The Meyersdale commercial. (Meyersdale, Pa.) 1878-19??, September 17, 1914, Image 2

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News Items of Interest From N
PPPPPITIIIV
PPO YON
. ROCKWOOD.
Mrs. Olarence Crirchfield who has
been seriously ill for several days
past was on Sunday removed to the
Cottage Hospital, where she will take
special treatment. She was accom-
panied to Connellsville, by her hus-
band and family physician, Dr. C. d.
Hemminger.
Mrs. Charles Weisel, of Scottdale,
and Mrs. C. R. Lane of Pittsburgh,
were guests of their brother and sis-
ter, Mr. and Mrs. Foster Walters.
Mrs. William Farley, aged 29 years,
died at a Connellsville hospital on
September 8th, after having given
birth to a little daughter. The re-
remains were taken to the home of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Abrabam
Hay, in Black township, and servi-
ces were held on Thursday of last
week, conducted by the pastor of the
Reformed church. Those who at-
tended the funeral from the vicinity
of Meyersdale were the following: —
Prof. Kretchman and wife, LL. A.
Kretchman and wife, Harvey Kreteh-
man and wife, John W. Kretchman
and wife, H. E. Hershberger and
family, Lloyd, Frank and Edward
Hay.
Fred Just, and daughter Miss Nellie
of Akron, Ohio, were visiting friends
here recently. They were forme:
residents of this place, Mr. Just being
a partner in the furniture business
with his brother, Cyrus Just.
r—————— et —————
SALISBURY.
Editor P. L. Liyengood, of the
Frostburg Spirit, was a Salisbury vis-
itor Saturday.
The public schools of this borough,
opened last week with an attendance
of 247 pupils.
Mrs. Ellen Garlits, widow of the
late Joseph Garlitz, sold at public
sale last Friday afternoon all the
personal property on the farm, a
short distance southeast of town,
and will go to live with her daughter,
Mrs. Fannie Baker, at Frostburg.
Sherman G. Stevanus, of Sugar
Creek, Oo, is v siting his father,
J. S. stevanus, at Sand Flat, and the
forepart of the week visited his
brother, W. B. Steyanus, apd family
in Saliehry, Ulu returning home.
Attorney J. O. Lowry of Somerset
was a town visitor Wedneaday and
Thursday.
Miss Carmen Ringler, and Clara
Gartner, of Fairhaven, Pa., are vis-
iting relatives and friends here this
week. Part of last week they were
guests of the former’s sister, Mrs.
Robert Newman, in Elk Lick twp.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Glotfelty, and
children of Oakland, Md., were guests
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. T.
Smearman, during the past week.
Mrs. B. F. Grey, and daughter of
Accident, Md., were guests last week
of Mrs. Grey ’s sister, Mrs. L. W. Mil-
ler, and family.
Miss Mary Rushter, of ‘Washington,
D. C., visited her sister, Mrs. Her-
man Reiber, last week.
Joseph Patton, of Akron, Ohio, was
a Salisbury visitor seyeral days last
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Bowser and
children of Garrett Co., Md., were
* the former’s brother, Alvin Bowser,
and family Sunday last.
Miss Helen Knecht of West Salis-
bury is visiting friends at Meyersdale.
Mrs. Homer Barnett, of Jenner,
spent several days of last week with
her mother, Mrs. Thomasine Mec-
Dowell, at this place.
Miss Grace Easton, and her cousin
Miss Annie Gipe, ol Johnstown, spent
last week here with Mr. and Mrs. R.
8 Easton, on Main street.
Mrs. Wm. Reiber, and daughter
Miss Mary, of Lonaconing, Md., are
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Herman Reiber.
i lyr mai
VIM.
Mrs. Fred Miller, who was a sufferer
of cancer of the stomach for some
time, died at the home of her daughter
Mrs. P. C. Miller, on Thursday of
last week. Interment at Johnsburg
on Sunday at 10 A. M.
James Ringler and Wm. Fike, Jr.
returned home Saturday after spend-
ing the summer in South Dakota.
John Nicholson, of Markelton, spent
last Thursday at the home of W. W.
Nicholson.
Mr. and Mrs. Eiffert, of Frostburg,
Md., spent seyeral days of last week
at the home of Martin Meyers.
Mr, and Mrs. Chas. Lepley with
their son and daughter-in-law, all of
Somerset, spent a few hours at the
home of O. W. Tressler, one evening
last week.
Samuel Saylor and family, of near
Meyersdale, spent last Sunday at]
Vim.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Vought, of
Washington, D. C , visited his sister,
Mrs. Emma Fike on Tuesday.
00S F LEFT Ibid a an an ah an dot CEEE
NEIGHBORHOOD NEWS:
ear-by Places, Gleaned by The 4
Commercial’s Special Correspondents.
bop i Ebb tb bi bette biiibiiieeee ofoofodocfers @ooforded ofeodeofoed Podeodort hofordeod bod
Throughout the County.
A tremendous apple crop is the rule
this year throughout the mountain
districts and adjoining sections in
southern Somerset county.
While handling a rifle, Carl, the 17
year old son of Chas. Shaffer, of
Ralphton, was accidentally shot in
the abdomen and seriously injured.
Miss Bessie A. Martz of Glencoe,
has succeeded her father, Eli C.
Martz, as postmistress in that village,
She had beenthe capable assistant for
a long time.
The large saw mill of C. K. Shaffer
on the Holsopple tract near Hillsboro,
was destroyed by fire recently. The
fire is believed to have been started
by sparks from the engine.
Adolph Godel of Windber has re-
ceived word that his son and daught-
er-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Godel,
formerly of this county, now of Al-
toona, took passage on an English
vessel at Liyerpool, on August 29th,
and that they were homeward bound.
The Kirkpatrick Coal Company has
sold the mines at Listonburg to a new
concern of operators from Punxsntaw
ney, Salisbury and Harrisburg. J. A.
Kirkpatrick of Rockwood, and his
son, Blayer Kirkpatrick of Rockwooa
were former proprietors of the Lis-
tonburg mines.
The Loyal Women’s Class of the
Hooversville Lutheran Sunday school,
of which Mrs. R. W. McGregor is
teacher, made $161 on a quilt last
week. People were assessed a cen-
tain sum to have their names worked
in the quilt and in that manner $84.11
was realized. At a social, when the
quilt was sold $45 was cleared, and
the quilt was sold to R. W. McGregor
for $32.
Alice Suter, 32 years of age, and a
native of Fairhope, this county, was
taken to a Cumberland hospital last
Tuesday for what is believed to be bi-
chloride of mercury poisoning, but
she declined to remain at the institu-
tion and later was taken to her home.
She went to Cumberland several
laundry in that city had a haf "per-
manently injured when the member
was caught ic the machinery. It will
be several days, the physicians say,
before the result of alleged attempt
at self-destruction will be known.
A Lame Back-Kidney
Trouble Causes it.
And it will give you worse if not
checked. Mrs. H. T. Straynge, Gaines-
ville, Ga., was fairly down on her
back with kidney trouble and in-
flamed bladder. She says: ‘‘Ijtook
Foley Kidney Pills and now my,back
ia stronger than in years and both
kidney and bladder troubles are en-
tirely gone. :
Sold by all Dealers Everywhere. ad
e——— etme
Some Farm Facts.
The need of the rural communities
today is intelligent and consecrated
leadership.
The farm is the power house of all
progress and the birthplace of all
that is noble.
The farm is the nursery of civil-
ization and the parsonage of all re-
ligious denominations.
The farmer asks no special privilege.
The business of farming only wants
the same opportunities afforded other
lines of industry.
It is as much a duty of the country
pastor to exhort us to own a home
while on earth as it is to inspire us
to build a mansion in the skies.
The rural press, the pulpit and the
school are a trinity of powerful in-
fluences that the farmer must utilize
to their fullest capacity before he can
occupy a commanding position in
public affairs.
Cost Kept Down—
Quality Kept Up.
No better medicine could be made
for coughs, colds, croup, hoarseness,
tickling throat, bronchitis, etc., than
Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound.
That’s why they can’t improve the
quality, and war or no war, the
price remains the same. No opiates.
Don’t take substitutes, for Foley’s
Honey and Tar is the best.
Sold by all Dealers Eyzrywhere. ad
mmt———— te e———
Reed Bird in Season.
President Wilson has signed the new
regulation making the open season
for Reed birds in Pennsylvania com-
mence on September first, and con-
tinuing for eight week. Wild ducks
and rail birds may be shot until Jan-
September 22nd.
years ago and while employed in 2°
NEARBY COUNTIES.
What is Going on in This Part
of The State
What is believed to be a robbers den
was discovered Wedaesday afternoon
in the mountains above Bluestone by
Special Officer T. C Phalin of the
Baltimore & Ohio, railroad and Con-
stable Samuel Ritenour of South
Connellsville. It was inhabited by
two men, one of whom gct away but
the other, Frank Tinzer, was cap-
tured and is now locked up in the
city hall.
Peaches sold as low as twenty-five
cents a basket at Cumberland last
week.
Immigrant traffic over the Pennsy
has shown a great decrease since
the outbreak of the European War.
Not a single special train has passed
west during the past several weeks,
although several cars haye been at-
tached to regular trains. Transpor-
tation to Europe has been confined
chiefly to the Italian linc=
The twenty-ninth annual reunion
of the Pennsylvania Canal Boatmen’s
Association will be held in Johns-
town on the 17th inst. The veterans
of the Fifty-fourth Pennsylvania vol-
unteers of the Civil War will hold
their annual reunion in Johnstown,
The Commercial Hotel at Hynd-
man, has been sold to F. E. Colvin,
Esq., of Bedford, for $1,200 at Sheriff
sale,
Miss Amy Large, of Denver, Col.,
died at the Union House, near Ev-
erett county, early Thursday morn-
ing of a fracture of the skull, the re-
r:sult of an automobile accident, be-
t veen Bedford and Everett late
Tuesday afternoon. The young lady
did not regain consciousness. She
was 18 years of age and was on a visit
to her uncle, James .D. O’Neill, of
Pittsburgh, who is vice president of
the United Coal company, which has
extensive operations in the Somerset
field, especially near Boswell.
The W. H. Fissell Company, of
New York City, has been awarded
the contract for erecting the new
government post office building on
Penn Square, Bedford. The contract
price is $52,800. Work is to begin at
once.
erecta eee see
Dizzy Head, Fluttering
Heart, Floating 5;
These are signs of kidney and blad- |
der trouble.
too, backaches and be tired all over. |’
Don’t wait longer, but take Foley
Kidney Pills at once. Your miserable
sick feeling will be gome. Yon will
sleep well, eat well and grow strong
and active again. Try them.
Sold by all Dealers Everywhere. ad
meres eset
Housing and Health.
Nature intended man to live out-
doors. Civilization has so extended
the geographical range of the human
race that this primitive plan has of
necessity been abandoned by the
great “majority of people who spend
far more time indoors than out.
In the early stages of civilization
houses were sufficiently primitive to
insure a heal;hful degree of ventila-
tion. In recent years there has been
much talk in regard to the improve-
ment necessary in housing conditions.
In the larger cities there are many
miserable tenements which are unfit
for habitation but the great majority
of our modern houses are constructed
on sanitary lines and would be more
healthlful if they were properly used.
All the living rooms and bed “rooms
should have a sufficient amount of
fresh air passing through them ito
keep the atmosphere perfectly sweet.
With the arrival of the cold weather
comes the problem of properly heat-
ing the house. The ordinary hot air
furnace provides for the admission of
fresh air as do indirect systems of
steam and hot water heating but
where the radiators are placed in the
rooms heating too often means rais-
ing the temperature of the impure
and stagnant air which often remains
unchanged for hours regardless of
the number of people who breathe it.
It may add to the expense of heat-
ing our homes and places of business
to permit constant admission of fresh
air and the discharge of that which
has been vitiated. Health, however,
depends upon the quality and quanti-
ty of the air we breathe and the
slight additional expenditure required
for heat plus ventilation will mean
much to health when compared with
heat minus ventilation.
The latter is responsible for the
great increase in pneumonia which
occurs during the winter months.
amit eee ees eereeee
“I have been somewhat costive
but Doan,s Regulets give just the
results I desire. They act mildly and
regulate the bowels perfectly,’’—
Gov. B. Krause, Altoona, Pa. ad
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
unary 15th.
CASTORIA
tenes
———
t
You’l have headaches ||
INCLO-FRENCH TIDE
SWEEPING INVADERS
FAR FROM PARla
FIFTY AVIATORS HAVE
LOST LIVES THUS FAR
DURING PRESENT WAR
PARIS.—The total number of §
aeroplane pilots killed thus far
in the war is estimated at fifty,
divided among the beligerents
as follows: Russian, 16; French,
12; English, 4; German, 18.
This does not take into con-
sideration pilots and crews of
dirigibles, many of which have
been reported destroyed.
London.—Cutting off a great force
of Germans sixty miles northeast
of Paris, the first and second divi-
sions of the British army, assisted
by a French cavalry, scored a com:
plete victory.
Unofficial despatches telling of
the battle state that the British cap-
tured 6,000 prisoners and fifteen
guns. Although greatly outnumber
ed they completely routed the Ger-
mans. Officers report the forces of
" the Kaiser utterly demoralized. The
prisoners taken were half starved
and ravenously devoured beef bis-
cuits supplied them by their captors.
A party of British cyclists surpris-
ed a detachment of German cavalry
in a wood and wiped out 150. The
losses of the attacking cyclists were
severe, but nothing to compare with
those of the Germans.
DEVELOPMENTS OF THE WAR.
FRANCE.—Gen. Joffre, commander in
chief of the French forces, in a
telegram to the Minister of War
says that the French victory ap
pears more and more complete.
“Everywhere the enemy is «in re
treat, abandoning prisoners, wound
ed and stores.” In a further state
ment he says that the German army
is retreating before the French left,
having evacuated Amiens and fall
ing back eastward between Sois-
sons and Reims. In the centre the
Germans still hold the south end
of the forest of Argonne, but west
of this they have retired north-
ward from Vesle and are making no
attempt to defend the Marne to the
According
Sama TOPS Jerman Army
eastward has been cut, thus forcing
the invaders to rely on the lines
through the valley of the Meuse and
“through Luxemburg, which are like
ly to be thrown into confusion by
the congestion. The Crown Prince's
force, attacking Verdun, is also
| imperiled. Tvl
BELGIUM.—Passengers returring ta
! England from Holland report that
the Anglo-Belgian forces have re
captured Brussels and are now in
occupation of it. A large Belgian
army under King Albert defeated
the Germans with considerable loss
at Termonde, Ghent and Lierre. It
has driven the Germans in the dis-
trict around Antwerp south and it
is said that the German forces have
been cleared out of a territory fif-
teen miles south of Antwerp. The
purpose of these movements in
Belgium has been to cut off the
German communication with the
German front in France and also to
check the sending of troops to the
French battle front. The Belgian
successes, it is asserted, have been
largely instrumental in effecting
both of these purposes.
RUSSIA.—The reports from St. Pet:
ersburg, Rome and Paris say that
the Russian victories for the past
few days have utterly overwhelmed
the power of the Austrian army in
Galicia. The armies of Gens. von
Auffenberg and Danki have been
shattered in Galicia where they
were making a desperate effort tg
concentrate in the vicinity of
Ravarusska. Caught between riv-
ers and unable to protect their
wagon trains or transport artillery
in marshy country, they were cut
off from supplies of all kinds and
are now completely surrounded. It
is estimated that the Austrian Gen:
erals were unable to withdraw 180,
000 men after the disasters at
Krasnik and Tomaszow. It is said
that the Russians in the last two
of Lemberg.
days have taken 60,000 prisoners,
including 110 officers, and an im-
mense quantity of ammunition and
military stores. The surrender of
Gens. Auffenberg and Denki will
have two immediate results. The
way will be open for the great Rus-
slan army to advance toward
Breslau and thence to Berlin, and
also for an independent force of
Russians and Servians to make a
junction for an advance upon Buda-
pest and Vienna. The Russians
upon completing their operations in
Galicia plan to move directly toward
Vienna.
VIENNA BITTER AGAINST KAISER
Left Austria to Fight Czar’s Forces
Alone.
Vienna.—There is increasingly bit,
ter feeling here against Germany and
an almost universal demand in popu.
far circles that the Government sue
for peace. The acknowledgment that
the Austrian grmies were eompeiled
to meet the Russian assaults alone
and unsupported while Germany in.
to |.
vaded Francé With the result ths
the Austrian army was crushed by
overwhelming numbers has resulted
- WAR!
in FEurope just emphasizes
again how fortunate we Ameri-
cans are.
A PRESENT---of peace and
all the rich bounty that peace
means to a fruitful nation.
A FUTURE--glowing with
the prospect and enjoyment of
stored up treasure, the measure of
today’s work in peaceful surround-
ingsand under peaceful conditions.
Each Dollar placed in the keep-
ing of this bank now means added
contentment and enjoyment of a
greater peace in the future.
CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK
THE BANK WITH THE CLOCK
Before You Buy a Cream Separator
[FIRST SEE AND TRY
A DelLAVAL,
THE BEST SEPARATOR MADE.
JT. YODER, Office 223 Levergood St.,
Johnstown, -
Penn’a.
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The Largest Sale of Any Medicine in the World.
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SSAA AAA AAA,
eee OI EI Or ©
Beginning September 20
In the Magazine of
The Pittsburgh
Sunday Post
Seen:
“THE VALLEY OF FEAR”
The Highest Priced
Story Ever Published
SEER ERE,
: Fifty cents a word—a record price—was paid
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle for the serial rights only.
7. The latest work by this great novelist shows the
master craftsman of mystery and adventure tales at
his best.
The greatest of all detectives, Sherlock Holm es,
solves a thrilling American mystery which baffles all
minds but his,
Don’t miss the opening installment.
Sunday Post Now.
o—=tor = or——0cd}
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