VOTITY. doubt vertis- sually They s, ete.? rtistic. f them pinion The Somerset County Star. VOL. X. Dry Goods and Notions! Carpets, Mattes. Linoleum! As you know we always have been in the lead in these We have just placed on our counters a full line of White Shirtwaistings and Shirtwaist Suitings, Spring and Summer Dress Ginghams, Mercerized Silk Zephyrs, Light and Dark Percales, also a new line of Calicces, Apron Ginghams, Muslins and Sheetings. goods, come and look over the carpet samples and the rolls You will find the prices low and the patterns of Mattings. good. 9 0 BANK OF SALISBURY. Capital paid in, $50,000. Surplus & undiyided profiits, $9,000. d PLR ENT. INTEREST oewcerie. 8 Deposits. J. L. BArRcHUS, President. H. H. Maus, Vice President. : ALBERT REITZ, Cashier. DIRECTORS:—J. L. Barchus, H. H. Maust, Norman D. Hay, A.M. Lichty, F. A. Maust, A. E. Livengood, L. I. Beachy. = RR A RR #5 A SRR TRAN - Get it at the Elk Lick Drug Store. de A TT = Satisfied -:- Customers. The above number of customers used our Peptonized Beef, Iron and Wine during the Spring and Summer of 1903, and any one of them will tell you they were satisfied for the following reasons: 1st. It tones up the system and makes you strong. 2nd. It creates an appetite and ades digestion. 3rd. The cost is but 50c. per pint, or half the cost of any other spring tonic on the market. Your money back if you are not ratisfied. ¢ v R. REICH & SON, | Decl fi We have opened a branch undertaking room on am. Grant Street, Salisbury, Pa., ea and have it stocked with the latest and best Caskets, Robes, Lining, ete. Wagner Bros., Agts., - - Telephone No.9. (WHY NOT BUY THE BEST" Surries, Buggies, Road Wagons, &c. all hung on W. S. Shuler’s Improved Patent 4 Spring. Easy, Noiseless, Elastic, Non- breakable. Guaranteed for the life of the vehicle. We are continually adding new features that make our vehicles attractive. Highest possible value for the price. Send for folder No. 27, showing our 1904 styles and prices. Agents wanted in un. occupied territory. & ARTA Loe iA ——— CHUCTANUNDA CARRIAGE CO., Amsterdam, N. Y. he 1—Top Buggy. 2 THE SCULL RING MUG. How it Changed Expression at Va- rious Stages of the Late Politi- cal Game. Three weeks before the election when the Scull gang felt sure of vietory. Last week of the campaign, when mat- ters were looking a little “spicious” to the Scullions. It showed surprise when “Polly Gin- dlesperger” (Ed. Werner, Democrat,) was not permitted to vote. It showed all signs of anger when Pro- hibitionist Ed. Hoover was turned away from the polls. It expressed disgust when the vote of Somerset borough was announced. It looked real sick when the returns from Salisbury and Garrett were re- ceived. And this isthe way the old Scull “Phys” has been looking ever since the re- sult in the county is known. 2: —— THE BEST FAMILY SALVE. DeWitt’s Witch Hazel gives instant relief from Burns, cures Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Eczema, Tetter and all abrasions of the skin. In buying Witch Hazel Salve it is only necessary to see that you get the genuine DeWitt’s and a cure is certain. There are many cheap counterfeits on the market, all of which are worthless, and quite a few are dangerous, while DeWitt’s Witch Ha- zel Salve is perfectly harmless and cures. Sold by E. H. Miller. 5-1 Tne Republican voters of Somerset county on Saturday obeyed the time- worn injunction: “Never put off ’till to-morrow what you can do to-day.” They annihilated the Scull gang of bolters, and by their ballots served no- tice that they can expect but little sympathy from true Republicans.— Windber Journal. THE Congressional conference for this district convened in Harrisburg, Wednesday of last week. As per former agreement of “the powers that be” in Greene, Fayette and Somerset counties, Hon. Allan F. Cooper, our | present popular and efficient congress- | man was renominated. The nominee is highly satisfactory to the district, and he will be triumphantly elected in November. By a harmonious arrangement of the politicians of Fayette, Somerset and Greene counties, Hon. F. M. Fuller, of Fayette, and Captain Crago, of Greene. will represent our congressional dis- trict as delegates in the Republican National convention. Their alternates are Hons. S. A. Kendall and N. B. Critchfield. Our Ex-Sheriff Good has been chosen as a Presidential elector. The arrangement is satisfactory all around. -- Tue Somerset Standard refers to the editor of the Meyersdale Commercial as old Mrs. Lou Smith. The Standard is in error, for the old bat never was married. It is old Miss Lou Smith, and the figety old thing has been missing it on every political nove she has made in the last five years. There was once a time when old Miss Lou should have been married, but Lord pity any one that would want to make a match with her now, even in a political way. ee Erwan LiveNeoop, the sugar king, who more than thrice has refused a crown, kept himself hid for about a week after the primary. This week. however, he passed through town on a horse that was going at Dan Patch speed. We asked his son Dan, who clerks in Miller's drug store, what it all meant. Dan replied that Dr. R. M. Beachy, the noted veterinary surgeon, had just phoned to the “old man” to come down quick, bring old Mrs. John N. Davis's camphor bottle along and help get old Miss Lou Smith out of her after-election trance. Tue poor oid Somerset Herald is still sobbing, slobbering, blubbering, bellowing, howling, scowling. scolding, crying and lying about the late Re- publican primary election. But “let the galled jade wince,” for its howls and wails are music to our ears, and it demonstrates that green cucumbers are not the only producers of bellyache. Thus, in a measure, is the green cu- cumber vindicated, and thus, with its treasure, is the green Scull gang anni- hilated. The choir will now please put away its peanuts and screetch the funeral dirge, and the true Republicans will come forward with their tin cans, dead cats, rotten mackerel, ete., to decorate the grave of party treachery. me el lee CAREER OF JOHN P. ELKIN. Sketch of Life of Republican Nomi- nee for Supreme Judge. John'P. Elkin, named for Supreme Court Justice, was born in West Ma- honing township, Indiana county, Pa., January 11, 1860. In 1874 his father, Francis Elkin, with others, founded at Wellsville, O., the American Tia Plate Company, which erected the first tin plate mill in this country. In this mill John P. Elkin worked during several of hisboyhood years. He was educated in the common schools of Smicksburg, Indiana county, and at the Indiana Normal School. At the age of 15 he began teaching school, an occupation he followed for several years. In 1882 he entered the law department of the University of Michigan and graduated two years later. . In the same year he was admitted to the bar of Indiana county and was also elected a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. Two years later he was re-elected. He was a del. egate to a number of Pennsylvania Republican State conventions and per- manent chairman of that of 1891. For several years he was chairman of the Republican State committee. For nearly three years he was deputy at- torney general under Attorney General McCormick, and was appointed attor- ney general by Governor Stone, which position he held during the latter’s en- tire administration. He was the most prominent candidate for the Republi- can nomination for Governor two years ago, but was defeated by Senator Quay abandoning him for Judge Penny- packer. ARE YOU A DYSPEPTIC? If you are a dyspeptic you owe it to yourself and your friends to get well. Dyspepsia annoys the dyspeptie’s friends because his disease sours his disposition as well as his stomach. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure will not only cure dyspepsia, indigestion and sour stomach, but this palatable, reconstruec- tive tonic digestant strengthens the whole digestive apparatus, and sweet- ens the life as well as the stomach. When you take Xodol Dyspepsia Cure the food you eat is enjoyed. It is di- gested, assimilated and its nutrient properties appropriated by the blood | and tissues. Health is the result. | i Sold by E. H. Miller. 5-1 A Few After Election Echoes from the Somerset Standard. If you want something soft to put under your carpet call on J. C. Lowry for a bundle of the first and last issue of his Taxpayer. The bolters talk of carrying their fake into the Dauphin county court. If they do they had better take an un- dertaker along to bring it home. With but two exceptions every cans didate on the Scull ticket was defeated in his home district, and in every dis- trict in the county where he has ever lived. That crowd of Scull candidates who were chasing about Somerset on that Saturday night three weeks ago to find Carl Shaffer probably are now sorry they found him. The editor of the Taxpayer trusts that its millions of patrons will bear patiently with its absence till he can get out of the Bolters’ hospital. His symptoms are those of grip, accom- panied by a feeling of goneness, and a dark brown taste. His temperature is 105 in the shade, and respiration some- what jerky. You needn’t wonder why the Bozoo sent up a ten-by-twelve howl this week. It’s only trying to let its candidates down without “busting” them. Tt made its candidates believe that “anti-court- house” was an issue (and they were about the only persons who did believe it), and then it pulled their legs to an unnatural length. It is now trying to keep them from seeing the fake. There’s Meyersdale, the home of Mrs. Lou Smith and her Gatlin’ Gun. What do you think would have happened over there if Mrs. Smith had been per- mitted to fire one more volley of court- house tacks? The thought chills to the very marrow. What the Regulars did to the Old Lady was enough, dear knows ; but what they might have done if the Old Girl had had one more fit is appalling even to think of. Judge Sulzberger of Philadelphia, in the trial of an election case said: “A man can’t be a Republican and at the same time be a leader of the hosts that are trying to defeat the Republican party.” Under this ruling, which is in entire harmony with both justice and common sense, the whole Scull crowd should have been turned away from the polling place at Somerset, last Sat- urday, for they have been “leading the hosts that have been trying to defeat the Republican party” for the last five years. The polls had not been open long when Ed. Hoover presented himself to vote. but Barron told him he could not do so, as that was a Republican pri- mary, at which only Republicans could vote. At the Spring election Hoover declared himself to be a Prohibitionist (don’tlaugh), and presented a watcher’s certificate which he said was his au- thority from that party to remain in the election room. Being a Prohibition- ist, therefore, he had no right to vote at a Republican primary. Later came Aleck Postlethwaite, who was one of the sponsors for the “Citizens” party at the spring election, and he was turned away, as he should have been. GOOD FOR CHILDREN. The pleasant to take and harmless One Minute Cough Cure gives immedi- ate relief in all cases of Cough, Croup and LaGrippe because it does not pass immediately into the stomach, but takes effect right at the seat of the trouble. It draws out the inflamma- tion, heals and soothes and cures per- manently by enabling the lungs to contribute pure life-giving and life- sustaining exygen to the blood and tis- sues. One Minute Cough Cure is pleasant to take and it is gook alike for young and old. Sold by E. H. Mil- ler. 5-1 i een Meyersdale Has a Carrie Nation. Whatever else the bustling Metrop- olis may lack, she comes to the front with a saloon smasher that bids fair to force the Kansas Carrie to look to her laurels. One evening last week she invaded one of Meyersdale’s hotels, where she found her luckless spouse “up against” a large schooner of that which promises eventually to make the town famous. With introductory re- marks that would not look well in print, she grabbed the glass, and, dash- ing its contents in the face of her thor- oughly dismayed husband, threw the empty glass at the bartender, and, missing its mark, narrowly escaped the cash register and several other expen- sive furnishings back of the bar. She then grabbed her recreant husband by the ear and led him home, where he is repenting his folly, and computing the interest upon his large holdings in re- alty, ete., in that borough.—Rockwood {| Gazette. | ing that time | countries of Europe understand SALISBURY. FLK LICK POSTOFFICE, PA., THURSDAY, APRIL 14. 1904. ELAINE ROZE'S NEW YORK LETTER. The Oriental Era in Dress and Per- fumes—Dress for Out-0f-Door Life. Out-of-door life the woman of to-day will have, and whether golfing, riding automobiling or walking, as her taste or purse may indicate, she must be suitably gowned. No longer are her gowns for more formal wear given pree- edence, but she recognizes the impor- tance of making a judicious selection of her gown for general wear, for un- doubtedly she will be more often seen in it than in any other. Let it be trig and neat—jaunty as she likes, but never “fussy.” Let it be of material that is comfortable, stylish, and of all things weather-defying, which is entirely possible in these days of rain-proofed cloths. The vast majority of New York wom- ankind face the April vagaries of Dame Nature fearlessly, in serviceable gowns of bright mohair or nattily woven mix- tures of Australian wool and silk. Priestley cravenetted, these frocks give to the wearer a smart appearance if the sun is shining, and an equally up-to-date look if caught in a shower. In my illustration is depicted one of these ideal gowns, worn with a wash- able white silk, lace-trimmed waist. The little kimona here shown is a bit of prettiness that the dawn of the Or- iental era in dress has brought us. There has never been anything more picturesque than the kimona with which the Japanese beauty has co- quettishly, with the true grace of ar- tistic temperament, draped her form for more generations than exist in Oec- cidental records of attire. For many years we have been appre- ciative of the beauties of Oriental fab- rics, as adapted to cozy corners and negligee garments, but to-day these exquisite creations are receiving en- thusiastic recogition in their use in the construction of dainty gowns, and hap- py is she who has a bit of Oriental em- broidery or a scarf that she can fashion into a fascinating stock or charming bodice. And the popularity of the Oriental atmosphere has permeated the perfume field, and were until recently milady’s every movement recalled to us the scent of some familiar flower, we are now wafted back, in the quaint odor of Vantine’s Sandalwood, to our child- hood’s recollections of the dear old sandalwood fan. The dress skirt worn with the charm- ing negligee garment of the Flowery Kingdom is one of the most modish creations in cream Peau de Crepe, which has taken front rank among silks for shirtwaist and lingerie purposes, as well as for gowns for formal occasions, and in white is one of the leading silks for wedding gowns. ErLAINE Rozk. A THOUGHTFUL MAN. M. M. Austin, of Winchester, Ind. knew what to do in the hour of need. His wife had such an unusual case of stomach and liver trouble, physicians could not help her. He thought of and tried Dr. King’s New Life Pills and she got relief at once and was finally cured. Only 25¢, at E. H. Miller's Drug Store. 5-1 The Only Wines Fit For Invalids. The chemical change that takes place in wine while ageing and depositing its unhealthy parts is too little understood and appreciated. It is wonderfully improved for medical use. Each rack- ing after six months rest during a number of years extracts its unhealthy parts. Speer’s Port Grape Wine and Bur gundy are not bottled until nine years old, and racked every six months dur- Old doctors in wine this