—— THE MEVERSDALE COMMERCi:.. “AZYERSDALE, PA. “DUCKING” IN BATTLE. Little Chance For Dodging Modern High Velocity Bullets. Although under the altered condi- tions of modern warfare both officers | and men take all the cover they can get, it is still considered “bad form” to duck when bullets are whistling or shells screaming overhead. This is a survival of the old Crimean days, when men were actually punished for ducking bullets in battle. That the Service tradition was not always strict- ly observed even then, however, is ap- parent from a story told of a grizzled old veteran who, on being remonstrat- ed with by a young corporal for indul- gence in this very practice, replied, “It’s all very well for you, m’lad, but I'm a family man,” and continued to duck at each report. It is on record, too, that Napoleon strongly objected to it, and on one occa- sion he even went to the length of publicly reprimanding one of his staff officers for stooping over his horse's neck in order to avoid the balls he heard whistling over his head. General Gordon, no mean authority, was of a different opinion, though. Writing in his journal, he says, “For my part, I do not consider judicious ducking to be a fault, for I remember on two occasions seeing shells before my eyes which certainly, had I not bobbed, would have taken off my head.” Needless to say, however, it would be impossible to dodge a modern high velocity projectile in this free and easy fashion. It cannot be seen, and by the time it is heard the danger is past.— London Mail. COMFORT IN THE HOME. A Man's Notion of How the Roome and Things Should Look. A young newly married man com- plained recently that he almost dread. ed taking a friend home to dinner be- cause his wife, every time she expected Company, imagined it was necessary to scrub the house from garret to cellar and polish every bit of silver on the sideboard. It made him uncomfortable all day long to think of his wife giving herself this wholly unnecessary trouble. , "Of course, a man likes to see his home looking nice when he takes an ,6ld chum into it—and of course the ‘chum does too,” he said. “But I'd be far happier if I could convince my wife that a house can look tidy even if it ’t been gone over that very day. “I lke the books to look a little dis- orderly. You get the feeling that ey’re being read all the time, and t's what books are for. And I like the music on the piano to be a trifle disarranged. It looks as if we really ‘sang the songs, and it gives a room that cozy home feeling that a fellow ‘doves. What if the curtains aren’t just in every window? Things ought look as if they were touched and Were used and enjoyed. If the sofa Cushions are dented you know some @ne has leaned against them. Isn’t that What they're for? But if they stare at Jou in a prim row you're a brave man you dare to put your back against them—much léss your tired head! “And when a fellow comes home at aight he usually has a tired head! — Irish World. * Fly Killers. One recommendation of the depart- ent of agriculture for getting rid of files 1s powdered hellebore. This when Yrinkled on the manure heaps in which { flies lay their eggs destroys the larvae and does not in any way spoil manure, e Journal of the American Medical “Association says the hygienic labora- pry of the public health service has ound in salicylic acid an eminently satisfactory agent for killing adult files. This, it says, is not an objec- tionable substance to handle, and there Is little danger of toxic effects from ac- cldental consumption of considerable doses of it. A 1 per cent solution of salicylic acid should be sweetened and left in shallow saucers where flies will easily fing it, empleo meas “Crossing the Bar.” Lord Tennyson's most noble death mg, “Crossing the Bar,” is one of the hire greatest death songs ever writ ben, and it comes to us as a sublime Prayer, a humble petition. a sacred be of a great man. The last Ione man on this terrestrial sphere will utter no gander words when he sets sail to #sas unknown than those dropped as #ith’s anchor by the silent man of the ester age: 0 hope m t face to face en: Tha os the bar. : Faithful Cook. “Did you ever hear of a cook stay- fg with the same family as long as ty years?” h, yes.” “I presume si:e was called a jewel >’ “She doubtless was considered one, bit the family called her ‘mother.’ "— gham Age-Herald. et i Replacing a Meat Dist. The people of the United States con- sume fully twice as much meat per cap- fa as do the people of Europe. Dried Beans, peas and lentils may replace meat in the diet to a large extent to he advantage of outdoor workers espe- Too Late. Betective—So I've caught you in the fiaencial district, have I? Crook—Yes, MW, but I can’t slip you nothing. I just Jot away from a broker.—New York e. Better Stil: Mary—Why don’t you prefer Harold #% Tom? Harold is capable of big Maude—Yes; but Tom owns @me, —Puck. SIX SIDED SNOW CRYSTALS. ! That Is Nature’s Law, but Why It Is { So Science Cannot Explain. Snow crystals obey an immutable law of six. They are six sided jewels or six pointed stars. They never an- swer to the law of four or five. ‘Snow is crystallized water, and water always | crystallizes in six sided forms. Why? No one ever will know. There is no more apparent reason for the sixness of crystallized water than there is for the monoclinic prisms of sugar crys- tals. Water and sugar and the com- plex minerals which make the granite rock all follow laws which are utter- ly unchangeable, but which are, as far as We can see, without any special rea- son. It is as profitable to speculate why the chlorophyll of vegetation is green and why the blood of animals is red. 1 | The whiteness of the snow is under- standable. It is due to the fusion of prismic colors scintillating from the countless surfaces of minute crystals, Human sclence comprehends this. It also comprehends the fact that snow is a poor conductor of beat and thus prevents terrestrial radiation and keeps the earth and the things in the earth snug and warm under the white blan- i ket which is softer and finer than | lamb’s wool or eiderdown. Science | knows why snow is white and why it is beneficent, but it cannot explain the ! law of six. | It is well that snow cannot be al- | together explained. | earth's most beautiful mysteries. It would lose something in beauty were |! it to lose all its mystery.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. BANKS “LOAN” MONEY. They Don’t “Lend” It Because It is a Business Transaction. Why is it banking houses always “loan” their huge sums of money, nev- er by any chance “lend” them? “Lend” is the true verb, while “loan’ was ex- clusively the noun. How came it about that “to loan” has uniformly supplant- ed “to lend?” ) ? he purists make a great fuss about this, They insist that the stupid and untaught financial world has foisted upon the language a substantive verb when no new verb was needed, when the ancient and established usage was fixed in the signification of “to lend.” But prior to the modern development of business enterprise when money was lent, it was bestowed upon the bor- rower either for temporary use with- out compensation, as a mark of favor or patronage, or by the professional money lender who, taking advantage of persons in extremities of need, de- manded usurious interest. This Anglo- Saxon verb today retains its ancient connotation. When it was coined the productive powers of money were un- known and the wealth of rich men was locked up for safety and kept out of the channels of commerce. Nowadays, by devices of credit and rapid intercommunication, it is kept constantly working in productive en- terprises. Immense loans are made, no longer to relieve the necessitous and the improvident, but to stimulate in- dustry and to enable the borrower as well as the loaner to reap a profit in his transactions. Mouey is “loaned” in this sense. It is not lent.— New York Times. The People of India. | The population of India speak about i 150 different languages and are divid- ed up into’ forty-three distinct nation- alities. There are 2,378 main castes | besides a large number of subcastes. | There are 200,000,000 Hindus, 60,000, | 000 Mohammedans, while among the | Hindus there are 50,000,000 of degrad- ed people of no caste, whose touch or | even shadow is supposed to cause pol- lution. Limited in number, but mighty in in- fluence, are the Parsees, who hold the wealth of Bombay in the hollow of their hands and dwell in the loveliest mansions around the coast. They con- . form to European customs and live as much like Europeans as is possible for ; a colored race. Yet these people still i Worship the sun. —_—— The Seychelles Islands. The Seychelles islands form an archi. pelago of 114 islands and are situated about 1,400 miles east of Aden and | 1,000 miles from Zanzibar, They rise steeply out of the sea, culminating in | the isle of Mahe, which is about 3,000 | feet above the level of the ocean and | i8 nearly the center of the group. All the islands are of coral growth. The sive coral hewn into square blocks which glisten like white marble. Trying to Oblige. “What's your name, my poor man?’ asked the kind hearted woman. “Lady,” replied Plodding Pete un- blushingly, “me name is ‘Lord Reginald Courtenay Thorpe.’ ” “Are you sure that’s your real name?” “No, I Jes’ thought it *ud be a nice name fur you to use if you wanted to put de fact dat you had given me a sandwich an’ a cup o’ tea in de society Rews.”—Washington Star. There Are Others. “It is very strange that no ome has over been able to find Captain Kidd's treasure.” “Oh, well, Captain Kidd isn’t the real estate and couldn't get it out.”— 8t. Louis Post-Dispatch. : The Whole Period. when she thinks of nothing but dress.” “What period is that?” “From the cradle to the grave.”— Puck. Beauty is the first present nature glves to women and the first it takes away.—Mere It is one of the | INDUSTRIAL ACCIDENTS. The Large and Puzzling Part “Man Failure” Plays In Them. the statement made at a “safety” meet- ing that 10 per cent only of industrial accidents are due to machine failures, the remaining 90 per cent being wholly chargeable to “man failure.” Students, however, will not be satis fied with the simple statement, but will want to know something more, espe- cially as to conditions that contribute to this appallingly large percentage charg- ed directly to man’s share in the fault. It will not do to say that in each in- stance wanton carelessness is blame.- able. Psychologists are no longer con- tent with that explanation, but are go- Ing deeper into the causation of acci- dents, seeking to determine Just why the normal mental processes at times break and the Interrupted co-ordination between brain and body ends in disas- ter. , In the matter of interpreting railway signals, for example, it has been set up that registered impressions vary as to individuals and that likewise individ- uals react in different ways to the fm. pressions given. | Emergencies invariably arise in the , operations of modern Industry similar | to those in the transportation service, . and, while the safety device may work | with mechanical accuracy, the human | factor cannot be depended .upon.— | Omaha Bee, a —————— | FRUIT AS A FOOD. | Only Figs, Dates and Maybe Bananas Are Really Nutritious, “Fruit of all kinds, when mature and | fresh, is beneficial for healthful diges- tion, good quality of blood and as a preventive of clogging of the liver, kid- neys and skin and, last but not least, the brain. “It is a mistake, however,” writes W. Howard James, M. D., in Good Health, “to look on fruit as a source of nourishment. It should not be taken with that idea. It should be looked on more as the lubricator which makes | the machinery work harmoniously and { without destructive friction. “Some fruits may certainly be rank- ed as food, such as figs, dates and per- haps bananas. Those in the tropics, who live largely on the banana, we are ' told, develop considerable abdominal distention on account of the quantity taken. With the exception of the date and the fig, fruit should never be con- , sidered as a food. “The taking of fruit often does good | by lessening the amount of food taken. | We are a generation of dyspeptics on account of excess of food, insufficient oxidation and lack of proper supply of fruit and pure water.” ” Codfish Will Eat Anything. The cod has the reputation of being Detite for posters and old tin cans is the subject of frequent Jests. The va- ried nature of what the cod swallows is not more remarkable than the enor- mous quantity. According to a writer in the Scotsman, such articles as sil- ver brooches, clasp knives, books and rubber balls have been found in its stomach. One fisherman of Aberdeen has a stone that weighs more than a pound taken from a cod that had swal- lowed it for the sea anemones with which it was covered. The same fish- erman has also found specimens of al- most all the stalk eyed crustaceans that frequent the northeast coast of Scotland and of every kind of fish that a cod can master, including its own young. Cod have been known to swal- | low partridges, guillemots and hares. Dangerous Sport. First Lady (reading a newspaper)— This golf seems to be a very danger- ous game. Did you see what happen- ed to a man named Taylor? He went into a bunker and was in two when he came out. Second Lady—How dreadful! | “Yes, here are the words, “Taylor ' getting out in two; Braid secured a half.’ ” “Well, Tommy ?” “Does it say what happened to the ' other half?" “No, but there was worse to follow. According to the report, Taylor then . Tell completely to pieces.”—HExchange. er ——— Altering the Map Without War. In a world where nations grow and ' decay, where forces change and popu- Bouses are built of a species of mas- : lations become cramped, it is not pos- sible or desirable to maintain the stat- Su quo forever. If peace is to be pre- served, nations must learn to accept | unfavorable alterations of the map | without feeling that they must first be defeated in war or that in yielding they incur a humiliation.—Bertrand | Russell in Atlantic Monthly. EE ————————————— No Discrimination. “I'm afraid father-in-law doesn’t care much about me,” said the young man. “He finds fault with most everything I do.” “Nonsense!” repHed his wife. “You | | don’t know his ways. He is treating ; you just like one of the family.”—Ex- | only man who has put his money into “TLere is a period in a woman’s life i | change. Ear of the Whale. The orifice of the whale’s ear is scarcely perceptible, yet it is said that the whale’s hearing is so acute that a ship crossing its track half a mile dis- tant will cause it to dive instantly. True. Professor—Now, what wag the cause of the decline of the Roman empire? Bright Student—I xnow. It was due to too much militarism on the part of outsiders, Believe me. it is piadence that first forsakes the wretched. Ova i CC ARCS RE Close observers are not astounded by : Ie OPPENHEIMER CLOTHES as omnivorous as the goat, whose ap- -—ald more. Service. Suits, $15 aright to expect. business has been Spring s designers are creato leading clothiers. 7% fs Oppenheimer Clothes Will Please You There is much satisfaction in wearing clothes that really please you. Oppenheimer Clothes do that ey give you the service you have For sixty years the Oppenheimer conducted on that one idea, tyles are right, as usual, Our IS not guessers. to $28. WHOLESALE EXCLUSIVELY 115-123 Seventh Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. Troisers, $2 to $6. eM. OPPENHEIMER , @& CO. For sale by Femmes He ABOUT EXTRAVAGANCE. Nature Sets an Example, and Many Poor Mortals Feliow it. , Extravagance is a relative term usually misapplied. If a man is worth a hundred million it would not be con- jidered extravagant for him to spend & hundred thousand dollars on goldfish if he wanted to. If a family of ten people living on $1,000 a year should get their pictures taken that would be extravagance. Hxtravagance is an exceeding of the speed iimit. But Who shall ssy what this is? extra is often necessary. Vagance is often nece . | The stn is extravegant—the greatest heat prodigal. So is mature. Sosa river. Rain clouds are horrible exam- bles of extravagance. They pour out all their possessions without regard to what they get in return and then fade away. How like some people that Is, break you, and not caring! The. chief fault eof extravagance, whatever it may be, is not so mrch in the results it brings about, which may be good or bad, ag in the time it wastes. It is immoral because it takes sway from our capacity for indulging n the Bay Soy of life. isn’t the money you spend; & = the time you take to spend 1 that causes the damage.—Life, GOOD AND BAD MANNERS. And the Brand Used In the Privacy of the Home Circle. fifth Men with bad manners are 3 very successful in life because their competitors and opponents lose their tempers, thus making it easy persons with the had manners gf? $F “feat them. Before a bad mannered per- Soh becomes wealthy he is known as a selfish boor. Afterward he is sa’d to There is grave danger that while a bad mannered person is still in the boor class some strong minded and strong muscled individual may resent his bad manners and spread his fea- tures hither and yon over his face with & few brisk and well directed blows of a pair of No. i1 fists. If one cares to run the risk, bad manners are great things on which to gamble.—Kenneth L. Roberts in Life. The Anclent Dragon. The pterodactyl, whose fossil remains have been found in the chalk at Cam- bridge, England, and elsewhere, with & very varied spread of wings, which | in the largest specimens must bave reached twenty-five feet, is almost iden- tical with the dragon of fable. A bat like creature, with an elevated hody| and long neck ending in an absurdly small head with a portentous. beak, it! could run very swiftly, was a fish eater and could swim, or it. fleys by means of huge membranous. wings, -which con: | aected its long fore quarters with its 3 hind legs. The pterodactyl evidently existed down to a comparatively recent geological period, and it is not at an improbable that the traditional dragon Is described from the last living spect mens as met with by primitive man, Hard to Endure. “My dear. should die don’t let that irrepressible wag, Snoofers, be one of the pallbear- | “Oh, don’t taik about. dying, Hen | ry!” answered the tearful woman. “But 1 must. keeping the other pallbearers chuckling gall the way out to the cemetery and back to town gets on my neives.”— Birmingham Age-Herald. Literary Inference. “Who wrote “The heights by great] en reached and kept were not at tained by sudden flight, but they while thelr companions slept were toiling up- ward in the night?” “lI dunno. Must have been 80s Poet said the sick man, *“4f 1 ; The idea of Snoofers| who hadn't heard about the eight hour day.”—Washington Star.