EER HRI . . = ee irae - oe ————} [Registered at the & ostofhce at. Meyersdale, Pa , as Second- Class Mail Matter.]| THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, A. M.-SCHAFFNER, Editor and Proprietor. Pablished €very Tharsday in the Year at $1.80 Per Year Cash Phone No. 55. 110-112 Center Street. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6. 1913 Meyersdale’s Contest. Meyersdale emerges from the battle of ballots, and the bitter contest which was waged will soon be forgotten and all will be found working for the greater and better Meyersdale. To the victors The Commercial extends hearty congratulations, and to the defeated good will and good wishes. In a government, constituted as ours, everyone must with good grace accept the verdict of the people. They spoke on election day, and the men elected to their various offices, in the faithful per- formance of ir duties, have a realizing sense of the fact that they hold their offices by the will of the people. From the hightest to the lowe: ay their tenure of office be in accordance with the spirit and letter of the law, agreeable to the cffice holders and satisfactory tc » people whose servants they are. . May all result good for Meyersdale. EIS CS PE Crisis Near liu Mexico. The real crisis in Mexico is near at hand. It is announced that! President Wilson demanded the resignation of Hureta and that no| one closely allied with him is to carry on the government of Mexico. What disposition of this demand Hureta will make remains to be seen. If he rejects the ultimatum of the President, the adminis- tration will be compelled to enforce its demands, and that will mean a clash between Mexico and the United States. At Swarthmore in this state and in Alabama President Wilson declared that this nation is not seeking new territory and that the governed have rights and privileges as well as the governing ones "Phe condition of Mexico is pitiful, and while the administration apparently has done everything possible to avert a clash there is a limit to a state of warfare and butchery, and should conditions con- tinue as they have been, the day may be near at hand when the leaden heel of America will be felt in the lawless and abused Re- public of Mexico, : Bond lous Deleaied. The fifty million dollar bond issue for good roads has for the time being received a quietus. A big majority of the people who voted on the question decided that it would not be fair to burden the state for years to come with a heavy debt which the next gen- eration would have to pay. The slog was ‘‘good roads’ and every effort was made to confuse the people and fool them as they used to, with v ‘protection’’ ery and the ‘‘full dinner pail.’”’ Everybody any : good roads but there are a great many people who believedn the old fashioned way of paying cash for what you buy and it'#as been demonstrated to all fair minded men that five million dol} / Xe Sg 4 4 4 ) can be raised annually for good roads without burdening the st with a $50,000,000 debt, and about $5,000,000, it is believed by many’: is about all that a state can spend honestly and judiciously in rosd making in the course of a year. : ‘ oR . . . £i Sulzer Vindicated. : William Sulzer received one of the © mest tributes at the recent election in New York that any”. ovo. received. Impeached and deposed as governor of. pois State, he was nominated and triumphantly _ eeted to membership of the lawmaking body which brouc’ « shout his political downfall. Tammany is corrupt. Sulzer had been playing the game before he was governor, Murphy wanted him to continue, and Sulzer wanted to give a good administration. Hence the upheaval. The public believes that practically all the charges brought against Sulzer were true, but it resents the feigned honesty of Murphy. Naturally the public sympathized with Sulzer and felt that he had not had a square deal. But is it not strange that a man found guilty of numerous charges, deposed as governor, and a few weeks later is elected a member of the legislature ? The peo ple sometimes vote in a mysterious way their wonders to perform The Elections. Tammany received a solar plexus on Tuesday. Her candidate was snowed under b{ many thousand votes. The curtain had been drawn aside during the Sulzer trial and the people of greater New York saw Charles F. Murphy very closely and distinctly. Slowly but surely the free born, clear thinking, independent men of Amer- ica are impressing upon the minds of men that the day of the political boss is passing away. Now and then men try to beat the game, but in this 20th century they usually get hurt. It is contrary to the spirit of the age to have a political dictator and bruiser carrying elections with a high hand. Charles F. Murphy was hit hard, and every time the people assert their manhood against the boss they rise a step higher in self-government and respectability. The contest was not so much between McCall, the Tammany candidate, and Mitchell, the Fusion candidate, as it was against corrupt Tammany and Boss Murphy on the one hand and the re- sentment of an outraged people on the other hand. The people won in New York to their credit. The passing of the “tariff bill apparently has not weakened the administration. Massachusetts elected the Democratic candidate by a big majority, New Jersey elected Wilson’s choice for governor by a safe plural- Meyersdale Commereial. | SCIENCE OF CITY BUILDING Many Cities Desert the Topsy Method of Expansion and Begin to Reach Out. small, that are deserting the Topsy method of just growing, says Harper's Weekly. They are being gently and persistently pushed along toward greatness. To use an invidious meta- phor, they are picking factories from their less wakeful neighbors and planting them in their own towns; they are causing the transfer of hun- dreds of millions of dollars’ worth of business from the somnolent cities and, in this time of reforms, are | boasting of their remarkable progress | in population. | The way the thing is done may be aptly illustrated by the . manner in which Poughkeepsie obtained an auto- | mobile factory. The secretary ready in a newspaper that an Itflian som] pany was thinking of locating a fac- tory in, this country. Without waiting | | for the owners to have a. chance to! § look the country over and decide for 3 themselves, the secretary pounced | upon them and talked Poughkeepsie, | d talked it hard and convincingly He invited them to come up and see the place, and when he got them took them all over the town and showed 4 them the schools and churches, the | g parks and workingmen’s houses, told | them about the railroad facilities and | rates. Then he took them to the very § ad- | | | spot that he had picked out in vance where they could build. He # idl | 8 There are certain cities, big and |} i 3 aq i EE 4+ ho th at Oud For the next few weeks we are prepared to offer you-a selection of COATS, of which we are proud, for men and women, and we feél sure you will be pleased to see our nifty, up-to-date stock, and when you see our stock, you will agree with us that we are prepared to furnish Coats for men and women of the most fas- tidious tastes. | pictured the factory fo them, pointed | to the homes their men would live in, | told them how low the taxes were and | how healthful was the air. When they went away the visitors had ev-| ery good point about Poughkeepsie throbbing in their heads in 100 differ-| ent forms, and consequently they | straightway came back and built their factory in Poughkeepsie. | | MAKE WASTE PLACES BLOOM Railway Station Garden Is Latest Move Toward the City Beautiful. . During the last few years a new - kind of garden has come into being in \ 5 \ > the shape of the railway station gar- LL ETRE den. It is tended by members of the: Come in and convince yourself, We will count it a pleasure and privilege to show you our stock, whether or not you wish to buy. FAIR Dealing BITTY Demise ~ Lal uy ana FAIR Treatment FAIR Prices FAIR Merchandise FAIR Selling #taff, and is usually a picture of neat ness, and often of beauty as well. The| _ in Lb Sy Pf small, tidy beds, or long narrow bor: ders edged with white stones, are ‘often glorious masses of color, with- out one jarring note. At some country stations the name of the place is worked out in flowers or small shrubs, and should the traveler by chance fall into conyersation with the presiding genius of the garden he will find that a remark on the nattiness and pretty ness of the scheme of decoration will be much appreciated. In their season, roses—usually red or white or yellow Ramblers—bloom luxuriantly at many a wayside stopping place and trans- form the station itself into a ‘thing of beauty.”—London Globe. South America’s Worst Brigands. I made many expeditions from Po: tosi into the surrounding country, writes W Hilton-Simpson in the Wide World. The Indians here are the no- torious Aimara, likewise descendants of the Incas, and the worst brigands in South America. Their principal oc: cupation is murder and theft, and un: til quite recently they sacrificed their prisoners to the gods, and then par took of their flesh. As regards sav- agery, they easily excel all other tribes. The sacrificial victim was not merely butchered, as happens in most | similar cases; he was bound, and then | the flesh was torn off his living body and eaten by men, women and chil dren. If, in the process of being tor- tured, as much as a moan escaped his lips, the bones of the victim. were thrown away; but if, on the contrary, he was stoic enough to be silent, the | bones were collected and set up on a| pile of rocks to be worshiped. It .is| still within the memory of living man | that human meat was sold among the Aimara. Plant Street Trees. | Plant a tree. The expense is small. | The subsequent attention is not large. | Once started, the tree helps itself as scarcely anything else of moment to us ever does It grows while we sleep. It drinks the sunshine and compounds its own food out of the refuse gases of the air and the watery solutions of | the soil. Out of these inert, inattrac- tive, barely recognizable substances by a miracle of transformation there comes forth®that thing of life and beau- ty, which is also a thing of tangible money value—a tree. Improving. “Bliggins like to hear himself talk.” “ls that all you have against him?” ity, in Maryland a Progressive Democrat was named for the United States Senate. In Pittsburgh the Penrose forces elected Armstrong over the Flinn forces Mayor of Pittsburgh, and the indications are that Sen ator Penrose is gr: lly getting back the power that was so | ruthlessly y, so cruelly taken away from him a few| vant Penrose again, ! to serve years ago. Well them six years longe 1 the United States Senate. “Could anything be worse?” | | “Certainly. Bliggins used to like to | | hear himself sing.” Umpire’s Joy. “So he claims to be she only per-| fectly impartial umpire in the game? | On what does he base the claim?” | Groceries. November The Quarterly | : Winter issue of A Butterick Butterick Patterns Fashion Magazine now on sale at . (with coupon entitling pur- chaser to a pat- tern FREE), can be had at our pattern counter for 25¢. These Corsets are the exquisite creations of expert corset designers . and artisans They are patterned after such attractive lines that they are dreams of beauty, yet substantial and practical =~ The materials used in their construction are carefully selected stock of contils and batistes. The boning materials, corset clasps, hose supporters and trimmings are all of the best grade. Every woman who wears a properly fitted American Beauty Corset is conscious of her figure attractiveness The prices are exceptionally low for corsets of such high quality. Only $1.00 to $3.50 Per Pair. : 1cc and 15¢C Get a Fashion Sheet free at et Co. Excusive 8 FOR SALE AT ZB Glessner’s Department Store, | our pattern counter. These are distinctly new and stylish outer garments for Sport Coats. Women and Misses’. The coats are very il Te ance and particularly comfortable in the wearing. Women’s Novelty Cloth Coats. finish goods made up in the most approved styles Women’s Black Plush and Nealette Coats. nothing excels Plush and Sealette. The styles are selected for practical service and dress wear. If it should happen any time we are out of your size we can get it in two days time. ildren’ Fur Effects and Novelty Cloth. New one just received. Practical Children’s Coats. 3 Coats. and stylish models suitable for school and St SE; Teche My lines of Dress Goods and Dry Goods Dress Goods and Dry Goods. : are being made more complete day by - day. The things that are being added are the newest of their kinds, All the fashionable mate- rials, fancy and rotigh In appearance and wearing qualities You will find here GROCERY SPECIALS cach week. It will pay you to buy your dry goods and groceries from me. ALBERT S. GLESSNER SUCCESSOR TO APPEL & GLESSNER "MEYERSDALE, PA. . Prof. day las Mrs. week v Sami spent Jame in Som Qzias ship, ° F. C, Friday ion. Mrs. last at ‘friends * Miss line I f.iends Mrs. of Me; license Miss a Sun and fi Miss and Si berlan Miss ‘tlves a eral de Mrs. "Washi main f Mart :Frosth expect Joh relativ return Mrs. ter pai ington the wi Miss bury friend, Lincol Mr. left S they | ing wi Mr. son I evenir and fr Miss Wm. ere “ daugh Mrs. to the land, where Mrs. daugh spend. forme Brady Miss “Miss 1 Md., : ithe | Schisc « Yer! Md., spend: Mr. a North Miss in the partm and o few d. Mr. Savag to att in-law took } Mist day la she v her and I Mis: Miller berlar a Ha home Mrs ter, M spent with Sams Mrs a fe Mrs. 1] her s Some: nellsv New for n the B: SeVer: with 1 of Frc Mrs ter, N Owen tives : home Richa merclL