our blished everv Thursday at Meversdale. Pa. . N. WILSON and SON iblishers and Proprietors HN ENGLE, Acting Editor ription Price $1.50 per year ertising Rates made known upon application SDAY, MARCH 13, 1929 Weddings lB Margaret Elizabeth Friedline, rr of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Fried- H Ernest Ray Shaffer, son of Mr. . I. E . Shaffer, both of Somer- hship, were married in Somerset Rev. N. A. Pearce. Tistella Marie Queer, daughter ind Mrs. Allen Queer, and Mel- iam Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs. Brown, both of Somerset town- re married in Somerset by the A. Miller. lorence Edna Hoover, daughter and Mrs. Elijah Hoover, of valley , township, and Charles elly, son of Mr. and Mrs. David elly of Black township, were in Somerset by Justice of the arles J. Harrison. lda Reese, daughter of Mr. and M. Reese, and Harry C. Close, Ir. and Mrs. A. J. Close, both sville, were married in Somerset ev. George L. Roth. Jena Harris, daughter of Mr. Willis Harris of Acosta, and Harvey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey of Jenner township, rried in Somerset by the Rev. ayes. fary Goniak, daughter of Mr. Kazimier Goniak, of Ursina, ter Enos, son of Mr. and Mrs. ps, of Acosta, were married re- ; Justice of the Peace Robert r, of Somerset. Ernest Mitchell and Ocala akefield, both of Scullton, were hu marriage license at Cumber- ~ al and Personal ames Baird was a visitor to Hale last week. and Mrs. Russel Younkin ily, of Somerset, were Sun- tors here at the home of the brother-in-law ® and sister, ard Dull. = i-Solid Butter Milk ow be had at the eyersdale Dairy. Try Our ETY SOLVENT For Cleaning Price 35c¢c Gal. o Equipment Co. RICKARD & SON, Prop. St. Meyersdale, Pa. t way, you will soon elevated to a position ere you can look over world with new con- nce and selfirespect. © ~ SECOND VATIONAL | | Join the Easter Parade! Get your Easter Candies here . Easter Eggs, 5c size to 5 pounds MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 1929 eer sate fommerciad | al ERR, Famous Pan’s Easter Eggs With from our from Box Candies Easter Egg Dyes will Chickens, Pigs and Rabbits every egg purchased pound up we inscribe your name on FREE. store one THOMAS DRUGSTORE Inc. Leading Druggist MEYERSDALE, PA. The Place Where Your Business is Appreciated ## EORTC RRRRET ROP Social and Personal Mrs. W. H. Dill was hostess on Friday evening when she entertain- ed the members of the L. B. T. Club at her home on North street. Lunch was served after a few pleas- ant hours spent in doing fancy work. Mrs. Clarence Rowe very delight- fully entertained on Monday even- ing with a surprise birthday party at her home on the South Side, in honor of her mother, Mrs. W. H. Habel who celebrated her birthday on Monday. Twelve guests were present and a delightful evening was spent in playing cards, after which Mrs. Rowe served lunch. Miss Kathryn Kerrigan, of Con- nellsville, spent the week end here with relatives and friends. TW. H. Sutter, of Martinsburg, W. Va., spent Sunday here with his wife and daughter and other rela- tives and friends. Miss Mame Weber returned Sun- day, from Cumberland, where she had spent several days with rela- tives. Miss Effie Hasselrode has return- ed from a few days visit with friends in Pittsburgh. Mrs. James Leckemby visited in Cumberland. recently Miss Mame Forquer, one of the efficient teachers in the Meyersdale public schools, spent the week end at her home in Ursina. G. G. Knieriem and family, of Hiysota, spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Knieriem, 500 Salisbury St. Mr. and Mrs. Edward McKenzie, of Greensburg, spent Sunday here with the former’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sampson McKenzie. Mr. and Mrs. Harry England, of Bedford, spent Sunday here with their relatives, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Dahl. who vis- re- Mrs. Harry Rosenberger, spent last Saturday and Sunday iting her home in Homer City, turned to her home here. The rummage sale held by the Ladies’ Aid of the Reformed Church at the Commercial office last Satur- day - was a huge success and they were very well pleased with the out come of the sale. Miss Mildred Stotler has accept- ed a position with the Philips-Jones Corp., of Meyersdale, and is em- ployed in the office. Miss Mary Reich, had Miss Ruth Meehan as her dinner guest last Sunday evening at her home on Broadway. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Campbell, of Confluence, were visitors to Mey- ersdale this week. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Keefer and two children, of Somerset, spent | Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Baer. Social and Personal Nathan Friedland and Harry Brett, of Altoona, were visiting in Meyersdale this week. Me. and Mrs. J. P. Havis, of Pittsburgh, were visitors in Meyers- dale, on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs! Geo. Smith, of Meyersdale, R. E. Smith and son, of Somerset, spent Monday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Boyer, of Berkley Mills. Theodore and Frank Kirchner took advantage of the excursion to Washington, last Monday, to be present at the inauguration of Her- bert Hoover. The boys enjoyed the day very much and are regular “Hooverites” since they saw the president-elect. They brought home with them a pillow with Hoover's photo and some fine views of the Capitol City. Ralph E. Smith, of Somerset, was a recent caller at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Smith. Mr. McIntyre and Mr. Barron, of Rockwood, Pa., were visitors to Meyersdale last Friday evening. Miss Leah Tumpson was a Som- erset visitor, Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Robley, of Berlin, visited in Meyersdale on Sunday. Miss Jane Livengood, of Salis- bury, spent the week end with Miss Jane Baldwin. Miss Betty Cook entertained the members of her Sunday School class at her home on North street, Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Estep, of Windber, were recent callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ross Al- bright. Mrs. Benj. Day, Mrs. Wm. Day, Mrs. Geo. Keichner, Mrs. Sam Keichner and Theo. Keichner spent last Sunday at Boswell and Jen- ners, visiting Mr. and Mrs. A. Rice and Mrs. Harry Smith. Elmer Bowman, Mrs. John Tress- ler and son, Albert, spent Monday in Cumberland. Among out of town visitors Tues- day, we notice J. C. Kendall, of Oakland, Maryland, and John Rem- bold, of Greenville Township. Theodore “Dory” Merwine is confined to his home on Chestnut Street on account of illness. Harvey M. Kretchman and John Weimer were business visitors to Somerset, Tuesday. George Stein, of Somerset, was a visitor at his mother’s home on North Street, Saturday. Rev. C. P. Bastian, pastor of Trinity Lutheran Church, Berlin, was a Meyersdale visitor, Monday. who sons in Matthews, her Nannie the winter Mrs. | spent with | . % { dav, on train No. 8. | Canton. Ohio, returned home Sun- | | sible for him to lie * Daddys | Evenin Fat ale A TARY: CRAIAM - BONNER A BLIZZARD “The people on the earth call this sort of a storm a blizzard,” said Prince Sleet. “Isn't it a perfectly beautiful name?” \ “Isn’t it?” repeated the Cloud King. “Isn’t it?” said the Storm King. “It’s perfect.” “You were going to tell us a story,” said Princess Snow to the Storm King. Pray continue with it.” “Do,” said the others. “I will,” said the Storm King. “You see I heard people say that it looked like a storm. “Yes, they said they could see a storm coming. I didn’t mind that in the least, but what do you suppose they said next?” “We can’t imagine,” answered the heads of the Storm King’s armies. “I'll have to tell you then,” said the Storm King. “Do,” begged Prince Sleet. “They said that they would have to hurry and beat the storm. “You see there were a good many people out walking and having some “] Didn't Feel Them Beating Me.” good winter exercise they called it, when old Mr. Wind got started with his restlessness. “Then my dear old friend, the King of the Clouds, upset the looks of the sky—at least the people said so.” “What in the world did they mean by beating the storm?” asked Prince Sleet. “I didn’t feel them beating me,” said Mr. Wind, laughing a very cold laugh. “That's the great joke,” said the Storm King. “All they meant by saying that they wanted to beat, the storm was that they wanted to hurry and reach their houses before we arrived.” “Ha, ha, ha,” laughed Prince Sleet, as he and the King of the Clouds danced gleefully about together. “They couldn't beat us if they tried,” said the Storm King, ‘My armies are too strong, my generals and princes too powerful, and so when they say they try to beat the storm—all they mean is that they want to escape us!” “Pretty good joke,” they all agreed. “So I've decided that I'd give them a real storm to beat—not just a Iit- tle one.” “Hurrah,” said Prince Sleet, “and so 1 came.” “Hurrah,” Clouds. “Horrah,? “Hurrah,” said the King of the said Mr. Wind. said Princess Snow. “Hurrah,” said the Icicle Girls. The storm creatures were 80 amused at the earth peoples’ joke that they had a glorious laugh and game —which meant a terrific blizzard. The rain froze as it fell, for that was the work of Prince Sieet, and the Snow King and his children helped. Mr. Wind entered into it with ali his breath, and he blew good and hard I can tell you! Of course the King of the Clouds made the sidewalks icy with the as- sistance of the Icicle Girls and the Ice Princes and Princesses. But the happiest of all was Prince Sleet, who said the nicest word in the world was the gloriously stormy word— BLIZZARD! PUZZLES Which toe never gets frostbitten? Mistletoe. * * * When is a candle in a bad temper? When it flares up. * Xx » When is the sun like a Christmas Jelly? When it sets. * % * Why is snow like Christmas? Be- cause it may fall on any day of the week. * * * What is the left side of Christmas plum pudding? The part that is not eaten. * x 2 Why is an orange like a church steeple? Because we have a peel from it. * % = What would a spider do if he was late for his Christmas dinner? Take a fly of course. * *® * Why does a short boy rise early on Christmas day? Because it is impos- long. * = What notes compose the most *fa- vorite” tunes, and how many tunes do they compose? Bank notes, and they | make for-tunes, "00 CCL ECCLELEECLCEEC ECCLES, oS The Tradition Held Good By CLARISSA MACKIE COOP 0 0000000 60000000 (Copyright.) HE old Frost house stood, in its majestic loneliness, on the little hill beyond the Methodist church. In years gone by, the Frost family had been very prominent in Littlefield— the men had been judges, doctors and the real family tradition might have been called hospitality. War came and took toll of the Frost young men. Judge Frost and his “good wife both died during that period, and an only daughter, who had been a nurse in Flanders, had returned to her empty home to be married to an English army officer. Then, locking up the house, she gave it into the keeping of Rose Frost, a distant cousin, who lived nearby, and sadly said just before she sailed for England: “We have never heard from our Jock, Rose. If we were convinced of his death, something could be done with ‘the house, but if you will look after it—perhaps, some day, Jock will come home again.” No one believed that Jock Frost would come home again. And yet one morning his far-away cousin Rose awoke with the sun in her blue eyes and with a thrill in her heart. “I just have a feeling that Jock may come home today, and it will never do to ignore the family tradi- tion -and let him knock and find the house closed! I will tell mother at breakfast, if she does not need me, I will go over right away and get ready for Jock.” So Rose, brighter than usual confessed to her mother. “I do not need you, Rosy, and you may take Hester, if you want her. There is not very much to do today,” said the mother. So Rose and Hester spent the day working in the big house. At five o'clock the two women could say that the house was ready for any returned wanderer, or any casual guest that might appear. There were pleasant fires burning on the hearths, and the glow of lamp- light and firelight sparkled on the brightly polished window panes. In the small sitting room was a gateleg table spread with a linen cloth on which were placed the old Chelsea china and polished old silver." “You must be terrible sure, Miss Rose,” said Hester. : “I do feel sure, Hester,” said Rose confidently, “and for that reason I am going home to change my dress. I will be back in half an hour.” “If anybody comes, Miss Rose, there ain’t much for ’em to eat,” contended Hester. “I will bring something over—per- haps Sam will kill a chicken and I will bring a loaf of fresh bread.” Hester hurried around during the absence of her young mistress and had a good fire in the kitchen range when Rose returned with a large bas- ket. “Mother has put in all sorts of good things, Hester, and I know that she thinks I'm crazy!” “She thought you was crazy the night you dreamed that some one was robbing the hen roost—and when your pa and Sam went out, sure enough they caught that furriner from the river bottom—remember?” “Yes, indeed,” laughed Rose, and her laughter continued as the front door knocker sounded smartly. “Well, here he is!” declared Hes- ter, whipping off her kitchen apron and disclosing a frilly white one be- neath it. Then she hurried to the front door. She did not notice that Rose Frost had fled to the large front parlor, where she sat shivering be- hind the great fire screen. Hester opened the front decor and discovered a tall, bearded man, wear- ing a large gray coat and a hat pulled low over his dark eyes. “Oh, howdy do, Mister John,” said the woman cheerily. “We been look- in’ for you. I guess—” The stranger entered and, removing his felt hat, hung it on the rack, and then turned to her. “A room, if you have it, please,” the man said sharply, and then start- ed up the front stairway, Hester trail- ing after. When they reached the top of the long stairway the man paused, as if to let Hester pass ahead of him, and in doing so faced the large oil portrait of Judge Frost's wife. For an instant he paused there, as if uncertain, staring at the dignified, white-haired old lady of the picture, and then, with a strangled cry of “Mother—mother!” he fell forward down the stairs to the very bottom. Hester rushed away for the nearby doctor, while Rose brought restora- tives. She was working tenderly over the white-faced man when Doctor Weed arrived with his chauffeur. They carried the fainting man up to the room that used to be Jock Frost's, and laid him on the freshly-made bed. Then the doctor wrote a prescription, sent Cyrus to the drug store, and then went out and spoke to Rose. “It's your Cousin Jock, all right. Think he must have had a shock dur- ing the war—falling down stairs was a restorative shock. He woke up a few minutes ago and said, ‘Hello, Doc! I’ Then he asked for his father and Violet—=so guess it’s up to you to tell him, Rese.” * * * = * * *® TEE 0 00eS The Frost tradition still nolds good. The doors are always hospitably open, and Jock Frost, one of the leading cit- jizens, often says to his wife, Rose, “We must keep up the Frost tradition, my dear. If I had found an empty house that night, goodness KEknow# what might have happened!” Social and Personal Mrs. Joe Mankamyer and Mrs. Urmson called at the Commercial office Monday afternoon and wished the paper success. Louis Weld, of Hyndman, is vis- iting in Meyersdale for a few days. Miss Amelia Clotsworthy, R. N. of Baltimore, Md., is here visiting her mother, Mrs. Charles Clots- worthy, of Centre street. Mrs. John Darrah, Monday in Cumberland. Jr, spent Mrs. Charles Sanders and little son, Jack, left Wednesday morning for Williamsport, where they will spend a week or ten days with the former's brother-in-law and sister, Prof. and Mrs. R. T. MacLaren. Rev. Father Brady and Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Reich, spent Friday of last week with relatives and friends in Johnstown. Miss Ruth Machin, R. N. in the West Penn Hospital, Pittsburgh, is here visiting her relatives Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hare at “Casey’s Cafe.” Mrs. Dennis Yoder, spent Tues- day in Somerset on business. The Spring suit sale that is being put on by Hartley Bros. is being very well patronized and it only goes to show that ‘the old. old slo- gan, “It pays to advertise” is cer- tainly a true one. Mrs. S.J. Grine returned home, Friday evening of last week from Youngstown, Ohio, after spending the winter with her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Baer. She was accompanied home by her daughter, Mrs. Baer. Mr. Howard Shockey was a busi- ness caller with Somerset friends, Friday of last week. Mr. Wm. Daugherty was a Som- erset visitor, Tuesday of this week. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sanders, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Derry and Miss Elizabeth Darrah were Sun- day visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Derry, at West Salisbury. Mrs. R. H. Philson left Sunday afternoon for Morgantown, W. Va., where she will spend the week vis- iting her sister, Mrs. Roberta Rob- erts and family. Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Weaver en- tertained a few of their friends last Thursday evening, at their home on Meyers Avenue. The evening was spent in playing 500 and at the con- clusion of the game a two-course lunch was served. Dr. Samuel Hoke is spending the week on a business mission, in Pitts- burgh. MCKENZIE & (0. For Better Groceries ET IN TACs: CTL a a 7) T rere ’S CHARM in your hair Your hair can be made to look beautiful—to add immeas- urably to your smartness and chic. The answer of course is a Permanent from the Vanitie Shoppe. Beginning April 1st, “special price of $10 for Edmond Waves. Both short and long. Also, special service of one extra fin- ger wave will be given to those having permanents during month of April. The Vanitie Shoppe Meyersdale, Pa. Social and Personal Mrs. H. C. Mauk, who has been confined to her home on Main street for the past two months, recuperat- ing from a recent operation, was given a surprise on Friday after- noon when the members of the sew- ing ¢lub of which Mrs. Mauk is a member, called and announced that they had come to help celebrate her birthday, which occurred that day. The afternoon was pleasantly spent and at 5 o'clock supper was served which the ladies had prepared and brought with them. Mr. Charles Plitt has accepted a position with The Toggery Shop, and it is the writer's opinion that Mr. Baldwin has made a wise move in adding Mr. Plitt to the sales force. Fig Bars, 1b.........15¢ Macaroon Snaps, lb..20c CHOCOLATE, Walier Baker's, cake. PEARIL/ TAPIOCA, box............ APRICOTS, Fancy Evaporated, 1b... } PRUNES, two pounds.............. DILL PICKLES, large jar........... OLIVES, Large Queen, qt. jar....... PEANUT BUTTER, loose, 1b........... SOOT DESTROYER, package........... APPLE BUTTER, 1 gallon crock....... Cakes “eee 0s ee Ginger Snaps, 2 lbs..25¢ Coconut Snaps, 1b...18¢ Grape Juice Pint Bottle 25¢c Bean Candy per lb. 15c¢c Beans Brown Egg 2 1b. 25¢ Coffee OUR BREAKFAST COFFEE, Ib............. 45¢ MADERA COFFEE, fine quality, 1b..... MONARCH COFFEE, bb.................. COCOA, loose, two pounds............... POSTUM CEREAL, large package. ...........25¢ e.....29¢ . «»Dbe evi 950 Both Phones McKENZIE & CO. We Deliver 10:1 SSI New Auto Bu Became Effe Improved Service town, Meyersda Boswell and Son Effective Monday Company has made in its schedules, eac prove the service. announces that an a timore and Washing The new Johnstov is as follows: Leave Johnstown 9:15 a. m.; 1:00, : 9:30 p. m. All busses make nertown for Boswel Leave Somerset | 9:15 a. m.; 1:00, £ 9:00 p. m. From Somerset fc leave at 7:80 and 4:15 and 7:30 p. m. From Somerset and 11:20 a. m. anc The Central City Cost $2, first time 75 years a making. out the he Pa Wednes s School Sh