Kha A Ar Bed A Ga a or REE SRR TTT Le i i f——— WE RRS TS TT TPS SRL i} NZ, Lan- . be- was mes rink THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL ALE PA “Bull” “rolling your own. for “the makings”. cigarette brims over with sparkle of sprightly spirits. SMOKING Carolina leaf, in the world. Durham. joy in smoking. An Illustrated Booklet, I : RI < FREY correct way to XY oxy Own . iifboth be a he one pre Vil high n sEquest "Address “Bull” A aaa N . THE AMERICAN TOBACCO CO. The Clubby Smoke —“Bull” Durham You start something lively when you produce Durham in a crowd o That fresh, mellow-sweet fragrance of “Bull” Durham makes everyone reach A hand-rolled “Bull” GENUINE ‘BULL DURHAM Made of rich, ripe Virginia-North “Bull” Durham is the mildest, most enjoyable tobacco No other cigarette can be so full of life and youthful vigor as a fresh-rolled cigarette of “Bull” “Roll your own” with “Bull” Durham and you'll discover a new LEADS BRITISH TRODPS IN TURKISH CAMPAL - live-wires and start Durham zest and snap and the TOBACCO Ask tor FRE E package of ‘‘papers’ with each 5c sack. LIGHTING A CATHEDRAL. Simple Yet Spectacular Method at St. Isaac’s, In Petrograd. In au article in the Atiantic Monthly describing a midnight mass on Easter eve in St. Isaac’s cathedral. Petrograd. Warrington Dawson says: “A sudden blaze of innumerable can dles, hanging high overhead in great chandeliers, tore away the gloom and told us that the ceremony was to be gin. At the Isaakiewski Sobor one match did what a switch or button does elsewhere, save that here the opera- ton was as ingenious and initiative as could be devised, instead of being . a machine made contrivance scattered by millions over the world. “A waxed string, an end of which hung down within easy reach from the marble paving, ran from one wick to another, then from group to group from chandelier to chandelier, until all the candles in the cathedral were connected. The match was applied to that string. A spark spitting tiny flame raced up to the first candle and so sped on its way, an earnest, busy little lamplighter, quick as the snap of a finger, adroit as a monkey and almost anfailing in its success. “Amorg the hundreds I saw it reach I counted very few which did not blaze ! at the touch, and most of these flared an instant and sputtered out, showing that the string’s work at least had been done. The general effect, indeed. was as if each wick had been an elec- tric bulb, but the whole, instead of lighting when one switch was turned. depended upon a hand swept over suc- cessive buttons.” The Kitchen Floor. A practical way of dealing with the kitchen floor and at the same time economizing labor, is to cover it with a plain, dark colored linoleum, such as. red, blue, green or black, and to polish it. A shiny surface is easy to sweep up and keep clean, and if polished once a week on the other days it need only be run over with a mop. If treated in this way it will always Iook nice and will save at least twenty minutes’ work 4 day.—St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Fogs of Peru. Peru has hundreds of square miles along its coast of rainless country. In this tract rain is never known to fall Yet the region is not entirely barren of vegetation. Some parts of it, indeed, are eomparatively fertile. This is due to the extraordinary fogs known as “garuas.” They prevail every night from May to October after a summer that is sultry and extend up to a level of 1,200 feet above the sea. Above 1,200 feet rain falls. When Wild Wir Blow. Most of us are apt to look on a storm simply a strong Wh d blowing one place to another It ight fre t all, for a storm y, and a storm is 1Irve, not real a wind, but a whole W el | Des eter, several but BEWITCHED HIS HEARERS. When James Whitcomb Riley Recited One of His Poems. In his platform career,” during those years when he went about the country reading his poems, James Whitcomb Riley saw with his eyes and heard with his ears what people thought of him. Never any other man stood night after night on the stage or platform to receive such solid roars of applause for the “reading” of poems— and for himself. He did not “read” his poems; he dia not “recite” them, either. He took his whole body inte his hands, as it were, and by his wizard mastery of sugges- tion left no James Whitcomb Riley at all upon the stage. Instead the au dience saw and heard whatever the incomparable comedian wished them to*see and hear. He held a literally unmatched power over them for riot- ous laughter or for actual copious tears. and no one who ever saw an exhibi- tion of that power will forget it—or forget him. There he stood, alone upon the stage, a blond, shortish, whimsical man in evening clothes—a figure with ‘‘a whole lot of style” and a whole lot of its own style too! He offered a deferen- tial prefatory sentence or so; then sud- denly face and figure altered, seemed to merge completely into those of a person altogether different from the poet, and not Mr. Riley, but a ITooslicr farm hand, perhaps, or a thin little gir stood before you, “done to the life.” Then the volce came, ‘done to the life.” too—done to the last half audi- ble breath at the end of husky chuckle or wistful sigh. There was no visible effort on the part of the magician. The audience did not strain or worry for him as audiences so often do for those who “entertain” them, because his craft lay not in contortion, but in a glamouring suggestion that held spec- tators rapt and magnetized. Nat Goodwin's opinions upon the production of realistic pathos in com- edy may be accepted as academic. Mr. Goodwin said: “I used to recite ‘Good by, Jim’—until I heard Riley do it. Then I asked the Lord to forgive me and never tried it again!”—Booth Tar- kington in Collier's Weekly. “Careless. “Burglar broke into Brown’s house the other night.” Photo by American I’ress AsSs0Cialion. GENERAL F. S. MAUDE. General Maude by his recapture of | Kut-el-Amara avenges the reverse suf- | fered by General Townshend when the | latter was: compelled to surrender to! the Turks his garrison of 9,000 men | after a hard siege. A GENERAL SURVEY OF THE WAR An armed transport steamer of 34, 494 tons with about 500 colonial troops, artillery and horses, on board, was sunk by a German submarine in the Mediterranean on Feb. 24, the Ger- man admiralty announced. Some of the troops were lost. A troop-laden transport of about 5,000 tons was sunk on Feb. 23, it was also announced. A 9,000-ton transport under escort, is reported sent to the bottom on Feb. 17, south of Malta, while the sinking of thirteen other vessels of a total of more than 25,000 tons, is recorded. The statement adds that thirteen other vessels have been sunk. the Franco-Belgian front north of the Somme and on the east bank of the Meuse in the Verdun region, German army headquarters announced. A british destroyer was sunk with BERLIN ADMITS un T0 TAKE PRECAUTIONS por ts abou. ‘that Gerraaany, after the proclamatio. Lively engagements took place ot: AMERICAN PLOT. Zimmermann Says Conditions Made Move Imperative German Foreign Office. Attempted to Ally Japan and Mexico Against Unit- ed States In Case of War. Foreign Secretary Zimmermann Of Germany has admitted in part and de- fended Germany's action in seeking to | -ally Japan and Mexico against the United States. The plot was revealed by President Wilson and the Wash- ington government last week. A diipaten won Jerin’ quoted Zim- meri.ialil as say.ng: “Yue American press contains re- cztrucuons from ithe min- | istry of 10.0 ga afiar, to the German | mins ier i. Mex.co C..y, in the event | { ne 3 : { of” uuresir.c.ed submarine warfare,’ failed to keep the United States neu- s tral. lowing facts: “After the decision had been taken to beg.n unrestricted submarine war-! fare on Keb. 1 we had to reckon in view of the previous attitude of the United States government with the possibility of conflict with that gov- ernment. That this calculation was right was proved by the fact that the American government severed diplo- matic relations, with Germany soon after the proclamation of a barred zone and asked other neutrals to fol- low her example. “These reports are based on the fol- | was not only the right but also the duty of our government to take pre- cautions in time—in the event of a military conflict with the United States—in order to balance if possible the adhesion to our foes of a new enemy. The German minister at Mex- ico, therefore, was instructed in the middle of January that in the event of the United States declaring war he should offer to the Mexican govern- ment an ‘alliance and arrange further details. These instructions, by the way, expressly directed the minister to make no advances to the Mexican . government unless he knew for a’ cer- tainty that America was going to de- clare war. " “How the American government re- ceived information of the instructions sent by a secret way to Mexico is not all hands in the North sea on Thurs- day, the English admiralty announced. It is belicved she struck a mine, the announcement states. The British troops in their forward movement in the Ancre area in France have made another advance east of Gommecourt along a two-mile front of about two-thirds of a mile, according to the official report from headquarter-. “oc -rly 200 prisoners were capiur~d. LIVE STOCY 730 CRAIN Pittsburgh, March 6. Butter—Prints, 44@44'%c; tubs, 43 @43%c. Eggs—Fresh, 37c. Cattle—Prime, $10.50@11; good, $9.756@10.35; tidy butchers, $9@9.50; fair, $8@8.75; common, $7@7.75; heif- ers, $6@9.75; common to good fat bulls, $5@8.560; common to good fat cows, $4@8; fresh cows and spring- ers, $40@85. Sheep and Lambs—Prime wethers, $11.50@12; good mixed, $10.560@11.25; fair mixed, $9.25@10.25; culls and common, $5@6.50; heavy ewes, $6@9; spring lambs, $11@14.50; veal calves, $12@12.50; heavy and thin calves, $6 @9. Hogs—Prime heavy, $14.20@14.25; heavy mixed, $14.10@14.15; medi- ums and heavy Yorkers, $14.10; light! Yorkers, $13.50@13.75; pigs, $12.26@ 12.75; roughs, $12.50@13.25; stags. $11@11.25. : Cleveland, March 6. Cattle—Choice fat steers, 1,100 pounds and upward, $9.756@10.50; choice fat steers, $1,000 pounds and upward, $9.25@9.50; good to choice butcher steers, $8.75@9; fair to good butcher steers, $8.256@8.50; common to light steers, $6 50@7.25; choice heif- ers, $8.26@8.50; light heifers, $7.26@ @8; bologna bulls, $6.755@7.50; good to choice cows, $7@8; fair to good cows, $5.50@6.50; common cows, $4 @5. Calves—Good to choice, $12@12.50; “Did they get anything?” “Nothing but some jewelry. They : overlooked a steak and a dozen fresh eggs that were in the icebox.”—Detroit i Free Press. Coney Island. Coney Island was called Coneyn or Rabin Island bv the Dutch Henry Hudson ne 1SONn river, on such a « man o has conquered hin $13.75; mixed, $18.70; Yorkers, $13.65. pigs, $12; roughs, $11.50. Sheep and Lambs—Good to choi ce lambs, $14@14.35; fair to good, common, $9@ ood to choice wethers, Z : | 13.50; culls and i 7) | £ 11.60: good to choice ewes, alll - 82 r Wheat—May, 91.8% %. Corn—Ma; , $1.063%%. Oats—May, b9%e. 8; good to choice butcher bulls, $7.50 | fair to good, $10.50@11; heavy and | Hogs—Choice mediums and heavies, $12.50; stags, | known. It appears, however, that the treachery—and it only must have been treachery—wag committed on German territory.” The note which Zimmermann sent to the German minister in Mexico City and which was revealed by Pres- ident Wilson was as follows: “Berlin, Jan. 19, 1917. “On the first of February we intend to begin submarine warfare unrestrict- ed. In spite of this, it is our inten- tion to endeavor to keep neutral the United States of America. “If this attempt is not successful we propose an alliance on the follow- ing basis with Mexico: That we shall | make war together and together make peace. We shall give general financial support and it is understood that Mex- ico is to reconquer the lost territory in New Mexico, Texas and Arizona. The details are left to you for settlement. “You are instructed to inform the president of Mexico of the above in the greatest confidence as soon as it is certain that there will be an out- break of war with the United States and suggest that the president of Mex- ico, on his own initiative, should com- municate with Japan suggesting ad- herence at once to this plan; at the same time, offer to mediate between Germany and Japan.” MUCH LEGISLATION UNFINISHED AT END Sixty-Fourth Congress Adjourns With Only Two Administration Measures Passed. Of all the legislation on the admin- istration program proper only two measures, the revenue bill and the measure giving civil government to , Porto Rico and American citizenship to its inhabitants got through the leg- islative tangle at the close of the Among the administration bills which failed were the measures to supplement the Adamson law, the bill “Anticipating these possibilities it to enlarge the interstate commerce commission, the Webb bill to legalize | | joint foreign selling agencies and con- | | servation legislation, including the | | general dam bills and water power | | bills. Bills which did not form part | © | of the original program, but which were pressed unsuccessfully by cabi net officers and administration lead | session. { | ers late in the sess included | amendments to tl 8 g act to give president comman- | deer nit nd 1 stic espionagt bill whici as 5 oy tne but ney was 1 up in house. . The a Wr $ET0( Dist dian, 3 2 # sular, $5,600,000, and urge: $5,000,000. | attempt wise Children Cry for Fletcher's The Kind You Have Always — and which has been in use for over over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his per- LZ sonal supervision since its infancy. Cdl Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and * Just-as-good ”’ are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor 0Qil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups . It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. For been in constant use for the r Wind Colic and Diarrhoea ; more than thirty years it has elief of Constipation, Fiatulency, allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids” The Children’s Panacea—Th the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. ¢ Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALways Bears the & Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Ha ve Always Bought JHE centaur COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY, WE v PR | SHELL SHOCK IN BATTLE. | A Curious Fact That Only Unwounded | Men Suffer From 1t. By the methods of modern war no | inconsiderable proportion of battlefield | casualties are due to shel shook. 5 | a] | new terror of battle and one that was | unknown before the advent of later | day high explosives. | It is a curious fact that only un-| wounded men suffer from shell shock. Eminent surgeons say that a wound | neutralizes the psychic sense—in ple ain | English that nerves do not affect a wounded man in the same way as an unwounded one. For shell shock is nothing more or less than a nervous breakdown—a ter- ribly intensive breakdown that physi- cians find most difficult to cure. It is elitirely a mental cause, and though it is called shell shock it has very little to do with shells. There are men, brave men, too, who find the strain of war too great for their mental stamina. They see terri- ble sights and hear terrible things, and these react upon them temperamentally and physically. Gradually, perhaps un- consciously, their ability to resist is overborne. Their mental power is ex- hausted. They become afraid—dread- fully, terribly afraid--and the end is only a matter of time. A certain cure has yet to he found, though severe electrical treatment has had some effect.—London Answers. Wasted Power. Professor Charles Baskerville, head of the department of chemistry in the College of the City of New York, stated in a recent interview regarding the work of modern chemists: “In any chemical problem there is no telling where the chemist will stop. Just now there are many chemists working on the problem of free gas. An immeasurable lot of power is wast- ed in the dumps of our coal mines. If this waste were reduced to gas by the retort process enough ammonia might be produced as a byproduct to pay for the whole cost of the operation, making the gas free. The gas could then be used to generate electric power. Really, one big railroad ought to be running on the power it is now throwing away in these supposedly worthless dumps.” Employment Managers. The function of securing the right kind of help and seeing to it that that help makes continued progress toward maximum efficiency is second to no other in any factory, and for this rea- son the manager of the employment department must have absolute author- ity over those functions or at least must have first hand access to the ear of the Silene administrative author- ity.—R. C. Clothier in Industrial Man Se — Coolness Under Difficulties. The grammar school principal went from room to room explaining what to do in case of fire. The pupils listened FOR WOW EN © i70TORISTS. Some Things a Gort Driver Should and Should Not Do. The good (river ¢f a motorcar never brakes swiftly except in an When drawing up at a e she cuts off igniticn early momentum to carry the street s and allows eur to the stepping place, using tbe service brakes gradually, The good driver thus saves gasoline and wear upon brakes, coasting to a stop with the smoothness of operation of an easy start. A good driver never uses the emer- gency brake, because she never has ge s. She sees and avoids the before it arrives. The poor driver rushes into trouble and depends upon quickness in grabbing the emer- gency lever to save life. More than one accident has followed a futile at- tempt to find the scldom used emer~ gency lever in a hurry. The good driver rounds sharp cor- ners to the right and goes over ex- tremely rough stretches of road or hit unexpected “thank you ma'ams’” with clutch disengaged, to save the rear axle mecha 1. The goed driver uses the wheel with the least possible motion. She does not drag it suddenly from side to side, but turns it so gradually that passen- gers are unconscious of the fact. In rounding a corner she commences tot straighten the car up before it is half- way around. — Woman's Home Coms panion. RECORD COAL LOADING. Uncle Sam’s Plant at Cristobal Is the Fastest In the World. The good work of the Cristobal coal loading plant at the isthmus of Pana- ma is the subject of a report receiv ed at the war department from one of its boards, whose conclusions are the engineers and is probably the mosft efficient loading plant in the world. If was found that the minimum perform. ance during the test was 1,950 tons an hour and the maximum 2,486 tons. The minimum occurred when one of the four diggers was temporarily out of commission, due to a defective bucket, At 2400 tons an hour the plant far exceeds the work of any other known plant for loading steamships or even of railroad !- ading plants. The canal collier Ulysses was loaded at the rate of 1,650 tons an hour, and 12,000 tons chant ships cannot be loaded at this rapid rate, as their hatches are too small and their bunkers are not ar- ranged to admit of such work. This is a feature in shipbuilding that is be- ing carefully taken care of nowadays in constructing ships that are to pass through the canal. All new United States naval colliers are so built that they can be loaded at high speed. An Eye to Business. with respectful attention until he game 1 instructions, then smiles les disturbed the vrihoipars to his and 2 | serenity. TADOVE { 128 ) clo i 1 ure 1 s } 0 a n Men who are ad « | ish things that they la the ones will er “This play is the worst ever 1 am | 20 to demand my meney ii ‘Wail unti : { man. Ten ye Aled =, ¢ Tho be the mo viol \ existence that the plant fully meets the plans of were put on her in eight hours. Mer-~