out ick NG UV etre. aes cot J td > use, one; t just ishing nents ? rooden or re- ss air LASY Pages I. Y. J Hw oo - Gountp Star, VOL. XIV. SALISBURY. ELK LICK POSTOFFICE. PA. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 13. 1908. N15, =—33—= PER CENT. =O I= MEN'S HATS AND LADIES’ SHOES. SPECIAL SALE FOR TWO WEEKS, February 1st to 15th. Any hat you pick will be sold at 33 per cent. less than the marked price. All RicnArRDSON make of Ladies shoes will be closed out at 33 per cent. below the regular price. FIR IK SUPPLY 0, Nil ry, Penna. T AT OF SALISBURY. Capital paid in, $50,000. Surplus & undiyided profiits, $15,000. Assets over $300,000. On Time d PIR GENT. INTEREST bese J. L. BarcHus, President. H. H. MausT, Vice President. ALBERT REITZ, Cashier. > DIRECTORS: —J. L. Barchus, H. H. Maust, Norman D. Hay, A. M. Litt, F. A. Maust, A. E. Livengood, LL. Boachy- Our store is chucked full of Everything Good to eat, and our prices are always fair. We aim to please our customers by courteous treat- % ment and prompt delivery of goods. Call to see us. Very Respectfully, S. A. Liar Salisbury, Pa. XOIXED SRDS @» That's what we claim for pure home-ground Chop. It ® does not pay to buy imported adulterated feed. The S$ best is the cheapest in the end. We have the best of ig 3 everything in the Flour, Feed and Grocery line. Binder Twine and Phosphate! Buy your Binder Twine from us, also Phosphate for & your fall crops. We have the best of it, and our prices ) are always fair. We handle the choicest and purest of country produce, 2 and deliver goods promptly. Jest Sl Da ay Feed Co. BHBHBBBOBROLBEBBE =A present duty: STAR. & & Ed # & ® & & : & : ® 8 & : & 8 & &® i & i . 2 2 2 ES & & a & & & BERKEY & SHAVER, Attorneys-at-Liaw, SOMERSET, PA, Coffroth & Ruppel Building. ERNEST 0. KOOSER, *i Attorney-At-Liaw, SOMERSET, PA. R. E. MEYERS, DISTRICT ATTORNEY Attorney-at-Liaw, 804 =RSET, PA. Office in Court House. W. H. KOONTZ. KOONTZ & OGLE Attorneys-At-Law, J. G.0OGLE SOMERSET, PENN’A ’ Office opposite Court House. VIRGIL R. SAYLOR, Attorney-at-Liaw, SOMERSET, PA. Office in Mammoth Block. DR. PETER IL. SWANK, Physician and Surgeon, ELK LICK, PA. Successor to Dr. E. H. Perry. | publican voters at the Primary Election to Pola Amoumncements Candidates, Toke Notice. . Announcements under this head will be ran until the date of fhe Spring primary for $5.00, Additional matter will be insert- ed for 5 cents per line, each insertion, ex- cept for candidates who carry no standing announcement in this paper, who will be charged 10 cents per line, each insertion. Portrait cuts will be inserted at the rate of 25 cents per inch, each insertion. For AssEMBLY, P. L. LIVENGOOD, OF SALISBURY BOROUGH. I solicit the votes and influence of the Re- be held April 11th,1908. 1 am for local op- tion legislation and against the licensing of saloons, and I don’t care who knows it. P. L. LIVENGOOD. To THE VOTERS OF SOMERSET COUNTY. At the request of a large number of pa- trons of the Prothonotary’s Office. I have consented to be a candidate for re-election to said office. Thanking my many friends throughout the county for their kindness in the past, I again, most respectfully so- licit your support and influence at the Re- publican Primary Election to be held April 11, 1908. Very respectrully, 4-9 CHARLES C. SHAFER. KE. C.SAYLOR, D. b. 8, SALISBURY, PA Office in Mrs. M. Dively Residence, Grant Street. Special attention given to the preserva- tion of the natural teeth. Artificial sets in- serted in the best possible manner. o V ¢ a> eN “A SQUARE FROM EVERYWHERE.” >o®WeD An excellent restaurant where good service combines with low: prices. ROOMS $1.00 PER DAY AND UP. The only moderate priced hotel of reputation and consequence in PHILADELPHIA. Wagner's LIVERY, Salisbury, Penna. Frank Wagner, Propr. Harvey Wagner, Mgr. Good horses, and good 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. YOUR CHAPS Disappear Like Magic when you use FROST CREAM. Good for hands. Good for your face. Good for your lips. Goea for your chaps. Good for girls. Good for ladies. Good for men. Price, 15 & 20. Then You Will +4 “Good for Mil I Nay: | LOX Subscribe for Tog 8 SS RH SS ler, The Drnggist!” To Tre REPUBLICAN VOTERS OF SOMERSET COUNTY. I hereby announce myself as a Republi- can candidate for the nomination of Coun- ty Commissioner at the primary election to be held Saturday, April 11th, 1908. Your support is respectfully solicited. | 4-9 RUSH S. MOMILLEN. For COMMISSIONER, P. K. MOORE, Or MippLECREEK TowNsHIP. Subject to the decision of the Republican Primary Election to be held April 11, 1908. I kindly solicit the support of the Republi- can voters. - For CouNTYy COMMISSIONER, C. C. HECKLE, Or SumMmIT TOWNSHIP. The support and influence of the Republi- cans of Somerset county is respectfully so- licited at the Primary Election to be held Saturday, April 11, 1908. ( For County COMMISSIONER, JOSIAH SPRCHT. Or QuEMAHONING TowNsHIP. To the voters of Somerset county: At the request of a large number of pa- trons of the Commissioners’ office, I have consented to be a candidate for re-election to said office. Thanking my many friends throughout the county. for their kindness in the past, I again most respectfully so- licit their support and influence at the coming Republican Primary Election to be held April 11,1908. Very Respectfully, JOSIAH SPECHT. FoR SHERIFF, J. W. HANNA, Or NEw CENTERVILLE. I solicit your support for nomination on the Republican Ticket, at the Primary Election to be held on Saturday, April 11, 1908. THE SPREAD OF LOCAL OPTION. Without doubt the greatest move- ment for civic righteousness and moral reform inaugurated in recent years is local option. Like a giant ocean wave it is sweeping over the country. Where adopted it has awakened the people to the fact of its wonderful influence for uplifting the brotherhood of man and bettering his ~ condition materially, morally and spiritually. Although a sporting town at the head of the column, the sentiment in Windber is growing like a vine, and it has come to stay. Many of the best citizens of our town are looking forward to the time when such a law will be placed on the statute books of the state. When the citizens of a township, town or county, instead of the state, shall say whether licensed houses shall exist in such towns and districts. —Windber Era. Handed Him a Proper One. Said the speaker at a lawyer's din- ner: “We lawyers couldn’t do better than to resolve in the new year to be gentler in our cross-examinations. Rudeness in cross-examinations never pays. This is a truth that I once saw proved in a damage suit. In this suit a cross-examining lawyer shouted at a witness in overalls: ‘You,there, in the overalls, how much are you paid for telling untruths? ” “ ‘Less than you are,’ the witness re- torted, ‘or you’d be in overalls, too.” ” ely SUFFERING & DOLLARS SAVED MIXED OFTEN. This Simple Home-Made Mixture. Some remarkable stories are being! told about town and among the coun- try people coming in of this simple home-made mixiure 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. as a dose one teaspoonful after meals and at bedtime. No change need be made in your usual diet, but drink plenty of good water. This mixture, writes one authority in a leading Philadelphia newspaper, has a peculiar tonic effect upon the kidneys; cleansing the clogged up pores of the eliminative tissues, forc- ing the kidneys to sift and strain from thie 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. Loeal Option i in Somerset County. Tbe Anti-Saloon League has begun active work in this county. A conven- tion will be held in the Assembly room of the court house, in Somerset, on Thursday, Feb. 20,1908. Two sessions have been arranged, one at 2 p. m. and another at 7:30 p. m. State Superin- tendent 8. E. Nicholson, of Harrisburg, will deliver an address. as well as other noted state workers. It promises to be a great convention. The purpose of this convention is organization and co-operation in securing the nomina- tion of Assemblymen from this county pledged for local option. This move- ment is rapidly gaining ground, and it is believed many friends of local option will be in attendance” at this conven- tion to hear these noted speakers and plan for aggressive work before the primary election. FOR RHEUMATIC SUFFERERS. The quick relief from pain afforded by applying Chamberlain’s Pain Balm makes it a favorite with sufferers from rheumatism, sciatica, lame back, lum- bago, and deep seated and muscular pains. For sale at Miller’s Drug Store. 3-1 grein Prohibition’s Growth. Not since the days of Abolition has any great ethical principle made such a fight for recognition by our political system as Prohibition has within the last few years. Like the Abolition movement, the struggle for Prohibition had an insignificant local beginning, and was, at first, a vital principle only to women’s societies and unimportant men, who were led by a isingle individ- ual of extraordinary power. But after Garrison came Wendell Phillips, Lucy Larcom, Harriet Beecher Stowe and others, whose eloquence made new converts to:their cause every day, and in due time set the whole country afire with it. Likewise, Prohibition took the mantle of Neal Dow and cast it over the shoulders of John B. Gough, and after him came a score of others, with the late Francis Murphy among them. Abolition lived half a century, then reached its zenith and expired amid the blood and smoke of a great war which it had stirred up. But that war was its creation and its servant, doing its work, and died only because its work was done. Prohibition has ex- isted half a century now, and perhaps has not arrived at its zenith, but it has reached a tremendous height and is spreading all over the country in leaps and bounds greater than those of Abo- lition, except in its later days. Its issue will not be left to the sword, as was that of its greater forerunner, but it will put its trust in the ballot and in the war of ballots and there will surely come a Gettysburg.—Washington Post. SIMPLE REMEDY FOR LA GRIPPE. La grippe coughs are dangerous, as E. 8. Loper, of Marilla, N. Y., says: “IT am a carpenter and have had many severe cuts healed by Bucklen’s Arnica | Salve. It has saved me suffering and | | | salve I haveever found.” sores dollars. , ulcers, fever sores, 25¢c. fat BE. H. piles Miller’s store 3- drug It is by far the best healing | ious results need be feared. Heals burns, | eczema and | ol they frequently develop into pneu- monia. Foley’s Honey and Tar not only stops the cough, but heals and strengthens the lungs so that no ser- Druggists Iear Much Praise for | Horrisle Accident to LeviCochramm, The people of Salisbury and vicinlgy | were greatly grieved, Tuesday ev ening, to learn of a most distressing accidast jibat befell Levi Cochrane, Tuésdgy afternoon, the particulars of which am about as follows: Some mining ears were being rum down the tramway that leads from tise Sechler opening to the tipple at Mam chants mine No. 2. and Levi was em one of the cars, The descent beigg quite rapid, the cars usually run ste high speed over part of the tramwag, and Levi became alarmed and though® the man in charge of the trip had lest control of the cars. He therefess jumped off, thinking thereby to aveall death or serious injury. But just as he jumped, the cars entered a vesp narrow cut, and he was caught be- tween the cars and a bank of earth He was rolled and dragged for a coe- siderable distance, which resultedam dislocating one of his hips, and alse breaking the bone near the hip joint. His injuries are of sucl a serious ne ture that he had to be sent to Pitts burg, where the most skiliful of hes pital and surgical treatment is to We had. The unfortunate young man is a ses of Mr. and Mrs. Archie Cochrane, whe seem to be having more than their share of misfortune with their sone Charles, the eldest of their boys, lost = leg some time ago as the result of & mine accident, and Levi, who is about 20 years of age, will be fortunate im deed if he escapes death or being e cripple for life as a result of Tues day’s accident. ! Ministerial Association Meeting. At the monthly meeting of the Som- erset County Lutheran Minesteriat Association, held at Rockwood, last Monday, the following resolutions were unanimously adopted : 1st. That the Secretary be instructe@ to write the Hon. A. F. Cooper, mem- ber of Congress fon this district, peti- tioning him to give his support to the Littlefield bill to prohibit the shipment of intoxicating liquors into terretory under prohibitory laws. 2nd. That this association endorses the work of iha Anti-Saloon League in its efforts to secure the enactment of & local option law. 3rd. That we pledge our support to The Anti-Saloon movement for a coun- ty convention of the friends of Local Option, to be held in the Assembly room of the Court House, at somerset, Thursday afternoon and evening, Feb. 20, 1908. for the purpose of organization and co-operation in securing the nomi- nation and election of Assemblymen from this county pledged for local option, and call upon the pastors and members of all churches to be present and take part in the meeting. CHRONIC CONSTIPATION CURED. One who suffers from chronic consti- pation is in danger of many serious ail- ments. Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup cures chronic constipation, as it aids di- gestion and stimulates the liver and bowels, restoring the natural action of these organs. Commence taking it to- day and you will feel better at once. Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup does not nauseate or gripe,and is very pleasant to take. Refuse substitutes. Sold by All Druggists. 341 How the Lawyer Cleared his Client. A lawyer was defending a man ac- cused of house-breaking, and said te the court: “Your Honor, I submit that my cli- ent did not break into the house at all. He found the parlor window open and merely inserted his right arm and re- moved a few trifling articles. Now. my client’s arm is not himself,and [ fail to see how you can punish the whole individual for an offense:com- mitted by only one of his limbs.” “That argument,” said the judge, “ie very well put. Following it logically. I sentence the defendent’s arm to one year’s imprisonment. He can accom pany it or not, as he chooses.” The defandant smiled, and withthix lawyer’s assistace unscrewed his cork arm, and, leaving it in the dock, walk ed out. CHILD'S LIFE SAVED BY CHAM- BERLAIN’S COUGH REMEDY. Mrs. John Englehardt, of Gera, Mich. tells of the anxious moments spent over her little two-year-old daughter who bad taken a hard cold resulting ie croup. She says: “I am satisfied that if it had not been for Chamberlain Cough Remedy she would have choked to death. I gave this medicine every ten minutes, and she soon began The gen- uine Foley’s Honey and Tar contains no harmful dru ,and is in a e substitute throw up the phlegm. I can recom mend it in the highest terms, as I have 10ther child hat v cured