¥ § ne RR (HE SOMERSET COUNTY STAR P. L. Livexcoon, Editor and Publisher. as mail matter of the Second Class. Subscription Rates. THE STAR is published every Thursdav,at Elk Lick, Somerset County, Pa. at the fol- lowing rates: One year, if paid spot cash in advance.. $1.25 If not paid strictly in advance........... 1.5 Bix months, if paid spot cash in advance £6 If not paid strictly in advance. « oT Three months, cash in advance -35 Single copies... .......coiiiiiiiinieieannen 05 To avoid multiplicity of small accounts, all subscriptions for three months or less must be pald in advance. These rates and terms will be rigidly adhered to. Advertising Rates. Transient Reading Notices, 5 cents a line seach insertion. To regular advertisers, 5 gents a line for first insertion and 3 cents a Sine for each succeeding insertion. No busi- ness lacals will be mixed with local news ftems or editorial matter for less than 10 gents a line for each insertion, except on yearly contracts. 5 Rates for Display Advertisments will be made known on application. Paid Editorial Puffs, invariably 10 cents a n ne. Legal Advertisements at legal rates. Marriage, Birth and Death Notices not exceeding fifteen lines, inserted free. All additional lines, 5 cents each. Cards of Thanks will be published free for prtrons of the paper. Non-patrons will be eharged 10 cents a line. Resolutions of Respect will be published for 3 cents a line. All advertisements willbe run and charg- ed for until ordered discontinued. No advertisement will be taken for less than 25 cents. LOCAL AND GENERAL NEWS. Charles Brown, of Grantsville, Md, is a business visitor in this city today. James Smearman, of Accident, Md., is the guest of his brothers, Henry and Jefferson, who reside here. Avoid serious results of kidney or bladder disorder by taking Foley's Kid- ney Cure. E. H. Miller. 9-25 The Keim-Brumbaugh breach of promise case will be tried in the Hunt- ingdon county court, next week. The father of Mrs. Dr. Speicher, Mr. McMillen, of Accident, Md., is the guest of the Speicher family this week. The Catolic picnic held in the K. of 1.. grove, last Saturday was a great suc- cess. The net profits footed up to slightly over $132. Misses Janet Russell and Edith Koontz, returned to their homes in Braddock, Pa., on Sunday, after a week’s visit with the latter’s sister,Mrs. *W. B. Stevanus. Mrs. S. S. Koontz and son, of Brad- dock, Pa., who had been visiting Mrs. M. C. Kann, at Garrett, 'Pa., arrived Here one day last week for a short visit with Mrs. W. B. Stevanus. Miss Della Brown was last week hired by the Elk Lick township school board to teach the Lowry school, which position became vacant a few weeks ago through the death of Prof. E. E. Barclay. Well, if it wasn’t for THE STAR stirring ap the the animals the old dry bones eccasionally,by hurling thunderbolts of truth at them, life in this town wouldn’t be relished to the extent that it is by the average citizen. : “I had a running sore on my leg for seven years,” writes Mrs. Jas. Forest,of Chippewa Falls, Wis., “and spent hun- dreds of dollars in trying to get it heal- ed. Two boxes of Banner Salve entire- ly cured it.” No other salve so heal- ing. E. H. Miller. 9-25 Mrs. J. W. Giffin, of Conemaugh, Pa, was a welcome caller at THE Star of- fice on Tuesday. Mrs. Giftin has been here for a week or more, visiting her many Salisbury friends. She is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Geo. H. Suhrie. WANTED 5 YOUNG MEN f{rom- Somerset County at once to prepare for Positions in the Government Ser- vice—Railway Mail Clerks, Letter Car- riers, Custom House and Departmental Clerks, etc. Apply to Inter-state Corres. Inst., Cedar Rap- ids, Ia. 10-1 No man in this world is so much ad- mired and respected as the earnest, faithful Christiafh, the man or woman who shows by his or her daily life that he or she is a true and devoted follower of the humble Nazarene. The genuine article is very rare, these days, while the spurious is very numerous. “By their fruits ye shall know them.” The Grace Coal Company has pur- chased the four-foot vein under the Samuel A. Philson land adjoining Ber- lin on the south. The price paid Mr. Philson for the coal was $3,900. This coal is the famous smokeless seam and will be marketed by the Grace Coal Co. for blacksmithing and other special purposes, as is being done with that in the Garman purchase.—Berlin Record. Thomas Eckerd was recently chosen by the Town Council to serve as a member of that body in place of W, H. Boucher, who resigned. J. W.Ring- ler has also resinged, but his successor has not yet been chosen. We think Mr. Eckerd will prove to be a good councilman, and we consider that the Council acted wisely in choosing him. Robert Speicher, William Baumgard- ner and George Haselbarth returned home from the “Yough” river a few days ago, where they had been enjoy- ing a very pleasant outing. They were camping and had lots of sport catching bass and suekers. Hans Wilhelmi, I. J. Engle and Ellet 8. Baumgardner visited them while they were there,and they, too, came home well /laden with fish stories. When a newspaper man lets a paper run without sending a dun each year he shows he has confidence in the sub- | seriber’s intention to pay,and the obli- | gation rests upon the man getting the paper to treat the newspaper man as well by paying promptly, by mail or otherwise. It’s a mighty mean man who will move out of the country with- out paying his newspaper bill.—Clear- field Public Spirit. [ | Noah Keefer, who resides just east of town, brought to this office several days ago a plant that is somewhat a curiosity. It resembles a flower plant, but the blossom, Mr. Keefer says, is a species of strawberries good for eating or baking. He informed us that if one of the blossoms were planted at this season the plant would bear fruit next year, and requires no cultivation.— Somerset Standard. The Meyersdale Republican says that the time granted tothe Meyersdale & Sal isbury street railway company in which to file their bond, has expired, and with it the franchise granted to them by the last council has also ceased to exist. If the company, continues the paper, should want another franchise now they will find that they will hardly be able to secure another franchise so favorable to them as the old one. As a rule a man will feel well satis- fied if he can hobble around on crutch- es two or three weeks after spraining his ankle, and it is usually twoor three months before he has fully recovered. This is an unnecessary loss of time, for in many cases in which Camberlain’s Pain Balm has been promptly and freely applied, a complete cure has been effected in less than one week’s time, and in some cases within three days. For sale by E. H. Miller. 9-25 Our popular and efficient druggist, Mr. E. H. Miller, who, by the way, con- ducts the most up-to-date drug store in all Somerset county, is putting many of his own preparations on the market, and we take pleasure in saying that his family remedies and specifics are the equal of anything on the market for the maladies they are recommended for. You can always rely on Mr. Mil- ler’s medicines, and he is building up a nice wholesale and retail trade on them. Mr. D. H. Daugherty, well known throughout Mercer and Sumner coun- ties, W. Va., most likely owes his life to the kindness of a neighbor. He was almost hopelessly afflicted with diar- rhoea ; was attended by two physicians who gave him little, if any, relief, when a neighbor learning of his serious con- dition, brought him a bottle of Cham- berlain’s Colic, Choelra and Diarrhoea Remedy, which cured him in less than twenty-four hours. For sale by E. H. Miller. 9-25 When you enter a town which con- tains fine residences, fine churches and fine business houses, such as Salisbury has, and then behold an old, dirty, rot- ten and dilapidated school building like the only one to be found in Salis- bury, you can rest assured that there are a lot of old misers, hypocrites and mossbacks in that community that the graveyards and hades are yawning for. This item is so all-fired true that it may hurt some people, but truth is mighty and must prevail. A Shanksville correspondent to the Somerset Standard tells of a medicine vender who recently sold a great deal of medicine in that vicinity, and adds that many people who swallowed the fakir’s nostrums were made violently ill. In some cases a physician had to be called, but whether the physician killed or cured the patients, the cor- respondent sayeth not. At best the taking of medicine is largely guess work, but those who think they must have medicine should always consult a reputable physician. Elsewhere in these columns our friend H. H. Reitz announces that his cider and applebutter factory is now open for the season of 1902. Indica- tions are that Mr. Reitz will do a larger business than ever this year, as the ap- ple crop is quite large, and the capacity of his works has been increased. Mr. Reitz deserves much credit for his en- terprise, and the products of his factory have justly earned an enviable reputa- tion. Furthermore, Mr. Reitz is an ex- ceptionally upright man to do business with, and he deserves the excellent patronage he enjoys. Probably the largest yield ot oats in Maryland, and possibly in the world, says the Cumberland News, was har- vested on a little piece of ground con- taining two and a quarter acres in the town of Accident, Garrett county, last week. The crop belonged to Dr. W. Ravenseroft. When the grain was threshed the machine indicated a yield of 184 bushels, but by weight it was found to be 230 bushels, or an average of 102 bushels to the acre. The seed was sown at the usual time. In pre- paring the ground no unusual means were employed to, enrich it. This record is phenomenal. Lingering Summer Colds. Don’t let a cold run at this season. Summer colds are the hardest kind to cure and if neglected may linger along for months. A long siege like this will pull down the strongest constitution. One Minute Cough Cure will break up the attack at once. Safe, sure, acts at once. Cures coughs, colds, croup, bron- chitis, all throat and lung troubles. The children like it. E. H. Miller. THE EX-METROPOLIS. Is Meyersdale’s Glory Departing From Her? If all reports are true that come from railway circles and seem to be pretty well founded, then, truly, Meyersdale, the once metropolis of Somerset coun- ty. is bound soon to advance very slow- ly if not actually to decline. Windber, the new coal town in the north of the county, has already far distanced Mey- ersdale in point of population; but as a well built, substantial town, the ex- metropolis is still many leagues ahead of the new metropolis which has arisen in the north. And right here we wish to say that if the course of the main line of the Pittsburg division of the B. & O. railroad is to continue through Meyersdale, that town will be a pros- perous business community long after Windber is abandoned to the owls and bats. But it now seems to be an as- sured fact that in a few years Meyers- dale will have nothing but a stub rail- road intersecting the main line at Gar- rett, as it is proposed to abandon Sand Patch tunnel and construct a short cut from Garrett to Hancock, Md., via Downey and Everett, thus avoiding the tunnel and heavy grades east of it, and at the same time shortening the dis- tance to Hancock about 35 miles. The new line will pass within a quarter of a mile of Donaldton, the new coal town near Berlin, and will be an outlet for the yet undeveloped cold field of Brothersvalley and Stonycreek town- ships. Engineers are now surveying the new route, which it is said will be double tracked and used for the main line. Much uneasiness is felt in Mey- ersdale over the proposed change, and if the new route is built, Garrett will be one of the foremost towns in the county, while Meyersdale will have to go away back and keep quiet. Not Doomed For Life. “] was treated for three years by good doctors,” writes W. A. Greer, Mc- Connellsville, O., “for Piles and Fistula, but, when all failed, Bucklen’s Arnica Salve cured me in two weeks.” Cures Burns, Bruises, Cuts, Corn#, Sores, Eruptions, Salt Rheum, Piles or no pay. 25¢. at E. H. Miller’s drug store. es ce School Matters. Our borough schools opened on Mon- day morning with a total enrollment of 223 pupils, and this number will be greatly increased as the term progress- es. Already some of the little dingy rooms are overcrowded, as the follow- ing figures will show, but they will be much more crowded before the term is completed. In the First primary room there are 53 pupils ; Second primary, 48; First in- termediate, 33; Second intermediate, 48; Grammar, 24; High School, 15. As will be seen, the primary rooms are the ones which are overcrowded, and no teachers on earth can do justice to their pupils or to their profession where such a state of affairs exist as in the primary rooms of the old, antiquat- ed, dingy shed known as the Salisbury school building. Evidently there is a very small valuation put on education and the lives and comfort of our school children. The two physicians we have in the board of directors ought to register a vigorous kick in favor'of a new school building, one which would afford proper sanitation for the many precious lives that are to be improved therein and rendered useful to the world and to mankind. School houses are supposed to be the fortifications of the republic, but such a school house as Salisbury has is more like a pest house or a boneyard. Itis a shame, a disgrace and a reproach upon the community, and a crime against the rising generation. The old fogyism in this town which is contend- ing against proper educational facilities is almost enough to cause the very stones in the streets to cry out in mutiny. Big Apples. Ellis Wagner brought an apple up town several days ago that weighed 1414 ounces, and which measured 14 inches around one way and 13 the oth- er. Ellis plucked the big apple from one of his own trees. Now then, we are ready for some one to step forward and show a bigger one. Soon after the above item was in type, Jeff Smearman showed us an ap- ple picked from a tree in his lot that is a little larger than Mr. Wagner’s apple. It’s dimensions are as follows: Weight, one pound ; circumference, 14}5 inches one way and 12 inches the other. Now we are readyto hear from some other fellow who has a big apple. A Boy’s Wild Ride For Life. With family around expecting him to die, and a son riding for life, 18 miles, to get Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, W. H. Brown, of Leesville, Ind. endured death’s agonies from asthma, but this wonderful medicine gave instant relief and soon cured him. He writes: “I now sleep soundly every night.” Like mar- velous cures of Consumption, Pneu- monia, Bronchitis, Coughs, Colds and Grip prove its matchless merit for all Throat and Lung troubles. Guaranteed bottles 50c. and $1.00. Trial bottles free at E. H. Miller's drug store. JUDGE KOOSER ABROAD. Talks of the Political and Labor Conditions in This State. Denver Republican, Aug. 19. Judge Francis J. Kooser, presiding judge of the Sixteenth district of Penn- sylvania, was the guest of his brother, H. B. Kooser, general passenger agent of the Missouri Pacific railway, yester- day. Judge Kooser is a staunch Re- publican of the Keystone state, and has figured conspicuously in polities for the last 20 years, and is probably one of the best informed of the political leaders of the state. He says he looks for a clean sweep at the state election next fall. “We were never in better shape,” he says, “to carry on a campaign than we are this year. There is the greatest harmony in the state organization. I am quite sure that the general policy of President Roosevelt will be endorsed and it looks to me now as if he would be renominated, although of course you cannot tell just how those things will go.” 7 Judge Kooser says he thinks the set- tlement of the miners’ strike is only a question of a few'weeks, as every effort is being brought to adjust the differ- ences between the miners and the op- erators. ‘Before I left thestate I was informed by very reliable authority that Mr. Quay had been appealed to and that he had already done much toward smoothing over the situation,” said Judge Kooser. “He has the con- fidence of the mine owners, and many of the leaders of the unions, and 1 have no doubt that his work on the matter will do much to effect a complete set- tlement. In my part of the country. western Pennsylvania, we have abso- lutely no trouble with the miners of soft coal.” The miners are paid good prices and I believe both miners and mine owners never made so much mon- ey as they are making today. “The strike has caused considerable distrdss among the Eastern consumers who are in the habit of using hard coal. I recently took a trip along the East- ern coast and found there was a large number of consumers who had exhaust- ed the supply of hard coal. I suggest- ed to a friend that he use soft coal un- til the supply of the hard coal had in- creased, but he scouted the idea, reply- ing that he never could get along with soft coal.” Judge Kooser is on his way to Yel- lowstone park, where he will remain until he has just time enough to get back home before his court convenes in September. Delicate Ladies and the Aged. For medical use physicians say Speer’s Port Wine surpasses the im- ported. Delicate ladies and aged peo- ple find it the best wine to be procured, and so blood-making as to absolutely give strength and color and prolong life. Suicide Follows Assault. News of a horrible tragedy enacted in Jenner township reached Somerset Tuesday morning of last week, says the Somerset Democrat, the facts of which are about as follows: Friday, Aug. 22nd, Jacob Craver and Henry Shaffer were engaged in setting up some agricultural implements at the farm of Phillip Sporry, about two and one-half miles northwest of Bos- well. The men had some trifling dis- agreement which finally ended in a scuffle, during which Craver struck Shaffer with a heavy piece of iron, ren- dering him unconscious. A physieian was called and Shaffer’s condition pro- nounced serious. Craver worked for Sporry, but lived in a shack three- fourths of a mile from where he was employed. He was unmarried and em- ployed no help. He went to his home after the fight and brooded considera- bly over the trouble he had made for himself. Sunday he told a young man named Johnson, a distant relative, that if he came over to his place he would tell him something. Johnson came to Craver’s home as directed, and as he approached the place, he noted that everything was in a state of great disorder ; the furniture had been carried out, and the doors and windows were open. On entering the house he was horrified to find Craver suspended by the neck, dead. The young man immediately informed neighbors and the county authorities were notified. The remains were taken in charge by Ross Kiernan, a half brother of the deceased. Craver was a man about 55 years of age,and was not regarded as a desperate man. Shaffer, the man who was injured in the assault, is reported as recovering. He has a wife, but he has not lived with her since his release from the penitentiary, some time ago, where he served a long sentence for a revolting crime. He is about 45 years of age. Beware of the Knife. No profession has advanced more rapidly than surgery, but it should not be used except where absolutely neces- sary. In cases of piles for example, it is seldom needed. DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve cures quickly and perma- nently. Unequaled for cuts, burns, bruises, wounds, skin diseases. Accept no counterfeits. “I was so troubled with bleeding piles that I lost much blood and strength,” says J. C. Philips, Paris, Ill. “DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve cured me in a short time.” Soothes and heals. E. H. Miller. FROS S. DEPOSITORY 2 Q Co «o> - ee U ° . Capital Stock and Surplus Fungd...........ccocvavivivsnrrrerrsnns, $100,000.00 Deposits (over).............. iii lh nr sane 760,000.00 ASS0S (OVER)... ooo iss iiie isn ia nose hr aasanaas 910,000.00 ....Savings Department.... «__Three Per Cent. Interest Paid on Deposits.» Drafts on all parts of the world. Accounts of individuals and firms invited. Deposits sent by mail and all correspondence given prompt and careful at- tention. This bank is the only United States depository in the George’s Creek Valley. Bank open Saturday nights from 7 to 10 o'clock. MARX WINELAND, PPESIDENT. ROBERDEAU ANNAN, CASHIER. BOYS’ CLOTHING! We have given special at- tention to this department and have all the new styles in Norfolks, Russian Blouse and Three-piece Suits To Please The Boys. It will be to your inter- est to see the great values we are offer- ing in Barchus & Livengood, Salisbury, Pa. Asthma Cure Hree Dr. Taft’s Asthmalene! $= Brings Instant Relief and Permanent Cure in All Cases. =3 Trial bottle sent ABSOLUTELY FREE. Write your name and address plainly. There is nothing like ASTHMALENE. It CURES when all else fails. The Rev. C. F. WELLS, of Villa Ridge, 111, says: “Your trial bottle of Asthma- lene received in good condition. I cannot tell you how thankful I feel for the good derived from it. I was a slave, chained with putrid sore throat and Asthma for ten years. I despaired of ever being cur- ed. I saw your advertisement for the cure of this dreadful and tormenting dis- ease, Asthma, and thought you had over- spoken yourselves, but resolved to give it a trial. To my astonishment, the trial Jong like a eharm. Send me a full-size ottle. 2 The Only Genuine Bears This “SWALLOW.” %, RELIEF, of rmpenss Polk, Pa., June 20th, 1901. Dr. Taft Bros., New York. Gentlemen :— Your medicine has helped me very much, it has cured me of the Asthma I am very thankful that I saw your advertisement. I tried every kind of Asth- ma medicine I could think of and could got no relief until I tried Dr. Taft’s Asthmalene and it helped me directly : Yours truly, Mrs. Mary Adams. 0 Uniontown, Pa., . 2 foo. Tutt Brot, ; , January 17th, 1902. New York. Gentlemen :(— It gives me great pleasure to let you know that I received your tri - tle of Dr. Taft’s ASTHMALENE and received more relief from ok py i other medicine I have tried. Enclosed find money for a large bottle of Asthma- lene. Please send immediately to, N. H. Barnes, No. 9 Church St. Lilly : i 9 De Tutt Deon. illy, Pa., April 7th, 1902. New York. Gentlemen :— I received your Asthmalene in good shape and in due time. that it is an elegant medicine and has done Lh claim for pag ious SAY to walk up hill on account of my breath. After taking your medicine one day I went to chopping timber and have been working right along every day that is fit to work ; this is a very bad climate and this has been the worst kind of a spring, hardly two daysalike. I am sending an order enclosed in this to be sent at once. Yours gratefully, William A. Bradley. 10% The wholesale drug houses in the United State and Canada unhesitating- ly say, “ASTHMALENE is and has been our standard remedy for the ne Asthma for more than thirty years; we can offer nothing just as good.” toi Ask your druggist for it. Delay in using Asthmalene means untold suf- ering. For FREE trial bottle, write at once to B. 8. M 7! East 130th St.. New York City. SKEAN, Sole Azan, | 4 OU C. ment y taine a list is specially diseases, it Brigh nesses of | eases, Cat Nervous I ' diseases w "re incre: ser “ An timonial: THE INS Thi WwW. H. Ko A Office opp ERNEST £ J. A. BER «Coffroth & R.E. ME" Office in ( A. F. SP] Ph Office cor My pri Se ly gu 1ts an fo | PUBLISE Star {