THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, MEYERSDALE, PA. MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL —m PUBLISHED AT MEYERSDALE, PA. R. M. SWISHER, Editor. —n When paid strictly in advance $1.25 shen not paid in advance $1.50 NEW VICE-CHAIRMAN a pe The Career of John T. Adams, of Jjowa, who was recently selected as Vice-chairman of the Republican Na- tional Committee, indicates that if the Committee desires efficiency in political management, they made no mistake in their direction. Mr. Adams is an interprising and successful business man, a student of politics in the broadest sence, and a political worker along such lines as to win the esteem of the Republicans and arouse the fear of his Demoratic opponents. \ Prior to 1908, Mr. Alams had taken no actipe part in politics, but had con- firmed his attention almost entirely to the management of a sash and door manufacturing establishment at Du- puque, Iowa, of which concern he has peen President for 22 yeras and with which he has been associated for 33 , years. Athough not active in poli- tics he has taken an active interest in governmental problems such as would be a eredit to any American citizen. He has been a life-long stu- dent of history, and particularly of the economic problems confronting the people of the United States. His pri- vate library is known as one of the pest in the State of Iowa, and is par- ticularly well supplied with the best known works On economic subjects. He reads German and French fluent- ly and has studied German authors on ecomomic subjects. His extensive studies have won him ‘a reputation among his friends as a man of schol arly tastes. With his broad foundation for. use- ful political service, Mr. Adams be came active in politics for the first time in 1908 when his neighbor and personal friend, the late Senator Alli- son, induced him to take charge of his campaign for election to the Senate, at which time the contest was beiween Allison and Cummins for the nomina- tio. His ability as a political work- er is attested by the fact that he won the nomination for Allison but did it in such a manner as not ito forteit either the mwespect or the friendship of Cummins, who was latter elected to the Senate after the death of Sena- tor Allison, Although thereafter active polities, Mr. Adams was never a candidate for any office. However, he was elected by the people of Dubuque to member- ship on the Board of Education, and has served very acceptably as a trus- tee of Dubuque College. He was elec- ted a member of the Republican Na: tional Committee of 1912, and was chosen a member of its Executive Committee. In 1916 he was an active supportr of the candidacy of Senator Cummins for the presidential nomi- nation, and was elected a Member of the National Committee in a State- wide primary in which he won by an over-whelming majority. His rcla tions are both with Senators Cum- mins and Kenyon, of Iowa, all the members of the Iowa Congressional delegation, and all the officers of the State government. No person in his own State opposed his election to the National Committee on the ground {that he was lacking in progressive- ness, If the Republican party desires the leadership of a man who can be ag gressively and effectively active in party affairs and yet so tactful as to retain the confidence and friendship of members of all factions of his own party, it would seem that in the se lection of Mr. Adams as Vice‘Chair- man, no mistake was made. LEAK INVESTIGATION When he President sent his peace note to ithe belligerents it seems that Wall street had been furnished ad- vance information and the ones qr the inside made fortunes in buying and selling of stocks wheih would be affected by ithe cessation of the war. A committee was appointed by Con- gress to investigate and were ready to report that it was all an error; that no information was given out: that the brokers just guesed it, as there was no leak ithe services of a plumber would not be required; when the irrepressible Tom Lawson, of Frenzied Finance fame, pushed his person into the lime light and gave testimony which set the cabinet offi- cers and others in high places to cer- | tify to Tom’s eligibility to membership in the Ananias club. The committee adjourned to meet in New York, but | it was a forgone conclusion that noth- | ing will develop; that the whitewash js being prepared and will spread on good and thick. .There blind as he who will not see.. i eme———— is nohe sO 5 al NS F——— NEW FEDERAL TAXES Although the Committee on Ways EVERY THURSDAY | '\ ns has taken no final action on ways and methods to raise $309.- 000,000 new revenue, Washington cor- respondents have discovered a lot oi proposals pefore the committee, some or all of which are to be adopted. A few weeks ago there was talk of low- ering the income tax exemption 10 $1,000, but after hearing form the county the committee seems to have abondoned the plan. It still thinks that one-third of one per cent, of the country is enough to pay this tax, which has been doubled, and that of those lesser income than $3,000 or $4,000 should go free. Everyone knows that the proposed reduction was fair and honest, but the Democra- tic Party is not anxious to alienate votes. " The largest scheme is one to levy a tax of one per cent. on all profits from business in excess of eighty per cent. This will largely take the place of the present corporation tax and is expected to produce $200,000,000. The munition tax will cease with the war and the increase is partly with a view to that contingency. The so called «war” taxes by stamps are to be re laid and are expected to produce near- ly $50,000,000. Inheritance taxes are to be largely increased So that people will hate to die more than ever. Liquors, beers and tobacco are scheduled for heavy increases and it is proposed to raise $42,000,000 by = tax on mineral waters and all kinds ol soft drinks. Candy comes in for ten per cent., phonograph records for one per cent., moving picture reels for one cent a foot and oleomargarine three cents a pound. Billboards and street car advertisments are expected to vield $25,000,000, and $1 per horse power on automobiles will yield over $30,700,000. But the big item is a ax ‘n copper, pig-iron and alumium to raise $81,000,000. All these items aré xuected to produce about $500,000,000 hich is more than is needed, so that it not likely all of them will be-laid. It is interesting to noie that these direct taxes will affect practically every human being in the conntry and will materially increase expenses 1L every normal family. All this time not a word is said about practicing economy anywhere. Nothing is so unpopular in ‘Washing- ton as trying to save money Or in crease efficiency. er ——————————————— and ; de ole of fe ofe of of ode ode ofe ode oe ob Once the War Ends. In an editorial advising against stock speculation by the general public the New Yory, Journal says: Keep your money in your pocket or invest it in safe bonds or in savings banks or good property. All the stocks that have fattened 0 the war must suffer and shrink. The two greatest steel men in America tell you that under the present Tariff laws no steel or ironconcern can earn a dollar once the war ends—and the war is ending. - « You will thank us for this advice in a few weeks or months, if you follow it. The advice is sound. No one can fortell what will become of stock ma-- ket values when peace returns. In the absence of a Tariff law that shall provide ample Protection against the industrial invasion sure to come, the iron and steel concerns are not the on- ly ones that will be unable to earn & dollar of dividends. Very Likely. “Saturn has eight moons.” “] wonder if moon songs are eight timos as numerous with them as with ns.” —Louisville Courier-Journal. Keeps It There. He—You're always wanting money. My hand's in my pocket all the time. She— Yes. and it never comes out. go ole oe oe of oe of fe oe of ode of oe ole ode ole ob oR + 3 # PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT. #% 3 ee + 3 Open the Windows. % # Statistics show that the death % rate for pneumonia, bronchitis, % colds and grip is highest in 4 #% January, February and March. #% These are the window shut + % months. The rate is lowest in + #% July. August and September. + # when the windows are wide #% open. The rate rises again in 3 4+ October. November and Decem- + per. when the windows are clos- #% w ing. It does not drop again un- vs til April. May and June, when + % the windows are again opening. The death rate for the four #% diseases in winter cannot be re- 5 # duced to that prevailing in sum- mer. but it can be materially lessened by a more general use of fresh air. No air that ever blew out of doors is as dangerous or so poi- sonous as that inside a bedroom Yeo Je fe Te *. + Je oe of of ole ole ofe of with tightly closed windows. Night air is just as pure and wholesome as day air. Fogs and rains are only injurious in so far as they frighten you into clos- ing vour windows. ” Open the wii dows and lower «© * the death rate 4 % ge ope ofe of RB ge oe of of ofe oe of ok fe op oF + («ndeused CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK Sratement OF MEYERSDALE, PA. At Close of Business Dece.nber 27, 1917 RESOURCES Jans and Investments... .............cennnnnn. $771,422.91 1. S. Bongs..... castimiteseecinss Cease ln... 70,000.00 Banking House....o... i venunn. cri venannee. ns 29,500.00 Due from Banks and Reserve Agents..... ....... 220,205.37 Cash...:... teriniaieie i dec a 52,308.69 fotal.... $1,143,436.97 LIABILITIES C pital Stock ........-ceennsn cones. . ... $ 65,000.00 SUIDIOS .s. sors snns sor nian ir snus sun vn mtan 100.000.00 Undivided Profits..... ......... Red Ja 36,415.34 | Circulation .. ........s ties bions vie hatin 65,000.00 | Depos:t8 :....... .z-.- NE ain 877.021.63 { i ! Total. ... $1,143,436.97 | The Citizens National Bank | i «The Bank With The Clock With The Million’ AEA ESA RRRRRA RO I KEYSTONE PatAGRAPAS | Mary Loyan, aged siXieen, arraigned be.ore Magistrate James R. Watkins in Pittsburgh on a charge oi disorder- ly conduct after she had admitted she intended to drown hersclf, told a tule of abuse at the hands of her paren.s because she refused fo marry a bcard- er at the Loyan home. “I'd rather jump into the river than marry him,” she told Magistrate Watkins. “I don't love him—don’t even like him—and I'm not going to marry a man 1 care nothing for.” Thirteen departments of the state government have reported defieits of $689,010.94, nine have reported none and two have made reports classed as to W. Harry Baker, secretary of the senate, by Governor Brumbaugh. Mr. Baker is framing the biennial de- ficiency bill and the information’ was requested of the governor, who asked the heads of departments to make re- ports to him. A half million dollars for the en- dowment fund were received during the past year by the museum, one of the constituent bodies of the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania, according to a re- port read. at the annual meeting of the board of managers. In addition, the collections of art, archeology and ethnology have been increased half a million dollars in value through gifts, purchases and expeditions. Governor Brumbaugh granted re- : pites until March 5 to Henry Ward Mottern and Ernest Haines, Jefferson county boys condemmncd to death for murder. The lads were to have been cxecuted next week, but counsel ap- pealed for opportunity to take their cases to the state supreme court fol- lowing a final decision of the pardon board not to intervene. The Field hospital, the Field ambu- lance and Troop H, the last of sev- eral national guard organizations of the Pittsburgh district to complete a service of several months on the Texas border, arrived in Pittsburgh Tuesday. Other organizations were Troop F of New Castle and Troop C of Harrisburg, known as the Gover- nor's troop. Ten men employed by the Lundgren Construction company of Braddock were injured when a scaffold, on which they were working, in the plant of the Westinghouse Machine com- .pany, East Pittsburgh, broke, causing them to fall twenty-five feet. David Dough, employed at No. 7 mine of the Pittsburgh Terminal Rail- road Coal company at Large, was in- stantly killed while riding from the tipple on. a coal car which crashed into a coal train. Hough was crushed between the cars. | George Fry of near Indiana, brought pefore Judge J. N. Langham on a charge of desertion and non-support, admitted that since his marriage eight years ago he had given his wife $1. Judge Langham ordered him to pay her $25 a month. Employees of the hot mills of the American Sheet and Tinplatée com- pany at the Farrell works have been granted an increase in wages of about 6 per cent. The advance was made voluntarily and came as a surprise to the workmen.’ Congressman-elect 0. D. Bleakley of Franklin, who recently completed a trip through the air from Philadelphia to Washington, will make the same journey in February, according to an announcement made there. Owing to the high cost of news print paper, it was announced hat all after con nd mor ne pil publisl i7 Philadelpl pu eres tl pr ) Nn per copy on provisional, according to a letter sent | Bethlehem’s Bid on Shells for the United States Navy ' To the American People: The Secretary of the Navy has awarded eontracts amounting to over $3,000,000 to a British bidder for 14 and 16-inch projectiles for the Navy because of v much lower prices offered by the i bidders. We know nothing of the basis upon which the British bids were made, but the pub- Be is emtitled to know the facts upon which we ourselves bid for this work. Two years age we took contracts to make 4,900 li-imch shells at a price of $1,315,008. Up te mew mot a single shell has beem ac- ecpted by the Gevernment, al- though we have expended, in wages, materials, otc., om these orders $322,881, snd we have mot received a SINGLE DOLLAR en these contracts. el a A penalties amounting to $678,016 In the light of our experience, and hav- ing no other basis, we bid for 16-inch shells approximately the same rate per pound as that which the Navy Depart. ment actually awarded a 14-inch shell contract one year ago Bethlehem Steel Company CHAS. M. SCHWAB, Chairman EUGENE G GRACE, Presider LIVE STOCK AND GRAIN 42%, @43c; Eggs—Fresh, 57c. Pittsburgh, Jan. 23. Cattle—Prime, $10.50@11.25; good, $9.76@10.50; tidy butchers, $9@9.50; fair, $8@9; common, $6.50@7.50; heif- Butter—Prints, 41 @42c. tubs. ers, $6@9.50; common to good fat bulls, $6@8.50; common to good fat cows, $4@8; fresh cows and spring- ers, $40@85. Sheep and Lambs—Prime wethers, $10.50@11; good mixed, $9.50@10.25; fair mixed, $8@9; culls and common, $4.50@6; heavy ewes, $6@9; spring lambs, $10@14.65; veal calves, $14.50 @15; heavy and thin calves, $7.50@10. Hogs—Prime heavy, $11.70@11.75; heavy mixed, $11.656@11:70; mediums and heavy Yorkers, $11.60@11.65; light Yorkers, $10.90@11.15; pigs. $1050@11.16; roughs, $10.560@10.76: stags, $9@9.26. Cleveland, Jan. 23. Hogs—Heavies, $11.30@11.35; medi- ums, $11.35; Yorkers, $11.25; pigs, $10.50; roughs, $10; stags, $9. Cattle—Choice fat steers, $9@9.75; good to choice steers, $8.560@9; fair to good steers, $8@8.50; fair steers, $7.60@8; common and light steers, §6 @7; good to choice heifers, $7@8; fair heifers, $56.50@7; choice fat bulls, $7@8; bologna bulls, $6.26@6.75; choice fat cows, $5.50@6.50; fair to good cows, $5.50@6.25; common grades, $4@5; old rimmers, $3.75@ 6.26; good to choice milchers and springers, $50@80. Sheep and Lambs—Good to choice spring lambs, $14@14.25; fair to good, $12@13; culls and common, $9@11.50; good to choice wethers, $8.50@9.50; good to choice ewes, $8.50@9.50: mixed ewes and wethers, $8.50@9.50; culls, $6@7. Chicago, Jan. 23. Hogs—Mixed and butchers, $10.60@ 11.16; gooa heavy, $10.75@11; rough heavy, $10.65@11.80; light, $10.45@11; pigs, $8.25@10.10. Cattle—Braves, $7.70@11.85; cows and heifers, $4.75@10.10; stockers and feeders, $5.75@8.90; Texans, $8.60@ 9.40; calves, $10.25@%4.75. Wheat—May, $1.867%. Corn—May, $1.01%. Oats—May, 68%ec. . Tattler. “You didn’t tel’ me. Bobbie, you were in a fight.” “No. sir. | knew you'd hear about it from that boy's father. That's the | kind of a boy he is Life | | — A part of your friends condemn you approach the con others praise you: Ke aloof from the ad- demning and mirers.— Talmud. COREE EER EET EL LEER EEDA STEREO ERRGRL SL EO SORNE EER Hartley & Raldwin’s Red Letter Sale i Is in Full Blast. It never started with aflarger volum of business than this year. It seems that the people do appreciate real, genuine bargains, Call and feel at home at our store. | 1 Hartley & Baldwin Meyersdale, Pa. Se mmmmmmm————,s mms; ein TT TT The Columbia Famous Artists? If you have not you can by calling at my Drug Store. Here is a list of a few: Parlow Cascals Marie Barientos, M J. O'Connell James Harrod Henry J. Marshall Oscar Seagle Lucy Gates Vernon Stiles David Besham Samuel Ash James Reed Morton Hamey Eddy Brown Kathleen Parlow Josef Hoffman Charles Harrison . Columbia Records {or February on sale. F. B. THOMAS LEADING DRUGGIST MEYERSDALE, PENNA. Del AVA THE BEST SEPARATOR MADE, 223 Livergood St. : PA. J. T. YODER, : needs a : JOHNSTOWN, RRO ACRORROE EON RBOBCROBIRIRORT JOROBOBOREORROR. £8 Eyes Examined I want to see you about your | EYE TROUBLES. 1 know 1 can help you to see better and to feel better. Bad vision is very | common in these days of reading and studying. Don’t neglect your most organs— YOUR EYES. "COOK, Both Phones precious THE OPTOMETRIST Eye Sight Specialist Inactivity Causes Constipation | CHURNGOLD Lack of exercise in the winter is 2 | BUTTERINB You | 3 Donges’ Market frequent cause of constipation. feel heavy, dull and listless, your com- | plexion is sallow and pimply, and en-| ergy at low ebb. Clean up this con- | ; dition at omce with Dr. King’s New | C AS ? O f= ! A Life Pills, a mild laxative that ve- For Infants and Children lieves the congested intestines with- . In Use ForOver 30 Years out griping. A dose before retiring will assure you a full easy movement ' Always bears in the morning. 25c. at your Drug- the ist Signature of 2 % oh Be" Hl pr CEORHCBOHO Loc 3 OIE Mrs. G Lee, wer Boynton Mrs, P Livengoo day last Mrs. M. Shuma 1 bag a J.D tor with Miss. | Pa. is a latives, ney, of 1 3h gz ner’s Gr Miss 1 erset Hi Sunday BE. A. Di Mrs. spent Se here wi M. Sha Use C ne othe Mrs. was the here se was on where | wedding was Im: week. Try ¢ Bittner Ware Minera remain Mrs. ents a days le Mirs. for Je: ing a daught Darnle Mr. was tl Dm. an Avenue Feec ducer, Phillip Miss was a ated lowe ser, atter of th Mi Acos the who TI of th ruar M: stre at G Chri joys pers W of c to p! cati for in t T] assC Ssh and The mus