The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, May 19, 1898, Image 4

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    THE SOMERSET COUNTY STAR
P. L. Livexaoon, Editor and Publisher.
Entered at the Postoffice at FElkLick, Pa.,
ax mail matter of the Seeond«‘lass.
Subscription Rates.
“Toe STAR is published every Thursday, at
‘Elk Lick, somerset, Co., Pa., at the ¥ollow-
ing rates:
one year, if paid within 30 days.
If not paid within 30 days... ...
Nix months, if paid within 30 da
Jif not paid within 30 days.........
Three months, «cash in advance. . .
Single copies... oo. 05
To avoid multiplicity of small accounts,
all subscriptions for three months or less
Just be paid.in advance. These rates and
terms will be rigidly adhered to.
TRANSIENT READING NOTICES, 10 cents a
Tine for first insertion; 5 cents a line for
each succeeding insertion. To regular ad-
vertisers,5 cents a line straight. No busi-
mess locals will be mixed with local news
dtems or editorial matter for less than 10
cents a line for each insertion, except on
vearly contracts. $
RATES FOR DISPLAY ADVERTISEMENTS
will be made know on application.
Pain EDITORIAL PUFFS, invariably 10
cents u line.
J EGAL ADVERTISEMENTS at legal rates.
MARRIAGE, BIRTIHL AND DEATH NOTICES,
not exceeding fifteen lines, inserted free.
All additional lines, 5 cents each.
CARDS oF THANKS will be published free
for patrons of the paper. Non-patrons will
“be charged 10 cents a line.
RESOLUZIONS OF RESPECT will be <pub-
lished ford cents a line.
All advertisements will be runand charged
for until ordered discontinued.
No advertisement will be taken for less
than 25 cents.
Where you can get
Shoes to suit your
head and fit your feet?
We have them in
4
h
reat abundance. Our
‘
<
and Misses’ |
nO
The United Evangelical district eon-
vention is in session, this week, in fal-
isbury. The. attendance is large and
the sessions-are reported to be very in-
teresting.
The Brethren church expects to hold
a Missionary convention in Salisbury,
under the direction of the General
Missionary Board of the Brethren
church, June 24th, 25th and 26th.
A series of meetings are being held
in the German Baptist church. this
week, which will terminate ith a love
feast or holy commuaion. Several vis-
iting brethren are in attendance.
Mr. Bruce Muust, a son cf the late
Joseph Maust, is here on a short visit
among his relatives and old-time ac=
quaintances. Mr. Maust is a prosper-
ous farmer of Osceola county, Towa.
C. W. Krissinger & Co., of Berlin, |
have found it necessary to erect a |
warehouse 30x70 feet, two stories high. |
in order to keep pace with their grow-
ing hardware, implement and vehicle
trade.
Irven Beals, who needs no introduc-
tion to our people, informs Tur Star
that he is going to make an effort to re-
organize our band. Tur Star hopes
Mr. Beals will succeed. We can’t get
along without a band, especially during
war times.
|
We are in receipt of an interesting
letter from Geo. 8. Scully, who is still
at Camp Hastings, Mt. Gretna. His
regiment, he says, will likely be sent to
Tampa, Florida, or Chickamauga. Ga.,
next week. We will publish a portion
of his letter, next week.
A warehouse near the Berlin depot
and an empty box car standing near
by, were destroyed by fire on Tuesday
night of last week. The warehouse was
a 16x24 structure and was the property
of Jonathan Miller. The fire is sup-
posed to have been of incendiary origin.
Mr. W. W. Shaw han, of the Pen-Mar
Coal Company, has sent his wife to a
hospital for surgical treatment. Mrs. |
Shawhan has been ill for a long time,
we are informed by her husband, and
we hope she will soon be able to return
home, .permanently cured of her afilic-
tions.
Rev. J. C. Mackey will leave for Ha-
gerstown, Md., on Monday, May 23d,
where he will lecture on the educa-
tional interests and outlook of the
Brethren church. We aré informed
that Rev. Mackey will also attend the
Virginia, West Virginia, Pennsylvania
and Ohio conferénces of the Brethren
church. :
We have heard of an instance where- |
in a delinquent subscriber’s failure to |
pay his subscription saved his life.
The fellow happened to be caught out
in a heavy rain and crawled into a hol- |
low log to keep dry. The rain contin-
ued until the log swelled so he could |
not get out,and when all hopes were
gone, he
owed $5.00 subscription
happened to think that he |
to his home
paper, which made him feel so little |
| that he had no difficulty in getting out,
shoes in Vesting Tops
are simply beauties.
e¢ can be had
| charged with stealing five hogs belong-
{ing to-a-Mr. Pigg.
n different
widths,
thereby assuring you
of a perfect fit.
+ {all and see us.
RA
Meversdale, Pa.
1.0CAL AND GENERAL NEWS. |
&
Dewey.
Oh, Dow was the morning
Upon » first of May;
And Dewey was the Admiral
Down in Manila bay;
And Dewey were the Regent’s eyes
Those orbs of royal blue;
And Dewey feel discouraged?
1 Dew not think we Dew.
—Kugene F. Ware,
> 2
Sheriff Hartzell made an oficial visit
10 our town yesterday.
Prof. Grant Kendall, of Fairmont, W.
Va., was in our “burg” on Tuesday.
Candidates Kooser and Meyers were
in town this week. Both are sure win-
ners.
Lloyd Shaw, of Confiuence, has en-
listed in the United States navy for a
term of three years.
Dr. Wm. McMillen and wife, of New
Centervilie, made Salisbury friends a
short visit this week.
Rockwood correspondence received
late for publication, this week.
All correspondence must. reach us no
later than Tuesday.
The firm of S. A. Lichliter last week
purchased 250 barrels of maple sugar
from the farmers in this locality. This
ds doing a sweet business on a large
scale.”
100
| journal relates an amusing case which
| arose in that state a few
yr which
i skin disenses,”
i Bender & Bro, Grantsville,
and his life was saved.
An Arkansas correspondent to a Inw |
years ago, in
he was counsel for the defense.
A man by the name of Driver was
One ot the witness-
es was named Hamm, the prosecuting
was Chew, and the |
attorney’s name
| counsel for the defense were Miles & |
Miles. The correspondent desires to
know whether if Driver drove Pigg’s|
for Miles & Miles
would be fit to Chew?
judgment.
the Hamm
We suspend |
hogs
Brethren Church Sabbath Serviees.
Dr. Mackey will preach Sabbath morn
ing at 10:30 o'clock; subject, “Tepid |
Christianity.” Sabbath-school at 2 p.
m. Y.P. 8 C.E. choral service at 6 p.
m. Everybody welcome.
One Minute is not long, yet relief is ob-
tained in half that time by the use of One
Minute Cough Cure. It prevents consump- |
tion and quickly cures colds, croup, bronchi-
tis, pneumonia, la grippe and all throat and
lung troubles. P. 8. Hay, Elk Lick. C0 A.
Bender & Bro, Grantsville,
J. C. Lowny, of Somersef, seemed to
be the chief trainer of Congressman
Hicks, when he brought him to Salis- |
bury, last week. Tue Star will ven- |
ture the assertion that if Mr. Hicks
goes into Addison township to hold |
meetings, Mr. J. C. Lowry will not be
the man to introduce him there.
— a
8S. M. Geary, Pierson, Mich., writes: “De- |
| Witt’s Witch Hazel Salve is curing more |
piles here to-day than all other remedies
combined. It cures eczema and all other
P. 8. Hay, Elk Lick, ¢. A.!
a
Tis week the Somerset Ilerald un- |
dertakes to show up ihat Congressman
Hicks has been taking exceedingly
good care of old soldiers and their wid- |
ows. As evidence in the case it quotes
the post-oflice appointments at Jenners, |
Addison, Shanksville, Chritchfield,
Kantner and Scalp Level. How gener-
ous, indeed! Some of the offices named
scarcely pay $50 a year, and none of
them pay over $250 a year. Further- |
more, the offices at the places nagged |
usually go begging for an ar
and there are few who would accept
some of them as a gift. ILet the “Her-
ald” name some good paying post-office
in this county that was dealt out to an
old soldier or a soldier’s widow, if it
| several different states.
| lican party himself?
t whole ground.
I piles.
{ tain
| with such epithets as
dare. “Timmie” and “Hicksie” ought
to be ashamed to deal out only the
leavings to the old soldiers, and their
bragging about it is only adding insult
to injury.
i ~~
8. C. P. Jones, Milosburg, Pa., writes: “I
have used DeWitt’s Little Early Risers ever
since fhey were introduced herc and must
say I have never used any pills in my fam-
ily during the forty years of my housekeep-
ing that gave such'satisfactory results as a
laxative or cathartic.” DP. 8S. Hay, Elk
Lick. C. A. Bender & Bro, Grantsville.
2 —~— -
“Lucirer” thanks God that polities
will soon be shelved. “Lucifer” will be
shelved also,%ind then Tur Star will
cay “amen!” and devote its space to
local and general news of the day.
ler —
£8. E. Parker, Sharon, W. Va. writes: —¥I
have tried DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve for
itching piles and it always stops them in
two minutes. I consider Dewitt’s Witch
Hazel Salve the greatest pile cure on the
market. I. 8S. Hay, Elk Lick. C. A. Bender
& Bro., Grantsville.
Tur Somerset Herald this week
comes out with a sickly whine to the
effect that it is all wrong to show up
the records of public men who are not
now candidates. If that is the case,
then why are the Herald and Meyers-
dale Commercial so busily engaged in
trying to defame the characters of Geo.
F. Kimmel, Gabriel Good and Judges
Horner and Black? Are these men
candidates at this time? No; there are
no candidates for Commissioner or As-
sogiate Judge running in this campaign.
The’ Herald and Commercial were the
starters of this kind of warfare, and.
they commenced on Commissioner
Kimmell away last winter, just as soon
as they found out that they would not
get the county’s annual statement to
publish. Now the Herald wants to cry,
since it has got the worst of a battle of
its own choosing. Poor old Herald.
A
The human michine starts but once and
stops but once. You can keep it going
longest and most regularly by using De
Witt’s Little Early Risers, the famous little
pills for constipation and all stomach and
liver troubles. P. 8S. Hay, Elk Lick. €. A.
Bender & Bro., Grantsville. :
—-— —
Tne Somerset “Ilerald” is still mak-
ing use of the threadbare statement
that Hon. Wm. I. Koontz is not a le-
publican. Ish dot so? Vell now! If
he is not a Republican, then the Na-
tional Republican committees must
have been in error for years, for Koontz
has been sent out at different times,
by the National Republican commit-
tees, to make Republican speeches in
Even Presi-
dent McKinley invited Mr. Koontz to
Ohio to speak in his own district.
Why didn’t McKinley invite the grin-
| ning, hyena-countenanced “Timmie,”
who imagines he is the whole Repub-
Another thing, if
W. H. Koontz is not a Republican, then |
why did the Scull chairman announce
| him as a eandidate to be voted for at a
epublican primary? The rules
vide that only Republicans, and loyal
Republioans at that, can be announced.
pro-
The Scullpaper should be honest and
just state that Koontz is not
would cover the
Republican, which
this
have some-
won't work in Koontz’s
But “Timmie” must
case,
hoary
——
The Cuban question and political issues
sink into insigniticance with the
suffers from piles. What he most desires, is
relief. DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve cures
P. S. Hay. Elk Lick. C. A. Bende
& Bro, Grantsville,
.
Shall We Dismiss Them?
Some pity has een expressec by
good-hearted and well-meaning
persons for the clear and
showing-up Tur Star has been giving
the Scull ring. 1t is true that
cer-
out fear or favor, but Tne Stir asks its
readers to consider what
head of the ring.
start newspaper abuse in
county polities? Have not the Somer-
set Herald and its editors for years been
engaged in a deliberate attempt to |
blast the political fortunes of many of!
the most honorable
members of the party? Ilave they not
| for years been branding many, very |
g ry:
true Republicans |
many, honest and
“kickers,” ‘“bolt-
? “liars,” “rascals,” “half-
ers,” “fakers,
| breeds,” ete?
We sce at the head of the" Ierald
columns the name of Tdwaad Scull,
whom we believe controls or ought
control its policy.
The ugly attacks of these men Tie |
| Stan has met and repulsed, and like |
| every well fought battle. the sight of |
upon the field of glory |
| must fill tenderhearts with compassion.
Tue Star does not thirst for biood. |
carnage left
Tue Star is for peace, but it must be
an honorable peace. This is a free
{ country, and we say now, once for all
| time, that Tue Star will never lie down
before bulldozing and brow-beating.
No blow-hards, jaw-whackers nor big-
windies shall successfully assail our
position while a grein of powder or a
drop of blood remains to hold the fort.
Desperate diseases require desperate
remedies.
The Herald shall know that other
a Scull |
The old “independent” |
lery didn’t work in Kooser’s case, and
lit
| year.
{ thing to grasp at, you know, even if it
lig. an old, worn-out,
| Poor old “Timmie!”
chestnut. |
man who
merciless |
has called |
| forth these broadsides leveled at the
Who was first to!
Somerset |
and deserving |
to!
And at the head of |
| its local page we see the name of Geo. |
{ R. Scull. :
people ‘also have type and printing
presses; that other people can splash
ink and sling English with them ; that
they can be made to swallow double
doses of their own medicine. Tre Star
knows no fear; its editor was not at
home when that commodity was dis-
tributed among the human race. Tune
Star will be decent when its enemies
are decent; but if we must delve in
abuse we will do so and will fight
the enemy to the last ditch. We haven’t
we hope that we will not need to; but
if the occasion demands it, if we are
forced into it, you can rely upon it that
there will be such a shaking up of old
Scull bones as was never dreamed of.
We have prepared munitions of war
for a whole summer’s campaign, and if
the worst must come we will neither
ask for quarter nor give quarter. We
are fighting in a righteous cause and
we will fight to the death rather than
yield an inch, rather than yield to
wrong and the oppression of the people.
But we believe the people’s victory is
nearly won, and from this on we will
not fight with any more force than we
deem necessary. We believe the Sculls’
Waterloo is in sight, and Tur Star will
not, turn its heavy guns upon a waver-
ing, staggering enemy, nor upon the
by the crushing projectiles of ‘truth. by
the screaming and crashing bombs of
fact. :
When the smoke of battle clears
away, we shall decently allow the mor-
tal remains of the ring candidates, viec-
tims of the ring’s reckless and indis-
creet career, to be carried from the
plain and be buried out of sight.
The iron has entered the soul of the
ring ; its death rattle is in its throat; it
breathes its last gasp and writhes in its
last convulsion. We will not raise the
foe, nor disturb the hush and quiet of
its funeral. The ring will suffer death,
the final terminus of disease. The ccol-
ing-board, the bier and the hearse shall
perform their last offices and the ring’s
evil be interred with its bones without
sacrilegious sound from Ture Srar.
fr
Late to bed and early to rise, prepar
man for his home in the skies, Early too
and a Little Early Riser, the pill that mk
life longer and better and id
wiser. }
Hay, Elk Lick. C. A.Bender & Bro, Gril:
ville.
te
A SERIOUS C
Commissioner Kimmel Appears {0
~ Have the Sculls In a Hole.
The Somerset Herald this week, prin:
what purports to be a due bill signed
by George IF. Kimmell and Wilii:
Winters. County Treasurer, for a lou:
of five hundred dollars (500.00). ‘I!
Ileral:
| Kimmell for liaving accepted money
| William Winters. It
[that Mr. Kimmell wrong-doer,
| while it entirely excuses William Win-
ters, and says that the Ilerald people
| donot believe he has violated the law.
We desire to look
in the {
HARGE.
{ae
vid
makes a vicious af
| from
is a
this matter scuare
nee, as if is a matter that con-
cerns the tax-payers of
We reason thus:
money he borrows it from another who
has. it to put out, and if Treasurer Win- |
ters was in the loaning business (and
| we know he has been loaning to other
| people than George I. Kimmell) we do
| not see how Kimmell has violated t
| law. ~ 1¢ appears to be certain that the | !
| thousand doliars by the Congressman from
1 ry MMroncirer-i1a8 vi § 1 aw |
County Treasurer has violated the law, | diatriar. and neither the name of the |
and iu Wi
look
Il be the duty of the Court to
into this matter.
public moneys, approved 31st of March;
i 1860.
“If any officer of this Commonwealth, or
of any cily, borough, county or township
thereof, shall loan out, with er without n-
terest or return thercof, any money or valu-
able security received by him, or which may
be in his possession, or under his control by
| virtue of his office, he shall be guilty of a |
Tne |
Star has made its presentments with- |
misdemeanor in office, and, on conviction,
be sentenced to pay a fine not exceeding
one thousand dollars ($1,000), and undergo
| an imprisonment, by separate or solitary
continemaent at exceeding five
| years, and, if still irr oflice, be
thereafter incapable of exercising the sume
and the office shall be forthwith declared
| vacent by the court passing the sentence”
a
Jabor, not
“One Minute Cotig
sold or used and I
in its praise’
, Odell; Ga. PLS. Hay, Elk
Bro, Grantsville.
have
too much
aration I
can’t ‘say
over
hant
1 Kénnon, Mere
tIiek. Co Ac Bender &
What Did They Do?
lin Record.
What Senator Critchfield
done, except
that would keep-him in the employ of
the State betwixt legislative sessions,
Pe
has ever
cern, as his performances in behalf of
letters on a sign board.
Neither is it apparent that the late
branch of the assembly made any bet-
constituents were concerned.
was going to give the fees a shave, but
| his promises were “nit,” and he didn’t
do a bit, but let his resolutions find a
| grave.
What Wm. Sanner did, that was of
any good to the people, is just as cyph-
! erical as in the case of the other two.
| The fact is, the Quay majority in the
Legislature, of which our members
were a part, were not getting orders to
help the people, and as they did not
dare act independent of orders, the
peoplé€ got nil.
opened with our main batteries yet, and |
shattered ranks so nearly mowed down |
battle cry over the corpse of the slain |
intimates |
the County.
When a man needs |
3 |
1e
The following is |
o act of Assembly, relating to loaning |
adjudged
| bled to participate in the pole-raising,
hi Cure is the best prep- |
| very hospitable aud courteous. and
many !
staunch admirers and friends in that |
I. M- |
to leg for appointments !
it would take a pair of lenses to dis- |
the people do not stand out like the |
members from this county to the lower |
ter record, so far as benefiting their |
Smiling |
Wm. Miller, the Quemahoning tiller. |
Hicks Speaks In Salisbury.
Congressman ‘J. D. Hicks made a
speech in Hay’s opera house, last Thurs-
dny evening. Although a’ great effort |
had been made by a few of the post-
office candidates and their friends to
get the Hon. Josiah a big audience, the
turnout was rather small. lis speech
was made up of egotistical gush and a
lame plea for votes, and from what we |
learn, his speech did not make
{can
much of a hit.
Of course the
| degree by the oily-tongued Josiah, but
i what confuses many of the old veterans |
and the laboring men, is the fact that
Mr. Tlicks and the
offices and other appointments.
~ Look over the principal appointments
made in Somerset county, and see if
Tie Star is not right when it says that
The proper thing for the old soldiers
and the laboring men to do is to let
Hicks look to his well-fed appointees
for his votes.
J. C. Lowry also addressed the meet-
ing and tried to convince the audience
of the greatness of Mr. Hicks and the
importance of Wn A. Stone’s election
to the office of Governor. With such a
nit”
tr pe
One Minute Cough Cure, cures.
That is what it was made for.
Rl
Rib-roasters From the Berlin
‘““Record.”
dates are not so bold in
a few years past, that sort of faith net-
ing more like a Jonah than an Eli to
| their chances of success.
|
to the voters -of
Irrespective of hiz merits or
his claims
county.
unable to support hfm on account of
ed.
Congressman
field and Assemblymen Sanner and
Miller, old soldiers themselves, are be-
were not so anxious to remember the
soldiers in the disposition of the post-
offices and Harrisburg clerkships. ete.,
as they were to get their votes when
they ran for office before. The “vets”
may take a tumble, to themselves, and |
k upon Mr. |
instead of forgetting. do some remem-
bering.
| ing the sale of postofiices, as contained
in lust week’s Record, Josiah 1D.
wrote to Mr. Wanamaker denying that
he was guilty of such business and re-
the of Wanamaker’s
the
name
gesting
authorityeali of which leads to
lows:
rressman Hicks wants
from Mir. Wanamaker
that the post-office at Tarone was offered
to), Mr. Wanamaker
| make such a charge. In his speech at West,
| Chester he read a letter from a gentieman
nome was given, about a post-office,
which was not named, being held for three
Cong an explana-
tion of the charge
i for saie fo did not
whose
nor the number of the dis-
trict was given.
to have been in something of a
identify himself with the matter.
iene 2
DeVWitt’s Little Early Risers,
The famous little pills.
Congressman
Congressman Hicks seems
—-—
Patriotism In Jenner Township.
The editor of Tue Starhad the pleas- |
ure, last Saturday, of being at Jenner
| Cross Roads and seeing the loyal andy
patriotic sons of that jownship erect a
flag in honor of Admiral Dewey and
his great victory at Manila.
Several hundred people had assem
| and 1t goes without saying that the af-
fair was a success in every sense of the
word. We found the people of Jenner
Tur Star has
learned that
|
township.
| Nearly all of the candidates were
present, and all of them who so desired
Sculls have been |
turning down all the old soldiers and |
the working men that applied for post- |
in every case the most well-to-do ap- |
plicant was the one to get the plum. |
As indicative of the political change |
of - affairs in Somerset county, candi- |
announcing |
their adhesion to Sculldom as they were |
Somerset |
demerits as a candidate, the Record is
the alliances with which he is connect- |
licks, Senator Critch- |
ing reminded. now that a couple of |
| them are candidates again, that they |
Hicks |
hurry to |
——— "NT ~
PIANOS
We are sole agents for
Steinway,
Chickering,
Hardman,
Krakauer,
Harrington
And other makes of Pianos.
LOW PRICE! EASY TERMS!
MR. E. C. WELCH, of Friedens,
Somerset county, Pa. can give full in-
| formation concerning all the makes of
! Pianos we represent and ean quote our
| old soldier and the |
| working man were taffeyed to a grent |
| lowest Pittsburg wareroom price.
Catalouge mailed on applicatiop.
C. C. MELLOR CO.,
Successors to Mellor & Hoene.
319-321 5th Ave., Pittsburg, Pa.
T. W. GURLEY,
Jeweler and Optician.
Fine Watch Repair-
ing and HKnoaraving.
Get n pair of Gurley’s 50 cent Spectaeles cor=
rectly fitted; and guaranteed.
The Cash Store
OF
Meyersdale, Pa.
ee ene pk
backer as Mr. i,owry, [licks will doubt- |
less sweep everything before him— |
THE BARGAIN STORE
gy
Somerset County.
In Dry Goods, Clothing, Shoes,
Carpets, Wail Paper, ete.
L00k 10 Your Own nlerest!
| Hon. J.D. Hicks avails himself of the
columns of the Record for presenting |
Buy where you can buy
for
We
make it pay you.
thes best goods the
will
Our
least money.
stock is larac.
CAMERAS AND SUPPLIES!
We are carrying in stock a fall
line of Cameras, all sizes. Also
FILMS em
for
After Wanamaker’s charges concern- |
all sizes of Can
Orn
s. Every
roll guaranteed. Call and exam-
ine the
Tourist Hawk Ly
\
{Coy »i7
euvamera,
Philadelphia Press to comment. as fol- |
BUSINESS MENTION, WARIS, ENO NGEREATS
LEGAL AKD SPECIAL NOTICES
¥
I For Delegate to State Convention,
CHAS, I. COOK,
Soliciting your vote and influence
{| Republican Primary kKicction to
Saturday, May 25, 154
1
{
BERLIN BOR.
at the
be held
vr District Altorneyy,
RUFUS E. MEYERR,
| OF SOMERSKT BOR.
Soliciting your vote
Republican Primary
Saturdny, May 23, 1803,
=, 1
and influence at the
Election to be held
| For Congress,
FRANCIS J. KOOSER,
OF SOMERSET BOR:
Soliciting your vote and iifluence at the
| Republican Primary Election, to be held
LRatarday, May 28th, 189%
For Assembly,
S.A. KENDALL,
OF MEYERSDALE BOR.
lepuhblican
saturday, May
“were given a chance to speak ; but each |
purely patriotic order.
The gentlemen who availed
selves of the opportunity to speak, were
A. C. Holbert, S. A. Kendall. F.
Kooser, Hon. W. 11. Sanner, Hon. J. D.!
Hicks, Hon. Wm. II. Koontz and - Hon.
N. B. Critehfield, who spoke in the or-
der as named. The audience was at-
tentive throughout the speaking, but
Koontz, Kooser and Kendall spoke,
which seems to indicate that the three
K’s are prime favorites in Jenner.
pp
DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve
Cures Piles, Scalds, Burns.
Tue Star and the Nickell Magazine,
both one vear for only $1.50, cash with
order.
fully illustrated, and its contributors
are among the best writers in the coun-
try. Address all orders to Tig STar.
{ Elk Lick, Pa.
speaker was very wisely limited to 15
minutes, and the speeches were all of a!
them- !
J. |
applauded and cheered lustily when ;
| will make known the same Nithout delay.
| 5-19
The Nickell Magazine is beauti- |
vertising space. 5-20.
-
AUDITORS NOTICE. — In the
i Henry Thomas Weld, decease
The undersicned: Auditor duly appointed
by the Orphans’ Court of Somerset county,
i Pa., to make a distribution of the funds in
| the hands of the Administrators to and
| among those legally entitled thereto, here-
by gives notice that he will sitet the offtec
| of Koontz & @gle. in Somerset borough, Pa,
Lon Saturday, May 2ist, 1839s, at 1 o’clock pon,
i for the discharge of his duties as Auditor,
when and where all persons interested may
attend if they deem proper.
i ERNEST 0. K(
i 5-19 :
estate of
YOS ER.
Auditor
-— tr - :
ADMINISTRATORS NOTIC
Thoms NS. Williams, late of
township, deceased.
Letters of administration on the estate
of Thomas S. Willinms, late of Elk Lick
township, Somerset county, Penusylvania,
Il—Estate of
Elk Lick
ing in the borough of Meyersdale, Somerset
countv, Pa, to whom all persons indebted
to said estate are requested to make pag-
ment, and those having claims or demands,
.'B. COOK,
Administrator.
A Grand Opportunity.
See “ad” of A. H. Herendeen & Co.,
Geneva, N. Y. Steady employment, -
good pay. . tf
deceased, have granted to W. B. Cook, resid-