Fo THE -TONIC ATMOSPHERE of the woods and fields acts like magic on the tired, overworked man. GetaST NSand shoot straight at the object, be it target or game. Equipped with our make means bringing down the bird or beast and making record target shots. Our line: RIFLES # PISTOLS # SHOTGUNS Rifie Telescopes, Ete. Ask yourdealerzndinsist | Send 4c in stamps for 140 on the STEVENS. Ifyou | rage catalog Qescnbe | the entire STEVENS line. cEniRoiae out polar | Profusely illustrated, and models, we ship direct, | contains points on Shoot- express prepaid, upon | ing, Ammunition, Proper receipt of catalog price. | Care of Firearms, etc. Beautiful three-color Aluminum Hanger will be for- warded for 10 cents in stamps. J. STEVENS ARMS AND TOOL CO., P. O. Box 4098 CiHICOPLE FALLS, MASS. U.S. A, 2 e Sewing Machine STANDARD GRAND. SWELL FRONT. 'LOCK AND CHAIN STITCH. TWO MACHINES IN ONE. BALL BEARING STAND WHEEL. We also manufacture sewing machines that retail from $12.00 up. The “Standard’’ Rotary runs as silent as the tick of a watch, Makes 300 stitches while other machines make 200. Apoiy to our local dealer, or if there is no er in your town, address THE Standard Sewing Machine Co., CLEVELAND, OHIO. REICH & PLUCK. ANTS, MEYERSDALE, PA. 9 a? fa 5 RIGINAL LAXATIVE HONEY ans 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 PINEULE MEDICINE CO.,Chicago, U.S.A. SOLD BY ELK LICK 'HARMACY. TORNADO Bug Destroyer and Disinfectant. An Exterminator That Exterminates. A Modern Scientific Preparation. A Perfect Insectide, Germicide and Deodorizer. Will positively prevent Contagious Diseases. Positive Death to All Insect Life- And their nits or money refunded. Sold by all druggists or sent by mail, Price 28 Cents. TORNADO MFC. CO., ~ Columbus, Ohio. THE CRIGINAL LAXATIVE GOUGH SYRUP Cures all Coughs and cons Req assists in expelling son and the Colds from the oy System by KR bottle. gently moving % ” the bowels.4 A certain cure\&ig for croup and whooping-cough. {Trade Mark Registered.) KENNEDY'S vcaxamve HONEY TAR PREPARED AT THE LABORATORY OF £. OC. DeWITT & 0O., CHICAGO, U. 8. A. SOLD BY E, H, MILLER, ip THE NEED FOR CONTINUANCE IN WELL-DOING. Now that the coal strike is upon us, it may be interesting to the people of the United States to know that they spent approximately $1,500,000.000 last year for fuel for the production of power, light and heat. With the steady increase in the number of our manu- facturing industries, our need for fuel is not likely to diminish as the years go by, nor is it probable that our annual expenditure for the material with which to produce power, light and heat will become less. In view of our ac- cumulating needs and the growing dif- ficulty we may have in meeting them: the statements recently made by Gov- ernment experts and referred to the Senate Committee on the Geological Survey are Ssuch as may well make every pacriot pause. These statements are to the effect that the losses in the utilization of fuel for the development of power, light and heat under existing conditions are so great that in a ton of coal consumed in an ordinary manufacturing plant less than 5 per cent. of the total energy is available for the actual work of manu- facturing ; that in an ordinary locomo- tive only from 3 to 5 per cent. of the fuel energy is obtained for pulling the train; that in our houses ordinarily not more than one-seventh of 1 per cent. of the fuel energy is actually trans- formed into electric light; that gases from the blast furnaces of the country are now lost in the atmosphere that would yield continuously, if properly utilized, more than 2,500,000 horse- power ; and that by-products might be gaved from the 40,000,000 tons of coal which we now convert into coke that would have an aggregate yearly value much greater than that of the coke itselt. These by-products would in- clude ammonium sulphate sufficient to fertilize our farms, creosote for the preservation of our timber, and pitch enough for briquetting our slack coals, roofing our houses, and repairing some of our roads. How appalling that such waste should continue after we know that it exists! Unfortunately, it is not always clear even to those who best understand the nature and uses’ of coal how such economies may be effected. No meth- ods, for instance, are known by which more than one-sixth of the nitrogen in coal can be saved in the manufacture of coke. There is no subject touching the welfare of the human race on which research is more needed than economy in the use of fuel. The results of the fuel investigations conducted at St. Louis during the Lou- isiana Purchase Exposition by mem- bers of the United States Geological Survey are so encouraging to both producers and consumers of coal that the nation may well take to heart the continuance of those investigations. Persons desirous of knowing more about this work should apply to the Director of the United States Geolog- ical Survey for Professional Paper No. 48. In comparison with tke immense sum annually expended for fuels, the amount of money necessary to carry on this work for several years seems n mere trifle, especially when the mag- nitude of the interests involved is con- sidered. The recommendation of the Director of the United States Geolog- ical Survey that the sum of $250,000 be appropriated by Congress for the in- vestigation of the coals, lignites, and other fuel substances of the United States during the fiscal year ending June 30. 1907, should therefore meet with the enthusiastic approval of the whole people, since it is a matter that concerns every citizen. It should not be forgotten that work of this kind is necessarily expensive. It must be done with the greatest pos- sible care and on a scale sufficiently large to commond public attention. Every test must be extended over a period of from 8 to 6 days, and many of them over a longer period, during which time it is necessary to employ 2 or 3 shifts of men so that the work may be constantly under supervision. Not only must the experts in charge of the work be men of the highest train- ing and experience, but even the ordi- nary workmen must be selected with care and must be given such compensa- tion as will make them willing to ren- der proper service. Finally, the equip- ment mustinot only be the best obtain- able, but it mustibe kept accurately ad- justed and must be in duplicate, so that there need be no delays in case of ac- cident to any part of the machinery. By the close of the present fiscal year the Survey will have completed a series of general comparative fuel tests of coals from many of the beds already developed in the more important fields. It happensthowever, that even during the progress of this work, new beds have been opened up in the older min- ingl8States, such as West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, as well as in Alabama, Towa and thelWestern States, in which the coalffor lignite, i# quite unlike that tested’fromfthejhigher or lower beds. If Congress decides to appropriate money for the®continuance of the in- vestigation, the fuel in these new beds will be tested, and an attempt will also be made to solve many problems con- nected withthe deposits in the old beds whieh, for lack of time and money, have not yet been seriously considered. Certain typical coals and lignites will be veleeted from ench of the’ lnrger fields »wnd thoroughly studied as to the conditions under which they may be used to the best advaniage. The ef- will thus be in- crensed nnd the regions they represent will be benefited. A detailed investi- gation of this character ix indeed abso- lutely necessary before many of the valuable resultz already obtained can be made available for general practice. ree A REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. ficiency of the conls Wm. H. ‘Walker to Chas. H. Trimpey, in Stonycreek, $10,092. Joseph Kreger to Samuel Robinson, in Lower Turkeyfoot, $200. Isaac Rishel to Minnie M. Bowman, in Milford, $7000. . N. W. Sullivan to Milton J. Shank, in Somerset Twp, $9000. Elias G. Bittner to Simon in Lincoln, $7000. Wm. W. Young to Resley J. Stevan- us, in Somerset Twp., $5000. Charles E. Weller to Wi. W. Young, in Somerset Twp., $75. Albert M. Hechlerto Edward Hoover, in Somerset Twp., $1500. Frederick Pile to D. B. Zimmerman, in Somerset Twp., $2402. Luke Kane to J. C. McSpadden, in Rockwood, $400. Barbara 8. Dallas to Dorothy Pile, in Somerset Twp., $475. Hnrvey Fike to Abraham Kinsinger, in Summir, $1767. C. W. Weigle to Elizabeth Gindle- sperger, Hooversville, $100. Jacob 8. Barkman to Walter C. Beck, in Milford, $4800. Joel Gnagy to Conrad §Herwig, in Summit $6000. John H. Seibert to Wm. Bowman, in Somerset Twp., $800. Nelson N. Cupp to Henry Bausman, in Addison, $3800. Valentine Hay to C. A. Weisel, in Milford, $90. Amelia A. Hay to Leonard B. Miller, in Conemaugh, $6000. . Ira V. Rush to Generva King, in Con- fluence, $500. John 8S. Rhoads to Mary A. Barndt, in Quemahoning, $1050. Joseph 8. Miller to Wm. H. Martz, in Summit, $9000. Wm. Berkey to Jeremiah Berkey, in Quemahoning, $4471. Wesley E. Trostle to D. B. Zimmer- man. in Quemuhoning, $7650. Jeremiah Berkey to same, in Quema- honing, $11,223. a John Gindlesperger to Quemahoning Coal Co., $250. John H. Brunner to Moses Bisel, in Jefferson, $1000. Bena lloffman to Elmer Ream, in Paint Twp., $250. Wilmore Coal Co. to C. W. Wagner, in Windber, $2765. George Cobaugh to Nancy Smith, in Quemahoning, $400. Ella F. S. Zufall to Edna Fisher, in Confluence, $800. Ada Lape et al. to J. M. Griffith, in Jenner, $1600. Jerome Stufft to James B. W. Stufft, in Quemahoning, $7000. Jerome Stufft to Daniel G. Stufft, in Quemahoning. $9000. Israel Berkley to Samuel S. Berkley, in Somerset Twp., $1000. Emily Traft to Frank Shaulis, in Som- erset Twp., $300. Wm. J. Baer to 8. Lenhart, in Somer- set Twp., $275. Josephine Daugherty to C. U. & W. R. R. Co., in Larimer, $200. John M. Wright to Charles B. Dickey, in Elk Lick, $18,000. Jerome Fyock to Margaret Custer, in Paint Bor., $2200. Catharine Walker to Elizabeth Cook, in Meyersdale, $700. Isaiah Heinbaugh to Levi Heinbaugh, in Upper Turkeyfoot. $100. — ee. P. Baker, No Longer in the Buckwheat Class. Somerset county is no longer in the granger class. The Frosty Sons of Thunder have become coal barons and industrial magnates. Railroads and trolley lines, telegraphs and telephones, coal mines and coke works with their attendant features, including strikes and riots, water and electric lighting companies, sanitariums and summer resorts, lumber mills and tanneries, brick manufactories and stone quar- ries, dot the land once given over to buckwheat and maple sugar. In the march of development and progress, Somerset county maintains a place at the front, and in politics she is as stren- uous as ever.—Connellsville Courier. Yes, we are no longer confined to the buckwheat class, but yet good old Som- erset county is as famous for buck- wheat and maple sugar as ever. The finest buckwheat cakes in the world are baked in the families of the Frosty Sons of Thunder, and for high grade and unadulterated maple. sugar and syrup. we have all the rest of the world, even including Vermont, skinned to a finish. Another thing good old Somerset county leads the world in is good old country cured ham. The man who has not yet tasted the heavenly hams cured by the farmers of Somerset county, Pa., has yet to learn what the best ham in the world tastes like. You may talk about your jellies, your pastries and your jam, you may boast about the oyster and the clam, We know they’re all good eatin’—jyes, so ig beef and lamb; but all the same they lack the fame of Somerset county ham. Wonderful Sensational OUR GUARANTEE ‘It reproduces the human voice with all the veiume of the original’? GRAND PRIZE, PARIS 1900 16 TIMES LOUDER THAN ALL OTHER TALKING MACHINES THE MOST MARVELOUS TALKING MACHINE EVER OONSTRUOCTED STYLE PREMIER $100. @ Absolutely New Principles Patented in all Civilized Countries REPRODUCES COLUMBIA AND The Latest Invention ALL OTHER CYLINDER RECORDS SPLENDID FOR DANCING PARTIES A Perfect Substitute for the Orchestra. ~~ For Sale by Dealers Everywhere and at all the Storcs of the Columbia Phonograph Company, General Creators of the Talking Machine Industry. So NEW Twentieth Century Cylinder Records HALF FOOT LONG Astonishing Results. Must be heard to be appreciated Largest Manufacturers in the World. Owners of the Fundamental Patents. DOUBLE GRAND PRIZE, ST. LOUIS 1904 615 Penn Avenue, PITTSBURG, PA. =(Closing Outl= en. Calicoes at 5c. per yard. Lancaster Ginghams at 6e. Great Cut Price Sale! TTA TATA IOP AT SPOOLS Having made all the money I care to make at merchandis- ing, I have decided to close out my entire stock of desirable gen- eral merchandise at cut prices, regardless of cost. § You Get The Benefit} ER a es ss Tn TE REBEL, Stock consists of a large quantity of Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots and Shoes, Notions, ete., and now is your time to buy. >A Few Quotations of Interst!< Shoes at 4oc. per pair and up. Sandals at 25¢c. and up. Vienna Flour at $1.15 per sack. Sugar at 5c. per pound. Bananas at 15¢. per doz- Cloverseed at $8.75 per bushel. These are only a few of the many bargains. Timothyseed at $1.75. Come while the opportunity lasts, inspect the goods and save money. The cut- price sale is now on, and will last until all goods are sold. H. C. SHAW, Salisbury, Pa. hand, Typewriting, ete. A GOOD BUSINESS EDUCATION can be had only in a good school. The Meyersdale Commercial College is prepared to teach Bookkeeping, Short- MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL COLLEGE, Moyersdale, Pa. | ceived. wn Dr, King's KILLvw= COUCH ano CURE THE LUNGS New Discovery ONSUMPTION _ Price FOR § oucHs and 50c & $1.00 OLDS Free Trial. LES, or MONEY BACK. Surest and Quickest Cure for all THROAT and LUNG TROUB- H& WEDDING Invitations at TaHE Star office. A nice new stock justre- 60 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &C. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether invention is probably patentable. Co ons strictly sonndential. HANDB! sent free. Oldest agency for securing Patents taken t! ong special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American, A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest eff. culation of any scientifie Journal Terms, $% MU four months, $l. Sold byall newsdealerd Co ze1ereaiar, Now York Branch Office. 635 F St.. Washington. D. (6) 4 ~ IIASA OTSA OT YOY SMSO