MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, THURSDAY, JANUARY 3, 1929 Bu NE sh! Slush!” Slippery Days Are Here! ect Yourself With ur Arctics and Overshoes can’t take chances health! We have st arctics, overshoes, and rubber boots in the lowest prices ch they can be ob- hnywhkere. e will mean absolute on in all kinds of hther. have them in all . for both men and Shoe Store ERSDALE, PA. Somerset County Weddings { Miss Martha Katherine Meyers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James M. | Meyers, and Hiram P. Walker, son of | Mr. and Mrs. Peter Walker, both of ' Rockwood, were married in Somerset !by the Rev. Dr. A. E. Truxal. Miss Alice Helen Miller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence H. Miller of Stoyestown, and Frank Reese Nichol- son, son of Mr. and Mrs. Nelson G. Nicholson of Meyersdale, were mar- ried in Somerset by the Rev. George Leith Roth. Miss Lillian N. Weigle, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Weigle of Listie, and Evert C. Rummel, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Rummel of Boswell, were married in Jennertown by the Rev. W. J. Lloyd. Miss Goldie Marie Hoffman, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Hoffman of Somerset, and Reon Deosta Wills, son of Mr. and Mrs. Waldon Wills of Brothersvalley township, were mar- ried in Berlin by the Rev. C. P. Bas- tian. Miss Hazel May Hassenpflug, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John G. Hassenpflug of Jerome, and John W. Speicher, son of Mr. and Mrs. Step- hen W. Speicher of Conemaugh town- | ship, were married in Johnstown by ithe Rev. C. C. Shaffer. | Miss Elsie Mabel Miller, daughter | of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Miller of Black | township, and William Clyde Judy, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Judy of | Garrett, were married in Rockwood by ithe Rav. C. W. Raley. | Miss Evelyn Grace Shaulis, daugh- {ter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael M. AMPTON NEWS n with fair weather. ng with flu. pan at this place. and vicinity. hard Edwards and wife fk of Cumberland, Chas. hno, Henry Bittner and bf Meyersdale and Bunn bas, W. Va. and John Hittie of spending a few days at this place. visitors to spend the e year were Mrs. Willis rs. Allen Bittner and A. C. Leasy and Mary Mary Keefer, all of this n is leaving to resume Indiana after a few er says there is noth- orse than to be met at lis lady friend when he ull of big packages. says what ever you do hy will be your portion hr. So we expect quite little dog, his hair is e, and everywhere that dog is sure to go. him to Berlin one day, st the rule, so Teddy ds of cheese and laid n went to visit Jim- The old year passed out! 3 Iler, and William Richard Meyers, son an and Adaline Werner, .’ : a A i oe to watch the birth of | of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Robert Mey- by attending revival | lof people in this section bse and family of near spent the holidays at ps Poorbaugh and Nellie spending a few days at visitors at James Bitt- y Shaulis of Lincoln township, and Carl { Richard Miller, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer E. .Miller of Sipesville, were married in Sipesville by the Rev. C. K. Spiggle. Miss Mabel Mae Butler, daughter of | Mr. and Mrs. William Franklin But- ers, both of Brothersvalley township, {were married in Garrett by the Rev. | Samuel F. Tholan. Miss Kathryn Rachel Wyand, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wyand, and Harry William Rhoads, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer E. Rhoads, both of Brothersvalley township, were mar- ried in Berlin by the Rev. D. S. Ste- phan. Miss Florence Elizabeth Gindlesber- ger, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gindlesberger of Windber, and For- rest J. Manges, son of Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Ray Manges of Central City, were married in Stoyestown by the Rev. J. A. Brosins. Miss Ruth Elizabeth Lohr, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Lohr of Garrett, and Kenneth Osborne Gless- ner, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ross Gless- ner of Somerset, were married in Garrett by the Rev. Samuel F. Tholan. BOYNTON NOISES The Boynton school held a ‘success- ful entertainment Friday, Dec. 21. Rev. D. W. Detweiler, Misses Augusta and Frances Livengood, Salisbury, Pa., and Miss Edna Hockman, of Boynton, furnished music for the evening program. Mr. and Mrs. M. Hockman enter- tained the following members of the family on Christmas day: Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Walker and family, Blough, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. Howard Hockman and daughter, Joyce, Mrs. Hazel M. Rigglemann, Cumberland, Md., and Mr. Harry E. Hockman, De- troit, Mich. 11 the cheese had dis- ernment | Job Printer | pes the biggest busi- | as a job printer, by envelopes and print- | Hdresses on them, in antities. ewspaper and job fair competition on | e Sam, and as tak- | b source of revenue | ountry towns and baying: will continue the | he Commercial day, Dec. 30. Mrs. Boaz Trent, Mrs. Emma GIFFORD PINCHOT ON FOREST PRESERVATION For the last decade and more the essential fact about the forest situa- tion in America has been winked at or overlooked in most public discus- sions of the subject. This fact is that our forests are disappearing at a rate that involves most serious dan- ger to the future prosperity of our country, and that little or nothing that counts is being done about it. Out of 822,000,000 acres of virgin forest only about one-eighth remains. Half of that remaining eighth, rough- ly speaking, is held by the Govern- ment and is safe from devastation. The rest is being cut and burned with terrible speed. And there is nowhere in the world anything like a sufficient supply of the kinds of timber we use to take the place of what we have de- stroyed. The foregoing statement is taken from the introduction to a pamphlet by Major George P. Ahern, entitled “Devastated America.” Major Ahern established the Philippine = Forest Service, organized the protection and utilization of forty million acres of public timberlands, and not only laid the basis for a perpetual succession jof timber crops, but earned cash en- | ough to pay all the expenses of ad- ministration, all the expenses of the | Pritippiae Forest School (which he |founded), and four million dollars to | boot for the public treasury. | This outstanding success in forest |conservation in the Philippines was 'built on Government control of lum- |bering. That is and has always been {the foundation of such success [throughout the world. And through- out the world the right of the Gov- ernment ‘to exercise such control in the public interest is recognized. Forest devastation in the United States can not be stopped without it. Forest fires are steadily growing worse in America, and fire prevention is absolutely indispensable. But the axe carelessly used is the mother of forest fires. The axe and not fire is our greatest danger. Until the axe is controlled there can be no solution of the fire problem, or of the problem of forest devastation. Over the National Forests, which cover one-fifth of our ultimate bos- sible timber-growing area, we have established Government control of the axe. These forests are safe, they are well handled, and they will produce larger and larger crops of timber as time goes on. Over the other four- fifths of our forest land the axe holds unregulated sway. Either we must control the axe on: these privately owned lands; or the forests that are left will follow the road of those that are gone already. The lumber industry is spending millions of dollars on propaganda in the effort to forestall or delay the public control of lumbering, which is the only measure capable of putting an end to forest devastation in Amer- ica. It is trying to fool the Amer- ican people into believing that the in- dustry is regulating itself and has given up the practice of forest de- there are now over 600 consolidated schools in Pennsylvania attended by 50,000 are transported. counties in the state have closed all their one-room schools and one of our adjoining counties, Bedford, in which CONSOLIDATION OF SCHOOLS IS TIMELY ISSUE Dr. Driver's Hlustrated Lectures Stimulate Interest in School Con- solidation in Somerset County— Stonycreek Township Will Close All One-room Schools Next Year— Brothersvalley Now Considering Consolidation, Dr. Lee L. Driver, Director, Rural Service Bureau, Department of Pub- lic Instruction, recently spent two days in Somerset County to discuss with officials and patrons some of the rural school problems now under con- sideration in various districts in the County. During his visit he confer- red with the Stonycreek School Board on the location of their consolidated school building and with the Shanks- ville Board on proposed plans to com- bine their schools with Stonycreek, thereby giving the children of that small borough the advantages of a larger graded school. Dr. Driver also delivered two illus- trated lectures in Brothersvalley i Township, one in the Valley Grange hall, Beachdale, and the other in Hill- crest Grange hall near Hays church. A good audience greeted Dr. Driv- er at both ‘these meetings. All the directors from ‘Brothersvalley were present and every school in the town- ship had some of its patrons in at- tendance. County Supt. of Schools, W. H. Kretchman presided, and his assistants, M. R. Schrock and A. B. Cober were also present. The people, regardless of their views’ on consolidation, were delighted with the lecture. Many of the school patrons stated that the discussion on the advantages of closing one-room schools cleared up many points which they had not understood and that they are now more favorably inclined to support consolidation. Dr. Driver is recognized through- out this entire country as authority on school consolidation. He is not a driver as his name suggests but a leader. He was the first man in the United States to consolidate all the one-room schools in a county and in recognition of his splendid leadership in Randolph County, Indiana, he was offered a position in Pennsylvania nine years ago. During the time he has been in this ‘State he has proba- bly done more for the improvement of rural school ' conditions than any other man, Dr. Driver told his audiences that more than 100,000 pupils and that Fourteen conditions are not as favorable as in Somerset County, closed 43 one-room schools last year. Somerset County now has ten con- vastation. tion in his most valuable paper. whirlwind is not far off. WASTEFUL HEATING Brown and Mrs. John Bittner are on the sick list with influenza. That is not true, and Ma- jor Ahern has proved it beyond ques- We are still sowing the wind, and the METHODS CRITICISED The economy and conveniences of “central heating” and of liquid fuels are beginning to make an impression upon the ultra-conservative Briton. | At the recent world fuel conference Harry BE. Hodkwinh took leave on lin London, daring speakers caused =o Sunday for Detroit, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Shumaker | and family and Mr. Albert Somerville | ust, Expires at Memorial Hospital. Andrew Larson, aged 45, of Listie, s sent out from ¢he la mine accident on August 28, passed | doner. St. Paul, Minn,, a away in Memorial hospital. : views this subject | hurt while at work for the Queéma-|pointed out that coal fires, especially | tax very much if any. | honing Coal Company. coal burned Subscribe for the Commercial in open grates, were > Surviving the deceased are his wi- |largely responsible for the “pea soup” |ed centrally for Brothersvalley elim- r government com- (dow, Mrs. Nellie Larson, and five chil- | London fogs and suggested legisla- | inates the need for a High School in ng to Congress for dren, as follows: Thelma, aged ‘21 and |tion to prohibit open coal grates in connection with the consolidation pro- | unmarried; Marie, aged 20; Lester, the interests of smoke prevention. i aged 18; Earl, aged 17, and Dorothy, aged four. | small sensation by attacking the coal ! grate fire, long a cherished institu- tion in the British home, and declar- Y . : _|ing the superiority of the new fuels, of Detroit, Mich., arrived here, Sun [oil and gas, when consamed In hrd. iern automatic furnaces. This is their freedom from |building without a vote on a bond is- He was smoke and soot. = Another speaker [sue and without raising the rate of | | jeet. solidated schools ranging in class- rooms from two to nine. The Stony- creek project will be the most out- standing and largest in the county with fifteen one-room schools trans- ported to one graded school and a four-year High School to be estab- lished in’ connection with the grades. In Brothersvalley Township consoli- dation would be comparatively easy. There are now two graded schools in the township, Pinehill and Macdonald- ton of four rooms each. These schools would no doubt be continued | as they now are should the board de- | cide to consolidate the one-room | schools. i There are ten of the fifteen one- | the children are transported. . . . | Sir Robert Horne went so far as to |on roads which which become impass- | Listie Man Dies say that “the pouring of raw coal in | able during the school months must | {a crude state into furnaces and do- |be continued until the roads are im- | Of Broken Back 'mestic grates must now be recognized | proved. i [as a tragedy from which we must find | Brothersvalley has all the resources hve always protested | Andrew Larson, 45, Injured in Aug- a way to escape.” | necessary for consolidation. V : Even though the factor of greater !tax rate of only nine mills, while the ails, or is said to ail the hum : convenience may not appeal to the | average in the county is twenty mills; [Janis M. Hepbron disputes the state- ! uman race. |average Britisher as strongly as it |a handsome balance in the treasury, printing establish- {whose life was prolonged by various does to Americans, the new fuels | and an assessed valuation of $1,849, | {treatments at Memorial Hospital af-|have another advantage which no one 259 it is possible for the School Board | seri | Zamiiin te sak het very ee he National Editor- | ter he had suffered a broken back in {can appreciate better than the Lon- |to secure the necessary cash for ihe ported to the police,” Mr. Hepbron y piece o | - room schools on or near hard surfac- | ed roads. This would make transpor- | tation much easier than it now is in| some other parts of the state where | Schools | The announcement that the Meyersdale Commercial will resume publication has attracted more atten- tion in Meyersdale and vicinity than any event in recent vears. Itis being widely discussed and commented up- on by both the men of business and the reading public. For years the Commercial stood high in the community until the death of its veteran editor and served well as a purveyor of local news and as an advertising medium. That the Commercial is to resume publication means that this section of the county is to have another clean, but, independent newspaper, which will endeavor to serve the public in a satisfactory manner at a reasonable subscription price. Its columns will contain the local news of the community and the happenings of interest in the county, as well as an epitomy of national and world affairs. Timely striking cartoons will be published weekly and pictures of persons and events of interest to all will appear. The International Sunday School Les- son, a serial story and other special features will be car- ried. In its advertising columns will be found only an- nouncements of reliable business men of dependable merchandise. If you feel that Meyersdale and vicinity will be bene- fitted by the publication of a newspaper such as the Com- mercial aims to be, your subscription is solicited. Just fill out the subscription blank below and send it in to the Commercial office and the paper will be delivered to your home each week: —_—. sesame SUBSCRIPTION BLANK To the Meyersdale Comanercial, Meyersdale, Pa. a Please find herewith $1.50 for which enter my subscrip- tion to the Meyersdale Commercial and send to the follow- ing address: Name _ L L POWn oi, tls Cn a LE Se State 1 i i. Street 0... 1 a R. D. No. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE COMMERCIAL NOW AND READ IT EVERY WEEK With a The Berlin High School being locat- Subscribe for the Commercial ment that crime does not pay. i that city (a ‘typical American rity’) Proportion to the increase in laws en- there were 10,000 serious crimes re- | acted. It would hardly be an exag- says, “and in the final analysis only | criminal 97 people went to prison. uh ania d doesn’t pay, who then gets the almost | and similar laws infringing on per- unthinkable sum of from ten to six- Sonal liberties, means a continually teen billions ‘which is said to be the increasing number of law breakers. yearly toll of crime in this country, a i sum which is one-seventh of our total Sing, | earnings?” hically the farce of American law | house and execution is almost a year. | enforcement. We ' have more laws {than any other country in the world, more professional reformers, more In an article in the Baltimore Sun, { people with cures for everything that Does Crime Pay? Classified Advertisements Use this column free of charge for the next two weeks. If you have any thing to sell; or trade, lost or stolen; or if you want to buy something, say it here under this col- umn. ' It will cost you nothing for the next two issues of this. paper. - «In And crime has increased in direct legislation’ of the “freak ! on What a commentary on the American If crime : t¥Pe, such as anti-pistol enactments system of administering Justice, in contrast to that of England, where from the time of trial, including every : known: appeal, only about six weeks elapse before execution.” A fact such as this requires no comment. i — Subscribe for the Commercial Mr. Hepbron ‘states that in Sing according to Warden Lawes of i that Penitentiary, “the average time Statistics such as these show grap- ! between committment to the’ death 0 { Ve Ir coats S’ OVERCOATS AGE 9 TO 15 00 Reduced to $6.75 yO Rediiced to $8.25 leduced to $12.75 —~ CASH ~- EARL H A I BOYS’ OVERCOATS AGE 2 TO 8 $6.00 Reduced to $3.75 % Volume XL ow Meyersd: ~ By Cl Visitors. Played " Vigor—Refeére ing Victory ta Seniors Play C - Favor of Form “ou! Windber defeated I { Meyersdale on Tuesd: | the close score of 19-2 was handicapped consi presence of a personag the name of Gettys, to refer as a referee. Th ‘was the “rats rubbers’ ‘the principal role in th up. He was here, the where and he always aj up just at the right 1 foul on the home boys played a very importa: evening’s festivities. A would make a good Jesse James was a teacher in comparison from the metropolis Pa., not far from W Gettys had one of thos one of those funny kin . ersdale was robbed of ° ting it mildly.,. The ho somewhat off color but good game with the di which they were put. To the Basket Ball f: set County I would like tion of the fact that Y esses one of the fine; bunch of players ever basket ball court, but tk have been returned viet night’s game. The sco: quarter was 5-5, at the favor of Meyersdale, 15-14 in favor of Wind - score was 21-19 in favo Rich was the long shot opponents, as he was a 3 when given an oppo: Gettys, the afore-ment should go over to Ma start learning the rules Meyersdale plays her Thursday evening at Jo Johnstown Catholic Hi. The High School Res Seniors played a very i the preliminary, the 22-18 in favor of the r old reliable, Jim Slicer. game in a very efficient always the case when Ji the game. Turn out an home boys, as they ne port. ’ ‘Summary: ‘Windber—21 M Rich McFeeley Kennan ‘Anderson. .............. G......... Substitution—Marron ley. Field 'goals—Dull 2 Maust 1, Boyer 1, Rich Anderson 1, Marron 3. Foul goals—Dull, 2 3 of 6; Maust, 1 of 1; I Rich, 1 of 2; McFeeley, ron, 0 of 3. Referee — Gettys. Sq Timer—Shaulis. —JOSEPH Meyersdale Bowl League Teams Following the stanc Bowling League teams: Belcher Thursday—Hare vs. D Friday—Enoch vs. Be Next Week Raymond-Belcher, Jan Hare-Hartley, Jan. 22. Enoch-Thomas, Jan. 2 Weyer-Dahl, Jan. 25. Too of brew res