open table $1.5) $2.50 >erson ithout Club inner. The Meyersdale Commercial All the News--Every Week. OUR BOYS : ; and GIRLS IE FOR THOSE WHO DEVELOP FILMS Our Job Department Is Complete. New material has been added this week and will be added as fast as needed. We realize “A Satisfied Customer is our Best Advertiser.” Patronize the Meyersdale Commer- cial. After negatives are developed, they must be thoroughly fixed. The function of the fixing bath is not merely to clear the negative by dissolving those particles of silver bromide which the developer has not converted into met- allic silver, but also to produce such changes that the negative can after- ward be made permanent by thorough washing, says Kodakery. There are two equally important stages of the fixing process. During the first stage the creamy colored (un altered) silver bromide is dissolved. When this had occurred the negative is clear, but it is not yet thoroughly fixed. It still contains an invisible “ Couble salt which water cannot dis- solve and which, if left in the nega- tive, will ultimately ruin it. This invis ible salt can, however, be dissolved by the fixing bath, and it is for this rea- ron that negatives must be Ieft in the fixing bath at least five minutes long- er than it takes to clear them. They can, when convenience requires, be left in the bath all night without in- Jury. When in need of Programs Bill Heads Posters or Dodgers Envelopes Letter Heads Statements Sale bills RINTERS oh ” ARTICULAR EOPLE Call on the Meyersdale Commercial When negatives are in the fixing bath they should be kept fully immers- ed, 80 no parts are left above the sur- face of the solution. They should not be piled one on top of another. The bath must have obstructed access to the emulsion side of every negative, Neglect of these precautions will cause uneven fixing and may cause stains and other needless troubles. Look over your collection of nega- tives. If, when holding them at any an- gle you detect streaks or other shaped areas that are in any way discolored, place them in water for half an hour, then in a fresh acid fixing bath for one hour, after which they should he thoroughly washed and dried. This treatment cannot injure any negative. While it will not remove old stains, it wil usually prevent recently made negatives that were imperfectly fixed from becoming stained through such imperfect fixing. » Tales of a Goose This much laughed at bird is the clown of the bird circus. He goes about with his long neck stretched to its ul- most, gabbling, cackling, hissing, wad- dling and hobbling along in a fool¥sh- looking way. All the time he is sensi-- ble and knowing enough—content to make a goose of himself when he secs how much it amuses his friends. Like A SPRINKLING DEVICE. hglds as a Flre HEN it comes to selecting W plumbing fixtures the ! . woman who has a hobby 77 for appropriate and graceful desi. n inall furnishings will have a new and sbsorbing interest, for the up-to- date plumbing fixtures now offered 7 inan extensive number of designsfor 2 her approval are all ful, beau- 77 tiful and yet correctly fashioned for their purpose. These fixtures of “Standard” manufacture and guarantee when installed by us make the satisfactory equipment. TT Kitchen Sink needs a ELAVAL PARATOR MADE, THE BEST S 3 Li d St. J. T. YODER, ioinstown, ea. VERS BORCECRCEA0ERNNA RRO BOOB BCRC ECE BEBO BCECaCE08 Every Farmer with two or more cows =] : The. payrotl of the Pittsburgn Lon- | struction company’s slag mili, amounting to between $600 and $700, | was stolen from an express company ’ | office in Dunbar while the agent-was at lunch. No trace of the money has been found. Let us drive home to you | If a sufficient number of the stu- the fact that no washwoman dents at Washington and Jefferson can wash clothes in as sani- | college express a willingness to take tary 2 manner as that in ' such instructions, plans being con- sidered now for giving military train- which the work is done at § ing in the college may be adopted. our laundry. Driving if Home aa © | gf! From a bullet wound in the mouth, accidentally licted when a revol- 1 d aniong a crowd of ver was dis d a1 g a cro N 2 Cohn, We use much more water, landreape with surprises. You . have "THe many another .clown he is willing to put agide his dignity and good sense «for the saké of winning a laugh. Both the tame and tbe wild goo: are more than a match for the crow in intelligence and wit. All the bird world knows this, but few people do. The goose is really remarkable for Loumge, careful forethought for tom- Bevel © abvedmurance on the wing Newspaper Representatives of. SON Bday ern Pa., Meet In Pittsburgh. The Doati*ful Charm of the Supurus Walking fin (he outer suburbs is a fascinating exercise because of the real estate operator who has fillea the €@i.annizkirts of the city. Be statement in explanative. ..iora fields tion of the transfer of Belgian abo ers to Germany. It says the measure | is by no means a hardship for the laborers, but is a social necessity. | Owing chiefly to the British em- | An organization to be known as the bargo against Belgian overseas trade, | Publishers’ Association of Western which before the war supported a ' Pennsylvania was formed Tuesday large part of the industrial population. when the newspaper publishers of the large numbers of Belgian workers are western end of the state came toO- idle, the statement says, and condi- | | gether in Pittsburgh. Thirty-five mem- tions are growing worse. Many fam- | ' pers were enrolled either in person or ilies after spending all their savings . i | by proxy. The following officers were have become objects of public charity. | elected: President, J. L. Stewart, This state of things is not due, as | Washington Observer; vice president, asserted in Belgium, to German re- ! A. C. Dickinson, Sharon Telegraph; quisitions of raw materials, it is ex- secretary and treasurer, A. W. Mec- plained, for these requisitions oc- ' Dowell, Sharon Herald. curred as a rule only where factories Paramount among the purposes of were unable to continue operations. | the organization is to consider the Of 1,200,000 employees engaged in conservation of publishing interests | Belgian in‘ nstries before the war, in this part of the stale, as well as 505,000, including 158,000 women, are periodically to discuss measures that now wholly without work, and 150. | will improve conditions and matters 000, including 46,000 women, are part- of general interest to the business. ly without work, making a total of | COAL LANDS TRANSFERRED 655,000 per-ons dependent on public aid. In addition to these there are | 298,000 wives and $12,000 children of | H. C. Frick Coke Co. Buys 12,000 Acres of J. V. Thompson's Holdings. Sale of 12,000 acres of Greene coun- ty (Pa.) coal land, held by J. V. men without work, =o that 1,560.000 ! perscns, or ‘ne-fifth of the total Bel- gian popula o require assistance. The Wrong Man PEER eb hd “In the stories that people write I notice that dead people are always turning up again,” said the school- teacher. “That’s not true to life!” “Well, I don’t know,” returned the bos’n, “how untrue it is to life, but it really happened once that I know of. “Slick Dick Peterson was a reform- ed pirate who lived in a little town called Oswego-by-the-Sea. One day Slick Dick was run over by a train and his head was cut off. We all identified him and he was buried. We gave him quite a send off in the way | “One day not long after that event Slick Dick knocked at my door and wanted me to cash a check. It hap- pened to be in the day time, so there wasn’t much excuse for pulling any kind of stuff about ‘shaking gory locks at me,” but at any rate, I was glad my wife didn’t happ.n to be at home to see him. “I told him not to go prowling around town, that too many people had been to his funeral. He said he saw in the paper where they had him dead and buried, but it certainly was- n't him. There must have been a mistake &bout the identification, he said. “ I said, ‘Well, somebody's dead! Who {is it?’ : “Slick Dick said that this wasn’t the point. His idea was to raise some money by getting somebody to cash a check for him. I told him that I would do my share toward cashing it, and that I thought that all the men who had attended the funeral would help raise money for him if he would only spare the women and children. “He agreed to spare them and re- tired into my barn. I went to the other men, and as fast as they con- tributed I let them get a squint at of a funeral. } MENTICNED AS SUCCESSOR TO GEN. JOFFRE IN FRANCE Photo by American Press Association. GENERAL PETAIN. LARGER COMMUNITY INTEREST: Time was when roads were bad, the means of travel limited, and the aver age community did not include more than four square miles of uncleared Slick Dick thru the baen door. “I kept him in my barn for several | days and I had just about enough money to get him out of town and away when he had the jimjams. You ' see, the ‘only way I could keep him satisfied with life in the barn was to keep him drunk. “By the time he took the jimjams thers had been so many people pass- ' ing through the yard that some of the kids got suspicious and took a look through the crack and saw Slick Dick. Then the women got onto it and ev- was alive and was kicking the boards off my barn. “But the point I wish to make is that in life as in books and plays there are cases of men coming back to life and mistaken identity. The man had lost his left leg and Slick : Dick had lost his right one. That was RHHEUMATISHM In wiiter, when the snow is slushy, and when the rain is wet and cold, the giiivaie soggy, soft and mushy, the of The Te State “hae the old. loaf of bread be incrédBeatll®, wintey that small rolls, which heretofore have sold for 6 to 8 cents a dozen, be sold at 10 cents. They recommended that the 10-cent loaf of bread remain at that price. A jury in the United States dis- trict court in Pittsburgh placed $6,000 as the price of one foot. The case was that of Arthur Kelly versus the Pennsylvania Railroad company. Kelly was employed as a brakeman and was thrown from the top of his train when the brakes refused to work. His right foot was severed. A 10 per cent ingrease in wages, affecting the men employed by the day and tonnage men, has been an- nounced by the Jones and Laughlin Steel company in Pittsburgh. The in- crease will go into effect Dec. 15. Be- tween 8,000 and 9,000 workers, it is figured, will be benefited by the in- crease. Forest fires are chasing the deer hunters out of the woods north of Clearfield. Several camps were locat- ed in the region where the fire is burning fiercely. In some places it was with difficulty that the hunters saved the deer that they had killed and hung in front of their cabins. More tha: 300,000,000 francs already | Thompson, former Uniontown banker has been s ant in supporting these and coal operator, to the H. C. Frick persons, and 20,000,000 francs month- Coke company, was announced by A. ly will be wired henceforth. These ©. Robinson, vice president of the masses of idle people, the statement Peoples Savings bank, Pittsburgh, the says, are d-zenerating and drunken- chairman of the Josiah V. Thompson ness and social depravity are result- creditors’ committee. This is the ing. | largest coal sale ever recorded in west- ANDITS KILL AMERICANS Two Executed by Villa's Men—One | { ern Pennsylvania. Ms Thompson, according to the ap-| | praisers, owned 58,403 acres of coal! ! land in Greene county, upon which ! Rurned at Stake. | they placed a valuation of $32,647,000. Government agents in El Paso, Tex, | The sale announced by the creditors’ gent a report to Washington saying committee comprises approximately an American named Foster had been { one-fifth of the Greene county hold- mutilated, then burned at the stake ings for about one-fifth of the ap- by Villa ba dits operating near Tor: | praised valuation. reon. The report was said te have | been brought by refugees coming to the border from Torreon. These reiugees reported also that | they had secn sixty Carranza soldiers near Torreo. whose ears had been cut off by Villa »ndits. Foster’s son was | brought to forced to witness his father’s execu- | Pennsylvania yvter many change the w ® times, ruse purer and more | costly soap, and keep all the clothes in constant motion during the entire process. ner- It's simply a matter of having proper facilities. inspectors allege o1 | | pi | anes; which the gov | Tabulation oi sylvania supreis Meyersdale Steam Laundy Ee 0055 ¥s i 250.923, and 77 sc ed. A wage increase of about 10 per cent, affecting nearly 40,000 men em- i ployed in Bethlehem Steel com- , pany’s pls \t South Bethlehem and ! Steelton, Pa., and Sparrows Point, | Md., was announced t week by E. G. Grace, president of that company. The increase is effective Dec. 16. Fire swept the village of New Oak { Hill, in Nor th Versailles owas 2 1 houses, dame erybody in town knew that Slick Dick | schools. only difference between Slick Dick ' and the dead man was that the dead | ural and not due to forest lands with their. mud roads. Then the church and the school at every other mile was a convenient | necessity and marked the center of tlie neizhberheod’s social and reli- gious activity. Those were small coms munities with local interests. Those | were days of independence, when _ close neighbors had to pool their in- terests in order to hold their own dgainst the natural impediments te rural progress. As travel was limited they had their places of worship - right in their midst as were the - But we are beginning to feel . that we have passed that state. From all over the land there is go- ing up a continual cry of “Save the - country church,” “What can we do to get it back to its former place in the - communal Jife?” But it can never be - resurrected. Its decline has been nat- any artificial | means. Plainly we have outgrown it. The little country church has served * all.” { the purpose well in its day, but we feel that we nced a larger, more cen- tralized church »nd a banding togeth- er of communities for better mutual advancement and social welfare. § We want to get in touch with better social and religicus instruction. Our greatest strength lies in unity and by uniting a greater number of workers be %nn cause we secure better ject with Pr rantxalized school is structions that he read it to the woe man chancellor personally. In making it public, the state department an- nounced that the interview had take: place, but said nothing about results, The decision to protest formally, against the treatment of the Belgians followed unsuccessful informal efforts by Charge Grew, under instructions that he say informally to the Berlin foreign office that the deportations were having a most unfavorable effect upon neutrals, particularly the Unit- ed States. The charge was informed in reply that the policy was a military, necessity and that Gei.aany regarded it as legal. The note, with the department's statement making it public, follows: “On Nov. 29, Mr. Grew, our charge at Berlin, was directed to obtain an interview with the German chancellor and read to him the following: “The government of the United RBrates has learned with the greatest concern and regret of the policy of the German government to deport from Belgium a portion of the civilian population for the purpose of forcing i them to labor in Germany and‘is con- strained to protest in a friendly spirit, but most solemnly against this action, which is in convtravention of all prece- dents and of those humane principles ot international practice which have long been accepted and followed by civilized nations in their treatment of noncombatants. “Furthermore, the government of the United States is convinced that the effect of this policy, if pursued, will in all probability be fatal to the Belgian relief work, so humanely | mile and a half from East Pittsbur | ) ring the lives The C planned and so successfully carried out, a result which would be generally : | deplored and which, it is assumed, “| would seriously embarrass the Ger- man government.” | | tion, the refugees said. Foster was | t for the | yok has appr r Tripping on & tug, Mrs. Gor hacienda superintend | >Y | use of the C: u Pitts- | St 3 Twenty: or Jo | 'y, an American mining ‘| burgh. : 12 | goll and struck her head a | man at Par: il, Chihuahua, was killed total of neiac- | oo rner of a table, fracturing her s | by Villa be dits when they eatered | and the act fiions for this purpose $28,000,000. The | d dying inst tantly | the town N -. B, according $9 & tele- | reducing thes 1der Carnegie Institute of Technology re- | 2Re. oF a H gram received by the Alvarado Min- | will result in a two thirds Sonreass, ceived $956,000. Charles W. Voitls, aged t v- | ing and Milling company. A messen- ger who an ved fram Ramel sertly after the telegram wes made public said Gray was baaged dy owrder of Villa, Sawmill, Engine, & Boller for sale. Outfit ready for business $550.00 See H. Phillipe, Clay 8t. Meyersdale, Pn. were statements made by John Price Jackson, commissioner of the state department of labor and industry, in { an address at the Coal Mining Insti- tate of Americs ta Pittsburgh. The cpeaker eaid the mmmber of ac- eidents reported up to Dw. 1 was ame Ssdiunctbmdisiidineind Ao RTE nine, of Moundsville, W. Va., of the Washington (Pa.) News, diec in the Ohio Valley General hospital. Emery A. Walling of Erie, elected supreme court judge in November, spent $9,041.79 in his campaign. His | election expenses filled here show he The Chic: go Bridge and Iron Works gave $1,000 to the Democratic state | company of Greenville announced an committee and $2,600 to the Republi- | fmerease of wages of 10 per cent to can state committee. He received no over 1,000 employees. contributions. | Tr 3 i