fn, Spool «0 The C >mmercial Ty The secret of President Wilson's ° “mysterious Mexican policy is out at .- The explanation comes, not from any formal announcement upon e carefully typewritten authority of ® White House; not through the on pronouncement of a Presiden- ‘tial message to the assembled Con- * gress from the rostrum of the House of Representatives; not from a stern mation over the signature of Woodrow Wilson and under the great seal of the United States; not Smog trumpet call to the nation from the re > er-in-Chief, notifying the foroes that at last he has determined to'act. No, not through any of these ‘honorable courses has the secret, guarded so carefully for these many weary and disheartening months, at length espaped. It has been per- mitted to leak cut through the very policy of inaction which is the one ~ yery distinctive 1eature of the Wil: son-Bryan management of our foreign affairs. PEACE AT ANY PRICE. That is the secret. That, is the true meaning hidden under the filiterative felicity of President Wilson’s ‘‘watch- fulwaiting.”” The dreadful tale of outrage, pillage and murder that comes in daily increasing burden over ‘the wires from the bandit-ridden land syond cur southern border touches o sympathetic chord in the American government. No heart is fired, no red blood stirred in the Waite House Es or State Department. Here is no | room for honest wrath or righteous § indignation. Here is no place for just resentment at untold villainy or in- conceivable affront. What boots it to this bloodless, heartless govern- ment that men, women and children of our race are enduring every day the terrors and the tortures of an un- checked reign of savagery, and find- “ing by the bitter test of previous ex- perience that the pledge and the faith of our government to insure them protection are a worthless pledge and a broken faith. The Philadelphia Public Ledger, ~ which has often given a left-handed support: to the Penrose machine in Pennsylvania, is now imploring the Republican party to chose exceptional candidates for the approaching cam- paign. “No make-shift will serve, ’ says the Ledger. ‘‘The candidate must be able and above suspician.”’ Now, if the Ledger will inform the pe of Pennsylvania how any can- didate on the Penrose ticket can be “above suspicion’ it will have per- rmed a genuine and lasting service its Republican friends in that state. J : ® How's This? - We offer One Hundred Dollars Re- ward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY, & Co., Teledo, 0. We, the undersigned have known -P. J. Cheney, for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honora- ble in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any ob- ~ ligation made by his firm. NATION AL BANK OF COMMERCE, Toledo, Ohio. Hall’s Qatarrh Cure is taken inter- nally and acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. Sol) by all Druggists, 756 cents per bottle. Take Hall's Family Pills for Con- stipation. ad : eh Don’t diy Engage in Orcha:d Business. Emphatic advice is given by the State agricultural officials agaii st un- skilled ', "ssons idly engaging in the . fruit-growing industry, for, contrary to a ‘common belief, orcharding is such an intricate business that no one need expect success in going at in a hap-hazerd way. In writing to a Greensburg banker who asked about the subject, State Economic Zoolo- gist Surface, Harrisburg, said : + ‘1 think what we need is better i J fruits and more productive trees, | (5 td rather than more trees and plants. The country has been well over-plant- ed already, but the expense and skill of taking care of them had been more than. planters have counted on, and, consequently, fruits of high quality are not being produced in the in- creased ratio that planting is going on. “I anticipate that there will be no end of poor orchards for sale cheap in this State and others in the future. Money is to be lost in orchards by persons who do not know the busi- ness. To succeed one should know ib the same as any other business. Therefore, I recommend a person to go slowly and plant comparatively a 2B small area in size, and grow with the trees, and learn to manage them be- fore going into more extensive plant- 4. ving.”? FOLEY: hipNEY PILLS FOR BACKACHE KiDwEYS AND BLADDEF ETT TRE RE ra BRINGS SUIT FOR DAMAGE. The value of licensed hotel property in Somerset county is revealed in a $10,000 damage suit brought thisafter- noon in the court of common pleas 1n which the plaintiff is ex-Sheriff Peter A Johns, of Uniontown, Pa., and the defendants are Sheriff Charles F. Hochard, Nora A. Winters, and George P. Stein, of Somerset. The suit also involves a novel point of law concerning business relations between landlord and tenant. Sheriff Johns says that on January 30, 1914, he owned the furnishi gs of the Hotel Vannear in Somerset. Back of the damage suit is the following interesting history: On July 30, 1907, Ferdinand L. at | Snyder leased from Jacob B. Winters the Hotel Vannear to April 1, 1910, at $3,600 per year, payable monthly, with an option to re-rent for an ad- ditional period’ of five years, which option was exercised. It is alleged that Snyder also agreed to buy from Winters the furnishings of the hotel on monthly payments, for which Johns became surety for Snyder. After a lapse of several months Snyder could not make the payments, it is alleged, and Johns paid Winters for the same with an agreement with Snyder that the furnishings from that time would belong to the plaintiff, and with the consent of the parties the property was left in the Hotel Vannear. On June 1, 1909, itis averred, Snyder sold his hotel business to Harry G. Spitznogle, who paid rent to Johns for the use of the personal property and rent to the owners for the use of the building. It is also alleged that Snyder paid his rent under the lease a considerable time after it was due 1 monthly, and this custom of delayed payments continued atter the lease was transferred to Spitznogle. Title to the hotel property passed to - Winters’ sister-in-law, Bertha Stein, and later on April 1, 1912, to Winters’ wife, Mrs. Nora A. Winters, and she is said to have sanctioned the belated payments of rent and com- pliance with the terms of payment in the lease was not demanded or re- quired, but was waived by Mrs. Win- ters. On January 30, 1914, there was due $649.98 rent, it seems, and on that day a check signed by Peter A. Johns for that amount was handed to Mrs. Winters who refused to accept it, and immediately thereafter the amount in cash was tehdered her but she again declined, demanding rent for the full term of the lease, which expires April 1, 1915, amounting to $5,024.96. Sub- sequently Winters issued a landlord’s warrant for the latter sum and placed the same in the hands of Charles F. Hochard for execution, who distrain- ed the goods of the plaintiff and on January 13, 1914, sold the same to Attorney W. Curtis Truxal for $1,050. Johns claims that the demand for rent for the whole term of the lease and the sale of the goods were illegal, and that Hochard, who executed the warrant; Mrs. Winters, who issued the warrant, and her brother, George P. Stein, who, ‘‘acting with them, aiding and abetting them, controlling and managing them,’’ were transgres- sors, and therefore are liable to the plaintiff for $5,000, the yalue of the goods. Johns asserts that the sale of his goods was illegal because there was no rent in arrears at the time of the sale, and for this reason sues for dou- ble damages in the sum of $5,000. Plaintiff further claims that the land- lord’s right, if any she had, to demand payment of rent to April, 1, 1915, was waived by her action in regard to the collection from and payment of the rent by the tenant. Johns further alleges that the de- fendants were trespassers and are lia- ble for the payment of damages to the plaintiff for the reason that there was no right in Mrs. Winters to declare a forfeiture of the lease and demand payment of the rent to April 1, 1915, there being no covenant with her in the lease to give her such right. Disordered Kidneys Cau:e much Misery. With pain and misery by day, sleep-disturbing bladder weekness at night, tired nervous run-down men and women eyery where are glad to know that Foley Kidney Pills restore health and strength, and the regular action of kidneys and bladder, Sold by all Dealers Everywhere. —— ee Real Presence of Mind. An efficiency engineer was talking about presence of mind. “For presence of mind.” he said, “no- body can equal John X.” “When John X. lived in Cleveland his next door neighbor said to him ou morning: * ‘Smith's cow got in my garden ves terday and ate a lot of grass and flowers.’ . **Yes.’ said John X., ‘it got in m: garden, I milked it to the valu of the d ne, and then drove i: out.” "—W 1 Star. INTERNATIONAL SUNDAYS (CTio0L LESSON (By E. O. SELLERS, Director of Evening Department, The Moody Bible Institute, Chicago.) LESSON FOR MARCH 15 LAWFUL USE OF THE SABBATH. — LESSON TEXT—Lule 13:10-17; 14:1-6. GOLDEN TEXT—'The Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sab- bath.” —Mark 2:27. These two sections of scripture have been chosen that we might em- phasize the truth of the golden text which can correctly be translated, “The Sabbath was brought into being on account of man, and not man on account of the Sabbath.” There are two extremes of thought and action as regards the Christian Sabbath. Ome is to make it a heli- day, the other to make it a holy-day, to worship the day as though it pos- sessed some secret sacredness there- by forgetting the author of the day. A study of what Jesus taught will check laxity on the one hand and cor- rect fanatical error on the other. Contrast Shown. I. Jesus loosing the woman, 13:10 17. THis incident is a strong contrast between God's mercy and man’s lack of mercy. Satan was to blame for the woman’s illness (v. 16) and at the same time for the hardness of the hearts of these men. The incident occurred in a synagogue and displeas- ed the leaders. As if to rebuke them Jesus not only spoke the word of relief but also touched her, causing an instantaneous and a complete cure. Her response was to glorify God. The sight of this satanic captive acted in contrast upon Jesus and the ruled of the synagogue. Compassion and an utter lack of sympathy. More care for legalism than for the relief of one created in God's image. Jesus seems to have acted speedily and is today calling the unfortunate to him to be healed and comforted, Matt. 11:28-30. Jesus could have healed by a word only, John 5:40-43, but there is power also in the loving touch, which in this case quickened her faith (v. 13). The record does not suggest that her cure was In response to her faith as was the case in other cures, Matt. 8:10; 15:28. If the ruler had had a heart of compassion he too would have re- Joiced at the cure, but he cared more for ceremonial ecclesiasticism than for the good of the worshipers and his emotion was that of indignation rather than that of joy. A religion that is more concerned with bondage to the beggarly elements, the observ- ance of days (Gal. 4:9-11) is here de- nounced as hypocrisy (vv. 15, 16). It is to have more interest in property than in human souls. Ofttimes hatred for those who do not agree with us is covered up by a false fanatical pre- tended jealousy for the law of God. Love's Attribute. Il. Jesus healing the man, 4:1-6. In this incident the question of the Sab- bath is raised by Jesus himself, evi- dently in answer to their mental at- titude, for “they watched him” (v. 1). Receiving no reply, Jesus first healed the man and then again reminded them of the care they gave their cat- tle. Jesus plainly implies that if they give care to an ox or an ass on the Sabbath, how can it possibly be wrong to relieve humanity on the Sabbath? Mercy and love are superior to cere- monies though these be of divine ap- pointment. The reasoning .is clear. Love is an attribute of God's ¢harac- ter, I. John 4:8, and therefore his own ceremonies must give way before the activities and energies of his being. Thus to act upon the principles that “concern the valuerof an “or or an ass” is to allow the lower to control the higher, for a man is of more value than the ox. These Pharisees were exceedingly religious, great for the “letter of the law,” but they were dried up at heart, and consequently far worse off than the man with the dropsy. It is small wonder then that the master’s reply should silence them 50 “they could not answer him.” The Teaching.—It is true that fun- damentally the Sabbath idea is one of worship and rest, but the reason for its existence is because of man’s need of that rest. That true rest can be found only in a true and intelli- gent spiritual fellowship with God Anything, therefore, that interferes with or hinders rest breaks the Sab bath and should be reinoved in order that the Sabbath intention may be ob- served. These men were justified in leading an ox or an ass to water on the Sabbath or to rescue one in peril. On the same principle any work which enables men to enter into a Sabbath rest ig not suly justifiable but necessary in the interest of the Sab- bath itself. They cared for cattle on- ly as cattle, their property; we must care for mer for their own sakes and in his interest and behalf. The Sabbath must never be dese- crated by being made an instrument of harm to man. It is always dese- crated when, in the presence of hu- man need, we decline to render serv- ice on the plea of the sanctity of the day. «A false ceremonial sanctity of any particalar day must never be per- initieq to destroy the underlying, the truly essential sanction and author- | fty for a 3zbbath rest. Physically we do not each night fully regain our | lost eneryy and need the seventh dav to balance the account. Spir tually ve need he strength that comes from he Ss th day's rest. Isa. 80:15 EE TE CREE. SRE For Her Convenience Just inside our entrance is a room for the especial comfort and convenience of’ our lady customers, and, as ladies have proven themselves shrewd buyers, they can® greatly aid themselves by having an account of their own. your bills by check gives you positive protection and an exact record, whic useful as a protectograph against little extravagances. The very act f paying is very MEYERSDALE, PA. SECOND NATIONAL BANK, Resources Over Six Hundred Thousand Dollars. a CHURCH SERVICES. Methodist Episcopal church ser vice, Rev. G. A. Neeld pastor—Ser vices at10:30 a. m. Sunday schcol 9:30 a. m. Epworth League at 6:45 p. m Evening service at 7:30. SS. Philip and James Oatholic church, Rev. J.J. Brady, pastor.— Church of the Brethren—Preaching | 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p.m. Sunday | School, 9:30 a. m. Christian Worker Meeting at 6:30 p. m. Bible Class Saturday evening, 7:30 p. m. Teache: Training classes meet Monday evening 7 and 8 o’clock, respectively. Sunday 8chool Workers Meeting, Friday evening, 30th inst., at 7:30. Brethren Church, H. L. Goughnour pastor—Services on Sunday, March 15 morning and evening in Meyersdale chrreb. Sunday School and Christ ian Endeavor at usual hours. All are cordially invited. PREACHING SERVICES AT SHAW MINES. On next Sunday afternoon, imme- diately following the Sunday school session, Rev. G. A. Neeld will preach in the school house at Shaw Mines. All the people of that vicinity are arged to come to the service. eee reeset Big, husky, liyely chicks! Yours will be if you use Pratts Baby Chick Food and Pratts White Diarrhoea Remedy. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. For sale by Habel & Phllips and Cover & Son. ad eel ett : Precocity. Little Willie is really too precocious. I met him the other day with his school bag under his arm. “Well, well.” said I, “and so you go to school now, eh?” “Sure, Mike!” said little Willie. “Ain’t I over six?” “And do you love your teacher?” 1 asked. . “Aber nit!" said little Willie. “The old hen's too old for me.” Washington Star. Adam’s Apple. The projection in the front of the throat in men, denoting the position of the thyroid cartilage, is styled “Adam's apple.” It develops rapidly usually when the voice “breaks,” lieing com- paratively small in both children and women. The name arose from the tra- dition that when Adam attempted to swallow the apple in paradise it stuck in his throat, giving rise to the swell- ing since seen in all his adult male de- scendants. Quite a Difference. First Comedian—What's the differ- ence between a beautiful young girl and a codfish? Second Comedian— Give it up. First Comedian—One has a chance to become a fall bride and the other to become a ball fried.— Brooklyn Eagle. The Connection. Scott—] remember reading of a very rich man who said he’d sooner be poor. Mott—Yes, and probably you re- member reading somewhere that all men are liars.—Boston Transeript. Foolish. It’s a foolish man what sits down ter count his troubles, kaez dat only gives ‘em another chance ter swat him. —Atlanta Constitution. One pound of learning requires ten pounds of common sense to apply it.— Persian Proverb. —— Truth That's Worth Money. Plain Using Foley’s Honey and Tar for a cough or cold may save you both sickness and money. F. F. Monahon. | Menomonie, Wis., says: ‘Iam fex- i posed to all kinds of weather and I ‘find Foley’s Honey and Tar Com- pound always fixes me up in good shape when Icatch cold or have a “bad cough. Irecommend it gladly.’ 1se substitutes. Sold by all Dealers Eyerywh re. Mass next Sunday 9 and 11 a. m ! Vespers and Benediction at 7:30 p. m. | Fashions and Fads. Black tulle is a pretty touch on any color. The sleeveless jacket is growing in | {not to wait until the fly is flying to | swat him, but to swat him indirectly i, Cost More— Worth pia Gasolines—Il'uminants — al net —Specialti § : Waverly Oil Works Co. SITE olbi ae : favor. White continues among the smart | colors. Three-piece suits of taffeta are the | 1atest. The suede glove is superseding the | glace glove. | Girdles and sashes are still an im | portant item. are fashionable. Parasols of white moire have a black satin border. The new skirts still preserve the peg-top silhouette. Serges of brilliant coloring will be fashionable this spring. Colored tulle is being combined with the corsage bouquet. All manner of bindings are making their appearance in connection with dresses, suits, and coats. The newest fur trimming is monkey fur. It makes charming revers to a coat, for it is long and silky. Gloves are more or less somber, but ail the natural tan and kindred tints are worn as much as white. The narrow ruffles so much appre- ciated by our grandmothers are here again and they are made of tulle. Have the new spring tailored coat and skirt made of the new diagonal duvetyn or the new corded duvetyn. The corduroy suit made Russian blouse style and trimmed with fur is emivetly becoming to the slender figure. —————— eee. Here at Home, Meyersdale Citizens Testify and Con- fidently Recommend Doan’s Kid- dey Pills. It is testimony like the following that has placed Doan’s Kidney Pills so far above competitors. When people right here at home raise their yoice in praise there is no room left for doubt Read the public state- ment of a Meyersdale citizen: Mrs. Joseph Quinn, of 37 Broad- way, Meyersdale, Pa., says: ‘““About a year ago one of our family was troubled by severe pains in the small of his back. It was hard for him to stoop over or do any lifting. He used Doan’s Kidney Pills, procured at Thomas’ Drug Store and the first box was all he needed to satisfy him that Doan’s Kidvey Pills are a wonderful kidney remedy. Now whenever he is attacked by back- ache he gets Doan’s Kidney Pills He always recommends them to his friends.”’ Price 50c, at all deaters. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills the same that Mrs. Quinn recommends. Foster- Milburn Co. Prop., Buffalo, N. Y. ad. remem. The Perfect Day. There is. perhaps, one such day in every one's life. It is seldom more— when the whole world seems to hang in a nebulous light, when nothing is quite real or quite certain, when the entire universe might be a bubble to break with touching. when one is be- yond one's body, all pure soul, when everything—even the birds in their bursts of song and sudden silences, the flowers, the clouds—conspires for per fection. Such inoments come only when one human spirit first touches another and vanish, or at least are transmuted. with the first kiss, the first spoken word of love.—From “Simp- son,” by Elinor Mordaunt. For any itching skin trouble, piles, eczema, saltrheum, hives, itch, scald head herpes, scables. Doan’s Oint- ment is highly recommended. 50c a i box at all stores. ad Spring gowns made of black silks | | by destroying his bree ding places. | A Bucks county woman received thi following advice when she wrote to State Kconomic Zoologist Surface, | Harrisburg, about the matter, and every fariner, as well as city dweller, ~ will find himself able to help in the | war of rmination by following: the sugges ions: . “Reply ing to your inquiry as to the: proper method of combatting flies, © | can say that “Swat The Fly.” Get ready now to swat the fly ime 1914. The most approved method is I earnestly recommend this be done by destroying ti oe 3 breeding places. They breed or mi tiply in filth, such as the cleanin Fog: from poultry. houses and stables. If stables are kept th ioroughly clean ande® the manure dusted occasionally with ground phosphate rock the flies will ® - not breed in it This will also greatly: improve the fertilizing qualities $f the manure for the soil and will mora than justify the effort from this stand. point. The rule is one pound of: ground phosphate rock for each 1,000¢ © pounds of animal in the stable, scat- tered daily over the droppings. ind persons would look carefully after the stables, the pig stys, and poultry houses, etec., there would be no diffi culty in Eecping down the flies. : ‘‘While a few flies will hibernate op pass the winter in the adult stage, § many more are in the chrysalis stag’ in places of protection near wherg they fed as larvae. Ido not think a. reward for fly gathering now would: do much good, as most of them args where they can not be reached.” me eneeeeemteaee—— Ants Don’t Harm Trees. r # pe. It is a common false impression that black ants running over sweet cherry i trees are responsibie for leayes curling up. The real cause of the curling leaves however, are minute plant lice, or aphids. State Economic Zoologist H.. A. Surface, Harrisburg, has writtem the following advice to an in quirer- who lives near Philadelphia: ‘These plant lice give out a sweet juice on which the ants feed. It would not do your tree any good if you would keep the ants off of it. The thing to do» is to kill the plant lice. The method of doing this depends upon the size of the trees. If it is a small tree, so yow' can reach the branches and bend then» down into a pan of liquid, there is noe trouble about destroying the pests. Make up a strong solution of soap teil add a few drops of amonia, or make a. strong tobacco decoction and bend the twigs down and dip the infestect ends into either of these liquids held in the pan. ‘If it is a large tree you should apply the liquid with a spray pump, doing this, if possible, before the leaves curl, and repeating it as ofter. as you see the pests present. ‘‘Use one pound of tobacco dust or leaves in one gallon of water, and steep it for two hours; or make a soap solution by using one pound of Whale Oil ‘Soap in about three gallons of water; or one pound of ordinary soft soap or brown laundry soap in three gallons, and add to this a few spoon- fulls of ammonia.” Special ‘‘Health Warning” for March, March is a trying month for the very young and for elderly people. Cronp bronchial colds, lagrippe and pneumonia are to be feared and avoided. Foley’s Honey and Tar is a great family medicine that will quickly stop a cough, check tha progress of a cold and relieve inflam- ed and congested air passages. I% is safe, pure and always reliable. Sold bv all Dealers Everywhere. ete eee FOLEY FAMILY WORM CANDY" Always Successful - Children Like It