a Ee asa PER i a] SS mr itn sn amano genes I CS CE Gounty Star, x7 VOL. X. SALISBURY. ELK LICK POSTOFFICE, PA. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25. 1904. NO. 6. Ir seems there was a citizens’ ticket | Listen to the Somerset Democrat. | Bolters Form Combinations and ARTHUR—ROOSEVELT. t & voted at Salisbury and another at Ber- “The death of Senator Marcus A, Suffer Stinging Defeat. Clot il Our Spring and Summer Sam- The Easter sea- ple Books are here. son is coming, when everyone wants to come out in a good-fitting, nobby Suit. The three books we have to se- lect from contain the latest designs and colors in cloth for this © season.. The Prices Range From $10 to $35. I PLY 0, [1D Sugar g | For$1.00, 2m order of goods store. ge oy Ir, Ley, Po p22 at a fi BARGAIN == By special arrangement Torn Py the Kirk Juvenile Soap Com- Eh A | < ~ pany, we will sell one gross of their Juvenile Soap at 15 cts. HY | per cake or 40c. per box. This is one of the finest perfumed ITY. | Toilet soaps on the market, and sells the world over at 25c. per cake or 65c. per box, REMEMBER, there will be but one gross sold o% the reduced price. Elk Lick Drug Store. ay § RR REICH & SON, oubt i Ttis- : ° . | nl : Hv Chey iN - : [ We have opened a branch undertaking room on a. Grant Street, Salisbury, Pa., ees | and have it stocked with the latest and best Caskets, Robes, Lining, ete. ete.? Wagner Bros., Agts., - - Telephone No.9. | istic. the MODEL Gas ana Gasoline Engines ARE THE BEST ON THE MARKET Because they are Simplest | in construction and most economical in fuel consumption Positively safe Absolutely reliable J Easy to run | hem t No complicated parts Always ready far use Fully guaranteed Made in sizes from 2 H. P. to 100 H. P. Send for Catalogue and Prices MODEL GAS ENGINE CO. Auburn, Ind. nion | lin, says the Somerset Herald. Yes, and it also seems that a citizens’ ticket was voted at Somerset, and ahother in Somerset township, but both of them fell far short of being elected, much to the chagrin and sorrow of the Somerset Herald. About all the contents of the Herald, this week, can be justly classed as whine and bellyache, and there’s no more Barker’s Liniment in sight. Poor old thing! Our old friend Lucifer Ananias Smith, of the Meyersdale Scull Organ- ette, stated last week that he had a late report of a recount of votes in Somer- set borough, and that the recount showed that the whole Citizens’ ticket was elected, with but one exception. Lucifer’s late report must have come from hades, the place he is destined for, as his master, Timmie Scull, ac- knowledges that the whole Republican ticket was elected in Somerset borough, with but one exception. The old Pe- runa-embalmed carcass that presides over the Commercial ie never taken seriously, for the poor old thing has long been in its dotage. THE old threadbare pair of pants that presides over the columns of the Mey- ersdale Commercial, refers to the late Republican ticket of Salisbury borough as a fake Republican ticket. Thus all the candidates on it are classed as fakirs. It's really too bad that Chas. May, W. B. Stevanus, W. 8. Easton, Robert Cochrane, R. 8. Johns, Asa B. Newman, Morgan Williams, Austin Brown and James B. Martin are all fakirs, having been so classed by the decree of an old mongrel like Lou Smith, at the solicitation of his Somer- set boss. But as Lucifer has been in about all parties under the sun, as well | as in other people’s pockets, much to their sorrow, it is no wonder he con- siders it a crime to run on a straight Republican ticket. Anything straight is distasteful to the old dehorned ibex. Accorping to the Windber Journal, the Eureka Supply Company, which is only another name for the Berwind- White Coal Company, has served no- tice on Windber boarding-house keep- erg who board miners in the employ of said company, that unless they buy their provisions at the company store, the company will discharge the men boarding with persons who buy else- where. That's about the worst tyr- anny we have ever heard of, and we note that the other Windber merchants have formed an association to protect themselves against brow-beating meth- ods of the Eureka Supply Company. When coal companies sink so low in the moral scale as to resort to the methods in vogue in Windber, almost any means to rid the community of company stores .would be justifiable. We have company stores in Salisbury, too, but thank fortune they are not of the Windber stripe. A MOTHER’S RECOMMENDATION. I have used Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy for a number of years, and have no hesitancy in saying that it is the best remedy for coughs, colds and croup I have ever used in my family. I have not words to express my confi- dence in this remedy.—Mrs. J. A. Moore, North Star, Mich. For sale by E. H. Miller. 3-1 “A Sensible Suggestion. Every citizen of Somerset county ought to know how every other citi- zen’s property is assessed. The as- sessing of property is a public affair, not a private one, and it should be the privilege of the public to know all about it. Sometimes mistakes creep into the valuation of private property, and sometimes abuses are practiced where the abuses are made a private snap. No matter where secrecy is maintained, there all the evils known to assessing are likely to be found The only remedy for this is publicity ; if the assessed valuation of all property were printed in the newspapers or in pamph- let form so that all citizens might know the valuation of all property, there would be fewer mistakes and no abuses. With the lists thus printed and ecireu- lated every citizen would become a committee of one for the correction of errors and abuses.—Somerset Demo- crat. ie HAVE YOU INDIGESTION? If you have Indigestion, Kodol Dys- pepsia Cure will cure you. It has cured thousands. Itis curing people every day—every hour. You owe it to your- self to give it a trial. You will con- tinue to suffer until you do try it. There is no other combination of di- gestants that digest and rebuild at the same time. Kodol does both. cures, strengthens and rebuilds H. Miller Sold by E. | cases Kodol | Hanna, which occurred at Washington, Monday, is a loss to this nation. Han- na will go down in history as one of the great men of the Twentieth cen- tury.” “Whatever may be said of the politi- cal methods of Senator Hanna, and however much he may have been ecriti- cised for his stalwart partisanship, there can be no question as to his com- manding abilities, his tireless enter- prise and his genuine Americanism.” What a contrast between the things Democratic papers are saying of Sena- tor Hanna since he is dead and the things they said of him when he was yet living! Tt has always been a cus- tom of the Democratic press to vilify, lie about and abuse all the great men in the Republican party while they live, but laud them to the skies after their death. Another strange thing about the Democracy is this: When- ever they want an ideal, they usually hunt among dead Republican states- men to find one. For example, a few years ago they were comparing the Windbag Bryan to the great and im- mortal Lincoln. The comparison was indeed a bad misfit, but is shows how greatly Democrats admire Lincoln, who was more abused by Democrats while he lived than any other man in Amer- ica. BETTER THAN GOLD. J “I was troubled for several years with chronie indigestion and nervous debility,” writes F. J. Green, of Lancas- ter, N. H. “No remedy helped me un- til I began using Electric Bitters, which did me more good than all the medi- cines I ever used. They have also kept my wife in excellent health for years. She says Electric Bitters are just splen- did for female troubles ; that they are a grand tonic and invigorator for weak, run down women. No other medicine can take its place in our family.” Try them. Only 50c. Satisfaction guaran- teed by E. H. Miller. 3-1 What a Board of Trade Could do for Salisbury. Tue Star has often urged the im- portance of & board of trade for this town, but it seems our business men are all to well satisfied to reach out for new industries, and so long as they are content to move in the old ruts. just that long will they be playing a losing game. Gentlemen, why not put your shoulders to the wheel of progress and do something? What has secured for Berlin her shoe factory? Her board of trade; and the same body is quietly doing many other things for the town. As a result of the good work of the Berlin board of trade, no town in the county is improving faster than Berlin. The following bit of news from The Shoe and Leather Reporter contains much that ought to make Salisbury business men think, act and hustle: “The shoe manufacturing business of Frederick C. Young, of Rochester, will be removed shortly to Somerset, Pa., where it will be recognized and incor- porated as the Somerset Shoe Manu- facturing Company. The capital stock of the new company is $50,000. Mr. Young retains a large interest in the concern, and will personally conduct the business for a time, at least. W. V. Marshall, President of the Board of Trade of Berlin, Pa., visited Rochester last week, and, after an inspection of the plant and several conferences with Mr. Young, the deal for removal was consummated. Mr. Marshall recently displayed enterprise by bringing a Philadelphia shoe factory to Berlin, which is a village of 1,000 inhabitants. Somerset, a few miles away from Ber- lin, has 2,000 population. A number of Rochester shoemakers will go with the concern to Somerset. A factory build- ing, with a capacity of 1,000 pairs of women’s shoes a day, will be built at once, so there will be little interrup- tion in the business. Samples will be made for fall. The present staff of salesmen will be retained as far as possible. Women’s welts, turns. and McKays will be the product of the Somerset factory. Mr. Young has been manufacturing shoes in Rochester for over twenty years, and is Vice President of the Rochester Shoe Man- ufacturers’ Association.” RELIEF IN ONE MINTTE. One Minute Cough Cure giyes re- lief in one minute, because it kills the microbe which tickles the mucous membrane, causing the cough, and at the same time clears the phlegm, draws out the inflammation and heals and soothes the affected parts. One Minute Cough Cure strengthens the lungs, wards off pneumonia and is a harmless and never failing cure in all curable of Coughs, Colds and Croup. One Minute gh Cure is Pleasant to k Here are two historical facts: Napoleon met his Waterloo on the 18th day of June, 1815. The Scull bolters met their Somerset on the 16th day of February, 1904. If the Republicans of this county needed any further evidence of the complete rout and rebuke of the Bazoo crowd they have it in the result of the election held on Tuesday in the bor- ough and township of Somerset, the hot-bed of wild-cat politics, in which |. the bolting spirit that was sent out to different parts of the county has been nursed aud kept alive. The Bazoo crowd has been in the bolting business for several years, and during that time they have clothed themselves with a career they cannot shake off. If there is any form of bolt- ing that they have not tried, or any scheme to defeat the nominees of the party at whose pie counter they fed for 80 many years that they have not in- dulged in, it is evorthy of mention. In their bolting career their strongest following has always been in Somerset borough and Somerset township. It was here that they made their special drives, and whatever success they at- tained was blown over the county through the Bazoo as an evidence of their strength, and thus their deluded following in different parts of the county has been held. When the Bolters went into court re- cently in an effort to prevent the regu. lar Republicans from holding their primary elections in the various bor- oughs and townships of the county, they met with another defeat in their |’ series, and feeling that they then needed some public approval of their course they turned to Somerset bor- ough and Somerset township for it. But to make their success doubly sure, as they thought, they formed a combi- nation with the Rupple faction of the Democratic party, and a coalition with a part of the Prohibition party. Out of this combination grew what they pleased to call the Citizens’ ticket, with which the bolters went to the people for the greatly desired endorse- ment. But although the regular Re- publican ticket was up against the field, as combined by the bolters, it came out of the contest in both borough and township with a vietory so sweep- ing that the Bolters’ Bazoo was not able to catch its breath, though it held back to blow the hoped-for “endorse- ment.” As a result the regular Republican organization stands clothed with the substantial endorsement and approval of the people, while the Bazoo crowd may simply score for itself another de- feat, and go a hunting for some un- heard-of thing with which to combine. —Somerset Standard. A CURE FOR ECZEMA. My baby had Eczema so bad that its head was a solid mass of scabs. and its hair all came out. I tried many reme- dies, but none seemed todo any perma- manent good uutil I used DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve. The Eczema is cured, the scabs are gone and the little one’s scalp is perfectly clean and heal- thy, and its hair is growing beautifully again. I cannot give too much praise to DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve.—Frank Farmer, Bluff City, Ky. In buying Witch Hazel Salye look out for coun- terfeits. DeWitt’s is the original and the only one containing pure Witch Hazel. The name E. C. DeWitt & Co. is on every box. Sold by E. H. Miller. 3-1 Cn ADVERTISING PAYS. In 1889 P. T. Barnum, the great show- man, journeyed to the Pacific coast, to visit a relative. On his way back east he stopped at Kansas City to see the great Barnum & Bailey show that was then exhibiting in that city. The then press agent of the Barnum & Bailey show, Bert Davis, introduced to Mr. Barnum the editors of the local papers at the former’s hotel. In the course of the conversation which naturally fol- lowed, Mr. Barnum said: “Gentlemen, Mr. Bailey tells me that my presence at the performances of the Barnum & Bailey circus is worth $5,000 a day to the show. If this is true, it ismy name that is so valuable. It is known in every town, city and hamlet; it has be- come a household word throughout the country. Now, gentlemen, all of this was done by newspapers, and if adver- tising can make a name worth $5,000 a | 4 : | his time to expire March 4, 1905. day, what is it that advertising can’t do?” It is said that good advertising will open anybody’s purse if carefully fol- lowed. The first ad. may not do it, will the second, nor the third, but each next, until, one paves the way for the neither | roads and street railroad sompanise History Repeats Itself After Two Decades. From the Washington Post. In June, 1880. an Ohio man. James A. Garfield. who had been conspicuous in the lower house of congress, was nominated by the Republicans for president. ‘A New York man, Chester A. Arthur, was nominated for vice president. Soon after his inauguration, President Garfield was assassinated. Vice President Arthur became presi- dent. President Arthur soon had to deal with corruption in the postal service. Discord arose among the Republicans of New York state. President Arthur made no secret of the fact that he desired the nomination in 1884. President Arthur had the support of the New York leaders. The convention of 1884 was called to meet at Chicago in June. The situation in New York state gave concern to the Republican leaders. The Democrats went to New York state for their presidential candidate. President Arthur was defeated for the Republican nomination. In June 1800, an Ohio man, William McKinley, who had been conspicuous in the lower house of congress, was nominated by the Republicans for president. A New York man, Theodore Roosevelt, was nominated for vice President. Boon after his inauguration President McKinley was assassinated. Vice President Roosevelt became pres- ident. President Roosevelt soon had to deal with corruption in the postal service. Discord arose among the Republicans of New York state. President Roosevelt has made no secret of the fact that he desires the nomi- nation in 1904. President Roosevelt has the support of the New York leaders. The convention of 1904 has been called to meet at Chicago in June. The situation in New York state gives concern to the Republican leaders. The Democrats are looking to New York state for their presidential can- didate. Will President Roosevelt be defeated for the Republican nomination? ESCAPED AN AWFUL FATE. Mr. H. Haggins, of Melbourne, Fla., writes, “My doctor told me I had Con- sumption and nothing could be done for me. I was given up to die. The offer of a free trial bottle of Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption, in- duced me to tryit. Results werestart- ling. Tam now on the road to recovery and owe all to Dr. King’s New Discov- ery. It surely saved my life.” This great cure is guaranteed for all throat and lung diseases by E. H. Miller, Druggist. Price 50c and $1.00. Trial Bottles free. 3-1 Life Story of Marcus A. Hanna. Born at Lisbon, O., Sept. 24, 1837. Went to Cleveland in 1853 with his parents. Had a High School education, with one year at Western Reserve college, then at Hudson, O. Served 100 days in the civil war as a union soldier, leaving the service be- cause of his father’s death. Married in 1867 to Miss Augusta Rhodes of Cleveland. Succeeded to management of the firm of Rhodes & Co., iron and coal merchants, in 1867, and in 1877 started the firm of M. A. Hanna & Co. Was elected to his first office in 1870 a membership in the Cleveland board of education. In 1884 was a delegate to the Repub- lican national convention. In 1894-5 began his fight for the nom- ination and election of MecKinley to the presidency. In 1896 managed the Republican national campaign that made McKinley president. March 5, 1897, was appointed United States senator by Gov. Bushnell to sue- ceed John Sherman. In January, 1898, was elected for both the short and long terms in the senate, On January 12, 1904, elected for another term of six years to succeed himself. Was a stock holder in banks, rail- iron and ship many Weivats a large holder of coal, pine interests, and with holdi