The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, June 27, 1907, Image 1

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

    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 coffeesfromdif-
ferent parts of the world, con- There’s
sequently four different prices. a
These different prices mean blend
that some coffees cost more to for
import than others. YOu
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 is rich, full-bodied and
delicious—the 25¢ or 20c blend
each has a distinctive flavor
<which may please you.
en
Lotlteo—
A
Question
of
Taste
MLLIE
fis S 4
Diu COME ONL
“EDWIN. GILLIES 3! d
For sale by
Elk Lick >up
Salisbury, Penn.
(O.
XB
|
¢
@
%
4
aw
3
2
%
BB
308%
%
VA
=
Av
Semeem—y
OB
0
5
SR
ON
SHR
G8
AS
OF SAEISBURY. 4
& undiyided profits. $15,000.
HS
Surplus
Capital paid in, $50,000.
Aszets over $300,000
) PER CENT. INIEREO
H. H.-Mavsr,
Rerrz, Cashier.
H. H: i t, Norman D..Hay, A. M.
Maust, A. E. Beachy.
396
On Time
Deposits.
HBR
Vice President.
Barcus, President.
ALBERT
DIRECTORS: —J. L. Barchus,
Lichty, F. A
QO OO OHO 3 SD 8, 8, &
ees #35 RRB HIS IS
BJ. L i
5
:
5
To
Livengood, I.. 1.
B NOs 80, 6
BSR IIS BB BSS
3
3
2
8
€
59%
Sr
A 7 N/,
PEPE
SOE
eeds, Seeds,
Before buying your seeds for spring sowing,
of veel
DQ 8,
SPEDE
DTU US >
UO UDG Y
Seeds!
call
QB 8 6, S750
LS Sy
> GUN CDG)
A
Fp
a
i
02
SE
3B
E08
and
8
AY
reed
Oc
firey.
Mavyorn CLOVER, MEpiv ym C
CRrivMsos CLOVER,
examine our line
BIR
LOVER,
34
ALSIKE,
MitLET
6
4
Tiviorny, JARLEY.
AY
\Y7
3
and prices are always in line.
In lic - J.
Salisbury, Pa.
BE BBD
UN
We buy in large quantity,
SA Lone,
5 PAOD
400s OR ay
Ru TUS
HR
0s
SO0
)
59
AY
SS]
3677
PCN GN
5 9
Sa
Foreton and Domes
Finest of Groceries, Hardware, Miners
The
best Powder and Squibs a Specialty.
fi [A Ic il For Butter
1s DRY
Supplies, Shoes, Clothing, Ete.
| KNOWN
| Young’s new million-dollar
{ square from Reading Railroad Station.
AT]
| moderate rates.
i the two prince ipal railroad stations and in
I IKuropean Plan, $1.00 to $2.5
| the stock and improve
GOODS,
And Eggs.
’
Attorneys-at-I.aw,
SOMERSET, PA
Attorney-At-l.aw,
SOMERSET,
. MEYERS,
DISTRICT ATTORNEY
Attorney-at-T.aw
SOMERSET, PA.
| Office in Court House.
WwW. H. KooNTZ. J
KOONTZ & OGLE
Attormneys=s-At-ILiaw.
SOMERSET, P
office opposite Court House.
VIRGIT, R. SAY LOR,
Attorney-at-Tuaw
SOMERSET, PA.
Office in Mammoth Block.
SWAN Is EA
DR. PETER 1a
Physician : re Surceon,
ELK LICK, PA.
Successor to Dr. E. H. Perry.
C¢SAYLOR,
SALISBURY, PA.
Mrs. M.
D. D.S.,
Dively Residence, Grant
Street.
Office in
Special attention given to the preserva-
tion of the natural teeth. Artificial sets in-
sertedsin the best possible manner.
THE CHANNELL,
AS THE NEW BRADY HOUSE,
15 & 17 SOUTH ARKANSAS AVE.
OCEAN VIEW.
Two minutes walk from Boardwalk and
pier. One-half
Good table.
Write
ASONABLE.
two hundred.
TERMS RE
Capacity of house,
| for booklet.
A. C.CHANNEL]L,
Proprietor,
yntic City,
WINDSOR HOTEL,
1217-1229 FILBERT ST.,
PHILADELPHIA, PA
up-to-date accommodations at
A square each way from
Modern,
the center of the Shopping and theatre dis-
trict. American Plan, $2.00 to ) per day.
VN.
Insure
Your
Child’s
Life.
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 DRUCCIST.
Write to-day for Booklet that tells you all
about CROUP. Don’t buy something elsc
claimed to be * just as good.”
DERBY’S PURE
KIDNEY PILLS
for all Kidney, Liver and Bladder Troubles.
60 Pills—10 days’ treatment, 25 cents at your
druggist. Write to-day for free sample.
DERBY MEDICINE CO.,
Eaton Rapids, Michigan.
New Firm!
G. G. De lLozier,
3 Gr
Ba
EE
isbury, Pa —~& GROGER AND CONFEGTIONER.
Having purchased the well known Jetlery
grocery opposite the postoffice,I want the
public to know that [ will add greatly to
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 asquare deal and courteous
treatment to all customers. My line will
consist of Staple and Fancy Groceries
Choice Confectionery, Country Produce,
Cigars, Tobacco, etc.
{ OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE,
SALISBURY, PA.
ogwirs Early Risers |
The famous little pills.
G. OGLE
I'mer
Robert Augustine,
| Steinbaugh,
| trolley
OFFICIAL DIRECTORY.
officials.
their
£ and district
Unless otherwise indicated,
dresses are, Somerset, Pa.
President Judge—[Franeis J.
Member of Congress—A.
Uniontown, Pa.
State Senator— William
Bedford, Pa.
Members of the
Iindsley, Somerfield :
Sheriff —William C. Begley
Prothonotary—Chas. C. Shafer.
Register—Chas. IF. Cook.
Recorder—John RR. Boose.
Clerk of Courts—DMilton IH.
Treasurer—DPeter Hofman.
District Attorney—R. KE. Meyers.
Coroner—Dr. 8. J. H. Louther.
Commissioners—Josiah Specht, Kant-
; Chas. F. Zimmerman, Stoyestown ;
Somerfield.
tor—Berkey & Shaver.
Jury Commissioners—Geo.J.Schrock ;
J. C. Harding. Windber.
Directors of ‘the Poor—J. IF. Reiman,
J. B. Mosholder, Somerset ; and Aaron
FF. Swank, Davidsville. Attorney for
Directors, H. F. Yost; Clerk, C. L.
Shaver. .
C.
Assembly—J.
AW. Roh :
Fike"
Auditors—W. H. H. Baker,
J. 8S. Miller, Friedens ; Geo.
Stoyestown.
Superintendent of Schools—D.
Seibert.
“ County Surveyor—A. E. Rayman.
Chairmen Political Organizations—N.
B. McGriff, Republican;*Alex. B. Grof,
Democratic ; R. M. Walker, Berlin,
Prohibition : 0. P. Shaver, Friedens,
Lincoln.
County
Rockwood ;
W,
Ix Pennsylvania, last year, 2484
people died of diphtheria, in spite of
the state’s free anti-toxin humbug,
which, next ‘to vaccination, is about
the greatest superstition on earth. The
local statistics of this vicinity show
that about all’ the diphtheria patients
that were not given anti-toxin, recov-
ered, while about all the deaths that
occurred were cases which anti-
toxin was used. It is therefore pretty
certain that anti-toxin kills more ‘peo-
ple than diphtheria. Away with it!
. —-
in
We are still anxiously awaiting the
injunction decisions, but the
wheels of justice move exceeding slow
in old Somerset county. In the mean-
time the P. & M. company busy at
work on its road, while the old M. & S.
is having a hard time to keep a
men at work without money. and all
for the sake of keeping up a bluff.
When a few irresponsible schemers
can go into a and sprag the
wheels of justice, common sense and
the business interests of com-
munities, there is something radically
is
court
several
wrong somewhere.
Ox June 25th two clergymen started
on five-day debate on baptism, in
Confluence, and like all harrangues of
that kind, no good will come out of it.
All such debates are good for is to stir
up strife and animosity among the
various churches, and when the “pa-
laver” is all over, people will hold the
same opinions they held before. The
right mode of baptism, or whether any
mode of it is necessary or not, all de-
pends on how people are raised, and
how far they are capable of thinking
for themselves, or how far they are
willing to let the preachers do their
thinking for them. The wrangies
baptism used to be very popular from
25 to 50 years ago, and the average
man of mature years has heard enough
of them to know that such debates are
productive of no good whatever. A
whole lot of people who delight to be
continually disputing with each other
on how much or in what manner water
is to be used in baptism, will some day
go to where they will never see a drop
of it, and the sooner some of them go
there the more peace and real religion
there will be in this world.
i
Dox’r advertise, if you think you are
wasting. money. Let your competitor
waste hiss-money on advertising, and
perhaps you can put him out of busi-
ness. “Fix his clock” for him. Just
stand back of him and laugh when you
see him squandering his money for
printer’s ink. Once there was a boy
named John Wanamaker, or maybe it
was moneymaker. Anyway, his name
was John with some kind of a maker
attached to his last name. He owned
fifty, yards of calico, three pairs of jean
pants, and five pairs of boots. He call-
ed it a dry goods store through a Phila-
delphia newspaper, and offered to sell
a pair of socks for 39 cents. The don’t-
believe-in-advertising merchants just
laughed. Young John spent $35 in ad-
vertising through the Philadelphia
Ledger, just once, and he had less than
$100 worth of goods. He was caution-
ed by the merchants who “knew it
didn’t pay.” It was through sympathy
that they offered him advice, But
John did not listen, and blew his
money foolishly. Today poor John
a
on
ad- |
~Solici- ]
few"
- |
Kooser. |
Sy
FE. Cooper, | | “Foley’s
Miller, preparation for coughs, colds and lung
1
|
|
|
i
| tesson.
CURE CONSUMPTION.
Ark,
Is
WILL.
A.A writes:
the best
Finch,
and Tar
Herren,
Honey
I know that it has cured cone
in the first stages.” You
never heard of any one using Foley's
Honey and Tar and not being satisfied.
| Soid by all Druggists. 7-1
[ trouble.
sumption
MORE EVIDENCE OF UNEQUAL
COAL LAND ASSESSMENT.
The indignation over the present un- |
equal coal land assessment
ning to spread, and since Tur Stan
fired-the first gun, other county papers
are beginning to ventilate and con-
demn the unfairness shown to the onl]
men. In speaking of the matter in its
issue of this week, the Somerset Herald
very truthfully says:
“There can be no good
the farmer .who prefers
minerals for a better
reason why |
to hold his
market should |
not pay relatively the same rate of tax |
as the operator. The latter is satisfied |
with the profit he can make today,
while the former holding off for
something better.”
ight here Tue. Star will cite its
readers to another glaring case of un-
fairness in the present rascally assess-
ment. Wm. Rininger, father of the
chief clerk to the County Commission-
ers, has 160 acres of coal land in Que-
mahoning township, with valuable
buildings, two eeal openings, also a
valuable limestone plant, and the en-
tire property is asses ssed at only $2700.
The adjoining lands are assessed at $60
to $70 per acre. If such unfairness is
permitted to stand, then indeed is jus-
tice- not only sleeping, but dead in
Somerset county.
is
CHAMBERLAIN’S PALIN BALM,
It is an antiseptic. liniment and pre-
vents blood poisoning resulting from a
cut, t also causes the
parts to heal without and
in much less time than when the usua
treatment is employed. It allays the
pain of a burn almost instantly. For
sate at Miller’s Drug Store. 7-1
bruise or burn.
maturation
ao
INCREASED WAGES FOR TEACH-
ERS.
New Law Fixes the Minimum Sal-
ary at Forty Dollars Per Month.
The Legislature has given
teachers another increase in wages by
making the minimum salary forty dol-
lars per month.’ The law went into ef-
fect the first day of this month. Fol-
lowing are the conditions of the act.
Section 1. That from and
passage of this act, the salary of com-
mon school teachers, in districts of this
Commonwealth receiving State
priation, shall be no less than fifty dol-
appro-
lars per month in all casses where the
teacher holds a professional, permau-
nent, or normal certificate, and has hail
two years practice, and presents a cer- |
tificate of proficiency in said practice,
for said time, from the superintendent
in charge of said teacher.
Section 2. That the minimum salary
shall be ferty dollars for all teachers
holding certificates of less grade than
required under section one of this act.
And that the State shall pay the amount
of increase in all salaries that are pro-
vided for under this act, and over the
amount of salary paid in each school!
district in this Commonwealth in one
thousand nine hundred and six, and
said increase shall be, paid out of the
increased appropriation for the com-
mon schoels. ' ~
Section 3. The president and secre-
tary of school districts, where the pre-
scribed salary is greater than that paid
for the school year beginning June, one
thousand, nine hundred and six, shall
certify under oath to the State Super-
intendent of Public Instruction, on
blanks prepared by him, the number of
teachers, with the salary paid to each,
for the year for which the report is |
made ; also the number of months in
the school term for said year. In order
that any district may participate in
this additional appropriation its report
must be filed in the Department of
Public Instruction on or before the
first Monday of October, one thousand
nine hundred and seven, and at the
same time annually thereafter. The
total amount payable to all the school
districts in the State, on account of the
increase of teachers’ salaries as pro-
vided for in this act, shall first be de-
ducted from the total annual school
appropriation, and the balance of said
appropriation shall be apportioned and
distributed among the several districts,
as provided for under existing laws.
The State Superintendent of Public In-
struction shall, at the usual time of
1s begin- |
school |
after the |
seds the result of his mis sGaing~to has | | paying the regular appropriation, gag
| so many dry goods stores he can hard- | to
| Below will be found the names of the | ly find time to study his Sunday school | school appropriation. an
various county
the avmmd
excess equal
to the difference between the salaries
of the teachers for the school year waa
thousand nine hundred and six aad
the salaries prescribed ag
this
those districts, from
minimum
act.
COLIC AND DIARRHOEL.
Pains in the stomach, colic and dier-
rhoea are quickly relieved by the ase
of Chamberlzin’s Colie, Cholera and JF
arrhoea When need af
give it trial.
at Miller's Drug Store.
NEW PENNSYLVANIA PURD FOC
LAW.
Remedy, in
such a medicine rer
a
sale
os
Tustin bili, June
and popularly
Pennsylvania
The
1907,
|. Ne ey
makes some
adn
kuown
Pure
important
E,
as’ “Tes
I'ood
changes. Its
general provisions, adulteratism
| of foods,are substantially the same as
those contained in. the former act «of
{June 26, 1895. Its provisions are sufi
stantially in accordance with the Fed-
| eral Pure Food Law, approved June 38,
| 1006. It gives relief to retail dealees
| when they protect themselves by =
guarantee of the quality of goody
purchased in writing, procured frees
| the vendor, and provides that the meam-
| ufacturer, wholesaler and jobber sel
ing food products shall be responsibiis
for violations of the law. The penalty
for violations of the law has bem
changed from fifty to sixty dollars, and
the procedure is by summary convie-
tions, while under the old law ti
remedy was a prosecution for a mis
demeanor. The new law is much less
drastic than the old. It intended
primarily for the protection of the pul
lic, and its provisions shall be rigidig
enforced. The (‘ommissioner asks tine
cordial co-operation of manufacturers
wholesale dealers, jobbers and retai
| dealers in the enforcement of the law.
| In order to give the retail dealer the
protection intended to be furnished bg
| the statute, it is important, already
stated, that he shall protect himself bg
| the written and signed guarantee af
the and regulations
| have been formulated and will
| printed at length in the Monthly Bri-
[letin, and a copy can be by
| dressing the Commissioner at Harris
| burg. the guaraw
i tee to the retail must not im
| overlooked. The rule relating to the
penne i= as follows, to wit :-
{
|
>
Law
as to
ire
|
is
as
vendor, Rules
oe
had aé-
The importance of
dealer
(GUARANTEE.
The
: the
I
| New y ennsylvania food
i
approved
referred to in
law,
all
invoice
guarantee
be
guarantees
purchased,
June 1, 1907, should
printed
{upon bill
signed by the vendor and substantiallg
in cases
| written or
each of goods
| in the following language, to wit:
| the
|! mentioned foregoing ‘invoice
| hereby and the
to be in full comformity with the
30, 1906, populariyg
Drugs: Act®
I, (or we) the vendor of articles
the
guarantee
in
warrant
same
| Federal Act of June
Food
| and also further hereby guarantee
{ known as “The and
Lhe
| same to be in full conformity with the
act of the General Assembly of Pena-
sylvania, popularly known as “The
New Pennsylvania Food Law” approw
ed June 1, 1907, in that the said articles
are not adulterated within the mean
ing of the aforesaid act of Congress, ar
the aforesaid act of the General
sembly of Pennsylvania, and that the
said articles are not misbranded withim
| the meaning of either of the said acts
With respect to goods now . in ‘the
possession of retail dealers, they. should
immediately take the precaution to oi :
tain a guarantee from the vendor im
the form above designated upon the ia-
voice now in their possession, or obtaum
from the vendor a duplicate invoice
the goods with the guarantee stamped,
written or printed thereon, and signed
by the vendor from whom the goods
were purchased. If this is not attend-
ed to, the retail dealer will‘be held re
sponsible for any adulterated goods
sold by them.
he
a8
of
A LESSON IN HEALTH.
Healthy kidneys filter the impurities
from the blood, and unless they do this
good health is impossible. Foley's
Kidney Cure makes sound kidneys and
will positively cure all forms of kidney
and bladder disease. It strengtheas
tne whole system. Sold by all Drug-
gists. Tal 7-1
WANTED, MEN AND WOMEN TO
SWEAR and affirm before the undee-
signed, when they have documents te
which lawful affidavits are required. Ek
also draw up all manner of deeds,
leases, mortgages, etc., neatly and ae-
curately, according to the require
ments of the law. Typewritten werk a
specialty.
A full line of legal Janis always om
hand. L. LIVENGOO®,
Notary Public and Conveyances.
Star OFFICE, Elk Lick, Pa. te