Alge for Whooping Cough, Colds, Sore Throat. SOLD UNDER A POSITIVE CUARANTEE Contains no Opiates. Pleasant to take. 80 Doses for 35 cents AT YOUR DRUQQIST. Write foday for for Booklet that tells you all Don't something else about CROU 0; ©. claimed to be *‘ just as ” DERBY’S PURE KIDNEY PILLS fo all Xjdnaz: Liver and Bladder Troubles. 60 Pills—10 ’ treatment, 25 cents at your n te to-day for ‘free sample. DERBY MEDICINE CO., Eaton Rapids, - Michigan. Juestion 1s breat One. But in proportion to its importance as a channel to success, the question of buying a piano is enen greater. It means ever- lasting dissatisfaction or perpetual harmony and happiness. We Are Piano Judges. We can settle this all important question for you without a We simply make your purchase of a piano a good, big Come in and let us show you what we call a good piano. Reich & Plock, Meyersdale, Pa. ub A AWE ITE 114 The Original, Old Reliable BEACHY'S HORSE & CATTLE POWDER, ~25¢. per Ib. legal fee. success. Murphy Bros. RESTAURANT! ZARA Headquarters for best Oysters, Ice Cream, Lunches, Soft Drinks, etc. Try our Short-Order Meals—Beef- steak, Ham and Eggs, Sausage, Hot Coffee, ete. Meals to Order at All ame. Hours! == We also handle a line of Groceries, Confectionery, Tobacco, Cigars, ete. We try to please our patrons, and we would thank you for a share of your buying. MURPHY BROTHERS, McKINLEY BLock, SALISBURY, PA. Baltimore & Ohio R. R, LOW RATE—ONE WAY CoLONIST FARES, TO PRINCIPAL POINTS IN CALIFORNIA, ARIZONA, COLORADO, Britis CorumBra, MoNxTANA,MEX- 1co, NEw MEXICO, NEVADA, OREGON, Texas, Sovran Daxora, Ura AND WASHINGTON. On Sale Daily, FROM FEBRUARY 28 TO APRIL 29, 1907. For tickets and full information call on or address ticket agents, Baltimore & Ohio R. R. 28 the kind you used fo buy’ . blk Lick Drug Nore, CHIR AV ELAR ANOVA DUBOIS Gas and Gasoline ENGINES Are adapted for every purpose where power Is required. Per- fectly Safe. Strictly High Grade. E :s s ££ s & Es s = s = = 3 = = = = = = = 4 = NS Horizontal Type 5 to 100 H. P, Give more power, last longer and cost less to operate. They are known the world over and in Buffalo alone over 500 are in use. As proof of their simplicity, economy and durability Gold Medals First Awards were secured at all large expositions in this coun- try and Europe. We build gas engines 2 to 100 H. P., gasoline sugines 2 to 40 H. P. for manufacturing, electric lighting, farm portable work, pumping, etc., both horizontal and vertical types. All the lates improvements. Every engine warranted. oi We operate a $300,000 plant and every engine is shipped direct from the factor; 0 you at factory prices. Catalogs and full information sent DUBOIS IRON WORKS, 801 North Brady St, DuBois, Pa. SN [ LET US GIVE YOU Vertical Type 2 to 12 H. P. New Store! New Goods! 8 We have opened a fine new general store in the M. J. - Glotfelty building, Ord St., Salisbury, Pa., and invite you to come and ay our nice, new line of Dry Goods, £3 XXX A price on Yard Pence. Don’ HA think of putting up any kind of fence before you fot our 48 page free Catalogue and the west prices ever named on Ornamant- al Fence and Gates. We can sell you A FENCE Like abovecut,36inches high, at 12 cts. Ber running foot. Made of extra heavy alvanized Steel Wire and will last for years. Costs lessthan wood and is far prettier. Many styles; Lowest Whole- sale Prices. ave no agents but sell direct to user. Write today. KITSELMAN BROS. Box 514 MUNCIE, INDIANA. L <* 3¢] TEES 5 BR 1 TB A Re 3 We start with an entire new stock, and we handle oh the best and purest brands of goods. We solicit a share of your pat- ronage, and we guarantee a square deal and satisfaction to all. Howard Meager & Co. No. 21 McWhorter Hand Lipid tte It distri! the fertilizer in a furrow, bes side the growin Crop, as a ope or as a bro: ad 60 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE TrRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &cC. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably Da ANDEG Communica- tions strictly confidential. BOOK on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for ei paten Patents taken th special notice, without charge, in th ; Scientific American, A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cl; culation of any ScieniLing Journdl, Terms, $3 year ; four months, $1. d by all newsdealers: MUNN & £0. 261Broadva, New York Branch Office. 625 F St.. Washington. D. C. n arrow his 1 Sp § two feet, without ving or addin; \ or loosening a bolt, and in any quanti very few pounds up to forty or more pounds § the hundred yards of row. /. The fertilizer can be instantly divided inl > tw or more streams, and thus be applied beside on two more-rows of plants at the same time. = TOP-DRESSING STRAWBERRIES. } For this work it is the ideal thing, making a beautiful and ie spread of the fertilizer on any row or bed of strawberries up to two and one-half feet wide. The distributer is light, yet rigid and strong, and easy and pleasant use by man or boy. ‘We make all i of Horse Fertilizer Distributers, also Potato Planters, Bean and Peanut Planters, and Paris Green Dusters. Send for Illustrated Catalog N. J. nts. rough Munn & Co. receive Wagner's RESTAURANT, Ellis Wagner, Prop., Salisbury. (Suecessor to F. A, Thompson.) OYSTERS IN EVERY STYLE! Also headquarters for Ice Cream, Fresh Fish, Lunches, Confectionery, ete A share of your patronage solicited. McWHORTER MFC. COMPANY, Riverton, "Dr. CHAS. F. LIVENGOOD, Executor, i named having been granted to the under- the same, to present them duly authenti- ing with trains east and west. | : Boswell, Pa. Returning, No 1 leaves Meyersdaleat1 P.M Estate of Stephen Bowman, late of Jenner C. W. STATLER, - = Proprietor. | signed, notice is hereby given to all persons cated for settlement, at the late residence Schedule: No.2leaves Meyersdaleat : 6 P.M | Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar THE SALISBURY HACK LINE EXECUTOR'S NOTICE. | Township, Somerset county , Pa., deceased. Letters testamentary on the estate above indebted to said estate to make immediate E#F=Two hacks daily, except Sunday, be- | payment, and those having claims against twien Salisbury and Meyersdale, connect- of decedent, in said tow nship, on Saturday, March 16th, 1907, at 10 o'clock in the fore- Hack No. 1leaves Salisbury at Hack No.2 leaves Salisbury at L@-First class rigs for all kinds of trav- | Cures all Coughs, and expels Colds from ol,at. reasonable prices. the system by gently moving the bowels. Satisfaction guaranteed, AND CURE vt LUNGS “Dr. King's | New Discovery ONSUMPTION Price FOR OUGHS and B0c 431.00 Free Trial. Surest and Quickest Cure for all THROAT and LUNG TROUB- LES, or MONEY BACK. VALUABLE REAL ESTATE AT PUBLIC SALE. I will offer at public sale,on the premises, in Elk Lick township, Pa.,at ONE O'CLOCK P.M. SATURDAY, MARCH 9TH, 1907, the following described real estate: About 73 acres of land, 3 acres of which is cleared, having thereon a good, new 8-room Dwelling House, Poultry House and other outbuildings. This property is located about midway between Salisbury and Boyn- ton, on the new electric railway connecting Salisbury and Meyersdale. It has a never- failing well of excellent water, a nice lot of young Fruit Trees, etc. An ideal place for truck farming and poultry raising. TERMS made known on day of sale. 8-7 HENRY SOMERVILLE. WANTED |—Farm hand with ex- perience and reference to work by the month or year. Elderly man preferred. A good home will be provided. State wages wanted. Address J. L. Orris, R F. D. No. 2, Wilmore, Pa. 2-28 LOST !—Between Salisbury and Meyersdale, last Friday evening, a package containing a large Double Shawl, Hood, Mit- tens, etc. The finder will be suitably rewarded by delivering same to JOHN MEAGER, tf -Salisbury, Pa. WANTED, all the sick and well peo- ple to know that we are sole agents for Dr. Kimmell’s celebrated Stomachic and Nervine Remedy, also Dr. Kim- mell’s Headache and Liver Tablets. tf HowaArp MEAGER & Co. Mr. Hiram C. White, the well known Fashionable Tailor of Chambersburg, will be in Salis- bury in a few days with a very choice ling of Spring Suitings. Exclusive styles. Perfect fit. Satisfaction. All orders filled by Easter. 2-28 & Crude Heine Thoughts Circle A Column Dedicated to Tired | Mothers As They Join the Home Circle at Evening | Tide. Editorial Pen: — Pleasant Evening Reveries. Depart- ment. Good manners are not taught in the school books. They are found in the home lessons. It is well to be charitable in all our conclusions, mindful that we often need the cloak of charity ourselves. Fill life with sunshine and strew flowers where others throw stones. Make life a bright spot in this world, and where you see flowers, cast smiles, and whether it be morn, dusk or night, let the sunny side of nature always be -at full meridian. WHAT SHALL I TEACH MY CHILD? Teach him that it is better to die than to lie; that it is better to starve than to steal; that it is better to be a scavenger or a wood-chopper than an idler and a deadbeat; that it is just as criminal and reprehensible to waste Monday as to desecrate Sunday; that labor is the price of all honest posses- sions; that no one is exempt from the obligation to labor with head, hands or heart ; that “an honest man is the noblest work of God ;” that knowledge is power; that labor is worship and idleness sin ; that it is better to eat the crust of independent poverty than to luxuriate amid the richest viands dependant. Teach him these facts till as i they are woven into his being and reg- | ] his | hearse full of smuggled 1S | 5 > I being teased about it ulate his lite, and we will insure success. A genuine mother could no mors When mean a hawk. mother” robin could raise say a “genuine we something more than a mother who | prays with her boy.gnd sends him to Sunday school. All these things ure good as far as they go, but there is a lot more to do to train a boy besides praying with him, just as there are things necessary to the cultivation of a garden besides reading a manual. To succeed with roses one must prune, weed and hoe a great deal. To make a boy into a pure man, a mother must do more than pray. She must live with him in the sense of comrade and clos- est friend. .She must stand by him in time of temptation as the pilot sticks to the wheel when rapids are around. She must never desert him to go off to superintend outside duties any. more than the engineer deserts his post and goes into the baggage car to read’ up nfinsaring when his train is potinding ‘088 the country at forty tiles an bour. , TRUE LOVE OF WOMEN. No woman will love a man better for his being renowned or prominent. { Though he be the first among men, she will be prouder, not fonder; as is often the case she will not even be proud. But give her love, apprecia- tion, kindness, and there is no sacrifice she will not make for his content and comfort. The man who loves her well is her hero and king—no less a king, though his only kingdom is his heart and home. In nine cases out of ten it is a man’s fault that he is unhappy with bis wife. It is a very exceptional wom- an who will not be all she can be to an attentive husband, and a very excep- tional one who will not be very disa- greeable if she finds herself wilfully neglected. THE ORDINARY WOMAN. We have noticed that among the many prizes given by Andrew Carne- gie as a reward for bravery and hero- ism, none have been awarded to wom- en, say nothing of the “ordinary wom- an.” Are women less brave than men? True, the ordinary woman may be afraid of a mouse, but her record for true heroism and bravery will compare favorably with man. - 8he may not jump in front of a run- away team to stop it or rescue a friend from the fifth story of a burning build- ing, but we have women right in this community who have exhibited more true heroism than any man wearing the Carnegie badge of honor for brav- ery. Many a soldier who bravely stood at his post of duty for two or three years badges. We would not take one from dinary” woman has stood at her post™of | erty and discouragment, and true Spartan courage kept the wolf from the door and saved the lives of a large family of children. The man who gaves one life receives a prize for bravery, his picture appears in the metropolitan papers, and he wears a medal which says to the world he was brave. And he was. But the woman who has saved the lives of many is given no; badge, and seldom even a word of commendation. The husband of the ordinary woman has not the gift of making money. He works hard, but is a poor manager and the wolf never gets far from his door. The good wife sews, cooks and mends a kind word for pay. One has most truthfully said that for each of her children she trod the Gethsemane of woman, only to go through that slavery of motherhood which the woman en- dures who is too poor to hire compe- tent nurses. For years and years she never knew what it was to have a single night’s unbroken sleep. The small nours of the morning found her walking the floor with a sick babe, or putting water to thirsty little lips. There was no rest for her day or night. There was always a child in her arms or clinging to her skirts. Oftener than not she was sick and nerve-worn and weary almost to death, but never fail- ed to rally to the call of “mother !”—as a good soldier always rallied to his battle-cry. Nobody called her brave, and yet, when one of the children came down with malignant diphtheria she braved death one hundred times in bending over the little sufferer, without one thought of danger, and when the little one was laid away under the sod, she who had loved most was the first to gather herself together and take up the burden of life for the others. These ordinary women may not re- ceive-a Carnegie badge for bravery, but **He who marks the sparrow’s fall” will certainly reserve for them the brightest jeweled crowns in his king- dom. The Canny Scot. A well-known city officer in Auld Reekle was celebrated for his cunning and wit. His mother having died in Edinburgh, he hired a hearse and car- 5 ; { only took away the raise a bad boy into a bad man than a | ’ y we! ried her to the family burying place in the Highlands. He returned with the and, friend, whiskey, by a he | snid : no harm do | body and hel ”—The Scotsman. - “0, man, there is back the spirit. Character Building. What is the object of education? it to teach a child or man to know something that he did not know, or to be something that he was not? Is it, in other words, an intellectual or a moral process? The safest answer is to say that it is both; but there is a growing suspicion among those who have studied the question most deeply that our schools are not so successful as they might be on the side of char- acter building~london Chronicle. 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 him, he merits them ; but many an “or- duty for thirty, forty and even half; rl] century, fighting with sickness, “pov- during the Civil War, is covered with" for the man who does not even give her | REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. —————— Beginning with the first entry made in the new court house the following - deeds have been recorded: John H, Seibert to John R. Boose, in Somerset borough, for $3700, J. J. Kennell to Mary E. Kennell, in Southampton, for $50. J. J. Hoblitzell to A. Lawrence, in Elk Lick, for $125. W. B. Dibert et al..to J. P. Philips. in Elk Lick, &c., for $85,000. A. J. Postlethwaite to Mary F. Sar- gent, in Somerset borough, for $6826, Listie Manufacturing Company to Meyersdale Coal Company, in Somer- set township, for $22,668. Albert Dively to Jacob B. Schrock, in Berlin, for $1300. To perfect this chain of title an earlier deed forthe property from Jacob Keffer to Martin Dively, bearing date of 1798, was recorded. For one hundred and nine years the deed was held in the Dively family. George Growall to A. E. Growall; in Black, for $59. Mary Crider to C. 8. Reeder, in Wind- ber, for 1800, Peter W. Trimpey to Mary B. Trim- pey, in Lincoln, for $7500. J.C. Schrock to J. E. Ferner, in Windber, for $6560. Valentine Hay to Mary Rector, in Milford, for $140. Sophia Baer to Virginia A. Herring, in Conemaugh, for $1000. 8. P. Zimmerman to A. M. Custer, in Quemahoning, for $17,700. Sarah B. Fleichhouer to A. M. Custer, in Quemahoning, for $11,875.48. D.’J. Kussell to E. G. Walker, in Mil- ford, for $7000. John H. Benford’s heirs to Elizabeth Alcot, in Ursina, for $100. . Geo. B. Somerville to Berwind-White Mining Co., in Windber, $1. Valentine Hay to Mary Rector, in "Milford, $150. David Durst to Alice O. Darst, in Elk Lick, $1. Mosley McClintock to W. Hampton McClintock, in Elk Lick, $150. Conrad Benning to Babcock Lumber Co., in Allegheny, $1.- Peter Rhoads by Sheriff, to Jacob Kimmel], in Stonycreek, $150. Charles Krissinger to same, in Stony- creek, $190. Wm. J. Baer to Daniel Ursina, $160. Nannie Brown to George Donges, in Summit, $1000. George Donges to John F. in Summit, $1100. Robert Nicholson, Admr.,, to Wm Woodmaney, in Confluence, $36.50. .Christopner C. Zimmerman to S. Zimmerman, in Quemahoning, $696. Wilmore Coal Co. to same, in Quema- honing, $11,675.48. Annie M. Fike to Wm. Meyersdale, $650. David J, Ansell et al. to Ellsworth G. Walker, in Milford, $7000. Alfred Mitechell’s heirs Mitchell, in Addison, $1. Sally Enos, Ad., to Wm. Addison, $350. Rachel Foy to Black, $375. Abraham H. Miller to Simon Smith, in Summit, $1200. ; Rollin Holsopple to Sylvester Berkee bile, in Benson, $1200. Annie P. Fike et al. to Milton A. Fike, in Summit, $2500. B. R. Jones to P. L. Casebeer, in Som- erset twp., $150. Leah Baughman to Pittsburgh & Con- nellsville R. R. Co., in Summit, $150. Geo. M. Saylor to Emma Saylor, in Somerset borough, $300. C. Suhre, Ex. to D. H. Suhre, in Alle- gheny township, $2500. S. G. Miller to F. Hooversville, $1600. Mary A. Coleman et al. to Marling Smith, in Brothersvalley, $4500. Alex. Snyder to Rockwood Water Co., in Black, $737.95. Edward P. Marshall to John E. Mar- tin, in Shade, $1. a Dickey, in Seigner, P. H. Baldwin, in to Julia A. O. Bird, in Alex. Hamilton, in G. Fryburg, in Marriage Licenses. Lewis Hyatt and Millie C. both of Confluence. Harrison Pritts, of Wilson Creek, and Emma M. Roctor, of Rockwood. Albert A. ship, and Agnes C. township. Fisher, town- Jenner Barnett, of Lincoln Shaffer, of Robert Goshorn, of Meyersdale, Pa.. and Mamie Battles, of Charlottesville. { Va. Philipey, of Ursina, and of Butler, Pa. Harvey F. Dora Imbody, John Hart and Rosa Finkhouser, { both of Paint borough. | Is | | James J. Turner and Emma G. Boyle, both of Windber. David P. Lavan and Jennie C. Fried- line, both of Jefferson. David A. Kelly, of Middlecreek, and Myrtle L. L ong, of Black. They Want to Know the Price. A grocer in a nearby town happened around when a farmer was unloading several boxes filled with groceries which he had ordered from the Chicago department stores. The: grocer asked the farmer the price of the articles purchased, and then told him that he could sell them just as cheap. The farmer then said: “Is that so? I take the home paper, but -you seldom or never advertise. I am not a mind reader.” 8