rr ————. “EE ga- 1 it ore on- ns, ite, me 905 904 £’S, hose Book rofit §, Our OOT OF OFORE. AL HAS OAD. from iles of lus 50 from elphia 00 for 17 and 25, in miles 2 one trip. 6 and 25, in- nt of of re- tober gents. t does y ad- busi- ing, a fit to which tf s and $3.75 rs to tf E. i 1 i RT HR County Star. NO.28. And Shirt- waistings! PO EP ST EAE EP OVP EB EF A EP AAS o Just received a fresh assortment of Lawns, Dimities, IY Silk, Ginghams, Organdies and Imitation Mohair. The prices of the above assortment are 10, 12%, 15, 18, 25 and 30 cents. 09 09 : OF SALISBURY. Capital paid in, $50,000. Surplus & undiyided profiits, $9,000. § PER GENT. INTEREST ose Deposits. J. L. BaArcHus, President. H. H. Mausr, Vice President. : AvLBert REIrz, Cashier. DIRECTORS :—J. L. Barchus, H, H. Maust, Norman D. Hay, A. M. Lichty, F. A. Maust, A. E. Livengood, L. L. Beachy. ARS NESE AER AENEAN RRR ERE ERR RR RR Sa Lam (poly Pleased J realy Pleased are all people who calli > inspect our immense stock of new goods in all de- : partments. 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 Store. We have just added to our store : Is your Hair Falling Out? a, STOP IT, no more Baldness. Disease prevents the hair being nourished, hence it falls out. BROWNELL’S Maiden Hair Fern Hair Tonic kills germ life, cures the disease, nourishes the hair, Not 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 all 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. Isa pure, vegetable, oil and mineral product. Use any kind of water. A very small quantity of soap and a hulle water will do the work. Also or cleanin, kitchen utensils; it has no equal. The most wonderful prodoct of modern science. For sale eve here, 5 Cents. Don’t let your grocer substitute. Made only by the | MAPLE CITY SOAP WORKS) Monmouth, ut. J 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, Collins, Caskets, Bic. 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 funeral 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, Meyersdale, Pr. E. E. CODER, WaIches, Clocks and Jewelry, SALISBURY, PA Repairing neatly, promptly and substan- tially done. Prices very reasonable. REPUBLICAN TICKET. STATH, For State Treasurer. J. LEE PLUMMER, of Hollidaysburg. For Judge of the Supreme Court. JouN STEWART, of Chambersburg. For Judges of the Superior Court. GEORGE B. OrRLADY, of Huntingdon. CuarLes E. Rick, of Wilkes-Barre. JAMES A. BEAVER, of Bellefonte. WiLLiam BEGHLEY, of Somerset Borough. For Prothonotary, CHuas. C., SHAFER, of Somerset Borough. For Recorder of Deeds, JouN R. Boose, of Somerset Borough. For Clerk of Courts, MivrroN H. Fike, of Meyersdale Borough. For Clerk of Orphans’ Court and Regis- ter of Wills, Cuas. F. Cook, of Berlin Borough. For Commissioners, Josian SPECHT, of Quemahoning Township. ROBERT AUGUSTINE, of Somerfield Borough. For Treasurer, PETER 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. JouN MOSHOLDER, of Somerset Borough. For County Surveyor, ALBERT E. RAYMAN, of Stonycreek Township. BOYS AND CIRLS wanted in every locality in the United States to take subscriptions for liberal cash commissions to ADAMS’S MAGAZINE (A whole year for 10 cents) The best and cheapest monthly home magazine in the world, containing 32 pages, 10x14inches, of selected jeading matter of unusual interest in every home. Liberal commission to solicitors. Send postal card for full 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 irespass notices containing extraets from the far-reaching trespass law pass- ed at the 1905 session of the Pennsyl- vania Legislature. The notices are printed on goed 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 STATE POLICE LAW. Officers are Authorized to Make Aet as Forest Fire, Game and Fish Wardens. Below is the full text of the measure passed by the last legislature and ap- proved by the state executive on May 2, 1905. The provisions of the new law are of special interest to the people re- siding in the rural localities through- out the state: An act creating the Department of State Police ; providing for the appoint- ment of a Superintendent thereof to- gether with the officers and men who shall constitute the force; defining their powers and duties, and making an appropriation for the expenses con- nected therewith. Section 1. Be it enacted &e., that it is hereby created and established the Department of Staté police; the head of which shall be Superintendent of State Police to be appointed by the Governor, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, serve for a term of four years from the date of his ap- pointment, and who shall receive a salary of three thousand dollars per annum, to be paid quarterly upon war- rant of the Auditor General drawn on the State Treasurer. Section 2. The Superintendent of State Police shall be provided by the Board of Public Grounds and Build- ings with suitable offices at the Capitol, in Harrisburg, and shall give a bond to the Commonwealth, in the sum of twenty thousand dollars per annum; one clerk, who shall be a competent bookkeeper, at a salary of fourteen hundred dollars per annum. and a com- petent stenographer at a salary of twelve hundred dollars per annum. Section 3. He is also authorized to appoint the State Police Force, which shall consist of four companies, or pla- toons, each consisting of a captain, at a salary of fifteen hundred dollars per annum, a lieutenant, at a salary of twelve hundred dollars per annum; five sergeants, at a salary of one thou- sand dollars yer annum, and fifty men, at a salary of seven hundred and twen- ty dollars per annum. No applicant shall be appointed by the State Police until he has satisfactorily passed a physical and mental examination, based upon the standard provided by the rules and regulations of the police force of the cities of the first class, in addition to which each applicant must be a citizen of the United States, of sound constitution, able to ride, of good moral character, and between the ages twenty-one and forty years. Section 4. It shall be the duty of the Superintendent of State Police to pro- vide for the members of the Police Force, suitable uniforms, arms, equip- ments, and, where it is deemed neces- sary, horses; and to make such rules and regulations, subjected to the ap- proval of the Governor, as are deemed necessary for the control and regula- tion of the police force. It shall also be the duty of the Superintendent to establish local headquarters in various places. For that purpose he is hereby authorized to do so, by lease or other- wise, so as best to distribute the force throughout the various sections of the Commonwealth, where they will be most efficient in carrying out the pur- poses of this act to preserve the peace and prevent crime. Section 5. The various members of the Police Force are hereby authorized and empowered to make arrests, with- out warrant, for all violations of the law which they may witness, and to serve and execute warrants issued by the proper local authorities. They are also authorized and empowered to act as forest fire, game and fish wardens; and in general, to have the power and prerogatives conferred by law upon the members of the police force of cities of the first class, or upon constables of the Commonwealth; and are intended, as far as possible to take the place of the police now appointed at the request of the various corporations. The State Police Force shall, wher- ever possible, co-operate with the local authorities, in detecting crime and ap- prehending criminals, and preserving the law and order throughout the state. Section 6. That the sum of four hundred and twenty-five thousand dol- lars, or so much thereof as may be necessary, be, and the same is hereby specially appropriated to pay the sal- aries and expenses necessary to carry this bill into effect ; the same to be paid on warrant drawn by the Auditor Gen- eral upon the State Treasurer out of moneys in the State treasury not other- wise appropriated. Section 7. All acts or part of acts inconsistent herewith be, and they are hereby repealed. ee @& WEDDING Invitations at TaE STAR office. A nice new stock justre- ceived. tt. | | Arrests Without Warrants— | | . Solid Truth. The Jeannette Dispatch is willing to Can an Editor Tell the Truth? Occasionally we meet a man who is give the devil his dues and accept all | sists that an editor could always tel kinds of “tainted money” if it can be | the whole truth | wanted to. put to good use. And so does every other man with | common every-day horse sense. The | people who are making an ohiery | against “tainted money” are simply | playing to the galleries for a little cheap notoriety. We regret to say that even some of the professed humble and willing workers in the Master’s vineyard cannot withstand the temptation of posing in the lime- light of publicity. —Connellsville Cour- ier. BENT HER DOUBLE. “I 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 had 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 ee pepe Too Much Water in the Coal. The directors of the Pittsburg Coal Company yesterday passed the divi- dend for the last calendar quarter, and that concern thus took its proper place in the list of rotten trusts. With the Crucible Steel Company and the Amer- ican Window Glass Company, not to mention others, it fell into the line, to which it has long belonged, of that brilliant galaxy of local promotions known as the “weak sisters” of Pitts- burg. Too few parts coal, too many parts water, it has reached the water level. Mismanaged from its birth, “bottle nursed” from the beginning, it has accepted rank with the weaklings. During the past quarter it earned less than one-half the sum necessary to pay the dividend on its preferreu stock: and, therefore, at least, after repeated dodgings and after several times pay- ing dividends when there was no legal nor moral warrant for them, it has been decided to no longer attempt to maintain its position between “hell and the boiler shop,” but to take refuge in the neutral ground known as the scrap heap.—Pittsburg Times. 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 drug store. 8-1 Train Stoning. The death of a passenger on the Bal- timore & Ohio railroad between this place and McKeesport, caused by a blow from a stone hurled by some ma- licious scoundrel at the train as it passed by, is not the first accident of the kind, though the result was unusual and distressing. The stone-thrower probably did not intend to commit murder, but his act might without any straining at the law be construed as a capital offense. There are some crimes wherein malice is assumed by the law, acts wherein deliberate intent is taken for granted. Premeditation is essential to a verdict of murder in the first degree, yet pre- meditation is presumed in cases of poisoning. The man or boy who throws stones at a passing train must likewise be pre- sumed to have acted wilfully, deliber- ately, maliciously. The hand that cast the stone that killed Alexander H. Campbell was the hand of a murderer whose neck should feel the vengeance of the noose. It may not have been premeditated homicide, but it was ma- licious murder, and one is quite as bad as the other. The train-stoning animal is danger- ous, and he should be suppressed if he has to be obliterated. —Connellsville Courier. 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 strain 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 so purifies that disease can not attack and gain a foothold as when in a weakened in his paper, if hs He can’t do it and continme in the business, remarks an exchange. A Missouri editor tried it and was ie vited to leave town, and the request was put so forcibly that he “got™ Here are some of the items that pat him out of business: : “John Borin, the laziest merchant im town, made a trip to Belleville yestee day.” “John Doyle, our groceryman, is da ing a poor business. His store is dirty, dusty and noxiously eodoriferous. Be- sides he spends a good part of his time loafing around town. How can he expect to do much?” “Rev. Styx preached last Sunday em charity. The theme was a good ome, but the sermon was rot.” “Dave Shukey died at his home im this place, the doctor gave the cause es heart failure. The facts are that Dave was drunk, that whiskey killed hiss, that everybody knows it. and that the doctor lied when he said it was heart failure.” “Paddy Smith’s ‘blind pig’ is runnieg wide open seven days in the week and no one knows it better than the village dads.” “Married, Miss Lylvia Rhodes aad James Canakan, last Saturday evening at the Baptist church. The bride iss very ordinary girl who knows no moee about cooking than a rabbit and nevee helped her mother three days in hee life. She is no beauty and has a gal like a fat duck. The groom is a well known and up-to-date lcafer. He’ been living off the old folks all his life and don’t amount to shucks. They will have a hard life of it.” “Arch Abercrombie thrashed his wife again Sunday.” 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 Our Flag the Oldest. . The star-spangled banner is oldee than any one of the present flags of the European powers—we are reminded by the Paris Figaro. It was adopted in 1777 by the Com- gress of the thirteen colonies of North America, then at war with the mothee country. The yellow and red Spanisk flag came out in 1785; the French tri- color was adopted in 1794; the red English emblem, with the union jack in the upper cornor, dates from 1801: the Sardinian (now the Italian) flag first fluttered in 1848; the Austro-Hum- gary flag was one of the consequences of the compromise of 1887; the present German flag first appeared in 1871, and the Russian tri-color is quite a recemt affair. The only modification that the American flag has undergone since its origin consists of a new star every time a new state is taken into the Union. THE DIAMOND CURE. The latest news from Paris, is, that they have discovered a diamond cure for consumption. If you fear consump- tion or pneumonia, it will, however. be best for you to take that great remedy mentioned by W. T. McGee, of Vanleee, Tenn. “I had a cough, for fourteem years. Nothing helped me, until I took Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumgp- tion, Coughs and Colds, which gave im- stant relief, and effected a permaneat cure.” TUnequalled quick cure, for Throat and Lung Troubles. At E. HL Miller’s drug store ; price 50c. and $1.08, guaranteed. Trial bottle free. 8-1 me Arrested for Embezzlement. The Pittsburg Times of July 18th contained the following paragraph com- cerning a commercial traveler who has: been coming to Salisbury for severad years. “A. C. Parker, of Johnstown, Pa.,"was arrested last night at the Union statiom by Albert H. Swineheart, of the Pena sylvania railroad detective bureau, om a charge of embezzlement preferred by Bissinger Bros., of 545 Liberty avenue, Pittsburg. Parker was employed ass traveling salesman, and is alleged te have taken about $200 of the firm's funds. Information was made before Alderman Edward Levergood, of Johns town. Parker left Johnstown yester- day for Pittsburg, and was arrested upon his arrival at the Union station® THREE GOOD AND JUST REASONS There are three reasons why mothees prefer One Minute Cough Cure: First, It is absolutely harmless; Second, I tastes good—children love it; Third, & cures Coughs, Croup and Whooping Cough when other remedies fail. Sol condition. Sold by E. H. Miller. 8-1 | by E. H. Miller, 8-1 RRR