Y, . $ 100,000.00 .. 960,000.00 .- 1,120,000.00 )Sits._e d careful at- ek Valley. Cashier. enderson. et thes by a collar ¢&& that lies § doesn’t e shoul- t “Live- #8 the lit- form a it 9" Ni. = 4 Y 00DS, [iners’ The ty. 1 r Butter . \nd Kgs. = ) COIS. | duce. air share of your uy, Pa, ot Salve : | - 15; Sores. 'y and Tar e. No opiates. | { S.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. War on Weeds! THISTLE-INE is sure death to Canada Thistles _and all other naxious vegetation. ers, k, cemetery and hiznwa commissioners, r ers who have given i — h test. It a d ch ih th a thoro! is er and ches; ray the and weedsin w. driveways and street gutter with THISTLE INE icy ae then) ok yard hich take prid you have a lawn or 1% whic a e pride, you will find THISTLE-INE a constant friend in SS Ryiay aon Burdock, Wild Lettuce, or other unsightly weeds. You run no risk of failure in ord: g, for when used according to directions, we guarantee the results to be entirely satisfactory. Sena for Circular. Le LINDGREN CHEMICAL C0., No. 10 S. lonia Street, Grand Rapids, Mich. | Rockers for the Home AT FACTORY PRICES Shipped direct to the Customer. “HERO” Fanning MILL We guarantee that the HERO will do better work in the separ- ation of succotash and cleaning of | grain, than any other fanning mill. 5 Solid Comfort." ' {complete for cleaning and separ- | Jating all the grains raised in your Xn 'llocality. Write for prices. We Go Polianod, Genin Leather UP. Bolstered Bp + Goncor Back, 7 | | | pay the freight. TWIN CITY SEPARATOR CO. VY k Fer rice 85.00 cach. finish, com. Minneapolis, Minn. Our line of Rockers has an established repu- tation for Slogan h, fort and dur. ability. for complete Catalogue. TOMLINSON CHAIR MFG. CO., “The Chair House.” High Point, N. C. 'Y and Tar ps the cough. of le at THE STAR ; the thing for | ing paper and - e miners. Five of them. 174 » Foley's | Cures All Kidney and All screens furnished with the mill} 152.00 Worth Sent Free. Dr. Miles, the Great Specialist in Diseases of the Heart, Nerves, Stomach and Kidneys. Will Send a Trial Course of His New and Remarkable Treatment Free. When an experienced physician offers to give away $2.50 Treatments for dis- eases of the heart, nerves, stomach, kidneys or iropsy, it is conclusiye evi- dence that he has great faith init. And when hundreds of prominent men and women freely testify to his unusual skill and the superiority of his New Special Treatments his liberality is cer- tainly worthy of serious consideration. That Franklin Miles, M. D,, LL. B,, is one of the world’s most successful phy- sicians is proven by hundreds of wor- derful cures of well-known people. One patient cured after failure of eleven Grand Rapids physicians, one after being given up by thirty physi- cians, one after nine of the leading ductors in New York City, Philadelphia and Chicago failed. : The late Prot. J. 8. Jewell, M. D,, editor of the Journal of Mental and Nervous Diseases says: “by all means publish your surprising results.” Prof. J. P. Ross, M. D., Ex-Presi- dent of Rush Medical College, wrote in 1874: |%Dr. Miles has taken two courses of my privateinstructions in diseases of the heart and lungs.” Mr. Truman DeWeese, editor of the Chi- cago Times-Herald, states: «Dr. Milescured me of years of inherited headache and diz- ziness.” The well known manufacturer of Freeport, I1L.. J. C. Beott, says: “I had fruit- leasly spent thousands of dollars on phy- slcians until I consulted Dr. Miles.” _ One thousand remarkable testimoni- als sent upon request. : As all may have the Doctor's Book, valuable advice and $250 worth of treatment, especially prepared for their case, free, ns. s- trial we would advise every sick one to send for them at once. Give a careful description of yoursymp- toms. Address, Dr. Franklin Miles, Dept. G., Grand Dispensary, 413 to 423 Main St., Elkhart, Ind. 10-20 wOPIATE WO NEADACHE PILLS HEADACHE - ‘Cured at. ence. Headache Pill without an Oplats. Will break np the worst colds and fave relieve Neuralgia, Rheumat- fon ana Nervo sleeplessness . Fries 35e. n box at your drgught. r druggist (or trader) does not aki 3 Hem Hig we f prio. of . | RON-OPIN HBEAPACHE PILL CO, Westbrook, Malne. Kidney) Bladder Diseases GC Uy Ir o Foley's Kidney Cure will positively cure any case of Kidney or Bladder disease that 1s not beyond the reach of medicine. No medicine can do more. If you notice any irregularities, commence taking - Foley's Kidney Cure at once and avoid a fatal ‘malady. A Herehant Oured After Having Given Up Hope. Foléy & Ce., Chicago. Gentlemen:—] was afflicted with Kidney and Bladder trouble for six years and had tried numerous preparations without getting any relict and had given up hope of ever being cured when FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE was recommended to me. After using one bottle I could feel the effect of it, and after taking six fifty-cent bottles, I was cured of Kidney and Bladder trouble and have not felt so well for the past twenty years and I owe it to FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE. James Smith, Bentons Ferry, W. Va. A Veteran of the Slvil War Cured After Ton Years of Suff ering. R. A. Cray, J.P., of Oakville, Ind, writes:— ¢‘Most of the time for ten years I was confined to my ded with some disease of the kidneys. severe I could not move part of the time. I consulted the best medical skill available, but got no relief until FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE was recommended to me. I am grateful to be able to say thatit entirely cured me.” Refuse Substitutes It was so Two Sizes, 60 Cents and $1.00 SOLD AND RECOMMENDED BY — E. H. MILLER, ELK LICK, PENNA, TWENTY-TWO MEDALS. Unpreeedented Award to the Balti- more & Ohio Railroad Company at the St. Louis World’s Fair. Sr. Louis, Oct. 15—The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad exhibit at the Lou- isiana State Purchase Exposition has won all the medals that eould possibly be awarded to a railroad company. The highest award of the Exposition, earrying with it the premier honor in each department, or building, is the special gold medal for the best, most complete and most attractive exhibit. This award was to be recommended by the Department Jury, and ratified by the Superior Jury. In the department of Transportation Exhibits, the De- partment Jury, with Vice President Kendrick, of the Santa Fe System, at its head, was composed of distinguish- ed railway men, engineers, mechanical and other experts of this country, Ger- many, England, France, Austria and Japan. The Superior Jury has for its head Governor Francis, while Director of Exhibits Skiff is First Vice Presi- dent, and the membership throughout of the most eminent and representative men at the Exposition, including the Commissioners General of the Foreign Countries, the Presidents of Depart- ment Juries; Chiefs of Departments, ete. Naturally, the rivalry was strong for the ¥pecial gold medal, of which there is but one in each building, the holder winning with it the Exposition first honors, there being none higher and so exclusive. : The award was to the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company by the unani- mous vote of the full Department Jury, and like great distinction was accord- ed by the full Superior Jury. The Grand Prize, another gold medal, was awarded the Baltimore and Ohio on its Section as a whole, and denotive of the highest distinction in its class or group. In conjunction with the Grand Prize, eighteen collaborators’ medals were awarded; these going to those who had contributed to the striking educational value and general com- pleteness of the Baltimore and Ohio Sectiof. The Group Jury, followed by the endorsement of Department Jury, and ratified by the Superior Jury, awarded a gold medal of honor to Ma- jor J. G. Pangborn, Director of the Ex- hibit, in recognition of the origination and completion of the great historical collection, and the scheme and perfec- tion of its installation. / Additional to the foregoing, and dis- tinctive of the honors awarded the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company in another building, is the Grand Prize and gold medal in the group of “En- gineering and Architecture” in the Department of Liberal Arts. this being on the model of the new Union Station at Washington, which is the central feature of the B. & O. Section in the Department of Transportation. The “Sweepstakes,” as it might be termed, in the fourteen acres of exhib- its in the Department of Transporta- tion, the Grand Prize in the railway group of the same building, another Grand Prize in the Department of Lib- eral Arts, and the medal of honor—four gold medals of the very highest class, and eighteen other medals, most of them gold, is the Company’s Louisiana Purchase Exposition record. It is be- yond paralleling, for it is topped by the Special Gold Medal for “the best, the most eomplete, and the most attrae- tive installation,” and there is but one such medal. —e— atl er MORE SOUTH PENN NEWS. Weiter, Who Speaks Knowingly, Says it Will be Built. The following account of the build- ing of another railroad through Somer- set county appeared in a recent issue of the Bedford Hawkeye: “A personal letter received by the managing editor of the Hawkeye from a friend in Washington brings infor- mation that there is not a shadow of doubt as to the building of the new Baltimore and Ohio line from Somerset county by way of Bedford to Hancock. Md. This was predicted by the Hawk- eye several months ago and later the same statement was made by the Pitts- burg and Philadelphia papers. “The Washington writer says that many public improvements have been delayed by the unfavorable business conditions of the past three months, but that times are brighter, and the in- dications are that railroad enterprises will be pushed. The uncertainty as to the Presidential election has, he says, had but little to do with sueh matters. The construction of the new line over the Sonth Penn right-of-way has be- ‘some a necessity and cannot long be delayed. The railway people have viewed the situation in every light, and there is but one thing for the Baltimore and Ohio to do, and that is to build and build quick. “The writer of the letter confident- ly declares that one of the important events in Bedford county next spring will be the opening of the new line from Somerset to Mann’s Choice. Bal- timore and Ohio trains will then be run by way of the latter place to Cum- berland, where they will take the main line. Work on the Hancock extension, NOTICE! The Big Rush Now Over at the Reitz Applebutter Factory. All who wish to get applebutter made can now get prompt service, as the big rush is over. Look up the ap- ple markets and see in how many places apples are scarce. It will pay you to make use of all your apples. Bring them to the factory and have them converted into money. The crop may be short the next few years. The factory will be open until further no- tice. Thanking you for past patronage, we solicit a continuance of the same. tf H. H. Reitz & Sox. WANTED !—A good, honest man knowing himself to be indebted to Tax STAR to do some work for the editor to apply on account. Our job will last a few days. Only our honest delin- quents are expected to answer this ad- vertisement. JUST RECEIVED a carload of Salt which we are selling at rock-bottom prices. West SaLisBury Fxep Co. FOR STONEWARE of all descrip- tions, call at the West Salisbury Feed Store, West Salisbury, Pa. We are selling these goods very low. tf GOOD GIRLS WANTED !—One for kitchen and one for dining room work. Apply at Hay’s Hotel or address the proprietor, D. I. Hay, Elk Lick, Pa. tf BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD -—T0 THE— WORLD'S FAIR. VERY LOW RATES. Various forms of excursion tickets to 8t. Louis vis Baltimore & Ohio Rail- road now on sale from. Salisbury Junetion, as follows: SEASON TICKETS, good to return un- til December 15, 1904, to be sold daily at rate of $28.30 round trip. SIXTY DAY Excursion Tickets, final limit not later than December 15, 1904, to be sold daily at rate of $23.55 round trip. FIFTEEN DAY Excursion Tickets, to be sold daily at rate of $19.55 round trip. VARIABLE ROUTE EXCURSION TICKETS, either season or sixty day, will be sold going via one direct route and returning via another di- rect route, full information concern- ing which can be obtained from Ticket Agent. STOP-OVERS not exceeding ten days at each point will be allowed at Washington, Deer Park, Mountain Lake Park, Oakland, Mitchell, Ind. (for French Lick and West Baden Springs), Cincinnati and Chicago within return limit, upon notice to conductor and deposit of ticket with Depot Ticket Agent immediately up- on arrival. STOP-OVERS not exceeding ten days will be allowed at St. Louis on all one-way (except Colonists’ Tickets to the Pacific Coast) and round-trip tickets reading to points beyond St. Louis, upon deposit of ticket with Validating Agent and payment of fee of $1.00. Three Solid Vestibuled trains are run daily from New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington via Park- ersburg and Cincinnati to St. Louis. Three Solid Vestibuled trains are run daily from Pittsburg, Wheeling and Columbus via Cincinnati to St. Louis. Magnificent. coaches, sleeping cars, ob- servation cars and unexcelled dining car service. . For illustrated folder, time table and full information, call at Ticket Office, Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. Executor’s Notice. Estate of Isabel Boyer, late of Salisbury Borough, deceased. Letters testamentary on the above estate having been granted to the undersigned by the proper authority, notice is hereby given to all persons indebted to said estate to make immediate payment, and those hav- ing claims against the same to present them duly authenticated for settlement at the residence of 8. R. McKinley, in the Borough of Salisbury, Somerset county, Pa., on Saturday, the 5th day of Nevember, 1904 : ADA HILTON, Hay & HAY, Attorneys. kxecutrix. Saptember 27th, 1904 11-3 No Encouragement Here. On Saturday morning Editor Alex B. Grof, of the Democrat, and C. F. Uhl, Jr.. candidate for Congress, represent ing the remnant of a party known as Democratic, which is said to have flour- i<hed in Somerset county during an re- mote period not remembered by even the oldest inkabitant, came over from the county seat and boarded Duquesne, Saturday morning, their destination being Uniontown, where they went with the avowed intention, as Alex put it, of “converting Fayette county.” At the station, before leaving, the two en- thusiastic supporters of Parker and Davis certainly received poor encour- agement when they endeavored to dish out Democratic doctrine to a bunch of local railroad employees who were there waiting to go out on their several runs. Railroad men, as a general rule, are an intelligent, well posted class of people, and the soup-house days of Cleveland times remsin green in the memories of the majority of them. They are perfectly satisfied with con- ditions as they at present exist, and as a consequence their vote, both here and elsewhere, will be virtually a unit for Roosevelt and Fairbanks and the entire Republican ticket. The sally on the part of candidate “Charley” Uhl that Teddy would finish in “also ran” company fell flat, and Alex’s plea that “your uncle Gassaway” started life as a railroad employe did not serve to raise the feeling of sym- where the railroad employe would to- pathetic inspiration to that degree | Davis, who, upon information, volun- teered by a conductor happening along, paid his railway employes with checks, and then discounted them at a rate as high as twenty per cent. at one of his numerous banks. No, Messrs. Grof and Uhl, if you find picking no easier in Fayette than you have found it in Somerset county, we are satisfied that you will not even finish in “also ran” company.—Meyers- dale Republican. A LOVE LETTER Would not interest you if you’re look- ing for a guaranteed Salve for Sores, Burns or Piles. Otto Dodd, of Ponder, Mo., writes: “I suffered with an ugly gore for a year, but a box of Bucklen’s Arnica Salve cured me. It’s the best Salve on earth. 25c at E. H. Miller's Drug Store. 11-1 LAMENT OF THE IRISH EMIGRANT. BY LADY DUFFERIN. Lady Dufferin, poet, who was born in 1807 and died in 1867, was the author of many popular songs and ballads, of which the one given below is the best known. She was the granddaughter of the dramatist and orator, Richard Brinsley Sheridan, and mother of the late diplomat, the Marquis of Dufferin and Ava. I’m sittin’ on the stile, Mary, Where we sat gide by side On a bright May mornin’ long ago, When first you were my bride; The corn was springin’ fresh and green, And the lark sang loud and high; And the red was on your lip, Mary, And the love-light in your eye. The place is little changed, Mary; The day is bright as then; The lark’s loud song is in my ear, And the corn is green again; But I miss the soft clasp of your hand, And your breath, warm on my cheek ; And T still keep list’nin’ for the words You nevermore will speak. "Tis but a step down yonder lane, And the little church stands near,— The church where we were wed, Mary; I see the spire from here. But the graveyard lies between, Mary, And my step might break your rest,— For I've laid you, darling, down to sleep, With your baby on your breast. I'm very lonely now, Mary, For the poor make no new friends; Bat, O, they love the better still The few our Father sends! And you were all I had, Mary,— My blessin’ and my pride ; There's nothing left to care for now, Since my poor Mary died. Yours was the good, brave heart, Mary, That still kept hoping on, When the trust in God had left my soul, And my arm’s young strength was gone; There was comfort ever on your lip,— And the kind look on your brow,— I bless you, Mary, for that same, Though you cannot hear me now. 1 thank you for the patient smile When your heart was fit to break,— When the hunger pain was gnawin’ there, And you hid it for my sake; 1 bless you for the pleasant word, When your heart was sad and sore,— 0, I’m thankful you are gone, Mary, Where grief can’t reach you more! I’m biddin’ you a long farewell, My Mary—kind and true! But I'll not forget you, darling, In the land I’m goin’ to; They say there's bread and work for all, And the sun shines always there,— But Ill not forget old Ireland, Were it fifty times as fair! And often in those grand old woods Pll sit, and shut my eyes, And my heart will travel back again To the place where Mary lies; And Pll think I see the little stile Where we sat side by side, And the springin’ corn and the bright May morn, When first you were my bride. A BARGAIN FOR FARMERS. The New-York Tribune Farmer, na- tional illustrated agricultural weekly of twenty large pages, has no superior as a thoroughly practical and helpful publication for the farmer and every member of his family, and the publish- ers are determined to give it a circula- tion unequalled by any: paper of its class in the United States. Knowing that every enterprising, up- to-date farmer always reads his own local weekly newspaper, The New- York Tribune Farmer has made an ex- ceedingly liberal arrangement which enables us to offer the two papers at 80 low a price that no farmer can afford to lose the opportunity. The price of The New-York Tribune Farmer is $1.00 a year and THE SoMER- sET County STAR is $1.50 a year, but both papers will be sent for a full year if you forward $1.50 to THE STAR, Elk Lick, Pa. Send your name and address to The New-York Tribune Farmer, New York City, and a specimen copy of that paper will be mailed to you. tf H@ CLOCK REPAIRING, Gun smithing and many other kinds of re- pair work done neatly, promptly and day rather have the motive power however, will be pushed as speedily as possible, and it is stated that the fall of 1905 will witness the opening of the new road through to the Potomac at Haneock.” | white-leaded and dead in the round- houses than bright and shining, throb- | bing with energy out on the road—and all this for a complimentary vote for| tf substantially. All work left at the | Theopb. Wagner residence will be | promptly attended to, at reasonable | prices, by the undersigned. Bex. WAGNER, Salisbury, Pa. eit ul ERA, TRS YS RRS a arm sor sine C—O
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers