Be SE vl ITH OF THE WEEK'S NEWS &¥ atest Telegraphic and Cable Intelligence Epitomized. 2 2 #@3iD WORLD AND" THE NEW £TWsiitics] Pot Is Bubbling Furiously— <#tews About Wars That Are Rag- didng and Rumors About Wars to Come. Washington Xlepresentative Murdock, of Kansas, +. #2rngressive leader of the House, in- v@%opdnced three anti-trust bills. - “The Postoffice Department an- “wememanced it would be compelled to ig- gusewre the Federal eight-hour law dur- E. 38g the Christmas run of mail matter. President Wilson was assured that ; J “#7he Currency bili would be reported 0 / «»tap dhe Senate and that Congress would gmramain in session until the measure “ras passed. The Democratic Senatorial confer- wsenee instructed their colleagues on the ‘ Fi 3ganking and Currency Committee to ¥ wsfige another effort to agree on the < L3mrrency bill, but Senator Hitchcock -mgmnounced that he would not accept «“4¥mwe proposals of his fellow-members. Personal sift “The will of Chas. 'G. Gates filed for %“i.zsnohate at Beaumont, Texas, provides Year the use of the $3,000,000 fund left : ¥y his father for the Gates’ Old Peo- 4 wisle’s home at West Chicago. Former President Taft was a visitor “xX the White House. It is said he has Se -#7%ost 100 pounds. iss Jessie Wilson, who is to be ©{ “Tae thirteenth White House bride, was : vitdhe guest at a “hoodoo” luncheon, . @iven by Mrs. Daniels, wife of the “&Fecretary of the Navy. : Mayor-elect John Purroy Mitchel -ailed from New York on the United Fo yait Company steamer Zacapa, for a ‘ “Iwree-weeks’' vacation at Panama and Fiéamaica. He was accompanied by firs. Mitchel. 3 General i EH. B. Hollins & Co., Wall street ‘uifwrokers, New York, and promoters, + «zavere petitioned into bankruptcy. «Chas. Southwick, three years old, « «mwas killed by the accidental discharge =f a shotgun at his home in Peabody, Thafass. The Rev. Dr. Joseph Silverman, in s © mm address in Temple Emanu-El, New | Work, said that woman suffrage was - um farce. , ~The United States cruiser Galveston ‘ =has been ordered to Guam to assist “¥wxe naval collier Ajax, which was forced aground in the recent typhoon. . Mrs. Mary Hopper, nd .totally blind, was ~#2 her home at Ossining, N. Y. Princeton reports that 169 students «mworking their way through that col- #5ge earned more than $20,000 during #£ he year ending last June. Joseph Devorshack, a milk dealer s=uf Passaic, N, J., was fined $50 on a ~wsharge of having hit his wife in the #TZace with a hot mince pie. ' The shoe leather dressing plant of oi 5%. Levor & Co., at Gloversville, N. Y., : 3 wivwas totally destroyed by fire. The Leioss is $200,000. “Three burglars entered the home of {Philip Stakely, at West Bridgewater, Pa. .and after torturing him with a “u%of poker, escaped with $27.15. S President Wilson requested Eugene ¢ +». Dorsey, supervising inspector at "ouisville, Ky., to resign, because of ™active and offensive partisanship.” ena Hewitt, seven years old, is {"##ead at her home in Atlantig City, #1. J.,, from burns received ~ while playing “Indian” with her five year »1d brother. President Caldwell of Wells Fargo *% Co., in his annual report, said the parcel post had made such inroads on the express business that the reduc- “on in rates ordered for next Febru- “gry 1 may seriously impair dividends. Miss Gertrude N. Garrit, of Suffield, Conn., was awarded $50,000 damages :1n the Superior Court in her suit =against the Connecticut Light & Pow- #r Company for the loss of both of + . her arms. John R. Lannom, a member of the sophomore class at Yale, was found . #n the walk at Durfee Hall, New + ::Haven, with his neck broken, evi- « Jfently having fallen from his room +yn the second floor. ‘More than 100 college students and their friends were arrested and fined $10 each for being intoxicated while —=selebrating the football victory of «7 hieorgetown University over the Uni- -«ogsersity of Virginia. “The United States Senate decided #0 present a silver service to Miss “Wilson as a wedding gift. “Zhe President's yacht Mayflower, >~fkas been placed in the Brooklyn navy wgard for overhauling. Postmasters have been authorized “io turn Over mail for “Santa Claus” +. 40 eharitable institutions. RE A committee of 250 leading Demo- | erats is to be formed under the di- | section of the Jeffersonian Alliance to form .an organization that will geavor to take control of the -- machinery in New York City =: Lammany’s hands. 82 years oid, | burned to Feath when her clothing caught fire | Pittsburgh has begun a movement to install women police. Five milk dealers were fined $25 each “in Jersey City, on charges of adulteration. Allen P. Tupper, principal keeper at Auburn, N. Y., prison, is dsad. He was a prison guard 35 years. George W. Paxen, 60 years old, was severely scalded when the boiler of his locomotive exploded and threw him from the cab at Philadelphia. Sea View Hospital, at Grymes Hill, Staten Island, N. Y., with accommo: dations for 1,000 sufferers, and built at a cost of $3,500,000, was opened. The body of Gustav H. Hamburger, Health Commissioner of Mount Ver- non, N. Y. was found in the Long Island Sound off Fisher’s Island. Francis M. Shaw, one of the famous “300” who favored Grant's third term nomination, is dead a Montclair, N. J, aged 75 years. The question of votes for women in the Episcopal churches was put over for a year by the Diocesan Conven- tion. The Senate passed a resolution for an investigation into the alleged tele- phone monopoly in the District of Co- lumbia. It was announced that Gen. Zelaya, | former dictator of Nicaragua, who ar- | rived at. New York a week ago, will not be molested by the immigration authorities. Mayor-elect Jchn Purroy Mitchel’s . statement of campaign expenses was ' filed at New York. He spent $493.99, the greater part of which went for boxing lessons and throat treatment. | The Board of Deacons of Cavalry Baptist Church at Austin, Tex. have ordered their pastor, Dr. J. R. Ram- sey, to leave the city immediately and refuse to make their reasons public. Under the will of Mrs. Helen D. Winans, who died at The Hague, Hol- land, the Bide-A-Wee Home for dogs and cats in New York receives a be- quest of $50,000. The striking taxicab chauffeurs of Philadelphia agreed to return fo work for $2.25 a day for ten months of the year and $1.75 a day for July and Aug- ust. | Miss Mary Smith of Glenspey, Sul- livan county, New York, has the dis- tinction of being the first woman to kill a bear in Sullivan county in half a century. | Supreme Court Justice Seabury up- set the contention of the New York Board of Education and decided that a married woman teacher cannot be dismissed for absenting herself from her duties to become a mother. The election of Bartlett as Chief Judge of the New York Court of Ap- peals is assured. Returns from a dis- trict in Kings made 7,000 look like 4,000 through a clerk’s carelessness. Werner is defeated by 2,500. Everett P. Fowler was indicted in New York on the charge of extortion following testimony before the Grand Jury by S. P. Hull, a contractor, that he had been forced to contribute $250 to the Democratic State campaign fund in 1911. { Joseph R. Sullivan, secretary to Senator James Hamilton Lewis, swore | out a warrant charging Sidney Moul- { throp, formerly a stenographer for | the Senator, with forgery in connec- | tion with the letter to Henry M. Pin- l : dell, named as Ambassador to Russia. Sporting : | Princeton wound up the footbball season with a team which was just short of being cast in championship | mould. Defeat by Dartmouth and Harvard and a tie with Yale afforded nothing to arouse much enthusiasm, but apart from mere results the team and the players were worthy of the | pest traditions at Princeton. There were new developments indi- cating further that Gov. John K. Tener of Pennsylvania will be elected president of the National League of Baseball Clubs when the annual meet- ing is held in New York City on December 9. Lewis Chandler, Jr., of Tuxedo Park, N. Y., successfully defended his title as champion sculler of Harvard by winning the Carroll cup for the seconds successive year, defeating Capt. Reynolds of the varsity crew by one length. Abe Attell, former champion feath- erweight, said that he finally had re- ceived a return match with Johnny Kilbane, who wrested the title from Lim a year ago last winter. Foreign The French armored cruiser Condo arrived at Vera Cruz. Prince Camille du Poligaac, who served in the American civil war, is dead in Paris, aged 81. Representative Fernandez of the Cuban Congress introduced a bill pro- viding for sterilization of criminals. Mendel Beiliss, the Russian who was acquitted at Kiev on the charge of ritual murder, will emigrate with his family to Philadelphia. Simon Spiro, a captain in the Union army during the civil war and organ- izer of the First Odd Fellow lodge in Germany, is dead in Berlin, aged 78. Second Secretary of the British postoffice testified before the Royal Commission that the present private cable serviee is good and a govern- ment owned system is unnecessary. Berlin’s oldest newspaper, the Vos- siche Zed ung, which, because of its dignity, is known as “Aunty Voss,” | has been ®bld to the publishers of the | radical morning Post and the Gazette. The Duma rejected a proposal de- signed to give rights to Jewish sub- * the Czar equal to those en- ers. jec joy at London. a» | RUSSIAN JOAN OF ARC By BESSIE R. HOOVER. Dmitri Pretzoff had been notified that he must serve in the czar’s army. This news came like a thunderbolt to his mother, Anna Pretzoff, who is my distant kinswoman and who has cared for me ever since the awful night at Priblov ten years ago, when my parents were both killed. It seemed as if Dmitri could not be spared, for his mother’s little holding had to be cared for; and Anna Pret- zoff and myself could never do all the work, though. I was twenty years old and strong for a girl. The day came when Dmitri was to go; but like a stroke out of a clear sky, a strange sickness fell upon him that very morning as he started on his way to Svelk, where the recruit- ing officer was stationed. Dmitri was very sick, so sick that he seemed near death. Of course he could not go to Svelk that day, but that only put off his going a little longer. Then a quick resolve came to me, | and with it a daring plan, that though I was only a peasant girl, I formed in a moment's time. Fired with an unreasoning zeal of adventure, I slipped up to the loft where Dmitri’s best clothes lay ready for him on a cot. I hastily put them on, and they were a good fit, for I was about his height, and large and Then I quickly strong for a girl. clipped my hair in the fashion of the peasant men, and went down stairs. Calling Anna Pretzoff into the kitch- en, I told her of my determination to take Dmitri’s place, march away with the troops, and when there was no longer any fear of them coming back for Dmitri, I would explain all and come home. At the recruiting station all went as it should, and I was soon march- ing, shoulder to shoulder between two stalwart peasant soldiers, who took my presence as a matter of course. Ou tHe third day my name was called as we stopped for dinner beside a little stream. “Dmitri Pretzoff, a letter.” almost forgotten my new name. The letter had been written by kins- woman, and said that I must come home at once, for Dmitri was dead. Dead! Dmitri, my old playmate; the man I was going to marry some- time! I had not thought that Dmitri would die. i The old scenes and the familiar I had 1 conference on saf- faces that had faded so quickly from my careless mind, that the strange events of the last three days seemed to obliterate, came back, and I was homesick with a dull, physical pain. After all, I was only a woman, and Dmitri had been more to me than I had been conscious of. I must go home and care for his mother. That night T got & permit to visit the commanding officer's tent. He was alone and PF told my errand briefly. ; “] am a girl,” I said, “I took the place of Dmitri Pretzoff, who was too sick to come—now he is dead. May I go back and take care of his mother?” The officer was astonished, then nonplussed, and abové all he was dis- pleased to think that such a trick had been played. “Did you do this for love of coun- try?” he questioned. “No,” I answered, “I went to seek adventure,” then I hung my head, for the part that I was playing did not geem so heroic as it had at home; all of a sudden I saw that I was really an impostor. But I was a woman, very tired, almost sick, and the officer had com- passion on me, for he wrote a pass and gave me money enough to get back home on. And some way the papers got hold of the story and dilated on it as pa- pers will, and it went all over the world that I was a second “Joan of Arc,” when I was only a foolish and ignorant girl. I started home, still in my uniform, with my knapsack strapped across my shoulders and the preclous pass signed by the commanding officer, in my pocket. Leaving the train at the little sta- tion at Svelk, I tramped disconsolate- ly through the flelds towards my kins- woman’s holding. A peasant was working in the field, a strong young fellow, I could tell by the lusty strokes of his mattock. It must be Jan Covens, I thought, helping because of Dmitri’s death. “Ho, Jan,” I called, glad to speak to one of my own people again. But it was not Jan- that turned toward me at the sound of my voice— it was Dmitrl. Then I supposed that I must be delirious from overstrain, and that thé man I saw before me was only a phantom. But no, it was Dmitri, who welcomed me back as one from the ‘dead; for his mother had never told him of my taking his place, but had led him to believe that I had wandered away, no one knew where. Not till long after Dmitri and I were married, did Anna Pretzoff tell me the whole truth about the strange sickness of her son. When the day had come for him to join the army she drugged him with tea made from a poisonous herb. He drank this liquid during the morning meal, and shortly after became insensible. Later she had written that he was dead, think- ing that the news would bring me home. (Copyright by Daily Story Pub. Co.) | he can afford to laugh and grow fat. mint AEG THF ¢DEBU1ANIE SLOUCH”. New York Women in L ates Modes —New ollars—Hat Crinatrr =Car vl ry ——— Bere + Pe ’ The above design is by The M Company, New York BD ee Makers of McCall Satterne, Ener i New York, November 13. The prevailing silhoute is vague as to any hard and fast lines—but sin- uous above all things, especially with the gi.l contingent so that the ‘‘debuta: « slouch” applies aptly to her gen: ':! aspect. She is so wil- lowly th: she wr: ps herself around pillars a... drapes herself over the calling oi . 1 box, droops over the table in ibe J restaurant and flops anyhow i1to a chair. She affects shoes Ww... solt soles, and low heels ornot a' ull moves with a sidewise dip, her b.dy bowed backward while everything about her sags and drags. Sometinies she is sixteen and pretty, sometinie: sie has the fignre of six- teen and a tace of forty and when For Your Baby. The Signature of X30] LEER RR RRR RR RR RRR prepared by him for over 30 years. YOU'LL give YOUR baby the BEST sag O B08 Your Physician Knows Fletcher's Castoria. Sold only in one size bottle, never in bulk or otherwise; to protect the babies. ® The Centaur Company, ZT: Pres't » € # : is the only guarantee that you have the (Genuine NN WAN NWN NAN NANA NN WN N RR \ \ NN ON N NAAR \\ / 7 AAS INS “IT'S A CURE! THAT'S SURE} Jones’ Break-Up For over 20 years has Cured RHEUMATISM Sciatica, Lumbago and Gout you have Rhiurmatism (any form] got Jones’. -Up, It will cure you as’ t Bove taken 16. Guaranteed £5’ Sure all case BEGISTERLD Wea? IT, the slouch is attempted without the girlish figure, it becomes the wob- ble that suggests the negio mammy with her bundle of washing. Very rarely is the girl attraciive as she would be iu a natural pose, bug she’s in line with the extreme fad. dish. fasuiou and thut’s what she aims at. DRAPERIES. AND DRAPERIES. Draped sty les rule everywhere and nothing escapes the craze for curves and fioppy ecitects. ‘Lhe only stiffen- ing is at ube edge of the lace tunies in “lamp shade’’ styles. ‘Lhese .are varied ivacuuitely but are mneariy always in e.idence on fussy frocks for day or cvening wear. Very lew dresses are straight around at the foot, except the tailored styles. All others drape up at the centre front or back tu show the foot and hos iery “discreetly on the well bred woman bul otherwise on .the other sort of wearer. LACLS AND TRIMMINGS. Laces aud nets of all kinds are lav- ishly employed. White Chantilly over a skirt of black meteor, the black foundation extending up on ‘the waist like a wide girdle. The upper part of the blouse and sleeves of plain net, the elbow length sleeves finished with a loose frill of Chantilly. An Irish green girdle draped with folds at the waist and a large green velyet rose tucked in at the front. Made for a dinner or theatre dress this will be worn ata horse show, topped by a small hat of black vel- vet, with a rever of ostrich on one side and a flaring lace on the other, a small bow of the green perched, butterfly fashion, at the edge. The coat an elegant affair of unspotted ermine from -C. C Shayne and Co. has a panel back and long revers, finished with a fringe of tails below the waist line. Rolling Robespierre collar, and lining of royal purple brocade figured in huge green and yellow tulips Tails are no longer used to spot ermine, but as a trim= ming for this: and other furs. Fur coats are cut ana draped on precisely . the same lines that prevail for high grade garments of brocades, yelvets and duvetyn. The supple skin drape perfectly in broadtail, moire astrachan, mole, dyed musk- rat and seal, and almost all fur gar- ments are trimmed with contrasting collars, bands, revers and the new piping of fur or velvet, a three- quarter wrap, on draped Japanese lines of French dyed muskrat—the most perfect substitute for seal, has a skunk collar and cuffs and a lining of grass green satin, trimmed abt the edge with bands of brocaded cloth of gold. GORGEOUS LININGS. Gorgeous procaded linings mark| the hign class fur garment, and | vivid contrasting tones, except in | | the small sets, where blending colors FOR SALE AT Oct. -3m COLLINS’ DRUG STORE, Meyeredale, Pa. Another 8ig Price Reduction ! SUNBEAM MAZDA 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—BcFORE YOU ¥aY YOUR NEXT LIGHT BILL. THESE PRICES NOW EFFECTIVE. 10watt...« ..... 35c each watt .... ..... 35¢c each 3 valy Beha 35¢ each wath.) LLL. 45¢ each wabb .<.:. .... 35¢c each 100wath... ....... 80 25 wabb.......:.... 35¢ each o each Put ‘a National Mazda Lamp in Every Socket. Buy them in the Blue Convenience Carton—k Use them as you need them. : SID 2 stock on Nand, Telephone orders filled. BAER & CO. —~— AANA NS J. S. WENGERD SELLS No. 1 Roofing Slate, Steel Roofing, Felt Nails, are employed. Foxes come in all shades and are even dyed canary color in some instances, though in| this country Houfflin is more often used where high colorings are desired. It is a new French idea to dye pelts in blues, greens, violets and other un- natural shades to go with certain costumes, but such extravagant and Valleys, extreme styles are only followed by | Ridging anc the few here. : Spouting. A RIOT OF HUES. Some of the fashionable combina- tions of colors this year are tete-de- naigre with touches of oleander pink and sapphire blue and elephant gray or Burgundy with Irish green. All! the copper and mahogany hues are favored for costumes and suits of black, plum, mahogany, mouse gray and cinnamon brown have matching A. waists of brocaded crepe. Black, one piece gowns have long slyeves and a plastron of figured red crepe. . Lucy Carter. ee: Fairy Gingerbresd. 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. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. HOLBERT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, SOMERSET, PR « @wUffice in ook % Beerits’ Block. up EERIE VIRGIL R. SAYLOR, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, 00t.29-08. SOMERSET P: G. © GROFF, . JUSTICE OF, THE PEACE. EE CONFLUENCE, PA. Allow for this dainty one-halfcup-| Deeds, Mortages, Agreements and all Legs -6ma7m ful of butter; ‘one. cupful of sifted | Papers prompuly executed v. 6 powdered sugar, one-half of milk, one and three-quarter cupfuls of flour, BUHL & GATESMAN, one rounded teaspoonful of baking powder and two level teaspoonfuls of ginger. Cream the butter, add gradually the sugar and beat until very white and creamy. Beat in the and Gin, Distilling up-to-date MEYERSDALE, Pa. Nov.1&—tf. Distillers of Pure Rye, Wheat, Mal : milk, adding it very slowly. Stir in the flour sifted with the ginger. In- vert a dripping pan and butter the bottom. Spread the mixture very thinly and bake in a moderate oyen. Turn the pan often that it may bake evenly. Cut in squares before re, moying it. onadae EEE CASTORIA For Infants and Children, : The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of ————— San-Jose $ A fruit grow! wrote to Prof.H ologist. Harrisb casionally foun with San Jose ¢ cases the pests ait’in this cou was trying to g stroy mfested 1 ers from infest Surface what I The reply of mation useful jal interest dul agitation. It | «J do not th stroy any tree the scale. 8] lime sulfur sol have had it but I have not to spray, beca my trees is tk meighbors spr few more scal ‘when the win trees to mine, pressed by sp Ing the dorn boiled lime home made 0 “The best ing the Sand. ing one pona pounds of gallon of wat hour; and th wanted, and use it dilute times its bul any length o as the comm For more a are doing Ss have a hyd instrument strength of ‘““I'ne chie troling the tively and either from or uod usin using it th lime-snlfur directed, or meLer, an thorough, trouble wit nexy dorm shouid be pest. ‘“I'ne par the San Jo which hav sons reque wo be effi in other re mend any trees with tién during have live soon learn and if par tings of in Lime: A false. the effect is a poiso jurious tc This solu and DOW ¢& terial for bushes, s at any tin is compo! sulfur an harmless! itself whi poison. . mist of i could dri: out being senical J He could est solut the unco them ang least. When | apple orc risburg, lime-sulf were yell the mist nor han the lime: jurious if because walls an washed ibe far m | A pers ferial wi os, and i the peor he was 1 soletion. as they it was a sumptio material cerned. It mus son adds son to t dormant aration fur and ter to i spray m Jents ar jectsons ine tha should }