| J | +r. accomplishments nor of the special - | 9 INTERNATIONAL SUNDAYS (ilooL LESSON (By E. O. SELLERS, Acting Director of Sund~v School Course Moody Bible In- stitr “hicago.) rn LESSON FOR FEBRUARY 14 | SAMUEL CALLED TO PROPHET. BE A LESSON TEXT-—I Samuel 3:1-13, 19, 20. GOLDEN TEXT-Speak, Jehovah: for thy servant heareth.—I Samuel 339. R. V. Samuel was the last judge and the first of the order of prophets. His name means “asked of God,” and he was dedicated to God (1:11) as a Naz arite. In fulfillment of his mother's vow he was brought to the temple when he was a young child (1:24), Jo- sephus says, at twelve years of age. Hannah's song of rejoicing (2:1-10) is the expression of a great soul and a choice piece of literature. Samuel had the advantage of being well born, but after studying Eli’s household we are not so confident as to the environ- ment amid which he was placed. I. Samuel’s Vision, vv. 1-10. The young child entered heartily into the temple worship and duties as directed by the aged priest, Eli. This man was not faithful in giving the people the word of God. “It was rare” (margin) and the result was that “there was no frequent vision” (R. V.). The word is also “precious” (v. 1; Ps. 19:9, 10), though when it is as common as it is in this land men frequently set but little store by it. God will judge men for such laxity even as he judged Israel (Amos 8:46, 11, 12). A vision is a knowledge of a need and of the resources at our command. Eli and his sons had no vision and a people lacking in this direction perish (Prov. 29:18). Jehovah is about to make known to Israel his will ard in so do- ing he passes over this indulgent father and chooses the child Samuel. Teach- ableness and obedience are the chief characteristics of childhood and these traits count for more with God than does age or experience (Matt. 11:25, I Tim. 4:12, Matt. 21:6). Samuel had not acquired the conceit of youth, he was faithful to his duties, respectful to his elders and did not boast of his elation which came to him. Sam- Rel fra in the holy place of the “sa- c ent” near Eli, for the great temple was not yet built. As such he is a type for the Christian (Ps. 27:4). It Vas there that the Lord revealed himself to him (John 1:14 R. V. mar gin), One of Samuel's duties as the special attendant of Ell was to open the house of God every morning, also to tend the sacred lamp which burned front evening to morning (Ex.'27:20, 21). As he attended to these duties God made himself known to Samuel v. ." frequently calls men and they are not at home but have gone into the far country. God as ev dev: ‘but 188 not : Samuel wW out er w him, trodeiv a dirgot did not yet know e Trev: revelation, hénce he Jehovah.” Thinking at once priest, Samuel ran to receive orders or to render service. Had he disre- garded the voice he would not in the end have received his clear revelation. To have closed his ears, turned over for further sleep or to have risen hesi- tatingly would, in all probability, have prevented any further calls (Prov. 1:24, 25, 28). God wants, for special services, those who make glad re- sponse to his first call (Isa. 6:8; Luke 9:59-62; Acts 9:6). Three times the call comes and three times Samuel makes reply. The teacher needs to be ever alert to take advantage of these opportu- nities to unfold and enforce the claims of Christ and to challenge an imme- diate decision of the soul. Happy are they who like Samuel hear and recog- nize, even though it be a progressive revelation, the voice of Jehovah, and hearing, obey it. There is little need at present for the audible voice, for we have the word and the still small voice of the Holy Spirit. The voice Samuel heard became a vision (v. 15). II. Jehovah's Verdict, vv. 11-13, 19, 20. The chapter following tells of the defeat of Israel, the capture of the ark and the death of Eli and his sons. These were the things “at which both the ears of everyone that heareth it shall tingle.” The word of Jehovah stands fast, and what he speaks that he performs “from the beginning even unto the end” (Luke 21:32, Numbers 23:19). The word of Jehovah to Sam- uel about the house of Eli was one calculated to strike terror and silence into the lad’s heart. Eli was not igno- rant of the wickedness of his sons (2:27-36). Eli learns from Samuel Je- hovah’s message. Eli was a great and good man, submissive to God’s will, but he was a weak man, rather than just piously resigned. He might bet- ter have prayed for mercy and strength to deal with his wicked sons. However, it was too late to change their lives. “And Samuel grew and Jehovah was with him” (vv. 19, 20; see algo Luke 2:52). Jesus also grew normally (Luke 1:80). “When God calls he qualifies; when he qualifies he calls” (Matthew Henry). Samuel was trained in the house of God to be a great prophet (1) by the dedication of his parents and the prayers of his mother; (2) by’ the teaching of Eli, the priest of God; (3) by the routine of service in the duties assigned him; (4) by the of the present war, writes Mrs. Li . Thy boy is gay and joyous as the birds ( bloodshed, nothing of his own weari- testing of temptation in his contact with the sons of Eli. Song and | | | { | BERLIN. A son was born recently to Mr. and | Mrs. E. J. Lyons; a daughter to Mr. Story...... The War of Peace. I am for war. The war that drives Injustice from the haunts of men; The war that makes for happier lives, That helps the fallen up again. The strife to make a better way Than ever men have trod before, To build a land where children play And neither guns nor cannon roar. I am for war. The war that frees The baby slaves of Monster Greed; The war that battles with disease, And has real service for a creed. The war of science and of art Against the battlements of wrong, The war of brain and brawn and heart To equalize the weak and strong. I am for war. The war to make This earth a joyous place for all; To have men rather give than take. To have them rise and never fall. I'm for the war that betters life, That seeks all human wrongs to cease The bloodless and constructive strife That is the crowning joy of peace. I seek no thorns, and I catch the small joys. If the door is low I stoop down. If I can remove the stone out of the way I do so. If it be too heavy, I g0 round it. And thus every day I find something which gladdens me—Goethe in Doubt. Ethel—Oh, dear me! I don’t know | what to think! Algy asked me last night if I wouldn’t like to have some- thing around the house that I could love and would love me. Edith—Well. Ethel-—Well, I don’t whether he means himself or whether he is think- ing of buying me a dog! This little incident has been told of Thomas Bone, “the sailor missionary.” Seeing him approach one day, one of a group of sailors announced his in- tention of having some fun. He stepped forward and removed his hat, revealing a perfectly smooth crown, and asked: “Can you tell why my head is so bald, while all of my companions have plenty of hair?” (je “I don’t know,” was the smiling re- ply, “unless the reason given me by a farmer the other day would apply, that an empty barn is not worth shing ling” To His Mother. In France the relation between a | son and his mother is very sweet and tender. Even the boys of the least cultivated class show an almost im- variable courtesy and unselfishness to ‘their mothers. =] 1 was in Paris the first two months. anion, and a woman whp worked far e, spoke pften of her only child, a boy, who was in one of the very first regiments, ordered to the front. I have never seen anything so sweet as the: letters he wrote to her to allay her fears. Jam sending you the last ome he wrote; I borrowed it of her that I might copy it. In translating it liter- ally, I have kept much of the charm of the original. “Little Mother, So Dearly Beloved. foo, Hieston to The Youths Com- that sing. Dost thou hear that, little one! Thou must not worry in the very least, my mother. Indeed thou canst not imagine how happy we have been nor what delicious things we have to eat. We caught a rabbit to put in our stew and we found potatoes in a field. Thy boy grows fat, my mother! Why shouldst thou worry? Thou must not mourn when we are laughing. Give to all the friends my loving greeting, and thou, dear heart, look not for letters. It is so seldom that we can write. , Re- member that I am safe and that I love thee. “I send a thousand kisses and I am thy son.” : This letter sent to the mother by a comrade of her son, had been wrtten on a scrap of paper with a pencil while he was in the trenches, before the en- gagement in which he lost his life. He said nothing of the horror of the iness and dread, nothing of the agony and cruelty and death that he had seen. He wrote only what he knew would comfort and reassure her. The letter did strangely comfort the lonely, sorrowing mother. It made her forget the war and think of her boy as a gay and laughing child again. There had been no funeral. She had not seen him dead. His joyous written words were far more real to her than what she knew of his death. His lov- ing thought had lifted her into the realm of the spirit in which there is no death. A INS SNS CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears Ne Hr e @ Signature of gq and Mrs. Wm. Bracken, and a son to Mr. and Mrs. Abert Ohler. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Snyder, Mrs. Jesse Wood, Misses Ella and Emeline Snyder, and W. K. Taylor, sleighed to Somerset recently to attend the sec- ond annual banquet of the Eastern | Stars. Mrs. R. B. Colvin and mother, Mrs. Grazier, of Somerset are Berlin visit- ors for a few days,Mrs. Colvin stop- ' ping at thelJ. P. Mc Cabe home and Mrs Grazier at the C. O. Hay home. Miss May Fogle returned home on Thursday night after visiting for a month with her sister, Mrs. Harry Zeig, of Pittsburg. Mrs. U. B. Fuller, of Meyersdale, visited over Wednesday and Thursday with Mrs. Joe Vonmoose, of Pine Hill. Mrs. B. A. McDonnel has been suf- fering the past few days from injuries caused by a fall down the attic steps at her home. William Koontz is still quite seri- ously ill. Miss Hulda Barclay, who underwent an operation recently at the Penn Hospital, Pittsburgh, for appen- dicitis, has returned to her home in ‘Allegheny township. The® banquet tendered the officers and directors of the First National Bank and their wives and friends on the evening of Feb. 2, by Dr. G. B. Masters and John M. Gambert, vice president and director, respectively, | was a great success in every respect. Landlord Falknor and his wife served a delicious feast. VIM. (Held over from last week.) Henry Wetmiller, of Berlin, was a visitor here in these parts a few days ago. Oscar Tressler, of Detroit, Mich., is 4 guest at the C. W. Tresler home. Mrs. Ada Kieffer, of Finzel, Md., was a visitor for a few days recently at the W. W. Nicholson home. Mr. Wilson Walker, one of Summit township’s school directors, was in- 'specting our school not long since. Milton Fike and family and Miss Ed- na Tressler spent last Sunday at the Wilson Vought home in Elk Lick | township. George Stein and family, of Meyers- dale were visitors here a few days ago at the home of Mrs. Mary Seggie. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Shuck spent a day recently visiting at the home ofr their son, Milton in Larimer town- ship. Mrs. John Pyle, of Coal Run, spent Tuesday night of one week ago with |. his “daughter, "Mrs. Eugene bo R. S. Nicholson, ‘of Pleasént Hill was a recent Vim caller. Be Miss Margaret Knepp, of Larimer township is staying at the home of Henry Suder. Ed. Hoil,of West Salisbury, spent Wednesday at Vim. 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. Extracts from the records, Certified this 12th day of January, 1915. ; A. J. Heiple, Prothonotary. SEAL| West | ——— GRAND PRIZES TO BE AWARDED IN $2200.00 Trade Extension Campaign $2200.00 HARTLEY, CLUTTON CO. WEDNESDAY SFECIAL SAL February 3rd, 19:5. HOOSIER "Ten Votes for One. -:- Special —— Bet A ova Service Checks FIRST PREMIUM. $600.00 Claxton Player Piano. SECOND PREMIUM. LADY'S WATCH —Z0 year gold filled, 15 Elgin movement, and one DUE BILL FOR $375 on the purchase of la Claxton Player-Piano when Jewels, jaccompanied by the balance in { | cash. THIRD PREMIUM THREE-PIECE TOILET SET— and one DUE BILL GOOD FOR £365.00 on the purchase of one Claxton Player Pianp when ac- companied by the balance in cash. FOURTH PREMIUM ONE HALF-DOZEN ROGER’S SILVER KNIVES AND FORKS and one DUE BILL FOR $355. on the purchase of one Claxton Player Piano when accompani- ed by the balance in cash. ro am FIFTH PREMIUM ONE HALF DCZEN ROGER’S KNIVES AND FORKS and one DUE BILL FOR $345.00 on the purchse of a Claxto.. Player Pi- ano when accompanied by the balance in cash. SIXTH PREMIUM. ONE-HALF DOZEN ROGER’S SILVER TABLE SPOONS and one DUE BILL.FOR .$335.00 on the purchase of one Claxton Player Piano when accompani- by the balance in cash. SEVENTH PREMIUM ONE HALF DOZEN ROGER’S SILVER TABLE SPOONS and one DUE BILL FOR $325.00 on the purchase of one Claxton Player Piano when accompa- nied by the balance in cash. EIGHTH PREMIUM. ONE HALF DOZEN ROGER’S SILVER SOUP SPOONS. NINTH PREMIUM. ONE HALF DOZEN ROGER’S SILVER SOUP SPOONS. TENTH PREMIUM. § ONE HALF DOZEN ROGER’S SILVER SOUP SPOONS. premiums. Hartley Block, AUDITOR'S NOTICE. In Re Assigned Estate of S. D. Liven- —. The undersigned having been duly appointed Auditor by the Court of Common Pleas of Somerset County, Pensylvania, to make distribution of the funds in the hands of Chas. H. Ealy, Assignee of S. D. Livengood as shown by account filed to and among those legally entitled thereto, hereby gives notice that he will sit to perform the duties of his appointment on Fri- day, the 19th day of February, 1915, between the hours of 9 a. m. and 3 p. m. at the Court house in the Borough of Somerset, Pennsylvania, when and where those interested may appear. All persons having claims against the said assigned estate are hereby noti- fied to present the same to the Auditor on or before the above date or there- after be forever barred from participa- ting in the fund for distribution. J. C. LOWRY, Auditor. \ IN THE ORPHAN’S COURT OF | SOMERSET COUNTY PA. In the Estate of Louisa Clark, Deceas- ed, Late of Rockwood Borough, Som- erset County, Pa. Letters of Administration having been granted the undersigned adminis- trator for the Estae of Louisa Clark, deceased, late of Rockwood, of the County of Somerset, State of Penn- sylvania, notifies all persons having claims against the said estate to pre- sent the same and those being indebted are requested to make settlement on or before Saturday, March, 13th at one o'clock in the Borough of Somerset, Pennsylvania. ERNEST O. KOCSER, Administrator. ASA Ae Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA FOLEY KIDNEY PILLS FOR BACKACHE KIDNEYS AND BLADDER Will entitle THE HARTLEY THIS COUPON MEYERSDALE, PA. to 100 Votes in Piano Player Contest. By THE COMMERCIAL. Void After Februaryl17th , 1915. In addition to theabove therewill be given in monthl FILLED LADY'S WATCHESto club member s and 22 Sil verware Premiums as weekly the person presenting it at CLUTTON STORE, Note—A new or an old subscription to The Commecial paid at this office entitles to 15,000 Votes. | per, rt You should be very colds cold remedies. COUGH AND COLD REMEDIES. You can cure them with our cough and We Handle Only Standard Makes. y pre miums Five 10-year GOLD HARTLEY, CLUTTON CoO, THE WOMEN’S STORE. : Meyersdale, PA. NANA, SNA careful with coughs and ‘ew -te ae . . Both Phones F. B. THOMAS, Leading Druggist, MEYERSDALE, PA. Every Farmer with two or more cows needs a “A DelL AVAL, SEE J T. YODER THE BEST SEPARATOR MADE. 9 Office 223 Levergood St., Johnstown, Penn’a. JOSEPH L. Residence: 309 North Street Economy Phone Funeral Director and Embalmer Meyersdale, Somerset Co., Penn’a TRESSLER Office: 220 Center Street Both Phones, TO OUR CORRESPONDENTS As a rule our correspondents are very faithful, regularly sending in the | so inform us or the news of their locality, and those are | win ha | charge, have never sent any letter, If you do not intend to send in matter cost of the paper ve to be entered against your the only ones who can expect pay for | their services. There are a number of names from the previous editor's list marked as correspondents to this pa- but who since we have taken correspondence |in by Tuesday of each week,as other | wise we may be compelled to hold it | over, in the hurry of going to press. | Try to have your