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 thé 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. I® Buy the Genuine R. M. BEACHY’S Horse and Cattle Tonic. It does not cost any more. AT TTT AA IA PAPITATA OO ILS A WE MAE TT 4+ The Original, Old Reliable BEACHY'S HORSE & CATTLE POWDER, the kind you used to buy. 2s5c. per Ib. Blk Lick Drug Ntore. 2000 AAMAS AA ATA LATTA AAAS \ PA PT ITAA OIE EVR LRN LL 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, Groceries, etc. Prices (SLA Aso w As The Lowest! We start with an entire new stock, and we handle only. the 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. I "DR. WILLIAMS’ ) FLY AND INSEGT DESTROYER Protects Horses and Oattle from Fly Pests and y Vermin. Guaranteed to Kill the Flies. Perfectly Harmless. A Grand Disinfectant and Easily Appliod. tive freedom from flies, lice and vermin which usually ef- ve stock. This is the first preparation which actually does all for it. who have spent many weary summers fighting fliesand 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. Where no agency has been appointed a sample tin free or your grocer’s or hardware dealer’s name. g J) THE F. WILLIAMS COMPANY, Madrid, N. VY. SPOONS, FORKS, KNIVES, Etc. have been made for over (/} Cc / $ fifty years, steadily gaining in character of designs, : finish and general popu- larity, but best of all, 99 the good old “‘Rogers’’ / 0S quality has been main- tain It would be hard a indeed to Je upon the wearing qualities first ex- hibited by this brand, and "es, which have made “1847 Rogers Bros.’’ the most famous of all Y/ er silverware. Do not experiment by "trying something that has not stood the test of time. Buy “1847” goods, which have a well-known -and well-earned reputation, and you run 7 (rd no risk. There are other ‘‘Rogers.”’ ‘ The original and genuine has the prefix—*“1847.”’ Sold by leading dealers eve here. Send to the makers for catalogue No.6 containing newest designs. Iwrzmnartional Sinver Co., SBuecesso r to MERIDEN BRITANNIA COMPANY, MERIDEN, CONN. FOLEYSHONEY-<TAR FOLEYS for children; safe, sure. No opiates Makes Kidneys and Bladder Right DR.KING’'S NEW DISCOVERY Dr. King’s New LifePills Will Surely Stop That Gough. The best in the world. Kodol For Indigestion Our Guarantee Coupon It, after using two-thirds of a $1.00 bottle of Kodol, you can honestly say it has not bene- fited you, we will refund your money. Try Kodol today on this guarantee. Fill out and sign the following, present it to the dealer at the time of purchase. If it fails to satisfy you return the bottle containing one-third of the medicine to the dealer from whom you bought it, and we will refund your money. Town State Sign here Cut This Out ———eeeeee] Digests What YouEat And Makes the Stomach Sweet SOLD BY E. H. MILLER. REGISTERS NOTICE Notice is hereby given to all persons con- cerned as legatees, creditors or otherwise, that the following accounts have passed Register,and that the same will be pre- sented for confirmation and allowance at an Orphans’ Court, to be held at Somerset, Pa.,on WEDNESDAY, THE FOURTH DAY Or DEC. 1907. First and final account of Vincent Suhrie, administrator of Mary IL. Suhrie, deceased. First and final account of William H. Smith, executor of Nancy McCloskey, de- deceased. First and final account of John S. Engle and William H. Engle, administrators and trustees of Solomon Engle, deceased. First and final account of Daniel Snyder, administrator of John S.Snyder,deceased. First and final account of Josiah Kauff- man, administrator of Moses Kauffman, a supposed decedent. First and final account of Ada E. Kautz, administratrix of William H. Kautz, de- ceased. First and final account of J. Clarence Dull, executor of Jonathan J. Lohr, deceased. First and final account of Dennis Hay, ad- ministrator of Simon Hay, deceased. Final account of Samuel G. Walker, admin- istrator and trustee of Henry Dorsey, de- ceased. ! Final account of J. Edward Ingersoll, ex- ecutor of Alonzo Chamberlin, deceased. First and finalaccount of Norman E. Knep- per, trustee for the sale of the real estate of Robert P. Cummins, deceased. First and final account of Norman E. Knep- per, trustee for the sale of the real estate of Sarah J. Cummins, deceased. First and final account of Judson S. Hart- zell, executor of the joint will and testa- ment of Margaret Roddy Frantz, deceas- ed, and Mary Roddy, deceased. First and final account of Naomi Enfield and Johr J. Enfield, administrators of Freeman Enfield, deceased.] CHAS. F. Cook, Register. Register’s Office, Nov. 2, 1907. FLORIDA LETTER. H. G. Wilhelmi Writes from the : Sunny South. Under date of the 7th inst., our friend Hans Wilhelmi wrote quite an inter- esting letter to the editor, a portion of which we take the liberty to reproduce in THE STAR, believing it will interest a goodly number of our readers Mr. Wilhelmi says: “My family arrived safe and sound. My wife is inclined to be somewhat homesick, but the children like it here and say they are going to stay. : “I had them down to the wharf, last Sunday, and they saw three negroes baptized, also saw a fisherman pull out a two-foot speckled salt-water trout. Then I showed them bananas growing on a tree, some orange and lemon trees with fruit just ripening, also showed them palmetto trees, magnolia trees, etc., which they enjoyed. “Qur city tried for prohibition, but lost by 180 votes. Pretty close for a place of 28,000 people. Our neighbor- ing cities and states are all going dry, but this being a seaport town, it will take some time to get it dry. “Jt seems that a fellow doesn’t real- ize the importance of his home paper until he gets away from home.” A METHODIST MINISTER RECOM- MENDS CHAMBERLAIN’S COUGH REMEDY. We have used Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy in our home for seven years, and it has always proved to be a reli- able remedy. We have found that it would do more than the manufacturers claim for it. It is especially good for croup and whooping cough. Rev. JAMES A. LEWIS, Pastor Milaca, Minn., M. E. Church. Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy is sold at Miller’s Drug Store. 12-1 A Bad Spell. A Missouri girl spells the name of her dog “Phideau.” If her own name isn’t “Mae” or “Elsye,” it certainly is “Nellye.”—Cleveland Leader. Furthermore, the chances are that the girl and dog referred to by our es- teemed Cleveland contemporary are ‘both of a very insignificant breed. = Don’t Write on Newspapers. The practise of writing a few lines on the margin of newspapers being sent to a friend through the mails must be stopped, and violators of the postal regulations will be prosecuted in the United States District Court. The postoffice Department has suggested that the newspapers advise their read- ers not to write on margins. Violators of the third class mail laws, who send as third class matter any written mes- sage, will be punished if detected. DANCING PROVES FATAL. Many men and women catch colds at dances which terminate in pneumonia and consumption. After exposure, if Foley’s Honey and Tar is taken it will break up a cold and no serious results need be feared. Refusq any but the genuine in a yellow package. Sold by All Druggists. 12-1 “tat thre bazaar. E.C. DeWITT & CO., Chicago, IlL] Take aCar for the Grand Bazaar, +The Ii#ies' Aid Society of the M. E. church ot Meyersdale is busy making arrangements for a bazaar and supper to be held Dec. 6th and 7th, in the basement of their church. The society will have for sale many articles in fancy work and common sense, and dolls in all sizes and styles suitable for Christmas gifts. each day, and supper will be served at b o’clock, for 25 cents. It will pay you to take a trip to Mey- ersdale and buy your Christmas gifts tf The latest photographs for the Holidays, at Conrad’s, Meyers- dale, Pa. tf LOST !—In Salisbury, about a week ago, a Lady’s Gold Watch with the initials P. K. M. engraved on the case. Black guard attached with letter D thereon. Finder will be suitably re- warded by returning watch to Samuel Baker, Elk Lick, Pa. Nov. 8th, 1907. tf A new and seleet line of pic- ture frames and mouldings for the Holiday trade, at E. E. Con- rad’s, Meyersdale, Pa. tf LOST !—A good, heavy Mo- hare Robe, black on one side Also lost a Seat Cushion off a three-seated spring wagon. Finder will be suitably reward- ed by leaving same at Hay’s Hotel, Salisbury, Pa. 11-28 Leave your orders at Conrad’s, Meyersdale, Pa., for crayon and colored portraits and framing of pictures. tf RRR TO LAND OWNERS:—We have printed and keep in stock a supply of trespass notices containing extracts from the far-reaching trespass law pass- ed at the $905 session of the Pennsyl- vania Legislature. The notices are printed on good cardboard with blank line for signature, and they will last for years in all kinds of weathen Every and owner should buy some of them, as the law requires land owners to post their lands if they want the protection of the latest and best trespass law ever passed. Send all orders to THE Stag, Elk Lick, Pa. tf rei nin I PAY CAR FARE on the trolley, both ways, for all who give me an order for a dozen cabinet pictures, or their value in other work. E. E. CoNrAD, 11-29 Meyersdale, Pa. IT IS BAD BUSINESS to allow peo- ple to look in vain through the col- umns of THE StAr for an advertise- ment of your business. tf NEW MAIL ARRANGEMENTS. Postoffice to be Moved and Two Ad- ditional Mails Added to Our Service. Since the trolley line is in operation, C. W. Stotler finds the hack and mail business sd unprofitable that he wants to get out of it. He wrote the Postof- fice department some days ago to re- lease him from the mail contract and hand it over to the trolley company. Yesterday a postoffice inspector came to Salisbury to confer with Post- master Lowry and representatives of the trolley company, in regard to some contemplated changes in our mail ser- vice. The inspector recommended that the postoffice be moved from its present site to a point that would be more in the business center of the town and in close proximity to the car line, which will likely soon be extended to the Ord and Grant street intersection. Postmaster Lowry has accordingly arranged with C. R. Haselbarth & Son to enlarge the building now occupied by Albert Haselbarth, the dentist, and suitably arrange it to be used for the postoffice. The office will be moved shortly after the 1st of next January, and as scon as the mail is carried by the trolley company, which will be about the first of next month, we will in all probability have an in-coming morning mail and an out-going even- ing mail, which we have long neened. Then we will also be in a position to get rural free delivery out of Salisbury, which will soon put the Elk Lick post- office in the Presidential appointment class, and cause the little suburban postoffices to go out of. commission: Verily, the world moves. HE FOUGHT AT GETTYSBURG. David Parker, of Fayette, N. Y., who lost a foot at Gettysburg, writes: “Elec- tric Bitters have done me more good than any medicine I ever took. For several years I had stomach trouble, and paid out much money for medicine to little purpose, until I began taking Electric Bitters. I would not take $500 for what they have done for me.” Grand tonic for the aged and for fe- male weaknesses. Great alterative and body builder ; best of all for lame back and weak kidneys. Guaranteed by E. H. Miller, druggist. 50c. 12-1 and mostly red on the other. The bazaar will be open at 2 o'clock 9 Furs. The time to buy & Let us show you our stock and quote © €8 you our prices. OI IT AXED TAD OA ODED EIE ON UU EEN UD UNI UN EN CG aise Furs! them is right now. CY XO) UY GY P.S. HAY, Salisbury, Pa. OE RG WY Li Ha aE TEN DOLLARS 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. UNITED STATES SPECIALTY MFG. CO, PER DAY No money required. Hopkinton Mass. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Charles H. Wolfersberger to Andrew | J. Sembower. $300, in Rockwood ; dated Nov. 1, 1907. George H. Tressler et ux. to Barbara Braucher, $950, in Meyersdale; dated Aug. 31, 1907. ; William H. Seese to David Younker, $3000, in Paint twp. ; dated Nov. 1, 1907. Sadie B. Bowers to Iva P. Matthews, $810, in Hooversville, dated May 17, 1907. Wilmore Coal Co. to Albert Torquato- $675, in Windber, dated Oct. 30, 1807. Ernest ©. Kooser to Elizabeth A. Grove, $250, in North Somerset, dated July 15, 1907. Jacob Judy’s Ex. to C. D. Fritz, $30, in Garrett, dated May 26, 1907. C.D. Fritz et ux. to Simon W. Fritz, $30. in Garrett, dated Nov. 4, 1907. John R. Boose et ux. to same, $375, in Garrett, dated Nov. 2, 1907. Emanuel Eash et ux. to Chauncey J. Lehman et al., $50, in Conemaugh, dat- | ed April 2, 1907. Margaret R. Frantz, Ex., to Albert C. | Jeffreys. $2000, in Addison, dated Oct. 30, 1907. Frank R. Stutzman to Lillie 8. Stutz- | man, $150, in Somerset bor., dated July 11, 1902. Schell H. Stutzman to same, $150, in Somerset bor., dated July 13, 1907. Gertrude Faidley et vir. to Rufus M_| Beachy $2000, in Summit, dated Oct. 29, 1907. Charles W. Poland to Voghtman, $800, in Summit, Nov. 4, 1907. Joseph Grush et ux. to Mahlon Pen- rod, $696.25, in Paint, dated Nov. 1, 1907, John M. Steif et ux. to Wm. H. Bitt- ner, $400, in Northampton, dated Oct. 14, 1907. Charles E. Claycomb et ux. to Sallie S. Aldstadt, $1000, in Windber, dated Sept. 21,1907. Ezekiel Felix et ux. to Babcock Lum- ber Co., $2300, in Ogle, dated Nov. 4, 1907. Henry L. Younker to same, $850, in Ogle, dated Nov. 4, 1907. Christian C. Holsopple et ux. to Som- erset & Cambria Coal Co., $1500, in Conemaugh, dated Oct. 30, 1907. Isaiah Good to Jerome H. Judy, $3000, in Garrett, dated Nov. 7, 1907. James Snowden et ux. to Wm. H. Seese, $900, in Paint, dated Nov. 5, 1907. Patrick Gilroy et ux. to Ira McFeely et al, $1700, in Windber, dated Nov. 7, 1907. : Sarah J. Cummins, Trustee, to Joseph M. Bricker, $92.84, in Somerset bor. dated Nov. 6, 1907. Robert P. Cummins, Trustee, to same, $557.16, in Somerset bor., dated Nov. 6, 1907. Austin Phillippi et ux. to Moses Lip- | Annie D- dated hart. $1000, in Casselman, dated Oct. 9. Last Day of the Salisbury Hack Line. This date numbers the days of the Salisbury hack line, as the P.& M. street railway has gobbled all the pas- senger traffic, and carrying the mail alone is not sufficiently remunerative to keep the hack line in operation. Beginning Friday morning, €C. W. Stotler, the mail contractor, will send the mail down on the trolley line, with a sworn carrier in charge. ‘Goodbye, goodbye, old hack! You have served us faithfully and to the best of your ability for about a score of years. But we are glad that your days are numbered. Not that we loved you the less, but because we love the trol- ley more. This is an age of progress, and old things must give way to the new, a — A HARD DEBT TO PAY. “I owe a debt of gratitude that can never be paid off,” writes G. 8. Clark, of Westfield, Towa, "for my rescue from death, by Dr. King’s New Discovery. Both lungs were so seriously affected that death seemed imminent, when I commenced taking New Discovery. The ominous dry, hacking cough quit before the first bottle was used, and two more bottles made a complete cure.” Nothing has ever equaled New Discovery for coughs, colds and all throat and lung complaints. Guaran- teed by E. H. Miller, druggist. 50e. and $1.00. Trial bottle free. 12-1 Marriage Licenses. Charles D. Saylor, Meyersdale. Lylia Imhoff, Meyersdale. Robert M. Sipe, Glassport, Pa. Cecelia A. Hockart, Meyersdale. Irwin W. Walter, Black twp. Mary Magdalena Brown, Black twp. George M. Shoemaker, Black twp. Bertha May Lape, Blaek t Fe Austin P. Bailey, Quemahomiig. Katie Hurkledier, Quemahoning. Dennis Fike, Summit twp. Ellen Bowman, Boynton, Pa. Thomas I. Miller, Hooversville. Mabel Hummel, Windber. Eli S. Leaphart, Upper Turkeyfoot. Sada G. Snyder, Upper Turkeyfoot. Joseph Markeoka, Windber. Sulia Bubon, Windber. Jefferson Lape, Shade twp. Annie Tressler, Shade twp. A GOOD LINIMENT. When you need a good reliable lini- ment try Chamberlain’s Pain Balm. - It has no superior for sprains and swel- lings. A piece of flannel slightly dampened with Pain Balm is superior to a plaster for lame back or pains in the side or chest. It also relieves rheumatic pains and makes sleep and rest possible. For sale at Miller's Drug Store. 12-1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers