VOL. VIII. SALISBURY. ELK LICK POSTOFFICE, PA., THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1903. + NO.52. “Sole” Satistying! Purse Soothing! Why talk about Shoes when all you have to do is to come in, and we will show you all that is per- fection in the Shoe line? We Are Selling ; Great Deal of What? Why, Thompson's Home- made Bread, just the kind that mother bakes. large 10 cent loves for 25 cents, or 14 for $1.00. We Give Coupons Three but only a few, have been doing all their advertising in outside sheets and catch-penny schemes of various sorts. That kind of advertising doesn’t pay very well; and furthermore, gentle- | men, it isn’t right ; it isn’t fair; it isn’t generous nor square. There are always times in every man’s life when his home paper can be of much service to him, and there is nothing that affords an editor more pleasure than when he can be of ser- vice to his friends. But some men never appreciate an editor’x good will until it is too late. The things he does and says that piease them are soon forgotten, but they never forget a mistake that an editor. as well as all other human beings, will occasionally fool legislature, making vaccination compulsory; but in most of the towns of the state there are not enough fools and tyrants to enforee it. Instead of health boards issuing edicts to vaccinate, would it not be far a better and more effective plan to issue sanitary instructions, informing the people how to diet themselves and what other sensible precautions to take against the spread of smallpox and other contsgious disease? We think it would. : Pains in the Stomach. Like toothache, this is not a danger- ous, but a decidedly unpleasant ail- ment. Persons who are subject to attacks of it will be pleased to know FOUR TRACKS FOR B. & 0. Millions to Be Spentto Make the System One of the Country’s Best. From Chicago it is announce@ semi-officially that the management of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad has determined to have a four-track line reaching from that city to the sea board, and that millions will be spent to make the system one of the best im the country. The proposed improve- ments, it is said, will reduce the dis- tance between Chicago and Pittsburg by eighty miles, and also the distance to Baltimore, Philadelphia and New York by an equal or a greater distance. It is stated that in the work of re- construction of the system, which was al Port One of the make. Thus some men will nurse their | that prompt relief may be had by taking | bankrupt, and discredited in 1886, = 3 nek . . prejudices until they die. Then the |a dose or two of Chamberlain’s Colic, tatal of over $80,000,000 has already beem Pe Attractions k oh all ( 0 01 00 editor will write nice obituary notices, | Cholera and Diarrhea Remedy. This expended, while the plans now in com- queeze . : ; 0r 0, 0. all ‘ » | mentioning all their good qualities and | remedy is equally valuable for children, templation call for enough more to foot ge; so of our Shoes is the price. Style ipnaring hele meanness, after which | and when redaned with water and op FIL 100 000: rie is the nok Ro litor. : ; . the bereaved relatives will sometimes | sweetened is pleasant to take. For |Sfupendous undertaking ever carrie oh and comfort are others. Bo you heed not buy all buy a few extra copies of the paper and | sale by E. H. Miller. out by any railroad company in the e— less —— - Ey at one time. hand the editor a few dollars; bat re re world, barring the Pennsylvania. The more frequently will forget to offer a They Will Dwell in Zion. The proposed improvements, it ‘is stance, 7 We remain your servants. | cent. But such is life. Prof. C. C. Ellis, formerly a Bedford RanouneR; oy use the old South Penn always ct > . ry . > 3 In conclusion we only wish to say te : ieite | TOUte, started some years since by the If you It you find a Pr 1ce below ours, you will find that we would like to have an adver- ny ii rae Vanderbilts in an attempt to war or for W ) Thompson {0 tisement from every business firm in| ominently connected with that sect, | "82ist the Pennsylvania by building = eo . [] EDA of ning Over KES. he Trusts in Retu 1- and Sunshine=—— ar 3 the quality below, also. The latest thing out in Shoe Polish. Blocking, dauber and polish put up neatly in a box. No liquid dressing to spill, no soiled hands. Elk Lick Supply Co. oT 7. RST INATIONAL BANK «OF SALISBURY. =< CAPITAL, $50,000. No. 6106. : Modern fire and burglar proof safe and vault, affording absolute security. Offers every accommodation consistent : with safe and prudent banking. OrriciRrs :—J. L. Barchus, President ; H. H. Maust, Vice President; Albert Reitz, Cashier. : Directors: —J. L. Barchus, L. I.. Beachy, H. H. Maust, A. F. Speicher, A. M. Lichty, A. E. Livengood, I'. A. Maust. a RE RS I RE RRR ANOTHER VOLUME COMPLETED. Annual Message to Our Patrons and Readers. This edition completes volume No. 8 of Tur SrAr, and we are pleased to say that we will begin volume 9 under much brighter prospects than we could see at the beginning of any of the preceding volumes. Notwithstanding the fact that the general business of this community has been mueh poorer during the year 1902 than it was in 1901, the business of THE STAR,” never- theless, was much greater during the year just closed than during any other year of its existence. The increase is due partly to our own hustling and partly to the hustling of up-to-date merchants. The volume of business done in this town depends to some extent on the condition of the coal trade; but it depends at least as much. and we believe more, on the amount of energy put forth by our business men. Some of our merchants did far more business in 1902 than they did in 1801, although the coal trade during the last year was nothing to brag on. The merchants who are enjoying a greatly increased business are the ones who have in- creased their advertising. Our two best examples of this are probably Barchus & Livengood and Druggist E. H. Miller. These firms report. an immense increase in their business, and we can’t help but believe that their liberal and up-to-date advertising policy is principally responsible for it. town—an advertisement in keeping with the business done. We believe we deserve this, and we know that it would be a good thing for the town and the advertisers. Bring in your copy, gentlemen, and help to make our next volume better than the last. Help us and we will help you. As long as we help each other we will have a good town and all do a nice business. ———e Heads Should Never Ache. Never endure this trouble. Use at once the remedy that stopped it for Mrs. N. A. Webster, of Winnie, Va.,— she writes “Dr. King’s New Life Pills wholly cured me of sick headaches I had suffered from for two years.” Cure Headache, Constipation, Biliousness. 25¢ at Miller’s drug store. A Fake Smallpox Scare. Russell Engle, of near Summit Mills, was reported several days ago as being down with smallpox, and some of the timid people of our town at once be- came badly frightened, as Mr. Engle had been seen in some of our stores and shops as late as last Thursday. Some of them made great haste to get vaccinated, and judging from the way some of them spluttered around, one might have thought that they were already vaccinated and that it took on a portion of the body where it interfered with their sitting down. But the scare has partially subsided, as reliable information since. received has it that Mr. Engle only had a case of rash, and not much of a case of that. Anyway, what’s the use of becoming panic-stricken? Smallpox isn’t nearly was, December 25, married to Miss Emma Nice, of Perkiomenville. The ceremony was performed by Elder Hammond, of Zion City. Miss Nice, as well as Prof. Ellis, is a graduate of Juniata College. Mr. Ellis became acquainted with Miss Nice when she was a student and he a teacher in the college. We wish the bride and groom a happy and long life, but rather desire that he may leave off Dowieism and come back to himself.— Bedford Inquirer. From the above it would seem that even college professors get crazy spells. It’s a wonder that a man seized with the Dowieism craze has enough sense left to get married, and especially to marry one of his own class. But let birds of a feather flock together. In Zion let them dwell until rid of the crazy spell. Ax exchange makes a big ado over the fact that there are only six lawyers in the Massachusetts Legislature. That’s nothing at all, for there is not even one lawyer in heaven. We have ‘it by long distance telephone that an editor landed in heayen several days ago. Just how he got in is not known, but it is supposed that he slipped in at the gate unobserved by St. Peter. Steps were at once taken to eject him, but a close search revealed the fact that there wasn’t a lawyer in heaven to draw up ejectment papers. The editor is still there and says he has come to fill a long felt want. Tue latest whirl of the wheel of progress has developed a daily news- road from Pittsburg to the seaboard. Before it was done a truce was reached through the influence of Wall Street interests, and ever since about sixty miles of grade and several tunnels have been lying idle. A Life at Stake. If you better knew the splendid merit of Foley’s Honey and Tar you would never be without it. A dose or twe will prevent an attack of pneumonia or la grippe. It may save your life. E. H. Miller. Coal Companies Combine. A press dispatch originating at Fair- mont, West Va., says that the Consoli- dated Coal Company, of Georges Creek, Md. ; the Somerset Coal Company, of Somerset, Pa., and the Fairmont Coal Company have consolidated and will hereafter be known as the Consolida- tion Coal Company. with its principidl office in Baltimore. The combined capital is $31,157,000. The combined output is 8,500,000 tons year. ; The deal was consummated in Faie- mont, last week. but the amount paid cannot be learned. C. W. Watson, of Fairmont, president of the Fairmont Coal Company, has been made president of the combination. George DeBoth, also of Fairmont, has been made treasurer and secretary of the new company, The Fairmont Coal Company owned and contracted 25 well-equipped mines. The Consolidated company, it is said, has secured a controlling interest im the other two companies, and as the interests of the B. & O. railroad are the ° i 2 1S e $1 PER A 0] ) They allow no goods to get stale on | as fatal as many other diseases that |[P2Per on board an ocean liner, COn- | came as the Consolidated Coal Com- i 8 . their hands, but keep them moving by | are much more common. “But those taining the latest telegraphic news pany, it pldces the B. & O. in complete i EE - re ES EE ES SEs offering special inducements and in- | ugly marks,’ is what you hear many from all parts of the world as a result control of the seaboard traffic for soft . i : of Marconi’s invention. Contracts for We claim to be the Lowest Pricep WrHiskey House. We really sell vesting liberally in printers’ ink. people exclaim. Yes, you will hear coal. It also assures vast operations * The firms in this town whose busi- | people expressing fear of “those ugly in the Stonycreek township. coal field, whiskey as low as $1.10 per gallon, and mind you ; distilled whiskey—not-a such a service have been concluded Ce Liocon- decoction of chemicals—but of course it’s new and under proof. rk. n for the 1e Home. TS address, 35¢ )RLD, yz, New York. ) RDS edition of | Diction- al is kept times. It expensive is the only onary the RD ITY ng world. ow. Web- th Judges, inters,ete., ntries. bring you pages, ote. JOMPANY LASS. R'S ONAL} : “CasPER’S STANDARD” 10 Year old whiskey is a liquid joy! It is actu- ally produced by honest Tar Heels in the Mountain Section of North Caro- Tina by the old time process. Every drop is boiled over open furnace wood fires, in old style copper stills, in exactly the same way it was made by our grandfathers a century ago. First rate whiskey is sold at $5 to $6 per gal- Ton, but is not any better than “Casrer’s STANDARD.” It is the best produced and must please every customer or we will buy it back with gold—we are incorporated Under the Laws of N. C., with an authorized capital of $100, 000.00 and the Peoples National Bank and Peidmont Savings Bank of Wins- ton-Salem, N. C., will tell you our guarantee is good. This old honest, mild and mellow whiskey is worth one dollar per quart, but to more fully introduce “Casper’s Standard” we offer sample shipments of this brand at half price, (packed in plain sealed boxes) 5 Quarts $2.95, 10 Quarts $5.00, Express Prepaid Anywhere in U. S. All orders and remittances (in stamps, cash or by check, etc.,) as well as requests for confidential price list MUST BE ADDRESSED AS FOLLOWS: : S. C. S. CASPER CO., Winston-Salem, N. C., U. S. A. Main Office and Warehouses: No's, 1045-46 Liberty and 1, 3, 4 and 5 Maple Sts, Whiskey $1: Gallon. L Always ask for * Franklin Mills.” All & Granulated ( ‘| Fertihzer: Lime For Farmers. This lime is especially prepared to be drilled in with the crop, the The best. bread is made of THE FRANKLIN TILLS FINE FLOUR OF THE ENTIRE WHEAT. | eading Grocers sell it. Qo. oo rr EX JETT TWIRNENT TTT ad ARY. ER \ ERAN « same as Phosphate. Write for circular giving full in- formation. RM. DERCHY, Bk Lick, WHEATLET Is Good for The Aged .. TN TN SN SST A A A A | Give a Thought To Nourisfuncnt. Try... K A Tx w AT wr pry \RA Bost Ra 48 Te 1 Be WB 1 {4 T. A kg Pr A The best cereal food ev ket, It fora: OUTRUN, | Sold in 2-1b. packages by ZaanasanannaN ANN BANNER | themost heaiin % / 5 Zn SUAS w FRANKLIN MILLS CO., LOCKPORT, ness decreased during the last year are the firms that paid little attention to their adyertising, those who decreased their space or did not advertise at all. People soon notice it when a firm goes into a trance, and they seek livelier people to buy from. Every business house in this town should have an advertisement in this paper the year around. Not for sweet charity’s sake, but because it pays. There is no surer way to kill a town than to allow its local paper to go out week after week destitute of advertise- ments. When such is: the case it silently, but very forcibly proclaims to the world that the town it is published in is a very dead place and has principally mossback merchants and mossback stores. When advertise- ments such as Barchus & Livengood have in this issue are found in the local paper, it gives outsiders a good opinion of the town, and especially of the advertiser ; and when people have a good opinion of your town and its busi- ness men, that is where they will buy. Some of our advertisers should in- crease their space, as the amount they use is not in keeping with their busi- ness. Some of them do a much larger business than their space indicates. They should# use enough space to indicate the volume of business they do, as that invariably brings more busi- ness, creates more desire and produces more wants to be supplied. We thank our patrons, one and all, for their patronage, and it afiords us | | pleasure to say that Salisbury’s busi- | | ness men, taken as a body, are a pretty | good set of men and have very good stores. There are a few, however, who | have not been doing the right thing by the local paper, and that means they have en d marks” who are already as ugly as it is possible to make them—people whose personal appearance might possibly be improved by smallpox marks, but couldn’t possibly be rendered any uglier, even if you’d spit tobacco juice in their faces or hand them a dun for what they owe you. And why get vaccinated? Why indulge in that preposterous and bar- barous humbug? The only real bad case of smallpox they have yet had in Rockwood, according to the Rockwood Gazette, was that of Mr. Berkey, who died, and who was vaccinated and had a very sore arm before he took the disease. It is even the opinion of some people that young Berkey died of vaccination, and not of smallpox. Judging from an article taken from the Rockwood Gazette, which appears in this issue, the logical conclusion to arrive at is that he died from the evils of smallpox and the vaccination com- bined. Of course, none of us want smallpox, neither + do we want to come in contact with it, But it does no good to go crazy from fright and squander money, health and in some cases life by being vaccinated. Some medical men denounce vaccina- tion as a humbug of the first water, while others, (some sincerely and some insincerely) contend that there is virtue in it. When doctors thus dis- agree, the logical conclusion to draw is this: If there is any virtue in vaccina- tion, there is so little in it that the | attendant dangers more than offset the alleged benefits. As for us and our house, we want no vaccination in ours, not even if small- pox should suddenly make its appear- ice in half of the families of this town. f course, we know there is a fool law t was passed some years ago by a! with the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company by a British mail steamer plying between Liverpool and New York, the name of which will be kept secret until the arrangements for the journalistic end of the venture are completed. These will include the in- stallation of a typesetting machine and cylinder press, the engagement of a writing staff, and everything that is to be found in a modern print shop ondry land.—Johnstown Tribune. THE erection of a new court house for our county is a problem that is being agitated in some quarters. That our old court house is far too small for present needs is a sell evident fact. We need a new court house and we need it badly. The erection of a new one should be provided for at once. This is no longer a one-horse county, and we need something better than a one-horse court house. Two new county offices were created by the Legislature, last winter, and now we do not have sufficient office room for our county officers. Besides, the old offices and vaults are already over- stocked with accumulating records and volumes of various kinds, and more room must be provided in some way. To build additions to the old court house and remodel it would be very poor policy. Should that be done, it would, at best, still be nothing but and old and unsatisfactory building. By all means let us have a new court afford it. - For Sickness Get the Best. which is so largely owned by the Con- solidated company. New Century Comfort. Millions-are daily finding a world of comfort in Bucklen’s Arnica Salve. Kt kills pain from Burns, Scalds, Cuts, Bruises; conquers Ulcers and Fever Sores; cures Eruptions, Salt Rheum, Boils and Felons; removes Corns and Warts. Best Pile cure on earth. Only 25¢ at Miller’s drugstore. Another Side to the Railroad Talk. A recent issue of the Baltimore Hearld contains the following: A story that the Baltimore and Ohie Railroad Company is about to construct a line of 200 miles, which would shortem the distance between Pittsburg and Baltimore 50 miles, has been going the rounds for several days. President Loree, of the B. & O., whea asked about it by a Herald represents- tive, yesterday, said: “There is absolutely not one word @€ truth in it. The only extension the Baltimore and Ohio is making, and the only one in comtemplation now, is = twenty-mile extension into the Somee- set coal regions of Pennsylvania, and that is an old story.” This extension takes in part of the old South Penn railroad, which prob- ably gave rise to a part of the story, and somebody doubtless dreamed the remainder of 1t. house, quick, and one that will cost not | less than $100,000. The county can | syrups containing { Honey and Tar is a safe and lay Children Poisoned. Many children are poisoned and mad | nervous and weak, if not killed right, by mothers giving them co opiates. Foley's | Physicians of cities . | res ¢ 1 fro | | prescribe irom | remedy for coughs, eroup iSpeer’s N. | 1: : ; the Clar | troubles, and is the onl prominessé | are une for | cough medicine that contains no opiates enterta or other poisons. E. H.Miller,