mani THE METERSDALE COMMERC. ~xSRSDALE, PA. ONE CONTROVERSY AT A TIME | . = . MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL Tre anti-alien land bills in the leg- islatures of Idaho and Oregon will not , be passed. The determination of this | country, in every state of the Union, is | to do nothing which will add to the PL. oLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT MEYERSDALE PA R. M. SWISHER, Editor. Condensed Statement CITIZENS NATIONAL B: NK ~ "looks as if the Wilson-Underwood law ‘party stands for. _ tleship Maine was blown up in Havana Jiberation of Cube, and : adding the $1.28 $1.50 Wnen paid strictly in advance “% nen not paid in advance THE LEGISLATURE "|{A S[Y} 0an)e[sI39[ oY} JO HIOM OUL | fer is not to the credit of that body. One-fourth of the length of the term has gone and without anything to show in results. Not a bill yet enact- ed into a law, not one of the hundreds of laws that need repealing yet taken from the statute books. It, so far has resolved itself into two fac- tions, one faction favoring an investi- gation and the other faction deter- mined to prevent an investigation of the way money has been spent. According to the statements, Gov- ernor Brumbaugh, well-meaning old man that he is, has been led into an error of judgement in using money ap propriated for hg contingent expanses as a slush fuxd for extravagant ex- penses. The Auditor General also seems to have traveled with a retinue of servants, in pomp like an eastern monarch, in fact, according to the re- ports, about the only ones who have had any sense of decency about the matter of expense were Hon. Frank Black and Henry Houck. A friend suggested a few days since that the scandal connected with the state adminstration was the funeral of the Republican party. If such be true let the obsequies proceed, and the people will follow the leadership of such men as the two just mentioned in constructing a party in ‘which the Keystone of the arch shall be Honesty and Sobriety. Local option, which was bombasti- cally promised us by the Governor, is a dead issue. The statement of the Attorney Gen. eral that the contingent expense fund of the Governor was a fund which he controlled and that, “He could burn it if he wished” is net a point well tak- en. All laws are interpreted by the intention of the law-makers when the law was framed. The intention was not to create a fund of state moneys for the Governor to burn. If there was no illegal expenditures then an investigation will so deter- mine, hence why should it be opposed? ‘The Republican party will be strength- ened by an investigation. Only those who are guilty should fear the expos- ure. i HOW CANADA CELEBRATED Canada celebrated the Democratic victory in 1916 election by sending us $27,000,000 worth of her goods dur- ing November. ' That made a total of our imports from our northern neign- bor for the first 11 months of that year $213,500,000, an increase of $53, 000,000 over the 19% period. nine -months of which was under the Re: ‘publican protective. tariff law. It has been good pickings for the Ce- nucks, but their gratitude will never reach the point where they will per- mit the products to enter their mark- et at anything lower than protective rates. It is a one sided affair, particu. larly hurtful to our farmers, who, in their excitement over war profits, arc apparently unconscious of the shin- skinning which Canada is giving them. “The war cannot last indefinitely, bur Canada’g sales to us after the war will, under the present tariff policy, be limited only by her own desires an: ability to produce. Are we going to prepare for competition with Canada and other countries before this war jag is over, or postpone tariff revi- | sion until a war-post depression has put our industrial liver eut of whack? PONIDEXTER ALERT The ‘first real step to test the opin- ion of the country in the latest Ger- man crisis rame, appropriately enough “from a Republican Snator, represent- ing a ‘Pacific Coast .State and ther- oughly imbued with the spirit of pro- gressiveism which the Republican Senator Poindex- ter’s proposal for the immediate con- struction of a hundred additional sun- marines went direct'y to the heart of ithe situation and met the issue of the German in terms of adequate prepar- edness. The fate of the proposal Tests of course, with a Democratic majori- ty; but there is no question that Sena tor Poindexter vioced the active opin- ion of the nation in advocating a speedy increase of our submarina force in the face of a situation which brooks no delay. Nineteen years ago today the Bat- harbor. “An act which brought on a war with Spain, terminating in the Philippines and. Poto Rico to the do gravity of our industrial That these bills are within our rights and that they are no more drastic than the existing statutes of Jaoah, against whose subjects they are chief. ly aimed, is not to be questioned. Bat there are times when to do all the things which are a nation’s of right leads to consequences which are un- thinkable. Thsi is one of those times Whatever of irritation and of aggres- sion may come now should come from the other side. STOP THE -DILLY-DALLYING Intimations from Harrisburg are that the Legislature will be kept ia session until July. If it soon dues not get down to busifiess it is hardly to be expected it will complete its “la- bors” by that time. But (kere is not the slightest reason for any such ex- tended session. The public business demanding attention can be trans- acted in much less time than the al- most five months between now aul July. The Senate has disposed of the investigation resolution, ‘which has been holding the legislative machih- ery idle; its passage through the House should be little more than a formality since the subject nus Lee. sufficiently threshed over. But, what- ever its fate, the action should be tak- en promptly. The pecple are impa- tient of the delay; the growing bill of costs for services that are not rende ed cannot be excused. There is a big hopperful of bills already introduced, but the committees have not got down to work on them, possibly because th» vast majority of them are worthy of very little consideration. The fev bills of imp-rtance that have been iu- troduced, like the local option bill and that to repeal the non-parisan law as it applies to the election of judges, should be disposed of as promptly as possible. Under ordinary circum- stances the public interest would de- mand there would be no dilly-dally- ing at Harrisburg; now that the coun- r is confronted by the possibility or war it is more than ever important that purly domestic concerns be han- dled without delay that every resouce of the nation may be put at the dis- posal of the National Adminstration without interference of any kind. EQUALITY WILL RE- MAIN AN ISSUE If the corrupt practices act is not to be voted upon at this session of Coa- gress the QGallinger amendment to that measure will likewise fail of ac- tion. But both the bill and the amend- ment will be in evidence when the new Congress convenes; and it is possible’ that the Gtllinger amend- ment will have a life of its own apart from any bill. The subject of South- ern representation in Congress and in the electorial college ig the most im- portant question of political interest in this country today. It has been made acute by the results of the re- cent election, wherein t swolln and il- legitimate electoral vote hag been sc- cured for the Democratic party in de- flance of the Constitution. Such con- ditions cannot endure or be indured. The Gallinger amendment points the way to cure them, : SOMERSET COUNTY’ In Somerset county there were 23 fatal accidents in the indu.trial esta- blishments during the pust year. Of this number agreemenrs a¢: awards have been filed showing - compenso- tion approximating $45,000, represent- ing 18 compensable cases. STIFF, SORE MUSCLES RELIEVED Cramped muscles er soreness. foll »w- ing a cold or case of grippe are eased and relieved by an application of Sloan’s Liniment. Does not stain tne skin or clog the pores like mussy ointment or plasters and penetrates quickly without rubbing, Limber up vonr muscles after exercise, drive out the pains and aches of rheumatism, neuralgia, lumbago, strains, sprai.is and’ bruises with Sloan’s Linimeat. Get a bottle to-day. At all Druggists, 26c¢. During the past week we- have re- ceived several letters, asking for free advertising, which we have consigned to the usual receptacle. A concern in Brooklyn is more generous Row- ever. It is a Railway Educational As. sassination, and proposes that we. may advertise this business in .our names and they will divide the tuition with us on all students we secure for them. We are selling space, not other veo- ple’s goods. But to clap the climax the State Department of Labor and Commerce, sends us some copy for which they ask free insertion, and =3 it was overweight we had to pay the overdue postage. Think of the gall of that, will you. The waste baskets get that stuff sure, Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA main.of Uncle Sam. relations, | OF MEYER At Close of Eusiness i i w Le : RESOURCES i: a= 0 & Loans and Investments.......................... $771,422.01 U. 8. BoD@S.... Mc veereter.ocrerenecdinenss Banking House..................... Due from Banks and Reserve, Agents....,........ 220,205.37 LIABILITIES - Capital SE00K...... cvveeesssstssreeees ane » «on $65,000.00 SUrPIUB ....0 vivireais ied geese ens 100000 Undivided Profits. .... ..ooleeiviouannres venus Circulation... ..... cee i osuigiovntssos senecenel ing Deposits .................c;ei toc viciiiiaii ds SDALE, PA. December 27, 1917 70,000.00 csiesneeenss 20 500.00 £2 208.69 Total.... $1,143,436.97 36.415 34 65, 000.00 877.021 63 ; Total.... $1,145,436.97 i ca in THE COMMON EVERY-DAY PIN (By Sam’l. G: Dixon M. D.) The pin is born with millions of brothers and gisters, who leave home to travel all parts of the world. "On their journey they come in contact with us human beings and it might be | interesting to take up, what some- times happen when they do so. Suppose a pin found its way into | the laundry of a shirt manufacturer. We would be likely to hear of it, first in the mouth of one of those folding the shirt and preparing it for ship- ment. This pin, as well ss oiners might perhaps be making its first in- timate acquaintance with the germ that produces sore throat. The shirt gets to the consumer who starts to make it ready for use. For the sec- ond time, the poor pin finds that hu-' man mouth again, its abiding place. Possibly this time, it gets into an ul- cerated mouth, thence it gets into the pin cushion or some other receptacie. The persons who handle these, can- not recognize disease germs by the naked eye, and therefore the pin with its cargo of germs is ready for new service. This time, perhaps, by a dressmaker, if she has the bad habit alreadyglluded to, she fills her mouth with these pins while she cuts with her paterng and fits various pieces to- gether, This. time for variation, the pin maj; have found dodgment -in a healthy woouth. Nevertheless it 8 net a pleasant fault, whesi' you know anyone making such use of them, Many a Mother who uses pins in fastening a child’s dress together, does the sage ithing. By this time, in the pin’s life history, it ig quite well armed with spores of germs and real- ly ig accounittable for much harm along its path of travel. And now as it is getting old and about ready to close its life, a little child may be stricken with tonsilitis or diptheria or even scarlet fever, because some of these diseases are easily communica- ble from throats so recently affected by ithe disease that the danger is n recognized. . The presence of the germs that have been deferred to on the pin, is a real danger, as the phy- sician or ithe laboratory worker knows he ‘can plant them in food stuffs that will make them grow and multiply in great numbers, colonies can be seen by the naked eye and they = can be in jected into other living beingg and produce disease. The habit of putting pins into the mouth would not continue for a mo- ent if everyone knew this. The Moral of this little story fis, never hold pins in the mouth as they srread disease, even fatal disease. Spanish Meat Balls. : Spanish meat balls are as palatable as they are rare and made thus: One can of tomatoes. one onioy chopped fine. garlic or cayenne to taste. This forms the “Spanish.” One and a half pounds of hamburg steak. Soak half a loaf of stale bread; drain off all wa- ter. Take one egg. pepper and salt to taste. mix together. roll into balls the size of an egz and cook in the “Span ish” three-quarters of an hour Posset. I'he proper meaning of the word “posset,” frequently used in Lan cashire. England. is a drink taken be- fore going to bed. Originally it was milk curdled with wine and comes from the Latin posea, meaning a drink made with vinegar and water. Highly Necessary. i “Why is the official spelling of gov- ernment with a big G? “Beeause they could hardly begin government without a capital.”—Baits. i: zens National W. th The Clock With The Million" Par tL an the pin’g history thus far, to think sf | © In what are called i rages” distant objects show an appar ‘| nomenon as being the work of evi, ‘a complete set.” Bank SAVED HIS OWN FACL. Why He Balked at Being a Witness on the Side of Truth. Colonel E. M. House—'Silent” House, | as he is often called—told at a dinner in Washington a significant parable: “They who expect the men in author- ‘ity to do a great deal for them—thoy who expect the impossible—should re member the grizzly bear story. “A famous grizzly bear hunter gave a dinner, and one of the guests told of a bear hunt that he had once shared iu with his hot. It had been a remar! able hunt. The bear had been kilici under almost incredible difficulties Although hi, auditors looked skeptical the narrator did not spare them any ¢ those, difficulties. He counted on the host, you see, for corroboration. “Then, when he had finished hi strange but perfectly true tale. he sai “There, that's the story, and, ge tlemen, our host will corroborate ever, ‘word I say. “‘No, George, he said, 'L don’t re- Wii: LS by Betis ntti: DIR oo: IRR AMRRR———————— ' Hartley & Baldwin ee r— (LEE THT New Line of String Cars for Men and Boys, All the New Styles Just Recieved. Style, Quality and Price Right. Hartley & Baldwin Meyersdale, Pa. HP NR Our Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil for your cough and colds. Price 50c and $1,00 per. bottle. Columbia Records for February on sale. F. B. THOMAS member anything of the sort at all.’ “Tableau! “Maddened’ by this tableau, the guest ! at the end of the dinner took his host aside and hissed: “ ‘Why didn’t you back me up in that ‘bear story? You know every word of it was true.’ Yes. suid the fmmous hunter—'yes. it was all true, but I saw that every- "body round the table thought you were lying. If. then, I had supported y the only result would have been th: Har too." ”—" ‘ashington Star. Looming Mirages. “looming mi- LEADING DRUGGIST MEYERSDALE, PENNA. they would have set me down for & 8 ‘ent extravagant increase in height - without alteration of breadth. Distant pinnacles of ice are thus magnified into immense towers or tall, jagged mountains. and a ship thus reflected from far out at sea may appear to be long. Rocks and trees are also show: in abnormal shapes and positions while houses, animal and human be- ings appear in like exaggerated shapes Before-the sandy plains of our south- western states and territories were converted into verdant fields by the ingenuity and tireless energy of man mirages were very common in those regions, the Indians regarding the phe- spirits. A Russian National Dish. One of the national dishes of Rus- sia is known as the pashka. ‘It is a sort of cake that stands one and a half feet high and is always put on a tall base. It is usually surmounted by a sugar cross and is placed in the center of the table when the Russians hold their great feast at Easter when thé fast is broken. It.takes about sixty eggs to make the pashka, but none but natives’ can succeed in producing the rare taste Comprehensive. *I understand you have bought a ser of Shakespeare's works.” “Yes.” replied Mr. ‘Dubwaite loftily. “And a glossary. too. I presume?” “Oh, res. yes! In fact, everything Shakespeare wrote.” — Birmingham Age-Herald. Higher Authority. Willis—The Highfliers are going to give up their big house this year. Mrs twelve or fifteen times as tall as it is , THE BEST SEPARATOR MADE, ‘aie 223 Livergood St. J. F, YOD¢r K. *JUHNSTUWN, PA. JROROBOBOSCRORORT HiS a 8 v vleie uleiniatelt meat: ” EYE ‘TROUBLES, : I khow I can help you to see better. and to feel better. Bad vision is very common in these days of reading and studying. most EYL>. COOK, Both tlo ves precious organs— YOUR TT THE CPIGMETKIST Eye Sight Specialist Viyersd le, Pa' & 5: CUVOTLAI 2000C00COAN CACORE CUT YOUR BUTTER BILL Save ‘about half your butter bill and get better results by using Blanton Creame 1 Butterine Willis—You must be mistaken. | was | talking with Mrs. Highflier only yes- | terday. i with the mortgagee only this morn ing.—Puck. : i - } Trouble en the Read. | First Centipedo— What's the matter? 8econd Centipede—I need a traffic cop; New York Sun. mere American. my feet want to go different ways. — | eb eines te wt a Willis— Well, I was “om | Rich in Butter Fats; Sweet, ; ae oh helesoms, Nutritious — Not made in a PN Packing House Oo ? . ee : apd urned fresh eve ia » West cream. ah churn to user ba odor and germ e s ta rineg Better than Butter for Everything: 5 Te OF Rares} Poa... aie iaiaieieiRiRiALr a EEE 8 EIR Rate ele inte Naat late 1 A SORCB0BTECRE Don’t neglect your 3 Gi b fe 4 bt at nt at of Bi TO¢ ur re frc ual be ate cou 5 say tha life fait me RES OY