SE w : # 5 RT SR AT STI - es ET . 2 issn] —— i . te 1! - oe : i] » 8.3 ’ R i vs { 4. ‘ 4 4 H E 3 i 4 } L 01 Nn cl 4 l . ¥ - k) - ’ : Hd . Kk 3 VOL. X. SALISBURY 3 Y | . ELK LICK POSTOFFICE, PA., THURSDAY, JULY 14. 1904. NO. 26. JB | ning golden laurels. But it is in the | ersdale Commercial, through its union ister | of th st. Nes REPUBLICAN TICKET. lone where woman rules and reigns | sympathy expressed only for patronage rewehorar Re Sone] Than . shrewd f " ncrowned but royal queen, superb | and miners’ votes, has got to be a about telling his ado > ne oil. ih ’ NATIONAL. Jinan of human destinies; it is here menace to law and order, life and | all subjects concerni SRE ox b. nn wo " For President, she ig the real saver of life to this great | property. It’s influence only tends to | trust the ministers . : om Ne ; . am . X Nation.—Windber Journal. produce criminals and crime. Decent, | us for libel f. Bt Proseculs TuronORE ROOSEVELT, Th e,y— law-abiding citizens are roundly c ~- Ww i Jor Making the comparison: ing of New York. Tue Democratic candidates for demning its course. The li TH idee Journal. the 3 i . Presi »1 : = re is any suing to be d . f For Vice President, resident and Vice President of the anarchistic harrangues of Organizer | Star should doit ns d one. Tnx ow= v | United States, who were nominated by | MeCullough and others of his ilk, al ho Ne Jony Dat we CARLES W FAIRBANKS, that party in convention assembled at |} Be0jTore sn tow suit. We wouldn't be : of Indians. Vii Lm Fo a ave a tendency to incite men to crime guilty of anything so unprofessional as “ . hd a , y es , are Judge ton | most horrible, and it is about time for | that. ? . STATE. None bo, a J Hon. the authorities to cut the career of the ————— . RR ER OE ae ] : ’ st virginia. | agitators short. A ’ : Judge of the Supreme Caurt, Parker, who is an able judge,is by no| The organizers are in this region BETTER 0 OUTLOOK, SE S Hox. Jonx P. Erk, means regarded as a statesman, and | now, and it is a pretty sure prediction The Pittsburg Times in commenting : l 1 1 { 1 1 1 l oo ; of Indiana County. when compared to Theodore Roosevelt | that you will soon hear of more depre- editorially on the business outlook, ol 2s 8 man fit to fill the highest office | dations and crime. The last time Me- | S8YS: “It is significant and encourag- Tre S S OO S e - within the gift of the American people, Cullough spoke in Coal Run, an at- ing that the second half of the calendar : did p 2 . For Congress, he appears as a mental dwarf. His | tempt to blow up Meager’s tipple, and | Y©2F Opens up with a more hopeful ount S Aries PF. Cooren running mate, Mr. Davis, is an old man | g Jot of shooting at com > tone in the business world. Al : J ALLEN F. , dat ; pany watch- or 1 the ink i ) 1 tw eA 1 St 1 I} gs, ot Dotorons Pa on dotegs, and anwar of Siiy men, speedily followed. Such are the | inancial writers and commercial agen- do't. > § . man that old is no 0 | fruits of unionism in Coal cies appear to be takin IN : n H For Assemblymen i msm in Coal Run, 2 2 mare pike ss Ot10 S, ats, S ymen, fill any office, and especially not an of- | The burning of the Merchants Com. | istic view of the future than they dnt i t L. C. LAMBERT, Seg thas Wi land him in the Presi- pany’s block of ten houses was the sig- have assumed at any time for a year eally ho S rp of Stonycreek Township. ential chair in case the President | pa] for wild rejoicin past. Of course the I ] ( , ce ont g among the union re are no signs of a they I ) . >. oes, a S, J. W. ExDSLEY, Should Qe mn aks ky SS analy miners of Coal Run who witnessed it. | ?00™ NO is there any disposition to ut of : 1 of Somerfield Borough. en Tillman, of Sout arolina, re- | The residence block burned was _ | prophesy a quick return to the mar- over i | 1. 1 | 8 O cul Yl S, Por District Attornd marked when Parker’s famous gold |ed at a cost of about $2,500 kip velously busy times we had two Sore their 1 ’ T Ys standard message was received, you | her w , :» | ago, but on every hand | H oh Eu : : ) as very cheap. If erected now it y hend there are not that i a I NX A Fa Tre vrus E. MEYERS, can a ways rely on the Democratic | would cost much more. The burning wanting conclusive indications that the a to | ’ . of Somerset Borough. persy making a d—n fool of itself at | was a horrible crime, and it has added | /*5t half of 1904 will yield better re- ial ( x For Poor Director the proper time. Roosevelt and Fair- |g good many nails to the coffi turns than the first. F , t ne. n of or- or 10 months or ‘they 2 Tro oS T 1€ S. a 5.5 banks will win in 2 walk. The Demo- | ganized labor in this region. more past there has been throughout ich JR ARON F, BSwANE, cratic platform is silent on the mone-| The mij ’ i the United Stat fa of Cotiematnh Towncbip. Greasy atiorn gi ont Bn Se The miners’ union does not teach ates a very marked era arro- I ; y udge Parker, be- | crime, but crime is nevertheless the of depression and repression in all FADD # 3 : oe accepting the nomination, wired to | outgrowth of unionism when dominated | ines of trade, and actual conditions and LIE Ax attempt was made to blow up the | the convention that' he was a gold | by illiterate and vicious men, as is the | PAve:been accentuated by the prevail- en: 4 2 . tipple of the Meager mines at Coal | Standard man, and if he wag not ac- case in this region. Public sentiment | Ing habit of people to constantly be- asin i Run, in the upper Meyersdale region, ceptable to the:convention on that ac- {is now more bitter agninet the union | MOAN their fate and to everlastingly - dis- ; last week. It was alleged the attempt | Ount, he asked that another candidate | in this region thai ever, and there is | look upon the darker side of the picture rally . oe We was made by union miners, and it | De nominated in his place. The tele- | some talk of organizing a citizens’ al- | Until it i¢ a truth that we have become seems no others would have any motive | 878m stirred up quite a commotion, liance for protection. almost a nation of weepers and wailers. i: : WN for such an act. When workmen, no | 80me of the delegates cursing Parker en It has come to be that few of us are C. I | Wh matter what their grievances, become | f0F it, others praising him. The con- WEAK HEARTS happy unless we are miserable, and no i criminals and violate the laws, they | vention played the coward by keeping | are caused by indigestion. If you eat | matter how little or how great the hu E ny! can only expect to lose the sympathy | Silent on the monetary standard, but | a little too much, or if you are subject | basis of that mental depression, no mat- : ¥ of the general public, and their own that was done to keep the Bryanite | to attacks of indigestion, the stomach {ter how incomparably better off ma- 0 him : | cause as well. Lawléssness is the | 1diots from bolting. The poor old | expands—swells, and puffs up against | terially we are to-day than say 10 years 8 surest road to defeat—Windber Era. Democratic party is in asorty plight, to | the heart. This crowds the heart and | #80. good fortune is forgotten in the but- : ———— say the least, but that is greatly to our | shortens the breath. Rapid heart | Contemplation of what might have id I RO EO Yastannay 8 Pittsburg Times con- | country’s everlasting advantage and | beats and heart disease is the final re- | been; and all is vanity and vexation of rd an tains a lengthy article on a big church | benefit. sult. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure digests | Spirit. : squabble in Rockwood, in which Rev. Toa — what you eat, takes the strain off th “Fortun i -— 5 s the e ately human nature is sueh e who ; ; 8 0. E. Rodkey and Editor Chas. F. Over- craps UPON Tor OF PILES. heart, cures indigestion, dyspepsia, |that eventhe blue devils become tire- | % acker figure as the principals. We iles upon top of piles of people have | sour stomach, and contributes nourish- | some, and the consuming power of this strap t : ® have been hearing a good deal concern- he piles, and DeWitt’s Witch Hazel | ment, strength and health to every or- | Nation, and of the world is so great | : ing the disgraceful affair for some time, | Salve cures them. There are many |gan of the body. Sold by E. H. Mill and constant that hard ti | jus- Rh -| = OF SALI SBURY. principally through prominent Rock- | different kinds of Piles, but if you get| 8-1 pe last forever. nt 1 re . : 2 : a x 5 wood people, and they, like the news- | the genuine and original Witch Hazel ——— there were to be a better d wy he BN 2 Capital paid in, $50,000. Surplus & undiyided profiits, $9,000. & paper article referred to, take sides | Salve made by E. C. DeWitt & Co. of Taxing Church Property. those things which hn B- : On Time with the minister. If Overacker has | Chicago, a cure is certain. H. A. Tis-| The Rev. Madison C. Peters comes | Need, and as if the restriction of output CSL i Deposits. been guilty of all the things charged | dale, of Summerton, 8. C., says, “I had | out boldly for the taxation of church | must soon give place to an expansion . with while he was superintendent of | Piles 20 years and DeWitt’s Salve cured | property. In a recent lecture he said: | of product in all lines. The thin ft his i J. L. BARcHUS, President. H. H. Must, Vice President. i the M. E. Sunday school, he is either a | me after everything else failed.” Sold | “Tax churches, and only those able | Which people bought with lavish 0 8. Arserr Rerrz, Cashier. very bad man or a religious fanatic | by E. H. Miller. 8-1 | to bear taxes will dare to be extrava- | in the heyday of big profits and high g. an’ DIRECTORS: —J. L. Barchus, H. H. Maust, Norman D. Hay, that ought to be suppressed. We have —-—— gant. Tax churches, and modest build- | Prices are wearing out and must be re- A. M. Lichty, F. A. Maust, A. E. Livengood, L. I. Beachy. ye Stare) ig ings will be erected where they are | Placed; the readjustments made neces- ove usually the dirtiest, bitterest and most 1 most needed, instead of a few imposing | sary by the halt that f | i 3 : ) sin at was £ IE disgraceful of all quarrels. Yet, in the ' structures in the fashionable on year have effected the a ¢ dis. | face of it all, SAmach members are sup- | STRIKERS REJOICE AT BURNING | Everybody's tax goes up to allow the | the retrenchments that were instituted posed to be followers of the meek and OF COMPANY PROPERTY. tax on church property to come down. have brought about a most satisfactory great | I — Oo mm lowly Jesus, o ee Ra The American people would rise up in | condition; and we have all learned = J om ——y JopCIsa row the constant thunder A Navibar or Jen Imported and Teailion azainst direct taxation for | lesson that should not soon be forgot- 7 day, of the Rockwood Gazette, one would ntput 0 nes Increased. Sans sean that of fi ip hile f think that there isn’t a good man or . e erp 3h &1. that of fining peo. Sanwiile from ont of the West 1 an? S 9t1S ed -: Le usto | | ) ers. at BR a Otlabry Soniinney 2 Weaken | ple for building attractive places for | comes the inspiring news that the crops oiter’s own Tamils. Mattes Overatios rikers’ Cause, and Public Sen- | worship would be to tax building sites | Will be all right. Indeed some of the an : Tha above number of customers teed our wey be a6 instrament in the Bends cf timent is Sirongly Against according to their value, irrespective | railroad presidents who have gone over ; Go to rerifuthe mors Amoiphers of rike. of the uses to which they are put. thousands of miles of territory to per- lin’ up Pe tonized Beef [ton and W ne that town, but we are rather of the Since last week a namber of changes This would discourage a strong specu- | Sonally inquire into the outlook declare y P : opinion that the Fockwosd editor ants hve Laken ples in the sintag shins lative fondency has Me Soveloning hat wi i was the prospect for oot So : gets pessimistic at times and sees] 1°" IP is region. e strike has | #among the churches. rere have been | 8 normally big crops quite. so promig- Soong nmi RR et fr ond any Se through a ginss darkly, 5s it wers been effectually broken for some time, | Some scandalous manifestations of this |ing Soit will be seen that, whatever xXpres- “ N reasons: Chop it off, Charley, for Rockwood is a and each week sees an increased out- | tendency, and it is an obvious fact that | else has failed to come up to plans and od Ist Yi tones up the system and makes you strong. community made up very largely of put of coal at the mines. Since our is- | churches often grab and hold on to |eXPpectations, Providence still smiles on : 2nd. It creates an appetite and ades digestion. Tn sue of last week about thirt cperi- | choice sites in i ities | the United Stat d i ookin’ s D « p : : : , : y experi growing communitie States and the basis of all oo%iD 3rd. The cost is but 50c. per pint, or half the cost of very good people. They may not be as enced Italian miners have been im- | for no nobler reason than that whi h our prosperity. is more abundant th any other spring tonic on the market. perfect as you are, but they are good ; [ : Boman » ¥ ® slanqan ap own in . F people, nevertheless. In your last is- Ported by tie Marohems Gos) Dope Panies fhe seal Situs han She ———— » ~ sue you say youn are satisfled to trast | P27Y ITO Lhe narlh end of the county, roles 2ave no hetterrightito mo: j n’ o’er . (yet 1t at the Elk Lick Di ug Store. in the biblical quotation, “Vengeance i hany Saal ne Lave bens Ropelive Donna il any other Pte Coinage Sf Siiver Dollars. ; i is mine, sayeth the Lord; T will repay.” | ¢105¢d down for an indefinite period. | kind of corporation. and monopoly arring the election of a Congress Your money back if you are not satisfied. hk y W) repay owing to having no sale for their coal | exercised by a church is no whit bet favorable to the free and unlimited er got Now, be as good as your word, and y y better i dort try to wresk oll the venseanes at any price. than land monopoly exercised by Sir | coinage of silver at a ratio of 16 to 1, Star. -~—s >. yourself. For God's sake give the Some of the imported men are mar- | John or His Grace. It is landlordism the mints of the United States have Tx -— Lord o chance, and. maybe He wil ried and are now occupying company | none the less because the gain goes coined their last silver dollar. Collee- - ev wine Rockwood out: u¢ completely ss houses. The importation simply means | into the spread of the gospel or into |tors need not hurry to secure a speei- to-day AE ‘ NT He did ancient Sodom. And then. that these new men will take the the maintenance of a gorgeous and |men of this coin. however, for in the 0. 538 5 . PIANOS. ORGANS. again, maybe ie won't, places of an equal number of our home | barbaric ceremonial. And a glance at | Philadelphia mint alone there are d par- BT BUSH & GERTS FARRAND, — people, who have been foolish enough | the figures of church property in the | something like $105,000,000 shining new int . ’ ESTEY. THE strength and glory “of a nation | to sacrifice their jobs, their independ- | United States should be enough to |dollars inthe vaults. ved on CHICKERING & SONS, KIMBALL. rests for security upon the homes of | ence and their manhood in order to [convince thoughtful people that this| No more silver dollars are to be coin- Ruck STRICK &JZETDLER, SEWING MACHINES its people. The strength and power of | stick to a brand of labor unionism that | phase of the subject is of more than |ed because the mints have exhausted Do o L ———— the homes of people is measured by the | rejoices at incendiarism and general | passing interest.-——Johnstown Democrat. | the silver bullion purchased for that stpaid 8 VICTOR, DAVIS, character of the women who preside in | outlawry. Tra purpose. The existing laws do not tail at | HOBERT M. CABLE, ne them. Hence, whatever uplifts and The importation of the Italians is | Lhe pill that will, will fill the bill. provide for the purchase of additional show J : NDA D, strengthens women makes the nation | doubtless responsible for the burning Without a gripe, bullion, so the fate of the big silver Bg } KIMBALL, NEW HOME, more secure. You can correctly meas- | of a block of ten houses, the work of | L0 cleanse the liver, without a quiver, | coin rests on the return to power of ena SHUBERT, bayroNo, ure the civilization of people by their | an incendiary, which occurred near Take one at night. the political party favoring a silver OXEORD GOLDEN STAR, estimate of woman and the position in | Merchants mine No. 3, between the | DPeWitt’s Little Early Risers are |standard. . . SUPERB. society held by her. This statement | hoursof 9 and 10 o'clock, Tuesday |SMmall, easy to take, easy and gentle in =~? a1 CECILIAN PIANO PLAYERS. needs no enlargement. Measured by | evening. The houses were empty, but | effect, yet they are so certain in re- E. H. MILLER . Mr. eli this unerring standard, not since the | would likely have been filled with im- |Sults that no one who uses them is dis- | asks the readers of this paper who are neroial Second-hand Pianos at $100 and up. Quality makes the price. Jory Say hy fopther in oes pores Jena ihe near future, had Shpuinted, Sora ig fon ut suffering with indigestion or dyspepsia r sale Some Second-hand Organs at $10 and up. fel SYmbhony a5&hs Jawn of creation not the torch een applied. Theburn: he A ey Po er [to eall on him ai once and get a botile 22 g has there been a time or a country | ing is without doubt the work of some |Jaundice, dizziness and all troubles | of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure. If you knew Fg M&F C. E. LIVENGOOD, Our Tuner, thoroughly understands his business | When and wherein woman held a high- union miner or miners, and union men | arising from fn insniive, sluggish liver, | the value of this remedy as we know it, Ivcuts and guarantees satisfaction in tuning and repairing. er, holier rlace in the life of the nation | that we have spoken to admit them- Early Risers are unequalled. Sold by you would not suffer another day. of oi : than at this time in this great country selves that there is no doubt of it. E. H. Miller. 8-1 Kodol Dispepsial Cure is a thorough Call at THE NEW REICH } of ours. This can be said to the im-| We suppose, of course, that the | - ay digestant and tissue-building tonie as ge as- y : . mortal glory of this land. Our women | Meyersdale Commercial will do its ut- | An 0dd Comparison. well. Tt is endorsed personally by show are the moral and spiritual life of the | most to shield the criminal or criminals | J. A Berkey, Esq., of Somerset, and 1 ds of people whom it has cured Republic. Their intellectual activities | who did the horrible deed, just as it | P. L. Liv d, edi of t SALis- i yo of at ex- q . 2 iH , just as i . L. Livengood, editor of the SaArLis- | a, palpitation of t exist =A present duty: Subscribe for THE are as boundless as their opportunities | has been trying to shield the union and | Bury STAR, were Windber visitors Sat- | the oubles gener- iwant are great. In the realm of literature, stify the many cowardly and criminal | urday. The versatile and ironical | Cure digests rice. STAR. of art, of philosophy, in every depart. |s that Some of its members have | “Pete” was togged out in a complete | easant, palatable ment of intellectual life, they are win- committing all along. The Mey it, and looked more like a min- 8-1 —rd ni ems Sm tn, re AA
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers