The Meyersdale commercial. (Meyersdale, Pa.) 1878-19??, December 14, 1916, Image 5

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a — ne?
MISCELLANEOUS.
ran
passing at the time and at omse toox
; charge of the boy and in a sv rc time
tha Yoy was rallying and in 2 day or
| two was as good us new. No blame
| could be attached to any one for the
i accident, and had the auto been going
| at fair speed the accident would wro |
| bably have been a fatality. |
|
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
~ HELP WANTED. Fifteen giris over
FIRE, AUTOMOS:LE, 116 years of age can get employment
COMPENSATION AND at once at Floto Bros. Cigar Factory.
“LATE Guanes INUURANC! on
§.€00% 4 30N | MURRAY AUTO SERVICE.
Me, »rs =F
4 Runs Twice Daily Between Meyers
dale: and Somerset Via. Berlin.
Leaves Central Hotel Meyersdale at
{7:00 a. m, and at 3 p. m.
| Leaves Somerset at
CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK
Meyersdale, Pa. -—Decembe~ 9th,!
1916. The annual meeting of the stock-
holders of this bank for the election
W. CURTIS TRUXAL,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
SOMERSET, PA.
{ of directors to serve for the ensuing ; Prompt tention of i
year will be held at the banking house iid attention given to all lega'iy 35 5 m, aud at 3:30 p. m.
{| Tuesdty January 9th, 1917 between 3 For further particulars Inquire of
ep |
| a i MORRIS MURRAY,
D T !
DENTISTRY. | Central Hotel — —Meyersdale, Pa.
eliminates the | of : x
dread of havng your teeth extracted
crowned or filled. |
| work. I also treat and guarantee fc
ior Infants aud Children
cure Pyorrhea, Riggs Disease o!
isp For Over 3G Vers
loose, springy, bleeding gums whe |
lz | pss
“Ne + yes
aries QF Tg
not too far advanced.
|
|
the hours of 1 and 2 P. M.
R. H. Philson, Cashier.
Maoidern dentistry
SAND SPRING WATER CO.
NOTICE;-The “annual meeting of
The Stockholders of the Sand Spring
Water Co. of Meyersdale, Pa. will be
held in the directors room of the Cit-
izeng National Bank on Monday even-
ing January 8, 1917 at 7.30 P. M. for
the purpose of electing directors for
the ensuing year, and the transaction
Girls and wore
can join our
D2 iin
Xmas banking
ER
Pure
Made from Cream of Tartar
NOALUM-NO PHOSPHATE
Lali Chul
Come in, ask about it.
PERSONAL AND LOCAL the meeting. :
. S. B. Philson, W. T. Hoblitzell, : POVERTY OF WEALTH K Work, Five R tha, whites
x Secretary, President, 3 N, BOYS or MEN ohn join. : = or IE ie
Mrs. C. P. Meyers spent last Friday Yes, GIRLS or WOME ] A great abundance of food does not + ing and Kalsomiming. Work sat
The plan is this: Come in and get a “Christmas Bank Club” book
FREE. It costs nothing to join. Deposit 5 or 10 cents or 1 or 2 cents
Then increase your deposit the same amount each
make a great nation. The invincible
Roman legions lived for days at a
time on wheat which they gathered
and ate as they marched. The rich-
est men of the earth dine as frugally
as mortar mixers. Andrew Carnegie
could afford to send vessels to every GOING HOME
land to gather its delicacies for his Sly ay De
: i atmeal. 8Way IT
table; his favorite dish is o | back again” writes David Grayson in
Frank Vanderlip, head of the City Na- | y
_| “The Friendly Road.” “I shall never
tional Bank of New York, could em | ret thet solve morning hor
ploy 8 legion of chefs I pre walked from the city of Kilburn into
curean feasts for his delight; Vander- | Ee itr puihzohy og
lip Sar only ho meals 2 aap: The a song in my throat, and the gray road
| Dake © SIRgion Whe He stretching straight before me. 1 remems-
|
|
i
story, charges Reasonabie.
Chas. M. Murphy
Penn’a street
in Pittsborg. ;
Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Hoffman of near i
Berlin, spent Wednesday visiting and
The regular Annual Shareholders
shopping in Meyersdale.
2 Meeting of the Second National Bank
Oleomargayine, 25 cents a pound of Meyersdale, Pa will be held at
at Habel & Pbllps,. | their banking house at 2 P, M, on
Miss Margaret Hartle of ‘Warren, | myegday January 9, 1917, for the pur-
Pa., visited her parents, Mr. and MIS. | 1,56 of electing Directors for the
John Hartle, several days this Week. | o ming year and such other business
as may come before the meeting. E
J. H. Bowman, Cision]
- ANNUAL SHAREHOLDERS
MEETING
for the first week.
eee rere
week.
In 50 weeks:
l-cent club pays $ 12.75
$ 25.50
$ 63.75
$ 127.50
2-cent club pays
Mince meat 124 ceuts per 1b :
: - at Habel & Phillip. |
: 5_eent club pays
y t ed yester-
Mus: 1.4 Woller returned ¥ | PENSY TO ELECTRIFY THE 10-cent club pays
MOUNTAIN SECTION OF THE |
3
¥
oleon at Waterloo gould have dined
po ambrosia and nectar; he some- ber how eagerly 1 looked out across
SE ton wis guasts, bot he ligw| the fields and meadows and rested my
ited his eating to a boiled potato and | &YeS upon ihe Sistors Mine How roomy
a chop. Some authorities state that | it all w B3 1 loo keq up
wag | DUG alee
3
x
x
x
x
2
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
xX
x
=
x
day from Akron, O. where she had
Be EE MAIN LINE You can pat in $1.00 or $2.00 or $5.00 each week, and, in 50
weeks have have $50 or $100 or $250. 8
or oysters at Habel & Phillips the Pennsylvania Railroad between
Mrs. M. H. Baldwin will be hostess | this cit§ and Altoona, often proposed, ,
. today and her guests will include the | pn, seems. in a fair way to te aceom- |
members of the L. B. T. CIub. _ plishment, according to reports of
on candy and nits fo plans now being prepared by Chict
| Engineer A. C. Shand at Altoona. The
principal feature of the plans is the
construction of a huge reservoir in
the mounttins near Tipton, east. of
Altoona, to be used as a source of i
: power for moving the trains oy, eR
Leave your order for your Xmas turkey Blotiifishilon of the shot Tne of
We add 3 per cent interest.
Napoleon’s defeat at Waterloo
You can start TODAY---START.
due to an acute attack of i
$ a3 piv DTC eY
BL stem wnoAPHS U S PRU} £8 i S
__ .uprant,” James i 1 e B
_ __%mcdis Chevalier, who| Fire starting in the residence of Mrs. FOR BELGIANS
atim is a German subject, is being | Ann Saylor in Barrett street, Ohiopyle,
Germany Told Deportations Are
Special pric.s
school teachers and sunday schools
at Habel & v’hillips
Y
»
] detained in Pittsburgh until the police & summer resort eighteen miles east
and detectives can check up his move- | of Connellsville, practically wiped out
ments for several weeks past. The|the business section and destroyed
prisoner denies he was implicated in eight residences. The loss is estimat- |
Mr. Isaac Weinstein is on ‘the sick
list this week but reports from him
are that he is now resting comfort-
able. Dias. DotwatT pe the plot. ed at $45,000. A call for help was |
ain Sap + That the blowing up of the plant at sent to the Connellsville fire depart-
8 Walkers Mills and Oakdale, the latter ment and a chemical truck was rushed Inhimane and Unprecedented
oranges and lowest prices . :
. at Babel:& Phillips =
Ba hl
‘on Sept. 15 last, resulting in five | on a special train over the Baltimore
deaths, were the results of a big con- and Ohio railroad.
spiracy among . foreigners, Is the Announcement was made last week | BERLIN JUSTIFIES COURSE
theory of ofiicials, by the state workmen’s insurance
Chevalier is alleged to have made fund board in Harrisburg that it
i admissions which satisfy government, . ,,inorized a 15 per cent refund
|
Largest stock of candies, nuts and
i
1
ernie ry ER aie
Mrs. J. H. Boiss
{ Ee sl .
Dam
ot td
Note Says the Removal of Belgians
to all commercial and general insur to Germany For Forced Labor
ance risks and a 10 per cent refund to
mine operators insured in the state Creates Bad Effect In United States.
fund. The refunds will aggregate
$90,000, and will be distributed in the
form of credits on policies for next
year. -
authorities that three men were im-!
plicated in the plot to wreck the
plants at Walkers Mills and Oakdale.
It is also s.id that the conspirators
had designs on the chemical plant at
McDonald and that it was to have been
blown up also on Sunday night.
PUBLISHERS ORGANIZE
Newspaper Representatives of West.
ern Pa. Meet In Pittsburgh.
An organization to be known as the
Publishers’ Association of Western
Pennsylvania was formed Tuesday
A note to Germany protesting
against the deportation of Belgians
for forced labor as comtrary to all
precedents and humane principles of
international practice was made pub-
lic by the state depertment in Wash-
ington.
The note was cabled to Charge
Grew at Berlin on Nov. 29, the day
Ambassador Gerard discussed the sub-
ject with President Wilson, with ins
structions that he read it to the Ger-
man chancellor personally. In making
it public, the state department an-
nounced that the interview had takem
place, but said nothing about results.
The decision to protest formally,
against the treatment of the Belgians
followed unsuccessful informal efforts
by Charge Grew, under instructions
that he say informally to the Berlin
foreign office that the deportations
were having a most unfavorable effect
Deportations Justified, Berlin Says.
The German government issued 2
statement in explanation and justifica-
tion of the transfer of Belgian labo -
ers to Germany. It says the measure
is by no means a hardship for the
laborers, but is a social necessity.
Owing chiefly to the British em-
bargo against Belgian overseas trade,
which before the war supported a
large part of the industrial population. when the newspaper publishers of the
large numbers of Belgian workers ars ! western end of the state came to-
idle, the statement says, and condi- | gether in Pittsburgh. Thirty-five mem-
tions are growing worse. Many fam- | bers were enrolled either in person or
ilies after spending all their savings ; by proxy. The following officers were
have become objects of public charity. | elected: President, J. L. Stewart, trict court in Pittsburgh placed $6,000
This state of things is not due, as | Washington Observer; vice. president, {as the price of one foot. The
asserted in Belgium, to German re- A. C. Dickinson, Sharon Telegraph; | case was that of Arthur Kelly versus
quisitions of raw materials, it is ex- secretary and treasurer, A. W. Mec- the Pennsylvania Railroad company.
; | plained, for these requisitions oc- Dowell, Sharon Herald. Kelly was employed as a brakeman
curred as 2 rule only where factories Paramount among the purposes of land was thrown from the top of his
swere unablc to continue operations. | the organization is to consider the | train when the brakes refused to
conservation of publishing interests | work. His right foot was severed.
HEN it comes to selecting
W “plumbing fixtures the |
. woman who has a hobby
for appropriate and graceful desizn
inall furnishings will have anewand
absorbing interest, for the up-to-
date plumbing fixtures now offered
inan extensive number of designsfor 2
her approval are all graceful, beau-
tiful and yet correctly fashioned
for their purpose.
These fixtures of “Standard”
manufacture and guarantee when
installed by us make the
satisfactory equipment.
BAERSLL)
The Pennsylvania State Bakers’
association, in session in Harrisburg,
agreed to recommend to the bakers
of the state that on Jan. 1 a b-cent
loaf of bread be increased to 6 cents;
that small rolls, which heretofore have
sold for 6 to 8 cents a dozen, be sold
at 10 cents. They recommended that
the 10-cent loaf of bread remain at
that price.
V
V)) irr =r) er)
ae 1
Al
A jury in the United States dis-
SER
the Of 1,200,020 employees engaged in |
rly 1 Belgian in ustries before the war, | in this part of the stats, as well as r—— . upon neutrals, particularly the Unit-
nds 505,000, including 158,000 women, are periodically to discuss measures that A 10 per cent ingrease .In Wages, ed States. The charge was informed
oad . now wholly without work, and 150.- | will improve conditions and matters afseine Hie men saploy i: the day | 1 only that the policy was a military
; 000, including 46,000 women, are part- | of general interest to the business. and tonnage men, has been an: |, .. city and that Ge..aany regarded
Every Farmer with two or more cows
needs a
¥ | 655,000 peir-ons dependent on public
ly without work, making a total of
COAL LANDS TRANSFERRED
H. C. Frick Coke Co. Buys 12,000
Acres of J. V. Thompson’s Holdings.
aid. In addition to these there are
293,000 wives and 612,000 children of
nounced by the Jones and Laughlin
Steel company in Pittsburgh. The in-
crease will go into effect Dec. 15.
tween 8,000 and 9,000 workers, it is
figured, will be benefited by the in-
it as legal.
The note, with the deparument’s
statement making it public, follows:
“On Nov. 29, Mr. Grew, our charge
at Berlin, was directed to obtain an
Be-
men without work, so that 1,560,600 |
persons, or 'ne-fifth of the total Bel- | crease.
Sale of 12,000 acres of Greene coun- interview with the German chancellor
YO A
gian popula on, require assistance. | ty (Pa.) coal land, held by J. V.| porest fires “are chasing the deer | and read to him the following:
4 More tha 300,000 000 francs already Thompson, former Uniontown banker hunters out of the woods north of “The government of the United
: has been s =nt in supporting these and coal operator, to the H. C. Frick Clearfield. Several camps were locat- 8rates has learned with the greatest
concern and regret of the policy of
the German government to deport
Coke company, was announced by A.
C. Robinson, vice president of the
20,000 000 francs month-
oid henceforth. These
persons, and
ly will be r qui
ed in the region where the fire is
purning fiercely. In some places it
THE BEST SEPARATOR MADE,
Sr g Y DE i 223 Livergood St. masses of inte people, the statement Peoples Savings bank, Pittsburgh, the |. with difiiculty that the hunters from Belgium a portion of the civilian
ble a Rw — Ag JOHNSTOWN, PA. ays, ore. dogengranng and drunken- chairman of the Josiah V. Thompson gaved (he deer that they had killed population for the purpose of forcing
: a { | ness and social depravity are result- creditors’ committee. This is the |, 4 jung in front of their cabins. them to labor in Germany and’is con-
aD uisiainiesaceidutatnietecuuiatatutatataintnina ini HBEH largest coal sale ever recorded in west- ee strained to protest in a friendly spirit,
- Zeer fftet | ern Pennsylvania. A wage increase of about 10 per | hut most solemnly against this action,
Sere BANDITS KILL AMERICANS { Mr. Thompson, according to the ap- | cent, affecting nearly 40,000 men em- | which is in convtravention of all prece-
51.5) : | The. payroil of the Piitsburgn Uon- | praisers, owned 58,403 acres of coal | ployed in the Bethlehem Steel com-| dents and of those humane principles
$2.50 3 2 j 3 ! struction company’s slag mili, | Two Executed by Viila’s Men—One | land in Greene county, upon which pany’s plants at South Bethlehem and | pt international practice which have
SSont | IVY ote amounting to between $600 and $700, Burned at Stake. | they placed a valuation of $32,647,000. Steelton, Pa., and Sparrows Point, | long been accepted and followed by
thout = | was stolen from an express company’s Government agents in El Paso, Tex., | The ‘sale announced by the creditors’ | Md., was announced this week by BE. | efvilized nations in their treatment
| office in Dunbar while the agent-was sent a repert to Washington saying | committee comprises approximately | G. Grace, president of that company. | of noncombatants.
Club | at lunch. No trace of the money has | an American named Foster had been | one-fifth of the Greene county hold- | The increase is effective Dec. 16. “Furthermore, the government of
nner. | been found. mutilated, then burned at the stake | ings for about one-fifth of the ap a the United States is convinced that
. | ——e by Villa ba.dits operating near Tor | praised valuation. Fire swept the village of New Oak | i i i d
. Let us drive home to you Bi 1. , cuficient number of the Stu-|yeon. The report was said te have | r ny Hill, in North Versailles township, a a Shes OF een sna
the fact that no washwoman ' dents at Washington and Jefferson | been brought by refugees coming to | mr RE MANY mile and a half from East Pittsburgh, Belgian relief work, so huma 3e
can wash clothes in as sani- college express a willingness to take | the border from Torreon. § Te destroying ten houses, damagmg Oth | ppp eq and so successfully ry
———— . tructi : : : ton langering the lives of several 3 re :
dar tary a manner as that In such instructions, plans being con-| These reiugees reported also that | Compensation ! g the lives of several| out a result which would be generally
* 3 sidered now for giving military train- | they had n si - soldiers | Yea | pers i least s pers red and whi it 1 1
ich the work is done at ze ey had secn sixty Carranza soldiers | Year. | ar he deplored and which, it is assumed,
wialicn 1 g 8 ing in the college may be adopted. pear Torreo. whose ears had been cut - of goeianiy | = 2 q¢ ;using a loss that | would s usly embarrass the Ger
a: Wil: iy
our laundry. From a bullet wound in the mouth,
costly soap, and keep all the Tee
off by Villa »ndits. Foster's son was
forced to witness hig father’s execu- |
the town N r. B, according to a tele-
tion of
compensa-
os accidentally sted when a revol- = ; : :
We use much more water, ver was diac] ro awd of | tion, the refugees gaid. Foster was for the
hanoe t} ter any more nen at a Cohn. | ®2 Ax ar hacienda superintendent. | ximately D
ange the water me nore §, me Cohn, 53 a : i : :
e lange Ne Water many B aged 4 oe. a Pitsburgh m in H d Gray, an American mining ite who, | baugh
times, ‘use purer and more § 3 m '°I" | man at Par: 1], Chihuahua, was killed | n of the act | tell and
§ chant, d by Vill br d +3 — a | Fr i f a
y Villa be dits when -they emtered | in force fori; no for il | corner of a
3 10T L |
aintained
; man gov
]
e lnstitute of Technology re | and dying 1
. el | bois, Pa., Dcputy United h evra
clothes in constant motion ota py h iy (\ | gram received by the Alvarado Min- | result in a two-thirds decrease, rue 2056 000 : . :
: : ; { oiates | Tin: { : ceived $956,000. Charles W. tle, aged twenty-
during the entire process. Pittsburg | ing and Milling eomspamg. A messen- | were statements made by John Price ae OIE, he 24)
dines’ wh | ger who ar: ved fren Wawsad sbertly | Jackson, commissioner of the state Emery A. Walling of Erie, elected nine, of Mounasviils, Ww. va., editor
: It's simply a matter of inspectors ail : 1 after the telegrams was made public | department of labor and industry, in | supreme court judge in November, of the Washingion (Pa.) News, died
§ having proper facilities. HITZ PT 2 | sad Gray was hanged by order of | an address at the Coal NE Tun 07170 To his camipaigh, its (1B the Olio Valley General hospital.
free 5 Tabulation oi r Lan Bene Villa, tute of Americs fa Pittsburgh. election expenses filed here show he The Chic: go Bridge and Iron Works
s: E sylvania supreni ; y te showo 2 The opeaker enid the mumber of ac- | gave $1,000 to the Democratic state | gompany of Greenville announced an
! Meyersdale Steam Lanndy a total vote of 820 fustice Wal | gawmill, Engine, & Boller for sale. eidents reported up to De. 1 was | committee and $2,500 to the Republi- | fncrease of wages of 10 per cemt to
SOR 3 563, ; ( : i A11€] | Outfit ready for business $550.00 See han can state committee. He received no | pyer 1,000 employees.
250.923, and scattered : contributions. :
| rv; Phillips, Olay St Moyersdle, Pls | iar ier —— | CM : 2