| | ut pay- | for at If not Sey THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, MEYERSDALE, PA. AOBOCRCROR. A OL ROBO RF OREO] | . Local and Personal §, r+ Miss Dorothy Collins, of Connells- BOBCEOHCBCHCRCICH SROSIROSOOC aOR | Mrs. M. F. Baer is spending a few days in Frostburg, Md. i N. E. Miller has returned from a business trip to New York. Mrs. E.r O. L. Stotler is visiting friends in Fairmont, W. Va. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Dahl and fam- ily spent Sunday in Bedford, Pa. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Stacer, of Homestead, spent Sunday here. Misses Fannie and Olive Phillips have returned to-Fairmont, W. Va. Mrs. George Miller and children are visiting relatives in Pittsburg. Mrs. John Dixon, of Connellsville, is the guest of her son, James Dixon. ville, is visiting at the home of C. P. Baer. License was granted Carumi Ramaciati and Anna Ellen Greig, last Monday at Cumberland, allowing | them to be united in the bonds of | holy wedlock. Miss Maggie Baer, of Pittsburg, : who had been spending some time | at Atlantic City, stopped off here] with friends and was a pleasant caller | at the Commercial office. i The Citizens Band will give an-! other of those interesting concerts on; Sunday evening at 8 o'clock on the] Band Stand, on the square and those who fail to attend will miss a good thing. Misses Mary Jeannette and Anna Lucille Allen, bright little daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Allen are spending two weeks with their grand mother, Mrs. Mary Jeannette Allen at Cumberland, Md. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Price went to Morgantown Sunday, where they at- tended a family reunion. Mrs. Price Fred Wilmoth is on a business trip to New York and castern cities this week. Robert Thompson, of Barnesboro, was a welcome caller at this office today. : Miss Nora Cox, of Pittsburg, is she guest of her mother, Mrs. Eliza- beth Cox. , Mrs. Flizabeth Younkin has re- surned from a severals days visit in Cumberland. Misses Lillian and Margaret Baer visited Mrs. N. B. Hanna, at Elk - Lick, Sunday. Mrs. S. M. Tressler and daughter, Edna, visited relatives in Hyndman, Pa., Sunday. : Mrs. Charles Lenhart, who was ths guest of Mrs. C. E. Deal has returned to Pittsburg, Pa. ....We have just received a carload of €opra Oil Meal—very rich in protein. Good for all farm animals, $2.70 per hundred at Habel & Phillips. Miss Emma Snyder of Berlin is spending a week in town the guest of Mrs. J. T. Shipley. . Dr. McCune, of Braddock, spent a few days in town during the past week with friends. _ Mrs. C. E. Deal and daughter, Margaretta, are spending the week in Grantsville, Md. Misses Myrtle and Lutie Tressler are goods for the Tressler Millinery. Mr. and Mrs.'E. C. Naugle are in Bedford, Pa. visiting Mrs. Naugle’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Stiver. . Mr. and Mrs. Harry Eicher and two children of Somerset, Pa., have been visiting relatives in town recent- ly. Miss Kathryn Loroditch, of Poca- hontas is spending a few days in town the guest of Mrs. S. J. Mac- Kenzie. Mr. and Mrs. George Eicher and two children, of Somerset, Pa., spent Saturday and Sunday visiting rela- tives here. : Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Steinley and family, of Finzel, Md., visited at the hore of M. F Baer a few days of this week. = Mr. and Mrs. Irwin Steinley and two children of Finzel, Md., were Sat- urday and Sunday visitors at the home of M. F. Baer. Misses Lutie and Myrtle Tressler went to Pittsburgh on Sunday where they will purchase the fall geods for the Tressler millinery. : Miss Elizabeth Hay, of Somerset, is spending a few days in town, the guest of her grand-father, WwW. H. Hay, Esq., of Beachly street. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Graberstein, Misses Esther Stacer and Katie Grab- erstein motored here and spent Sun- day at the home of John Stacer. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Fernser, and family, of Washington, D. C., are visiting at the home of Mrs. Fern- ser’s mother, Mrs. Emma Younkin. The Meyersdale Fair will be held September 18-21. When in town visit the store whose ad you see in this paper. They appreciate your trade. Misses Fannie and Olive Phillips, who were visiting relatives and friends in Meyersdale and other cities have returned to Fairmont, W. Va. : Miss Pearl Martz, of Scottdale, and Lewellyn Poorbaugh, of Mt. Pleasant, who were visiting Miss Elizabeth Wagner, returned home on Monday. : Mrs. J. T. Shipley, accompanied by her daughter, Belle, and grand- daughter, Margaret, spent the week end in Somerset with Mrs. D. B. Zimmerman. The excursion from Pittsburg and intermediate points, to Cumberland were well patronized last Sunday, a total of 1700 persons being carried into the city. Use Hammond Dairy Feed and you will get more milk and cream, Car- load due in a few days at Habel & Phillips Patronize our Advertisers. ‘ couple of weeks’ visit, Mr. Price 13- in Pittsburg purchasing fall remained with friends there for a turning during the week. ' i. Weinstein and wife returred | from New York on Friday with a new ; and complete line of all the latest things on the market in Ladies’ wear and furnishings. Be sure to call next time you are at the Post Office a 3 iy look the Hne over. y Esq. Hay, a Democwet, has mathy th Republican friends and being a can-| didate for re-election as Justice of the | ‘ to ‘have offered to send a signed blank 137G | KEYSTONE PARAGRAPHS | That there are at least two patriots in Fayette county was evidenced when Lee Chong, a laundryman, after pass- ing the physical test, waived exemp- tion and was accepted. The other man, whose name was not given out, and who is the support of a widowed moth- er, a wife and two children, waived exemption when he ascertained that his mother could earn $50 a month. He said the $25 he could send home from the army, with the $50 his moth- er could earn, would keep them com- fortable. He was accepted. Frank B. Black of Somerset coun- ty, one of Governor Martin G. Brum- baugh’s oldest friends and his per- sonal selection for state highway com- missioner, announced that he had re-' signed as highway commissioner, to take effect on Aug. 15, at the request of the governor. The commissioner jssued a letter in which he charges that attempts were made from time to time to play politics in the depart- ment, and that he does not care _ longer to be connected with it. The first attempt to bribe an exemp-' tion board was reported in the district comprising Sharon, Sharpsville and Greengille. A wealthy parent is said ik té the board conditioned on his SQ "being exempted from service. An- ey tter was © received frem parents swho threatened te: carry the matter to the Washington authorities if their son’s claim for ex- Peace, some of his Republican friends | emption is"not allowed. circulated a petition to have his name “placed on the Republican ballot as a: Candidote for same office. Messrs George Wilson, of Bertin | and James Lohr, of Johnstown, and Misses Viola Mickey and Thelma Nicholson, of Somerset, motored to SXpPlo | An explosion in the enameling metals d¥partment of the Spang-Chal- fant Steel company in Pittsburgh injured ten men. Frank Kaiser, a foreman, is reported to be the most . seriously injured. The origin of the | sion is unknown. A number of men, not included in the injured, were . ; = i Meyersdale, Friday afternoon, : stop ! working nearby, but escaped when the i ping at the Slicer Hotel, returning to . explosion occurred. i | Somerset Monday afternoon. A ten month old son of Mr. and Mrs. Heinbaugh, of Coal Run, died at their home on Wednesday. Fun- eral services will be held by Rev. Oney on Friday followed by inter- ! ment in-I. O. O. F. cemetery at Elk Lick by W. C. Price, undertaker. The gallant 142nd regiment, com- { manded by Colonel R. P. Cummins, during the Civil war, will hold their annual re-union in the grove at | Friedens, Somerset county, on Mon- day, September 8rd. Next week we will publish full details as to trains, | speakers, music, entertainment, ete. We expect to have a carload of ' Yellow Free Stone. Peaches in the | early part of next week and think price will be reasenable. Send us i your order. Habel & Phillips The M. E. Bible class picniced at Accident, Md., on Tuesday afternoon i having supper and indulging in a | few athletic games such as playing baseball and pitching horseshoes, and returning, stopped at Stanton’s dam and enjoyed the bathing, returning at 9 p m. Miss Catherine Keidle entertained last Friday evening in honor of Mrs. Norman Shomaker, Music and re- freshments were enjoyable features and Mary Wagner. The affair was a farewell, as Mr. and Mrs. Shoemaker and family expect to leave here for Geneva, O., in the near future. The manufacturing of booze under government supervision is to be dis- continued September 8th at 11 p.m. by order of the President. The order is effective “during the war.” Specu- lation has already advanced the price in many localities. The government will take the stock now on hand and use it in the manufacture of explo- sives to kill people. Some of it will need but little manipulation to make it as deadly as a machine gun or a 42 centimeter shell. =: NEW ARMY OPEN TO ALIENS Not Under Liability to Serve But Will Be Accepted. The ranks of the new national army were opened formally to friendly aliens as volunteers. A ruling by Pro- vost Marshal General Crowder com- municated to the selection boards di- rects that all such aliens who waive their rights of exemption of national- ity ,be promptly accepted for service. Provost Marshal General Crowder took steps to reduce the number of exemptions because of dependent fam- ilies. Instructions were sent to the governors of all states pointing out that the minimum pay of soldiers is $30 a month and that local boards must consider whether a man’s de- pendents could not be supported on that amount. Government officials generally are beginning to take up the individual questions that arise where govern- ment employees are called for service. Secretary Daniels said that knotty problems were arising in the navy department as to what individuals in the clerical force, navy draughtsmen or skilled workers at the navy yards are absolutely indispensable. The number of exemptions asked by the various departments will be re- duced to the absolute minimum, it is indicated, even if some temporary de rangement of clerical work results. s | merce of Pitteburgh. of the evening. The guests were: Sommerce : ¥ Mrs. William Robertson, Mr. and Mrs. | Glen Crowe, Misses Gertrude Hibner John Baptiste of Irwin failed to ap: : pear among the first fifty of the sec- ond call of Exemption Board No. 2 of | Westmoreland county. Sheriff John Kilgore found Baptiste in jail where he is being held in connection with the murder of Mrs. Louise Falons, an old widow, who was stabbed to death in her home last April. f That Otto T. Post, a German, who was interned in Pittsburgh because of his alleged friendliness with Ger- many, raised a fund there to buy a silver loving cup for the captain of the submarine which sank the Lusi- tania, is one of the accusations made by government officials against the Pittsburgher. . A merger has been effected between the B.’K. Elliott Company and the Wi C. Fisher company, both of Pittsburgh, | to manufacture and sell optical goods, artists’ goods, cameras, scientic in- struments, etc. Both companies own patents which will belong to the new firm, to be known as the B. K. Elliott company. Several presidents of corporatiozs have volunteered to make financial sacrifice by offering to take war emergency positions with the ord- pance bureau of the war department, according to armcuncement by Robert Garlind, president of the chamber of A. M. Brink, aged seventy-six. is dying from burns and the Baptist church at Kinzua is in ruins, with a loss of about $3,000, as. the result of Brink boiling tar. on his kitchen stove. When the tar boiled over it set fire U the kitchen, the flames communicating to the church. Fire caused a loss of $150,000 at the Waynesburg tin mills. A night watch- man discovered the fire in the anneai- ing department of the mill and before local firemen could reach the build- ings the flames had spread to the tin house, a warehouse and the sorting room. . imi Two persons were drowned while bathing near Ligonier, one while trying to save the other. The dead are: Mazie Hodge, aged sixteen, daughter of Ernest Hodge of Jeannette, an: Robert Eicher, aged eighteen, son ci Edward Eicher of Jeannette. The United States mint at Phila delphia soon will increase its work: ing force because of the heavy demand for small coins. Its daily pro- duction now is 350,000 dimes, quarters and halves, and 150,000 nickels and one-cent pieces. All children under fifteen .years of age were ordered barred from the moving picture theaters and churches in New Castle by the state health de partment as a result of the epidemic of infantile paralysis outbreak. The state department of health is receiving samples of court plaste: from all parts of the state in almos: every mail and the letters accompany: ing them say that the: writers fea: the plaster has been poisoned. Robert K. Young of Wellsboro, for mer state treasurer of Pennsylvania took the oath of cffice as a public service commissioner. Unable to swim, Elmer Jenners, aged nineteen, was drowned in Phila delphia when a canoe upset in the Schuylkill river. A honeysuckle bush whieh bloomed late in May is now in full bloom at the home of James Poole in Scott dale. 3 Chester of IMPORTED and DOMESTIC 4 tobaccos — Blended &#* 4 GCARETTES it go at that. they lik of smoking . “They please the taste great! But also—"’ If a cigarette simply pleased the taste, smokers used to lct Because Chesterfields give smokers not only a taste that but also a new kind enjoy roc Chesterfields hit the smoke- spot, they let you know are smoking-—they “Satisfy”! But not now. ou Yet, they're MILD! ® The new blend of pure, natu- : ral Imported and Domestic to- a baccos—that tells the story. % And the blend can’t be copied i —don’t forget that! Tse Ask for Chestefields—next _ ° time you buy. Weapped 4 / & n glass- a ne paper— =H 2 Es + £5 cers them . Ze fresh. They SH, and yet 7n& Milf - 10¢ «| THE NE’ER DO WELL. By Rex Beach. This Passion-Throbbing film of Panama, is the successor to Rex Beach’s other great success “The Spoilers” It is even greater than “The Spoilers. Its flights of sweet romance are higher, its action and its risks and dangers more over- whelming.... Enacted by the famous Spoilers cast in the Panama Canal Zone. ! “The Ne’er-Do-Well,” by Rex Beach, the Selig spectacular drama filmed by the Selig Polyscope Com- pany, features Wheeler Oakman and Kathlyn Williams and an all-star cast. The hero is Kirk Anthony, a college graduate, a veteran football player, and, since graduation the coch of his university team. On the evening following a football victory, the last of the season, Kirk and others start out to celebrate. Late that night -he finds himself on ship- board, and when he awakens he is|§ Nothing So Good When on your trip there is “Nothing so Good” as a Box of Johnston’s Candies. Pure and Delicious. Columbia records for September now on sale Call and hear them without money and without baggage.|§ During the voyage Kirk becomes ac-| Mrs. | & Stephen Cortlandt—whom he learns| g to admire very much. She is really! a diplomatic agent of great influence. 7 One day while Kirk is out hunting he | meets in a forest bower, a Spanish; § quainted with a woman—a girl who is known only as “Chiquita” He falls desperately in love with her, and tries vainly to discover her iden- tity. The story of his making good, of his winning of Chiquita despite the counter-plotting of Mrs. Cort- landt, of the clearing of his name, and of the final decisive intervention in Panamanian affairs of old Darwin K. Anthony, is strongly engrossing and varied by many richly humerous episodes. Coming Wednesday, August 29th, at the Summer Garden. ~ F. B. THOMAS LEADING DRUGGIST MEYERSDALE, PENNA For Sale . For Sale. A valuable tract of Coal land, con- taining 120 acres. Also, two modern improved residence properties in A 25 H. P. Boiler with 20 H. P. engine attached. Address:or see H. C. Mauk, Meyersdale. If interested, inquire of J. L. Fichtner, D. A. Floto, Hyndman, Pa. Meyersdale, Pa. Subscribe for The Commercial. | Get our prices on Job Work. BE