The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, September 20, 1906, Image 5

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THE LINDEMAN PIANO
in the lead for 70 years.
TIME IS THE TEST OF MERIT.
Beware of imitations.
We believe that the 70 years’ experi.
ence and reputation we put into our
fq Piano, the care and attention we put into
= jts construction, have refulted in one of
the most sa ry instruments ever
ut on the market. Has all the latest
[Eprovements. Every one warranted.
WHY NOT BUY THE BEST?
when the priceis within thereach of any
ES a El Cha
LINDEMAN & SONS PIANO CO.,
548-560 West 23rd St., New York. ~
New Firm!
G. G. De Lozier,
GROGER AND GONFEGTIONER.
Having purchased the well known Jeffery
grocery opposite the postoffice,I want the
public to know that I will add greatly to
the stock and improve the store in every
way. Itis my aim to conduct a first class
grocery and confectionery storé,and to give
Big Value Xor Cash.
1 solicit a fair share of your patronage,
and I promise a square deal and courteous
treatment to all customers. My line will
eonsistfZof;;sStaple and Fancy Groceries
Choice Confectionery, Country Produce,
Cigars, Tobacco, etc.
OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE,
SALISBURY, PA.
Meat
~~
Market!
Take notice that I have opened a new
and up-to-date meat market in Salis-
bury, one door south of Lichliter’s store.
Everything is new, neat and clean,
and it is a model in every respect.
I deal in all kinds of Fresh and Salt
Meats, Poultry, Fresh Fish, ete.
I pay highest cash prices for Fat Cat-
_ tle, Pork, Veal, Mutton, Poultry, Hides,
| GARNER 10 PLERSE YOU
and want you to call and be con-
vinced that I can best supply your wants
in the meat line. :
CASPER WAHL,
The Old Reliable Butcher.
THE SALISBURY HACK LINE
« AND LIVERY. ™~
C. W. STATLER, - - Proprietor.
Two hacks daily, except Sunday, be-
tween Salisbury and Meyersdale, connect-
ing with trains east and west.
Schedule:
Hack No.1 leaves Salisbury at........ S8A.M
Hack No. 2 leaves Salisbury at........ 1P.M
Returning, No 1 leaves Meyersdale at 1 P.M
No.2leaves Meyersdaleat............. 6P.M
M@P=First class rigs for all kinds of trav-
ol,at reasonable prices.
Fits the Lunch! Fits the Pocket!
THE IDEAL
FOLDING LUNCH BOX
represents the end of £ wir ig A in a Lanch
1
po
sess, and has more than one valuable advan-
tage that no other lunch box ever ha
t is strong and durable, and will give years
of continued service. It is convenient to
carry both in and out of use. It is attractive
in ap; ce, and because of its being used
for more purposes than one, is a great relief]
to sensitive people who dislike the idea of
being seen with a dinner basket.
The Ideal Lunch Box is so low in
ahyone can afford to buy it. Can be folded
up in a moment to fit pocket, with no more
inconvenience than an ordinary pocketbook.
ROCHESTER LUNCH BOX MFG. CO.,
Cox Building, ROCHESTER, N. Y.
BALTIMORE & OHIO
$20 MILEAGE TICKETS
In addition to the INTERCHANGEABLE
ONE-THOUSAND-MILE TICKETS, sold at
rate of $30 each with refund of $10, the
BALTIMORE AND OHIO RAILROAD COM-
PANY have placed on sale another form
of ONE-THOUSAND-MILE TICKET, scold
at $20, good over all lines east of the
Ohio River; also over the Philadelphia
and Reading and Central Railroad of
New Jersey systems. These tickets are
good for one or more persons for one
year from date of sale, and will be ac-
cepted for passage on all trains.
C. W. BASSETT,
General Passenger Agent,
D. B. MARTIN,
Manager Passenger Traffic
9-20
price
KILL vw COUCH
{ao CURE THE LUNGS
«m Dr. King’s
New Discovery
ONSUMPTION Price
FOR {| ouGHs and S50c & $1.00
: OLDS Free Trial.
Surest and Quickest Cure for all
THROAT and LUNG TROUB-
LES, or MONEY BACK.
MONUMENTS! MONUMENTS!
If you want to purchase a
Monument, Headstone or Iron
Fence, call at our yard at No.
99 N. Centre St., Cumberland,
or at Frostburg, where you will
see the largest stock in Western
Maryland to select from, sold at
prices that defy competition.
J. B. Wirriams Co.
The Low Price Marble and
Granite Dealers. 10-11
Desirable Pesiionce Property for
a
One of the most desirable modern
homes in Salisbury—14 rooms, heated
by hot air, bath room, hot and cold wa-
ter, electric light, good stable and other
out-buildings, large corner lot, ideal
location, ete. For particulars call on
or address THE STAR, Elk Lick, Pa. tf
Qe A
Desirable Real Estate at Private
Sale.
The heirs of Caroline E. Smith, de-
ceased, offer their large double dwell-
ing on corner of Ord street and Smith
avenue, Salisbury, Pa., at private sale.
Apply to Stewart Smith, sdminisita-
tor. tf.
SAFE AND GENTLE horses at the
Williams Livery. All good travelers
and suitable for either young or old
persons. J. W. Williams, proprietor
Salisbury, Pa. tf.
SHOE BARGAINS!—We have the
biggest and best stock of Men’s, Wom-
en’s and Children’s Shoes in town, and
we are offering special bargains in
Shoes at this time. Call and save
money. HAY’S DEPARTMENT STORE.
t
DRESS SHIRTS !—The finest line that
ever came to town, at Hay’s Depart-
ment Store. Prices, 50c., 75¢. and $1.00.
tf C. T. Hay, Manager.
BEST HORSES, ‘best rigs and best
general equipments in the livery line,
at the Williams Livery, Salisbury, Pa.
Somerset County telephone. tf
WANTED AT ONCE !|—Two
good girls, white, for kitchen
work, at Hay’s Hotel. Good
wages. Apply to or address D.
I. Hay, Elk Lick, Pa. tf
FOR BEST LIVERY service, go to J.
W. Williams, Salisbury. Pa. Good
horses and best of rigs. tf
TO LAND OWNERS: —We have
printed and keep in stock a supply of
trespass notices containing extracts
from the far-reaching trespass law pass-
ed at the 1905 session of the Pennsyl-
vania Legislature. The notices are
rinted on good cardboard with blank
ine for signature, and they will last
for years in all kinds of weather. Every
and owner should buy some of them,
as the law requires land owners to post
their lands if they want the protection
of the latest and best trespass law ever
passed. Send all orders to THE STAR,
Elk Lick, Pa. tf
IT IS BAD BUSINESS to allow peo-
ple to look in vain through the col-
umns of Tee Star for an advertise-
ment of your business. tf
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
THE BLANKS WE KEEP.
The following blanks can be obtained
at all times at THE STAR office: Leases,
Mortgages, Deeds, Judgment Bonds,
Common Bonds, Judgment Notes, Re-
ceipt Books, Landlord s Notice to Ten-
ants, Constable Sale Blanks, Summons
Execution for Debt, Notice of Claims
for Collection, Commitments, Subpoe-
nas, Criminal Warrants, etc. tf
ENGRAVED INVITATIONS for
weddings, parties, etc., also engraved
visiting cards and all manner of steel
and copper plate engraved work at THE
Star office. Call and see our samples.
All the latest styles in Script, Old Eng-
lish and all other popular designs at
prices as low as offered by any printing
house in the country, while the work is
the acme of perfection. tt
EMERY MOST ANSWER
Serious Allegations Which the Can-
didate For Governor Must Meet.
CASTLE AND SWALLOW SPEAK
The
Called Upon to Declare Himself
Democratic-Lincolnite Nominee
Upon Serious Matters In the State
Canvass. :
[Special Correspondence.]
Harrisburg, September 18.
Lewis Emery, Jr., the Democratic
Lincolnite candidate for governor, has
been on the defensive ever since he was
nominated.
He has been charged with many de-
linquerncies, to put it mildly, and he
has failed to answer a single charge.
He has been accused of placing the
church upon the same plan with the
brewery, he has been condemned for at.
tacking the Standard Oil company
while being a partner in an oil trust
which, as far as it goes, is quite as much
| ota public menace as is the Rockefeller
trust. He has been condemned for fail-
ure to appreciate the Christian spirit
evinced in the maintenance of the Sab-
bath, he has been weakened by the at-
tacks that have been made upon him
for accepting rebates from the rail-
roads, while proclaiming to the world
his unalterable opposition to the sys-
tem which has been denounced by
every Republican orator that has ap-
peared upon the platform during the
present campaign, and he has shown a
personal weakness in meeting such
{ssues, that have, in the opinion of
many, practically put him out of the
race for the governorship.
Homer L. Castle, the Prohibition
eandidate for governor, accentuated the
issue of ‘“‘the Church vs. the Brewery,”
in his speech delivered recently in Har-
risburg, when he said:
“I must insist that Mr. Emery is not
fit to be the governor of this state, be-
cause his mental ideals are low and tre-
mendously warped. He sits down in
cold blood and writes a letter to a
man, in which he puts the church and
the school house and the hospital on a
parity with a brewery. Just think
of it!
As to the Church.
“The church, which, aside from the
home, is the only institution which
has Divine sanction and ordination.
‘The church, which has stood for
these ages as the sign present of God
with man.
“The church, into whose life has been
poured the thoughts of the best men
and women that have ever lived.
“The church, for whose life so many
men have laid down theirs and wil-
{ingly surrendered all they had and
were, that it might have life.
“The church, whose spires point the
mariner on life’s sea the way to the
better.
“The church, into whose portals you
and I went as boys, and where first the
minister of God laid his hands in bles-
sing on our heads.
“The church, where our names were
enrolled and where every Sabbath we
meet and catch a fresh breath from the
atmosphere of higher life.
“The church, to whose altar you and
I led the woman who became part and
parcel of our lives, and heard the min-
ister say, ‘Whom God hath joined to-
gether let no man put asunder.’
“The church, through whose door
we carried for the last time the body
of a sainted mother.
“The church, that comes to the bed-
side as all things terrestrial seems ta
recede from us, and touching our fad-
ing eyesight, makes us to see glories
beyond. This church is no better, in
the ideas of Lewis Emery, than a brew-
ery, and I am not objecting to Mr.
Emery’s ideals.
“Some have said that he is honest
when he makes these statements. Let
that stand for the fact, and his very
honesty makes him the more ineligi-
ble as the governor of a Christian com-
monwealth.
“The objection that I urge to him is
not that he believes that the church
and the brewery are upon a level, but
that the man who does believe that
ought not to be foremost in a Chris-
tian commonwealth.
“We have in this state approxi-
mately 5000 ministers of that church;
we have at least 5,000,000 attendants
upon the public services of that church,
and, to put it in the parlance of the
street, I say it is up to that church ta
demonstrate by declining to support
fr. Emery, that it does not believe that
} is a fact that they are no better than
the brewery.”
Mr. Castle then gave testimony as
to the great work of the public schools
and the hospitals of the common-
wealth, which, he said, Mr. Emery had,
with the church, linked in the sama
category of the breweries.
He recounted a story about Mr. Em-
ory making a speech on a Sunday at a
gathering of Italians, ‘where beer
flowed freely,” and on this point he
said, among other things: “I do not ask
Mr. Emery to reverence the Christian
Sabbath day. I do not insist that he
shall go to church; I do not even insist
that he shall not attend Italian brawls,
but I do insist that the man who does
that is not fit to be governor of a
Christian commonwealth.
“Beyond the peradventure of a doubt,
it is the duty of the church to take a
hand in this fight, not alone for the
maintenance of its cwn honor, but for
the maintenance of the honor of the
country.”
Emery’s Oli Trust.
Mr. Castle then discussed at lengtk
Mr. Emery’'s Business operations, de-
claring that the Pure Oil company,
with which he had been identified, is
as much of a trust in its way as is the
Standard Oil company.
Upon this point, among other things,
he said:
“I have said, furthermore, that Mr
Emery is not sincere in his opposition
to the present Republican reign. It is
known that Mr. Emery has as his part-
ners in the Pure Oil Company such men
as McNichol, Durham and Mack. Mr.
Emery has been repeatedly asked to
show the people of this state the books
where these men paid (if they ever did
pay) for the stock which they hold. He
has been asked to tell what relations
this stock has to the New Jersey legis-
lative manipulations and the Pennsyl-
vania legislature; heretofore, so far as
I know, he has never given any reply
to this. If he does not tell that miser-
able story, I will tell it in due time.
“It is of very recent date that he has
opposed Senator Penrose. I am reliably
informed that about the time that
Judge Stewart declined to be the Re-
publican candidate, Mr. Emery, in com-
pany with Mr. Woodbury, of Schuyl-
kill county, and some others, visited
Senator Penrose in Washington and
undertook to make a deal with him.”
Mr. Emery has been seeking ‘to
make political capital out of his at-
tacks upon the Standard Oil company.
He has as yet failed to answer Mr.
Castle's direct charge that Mr. Em-
ery’s oil interests have been benefl-
claries of rebates, quite as much as
has the Standard Oil company in their
limited way.
Upon this subject Mr. Castle, at
Corry, last week said:
“Is this canvass of Lewis Emery,
Jr., a fair, candid, honest canvass,
based upon actual conditions of the
men themselves, or is it a pure sham
and a fake and a fraud? As bearing
upon that I am reminded of the fact
that Lewis Emery appeared before
the industrial commission and gave
testimony, in 1899, and by turning to
page 669, volume 1, of the printed re.
ports of that commission, we find this
interesting bit of information:
Emery’s Old Testimony.
“These questions were directed to
Mr. Emery when on the witness stand,
and the answers are his:
“ ‘Have you frequently in your busi-
ness enjoyed rebates?’ was asked Mr.
Emery, and his reply follows:
“ ‘No, sir; never. Now let me mod-
ify that. In my business previous to
1872, in the refinery in Titusville, Pa.,
rebates were a common thing, but we
were young and new in the commer-
cial business, and fellows in Cleveland
and Pittsburg were a little more ex-
perienced. We didn't seem to make
very much money. They were run-
ning full tilt with their wells, barrel
shops and everything, and we began
to look about to see what was the
matter. We went to Pittsburg, and
learned to our astonishment that cer-
tain concerns were getting 25 cents
a barrel. We were large shippers,
and we demanded to be granted the
same. That was away back in 1870.
We were given 25 cents; and then we
got on to the fact that some refiners
were receiving 75 cents back and
some other refiners were receiving 50
cents. The rate at that time was in
the neighborhood of $1.50, and oil
could be carried at a profit today at
25 cents. From that time to this, no,
I am not guilty.’
“It is, perhaps, interesting also to
note that there is filed with the inter-
state commerce commission in Wash.
ington a paper showing that as late
as 1897 the Emery Manufacturing
company, of Bradford, was shipping
to the Emery Manufacturing com-
pany, at Buffalo, N. Y., by the Buffalo,
Rochester & Pittsburg railroad, a
large number of cars that were billed
as acid, when in fact they contained
oil. The rate on acid was 5 cents per
100 pounds, and the rate on oil was
814 cents. And in that way they were
getting rebates on their oil by falsely
billing the oils which they were ship-
ping to Buffalo, and which were being
paid for by W. H. Foote & Co.”
Castle’s Defi to Emery.
Mr. Castle challenged Mr. Emery to
prove the charge that the Castle
company was being financed by the
Standard Oil company. If the charge
were proven, Mr. Castle said, he
would retire from the contest. “If I
fail to prove any of the charges I
have made against Mr. Emery, I will
also quit the field,” Mr. Castle said,
“and if Mr. Emery does not explain
away those charges, then he should
quit the contest.
“In respect to receiving Standard
Qil money, we are better than Mr.
Emery is. He at one time, about 1885,
went broke, and he went to New York
to secure help from the Standard Oil
company, and that company discover-
ing that he had a lot of iron tanks on
his hands that were really junk,
bought them from him, paid him about
$350,000 for them, and he took that
money and reinstated himself. And
after he had received the money he
declared publicly, and I am prepared
to prove it, if he ever again raised
his hands against the Standard Oil
company he hoped God would wither
them from his body. Is he keeping
that vow now in this false-pretense
campaign of his?”
Dr. Silas C. Swallow, late Prohibi-
tion candidate for president, has been
¢ven more personal than Mr. Castle
in his public comments upon Mr. Em-
ery.
In a recent Harrisburg speech Dr.
Swallow sald:
Dr. Swallow's Hot Shot.
“Having fought nearly to a finish
the Quay gang for 10 or more years,
we are not quite content to have
foisted on us a fake reformer or coun-
terfeit who has used in his business,
as we have the court records to prove,
the very identical methods ‘employed
by the Standard Oil company, public
prejudice against which is the popu-
lar hobby on which he proposes to
ride into undeserved power.
“The kind of a man we want in the
gubernatorial chair might be descibed
by a description of the kind we don’t
want. We don’t want a protege of the
almost defunct Quay dynasty, nor of
the corporate influence of the state.
Nor do we want a man whose efforts
for reform have enriched himself and
Dis friends from the coffers of those
whom he professes to hate and fight;
nor one whose crusade for reform
has been confined to the furtherance
of his own monetary interests; nor
one who places the Lrewery on a par-
ity with the church, the school and
the hospital.”
After some very direct references
to Mr. Emery’s alleged personal hab-
its, Dr. Swallow said: ‘“We must not
put into the gubernatorial chair an
egotistic boaster or a man of low
breeding or of salacious views of so-
clety, or one who put the people of
our great state to shame by his coarse
motives, manners and methods.”
STUART AND HIS TOUR
Schedule For th: First Two Weeks
of the Republican Spellbinders.
SHEPP TO DIRECT THE ORATORS
“Uncle Joe” Cannon and Others of
National Prominence to Speak In
Pennsylvania.
[Special Correspondence.]}
Philadelphia, September 18.
Edwin S. Stuart, the Republican
nominee for governor, and his col-
| leagues on the Republican state tick-
et, will start out this week upon their
tour of the state, and will make their
initial speeches of the trip at Centre
Hall, Centre county, on Thursday, Sep-
tember 20, at a farmer’s picnic. They
are scheduled to go to Bellefonte the
same day and address the voters of
that borough.
On Friday, September 21, they will
address a meeting in the evening at
Clearfield, and there will be an after-
noon meeting the following day, Sat-
urday, September 22, at Lock Haven,
Clinton county, and in the evening
they will speak at Williamsport, Ly-
coming county.
A meeting in the afternoon at Se-
linsgrove, Snyder county, will open
the week, beginning Monday, Septem-
ber 24, and on the evening of the
same day the governor-to-be and his
colleagues will address a meeting in
Shamokin, Northumberland county.
On Tuesday, September 25, they will
be in Mahanoy City in the afternoon,
and in Pottsville in the evening.
There will be a meeting in Wells-
boro, Tioga county, on the evening of
‘Wednesday, September 26, and on
Thursday, September 27, the candi-
dates will speak in the afternoon at
McSmethport, McKean county, and in
the evening at Bradford, McKean
county.
Tionesta, Forest county, will be vis-
fted on the afternoon of Friday, Sep-
tember 28, and on the evening of the
same day the spellbinders will address
a meeting in Warren county.
An afternoon meeting in Corry, Erie
county, will be held on Saturday, Sep-
tember 29, and on the evening of the
same day there will be a grand rally
in Erie.
Great Demand For Stuart.
There was a great demand upon
Chairman Andrews, of the Republican
state committee, for meetings to be
addressed by Candidate Stuart, and
as far as possible an effort was made
to meet every reasonable request for
such meetings.-
Colonel Andrews has announced the
appointment of Colonel Daniel B.
Shepp, a member of Governor Penny-
packer’s staff, to be chief of the bu-
reau of speakers for the Republican
state committee. Colonel Shepp has
many friends throughout thé state,
and it is predicted that he will enlist
many of the best orators of the Repub-
lican party in this and other states in
the cause of Republicanism in Penn-
sylvania.
Uncle “Joe’ Cannon is among oth-
ers that Colonel Shepp is confident he
will have to speak for the whole Re-
publican ticket in this state this fall.
Colonel Shepp has been in communi-
cation with Chairman Sherman, of the
Republican National Congressional
Committee, and has been advised that
a number of national celebrities will be
assigned to speak in this state. Re-
publicans realize that the skirmish
of the next presidential campaign is
now going on.
The loyalty of Repubiicans every-
where must be appealed to, that they
shall not be misled by the cry for fu-
sion candidates, with the declarations
that there is no national significance
to the canvass in this state this fall.
Emery and his supporters are busy
with arguments that this is simply a
local fight, but when the Garmans, the
Guffeys, the Donnellys and the Ryans
et al. go over to New York and tell
Bryan what they are really doing in
Pennsylvania it is time that Republi-
cans all along the line should awaken
to the true situation and rally around
the banner of Edwin S. Stuart, their
nominee for governor, and have Penn-
sylvania give a ringing answer to the
Bryan presidential boomers with a tre-
mendous Republican and Roosevslt
majority in November.
MEYERSDALE FAIR.
Edwin 5. Sturat, Louis Emery, Jr.,
and Other Prominent Speakers
Will Be Present.
The Sixth Annual Fair of the Mey-
ersdale Fair and Race Association,
which will be held September 26, 27
and 28, promises to far eclipse that of
any past year, and the officers of the
association have been very busy this
week arranging for the same. Bill
posters are out advertising the Fair,
and from all sides come reports of a
larger attendance than ever before.
President John 8. Graves is having
the grounds and buildings put in
shape, and it may be necessary to build
additional stables to accommodate the
race horses, for the fact that the asso-
ciation is in a race circuit, and that we
follow Johnstown, and in turn are fol-
lowed by Cumberland, will bring a
large number of horses. A number of
entries have already been received.
There will not be a spare foot of
space in the Exhibition building, and a
number who wished to make industrial
exhibits are arranging to make the
same in the open. The entries of cat-
tle, horses, sheep, swine and poultry
will surpass all former years, while the
exhibits of farm and garden products
will also be very large. The ladies are
also taking a great interest in the Fair,
as they will make a very niee exhibit
of fancy work of all kinds, oil and wa-
ter colors, and china painting. Beals’
Military Baad will furnish music each
day, and the Belmont Sisters, the
greatest lady aeronauts in the world,
will make daily balloon ascensions
with a parachute drop.
On Thursday, September 27th, the
entire gubernatorial party on the Re-
publican ticket will be present on the
grounds, and speeches will be made by
some of the party. Those comprising
the party will be: Edwin 8. Stuart, of
Philadelphia; Robert 8. Murphy, of
Johnstown ; Henry Houck, of banon
county; Robert K. Young, of Tioga
county. This will be a great honor for
the association, and the county as well,
and will undoubtedly bring a great
many people to hear and see this dis-
tinguished party.
On Friday, the 28th, Louis Emery,
the Democratic-Lincoln candidate for
Governor, will be in Meyersdale and
address the people on the issues of the
present campaign.
Let every one take a day off and
come and meet old friends, and enjoy
themselves at the Fair. Remember the
dates, September 26, 27 and 28.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.
Jacob Jones to Chauncey J. Lehman,
in Conemaugh, $ !
Edward Alcott to Samuel B. Alcott,
in Ursina, $1500. ;
Boswell Improvement Company to
Charles Swetoski, in Boswell, $350.
W. D. Claycomb to J. F. Horner, in
Boswell, $1425. .
Walter W. Knable to Ida XK. Hoblit-
zell, in Somerset borough, $1000.
Henry Haugar to Clinton S. Hauger,
in Brothersvalley, $1600.
Amos W. Knepper to James C. Sible
et al, in Somerset borough, $27,000.
Joseph A. Poland to Charles W. Po-
land, in Summit, $300.
John M. Olinger to Ross Albright, in
Summit, $700.
Daniel E. Keller to Timothy L. Var-
ner, in Somerset borough, $950.
Amanda M. Green to 8. H. Bowman,
in Somerset borough, $10,200.
S. H. Bowman to M. C. Talbot, in
Somerset borough, $1.
Daniel Shultz’s Executors to John Q.
Barlow, agent, in Larimer and Green-
ville, $350.
Andrew Sturtz to John Q. Barlow,
agent, in Larimer and Greenville, $175.
Valentine Hay to H. G. Kelley, in
Somerset borough, $500.
Joseph Levy to Flora B. Berkey, in
Somerset borough, $5500.
Ephraim 8. Thomas to Jobn 8S. Thom-
as, in Lower Turkeyfoot, $400.
Francis Taylor to Albert Weigle, in
Shade, $5000.
Harvey H. Ling to Catharine Heiple,
in Somerset township, $700.
Timothy L. Varner to Elmer O. Long.
in Somerset borough, $475.
‘Wm. H. Boor to Augustino Cononics,
in Summit, $950.
H.H. and F. A. Maust to Citizens’
Light, Heat and Power Company, in
Elk Lick, $85.
John W. Wechtenheiser to William
Wechtenheiser, in Shade, $2500. :
Holsopple Lodge, I. O. O. F. to Dr. H.
A. Simmerman, in Benson, $50.
tpn
STARVING TO DEATH.
Because her stomach was so weaken-
ed by useless drugging that she could
not eat, Mrs. Mary H. Walters, of St.
Clair St., Columbus, O., was literally
starving to death. She writes: “My
stomach was so weak from useless
drugs that I could not eat, and my
nerves so wrecked that I could not
sleep ; and not before I was given up to
die was I induced to try Electric Bit-
ters; with the wonderful result that
improvement began at once, and a com-
plete cure followed.” Best health
Tonic on earth. 50c. Guaranteed by
E. H. Miller, druggist. 10-1
es
Not Much Doing in Mail Order Town.
The Mail would like to see one Col-
orado county entirely settled by mail
order people, just to see what would
happen.
The stores would stand it as long as
they could, then move away. Banks
would close their doors.
would have to quit. The hotels would
go out of business, mechanics move
away, churches dwindle, buildings be-
come vacant and delapidated.
Strangers would take one look and
flee. Isn’t that precisely what would
happen if an entire county were popu-
lated with people who purchased every-
thing in Chicago?
Who would buy a farm so located
that he couldn’t drive to some sort o!
town? Be a friend to your town, Mr.
Farmer, and it will be a friend to you
—Salida (Colo.) Mail.
———etl een
All kinds of Legal and Commercial
Blanks, Judgment Notes, ete., for sale
at Tug STAR office. tf
B®” WEDDING Invitations at Taz
ceived. tL.
Newspapers.
StAR office. A nics new stock just re
on em
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