WHEN YOU BUY SALMON When you buy a can of salmon do | you know whether it is “red,” “pink” or “white” and that all the varieties taste alike and all have about the same food value? But the patker sells the “chum” or white salmon for less than half he gets for the red and be only gets 50 per cent as much for pink as for red salmon. So when you «pay a high price for “red salmon” see that it is really marked “red.” I learn- ed these facts while at the dock at Saldovia looking over the cannery of yd his associates. The the cannery depart- m from the boiler. wave heen 50,000 cans pil- they cooled in the > sharp, an clear atmospher light 1 heard a po 12 on thousands « n out of te water a day. They go from le and can be on vour ta- v York three or four weeks fey were cs it.” Fresh fish! Mr. R: tandolph said that one of the choicest d licacies he ever > 1S a ] oiled hearts of the nds , While the Si almon rage only ‘hey taste like sweet- 3,” he adds 3 “It is too had they are we Aste d.” And so are the fine, large livers as big as your hand, and the spawn which if it was sturgeon eges would command a high price for cavier. Plans to utilize some of these products are being studied by Mr. Randolph and by others. Another Tidbit is the little chunk of sweet, ten- der meat lodged in the cheek of the salmon, just below the gills. The can- ners reserve such delicacies for them- gelves and their friends, but the time will come when they will find special mention on the menus of the highest | priced restaurants. The canners get at wholesale only | about 13 cents for a one pound can of the best red salmon and only half the price for the pink and even less for the white. The red salmon constitut- ed only three-sevenths of the pack, but three fourths in value of the en- tire product. The public prefers the red meat and is willing to ray double price for it. So much for gratifying a taste—John A. Sleicher in Leslies. LOGT AND FCUIID. It is a word of strange happenings. On the Alrcska steamer from Seattle was a young lady who bitterly lament- ed {o a friead aboard the loss of a pin. I. was an Elk emblem, gold and jew- eid, a 1 ent from her brother. She had I it on the street in Seattle ju re her departure. She related the circumstances in the presence of ’ » parzenger to whom she had just Leen introduced by her friend. Thi v passenger seemed inter- € rer: ye . > ads = — ald : mailed. iu a i Hmic ue returned | from his statercom and re d the lost treasure. A happier younz wom- an than the recipient could not have been found.—From Leslie’s BRIEF DECISIONGZ. The Mother Hubbard just stmply | “¢'° bad to go out of fashionable literature, | It wouldn't frou frou. Isn’t it strange considering how | fond some men are of attitudes, that they strike them so freque itly? Not every man who g=ts a2 good sendoff can come back. Some people seem to take zreat de- fight in looking forward to yesterday. By and by, every man finds out that be is a fool—but some woman kuew if first. This would be a poor wo ld for crit. fes if nobody accomplished anything. The fool never knows ctter next time till it is too late. If you want your income to go up hitch it to an airship.—From Judge. If honesty were not the best policy there would be a good deal less of it. Ti ier it is to reform a man the less it amounts to. Wit without wisdom is sauce with- out meat. A lazy man is a dead loss to him elt. a ed with shiny cans of i a | 10t be sold a nere- y to pers i the As I saw ti viral son takir cases via J asked Mr. } ng the fish then being VAIN LONGING. I'd like to be a preacher—but lack | the grace, I fear — to be a moral teacher, a famous pulpiteer. Then every mortal sinner on whom I chanced to call would make me stay to dinner, for which, of course, I'd fall. Methinks I'd never sicken of grub the pastor eats, the tender fried spring chicken and jam and other treats. Beneath my church’s steeple I'd have the inside track; I’d roast | and rake the people, and none would answer back. Whereas, if las men hol ler warm sentiment of theirs, folks | take them by the eollar and roll them | down the stairs. I'd. like to be a banker and store up shining coin, the goods for which men hanker, from Denver to Des Moines The banker’s job's ench ing he has his treasure box, and men core allivanting to leave with him their The merchant and the miner rush where he patient stands, and 1a! eine and shiner and leave hands. The buyer and the baker and the hore, and the widcos, all seek . The gardener and brakeman who’s in luck shining gilder, the ko to the banker kale, ¢ and the kroner, the doub on an a the tael. The banker’s life is sunny, he plays a pleasant game but no one brings me money until I've earned the same. I see no pe e rush ing, with frantic, eager zeal, into my trongbox pushing the long green or he wheel. I'd like to be a granger—that’s what I'm honing for—and fill my horse’s ranger with rich excelsior. I'd rs > wooden, the clingin: h; for farming is a puddin’—a carnival of cash. The merchants 2 trying to get the farmer’s tr: n he goes aaelling. the Hs S ty In pur ple ar 3 fine Tis nen ve Stokes his fine and townward he goes sp easy pickin’, so he can dance and 2: he gets more for a chicken than any cow should bring. Dut what’s the use of wishing for jobs that bring the dimes? I'll have to sit here dishing my feeble-minded rhymes.—By Walt Mason from Judge. HOT SUN MAY BE FATAL TO BLONDES. Fight the freckle. Taboo the coat of tan. And do these things—especially if you are a blonde-—out of considera- tion for your health, and not merely as a matter of vanity. That is the warning issued by Dr. I"rank C. Knowles during a recent dis- cussion of treatment of skin diseases before the Philadelphia County Med- ical Society, according to Marguerite | Mooers Marshall. “A great percentage of skin diseases are cancerous growths,” said Dr. nowles. “The blonde type of women | en subjected to the rays of the sun is very susceptible to the disease. Not only the blonde woman, but the wom- an possessing a freckled face, must void the sun. Such preventive meas- s will save them from much trou- And with that last statement Dr. (Claude L. Wheeler, editor of the New ) lical Journal, entirely agree:, rather doubtful if the nally cause eancer in ” he conceeded, “that can " not always, comes from Y But this ir y be develop- > case of a a ci in the case of a woman vh ecelve 5s a blow on the breast. Th nere impact of a tennis ball upon t! >=h fo as been known to result in cancer. ‘But it doesn’t seem to me that even ravated sunburn or freckles suf- eel irritates the skin to c erous growth. Also it’s a disesse Hp rarely aprears before the age of 35, and those most likely to expose themselves to the sun are young men and women.” So, if you are a blonde, get under cover. Laws should be enacted compelling young physicians to practice on cats beeause one life out of nine would- n't be missed. Occasionally a girl marries a man just to keep him from hanging around the house every evening. Still, if you find yourself in a rut, remember that a rut is the smooth- est part of the road. As a comfortable seat a good rock ing-chair beats a throne to a frazzle. Unreanitied love is one brand of heart failure. But it’s never fatal. Lut a her-in-law can lay down 7yer. ‘5 an opportunity, get one. :2y season for the farm- hen, Many a pe .cnt leather shoe hides an aching corn. One liltle dimple has caused many a fall, Does your charity cover many sins? ns sali til buck. The borrower a LOOSENING UP, I'd like to save up seven bones, THE TYPEWRITER. against the rainy day, but kindly folk, which I earn the good long green. with siren tones, entice my plunks It is the tenth one I have owned; away. Kind, helpful people, great of ten times by eager agents boned, I've heart, are evermore abroad, and they loosened up a hundred wheels, too, | pursue me through the mart, and too responsive to their speils. Each touch me for my wad. This morning, when ¥ drew my machine of sterling worth. You'll wage, and stepped upon the street, break your heart and spoil your biz if | agent sells the best on earth, the one there came a girl of chicken age, with buy any one but his. dazzling smile and sweet. “My friend,” Ten new machines I've bought, at she said, “across the seas, the wound- | ed soldiers wail; theirlegs were shot off at the knees, and they are short of kale. Dig up the coin you've la- bored for,” the lovely damsel begs, ‘and buy some hero of the war a brace of wooden legs.” When such a human buttercup way- lays a world-worn gent, that gent can cnly loosen up, and try to look con tent. Before I'd gone a hundred feet 1 met another maid, with eyes so bright and smile so sweet, she made the first cne fade. She seized me by the bu:- tonhole, and cried, “Well met, old scout! I'm sure you have a goodly | roll this being true, shell out! The ladies of the Uplift Guild would help the Eskimo, who is so poor he has to build his bungalow of snow. We'd build for them a thousand huts upon the modern plan, so kindly spring no ‘ifs’ or ‘buts, but cough up like a man.” . I do not care a dozen whoops about far-off jays, nor care in what design of coops they have to spend their days. But when a lovely, smiling peach would help those greasy lads, a mortal man can only reach down in his jeans for scads. In other days the women old went round and passed the hat, and found their victims stern and cold—no man would fall for that. An ancient dame with grizzled bair, and shapeless frame and bent, might dog my foot- steps everywhere—she wouldn't get a cent. But now the lovely maidens | take the warpath every day, and even hardened tightwads quake, and yield in’ | the right of way. The daughters of in Te own motor car. His life is the horseleech rise, and camp upcn my trail, with pearly teeth and starry | eyes, and always get the kale.—DBy Walt Mason, from Judge. REBUKE TO THOUGHT—LESS TRAVELERS. The traveler of today is so accus- tomed to the comforts and luxuries | afforded in modern railway and steam- ship travel that he fails to appreciate | them at their true value. This fact is brought to mind by the signs in ev- | ery railroad train, steamship, state- | room and frequently in hotels, One of the largest Pacific coastwise steam- ers has a placard in every stateroom | requesting passengers to refrain from lying down in the berths with their boots on, and the proprietor of a western hotel has expressed his re- quest that the property be respected by his patrons in this keenly sarcas- tic manner: “If you are accustomed to spitting on the floor at home, you are at liberty to do so here. Make vourself at home.” Almost daily one observes newspaper reports of the’ abuses of privileges by campers, tour- ists and travelers, until finally gov- ernment action has been necessitated in many places to insure protection of public grounds. It is a sad commentary of human nature that most of us lack in respect | for other people’s property. It is | strange that persons who exercise the greatest care in conserving their | own effects will put their feet on plush sofas in pullman cars and in hotels, will scatter debris about trains and hotel lobbies, will drop cigar ashes anywhere, throw away lighted cigar- ettes and often through their careless- ness, cause fires and destruction to property. The same kind of thought > | less persons will litter up picnic { grounds and defzce property in seek- ing souvenirs ~nd in writing and cut- ting their names in public places and conspicuous spots. With the growth of travel this terdency has become more marked. If the vacationist is to find a second welcore anywhere, it hehooves him te show his good breed- ing by his regard for the comforts and luxuries of travel, and gratitude toward his fellow citizens who have mad him gifts of parks, camp sites, and forst reservations. A scientist states that fully two- thirds of a woman’s pleasures in life are derived from her ability to shed tears at will. Keep an eye on the man who says money will do anything. The chances are that he will do anything for mon- EY. The dachshund has very short legs, ! but his pants are just as long as those of any other dog. Sometimes it is a woman’s fondness for change that keeps her hushand’s pockets empty. Some men are so reckless with their coin that they even use it for pay- ing debts. A pessimist is a person who is sea- pick during the entire voyage of life. The majority of men are like clocks —either too fast or too slow. Tomorrow = the happiest day in the life of the average man. It’s a strong friendship that eam stand a loan. Prudence is common sense well trained. times, with which to perpetrate my rhymes; and as I punch the lettered keys and write such locoed Hogghts as these, I often wonder how the lads vho in the old time wrote for scads, hmen as Dickens, Bulwer, Scott, » managed to produce their rot. 1 y those great gifted men who had 1 gle with a pen, which always to s was upon the blink and scratched and clogged and spattered ink. It must have made Charles Dickens hot when he beheld a big green blot upon the chastely page. I seem to see him in his rage; I seem to hear the great man swear and bust the pictures with a chair and throw the inkstand down the hall and kick the tomeat through | the wall. Oh, I can see poor Charlie sweat | while doping out his “Edwin Drood,” | and I can see him throw a fit while | blotting “Martin Chuzzlewit.” Just | think of it, all modern men; condole | with those who used the pen! And I sit here in ease and peace and all things go as slick as grease I work my fingers and my head and grind out rhymes, as I have said. 1 | do not fool with cheap goose quills; no ink upon the paper spills. My new machine is smooth as lard and makes things pleasant for a bard. But now the blamed thing will not | work! In vain, in vain the keys I jerk! The dog-gone carriage will not slide—there’s something busted, sure, inside. The patent rintums’ out of whack, the mainspring’s split all up the back. I place the ‘writer” on a bench and toil with pick and monkey wrench, and loosen up some burs and nuts and tinker with the metal guts and fus with lever, cam and crank, and say, “Blink blank, blink blank, | blink blank!” | The agent comes with sack and kit, | and in an hour he fixes it and says, in | soft and siren tones, “My bill for that is seven bones.” { And now I sort o’ seem to think that men who wrote with pen and ink were | not such an unlucky lot. Hooray for Dickens, Bulwer, Scoit!—By Walt Mason, from Judge. THOUGHTS. Intelligence is the mother of good luck.—Benjamin Franklin, No one but yourself can make your life beautiful, no one can be pure, honorable and loving for you—J. R. | Miller. Life without endeavor is like enter- ing a jewel mine and coming out with empty hands.—Japanese proverbs. Our greatest glory is not in never failing, but in rising every time we fall—Confucius. Many men owe the grandeur of their | lives to their tremendous difficulties, -—Spurgeon. His heart was as great as the world but there was no room in it to hold the memory of a wrong.—(Said of Lincoln by Emerson.) Beware of little expenses; a small leak will sink a great ship.—Ben | Franklin. “Don’t nurse opDortunity too long— take it into active rartnership with you at onge, lest it leave y you for other company.’ I a man can write a better boo’, preach a better sermon or make a befter mousetrap than his ncizhbor, though he builds his house in tha weeds, the world wil! ke a Leaten path to his door.— iubbard. ~ Success in life is a m much of tale:i o* opwvortunity as of concentration and rp ecgeveran There is someih! 7 wrong with the s1.2:1 boy who isn’t looking for some- thing to eat within ihirty seconds aft- er he arrives honie from school. The man at the bot om of the lad- der has cne adviontage over the min at the top. He doesn’t have so far to fall, A bully is a man who is always vaniing to ficht some other man half his size. It is so much easier and-less expen- sive to get married than it is to get unmarried. When it comes to manual labor, the average man is a tramp at heart. Consider the bald-headed man; he combs not, neither does he brush. While the little dog is barking the big one absconds with the bone. A little learning is almost as dan. gerous as some little widows. You can’t hurt some men unless you hit them on the pocketbook. No girl wants a secret marriage still it is better than none. A man runs into debt, but he either walks out or stays in. No argument can discount genuine happiness. Never hit a man when he’s got you down, Some men are too honest to take a hint. It is a wonderful machine with | Christmas Christmas will soon be here, see the nice Christmas presents you can buy In nice boxes 50c to $8.00 This will make a very nice present for Stop at my store and CIGARS BOX CANDIES 30c to $5.00 Johnstons and Reymers KODACK Perfume and Toilet Articles 25c to $15.00 any one. a bottle, Columbia Grafonolas Stop and look at a real talking machine, the Grafonola, and hear the world’s greatest singers, Lazaro, tenor, and Marie Barientos, soprano. MEYERSDALE, AN F. B. THOMAS LEADING DRUGGIST PENNA. ee ee ee A A el Ne laf NPP FF PP tnd FOR CHRISTMAS Keen Kutter Pocket Knives. Shears, Blade Razors and Ender and Pen Safty Razors, Carving F you want to make a Christmas present to your friends that will be long remembered and give the best satisfaction come to our store. We have a full line of a Boys Sleds, Wagons, BY v — Skates," Tool Boxes, etc. Safty. Razors, Keen Kutter Knives and F-rks Aluminum Ware, American Model Builders, and many other useful articles that would make some one happy. WE HAVE THEM = ee Te YER The Meyersdale Hardware and Supply. AER RR NST Th NR EE RRR Little Red Bank Book for a Christmas Gift. Useful Gifts is the Christmas Shopping Slogan this year, What gift more useful than a Savings Account? What gift shows more thoughtful- ness on the part of the giver or more flatter- ingly demonstrates the faith in the recipient’s possibilities and character? Make it a happy Yuletide, for the young- sters—helpful, instructive, and habit-forming. ONE DOLLAR DOES IT. May we help? LJ en ILA I SN a cof I NN NSN NI NINN SNS Subscribe for the Commercial The Citizens National Bank “The Bank With The Clock With The Million” GER —— VOL. BEIN The Str Co ‘UNDER Wheg the White F on Watc Secret S Itisa fi White Hg that beats relieved fi izes the u to underg after he b the contr: ing that | life passes ture of wi Of cours with cons human na Joy the re office. Bu president He is the ment serv lation. F appointme from soci dropping | him and t he was ac It is no from knov it saves hi criticism. only the } from his are near whole gro and he res From co who freq! Washingt news fron sees the days, and them to pending q from them tion at all lent judg "know that member a stances of is generou ary and in ing. He each year his hospita Three pr have been in consequ enjoin upc service of duty of gu assault. men are they atten Of cours House the who watct presence o necessary. goes abroa ice men are diate neig] which he | follows; w! journey the These Se very skillf: of persons in their ex gerous. Of kill the pre life for it t! might not out his pun danger fro from delib impression great preca McKinley + falo as is would not } The assa band in his cealed a re kerchief. secret serv. the assassi the revolve fore the 1 where he c Although I such preca that they a: ident. The considerate trained me! but that co ident’s step scious feell lance and of being pr An impre the preside: try. There doing so, a the constith in leaving There is a « the vice p president i (Contin