$9 ar EnIz7e ' eldest of whom on PES” "THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, MEYERSDALE, PA. FOOD FOR THE AGED. Some Diet Rules For Thise Who Are Advanced In Years. Libraries have been written on diets little thought bas been given what aged people should eat. “Superintendents of homes for the aged show absolute ignorance of the diet that senile changes necessitate,” writes Dr. I. L. Nasher in the Medical Review of Re- views. With advancing age there is less strength and activity. For these rea- sons the amount of food should be di- minished. The loss of. teeth in old age is nature's signal that an aged person should no longer eat meat, the only food that needs to be thoroughly mas- ticated. “It is not necessary suddenly to discontinue the use of meat. should be a gradual reduction. and only the light meat of young animals and fowl should be taken.” ‘There is no definitely prescribed diet for old age, but there are a few rules that can be followed: The total amount of fcod must. be dimini:hed It must be thoroughly cooled and tine- Iy¥ chopped. Vegetables = containin: much cellulose should be. freely used. Foods should be given in a lHquid. semi- Jdiquid or mush form, and dry foecds should Le avoided. [Foods should not be given at shorter interyals than four or five hours. WASHING THE HANDS. How to Get Them Clean After a Greasy Job on the Motorcar. The following is a practice long fa- #niliar to railway engineers, who have to mess around oil, and it should serve equally well for their present day coad- Jutors of the motor car: Wash the hands in warm water, using a soft, free lathering.soap. Work up a good lather and then dip the fin- gers into a small dish of lubricating ofl. This will further emulsify with the lather already on the hands and quickly cut the grime and dirt, leaving the hands clean and soft. Do not use ‘too much oil, and always soap the ‘hands before applying the oil. | After using this mixture be sure to lot the washbowl drain and then rinse at quickly, as the oil, if left, separates ‘from the soap and makes a ghastly : [Thess on the sides. | Another good way*of cleaning the hands after a dirty job around the car is to wash them in turpentine, rubbing it well into the skin and then wiping off thoroughly on something that can be thrown away. B: ‘ving this and finishing with Warm-wases: and plenty of soap the hands Pr te cleansed of all traces of the go. gle wh JOD New York Post. Hara me The Road to Thrones: In the year 1716 a gir} ‘called Marie @’Abbadie was, hired" 48 a servant in ughte amed Dom. due Habas and Marie d’Abbadie. A Bearnais from the village of Boellh, whose ‘name ean de St. Jean. stayed in’ ‘this HE sa%v the pretty maid, fell in“1oVe with her and on May 80, 1719, wedded her in the church at As- sat. They had several daughters, the . 1754, was adotte, married at Boeilh’to Henri; physician, son of Jean Beryadbtte, mas- ter tailor. Their son Was Napoleon's. marshal, Bernadotte, who became king of Sweden and whose great-grandsons are respectively King Gustave V. of Sweden and King Haakon VII. of Nor- way. - Power of Eloquence. A story is teld of .the great Irish orator, O'Connell. An attack had been made upon him in the house of com- mons. When O'Connell arose to reply ‘his lofty brow was black with thun- ‘der and his arm uplifted as if to strike. Then, checking himself, he said, “But “the gentleman says he loves Ireland.” Lowering his tone to the rippling mur- mur of a summer brook, he continued, “I have no words of bitterness or re- proach for any man who loves Ire- land.” The pathos in the fragmentary ‘utterance of the last word brought tears to the eyes of many yeterans of the house, A Curious !Hlusicn. People declare that they have seen a field of grass gradually change color during a shower of rain, thousands of mushrooms springing up before their eyes. This is an optical illusion caused by the rain beating down the grass. The mushrooms do not really spring up during a single shower of rain. They are there already, but hidden by the grass, and when the rain beats down the grass it exposes the hidden mushrooms.—London Mail. #4 Olive Oil. ‘When olive oil is good and fresh it is [of a pale greenish yellow color, with little taste or smell, except a sweet, nutty flavor. Surprising to say, olive oll is not made from the seed of the olive, as in the case of most vegetable oils, but from the flesh or pericarp of the fruit. Mending Hot Water Bottles. To mend a hot water bottle use a patch such as used for auto tires. They can be had at any garage. Just clean around the puncture with gasoline, then apply patch. J Our Troubles. @Gibbs--80 you blame your Present troubles on the middleman. Dibbg— Not exactly. 1 blame all our troubles on the first man.—Dallas News. Too Much of It. “Was the dinner cooked to suit you?” “Yes, all but the bill. Take it back and have it boiled down.”—St. Louis Post-Dispatch, There | Let In the Sunlight. All household furnishings should “i exposed to direct sunlight for a num- ber of hours every few days. Direct sunlight is the best disinfectant known, for business men and actresses. but | Lt kills germs in a few Hours. Difused sunlight or daylight may have as good effect, but in a much longer time. Shut- ting the sunlight out of the house is | It should go an unhygienic custom. as has gone many of the ideas and customs belonging to the dark ages. Germs live and thrive in darkness. THE WHITE PLAGUE. Tuberculosis Is Often the Result of Lack of Nourishment. 3 While tuberculosis is caused by a well known germ, we often have a right to be suspicious of its coming from want of proper nourishment, This would seem to be a forerunner of the true disease of tuberculosis. This want of nourishment is to be ac- counted for in several ways. The di- For that reason sunshine should find | gestive system may be naturally weak its way into the home daily, and its —that is, born weak. It may have been presence should be welcomed as a mes- | strong in early life, but abused by the senger of cleanliness and good health. | use of alcohol, eating rapidly when The drawing of shades and the closing of windows to keep the carpets and draperies rrom fa@ling should be dis- couraged. It is better to have carpets and draperies that are faded than to have boys and girls with cheeks that are faded. Roses in the cheeks are more valuable than fFoses in the carpet. How to Fit a Horse Collar. A collar should be fitted to the horse and not the horse to the collar. The . collar that is too large should not be used on a horse in the hope that he will grow large enough so it will even- tually fit. A collar that fits well in the spring may not fit at all in the fall. When one is fitting a horse with a collar the animal should be standing in a natural position on level ground, with - his heau held at the height maintained . while at work. led should fit snugly to the side of the The collar when buck- neck, and its face should follow closely and be in even contact with the sur- face of the shoulders from the top of the withers to the region of his threat. physically or mentally tired or by gulping food without proper chewing. A plunge bath just after eating will often arrest digestion. The drinking | of ice water during a meal or iced tea and coffee will reduce the temperature of the stomach so that the natural. jIrocess. of digestion is interfered with. As a result, the food is not properly prepared for the organs to absorb it. Therefore it is not taken up by the| blood stream as it travels through the system of arteries to build up the dif- ferent tissues of the body. There are ce tain things that nature demands for building up healthy bodies. We must have some nitrogen in the form of meat or eggs or beans. We must have som fats, and we must have some starches; otherwise the body will be partly starved and disease germs will thrive in the different tis- ‘sues. This ocers more often in the lungs than anywhore else, but there is hardly an organ in the body that will not, under certain conditions, become ! tuberculous. — Dr. Samuel G. Dixon, © At the throat there should be enough Health Commisisoner of Penpsylvania. c room for a man's hand to be inserted : inside the collar.— Farm and Fireside. Waste In Food. “Eat what is on ‘your plate” may seem to many people to be a new table precept, yet it has been practiced for many years in certain little communi- ties nestled among the rugged hills of New England, where the waste of food is regarded as almost a crime. Hang- ing on the walls of many houses in these communities may. be found the “Table Monitor,” perhaps worked in worsted or cardboard and setting forth this sentiment, which somehow has a “haracieristic old {time New England ring: i Prosperity may roll’ with araple flow, Still to be prized, that it may widely bless The world is full enough of want and woe; 1 will not mock with selfish wasieful- ness. People Who Rarely Wink, There are people who rarely wink. How they manage to get along with- out doing so is a marvel, ‘but ‘some- how or other they do. Some eyes are naturally more moist than others, and the very moist eye does ‘not so much need the assistance of the lids to keep g 2 te constity- winking, though under the control of” the will, is done so quickly that it is practically’ an invol- untary action. Men wink when they feel that the eye is. uncomfortably dry, and when it, dges; not become dry the necessity for w fing is not felt. First Veterinary School. | ie As nearly as the facts can be ‘got at the first veterinary school was. found ed in the city of Lyons, France. abont the middle of May of the year 1iul. Since 1761 veterinary schools have spread ail over the civilized world. especially in Germany, France, Eng- land and the United States of Ameri- «a, in which advanced countries the norse has the-benefit of as fine a sei- ence as that which exists for his mas- ter, man. Her Proposal. “Ah, George, did you propose to Vivian?" “No. She made the proposal hefore I had a chance to say anything.” “She did? What did she say?” “She proposed that I should leave the house immediately, and I did.” Simplicity. 1 am convinced. both by. faith and experience, that to maintain oneself on this earth is not a hardship, but a nas- time if we will live simply and wisely. as the pursuits of the simpler nations are still the sports of the more artifi- cial.—Thoreau. obo bso oe 4 dees de bk ok PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT. Measles. “Every rise in fompeluture of a child should mean isolation as completely as if that child were in fact afflicted with an acute contagious disease,’ says the Medical Record in discussing means for -the prevention of measles. By a “rise in tempera- ture” is understood any tempera- ture higher than 99 degrees F. For measles is most infectious in its earliest stages, when. the symptoms are generally only those of a cold in the head. The typical rash has not yet appear- ed, but the child is sneezing, blowing a minute spray from its nose with every sneeze. This spray is laden with the germs of the disease. These germs are scattered thromigh the air of the home or the sehoolroom and in- haled by the noses of brothers and sisters or schoolmates. It is then, far more than when the disease has developed to the easily recognizable stage, that infection is spread; therefore it is then that the child must be iso- lated. TY ITTY PPP SA A seman Tepper ER A —— adaaanill TO UTILIZE THE SUN'S HEAT. Why Not Store It In Oil In Summer and Make It Werk For Us? Of course water can be heated only to the boiling temnerature, but there are many liquids that can be heated to a very much higher temperature than thi§ without boing. I have taken a tumbler of olive oil and heated it by means of a thin iron wire connected with a voltaic battery. I placed in the tumbler of oil a test tube filled with water. . In a short time the water was boiling, but the oil remained perfectly quiescent. If you store up hot oil in: stead of water you will have at yo command a source of heat able to do | all your cooking and even produce steam powerto work machinery. a We have plenty of heat . going to | waste in Washington during: the sum- | ‘mer time, for the sun’s rays are .very powerful, and we do not use the reofs of our buildings except to keep off the |. rain. What wide expanses of roof aré |. available in all our large cities) for the utilization of the sun's rays! Simple | pipes laid up on the roof and contain; 1 » Ing oil or some-other Nglita Would soon | become heated by the sun's rays. “Th «hot. ofl could :be - carried: into. an Watches and Water. When a person falls overboard or gets a ducking in any other way he at once has trouble with his watch, un- less, of course, it happens that he be not wearing it. If he is wise he will send It at once to a watchmaker. What the latter can do to it depends upon the extent of the wetting and the length of time that has elapsed since the immersion. : The Jewelers’ Circular says the re- pairer will take the watch entirely apart. If there be water still notice- able he will place all the parts in al- cohol and then clean them. If they be dry he will put all ordinary steel parts in benzine and all plates, bridges and brass parts in a solution of alkali and soap. A repairer receiving a watch several days after its wetting will immerse it in coal oil. Then he will decide wheth- er it will be less expensive to clean the works or to replace them with a ew movement. ii Three Servian Words. Dobra is the general word of assent in Servia. If a doughnut is good—and Serbs make delectable doughnuts in tin pans over camp fires—it is dobra. A good looking girl is’ dobra, and if she is very good looking she is dobra- dobra. A good speech or a lucky gen- eral or a pleasant summer or the word to charge are all dobra. One can go anywhere in Servia it one is but letter perfect in dobra and nai- mo, which latter, is the general nega- tive. One should also be able to say “Hydy!” with great force and convic- tion. That is the slang for “hurry.” And it is needed, for these Balkan peo- ples do not like to hurry unless killing is somewhere involved. One's conver- sation might lack continuity perhaps, but if supplemented by assorted rubs and pattings-one need never miss a bed er a meal where a Serb camp fire shines.—Herbert Corey in Saturday Evening Post. Cheap and Good Foods. Bome of the best foods are the cheap- est. There are carrots, salsify, par- have the rarest combination of food ‘qualities of anything that grows. « It is 80 healthful that it is said a steady diet of it will cure many distempers. Parsnips are cheap,. good, wholesome. Anybody who doesn’t like the taste of i|'a parsnip has his palate put in wrong. ‘Lettuce is cheap, and a lettuce sand- wich is royal food. Any ome who starves ‘while these things: are on the ‘market, to be bought for a few ¢ents, “has mot much of a claim on life. There is more health in them than in porter- house steaks or oyster cocktails. Some ‘people affect to think they are .a low ‘brow food, but it might be sald in-re- tort that they are’ low -browed people ‘Who “think 50~Bolumbus 0) State ba 4 sn - fi Washington's Bowery: | ; Pennsylvania avenue, im your expec- psuldted tank ‘and: Stored. “Yoh “toll heat “that falls upon the’ ‘tops of your houses, but: effect some cooling of the ‘houses themselves by the abstraction of this heat.—Alexander ‘Graham Bell 1: National ‘Geographic Magazine. ? An Audacious Sohoolboy. The audacity of Warren Hastinas as his name beneath the clock on the western tower of the abbey pales be- fore the audacity of another Westmin- ster schoolboy, ‘who secreted himself in the abbey in fulfillment of a waver that he would sleep in the abbey, not withstamding the report that the ghost of Bradshaw, the president of the court at the trial of Charles 1., who in the time of the commonwealth occu- pled the deanery, haunted the building. He spent the night in the gbbey and occupied his time in carving his name on the coronation chair, which bears’ to this day the following rudely cut in- : scription: this cha “I, Peter Abbott, slept ir "—Dundee Advertiser. The Call to Individuality. No man thinks his own thoughts; no man uses his own eyes; no man stands upon his own feet; no man walks alone. ‘We go in flocks; we lean on others; we follow the multitudes blindly; we bend our necks to the yoke of public opin- ion; we have no self reliance. The only virtue we have is conformity, The demand of the age is for men and wo- |" men of character who are self poised, self reliant, independent and self as- sertive.’ Society follows customs and routine. . The redemption of the race is in the originality of individuals.— Jacob Gould Schurman. ‘thus not only conserve and uthize the’ 14" Westminster schoolboy in carving tation the Broadway of Washington, is morg or less its Bowery; since proprie- soon, take over their holdings, see no _tels bid for lodgers at 50 cents a night, .venirs—the capitol on brass slippers, the. capitol on silver puppies, the capi- tol on patriotic’ dustpans, the capitol illuminated with mother-of-pearl. Chop suey resorts abound. On the" way to his inauguration each new president passes a “home of burlesque,” a penny arcade, a tattooist’s studio and the shrine’ where a ‘beautiful lady palm- ist” reveals your name. And yet at the end of this amazing thoroughfare rises the matchless dome that crowns the capitol, which crowns a lordly emi- nence.—Rollin Lynde Hartt in Century. Hibernation. In the state known as “hibernation” ‘respiration practically ceases.' Diges- tion seems to follow respiration, and the waste of tissue is reduced to the smallest possible limit, the circulation in the meantime being only just suffi- cient to sustain life. It has been as- certained that animals can endure the loss of tissue until it amounts to 40 per cent of their normal weight. Should "the weight be reduced beyond that lim- it the result is death. It is the stored up fat within the body of the hibernat- ing creatures that sustains them dur- ing the many months of cold weather. Cleaning a Water Bottle To clean the inside of a water bottle or any glass that is too small to insert ‘the hand into put into the bottle a small quantity of tea leaves, pour in’ aboul : one-third of a ‘teacupful of vinegar, E 3 i shake well, empty and rinse with cold Milton's Works. “Milton regarded the “Paradise Re- gained” as infinitely superior to the “Paradise Lost” and once expressed great surprise that any one should en- tertain a contrary opinion. He said that of all his works the poem “On the Morning of Christ’s Nativity” was’ his best. It was his earliest, being writ- ten in 1629, when he was twenty-one Years of age. Domestic Bliss. “You are always reaching for some- thing you can’t afford.” “You were not always of that opin- fon.” “Oh, is that so?” “I think so. At least you didn’t say that when I proposed.” —Houston Post. Too Sensitive. “What is wrong between that young engaged couple?” “He didn’t like it because when he told her that he would die for her she wanted to know how much life insur- ance he carried.” —Baltimore American. There is one broad sky over all the world and, the same heaven beyond it.—Dickens. whether it be blue or cloudy, | water. A perfectly clear glass will re- sult. - - . Must Be Paid. “Dad, I want to be a musician.” “Then I'd be either a piper or a fid- dler.” “Wey?” “When there is any paying to be done I notice they are always preferred creditors.”—Kansas City Journal. Work as Well as Pray. Pray fer what you want, but don’t wear out de knees of yo’ britches at ft. Ef you don’t git a quick answer rise up an’ go to work befo’ you git too weak ter rise.—Atlanta Constitution. The Alternative. to keep up with your neighbors? Mrs. B.—If we can’t, my dear, we'll move. — Pittsburgh Press. The Giraffe. In its native country of Africa the giraffe sometimes attains the height of seventeen feet. Many things difficult to design prove | easy to perform.—Johnson. erry tm CES - EE snips, lettuce and such stuff. Carrots: Mr. B.—Do you think you'll be able tors, aware that the government will | : object in improving them. Dowdy ho- |, 25 even. Shop windows féem with sous | st a Head of Chautauqua Light Opera 3 J. K. MURRAY A8 GEOFFREY WILDER. R. MURRAY during his long career before the public in operas hae been has been associated with Francis Wilson, De Woif Hopper and practi- in Hoyt’s “A Tin Soldier,” “Nanon” and many other pieces. His great fame, as well as that of Mrs. Murray (Clara Lane), lies in the fact that they prac- tically made the noted Castle Square Opera Company of Boston. .They were . engaged to head the company when it was at its lowest ebb, and through their efforts it was brought to the high standard which it afterward attained. For the past two seasons he has sung the leading male part in “Sari” un. der the management of Henry W. Savage. “Sarl” is one of the most popular and successful light operas which has been put on’ the stage in several years, and Mr. Murray’s excellent work contributed in no ‘small part to its success. Mr. Murray was born in Liverpool, England, but is 4 true American in ‘every. sense of the word. Both he and Mrs, Murray” are delightful people as well as singers of high merit. They are prominent, in the cast of the light opera “Dorothy,” to be given at the local Chautauqua. cally all of the other stars. He starred for a time in Irish drama and played Company Famous In Stage World oe) connected with some of the most famous operatic organizations. He Let the Long Blue Chimney Do Your Cooking HERE'S no need to burn up your strength over kitchen drudgery. T It takes energy to cook meals, but it ought to be heat energy, not human energy. You don’t do all your own cooking on the New Perfection—the Long Blue Chimney does it for you. No coaling up, no shaking down; no soot, no ashes, no fussing. Visible flame always—steady ways. Easy to light and cooks fast or slow as you like. The stove of dy habits. In more than 2,500,000 homes. . Come in and see the new reversible glass reservoir, a new fea a ture that makes the New Perfection better than ever, Meyersdale Hardware 60 BALTIMORE & OHIO i SEASHORE EXCURSIONS FROM MEYERSDALE, PA, TO Ablantic GIy CAPE MAY, SEA ISLE CITY, OCEAN CITY, STONE HARBOR, WILDWOOD ? AUGUST 9 and 23, SEPTEMBER 6 TICKETS GOOD RETURNING 16 DAYS] Secure Illustrated Booklet Giving Full Details From Ticket Agents, Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. 30-34 $8.50 Glood in Coaches Only $10.50 Good in Pullman Cars With Pullman Ticket - ROYAL frei BAKING POWDER No Alum-—No Phosphate