The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, November 29, 1906, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    IE
cASES FOR DECEMBER TERM OF
CRIMINAL COURT.
Eighty-four cases are on the quar-
r 'rly calendar issued by District At-
* yrney Meyers, for December term of
-yurt. Two of these are charges of
warder, with prospects of a third, if
he officers are successful in discovering
‘he murderer of Mrs. Catharine Stauf-
Ar.
CASES FOR MONDAY.
Sylvester Shoemaker, charged with
‘arrying concealed weapons, on infor-
nation of George Plummer.
Sylvester Shoemaker, assault and
)attery ; Andrew Steele, prosecutor.
Andrew Steele, assault and battery
ind carrying concealed weapons; Syl-
ester Shoemaker, prosecutor.
Stiner Zellen et al, malicious mis-
-hief ; Wm. McKee, prosecutor.
George Werbon, assault and battery;
steve Swetcorvitch, prosecutor.
Jonas Stevannus, adultery; Edward
3isbing, prosecutor.
B. F. Fisher, assault and battery and
iesertion ; Annie Fisher, prosecutor.
U. G. Samuels, perjury ; Rowena Rob-
rts, prosecutor.
Charles Gloss, assault and battery to
ravish ; Susan Barnhart, prosecutor.
J. C. Bentley, assault and battery to
kill ; H. Batkerviez, prosecutor.
E. W. Gillan, assault and battery to
. kill ; Charles Bunda, prosecutor.
TU. G.Samuels, bigamy ; Rowena Sam-
nels, prosecutor.
James Walter, aggravated assault
and battery, John Yutzy, prosecutor.
Mike Kochics, carrying concealed
weapons ; James Badling, prosecutor.
Paul Covoch, assault and battery to
kill; F. H. Couperthwaite, prosecutor.
Frank Hagnos, assault and battery to
kill ; John Tomko, prosecutor.
John Marusin et al.,, aggravated as-
sault and battery ; John Kubalos, pros-
ecutor.
Frank Shultz, malicions mischief; J.
C. Bentley, prosecutor.
Charles Swank, larceny; George W.
\ckerman, prosecutor.
Joseph Horwat, larceny ;Mary Nimco,
prosecutor.
John Lake, larceny § George W. Ack-
erman, prosecutor.
J. B. Walker, assault and battery; B.
Tressler, prosecutor.
Bert Miller, assault and battery to
kill ; Cora Foust, prosecutor.
David Spencer, assault and battery;
3, McMahon, prosecutor.
Edward Lytle. larceny ; John O. Huff,
orosecutor.
Bert Miller, robbery; Korah Foust,
prosecutor.
Wm. E. Rowe, burglary; A.
ner, prosecutor.
Peter Berisky, burglary ; Aaron Seese,
nrosecutor.
Ralph McClintock, burglary; W. S.
Kuhlman, prosecutor.
Ralph McClintock, burglary;
\lcott, prosecutor.
Wm. E. Rowe, burglary; T. W. Gur-
‘ey. prosecutor.
Charles Metile, burglary; E. C. L.
Bartow, prosecutor,
John Cook, assault and battery to
(ill; Wm. Brant, prosecutor.
S. Gless-
S. B.
CASES FOR TUESDAY.
John Hudoc et al, robbery; 8. W.
VIecMullen, prosecutor.
George Stanley, assault and surety;
‘veorge Fertig, prosecutor.
Stiney Dulic. assault and battery and
-esisting ; B. G. Fry, prosecutor.
Mike Bialehick, assault and battery
o kill ; B. A. Chadwick, prosecutor.
Four cases against A. G. Marshall,
‘harging conspiracy, larceny and em-
bezzlement; Harrison Snyder, prose-
:utor.
Ellis Barnes et al., housebreaking;
ilizabeth King, prosecutor.
C. F. Wright, carrying concealed
weapons; C. A. Chapin, prosecutor.
P. D. Peterson, false pretense and for-
zery ; H. H. Williams, prosecutor.
Supervisors of Quemahoning, Stony-
creek, Jefferson and Shade, neglecting
roads; prosecutors, Chas. A. Shaffer,
W. H. Grove, W. E. Maul and Isaiah
Hamer.
Angelo Monica, violating liquor laws ;
J. W. Brant, prosecutor.
Harry Sheetz, embezzlement; Alex-
ander Fisher, prosecutor.
W. H. Coughenour, violating liquor
laws; J. B. Walker, prosecutor.
Wm. Jones, assault and battery and
surety ; Mary Jones, prosecutor.
Morgan Marsh, larceny; Domer E.
Kreger, prosecutor.
Jennie Metile, receiving stolen goods,
E. C. L. Barto, prosecutor.
Grover Piper et al, burglary ; 8. Kri-
der, prosecutor.
Harry T. Kauffman, rape; Viola Ba-
ker, prosecutor.
CASES FOR WEDNESDAY.
Annie E, Parson, fornication ; Russel
Holsopple, prosecutor.
Dora Penrod, fornication ; 8. W. Law-
head, prosecutor.
F. & B, cases: David A. Kelley, Myr-
tle M. Long, prosecutor ; John Metzler
Lucey Pletcher, prosecutor ; Irvin Risch:
Mary A. Yoder, prosecutor; Wm. Far-
rel, May Gemmie, prosecutor ; Oscar G.
Jordan, Cora Shroyer, prosecutor;
Charles Hannigan, Annie Ziglar, pros-
ecutor ; G. C. Kalp, Cora Frew, prosecu-
tor; Frank Beyland, Dora Emerick,
prosecutor; J. R. Zerfoss, Emma C.
Lape, prosecutor ; Hiram Yoder, Mary
Zerfoss, prosecutor ; Karl Shaffer, Cora
Durst, prosecutor ; David E. Barthole-
mew, Edith E. Baker, prosecutor.
Fornication cases: Susan Valentine,
John W. Beck, prosecutor ; Sarah Ack-
erman, M. H. Bowman, prosecutor;
Carrie Herrington, G. W. Tressler,
prosecutor.
Henry Dively, receiving stolen goods ;
Ambrose Besby, prosecutor.
Desertion cases: Henry Vogel, J. B.
Mosholder, prosecutor; H. J. McMinn,
Lucinda McMinn, presecutor; Warren
Cutter. Cecili Rutter, prosecutor.
Sarah Williams, surety; Elenora
Lochrie, prosecutor.
For Thursday the murder case in
which J. DeFrancesco is defendant, is
the only one set for trial.
The case against Norman Bowman,
charged with murder, is set for Friday.
FAMOUS STRIKE BREAKERS.
The most famous strike breakers in
the land are Dr. King’s New Life Pills.
When liver and bowels go on strike,
they quickly settle the trouble, and the
purifying work goes right on. Best
cure for constipation, headache and
dizziness. 25c. at E. H. Miller's drug
store. 12-1
lp
Marriage Licenses.
Louis Zusek and Mary Loger, both of
Landstreet.
James Fitzgerald and Daisy Viola
Wechtenheiser, both of Listie.
George B. Keim, of Meyersdale, and
Lottie R. Zufall, of Casselman.
Dorsey E. Gohn, of Jenners, and
Della V. Hoffman, of Somerset town-
ship.
Albert Porter McClintock and Susan-
na A. Conn, both of Fort Hill.
John Moyko and Mary Dulon, both
of Conemaugh.
John Warrick, of Ursina, and Ada
Bassard, of Humbert.
Robert G. Coldorn and Mary 8. 8trin-
ger, both of Windber.
Charles E. Unger and Matilda H.
Peterson, both of Boswell.
James F. Albright, of Meyersdale,
and Sallie Reel, of West Virginia.
Silas Mutinelli and Rosa Baronia,
both of Relphton.
Herman Queer, of Middlecreek, and
Priscilla Burkholder, of Elk Lick.
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
Two from the Meyersdale Commer-
cial.
“Jesse” Slick dropped into town, Sun-
day. He stopped with his sister, Mrs.
Mary Yeager, on Broadway, long
enough to eat a square, old- fashioned
meal. It was a duck dinner prepared
by a master hand, and “Jesse” says it
was just what he needed to fill a long-
felt want.
One of Dr. Bruce Lichty’s match
horses was shot, Sunday, to relieve it
of its misery. Some one evidently cut
the horse a deep gash just below where
the collar rests on the breast. The cut
was evidently deep enough to reach a
vital point, or at least produce internal
hemmorrhage.
POPPING CORN.
And there they sat, a poping corn,
John Styles and Susan Cutter—
John Styles as fat as any ox,
And Susan fat as butter.
And there they sat and shelled the corn,
And raked and stirred the fire;
And talked of different kinds of care,
And hitched their chairs up nigher.
And Susan she the popper shook,
Then John he shook the popper,
Till both their faces grew as red
As saucepans made of copper.
And then they shelled and popped and
ate,
All kinds of fun a-poking;
While he haw-hawed at her remarks.
And she laughed at his joking.
And still they popped, and still they
ate—
John’s mouth was like a hopper—
And stirred the fire, and sprinkled salt,
And shook and shook the popper.
The clock struck nine—the clock struck
ten,
And still the corn kept popping;
Tt struck eleven and then struck twelve,
And still no signs of stopping.
And John he ate, and Sue she thought—
The corn did pop and patter—
Till John cried out: “The corn’s afire!
Why, Susan, what’s the matter?”
Said Sue, “John Styles, it’s one o'clock ;
You'll die of indigestion ;
I’m sick of all this popping corn—
Why don’t you pop the question?”
—Anon.
ee
Maryland Ranks Third in the Num-
ber of Negro Voters.
Figures show that there are more
negro voters in the state of Tennessee
than in any other state of the Union
The negro voters in that state total
112,236. Kentucky comes next with
74,728 black voters. The third state in
point of numbers is Maryland, with a
total of 60,406. Pennsylvania has 51,
668 negro voters, and Missouri 46,418.
The colored vote in the state of New
York is 31,425. In Illinois the black
vote is 29,762, and in Ohio 31,225.
The negro vote in the states that dis-
THUGS OF MOIR
Men Who Reduced Murder to
an Art—Victims Sacrificed.
HOW GRAFT FLOURISHED.
Religious Devotees That Divided
Spoils of Their Crime With Tem-
ple—How Members of the Band
Were Initlated—Their Palmy
Days in Paris.
The Thugs were under Vows to Kal
Devi, the black brewed consort ot
Siva the Destroyer. She is that terri-
ble personage who appears in the
Hindu Pantheon as a fierce but beau-
tiful woman, riding on a tiger, or as a
bideous, blood stained idol, garland-
ed with skulls. Banded together as
caste brothers, the Thugs hunted men
to offer them to the deity of destruc-
tion, and because she required a blood-
less sacrifice they killed their victims
by suffocation.
The Thugs, not being cannibais,
could not live by mere murder. So
they robbed their victims and divided
zhe spoils between themselves and the
temples of Kali. As a religious body
they were protected by the Brahmins
and by pious but impecunious Rajas,
who licensed and taxed them. It was
an easy way for a ruler to increase
his revenue and the victims were trav-
eling merchants who would not be
missed.
During the many centuries of war
and anarchy in India Thuggee flouar-
ished mightily. Under Aurungzebe, to
whom as a Moslem Kali was an ab-
horred idol, it suffered a check.
The Emperor ordered the Thugs to be
strung up by the left hands in the
jungle and left there to die. The Ban-
ians, prototypes of the sentimental-
ists who present notorious modern
criminals with bouquets, banqueted
the stranglers before the execution.
These terrors of the Indian high-
way are now extinct, like the sabre
toothed tiger. About sixty years ago
many hundreds were executed and the
remainder transported or put to Work
at tent making and other peaceful
trades, In strict confinement.
It was the writer's privilege a few
years ago to visit one of the last of
the world famous stranglers. He had
been captured young, and sentenced
to imprisonment for life in a central
Indian jail.
Nadhoo, so he was called, had been
so long a prisoner that he was rather
cared for as a curiosity, a museum
specimen, than treated as a criminal.
He had become an expert in weaving
and when the looms were idle was by
no means unwilling te talk of his ex-
leriences as'a Thug. He had been
Lorn in the caste, and devoted early
to the service of Kali. His father led
him to a secret place in the jungle
end initiated him, by the wierd rite
of the corpse and the dagger, into the
freemasoniy of the brotherhood. He
learned their signs, how to interpret
the omen of the owl, the patter of
the “ramawsi”’—the secret language
of the craft. Being a precocious youth,
as he said, he was selected to play
the part of ‘talker,” or confidei.ce
man. The old man illustrated with
wrist and knuckle the act of tighten-
ing the rumai, or handkerchief, round
the neck of the victim. He told Low
the travelers were buried while warm
in the graves that had been prepared
fcr them. For himself it was his des-
tiny to be a Thug. “It is our cus-
tom,” he said. “The potter’s son taies
to the potter's wheel; the copper-
smith’s to the tinkling of the ham-
mer.”
The garrotters who infested London
in the ’'60s choked, but did not kill the
late returning citizens. When chloro-
form came into use in surgery, the
underworld of crime, or at any rate
its master minds at one appreciated its
value. It was painless, it was sate—
for them; the victim would awake ji
a state of mental confusion—he could
give the police no clew. The drug ve-
came popular with the scientific crim-
inals who operated on English rail-
road lines, where the closed compart-
ments secure privacy. Sometimes a
subject died under chloroform by mis-
adventure, but that might have hap-
pened at the hands of a young med-
1cal practitioner.
In Paris, however, the tricks of In-
dian Thuggee have been closely fol-
lowed. Look over the files of the
Parisian papers of recent years, you
will find accounts of men found dead
in lonely places with leather cords
around their necks and empty pock-
ets.
A robber dressed like a workman
or petit bourgeois would approach a
belated clubman and offer him for
sale a ring, ostensibly picked up from
the pavement. If Monsieur did not
take alarm the robber’s partner, who
had crept behind his victim, snared
his mouth and throat in a noose. Then
with a quick jiu-jitsu turn the thug
heaved him off the ground on to his
own back, like a sack of coal, and his
partner stepped up and rifled Mon-
sieur’s pockets. The latter was then
dropped on the pavement with force
enough to stun him and the thugs
made their escape.
To the Grave in a Cab.
The eccentric life of the late Horatio
Bright, wealthy retired manufacturer
of Sheffield, England, was no more ec-
centric than his funeral.
Before daybreak an ordinary cab
drove up to the door of his house, and
his body, contained in a plain coffin,
was placed in it A second cab carried
a party of undertakers’ men, and they
were driven over the bleak moorland
to the village of Moscar, six miles
away, where Mr. Bright many years
ago erected a magnificent mausoleum
franchise the black man is not given.
& WEDDING Invitations at THE |
Star office. A nice new stock justre-
ceived. tt.
to shelter the coffins of his first wife
| and his son. He used to sit in it for
hours beside the coffins.
HOW PLAYING CARDS ARE MADE.
A Great Industry—Care Used to Pre-
vent Cheating.
During the year 1906 more than 5¢,-
000,000 packs of playing cards were
printed and sold at a profit by manu-
facturers in Great Britain, France,
Germany and the United States. In-
dustrially regarded, the playing card
business is one of the best manufactur-
ing adjuncts to the world of workers.
As a contributor to the revenues of
those countries where cards are pro-
duced in quantity, says the Chicago
Tribune, it is a gold mine.
At the same time, however, the ex-
pert player who is making a record
at cards, or who has a desire to win
money at the gaming table, finds little
use for a card costing more than 25
or 35 cents a pack. His objection to
the finer card is that it doesn’t ‘‘feel”
right and shuffles too easily. For the
card “sharp,” too, a card which has
the standard back serves his illicit
purpose of “marking” beter than the
most elaborate of “art” back that can
be designed in gold and colors. In-
cidentally, too, the necessities which
the players feel for a frequent renewal
of the pack makes the item of expense
for hand made cards seem useless in
whist games, where some one of the
four players is likely to ask for a
new deck after two or three games
at the most. Cards at retail may pe
bought for 10 cents, 15 cents, 25 cents,
35 cents and 50 cents a pack.
Considering the hand made cards
that cost from 75 cents to $1 a pack,
it is interesting to remark that what-
ever elaborate departure may be made
in the artistic effects of the back, the
consuming public will have no change
made in the conventional card face,
which has been in use for more than
fifty years. This card face, as an ex-
pression of artistic design, is consid-
ered far below the standards of the
designer of the present time. - kor.
the person who will afford a Bible in
an edition de luxe up to $15, or even
$20, the standard card face is quite
enough to satisfy his artistic tempera-
ment. Time and again some enterpris-
ing card manufacturer who has made
a hit with a novelty in a card back
has tried to make the face of the card
meet in artistic measure—and has
failed. Not even the variation of the
card spots will be tolerated; not even
the ‘“‘squeezer” mark in the corners
may be altered. The player's first
wish is that he shall recognize a card
the instant he turns its face, and to do
this he insists upon the card face as
has stood for half a century at least.
That the back of a card shall not
coil easily is one of the first desider-
atums of the player. In many of the
ornate backs that have been put on
the market there is too mucn nught
surface to carry the print of a finger.
Then in the cardboard base there are
{wo sheets of paper pasted together,
1.aking the hand made card too thick,
v hile the double coat of enamel with
its composition “slip” makes it too
smooth for handling by the player,
who does not stick always to this style
of card.
The cheaper cards are printed from
a continuous roll of cardboard, the
hacks printed first and the faces last,
afterward covered with a coat of en-
amel which has the “slip” introducea
by secret process. The hand made ar-
ticle is made virtually a deck at a time
irom a flat sheet of cardboard. On
this the backs are printed first upon
the first coat of enamel, each color
on back and face necessitating its
separate imprint, and when these coats
have dried another coat finishing tne
card with enamel and “slip” is ap-
plied front and back. Another drying
process prepares the cardboard with
its fifty-two imprints ready for the
punches.
It is in punching the card from the
strips into which sheets are cut that
the highest degree of precision must
be reached. The card punch fits into
the die as closely as polished, tem-
pered, sharpened steel can be made
to fit, and after the punch has been
perfected the greatest care must be
12ken of it in preserving the edges,
so that not the slightest abrasion or
irregularity shall exist in a pack of
cards after they are assembled.
Only one punch can be used in cut-
ting a pack. There may be 140
punches at work in the factory, but
not one of these can cut a card effec-
tively for the completion of a deck
cut by another punch. Somewhere in
the edge of such a card an uneven-
ness would serve to identify it in the
hands of a man who might try to use
the pack into which it was placed.
Punching the fifty-two cards of the
deck with the same sharp punch, how-
ever, the result is a smooth, even sur-
tace as unintelligible to the touch as
the faces or backs of the individual
cards themselves.
A Strange Stone,
The Hawaiian Star tells of a re-
markable stone brought to Honolulu
from Kauby by the steamer Mauna
Loa. It is what is known as the Ilili,
the stone that breeds The stone was
found in Koloa, Kau.
According to the slatoments of the
natives living in that section, if the
stone is placed in a glass or jar and
water poured over it and the jar be
corked for a couple of days, the stone
will multiply. In fact, it ought to we
called the Deucalian stone, the means
by which the word was repopulated
after the deluge of mythological times.
The stone will, it is said, reproduce
itself in the form of five or six
smaller stones. The Ilili has aroused
a great deal of curiosity, and it is
likely that some interesting experi-
ments will be made with it.
Teacher—Does the question bother
you?
Scholar—No'm;
bothers me.
it’s the answer that
J OF GREAT SINGER
Fortunes Earned in America
Not Always Kept.
Mme. SEMBRICH’S WEALTH
Operatic Favorites of a Generation
Living at Their Ease—Others
Obliged to Teach—Etelka Gerst-
er's Case Unique and Pathetic—
Divag With Brief Glory.
The great popularity of Wagner's
music has made it possible for Ger-
man singers, such as Herr Knote and
Mme. Ternina, to earn large sums in
New York, says the New York Sun.
But the German opera houses do not
ray high prices to their own singers.
when the intendants of these theatres
ray $1,000 a performance, it is tp the
Violettas and Lucias, not to the
Brunnhildes and Elsas.
German audiences are satisfied with
their own singers in these Wagner
roles.
The singers of the last generation
made their fortunes here, just as those
of the present day have done. The
noted sopranos, with the single ex-
ception of Mme. Sembrich, who is re-
puted to be one of the wealthiest of
all singers, made their fortunes in the
United States. So did the tenors, like
Campaini, who died poor, through his
own recklessness, and Jean de Reszke,
who is still a rich man. Abbey &
Grau paid Mme. Sembrich $125,000 and
her expenses during her first visit to
this country, which was her second
year on the stage, but her fortune
was earned in Russia.
The American prima donnas earned
thelr money in their own country.
Clara Louise Kellogg, who sang from
1861 for about twenty-two years, has
an ample fortune, on which she lives
pow in great comfort. Her home at
New Hartford, Conn., is not preten-
tious, but has every comfort and Mrs.
Carl Strakosh, as she is now, spends
much of her time in travel.
Mme. Eames has a large following
here, but she practically sings no-
where else. She has apeared at Monte
Carlo, St. Petersburg, Paris and Lon-
don, but she is now heard chiefly in
New York.
Clara Louise Kellogg, on the con-
trary, enjoyed great success in Rus-
sia, and for years sang regularly in
Italian opera in London. Although
her career was not long, she had plenty
of opportunity to earn her fortune,
as she sang during the season ot
1874-75 i125 times. Half as many ap-
pearances satisfies the most indus-
trious prima donna nowadays.
One of her most popular contempor-
aries was also her compatriot. This
was Annie Louise Cary, about the
most popular contralte that this coun-
try has ever produced. She was born,
2s Mrs. Strakosch was, in 1842. Miss
Kellogg, as she was called, made her
debut in 1861, and Miss Cary sang for
the first time a few years later, at
Copenhagen.
She was immensely popular in Rus-
sia and in Brussels, where she fre-
quently sang. For seven seasons she
was engaged at the opera house in
Hamburg. She sang a great deal in
concert and oratorio. Ome of her
most popular operatic impersonations
was Amneris in “Aida.”
Etelka Gerster is now teaching in
New York, where, in 1878, she began
a career that made her one of the most
popular singers ever heard there. Ir
her voice had not failed before she had
sung less than ten years she would
rot probably now be teaching.
She knew no failures while she kept
her voice, and she could have sung
there for years, such a reputation did
she make when she sang at the Acad-
emy. As a beginner, Etelka Gerster
sang in Venice in 1876, but before 1887
she had lost her voice and was com-
relled to leave the stage.
Mme. Gerster began to teach in
1896. During the intervening years she
had given concerts in small towns but
with little success. Her activity as a
teacher may continue for years, how-
ever, and that is one advantage she
zains in having her career as a singer
cut short.
Mme. Gerster sang only at the Acad-
emy. It was at the Metropolitan that
she attempted to appear in concert
after her voice failed. It was a long
time before she could be persuaded
that it was really gone. She main-
tained for years, that it was in as good
condition as ever, and that she was
merely the victim of a cabal. Her
case was unique in the history of op-
era singers. Never before was a
woman so famous with a career of
only seven years.
Christine Nilsson, who has not sung
in public for almost twenty years, not
only earned most of her large fortune
in the United States, but invested it
here. It was only a few years ago
that she sold her investments in Bos-
ton real estate and reaped a great
profit on her money she naa origin-
ally paid out. Alfred Rothschild dia
much to invest her earnings judicious-
up for her, just as he did in the case
of Adelina Patti.
When Nilsson made her first ap-
pearance here, in 1872, it was in con-
cert at Steinway Hall. The following
two years she sang in opera, and she
returned twice afterward to sing in
concert. She was able to sing four
times a week without trouble, which
was the reason for the large profits
she made.
If the nations insist on fighting, as
a last resort the czar should ex-
plain to them in detail just how it
feels to be whipped.
The dogs of war are doing so much
growling they will be hoarse long be-
fore the fighting begins.
FOR SALE.
Finest Graphophone Outfit in Salis-
bury Offered at a Bargain.
This outfit consists of a $25.00 Columbia
Graphophone, a $450 Record Case and $18.00
worth of Records—72 in all, which is the
eapacity of the case. The entire outfit cost
$47.50, and all is practically new and as good
as the day the goods left the factory. It is
easily the finest “talking machine” outfit
in this town and vicinity, an@& is offered for
sale at a great bargain.
The entire outfit can be purchased for
$35.00 cash.
The Graphophone without Case or Records
can be bought for $20.50.
* Record Case can be bought singly for $4.00
or, filled with 72 Records, for $14.80.
The complete lot of Records, 72 in all, can
be purchased separately for $10.80. Follow-
ing is a list of the Records:
3 Tenor Solo—To my First Love.
“ —Oh, don’t it tickle you?
: Quartet—Nationality Medly.
4. Whistling Solo—Home,Sweet Home.
5. Quartet—The Old Oaken Bucket.
6. “ —On Board the Battleship Oregon
7. Auction Sale of Furniture and House-
hold Goods.
8. Tenor Solo—I’'m not particular.
9. Sextette—Through the World wilt Thou
fly, Love.
10. Circus Gallop—Susa’s Band.
11. Whistling Solo—Love’s Golden Dream.
12. Tenor Solo—Oblige a Lady,
13. Baritone Solo—When the Hebrews open
Pawn Shop in Old Ireland.
14. Picalo Solo—The Skylark Polka.
15. Quartet—My Old Kentucky Home.
16. Orchestra—Hands Across the Sea.
17. “® —The Nations before Pekin.
18. Trinity Boy Choir—Onward Christian
Soldier. :
19. Quartet—Barnyard Medley.
20. Rehearsal for the Husking Bee.
21. Minstrels—Upon the Golden Shore.
22. Russian Hymn—Gilmore’s Band.
23. Baritone Solo—The Clock of the Uni-
verse.
24. Orchestra—Light as a Feather.
25. Baritone ;Solo—Break the News to
Mother.
26. Tenor Solo—Would you if you could?
27. Cornet Duet—Come back to Erin.
28. ScotchjMedley—Gilmore’s Brass Quar-
tet.
29. Baritone Solo—Brown October Ale.
80. Quartet—The Sleigh Ride Party.
81. “® —Rock of Ages.
32. Baritone Sclo—Hosanna.
| 32 Orchestra—The Birds and the Brook.
34. Italian Vocal Solo.
85. 'Quartet—Hark the Herald Angels 8ing.
36. Hebrew Male Quartet.
87. Cornet;Duet—Mid the Green Fields of
Virginia.
38. Quartet—I stood on the Bridge at Mid-
night.
89. Quartet—InZOld Alabama, with Barn
Dance and NegrojShouts.
40. Vaudeville—Pumpernickle’s Silver
Wedding.
41. Orchestra Bells—Medley of Popular
Airs.
42. Baritone Solo—ThelHoly City.
43. Orchestra Bells—Waltz Medley.
44. Two Rubes in an Eating House.
45. Musical Congress of Nations.
46. Negro Shout—Turkey in the Straw.
47. Musical Monologue—Having fun with
the Orchestra.
48. Quartet--Camp of the Hoboes.
49. Recitation--The night before Christmas.
50. Quartet--The Vacant Chair.
51. Baritone Solo--Let All Obey.
52. Tenor and Orchestra--Bedelia.
53. Baritone Solo--Back, Back, Back to
Baltimore.
54. Killarney--Gilmore’s Brass Quartet.
55. Clarinet Solo--Southern Plantation
Echoes.
56. MinstrellJokes.
57. Minstrels-—-My Friend from My Home.
58. “ --Our Land of Dreams.
59. Minstrel Jokes.
60. “ “
61. Baritone Solo--Deep, Down Deep.
62. Tenor Solo--Safe in the Arms of Jesus.
63. High School Cadets--Columbia Band.
64. Bridal March from Lohengrin--Band.
65. Manhattan Beach March--Susa’s Band.
66. Nibelungen March--Band.
67. lary from Il Trovatore--Gilmore’s
and.
68. Rodding of the Winds--Gilmore’s Band.
69. ian yoheyenne Joe’s Cowboy Tavern--
re
70. Mealy March, Broadway Hits--Orches-
71. Come Where the Djlies Bloom--Gil-
more’s Brass Quartet.
72. Duet--Old Black Joe.
For farther particulars, inquire at
STAR OFFICE, ELK LICK, PA.
xf x1
Pou are respectfully
inbited to call at our
office for the purpose
of examining samples
and taking prices of En-
grabed Calling Cards,
Inbitations, etc. Our
work the best, styles
the latest and prices the
[otwest.
2
NF
25H
nH
Yr
Nr NF
60 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
TraDE MARKS
DESIGNS
CoPYRIGHTS &C.
Anyone: sending a sketch and description may
oortal i our Sfinion free whether an
tabl
codental HANDED on Patents
eave
Patents oe t. Shy umn x
special notice, without charg
"Scientific American,
A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest ¢if:
culation of any scientific journal.
year ; four months, $1 Sa Eral a on
MUNN & Co, ss 1arseear. Ney York
625 F' 8t.. Washington. D, C.
Kodol Dyspepsia Gure
' Digests what you eat.