I Sgr a INA a I THE SOMERSET COUNTY STAR ?. L. Livexcoop, Editor and Publisher. Entered at the Postoflice at Elk Lick, Pa. ss mail matter of the Second Class. Subscription Rates. THE STAR is published every Thursday,at Salisbury, (lk Lick, P. 0.) Somerset Coun- sy, Pa... at the following rates: ©ue year, if paid spot cash in advance.. $1.25 KH not paid strictly in advance 1.50 Six months..... . Three months... Single Soples.... cesrsnsstsssasinarisespimrnss To avoid multiplicity of small accounts, all subscriptions for three months or less must be paid in advance. These rates and serms will be rigidly adhered to. o F23 Advertising Rates. Transient Reading Notices, 5 cents a line sach insertion. To regular advertisers, 5 gents a line for first insertion and 3 cents a fine for each succeeding insertion. No busi- mess lacals will be mixed with local news #ems or editorial matter for less than 10 gents a line for each insertion,except on yearly contracts. Rates for Display Advertisments will be made known on application. Editorial advertising, invariably 10 eents a line. 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 prirons of the paper. Non-patrons will be charged 10 cents a line. Resolutions of Respect will be published for 5 cents a line. All advertisements will be run and charg- ed for until ordered discontinued. No advertisement will be taken for less than 25 cents. LOCAL AND GENERAL NEWS. EENSY [TENS GATHERED HERE AND. THERE, WITH AR DGCASINAL JOKE ADDED FOR SPICE Pinesalve acts like a poultice.—Sold by Elk Lick Supply Co. 2-1 Miss Berta Baumgardner, of Fayette eounty, is the guest this week of Rev. E. S. Johnston and family. Dr. Dade’s Little Liver Pills cure Liver ills. Sold by Elk Lick Supply €o. 12-1 Elet Smith, of Pittsburg, arrived in town several days ago to attend the wedding of his niece, Miss Alice Smith. Elet’s old-time friends were all glad to gee him, Michael Hady, a well known and highly respected citizen of Meyersdale, died very suddenly at his home, Wed- mesday morning, the 7th inst, aged nearly 64 years. John Tedrow was pretty badly hurt in the mines, several days ago, by a fall of roof slate, We wish him a speedy recovery and are glad to say that he is getting along real well. : Mr. and Mrs. Harry McCulloh were ealled to Addison, Sunday last, on ac- eount of the serious illness of Mrs. Me- Culloh’s father, whose death is men- tioned in our Addison items. The oil well near Pocahontas, Pa., is now down to a depth of over 1500 feet. If oil is struck at all, it will be struck in a few days, and some of the people interested think it is a sure thing. Ring’s Dyspepsia Tablets cure indi- gestion, dyspepsia and strengthens the stomach. Sold by Elk Lick Supply Co. 12-1 Mr. and Mrs. John Seeders took their little daughter to the school for the deaf at Edgewood Park, Pa., last Sunday, where she will be educated. It was a very wise move on the part of the parents. Ex-Judge Brandler and daughter, of Cumberland, Md., were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. N. Brandler, of Salisbury, andi Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brandler, of West Salisbury, several days during the past week. J.R. Joy goes to Somerset today to accept the position of Chief of Po- lice of that town. We believe that Mr. Joy will prove himself to be the very man for that position that Somerset has long been looking for. ¢.T. Hay’s sawmill which he had in eperation over in Greenville township, was destroyed by fire on Monday night last. Loss about $1,000. No insurance. The origin of the fire is unknown. Mr. Hay has our sympathy, for the loss is a severe blow to him. J. A. Berkey, the well known Somer- set attorney, returned from the British Fsles Thursday last, after an absence of six weeks. He had a very pleasant and interesting time, and also reports a gain of ten pounds in weight. He has our thanks for some valued relies. Just as we go to press we learn that Marcellus Shartzer, of Coal Run, has been convicted of assault and battery in our county court. Shartzer is a striker and hit Wm. McMurdo with a brick, some time ago, while the latter was returning from his work at the mines. THE STAR office will have a larger and more attractive line of calendars this year than ever before. Business men should hold their orders until a representative calls. We can save you agents’ and jobbers’ profits, as we buy direct from the makers and importers. tf That awful grinding, stabbing pain in the back is from the kidneys. A dose of Pineules will cure it over night. | Pineules is a new discovery put up ina mew way. A delightful remedy and | specific for all Kidney and Bladder | troubles. Sold by Elk Lick Supply | Co. 12 Report says that Sam Buckwan was the recipient one day last week of =a draft for $4000, the present of a friend in Germany. The Gazette could not verify the rumor, but hopes it is ture, and wishes the amount was a hundred times greater, and then you would see Rockwood boom. —Rockwood Gazette. Delia Mayhew, a well known woman of Grantsville, Md., died at the home of a daughter residing in Jobnstown, Pa, one day last week. Deceased was aged nearly 63 years, and is survived by several sons and daughters. Her re- mains were taken to Grantsville for burial, Monday last. The funeral was conducted by Rev. E. S. Johnston, D. D., of Salisbury. Jas. Taylor, of Kendallville, Ind., was seriously diseased with kidney and bladder trouble for 20 years. He tested every known remedy without much benefit, until he used Pineules. This new discovery cured him, and Mr. Tay- lor advises all persons suffering from kidney or bladder trouble to get a bot- tle of Pineules at once. Sold by Elk Lick Supply Co. 12-1 Howard H. Keim, of Ladoga, Ind., in remitting for Tue Star, says: “Your paper is the only one of its kind. and I enjoy it. I am just home from a trip to Illinois. Farming land in the great corn belt is going ‘skyward; $200 an acre has been paid for a 200-acre farm in Illinois. Our farm has doubled in value since we bought it. Wish you could come over and help us eat melons. I wish you continued success.” Uncle Jakey Heinbaugh, who was thought to be approaching the end a few weeks ago, is showing his remark- able vitality by getting around again. Mr. Heinbaugh is 87 years old, and people who remember him in his prime say that he was the strongest man that ever trod Somerset county soil. Uncle Abe Yowler, who is a frisky boy com- pared with Uncle Jake, says that he saw the latter hitch himself to a stone- boatload of rock a goodsized horse had failed to pull and walk off with it. Other equally marvelous tales of his enormous strength in his prime are told.—Rockwood Gazette. Bee’s Honey and Tar is different from all other remedies offered for the relief of cough, lung and bronchial troubles. It contains Antiseptic properties that destroy the germs, and Solvent proper- ties that cut the phlegm, allowing it to be thrown off, moves the bowels gently. Cures Croup, Whooping Cough and Colds in one night. Sold by Elk Lick Supply Co. 12-1 Several people out in the vicinity of Barronvale have come up against the lightning rod swindler with disastrous force. One man paid $140 for having his buildings ornamented with copper rods and pretty steel points, and an- other $300. Which reminds us of Uncle Josh Weathersby’s experience with a lightning rod agent, who upon return- ing home from a neighbor’s found that the agent with whom he had signed a contract had “put seven rods on the house, six on the barn,two on the corn- crib, one on the crabapple tree, and had the old brindle cow up in a fence corner trying to put one on her.”—Rockwood Gazette. A new theory that is proving success- ful in the cure of Coughs, Lung and Bronchial affections is offered in Bee’s Laxative Honey and Tar. This remedy cuts the mucus, heals the membranous lining of the throat, lungs and bron- chial tubes; wards off Pneumonia and strengthens the system generally. Croup and Whooping Cough disappear before its use as snow before the sun- shine of Spring. 1t’s pleasant. Sold by Elk Lick Supply Co. 12-1 The wife of Oliver W. Boyer died about 8 o’clock Tuesday morning, the 13th inst., after a long and severe seige of dropsy. She was aged 72 years and three months. Mrs. Boyer resided in Salisbury nearly all her life. She was a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Glotfelty. She is survived by her husband and the following named children: Lloyd C. Boyer, Mrs. Ada Hilton, Mrs. M. J. Glotfelty, Mrs. S. R. McKinley and Mrs. Fred Otto. Two sons, Milton and Samuel, died some years ago. The funeral took place yesterday at 2 o’clock p. m., conducted by the pastor of the M. E. church of Meyersdale. The service was very short, as the deceased requested before her death that no lengthy sermon should be preached. Mrs. Boyer did not believe in eulogies of the dead, for which she deserves credit. Peace to her ashes. You cannot cure piles by external application. Any remedy to be effec- tive must be applied inside, right at the seat of the trouble. ManZan is put up in a collapsible tube, with a nozzle, so that it reaches inside and applies the remedy where it is most needed. Man- Zan strengthens the blood vessels and nerves so that piles are impossible. ManZan relieves the pain almost in- stantly, heals, soothes, cools and cures Sold by Elk Lick Supply Co. 12-1 They tell a good joke on our old friend and college chum, Bill Kyle. Biil is an enthusiastic member of the United Mine Workers, and he was at a union dance, one night last week, vig- orously turning an ice cream freezer. He was surrounded by a large crowd of men that were calling for cream, but Bill would say: “Just wait a few minutes more gentlemans, till the | cream’s froze.” Well, he churned and churned, the sweat rolling off of him in huge drops, but the cream refused to get solid. When nearly exhausted he opened the freezer tosee what was wrong, and then discovered that he had been turning a freezer that had no dasher in it. That was a pretty good joke on Bill. but the striking miners are all doing about the same foolish thing. They are trying to freeze the coal operators to their terms. but they are turning an old squeaky freezer that has neither ice nor dasher in it. WHAT IS LIFE? In the last analysis nobody knows, but we do know that it is under strict law. Abuse that law even slightly, pain results. Irregular living means derangement of the organs, resulting in Constipation, Headache or Liver trouble. Dr. King’s New Life Pills quickly readjusts this. It’s gentle, yet thorough. Only 25c¢. at E. H. Miller’s Drug Store. Female Swindler. A smooth female swindler is travel- ing in many sections under the guise of an agent selling medical books to women. Her method is to take orders for as many of a set as her beguiled victim sees fit to order—and sign a document to secure. Sometimes but two or three or four of the twelve booklets are subscribed for, but that doesn’t make any difference to the so- licitor or the unsuspecting woman whom she dupes. When the signed order turns up for cashing, it is a note or order, promising to pay for the whole twelve, as the signature is bona fide, the printed and signed order is not to be yvitiated by mere verbal testimony. celle CURED OF LAME BACK AFTER 15 YEARS OF SUFFERING. “I had been troubled with lame back for fifteen years,and I found a com- plete recovery in the use of Chamber- lain’s Pain Balm,” says John G. Bisher, Gillam, Ind. This liniment is also without an equal for sprains and bruises. It is for sale by E. H. Miller. A Pretty Wedding. As per previous announcement, the marriage of Mr. Samuel Pile Sebell, of Connellsville, and Miss Alice Augusta Smith, of Salisbury, took place in the Salisbury Brethren church, yesterday morning at 8:30 o’clock. The ceremony was performed by Rev. J. H. Knepper, of Meyersdale, and was witnessed by a large number of admiring friends. The church was handsomely decorated with flowers, autumn leaves, ete., and the bride and groom presented a most tasty and pret- ty appearance. The ceremony was very impressively and gracefully per- formed, and the whole affair was ex- ceedingly well executed. The happy couple are the recipients of many handsome presents, and they will be at home at 348 East Main street, Connellsville, Pa., after Oct. 12th. THE Star joins the many friends of the newly wedded couple in wishing them a long and happy life. i 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, Cough’s and Colds, W. H. Brown, of Leesville, Ind., en- dured death’s agonies from asthma; but this wonderful medicine gaye in- stant relief and soon cured him. He writes: “I now sleep soundly every night.” Like marvelous cures of Con- sumption, Pneumonia, Bronchitis, Coughs, Colds and Grip prove it’s matchless for all Throat and Lung troubles. Guaranteed bottles 50c. and $1.00. Trial bottles free at E. H. Mil- ler’s drug store. GAS FOUND AT CONFLUENCE. Johnstown People Have Struck Well of High Pressure in That Vicinity. Confluence, Sept. 13.—A gas field. the extent of which is not at present defi- nitely known, has been discovered in the vicinity of Confluence. A well drilled within two miles of the town has been corked now for several weeks. The discoverers of the field are Jehns- town people. They came here, it is claimed, with the intention of drilling a test well for oil. They were down less than 200 feet when a body of gas was struck thai prevented any further drilling for oil. A pressure that equals the best of the wells in the Southern Fayette county field, those on the in- side say, exists at the well. It was a month or so after the well was corked that the general public in this vicinity became aware of the fact that a gas field that may rival that of Green county and some of those in West Vir- ginia has been discovered in Lower Tuarkeyfoot township. The owners of the well have taken options on considerable territory sur- rounding the present well, but a great acreage is still in the hands of the farmers owning the ground. They have almost without exception refused to lease. A gas field of lasting supply at Con- fluence would be a boon to all the towns in Somerset county, to which it could be easily piped. CHAMBERLAIN'S COUGH REME- DY AIDS NATURE. Medicines that aid nature are always most effectual. Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy acts on this plan. It allays the cough, relieves the lungs, aids ex- pectoration, opens the secretions, and aids nature in restoring the system to a healthy condition. Sold by E. H, Miller. A Model Little Barn. Esquire Levi Lichliter recently erect- ed on his Gay street lot a barn of which he is justly proud. For neatness, sub- stantiability and convenience, it sur- passes anything in that line we have yet seen. The structure is 26x52 feet, and the material used is of the best. The framework is very substantial, and it is covered with fine surfaced lumber and a most excellent slate roof. + On the first floor is a commodious wagon shed and a number of the best constructed stalls we have ever seen, one of them a nicely arranged box stall, just the thing for a horse or cow if one should become sick. The horses can be led into or out of the wagon shed either through an in- terior or exterior door, and the shed is large enough to drive a team nnd wag- on into it before umhitching. The mangers, feed boxes, etc., are well tinned ro keep horses from gnaw- ing them, and the feeding entry is well equipped with spacious and convenient feed bins. On the second floor is room for a large amount of bay, and immediately above the wagon shed is a 35-barrel tank, which is supplied with water from the roof. This is convenient for washing buggies and wagons, and Mr. Lichliter also has a pipe leading the water from the tank to his kitchen door, where it can be tapped for wash- ing and scrubbing purposes. The building is nicely painted and | well supplied with windows, and we cannot see how a barn could be made more comfortable or convenient. It is worth going to see, especially if you are thinking of building a barn. THE STOMACH IS THE MAN. A weak stomach weakens the man, because it cannot transform the food he eats into nourishment. Health and strength cannot be restored to any sick man or weak woman without first re- storing health and strength to the stomach. A weak stomach cannot di- gest enough food to feed the tissues and revive the tired and run-down limbs and organs of the body. KXodol Dyspepsia Cure digests what you eat, cleanses and strengthens the glands and membranes of the stomach, and cures indigestion, dyspepsia and all stomach troubles. Sold by E.H. Mil- ler. Addison News. A. 8. Jeffreys died at his home in Ad- dison, Sunday evening, Sept. 11th, 1904, after an illness of about 15 days. He was in his 60th year, and lived in Ad- dison 34 years. He is survived by his wife and seven children, viz: C. N. Jeffreys, postmaster of Addison; Walt- er Jeffreys, of Pittsburg; Judson Jef- freys, pastor of M. E. church at Fair- chance, Pa.; Frank Jeffreys, of Mark- leysburg, Pa.; Albert Jeffreys, of Ad- dison, Pa.; Mrs. Harry McCulloh, of Elk Lick, Pa., and Ruth Jeffreys, of Addison, Pa. Mr. Jeffreys was a good citizen and will be greatly missed in this community. He was a stockhold- er and officer of the First National Bank of Addison. The funeral will take place on Tuesday, the 13th inst. We all extend our sympathy to the sorrowing friends. Our schools opened on Monday, Sept. 12th. It is reported here that the West Virginia and Garrett County telephone lines have consolidated. That is what they should have done long ago, and they should be put in better condition. Last Saturday Bert Rush, of Union- town. was here and went out hunting. He tied his horse to a tree, hitching it pretty long, and the animal got one leg over the hitching strap, strangling itself to death in that way. The horse was valued at $200. FROM 148 TO 92 POUNDS. One of the most remarkable cases of of a cold, deep-seated on the lungs, causing penumonia, is that of Mrs. Gertrude E. Fenner, Marion, Ind., who was entirely cured by the use of One Minute Cough Cure. She says: “The coughing and straining so weakened me that I ran down in weight from 148 to 92 pounds. I tried a number of rem- edies to no avail until I used One Min- ute Cough Cure. Four bottles of this wonderful remedy cured me entirely of the cough, strengthened my lungs and restored me to my normal weight, health and strength. Sold by E. H. Miller. Keep This in Mind. An exchange very truthfully says: Every man in every town during the course of his lifetime has to ask a favor of an editor—pot an exception to this rule. A man may may escape a doctor, keep clear of the court, but once in a lifetime, at least, every man has to go to the newspaper to have a certain piece put in—a death notice, a mar- riage notice, etc.,, to have a certain . piece kept out or to have his name printed in, or omitted from some item. It is therefore to your interest to treat the editor fairly. He desires to be fair ; he would rather do the right than the wrong thing; but if you give him a kick, the dent of it may be found in the top of your own hat some day, and you will never know how it got there. Don’t you think you are immune ; don’t think that Providence has especially favored you. - Your time will come, and when it does, it will be a fine in- vestment if you have a friend in the | editor’s office. Marx Wineland, President. Marx Wineland, Timothy Griffith, rrosteurG. mp. BA U.S. DEPOSITORY. Capital Stock and Surplus Fuad... ...cccoenivnrennaerecenes Sia $ 100,000.00 Deposits (OVEr)......oueenerer mmmmmomnserecaeces eridseseanee 960,000.00 Assets (OVeP)...ccoovenneseene et cmuwinsresianiscane ees ee eaannme. 1,120,00000 —..Savimgs Department... «__Three Per Cent. Interest Paid on Depasits._» Drafts on all parts of the world. . Aecounts of individuals and: firms invited. : Deposits sent by mail and alli correspondence given prompt aad careful at. This bank is the only United: States depository in the George’s Cinek Valley. Bank open Saturday nights from 7 to 10 o'clock. . OFFICERS: Roberdeau Annam. Cashier. DIRECTORS: Dumean Sinclair, Robert R. Henderson. Roberdeau Annan. Boys = all Attire! We have just received our large stock of boys’ fall cloth- ing and would be pleased to have you call soon and see All The Latest Styles! Our assortment of boys’ and girls’ school shoes is now com- Barchus & Livengood, dalishury, Pa. | EXIe 0, LI, S—Salisbury, Pa—~§ | oreten and Domestic “Coons. Finest of Groceries, Hardware, Miners’ Supplies, Shoes, Clothing, Ete. best Powder and Squibs a Specialty. Hes A The il For Butter And Fags. . A. Lichliter Headquarters for the finest bread makers in the world— MINNEHAHA and PILLSBURY’S BEST. FEED OF ALL KINDS. FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES. Green Groceries A Specialty On Saturdays. Call, give us a trial and have your goods delivered to your door promptly and in good condition. Grant St, Salisbury, Pa. of THE MEYERSDALE COMMER- CIAL COLLEGE will open APRIL 4, 1904. Fine courses of study ; experienc. HG | ed teachers; low expenses; new building. New ] ri Se ow of g classes every Monday. Write Foley’s Kidney Cure Foley’s Honey aaa Tar | makes kidneys and bladder right. for children,safe,sure. No opiates. [ | [