~ et! A 1a new | Salis- s store. clean, it, id Salt at Cat- , Hides, 0 con- r wants AL, cher. JS seam BEd pUEal oa Y . Ar Hin UL re 0, 11, Salisbury, Pa—§ Boreten and Domestic DRY GOODS, Finest of Groceries, Hardware, Miners’ Supplies, Shoes, C lothing, Ete. The best Powder and Squibs a Specialty. PIES il For Butter And Eggs. Farmers Favorite Grain Drills, Corn Drills, 1900 Wash Machines, . Syracuse, Perfection, Imperial and & Oliver Chill Plows, Garden Tools, & Farm Tools, ete., and still offer bt Sel Brus In Bogie, Spi Wows, Ee. EW Also headquarters for jNutrioton-Ashland Stock $8 Food, and all kinds of Horse J prices are the lowest. and Cattle Powders.ggOur TTA IE HST RO PITA AT IAPS AYIA E AT LICHLITER'S ZAMAN You will always get the best fresh Groceries. We do not keep goods, we sell them ; therefore they are always fresh. We have on hand the three leading brands of flour— Minnehaha, Pillsbury’s Best and Call to see us, and you will be ° 0 9 Vienna. treated courteously and right. {SOY P1. Feed Home-Made Chop! Why? Because it is pure. best grades of corn and oats. Made from the Con- tains no screenings or sweepings. It is nothing but pure corn and oats, ground by the latest improved methods. Try a hundred-weight, and you will have no other. Manufactured by WEST SALISBURY FEED CO, We carry three kinds of Home-Made Chop | —Corn, Oats and Corn and Oats. Prices; very reasonable. ) West Salisbury, Pa. ‘We use the best malt and water. We produce a good, Sold at All Leading Hotels. Is Good BEER! hops, and pure Sand Spring wholesome beverage. Orders Promptly Delivered. Wl 00. Just receiv- ed a nice line of AT $3.65 TO $4.25. A nice line of Couches at $12.00 and up. A nice line of Mattresses and Springs. Yours for big bargains, The Windsor Hotel. Between 12th and 13th Sts., on Filbert St. Philadelphia, Pa. Three minutes walk from the Reading Ter- minal. Five minutes walk from P. R. R. Depot. European plan, $1.00 per day and up- wards. American plan, $2.00 per day. FRANK M.SHEIBLEY, Manager. Kodo! Dyspepsia Cure Wm. R. HASELBARTH. Digests what you eat. - This store is a regu- lar hive for convenien- ces. When you are tired, come in and rest. Look about you and note the many things, useful and ornamental, that you never thought you wanted until you Whether you buy a postage saw them. stamp or card, or noth- ing at all, come in any- No trouble to show goods way, and rest. and quote prices. The: Elk Lick Drug Sloe THE SALISBURY HACK LINE « AND LIVERY. C. W. Statler, - - - Proprietor. @F—Two hacks daily, except Sunday, be- tween Salisbury and Meyersdale, connect- ing with trains east and west. Schedule: Hack No.1 leaves Salisbury at........ 8A. M Hack No.2 leaves Salisbury at........ 1P.M Returning, No 1 leaves Meyersdale at 1 P.M No.2 leaves Meyersdaleat.............6 P.M LF First class rigs for all kinds of trav- el, at reasonable prices. STANDARD Sewing Machine STANDARD GRAND. SWELL FRONT. LOCK AND CHAIN STITCH. TWO MACHINES IN ONE. BALL BEARING STAND WHEEL. We also manufacture ‘sewing machines that retail from $12.00 up. The “Standard” Rotary runs as silent as the tick of a watch, Makes 300 stitches while other machines make 200. Apply to our local dealer, or if there is no amie in your town, address . . THB Standard Sewing Machine Co., CLEVELAND, OHIO. . Reich & Plock, Agts., Meyersdale, Pa. An improvement over all Cough, Lung and Bronchial Remedies. Cures Coughs, Strengthens the Lungs, gently moves the Bowels. Pleasant to the taste and good alike for Young and Old. Prepared by PINEULE MEDICINE CO.,Chicage, U.S.A. SOLD BY ELK LICK SUPPLY CO. Safe, Quick, Reliable Regulator Superior to other remedies sold at high prices. Cure guaranteed. Successfully used by over | 200,000 Women. Price, 25 Cents, drug- | gists or by mail. Testimonials & booklet free. Dr. LaFranco, Philadelphia, Pa, for particulars, to The Franklin Mills Foley’s Honey sad Tar cures colds, prevents pneumonia. PUBLIC SALE! The Salisbury Borough School Board will offer at public Sale, SATURDAY, APRIL 29th, 1905, AT 2 O’CLOCK P. M., the following: The Old Public School Building. The Steam Heating Plant in the old school building. Time given for removing building, and terms will be made known on day of sale. By order of the board. 4.27 C. S. LICHLITER, Secretary. Normal Notes. The normel at Boynton opens May 8th. Examination at the close by the County Superintendent. Reductions to two or more from same family. There will be as many instructors as necessary, all capable of teaching high- er branches. 5-4 FOR SALE!—I offer for sale at a bargain, a 2-horse Brown farm wagon. Also some choice varieties of early seed potatoes at reasonable prices. W. B. STEVANUS, tf Elk Lick, Pa. TO OWNERS OF MARES. Persons desiring to breed mares to the celebrated Perch- eron Stallion, Terminus, No. 31567, will please take notice that from this date the said stal- lion will stand at the stable of the West Salisbury Feed Co. West Salisbury, Pa., instead of the barn of Daniel J. Meyers. Terminus Horse Co. April 27th, 1905. tf. BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD. SPECIAL LOW FARES. ——SUMMER SEASON 1905— ASBURY PARK, N. J.—National Ed- ucational Association. Tickets on sale Suly 1, 2 and 3, good returning until July;10, inclusive. ATLANTIC CITY.CAPE MAY, OCEAN CITY and SEA ISLE CITY, N.J, OCEAN CITY, MD.,, and REHO- BOTH BEACH, DEL.—Special Ex- cursions operated June 22, July 6 and 20, August 3, 17 and 31. Tickets good sixteen days. BALTIMORE, MD.—United Society Christian Endeavor, July 5 to 10. BUFFALO, N. Y.—Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, Grand Lodge, July 11-15. DENVER, COL—Epworth League. Very Low Rates. Tickets on sale June 29 to July 3, good returning un- til July 17, inclusive. DENVER, COL—G. A. R. Encamp- ment, September 4-7. PORTLAND, ORE.—Lewis & Clark Centennial Exposition, June 1-Octo- ber 15. Special announcements from time to time. For detailed information call on or address Ticket Agents Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. 5-25 GREATLY REDUCED ONE-WAY COLONIST FARES TO THE WEST. —VIA— BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD. Commencing February 28th, and con- tinuing daily to and including May 14th, 1905, the Baltimore & Ohio Rail- road will have on sale from all stations, ONE-WAY COLONIST TICKETS to principal points in California, Arizona, British Columbia, Colorado, Montana, New Mexico, Oregon, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Washington, Wyoming, etc, at GREATLY REDUCED RATES. For tickets and full information, call on or address Ticket Agents Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. 4—27 EPWORTH LEAGUE CONVENTION, DENVER, COL., JULY 5-9, VIA BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD. VERY LOW RATES. Fron all points East of the Ohio River, tickets will be sold June 29 to July 8, inclusive, valid returning to and including July 17, 1905. Extension of return limit to August 11 may be obtained on deposit of ticket and payment of Fifty Cents. For full particulars, address nearest B. & O. Ticket Agent or C. W. Bassett, G.P. A,B. & 0. R. R,, Baltimore, Md. 6-15 The Terror of the Sea. In “The Terror of the Sea” in the March :McClure’s, P. T. McGrath re- counts the awful toll taken by the derelict of the passers on the highways of the sea. Crossing the Atlantic has become a commonplace, but, lest we forget the vast power and the mystary of the sea, here are true tales of the perils that beset the mariner, and of the myster- ious fates that have overtaken stout ships, all within the memory of the youngest sea-captain. These stories of great ships found, not once but many times, silent and empty in mid-ocean, with all sail set and everything in its place, everything right and shipshape; but with «crews vanished completely, leaving no trace and never to be heard of again. These stories chill the blood and, because they are true, they give a sharper thrill than fiction. DASTARDLY DEEDS. Defeated Strikers Smash Tools and Explode Dynamite. On Tuesday night a large quantity of” dynamite was exploded near some houses owned by the Merchants Coal Company, at Coal Run, and occupied by foreign miners. The explosion was terriffic, and it resulted in breaking many window panes in the company houses, also in cracking the plate glass in D. K. Malcolm’s store, which is a considerable distance from the scene of the explosion. Thus it will be seen that while the coal company suffered damage at the hands of enemies, Mal- colm suffered damage at the hands of his fool friends. The explosion was undoubtedly the work of defeated strikers, ostensibly for the purpose of frightening the for- eign miners out of the community in order to make room for miners who had been striking, but who are now begging to be put to work at the price they steadfastly refused for 16 months. The same night another depredation was committed at the Meager mine, by the same kind of people, who entered the mine and broke and twisted all the tools in the place. Such crimes only embitter the coal compsnies all the more against their old employes, and as a result com- paratively few of them, especially of the Coal Run brand, will ever be able to find employment in the mines of this region. It is also rumored that an explosion took place near the old Shaw mine, at the lower end of the region, on Tues- day night, but at the hour of going to press we have no particulars. FORGET ABOUT YOUR STOMACH. If your digestion is bad the vital or- gans of your body are not fed and nourished as they should be. They grow weak and invite disease. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure digests what you eat, cures indigestion and all stomach troubles. You forget you have a stomach from the very day you begin taking it. This is because it gets a rest —recuperates andgradually grows so strong and healthy that it troubles you no more. KE. L. Babcock, Amherst, Minn., says: “I have taken a great many remedies for indigestion but have found nothing equal to Kodol Dyspep- sia Cure.” Kodol digests what you eat, cures Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Sour Stomach, Belching, Heartburn and all Stomach Troubles. Its preparation is the result of many years of research. Sold by E. H. Miller. 5-1 Yellow Dog May Establish Guilt or Innocence of Sam Turvey. A yellow deg is held a prisoner by Sheriff A. J. Coleman. The dog will be an important witness it is said, at a murder trial to be held in Somerset, shortly. The animal is being carefully guarded, and it is expected that his actions when on the stand will have a great deal to do with influencing the jury. The dog, it is said, belongs to Samuel J. Turvey, who was remanded to jail by Judge Kooser at the conclusion of a habeas corpus hearing, without bail, to answer for the murder of William Sut- ton, a strike breaker employed by the Somerset Cool Company, who . died recently from the effects of a gunshot wound received while on his way to work. Mention of this case has been made before by THE STAR. Sutton and a man named Kemp were on their way to work, last Octo- ber, when they were fired upon by a man who stood behind a hickory tree. Kemp was shot in the leg. He kept watching the spot from which the shot seemed to come, and saw a common yellow dog with a_bushy tail running to and fro. Shortly there was another shot, and Sutton was hurt. Then Kemp, it is declared, saw Turvey and the yel- low dog in a ravine. Turvey carried a shotgun, Kemp said. The testimony of Kemp is almost positive, and the court held Turvey for his appearance. The officials learned of the dog’s ap- pearance at the shooting and deter- mined to secure it for the trial. It is now in custody, and will be kept se- curely until the next term of court. The innocence or guilt of Turvey will probably be proven by the identifica- tion of the dog as his property. ABOUT RHEUMATISM. There are few diseases that inflict more torture than rheumatism and there is probably no disease for which such a varied and useless lot of reme- dies have been suggested. To say that it can be cured is, therefore, a bold statement to make, but Chamberlain’s Pain Balm, which enjoys an extensive sale, has met with great success in the treatment of this disease. One appli- cation of Pain Balm will relieve the pain, and hundreds of sufferers have testified to permanent cures by its use. Why suffer when Pain Balm affords such quick relief and costs but a trifle? For sale by E. H. Miller. 5-1 YES, WE CAN !|—We can supply cuts suitable for any and all kinds of ad- vertisements and job printing. Call at THE STAR office and see our large as- sortment of specimens. We can show you cuts of nearly everything that ex- ists and many things that do not exist No matter what kind of a cut you want we can supply it at a very low price. CHAMBERLAIN’S COUGH REMEDY THE BEST AND MOST POPULAR. “Mothers buy it for ecroupy children, railroad men buy it for severe coughs and elderly people buy it for la grippé,” say Moore Bros., Eldon, Iowa. “We sell more of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy than any other kind. Itseems to have taken the lead over several other good brands.” There is no ques- tien but this medicine is the best that can be procured for coughs and colds, whether it be a child or an adult that is afflicted. It always cures and cures quickly. Sold by E. H. Miller. 5-1 Fire in West Salisbury. Last Saturday evening a large stor- age warehouse in West Salisbury was consumed by fire. The building was a structure 144x36 feet, erected several years ago by the American Analine and Extract Co., and used as a storage room for sumac leaves and stems, which said company used in the manu- facture of tanic acid and dye material. After the extract factory was destroyed by fire, several years ago, the sumac warehouse was purchased by F. J. Anspach, of Philadelphia, who rented it to Luther Anderson. At the time of the fire Mr. Anderson had in the build- ing about 18 tons of straw, a new mow- ing machine, grain drill, hay rake, hay ladders, cart, shovel plow, sled, sleigh and about $20 worth of paint, all of which went up in smoke. Mr. Anderson carried $275 on the contents, which will not cover his loss. The building was erected at a cost of $750, when lumber and labor were very cheap, and the insurance on the build- ing was but $300. The fire is supposed to have been of incendiary origin. , THE RIGHT NAME IS DrWITT. DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve cools, soothes and heals cuts, burns, boils, bruises, piles and all skin diseases. K. E. Zickefoose, Adolph, W. Va., says: “My little daughter had white swelling so bad that piece after piece of bone worked out of her leg. DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve cured her.” It is the most wonderful healing salve in the world. Beware of counterfeits. Sold by E. H. Miller. Harrisburg, April 19.—Gov, Penny- packer today approved the Grim auto- mobile bill and two other bills, and vetoed nine bills, including that pro- hibiting the making of usurious loans. The Grim bill regulates the speed limit of automobiles to a mile 1n six minutes in cities and boroughs, a mile in three minutes in the country; re: quires a license for which $3 shall be paid at the state highway department; requires the machine to carry a light in the front and the back; regulates the proceedings of action against of- fenders and prescribes a penalty of from $10 to $25 for the first offense and from $25 to $100 and 30 days’ imprison- ment for the second offense. The fines are to be used for the improvement of the public roads within the muniei- pality in which violations of the act may be committed. The bill goes into effect Jan. 1, 1906, and no person under 18 years of age may take out a license. CHEATED DEATH. Kidney trouble often ends fatally, but by choosing the right medicine, E. H. Wolf, of Bear Grove, Iowa, cheated death. He says: “Two years ago I had Kidney Trouble, which caused me great pain, suffering and anxiety, but I took Electric Bitters, which effected a complete cure. Ihave also found them of great benefit in general debility and nerve trouble, and keep them constant- ly on hand, since, as I find they have no equal.” E. H. Miller, the druggist, guarantees them at 50c. : 5-1 Socialism in Practice. Once, as the story goes, two Irishmen were engaged in a discussion, when Pat asked Mike what Socialism was. “Well, Socialism is sort of an equal division of property,” declared Mike, “What’s mine is yours, and what's yours is mine. That’s the idea.” “If you had $2,000,000,” asked Pat, “would you give me $1,000,000?” “J would that,” said Mike. according to my principles.” “If you had two houses would you give me one of them?” was Pat’s next question. Mike insisted that he would. “And if you had two fine horses would you give me one?” Mike declared that he would follow his principles. “And if you had two goats would you give me one of them?” finally asked Pat. “J would not. I have them,” declar- ed the Socialistic disciple. And there is not in the books, be it remembered in these days when so many men are pretending to be So- cialists, a better definition of Socialism than that.—Louisville Courier-Journal. “That’s FRIGHTFUL SUFFERING RELIEV- ED. Suffering frightfully from the viru- lent poisons of undigested food, C. G. Grayson, of Lula, Miss., took Dr. King’s New Life Pills, “with the result,” he writes, “that I was cured.” All stom- ach and bowel disorders give way to their tonic, laxative properties. 25c. at E. H. Miller’s drug store, guaranteed. 5-1 SE ie MN cceernmn ! Automobile Bill Has Become Law. & a #3 x
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers