The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, May 04, 1905, Image 5

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Forelon and Domes
DRY
| "Goobs,
Finest of Groceries, Hardware, Miners’
Supplies, Shoes, Clothing, Etc.
The
best Powder and Squibs a Specialty.
iis!
for Buiter
|
P60 Sls Reh
OCCA NCL
Farmers Favorite Grain Drills,
Corn Drills, 1900 Wash Machines,
Syracuse, Perfection, Imperial and
Oliver Chill Plows, Garden Tools, §
Farm Tools, ete., and still offer &
Sel Buns in Boggs, Sip Wop, Ee.
f®~ Also headquarters for *Nutrioton-Ashland Stock &
Food, and all kinds of Horse and Cattle Powders.ggOur
prices are the lowest. -
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ZZ OLLI ALLIS
You will always get the best fresh Groceries.
We do not keep goods, we sell them ; therefore they are always
fresh. We have on hand the three leading brands of flour—
Minnehaha, Pillsbury’s Best and Vienna.
Call to see us, and you will be treated courteously and right.
, ols, Pl
Feed®Home-Made Chop!
Because it is pure.
best grades of corn and oats.
Made from the
Con-
tains no screenings or sweepings.
Tt is nothing but pure corn and oats, ground by the latest
improved methods. Try a hundred-weight, and you will have no
other. Manufactured by
WEST SALISBURY FEED CO,
We carry three kinds of Home-Made_ Chop
—Corn, Oats and Corn and Oats. Prices
very reasonable.
!
)
West Salisbury, Pa.
Is Good
BEER!
We use the best malt and hops, and pure Sand Spring
water. We produce a good, wholesome beverage.
Sold at All Leading Hotels.
|
Orders Promptly Delivered.
Wl 0
Just receiv-
ed a nice
line of
HON
AT $3.65 TO $4.25.
A nice line of Couches at $12.00 and up.
A nice line of Mattresses and Springs.
Yours for big bargains,
Wm. R. HASELBARTH.
|
The Windsor Hotel.
Between 12th and 13th Sts., on Filbert St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Three minutes walk from the Reading Ter-
minal. Five minutes walk from P. R. R.
Depot. European plan, $1.00 per day and up-
wards. American plan, $2.00 per day.
FRANK M.SHEIBLEY, Manager.
TVEENCES
Te
This store is a regu-
lar hive for convenien-
ces. When you are
tired, come in and rest.
Look about you and
note the many things,
useful and ornamental,
that you never thought
you wanted until you
Whether
a postage
saw them.
you buy
stamp or card, or noth-
ing at all, come in any-
No
trouble to show goods
way, and rest.
and quote prices.
{ie lk Lick Drug Sle
THE SALISBURY HACK LINE
o AND LIVERY.
C. W. Statler, - - - Proprietor.
L&@=Two hacks daily, except Sunday, be-
tween Salisbury and Meyersdale, connect-
ing with trains east and west.
Schedule:
Hack No. 1 leaves Salisbury at........ SA. M
Hack No. 2 leaves Salisbury at........ 1P.M
Returning, No 1 leaves Meyersdale at 1 P.M
No.2 leaves Meyversdaleat............. 6 P.M
L@First class rigs for all kinds of trav-
el,at reasonable prices.
STANDARD
Sewing
Machine
STANDARD GRAND. SWELL FRONT.
LOCK AND CHAIN STITCH.
TWO MACHINES IN ONE.
BALL BEARING STAND WHEBL.
— 2150 3 manufacture sewing machines that
i The Standard Rotary rugs <3 Hen while
other machines make 200.
Ap ly to our local dealer, or if there is no
er in your town, ad:
Standard Sewing Machine Co.,
CLEVELAND, OHIO.
Reich & Plock, Agts., Meyersdale, Pa.
ORIGINAL
LAXATIVE
avo TAR
An improvement over all Cough,
Lung and Bronchial Remedies.
Cures Coughs, Strengthens the
Lungs, gently moves the Bowels.
Pleasant to the taste and good
alike for Young and Old.
Prepared by PINLULE MEDICINE CO.,Chicage, U.S.A.
SOLD BY ELK LICK SUPPLY CO.
i)
ox Um E2D CE Amy ] 4
Safe, Quick, Reliable Regulator
| Superior to other remedies sold at high prices.
i Cure aranteed. Successfully used by over
200,000 Wemen. Price, 23 Cents, drug-
{| gists or by mall. Testimonials & booklet free.
Dr. LaFrance, Philadelphia, Pa,
Kodol Dyspepsia Gure
Digests what you eat.
Foley’s Honey ana Tar
cures colds, prevents pneumonia.
Normal Notes.
The normal at Boynton opens May
8th. Examination at the close by the
County Superintendent. Reductions
to two or more from same family.
There will be as many instructors as
necessary, all capable of teaching high-
er branches. 5-4
FOR SALE!—I offer for sale at a
bargain, a 2-horse Brown farm wagon.
Also some choice varieties of early
seed potatoes at reasonable prices.
: W. B. STEVANUS,
tf * Elk Lick, Pa.
TO OWNERS OF MARES.
Persons desiring to breed
mares to the celebrated Perch-
eron Stallion, Terminus, No.
31567, will please take notice
that from this date the said stal-
lion will stand at the stable of
the West Salisbury Feed Co.,
West Salisbury, Pa.,- instead of
the barn of Daniel J. Meyers.
Terminus Horse Co.
April 27th, 1905. tf.
ep en
BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD.
SPECIAL LOW FARES.
——SUMMER SEASON 1905.—
ASBURY PARK, N. J.—National Ed-
ucational Association. Tickets on
sale Suly 1,2 and 38, good returning
until July 10, inclusive.
ATLANTIC CITY,CAPE MAY, 0CEAN
CITY and SEA ISLE CITY, N.J,
OCEAN CITY, MD., and REHO-
BOTH BEACH, DEL.—Special Ex-
cursions operated June 22, July 6 and
20, August 3,717 and 31. Tickets good
sixteen days.
BALTIMORE, MD.—United Society
Christian Endeavor, July 5 to 10.
BUFFALO, N. Y.—Benevolent and
Protective Order of Elks, Grand
Lodge, July 11-15.
DENVER, COL.—Epworth League.
Very Low Rates. Tickets on sale
June 29 to July 3, good returning un-
til July 17, inclusive.
DENVER, COL.—G. A. R. Encamp-
ment, September 4-7.
PORTLAND, ORE.—Lewis & Clark
Centennial Exposition, June 1-Octo-
ber 15.
Special announcements from time to
time.
For detailed information call on or
address Ticket Agents Baltimore &
Ohio Railroad. 5-26
EPWORTH LEAGUE CONVENTION,
DENVER, COL., JULY 5-9, VIA
BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD.
——VERY LOW RATES. ——
Fron all points East of the Ohio
River, tickets will be sold June 29 to
July 3, inclusive, valid returning to and
including July 17, 1905.
Extension of return limit to August
11 may be obtained on deposit of ticket
and payment of Fifty Cenfs.
For full particulars, address nearest
B. & O. Ticket Agent or C. W. Bassett,
'‘G. P. A, B. & O. R. R,, Baltimore, Md.
6-15 San
A Man Like the Late Dr. C.G.
Stutzman.
DuBois has one of the most generous
hearted citizens to be found anywhere.
The poor, the cripple, the unfortunate
and all classes of suffering humanity
strike a soft spot in his great heart.
This morning, as an incident of one of
his charitable acts, he saw a little boy
on the street poorly shod, and taking
him to one of the shoe stores had him
fitted with a pair of neat and comfor-
table shoes. This is only one of the
many kind acts by the man, and bis
silence makes them the more a matter
of heartfelt sympathy than one of show.
The man is Dr. McClellan.—DuBois
Express.
Sam Jones on Newspapers.
Speaking of newspapers, the Rev. Sam
Jones says: “If I wanted toget a right
square judgment, I'd rather go to a
newspaper office than in a court of
justice. No man whose life is true,
pure and just is afraid of the newspa-
per press of America. They are the
best detective force in the country to-
day. They have punctured more
shams, and so far as I am concerned,
I say take off the bridle and let them
go. The only ones that will be hurt
are shams and frauds. And if you
think the newspapers print too much
of a sensational kind, don’t you read it.
The papers need to be reformed, but
the people have got to reform first.
Newspapers are printed for money, and
to suit their patrons. If- you think
they should be run on a high moral
platform, just reform yourself and the
papers will follow suit.
ed
SAVED BY DYNAMITE.
Somyetimes, a flaming city is saved by
dynamiting a space that the fire can’t
cross. Sometimes, a cough hangs on so
long, you feel as if nothing but dyna-
mite would cure it. Z. T. Gray, of Cal-
houn, Ga., writes: “My wife had a very
aggravated cough, which kept her
awake nights. Two physicians could
not help her; so she took Dr. King’s
New Discovery for Consumption,
Coughs and Colds, which eased her
cough, gave her sleep, and finally cured
her.” Strictly scientific cure for brone
chitis and La Grippe. At E. H. Mil-
ler’s drug store, price 50c. and $1.00;
guaranteed. Trial bottle free. 6-1
A Few “Yellowjacket” Stings.
From the Moravian Falls (N. C.) Yellow-
jacket.
The best way to get the advantage in
a law suit is to keep out of it.
Yes it’s perfectly proper for Russia
to charge up the cost of the war to the
“running expenses.”
If God made the Democrat at all, he
must have made him blind, and the
devil supplied the eyes.
Bryan’s silence on the silver ques-
tion these days is so loud that it is at-
tracting lots of attention.
The fossilized party is very much op-
posed to expansion, with one excep-
tion—it would like to expand its vote.
Democracy’s mind of “paramount
issues” is about exhausted, but she bas
a healthy graveyard full of dead ones.
Stick your Yellow Jacket in your
pocket and earry it about with you to
loosen up the moss on your neighbors’
backs.
Someone has discovered that the
Japs do not use chairs. And they are
not letting the Russians use them very
much, either.
Two men in history have made great
records fighting with a jaw bone.
Samson was one, and—well, you know
the other one.
Every time the Democrats have got-
ten hold of the governmental base-ball
bat they have made a hit—they hit the
botom of the treasury.
About the only Democratic principle
still remaining in this country is whis-
key, and they say that ain’t half as
good as it “used to was.”
If you want to know what a man’s
politics are, ask him. If he begins to
blink his eyes and stutter you may call
him a Democrat and pass on.
If there are any tears in Heaven,
we'll bet Tom Jefferson has wept his
nose red over the erring ways of the
party that still persists in calling him
its father.
Since starting the Yellow Jacket we
have said lots of pretty hard things
about the Democratic party, but if we
have said anything we are sorry for,
we are glad of it.
«1 still have great faith in the peo-
ple,” says Commoner Bryan. It seems
like a sort of one-sided confidence, as
the people have never shown any dis-
position to reciprocate.
“Should idiots be killed at birth?”
asks a carious clergyman. Well, what
are you going to do about it when you
don’t find it out till they grow up and
get into the ministry to ask darn
fool questions?
Judge Parker’s team of horses ran
away at Poughkeepsie, N. Y., a few
days ago, and it is said they broke all
time records for fast running. What a
pity it was—for the Judge—that he
didn’t drive that team in the Presi-
dential race!
CLEARED FOR ACTION.
When the body is cleared for action,
by Dr. King’s New Life Pills, you can
tell it by the bloom of health on the
cheeks ; the brightness of the eyes; the
firmness of the flesh and museles; the
buoyancy of the mind. Try them. At
E. H. Miller's drug store, 25 cents. 6-1
-—
A Fine Bunch of Fat Cattle.
On Tuesday we had the pleasure of
looking at the finest bunch of faf steers
we have seen in a long while. There
were nine head of them, and they were
raised by Norman D. Hay and sold to
John Winters. a well known cattle
dealer who resides at Midlothian, Alle-
gany county, Md. The cattle were
two-year-old Durbhams, and their aver-
age weight was a little over 1200
pounds. They surely were beauties,
and a credit to buyer and seller alike.
Mr. Hay is one of the foremost farm-
ers of Elk Lick township, and the
bunch of steers mentioned were con-
sidered the finest in all Somerset
county for their age. Naturally, he
held them at a high figure, and Mr.
Winters, who is an expert judge of
cattle, and always on the lookout for
the best, was the first man to offer him
the desired price.
Mr. Winters has been buying
in Somerset county for about 30 years,
and it is said of him that he never
broke faith of went back on a bargain
made with any of our farmers. Fur-
thermore, he always pays top-notch
prices for good cattle, and that is why
be succeeds in handling such a large
percentage of the choicest cattle raised
in Somerset county.
Same Everywhere.
Two men from one of the townships
were “ripping up” a neighbor to-day on
the street corner. A third man who is
well acquainted with the whole lot of
them was asked: “What did Smith
ever do to those fellows, or what’s
wrong with him, that he seems to be so
unpopular?” The third man, who is
perfectly truthful, replied: “There’s
nothing wrong with Smith at all, and
the only thing he ever did to those fel-
lows is to get along better than they
have.”—Johnstown Tribune.
YES, WE CAN |—We can supply cuts
suitable for any and all kinds of ad-
vertisements and job printing. Call at
Tae STAR office and see our large as-
gsortment of specimens. We can show
you cuts of nearly everything that ex-
ists and many things that do not exist
cattle
we can supply it at a very low price.
Mining in the George’s Creek Re-
gion Contrasted With Mining in
the Elk Lick Region.
For some time both company author-
ities and miners in Ocean No. 7 of the
Consolidation Coal Company have
made effort to pass the 4,000-ton mark
in daily output.
Tkursday of this week, 27th inst.
they succeeded, the output of coal for
that day reaching in this region the
unprecedented single-mine total of
4,148.63 tons !—over 9 million pounds!
—or over 13000 pounds mined and
loaded by each miner!—Frostburg
Mining Journal.
From the above it will be seen what
a George’s Creek miner can make in a
day at 60 cents per ton, when the day’s
work is unprecedentedly large, and
the miner loads 13,000 pounds, or 6}
tons of coal in a day. In this region
that amount of coal is considered a
light day’s work, and it is very com-
mon in the Elk Lick region for one
man to load from 10 to 15 tons of coal
in a day. Even at five cents a ton un-
der George’s Creek price, the Elk Lick
miner has a great advantage in work
and wages over the George’s Creek
miner.
FORGET ABOUT YOUR STOMACH.
If your digestion is bad the vital or-
gans of your body are not fed and
pourished as they should be. They
grow weak and invite disease. Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure digests what you eat,
cures indigestion and all stomach
troubles. You forget you have a
stomach from the very day you begin
taking it. This is because it gets a rest
—recuperates and’gradually grows so
strong and healthy that it troubles you
no more. KE. L. Babcock, Amherst,
Minn, says: “I have taken a great
many remedies for indigestion but have
found nothing equal to Kodol Dyspep-
sia Cure.” Xodol digests what you eat,
cures Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Sour
Stomach, Belching, Heartburn and all
Stomach Troubles. Its preparation is
the result of many years of research.
Sold by E. H. Miller. 5-1
Addison News.
April 24th.—Mrs. Ehzabeth Stark,
whose maiden name was Wright, died
at her home in Petersburg, recently, at
the age of 84 years and one month.
She was the last of thirteen children
known as the Wright family, and they
all lived to reach a very great age.
Deceased was a member of the M. E.
church, and her funeral was the most
largely attended of any funeral held in
Addison for years. She is survived by
four sons. The funeral services were
conducted by Rev. Wilkinson, in the
M. E. church of Addison. Mrs. Stark
was highly esteemed by all who knew
her, and the bereaved relatives have
the sympathy of the whole community.
Mrs. Charles Mitchell, of Friends-
ville, Md., is very sick at the home of
Mrs. Mary Thomas. At this writing
she is not expected to live very long,
but we all hope for her recovery.
Last Sunday Harry and Ray Rishe-
barger were at home visiting their
father and sister.
Jasper Augustine, of Uniontown, is
here this week on business. Jasper is
always a welcome visitor in Addison.
We were very sorry to learn of the
illness of the editor’s wife, in last week’s
STAR.
A CREEPING DEATH.
Blood poison creeps up towards the
heart, causing death. J. E. Stearns.
Belle Plaine. Minn., erites that a friend
dreadfully injured his hand, which
swelled up like blood poisoning. Buck-
len’s Arnica Salve drew out the poison,
healed the wound, and saved his life.
Best in the world for burns and sores.
25¢. at E. H. Miller’s drug store. 6-1
Houses Sink Into Bowels of Earth.
Somerset, Pa., April 27.—Last night
between 11 and 12 o'clock, at a point
between Berlin and Meyersdale, two
houses, situated side by side, sunk into
the ground so that the chimneys alone
are visible. The neighborhood was
highly excited by this catastrophe and
a crowd collected in a few minutes. It
was reported that the collapse of the
houses was the result of an earthquake
shock, and the residents of that section
were apprehensive lest a repetition
of the shock might bury the entire sec-
tion in the bowels of the earth. Crowds
of persons from all parts of the county
journeyed to Meyersdale to view the
occurrence. Several persons thorough-
ly investigated the vicinity and gave as
their opinion that the collapse of the
dwelling houses was caused by the re-
moval of a vein of coal which passad
directly under the site of the building.
Although the houses were occupied by
several families, all the occupants were
warned by the ominous sounds, which
preceded the collapse and made their
escape unhurt.
A Modern Instance.
There was a man in our town,
And he was wondrous wise.
He jumped into a bramble bush
And scratched out both his eyes.
No matter what kind of a cut you want cartridge paper for the miners.
{ And when he found his eyes were out
| He had a happy notion—
| He got his eyes back in again
With Doctor Soakem’s lotion.
| (For sale at all drug stores.)
1
| OLD PAPERS for sale at Tee STAR
| office. They are just the thing for
| pantry shelves, wrapping paper and
Five
| cents buys a large roll of them. tf
Fon i
A RR ear Sad
Pr a a
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