. of ® 5 RL 6 1 QroR ALY ~~ i iil TITRA A a“ COVERNMENT SUPERVISION MEMBER BANK UNDER FEDERAL RESERVE ACT THINK OF THE CONVENIENCE re v a | When thers is interest due on a note; a bill to be paid; or an insurance payment due, no need to come tn town to settle it if vou know the amount and have yonr cneck hook at hand. You ean op n 8 ches k acecunt in this Ravk with a small sum, and the cerver jer ce of it alone makes it almost necessary to the modern farmer -i- Besides the convenience, there is the cafetv of i* to be considered. You will not lose money from your pocket if veu PAY-BY-CHECK. It’s the Safe Way Citizens National Bank «The Bank with the Clock” Meyersdale, Pa. A I TO Ned fA wt 2 Sm AA rrr R.P. Shepherd, Noted Community Expert COMPROMISE MAY | IRISH REPUBLIC'S END CAR STRIKE, Ptitshurgh Business Men Take Hand In Traction Situatien WESTINGHOUSE MEN- IN RIOT Plants In Rankin and Braddock In- vaded by Striking Men; Two Jump Into Monongahela River to Escape. With the city and interurban car lines tied up, thousands of machinists joining the already large army of striking craftsmen, business of all kinds at a stanrstill, the Pittsburgh district is experiencing the greatest industrial upheaval in years. With the, strike of 3,100 car men the street railway system of the city and its environs became paralyzed. In the meantime, Pittsburgh is walk- ing; grumblngly, it is true, but vigor- ously measuring the miles of pave- ments that criss-cross the city—that is those who have no autos and find the jitneys overcrowded. Canferences are now being held in the Fort Pitt hotel between Pittsburgh business men, newspaper men, trac- tion officials and representatives of the car men’s union, looking to a set- tlement of the strike of the car men. Angered because workmen in the various industrial plants in Rankin and Braddock refused to join their ranks, 5,000 striking employees of the allied Westinghouse plants entered the Edgar Thomson Steel works at r-add ck, the McoClintic-Marshall Con- struc ion company, Rankin; the Amer- can Steel Wire company’s plauts at Rankin and Braddock and the Stan- dard Chain works at Rankin, and at- tacked the employees. Two men, to save their lives, jumped into the Monongahela river. Several others were beaten up. After the strikers HE second day of the Chautauqua R. P. Shepherd, community effi- ciency expert, will make two addresses. His afternoon address he calls “Babies and Folks,” a fascinating presentation in popular words,of the essential facts of several ologies—biology, embryology, physiological and edu- cational psychology—with special reference to present changes in school, church and community programs. Children are urged to be at the tent for this lec- ture, for babies and boys and girls will be used on the platform to demon- strate and make personal the “acts presented. — | Noted Humorist to Entertain Chautauquans m—r3 TRICKLAND W. GILLILAN, leading humorist on the American platform. aker on the Chautauqua here. 1] a | ber whose picture is shown above, is the He will be the last | {en tad terrorized the men they demol- ished several thousand doliars’ worth of property. When the Braddock po- ‘ice atien:pted an arrest the strikers ‘urned on them and forced-the officers to release their prisoners. The rioting lasted nearly three hours, when strike leaders finally per- u~ded. the moeb to disperse. The dis- d-rs wer» ihe most serious that save occurred since the Westinghouse trike was declared two weeks ago. Practical all downtown barber shops have sigaed an. agreement to ihe union scale and are ‘operating as wWiual. Only four of ‘the downtown shops have refu:ed to sign and rep- resentatives of local union No. 20, Journeymen Barbers, 170 out of the 208 shops in the district have signed. The new scale calls for not less than $15 a week with 60 per cent over $24.50. Fifty laborers employed at the Aspinwall filtration plant went out on a strike because Superintendent Charles A. Finley of the bureau of water refused to give them an in- crease in’ wages. The men receive $2.10 a day and they are demanding $2.50 'a day. One thousand carpenters are on strike at Akrom,-O., to enforce their demands for an eight-hour day, 55 cents an hour and the closed shop. Building is at a standstill. The car- hour. About 2,000 machinists employed at the various industrial plants of | Youngstown, 0., are out and a num- of these plants are operated in a crippled condition, several being closed. There is not the slightest suggestion of disorder, and while the strikers appear to be determined no ill-feeling has come to the surface sO far. One hundred carpenters employed by twelve contractors at East Liver- pool, O., struck when refused an in- crease from $4 to $4.50 for eight hours. All bricklayers were granted an in- crease from $5.20 to $5.60 for eight hours and the hodcarriers granted an increase from $2.50 to $3 for eight hours. STRAWBERRY CROP BIGGER Arkansas and Missouri May Ship 2,300 Cars. Reports received by the department of agriculture from a representative in the territory and from railway officials, growers and shippers indicate more than 2,300 cars of strawberries may be shipped from Arkansas and Mis- souri this season, if prices are such as to warrant it. These figures are based in part oD which this year may have stimulated heavier buying than usual. There is gvery evidence that the crop is much larger than last year and that it is In excellent condition SUNMON| TUE WED] THU [FRI [SAT | [213/456] 89 11,2) 6 78910111213] H151617181920 252621, gr mts! BET TT te declared that: penters were receiving 45 cents an!’ purchases of crates, the low price of | DAYS ARE SHORT Last of Rebels Lay Down Arms at Foot of Parnell Statue ements PRISONERS GO TO ENGLAND James Connolly, One of Leaders of Rebellion, Formerly Had Been Edi- tor of New Castle (Pa.) Free Press. The remnants of the Sin Feinn rebel army, which a week ago set out to es- tablish a “Republic of Ireland,” has surrendered unconditionally, following the example of the main body which succumbed in Dublin a few nights ago to the government troops after death and destruction had reigned supreme in the Irish capital for a week. One thousand rebel prisoners were counted in Dublin. Isolated‘groups of snipers, who held out in their well hidden haunts long after the capitula- tion of the main body, surrendered one by one. Of the 1,000 insurgents taken in Dublin, 489 have been sent to England. There were no wounded among them. Most of them were young men and boys. They were im- mediately put aboard a train for pris- ons in the interior of England. Sir John French, commander in chief of the government's force in Ire land, report~d officially that all the rebels in Dublin have surrendered, that the citv is “quite safe” and that the revolutionists in the country dis- tricts, too, have accepted the govern ment’s term of capitulation. { The rebels in Enniscorthy, who had made a particularly stubborn stand, | were the last to give up. TT EER ARR, ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. | AVegetable Preparation forAs- similating the Food and Regia ling Uwe Stomachs and Bowels of 8 INFANTS “CHILDREN 2% | Promotes Digestion Cheerful | ness and Rest Contains neither | Opium Morphicte nor Mineral ‘NOT NARCOTIC. ve | Aperfect Remedy for Consfips 3 ion, Sour en Diarra fh: Worras Convulsions Feverisit | ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. C Se CQMPANY, Tue CENTAU ’ NEW YORK. ! EE TLE RP hci 35 CENTS A al ji itl) asic MY Exact Copy of Wrapper. Bears the Signature GASTORIA For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA THE CENTAUSR COMPANY, [.EW YORK citi. Jim Connclly, leader of the rebel; a = AY Sa PE lion, who a .ew years ago was editor | CRRA RARER ARORA BC EO E0R0R0R0RCE ES AROR0B0R OBUBOBCHOC OO HCHCECE of a Socialist pzper in New Castle, Pa.,{ § ]& was killed in the fighting. | The last rebel stromghold to be’ taken was Jacobs factory. Cut off * from the center of the city the be-! leaguered insurgents here had not | heard of the capitulation of chiefs. They kept up a desultory tusillade from the roofs and windows and finally had to be subdued by a battery of artillery. ; This sudden and dramatic end fol- lowed upon a defeat of the rebels in various parts of the city. Their main x x x x 3 x x their 5 2 < x z x x f... MOTTLED Good layers of large, white eggs. -:- Cost less to keep than ordi- nary fowls, and lay more eggs, Mature Early and Do Not Set. : Improve your flocks, make more money. -: stronghold, the postoffice, was fired by the insurgents themselves with paraf- fin oily, The building burned fiercely and & 1s retired to the Coliseum stredt. Finding themselves hemmed in by troops on all sides, they surren- dered in a body—those who had not been shot by the military. The Metropole hotel is burned to the ground and both sides of Sackville street are practically burned out. Tal- bot street is practically destroyed, to- gether with the Eden quay. Democratic Plank Indorsed. The Michigan Republican state con- vention urged the state delegation to Chicago to vote for ‘some dis- tinguished Republican statesman, such a Charles Evans Hughes,” and boldly indorsed’ the plank of the Democratic national convention in Baltimore which favors one term for Democratic presidents. MARKET QUOTATIONS Pittsburgh, May 2. Butter—Prints, 37@37%ec; tubs, 36 @36%c. Eggs—Fresh, 22% @23c. Cattle—Prime, $9.50@9.75; good, $8.80@9.35; tidy butchers, $8.50@9; | fair, $7.76@8.26; common, $6.50 @7.60; heifers, $6@3.50; common to good fat bulls, $5@8; common to good fat cows, $4@7.75; fresh cows and spring- ers, $40@80. Sheep and Lambs—Prime wethers, $7.80@8; good mixed, $7.40@7.75; fair mixed, $6.60@7.25; culls and Comme, $4@5.50; lambs, $6.50@10.10; veal calves, $9@9.50; heavy and thin calves, $56@7. Hogs—Prime heavy, heavy mixed, | mediums and heavy Yorkers, $10@ 10.05; light Yorkers, $9.40@9.50; pigs, $8.756@9; roughs, $8.75@9; stags, $7 @17.25. Cleveland, May 2. Csttle—Choice fat steers, $8.50@ ! 9.15; good to choice butcher steers, $8@8.85; fair to good butcher steers, | $6.75@17.85; good to choice heifers, $7.560@8.75; good to choice butcher bulls, $7@7.85; bologna bulls, $6@7;' good to choice cows, $6.75@17.50; fair to good COWS, $5.50@6.50; common cows, $4@5.25. Calves—Good to choice, $9.76@10; ! fair to good, $8.50@9.60; heavy and common, $5.50@8. : { . Clipped Sheep and Lambs—Good to choice lambs, $9.26@9.65; fair to good, i $7@9; good to choice wethers, $7.50@ ' 8; good to choice ewes, mixed ewes and wethers, $7.26@7.76; culls, $4.50@6.50. | Hogs—Mixed, $9.95@10; $9.90@9.95; mediums, $10; pigs, $8.75; stags, $7; roughs, $8.90. ' Chicago, May 2. Hogs—Bulk, $9.80@9.95; light, $9.56 @10; mixed, $9.60@10; heavy, $9.50@ 10; roughs, $9.60@9.65; piss, $740@ 8.10. | Cattle—Native beef steers, $7.96@ { 9.90; stockers and feeders, $6.85@ | 860; cows and heifers, $4.10@9.35; | ealves, $6.25@9.26. Wheat—May, $1.16%. T7%e. Oats—May, 4676. ge lh —— Corn—May, Born Bem merEn ‘gt ‘the top of Sackvillef $7@17.50; | | Yorkers, Have Birds of Which You BAGS $2.50 ARR 0 A 0 Q MR EERE RE REA RS 5, 2 siulsinlninialnle BIDS ON SCHOOL SUPPLIES FOR 1916—1917 WANTED BY THE MEYERSDALE SCHOOL BOARD. 10 gross Pencils Eb. Faber Mos 390 S. No. 2 10 Gross Pencils Eb. 3200. 3 Gross Primary Penciis Eb. Fab- er, No. 6370. 3 gross Drawing No. 5 V. H. 155 2 gross Penholders Eagle No. 1040 600 Economic Erasers 120 18 Doz Dixon's Eclipse Erasers No. 868 : 3500 Knowledge Ruled (Yellow) 1500 No. 6564 Roberts & Meck Tab- lets 40 Reams Roberts & Meck Yellow | Paper No. 507 70 Reams of Exam. Paper (Ruled) 1 | 10 Reams Exam. Paper (Ruled) | No. 2 Faber No. Pencils, Dixons | Pencil Tablets, | 50 Reams of Practice Paper for pen and ink (writing) 1,000 Note Books, Genius Comp.! No. 4055 : 20 Reams of Drawing Paper 9 by 12 white 2 Doz. Stenography Note Books Ra- pid-write No. S—671 2 Doz. Steography Note Books, Ra-| pid-Write No. S—672 | | | 6 Reams of Drawing Paper, White 17 by 22 for Mechanical Drawing 15 Doz. U. S. Mail large size, ruled | 5 Doz. U. S. Mail small size, ruled | 5 Doz Sheets Carbon Paper 8.12] by 13 inches Black | 20 Reams Typewriter Paper 8.12 by 13 8 Reams Typewriter Paper 8.12] by 11 8 Reams of Typewriter Paper 5 1-2] by 8 1-2 15 Gross of Eagle Pens No. 660 | 15 Gross Hstebrook Pens No. 102 | 10 Gallons of Ink : | | 27 Teachers’ Roll Books 600 Corks, 7-8 inch 12 Boxes Hotchkiss Paper Fasten- ers 3 Boxes 34 inch Paper Fasteners | 8 gross Thumb Tacks 48 gross Claxton Velvet Dustless | Crayon 5 Doz. Bottles of Library Paste. Competitive goods will be con- ! sidered . All bids to be in the hands of the Secretary by Friday evening, | May 12th, 1916. | J. M. GNAGEY, Secretary. vhiidren Ory FOR FLETSHER'S CASTORIA | | ANCONAS... N ae > 2 - will be Proud by Buying a Mtting of ¥iges T. W. GAIN. essai MANA W. VL CHCE0BIBCBOBCE0B0B0 80 IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF SOMERSET COUNTY, PENNA. Notice is hereby given that an ap- plication will be made to the above Court on Friday May 5, 1916 at 10 o'clock a. m. under the corporation Act of 1874 of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and the supplements there to for the Charter of an intend- ed corporation to be called “St. Mark’s Congregation of the Reformed Church in the United States,” the character and object of which is to support the public worship of Al- mighty God accordihg to tho faith, doctrine, discipline and usages of the Reformed Church in the United States and for these purposes to have and possess and enjoy all the rights, bene- fits and privileges of the said Act of Assembly and its supplements. The proposed Charter is now on file in the Prothonotary’s Office. W. CURTIS TRUXAL, Solicitor -C. H. SHOCKLEY INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS. Spccial Agent for the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States. MEYERSDALE, PA. We all carry Fire Insurance. (Good) Your life is worth more to your family than a building is to you. Our life policies are liberal. In case of total disability, caused either by sickness or accident. Premium - then ceases and we will pay you an in- | come for life. On the other hand if | you live 20 years we will pay you back more than you ever paid for | your insurance. { \ | Life insurance protects the home.