The Meyersdale commercial. (Meyersdale, Pa.) 1878-19??, September 26, 1929, Image 7

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    GLENCOE ITEMS
Mrs. J. T. Leydig who had been ill
for some time is improving.
Fred Raupack and family, Carl
Raupack and family and Edward S.
Hartman and family motored to Ber-
lin on Saturday evening on a shop-
ping and pleasure trip.
Arthur Bittner, of Cumberland,
Maryland, was the guest of his wife's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Leydig,
recently. Mrs. Bittner is taking care
of her mother for a short time.
F. B. Miller and family were shop-
ping at Berlin on Saturday night.
Mrs. Willis Schrock and Mrs. Allen
Bittner are visiting relatives and
friends in Johnstown this week.
All candidates for the various
Township offices have been quite busy
just before the Election.
BLOUGH NEWS
A “Broken Heart” Social was held
at the Maple Grove school house at
Blough on September 20th. Quite a
large crowd attended.
Landstreet is becoming quite a pop-
ular place. A free dance was held in
the empty house Number 11 by some
of the people of that place.
Miss Blanche Bannock had the mis-
fortune of injuring her foot on Tues-
day, but is able to be about again.
Robert Sloan spent Sunday at Rob-
ert Howell's.
Mr. and Mrs. John Hipple and fam-
ily spent Sunday in Meyersdale.
James* Wilde and John Seders and
| daughter, Mildred, spent Saturday in
Somerset.
i John Knurick was a Meyersdale vis-
itor on Sunday.
Arthur Wilde and family, and Charles
Seders, spent Sunday in Portage.
Mrs. Charles White has returned from
a few weeks visit in South Fork.
There have been three or four severe
frosts the past week and few people re-
ported snow-flurries on Saturday morn-
ing.
WEST SALISBURY
Mrs. Bertha Trent held a surprise
party for her son Earl on Monday eve-
ning. He celebrated his eighteenth
birthday. Those present were: Carl and
Lawrence Knecht, Walter Kinsinger,
James Rodamer, Mrs. Lloyd Fuller,
Gertrude Showalter, Margaret, George
and Earl Diehl, Idabelle - May, Percy
Harris, Kathryn and Isabelle Diehl,
Mary Patton, Mabel and Anna Thomas,
Leona Jones, Mrs. Robert Jones and
son Robert, Mirial Harding, Mrs. Wm.
Harding, Orrie Able, Mrs. Henry Diehl,
Harry Beynon, Mary, Kenneth, John,
Iva, and Bertha Trent, Howard Miller,
Miriam Harding, Clarence Humbertson,
Helen Fuller, Andrew Able and Mrs.
Wm. Diehl.
Mrs. M. P. Bowman spent Wednesday
with her sister, Mrs. John May, of
Boynton.
Miss Ellen Bath and Mrs. Robert
Jones were callers at Mrs. Henry Pat-
toms on Tuesday.
Mr. John Camp spent Wednesday
with his daughter, Mrs. George Engle.
were callers at Ida Belle Mays, {Monday.
Mrs. Hamp McLintoc was a business
caller at Mrs. Henry Pattoms, Monday.
The M. O. Bible Class held their reg-
ular monthly meeting at the home of
Mrs. Maud Jones. After the business
part of the meeting, a delicious lunch
was served. There were about 32 at
the meeting.
Mr. John Camp is busy
his potatoes.
Mr. Robert Jones and
Thomas, who are working
City, spent the week end
families.
taking out
Mr. Elias
at Central
with their
Ida Belle May spent the week end
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
May, of Boynton.
Miss Evelin May, of Boynton, spent
Wednesday evening with her sister, Ida
Belle May.
Mrs. Percy Harris and two children,
who spent a week, visiting Dayton, Ohio,
returned to their home, Sunday.
Mrs. M. P. Bowman spent Sunday
afternoon with her Father and Mother,
Mr. and Mrs. G. P. Walker, of Coal Run
Mr. Clarence Pattom spent Sunday
with Andrew Able.
Miss Avis Maust spent Sunday at
her home, with “her Father and Mother,
Mr. and Mrs. R. LL. Maust.
Miss Elizabeth Rodamer and Samuel
Harding were callers at Coal Run.
Mrs. John Diehl and son are spending
a week with her Father and Mother,
Mr. and Mrs. John House.
Mr. A. E. Hoyle was a caller at Miss
Kathryn Fallon’s of Boynton.
Those Model T Fords seem to be as
A well-knowr§ publicist recently
This type of easoning is typical
of many refon
si:cked without pub-
f tere is public oppo-
it of the public, be-
ry, criminal.
of*laws are a good ex-
are unquestionably
housands of citizens
arms, for protection
or sport, in defiznce of state and
local ‘statutes. {The American people
have hever taken kindly to usurpation
of constitutional rights by modern
legislators. .
Present day crime thrives on our
abundance of. laws, ‘our legal techni-
calities, and the antics of reformers
and sob-sisters. *i The clever criminal
who actually seesthe inside of a pris-
on is the exception, rather than the
rule. it
A great body pf experts has said
that our laws ar§ simplified and our
judicial a] is based on com-
mon sense and ‘nyt technicalities, we
can not hope to siecessfully cope with
the underworld.
The moral is in. It is time we
lic approval/
sition, that
comes, iry the
«The anti-pj
ample. . There
hundreds of
who own sma
Miss Miriam and Mildred Harding,
slow in dying out as a rich uncle.
stopped passing} laws to interfere
with the rights and lives of the good
citizen and turned our attention to
the real criminal. It is a sad com-
mentary on legislative intelligence
when, with gang murders and rob-
beries going unpunished on every
hand, the reformers spend their time
trying to devise ways to make it im-
possible for honest citizens to own
guns.
Nowadays when a fellow goes off in
an airplane and doesn’t come back |
you don’t know whether he has crash-
ed or whether he is trying to break
the endurance record.
PAINFUL CORNS
Loosen—Lift Out
A little known Japanese herb, the
discovery of an eminent German
scientist (Dr. Stickel) instantly
soothes the corn, callous or wart,
then loosens it so that shortly .you
can lift it right out. This new
discovery called “Corn Fly” excites
the white blood corpuscles to action
and grinulates the corn at its root
so that it drops out and leaves no
trace of scar or soreness.
You will also find “Corn Fly Foot
Bath Powder” a boon for sore, tired
or perspiring” feet.
“Corn Fly” for corms, 35c, “Com
Fly Foot Bath Powder” 25c, and
“Corn Fly Bunion Remedy” 50c, (all
three—$1.10 value—for $1.00), are
sold under a positive money-back
guarantee by Hi-Gene Co., Newark,
N. J, or local druggist.
2:30 and
Two Sales Daily!
7:30 P. M.
+»
in ¥-
:
.
£
LIVING ROOM - Di
Odd Vanities, Dres<- -
Spinet Desks, K*
STOCK CONSI-
NIN" ~
Sale Starts
Sept. 27th
FRIDAY
Penn Furniture Co., of Somerset, Pa., Buys Entire $50,000 Stock
of High-Grade Furniture from the Johnstown Furniture Co., Cor.
Vine and Franklin Streets, Johnstown, Pa. Entire stock will be
SOLD AT AUCTION, R. Wm. Guyney, Auctioneers.
FARRAR
_'I' be Sold
Reserve.
£D ROOM SUITES
1d Mattresses, End Tables,
_ 'honographs, Lamps, Rugs.
to the
. GIVEN EVERY LADY WHO
'S OUR OPENING SALE
Day of the Sale
= Enjoy the Pleasure
REMEMBER
Sale Starts
FRIDAY
Sept. 27th