The Meyersdale commercial. (Meyersdale, Pa.) 1878-19??, July 19, 1917, Image 3

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ding THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, MEYERSDALE, PA.
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is a Spend Si IS SINGING A LOST ART? WHAT DOES DEATH MEAN? KNOW THE CAR’S LOAD. :
sa ure he —_— tere !
ana- because of his lack of concentration For the People at Large It Certainly Is, | An Artist Called It “the Chance to Ex- Method by Which a Motorist Can Get | CONDENSED REPORT OF CONDITION
had 2ad Nis lusbuety $0 now his own mind Says This Critic. plore the Infinite.” the Best Tire Service. o
nded : al a ume, 8 cap o Singing, as far as most people are | A new definition of death is that by | © “Perhaps the greatest and most im- | Th S d N t ] B k
puz- Ju Shr 5514 he Terindu him of a hunt. concerned, is a lost art. Thousands |a French artist, who has now tested portant thing a motorist should know © econ a iona dan
real J, Er own : Ha start attend operas, recitals and musical | the truth of his own words. “Death,” | about a car is its weight with the aver- :
on hls OWE or a — yx fom To comedies; tens of thousands wind up |said he, “is the chance to explore the | age load carried,” says an expert. “By MEYERSD ALE PA
over- Jump a buck and run him for miles, phonographs. But, as for singing them- | infinite.” The definition is in the same knowing the weight of his car when ’ .
new, When the buck was on the Polat of es. selves informally at their work or play, | mood as that of the late Charles Froh- loaded ready to run the motorist is in JUNE TWENTIETH, NINETEEN SEVENTEEN
inter baustion the hound’s nostrils would | (26Y have forgotten how. In times |man as he went down on the Lusita- | a position to regulate his tires so that
said, catch the taint in the air where a fox | 250 People of all ranks sang together |nia. It is a bit more definite, however, they not only act as the best shock
hand had crossed the trail, and he would fn. | 25 2 matter of course, Sailors sang |than “Death is life's most beautiful | absorber obtainable, but are fit to off- RESOU RCES
the stantly decide that ator all. fox"wase at their work; peasants, shepherds, | adventure.” It expresses the nature | set any injuries which may come from :
y the ’ ’ cowboys, ali had their favorite and ap- | of the adventure. over or under inflation. Loans and Invest t : 4
what he had come for, and he would : 3 LT ok mens Lo... Loan .. $592,905.50
. the turn aside to pursue the fox, Perhaps: propriate songs. The songs of children | This French artist, it seems, was en- With the weight of the car known U.S Bond d P .
road. an hour lat, when the chase wag | 2 88mes, the lullabies of mothers, are | amored of the space idea. He was | when Preparing for a trip which in- ro 8 an remum ............. ceeean 70,179.37
post. growing warmer every min ute, is Keer in the collected ballads and folklore of | ever viewing the world as a vessel voy- | cludes passengers it is very easy : for Real Estate, Furniture & Fixtures ........ boi 64.075.20
nose would detect the presence of a many peoples. aging. He endeavored with artist vi- | the motorist to regulate his air pres- Cash dd £ ’ !
pere rabbit, and he World go after the cof The pastimes and labors of the hus- | gion to visualize the world as rushing | sure ix the tires so that they will run and.due from Banks... 125,338.50
good tontail, with the inevitable result that | P22dman and the shepherd,” says An- | through infinitude by other worlds or with the least injury to themselves. Total Resources $ 852,498.67
by 4 oclock in the afternoon that drew Lang, “were long ago a kind of |in a stream of comets, planets, aster- | This foresight will also prevent a . » .
hound would be thirty or forty miles | 2atural opera. Each task had its own |fods, suns. And his dream ‘was of | break in the side walls caused by an LIABILIT [ES
away from home in a swamp with a | S908; Plowing, seeding, harvest, burial, | flights across the gulfs to Mars, to overload. : : . =
ney’s chipmunk treed!”—Saturday Evening all had their appropriate ballads or Venus, outside the solar system, to With the weight of your car, plus Capital Stock Paid ai $ 65,000.00
1776, Post 2 dirges. - The whole soul of the peasant | Sirius and the greater suns.’ With | the weight of gasoline, water and : : :
f the : class breathes in its burdens as the paint he strove to render what Goethe | extra tires, with the weight of the Surplus Fund and Profits ..... »leisiee vedanta 65,621.83
that Georve and His Legs. great sea resounds in the shell cast expresses in the song of the archan- passengers added, you have the total Cireulation .........00 0... 7 010s 64. 400.00
sun,” LX by Lit v6 hoteile0) rubbers are | 4D On the shore.” pain gels in the opening of “Faust.” running weight of your car, a A aes an ’ .
nusic ng out the truth about our im. Nowadays the whirl of machinery All the Kinds of us pass over, willing- foo a quick way of Jetermining Deposits Smee etek EL a a 657,476 S4
rtal George. Vie lave lLeretofor makes all the noise. The workers in ‘ly, reluctantly. We have no choice, i what air’ pressure you wi carry in So itr, Te
rgins. Leen told {hat he wore false ie mills might find it unsatisfying to sine and there are no exemptions. Proba- | your tires if you have no regular table Total Liavilities $ 852,498.67
n'ar~ and that at Valley Forge he unblitsi- | at their work, but it is doubtful if they bly we have no choice concerning what | of inflation the following table is sno a SS
trum- ingly deceived his ragied and despoxd- | would sing even if their voices could “death is to be, Whether it means ex- gested: : 0 : 1 :
8, SiX eut troops with the arrival of ample | be heard, while singing in an office or tinction or confers immortality, wheth- “F or item Wig [ride the rowth as Shown mn Following Statements
strels St plies of amm ion, which consist. | store would pretty surely be stonpe! er it is a glorious adventure or ushers | weight o 1e loa y thirty-two.
. oth- ls powder barrels filled with or by the “boss” or the police. Thotisands 3 into another sordid existence bound- “Tor three and one-half-inch tives di- Made to Comptroller of Currency.
three and now a correspondent of the Now congregate every night in the silence ed by another death, we have no pow- vide the weight by forty. J JULY 15, 1908 ; : $262,014.92
unts- York Sun declares that ia the full | of moving picture theaters, and, even er to determine. We await its coming For four-inch tires divide the ONE QUARTER MILLION
n for length portraits of Washington by |in the churches where singing by the = and its solution, both, We are its vie. | weight of the load by forty-eight. A
roces- Stuart, of which there is one inthe ‘| congregation used tg be customary the tins or its beneficiaries, but we have | “For four and one-half-inch tires di- JUNE 20, 1917 . - $852.498.67
, two New York public library, the legs were | attendants now usually listen in silence no power to change its destiny. The | vide the weight of the load by fifty-six. OVER THREE QUARTER MILLION ? 2
nice’s not his own. “I have seen the letter | to a paid singer. bold dreamer welcomes it as oppor- ror five teh ie Hires vide the A 2
orses, from Stuart thanking the true owner Singing in this age is largely confined = tun y. The tired spirit is reconciled | Weight of the load y sixty-four. .
and for his kindness in providine a sym- | to the professional performer, drunken ' to it as rest. Perhaps it will bring to “For. five and one-half-inch tires di- NET GAIN BETWEEN ABOVE STATEMENTS
1d six metrieal foundation for the bust of the | men and phonographs. — Indianapolis ' every man his‘different hope. Let us ig the weight of the load by seventy:
reat president and presenting one of | News. so trust.—Minneapolis Journal. WO. $
Ee psy Perla thanks for his Sarre i I re other TTastinte the working 590,48 3.75
. kindness.” ArET ~ Q = out of the above table suppose your
srica’s Bess rr —— BAD HABI IS OF POSTURE. | FIT THE MAN 10 THE 0B. car weighed 2,880 pounds and you are —OVER ONE-HALF MILLION—
» mul- s Free Speech. : + using four-inch tires. From the above
owing An old negro woman had lived with They Yess Ey. 2g Shronic _ Square Pegs re Nev age to Go Into | oo G14 that for four-inch tires the a
ke up a certain family in the south for many | py. significance of the postures habi- ; i i weight of the load should bp divided Bl
i TRIS i N B eso i Iu the American Magazine is an ar- y _eicht. h wil ive vou . .
. 1- years. One day her mistress had occa- Tie : eR dividunls is the Li. 5 Y by forty-eight. This 1 give ; .
1 di siou to reprimand her quite sharply for Tuan gssamed by Indieiduals 1 pe ticle entitled “Are You a Square Peg sixty pounds air pressure, which .
5 oe something that had gone wrong, "The Subject of Serious yum by In a Rlou::d Hole?” by Herman Schnei- should be carried in your tires. The : i i :
fhe ig negress said nothing at the time, but P ys Slans ne DresenL. (osuaus ive In: der, dean of the school of engineering | tre mileage will be greatly increased .
ave. a little later her voice could be heard Yestigarions Seem - to lndieate prefiy, of ge p niversity of Cincinnati. Dean | jr the motorist will regulate his air 5
Tr COn~ in the kitchen in shrill vituperation of conclusively that bad postures, such as | schneider has devoted his life to mak- pressure by the load he carries.” —New : .
‘Work 3 3 stooping shoulders, contracted chests ing successes out of failures and to § . =
everything and everybody, with a rat- Tots a ee : ] 5 York Sun.
my, a tling accompaniment of pans and ket. | °F Protruded abdomens, are not merely : finding the right job for the right man. :
object tles. So loud became the clamor and | (2€, result of careless habits in the ; He believes that failure is seldom more CHARM OF FLOWERS :
d am- so vindictive the exclamations that | [2dividual, but are due to some slight . than an indication of the right path to F h . WwW 1 1 f h f 11 . , &
n can Mrs. C. went hurriedly down to the | PRYSical deformity Which should be | success. Av:ong other things he says: Wi SOREN e 1nave a supp y (0) t e 10 owing. f
3, if he kitchen. corrected. Cenerally speaking, Dersous | “Every individual has certain gen- | Gardening ls a Hobby That Becomes :
se and “Why, Liza,” she began in amaze. | WHO Dave Pad posture habits are not | eral traits: srery hind of “work Das Bist [nator Ait a P Y G 1, d P 1 3
t work “ , | very robust. certain genernl characteristics. e arring the aly ancie a ¥ :
mes a foot, Who 90. earth ate you talking Every one has observed that persons | problem is {o interpret the traits of | luring pastime of going a-fishing, no aris reen on on urp e 2
4T ain’t talkin’ to 1 ° 1y,” the old who are fatigued drop into bad pos- the individual. classify the character- | hobby has a stronger grip on its devo- . -
negress replied, “but ! ‘t keer who | tures temporarily, and there are many istics of the job and then guide the | tees than gardening. At 4 o'clock White Helebore :
in dis house hyars mc ~~. .arper's Mag. | examples of unusually robust persons | individual into the job for which he is of a summer morning Celia Thaxter s 5
ock on azine. with whom bad posture is chronic. | supremely fitic.;. This is oné real em. could be found at work in her radiant :
is 361 —— Nevertheless, tendency to bad posture ployment problem. little island plot, a sister in spirit to . =
1 level. Misprints ar. | axir Laos. undoubtedly adds to the trend toward | “There are very many human char old Chaucer when on his knees in the Arsenate Liead Blue Vitriol
1 is 10 The late Sir Hiram Maxim says in | Weakness and chronic disease, partic: | acteristics, but {l:ere are a few broad | gragat dawn to watch a daisy open. 3 :
e hand his autobiography that when he organ. ularly in individuals who are not nat and general ones which frequently | And these were not exceptional, not » 5 5 : :
he dial ized the United States Electric Light. urally rugged. ; . make for success or failure. . extraordinary, cases of devotion. They Conkey Ss Tice Liquid and Powder.
ne-half ing company the printer sent home its | The robust child or the adult who | “There fs a type of a man who wants | were merely typical exponents of the 1
with a ‘stationery with the heading, “The takes an adequate amount of recrea- | to get on the same car every morning, | true gardener’s passion.
tat for United States Electric Lightning com- | tion from work does not usually fall | get off at the same corner, go to the | Nor fs this tense enthusiasm fleeting.
ST pro- -pany.” "When he established his new | into bad habits in sitting or standing; | same shop, ring up at, the same clock, { Not in the least. It is not more tran.
mes of gun company in England he told of | Ib fact, he is able to combat the condi- | stow his lunch in the same locker, go | sient than the bibliomaniac’s passion.
ms ace this mistake in order to emphasize the | tion of study and w «k which make to the same machine and do the same | no more evanescent than the collec- COLUMBI A RECORDS
protect importance of getting the stationery for bad posture. The less robust child | class of work day after day. Another tor’s zeal, which only death can : .
_Phila- printed correctly. When the first | and the overworked or too sedentary | type of man would go erazy under this quench. It is no sudden, youthful :
sheets were brought to him. however, | adult, on*the other hand, are obliged routine. He wants te move bot Toe fervor. Indeed, it is rarely found in 3
he found that the Engiish printers had to make persistent efforts to avoid had | new people. see an o things. € | youth at the storm and stress period, F J ] r N S ]
wo made his concern appear as *“The Max. posture habits. Ang, although those fizit is Settled: tu sceond is roving | while it ma; be ohrerved to be strona- or u y ow on a e.
erstand im Gum company.” habits may have no very detrimental "The first might male a good man for ust in those for whom the Gays of wild
lote to ? - : effect upon the general health during a shop manufactuiing a standard prod- | op thusiasm are over. The bachelor
wallow : Easy Generosity. : chifhood, they are likely to result in | uct; the second might make a good clergyman or the quietest of spinsters, ;
is to be Mother (to small son)—Bobby. dear, ; chronic diseases later in life as a result railroad man cr a good outdoor car-| ror whom other passion is nonexistent, F B THO M S
owever 1 hoped you weuld be unselfish enough . of the anatomical deformities pro- | penter. A failure in one. line of Work will yet lavish on their gardens enough HY . BB A
ken im- to give little sister the largest piece of | duced.—Exchange. | may prove a big success ‘n another. devotion to have won the heart of the :
dote to candy. Why, sce, even our old hen | : : ee most-obdurate of persons, enough ten. ' J LEADING DRUGGIST
with © gives all the nice big daintles to the Platinum In Coins. : oh United wiv Areries. viet dérness to have sufficed for the moth- = & ;
little chicks and only keeps an occa- | The only instance in which platinum ie assumption ‘of the e “the ering of a dozen little ones. A garden | 8 5 A :
whirl sional tiny oe for herself. has been used for coins was by the United States of America® first ap- | is the world of the recluse, the passion | MEY ERSDALE PENNA
Bobby thoughtfully watched the hen ‘Russian government between the pears in Jefferson's draft of the Dec- of the lone man or woman, the diver. | - pa ali
and chicliens for a time and then said, , Years 1828 and 1845, when they made laration of Independence, and in this sion of statesmen, the recreation of | CC CCC BOAO BBA 0A BCACIRS RRR ROROROC. sieisialeiuiuieiuiaie:
. “Well, ma:ama. I vw ould, too. If it was ' pieces of 3, 6 and 12 rubles. Coins Darticular the frst draft was not al- poets and artists of all ages, except | oT
is wife worms.”—Rochester Times. | and medals have been struck in this tered by the congress in ordaining the perhaps musicians, who may be over-
f lamb, ee metal by other governments simply for Declaration, . The Words are found IM | careful of their hands.—Frances Dun-
nything A Generation. | commemorative or experimental pur- the final paragraph and Lay appear. | ... in Scribner's.
In the long lived patriarchal age a poses, but never for circulation, like ' In the official copy on file: “We there- | > O er
ats ail ERR 0 mn omens Sect | en an Fore | A the rire ste Se | enero] .
u a Years (Genesis xv, 1). Up to within fairly recent years coun- | £ ‘ ’ gene v x ¥ 5 3 s
and or ¥ Subsequently the reckoning was the a gold coins have been made = £Tess assembled”— On Sept 0 1770, 1 fhe Womans Home Companion 6, | JOHNSTOWN
7, | same that Yas heen: more recently of platinum and then gilded. Thats fie I fest hea Gosisuated Eas did the calculating for a °,
| wap Jou thirty to forty : was only when the Dhee of platinum aor nu en style baseball field made a fine job of it. It Sells the Champicn Cream Saver
man.” Y Fears (Tob. x14, 10). was about half that of gold. 3 takes just so long to run from plate to a
w. I} : Rotem to Rati : first, and it takes just about that long. |
si Li) Incengruous. Nervous Systems. Sin Hor Water te oaeve Coughing: , | less a tiny fraction of a second, for | THE ]
i e Alick—What is an incongruity, In man and all of the higher animals ersons chronically ill, espe ally iL 2. ball 0 be Solace be toe | a’
Journal. uncle? Uncle William—An incongruity, : ; ‘enters in .the | those suffering from consumption, | the average ball to be fie ¥. tae
ae the nervous system centers e - A average shortstop and hurled down to |
: child, is a divorce lawyer humming a Yrain, and life is dependent upon the | ave sudden and wearing attar’'s of the big mitt waiting for it. The least |
hori wedding march. condition of the brain, so that the | ¢0Ushing. In an emergency, the Medi- Mp. hesitation. jumc it and the | SE the same good judgment in selecting a cream separator
x slightest injury te it means death or ¢2l Fortnightly says, hot water will | 8lD, hesitation, juggle or Yall, an a i that you would in making any other investment. Before
NT. + Vegetation In Polar Regions. derangement of faculties. But in the | °ften Drove very effective. Water is ue 1s ae ga Shean hig, hands | you buy a separator, there are certain things that you
+ The rapid growth of vegetation in | .,c. of the worm and other creatures | Much better than some of the remedies | PAID down Tor a ‘safe. i ought to know about it. he
5 the polar reglons is attributed to the | or t10 ower kind the nervous tissues | Which disorder digestion and spoil the { | . y Will it skim clean under all conditions? -
foot- electric currents in the atmosphere. are distributed over the body and do | 8PPetite. Water very hot, almost boil- Hat Ho sined Sells i . opt Will it deliver cream of uniform thickness? :
f fat + not center in the head, so that a worm | 28, should be sipped when the par- ey Is is ole ia —= an Does it run easily and require little or no attention?
York 000000000000000000 | 3y he cut in half and still Live. OXySms come on, EN i Is it simple. so that it will not continually be getting out of
Fig 2 te a oe oni. ore
A Hemming Tip. rainage. ‘he ‘su e
foot, 3 © PRACTICAL MEALTH HINT. : Speak to the Horse. In sewing heme of Ai or sheets | drained lands are almost invariably Is it easy to clean?
weab ° The human voice has more or less al degrees warmer tnag Hoss of Is it built to last?
ecure ° - Neuralgia. © | marked influence on all animals. In | OF JRuslin, in starting them from the | sever EToes ;
j : } ly drained lands. Drained soils also Most important of all,
0 in- © Neuralgia means nerve pain. O | p.yooino horses especially the voice | €2d Place a piece of paper under the | poorly : 0
push- © Neuritls means inflammation of 0 | jo or tho greatest use. It should be | Beedle and sew through it for about on ns aster Slter ola Spalls > oh Wh t do co le who
toes © the nerve. In neuralgia the pain o quiet and, though confident and mas- wo inches, then on to the hem. This | much ear JOF In SPRING Xo R x aa P P
vhere © comes and ges, In neuritis ‘the Q terful, hot loud and boisterous. No will prevent the elogging of the thread that dynamiting heavy soils will pay. are usi it Sa <?
soles of © ache is steady and sticks closely O | ;10 ohould ever touch a horse without | #2d needle. " Then after tearing off the ng y :
th of © to the affected nerve. If the O | oi the same time speaking to it. paper the threads’ are there for tying : Moss Bread. THe min wiio is wiing a machine fs the wen
road, © nerve could be taken out and ex- 0 d the end. (A kind of bread is made along the who can tell you the truth about it. We'll be
[£ the © amined we could find nothing o Love and Strife. 3 Columbia river by the Indians from a gizd to give You She names of 5 Sumber of De
thing *& © abnormal in the case of neural- oO Of a truth love ‘and ‘strife were Height of Hopefulness. 108s that grows on the spruce fir tree. them men Who Tormarly net pains of other
e me- + © gia. In neuritis the nerve would © aforetime and shall be; nor ever. me. He—After 1 am out of college, dar-| This moss is prepared by placing it in makes. ee these Jed 2nd ask fnew 3 hy hey
be found to be inflamed. The © 4 : ? > ling, I may have to wait a few months | heaps, sprinkling it with water and Ebr North hey hink of the Do taval,
ed to ° thinks, will boundless time be emptied | pofore. I can make envi or A be i Eel, Wot aud tv orth y
body, © question of what is behind the o of that pair. And they prevail in turn I © emongh to support permitting jt to ferment. en. i Is The NEW De Laval has every good
ightly © pain of neuralgia is more impor © 23 the Clrels como: Youd d and pass you. She—It is so bard to wait. He! rolied into balls as big as a man’s the alder mu *h as Jars be
fe © tant than the answer to the cry © Sn a (bravely)—I know it. But of course | head, and these are baked in pits. | ale ng aie
ankle 5 © for relief. It must be remem- © | 2Way before one another and increase you know the world doesn’t know any. — | Be indi "which insures operation at the
oe : oO bered that Detralgis is merely & © in their appointed time.—Empedocles. thing about me yet.—Exchange, Doesn't He, Though? | proper speed, and the improved automatic oiling
de by © symptom, not a disease. Some- © i E Toiis Taak EE | Bach—Confess, now, Henry, you | We'll be glad to let you try cut a8 NEW
If an © times malaria is the underlying © “Very sus —- 2 n they sae - Ambigueus. don’t pay as much attention to your Laval on your own farm before buying.
nding © cause. Other times it may be 0 Kodi Eg aan, Lies say. How are you, old man? Feeling | wife as you did before you were mar- |
cage. *b © due to alcoholism, diabetes, lead © Fe bi i" _— Sn) pretty strong? oo iw ried? H. Peck—Lord, yes! I mind i
reater. © poisoning, gout, rheumatism or o | Week, on poi SE Ls an in No, only Just managing to keep out | twice as quick now. ee ee amet irerermerarir ree
+ © Bright's disease. A diseased © | to BE In rontains any ® | of the grave. rr — Pittsburgh Excdrsion, FOR SALELetterheads, en-
* © tooth or a diseased ovary may o | publishers cla ‘Oh, I'm sorry to hear that!” Not Necessarily. ) Round Trip—Sunday, July velopss, calling cards, business
° sible. In every case © | - —. “The face is the index of the mind y = gh . exh 3 od
declecperk ® t o | Reason, prudeunce, caution res ar 5] if 8 » luvoices, neiiatie 2 Ee
2 ¢ , on , | don’t know £ =ta
¢ is made up
EE ‘ ati