THE SOMERSET COUNTY STAR | P. L. Lavexaoon, Editor and Publisher. Entered at the PostofMce at Elk Lick, Pa. as mail matter of the Second Class. Subscription Rates. THE STAR is published every Thursday, at Salisbury, (Blk Lick, P.O.) Somerset Coun- ty, Pa, at the following rates: _ One year, if paid spot cash in advance... § If not paid strictly in advance Bix months. ................ 8 Three MONthS........v.cveravaiinviii sii: Single copies. 1.25 | 1.50 | 05 months or less all subscriptions for three rates and must be paid in advance. These terms will be rigidly adhered to. Advertising Rates. Transient Reading Notices. 5 cents a line each insertion. To regular advertisers, 5 gents a line for first insertion and 3 cents a line for each succeeding insertion. ness lacals will be mixed with local news | items or editorial matter for less than 10 | cents a line for each insertion,except on yearly contracts. Rates for Display Advertisments will be the latter in Frostburg, Md. They spent a week in the cities named, and both report a good time. Prial 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- tarrh Remedy. Sold by All Dealers. 1-1 The Salisbury Bowling Club got done | 1p on three straight games of ten pins, | by the Somerset club, in Somerset, last | | of its regular men along. | Laxative Cough Syrup that No busi- | | the throat and lungs. made known on application. | Editorial advertising, invariably 10 cents a line. Legal Advertisements at legal rates. Marriage, Birth and Death Notices not exceeding fifteen lines, inserted free. Cards of Thanks will be published free for prtrons of the paper. Non-patrons will be charged 10 cents a line. Resolutions of Respect will be published for 5 cents a line. All advertisements will be run and charg- ed for until ordered discontinued. No advertisement will be taken for less than 25 cents. The Taking Cold Habit The old cold goes; anew one quickly comes. It’s the story of a weak throat, weak lungs, a tendency to consumption. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral breaks up the‘taking-cold habit. It strengthens, soothes, heals. Askyour doctorabout it. “1 had a terrible cold, and nothing relieved me. Itried Ayer’'s Cherry Pectoral and it promptly broke up my cold, stopped m cough, and eased-every part of my y. It did wonderful work for me.”—MR. J. F. LUTZ, Toledo, Ohio. Made by J.C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass, Also manufacturers of yers Keep the bowels regular with Ayer’s Pills, Just one pill each night. SARSAPARILLA. PILLS. 3 HAIR VIGOR. LOGAL AND GENERAL NEWS. NEWSY [TEMS GATHERED HERE AND THERE, WITH AN OCCASIONAL JOKE ADDED FOR SPIGE. Dr.-and Mrs. E. C. Saylor were visited during the week by a sister and brother of Mrs. Saylor, who reside near Berlin. DeWitt’s Carbolized Witch Hazel Salve—don’t forget the name, and ac- cept no substitute. Get DeWitt’s. It’s good for piles. Sold by E. H. Miller. 1-1 The price of “turkeys took quite a tumble, last week, when it dropped from 15 to 13 cents per pound. Some were even sold at 12 cents. Orino Laxatlve Fruit Syrup, the new Laxative, stimulates, but does not ir- ritate. It is the best Laxative. Guar- anteed or your money back. Sold by all Druggists. 1-1 The excellent report of the Farmers’ Institute, which appears in this issue, was written up by Dennis and W. B. Stevanus. The Stevanus brothers are good reporters. Jack and Jill were both quite ill, Now each is well and wiser, For blues and headaches have to go. When they take an Early Riser. DeWitt’s Little Early Riser Pills are sold by E. H. Miller. = 1-1 Rev. L. P. Young and family went east to visit relatives and friends in Blair and Mifflin counties, Pa., a week or more ago. Mr. Young returned home yesterday evening. A series of Evangelistic meetings are being held in the Ord street Breth-' ren church, nightly, this week, by Rev, Beechler, of Meyersdale, who is pro- nounced one of the ablest pulpit speakers heard in this town for many .years. ; Thousands of men and women in ali walks of life are suffering from kidney and bladder troubles. Don’t neglect your kidneys. Delays are dangerous. DeWitt’s Kidney and Bladder Pills af- ford quick relief for all forms of kidney and bladder troubles. A week’s treat- ment, 25¢. Sold by E. H. Miller. 1-1 Stewart Simpkins is rejoicing over the advent of a young son that arrived at his home last Sunday evening. The young fellow is hale and hearty, and we trust that he will grow up and be as good-natured and industrious as his father, The Connellsville Courier has de- cided to discontinue its Sunday edition, for the reason that it did not pay. The weekly and daily editions of the Cour- ier, however, will continue as hereto- fore, and they are both exceedingly prosperous, able and newsy. Miss May Lichliter and Miss Ada Livengood returned home, Monday evening. The former had been visit- All| additional lines, 5 cents each. LT a | stitute, in Salisbury, last week. TE aE | night. To avoid multiplicity of small accounts | The Salisbury club was some- | what handicapped by not having some We did not learn yet what the score was. There is something about Kennedy’s makes it different from others, as it causes a free yet gentle action of the bowels through which the cold is forced out of the system. At the same time it heals irritation and allays inflammation of It is pleasant to take. Children like it. Contains no opiates nor narcotics. Sold by E. H. Miller. 1-1 Hon. A. W. Knepper, of Somerset, was in attendance at the Farmers’ In- While | here he was a caller at Tie Stir office, and he informed the editor that he would likely seek a re-nomination for the Legislature, at the coming primary. Jacob D. Miller and wife will spend the winter among friends in Westmore- , land county, Pa., where they have a | lot of carpet weaving to do that will | keep them busy all winter. We wish | them a pleasant and profitable season, | but trust that they will return to Salis- | bury again. | widneys? Are you having trouble with your There are lots of people to- day who wonder why they have pains | ncross the back, why they are tired | and lacking in energy and ambition. Your kidneys are wrong. They need relief without delay. Take DeWitt’s | Kidney & Bladder Pills; they are for | veak back, inflammation of the blad- | der, backache and weak kidneys. Sold by E. H. Miller. 1-1 CO. A. Wilt and family, who now re- «ide at Bayard, W. Va., arrived here last Saturday. It was their first visit to Salisbury since they moved away, and, of course, it did them much good to come rolling into Salisbury on a trolley car. They were the guests qf Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Wagner, the parents of Mrs. Wilt, for several days. Millions of bottles of Foley’s Honey and Tar have been sold without any person ever having experienced any other than beneficial results from its ase for coughs, colds and lung troubles. This is because the genuine Foley's Honey and Tar in the yellow package contains no opiates or other harmful drugs. Guard your health by refusing any but the genuine. Sold by all Drug- gists. Te 1-1 The George's Creek Press, the of- ficial organ of the United Mine Work- ers of this district, suspended publica- tion, last week. An out and out labor organ cannot exist long in a town no larger than Lonaconing, Md., where the Press was published, especially when the subscription price ranges from 50 cents to a dollar a year, and a large percentage of the won’t pay up even at those starvation rates. subscribers When the Stomach, Heari, or Kidney nerves get weak, then these organs al ways fail. Don’t drug the Stomaecn. nor stimulate the Heart or Kidneys. That is simply a makeshifi. Get a 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 I'quid —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 by All Dealers. 1-1 George Walker, Sr; whose death was noted in last week’s Star, was born in Scotland, July 17th, 1842. He died near Somerset, Pa., Nov. 27tb, 1907. He resided at Coal Run, Pa., a number of years, where he had the good will of everybody, for he was a man of kindly and inoffensive disposition. His re- mains were laid to rest in the I. O. O. F. cemetery. at this place, last Thurs- day. Of his family we know but little, but he was the father of George P. Walker, of Coal Run, and Mrs. Albert Stein, of Meyersdale. Whenever you feel that your stomach has gone a little wrong, or when you feel that it is not in good order, as is evidenced by mean headaches, nerv- ousness, bad breath, and belching, take something at times, and especially after your meals until relief is afford- ed. There is nothing better offered the public today for stomach troubles, dyspepsia, indigession, ete., than KO- DOL. This is a scientific preparation of natural digestants combined with vegetable acids and.contains the same juices found in every healthy stomach. KODOL is guaranteed to give relief. It is pleasant to take; it will make you feel fine by digesting what you eat. Sold by E. H. Miller. 1-1 The Ladies’ World for December is one of the most attractive magazines that has come to our table. It is full of entertainment, information and sug- gestion for the holiday season, has a lot of capital stories and some special art features that are remarkable—very remarkable when one considers the low price at which the publication is offer- ed. Among the short fiction there is a characteristically tender story by Chas. G. D. Roberts, where the interest cen- ters in a little girl, while J. J. Bell ing friends in Cumberland, Md., and touches our sympathy with Tam, a story of a Scotch boy that is excellent- ly done. Henrietta Crosman gives a vivid description of her ante-stage life which Was spent largely on the frontier, and tells how she and her mother be- came medicine the Chip- pewas. The second part of Roy Nor- ton’s serial, The Captain and the Maid, confirms the good last month, and promises to be an un- usually fine story. Ior the children Livingston B. Morse begins a series of Dream: Animal will de- light the young pecple, and for them, too, there are some ingenious puzzles, The housewife will find on every page something she wants to know, whether it be about cooking. needlework, inex- pensive Christmas the health, etiquette, what to wear herself and dress her children in—or practically anything else about her home life, for | the number is most complete. New York ; Fifty Cents a year. women of impression made Tales which gifts, A tickling cough. from any cough, is | quickly stopped by Dr. Shooop’s Cough | Cure. And it is so thoroughly 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 ten- der stems of a lung-healing mountain- ous shrub, furnish: the curative prop- erties to Dr. Shoop’s Cough Care. It | calms the cough, and heals the sore and | sensitive bronchial membranes. No opium, no 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. 1-1 The Hand Bill Nuisance. The following notice given through the columns of the Meyersdale Re- publican, by Burgess Reed, of that town, is appropriate and in order: ImprorRTANT NOTICE. The practice of parties distributing hand bills promiscuously on the streets and the ringing of door bells must be discontinued at once. The police have instructions to arrest persons guilty of this practice. Persons who send out the bills should instruct those who pass them to this effect. J. C. REED, Burgess. It is time for a notice of the same kind to be given by the Burgess of Sal- isbury. Meyersdale business men have lately been flooding this town with hand bills, and the insolence and impudence of some of the bill distrib- utors has reached the unbearable stage. They have even been nailing bunches of bills to people’s shade trees in Salisbury, and it is time for such conduct to be stopped. If we catch anybody driving nails into our own shade trees, we will at once proceed to drive a few nails into the offender’s coffin. We like to see people advertise their wares, but there is a right way and a wrong way to go about it. Newspaper advertising is by all odds the best. The bill distributor and constant door bell ringer is a public nuisance. MIXED OFTEN. Druggists Hear Much Praise for This Simple Home-Made Mixture. Some remarkable stories are being told about town and among the coun- iry people coming in of this simple home-made mixture curing Rheuma- tism and Kidney trouble. Here is the recipe and directions for taking: Mix by shaking well in a bottle one-half ounce Fluid Extract Dandelion, one ounce Compound Kargon, three ounces Compound Syrup Sarsaparilla. Take a: a dose one teaspoonful after meals and at bedtime. No change need be made in your usual diet, but drink plenty of good waler. 3 This mixture, writes one authority in an leading Philadelphia newspaper, Lins a peculiar tonic effect upon the kidneys; cleansing the clogged up pores of the eliminative tissues, fore- ing the kidneys to sift and strain from the blood the uric acid and other poi- sonous waste matter,overcoming Rheu- matism, Bladder and Urinary troubles in a short while. A New York druggist who has had hundreds of calls for these ingredients since the first announcement in the newspapers last October, stated that the people who once tried it “swear by it,” especially those who have Urinary and Kidney trouble and suffer with Rheumatism, The druggists in this neighborhood say they can supply the ingreodents, which are easily mixed at home. There is said to be no better blood-cleansing agent or system tonic known, and cer- tainly none more harmless “or simple to use. tre REAL ESTATE "TRANSFERS. Gertie K. Jones et vir. to Joseph J. Eash, $925, in Conemaugh, dated Nov. 15, 1907. Jacob M. Lichty’s heirs to Jacob W. Peck et al, in Summit, dated Oct. 8, 1807. Wilmore Coal Co. to Peter Komos- hinisky, $750, in Windber, dated Oct. 28, 1907. Steve Best et ux. to Mike Grabick, | $645, in Windber, dated Nov. 16, 1907. Adeline Hochstetler to Mary Smith, $100, in Addison, dated Oct. 19, 1907. William C. Armstrong et ux. to Simon P. Parkley, $4800, in Lincoln, dated Oct. 26, 1907. | $1, i Jenner, dated Nov. 7, 1907: EL CUTTY _FROSTBURG, MD. BANK [.. DEPONTORY Capital stock. $b Surplus fund.. SAVINGS DEPARTMENT: THREE PER CENT. INTEREST Drafts on all parts of the world. Accounts of individuals and firms invited. Deposits sent by mail and all correspondence given pr tention. PAID ON DEPOSITS. Bank open Saturday nights from 7 to 10 o’clock. ae. OFFICERS: em 3 : Roberdeau Annan. President. Olin Beall. Cashier. DIRECTORS: mmm Robert R. Henderson. Daniel Annan. Duncan Sinclair, Timothy Griffith, Roberdeau Aunan. 50,000.0( 70,000.00 Deposits (over) 1,000,000.00 0 Assets (over).. 1,200,000.00 ympt and careful at- | Meat a Market! 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 TO PLEASE YOU and want you to call and be con- vinced that I canbest supply your wants in the meat line. CASPER WAHL, The Old Reliable Butcher. ® WALK OVER ; SHOE FOR:MEN “FOOTWEAR! ‘We are prepared, as usual, to meet your wants in this line with the largest &7 stock of Fall shoes and rubber goods ever brought to Salisbury. New Win in Men's and Ladies’ Walk-Overs. We have a complete line of ladies’ warm-lined shoes— just the thing for winter wear. Don’t fail to see our large stock of dependable footwear and rubber goods when needing anything in this line. archus & Livengood. See the ir Myles ® $600, in Windber, dated Nov. 15, 1907. (Clalvin W. Ripple to Joseph J. Shaf-| fer, $1700, in Paint bor., dated June 28, | 1907: | J. L. Snyder to S. Kate Snyder, $900, | in (Glencoe, dated March 25, 1907. | William A. Miller et ux. to H. W | Walker et al., $1050, in Somerset twp., | dated Nov. 7, 1907. Henry Musser et ux.to Mary Hamill, $2800, in Meyersdale, dated March 9, 1907. Richard Hughes to William Fergu- son, $600, in Windber, dated Sept. 13, 1907. 1 Adam Rutkowski to Joseph Fargow- ski, $1., in Windber, dated July 30,1907. Wilmore Coal Co. to Adam Rutkow- | ski, $50. in Windber, dated’ July 26, 1907. Some to Yudian Hoicka,™ $575, in| Windber, dated Sept. 6, 1907. C. E. Specht et ux. to 8S. G. Painter, Leonard A. Clark et ux. to Edward V. Babcock, $3000, in Allegeeny, dated | July 5, 1907. i } $1, in Rockwood, dated Nov. 21, 1907. Stoyestown Lodge, I. O. O. F,, to Tillie Rankin et al. $29, in Quemahon- ing, dated Oct. 31, 1907. BADLY MIXED UP. Abraham Brown, of Winterton, N.Y, | had a very remarkable experience; he says: “Doctors got badly mixed up over me ; one said heart disease; two called it kidney trouble; the fourth, blood poison, and the fifth stomach and | liver trouble ; but none of them helped | me ; so my wife advised trying Electric | Bitters, which are restoring me to per- | fect health. One bottle did me more | good than all the five doctors preserib- ed.” Guaranteed for blood poison, weakness and all stomach, liver and kidney complaints, by E. H. Miller, druggist, 50c. 1-1 BUY A TYPEWRITER !—See the Pittsburg Visible, at Tune Star office. None better, no other quite so simple in construction. Holds world’s record ' for speed. Veryeasytooperate. Price very reasonable. P. L. Livexcoon, Agent. DANGER IN ASKING ADVICE. When you have a cough or cold do not ask some one what is good for it, as there is danger in taking some un-! known preparation. Foley's Honey vents pneumonia. yellow package. The genuine is in a | ‘Refuse substitutes, | Aug. H. Kane to Habert M. Habert, Sold by all Druggists. 1-1 L % ant Match Our Prices on Clothing! 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 THE OF 17. $1550, in Windber, dated Nov. 21, 1907. to 12.50. Garfield R. Leslie to Mary E. Leslie, | Boys’ Suits at ®1 75 to 5.00! Come in and let us fit you out. 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 sellfsuch excellent goods for so little money. lk Lick Variety Store, Corduroy Suits for boys from Della Farber to Wilmore Coal Co. 10 to 13 years at $8,00. Very fine Rain Coats for men at $10 A nice new liné 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. Now is the time to -C. T. Hay, Manager. "R.REICH & SON, | DI Sou mers MEYERSDALE, PA. and Tar cures coughs, colds, and pre- Undertaking parlor on Grant St., Salisbury, Pa. L. C. BOYER, Manager. EF Somerset,County and Economy Telephones.