THE SNFRSET COUNTY STAR P. L. Livexcoop, Editor and Publisher. Entered at the Postoflice at Elk Lick, Pa. as mail matter of the Second Class. Subscription Rates. THE STAR is published every Thursday, at Salisbury, (Elk Lick, P. 0.) Somerset Coun- ty, Pa.,at the following rates: One year, if paid spot cash in advance.. §L25 If not paid strictly in advance . 15 Six months....... +h . JD Three months.... 50 es. baie aesn sore 40D To avoid multiplicity of small accounts all subscriptions for three months or less must be paid in advance. These rates and germs will be rigidly adhered to. Advertising Rates. Transient Reading Notices,5 cents a line each insertion.. Tq. regular advertisers, 5 sents a line for first insertion’and 3 cents a tne for each succeeding insertion. No busi- ness lacals will be mixed with local news {tems or editorial matter for less than 10 oents a line for each insertion,except on geoarly contracts. Rates for Display Advertisments will be made known on application. jditorial advertising, invariably 10 cents «lin e. Legal Advertisements at legal rates. Marriage, Birth and Death Notices not exceeding fifteen lines, inserted free. All additional lines, 5 cents each. Cards of Thanks will be published free for prtrons of the paper. Non-patrons will be oharged 10 cents a line. Resolutions of Respect will be published Cor 6 cents a line. All advertisements will be run and charg- ed for until ordered discontinued. No advertisement will be taken for less than 25 cents. For Lung Troubles Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral cer- tainly cures coughs, colds, bronchitis,consumption. And it certainly strengthens weak throats and weak lungs. There can be no mistake about this. You know it istrue. And your own doctor will say so. “ My little boy had a terrible cough. I tried everything I could hear of but in vain until I tried Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. The first night he was better, and he sieadilt snproves RS. S. J. until he was perfectly well.” — STEELE, Alton, IIL Made by J.C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. Also manufacturers of Y e I's SARSAPARILLA. PILLS. HAIR VIGOR. Keep the bowels regular with Ayer’s Pills and thus hasten recovery. LOGAL AND GENERAL NEWS. NEWSY ITENS GATHERED HERE AND THERE, WITH AN OCCASIONAL JOKE ADDED FOR SPICE. Jeweler L. E. Coder and family have moved to Frostburg. Foley’s Kidney Cure will cure any case of kidney trouble that is not be- yond medical aid. Sold by all Drug- gists. 11-1 Jerry Glotfelty orders THE STAR sent for a year to his sister, Mrs. Geo. C. Blocher, at Sutton, Md., for which he has our thanks. Obstinate cases of constipation and ‘nasty, mean headaches promptly dis- appear when you take DeWitt’s Little Farly Riser Pills. Sold by E. H. Mil- der. 11-1 Albert Reitz, cashier of the First National Bank and secretary of the Improved Traction Engine Company, went to Rochester, N. Y., several days ago, on business for the engine com- pany. : DeWitt’s Carbolized Witch Hazel Salve is good for little burns and big burns, small scratches or bruises and big ones. It is healing and soothing. Good for piles. Sold by E. H. Miller. 11- Dr. Abe Livengood, the veterinary surgeon, came up from Keyser, W. Va., several days ago, to do some profes- sional work at Jennings, Md. He was looking as hearty and prosperous as usual. : If you take DeWitt’s Kidney. and Bladder Pills you will get prompt re- lief from backache, weak kidneys, in- flammation of the bladder and urinary troubles. A week’s treatment 25 cents, Sold by E. H. Miller. 11-1 An infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Garlitz, of West Salisbury, died on Monday last, aged 12 days. The funeral service took place Tuesday, Rev. J. J. Brady, of St. Michael’s Cath- olic church, officiating. Trial Catarrh treatments are being mailed out free. on request, by Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wis. These tests are proving to the people—withouth a penny’s cost—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. 11-1 The public sale of Mrs. Wells Garlitz, which took place on the &. K. Weimer farm, Tuesday, was one of the best sales held in this lceality in a long while. The attendarce was large, and the prices realized by Mrs. Garlitz ‘were very satisfactory. Does your back ache? Do you feel tired and drowsy and lacking in am- bition? Ifso, there is something wrong with your kidnoys DeWitt’s Kidney and Bladder Pills relieve backache, weak kidneys, and inflammation of the bladder. A week’s treatment 25 cents. Sold by E. H. Miller. 11-1 Harvey Fogle has been spending most of his time in Grantsville, re- cently, nursing typhoid fever patients. His sister, Mrs. Jacob Bender, is down with that disease, and her husband and one of their children also have it. Harvey came home, however, a few days ago, owing to illness of his wife. No home is so pleasant, regardless of the comforts that money will buy, as when the entire family is in perfect health. A bottle of Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup costs 50 cents. It will cure every member of the family of consti- pation, sick headache or stomach trouble. Sold by all Druggists. 11-1 “Barney” Reiber has increased the population of Salisbury quite consid- erable by moving his family from West Salisbury into the borough. There are twelve souls in the Reiber family, and will cause Salisbury to set up the claim of being the metropolis of Somerset county. Stomach troubles, Heart and Kidney ailments, can be quickly corrected with a prescription known to druggists everywhere as Dr. Shoop’s Restorative. The prompt and surprising relief which this remedy immediately brings is en- tirely die to its Restorative action upon the controlling nerves of the Stomach, etc. Sold by Elk Lick Phar- macy. 11-1 M. W. Kinsinger, who resides 2!5 miles south of Grantsville, Md., will have a big public sale on Friday, ‘Nov. 1st. Live stock, household goods, tools, implements vehicles and many other articles will be sold. Mr. Kinsinger will also offer his farm at public sale, on said date, if he does not sell it sooner. You never have any trouble to get children to take Kennedy’s Laxative Cough Syrup. They like it because it tastes nearly like maple sugar. nedy’s Laxative Cough Syrup is a safe, sure and prompt remedy for coughs and colds and is good for every member of the family. Sold by E. H. Miller. 11-1 John J. Walker, the genial and ac- commodating liquid refreshment dis- penser of the Valley House, is setting up the smokes, ete., this week, owing to the arrival of a plump girl baby, yes- bterday, at his home. John says a boy would have pleased him a little more, but admits that a nice little girl is something to be very proud of. In most cases consumption results from a neglected or improperly treated cold. Foley's Honey and Tar cures the most obstinate coughs and prevents serious results. It costs you no more than the unknown preparations and you should insist upon having the gen- uine in the yellow package. Sold by all Druggists. 11-1 ° Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Brandler have decided to move to Pittsburg, where Nicholas has secured employment in a meat market. They are good people, and their many friends in Salisbury will regret their removal very much. Our best wishes will go with them, and we know that they will prosper even more in Pittsburg than they did here, and they always did exceedingly well here. A weak Stomach, causing dyspepsia, a weak Heart with palpitation or intermittent pulse, always means weak Stomach neryes or weak Heart nerves. Strengthen these inside or controlling nerves with Dr. Shoop’s Restorative and see how quickly these ailments disappear. Dr. Shoop, of Racine, Wis,, will mail samples free. Write for them, A test will tell. Your health is cer- tainly worth this simple trial. Sold by Elk Lick Pharmacy. 11-1 Our friend W. H. known auctioneer, came over from Boswell, Monday, to cry the Mrs. Wells Garlitz sale, next day: He called at Tue STAR office while here to re- new his allegiance to the “Twinkler.” He was in his usual good humor, and he carries sunshine with him wherever he goes. The latch string is always out for him at the office of the ‘Great Lu- minary.” Powell, the well Pain anywhere, pain in the head, painful periods, Neuralgia, toothache, all pains can be promptly stopped by a thoroughly safe little Pink Candy Tab- let, known by Druggists everywhere as Dr. Shoop’s Headache Tablets. Pain simply means congestion—undue blood pressure at the point where pain exists. Dr. Shoop’s Headache Tablets quickly equalize this unnatural blood pressure, and pain immediately departs. Write Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wis., and get a free trial package. Large box 25 cts. Drug- gists. 11-1 Mr. Jacob S. Miller, of Friedens, Pa., was in Salisbury a couple of days, this week, visiting at the home of his daughter, Mrs. E. E. Haselbarth, and arranging for the County Farmers’ Institute to be held here on the last two days of November. Mr. Miller says the institute will have an inter- esting program, and he hopes the trol- ley line between here and Meyersdale will be in operation by that time. -So hope we all of us. To check a cold quickly, get from your druggist some little Candy Cold Tablets called Preventics. Druggists everywhere are now dispensing Pre- ventias, for they are not only safe, but decidedly certain and prompt. Pre- ventics contain no Quinine, erative nothing harsh nor sickening. Taken at the “sneeze stage” Preventics will pre- vent Pneumonia, Bronchitis, La Grippe, etc. Hence the name, Preventics. Good for feverish children. * 48 Preven- tics 25 cents. Trial Boxes 5 ects. Sold by Elk Lick Pharmacy. 11-1 Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Cochrane return- ed home from a pleasure trip of about three weeks duration, several days ago. They visited Philadelphia, the a few more such gains in populatien f Ken-’' state of Kentucky, Chicago, Detroit and other places. They had a very pleasant trip, but their pleasure was somewhat marred by Mrs. Cochrane taking sick, which caused them to abandon some of the pleasures they had planned. We are glad to report, however, that the lady has again re- covered her health. Govey and Taterka, managers of “Lion'and the Mouse” and the “Broken Hearts Company,” will present their refined sensational melodrama, **Brok- en Hearts,” in Hay’s Opera House, on Wednesday night, October 16th. The company contains the best of actors, actresses and singers. They will show something grand in the way of electric- al effects. This will be a treat for the people of Salisbury. Prices are only 25, 35 and 50 cents. Tickets will be on sale early. - on Henry E. Jones, of Tampa, Fla, writes: “I can thank God for my present health, due to Foley’s Kidney Cure. I tried doctors and all kinds of kidney cures, but nothing done me much good till I took Foley’s Kidney Cure. Four bottles cured me, and I have no more pain in my back and shoulders. I am 62 years old, and suf- fered long, but thanks to Foley’s Kid- ney Cure I am well and can walk and enjoy myself. It is a pleasure to re- commend it to those needing a kidney medicine.” Sold by all Druggists. 11-1 “Old Jack Frost” acted very decently put in his appearance until Oct. 1st. We had a ripping good frost on the first two days of this month, but we think about all the late corn had thor- oughly matured before the frost came. Even the huckleberry crop is a marvel for lateness, this year. Only last week Jerry Shoemaker came down from Negro Mountain with a nice lot of huckleberries, and he said he would bring another lot to town this week. The chestnut crop, he says, is a failure in his locality, this year. Richard Beachy, of Esbon, Kan.., has our thanks for three “plunks” to ap- ply on subscription to the “Twinkler,” and to J. W. Watkins, of Boswell, Pa, we return thanks for two “plunks” for the same worthy purpose. The “stuff” ought to keep rolling in from about five or six hundred other subscribers in amounts ranging from $1.50 to $10.00 and upwards. We have lots of money coming to us all the time, but most of it is too all-fired slow in arriving. Cash up, all ye delinquents, for it costs “dough,” and lots of it, too, to feed and clothe a family of nine, to say nothing other little incidental expenses as be- long to our business. Thomas A. Edison, the great Ameri- can inventor, says “Fully eighty per cent. of the illness of mankind comes from eating improper food or too much food ; people are inclined to over-in- dulge themselves.” This is where in- digestion finds its beginning in nearly every case. The stomach can do just so much work and no more, and when you overload it, or when you eat the wrong kind of food, the digestive or- gans cannot possibly do the work de- manded of them. It is at such times that the stomach needs help; it de- mands help, and warns you by head- aches, belching, sour stomach, nausea and indigestion. You should attend to this at once by taking something that will actually do the work for the stomach. Kodol will do this. It is a combination of natural digestants and vegetable acids and contains the same juices found in a healthy stomach. It is pleasant to take. It digests what you eat. Sold by E. H. Miller. 11-1 W. C. T. U. Meeting. The W. C. T. U. will meet at the home of Miss Margaret Glotfelty, Monday evening, Oct. 7th, 1907. Following is the program: Singing—*‘Jesus, Saviour, pilot me.” Scripture reading. Prayer. Singing—'"“Almost persuaded.” Roll call. Reading—Mrs. Baumgardner. General discussion—'"'How do women hinder the temperance cause?” Recitation—Miss Margaret Glotfelty. Reading—Mrs. Shaw. Recitation—Freda Livengood. Business. \ Reports. Collection. COMMITTEE. Reunion of 133 Regiment, P. V. The Annual Reunion of the 133rd Regiment, P. V., will be held at Everett, Bedford county. Pa., on Tuesday, Oct. 15th. In addition to all members of the regiment, the presence of all old soldiers is desired. Good speakers will be there. A business meeting will be held in the afternoon, and a camp-fire in the evening. Attend the reunion and take your friends with you. A. W. KNEPPER, Secretary of Regiment. QUINSY, SPRAINS AND SWEL- LINGS CURED. “In November, 1801, I cgught cold and had the quinsy. My throat was swollen so I could hardly breathe. I applied Chamberlain’s Pain Balm and and it gave me relief in a short time. In two days I was all right,” says Mrs, L. Cousins, Otterburn, Mich. Cham- berlain’s Pain Balm is a liniment and is especially valuable for sprains and swellings. For sale at Miller's Drug Store. —e 11-1 CARBON PAPER for sale at THE Star office. tf with this locality, this year, and didn’t | of our two libel suits in court and such 1 SAVINGS DEPARTMENT: - Drafts on all parts of the world. tention. Robert R. Henderson. Bank open Saturday nights from 7 to 10 o’clock. ST NATIONAL FROSTBURG, U.. DEPON TOR THREE PER CENT. INTEREST wo. BANK ~ Capital stock..$ 50,000.0( 70,000.00 Surplus fund. . Deposits (over) 1,000,000.00 . § Assets (over).. 1,200,000.00 PAID ON DEPOSITS. Accounts of individuals and firms invited. Deposits sent by mail and all correspondence given prompt and careful at- o ; me OFFICERS: mmm. Roberdeau Annan. President. Olin Beall. Cashier. Ame DIRECTORS: ——ammt. Duncan Sinclair, Daniel Annan. Roberdeau Aunnan. Timothy Griffith, Meat ~otlim—. Market! MY a Take notice that I have opened a new and up-to-date meat market in Salis- bury, one door south of Lichliter’s store. Everything is new, neat and clean, and it is a model in every respect. I deal in all kinds of Fresh and Salt Meats, Poultry, Fresh Fish, etc. I pay highest cash prices for Fat Cat- tle, Pork, Veal, Mutton, Poultry, Hides, | GUARANTEE T0 PLEASE YO and want you to call and be con- vinced that I can best supply your wants in the meat line. CASPER WAHL, The Old Reliable Butcher. NEW FALL CLOTHING Our new stock of Men’s and Boys’ Clothing is in, and we are showing the largest and most up- to-date line that ever came to Salisbury. Men’s Suits in plain and fancy patterns, $7.50 to 20.00. Nobby Knee Pant Suits for the Boys, $1.50 to 5.50. Young Men’s Suits in the new stylish models, $4.50 to 12.00. New fall styles in Men’s Rain Coats, $10.00 to 15.00. We can save you money on anything in the clothing line, and will be pleased to show you all the new styles, whether you are ready to buy or not. New Hats, Caps, Shoes, Neck- wear, Shirts, ete., are here in all the latest styles. Come in and let us tog you out. BARCHUS & LIVENGOOD. ® Well Known Citizen of Elk Lick About to Sell Out. On the 29th of this month, Reuben | Johnson, one of the well known and re- spected citizens of Elk Lick township, will sell his personal effects at public sale, and he will also offer his little | farm at public outery, same day, if he! does not sell it sooner. Mr. and Mrs. Johnson intend to make | their home with one of their sons, who! is a farmer and market gardner, near Cumberland, Md. The best wishes of the community will go with the worthy old couple, and all their old friends and neighbors will be sorry to see them | depart. | Judge Kooser Overrules Assign- ments of Error in Trolley Cases. On Saturday afternoon Judge Kooser overruled the numerous assignments of error eited in the trolley .cases against his opinions, and entered final decrees in favor of the Pennsylvania & Maryland Street Railway Company. In the S. P. Maust case the attorneys alleged 63 assignments of error by the Court, and the averments covered 63 pages of typewritten matter. In the Meyersdale & Salisbury case ®there were 180 assignments of error. These averments cover nearly one hundred pages of typewritten matter. The cases now go to the Supreme Court, and if the plaintiffs fail to win, it certainly cannot be because they have not alleged error by the lower court.— Somerset Standard. An Interesting Number. No story illustrates the curious mix- ture of associated ideas better than the following: I asked a small boy one day after a long and labored Scripture lesson: “What did Peter do to prove that he was penitent?” Up rose a dozen hands, and I selected one. “Please, teacher,” came breathlessly, “he crowed three times!” Another time I was explaining about the gathering of the’ manna in the wilderness, and how the Israelites had. to colleet a double quantity on the Saturday so as to last over Sunday. enough for two days on the Monday, the heavenly food would be unfit to eat on the Tuesday.” A little girl of five was deeply interested, and anx-- iously asked, “But, teacher, s’pos’n that Toosday was Washin’ton’s burf- day?”’—“Humors of the Schoolroom,” in The Ladies’ World for October. a — DR.KING’'S NEW DISCOVERY Will Surely Stop That Ceugh. Cant Match Our Prices on Clothing! We are the leaders in low prices and high quality, as a visit to our large store will readily convince you of. Competitors can neither match our low prices nor the high quality of our new line of Boys’ Clothing, made by W. & T. Allen & Co., the great Philadelphia outfiters, whose clothing we handle exclusively and are making a special drive on at this time. : i JU THIN OF IT, Boys’ Suits at $1.75 to 5.00! Very fine Rain Coats formen at $1 () A nice new line of Men’s Overcoats at 88 to 12, 10 to 13 years at $3.00. to 12.50. Corduroy Suits for boys from About 25 Men’s Suits Left over from last Spring will be closed out at half price. Come in and let us fit you out. Now is the time to get your boy a good, serviciable school suit at an ex- tremely low price. you our Boys’ Clothing. By all means call and let us show The great values we are offer- ing you will be doubly apparent to you when you see the style and excellent quality of the goods, and you’ll won- der how we can sell such excellent goods for so little money. Jk Lick Variety Store, C. T. Hay, Manager. “But if,” I pointed out, “they gathered JG R. REICH & SON, eS, MEYERSDALE, PA. Underfaking parlor on Grant St., Salisbury, Pa. - L. C. BOYER, Manager, [I Somerset County and Economy Telephones.