» W. H. KooNTZ. KOONTZ & OGLE Attorneys-At-Liaw, J. G. OGLE SOMERSET, PENN’A Office opposite Court House. ERNEST 0. KOOSER, Attorney-At-Liaw, SOMERSET, PA. J. A. BERKEY Attormney-at-Liaw, SOMERSET, PA. Coffroth & Ruppel Building. R. E. MEYERS, Attorney-at-Iunaw, SOMERSET, PA. DISTRICT ATTORNEY. Office in Court House. VIRGIL R. SAYLOR, Attorney-at-Liaw, SOMERSET, PA. Office in Mammoth Block. ee —— E. H. PERRY, Physician and Surgeon, (Successor to Dr. A. F. Speicher.) SALISBURY, PENN’A. Office cornel Grant and Union Streets B.& 0. R.R.SCHEDULE. Winter Arrangement.—In Ef- fect Sunday, Nov. 22, 1903. §lUnder the new schedule there will be 10 daily passenger trains on the Pittsburg Di- vision, due at Meyersdale as follows: Fast Bound. No. 14—Accommodation ............11 02 AM No. 6—FastLine.................... 11:30 A. M No. 46—Through train.............. 441 P. M No. 16—Accommodation ............ 5:16 P. M No.10—Night EXpress............. 12:57 A. M West Bound. No. 11—Pittsburg Limited.......... 6:13 A.M No. 13—Accommodation............ S:42A. M No. 47—Through train............ 10:46 A. M er Ly No. 5—Fast Line.................. No. 49—Accommodation ............ 4:50P. M W.D.STILWELL, Agent. ¢ Cy Correct Silverware Correctin character, design and workmanship—is as necessary as dainty china or fine linen if you ‘would have everything in good taste and harmony. Knives, forks, spoons and fancy pieces for table use will be correct if se- lected from goods stamped ‘1847 5ev Remember *“1847,'" as there are imitation “Rogers.” For Catalogue No. 6 address the makers International Silver Co. Meriden, Conn, Indigestion Causes Catarrh of the Stomach. For many years it has been supposed that Catarrh of the Stomach caused indigestion and dyspepsia, but the truth is exactly the opposite. Indigestion causes catarrh. Re- peated attacks of indigestion inflames the mucous membranes lining the stomach and exposes the nerves of the stomach, thus caus- Ing the glands to secrete mucin instead of the juices of natural digestion. This is called Catarrh of the Stomach. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure relieves all inflammation of the mucous membranes lining the stomach, protects the nerves. and cures bad breath, sour risings, a sense of fullness after eating, indigestion, dyspepsia and all stomach troubles. Kodol Digests What You Eat Make the Stomach Sweet. Bottles only. Regular size, $1.00, holding 2% times the trial size, which sells for 50 re, Prepared by E. © DeWITT & CO., Chicago, til. SOLD BY E. H. MILLER. ” s Nothing has ever equalled i Nothing can ever surpass it. Dr.King’s New Discovery ON MM TION For Cs SUMPT Price SUGHs ase caflm A Perfect For All Throat and Cure: Lung Troubles. Money back if it fails. Trial Bottles free. FREE SEEDS FOR EVERYBODY. We have seeds at THE Star office for everybody, and they are free to all. They were sent to us for distribution by the Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C., at the request of Congressman Cooper. Come and get a package of them while they are yet to be had. Come and take advantage of your “Uncle Samuel’s” liberality. The seeds are yours for the asking, with our good Congressman’s compliments and best wishes thrown in. tf Foley's Kidney Cure makes kidneys and bladder right. Forced te Suepend. An Amended Plea.’ “My dearest own,” was what he said, And doubtfully she shook her head. “And are you still unsatisfied?” The youth, bewildered, quickly cried. “If I'm ‘dearest own,’ ” said she, “Some others there would seem te be. I'm ‘dearest,’ but I'a rule alone And bave no ‘dear’ or dearer own.’ “I may be first, but others, too, Would seem to thus belong to you, And so I say, Amend your plea, Or else, dull sir, you can’t have me.” “A plague,” he cried, “upon the dame Who makes to Jearning such a claim, Must lovers parse and analyze The words all girls were won't to prize? “Well, then, known You are, in truth, my only own.” to please, let {it be Round But Not Thick. Some hoys were up before a local magistrate, charged with having placed obstructions on the railroad track. The boys were thoroughly frightened, but when tne magistrate, in a fatherly way, explained to them that confession would make it easier for them in the end, one of them weakened and “owned up.” “So you did place a stone on the track,” said the judge. “Yes, sir,” faltered the boy. “How big was it?” asked the judge, but the boy didn’t seem to know. “Was it as big as my head?” sug- gested the judge. The boy looked at him gravely. “Yes, sir,” he said. “As big around, but only about half as thick.” And the judge joined in the smile which went around the rooin, even though it was at his own expense. Sensational. The servant handed Mr. Highmore a letter. It was from Harold, the eldest son, who was in college. “Anything new in it?” asked Mrs. Highmore. “Yes,” said the father of the family, in an agitated voice, as ne glanced hastily over the letter. “He doesn’t ask me for any money.”—Chicago Tri- bune. Explained. “Yes, they're engaged,” said Ethel “But it’s the most reinarkable case! She says she’s in love with him, and vet she has known him only four days. I don’t understand it.” “Simplest thing in the world,” mused her companion; “If she had known him longer than that she wouldn't have been In love with him.” —Detroit Free Press. Rare Opportunity. Conjurer (pointing to his cabinet) —Ladies and gentlemen, I now call your attention to the great illusion of the evening. I will ask any lady in the audience to step on the stage and enter the cabinet. I will then close the door, leaving no trace. Husband (to his wife)—Matilda, my love, do oblige the gentleman and walk up.—Tit-Bits. The Supreme Power. Nodd—There’'s no use in talking, the higher education of women is meking them more powerful all the time. Todd—Nnnsense ! A woman whe wields more power the any one I knew can neither read nor write. “Who is she?” “My cook.”—Brookiyn Life. All Put On. “Say,” remarked little Tommy, who had heard his father and mother dis- cussing investments, “Pa just said something about an ‘outside figure.’ wonder what that is?” “Why, ma has one,” replied his sis- ter Ethel. phia Press. The Three P's. “Dis here radium,” said Uncle Eben, “may turn a cullud man white, but it can’t make a complete job of it onless it kin spoil his appetite for policy, persimmons an’ possum.”—Washing- | ton Star. He Is the Limit. Mac—They say Penny Is very mean. | Jack—Yes; he never offers to treat people until he hears they have taken a pledge.—Chelsea (Mass.) Gazette. Just as Good. Ta know just how to sing’s a thing Deésipable, but, then, It’s well to ‘know how not to sing And also where and when. —Philadelphia Press. “It’s the padded one she | wears when she goes out.”—Philadel- | other fellows come even to the fence.” . TOMMY PLAYS SIR KNIGHT. | But the Tournament Wae Turned inte a Lynching by Vigilantes. “Gee, but I'm tired,” said Tommy. “I'm goin’ to have the leg ache, too, to-night. Did ou ever have the leg ache, Uncle Jimmy? Ain't it fierce? My, but it hurts, an’ mother has to get up an’ rub them. There aim’t nothin’ worsen the leg ache.” : “Why do you kill yourself playing all day Saturday, then?’ asked the unsympathetic Uncle Jimmy. “] guess you never played, did you?’ snorted Tommy. “There ain't but one Saturday in every week. The other one's Sunday, and that ain't no good.” “What's the matter with your hand?’ asked the uncle, pointing to Tommy’s left wrist, which was band- aged. “That's a wound,” replied Tommy with dignity. “A what?” “A wound I got in battle. We played Roland and Oliver this after noon. Did you ever play that, Uncle Jimmy? I got this up.” “Who are Roland and Oliver ” ask- ed the uncle. ; “Didn't you ever read §bdeut King Charleymane and his knights? I thought you went to college.” “0, those fellows.” “Yes,” continued Tommy. “We made shields out’'n table boards. You saw a board in two and nail the pieces side by side. Then yom paint them with your skutchen. An’ you make swords out'n lathes an’ you take clothes props for lances. My but them table boards is hard to saw through an’ you just can't get nails to go straight. They bend double. An’ we had helmets made out’'n tin. Then we went down where there's a gulch in Milliken's pasture an’ had the fight.” “Sort of Roncesvalles affair?’ “That’s it, only we can’t pronounce that word, but that’s where Roland gets nuled, ain't it? I was Roland, an’ was fightin’ four Saracens, I guess that’s the way you say that, and my foot slipped. I fell on that old shield an’ there was a nail head stickin’ out an’ it just tore a piece about two inches long out'n my hand. Didn’t bleed much. Just got all blue. An’ then—" “Then what?” “Then I had to die. of course. I blew a tin horn, like Roland does, but my knights didn’t hear it, they did in Roland, only the traitor pretended jit wasn’t his horn, an’ then I died. But say, that wasn’t the fun. You ought t’ seen the turnament that we had.” Tommy was silent for a moment, while * Uncle Jimmy chuckled over the batttle of Roncesvalles, and then he asked. “Say, Uncle Jimmy, where’s mother gone?’ “Over to see Mrs. Howard,” said the uncle. “I knew it,” exclaimed Tommy, in despair, “just my luck. Now I'll have to stay in the yard a week. Have to come right home from school an’ stay in the yard. Doggone it. I just knew she’d go over there.” “What's the trouble ” asked the uncle. “Why, we had an Indian fight after the turnament, an’ we captured a lot of prisoners, an’ Hefty said we had to burn em at the stake, but Skinny wanted to hang one. Hefty says In- dians don’t hang their prisoners of war, but Skinny says he didn’t care. We'd be vigilantes an’ hang one. So we burned the others. Of course, we put the fire out when it got close to them. Then we hung Kid Howard. “Course we didn't hang him by the neck. That’d kill him. Hefty said to hang him by the feet. We got a clothes line an’ tied it to his legs an’ hauled him up. We weren't goin’ to let him hang but a minute, but we tied the other end of the rope so's we wouldn’t have to hold it. An’ just as we were goin’ to let him down—he was a-yellin® awful—a kid yells ‘Look out, she’s comin'!’ I guess his mother must have heard him yell. Their house's right close there. There she was a-comin’ for us. You know squaws is somethin’ fierce when their young is in danger. An’ you bet we cut an’ run. “She yelled, ‘I know you, Tommy, an’ you, Clarence Williams, k an’ you, Harry Jones, an’ you see if I don’t tell your mothers! We got ayér the fence an’ watched her. She gouldn't get the kid down. We had tied the knot too tight. He was a yellin’ and she was a tuggin’. I guess he'd be hangin’ there yet if one of the other kids hadn’t got a hatchet an’ cut the rope. Then he came down real quick.” “You'll get off lucky with a week in the yard,” suggested Uncle Jim- my. “I guess I'll catch it)’ said the philosophic Tommy. “I thought may- be mother wouldn't see Mrs. How- ard till she had forgot it, but ‘course she had to go over there to-night. Ain’t that the worst luck? I don’t mind the lickin’, but she’ll make me stay in the yard an’ she won't let the Tommy kicked a hole in the gravel at his feet, while the uncle laughed at him. “You needn’t laugh, Uncle Jimmy,” he said. “I guess you wouldn't like | to be shut up in your room an’ not | have Edith Williams ’lowed to coms® | an’ see you.” | “No, that wouldn’t be nice,” ad-| mitted Uncle Jimmy. “Well, then,” said Tommy, as it | that settled it, and it did for several | moments. Then Uncle Jimmy re-| marked: | “Your mother’s coming down the | street, Tommy.” | “Gee, is she?’ exclaimed the boy | “Say, 1 guess I'll go to b&d."—C. S. R., in Chicago Tribuhe. } FOLEY’: KIDNEY CURE Guaranteed for All Kidney and Bladder Troubles. Is Safe and Sure FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE cures the most obstinate cases of kidney and bladder diseases. It supplies the kidneys with the substances they need to build up the worn out tissues. It will cure Bright's Disease and Diabetes if taken in time, and a slight disorder yields readily to the wonderful curative power of this great medicine. It sooths and heals the urinary organs and invigorates the whole system. If your kidneys are de- ranged, commence by taking FOLEY’S KIDNEY GURE at once. It will make you well. A Physician Healed, Now Prescribes It Dally Dr. Geo. Ewing, a practicing physician at Smith’s Grove, Ky., for over thirty years, writes his personal experience with FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE: “For years I have been greatly bothered with kidney and bladder trouble and enlarged prostate gland. I used everythin known to the profession withoutrelief, untill commence to use FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE. After taking three bot- tles I was entirely relieved and cured. I prescribe it now daily in my practice and heartily recommend its use to all physicians for such troubles, for I can honestly state I have prescribed it in hundreds of cases with perfect success.”’ Had to Get Up Several Times Every Night ; Mr. F. Arnold, Arnold, Ia., writes: “I was troubled with kidney disease about three years. I was nervous and all run down, and had to get up several fimes during the night, but three bottles of FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE effected a complete cure. I feel better than I ever did and recommend it to my friends.’ TWO SIZES 50c and $1.00 EH. MITA. REIT. LICK PA. 4 Acute ] by the or Most Chronic Skillful Kidney D Special- and ists Bladder N for ij Kidney Dis- Rana eases E ‘Bladder @ Dis- Guaranteed PREPARED ONLY BY FOLEY & COMPANY 2 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 4/4 u. Ha 77 ys —. SSS i. NSS a ——aass .._ IF YOU ARE ANCHORED to a conviction you will avoid much unnecessary work and worry. After you have once tried it, you will know beyond doubt that our print shop can be very valuable to you in your advertis- ing campaign. All circulars, folders and printed matter of that kind usually look alike to the busy man. But gain a hearing everywhere. ours Do you ever send out business invitations, folders, circulars. ete.? They bring business when they are attractive and artistie. We make no other kind. Our standards are high, and no work that falls short of them leaves our shop. Let us show you some of our work. We want your opinion of it. The Somerset County Star. are distinctive. We make them different. They - J on | 1€ - ir with fo a dis and Nw an x lates bi will our work yh A py he will .§ order when