Somerset VOL. X XIII. SALISBURY. ELK LIC K POSTOFF ICE. PA., THURSDAY, OCTOBER = 1907. FUN i I 4 NR 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. Elk Lick Supply Co. dalishury, Pa. A VII A A A I BBB BIB BBS ry VRE 7 REY) OF SALISBURY. Capital paid in, $50,000. Surplus & undiyided profiits, $15,000. Assets over $300,000. On Time J PER CENT. INTREST £2,riee J. L.. BArcHuSs, President. « H. H. Mausr, 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. L. Beachy. HOSES Sb SRB SY BEDE BRK S <5 4 9, oh SC 3% SR BB om 9 9 “GY @ GY a 9 > ® Before buying your seeds for spring sowing, call and examine our line of fancy, recleaned MaMmoTH CLOVER, MEDIUM CLOVER, CriMsSON CLOVER, ALSIKE, Timorny, MiLLET, BARLEY. We buy in large quantity, and prices are always in line S. A. Lichliter, Saisony, Pa. It The 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 best everything in the Flour, Feed and Grocery line. Binder Twine and Phosphate! 3inder We have the | Buy your your fall crops. are always fair. We handle the choicest and purest of country produce, and deliver goods promptly. West Salisbury Feed Co. est of it, and our prices v of & [wine from us, also Phosphate for g EEA present duty: STAR. | way. | BRERKEY & SHAVER, Attorneys-at-I.aw, SOMERSET, PA. Coffroth & Ruppel Building. ERNEST 0. KOOSER, Attorney-At-Liaw, SOMERSET, PA. R.E.MEYERS, DISTRICT ATTORNEY Attorney-at-Law, SOMP¥RSET, PA. Office in Court House. W. H. KOONTZ. KOONTZ & OGLE Attorneys-At-Law, SOMERSET, PENN’A OfMce opposite Court Mouse. VIRGIL R. SAYLOR, Attorney-at-L.aw, SOMERSET, PA. Office in Mammoth Block. DR.PETER L. SWANK, Physician and Surgeon, ELK LICK, PA. Successor to Dr. E. H. Perry. E.C.SAYLOR, D. D. 8, SALISBURY, PA. Office in Mrs. M. Divély Residehce, Grant Street. Special attention given to the preserva- tion of the natural teeth. Artificial sets in- serted in the best possible manner. WINDSOR HOTEL, 1217-1229 FILBERT 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 PHII.LADRKLPHIA. | Wagner's LIVERY, 2 ply, Penna Frank Wagner. Propr. Hovey Wagner, Mgr. Good horses. 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, at reasonable rates. Somerset County telephone. New Firm! G. G. De Lozier, (ROGER 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 store in every Itis my aim to conduct a first class | grocery and confectionery store,and to give ‘Big Value For Cash. "| gin mills, but in spite of them. I solicit a fair share of your patronage, | and [ promise asquare deal and courteous | treatment to all customers. | consist | Choice 1 | | | { { Subscribe for THE | Bucklen’s Arnica Salve My line will Groceries Produce, and Fancy Country of Staple Confectionery, Cigars, Tobacco, etc. { OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE, SALISBURY, PA. 60 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &C. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain ls opinion Jrees w Sther an invention is pro! special notice, without charge, in the "Scientific American, A A hdhdsomely {llustrated weekly. Larcest ok on of any scien: urnal. Term Sala MUNK mend ths, SL. Ho byall nr NN & Co,3018reawar. New York MUNN Office St.. Washington. D. The Best Salve In The World. J. G.OGLE | MIX THIS. | Prepare it at Home By Shaking In- gredients Well in a Bottle. | What-will appear very interesting to many people here is the article taken from a New York daily paper, giving a simple prescription, as formulated by a noted authority, who claims tha¢ he has found a positive remedy to cure almost any case of backache or kidney or bladder derangement, in the follow- ing simple prescription, if taken before the stage of Bright's disease: Fluid Extract Dandelion, one-half ounce ; Compound Kargon, one ounce; Compound Syrup Sarsaparilla, three ounces. Shake well in a bottle and take. in teaspoonful doses after each meal and again at bedtime. : A well-known druggist here at home, when asked regarding this preserip- tion, stated that the ingredients are all harmless, and can be obtained at a small cost from any good prescription pharmacy, or the mixture would be put up if asked to doso. He further stated that while this prescription is often prescribed in rheumatic afflictions with splendid results, he could see no reason why it-would not be a splendid remedy for kidney and urinary troubles and backache, as it has a peculiar action upon the kidney structure, cleansing these most important organs and help- ing them to sift and filter from the blood the foul acids and waste matter which cause sickness and suffering, Those of our readers who suffer can make no mistake i in giving i arial. Mr. FAIRBANKS i8 trying his best to get his boom in out cf the wet. Russia is still executing prisoners without trial, and consequently, walk- ing in darkness, THE negro Republicans seem to be trying to cast a dark cloud over the prospects of Taft and Roosevelt. ~~ Proressor LArkIN should not be too sure about all marriages for life being crimes. A namber of people may have had better luck than he. : AN Antwerp steamer has landed in New York with a cargo of 7,000,000 Teddy bears. Somebody is going to get this country into a real war yet, THERE is a prevalent Wis that it will be time to talk about Judge Landis for President after the big fine he imposed on the Standard Oil Company has been collected. i THE two-cent rate is constitutional in Ohio, but unconstitutional in Penn- sylvania. But then, the Pennsylvania railroad has charge of the Pennsyl- vania constitution. H. H. RoGEeRs, the Standard Oil mag- nate, has been ordered by his physician to “keep quiet for three months.” A prescription like that would kill Rich- mond P. Hobson or Wm. Jennings Bryan. PENNSYLVANIA makes one-fourth of the National cigar output, and also sells and drinks more “booze” than any other state in the Union. As a result, her jails, penitentiaries, work houses and alms houses are also the fullest, and the same can also be said of her lunatic asylums. Yet, with all this, Pennsylvania is, taking it all in all, the greatest and most useful state in the Union. If “Uncle Sam” had to part with one of his numerous states, he would feel the loss of Pennsylvania far more than that of any other state. Pennsylvania‘is a greats empire within herself. Not, however, through and by the aid of her tobacco factories and NOTICE TO OUR cus’ FTOMERS. 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 recomend it as a safelremedy for children and adults. Sold by all Droggists. 11-1 Two-Cent Railroad Fare Law Now in Effect. The railroads of Pennsylvania have decided to comply with the Two-Cent Fare law, pending the decision on the constitutionality of the act in the Su- preme Court, and began selling tickets at the two-cent rate on the first day of this month. | ouT OF SIGHT. “Qut of sight, out of mind,” is an old saying which applies with special force to a sore, burn or wound that’s been treated with Buckden’s Arnica Salve. It’s out of sight, out of mind and out of existence. Piles too and chilblajns dis- appear under its healing influence. Guaranteed by E. H. Miller, Druggist. A GREAT SPEECH. - Colonel teliry Watterson made a speech at the opening of the Bluegrass Fair, at Lexington, Ky., that would make him famous, were he not already famous. Following are some of the good and true utterances he made in his speech on the said occasion: WARNING AGAINST “T8Ms.” “I protest against that religion which sands the sugar and waters the milk before it goes to its prayers. I protest against that morality which poses as a saint in public to do as it pleases in private. As the old woman said of the old man’s swearing, “If there is any- thing I do hybominate, it is hypocrisy.” In my opinion those things which threaten Kentucky are not the gentle- manly vices of the race course and the sideboard, but perfidy and phariseeism in public and private life. “I warn our people against the intra- sion of certain ‘isms’ which describe themselves as ‘progress,’ and muster under the standard of what they call ‘God -and morality,” but which, fifty years ago, went by a very different name; ‘isms’ which take their spirit from Cotton Mather, not from Jesus Christ ; ‘isms’ which, where they can- not rule, would burn at the stake; ‘isms’ which embrace the sum of all fanaticism and intolerance. No ANGELS BY LEGISLATION. “I refuse to yield to these. Holding the ministry in reverence as spiritual advisers, rejecting them as emissaries of temporal power, I do not intend, if I can help it, to be compelled to accept a rule of modern clericalism, which, if it could have its bent and sway, would revive for us the priest-ridden systems of the Middle Ages. Ido not care to live in a world that is too good to be genial ; too ascetic to be honest; too procriptive to be happy. I do not be- lieve that men can be legislated into angels, even red-nosed angels. . “The blue laws of New England, dead letters for the most part, did more harm to the people, while they lasted, than all the other agencies united. TI would leave them in the cold storage to which the execration of some and the neglect of all consigned them long ago, not embalm and import them to Ken- tucky to poison the meat and drink and character of the people. TI shall leave my home life, my professional career and my familiar associates to say whether I do not place, and have not always placed, the integrity of man, the purity of woman and the sanctity of religion above all earthly things; but I hope never to grow too old to make merry with my friends and forget for a little that I am no longer one and twenty. When the time arrives for me to go to my ac- count, I mean to go shouting; to go with my flag flying. For OLD KENTUCKY. “IT want to live yet a little longer to tell the truth and shame the devil, but if obscurity and adversity and neglect shall overtake me, it will be a comfort even in the valley of the shadow of death, that from first to last I fought not for the speckled gospels of the short-haired women and the long-hair- ed men of Babylon, but for the simple manhood and lovely womanhood of Old Kentucky—never New Kentucky, but always and forever, Old Kentucky —vyour birthright and mine.” A QUICK AND SAFE REMEDY FOR BOWEL COMPLAINTS. Twenty years ago Mr. Geo. W. Brock discovered that Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy was a quick and safe cure for bowel com- plaints. “During all of these years,” he says, “I have used it and recom- mended it many times and the results have never yet disappointed me.” Mr. Brock is publisher of the Aberdeen, Md., Enterprise. For sale at Miller’s Drug Store. 11-1 A Hot Time at the Fair. It is said that not less than 8,000 peo- ple and over 800 vehicles passed through the gates at the Meyersdale Fair and Races, last Thursday. It is also reported that about 8,888,888 “cuss” words were reeled off over one of the races. But twas ever thus, and to be a race starter is like being a base- ball umpire—destined to be “cussed” loudly and long, all of which adds to a man’s prominence and popularity. A CRIMINAL ATTACK on an inoffensive citizen is frequently made in that apparently useless little tube called the “appendix.” It’s gener- ally the result of protracted constipa- tion, following liver torpor. Dr. King’s New Life Pills regulate the liver, pre- vent appendicitis, and establish regular habits of the bowels. 25¢c. at E. H. Mil- 25¢. 11-1 ler’s drug store. 11-1 T THE TROLLEY. | Track Almost Completed--Cars Will be Running Soon. The track of the Pennsylvania & Maryland Street Railway Company is almost completed between Salisbury and Meyersdale. The track- -layers are now within a very short distance of the Northern boundary line of Salis- bury, and it is likely that the last rail between the two towns will be spiked down by this evening, except at the railroad crossings. ‘The poles are nearly all erected, and most of the wire is strung. Some track in both boroughs is yet to be laid, some ballasting to be done along the line, county road crossings to be put in good condition, ete., all of which will be rapidly pushed to completion, and it now looks as though cars will be running at an early date, probably by Nov. 1st or sooner. ee A CARD. This is to certify that all druggists are authorized to refund your money if Foley's Honey and Tar fails to cure your cough or cold. It stops the cough, heals the lungs and prevents serious results from a cold. Cures la grippe cough and prevents pneumonia and consumption. Contains no opiates. The genuine is in a yellow package. Refuse substitutes. Sold by all Drug- gists. 11-% —————— Negro Shoots Two Men in Meyers- dale. A shooting affray occurred in the bar room of the American House, in Mey- ersdale, last Thursday evening, when Henry Hudson, a negro, shot Joseph: Eden, another negro, and Robert F. Rae, a white man. According to reports, Hudson blamed Eden for being too intimate with his: (Hudson’s) wife, and for that reason opened fire on him with a revolver. Eden tried to shield himself behind Rae, an innocent person, and the re- sult was that two bullets intended for Eden took effect in Rae’s arm. Anoth- er bullet entered Eden’s breast, but it is believed that neither of the shots will prove fatal. - Hudson is now in jail. Rowdies Pull Birgess Welfley’ Ss Whiskers. The following news dispatch from Somerset appeared in Monday's Pitts- burg Gazette Times: “When you point the town red you must pay for your paint.” This edict Burges W. H. Welfley gave out to young men when he took office here nearly 25 years ago, and he has since stood by it. He is today nursing bruises and preparing bills for several alleged “painters.” Late last night the 75-year-old bur- gess noticed several intoxicated men fighting in a street. No policemen were present, and when the burgess attempted to make arrests he was handled roughly. Among the indigni- ties he suffered while pinned down in the gutter was the pulling of his whisk- ers. The men escaped, but Welfley thinks he knows his assailants,and ar- rests are likely. Somerset’s venerable burgess should follow the style of the Burgess of Salis- bury, who wears neither whiskers nor hair on his head. If the above news item is true, no doubt the Somerses burgess is of the opinion that there are worse forms of punishment than hav- ing one’s leg pulled. According to late and reliable re- ports, the above sensational item from the Gazette Times is far from the truth, as most Somerset county dis- patches to the daily papers are, and some people are beginning to think that certain correspondents to the city papers are the most conscienceless and abandoned liars on this side of hades, their final home. The latest reports have it that a drunken man clutches at and clung to Burgess Welfley’s whis- kers for a brief period, merely to have something to hold on to, and not with any intention to do bodily harm. ae A CERTAIN CURE FOR CROUP— USED FOR TEN YEARS WITH- OUT A FAILURE. Mr. W. C. Bott, a Star City, Ind., hardware merchant, is enthusiastic in his praise of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. His children have all been subject to croup and he has used this remedy for the past ten years, and though they much feared the croup, his wife and he always felt safe upon retiring wheh a bottle of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy was in the house. His oldest child was subject to severe at- tacks of croup, but this remedy never failed to effect a speedy cure. He has recommended it to friends and neigh- bors and all who have used it say that it is unequaled for croup and whoop- ing cough. For sale at Miller's Drug Store. 11-1 NO. 38.