pur- Con- cest this y, at » - » The Somerset County Star. VOL. xX. SALISBURY. ELK LICK POSTOFFICE, PA., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22. 1904. NO. 36. ' Your Next "ples we anteed. We are displaying the largest line of sam- New Suit should be bought from us, if you are looking for prop- er fit, latest styles and great- est values. We are agents for two of Chicago's largest made-to- measure clothing houses— A. E. Anderson & Co. and Ullman & Co. Now is the time to fit your- self in a new and nobby suit for fall and winter. have ever had, and all fits are guar- A. ES A RB RR Re & Capital paid in, $50,000. Surplus & undiyided profits, $9,000. 5 E J.L. DIRECTORS :—J. L. Barchus, H. H. Maust, Norman D. Hay, NATIONAL BANK OF SALISBURY. § PER GENT. INTEREST cece. BarcHuUs, President. H. H. Maus, Vice President. . ALBERT REITZ, Cashier. M. Lichty, F. A. Maust, A. E. Livengood, L. L. Beachy. RIG 3 SREY RE RBR BRIBES ERR RRR RR ERRN | Not 1 ful " Sager Hair Tonic and Dandruff Cure. It imparts vigor and lustre and prevents the hair from falling out or turning gray. PRICE 75 CENTS PER BOTTLE. |. ELK LICK PHARMACY. It's the Hair, that makes a woman beautiful. Any lady can produce a luxurant growth of hair by the care- the Hat application of LOOK -:- HERE! Pianos VICTOR, Dave, HOBERT M. CABLE, STAND ARD, ‘ff KIMBALL, NEW HOME, : DAYTONIO, SHUBERT, GOLDEN STAR, OXFORD. SUPERB. REICH & PLOCH, CENTRE STREET, MEYERSDALE, PENNA. " ESA present duty: Subscribe for THE STAR. T king for a catalogue, getting prices and looking over our stock may ot he rs of a good many dollars. Agents for the following makes: PIANOS. '# BUSH & GERTS, | | CHICKERING & SONS, {} STRICK & ZEIDLER, ‘We have engaged the services of C. E. LIVENGOOD, Piano and Organ Tuner and Repairer, and orders for work in that line left at the music store will receive prompt attention. Somerset County Agents for Estey Pipe Organs. rrom $125.00 up. Organs from $15.00 up. Sewing Machines from $10.00 up. ORGANS. FARRAND, . ESTEY, KIMBALL. SEWING MACHINES. Cecilian Piano Players. REPUBLICAN TICKET. NATIONAL. For President, THEODORE ROOSEVELT, of New York. For Vice President, CHARLES W, FAIRBANKS, of Indiana. STATE, Judge of the Supreme Caurt, Hon. Jorn P. ELkIN, of Indiana County. COUNTY. For Congress, ArLEN F. COOPER, of Uniontown, Pa. For Assemblymen, L. C. LAMBERT, of Stonycreek Township. J. W. ENDsLEY, of Somerfield Borough. For District Attorney, Rurus E. MEYERS, of Somerset Borough. For Poor Director, AaroN F. BwaNk, of Conemaugh Township. . Tae Sultan of Turkey shares the Democratic fear of President Roose- velt’s impulsiveness. WesTERN Democrats insist that the silver question is as sound a theory as ever. Yes, nothing but sound. DEMOCRATIC campaign managers should keep Champ Clark off the stump until he agrees to carry a safety razor. RusseLL SAGE is 88 years of age and rated at $170,000,000. He should be eli- gible for the Democratic Vice Presi- dential nomination in 1908. JUDGE PARKER promises to be satis- fied with one term in the Presidency. The voters will ask him to be satisfied with less than that. el CHAIRMAN TAGGART will not open a Western headquarters. The Democrats have no hope of carrying any state west of the Alleghanies. Sir Tromas Lirrox is going to make a fourth hopeless effort to lift the American cup. Such a cheerful loser should be in Democratic politics. “Ours is a world power” said Judge Parker in his speech of acceptance, and he might have added, “thanks to the wisdom of the Republican party.” — Junge PARKER assures the voters that the Democracy is the coming party. The only trouble is that it al- ways arrives four years behind time. Ter Western Democrats who were clamoring for Judge Parker to break his silence did not expect him to break their political hearts at the same time. Ex-PreSIDENT CLEVELAND professes to fear President Roosevelt and the army. Mr. Cleveland should remember that Coxey’s armies do not march under Republican administrations. Tue Panama Canal is another achievement of which the Democrats complain only because it represents Republican ability to grapple with perplexing and difficult problems. THE claim of certain Democrats in the West that silver should be worth as much an ounce as wheat is a bushel should be classed with the humors that always mark the progress of a political campaign. ies) It is folly to eriticise David B. Hill for his plan of managing a Democratic campaign. He fully appreciates that his party shows to the best advantage when diplomatic concealment is appli- ed to its record. Jubak PARKER is perfectly safe in de- claring for one term. Experience has taught the American people that one Democratic administration is all they can ever afford, without going into bankruptey proceedings. Tae Republican party will make no claims of credit for the splendid crops which are now being harvested, but the Republican party has made possi- ble the splendid prices which the farm- ers will get for their products. In 1890, before the passage of the McKinley Law, we imported 329,435 tons of tin plate. Last vear we im- ported 47,360 tons. In 1890 we pro- duced no tin plate whatever. In 1803 THE average number of failures dur- ing tbe last Democratic administration was about fourteen thousand annually. Since 1897, with a large increase in the number of business concerns, the aver- age has been between ten and eleven thousand annually. Wren W. F. Sheehan bolted the Democratic candidate in 1898. he start- ed a “roll of honor” upon which were written the names of Democrats who wanted sound money. Judge Parker’s name is not on that roll. He voted for Bryan in 1896 and again in 1900. Tom WaTteoN says that the 6,500,000 Democrats who followed Bryan in two campaigns can not be delivered to the Clevelandites. Watson should at least subtract one from that number, as Judge Parker has been delivered to the Clevelandites and the charges paid. HeNrY G. Davis complains that the expense of maintaining the federal government is constantly increasing. He fails to understand why it should cost more to keep a family of 80,000,- 000 than it did the family of 80,000,000 that Uncle Sam had when Mr. Davis was a boy. A mAN who was once congratulated on the high standing he maintained in his community, and also upon his un- usual tactiturnity, remarked naively, that if a person succeeded in keeping quiet, people would never discover how commonplace his ideas were. Judge Parker seems to have heard of that man. alae THE whole question of unionism is put inte a nutshell by President Roose- velt when he gays, “We recognize the organization of capital and the organi- zation of labor as natural outcomes of our industrial system, which is to be granted the full protection of the law and which in turn is to be held to a strict obedience to the law.” Maxy people question the proprioty of estimating the chances of success by the odds speculators are willing to give, but it is, perhaps, worth while calling attention to the fact that in New York City bets are being made daily with increasing odds in favor of Roosevelt and Fairbanks. No well- informed Democrats are willing to give even chances on the success of the sphinx of Esopus. THE history of the Democratic party has been one succession of failures. Whenever it has been given power with the opportunity to inaugurate and car- ry to completion some gregt national issue, such as a tariff law, a financial policy, or a lesser national issue, it has proved not only disastrous for the party and policy itself, but has carried with it disaster to the financial and commercial interests of the country. THERE is not a single act in the ad- ministration of Theodore Roosevelt, there is not one single act in his public or private record, for which he needs to.apologize. On the other hand the editorial columns of the Democratic papers now supporting Judge Parker are filled with apologies and explana- tions of the inconsistent course of not only the candidates, but the party which they are endorsing. “WE each and all owe a duty to the community and to the state. It is a positive duty, and that is to aid in se- curing good laws and their faithful en- forcement. We are not menaced by foreign foes. We have no fear of alien attack. We have nothing within to dread except the indifference of the intelligent citizen to the discharge of his civic obligations.”—Hon. C. W. Fairbanks, at Freehold, N. J., June 27, 1903. Ovur old friend Lucifer Ananias Smith seems to think that because he has fol- lowed political bunglers over a preci- pice, that others ought to do the same. Good Republicans never follow erring friends into the Democratic party or into any fool bolting movement. The way to be a Republican is to stick to the party, and of all the political par- ties under the sun, the Republican party is far and away the best and 'the safest to tie to. Our expenses during the past few years have been about $6.30 per capita. This is considerably less than were the per capita expenditures during the early seventies, and then we had no large pension account, we had no Pan- ama canal, we had no rural free de- livery, we had no Philippines, and we had no wish to maintain our position as the foremost nation of the world with its responsibilities and necessarily increased expenditures. No TRUER words were ever spoken speech of acceptance wherein he said: “President Roosevelt has been con- fronted with large and serious ques- tions. These he has met and solved with high wisdom and courage. The charges made against him in the Dem- ocratic platform find an irrefutable an- swer in his splendid administration, never surpassed in all the history of the Republican party and never equal- ed by the party which seeks to dis- credit it.” It will not do to rely upon the po- litical complexion of the United States Senate to save us from tariff agitation, Should Messrs. Parker and Davis be elected in November and a Democratic House of Representatives, we should have a tariff law framed within twelve months and the business interests of the country would feel the effects im- mediately, even if it was impossible to repeal the present law. So great is the fear of Democratic tariff tinkering that the smallest cloud on the horizon would bring a storm of commercial disaster long before any tariff law gould be enacted. WHAT'S IN A NAME? Everything is in the name when it comes to Witch Hazel Salve. E. C. DeWitt, of Chicago, discovered some years ago how to make a salve from Witch Hazel that is a specific for Piles. For blind, bleeding, itching and pro- truding Piles, eczema, cuts, burns, bruises and all skin diseases, DeWitt's Salve has no equal. This has given rise to numerous worthless counter- feits. Ask for DeWitt’s—the genuine. Sold by E. H. Miller. CRIPPLE CREEK TROUBLE DE- SCRIBED BY A CITIZEN. From the Somerset Standard. Visitors at the home of Dr. and Mrs. G. B. Hough are Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Moore, of Cripple Creek, Colorado, Mrs. Moore being a sister of Mrs. Hough. Both of them are natives of Fayette county, and they have been visiting through the East for the past seven weeks. At New York Mr. Moore par- ticipated in the annual National Bun-' defest Rifle Shoot, and carried away some of the medals. There were twen- ty-seven hundred contestants, the shooting being done with rifles at a dis- tance of two hundred yards. Coming from Cripple Creek where Mr. Moore has been in business for the past eighteen years, he is full of infor- mation concerning the miners’ strike that has been in progress there for about eighteen months, the like of which has probably never been equaled in this country. He says the city of Cripple Creek has a population of about 20,000 inhabitants and that it is depend- ent largely upon the mines. The present strike is the first one in that district for ten years. When the last strike was settled an agreement was reached betreen the mine owners and the Western Federation of Labor, a compact that was faithfully kept until the present trouble, when about six thousand miners, went out on a sym- pathy strike with union men who oy? a grievance at Colorado City. Since then the strikers have not stopped in their lawlessness short of murder. Lives have been taken by the whole- sale and property has been destroyed wantonly. Governor Peabody, at the solicitation of the business men of Cripple Creek, called out the State guard to suppress the disorder. To make matters worse some of the county and city officials. who were elected largely by the vote of the union miners, have aided the strikers in this trouble. It came to such a pass, Mr. Moore says, that an alliance of the business, pro- fessional and better men of the com- munity was formed, and a course of 1 action decided upon at a public meet- ing. A committee of twelve was ap- pointed to call upon the Sheriff, one of the strike sympathizers. and demand his resignation, one of the arguments used to persuade him being a rope in the hands of determined men. The of- ficer resigned then and there, and his successor was elected on the spot. This same course was taken with sev- eral minor officials, and more than one hundred of the strike leaders were either deported or driven from the community. The lowest wages paid to the union men at Cripple Creek before the strike, was $3 for a day of eight hours, and from that up to $6. The above should be read and thoughtfully considered by a lot of fellows in this vicinity who are allow- ing their minds to be poisoned and their judgment warped by the ravings of an unprincipled and unreliable so- cialistic and semi-anarchistic sheet published at Girard, Kansas, and er- roneously called “Appeal to Reason.” The Kansas paper is a monstrosity that appeals to the ignorance and narrow prejudices of men, and to be influenced by the worthless and unreliable slush that appears in its columns from week to week, is simply showing a very low order of intelligence on the part of the persons so influenced. Men who waste their time reading such damnably worthless and corrupt literature are never benefited thereby, but they are poisoning their own minds and the minds of their posterity, shriveling their souls and helping to betray them- selves into final oblivion and damna- tion. ————— All kinds of Legal and Commercial we produced nearly 400,000 tons. than those of Senator Fairbanks in his Blanks, Judgment Notes, ete., for sale at THE STAR office. tf A Fool Howl from a Howling Fos In last week’s Meyersdale Commes cial, E. 8. McCullough, the big-mou fie ed jackass and erstwhile Mormon ela from Michigan, attacks the Meyersdslie Republican and its editor witk all he venom and hog language at his com mand. He denies that he advised the organized miners of this region to bog— cott the Republican and the mas business men of Meyersdale who &s- clined to go into the Labor Day parades on Sept. 5th. His denial, however, & like the man, it doesn’t count for muds. McCullough seems very much afrauf that the Republican will turn the Meg ersdale business men against him. He need have no fears along that line, fax the business men of this entire regiem have been against the imported Micki gan jackass ever since he started @m bray in this coal field. The reason &s plain. A jackass is detested on general principles, and especially so when he i continually doing a lot of useless bray- ing a la McCullough. In his last bray, Jackass McCullough acknowledges that he can’t win the strike for the miners, and he calls oa Editor Bishop to use his good offiess with the coal companies to effect = compromise, and he says that the strife will be called off if 55 cents per tons offered and full recognition of the union granted. The proposition comes too late, we fear, and it would be folly to ask the operators to pay 55 cents and gras full recognition of the union. Had thes strike managers made that propositiem in the outstart, there is little or om doubt that it would have been accepted. But instead of using good sense am good diplomacy, the strike managers refused 60 cents a ton when Johm Meager made the initial offer, which, & accepted, would likely have establishe® that as the scale price for the regice for one year. The truth is, the strike managers wanted nothing but a strike, so that they could hold down fat jobs that are not to be had when there are no labor troubles. Had the miners of this re- gion acted on their own judgment, in stead of being governed by the jaw- smiths and worthless agitators from abroad, they would not now be in the sad predicament that they have allow- ed the labor grafters to lead them inte. The Creek miners used better judg- ment, and if you go to Frostburg and midgle among them, you will hear them poking all sorts of fun at the miners of this region. They say the miners here are fools for striking when the Creek region is working, and that’s just what the strike managers think themselves, but will not admit it on account of their own good jobs, which they ase holding at the expense of the posr miner and his family, who must suffer while the strike managers feed at the best hotels and continue to rub ther well filled bellies against the beer andl champaign counters of the hotel bars This is not intended as a defense of Editor Bishop, for he needs none. Itis merely to show you that McCullough's tirade is only a fool howl from a howi- ing fool, and even that is self-evidest and needs no showing up. a BUCKLEN’S ARNICA SALVE Has world-wide fame for marvelows cures. It surpasses any other salwe, lotion, ointment or balm for Cute, Corns, Burnes, Boils, Sores, Felons, D&- cers, Tetter, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Chapped Hands, Skin Eruptions ; infai- lible for Piles. Cure guaranteed. Only 25c. at E. H. Miller’s Drug Store. No Mud-Slinging. Both President Roosevelt and Judge Parker are men of unimpeachable im tegrity. They are honest from skin marrow. There is not a blemish om the private life of either, and thew characters will stand the test of the most searching inquisition. Their antithetical temperaments age legitimate issues in the campaign, ss are their public acts and their politics? records; but it is not necessary to de- nounce one as a fraud or to perm anybody to insinuate that the other has been the knowing beneficiary of election frauds. The American people are in no meed for a mud-slinging campaign. They won’t tolerate it.—New York Work (Dem.). FEARFUL ODDS AGAINST HIN Bedridden, alone and destitute Such, in brief, was the condition of sm old soldier by name of J.J. Haveas, Versailles, O. For years he was troubled with kidney disease, amf neither doctors nor medicines gave him relief. At length he tried Electeie Bitters. It put him on his feet in sheet order, and now he testifies: “I'm em the road to complete recovery.” Best on earth for Kidney and Liver troubles and all forms of Stomach and Bowel complaints. Only 50c. Guaranteed &g E. H. Miller, Druggist. A AR