SBURY. nterest ave ed num- lisbury, n extra ery (fine done by ’a.. who as been y differ- and dis- plainly vith the ry build- old like number STAR to ho may alisbury engrav- , the old has been But we ose who picture irround- he farm ity, alse 1 build- n of the Zs. cents te TAR, Elk tf LROAD. ld from miles of e plus 50 nd from adelphia $1.00 for 8,17 and ar 25, in- 00 miles 1 be one nd trip. 16 and er 25, in- ment of n of re- October Agents. : MINAL EET, altimore ew York nnection addition h Ferry nued. 108t pop- etropolis he hotel, In the terminal opy was , under ith, 23rd, , 80 that rom the use, and f street 'w York d Street - “Liberty vice has ranspor- rgage at t is most on in the ¢ of the Passen- imore & e Heart centers | Street, y. Full al detail of this d 5 cents ger Pas- ltimore, (E-WAY WEST LROAD. ith and ling Oc- & Ohio ily, from LONIST in Cali- bia, Col- ~ Oregon Vashing- "LY RE- tion, call altimore 10-26 erset bor erset bor Windber oustwell hio Pyle nfluence yersdale yersdale onycreek onycresk hnstown nemaugh NO. 36, Elk Lick Supply Co. ES NT SEPT ONY We have just received a new line : of Mohair shirtwaist suitings, Danish- cloths, Broadcloths, Flannettes, Fleece- » down and Outingcloths. 9 9 ‘ Heavy-weight underwear for men, women and children, at prices to suit all. | Ee AAIMAATIO ARTA AAA LOAM TOA BAIA LBA BAIA 5 Elk Lick Supply Co. RS ER EN EERE ERGs OF SALISBURY. & Capital paid in, $50,000. Surplus & undiyided profits, $9,000. On Time § PER CENT. INTEREST oeposte. : J. L. BarcHus, President. H. H. Mausr, Vice President. = ER AvLBERrRT REITZ, Cashier. DIRECTORS :—J. L. Barchus, H. H. Maust, Norman D. Hay, A.M. Lichty, F. A. Maust, A. E. Livengood, L. L. Beachy. & hreatly Pleased are all people who call to inspect our immense stock of new goods in all de- HH We have just added to our store 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. RRR RR SRE Re Swmmue 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 hills 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 all injurious substances. Send for Testimonials. For sale by Druggists. THE SEVERANCE & STEWART COMPANY, Pu 2. Oe Ha, 2590 No. Ashland Ave., Chicago, lI. - 72 No. Willard St., Burlington, Vt, ‘Will remove more Real Estate in less any soap ever placed on the t. ‘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, table, oil and mineral product. Use any A very small Juastivy of soapands used for cleanin kitchen utensils; it has no equal. The most wonde oct of modern science. For sale everywhere, 5 Cents, Domi les your grocer substitute, Made only by the MAPLE CITY SOAP WORKS, Monmouth, ". 4 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, Etc. 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, Meyersdate, Pa Ae ei re ; #2 LE od i ER RT as XA Ps S-T-IE-W-X3-INT-S SPELLS STANDARD, SAFETY, and SHOOT STRAIGHT HB Our RIFLES, PISTOLS AND SHOTGUNS are generations past the experimental stage, and are HARD HITTING and ACCURATE—ALWAYS! Ask your dealer and insist | Send for 140-page illus- trated catalog. 5% inter- ested in SHOOT! cover postage, (Our attractive three-color Aluminum Hanger will be § sent anywhere for 10 cents in stamps. J. STEVENS ARMS AND TOOL CO., P. 0. Box 4095 CHICOPEE FALLS, MASS, U.S. A. hi & =ITAVER, Allo rnevs-at-loaw, SOMERSET, PA, Codroth & Ruppel Building. ERNEST O. KOOSER, Attorney-At-I.aw, | SOMERSET, PA. R. E. MEYERS, DISTRICT ATTORNEY. Attorney-at-Liaw, SOMERSET, PA. Office in Court House. W. H. KooNTZ. KOONTZ & OGLE Attorneys-At-Liaw, J. G. OGLE SOMERSET, PENN’A Office opposite Court House. VIRGIL R. SAYLOR, Attorney-at-ILiaw, SOMERSET, PA. Office in Mammoth Block. E. H. PERRY, Physician and Surgeon, SALISBURY, PENN’A. Office corner Grant and Union Streets E. C. SAYLOR, D. D. S,, SALISBURY, PA. Office in Henry DeHaven Residence, Union Street. Special attention given to the preserva- tion of the natural teeth. Artificial sets in- serted in the best possible manner. E. E. CODER, Waiches, Clocks and Jewelry, SALISBURY, PA Repairing neatly, promptly and substan- tially done. Prices very reasonable. CO-OPERATIVE MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE 6O., “@e ® Berlin, Pa. 9% % Affords reasonable insurance. No ad- vance in rates. Write for information. Jac.J.Zorn, W.H. Ruppel, Sec. Pres. HAVE YOU A WANT?—If so, try a small “ad” in Ter Star. Many wants can and are promptly supplied if ad- 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, Jorx R. Boosk, of Somerset Borough. For Clerk of Courts, Mivron 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, PETER HOFFMAN, of Paint Township. For Auditor, W. H. H. BAKER, of Rockwood Borough. J. S. MILLER, of Somerset Township. For Poor Director, Wirriaym Braxr, of Brothersvalley Township. For County Surveyor, ALBERT E. RAYMAN, of Stonycreek Township. For Coroner, C. E, BITTNER, of Hooversville Borough. OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. Below will be found the names of the various county and district officials Un- less otherwise indicated, their addresses are, Somerset, Pa. President Judge—Francis J. Xooser, Member of Congress—A. F. Cooper, Union- town, Pa. State Senator—William C. Miller, Bedford, Pa. Members of the Assembly—J. W. Endsley, Somerfield; L. C. Lambert, Lambertsville. Sheriff—A. J. Coleman. Prothonotary—N. E. Berkey. Register—Charles C. Shafer. Recorder—Everett C. Welch. Clerk of Courts—John G. Emert. Treasurer—W. 8. Matthews. District Attorney—R. E. Meyers. Coroner—Dr. 8S. J. H. Louther. Commissioners—S. W. Poorbaugh, Joseph Horner, Jos. B. Miller. Solicitor—A. L. G. Hay. Jury Commissioners—C. R. McMillan, Ad- dison; W. J. R. Hay, Lavansville. Directors of the Poor—Chauncey F. Dick- ey, J. B. Mosholder, Somerset; and Aaron F. Swank, Davidsville. Attorney for Direc- tors, H. F. Yost; cleek, C. L. Shaver. Superintendent of Schools—D. W. Seibert. Chairmen Political Organizations—F. M. Forney, Republican; Alex. B. Grof, Demo- cratic; R. M. Walker, Berlin, Prohibition. Tur Chicago Daily Review pays a glowing tribute to the publisher of the county weekly in the following: All honor to the editor of the weekly news- paper. He is the man who has time to get near to the hearts ‘of the people. He meets the men and women of all classes and learns of the aspirations of the people at first hand. He goes to the fairs and the races and church do- ings and he gets his inspiration from unpolluted sources. He is better able to reflect the sentiment of the people than the man who is forced, by circum- stance, to sit all day in a dingy office in a high building to fill ajdaily paper. The country newspaper man is the real agent of the people. What he writes is from the heart. All honor to him. i ee THE cry is heard frequently in this country that the state should own the railroads. Yet if we are to judge by the experience of European countries, we will certainly think well before taking any such step. The state roads of France, as of all the German states except Prussia, have long since dem- onstrated their inefficiency in all de- partments, and now L. Paul Henry, in the Annales des Sciences Politiques of Paris, holds Switzerland up to us in a similar light. vertised in this paper. tf Swiss roads were under complete con- trol of the state,and M. Henry, there- fore, asks, “What judgment may be passed on the financial results of 1903 and 1904? It seems that the most fa- vorable verdict we can render is that the roads have not actually been im- periled. But if we compare this to the golden age which was predicted, we may easily understand how great has been the disillusionment in Switzer- land. The most serious phase of all, however, lies in the fact that a reflex action has been exercised on the na- tional credit.”—New Britain (Conn.) Herald. i THE editor of one of our exchanges has the following to say on the subject of luck: “Ill tell you about this thing of luck. It comes to the person who keeps the weeds cut down so that it can find him. Luck sometimes walks up and collars an idler, but it is more linble to nab the man who is busy do- ing the best he can all the time. Luck isn’t lying around on the street allow- ing loafers to cover it with whittlings. Neither is it in the stream waiting for some lazy fisherman to hook it. Luck generally goes hand in hand with in- dustry. If you sit around and wait for luck to hand you a bag of gold and make you a rich man you are pretty apt to end your days in the poor-house. A four-leaf clover will bring more luck to a busy fellow than it will to the loaf- er. It may seem a little tough for a man to work hard for a long time and then have his earnings all swept from him at a single stroke, but it is better to have lost it than never to have had it at all. And another thing, luck isn’t labeled. So it will do you no good to stand around and look for it. Go to work.” For some time the United Mine Workers have been raising a great howl because the Consolidation Coal Company has secured the appointment, by the Governor of Maryland, of sever- al special policemen to keep watch of their property. Some of the leaders of the organization have been holding public meetings and making fiery speeches against the policeing of the mines, claiming that such a course on the part of the coal company is a men- ace to the peace of the region, ete. The real menace to the peace of the region is the walking delegate or the organ- izer who i8 permitted to make inflam- matory speeches. It’s none of the United Mine Workers’ business how many special police are put in service to keep watch over the company’s property, for those special policemen are not a menace to any man who in- tends to go about his own business and not meddle with other people’s prop- erty. When the organization leaders set up a howl against the special po- licemen or guards, they are virtually admitting that they are seeking to com- mit crime and depredation and object to having property watched that they are seeking to destroy. Only several days ago a cowardly attempt was made to assassinate one of the special police- men, in Frostburg, and that is all the evidence needed to prove that such of- ficers are needed in the George’s Creek region, and that the Governor should appoint more of them, instead of heed- ing the Mine Workers’ request for the removal of the officers. LIKE FINDING MONEY. Finding health is like finding money —so think those who are sick. When you have a cough, cold, sore throat or chest, irritation, better act promptly like W. C. Barber, of Sandy Level, Va. He says: “I had a terrible chest trouble, caused by smoke and coal dust on my lungs; but, after finding no re- lief in other remedies, I was cured by Dr. King’s New Discovery for Con- sumption, Coughs and. Colds.” Great- est sale of any cough or lung medicine in the world. At E. H. Miller’s drug store, 50c. and $1.00 ; guaranteed. Trial bottle free. 10-1 Shelter of Silence. Meyersdale and other papers do not hesitate to give the name of the young girl recently involved in a gross out- rage there, but though they admit suf- ficient evidence was produced at the hearing to hold several men, married and single, as the chief perpetrators, they carefully suppress their names. Is such discrimination in the interest of good morals? No! It is one of the chief means of promoting such crimes. The girl is, if anything, more deserving of the shelter of silence.—Confluence News. The News is exactly right in the opinion it expresses on the Meyersdale livery stable outrage. It looks cow- ardly and unfair, and it is cowardly and unfair to do as the Meyersdale Commercial did—expose the young girlin the scandal and withhold the names of the married and single men that figured in the disgraceful affair. During 1803 and 1904 the | The men are worse than the poor, Yar gnorant girl, and they should be thoroughly exposed and completely ostracised and spurned from all decent society. We are inclined to think that hush money has figured in the case, and that goes a long way in keeping moral lepers under cover, around some so-called newspaper offices. Then, again, it may be the fear of losing a little patronage among the so-called good families that usually make the dollar mark the standard of respecta- bility and care little or nothing for common decency and good morals—we say that may be the reason that a lot of guilty culprits ane kept under cover, while the mere child they have rained is held up to the public gaze as a hor- rible example of depravity. If the Meyersdale Commercial is not a moral coward, if it is not ‘guilty of receiving hush money, if it is really in earnest in urging better morals for Meyersdale, let it boldly show its colors on the side of right and expose the men in the scandal ae it did the poor, friendless young girl they have helped to ruin. They are in luck that their names are unknown to THE STAR, even if its edi- tor isn’t a church member. GOT OFF CHEAP. He may well think he has got off eheap, who, after having contracted constipation or indigestion, is still able to perfectly restore his health. Nothing will do this but Dr. King’s New Life Pills. A quick, pleasant, and certain care for headache, constipation, ete. 25c. at E. H. Miller’s drug store ; guar- anteed. 10-1 THE SHADES OF LINCOLN! Audacious Misuse of the Martyr President’s Name by a Combi- nation of all Kinds of Dis- gruntled Politicians. One of the most disgraceful actions in political history is the present scramble of mongrel has-beens or’ would-bes to push themselves into no- tice as promoters or members of a new organization, to be called the “Lincoln party” Last year most of the same hucksters endeavored to receive recog- nition as the “Union party,” and the vote of the people cast them into such obscurity that they are now being resurrected under another guise. But ¢hades of the lamented Abraham Lincoln! To think that the off-shoots would have the audacity to flaunt themselves under the name of almost the father of the Republican party, with the purpose of injuring the very organization that the President of freedom loved so well! And the first promoters of this new Lincoln party at Harrisburg, who are they? Lewis Emery, Sr., of Bradford, a rich oil monopolist, who has been a chronic kicker for over twenty years, and who now seeks to boom himself for Governor ; Henry C. Niles, of York, a young lawyer who is disgruntled be- cause the Republican organization thought him too presumptuous and premature to be named for the Super- ior Court, they turned him down; George E. Mapes, virtually a Demo- crat, now holding place on Wanamak- er’s Philadelphia Record and subserv- ient to his political master’s orders: Leisenring and Bateman we do not even know. This is the hybrid five who insulted the memory of Lincoln by using the martyr President’s name for their miserable political purposes in the hypocritical cry of “reform!” Itis enough to make the great commoner turn over in his grave, if he could know of such infamous use of his name to impose on the people. And in various localities we see aspirants for this or something else, or having a “crow to pick” with some local Republican lead- er, who are intruding themselves be- fore the public as precinct recruits for this new fake party! Thus we have in opposition to the Republican party of Lincoln, Grant, McKinley and Roosevelt such guerrilla or banditti parties as the Democratic, Prohibition, “reform” or independent, so-called Lincoln and what not?—all se mixed together that they cannot them- selves tell t’other from which! But Lincoln—it’s the worst misuse of his memory since the worthy mae- tyr’s death. The Republican freemen will resent this fraudulent assumption of make-shift politicians.—- Chester Citizen. ALWAYS SUCCESSFUL. When indigestion becomes chronic it is dangerous. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure will cure indigestion and all troubles resulting therefrom, thus preventing Catarrh of the Stomach. Dr. New- brough, of League, W. Va, says: “Te those suffering from indigestion or sour stomach I would say there is ne better remedy than Kodol Dyspepsia Cure. I have prescribed it for a num- ber of my patients with good success.” Kodol Dyspepsia Cure digests what you nd makes the stomach sweet » 1{}
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers