< : SESS: RBRE gn Cr cess in Tes Necessities. The “Foster” Hose Supporter. : It’s the best supporter in this broad land : a supporter i that has won its way, not through advertising or pic- 3 tures or displays or false promises, but just through : «Dress Makers who know how” and satisfied patrons, $ who didn’t, but do now. You can’t make a mistake if £ you look, because, «The Name is on the Buckles.” oa i [ATR EIRTET It has many imitators, but no competitors. It is not a % question of price here, thie price is right—not any higher $ than the don’t-last-amy-time-kind, but it is a question of quality, and that is best. _ ; You cannot fulfill your daily duties with a hose sup- porter that doesn’t suppdrt. . We have. the kind whighyls guaranteed to do its duty inde of best ‘material g for service and style—at a price that is safe. : «The Foster,” the Peer of Hose Supporters. ENCE RETRY i 1%] HT RR SR SS BRE SHA SEE EES SES EEE ER SRE EEE ISIE LOD ¢ Hammocks, Summer Underwear, <~Summer Goods of All Kinds, for Men, Boys, Women and Children. : 2 Our Dry Goods Department is the talk and pride of the town, and our stock of Shoes, Hats and Dress Shirts has them all beat. OUR PRICES ARE VERY LOW. FLK LICK VARIETY STORE, C. 1. Hay, Monogr BRR TRS LC LAA AWE IE 14 The Original, Old Reliable BEACHY'S HORSE & CATTLE POWDER, the kind you used to buy. 25c. per Ib. ilk Lick Drug Store. FOURIER AERIS New Store! 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, Shoes, Groom ete. 2 = & % Eo] = = = « & = = = = = 8 = ® = 8 = fo] ko = = ® = 1a bib BALM Hr « We start oid an entire new es ee we ny L 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. EWEL RUNABOUT—S$600 Complete oF Reliable and Economical Our 1907 Car is as near perfection as the highest grade of mechanical engin- eering and shop practice can make it. It comes nearer the ideal gonosption of agentlemen’shorseless carraige th: any car that has yet been at Can be operated by =n any member ot Sy : 1s family Tho can be hn tuted With horse's reins. ri or ca ° Fully Guaranteed and testimonials. ogue FOREST CITY MOTOR CAR CO.. Masslilion, Ohlo. ole Early Risers The famous little pills. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests t you eat. SEIN Coe a OB AD DOD ED COA XG GARR PEP OP) UN AG NO), AY) AVOID Impure drugs are worse than Bor death, you don’t want to take any risks. ELIE SELLS SL When it is a case of life You want the purest, the $2 no drugs. ¥ freshest drugs that you can get, accurately compounded. Accuracy and reliability in compounding are distinguishing feat- § 2 ures of our pharmacy. You get what your prescription calls for, and get it promptly. This store con tains everything that a first class Y drug store ought to contain, and in the best quality obtainable. 4 PAUL H. GROSS, City Drug Store, & Meyorsine Pa. ye | Chicago, TI. =A present dupy: STAR. Subscribe for THE GG. De tol GROCER AND CONFECTIONER. Having purchased the well known Jeffery grocery opposite the postoffice, I want the public td iknow tHat IT will. add greatly to the stock and improve the store in every way. It is my aim to conduct a first class grocery and confectionery store,and to give Big Value For Cash. I solicit a fair share of your patronage, and I promise a square deal and courteous treatment to all customers. My line will consist of Choice Confectionery, Cigars, Tobacco, ete OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE, Country Produce, SALISBURY, PA, SECUR TZ GALL SALVE! POSITIVELY HEALS SORE SHOULDERS SORE NECKS OR BACKS ON HORSES AND MULES it Heals Them Anyway in Harness, under Saddle or idle. If not sold in your town we will send yqu FREE SAMPLE, if you send us name of your dealer. Put up in 25¢., 50c. and $1.00 Cans. MONEY BACK IF IT FAILS. SECURITY REMEDY GO. Minneapolis, Minn. FoRBARBWIRE & ALL CUTSVsE SECURITY ANTISEPTIC HEALER Murphy Bros. RESTAURANT! ZAIN Headquarters for best Oysters, Cream, Lunches, Soft Drinks, etc. Try our Short-Order Meals—Beef- Sausage, Hot steak, Ham and Eggs, Coffee, ete. Meals to Order at All ae. Hours! em 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, Joy BUILDING, SALISBURY, PA. Estate Notice. Estate of Samuel J. Lichty, Hoceased late of Salisbury Borough, Somerset Co., Pa. All persons indebted to said estate are re- dnested to make immediate payment, and ose having legal claims against the same will present them Without elay, in proper order for settlemen A.M. LICHTY, a islrator, or his at- torney J. OC. Lowry, Somerset, Pa. Salisbury Borough, May 13, 1907. 6-20 | *“Houghion Quality” Staple and Fancy Groceries | | ! { | { | Ice REAR VIEW. Style No. 70 The Trainer's Friend The Matinee Favorite g. Ten Styles in Racing Veliles Ten Styles in Pleasure Vehicles Catalog of each or both. T MODERN PLANT IN THE WORLD. THE Mos SURES THE PRICE. EL HOUGHTON cowrany, MARION, aad (25 OH10. U.S.A, Indigestion Causes Catarrh of the | Stomach. | For many years it has been supposed that | Catarrh of the Stomach caused indigestion | and dyspepsia, but the truth is exactly the opposite. Indigestion causes catarrh, Re- peated attacks of Indigestion inflames the mucous membranes lining the stomacth and exposes the nerves of the stomach, thus caus- ing the glands to secrete mucin instead of the juices of natural digestion. This is called Catarrh of the Stomach. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure relieves all inflammation of the mucous membranes lining the stomach, protects the nerves, and cures bad breath, sour risings, a sense of fullness after eating, indigestion, dyspepsia and all stomach troubles. Kodol Digests What You Eat ake the Stomach Sweet. Bottles Ma Regular size, $1.00, holding 2% times the trial size, which sells for SO cents. | Prepared by E. C. DeWITT & CO., Chicago, Ill. SOLD BY E. H. MILLER. FOLEY’ KIDNEY CURE WILL CURE YOU of any case of Kidney or Bladder disease that is not beyond the reach of medi- cine. Take it atonce. Do not risk having Bright’s Dis- ease or Diabetes. There is nothing gained by delay. 50c. and $1.00 Bottles. REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. | FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Sn Baltimore & Oli R R. SCHEDULE IN EFFECT JUNE 2, 1907. MEYERSDALE. | | ! +Daily except Sunday. ¢Sunday only. . { *Daily. CONNELLSVILLE & PITTSBURG. De- ds *5.44 a. m., 17.52 a. m. (local), *2.46 p. m 4.34 p. m. a. local). Arrive *10.55 a. m. (local) *11.30 a *4.50 p. m., +6.50 p. m., *9.29 p.m CHICAGO. Depart *246 p.m. Arrive *1130 a. | m., *4.50 p. m. CLEVELAND, Depart *2.46 p. m. Arrive Pipi "BALTO., PHILA & NEW YORK, Depart *11.30 a. 4.50 p. m., *9.29 p. m. Arrive *5.44 a. 2.1m CUMBERLAND, Depart ns a. m. (local), *11.30 a. m., *4.50 p. m. . (local), *8.29 p. m. Arrive *544 a.m, F152 8 a. m. (Iocal), *2.46 p. m., *4.34 p. m. (loca 1). HNSTOWN and Yay Stations, Depart a. m., +246 p. m.,* 31pm. Arrive $11.30 a m., +4.50 p. m., 7. 153 p.m J CONTINENTAL CASUALTY COM-, PANY. Health and Accident Insurance— Popular Monthly Payment Plan. W. M. Pletcher, district manager of the above named company, is in town, and has organized an insurance club, the monthly premiums of which range from $1.00 to $2.00, to be paid each month to Albert Reitz, cashier of the First National Bank. This appeals to every class. as sick- ness and accidents are no respecters of persons. Every one whose time has a money value should insure against the, loss of it by sickness. Facrs SPEAK Louner THAN WORDS. This company is 21 years old, and pays over 200 claims daily. It has paid to policy holders, $6,634,000. Cash cap- ital, $300,000, and hase deposited with the Insurance Departments of the dif- ferent states, $200,000. Insure now ‘with this old reliable company. For further particulars, call and see W. M. Pletcher, the District Manager, at the Valley House. You cannot tell what day you may meet with an accident, or get sick, and you cannot get a better sick and aceci- dent policy than the Continental offers you. Main office, 1208 Michigan Avi. oy ie sii ee NOTICE TO TEACHERS. The Salisbury Borough School Board will meet on Friday even- ing, June 21st, 1907, at 8 o’clock, to employ six teachers at the fol- lowing wages : Principal 368, 00 por mo. | Grammar 2nd Intermediate 40.00 1st Intermediate.. 40.00 2nd Primary 1st Primary Term, eight months. All applications to be in the hands of the secretary by 7 o’clock p. m. on above date. By order of the Board. C. S. LICHLITER, a Secretary. - UNDERTAKING. Latest and Most Up-to-date Methods —Fine Stock. The new undertaking establishment, corner North and Center streets. Mey- ersdale, Pa., is equipped with a full stock of the most popular undertaking goods, and the new undertaker, W. A Clarke, comes well recommended as a skillful embalmer and funeral director. A trial will convince you. Charges reasonable. Economy and Somerset County telephones. tf Se gels H&F Dr. Milne is continuing the use of Somnoform for the painless extrac- tion of teeth, in his well equipped dent- al office in Meyersdale. Too much can- not be said of this wonderful anaes- thetic. Nothing can be said against it by the most critical. It is absolutely harmless and perfectly safe. tf i en Store and Fixtures for Sale. I hereby offer my entire stock of Confectionery, etc., together with my Store Fixtures, for sale at a reasonable figure, as I desire to quit business. For particulars apply to Ernis WAGNER, Salisbury, Pa rele FOR RENT!—The large double dwelling corner Ord St. and Smith Ave., adjoining Dull Mercantile Co.'s store. Will rent either the whole or one-half of residsnce. Good lot and outbuildings. Plenty of fruit and ex- cellent water. Apply to tf STEWART SMITH, re et EVERY TIME you hire a rig at the Williams Livery, Salisbury, Pa., you will get the worth of your money. Somerset County isispnone. tf tf "Stig WwW ANTED, MEN AND W WOMEN TO SWEAR and affirm before the under- signed, when they have documents to which lawful affidavits are required. I also draw up all manner of deeds, leases, mortgages, etc., neatly and ac- curately, according to the require- ments of the law. Typewritten work a specialty. A full line of legal blanks always on hand. P. L. L1vENGOOD, Notary Public.and Conveyancer. STAR OFFICE, Els Liek, Pa. tf 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 a ,.ephf IT IS BAD BUSINESS to allow peo- ple to look in vain through the col- umns of Tue Star for an advertise- ment of your buginess: tf TRY IT I—Our Bouts Et Belle Type- writer Paper. We furnish it blank, in full letter sheets, 84x11 inches, for only $1.10 per ream. We also furnish it printed. when desired, at customary prices. We also have many other grades and brands of typewriter paper, 25d it’s all good. SoMERSET COUNTY STAR. | other OUR DEAREST FOE. The United States Agricultural De- partment warns the farmers of the country that the rat—the big Norway - rat—is a most expensive luxury. It is said that a healthy rat, and nearly all rats seem to be wonderfully healthy, will eat or destroy 50c. worth of grain a day. The rat census has never been taken, but the department suggests $100,000,000 as the probable value of the cereals consumed yearly by the rats of the United States. The annual loss by rats:in France is given as $40,- 000,000. The people of little . Denmark lose $3,000,000 a year by rats. It is evi- dent that the rat holes will bear look- ing into, as President Lincoln said. Rats consume a great deal of waste, but that waste could be much better disposed of. The rats are a heavy drain on the profits of agriculture, and the loss they cause is by no means confined to food. : The agricultural department tells us that rats destroy eggs and young poul-. try, pigeons, game birds and wild song birds. They have been known to kill young rabbits, pigs and lambs, and even to attack children. Carl Hagen- beck once lost three young elephants because rats gnawed their feet, infliet- - ing incurable wounds. They enter stores and warehouses and destroy drygoods—lace curtains; carpets, wool- ens, silks—as well as kid gloves and leather goods. They gnaw through lead pipes, flooding buildings with water or filling them with gas. They injure furniture and the founda- tions and doors of buildings. They eat the insulation from electric wires, thus causing disastrous fires. The average fire loss in the United States due to de- fective insulation is placed at $15,000,- 000 annually, a considerable part of which is said to be caused by rats. The Philadelphia Press thinks this is a terrific indictment of the rat, but be- sides, rats are the host of the germ of the Bubonic plague, and they are the active means of spreading that disease. They are the most prolific of animals. The young female begins to breed at three months old,and will produce from three to six litters a year, and ten little rats at a litter. A single pair breeding without check would in three years be responsible for a rat population of 20,- 155,392. Aft were not for the dogs, traps, poisons and many other enemies of rats, there would soon be no room on the earth for anything but rats. Their numbers are kept down, but the rat population nevertheless enormous and costly. The Agricultural depart- ment has published a bulletin entitled “Methods of Destroying Rats.” Every farmer and every man who has rats on his premises should procure this bul- letin and put its precepts into practice, says the Uniontown News Standard. . er Cet is CHAMBERLAIN’S PAIN BALM. It is an antiseptic liniment and pre- vents blood poisoning resulting from a cut, bruise or burn. It also causes the parts to heal without maturation and in much less time than when the usua treatment is employed. It allays the pain of a burn almost instantly. For sale at Miller’s Drug Store. 7-1 GOT EIGHT YEARS. Slayer of Truman Root, at Friends- ville, Md., Goes to the Pen. Cumberland, Md., June 15.—Judges Boyd and Henderson, sitting as a jury, yesterday rendered a verdict of guilty of manslaughter in the case of John Brown, for the murder of Truman Root, at the home of Mrs. Mary E. Friend, near Friendsville. It appeared the men, who were lumbermen, had quarreled over the woman, and Tru- man was stabbed. Mrs. Friend did not see the tragedy. Brown was sentenced to eight years. A YEAR WITHOUT SUMMER. Recent Erratic Weather Revives Memories of 1816, The erratic weather this spring has revived interests in accounts of the cold season of 1818.. In old newspaper files it is known as ‘‘the year without a summer.” There had been nothing like it in the memory of the oldest per- sons then living, and ‘there has beed nothing like it since. May was a month of frosts, and snow and ice formed an inch thick, ’tis said. At least one man was frozen to death in Vermont, where snow fell to the depth of ten inches. There was three inches of snow in New York, and water froze in ponds on the Fourth of July as far south as Virginia. Corn was killed. August was no better, and the suc- ceeding months were cold. In the spring of 1817 seed corn wes sold for $2 a bushel. Similar conditions were re- ported from Europe. In an Albany paper, dated several years ago, James Winchester, ninety years old, of Vermont, was quoted on his knowledge of that strange summer —Kansas City Star. DO NOTN (EGLECT THE CHILDREN. At this season of the year the first unnatural looseness of a child’s bowels should have immediate attention. The best thing that can be given is Cham- berlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy followed by castor oil as di- rected with each bottle of the remedy. For sale at Miller's Drug Store. 7-1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers