ERA SIIEEE rer SEPTEMBER JURORS. The following jurors have been drawn to serve at the regular term of September Criminal Court, which will convene on Monday September 13: GRAND JURY. C. W. Snyder, farmer, Somerset Twp. John 'Cosley, farmer, Ursina. william Baer, farmer, Greenville. Franklin Shroyer farmer, Allegheny. H. C. Livengood, laborer, Addison. John S. English, minister, Stoyestown. Harrison Livengood, laborer, Elklick. T. W. Black, merchant, Confluence. E. K. Hostetler, farmer, Greenville. L. W. Pollard, druggist, Garrett. Harvey Zerfoss, motorman, Somerset Township. Stewart H. Boucher, merchant, New Centerville. J. C. McCarney, Township. John H. Miller, farmer, Northampton. C. R. Miller, merchant, Jefferson. Emanuel L. Berkley, farmer, Summit. Edward D. Glessner, farmer, Brothers- valley. John C. Christiner, laborer, Summit. Hiram Shank, painter, Somerset Twp. Allen J. Ogline, farmer, Lincoln. william Benning, laborer, Allegheny. Alvin E. Fritz, farmer, Jenner. Perry Brugh, farmer, Milford. minister Somerset Frank M. Forney, editor, Somer set. Petit Jurors. Wm. C.Gramling, laborer, Windber. Chas. F| Zimemrman, farmer, Quem’h. W. S. Kern, barber, Paint Boro. Roy H. Shaulis, farmer, Jefferson. S. J. McMillen, dentist, Somerset Bor G. A. Smith, manager, Windber. Allen Bruner, farmer, Milford. Jno. J. Lehman, farmer, Conemaugh. Hiram Hoffman, retired, Benson. Irvin A. Rish, blacksmith, Conemgh. F. D. Lehman, farmer, Paint Twp. Frank E. Rugg, farmer, Addison. Harry A. Baldwin, clerk, Meyers- dale. Gillian Saffer, farmer, Paint. D. E. Miller, plumber, Windber. Jno. W. Folk, merchant, EXlick. W. H. Cramer, auditor, Somerset. M. C. Maurer, farmer, Jenner Homer Swartz, liveryman, Stoyest- town. Geo. C. Hazelbarth, tinner, Salisbury. Albert Norris, laborer, Garrett. Alex. Ringler, farmer, Brothersvalley Eli C. Emert, carpenter, Lincoln. Jno. Weamer, farmer, Quemahoning. Chas. Enfield, teamster, Black. WHEN FLIES PLAY POSSUM Explaining Why the Campaign for Theii Extermination Should Be- gin at Once. It is not only in the summer that the enemy of the fly should be busy, according to a bulletin issued by the committee on pollution and sewerage of the Merchants’ Association of New York, but in the winter as well. “Kill the winter flies,” is the burden of the committee's appeal, and it de- clares that now is the time to begin next summer's campaign, says the New York Evening Post. “Most of last season’s flies, having completed their life cycle, are dead,” the bulletin reads, “but those hatched late have left their eggs in a favorable place for incubation in the early spring, and these eggs will survive the winter unless disposed of. They will hatch out during the winter in an even temperature. “These winter flies will become the progenitors of next summer’s count- less billions. At the first approach of cold weather the flies seek warmth and protection in houses and stables. From cellar to garret they hide in nooks and corners. Keep them out. If any succeed in getting in, kill them. “Don’t trust the cold to kill them. Don’t assume that they are dead when you find them lying on floors or win- dow sills in unused rooms. They are ‘playing possum’ and will revive when the temperature rises. “Clean up the house and give spe cial attention to every out-of-the-way place where flies may lurk. Make sure there is nothing left which may harbor their eggs. One fly that survives the winter will become the parent of hun- dreds of millions next summer.” FRAUDS FOLLOW THE WAR Little Doubt That This Conflict Will Be Productive of the Usual Crop of Fakes. . The experience of a New York jeweler who was taken in by a brace of swindlers operating as war refugees and a block of tin masquerading as platinum is no doubt but the first of a long line of dupes. The ruined busi: ness man, the haughty aristocrat fall- en on evil times, the impoverished widow and the demonetized heiress will become numerous as the birds of prey wake up to their opportunities. The impostors will have remnants of SEE BY WIRE WHI WHILE TALKING Inven Televista, Londoner's Recent 3 tion, Described in Consular Report | ' —Machine Is Costly, Seemingly it will not be long before | persons conversing over telephones | can see the persons to whom they are talking, if an invention just reported to the state department by Deputy Consul General Carl R. Locp from Lon- don, England, comes into popular fa- vor. Mr. Loop reports such an inven- tion for transmitting light by wire as follows: “Dr, Archibald M. Low, a London consulting engineer, claims to have discovered a method by which light may be transmitted by wire. The in- vention is thus described: The con- trivance consists of a transmitter and a receiver connected by wire. The transmitter is a screen divided into a large number of small squares—cells of silenium, the electrical resistance of which element varies according to the light that touches it. “Over the screen is passed a syn- chronously running roller consisting of a number of pieces, which are alter- nately conductors and insulators. The roller is driven by a motor of 3,000 revolutions per minute, and the result- ing variations of light are transmitted along an ordinary conducting wire. The receiver is made up of a series of cells operated by the passage of polarized lMght through thin slats of steel, and at the receiver the object be- fore the transmitter is reproduced as a flickering image. “The process is referred to by the inventor as a ‘kinematographic appli- cation of common electrical principles.’ The system has been tested through a resistance equivalent to a distance o1 four miles, but in the opinion of Doc- tor Low there is no reason why it should not be equally effective over far greater distances. “The cost of the apparatus is con- siderable because the conductive sec- tions of the roller are made of plati- num and many wires are required for the transmission of the images. The invention is called the ‘televista.’” LAMP POSTS MADE OF WIRE Chicago Inventor Constructs Strong and Ornamental Support Made of Common Woven Wire. Using woven wire in cylindrical form for lamp posts, telegraph and telephone posts and supports for bal stocks of plausible jewelry, laces that look antique to untrained eyes, armor that might have been worn in old Peter L. Phillippi, farmer, Addison. 0. W. Carver, csarpenter, Shade. Scott Lohr, farmer, Conemaugh. W. T. Hoblitzell, coal dealer, Meyers- dale. Elas Zerfoss, farmer, Somerset Twp. C. S. Claar, marchant, Garrett. Everett H. Cable, clerk, Brothersv. John A. Miller, Summit. Albert Naugle, farmer, Conemaugh. Geo. Hay, farmer, Black. Ed. J. Kimmmell, Somerset Boro. Geo. E. Rayman, farmer, Edw. W. Conn, farmer, Addison. Geo. J. Orris, retired, Windber. A. G. Lowry, carpenter, Salisbury. Wm. M. Seese farmer, Conemaugh. Milton Baer, laborer, Meyersdale. Alfred E. Barron, farmer, Somerset T Eph. G. Walker, farmer, Brothersva. Jno. W. King, laborer Rockwood. F. W. Layton, bookkeeper, Clarence L Fisher, clerk, Berlin. O. J. Long, farmer, Brothersvalley. HOW'S THIS? We offer One Hundred Dollars Re- ward for any case of Cataarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY CO., Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned hve known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years and be- lieve him perfectly honorable in all business transaction and financially made by his firm. NAT. BANK OF COMMERCE Toledo, Ohio. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken inter- nally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall’s Family Pills for con- stipation. RHEUMA TIC SUFFERERS GIVEN QUICK | RELIEF Pain leaves almost as if by magic when you begin using “5- Drops,” the famousold remedy for Rheuma- tism, Lumbago, Gout, Sciatica, Neuralgia and kindred troubles. It goes right to the spot, stops the aches and pains and makes life worth living. Get a bottle of “5-Drops” today. A booklet with each bottle gives full directions for use. Don’t delay. Demand il} "5-Drops.” Don't ac- HIS cept anything else in " place of it. Any drug- (gist can supply you. If you live too far sfrom a drug store send One Dollar to ‘Swanson Rheumatic Cure Co., Newark, «Ohio, and a'bottle of “5-Drops'- will be sent prepaid. n material and type. Stoneyck. Jno. R. Roose, clerk, Somerset Boro. Meyersd. invitations are up-to-| chivalric days, but wasn’t, pictures with the dust of the Renaissance care- ‘ully rubbed into the wet paint and a thousand other priceless treasures of fakery. All will be going at bargain orices not exceeding fifty times their -eal value, and each object will be ~endared more precious by the thrill- ing fable that will account for its es- cape from the debacle of some Belgian or Polish or Gallic or Galician mart or manor house. Even the swagger- ing looter will turn up trying to real- ize on his booty and begging secrecy on the part of his victim. The swin- dlers will be of all nationalities, with infinite variety of temptation for gulls and ingenious yarns to meet all doubts. People with long purses, short knowledge and artistic aspira tions, please take notice. Teaching Art to Children. The Children’s Hour held under the auspices of the department of fine arts, Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, was inaugurated for the season of 1914-1915 a short time ago. J. Taylor, illustrator, member of the faculty of the Carnegie Institute of Technology, gave a chalk talk on illustrations of interest to children. He was assisted by Norman Kennedy and J, W. Thomp- son, both of Pittsburgh. Many inter- esting subjects have been selected for demonstration to the children during the year. There will be exhibitions of modeling, plaster casting, and vase craft, as well as talks, illustrated by lantern slides, on various periods of painting and architecture. The per- manent collections and special exhi- bitions in the department of fine arts will be utilized for the benefit of the children. Russian’s Great Work. A. A. Balakshin, a Russian, is at the head of the greatest farmers’ union in the world, a most remark- able organization composed of the Russian peasantry covering a vast stretch of fertile land from the Ural mountains to the confines of Mongolia. The chief industry is butter making, and almost the entire output has found ready market England. M. Balakshin assumed the task of organizing the farmers some years ago, and has suc- ceeded to an extent not dreamed of at the beginning. He is regarded with loving reverence by the 300,000 souls to whose well being he has devoted his life, and by whom he is affection- ately spoken of as “the little grand. father.” Question. Several of the leading directors of tne New Haven railroad retired at the moment when the investigation of the line became most sweeping. Commissioner Whitworth Riggs of the bureau of civics said apropos of these retirements in Pittsburgh: “It's an occurrence, we are told, that has no significance. These direc tors are overworked. They want a rest. Hence they retire. “But I, for my part, studying this episode, would ask: “If appea es are deceitful, what disa ances?” a hon — Chicago i ustrade or newel post lamps, a Chi: cago inventor has constructed a strong and ornamental support, which, if bent ] = S: Et Posts of Wire Netting. or twisted by accident, may be pulled back into shape, says Popular Mechan- Ics. Telephone posts made after this design, being of open wire net work, offer much less resistance to the wind and are far less liable to destruction by fire. An electric flash light contained in 5 watch case has been patented in erm: AE A NG An American automatic telephone’ system has been established in Sim- la, the summer capital of India. ® ® ® Wireless messages are sent much more easily at night than in the day- time and in winter than in summer. I Electrical machinery is used almost exclusively in a Philadelphia ice ¢tream factory that turns out 10,000 {Quarts a day. . e Fi) Ld Accordiig t6 a German sciefitist, hallstones afe f6tmed by the electricity of the thunder storms which they ac- company. ® ® © The first English plant devoted .=- ; clusively to making steel by electrical processes is being erected by a Shef- field company. ® ® Paris now has the largest steam tur- bine electric plant in Europe, a street railway power station producing 130. 000 borse power. ® @ e A Connecticut inventor's farm trac tor comsists mainly of a huge wheel, within which is the motor that fur aishes the powsf, ® ® ! As an advertising novelty an um- brella has been patented to be placed | Sleo ite lights ia stores to aif- | r illumi ion | home of her grendmbther, Mrs. Van- | Sickel. | A. E. Baer URSINA. Miss Sarah Schaible was a shop- i per in Confluence, Thursday Misses Helen Kalburgh, of Cumber- land; Laura Blades, of Somerset; Helen Kutcher, of Braddock, and A lice Friedlline of Meyersdale, are vis- iting at the home of Misses Ethel and Nellie VanSickle. Mr. ani Mrs. Edward Anderson and children are visiting at the form- er’'s home near Johnson’s Chapel. Mrs. W. S. Crowe, of Dunbar and Mrs. Chas. Cross of Tarr Station, are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Wills for a few days. Manager W. R. Wills has arranged for a base ball game at Johnson's Chapel on Saturday, August 21. Miss Hazel Irwin is visiting at the Biniagninielesniataintatantasaintataataateleinintelsialn] Harry Campbell was a recent bus- iness visitor in Confluence. CROUP AND WHOOPINGCOUGH. Mrs. T. Neureuer, Bau Claire, Wis., says, “Foley's Honey ad Tar Com- pound cured my boy of a very severe attack o croup after other remedies had failed. Our milkman cured his children of whoopingcough.” Foley's has a fortygyears record of similar cases. Contains no opiates. Always in- sist on Foley’s. Sold everywhere. Hundreds of health articles appear in newspapers and magazines, and in practically every one of them the im- portance of keeping the bowels reg- ular is emphasized. A constipatea condition invites disease. A dependa- ble physic that acts without inconve nience or griping in Foley Cathartic Pills if you have any good news In your locality send It in to the Commer Ee ee a ele nln ie nie sleseie Esuie eIulnlacE asst 3 Ghurch ENVeIODes 0 ks Discount During August. Don’t send to a distance for your Church Envel- opes when we print them for the same price, and you can save ex- pressage and parcels post rates. Duplex or Plain Envelopes Write for Samples. cial for your friends to read. Church ey K. CLEAVER, Manager Printing (Company, Slimneasnecsasnscaoaceaacaaacaaanananen aaa a eA RRR RR A RC BOB BOE BOER R LRA IRSA SRA RA ACh ‘Get Up’ BROTHERS. fect tobacco for the big, You get hold of BROTHERS. Noto want in tobacco. Am mm POCAHONTAS. Farmers in this vicinity have be- gun the cutting of oats. The barn dance held in thé new barn of A. G. Yutzy last Friday ev- ening was well attended. Is it necess- ary to say that all had a good time? The Pocahontas Brass Band and Tin Band are tuning up for the sere: nading in the near future. The following persons Stonycreek last Sunday: Mrs. George Baer Mr. toured to Mr. and and Don’t you back up or stop until you've tried FIVE It’s the one per- fisted, out-of-doors man who wants a rich, mellow tobacco for both chewing and emoling. the honest sweetness cf (1215 pure Southern Kentucky leaf, a~cd for three to five years, to bring out all its mellovsfracrance and flavor. FIVE BROTHERS has the genu- ine snap ond taste that you and Mrs. and Get two- FIVE io on visit to FFéstburg on Monday. The Sund&7 School picnic heid at this place last Saturday was weil at: tended. Millard Steinly wa&¢ in Meyersdalé!| on Monday last transacting business Austin Friedline forrierly of Poca- hontas,: but late of Akro#, Ohio, has returned and will work fér Union Mining Co. at Mt. Savage. Mrs. Wm. Garlets, of Connéllsville is visiting her mother-in-law, Paul. » C. Dietle and Millard wife w mt sm SINT Sr. FIVE BROTHERS Pipe Smoking Tohaoes, wh, is jo ey made up for the sturdy man who i is hungry for a real man's tobacco. For many years all sorts of brands have tried to beat out FIVE BROTHERS, but the old he- boy is still the king-brand of them all. Nothing fancy abe y about the FIVE BROTHERS package— we put all the cost into the tobacco. As you say N a horse, “he’s all horse™—so we say of FIVE BROTHERS “it’s all tobacco.” FIVE BROTHERS is sold everywhere — get a package 3, Ye THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY oy smile. It’s 4 boy, Nay, A rem Ln LR urday and Sunday, Simoni Werner is wearing a broad “ a 4 Sunday School #Héxt Siliday in St. Mark’s Reformed church at 10 a; m. wl. +3 CASTORIA For Isfants and Children in Use For Qver 30 Years always | bears Blt of ZT i ol & ¥ i. Time Be: in te Th their whic] dred equal chan; them vidua Cai show been disea eases withi the n is su rious ual a cours iar w ereise whicl itaria Fey disco the 1 indol aware unwis other proba their effect ces. ] ificat ly to forec: the n of the ture | of lec popul Pro mit t risk & will p less more what Self seem dulge: ting i Time MC “Mc erable energ; dition of rat ODPOSs!H The less o as if 8 part ing tc tion f Tess, | ‘cross and tl ten m All the n exhau it and ' persor of del thoug! better To I due c “right fits of machi cessfu not co The: ly .rou If we broadl gress pace. selfish have sires i tion fi achiev To: | pily n our Dp! Progre by ra squirr STOR Anti next V labor from + igners partici vania