The Meyersdale commercial. (Meyersdale, Pa.) 1878-19??, October 02, 1913, Image 4

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    Meyersdale Qommereial.
[Registered at the Fostoffice at Meyersdale, Pa , as Second-Class Mail Maiter.]
|
| ICKED UP IN,
ENNSYLVANIA *
THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL,
A. M. SCHAFFNER, Editor and Proprietor.
Pablished Every Tbarsday ip the Year at $1.80 Per Year Cash
> Phone No. 55. 110-112 Center Street.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1913
'Riley’s Birthday Poetry Party.
James Whitcomb Riley, Indiana’s popular poet, will Cris
his 61st birthday anniversary next Tuesday and it is the pend 18
friends to have his admirers give him a “‘poetry shower. » Boe
invited to send a’ few lines of verse to the Hoosier posts r. Ri ley
has been a good citizen and has come so close to the heart in his
writings and why he should be punished with all that poetry is a
mystery. If this project is carried out he will pray to be delivered
from his friends. 0
Joe Cannon for Congress.
The Hon. Joseph G. Cannon, known is “Uncle Joe,” is going
to make the race for Congress again ‘to please his friends.
When he first was chosen speaker of the House he was idolized by
his party and admired by his political opponents, but before his
service of speaker was over he was bitterly hated by many of his
party and despised by his political enemies. When the time came
for election the people of the Danville, Illinois, decided to trust
their interests to another. With the two years rest that Cannon
has had, he is ready to make the race once more for Washington
and making in all twenty-two, winning nearly every time. Who
knows but that the arch reactionary, although nearly eighty years
young, will again get a seat in Congress.
Somerset's Good Crops.j
When the poet sang, ‘‘Mongst the Hills o’ Somerset’’ he was
impressed with the grandeur of our mountain land, the beautiful
foliage of the trees, the strata of our rocks, the heaven penetrating
peaks of our elevations, the torturous course of our streams, and
the crystal cascades on our hills. He hardly realized the rich min-
eral treasures hidden ‘'mongst those hills, nor has the story been
fully told of the rich agricultural tracts that are nestled among
these hills, the productiveness of the soil on the mountain slopes
and the large crops that are harvested in these flats. Somerset
county has again fared well during the past year. The late frosts
did considerable damage to the berries and fruits but aside from
the damage to the early crops, this has been a good year once more
for the farmers of Somerset County. Some Sections of the county
have suffered very much through the drought, while the damage
here was slight. Hay, wheat, oats, corn, —all yielded good Crops.
With the load after load of potatoes that hase been brought to town
for shipment, the size and quality of the same, ¢ 1s evidence suffi-
cient that the working man’s food has been ountifully suplied
here. The price of potatoes a year ago was = high for most
p=ople and will possibly be so again. The fact is, ue 1S too high.
The supply is not such that there is much pro ability for cheap
The law of supply and demand is a law which hag to be
potatoes. h tariff and low tariff.
reckoned with aside from hig
SCHOOL REPORT.
Report of Meyersdale Public Schools for First Month Ending September 26, 1913.
-
HIGH SCHOOL—TEAUHERS,
hs : ist. and Algebra; Prof. J. H. Coleman
- 1.. D. Crunkleton, Prin. Hist. an :
re, Phys. Coots Miss Rena Lauver, Drawing, Shorthand, Type-
Writingiand Biology; Miss Alice M. Hanford, Latin and English; Miss Evya-
lyn Truxal, German and English.
Total Enroll’t. Av. Att. Per Cent. of Att.
M ® M: mT M FT
i 3.8 11 3 7 10 97 86 9p
ONIOTS.. 511i rrreerrivessnssssse 90
ii r Sm. 8 sw. Bw wg
Bo Homores. iiinds. 22 33 12 9 5 97 05. 96
i arberabeaiase 21 31 52 20 an 49 93 94 94
GRAMMAR GRADES TEACHERS.
Grammar Grades—Mis Edith Wilhelm, Arithmetic, Writing and Mental
“Arithmetic; Mise Edith Hoover, English, Reading and Penn’a. Citizen; Miss
isé Floto, Geography, Spelling and«History.
a : 13 11 24 10 -10 24 90 90 90
ee EY
Highth Grade AE 17 26 43 15 24 39 93 94 94
i 1 24 35 88 90 89
Ve ade, Miss Mayme Platt L127 41 1
Never Be ¢“ TFllen 1int............:..... 21 18 39 18 15 33 89 82 86
known man, aged about 40 years, was
(Western Newspaper Union, Special
News. Service.)
Greenville —Retiring from the pres-
he has held since 1909, the Rev. C.
Theodore Benze, D. D., will sail for
Germany to assume charge of a pro-
fessorship at the Kropp seminary,
near Kiel, the first week in October.
Philadelphia—With the skull
crushed and the shoulders, arms and
back bearing bruises, the nude body
of Israel Goldman, 7 years old, was
found on the golf links of the White
Marsh Valley Country club, near here.
The police said that the child was
probably attacked and killed by a de-
generate. Around the boy’s throat
was a shoe string drawn tight enough
to have strangled him.
Somerset. — That Attorney Harvey
M. Berkeley of Somerset apparently
is an embezzler to the extent of $76,-
000 was disclosed in the Somerset
county court when his books as sec-
retary and treasurer of the Somerset
Telephone Co. were examined. Berke-
ley has been missing since August 21.
The last seen of him was in Union-
town, where he is reported to have
obtained $500 on a personal check
drawn on a Somerset bank, which
later was protested. For many years
prior to 1906 he was cashier of the
First National bank of Somerset, and
idency of Thiel college here, which |
ranked high in financial circles. Con-
fidence in him made it possible for
phone stock as collateral.
to the books found in his office, 3,000
shares of fictitious stock were issued, |
representing at par value $76,725.
ing a cab in a funeral cortege, was |
killed when ‘a heavy wagon coming
down a hill ran into his team. He
mourners iwere slightly injured.
Waynesburg. — Two men were in-
jured, one seriously, when an auto-
mobile in the road between Car-
a 20-foot embankment. Dr.
Laidley of Carmichaels was cut and
his skull may be fractured.
and cut on the head and body.
Laidley’s machine rolled over twice
before reaching the bottom of the
hill and landed on its wheels with the
engine still running. - i
Breckenridge.— A consignment of
sheet steel manufactured by the West
Penn Steel Co. here will be among
the first of local products to go
through the Panama canal. The com-
pany has a large order to fill in San
|
rail, but the next load will go by wa- |
ter.
Erie.— One man was instantly
killed and another seriously injured
here when they were run down by
the Twentieth Century Limited on the
Lake Shore railroad. The dead man
is Harry S. Zuck, a plumber, 33 years |
old. With Clem Kent, 30 years old,
a painter, he attempted to cross the
tracks ahead of the train. Kent
reached to save Zuck, but just as he
seized his coat, the train struck him.
Kent was knocked unconscious and
his arm broken in three places. !
Pittsburg.—Climbing on the safety
gate to look down an elevator shaft
at the plant of the Armstrong Cork
Co., John Myers, aged 15, was killed
when the descending elevator frac-
tured his skull, He was employed as
a team box tender. }
Sharon.—While drinking soda at a
local confectionery establishment
here, Mrs, Mary Mollitoire dislocated
her jaw. The proprietor of the place
was unable to reset the jaw and
rushed for a doctor. The jaw was
soon adjusted after the physician ar-
rived. o
Greensburg.—The body of an un-
found near the Radebaugh tunnel on
the main line of the Pennsylvania rail-
road, neat 'hefe. The man had evi-
‘dently been struck by a train.
‘Chainbersburg. — William W. Brit
fon, a member of the Pennsylvania
Jegislature during the sessions of
1881, 1897 and 1899, died at his home
at Upper Strasburg, this county, from
paralysis. He was 81 years old.
Philadelphia.—In pursuance of the
policy of substituting electricity for
steam on the company’s suburban
’ 20 39 17 19 36 94 95 95
ixth Grade ‘¢“ Emma Hostetler........19
Sh s “ir ¢¢." Marion Leydig............ 20 21 41 18 19 37 89 90 90
Fifth Grade, “ Marie Crowe............... 17 29 46 17. 25 42 93 87 90
$4 $s ‘¢ Hester Meyers............ 29 18 47 25 16 41 90 92 91
47 17 26 41 94 93 94
h Grade ¢¢ Nelle Dom 1928
Pons ¥ ¢« Susan N. Baer........... 27 16 43 24 13 37 92 94 88
£ ¢ 13 31 96 92 94
i de ‘“ KateCoulehan............ 20: 15 :35 18
Thi fhe : ¢¢ Martha Deist.......... ... 27 21 48 25 19 44 96 96 96
i 25 9 23 21 4 93 92 93
d Grade ‘¢ Esther /Austin..... ......25 24 4 !
Boy in # violet Clark............... 23 20 48 23 23 46 94 93 93
Second and First, ‘¢ Frieda Daberko......... 27 14 41 24 13 37 92 94 93
First Grade, £1 Mary FEiecher..... ........ 24 27 51 22 24 46. 90. 90 90
““ 6c 6 16 41 22 15 37 90 95 93
Eleanor Lepley
Total Attendance High School... ........ 44 1 116
Total Attendance Grades aster irieaiaesiinntin 379 364 743
Total Attendance in all Schools........... 423 535 889
. W. H. KRETCHMAN, Sup. Prin.
BROUGHT SUIT. \ZUF ALL MILLINERY
| GOODS SOLD.
Ida Klink has brought suit against |
the township of Summit to recover
$10 damages Tw Ba ron | Tuesday, W. H. Dill, bought The
d bn while she | goods. The household goods are also
from 8 horse #n ey [to be sold at constable sale, to set-
and hor i ee tle a rent claim against, the com-
in, 0 . m. | :
iy Er She alleges that the horse | P41Y » held by Paul Gross, of Johns
fell in a cutter on the road between | >
Summit Mills and Keim postoffice | Fancy Norway Mackerel 10 cents
which the township supervisors neg-|each at Bittner’s Grocery.
lected. At the scene of the acci- | —————
dent, it is alleged, the road is only | Now is the time to plant bulbs, if |
10 or 12 feet wide, with gutters on | you want them to bloom for Christ- |
both sides between 5 and 6 feet deep. | mas, at Habel & Phillips. at
The Sufall Millinery Co’s., goods
| were sold under the hammer on
lines, the directors of the Pennsyl-
vania Railroad Co. authorized the
electrification of its Germantown &
Chestnut Hill branch, 12 miles long.
The work is to cost $1,250,000, “and
will be completed within a year.
Donora.—Fifty-two survivors of the
100th regiment, Pennsylvania Veteran
volunteers, better known as the
“Roundheads,” attended the forty-
eighth annual reunion of the regiment
here. The “Roundhead” regiment
was organized on August 31, 1861, and
re-enlisted on January 1, 1864. It was
mustered out on July 24, 1864. The
regiment took part in 26 battles, in-
cluding Bull Run, Antietam and the
Wilderness. Thirty-two of the veter-
ans died during the last year.
Norristown.—Nine relatives of the
late Robert N. Carson, who made his
fortune in street railways, renewed in
the orphans’ court here their contest
for the $4,000,000 which he set aside
for the establishment of a college for
girls near here. The contestants de-
clare that the witnesses to the will
are interested in charity.
Carlisle. — Miss Jane West, well
known throughcut this section as one
of the most beautiful and talented
girls of ante-bellum days, was asphyx-
iated while fighting flames in her
apartments at the big Mount Holly |
him to get large loans by giving tele- |g
According | #@
| 4
Easton.—Charles Yard, while driv- | §
was crushed beneath the cab and four | 4
michaels and the Monongahela river | FE
became unmanageable and went over | i
John | 3
bruised on the head and body, and | id
John | #
Horner of Carmichaels was bruised | E
Dr. | #
Francisco and has been shipping by |
Our Specials for the Next
Few Weeks!
Swe at ers i In the history
of this store
we mever had as large a stock, as
choice a variety and as good bargains
as we are offering this Fall for
Sweaters of all descriptions.
blankets and Comfirfs, Js have laid
of Blankets and Comforts at astonish-
ingly low prices. Come in, look the
stock over and we are sure you will
want to help us reduce our “stock of
the above description.
FAIR Dealing
FAIR D....o.
Lea SUYIng
FAIR Selling
FAIR Treatment
FAIR Prices
FAIR Merchandise
meme?
CERRY
i See the new things that have just arrived from the factory this day,
wha comprising practically the most desirable things obtainable in this
4 line, and every number proven, by Baltimore and New York good
dressers, to be the correct thing for discriminating wearers,
New Kimona Goods
Wiel ~
ii New Crepes for Long and Short Kimonas and for Dressing Sacks at
15¢, 20c and 25¢ per yard. : Handsome Ribbons for trimming Kimo-
a nas and for Fancy Work.
Inn. : : |
Albert S. Glessner
COATS FOR no
. Children fe
mm HIS season promises to eclipse all records in the popularity of
. PILE FABRICS. Hence you will find my line strong with
Coats of Pony Cloth, Silk Plush, Carocal, Astrakhan, etc. The va-
riety of styles and of fabrics shown here will greatly assist you in
pr TE ge ew
making suitable selections. All my Coats are new and I guarantee
correct cut, style and make, strictly UP-TO-THE-MINUTE —the
assured styles for Fall and Winter, 1913 and 1914. Take advantage
of these offerings at MONEY-SAVING PRICES.
Ladies’ New Neckwear
BY THE WAY have you priced my new stock of Dry Goods ? Let me
9
whisper it in your ear so that my competitors can not hear
it, “I'll save you from 5 to 15 per cent. on your Dry Goods’ bill.
Make me prove it.’,
ALBERT S. GLESSNER
SUCCESSOR TO APPEL & GLESSNER
SEERENRWYT
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