ipe de- fechanic al Book, h bound a ecom- es and of the country. S many rt Meth- ous Tab- invalua- ally the ant is a vhich all 1, serib- his . The a 1 for ers, ail 10 0 all. “ablets. ghly cleans- ating effect: and ; bowels. iping and no Stout peo- se relief and r'ywhere. ad rice Qlarke rector le same place to all calls : Phones. roat, use Dr. Two sizes, 25 1 drug stores. © Pretzel’s ’, on sale ab 8d at F. A. progressive #0 rest, nT rribly y Trouble ; all day—no eadache, back- nts, weariness, trouble. Fo- (nick relief for trengthen the he aches, pain fe worth living dney Pills and ou feel. rerywhere. ad: TRY assured by Regulator. It tock, increases higger hatches wealthy chicks. revention’” say- Tablets of Pow- ventative and back guarantee ad YRIA Yeas TZ n gry HERS DORIA ¥ 138 Bs i CATTLE DISEASE MENACE TO MAN. The prevalence a6e of the foot and mouth disease as reported among cat- tle in various sections of Pennsylyania may affect the dairy herds. Should ' these become infected there is a dan- ger of the transference of the disease from infected animals to human be- ings through the milk. As the records in this State show this possibility Dr. Samuel G. Dixzen, Oommissioner of Health, has issned the following warning: “The foot and mouth disease which is known to the medical world as aphthous fever is highly infectious in cattle and manifests itself by a rising temperature and the appearance of blisters on the mucus membrane of the month, tongne and nose. The blisters are followed by ulcers; di- gestive disturbances are also common. Death seldom occurs in human be- ings. As a matter of protection against the possibility of infection the use of raw milk may be discontinued. A safety factor is to pasteurize the milk. Following is a simple method whieh may be used. “Place a saucer in a pail seven or eight inches in diameter and about the same height. Set the milk bot- tle on this. from the milk bottle. Pour in the pail a sufficient quantity of luke warm water to half cover the bottle. Watch the water and as soon as it has boiled twenty minutes, remove the bottle of milk and allow it'to cool slowly. Never place vhe milk im- mediately upom the ice or the bottle may break. Seal the bottle with a new cap, a supply of which you can obtain from the milk man, and place the milk bottle where it will remain at a temperature of 40 to 50 degrees temperature. It must be kept cool and clean if it 1s to remain safe for use. ‘Jf the milk supply is not received bottled secure a bottle of the same size and cork after sterilization.” Hundreds of imitations have come and gone since Foley’s Honey and Tar Oompound began—40 years ago— to loosen the grip of coughs and colds. You can not get a substitute to do for you what Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound will Jo—for coughs, colds, croup, bronchial af- fections, lagrippe coughs, and tick- ling throat. Buy it of your druggist and feel safe. Sold by all Dealers Everywhere. ad i —— natin The day of harsh physics is gone People want mild, easy laxatives Doan’s Regulets have satisfied thous-: 25¢ at all drug stores. dd remem apse ands. IN RE-ASSIGNED LIN RAE COURTOF COM- ERSen on ESTATE OF | ESET OUNLY 7. S.D.LIVENGOOD ) RULE ON CREDITORS. Charles H. Ealy. assignee of the sald S. D. Livengood to succeed Harvey M. Berkley, former assignee, having presented a petition to the Court of Common Pleas of Somerset County, setting forth that the Title, Guaranty & Surety Company of Scranton, Pennsylvania, the bonding Company which is surety upon the bond of the said Harvey M. Berkley. through its attorneys and agent had represented to petitioner that it was willing to pay the sum of Twenty Thousand ($20,000) Dollars in full payment and settlement of all claims and suits brought or which may be brought against 1t by or in behalf of creditors of the said S. D. Liven- good, by reason of the defalcations of the said Harvey M. Berkley, and having prayed the Court for a rule upon creditors: generally to show cause !why settlement should not be made upon the said basis the Court made the tolléwing order: “Lact. 26, 1914, presented at Chambers and | to show cause awarded. Notice to be rule p given in three of the County newspapers for | three weeks. Returnable Nov. 23, at 10 a. m. By the Court, Wu. H. RuppEL, P. J." Certified this 26th day of Bod 1014 AARON F, HEIPLE, Prothonotary. oct. 294ts.ad mn m—— pr ——————— Auditor's, Notice. in re Estate of. Levi McClintock, deceased, in the Orphans Court of Somerset County, Pennsylvania, No. 138 — — 1913. Notice is hereby given that the unl dersigned, James B. Landis, has been appoint ed Auditor by the Court. to distribute ths Tund remaining in the hands of the Administrator. to'those entitled thereto, and that the said au ditor will sit for the purpose of his said appoint | ment in the library room in the Court House, Somerset, Penn’a., on Friday the 30th of Oct= ober A. D, 11914, at1 o’clock P. M. when and where all parties in interest ars required to appear and present their claims before said Aditor, or be debarred from sharing in the fund% JAKES B. LANDIS, Auditor, 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE TRADE MaRks DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &c. n ndin a sketch and description may query ascertain ¥ our opinion ia om whether an nyention is probably paten tions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents sent free. est a, SEeuC ancy for securing ihg pate Patents taken 1 unn 0. ive special notice, without charge, in the Scioniiic Fimerican A handsomely illustrated weekly. 3 argest culation of any jclenting ic do urnal. Terms, i year; four months, § d by all ne H. "MUNN & Co. s618roscnay. NEW York Branch Office, 625 F St. Washington; D. C. Remove the paper cap| Suijiss! Enroute one car eighteen inch Eureka Red Qedar Shingles, which we ex- pect soon. Our price right out of the car aud for cash will be $4.25 per thousand. Get yovr orders early. ad MEYERSDALE PLANING MILL. er—————————— For, SALE.—A good Palmer-Weber Co., Piano at a bargain. Apply, to d The Commercial. ” al cere epee For SALE—A four year old thor- ough bred Shropshire Ram. 0z1as WEIMER, nov.12-3tad Sand Patch, Pa.,R D.1 re ng ——— tes EsTRAY—A full blooded foxhound, medium size, light on legs, head and belly, black on the back, ear slit, three small marks on ear, disappear- ed from near Allegheny Mines on October 15th. Will pay a reward of $5.00 for the return of the dog or for information whereby I can get pos- ‘session again. ' ELIAS JUDY, nov.12-3t-ad Garrett, Pa. R. D. 1. ane Good girl wsafed for general house work, at A. PHILLIPS, : aby Salisbury St. ee eee Dr. Hesse’s Poultry Panacea and Stock Tonie, are guaranteed to make Eggs and Milk, sold ab ad Holzshu & Weimer. Foley's Honey and Tar Compound for Croup. Croup scares you. The loud hoarse croupy cough, choking and gasping for breath, labored breathing, call for immediate relief. The very first ‘dose of Foley’s’ Honey and Tar Com- pound will master the croup. It cuts the thick mucus, clears away the phlegm and opens up and eases the air passages. Sold by allj Dealers Everywhere. ad eee etme APHORISMS ON RELIGION. Persecution is‘a bad and indi- rect way to plant religion.—Sir Thomas Browne. The body of all true religion consists, to be sure, in obedi- ence to the will of the sovereign of the world, in a confidence in his declarations and in imita- tion of his perfestions, — Burke. Religion. the pious worship of God.—Clicero. Men will wrangle for religion, write for it: fight for it, die for it; anything but—live for it.— C. C. Colton. Piety, like wisdom, consists in the discovery of the rules under which we are actually placed and in faithfully obeying them. —Froude. TO WOMAN. Backward, turn backward, dear __. ones, in your flight; Make yourself girl again just for ‘tonight; Drop the sex question, suffra- gette, sport; Blow us one kiss of the old tash- ioned sort. -—Life. SKY PRAISES. Not golden sky, which was the doubly blessed symbol of ad- vancing day and of approaching rest.—George Eliot. The starry cope of heaven.— Milton. ! The sky domed above us, with its heavenly frescoes, painted by the thought of the Great Artist.—Allan Throckmorton. - Sometimes gentle, sometimes capricious, sometimes awful; never the same for two mo- . ments together; almost human "in its passions, almost spiritual { in its tenderness, almost divine in its infinity, its appeal to what is immortal in us is as distinct _ as its ministry of chastisement or of blessing to what is mortal is essential.—Ruskin. Flies’ Eggs. Eggs of flies are so small that you must use a microscope in order to see their real peculiarities. Each female fly lays on the average of 150 eggs. For her cradle she selects a heap of garbage or refuse. The eggs hatch into minute maggots. In five days the maggots turn into little chrysalids, or pupae, shaped like miniature beans. Within another five days these give birth to flies, which develop with amazing rapidity into adult insects, and then the mischief begins. Telling a Secret. “No woman can keep a secret,” says any woman's husband. And any man’s wife, you may be sure, has remarked at one time or an- other and perhaps ms any times: “Of 1.1) es! Shingle; OVER A MILLION AND A HALF WOMEN WORX AS FARM HANDS IN THE UNITED STATES. By Peter Radford Lecturer National Farmers’ Union. Qur government never faced so tre- mendous a problem as that now lying dormant at the doors of congress and the legislatures, and which, when aroused, will shake this nation from center to circumference, and make civilization hide its face in shame. That problem is—women in the field. The last federal census reports show we now have 1,514,000 women working in the field, most of them south of the Mason and Dixon line. There were approximately a million negro slaves working in the fields when liberated. by the emancipation proclamation. We have freed our slaves and our women have taken their places in borslage. We have broken the shackles off the negroes and welded them upon our daughters. The Chaln-Gang of Civilization. A million women in bondage in the southern fields form the chain-gang of civilization — the industrial tragedy of the age. There is no overseer quite go cruel as that of unrestrained greed, no whip that stings like the lash of suborned destiny, and no auctioneer’s block quite so revolting as that of or- ganized avarice. The president of the United States was recently lauded by the press, and very properly so, for suggesting medi- ation between the engineers and rail- road managers in adjusting their schedule of time and pay. The engi- neers threatened to strike if their wages were not increased from ap- proximately ten to eleven dollars per day and service reduced from ten to eight hours and a similar readjust- ment of the overtime schedule. Our women are working in the field, many of them barefooted, for less than 50 cents per day, and their schedule is the rising sun and the. evening star, and after the day’s work is over they milk the cows, slop the hogs and rock the baby to sleep. Is anyone mediat- ing over their problems, and to whom shall they threaten a strike? Congress has listened approvingly to those who toil at the forge and be- hind the counter, and many of our statesmen have smiled at the threats and have fanned the flame of unrest among industrial laborers. But wom- en are as surely the’ final victims of industrial warfare as they are the burden-bearers in the war between na- tions, and those who arbitrate and mediate the differences between capi- tal and labor should not forget that | when the expenses of any industry are unnecessarily increased, society foots the bill by drafting a new consignment of women from the home to the field. Pinch no Crumb From Women’s Crust of Bread. No financial award can be made without someone footing the bill, and we commend to those who accept the responsibility of the distribution of in- dustrial justice, the still small voice of the woman in the field as she pleads 1 for mercy, and we beg that they pinch no crumb from her crust of bread or put another patch upon her ragged garments. : : "We beg that they listen to the scream of horror from the eagle on every American dollar that is wrung from the brow of toiling women and hear the Goddess of Justice hiss at a verdict that increases the want of . woman to satisfy the greed of man. ‘The women behind the counter and in the factory cry aloud for sympathy and the press thunders out in their defense and the pulpit pleads for mercy, but how about the woman ‘in the field? Will not these powerful exponents of human rights turn their talent, energies and influence to her relief? Will the Goddess of Liberty enthroned at Washington hold the cal- loused hand and soothe the feverish brow of her sex who sows and reaps the nation’s harvest or will she permit the male of the species to shove’ women—weak and weary—from the bread-line of industry to the back al- leys of poverty? Women and Children First. The census enumerators tell us that of the 1,514,000 women who work in the flelds as farm hands 409,000 are six- teen years of age and under. What is the final destiny of a nation whose fu- ture mothers spend their girlhood days behind the plow, pitching’ hay and hauling manure, and what is to become of womanly culture and refinement that grace the home, charm society and enthuse man to leap to glory in noble achievements if our daughters are raised in the society of the ox and the companionship of the plow? In that strata between the ages of sixteen and forty-five are 950,000 wom- en working as farm hands and many ‘of them with suckling babes tug- ging at their breasts, as drenched in perspiration, they wield the scythe and guide tha plow. What is to be- come of that'.nation where poverty breaks the crowns of the queens of the home; despair hurls a mother’s love from its throne and hunger drives innocent children from the schoolroom to the hoe? The census bureau shows that 155,- 000 of these women are forty-five years of age and over. There is no than ed more pitiful sight in civilization | beggars and said oman Eo — " a Sime whiancs Lue i nen it should give them a c¢ n and their oniy friend is he vho t > bread with ("ome unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden and 1 will give you rest Oh, America! The land of the free and the home of the brave, thé world’s custodian of chivalry, the champion of human rights and the de- fender of the oppressed—shall we per- mit our maidens fair to be torn from of destiny and chained to the plow? Shall we permit our faithful wives, whom we covenanted with God to cher- ish and protect, to be hurled from the home to the harvest field, and our mothers dear to be driven from the old arm chair to the cotton patch? In rescuing our citizens from the forces of civilization, can we not apply to our fair Dixieland the rule of the sea—‘“women and children first?” There must be a readjustment of the wage scale of industry so that the women can be taken from the field or given a reasonable wage for her serv- ices. Perhaps the issue has never been fairly raised, but the Farmers’ Union, with a membership of ten million, puts its organized forces squarely behind the issue and we now enter upon the docket of civilization the case of “The Woman in the Field” and demand an immediate trial. RAILROADS APPEAL TO PRESIDENT The Common Carriers Ask for Re- lief — President Wilson Directs Attention of Public to Their Needs. The committee of railroad execu- tives, headed by Mr. Frank Trumbull, representing thirty-five of the leading railroad systems of the nation, recent- ly presented to President Wilson a, memorandum briefly reviewing the dif- ficulties now confronting the railroads of the country and asking for the co- operation of the governmental authori- ties and the public in supporting rail- road credits and recognizing an emer- gency which requires that the rail- roads be given additional revenues, The memorandum recites that the European war has resulted in general depression of business on the Ameri- can continent and in the dislocation of credits at home and abroad. With revenues decreasing and interest rates increasing the transportation systems of the country face a most serious crisis and the memorandum is a strong presentation of the candle burning ‘at both ends and the perils +hat must ultimately attend such a conflagration when the flames meet is apparent to all. In their general discussion the railroad representa- tives say in part: “By reason of leg- islation and regulation by the federal acting independently of each other, as well as through the action of a strong public opinion, railroad expenses in recent years have vastly increased. No criticism is here made of the gen- eral theory of governmental regula- tion, but on the other hand, no in- genuity can relieve the carriers of ex- venses created thereby.” President Wilson, in transmitting the memorandum of the railroad izes it as “a lucid statement of plain truth.” the emergency as extraordinaty, con- tinging, said in part: “You ask me to call the attention of the country to the imperative need that railway credits be sustained and the railroads helped in every possible way, whether by private co-operative effort or by the action, wherever feasible of governmental agencies, and I am glad to do so because I think the need very real.” The conference was certainly a fortunate one for the nation and the president is to be congratulated for opening the gate to a new world of effort in which everyone may co-oper- ate. There are many important, prob- lems in our complex civilization that will yield to co-operation which will not lend themselves to arbitrary ruls ings of commissions and financing railroads is one of them. The man with the money is a factor that can- not be eliminated from any business transaction and the public is an inter- ested party that should always be con- sulted and happily the president has invited all to participate in the solu- tion of our railroad problems. Girls Love Each Other So. Two girls fighting on a street corner this evening. It was an uncomely sight and, thank fortune, an unusual one. Passersby were so amazed that they stopped a few seconds, just as the policemen took the belligerents, to in- quire the cause of the row. An el derly woman who sold papers at the corner supplied the information. “It was all over nothing, like it always is,” said she. “Them girls is good friends, and all in the world that started the scrap it was whén one, to josl the other, said: ‘Excuse me, Madge, is that your hair you got on?” Then they went at. it. di’ think of ’em?” Bacgarat. Baccarat, the little town in the de- partment of Meurthe and arrondisse- ently no connection with “Baccarat, Bad 1a uck and Bankruptcy,” though it Is r how it acquir sed its name. I'l , was im- > it is sai hv tho the hearthstone by the ruthless hand | government and the forty-eight states presidents to the public, character- | The president recognizing | ‘What . ment of Luneville, France, has appar- ] a fd = ms NN ERR = The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his per= er sonal supervision since its infancy. % Allow ne one to deceive you in this. All Counterieits, Imitations and ¢¢ Just-as-good ’>’ are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of 5 : Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Ci, Pare= goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine mor other Narcotic . substance. Its age is its guarantee. Ii destroys Worms: and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Piarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. op The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALways Bears the Signature of NNR #4 KNNNNY & In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought E sure your plumbing has real worth. Just think, if your home were remodeled with “Standard” plumbing fixtures, how much nicer it would be, more comfortable, more convenient and in value increased above the cost of the remodeling. May we show you illustrations * in color of bathrooms? i Baer & uum ‘The oil that gives the steady, bright, white light. ‘Triple refined 3 ‘from Pennsylvania § Crude Oil. Costs little 222) WAVERLY OIL. WORKS CO. Gasolines, Min a, 1 Lab 5 an ricants, Parafine NS FREE 8% Waverly Products Sold by BITTNER MACHINE WORKS -:- D. H. WEINEL -:- P, J. COVER & $0¥—Noyersdale JOSEPH L. TRESSLER | 4 Funeral Director and Embalmer Moversdale, Somerset Co., Penn’a Office: 7 72 hs about oil Residence: 309 North Street Economy Phone, 220 Center Street Both Phones. Start Your Holiday Buying Today ou ae hundreds of useful gifts that you can buy for men at a man’s store; things that men and young men use and would be glad to have any day in the year. Here are many nice little necessities and right now our stocks are unusually complete. Better make your choice while the buying is best. Should sizes be incorrect or gifts du- plicated, we'll be glad to make things right—that’s a part of our service. Plentiful stocks of HART, SCHAFFNER & MARX clothes. Striking things in suits and over- coats; full lines of shirts, neckwear, hosiery;—every- thing for a man. 4 Make Him a Useful Christmas. HARTL EY & BALDW » Schafifin & Marx Clothes LS