The Meyersdale commercial. (Meyersdale, Pa.) 1878-19??, March 28, 1918, Image 4

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THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, MEYERSDALE, PA.
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General
"REPRESENTING
OF PLAIN
Ch OC
For Representative in (oi
rd Pennsylvania District.
VIEWPOINT
PEOPLE = EVERYWHERE.”
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PeSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS SSS SSSSSSSSSISSSSSSS>
WE RECOMMEND
Eber K. Cockley &
Herman G. Lepley
For Representatives in the
Assembly.
A. Lindstrom
For State Senator.
Hon. L. S. Mellinger
3
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ue
THE
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NOTICE |
TO WHOM IT MAY
CONCERN:
nl No. 2774, Lb. M, W.
R., wishes to inform members aid)
others that the Gonsol mines did
not resume work in this region as |
UNION MINES.
STRIKERS returned to work at
their government’s request.
THRELOGAL UNION PURCHASED
A $500 LIBERTY BOND AS fiN
ADDITIONAL AGT WORTHY OF
YOUR NOTIGE.
TRUSTEES.
ND
fone nr
Advertize it All the Time
a
It SP i PS.
Driving It Home}
Let us drive heme to you
the fact that no washwe-
man can wash clothes in
as sanitary a manner as
that in which the work is
done at our laundry.
We use much 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.
f
|
It is simply a matter of having
proper facilities.
For Sale
1 1917 Maxwell Roadster.
1 Oak and Leather Davenport.
1 Round Oak Range, No. 20.
1 large Lawn Mower.
1 1900 Washer and Ringer.
1 Laundry Stove.
1 Kitchen Table.
1. “Conover” Grand Piano
1 Ice Cream Freezer.
Each article in good condit-
inspection.
Meyersdale Steam Laundry
Joseph L. Tressler
Meyersdale, Penna.
Residence: Office :
309 North Street
onomy Phone.
Feritstic
dob Printing.
SAS NS
ion—will bear the most rigid
R- W. CADDELL, Seibert
House on Main Street,
SOMERSET, PENN’A.
A PF PP rrr ra am ~~ ir
Pure Blood
You can keep your blood in
good condition—have a clear
Puneral Director and" Embalmer §
2292Center \tree § :
Both Phones. §
| Largest Sale of Any Medicine inthe World.
| me
| best.
skin, and bright eyes, by taking
Sold everywhere, In boxes, 10c., 25¢c.
All persons should have
equal opportunity to develop
MATERIALISTS.
No, the Socialists are hoi
rainbow chasers.
The opponents of Socialism
are rainbow chasers.
: Frequently some opponent
of Socialism, in one breath,
charges us with being rank ma-
terialists, who are concerned
only with base, physical, mater
ial things.
And, in the next breath, he
charges us with being rank i-
dealists and rainbow chasers
who are attempting to estab-
lish an impossible heaven on
earth.
Of course, these charges do
not hang together very well.
But then, as our eritics are in
the wrong, we cannot expect
them to be reasonable.
We Socialists are neither
rankmaterialists nor rank ide-
alists.
We have high ideals but we
do not spend our time dream-
ing about them.
We recognize the fact that
the reason men cannot appro-
ach their ideals, but are curb-
ed and thwarted, is because
their actions and aspiratons
|the possibilities in them, and
to share the good things of life |
| equally, if they equally do their
are limited and governed by
an unfavorable environment.
We have our knife out for
that environment.
When we lay that environ-
ment in its grave we propose to
replace it with a better one.
Men are chiefly the product
of their environment, and of
heredity, which is chiefly com-
posed of inherited environment
The nature of the environ-
ment of men is determined
chiefly by economic conditions.
Economic conditions are de-
termined chiefly by the mode
of producing and distributing
the necessities and comforts of
life.
RD NPN ~~
.of spending his life in abolish-
sry
a ay
WHAT'S 50 AND WHAT ISN'T
Copyrighted by JOHN M. WORK
To make a radical chauge in
the environment, you have to
change the mode of production
and distributon. ag
The economic conditions
now prevailing make the envi-
ronment of the average man
such that he is condemned to
starve himself mentally, mor-
ally and spiritually, in order
to escape physical starvation.
He is compelled to scrambe fur
iously for money enough to pro
vide a bare existence. uf
We know that under a rat-
ional system the world’s indus-
trial work can be done in half
the time spent upon it under
the present wasteful, unsecien-
tific, chaotic system. He
We want men to have the
time andthe means and the op-
portunity to cultivae their * high
er natures,
But we know that this can
only be accomplished by chang
ing their environment. In
other words, by abolishing cap-
italism and introducing Social-
ism.
Therefore, when we are
charged with being rank mat-
erialists or rank idealists, I re-
ply that the Socialist is the on-
ly materialist who is not ra nk
and he is likewise the only ide-
alist who is not rank. He is
neither a materal groveler nor
a rainbow chaser.
.The man who makes mater-
ial ends his ultimate object is
the material groveler.
And the man who spends his , :
life, as some opponents of Soc-
ialism do, in trying to get men
to be decent under the present
impossible conditons, instead.
ing those conditions and repla-
ing them with conditions
wherein men can be decent, is
the rainbow chaser.
The Socialist is practical.
oo
Se,
LUCKY
it’s made
CIGARETTE
N a year it has become
famous; the man’s cig-
arette for the men who are °
working over here, and
fighting over there.
The reason?
tobacco and because—
IT'S TOASTED
2 Guaranteed by
INCORPORATED
STRIKE
Because
of Burley pipe
fi
J
!
4 -
Pp a
parent
Gordo:
Mrs.
two cl
visiting
Mrs. E
Mr.
spendii
the hoa
Chicag
Mrs.
and Ma
returne
where
days.
Mr. :
and fa;
lips’ mc
Dickens
week.
Mrs.
daughte
Cumber
Kennell
Staub.
Mrs.
daughte
were Vis
W. LT
Bedford
Misse;
Griffith,
are visit
sister-in-
John Gi
Mr.
Ludwig
wig, wh
home of
returned
day.
Mrs.
and two
and Wil
ing at th
returned
day.