HE SOMERSET COUNTY STAR P.L. Livexcoon, Editor and Publisher. #Fntored at the PostofMee at Elk Lick, Pa. sssaail matter of the Second Class. Subscription Rates. - WwE STAR is published every Thursday,at ssdisbury, (Elk Lick, P. 0.) Somerset Coun- ay. Pa. at the following rates: Ooe year, if paid spot cash in advance. $1.25 Bf mot paid strictly in advance........... 1.60 @is months Tiree months seal SRI COPICS.....ovvreiriiesineins nian 205 Wo avoid multiplicity of small accounts' #8 subscriptions for three months or less wmust be paid in advance. These rates and germs will be rigidly adhered to. Advertising Rates. @ransient Reading Notices, 5 cents a line ssch insertion. To regular advertisers, 5 ==mts a line for first insertion and 3 cents a &ime for each succeeding insertion. No busi- wee Pacals will be mixed with local news dams or editorial matter for less than 10 am=ts a line for each insertion, except on gmorly contracts. Rates for Display Advertisments will be made known on application. ®ditorial advertising, invariably 10 cents: wine. . Legal Advertisements at legal rates. ¥arriage, Birth and Death Notices not smeeeding fifteen lines, inserted free. All adaitional lines, 5 cents each. @ards of Thanks will be published free for srtrons of the paper. Non-patrons will be sharged 10 cents a line. Resolutions of Respect will be published Swe 5 cents a line. &l1l advertisements will be run and charg- 8 for until ordered discontinued. Wo advertisement will be taken for less &an 25 cents. {Ask Your wnDoctor! If he tells you to take Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral for your severe cough or bronchial trouble, then take it. If he has anything better, then take that. But we know what he will say; for doctors have used this cough medicine over 60 years. “I have used Ayer's Cherry Pectoral for hard colds, bad coughs, and influenza. It has done me great-good, and I believe it Is the best cough medicine in the world for all thiroat and lung troubles.” ELI C. STUART Albany, Oregon. Made by J.C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. Also manufacturers of 9 SARSAPARILLA. ers uw Keep the bowels open with one of Ayer’s Pills at bedtime, just one. PILLS HAIR VIGOR. OCH MD GENERAL NEN WEWSY TENS GATHERED HERE AND THERE, WITH AN OCCASIONAL JOKE ADDED FOR SPIGE. A happy Thanksgiving to you, one and all. DeWitt’s Little Early Risers are the best pills made. They do not gripe. Sold by E. H. Miller. 12-1 Miss Ada Livengood is visiting in Frostburg, Md., this week, where she is she guest of her highly esteemed friend, Miss May Cosgrove. Mrs. Albert Musser and daughter Hazel, of Berlin, are this week visiting Mr. and Mrs. Silas A. Wagner, the parents of Mrs. "Musser. DeWitt’s Carbolized Witch Hazel Salve penetrates the pores—thoroughly cleanses—and is healing and soothing. Good for piles. Sold by E. H. Mil- ler. 12-1 George Walker, formerly of Coal Run, Pa. but for the past-few years an inmate of the County Home, died at that institution yesterday. Good morning! Have you butchered your fat porkers yet? If so, what did they weigh? Now, don’t lie about the weight, but tell the truth. _Ex-Burgess J. D. Swank, and ~Mer- zhant Tailor Rupert Kimmel, both of Somerset, came to Salisbury on both business and pleasure, yesterday. - The Postmaster of Gasconade, Mo. Daniel A. Bugh, says of DeWitt’s Kid- -gey and Bladder Bills: F am’ doing. well, and improving so fast in health, that 1 cannot say too much for your Kidney & Bladder Pills. 1 feel like a pew man.” DeWitt’s Kidney and Blad- der Pills are sold by E. H. Miller. 12-1 Last Saturday night a heavy, wet snow fell, and on Sunday morning we fad about 8 or 9 inches of it. Many telephone wires were broken down by ®. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Haselbarth went aver to Friedzas, last week, to visit Mr, and Mrs. Jacob 8. Miller, the parents of Mrs. Haselbarth. They returned home on Tuesday, accompanied by Mrs. Haselbarth’s little brother. Trial Catarrh treatments are being mailed out free, on request, by Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wis. These tests are proving to the people—without a penny’s cost—the great value of this scientific prescription known to drug- gists everywhere as Dr. Shoop’s Ca- Barrh Remady. Sold by All Dealers. The hotels Vannear, Belmont and Arlington at Somerset will on and after December 1 discontinue their station busses under a compact made between themselves. The Somerset House buss will continue to meet the %rains, says the Berlin Record. Babies and children need prompt at- tention when suffering from coughs and sslds. The best remedy for mothers to use is Kennedys Laxative Cough Syrup. It tastes nearly as good as maple sugar. It contains no opiates, and it is laxative and drives the cold out of the system by gently moving the bowels. Sold by E. H. Miller. 12-1 Now is the time to plant your Christ- mas “ads.” Tne Star is better pre- pared than ever to carry your adver- tisements into the good homes of this locality. Let your light shine, and the through the columns of Tie Stag. A prominent and truthful citizen was recently heard make the following re- marks: “Tre Star sometimes gives some very hard knocks, but I never knew it to jump onto an innocent per- son.” Right you are, “Mr. Man.” Only the guilty howl when rottenness is ex- posed. Don’t forget the Farmers’ Institute in Salisbury, Friday and Saturday of Be sure to attend, for it will be interesting. See program else- where in this paper. Don’t forget that 4 the farmers are the life blood of the nation, and it won’t cost you a cent to attend their institutes. this week. To check a cold quickly, get from your druggist some little Candy Cold Tablets called Preventics. Druggists everywhere are now dispensing Pre- ventics, for they are not only safe, but decidedly certain and prompt. Pre- ventics contain no Quinine, no laxative, 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 cts. Sold by All Dealers. 12-1 We see in the daily papers that the price of meat is coming down, and we know the reason why. Frank and James Murphy, Salisbury’s popular restaurant keepers, recently killed six hogs, the combined weight of which netted 634 pounds of dressed pork. John Kann is not the only man noted for raising big hogs. | The editor of THE Star is going to |'make a try to get into the next legis- lature, and George B. Walker is going to make a try in court, next Monday, to get the same editor into jail,on- a charge of criminal libel. However, we are not in the least discouraged, for there are lots of people who think we could rub elbows with more honest men in jail than in the legislative halls in Harrisburg. There is nothing better for stomach troubles than KODOL, which contains the same juices found in a healthy stomach... KODOL is offered on a guar- anteed plan for the relief of heart burn, flatulence, sour stomach, belching of gas, nausea, and all stomach troubles. So at times when you don’t feel just right, when you are drowsy after meals, and your head aches or when you have no ambition, and you are cross and ir- ritable, take a little KODOL. It digests what you eat. It will make you healthy. Sold by E. H. Miller. 12-1 The Meyersdale Orchestra, smnder direction’of Wm. P. Young, will give a fine concert in the Grand Opera House, Meyersdale, Pa., on the even- ing of Dec. 3d. The orchestra will be assisted by Mrs. C. P. Maclaughlin and Mrs. G. W. Collins, soprano sing- ers, and Prof. J. Irven Beals, tenor singer. Admission 35 and 50 cents. The concert will be well worth hear- ing. Over at Berlin they have a racoon genial proprietor of Hotel Wagner, of this place, to come over and show them how to catch ’coons. Frank Wagner has a ‘coon dog that he can go out with and catch more ’coons in a single night than the Berlin club can capture in =a week, to say nothing of ’possums, wild- cats, etc. But of course, Frank’s brag dog hasn’t captured Silas Darst’s panther yet. When the Stomach, Heart, or Kidney nerves get weak, then these organs al- ways fail. Don’t drug the Stomach, nor stimulate the Heart or Kidneys. That is simply a makeshift. Geta pre- scription known to Druggists every- where as Dr. Shoop’s Restorative. The Restorative is prepared expressly for these weak inside nerves. Strengthen these nerves, build them ‘up “with: Dr? Shoop’s Restorative—tablets or liquid —and see how quickly help will come. Free sample test sent on request by Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wis. Your health .is surely worth this simple test. Sold Ibs 11 Dealers. ay 1% The Eagles’ Minstrels in the Grand will be a fine attraction, but it is not correct, as printed in the Meyersdale Republican, that 8. L. and P. L. Liven- good will sing in the chorus. 8S. L. is knocked out by a bad cold, and P. L. is knocked out by a combination of hoarseness ard business that requires all of his attention. However, the non- appearance of the two Salisbury vocal- ists (?) will not in the least detract from the excellence of the show. You can’t be well if you have a weak, unhealthy, tired out stomach. Neither can you feel good if by some little ir- : regularity in eating you have caused the stomach to get out of order. These little stomagh troubles are signs of in- digestion, which may and very often do turn into a very bad case of dys- pepsia. Don’t allow this to go on a single day without doing something to overcome it. Take some good reliable and safe digestant like KODOL For Dyspepsia. KODOL is the best remedy known today for heart burn, belching and all troubles arising from a disor- dered digestion.” Tt is pleasant to take and affords relief promptly. Sold by E. H. Miller. . 12-1 John W. Folk, the genial and ac- commodating postmaster of Springs, called at TrE STAR office, Monday, to have his wife sworn into the mail way to do that best is to let it shine | club, but they, ought to send for the Opera House, Meyersdale, Pa., tonight, |. service as assistant postmaster, by P, IL. Livengood, Notary Public. Post- master Folk is at present very badly disabled, owing to a very sore hand with which he has been suffering for some time. His wife a woman of good ability, and that she will conduet the postoflice in a satisfactory manner until John’s hand gets well, is a fore- gone conclusion. is Elsewhere in this paper appears an item telling of a snug fortune in Ger- many which the wife of Jacob Diehl, late of West Salisbury, but of Robbins Station, Pa., is a sharer in: We met Jacob’s brother Fritz, the other day, and Fritz says he is looking daily for his brother to make him a visit and bring the entire fortuue with him. “Then,” said Fritz, “I will butcher two fat hogs, and me and Jake will show everybody in the neighbor- hood a good time.” That may all come to pass, Fritz, but Jake’s wife may ob- ject. Then what? now Jacob A tickling cough. from any cough, is | quickly stopped by Dr. Shooop’s Cough | Cure. And it is so theroughly harm- | less and safe, that Dr. Shoop tells] mothers everywhere to give it without | hesitation, even to very young babes. The_ wholesome green leaves and temn- der stems of a lung-healing mountain- ous shrub, furnish the curative prop- erties to Dr. Shoop’s Cough Cure. It calms the cough, and heals the sore and sensitive /bronchial membranes. No opie chloroform, nothing harsh used to injure or suppress. Simply a resinous plant extract, that helps to heal aching lungs. The Spaniards call this shrub which the Doctor uses, “The Sacred Herb.” Demand Dr. Shoop’s. Take no other. Sold by All Dealers. Poker Joint Burned. About four o’clock, last Sunday morning, a small frame building owned by John J. Livengood, and formerly used for a wagon-maker’s shop, was destroyed by fire. The place has for the past few years been used as a gambling resort by cer- tain single and married men about town, who ought to be in better busi- ness. Mr. Livengood, the owger, is a man past three score years and ten, and he has on more than one occasion routed the gamblers, we are told, but they would soon return to ply their hellish trade, even breaking the lock to the old shop to gain entrance. The famous joint has long been run- ning wide open, and the proper officers to suppress such places knew all about it, but for some reason refused to put a stop to it. The shame is upon the officers, therefore, while the loss falls upon people who are scarcely able to bear it. The building was not only destroyed by the fire, but two buggies stored therein, one belonging to Mr. Liven- good, and the other to W. B. Stevanus, also went up in smoke, as did other things of more or less value that were stored in the building. The total less is about $200, and as near as we can learn, the fire originated through a “scrap” over a game of cards, which is thought to have resulted in an over- turned lamp or stove. There is talk of arrests to be made, but just how matters will terminate for the persons responsible for the fire remains to be seen. BE FARMERS’ INSTITUTES. ‘ Program of Sessions to be Held in Salisbury, Nov. 29th and 30th. Farmers’ institutes will be held at the following places on the dates named: Salisbury, Nov, 29th and 30th: Somerset, Dec. 2nd and 3rd; S oystown. Dec. 4th and 5th. Follow- ing 1s.the program for the sessions to beiheld at Salisbury: Fripay, Nov. 29,1:30 P. M. Opening exercises. Organization. : “Legumes for feed and fertility”’— Amos B. Lehman, Franklin county, Pa. “The farmers’ small fruit’ garden”— J.-S. Stexanus, Springs, Pa. Queries. = Fripay. EVENING, 7 O'cLOCK. Recitation, “Sombre”’—Mrs. Haselbarth, Salisbury, Pa. “Mistakes in life exposed”—R. 8S. Seeds, Huntingdon county, Pa. SATURDAY, Nov. 30,9 A. M. “What the farmers need to make farming a success”’—L L. Beachy, West Salisbury, Pa. ' “Accumulation and uses of legumes” —Dr. Wm. Frear, Center county, Pa. “Building up the dairy herd for profit”—D. H. Watts, Clearfield county, Pa. ; V. 8 x > SATURDAY, 1:30 P. M. “Life on the farm in 1907"—Pearl Hay, Elk Lick, Pa. “What the farmers don’t need”—Rev. 8. C. Stover, Elk Lick, Pa. “Theory and practice in farming”’— Amos B. Lehman. “Benefits derived from farmers’ in- stitutes”—R. 8, Seeds. SATURDAY EVENING, 7 O'CLOCK. Queries. “The family”’—Miss Minnie M. Rin- inger. : “Condimental stock foods, their and abuses”—Dr. Wm. Frear. Recitation. “What constitutes a country home” —R. 8. Seeds. —_———————— O&@ WEDDING Invitations at THE uses ® ‘ing that they had a good time, and | Star office. A nics new stock just re- ceived. tf. SIE TV FROSTBURG, [.. DEPONTORY SAVINGS DEPARTMENT: THREE PER CENT. INTEREST | yoo PAID ON DEPOSITS. Drafts on all parts of the world. Accounts of individuals and firms invited. Deposits sent by mail and all correspondence given prompt and careful at- tention. Bank open Saturday nights from 7 to 10 o’clock. OFFICERS: Roberdeau Annan, President. DIRECTORS: Duncan Sinclair, Rober{l R. Henderson. Daniel Annan. ETN: 7.N, Roberdeau Aunnan. Meat lly... Market! NY et IONAL Capital stock... $ Surplus fund.. 50,000.00 70,000.00 : : 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, ete. I pay highest cash prices for Fat Cat- tle, Pork, Veal, Mutton, Poultry, Hides, ete. | GUARANTEE 10 PLEASE YOU 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. 0 Assets (over).. 1,200,000.00 Olin Beall. Cashier. Timothy Griffith, ASK FOR THE SHOE FOR MEN Don’t fail to see We have a complete line of ladies’ warm-lined shoes— just the thing for winter wear. and rubber goods when needing anything in this line. Barchus & Livengood. FOOTWEAR! | We are prepared, as usual, to meet your wants in this line with the largest stock of Fall shoes and rubber goods ever brought to Salisbury. See the New Winter Myles in Men's and Ladies’ Walk-Overs. our large stock of dependable footwear LINGERING COLD. Oruer - TREATMENT, Bur | QuickLYy CURED BY (CHAMBERLAIN’S Cove REMEDY. “Last winter I caught a very severe | cold which lingered for weeks,” says J. WITHSTOOD | | Urquhart, of Zephyr, Ontario. “My cough was very dry and harsh. The | local dealer recommended Chamber- lain’s Cough Remedy and guaranteed it, so I gave it a trial. One small bot- | tle of it cured me. TI believe Cham- berlain’s Cough Remedy to be the best I have ever used.” This remedy is for sale at Miller’s Drug Store. 12-1 Birthday Party. The home of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Foy, of Meyersdale, Pa., was the scene of a merry birthday party, last Thurse day evening, the occasion being the 18th birthday anniversary of their daughter Maude. An enjoyable evening was spent in playing games, music, etc., and a boun- teous supper was served at a late hour, | after which the guests departed, feel" wishing Miss Maude many more happy birthday anniversaries. ! The young hostess was the recipient | of many handsome and useful presents. | The following named guests were present: Mr. Levi Cochrane and | Misses Susan and Charlotte Cochrane, of Salisbury; Mr. Walter Blum and Misses Emma Tipkie, Bertha Tipkie | and Sara Hartle, of Johnstown, Pa.; ‘Messrs. Hartung, Thomas Lynch, Thos. Rumgay, Thomas McKenzie, Cam- bridge Darnley, Charles Dabl, Clark Emerick, Norman Valimount and Misses Gertrude Darrah, Emma Brae- | secker, Helen Rumgay, Cecelia Hartle, | Gertrude Donnecker, Carrie Donneck- | er, Carrie Emerick, Minnie Baer and Bertha Walker, all of Meyersdale. CURED OF BRIGHT’S DISEASE. Mr. Robert O. Burke, Elnora, N. Y,, writes: “Before 1 started to use Foley’s Kidney Cure I had to get up from twelye to twenty times a night, and I was all bloated up with dropsy and my eyesight was so impaired I could scarcely see one of my family across the room: I had given up hope of living, when a friend recommended Foley’s Kidney Cure. One 50 cent bot- | tle worked wonders and before I had | taken the third bottle the dropsy had gone, as well as all other symptoms of Bright’s disease.” gists. 12-1 FOLEYSHONEYASTAR Cures Colds; Prevents Pneumonia Sold by All Drug-- Can't Match Our Prices on Clothing! v 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. ac JUST THK OF 17. Boys’ Suits at $1.75 to 5.00! Corduroy Suits for boys from 10 to 13 years at $8.00. Very fine Rain Coats formen at $10 to 12.50. A nice new line of Men’s Overcoats at $8 to 12, 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. By all means call and let us show you our Boys’ Clothing. 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. k Lick Variety Store, C. T. Hay, Manager. R REICH & SON. 0 Diels And Emodmers, MEYERSDALE, PA. L. C. BOYER, Manager. Undertaking parlor on Grant St., Salisbury, Pa. | B® Somerset;County and Economy Telephones.