The Meyersdale commercial. (Meyersdale, Pa.) 1878-19??, June 08, 1916, Image 3

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to knock
Opportunity is said
but once
presents itself.
SAVE.
But ycu have a chance to open an account
with this bank six days out of every week,
Once you have started to save a part of
your earnings, you will be PREPARED
when a good business OPPORTUNITY
Having a bank account he!ps create busi-
ness ability, Our WILLINGNE®“S to
SERVE is your OPPORTUNITY to
“THE BANK WITH
The Second Navional Bank
of Meyersdale, Penna
Patuininioiu in nin un n n un nn nintnininloininlnln]
Your Eues are Weak
There is not one person out
of a large number who can boast
of PERFECT EYES---Our mocce
for our BAD EYES.
You had better look after
your case.
A Thorough HKxamination
will be good for you.
INOTHING SO GOOD
As to go to a place to have a light lunch,
glass of Soda Water, or Ice Cream than to
THOMAS CAFE. The place where your
patronage is appreciated. Our rest room is
opened to the public; vou are welcome there.
I handle a full line of Pure Drugs, Medicines,
Domestic Cigars. -:- -:- ts
FB. THOMAS, Leading Druggist,
Opposite Citizens Bank MECERSDALE 5
COOK,
Both Phones
A NS
THROUGHOUT THE COUNTY
Items of Interest Culled from Our
Exchanges.
The Somerset Play Ground is to
open next week. The forenoons will
be devoted to games, folk dancing and
play. In th afternoons, there will be
taught basketry, sewing and cooking.
Anthony Muli, Jos Cassonese and:
Michael Mannasino, miners of Wind-
ber, recently pleaded guilty to hay-
ing violated the mining laws, and up-
the payment ‘of costs; the Court let
@®.n go on parole. The information
Nicholas Evans.
The graduating class of the. Somer-
set Hight School left Thursday morn-
ing on a sightseeing trip to Washing-
ton, D. C. The class numbers 18 mem-
bers, one of the largest that ever com-
pleted the course of sttudy. The grad-
uates were chaperoned by Miss Clara
Shoemaker, a member of the high
school faculty.
ree emesis
NEARBY COUNTIES.
The Rev. John S. Hershberger of
Everett, has been appointed by Gov-
Brumbaugh as associate judge of
Bedford county. The Rev. Hershhsr-
ger is a retired merchant.
After . suffering nearly half a cen-
tury from headaches, Fred Seibert
of Dawson has been cured.’ Recent
ly he discovered a hard substance
in the roof of his mouth and after
working with it he extrgcted a four-
penny nail. Seibert says that when
he was seventeen years old he was
struck on the head by a board and
that in some manner a nail must
have been driven into his skull. Sei-
bert is now sixtyfive years old.
Looking forward to the celebration
of a safe and sane Fourth of July,
the authorities of Bedford have pas-
ged an ordinance prohibiting per-
| sons from exploding firecrackers,
5 squibs or explosives of any kind, and
f i dealers have been warned not to sell
fireworks of any kind. It is a difficult
thing for officers to prevent the |
discharge of noise-making devices if |
the merchants are premitted to sell
them.
The armored car which is making
the round trip between Boston to |
San Francisco passed through this
county early last week over the Lin-
coln Highway. The car carries 1,500
pounds of armer plate and, with crew
and equipment, weights 5,300 Ibs. |
It takes an average of one hundred
miles daily. The car is equipped with |
bullet proof tire, periscope machine |
gun, aeroplane rapid fire gun, camp
outfit, wrecking apparatus and wire
guards.
MARRIED IN CUMBERLAND
Marriage lieenses were issued at
Cumberland on June 2, to Joel Welsh
Dickey of Meyersdale and Genevieve
Anna Lancaster of Mt. Savage, Md.;
Ira Livingood and Edna Elizabeth
Jeffreys, both of Elk Lick, and George
Earl Marker of Rockwood and Carrie
Elizabeth Bittner of Garrett.,
BERLIN
! The marriage of Miss Minnie Bend-
> er, daughter of W. H. Bender, of this
place, and Morgan Watkins, of Bos-
well, took place at Somerset on May
30, the ceremony being performed by
Rev. I. Hess Wagner. They will go to
housekeeping in Boswell where Mr.
Watkins is employed.
There have been nearly 600 tickets
sold for our Chautauqua which prom-
ises great things.
Mrs. Samuel Boches of Berlin was
a Meyersdale visitor Friday.
Four automobile loads of ladies,
members of the Berlin Sisterhood
Dames of Malta, on Thursday went to
Pittsburg to have degrees administer-
ed and to become better acquainted
with the secrets of the order. The
Dames of Malta were organized at
- FREE SUMMER
against them was made by Inspector.
teachers.
)
(HE CHIME CLO(K”
TRAINING SCHOOLS
Under the direction of the state |
hoard of education summer training:
schools will be conducted in Phila |
delphia, Reading, Wilkes-Barre, ot
tcona, Pittsburg and Erie. . |
The courses will be six weeks in |
length.: Schools will be open on the |
17th. of July and close on the 25th. of #&
August. The last day will be devoted §
to ‘the state examination for continua |!
tion school certificates. This ane
ment “has ‘been made so that the Lh
teachers attending the summer
schools may take the state examina-
tion without additional expense.
The following courses will be offer-
ed: A course for teachers who . are |
desirous of entering continuatien It
pas
school work: an advanced course for 6 ~~ ~A~~~~~A~A~m
Driving If Home
Let us drive home to you
the faci that no washwoman
can wash clothes in as sani-
rary a manner as that in
+ hich the work is done at
our laundry.
We use much more water,
change the water many more
‘mes, use purer aad moe
costly soap. and keep all the,
“lothes in" ecnstant n ‘otion
during the entire process.
It's simply a matter of
having proper facilities.
Yeyersdale Steam Laundry
MSN
continuation school teachers, and .a |
course in professional work for man-
ual training and domestic science |
A teacher in Pennsylvania who has
had one or more years’ teaching ex-
perience may enroll in the state sum- |
mer training schools, for one of the
continuation school courses, jor any
domestic science or manual training
teacher of Pennsylvania may enroll
for professional work in this special |
snhject without any charge whatever |
for instruction or supplies. Teachers,
however, must pay their transporta-
tion to and from the school and their
living expenses while in attendance
at the school.
In order to make the proper prepar-
ation for the summer training schools
it is necesary that all Fogistrations)
for attendance at the schools be in:
Harrisburg not later than the first of
July.
Teachers desiring to enroll for any
of the courses may secure the neces-
sary nrollment blanks on applic: ]
to the director of industrial edication
bureau of vocational education, room
25. Union Trust building, Harrisburg. ; |
| ME AN’ SPOT.
| “I got a pup an’ his name’s Spot,
And my name it’s jest Jim; 4
He’s ’bout th’ only thing I got—
| Th’ rest’s inside o’ him!
jie et pa’s boots, an’ pa he said,
‘Thet pup mus, go!’—so then
! He did; but before we went to bed,
Th’ pup come again.
’
{ “One time he ketched a chicken, it
Belonged nex’ door to us,
An’ Mis’ Smith like to had a fit— re
T ay not give your lad
She made a awful fus
Pa said to her, ‘Well, we'., now ou
It seems to me th’ thing to do
Is: shut your chickens up.
“An’ then pa went an’ found a hén
That’s ours, an’ it wuz dead
An’ kind o’ rumpled up. so then
Pa he got mad an’ said,
‘That pup mus’ go! I tell you whut,
You’ better understand!’
I bet Spot never done it, but
He like to got me tanned.
“Spot comes in when it rains, an’ he
Smells doggy, like they do;
He’s allus rubbin’ up on me
Till IT smell doggy, too.
He gits beneath th’ stove as slick,
An’ tries to dry his hair;
But ever’body hallers quick
Phew! Chase him out o’ there!’
“My folks they say they don’t like
Spot.
I kind o’ guess it’s so;
Cause when he’s home, as like as not,
They keep him on the go.
But he don’t keer, cause he knows me
For a
GALVANIZED ROOF
MEYERSDALE, "ee PENNA
Wholesale prices on carloads shipped
JUNE 16, 30, JULY 2i, AUGUST
Can’t hardly blame a pup! =
RogING
FIRST CLASS SLATE
or
write to
J. S. WENGERD
to any railroad station
A full line of Spouting Nails and
Valleys.
avatar
BALTIMORE & OHIO
$12
Mi {GARA FALLN
AND RETURN
11, 25, SEPTEMBER 8, 22
AND OCTOBER 6
TICKETS GOOD 15 DAYS
THE OPTOMETRIST
Eye Sight Specialist
Meyersd. le, Pa.
A ISSN SS
ATTRACTIVE
SIDE TRIFS
CON ULT TICKET AGENT FOR tUiL
PARTICULARS
th2 same training?
“When I was a growing lad, and came
upon many words in my reading that
Idd not nnderstand, my mother, in-
ng me the definition when
‘0 > he, uniformly ccnic ra: {0
=y to learn it, and in ‘this
Ily lcaraed many things
ing of the individual
word in question—among other things,
how to ue a dictionary, and the great
pleasure and advantaze there might
be in the use of the dictionary.
Afterwards, when I went to the village
school, my chief diversion, after les-
sons were learned and before they
were recited, was in turni-~ over the
pages of the ‘Unabridged’ cf those
days. Now the most modern Una=
bridged—the NEW INTERNATIONAL—
gives me a pleasure of the same sort.
So far as my knowledge extends, it is
at present the best of the one-volume
dictionaries, and quite sufficient for
all ordinary uses. Even those who
possess the splendid dictionaries in
several volumes will yet find it a great
convenience to have this, which is so
compact, so full, and so trustworthy
as to leave, in most cases, little to be
desired.” Albert S. Cook, Ph.D.,LL.D.,
Professor of the English Language and
Literature, Yale Univ. April 28,1911.
An’ sure as my name,’s Jim,
{ like him awful lots—you see,
We're pardners, me an’ him!”
—Charles C. Jones in Table Talk.
| Get our prices on job work.
WRITE for Specimen Pages, Illustrations, Etc.
of WEBSTER'S NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY
G. & C. MERRIAM COMPANY,
For Over 68 Years Publishers of
The Genuine Webster’s Dictionaries,
SPRINGFIELD, MASS., U.S. A.
of life is a great ‘part y sponsible | Perfumes, Toilet Articles. Imported and
| fine job man.
{
Pa ~~
rs
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
Have secured the
Our Job Work Pleases
SOR FLETCHER'S
CASTOR 'A
a a Eo
services of a
| he
| {nildren Ory
|
morning in the kitchen, over a coal
range. For it’s wearing, beyond a
woman’s strength, to carry wood and
haul coal from bin to kitchen.
And you can’t control the heat of a
coal range. Most times you've far
more heat than you need—a waste
of fuel—that turns the kitchen into a
nerve-racking furnace.
A New Perfection Oil Cook Stove
offers you a way to :
end kitchen drudgery New .that every gallon will
and at the same time PERFECTION be like every other
to economize, for the
Perfection burns ker- Oil Stove © that will burn with-
osene, the cheapest
fuel. Think—no coal,
no wood, .no shaking,
no ashes, no fear of
the fire going cold.
Instead, heat when you
want it and exactly
as much as you want.
A New Perfection is
inexpensive. Ask
Can't, if you re too done up to eat.
And youre bound to tire, after a
THE ATLANTIC
REFINING CO.
- A rr A At PT rem mm
KANSAS CROPS.
The Commercial receives many
THE NATION PASSED BY.
To A Good Samaritan:
A nation is dying of hunger.
It is a small, weak nation, and its call
perhaps is unheard among the strong-
er appeals of its powerful neighbors,
in their sudden, recent sufferings.
For three years the country of Alba-
nia has been the victim of sword and
famine. Now, the people are with-
out food. Ten thousand human beings
are starving daily.
The women are emaciated; their
bones seem about to protrude through
their skin. Would you give bread to
one famished woman; save for her a
child dear to her as yours to you?
Would you win a grateful look from
the appealing eyes of her in whose
wasted hands you place the gift?
Give one hundred cents to buy flour
for Albania. If you have given to oth-
er countries until you feel that you
can do no more, give ten cents. A bit
of bread from each of the well-fed
will feed all.
The Albanian Relief Fund
Send money to Albanian Relief Fund,
70 Fifth Avenue,
’ New York.
ENJOY
Your
‘MEALS
your dealer to show you its fireless
cooker, its separate oven, its combus-
tion chimney, its long- lasting wick.
Be sure, though, you use Atlantic Ray-
olight Oil in your Perfection. That's
essential. For it is just as necessary
to discriminate in buying kerosene
as it is in selecting flour. It takes
use to prove.either. You don’t have
to buy a flour on trust; neither need
you take a chance on kerosene.
For you can ask for Rayolight with
the positive assurance
gallon. A kerosene
out smoke or smell,
but that will yield
a great and a cheap
heat.
With allits advantages
Rayolight costs no
more than ordinary,
unreliable kerosene.
Buy it by name, where
you see this sign:
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
| letters from subscribers all over the
{country in which encouraging and
| complimentary remarks are made but
| ,savors too much of tthe “ego” to pub-
| lish them. Such a letter has just been
| received from Mrs. Abram A. Ring-
ler, of Scottville, Kansas, who ad-
| vances her subscription to June 1918.
| Mrs. Ringler says regarding the crops
there:
This has been a later spring than
tusual but we are having plenty of
| garden vegetables, Peaches were
| mostly frosted but we will have lots
of other fruits especially cherries.
| Some farmers are complaining of
| the cut worm taking much of the first
| planting of corn ana had > replant.
| A few farmers have begun to cut
| their first crop of alfalfa which will
be just a fair crop. Wheat is heading
‘and is worth $- a bushel; corn, 60cts.
Fat, hcgs are $9.25 a hundred here.
EXPRESSMEN TO BE PENSIONED.
A pension system effecting more
than 15,000 employes of the Wells-
Fargo Express Company becomes ef-
fective June 1st. All the contingen-
cies of this class of employment are
provided for, from disability to old
age. The minimum pension will be
$30 per month, which in case of death
will be paid to defendants of the em-
ployes, under certain conditions. Fun-
eral expenses will be paid of all em-
ployes in the service of the company
one year or longer.
The new system will involve the ex-
penditure of several hundred thous-
and dollars annually.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
Our Job Work Pleases
a Te
A ER TR ERE EE