sme m—— . - Don't This, 1+" at I have = . )YOERIES, am offering ou JR MONEY, yurteous ser- 0. : is “increasing idence 1 can ling. | Pres, Town. A a, ” § Coats! @8 you cannot afford to miss. ONE. FOURTH OFF fon all Ladies’ and Misses § Also Great, Big §! Reductions on all Ladies’ and Misses Suits! Onie- -Fourth offonall Men's and Boys’ Ove rcoats! Considering our extra fine line, this is an opportunity. @» CC. HARTLEY. sed. The e best of &8 ly! y produce, % i ant #0 yare.— ° dd pieces. > sither Christ- RS, DALE, PA. JIA ry and yellow. e signs of the 3 have kidney it’s why they ailing a long rouble may be regularity. If ed to at once. king the cause and a, Tenn. 9 General Msrchants} We carry a full line of dry goods, notions; hats, caps, shoes and rubbers. Our grocery department is well filled hs oat CH, TURN OVER A NEW LEAF AND BUY YOUR DHYGS THE CITY oRls STORE, CLUTTON BROS. YOU'LL rids the system of a cold with the best of everything in canned goods, by acting as a cathartic on the and dried fruits. : MEAT MARKET. We carry at all times the best line of fresh meats, butter and cheese. Elk Lick Supply Co, ‘General Merchants. bowels ia BEES LAXATIVE Bees is the original” lazative sesgh ma hs Soin? caveying the cold of (hroogh els, © cold o satoral channel ah * Guarasteed to satisfaction ag money re SOLD BY E, H. MILLER. EXE rons fa . If you were going to Cross a desert which would re-: require several days, you would provide necessary food &8 and water before starting, to last until you reached the & other side. Is it not just as wise and important to pre pare for the deserts of life, such as sickness, “hard times” R and old age by saving. Decide you are going to save, & NOW, then call and start an account with us. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF SALISBURY, Erk Lick, Pa. Pou are respectfully inbited to call at our office for the purpose of examining samples amd taking prices of En- grabed Calling Cards, FInbitations, etc. Our toork the best, styles the latest and prices the Iotuest. COUGH SYRUP Pay For Lack of Grit. If he who hesitates is lost, As some old sage has writ, It surely is a fearful cost To pay for lack of grit. To save yourself is best. Lost, Found, Ete. A Fearful Cost to Don’t hesitate if you would win; Just put your Advertisements in (Rates Furnished on Request). WANT COLUMN. For Sale, For Rent, White Dress Stuffs, Embroid- eries, Laces, Muslin Underwear, "| Bedding and Table Linen, at the lowest rock-bottom prices. Sale begins Jan. 15th, at Miller & Collins’s. WANTED, MEN AND WOMEN TO SWEAR and affirm before the under- signed, when they have documents to which lawful affidavits are required. I also draw up all manner of deeds, leases, mortgages, etc., neatly and ac- curately, according to the require- ments of the law. Typewritten work a specialty. A full line of legal blanks always on hand. P. L. LivENGOOD, Notary Public and Conveyancer. Star OFFICE, Elk Lick, Pa. tf "MISERY IN STOMACH And Indigestion Vanishes in Five Minutes and You Feel Fine. Why not start now—today, and for- ever rid yourself of Stomach trouble and Indigestion? A dieted Stomach gets the blues and grumbles. Give it a good eat, then take Pape’s Diapep- sin to start the digestive juices work- ing. There will be no dyspepsia or belching of Gas or eructations of undi- gested food ; no feeling like a lump of lead in the stomaoh or heartburn, sick headache and Dizziness, and your food will not ferment and poison your breath with nauseous odors. « Pape’s Diapepsin costs only 50 cents for a large case at any drug store here, and will relieve the most obstinate case of Indigestion and Upset Stomach .| in five minutes. There is nothing else better to take Gas from Stomach and cleanse the stomach and intestines, and besides, for assimilation into the blood all your food the same as a sound, healthy stomach would do it. When Diapepsin works, your stom- LOTS FOR SALE?—Three lots front- ing on Ord street, opposite the school dp—and then you feel like eating |drink-sellers are kept busy? house, Apply to'M. H. Boucher, Mey- ersdale, Pa. tf ' Carnival, commencing Satu day, Jan. 9th. eet len addresses of all taxable inhabitants White 15th. Sale begins | Mammoth Yellow cemmencing Saturday, Jan. 9t lin Underwear are 25 to 33 p Prove this statement at Mill 15th. ner’s Mammoth Yellow Carr 9th. and take notice. This year fore. eee A ee rm ginning Saturday, Jan. 9th. ance and White Muslin Unde ginning Jan. 15th. January 9th. ——e—————— WANTED !—Rents to collect, Deeds, | Mortgages, Pension Vouchers, ete, fill out and attest anteed. As long as they last you can buy two papers of pins for one cent, two cards of hooks and eyes for one cent, one paper of | be thoroughly cured of Indigestion. | needles for one cent, at Appel h & Glessner’s Mammoth Yellow FOR SALE !—A few Somerset Coun- ty Directories containing names and county in 1803; also contains township. railroad and mineral map of county; January A dependable suit of clothes worth $10-00 or .$12.50, for $5.98, at Appel & Glessner’s Carnival, . Ladies :—The values in Mus- cent. better than for some years. & Collings White Sale, Jan. Unheard of bargains in every department at Appel &: Gless- val, commencing Saturday, Jan. Miller & Collins's White Sale 3 always causes women to sit up will do so more than ever be- Ten spools of Clark’s O. N. T. A general Mid-Winter Clear | ho! wear Sale is scheduled to take place at Miller & Collins’s, be- Don’t fail to attend the Mam- moth Yellow Carnival, in Mey- ersdale, commencing Saturday, Satisfaction guar- P. L. LIVvENGOOD, ti Star Office. ach rests—gets itself in order, cleans when you come to the table, and what you eat will do you good. Absolute relief from all Stomach Misery is waiting for you as soon as you decide to begin taking Diapepsin. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. r-| The following list contains the more important deeds entered of record since our last&eport: John Copelli to Geiseppe Geraci et al., $200, in Windber. of Daniel Benneret et ux. to John Bee- ner, $600, in Jenner. 50c. each. Star office. soo tf 8. Gower, $1100, in Addison. vo Sm Henry F. Barron et ux. to Walter V. : Miller & Collins’s Annual | Sipe, $450, in Somerset. $400, in Allegheny. F. to Henry Yutzey, $35, in Milford. Kozik, $150, in Windber. h. ley, $10, in Shade. tian Knepp et al., $750, in Larimer. €T | $760, in Meyersdale. er | Orris, $1825, in Windber. tulic et al., $850, in Windber. E. Custer, $875, in Benson. 11- | dale. eradale. $50, in Meyersdale. Elizabeth Algers to 8. P. Geisel, $315, it | in Hooversville. Della M. Levitt to Isaac Paul, in Stoyestown. Saturday Night Reveries. them to pieces with tattoos. day night the ledger closes with a clash, bang, click, goes the key in the lock, man breathes free again. world is all shut out. in, rather. family Bible—and not in the bank. forty. nothing to anybody. God and rake courage.—Exchange. " Samantha McClintock et vir. to Peter Augustus R. Sarver to Ella Sarver, JTrastees Rockwood Lodge I. O. O. Cunningham Longwell et ux. to Paul Johu G. Glessner et ux. to Charles | lers, K. Glessner, $337.50, in Brothersvalley. George C. Pebley et ux, to Rosa Peb- Catharine B. Fechtig et vir. to Chris- E. A. Pheasant et al. to George J. Martin Swanson et ux. to Peter Ko- Elmer J. Lehman et ux. to Walter Samuel D. Livengood’s Assignee to Norman E. Miller, $32,700, in Mejyers- Norman E. Miller to Second National Bank of Meyersdale, $32,700, in Mey- Ellen McGlone et vir. to Wm. Habel, $2,000, Saturday night seems to have the thread for 10c., or 10 yards of | happy faculty of making people human, Lpest ealico for 10c., or 25 pounds of Granulated sugar for $1.00 with every purchase of $5.00 or over, at Appel & Glessner’s Mammoth Yellow Carnival, be- | the iron-doored vault comes to with a It is Saturday night, and the business Homeward, The door {nat has been ajar all r- | the week gently closes behind him, the Shut out? . Shut At home are his treasures, after all, and not in the vault and not in the book—save the record in the old Maybe you are a bachelor, frosty and Then, poor fellow, Saturday night is nothing to you, just as you are Get a wife, blue- | and was wholly cured by six bottles eyed or black-eyed, but above all, true- eyed. Get a little home—no matter | how little—a sofa just to hold two, or to 'two and a half, in it, on a Saturday | night, and then read this paragraph by | | and all Bronchial affections. the light in your wife’s eyes, and thank | $1.00. Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by WHAT IT WOULD DO. The money paid for one glass of beer would pay for one loaf of bread. The money paid for one glass of whisky ‘would pay for one pound of beef. The money paid for two glasses of beer would pay for a half peck of potas toes. The money paid for two glasses of whisky would pay for one pound of coffee. The money paid for three glasses of beer would pay for a quarter of ea pound of tea. The money paid for three glasses of whisky would pay for a fowl. The money paid for four glasses of beer would pay for a dozen of eggs. The money paid for five glasses of whisky would pay for two pounds of butter. The money paid in one month for two glasses of beer a day: would pay for a ton of coal. The money paid in one month for two glasses of whisky a day, would pay for a suit of clothes. The money paid in one year for three glasses of beer a day would pay the rent for a small suite of rooms for one year. The money paid i in one year for three glasses of whisky in a day, would pay for an outfit of household furniture. The money paid in one year for four glasses of beer a day, would#pay for a carriage. The money paid in one year for four glasses of whisky a day, would pay for a horse and harness. ee Thirteen Questions for Thoughtful. 1. What have the saloon-keepers done to improve the condition of the. working class? 2. Have you the more comfortable one triangule will digest and prepare | homes through supporting the drink- seller? 3. Have you fewer jailers and mag- istrates through supporting the saloon- keepers? 4, Are your taxes less because 5. Is bread cheaper ‘because nearly forty millions of bushels of grain go to. the malter instead of the miller? 6. Ts trade improved because money is spent at saloons instead of in clothes, Tell your druggist that you want | furniture and food? Pape’s Diapepsin, because you want. to 7.” Are the articles manufactured by "| brewers and distillers worth the money .that is paid for them? 8. If drink sellers had to keep all the paupers, lunatics and criminals they make, how many of them would be able to keep out of bankruptey? 9. Isthe health of these drinkers of intoxicants better than that of peo- ple who don’t drink? 10. Are the neighborhoods most or- derly and prosperous where the sa- loons are the most numerous? 11. Would your sons and daughters be improved if they were trained up behind saloon-bars? 12, Don’t saloon-keepers generally. vote for those candidates who promise to protect their trade, regardless of every other trade? : 13. If a church were composed of nothing but malters, brewers, disti's saloon-keepers and their assist ants, what influence would’it exert on the drunkenness of the country? Marriage Licenses. John L. Flick and Elsie E. Hay, both Lloyd Uphold et ux. to Lizzie Shultz,| of Jefferson. Sylvester F. Baer, of Allegheny, and Cora C. Shaulis, of Stonycreek. Ulysses B. Miller, of Elk Lick, and Fannie Enos, of Black. Alonzo B. Walters and Cora Ellen Flowers, both of Somerset. Thomas S. Pitt and Lillian M. Wal ler, both of Confluence. Martin L. Boyts and Myrtle M. Mil ler, both of Hooversville. Philip 8. Rhoads and Ida C. Glessner. both of Somerset. Harry F. Yutzey, of Milford, and Jessie M. Shultz, of Jefferson, Harry W. Hitechew, of Johnstown and Christena M. Wentz, West St. Clair twp., Bedford county. Henry Y. Thoman, of Upper Yode: twp., and Alice Sear, of Conemaug! twp., Cambria county. John W. Ross and Annie Colemsry both of Berlin. George J. Smith and Lottie Ross, get their hearts to beating softly as both of Berlin. they used to do before the world turn- ed them into war drums and jarred On Satur- Bruce Henry, of S¢allton, and Hatti. Keenan, of Leisenring, Fayette Co. James J. Miller and Kate L. Branta- na, both of Black. Paul Grossman and Lillian B. Clay- comb, both of Somerset. Henry Keim, of Davenport, Neb., anc Annie Snyder, of Rockwood. A HORRIBLE HOLD-UP. “About ten years ago my brother wa: “held up” in his work, health and hap- . piness by what was believed to be hope- less Consumption,” writts W. R. Lips- comb, of Washington, N.C. “He too} all kinds of remedies and treatmen: from several doctors, but found no hel; till he used Dr. King’s. New Discovery. He is a well man today.” It’s quick t. relieve, and ie surest cure for weak o sore lungs,} 3morrhages, Coughs anc Colds, Bronchitis, LaGrippe, Asthm: 50¢c. anc | Elk Lick Pharmacy. 2-1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers