\ \) er ut lo 1d he VS 1d red uit ad- er, rd. er- m- ful rd. fect . and e is wo- Hing rint ited 'ens fortu- ldier, aving -driv- near hould they arrels dvice. 1plete ucing litary at his ar, for it last 3oston Mrs. Bertha Stanton and son visited Somerset relatives recently. . np PERSONAL AND LOCAL COLUMN. Mrs. Laura Wagner is visiting Cum- berland friends. Mrs. James May visited Rockwood relatives, Sunday. Thomas Cumiskey, of Martinsburg, was a recent visitor. Mrs. Charles Walters, of Connells- . ville, visited relatives here recently. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Reich spent Sun- day with relatives at Salisbury. . Leo Derry visited Smithfield rela- tives a few days ago. Mrs. E. J. Leonard visited with Ber- lin friends one day last week. Mrs. James Kerrigan, of Sand Patch was a business visitor here Friday. W. H. Rutter, of Somerset, Sunday- ed here with his family. A. A. Bolton, of Cumberland spent last Sunday with Meyersdale friends. Miss Edith Just visited relatives and friends a part of this week. Dr. A. E. Truxal was a Hyndman caller on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Brant, of Macdon- alton, were town visitors on Tuesday. Mrs. James Wilson and Mrs. Jas. Gordon spent Monday with friends at Glencoe . Mr. J. 8. Large, father of Dr. C. P. Large returned home on Sunday from his former home at Buckingham, Pa. Postmaster Naugle spent several , days of the present week im Conn- ellsville and Pittsburg. Mrs. Wm. Seggie and Mrs. Geo. Stein were Cumberland wisitors Thursday. Mrs. Frderick Knieriem, of Cumber- land, spent Sunday at the H. C. Knier iem home on Broadway. Mrs. Lucente and children returned | home on Monday from a visit with rel- atives in West Virginia. Mr. and Mrs, Edward Boyer, of Gar- rett, were town visitors om Saturday last. 3 “The Mountain City News” is the name of a new Semi-Weekly paper just launched at Frostburg. Mrs. Chas. Bender and daughter, of Grantsville, on Saturday were in Meyersdale. Moss Lucil: - Lyut 1s visiting her sis ter, Mrs. Walter Ebaugh at Hancock in Maryland. Mrs. A.'F. Darrah and children spent Sunday with her parents, near Sand Patch. Mrs. Martha Douglas, of Rockwood, spent Sunday here with relatives, Arthur Scott’s, Main street. Miss Ellen Lint one of our teachers, spent Saturday and Sunday with her home folks in Larimer township. Mrs. Morris Mosholder fell on an icy walk near the new bridge a few days ago breaking her left arm. Mr. J. N. Cover attended to business matters a part of the present week at Stoyestown and Johnstown. od : Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Stotler left on Sunday, taking No. 6 train for a visit ‘at Baltimore and New York. Wm. Knecht, of West Salisbury en- joyed last Sunday with friends in this place, . -Mr. David Cronin, of Confluence was here with Meyersdale friends on Sun- day last. ; B.J. Lynch, the town engineer, has been transacting business in Balti- more a part of the present week. Mrs. Wm. Younkin, of the South Sde, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Hibner at Mt. Braddock. Mrs. B. B. Collins is spending the week ‘with her friends, Dr. and Mrs. P. P. Ritter at Boswell. Miss Grace Weller visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Clark at Garrett over Sunday. J. A. Schlight, the efficient agent of the B. & O. at this place, was in Con- nellsville, one day last week. J. W. Haley, proprietor of the Union hotel, has been suffering with rheu- matism. William Yoste and family, of Mey-! ersdale have moved this week to Garrett. Miss Mayme Forquer, grade teachers, spent the week-end with Ursina friends. Mrs. A. W. Poorbaugh has returned from Johnstown, where she had been visiting for a week. Miss Clara Rowe very pleasantly entertained ahalf dozen of her High school friends Wednesday evening. Misses Mary and Sara Smith, of Pittsburgh, are guests at the home of their brother-in-law, J. F. Reich Miss Elizabeth Irwin very pleasant- ly entertained a number of her friends, Friday evening. Mrs. Frederick Yougkin, of Ursina is spending a few days with her rel- atives, Mr. and Mrs. Ward Dull. of the South Side. John Maul, of Maul Bros. has retur- d from Milwaukee, where he spent « week at the convention of the Inter national Custom Cutters’ Association. Mrs. Frederick Younkin, of Ursina, spent Saturday and Sunday here at the home of her relatives, Mr. and Mrs. Ward Dull, of Beachley street. Mrs. Mira Pfahler is breaking up housekeeping in order to make her home with her son, Ralph D. Pfahler, whose wife recently died. Mrs. Spence, who has rooms at the home of Mrs. J. J. Stotler, was taken one of our ne # on Tuesday, to the Markleton sanita- rium for treatment. Miss Nellie Weimer, daughter of Mr. U. M. Weimer, has gone to Washing- ton, D. C,, to take a course as a nurse in the Children’s hospital. Mrs. Scott Hartline and four chil- dren who had been here the past month with relatives returned to her home the latter part of the week. Mrs. Philip Reich and children spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Beachy at West Salis- bury. { | Miss Tina Collins returned home on ; Thursday last from a two-weeks’ vis-' it with Mr. and Mrs. H. Albright at Berlin. Karl Pfahler has gone to resume his work of assisting in laying out cross- country auto roads. His work will now be in the state of Illinois. Mrs. E. R. Floto, of Connellsville visited here at the home of her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Shipley on My- ers avenue Tueseday of this week. Miss Margaret Hartle, a graduate nurse, who had been attending a pa- _ tient during the past month near Rock- ‘wood, has returned Salisbury street. Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Klingaman, daughter Dorothy and Miss Sallie Stratton spent Sunday with Mrs. Kin- gaman’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Wilhelm near Berkley. Mrs. Perry Strump and daughter, Miss Anmie, of Columbus, Ohio, who | had been visiting friends here for the : past two weeks have gone to visit friends at Lonaconing in Md. Mr. I. Weinstein has gone to Pitts- burg, Philadelphia and New York to ilay in a supply of the latest in the | clothing line for men’s furnishings for his new store next to the postoffice. Miss Lula Hocking was called on Saturdayto the home of her sister, Mrs William Sturgis, at Oakland, Md. by the latter’s llmess: She is now im- proving. : Flour has risen to about nine dol- lars per barrel in this vicinity owing to the high prices of wheat, but the local bakers have not yet made an in- crease in their rates. ’ Mr. W. H. Habel, a layman of the Amity Reformed church of this place gave an address before that congrega- tion on Sumiay might that has mer- ited a good deal of favorable com- ment this week. Mrs. Paul Horning and family who had been residing at Friedens arrived here last week and spent several days at the home of the former's sis- ter, Mrs. John ‘Stein before going to Shaw Mines where they will now live. Mrs. EHzabeth Weyh, who had been spending several . months with rela- “tiwes im New York City has returned to the home «of her daughter, Mrs. Mrs. Henry Schwarner on Meyers av- to her home on ters at Somerset, employed on the Somerset and Cambria branch with headquarters at ‘Somerset, spent Sun- day in this place with his family on Salisbury street. : Homer Collins, son of Merchant Geo. Collins, came home last week suff- from a slight concussion of the brain received while playing basket ball at Richmond Medical College, where he is a student. He was able to return on Tuesday. Fred Vannear is lying in a serious condition at his home near Somerset him Friday night at Boswell by two strange men, who after robbing him of his gold watch and a sum of mon- ey, made their escape. “Billy” the two-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Clutton, had the up- per half of the middle finger of his right hand badly crushed Monday, by being caught in a clothes wringer. It is thought that the charming little fellow’s finger may not be perma- nently injured. B. F. Smith, who for a number of yearsc conducted a butter and egg establishment on Meyers avenue, near the B. & O. station,has retired from the business and on Saturday in com- pany with his-daughter, Mrs. Florence Turner, left for New York, their for- mer home. » R. E. Meyers, for several years the store manager for the Dull Mer- cantile Company at the Wilson Creek mines, has resigned and will be suc- ceeded by Frank Hood, of West Vir- ginia. Mr. Meyers has purchased the Wilson Creek meatmarket, formerly owned by his brother A. C. Meyers. According to a decision from Har- risburg, commission merchants and wholesale grocers must mark all pota- to and apple sacks with their proper weight in sending them out to retail- ers. It is not necessary for interstate shipments to be so marked, the ruling declares. A birthday surprise in honor of the sixtieth birthday anniversary of Mrs. H. J. Ebbecka was held last Thursday evening at her home on North street. . The guests assembled early in the ev- ! ening and were received by the Misses | Daise and Sanna Ebbecka. At ten o’- ! clock a dainty luncheon was served. | i: Horse and Mule feed made from corn ! oats and alfalfa $1.76 per hundred at | Habel & Phillips. Bmgimeer Jacob Opel, with headquar: | Va., i as the result of an attack made on PREVENT 0G CHOLERA Every Precaution Should Be Taken ta Check Disease. Stray Pigs Should Be Looked Upon With Suspicicn—Carcasses of Dead Animals Must Ze Burned With- out Delay. Because hog cholera is so readily carried from one farm to another every precaution should be taken against its spread when it appears in a community. In Germany and other countries where animal diseasés have Len well held in check, quarantine is strict for hog cholera and other pre | ventive measures are largely used. i These different steps should be taken when hog cholera appears: Sick and exposed hogs must be kept confined or isolated on the premises where they belong. Strav pigs should be looked upon with suspicion. When pigs are shipped into a herd there should be certainty that they come from uninfected premises and that they have not been exposed in ship ment in cars or public stockyards. burned or buried without delay. Litter and manure must be disposed of in a like way or thoroughly disinfected. All implements or wagons or carts used in handling sick or dead animals must be disinfected. Pens and yards must h2 similarly treated whether serum ; has been used or not. Promiscuous traveling back and forth from infected premises should pigs With Strong Constitutions Resist Attacks of Cholera. be discouraged. After men and horses have been in infected pens or yards, their shoes :and feet should be cleaned and even disinfected before going upon the highways or healthful premises. Straying animals, like dogs and cats, ought ' to be looked on as danger sources. Hogs should be kept away from streams that may run from in- fected yards. These and other precautions that are suggested by the extreme wviru- lence of the cholera germ should be taken. They may seem rather far- fetched at times, but they are mone ve ess espential, Through wholly un- expected means the ‘disease is trans- commumity as something of a mystery. The presence of cholera always means that it has been carried there. st Ome : general suggestion may be. made: Good health and strong comsti- . tutions. help in fighting all animal dis- ‘eases, cholera as well as others.- CULLING THE POULTRY FLOCK Many Farmers Are Keeping Hens Long Past Their Period of Usefulness— : Give Plenty of Room. (By J. G. HALPIN.) A great deal is being said about the ! advisability of keeping all of the stock ; that a farm .can possibly hold. I think, ! however, that this advice is wrong. and that we should encourage our farmers to cull more closely than usual. On a large proportion of our farms there are old hens that are long past their period of usefulness, many of these hens with long toe nails show- ing that they have not worked for months. There are also many crow- headed, thin-breasted, weak-consti- tutioned heirs that will never be good egg producers. Also, there are many farms with little late-hatched chicks that will not be a paying investment. All of these culls should be disposed of as quickly as possible and the feed given to the better individuals. I ad- mit that the price of eggs will be high, but with our present feed prices one cannot afford to feed the hens that show from their general make-up that they are likely to be poor producers. On many farms there are 200 chick- ens with only housing room for a hun- dred. If the flock is reduced down to the burdrad best ones, the result will be meny more eggs in the winter and a much lower feed bill. Keeps Hocs Well. Less grain, more pasture, less con- fnement and more exercise in the pure air of the alfalfa, clover or blue- grass fields will tone up the system so that disease is not readily contract- ed. Yet with the best of care and feed disease in new forms will appear to baffle us, and when it comes, it is not safe to dally with it, especially if it seems infectious. Letting sick hogs have the run of the herd is sure to spread disease, therefore it is a safe rule to lose no time in removing the first sick hog to some remote lot where it cannot infect the herd as its dis- ease progresses. Potato Culture. Some of the things that cause the faflure of potato hills are poor soil, improper preparation, poor seed, ir- regular planting, poor cultivation, bugs, diseases and poor weather. Many of these conditions are con- trollable; all of them may be influ- Carcasses of cholera hogs must be; mitted and makes its appearance ia a" {| and liberty, and that he wouldn’t give | was playing he might have been clam. | but, alas, she was too candid, and the | JEMIMA 4:0 BILLY By KATHRYN HOWARD. “Poor Jemima,” sighed the Brunette, “she certainly does seem to have bad fuck.” “What is the matter now?” asked the Blonde, giving half her at tention to the Brunette’s remark and half to the question whether it would be safe to eat oysters sg early in the sea son. “She has los! her latest,” alliter atively replied the Brunette. “Billy has departed and she is now alone.” “What a pity,” remarked the Girl With the Auburn Hair. “Yes, it is a pity,” agreed the Bru nette, ‘and she had marked Billy for her own. I don’t understand it.” The Girl With the Auburn Hair laughed. “But Billy did,” she announced. “Understand what?” questioned the Blonde. ’ “That Jemima had marked him for her own,” replied the Girl With the Auburn Hair. “That is the reason he flitted.” “But he was devoted to Jemima,’ objected the Brunette. “I would have fancied him a willing victim.” “At your age, too,” almost sneered the Girl With the Auburn Hair. “Don’t you know that a man is never a will ing victim—he always likes to vic timize, and if he can’t do that he just | won't play. “The trouble about poor Jemima wag that she took it for granted that Billy was willing, not te marry her, but that she would marry him, for a girl of Jemima's temperament always mar ries somebody—and there's both a distinction and a difference Now she had decided that Billy was an eligible party—he is handsome and clever and agreeable, and is, in fact, everything that is desirable in a husband. He liked Jemima very much, and if she had not let ‘him see that she intended to select him from the world of men to love, honor and obey her for the rest of their days, she might have been wearing a solitaire now—instead of playing solitaire. But she assumed a proprietary manner, gave Billy the impression that she depended upon bim and didn’t have another admirer in the world and took him to task ‘when he did not do just what pleased her. : “Billy is the sort of a man who likes to think that he is taking the fhnitia: tive, and the glory of winning instead of being won, appeals to him. But poor Jemima didn’t realize that and she made the siege that she inaugu- rated for his heart and hand too ap parent. =e : “I have an idea that Billy woke up one fine morning with the realization that Jemima had designs upon his life up that liberty for a million dollars. If she hadn’t shown him the game she oring for her to make him a prisoner, liberty-loving Billy decided that to run away was the only safe thing to ‘do. So he ran and he has ‘been so busy with engagements with other girls and has flitted and fluttered about like a | dizzy whirling dervish just to show to himself and others that he is still in full possession of that liberty which had been seriously threatened.” The Blonde sighed, as the Girl With the Auburn Hair paused to give some attention to her chicken salad “It is a pity that women can never, never be candid and show their true feelings,” she remarked. “Isn’t it?” agreed the Brunette. “We are blamed for being deceitful, yet if we are not always acting we never suc- ceed.” “Yes, subterfuge becomes our sec: ond nature,” said the Girl With the Auburn Hair, ‘but, ‘after all, if it pleases a man to think that he is the great arbiter of fate, it doesn’t really do us any harm. In fact, if to fulfill the mission laid down for us by one George Bernard Shaw, of being the pursuers instead of the pursued, re- quires a little art and finesse we should enjoy it more. After all, we don’t re- spect the man who is captured by ob- vious methods; we call him gullible, «nd simple, and pass along to the difii- cult man.” “But thi; doesn’t make it any easier tor Jemima, said the Blonde, “and she really feels very sorry because she has lost Billy.” “But she’ll get over it,” cheeringly prophesied the Brunette. “She will grieve for Billy a little while and then she will realize that there are other Billies in the world and perhaps this experience will teach her to be more subtle.” “Let us hope so,” said the Girl With the Auburn Hair, and she prepared to pay the check and the Lunch club ad journed. The Next Step. “I am tremendously interested in this votes-for-women proposition,” said Mr. Meekton. “Of course, you expect that women will vote.” “I haven't a doubt of it. What I AID IN WALL CONSTRUCTION Object of St. Paul Inventor Is to Elimi- nate All Planes of Weakness and Permeability. In speaking of the objects of an in- vention of A. F. Meyer of 1001 Germa- nia building, St. Paul, Minn., the Sci- entific American says: “Among the several important ob- jects of this invention is the provision of a wall construction designed to eliminate all planes of weakness and permeability resulting from the depo- sition of concrete in successive hori- rontal layers and to make possible and Wall Construction. practicable the production of a pleas Ing and durable finish by means of brushing and washing the partially hardened concrete. Further, to pro- vide a corstruction which embodies the assembling of a framework disclos- | ing window openings and ordinary panels for the walls, the last being filled with concrete or other cast ma- terial, each panel being cast as an in- tegral block.” ' NOISE IS QUITE EXPENSIVE | Din Caused by Use of Stamps as Crushing Machines is Responsible for Misunderstood Orders. In’ a recent eonversation the super- intendent of a large stamp mill made the observation that ‘noise costs money.” ‘We had been discussing the use of stamps as crushing machines and the comparative merits of various devices for crushing ore. One of the arguments advanced by this superin- tendent against the use of stamps was the tremendous and ‘never ending noise produced by the falling weights. Tn Wis opinion the din was responsible for many misunderstood = directions and orders to employes, resulting in sonfusion, loss of time and expensive mistakes. The point is readily per- anxious to give the impression that he understands the boss’ orders, and: rather than ask a question for fur- ther information, he will sometimes pretend to understand and then go and seek advice from a fellow work- man. The order may be wrongly exe: cuted or not at all. The noise of the stamps contributes greatly to this condition, makes it dificult to give and receive orders, and undoubtedly causes many mistakes. The cost of noise may not be estimated exactly, but it is a real factor—Metallurgical and Chemical Engineering. NEW TOOL FOR CARPENTERS Beveling Saw Guide Is Adapted to All Purposes for Which a Miter Box Ils Employed. A new type of beveling saw guide recently placed on the market is also adapted to all the purposes for which Beveling Saw Guide for Carpenters. a miter box is employed and can be used on lumber of any width. The illustration shows its operation clearly. Available Water Power. The geological survey has estimated the available water power of the United States from 36,000,000 to 65,- 500,000 horsepower, not including the power that could be conserved by reservoirs. Carrying Barrels. For carrying barrels there has been Invented a four-deck wagon, barrels being hoisted in an elevator to the top one and rolling from one to another until they reach the bottom, where they are unloaded. Varnishing Furniture. By the application of an electric am interested in is seeing how Hen- rietta will manage to take the vote | away from the women of whom she | particularly disapproves.” enced by proper methods of culture. Yom sn ——————. wore 0 { of. varnishes on + wood as heater to the air tube the spraying furniture has been possible, the heat preventing nick turning white on the would if celd made 1 On CUT FLOWERS FOR Valentine Day Better order now Violets -- 5 Roses -- _ Carnations Collins” Drug Store - The oxall sere J Hartley Bloek, FOR A FIRST-CLASS GALVANIZED OR SLATE ROOF, P.T ON COMPLETE & REASONABLE Write to v» S. WENGERD RD 2 A MEYERSDALE, t= _. PENNA. as we are getting a car load of Galvanized Roof early and can save you money if you order soon on account of the galvan- ized spelter raising in price. All Work Guaranteed and Done, to Order. TIVEFIECE IS QUITE HANDY venience and Safety—Watch =. Can Be Seen at Glance. In ‘a. great many places where it is necessary to know the time at any moment, a watch is a very convenient guide. If the watch is placed flat on the table or desk, it is not always eas celved. The average mill employe is-{ {ly seen and them, too, it'is liable to be pushed off and broken. The sketch shows a desk block ‘which was used with a great deal of satisfaction. The recess in the top of the block is for the chain, which need not be taken from the watch. The slight Desk Block for a Watch. angle of the block, which is hollowed out to receive the watch, makes the dial clearly visible from aimost any point of view. For convenience and safety in connection with the come tinual use of a timepiece this sugges- tion is hard to excel, says Popular Mechanics. The block is easily made and finished to present a pleasing ap- pearance on any desk. A frame has been invented to hold an ice cream box secure while it is being filled. * » * Oxygen and alcohol vapor are being used tc stimulate the heart by English physicians. - ® ® Mufflers to silence the motors of their dirigible baloons are being tried by German army officers. ® ® a The Russian government has of dered ten aeroplanes of a type to carry 11 persons in addition to the pilot. ¢ © ® The normal human eye is blue, say scientists, other colors being caused by the presence of different pigments in the iris. k $s © LJ It has been contended by a French scientist that ultraviolet rays aid di gestion in persons suffering from weak stomachs. ® & ® Of the 43 airmen in the 'world whe have looped the loop, France has 26, | England 6, America 1 and Russia and | Italy 2 each. re. a ——— eer pest ———— ER —— Desk Block Is Recommended for Con we pe