The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, October 10, 1907, Image 1

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    op Sing
SA LI S BURY.
-
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
Lo,
Elk Lick Supp
dalishury, Pa.
r
I
OF SALISBURY.
J Capital paid in, $50,000.
Assets over $300,000.
J PER GENT. INTERES]
On Time
Deposits.
J. L. Barcuus, President.
2% ALBerTt REITZ, Cashier.
y DIRECTORS :—J, L. Barchus, H. H. Maust, Norman D. Hay, A
Liehiy, F. A. Maust, A. E. roengead, 1. L. Beachy.
Surplus & undiyided profits, $15,000. ©
H. H. MausT, Vice President. 3
. M. &
$00
>)
Seeds, Seeds! ¢
call
3 Before buying your seeds for spring sowing, and
& examine our line of fancy, recleaned
82 MayyvorH CLOVER, MEDIUM CLOVER,
CRrR1MSON CLOVER, ALSIKE,
TiMorny, MILLET, BARLEY.
We buy in large quantity, and prices are always in line.
S. A. Lichliter, Salisbury, Pa.
0S
RS
Suseeesanna as RBBB
It
The
of
That's what we claimgfor pure home-ground Chop.
does not pay to buy imported adulterated feed.
best is the cheapest in the end. We have the
everything in the Flour, Feed and Grocery line.
Binder Twine and Phosphate!
for
best
Buy your Binder Twine from us, also Phosphate
your fall crops. We have the best of it, and our prices
are always fair.
We handle the choicest
and deliver goods promptly.
Wes Salisbury Feed Co.
and purest of country produce,
BBB
SE
: BBE
0
BERKEY
Coffroth & Ruppel Building.
;
RB
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lextra good equipments for pic-
| nicking and sleighing parties.
| at reasonable rates.
|
GROGER AND CONFEGTIONER.
| grocery opposite the postoffice, I want the
{ public to know that I will add greatly
| the stock and improve
| way.
Big Value -For
{and [ promise
| treatment to all
| consist
"Choice
EEA prosent duty:
“STAR.
“A SQUARE FROM EVERYWHERE
Salisbury, Penna.
all kinds.
1
& SHAVER,
Attorneys-at-T.aw,
SOMERSET, PA,
ERNEST 0. KOOSER, |
Attorney-At-Law,
SOMERSET, PA.
R. E. MEYERS, DISTRICT ATTORNEY
Attorney-at-Tuaw,
SOMERSET, PA.
Office in Court House.
W. H. KOONTZ.
KOONTZ & OGLE
Attorneys-At-L.aw,
SOMERSET, PENN’A
Office opposite Court House.
VIRGIL R. SAYLOR,
Attormney-at-T.aw,
SOMERSET, PA.
Office in Mammoth Block.
DR.PETER LL. SWANK,
Physician and Surgeon,
ELK LICK, PA.
Successor to Dr. E. H. Perry.
E.C.SAYLOR, D. D. S.,
SALISBURY, PA.
M. Dively Residence, Grant
Street.
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,
1217-1229 FILBERT ST.
Special automobile s rviee 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
PHILADRKI PITA.
Wagner's
LIVERY,
Frank Wagner, Propr.
Harvey Wagner Mgr.
Good Wren, and pod rigs of
Special attention to
the needs of traveling men, and
Horses well fed and cared for,
Somerset County telephone.
A I
New Firm!
G. G. De lLozier,
Having purchased the well known Jeffery
to
store in every
a first class
and to give
(lash.
the
It is my aim to conduct
grocery and confectionery store,
ol your patronage,
asquare deal and courteous
customers. ~My line will
Of and Fane)
Confectionery, Country
I solicit a fair share
Staple Groceries
Produce,
Cig
OPPOSITE
ars, Tobacco, ete.
POSTOFFICE,
SALISBURY, PA
60 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
TRADE MARKS
DESIGNS
COPYRIGHTS &C.
Anyone sending a sketch and ro whether a3 may
quickly ascertain our opinion free w
invention is probably patentable. Comm ee
tions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents
sent free. Oldest agency for securing ents.
nts taken t rough Munn & 0. receive
special notice, without charge, in
“Scientific American,
A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest on
aa of any scientific our rnal. Terms.
s four months, $1. Sold byall ear
N & Co, 31sreacar. New York
Branch Office. Washington. D. C.
'Bucklen’s Arnica Salve
Mix This Simple, Helpful Recipe at
‘Home and Try it, Anyway.
Get from any prescription pharma-
cist the following:
Flaid" Extract Dandelion, one-half
ounce ; Compound Kargon, one ounce;
Compound Syrup Sarsaparilla, three
ounces.
Shake well in a bottle and take a
teaspoonful dose after each meal and
at bedtime. :
The above is considered by an emi-
nent authority. who writes in a New
York daily paper, as the finest pre-
scription ever written to relieve Back-
ache, Kidney Trouble, Weak Bladder
and all forms of Urinary difficulties.
This mixture acts promptly on the eli-
minative tissues of the Kidneys, en-
abling them to filter and strain the
uric acid and other waste matter from
the blood which causes Rheumatism.
Some persons who suffer with the
afflictions may not feel inclined to
place much confidence in this simple
mixture, yet those who have tried it
say the results are simply surprising,
the relief being effected without the
slightest injury to the stomach or other
organs.
Mix some and give it a trial. It cer-
tainly comes highly recommended. It
is the prescription of an eminent au-
thority, whose entire reputation, it is
said, was established by it.
A druggist here at home when asked
stated that he could either supply the
ingredients or mix the prescription for
our readers, also recommends it as
harmless.
Tre fall shylos. in collage yells are
reported to be somewhat louder than
last year’s patterns.
WHEN a good jockey can earn $50,000
a year, it is strange that so many light
weights try to get into Congress.
Oxke difference between ancient Rome
and modern is that the Roman Rocke-
fellers were not Sundav school special-
ists.
Ll
Two new steamers named Harvard
and Yale are plying between Boston
and New York. We hope they will not
meet in a football collision.
alae
A Curcaco wife saved enough out of
her weekly allowance to get a divorce.
Is that why the women’s clubs insist
upon the wife having a weekly allow-
ance? :
Says the St. Louis Globe-Democrat :
“It is better to be charitable than rich
—and you can’t be both.” The great
majority, it seems, are finding it hard
to be either.
——-
Gas is cheaper in England than in
the United States, because the com-
panies are honestly capitalized. They
do not have to pay dividends on wa-
tered stock.
A Cuicaco exchange tells about a
man in that city who has attempted to
commit suicide six times within the
year. A bad habit like that will be the
death of him some day.
Tue Holton. (Kan.) Journal has a
country correspondent who signs him-
self “Damit.” But it is doubtful if he
would swear to one half the statements
he makes in his letters.
Ee
Tiere has been so much talk about
states’ rights, that we do not see why
Mr. Rockefeler does not buy a state
aud own it, and thus resist the injunc-
tions of the federal courts.
ly — -
Mr. Bryax will announce his can-
didacy at a dollar-per-plate banquet in
Omaha, in December. The price of
Democratic dinners alone, remains un-
affected by the general rise in the cost
of living.
—_-——
Jarax is establishing an immense
ordinance foundry on one of her con-
venient islands. Little Nippon ap-
pears determined to have all the frills
of Christian civilization if she “busts”
a hamestring.
- a
A Sax Axroxio promoter has ventur-
ed the prodiction that ten years hence
there will be five thousand millionaires
in Texas. In that case, the rest of the
population will probably he headed for
the poor house.
A Virainia judge apologizes for g
ing to sleep while the attorneys were
arguing. It would seem to us that the
attorneys ought to do the apologizing |
when they can’t even interest the judge
who must decide the issue.
“A Top-NOTCHER is an individual who
works for the institution of which he is
a part, not against it,” says Elbert
Hubbard. “He does not wear rubber
The Best Salve In The World.
boots and stand on glass when he gets
o- | citizen of Codell,
|
orders from the boss.
policy of the house. The interests of
and he never separates himself from
the concern, swabbing the greased
shute by knocking on the place of man-
agement. . "A top-notcher never says
inwardly, or outwardly, ‘wasn’t hired
to do that,’ nor does he figure to. work
off the clock. He works until the
work is done, and does not
desk looking like a map ef San Fran-
cisco after the shakeup. As a general
proposition, I would say the top-notch-
sons. A top-notcher prizes his health
more than a good time, so he has a
good time all the time. Soreheads and
belliakers are usually suffering from
evereating, lack of oxygen and loss
of sleep. If you want to be a top-
notcher, beware of the poker proclivity
and the pool-room habit—otherwise
destiny has you on the list.
HOW TO CURE A OOLD.
The question of how to cure a cold
without unnecessary loss of time is one
in which we are all more or less inter-
ested, for the quicker a cold is gotten
rid of the less the danger of pneumonia
and other serious diseases. Mr. B. W.
L. Hall, of Waverly, Va., has used
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy for
years and says: “I firmly believe
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy to be
absolutely the best preparation on the
market for colds. I have recommend-
ed it-to my friends and they all agree
with me.” For sale at Miller's Drug
Store. 11-1
Lutheran Clergyman Who Does not
Believe in a Personal Devil.
“I do not believe in fate; I no more
believe in fate than I believe in a per-
He is a ot
| conductor, and through him plays the |
the house are his—he is the business |
exactly eight hours, or wear the face |
leave his |
ers and cigarettists arg different per- |
IN MEXICO,
Ralph Smith Writes Interesting
“Letter to the Editor, and Tells
of His Travels, ete.
Ralph, the son of Mrs. Evora Carr
{ Smith, who is remembered by many of
the people of Salisbury and vicinity,
has been kind enough to write the ed-
itor of this paper a very interesting
letter, a portion of which we shall take
the liberty to publish, believing that
it will interest many of our readers
and give no offense to our friend Ralph.
who is a good seaman, having received
a good education in navigation on the
school ship Saratoga, some years ago,
and has since been holding some very
responsible positions on board of dif-
ferent vessels.
CoAryacoaLcos, Mex1co, Sept. 29, 1907.
Dear MR. LiveExGoop :—Upon my ar-
rival home about two weeks ago, I
heard that you were in Philadelphia
and had left there about a week before
I arrived. I can assure you I was very
much disappointed at not having the
pleasure of seeing you there, also when
you were in New York, but I had left
there about ten days before you were
over.
It is quite a while since you heard
from me, and during that time I have
been almost all over the world. Dur-
ing 1905 and 1906 I was in Europe,
several times in Africa, Turkey, several
places on the Black sea, South America,
Mexico, and as far north as Canada. I
am at present thinking of going out on
the Pacific coast in a few months.
This is rather a nice place, but is a
uew town, and is not built up to any
great extent, having a population of
only about 10,000. The town is rapidly
growing, however, owing to the ship-
ping having started about a year ago,
and a good many Americans are drift-
ing in, as they can make good money
sonal devil, and if I believed in either,
I would pray God for annihilation, not
only in time, but in eternity.”
These words were uttered by the
Rev. Dr. Shipman while preaching in
Trinity Lutheran church, at Somerset,
recently, and now there is a big hub-
bub over it in that denomination. Dr.
Shipman’s belief is shared by hundreds
and thousands of ministers of the gos-
pel, who not only disbelieve the person-
al devil doctrine, but many otherthings
that they pretend to believe in.
Well, there may or may not be a
personal devil and a burning hell, but
if there isn’t, we hardly see how some
arch fiends and contemptible hypo-
crites are ever going to get justice.
Anyway, the devil is a convenient
scapegoat for people who are fully as
bad or worse than he to blame their
meanness on.
The way some professing Christians
act is enough to shame the devil clean
out of his job, and make him look like
a saint in - comparison to his apt fol-
lowers.
er
SPRAINS AND SWEL-
LINGS CURED.
“In November, 1901,
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. 11-1
QUINSY,
I caught cold
A One-Sided Fight.
Congressman John Dalzell, of Penn-
sylvania, sums up the campaign in the
state this fall in the following manner:
“It looks to me as though it was a very
one-sided fight. The Democrats have
no issue upon which to contest the
election. If they thought they had
one in the capitol graft, the Republi-
cans have taken in from them by the
manner in which the state administra-
tion has gone after the grafters, inves-
tigating all the facts concerning the
capitol and prosecuting those believed
to have been connected with the graft-
ing. The Republicans have done all
they promised to do, and no one can
find fault with it. Therefore I do not
see upon what grounds the Democrats
can base any hope of winning.”
HARD TIMES IN KANSAS.
{| The old days of grasshoppers and |
{ drouth are almost forgotten in the pros-
| perous Kansas of to-day; although a
Earl Shamburg, has
| not yet forgotten a hard time he en-
| countered. He says: “I was worn out
and discouraged by coughing night and
day, and could find no relief till I tried
Dr. King’s New Discovery. It took
less than one bottle to completely cure
| me.” The safest and most reliable
cough and cold remedy and lung and
throat healer ever discovered. Guaran-
teed at E. H. Miller's drug store. 50c.
and $1.00. Trial bottle free. 11-1
| tube called the “appendix.”
in this place. If they know anything
at all they can make from $150 to $300
a month, or from $300 to $600 in Mexi-
can money.
I had a very nice time while I was at
home, this time, the first time for al-
most two years, but I expect to be at
home about every six weeks for a
while.
I hardly knew my sisters, they seem
to have changed so much in the past
two years. If Salisbury people have
changed as much accordingly in the
past niue years, since I left, I hardly
think T would know anyone in the
town. I expect to be out there for a
few weeks, next summer, if all goes
well and I am within 10,000 miles of
my old hcmre.
I am at present in the S. S. Hawaiian,
a ship of about 6,000 tons, owned by the
American-Hawaiian S. S. €o., and at
present we are running between New
York, Philadelphia and several Mexi-
can ports. We arrived in this port
yesterday, and will leave here about
Oct. 5th with a cargo of about 125,000
bags of sugar for the Spreckles Sugar
Refining Co., of Philadelphia, and then
proceed to New York and load a gen”
eral cargo, most of which will be rail-
road and bridge iron for Mexico and
the West coast.
With best regards to all
friends in Salisbury, I am
Respectfully Yours,
Raven C. Smith.
HIS DEAR OLD MOTHER.
“My dear old mother, who is now
eighty-three years old, thrives on Elee-
tric Bitters,” writes W. B. Brunson, of
Dublin, Ga. ‘She has taken them for
about two years and enjoys an excel-
lent appetite, feels. strong and sleeps
well.” That’s the way Electric Bitters
affect the aged, and the same happy
results follow in all eases of female
weakness and general debility. Weak,
puny children, too, are greatly strength-
ened by them. (Guaranteed also for
stomach, liver and kidney troubles, by
E. H. Miller, Druggist. 50c. 11-1
East Brady Woman Has Lived Un-
der Rule of Every President.
Batler, Pa. Oct. 7.—Elizabeth Free-
man, more familiarly known as “Aunt
Betsy,” yesterday celebrated her 114th
birthday at her home, near East Brady.
She maintains her mental faculties in
an extraordinary manner, and is bright
and happy.
Mrs. Freeman is probably: the only
woman in Pennsylvania who has lived
under every President of the United
States. She was-born in Fayette coun-
ty, near what is now Connellsville.
my old
A CRIMINAL ATTACK
on an inoffensive citizen is frequently
made in that apparently useless little
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¢. at E. H. Mil-
ler’s drug store. 11-1