The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, June 01, 1905, Image 8

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RERKEY & SHAVER,
Attorneys-at-Liaw,
SOMERSET, PA.
Coffroth & Ruppel Building.
ERNEST 0. KOOSER,
Attorney-At-Law,
SOMERSET, PA.
R.E. MEYERS, DISTRICT ATTORNEY.
Attorney-at-Law,
BOMERSET, PA.
Office in Court House.
W. H. KOONTZ. J. G. OGLE
KOONTZ & OGLE
Attorneys-At-Law,
SOMERSET, PENN’A
Office opposite Court House.
VIRGIL R. SAYLOR,
Attorney-at-L.aw,
SOMERSET, PA.
Office in Mammoth Block.
E. H. PERRY,
Physician and Surgeon,
SALISBURY, PENN’A.
Office corner Grant and Union Streets
B.& 0. R.R. SCHEDULE.
Summer Arrangement.—In Ef-
fect Sunday, May 21, 1905.
Under the new schedule there will be 14
daily passenger trains on the Pittsburg Di-
vision, due at Meyersdaie as follows:
Fast Bound.
*No. 48—Accommodation ........... 11:08 A. M
asNo. 6—Fast Line................... 11:30 A. M
*No. 14—Through train............. 4:54 P. MX
+No. 18—Accommodation........... 5:81 P.M
*No.12—Duquesne Limited........... 9:35 P. M
*No.208—Johnstown Accommo.......7:45 P. M
West Bound.
*No. 11—Duquense................... 5:58 A.M
+No. 18—Accommodation .......... 8:18 A. M
*No. 15—Through train..... vee. 11:20 A.M
*No. 5—Fast Line.......... 428 PX
*No. 49—Accommodation ........... 4:50P. M
*No0.207—Johnstown Accommo...... 6:20 A. M
Ask telephone central for time of trains.
£pr-*Daily.
E@=+Daily except Sunday.
W.D.STILWELL, Agent.
A Horse
Knows the
Difference
between good and bad food.
German
Medicated
Stock Food
| Will save your Horse and save
money. It is the best food on
the market.
Sheep and Hogs.
Hog Cholera.
For sale by dealers.
Send for Circulars.
GERMAN STOCK FOOD CO.,
The oldest Stock Food Co. in the World,
Minneapolis, Mirn.
Also for Cows,
No more
a—
tn
a.
The Patent Bent Rung
LADDERS
1 Strongest In the World.
fhe Single and Extension Bent Rung Lon
4 Ladders are light, strong and quickly i]
4 easily handled.
The Columbia Step Ladders are
made with Basswood or Norway
Pine sides, @alk steps and a Bent
Hickory Rung, soonrely rivited
step and to
under each e sides
#8! with wrought iron annealed nails,
Bl making the lightest and strongest
#1 Step Ladder ever off¢
| sors the money.
g e manufacture
§ other high grade Step
Ladders, as well as a
8] complete line of Single
i and Extension Straight
Rung ers.
| Send for descriptive
cataloghe and Pras,
INDIANA BENT RUNG
LADDER COMPANY,
Indiana. Penn,
Sour
Stomach
No appetite, loss of strength, nervous-
ness, headache, constipation, bad breath,
general debility, sour risings, and catarrh
of the stomach are all due to indigestion.
Kodol cures indigestion. . This new discov-
ery represents the natural juices of diges-
tion as they exist in a healthy stomach,
combined with’ the greatest known tonic
and reconstructive properties. Kodol Dys-
pepsia Cure does not only cure indigestion
and dyspepsia, but this famous remedy
cures all stomach troubles by cleansing,
purifying, sweetening and strengthening
the mucous membranes lining the stomach.
Mr. S. S. Ball, of Ravenswood, W, Va., says:—
** | was troubled with sour stomach for twenty years.
Kodol cured me and we are now using it in milk
lor baby.
Kodol Digests What You Eat.
Bottles only. $1.00 Size holding 2% times the trial
size, which sells for 50 cents.
Prepared by E. O. DeWITT & 00., CHICAGO.
SOLD BY E, H, MILLER.
RUSSIA—1906.
A red haze hung over the mountain,
The flail in the valley was still,
A lone woman wept o’er a baby that
slept
And the grain lay ungronnd at the
mill.
A plow in the half-cloven furrow,
A forge that was smokeless and dead,
While over it all hung the stillness, a
pall,
And the haze o’er the mountain, blood
red.
And over and over and over
By village and farmhouse and hill,
A haze, bloody red, all the landscape
o’ergpread
And the valleys deserted and still.
The earth at the seedtime unbroken,
The flelds at the harvest ungleaned,
And lone vigil kept by a woman who
wept
With a babe at her bosom unweaned.
Then down from the mountain a horse-
man
Dashed, plum’d and eworded and
mailed ;
Nor heard he the moan of the woman
alone,
Nor saw he the grain all unflailed;
“To arms!” for the battle was bloody;
“To arms!” for the columns were
thinned ;
And over the land rang hiz brazen com-
mand,
For his horse wore the wings of the
wind.
Then fatherless lads from their hovels
Went shouldering ponderous guns,
And old men and gray tottered weakly
away :
To find the rude graves of their rons;
For Country is higher than kindred,
And what is the glory of sod
Unwet by the flood of its yeomen’s red
blood?
And war—is it not more than God?
So women with babes at their bosoms
Gazed out o'er the furrows untilled,
Through the haze resting red like the
blood that was shed
In a far-away struggle unwilled.
And eyes that are swollen and anguish-
ed
Uplifted in silent appeal:
“0 God of the Poor, does Thy mercy
endure
When Thy monarchs know naught
but of steel?”
And over and over and over
By village and hamlet and hill,
The haze resting red like the blood that
is shed,
But the flail in the valley is still.
The earth at the seedtime unbroken,
The fields at the harvest ungleaned,
And a lone vigil kept by a woman who
wept
With a babe at her bosom unweaned.
—J. W. FoLEY, in New York Times.
JUST WHAT EVERYONE SHOULD
DO.
Mr. J. T. Barber, of Irwinville, Ga,
always keeps a bottle of Chamberlain’s
Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy
at hand ready for instant use. Attacks
of colic, cholera morbus and diarrhoea
come on go suddenly that there is no
time to hunt a doctor or go to the store
for medicine. Mr. Barber says: “I
have tried Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera
and Diarrhcea Remedy which is one of
the best medicines I ever saw. I keep
a bottle of it in my room, as I have had
several attacks of colic, and it has
proved to be the best medicine I ever
used.” Sold by E. H. Miller. 7-1
Fine Tribute to the Sugar Maple.
“Rispah,” the well known Stoyes-
town newspaper correspondent, pays
the following very eloquent and de-
served tribute to the sugar maple tree:
“Some one has said that the Lord
might have created a finer tree than
the sugar maple, but He didn’t. Those
who have seen a natural grove of sev-
eral hundred of these trees will readily
agree with this saying. Stately in size,
symmetrical in form, magnificent in
verdure. venerable in age. Intheearly
spring yielding a nectar of aromatic
sweetness fit for gods to sip, in June
covered with a mass of darkest green
foliage among which squirrels delight
to gambol and silver-tongued birds of
brightest plumage carol their sweetest
songs to their mates, in October chang-
ing their leafy cloak to a mosaic of
hues and tints that no peinter could
invoke from his pallet. The grandest
of all trees—shall it be said that the
greed fora few paltry dollars at the
beginning of the Twentieth century
caused the extinction of this monarch
of the forests in Somerset county?”
. HUGE TASK.
It was a huge task to undertake the
cure of such a bad case of kidney dis-
ease, as that of C. F. Collier, of Chero-
kee, Ia., but Electric Bitters did it. He
writes: “My kidneys were so far gone,
I could not sit on a chair without a
cushion; and suffered from dreadful
backache, headache, and depression.
In Electric Bitters, however, I found a
cure, and by them was restored to per-
fect health. I recommend this great
tonic medicine to all with weak kid-
neys, liver or stomach. Guaranteed
bys H. Miller, druggist ; price 50c.
OLD PAPERS for sale at THE STAR
office. They are just the thing for
pantry shelves, wrapping paper and
cartridge paper for the miners. Five
cents buys a large roll of them. tf
YEARNINGS.
Jest a little cradle in a wagon passin’
by,
But it sort o’ hurts me in my feelin’s;
wonder why?
We ain’t had no children, Mandy Jane
an’ me, that’s sure,
Tho’ we've often wished the stork would
linger at our door;
Kind o’ looked an’ waited till the years
had passed away,
An’ her brown locks an’ my black ones
both had turned to gray,
Went on just believin’ that our dreams
ud all come true,
Kep’ so busy hopin’ th’ warn’t time fur
feelin’ blue.
"Taint no doubt, it’s lonesome sittin’
roun’ a grim ol’ house,
Jest us two ol’ people, evenin’s, quiet
as a mouse ;
Seems like that a feller’d like to have a
couple of boys
Stompin’ roun’ the kitchen, an’ a-mak-
in’ lots o’ noise;
With a pair o’ girls a-chatterin’in their
foolish way,
Gigglin’ waitin’ fur their comp’ny,
priokin’ up; an’ say—
Some folks worry at it, but it kind o’
seems to me
That’s the sort o’ life our Maker meant
this life to be.
When your courtin’s done san’ over
where’s your youth to go,
When there ain’t no children roun’ you
keepin’ life aglow?
Tho’ the fires o’ love have smoldered,
embers heat the ash
When you ketch your boy’s eyes dartin’
love’s first lightnin-flash.
Say you're old an’ gettin’ doty, why,
the sight’ll start
Jest a reg’lar dancin’ measure in your
dim ol’ heart,
An’ you feel that life is sweeter when
you see love's fire
Puttin’ fears an keers an’ doubtin’s on
a fun’ral pyre.
Jest a little cradle in wagon passin’ by,
Yet it brings the tear-drops an’ a long-
regretin’ sigh;
Jest a little cradle—my, I wonder who
it’s fur?
Mighty happy father, him, an’ happy
mother, her.
Wish ’em all the blessin’s that I'd ask
fur fur myself,
Tho’ the Lord has laid me kind o’ use-
less on the shelf:
Hope they'll live the ’lotted time o’
hearty ol’ threescore,
.Hope they'll fill that cradle up a dozen
times, or more!
—PavL Lavrexce DUNBAR, in Pittsburg
Times.
DYING OF FAMINE
is, in ite torments, like dying of con-
sumption. The progress of consump-
tion, from the beginning to the very
end, ie a long torture, both to victim
and friends. “When I had consump-
tion in its first stage,” writes Wm.
Myers, of Cearfoss, Md., “after trying
different medicines and a good doctor,
in vain, I at last took Dr. King’s New
Discovery, which quickly and perfectly
cured me.” Prompt relief and sure
cure for coughs, colds, sore throat.
bronchitis, ete. Positively prevents
pneumonia. Guaranteed at E. H.
Miller’s drug store, price 50c. nd $1.00
a bottle. Trial bottle free. 7-1
Awful Warning to Boys.
James, a young fon of Timothy Sul-
livan, of Youngstown, met with a “sad”
accident, some days ago. Having
chopped a pile of kindling, he proceed-
ed to carry it into the house, when he
fell and broke his left arm. This
should be a warning to boys who are
inclined to interfere with the duties of
their parents and sixters.—Greensburg
Democrat.
————— eae
GREAT SOUTHERN COMBINATION.
The Sunny South with This Paper
for only $1.60 for Both One
Year.
The Sunny South, of Atlantd, Ga.,is
the South’s great literary weekly. Its
wide circulation in over 60,000 homes
proves ite popularity where it is well
known. It is devoted to literature, ro-
mance, fact and fiction, and its well
edited and interesting columns each
week make good the wide claim that is
urged for it.
The continued stories are from the
best authors and the interest is main-
tained from week to week by the liberal
installments that are presented. Its
short stories, sketches, anecdotes, inci-
dents of travel and adventure, poems.
and paragraphs, giye it a life and genu-
ine interest not found in ordinary story
papers
e Sunny South is rapidly becoming
the family story paper forall American
firesides. It is not sectional in any
sense, and yet it is truly Southern in
its literary excellence. A subtle charm
steals out from its columns, suggesting
balmy breezes, sunny skies and sweet-
scented, delightful landscapes. It is
dolent of a life and civilization that is
peculiar to the South, or we might say
that is more intensely American. A
sample copy will be sent free to all who
will send a postal card request, which
shall contain also the names and ad-
dresses of six of your neighbors, to the
Sunny South, Atlanta, Ga.
We have made a clubbing arrange-
ment with this Southern literary week-
ly whereby we can offer THE STAR and
the Sunny South both one year for only
$1.60. If you wish to take advantage
of this exceptional offer, please send at
once. Remit by safe methods and ad-
dress all orders to THE STAR, Elk Lick
Pa. tf
Wordless Dialogues.
=. 7" “ailked the originator eof
feel questions, lighting a cigarefte.
“ ,” replied the fair daughter
of Eve, shifting her gum te the other
cheek.
“ ”
y
ventured the cigarette
consumer, with a faint smile,
, she protested, with a
shrug. The shrug was her specialty.
3 ,’ he hazarded, as he started
| down the front steps.
. ,”” she sald. It was a part-
ing shot, and it hit the target.—Chi-
cago News.
An Up-to-Date Child.
“Hans, why are you reading that
book on ‘Bringing Up Children? ”
“lI am only seeing if I am being
brought up right.”—Fliegende Blaet-
ter.
- Mer Reason.
“IAllfan is not sure that she loves
Walter. Sometimes she thinks she
does and at other times she’s com-
vinced she doesn’t.”
“And yet she's going
him?”
“Oh, yes—that's all settled.”
“But if she is net sure she loves
him why doesn't she break the en-
gagementy’
“Because she's
Kansas City Journal.
to marry
twenty-seven,” =
One from Maulin,
Have none of you heard the
Big Bear,
Who never a word did say?
But clenched her paws and said to
herself
I'll stay in Man-chu-ri-a.
I'll stay ia Man-chu-ri-a, my boys,
I'll stay in Man-chu-ri-a;
They may cuss and swear and tepr
their hair, i
‘But I'll stay in Man-chu-ri-a.
; —Manila American.
Great
Variegated.
White—there was no lack of color
in the afternoon I put in to-day.
Black—How’s that?
“Well, Brown took me for a ride in
his Red Devil with a blue humorist
and a green chaffeur, and we spent
the time in a whitewashed cell reading
a yellow newspaper, while waiting
for him to raise the greenbacks to pay
the fine.”"—Life.
Shop-Sauce.
“What kind of a hat should a mam
wear with a pepper-and-salt suit?’ ask-
ed the handkerchief salesman of the
genius who held sway over the neck-
wear counter,
“A castor, ef ‘eourse,” responded the
cravat clerk with the insouciance of a
man who is studying for the stage by
spending ten, twenty, or even thirty
cents, as the case may be, every Fri-
day eveming.—Judge.’
No Discomfert.
Van Antler (entertaining Wither
by at his country home)—Now, old
man, if you should happen to want
anything in the night, just touch this
bell.
Witherby—Never! I know how hard
it is to keep servants in the country.
Catch me touching that bell.
Van Antler—BW | assure you yeu
are perfectly safe. The bell doesmt
work.—Life.
Wouldn't Stand fer It.
“Now that we are engaged,” said
the amateur magician, “1 must begia
to save up for the wedding. Don’t
you think, under the circumstances,
that we could dispense with the em-
gagement ring?’
“I should say not,” replied the
prospective bfide. “Noné of your
sleight-of-hand tricks for me.”—Chl-
cago News.
Desperate.
Hereupoa the man gave himself up
te despair.
“I shall starve! There is nothing
in the house but breakfast food, and I
am thoroughly committed to the ne-
breakfast cure!” he exclaims, the
tears trickling down his bronze
cheeks.
Qf. course, he is too proud to beg.—
Puck.
The Majority.
They sing ‘the man behind the gun”
."*The man behind the plow,”
“The man behind the pick,” and some
I can’t remember now.
But far more numerous than all
Who've furnished stuff for rhymes,
You'll find, in each community,
“The man behind the times.”
—Baltimore American.
Willie.
Ethel—What di@ you open that
even deor for? Don't you know that'll
spofl the cake mamma's baking?
WWlil{e—Sure andl if it’s spoiled she'll
a we wast of it.—Phila-
10 cts. a copy.
zine for the family,” says oné
every month.
“The
Great features are promised
and Charles Wagner. Get al
by taking advantage of this
Special
—fourteen months for $1.00 or the pri
McCLURES
MAGAZINE
is “the cleanest, most stimulating, meatiest general maga-
It is without question
Best at
wholesome interesting short stories in every number, con-
tinued stories, poaciital pictures in colors, and articles by
such famous writers as Ida M. Tarbell, Lincoln Steffens,
Ray Stannard Baker, John La Farge, William Allen White,
Send $1.00 before January 31,1905, for a subscription for the year 1805
and we will send you free the November and December numbers of 1904
48-59 East 23d Street, New York City. Write for agents’ terms.
$1.00 a year.
of the million who read it
any Price.”
for next year—six or more
1 of it right into your home
Offer:
ce of twelve. Address McCLURE’S,
(Carpet And Rug Weavinel
I have in operation a celebrated Newcomd Fly-Shuttle Loom,
and am prepared to do all kinds
Fancy Weaving on Shawls, Muffl
of Carpet and rug weaving, alse
ers, etc.
Don’t go to other towns for your weaving when you can be
well served at home.
Call and examine our work. We guarantee
satisfaction or refund your money. Prices very reasonable.
Mrs. J. D. Miller,
Beachy Addition, Salisbury, Pa.
falls out.
BROWNELL’S
Maiden Hair Fern Hair
Lills
head quickly. Is not sticky. Itis not
natural color to the hair, that is it brin.
substances. Send for Testimonials.
2590 No. Ashland Ave., Chicago, lil.
Is your Hair Falling Out?
STOP IT, no more Baldness.
. Disease prevents the hair being nourished, hence it
erm life, cures the disease, nourishes the hair,
ot a stimulant, but a cure. It dries on the
healthy living growth, Is purely vegetable. Is positively free from ail injurious
For sale by Druggists..
THE SEVERANCE & STEWART COMPANY,
- 72 No. Willard St., Burlington, Vt,
Meu
Tonic
a dye, but a food to restore vigor and
the hair from a sticky condition to a
of modern
Will remove more Real Estate in less
hme than any soap ever placed on the
mar]
MECHANIC’S SOAP
it is possible to have clean, soft odorless
hands. A
vegetable, oil and mineral p:
kind of water. A very small quanti
little water will do the work.
kitchen utensils; it has no equal. The most
prodoct
Don’t let your grocer substitute. Made onl;
MAPLE CITY SOAP WORKS, Monmouth, lil.
We care not what your work is, with
MAPLE CITY
trial will convince you Is A Jue
science. For sale ev hy 5 Cents.
o only by the”
SAVE TWO PROFITS.
From factory to user at wholesale
EMPIRE STATE
he top is made of charcoal malleable
—you can’t break it with a sledge hammer.
The fire box and oven large and roomy. The
heat circulation perfect and temperature even
ughout. The saving in fuel
The only steel range made that sets on 1
our free catalogue—we can save you money.
will pay for the range.’
sweep and clean under it. It is elegant in design
and finish, handsomely nickeled and highly pol-
ished. It is practically indestructible. Sr
DRAKE HARDWARE COMPANY, Friendship, N. Y.
price.
you can
50 YEARS’
fz EXPERIENCE
Tract MARKS
DESIGNS
CoPYRIGHTS &C.
Patents
special notice, without charge, in the
Scientific American,
A handsomely illustrated Neekly. Jaraes; cir-
8,
culation of any scientific journal. ;
r months, $1. 8old by all newsdealers.
BHONN £ Gozo rerweor. New York
Branch Office. 625 F' St. Washinton, D. |
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NOTICE IN DIVORCE.
Elizabeth Mull vs. Alfred Mull,in the Court
of Common Pleas of Somerset County,
Pa., No. 13, May Term, 1905.
Alias Subpoena 11x Divorce. 1'o alfred
Mull, respondent above:—You are hereby
notified to appear at our Court of Common |
Pleas, at Somerset, Pa., on Monday, 11th day
of Sept , 1905, to answer the lible subpoena
and alias subpoena in divorce above stated,
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{a0 CURE Te LUNGS
KILL w= COUCH
«= Pr, King's
New Discovery
ONSUMPTION Price
FOR ¢ oucHsané soc &s$1.00
gf 0L0S Free Trial.
2 Surest and Quickest Cure for al
THROAT and LUNG TROUB-
4 LES, or MONEY BACK.
WHEN A MAN TELLS YOU it does
not pay to advertise, he is simply ad-
mitting that he is conducting a busi-
ness that is not worth advertising, a
business conducted by a man unfit to
do business, and a business which
should be advertised for sale. tf
& CLOCK REPAIRING, Gun
smithing and many other kinds of re-
pair werk done neatly, promptly and
substantially. All work left at the
Theoph. Wagner residence will be
promptly attended to, at reasonable
and to show cause why a decree of divorce | prices by the undersigned
from the bonds of matrimony should not
be made against you.?" T= Tm aes aR Tsa |
6-22 ANDREW J. COLEMAM, Sheriff.
4 BEN. WAGNER,
t Salisbury, Pa.
v