| OF Y, T OF ORE. HAS offic. Var d in otes il and to the ado on- who has nan eat. uch and iral not t is ork hen ney -, of ter, Ors had n 1 n 1 ich and ver. ney re; County Star. VOL. XI. SALISBURY. ELK LICK POSTOFFICE, PA., THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1905. NO. 27. 9 AGT GS GG GOGGIN SST = «> : Uy, ; & 2 = bi 0 x T a Ea 255 | gd 5 % y * oS A A a Te a ah a9 ad S77 my = > 7 IO 4 [7 gK7 5 ed \ ke A <b GY “WY Y GY & 2 GY & a oR And Shirt- waistings! I E fd) Ck pd APD RY a FES A WE =} Just received a fresh assortment of Lawns, Dimities, ) Silk, Ginghams, Organdies and Imitation Mohair. The prices of the above assortment are 10, 12%, 15, 18, 25 and 30 cents. of (Or. Grant And Ord S15, Salishury, Pa. 9 WY Ata aon) “GY SEER ERROBRRRLBRBRBBRBBBBE RH A RR RRR: OF SALISBURY. = Capital paid in, $50,000. Surplus & undiyided profits, $9,000. : 1 DER CENT. INTEREST So Deposits. J. L. BArcHUS, President. H. H. Mausr, Vice President. ALBERT REerrz, Cashier. DIRECTORS :—J. L. Barchus, H. H. Maust, Norman D. Hay, A.M. Lichty, F. A. Maust, A. E. Livengood, L. L. Beachy. . I Tl Greatly Pleased & are all people who call to inspect our | immense stock of new goods in all de- partments. We have just added to our store A Nice Line of Dry Goods. Our pri- ¥ Call and see if we can’t save you some money. ces are very low and our goods the very best. Elk Lick Variety Is your Halr Falling Out? STOP IT, no more Baldness. Disease prevents the hair being nourished, hence it falls ou * BROWNELL'S Maiden Hair Fern Hair Tonic kills germ life, cures the disease, nourishes the hair. ot a stimulant, but a cure. It dries on the head quickly. Is not sticky. Itis not a dye, but a food to restore vigor and matural color to the hair, that is it brings the hair from a sticky condition to a healthy living growth. Is purely vegetable. Is positively free from ail injurious substances. Send for Testimonials. For sale by Druggists. THE SEVERANCE & STEWART COMPANY, 2590 No. Ashland Ave., Chicago, lil. - 72 No. Willard St., Burlington, Vt, Will remove more Real Estate in less time than any soap ever placed on the market. : We care not what your work is, with MAPLE CITY MECHANIC'S SOAP it is possible to have clean, soft odorless hands. A trial will convince you. Is a pure, oil and mineral product. Use any uantity of soapand a 0 used for cleanin, p kitchen utensils; it has no equal. prodoct of modern science. For sale everywhere, 5 Cents. Don’t let your grocer substitute. Made only by the | MAPLE CITY SOAP WORKS, Monmouth, Iie Important Announcement! To the people of Salisbury and vicinity I wish to announce that I have purchased the undertaking business of Rutter & Will, in Mey- ersdale, and have moved to that town. However, I have not sold out in that line in Salisbury, and I have a representive to look after my inter- ests in Salisbury, where I shall keep constantly on hand a fine stock of Undertaking Goods, Coffin, Caskets, Efe. L. C. Boyer is my Salisbury sales- man, and can sell you anything you may need in my line. I will con- tinue to do embalming and funersl directing, both in Salisbury and Meyersdale. Thanking the public for a gener- ous patronage in the past, and so- liciting a liberal future patronage, I remain your servant, H. MCCULLOH, Meyerstale, Pr. E. E. CODER, WaIches, Clocks and Jewels, SALISBURY, PA Repairing neatly, promptly and substan- tially done. Prices very reasonable. REPUBLICAN TICKET. STATE. For State Treasurer. J. Lee PLUMMER, of Hollidaysburg. For Judge of the Supreme Court. JoHN STEWART, of Chambersburg. For Judges of the Superior Court. GEORGE B. ORLADY, of Huntingdon. CuarLes E. Rice, of Wilkes-Barre. JAMES A. BEAVER, of Bellefonte. COUNTY. For Sheriff. WiLtiam BEGHLEY, of Somerset Borough. For Prothonotary, CHas. C. SHAFER, of Somerset Borough. For Recorder of Deeds, Jorx R. Boosg, of Somerset Borough. For Clerk of Courts, MirroNx H. Fike, of Meyersdale Borough. For Clerk of Orphans’ Court and Regis- ter of Wills, CHas. F. Cook, of Berlin Borough. For Commissioners, JOSIAH SPECHT, of Quemahoning Township. ROBERT AUGUSTINE, of Somerfield Borough. For Treasurer, Perer HOFFMAN, of Paint Township. For Auditor, W. H. H. BAKER, of Rockwood Borough. J. S. MILLER, of Somerset Township. For Poor Director, WiLLiAM BraNT, of Brothersvalley Township. JoHN MOSHOLDER, of Somerset Borough. For County Surveyor, ALBERT E. RAYMAN, of Stonycreek T8wnship. BOYS ANDCGCIRLS wanted in every locality in the United States to take subscriptions forliberal cash commissions to ADAMS’S MAGAZINE (A whole year for 10 cents) The best and cheapest monthly home magazine in the pages, 10x14inches, of selected matter of unnsual interest in every home. Liberal commission to solicitors. Send postal card for fall particulars and subscription blank book AT ONCE, ADAMS'S MAGAZINE, 131 W. 24th St, N.Y. City TO LAND OWNERS:—We have printed and keep in stock a supply of trespass notices containing extracts from the far-reaching trespass law pass- ed at the 1905 session of the Pennsyl- vania Legislature. The notices are printed on good cardboard with blank line for signature, and they will last for years in all kinds of weather. Every land owner should buy some of, them, as the law requires land owners to post their lands if they want the protection of the latest and best trespass law ever passed. Send all orders to. THE STAR, Elk Lick, Pa. tf | you explain it?—Johnstown Tribune. Ox one of the swellest streets of Johnstown this can be found: A father and mother and the father’s brother, all of whom are perhaps as hard drink- ers and as vile blackguards as the town holds. They drink and swear and hurl foul language at all hours of day and night, and often the neighbors are wakened up out of a sound sleep and compelled to listen to them. But the father and mother have five chil- dren who are as mannerly and well be- haved as any children on the street, and not an improper word was ever heard to issue from the mouth of one of them. Now, you psychologists who believe in heredity, and you other ones who say it’s all in environment, how do NEARLY every traveling man doing business in Kansas says prohibition is a miserable failure. They judge, as we are all inclined to do, from what they see, personally. Yet, they are doubtless wrong in their conclusions. The Greensburg Republican probably voices the sentiment of a large ma- jority of the editors of the state in ac- cepting the following from the Kansas City Journal as a fair statement of the case: Prohibition has worked well in Kansas towns. It is rigidly enforced in more than half of the counties in the state. Rural districts observe it quite religiously. While it is not a complete success, so far as absolutely prevent- ing the sale of liquor is concerned, temperance people say it is the most practical way to handle the question; that it promotes temperance to a greater degree than the license system. They point to the fact that Kansas has only 8,000 drunkards, whereas its quota would be 15,000 according to statistics of other states. No state has fewer paupers. Twenty-five counties main- tain no poor houses at all, and eight of the other eighty had no inmates for over two years. Business: failures in Kansas are less than one-third of 1 per cent. In a number of cities the law is a dead letter, but there has never been during the twenty-four years of its ex- istence a serious effort made to secure its repeal. It has not been a political question in Kansas for a number of years.—Esbon Times. BENT HER DOUBLE. “T knew no one, for four weeks, when I was sick with typhoid and kidney trouble,” writes Mrs. Annie Hunter, of Pittsburg, Pa., “and when I got better, although I bad one of the best doctors I could get, I was bent double, and had to rest my hands on my knees when I walked. From this terrible affliction I was rescued by Electric Bitters, which restored my health and strength, and now I can walk as straight as ever. They are simply wonderful” Guaran- teed to cure stomach, liver and kidney disorders; at E. H. Miller’s drug store ; price 50c. 8-1 Think and Observe. Some smart latter-day teachers don’t seem to be able to talk anything about school work, except that the new ways are far superior to the old. They can talk and talk about that, and when done they have. said nothing. The modern sehool ought to be superior, and so ought the teachers, as the facili- ties grow better, but the schools never improve under teachers whose stock in trade is to make fun of old teachers. Brains are required to make teachers, now as in old days. Compare this or that school with its pupils of 20 or 25 years ago, and then judge. Think a little, now, before you decide.—Cum- berland Courier. Yes, think and observe a little, and you will not need to do much of either, in this locality, at least, to convince yoursalf that the little red school house, with its old-time teacher of a generation or two ago turned out far better and more intelligent citizens than our schools are turning out now. It is easy in these days for boys and girls to complete (?) the high school course and graduate, but how they can graduate and know so little has often astounded us. The boys and girls who went through the same old arithmetic, grammar, history, geography and other books, winter after winter, a generation or two ago, when there was no course of study, were as far ahead of the average modern-day high school grad- uate, so far as practical and useful ed- ucation is concerned, as electric light is ahead of the tallow-dip. There is something extremely rotten in our pub- lic schools today, and he who has not noticed it has been going along with his eyes closed. A SURPRISE PARTY. A pleasant surprise party may be given to your stomach and liver, by taking a medicine which will relieve their pain and discomfort, viz: Dr. King’s New Life Pills. They are a most wonderful remedy, affording sure relief and cure, for headache, dizziness and constipation. 25c. at E. H. Miller’s TRAINED FORESTERS IN GREAT DEMAND. The Supply Not Large Enough and Good Positions Await the Right Men. The demand for foresters is increas- ing rapidly both for State work and with private owners. Many States now have forest commissions, and sev- eral of them have State foresters. A trained forester at $2,400 a year and two assistant foresters at $1,200 each are wanted by California. Wisconsin wants an assistant forester at $1,500, Indiana a forester to take charge of its State reserve, and Washington offers $1,800 a year for a trained forester. In many other States the advisability of creating the office of State forester has been under discussion this year, and it is only a matter of a few years when such an official will be considered a regular part of an efficient State gov- ernment. The demand for foresters by private timber owners is growing at a still more rapid rate. During the last twelve months 7 of the Bureau of Forestry force have left to take up work with such owners, and 4 have accepted pub- lic positions—two with Massachusetts, one with Connecticut, and the fourth with Ontario, Canada, A number of other requests from private owners can not be met because men are not avail- able. The year before there were less than half as many applications for trained men. But the demand for trained specialists in this line has only begun. Large lumber companies, great wood manufacturing concerns, owners of ex- tensive forests, railroad companies, and others are taking a hitherto unknown practical interest in conservative for- estry. They must have expert men to control their holdings. The result is that forestry is very rapidly taking its place as a recognized profession. A number of forest schools are training young men for this work, but the de- mand has outrun the supply. : —————t A SMOOTH ARTICLE. When you find it necessary to use salve use DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve. It is the purest, and best for Sores, Burns, Boils, Eczema, Blind, Bleeding, Itching or Protruding Piles. Get the genuine DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve. Sold by E. H. Miller. 8-1 SPECIAL SALES. When a successful merchant in an Indiana town of 12,000 was asked if he thought special sales good practice, he said: “Indeed I do. I have one all the time. My store is the ‘vau- deville’ house of our town—continuous performance. I can run two specials a day for a week and the people will never go back on me. Why? Because I always deliver the goods and there is no one else in this town or any nearby city who can discount my goods in quality or price.” This merchant has the situation about right. People love to shop at the live store, the popular store where there is always something doing. Farmers, as a rule, work hard for their money and they like to see a dol- lar cover a foot square if possible. The proper inducements—something new and necessary—never fails to bring a good response on Saturday from the rural district. If the skeptical mer- chant would try offering some special inducements for Saturday trade he will be quickly convinced. During the past two years there have come into prominence a large number of so-called “special sales promoters.” Many excellent and successful business men—a few unscrupulous sharks. Quite a number of the large whole- sale dry goods firms have a special sales department in connection with their collection department, and it’s a very successful and wise plan. A merchant falls behind, practically fails, his failure affects a number of con- cerns—were the big house to jump in and close him up, have a receiver ap- pointed, etc., many minor claims would come up, and possibly the merchant would go into bankruptcy. Quietly the big house sends down their special sales promoter and he puts on a big special sale, and in the majority of in- stances it is a big success. The house gets its money, the merchant a new start, and instead of a bankrupt stock of goods, a ruined man and lost trade, they have a better friend than ever, a more careful buyer in the future and a believer in advertising—altogether the ideal customer.—The Ad-Writer. OLD PAPERS for sale at THE STAR office. They are just the thing for pantry shelves, wrapping paper and cartridge paper for the miners. F ive drug store. 8-1 cents buys a large roll of them tf W. T. Buchanan at Head of Another Great Enterprise. Mr. W. T. Buchanan, late of Salis bury, but who now resides at Newpoet, Tenn., where he presides over a gigan- tic extract factory, is now at the head of another great extract plant to be erected at Stokesville, Va. His many Salisbury friends rejoice at his great success, and the following. clipped from the Harrisonburg Daily News, will be read with interest: “Work has been commenced on the foundations of a tannic extract plaat to be ‘erected at Stokesville hy the Imperial Extract Company, a corpora— tion recently organized by a number af gentlemen who are the chief stock> holders in the well known concern af England, Walton & Co., of Philadelphie. Completed, the plant will cost approx- imately $65.000. It will be known ss the Imperial Extract Works. The new plant will occupy sixteem acres of ground in East Stokesville and will consist of six large frame buildings and a boiler house. The latter will be of brick, 200,000 of which will be re- quired for its construction. The frame buildings will contain something more than 200,000 feet of lumber. The plaat will be erected under the personal sa— pervigion of W.T. Buchanan, genersl' manager of England, Walton & Co's great extract plant at Newport, Tena... and one of the greatest experts in his line in this country. It will have a capacity of fifty barrels a day and will give employment to almost, if not quite one hundred men. The product of the works will be manufactured from materials supplied by the native forests, and will be the best grade of tanning fluid known. Although the buildings will be very large, requiring immense labor in the construction, it is anticipated that the plant will.be complete and in operatioa by January 1, 1906. Mr. Buchanan will be general man- ager of this plant, as well as of that im Tennessee. The officers of the Im- perial Extract Company are, President, Thomas Y. England; Vice President, Charles 8. Walton; Secretary and Treasurer, Charles S. Warren, all of Philadelphia.” INDIGESTION CURED There is no case of Indigestion, Dys- pepsia or Stomach Trouble that will not yield to the digestive and strength- ening influence of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure. This remedy takes the straim off the stomach by digesting what you eat and allows it to rest until it grows strong again. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure affords quick and permanent relief from Indigestion and all stomach troubles, builds up the system and se purifies that disease can not attack and gain a foothold as when in a weakened condition. Sold by E. H. Miller. 8-1 A Distressing Shooting Accident. Tuesday afternoon Percy Imhoff ae- cidentally shot and killed his cousin— Paul Imhoff. In the morning the lads had gone into the Mercantile Depart- ment Store to purchase some articles. and in the absence of the clerk from the hardware department, they pur- loined a 32-calibre revolver from the gun case. The shooting occurred at the home of William Imhoff, about half-past one o'clock. No one was ia the house at the time of the accident, but the two boys. Mrs. Imhoff being absent from home, visiting in Hynd- man, and Mr. Imhoff was at workina distant hay field. Neighbors who ea- tered the house, aroused by the report of the gun, and the subsequent cries of pain, found the wounded boy expiring on the floor, and the other lad in a great state of fear and trepidation, cry- ing, “Now they will hang me!” He disappeared shortly afterwards, and was last seen on the road close te Sand Patch. He had evidently gone te join his mother in Hyndman. While the particulars of the tragedy are not fully known, it is hardly likely that the act was deliberate. There is some fault in the working of the gue, and it is probable that the shooting was purely accidental. The dead child was a son of Alice Imhoff, and was aged about 8 years. Interment took place Thursday afternoon at 3 o'clock. —Berlin Gleaner. THE DIAMOND CURE. The latest news from Paris, is, that they have discovered a diamond cure for consumption. If youfear consump- tion or pneumonia, it will, however, be best for you to take that great remedy mentioned by W. T. McGee, of Vanleer, Tenn. “I had a cough, for fourteem years. Nothing helped me, until I took Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consump- tion, Coughs and Colds, which gave ic- stant relief, and effected a permanent {cure.” Unequalled quick cure, for iT ng Troubles. At E. HL M ore ; price 50c. and $1.00, ial bottle free. 8-1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers