The Meyersdale commercial. (Meyersdale, Pa.) 1878-19??, January 09, 1918, Image 4

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    MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL
Issued Every Wednesdaly
r K. Cockley, Editor and Pro-!
r.
scription price, $1.2
Ba CU fising
for space;
rates,
10 cents extra
10 cents per |
per
or composition done at this of-|
y cents per inch additionalgfor
red position. Small reader ads.,
s per line. These rates are net.
scounts or cutting of published
ered as second-class matter, at
st-office at Meyersdale, Pa,
act of March 3, 1914.
<@
EDITORIAL
here a beast so base and so de-
that will maneuver in every
rable manner to harm a broth-
then come ou; in the open to
over what appears to be suec-
owning its efforts?
= - *
member of the human family
bv cumning and intrigue
in knocking down that which
suc-
quired the sacrifice of months!
or, time and energy in the
g occupies the same position |
circulator of a false répor; de- |
to cause the failure of a bahk- |
stitution, and those deluded
s who follow him are like the!
kors who rush in to withdraw
funds from the vietimikzed
who by their action cause an
tion to fail when they might
s life by giving (it the benefit
doubt and sticking with it |
h thick gnd thin.
aitor to the institution of the
family and the others are his
ded and ill-informed followers,
* * *
SOCIALIST CONTENDER
obody whispered it to us that |
Socialist had contr buted to |
pport of the republican news-
f Meyersdale. Tha; is purely
er of personal choice and a
rhich we would not wish to
b anybody. Why, there are a
d republicans who read The |
ale Commercial and it is no-
business what they do.
good measure, it's a two to
that the local Socialist who
i to have dropped his
n the capitalistic contribution
Hota Ted cara meniber Of the
clags party and the
Bocialist at all,
* * *
BUN WHO STAYED HOME.
are a few Huns in Meyers-
d in other towns of this coun- |
desire to!
would very much
‘ery conscientious
ap before aq fying squad, |
o would only tou gladly give |
er to ‘“fire,” if they possessed |
bessary ‘authority.
er of Socialists in Meyersdale
ewhere who. would very much |
hte it if they could witness!
jumping |
capitalistic Huns
|
!
5 per year. |
The former |
But, |
two |
efore |
strictly speak-!
SO nd TRS EG UT
WHAT'S SO AND WHAT ISN'T
Political Corruption
No, Socialism wil] not increase po-
litical corruption.
Capitalism
ruption.
Some people who have
thoughtfully considered the subject
say that the public ownership and
operation of the industries, with the
consequent ‘increase in public officials
and pubile business, will lead to an
increases political cor-
never
| increase in political corruption. And
ithey say we ‘have enough mow.
Indeed. it is true that we have
enough now.
We have entirely too much. i
Socialism proposes to abolish po- |
| litical corruption.
How?
| What is its cause?
|
The private ownership of the in- |
{ dustries,
{ other words, capitalism is the
| canse of political corruption.
| Capitalism is also the cause of
| private corruption. the cheating, ly-
in
|ing, stealing, adulterating, grafting,
etc., now going 0 nin private busi-
ness.
if Socialism merely transferred the
{ corruption mow going on in private
business to the public business the
| total sum of corruption would not be
increased. We would be as well off
in that respect as we are now.
But we do not fmtend to do that.
We intend to abolish political cor-
ruption.
What is it that cases a legislator
to take a (bribe?
The private business interests of
| those who bribe him. I; is to their
financial interest to bribe him.
Socialikm will make those ‘business
interests public. It wil] thus remove
the incentive to bribe him. Nobody
would gain anything by doing so.
Who is it that corrupts the alder-
jmen of the cities and towns?
The corporations which own the
water works, the street railways, the
gas works, the electric light plants,
{the telephone systems, the fire hose
manufacturers, the brick plants, the
lasphalt plants, and other industries
which supply cities with the things
they need.
| Socdikalism will collectively own and
operate aly ,of these enterprises. The
Peause otsehis corruption will thus be
| removed.
{ What is it that causes a candidate
congress to spend more money
| getting elected tham the salary of a
congressman amounts to, corrupting
the voterg with liquor and buying
them outright when possible?
It tls because the great capitalists
of the country, the owners of Yhe
{ for
|
Socialist | je industries, in return for his fav-
{ors to the capitalist class in congress
are only too glad to give him tips as
|to when and where to speculate and
{amount of his salary.
scarcely necessary.
ini :
By abolishing its cause. {qerarymont.
|
Copyrighted by JOHN M. WORK.
Socialism will make these conpora-
tions and trusts public property and
thereby remove the cause of this cor-
ruption.
What was the cause of the scandal
in the post-office department at
Washington some years ago?
Private ownership of the indus-
In other ‘words. capitalism.
What were the wcorruptionists in
the post-office department charged
whith?
They were charged with taking
bribes from private corporations in
consideration of using their influence
to get the post-office departmen; to
let contracts to those private corpor-
ations for the manufacture of var-
| ious articles used in the post-office
tries.
If the public had owned those
plants and manufactured those arti-
icles itself, instead of letting con-
| racts to private corporations for
{ them, there would not have been any
|oppertunity for that corruption to
{oceur.
That is perfectly plain.
That corruption was due to the
| private ownership of the plants which
produced those articles.
Yes, but if thé public did own
| those manufacturing plants it would
still have to buy, from other private
corporations, material of various
kinds for mse in those plants, and
thug the door would be opened to
corruptflon again in the letting of
contracts to those other private cor-
porations.
True.
And the remedy fer that is the
public ownership and operation of
those other industries.
The remedy for that is the public
ownership and operation’ of those
other industries.
The remedy for the evils of public
ownership is more public ownership.
Extend the circle of public owner-
ship to the point where all the in-
dustries are made public, so that
there are no longer any contracts to
be let to private plants, and yom
have completely shut out the oppor-
tunity for such corruption.
Sodialism will also introduce the
initiative and referendum, so hat city
councils, legislatures and congresses
will not have the power to pass im-
portant laws witout submitting
them to popular vote, if the people
so desire. likewise the recall, which
will enable the people to discharge
any official a; amy time when they
distrust him, instead of letting him
fill out his term as they have to do
at present.
Socialism will also make all men
so vitally and personally interested
in public affairs that the good men
will keep the rascals out of impor-
tant positions. Hundreds of thous-
{ands of “good” men now attend to
There are | jpyest so as to make many times the thelr private affairs, without giving
Somet'imes | i
they bribe him outright. But that is |g
They can easily
reward him by showing him how he |
a thought to public affairs. ‘This
ives designing men an advant- bo in
| public affairs. In the Socialist ¢-m-
monwealth the affairs of ‘these
a fiery furnace like grease |can draw a fortune oug of the poc- | “good” men will be public affairs.
bt griddle.
the two became comnnlsory
int of view.
ithstanding the
ion of the Socialists’
r important international sub- |
1 the recognition of the great |
»f Socialism hy the govern-
f both the United States and
;, the capitalistic Hun cannot
kb his prejudiced opinion of
men So as to place himself
ition where he®could be of |
vice to humanity, nor can he
md the cardinal principles of
cy.
is not to serve and love;
5 but to kick and shove!
JADS” RIGHT T0
RK MEN 16 HOURS
opinions
PHELD BY U. S. COURT
Iphia, Jan. 1.— The United |
enrit court of appeals hand-
a decision reversing the |
f the United States circuit
ich held ‘that the act of
1917, in connection” with
firemen and engineers on
heomotives more than six-
ys without a lay off on i
hia and Erie branches.
on; which is expec
try-wide significance o
onditions, affects employes
h extra locomotives
ous region. Although
remain on duty more n
of hours permit! by
1907, the judges lec at
President’s |
{him to congress.
mak
‘arian x
Socialism 3
| public property.
ler want the office badly enough to
try to corrup; the voters in order to |
[get it.
Why id it that the capitalist po-
[litical parties shamelessly disgrace
our election days by the use of lig-
uor and money?
there are great corpora-
tions and trusts which are willing to
{pay these machines vast sums of
money, called campalign funds, for
Because
[their services in letting the capitalist |
alone or
tion as it desires.
[class passing such legisla-
{ z
(By George Creel.)
When I was on the ‘Appeal to Rea-
son a printer walked into the office
lone day and asked J. A. Wayland for
{
{a job.
“All right,”
come to terms.
for it?"
“Fuh!” exclaimed the printer.
said Wayland, “if we
ican
Me
‘“‘¥ say, how much
me for the job?”
“I was expecting to be PAID for
2
‘All right; figure it that way, then.
much do you want?”
‘I want the
The union scale
union scale.”
ime was three dollars g day. Way- |
land quoted that and continued:
If IT pay vou the union scale, how
ve will vou set in eight
e the industries
There will then be}
[id be compelled to share the Ino incentive to buy congressmen. The
congressional aspirant will no" long-
Jj will wither away and die.
bling and Knowing
What’ll you pay |!
will you PAY |
in Girard at that |
We cammot quife pets of the toiling dupes who elected | They will be compelled by the nature
ith either of these two ex-
ints of view, although if any!
‘of thllngs to give attention to public
affairs.
In view of al] these altered circum-
stances, it is safe to say that Social-
[ism will immediately mupon its intro-
j duction practically abolish political
corruption.
And in the course of a few years,
as soon as the new environment has
(had time to eliminate by degrees the
grafting propensity which has heen
so highly developed by capitalism,
Socialism will abolish political cor-
ruption altogether.
Graft is a product of the present
| environment.
Socialism will provide an environ-
ment in which graft cannot live. It
| and ‘ems’ he could set. Wayland
figured and then remarked:
Setting that much type is worth
seven dollars to me.”
“'We-e-11, all right.”
“Let’s understand thig clearly,”
said the old man, “If I PAY you
three dollars a day, do you agree to
PRODUCE seven dollars’ worth of
value for ME—every day?”
“Ye-e-es.”
“The difference,” smiled Wayland,
“is four dollars a day. - Now then, if
YOU'LL pay ME four dollars a day
for the job you can have it. Certain-
ily! Take off your coat and go to
{work.”
This printer BELIEVED the Ap-
[oes to Reason was paying him three
dollars a day. J. A. Wayland KNEW
{that the printer was paying HIM
four dollars a day.
There's a lot of fdifferenice between
believing and knowing.
And again I want you to notice
| tha; Wayland was able to exact this
four dollars a day because he pri-
vately owned the machinery with
hich tl I to work
orem ren Sg ty Ty
1
Loree re
A
x ”
Sp ey mi
pug
TAX EXCESS PROFTS!
McAdoo sends to Con-
gress the amazing recommendation
Secretary
that further faxation measures be
avoided at the session of Congress
now beginning and that aft of the
huge sum required for carrying on
the war next wear be raised by ad-
ditional bond (issues. It is well to
have respomsibility definitely fixed
for a method of war financing that
of the
people to a grédater exten than all
is adversely affecting the spirit
other adverse factors combined. The
Department of Labor
pleted
has just com-
an industrial survey of New
York State, and announces fits find-
ing that a chief cause of industrial
unrest throughowu; the State is labor’s
feeling that the large employing cor-
porations are making huge profits
from the war, This is not merely
labor’s feeling—it is the fact. Durning
the past year the number of million-
aires in America increased from 14,-
571 to 22,696. 2 During the same year
fortune reached
passed the billion-dollar mark. There
are in the Unfited States 3,733 per-
sons with fortunes ranging from $3,-
750,000 to $1,600,000,000, according
to the estimates of the Treasury De-
partment.
Perhaps Mr. McAdoo fears that the
big business eommunity will commit
sabotage, bring on a panic, paralyze
the na*ion’s industrtfal processes, if
Congress ignores its (and his) de-
mand that the tax rate on excess
war profits be lef; at the present
maximum of 21 per cént.,, with a
sliding scale downward, instead of
being increased to, ,the 80 per cent.
that England takes. It isa fear that
reflects on the energy and courage of
Attorney General Gregory, who has
set his face like flin; against sabo-
tage as practised by the I. W. W.
Seriously, it makes too light of the
enthusiasm and devotion = of the
American ‘people, and of the power
of McAdoo’s £hief, the President, to
mobolizé public opinion agalinst any
group who migh; dare to withhold
capital, machinery or natural resour-
ces from the fTulles; possible useful-
ness in the pr notion of the national
back of these agen-
‘ér to commandeer.
4 ~The Public.
[NITING. FARMER
AND CITY WORKER
NATIONAL LECTURER FOR NON-
PARTISAN LEAGUE SAYS FAR-
MER AND CITY WORKER MUST
UNITE.
one private and
cies lis the po
(By C. M. Thompson.)
“Co-operative societies and associ-
ations, which in many respects have
proven superior, from the standpoint
>f economy, to private ownership are
now giving way to public ownership.
This is necessary because small co-
operatives cannot succeed in compe-
tition with powerful conporations.
For several years the co-operative
creamery in Minnesota and Wiscon-
sin was pz suceess. The corporation
centralizer is putting them out of
business—just like the large meat
packers put the little packers out of
business.
“In other words co-operation must
and is undergoing a period of evolu-
tion—passing from the small co-op-
erative effort to the larger co-opera-
tion wherein the state co-operates
with the people.
“The small co-operative can no
more compete with the powerful cor-
poration than the small individual
can.
“The small co-operative society in
the miidst of the gigantic corporatioms
is like stopping the spigot and leav-
ing the bunghole open.
“The idea of co-operation in the
Northwest started among the farmers
and at first conceived only co-opera-
tive local grain elevators. The grain
combine simply smiled and headed
them off at the terminal. Then the |
farmers built a co-operative terminal |
at St. Paul. Then the combine |
grinned and headed them off at the
grain exchange. The farmers then
established a co-operative grain ex-
change—and were met with the blud-
geon at the mills. The little ideal |
which first demanded a local elevator |
evolved now to a demand for |
state-owned terminals, storage plants,
warehouses and mills.
‘The Non-Partisan movement now
sweeping the Northwest-—operating |
at the present time in 15 states, is|
1¢ to the policy of public own-
has
nership of
beh hk
wt rian
rs ie {
| consumer, {into ‘the country and play the coun-
[try worker against the city worker |
{by telling the farmer that the city |
{worker its making it all.
{that
the li
a ied a rae
WOT
TODAY'S
HOUSEWIFE
Is - enthusiastically endorsed
by over 1,000 000° progressive
housewives because they have
made this great discovery: penses
TOD AN S HOUSEWILIG
Tm
D NCR 24 SS THE their st
JOYS OF LIVING. hy
TODAY’S HOUSEW Ir FE is
the new title of TODAY'S
MAGAZINE with Io has
en consolidated TH IE
your entire
of pleasure
the ins irate n
dent alw
; sent and fut
ly many hours
in addi
nd encon
mak 1d
a brighter. be
Remitta
List under this heading your busi
ness npatme, location, telephone num-
ber and a brief genera] description of
goods carried in stock, or of profes- |
sional services available to: the pub.
lic, ‘No single ad listed to contain
more thn seven printed lines. The
cost is 30 cents per monih.
¥ * * *
MEYERSDALE, PA. i {
R. REICH & SON, 130 Centre. St., |
Funpiture, Carpets, Wall Paper, |
Stoves, Pianos & Musical Goods; |
Undertaking a Specialty; afl |
phones.
W. B. COOK & SON, Fire, Automo- |
bile, Compensation, Plate |
Glass Insurance. |
WILLIAM C. PRICE, Successor to]
W. A. Clark, Funeral Director;
Business Conducted at.the .Same
"lace; Prompt Attention Given All
ills; Both Phones.
* * *
GARRETT,
and
PA.
WILBIAM MARTIN, Shoe and Har- |
aess Repairing; Shoe Shine. |
SIDNEY BURK & SON, First Nation-
aj Bank Bldg. Up-to-date Shaving
Yarior,
ufacturers of Mcdicines, Toilet Ar-
ticles, Extracts, Soap, ete., Main of
fice Pittsburgh, Pa. |
BEAL’S RESTAURANT, Short Or- |
ders; Cigars and Tobacco; Grocer- |
ies; Ice Cream; and Justice of the |
Peace. .. Economy Phone.
W. H. CLEMENS, Notary Public; Ice!
Cream, Soda Water, Confection- |
ery, ete. Economy Phone. |
I. KE. JUDY, General Merchandise |
and Country Produce. Economy |
phone,
WALK KISTLER, Shoes, Hats and!
Tailor Made Suits a Specialty; full
line of Dry Goods and Notions. |
Next Door to Postoffice, |
* =» * !
HOOVERSVILLE, PA.
C. A. LOHR & SON, News Agency; |
daily papers, late magazines; gan
dy, Cigars, and Soft Drinks.
HARRY ISAACSON, Water street at|
corner Bridge; Clothing, Shoes,
Gents’ I'urnishings. County phone |
18,
JOHN E. HAMILTON, Majin St. |
Drugs, Soda Water, Cigars. County |
Phichie,
Furnishings; Bicycle Supplies.
J. C. DULL, Water St., Shoes, Gents’ |
{
I’. W. MENSER, Plumbing, Heating, |
Tinning. County phone.
W. E. DOYLE, Main St., Barbering,
Shampooing, Massage.
HOOUERSMILLE GARAGE, P. M.|
oyer,
|
Prop., Successors of Autos. |
Both phones.
today or cul!
is of McCall's
THE COMMERCIAL’S UP-TO- DATE BUSINESS
GUIDE AND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
TH ANGEMA LABORATORY, Man- |.
Our Best Club
with this Paper
OR a limited time
offer two of America’s foremost
magazines together with our
own paper at a big reduction from
regular prices.
en's
It is important for you to act quickly
because we may have to withdraw this
offer at any time on account of the tre-
mendous 1mcreased costs of publishing.
Now that congress has pissed the Zone Postage
Bill, which will add millions of dollars to the ex-
it is certain that
most magazines wiil soon have to greatly increase
of the various magazines,
ibscription fates.
2,500,000 women have voted MeCall’s Magazine | and
Today’ s Housewife as two most helpful and entertaining
magazines that are indispensable to every wife and mother.
This offer is open to new and renewal subscribers. th
Send your order
and look over the latest num-/
nee must be sent with order.
at our ofice
and ‘['odey’s Housewife.
1
|
|
These Business and Professional Men Contribute to the Sup-
port of The Commercial; Commercial Readers Contribute
to the Support of These Business and Professional Men.
MARKLETON, PA.
MARKILETON STORE CO., General
Merchandise and Country Produce.
Economy Phone.
; +» 0%
ROCKWOOD, PA.
ROCKWOOD HARDWARE €O., W.
Main St., General Hardware and
full line of Mining Tools. FEcon-
omy phone.
J. J. KARR, ¥Farmers” and Mer-
chants’ Bank Bldg., Tonsorial Ar-
List,
E. A. MALSBERRY, W.
Jewelry and Watches; B. & O.
Wateh Inspector, : * f
FRITZ MACHINE SHOP, All Kinds 2
of Repair Work; Pipe and Pipefit-
tings. + Economy phone... =
THE HOME MADE BREAD MAN, J,
DD. Snyder. County Phone No. 26
Economy phone No. 15.
Z. ED. MILLER, W. Main St., Fruit
and Groceries. Economy
No. 87.
PETE MANCUSO, W. Main St., Mer- |.
Cleaning, Pressing, |!
chant Tailor;
ilepairing; Work Guaranteed.
PHOTOPLAY THEATRE, Geo. Rid-
enour, Prop.,, W. Main St., First
Class Pictures; Change daily.
MEYERS’ HARDWARE & MEYERS’
VARIETY STORE, N. F. Meyers,
Prop., Miller Bldg., General Hard-
ware, full line of Variety Goods.
Keonomy phone.
MILLER & WOLF, Successors to
John D. Locke, Miller Block,
Clothing, Shoes and Hats for Men.
MILLER'S HOTEL AND RESTAUR-
ANT, Rooms, Meals, Short Orders;
Tobacco and Cigars; full line of
tirgeeries. First Clas Accomoda-
tions. . cos
* 3 »
‘SOMERSET, PA.
| W. CURTIS TRUXAL, Attorney-at:
Law; prompt attention given ¢o all
legal business.
x *» ’&®
WINDBER, PA.
FRED BRUMBERG, 911 Graham
Ave, Gemeral Blacksmith and
Horseshoer. Local phone.
GEORGE RUDOLPH, 1321 Midway,
Custom Tajlor. Local phone.
TORQUATO BROS. 1317 Midway,
General Contractors. Bell phone
Ao. 107-d.
SOJ: BRICKER, 1320 Graham Ave.,
Clothing, Shoes, Gents’ Furnish-
ings.
{C. D. NUP'P, 1214 Graham Av., News-
papers, late Magazines; Candies,
Cigars and Tobacco.
means of converting the raw farm
materials into the finished products. |
It seeks. to bridge the gulf that yawns |
[between the producer and the econ-|
sumer—a gulf in which hordes of |
{useless middlemen lie in ambush and
prey upon the products of the farm |
on its way to the factory and prey
upgn it again on its way back to the |
“Nonpartisan League recognizes
business and politics are very
closely related——are Siamese twins. |
| That politics secures the power with |
{ which to make the rules of the game |
S That's
the reason it
~the reasou
the political
of
busi
| cities.
| fieda.
“The farmer vote of the nation has
{always been considered as conserva-
{tive—and indeed has been such. It
| always offsets the radical vote of the
Politicians play the city |
worker against the country worker!
|'by telling the city worker that the
farmer is making it all and go out |
The Non-
Partisan League is going to break |
the farm with the
in the fact
orker on
of the worker ny.
we are able to
Main St., |
phone
~ McCALL’S
MAGAZINE
Famous for Fashions
If you wish to dress becom-
ii #1¥, “attractively, ' stylishly,
a big saving of ‘money; if
Bt like to. make beautiful
things in fancy needlework;
if you desire to cconomize on
foods and housekeeping ex-
. penses; if you enjoy reading
be es) adi
HOUSEWIFE, This attrac- Each of these sterling periodicals now. séil for 10¢ per copy a nin
tively illustrated housekeepers gg that vou get $2.40 newsstand ue besides a year’s sub- alli tetizhted wit}
magazine is bigger, brighter 3 Jou Wy be delighte with
and. better than either: was seripion for our paper forthe special price indicated below. ' ' 3{.CAL1’S MAGAZINE, be-
alone. Ever sue will afford ause these are the things
wake McCALI’S MAGA-
© a favorite of more than
million, two hundred
one
thousand American women,
SPECIAL ROCK BOTTOM PRICE
These two popular Magazines, with the Commercial, ail one year, for $2.00.
2
: 4
Driving Ii Home ! 3
:
¥
y ¥
- 3 ; It
Let us drive home to you §
- the fact that no washwoman ¢
can wash clothes in as sani- @
tary a manper as that in which
- the work is done at our laun-
dry. »
We use drach more water,
change the water many more
times, use-purer: and more
costly soap, and keep all the
clothes in constant motion
during the ‘entire process.
It is simply a matter of having
proper facilities,
‘respectfully ‘announces = *
ithat - commencing with |
“ December 1st he will
adhere :STRICTLY to
‘the GASH SYSTEM.
Hocking Block, Nov. 20, 1917
JOS. L. TRESSLER
Funeral Director
and Embaimer
Meysrsdale, Pa.
Office:
229 Center S.
Both Phones.
Residence:
309 North Street
Economy Phoae.
GC OCC OOUGO00GH00
NOTICE
To the Stockholders of the
Sand Spring Water Co:
A meeting of the Stockholders of
the Sand Spring Watre Co., of Meyers-
dale, Pa , will be heid in the directors’
room of the Citizens National Bank,
on Monday evening, January 14, 1918,
at 7o'clock, for the purpose of electing
directors for the ensning year, and the
transaction of any other business
properly brought before the meeting.
S. B. PHILSON, Sec.
TRY THEM
The next time you suffer with
headache, indigestion, bilious-
ness or loss o appetite, try—
BEECHAMS
PILLS
Rargest Sale of Any Medicine in the World.
Sold everywhere. Jo boxes. 10c., 25c.
Apportionment of labor to indus-
| tries vital to the conduct of the war
| will be taken up by the Comneil of
down that wall of prejudice between | National Defense with union officliyds.
{these two elements and pool the vote |
of the wm
No, the Socialists won't harm ecap-
after
1 thevre
VOL. 10. NO. 1
| SOM
Miss Ida M.
i visited Mrs. Ra
j farm over New
Miss Bertha
10 Albright Colle
eral days at the
Mr. and Mrs. Sa
Pp. Werner,
business |
, ene)
HS
Sanjuel Hom
Fowaship, has b
“Trespass agains
Re Company to rec
? $1200 for damag
plaintiff,
Mrs. A. C. Wai
is visiting at the
Mrs. J. M. Lout!l
Mrs. Gilbery 1
: dren have retury
Tn ing relatives anc
town, W. Va,
Mrs. C. A. Sk
has returned hon
parents, Mr. and
ver.
J. M. Bricker
to Johnstown.
A number of
who passed the
homes have retu
tive colleges,
Elmer Friedli
his home in Pitt
ing several days
Mrs. A. B. Fried
{48 Rachel D
al nurse of Pitts
Mrs. E. C. Ban
Penn Hospital to
returned home Iz
Private Russe]
Camp Lee traini
ited at Somerset
lived while empl
the Victor Coal (
Mr, and Mrs. A
Fall, Sais, wer
ter spending se
home of his daug
- gent, of New Yo
Andrew Thom]
was a recent visi
Mrs. Chas. M. 1
atives and friend
H. E. Bittner,
transacting busin
1. 8S. Werner,
transacting busin
terday.
Frank B. Flec
caller 10 Johnsto
Henry Altmil]
home after sp
at Johnstown,
Earl Speicher
in Johnstown yes
Ed. H. Boyts :
to Tampa, Flori
spend the winter.
James Hamer,
is spending a s
Somerset relative
Mr. and Mrs. Li
daughter, Miss VN
home after visitix
Somerset friends.
J. BE. Herr, of
recent visitor to
J. M. Black, o
transacting busin
cently.
Mrs. Harry Mil
town, is visiting 1
in Somerset.
Mrs. A. W. Lo
home after vis
with relatives an
her.
Mrs. H W. B
Street, has ret;
visit with relati
Rockwood.
George Montgo
visiting relatives
several days.
Miss Claro Wi
home after visitiz
with relatives in
John Mong, of
the home of Edw
South Street.
Landlord G. G
co, was a Somers
Mrs. Sarah B
home after sper
with her son, Hi
fain street.
Mrs. Jennie C.
Frostburg this w
spend the remain
Chief Electrici
of the Consolids
in the Jenner fiel
his vacation
Worcester, Massa