wt rm ¥ “ ep in cr mame eA dl SRE de FARMER'S = fine or onecce win SANTA-FE-PRESIDENT SHERIFF QUELLS oo COLUMN Some Practical Suggestions Well Worth Knowing From the De- partment of Agriculture. Snake stories that are colored or enlarged or untrue do much more | harm than good. There are two speci- | es of poisonous serpents in Pennsyl- ¥ania, the copperhead and the rattler, | and they generally live in the more | remote or inaccessible districts, ara | peacefully inclined, and do not chase persons and are not so serious in their effects as most persons think, The horrible big snake stories that often originate in the minds of per- sons who wish to tell something fear- ful, or perhaps magnify their own pro- wess or skill in combat, and which are sometimes published and republished | in the newspapers do much more harm than good. In the first place, big snake Stories generally are not true, and BIG SNAKE STORIES | KING CONSTANTINE. x X x x x X xz x x x x x x xX x X x x x x x § REIDELBERG Ri0T 5 Injured; Heavy Damage one by Chemisal Go. Strikers STRIKERS WANT WAGE RAISE Men Left Plant Thursday When 1a crease Prom 35 to 486 Cents an Hour Was Denied—S8ix Men Arrested. Five men were severely injured and thousands of dollars’ damage was don: during a riot, when striking laborers stormed the plant of the Aetna Chem- ical dompany, Heidelberg, Pa. Follewimg the outbreak of the trouble a call for help was sent to Sheriff George W. Richards, who later detajled thirty-three deputies, under command of Deputy Sheriffs Morgan and Matthews, to the scene of the E. P. RIPLEY. <0 WILL FIGHT 8-HOUR LAW bad— driEielniuie ein nlulnle ln ewe nin ERIN 0 aln RESULTS Both Fhenes How Are You? is a very common question. that you are well in every respect? If so you are EXTREMELY FORTUNATE—Eye defects cause conditions that make you feel COOK, Eye Sight Specialist Can you say 2 If your Eyes are sick I can help you by Fitting Proper Glasses—Come to see me. GUARANTEED. THE OPTOMETRIST Meyersdale, Pa. trouble. The prompt arrival of the bersons not knowing this are fright. ened by them so that they resolve they will keep amay from the country and thus not be in danger of horrible suakes. Nervous or timid women and | children instead of goinz out into God’s pure air on the breezy hills and along wooded streams become 80 afraid of the horrible denizens of such hy Places that are so vividly pictured that series of hostile they decide to go to the seashore and comparable only with live in stuffy humanity, . xs does a great injustice to persons who the week. First, Italy opened hoetili need the most natural and enjoyable ties pains} Germany. recreation mankind can take. 1 ~~ THE WAR n:anifesto- the rooms amid crowded days of the Europcan slaughter. lw o 7 ? engagement with the Austrians in the No part of the country is better ad- Transylvanian Alps, apd that evening Bucharest declared waf en Austria, Hungary. Berlin retaliated with a war apted to giving pleasure in summer outings than tht wooded foothills and mountains of Pennsylvania, with their cooling shades, pure streams, diversi- led and interesting flowers, and harm- Z less animal life, It should be known lowed. that there is no wild creature of any ! against Roumania. Reumanians cap flict pain or terror upon manknd in any way, unless in very remote places and by accident one should happen to disturb one of the tivo vono an us pents in Pennsylvania. stantine has abdicated his throne in favor of his son, Crowa Prince George, Ler These reports have not been definitely established, however. The crown Finally isis very important to the prince is generally considered an agriculture people they induce city allies’ syi:p:thizer. visitors and country boarders to come and dwell among them. lo do this the tO note two Important personages of first thing is to stop snake stories, ang feminine gender. Queen Elizabeth of show that the country is far safer, ‘oUmania ia an English princess, more healthy, and more pleasant than while Queen Sophie Of (Greece Is a sister of Kaiser Wilhelm. the seashore or the city. The producer The Roumanians, assisted by Rus- of country produce can find much more sian troops, have begun an invasion réady and profitable sale for hic £0045 of Transylvania, taking the mountain among campers, or persons on out- : passes and several of the larger cities ings, or summer hotels in his vic'nity of the Hungarian province almost than by attempting to ship it away to without oppositien, Vienna declaring the city. There should be a great de it is impractical to defend the tortu- mand in the delightful rural commun. OUS mountain boundary. It is pre: ities for fresh butter, eggs, milk, meat, sumed the great battle will be fought: vegetables and fruits, and there should inthe Jrovines, on, grogny: cf be all Indusement offered to those per pp ts NER Athens have pre. sons who take yacaticns to do ths in sented to the Greek government a note éhe country where they can have a demanding control over Greek posts real outing, and get in touch with rea] and telegraphs, and insisting’ on the nature. It will do the city people good deporfation from Greece of agents ‘of to become acquainted with the country , the central powers. ? people and’ learn their problems ani | CT —— method of living, and it will do the GOV. PENNYPACKER DEAD country people good likewise to see A GENERAL SURVEY OF With the declaration last Sunday by the deputies and taken to the Alle- Italy of war against Germany be opening I'aysicians from the plant. None is in In : . i i i ice I S 8, or to stay at home. This all there were five declarations during | (Deir injuries when struck by stone Roumanian = troops on the same day fought a smail The trouble began when the day tured Rutschuk, Bulgaria, and Sofia] began formal hostilities. Turkey fo!- In dh effort to align Greece on the kind inhabiting the State that will in. Side of the entente, a rebellion has : £ 18 broken out in Greek Macedonia, and reports have come out that King Con- In this ‘connection it is interestng | men from Sheriff Richards’ éffice and the efficient manner im whieh they SON SLAYS PARENTS quiet to be restored. Six men who are said by the of- ficers to have played a prominent part in the riot were placed under arrest When Arrested. the bodies in graves which had bee gheny jail. oe All the injured were attended by serious condition. The men received | tax.” _ | bieces of slag and iron hurled by the riote.s. in a shallow grave, and then Muelle shift was leaving the plant. The strik- ers, about forty in number, began at- tacking the men, hurling stones and everything hat came within their reach. MawLy of the missiles struck the plant and caused considerable damage to the machinery, Practically every window in the plant was broken. The strikers left the plant of the company ¢i Thursday night, when their demand for gn increcse in wages from 33 to 46 cents an hour was re fused. The striking men patrolled the plant in an orderly manner until their outbreak. The meximum wage for laborers at the plant is 45 cents and the minimum is 35 cents an hour. Most all the la- ; kcrers at the plant are paid the maxi- | mum wage. | The six men under arrest gave their | names as Andy Lasckuki, Emevio Piz { zZngovilli, Pe‘er Bartoli, Steve Koval | «ki, Sylvest.r Koviski and Camillo De luco. All are charged with rioting and are being held under $2,600 bail. — Wiison Notified of Renomination. Facing nearly 20,000 enthusiastiic men and women ag he stood on the prepared. store. the father was shot three times. many eight years 280 amassed considerable property. father was a farmer. was the only child. GLASS BECOMES GOLDEN Shutdown That Consumers Worry. window glass. more glass will be exported than in any other year in history, notwith- standing the fact that 1,500,000 boxes were shipped abroad in 1915. The failure of the wage committees ‘representing the = National Window Glass Workers and the hand window glass manufacturers to agree at their first wage conference was a big disap- pointment to many manufacturers who .were hoping that operations could be started the last of this month. An- other meeting will be held on Sept. 19, at which time the scale by the workmen will likely be adopted, PA. MAN HEADS G. A. R, . veranda of the magnific ‘White House, Shadow I. PRY ; Branch, Ny-J., Woodrow Wilson Satur. day afternddn was notified of his sec. ond nomination for the presidency of the United States and responded with ‘a speech of acceptance, the true Axger- ican ring of which set the immense crowd ‘into wild cheering. LIVE STOCK AND GRAIN Pittsburgh, Sept. 6. Butter—Prints, 35@35%e; tubs, 34 bandled the situation soen caused] Florida Youth Confesses to Deed John Mueller, nineteen, killed his father and mother at Palatka, Fla., by shoeting them with a rifle. He buried prepared in advance of the killing. When arrested he said he killed them “because I had to do so to get the war The mother was killed at the home, | three miles from town, the body buried | hastened a mile down the road, where he shot his father from ambush, drag- ging the body through the woods to, the home, where two graves had been The mother was bound with wire | which the boy bought at a Palatka ' She was shot five times and The x - Muellers moved to this state from Ger- £5 39,000 Geographical Subjects, and had The John Mueller So Precious and Scarce In Summer With the demand for window glass the greatest in history, and with virtu EB ally every glass plant in the country closed down for repairg, it is almost impossible to procure popular sizes of ' proposed | . : @84%c. Eggz—Frosh, 33c. William J. Patterson of Pittsburgh life from the viewpoint of the burden. Former Pans Executive Suc- Cattle—rraue, $9.25@9.75; good, Elected Commander-in-Chief. ed city people Misleading snake stories eumbs to Uraemic Poisoning. , $8.50@y; ucy butchers, $7.75@8.25: William J. Patterson of Pittsburgh should not be the means of keeping | After a brave and in the main a fair, $i @7.50; common, $6@7; com-|wag elected commander-in-chief of the | them apart . | cheery battle against uraemic Poison: mon to good fat bulis, $4.50@7.25; Grand Army of the Republic at the ah. a ' ‘ing, former Governor Samuel W. common to good fat cows, $4@7.50; | nual encampment in Kansas City, Mo. ; —— $ Pennypacker of Pennsylvania died at STEALING NESTS IN AUGUST i 3 o'clock Saturday afternoon in his i k ills, August is the worst month in the Rome at Pennypacker Mills near year for hens on the farm to “steal” their what scheme nests in unusual places this month no one seems to know. Sure it is that putting eggs from such nests in the market baskets is an abominable practice. In stronger words it is stealing again, For, the city house-wife that pays for such eges cannot use them and will not .use them. City house-wives will do well to view with suspicion any eggs that come to them at this season that have shiny or glossy egg shells. Thig gloss is what you find on eggs that have been brooded or sat on by a hen with the incubating fever. Fortunately a very large per cent of eggs coming to market are card. dled before being offered for sale. But the loss must come out of Some- body’s pocket-book, Every time a housekeeper buys a stale egg or a bad egg the business of selling eggs and the business of pro- ducing eggs gets a set back. It does not pay the poultryman or the farmor ever to sell an incubated egg, a crack. ed, egg, or a stale egg. If more farms would be rooster-less and farm eggs more generally not fer- tile or sterile the harm of selling eggs | from stolen nests would be a great deal less. At most then they would be only stale eggs and they could not reach market with the smell of a dead animal in them or even worse, with a dead chick therein. For a hen though, to steal her nest is usually a sign | that that particular hen is a good one. i. i} s LE Pad nests. Just wLy this is so or | Nature is working by causing numbers of hens to hide their . Schwenkville, at the age of seventy- ; three. He had been ti} and confined to the house several months, his malady having been aggravated by the recent severe fracture of an arm, and by his almest superhuman determina- tion for a time to minimize both his malady and his injury. With a Fife reserva store of vitality and a native wit and optimism that long refused to he conquered, the ex- { governor prolonged his span of life v several days past the time when death seemed imminent. But the last few rallies only made more evident the fact that the end was drawing nearer, | and, weakened and able no longer to | resist, he expired Saturday afternoon with his family and closest friends at kis bedside. JAPANESE FLOCK TO BRAZIL Emigration to Other South Ametizan Countries Also Large. Large nun:bers of Japanese are em:- grating to South America, saccording to the Japanese Advertiser, forward to Washington by the American consul general at Yokohama. One ship is said to have taken nearly a thousand smi- grants to South American ports re- cently. “Since the gentlemen's agreement with the United States,” the paper is quoted as saying, “the number of Jap- anese emigrants to South America has | increased im great numbers. The policy of Australia thes also nade the south- : ern continent attractive to people from this country. Justice Dies In His Office. Daniel McClane, aged seventptwo, heifers, $56@3; fresh cows and spring. ers, $40G 50. ° Sheep and Lambs—Prime wethers, $7.80@8; good mixed, $7.26@17.75; fair mixed, $650@7; culls and common, $350@5; spring lambs, $7@11.25; veal] calves, $13@18.50; heavy and thin calves, $7@9.50. Hogs—Prime ‘heavy, $11.50@11.55; heavy mixed, $12.60@11.65; mediums and heavy Yorkers, $11.80@11.99; light Yorkers, $11@11.50; pigs, $10@ 10.76; roughs, $9.76@10.25; stags, $8 @8.50. Cleveland, Sept. 5. Cattle—Choice fat steers, $8.75@ 9480; good to choice butcher steers, $8@8.76; fair fo good butcher steers, $7@8; common to light steers, $6.25 @7; good to choice heifers, $7@8; fair to good heifers, $6@7; good to choice butcher bulls, $6.26@7; bologna bulis, $6.25@86.25; good to choice cows, $6@ 6.50; fair to good cows, $6@6; com- mon cows, $3.50@4.50. Calves—Good to choice, $13.50@14: fair to good, $12@13.50; heavy to com wn, $6609. . & 7 T.ambs—Good tr (Ww Seeing ROUEN pla 10; cul La, good 1 choice ww. w wi0i.ib: good (5 choice cvwe., 1u.5066.75; mixed ewes and wetherz, 36.75@7; culls, $3.50@ 450. ; Hogs—Mixed, Yorkers, mediums and heavies, $11.50; pigs, $9.75; roughs, $9.76@9.85; stags, $9. Chicago, Sept. 5. Hogs — Bulk, $10.60@11.10; light, $1080@11.25; mixed, $10.20@11.25; heavy, $10.10@11.15; r~ughs, $10.10@ 10.80; pigs, $7.76 @9.80. Cattle—Native beef cattle, $7.25@ 11.30; stockers and feeders, $4.85@ 7.70; cows and, heifers, $8.76 @9.50; calves, $5@12.50. for thirty years a jystice of the peace in East Liverpool, 0. died wiiile at- tending: to business in, his ofce: Ho was a Civil war veteran. I TT emp Pom ae YL Sheep—Wethers, $6.25®7.60; lam bs, are receiving the best prices in a The senior vice commander named City, department commander of Mis souri. ' The other new officers are: E. K. Russ, New. Orleans, junior vice com- Manzanola, Col., chaplain-in-chief, and William M. Hanna, Aurera, I1l., sur- geon general. The new commander- in-chief announced the following mem. bers of his staff: H. H. Bengough, Pittsburgh, adjutant general; General Cola D. R. Stowits, Buffalo, quarter- master general, and J. Henry Hol comb, Philadelphia, assistant quarter master general and custodian. SMALL PAPERS MAY SUSPEND Shortage of Print Paper May Force Them Out of Business. Additional economies and more ac tive co-operation in the manufacture and consumption ef news print paper are suggest .. in a letter addressed to each memb “tn “"ews Print Manu facturers’ “ei: » ‘the ? trade com _.s:. Because c. ; Be publishers of tae sri: aad weekly newspapers taroug.out th. country fear they will have to suspend publication. The letter says the sus pension of these papers would be “a national calamity.” Fader, it day Senator Sutherland Heads Bar. Senator George Sutherland of Utah was elected president of the American Bar association for 1917, defeating by four voted Welter George Sith of and Buckwheat crops in many sec- Philadelphia in the convention in Chi ' tions. 08go. Apple crops larger than normal yields are expected in Elk, Forest, Peaches Bxing Good Prices. Mercer, Potter, Susquehanna, and Peach growers of Romney, W. Va. was William H. Wormstead of Kansas | mander-in-chief; Rev. Orville S. Reed, | las compared un Y, WEBSTER'S NEW INTERNATIONAL Superiority of E P| questions such as ‘““How ig ronounced ?’’ ‘“Whera ig ?* ““What is a continuous age?’’ “What is a howitzer? is white coalf’’ i nounced ?”’ More than 400, E 12,000 E Biographical Entries. Over 6000 lilus- trations. 2700 Pages. The only diction E ary with the divided page—a stroke of [ ree, a set ol Pocket Maps if you name this TT Tr Port. rar A oni. STATE AGRICUL- Orders continue to flow in from for- TURAL NOTES. eign countries and it is predicted that | Lf Berks | wheat crop at tan ver cent. above the average production. Although a con "siderable pcrtion was damaged in the shock by the heavy rains, | In several séctions of the State 't is reported that the quail have been a big assistance in cleaning the potato | patches of bugs. ! Throughout the State the hay yieid has been unprecedented and two mill- fon mcre tons was preduced over Lot | year, ua In the northern tier counties con- | siderable grain remained in the shocks lin the field on the first of August. Clearfield county apples are said 9 “have considerable scab and many ho:d hail storm marks, | Adams county reports an apple yield , of practically ninety per cent. of an | average crop. The excessive drought during the first few weeks of August has causad damage to the potato crop which is not expected to reach an average yield. Tobacco is back and irregular in growth and the worms are reported very bad in Lancaster county, In sections of Montgomery county | wheat has averaged about twenty-two | bushels to an acre in the threshing. | i Statistics gathered by the Pennsyl- | vania Department of Agriculture show | that the plum crop in the State will be about 62 per cent, of the normezl yield. The average price of cherries per quart in the State was eight cents, raspberries, ten cents and blackber- | ries nine cents. Clearfield county re- ports a hay harvest of over twenty per cent. larger acreage than lagt year. ‘TUUAWO coukties report an in- crease in acreage sown to Yuckwheat | witk a year ago with Cameron county leading with ten or cent. and Wyoming next with eight per cent, Farm labor is reported Very scarce and in some counties lack of farm help has greatly retarded the harves- ting of the crops this season. The lack of rain during the past few weeks has retarded both potato Tioga counties, $6.50@ 10.90. Wheat—Bept., 81.44%. Corn—Sept. ! 7c. Oats—Sept, 45Yc. A ——— dozen years. Elbertas, which Rave, just commenced to reach the market , are bringinz $3 to $3.50 .8 carrier. { i I av cho wont ovr min apogee ~=ut oo - In August 1915, a Fulton county farmer bought five ewes for $25. This summer he sold five lambs when four | months old for $53. and 37one half A HC BC BB RR OR ROR RR AY HU couity estimates place the | BALTIMORE & OHIO 16-DAY EXCURSIONS TO NORFOLK OLD POINT COMFORT VIRGINIA August 10 and 24, Sept. 7 $8.50 ROUND TRIP GOOD IN COACHES ONLY FOR $2 00 ADDITIONAL TICKETS WILL BE GOOD IN PULLMAN CARS, WITH PULLMAN TICKETS The Route is Rail to Washington™ or Baltimore and Delixhtful Steam- er Trip to Destination Full Information at Ticket Office t Avg. o-b avert pl Gh IomBiGl gs] SIE of Where Motorists Lodge The favorite route for motorists is the: Great National Highway, formerly known as the National Pike. It winds from the east through Cumberland and ‘down into Pittsburgh by way of Brownsville, entering the main part of the city right at the Monongahela House PITTSBURGH where cool, airy rooms with open river view afford the most comfortable summer quarters, European Plan Single Room, without bath, $1.00 and $1.5) per day. Single room with bath $2. 00, $2.50 i and $3.00 per day. Each additional person $1.00 per day in any room, with or without bath, | Complete Cafe Service from 25¢ Club | Breakfast to the most elaborate dinner. J. B. Kelley, Manager Smithfield St., Water St. and First Ave. Pittsburgh EE pounds of wool for $12.87. He retained the best lamb and now hag a flock of six sheep, cleared the original invest- ment and had $41 profit. The cost of ! keeping the sheep was very small, ST. PAUL Charles McKenzie’s of Pocahontas, were visiting Oscar Sipple’s on Sun- day. Charlie Cocks of Rockwood were the guests of Richard Sipple’s on Sunday. George Sipple of Pittsburg is spend- ing som time this week with friends in St. .Pari. There is a big difference between the words “poverty” and “property’” in meaning. Those St. Paulers of which we spoke last week want to do away with poverty, They would like to S€e every ome own all the property- he needs. They are ga funny set, They think every body able to work should do useful work and be paid for it with a sum equal to what he earns. They have an idea that this plan: would give every one the chance to- own the property he needs. ——————— Get owr nrices on Job work. PASSE Gongrass Pr tion For L; SOMPERS L weddfation Pres Eonfidence In Eight-Heyr D: Ninety-two la passed by cong latures during tk according to a s the American £ Legislation. “The most si ilegislation,” say John B. Andrew laws, one Rnrohii interstate or for itain products’ i ‘which the labor . employed, and t model scale of tion for persona eral employees, now more thax 4 “Several hund introduced into Dr. Andrews add legislateres in ground out their nual grist.” Samuel Gompe American Feder: public in We ment on “Labor Issues” for 1916 acterized the pa ~ able one in the movement, espe ing of the worki: labor legislation. “Labor day, 1 pers, “brings to | ica the right to in the trade unic have been tests proved its run there haye bee 3 have tested its TT § union. ‘Through ‘them : those things whic some organizatio "been phenomenal. “Taking the Ia hole, there has in the @ shorter workday similar period of f these victories nly in the light « the meaning of e shorter wor lore than an ec a demand for « Si EIGHT-HOUF ailroad Strike Is Signs | The Adamson ei; d by labor union « satisfactory set mands on which th Lalling a nation-w ay, was passed ‘by the senate Sat The president 1 and the strike has Klondike Discover Snookum Zim *who, with George discovered the K twenty years ago, cently at Carcros At one time he £0ld, nearly, all o dered. On a visit ‘money from his h¢ ‘the crowds scramb Coal Moven Coal which has the Kanawha rives -conditions this sun move toward the m 2nd middle west. . -sffeam have been boats are handling - N. Y. Car Men Aga Motormen ‘and ce -on the elevated am the Interborough F pany, New York, work unless officers consent to meet a c 16 9 11 7181 4