a in Tey mi rs To SE ER sw : E &% ihe THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL ge A AES Ei Butadiene 2 IN STERLING LIVES A GIRL Who Suffered As Many Girls Do—Tells How She Found Relief. 8terling, Conn.—*‘1 am a girl of 22 years and 1 used to faint away every men,’ and I saw how Wothers had been helped by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta- ble Compound, and decided to try it, and it has made me feel like a new girl and I am now relieved of all these troubles. I hope all young girls will get relief as I have. I never felt better in my life.”’—Miss BERTHA A. PELOQUIN, Box 116, Sterling, Conn. Massena, N. Y.—*I have taken Ly- dia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound end I highly recommend it. If anyone wants to write to me I will gladly tell her about my case. I was certainly in 8 bad condition as my blood was all turn- ing to water. Ihad pimpleson my face and a bad color, and for five years I had been troubled with suppression. The doctors called it ‘Anemia and Exhaus- tion,’ and said I was all run down, but Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- und brought me out all right.”’ — Miss VISA MYRES, Box 74, Massena, N.Y. Young Girls, Heed This Advice. Girls who are troubled with painful or irregular periods, backache, headache, dragging-down sensations, fainting spells or indigestion,should immediately seek restoration to health by taking Ly- dia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. “Przemysl.” “Przemysl” is one of the few really simple proper names that have secured notoriety ‘in the Russian invasion of Galicia, It is pronounced “Pzhem-is-1,” with the accent on the “pzhem.” Just how easy this is one may appreciate by considering Przemyslany, in the first syllable of which the “r” is sound- ed, thus: ‘“Przhe,” with the Austro Hungarian variation. of “miscellany” following. In pronouncing “Przemysl” you should carefully hold a “p” be treen your teeth while pronouncing “ahem” (which is a soft, mushroom, " dumdum variety of “shem’”) and just as you are about to eject it deftly in- sert the “p” in the outer hook of the “z;"” thus: “Pzhem.” Nothing can be simpler. Finally Captured Eagle. After defying a score of traps and as many guns of farmers, who have sought vainly to impose summary sentence for the loss of hundreds of chickens over ® period of six months, Old Baldy, a monster eagle, was caught by a man with a lasso. He lay waiting in the shadow of his chicken house for the chicken thief for more than eight hours. The bird swooped down shortly after daybreak. The lasso was thrown around the eagle's neck. The man wanted to capture the bird alive, but it fought so desperately that he was forced to shoot it. The eagle measures eight feet seven inches from tip to tip, and weighs 73 pounds. A barber always makes a hit with 8 man by telling him that he has the toughest beard in the world. LIGHT BOOZE. Do You Drink It? A minister's wife had quite a tus- sle with coffee and her experience is interesting. She says: “During the two years of my train- ing as a nurse, while on night duty, I became addicted to coffee drinking. Between midnight and four in the morning, when the patients were asleep, there was little to do except make the rounds, and it was quite natural that I should want a hot cup of coffee about that time. I could keep awake better. “After three of four years of cof- fee drinking, I became a nervous wreck and thought that I simply could not live without my coffee. All this time I was subject to frequent bilious at- tacks, sometimes so severe as to keep me in bed for several days. “After being married, Husband begged me to leave off coffee for he feared that it had already hurt me alfnost beyond repair, so I resolved to make an effort to release myself from the hurtful habit. “I began taking Postum, and for a few days felt the languid, tired feel ing from the lack of the coffees drug, but I liked the taste of Postum, and that answered for the breakfast bev erage all right. “Finally I began to feel clearsr headed and had steadier nerves. Aft er a year's use of Postum I now feel like a new woman—have not had any bilious attacks since I left off coffee.” Name given by Postum Co. Battle Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. Postum comes in two forms: Regular Postum—must be boiled. 15¢ and 25¢ packages. Instant Postum—is a soluble pow der. A teaspoonful dissolves quickly in a cup of hot water, and, with cream end sugar, makes a delicious bever age Instantly. 300 and 50c tins. The cust per cup of both kinds is about the same. “There's & Reason” for Postum. i »—s0ld hy Groocems. | well CONSTRUCTIVE WORK OF GIFFORD PINGROT Here is a Record of Achievement so Great That it Inspired Theodore Roosevelt, For- mer President of the United States to Say That of “The Many Public Officials Who Under My Administration Rendered Literally Invaluable Service to the People of the United States, He (Pinchot) on the Whole, Stood First.” : He took charge of the Forest Service of the United States when there were only eleven persons in it, and left it the best organized bureau in Washington, em- ploying more than 3,000 men. ; n 1909, he prevented Richard Achilles Ballinger, Secretary of the Interior under Taft, from handing over to the Morgans and the Guggenheims and Rockefel- lers, billions of tons of coal in the Alaska fields. This was one of the greatest steals ever attempted in America. . He fought for the bill creating the Child Labor Bureau, for the benefit of the children who work, and did not cease his efforts until the bill became a law. 0 He was one of the leaders in securing better, working conditions for the min- ers. With the support and co-operation of Roosevelt, Pinchot, John Mitchell, and Jo- seph A. Holmes were mainly responsible for the creation of the bureau of mines. He has been a champion of the right of workmen to organize in unions and by every fair means to compel recognition of such unions by employers. He advocated and fought for the passage of the Esch bill to put an end to the disease called ‘‘phossy jaw’’ by taxing the phosporous match industry out of exist- ence. He is one of the leaders in the United States for an honest protective tariff based on the findings of a non-partisan scientific commission. : When head of the Forestry Service he was responsible for initiating and put- ting into effect an insurance plan to protect the workers in his department. He joined the fight for the passage of a workmen’s compensation bill which was finally passed by the federal government for the benefit of the men employed by the national government. He took part in the fight for pure food and helped frame the meat inspection law, which the beef trust opposed in vain. As chief forester, he virtually created the United States Forest Service, through which the national forests are administered. . He was responsible for saving a hundred million acres of public forests to the people, while he held office, in spite of all the powerful corporations and individuals who tried to grab our natural resources could do. s He uncovered the attempts of the magnates to monopolize our natural re- sources. He laid down a plan, now being followed, to preserve the people’s rights and at the same time encourage business development and enterprise. : As head of the National Forest Service he gave a large share of his active interest to helping farmers in all states properly care for their wood lots. Pinchot was the man behind the Act of June 11, 1905, which opened the national forests to settlement under the homestead law. Over one million acres of farms have been taken up under this act. He has been an ardent and self-sacrificing worker for the forests and natural resources of Pennsylvania. He worked with J. T. Rothrock, the ‘‘father of forestry’ in this state, to build up Pennsylvania’s forests. HERE IS THE MAN WHO He was a member and secretary of the public lands wiLL DEFEAT Penrose Commission and bore the brunt of the work. people’s great deposits of coal, and other minerals, and made it an issue. - He checked the growing water power trust and saved millions of dollars for the public. ’ He is an expert at law making. For twenty years he has been active in shaping important and, funda- mental legislation in the interests of the people. He is the man who is responsible for the defeat of the Raker Water Power grab bill, creating a vicious precedent for giving away public rights to water power companies. - He has appeared more often before House and Sen- ate Committees, urging progressive conservation and humanitarian legislation, since his removal from the government service, in 1909, than any other private citizen in the country. ; : : He prevented the passage of a dangerous bill intro- duced March 28, 1910, by Senator Smoot, which would have allowed the water power grabbers to help them- selves to the remaining 12,000,000 horsepower of the public domain now in federal ownership. "He was responsible for the defeat of the vicious Heyburn amendment to the Agricultural bill in the sixty-fifth Congress, which would have ripped .up the national forests for the benefit of the timber barons. He was instrumental in defeating in the House of Representatives on February 23, 1911, the so-called Mondell Alaska. Coal Leasing Bill, which would have turned over the coal lands to the. grabbers who had been attempting to defraud the govern- ment and were caught. : Pinchot was responsible for defeating the nine Ballinger fake ‘‘conservation bills’’ aimed at breaking down federal control of public water powers, coal, oil, phos- phates and natural gas, and thus making it easy for the grabbers to raid the public domain. . He formed the National Conservation Association to fight the men who would grab the natural wealth of the country. As president of that body he fought every effort made to take the people’s resources without adequate compensation. He was chairman of the National Conservation Commission and worked with the governors of the various states to safe-guard and develop the resources of their states. He was a member of and the prime moving spirit in the Inland Waterways Commission to develop the waterways of the country and thus build up a great barrier against railroad domination. ; ; He planned and put into effect a comprehensive system of grazing range con- trol whereby on the government land, cattle and sheep men, whether rich or poor, get a square deal. He lived on the ranges with the stock men until he knew absolute- ly their needs. y He initiated and laid before President Roosevelt the plan to better the condi- tions of life on the farm. As the result of his work'Roosevelt appointed the Country Life Commission August 10, 1908, and Pinchot became one of the leading members of it. Pinchot suggested and worked for the plan of revising our land laws in order to make public lands more useful to the farmers. He was a pioneer in the great government work of irrigation and one of the men to whom the people owe most for the great success of this project, which has brought millions of acres under cultivation. “He played one of the leading parts in the effort to make the national government the chief instrument in developing the irrigation of the arid West,” says Theodore Roosevelt of Pinchot, in his autobiography. Pinchot took a leading part in the scientific organization of the government bureaus at Washington. He put the business of his own department and that of others on a sound modern basis. Pinchot for years has been a leader in the movement to improve the condition of country churches. He established a thorough and efficient system of game protection in the National forests. He was the leading spirit and the director in the movement to conserve the resources of North America, which resulted in the international gathering at Washington, at which definite steps were taken to preserve the GIFFORD PINCHOT Washington Party Candidate for U. S. Senator. forests, the water power rights and mineral resources of Canada, United States and Mexico. | He founded and maintained at his own expense the Yale Forest School at shis home at Milford, Pennsylvania, where field instruction was given to the students. He is the man who started the fight to save the | opi (pd) ped ne Rp nd nd ff fd [fd 2 nd nd ed fd fd fd nd fed fd nd fT nn RR Fe fr Fa ef id? & The Citizens National Bank e Meyersdale, Pa. ; © Statement, September 12, 1914 | (Comptroller's Call) 2 Banking House . . Cash... .. 7... 2) od Fe) 2) 3) 2) 2) =) 2] . - * -. ° . . . 5 Due from Banks and Reserve Agents . 5 ; 5 2 Resources: | Loans and Investments. . . . . . . . $725,836.75 United States Bonds. .. . . . ... . . 29,300.00 & 61:260.14 & 5 | $1,008,168.41 & 0. Liabili ies: a Onpital Stoek =... 2000... $:65000.00 B 8 Surplus Fund... . .‘. .. ... 100,000.00 E 5 Undivided ‘Profits. . ... .\. . . . 25,800.02 g 8 Circulation . .. . . ..., J. +s... 6500000 % BS Deposits... ¢ .c. . 00.0... 752,363.30 = : $1,008,168.41 § 9 Officers and Directors: & 0 S. B. PHILSON, President = S. A. KENDALL, Vice Pres., R. H. PHILSON, Cashier : 2 CLARENCE MOORE, Asst. Cashier @ S. C. Hartley, W. T. Hoblitzell, F. B. Black, : 5 W. N. Moser, H. Bunn Philson (fA Intnl [nd U J fr EEE EREEEERE ERR ERE EERE SHELTER FOR BADS Particularly Desirable Where Edible Material Is Scarce. Designs of Two Houses Given in Bul- letin Issued by Agricultural De- partment—Importance of Pro- tecting the Milk Cans. (Prepared by the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture.) The farmer who will build a food shelter and furnish an abumdance of food in it will find that many birds of value to him as insect-destroyers, will’ haunt his premises. This is particu-1 larly true when there is a scarcity of bird food in the vicinity. ‘The United States department of agriculture in a ~ AAR CN Te Rs Bm TRY -—— Food Shelter for Attachment to Post— Roof Cut Away to Show Construc- tion—Sides Made of Glass; Size of . Panes 8 by 10 inches. , : recently published bulletin on bird houses has offered designs for shel- ters that will protect food in all kinds of weather. To induce birds to enter a food shel- ter baits are first placed in a conspicu- ous place outside and the birds are led by degrees to enter the inclosure. Such food as suet, seeds, or cracked nuts will prove attractive as bait. Two designs are given in the bulle- tin for adequate food shelters. The first may be attached to a tree, the other may be placed on top of a post or tree stub. The sides are made of glass. There is no bottom to either of these structures. Besides protecting food, such a shel- ter will provide a place where one in- terested in birds cam watck them con- veniently. | If the farmer has neither the time | nor inclination to make a shelter but! still desires to attract valuable birds by putting out food, the next best thing is to fasten the bait te trunks or branches of trees or scatter it on the ground in sheltered places. Desirable birds may be attracted by other means than food, particularly in summer. ciate fresh water for drinking and bathing. A shallow pool of varying depth, if only a foot across, becomes a center of attraction for all ti i in the vicinity, and it may On warm days. they appre- | S | any shipper can with little effort and material. Only a small amount of cement is required, or, if that be lacking, a pap with stones in it, set in the ground will be equally serviceable, Cats are particularly dangerous to birds, and should not be permitted near the home-made bird pool during bathing hours or go near the food shelters. Designs for simple and elaborate bird houses that will interest all bird lovers are given in a farmers’ bulletin No. 609, which the United States de- partment of agriculture has recently issued. It is entitled “Bird Houses, and How to Build Them,” and will be sent free of charge to anyone request- ing it from the department. Protection for Milk Cans. Much milk that seems to be perfect- ly good when it leaves the farm, reaches the consumer in bad condi- tion, and the United States department of agriculture is now convinced that this is frequently due to a rise in the temperature of the milk during trans- portation. A series of tests that has recently been completed shows the importance of surrounding the milk cans during hot weather with -some ap- propriate insulating material which will effectually exclude the heat, Even when milk is to be shipped only a short distance its temperature should not be higher than 50 degrees F. At this temperature bacteria will multiply, but the increase is slow and a few hours delay will result in no serious injury. In milk above 50 de- grees F. the rate of bacteria growth is much more rapid. It follows that when the milk is to be shipped a long dis- tance it must be loaded on the cars at a temperature much less than 50 de- grees F. unless some efficient means is taken to prevent the temperature - rising during the journey. Perhaps the most practical way of accomplishing this is to wrap the cans in a pair of quilt jackets, wet burlap, or some other similar gnaterial. In the course of the recent experiments milk vas hauled a distance of 13 miles in an average air temperature of 82.65 de- grees F., the milk being shipped at a temperature of 50 degrees F. "At the end of three hours the cans that were hair-quilt jacketed showed a raise of only 5% degrees F.; those wrapped in wet burlap, a raise of 81 degrees F. Milk in cans that were left unpro- tected rose in the same time to a tem- perature of 78.5 degrees F., an increase of 28.5 degrees. This is much too high. More elaborate methods of preserv- ing milk during shipment by refrigera- tion are discussed in a professional bulletin just issued by the United States department of agriculture, which deals in a technical way with many types of refrigerating apparatus. The bulletin discusses fylly the influ- ence of time and temperature on bac- teria in milk. It also contains elab- orate diagrams illustrating the differ- Food Shelter for Attachment to Trunk of Tree. ent methods employed in utilizigg re- frigeration, and the cost of operating them. This bulletin so long as the department’s supply lasts will be sent free to all interested in the refrigera tion of miik. Refrigeration, however, is, of course, not always possible, whi take the prec 77,000.00 # 114,771.52 & m——— ILL ; Refuse GEN. ( Chief | Northe “By, and Juare: a peace Carranz off by ( of Mex shot aI nouncel Carranz . for him Constit active against This is doul any of Aguas huahua given with C ed all insist 1 resigna As ¢ nition reon tl It ds 8 tack © Villa v but th rapidly Gen. - cently Army supply was St illo b Saturd get if also -f rera b his fo his er Mex the re instig: ficos Gen. atateq