The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, June 23, 1898, Image 4

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    THE SONERSET GOUNTY OTA
. L. Livexaoon, Editor and Publisher,
Entered ant the Postoflice at E be I Lick, Pa.,
as-mail matter of the Second cla
.
Sub=cription Rates.
THE STAR is publishe d every Thursday, at
Elk Lick, Somerset, Co, Pa, at the foliow-
ing rates:
one year, if paid within 30 days
IT not paid within 30 days.. .
Rix months, if paid w ithin 30 dny
If not paid within 30 days. ....
Three months, ¢ ash in advance
Single copies...
#0 avoid nn tiplic ity of small accounts,
all subscriptions for three months or less
must be paid in advance. These rates and
terms will be rigidly adhered to.
Rates.
PBEANSIENT READING NOTICES, 10 cents a
line for first in tion; 5 cents a line for
cach succeeding insertion. To regular ad-
vertise cents o- line straight. No busi-
ness loeals will be mixed with local news
items or editorial matter for less than 0
cents no line for each insertion, except on
yearly contracts.
RATES FOR DISPLAY ADVERTISEMENTS
will be made know on application.
‘Alb Eprrorian Pures, invariably
cents a line.
lLEGAL ADVERTS
RB
Advertising
10
EMENTS at legal rates
MARRIAGE: BIRTH AND DEATH NOTICES,
not exceeding fifteen li inserted free.
All additional lines, 5 cents each.
CARDS OF THANKS will be
for patrons of the paper.
be che ed 10 cortsadin
YESOLE TONS Of RESPEC i 1
- 3 conn n Hu
t cntswill be run
re httiod.
ment will be taken for less
will be pub-
for until ord:
No sd ve Lise
than 25
Pp
Where did you
that suit?” At
Miller & Collins's.
have the nicest select-
nd CHILDRENS
you
get
They
ion of BOYS
CLOTHING ever
No
saw, at
prices away down. wonder
they do the clothing business
of the county, because you can
n whit
CHEE
{
Ml LL.
=1.00 on a suit.
S1.O0 Buys a pair
shoes.
29 cts. buys
29 Gimhiys a waist.
10 cot s. buys a pair |
of a
M
LOCAL AND GENE RAL NE WS. |
you want.
§ Gl
eyersdale, Pa.
Interesting war news will be found |
on our inside pages.
Don’t forget the electric light meet-
ing in the Opera house, to-morrow eve-
ning.
The Misses
went to
friends. z
Mr. and Mrs. Abner MeKinley
daughter are in Somerset to spend the
summer.
There are several cases of measles in
Somerset, and Somerset isn’t a measly
‘ town, either.
Baltimere, last week, to visit
An excellent write-up of the great
Trans-Mississippi Exposition, at Omaha,
Neb., will be found on our inside pages. |
A new postofiice out West has been
called
fuses to
envelopes.
“Dewey,”
handle anything but Manila |
of
|
6 ie |
AP.
1 | last
| years old.
{ four small children to mourn their loss.
published free |
Non-patrons will |
| Somerset jail for stealing a horse from
andcharged | «
county.
|
x
i-ton,
| usual all his patrons and friends, of
| not yet paid their
| gre: atly oblige us by making prompt re-
mittances.
i ment was raised on our streets by a
| fever in Someret.
{ Ture Star a short visit on Friday eve-
1
| ning last.
there,
| will spend ten or twelve days
| the War oflice will be temporarily locat-
led there during the President’s stay,
{ dison and Lower Turkeyfoot townships,
Lo
{ about 12 miles long, and
i large wooded
Alice and Isolene Smith |
and |
|
|
|
and the postmaster re- | plenty of praise.
|
The annual banquet of the Itoyal Ar- |
he 1d
Pa. 0
anum will be
Inn, Somerset,
July 1st.
the Highland
n Iriday evening,
s called to In-
o'
rs at the State Normal ex-
Pritis wa
week,
County Supt.
diana, Pea.,
the examine
aminatious.
, last to aei as one
| believe.”
| month.
Mrs. Letchworth, of Cambria county.
who was the guest of her mother, Mrs.
Robt. Easton, and other relatives here,
returned home, last week.
The German Baptist Brethren, at
their annual meeting which recently
convened at Naperville, 111., raised $1,-
400.01 for missionary purposes,
Hon. E. 8, Aschom, of Riddlesburg,
Bedford county, has -been appointed
Chief Weigher at the Mint in Philadel-
phia, and has entered ‘upon his duties.
Sampson, one of the triplets of Mer.
and Mrs. Charles Shue, died last week.
The remaininig boy and girl, Dewey
and Manila, are doing well.—ZLonacon-
ing Review.
A western farmer recently flung a
Spanish flag tothe breezes over his barn,
“just for fun,” and his wife has been
busy ever since, scraping the tar and
feathers off of him.
All enterprising and public-spirited
citizens of Salisbury will be at the
Opera house, to-morrow evening, to
hear what will be said in favor of an
electric light plant for Salisbury.
A young man named Ben Eddy, of
Indiana, was recently landed in the
John J. Horner, of Stanton’s Mills, this
The horse has been recovered.
Our fighting editor, John O. Johns-
wio was away on a visit with
| friends at Altoona and Stoystown, re-
turned on Monday, looking more mus-
cular than ever. le reports a pleasant
time.
Those of our subscribers who have
subscriptions will
Don’t lose sight of the fact
that it takes lots of money to run a
good newspaper.
“My son,” said the aged: politician,
“Tt is better, especially when you are
talking about the enemies in your own
party, to use only soft and honeyed
words. They are tue easier to eat,
should occasion arise.”
Mr. Ilarry S. Kifer, the genial sales-
man representing Chas. I. Fisher, of
set; was in town this week — As
which he has many here, were glad to
see him, and as usual he sold piles of
goods.
Yesterday afternoon quite an excite-
slight blaze at the Casper Loechel
house. However, the excitement soon.
died away when it was discovered that
nothing but the soot in one of the flues
was burning.
The Mutual Telephone Company is
distributing poles for a line into Salis-
bury. The line will also extend to
Meyersdale, via Summit Mills, and
from thence to Berlin and Somerset.
The central office in Salisbury will be
in the Valley house.
Mr. Ernest Cook, Miss Bertha Cook,
and Miss Lena McMillen, all of Somer-
set, arrived in Salisbury, last Saturday,
mounted on bicyeles. Mr. and Miss
Cook were guests of M. J. Beachy and
family, and Miss Mellillen a guest of
Dr. Speicher and family.
Sam Jones puts it this way: “I am
not sorry for the American Spanish
war. We had to fight, or in ten years
we would be licking each other. The
war with Spain is a safety valve. It
will keep the boiler from bursting, I
of Somerset,
Tuesday of
was about 25
a husband and
Mrs. Chas. Zimmerman,
died of typhoid fever, on
week. Deceased
She leaves
There are several other cases of typhoid
Dr. A.J. Welfley, of Confluence,made
Of course the doctor sub-
scribed for the great paper before leav-
ing. le reports Confluence in a thriv-
ing condition and says he is doing well
all of which we are glad to note.
President McKinley expects to be in
Somerset in the near future, where he
at the
residence of his brother. It is said that
which will give Somerset a great deal
of prominence.
A narrow gauge raiiroad is being
built from Confluence up through Ad- i
White's This road will be
will tap a
district. The site for a
saw mill been obtained near the
Casselman river.
The 22nd annual convention of the
Lutheran Sunday schools of Somerset
county will be held in the Casebeer
church, obout five miles north of Som-
{erset, on Tuesday, Wednesday and
| Thursday, the last three days of this
A large and- interesting con-
vention is expected.
creek.
has
“After the ceremony,” wrote a rural
editor, “the bride was hailed and Kkiss-
ed by all, and the happy couple given
Ile handed it to the
devil to set, and next day he was
shocked when it read: ‘After the ses-
sion the bride was jailed and hissed by
all, and the serappy couple given twen-
ty days.”
Flag day was observed in Shanksville
by the raising of a pole 101 feet high,
{ county, father
i bond yesterday to answer a charge of
from which floats an American flag
10x24 feet. Appropriate ceremonies
were held for the occasion, under the
auspices of Shanksville council Jr. O
U. A. M. Shanksville has the reputa-
tion of being one of the most patriotic
villages in America.
Grant Schrock, a son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Schrock, of Bakersville, is serving
“Uncle Sam” in the capacity of a sol-
dier. He is with the troops at Tampa,
or may be now on Cuban soil. In alet-
ter to his parents, recently, he stated |
{
|
that the thermometer registered 110 |
degrees at Tampa, but said the north-
ern soldiers stood the heat remarkably
well.—Somerset Standard.
{ piles.”
Lsame,
| diseases.
A mother who had forbidden her |
children to mention
evil one, was not able to attend church
the name of the |
a few Sundays ago, and when her little |
boy, eight years old, came home after |
service she asked him the subject of |
the sermon. He answered promptly:
“It was about Jesus being taken up in- |
to the mountain by the—by the—by |
the gentleman who keeps hell.”
Ernest 0. Kooser, of Somerset, re-
cently went to Harrisburg to tender to |
Governor Hastings the services of the
Somerset military company. He learn-
ed that the Company’s services are not
needed at present, but the boys will
hold themsevles in readiness for any
call that may be made.
is the eempany’s captain, E. 0. Kooser
1st, and Irvin Saylor 2nd lieutenant.
Three little boys of Westernport, one
| over.
Samuel Crous e |
a son of Mr. Jonah Morgan, were in the
Tom
when one of
woods on the mountain near Mr.
Michaels’ farm, last week,
tand all throat and lung troubles.
i KIK
the boys discovered something, with a |
hissing sound, flying through space to- |
ward them. They were so badly fright-
ened that they all ran. Tt was a mete-
orite and lodged into the earth with a
loud report. Several will try
to find it.—Lonaconing Review.
The Act of 13th Mareh,
which unseated lands are sold for taxes
parties
| want to have a first-class time without
| going far from home to have it,
1815, under |
| Fourth in
by the county treasurer, provides that
such sales shall be held every
years, on the second Monday in June.
Just why the treasurer’s
two |
i celebration and a good time;
unseated land |
|
sale was advertised in this county for |
“Tuesday, June 14)” we are not told,
but presume it will be laid at the door
of the ever-present ‘clerical error.”
The sale was held on Tuesday, and the
question of its legality may come up
later.— Somerset Standard.
Catharine, a fifteen-year-old daugh-
ter. of = Mr. and Mrs. Robert K.
Showalter, of Meyersdale, died last
Friday, after months of untold suffer-
ing and agony caused by being badly
burned, last February, when her cloth-
ing caught fire while taking the ashes
from a cooking stove. The remains
were brought to Salisbury for burial,
on Sunday, and the funeral services
were held at St. John’s Lutheran church
and conducted by Rev. Collins, of Mey-
ersdale. Much sympathy is felt for the
bereaved family.
“On a day last March,
nois paper, ‘a young man
train at Peoria, Ill. The first sight that
arrested his attention was a pretty
young woman standing at her father’s
gate, Ie spoke to her, and she replied
pleasantly. The conversation contin-
ued, and they finally took a walk into
the town together. In the store win-
dows they saw things that suggested
house-keeping. In less than an
from the time he alighted from the
train the young man was married. It
is said that since the particulars in this
case became known there is a giri wait-
ing at every gate in Peoria.”
” says an Illi-
got off the
hour
On Monday, Esquire Oliver Knepper
received a note written on May 4, from
his son, Ensign Orlo 8S. Knepper, who
took part in the great naval battle in
Manila harbor on May 1. Ensign Knep-
per is on the gunboat Concord, which
figured so prominently in the battle.
In speaking of the Dewey victory, Orlo
says; “we wiped the Spanish fleet off
the face of the earth,” and expresses
the hope that the North Atlantic squad-
ron has done equally well. Ensign
Knepper tells his parents that his note
is merely written to advise them that
he by the same mail sent a lengthy let-
ter to his sisters in the far West, de-
scribing the great battle, which letter
would be forwarded home.—Somerset
Standard.
Bbtween Mountain Peaks:
AvrtooNa, June 13.—A unique flag
raising took place, Saturday evening,at
McKees, this county. A large flag was
floated 300 feet in the air from a wire
which spanned 1,200 feet between two
mountain peaks. The flag is directly
over the ruins of the old fortifications
built in 1863 as a defense against Stu-
art’s cavalry raid.
The Chief Burgess of
DeWwitt’s Little Karly
Milesburg, Pa. says
Risers are the
cure consti-
stomach and
but great in
years of housekeeping. They
pation, sick headache and
liver troubles. Small in size
results. Po 8S. Hay, ElkLick.
& Bro., Grantsville.
ae
Selling Without Lieense.
Johnstown Democrat.
Jagob Seese, one of the wealthiest
| before Justic Scott Muarphy, last night,
best | : -
pills he ever used in his family during forty | €01 irely too common in
i Salisbury,
C. A. Bender |
ard church and was always looked upon
as being one of the exemplary people
of that locality. Yesterday. however,
Constable Gilbert, of Somerset, assist-
ed by Constable Mays, also of Somer-
set, arrested both on a charge of sell-
ing without license. At the hearing
¢ bail for court.
——enl Tir
“I think DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve is
the finest preparation on the market for
So writes John ¢. Dunn, of Wheel-
ing, W. Va. Try it and you will think the
It also cures eczema and all skin
P.S. Hay, Elk Lick. . A. Bender
& Bro., Grantsville.
Seese gave
a
ELECTRIC LIGHT MEETING.
An electric light meeting will
be held in Hay’s opera house,
Friday evening, June 24th. TIt|
is important that all citizens in- |
Sal- |
this meeting and
terested in electric light for §
isbury attend
help to
discuss © the question.
matters of |
be talked |
Let every citizen
Come, everybody, as
great importance will
take it
upon himself to sce that there
is a good turnout.
~~
The editor of the Evans (ity, Pa. Globe,
writes: “Onedinute Cough Cure rightly |
named. Tt eared my children after all oth-
er remedies failed.” It eures
is
couchs, colds |
PS. Hax, |
Bender & Bro. Grantsville.
— >
Big Celebration at Meyersdale.
On July 4th there will be a big cele-
bration in Meyersdale, and Tie Star
wants it emphatiecaily nnderstood,right
here, that all the
Lick. G. A.
Salisbury people who
can do |
no better than to spend the glorious |
the ? Many of |
our people will no doubt go to Rock- |
wood, where there will also be a big |
but with
all due to Rockwood and its
many good people, Tie Star fgels that
Nalisbury owes Meyersdale the biggest
turnout on this occasion,
lowing reason:
Last fall when there was a big picnic |
here, the Meyersdale
“Metropolis.
respect
band came up |
and brought several hundred people |
here to help make the occasion a great |
success, which it proved to be. Can
we now afford to give Meyersdale the |
go-by? In the name of justice Tur
STAR says no.
We have been that our
band had decided to go to Meyersdale
on the Fourth, but now we are inform- |
ed that it will go to Rockwood. Just
why this change of mind took place,
we do not know. While Rockwood is |
to be congratulated, and while Tug
Star wishes the good people of that
town a large crowd and a royal good
time, we nevertheless hope that Salis-
bury will at least be equally well repre- |
sented at Meyersdale, where the Alert
Concert Band, of that town, will give |
a demonstration and a good time sec-
ond to none within fifty miles of here.
Right is right and one good turn de-
serves another. Let Meyersdale have,
good turnout from here.
informed
a
—
Sick
and all
quickly cured by using
DeWitt’s Little
sant to take
C.
headache, biliousness, constipation
liver and: stomach troubles can be
r famous little
arly R
never
those
pills known as isers.
They are plea
P. 8S. Hay, Elk Licl.
Grantsville,
and
A. Bender & Bro, |
gripe. |
—
A Musical Family. |
The following is an exact copy of n
letter received by a young lady, who,
possessing a piano and being about to |
move to a small country town, adver- |
tised for room and board with a family |
“musically inclined :”
“Deare Miss think we kin sute |
you with room and board if you prefer!
to be where there is musick, I play the
fiddel, my wife the my dotter
Jule the akordion, my other dotter the
banjo, my son llen the gittar, my son
Jolin the floot and koronet, an my son
Clem the basedrum,while all of us sings !
gospell hims in which we would be glad
to have you take part both vocal or in- |
strumental if you play on anything. |
We play by ear an when we all git
started there is real music in the air.
Let us know if you want to come here |
to bord.”
, we
orgin,
— —
E. (. Blanks, of Lewisville, Texas, writes |
that one box DeWitt’'s Witch Hazel
Salve was worth $50,000. It cured his piles |
of ten years standing. He advises others to
try it. It also cures eczema, skin discases
and obstinate sores, PS. Hay, Elk lick.
C. A.-Bender & Bro. Grantsviile.
—-
A Warning to Bird Slayers.
The ungodly and cruel practice of |
killing harmless birds is getting to be |
and around
and one of these days
body will have to pay for this outra-
geous form of eruelty. The birds are
of
some-
{ not only harmless, but they are really
| po.
our friends.
{ against all offenders.
residents of Paint township, Somerset |
of nine children, gave
having violated the liqucr laws in a
number of respects. Frank Alexander,
a young man alleged to have been en- |
gaged in the same business, was sent |
to jail in default of bail for trial.
Seese, who is past his fiftieth year, is
i
|
|
|
! quite wealthy, a member of the Dunk-'
The law puts heavy fines
on persons convicted of killing birds,
and thel3laws ought to be enforced |
The question is sometimes asked
why insect pests are so much more
numerous than they were years ago.
The answer is easy. Itis because there
| are too many fools running about with |
| guns, shooting at every bird they see. |
Another class of chumps begrudge the |
{ birds a few cherries or berries, and they |
lie in ambush to kill every bird they |
see on their fruit trees. This is all |
stag
LER Lick. C.
{ that the I.
was scheduled for the Fourth has been |
| not go unrewarded flor
for the fol MABUANINIOUS ITT il j
may fix for their pro-
| Every member is a
[ trim.
| our committee on
Livengood, the popular leader of the
band, states that Salisbury and vicinity |
In |
"ing from his letter:
{painted in our
| ready been procured.
| gripe.
| trip,
wrong. No humane, kind-hearted or
God-fearing person will begrudge the |
birds a few cherries or berries. Our |
feathered friends are entitled to al
share of the fruit for the good they do
in the way of destroying insects.
Think of the millions of vile creeping
worms, ugly bugs, ete., that one bird
alone destroys in a summer. Think of |
|
|
|
|
a |
the sweet songs they warble forth to
cheer this sad old earth! Think of the |
cruel sin so often committed by killing |
birds, when it is known that many of |
them have young birdlings, which must |
die of starvation in their nests! Think
of what a dreary place the world would |
be without birds! Think of all these |
things, and then, if you remember of
ever having killed a harmless bird, bow |
| your head in shame, ask God to forgive
you, and resolve never to commit such
cruelty and sin again.
Tue Star has no reference to game |
birds that are killed for food.
which are usually killed either
RR
Win your battles against
ing promptly. One Minute
duces immediate results.
ly it prevents consumption.
Cough Cure pro-
When taken ear-
And in later
es it furnishes prompt relict.
A. Bender &
a
Bro. Grantsviile.
CELEBRATICN NOTES.
“Dewey” says Roc! xwood Will Be
the Center of Attraction.
Ba;
indicates that
Rocrwoon, June 23. —Everything
Rockwood will be the
center of amusements, population and !
| general interest on July 4th.
All fin-
ger-boards point
will lead to the
Word has been
©...0).
Tub” of
received from
I'. celebration
the county.
Jerlin
which
and will take place on a
later date, owing to the extensive prep-
arations being made at
demonstration.
postponed
Rockwood for
a gloricus Berlin will
and materially subzeribing to the suc-
cess of the Rockwood celebration. The
I. 0. O. F. will find our citizens equally
| LOW PRICE!
We are |
speaking for the protection of the song |
| birds,
| through meanness or ignbr nee.
disease by act- |
so.generously |
PIANOS!
We are sole agents fer
Steinway,
Chickering,
Hardman,
rakauer,
Harrington
And other makes of Pianos.
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 can quote our
lowest Pittsburg wareroom price.
Catalouge mailed on application.
C. C. MELLOR CO.,
Successors to Mellor & Hoene.
319-321 5th Ave., Pittsburg, Pa.
SEE —
(rurlev’s
S15.00 Bicveles
The Cash Store
Oa
Meyersdale,
AR
Somerset Coun
{
\
P. Ss. Hay, |
Yi:
NOR
iy,
\
A
THE
Al
——0F
that way and all roads
In Dry Goods.
Ws i
lotliing, Shoes,
il!
Carpets, Paper, ete.
Ou Inter
1
you can buy
]
JOS
LO0k 10 Your
uy whe:
best
ior
We
the oo
the
least money. will
ever date they
posed reunion.
CIT OTI wht= i
make it pay you. Our
stock is larce.
We can now s‘ate on reliable author- |
ity that
net Band will be among the bands
present at Rockwood on Independence
This
the
organization ranks
best bands of
professional musi-
, this yea prime
day. high
among
The band
cian, r.is in
an invitation extended by
music, Mr. Samuel
accepting
L.
will come to Rockwood en
his own language we quote the follow-
“Everybody is go-
masse,
ing to Rockwood.”
A graud parade has been added to
the list of attractions since submitting
i our correspondence of
last week, in
which Rockwood and at least three
| contigious townships will participate.
\ ilag pole 136 feet long, artistically
National colors, has al-
ly pines were spliced together, securely
pinioned and banded, and we feel s
in saying that it is the highest as well
[ as one of the best flag poles that pierce
aereal heights of Somerset county.
All the committees on arrangements |
are getting down to earnest and sys-
| tematic work, and everything points to
a grand success DEWEY.
a;
Bob of Lafayette, Ind.
Moore, says that
for constipation hie has found DeWitt’s Lit- |
tle Karly Risers to be perfect.
Try them for stomach
troubles. P. 8S. Hay, Elk Lick.
der & Bro, Grantsville:
~~
Who Would Rcb an Editor.
The editor of the Tazewell (Tenn.)
Progress in trouble. He has been
robbed, and this is the way he tells it
to his readers:
“Our meat house was entered, last
Thursday night, and three
two middlings taken therefrom.
They never
and liver
C. A. Ben-
is
Any
| one who would steal from a poor coun-
try editor with a houseful of orphans |
| would rob a corpse after it commenced |
| to smell.
is
While ther no definite
clew, we are inclined to think it was a
| republican, for a dem ocrat or populist
and |
would have taken both meat
smokehouse.”
-——
Thousands of persons have been cured of
| piles by using DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve.
and all
r(
It heals promptly and cures eczema
It gives immediate
Lick.: C. A.
diseases. Lief.
Hay, Elk
Grantsville.
skin
Pe,
—
| Baptist Young Peoples Union of
America, Buffalo, N.. Y, July
14-17, 18¢8, B. & 0. R. R.
~ - . . 1
For the occasion tickets will be sold |
at the low rate of one fare forthe round |
from points on the Baltimore &
Ohio Railroad.
joint agent at Buffalo on July 17th,18th
or 19th and payment of fee of 50 cents.
| The Royal Blue Line between Wash- |
ington, Baltimore, Philadelphia and
New York are the finest and fastest!
trains in the world. Call on nearest |
agent B. & O. R. R. for routes and de- |
tailed information.
the celebrated Salisbury Cor- |
the state. |
The engagement of this musical |
organization is a suflicient guarantee |
of the complete success of the musical |
| phase of the program for the day. In|
Two tall, shape- |
afe |
hams and |
Bender & Bro, |
Tickets will be good |
| going July 12th to 15th inclusive, with |
| privilege of extension until September
Ist inclusive, if ticket is deposited with |
Yours Truly,
CH artley.
BUSIKESS MENTION, WANTS, AK HIUNCENENTS,
LEGAL AND SPECIAL HOTICES.
Wateh C. IR. &
vertising space.
Haselbarth Son’s ad-
5-26.
Iead-
at the J. B-
and Granite
The place to buy Monuments,
and Iron Fencing is
Williams Co.'s
Works, Frostburg, 2d. Best work at
away down prices; a full { Terra
Cotta Pipe and Cement always
hand.
stones
Marble
stock u
on
6-23
~~
WANTED:
Agents, Nor
| from town to town
{ for a RELIABLE F
with all traveling and
| PAYABLE
[ Wins
General
to travel
agents
SoU0.00 per year
expenses
Joux C.
Arch St,
tf.
— Traveling
TO CANVASK but
and employ
LRM,
living
WEEKLY. Addres
Co.,
{ Philadelphia, 1
PON
ALE !'—Several
These Pe
excell
FOR S Braham
| Patent Pens. a new
| invention and an By
| their use bletting is an impossibility
ink will write an or-
IroOsSS
IS
are
nt thing.
{anl one penful of
| dinary letter.
{and avoid blots.
{ long as other pens. We have them in
"stubs and all other styles. Will
them out at 15 cents *per dozen,
r
They save ink, save time
They last twice as
close
Reg-
ular price is Try
them and you will use no other. Law-
yers, ministers and clerks buy them by
| the gross. get them at The
| Star oflice.
25 cents per dozen.
You can
YES, WE CAN !—We can supply euts
| suitable for any all Kinds of ad-
i vertisements and job printing. Call.at
| Tie Star office and see large as-
sortment of specimens.
you cuts of nearly everything that ex-
ists and many things that do not exist.
No matter what kind of a cut you want,
we can supply it at a very low price.
National Fditeationnt Association
Meeting, Washington, D. C.,
July 7 to 12, 1898.
| For this occasion the &
Ohio BR. R. will sell tickets to Washing-
ton at the low rate of one fare for the
round trip, plus $200 membership fee
(except that from the rate
will be $1.25, round trip). Tickets will
Pittsburg, Parkersburg,
thereof on
| July 4th to 7th inclusive good return-
ing, leaves Washington July § to 15 in-
{ elusive, with privilege of extension an-
til August 31, 1898. if ticket is deposited
with joint agent at or
| before July 12, and pe; fee,
fifty (50) cents. Solid vestibuled trains
from Chicago, St. Louis, Cincinnati,
Louisville, Columbus, Pittsburg and
intermediate points. Royal blue
| trains between New York, Philadelphia,
! Baltimore and Washington, finest and
| fastest trains in America. Call on
agent Baltimore & Ohio Railroad for
full information concerning stopovers
and side trips. The Baltimore & Ohio
Railroad is thc most interesting, histor-
and
our
We can show
Baltimore
Baltimore
|
| be sold from
| Wheeling and points east
Hu
Washington, on
ment of
mr
The
| ical and scenic route in America.