a 3 e EAR PT Ei THE SONERSET COUNTY STRR P. L. Livexgoopo, Editor and Publisher. Entered at the Postoflice at Elk Lick, Pa. as mail matter of the Second Class. We Trust Doctors If you are suffering from impure blood, thin blood, de- bility, nervousness, exhaus- tion, you should begin at once with Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, the Sarsaparilla you have known all your life. Your doctor knowsit,too. Askhimaboutit. You must look well after the condition of your liver and bowels. Unless there is dally action of the bowels, poisonous products are absorbed, causing headache, biliousnéss, nau- sea, dyspepsia, and thus preventing the Sar- om doing its best work. Ay: sa 11 ® Pills TC liver plils. Act gently, all vegetable. The dose is only one pill at time. Made J.C. Ayer Co., Towel, Mass. @ Also manufacturers HAIR yers BE... LOCAL ND CENFRAL NEWS. HEWSY [TENS GATHERED HERE AND THERE, WITH AN OCCASIONAL JOKE ADDED FOR SPICE. Said the shoe to the sock, “T’ll wear a hole through you.” Said the sock to the shoe, “T’ll de darn’d, if you do.” —Ex. J. C. Balliet went to Kingwood, W. Ya., on business; yesterday. George Blake, of Johnstown, Pa., is eirculating among Salisbury friends this week. Crossed eyes straightened without operation. Dr. A.J. Thorn, office in Valley Hotel. tf Rumor has it that one or two hand- some new business blocks will be add- ed to Salisbury, this year. J.L. Yost, a prominent farmer of Garrett county, Md.,, was a business ealler at Tre Star office, Monday. For bloating, belching, indigestion, ete, eat a Ring’s Dyspepsia Tablet after meals. Sold by Elk Lick Pharmacy. 6-1 Chas. J. Newman enrolled last Mon- day in the Meyersdale Commercial College for a course in book-keeping. For headache, constipation, etec., Dade’s Little Liver Pills are best. They eleanse and tonic the liver. Sold by Elk Lick Pharmacy. 6-1 . We have on file for publication a very interesting letter from M. P. Lichty, of North Dakota. It will be published in the very near future. Salve! Salve!! Spread the Salve, but let it be Pine Salye, natures rem- edy for cuts, burns, sores, ete. Sold by Elk Lick Pharmacy. 6-1 Mort A. Wagner and family were visited Saturday and Sunday last by Mr. and Mrs. James Harding, of Gar- rett, the parents of Mrs. Wagner. Why take a dozen things to cure that eough? Kennedys Laxative Honey and Tar drives the cold out through your bowels. Sold by E. H. Miller. 6-1 The town of Oakland, Md., has grant- ed a franchise to a West Virginia com- pany to pipe natural gas into the town . for domestic and manufacturing pur- poses. Even the. Meyersdale Commercial says that Amos W. Knepper ought to be elected to the Legislature, this year. When the Commercial says anything } seually isn’t so, but in this instance is. Hans Wilhelmi has a pet snake in his din shop. Hans is as fond of snakes as an old hen is of her chicks, and his pet snake is very fond of him. The next . thing we know Hans will be eating ‘em : alive. It is not difficult to relieve blind, bleeding, itching or protruding piles with ManZan, the great pile remedy. It is put up in collapsable tubes with aozzle, and may be introduced and ap- plied at the seat of the trouble. Stops pain instantly. Sold by Elk Lick Phar- macy. . 6-1 J. M. Glotfelty, of Lanark, Ill., ar- rived here yesterday for a visit with his brothers, Milton and Calvin. This i Mr. Glotfelty’s first visit to his na- tive heath for 16 years. He will re- main several weeks. Do your eyes tire when reading, be- eome red, watery or painful? Heed nature’s warning and avoid expensive and painful operations of uncertain eutcome. Dr. J. A. Thorn, office in Valley Hotel. Scientific examination free. tf Clyde Balliet came home from Pitts- burg, Monday, to spend a couple of weeks with his parents. ile had been in a hospital in Pittsburg not long ago, taking treatment for a diseased leg, the result ef a fracture sustained more than a year ago. He thinks the lame Jeg will be in its normal condition after a rest of a few weeks. W. H. Boucher went to Windber, Tuesday, to do guard duty at the mines in that vicinity. Wm. Rees and James Cochrane, who Lad been doing guard duty there, returned home recently, and they report that the Windber strike is about at an snd. The mines sre all running, and most of the strikers Bave returned to work. The gums and resins obtained from pine trees have long been recognized as highly beneficial in the treatment of backache, kidney and bladder troubles. Pine-ules is the name of a new med- seine, the principle ingredients of which eome from the pine forests of our own native land. Sold by Elk Lick Phar- macy. 6-1 All examinations made with electric- al instruments in modern dark room. 1 ask you no questions, and do not have to depend upon uncertain and mislead- ing answers in making my diagnosis. 1 see what is the trouble. Examina- tion free. Dr. A. J. Thorn, office in Valley Hotel. tf Wm. H. Engle, Haselbarth’s genial and accommodating hardware clerk, has bought a lot on Somerset street. just east of I. J. Engle’s handsome new residence, where he will erect a new dwelling house during the coming sum- mer. “Billy” is as good a fellow as you can find anywhere, and we will be glad to get him for a near neighbor. A liquid cold cure for children that is pleasant. harmless, and effective is Bee’s Laxative Honey and Tar. Super- jor to all other cough syrups or cold remedies because it acts on the bowels. An ideal remedy for Coughs. Colds, Croup, Whooping Cough and all curable lung and bronchial affections in child or adult. Pleasant te take. Sold by Elk Lick Pharmacy. 6-1 Nicholas Diehl, of Robbins Station, Pa., arrived here on Monday for a week’s visit with his uncle Fred, who lives in West Salisbury. Nicholas says he still likes our geod old town and vicinity very much, and if he can ob- tain work here he will remain, and once more become one of our citizens. He is a good fellow, and we hope he will succeed in finding work here. The tar that is contained in Bee's Laxative Honey and Tar is harmless. It is not coal tar, but is obtained from the pine trees of our own native forests. Bee’s Laxative Honey and Tar is the best remedy for colds because it acts on the bowels—thus expelling all colds from the system. Bee’s is the original Laxstive Honey and Tar, and is best for coughs, colds, croup, whooping cough, lung and bronchial affections. Sold by Elk Lick Pharmacy. 6-1 Mr. E. D. Miller, who has been men- tioned in these columns as a candidate for representative in Congress from this district, was in town Monday greeting his old friends and making many new ones. Mr. Miller is proving a most formidable candidate, and everything looks most promising for his hearty indorsement by the Repub- lican primaries May 26.—Quemahon- ing Sentinel. This is the last week of the Republi- can primary campaign, and THE STAR is heartjly glad of it. The candidates drew liberally on our space during the past few weeks to advertise their can- didacy, but next week we can once more drop politics and devote more space to local and general news, and restore some valuable features of the “Twinkler” that we had to abandon during the campaign. A dose of Pine-ules at bed time will usually relieve backache, before morn- ing. These beautiful little globules are soft gelatine coated, and when moisten- ed and placed in the mouth you can’t keep from swallowing them. Pine-ules contain neither sugar nor alcohol—just gums and resins obtained from our own native pine forests, combined with other well known bladder, kidney, blood and backache remedies. Sold by Elk Lick Pharmacy. 6-1 A water plant will be one of Stoyes- town’s improvements, this summer, and the company putting it in recently struck a strong stream of water by drilling at a point about 150 feet above the center of the town. The company and the town are both in great luck. Now, let Salisbury get a move on and put in a water plant. Old Meadow Mountain is so full of water that it is almost a mountain of water. There is little doubt that a well drilled almost anywhere on top of Meadow Mountain would bring forth a stream of water large enough to water a town twice as big as Salisbury. A GOOD COMPLEXION. A good complexion is impossible with the stomach out of order. If pasty, sallow people would pay more at- tention to their stomachs and less to the skin on their faces, they would have better complexions. KODOL FOR DYSPEPSIA will digest what you eat and put your stomach back in right shape to do its own work. Kodol re- lieves palpitation of the heart, flatu lence, sour stomach, heart burn, etc Sold by E. H. Miller. 8-1 — .,————— Another Pipe Line Heading This Rights of way are being bought through this locality for anorher pipe line. It isn’t the Standard Oil Co.. this time, but a company known as the Su- perior Oil Company, we are informed. The new line will parallel the Standard line, and when the time comes for the trenching and laying of pipe, it will bring much activity and money into Salisbury and vicinity. Kendalls Acquire Big Timber Tract in Garrett County, Md. The Mackie Lumber Co., incorporat- ed, of Piedment. W. Va., recently closed a sale to the Kendall Lumber Co., of Pittsburg, Pa., now the largest opera- tors in Garretc county, of the timber rights only to 800 acres of land situated on “Yough” river, about seven miles from Oakland, between Oakland and Kendall, in Garrett county, for $10,000. The Mackie Lumber Co., reserved the surface rights, as well as the miner- al rights to this land, which is under- laid with three veins of excellent coal. There is no doubt that a railroad will be constructed in the near future up “Yough” river to connect with the Baltimore & Ohio railroad at Oakland, Md. This land was formerly the prop- eriy of Taylor and John Sinee, and is covered with excellent timber, mostly hardwood, and the Kendall railroad, a narrow gauge branch of the Confluence & Oakland, extends nearly to the tract. POSTMASTER ROBBED. G. W. Fouts, Postmaster at Riverton, Ia., nearly lost his life and was robbed of all comfort, according to his letter, which says: “For 20 years I had chronic liver complaint, which led to such a severe case of jaundice that even my finger nails turned yellow; when my doctor prescribed Electric Bitters ; which cured me and have kept me well for eleven years.” Sure cure for Biliousness, Neuralgia, Weakness and all Stomach, Liver, Kidney and Bladder derangements. A wonderful Tonic. At E. H. Miller's drug store. 50 cents. 8-1 Of Importance to Fruit Growers. Prof. H. A. Surface, State Economic Zoologist, in referring to the probable appearance of the seventeen-year lo- cust in Pennsylvania, this year, says they will be particularly destructive to young trees. He further says: As prevention in this case is very much better than remedy, it is best not to trim trees until after the locusts depos- it their eggs in June, and prospective planters should refrain from planting trees, this spring, on soil where trees or bushes were growing seventeen years ago, or which adjoins land that is now in forest or was covered with woodland in 1889. Choice trees or shrubs should be covered with netting to prevent ipn- jury by the female locust. ee Another Big Lumber Deal. This seems to be the age of big lum- ber deals. Several of our exchanges give the following as one of the recent big deals: The Anderson Lumber Company, which has been operating a large tract of timber land in Black, Elk Lick and Addison townships, last week secured an additional six thousand acres. ad- joining the Somerset county tract and extending into Garrett county, Mary- land. The principal stockholders of this company are W. B. Dibert of Johns- town, H. T. Newell of Pittsburg, and James B. Anderson of Somerset. The company has a five-year contract with the Westinghouse Company, of Pitts- burg, to furnish 25,000 feet of lumber daily, and it has been operating a large mill at Pinkerton for more than a year. They expect to peel one thousand cords of bark next summer. The new tract acquired by this com- pany consists of hemlock, pine and oak, and work in cutting it will start im- mediately. It has been decided to operate four mills, and employment will be given to a large force of men. A BAD BURN. For a painful burn there is nothing like DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve. There are a host of imitations of DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve on the market—see that you get the genuine. Ask for De- Witt’s. Good, too, for sunburn, cuts, bruises, and especially recommended for piles. The name E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago, is on every box. Sold by E. H. Miller. 6-1 The Innocent Bystander. When a riot is suppressed by officers of the peace using any extreme meas- ures the resistance of rioters makes necessary, complaint is always heard that some “innocent bystander” has been shot. At a riot there are no “in- nocent bystanders” in the eye of the law. This is the declaration of the courts of this State, made more than sixty years ago. Said the Supreme Court of this State at a period when riot endangered the peace of the Com- conwealth :(— “In case of a riot, all who are present and not actively engaged in its sup- pression are, in contemplation of law, participants ; passive conduct may be construed as an acquiescence in the offense, if not an approbation of it and a presumption of guilt may be drawn if not explained by other circum- stances.” When a riot comes the good citizen who stays ceases to be a good citizen unless he is suppressing the riot. He cannot be an “innocent bystander.” He must aid thelaw in suppressing riot or separate himself from those who are rioters. If he stays and is shot, he has only himself to thank.—Philadelphia Press. A LAZY LIVER. A torpid, inactive liver can produce more bodily ills than almost any thing else. [Itis good to clean the system out occasionally. Stir the liver up, and get into shape generally. The best re- sults are derived from the use of De- Witt’s Little Early Rirers. Reliable, effective, pleasant pills with a reputa- sion, Never gripe. Sold by E. HM er. ——e ee MEMORIAL DAY DESECRATION. It is snd, but true, that Memorial day has lost its significance in most of the towns and villages of our great country. The G. A. R. is protesting, and justly, too, against the way Memorial day is observed in most places. In an able article on this subject, the Detroit News gets off the following, which should set people to thinking and cause them to govern themselves accordingly on Memorial day: May not the heroes, battle-slain; or from their wounds of service, dead ; or, from long marches, or disease, have met in ghostly campfire on the other side and delegated some to visit earth, and in the silent midnight watches, say: “Qld comrades, do it not again! For sake of blood we shed, and wounds we bore, and legs we left on fields of strife ; for armless sleeves we wore on earth in after years; yea, for the sake of God and native land, or land of our adop- tion, forbear the celebration! Memor- ial day! What isit now? A day of games, cockfights and ball; of booze and brawl and Bacchanalian mirth; a day when we are most forgot by those who most should have us in their thought—the generation born and blest since we fought and died—and died for them. “In God’s name let us rest! “Let living comrades, with sweet flowers, limp to our graves and strew us o’er, and drop a tear. Brave boys were they—soon to join us! Ah, griz- zled heroes—see how they grow old! “But make no gaudy day of loud dis- play ; of speeches grand, and blare of band, with marshal, aids, flags and a long procession. “Not Cicero, Demosthenes; not Wil- liam Pitt nor Henry Clay; not ‘Hank’ nor William Alden Smith; nor Hamil- ton, nor Townsend; not Gardner nor even Loud, could tell our merits to the crowd, ere half—nay, full three-fourths —would race to reach the grand or bleachers’ stand to note the game and yell ‘good eye!’ or otherwise to view or referee a fist fight, dog fight or a fowl dispute. Mock not our shades with crowds who care not why we fought, or how, or when we died. “A flower, a tear from comrades dear who knew us best; then let us rest!” DRESS SHIRTS !—The finest line that ever came to town, at Hay’s Depart- ment Store. Prices, 50c., 75¢. and $1.00. tf C. T. Hav, Manager. 1 | 1) [SDE ORVINGS DEPARTMENT: Drafts on all parts of the world. tention. Murx Wineland, President. Marx Wineland, Timothy Griffith, Capital stock..$ \ TORY Surplus fund.. 60,000.00 Deposits (over) 960,000.00 0 Assets (over).. 1,088.000.00 NATIONAL ostBurc.mp. BAN K 50,000.00 . THREE PER CENT. INTEREST PAID ON DEPOSITS. Accounts of individuals and firms invited. Deposits sent by mail and all correspondence given prompt and careful at- Thisbank isthe only United States depository in the George’s Creek Valley. Bank open Saturday nights from 7 to 10 o'clock. a OFFICERS: eesenenn. Roberdeau Annan, Cashier. see DIRECTORS: ss. Duncan Sinclair, Robert R. Henderson. Roberdeau Aunan. Meat RL Market! nN Take notice that I have opened a new and up-to-date meat market in Salis- bury, one door south of Lichliter’s store. Everything is new, neat and clean, and it is a model in every respect. I deal in all kinds of Fresh and Salt Meats, Poultry, Fresh Fish, ete. I pay highest cash prices for Fat Cat- tle, Pork, Veal, Mutton, Poultry, Hides, | CMRANTER 10 PLEASE YOU and want you to call and be con- vinced that I can best supply your wants in the meat line. CASPER WAHL, The Old Reliable Butcher. AUS UU For Men, and gentlemen. TCT PET ETA) : CPE ADU US US GN R OREO EP EAE ROS LO GOR GIGS FINE SHOES § Women And == {|l{ren/=== We are showing a superb line of high class footwear, this season, in All The New Up-To-Date Shapes. A complete line of Oxfords for ladies rt You can get just the shoe to fit your feet from our large stock of widths and sizes. Barehus & Livengood. Zz 2 x eg 3 NED NH EA EIR OA IBS BO DE UNG NO AP ASK FOR THE NWA 7a \ GER ATR aS EERE SAD EER IADR EA AAA NON) ) NL SE Fine Testimonial from Boswell for Hon. E. D. Miller. The Sentinel hails with delight the opportunity to support a man of excel- |g lent ability, high character and ample preciating his past excellent services and superior qualifications, are plainly the fact that he is not a resident of the County-seat nor a ring politician. We brought to bear upon Mr. E. D. Miller by the plain people who knew him be- fore he gave consent to become a can- for represenlatiye in Cougress from earnest, almost imperative. office is not a private snap, but is a public trust not to be doled out to pol- upon it, but ought to find and fall upon duties and serve the publie. servant, that another, untried, shall and share the honors only? men’s souls, as was spoken in the crises of desperate, bloody war, but surely these are'times when the consciences of men are being aroused to a sense of the necessity of electing honest, capable men to office, and especially to great legislative positions, when mighty re- forms must be planned and executed, if we are long to preserve our National honor and existence. In Mr. Ephraim D. Miller. of Rockwood, we find this high ideal of a candidate, and we shall make no mistake when we cast our votes for him for representative in Congress, at the Republican primaries on May 26, 1906.—Quemahoning Senti- nel. mir THE LINCOLN PARTY. The ambition of the Lincoln party, composed of a coterie of would-be bosses posing as reformers, to nomi- nate as their candidate Judge John Stewart and compel the regular organ- ization to accept him in order to avoid a split in the party and the possibility of defeat, has come to grief by reason of the refusal of Judge Stewart to play the part of the stalking horse. Now there is talk of fusion between the Lincolnites and the Democrats. The cloven foot is revealed. The mot- to of the Lincoln party seems to be anything to beat the Republican party. Colonel Guffey has declared against any fusion that does not include a Democrat at the head of the ticket. Will the Lincoln party leaders enter into a Democratic coalition on such terms? If they do, they will be politically damned, now and forever, says the Connellsville Courier, and every word of it is true. experience for an exhalted position, to q which the people of the county, ap- |g calling him, and this notwithstanding |? are aware that much pressure was |j didate for the Republican nomination |¢ this district, and he acquiesced in the |§ call only when he realized that it was | As we already understand, a public; iticians and ambitious upstarts who |$ may think they have hereditary claims |g the man best qualified to perform the |g Why then | @ should we retire a good and faithful |'%% have an opportunity to draw the salary | 4 These may not be times that try |g V3) E0 OOO ASSES U. R. HASEIBARTH & SO. Farmers’ Favorite Grain Drills, Corn Drills, 1900 Wash Machines, Syracuse, Perfection, Imperial and Oliver Chill Plows, Garden Tools, Farm Tools, ete., and still offer 99 prices are the lowest. Food, and all kinds of Horse and Cattle Powders. ORCI Bargains In Bugges, Spring Wagons, EL: 3} PRE®F Also headquarters for Nutrioton-Ashland Stock & Our BRYDON RESIGNS. Supt. Brydon of Somerset and Con- solidation Coal Companies Ac- cepts Position With the Davis Coal and Coke Co. Mr. J. C. Brydon the popular, and ef- ficient general superintendent of the Somerset and Consolidation Coal com- panies, has resigned his position to ac- cept the position of general manager of the Davis Coal and Coke Co., of West Virginia, and expects to take charge of his new position about July 1st, next. His headquarters will be at Cumber- | land, Md. Mr. Brydon is one of the shrewdest, most energetic and honorable men we ever knew, and it is with much regret that those associated with him in the coal fields of Somerset county will bid him adieu. Mr. F. R. Lyon is prominently men- tioned as Mr. Brydon’s successor with the Somerset Coal Co., for he, too, is a man of signal ability in mining mat- ters, and, furthermore, is a gentleman of great popularity. Mr. Lyon is at present assistant general superintend- ent of the Somerset Coal Company. A MOUNTAIN OF GOLD could not bring as much happiness to Mrs. Lucia Wilke, of Caroline, Wis., as did one 25c. box of Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, when it completely cured a run- ning sore on her leg, which had tortur- ed her 23 long years. Greatest anti- septic healer of Piles, Wounds, and Sores. 25c. at E. H. Miller's Drug store. 8-1 WAGNER'S BAKERY, M. A Wagner, Prope, Salisbury, Pa, Finest Bread, Cakes, Pies, Buns, ete., ever sold in Salisbury. Our baking stands on its merits, and we want your patronage. Our pure home-baked Bread, Pies, Cakes, Buns, eic., can al- ways be purchased, nice and fresh, from our sole agent in Salisbury, G. G. De Lozier, Opposite Postoffice. THE SALISBURY HACK LINE o AND LIVERY ~~ C.W. STATLER, - - Proprietor. E@r=Two hacks daily, except Sunday, be- tween Salisbury and Meyersdale, connect- ing with trains east and west. Schedule: Hack No. 1leaves Salisbury atees.....8 A.M Hack No. 2 leaves Salisbury Ateecssee.l Po M Returning, No 1leaves Meyersdale at 1 P.M No.21leaves Meyersdale &tecesse soseses 8 PM &@=First class rigs for all kinds of trav el,at reasonable prices. EE, {ls ‘betical 48 prov tion la mittee ing wif eligibl¢ Prima, May 2 «@’clock in the Norma Joh Clar J. Ww D. J. A.W
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers