The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, August 08, 1907, Image 5

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TRUST A
WELL BRED
WOMAN
to know where to get the best of everything. She knows that,
especially in drugs, medicines, toilet articles and stationery, there S
never anything gained, and frequently much lost by using some-
thing cheap and inferior.
We have quite a crowd around our place, but there's always
room for one more, and our clerks are of the spry kind. They
don’t keep a customer hanging around half a day before being
waited upon.
PAUL H. GROSS, CITY DRUG STORE.
DEUTSCHE APOTHEKE, MEYERSDALE, PA.
I& Buy the Genuine R. M. BEACHY’S Horse and Cattle Tonic. Tt
not cost any more.
does
BR RR RR RR RR RRR RRS
MEASONABLE GOOD
8 Hammocks, Summer Underwear,
«Summer Goods of All Kinds, for
Men, Boys, Women and Children.
5
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.
ELK LICK VARIETY STORE, 0. 1. Hay, Manager.
RB A A A RR SR RB
BR aes
&
&
3
Sem
&
TP TTT SANE ANA
AWE IE IT 4
The Original, Old Reliable
BEACHY'S HORSE & CATTLE POWDER,
asc. per 1h,
the kind you used to buy.
Blk Lick Drug More.
ZAVALA RIS
New Store! New Goods!
We have opened a fine new general store in the M. J.
Glotfelty building, Ord St., Salisbury, Pa., and invite you
- pi : 2 2 La :
to come and inspect our nice, new line of Dry Goods,
JULI IRS
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roceries, ete.
CAA I TA RT ATI JET
Prices As Low As The Lowest!
BBR TR BRB eB a eS SIR SI 8 KBR eR [8 oS TE TR Se [8 Te BIR
We start with an entire new stock, and we handle only 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—S600 Complete
BR 2 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 conception
ofagentlemen’shorseless carraige than
any car that has yet been produced.
Can be operated by any member of
he He family who can be Rusted with a
: worse’s reins. Write for catalogue
Fully Guaranteed and testimonials.
FOREST CITY MOTOR CAR CO. Massillon, Ohio.
™ DR. WILLIAMS'
FLY AND INSEGT DESTROYER
Protects Horses and Cattle from Fly Pests and
Vermin. Guaranteed to Kill the Flies.
Perfectly Harmless. A Grand Disinfectant
and Easily Applied:
It is possible to have positive freedom from flies, lice and vermin which usually ef-
fect fowls, cattle and all live stock. This is the first preparation which actually does all
that’s claimed for it. Farmers, who have spent many weary summers fighting fliesand in-
sects, and the following winters endeavoring to be rid of lice and vermin. in poultry
houses, will find Dr. Williams’ Fly and Insect Destroyer their *‘ right-hand man.”
After using this exterminator according to directions you will notice a decided im-
rovement in all your stock. Where no agency has been appointed a sample tin free
\ or your grocer’s or hardware dealer’s name.
THE F. WILLIAMS COMPANY, Madrid, N. VY.’
RIETER EERE ES)
ON YOUR » Br
Be sure to be properly equipped—obtain the STEV-.
ENS and you CANNOT GO WRONG. We make
from $2.25 to $150.00
PISTOLS . + from 2.50to 50.00
SHOTGUNS . . from 7.50to 35.00
Ask yout dealer and insist | Send for 140-page illus.
on our popular make. 1f|trated catalog. If inter.
voucannotobtain, we ship | ested in SHOOTING, vou
dire t, carriage charges ourhtto have it. Mailed
prepaid, upon receipt of | for four cents in stamps to
catalog price. | cover postage.
Our attractive three-color Aluminum Hanger will be
3ent anvwiiere for 10 cents in stamps.
J. STEVENS ARMS AND TOOL CO.
P.O.
Chicopee Falls, Maes., U. S. A.
RIFLES . . .
Dox 409%
That’s what the superb Pittsburg
Visible Typewriter is, and it
doesn’t cost a small fortune,
either, as some do that are not
nearly as up-to-date.
None: Beller Al Any Price!
The Pittsburg Visible is practie-
ally fool-proof, and just a lit-
tle better than necessary.
For sale at Tue Star offie. Al-
so typewriter paper and car-
bon paper. Prices fair.
I=
INARI
POSITIVELY HEALS
SORE SHOULDERS
SORE NECKS
OR BACKS ON
HORSES
AND
MULES
It Heals Them "Anyway
in Harness, under Saddl¢
or kdle.
If not sold in your town we will:
send you FREE SAMPLE, if you
send us name of your dealer.
Put up in 25c¢., 50c. and $1.00 Cans.
MONEY BACK IF IT FAILS.
SECURITY REMEDY GO.
Minneapolis, Minn.
FoRBARBWIRE & ALL CUTSVs®
SECURITY ANTISEPTIC HEALER
Executor’s Notice.
Livengood, deceased,
Borough, Somerset
Estate of Catherine
late of Salisbury
county, Pa.
Letters testamentary having been issued
to the undersigned by the Register of Wills
in and for Somerset county, Penn’a., upon
the above named estate, all persons having
claims against the same will present them
for payment, duly authenticated, at the res-
idence of the executor, in Salisbury, on Sat-
urday, August 31st, 1907, in the afternoon,
and those indebted thereto will please
make immediate payment to
309 E. H. LAMBERT,
Executor.
Kodol Dyspepsia Gure
Digests what you eat.
FALL TERM BEGINS SEPT. 2, 8 &
4, THRTRI-STATE BUSINESS COL-
LEGE, Cumberland, Maryland.
Write for eatalogue and terms. 9-1
eet srs
HOME FOR SALE !—A desirable 2-
story, 6-room frame dwelling house,
adjoining Salisbury borough, Pa., to-
gether with a half-acre of ground, also
good out buildings. The buildings are
all new and in fine repair. For par-
ticulars call on John Lichliter, Salis-
bury, Pa., or address Howard Yaist,
Vale Summit, Md. tf
CARBON PAPER for sale at THE
Star office. tf
BUY A TYPEWRITER !—See ths
Pittsburg Visible, at Tue Star office.
None better, no other quite so simple
in construction. Holds world’s record
for speed. Veryeasy tooperate. Price
very reasonable. :
tf P. L. LivExcooDp, Agent.
ny pt
FOR SALE!—A good, second hand
baby carriage. Apply at the home of
Stewart Smith, tf
THE LIMIT OF LIFE.
The most eminent medical scientists
are unanimous in the conclusion that
the generally accepted limitation of
human life is many years below the at-
tainment possible with the advanced
knowledge of which the race is now
possessed. The critical periodjthat de-
termines its duration, seems to be be-
tween 50 and 60; the proper care of the
body during this decade cannot be too
strongly urged ; carelessness then being
fatal to longevity. Nature’s best help-
er after 50 1s Electric Bitters, the sci-
"entific tonic medicine that revitalizes
every organ of the body. Guaranteed
by E. H. Miller, Druggist. 50c. 9-1
ANTI-SALOON LEAGUE.
Its Great Activity and Telling Work
—Facts and Figures Not Gener-
ally Known.
Some Interesting Statisties that
Hold Out Much Encouragement
for Temperance Workers.
From the Somcrsel Standard.
There is a strong and increasing anti-
license sentiment in the United States.
And back of it, keeping up the agita-
tion, isthe Anti-Saloon League, which
is being reinforced annually by thous-
ands of earnest and tireless workers:
The movement against the saloon is not
spasmodic, but deliberate and effective,
and those engaged in the fight believe
that the saloon must and will by wiped
out.
The liquor interests everywhere are
awake to the situation; they are sitting
up and taking notice ; they have organ-
ized, and at a recent meeting of the
wholesale liquor dealers it was repeat-
edly stated that the liquor interests
had more to fear from the Anti-Saloon
[.eague than from any other agency.
At each session of the different State
legislatures.new anti-license or restrie-
tive liquor legislation is. introduced.
Back of it is the Anti-Saloon League.
The League has not been very success-
ful in Pennsylvania, but its numbers
have been increasing, and the organiza-
tion is now strong enough to maintain
a lobby at Harrisburg. At the last ses-
sion of the State solons a number of
local option measures were introduced,
and the fight centered on what was
known as the Craven local option bill.
Under the terms of this measure the
voters of the different districts would
have voted every two years on the
question of whether the districts should
be wet or dry.
The Legislature met the question
cowardly. The bill was referred to the
Law and Order committee, where the
death of the measure was a foregone
conclusion. But the author of the
measure refused to be thus throttled,
and he offered a resolution to have the
bill taken from the committee and
placed on the calendar. The vote upon
this measur was one of the most dra-
matic of the session, and while the res-
olution was defeated, the sentiment ex-
pressed by representatives from every
section of the state indicated *that the
fight would be renewed with greater
force before the next legislature. A
majority of the members present voted
in favor of the resolution, but, as usual
in matters of great public importance,
| a sufficent number of dodgers remained
away, and the resolution was lost for |
| Stonycreek, dated Aug. 1, 1907.
want of “a constitutional -majority.
Messrs. Endsley and Knepper. the Rep- |
Somerset
placed
resentatives from
voted to have the bill
calendar.
‘county,
on
Some idea of the strength of the anti- |
license movement may be gleaned from
the following statements:
In Kentucky, 97 of the
counties.
In Alabama the people are permitted
to choose between license and
cense, or between saloons and a county
dispensary. More than half
state is dry.
In Arkansas, 60 of the 75 counties
are dry. There the law requires the |
drinker to take out a tag license, which |
| of hawking and peddling.
Mr.
costs him $5 annually. Think of the
tippler laying down his credential
alongside of his dime for his stimu-
lants!
In Georgia, 124 of the 148 counties
are without soloons. In Atlanta, the
the !
119 counties |
are totally dry, while there are local |
option measures in all but one of the |
| teed by E. H. Miller, Druggist. 25c.
no li-|
of the |
| records of recent years contain but one
saloon license has been increased from
$1,000 to $2,000, and the price of whis-
key to 20 cents. The legislature is in
session, and an effort is being made to
pass a State Prohibition law. The
measure has passed the Senate.
In Louisiana, seven-eighths of the
state is dry territory, because the li-
cense fee is $3,600 a year.
In Oklahoma, that portion of the
state known as Indian Territory will
be under absolute prohibition for twen-
ty-one years.
In Mississippi, three-fourths of the
state is without saloons.
In Texas, over two-thirds of the state
is without whiskey, 55 counties are
partially so, and only 47 counties are
totally wet.
In Virginia the sale of intoxicants is
prohibited in rural communities.
In West Virginia thirty of the fifty-
five counties are without saloons.
Next fall Delaware will vote on the
question of license or no license.
In Ohio the anti-aloon forces have
been very active, and a law is in force
there permitting local option by peti-
tion, obviating the necessity of holding
an election. Over 3,500 saloons have
been put out of commission within the
last six months. More than sixty per
cent. of the municipalities .are dry;
1,140 of the 1,376:townships have no sa--
loons, and 350,000 people live in the dry
sections of the larger cities.
Such men as Governor Folk, of Mis-
souri, Governor Campbel, of Texas, and
Governor Beckham, of Kentucky, have
taken up the work of the Anti-Saloon
League. They unite in saying that the
loss of revenue to the states is more
than offset by the saving in criminal
court costs.
The fight being waged by the anti-
saloon forces is not to be regarded
lightly. It is on everywhere, and even
in Somerset county it is not to lie dor-
mant. The Prohibitionists will open
their campaign with a meeting at Som-
erset, on the 12th of this month, and it
will be followed by thirty-five or more
meetings, which will be addressed by
orators of wide reputation. Next year,
Somerset county will elect two mem-
bers to the legislature, and the license
question will be one of the issues in the
campaign. Temperance people will
want to know where the candidates
stand on the license question. And so
will the license-holder. Keep your ear
to the ground and watch the fight.
i —
“EVERYBODY SHOULD KNOW?”
says C. G. Hays, a prominent business |
man of Bluff, Mo.. that Bucklen’s Ar-
nica Salve is the quickest and surest
healing salve ever applied to a sore, |
burn or wound, or to-a-«ease. of piles.
I’ve used it and know what I’m talking |
Guaranteed by E. II. Miller,
9-1
about.”
Druggist. 25¢.
> —
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.
W. H. Ruppel et ux. to William G.
Jaker, $190, in Linceln, dated July 26, |
i day he is as healthy a child as parents
1907.
Frank Murray et ux. to Caroline
terman et al., $900, in
dated July 24, 1907.
Lavinia A. Ross et al. to
June 22, 1907.
Noah Gohn et ux.
Branch R. R., $1000,
July 29, 1907.
Annie Matilda Miller et vir. to same,
$1400, in Jenner, dated July 29, 1907.
Ernest O. Kooser to Maud V.
$1.00, in North
16, 1907.
Malinda Ream et vir. to Rosan Sny-
der, $2000, in Berlin, dated July 26, 1907.
Frank I. Dawson et al. to Quema-
honing Branch R. R., $240, in Jenner,
dated July 31, 1907.
Ernest O. Kooser to Charles I. Comp-
ton, $290, in North
July 18, 1907.
to Quemahoning
Somerset,
Simon P. Miller et ux. to [Hamilton J. |
Crawford, $275, in Addison, dated July
25, 1907.
Chas. M. & W. H. Knupp to James]
dated |
M. Krupp, $300, in Jefferson,
June 14, 1907.
Frank B. Black et al. to William G.
Hocking et al., $34,787.12,
county, dated March 9, 1907.
Josiah J. Walker's Ex’tr. to
Walker, $870, Stonycereek,
Aug. 1,1907.
to
Wm. CG
in dated
Same Edward Lowry, $36, in
| Stonycreek, dated Aug. 1, 1907.
Sarah Brant et vir. to same, $525, in |
Paul Casper to Stif Bucovies, $575, in
Windber, dated July 31, 1907.
“REGULAR AS THE SUN”
is an-expression as old as the race.
doubt the rising and setting of the sun
is the most regular performance in the
universe, unless it is the action of the
liver and bowels when regulated with
Dr. King’s New Life Pills. -~ Guaran-
9-1
Not Many Jews in Jail.
There have been very few
placed in the Somerset jail, and the
Jews
name, that of Mike Stine, who was
brought to Somerset, last week, from
Windber, and imprisoned on a charge
Inquiry into
Stine’s ~trouble -developed this
story: He is an itinerant watch re-
pairer, and was following his vocation
at Windber, when someone, perhaps by
design, asked him to sell him a watch
Pe-
Hooversville, |
Babcock |
Lumber Co., $2233.33, in Shade, dated |
in Jenner, dated |
Flyte. |
dated July |
Somerset, dated |
in Somerset |
No!
crystal, which Stine did, charging the
purchaser twenty cents therefor. A
while latex Stine was arrested for
hawking and peddling. It is reported
that he could have settled the case for
$20, but not having that amount, he
did not settle. The fine for peddling is
$50. ;
Stine was brought to jail, and the
following day friends raised the amount
of the costs in the case, and he was re-
leased. Sometimes officers strain at a
gnat and swallow a camel.—Somerset
Standard.
ENDORSED BY THE COUNTY.
“The most popular remedy in Otsego
county, and the best friend of my fami-
ly,” writes Wm. M. Dietz, editor and
publisher of the Otsego Journal, Gil-
bertsville, N. Y., “is Dr. King’s New
Discovery. It has proved tobe an in-
fallible cure for coughs and colds, mak-
ing short work of the worst of them.
We always keep a bottle in the house.
I believe it to be the most valuable pre-
scription known for Lung and Throat
diseases.” Guaranteed to never disap-
point the taker, at E. H. Miller's drug
store. Price 50c. and $1.00. Trial bot-
tle free. 9-1
: ee
Geologic Surveys in Pennsylvania
Coal Fields.
Geologic surveys in Pennsylvania
are cooperative between the Federal
Government and the State, the two
governments sharing equally in their
expense and conduct.
No new areas will be surveyed this
season, but an effort will be made to
complete field work in a number of
quadrangles where surveys are al-
ready far advanced.
General supervision of the work rests
with George H. Ashly, of the National
Survey, who will complete the survey
of the Punxsutawney, Curwensville
and Houtzdale quadrangles, and will
visit the Clarion quadrangle, which
will be finished by E. F. Lines. The
oil resources of the same regicn are be-
ing studied by M. J. Munn, who, in as-
sociation with George C. Martin, will
complete the field examination of the
Sewickley and Claysville quadrangles,
and of Washington county. Mr. Mar-
tin will do a small amount of addi-
tional work in the Burgettstown quad-
rangle and, with Frederick B. Peck
and Mr. Munn, will study the Carnegie
quadrangle. The geology of the War-
ren quadrangle, near the northern
| border of the state, will be studied by
| Charles Butts.
lr
| CHAMBERLAIN’S COLIC, CHOLERA
AND DIARRHOEA
BETTER THAN
DOCTORS.
“Three years ago we had three doe-
REMEDY,
THREE
| tors with our little boy and everything
| that they could do seemed in vain. At
last when all hope seemed to be gone
we began using Chamberlain’s Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and in
a few hours he began to improve. To-
JOHNSTON,
Miller's
09-1
could wish for.”—Mnrs. B. J.
Linton, Miss. For at
| Drug Store.
sale
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
| — >
|| MEN PAST SIXTY IN DANGER.
More than half of mankind over sixty
| years of age suffer from kidney and
| bladder disorders, usually enlargement
| of prostate glands. This is both pain-
| ful and dangerous, and Foley’s Kidney
Cure should be taken at the first sign
| of danger, as it corrects irregularities
| and has cured many old men of this
Mr. Rodney Burneti, Rock-
| port, Mo., writes: “I suffered with en-
larged prostate gland and kidney
| trouble for years, and after taking two
| bottles of Foley’s Kidney Cure 1 feel
{ better than I have for twenty years, al-
though I am now 91 years old.” Sold
| by all Druggists. 9-1
IT IS BAD BUSINESS to allow peo-
{ ple to look in vain through the col-
{ umns of Tne Star for an advertise-
ment of your business. tf
- >
disease.
REMEDY FOR DIARRHOEA.
« NEVER KNOWN TO FAIL.
“1 want to say a few words for Cham-
berlain’s Colic, Cholera and: Diarrhoea
| Remedy. I have used this preparation
fin my family for the past five years
and have reéomimended it to a number
| of people in York county and have
never known it to fail to effect a cure
in any instance. I feel that I can not
say too much for the best remedy of
the kind in the world.”—S. JEMISON,
Spring Grove, York county, Pa. This
| remedy is for sale at Miller's Drug
| Store. : 9-1
a
All kinds of Legal and Commercial
i Blanks, Judgment Notes, ete., for sale
at Tae Star office. tf
LIFE INSURANCE.
For twenty-five cents you can now
| insure yourself and family against any
| bad results from an attack of colic or
diarrhoea during the summer months.
| That is the price of a bottle of Cham-
berlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy, a medicine that has never
been known to fail. Buy it now, it
may save life. For sale at Miller's
Drug Store. = 9-1