THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, MEYERSDALE, PA. eee eee HOUSTON URGES CONTROL OF FOOD Gensus of Supplies Needed, Says Sec. of agriculture RESOURCES ARE UHKNOWN While Shortage of Wheat and Pota- toes Has Raised Their Cost, Prices on Other Foodstuffs Have Soared. A thorough census of America’s | food supply was urged before the sen- | ate committee on agriculture by Sec- | retary David F. Houston, speaking | both in his capacity as the administra. tion and a member of the council ot defense. The fact that we have no way to weigh with any degree of accuracy,.! Amnerica’s food re urces, causcd Sec- retary Houston (6 ...y stress upon the need of immediate action upon the im- mediate necessity of appropriating $25,000,000 to create a bureau of food census now. “We have neither the authority, the machinery nor the means immediately at hand,” :a:d the secretary, “with which (¢ wssemble and digest these statistics, ... order that we might ob- tain tie 'd basis for federal con- trol .uod situation as a war measure. The (ei. .:c advances in the cost of the necess.ties of life, Secretary Hous- ton blames on the alarming shortage | of wheat and potatoes. “The prices have soared when the supply was entirely adequate in many lines of production,” said Secretary Houston. “We are unable to figure the economical reasons for such price advances. Seemingly, it is a combina- tion of circumstances.” ‘ “Might it not be a combination of individuals?” questioned Senator Ken- yon. ’ “Possibly,” answered the cabinet of- ficer. Secretary Houston told the commit- tee that he thought it would be well to have the enactment of a law per- mitting, for the period of the war, the fixing of prices of foodstuffs by the federal govermment. The navy having tried out the fixing of the prices for munitions and other neces- gities of the sea fighting force with genuine success, he thought: this showed a way in which the food situ- ation might be met. He expressed the opinion that the application of drastic measures, once or twice, to the detri- and betterment of the conditions of the common people's larder, would probably arrest the disposition of the people who control the national supply of food to boost prices. The suggestion of a federal license to purveyors of foodstuffs as a war mea.urce also met with Secrciavy Houston's approbation. Senator Nor- ris presented the question of the al- leged wastage of materials needed for food in the manufacture of grain alco- bol. On this point Secretary Houston told the committee that he was not in possession of the complete facts. He said that last year about 145,000,000 bushels of grain found their way to the distilleries, but what amount came out for use in munition manufactures and what for drinkables he was un- able to say. : “It is estimated that the flour sup- ply,” said Secretary Houston, “on the basis of a mormal crop, could be in- creased 18,000,060 barrels a year through the milling ¢f wheat so as to make 81 per cent of the kernel into flour instead of 75 per cent, as at present. The problem, however, has many sides and various important is sues are involved.” By a vote of 43 to 33 the senate de- feated a notion to strike the entire censorship clause from the bill. It also rejected, 40 to te by Senator Cummins signed to modify the pro- visions. The amendments adopted leaves the clause only. prchibiting “publication” of inform-:ion regarding the move: ment, pumbers, description, condition . or dispositi { the armed forces. O motion of Senator Smith of Georg more drastic language which would prohibit “collection, recording or 2 tempts to elicit such information,’ was struck out. As it remained with out having been {inally adopted and incorpcrated into the bill, the prohi bition regulations wouly apply mere ly to “publication.” STRIKES IN BERLIN Chancellor Von Hollweg Will Not Act . as Arbitrator. According to the Berlin Vorwaerts, the: strike of munitions workers con tinues everywhere in Berlin: and Chancellor von Bethmann-Hoilweg’'s reply to a deputation of workers from the Deutsche Waffen and Munitions Fabrik of Berlin was a declination to assume the task of arbitrator. Strikes have broken out in various munitions factories in Germany, includ- ing the Krupps, the Telegraaf says it has learned from German sources. The Berliner Tageblatt was quoted as saying that a number of munitions makers had quit, but that “effectual measures were being taken.” It was estimated that from 125,000 to 130,000 German workmen were on strike in Berlin and its emvirons, but some had promised to return to work despite the protests ef their leaders. RIGHT WAY TO HANG THE . FLAG UNDER ARMY CUSTOM BRA Fro Photo by American Press Association. KANSAS WHEAT FAILURE 55 Per Cent of Sown Area Abandoned; Weather Against Grain. Fifty-five per cent of the 1917 wheat crop in Kansas is a failure, leaving the smallest acreage since 1897 and one of the poorest conditions the state has ever known, according to the offi- cial crop report just issued by J. C. Mohler, secretary of the state board of agriculture. The report covers every acre of wheat-producing land in Kansas. Prospects for a crop from the re- maining 45 per cent of the last fall sowing is shown as 60.13 per cent. The report does not give the bushel estimate, but it was explained by ex- perts that the figures would indicate a probable crop of 48,000,000 bushels —nearly 51,000,000 bushels less than last year and more than 133,000,000 bushels short of 1914. This failure is attributed in the’ , main to dry weather, freezing and , the blowing of the soil by the wind. . Increased acreage of corm, oats and ment of the control of food grafters, ' potatoes is shown by the report. U. S. ENTRY CELEBRATED England Pays Distinguished Honors to i America, Last Friday the English people cele- brated America’s partnership in the gigantic world war by a religious serv: ice in St. Paul’s cathedral, London, attended by the official heads of the nation and a great congress, which in- cluded hundreds of Americans and many prominent men and women. There was a great display of Amer- fcan flags in’ London and other Eng: lish towns and a popular demonstra- tion by the crowds which surrounded the cathedral. The Stars and Stripes floated from the highest tower of the parliament buildings at Westminster, the first {ime a foreign flag was ever displeyed cn that eminence, and flew above all government buildings in the British copital. The services in the historic cathe- dral, where {he most momentous oc- casions of national rejoicing have been solemnized, was unprecedented in being the commemoration of an act and decision of another nation. U. S. DAY IN FRANCE America’s Entry Into War Is Fittingly Celebrated. The Stars and Stripes were fiung to the breeze from Eiffel tower in France on Sunday aftermoon and saluted by twenty-one guns. This marked the opening of the ceremonies of “United States day” in Paris. The French tri-color and the Star- Spangled banner were at the same hour unfurled together from the resi dence of William G. Sharp, the Ameri- can ambassador, in the Avenue D’Ey- lau; from the American embassy, from the city hall and from other municipal and government buildings. The streets and boulevards were jammed with i cheering crowds. Guard Rules Modified. Discharges from the national guard will not be granted enlisted men solely because they are married, ac- cording to instructions sent out b: the militia bureau of the departmen: | ) Where a soldier has inde. | Particularly of the great Latayette pendent means which will prevent his | may be kept vividly in mind, I earnest: of war. family from becoming a charge upon the government, he will not be mus- tered out. U-Boat Proliem Not Solved. “We hive to admit that, without Anierica sea supplies are in such danger as to jeopardize the whole campaign,’ says Arthur Pollen, Brit- ish naval expert, in the newspaper, Land and Water. He adds that the British admiralty has failed to solve the U-boat problem. New Fighter Launched. The new superdreadnought New Mexico was launched in the Brook: lyn navy yard Monday. i patriot as he is a French patriot. His | most heroic and valuable character. WILSON INSISTS ON DRAFT BILL No Other Plan. For Raising Army Will Do, Ha"Says "FIGHTS VOLUNTEER SYSTEM Only by Selective Conscription: Can Active and Productive Power of Na- tion Be Mobilized, Chief Declares. President Wilson has issued a pub- lic appeal for the support of the prin- ciple of “selective conscription.” The president’s argument is con- tained in a letter to Representative Helvering of Kansas, a Democrat member who favors the administra- tion hill ,the selective conseription feature of which has been subordinat- ed (0 the volunteer system by the house committee on military affairs. Only by selective conscription, con- tends the president, can the full man power of the nation be marshaled effi- ciently, and those best fitted for mili- tary service be separated from those who are more urgently needed on farms, in the mines and factories. He points out that there already is room for 600,000 volunteers in the regular army and national guard. “The process of the draft is, I think, | very ciearly set forth in the bill draft- ed by the war department, and which 1 so earnestly hope the congress will adopt, but it is worth while to state the idea which underlies the bill a little more fully. “I took occasien the other day in an address to the people of the country | to point out the many forms of pa-' triotic service that were open to them and to emphasize the fact that the military part of the service was by no means the only part, .and perhaps, all: things considered, not the most vital | point. Our object is a mobilization of all the productive and active forces of the nation and their development to the highest point of co-operation and efficiency, and the idea of the se- lective draft is that those should be chosen for service in the army who can be most readily spared from the prosecution of the other activities which the country must engage in and to which it must devote a great deal of its best energy and capacity. “The volunteer system does mot do this. When men choose themselves they sometimes choose without due re- gard to their other responsibifities., Men may come from the farms’ or. from.the mines or from the factories or centers of business who ought not to come, but ought to stand back of the armies in the field and see that they get everything that they need’ and that the proper course is sus- tained in the meantime. “The principle of the selective draft, in short, has at its heart this idea, that there is a universal obligation to serve and that a public authority should choose those upon whom the obligation of military service shall rest, and also in a sense choose those ‘who shall do the rest of the nation’s work. The bill if adopted will do more, I believe, than any other single instrumentality to create the impres- sion of universal service in the army and out of it, and if properly admin- istered will be a great source of stim- ulation. - “Those who feel that we are turning away altogether from the voluntary principle seem to forget that some 600,000 men will be needed to fill the ranks of the regular army and the na- tional guard and that a very great field of individual enthusiasm lies there wide open.” The administration bill to create a big war army by selective draft is under debate in both houses of con- gress. x The real interest centers in ‘the house because the opponents of the general staff plan have a fighting chance to force the passage of'the Dent bill, which is the committee sub- stitute for the selective draft plan of the administration. In the senate an administration victory is admittedly a foregone conclusion. TO HONOR FRANCE IN PENNA Governor Brumbaugh Sets Aside April 26 as Day of Commemoration." Governor Martin G. Brumbaugh is- sued the following request to the ‘peo- ple of Pennsylvania: re “This country must never forget the invaluable assistance given us in the Revolutionary war by France. “Her greatest gift was the services of Tat ayette. He is as much an American services to this republic were of the “That the services of France and ly request that we set aside April 26, the anniversary of the embarkation: of Lafayette from Bordeaux to America. as France duy. Hy “On this day in ali schools and in all public gatherings and before all patriotic societies let there be held exercises suited to the occasion .and related to this national crisis in which once more this country stands with France for humanity and for the ideals eof liberty, fraternity and equal- ity.” Berlin Denies U-Boats Here. It is officially announced in Berlin that there is no submarines as yet in the western part of the Atlantic. HEIR TO MILLIONS JOINS . ILLINOIS NATIONAL GUARD Photo by American Press Association. MARSHALL FIELD III. Young Mr. Field, who is a grandson of the late Marshall Field, first Chi- cago merchant . prince, will join the First Illinois cavalry as a private. He thinks it the duty of all young men to enlist. ‘ A GENERAL SURVEY OF THE WAR German torpedo boat destroyers fired 100 shells in the region of Calais. Some civilians were Killed. - Twelve persons were wounded. Calais is the western terminal of the main railroad artery that supplies the British armies on the Lens-Arras battlefront in northwestern France, + and lies directly opposite the British channel port of Dover, near which place five German destroyers attempt- ed a raid on British shipping Friday night with the result that two Ger- man ships, and pbssibly three, were sunk by British patrol vessels. It is believed the object of the raid was to interrupt the voyage of the British premier, Lloyd George, across the channel from the continent, where he had been in conference with the French and Italian prime ministers. It is believed the German destrdyers ‘were the ones which escaped in the darkness from the Dover battle, di- | recting their shells on this town while skirting the coast on their return to the naval bases at Zeebrugge, Bel- gium. ‘Hard fighting continues between the French and the Germans all along the southern front in Framce. The French war office, in its latest com- munication, records further progress for the forces of General Nivelle north of the Aisne, in Champagne and in the Argonne forest. More than’ 19,600 Germans have been made prisoners and ‘guns in excess of 100 have been captured by the French since the offensive began last Monday. : British troops made further prog- ress in the region of Lens, where the fighting continues to go in their favor, says the official statement issued by the British war office. Three German counter attacks were repulsed by the British, who captured a number of prisoners and machine guns. The late British official communica- tion announces that the prisoners taken in the offensive begun last week now aggregate more than 14,000. Guns to the number of 228 also have been taken. In the Champagne section on the right strong positions still held by the enemy are falling one by one. All this work could only have been done at a heavy cost in life under former war conditions. It is being carried out with comparatively small loss. General Maude, commanding the British forces in Mesopotamia, has forced a passage of the Shatt-El-Ad- hem, attacked the Turkish main posi- tions and completely routed the Turk- ish forces, says an official statement issued by the British war department. So far 1,244 Turks have been taken prisoner. : The British hospital ships Donegal and Lanfranc with many wounded aboard have been torpedoed without warning. They were sunk on April 17. Of those on the Donegal twenty-nine wounded men and twelve of the crew are missing. The Lafranc carried Ger- man wounded as well as British. Of those aboard nineteen British and fif- teen Germans are believed to have perished. BRAZILIAN RIOTS SERIOUS Big Masses of German Munitions Found In Country. Rio de Janeiro dispatches stated fed- eral troops engaged in putting down the German uprising in cities,in south- ern Brazil had found huge supplies of ammunition. Other evidence had been brought to light, it was declared, tending to show that the Germans had planned action long ago. Serious rioting occurred in Porto Alegre, where manifestations against the German colony have been in prog- ress several days. AS a street car crowded with passengers passed a German hotel shots were fired from the building. Several persons wera wounded. FER cn — = without water, and finally came stag- drinking water, while a fifth man al- Willis— You must be lke an overheated boiler. a wT Eon, rnildunn Cry for Z b A ¥ | i Lv : 0 ER or 8) GHERN wh NC aRn NAN : : 2 . Tho 3 You 17.2 ATs Bought aud which has boc ’ -.¢. has peen made under his per= LCT: connl supervision since its infancy. AHF A nw no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeit, In Loos and ¢¢ Just-as-good ’’ are but. Experiments that t , +‘ and endanger the health of Infanis and C! idren—I.xperience against Experiment Nhat is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor, C ay Paros! goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is P CASH) o t contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other arcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. ¥or more than thirty years it has been in constant ase for the rclief of Constipation, Flatrleney, Wind Celie, all Tecthing Troubles and i Diarrhea. It veguiates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. ceENUINE CASTORIA ALways nnn Eo BL MR £3 & In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought ORK CITY, THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW Y SED | 7 TT _— o WRITING FOR THE STAGE. 8ir W. 8. Gilbert Was Not Overproud {a of His Own Work. i*No man,” writes Mrs. Alec-Tweedie Why He Balked at Being a Witness on her reminiscences, “My Tablecloths,” the Side of Truth. “Had stranger admirers or keener Colonel BE. M. House—“Silent” House, haters than W. 8. Gilbert. Successful as he is often called—told at a dinner people always have, but then, added toin Washington a significant parable: his success, he had a pompous manner “They who expect the men in author- and a sarcastic tongue. ity to do a great deal for them-—they “He was in excellent form one May who expect the impossible—should re- night in 1898 when he dined with me. member the grizzly bear story. 3 We were talking about ‘Lysianne,’ “A famous grizzly bear hunter gave a Sarah Bernhardt’s new play, which ldinner, and one of the guests told of a had just seen in Paris, and I sald itbear hunt that be had once shared in was a poor play splendidly acted. with his host. It had been a remark- *“‘IZ it's a poor play it's sure to suc-able hunt. The bear had been killed ceed,’ he retorted. ‘No good play isunder almost incredible difficulties. SAVED HIS OWN FACE. ever a Success. Fine writing and high Although his auditors looked skeptical, - morals are hopeless on the stage.” the narrator did not spare them any of “*That is severe.’ , those difficulties. He counted om the ““‘Not any too severe. I have beenhost, you see, for corroboration. scribbling twaddle for thirty-five years “Then, when he had finished his to suit the public taste and ought tostrange but perfectly true tale, he said: “know. And, after all, look at the the- “There, that's the story, and, ger: ater. It contains some 1,500 persons.tlemen, our host will corroborate every, Now, if you serve up tripe and omions word I say. ¢ for the gallery it offends the stalls; if «No, George; he said, I don’t re- you dish up sweetbreads and truffleSmember anything of the sort at all.’ for the stalls 1t disgusts the pit. There “Tableau! fore plain leg of mutton and boiled po- “Maddened by this tableau, the guest tato is the most suitable fare for all. at the end of the dinner took his host Light fiippery and amusing nonsense aside and hissed: hy are what I have endeavored to write. «Why didn’t you back me up in that But I can tell you that after thirty-five pear story? You know every word of years of that sort of thing, which I amit wag true’ 9 glad to say has brought grist to the « Yes’ gaid the famous hunter—'yes, mill, I am about sick of it, and Ijt was all true, but I saw that every- shouldn’t mind if I never wrote anoth- body round the table thought you were er word.”” lying. If, then, I had supported y« 1 FADS OF LITERARY MEN. A Letter From His Wife Always Made Hawthorne Wash His Hands. Looming Mirages. Keats liked red pepper on his toast. In what are called “looming mi- Dickens was fond of wearing jewelry. rages” distant objects show an appar- Joaquin Miller nailed all his chai ent extravagant increase in height to the wall. without alteration of breadth. Distant Edgar Allan Poe slept with his cat pinnacles of ice are thus magnified and was inordinately proud of his feet into immense towers or tall, jagged Daudet wore his eyeglasses when mountains, and a ship thus reflected asleep. from far out at sea ma : se y appear to be Thackeray used to lift his hat when twelve or fifteen times as tall as it is they would have set me down for a liar too.” ”—\ "ashington Star. v, — eee ever he passed the house in which hejong. Rocks and trees are also shown wrote “Vanity Fair.” in abnormal shapes and positions. Alexandre Dumas the younger bought while houses, animal and human be- a new painting every fime he had ainos appear in like exaggerated shapes- new book published. before the sandy plains of our south- Robert Louis Stevenson's favorite western states and territories were recreation was playing the flute, in or- converted into verdant fields by the der, as he said, to tune his ideas. ingenuity and tireless energy of man Robert Browning eould not sit still. mirages were very common in those With the constant shuffling of his feet regions, the Indians regarding the phe- holes were worn in the carpet. nomenon as being the work of evil Longfellow enjoyed walking only at spirits. sunrise or sunset, as he said his sub- limest moods came upon him at these times. Hawthorne always washed his hands before reading a letter from his wife. 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’ He delighted in poring over old adver- feet high and is nis on a talk tisements in the newspaper files. base. It is usually surmounted:by a Oliver Wendell Holmes used to Carry sugar cross and is placed in the centr a horse chestnut in one pocket and a of the table when the Russians hold potato in another to ward off rheuma- their. great feast at Easter when the tism.—Philadelphia Inquirer. fast is broken. . It takes about sixty ; €ggs to make the pashka, but none but Horrors of Thirst. natives can succeed in producing the There is no horror like the horror of rare taste. To thirst—no physical suffering compara- ble to it. A traveler over the desert in Egypt describes a man who had lost his way, wandering about for days o 2 - Comprehensive. 4 I understand you have bought'a set f Shakespeare’s works.” : “Yes,” replied Mr. Dubwaite loftily, a complete set.” ? : d “And a glossary. too, I' presume?” af “Oh, yes, yes! In fact. everything Shakespeare wrote” — Birmingham Age-Herald, : gering into his camp. The man’s eyes % were bloodshot, his lips swollen to twice their natural size. His tongue, blue, parched and swollen, hung out of his mouth. To allow such a man to drink water at will would be like pumping cold water into a redhot Ta aT steam Dbofler. It would kill him.. This Higher Authority. man required to be held forcibly by Willis—The Hizhfliers are going to four men in his eagerness to get at 5.'¢ UD their hi hous S year. Mrs. nistaken. 1 was | lowed a few drops to trickle down the talking with Mrs. Highiiier only yes- throat of the sufferer at long intervals. terday. Willis—Well, I was talking | He had to be cooled off little by Httle, .t2 the mortgagee only this morn- ing.—Puck the only result would have been that. serve allow fect the r and i the v ures | Prob: tenth form: owin; phere Pal ed MU + oo