les. RR RR RR RRO ONCE CH RRR RR RR RRR RRR EE BBE EOE AAAS, FORORORORCH a. MRR RRR RCRA a Sh, or the ungry >. For srands id he ind of it the age— to the r a ”—so ‘HERS rr x im, g§ a broad day if St. t 10 a. m, Sia wv g | RIA dren { ) Years | 72a ' personal efficiency. A certain degree pop We 1c. 2 a . 3 Eins pas mr DEGENERATIVE DISEASES Timely Talks by Commissioner Dix- on on Health and Hygiene. Benjamin Franklin said, “Nine men in ten are suicides.” The indifference of individuals to their continued personal welfare which inspired this remark one hun- dred and sixty-nine years ago applies equally to-day. Conditions have changed in many ways and some of them are less beneficial for the indi- vidual. Carefully - accumulated statistics show that there has in all probabili- been a steady increase in Bright's disease and the degenerative dis- eases incidental to advancing age, within the past few years. Certainly the number of deaths from this cause is sufficiently high to warrant the se- rious consideration of every individ- ual advancing toward middle life. Of course everyone now-a-days -is famil iar with thesdoctrine of fresh air, ex- ercise and simplicity of diet, etc, which makes up the creed of the san- itarian. Few are willing to go to the fancied discomfort, of denying themselves the pleasures of eating, drinking or indolent ease: They are perfectly aware to be sure that indulgence is unwise. They have been warned by other people’s experience and not im- probably have been admonished by their medical adviser as to the evil effects of certain favorite indulgen- ces. But the fact that a single grat- ification of their weakness is uot like- ly to be accompanied by any of the forecasted ill effects seems to lead the majority of people on regardless of the ultimate accounting which Na- ture is certain to demand. The way of least resistance seems to be the popular path. Probably every individual will ad- mit to himself that he’ is running’ a risk and that the uitimate outcome will probably prove sérious. Neverthe- less continue he will and so there is more than a modicum of truth in what Poor Richard said. Self denial and temperance may seem Spartan virtues to the self in- dulgent but they are worth cultiva- ting if one would challenge Father Time and his grim companion. MORE HASTE LESS SPEED. “More haste less speed” is a ven- erable warning against misapplied energy. The summer season gives ad- ditional reason to consider the value of rational well directed activity as opposed to spurts of action. The average city dweller regard- less of years is apt to scurry about as if life depended upon his catching a particular train or trolley. Rush- ing to and fro with small considera- tion for those who impede his prog- ress, he will risk life and limb to cross a street thirty seconds sooner and then gaze in a show window for ten minutes, All this is extremely wearing on . the nervous system and physically exhausting. It easily becomes a hab- it and if continued leads to loss of of deliberation usually insures more thoughtful and effective action and is better from the health standpoint. To progress at moderate speed with due consideration for other people's “rights of the road” results. in bene- fits of no small value. Your physical machinery is far more likely to suc- cessfully meet emergencies if it is not continually running on high gear. Then too there is much in our dai- ly round he who runs may not read. If we are to live rationally and think broadly it is well to make one’s pro- gress through life at a moderate pace. Your scurrying busybody is selfish even though unintentional. To have an eye for other people’s de- sires and ambitions and a considera- tion for their ideals may help us to: achieve our own. To live peacefully and to live hap- pily materially aid in maintaining our physical health and vice versa. Progress is not necessarily measured by rapidity of action; consider the squirrel in the revolving cage. | STORING A MILLION TONS OF COAL Anticipating a boom in business next Winter, as well as a shortage of labor in the Cambria County flelds, . from which section hundreds of fore- igners are leaving for Europe to participate in the war, the Pennsyl- vania Railroad Company several days ago began the erection of a side track at Eldorado leading to a parcel of ground near the Meyers Brothers greenhouses on which 1,000,000 tons of coal will be dumped. The first con- signment of coal for the storage plant arrived on tae ground last week. It is also understood that al similar dumping ground will be pro- vided at the Hollidaysburg classifi- | cation yards. Children Ory FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA PETA ERS. THROUGHOUT THE COUNTY Mrs. Christ and Miss Alma St. Clair music teachers from Friedens, were thrown from a buggy Friday morning, near Boswell,when a horse they were driving became frightened at a motor- cycle and ran away. Both ladies were thrown into a fleld. Mrs. Christ sus- tained cuts on one of her arms but Miss St. Clair escaped with a few bruises. It is estimated that more than 5,000 people were in attendance Saturday at i the annual Friedens Harvest Home | picnic, under the auspices of the Friedens Lutheran Sunday school. The Baltimore & Ohio trains brought hundreds of visitors to the while automobiles by the brought many more. scores While engaged in oiling a wring- | er recently, preparatory to doing the family wash, Mrs. W. H. Traup, of Somerset had a finger severed in the cogs of the machine. On the day pre- vious she buried ner husband, who was killed while handling a Spring- field rifle, the property of the N. G. P. « The comptroller of the currency has given notice that the incorpo- rators of the Fisst National Bank of Cairnbrook, have complied with the law and therefore are authorized to commence business. Judge Ruppel of Somerset filed a decree last week at Greensburg in the case of Rebecca Shupe vs, Roy A. Paul J, and Grace Rainey in which the Somerset jurist sustained the plaintiff’s claims. The corps of teachers for Alleghe- ny township for the coming term is as follows: Glen Savage, Anna B. Coughenour; Mount Zion, Kate Shaff- er; Pine, Nelle Menges; Werner, Florence Will; Harmon, Besse Hall; . Felton, Edith Clites; Mountain, Grace Caton; Hillegas, Celia Caton; Suhrie, Thos. Hillegas. The fourth annual reunion of the descendants of the late Jacob and Maria Eppley of Jenner township was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Peterson near last Saturday. The officers of the as- sociation are : President, Wm. J. Ep- pley; secretary, Anna Alwine; histor ical secretary, Elmer G. Peterson. At the reunion, the forenoon was given over to amusements and sports. The afternoon was more formal and some excellent addresses were given, Ralph Galluci, an Italian, who had resided in Somerset county, decided to return to his native country and fight for native land, which is now in- volved in war. So selling his possess- ions and gathering together all the money that he had, he went as far as Altoona, having $170 with him. That evening he fell in with several of his countrymen and they sat down to a little game of cards, at the close: of which the prospective soldier found that his money was gone but $25, but later the thief was caught and identified. Three young men were injured, Sihousn not seriously, in an auto- mobile accident Friday evening até o’clock about one mile from Jerome i on their way to Boswell. A racing ma. chine occupied by Ralph Marrison and A. Bittner and another automob- ‘ile occupied by William Smith, Glenn Cable, Gomer Williams, and James Goodisky collided. Toth cars over turned. Morrison was the most se- riously injured, having sustained a i slight concussion of the brain. Cable . received an injury to one of his ankles and Smith received bruises and cuts about the body. STRAIN TOO GREAT. Hundreds of Meyersdale Readers Find Daily Toil a Burden. The hustle and worry of business men, The hard work and workmen, The woman's household cares, Often weaken the kidneys. Backache, headache, dizziness, Kidney troubles, urinary troubles— frequently follow. A Meyersdale citizen tells you what to do. Mrs. Joseph Quinn, 37 Broadway, Meeyrsdale, says: “About one year ago one of our family was troubled by severe pains in the small of the back. It was hard to stoop over or to do any lifting. One box of Doan’s Kidney Pills, procured at Thomas’s Drug Store was all that was needed stooping of to show him that they are a wonder- ; ful kidney medicine. Now, whenever attacks of backache come on, Doan’s Kidney Pills are used with satisfac- tory results.” Price 50 cents at all dealers. Don’t | simply ask for a kidney remedy, get | Doan’s Kidney Pills, the same that i Mrs, Quinn had. Foster—Milburn Co Props., Buffalo, N. Y. No. 5 Shipping tags on hand ready to print what you want on them. DRESSED AND LIVE SPRING CHICKENS AT DONGES’ MBAT MARKET. town, | Ee T an — wr a | NEARBY COUNTIES, Two men p ville, to a che aded guilty at Brook- ge of fraudulently col- lecting bounties on wease: skins and were fined $200. Bedford Springs is enjoying the largest patronage in a hundred years and hundreds of visitors cannot se- accommodations, even though private families give their rooms. | The handsome new hotel to be buiit by Lee Hoffman, will be started in the spring. A. H. Glenn, aged 40 years, a West- | ern Maryland railroad conductor, of | | Elkns, W. Va., was drowned late Sat- ' , urday afernoon in the Potomac at Cumberland. Glenn, who could not swim, was under the impression that he could wade out in the water, not knowing its depth. He sank imme- diately but came up frantically call- ing for help. A companfon was power- less to aid the drowning man. Because the train was late, Pay- master Fred Vinton, of the Green- wich Coal & Coke Co., did not wait Saturday morning to deliver to the | express office the pouch containing money to be paid their miners that day. Instead, he threw the pouch into his automobile and started for the | the mines. And because he was tak- | ing the money instead of it being | hauled up in the express wagon, the carefully laid scheme of five bandits to get the $10,000 was foiled. The State police was called upon, three of the robbers caught, and a soldier was shot by them but not seriously. A clever scheme to defraud the B. & O. railroad was nipped in the bud recently. A car of supposed muni- tions of war consigned from the vi- cinity of Clarksburg, W. Va., to the war zone for the use of the Allies, cure was mysteriously burned in the Cur- tis Bay yards at Pgaltimore. A claim for $17,218.87 was made. Clerks who broke into the car, however, found that the cargo was chiefly cement and sawdust. A fuse nearby indicated that the fire had been of incendiary origin. Joseph A. Bell, of Cresson, 30 years iold on Friday confessed to post office | inspectors in' Johnstown that he was guilty of rifling them ails has been stealing money from letters “for sev- eral months.” Mr. Bell has been em- ployed since January 1st, 1913 as the only mail clerk on a train be- Sulphur | Springs in Conemaugh township, on i i the Blacklick Valley. United States Commissioner Robt. C. Hoerle held Bell in $1,000 bail for the September term of federal court at Erie. Having been converted and earned sufficient funds to reimburse all from whom he had stolen. Evangelist C. P. Ellis of Longmont, Col, is in Bedford, Fayette and Somerset counties mak: ing an effort to locate his burglar victims of 22 years ago. In ‘many in- stances Evangelist Ellis has found that the people whom he robbed are dead and heirs of his” victims, after hearing his story. of conversion from a burglar to a Christian, refuse to ac- cept the money offered in payment for articles stolen. The evangelist had a partner in his confessed night- ly raids on business houses, but he knows nothing of the whereabouts of the other man. All that he wants to is to reimburse the people from whom he himself stole. He wants to make atonement for his thefts and re- lieve a troubled conscience. He was converted 12 years ago, he says, went west joined the Methodist church and became an evangelist and this is his first opportunity he has had to re- turn to the east having been waiting 12 years to earn sufficient funds tn pay his railroad expenses and for ar- ticles stolen, BRUSH YOUR TEETH, AND ALSO YOUR TONGUE Brush your teeth. By all means, brush your teeth religiously and well but for pity’s sake brush your tongue too. Wield your brush backwards and forward under and over, to the north, the south, the east and the west; scouring it with fervor for it is in very truth a tiny forest of dense foli- age wherein lurks the unseen enemy. Every time you open your mouth a whole regiment of little microbes charge through the aperature and take up quarters somewhere in the confines of your chewing apparatus. Seek them out and annihilate them before sweet sleep enfolds you; for fortified with an enormous capacity for work; they rest not; nor do they grow weary and you may awaken in the morning to find whole companies firmly intrenched in the very middle of your tongue. If you can’t conceive of your own particular organ being so invaded take a micrscope and mirror and get busy. The statement Issued by Dr. Mayo the Rochester, Minn. surgeon of na- tional repute, that “the next step in preventive medicine should come from the dentist,” meaning that the mouth must be kept clean if health is to be maintained. We print sale bills quick. All kinds of job work here. | OLD CURSE AT WORK STILL tween Cresson and Indiana by way of j set by the American builders whom a NTE ST in cesar Bt al semi 6 Death of English Officer in France Re- calls Maleciction Pronounced Centuries Ago. as The Hon. Francis Geoffrey Pearson, Lord Cowdray’s third son has recalled in : England the violent end of other heirs to Cowdray, the historic mansion near Midhurst, and of the curse that was proncunced in 1538, when Sir Ar- thur Browne, father of the first Lord Montagu, received Battle abbey as a gift from Henry IIL Sir Arthur destroyed the great church at Battle and the cloisters, and , converted the abbot’s lodging into a I dwelling house. While he was holding | a feast in the great hall one of the | dispossessed monks entered and sol- emnly cursed the family, declaring that the Montagu line should “perish by fire and water.” It was not till 1793, two centuries later, that the curse was fulfilled. In that year Cowdray house was destroyed by fire, and a week later the last Viscount Montagu was drowned in the Rhine, ' After the death of the last Lord Montagu the Cowdray property came into the possession of the viscount’s sister, Mrs. Stephen Poyntz, who soon after receiving the estate lost her two sons by drowning at Bagnor. ' On the death of Mrs. Poyntz the property was divided between her three daughters, but was sold to the earl of Edgmont in 1843. In 1909 it came into the hands of Sir Weetman Pearson, and when Sir Weetman, on being made a peer in 1910, chose the title of Lord Cowdray, an old Sussex woman spoke of the curse, which, says a London let- ter, is still remembered among the Midhurst people. PLAN LONG BRIDGE OVER SEA British Engineers Contemplate Pro- ject Successfully Carried Through in America. The project of connecting the island nf Ceylon with the mainland of India by a railroad bridge has been revived again, though, like all such projects, : It must wait till after the end of the war. The distance is 22 miles, nu- ! merous rocky islets furnish natural halting places, and the intervening wa- ‘ter is said to be shallow enough to make pler-buflding easy for modern engineers. Even if this bridge is built, it will ‘not be the longest structure of the sort in the world. The Florida East Coast railway goes out to sea 46 , miles, from the tip of the Florida peninsula to Key West. At one point, It crosses nine miles of open water, ' and passengers on its trains are out of sight of land. The whole remark- | able ‘structure is of re-enforced con: Rian Bb a sa iesliitoten death by a German bullet of | Condensed Statement CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK OF MEYERSDALE, PA. At Close of Business June 23rd, 1915. 1 F b RESOURCES Loans and'Investments...................... $681,064.41 U. S. Bonds cone tras assassin hss 75,000.00 Banking House. .................0..... 0.5 29,300.00 Due from Banks and Reserve Agents..... ....... 126,594.25 Cash........ Crk tae tenses ass estan, cae. 70,738.76 fotal.... $986,697.42 LIABILITIES Capital Stock. ............c.i...0 im . ... $65,000.00 Surplus:..., .................. 0h oad .. 100.000.00 Udivided Profits............ Seite l ih. nie 25,323.01 Cireglation... .....c.............0000 Ja. . 63,800.00 Depesites..........,.......... 0... 0b. loa 732,574.41 Total.... $986,697.42 ee ed ed eet a Nf NS Nl Nf NI NN PP I SINS SIS, Nm rar Butter From Best Local Dairies , crete, calculated to last for ages. The engineers of British India will have a hard job to beat the precedent ! Henry M. Flagler set at work It | will be interest to see them try. An Important Decision. An important decision affecting the banking law was made by the appel- late division of the supreme court in Wulff vs. Roseville Trust company, in which the court vacates an attach- ment in this state against the property of a financial institution in New Jer sey which has been closed by the commissioner of banking and insur ance. The court held that New Jer- sey law relating to the closing of a bank by the commissioner is similar to the provisions of the New York banking law and that the commission- er “is deemed to have become vested with the title to the assets of said in- stitution as the trustee of an express trust.” The court says that “in such a case no creditor is permitted to ob- tain a preference over others or to ob- tain a lien upon the property of the banking institution after the commis- sioner has taken charge thereof.” Sneezing as a Diagnosis. A sneeze is responsible for the dis covery by City Clerk Newton that he had three broken ribs and a dislocated shoulder, says a Hanford (Cal.) dis patch to the Los Angeles Times. Sev- sral days ago Newton and a number of friends were returning from an automobile ride when the machine turned over. He was slightly injured, but thought nothing of it. Later he sneezed vigorously and the pain increased; he sneezed again and then hastened to see a doctor. The physician, after an examination, informed him that he had three bro ken ribs and a shoulder out of joint Since then Newton has been too ill to work. His friends are now wondering whether he would have felt the in juries if he had not sneezed twice. “Our Friends the Enemy.” A zealous bobby captured a work: ingman and haled him into court om the charge of being an unregistered German. The man swore he had a Russian birth certificate, and pro- duced it. Then said the magistrate severely: “But why then have you for ten years been masquerading as a Ger- man?” “Because,” answered the man apolo- getically, “when I came to England ten years ago the feeling against Rus- sia was so strong that I was obliged to pass myself off for a German.” — Molly Best in Harper's Weekly. Rapid Changing. “Well,” said the janitor of the city hall in Dixmude, as he shoved another bomb off the bed coverlets preparatory to rising, “well, I wonder which flag I'll have to put up over the building BUTTER is not butter unless it is made by a process that preserves all the oils of the milk. When you lose part of these nourishing (oil) qualities you lose part of your butter. The butter we handle is made so as to preserve every nourishing and necessary quality. McKenzie & Smith | Meyersdale, Penn’a Every Farmer with twe or more cows needs a A DelLAVAL, THE BEST SEPARATOR MADE. J. T. YODER, Office 223 Levergood St, Johnstown, - Penn’a » CAPE MAY, SEA ISLE CITY, OCEAN CITY, STONE CITY, WILDWOOD JULY 1, 15 ano 29, AUGUST 12 ano BALTIMORE & OHIO SEASHORE EXCUXSIONS from MEYERSDALE to meemerienen Atlantic City $10.50 Good in Pullman Cars with Pullman Ticket. 26, SEPTEMBER 9 TICKETS GOOD RETURNING 16 DAYS Secure Iilnstrated Booklet Giving Full Details from Ticket Agents BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD. ny O i “WHY didn’t I have this bathroom put in long ago. It is so clean and beau- tiful that I feel provoked thinking of all that time that I worried along with the old bathroom.’’ Don’t wait until you can say that when a ‘Standard” bathroom put in by us will mean so much to jou mow. Baer & Co. em ei —L 10] Lavella Lavatory today!”"—Detroit News. CASTORIA 2 7 is << - "OLEY W\IDNEY PILLS FOR RHEUMATISM KIDNEYS AND BLADDER ~~ Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S ~~~ Get our prices on Job work. ——