\ 1, IS B JURY. Watch Out for the new Fall and Winter Goods daily arriving at the big corner store. Don’t buy your Fall and Winter goods until you see our line. A > Co. k Lick Supp alishury, be OF SALISBURY. Surplus & undiyided profits, $15,000. | oa Capital paid in, $50,000. Be % Assets over $300,000. On Time J PLR GENT. INTEREST oeposte H. H. Maus, Vice President. ALBERT REITZ, Cashier. DIRECTORS :—J. L. Barchus, H. H. Maust, Norman D. Hay, A. M. Lichty, F. A. Maust, A. E. Livengood: L. IL. Beachy: a2 HR J. L.. BArcHus, President. OSC 3 SY Sears, Nerd call pS a Before buying your seeds for spring sowing, and examine our line of fancy, recleaned RBH BRBRBS Mavyora CLOVER, MEDIUM CLOVER, CRIMSON CLOVER, ALSIKE, TimMmorny, MiLLET, BARLEY. We buy in large quantity, and prices are always in line. & 2 >. A. Lichliter, Say Pa. = BRB B BLED > wl BE AT A I The of That's what we claim for pure home-ground Chop. does not pay to buy imported adulterated feed. best is the cheapest in the end. We have the Feed and Grocery line. hest everything in the Flour, Binder Twine and Phosphate! from us, also Phosphate for the best of it, Binder Twine We have Buy your y your fall crops. and our prices are always fair. We handle the choicest and purest of country produce, # and deliver goods promptly. West Salisbury Feed Co. EE Apresent duty: STAR. ELK LIC K r 08S Subscribe for THE STOFF ICE. PA. THURSDAY. | Star, SEP TEMBER 26. & SHAVER, BERKEY Attorneys-at-I.aw, SOMERSET, PA. Coffroth & Ruppel Building. | ERNEST 0. KOOSER, Attorney-At-IL.aw, La SOMERSET, PA. | R. E. MEYERS, DISTRICT ATTORNEY Attorney-at-Iaw, | SOM¥RSET, PA. | Office in Court House. W. H. KOONTZ. KOONTZ & OGLE Attorneys-At-L.aw, SOMERSET, PENN’A Office opposite Court House. VIRGIL R. SAYLOR, Attormey-at-I.aw, SOMERSET, PA. Office in Mammoth Block. DR. PETER L. SWANK, Physician and Surceon, ELK LICK, PA. Successor to Dr. KE. H. Perry. E.C.SAYLOR, D. D. S., SALISBURY, PA. NM. Dively Residence, Grant Ste et. | Office in Mrs. Special attention given to the preserva- tion of the natural teeth. Artificial sets in- { | | serted in the best possible manner. | | WINDSOR HOTEL, 1217-1220 FIL BERT ST. | “A SQUARE FROM EVERYWHERE.” | Special automobile s rvice for our guests. | Sight-seeing and touring cars. Rooms $1.00 per day and up. The only moderate priced | hotel of reputation and consequence in PH ILADI I. PHIA. Wagner's LIVERY, Sal ishury, Penna. Frank Wagner, Propr. Harvey Wagner, Mgr. | Good BORER and good rigs of all kinds. Special attention to the needs of traveling men, and extra good equipments for pic- nicking and sleighing parties. Horses well fed and cared for, lat reasonable rates. Somerset County telephone. N ew Firm! G. G. De lLozier, GROGER AND GONFEGTIONER, Having purchased the well known Jeffery grocery opposite the postoffice, I want the public to know that I will add greatly to the stock and improve the in every way. It is my aim to conduct ‘grocery and confectionery store, Big Value store a first class For (ash. I solicit a fair share of your patronage, and I promise a treatment to all cu consist Choice Cigars, Tobacco, ete. OPPOSITE 1 square deal and courteous tomers, ~My ill and Fancy “Groceries Country Produce, line w Ol Staple Confectionery, 'OSTOFFICE, SALISBURY, PA 60 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &cC. 1g a sketch and description may gaic iy ascerts in our opinion free w Sth an invention is probably patentable. Communica- tions strictly Eonpdential HANDBOOK on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing paten Patents taken t pron Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American, A handsomely illustrated weekly. culation of any Bdiehiing | prrnal: vear; four months $L d by all Forms. 63, & Cp, se seaiver. New York Branch Office. £25 F St.. Washington. D. C. 9, - ows Early Risers The famous little pills. Terms, $3 and togiye | Wrox the gods would destroy, they first make mad at Theodore Roosevelt | and his style of doing things. | Tue Democracy’s greatest regret is caused by the fact that the Ohio Re- | | publicans always do their scrapping | | between elections. | A CHicaco man has gotten even with a music teacher, next door, by keeping ten cats. They are now having a reg- ular cat and piano time of it. Tue only colored holes of the Georgia legislature has resigned. The fact is, a colored Georgian can have more fun growing watermelons than making laws. THE eOnritry? s crop of oats is going to be the shortest of the lot, but the number of young men sowing the wild variety, is not likely to decrease on that account. THE Detroit Free Press wants to know what has become of the Presi- dent’s movement for an eight-hour day for wives. It is probably on the shelf, right alongside the movement for the Shaplineation of our spelling. A Des MoiNES man, in order to pro- cure money for his sick wife, pawned two gold teeth and his wooden leg, and the Harrisburg, Va., News thinks mar- riage is no failure under such circum- stances. Still, when a man is driven to such extremes he can hardly regard it as a howling success. Tue farmer bends the fre to none, and is less disturbed by the world-wide reign of graft and greed than any of his fellows. His hair may be bushy, his skin bronzed, but his eyes are clear, his digestion is like that of a three- | year-old mule, his conscience is like the ether above his head, and his bank account-as fat as his favorite shoat. | May he live long and prosper, this son of the soil, who is the balance wheel of the -universe, exclaims an exchange, | but it is more than can be truthfully ' said of some farmers. For instance. i the one who puts all his largest apples, and berries on top when | marketing them, the one who works tallow into his lard, converts stale packed butter into rolls and sells it for | fresh butter, and who resorts to all the | petty, thievish tricks all too common | among farmers. Great isthe honorable | tismior and his honorable occupation, | but not sll farmers are honest; not all are decent ; not all are possessors of a clear conscience ; not all of them are rich, and not all of the ought to be. Like all other classes, the farming class is made up of good, bad and indifferent people, and we do not believe in class worship, no matter of what calling ’ | profession, art or avocation. True, we could not get along without the farm- | er, but wouldn’t the farmer have a | hades of a time getting along without | the mechanic, the laborer and the | numerous other fellows he needs so { badly in his business? Many farmers | all over this great land of ours are | nearly out of business on account of scarcity of farm labor, and when it comes to singing the praises of the { farmer, that underestimated and lowly {individual who is usually underpaid | and known as the farm hand, is, as a | rule, forgotten. Many a wealthy | farmer owes his prosperity and his {fame to a good-natured, faithful, | strong farm hand working for the | meager wages of $15.00 to $20.00 per | month, from sunrise until after dark. potatoes — > Lovely Woman. After man came woman, and she has been after him ever since. She has | good faults, such as false complexion, | ete., but she is a great deal better than her neighbor, and she knows it. She has been known to hold up a man—her smile, until he has change for ice weapon being a all his spare : "Kept idle, | state arrests a young fellow, who, spent feream, candy, ete., then say, depart | from me, I never knew you. She will | accept all of a man’s eight-dollar sup- pers, bouquets and devotions, and then some other fellow, forgive her a woman, but we | She | | run off and | but for this we great deal. Eve was a {don’t think she was a model wife. couldn’ go to church and come home | and gossip about somebody’s new spring bonnet or walking blessed privilege was denied her. all, a woman is handy to have the place to swear at when you happen to cut yourself with the razor and don’t | feel like blaming yourself, says an ex- change. marry would After ! about OF INTERES T TO MANY. Foley’s Kidney Cure will cure any | case of kidney or bladder trouble that | is not beyond the reach of medicine. No medicine can do more. Sold by all | Druggists. 10-1 | gallant about hat—this | | are not, and should not be, | the law from whose toils even the gi- | gantic octopuses of finance cannot es- ment of your business. THE CORVIOT HIS FAMILY—LAW. It is urged that convicts must not be that they must earn their | living, that the people should not be | taxed to feed and clothe an army of | criminals, Let us and so forth, and so forth. see how this works. let us say, in a drunken quarrel has stab- bed a companion. He is hurried away to prison. He is brought into court, tried and convicted. He sent to prison for five years or for ten years, or for life. All the while a young wife and a half-dozen little children are left without support. They huddle in a corner of the court room. They hear the law- yers’ yawp. They listen to the verdict. The case is closed. The young father ie bundled off in one direction in chains. The young family is turned off in another in tears. The state takes the time, the earnings of the one to itself, leaving the other to starve: The mother dies of despair. The boys grow up thieves. The girls grow up harlots. The law is vindicated. The taxpayer is protected. The criminal classes are replenished. Is it not dam- nable? Does not the society which tolerates such monstrosities deserve all the evils it entails upon itself? The state has no right to take that man’s labor from his wife and children and give them no equivalent. It should punish the guilty, not the innocent. Every dollar that is diverted in this way from the natural needs of the helpless to the uses of the public, is base blood money that should and does carry with it the curse of God. i is LOST AND FOUND Lost, between 9;30 p. m., yesterday and noon to-day, a bilious attack, with nausea and sick headache. This loss was occasioned by finding at E. H. Mil- ler’s drug store a box of Dr. King’s New Life Pills. Guaranteed for bil- iousness, malaria and jaundice. 25c. 10-1 a THE FORVIONERS. Foreigners To come to this country pay no tax as long they are not naturalized, but they are allowed in the meanwhile to enjoy our privileges the same as American citizens. Some of them are not satisfied with riding in the wagon, but they want to grab the lines and do the driving. The money they earn in crowding out American laborers they straightway send home to their native country, where a thou- sand dollars makes a rich man, while we pay the expenses when they are in- jured, take care of the inebriates, those who become insane, and spend millions of dollars annually in court trials and punishing the vicious whose unlawful deeds land them into the clutches of the law. There is an in- justice done us somewhere, and the man who solves the riddle and is in- strumental in correcting the wrong will be deserving of a seat among the immortal. —Ex. le "WHEN HAZING BECOMES CRIME. The C rnelleeilin Courier voices this paper’s sentments exactly in the fol- lowing editorial on the subject of haz- ing. “The brutal sport of hazing is being frowned down in most American col- leges, and with good reason. The per- haps fatal injury of a Bellevernon boy at the Ohio State University is an ex- ample of the reason. as “It may be urged that his schoolmates did not intend him any bodily harm, but the circumstances would seem to disprove this assumption. The abduec- tion and imprisonment in a barn would not in themselves indicate any purpose other than playful prankishness, the brutal and murderous beating ad- ministered reveals a ruflianly character not in keeping with civilized and en- | wmind- | imbued | lightened American sentiment, ful of the rights of others and with the spirit of common humanity. “It rather breathes the of savagery, or the wanton cruelty of | pitiless ferocity. There was nothing it: Tt an act of not of bravery; it was a college joke; not merry; it was cowardice, Bowery stunt, murderous, it was not was { erime, not class combat. ‘And as crime it should be punished. Even college lads, with their magnified | ideas of their cwn magnificent attain- | ments and the shining excellence of | their unique and exclusive adornment, immune, to cape.” IT IS BAD BUSINESS to allow peo- ple to look in vain through the col- umns of Tue StAr for an advertise- tf The | their natural protector and | 1907 AT ROOKWOOD. Star Man Gets Acquainted with Editor Bach—Also Falls in with | Colonel Ed. Werner—Stunts ! Performed with the Court House Anaconda. Last Saturday evening we had the pleasure of making the acquaintance af Prof. E. E. Bach, editor of the Som- | erset County Leader, published at Rockwood. We walked into his den at about 9.30 p. m., taking him by com- | plete surprise, while he and the busi- ness manager, P. E. Weimer, were busy | counting over about a bushel of money, all of which we suppose was taken in that day. As soon as the two men looked up and saw an intruder standing before them at that hour of the night, they naturally took us for a robber, and at once Editor Bach grabbed all the money, which was only editorlike, and Weimer grabbed the office towel and was about to break it over our cranium, Just as the blow from the rigid and dangerous weapon was about to de- scend, we disclosed our identity, stat- ing that we, too, were engaged in the newspaper business, and consequently had more money of our own than we knew what to do with, and had no de- sire to rob a wealthy fellow editor. Then an introduction and a general hand-shaking followed, and we found both gentlemen very affable and agreeable. After.tecussing” and discussing var- ious subjects for a time, we went out with the editor to hunt up “Urie” Werner, the ex-editor, who is still in the employ of the Leader, and whose valuable services as solicitor and printer cannot well be dispensed with, especially since Mr. Bach has recently hired two all-fired good looking girls to be drilled into the noble art of type- setting. ‘‘Urie” is just the fellow to have around when ladies are to be kept smiling, which is essential to lady com- | positors. | After visiting all the saloons and | failing to find “Urie,” we finally located | him in a restaurant, where, true to his | natural instincts, we found him gently | crowding all manner of good things [ into his face. With his usual hospi- | tality and generosity, he invited us to join him, but we had already filled up on eatableg, ete., at Editor Bach’s ex- pense, hence had to decline the invi- tation. Later the three of us repaired to the front porch of Hotel Hentz, where yarns were exchanged until bed time. The next morning Tue Star man went to Somerset and returned to Rock- wood again on Monday morning, hav- ing the good fortune to fall in with our old friend Colonel Edward®H. Werner, en Of course, after reaching Rockwood, the colonel went with us to the Leader office. and few minutes later both of us went up street in company with Editor Baeh. The colonel conducted us to a private room in which his court house anaconda is kept, and in a few minutes all were performing stunts with it. The ana- conda, so the colonel informed us, was imported from the King’s Gate, at Dublin, Ireland, and is said to be the only kind of serpent that good old Saint Patrick did not drive out of the Emerald Isle. The court route. a house anaconda is an agreeable kind of “varwmint” if you know how to handle it. It is brown in color and looks very “stout,” but is not regarded as dangerous. However, not but being used to handling it, [it got ob- | streperous for Tue Star man and blew froth all over him. Then Colonel Ed- { ward had to show us how to handle the |.darned anaconda. We didn’t get bit by it, but no doubt would have if we had fooled with it long enough. We quit in time, however, and will | say in conclusion that if a fellow can’t { have a good time with the gentlemen mentioned, he can’t have it with any- body. —- | Marriage Licenses. devilishness | Boswell. Broadtop, Pa. { Jacob E. Enos, | Minnie Blair. William E. Emily K. | Anton Shukely, Ashtola. Ashtola. | Lander C. Stewart, Layton, Pa. | Mrs. Lillian Pattes, Confluence, Pa. | Ralph R. Lyon, New Albany, Pa. { Ruth M. Stutzman, Somerset twp. | Jacob B. Gerhardt, Somerset twp. Florence Miler, Somerset twp. Ee Binford, Grafton, W. Va Truxal, Meyersdale. Lizzie Garl, | Trial Catarrh treatments are being ! mailed out free, on request, by Dr. | Shoop, Racine, Wis. These tests are | proving to the people—without a Loni h Som —the great value of this scientific prescription known to drug- | gists everywhere as Dr. Shoop’s Ca- tarrh Remedy. Sold by Elk Lick Phar- macy. 10-1