RRR TR STAR ' men were more concerned about the soldier vote, than they were | Meyer [Registered at the Fostoffice at Meyersdale, Pa , as Second-Class Mail Matter.) THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, A. M. SCHAFFNER, Editor and Proprietor. Pablished Every Tharsday in the Year at $1.80 Per Year Rash Phone No. 55. 110-112 Center Street. THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 1914 New Administration. The city government has changed hands, quietly and harmon- jously, reflecting credit upon those retiring, and upon those who assumed charge of the city’s duties and responsibilities. The indications are that there will be a strong municipal ad- ministration and that the ordinances will be carried out fully. All who know Mr. Gress feel asured that he intends to take care of the city’s interests, and in his effort the good citizenship of Mey- ersdale should give him good support and doubtless. will do so. - The new council starts work under fine auspices, some of the veterans of council remaining, with new blood coming in and all having the interests of the city at heart great things may be ex- pected. Union Services. The spirit of religion seems to be mightily at work in the world. Billy Sunday made Johnstown better, now he is hammer- ing away at the sins of Pittsburg. Meyersdale is having union services, discussing the various phases of the Kingdom of God, its relation to the municipality, temperance, the ballot and the mis- sionary aspect. ; These are all up to date topics, and if the teachings of the Mas- ter are more fully actualized in the various activities of life, the prayer of Christendom will find its early fulfilment. A spirit of unity and harmony is evident, the pastors of the various denomina- tions working heartily together in these services, and as a conse- quence there must continue to be a broad spirit and confidence and good will existing among the membership of the various religious bodies. . The Liquor Question. The license or no-license question is again beginning to disturb the minds of those who are in favor of the saloon and those who are against the saloon. The court knows the sentiment of the county in that respect, and nothing that the remonstrants can do will likely have any effect, unless the court reverses itself. Those who are against the liquor traffic in whatever form should now get busy and send their prayer to Washington, to our Congressman and our United States Senators. There the battle will be fought and the outcome of which will *have significance for the whole of this country. Taking the matter out of our courts, which should have been done, years ago. ; Washingt :. is the stragetic point at this time, and any con- gressman will consider well, any petition of that kind, and his vote will invariably be recorded against the liquor business, for it will mean defeat to any congressman to vote otherwise, ———. . . ° 2 3 . Political ‘endencies. The political game is a great game. Organization, persistence and execution eount, The particular class which is the object of the politician changes about every decade. A generation ago the one concern of the politician was the old soldier. Congressmen almost tumbled over each other in offering bills to pension the old soldier. It mattered very little what might be the nature of the bill whether wise or foolish, sane or otherwise, helpful to the old soldier or injurious to his best interests. Men favored those bills with much bluster, and those who at heart were opposed to such measures vere either silent or joined the crowd. The fact is those about the welfare of the soldier. That pension racket had been | worked to the limit, and the soldier vote had been a valuable and safe asset to the party in power. Statesmanship rises above such methods, gives the worthy soldier a pension, not for his vote, but becausé of a nation’s graticude to the boys in blue for rendering aid in the. time of their country’s need. The waving of the bloody shirt and the scramble for the old soldier vote, through reckless pensions is over. All are of one mind today that the soldiers are deserving of gratitude and of pensions commensurate with their need. The next raid that was made for votes was in behalf of labor, and the slogan was ‘‘protection’ and a ‘full dinner bucket, but labor continued to live from hand to mouth their condition but slightly changed. The rich became richer and the poor remained poor. Mark Hanna, who was almost an absolute monarch, in our nation, became immensely wealthy through the life blood of labor. Labor had been fooled and cajoled, but benefited very little. Pro- tection and a full dinner bucket, were catchy and held the labor forces together, but, even that has been proven to be a farce and a humbug. Corporation stores, corporation supplies, corporation weight, corporation methods are still in vogue. Labor is getting too intelligent to be hoodwinked any longer. We all know what Lincoln said about fooling the people. Labor no longer wants loud professions by men who want their votes but labor wants tangible benefits, real results for its own betterment. The labor vote has been thoroughly exploited by the politician. Now the onslaught is made on the farmer for his vote. The men who know anything about the stability, patriotism, thrift and the home in our nation, recognize that the farmer has been in the past, is now and is bound to be in the future, a source of strength, of power, fair-minded and loyal. No class of the nation has made more progress and enjoyed more solid comfort and gained more of this world’s goods, honestly and legitimately, than the sturdy farmer. | The farmer of to-day is an intelligent class, acquainted with the throbbing, beating world, as well as his city brother. At his own fireside, ten miles away from the railroad, he has every day in his home the picture of the whole civilized world in the form of the city newspapers,and while there is eveything done by the politicians to control the farmer vote, they run up against an intelligent class of the nation’s strength which is ahle to weigh propositions and a class which can not be fooled nor driven. Class legislation is bad. Laws should be for the benefit of the whole people, for all classes | and all masses. | ICKED UP IN | ENNSYLVANIA | Western Newspaper Union News Service. i Sunbury.—A horse of John Engle, a dairyman, ran away, dashed into an- | | other dairyman’s team and caused it | to run away and then scaled a fence | and badly injured itself. gon was demolished and one hundred dollars’ worth of eream was destroyed. The other wagon was wrecked but the horses were captured before they in- jured themselves. Lykens.—Mark, 6, son of Ray Bow- man, is in a serious condition from blood poisoning, developing from a vaccination wound. The vaccination, which was made several days ago, seemed to be having no effect on the boy until he was taken suddenly with intense pain. Since, he has been se- rious. . Emlenton.—Tripping over a heavy iron bit at an oil well, John Hall, 26, fell against a can containing 25 quarts of nitroglycerin and was blown to atoms in the resulting explosion. Washington. — The father and friends of Charles Gratz have just learned that he was married in 1912 and has a daughter. Washington. — John Malicka, ar raigned for wife desertion, declared he supposed himself married for but three years to Pauline Malicka, the prosecuting witness, and had left her and their four children with the in- tention of marrying another woman, the three years having expired. Jus- tice Carmichael held him for court. Washington.—Doctors H. J. Repman and Edardw McKay of Charleroi have filed a,$1,000 bond with the othono- tary to “secure the commonwealth in the use by the defendants of dead bodies for the promotion of medical science. Mauch Chunk.—Radium proaucing deposits, the first in the eastern part cf the country, have been discovered within .a mile of this city. Cropping out of a cut made by the Tamaqua trolley line along the eastern base of Mt. Pisgah, directly below the Switch- bach, streaks and blotches of a yellow substance are to be seen. This is carnoite, from which radium is ex- tracted. The discovery is of a great scientific value. The government geol- ogists had made tests of the sub- sti_ices. It has been definitely estab- lished that radium is contained in the deposit. Whether the quantity is of commercial value cannot be deter- mined until further examination is made. While the deposits have been known to geologists of the bureau of mines and to the faculty of Lehigh uni- | versity at Bethlehem for some time, no information of the find became public until recently, when Dr. Howard A. Kelly of Johns Hopkins university and Dr. Edgar T. Wherry of the United States National museum of Washing- ton made a geological survey of the ground. Sunbury.—Dared to answer a matri- monial advertisement in a newspaper, Miss Pearl Dwineford, 18, of Shamo- kin, took the banter and became ac- quainted with Harry Morgans of New York city. Photos were exchanged and a marriage proposed by Morgans through the mail. She declined with- out first seeing her intended husband. Morgans visited her a#id a few days later she wired from New York she was married. Sunbury.—A fast Pennsylvania pas- senger train when it reached this place carried on its pilot a g£2ad pigeon. The pigeon had attached to one of iis 5 a note bearing “Merry Christmas n Frank.” The train kad killed he pigeon while the ; oR Woz fxing OW, Meadvilie.—Yeggmen who blew the «fe in the postaffice at Cochranton 1 vay with $300 and stamps. eggs then escaped on a handcar. Altoona.—James P. Gillen, 84, a vet- eran of the Mexican and civil wars, died while visiting in this city. He Phe y Engle’s wa- | Be Val A Special Opportunity For the Ladies - A Big Line of Embroideries and Laces to Sold Under Gost. Seam Laces, Torchon Laces, Heavy and Light. "EMBROIDERIES In All Widths, Styles and Prices. ladies’ and Gentlemen's Sweaters at a Big Reduction. ~~ FLANNELETTE SHIRT WAISTS, 48c Flannelette Nightgowns and Petticoats in great abundance] at tempting prices. Ladies’ and Certlemen’s Coals and Suits Are Offered at Greatly Reduced Prices. LOWER PRICES ; TTT | ALWAYS ALWAYS BEST QUALITY WEEK'S NEWS BY TICK AND FLASH ' What Interests the World Chron- icled by Telegraph and Cable. | Washington Loome Les ce o Chutes of Interest—Legislatures Busy in Many States—The Lights and Shadows ef five Rews. had made 13 trips around the world. He was one of the last men to die who made the expedition with Com- | modore Perry to Japan in the seven- Washington It was rumored that Chief Justice ties, in a successful effort to force the | White and Justice Holmes might re- Japanese to open their ports to the commercial world. Gillen first of the crew to go ashore. tire before the end of President Wil- was the gon’s term. Women students of Trinity College Kane —George Cook, 20, is ir a se | at Washington will war against im- rious condition as the result of being shot while trying to prevent . his father from abusing his mother. father, H. J. Cook, is being sought by police. The younger Cook returned home late one evening 2rd found his | mother being abused, it is alleged. He interfered and was shot. Pittsburgh. —Exposure iz 2 aol Titled Cksssman, 37. Annie Smith, 50, was found almost frozen-te | leath om tse orem of 2 home belong- ing to people who could net identify rer. She is pet expeeted to live, Washington —Esss=ss tbe National Telephone company has been recently tha anl = Pont fined for working phone girls longer « that 54 hours allewsE Eby Iiaw, the | company has ésebfesd to ciose ita toll :xchanges on Supfa== York.—Edward Schefs vo =e and Wilson Jorfes s=4 ites == men were injured when an auTCEEOSI® in which they were riding turned over, Jinning them beneath. Meadville—Mrs. Elizabeth Coburn lied here at the age of 100 years, 3 nonths and 21 days. Pittsburgh.—Three unidentified for- signers were run down and Killed while walking on the tracks of the ’ennsylvania railroad near here. Sunbury.-—aiVedded but six weeks, Mrs. Barbara Rauck, 62, has left her iusband, who is 72, and claims she vill never return to him. Rauck has tarted suit in the courts for &ivorce, hargi rtion. They are the old- st couple who have ever taken part n a legal senaration eacs2 = Nartham- modest plays and playhouses. The Currency Organization Commit- The | tee decided to have a special steel car | as an “office on whesls” for its West- ern Journey. It was said that President Wilson { hoped to settle the controversy with | | Colombia over the seizure of Panama before the canal is ‘opened to naviga- tion. Personal | Kermit Roosevelt is engaged to be mayried to Miss Belle Willard, daugh- ter of Ambassador Willard. Dr. Katherine Bement Davis, new | commissioner of correction, assumed ‘her duties as the first woman ever ap- pointed to the head of a New York ay &aNSn. ! Lord Northcliffe, the English pub lisher, acting upon medical advice re- garding his eyesight, is relinquishing] some of his responsibilities and going abroad until Easter.. A dinner will be given at New York under the auspices of labor organiza- tions to Samuel Gompers, the labon leader, January 27, his 6th birthday. E General Ice harvesting began in many sec- | tions of New York State. Thieves broke into a store in Shamo- | kin, Pa., and escaped with $4,000 worth of silks and plumes. } GLANCEC AT FOREIGN AFFAIRS | | mrs. Lillie Deveraux Blake, a pio- | s Shas ‘Irarion, an octogenarian,” per- | neer suffragette, died at Englewood, | ished in a fire which destroyed his | house at Georgetown Center, Me. IN. J., aged 80 years. | "E. Grat | Professor Seth OC. Chandler, astron- | + Graham Wilson, a wealthy farmer omer, is dead at his home in Wellesley, | Mass. 1 | Cyrus Brown, 17 years old, was | assaulting Miss Kate Turner, was sen- | tenced to 14 years in the penitentiary. 0 ] Edvrard Norton of Newark, N. J., was drowned while skating on Lake Bran- arrested charged with having obtained | degee, near New London. $1,400 by subscription to purchase a Dr. John H. Finley was inaugurated $100 wooden leg. {at Albany as president of the New Senator Borah, in a report on the York State University and State Com- coal-mine sirike in West Virginia, se- | missioner of Education. verely arraigned the military rule that Governor Glynn intends to cut the then prevailed there. | State sinking fund to the amount ac-| From Washington comes the rumor - tually needed and §8,000,000 will be that Huerta, within a week, will as- ®t aside this year for that fund. sume active command of the Federal Kukea College of Penn Yan, N. Y., 8rmy. will receive $25,000 of the $6,000,000 The steamer Sonoma arrived at San educational and missionary fund being Francisco with a record cargo of 1,800 raised by the Discinles of Christ. bales of Australian wool, valued at William Kennedy and Thomas Alli- juad.ao0, tow i ; son, workmen, were killed by the ex- Quail are Starving In the hills near plosion of dynamite used in road con- Harrispurg, Pa. owing to a sleet storm struction near Downington, Pa. Py wo six inches of SIOW, COV : : ood. Secretary of Connecticut State a + 4 3 : Phillips warned automobile owners Sa, aaa Se that they will be arrested if they fail Now York, in 1912, accuzes the _ to display their 1914 markers, | of soliciting a $5,000 bribe to “throw” Archdeacon McElroy is dead at | the case. Farmingdale, L. I. He was 64 years | David Powers, a Chicago policeman, old ‘and had been in the Episcopal | threatened to shoot John Bradon, who ministry for 40 years. |had jumped into the river to commit The United Railroads Company of | suicide, if he did not swim ashore. He: San Francisco presented its 1,587 em- | swam. ployes with insurance policies totaling Bart Dunn, political leader at Nyack $1,250,000. ; | of Charlestown, W. Va., convicted of N. Y., was sentenced to ten months” Col. Goethals, Panama Canal Engi- Imprisonment and fined $500 for con- spiracy to defraud in highway econ- struction in New York State. The trunk of a man’s body was found on the beach at Edgemere, IL. I. It was a part of the body of Albert neer, said everything but dread- | noughts can pass through the canal in | its present state. | Three boys found in woods in Flush- ing, N. Y., the body of John Monahan, who murdered his wife in their home bad killed himself. Mayor Mitchel was inducted into office in New York with the briefest ceremony on record. He enjoined on his staff, silence, team-work and sim- plicity. R. A. Long, a wealthy lumberman of ansas City, announced he would give 1,000,000 to the Christian Church and its colleges if the institutions succeed in raising $5,000,000. Conduct League.” been reinstated. His conviction wa reversed. v their moray Tha honk is zglvent C. H. Hyde, ex-New York City Cham- berlain, disbarred from law practice after his conviction for bribery, has When Alfonso Cubicclotti, owner of | & bank in Philadelphia, attempted sui- | cide, more than 200 depositors gath. ered around the bank and demanded {J. Jewel, aviator, who vanis lin Brooklyn four days before. He | a flight Oct. 13. The body of Jessie Evelyn McCann, the Flatbush school teacher and social welfare worker, was washed up on the Coney Island shore just one month to a day from the time she so mys- teriously disappeared from her home in Brooklyn. . J. P. Morgan & Co. annougced that Ayburn, N. Y., prisoners presented a | hag ® retire unique New Year's card to Superin- | some of tendent of Prisons, John B. Riley, | thanking him for nermitting the “Good the partners in the firm—Mr, Morgan, | Charles Steele, Thomas W. Lamont, {H. P. Davidson and Ww. H. Porter— d from the directorate of the greatest railroad and {other corporations in the eountry, ow- Ing to an “apparent change in public sentiment in regard to directorships.” Two big buildings at Seabright, N. |J., and Arvesne, L. I, and scores of smaller buildings along the New Jer- sey and Long Island coasts were beaten down by the surf and carried out into the ocean during the great storm along the coast The loss caus- ed by the two days’ storm is estimated at more than $1,000,000, mae 5