The Meyersdale commercial. (Meyersdale, Pa.) 1878-19??, July 01, 1915, Image 8

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SALISBURY.
Star Lodge, No. 409 K. of P. of
Salisbury, held their annual meme-
rial services at 2 o'clock p. m. in
their hall in the McKinley building
on Sunday. An appropriate address
was made by Rev. E. E. Oney of the
Lutheran church. The music was
furnished by the Salisbury Orchestra
and the Boynton band. After the ser-
vices in the hall, the members of the
order and the band marched to the I.
0. 0. F. cemetery where services
were held also.
The lawn fete held on Saturday ev-
ening on the Chalfant lawn for the
benefit of the Woman Suffrage As-
sociation was well patronized. How-
ever, many men and women remain-
ed away for the sane and simple rea-
son that they are not in favor of the
Woman Suffrage movement and for
that reason will not contribute to its
promotion.
Wm. B. Frye, the champion ground
hog catcher scored a record for this
season that will be hard to beat. Last
Friday “Windy Bill” and Jap Tress-
ler captured 15 woodchucks and
“Windy” avers that it was not a good
day at that. He captured 44 in three
days and the total would have been
a good deal higher, he says, but all
hogs that were too old, not fat enough
or too large to be roasted in a com-
mon wash boiler were turned loose
for some one else to while away the
time over.
Mrs. J. L. Kendall of Pittsburg,
spent Wednesday with Mrs H H.
Maust.
Mrs. A. M. Lichty and Elizabeth
Lichty spent last Wednesday in
Pittsburg.
Miss Minnie Livengood, a pupil in
the School for the Deaf at Edgewood
arrived last Thursday to spend the
summer vcation with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. P. L. Livengood.
Miss Florence Maust entertained
the Meyersdale Sewing Club at her
home on Grant street last Wednesday
afternoon.
The Salisbury Normal School closed
last Thursday with an interesting
literary and musical program.
S. R. McKinley spent several days
at McDonalton as the guest of his son
Herbert McKinley and family. On
his return he was accompanied by
his grand-daughter, Clara, who will
spend several weeks with her grand-
parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Deal, of Red
Hill, and Guerney Glotfelty and chil-
dren, Gladys and Earl, of Roscoe,
spent part of last week with relatives
at this place. .
Misses Harriet and Edna Hay,
Josephine McMurdo, Zipha Stotler
, Elsie Miller, Messrs Wm. Garlitz, of
town, and James Slicer, of Meyers-
dale, motored to Grantsville last
Wednesday and picnicked at Stan-
ton’s dam after which they took a
spin to Frostburg, returning at night.
Mrs. S. Q. McClure, of Washing-
ton, D. C. is visiting at the McClure
home on Union street.
Attorney Wm. McClure, of Pitts-
burg is also a guest at the McClure
place.
Ed. Loechel was a Frostburg visitor
last Monday.
Ethel Schramm who for the past
four years has been the first primary
teacher in the Salisbury schools was
recently elected to a similar position
n the schools of Boswell borough.
Claude Menser, after a brief visit
with relatives in town returned last
week to his home in Crawford, N. J.
James Larue, who went to Akron,
Ohio, some time ago to find employ-
ment returned home last Saturday.
Mrs. Lydia Shaw, Miss Helen Shaw
and Potter Shaw spent last Wednes-
day at Hilldale farm in Garrett Co.
Misges Minnie and Winifred Bon-
g, of Grantsvlle, were guests at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. F. F. Petry
one day last week.
P. L Livengood and Joseph Algi-
re spent part of last week in West
Virginia.
Harvey Hay,
Newman and
last Thursday
the auto races.
Paul Dickey, of Avalon arrived
last week to spend the summer vaca-
tion with his grandmother, Mrs. Sa-
villa Boyer.
Fred Petry, H. OC.
Jos. Satler motored
to Uniontown to see
..WE ARE DISTRIBUTORS OF THE
FAMOUS ROYAL SCARLET LINE.
SEE OUR WINDOW. A PURCHASE
WILL PROVE THE .QUALITY
at HOLZSHU & WEIMER'S
BANANAS BY THE BUNCH FOR
THE 4TH AT FROM 90 CENTS PER
BUNCH UP.— at HABEL & PHIL. |
LIPS..
NEW POSTAL RULING.
Persons who desire to send instruc- |
tions with packages may now attach a
letter to outside of the package with-
out changing mail rate of the pack-
age itself. The package takes parcels
post rate and the letter requires first
class postage. In all cases parcel post
matter must bear the name and ad-
dress of the sender.
FOLEY KIDNEY PILL
“OR RHEUMATIiZs KIDNEYS AND BLADC .
REAR ARREARS RR ARR RRRRS
WE CAN only hope to succeed in
our business by selling the best mer
chandise at the lowest price and by
giving the most prompt and attentive
service.
These three essentials are particu-
larly matked in the way in which we
are conducting our corset department.
We consider HENDERSON CORSETS
the best model on the market to-day.
Inasmuch as we sell these well-known
corsets from one to five dollars, we EEL
are sure we have reached the lowest NY IE
prices possible. And as our sales- HEARERSON
ladies are all expert corsetiers we CORSETS
know we can give the best and fullest service to our
patrons when they come here for their corsets.
After you have examined our splendid assortment of
HENDERSON CORSETS, you will join with the other
fashionable women and become a HENDERSON CORSET
wearer.
The convenience of our corset department and service
of our salesladies are always at your command.
Hartley, Clutton Co.,
“The Women's Store.”
Hartley Block, Meyersdale, Pa.
em,
RRA RR RAR AAA ARRAS AFAR ARRAS 5 6
hh hhh AAA hth hth hth hth th hth th hth hth hth th th Ah Oh
AS Nn INSP
GRANTSVILLE. the Maple Glenn meeting house,
The Old Pike through Grantsville near here, from June 14-17. The
has been completed and the con- meeting was well attended and ma-
| tractors, Fogle & Son, of Altoona, 'ny states were represented.
‘are to be congratulated upon the Carroll C. Nathan has
rr, re De Ue
i returned '
splendid road they have built. Mary- |from St. John’s College, Annapolis, .
land is building a system of good for his summer vacation. ; i
} roads that she may well be proud of Miss Nora Durst has returned to
but it is still far from what it should her home after spending the winter
le
IAAL
J VAL F
) EEE
’
Mr. Husband, Help Your
Wife in the Kitchen!
No, not peeling the potatoes, washing the dishes and the other familiar
kitchen duties, but help her by buying a cook stove that will make her
work easier and more comfortable. You're not the one that stands over
a red-hot stove preparing meals and you're not always around when coal
is needed or there's wood to be split or ashes to be taken up.
What's more to the point, you don’t have to be if you buy a
NEW PERFECTION OIL COOK STOVE
And your wife won't have to stew herself to a frazzle in a hot kitchen
getting breakfast, dinner and supper ready. Now,be fair to your wife and
relieve her of a lot of the drudgery of the kitchen with a New Perfection.
Think how easy it is for her to simply scratch a match and have a stove
ready for instant use—no poking and raking and waiting for it to “burn
up.” Save money? Why, of course! There's no fuel being consumed
when the stove is not in use. And think of the time and labor saved, too.
be and it is to be hoped she will con-
tinue in the good work she has
started until every part of the State
jis connected by roads kept up to
par.Since the rebuilding of the his-
| toric Old National Road it has be-
come the main thoroughfare
tween the East and the West and au-
, tomobiles of every description may
| be seen on the Pike at all hours of
{ the day and the greater part of the
{ night.
Miss Angela Getty, who graduated
from the Frostburg State Normal
School last week is home for her
vacation. Miss Ruth Keller also
finished her course at Western
|
Maryland College and will spend her |
vacation with. her parents. Both
girls are to be congratulated upon
their good work at school and
on their training for the profession
of teaching for which they are now
well prepared.
Mrs. Howard Ringer has been ill
| the past week. Her sister, Miss Bes-
| sie Griffith is with her.
The many friends of Mrs. Dr. Kel-
ler are glad to hear she is improw
ing nicely at the Johns Hopkins
Hospital where she underwent a
very serious operation some time a-
£0.
Misses Ruth Keller, Wilda Getty,
Ethel Stanton and Urban Bloch- |!
er, Lloyd Loechel, Floyd Stanton |
motored to Addison on Sunday even-
ing and took supper at that place.
Miss Edith Kirby and Mr. Henry
Price of Frostburg spent Sunday ev-
ening with friends in Grantsville.
Miss Viola Broadwater, a student
of Dana’s Musical Institute, Warren,
0O., returned home on Friday.
A number of people from this
place took in the races at TUnion-
town.
Rev. Ira S. Monn held services in
the Reformed Church, on Sunday.
Mrs. Cole and daughter, Cather-,
ine, of Baltimore, Misses May and
Louise Wilson and Mrs. Bagent and
child, of Cumberland, were guests
of Mrs. Marian Broadwater, Sunday. |
Mr. Will Wright has purchased a |
new Ford car.
Miiss Linnie Miller and Chas. |
Buckle were quietly married at the |
Lutheran church by Rev. Oney on |
Wednesday of last week. The bride |
and groom were attended by Miss |
Florence Miller and Mr. Harry Pore
They will reside near here.
On Friday evening Mrs. Mary |
Livengood entertained the Bibl |
class of the Reformed church at her |
home Mrs. Chas. Getty entertain]
ed the Adult Bible class of the Luth- |
| eran church one evening last week. |
Miss Mabel Farner of Salisbury |
is visiting Miss Esther Bender.
Mr. Chas. Bender and family mo- |
tored to Frostburg and Mt. Savage |
Saturday and took supoer with |
Mrs. Bender's brother, Will Yutzy |
‘at Mt. Savage.
lon
Petry Bros.,, of Salibury, are
modeling the home of Henry Bonig|
and building a new porch to it which |
will make itafinehome when fini- |
ished.
The Conservative Amish Mennon-
re- |
'ite held their annual conference at|BEL & PHILLIPS.
| who knew him. He was always kind
'and affectionate to
Lutheran church on Saturday after-
‘noon at 1 o’clock by Rev. W. H. B. |
day visiting friends in Rockwood.
| With her sister at Jenners, Pa. |
‘ Miss Marie Conner has returned :
from an extended trip to Keyser, W.
Va., and Frostburg.
| Miss Lucretia Boucher is attend-
‘ing Summer school at Oakland.
be- |
A FULL STOCK OF LITTLE
CHICK FEED, SCRATCH GRAIN,
CORN, OATS, WHEAT, HENOLA |
MASH, POULTRY, PAN-A-CE-A,
LOUSE KILLER, ETC. AT HOLZ-
SHU & WEIMERS.
CUSTOM CHOPPING DONE AT HA-
‘BEL & PHILLIPS’ WAREHQUSE'
Don’t put it off any longer.
With the separate oven and fireless cooker the New Perfection has the
utility of other stoves. Your wife can bake, roast, fry, broil and boil. Can
heat water for wash day and irons for ironing day.
) I Go now to your dealer and examine the New Perfec-
tion Oil Cook Stove with the perfected oil reservoir, the regulated flame control,
the combination chimneys that prevent smoke and smell and the improved wick
that outlasts the ordinary kind. Give your wife a square deal and investigate today
this safe, sane, saving and satisfying cook stove.
THE ATLANTIC REFINING CO.
Philadelphia
Best results are obtained by using Rayolight Oil
Pittsburgh
ON CLAY STREET s
GARRETT. \
Everybody is looking forward to
the celebration to be held here on
July 5th.
Posters have been displayed an-
nouncing the program for the event
which consists among other things,
of music, races, etc. Various prizes
will be given and the music will be
furnished by the Garrett band. The
| event promises to be an unusual one.
Many of our people attended the
Lincoln: Chautauqua at Meyersdale
and report excellent talent in the
course.
James N., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Milton Shoemaker, of Garrett, died
on Thursday evening from diphtheria.
He suffered for about 7 weeks from
the onset of the disease until the an-
gel of death saw fit to relieve him.
He was the pride and the joy of his
parents as well as of the many people
his playmates
and friendly to all with whom he
came in contact. The little one was
aged three years and nine months.
Funeral services were held in the
Carney. There survive him, his par-
ents and one sister. Interment was
made in the cemetery at Fritz’s
church. Tressler & Walker, of Mey-
ersdale were the undertakers.
W. P. Ritts of Somerset was a bus-
iness visitor in town on Tuesday.
J. D. Hoffert of Ralphton
Sunday with his family here.
spent
Walter Judy and family from Som-
erset spent over Sunday at the home
of Mr. Judy’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
N. J. Judy.
J. H. Mahaffey of Boswell, was a
business visitor on Tuesday.
Anna Judy and Mary Kimmell left
on Tuesday evening for Somerset
where they intend to take the profes-
sional examination.
E.E . Carver was a business caller
in Berlin on Monday.
The personal property and real es-
tate of Jesse Long were sold at pub-
lic sale on last Saturday.
Edward Pritts of Meyersdale spent
Tuesday in town.
Mrs. W. M. Kistler spent over Sun-
WE HAVE NOW INSTALLED A |
WAREHOUSE MAN WHO WILL
SELL YOU FEED OR FLOUR AT
ALL TIMES AND DO ANY CHOP-
PING YOU WANT DONE, at —HA-
>
A CAMPUS SCENE AT INDIANA, PA., NORMAL,
THE SCHOOL OF 1,500 STUDENTS,
Li” a a Normal, A School For Am
A Pitts
The other day 1 went up to Indiana,
Pa. Tt's about 60 miles from Pitts-
burgh Say—1I didn’t know we had the
biggest Normal School in America right
here Ly us, did you? You ought to see
that school—fifteen hundred eager,
busy stud! full of life and work-—
a grou splendid buildings in a set-
¢ old elms and oaks on the
spreading campus.
py > are two great things about
this school: you remembar them above
all the rest. First, those fifteen hun-
dred students, brimful of ambition and
youth; sccond, the fact that Indiana has
a definite, well-defined purpose. That
i i >» reason for the
tremendous success—the one
essential and basic reason, I think. Of
course, it is good to have a property
worth a million dollars and to have the
finest kind of equipment, and the best
professors you can employ, and all that.
Indiana has all these and more.
But in spite of all its bigness and its
beauty the most imp
in thinking over my visit is that
steady, clear purpose. It’s in the air
everywhere. Everybody at Indiana
Normal knows what he or she is doing,
why he or she is doing it—and they're
all glad and eager in the doing. There's
no laissez faire, culture for show-off’s
sake fallacies at this school. There's
sive thing to me
plenty of music—but you have to work !
at it and get it—and there’s Latin and
Greek, and German and French.
They certainly do let the young people
work: but they don’t neglect athletics
BS wa all redlise when oe neo hians
play baseball, football or basketball, or
when their track team comes around
collecting cups. I know about Indiana
in athletics all right: we all do. We
know Frank Mt. Pleasant, William J.
Jack and W. Smith among the
coaches, Carroll among the
runners.
A Practical School
seemed to me to have
freer scope than others; it
intellectually as
1 ly t may be said to
on Ambition. Tt inspires
and then trains that Amb.-
and R. A
ambition
14
dor’t believe there’s a school anywhere !
which gives a wider range of studies. |
tion. I believe there's more practical,
sensible Ambition at Indiana than at
any other place I've ever visited. This
school provides a thorough training: it
aims to equip young women and young
men to find, to win and to deserve true
happiness he happiness that comes
z efficient work in the world
appreciating the good and
tin.ags of life.
looked over the happy, busy
throngs at Indiana I kept thinking
what a wonderful thing it is’ to be fit-
tiny fifteen hundred girls and boys to
become truly valuable for
good. All of these Indiana students, |
graduated, are independent—in
meaning of that word—for
.tted to earn their own living.
h one doesn’t have to do
. comforting thing to know |
, iI the need comes. Most of;
ueats will ‘become teachers. |
of the thousands of Indiana
2re tes now spreading that philos- |
oplhiy which is so dominating at Indiana |
that one reads it in their faces, the
philosophy of cheerful service and of;
joy in good work. Honestly, I be-
lieve there is no greater work for the:
good of the world being done any-;
where than this that Indiana does so!
well. The state is proud and has good!
reason to be proud of this big school. |
Many Comforts—Small
Expense
One of the ma:
the school is the
things they provide for a wv
amount cf mone} Tha cof
like » in apnearar In fur-
uipment it is very like |
'11-to-do men of excel-
roo! re perfect for!
at, electric.
I's. The |
. which ,
1t, cold,
. laun-
quality and number of |
ry small |
1 is very |
a colle
y ye t good boa
laundry and on. for 2 z
you are prepal t 1
are not
a term—3$
you
$200
for pport
sleep in a stuffy
St. Paul’s Reformed Church of Som-
erset will be enlarged this year. With-
in the last week, plans were submit-
ted tg contractors.
Samuel Hocking, a student at Wash-
| ington and Jefferson College, Wash- |
| ington, Pa, spent Thursday and
Friday as the guest of his cousin, |
| Mrs. Luther Shults 1
r wonderful things at | LL.
| sent free on
burgher’s Impression of the Famous School at Indiana, Pa.
in any respect to one of the school’s
rooms—s$3 for one night. One thing I
know—Indiana is giving a demonstra-
tien of economics and good living
ous Temarkanle in its way as its
emonstration of thorou r i
training. A year at that ol neterl
be a bargain, in my opinion, at $750 in
health and comfort, allowing nothin
for the inspiration, knowledge an
training.
Hard Work and Healthful
Play
If you get the impression from
I’ve written about serious work What
the students’ life at Indiana is a
grind” you are quite mistaken. When
they work they work with a will, and
when they play they put the same
jovous life and spirit into the play.
Baseball, tennis, basketball, all sorts
of track events—after classes the wide
grounds are alive with healthy voung
people enjoying themselves. There's a
splendid big room for dancing. The
girls have a kitchen of their own where
they put into practice their cooking
and serving lessons. There are social
clubs, sororities, a debat ng club, Y. M.
. A, Y. W. C. A, a well-stocked li-
brary and a reading room. If there’s
anything boys and girls want and
shou have which is n i
Indiana, I can't think of if. C0 them at
The principal of India
Dr. James Ament, . :
-» Who come to the school in 1906
it had about three hundred stu-
na Normal is
.M, P D
when
aehis
you want to see a place far
interesting than any factory or on
producing battleships or ammunition
or breakfast foods, go to Indiana
where they are training young women
and men to live useful and happy lives.
0, the next best thing
: Indiana Catalogue, a
beautifully illustrated book. Ag nearly
as pictures and text can, thls book does
{| justice to the greatness of the school
1t describes. It is a remarkable book
about a wonderful school—and it is
f request. Anyone inter-
ested in schools—and everybody ought
to be—should have this book It
makes you proud of our state and the
people who have made such a school.
Children Ory
FOR FLETCHER'S
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