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. not cost any more. It does Say, Mr. Man, it will be but a short time until t he long winter evenings are here, and to while away the time pleasantly, you ought to have a copy of Searight’s History of The National Pike. It is full of fine illustrations, interesting tales of the old taverns, team- sters and coach drivers. reads it. filled at $3.00 per copy, by WM. SEARIGHT. Uniontown, Pa. Everybody is charmed with the work who Full of the humorous and pathetic, as well as daring robberies. A copy of the book can be seen at THE Star office. Orders for the same Gh) A WAL hs hei SOM 1 == We have the fastest selling line = DOLLARS NO MONEY REQUIRED. house agent in each section, goods sell themselves, are fully warranted. We start you as a general agent after you get acquainted with the goods, and teach you to get a nice living without hard labor. Are you interested ? Write to-day for catalogue and proposition. UNITED STATES SPECIALTY MFG. CO,, PER DAY of goods to offer to only one, house to No money required. Hopkinton Mass. CL RR le ALTE 174 The Original, Old Reliable BEACHY'S HORSE & CATTLE POWDER, 25¢. per. 1b. the kind you used to buy. Blk Lick Dene Store RULING VIS New Store! New Goods! We have opened a fine new general store in the M. J. < Clotfelty building, Ord St., Salisbury, Pa., and invite you * to come and inspect our nice, new line of Dry Goods, Shoes, Groceries, etc. AWARE RARER LIA A A THON A PTT OOO *® po start with : an entire new Stock ot we hondls ry ie 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. DR. WILLIAMS’ FLY AND INSECT DESTROYER Protects Horses and Cattle from Fly Pests and Vermin. Guaranteed to Kill the Flies. Porfectly Harmless. A Grand Disinfectant and Easily Applied. Itis ble 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’sclaimed 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. R. REICH & SON, MEYERSDALE, PA. Undertaking parlor on Grant St., Salisbury, Pa. L. C. BOYER, Manager. P® Somerset County and Economy Telephones. EWEL RUNABOUT—$600 Complete = 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 Tr = {he family who can En be J7usted with a orse’s reins. Wri or catalogue Fully Guaranteed and testimonials. 2 FOREST CITY MOTOR CAR CO.. Massillon, Ohlo. FOLEYSHONEY-~TAR ‘Bucklen’s Arnica Salve for children; safe, sure. No opiates The Best Salve In The World. DeWitt’s FOr YS HONEYASTAR this Early Risers Caorcs Colds; Prevents Pneumonia The famous little pills. Rodol For Indigestion. | DeWitt’s Kidney and Bladder Pills Relieves sour stomach, FOR BACKACHE palpitation of the heart. Digests what you eat. For Weak Kidneys Inflammation of the blad- der, urinary troubles and backache use DeWitt’s Ridney and Bladder Pills A Week's Treatment 25 Rn | E.C. DeWITT ¢ & CO., Chicago, Ill. | | SOLD BY E. H. MILLER. THE BEST FOR ILIOUSNESS AND KIDNEYS, LECTRIC , BITTERS KIDNEYCURE ‘Makes Kidneys and Bladder Right Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar | Cures all Coughs, and expels Colds from | the system by gently moving the bowels. | WANTED !—One or two good, | strong girls for general house | work. No washing. Wages, five ($5.00) dollars to one who | is satisfactory. Must be good, | plain cook. Address Mgrs. Jorn McKiBBIN, Cor. Shady & Forward Aves, tf Pittsburg, Pa. LOST 1CSatordey evening, Sept. 14th, 1907, between Hay’s Hotel and the Nickelodian, a $10 bill. Finder will be | suitably rewarded by returning the money to J. W. Corbett, Salisbury, Pa. 9-26. | i — | GOOD FARM FOR RENT. Two miles east of Grantsville, Md. on National Pike, containing 287 acres, | 200 of which is under cultivation ; 1500 sugar trees, 850 keelers and boiling ap- | paratus on the place, also two large or- chards, good buildings, etc. Good chance for a good farmer. Ap- | ply to Mrs. J. W. Blocher, Grantsville, | Md. 10-3 | FOR SALE with crops, live-stock xh farm- | ing implements thereon; good LR orchard, modern rangement for water in every field, land in high state of cul-| tivation ; possession at any time. | For further particulars, address | Lock Box 294, Somerset, Pa. 10-17 ar- tr FOR SALE CHEAP. Office Front (20 or feet | long) suitable for any business | office. Also good Typewriter, Letter Press, Blackboards 4x5] ft., and Counting Tables. Ad-| dress C. J. NEWMAN, | 10-10 Elk Lick, Pa. THE BLANKS WE KEEP. 25 | Springs, | request to publish the item | hasten thither on the { ‘mid the fruit o’erturned, ! where she is burned. $10.00 REWARD. THE Star will pay the above reward { for information that will lead to the arrest and conviction of the person who last week falsely reported to the editor an item giving details of the alleged marriage of Mr. Charles Krausse and: | Miss Anna Lee. The item was absolutely false, as we (have since learned from Miss Lee and | others. | married, but a The couple aforesaid were not well written item to that effect was mailed to THe Star, to which the name of F. W. Bender, the well known and popular merchant of was signed, together with a The item was published in good faith, but Mr. Bender denies that he sent it, and as he is known as a truth- ful man, we do not- doubt his word. | The signature of his name to the item | aforesaid was a forgery, and we’d like to find out the forger and teach him or her a much needed lesson. He or she who writes anonymous letters is to be despised, but the person resorting to forgery and the willful reporting of | false news to a public journal, in great danger of being sent to peniten- tiary, and fnsly to hell. ATTACK OF DIARRHOEA CURED BY ONE DOSE OF CHAMBER- LAIN’S COLIC, CHOLERA AND DIARRHOEA REMEDY. I was so weak from an attack of di- arrhoea that I could scarcely attend to is | my duties, when I took a dose of Cham- | berlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. It cured me entirely and I had been taking other medicine for nine days without relief. I heartily recommend this remedy as being the best to my knowledge for bowel com- | plaints.—R. G. STEWART, of the firm of | Stewart & Bro., Greenville, Ala. For sale at Miller’s Drug store. 10-1 Septembee-October Forcast. The old school-bell will still by rung, the poets’ songs will still be sung; the frost will fsoon displace the dew, the wind jamb thro’ the peek-a-boo. Untutor’d youth, with tears of brine, re- turneth sadly to the mine, and the new school-ma’am prepares to whack the bad boys where their pants are slack. The coming country fair is billed, The big prize hog is corned and swilled; The pumpkin that will lift the prize Is watched with proud and hopeful eyes, And the ‘amily mare, to win the pot, Is training for the coming trot. The summer-girl—romantic thing! will | homeward come upon the wing, and show her neighbors for a week where some man bit her on the cheek. The lucky wives of millionaires Will put up jam and pickle pears, But the most of us, denied these boons, Will spend the winter full of prunes. Some red-hot sealing-wax—alack! will fly | dow n Nancy’s tender back, exploring where | the flesh is bare,and 3 shrill screams will pierce the air. The men, a-washing at the will jump; pump, The boys on Saturday are loose To stain their hands with wainut-juice; The cider-swollen apples drip; Town pigs squeal for a morning nip, And the billy-goat, by autumn cheered, Lets cool winds frolic through his beard. piping quail is up at 4; September sweet is on it’s job, and the green corn ripens on the cob. October crisp will soon be here With softly-falling leaf and sere— With frosty morn and hunter's moon, And pumpkin-pie—“not yet, but soon.” nal. -- but Nancy, will not explain | The following blanks can be obtained at all times at Tae Star office: Leases, Mortgages, Deeds, Judgment Bonds, Common Bonds, Judgment Notes, Re-| Who are habitually constipated. HOW TO AV VOID APPENDICITIS. Most victims of appendicitis are those ants, Constable Sale Blanks, Summons | constipation by stimulating the liver Execution for Debt, Notice of Claims | | and bowels, and restores the natuarl | for Collection, Commitments, Subpoe- | action of the bowels. Orino Laxative | nas, Criminal Warrants, etc. tf | Frait Syrup does not nauseate or rive fr | and is mild and pleasant to take. fuse substitutes. Sold by all gists. Drug- 10-1 CARBON PAPER for sale at THE Star office. tf ‘| biles in Waynesburg, that Seyers declares he will impose a fine of | | able editor | Leader, | week delivered himself of the anti-race-suicide | Driver Holds Up An Automobilist With Revolver. At the point of a revolver, it is said» John“ Biggins, of Waynesburg, . was compelled to stop his automobile until W. Stewart, a Greene county farmer, could get his frightened horse around the machine. Stewart was driving to Waynesburg recently when he met Biggins. at the foot of a hill. Stewart asked Biggins to stop the machine, and when the lat- ter did not at once show a disposition to do so, Stewart, it is said, pulled his gun and ordered Biggins to stop. The driver of the machine got out and led Stewart’s horse around the automobile. So much trouble has been occasioned by the reckless speeding of automo- Burgess $100 on any driver of a machine who exceeds the speed limit within the borough. It would be a commendable action for Somerset’s High Burgess to issue a simlar ukase, says the Somerset Demo- crat, and we think the Burgesses of all other towns should pursue the same course. A fool in an automobile is a dangerous thing, and many fools and road terrors there are, these days, who are running automobiles. The Green county man who pulled his gun did the proper thing, and his example is worthy of imitation by all whose rights are are disregarded by reckless autoists. THE NEW PURE FOOD AND DRUG LAW. We are pleased to announce that Foley’s Honey and Tar for coughs, colds and lung troubles is not affected by the National Pure Food and Drug law, as it contains no opiates or other harmful drugs, and we recommend it as a safe remedy for children and adults. Sold by all Druggists. 10-1 Is New Primary Law Unconstitu- tional? If so, Who is to Pay for Holding Primaries Under New Act? Word has gone out from Harrisburg that not a single county in the state will be reimbursed for the expense of the Uniform primary until it is deter- mined by the courts or the Attorney General whether or not the act is con- stitutional. The act provides for the payment by the state of money ex- pended under the Uniform primary law, but not a county in the state has received a penny, and Fayette will be out over $6,000, unless the act is up- held. Nearly all of the 87 counties in the state have held two primaries since the new act was passed, and in no in- stance has any of them been repaid, although the act provides for such re- payment. Several other counties are out big sums, among them Allegheny county, which has a claim of $40,000 which the state refuses to pay. Philadelphia has a claim of $75,000, and Lackawanna county’s bill is $20,000. Somerset county’s bill for holding the last pri- mary is about $3,000. The question that now arises is this: If the Uniform primary law uncon- stitutional, and the state will not pay for holding the last primary, will it be constitutional for the various counties to pay the bills? If not,then who must do the paying? Furthermore, if the new law is unconstitutional, were the candidates nominated under the Uni- form primary act lawfully nominated? Pennsylvania has been sending too many jackasses to the Legislature, and not enough men who know how to draw up a bill so as to make it lawful and free from a half dozen different interpretations. — HEALTH IN THE CANAL The is ZONE. high wages paid make it men needed to construct the Panama Canal. Many are restrained, however, by the fear of fevers and malaria. It is the knowing ones—those used Electric Bitters, who go are safe from malarious influence with Electric Bitters on hand. Cures blood poison, too, biliousness, weakness and all stomach, liver and kidney troubles. | druggist. | Guaranteed by E. H. Miller, 50¢. 10-1 a ee A Rooseveltian Idea Expressed by | a Hustling Somerset County Editor. Prof. Bach, the hustling, affable of the Somerset County published at Rockwood, follow- last ing Rooseveltian, | idea, for which we return thanks: Cheer up, cheer up, the summer’s o'er, the | ‘stork’ on September 7. “We notice with great pleasure that ‘Uncle Pete’ Livengood has been es- | pecially favored by a visitation of the According to { his own count he has been permitted to | set up the smokes’ eight times in his, | —Gander-Bone, in Frostburg Mining Jour- | | of four boys and four girls. eventful life, he being the happy father The fact | FARMERS' BIGGEST YEAR. Earnings Promise to be a Billion More Than in 1906. Upward of $1,000,000,000 more than last year will be the American farmers’ earnings in 1907. Farm productions this year will be about 10 per centy less in quantity than in 1908, which was the bumper season, but the crops of 1808 will fully equal the average yields for five years prior, to last sea- son. The preliminary review of the crops of the year emphasizes that, because of decreased quantity and increased price the leading staples this season will net over $500,000,000 more to the farmers than last year, while their to- tal gains may, be almost twice as great. As the vast industrial prosperity of the last 15 years has been based upon the agricultural revival which charac- terized 1893-97, the American Agricul- turist predicts an even better era of good times now than in the recent past, because of these marvelous gains in agriculture. The wheat crop, this year, will ap- proximate 625,000,000 bushels, 159,000, 000 less than last year. Corn promises to be within five per cent. as much as last year, and with but two or three exceptions the biggest yield in history. lpr A HUMANE APPEAL. A humane citizen of Richmond, Ind., Mr. U. D. Williams, 107 West Main St., says: I appeal to all persons with weak lungs to take Dr. King’s New Discovery, the only’ remedy that has helped me and fully comes up to the proprietor’s recommendation.” It saves more lives than all other throat and lung remedies put together. Used as a cough and cold cure the world over. Cures asthma, bronchitis, croup, whoop- ing cough, quinsy, hoarseness, and phthisic, stops hemorrhages of the lungs and builds them up. Guaran- | teed at BE. E. Miller's drug store. 50c. and $1.00. Trial bottle free. 10-1 Teachers’ Institute. Following is the program for a teach- ers’ institute to be held at the Boynton school house, Oct. 12, 1907: Song. Address of Welcome—Anna McKin- ley. Election of officers to serve during our Local Institutes. “The aim of our Institutes” nah Miller. Recitation—Harriet Haselbarth, For Discussion: “The qualities of the Arithmetic adopted in the Town- ship”—Wm. Engle, Chas. Butler. “How to teach Geography to begin- ners”—Ralph Moser. Essay—Pearl Hay. “The relation of the Home to the School”—Minnie Ridinger. Committee on Resolutions—(Anna Glessner, Florence Compton, M. E. Hershberger) to report at this meeting. Program to be interspersed with queries. All friends of education are invited. COMMITTEE. —Savan- SUDDEN ATTACK OF CURED. A prominent lady of Brooklyn, N. Y., writes to inquire where she can obtain Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diar- rhoea Remedy. She says: “While stopping at a ranch in South Dakota I was taken ill of what seemed to be cholera. They gave me some of this medicine and it cured me. I brought a bottle home and have just used the last of it today. Mother was taken suddenly ill of dysentery and it helped her immediately.” For sale at E. H. DYSENTERY | Miller's Drug Store. | a mighty temptation to our young ar- tisans to join the force of skilled work- who have | there | without this fear, well knowing they | and ! 10-1 The Engine and the Cow. A cow that wore a bell, having been ran over and killed on the railway, the owner brought suit against the railway for damage. It was proved that the driver blew the whistle loudly and tried to frighten the cow off the track. But the farmer’s lawyer also proved that the cow rang her bell and tried to frighten the engine off the track; and so the jury decided in his Fagor. —Ex. — —— The ‘Strength’ of Flour. | Millers and bakers know that large | differences exist among various sorts of wheat flour with regard to baking value, or strength, but it appears that ! only recently have completed chemical tests been made to determine why a | given quality of flour of one brand will produce a loaf nearly one-third larger | than the same quantity of another brand. According to experiments by the Department of Agriculture, at | Cambridge, England, the volume of a loaf of bread depends in the first in- | stance upon the relative amount of | sugar in the dough. The addition of | sugar always increases the size of a | loaf, or, as the baker says, makes the | flour stronger. There are other dif- ferences affecting such things as tex- | that he has survived these happy ture and color of bread, the chemical events presage the successful outcome | basis of which are yet under examina- { of the libel suits entered against him. Orino | ceipt Books, Landlord s Notick to Ten- | Laxative Fruit Syrup cures chronic | distinction which few men enjoy, and | | to my mind ought to be honored as | | Josh Billings said about Re- | shun fer the rest uv his natural days | burns, scalds, cuts, wounds or piles, it | tion. THE TOUCH THAT HEALS | Is th@touch of Bucklen’s Arnica Salve. It’s the happiest combination of Arnica flowers and healing balsams ever com- be | pounded.. No matter how old the sore or ulcer is, this Salve will cure it. For A father of eight children is a happy | the country | [ school teacher: ‘He ought tew made a magir general an bev a pen- E. 10-1 Guaranteed by H. 25¢. has no equal. Miller, druggist. and hev a hoss and waggin tew du his going round in.’”