Many tell us they e delighted with our job printing. -- Bring us your work. VOL. XXIVE CONSIDERING THE COUNTY HIGH- | ~ WAY PROJECT "% Met ENTERTAINED Fo ron enocoss GD(RTGMEN \ Miss Helen Lichty of Meyers avt ‘enue, was hostess at a delightfully ‘appointed luncheon on Friday in hon- or of Miss Leah R. Leydig, of Gléncoe whose erigagement to Dr. Spicer of HT : ‘Cumberland was announced recently. State Game Commissioner O Ser; Covers were laid for ten of the for Busy Bettering Conditions in mer classmates of Miss Leydig, who | Somerset Co. Will Soon Receive i& a graduate of the Meyersdale| Consignment of Turkeys. : 1 ‘High School, ‘and after the luncheon | . H. Osmer, the state game pré- tion of Meyersdale | ‘was served the guest of honor “was. i 'Hiigh school building | “showered” With miscellameots ‘gifts ian 8 pene SOE ih J. zht. The meeting was |to be used in her new home. - ETRE Sontinie: iu the protection ler and the minutes of | Miss Leydig ' was also the recipi-| game.. He recently organi zed'a gives. called to order by ént’ of. many other useful household! 5 toon okab at. Windber and he'ls Mrs: Dr.” Ryland, and | gifts when a ‘numberof Meyersdale’s eager to establish several such .c lube read by the secretary, fair young ladies met at the old Mey- tiroughont the confity for the Foaton Cl fon’ after which the |ers homestead on the Avenue, Sat- that the state department will not : urday afternéon, at the invitation of consign game to persons in plac on d lin duet by Misses igs Catherine Meyers, where ‘no. such organizations . Auramdt and Miriam Gless- |’ The occasion’ was in the form of a ; ns sxit, young ladies aequitting Kitchen shower ahd:the dainty ~re.| MI. Osmer said, that he WnS Soom freshments: were served in’ the spac-| {0 Teeeive a consignment of turkeys fois Meyers kitthen, where the ‘show- to be let loose in the mest: favorable er” formed the: centre piece ‘on ‘the Place for thele ‘Saf Sd Hopfiaam } table around which the EucHiB gata received by the Ete Gao Fr Eo at go Completed. {+ The council of the. Borough. Meyérsdale' met in” regidar- séssion | Tuesday - evening, “Fe et eee folowing bers THE CONTEMPLATED HIGH WAY. fis plo wale Somerset a improving all country roads that will ‘Shipley, Deeter; Emeigh:; ic sed of J. G.| be of benefit to the general public. | a 1 pReport of Burgess Gress James McKelvy, | County = €ommissioners: _ Glessner, ; (The report’ of the Burgess, | Good, J. H. Beerits, W. Curtis Miller and Shockey stated that they |tine: Gress, wis that Aes and’ Truxal; ¢ Shaver, Capt. C. J. Har had heard some opposition from tax-| for: ‘the ‘month . Then Advan- rocured. on and Robt. 8. Scull, all members| payers, many of thei living in’ remote | to “$119.25, which ; get ‘Board of Trade, met | sections, who would receive no im-|the treasurer. “he gidind with Gounty Commissioners W. J.| mediate direct benefit from the baild- ported. that he had suspended Shockey and J. B. ing of county roads. These objectors iceman, Faller. for. indefinite /p | the constructiof: of | sgomplain that their present towmship |od because of the financial cond | taxation 4 now eitogether too heavy |: 1.48 “but they have apparently 10st sight of h ‘present gave his Views | worth of farm produce hale ny ha t RNs tia oir is tector and other kinds of fish: Inter. strongly in favor of the | yet gver bad roads robs Ade ; ; } te : YN - men of America club’ needs réviviilg ents of the committed pe making if" Foods £0 © FIRE DESTROYS : as it has practically béeome dormant, "when be stated that county road cOn- | {oun were ‘good ones. : : ; ; , » A Hei ; f'n thee ‘following game: Quail, 5 “years; here could be no better time oq to make-a statement of ig al : ng i deer, 2 years; turkeys; 2 years. With thepresent ‘when all Beem tO tt in the mattér next ~ districts | The home of Mrs. William Daber- | the fact that out of every, datler’s gs In Meyersdale the , United ex-Judge Kooser voiced |g. per cent of the profit : a would, n._Meye e the, U ‘Sports- . : f : : . i bliin aor oR ] Th ill closed’ must be started some time | gy. county. commissionen: gromie | vs bat ras. nd ded. Tea 1 incthe Pub- 7 /'¢ RD ‘NCE ere will be closed’ periods. for tand as one man for the buil these restrictions upon this choles 5 e the vork ving the ting am EE ME ISL, a i 8 OWSER. necessary roads that will be op \ travel every, month and day C jyear, : fot Spectal stress was laid on th gested south county road, » WEDDINGS IN THIS 2 MEYERS—STAHL. Mr. Albert A. Meyers and Miss Et- ta Stahl by, their" quiet wedding un- announged to the public, on Friday “evening, gave their friends quite a surprise. The -ceremony was perform- ed by the bride's ‘pastor, Rev. D. W. Michael at the Lutheran parsonage. The bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harvye Stahl of Main street a- bove the B. & O railroad ‘and is an accomplished and charming young woman. She took an active part in church work and for one year was & clerk in the Woman's Store of Hart ley-Clutton. The groom formerly liv- ed in Meyersdale and later at Addi- son. The young couple will live at Wilkinsburg where Mr. Meyers has a good position. LYNCH—MERVINE. On Wednesday . evening, February 2, at the Catholic parsonage, by Rev. Father Brady, Richard Lynch and Miss Elizabeth Mervine, two -of Mey- ersdale’s highly esteemed young peo- ple were united in marriage. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Quinn, the latter a sister of the bride were the attendants. The groom is the well-known telegraph op- erator at the Western Maryland sta- _ tion here, whose home is in Pittsburg. The bride is the daughter of Mr. 2nd Mrs. Theodore Mervine of Centre street and is a bright and lovely young woman, being an alumnus of | the Meyersdale High School. They expect to make their home for the present with the bride’s parents. A WEDDING ON ST. VALENTINE'S DAY Miss Rose Damico, daughter of the , well Known wholesale fruit dealer, | Augustus Damico, will be married on §t Valentine's day to James Miciche, of Baltimore. The bride is very young being about 16 and a scholar in the ninth grade of our public schools. CARLOAD NATIONAL GLUTEN FEED justt arrived. 82 to 84 per cent protein. 12 to 18 per cent fat. $1.85 per large bag—or SPECIAL PRICE | BY THE TON-—HABEL & PHILLIPS | 2 CANS L. & 8S. B. BAKED Saas FOR 25¢c AT BITTNER'S GROCERY. 8—5¢c CANS SARDINES FOR 10c AT BITTNER’S GROCERY VICINITY. lance and address, The Woman's Christian Temper- ance Union of Meyersdale, feels that it has scured a real treat for those in- terested in the betterment of social conditions, by bringing Miss Louise Hollister to the Methodist church on next Sunday at 2 p. m. The folowign press notices where she has been heard should be suffi: cient recommendation t& warrant a splendid audiences “Those who have failed to hear Miss Hollister last night at Goff M. E. Church on ‘The Outlook’ of the great temperance reform, missed a treat that does not come our way very often. Her pleasing personal appear- indeed bespoke a lady of culture and refinement. She is an orator among orators, and one instinctively feels she is loyally and honestly doing her life work. Daily Telegram, Clarkesburg, Ww. Va. «It is refreshing to listen to words so bravely, wisely, womanly uttered. Miss Hollister stepped aside from the beaten path of the usual temper- ance address. Park Rapids Enterprise, Minn. | . Special music will be furnished by Miss Carrie Donnecker and the Mey- ersdale Quartette all of whom need no recommendation to a home audience. Admission free with a Silver Offer- ing at the close of the lecture. Come; and bring your friends with you. DEATH OF INFANT CHILD OF MR. GEO. ICKES. Clyde Watson, fcur months old lit- tle son of Mr. and Mrs. George Ickes, of North Street, died early on Sunday morning from congestion of the lungs. The little one had been ill but two days. The funeral was held on Mon- day afternoon at 3:30, services being conducted by Rev. D. W. Michael, of the Lutheran church, Mr. Tressler being the undertaker in charge. The parents of Mrs. Ickes, Mr. and Mrs. Imler, of Bedford attended the funer- al. | DONATIONS FOR NEEDY JEWS ABROAD. On January 27, the Jewish Relief Committee secured $232 in Boswell, $200 in Somerset, $5 in Salisbury and | Meyersdale. $1 in moved must be evened up. New lights were installed on 73 corner of Fourth and Thomas streets and one on Large street. SE The Finance Committee’s Report. Active Account — — — —3 257.41 Sinking Fund — — — —— ' 1068.27 Bal. from Coll. Baer — 2184.92 The Bills Ordered Paid. Street Labor — — $ 14.71 Police: — — — — ——'~— 76.50 E. J. Dickey, Sec. Salary — 10.64 George Blake for Bread — — 7.68 Paid on Voucher of Frank Ziegler F. B. Thomas — — — — Summit Township — — — 10.00 J. O. Adams, blacksmith —. . 7.45 "A large number of bills were held" over. 3 3 Financial ‘Summary by Secretary Bills Payable — — — — $3209.01 Outstanding orders — — 200.00 100.00 38.30 Total Bills Receivable — — — — -1666.47 Balance 1763.64 Due from Colleletor ' 2184.92 Council adjourned to meet on Tues- day evening February 16. ELMER SHULTZ BADLY BURNED AT MINES Elmer Shultz who was operating the electric motrs at Shaw mine No. 1 was badly burned on Friday by the explosion of gas. Mr. Shultz was look- ing for seme tools in what is known as a sand hole, putting his Mght at the hole to see better, when a violent ex- plosion followed resulting in his being very badly burned about the head, face and chest. He was brought to Dr Rowe’s office in this place and lat- er:in the day sent to a hospital in Cumberland. Mr. Shuliz is aged 28 and his father was the late Conrad Shultz. DUTCH SUPPER. The Young People’s Guild of: Amity Reformed Church, will hold a, Dutch Supper and Parcels Post sale in the Banquet = room of . Amity Hall, on Thursday evening, Feb. 17, 1916. Supper will be served from § to 8 p. m. Two menus will be served—you may have your choice. The price will be 3b6c. | PRATT’'S POULTRY REGULAR IS THE BEST ON THE MARKET. DIRECED AND WE iT WILL INCREASE A CTION AT HABEL & PHILLI etwifen the rails where bricks had beet, re i | us by an appreciation of good music| and passive receptivity does not have active participa very little teaching mu- | a that they lid tempts to @ meetings we Meyersdale & i ae hear splendid chorus work because none of the churches had chormes. The very best any of them eould afford was a double quartette. There is no singing Meyersdale and young men are never iheard in the evenings on the street, doing really good singing as in other towns and the young ladies are not much ahead of the young men ip music. Rev. Goughnour said he didn't want to be a “knocker” but that he was simply stating facts as they really were and that he believed these conditions were due to the fact, that the town was in the grasp of a bad economic situation. There was no out: put of manufactured product and that nearly all the business men of the town were not producers but distri- pbutors. About the only public industry was mining and this was controlled by men who had their homes and their interests elsewhere and put there dollars there. He thought what the town needs is, that the business men get together and ‘erect factories etc. that will fur- pish employment to the young men of the town and keep them here. Statis- tics prove that every youmg man is worth $3000 to a community, and cer- tainly we ought to keep them if pos- sible and work provided for them would bring dollars into the town in which case all those necessary im- provements could be made. Music is a benefit to a town in three ways, First physically, Most peo- ple breathe improperly using the up- per part of the lungs. Proper breath- ing is taught in the first lessons in singing. Then most pupils do not e- nunciate clearly. This is also over come largely where singing is sys- tematically taught. The greater chorus singers in the world are the Germans; next eome the British and the Russians are prob- ably third. We can draw our own ref- erences from this. Second, music has an aesthetic and moral value. A sense of the beautiful and an appreciation for the finer things of life seem to be created in society in the good results that tion does astly music hag ¥ nas 8 teacher | discovered at about 2:30 o'clock by t| the fire signals are made, from the o. Saylor“Bok Factory. But by the time | Henry Miller, -| the Daberko home, ko at the southern end of Beachly street was burned to the ground on Wednesday morning, the fire being Mrs. Peter Rowe, who sent in the a- | larm to the electric light plant where the general alarm had been given, who lives mother, Mrs.. Rachel Miller near to rushed for the fire. hose truck, ‘which is. stained in a small Louse by the South Side of schoolhouse, ang was proceeding with | that in none of the’ from the’ Jvdrant for the Treason that nothing: could be done ‘until ‘the firemen arrived when another hydrant was used and the burning house was checked from spreading the flames to other houses. It is said that this de- fect at the hydrant was reported two years ago but nothing was done a- bout the matter. Mrs. Daberko who since the death of her husband who died about two weeks ago lived alone in the house, was awakened, so she says, by the crackling of the fire and she had bare- ly time to escape with a few clothes and her trunk. She became frantic as she beheld the burg of her home. The house was worth, perhaps, $750 and was insured for $500. The household effects were destroyed which were appraised by men select- ed by the executor, August Daberko, ‘a brother - of the ‘deceased, at less than $30. Mrs. Daberko, is ahout 70 years of age. Her mother is living with a son on Keystone street. The origin of the fire is not known; the greatest volume of flames at the time fire was. first discovered was on the second story. DON'T FORGET TO USE HAM-| MOND DAIRY. AND HORSE AND, MULE FEED. TRY ONE SACK AND, YOU WILL BUY AGAIN at HABEL & PHILLIPS YOU GET THE BEST PEAS ON! THE MARKET FOR THE MONEY at BITTNER’S GROCERY. cured to give instruction in the schools and also to do some communi- nity ‘work among the young people it would be a blessing to ithe town. Most of the amusements of the social gath- erings are what we would charac- terize as questionable and music would be both profitable and pleas- anit. with his | the orifice was stopped with stones so At the close of Rev. Goughnour’s address, Mr. Gnagey stated that the directors had already well considered the subject and by next year they are | reasonably certain that a course in | music would be established in | Meyersdale public schools. | : - | tion, “Abide. with 7 me,” was | by. Miss Maggie Damico and Mr. H | M. Cook, who could not be persuad respond to repeated ds, clapping of | the people. game, quail, deer and turkeys ought: to become quite abundant. The Charles: Damico fruit and gto cery store was broken into on Tues- day might and a general sampling of the articles of the store was made by the burglars, resulting in a ‘of about ten dollars, an estimate; x Damice. ‘weeks ago that of the H. M. gd jewelry store, is being carried on: by a band of youthful criminals. Anoth- er bit of evidence to substantiate this view is that ‘that some articles taken off ‘of the higher shelves, 8 small box was used for stepping om. An ordinary sized man could easily have removed the articles by phn ing on the floor. Some of the articles taken were candy, chewing gum (lots of it), tobae- co, cigarettes, a watch, a razor, $1.28 in money taken from the open regis. ter. It is to be hoped ‘that other mer- chants may be spared a similar visit, loss and annoyance, and also on the assumption and doctrine that even these are our brothers, that they may be apprehended and made to right about face in such a course of cons duct. MANY HEARD GOOD LECTURE According to he announcement made last week in the columns of the Commercial, D. A. Souder, D. D., a superintendent of missions among the Hungarians of this county for the Reformed church, gave an illustrated lecture in the Sunday School hall of Amity Church. The hall was crowded both on ‘the lower floor and on the galery. ‘The lecture proved to be im- teresting and instructive. The speak- er first gave a sketch of Hungary called attention to the thousands that emigrate anually to our country. There are said to be no less than 100,000 Hungarians in the United States. A large number belonged to the Reformed church in their native, land. The Reformed church in this coun- ty was accordingly challenged by the Providence of God to do mission work among these people and is now maintaining about fifteen missions in different parts of the country. A good- { ly number of them have proved val- the | uable property in the way of church- es and parsonages, which the lectur- fl quot. viol d NH : | er threw upon the screen. Much more ne 5 | ine duet, violin. and cello selee- |. .: ¢ +5 be done given | The greatest present is the education of Hungarian need at young men in our coun- try for the gospel ministry dmong