Jone 4 FARMER'S WIFE. T00 ILLTO WORK A Weak, Nervous Sufferer Restored to Health by Ly- dia E. Pinkham’s Veg- etable Compound. Kasota, Minn. — “‘I am glad to say ‘that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has done more for me than anything else, and I had the best physi- i cian here. I was so weak and nervous down in my right side for a year or more. I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound, and now I feel like a different person. I believe there is nothing like Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound for weak women and young girls, and I would be glad if I could influence anyone to try the medi- cine, for I know it will do all and much more than it is claimed to do.’’ — Mrs. CLARA Franks, R. F. D. No. 1, Maple- crest Farm, Kasota, Minn. Women who suffer from those dis- tressing ills peculiar to their sex should be convinced of the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to re- store their health by the many genuine and truthful testimonials we are con- stantly publishing in the newspapers. If you have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta- ble Compound will help you, write to Lydia E.PinkhamMedicineCo. (confidential) Lynn, Mass., for ad- vice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence. Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver is right the stomach and bowels are right. CARTER’S LITTLE ¢ LIVER PILLS gently butfirmly coms. pel a lazy liver to £8 do its duty. £1 Cures Con- £5 Headache, and Distress After Eating. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature Sore Ferro Tonic FOR EYES EET Eye to Business. A young subufban doctor whose practice was not very great sat in his study reading away a lazy afternoon in early summer. His manservant ap peared at the door. “Doctor, them boys is stealin’ your green peaches again. Shall I chasg them away?” The doctor looked thoughtful for a moment, then leveled his eyes at the "servant. “No,” he said.—Lippincott’s. OUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL YO® Murine Eye Remedy for Red, Weak, Watery yes and Granulated “Hyelids; No Smarting— ust Eye Comfort. Write for Book of the Kye y mail Free. Murine Eye Remedy Co.. Chicago. Queer Talk. “So poor old Bill has gone under.” “Yes, they say his business is going up.” It is well to be able to talk, ‘but there are times when silence is more valuable. — | | | | SOAP And Cuticura Ointment. They cleanse the scalp, re- move dandruff, arrest falling hairand promote hair health. Samples Free by Mall Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout tke world. Liberal sample of each mailed free, with $3-p book. Address “Outicura,” Dept. #8, Boston. RESIS SII IIISIISIISISISIISIISICIoR THE CRAZE FOR MORE By GERTRUDE MORRISON. == (Copyright.) The door opened and slammed. “Mornin’, boss.” ) The loud voice heralded swaggering steps. The- jaunty tone, the turnip- like odor of bad whisky, caused his employer to wheel from his desk and glance sharply at the face toughened and inflamed by recent hard drinking. “So it's you.” “Yep! I've come back.” His forced air belied his bravado. “Mr. Jackson, I've come back to draw what's comin’ to me.” His eyes fell before his employer's steady gaze. “Bar’bry,” he began, not unkindly, “this won't do.” He toyed with his morning's mail, his habit when pondering what to say. The workman jerked off his hat. “I want you to go home now and straighten up. Get yourself ready to come out Monday.” “It’s no use. We can't.” The dog- gedness of the answer went home to Jackson with a strange hurt. He turned from the look in Bar’bry’s face. It is never easy to face failure in hu- man guise. This time the strength of is “we” prevailed to pull him down a little in the other’s fall. “I can’t. I've tried to make a man of myself, and can’t. You'd best let me go.” . “No. Go home now. You're in no condition for work. But I want to see You out Monday. I'll have John put you on those flange-fires again.” The thought of delayed work wrinkled the business man’s brow into a frown. “Why can’t you let the stuff alone?” “I can’t. I've tried it and failed.” The knuckles of his huge hand stood out white as he gripped his rusty glouch hat. “You can, if you fight for it. You will never find a better place to try, Bar’bry. My boys are as clean a set of fellows as you'll find in the coun- try.” “Yes, the fellers are all right. I ain’t got anything again’ Johnnie, neither, nor you, Mr. Jackson. You've used me square.” “Then use me square now, Bar’bry. You know I need you. We're back on our orders.” The distant clatter of a cteam-rivet- er broke the monotonous creak of ma- chinery. “Come! Brace up, Pat! Don’t give up yet. You work along pretty stead- You You fly for three or four months. get yourself into good clothes. must try again.” “If things was different at home,” he muttered. : Jackson knew about that quick- tempered, shrill-tongued wife whose overtrying to manage well resulted in a pitiful nagging. He knew, too, that some things go unsaid. “Bar’bry, be a man.” “ll try, sir.” 2 The man rose in favor with his fel- ows; leaned on the handle of .is sledge, and shook in a deep-chested laugh as he joked with young Dick, his helper, and the others. They yielded him the precedence physical prowess corpmands among the unlet- tered. To the men of neighboring works they boasted of his biceps. They also liked his unassuming ways. Perhaps, too, the prize ring, from which he came, was reflected in a cer- tain halo around his head. Somehow, they never cared to question him about his skill with the gloves. Once Johnnie, by virtue’ of his superior po- sition as foreman and his meager size, dared to probe ever so little. The fellow shook his head, said the ring was rough on a man, and brought his sledge down with bangs that drove even - Johnnie into retreat. When bits of his roaring laughter no longer accented the rhythm of the machines, when his face grew stern, drawn, a hunted look creeping into his eyes, the fight was on. His blows rose and fell in new fierceness: could he have beaten out under them the f | | thirst that raged within, he would have conquered. His creed embraced only one way to meet an enemy—to stand dp to aim in the ring. He shook off the little { Woman who showed a suspicicks de- i sire to go down town with hirz every j evening. He stood his treat as of old, but his tongue wetted his lips unceas- ingly. “It’s like you and I wanting a drink | of water ever so often,” explained the Junior partner to the stenographer, giving the back of her chair a friend- ly shake. “Nothing so bad as a tramp boilermaker. We know, don’t we, little girl?” He strode across the floor and twirled out from the wall the chair beside her desk. “And gay,” leaning confidentially to- ward her—‘say, Thanksgiving’s com- ing, and mince pies, with something fn them that warms the cockles of my heart. Match your birdie out there fly If he tastes those pies.’ The bookkeeper opined that the fel- low ought to keep away altogether from the saloon. That was not Bar’bry's creed. He knew rly one wey—to stand up in the A new turn davelops gathered it on the streets thot g kf ti he in cred to 0 | i not t toc mucl That was spors, the man to stop ft. and Bar'bry ws=s THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL But sometimes, when a lad was be- ing drawn in too far, it was as if he detected unfair play in the combina~ tion of good cheer and light warmth which the saloon pitted against a dingy, fifth-rate room, lonesomeress, and only a lad’s power of resistance. He undertook to ‘restrain young Dick Piney, his helper; to reinforce his faint refusal to that most success- ful “continuous chain” ever devised, “My treat now.” Bar’bry himself re- vived under that more tangible aspect of the fight. One cold, crisp night he arrived late to find, off in a corner of the saloon, the lad a slumpy heap, muttering over and over: “See dem lights im the tubes.” The firm heard afterward how Bar'- bry shook him into partial rousing. The barkeepers, noting his huge, ges- ticulating fists, had not cared to in- terfere when he started down the track toward the boy's lodgings. Dick, white and sick, stumbled along, begged with returning con- sciousness to be allowed to sink down, but held fast to a bottle still nearly full. They know that Bar’bry must have walked him up and down the track until there was no more danger from the heavy Stupor. The boy himself remembered that finally the bottle dropped from his fingers; and he recalled that the man, bending over him in his barren room, turned away with a fierce, “Lord, boy, it’s hell.” The tight-leashed snarl in the last word partially sobered him, and came back to ‘bim in critical hours. As for Bar’bry, they know only that he fled with that cry on his lips wrung in torture by the fumes of liquor with which the boy’s hot breath filled the stuffy little roonf; that he appeared at the saloon with an empty bottle in his hand and a craze for more. They think they know how, retrac- ing his steps, he must have come upon the bottle dropped from the boy's limp hand. There, as he stood alone, in the waste of snow, mocked by the lines of steel that rushed past him in chill indifference, lured by the lights of the saloon up the track, his enemy dealt him a deadly blow for whose insidiousness he had no parry. You have noticed some spot where machines stand motionless and the boards are strewh with saws, chisels, hammers, gloves stiff to the shape of the hands from which they fell when the whistle blew “time up?” You have found, perhaps, that a slender rope still swayed with an echo of their activity? It was so with Bar’bry. He never came back. His wife disappeared in search of him. The firm, Mary's own, understood it as man for man, and challenged not the divine balance; but in the vineyard of Martha they have evolved that curiously virile creed, re- flected in Bar’bry’s ring, which reads “man to man.” Dick rejected the sacrifice. In less than a year he left, saying, “No man is my price. I'll git him, or I'li—" Long after the junior partner stood | { Ray, Ariz—Wayne Dengler lost his which swept Half a mile { of the Gila Valley Railroad and two A store and | seven houses were washed down Min- | eral Creek into the Gila River, and | ! at the grimy window that overlooked the flange-fires and listened to the din of the shop. The pea. of labor was a mechanical orchestra—its high chatter of riveters for the woodwind: the creak and clank of gearing, the | strings; and for the brass, the rumble of crane and blows of sledge. full, humdrum roar one marked un- consciously the part of each machine. The junior partner felt an instine- tive, troubled calling for a note that was lacking—Bar’bry’s deep-chested laugh. “It’s a hard world, little girl, and don’t you wish you had as few years left in which to get knocked out as I have?” ; Out of the silent past a slender cord still quivered, for he was thinking of that lump of sodden and breaking manhood, and wondered if the forces that made his “ring” had been “rough on a man?’ A KINDNESS MADE HAPSBURGS Founder of the Family Was Rewarded With the Crown of Grateful Monk. 3 The origin of the Hapsburgs, the royal house of Austria, is more won- derful than a romance. The founder, so goes the story, was Rudolph of Hapsburg, a yourg Swiss count, poor and obscure. One day while riding in the chase he came to a stream, beside which was a monk, who was In great distress at not being able to cross MISS HELEN SCOTT HAY tiefields of Europe. Miss Hay, who recently resigned as superintendent of the Illinois Training | School for Nurses, is in charge of the 120 nurses organized in America to| help succor the wounded on the bat- BANK DEPOSITS TEST COMING Unclaimed Moneys. Auditor General Will Attempt to Gain Harrisburg, Pa.—People connected with the fiscal department of the state government are much interested in the approaching test of the right in- terest of the auditor general's depart- ment to sue for unclaimed bank de- posits, which has been brought about through the determination of the Dol- lar Savings Bank of Pittsburgh to fight the case through the courts. The trial will bring up the question square- ly for determination and will be fol- lowed with interest. The bank con- tends that the auditor general has no authority to bring the action as was done, and that much of the money claimed was, in reality, drawn from the bank some years ago, before the lapse of 30 years. It is declared that there is no law on the subject which will stand the test and that the statute | conflicts with the constitution of the oe) = oe ee fe i Loans and Investments . 5 United States Bonds. . 5 Banking House . . . Cosy. em Capital Stock . . . . , Surplus Fund . . . . . 5 Undivided Profits . . . Citeulation . . . 4... Deposits, '. . sv. i. rf S. C. Hartley, ¢ W. N. Moser, The Citizens National Bank Meyersdale, Pa. Statement, September 12, 1914 5 (Comptroller’s Call) Resources: 5 Due from Banks and Reserve Agents . Liahili ies: Officers and Directors: S. B. PHILSON, President S. A. KENDALL, Vice Pres., ‘ CLARENCE MOORE, Asst. Cashier W. T. Hoblitzell, . $725,836.75 v oh uw wer 41,000.00 . 29,300.00 114,771.52 61,260.14 $1,008,168.41 eo . o.oo $ 65,000.00 le dee 100,000.00 yelled fo 14.25, 800.02 doe Lil, 765,000.00 «wv. . 752,368.89 $1,008,168.41 R. H. PHILSON, Cashier F. B. Black, H. Bunn Philson Ie EEE EERE EERE EEE EERE RE ARRANGE FOR WINTER TASK SHOULD BE PERFORMED WHILE WEATHER IS WARM. Each Hive Should Be Examined to As- certain If Required Stores Are on Hand—There Is Nothing Bet- ter Than Sealed Honey. (By F. G. HERMAN.) If there is one item above another having great importance in the winter- ing problem, it is the securing of the winter stores near and about the clus- ter of bees in time for them to settle down into that quiescent state so con- ducive to good wintering, prior to the middle of October, in the more north- ern localities. To arrange these stores properly and seal them, requires warm weather hence all will see the fallacy of put- ting off caring for them until cold In the ! | state. | Dauphin county court. Swept by Cloudburst. | life in a cloudburst, | through the main street. bridges were destroyed. creek. Washington, D. General Burleson, in a report amination of reports from the 9,653 ing depositories shows total deposits of $43,444,271 at the close of business last August, The increase month was approximately $4,200,000, which is the largest since the system began operation in January, 1911. 12 Men Buried in Mine Are Doomed. Sale Lake City, Utah.—Twelve min. ers are sealed in and there is little hope of their get- ting out alive. to the steps on whichighey were work- ing. They began digging hard to free themselves when a second -cave-in, carrying thousands of tons of earth and rock, crashed down on top of the first. Three Ships Sunk. The silence of the British authori- over. He told the young count that | he had been summoned to give the last ! sacraments to a dying person, but was | unable to perform that duty. The count i leaped from his horse, helped the monk to the saddle, who crossed the | stream and hurried to his destination. | The next day the monk sent the horse | back, with the warmest thanks. | “God forbid,” said the count, “that I| should ever ride a horse that has car- ried the Savior to a dying man.” and | sent the horse to the monk as 3 gift! to the church. In course of time the monk became chaplain to the prince elector of Mentz. A new emperor was | to be chosen. The monk persuaded his patron to present the name of Count Rudolph to the assembled electors, and the poor count of Hapsburg was astounded one da ) find that he had been chosen to wear the crown of the Holy Roman empire. — ie | | Just One Thihg After Another, | Hub—I've ing and golf not sati ng, smok- tili you're ; what else do yo given up drinki y pl to pl Ase you, wa give up? Wi ‘ell, you might give up $50. | I need a new gowr.-—Boston Evening | I mana. f Transcript. ties regarding naval operations in the mdi was suddenly broken by an- nouncement of a disaster to the British | navy which, according to official in- formation, has suffered the Joss of three armored cruisers, sunk by Ger- man submarines. The victims of this brilliant stroke on the part of the Ger- man fleet are the Cressy, the Aboukir and the Hogue, sister ships. were topedoed. Turks’ Order on Darenelles. Constantinople. — The authorities have issued an order that no vessel can pass the Dardanelies unless a Turkish officer and six Turkish sol- diers are aboard. Locks Cashier In Vault, Gets $1,300. Kansas City, Mo.—Armed with a pistol, but unmasked, a bandit enter ed the People’s State Bank, at Dod son, a suburb, locked Hugh Moore, assistant cashier, in a vault, and es caped in a motor car with $1,300 British Boat Sinks; 22 Lost. Trebizond, Asia Minor.— Twenty-two pers lost their lives by drowning as a result of the sinking of the Brit. ish steamer Belgian King, near Cape Kureli. | It is likely that the case will | be tried during the autumn terms of the houses of the Hercules Mining Company were demolished. Nineteen 60-ton ore cars were hurled into the Large Sums Deposited in Postoffices. C.— Postmaster made public indicates that a preliminary ex- postoffices in operation as postal sav- in that the Centennial- Eureka mine, on the Wasatch division, The roof of the mine caved in and sealed up the entrance All three | weather arrives. To be sure that all have the desired amount of stores Swarming ‘a Hive. there is only one certain way to do. and that is to open the hives and take out each frame. If, after going over a hive and weighing each comb, I find that there is 25 pounds of actual stores, I call that hive or colony all right for win- ter. If less it must be fed the defi- ciency; if more, it can spare some to help another colony which is lacking in the amount. In this way the whole apiary should be gone over. Colonies left on the summer stand require anywhere from 20 to 30 pounds of good food for successful wintering. A little in excess of this will do no harm, but on the contrary will stimu- late the colony in building up faster {in the following spring. | If one has on hand some sealed | combs of honey, a few of them can be | distributed among the light colonies, | but in the absence of these it will be | necessary to feed liquid honey or a { Birup made of sugar and water. Do not think of using anything but the best granulated sugar. When bees can fly all the time, you can ‘safely feed them anything. But when they cannot fly, there is nothing better than sealed honey. When you cannot have that use a sirup of granulated sugar. If the feeding can be attended to while the weather is still warm, the sirup may not be quite so thick, say about 2 pounds of sugar to one pint of water, which will make 3 pounds of sirup. If the feeding is deferred until cool weather has set in, the sirup will, of necessity, have to be a somewhat thicker consistency, for the bees will not be able to evaporate the super- fluous water out of it. In making the sugar-sirup be care- ful not to burn it while boiling. In just fact it need not be boiled at all: pour the boiling water over the sugar and stir until thoroughly dissolved: when cool it is ready to give to the | bees, { mulch to the celery. It is claimed by some beekeepers that if a few tablespoonfuls of extract-| ed honey are added to’ the sugar sirup it will prevent it granulating in thei comb, but there is little danger of| this anyway. If there are weak lots] just unite two or more together, re-i moving the least valuable queen. ' The bees of two lots may be united peaceably by sprinkling them thinly! with sugar sirup flavored with pepper- mint, and then placing the frames with adhering bees alternately in a fresh hive. The stronger the colony and the bees the less is the honey consumed. This appears strange, but it is quite true; a small lot of bees in -a hive containing several combs are restless, with the consequence that they cen- sume honey to raise the temperature lowered by the cool air surrounding them. The food supply may be ample owing to a particularly favorable sea- son after the supers have been re- moved, but even if feeding has te be resorted to, very little time will be needed to perform this part of the work. . : In order to obtain young bees for wintering, a supply of sugar, given at the close of the honey flow, will preb- ably be all that is necessary to com- tinue breeding up to the middle ef! September, when whatever further supply is needed to make the colomy safe for winter can be given in the form of sirup. VETCH IS IMPORTANT cop Its More General Growth Would Ald Materially in Live Stock indus- try—Aiso Improves Soil. (By A. SMITH.) Vetch should occupy an importamt place in the agriculture of those states where it can be raised with success. In four years’ comparisons on ever 800 fields, vetch has consistently made heavier growths and greater yields than ®crimson clover, red clover, or bur clover, although under favorable conditions these .have done well. Vetch is high in protein content, is a good hay, pasture, and soiling crep, and its more general growth would aid in the development of the live stock industry and remove much ef the existing necessity for buying hay. Vetch is used as a cover crop to pre- ‘vent the leaching and washing of seils. Like all legumes, it improves land by Plant of English Vetch. adding nitrogen and organic matter to the soils. As it grows through the winter and spring and may be her vested in time to plant corn or cow- peas on the same land, it should be used in building up impoverished seils and in maintaining the productivity of the land. The vetch crop does met require horse or man labor at amy time when this is needed for the cew- pea crop, except possibly at the har vest time of cowpea hay. Mulch the Celery, Do not delay applying the manure It conserves than any kind er Use three to four re better nt of tillage. inches of manure. 25 from The | Argor Lassi, right were the ( mans and 1 net | rand Secre ‘Was! of tl Presi mal tral | for t GERM. says mand tack] ficial man Fren that War pres for | RUSS! ture San pris _ arti] plie: wes furt cent that Prz Rus bon tres SW BELC bee out A] int whi and are dra ati net VOI rig his 15, Man, Pe Hav; thre have clud quic beer the the bod; four toge tion sian ALL