REST POSITS. careful at- vier. Friffith, ty, ure, Car- Sweepers Line, ul gifts SON, DALE, PA. ds! the M. J. nvite you y Goods, ket! tt ened a new ot in Salis- liter’s store. and clean, spect. h and Salt ete. - or Fat Cat- try, Hides, 13t YOU | be con- your wants WAHL, Butcher. BEST FOR JSNESS D KIDNEYS. TAR Vo opiates y and Tar Colds from the bowels. TAR alsiungs re a v h Made-to-Measure CLOTHING! April 2nd, 8rd, 4th. On the above dates we will give free with every suit order of $21.50 to 26.50, a fancy vest worth 4.35, or extra pants worth 3.80. With every suit order of $27.50 to 33.00, a fancy vest (@ 4.70, 5.00 or 5.85, or extra pants worth 4.20 to 5.50. With every suit order of $34.50 to 40. 00, a fancy vest (@ 9. 65 or 6. 00, ar extra pangs “worth from 5.65 to 6.35. The above must be full suits, and the se- lections must be made from Ullman Co.'s book—=—400 samples to select from. Elk Lick Supply Co. ATOM, BC OF SALISBURY. Capital paid in, $50,000. Surplus & undivided profiits, $15,000. & Assets over $300,000. On Time § PIR GENT. INTEREST oeposte. H. H. MausrT, Vice President. : J. L. BarcHUS, President. ALBerT REITZ, Cashier. DIRECTORS: —J. L. Barchus, H. H. Maust, Norman D. Hay, A. M. Sightyy! F. A. Maust, A. E. Livengood, L. L. Beachy. | extra good equipments for pic-- YOUR CHAPS Disappear Like Magic when you use FROST CREAM. Good for hands. Good for your face. -- - Good for your lips. Good for your chaps. Good for girls. Good for ladies. Good for men. Price, 10 & 25c. Then You Will Say; ¢ “Good for Miller, er 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 nicking and sleighing parties. Horses well fed and cared for, at reasonable rates. Somerset County telephone. Our store is chucked full of 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. Lichliter, Salisbury, Pa. That’s what we claim for pure home-ground Chop. "It does not pay to buy imported adulterated feed. The best is the cheapest in the end. We have the best of 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, and deliver goods promptly. West Dans Feed Co. NAR DER PRO SSE SSG uC were ordered for y days’ trial by readers of our advertising in one medium only. 112 only were returned from all causes. It must be assumed that the 2018 people who kept and paid for the washer did so because it was worth more to them than the money it cost. They all had the privilege of returning the ¢¢ EASY *’ at our expense same as you will have if you try one. They kept it because it solved the washing problem for them. You will keep it for the same reason if you try it. They expressed their satisfaction in the most positive 4 amen: terms. We will show extracts from their letters upon your request. Ask for our free book. It tells you why the ¢ EASY’’ is a woman’s machine. Pages 3-20 tell you how to cut washing expense in half and save your clothes whole, white and sweet, the way you like them. Pages 32-34 tell you how washing and bleaching are done in one operation. DODGE & ZUILL, 25 Dillaye Bldg., Syracuse; N. Y, WINDSOR Hl av “A SQUARE FROM EVERYWHERE.” 2 % © 9 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. BERKEY & SHAVER, Attorneys-at-Liaw, SOMERSET, PA. Coffroth & Ruppel Building. ERNEST O. KOOSER, Attorney-At-Law, SOMERSET, PA. R.E.MEYERS, Attorney-at-T.aw, DISTRICT ATTORNEY + BSOMYRSET, PA. Office in Court House. W. H. KOONTZ. KOONTZ & OGLE Attorneys-At-L.aw, SOMERSET, PENN’A J. G.OGLE office opposite Court House. VIRGIL R. SAYLOR, Attorney-at-Law, SOMERSET, PA. Office in Mammoth Block. DR.PETER L. SWANK, : Physician and Surgebdbns. ELK LICK, PA. ” Successor to Dr. E. H. Perry. E.C.SAYLOR, D. D. 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- gserted in the best possible manner. Baltimore & Ohio R. R. LOW RATE—ONE WAY COLONIST FARES TO PRINCIPAL POINTS IN CALIFORNIA, ARIZONA, IDAHO, BRITISH BCoLuMBIA, MEXICO, NEW MEXICO, NE- » VADA, OREGON, WASHINGTON. ON SALE DAILY UNTIL APRIL 29,1003, INCLUSIVE. For tickets and full information call : bow: \be Sa pA the |S or money refunded. on or address ticket agents, Baltimore & Ohio R. R. 3-26 The Cough Syrup that ny rids the system of a cold by Aging as a cathartic on the bowels is BEES LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUP Bess is the original | Jalaiiry Stik sough arid: SOLD BY ELK LICK PHARMACY. P.L LIVENGOOD, Notary Public. 3 : Star Office, Salisbury Pa. DEEDS, MORTGAGES, PENSION VOUCHERS, AGREEMENTS, WILLS, ETC., CAREFULLY | £ ATTENDED TO. Special Attention to Claims, Collections and Marriage License Applications. FULL LINE OF LEGAL BLANKS ALWAYS ON HAND. NELLIE REIBER, (Graduate Dressmaker, SALISBURY, PA. All kinds of plain and fancy sewing done to order at reasonable rates. Sew- ing room at residence, Beachy avenue. For Agents. A Success. “THE OLD WORLD AND ITS WAYS’ Wm. Jennings Bryan 576 Imperial Octavo Pages. 251 Superb En- gravings Jrom photographs taken by Col. ryan. ecounts his trip around the world and his visits to all nations.. Greatest book of travel ever written. Most suc- cessful book of this gencration. 41,000 called for in 4 months. rite us for sample Toponss of first 100 agents em- ployed. The people buy it eagerly. The agent’s harvest. Outfit FREE.—Send fifty cents to cover cost of mailing and handling. Address THE THOMPSON PUBLISHING CO., 8t. Louis, Mo. Administrator’s Notice. Estate of Soloman Meese, Deceased, late of + Elk Lick township, Somerset county ,Pa. Letters of administration on the above estate having been granted to the under- Signed, notice is hereby given to all persons indebted to said estate to make immediate paymen$; and those having claims against the sam@ to on them duly aut cated for settlement, to the undersigned, at his residence in Elk Lick township, on Fri- day, April 10th, 1908. JAMES MAUST, 4-9 ion FOR SALE! Grocery and Restaurant Doing a Prosperous Business. The undersigned, owing to poor health, desire to sell their well-patron- ized and prosperous grocery and res- taurant business. The business is a very desirable one, as the building in which it is located can be rented at a reasonable figure, and nearly four acres of ground go with it that is highly adapted to market gardening. The finest of spring water on the premises also many choice fruit trees and jsmall fruit. Business amounted to nearly $7,000 during the past year, and trade increasing right along. Poer health the only reason for selling. For terms and full particulars, ap- ply to MvurpHY Bros. tf Elk Lick, Pa. CATTLE FOR SALE!—One fine yearling Durham Bull, also some good fresh Cows. Apply to C. B. Dickey, Elk Lick, Pa. 4-2 COW FOR SALE !—One fine, young, fresh cow, Jersey and Durham. Apply to A. L. Williams, Elk Lick, Pa. 4-2 WHEN A MAN TELLS YOU it does not pay to advertise, he is simply" ad- .| mitting that he is conducting a busi- ness that is not worth advertising, a business conducted by-a man unfit to do business, and a business which, should be advertised for sale. tf Millinery Opening. The Zufall Company an- nounce to the ladies of Salis- bury that they now occupy the room next door to the postoffice, in the new Naugle building, Meyersdale, Pa. We want you to consider this a personal in- vitation for you and your friends to attend our Spring and Sum- mer Opening of Pattern Hats, Thursday and Friday, March 26th and 27th, 1908. THE ZUFALL COMPANY, Meyersdale, Pa. Next Door to Postoffice, Naugle Building. THE DRINKING HOUSE OVER THE WAY. The room was so cold, so cheerless and bare, With its rickety table and one broken chair, And its curtainless window with hardly a pane To keep out the snow, the wind and the rain. A cradle stood empty, pushed up to the wall, And how that d the saddest of all. In the old rusty stove the fire was dead; There was snow on the floor at foot of the bed. And there all alone a pale woman was ly- ing, You need not look twice to see she was dy- ing; Dying of want—of hunger and cold. Shall I tell you the story—the story she told? “No, ma'am, I’m no better, my cough is so bad; It’s wearing me out, though, and that makes me glad, For it’s wearisome living” when one’s alone, And heaven, they tell me, is just like a home. ‘Yes, ma’am, I’ve a ‘husband, he’s some- where about; I hoped he’d come in fore the fire wentout; But I guess he’s gone where he’s likely to stay— 1 mean the drinking house over the way. It was not so always, I Hope you won’t think Too hard of him, lady, it’s only the drink. I know he’sk ind-hearted, for oh, how Lhe cried For our poor little baby the morning it died! You see he took sudden, and grew very bad, And we had no doctor—my poor little lad! For his father had gonegnever meaning to all stay, 1 am sure, to the drinking house over the way. ¢And when he came back ’twas_ far in the night, > And I was so tired and sick with the fright, Of staying so long with my Laby alone, And it cutting my heart with its pitiful moan. He was cross with the drink, poor fellow, 1 know It was that, not his baby, that bothered him So; But he swore at the child, as panting it lay, And went back to the drinking house over the way. “I heard the gate slam and my heart seem- ed to freeze Like ice in my bosom, and there on my knees By the side of the cradle, all shivering, I stayed; I wanted my mother, I cried and I prayed: “The clock it struck two fore my baby was still, And my thoughts they went back to the home on the hill, Where my happy girlhood had spent its short day, Far, far from the drinking house over the way. “Could I be that girl! I, the heart-broken wife, There watching alone, while that dear little life Was going so fast that I had to bend low To hear if he breathed, ’twas so faint and so slow. “Yes, it was easy, his dying, he just grew more white, And his eyes opened wider to look for the light. As his father came in twas just break of day, Came in'from the drinking house over the way. “Yes, ma'am, he was sober, at least, mostly I think, He often stayed that.way to wear off the drink, And I know he was sorry for what he had done, : For he set great store by our first little sor. “And straight did he come to the cradle bed where Our baby lay dead, so pretty and fair; I wondered that I could have wished him to stay When there was a drinking house over the way. “He stood quiet a while, did not understand, You see, ma’am, till he touched the little cold hand; ~ Oh, then came the tears, and he shook like a leaf, And said: “Twas the drinking had all the grief.” “The neighbors were kind and the minister came, And he talked of seeing my baby again; And of the bright angels—I wonder if they Could see into that drinking house over the way. “And I thought when my baby was put in the ground, And the man with the spade was shaping the mound, If somebody only would help me to-save My husband, who stood by my side at the grave. “If it were not so handy, the drink! The men that make laws, ma’am, surely don’t think Of the hearts they would break, of the souls they would slay, When they licensed that drinking house over the way. “I've been sick ever since, it can not be" long; : Be pitiful, lady, to him when I'm gone; He wants todo right, but you never would think How weak a man grows when he’s fond of the drink. “And it’s tempting him here and it’s tempt- ing him there; made Four places I’ve, counted in this very square Where a man can get whiskey by night and by day, Not to reckon the drinking house over the way. ‘There’s a verse in the Bible the minister read: ‘No drunkard shall enter heaven,’ it said, And he is my husbandand I love him so, And where I am going I want him to go. Our baby and I will both want him there; Don’t you think the dear Jesus will hear to my prayer? And please, when I'm gone, ask some one to pray For him at the drinking house over the way. —Sturgis (Ky.) Democrat. mn BEST HEALER IN THE WORLD, Rev. I. Starbird, of East Raymond, Maine, says: “I have used Bucklen’s world. I use it, too, withgreat success in my veterinary business.” Price 25c. | | at E. H. Miller’s drug store. 4-1 A BOOST FROM NEVADA. Our Political Platform Read With Interest in the Far West—Sam Kimmel’s Mining Prospects. WELLINGTON, NEV., March 11, 1908. Mr. P. L. Livengood, Elk Lick, Pa. My Dear CousiN:—I read your an- nouncement in THE STAR, as a candi- date for the Stste Legislature, with much pleasure. Therefore, I feel like offering congratulations, for I admire the stand yourhave taken; first of all that you only ask for a seat by meang that are honorable and manly. Also the stand you have taken in regard to the liquor traffic; local option, in my opinion; is one of the first steps towards national prohibition, which I heartily endorse, and may God speed the day for its realization. The liquor traffic is a nuisance, a blot on civilization and the pringipal foundation for much un- happiness, poverty and crime in our fair land. Our penal institutions are crowded with unfortunates that can trace the beginning of their criminal careers by imbibing too freely of the flowing bowl. No right thinking people will deny the above assertions, because they are the simple and naked truth. I do hope the majority of the voters of Somerset county are of the proper thinking kind, and will express their true sentiments at the polls in accordance, and elect to office such candidates that are seeking honorable places by honorable means only, to represent the state and county, or rather its people, by showing their colors before election and abiding by them thereafter. Any candidate that is trying to “carry water on both shoulders” before election, is only fit to misrepresent the people and office, and should be made go away back and sit down. If I had any idea that you are seek- ing a seat in the Legislative halls of your great commonwealth simply to become a grafter and a bribe-taker, and for personal gain only, I would not wish you success. However, your past journalistic career should be sufficient proof to the voters of Somerset county that you are neither a dodger, nature- fakir, mollycoddle or grafter. There- fore, no voter expressing the true senti- ment can fail to admire your principles, ability and honesty, and vote in ac- cordance. I am yours very truly, 8. A. KIMMEL. P.S. Have been engaged the past year at prospecting for the ‘‘precious stuff,” and in developing a claim since July 1st. Am one of the discoverers and locaters of a number of what would indicate to be copper mining claims, judging from surface outcrops and assays. Mr. Warren, my mining partner, and myself, have been direct- ing our finances, and, other necessary energies in driving a tunnel, and have accomplished more than 400 feet of tunnel and other lateral work since July 1st. We have developed an ore body 30 feet wide. Conservative sam- pling shows 4 feet to. carry 20 per cent. zinc. The remainder averages 18 per cent. lead and 5 per cent. zine, and carries gold values up to $5 per ton, and a small percentage of copper and silver. The unfortunate part for us is that it turned into lead and zinc instead of copper. A copper proposition of such magnitude and same percentage would mean a regular and profitable producer, one we could operate without forming a stock company, and would be much sought after by the copper kings, al- though 35 miles from railroad, and the nearest smelters at San Francisco and Salt Lake-City. Perhaps we are in the field too early for the kind of ore we have developed, or maybe our tunnel is either 400 feet too long or driven 400 years too soon. If you are elected to the Legis- lature, would like to have you use your good influences towards having about two cubic miles consisting of our min- ing possessions removed to the vicinity of Pittsburg. S.A. KR. More Evidence Against the Crime of Vaceination. A victim of vaccination, a 9-months- old girl, died in Philadelphia on Friday night from blood poisoning, which is declared to have been the direct result of her inoculation with the vaccine virus, three weeks ago. Before she was vaccinated, the baby was strong and healthy, but two days after the operation, sores broke out in various parts of the body, and the doctor who was called in and who treated her up until the time of her death, said that the blood poisoning was caused entirely by vaccination. The matter has been brought to the attention of the secre- tary of the Anti-Vaccination League, and it will be investigated thoroughly. The secretary declared that the case was only one of hundreds where small children were made the victims of the practice of vaccination. The league is endeavoring to have vaccination en- tirely abolished.—Alexandria Gazette. For Assembly, vote for P, L. Liven- good, the candidate who is pledged to do all in his power for the repeal of Pennsylvania’s compulsory vaccination Arnica Salve for several years on my | old army wound, and other obstinate | | sores, and find it the best healer in the | law, if nominated and elected. These | vaccination murders must cease. a IF YOUR BUSINESS will not stand advertising, advertise it for sale. You cannot afford to follow a business that | will not stand advertising. ee ed