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. Elk Lick Supp Salisbury, Pa. 5 DIRECTORS: —J. L. Barchus, SALISBURY. Surplus & undiyided profits, $15,000. Assets over $300,000. 3 PER GENT. INTEREST J. L. BArcHuUS, President. ALBERT REITZ, Clshier. H. H. Maust, Norman Ty. Thy, A: OF © Capital paid in, $50,000. On Time foo M. Taehey; F. A (0. Before buying your seeds for spring sowing, examine our line of fancy, recleaned MayvmorH CLavir, MEpIuM CLOVER, CRIMSON CLOVER, ALSIKE, Timorny, MILLET, BARLEY. We buy in large quantity, and prices are always in line. S. A. Lichliter, Salen, Pa. IE OP OPE FESS AY | Best On Earth That’s does not pay to buy imported adulterated feed. ® best is the cheapest in the end. We have the best 5 everything in the Flour, Feed and Grocery line. Binder Twine and Phosphate! for s what we claim for pure home-ground Chop. It The Buy your Binder Twine from us, also Phosphate your fall crops. are always fair. We handle the choicest and purest of country produce, and deliver goods promptly. West Salisbury Feed Lo of We have the best of it, and our prices & BERKEY & SHAVER, Attorneys-at-ILaw, SOMERSET, PA. Coffroth & Ruppel Building. ERNEST 0. KOOSER, Attorney-At-Law, SOMERSET, PA. R. E. MEYERS, DISTRICT ATTORNEY Attorney-at-Liaw, SOMY.RSET, PA. Office in Court House. W. H. KOONTZ. J. G.OGLE KOONTZ & OGLE Attorneys-At-L.aw, SOMERSET, PENN’A Office opposite Court House. VIRGIL R. SAYLOR, Attorney-at-Iaw, SOMERSET, PA. Office in Mammoth Block. * DR.PETER L. SWANK, Physician and Surgeon, ELx LICK, PA. Successor to Dr. E. H. Perry. E.C. SAYLOR, D.D. S,, SALISBURY, Office in Mrs. M. Dively Residence, Grant SCF PA. | | Special attention given to the preserva- | tion of the natural teeth. Artificial sets in- serted in the best possible manner. | | | WINDSOR HOTEL, 1217-1220 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 | pte] of reputation and consequence in PHILADELPHIA. Wagner's | LIVERY. Salisbury Bani Frank Wagner. Prope liarvey Wagner, Mgr. ; Good ors ses, ond aoiod 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 way. Itismy aim to conduct a first class | grocery and confectionery store,and to give ‘Big Value For Cash. I solicit a fair share of yeur patronage, and I promise asquare deal and courteous | treatment to all customers. My line will | consist of Staple and Fancy Groceries Choice Confectionery, Country Produce, | Cigars, Tobacco, etc. OPPORITE POSTOFFICE, SALISBURY, PA 60 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE | TIE TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &C. Anyone sending a sketch and Jescription may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably atent table. Communica- tions strictly Songdent al. HANDBOOK on Patents Oldest agen securi] t free. Patents taken throug > Mus EX rd special notice, without vie A handsomely illustrated weekly. Jarzest oti culation of an Aciehtiag | urnal. year ; four m oa SL byall Bia MUNK & Co. 381s. New Y St.. Washington. York Bucklen’s Arnica Salve The Best Salve In The World. Ir Washington ever becomes a “dry” city, there may be less of this unseemly scrambling for seats in both Houses-of Congress. Paris is said to eat 37,000 horses every year. Perhaps that’s why her inhabitants continually suffer from nightmare, OKLAHOMA’S blind Democratic sena- tor will have a hard time keeping up with his party, when it gets busy “view- ing with alarm.” OccasioNaLLY the fool killer's labors are lightened by the man who likes mushrooms and doesn’t know how to tell them from toadstools. MR. RockEFELLER has so often been assured that he will live to be 100, that it will be a keen disappointment to the man if he fails to make good. Ar the 8t. Paul City Hospital, a strike was precipitated, the other day, by a nurse named Miss Alvina Ham- mer. Alvina must be something of a knocker. ‘ From Minieapolis comes the story of a chorus girl who collapsed from over- work. The result probably of trying to cover too much anatomy with too little skirt. “No Womax has any excuse what- ever for notlhaving a good figure,” as- serts a Chicago woman lecturer. No indeed. Not with a bumper crop of cotton in sight. “A MopkeL husband,” says the Indian- apolis Star, “is the noblest work of: woman.” There are times, though, when her mother puts the finishing touches to it. “Wuar will become of the poor peo- ple, if coal goes up and the mercury goes down?” asks the Pueblo (Colo.) Post. Why, they will also go down— into their pockets. ep Tie Thaw trial will begin December 2nd., and a good many people may get so interested in the details that they will forget to do their Christmas shop- ping until the last day. oes tues etary = 3 Now shit Gen. Grosvenor is home from Europe, we will soon hear in which column the various states will find themselves in the election, next vear, and arrange our bets accordingly. Tue Cleveland Leader says that Ohio grew enough wheat, this year, to make a barrel of flour for every man, woman and child in the state. Now, if every man, woman and child was sure of getting it, the world would seem brighter. ie Despite the fact that railroads are contesting the new two-cent-a-mile passenger fare law, claiming that the law has caused a big decrease in net earnings, the Ohio state railroad com- mission claims that reports for the first full year show that Ohio railroads have profited by the new law. The com- mission has compiled tnese passenger earnings from the annual reports of the railroads doing business in that state for the year ending June 30, 1807, and the commission claims that the total increase in passenger fares for the first year, unde the new law, was $1,387,927.60, says the Berlin Record. 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. 11-1 Jacob Kreger for Treasurer. | Kixawoonb, Pa, Oct. 15, 1907. | To The Republican V oters of Somerset County : I beg to inform you through the Re- | publican press of the county that I shall be a candidate for Treasurer at the Spring Primary. Isolicit your sup- port for this position. Jacos 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 KREGER. | | plaints. have never yet disappointed me.” Mr. Brock is publisher of the Aberdeen, Md., Enterprise. For sale at Miller's Drug Store. 11-1 he says, “I have used it and recom- | In two days I was all right, mended it many times and the resulisy L. Cousins, Otterburn, Mich. EDWIN MeNEAL. Guest of Levi Lichliter and Family Drops Dead at Supper Table. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin McNeal, of Onawa, Towa, arrived here a couple of weeks ago for a visit with Levi Lich- liter and family, Mr. McNeal and Mr. Lichliter both being nati%es of the Turkeyfoot - region, near Confluence, wkere they grew to manhood. They were friends from boyhood, and Mr. McNeal’s wife was a cousin of Mr. Lichliter, and asister of Elias Younkin, of Meyversdale. It is needless to say that the Me- Neals were enjoying their visit to the limit at the hospitable home of the Lichliters, but the pleasure of the visit was cut short on Tuesday evening, the 15th inst., when Mr. McNeal suddenly expired at the supper table, at about 5.30 o’clock. Deceased was aged 65 years, and his death was attributed to a stroke of apoplexy or heart failure. His ap- pearance indicated the best of health, and he was not known to have any sickness or ailment while he was here enjoying his visit. Edwin McNeal went to Iowa from this county in 1868, where he became an extensive and wealthy farmer. He was a man highly esteemed by those who knew him, was a man of fine physique, and in personal appearance strongly resembled the noted Con- federate general, Robt. E. Lee. He is survived by his wife, six sons and one daughter, one of the sons being a dis- trict or state’s attorney in Oklahoma, and the other a law student in the University of Chicago. He is also sur- vived by a sister, a Mrs. Barron, an aged lady residing at Barronvale, this county. His remains were prepared for burial by Undertaker Reich, of Meyersdale, and shipped to the family home in Iowa, yesterday. Miss Almira Lichliter accompanied | | the sorrowing wife on her journey as | tween the Somerset and Meyersdale far as Pittsburg, where she was met by her son from Chicago. HIS DEAR OLD MOTHER. “My dear old mother, eighty-three years old, thrives tric Bitters,” writes 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 cases 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 reali rp mente HORRIBLE ACCIDENT. who is on Klee- Coal Run Woman Dies from Burns Received While Pouring Kero- sene Into Kitchen Fire. Last Thursday night the wife of John Closco, a Slav miner residing at Coal Run, arose from her bed about mid- night to poke up the kitchen fire and have hot water ready for her husband to wash with when he arrived home from the mines, where he had been working on the night shift. The fire being low, Mrs. Closco pro- ceeded to pour kerosene oil into the fire, which caused an explosion and threw burning oil over the woman, setting fire to her clothing and burning her most horribly. She called fran- tically for help, running to the stair- way and trying to arouse a boarder who slept in an upper room, but before the boarder could come to her assist- ance, the clothes were all practically burned from the poor woman’s body. A doctor was hastily summoned, and everything possible was done for the sufferer’s relief,and later she was taken to a Connellsville hospital, where she died last Saturday morning. Deceased issurvived by her husband and two children, one a babe aged only two months. Seriptural Injunction. The good book says, “ask and ye shall receive.” Does this advice include the editor? Well, if it does, we want quite a nidber of our subscribers who have TELLS HOw. Directions To Prepare Simple, Yet Remarkable Home Mixture. A well-known authority on Rheuma- tism gives the readers.of a large New York daily paper the following valu- able, yet simple and harmless preserip- tion, which any one can easily prepare at home: Fluid Extract Dandelion, qne-half ounce ; Compound Kargon, one ounce; Compoand Syrup Sarsaparilla, three ounces. Mix by shaking well in a bottle, and take a teaspoonful after each meal and at bedtime. He states that the ingredients can be obtained from and good prescription pharmacy at small cost, and, being of vegetable extraction, are harmless to take. This pleasant mixture, if taken reg- ularly for a few days, is said to over- come almost any case of Rheumatism. The pain and swelling, if any, dimin- ishes with each dose, until permanent results are obtained, and without in- juring the stomach. While there are many so-called Rheumatism remedies, patent medicines, ete., some of which do give relief, few really give perma- nent results, and the above will, ne doubt. be greatly appreciated by many sufferers here at this time. Inquiry at the drug stores of this neighborhood elicits the information that these drugs are harmless and can be bought separately, or the druggists here will mix the prescription for our readers if asked to. — rt TEN PINS. Much Interest Being Taken in the League Games—Result of Games Thus Far Played. As per announcement in last week’s STAR, the first game of ten pins played | by any of the league ten pin clubs of Somerset county,.was a contest be- clubs, at Berlin, last Thursday evening. The contest was an easy victory for the | Meyersdale club, which won by a score W. B. Brunson, of | no doubt thoughtlessly permitted their | subscriptions to get in arrears, square up their accounts. the money, is our only excure for ask- | ing for it. QUINSY, SPRAINS AND SWEL- LINGS CURED. “In November, 1901, I caught cold and had the quinsy. My throat was swollen so I could hardly breathe. I quick and safe cure for bowel com- | applied Chamberlain’s Pain Balm and “During all of these years,” | and it gave me relief in a short time, » says Mrs, 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 to | We need | now | of 1909 to 1830. The second game took place at Mey- ersdale, Oct. 11th, and was a contest between Salisbury and Berlin, Salis- bury winning by a score of 1670 to 1660. The third game was pulled off in Salisbury, Oct. 15th, between the Salis- bury and Meyersdale clubs, Salisbury winning by a score of 1908 to 1770. All of the games have been drawing many spectators, and thus far all of the contests have been conducted in an orderly and friendly spirit, free from wrangling, etc., and that’s the way we trust that the balance of them will be conducted. The true sporting man or gamester is never a ‘‘rag chewer” and “chin music” should be tabooed to the greatest possible extent at all gaming contests. The league games yet to be played in the championship contest now on, are scheduled as follows: Berlin and Somerset, October 18. Berlin and Meyersdale, at Berlin, Oc- tober 22. Somerset and Salisbury, at Meyers- dale, October 25. Salisbury and Meyersdale, at Mey- ersdale, October 29. Berlin and Somerset, at Berlin, No- vember 1. : Meyersdale and Berlin, at Somerset, November 5. Somerset and Salisbury, at Salisbury, November 8. Berlin and Salisbury, at November 12. Meyersdale and Somerset, at Somer- set, November 15. NOTICE TO OUR CUSTOMERS. We are pleased to announce that Foley’s Honey and Tar for coughs colds and lung troubles is not affected at Somerset, Salisbury, | 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 Druggists. 11-1 Coming of Tempest Dramatic Com- pany Delayed. The Tempest Dramatic Company had been booked to appear in the opera | house on October 23d, but have recently | able to reach season, when they will present their changed their route, and will not be here until later in the new play, “Coast Guards.” 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¢. at E. H. Mil- ler’s drug store. 11-1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers