l cy. || wtp sou iu Raul 1- Sm ogre erm is FN iH eg i - INTERNATIONAL SS ESSON (By E. O. SELLERS, Acting Director of Sunday School Course Moody Bible In- stitute, Chicago.) LESSON FOR FEBRUARY 7 RUTH CHOOSES THE TRUE GOD. LESSON TEXT—Ruth 1:6-18. tire book.) GOLDEN TEXT-—Thy people shall be my people, and thy God my God.—Ruth 8 (Read en- The book of Ruth is a great love story, full of deep spiritual sugges- tiveness. Amid the tales of war, de- ceit, success and failure, this story py most beautifully illustrates another side of the life of the Israelites. The author of the book is supposed to have been the same as the writer of Judges, perhaps Samuel. I. “There Was a Famine in the Land.” This famine drove Elimelech, his wife Naomi and their two sons, Mahlon and Chilion, into the land of Moab, even as Abram before them “went down” into Egypt. The immi- grant sons married in that land, one of them becoming the husband of Ruth. Through this Israelitish al- liance Ruth learned of the true God and the record of this book reveals God to all who turn to him in sincer- ity and truth. This suggests the es- sential missionary character of the Old Testament. After the death of her husband and sons Naomi, hear- ing of returning prosperity in the homeland (1:16), elected to return to |' her own people. Il. “Entreat Me Not to Leave Thee.” . This story puts to silence all of the mother-in-law jokes. When Naomi thought they had gone far enough she sought to dismiss the younger women and expressed to them the tender affection which ex- isted between them. A woman in an eastern land can find rest only in the house of her husband and these young widows stood but poor chance of se- curing husbands among those who hated their race. Moreover we must remember that they were penniless. There seemed to be nothing for them to gain if they proceeded any farther {w.. 12). Orpah reluctantly and tear- fully turned back but Ruth clave to Naomi (v. 14). This illustrates our experience when we have to decide whether to leave friends, home and everything that we may follow Christ or, on the other hand, have to choose the things which are good and refuse to follow the best, (Matt. 10:37; Luke 14:33). : Lo 3, AON hither Thou Goest | Will WL + Naomi Ruth another op- portunity to go back to her people and this time bases her appeal upon the love of Ruth for Orpah (v. 15) The word Ruth means “friendship,” and one of the strongest motives for a loving nature to forsake the Lord , is the love for those that are of the world. Many young men and young women have had such loves but they usually result in making shipwreck of faith. ‘Read II Cor. 5:14, 15; Rom. 10:37. This test caused Ruth to count fully the cost (Luke 14:25-33). No more beautiful nor immortal words can be found in all literature than Ruth’s reply (vv. 16, 17). Ruth’s words are still sung as best expressing our song of life devotion. They have fur- nished inspiration for countless lives, sermons and stories, and for some of ; the earth’s greatest musicians as well. They most wonderfully illustrate our attitude towards him “whom not hav- ing seen ye love” (I Peter 1:8). IV. The Sequel. At Bethlehem Ruth had no other thought than to cling to her mother-inlaw, even in poverty and a life of lowly service. She did her menial duties faithfully, and displayed more of the real hero- ism of faith than that shown in the daring exploits recorded in the other history (Judges) of her day. The truest hero is not the reckless partici- pant in Europe’s battlefields, nor is he found in the mad struggle for commer- cial supremacy, but more often in the self-sacrificing acts of tender women and in the common round of life's duties. Ruth in a humble hut with Naomi was better off and better satis- fied than to have lived in the finest palace in Moab (Phil. 1:23). Through all of this love and devotion Ruth was being fitted for a larger sphere of influence in which she was enabled to give to Naomi the happiest life possi- ble to her. Not once is Ruth’s beauty suggested but she had the more at- tractive attributes of goodness, kind- ness and courtesy She may have had personal beauty but her character far outshone the physical This lesson is a suggestive one for Decision day in our Sunday schools. Give all an opportunity to choose and to follow even as Ruth did. For the Jittle folks tell the story simply “as 3 tv a little child” Emphasize the beauty and value of lovingly serving our elders. Naomi is no less a heroine. Her name means “pleasant, winsome.” True. she suggested a new name Mara, “bitterness,” but her sorrow was not for herself but for others,— “it grieveth me much for your sakes” (1:13). Naomi made the religion and worship of Jehovah so attractive as to win a most notable convert. It is our privilege to make religion attrac- tive. This gift cannot be bought nor Song and Story ...... VIGIL. I have waited with my mother down the dim, uncertain ages; I have waited in the cave and hut and tower; From the first dawn’s nameless fear To the death list posted here I have slain my soul in waiting, hour by hour. Under pelt of beast, trap-taken, or the leaves by chang winds blown, Under tonic, peasant hemp or cloth of gold, : By the fire in low flame burning, I have crouched in silence, yearning And, a8 now, my helpless heart has waited cold. Ancient is the part I play—like a cloak of heavy mourning I take it, bending from a million wo- men’s hands They have worn it, they have torn it Agonizing they have borne it, And its folds are dark with heartbreak of all lands. Oh, the woman figure, standing with the face towards the horizon; Oh, the hand above ‘the eyes to ease the strain! Gaunt and barren, stricken, lonely, With empty memories only, We have stood, the dry-eyed sentries of our pain. Nothing can we do to stop them, noth- ing can we say to hold them; Taking sunlight, laughter, youth, they swing away, And the things they strange, House and stret and voices change, But the women and thé burdened hours stay. leave grow I have waited with my mother down the dim uncertain ages; : While my children die, I pray the cen- turies through, And I wonder in my fear At the death list posted here If God has left the women waiting too! —Hortense Flexner. In honor of a visit paid to his plant by the governor of the state an auto- mobile manufacturer once had a com- plete car assembled in something like seven minutes. : road Some weeks after this feat was her- alded in the daily papers; the 'phoné at the factory rang vigorously. : “Is it true that you assembled a car in seven miutes at your factory?” the voice asked, Md : “Yes,” came. the reply. {Why 2" “Oh, nothing, ”said the calm inquirer, “only I've got the car.” : His Own Press Agent. he walked into the local newspaper office and handed the editor a scrap of dirty paper. On it was a brief ac- count of a juvenile football match which had taken place that afternoon. Glancing at the report, the editorial j eye caught the words: “Jones kicked 'a magnificent goal, the finest ever seen on the ground.” “Wos is Jones?” asked the editor. The youngster turned the thumb of his right hand proudly to his breast. “I'm Jones,” he said calmly. During the flood of 1913, Lima re- ceived her share of the overflowing waters of the Ohio. The streets turned into rivers. A dripping man, who apparently was suffering from an oversupply of wet goods inside as well as out, staggered into a blacksmith shop. With a thick voice he asked for a monkey wrench, and getting one, waded back into the street. < As he did not return immediately the blacksmith went to the door to look for him. He was standing in three feet of water, working over a hydrant. “Say; what are you doing there?” called the owner of the wrench. The drunk paused, braced himself a- with true civic pride: got to shut this water off. We ean’t waste it like this.” Why he Kept Boarders.” The man from the city was inspec- ting the country boarding house with the idea of spending the summer there with his family. “Of course,” he be- gan, “you have plenty of pure milk and the best of butter in the state on your table.” “No.” “Fresh beef and lamb every day, killed on the premises?” “I hain’t “Allkinds of vegetables in abund- ance, large orchard of choice fruits; cultivated berries picked every morn- ing?” “Say, mister! If I had all of them things on this farm I wouldn’t have to take boarders.” Cu..dren Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA SOMERSET COUNTY . COURT RECORDS. Conveyances of real estate by trus- tees, executors and administrators, in the Orphans’ court of Somerset county: : Joseph Penrod and John Henry Pen- rod, executors of the estate of Josiah HAPPENINGS THROUGHOUT Items of Interest Culled from Our Exchanges. A civil service examination will be conducted in the Windber postoffice | sold a house and lot in Boswell bor fOr a clerk carrier Feb. 13th, with a {ough to Frank C. Elden for $1,000. view of is 2 need of = additional Irvin G. Walker and Wm. G. Berk- Carrier for the local service. ey administrators of the estate of M. J. Bartol of Beaverdale has Samuel A. Berkey, Stonycreek town- boon pray a Patent telephone Se ship,sold a 13l-acre farm in Stony- tachment for speeding trains. r. creek township to Irvin G. Meyers for A Bartol’s device makes it possible to $1,505. : have telephone service on coaches of Louis C. Colburn, trustee of the és. fast trains. tate of Ezra J. Weigley, Somerset! IB a year of slump in the mining borough, sold a 50-acre farm in Som- iRdustry, the Lochrie interests in erset township to Chas. W. Walker this county made the tremendous re- for $2675. : | cord of an increase of 183 per cent in Henry L. Brant, executor of the es- : ©0281 output. It is doubtful if any other tate of Jacob L. Brant, of Brothers mining concern of its size in the coun- valley twp., sold a 99-acre farm in that (TY bas made a record anything like township to Harry W. Brant for $5800 i eta "he. 3 J. Wesley Barkley, administrator of rist, a wealthy Jenner the estate of Wm. Bearl, Jefferson township farmer, has instituted par- twp., sold a ten-acre farm in Jefferson i ange Spanst Daniel B. twp. to Edith Baker for $600. » the well known coal op- Harvey Custer and Samuel Custer, erator, concerning a tract of eight a- administrators of the estate of Mary o Jem) Wiis in Jenner and Que- A. Saylor, Allegheny township, sold Mahoning townships. Crist claims a an 80-acre farm in that township to Au interest in the land. Lewis J. Eskin for $1800. on 0, a miner employed by Stephen McClintock, administrator Ye Ses Level Coa) id Company of the estate of Levi McClintock, Ad- oarding at the Somerset House dison twp, sold three tracts of land in Paint borough, has returend to his aggregating 226. acres, in Addison hotel from Philadelphia, where he had township to James McClintock for bis rleht bil Joker out at the Wills $1,925. ye an ar hosptal. The eye was Matilda Burow, administrator of the Pierced about a month ago hy a splin- estate of Christopher Burow, Addison , te of rock folowing a blast. township, sold a house in Listonburg | to AnnieShow for $1,170. Black township, consisting of several Cyrus W. Truxal, administratorof lots and a two-story frame dwelling of the estate of Mary A. Beachley, Wa8 sold by Administrator J. R. Haines Meyersdale, sold 'a house and lot in Ist i gd afternoon to Isaac Kel- Meyersdale to Urias William Beach- 6%» Of the same townshp for $825. ley for $3,050. | Mr. Keller and his family, it is under- Ella M. Trimpey, executrix of the es- | stood, will shortly remove to their new tate of W. H. Trimpey, Upper Turk- residence in the suburban part of eyfoot township, sold a 135-acre farm South Hockwood. in Upper Turkeyfoot twp to Peter A. Kreger for $8,500. J Robert M. Luther, trustee of the es- Harrison, is greatly distressed over an tate of John A. Luther, Scalp Level, 2ccident to his four-year old son last sold a ten-acre farm in Paint twp. to Week, which permanently crippled the Robt. L. Wissinger for $1,200. | boy. Young Holberson had been visi- Samuel G. Walker, administrator of ing his grandparents at Houtzdale and the estate of Albert Hillegas, Alleghe- While at play about a corn cutter, his ny township sold a 409 acre farm to’ d was severed. and another form of 122 acres in Al- .WA8 mentioned in this paper, died at THE COUNTY. | gainst the current, and called back | “Somebody’s | $950. PROTECT SHEEP BY KILLING ‘WORTHLESS DOGS. Dog laws that will impose such, heavy taxes that worthless dogs will - | be disposed of, is the salvation of thes sheep industry, according to W. 4 Coffey, of the University of Illinois, a sheep raising expert, who addressed livestock breeders during Farmers’ ent. ‘| Week at The Pennsylvania State Col- The small boy was dressed in: foot: ball costume, and, with a’ jaunty air, lege. He sounded a note of warning, saying that if the business of sheep raising is éver to attain the promi- nence it deserves, the wool bearing animals will have to be better protect- ed. He advocates police supervision of dogs. " Mr. Coffey urged the organization of ! sheep and wool clubs to augment the interest in the industry, saying that instead of there being 34 sheep to | each farm, there should be fifty to seventy-five. He could see no reason why at least 75 per cent of Pennsyl- vania farms should not have sheep. “Flocks” he said, “should become the rule rather than the exception and ! the farm flocks should be larger than ' at present.”He urged co-operation a- |! mong the sheep owners, advising that flocks be similar in breeding and that ' methods of caring for sheep and mar- keting be the same throughout £ community. CASES FOR FEBRUARY cduRrT. Among the cases recently docketed for trial at the February term of court are the following: Charles Saylor and Andrew Saylor larceny of two cans of lard on infor- mation of John Houpt. > William Day, larceny of pork and shoulders, which he is alleged to have hidden in a woodpile near Acosta, on information of Mary Warznick. Ray Madden, desertion of his wife and four children on information of Mrs. Jennie Madden. Frank G. Larne, slander and abuse, on information of his wife. The couple : reside in Elk Lick. The prosecutrix a- vers that her husband is jealous of her, and while in those fits he calls her vile names and charges her with infidelity. News From the Front. He had waited thirty minutes for a slow waiter to bring his dinner. “Now”, he said to the waiter. “can you bring some cheese and some cof- fee?” “Yes, sir, in a minute, sir.” “And,” continued the diner, “while you are away you might send me a postal every now and then.” legheny twp to Robt. McLuckie for Confluence from the effects of a dose : - i of arsenic takeen in mistake for salts two years ago. He failed to find rel- ief from the terrible effects of the poisoning although he had consulted doctors and specialists in many cities At the time of takng the deadly stuff by_mistelte he was proprietor of a lo- Caroline Strizak, a daughter of John Strizak, formerly of Windber, | The estate of Annie E. Sterner in | Samuel Holberson, an employe of the . i Quemahoning Creek Coal Company at | Geo. E. and C. A. Schiller for $5200 | = William Coughenour whose death ' was brutally asaulted in her father’s | jewelry store in Twin Rocks recently by Stanko Bowich, a Croatian. Bowich was captured after a posse had chas- ed him five miles and was utterly ex- hausted. He had disposed of money and jewelry taken from the safe in the store, but two watches were found in his pockets which were identified by Mr. Strizak. Miss Strizik was fell- | ed to the floor and feigned death. State Highway Commissioner Ed- ward M. Bigelow has filed a bill in equity in the Somerset County Court asking for a mandatory injunction re- quiring the Quemahoning Branch R. R. Company, a subsidiary of the B. & 0. to remove its tracks at a crossing ov- er a state road near the new mining town of ecker, in the Jenners field. It is alleged that the railroad illegally. constructed the crossing in that it neglected to’ get a permit from the Public Service Commission. RULE ON CREDITORS ET AL In re assigned estate of S. D. Liven- good— January 12, 1915, a petition was presented to the Court of Common Pleas of Somerset County, by Chas. H. Ealy, Assignee of the said S. D. Livengood, praying the court for leave to grant an option upon all the right, title, interest, claim and demand of the said S. D. Livengood of,in and to the coal and fireclay underlying certain tracts of land situate in Som- erset and Stonycreek townships, Som- erset County, Pennsylvania, contain- ing in the aggregate eleven hundred (1100) acres, more or less, and known as the “Adams Mines” property. Said option being to purchase the interest of the said S. D. Livengood of, in and to the said described property at and for thesum of Twenty Thousand, ($20,000) Dollars, less charges and ex- penses, as set forth in said petition in the sum of $1,000 and to extend for a period of sixty (60) days. Whereupon the Court made the following order: “January 12, 1915, presented and rule awarded to show cause why the opton should not be given as prayed for,—the rule to be serv- ed by publication in two newspa- pers in the county. Returnable Jan. 25, 1915 at 10 a. m. BY THE COURT, W. H. Rupple, P. J. Iron Ore. Next to the United States, German; and France are the largest produc in the world. of iron Extracts from the records, SEAL] Certified this 12th day of ; January, 1915. A. J. H Prothonotary. THE GOD’ OF GAIN. We move by some strange impulse on our way; Some secret motive rules the simple course, The meagre compensation, meet for toil, May be illusive when the life is spent. Our native instinct feeds upon the vague Uncertain future, that may seem so real; With grim tenacity we cling to hope And thus survive the ravages of years. Enslaved in bondage to the gods of gain, Ambition leads her servants ever on, - Forbidding rest or pacive thoughts to soothe Their noble spirits in a sense of peace. The glory of the conquest is the charm Inspiring man to sacrifice and toil. 'T 'were just to strive and greater to succeed But not destroy the priceless gift of God. The cost of toil, the human sacrifice, The fierce relentless grind of mortal man Extort their toll at last and leave him prone Te frailties in the waning years of life. What profits man to gain his end and leave A gloomy record to the deathless past? What gain is there acquired in wealth or fame What compensation justifies the cost, When lives are steeped in such incessant toil And man creates the penalty of fate? A royal freedom is his heritage, Dominion over all the creatures here; The soil submits to his controlling hand And yields its fruitage for his recompense, And man is master in the form of God. His power and freedom should he maintain Nor yield in bondage to the god of gain, But live to feel the deepest sense of joy, And, though ennobling, be the fruit of toil, Toil on but pause to drink the sweets of life. Howard Phillips. COUGH AND COLD REMEDIES. You should be very careful with coughs and colds You can cure them with our cough and cold remedies. -- -:- We Handle Only Standard Makes. F. B. THOMAS, Leading Druggist, Both Phones MEYERSDALE, PA. —r HARTLEY & BALDWIN'S Red Letter Sale Started Out Larger than Ever, Giving Tremendous Bargains, Come In Early. Hartley & Baldwin. Every Farmer with two or more cows needs a A Del LAVAL, THE BEST SEPARATOR MADE, J T. YO D £ R, Office 223 Levergood St., Johnstown, - SEE Penn’a. JOSEPH L. TRESSLER Funeral Director and Embalmer Meyersdale, Somerset Co., Penn’a Residence: 3090 North Street Office: Economy Phone 229 Center Street Both Phones. TRIS COUPON Will entitle the person presenting it at THE HARTLEY CLUTTON STORE, MEYERSDALE, PA. to 100 Votes in Piano Player Contest. By THE COMMERCIAL. Void After February 10rd, 1915. rev Note—A new or an old subseription to The paid at this office entitles to 15,000 Vot ——L we TT ER