vi v DET re dy edd adhe § Ee —— sponds to the shutter. THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, MEYERSDALE, PA. Fall in Te with hundreds of thousands of red- blooded smokers of the good old U.S, A. Smoke the cigarette tobacco that's been an American insti- tution for three generations—“Bull” Durham, The rich, relishy, star-spangled taste of “Bull” Durham puts the national spirit of get-up-and-hustle into your hand-rolled cigarette. “Bull” Durham is the fres snappiest, liveliest of smokes. GENUINE ‘BuLL DURHAM - SMOKING TOBACCO “Roll your own” with “Bull” Durham and you'll find a far greater satisfaction in smoking your ciga- rette than you ever did before." Made of the richest, mild- Ask f 2%, FRE E ‘papers’ back ee Sc sack est leaf grown, “Bull” Durham has a delightful mellow-sweet flavor found innoothertobacco. Men who never smoked cigarettes before are now “roll- GENUINE DURHAM | ing their own” with “Bull” Durham. FRE Opn C1 taerariess + ao cigar: t+ papers, wii bath Ta tian, Sree, tn any addrees in €. eon request, Address “Built” | url.am, Dutham, N.C. THE AMERICAN TOBACCO CO. STRUCTURE OF THE EYE. Why We See Better In a Moderate Than In a Glaring Light. An observant chauffeur, passing an automobile with glaring headlights, noted that objects at the side of the road which had been distinctly visible dropped out of sight when the Deighi lights were thrown upon them. one can see better in a little light in no light, he wondered, why can one not see better in bright light than fn moderate light? The answer is, paradoxically, that the less light there is the better one sees, for the brighter the object the less efficient is the eyesight. Ir, after We have been in ‘darkness, we sudden- ly turn on a bright light and look at our eyes in a mirror we can see the pupil of the eye rapidly growing small- er. If we reduce the light the pupil dilates again. What happens is the same as in the camera when we ad- Just the shutter to the intensity of the light. The ‘colored iris of the eye corre- It consists chiefly of a muscle which, as the light increases, is stimulated to contract. thus drawing the curtain and shutting out some of the superfluous light. It wslally takes a few seconds for this adjustment to take place. Thus when ‘We emerge from pins into light we koi Spe ~ oof i da oe Ya Gaile "WHE Maite gre: Rha ler Tham dN = Ha wd - What Life iy beet x x ny re Rha | 8 i rr 5 : wid pe SY ine i Unwise, Woy fs ‘ever the ‘difference ‘between Tat what ih wih al re latter won- | tithe wise man wonllet's 4 the si, “¥imerson, ie " Clothealines. When the tine needs cleaning wrap it around the washboard and scrub {i it, with a brush in soapsuds. fl Beautiful Bridges. Populér love of ait may be carried too far. The author of ‘Charles Bour bon, Constable of France,” tells us that on the occasion of the sack of Rome the citizens refused to secure their safety by taking the advice of thelr captain, Reuzo da Cerl, and cutting the bridges Ponte Quattro. Capi and Ponte Sisto. “The people declined on the ground that they were “toe beau- e An Ox Hide. “Thomas,” sald the professor to =a pupil in the junior class in chemsfstry, “mention an oxide.” “Leather,” replied Thomas, “What is leather an oxide of 7 asked the professor. “An oxide of beef,” answesed the Bright youngster.—Chicage News, Tree le ea ne the Tao lowe a D ie last Tr ean} | general, A WHITE HOUSE DINNER. Dishes President Jefferson Served to His Guests In 1802. Manasseh Cutler, the founder of the Ohio colony and father of the ordi- nance of 1787, kept a diary all through his public life, and it is now in the pos- session Charles G. Dawes. - It con- taing @n ‘account of a dinner at the White Bouse given by J President Jef- terson Feb. 6, 1802, to Mr. Cut ler * 2nd six members of Pic an were . Cutler wrote that there was “rice soup, round of beef, ttirkey, mutton, ham, loin of veal, cutlets of mutton or ‘veal, fried eggs, fried beet, a ple called macaroni, which appears to be a rich crust filled with strillions of onions or shallots, which I took it to be; tasted very strong and not agreeable. “Mr. Lewis told me there were no onions in it; it was an Italian dish, and what appeared like onions was made of flour and butter with a particularly strong liquor mixed with them. Ice cream, very good; crust wholly dried. crumbled into thin flakes, a dish some- what like pudding, inside white as milk or eurd, very porous 4nd light. covered with cream sauce; very fine. “Many other J kg, a great vari- ety of fruit, Eleaty of. Wines and good. President s ‘We drank tea.” —Co- | lumibus-Dispate Wo ent BE eden Americans’ Physical Development, this coun eh a | “inspection of the crowds on, fhe streets | of anyone of our large cities, will, re- veal, pale; Sangh: and poorly |; Shen minded 3 ogerver or the She Seeirail those brought up in the bn the experience of most men who have had occasion rah ori iv woe heh Lieutenant General. Many of us are puzsled to know why a lieutenant general ranks higher than a major general. ae Hah the: Sedge: SEAS ah att military districts the Tess impofiant under the control “of a ser- geant major general the rank beyond ‘that of colonel, and the more impor- tant being govérned by a Heutenant the captain general being Cromwell himself, The lapse of time has. deleted the sergeant from the ser- gout} major general. ~London Chron- cle. Ocean Currents. There are twenty-seven permanent currents in the oceans of the world, and there are nearly as many more of the semi-permanent variety existing at one time. . Several causes tend to orig- inate and maintain these drifts. Uni- formly directed winds have the great- [ est influence. and differences of tem- peratures, storms, polar ice and eddies have each some effect, creating usually the currents of semi-permanent va- riety. 3 Gs of wemal igehuty, o ce g the froin, 4, modal of per per. | dev, A easua] ersizel.zopthand pasty, dably men. ERE yalcal ae ET hat the | To} are not get THE SCILLY ISLANDS. Washed by a Glution Sea Gorged With Human Victims. No more sinister locality could be found for the sinking of a vessel in a submarine crusade than the neighbor- ! hood of the Scilly isiands, where a number have met their. fate. of granite of different sizes thrown in- discriminately into a small shallow pool of water will give a tolerably cor- rect model of the islands of Scilly. They are seventeen in number, varying in extent from ten to 1,640 acres, be- sides twenty-two smaller islets and nu- merous naked rocks., They are loeated , In latitade 50, longitude 7, about twen- ty-five miles west by south from Land's End, Cornwall, England. Those who recall the scenic effects in “The Pirates of Penzance” retain some idea of the nature of the Scillonian panorama-— wild and picturesque, sheer cliffs and yawning caverns hollowed out by the ceaseless action of the ocean waves, a perilous approach in stormy weather. In earlier days the islands were in- fested’ with pirates. and -smugglers, while many of the inhabitants picked up a living as wreckers. It was on Gilston rock that Sir Cloudesley Shovel perished with 800 men in 1707, and in the graveyard of St. Mary’s repose the bodies of 311 victims of the wreck of the Schiller in 1875. So treacherous is the sea in these parts that there is an old proverb. that for every man who dies a natural death the sea takes nine. As for the strategic importance of Scilly, Borlase wrote over & century and a half ago: “In time of war it is of the utmost importance to England to have Scilly in its possession. If it were in an enemy’s hands the channel trade from Ireland, Liverpool and Bristol to London and the south of England could not subsist, for Scilly, lying at the point of England, commands both chan- nels.”—Bulletin of the National Geo- graphic Society. POLITENESS IN PORTUGAL. Ceremony With Which a Visitor ls Greeted and Dismissed. That Portuguese politeness is most ceremonial and may proceed to an ex- traordinary extent is, indicated in the case, say, of a visit to a high dignitary. The caller ascends a magnificent staircase, passes through a long suit of rooms to the apartment in which the dignitary is seated. He is Teopived with many bows and smiles, : When the visit is concluded the caller bows and prepares to depart. When to the invariable custom of the coun- try, make another salutation. He then discovers that his host ‘is following him and that the inclination is re- turned by one equally profound. When ! the caller arrives at the door of the standing on the threshold of the first, | and the same ceremony is again pissed between them.’ When the third apart ment is gained the caller observes that his host is occupying the place the caller has just left in the second. The same civilities are then renewed, and ese polite reciprocations are contin- ued until the caller hag traversed the ‘whole suit of apartments.” At the baivsteade ie caller makes a low and as he suploses a final saluta tion. But no: when he has reached the first landing piace the host is at the top of the stairs: wheu the caller stands on the second landing place his host has descended to the first. and upon each of these occasions their heads wag with increasing humility. Finally the journey to the foot of the stairs is accomplished.—Los Angeles Times, Road Warnings. “Half This Road Is Yours, the Other Half Mine.” ‘This big sign greets the eye of the fj motorist on the splendid ten ‘mile stretch of asphalt-macadam road be- tween Asheville and Weaverville, | which is a link of the southern ns- tional highway from’ Weshingon to San’ Diego, Cal. The sign is located at the ae Hmits and is a powerful reminder that others “have rights on the road, ‘A half mile beyond at a sharp curve around the rocky bluff a big sign on ‘ which is painted a skull ensbrouded in black. with “Just Around the Curve" underneath, involuntarily brings the driver to slow speed. —Asheville (N. C.) Bpard of Trade Bulletin. fi Forest Destruction. Fires and insects are the chief causes of forest destruction, and the United States bureau of entomology finds these harmful agencies curiously interrelat- Insect-killed sections of forests are the inflammable starting spots of fires. While on’ the other hand, fire wounds -on trees give a ready opening for boring insects. More. tir ber of mer- chantable size is’ lost directly through insects than through fides. | Baseball. “I- don’t understand baseball,” eom- plained Mrs. Flubdub. “It’s a mixed ee.” “What's mixed about it? “They appear to think just as much of the man who steals a base as the man who earns a run.”—Kansas City Journal. He's Still Doing. “What does your father do for a liv- ing, my son?” asked the kind old lady. “Time just now,” replied the young- ster, “but he used to do everybody.”— New York Times. Natural Recreation. The lightning plays, the wind whis- tles, the thunder rolls, the snow flies, the waves 1p, the field smiles, the bud shoots and the river runs. {| Dome i ndest of all institu i tions. —S It has | been said that a large bagful of pieces ! he reaches the door he must, according AT A CHINESE INN. . The Scenes #n the Interior of the One Roomed Mud Hut. The building was a long, one storied . mud hut, with thatched roof. We en- tered. Behold what the frontiersman ; bad created! The long room was the scene of homely industry. From the { center rafter hung a big oil lamp, shed- ding its rays over a patriarchal family as busy as a hive of bees. By the clay stove sat the grandfather feeding the fire with twigs and tending a brood of children playing on a dirt floor packed hard, swept clean, From one corner came the merry whir of grinding mill- stones as a blindfolded donkey walked round and round, while a woman in ered up the heaps of yellow cornmeal that oozed from the gray stones. More women in red threw the bright meal high in the air, winnowing it of its chaff; others leaned over clay mortars, . pounding condiments ‘with stone pes- tles, Men were’ htrrying here and there with firewood, cooking for the travel- ers. One end of the room was reserved for these wayfarers, but the k’ang at the other end was divided into sec- tions: - From each rafter over each sec- each cradle was a little brown baby, each baby tended by a larger child. Far away from the loud clamor of the western world we fell asleep in a clean | inner room, to the soft sound of swing- ing cradles and grinding millstones.— Atlantic Monthly. ALGERIA A NEW FRANCE. Result of § Century of Work Against African Savagery. After a vast expenditure in ljves and treasure France is beginning *to reap its reward from the conquest of Al- geria. A hundred years ago the north- ‘ern African country was the abode of ‘barbarism, and piracy was the princi- pal occupation of its people. The Unit- ed States was the first nation to revolt against the payment of tribute to the dey of Algiers for “protection” to com- merce, and after a brief but thrilling conflict the buccaneer chieftain was - brought to his knees. In 1827 the French took up the white man’s burden in Algiers and after a struggle of thirty years subdued the country. Under the monarchy and the second empire the government of Al- geria was based solely on force, but the republic won the allegiance of the Al- gerians by withdrawing the military government from all the settled por- tions of the country, which have since been treated very much as if they were a part of France, each department sending one senator and two deputies fo the French chambers. Algerians, second ; apartment the dignitary is §j save for a few of the tribesmen in the er remote interior, are now loyal French- men, regardless of color, race or re- lgion. Algeria also supplies vast quan- tities of foodstuffs and metals to France—New York World. What Tipping Means. Fourteen thousand six hundred per cent is a pretty high rate of rent! But it’s just what you pay when you hand the cloakroom pirate a jitney for watching your hat for an hour. Do you get us? Well, it’s just like this: When ¥ou pay 10 cents for the loan of a dol- lar for a year you pay 10 per cent. But if you pay 10 cents for the loan of a dollar for a day you pay 365 times as high a rate, or 3,650 per cent. It's just the same way with your $3 hat. When you pay 5 cents on it for an hour you are paying the rate of $438 a year counting only twelve business hours a day. And this is at the rate of 14,600 per cent. Tell this to the cloakroom girl today and get her “comeback.” But don't blame us if she’s a bit snippy.—Worcester Post. . Pirates and Steamships. It was the adyeny ‘of the steamship iat finally gave the pirates their death. in Malaya. - Every schoolboy. ha. to know the story of the first steamer off Borneo. Some pirate ships saw a steamer in the distance and, ob- serving the smoke from its funnels, thought the ship was on fire and there- fore helpless. They gave chase, but they were amazed to see the strange sea beast come up steadily against the wind and vomit fire from its gune. It was generally agreed in polite pirate circles that the white man had played honorable body of traders. Safe. Miss Fortyodd awoke in the middle of the night to find a burglar ransack- ing her effects. Miss Fortyodd did not’ scream, for she prided herself, among. other things, upon her courage. Pointing to the door with a dramatic: gesture, she exclaimed: “Leave me at once!” The burglar politely retreated a step and said, “I had no intention of taking you.”—New York Times. Relief. “What's your opinion about votes for women?” . “It's a great proposition,” replied Mr. Meekton. “It has smashed all the argu- ments Henrietta used to give me about the precious hours I spent talking poli- ties.”—Washington Star. Appearances. “Is he henpecked ?”’ “I think he must be. His wife is a very sweet, delicate, unoffensive, tact- ful woman, who never says ‘Boo! to an outsider.”—Life, The Kind. “The gardener and the housekeeper have the same but contrary cry.” “What is that?” { Sean. red with a wonderful headdress gath- ; tion swung quaint little cradles. In | a mean trick upon a successful” and “My flower is out.”—Baltimore Amer- | | ~ COOKING POTATOES. Waste That Comes With Paring and Scaking Before Boiling. Paring and cooking is the most waste- ful method, and added to this some cooks soak the potatoes in water afte: they are pared. Starting to cook then: in cold water also adds to the amouni of waste. Twice as much nutritive matter is lost if paring is done before boiling a- there is if it is done after boiling, not figuring the waste in cutting away the potato. The juices of the potato con- tain 85;per cent of the protein and 8. per cent of the ash, and these sub- stances are easily extracted when the protection of the skin has been re- moved. ‘' A pared potato soaked from three to five hours loses about three times as much of its mineral matter and seven | times as much of its protein as ome Eo and immediately cooked, i In the most wasteful method of cook- ing, paring, soaking and starting to cook in cold water the loss of protein is 51 per cent and 39 per cent of ash. - When cooked with the skins on pota- toes not soaked and dropped into boil ing water lose only 1.6 per cent of pro- | tein and only 4.9 per cent of ash. Baking and steaming are the most ' economical methods of cooking pota- toes when fuel is considered. Potatoes cannot be baked well in a slow oven.— New York Sun. WHAT A GARDEN DID. How One Ambitious Girl Added to Her Bank Account. Eight years ago a twelve-year-old girl in Cleveland started a little garden for vegetables and flowers. Flowers she sold that year brought her $18.45. It was a great sum, and she could hardly wait until the next spring so she could get at that gold mine of hers again. The next year she almost dou- bled earnings. In the third year they soared to $59.10. Each year there- after saw money roll in in increasing. amounts. Last year she came out with $285.63. She was a capitalist and could talk with the calm superiority of the class. “I am able to buy all my school books, clothe myself, spend some for pleasure and still add to my bank ac- count.” A fine young woman. At twenty we can imagine her. She has no complaint in the world. Her garden is a pleas- ant place, friendly to self reliant young people, remunerative for labor and pains, filled with the sweet odor of flowers. Sorrow may come to her some day, but never the sense of helpless- ness. The garden has taught her, as school and her parents’ counsel could not have, that always there is a way by which the wolf can be kept from the doorstep and by which despair is made an unknown quantity. —Toledo Blade. Battle of Dorking. The battle of Dorking was an imagi- "nary battle. In 1871, at the close of the Franco-Prussian war, Englishmen were reminded by the quick work Rote by Germany over France of the bilities of invasion, and’ Sir Geo: or Chesny wrote an interesting - f in- structive narrative called “The Battle of Dorking, or the Reminiscence of a Volunteer,” in which he depicted the imaginary scene of a great battle on English soil, which was won by the Germans. In short, the battle was the product of a military man’s imagina- tion, but it was so well worked out and so. vividly “described that as long a8 the German armies were in France the mention of the battle of Dorking was enough to make an Englishman shudder. A Nautical Explanation. A New York woman, recounting her impressions of a trip abroad, said: | “One thing at least I learned. That was the meaning of ‘windward’ and ‘leeward.’ The’ captain of the liner I crossed on explained this difference to me in a way that, If a little vulgar. was yet unforgetable. ‘® Captain,’ I said, ‘1 never can tell the difference between the windward and the leeward. Explain it to me, will Tt ell madam,” said the gruff old chptain, ‘if I were to spit to the wind. ward and you were to stand to the lee- hi of me you would be a fool.’ ” “How ‘to ‘Carty Water.” It you want Cot ‘a full pail > Water E § Jeithout 8piilin to © ~ r in a flat dish o or tray d other have something “ay Jom shou Ifiit is drinking water a clean saucer will do, and a fldt piece of wood thé best thing for a ir ! It is’ the 5 tle: waves that arise from the water's lapping against fhe sides and then ing e other side ‘that makes the water spill over. The floater stops this. —New York Sun. : Helping Some. Bill—I see that the theory that earth- quakes accelerate the movement of glaciers has been proved by observa- tion in - Alaska recently. Gill — Of course. Why, I'll bet some earthquakes "would even make a chessplayer move. —Yonkers Statesman. Explained. “Pa, what's the difference between ‘insurance’ and ‘assurance? ” “Well, the latter is what the agent has, and the former is what he tries to sell you.”—Boston Transcript. He Saw It. “There was a terrible accident at our house last night,” said a wag. “As I was gitting in the dining room I happened to | look out, and I saw the kitchen sink.” Let us not b with a heaviness rden our remembrance that’s gone EVILS OF ADENOIDS. These Girowths Are : — is the Health ot a Child. Not every child that is backward at school, that breathes through his mouth, has dull eyes, a short upper lip, prominent upper teeth or has a drawn, tired expression about the face has adenoids, says a state board of health bulletin. But this condition should lead a parent to suspect adenoid growth, and it should not be dismissed till a thorough examination has proved that such is not the case. Adenoids are a small, soft, reddish growth which comes in the back part of the throat where the nose and thront Join. A child who has adenoids breathes with his mouth open, has fre- quent colds and may have earacue of- ten or become deaf. It is not iulres quent that adenoids dull the expression of the eye, destroy the resonance of the voice and distort the facial expres- sion so as to produce a blank, idiotic stare. They hinder mental develop- ment by interferjng with proper physi- cal development. For that reason “re- peaters” at school are frequently said to be afllicted with adenoids. The best time to remove adenoids is when they are first recognizable to a physician. If they remain longer they do harm. They cause a child to have “colds” often and make him more sus- ceptible to diphtheria, scarlet fever, measles and whooping cough. Further- more, if he gets any of these diseases they are likely to be severe with him and leave him even worse afflicted. Cold, fresh air breathed through the nose is needed to prevent adenoid growth. It is needed also to prevent adenoids returning after an operation. Fresh air taken in through the nose prevents as well as cures adenoids. MOST SENSITI'™ 372, The Two That Can Cause the Greatest Agony of Fain. Which part of the human body is the most sensitive to pain? A sharp definition must be drawn here between irritation and pain. Irri- tation is not pain, but only a frequent cause of it. Thus a crumb lodged in the larynx near the vocal cords pro- duces violent irritation and prolonged coughing, which often result in actual pain. So, too, an insect or speck of dust in the eye sets up violent irrita- tion and inflammation, followed by acute pain, Of the surface of the body the finger tips and the end of the tongue are most sensitive. For instance, a burn on the fingers is much, more painful than one on the back would be, while one on the tongue would be more pain- ful still, ; Deep wounds are not painful, as a rule, save as regards the surface in- jury. Of pains not caused by external in- Juries neuralgia of the fifth nerve, the one which supplies the skin of the head and face, is the most intense. It has frequently driven people mad for the time being, and sufferers have been known to cut and even burn the flesh in desperate attempts to relieve it. ‘The rupture of the branches of the dental nerve in tooth drawing also causes agony so intense that it has ‘been stated that no human being could endure it for more than two seconds at a time.—Pearson’s Weekly. Roumanian Superstitions. It Is considered lucky to arrive in Roumania -dccompanied by rain. It means abundance, fer’ *% * of a fine harvest—wealth. Soiuetimes the peasant women put large wooden buck- ets of water before their threshold; a full vessel is a sign of good luck. They will even sprinkle water before one’s feet, because water means abundan¢s. “I have seen,” says the queen of mania in an article about the people of her country, “tall, handsome girls sfsp out to meet me with overflowing w jars on their heads; on my app: they stood quite still, the drops splagh- 5 their Taces, 89 Bi to prove oa: this ichers tchers It is lucky to gre. fun. Or.straw c Pe toward but an empty cart i sure sign of bad luck.” whet Makes Business Success. Alyays.a. premium i in busi- — rE e man who does painstakingly,” says J. ig ae the, M who Ye trus wi ho AL Jo trusted, to tha. Minter capacity. The man who informs elf “adequately about his frm, ts ods, its policies and its products, dni la. Ta ik 80 well that no oie ND. to patch the rag- Hd shortest road to seijpvementy ! Pp 7 “The Usual’ Remedy, Bobbie had been studying his grand- father’s face, which was very much wrin 1," Bob, * sald the old gentleman, “do you like my face?” “Yes, grandpa,” said Bobbie. “It's an awfully nice face. But why don’t you have it ironed ?’—New York Times. Her Idea. “What, buying cigars for your hus- band? I shouldn’t thin™ 'd encour- ” age him in the filthy hal... “I'm not. I’m buying them to dis ‘courage Lim.”—Detroit Free Press. Logic. Abandoned Alfred—They say that steady dripping of water "ll wear away a stone. Dreamy Pete—Jes' think, then, wot’d haspen to a man’s stomach by pourin’ glassiuly inter it!” ade for co- operation, like 1ds, like ere , ka the upper and lower teeth.— relius RR i a cqm- ; on the safest, surest and