LAMPS Buy National Mazda lamps for every socket in the house now carbon lamps with effigient National 1 Mazda lamps and get three times as much light without pense—BLFORE UU ~+Y YOUR NEXT LIGHT BILL, nrmo———— THESE PRICES NOW EFFECTIVE. 0watt .... .. .. 35¢ each S0watt .. ...... .. 45¢ each W0wath........... 80c each Put a National Mazda Lamp in Every Socket. Buy them in the Blue Convenience Carton—keep a stock on hand. BAER & CoO. additional ex- while STEWART’S HEALING POWDER for barbed-wire cuts and sores on animals. Supsiior to Selves oF Je thnert, : ech heals quic awa; ies, goo Red abn r 50 ies At drug or harness stores. F.G. Stewart & Co., Chicago. qa i sertain Rellef -rom headaches, dull feelings, and fuligue of biliousness, comes quickly -—and ‘permanent improvement in bodily condition follows—after your stomach, liver and ‘bowels have becn toned and regulated by SEECHAM'S PILLS Sold everywhere. In boxes, 10e., 28¢. Py What Fishes Know. That fish possess a certain power of reason is affirmed by many who have studied them. They often learn to recognize the voice of the one who feeds them. Fish will congregate in places where food is habitually thrown to them. If a morsel proves too large to be swallowed, they have been known to divide it on a sharp stone. Harper's Weekly. eee ere. Doan’s Regulets are recommended | by many who say they operate easily, | of hall)— | without griping and without bad af- ter effects. 25c at all Drug Stores. ed te rr rrr SELLS No. 1 Roofing Sla Steel Roofin Felt Nails, Valleys, Ridging anc Spouting, ’ a —— Stock always on hand at Meyersd at my mill in Elk Lick Towns R.F.D. No. 2 J. 8. WENGERD See Me Before Buying Elsewhere Meyersdale, Pa. te, ale and hip. HOLBERT, ATTORNEY-AT-LA w, SOMERSE <¥ Uffice in ook % Beerits’ Blan VIRGIL R. SAYLOR, ATTORNEY-AT-LA 0ct.29-038, G. GROFF Deeds, Mortages, Agreements an Papers promptly executed BUHL & GATESMAN, and Gin, Distilling up-to-date MEYERSDALE, Pa. Nov.i8-tf, Fair Suffragette—“Angd one who has heard my now answer.” | company, may I see you ho | evening ?’—Judge. PROFESSIONAL CARDS, , PENN , up stair; Ww, SOMERSET P JUSTICE OFTHE PEACE, CONFLUENCE, PA. d all Lega Vv. -6ma7’m Distillars of Pure Rye, Wheat, Mal Voice of the Charmed One, > , if any speech =wishes to ask a question, I shall be happy to Masculine Voice (from rear “If you haven’t any othey me thig Ss mR WASE Special to Th Foreign tions with ish the mc important, dent Wils To the ve tained the elections in Mexico settling. t eliminatio Dictator. ter of the has demo! hope. Me ter potent the situat eomment Carden, th who chos to Huerta had arrest Mexican ( to some A frank vie ment did the Mexi ranted in lomatic ¢ threatene unfortuna with Gre: ernment § officially ment thal ates the Thus, tec serves a | ter. At the be an inc of severa that som should be tolerable cations tl essary to to consid governm a general nitely se only tow .all soch tunately, western son seem that it is issue suc certain e two rec Swarthn the comr at Swart the spiri sought tc wealth’? said tha America that eve: tHe hom ple, who whateve consent he added nally si Mexican “1 wo this her same 8a where ¢ which is ed by a the gove From went to address cial Cor mented | a gener America said: ‘“The liberty a mainten against creed. “TI wa say, too not agai tional fc “It w .an hone; ritory sk iit as on to see material human | While pledge 1 the Unit the pres rity of . evitable prompt] stanees declarat those ok roe dec which e but alsc power | make it Congres dertaker characte ler ‘reso! Spanish famous ( at the o dured hs: Dyspe restore good he: ~ Burdock drug st