’ NO. 24. SALISBURY. ELK LICK POSTOFFICE. PA.. THURSDAY, MAY 30. 1907. 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 coffeesfrom dif- i ferent parts of the world, con- There’s sequently four different prices. a. These different prices mean ~~ blen that some coffees cost more to for ~ import than others. YOU If your choice is the lowest ae or the highest priced—you may : be sure that you have the very best of its kind. GILLIES’ 35 cent coffee is J mellow, aromatic and very deli- /‘cately flavored, while GILLIES’ 30c coffee is rich, full-bodied and delicious—the 25¢ or 20¢c blend ‘each has a distinctive flavor (which may please you. ai Cotteo— A florestion of Taste / + rh — en AGUS COT BR EDWIN J. GILLIES 30} pre 4 For sale by i pe tion o | RERKEY & SHAVER, Attorneys-at-I.aw, | Je SOMERSET, PA. | Coffroth & Ruppel Building. [ ERNEST 0. KOOSER, Attorney-At-Tiaw, SOMERSET, PA. MEYERS, DISTRICT ATTORNEY Attorney-at-Iuaw, : | : SOMERSET, PA. | Office in Court Houses: &- : J. G. OGLE ONE. HQONTL & OBER ms VMtorneys=-At-I.aw, SOMERSET, PENNA © Conrt House. R.SAYLOR, AXttorney-at-l.aw, SOMERSET, PA. Office in Mammoth Block. DR. PETER IL.SWANIK, hhiv=ician and Sarceon, ELK LICK, PA. to Pr. EH. Perry. | | E.C. SAYLOR, D. D. 8, * SALISBURY, PA. Mrs SN Pively Residence, Grant Street. Office in Special attention given to. the preserva- f the natural teeth. Artificial sets in- Me Lick Supply Co. Fm \Y I % 5B oe wv jo! OE 3) > , Gs ur | UHH OF SALISBURY. S| HORS Capital paid in, $50,000. Surplus &undiyided profits, $15,000. oe Asses over $300 000. SPER GENT. INTERES] H. H. Mausr, Vice President. Rei1rz. Cashier. 2h H. H..Maust, Norman D. Hay, A. M. & Jeachy. On Time Deposits. Jarchus, President. ALBERT DIRECTORS :—J. L.. Barchus. Lichty, F. A Maust, A. E. Livengood, L. L. HEBER 25%: 2 call and Before buying vour sceds for spring sowing, I “le (ie 3S examine our line of fancy. Mens CRIMSON CLOVER, ALSIKE, Tivroriny, MrLLET, BanLey., 636 % Mauvmorn CLOVER, M: CLOVER, We buy-in large quantity, and prices are always in line. S A Lich AA ZA BRE .) ’ S_Salisbury, Pa—8| > by DRY Foreien and Domestie Sons. Finest of Groceries, Hardware, Miners’ Supplies, Shoes, Clothing, Etc. The best Powder and Squibs a Specialty. I I ll Ri For Butter And Fags. KNOWN ASTHE NEW BRADY HOUSE, 15 & 17 SoUTH ARKANSAS AVE. OCEAN VIEW, vo minutes walk from Boardwalk and Nes v nillion-dollar pier. One-half square from Reading Railroad Station. TERMS REASONABLE. Good table. two hundred. Write capacity of house fod hooniot. XG CGH ANNELL, Proprietor, Atlantic City, N.. |. WINDSOR HOTEL, 1217-1229 F1LBER'T 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. European Plan, $1.00 to $2.50 per day. RRR RHR, P.L. LIVENGOOD, Notary Public. Star Office, Salisbury Po. EDS; MORTGAGES, PENSION VOUCHERS, AGREEMENTS, WILLS, ELC CAREFULLY ATTENDED TO: 17 2 Special Attention to Clitines, ( ‘ollections Licejse o od Marri: Applications. o LINE OF LEGAL BLANKS HLWAYS ON HAND. FULL RHR § THE SALISBURY HACK LINE oo AND LIVERY. ~~ C.W.STATLER, L& Two hacks daily, except Sunday, be- tween Salisbury and Meyersdale, connect- Proprietor, ing with trains cast and west. Schedule: Hack No.1 leaves Salisbury at........8 A. M Hack No.2 leaves Salisbury at ac BP-M Returning, No 1 leaves Meyersdaleat 1 P.M No.2leaves Meyersdale at... LPM I@- First class rigs for all kinds of trav- el,at reasonable prices. nh Insure ta WDE {IR 7% \ Your y K: We RBYS Child’s Zi if PD Lif Cs NO MORE CROUP. Also for = Whooping Cough, | x a Colds M Yr OK VILX-TURE Sore NIXTUR Throat. SOLD UNDER A POSITIVE CUARANTEE Contains no Opiates. Pleasant to take. 50 Doses for 35 cents AT YOUR DRUCCIST. Write to-day for Booklet that tells you all about CROUD. Don’t buy. something else claimed to be ‘ just as good.” DERBY’S PURE KIDNEY PILLS as - for all Kidney, Liver and Bladder Troubles. ’ treatment, 25 cents at your ay for free sample. DERBY MEDICINE CO, | |Eaton Rapids, Michigan. 60 Pills—10 da druggist. W | railroad solid with the June brides. Took on the poor with gentle eyes, for in such habits often angels desire alms. . el ms It is time to begin country that we should and sane Fourth of July. A Currexnt publication is called the Bill-Board. But a document which is | read with more anxiety is the Board | bill. ? warning the have a safe ~~ -——— IT is said that the automobile habit has almost put the diamond stores out OUR LOBSTER POLICE. More Evidence that George B. Walker Ought to be Discharged. Last Saturday night was one of tu- mult and lawlessness in this town, and much of it could have been avoided if Officer Walker had done his duty. The big “slob” stood around quaking with fear, while profanity could be heard in abundance all around him, and men swaggering drunk were not in the least bashful about parading back and forth in his presence, to their of business in. Paris. Few are wealthy | enough to afford both luxuries. — -—— - | Recexrry issued orders that no rice or old shoes must be thrown in any of its stations, will make thie Pennsylvania “I wir not stand for re-election,” says Senator Platt. Which is very well, as it is not at all probable that New York would stand for it, either. a DELAWARE now has alaw making it a crime to drink liquor: on a railroad train in that state. People will now begin to be thankful that it doesn’t take long to get out of that small state. It is reported that Justice Harlan, in a recent baseball game of the Wash- ington Bar Association, made a home run. This is to be expected of a judge of the highest court. Ne umpire” can overrule him. a - A Scientist predicts that automo- biles will be unknown in ten years from now, and that every one will travel in airships. If this man ever runs for office, he will get the entire { pedestrian vote. Tire party primaries will be held on | Saturday of this week, under the uni- form primary law, and the general election officers will preside at the | polls. There is practically no interest | felt iu primary election matters, this | year, and a very light vote is predicted all over the county. The Republican party is the only party that has a full set of candidates for nomination. The Prohibitionists had a full set of candi- dates, but H. F. Yost, whom they had slated for District Attorney against his will, has withdrawn, thus leaving but two candidates in the field for that of- fice, namely, A. C. Holbert and John S. Milier. Both of these men are Repub- licans, and good ones, too. 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 cold since she 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 sale at Miller’s Drug Store. 6-1 a a was ANOTHER LETTER FROM A. C. HOLBERT. In these last days of the campaign. | do not permit yourself to be deceived | by any adroit schemes of advertising. Advice appearing in any newspaper, not signed by a candidate, requesting | you to vote for this or that candidate, is paid for advertising, not the request | of the editor, and does not indicate the | policy of the paper. Should such stuff appear, do not per- | mit it to influence you. I have said that T have always supported the party. nominee: I shall do so now; no other person promises the same, hence I ask that you give me your vote on the Ist day of June for District Attorney. Yours truly, AaroxN C. HoLBERT. FROM RHEUMATIC PAINS. 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 little more than two weeks and found that it drove the rheumatism away. I have not had any trouble from that disease for over three months.” For sale at Miller's Drug RELIEF Store. 8-1 | borough. | been nipped in the bud, and the crowd | heart’s content. The rowdies regard [Her only as a big, mushy coward. 4nd they know full well that from him they need fear nothing. It is true that he had two fellows in the '‘coop” for a short time, but if he had done anything like his full duty, he would have had fellows packed in the “cooler” as tight as sar- dines in a box. But Walker is not the to pre- serve order, and well do the rowdies know it. They have taken his correct measure long ago, and for the Council to keep a mutton-head of his stripe on the police force is a most disgraceful waste of the taxpayers’ money. All he seems to be good for is to arrest chil- mar dren and summon people before the | Burgess who have violated no ordi- nance. Mere trifles are the things he usually tries to make cases out of, but and vulgarity’ the Burgess has thus far been fair and. manly enough to say ‘not guilty,” when it was plain that the big lobster of a policeman was merely trying to vent his spleen on some one ‘he had a spite at, or arrest little children for.the merest trifles. If the Councilmen the will take | trouble to watch Walker up on pay day nights and other occasions when there is lots of “boozing” going on, they can readily convince themselves, if they are open for conviction, that he an arrant coward and no more fit for po- liceman than an old grandmother in In the of is petticoats opinion many AN ITEM OF COUNTY HISTORY. The Young Attorneys’ Office. The first.election for Atigr- ney in ‘Somerset county was held i 1850. Prior to that date the office was filled by appointment by the Governar. The office in the last fifty-seven years Jhas been filled by the following mem- bers of ‘the bar, all of young men when elected : Col. J. R. Edie, elected 1850 one term | Hon. W, 11. Koontz, 1853. @eone tem |"Cyrus. Meyers, 1856. 7.7 Wm. Postlethwaite, 1982 Samuel Gaither, 1965... ..... .one term | Tudge Francis Kooser, 1868. two jerms | Tames L. Pugh, 1874 John R. Scott, 1877 Geo. R. Scull, 1880. F. W. Biesecker, 1883... .. L. C. Colborn, 1889 A. Berkey, 1892 JE. Meyers... District whom were wo terms ..one term one term ..one term .one teray Awo terns one ierm one 1 > Pov J. erm R present incumbent As to my qualification. I .quote from two of our leading county papers at vi 4 admission to the bar, and further sag that since my admission to the bar T { have earnestly and incessantly pursuad the study of law and have been actize in its practice; and believe 1 qualified for the ofiice : “Mr. Miller is a bright and exemplacy young man, and the Standard prediets that his admission will bring credit tw him and the Somerset bar. [Ie is a graduate of Washington and Jeffersca college.” —Somerset’ Standard, Nov. 17. 1904. % “After having passed a highly credit able examination before the standing committee of attorneys, John S. Milles was an I'riday-admitted to membership in the Somerset county bar. Attornay Miller is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Josiah Miller, of Stoyestown. He was born ic Jenner township, and is a graduate of am weil | { | registered three years Washington and Jefferson college. Hae ago as a law student in the office of Coffroth & Rup pel, since when he has diligently pur sued his studies. Few young attorneys people, the Council is only fostering | enter the profession better equipped rowdyism by keeping the big nonentity | than Mr. Miller, and his friends ali in office. predict a brilliant career for him. Mr. One of the men he had in the “coop’ | Miller has a wide circle of acquaint for a short time, last Saturday night, went down town immediately after he was liberated, and in a very short time he became involved in a quarrel with a young man from Coal Run. Much “rag-chewing” and bantering was done in the policeman’s very presence by the two men quarreling, while some of their friends were at least indirectly urging on a fight, which was arranged for and pulled off with the policeman’s full knowledge. The fact that the two men went out of the borough to fight it out, makes material difference. The fact remains that they were fol- lowed out of town by a big, noisy crowd of men. the grester portion of whom had been guilty of promoting a no { quarrel and fight, hence were disturb- ers of the peace. Had J. R. Joy, M. D. Thomas, John J. Walker or Frank { will put up a Wagner been the officer on the street at the time, no fight would have taken place, neither inside nor outside of the The whole affair would have would have either been dispersed or arrested.” But with a lobster for a po- liceman, the result was different, and it was a most disgraceful scene that took place just a little north of the borqugh line. One of the scrappers was pretty badly “done up,” and sevy- eral other fights were narrowly avert- ed. The Constable, either of the ship or of the borough; should get town- the i names of the persons who participated in the fight, as well as those who en- couraged it by their words and their presence, and arrest the whole “‘push.” And right here we want to tell you that it is a constable’s sworn duty to do | that very thing when he learns of such | affairs: In the meantime, the members of the Council should keep tab on the police- man and behold for themselves that it is just as impossible to make a good officer of such worthless material as it is to make a silk handkerchief out of a sow’s ear. A great majority of the people of this borough are opposed to George B. Walker acting as policeman, for the reason that he lacks judgment, executive ability and the necessary courage. He is badly at loggerbeads with Burgess McKinley, and he spends much of his time denouncing the Bur- gess, declaring that he will take no more cases before him. As there is no other place for him to take his cases, what is the use, or where the business sense in keeping such a policeman on the force? Bur- gess McKinley will impose fines when- ever Walker brings real cases before him, but whenever the big saphead tries to manufacture cases out of mere trifles and things that do not conflict with the spirit and intent of the bor- ough laws, then the Burgess will very sensibly ignore them. ances throughout the and is justly popular wherever known. He has secured an office in the Berkey building, over Coffroth & Ruppel.”— Somerset Herald, Nov. 16, 1904. Joux S. MiLLeE a THE MURDER TRIALS. county, This week all interest in court cen- ters in the trial of John Flickinger, charged with the murder of Wesley Emerick, the particulars of which ara well known to The Star's readers. It is doubtful whether the will be given to the jury before next week, as both the prosecution the defense vigorous fight to win. case and Mrs. Emerick, the widow of the sup- made a state ment before Justice of the Peace l.evi Llehliter, some months ago, which led the trial posed murdered man, to Flickinger’s arrest. Since is in progress, however, Mrs. Emerick has testified that first statement was false, and that she made it through fear of violence that was threatened by Just what the hard to of the her some of her neighbors. outcome of the case will be, is predict. list jurors in the case: William Spech’, of Stoyestown ; Wes ley Sstevanus, of Somerset township W. I. Powell, of Shade township "BEE. Clevenger, of Upper Turkeyfoot towa- ship; Washington Custer, of Shade township; John R. King, of Middle- creek township; John E. Phillippi, of Black township; Geo. D. Romesburg of Upper Turkeyfoot township; I. I Anderson, of Stonycreek township; } N. Greer, of Confluence ; Henry Hensel, of Lavansville, and Jeremiah Whipkey. of Middlecreek township. As soon as the Flickinger case is dis posed of, the Stauffer murder case, of Stonycreek township, will take place. In this case much interest is also cen- tered, and the following named jurers will decide the fate of Miller, the man accused of the murder: M. J. Shank, of Black township; Jonathan Enos, of Rockwood; Nelsoa Saylor, of Meyersdale; Jacob N. Wal- ter, of Milford township; J. IL. Sanner. of Lower Turkeyfoot township ; Mahle Jowman, of Somerset township; Cyrus Shultz, of Black township; Hirags Beck, of Middlecreek township; Fits Largent, of Addison; G. B pe of Jenners; N. D. Hay, of /Elk Lick fowa- ship, and William J. Jrenn, of Berlin. NOTICE TO R CUSTOMERS. We are pleaged to announce thet and Tar for coughs, troubles is not affected by the Natioghal Pure Food and Drug tains no opiates or other d we recommend it Ban for children and Following is a as a adults. Sod by Hprogsiste 6-1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers