THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, MEYERSDALE, PA. Summer Garden| SATURDAY FEB. 17th. “SOMEWHERE IN FRANCE.” Triangle-Kay Bee. Do you enjoy a picture that holds Jou in suspense until the very end— & tale so full of mystery that you can- not guess the outcome—a story so €ripping that you never notice the passing moments? Such a story is “Somewhere in france,” the new Triangle Play cc- starring Louise Glaum and Howard Hickman, by the late Richard Hard- ing Davis, A thrilling war story of mystery and secret service intrigue .. 4t ig sure to fascinate you. ‘Then, toc there’s a mile of Key- &tone fun and frolic. TUESDAY FEB. 20th, “THE WOLF WOMAN" a Triangle-Kay Bee. | 5 ! Louise Glaum, Triangle-Kay Bee | “Vampire Lady,” was bom in Mary- | land, but was taken to. Los Angeles so @arly in life that she was there when | the motion picture directors emigrat- | @®d to the Pacific coast. But before her screen debut, she appeared on the i speaking stage as the ingenue ih “Why | QGirls Leave Home.” Later she play. €d in “Officer 666” and in Nat Good- | win’s company. Soon after California was invaded | by the picture play producers, Miss | @laum presented herself to Thomas | H. Ince. She has been under his di- Tection ever since, appearing in sev- €ral well-known Triangle features, the first being “The Iron Strain.” Miss @Glaum is the star of “Somewhere in | France,” TriangleKay Bee picturiza- tion of the Richard Harding Davis novel of that name. She will also appear in a wonder- ful Vampire role in “The Wolf Wo- | man” which is scheduled for Tuesday February 20 at the popular picture re | sort, the Auditorium Summer Gard :n. | WEDNESDAY FEB. 21st. | “THE UNWELCOME MOTHER” Fox Feature The Fox feature for the coming ‘Wednesday is an other unsual, out of the ordinary photo-plays, like all the Fox productions, it is hard to judge the Fox pictures, you cannot say (00 | much about them, last week Virginia Pearson in “Daredevil Kate” was a| great picture, this coming week Wl | ter Law in “The Unwelcome Moths " is another you cannot help like, for he | following week, Theda Bara wil be | the big feature attraction in “Her | Double Life” if you are not a reRmor} on Wednesday, For night, you are missing the cream of the photo-plays. THURSDAY FEB. 22nd. “CRIMSON STAIN MYSTERY” Metro This is the serial night at this popu- dar amusement resort, the “Crimson ‘Btain Mystery” the serial photo-play that is different, you see some new faces every Thursday, it isn’t too late wet, the first few instalments are over but you still have a chance to sit down to the rest of the meal, the best is ¥et to come, a big six reel program, and music by the real musical four, to Suit the pictures. FRIDAY FEB. 23rd. “THE PRICE OF SILENCE” Willlam Fox Production This is the first big William Fox Super de Luxe feature, you have been reading about. It comes to the Sum- Wer Garden, Friday Feb. 23rd, with pefcal music by the .Auditerium or- estra, Don't miss this big seven der skating on the above dats, doors fpen at 6:46 p. m. First sbow at 7. Hi | NOT TO BE TOLERATED “We need laws in this country to compel fathers and mothers to work and do their share. Thousands of fathers and moth- ers today are leaning in their children for suppot. Look at the loafers on our street corners— where are their children? Work- ing, of course, and giving up every cent they earn. Child labor is a term which is not to be tolerated in America. “We have laws for the preser- vation of our forests and nearly every other thing in life, but we neglect our children, “You cannot put the child and labor togethr, and have a strong nation. . “No State, no home, no indus- 1 IN AMERIG= | + ‘OCAHONTAS TIPS ‘iam Durr, who | wwon for a rupte and getting along fine. Mr. A. G. Yutzy, an up-to-date far- mer is contemplating planting 10 acres of soup beans next spring. We wish him success, It is rumored there will be another wedding in this vicinity in the near future, C. C. Barmoy, is in mourning over the loss of his fountain pen since lust Saturday. The turtle which was buried alive in this town last fall will be dug up in the near future. Watch! This vicinity was the scene of very rough weather ever since the ground- sperated <.~id at home for the past few months been missing try has the right to rob the child of its cLildhood.” Rev, James V. Chalmers. (From the pulpit of Holy Trinity Church, New York.) GLADE CITY Miss Edna Mankamyer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Mankamytr, wag given a surprise party on Friday night, the occasion being her nine- teenth birthday. The evening was spent in games and music, after which a delicious luncheon was served. Those present were; Naomi ]enhart, Bessie Diest, | Ruth Bowman, Minnie and Pauline Swearman, Naomi Wahler, Myrtle and Edna Mankamyer. Miss Mank- amyer received some pretty and use- ful presenits. The guests departed at a late hour wishing Edna many more happy birth. days. Quite a few of our people in Glade City, spent Saturday night at Witten- burg for the purpose of witnessing the entertainment given by ithe pupils of that school. Those present from Glade City are Mrs. John Beal, Robert and William Bowman Grace and Charles Beal, Myrtle Edna and Lester Mankamyer, Minnie and Pauline Swearman, Ralph Wer- ner and Norman Fike, Ray Harding of our town unfortu- nately fell a short time ago and suf- fered a fracture of a leg, is recovering as rapidly as can be expected. Herbet Harrding, who was injured in the mines some time since, is now able to be about. The Union Sunday School of our town has become a live wire and the attendance is growing weekly and in- terest manifested is growing. Laat Sunday there were 69 children present which certainly is great when we con. sider that Glade City is only a small village. There will be preaching next Sun- day at three o’clock by Rev. Berkley, and a cordial invitation is given to the fathers and mothers of our town to at. tend. : -- wudld be politician was ounce speak- | ing before a smal] assembly in a vil- lage. In the course of his speech he Introduced some expression which dis. gusted his hearers. who thereupon’ started moving away The orator, see- ing this, put up his hands and said: “Pause, friends!" But the answer be got was from a local wag. who cried amid laughter: ; “Aye, an’ real dirty ones they are too !”’—Chicago News. ; md tt et -. ' Making Sure of It. Distriet Visitor— Well. one must do something for the suffering poor. Friend—Quite so, but are you really quite sure that they do suffer? Dis. trict Visitor—Oh, yes. I visit them and talk to them for hours at a time.—Lon- don Stray Steries. ———————— Quite a Resembiance. “Didn't you have a brother im this ceurse last year?” “No, sir; it was I. I'm taking it over again.” “Bxtraordinary resemblance, though. Positively extraordinary!” — Harvard Lampoon. or parties engaged in the stealing will be dealt with accordingly if caught. Henry Snyder, who has been laid up with rheumatism for the past few. weeks, has resumed work again, Dewey Wilkalm, of Wihipperville# was seen enroute for “Frog Hollow” ¥ last Saturday night. Misses Grace and Ada Miller, spent ; Saturday night and Sunday with their | parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Miller. Miss Ella Witt, a prominent young | school teacher of Blue Jay ‘school was in this town last Friday evening. -Thé oyster supper in St. Marks Re. | formed churrh, in spite of the rough weather was well attended last Sat: urday evening. : : : Fred Durr, is remodeling his lim. burger ‘bomb factory as there is strong talk of war, Jumbo Miller, will soon go in train- ing so as to enter the ring by Aprillst. He is the famous prize fighter of Po- cahontas, LITTLE TALKS ON HEALTH AND HYGIENE (by Dr. Samuel G. Dixon.) Army Blankets, United States army blankets are not economical for private or per- manent hospital use. "For the reader to fully appreciate this’ criticism he must disabuse his mind of a common fallacy that the purpose of blankets and clothing is to give heat off to tie body by preventing it from being taic- en off by the general atmosphere. Therefore, you want blankets soft and pliablé so that ‘they will fall of their own weight and fit snugly to the body, 50 as to prevent the air from ‘circula- ting between the blanket and the could be used in active campaigns, where it had to be carried, on the sol- diers’ backs, or on saddles of horses, or in the supply wagons, Owing to the fact that they were made of all wool, had long lives, and were made in a hog saw his shadow. ci’ The citizens of this vicinity have feed of every kind, meat, canned goods. and many other things and the party. i [ Special for this Week } PEE TER A large line of New Shirt Waists Just Arrived. I All the Newest Stripes and Colors, will be sold at 48 cents. TERN. Next Door to Post Office, AN ANCIENT. CLIFF CITY. The Ruins of Its Primitive Dwellings In. Walnut Canyon. Walnut canyon, near Flagstaff, Ariz. contains some of the most inter- esting ruins on the continent. The canyon itself is remarkable, being a thousand feet deep. a quarter mile in width at the top and a few hundred rise up in gentle slopes, but leap up- ward, tier upon tier. a giant limestone stairway. Here were conditions that appealed to primitive man. The smooth shelf or ledge formed a floor. the projecting rock a ceiling, the slop: ing strata rear walls. He had but to throw up front and side walls amd a home was completed, with a floor that would never wear out and a roof that would never leak. It is estimated that there are at least a thousand of these primitive dwell ings in the Walnut canyon. There is but a single entrance to this cliff city. The trail leads over the {ace and down the sides of the cliff and on through the ruins of one of these houses. When the walls of this building were stand ing it completely filled the width of the ledge. As no one could enter with. out passing through this house or gate- way, one man, armed with a primitive stone ax, might well have stood off an army. All articles of furniture have been carried away, but there are still traces of a fireplace, and the blackened ceil- ing tells of its long occupancy. In the substantial way, they soon found thair way into gemeral vse partielaply ja to hospitak use, and more especially into hospitals were the open air treat- | ment was necessary. The State Department of, Pennsyl- vania has its blankets made acrord- | ing to the following specifications: Double blankets not to be less than 80 in. long by not less than 60 in. wide when finished. Weight to be 4 1-2 I. per pair when finish- od . : * Warp—To be of cotton, long sta- ple. To be well carded and even- ly spun, of No. 14 yarn, 43 threads to the inch. 1 : Filling—To blend or mixture of not over 20 per cent. cotton. Bal- ' ance to all wool, staple good and true, 32 picks to the inch in fur- nished product. Color to be me dium gray. 3 Border—No color. Each pair of blankets to be bound on the ends with o 2 in. mo. hair binding. To have two ews of stitching 1-4 in. apart and to count about six stitches per inch, Bmbroidering—Each pair of blankets to be embroidered with the letters P. 8. C. 8. 4 121n high. To be in centre of blanket. —Note a blanket showing the general design and construction is on file at the Philadelphia Of fice. The army blanket is woven go cloge- Children Emancipated Powerful photodrama on subject of child Iasbor, which has the endorsement of President Wilson and Congress. See the WILLIAM FOX - PHOTOPLAY “The Price of Silence’ with that greatest of screen stars WILLIAM FARNUM —AT THE 3 ly and becomes so rigid when thrown over the body that it falls to fall in close, but stands out and permits the alr space between itself and the body. This interferes with the heat retaining qualities to the extent that after prae tical application in our large hosp! tals in the Commonwealth of Pena. sylvania we find in ithe cold high mountain regions we can get along with three softer woven blankets in- stead of having to use five army blankets. . : . 33h ghis discovery and practical avplication we not only save muen in maintaining our hospitals, but we give our patients more comfort. The/ blankets are warmer and at the same time are lighter in weight. GAS a TORIA, 1 and Chi oh Re nerve cells, and while the possibility { Tor‘the enemy. ashes and litter have been found bro- ken pieces of pettery—red, black and ray decorated in colors and with pai tories displaying ibieir artistic tastes In small pockets. dug out in the red. walls and carefully scaled ap. are sii occasionally found pieces of cloth o hemp and ther of yucca. corncobs squash shells. beans, ete.-- Exchange. - REAL DOUGHNUTS. The Genuine Old Time Cake Never Had sd iH . a Hole In It. {Why will some persons persist in speaking of the holes in doughnuts The real. genuine article never had a hole im it..~My memory goes back to 1840 and earlier: and my. boyhood ex. perience extended over a good part of Ifairfield. - Litchfield and New Haven counties. Conn;, and Westchester coun ty. N. Y.. up 40 1850. Our mothers af that time are to be regarded as the | best authority om old fashioned Amer ican cookery. . The dougknut of that period consist. ed of bread dough raised overnight. with bop meal cakes, or “emptinsg.” Sweetened with brown sugar, short ened a Mttle and fried to a rich brown in leaf lard and were somewhat larger than a goose egg and about the same shape. These were known among the ‘old Dutch New Yorkers and are scribed ia Barber's “History of New York,” published about 1840. f “Wonder cakes’ were bimilar, with a little more shortening and sweetening. The Gough was roiled about three. quarters of an fineh thick, cut 4uto squares of three inches, with three siits, which were pressed apart inte & fantastic shape, and were the idol. toed’ Sabbath day lunch. eaten under in tree or the horse shed be 3 & n the morning and afternoon serv I first remember crullers rwisted and with holes when | came to New York in 1854. ‘The very name of dough- put is suggestive of a round or oval shaped articie.—C. P. Benedict in New York Times. . t : TS ——— Why Disze-22 13 £4..cag ty Paar. An emhii CAOPHRY ote made the statemoeit (hat a great deal of contagion is due largely to nervou- apprehension and fear. Terror cause: radical chanzes in the secrétions an 1S not the direct cause of disease it cer tainly is sufficient to put the person in the proper condition to be attacked by the prevailing malady. edie oan | Its a well understood fact that ex. | | cessive anger infuses a texic element : . into » 3s the secretions. Fear ive capability the 4 down awbridge and m ~~ WEINS feet at the bottom. The sides do not | SATURDAY Muslin Underwear, mer Dress goods, broideries, TEINS A ] . SEMA UAL : | WHITE SALE | g THE WOMENS’ STORE. : , February 10 r—— pe fl) LAR Hal 10 Continuing for One Week. Waists, Skirts, Sum Linens, Curtain Ma Neckwear, In Newest Spring Patterns. M syersdale, Pa RAR Arr Org Childrens’ Dresses, terials, Laces, Em- HARTLEY, CLUTTON CO. N accouut of the severe wea. ther we have decided to con- tinue our Clean Up and White Sale over Saturday, Feb. 17th. £ BIG BARGAINS he § The Pfhaler Co, “The Store for All the People” (Continued from page one.) mp, GARRETT Personals, C. T. Bittner, who ig empoyed at Pittsburg is spending a few days at his home on Walker street. Bill Henderson, of McKeesport is Miss Clara Bittner, spent a few days of last week at Somerset at the home of her uncle, Mr. Mahlon Meyers. Mrs. Geo. Smith and daughter. Vel- ma were Meyersdale visitors Mon lay, Miss Verda Brant and Miss Margaret Seibert, of Martins. burg, W, Vt, spent Friday and satur day at Berlin visiting friends, Rev. H. H. Maust, of Berlin Was a Garrett visitor last Thursday. Miss Marie Weller, of Rockwood: is visiting her friend, Miss Nell B. Brant | on Church street. Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Bittner and fami- ly, atttended the funeral of Mrs. Bitt- ner’s father. at Somerset this week. epending a few days with, friends in | day, Garrett. : her guest, | day. Mr: and: Mrs. James McIntyre, spent | Sunday in Hyndman. : ? [ Mr. Irvin Engle, of ‘Berlin wag a| | business visitor here Tuesday. iiss Josie. daneht of Mr. a er « and Mrg 1¢ ( : last Sunday, where she will undergo an. operation | 2 | ! for appendicitis, | | spent - ° GLENCOE Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Love and daught- er. Elizabeth of Pittsburg, were Sun. day guests of J, L. Snyder. Mrs. Mary R. Poorbaugh, is visiting relatives and friends in Meyersdale this week. - r Mesdames W. Cook and F. Aldridge were Hyndman shoppers on Wednes- Geo. Bittner, wag given a pleasant birthday surprise by thirty of hip friends on February 13. Hig twenty first celebration, #7 Harry Bittner and wife of Rockwood Were guests of relatives here on Bais H. M. Poorbaugh, was nate ag to day. any complication later. The construction work on the bridge ; at Foley Tower is about completed, as yet we don’t know just for whom we should weep. Some of our own swains talk of following the gang, Mrs. W. H. Miller, was a Cumber. land shopper on Wednesday. Marion Leydig, entertained for a | few friends on Thursday night, Mrs. H. M. Bittner and childran, two days with her mother, Mrs, slrode who je 311 # 7 t Cc AST ORIA ge gestion better edition er read and ec <0 or i hats, fq Save sible, If you cars or or arm hold it it will n going on are swi - Never ing dire get it ov er shiniz Try a at an an from the in your « The co sidering things. white pa; ing or ty along the black, TI Or figures buff pape convince latter the distinct t trast of b The des * reading m ial that w the lighit i ritate the ‘When y¢ by the use too learned and the m it is subjec vice. Ofte glasses sel ted in med done with more, ‘one of se i It is the he was’nt ht to sqgueel.