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. & Buy the Genuine R. M. BEACHY’S Horse and Cattle Tonic. not cost any more. It does ST A WE IVE IT 4 The Original, Old Reliable BEACHY'S HORSE & CATTLE POWDER, 25C. per 1b. the kind you used to buy. Blk Lick Drag Store, ZAMIR A A RNS New Store! New Goods! We have opened a fine new general store in the M. J. , Glotfelty building, Ord St., Salisbury, Pa., and invite you ~ to come and inspect our nice, new line of Dry Goods, Shoes, {dearios etc. A ITAA ITTY SALAD OIL RAN Wor start with an entire new sack, rr we hinds fo he 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’ 3 FLY AND INSEGT DESTROYER Protects Horses and Oattle from Fly Pests and Vermin. Guaranteed to Kill the Flies. Porfoctly Hidrmiioss., A Grand Disinfectant and Easily Applied. It is possible 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's claimed for it. Farmers, who have spent many weary summers fighting flies and 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- provement in all your stock. ere no agency has been appointed a sample tin free r your grocer’s or hardware dealer’s name. N. Y. j THE F. WILLIAMS COMPANY, Madrid, Say, Mr. Man, 8_it will be but a short time until the 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. Everybody is charmed with the work who reads it. Full of the humorous and pathetic, as well as daring robberies. A copy of the book can be seen at TuE Star office. Orders for the same filled at $3.00 per copy, by WM. SEARIGHT. Uniontown, Pa. I efi 7 TEN DOLLARS PER DAY NO MONEY REQUIRED. We have the fastest selling line of goods to offer to only one, house to 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. No money required. UNITED STATES SPECIALTY MFC. CO., - Hopkinton Mass. . FOLEYSHONEY~~TAR FOLEYSHONEY:<TAR Cures Colds; Prevents Pneumonia for children; safe, sure. No opiates The sure v ~~ ay and safest for this is to see our line & before you buy. We are exceptionally strong, this $ season, on Bearskin Caps and Bonnets, Muff Sets and Leggins to match. * Infants’ Sacques, $ mere Stockings. Bootees and Cash- & BALTIMORE T. FITZGERALD, GENERAL MANAGER. ON AND AFTER SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1go7, THE WILL OCCUPY [HE NEW UNION STATION WASHINGTON, D. C. ALL PASSENGER TRAINS, THROUGH AND LOCAL, TO OR FROM WASHINGTON, D. C., WILL USE THIS STATION. & (OHIO D. B. MARTIN, MANAGER PASSENGER TRAFFIC Will not soot or smoke. Your Dealer Has It. r EY ‘A ‘Strictly high grade Illuminating Oil must make a large, white light, and burn the lamp out .dry with strong, firm flame without charring the wick Family Favorite Perfectly safe—150 degrees fire test—water white and odorless— WAVERLY OIL WORKS THE BEST FOR ILLUMINATING BOOKLET SENT FREE INDEPENDENT REFINERS PITTSBURG, PA. For Weak Kidneys Inflammation of the y der, urinary troubles and backache use DeWitt’s Kidney and Bladder Pills A Week's Treatment 25c¢ E.C. DeWITT & CO., Chicago, Ill. | SOLD BY E. H., MILLER. a $100 REWARD. The undersigned will pay the | above reward for informagion | that will lead to the arrest and | conviction of the person or per- | sons who cut the belt and did | other damage at their sawmill, on Saturday night, Sept. 28th, | 1907. R. NEwmAN & Bro, tf ——— Brine Desirable Residence for Sale or | Lamps, Dishes and many other house- | of the old station. Rent. Fine new six-room house in | Salisbury borough, containing good hot-air heating plant. Property also has an excellent | stable and fine large pa Very desirable location. Pos-| 1 ‘session can be had immediately. Apply to John Rees, Elk Lick, Pa. tf Local representative for Salisbury and vicinity to anted look after renewals and increase subscription list of a prominent monthly magazine, on a salary and com- mission basis. Experience desirable, but not necessary. Good gpporiunicy for right pearon. Address Publisher, Box 59, Station 0, New York. 10-¢ epee BUGGY FOR SALE !—A good second-hand vehicle. A bargain for some one. Inquire of Edward Reitz, Elk Lick, Pa. 10-24 MONUMENTS! MONUMENTS! Perhaps you object buying from agents, rather see the work for your- | self. Then visit our yard at 99 N.| Centre St., Cumberland, and see the | finest display of finished monuments in] the state, all of which will be sold at] away down prices. | J. B. WILLIAMS CO., - | | Low PRICE MARBLE AND GRANITE DEAL- ERS, Frostburg, Md. 10-24 | PUBLIC SALE! The undersigned will sell the follow- ing named property at public sale, at | her residence in Salisbury, Pa., begin- | ning at 1 o’clock p. m., Old Gray Mule Makes Fortune for West Virginia Farmer. Enoch Morgan, 78 years old, for half a century a resident of Webster coun- ty, W. Va, is perhaps the happiest man alive today. From poverty in the worst form he has come to great wealth, and all through the trade of a mule, thirty-one years ago. Morgan, thirty-onb years ago lived in a little hut near Webster Springs. His only possession was a small gray mule, and he kept it for years and years, until he became worthless with age. A few years later Morgan entered into a trade, accepting 750 acres of land. very mountainous and hilly, for the mule. The land was practically worthless, and Morgan could scarcely raise enough on it to pay the taxes. In the thirty-one years the land became more valuable, but its owner being of the Rip Van Winkle type, continued to sleep. Recently a timber concern prospect- ing through that section in search of timber, met with old Morgan. The concern offered him $35,000.in cash for the 750 acres. Morgan jumped at the offer, not knowing whether the concern meant business, or was “kidding” him. The deal was closed, and Morgan now has $35,000 in cold cash in the Webster Springs Bank to his credit, all through the sale of his little gray mule.—Ex. HARD TIMES IN KANSAS. The old days of grasshoppers and drouth are almost forgotten in the pros- perous Kansas of to-day; although a citizen of Codell, 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. Trialbottle free. 11-1 Customer Had Worst of It. An eastern paper tells us that a cus- tomer who recently went to a local store to buy an ax, found the price to be ten cents higher than he could get the same article from the mail order house at Chicago, and on making a complaint to that effect, the merchant agreed to “knock off” the dime, pro- viding the customer would give him the same treatment that he gave the Chicago house, and then the fun began. The customer paid ninety cents for the dollar ax. He then had to pay two cents postage and three cents for the money order. Then he had to pay the merchant twenty-five cents for express, and was on the point of taking the ax, when he was told he would have to leave the ax at the store for three or four days, the time it would take for it to come from Chicago. As several witnesses were present when the agree- ment was made, the customer had to comply with all the above terms, and on summing it up afterwards, he found he had paid $1.20 for a dollar ax, and still saved writing paper, envelope and loss of time to write the letter, and the risk of a duplicate money order. The customer was on a par with the merchant who sends to the “Cheap John” city print shops for his printed stationery. Chaat she Teachers’ Institute. A teachers’ institute will be held at Springs, in Elk Lick township, Nov. 9th, 1907, at one o'clock p. m. Following is the program: Song. “Aids in teaching”—Miss Anna Gless- ner. Recitation—Miss Florence Yoder. Essay—Miss Livengood. (Queries. “Are the schools of today advancing as rapidly as they should ?”’—Miss Annie McKinley. “School visitation”—M. E. Hershberg- er. Queries. “Number work for beginners’—Miss | Florence Keim. Song. “The ideal teacher”—James May. “The qualities of the arithmetic adopted in the township”—Wm. Engle and Chas. Butler. Report of the committee on resolu- tions. Song. The B. &0. the First Railroad to Enter the New Union Station, Washington, D. C., Oct. 27, 1907. Baltimore. Oct. 21.—On and after | October 27, 1907, the Baltimore & Ohio SATURDAY, OcTOBER 26TH, 1907. One Cooking Range,2 Heating Stoves, 1 Bedroom Suit, 3 Bedsteads, 1 Piano, 1 | some Chairs and Rockers, a lot of Mat- | | ting and Carpet, Tables, Cupboards, | | hold articles. i Railroad will abandon its present pas- | senger station at New Jersey Avenue | and C Street, Elk Lick, Pa. | | Couch, 1 Clothes Press, 1 Lawn Swing, occupy the new Union Station at the Washington, D. C., and intersection of Massachusetts and Del- | aware Avenues, two blocks northeast | The Baltimore & | Ohio will be the first to use this mag- REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Ernest O. Kooser to Charles Land- man, in North Somerset, dated Sept. 26, 1907. Simon Stutzman et ux. tojCharles E. Shaffer, $600, in Listie, dated Aug. 22, 1907. Isaac P. Friedline to Edgar A. Fried- line, $350, in Boswell, dated July 21. Margaret Sheets’ Adm’r, to Wm. H. Kretchman. $1136, in Meyersdale, dated Sept. 27, 1907. Mary E. Koontz to Joseph E. Bowser, et al, $2500, in Addison, dated Oect. 7, 1907. Monroe Lenhart’s heirs to Mary M. Jones, $260, in Summit, dated Sept. 6, 1907. Jesse T. Jeffrey et ux. to Clarence D. Miller, $1300, in Salisbury, dated Sept. 18, 1907. Valentine Hay et ux. to Conrad Ben- ning, $2750, in Allegheny, dated Oct. 10, 1907. Conrad Benning to Babcock Lumber Co., $2750, in Allegheny, dated Oct. 10e 1907. Amanda Nair et al. to Howard and Sarah Cornelius, $350, in Somerset twp., dated Oct. 10, 1907, Harry S. Kimmell et ux. to William NS. Kimmell, $350, in Somerset, dated Oct. 12, 1907. Same to Louise M. Fogg, $350, Somerset, dated Oct. 12, 1907. Same to F. M. Kimmell, $350, in Som- erset, dated Oct. 12, 1907. Jane Zerfos et ux. to Mattie Warher, $1800, in Somerset Lwp., dated June 21, 1897. Jonas H. Lenhart et ux. to Maud Suder, $500, in Summit, dated May 15, 1907. Harold H. Murray et ux. to J. A. En- gleka, $1000, in Berlin, dated Sept. 30. 1907. Conrad Herwig et ux. to Julia Bow- man, $1700, in Summit, dated June 5, 1907. Julia Bowman et vir. to E. M. key, $1500, in Summit, dated Oct. 1907. P. W. & 8S. Railroad Co. to Ernest O. Kooser, $1, in Somerset, dated May 21, 1907. Ernest O. Kooser to P. W. & 8. Rail- road Co., $100, in North Somerset, dated Oct. 3, 1907. Elizabeth Cook et vir. to Martha Cabadage, $425, in Meyersdale, dated Oct. 17, 1907. Reuben Johnson et ux. to John C. Hostetler, $500, in Elk Lick, dated Oct. 16, 1907. Wm. A. Frey to A. T. McKee, $1575, in Confluence, dated Oct. 14, 1807. Wm. P. Meyers to Rebecca H. Baker, $2200, in Meyersdale, dated Oct. 17, 1807. in Ber- 11 Frank H. Sufall to Earl S. Rhoades, $3400, in Somerset bor., dated Oct. 15, 1907. ———————— Marriage Licenses. Edmund D. Baker, Johnstown, Pa. Margaret M. Hunter, Windber. Newton San, New Castle, Pa. Mary Stutzman, Somerset, Pa. Wilson A. Brick, Allegheny twp. Hellen Fraley, Allegheny twp. William Friedline, Somerset, Pa. Daisy Irene Shaulis, Somerset, Pa. Solomon D. Bruner, Jefferson. Anna May Mull, Jefferson. Orrin S. Hewitt, Davis, W. Va. Izora B. Reitz, Reitz, Pa. John D. Miller, Garrett Co., Md. Nora E. Maust, Elk Lick, Pa. Henry Sere, Unamis, Pa. Carrie Hetrick, Unamis, Pa. Harvey G. Stuckert, McKees Rocks. Margaret S. Kimmell, Somerset, Pa. John R. Gardner, Cumberland, Md. Julia E. Brooks, Allegheny, twp. Harvey W. Bittner, Garrett. Susan Ida Gray, Garrett. Henry J. Speicher, Allegheny twp. Cecilia Werner, Juniata twp. Joseph J. Romesbery, Black. Lulu D. Tannehill, Black. Harry H. Searl, Johnstown. Mina B. Meyers, Johnstown. George O. Fuller, Creekside, Pa. Clara Long, Somerset twp. _| Peter Peterson, Windber. Clara E. Abrahamson, Windber. Harrison M. Mosholder, Summit. Cora E. Mosholder, Summit. Horace Brubaker, Johnstown. Minnie Boose, Meyersdale. John H. Barnhart, Quemahoning. Annie Brubaker, Jenner. Wm. F. Brant, Beachdale. Idella Barl Beachy, Beachdale. 0ld Maids Plentiful. Old maids who live in Washington, D. C., have been appalied by the fact that there are 11,820 more women in that city than there are men, and that out ot every 14 women in the district, 13 can get husbands if the men want them, while the fourteenth will have to live single or import herself a man from some other place. These figures are the result of the census taken by the police. The total population of the town is 326,435, of whom 157,308 are men and 169,132 are women. The white population is 221,417, and the | colored population is 95,018, so-that the | colored people constitute nearly one- | third of the population. It is stated TERMS OF SALE: —Cash required for | | nificent structure, and all passenger | that the reason why there are so many all purchases not exceeding $5,00, but | on purchases footing up to that amount | or more, a credit of six months will be | given, for which notes with approved | security will be required. | Mgrs. H. G. WiILHELML —_————— IF YOUR BUSINESS will not stand | | trains, through and local, to or from | | Washington, will use this station. As a matter of history, the Baltimore | | & Ohio Railroad, the first railway of | America, was the first railway to enter | | Washington, in 1835, and it is fitting | | that it be the-first to open the doors of | the great central station at Washing- | less men in Washington than women is | egies the government departments | are very inviting and attract young women from all over the country, while the fact that there are no busi- ness or manufacturing establishments of amy importance in the city, drives ambitious young men away to other advertising, advertise it for sale. You | ton, which will eventually be used by | towns, thus bringing about the striking cannot afford to follow a business that all the railroads which enter the Na- | disproportion between men and women will not stand advertising. tional Capital. in the city.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers