[ SOMERS] COUNTY STIR Need a good cathartic? A pill is best. Say a pill like DeWitt’s Little Early Risers About the most reliable on the arket. Sold by E. H. Miller. 12-1 The Pennsylvania Railroad Company | 1 iIvENGooD, Editor and Publisher. I | == | has decided to place an order for 100 | tered at the Postoflice ¢ Elk Lick, Pa. | ntered at the Postoflice a E Ik Lic | all-steel, non-inflammable passenger | as mail matter of the Second Class. | cars. It is the company’s intention to = EE | Subscription Rates. | THE STAR is published every Thursday,at Salisbury, ( Elk Lick, P. O.) Somerset Coun- ty, Pa., at the following rates: ®ne year, if paid spot cash in advance. f not paid strictly in advance......... Bix months. :- Three months. Single copies.. To avoid multipli eC s all subscriptions for three Es or less must be paid in advance. These rates and torms will be rigidly adhered to. . $1.25 50 Advertising Rates. Transient Reading Notices, 5 cents a line #ach insertion. To regular advertisers, 5 gonts a line for first insertion and 3 cents a line for each succeeding insertion. No busi- ness lacals will be mixed with local news items or editorial matter for less than 10 e¢ants a line for each insertion,except on yearly contracts Rates for Display Advertisments will be made known on application Editorial advertising, invariably 10 cents & line. Legal Advertisements at legal rates. Marriage, Birth and Death Notices not exceeding fifteen lines, inserted free. All additional lines, 5 cents each. Cards of Thanks will be published free for prtrons of the Daper Son patrons will be charged 10 cents a lin Resolutions of AR iaenot will be published for 5 cents a line. All advertisements will be run and charg- ad for until ordered discontinued. No advertisement will be taken for less than 25 cents. When the Hair Falls Then it’s time to act! No time to study, to read, to experi- ment! You want to save your hair, and save it quickly, too! So make up your mind this very minute that if your hair ever comes out you will use Avyer’s Hair Vigor. It makes the scalp healthy. The hair stays in. It cannot do any- thing else. It’s nature’s way. The best kind of a testimonial — “Sold for over sixty years.” Mado by J. O. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass, idee of SARSAPARILLA: yer: Sh CHERRY PECTORAL. LOCAL AND GENERAL NEWS. NENSY [TENS GATHERED HERE MND THERE WITH AN OCCASIONAL JOKE ADDED FOR SPICE Bantering boys And gambling men Are candidates, So say the Fates, For awful death, Or for the Pen. —Connellsville Courier. No holiday rates are to be allowed by the railroads, this year. The waste of natural gas in West Virginia is given as 500,000,000 cubic feet a day. J. L. Barchus and A. E. Livengood went to Harrisburg, Pa., on business, Tuesday last. Come out and see the fun at the Union Depot. You will like the wil West chorus girls. William Dively, a brother of Mrs. C. R. Haselbarth, died at his home in Kansas City, Mo., last Saturday. Miss Nancy Livengood went to Al- toona, last Friday, to spend the winter with Ler sister, Mrs. A. D. Gnagey. Nov. 23 is the dete Uncle Josh and Aunt Sara, the dude and all the rest will be found at the Union Depot. * Lew 8S. Keim, of Elkins, W. Va., was in town last Saturday and Sunday, the guest of his mother, Mrs. S. C. Keim. Meet your friends at the Union De- pot, the home talent production, at the Opera House, Friday night, Nov. 23d. * Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Smith and their daughter, Mrs. S. P. Schell, went to Connellsville, Pa., last Sunday, to visit friends. George H. Suhrie arrived in town, Iast Saturday evening, for a visit with his half-brother, “Squire” Samuel Lowry. David Durst, who was a resident of Grantsville, Md., some twenty years ago, was recently appointed jail warden at Oakland, Md. If you want a Business Education, attend the Meyersdale Commercial College, Meyersdale, Pa. It’s The Best School. Catalogue Free. tf The chicken and waffle supper given by the Brethren Ladies’ Aid Society, last Saturday evening, was a financial gsuceess, netting over $50.00. It pays to read the advertisements of enterprising home merchants. They are the people who make it possible to have conveniences right at your door. Good for everything a salve is used for and especially recommended for iles. That is what we say of DeWitt’s itch Hazel Salve. On the market for years and a standby in thousands of families. Get DeWitt’s. Sold by E. H. Miller. 12-1 build no more wooden cars. Our farmer friend J. F. Mosser, of near Hauser, this county, brought to this office, last Friday, a parsnip that is a wonder. It measures over a yard from top to bottom.—QOakland Journal. Did you ever notice the shape of the fellow’s head who has no use for his home newspaper? It’s one of the strongest evidences obtainable that Darwin’s theory of the origin of man is correct, says an exchange. A union Thanksgiving service will be held in the United Evangelical church, next Thursday evening. Rev. L. Z. Robinson, of the M. E. church, will preach a sermon suitable to the oe- casion. Everybody is invited. Piles quickly and positively cured with Dr. Shoop’s Magic Ointment. It’s made for Piles alone—and it does the work snrely and with satisfaction. Itching, painful, protruding or blind piles disappear like magic by its use. Large, nickel capped glass jars, 50 cents. Sold and recommended by Elk Lick Pharmacy. 12-1 On last Thursday Mrs. Ed. Glotfelty sustained an operation for the removal of a large fatty tumor, at her home in Springfield. The operation is reported as being a very sucgessful one, and the patient is recuperating nicely.—Lanark (111) Gazette. Druggist Miller returned from Ber- lin, Tuesday evening, where he had been on business. He was accompanied by his brother, who manages the Mil- ler drug store in Munhall, Pa. The Miller brothers now own and operate three first class drug stores, one here, one in Berlin and one in Munhall. Here is our condensed opinion of the Original Laxative Cough Syrup: “Near- ly all other cough syrups are constipat- ing, especially those containing opiates. Kennedy’s Laxative (containing) Honey and Tar moves the bowels. Con- tains no opiates. Conforms to the Na- tional Pure Food and Drug Law. Sold by E. H. Miller. 12-1 “What was the minister’s text today, Mabel?” asked the father of a 4-year- old miss who had just returned from church. “I can’t think of the words,” she replied, “but it was somewhere in the third chapter of St. Paul” “Are you sure?” queried the father. ‘Well, I may be mistaken,” answered Mabel, “but I know it was either St. Paul or Minneapolis.” Give children a remedy with a pleas- ant taste. Don’t force unpleasant med- icine down their throats, Kennedy’s Laxative (containing Honey and Tar is most pleasant to take. Children like it, and as a relief for colds, coughs, ete., there is nothing better. No opiates. Conforms to National Pure Food and Drug Law. Sold by E. H. Miller. 12-1 James C. Begley. of Somerset, has taken charge of the Berlin Gleaner as editor thereof. Mr. Begley is a good newspaper man, and he has had con- siderable experience as an editor and press correspondent. He used to edit and publish the Windber Journal, and later the Fayette Republican, and un- der his editorial management both were very newsy and interesting pa- pers. Editor Begley announces that the Gleaner will be a non-partisan pa- per. We wish him much success in his new venture, and we know that his paper will be interesting. Think of Dr. Shoop’s Catarrh Cure if your nose and throat discharges—if your breath is foul or teverish. This snow white soothing balm contains Oil of Eucalyptus, Thymol, Menthol, ete., incorporated into an imported, cream- like, velvety petrolatum. It soothes, heals, purifies, controls. Call at our store for free trial box. Elk Lick Phar- macy. 12-1 Sir Thomas Lipton, who visited Bridgeport, Conn., recently, made a visit to the factory of the American Graphophone Company, and was shown the manner in which records are made. He was so greatly interested in the operation that he made a cylinder record himself on which he related one of his inimitable stories explaining how it happens that he has not won the America’s Cup. This was reproduced, immediately, on the Twentieth Century graphophone, very much to Sir Thom- as’s delight. Several artists from the Record Making Department of the Columbia Phonograph Company, in New York, were present, and Mr. Frank C. Stanley, the well known bari- tone, sang “Tommy, Tommy Lipton,” a travesty of “Tommy Atkins,” render- ing it with fine effect, and to the great enjoyment of all who heard it. Preventics, as the name implies, pre- vent all Colds and Grippe when “taken at the sneeze stage.” Preventics are toothsome candy tablets. Preventics dissipate all colds quickly, and taken early, when you first feel that a cold is coming, they check and prevent them, Preventics are thoroughly safe for children, and as effectual for adults. Sold and recommended in 5 cent and 25 gone boxes by Elk Lick Pharmacy. A Westmoreland county farmer pre- dicts a hard winter ahead. Corn husks are very thick and the stalks lean to the west. Frogs are searching the hol- lows of mill ponds and mudholes to find the deepest places. Geese, ducks and chickens are growing a coat of fur under their feathers, and are rubbing their feet to harden them. All the one-eyed owls are leaving the country a month earlier than usual. Bob-tailed squir- rels are laying up extra provisions. Rabbit ears are shorter than ever be- cause they expect them to be frozen. Fungus growths on old logs have wrinkles in them. The last time his happened it froze the handles off ‘he plows. Groundhogs are sitting with humped-up look and tails. Cows ! ugt- ling around for pieces of flaniél io wrap up their tails, and hogs are rg t= ing their way to the middle «f hay stacks. All these signs indicate 30 de- grees below zero from November through to May.—Connellsville Courier. “For years I starved. then I bought a 50 cent bottle of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure, and what that bottle benefited me all the gold in Georgia could not buy. I kept on taking it and in two months I went back to my work as machinist. In three months I was as well and hearty as I ever was. I still use a lit- tle occasionally as I find it a fine blood purifier and a good tonic. May you live long and prosper.”—C. N. Cornell, Roding, Ga., Aug. 27, 1908. Kodol is sold here by E. H. Miller. 12-1 Rev. J. C. Mackey to Locate in . Uniontown. Rev. J. C. Mackey, who resided in Salisbury five or six years ago, serving as pastor of the Brethren church here for about two years, is soon to locate in Uniontown, Pa. Since leaving here, Rev. Mackey was located in Ohio, Kansas and Nebraska, his present charge being Carleton, Neb. In a letter received from him bear- ing date of November 13th, Rev. Mackey takes occasion to say the fol- lowing kind things concerning THE STAR: “THE STAR comes regularly, and we are not tired of it, either. It is like an old friend who gets closer as the years goby. Iam not watching the date when my subscription is due, but when your reminder appears it will be O. K. I have not yet reached the point when I can think better of myself for getting warm when told that the other fellow needs his money. So you attend to that, while I enjoy the paper. “By the way, we expect to return to Pennsylvania, Jan. 1st, and make our home in Uniontown. Can scarcely wait to get back to the old Keystone.” When the tip of a dog’ s nose is cold and moist, that dog is not sick. A fe- verish, dry nose means sickness with a dog. And so with the human lips. Dry, cracked and colorless lips mean feverishness, and are as well ill appear- ing. To have beautiful, pink, velvet- like lips, apply at bedtime a coating of Dr. Shoop’s Green Salve. It will soften and heal any skin ailment. Get a free. trial box, at our store, and be convine- ed. Large nickel capped glass jars, 25 cents. Elk Lick Pharmacy. 12-1 Salisbury Now Has Six Hacks Per Day. On Tuesday John Schramm and Frank Wagner started a new hack line between Salisbury and Meyersdale, thus giving C. W. Stotler’s well estab- lished mail and passenger hack line pretty stiff opposition. The new line consists of two hacks daily, each way, except Sunday, and the proprietors ad- vertise quick trips, owing to the fact that they have no mails to bother with. However, Mr. Stotler, the mail con- tractor, has decided not to be outdone, and accordingly he has added another hack to his line, calling the new one the One-Hour Hack, and which is mak- ing two trips each way daily, except Sunday, and covering the distance be- tween Salisbury and Meyersdale in one hour. By the two lines we now have six hacks each way between the two towns, two leaving Salisbury at 8 a. m., one at 9a. m.,oneatlp. m, one at 2 p. m,, and one at 3p. m. Returningthey all leave Meyersdale shortly after the ar- rival of the passenger trains, both in the forenoon and in the afternoon. There must be big money in the hack business to cause such activity in that line, and if the spirited competition keeps up, Salisbury will not need the trolley line. The best treatment for indigestion and troubles of the stomach is to rest the stomach. It can be rested by star- vation or by the use of a good digestant which will digest the food eaten, thus taking the work off the stomach. At the proper temperature, a single tea- spoonful of Kodol will wholly digest 3,000 grains of food. It relieves the present annoyance, puts the stomach in shape to satisfactorily perform its functions. Good for indigestion, sour stomach, flatulence, palpitation of the heart and dyspepsia. Kodol is made in strict conformity with the National Pure Food and Drug Law. Sold 3 E. H. Miller. 12-1 Better Stay on the F Farm. Young man, do not take up the study of medicine unless you are certain that you are fitted for carrying out for your- self a brilliant future in that profession. About 12,200 medical graduates are be- ing turned out by the colleges each year, while there is need of only about 2,600, according to one of our most dis- tinguished practitioners. Better stay at home on the farm where brain, brawn and energy will always win its own reward. The well-to-do farmer of today is the most independent man on the green footstool. —Ex. FIRST AID'TO BEAUTY. Nothing is more certain to benefit your complexion than a 25 cent box of Laxakola tablets. They freshen the skin, give color to the cheeks, cure constipation, and give you a clear, rosy, healthful complexion. E. H. Miller. 12-1 ORVINGS DEPARTMENT. Drafts on all parts of the world. tention. ee OF FICERS: cm. Roberdeau Annan. President. Robert R. Henderson. 13! NATIONAL Accounts of individuals and firms invited. Deposits sent by mail and all correspondence given prompt and careful at- Bank open Saturday nights from 7 to 10 o’clock. i Are DIRECTORS: em Duncan Sinclair, Roberdeau Aunan. GURL NUL) BANK LU. DEPONTORY . THREE PER CENT. INTEREST Capital | stock. . .$ 50,000. 00] Surplus fund.. 65,000.00 00 | Deposits (over) 960,000.00 Assets (over)... 10 ,088, 000. 0.00 PAID ON DEPOSITS. Olin Beall. Cashier. Timothy Griffith, Meat Market! MY ct Take notice that I have opened a new Pury, of 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, ete. | GUARANTEE 10 PLEASE 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. LL dS RR i I a an sat] $2.00 to 5.00. Boys’ Overcoats, 00 to 15.00. line. get acquainted with our price Barchus & Iivengood. SC EE Stylish Overcoats! rrr : All the new styles in Men’s and Boys’ Overcoats are here, ready for you to put on. Children’s Overcoats, Ages 3 to 19, Men’s Overcoats and Raincoats, $6.- We can save you money on anything in the Clothing Come in and let us show you the new styles, and $4.00 to 12.00. S. BRR Shoes: Groceries, etc. best and purest brands of goods. reasonable. New Storel New Goods! We have opened a fine new general store in the M. J. o. Glotfelty building, Ord St., Salisbury, Pa., and invite you « to come and inspect our nice, new line of Dry Goods, Prices As Low As The Lowest! We start with an entire new stock, and we handle only the ronage, and we guarantee a square deal and satisfaction to all. Howard Meager & Co. The most up-to-date assortment ever shown in Salisbury, and prices the most Come and see our immense new stock, comprising all the latest styles. The little fellow, the big fellow and the medium sized fellow can all be best fitted out here, and for the least money. Our stock of Hats is by far the largest and finest ever shown in Salisbury. The prices range from $1.00 to 3.50. Men’s fancy dress Suits from $7.50 to 15.00, and, mind you, the same quality other dealers sell at $10.00 to 20.00. Cor- duroy Suits, extra good ones, only $6.00. Overcoats, fine and dandy, $10.00 to 15.00. Children’s Suits, $2.50 to 5.00, and Youths’ $8.00 to 15.00. WE =For biggest values, this store every time. Hay’s Department Store, RR RR Eee We solicit a share of your pat- Wars Early Risers The famous little pills. otis Early Risers The famous little pills. BB C. T. HAY, Manager. THE ORIGINAL LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUP Cures all Coughs and ) oklo Red assists in expelling Semana the Colds from the Bes Honey System by bottle. gently moving ; the bowels. gS alg piyiy i A certain cure\GS Shen tar. for croup and whooping-cough. § KENNEDY'S VE HONEY» TAR PREPARED AT BHE LABORATORY OF E. O. DeWITT & CO., CHICAGO, U. 8. A. SOLD BY E, H, MILLER. ew oi TG A 2a Zein INA. ENA END ZOOL ADEN FN A. FADES ADEN ZAMAN ZENS ZL ADE EDS ZEMAN ZEMMIN Zhen | ZNGA GND SN ANE: ZENE EME ZA ZS: ZAG ZaNSGER 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers