we v dag uaa a i - AN Aer eee LEAL CAO O00 00001000 A i a go a ET 7 Kn —- THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, MEYERSDALE, Pa, The Mevyersdale Commercial All the News-- Every Week. 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. When : in need of Programs Envelopes Letter Heads Statements ~ Sale bills -Bill Heads Posters or Dodgers Call on the Meyersdale Commercial RINTERS ARTICULAR 'EOPLE { r— “Waverly * Qils and Gasa!! © Gasolines—Illuminants—Lubricants—Wax—Specialties Waverly Oil Works Co, - Cost Bhi Worth Most Pittsburgh g E RIDING ON BUBBLES OF AIR. Motoring Would Ce Ideal If Tires Could Be Made Thinner. In the whole mechanism of modern transportation there is nothing so par- adoxical, nothing so daring in concep- tion as these bubbles of air which we call tires. They are at once strangely nonsensical and strangely practical— nonsensical because they must endure great strains and yet are necessarily made of unendurable material ; practi- cal because nothing can match air as a shock absorber. From all the tales that we hear of tire costs and tire repairs, let it not be forgotten that motoring as we know it became possible because of the art of riding on babbles of air had been discovered. What happens when the old fashion ed iron tircd, wooden buggy wheel strikes a smal] stone in the road? It simply rises and the entire load rest- ing on the wheel is lifted. There is loss of power—more work for the horse, for whenever you or a horse lifts a weight energy must be expended. What happens when an air tube strikes a stone? The tube is simply punched in, as it were, momentarily! The wheel need not be lifted over the obstruction. In order to secure this extraordinary result the air must have a chance to compress. If it were possible to build a tire with a wall as thin as a soap bubble’s and yet so tough and elastic that it would both yield to blows and resist punctures and blowouts the ideal would be attained. One of the hardest technical tasks ever set was that of de- manding from the rubber industry a tube which would hold air and which would also be resilient. Air tires serve not only to make mo toring luxuriously comfortable, but to protect the car itself. Were it not for them engines would not perform their work so efficiently ; gasoline would not be so economically consumed; high speed would be unttainable; steeries would not be so easy ; shock would neg be completely abserbed.—Waldemas Kaempfrert in MeClure's Maguasine. HE KNEW THE TURK. 89 He Boldly Preceeded te Tale the Law Inte His Own Hands. In his book, “Forty Years Im Cea- stantinop! Sir Edwin Pears tells the following story to illustrate the Turk’s attitude toward foreigners: I knew the Engtishman of whom the story was pla, and 1 perenaded him we Ar * s10n. de sued « i.un ih the cuser Jurkish court that Luis jurisdiction over cases between Ti Geesssx wod Lorkish sub jects. Wkenr the Turkish defem@ier’ | came to teli his tale ke spoke of the Englishmen ag a gleem GF | | Engliss=an Ofioveme. mile BR | luc perrectly well that it Iv contrary to Turkish law to use s ich an @pithet, they did not interfere, whereupon the Englishman said, “I* you call me a giaour again I shall take the law into my own hands.” The Turk at once replied, “Well, you are a giaour.” . The Englishman stepped across the floor three or four paces and gave the Turk a blow on the nose that startled him and the court. As the blood flow- ed freely, there was a great hubbub, and orders were given to arrest the Englishman. He was a big, powerful fellow, and instantly he smashed the stool on which he was seated and cried out that he would brain the first man who laid hands upon him. Alischan, the dragoman who first told me the story, said that every one hesitated to attack the Englishman, and he, Alischan, was asked by the president to tell the aggressor that if he would apologize there would be an end of the matter. “Apologize!” said the Englishman. “Not a bit of it. He insulted me, and I let him have it.” Alischan went back to the president and said, “This is the kind of an Eng- lishman who won't stand an insult, and I can do nothing with him.” "Thereupon the court ordered the pro- ceedings to go on as if nothing had | happened. A Rousing Welcome. “Anyhow,” said the small man with the big set of books, over which he figured from early morn till late at night, “anyhow, there is one faithful friend at home that never fails to give me a rousing welcome.” “What friend is that?’ asked the billing clerk, pausing to eat a sand- wich while the boss wasn’t looking. “My old alarm clock,” replied the small man B dreamily. — Jacksonville Times-Union. Shadows of History. “William the Conqueror,” read the small boy from his history, “landed in England in 1066 A. D.” “What does ‘A. D.’ stand for?” in- quired the teacher. The small boy pondered. “I don’t exactly know,” he said “Maybe it's after dark.”—New York Times. Insert Letter “E.” “So you were invited to participate in a profit sharing scheme?” “Yes.” “How did you come out?” “I discovered that the purpose of the scheme was not sharing, but shearing.” —Birmingham Age-Herald. Irresponsible Spirit. “Has you: husband told you you must economize?’ “Yes,” replied Mrs. Flimgilt, “but I'm not lettine him bother ma Wa's a am | great nations live on respective islands | Ponte Sisto. | the ground that they were “too beau- | hour the inventor was absent. | phone call to his home in Orange, N. J., one of those people who sist on tak- ing up every fad that comes along.”— Washington Star. It isn’t a good plan to allow your re- grets for yesterday to overshadow your hopes for tomorrow. ALASKA’S LONG SPUR. The Aleutian Islands Chain Over a Thousand Miles In Length. Few persons are aware that the shortest route from San Francisco to Japan is by way of Alaska. Nearly a thousand miles are saved to vessels trading with the orient by coasting along the Aleutian islands rather than following the Hawaiian route. The Aleutian islands, more than 150 in number, which extend in a chain east and west for more than a thou- sand miles, are inhabited by the rem- nant of the Aleuts. Their war of the revolution closed just as the Ameri- can Revolutionary war began. So pa- triotic were the Aleuts, so brave in their struggle for independence, that they succumbed to the Russians only after a conflict of nearly fifty years, and then simply because the race was almost exterminated in the struggle. While the Aleutian islands must eventually form an important link in | the commerce between the United | States and the orient, other islands | ink our country with the vast empire to the north. ed States, so that citizens of the two within a few miles of each other. Evening Schools. Hvening schools owe their existence to the Rev. Thomas Charles, who about 1811 set up one at Bala, Wales, which proved to be quite successful. poor adults, who, on account of en- forced labor, had no chance to secure an education. The idea was taken in hand by the British privy council in 1861, and from that date evening schools began to be considered seri- ously. At the present time they are numerous throughout Great Britain, : America and many other leading na- | tions. Had No Time to Spare. The stage was all set in the Ritz- to Thomas A. Edison. It was a copy France, which Mr, Edison had admired while in France. At the appointed elicited the laconic reply: “I’m too bueg. Ship it over here.”—New York Post In the narrow Bering ! strait lie two little islands, one occu- | pled by Russia, the other by the Unit- ! In 1839 : or 1840 the English Bishop Hinds i strongly recommended such schools for | Carlton hotel for the presentation of a : magnificent sixteenth century cabinet ! of a piece carved for Louis XIL of : A tele- lan epoch making upheaval of human WHERE MANKIND WAS REBORN The Story of Florence Epitomizes the Story of Humanity. The story of Florence is the story of humanity; the broad, deep, moving epic of the awakening of r.an to his own divine power; the story of wea- derful self made men who had bug one idea in common—the thirst for free ac- tivity of soul. So the tale of the new birth, the renaissance, is the record of individ- ual spirit so free, so subtle and elastic, se profoundly penetrating springs of human purpose, that it has furnished the motive power of the | to the | . Historic -Roumanian City. ai ve, in Roumania, was the Cas- Ga Nova of the Romans during their occupation of Dacia; and in the middle | ages the place played an important role. :It-'was here that the Wallachian | prince Mircea the Old defeated the Turkish suitan Bayezid I. in 1397. Two hundred years later the most famous of Wallachia’s- chieftains, Michael] the ' . Brave, held sway here as “ban,” or governor, afterward becoming prince not only ef Wallachia, but of Moldavia and Transylvania as well, thus for a brief period uniting under one ruler the whole Roumanian people. The leu, which is the standard of as its value in ‘Roumania, was first coined world ever since, and Florence, as i con- In Craiova. It derives its name from | ditions then obtaining in the city and ' the figure of a lion stamped on the source and focus, because of the con throughout Italy, was the one spot in the world capable of producing such ecousciousness. And all this astonishing genius grew: directly out of—business! The city was peopled by men who manufactured the ' necessaries of life, by merchants, spec- ulators, bankers, tradesmen, artisans, handicraftsmen of every type. Busi- ness, work, was a condition of active participation in the life of the state, and because they did not work the nobles were debarred from this. It was the burghers, the people, who ruled, and even when evil ehance laid ' the state under the heav§ hand of a despot he was forced to develop his own character to the uttermost, be- cause his rule depended entirely upon his capacity as a man. The aristoc- racy accordingly was that of intelll- gence, of men who became eminent be- cause, first of all, they were the best in their own individual work. Under the practical inspiration of these mental giants Florence was re- created and learned to view life from within instéad of superficially. She learned that the individual is the soul of the state and that the state can succeed only when it is true to the best interests of its individuals.—A. 8. Riggs in National Gecgraphic Magazine. VINDICATED TH THE MULE. A Legal Case Where Nrioce the Honor of the / Animal Was Involved. One of the most famous cases re-' ported in the Missouri Law Reports is that of Lyman versus Dale, known as the “celebrated mule case.” It seems that Dale's hired hand, Parker, after a day's work supplying water to a clover huller, was passing through the city of Springfield, riding one mule and leading another. - He met Lyman just opposite a pile of bricks in the street, capped by a red lantern. The mule being led became frightened at the bricks and lantern. and, jumping aside, broke a wheel out of Lyman’s buggy. This laid the foundation of the case. Lyman sued Dale for a damage of $5. | charging him ‘with “negligence in han- dling a wild and unruly mule.” The case was first tried in a justice of the peace court at Springfield, Mo., and was appealed to the circuit court. From there it was taken to the court of appeals, which court, failing to agree, sent it to the supreme court of the state. This court held that Lyman could not recover damages unless he proved that the muie was “wild and unruly.” Judge Henry Lamm said that, while the amount involved in the case was small, the value of the case was great for the sake of the doctrine and also because it involved the “honor of the Missouri mule.”—Exchange. Who Owns the Falkland Islands? | Few people are aware to this day that the Falkland islands are marked i in all Argentine maps and geographies as “unlawfully retained by Great Brit- ain.” The origin of the dispute was that England after abandoning the | islands in 1774 resumed possession in | 1829. The Argentine government pro- | tested and, as A. Stuart Pennington | points out in his book on the country, | is even today “careful to do nothing | which could even apparently recognize the rights of the present possessors.’ | Tt was for that reason that it declined | ! mother?’ sobbed his wife, a proposal a few years ago to run a line of Argentine ships to the islands. Beautiful! Bridges. Popular love of art may be carried too far. The author of “Charles Bour- | bon, Constable of France,” tells us that on the occasion of the sack of Rome the citizens refused to secure their safety by taking the advice of their captain, Reuzo da Ceri, and cutting the bridges Ponte Quattro Capi and | The people declined on tiful.” An Ox Hide. “Thomas,” said the professor to a pupil in the junior class in chemistry, “mention an oxide.” “Leather,” replied Thomas. “What is leather an oxide of?’ asked . the professor. “An oxide of beef,” answered the bright youngster.—Chicago News. Was Coming Back. “Seemed to sadden old Geldbox when his new son-in-law said goodby after : the wedding. Is he so fond of him?” * «Well, not exactly. You see, the new son-in-law didn’t say goodby; he said sAu revoir.’ ”—Browning’s Magazine. Foiled. “Dearest, I ordered to be sent home today a most bgautiful hat for only $30.. It's a perfect love!” “My darling, your love will be re Geseive © be operated Tosi trouble is usw Grumbless vpor T=rically. ally cavenic.-Bouetas Jerveld. ofs ole of ‘ early coins. Its value is equal to that of the French franc (19 cents and a , fraction); Craiova was for centuries the capi- tal of Little Wallachia, that division of the country lying between the Alt | (Aluta) river and the Hungarian and + Berbian boundaries to the west.—Bul- letin of the National Geographic So- ciety. Soap an Antiseptic. Some medical authorities, explaining the abatement of epidemic ' diseases | in modern years, are sufficlently free ! from professional ties to attribute this ' betterment of conditions net to med- ‘ ical science, but to the increased use of soap and water., The Homeopathic ' Envoy 4s of the opinion that with a clean house and a clean person no one need have much fear of infection. A : writer in the New York Medical Rec- ord says: “Soap is now recognized to be antiseptic and to be efficacious must produce a lather. Bacteria rubbed into soap or diojped on its surface are in- ° capable of multiplication. The typhoid bacillus is very sensitive to soap, being killed by a 5 per cent solution in a short time. More than half the total number will die in one minute. . The thorough use of a pure patash soap is not only a mechanical method of cleans-" ing, but is an active factor in cutting’ | down germ life.” : The Arabic Language. : Though the Arabs number less than | the population of London, their lan: guage is one'of the mest widely spoken |! and influential in the world, for it is" the language of the Koran. Seventy millions of .people. in Asia and north Africa speak sone form of Arabic as their vernacular, and quite as many | more knew something of the language | from the Koran, which, in the original, | is a textbook in the day schools of the Mohammedans from Turkey to Afghan- | istan and New Guinea. Nor is Arabic unworthy of this extensive use. Renan, after expressing his surprise that such a language should spring from the des- ert regions of Arabia and reach perfec- tion in nomadic camps, declares that it surpasses all its sister Semitic lan- guages in richness of vocabulary, deli- cacy of expression and the logic of its grammatical construction.—London Chronicle. Sacred Scarabs. The sacred scarab, or beetle, of Egypt was the “tumble insect,” which forms bits of manure into a ball for laying its eggs in. Two individuals, male or female, always roll the ball ' together, and they do this merely for the purpose of conveying it to a safe place and hiding it. This insect was regarded as a symbol of the Creator among the Hindus, from whom the idea passed into Egypt. The ball was : imagined to represent the world be- . cause it was round and was supposed to be rolled all day frem sunrise to sunset. The Other Fellow. “Mother doesn’t think she’ll go to the theater with us tonight, Albert.” “Is that so? I have three tickets. What shall I do with the third one?” “Give it to the man you always go out to see between the acts. He can sit with us, and you won't have to go out to see him. "'—Exchange. He Told Her. “Why did I ever leave home and “Chiefly because your family was too stingy to take us in,” he answered bit terly.—Life. An Oid Master, Anyway. Miss Manyears—Yes, that was paint- ed of me when I was a little girl. Colo- nel Bunt—Is it a Rubens or a Rem- ' brandt?—London Opinion. dels cduriyalsale slo slnalsdens sade ale ale odo le oi PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT. «| a Te For Painful Feet. 5 Those who stand all day while = at work or those whose work ef! obliges them to walk a great deal oi are very often sufferers from painful affections of the feet. The 3 feet may be chafed and sore from walking over long distances. For the abrasions, wrapping a = small piece of absorbent cotton of: or clean linen soaked in castor < oil about the toe or heel or other abraded part entirely removes the pain and enables the sufferer to resume his walk with com- fort. For the prevention of sore feet soak the uppers of shoes or boots with castor oil and pour a little of this oil unon the feet, espe- cially 1e toes, and then put on the and soaked boots. This treatment is simple and inexpensive and proves ben- eficial in nee. The aching in the feet will be relieved by rubbing the thor- oughly with east ogo of of of of ok oF % ail se > o + hetween th SOCKS every insu os 3 4 ole PRATT td m %, al ¥ " of of + fo ofo ole ole ole ofe ole ofe ole ofs ole ofe ole ole o} ofe ols ole ole ole oe ole ols of of ofc os ole of a —— - go ojo oe oe ob ce ipsa En INTERNATIONAL PEACE. Plans to Secure it Have Been Tried For Three Centuries. Admirable and farsighted plans for ' securing a peaceful international order have been before the world for 800 years. M. Emeric Cruce submitted his plan, which included liberty of com- merce throughout all the world, as ' early as 1623. Following the peace of | Utrecht, the Abbe de St. Plerre devel- oped his plan, which included media- tion, arbitration and an interesting ad- dition to the effect that any sovereign who took up arms before the union ef pations had declared war or who re« fused to execute a regulation of the union or a judgment of the senate was to, be declared an enemy of European society. The union was then to make war upon him until he should be dis- grmed or until the regulation or judg- ment should be executed. ‘Some twenty years earlier Willlam Penn had produced his quaint and real- ly extradrdinary plan for the peace of Europe, in which he, too, proposed to proceed by military power against any ‘sovereign who refused to submit his claims to a proposed diet, or parlia- ment, of Europe or ‘who. refused to abide by and to perform any judgment ‘of such a body. i JAH these plans, like those of Rous- seau, Bentham and Kant, which came later, as well as William Ladd’s elab- orate and carefully considercd essay ‘6m a congress of nations, publislied in 1840. were brought into the world ‘too soon.’ They were the fine and noble dreams of seers which it is taking civ. lized men thiree centuries and more té begin effectively to realize.—New Yorl Times. ‘SAVED BY A CAMERA MAN. How He Won a Lease of Life For Some w of Villa’s Victims. During one of his earlier campaigns Francisco Villa ‘had an American movie photographer, Burrud by name, attached to his staff, who spent a | good deal of his time taking pjctures i! of the excessively vain. “general” him- ' gelf.” Sometimes, however, Burrud was called upon to ‘undertake more stren- [ uous operations. The following story, ' for instance, is told in Francis A. Col- ling’ “The Camera Man:” . “Burrud was called outdoors unex- pectedly at sunrise one morning and directed to report, with his camera, at ! once to headquarters. When he arriv- ‘ ed, coatless and breakfastless, before ' Villa’s tent he was told that the gen- eral had decided to have some twenty prisoners shot and wanted a moving | picture taken of the execution. The prisoners, most of them political mere- ly, were to be butchered to make a ‘moving picture scene. “Burrud feigned to examine his cam- era closely and then explained to the general that his films were bad and that it would be impossible to take the picture until a new supply had arrived. Villa was disgusted to miss the enter- tainment, but the camera man insisted that there was no use in making the exposure, and the picture and the ex- ecution were put off several days. “By the time the next supply of films arrived the general had fortunately changed his mind and the men were sav Electricity and Coal Waste. From coal we chiefly draw the sun's stored energy, which is required to meet our industrial and commercial ' needs. According to statistical records, ! the output in the United States during an average year is 480,000,000 tons. In perfect engines this fuel would be suf- ficient to develop 500,000,000 horsepow- er steadily for one year, but the squan- dering is so reckless that we do not get more than 5 per cent of its heating value on the average. A comprehen- sive electrical plan for mining, trans- porting and using coal could much re- duce this appalling waste. What is more, inferior grades, billiens of tons of which are being thrown away, might be turned to profitable use.—Nikola Tesla in Collier's Weekly. The Color Cure. To cure smallpox was apparently a very simple matter in the good old times. John of Gaddeston, court doc- tor to Edward IL, has recorded that he got rid of the disease by the simple expedient of wrapping his patients in red cloth, “Let scarlet red be taken,” he says, “and let him who is suffering } from smallpox be entirely wrapped in {it or in some other red cloth. I did thus when the son of the ‘illustrious king of England suffered from small- pox. I took care that all about his bed i should be red, and that cure succeeded very well.”—London Tatler. Raising Geese. The raising of geese was a profitable occupation of farming in England l years ago, and some farmers had flocks Tio 8000 or 10,000. Each goose pro- + | duced a shilling’s’ worth of feathers ; every year and quills to the value of ; threepence. The quills were used for ; pens. Easy. Bill-He always said he’d never mar- ry until the right girl came along.” Jill—Well, how does he know that the one he is about to marry is the right one? “Oh, she told him she was.”—Yon- kers Statesman. | Neighbors. “Wha sort of neighbors have you?” | “The usuail-sort. Cost us just a lit- tle more than I earn to keep up with | 'em.”—Detroit Free Press. {| What a happy world this would be if every man spoke as well of his live | 2eighbors as he does of his dead ones! a