The Meyersdale commercial. (Meyersdale, Pa.) 1878-19??, January 11, 1917, Image 2

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    —————— es
i The Limousine Look.
‘} Perhaps it is hypercritical of us
ding in a limousine is a magnificent
and awful thing, and how should any
«Plain mortal be expected to endure it
without amendment to his soul? 8till,
from our sidewalk, we do observe and
Protest. an no human being, even
though to the limousine born, learn to
tide in a closed car and avoid the clos-
ed face, that blank, top lofty aloofness
«of expression so alien to normal Amer-
fecan worry and cheerfulness?
The limousine look attacks any hap-
py, laughing.debutante or bank presi-
dent the jastant the door slams and
they sink back in what is technically
own ip motorear literature as “mila-
oe drpwing room on wheels.” It
fomes on or off the face very much as
flo the detachable tops that convert an
ordinary touring car of commerce Into
a miniature palace fit to stand before
the blazing glory of an opera house
with uniformed attendant handing in
a very charming and expensive wife.—
New York Tribune.
, . A Japanese Composing Room.
The most interesting department of &
-Japanese printing plant. is the, compos-
4ng room. Great cases of type of all
#izes extend the whole length -of the
mammoth room. As the Chinese and
Japanese characters used in a printing
office run far into the tens of ‘thou-
sands, the life of the compositor must
_be u continual search for the letter he
«desires Lo usd.
The compos ‘tors were scuffling around
the aisles of the room hunting for these
<haracters and all singiag at the tops
of their voices, which apparently caus-
ed them to forget the terrors of their
work. There seemed to be hundreds of
them, and the din was deafening.
After the proof is.finally corrected
the forms are made un, quite as they
are in an American newspaper office,
stereotyped and sent down to big cylin-
der presses,—Archie Bell in World Out-
look, :
Harriman Told Him.
Harriman had an almost supernat-
ural instinet for knowinz what was
going on and who was doing it in the
mysteries ¢ £ stock manipu.aiion. Once
when Southern Pacific had been going
up fast, Harriman and various bank-
ing houses buying in concert, he called
up on the telephone one of his private
brokers. “Somebody is selling.” he said.
“Yess sir, was the answer. “Well,
hand the market.25,000 for me.” TIm-
mediately he called up the head of a
banking firm much interested in the
market. “Who's seliing Southern Pa-
cific?" he asked. “1 don’t know. We
haven't been able to find out,” was the
answer. “I'll teil you,” snapped Ilar-
riman; “it’s your house.” And he cut
off the connection before any reply to
him could be made.—Exchange.
Somewhat Different.
Fred—There are times when 1 care
nothing for riches, when 1 would not
so much as put forth a hand to receive
millions. p
Kittie—Indeed! That must be when
you are tired of the world and its
struggles and vanities, when your soul
yearns for higher and nobler things.
Is it not?
“N-no; you are wrong.”
I" “Then when is it?”
“When I'm sleeping.”—London Mail.
: Senha soo ol)
: Success or Failure.
“How's that young doctor gettin
along in your neighborhood ?”
“It depends.”
“On what?”
“If that crowd that visits his office
daily are patients he’s doing very well;
if they're bill collectors he's having a
hard time of it.”—Detroit Free Press.
An Easy Task.
Lover (mournfully)—Have you learn-
ed to love another? Flirt (who had
ust broken off her engagement with
him)—Oh, no, George. I didn’t have
to learn. The man is very, very
wealthy, and the love came spontane-
ously.
Raised the Ante.
Small Blmer—Papa, give me a nickel.
Papa—Why, Elmer, you are most teco
old to be begging for a nickel. Small
Elm&—I guess you're right, papa.
Make it a dime.—Chicago News.
Bo of ole of fe ofe of ofe ole ole ole ole oe ole ole of ie
*
#4 PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT. -F
Boils and Carbuncles.
# The appearance of boils in
crops is mainly an indication of
impaired health. Single boils are
generally due to local irritation.
The location of the boil or car-
buncle determines the amount of
danger it may be to the patient.
If a boil or carbuncle occurs in
a locality where there are rich
blood and lymphatic area it at
once becomes a source of danger
because the vessels spread the
infection.
Boils and carbuncles are due to
infection by the streptococcic mi-
crobe. This means there are in-
fAsmmation and pus present in
these affections. Unless active
treatment is ‘instituted at the
very beginning of inflammation
there will be grave constitution-
al involvement which cannot be
checked.
To avoid serious results it
should be impressed upon every
one suffering from boils or car-
buncles the imperative need of
haying a physician at the first
appearance of the affection. De-
lay will cause destruction of tis-
sue or bone, deformity of a part
or systematic infection. which re-
sults in loss of life.
EET LEER PR SEE RRL EER EE RX
.
‘a
fede bh kb bb hhh hbk hhh bd ddd bbb bb
v.
&
te oles
doole obo BoB ob
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9. ote ole ote la ole ole ole ole ofe ofe ofe ofe ofe
HNN TN . i.e %% %0 *§
Flick:
A swar:a
on Feb. lui. . ie,
time as Fei; bua: deat Sa dk
the great C.itaiie i was LL
earth's at:no-phore £, secu
in Saskatchewun, western Canada, ‘and
seemed to be traveling southeasterly.
as it was also reported from Bermuda.
From the additional records supplied
by seamen W. I. Denning, the English
authority on meteors, has concluded
that it continued in view during at
least 5,500 miles. of its flight Ax the
visible stream could at no time have
been ‘more than about 100 miles high,
it must have followed the earth's
-eurvature, and the curious idea has
Been advanced by Garvin J.’Burns that
it was really. captured by the edrth'ds
a group of infinitestimal satellites.’ The
meteors may thus have passed around
othe globe several times before. reach-
ing the surface. It is supposed that
the orbit of the stream nearly coincid-
ed with that of the earth and that con-
sequently the velocity of fall’ through
our atmosphere was small. a Ww
Land of Borrowed Delights.
A large part. of the beauty of the
verdure and forest, of Italy that at-
tracts the visitor's attention was un-
properly Italian at all, but imported.
The favored groves of orange and lein-
on, with thelr golden fruit giinting !
among - the rich: ‘and sappy foliage, |
skinned Saracenic. invaders from: the
east. The cactus, with its prickly pear i
fruit, called the “Indian fig,” and the
aloe came straight from Mexico on the
heels of the Spanish adventurincs into
the unknown in the sixteenth ceutury. !
So did the American corn or maize.
Even the eucalyptus is an importation, |
a modern one, and the great groves of |
chestnuts that clothe the shaggy moun- |
tainsides so verdantly and give occu- |
pation to sg many venders of the hot |
and pasty boiled nut are believed
not to be native.—National Geographic
Magazine. . |
=aeetemrr————
Ecoks on a Shelf.
Books are frequently ruined through!
carelessness. This is less in the han- |
dling often than upon the shelves.
Books should not be packed tightly on!
a shelf. It ruins the back and causes
them to tear loose with the strain of
getting in and out. Often it forces the
leaves to sag to the sheif when pushed |
unduly. It is just as bad for books to
be too loose on a shelf, as they warp,
and the spreading leaves entourage
dust. A bookcase with the contents
at every angie. is not a p.eas.ui
sight. There are some housekeepers
who think a yearly dusting of the
books at housecleaning time sufficient.
This is bald enough when they are
kept under glass. When on open
it means ruin to valuable
it Likes a little longer to dust
ul tops of books on each
prem dar. Use a soft cheese-
_ Jnrter and shake it ‘fre-
. and Animals’.
Asi A ..... oc monkey, man. is the
only aninu *.z what we call binoc-
ular saigic jo. -tuat is, he can tell:
not only «eetioa of an object, but
hé can “timate Sulrly accurately its
distance. © J": i hoeattaiboch ‘of his
eves (ol © ho mame object at the
same time, Uke vio range finders. Oth-
er animals do not concentrate their
gaze in tals way. Their eyes are set
more neal; at the mules of the head,
so that they see not vuiy forward, but
backward for a ®iort distance. Man,
on the contrary, sees clearly “ouly the
object at which he locks directly.—
Popular Science Monthly.
Dauntless.
«He cleared the sill at a bound and
vanished in the darkness,” related Ro-
mance breathlessly.
“But,” scoffed Realism, “only a mo-
ment ago he was riveted to the spot.
Did he file the rivets?”
“Oh, no!” rejoined Romance, nothing
daunted. “Fortunately it was only a
small spot, so that by a superhuman
effort he wrenched it loose and carried
it along with him.”—Puck.
Great Expectations.
“1 really believe, Will Atwood, that
you married me because I have
money,” she announced, with a fine
display of feeling.
“No, you're wrong,” returned her
husband candidly. “I married you be-
cause I thought you'd let me have some
of it.’—Exchange.
Expectations Realized.
“Look’ee. Garge, didn’ I tell'ee all
th’ time my boy would make th’ folks
snt up an’ open their mouths when ’e
sot to Lunnon?”’
/n you did. And has ’e done it?”
Aye. 'E've started business as a
dentist!” London Passing Show.
Naval Salutes. *
Originally a town 6ria warship fired
off its guns on the approach of friend-
ly “strangers to show . that they had
such faith in the visitors’ peaceful in-
tentions they didn't think it necessary
to keep their guns loaded; hence the
naval salute.
Word From Br'er Williams.
Lightning don’t hit ‘twice in de same
place, an’ right dar is a lesson fer you
—wid de fust lick it ’tends ter all de
business it went after.—Atlanta Con-
stitution.
She Married One.
«Ig there an old maid in your fam-
iy?
#Yes: my husband.”—Detroit Free
Press.
The best manners should be used ali
day and ever” da They are noue i
good for courant
use.
of! attempts have been made; for in-
acts 0! “Standard.
“4notwn in the olden times and is mot jini. a. =
breathe of the Levant and the dark |'Jofer summing up
! glasses and. looking sarcastically at:
THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, MEYERSDALE, PA.
Real Treasure islands. ~ °°
There are quite a number of islands
scattered about the globe whereen
buried treasure exists. And people are
always trying to find it. Quite a score
stance, to unearth the treasure alleged
to be buried on Cocos island. Yet so
far thgadventurers have reaped no re-
ward tor their toil. Fully £50,000 has
been wasted, again, in futile attempts
to recover the “pirates’ hoard” report-
2d to be hidden near the lip of the
crater of an active—very active—vdl-
¢ano on Pagan island, in the Ladrone
group. x pee
Still, as a set off against many fail-
ures, there have been some few suc-
cesses. , There is. no doubt, for in-
stance, that-a Liverpool - sailor named
John Adams unearthed treasure to the
value of between £150,000 and £200,000
on Auckland island some years back:
nor that William Watson, a shepherd.
‘recovered iv 1°63 nearly a ton of gold
that hai been hidden on one of the
Queen Chariotte islands. Likewise
two runaway seamen named Handley
and Cross successfully - located: ;and
dng up a valuable hoard on Oak island,
of the coast of Nova Scotia, And this
after many others had failed.—Londou
sim
, {The Judge Hit Back,
A late police magistrate was a most
painstaking judge in all his cases, and
fn ‘important ones it was his custom to
until the next sit-
ting of the court. On one ‘occastort ‘he
gave an exhaustive decision on aease,
after svhich the lawyer for the plain-
tiff rcse and questioned tic ove
cePardon me,” suid hls: worship. “1
cannot allow. youu to reopen the case
after 1 have given my final decision.
1 may be wrong, but that is my opin-
fon.”
i The lawyer quickly replied:
“Then, your worship, I know it is no
use knocking my head against a brick
wall. 1 suppose I must sit down.”
The magistrate adjusged his eye-
the lawyer, said: :
“Sir, 1 know it is no use you knock-
ing your Load against a brick wall, but
1 may acd tuat I know of no one who
could perform such an operation with
less injury to himself than you."—Case
and Comivan?, 2
-gnd hé- announced that in the morning
rly eit
Old Lord lMayors' Tanduets. |
There used to be a good deal of sav-
agery abont London's lord mayors’
banquets, even in times comparatively
recent. The huinbler guests at least
struggled with each other for food aud
had to bring their own table cutlery if
they wished to eat decently and in
comfort. - For instance, Samuel Pepys
tells us how, at the banquet served up
two years after the restoration, there J
were many tables, “but none-in the |
ball but the mayors and the lords of |
i the privy council that had napkins or |
knives, which was very strangel.
Still more strange to such a lover of
female beauty as Pepys was the plain-
ness of feature of the city dames.
_ Of the ladies’ room he says: “I could
not discern one handsome face. * * *
Being wearied with looking upon a
company of ugly women, I went away
and took coach and through Cheapside
and there saw the pageants, which
were very silly,”
Old Time Theater Rowdies.
Rowdyism in London theaters was a
common occurrence in the old days,
as' is shown by the following from the
London Post of Oct. 27, 1798:
“Two men in the pit at Drury Lane
theater last night were so turbulent
and riotous during the last act of
‘Henry V.' that the performance was
interrupted upward of a quarter of an
hour. The audience at last asserted’
their power and turned them disgrace-
fully out of the theater. This should
always be done to crush the race of
disgusting puppies that are a con-
stant nuisance at the playhouse every
night.”
A “Friendly Match.”
1 speak of a ‘friendly match,” not
at all forgetting that dictum of the
old Scot to whom his opponent, break-
ing some trivial rule, said, “I suppose
you won't claim that in a friendly
match?”
“Friendly match!” was the reply.
““Phere’'s no such thing at golf!”"—Lon-
don Telegraph.
Morbidly Suspicious.
“If you want to fight I'll hold your
coat,” said the bystander to the quar-
- relsome man.
“Great Scott! Can't a man even
stand in the street without having a
cheek boy try to work a tip out’ of
him ?’— Washington Star.
Couldn't Fool Her.
The Mother—Do you think he has
matrimonial intentions, dear? The
Mafid-J certainly do, mother. He tried
hi§ very best to convince me last night
that 1 appeared to better advantage
in that twelve dollar hat than in the
fifty dollar one.—Puck.
Foxy Jack.
HEdith—Oh, ‘Jack told a dozen girls
he 10ved them before he proposed to
you. Ethel—Well, that’s “all right:
When T ‘spoke of it he’ told me’ they
merely represented: steps in his pro:
gression to his present ideal. — Ex-
change.
Cynical.
Slane—So you believe in signs, eh?
Well, when a man is always making
new friends what is that a sign of?
Blane—It’s most likely a sign that his
nese.
* Fooling the Enemy.
Long Ben, a stage driver in the
southwest with a seft voice'and a gen-
tle disposition, but with several notch-
es on the handle of his revolver, is not
given to seeking trouble. “77 ¥
Not very long ago he brought in a
200 pound salesman and, the roads
being unusually rough, landed both him
and his trunk in rather bad repair.
The more the traveling’ man thought
of it the madder he got, and that night,
when he discovered how his trunk had
been wrecked, his wrath boiled over,
he would beat that stage driver into
unconscious ugliness, - He got'up early
and paced the office of the hotel, await-
ing the arrival of Long Ben.
‘“One of the stage driver's friends slip-
ped over to the office of the livery sta-
ble, where the latter slept, and tipped
him off. ¢ Yirag pdt deny |}
..“Say, Ben, that fire eating pickle
salesman you brought in last night: is
over there laying for you and.is going
to knock your alleged head off as soon
as you go to breakfast.” i
: Rubbing his cheek speculatively, he
said in his peculiarly mild drawl: “I'll
just fool: that guy. I /wen’t go to
breakfast! —Saturday Evening Post.
1 i Scania
‘ Futility of Arguments.
BATITOT £
guments, if induiged, in, must be car-
ried on either with superior persons or
inferior persons. Viewed in this way,
the utter futility of all arguments be-
¢omes ‘@pparent at ouce. I
iFirst, it's futile, of course, to carry '
on an argument ‘with a’ superior per- |
gon, shecause,’ being r superior, =he will
have such complete contempt for your
opinions that he either will not listen
to you at all ot else he will listen with
a patroniging smile and immediately !
dismiss from his mind what you have
to say as not worth consideration.
, It is easily futile to argue with an
inferior person, for if you have any-
thing to argue about worth the time
of a man of your standing and mental
capacity, then it is absurd to waste |
talk upon an inferior being who will
not be able to appreciate it. Thus are
disputatious people isolated from the
world, and ‘there is no help for it.—
Life.
Japanese Homes.
thing I should like to men-
the Jopane tor, “and
{s our so (allied pride. 1 « }
ceive you here at this ciub as man te
man, aud woe can talk freely. but the
ordinary Japanese houie is not fitted |
{or intercourse with foreigners. Our |
kitchens cannot prepare foreign food.
Our mattinzs are marred by the use of
tables and chairs. Our wives are not |
accustomed to meeting strangers and |
do not speak foreign languages. Vis-
itors are compelled to take off their
shoes, and, if they have holes in their
socks, that is embarrassing for them.
Under such conditions intercourse has i
been in~the past rather difficult. We *
do not like to accept hospitality with
out being able to reciprocate. Rect
procity is a national trait of the Japa-
We respond very quickly to
friendship or suspicion.” — Maynard
Owen Williams in Christian Herald.
> last
1
11 re
Pride of a Musician.
Viotti, the famous French musician
of the eighteenth century, had an equal
contempt for royalty and an exagger-
ated opinion of himself, as the follow-
ing story shows: One day he was sum-
moned to Versailles to play before Ma-
rie Antoinette and the court. The per-
formance Had begun, the opening bars
of his favorite solo commanded breath-
‘less attention, when a cry was heard—
“Place for Mgr. the Comte d’Artois!”
At the sonnd Viotti immediately
ceased playing, cast an indignant
glance at his audience, placed his vio-
lin under his arm and walked out of
the place.
Harmless Humbugs.
“Do you really think the public likes
to be humbugged?’ asked the man of
many anxieties.
“Yes,” replied Senator Sorghum,
“when the humbug is pretty and harm-
less. But they resent the kind that
buzzes around waiting for a chance to
sting 'em.”—Washington Star.
The Plain People.
“I put my faith in the wisdom of the
plain people,” said the statesman.
“Yes,” replied Senator Sorghum. “The
wisdom of the plain people is all right.
The only thing I fear is that some of
them are getting so that they know
too much.”—Washington Star.
Kind Mother.
Mrs. O'Brien—An' I see yez takin’
in washin’ ag’in, Mrs. O’Flannigan?
Mrs. O'Flannigan—Sure ‘tis only to
amuse the childer I'm doin’ it. They
loike the windies covered wi’ steam so,
that they cail make pictures on thim!—
Pearson’s Weekly. 8
Quite a Difference.
“Pa, what's the difference between
a patriot and a jingo?”
“A patrict. my son, is one whose
boSOm: sweirs wn pitav ol his coub-
try, while in a jingo the swelling ap-
pears’ in’ his head.”—St. Louis Post
Dispatch.
The Reason.
“You never laugh at my jokes.”
“1 wouldn’t dare to.”
“Why not?”
“«] have always been taught to re
spect old age.”—Baltimore American.
Vulgarity.
“Why do you say be is vulgar?’
old friends have found him out.
The one who has read the book that
is cal'ed woman knows more than the
y Las grown pale in librecies.—
Houssaye.
one v''
“Because he has 1t least ten times
pave '—Chicaco
As no men are created equal, all ar-, |
iT J "
- You start something lively swhen you produce
“Bull” Durham in a crowd of live-wires and start |§
+ That * fresh, mellow-sweet |
fragtance of * Bull” Durham ‘makes everyone ‘teach 1
olted “Bull” Durham
“rolling * your own’.
for “the makings”. "A hand-rolled “Bull™"'] g
gest and ‘snap ‘and the J
cigarette brims_ over with 2é:
sparkle of sprightly spirits.
$9uA is sd ® A leva
The Clb Soke Bll Durham |
GENUINE
3 ad
Made of rich, ripe Virginia-North
Carolina leaf, “Bull”, Durham is
the mildest, most enjoyable tobacco
in the world. : Bef 24
No other cigarette can be so
full of life and youthful vigor as
a fresh-rolled cigarette of “Bull”
Durham. :
" “Roll your own” with “Bull”
Durham and you'll discover a new
joy in smoking.
An INustrated Booklet,
showing correct way to
FRE
Roll Your Own
Cigarettes, and a package of cigarette
papers, will both be mailed, free, to any
address in . on request. Address
Bull” Durham, Durham, N. C.
THE AMERICAN TOBACCO CO.
tl
Beautify
SMOKING" TOBACCO *
= v7 , 8 \
improve Your Complexion |
Get your blood pure, keep the liver active and the
bowe's rec lar, ard disfiguring pimples and unsightly
blotches will disappear from the face. For improvirg
and putting the blood in good order
BR
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ati ©
are safer, better and surer th
eliminate poisonous matters from the system, strength-
en the organs and purify the blood—bring the health-
glow to the cheeks, brighten the eyes, improve and
the Skin
Directions of Special Value to Women are with Every Box.
Sold by druggists throughout the world. In boxes, 10c., 25¢c.
d yansot 8
|
B
t 1 ;
fe
Ask for FREE
package of ‘‘papers’”
with each 6c sa
$
an cosmetics. They
as much money as i
Herald.
Be pitifn' + Fiery === = Bp@kS:
2 Bard hartiic 1a MEciares. {
as mma same —
BEGGARS, BEAUTY AND FLEAS |
Naples Is a. Seaport Crowded With |
Naples, aside from its anfazing local
beauty, is a dirty south Italian sea-
port, full of fleas and beggars, noisy as |
pandemonium day and night, without
a really distinguished edifice, and peo-
pled by a conglomerate mass as strik-
ingly beautiful physically as they are
notoriously untrustworthy. Bey \
storied heights that sweep in a magni- b ; BY 24 ’
ficent amphitheater I guy
liant bay the old city straggles down- £ 2 WEBSTERS
ward in a picturesque huddle of dense: |
ly packed houses and other buildings.
tortuous streets full of color and bub- |
bling with the nervous activity of the
south, black canyons of stone stair: |
slippery with damp and dirt, across
which its teeming houses gossip and |
quarrel in neighborly wise.
Nowhere are fisher folk more pictur-
esque in habit and costume.
is there so salty a dialect, spiced with
such myriad quaint and startling
phrases and exclamations.
brown of leg, dressed in ragged, parti-
colored motley, a stout canvas band
about each sinewy body for hauling in
the net without cutting the hands to
pieces, - they ‘bring ashore their shim-
mering silver quarry right along the
widest, finest promenade in the city—
the handsome Via Caracciolo.
Al¢éross that broad street the charm-
ing Villa Nazionale—not a house, but
a public park, wholely conventional ifi
design—contains an aquarium which J
may fairly be considered the most re-
| markable in the world for both the
variety and ‘interest’ of its finny and
monstrous -exhibits and the thorough-
ness ofits scientifie work.
of the great universities contribute an-
nually for the privilege of sending
special investigators in ‘zoology.
The commercial activity of this lar-
gest. city and second. seaport of Italy
clings closely about the skirts of the
enormous royal palace—800 feet long
on the bay side and ninety-five feet
high—and the naval basin and dock-
yard.
thriving seaport may be smelled and
heard, multiplied generously,
flag seen on the ships at anchor near
the stone wharves.—A. 8. Riggs in Na-
tional Geographic Magazine.
~ Amazing Contrasts.
From the
around the bril-
”
Ct
pa
rT
Nowhere
Bare and
To it many
Every smell and sound of a
every
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S |
study easy and
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them the' same
chances to win pro-
motion and success
asthe lad having the
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Colirtesy ‘and ‘Work.
When I' want to find’ ‘fault: with my
men-I say nothing’ swhen-1 go through
their departfnents.
I would praise them. My silence hurts
them more than anything else in the
world, and it’ doesi’t give offénse. It
makes them think and work harder.
Many men fail -beéawse’ they: do’ not
see the importance of being kind and
courteous to the men under them.
Kindness to everybody always pays
for itself. And, besides, it is a pleasure
to be kind. I have seen men lose.im-
portant positions, or their reputations
-—~which are more important than any
position—by little careless discourte-
#les to men whom they did not think it
was
If 1 ~-were. satisfied
worth while to be kind to—
Charles M. Schwab in American Mag-
azine
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