a wr ——— POTATOES HEALTHY ARTICLE FOR DIET. The consumption of potatoes is growing less every year. Why is not clear, but many things may enter in- to the question. People may be tiring of this common food, prepared in old- fashioned ways only. They may not, probably do not, understand its great value as a food. Very likely some be- lieve that potatoes are hard to digest others that they are fattening. City markets may change too much for them at times. Millions prefer meats and pastry. Now what is the truth about the food value of the potato? Dr. J. H. Kellogg, superintendent of the Battle Creek Sanitarium, Michigan, is one of the best authorities on food in the world. He has written one of the best articles about the potato and ‘we have taken from this article the fol- lowing figures and facts expressed in his own language: Do you know that | one pound of baked potato or one and a fifth pounds of boiled potato are equivalent in food value to 5 7-8 ounces of boiled beef, 1 pound of chicken, 1 1-2 pounds of codfish, 2 1-1 pints of oysters, 4 pints of clams (in shell), 4 1-2 pints of beef juice, 10 pints of beef tea, 1 1-2 pints whole milk, 3 pints skimmed milk, 8 eggs, 9 ounces baked beans, 7 ounces bread, 1 3-4 pints oatmeal or corn meal mush, 1 3-4 pints of hominy (cook), 1 pint rice, 1 pound of bananas, 2 pounds parsnips (cooked), 1 pound green peas (cooked), 3 pounds beets (cooked), 4 pounds boiled cabbage, 4 pounds radishes, 5 pounds tomatoes, 5 pounds of turnips (cooked) 1-2 pounds cucumbers. Steamed or mased potatoes di- gest in two or three hours, but roast beef requires four or five hours— twice as long. In all cases, the starch in the pota- to digests more easily and is appro- priated by the body more rapidly than the starch of wheat, corn and most other cereals, in some cases in less than one-sixth of the time. Potato gruel has been found, in Germany, to be of great service in feeding infants and invalids—is much better than corm starch, arrow roots, ete. One-fourth of the weight of the po- tato is food substance, ninetwen- tieths builds tissue, and three-tenths are alkaline salts. Of fat there is almost none in the potato—in prepar- ing it for food this fact should be remembered and the lack of it made up by adding cream, butter, etc. The idea that potatoes are fattening is all "wrong. The alkaline salts are mostly potash, and their job is to keep up the alkaline condition of the blood. This is necessary because a lowering of this condition ig one of the chief causes of the rapid increase in chron- ic diseases, deaths from which have doubled in thirty years and in that time have amounted to 350,000 lives, Meats form a great excess of acids; cereals tend i the same thing. The alkaline salts are needed to bal. ance this condition. If this country would eat four times the amount of potatoes it would mean the saving of thousands of lives annually and an in- calcuble amount of suffering from disease. MEAT EATERS. One hundred million meat animals are slaughtered each year in the United States, and therefore it would appear that every person, including babies, eats an animal. Sixty-per cent of all meat animals are slaughtered in establishments where there is fed- eral inspection, and approximately one animal out of every fifty-eight is in whole or in part on account of the meat being unfit for human use. Uncle ‘Sam is doing his best to protect the carnivorous tooth from crunching into meat infected by tuberculosis and other diseases, and the cost of the Federal Meat Inspection Service is now about $3,375,000 a year. NEW COAL FIELD An extension of the Boswell Branch railroad to near Edie, where the Con- solidation Coal Company is opening new mines, was begun several days ago. When the plant is completed, it will be one of the best owned by that company in this county. The Somerset Lumber Company has been awarded a contract for the erection of thirty double houses at the plant, and have finished several of them. ¥ BERLIN Fred Groff! and his daughters Margaret and Eleanor have been visit- ing in New York. Miss Orpha Stevannus and Miss Olive Sharver have returned home from Braddock, where they visited friends and relatives. Mrs. Merle Menges of Pittsburg is visiting relatives at this place. Her husband came to Berlin early in the week and packed and shipped their household gods to Pittsburg. Miss Rena Brant of Garrett gave a recital in the High School recently, assisted by J. P. McCabe. The enter- MOTHER OF MISS CAVELL | { A “grand old lady” is Mrs. Cavell, the mother of Edith Cavell, the Brit ish nurse whose last words before her execution were, “I am happy to die for my country.” To perpetuate the memory of her daughter, there is now a plan on foot in Great Britain to organize the Cavell Memorial fund. SOCIAL WAR WAGED IN CHINA British and Germans Clash In One of Clubs in Shanghal—Trouble at Other Ports. Peking.—Numerous incidents of a disagreeable social nature are occur- ing in the foreign settlements in the treaty ports of China. The only for c.gn place of amusement in Peking, a moving picture show run by an Bast Indian British subject, was raided re- cently by some legation guard because a British “animated cartoon” was un- complimentary to the Emperors Wil- liam and Francis Joseph, But the most peculiar incident has occurred in Shanghai, where the Ger- man members of a club were requested to remain away from the club house during the war. The overwhel ing number of British objects to their pres- ence. | The Germans went to the club and took away many cups and other silver trophies, and are now retaining them, threatening to melt them unless their entrance fees and dues paid to the club are returned to them. SHOOT GAME FROM AIRSHIP Texas Men Say New Kind of Hunt. ing is Greatést, of All Sports. Gallop, N. M.—Hunting wild game from the seat of an aeroplane is the favorite sport of Sam Hampson and J. N. Long, who recently purchased a machine from a man who had served with General Villa in Mexico. They took the machine to a point in the foothills of the Mimbres range of mountains in New Mexico and made a flight over that rough region. On the initial flight they saw a number of bear, deer and other wild game, and on a second trip, when they carried guns, they succeeded in killing some of the animals. The greatest difficulty which they encountered was that of recovering the game after it had been shot. Usu- ally the game fell in places that af- forded no landing for the aeroplane. SEALS MAKE HER WEALTHY Maine Woman Is About to Retire After ! { Twenty Years in the Busi- | ness. Boothbay Harbor, Me.—Mrs. Janet | MacD®hald, seventy-seven years old, is about to retire wealthy, after | twenty years in the business of seal catching, with three men in her em- ploy. The seals of Maine waters are mot valuable for their skins, but are eas- ily tamed and a e in demand for pub- lic and private ‘¢ollections and aqua riums and zoological collections. The catching is done at night, with the aid of nets, and Mrs. MacDonald has caught .many personally. Often they follow her about the house sev- eral days after capture. The usual price is $25 and her catch has averaged 100 in a season of six weeks in the late spring and sum- mer. Robs While Music Plays. South Bend, Ind.—Enter the musical burglar. While a phonograph in the home of Alexis Mossey was playing “I Want to Go Back to the Farm,” an enterprising robber was going through the Mossey residence and making a rich haul. Two diamond rings, several watches and a quantity of money made up his loot. Neighbors who heard the machine thought the Mossey family was at home, and the-burglar was left to his own devices during the absence of the family. Not until Mrs. Mossey re- turned at alate hour was the theft | tainment was a high order, and the patrons enjoyed it throughly. known. | HOW’S THIS? We offer One Hundred Dollars Re- ward for any case of Catarrh that can- not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Hall's Catarrh Cure has been taken by catarrh sufferers for the past thirty-five years, and has become known as the most reliable remedy for Catarrh. Hall’s Catafrh Cure aets thru the blood on the Mucus surfaces, ex- pelling the Poison from the Blood and healing the diseased portions. After you have taken Hall’'s Catarrh Cure for a short time you will see a great improvement in your general health. Start taking Hall's Catarrh Cure at once and get rid of catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Following out his policy of making the Uniontown High school strictly up to date and the equal of any in the state as an instrument to further com- munity welfare, Principal C. N. Mec- Cune has devised the idea of estab- lished an employment bureau in the High school. Cardg have already been filed out by High schools pupils who are workng out of school hours, stat- ing what kind of work they are doing and by whom employed . Other cards have been handled in by pupils not employed but wishing work to do during their spare hours. It is the in- tention of the High school authorities to keep these cards on file and to sug- gest and recommend pupils to the business men of this town in case they take advantage of this opportun- ity in securing help. By utilizing the High school bureau the business men and employers can be assured thdt no boy or girl will be recommend- ed for any position unléss in the opin- ion of the High school faculty that pupil is fitted for the work in every way. i: a- NSS NN A mm Buy Direct and Save Money DOUBLE SERVICE 170 11.EN Guaranteed 7,000 Miles Service .PROOF AGAINST PUNCTURES.. Double the thickness of the best standard makes of tires; average 10 or 12 layers of strong fabric, plus nearly one inch of tough tread rubber 100 per cent greater wearing depth and double the milage besides being practically Puncture-Proof. Unequalled for severe service on rough and rugged roads, hard pave ments and other places where tire troubles cannot be tolerated. Ride as easy as an ordinary pne { air space and pressure being the same. i Used in U. 8S. Government and Eu- ropean War Service. Our ‘output is limited, but we make the following low special Introductory Prices: Size Tires Tubes BOX Saal $38.60 ........... $2.30 Soxegel ideas 3.20 33x 4 . 4x4 36 x4 Two or more 10 per cent discount non-skids 10 per cent additional. All sizes—any type. Remit by draft, mon ey order or certified personal check; acceptance of order optional with consignee. Descriptive folder and complete price list mailed on request. DOUBLE SERVICE TIRE & RUBBER CO. AKRON, OHIO. Dept. C 2 — SS Waverly —the best \ petroleum products ¥ siade—all made from H high grade Pennsylvania H ‘Crude Oil. Gasolines, illuminating oils, lubricating oils and paraffine : wax. For all purposes. 320 Page Booklet Free— tells all about oil ll Waverly Oil Works Co. 5 Independent Refiners JFITTSBURGH, PA. vor ar by BITTNER MACHINE WORKS P. J. COVER & SON, ~ § MEYERSDALE PA arr pen EHTS TERN TEST RO op ea EE EET it ah aid eit il k Ea 4 1 & OU discriminate in the choice of your milk, yet to if ; YD mms about the {8 same. But you know differently. You realize i 8 b some cows yield better, creamier and more healt i f ki milk than others and that methods of caring for an . keeping milk differ. E You know about milk — that’s why you're partionlan A but are you equally well acquainted with kerosene: If you are, your choice is certain to be ATLANTIC : HO yb BR aR ® kPa th Why? Because it’s refined and re-refined by oil experts, 5 by men who know how to use methods that get every ¥ little bit of good out of the finest crude petroleum = Mother Earth yields. Atlantic Rayolight Oil is made right—it’s a pure kerosene. It burns without smoke or smell, it doesn’t char nor spoil - wicks, but it does yield an intense heat and a brilliant light, and it burns slowly and economically. Ask your grocer for it by name, because now, for the first time, you can buy kerosene whose makers you know and : upon whose goodness you can implicitly rely. What's more, its price is identical with ordinary kerosene. ho Atlantic Rayolight Oil is won- derfully useful for purposes other than lighting or heating —a few drops in the water 5 when washing windows or mirrors will give them a beau- Ei tiful polish. How do you use it? Maybe you know a way that'll get you something worth while. You never can tell. ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY Pittsburgh and Philadelphia and say good-bye to that breeder of colds —a bleak, draughty hall. These heaters are invaluable — their uses are manifold. They keep every part of the home comfy — yes, especially that spot that for half the year nothing seems to make habitable. The initial cost of a Perfection Smokeless Heater is small and, if Atlantic Rayolight Qil is used, its upkeep is little. It’s appearance is handsome you can get one at almost any dealer’s. ee ee ad al AN at ltt "i FSP" ttl lel Aid “irl lotr [ OUR PUBLIC FORUM | Peter Radford On Advertise It In America. As a citizen of this nation and one intensely interested in its material development, I want to add my approval to the “Buy It In America” movement. Commercial | ey ind ea VENS Repeating Shotguns The Stevens Hammerless costs no more than some hammer guns. § patriotism and business pride are the foundation stones it has the celebrated of success in industry and no country can become su STEVEN LOC preme in commerce and trade without it fosters a spirit im REC. yu " of friendship and partiality for its own products and insti 6 og aeons nag tutions. It is the spirit of the hive that makes the wheels of industry turn and each community should be a progressive unit in our industrial universe, All things being equal the farmer should patronize the local mer chant who is always a good citizen, a heavy taxpayer and friend of the farmer. The farmer sends shiploads of raw material to foreign markets and factories that meet on their way vessels laden with finished and foreign grown products coming to America. Aay effort to minimize this economig waste ought to be encouraged. But as a farmer and friend of the manufacturer and merchant I want to suggest an “Advertise It Jn America” movement. The manufacturer and Jobber may blow loud blasts on the horn of patriotism but if they will put T. W. Gurley. ll an “ad” in the newspapers in their trade territory, making a business presen. 7) mn Dealertin tation of their goods, they will find it far more effective ‘than waving the SPORT Star-Spangled Banner. The farmer is as much interested in thesprice of the PORTING GOORS. things ‘he hes to ‘buy ‘&s in the price of the things he has for sale and the advertising columns of his newspaper are his price ligt. The price is the thing and the farmer wants the figures in cold type. The politicians give him the patriotic buncombe he cares for. Business enterprise is a far more suo oesaful salesman than business patriotism. There are many most worthy organizations working to promote comimeree and trade but we seldom find organized effort to promote the press, yet it is fecognized as the most powerful ageney for progress the world has ever pro duced. We have all sorts of days calculated to promote ‘business and honor industry such as Trades Days, Bargain Days, ‘Labor Day, etc, ard why not have a press day and all business concerns advertise the things they have to sell and everybody subscribe for the local paper and all delinquents pay a year in advance. There is nothing #0 elevating in civilization as the smile of an editor and nothing will contribute more toward the welfare of a com munity than the prosperity of the press. The farmer is a friend and patron of the newspapers. He ‘subscribes fos the local paper ‘and reads every line in it and it is the best investment he oan make. There is no news 80 valuable as store news; no information sg interesting as market demands and no tragedy so entertaining as the rise and fall of prices and no page more closely studied by the farmers than the adver tising columns of the press. - | i) iH 0; 3 4 1 a RHEUMAT!G SUFFEREFR'S LIVEN QUICK RELIEF ~ Pain leaves #Imost as if by magic when you begin usimg *§- Drops,” the famousold remedy for Rheunma- tism, Lumbago, Gout, Sciatica, Neuralgia and kindred troubles. It goes right to the Spot, stops the aches and pains and makes life worth living. ‘Get a bottle of “5-Drops” today. A booklet with each bottle gives full directions for use. A, NA ma, Holland Oleomargerine Butterine DEWEY’S HORS Sold at The Leading Meat Market, POOREAUGH & BOWSER Ne ma & MULE FEED at $1.76 Per Hundred Weight. C. E. DEAL. o-Drops. * Don't ac- cept anything else ia 3 => Place ofit. Any drug- gist can supply you. If you live too far from ‘a drug store send One Dallar to FERTHJAZER IN 100 ths SACKS P. J COVER. Swanson Rheumatic Cure Co., Newark, Ohio, and a bottle of *5-Drors v.21 bs ' 4 seat prepaid, '- | | | i of : SF et bed lak Jol vis Const the F Jex Stufft Newix Const ant ‘A No. 2, Jan TY Ja near; Park | Elmer thur ¥ fith; & man; Arism; Mazier Supery in . Linc Kimnge W. Sek Consta Peace,