¥ / be ASHTUBS FOR THE PUBLIC atter in Which American Cities Are | Behind Those of Various Foreign Countries. Facilities for washing clothes are de cidedly meager in the tenement dis tricts of large cities. The establish: ment of public laundries or wash: houses fashioned after the plan of those long in use in foreign cities is a present demand. There are about fif: teen of these institutions in America, five of which are in Baltimore. Other cities which have found an urgent de mand for them are Philadelphia, Buf: falo and Elmira. Recently a commit: tee made an investigation of the ne cessity for washhouses in New York, Bnd the cost of their equipment, op eration, and so forth. The investiga tion covered a population of about four hundred thousand in the pooret sections of New York, and it was found that from 30 to 45 per cent of the fami: lies were without any washing facil ties in the home, while no hot water BXxcept that heated in the apartment is provided in from 70 to 95 per cent of the houses. Inquiry among 10,000 bath: Bers at one of the municipal baths Bhowed that the women were enthusi mstically in favor of the establishment pf public washhouses, and many of the men promised to make use of such facilities. In Baltimore and Phila. delphia special days are set aside for men. The public washhouse finds its chief justification in the fact that it gives to the people an ppportunity to appreciate the value to health and de- ceney of being physically clean. Phys- ical cleanliness enhances moral and spiritual tone, and leads to a demand for better housing ‘and better house hold equipment, which in tharn make for better health and for decency. ‘GOOD FOR LONG WARM SPELL ‘Widow Teeter's Opinion of Her De- parted Husband Evidently Was Not an Exalted One, The Widow Teeter's husband had been dead only a few weeks when ‘there were surface indications that she was about to marry again. The late Mr. Teeter had not been ‘exactly a model husband, and it was the general opinion that his death was & stroke of good fortune for Mrs. Teeter, but still the relatives of the deceased thought that his memory re- quired a widowhood of at least a year. When the indications of the approach- ing marriage betame apparent, some of her late husband's friends waited on Mrs. Teeter, and one of them said: “We hear that you are about to marry again, Lucy Ann?” “Well, I don’t know that it is any of your business,” replied Lucy Ann, “but if it will give you any satisfac- tion to know the facts, I don’t mind telling you that I shall be a married woman again in about two weeks.” “But Tom has been dead less than three months,” protested another. “Well, 1 suppose he’s dead as he ever will be, isn’t he?” © “But,” safd a third, “you ought in common decency to wait until he is cold.” “Wait until Tom Teeter is cold!” repeated the widow, with fire in her eye. “If your theological belief is or- * thodox, you must know that Tom Tee- ter hasn’t a ghost of a show of ever getting cold.” Then the objecting friends filed out and Mrs. Teeter resumed the work of preparing her trousseau. Activities of Women. Charwomen in England number 126, 061 In some German towns women are acting as scavengers. There are over 500 woman doctors in England and Wales. England now has a million and a half surplus women. Maori women, formerly cannibals, now vote in New Zealand. The German textile industries em- ploy more women than men. Female laundry workers in Topeka, Kan., have formed a union and have already made an agreement with the laundries for a 54-hour week and a minimum wage of $7 per week. The Women’s Tax Resistance league of London, composed mainly of suf frageites and whose motto is “No votcs no tax,” has decided to pay taxes this year on account of the war. To induce American women to wear cotten clothing a number ‘of Washing. ton society women have arranged to hold a national cotton fashion show in the capital city this month. Cow Secretly Adopts Fawn. Following a Jersey cow which haé developed a habit of disappearing every morning and coming home in the evening without her usual supply of milk, James Wilson discovered that the cow is raising a motherless fawn. Wilson’ followed the cow ‘to the outer edge of his farm. He was sur prised to sce a pretty fawn come from among the underbrush and start to nurse at the cow’s side. The cow seems well pleased with her charge and the fawn shows affection for its foster mother.—Grecnsburg (Pa.) Dis patch to New York American. While He Waited. HAD ENOUGH OF NEW YORK Dressmaker From Indiana Formed Mighty Poor Opinion of the Great Metropolis. She was a middle aged person from the rural districts and evidenced health in her appearance and perfect digestion in her breakfast, which con- sisted of ham and eggs with catchup on them. The catchup made even the waitress wince. Her trouble was en- tirely of the mind, but it was acute, “What I want to know,” she said to the waitress, according to a New York correspondent of the Cincinnati Times- Star, “is how there's so many people in New York when most of ’em, so fur as I see, could git away if they wanted to. I come here to see th’ fashions, actin’ on the advice of friends, though I run a dressmakin’ establishment 20 years in Vevay, Indianny, without never comin’ to New York an’ ain’t never comin’ again. If I ever took back th’ fashions I seen here to Vevay, I'd lose every customer I've got an’ probably git put out o’ the church. New York ain’t nothin’ but a regular swindle anyway, from end to end an’ from before breakfast to lockin’ up time. I was supposed to git ‘a quiet room in a convenient neighborhood. When I got there it was over a shootin’ ‘gallery, an’ th’ thinge that neighbor hood was convenient fur ain’t nothin’ for you an’ me to speak of. I moved quick an’ they wouldn't give me back the deposit 1 sent when I wrote to en- gage th’ room. But I ain’t gona under- take to tell ye about all th’ little things like that that happened to me. That's New York. But I want to tell ye one thing: When I git back to Vevay— and I'm a-goin’ today—I'm gona put a sign right in my winder that people that want New York fashions kin go to New York an’ git ‘em. Vevay’s good enough for me.” BAD EFFECT OF SMOKY AIR Neither Animals Nor Vegetation Flour- ish in the Vicinity of Large Manufacturing Plants. Whether live stock is likely to suf- fer when living in the neighborhood of railroad yards, industrial plants and large manufacturing centers, was the question that the Leeds (Eng,) university proposed to Yorkshifie farmers, and the answers showed the aflirmative not only for animals but also as concerns grass and other plants. It appears that the growth of young stock is kept back under such conditions, and in the case of old stock or horses these are seen to require much more care and food than those which live in a pure air. Such effects on animals are due partly to the direct action of the vitiated air when taken into the lungs and on the other hand by the very poor quality of grass that grows here, as it cannot develop un- der good conditions. Sheep raising is found to be specially difficult in these places, even impossible. Near Leeds, this had to be discontinued, for the wool was of very poor quality, besides being full of impurities of various kinds. Thus it appears that the same general rules apply to animals as to human beings under such cireum- stances.—Scientific American. Japan's Paper Underciothing, The Japanese are now making un- derclothing of finely crisped or grained paper, the New York Weekly states. After the paper has been cut to a pattern, the different parts are sewn together and hemmed, and the places where the buttonholes are to be formed are strengthened with calico or linen. The paper is very strong and at the same time very flexible. After a garment has been worn a few hours it will interfere with the per- spiration of the body no more than do garments made of cotton fabric, The paper is not sized, nor is it im- permeable. After becoming wet the paper is difficult to tear. When an en- deavor is made to tear it by hand it presents almost as much resistance as the thick skin used for making gloves, ttm ere Fault in Education. One regrettable fact about the ad- vanced education of many young per- sons is that they have been alienated from their homes and families and the “old-fashined” ways 6f the latter. The tragedy of this gulf which school and college have created between students and their parents is known only to the mothers and fathers who have endured it. Usually, also, the explanation is that the children have not won to even the beginnings of wisdom, ‘else they would value the real worth of the parents whose greatness of loyalty and service: and sacrifice is beyond the Dower of the schools to bestow. Any education which makes a boy ashamed cf his mother and father is a bad edu- cation. Napoleon’s Pen-Wiper. According to the biographers of Napoleon, his breeches were always of white cashmere. It often happened that two hours after leaving his cham- ber the breeches were spotted with ink by reason of the Corsican’s habit of wiping his pen cn them and of shak- ing ink all arcurd h =. It was a favor- “I ardon, sir. Were you waiting for anybody?” “I am waiting for some goulash thas | Ferdinand was to bring me.” | “Ferdinand has been called to the | colors a long t 3B e.” 1d have notified me, | | Ferdinand | on and is a 1 ra 3 ite trick of his i, strike his pen against the edge ~f a table and, of course, tha Preasches suffered. Furthermere, it appears that, how- | ever the great man dressed in the morning, was his dress for the ® * Santa's Christmas By MARY D. ARNOTT INDENETTE struggled vain- ly with the tears that | S~ueezed at last through tired eyelids. It was not often that the brave little homemaker gave way to grief, but in the present mo- ment she seemed unable to control her emotion. In the next room childish voices prattled joyously. Lindenette had not found the heart to tell them that Christmas would have to come and go without the hb much heralded visit from Santa Claus.’ Since the loss of both parents Linden- ette had managed to keep a roof over the heads of her small brother and sister and had provided food for their J] slight frames. What did it * matter if her cheeks had lost their roses and her lips their cheery bloom? The smile lingered. That was all that mattered. : She brushed her tears aside and arose to answer an unex- pected summons from the knocker. She looked her surprise at the great man who stood on her tiny porch. “I have come in search of one Lin- den Lane,” the stranger said with a smile to which the girl responded. “The name is unusual,” admitted impossible—being Lindenette Lane. May I ask you in from the cold?” She opened the door and Marvin Goodwin entered the pitifully barren rodin into which she led him. His eyes followed the girl rather than the contents of the room. Two small, pale faces peered at him from the kitchen door, and Goodwin smiled at them. “Do I look like Santa Claus?” he asked them by way of breaking the ice. “No, you don’t;” returned the boy, bluntly. “Besides, Linda says it may ‘be too cold for Santa Claus to come out this year.” There was a wail from the little sister, and the boy strove vainly to conceal his disappointment at this announcement. Linda gave them each a hug and told them to run along. When" they had gone she turned to Goodwin with inquiry in her eyes. . “My errand is a pleasant one,” he said quickly, for his own voice was none too controlled. “It will add to your happiness, I know.” He drew a memorandum from his pocket, and after consulting it, asked: “Your fa- ther, Linden Lane? Did he live in Stillwater, Minn., 22 years ago?” “Yes,” replied Linda, with a flush of excitement lending roses to her cheeks. “I was born there.” “Then, to come directly to the point,” Goodwin told her, “we find two depos- —— its of $25 each in two of our banks there. One Linden J. Lane opened the account 22 years ago.” Linda laughed softly. “My father used always to fear bank failures, and put small amounts in’ many banks.” She turned sparkling eyes upen Goodwin. “We thought we had collected all his savings,” she said. “These two nests were undiscov- ered,” the man laughed, “and the hens have been laying golden eggs. You have, at this very minute $300—>5 “Three hundred dollars! Oh!” sks impulsively held out her two toilworn little hands, “it is a fortune! The children! They can have their Santa Claus!” Goodwin found himself feeling hap- pier than he remembered having felt before. Was it the knowledge that he had been the Good Fairy in this small family, or was it something more sub- tle, more wonderful that had crept into his mind? He laughed a trifle nervously. “I am going to ask for immediate payment for the joy I have found for you,” he said and when Linda's ques- tioning eyes met his he said impetu- ously: “Let me come tomorrow—and help make Christmas glad for the children. May I come?” Linda glanced at him with a new shyness. “Yes,” she said, simply. “If you like I will go with you to help get that Christmas tree.” : Next. morning Linda and the chil dren were up early. The crackling of the fire as it roared up the stovepipe created a spirit of cheerfulness that greeted Marvin Guodwin when he presented himself at an early hour. “Oh!” shouted Bobiy, “here's ous own Santa Clays!” His eyes were glued to the armrul of packages Good- win deposited on the table. “Bobby!” cried linda. “Haven't you ever been Santa Claus before?” queried Feggy. “Never! This & my very firs ex- perience. I hope Y will acquit myself with proper dignifz.” And Linda's eyes, over the heads of the children, looked down deep into Goodwin’s big soul, and unconsciously she let the man read what her heart was ‘saying. “Next Christmas,” he was saying in his mind, “Linda will have permanent roses in her cheeks, and her eyes will wt e day, since he would not change s toilet until nig of his tian I ots was lined witk | be mire. and that will be all the hap- | pines Santa Claus could have.” tte smiled. Linden Lindenette, “and my own is even more | (By E. O. SELLERS, Acting Director Sun. day School Course, Moody Bible Insti- tute, Chicago.) ( LESSON FOR DECEMBER 6 CHRIST RISEN FROM THE DEAD. LESSON TEXT—Mark 16:1-8; Matt. 28:11. 15. ; GOLDEN TEXT-—-Why seek ve the live ing among the dead? He is not here, but is risen.—Luke 24:5, 6. The death of Christ made a pro. tound impression, Luke 23:48, 49. Jo Ship the body and gave it burial, Mark 15:42-47. In the lesson selected seph, who had béen ‘a secret ‘disciple, | for today we have, first, Mark's record of the discovery of the resurrection by the women, and, second, Matthew's record of how his enemies dealt with ( that fact. I. The. Resurrection Morn, Mark 16:1-8. The Sabbath ended at sune down and the shops were then opened. | Mary Magdalene then spices that they might anoint the dead body of Jesus. Matt. 28:1 'R. V. Starting the next morn, “while it was yet dark,” ‘John 20:1, they came to the tomb to per- form their last service of gratitude and love. He had no need of this serv- ice, Matt. 16:21; 20:19; however, it was acceptable and they were reward. ed by receiving the first ‘glimpse of the risen Lord. Women's Love Genuine, The reason they did not expect to see a risén Jesus was in their failure to listen to ‘and to ponder on “his words. The men dlso failed to ¢om- prehend the note of his resurrection which he so frequently sounded. In- deed, the report of these same women is by these men considered “as idle tales,” Luke 24:11. The women ap- pear in a better light than the men in this story. The women, especially Mary Magdalene, loved much because he had done so much for them. The extent and the genuineness of their | affection 4s found in that they went to the tomb to serve Jesus when appar- ently hope had fled and faith was blighted, I Cor. 13:8 R. V. Their visit was the fulfillment of their ministry of love, yet it reveals the darkness of- their minds. This was common to all of his followers, , Approaching the tomb they are con- : fronted by a new difficulty—“Who shall roll away the stone?’ The words of verse four are significant—‘Look- ’ , ing up, they see that the stone is rolled back,” Am. R.-V. This undoubtedly ; refers to the situation of the tomb and their approach thereto, yet the fact remains that “looking up” most of our difficulties are removed. Let us be constantly “looking unto him.” It has been suggested that God rolled away the stone, not that Jesus might get out, but rather that the women might get in. Mary found two angels sitting, one at the head and gone at the foot, where the body had lain, John 20:11, 12, and the two disciples to whom she reported found the linen cloth and the napkin and “believed,” John 20:2-9. The women were overwhelmed with perplexity and,:like Peter and John, “knew not the Scripture that he must rise again from the dead.” The an- gelic message, “He is risen; he is not here,” was the sounding forth of a message as great and as glorious as that sounded by the angels on the night of his birth, . Such experience and such knowledge entails a definite burden of responsi- bility, therefore the logical message and command of verse seven. This is also in accord with the Saviors last earthly message, Mark 16:15; Matt. 28:18-20. It is natural for us to lin- ger in silent meditation at the place of our greatest revelation or of our deepest soul experiences, but these women are urged to “go quickly.” The message of salvation is too im- portant to brook any delay. Spread False Tale. Matt. 27:62-66 and 28:11-15. Evident. ly the manner of his death and his re- ported prophecies as to the resurrec- tion made an impression upon the ene- mies of Jesus. This guard is an ex- pression of the ultimate ‘antagonism of the priests and rulers. ' ‘As this, the morn of the first day of the week, ap- proached the guard saw the vision of the angel and in its presence became as dead men. When later they had re- covered they hastened into the city and reported to thé priests the fact of the coming of the-angel #nd that the stone; upon which the seal rested, had been removed. Bribed, they spread abroad the tale that the disciples had stolen his body. ' The falseness of such a tale is evidenced by the fact that the rankest infidel has not the temerity to make such a claim today. ' The resurrection, as Paul affirms, is the "declaration that Jesus is the Son of God. 'It ‘is a vindication of his supremacy and of the supremacy of the spiritual over the natural. We do well to emphasize his ‘birth, and to dwell much upon his death, yet hoth of these have no essential value apart from the resurrection. Apart from this and the cross is no more than the tragic and awe-inspiring end of a life that failed. Connecting the cross with this demands that every thought- ful man should study it carefully. The resurrection demonstrates that he purchased | They may have paid | | the tomb a visit late on Saturday, see Consisting of a Recipe de, partment, a Practical Mechanic department, and Medical Book, all ‘in a handsome cloth hound Ii. The Watch at the Sepulcher, finished the work of redemption. The second To re LR by i ‘$1.50. > volume of 250 pages. The first seétion is a com- plete volume of . Recipes and ‘Home Hints by ‘two of the greatest experts'in the country. x second part has many Mechanical Hints, Short Meth- ods of Reckoning, Various Tab- les of Measurements, invalua- ble ‘to all ‘men, especially the Farmer and Mecha ‘The last department is a fine'Medienl Treatise which all : All new Subscrib- erscanget this ; Book with The Commercial fo 01d Subscribers, $1.60. By mail 10 cents extra to all. chanic. To feel strong, have good appetite and digestion, sleep soundly and en- joy life, use Burdock Blood Bitters, the family system tonic. Piice $1.00 eel eeeet—— i Itch! Itch!—Scratch! Scratch! Scratch! The more you scratch, the worse the itch. Try Doan’s Ointment. For eczema, any skin itching 50c a box. ad BUY.I ltch! For Father and Son AND ALL THE FAMILY] Two and a half million readers find it of A absorbing interest. ng in it is Whitten So You Can Understand it We''sell 400,000 copi month without givin g prem itms and have 4 solicitors. ' Any. publisher for free sample 4 Sass — ttt tii $1.50 A YEAR 11Sc'A COPY Popula Mechanics Magazine 116 No. Miclilgan Ave. CHICAGO Dromm’s Handmade Pretzel’s “Made in Johnstown’’, on ‘sale at McKenzie & Smith’s and at F. A. Bittner’s Meyersdale’s progressive grocers. Better than the'rest, kind. 50 YEARS’ ESIGNS : COPYRIGHTS &c. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly’ascertain our opinion free wi ether an invention is probably Communica- tions strictly confidential. OK 0 sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American, A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir. culation of Cleans Journal. y 18, $3 a STEVENS Repeating Shotguns The Stevens Hammerless costs ne more than some hammer guns.’ It has the celebrated ; STEVENS RECOIL UNLOCK Providing Saloty against , T. W. Gurley. | Shingles! nl * Dealer in ] fl SPORTING GOODS. Shingles! Shingles! ‘Enroute one car eighteen inch Eureka ‘Red Cedar Shingles, which we ex- the car aud'for cash will be $4.25 per #housand. Get yovr orders early. ‘ad ‘MEYERSDALE PLANING MILL. —————— rm e— For SALE.—A good Palmer-Weber Co., Piano at a bargain. Apply, to The Commercial. i ad ————— a For SALE—A four year oid thor- ough bred ‘Shropshire’ Ram. OzI1AS “WEIMER, nov.12-3tad - Sand Patch, Pa.,R. D. 1. A A A A A A AI PP FOR A FIRST-CLASS GALVANIZED ‘OR SLATE ROOF, PUT ON COMPLETE & REASONABLE Write to J. S. WENGERD as we can furnish you anything you want in the roofing line, outside of wood shingles, at the very lowest prices. R.D. 2 MEYERSDALE, ate pect soon. Our price right out of PENNA. 4 ONS NS NNN I 8, Sold by all nevea a NN & Co,3618roacnar. Ney York ch Office, 825 F' St.. Washington, D. C. PILLS Biv ODEX le Bee NSNHat, a. 0 1 Je ac st ‘Jeon - +] it a i had like tha twe say