» A an attainment in Dip manufacture. Hogs, Sheep, Cattle and Poultry. Company of America. FOR SALE BY q/FHL HARDWARE STORE, MTYERSDALE, PA. KILL GERM DIP AND DISINFECTANT This goods represents the highest An official Dip of great efficiency for the killing of Lice, Ticks, Scabs and other parasites and disease germs, which infest the bodies and pens of Approved by the United Breeding To_The_Pu We will open our factory on the farm’of N. D. Hay, in Elk Lick Township, for mak- ing Cicer and Apple Butter, on { Tuesday, August, We have installed new and up-to-date machinery and solicit your patronage, be- lieving that we can give satisfaction. ————————— 18th. 4 00D EYESIGHT u n IS A GREAT GIFT | - w ’ ” J | -~ But when it becomes imparedf the next best thing is a pair o glasses fitted by us. We are skilled in this work. = We have the train- ing, the experience, the facilities. We can fit your eyes with correct [| TO "PURGE HERSELF Ruppel and on the added ground that because be was attorney for the Johnstown Water company before his elevation to the bench, Amanda OCon- nor, the plucky Conemaugh township woman who has been defending her property against invasion by employes | of the Johnstown Water company, who desire to lay a pipe line through of the tract, has not yet surrendered. She is just as strenuous as fusing to permit the wate superintendent for the Johnstown Water company, Attorney Charles F. Uhl of Somerset, appeared in court on Monday and in- voked through Judge Ruppel the strong arm of the law in the water from headache, nerveo:1sness, ness, etc. at once. =diate relief dizi- Have them attended to EXAMINATION FREE! Consult | M. D. GOLDSTEIN, | backing of four members of the com- fled that the mistress of the O’Connor Eyesight Specialist. At Ooliins Drug Store, Meyers: IN. D. HAY, MEYERSDALE, PA, 7 R D2. W. M. FULLEM, } of » 7 _will depend upon your ability to meet and .«" mix with Folks. The first impression you create will de- pend upon your appearance—You will want to appear well dressed. Wouldn't it be a good stunt to come in and look over our lines of new Suits, Hats, Caps, Shirts, Ties, Hose and furnishings. A New Trunk, Suit Case, or Hand Bag might come in handy too. THE PLACE IS THE PLEASURE een F YOUR VACAT 0 N meme | glasses and give imm | daie TUESDAY, AUCUST 25th. Fsr Rent. | i : { A desirable 10-room housejon Mey- ers Avenue, in good repair, with mcd-! ern conveniences. Inquire, of mech 26 tf ALBERT S. (GLESSNEB.. | ers ——————— Ancillary Administrators Notice, In the Estate of Vi; H Prazee. late of Gar rett County, Maryland deceased. Ancillary Letters of Administration nave been granted iu the sade tate of L J Holiday in the Commounw:al b of Pruna, All persons resident tierin iodented 1a the said estate are hereby notified to mk» p-o apt payment of th- sane and all persons rest .ent therein having claims against sal v-i.L are requested 10 present their claims +n dus order for settlemen to, L. J. HOLLIDAY. Conflucuce. Pounde HARTLEY & BALDWIN, MEYERSDALE, PA. The Home of Hart, Schaffaer & Marx Clothes Or his Atty. JAS B. LANDIS somerset, Penna. Baltimore & Ohio EXCURSION TO CUMBERLAND AND RETURN SUNDAY AUGUST 30, 1914 ROUND $1.00 meyersdale| Special Train Leaves at 11:10 A. M. —- Only Remedy. Life is thick sown with thorns, and I know of no other remedy than to ‘pass through them quickly. The long- er we dwell on our misfortunes, the greater is their power to harm us.— Voltaire. / > "Waveri Waverly Qil Works Co. IN AANASASS SS A AS I IAS td le Sa Nd Nd eS EPA A a ol Nl el Pl Pk A SS SP Cost More—Worth Most y"” Qils and Gasolines colines—Iluminants—Lubricants—Wax—Specialties Pittsburgh rm A Se edd NSS NINN ld NSN NAL lon an attachment for contempt of | orders of the court. OF CONTEMPT. Alleging that the injunction seryed pon her is illegal because it does ot contain the signiture of Judge a udge Ruppel is an interested party ever in re-|10 COMPANY SEEKS AID OF LAW. W. H. C. Ramsey of Johnstown, accompanied by company’s effort to secure the right week, A of way through the O’Connor property. Lie i Superintendent Ramsey also had the Carload of middling just arrived, ab ‘Habel & Phillips. ad pany’s engineering corps, who testi-| farm on the North Fork or the Bens- creek interfered with the survey they were making by walking about in such places that they were inconven- jenced-in ‘‘taking sights ”’ TRIED TO TAKE TRANSIT. I Then the engineers told the court in a manner llustrated by gesture how \iiss O'Connor had laid yiolent hands on their transit and attemped to take possession of the instrument’ also pro- ceeding to deliver herself of alleged menacing declarations as to her rights on premises. She bad both hands filled with stones too, the engineers told the court. : COURT GRANTS A RULE. Last week: the Johnstown Water company went into court on a bill in equity, alleging the same offenses again complained of, and securing a temporary injunction restraining Miss O’Connor from further finterference with the work of the engineers for the water company. Asa result of ‘the plea made the court granted a rule on Miss O’Connor requiringgher to show cause why she should not belarrested court. Sheriff Hochard;went to the O'Connor farm and served the paper. It is understood that he had no un- usual experiences in carrringfout the e———————————— We are the largesti.sdealers in peaches in Somerset county and can save you money and give you better fruit. Send us your order. ad Habel & Phillips. WERNER REUNION. The sixth annual Werner Reunion and their relatives through (Anna- catherine. Werner, nee Sass) will be held on Tuesday, August 25th, 1914, at River Side Park. ! FARMERS PICNIC AT AD- "DISON ON AUGUST 22. Jasper Augustine is making exten- sive arrangements for thejunion farm- er’s and chiidren’s picnic to be held A cP A AAAS Sl ff tf ll Nel” advantage of actual teaching experience. THE INDIANA SCHOOL OF BUSINESS . . . and THE INDIANA CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC The Fortieth Year Opens Sept. 8, 1914 || ¢ Practical Training as Teachers Every Graduate of the State Normal School at Indiana, Pa., has had the : La Practice lends confidence and makes the significance of book-learned precepts come out clear and strong. | PENNSYLVANIA STATE Il NORMAL SCHOOL x oy ® . . - Where Ambition is Inspired, Directed and Trained IN CONNECTION WITH THE STATE NORMAL ARE The Leading Institutions of their Lind in Pennsylvania New catalogues now ready for distribution. Address Dr. James E. Ament, Indiana, Pa. ' of Indiana, Pa. A. E. KINSLEY, Principal H. E. COGSWELL, Director G | A Senior Teaching in the Training School ; sion. ¥® DIED FROM INJURIES. Catalogue) § Saturday. August 22nd, at OakjGrove near Addison. There will be music by the Connellsville Military Band the Fricdensyille band, and either the Frostburg or Confluence Band. A feature of the day will be two pa- rades at 10 o’clock in the morhing. The farmer’s parade will start] from Addison and the automobile parade from Somerfield, so that both arrive on the grounds at the same time. 'ON A TRIP TO VIRGINIA. Two touring cars left yesterday | morning on a trip to Luray Cayerns,. | the Natural Bridge and other points | of interest, by way of Winchester and will retarn to Meyersdale by way of | Gettysburg. The following made the | trip; H. M. Cook and wife, Mrs. J. M. | Olinger and daughters Misses Kate and Emma, of Meyersdale, Cyrus M. Beachy, wife, danghter and niece of | Witchita, Kas., and Earnest Liven- ; good, of Salisbury. They took the i precaution to take with them Mr. i Shope, a practical mechanist, in case * either car might get out of commis- ee eee Get our prices on flour, feed, sugar ' money, at Habel & Phillips. { On Tuesday an accident occurred iat the Shaw Mines, which resulted} Gohn colored, |! | in the death of Paton Catharine and Raymond Leighty, entertained a few of their friends at Those present. were, Mary Streng, = Lulu Smith, Margaret and Sara Emerick, Clara Daugherty, William and Emmit Smith, Carl Eisler, Nelson, Florence and Bertha Gerhart, Ida Leighty. The out-of-town guests were their aunt, William Twigg, and daughter Alice The evening was delightfully spent r company | were served. Tney received many to mar the heauty of her farm by al- beautiful presents. | lowing the instalation of a pipe line, | although she has been ordered to do | so by the court. pleasantly ‘ entertained at the home of Mrs. P. D. Cluttton, on Broadway street, Wednesday afternoon. Jessica their friends at their home on Meyers avenue, Thursday afternoon of last Supper will’ held in the Reformed Sunday School building. start at 5 seryed all eveuiag. littls daughter of Wilkinsburg, are guests of the former’s mother, Mrs. Mary Imhoff, of Front street, South Side. | 25 cents, at Bittner’s Grocery. at Habel & Phillips. tion of which has developed a new | etc., before buying, we can save yout) ad tba SOCIETY NOTES. BIRTHDAY PARTY. Friday evening. Hazel Cook, Smith, Stella birthday party James Henry, and cousin, Mrs. Cumberland, Md. playing games and refreshments ENTERTAINED CLUB. The Dorcas Thimble Club was yery Mrs. J. C. Reed, and daughter Miss entertained a number of HARVEST SUPPER. On Saturday August 20th a Harvest Supper will o'clock. Price 25 cents. ce creanr and cake extra and will be ad I : Rev. and Mrs. Burton Imhoff, and eee 3 dozen Heinz’s Sweet Pickles for ad Ce eres Carload yellow rec stone peaches, ad eters Found New Species of Microbes. A new species of microbes, the ac form of disease, has been developed by Mme. Victor Henri, a bacteriologist She subjected the baccilli-of anthrax to ultra violet rays, which changed their nature and shape. Then the modified bacilli were injected inte guinea pigs, the result being a slowly developing disease of a totally differ ent character from that of anthrax. Mme. Henri deduces from her discov: ery the possibility of evolution in the bacteria world, as in the animal world, and expresses the opinion that the multitudes of existing species | which have undergone transformations under the action of light, and have en- gendered the varieties of germs re sponsible for the diseases known fo science. am ek Fight With Mud and Wate® One of the oddest annual contests in the world, a mud and water fight, during which the women of far-off and little-known Bhutan, in the heart of the Himalayas, seek to prevent the men from taking possession of an inundated rice field, is described by John Claude White, late political offi- cer in charge of Sikhim, Bhutan, and parts of Tibet within the sphere of British influence, in a communication to the National Geographic society. The event is known as the spring ceremony Of blessing the rice fields. Victory for the women portends, dur- ing the coming season, fertility of the soil and increase among the flocks and herds. re ee Seismograph as Witness. Seismograph records have fre- quently been produced in court to show that the operation of heavy machinery produced sufficient vibra- tion in nearby buildings to make the owners of the factory liable for damages. Cat Reasoned Wisely. ‘about a cat's reasoning power. ‘street, plunged (trough. reasoned from this fact. tinople comie from a few primitive forms, | Romances quotes a remarkable story ‘While a paraffin lamp was being trimmed, | some of the oil fell on the back of the cat, and a cinder from the fire shortly ‘afterward touching it, the fur became ‘ignited. The cat instantly made for the door and, running up the village into the watering She had seen her human friends at home put out their kitchen ‘fire with water, and she must have TL UP BY WINE 150 of Passengers and Crew Perish cn Dalmatian Coast ABOUT 150 WERE RESCUED Great Britain, France and Russia De- mand Explanation of Ottomans— Keep German Crews to Train Turks—Fear Complications. London, Eng.—About 150 of the passengers and crew of the Austrian Lloyd steamer Baron QGoutsch were . killed or drowned when the vessel was blown up by a mine off the Is< land of Lussin, on the Dalmatian coast, according to a Reuter dispatchy from Trieste. She carried about 3 passengers and crew, of whom abouf 150 were rescued. : : Great Britain, France and Russia, have sent a sharp demand to Turkey for the immediate repartriation of the officers and crews of the German cruisers Coeben and Breslau. SE It is reported that the two cruisers were met by Turkish vessels outside and escorted into the Dardanelles. There is no official confirmation of the actual purchase of the cruisers by Turkey, but the report to that effect is generally credited. According to a dispatch from Constantinople Turkey has paid $20,000,000 for the German cruisers Goeben and Breslau. A dispatch to the Daily News from Rome says: “Turkey's purchase of the German cruisers Breslau and Goe- ben has made an unpleasant impres- sion here. Italy probably will demand an explanation as to the future use »f these ships and also warn Turkey ‘hat she will not allow the equilibrium »f the lower Mediterranean to be threatened, as Italy is determined to prevent complications.” : A dispatch to the Chronicle from West Hartlepool says that the captain of the Danish steamer Huldamaersk declares that he passed seven sunken German ships 15 miles off Spurn Head, at the northwest entrance of the Humbef. Only the masts of the vessels were visible above the water, - but the captain believes they wer German men-of-war. o Advices received here from Constan- are to the effect that the offi- « cers and crew of the Germal cruis- ers Goeben and Breslau disembarked apparently with the object of return- ing home, but that in reality only the. AE Turks. All the skilled German offi- cers, engineers, mechanics and sailors, it is said, remain aboard two cruisers to train the Turks. - Map BERLIN QUIET, NO FAMINE = Foreigners, EspeCially Fully Protected. Nt Washington, D. C.—The ‘American Association of Commerce and Trade of Berlin, through Ambassador QGer- ard, has requested the Stafe Depart-. ment to make public the following be careful in giving credence to war ° reports now circulating in the United States concerning conditions in Ger- many. The city of Berlin is perfectly quiet. eigners, especially Americans, are ful ly protected.” AEs Beet Industry Sued for $57,600 Postage Washington, D. C.—Suit was order- ed by Postmaster General Burleson to recover from the United States beet sugar industry $57,600, which it is alleged should’ have been paid in der Senator Lodge’s frank while the Underwood tariff bill was before Con- gress, Information concerning this pamphlet, which the postal authori- ties claim was illegally franked, was lobby investigation. The was the work of Truman H. Palmer, secretary of the United States Beet Sugar Industry. : a A LL 800 Indians Mowed Down. Washington, D. C.—In a night at- tack on Manzanillo in “what appears’ to have been one of the fiercest bat- tles on the west coast of Mexico,” says a report from Rear Admiral Howard, the constitutionalist forces, which included a regiment of 800 Yaqui Indians, under’ Col. Mendes, charged across a field which had been mined and strewn with barbed wire. Of one detachment of 200 men in the fight only 22 survived unhurt. Paymaster and Guards Killed: : Bluefield, W. Va —Paymaster F. E. Johnson of the Glen Alum Fuel Com- pany and his two guards were shot to death and robbed of $10,500 in a Height of Happiness. went to college. time. “Ob, yah,” she replied. |shoost like a collidge goirl.” ! Mending an Umbrelia. ia driver in the mines. He. was about 137 years of ac His funeral takes: : - mt [ place today.i. the Union cemetery, Thoughts uw der the Inspection of a Critic Teacher. § Rev. Mr. Miller, officiating. ’ Gretchen, the little German maid, was given a dress belonging to one of the daughters of the house, who Gretchen had a his- | trionic soul and loved to “live lives. Upon returning from her “day out” {she was asked if she had had a good “1 felt Take a small piece of black stick- {ing paste and soak it until it is quite | soft; place it carefully under the hole it dry. This is better as it closes the hole battle with bandits, while on their way to the mines of the company near Glen Alum, 75 miles west of here, with pay for the miners. ARR LES ee Germans Building Pontoon Bridges. Brussells.—The cashier of a Liege pank, who arrived here on a bicycle to obtain funds, says that he had little difficulty in getting out of Liege on establishing his identity. The Ger- man troops, he says, continue their preparations for defense in the event of the Belgian troops taking the offen- sive, but the impression in Ifege is that the Germans are preparing to leave the vicinity, as they are hurry- dilate de = yn er ‘[neatly and without ing the construction of pontoon pridges over the Meuse. ——— Tine LL i SE VRS unessential men were replaced by : Americans, ; telegram: “We would ask the Amer- fcan press and America in general 10 .¢ Food prices are normal. For- postage on a pamphlet circulated un- , | brought out during the recent Senate x ? pamph? ~~ ” Le and bat Spajgle, Weaver, P, Rapir tense, V carrying Norman ler, perji Winski, Eugene Joseph | Hoblitze cious mii “ Laura C Hammer Wedne .* liquor wi tive Lest assault a John Ohl * Ohler, D tery, Ma, and Laur ‘assault § Stanley i Wadislay £ sault and #8 § Stanley] Alexande ticing fer muel | : eapons * seman Jol out licen: § ry Bahr l, Mineava 43 | ~aggravat #1 § nie Hark .. against n AR sb & Se Nene Cs