# EE eg ES PHS BERKEY & SHAVER, Attorneys-at-Iiaw. SOMERSET, PA. * Coffroth & Ruppel Building. ERNEST 0. KOOSER, Attorney-At-L.aw, SOMERSET, PA. R. E. MEYERS,. DISTRICT ATTORNEY. Attorney-at-Liaw, BOMERSET, PA. Office in Court House. W. H. KOONTZ. J. G. OGLE KOONTZ & OGLE Attorneys-At-Liaw, SOMERSET, PENN’A Office opposite Court House. VIRGIL R. SAYLOR, Attormney-at-Iiaw, SOMERSET, PA. Office in Mammoth Block. E. H. PERRY, Physician and Surgeon, SALISBURY, PENN’A. Office corne:r 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 Meyersdale as follows: Hast Bound. *No. 488—Accommodation .... ie *No. 6—FastLine................... *No. 14—Through train............. +No. 16—Accommodation.... : *No.12—Duquesne Limited...........9: "> on -— Wun > RRARER *No.208—Johnstown Accommo.......7:45 P. West Bound. d *No. 11—Duquense................... 5:58 Al. M +No. 18—Accommodation .......... 8:18 A. M *No. 15—Through train.... ......... 11:20 A. M *No. 5—Fast Line................... 4:26 P.M *No. 49—Accommodation ........... 4:50 P. M *No.207—Johnstown Accommo...... 6:20 A. M Ask telephone central for time of trains. £@r=*Daily. H@=+Daily except Sunday. W.D.STILWELL, Agent. 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. Also for Cows, Sheep and Hogs. No more Hog Cholera. For sale by dealers, . Send for Circulars. GERMAN STOCK FOOD CO., The oldest Stock Food Co. in the World, Minneapolis, Minn. omit. — The Patent Bent Run LADDERS Strongest in the World. fhe Single and Extension Bent Rung Lon, Ladders are light, strong and ns an easily handled. The Columbia Step Ladders are made with ood or Norway Pine sides, oak steps and a Bent Hickory Rung, jiscurely. rivited P d to the sides | with wrought iron annealed nails, making the lightest and strongest Step Ladder ever offered for the money. RR | grade | Ladders, as well as 2 complete line of Single and Extension Straight Rung Ladders. Send for descriptive | catalogue and prices. i 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., saysi— ** I was troubled with sour stomach for twenty years. Kodol cured me and we are now using it in milk for 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 & QO., CHICAGO, SOLD BY E, H, MILLER. Woman, and What She is. Here is a Salisbury bachelor’s opinion of woman: Woman is a perpetual paradox, a chronic conundrum with out an answer, an unknown quantity possessed of un- expected possibilities, a perennial prize package of peculiar potentialities, a conventicle of characteristic contra- dictions and an amaranthine aggrega- tion of other attributes which are not alliterative. She is man’s greatest earthly blessing, and the cause of most of his misery. She is his chief inspira- tion to the achievement of all that is good, grand and glorious in this world, and at the same time a labor-saving device to help him make a fool of him- self. She soothes his tired nerves with the coo of her gentle voice, but she always has the last word in every con- troversy with him—and, incidentally, about 97 per cent. of the preceeding conversation. She brings him into the world, and in a few years later talks him to death. Most of man’s trouble is caused by woman, but so deftly does she pile the load on him, that whenever his burden of trouble is lifted, he wanders uneasily about hunting for more, otherwise there would be very few second wives. She will cheerfully go to the stake for truth’s sake, and lie about her age without even being asked. She will grow weary of anin- dulgent husband, but will cleave unto death to the man who beats her reg- ularly. She will break her heart be- cause a man does what she don’t want him to, and love him all the better for so doing. She scorns all advice in the selection of a husband, but takes two other women along to help her pick out a hat. The less actual comfort to be obtoined from a thing, the more en- joyment a woman gets out of its pos- session. At 16 she is a young woman, at 25, if still unmarried, she is a girl. She will face the grim spectre of death without a tremor, and swoon at the sight of a mouse. The only time she ever does what you expect her to do is when you expect her to do just what you don’t expect her to do. The sole reason she does anything is simply be- cause she don’t know why she does it. She jumps at conclusions and lands on them squarely, for the simple reason that when the eonclusion skips to one side, thinking to avoid her, it gets squarely in her way. She is the dear- est thing in all the world ; and the most agravating. She is as she is, and that’s all there is to do about it. The only man who eyer fully understands = woman is the man who understands that he don’t understand her, and has got sense enough to let it go at that. QUALITY VS. QUANTITY. Hard muscles and strong body do not depend on the quantity of food you eat, but on its perfect digestion and proper assimilation. When you take Kodol Dyspepsia Cure your system gets all the nourishment out of all the food you eat. It digests what you eat regardless of the condition of the stom- ach and conveys the nutrient proper- ties to the blood and tissues. This builds up and strengthens the entire system. Kodol cures Indigestion, Dys- pepsia, Belching, Sour Stomach, Weak Heart, etc. Sold by E. H. Miller. 7-1 Letter from the Secretary of Agri- culture. HARRISBURG, PA., June 10, 1805. Epitor STAR :—This department will greatly appreciate the favor, if you will publish for the information of all con- cerned, the statement that the last Legislature so amended the law regu- lating the sale of concentrated com- mercial feeding stuffs as to add to the feeds that shall not be sold without having affixed thereto in a conspicuous place a legible and plainly printed statement certifying the number of net pounds of the feeding stuff the package contains, the name, brand ¢r trade mark under which the article is sold, the name and address of the manufacturer or importer, and a state- ment of the percentage it contains of crude fat and crude protein of the fol- lowing: Corn bran, wheat, rye and buckwheat bran and middlings. Also hay, straw and corn stover, when the same are mixed with other materials. In other words, the feeds above named have been added to the list of feeds that cannot be sold without the above cited certificate being attached. This, however, does not, under the provisions of the act, interfere with persons en- gaged within the state of Pennsylvania in manufacturing flours so as to pre- vent them from selling at the place where made their own manufacture of bran and middlings, without having the above named certificate attached. N. B. CRITCHFIELD, Secretary of Agriculture. TEN TIMES EASIER. It is ten times easier to cure coughs, croup, whooping-cough and all lung and bronchial affections when the bowels are open. Kennedy’s Laxative Honey and Tar is the original Laxa- tive Cough Syrup. Gently moves the bowels, and expels all cold from the system, cuts the phlegm, cures all coughs and strengthens weak lungs. Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar contains no opiates, is pleasant fo the taste and is the best and safest for child or adult. Sold by E. H. Miller. 7-1 Gigantic Combine is After Coal Land in Six Counties. Local coal operators are greatly in- terested in the plans of a gigantic combination, composed of the Bethle- hem Steel Company and other eastern steel properties in which Charles M. Schwab is interested, and companies controlling huge tracts of both devel- oped and undeveloped coal lands in Cambria, Somerset, Indiana, Clearfield, Westmoreland and Fayette counties. Dispatches from Pittsburg during the lagt few days have contained infor- mation concerning this huge combine. The figures showing the total capital- ization are not yet available, but: it is stated that the immensity of the inter- ests involved is such as will make the combination one of the industrial giants of the country. gi An effort was made recently to as- certain just what coal lands were con- trolled in Somerset and Cambria coun- ties by these interests, but none of the local operators were in possession of the facts. It is believed, however, that the lands are now being held by pri- vate persons acting in the interests of the combine. All in all the total acreage involved is said to be in the neighborhood of 200,000. There are said to be 10 steel plants in the deal. and 70 miles of road tapping the various mines and coke ovens are to be included in the amalga- mation. lM Stop Grumbling. I'll tell you, my friend, all of us worry too much over things that do not concern us. I heard you ripping it into the Standard Oil Co., the other day, but to my certain knowledge you haven’t bought a cent’s worth of kero- sene or gasoline in years. If you had you would know that it costs about half as much as it did when your moth- er used to send you down to the store with the can. You also howl a great deal about the way the prohibitory law is enforced in Wichita and other cities. It may be true that saloons are illegal, but it would not affect you in the least if they were driven into the Missouri river. You let your lawn sprinkler run for three hours after the city ordi- nances say you shall shut it off, but that does not worry you. You also re- fuse to rent a box at the postoffice, and you get your mail out of the general delivery, and abuse the postmaster every time your dinky weekly. paper does not come. I'll bet you are back several years on subscription. Do you know that the whole community is sick and tired of your eternal bellyaching? If you would try to regulate some of your own failings, instead of ripping it into things that are not hurting you, ‘you would stand a whole lot better, and people would not think your going to church was such a gigantic bluff, says a western exchange. The Yellowroot Fizzle. “All's not gold that glitters,” nor is every yellowroot the yellowroot of commerce. The “Golden Seal” excite- ment spent itself Thursday afternoon, and thousands of pounde of the thin fibrous root that has been grubbed from the earth during the last week was dumped into the creek, - Men, women and children labored fexerishly, early and late, to fill the sacks, while others washed it clean in the creek. Some people down Barton way camped out all night in order to hold down certain patches of land where the golden weed was plentiful. Miners threw down their picks, and taking a hoe and gunny sack, climbed the hills prospecting for “color.” The fields were alive with excited men tearing up everything that at all resembled “yellowroot.” * Several men sold large quantities of it, and received payment by check, and as late as Thursday afternoon a man with a two-horse wagon was buying all he could find of it, and paying ten cents a pound. But the gentleman who came here from Cumberland and start- ed the boom, stopped payment of his checks on a local bank, and sent word that the yellow weed found hereabouts was not “Golden Seal,” but a base imi- tation. So the boom collapsed, and there is “yellow weed” to burn at Charlestown and Barton.—Lonaconing Star. It Doesn’t Pay. My young friend, there are many things in this world that it doesn’t pay to do. It doesn’t pay to try to pass yourself off for more than you are worth; it tends to depress your market quota- tion. It doesn’t pay to lie, for your lies must all be kept on file mentally, and in the course of time some of them are pretty certain to get on the wrong hook. A liar needs a better memory than any one is apt to possess. It doesn’t pay to try to get a living without work. You will work harder and get a poorer living than if you did honest work. It doesn’t pay to be a practical joker, unless you can enjoy the joke when you are the victim. It doesn’t pay to rest when you ought to be at work. If you do, you are apt to have to work when you ought to be resting. It doesn’t pay to cry over spilled milk, neither does it pay to spill the milk.—Dr. 8S. A. Steele, in Work. some day to give us & ‘good business iN ORDINAN Relating fo Tne Registration of DOs. SEcC.1. Beit ordained and enacted by the Burgess and Town Council of the Borough of Salisbury, Somerset County, Pa. that every dog or bitch within the Borough shall have around its neck a collar, on which shall be suspended a tab procurable from the Borough Treasurer, indicating the registry of the dog. The owner or possessor of every dog or bitch within the Borough shall annually, on or before the Fifteenth day of July, have the dogs, bitch or bitches, owned or harbor- ed by him or her, registered with the Bor- ough Treasurer, and shall pay a fee to said Treasurer, for the use of the Borough, of One Dollar for each and every male dog,and Two Dollars for each and every bitch, own- ed or harbored by him or her, or which is suffered to remain on his or her. premises. Upon the receipt of the registration fee, the Treasurer shall deliver the proper tab to be attached to the collar of each and every registered dog or bitch, and also a certificate of registration describing the dog or bitch. Persons removing or coming into the Borough after the Fifteenth day of July, in each year,or who may purchase or bring within the Borough limits any dog or bitch, may register the same by applying to the Burgess for a permit, and paying the Treas- urer the proper fee. SEC. 2. Nodog or bitch known to be cross or of vicious habits, nor any dog showing signs of rabies, nor any dog belonging toa house in which small-pox exists, shall be suffered to run at large, wether registered or not. Sg£c.3. No bitch while in heat shall be’ suffered to run at large,but the owner or harborer of such bitch shall securely and safely keep her and prevent her from run- ning at large. SEC. 4 The owner or harborer of any dog or bitch who shall fail to register the same, or who shall permit his or her dog or bitch to run at large, in violation of section 2 or 3, shall, upon conviction thereof, pay a fine of not less than Two Dollars ($200) nor more than Ten ($10.00) Dollars, with costs. SEC. 5. Any dog or bitch found running at large contrary to the provisions of this ordinance, is hereby declared a public nui- sance, and it shall be the duty of the Po- lice and such persons as the Burgess, with the consent of the Council, may appoint for the purpose to kill and remove the same. SEC. 6. The Burgess shall in each year provide the proper registry tab to carry out the Froyisions of this ordinance, which tabs he shall, from time to time, as required by the Treasurer, turn over to and charge the Treasurer with the value of same. Enacted into law this 14th day of June, A. D. 1805. . C.A. WILT, . Attest: — President of Council. IRA F. HAY, Secretary. ‘Approved this 19th day A Tune, A. D. 1905. JER. J. LIVENGOOD, Burgess. Cleveland: The Best-governed Civy. The best-governed city in the United States is Cleveland, Lincoln Steffens says, in hig story of Ohio, in the July McClure’s. “Tom Johnson is the ‘business msn for mayor’ that business men have been prophesying so long must come administration of a city government,’ and, now that he has, come, Business hates him because he hans given Cleve- land not only good government, but representative government, not only clean streets, but clean tax-lists; he has stopped not only blackmail. but bribery ; he tackled not only low-down, petty police and political graft, but high-toned, big, respectable, business graft, both legitimate and illegitimate. Tom Johnson is a reformed business man. His reform began at home; he reformed himself firet, then he under- took political reform, and his political reform began with the reform of his ownclass. . . . “In Cleveland we have as I write, this spectacle: Two stxeet-railway men, Mayor Johnson represents the city, President Andrews his stockholders, negotiating in public for the disposition of the street-railway system. There is no excitement, no bad feeling, no sus- picion of boodle or corruption.” "KISS HER. Say, young man! if you've a wife, Kiss her. Every morning of your life, Kiss her. Every evening when the sun Marks your day of labor done, Get you homeward on the run— Kiss her! Even though you’re feeling bad, Kiss her. If she’s out of sorts and sad, Kiss her. Act as if you meant it, too; Let the whole true heart of you Speak its ardor when you do Kiss her. If you think it’s “soft,” you’re wrong. Kiss her! Love like this will make you strong. Kiss her. You're her husband now, but let Her possess her lover yet. Every blessed chance you get, Kiss her. Every good wife lets her man Kiss her. Be a man then, when you can; Kiss her. If you’d strike with telling force At the Evil of Divorce, Just adopt this simple course: Kiss her. — Catholic Standard and Times. Where the Shame Should Lie. The Unicntown Standard retails a story of a tree being uprooted by a se- vere wind storm and then being blown back to an upright position by the next storm that came along. The article was headed “Nature Was Ashamed.” We should think the editor of the Standard ought to be.—Bellevernon Enterprise. iret { ) IF YOUR BUSINESS will not stand 10 cts. a copy. is “the cleanest, most stimul every month. Great features are promised and Charles Wagner. by taking advantage of this —fourteen months for $1.00 or the pr McCLURES MAGAZINE zine for the family,” says one of the million who read it It is without question “The Best at any Price.” wholesome interesting short stories in every number, con- tinued stories, beautiful pictures in colors, and articles by such famous writers as Ida M. Tarbell, Lincoln Steffens, Ray Stannard Baker, John La Farge, William Allen White, Get all of it right into your home Special Offer: Send $1.00 before January 31,1905, for a subscription for the year 1905 and we will send you free the November and December numbers of 1904 48-59 East 23d Street, New York City. $1.00 a year. ating, meatiest general maga- for next year—six or more ice of twelve. Address McCLURE’S, Write for agents’ terms Carpet And Rue Weavine! 4 I have in operation a celebrated Newcomd Fly-Shuttle Loom, and am prepared to do all kinds Fancy Weaving on Shawls, Mufflers, etc. of Carpet and rug weaving, alse Don’t go to other towns for your weaving when you can be well served at home. satisfaction or refund your mone Call and examine our work. We guarantee y. Prices very reasonable. Mrs. J. D. Miller, Beachy Additi on, Salisbury, Pa. BARGAINS [N CHILDREN'S DRESSES. Child’s one-piece Russian Dress of §Q Cent= Fach. Cts. iach. Delivery Free, Delivery Free 39 bray, light or dark 2 Skirt has 2inch , Sizes 2, 3 and 4 Russian blouse effe white, RutHes, wi in front and back, med with 3 rows of belt two rows. hem. Sizes 6, and 12 only. JOHN E. 357 BROADWAY, — =’ oo — good washable non-shrinkable Cham. The front has 3 box pleats, the band on side, also collar and cuffs of 2 inch pique—belt of pique. One piece Misses’ Dress made of same material and colors ss above, Full skirt with 3 inch blue; or ox-bloaud, The back has fly. ants: 3. PREPAID, ct in front, Yoke of th round scallops nlso sleeves, trim- white faney braid, = 1 ge. PREPAID. STARK, Manufacturer, EMPIRE STATE Positive] in a range. The top is made of charcoal malleable —you can’t break it with a sledge hammer. e fire box and oven large and roomy. The heat circulation perfect and temperature even throughout. The saving in a i The only steel range made that sets on le; Wee yand clean under it. It is elegant in desi our free catalogue—we can save you money. DRAKE HARDWARE COMPANY, Friendship, N. SAVE TWO PROFITS. From factory to user at wholesale price. STEEL RANG e to the fire are reinforced and lined with as- fi will pay for the range. h, handsomely nickeled and highl 1- ished. It'is practically indestructible. dor you can gn Y. TWENTY-SECOND INTERNATION- AL CONVENTION, CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR, BALTIMORE, MD., JULY 5-10, via BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD. From all points East of the River, West of Martinsburg, W. and South of Summit Point, W. tickets will be sold at One Fare $1.00 for the round trip. Tickets good going July 3, 4 and 5, valid for return not earlier than July 5, nor later than July 15, 1905. Extension of return limit to August 31 may be obtained on deposit of ticket and payment of $1.00 to Joint Agent at Baltimore, Md. Stop-overs will be allowed at Oak- land, Mt. Lake Park, Deer Park and Washington, in either direction. For detailed information apply to nearest B. & O. Ticket Agent or C W. Bassett, G. P. A.,, B. & O. R. R., Balti- more, Md. 6-29 Ohio Va., Va., plus 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 H& CLOCK REPAIRING. Gun- smithing and many other kinds of re- pair work done neatly, promptly and substantially. All work left at the Theoph. Wagner residence will be promptly attended to, at reasonable prices, by the undersigned. advertising, advertise it for sale. You cannot afford to follow a business that | will = st stand advertising. | 3EN. WAGNER, tf Salisbury, Pa. Send for S| ed Catalogue of Premiums. Stronger and whiter than any other starch. It is made by a new process, A Rer 2 more of the strength of the corn is retained than by theo) process. n the top of each pound package there is 2 Piece « of White Polishing ax and ‘our sofbest French Laundry Blue. a Price Ten Cents. n using Shirt Waist Starch the li i never, Totes the iron will never stick 2 sults in a snowy, white satin finish. It is the best and cheapest starch on the market. We ask you to give it a trial. For sale by all grocers. Prepared only by SHIRT WAIST STARCH COMPANY, Norwalk, Conn. 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 in Divorce. To alfred Mull, respondent above:—You are hereby notifled to appear at cur 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 and to show cause why a decree of divorce from the bonds of matrimony should not be made against vou. : 6-22 ANDREW J. COLEMAM, Sheriff. BD&F™ The Pittsburg Daily Times and THE STAR, both one year for only $3.75 cash in advance. Send all orders to THE STAR, Elk Lick. Pa: tt - 6, Para PN Di falls or = Mai Lills g Nc head «¢ natura health; substa 2590 |
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers