Somerset County Star. SALISBURY. ELK LICK POSTOFFICE. PA.. THURSDAY. MAY 23. 1907. T rr eee yer ferment Don’t let anyone tell you what coffee to buy. : Connoisseurs and expert cof- fee judges differ in their tastes. The point is to get a coffee that suits yourtaste. GILLIES’ COFFEES—"the- finest ob- tainable,” are blended to suit different tastes—all tastes. There are four distinct flavors, characteristic of cotfeesfromdif- =~ -" ferent parts of the world, con- There’s sequently four different prices. These different prices mean that some coffees cost more to import than others. , If your choice is the lowest or the highest priced—you may be sure that you have the very best of its kind. , GILLIES’ 35 cent coffee is mellow, aromatic and very deli- /cately flavored, while GILLIES “30c coffee isrich, full-bodied and delicious—the 25¢c or 20c blend ‘each has a distinctive flavor (which may please you. Cotlee— Question of Taste a blend for YOU © For sale by k Lick Supply Co. Salisbury, Penn. ~~ wo B GS | te AY & 9 4 C1 ISBURY. « S a Surplus & undiyided profits, $15,000. ob Assets over $300,000. SJ PER CENT. INTERES J. L.. Barcnus, President. H. H. Maus, Vice President. AvLsert Reitz. Cashier. DIRECTORS :—J. L. Barchus, H. H. Maust, Norman D. Hay, A. M. Lichty, F. A Maust, A. E. Livengood, I.. I.. Beachy. OF SAL wpital paid in, $50,000. RBI On Time Deposits. 2 % % B 5 % 2 | 2 | 2 & ® & §: = & #8 2 8 ® = HK a 08 53 AA oY IY § & SB 2 he BB AYN HGR Z\ Bx BE a7 % Before buying your seeds for spring sowing, call and SHB 3% 3 examine our line of fancy, recleaned el Mavyvorn Cover, MEprom CLOVER, 3 Bx Bi ~~ CRIMSON CLOVER, ALSIKE, \ Timorny, MILLET, BARLEY. BK We buy in large quantity. and prices are always inline: & : ~ Et by Tet ~Y TY ‘ S. A. Lichliter, Salisbury, Pa. BRL BBB IHBRIBHBHE BI S-Salisbury, Pa—§ Forelon and Domestic "co | "Goops. Finest of Groceries, Hardware, Miners’ Supplies, Shoes, Clothing, Ete. The best Powder and Squibs a Specialty. (es Markel Prices Paid "fe And Eggs. "| tion of the natural teeth. | RERKEY & SHAVER, | Attorneys-at-Liaw, : SOMERSET, PA. | Coffroth & Ruppel Building. : | ERNEST 0. KOOSER, Attorney-At-Liaw, SOMERSET, PA. IR. EMEYERS, DISTRICT ATTORNEY Attorney-at-T.axw, SOMERSET, PA. FOfMce in Court House. Ww. H. KOONTZ. J. G. OGLE KOONTZ & OGLE Attorneys-At-Tuaw, SOMERSET, PENN’A Office opposite Court ‘House. "VIRGIL R.-SAY LOR, _Attorney-at-Law. SOMERSET, Pa. Office in Mammoth Block. DR. PETER 1.. SWANK; Physician and Surceon, ELK LICK, PA. Successor to Dr. E. H. Perry. E.C. SAYLOR, D. D. S,, : SALISBURY, PA. M. Dively Residence, Grant iOffice in Mrs. ’ Street. Speciakattention given -to the preserva- Artificial'sets in- serted in the best possible manner. iy | THE CHANNELL, KNOWN AS THE NEW BRADY HOUSE 15 &17 SOUTH ARKANSAS AVE. OCEAN YIEVVY. Two minutes walk from Boardwalk and | Young’s new million-dollar pier. One-half | square from Reading railroad Station. | “ TERMS REASONA BLE. Good table. Capacity of house, two hundred. Write for booklet. : A. C.CHANNELIL, Proprietor, Atlantic City, N. J. WINDSOR HOTEL, 217-1229 F1ILBERT ST., PHILADELPHIA, PA |. Modern, up-to-date accommodations at | moderate rates. A square each way from | the two principal railroad stations and in | the center of the shopping and theatre dis- | trict. American Plan, $2.00 to $3.50 per day. | Iuropean Plan, $1.00 to $2.50 per day. | 1 & REA P.L. LIVENGOOD, ; Notary Public. u Star Office, Salisbury Pa. , DEEDS, MORTGAGES, PENSION VOUCHERS, AGREEMENTS, WILLS, ETC.. CAREFULLY ATTENDED TO. 2 Special Attention to Claims, Collections and Marriage License Applications. FULL LINE OF LEGAL BLANKS ALWAYS. ON HAND. = THE SALISBURY HACK LINE o AND LIVERY. C.W. STATLER, - -- Proprietor. L&@ Two hacks daily, except Sunday, be- | tween Salisbury and Meyersdale, connect- ing with trains east and west. Schedule: Hack No.1 leaves Salisbury at Hack No.2 leaves Salisbury at. Returning,No 1 leaves Meyersdale at 1 P.M No.2leaves Meyersdaleat............. 6 P.M L@F-First class rigs for all kinds of trav- el,at reasonable prices. IT Insure nN WDE 7A \ Your DR i <RBYS Child’s ROUP ELLE TRADE “MARK : NO MORE CROUP. Also for Whooping Cough, Colds, Sore Throat. SOLD UNDER A POSITIVE CUARANTEE Contains no Opiates. Pleasant to take. 50 Doses for 35 cents AT YOUR DRUCGCIST. Write to-day for Booklet that tells you all about CROUP. Don’t buy something else claimed to be *‘ just as good.” DERBY’S PURE KIDNEY PILLS for all Kidney, Liver and Troubles. 60 Pills—10 Jaye treatment, 25 cents at your druggist. Write to-day for free sample. DERBY MEDICINE CO. Eaton Rapids, - Michigan. lt _- Weak Ridneys Weak Kidneys, surely point to weak kidney Nerves. The Kidneys, like the Heart, and the Stomach, find their weakness, not in the organ itself, but in the nerves that control and guide "and strengthen them. Dr. Shoop’s Restorative is a medicine specifically prepared to’ reach these controlling nerves. To doctor the Kidneys alone, is futile. - It is a waste of time, and of money as well. If your back aches or is weak, if the urine gcalds, orisdarkand strong, if you have symptoms of Brights or other dist ng or dangerous kid- ney disease, try Dr. Shoop’'s Restorative a month— Tablets or Liquid—and. see. what it can and will do for you. Druggist recomnmend and sell Dr. Shoop’s Restorative ELK LICK PHARMACY. The Sanitary Water Purifier, CALVANIZED Steel Ghain Pump It is the Best Pump on the Market. Operated over cisterns and wells where depth does not exceed 20 feet. It will not Freeze, Rust or Rot. |" 5 It the most beautiful, : strongest and service- able, ard will produce more water. It is en- tirely Sanitary. The np water coming up the first tube into the spout, the over pro- duction into the wheel box, draining through the center tube. The base is so constructed that the water never splashes through the sides. We have used this pump in the finest homes in the city in kitchens, porches and yards and it has al- ways proven satisfac- tory. It is Sanitary because it is clean. It urifies the water by ; he action of the chain and the rains through the center tube which agitates the water, there being enough air ventilation in the pump, when in action, to keep the water pure and tasteless. Ask your dealer to show it to you. Manufactured by EVANSVILLE PUMP & MANFG. CO., EVANSVILLE, INDIANA, . | of buttons, anyway, and there can be FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY, JOHN S. MILLER. To the voters of Somerset County, Pu. I hereby announce to you that I am a candidate for the nomination of the Republican party for the office of Dis- trict Attorney. I am one of the younger members of the bar, having been admitted to the practice of law in the several courts of our county in the fall of 1904. 1 have always been a staunch Republican. and all my relatives, of whom I have a large number in the county, have always voted that ticket. 1 most earnestly solicit your vote and support at the coming Primary, and if elected will fill the office accord- ing to the laws of the Commonwealth, the oath of office, and the best interests of the people of Somerset county; and will perform the duties of said office earnestly, actively, and with dispatch. Joux 8S. MILLER. GOOD WORDS FOR CHAMBER- LAIN’S COUGH REMEDY. People everywhere take pleasure in testifying to the good qualities of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. Mrs. Edward Phillips, of Barclay, Md, writes: “I wish to tell you that I can recommend Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. My little girl, Catherine, who is two years old, has been taking this remedy whenever she has had a cold since she was two months old. About a month ago I contracted a dreadful cold myself, but I took Cham- berlain’s Cough Remedy and was soon as well as ever.” This remedy is for ed admirers of the paper known as Ap- | ing for a few more, especially if they Tue Rockwood Leader says that Perry Bird,.of-Addison, through Attor- ney J. C. Lowry, wants a mandamus on Confluence’s “Squire” DeCorse, alleg- ions, and said he would not grant the appeal even if ordered to do so by Judge Kooser. No doubt Mr. Bird thinks “Squire” DeCorse about coarsest officer he ever cum acroost.” He is the most'dignified “squire” in all Somerset county, that's sure, and lhe wears a badge about as big as an ordi- nary saucer, on the lapel of his cost, which is engraved bold 1 d official designation. is no appeal from the court of Jast on in eiters his name an re- sort in Confluence, of which “Squire” DeCorse is the He i equal to the big, mushy lobster now employed as chief of police in Salis- bury, who will likely be converted into lobster salad when arrives. whole push. the proper —— “Jim” B¥yant, of the Carleton (Neb.) Leader, - recently administered =o severe journalistic spanking to the grew out of the wearing of buttons bearing: the words ‘undesirable citi- zens,” the term applied by President Roosevelt to Haywood, Moyer and Pettibone, officers of - the Western Federation of Miners, who are now on trial for the murder of the Governor of Idabo. The editor of the Deshler pa- per is James Pontius, and the Leader declares that the said Pontius is a rela- tive of Pontius Pilate, the judge who allowed Christ to be crucified. We don’t know whether that canbe veri- fied or not, but it appears that Deshler dunce is a staunch admirer of the anarchist sheet ously ‘called Appeal to Reason, and also a friend of the thugs now on trial for their lives out in Idaho. But why all the rumpus about the wearing of a few buttons? If the men who believe Haywood, Moyer and Pettibone to be guilty, are wearing the buftons men- tioned, they should discard them at once. But if the other fellows are wearing them, they are wearing some- thing that proclaims to the world just exactly what Haywood, Moyer, Petti- bone and the believers in the Kansas anarchist sheet are. The poor, delud- Kansas errone- peal to Reason, haven’t got a full row no reasonable objection to their long- bear the words “undesirable citizens.” By their buttons and the kind of litera- ture they believe in shall ye know them—poor, sin-soaked simpletons! CHAMBERLAIN’S COLIC,CHOLERA AND DIARRHOEA REMEDY. There is probably no medicine made that is relied upon with more implicit ing that" the said “squife” refuses to grant an appeal from one of "his decis- | “de | There * time | WE notice that our old friend Editor | editor of a paper that goes by the crazy | name of Deshler Rustler. The trouble | the | OCR | Editor Summoned Before Burgess Who Promptly Renders Sensible Verdiet, Last Thursday morning’ George B. | Walker, the big, mushy lobster who by | accident. some months ago, was chosen | as chief of police of this borough, weat before Burgess McKinley and entered complair ! the editor of this paper. charasing him with profanity and - a weainst other becoming - conduct leg that evening on -the said offense was tHe did street, al ng committed the before. wanted a warrant, but the Burgess t gi him, evident: tha! made r which he js n + Il he did, Ste had r. puliceman the blunders f tod. (‘onze ly the-editor was not ar- I rested, but was allowed to come to the office of t Burgess unattended, and at such time as suited him for a hear- ing; which was last Saturday evening Lobster Walker was there and made affirmation to his statement, which al- most choked him, while beads of sweat | stood out all tenance. room over his sneaking coun- Sensible people in the court couldn’t help but smile and snicker at Walker’s flimsy and poorly concocted statement, and the editor tad no trouble whatever in proving that he had not- sworn an oath, and furthermore that he had done nothing else that he should be fined for. The editor had two good, law-abiding citizens as witnesses (John R. Brown: and 8S. LL. Livengood) who were with him during the time that the Offenses complained have been committed. and ‘their testimony easily disproved Lobster Walker's alle of were alleged to gations.. After the evidence was all in, Bur gess McKinley rendered verdict of “not guilty.” giving*his reasons there- for in a | sensible remarks, and thus the great trial ended, much to Walker's chagrin and disgrace. a few well chosen, logical and Spite work was at the bottom: of the whole affair, so far as Walker was con- cerned, and a few unprincipled whelpe in the community -tried hard to influ- ence the Burgess to decide the case on personal prejudice instead of on the evidence, the law or common sense. They reminded him before the trial came off that he and the editor had not been on good terms for some years, and advised him to ‘‘get even.” But they tried to corrupt the wrong man, and whatever else may be said of Me- Kinley in his official capacity, he must be given credit for doing what he be- lieves to be right in the matter of his decisions. While he is not our ideal of a Burgess, we nevertheless give him credit for not being governed by per- sonal prejudice in his decisions, and we believe he would make an excellent Justice of the For that oflice we would support him with pleasure. Peace. confidence than Chamberlain’s Colic, | Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. Dur- ing the third of a century in which it | has been in use, people have learned | that it is the one remedy that never fails. When reduced with water and sweetened it is pleasant to take. For sale at Miller's Drug Store. 6-1 — LETTER FROM A. C. HOLBERT. Another card to the Republican Voters ~ of Somerset County. I may not yet bave seen you during this campaign; I may not be able to see you; the time has been very short and T cannot perform the impossible; I ask that you take no offense should I not see you personally. I further ask that you consider my lifelong devotion to the interests of the Republican Party; the fact that T am ON THE RETURN ; that I promise to sup- port the nominee; the fact that I am fully competent to fill the office in the interests of the County, and then, whether 1 see you personally or not, give me your vote on the 1st day of June, 1907. AaroN C. HOLBERT. RELIEF FROM RHEUMATIC PAINS. ee Among the troubles that beset man- kind rheumatism is one of the most aggravating. “Il suffered with it for over two years,” says Mr. Rolland Cur- ry, a patrolman, of Key West, Fla. “Sometimes it settled in my knees and lamed me so I could hardly walk, at other times it would be in my feet and hands so I was incapacitated for duty. One night when I was in severe pain and lame from it, my wife went to the drug store here and came back with a bottle of Chamberlain’s Pain Balm. I was rubbed with it and found the pain had nearly gone during the night. I kept on using it for a ftle more than two weeks and found that it drove the rheumatism away. I have not had any trouble from that disease for over three sale at Miller’s Drug Store. 6-1 As to our sorry apology for Chief of Police, that fellow is getting to be an intolerable and the Town Council ought to fire him. If we correctly informed, he has gone before the Burgess not less than four times to lay in complaint when he had no case He seems to think he is hired to spend about half his time loafing in Schramm’s restaurant, and the other half in sneak- ing around and playing the part of a contemptible eavesdropper. le strains at gnats and swallows camels and ele- phants with ease. He puts in his time watching decent citizens and thought- less children, but neglects to properly look after the rowdies that need look- ing after. What he needs is some more of the good medicine that “Al” Swartzwelder gave him just outside of the borough limits, a few years ago, or the kind that “Shad” Engle gave him. nuisance, are when Georgie was looking for trouble - But never mind, he will be given some more medicine, judging from what we hear, just as soon as the op- portunity arrives, that will be ever more effective than Dr, Swartzwelder’s favorite prescription or Dr. Shad Engle’s swamp root and gutter purgs- tive. What Lobster Walker needs to wear is not a star and mace, but a piece of Canton flannel about a yard square. about his loins and hips, for the Lord only knows what will happen him if certain people ever get a chance te “get even” with him for his dirty, un- warranted offenses. Free Samples of “Preventics” and a booklet on Colds will be gladly mailed . ou, on request, by Dr. Shoop, Racine, is., simply to prove merit. Prevent- ics are little Candy Cold Cure tablets. No Quinine, no Laxative, nothing harmful whatever. Preventics prevent colds—as the name implies—when taken early, or at the “Sneeze Stage.” For a seated cold or LaGrippe, break it up safely and quickly with Preventics. months.” For sale at Miller's Drug Store. 8-1 Sold by Elk Lick Pharmacy. 6-1 in front of Jeffery’s store, one night, =
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers