& coc a SALISBURY CHAUTAUQUA Rev. R. C. McMinn, superint-=ndent, Dr. Thos. Barney Thompson, Morning Hour Lecturer; Miss Franc Dunning, Children’s Worker. Program begins promptly as follows: Boy Scouts, 9: a. m.; Morning Story Telling; 10:00 Educational lecture; 10:00; Afternoon musié 2:30; After- noon Lecture at 3:00; Evening Music at 7:30; Evening Entertainment, 8:45 SUNDAY, JULY 18. . MORNING—10:30: Union Services. Music—Salisbury Orchestra, Male Choir. AFTERNOON—Sacred Concert, the Ziegler-Howe Orchestral Club. Ad dress—“Pillars in the Edifice of Christian Character,” Dr. J.- 'W. Crook. EVENING—Vesper Service. Sacred Concert, The Ziegler-Howe Orchest- ral Club. Address—“The Man Who Can,” Mr. Wm. Rainey Bennett. Note—No admission will be charg: ed , but a freewill offering will be ta- ken, and the Management asks that it be a generous One. - MONDAY, JULY 19. Boy Scouts. — Children’s Hour, Japa- nese Folk-Lore Stories( In costume) Educational Lecture, Drama, “Kind- ling.” The admission 25 cts; chil- dren free. AFTERNOON—Musical Prelude, The The Dunbar Singing Band. Lecture, “A Man's Duty to His Community,” Mr. Grosvenor Dawe. Admission, 35 and 15 cts. EVENING— Grand Musical Enter- tainment, The Dunbar Singing Band. Admiskion 50 and 25 cts. TUESDAY, JULY 20. MORNING—Boy Scouts. Children’s Hour, Russian Folk Lore Stories( In Costume) Educational Lecture, Dra- ma, “Pigeon.” Admission 25 cts. Children Free. AFTERNOON—Musical Prelude, Sut phen’s Metropolitan - Music Men. Lecture, Drama, “The Melting Pot,” Dr. Thomas Barney Thompson. Admission 25 and 15 cents. EVENING— Musical Prelude, Sut- phen’s Metropolitan Music Men. The Drama, Shakespeare, “The Taming o fthe Shrew,” The Ben Greet Play- ers. Admission 50 and 25 cts. WEDNESDAY, JULY 21. MORNING—Boy Scouts. Children’s Hour, Scandinavian Folk-Lore Stor- jes, In Costume. Educational Lect- ure, Drama, “The Great Divide.” Ad- mission 25 cents and Children, free. AFTERNOON—Musical Prelude, The Alfred Hiles Bergen Co. Lecture— “International Peace,” Hon. Jas. G. Stutesman. Admission, 50 and 25cts. EVENING—Grand Musical Enter- tainment, The Alfred Hiles Bergen Co. Admission 50 and 25 cts. THURSDAY, JULY 22. MORNING—Boy Scouts. Children’s . Hour, German Folk-Lore Stories, in costume. Educational Lecture, Drama “pygmalion,” Admission 25 cents and free. AFTERNOON—Band Concert, Sand’s Regimental Band. Admission 50 and 25 cts. EVENING, Band Concert, Sand’s Regimental Band. Admission 50 and 25 cents. FRIDAY, JULY 23. MORNING—Boy Scouts. Children’s Hour, Belgian Folk-Lore Stories, (In Costume.) Educational Lecture— Drama, “The Blue Bird.” Admission, 25 cts, Children free. AFTERNOON—Musical Prelude, The Haydn Quartette and Miss Helen Hancock. Entertainment, “Trained Birds and other Animals,” Parmahas- {ka. Admission, 35 and 15 cts. EVENING— Musical Prelude, Haydn Quartette and Miss Helen Hancock. Lecture, “The Martyr- dom of Belgium,” Hon. Chas. F. Scott. Admission, 50 and 25 cts. SATURDAY, JULY 24. MORNING—Boy Scouts. Children’s Hour, Exhibition. Admissicn 25 cts, with children free. AFTERNOON, A Musical Prelude, ‘The Weber Male Quartette. Lecture «popular Fallacies” Dr. Ernest Wray Oneal. Admission, 35 and 15 cts. EVENING—Grand Final Musical En- tertainment, The Weber Male Quar- tet. Admission, 50 and 25 cts. The THE LAW OF CANADA THISTLES Patches of Canada thistles, that de- testable weed which chastises the legs of raspberry pickers, for in stance, are about ready to go to seed and should be cut. Not many persons are aware of the law in regard to Can ada thistles. If some one complains to a constable that official must send a notice to the one responsible for the patch that the thistles must be cut in five days and the constable can collect fifty cents for sending the no- tice. Then if the thistles are not cut in five days, the constable is required to go and cut them himself, for which he receives mileage $2.60 per dav. This is not all, for $15.00 fine is collect from the person who refu- ges to comply with {I constable’s notice. AGRICULTURAL —— COMMISSIONERS Governor Brumbaugh’s plan for reorganization of the department of agriculture will really call for the aid of every citizen. The governor does not mean to stop at the reorganiza- tion of the administration of the de- partment, but according to his pres- ent plans he means to make it the means of showing the people how they can increase the yields, make loafing lands work and get more out of what he calls the by-products of farming—the chicken and the pig. The governor will probably choose his secretary of agriculture this week and if he makes the announcement he will lose no time in calling the new commissioners together and telling them what he wants done. It is the idea of the governor to have the reorganization of the office forces of’ the various bureaus fit im with the work he expects of them. Th administrative end will be grad- ually changed. First and foremost, however, will be the framing of a pro- gram for agricultural advancement, conservation of the soil, betterment of rural life and the building up of a popular sentiment which will be re- flected on the next legislature and secure from it the funds necessary to make the department one of the most active in the government. The gov- ernor intends to make the depart- ment figure as much in the public eye as do the health and highway de- partments. The commissioners will divide up the state and make visits to and in addition to find out what are the needs of each locality will outline in an intimate way the governor's plans. People who have been looking for a turning inside out of the depart- ment, most of whose bureaus have been doing work that has attracted much attention, are due to disappoint- ment. The reorganization is to be rather in ideals and then methods and men. The plan of Dr. Brumbaugh is to give personal attention to agri- culture and highways and he will make an automobile tour of the state this year for the sake of observations and to learn public sentiment. BERLIN. The street paving is expected to be started very soon by the State High- way officials. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Engert and daughter, Helen, and Fred Griskby, of Cleveland, Ohio, are guests at the home of their relatives, Mr. and Mrs. Don Kimmel. Mrs. C. F, Ray and two. children, of Macdonaldton, were recent Meyers- dale visitors. : Harvey G. Hay now delivers R. F. D. No. 2 mail in his Ford car. Mesdames W. P. Shaw, J. P, Mc- Cabe and Ed. Johnson were callers at the Dr. R. B. Calvin home in Somer- set Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Glessner have returned from a trip to Waterloo, Ia, where they spent four weeks at the home of Mr. Glessner’s brother, Jo- seph Glessner, a former resident of Brothersvalley. Among those who are camping at Edgewood Grove at Somerset are Mrs. Ella Walker and Mrs. Fred Groff and daughters, Margaret, Eleanor, Marion and Ena. The Rev. Wilkinson, wife and chil- dren and Dr. Henry Garey, of Wilkins burg, came to Berlin, Thursday even- ing, to spend the summer. Mr. Edwin Johnson ani three children, of Pittsburg, are reg- istered at the Berlin Hotel, for sever- al months. and Mrs. Mises Rave Heffley and Anna Ba- ker and Messrs. Elisha Durst and Lin- coln Bingner spent Monday in Som- erset, Mrs. Harry Kimmel, of Macdonald- ton, has returned from several weeks’ visit in Bloomington. INCREASE FOR POSTMASTERS. In the readjustment of postmast- ers’ salaries based upon the business done by the offices during the fiscal just closed, three distributors of Uncle Sam’s mails in Somerset County will draw increases, and three of them will be reduced. As usual the Somerset office did the largest vol- ume of business and as a conse- quence Alex. Groff will draw $2500 a year, being an increase of $100: The salary of Hooversville’s postmaster is boosted from $1300 to $1500 and Windber’s from $2200 to $2300. Re- ductions in salaries announced by the post office department are as follows: Confluence $1500 to $1400; Meyersdale from $2300 to $2200; and Rockwood from $1700 to $1600. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA on . > » year irom r. 4 usr “of A asst 217 1 DEY the agricultural exhibitions and fairs | REDPATH-BROCKWAY — CHAUTAUQUAS— | WERE UNIVERSALLY | COMMENDED LAST YEAR | | { LATROBE, PA.: “We found your people courteous and obliging to deal ith in eve rticular.” bit yy R. M. STEELE, : Superintendent of Education. TITUSVILLE, PA.: not speak too highly of the general character of what —Roasting to Death Over a Red-Hot Stove What's the use of getting “all sizzli~7 hot doy to simply shr COOKE, Lul Seal Love a cicve io next mealtime comes arcund. fire chimneys prevent all lasts the ordinary kind. . acquainted with a Ncw Perfection. Phiiadelphiz ing a meal from a stove that’s like a small furnace. Why don’t you go today to your local dealer and Get a NEW PERFECTIO —th- stove that heats when lLiect is wanted and don’t sproa the room so that you're fairly suffocated. 1iial over Think what it meais on a Emmanuel Church. Rectory. t the heat 0%f as souu eal is a in rae z « 1.50 waén the JOHIIETOWN, PA.: The New Perfection Oil Cook Stove saves time, money and labor. Ttlichts and regulates like a gas stove and, with the separate oven and fe cooker, is equal to it in cookin bake, boil and fry; heat water for was —in fact, do anything 2ny other stove will do. 1 smoke and smell and the improved wick out- It will certainly pay you to go today and get THE ATLANTIC REFINING CO. |in Bedford county, BE. M. Hoffman, of | Best restlts ae ob: xin=d by using Rayslight Oil HENRY PEASE, was presented.” ; Superintendent of Education. CPT TI HG A {f GREENSBURG, PA.: Ei i ny “I am of the opinion that every good citizen should £ 2% he take an active interest in establishing such an assem- , Fy ol bly as a permanent institution in his community. ROBERT C. SHAW, Superintendent of Education. : REYNOLDSVILLE, PA.: “I ‘wish to especially commend your plan for Sundays.” CHARLES D. REED, Pastor Baptist Church. | | “] attended almost everything that was given and can- | | | | het up” when you're eook- OIL COOK |! : STOVE | CORRY. PA.: | | | “The exquisite beauty and blessing of it all.” G. H. SHARPLEY, “The talent was of a very high order, and our people were very rauch pleased.” H. W. BOLE, Wholesale Lumber. power. You ean broil, roast, day and irons for ironing day The combustion | For shooting a doe last November, | that the man shot the doe and that he Pittsburgh | Connellsville, was recently fined $100 | then ssoufed Wo iarge horns Si : | and costs of $5.66.. Hoffman admitted |tened them to the doe to give the Im. shooting the doe. It was alleged by | pression that the animal shot was a GameWarden Ross, the prosecutor, | male deer. a —. George W. Williams, one of Bed- ford county’s most progressive farm- | ers, has installed the mechanical mil- | ker on his farm near Rainsburg. Mr. | Williams owns one of the largest and | best farms in Friends’ Cove, and | keeps a big herd of fine milch cows. | C. BE. Osmar, of Cambria County, | has been appointed a game warden for Somerset and Cambria Counties. The sc¢ramble for appointment, ‘with each branch of the fish aiff™=game associations advancing a candidate, caused such coufusion that the game commission went outside of the coun- | ty for a man. Schwartz Brothers, of Johnstown, | having adopted the profit-sharing NEARBY COUNTIES, | plans, last Thursday, distributed sev- | eral thousand dollars among the em- ployes. This was a voluntary semi! annual dividend. The sum received by | each employee is based on a percen- tage of profits. The cash distribution | is a welcome gift to the employees, | especially those going on vacations. Eighteen applicants passed thz State Forestry examinations recent- ly at the department of forestry. They will be sent to the woods for six weeks. Among the successful appli- cants and the stations to which they will go for the six weeks’ work are: William Dague, Clearfield; Henry D. | Phillips, Somerset; Mark H. Jackson, Swissvale. Operators of the Smokeless Coal | company mine, near Johnstown, in which an explosion recently killed eight men and resulted in the death of Gomer Phillips, first-aid man for the Cambria Steel company, are set-| tling the claims of the widows and | other relatives of the disaster. It is doubtful whether any of the cases‘ ever reach court. The company claims { the accident was caused by the explo- | sion of a number of percussion caps | caried into the mine in the hat of cne | of the men against orders and with- out any authority, as he was not a mi- | ner. After thoroughly investigating the conditions in Fayette county, Game Wardens Ralph Ross, of Uniontown, and Joseph Kennedy, of Monongahela City, found that the deer turned loose in Saltlick township some time since, | had done no damage to the farms in| that section. It had been reported that the animals were destroying | crops of a number of farmers, but] all who were visited by the officers | said that while they had seen a num- | ber of deer, their crops had not been | molested by them, and that iney | would favor the importation of more ng. The Governor he made for loc tice that it wou clared he | into the home deer, rather than tc decrease the number. { Surrounded by his relatives and | boyhood friends, who gathered for | the ninth annual Brum h reun- = jou recently at Matrinsburg, Gov-|ir ernor Brumbaugh renes his pre- election pled for mo 1d politic- al reforms arers to give more a uch matters and take a rt in public af-|lators fairs, He made a strong 1 yr clean | the] living, high thinking and square deal- sel . 3 Js —S0 _ For Manly Men == We have purposely made up ==. a tobacco to appeal to the strong, on vigorous man who wants full ri Re flavor and fragrance combined with honest sweetness in his smoke or chew. This tobacco is FIVEBROTHERS. It is designed especiallyto satisfy the tobacco- hungry man. It fills the bill. a Firemen, policemen, out-of-doors >) men, twofisted men in general, all say FIVE BROTHERS satisfies. Once they start using FIVE BROTHERS they cannot . get the same satisfaction out of any other << ® m—— bend ; ~$FIVE BRu(HERS Pipe Smoking Tobacco That's why it appeals to and pleases these men & | has character to it. sturdy character. FIVE BROTHERS is made from pure Southern Kentucky leaf, aged for three to five years, so as to bring out slowly and naturally all the juicy mellowness and richness of the tobacco. That's why its quality never varies—and that’s why hurried-up, hashed-up tobaccos can’t compare with FIVE BROTHERS. In strenuous hours of work or in pleasant hours of relaxation, be sure to have some of this wonderful tobacco with you. FIVE BROTHERS is sold everywhere —get a package today. = Neely, THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY pay” a Addl dd ND END NP — ES of the tight | " Jonas Walters, 72 years of age, lies |" {at his home in Boswell at the point told option and gave no- fractures of the lower jaw in three places, wounds of the face, a severe of death the result of injuries sustain- led to carry the fight |ed when he stepped from the slde- districts of the legis-| walk in front of the postoffice in his osed local of if | home Monday morning, direc- lates to succeed them- |ly in front of a motorcyclist. The aged | man was knocked down and sustained i be renewe je- i 1d be renewed. He de concussion of the brain and a possi- ble fracture at the base of the skull. The rider of the machine, said to be a young man from Wilkinsburg, is ex- int town, onerated by witnesses of the accident.} ' change The | throug! ridden railroa should countr, Or som the pri The or sma ding 1 spent | the cit, ing en ity of ’ those moods. The needs It is m our ord everyth and the is out who m day in into hi: We long on as phy even n fare.. If in ter sur familia; long ru at leas round | trast. So p bring y tifariou ities of the we: marvels [ Accor million County thousar the sea tivity meeting In m: which year, have, be carrying further through Dixon, arrange of ever ment pl der wa fore th begins. The source instance a Wate! face st charact: ber of boating streams If th springs with re ness of the pos: by the the met the gro Wher require drainag it ‘samp be take departn tests as The is anotl ure.. TI regulati ing wil The co! etc. wil disposal vision tion rec } Mrs. one of Conflue home fi months. years a as follc Scott, all of C ner, of Scott a & Leste years, Johnsto had bee time ar hospital decease Hermar His ccc Try