ob ert Li- ela tie ist nd Tie TS, iss q’lt me 5C; ker TK- RK 1st lin- ilt, >m- be; ily TO- rs. ey, nd ATY len iss 1ip- C. 1st 0c; Oc; Bc; Pa ar-- iss tto nd. reir 1ith , to the ter, ‘ore and and the Son een 10TS 1 in ums- ers. THE WAR ‘drive toward Monastir apparently is — AMERICAN COMMISSIONER IN MEXICAN DISPUTE N. Y. STRIKE SET 3 : DR. JOHN R. MOTT. A GENERAL SURVEY OF The tide of battle in the Roumanian province of Dobrudja has turned in favor of the central powers, according to Berlin. Field Marshal von Mack- ensen has succeeded in breaking the Roumanian and Russian resistance, the German war office reports, exscut- ing an encircling movement which compelled the entente forces to retreat in disorder. In the fighting in the Carpathians the Russians have taken the moun- tain ‘peak of Smotrec, which already had changed hands several times. Elsewhere along this rugged front the Bussians have been attacking heavily, but, according to Berlin, were beat- en off. : The British are again striking hard on the Somme front. Their latest thrust netted them two lines of Ger- man trenches on a line about a mile long between Flers and Martinpuich. It is at this point that the British have pushed farthest toward Bapaume, which is but little more than three miles distant from Flers. The advance straightens out the former bend in the line from Martinpuich to Flers, which now runs almost directly east and west. The French for their part of the Somme fighting have had another series of German attacks to cope with Strong forces advanced in waves against positions recently captured by the French ' between Rancourt and Priez farm. According to Paris the Germans did not even reach the French lines, being forced back to their trenches with heavy losses by the fire of the French guns. On the Macedonian front, in the re- gion north of Florina, the the entente developing strength. The Servians are reported to be continuing their ad- vance along the Broda, reaching a point near Urbani (Vrbeni), eight miles northeast of Florina, on the rail- road to Monastir. Immediately north of Florina the Bulgarians are making a stand, buf according to Paris failed in an attack on French troops in this region. Into the west the entente forces are moving forward on, the heights toward Poplli, ten miles from Florina. Artillery fire of increasing intensity is reported from the British front in the Dorian region. On the extreme easterly end of the line British war- ships near the mouth of the Struma have been shelling Bulgarian positions in the vicinity of Neohori. ° The French submarine Foucaus has been sunk in the southern Adriatic by bombs dropped fem Austro-Hungarian naval aeroplanes, the Austrian ad- miralty announced. The crew of Wventy-nine was rescued and made prisoner. Further diserders fn Greek Mace- donia are repoitéd. Greek civil authorities have been removed by the inhabitants. The pelice chief and Major Karapanos, military governor, with a company of the Thirty-first regiment of the line, are said to have joined the uprising. ROBBER GETS 3-YEAR TERM Pittsburgh Boy Convicted of Bold Day- light Robbery. Cenvicted on the testimony of his brother, who turned state’s evidence, John Romito, aged twenty-five, of Car- megie, found guilty of assisting his brother Nick, eighteen, in perpetrating the daylight robbery at the Pittsburgh Stopper company’s plant in Amberson street, Aug. 19, was sentenced to not jess than three years nor more than five years in the state penitentiary on one count; the same sentence on another count; not less than one year nor more than three years in the peni- tentiary on a third, and one day in the workhouse on a fourth count. The sentences are to run concurrently. Nick Romito was sent to the industrial school at Huntingdon. Steel Plant For Bettsville, O. Pittsburgh parties, said to represent a large steel plant, have purchased a tract of land near Bettsville, O., pay- FOR WEGNESDAY M.-jor Mitchel Expected fo Gall For Militia Conference of Leaders Votes Unani- mously For Strike to Aid Car Men. Crowds Jeer Strikebreaking Crews. The general sympathetic strike in aid of the New York street car men has been set for 8 o'clock Wednesday morning. This announcement was made by Hugh Frayne, general organizer of the American Federation of Labor, fol- lowing the meeting of representatives of eighty labor organizations at the Hotel Continental. Members of the state legislature from New York city, at a meeting, ap- pointed a committee to call upon Gov- ernor Whitman, who now is in New York, and urge him to convene the leg- islature in extraordinary session for the purpose of dealing with the strike. Union leaders representing all or- ganized labor in New York voted to call the general strike to aid the striking car men. It is estimated that 800,000 men will walk out. It will be the greatest strike in the nation’s history. Mayor Mitchel! is expected to urge Governor Whitman to order out the New York militia. Practically every branch of organ- ized labor is involved. : After the labor leaders’ meeting broke up it was learned that the strike will ‘be put into effect by ordering all undpn workers to remain off the sub- way, elevated and surface lines that are affected by the present strike of car men. These employees will noti- fy their employers that they cannot come to work because they cannot ride on cars that are manned by non- union men. The order to stay off street cars manned by nonunion workers will go into effect at 7 o'clock Wednesday morning. Any union worker riding on a street car will be subjected to heavy fine or dismissal from the union. Union leaders are confident the or- der will mean a quick ending of the traction strike. They believe that public clamor will force the traction companies to give in. ; Police reserves were called out to quell a near riot at Twenty-first street and Broadway as the result of the ex- plosion of several torpedoes on the car tracks. Passengers on passing cars piled from them in a panic. A big crowd quickly gathered and began to jeer the car crews. Fifty police ‘battled with the erowd several min- utes. Three men were arrested on charges of disorderly conduct. No one was injured. ‘ Two Third ¢avenue surface cars manned by strikebreakers met in a rear-end collision at One Hundred and Forty-sixth street, two passengers being injured and a score shaken up. Bombardments of elevated trains were resumed, strike sympathizers lurking on roof tops throwing bricks and bottles which shattered car win- dows. Several passengers were in- Jjured and sixteen attacks reported by the police. LIVE STOCK AND GRAIN Pittsburgh, Sept. 26. Butter—Prints, 36% @37c; tubs, 351% @36c. Eggs—Fresh, 34@35c. Cattle—Prime, $9.25@9.40; good, $8.25@8.75; tidy butchers, $7.75@8; fair, $6.50@7.25; common, $5@6.50; common to good fat bulls, $4.50@7.25; common to good fat cows, $3@6.75; heifers, $5@8; fresh cows and spring- ers, $40@385. Sheep and Lambs— Prime" wethers, $8@8.25; good mixed, $7@7.80; fair mixed, $6@7.25; culls and common, $3.60@5; spring lambs, $6.50@11; veal calves, $12.50@13; heavy and thin calves, $7@9. Hogg—Prime heavy, $11.25@11.30; heavy mixed, $11.20@11.25; mediums and héavy Yorkers, $11@11.20; light Yorkers, $9.76@10; pigs, $9@9.50; roughs, $9.60@10.22; stags, $8@8.25. Cleveland, Sept. 26. Hogs—Mediums and heavies, $11.15; mixed, $11.10@11.16; Yorkers, $11.10; pigs, $9.50@9.75; roughs, $9.50; stags, $8.75. Cattle—Choice fat steers, $8.25@ 8.75; fair to good butcher steers, $6.50 @7.26; common and light steers, $5.50 @6.60; good to choice heifers, $6.50@ 7.60; fair to good heifers, $5.50@6.50; good to choice butcher bulls, $6.25@ 6.75; bologna bulls, $5.25@86.25; good to choice cows, $5.75@6.50; fair to good cows, $6@6.78; common cows, $3.50 @4.50. Calves—Good to choice, $13@13.25; fair to good, $10@12.50; heavy to com- mon, $6@9. Sheep and Lambs—Good to choice springs, $10.75@11; fair to good, $8.50 @10.50; culls and common, $6@8; good to choice wethers, $7@7.26; good to choice ewes, $6.50@6.76; mixed ewes and wethers, $6.75@7; culls, $3.60 @4.60. ‘Chicago, Sept. 26. Hogs — Bulk, $10.35@11.10; light, $10.06@11.16; mixed, $10.06@11.15; heavy, $10@10.20; roughs, $10@10.20; pigs, $7@10. Cattle—Native beef cattle, $6.50@ 11.30; western steers, $6@9.25; stock- ers and feeders, $4.60@7.65; cows and heifers, $3.60@9.20; calves, $8.50@13. Wheat—Dec., $1.55%. Corn—Dec., ing $125 an acre, It is said a steel plant will be established there. | 800,000 MEN TO WALK OUT | found on the porch of the nome of KEYSTONE PARAGRAPHS | The Allegheny conference of the United Brethren church, largest in the denomination, in session in Johnstown, decided to retain the rule barring from its membership any minister more than fifty years old. Ministers now in the conference will not be dropped, but no preacher more than fifty will be admitted from outside. A number of sticks of dynamite Samuel Smith of Somerset. A lighted candle was found close by and a fuse attached, so that the flame from the candle would set off the explosive. Smith is a section boss for the Balti- more and Ohio railroad. Joseph Zavarella, editor of an Erie Italian weekly, convicted of sec- ond degree murder for killing his for- mer friend, Anthony Ferratti, during a quarrel, was senten.ed by Judge Rossiter to serve not lers than eleven years and six months nor more than nineteen years in the Western peni- tentiary. Supervisors of North Huntingdon township, Westmoreland county, have decided to spend about $300,000 on brick roads and a proposition to issue the township's share of bonds will be put before the voters this fall. The plan calls for about twelve miles of roads, with Irwin as the hub. A petition is in circulation in Con- nellsville seeking discharge from the Tenth Pennsylvania hospital corps on the border of Arthur Darr, Dewey Mil- ler, William Martray and Walter Rogers, seniors in Connellsvilie .high school and star players on the high school football eleven. Herman Calvin, Edward Sincernay and John Murphy were convicted of passing counterfeit ccins in Brie. Judge Orr later sentenced the trio, Calvin to four months in the Craw- ford county jail, Sincernay to four months and Murphy to ten months in the Erie county jail. Samuel W. Bernard, thirty, of Wash- ington, was injured so severely that he died in a Monongahela hospital, and Ellis Marsh, aged twenty-five, of Washington, was badly crushed when an automobile driven by Barnard went over a bank at a curve near Mononga- nela, Driving his auto truck from behind a freight train on the New York Cen- tral railrond at Harbor Creek, near by a fast Lake Shore train and was in. jured so badly that he died on the train en route to the hospital in Erie. In an effort to escape the alleged abuses-of her husband, Mrs. Johanna Ostroski of Pittsburgh, mother of eight children, attempted to jump into the Allegheny river from the Six- teenth street bridge. She was prevent ed by Special Officer Albert Holmes. According to the department of agriculture the oats crops will not be as large as expected and much in sight. Warning that wheat should be planted as late as possible to avoid the Hessian fly is given. George J. O’Brien, aged forty-five, of Pitcairn, a conductor on the Pennsylvania railroad, was killed in- stantly when an extra freight train, of which he was in charge, sideswiped cars on a ‘“ladder” track in the west -ud cf the Pitcairn yards. Sad news for all sauerkraut lovers wes handed out by the state agricul- tral department. The cabbage crop las fallen far short of expectation and t will be almost too high in price for ordinary wage earners to be able to afford the popular dish. The farm of Fred Abele of Banks: ville yelded two quarts of raspberries and one of strawberries and the family observed the first rest day of fall by cating them for dessert. This was the seccnd crop taken from the bushes and vines this year. D»~pite the fact that Judge Mc Laughry refused all retail and whole- -2le liquor licenses in Mercer county this year former dealers in Farrel apd elsewhere are circulating petitions and will ask for licenses next January. Charles E., baby son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Young of Liberty, near Con- :nellsville, is dead from the effects of a spider's bite, it is believed. Last week a spider was found in his bed. Infection of the chest developed. Just as Lewis Fuerry died in his home at Shamokin, Pa., of pneumonia, a messenger boy delivered a telegram for him stating that his brother, Cliarles, had been killed in a powder explosion in Haskill, N J. dustry announced that every private employment agency in the state would be required to procure a license by Oct. 1. There are over 250 such agencies in Pennsylvania. Four persons were injured, one, Harry benneit, agad thiriy-one, seri- ously, when an automobile driven by Bennett turned over on the Pittsburgh road one mile south of Saxonburg. Descending upon the mining town of Lemont, three miles morth of Union- town, auto bandits got large amounts of money and jewelry from a half- dozen houses and escaped. Thirty-three persons were injured, eight sericusly, in a wreck on a trolley ear on the Eastern Pennsylvania rail road near Pottsville, Erie, Harry Klein, thirty-two, was hit | less than the average potato yield is | The department of labor and in- | Driving It Home Let us drive home to you the fact that no washwoman can wash clothes in as sani- tary a manner as that in which the work is done at our laundry. We use much more water, change the water many more tms‘ uee purer and mores costly soap, and keep all the clothes in constant motion during the entire process. It's simply a matter of having proper facilities. Keyersdale Steam Laundry OWN AS BALTIMORE & OHIO . $12 NIAGARA FALLN AND RETURN SEPT. 8, 22 AND OCTOBER 6 TICKETS GOOD 15 DAYS ATTRACTIVE SIDE TRIPS CONEULT TICKET £GINT FOR I ULL, PARTICULARS IT A A a - Josoph L. Tress'er Funeral Direeter and Embal er Meyersdale, Penna. Office : 229 Center tree Both Phones. Residence: 809 North Street Economy Phone. 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 ‘oom with bath $2.00, $2.5) and $3.00 per day. Each additional person $1.00 per day in any room, with or without bath. Complete Cafe Service from 25c¢ Club Breakfast to the most elaborate dinner. J. B. Kelley, Manager Smithfield St., Water St. and First Ave. Pittsburgh ~~, WITTENBERG Held Over from Last Week Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Geiger were Sun- day guests at Wilson Millers. of Greenville. Mrs Susan Smith left on Sunday for Humbert to visit her daughter and son-in-law Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Geiger were visitors in Vm: over Sunday. Mr. Logan Arnold is busy thresh- ing for the farmers in this vicinity the latter, part of last week and this week, Rev. J. T. Shaffer will preach his farewell sermon next Sunday morn. ing in the Lutheran church. Mrs. Roland Ramhoff was a caller at W. H. Knepp’s on Sunday. Sw Children Cry FOR FLETSHER'S 733%c. Oats—Deo., 487%¢. CTASTORIA 30 KILLED IN ZEPPELIN RAID Two Air Dreadnoughts Shot Down by British 29 AIR BATTLES ON SOMME Paris Reports 48 Planes Shot Down, TIDE OF BATTLE FAVORS TEUTON COMMANDER Mainly German; Berlin Reverses Claim—Air Combats Continuous. don and the southeast coast of Eng- land killed thirty persons and injured 110 others, according to a British of- ficial statement. Of the casualties twenty-eight men, women and children were killed and ninety-nine men, women and children were injured in the metropolitan area of London. Two of the Zeppelin airships, both of a new pattern, were shot down in Essex. The crew of one was killed. The crew of the other, consisting of twenty-two men, was captured. Outside of the London district two persons were killed and eleven injured in an East Midland town, and it is feared that two other bodies may be buried in ruins. The missiles dropped by the hostile aircraft caused numerous fires and de- molished or damaged a large number of residences and stores in London. The casualties in the metropolitan area, according to an official compila- tion, are as follows: Killed, men, 17; women, 8; children, 8. Total, 28. Injured, men, 45; women, 47; chil- dren, 17. Total, 99. Forty-eight aeroplanes were shot down on the western front during twenty-four hours, according to of- floial reports from Paris and Berlin. Aerial combats are fought almost continuously during the daylight hours. Airmen on the entire front from the region of Havre to the Vos- ges have been engaged. Paris asserts that the French fly- ers “indisputably had the upper hand,” while Berlin says the combats gen- erally “resulted favorably for us.” The French official statement enum- Twelve Zeppelins which raided Lon- ® Photo by American Press Association. GENERAL VON MACKENSEN., — BUSINESS AT HIGH TIDE Industries Handicapped by Labor Shortage, Says Bradstreet. Bradstreet’s weekly report of busi- ness conditions says: “Propelled by extraordinary expan- sion in buying power and undismayed by high prices, trade, in a collective sense, has risen to very high levels, a veritable ground-swell of new buying having been experienced at leading centers this week. Jobbers, wholesale dealers, retailers and manufacturers all share in the upward movement, and interior merchants, even in zones where the wheat and cotton crops are short, are buying freely, lest there be not enough goods to go around later on. Some cities report record sales by retail dealers. “Manufacturers in leading indus- tries are handicapped by lack of ef- ficient labor, and though shipments are heavy, order books remain clogged, “In that excellent barometer of con- ditions, the steel trade, higher prices rule, dezliveries are falling farther be- hind, domestic consumers fully rec- ognize the futility of waiting for lower erates twenty-four German machines brought down, making no mention of casualties suffered by the French air corps. Berlin admits the loss of but six machines and says, “we shot down twenty-four machines, of which twenty fell on the Somme front.” Between Chaulnes and Havre six Germans were brought down. One fell, burning, near Chaulnes during an en- gagement between four French and six German machines. A second fell at Licourt, a third at Parvillers, and a fourth south of Marchelpot. A fifth and sixth were brought down by the same pilot in an engagement between a French squadron and six Germans. They fell in the region of Andechy, one in the French lines. A Fokker fell in flames north of Chalons. An- other was apparently damaged. In the Verdun region machine guns winged a German at close quarters. The machine descended at Poivre Hill. A Fokker dived vertically into the French lines east of St. Mihiel. In Lorraine a French pilot pursued a German for a distance of twelve miles into the German lines, killed a passenger and compelled the machine to descend. Another German machine descended in the forest of Gamecy. In the Vosges two German machines dived nose-downward into the French lines. The Berlin report on the same fight- ing says: “On the entire western front there was considerable aerial activity and numerous aerial combats occurred, both within our lines and beyond the enemy’s lines, all of which resulted favorably for us. We shot down twenty-four machines, of which twenty fell on the Somme front. Our losses were six aeroplanes. “First Lieutenant Boedecke and Lieutenants Winkens and Hoehendorf especially distinguished themselves. “Bombs dropped on Mannheim killed one person and caused consider- able damage. There have been repeat- ed attacks by flyers behind the Ger- man lines. At Lille, among others, six: civilians were killed and twelve houses | damaged. One of the German airships attacked the British military estab- lishments near Boulogne.” W. VA. MARSHAL KILLED Bootleggers Blamed For Act; Posses In Pursuit. George Church, marshal of Barbours- ville, W. Va,, was shot and instantly killed by three unidentified men. A deputy sheriff's posse, accompanied by bloodhounds, is trailing the slayers. Authorities believe the men were boot leggers who fired on Church when hs attempted to arrest them as the; stepped from a freight train. WAY FOUND TO ENFORCE LAW Wheeling Judge Enjoins .Property Owners From Permitting Liquor Sales, After two years of ineffective trials by jury, a way in which to enforce the Yost prohibition law in Ohio county, W. Va., has been found. Circuit Judge H. C. Hervey has en- joined permanently sixteen property owners fron. permitting sale of liquor on their premises and charged costs of proceeilngs amounting to $978 te defendants. quotations, and the situation seems to have arrived at the point where Eu- rope stands ready to step in with well nigh unlimited orders if assurances: can be made that the steel will be forthcoming as needed. “Weekly bank clearings, $5,652,117, 000.” GRAIN SHORTAGE SERIOUS New York Official Asks Agricultural Department For Solution. Whether the shortage in wheat and corn and the growing export trade in food commodities will increase ma- terially the already high cost of living, is a question Joseph Hartigan, com- missioner of weights and measures, of New York, has asked the federal department of agriculture to answer. In a letter to Secretary Houston the: commissioner cited the government. estimates that the wheat crop is 400,- 000,000 bushels smaller than last year, and that the corn crop is short by 345,000,000 bushels. He says that “if the presenti ration of export, between 5,000,000 and 6,000,000 bushels per week, is maintained, only 300,000,000 bushels of wheat will be left for do- mestic use.” He claims that 620,000,- 000 bushels are necessary for home consumption. TO TRAIN BOYS IN TACTICS Effort Will Be Made to Enlist Million Ycung Americans. An effort will be made to enroll 1,000,000 boys Xx the United States in the military training movement by next spring, it was announced in New York. Y A national committee is being formed to have charge of the work. Among those who have accepted mem- bership on the cqmmittee are Major General Leonard Wood, in command of the department of the east, and Rear Admiral N. R. Usher, commandant of the New York navy yard. The announcement came with the close of the military training camp for boys at Fort Hamilton, organized early in the summer and attended by more than 1,000 New York city boys at an expense of only 20 cents a day each. RIVER MEN FORM UNION Organization Grew Out of Successful Strike Two Weeks Ago. A movement that is expected to ex- tend throughout the Ohio valley has been launched at Point Pleasant in the organization of steamboat employ- ees, the only organization of its kind in the United States. The organization grew out of a strike of rivermen two weeks ago, just as Kanawha and Ohio shippers were preparing to send a big fleet south. The demands of the men for increased wages was granted by the shippers and the organization of the union fol- lowed. Put Belfry on Wrong End. The carpenters erecting the new Florence Methodist Episcopal church in Pinch Run, near St. Clairsville, 0., placed the helfry on the rear, in- stead of the front of the building, Members ars peeved. The mistake may be rectified before the dedicatisn on Oct. 15. A pg fe