aga- dd it nore con- s by fens, hite, ome r 1905 f 1904 RES, | oS] y whose ee Book 's profit it. Our ODED ns created anies. We 2S of good PHY NG. » Operators A. Our six > Telegraph ablished 20 1g Railroad ry student ion paying 3 east of the 5 to $100 a vockies, 1M- ne. No va- garding any r executive ue free. RAPHY, ffalo, N. Y. Jrosse, Wis. incisco, Cal. I'S AND ,ODGE, BER 16-23. AILROAD. sold from 50 miles of are plus 50 and from 1fladelphia ns $1.00 for 16,17 and ber 25, in- 100 miles vill be one ound trip. 15, 16 and nber 25, in- ayment of ion of re- to October et Agents. MPMENT, de], AILROAD. )th to Sep- turn pass- rting point mber 15th, routes and nit, call on BR. 831 Times and only $3.76 orders to tf PEPER YOON OPER WA WG 5 yi C ON A) hE) (lr. Gountp Star. 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. ) ant Mn (SAD ERED h Y o SG GCG " DREN GOD And Shirt- waistings! A D DX& UN GN UNE i ) £3 9 i = i 5 E <3 g 8 & g J. 1..BA = ol 1 HR RST NATIONAL BANE OF SALISBURY. Capital paid in, $50,000. Surplus & undiyided profits, $9,000. On Time Deposits. H. H. MausrT, Vice President. PER GENT. INTERES] renus, President. " AnLserr REerrz, Cashier. DIRECTORS :—J. L. Barchus, H. H. Maust, Norman D. Hay, A. M. Lichty, F. A Maust, A. E. Livengood, L. L. Beachy. A I ER RR RI RA RI BRS NICE PIRI: oY) a 3 a Y, A p Yi y £2 “uy (realy Pleased are all people who call to inspect our immense stock of new goods in all de- We have just added to our store A Nice Line of Dry Goods. 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. RE Rea Our pri- o0, : | ] | ; : falls out. Is your Hair Falling Out? 3, STOP IT, no more Baldness. Disease prevents the hair being nourished, hence i BROWNELL’S hills 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 ail injurious substances. Send for Testimonials. THE SEVERANCE & STEWART COMPANY, 2590 No. Ashland Ave., Chicago, ill. - air Fern Hair Tonic For sale by Druggists. 406 72 No. Willard St., Burlington, Vt, market. hands. kind of water. 4. very small prodoct of m Don’t let your grocer substitute. Made only Will remove more Real Estate in less time than any soap ever placed on the We care not what your work is, with MAPLE CITY MECHANIC’S SOAP it is possible tn have clean, soft odorless A trial wil, convince you. Is a pure, vegetable, oi) and mineral product. Use any uantity of soap and a . used for cleanin kitchen utensils; it has no equal. The most wonde: ern science. For sale everywhere, 5 Cents. y the MAPLE CITY SOAP WORKS) Monmouth, Ills 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, Coffins, 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 embdlming 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. MCCULLOR, Meyersaul, Pu. E. E. CODER, Wales, GIockS and Jewelry, SALISBURY, PA Repairing neatly, promptly and substan- tially done. Prices very reasonable. 3 » 5 ; I-27 -X3-INT-& SPELLS STANDARD, SAFETY, and SHOOT STRAIGHT Our RIFLES, PISTOLS AND SHOTGUNS are erations rimental stage, and are pase e expe r HARD HITTING and ACCURATE——ALWAYS! ist | Send for 140-page illus- trated catalog. If inter- ested in SHOOTING, you g a ought to have it. Mailed prepaid, upon receipt of | for four cents in stamps to catalog price. cover postage. Our attractive three-color Aluminum Hanger will be sent anywhere for 10 cents in stamps. J. STEVENS ARMS AND TOOL CO., P. O. Box 4095 CHICOPEE FALLS, MASS. U.S. A. BALTIMORE & OH10 RAILROAD EXCELLENT TRAIN SERVICE BETWEEN PITTSBURG, FINLEYSVILLE, WASHINGTON, GIAYSVILLE, WHEELING AND POINTS ON THE OHIO RIVER DIVISION. ——ALL THROUGH TRAINS—— TO AND FROM POINTS ON OHIO RIVER DIVISION RUN VIA BALTIMORE &OHIOR.R. BETWEEN PITTSBURG AND WHEELING ARRIVING AT AND DEPARTING FROM BALTIMORE & CHIO R. R. STATIONS PITTSBURG: Smithfield & Water Sts. WHEELING: South & Main Sts. For Time Tables, Tickets, Pullman Res- ervations, call on or addres Ticket Agents BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD. C. W. BASSETT, B. N. AUSTIN, Gen’l Pass. Agent. Gen’l Pass. Agent. D. B. MARTIN, Mgr. Passenger Traffic. Notice! T0 (ie Residents on East Side of Grant Steel You are hereby notified that the Town Council of'Salisbury Borough, Pa., will sit in Hay’s Opera House, on the 18th of August, 1905, between the hours of 7.30 P. M. and 9.00 P. M., for the purpose of establishing a grade on the East side of &rant street, extending from Broad lane south to Mechanic street. Those interested can appear, if they see fit, to show cause why said grade should not be established, etc. BY ORDER OF TOWN COUNCIL. Fall Term Opening. Tur Tri-STATE Business COLLEGE, Cumberland, Maryland, September 4, 5, 6. 8-31 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. CHARLES E. RICE, of Wilkes-Barre. JAMES 'A. BEAVER, of Bellefonte. COUNTY. For Sheriff. WiLLiaM BEGHLEY, of Somerset Borough. For Prothonotary, CHas. C. SHAFER, of Somerset Borough. For Recorder of Deeds, Joan R. BoosE, of Somerset Borough. For Clerk of Courts, MirTox H. FIKE, of Meyersdale Borough. For Clerk of Orphans’ Court and Regis- ter of Wills, Cuas. F. Cook, of Berlin Borough. For Commissioners, JosIAH 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. 8S. 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 Township. TYPHOID STILL RAGES. Regular Epidemie in Salisbury— More New Cases—Additional Case in Editor’s Family. Since early in the spring there have been between 25 and 30 cases of typhoid fever in Salisbury and vicinity, and the disease seems to be on the increase. Since our issue of last week the fol- lowing named persons have been stricken down, some of them having well developed cases of typhoid, others believed to be taking it: Mrs. Howard Warnick, Harrison Fair and Minnie Livengood. Grant street ; Mrs. Albert Lowry and three children of Randolph Inks, Gay street: Miss Ethel Schramm, Ord street, and a son of Matthew Fair in West Salisbury. Minnie Livengood is a 7-year-old daughter of the editor, and as she is both deaf and speechless, she is a hard patient to wait upon. Her sickness is extremely unfortunate at this time, as it comes at the close of her vacation, and will prevent her return to school at Edgewood Park, Pittsburg, when the next term begins, a few weeks hence. This makes the fifth serious case of sickness we have had in our family during the past few months, and in addition to that we have had to send one of our little daughters away, this week, for special treatment for a pair of very sore eyes, made so by being vaccinated a couple of years ago, which she had to submit to or be barred out of school. Thus are children made to suffer and parents put to outrageous ‘expense that medical graft may flourish and feed fat upon the most damnable and hideous outrage ever fostered by law. Of course, the wise (?) doctor who did the vaccinating will deny that the vaccination caused our child’s sore eyes, but deep down in his own hé&art he knows that it did. The child never had sore eyes before, but has had them constantly ever since the vaccination, and the scar on her arm still looks raw and is very tender to the touch. If all vaccinators were required to give a heavy bond and pay for the bad results of their damnable, hideous, blood-poisoning game of law-protected graft, as should be required of them, not one mother’s son of them could be induced to vaccinate anybody. Hell may or may not be paved with good intentions, but we believe it will be well decorated with those who stand for compulsory vaccination, SALISBURY. ELK LICK POSTOFFICE, PA. THURSDAY, AUGUST 10, 1905. “LUCIFER’S” CALL TO ARMS. “Ripe for Revalt,”’ Says the Com- mercial —What the “0ld War Horse’’ Will Really do. Last week “Lucifer Ananias” Smith, the old donkey skin that presides over the columns of the Meyersdale Com- mercial, gave notice that it is about to organize a new mongrel party to defeat the regularly nominated Republican ticket at the coming November elec- tion. “The time for revolt is here says “Lucifer,” and to prove it he re- prints from the Johnstown Democrat nearly two columns of “tommyrot” in closely set Nonpareil. For some strange reason “Lucifer” nearly always draws on Democratic papers for his campaign thunder, es- pecially when the stuff is contributed by “Edwie” Werner and other political outcasts whom he proclaims as grafters, tricksters and political thieves one year and sages, martyrs and patriots the next. And yet, in spite of it all, he claims to be an unflinching, stalwart Republican. But a short time ago “Lucifer” de- lighted to prate of thef greatness and honor of Quay, Penrose, Durham and other state Republican leaders. and his masters, the Scull brothers, did the same. Now they sing a different tune, and why? Simply because 8. & 8. be- came too greedy and full of rascality and had to be driven away from the “pie counter.” Now they flop their ears, and bellow and bray like dement- ed demons ; but they may bellow and baw! until the cows come home, for it will avail them nothing. The follow- ing, which appeared in a recent issue of the Johnstown Democrat, has tickled “Lucifer’s” vanity exceedingly and started him to bray in a and b and c and q, and several other letters, too: “There isipending revolution in Som- erset county politics. The lowering | clouds of protest are gathering omin- ously over the devoted heads of the county bosses. The venerable editor of the Meyersdale Commercial—the old war horse of the campaign of 1882 —is impatiently champing his bit for the inevitable fray. Editor Smith is calling in clarion tones for a conven- tion to place a Citizens’-Republican ticket in the field for the fall election, and there is every reason to believe Editor Smith will have his way.” Of course he will have his way, but, as usual, his way will lead directly back to the political scrap heap from whence he came. Neither “Lucifer’s” way nor his say nor his bray ever amount to anything, by jing! “The old war horse,” or rather the old war ass (and pretty badly wore, too,) may champ at bis bit until the smoke of battle has cleared away—and then what? He will have a badly soiled crupper, that’s all. The old war horse of Eighty-two, It’s nothing much that he can do, So just let the old war horse go, For soon he’ll be eating his crow— Crow for his dinner and supper, A diet hard on his crupper. A LAY ON THE HEN. Or Missouri’s Greatest Institution Done in Verse. Centralia (Mo.) paper. y Long before Maud raked the hay, the Misso¥ri‘hen began to lap;@nd before the ‘milkmaid had stirred = peg, the | Missouri hen had laid an egg. The corn must rustle, the flowers must spring, if they hold their own with the barnyard ring. If Maud is in need of a Sunday gown, she doesn’t hustle the hay.to town, but goes to the store and buys her suit with a basketful of fresh hen fruit. If the milkmaid’s beau makes a Sunday call, she doesn’t feed him on the milk at all, but works up eggs in custard pie, and stuffs him on that and chicken fry. And when the old man robs a nest and goes to town in his speckled vest to gape and stare at the circus rings or stand around talking of crops and things, his poor wife stays at home and scowls, but is saved from want by those selfsame fowls. For while her husband lingers there, she follows the cackling hen with care. Then hail, all hail, the Mis- souri hen! Acclaim her, poet, with your pen! Throw up your hat, emit a howl for the persevering, useful fowl. Cotton may be king, I ween, but the cackling hen is Missouri's queen. PUBLIC IS AROUSED. The public is aroused to a knowledge of the curative merits of that great medicinal tonic, Electric Bitters, for sick stomach, liver and kidneys. Mary H. Walters, of 546 St. Clair Ave., Co- lumbus, O., writes: “For several months, I was given up to die. I had fever and ague, my nerves were wreck- ed ; I could not sleep, and my stomach was so weak from useless doctors’ drugs, that I could noteat. Soon after beginning to take Electric Bitters, I obtained relief, and in a short time I was entirely cured.” Guaranteed at NO. 30. It Makes a Differense Whose 0x is Gored. If a farmer were to sell an editor several bushels of wheat, wait several years for his money and spend the n- terest on the account sending state- ments to the purchaser, to which the purchaser would pay no attention whatever, what would that farmer think of his customer? If a miner would load five or six tons of coal and’ wait years for his pay, what would he have to say about the person or firm owing him for his labor? Or suppose that an editor would owe several dol- lars toa merchant, mechanic or laborer,. and keep on owing it for years, paying" no attention to statements, and allow-- ing his creditor to spend the interest: and a portion of the principal each: year for postage stamps, envelopes and’ paper, what would the creditor think: or say of such an editor? The answer is easy. The farmer, miner, merchant, mechanic, laborer, or whoever the creditor might be would: proclaim that editor as a deadbeat and’ warn others not to trust him. But it makes a great difference whose ox is: gored, and there isn’t a country editor in the United States who doesn’t waste many dollars sending out statements to at least some of the classes named,. who pay no attention to statements,. but who strenuously hold onto the money that they owe the editor, who- has worked hard for it and in many cases needs it far worse than the ones: owing it. - But the editor is patient and long-suffering, and he doesn’t cry down: his debtors as they would ery him down if the money was owed to them. He is more charitable, hence tries to con- sole himself with the soothing (?) thought that his debtors are not dis- honest, only negligent, and he goes right on speaking well of them, fur- nishing them the news without money, helping their interests whenever and wherever he can, sympathizing with them during sickness and death, writ- ing nice obituaries, ete.. and looking to the world beyond for his reward. Of course the editor’s reward is in Heaven, or at least a whole lot of his: patrons seem to think that is the only place he has a right to look for it. Well, he may find it there, but we are sore afraid that those who treat him so badly will be found among the goats of Gehenna, grazing on the hard, hideous hills of Hades. And, really, most edi- tors would like to have the benefit of their earnings while still in the flesh. Not that they need the money, of course, but because they have worked hard for it and then earned it a time- or two more in trying to collect it. They would like to have it because it belongs to them, and not necessarily for publication, but as a guarantee of good faith. Evidently Acted too Smart. It is quite evident that some of the Meyersdale young men acted a little too smart, recently, while witnessing a ball game at Rockwood, judging from: an item in last week’s Meyersdale Re- publican. The Meyersdale “smarty” is usually very much in evidence at all public places. Of course there are other “smarties,” and even Salisbury has her full quota of them; but of al¥ the odoriferous, pestilential, outrage- ously disgusting, simple, silly and give- you-a-pain brand of “smarties,” the Meyersdale smart article has all others skinned a mile. The Meyersdale “smarty” ie usually an expert in sling- ing last year’s slang, and the way he tries to “throw it on” is enough to make the average monkey and parrot turn. green with envy. That’s why so many parrots are green, but for a brilliant shade of green, no parrot is “in it” with the average Meyersdale “smarty.” Following is what the Republican had. to say, last week: “Yutzy and Miller, of the Rockwood: team, got sore over the ‘rooting’ of some of the boys from this town, and’ without any other provocation started a free-for-all fight, which was disgrace-- ful in the extreme, and as a conse- quence they used up Irven Deal and Harlan Hoover, of this place, very: badly, and for a time it was thought that Deal’s injuries might prove se-- rious, Yutzy having kicked him in the ribs after knocking him down. Man- ager Custer, of the Rockwood club, that same evening disbanded his team, which was certainly a wise move. Joseph Snyder, of Rockwood, officiated as umpire, and gave very good satis- faction.” 1 etree SOOTHING AND COOLING. The salve that heals without a scar is: DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve. Norem- edy effects such speedy relief. It draws out inflammation, soothes, cools and heals all cuts, burns and bruises. A sure cure for Piles and skin diseases. DeWitt’s is the only genuine Witeh Hazel Salve. Beware of counterfeits,. they are dangerous. Sold by E. H. E. H. Miller's drug store ; price 80¢. 9-1 Miller. 8-1