a ~~ a IST OF THE © WEEK'S NEWS £ Eon Page Stories Retold in| % Pzragraphic Form. ;. @FITERESTING MINOR EVENTS & Px Telegraph and @able Roll In the +“ Important and the Inconsequen- tial, but to Each Is Given its Proper Space. 13 1 HY > Washington RELL LTTE NL LAE EE TS RE f Champ Clark celebrated his 64th irthday. Representative Kinkead of New Jer- WP: was named by President Wilson or ‘postmaster at Jersey City. The House passed the Rocher bill, rohibiting the shipping of convict- ade goods In interstate commerce. President Wilson read his message Congress urging the repeal of the use in the canal bill exempting erican ships from the payment of 8. He argued that the bill as it ands "is in violation of the Hay- duncefote treaty. Mrs. Woodrow Wilson has emphat- tfcally denied the reported engagement «@f Miss Eleanor Wilson to Secretary ‘WOT the Treasury McAdoo. Dudley Field Malone, collector of fle port of New York, and his wife, #7111 spend two weeks in the West dies, Mrs. Ann Bowe is dead at Woburn, Mass, at the age of 108. Aat a national testimonial meeting in Thick Hall, New York, the first al ~ “Xa Personal N vic Forum Gold Medal of Honor for listinguished Public Service was con- ferred upon Col. George W. Goethals, >» ‘Chiet Fngineer of the Panama Canal d Governor-to-be of the Panama Aone. TE Ax. An’earthquake was reported at Fair- nks, Alaska. The Giants and White Sox, baseball purists, arrived in Wew York. A special election for a United tes Senator from Alabama will be 21d May 11. Fearing blindness, August P. Heyne, years old, an arcEftect, of Newark, muypitted suicide. According to police figures there re 49,617 unemployed men in Chi- KO. Reports from south Florida indicate t the vegetable crops were injured rom 80 to 76 per cent. by the recent “Trost. * William 8. West, a wealthy lumber- an of Georgia, was sworn in as sen- r to serve until She election in ctober. : Claude Anderson, cashier of the Mercantile Bank of Memphis, Tenn. -wvhich recently closed its doors, was dicted on five counts. .” : William E. Kelly, president of the ational Letter Carrders’ Association, iI" be the new postmaster at Brook- n. i C. L. Brown, agent for the Adams press Co. at Farmington, Ill, was To charged with the embezzle- shent of $6,400. Assemblyman Law of New York in- #yoduced a bill appropriating $350,000 g pay for the State's share of elim- ‘¥nating grade crossings. * The Merchants’ Association of New ‘ork will guarantee $24,000 in receipts if the next Army-Navy football game Ms played in the metropolis. ™ An anti-tipping bill was introduced the New York Legislature. It Bo it a misdemeanor for anyone General . y accept, promise, offer or receive tip. Chas. Black, 17 years old, of Jersey ty, was awarded $18,000 for injuries icelved when a wagon on which he as sitting was stuck by a New Jer y Central train. P. M. Daniels, a New York real- Hrtate dealer, was semtenced ‘to five onfhs in the penitentiary and fined 0 on a charge of selling Iots under false pretenses. William Verris, bookkeeper of the “fireenwich Savings Bank, of Green- wich, Conn., which suspended last De- gember, was arrested on a charge of €mbezzlement and held in $5,000 Pail. Diplomatic and Congressional ecir- 7 George W. Vanderbilt died in Wash- ington, aged 52. Earthquake shocks were felt at At- lanta and other southern cities. Nine Chicago policemen were or- dered to take a course in jiu jitsu. Rear-Admiral George A. Lyon, U. S. N., retired, died in Philadelphia, aged 78. More than 35,000 youths observed “Boys’ Go To Church Day” in Kansas City. Mrs. Eva H. Mansell has been ap- pointed Overseer of the Poor at Tren- ton, N. J. Pearl Eytinge, at one time most not- ed actress on the American stag, is | dead in Atlantic City. The estate of the late Harry C. Val- entine at Trenton, N. J., has been pur- chased by H. S. Taylor, of Manchester, N. H. for $225,000. . Francis McNorie, assistant post- master of Milford, N. Y., was found frozen to death in a snowbank near Middlefield. Dr. Frank Strong, professor at the University of Kansas, was nominated for United States Senator from Kan- sas. A lone bandit entered the branch of the Sacramento Bank at Oak Park, Cal, held up the cashier and escaped with $2,000. Mrs. Minnie J. Grimstead, of Liberal Kansas, announced her candidacy for the United States Senate on the Re- publican ticket. A sample of radium bearing ore from Kingston, Jamaica, sent to the United States for assay has been pro- nounced satisfactory. Boston women have started a move- ment to protect marriageable girls from long courtships, which, they de- clare, are unjust. They want two years to be the legal limit. The body of Mrs. Annie B. Hay- den, missing from her home in Bos- ton, for a week, was found on the beach near her summer estate at Clifton Heights. Robert O. Koons, administrator of the estate of his brother, John C. Koons, a grocer, of Dundee, N. Y., found more than $40,000 hidden in his store. Theodore Lacey, convicted of em- bezzling $50,000 in State funds when a clerk in the convict department at Montgomery, Ala. was sentenced to 10 years in prison. Benjamin Warren Porter, president of the Springfield Chamber of Com- merce, and head of the New England Box Co., is dead in Boston, aged 49. John Lucas, paymaster for the Brown Shoe Co., was held up at 16th and Washington streets, St. Louis, by thieves, who escaped with $10,000, the factory payroll. After killing Mrs. Mabel Garcia, a widow with five children, Victor Rey- nolds of New York then shot and killed himself in the presence of the children. Max Gombert, of Hoboken, N. J. left instructions for the undertaker and money for his burial, then com- mitted suicide rather than undergo an operation. Jacob I. Weiskragen, of New York, received a verdict of $2,500 for the death of his son, who was killed by an automobile belonging to John Helichel. Clifford W. Hartridge, attorney for Harry K. Thaw at his first trial, has been disbarred by the Appellate Divi- sion of the Supreme Court of New York, for bribery. : G. Criswell Smith, 80 years old, Su- perintendent of Public Schools at Me- dia, Pa., was married to Miss Eliza- beth Lamb, 30 years old, of Tyner, N.C. FARMER'S HEN HOUSE One Illustrated Used for Years With Much Success. Building Will Accommodate About 140 Hens and Is Really Built In 12-Foot Sections — Covered With Roofing Paper. The accompanyiug illustrations show a practical farmer’s hen house which has been in use with good suc- cess for two or three years, writes R. R. Slocum of New York in the Na- tional Stockman and Farmer. The house is 12 feet by 48 feet and will accommodate about 140 hens. It is really built in 12-foot sections, or at least the arrangement is repeated in each 12 feet, that is to say each 12 feet has a window and an cpening in the front. The entire framework is of 2x4 stuff except the front and back sills, which are ccmposed of two 2x6 pieces laid one on top of the other. Each end floor joist is two 2x4 pieces laid one on top of the other. The joists are 20 inches apart from center. The raft- | Section of Front of Farmer's Poultry House. A—Screened Open Front. B.—Opening for Hens. ers are 30 inches apart. The whole building should be set about 18 inches from the ground on 16 cement or wooden supports. The walls and floor are made of 4-inch and b-inch hard pine matched stuff. The roof is 12- inch boards planed on the outside sur faces but unmatched. They are cov- ered with a prepared roofing paper which is carried down the back of the house. The window is made of two ordi- nary window sash nailed together by means of strips along the sides. The storm sash thus made in hinged at the side and opens like a door. It is a great convenience when cleaning the house. The openings in the front of the house are covered on the out- side with fine mesh wire netting. On the inside each is fitted with a mus- lin-covered frame hinged so that it can be made to close the opening at will. The opening is not closed except on cold nights and especially stormy days. A dropping board three feet wide runs along the back of the house, two feet six inches from the floor for its entire length. Three feet of the drop- ping board in each 12 feet is taken up by a coop for confining broody hens. In the front and back wzlls of each 12 feet are openings a foot square and 6 inches from the floor to let the hens g0 in and out. The nests are placed Sporting Sherwood Magee was appointed cap- tain of the Philadelphia Nationals by Manager Doolin. . The Boston Americans signed Tris Speaker for two years for $37,000, which is a record for an active player. The Detroit Americans closed a con- tract with S8am Crawford, and the St. Louis Americans kept Pitcher Lever- ens in line with a considerable raise in salary, : E. W. Gwinner, a wealthy Pitts- burgh banker, purchased the control- ling interest in the stock of the Pitts- burgh Federal League Ball Club. The trio of yachts being built for the America’s Cup defence will race for special prizes, not being eligible to compete for the regular trophies for the cruise. Prince William, Albania’s new Mon- arch, and princess Sophia, arrived at Durazzo. The British cruiser Berwick left Kingston, Jamaica, in a hurry for Brazil. Lieut. Col. Chebaieff, chief of the St. Petersburg police, was shot and killed in his office by .Lieut. Ivanoff, who then tried to commit suicide. Frederick Townsend Martin, social § Foreign #les had a sensation when it became %nown that John Bassett Moore, the | #@istinguished authority on internation- #1 law and diplomacy, had resigned | rom the office of Counsellor of the | + Department. . When a slight fire started in the | €1izh School at Worcester, Mass., the | #00 pupils got out in 1% minutes. | William J. Kelly, president of the ‘Wational Letter Carriers’ Association, as been recommended for appoint ostmasier of Brooklyn. 1 Nelson O’Shaughnessy, ather of Affaires ir tion of t All Amer in that v leader, brother of Bradley Martin and uncle of the Countess of Craven, well known to the society of all capitals, author of “The Passing of the Idle Rich,” died in London. Erroneous reports were current in Rome that the Pope was ill and had fainted shortly after rising. The con- dition of His Holiness is absolutely normal. End Elevation. against the back wall over the drop- ping boards. They could be placed under the dropping boards by raising the latter. Ordinary galvanized pails are used for the drinking water and home-made hoppers for the ground feed. As stated before, this house has been very successful despite the fact that Leghorns are kept in it and the winters since it was built have been severe. Muslin curtains are arranged 80 that they can be dropped down in front of the roosts on very cold nights. This house was built for less than $150 including the cost of some hired la- bor. Small Stock Fattening. That chickens intended for market should be divided into small flocks and should be fed heavily on fatten- ing feeds while giving them range in a small grass enclosure is the belief of Prof. James G. Halpin of the Col- lege of Agriculture of the University of Wisconsin. It has been found that as a rule the average farmer pays lit» tle or no attention to the fattening of | his market fowls, taking them to mar- ket directly from the range. A mixture of four parts of ground corn and one part of wheat bran mix- ed with enough sour skim milk to make it crumbly moist is the ration according to Professor Halpin, who recommends that they be fed only such quantities of feed as they will clean up in twenty minutes. Rye a Poor Ration. Rye is the poorest of poultry grains. oy FI'H + VENUE STYL&w rend Toward -implicity of ine— Materials Elaborate | immings Galore in Bill iantCclorings- \ague Out lines asking Underlying [rimminos, | | | | Materials are so elaborate and combined in such striking ways, that only the initiated realize how much the trend is toward simplicity of line. Waists are loose to bagginess, and skirts draped to follow suit un- til near the line at the foot where they all manage in some fashion to attain the ‘‘Peg-top’’ effect. Slash- es and other devices are a boon for comfortable walking, and a positive necessity for the dancing that meets one at every turn aftereleven o’clock in the morning. Silks, crepes, flower- ed gauzes, and printed chiffons are used in an indescribable profusion of loyely designs, and cottons riyal these in texture, fabric finish and colorings, nor are the wore expen- sive cottons a whit behind in price. Still one can find lovely voiles, pat- terned in Dresden flowers and ex- >(@ | — — or Your Baby . The Signature of 2 » e @ : is the only guarantee that you have the enuine repared by him for over 30 years, : YOU'LL give YOUR baby the BEST Go] Q Bo Your Physician Knows Fletcher's Castoria. Sold only in one size bottle, never in bulk oo, or otherwise; tO0 protect the ro babies. dg on No - ind ” The above designs are by The McCa! 2 Company, New York, Designers an The Centaur Company . ’ Pres't. i Makers of McCall Patterns. to Now York, Match i. EIST me Lent has arrived and anyone un-| ° : of acquainted with New York might We Hg { the think that {he need for the new attire ? che would show pause until the Easter- Ape mad 17s A CURE 3 THAT'S SURE ng tide, but this is the time of all the » - per year when people are busiest with I \ 0 k-U 1] > of | preparations for the coming season, ones rea 4) pro and shops and dressmakers are mak- For over 20 years has Cured ~~ ab ing most alluring bids for patron Rp bi i oo 0 age. ; EUMATISM a wh From Thirty-fourth street up to Sug Fifty-seventh, Fifth Ayeuue rivals Sciatica, Lumbago and Gout Por the famous Rue-de-la-pay in Paris, 1? you have Rheumatism [any jormi get Jones’ Re) where one sees everyone of note, oS” Preadn.| it wil gute Yous it hasa i others whe a and finds endless attraction in BE0)578055 Murgy : n in il pai the beautiful shops and more ex- FOR SALE AT . - Oct. -3m “ clusive places, above the lower ’ et toe jv: COLLINS’ DRUG STORE, Meyersdale, Pa. 2 |e cent to the famous Avenue. . WN ELABORATE MATERIALS. C EOI ones As the Guest Chamber is the concrete expression of the hosts. thoughtful consideration for the comfort of his guests— : So also the Bathroom should be more than merely sufficient for your own household. It should be refined and pleasing in appearance and your guests will upon leaving go with a recollection of a nicely furnished home. Our honest workmanship and ‘Standand” fixtures is the combination for a perfect bathroom, quisite borders for very little prices, and many of these make up fasci- natingly in the’ dainty dancing|T® frocks that practically everyone needs. rs TAFFETA CASAQUINS. Dainty Casaquins or Coatees of colored taffeta put together in frill- clinging draperies, figure. FIRST AIDS TO SHAPELINESS. t tunics are dropped for classical | Avoid Stuffy Wheezy Breath- that bring out ing. ther than conceal the lines of the Take Foley’s Honey and Tar Com- pound for an inflamed and con- Outlines that accord with fashion- gested condition of the air passages ies styles and trimming with pinked ruchings of their material top tunic skirts of lace, or voile, and one of the newest fads is to repeat the box- pleated silk ruches of the coat at the end of the tunic or at the foot of the skirt, after the fashions famil- iar in for bandings during the past season. The cross-over draped front skirt is as once so gracetul and practical that its popularity is easy to understand, and the draped opening, or even straight slit gives opportunity for the use of dainty accordeon pleatings, or for what are known as dancing skirts. These show prettily with every motion of the wearer and if selected to harmon- ize or contrast well with the dress skirt, and considerably to the effect. Petticoats of all sorts must be care- tully chosen now that so many dresses are more or less cut out at the foot, for the glimpse of match- ing or contrasting color and fabric mars the whole effect of the suit in too many instances. BEAD TRIMMINGS A FURORE. Corn and buckwheat should be fed sparingly, as they are very fattening. | General Valeriano Weyler has re-1 Captain-General of Cata- | signed as a, Spain. He will be succeeded by ific writer, worst | aid the typic- ! light colored j Wheat leads as a well balanced food, | and barley is a close second. Feed- ing too much buckwheat has a ten- dency to produce a white skin and 1 yol in eggs. ywel Trouble, spirits of camphor in the ¢ er will often cor- trouble in old and | number | Jets ar broideé Beaded tassels and silver lace trimming is a positive furore for dancing and other dressy frocks and [flowers in tapestry colorings. beaded nets make not only a ma- | black hats hold the lead they are jority of tunics for these, but a great | apt to have a bit of color in their | wraps for evening wear. gly popular as ng for all of © exceel ana Sores of trim but for ‘the latt are e: y overdone. Justa t jet is effective, but very heavy m- | mings are anything but chic. Mina- able lines are easily secured if one is caretul to select the right style of corset, and this without any un- comfortable pressure or binding. The fashionable figure today is the natural one, with ample room at waist and hips, yet with a certain trimness, apparent beneat the loose fullness of the outer dress. Expen sive French stays are no longer needed to secure correct lines, an thoritatiye shapes fully guaranteed are shown in new Warner rust proof styles just launched and shown everywhere. These American mak- ers, the largest in the world, are in constant touch with Continental fashion centres through a corps of resident designers, so that any variation of line is instantly known and anthoritatively reproduced. NEW HATS. Hats are either all crown with the brim rolled high and close or flat plateaux with no crown at all, and some of the prettiest of the latter are constructed of straw lace, with a strap of blue across the centre caught at either end with a rose, or clus- ter of small daisies or other field em- | § FOLEY CATHARTIC . 15 | i ¥eep Stomach Sweet - Liver Active -Bowels Regulay | While forany car or truc ed, if desired, within 6 mor : : . | 4 Touring Cars, Roed trimming, especially a bit of hme | : Runabonts, ‘““Tilleul” as en call it. or the French | | . | Verona Clarke. | | : iit | S | ABLETS | and bronchial tubes. A cold de- velops quickly if not checked and bronchitis, lagrippe and pneumonia are dangerous possibilities. Harsh racking coughs weaken the system, | but Foley’s Honey and Tar is safe, pure and certain in. results. Con- tains no opiates. Sold by all Deale“s Ey>rywhere. ——————— eee. ~ Heavy impure blood makes a mud- dy, pimply complexion, headackes, nausea, indigestion. This blood makes you weak, pale and sickly. For pure blood, sound digestion, use Burdock Blood Bitters. $1.00 at all stores. ad AT % 320010 $815 Guaranteed | Year er down and balance in monthly pay- fi ments will buy any car under our future 58 dclivery plan, and 4% interest will be [8 # paid on the deposit. - - Guarazieed Refund Plan, under il | termsof which 904% o Fe - x 4