THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, MEYERSD PROJECTS HAVE A WAR FLAVOR Confiict ‘ith Germany Brings L Kew Legislation, PATRIOTISM ACTUATES MOVES mo ———— Beyer Bill to Protect Officials Who Enlist is Passed—Bill Presented to Prevent Game Hunting During War and Resolution Appears for Drilling of Legisiators. Harrisburg, Pa., May 22.—Hard'y a day goes by withcul prolucing some thing of a “war” flavor fqr con:ider .- tion by members of the legislature. If it isn’t a resolulion reaffirmiig a loyalty pledge it is a new prcp.s lioa! to place Pennsylvania in the vanguard of pat:iotic effort during the troultle with Germany. A bill presented by Senator Stewart of Green, would prohibit all game hut- | ing in the state during the war. It is; get forth in a preamble to the bill t al this should be done to prevent the ia- guise of hunting game; a's) that the use of cartridges for hunting tonds to decrease the supply of ammunition for the use of the United States and her allies. The legislature has passed the Bay er bill providing that the parents of all appointive officers and employes 0 the state and of every county, mun c pality and sctocl district who enlist r are drafted into the army, shall b: paid one-half of their salaries dur nz such service, not exceeding $2000 a year. Also, it prohibits the removal of such officers ani employes dur'ng this service. If there are no: other persons authorized by law to perfor n the dnties of such officers or employ :s substitutes may b= employed. A sub- stitute is to receive only the remaining one-half of the salary, on the groun! that the man who remains at home should make a sacrifice. Would Drill Members. Representative West, of Montour, would have every member of the legis- lature trained for military duty. He introduced a resolution directing that they assemble every morning for in- struction from Major Q. O. Rei‘zel, one of the Lancaster membars. The resolution authorizes Reitzel to organ ize squads and appoint officers, an’ invites the senate to join the house in the movement, Meanwhile the war hoar1, consisting of Governor Brumbaugh, Lieutenan' Governor McClain, Treasurer Kenhar Auditor General Snyder ad Adjutant General Stewart, are holding many meetings for the purpose of whippine things into shape for the adequate d fense of Pennsylvania in case m-te x become critical. Preparedness is the | watchword of this board. Members of the committee for public safety and defense, headed by George Wharton : Pepper, of Philadelphia, consulted wih : the war board last week and the two bodies intend to work in complete ac. ! cord until all danger pas:zes. Two Mine Cave Bills. Two mine cave bills providing dif ferent procedure to solve the problem confronting the anthracite region in general and T.ackawanna county in particular, will be considered by the members of the house at the sam-* time. The mines and mining commit- tee of the lower branch has decided to | report out both the Scarlet and Ram: sey bills for the legislators to decid: which should become a law or which should be accepted by the house mem- bers as the better solution. This action followed a lively meet- ing of the joint senate and house com- mittees, which was also attended by three members of the Tener mine cave commission and others interested in surface protection. The cave-in com mission members present were W. L. Connell, E. J. Lynett and J. Benjamin Demmick. A. bill raising the license fee for several classes of motor cars is being sponsored by Senator Buckman, Bucks county. The bill would provide the state with about $500,000 additional revenue in the next two years. Motorcycle licenses remain at $3. Motorcycles ‘with side cars attached are increased to $5, and the minimum for automobiles is made $10, instead of $5. The fee would be $15 for less than fifty horse-power, and $20 for all cars: of more than fifty. Solid-tired autos are to pay the same license fee as at present. Dealers’ licenses would be $10 and a new $5 license is required for dealers in motorcycles. The rule regulating the age of driv- ers has been changed from a minimum of eighteen to sixteen. Paid operators will pay a $2 license fee, as formerly, but more than 67,000 unpaid operators fn the state will have to take out a ficense from the state costing $1. The bill has a requirement that would wipe out crooked road “traps,” maintained in many districts, where *Danger—Blow Ycur Horn” and “Rur Blow” signs are erected but partly con @ealed. Such signs must be erected at right angles to the highway and e@learly visible. etn ny WA 2 J AOW NATIONS OF EARTH | RANK IN PRODUCTIONS Here is a list of 25 of the world’s, most useful and valuable commodities, showing what country leads and what country ranks second in producing them: | Leading Second Commodity Country Country Wheat ....U. 8. A Russia Corn .....- U.S.A Argentina Oats ...... U.8 A Russia Ryo .....- Russia Germany Rice ...... China British India Tobacco U.S.A British India Cattle ....U. S.A. Russia Sugar .....Cuba Russia TER ..vvee China British India Coffee ....DBrazil Venezuela Cocoa .....Gold Coast Brazil Cotton ....U.S8. A. British India Wool ...-.. Australia Argentina Silk ..... . China Japan } Coal ...... U.S.A. United K’'gd'm Petroleum. U. S. A. Russia Pig iron... US. A. Germany Steel .....U.S8. A Germany +8. A. Japan umi S.A. France Zine J... ex J. 8. A. Germany i in... M’I'y States Bolivia i | Rubber ... Brazil Congo Gold ...... Transvaal U.S.A. | Silver .....U.S. A. Mexico This summary shows the number of | products in wirich each country leads: United States. 14 Cuba ........ 1 t China... ...... 3. Gold Coast... 1 ‘Brazil ......... 2 Nalay Strtes. 1 tussia Transvaal .... 1 {Australia ,,.. 1 All others.... 0 When you buy United States Lib- | erty Bonds remember .that you are { buying the bonds of tha richest nation | on earth, the one most abundantly | blessed by nature and by man, the | producer in the greatest quantity of 14 eommodities that the world demands. i Reniember, alse, that no other coun- try in the world leads in more than ! three, and that Germany, Austria-Hun- gary, Turkey and Bulgaria lead in none. { Nobody is entitled to any special | credit for believing in the country that is 80 tremendously richer than any other nation. The man who dodesn’t believe in the nature-blessed U. S. A. is 10 be pitied. | If you have not yet bought your United States Liberty Bonds, see your banker or broker today. BINKERS WIL HELP YOU | BUY OUR LIBERTY BONCS Patriotic bankers and brokers the nation over are making it easy for everybody to buy United States Lib- erty War Bonds. The fact that you have not an abundance of ready money need not prevent your helping | your government by ordering United | States Liberty bonds. See your bank- er or broker today and ask him about ; easy terms. 15 YOUR BOY IN THE WAR? | | Perhaps your boy, your brother, ycur sweetheart, some one ycu 1 | dear to vr heart, will be called inio i the war zone to risk his life foi free- dom, for liLerty, for America. War is no picnic. no holiday romp; it is | terribly serious business. Vietori« are almost never ven by unfed, naked, disheartened troops. Is it” your wish that our boys shall have the food, the i ‘clothing, the arms, the ammunition, { ‘the safeguards to reduce their danger to the minimum, to strengthen their spirits, to encourage them to victory? Then remember that you can help. To maintain and safeguard your boy at | the front takes money. Our govern- | iment needs that money now. To raise | it quickly, to make victory sure, to | ishorten the war, to save your boy and | your neighbor's boy, the government asks you to buy one or more Liberty bonds. The: yonds can he hought for 250, $100, ay ins terest, t} tire princinal, you will get back the «¢ 1 and wish for vie- Don’t just sit arom tory, peace and #:« return of the one you love. Du s many Liberty bends as you can nd help to make your wishes cone irne, America is frea. Her people are free. Yon a: to buy or not to buy United States Liberty Bonds. But you aren’t free to wear a United : States L: 7 Bond button unless you t'own at least one United States Lib- erty Bond. st The U. S. A. can make two and one- | ‘half cannon for every one the Kaiser ‘builds. Help build those cannon by buying United States Liberty Bonds. ‘See your banker or your broker today. Make your sweetheart a present that means profit and patriotism. {Buy her a United States Liberty Bond. Gov. Cox has bought United States janes Bonds. Have you? Sing “My Country ’tis of Thee” on ur _way to the bank to get United Btatps Liberty Bonds. When democracy gees to war democracy fights that war and pays for it. That's what the Libetty bonds are for. Will you buy your bond today? Help your friend win the automobile, Jeannette Kling, Play Reade priv x EANNETTE KLING is one of the five leading lyceum play readers of America. She comes the third evening of the chautauqua. Each winter she goes te Washington and studies all the late copyright plays. She then selects the one she thinks chautaugua audiences would like the best. This one she presents on the chautauqua platform the next summer, Some people say that they would rather see Miss Kling put on a play all by herself than to see it in an opera house. e ih : Ce a h J LINCOLN McCONNELL “He Gets Juice Out of Tombstones” ALPH PARLETTE says this about Lincoln McConnell: “I wish every- R body who ‘don’t lke lectures’ could hear him. I wish the king who never smiled again would sit in on a McConnell outburst. the paint on a wooden Indian’s cheek. He can get juice out of a tombstone -and flowers out of a snow bank. He can read a page from the Congressional Record and convulse you or a page from Webster's Undbridged and make you scream. “His lectures are a series of terrific broadsides, satirical stories, impersona- tions and stage gymnastics. He enjoys his lectures as much as anybody. He smacks his lips—the sentences taste so good. Remember, he is tremendously serious. ‘You laugh, yell and cheer; you wipe the tears out of your eyes and realize you have risen. It was g sermon all the time, with the fun and side show just to save things. The audience has been shot, slugged and spanked, but every one sees it was needed. McConnell has a way of hitting the hard- est licks as though he were trying to commute the punishment. He looks down over the audience and lovingly watches the villains die.” McConnell will lecture here twice the last day of the chautauqua. He can crack ALE, PA. Garm.. : Mcking In New York. The garment making industry in New York, much before the public nowadays by reason of the efforts of the save New York committee to move its base from the retail shopping dis- really one of the biggest assets the city has. Some 16,000 factories are op- | erated for tailoring, millinery, laun- | dering and other branches of wor" ! upon garments, employing more th: | 300,000 persons. Their output exceeds | goods valued at $500,000,000 annual ~ | aidi; 2 materially in making New Yo | the leading manufacturing center this country, Chicago, Philadelphia, St. Louis, Boston and Cleveland following in the order named. Join the Pay Up Crowd. John D. Rockefeller often referred proudly to the fact that when he was making $25 a month he made it a point to pay all his bills promptly. He also managed to save a little money that later became the foundation of his great fortune. When you pay your bills promptly you know just where you are at. Pay up is becoming a na- fional slogan. Cities and states have inaugurated” pay up days and pay up weeks. The man who pays his bills when they are due feels better for it. There is no doubt that he makes the man he owes feel better. Do your part in the pay up campaign. Pay now. H They Could Keep It Up. { There have been big men in Wall street who did all the work them- selves, who attended to every minute itm. who were facm Missouri in re- yard to cach point in apy proposition [ut up to them. One of these marvels was among the very greatest finan- ciers the country ever had But he didn’t last long, and there have been few others like him. If a man with the first order of Drains and ability could only keep it up there is nothing to prevent his owning the Unite! States. If E. H. Harriman could have lept on fifteen or twenty years longer it thre pace he was going he would Lave gobbled up all that was worth faking. He had about all the rail- roads in sight, and he was just getting a strangle hold on the big banks. Hy conquered every square foot of terr. tory as he went along. There was vo “force on earth to stop him except pre- mature death, and now he is almost forgotten.—A. WW. Atwcod in Saturday Evening Post. Most Buoyant Woed. i The Mghtest wood known, so far as any evidence attainable is concerned Is balsa wood, which grows extensive ly in the Central American and north ern South American states. It is com- posed of very thin walled cells, which are barrel shaped, interlace with each other and are almost devoid of woody i fiber. These cells are filled with air. making a natural structure well adapt- ed to prevent the transmission of heat because of the particles of air impris- | oned in the material without intercon- ' necting fibers. Various tests of the in- . sulating properties for resisting the | low of heat have been made. Balsa | wood has been used quite extensively { in the past as a buoyancy product for life preservers and in connection with the fenders of lifeboats and rafts. Its life is short, under ordinary conditions. uniess treated with antiseptic or pre servative material. i Ariake Bay’s Mystic Fire. Shiranublii, the mystic fire of Ariake bay, Wyushu, has been famous for the past 2,000 years, the sight being con: sidered one of the.great wonders of the Japan seas. . In a recent issue of the Taiyo Mags- , zine M. Kaneko, a teacher in the Shi ~mabara middle school, relates his im: pressions of the fire. According to Mr. { Kaneko, when he witnessed the spec- tacle the first light appeared like a star i about five miles distant. Suddenly the volume of light increased until it soon covered an area of many miles. The light moved with the waves and re- sembled electric lights being lighted and then suddenly extinguished. Mr. Kaneko says that intermittent wave- like movements are the chief charac- | teristics of the mystic fire. He fails to find a cause for the origin of the fire trict in the Fifth avenue section, iS’ PROFESSIONAL CARDS. FIRE, AUTOMOBILE, - COMPENSATION AND ~ PLATE GLASS INCURANGE W. + COOK & SON | Meyersdale, Pa. W. CURTIS TRUXAL, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, SOMERSET, PA. Prompt attention given to all [egal business. WANTED—OId papers, magazines, rubbers and shoes. J. D. DONER, 12-16 210 Grant St. Vetenarian S. P. Fritz, veteaaran, castrauag a speciality. P. 0. Address, Pims Hill, Pa. Economy Pihope, Gumbert store. 21 Josoph L. Tressler | Funeral Director and Embal ner Meyersdale, Penna. Office : 229 Center trae Bath Phones. Residence: 309 North Nfreet Economy Phone. Baltimore & Ohio RAILROAD SPRING TOURS TO WASHINGTON AND BALTIMORE MARCH 3i AND JUNE 1 $6.45 ROUND TRIP FROM M:YERSDALE Tickets valid for all refalar trains and good returning 10 days including date of sale. Tickets including 5 days boara in Washing ton, side trips, etc., may be secured upon payment of $20.50 additional. SECURE FULL INFORMATION FROM TICKET AGENT Driving It Home] Let us drive home to you the fact that no washwo- man can wash clothes in as sanitary a manner as that in which the work is done at our laundry. We use much more water, change the water many more times, use purer and more costly soap, and keep all the clothes in constant motion during the entire nrocess. It is simply a matter of having proper facilities. Heyersdale Steam Landry Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA in Driving the brain starts the pain the constant strain of | bowels by using ; DR. MILES’ LIVER PILLS MONEY WILL BE REFUNDED. Over-work, worry and business life are often a cause of much trouble. | Dr. Miles’ Nervine is highly recommended for all Nervous disor- linvaluable to business women. Regulate your IF FIRST BOTTLE, ,OR BOX, FAILS TO BENEFIT YOU, YOUR a NERVOUS ATTACKS. “I suffered with nervous at- tacks and headaches. Then my liver got out of order and fit seemed as though my: whole system was upset. I com- menced usihg Dr. Mies” Nerve ine and also took Dr. Miles’ Liver Pllls and now I feel pare feetly well in every way. My bowels also are in good shape now.” MRS. AUGUSTA KEISER, 1149 Portland Ave. Rochester, N; Y. BR it Pd bie pat et Ph Cede ME