7 100,000.00 960,000.00 ,120,000.00 ts. & | Sn 9 areful at- CG Valley. 4) * shier. - derson. 0 ~agim=— N EWTON, farther away. 75 and 100 barrels a day. after it was shot. pany’s property. - assessed. For one month’s production last year ness men in a business way. will be treated exactly like the large ones. cents. viv riz » © Uy Y JODS, ners’ The ty. Bn Butter wih Ls salisbury ou want A A A I Risers tie pills. sia Cure .. jou eat. ¥ This company has acquired leases upon two tracts of valuable oil land in the heart of the Kansas oil field. One tract consists of 80 acres, the other of 160 acres. A gas well of over 3,000,000 cubic feet daily is within 100 rods of the 80-acre tract, and good oil wells a little Some of these wells produce as high as There are no less than two hundred oil wells within two miles of the 160-acre tract, some as close as fifty rods, one of which produe- ed over $6,000 worth of oil the first twenty-one days The lease on 160 acres one-half mile from this company’s 160-acre tract sold recently for $50,000, with no better prospects than on this com- To develop these leases, a limited amount of treas- ury stock is offered at 10 cents a share, par one dollar. One hundred dollars will $1,000 worth of stock which carries with it no liability, and which cannot be sas field, over $194,000 was paid in dividends. This is a business proposition, conducted by busi- The small stockholders People here in Kansas who are familiar with the conditions of our property are buying stock at 10 cents : a share, and as soon as a few thousand more shares are sold, work will be begun upon well No. 1, after which it is very probable no stock can be had as low as 10 For further particulars write to the undersigned, who is treasurer of the com- pany and its heaviest stockholder, and to whom all remittances should be made. C. M. BEACHY. Newton, Kan. NN Of—o KANSAS. —=fi— in the Kan- & Cures All Kidney and Bladder Diseases a Foley's Kidney Cure will positively cure any case of Kidney or Bladder disease that is not beyond the reach of medicine. No medicine can do more. If you notice any irregularities, commence taking Foley's Kidney Cure at once A Merehant Cured After Having Given Up Hope. Foley & Co., Chicago. Gentlemen: —1 was afflicted with Kidney and Bladder trouble for six years and had tried numerous preparations without getting any relief and had given up hope of ever being cured when FOLEY’S KIDNEY . CURE was recommended to me. After using one pottle I could feel the effect of it, and after taking six fifty-cent bottles, I was cured of Kidney and Bladder trouble and have not felt so well for the past twenty years and I owe it to FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE. James Smith, Bentons Ferry, W. Va. and avoid a fatal malady. A Veteran of the Olvil War Gured After Ten Years > of Suffering. R. A. Cray, J.P., of Oakville, Ind., writes:— ¢‘Most of the time for ten years I was confined to my bed with some disease of the kidneys. It was so severe I could not move part of the time. I consulted the best medical skill available, but got no relief until FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE was recommended to me. I am grateful to be able to say that itentirely cured me." Refuse Substitutes Two Sizes, 50 Cents and $1.00 EEE SOLD AND RECOMMENDED BY -GESSSSSSuSmES E. H. MILLER, ELK LICK, PENNA. DON’T PAY. Strikes in the Meyersdale Region Have Been a Source of Much Crime. From the Rockwood Gazette. The Salisbury STAR, in discussing the strike situation, says: “Up to date a block of ten houses have been burned for the Merchants Coal Company ; several buildings have been destroyed and the tipple fired at the Galloway & Clayton mine; the Meager tipple has been twice dynamit- ed and once set afire; a house and two baystacks were burned for Mr. Meager, and the bottoms opened on several londed railroad cars at his mine; his son-in-law and one of his horses have been shot ; thirteen mine cars were run down ‘the Big Vein Coal Company’s plane, doing damage to the amount of $1000, and guards have been shot at.” It is now quite evident that the strike was ill-advised in the beginning, and it is certain that many of the strikers have been indiscreet, if not ab- solutely criminal, in conducting their campaign against the companies. Or- ganization is unquestionably very es- sential for the protection of labor, but unless it is conducted with reason and good judgment, it is very apt to be productive of evil results all around, as the Meyersdale strike seems to have been. Too often dissipated men with- out conscience and glib of tongue be- come leaders in all branches of union- ism, and through their ravings and red-headed oratory strikes are voted where not the slightest sense exists for them; and then the sober, steady, hard- working, good men who have families to support are the sufferers, while the agitators and walking delegates draw good salaries from the contributions of sympathizers and go about inciting trouble and misrepresenting their cause and the outlook for success, until terrible crime follows and the whole scheme fails. It seems to us that a strike could not have occurred at a more inopportune time than this, just when the demand for coal had almost ceased and the prices in the wholesale market were actually less than operators paid for mining the coalin very many instances. It is useless to demand of an employer at any time more wage than his busi- ness will warrant, and a strike that grows out of the refusal to accede to such a demand can be fruitful only of baneful consequences. JUDGE PARKER ON TRUSTS. Judge Parker in his speech of accep- tance was singularly and significantly indefinite in his discussion of the trust question. He said: “The growth of monopoly, of which complaint is justly made, cannot be laid at the doors of the courts of the country. The decis- jos of the Supreme Court of the United States, the Court of Appeals of Lhis state, and the courts of last resort in many states, warrant the assertion that the common law as developed af- fords a complete legal remedy against monopolies.” Standing alone it is dificult to inter- pret the meaning of this utterance of the Democratic candidate for Presi- dent. Read in connection with the Democratic State platform of New York, adopted at Albany last April and dictated by Judge Parker’s friends if not by the Tudge himself, it means that he is opposed to Federal control of trusts and monopolies. The trust plank in that Albany platform reads as follows: “Corporations chartered by the state must be subject to just regu- lation by the state in the interest of the people.” Judge Parker regards “the common law as a complete legal remedy against monopolies,” and his New York plat- form favors leaving the control of the trusts and monopolies to the states which grant charters to them. . This was the argument made by the attorneys for the Northern Securities Company when that case came before the Supreme Court of the United States. Those able constitutional law- yers agreed that as the Northern Se- curities Company was a state corpora- tion, chartered by the state of New Jersey, the enforcement of the Sher- man Anti-Trust law against that cor- poration was an unauthorized interfer- erence by the National Government with the internal commerce of (hat state. The Supreme Court, in its opinion handed down by Justice Harlan, re- marked: This suggestion does not at all impress us.” The court then held that the Sherman Law did prohibit such an interference with interstate commerce, and that “by the express words of the constitution Congress has power to regulate commerce with for- eign nations and among the several states and with the Indian tribes. In view of the unanimous decisions of this court, there ought not, at this day, to be any doubt as to the general scope of such power.” The Supreme Court also said in that opinion: “Asin the judgment of Con- ‘gress the public convenience and the general welfare will be best subserved when the natural laws are left undis- turbed by those engaged in interstate commerce, and as Congress has em- bodied that rale in the statute, that must be, for all, the end of the matter, if this is to remain a government of laws, and not of men.” The Supreme Court did not decide the Northern Securities case on the common law, nor did it regard a cor- poration chartered by a state as only to be regulated by the state. It swept aside all such technicalities as those suggested by Judge Parker and his state platform, and decided against that great trust because it violated a law of Congress which was in conform- ity with the power granted to Congress by the constitution. The Democratic party opposed the passage of the Sherman Law, and it has opposed all other anti-trust legis- lation for the last 15 years. From Judge Parker’s speech of acceptance it would appear that he is in harmony with his party on this question and would deny the power of Congress to pass such laws. He would leave such trusts to be regulated by the states which granted charters to them, and he would have left the Northern Secur- S. A. Lichliter, Headquarters for the finest bread makers in the world— MINNEHAHA and PILLSBURY’S BEST. FEED OF ALL KINDS. FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES. Green Groceries A Specialty On Saturdays, Call, give us a trial and have your goeds delivered to yout door promptly and in good condition. Grant St, Salisbury, Pa. War on Weeds! - THISTLE-INE is sure death to Canada Thistles and all other noxious vegetation. It can no longer be considered an experiment. That it is able to and does destroy weeds and thistles of all kinds, is shown by the hundreds of letters we have received from farmers, park, cemetery and highway commissioners, railroad officials, and others who have given ita thorough test. It 1s easier and cheaper to spray the grass and weeds in walks, driveways and street gutters, with THISTLE-INE than to cut or dig them out. Ifyou have a lawn or back yard in which you take pride, you will find THISTLE-INE a constant friend in destroying Bande on, Burdock, Wild Lettuce, or other unsightly weeds. You run no risk of failure in ordering, for when used according to directions, we guarantee the results to be entirely satisfactory. Send for Circular. - LINDGREN CHEMICAL C0., No. 10 S. lonia Street, Grand Rapids, Mich. $ REWARD a & OHIO RAILROAD. 500 ot The *“Nation’s Highway” a and “SHORTEST ROUTE” TO THE— The above amount will be paid to any person who will fur-| WORLD'S FAIR, - - ST. LOUIS. nish information that will lead THREE THROUGH TRAINS DAILY to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons who set fire to our large tenement build- | VESTIBULED THROUGHOUT WITH PuLLMAN SLEEPING CARS, OBSERVATION CARS AND DINING CARS, ing at Merchants Mine No. 3] VIA CINCINNATL on the night of July 12th, 1904, | SEASON, SIXTY-DAY and FIFTEEN- in Elk Lick township, Somerset; DAY EXCURSION TICKETS county, Pa. | ON SALE MERCHANTS COAL CO., | ~ AY tf Elk Lick, Pa.] —VERY LOW RATES— | —CHEAP COACH EXCURSIONS— FROM ALL STATIONS ANNOUNCED FROM TIME TO TIME. | | 1 SALESMEN WANTED to look after | our interest in Somerset and adjacent | counties. Salary or commission. Ad- | . ti dress The Harvey Oil Co., Cleveland, | Ask ticket agents for descriptive Ohio. 1t | World’s Fair folder, boarding-house | and hotel booklet, guide maps and full | information. Executor’s Notice. Estate of Isabel Boyer, late of Salisbury Borough: docensed. of Salisbury \ THE WAY OF THE RAIL IN THE Letters testamentary on the above estate | having been granted to the undersigned by WORLD. the Jjroper Shor notice is hereby given | TT to all persons indebted to said estate to | ni 2 i make immediate payment, and those hav- | u gue World's Fair Edition of the ing claims against the same to present *‘Book of The Royal Blue.” them duly authenticated for settlement at a . : ha hesidence of ‘8S. R. MeKinley, in the | The September number “Book of the Borough of Salisbury, Somerset county, Pa., | Royal Blue,” issued by the Passenger on Satarday, the sthday of November, 1504, Department of the Baltimore & Ohio Lxecutrix. | Railroad, which will come from press 11-3 | on September 12th, is entirely devoted to special interests at the World’s Fair. Its leading feature is an excellently prepared article on “The Way of the Rail in the World,” by J. G. Pangborn, | who has charge of the Baltimore & Ohio exhibit at the World’s Fair, and which | has been illustrated from photographs taken during the present month. The B. & O. exhibit, which is the most HAY & HAY, Attorneys. September 27th, 1904. BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD —T0 THE— ; ~ WORLD'S FAIR. VERY LOW RATES. Various forms of excursion tickets to Rr. Louis via Baltimore & Ohio Rail- : : : : > ea "| complete of its kind in existence, and pond aw 2p sale from Salisbury | the result of nearly fifteen years re- Lancy, ak Jags. | search, presents all types of locomo- SE ASON I ICKETS, good to return un- | tives, various cars, railway equipment, til De 3 2902, 80 be sold daily photographs, ete., both Eurcpean and Sia rate of $28.30 round (rip, | American, from the beginning of rail- SINTY DAY Excursion Tickets, final] way transportation. Mr. Pangborn limit not later than December 15,| «ho made a study of the Eis of josie sold daily at rate of $28.55 | 1 ilways throughout the world under a ok Abd . : | special commission of the Field Colum- FIFTEEN DAY Excursion Tickets, to |i, Museum of Chicago, is the author be sold daily at rate of $19.55 round | of caveral books on railways, notable ap: . = . | among them is the “World’s Railways.” VARIABLE ROUTE EXCURSION | other article by Mr. Pangborn on TICKETS, either season or sixty day, (he “Locomotive Tonnage at the will be sold going via one direct| world’s Fair” comments on the great route and returning via another di- |, unt of idle motive power on exhi- rect route, full information concern. bition in the Transportation Building. me Wich Suh be obtained from | (ne two and three-day itineraries Ticket Agent. : ive pointers to the prospective World’s STOP-OVERS not exceeding ten days | Fair Ricitors, hin of sight see- at each point will be allowed at | ing at the Fair is limited. Washington, Deer Park, Mountain | pa, sketches of various exhibits are Lake Park, Onkland, Mitchell, Ind. l.150 given and the entire volume is (for F¥ rench Lick and West Baden | {ig fely illustrated with snap shot Springs), Cineinnatl® an MICago | photographs at random throughout the within return limit, upon notice Lo | rounds conductor and deposit of ticket with | ® 100 those intending to visit the Fair Depos Diguer Agent immediately up- | oq well as for those who cannot make os a i the trip, this particular number is most R70 Oy nny oxeeading Jeu Hays valuable, as it presents the greatest of will be allowed at St. Louis on all|yy;1q’s Fairs in a pbotographically one-way (except Colonists’ Tickets to | rapjistic manner. the Paothe Loss) and {ond py The edition will be limited. Single tickets reading to Fons Poyon Fil copies can be obtained for 5 cents each, louis, upon deposit : ticket wun on application to D. B. Martin, Manager Validating Agent and payment oOf|pagsenger Traffic, Baltimore, Md. Reg- fee of $1.00. PRY Three Solid Vestibuled trains are run ular subscription, 50 eents per ahnulll daily from New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington via Park- ersburg and Cincinnati to St. Louis. Three Solid Vestibuled trains are run daily from Pittsburg, Wheeling and Columbus via Cincinnati to St. Louis. Magnificent. coaches, sleeping cars, ob- servation cars and unexcelled dining car service. For illustrated folder. time table and full information, call at Ticket Office, Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. A BARGAIN FOR FARMERS. The New-York Tribune Farmer, na- tional illustrated agricultural weekly of twenty large pages, has no superior as a thoroughly practical and helpful publication for the farmer and every member of his family, and the publish- ers are determined to give it a circula- tion unequalled by any paper of its class in the United States. Knowing that every enterprising, up- to-date farmer always reads his own local weekly newspaper, The New- York Tribune Farmer has made an ex- ceedingly liberal arrangement which enables us to offer the two papers at so low a price that no farmer jcan afford to lose the opportunity. The price of The New-York Tribune Farmer is $1.00 a year and THE SOMER- BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD. CHEAP EXCURSIONS ——T0 THE—— ST. LOUIS WORLD’S FAIR EVERY WEDNESDAY IN AUGUST, SEP- TEMBER AND OCTOBER. oNLY $15.00 ROUND TROP FROM SALIS- BURY JUNCTION. Tickets will be good going in coaches only on Specified Trains. ities Company to be dealt with by the state of New Jersey. But the Repub- lican party and the Supreme Court of the United States regard this as “a government of laws, and not of men.” ——— &F The Pittsburg Daily Times and TaE STAR, both one year for only $3.75 cash in advance. Send all orders to TEE STAR, Elk Lick, Pa. tf Returning, tickets will be good in ame t % coaches only on all regular trains, leav- ser County STAR is $1.50 a year, but ing St. Louis not later than ten days, both papers will be sent for a full year | including date of sale. _|if you forward $1.50 to THE Star, Elk { Call on Ticket Agent for time ofp... pg . trai i ion. 10-27 ’ > | PH ahd fell Information : Send your name and address to The | New-York Tribune Farmer, New York 9 : ’ | Foley S Kidney Cure City. and a specimen copy of that paper | makes kidneys and bladder right. will be mailed to you. tf mothe Re og cm Se ee mp ae nts AF it RES pls