The Meyersdale commercial. (Meyersdale, Pa.) 1878-19??, September 03, 1914, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    5
“Meyersdale Commereial.
[ Registered at the Postofiice at Meyersdale, Pa, as Second-Class Mail Maiter.]
THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL.
L. R. CLEAVER, Owner
K. CLEAVER, Editor and Business Manager.
Pablished Every Tbharsday in the Year at $1.80 Per Year Cas)
Somerset County and Economy Phones. 110-112 Centre Street.
THURSDAY, SEPTEWBER 3. 1914
Uncle Sam Wants Better Children.
The federal Department of Labor has established a Children’s
Bureau to teach ‘parents how to care for children and has just
jssued a booklet on ‘‘Prenatal Cuiture’’ which is for free distri-
bution, ;
For some time Uncle Sam has-been paying considerable atten-
tion to the improvement of hogs, chickens and livestock, as well as
teaching us how to raise pumpkins and potatoes, and it is encourag-
ing to find attention now being turned toward improving the hu-
man race.
A
Woman Suffrage.
A woman is an individual, and as such she has a right to in-
dependence in thinking. Intellectually, it was the cry a few years
ago that she was incapable of pursuing the more advanced branches
in our higher cuiricula of learning, but the honor women in the
first schools and colleges of the country, have silenced the question
as to the comparative strength of the sexes, mentally considered. _
Have not our mothers, sisters, and wives the same, yea, nobler
aspirations for what is best for the community, the state and the
nation, than the generality of men!
: The idiot, the Indian, the Negro, the yellow man, may help to
decide the destinies of the nation, but our laws at present degrade
women below these, in not granting her the right of franchise.
Political Candidates Here Next Week
Meyersdale is to be instructed in matters political during the
coming week, Candidate for the U. S. Senate, Gifford Pinchot,
and candidate for Governor, William Draper Lewis, on the Pro-
gressive ticket, are scheduled to appear at various places next week
in Somerset Co., on next Tuesday and Wednesday, and late rumors
have it that M. G. Brumbaugh, the Republican candidate for gov-
ernor, will be here about the middle the week. We have no au-
thority that Mr. Penrose will be along with him.
It is the duty of every voier in this section of the state to hear
the representatives of two of the three great parties of this com-
monwealth. Besides, all these candidates are men of unusual abili-
ty. After having heard them all you may still be of the same polit-
ical views, but no doubt you will be better able to discharge your
obligations as a voter. Go hear them all.
BUSINESS
ANNOUNCEMENT.
The new management, of the Com-
mercial desires to inform the public
hat all outstanding subscriptions, job
work and adyertising accounts have
been purchased from Mr. A. M. Schaff-
ner and settlement is to be made with
the present owner.
REDUCTION TO PAY UP.
That the subscription list of the
Commercial may be more of an ad-
vance payment list, up to November,
all settlements for arrearages or future
payments will be made on the basis
of $1.25 per year. For many people
this would mean putting out their
money at 20 per cent; surely this is
worth considering by the Commercial
subscribers, and those who purpose
becoming such.
1000 MILE AUTO TRIP
Joseph Mosholder of town, a vete-
ran of the Oiyil War, started Sunday
morning on an automobile trip to
‘Waterloo, Iowa. His son Maurice
and wife and two children, Catharine
and Alberta, went with him, Miss
Lettie Williams accompanied them
as far as Pittsburg, where she will
bid them good bye.
At Pittsburg they will be joined by
Mrs. George Bopp, a daughter of Mr.
Mosholder. They will pass through
Canton, O., Lima, and Fort Wayne,
Ind., to Chicago and thence to Du-
buge, Iowa, to Waterloo. The dis-
tance is between 800 and 1,000 miles
and is quite a trip for the 70 year old
veteran,
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
Those who have attended the Mey-
ersdale fair in past years recall vivid-
ly the annoyance of purchasing an
entrance ticket at the grounds owing
to the crush. To reduce this annoy-
ance the Fair management has ar-
ranged 10r the sale of tickets at the
Slicer Hotel, Meyersdale, as well as
at the fair grounds and it “is urged
upon all, who can conveniently do so,
to buy their tickets in town before
going to the grounds. 5ER —
Secial trains will be run on both the
B. & O. and the W. M: ‘Frains will
leave in the evening from Meyersdale
at about 7:00 o’clock making stops at
gll stations. Special rates during the
fair. W. H. DEETER,
President.
e——{ ———— {
§10c and goods at |
: |
ity Store. |
THE GOSPEL TENT.
The special Evangelistic Services,
which had been conducted inthe Gos-
pel Tent, on the South Side, for the
past nine weeks, came to a close last
Sunday night. The lot on which the
tent was pitched, was in an excellent
ocation, the permission for its use
was freely given by Mr. W. H. Hay.
The two Evangelists, who had been
preaching the Gospel, throughout the
series of meetings, are Mr. William J.
Armstrong of Hartford, Conn., and
Mr. George B. Winemiller of Har-
risburg, Pa.
These Evangelists have been labor-
ing for the glory offGod and are will-
ing to spend and be spent for the
spiritual and eternal welfare of the
people. They submit the following
brief account of the doctrines they
proclaim:
The divine inspiration, authority
and sufficiency of the Bible. ;
The Divinity of the Lord Jesu
Christ.
The total deprayity of human na-
ture. .
TheZdeath, burial and resurrection
of Christ as the all-sufficient sacrifice
for sin, and ground of justification by
faith.
The ascended, glorified Christ at
God’s right hand as the only,and’ all-
sufficientgHigh Priest for Hisfpeople.
That thelpractice of BelieversiBap-
tismiiby immersion, and the Lord’s
Supper be observed.
The second and imminent coming
of the Lord, as the hope of the church.
That the dead shall be raised either
to life or condemnation (Acts. 24:15)
and that) the blessedness of the’re-
deemed and the punishment of_ the
wicked are alike eternal. b
BTheysturther affirm, that they.are
not, inY¥any fway, in sympathy with
the Russelites or Millenial;Dawnists,
Mormons, Christian Scientists, Sev-
enth Day Adventists, Uniyersalists
or any "of thesejlatter day_delusions.
The Evangelists greatly appreciate
the strict attention giyen:,to the
preaching of the word of God, at the
Gospel Tent. They also purpose,’ the
Lord willing, to return to Meyersdale
for further Gospel work.
srs mn ———————
J. F. Norton, formerly of the firm
of White & Norton, exclusive custom
tailors, Chambersburg, Pa., will be
in Meyersdale Friday, Sept. 11th,
with a complete line of foreign and
domestic Suitings and O-Coatings’ for
for Fall. Wait to see him before
placing your order for your Fall suit.
Fit and fabric guaranteed. Prices
reasonable. ad
Upright pianc box
ad
INTERNATIONAL
SUNDAYSCTH00L
Department, The Moody Bible Institute,
Chicago.)
LESSON FOR SEPTEMBER 6
THE GREAT COMMANDMENTS.
LESSON TEXT—Mark 12:28-4.
GOLDEN TEXT—"“Thou shalt love the
Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with
all thy soul, and with all thy strength,
and with all thy mind; and thy neighbor
as thyself.” Luke 10:27.
This lesson considers a third ques-
tion asked of our Lord; two-others
in this connection we studied last
week. It was not so much a ques-
tion of placing one commandment in
competition with another, but rather
which commandment most clearly
epitomizes or reveals the final prin-
ciple in law. It was the business of
this scribe to know the law and to
interpret the commandments. Jesus
in his reply quotes from Deut. 5:4,
and from Lev. 19:18, which are both
in a sense an exposition of the Deca-
logue.
Love the Basis.
I. The answer of Jesus, vv. 2834.
The scribe’s question seemed to be
quite specific and so the Lord strikes
at once at the heart and by his quota-
tion reveals to us the fact that the
principle which is the inspiration of
the law is that of love. In passing
we have here another illustration of
the master’s ready use and knowledge
of the Scripture. Jesus makes a
four-fold summary. Man must love
God with (a) the heart, e. g., in sin-
cerity and uprightness; (b) with the
soul, with the warmth of the emo-
tions, and the feelings; (c¢) “with all
thy mind,” the intellect, not as a blind
devotee; (d) with “strength,” viz,
with intensity of service, with energy.
“To love God with all the heart and
soul and mind and strength is to have
supreme desire for and delight in
God’s glory, making everything else
second to that.” This statement is
but half, for the complement of our
love of God is to love man. Man
created in God’s image was “so loved”
by God that he gave his son (John
3:16); man can do not less and must
express that love in service to others.
To fail in the first is to break the
greatest of the commandments and
therefore to be guilty of all, Rom.
3:23. :
Human and Deity. :
Il. The question of Jesus, vv. 35-
37.
was a Messianic one and he grounds
his argument on the 110th Psalm, a
Messianic one. Jesus is inferior to
David as his son according to the
flesn but superior to him as lord of
the kingdom of which David himself
is a subject and not the sovereign.
Christ is both human and deity; his
kingdom is spiritual and earthly sov-
ereigns are honored if they are his
subjects.
111. The teaching of Jesus, vv. 38
40. The word “doctrine” in verse 38
is translated “teaching” in the re-
vision. These words of warning are
full of solemn significance. The
scribes, and they have their imitators
today, sought the places ef prefer-
ment, the seats of honor in the syna-
gogue and the chief places at the
feasts. The motive that governed
them was a selfish one. They de-
voured widows’ houses, and sought to
cover their covetousness and dishon-
esty by long prayers and a pretense
of piety. This brought upon them the
“greater condemnation,” Matt. 24:51.
Law and love is here again in con-
trast. Law. must become life.
1V. The view of Jesus, vv. 41-44,
Jesus had one look of love and com-
passion for his friends and the needy
and another that was exceedingly ter-
rible for his enemies. Thus it was as
a master teacher that he saw right
at hand an illustration for his les-
son, an application of the truth in the
case of the widow who gave out of her
penury and because of her love for
God, supporting these carping, selfish
scribes. She had two mites (about
fourth-fifths of a cent) and might have
withheld one except that the rabbis
forbade the offering of a single one.
Her love, however, went beyond the
“tenth” and she gave “all,” therefore
in proportion to their means she ‘cast
more than they all,” see II Cor. 8:12.
Offerings are needed still for the
Lord's work. Jesus is “over against
the treasure” and “sees” who it is
that “casts in” how much they cast
and the motive behind the gift. The
master’s standard of a commendable
offering is not according to our super-
fluity, but our deficiency, not what
will be missed but what of sacrifice
and in proportion thereto. Not to
please man, but God. Read II Cor.
8:1-3. Our Lords valuation of gifts
cast into the treasury remains for all
time the true standard of measure-
ment.
The love of God unifies a man. We
love because he first loved us, and
in proportion as we truly apprehend
his love, all that we have of heart,
life, strength and mind, yea, our
whole nature will unite in love. It is
this which unifies society. To love
him that begets is to love him that is
begotten. To love God is to love man
and to keep all of the divine com-
mands that concern our relations to
him,
As this woman left it is possible
that she was ashamed of the small-
ness of her gift but it pleased the
d.
Our Lord's question in return.
THE CENT-A-WORD COLUMN.
This space is to be devoted to sm#&ll
ads of any kind,—lost, found, want,
for rent, for sale, any honorable use
at all, and the charge will be just one
penny for each word. For example,
Jno Jay has a cook stove he wishes
to offer for sale and he words it like
this:—‘‘For Sale, Good cookstove,
John Jay.” The ad would cost the
said John Jay just six cents, no more
for each time he would have it in-
serted.
@& WANTED—A boylor young man to
learn the printing trade and the lino-
type later. One with experience pre-
ferred. oo... The Commercial. An BA
Special price on Chocolate Hydrex
this week at Bittner’s Grocery. ad
BE Carload Applebutter Crocks 95¢ per
dozen, or $7.00 per hundred, at
ad Habel & Phillips.
For SALE.—Fine Percheron thor-
oughbred giStallion, six years ‘old,
owned by Somerset and Bedford
County French Draft Horse Co., at
the Meyersdale Fair.
J. H. SUDER,
§.ad Meyersdale, Pa., R. D. 1.
Buy Ward’s Bread, fresh every day,
at Bittner’s Grocery. ad
3 bottles pure Ketchup for 25¢ at
Bittner’s Grocery. js ris... ad
= An automobile delivery truck ena-
bles us to give you quicker delivery
and two large warehouses enables us
to carry big stocksfand give you low-
er prices. [ad]@zb abel & Phillips.
Q10c can Swift’s Cleanser for 5c at
Bittner’sgG1ocery . 5, mmm fiw ad_
Giobe, ElectiiciandsNovelty “Store. [ad
S——————————
Coming to Meycrsdale
Monday, Sept 7th,
ONE DAY ONLY.
AT THE COLONIAL HOTEL.
Prominent Pittsburg specialist for
twenty yeare—Dr. Cooper—may be
consulted at this time free of charge
on chronic diseases of nerves, stom-
ach, liver, kidneys, bladder and bow-
els. Also catarrh, piles, goiter, rheu-
matism, paralysis, persistent head-
Bed-wetting of children and urinary
troubles of old people. We cure ap-
pendicitis, if seen early, without the
knife, and many tumors.
Minors must be accompanied by
‘bands.
Hours from 10 to 6. ad
Daily shipments of yellow freestone
Peaches at Habel & Phillips. ad
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
Executor’s Notice.
Estate of Jobn A. Shumaker, late of Harneds-
ville, Somerset County, Pa.. formerly of
Hyndman, Bedford Co., Pa., dec’d.
CLetters testamentary on the above estate
having been granted to the undersigned by the
proper authority, notice is ‘hereby given te all
persons knowing themselves indebted to said
estate to make immediate payment, and those
having claims aga nst the same to present
them duly anthenticated for settlement to the
undersigned, at his residence in Meyersdale,
Pa. NORMAN R. SHUMAKER.
- Executor.
NILA SSNS,
NS NSS NNN
FAIR TIME IS HERE
If we have fair weather there will be a big
Fair week. This will be a fair time to come
in and look at GOOD CLOTHING at a
FAIR PRICE—where you will get fair
treatment.
THE PLACE IS——
HARTLEY & BALDWIN,
The Home of Hart, @chaffaer & Marx Clothes
MEYERSDALE, PA.
BEverything in Elect ricfGoods at the |
KILL GERM DIP AND DISINFECTANT
' This goods represents the highest
attainment in Dip manufacture.
An official Dip of great efficiency
for the killing of Lice, Ticks, Seabs
and other parasites and disease germs,
which infest the bodies and pens of
Hogs, Sheep, Cattie and Poultry.
Approved by the United Breeding
Company of America.
FOR SALE BY
Comrrcnv EP RE QOn
SIEHL HARDWARE STORE,
MEYERSDALE, PA.
aches, deafness and inward weakness. |
their parents and wives by their hus-
Get My
Prices on
TUNGSTEN
MADZA
LAMPS
A Full
Be Line
T. W. GURLEY’S|
Sporting Geeds Department.
Thirty
Latest
[TITLE
Aren’t they beautiful? One
of these handsome Belding Pillow
Tops with Back given FREE to
gery puichaser o a 25 cent Beld-
ing Outfit containing 6 skeins of
FOR A FIRST-CLASS
Galvanized or Slate
Roof,
Put on Complete and Reasonable,
Write to
J. S. WENGERD,
as we can furnish you anything
you want in the roofing line,
outside of fwood shingles, at
” the very lowest{prices.
R..D. No. 2 MEYERSDALE, PA
Embroidery Silk
Illustrated Lesson and Latest Em-
broidery Designs. 7his is a ve
Special Offer so don’t delay, Come 7
early today and pick out tie Pillow
‘Top you want FREE, :
HARTLEY, CLUTTON (0.
THE WOMEN’S STORE
Hartley Block, Meyersdale. Pa,
“Waverly” Oils and Gasolines
2 Gasolines—Illuminants—Lubricants—Wax—Specialties
Waverly Oil Works Co,
Cost ‘Worth Most
Pittsburgh
NANA NSN NS
~r
has been conquered.
this feast of bargains.
My First Anniversary Sale
Starts Saturday, Sept. 5th---Lasts Ten Days.
War has been declared against the high cost of living,
_ These anniversary prices will stand, during this sale, as long as
a single item of the kind is in the store.
PY
The giant of High Prices
Everything is in readiness. Come now to
Pilgrim Calicoes....
Dark Outings....... ;
which you will need at once.
at the Fair.
DRESS GOODS BARGAINS
All the pretty new things for Fall and Winter wear at prices that will please you. Pretty Plaids
‘Bsn and Roman stripes in Silk, Wool and mixed goods.
Apron Ginghams......
Cotton Challies. ......
Bate’s Dress Ginghams....10¢ yard
Anniversary Bargains throughout the store.
sian 4c yard Cotton Batting............10c Roll
ire 5¢ yard PaperPins..... .......... 1c
.....5c yard Safety Pins. ........... ... de
io 5¢ yard Clark’s O. N. T. Thread. . .4c
] NOTE—This store will be headquarters for many visitors during
the Fair and Races. Also remember, I give $5.00 cash for the largest and best display of apples
Sweetheart Toilet Soap....4c
You will find hundreds of money-saving items
ALBERT S. GLESSNER,
(Successor to Appel & Glessner)
MEYERSDALE, - - -
PENN’A.
Belding’s —
Ny -~
iv
~ “A
-
=
p——
Items
Miss Mz
last in Cul
Miss AD
a Saturda;
Misses f
were Frid
Mr. and
Sunday Ww
Mr. Job
’ last week
Forget
member
week.
Misses 1]
spending
Somerset.
George
Annie sp
Salisbury.
William
a Monday
and frieng
Misses
Berlin, wt
with frien
Mr. and
spent Saf
Mr. Wm.
© Mr. ant
Finzel, M
friends on
Mrs. W
Nelle are
atives at
Mr. an
daughter
Berlin, on
Mrs. A
Spirella ¢
Pittsburg
Miss Ti
visit wit
Averlton
Miss M:
visited fi
days duri
James ar
relatives ¢
Miss Dc
Mrs, Dani
"land, O., v
Mrs. Jo!
several d:
her mothe
High stree
Miss L
Meyersdal
ing the p
rents at B
Levi J. .
valley tov
Civil War
town on I
Miss Ed
. home in J
week here
atfjles and
Charles
morning f
‘he was c:
father wh
Misses
of Keyser
their frien
several da
Miss Bes
Sunday
where she
days with
Mrs. OC.
Youngstos
their hom
relatives, .
John 8
ton, W. V
here with
L. W. We:
Miss Ma,
Sunday e
her brothe
Mrs. Jose}
Miss Lill
two week:
York, Ati:
returned h
No. 5.
Miss Lei
guest for
and aunt,?
has return
ville, Md.
Joseph I
visiting} at
and sister-
where hej
solidation