The Meyersdale commercial. (Meyersdale, Pa.) 1878-19??, May 16, 1918, Image 2

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    THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, MEYERSDALE, PA.
The Menerstate formerciat |
Published every Thursday by the
Commercial Co-operative Council.
EBER XK. COCELEY,
Business Manager.
HERMAN G. LEPLEY, Editor.
Entered at the Meyersdale postoffice
as second class mail matter.
Subscription price, $1.25 per year.
Advertising rates, all macter, 10 cents
per inch net, 5 cents per inch for com-
position work; 20 per cent extra for
preferred position; small readers, _
cents per line; Business Directory, 50
cents per month.
Ask for prices on job printing.
ma AINA NF SSSI NSN
TO THE YOUTH OF THE
WORLD
But I hope. I hope because
of the young. And to them I
now turn. To you, young men,
it has been given by a tragic
fate to see with your eyes and
hear with your ears what war
really is. Old men made it, but
you must wage it—with what
courage, with what generosity,
with what sacrifice, I well
know. If you return from this
ordeal, remember what it has
been. Do not listen to the
shouts of victory; do not snuff
the incense of applause. But
keep your inner vision fixed on
the facts you have faced. You
have seen battleships, bayonets
and guns, and you know them
for what they are, forms of
evil thought. Think other
thoughts, love other loves,
youth of England and of the
world! You have been through
hell and purgatory. Climb
now the rocky stair that leads
to the sacred mount. The guide
of traditien leaves you here.
Guide now yourselves and us!
Believe in the future, for none
but you can. Believe in what
is called the impossible, for it
waits the help of your hands
to show itself to be the inevit-
able. Of it and of all our
hopes, the old, the disillusion-
ed, the gross, the practitioners
of the world are the foes. Be
you the friends! Take up the
thought and give it shape in
act! You can and you alone.
It is for that you have suffer-
ed. It is for that you have
gained vision.—From “War
and the Way Out,” By G.
Lowes Dickinson.
SUMMIT MILLS.
Milt Opel’s, of Berlin, were
visiting at Ames Lindeman’s,
Sunday.
Mrs. Martha Phillippi and
children, of Coal Run, visited
at Urias Firl’s, Sunday.
Mrs. A. L. Faidley and Mrs.
Mahlon Yoder were Meyers-
dale shoppers, Monday.
There was a large attend-
ance at the communion services
in the Brethren Church, Sun-
day evening.
Mrs. Norman Kinsinger, of
Berlin, was visiting at the home
of George Brown, Saturday
night and Sunday.
We are having a great deal
of rainy weather, but it is what
we need at present to give our
garden vegetables a good start.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Schwartz and children, of Gar-
rett, were the guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Mahlon Yoder, Sat-
urday night and Sunday.
Among the visitors at the
home of Alex Faidley, Sunday,
were Mrs. Joel Landis and two
daughters, of near Berlin, and
Robert Faidley, his wife, and
two, children.
Samuel and William Miller,
who were employed at Rock-
wood opening a new mine for
John Kretchman, returned
home Saturday night and have
started to work at the C. C.
and M. mines.
Uncle Joe Shumack, always
a true patriot, has a large
American flag waving over his
bachelr home on the hill, where
everybody who passes may see
it and think more about it and
what it actually stands for.
Get our prices on Job Work.
MINE CAR WHEELS
AND
Complete Mine Cars
ALSO,
Car Bands, Drawbars and Forgings,
Motor Brake Shoes, all makes; also,
Machine Wheels, Cast Iron Motor Axle
Bearings, for babbitting;
and Stands, Dead Plates and Tuyeres,
for Jones Stokers, Grate Bars, Boiler
Doors and Liners, and general line of!
Grey Iron Castings. |
Immediate delivery.
SUPPES FORGE & FOUNDRY CO.
Johnstown, Pa.
i
| When words you speak, those
Cast Room |
Frogs, Turanouts, various types Sheaves |
Among the books received at
one army cantonment was the
Undertakers’ Review for 1905.
Someone must have thought
the soldier boys would like to
brush upon the dead lan-
guages.
A boy who swims may say
he’s swum, but milk is skim-
med instead of skum, and nails
you trim, they are not trum.
words are spoken, but a nose is
tweaked and can’t be twoken,|
and what you seek is never
soken. If we forget, then
we've forgotten, but things we
wet are never wotten, and
houses let can not be lotten.
The goods one sells are always
sold, but fears dispelled are
not dispoled, nor what you
smell is never smoled. When
young a top you often spun, but
did you see a grin e’er grum,
or a potato neatly skun?—Tit
Bits.
wet.
out of order. These *
1
Help
Directions of Special Value to Women are with Every Box.
Sold by druggists throughout the world.
When your head aches, it is usually
caused by your liver or stomach getting
‘sick headaches’
quickly disappear as soon as the stomach
is relieved of its bilious contents. Right
your stomach and regulate and tone
the liver with Beecham’s Pills, which
rapidly improve conditions and promptly
rieadache
In boxes, 10c., 25¢.
Against
The Middle
(The Packer)
The consumer wants to pay a low
price for meat.
The farmer wants to get a high
price for cattle,
The packer stands between these
| conflicting demands, and finds it im-
possible to completely satisfy both.
| The packer has no control over the
| prices of live stock or meat, and the
| most that can be expected of him is
i that he keep the difference between
| the two as low as possible. He does
{ this successfully by converting animals
i into meat and distributing the meat
at a minimum of expense, and at a
| profit too small to be noticeable in the
| farmer's returns for live stock or in the
| meat bill of the consumer.
Swift & Company's 1917 transac-
i tions in Cattle were as follows:
Average Per Head
Sold Meat to Retailer for . . $68.97
Sold By-products for e oo. 2400
| Total Receipts c+ so 3. 9305
Paid to Cattle Raiser « 2. 8445
Balance (not paid to Cattle Raiser) 8.61
Paid for labor and expenses at
| Packing House, Freight on Meat,
| and Cost of operating Branch
distributing houses . . . . 7.32
Remaining in Packer’s hands as
Returns on investment $ 1.29
The net profit was $1.29 per head, or
il about one-fourth of a cent per pound
filln of beef.
By what other method can the dif-
ference between cattle prices and beef
prices be made smaller, and how can
the conflicting demands of producer
and consumer be better satisfied ?
1918 Year Book of interesting and
instructive facts sent on request.
Address Swift & Company,
| Union Stock Yards, Chicago, Illinois
Swift & Company, U. S.A.
LIBERO Er asEDr | EEE
I~
‘Oppenheimer
; Spring models
IM.
TER TR BRIA
AAA AA ~
COAL RUN.
Mrs. James Keefer, of Berlin,
is the guest of her sister, Mrs.
Jeff Stevanus.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hoover, of
Salisbury, spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. “Farmer” Sip-|°
ple.
Mr. Milton Tipton and fam-
ily, of Jerome, were visiting the
former’s mother, Mrs. John
Tipton.
The home of Mr. Daniel
Stevanus is under quarantine,
some of the family having scar-
let fever.
Mrs. John Daugherty is
spending a few days in Berlin
with her son-in-law and daugh-
ter, Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Wel-
lington.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Hine-
baugh and two daughters, of
Berlin, visited Mrs. Hine-
baugh’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
C. P. Hersh,
Mr. Herman Miller, who is
working at Garrett, was home|
over Sunday. There is some-|
thing in Coal Run that attracts
Herman’s attention. What is|
it, Herman?
ere rm tis
Oppenheimer Two-Button Sack
for Young Men
day ideas of economy.
They are good clothes — made of dependable
fabrics, skillfully tailored and priced according to
actual value. Built for men who must dress well,
but who believe in getting a full measure of ser-
vice for every dollar they pay.
patterns are now being shown by leading clothiers.
he Suits, $15 to $30.
115-123 Seventh Street, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Insurance Clause—
Every OPPENHEIMER garment is
inspected rigidly and then offered for
Clothes are in line with present
in plain colors and all fashionable
Trousers, $2.50 to $6.
OPPENHEIMER, @&, CO.
WHOLESALE EXCLUSIVELY
J. T. Yoder
JOHNSTOWN
Sells the Champion Cream Saver
—TEENEW DE LAVAL
you have ever owned a separator of any oth
is ore Uuisianaing fRarnre of the NEW "be ill be, hers
appeal to you as much as even its mechani iori
and that is its simplicity. : sthavieal supstorl'¥:
You won't find any complicated, troublesome parts in
NEW De Laval. It does not get out of order i even Ei
it is sg : and iz for any Toesm you ever should want to take
apa e only tool you need is the combination wren
gcrew-driver furnished with each el Sompination ¢h ead
The NEW De Laval is the simplest
cream separator made.
A person
who has never
before touched
a separator
can, if neces-
BE De Laval niashine down
e a modern De Laval machine to the las it]
minutes, and then put it together again within Lwin Sve
is something that cannot be done outside a machine shop with
any er separator mede, and any separator user who has ever
had to wrestle with the complicated mechanism found in other
separators will appreciate what it means to him,
Don’t fail to stop in and see the NEW De Laval th time
1 g e next
you are in town. Even if you are not in the market for a sepa-
rator right Row, cone in and examine a separator that is said by
experts to embody the greatest improvements in
construction in the last thirty years. SOT) sparaee
CA oni |
Only tool required
Loans
U.S.
Bankir
Cash .
Due fi
Capita
Surplu
Circul
Depos:
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Funeral
M
Reside
309 Nortl
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