~ The Somerset We i MAS, Nal Ln AN ~ Es = a \ 3 en . . ! 2 SP) St Se & INS County Star, VOL. XIII. AT TO TO ATT OP LZ HA HTH SIT SPAY A Always 4 In The Lead o——when it comes to——o0 Fine Dry Goods, Shoes, ofions, Hats, Caps, Groceries, Fresh and Cured Meats. m-Cash paid for Country Pro- duce. : Elk Lick Supply Co. SISA MTS U7 — A LAT ITI AIT YOY BH CINSUVINR INR RLR RRR HALA LIA Oo’ 8 OF SALISBURY. Capital paid in, $50,000. Surplus & undiyided profits, $15,000. 74 Assets over $300,000. On Time § PER GENT. INTEREQT occ. J. L. BarcHus, President. H. H. MavusT, Vice President oR : ALBERT REITZ, Cashier. > 3 EOE EE EIDE EEE SUSU RUS US GS US US UI GS Received 7 ime mm RATS STOCK A POULTRY FOD 8 Li's. § You Can Save Money by Buying in Quantity. PDA A OD EP OPER) US US AU US) rane 0, Li, ~~ $>—Salisbury, Pag a DRY Foren and Domestic". Finest of Groceries, Hardware, Miners’ Supplies, Shoes, Clothing, Ete. The best Powder and Squibs a Specialty. fle te Pres And Bogs. BERKEY & SHAVER, Attorneys-at-Liaw, : SOMERSET, PA, Coffroth & Ruppel Building. ERNEST O. KOOSBER, Attorney-At-Law, SOMERSET, PA. R. E. MEYERS, Attorney-at-Liaw, DISTRICT ATTORNEY SOMFPRBET, PA. Office in Court House. W. H. KooNTZ. KOONTZ & OGLE Attorneys-At-Law, J. G. OGLE SOMERSET, PENN’A Office opposite Court House. VIRGIL R. SAYLOR, Attorney-at-I.aw, SOMERSET, PA. Office in Mammoth Block. DR.PETER L. SWANK, Physician and Surgeon, ELk LICK, PA. Successor to Dr. E. H. Perry. E.C.SAYLOR, D. D. 8, 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. WINDSOR HOTEL, 1217-1229 FILBERT ST., PHILADELPHIA, PA. Modern, up-to-date accommodations at moderate rates. A square each way from the two Daineipal railroad stations and in the center of the shopping and theatre dis- trict. American Plan, $2.00 to $3.50 per day. European. Plan, $1.00 to $2.50 per day. Don’t let beer get the best of you. Get the best of it— Monastary, brewed at Latrobe, Pa., and recognized by chemists and judges of a good article as a pure, wholesome, beverage. Delicious! Refreshing! Sold at the West Salisbury Hotel, West Salisbury, Pa. CHAS. PASCHKE, Propr. New Firm! G. G. De Lozier, (ROGER AND CONFEGTIONER Having purchased the well known Jeffery grocery opposite the postoffice, I want the public to know that I will add greatly to the stock and improve the store in every way. It is my aim to conduct a first class grocery and confectionery store,and to give Big Value For Cash. I solicit a fair share of your patronage, and I promise asquare deal and courteous treatment to all customers. My line will consist ;*of Staple and Fancy Groceries Choice Confectionery, Country Produce, Cigars, Tobacco, etc. OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE, SALISBURY, PA. ‘Wagers RESTAURANT, Ellis Wagner, Prop., Salisbury. (Successor to F. A. Thompson.) OYSTERS IN EVERY STYLE! Also headquarters for Ice Cream, Fresh Fish, Lunches, Confectionery, ete A share of your patronage solicited. Satisfaction guaranteed. : .| will result in a forest. ONE active beech nut, given achance, : One little thought started right. will go round the world and keep on its travels. It gets there by moving, not by sitting sulkily in the sawdust and-wishing it were a plum pudding. Move on. Catch on: Hold fast as long as you can, and if you are knocked off, grab for the next car that comes along, and you will get there. But don't start in the wrong di- rection. Do not start for the drunk- ard’s grave, or you will be sure to get there. Do not start in to go it blind whenever some “smart aleck” blows the horn for you to fall in, lest you fall in where it is deep and ever remain there. Be active or get out of the way, and in one year see how much better off in mind, body, and comforts you will be. : Youxe men, the first question your employers ask themselves when busi- ness becomes slack and it is thought necessary to economize in the matter of salaries. is, “Who can best be spared?” The barnacles, the shirks, the makeshifts, somebody’s proteges, somebody’s nephews, and especially somebody’s good-for-nothing young men, please remember that these are not the ones who are called for when responsible positions are to be filled. Would you like to guage your own future for a position of prominence? Would you like to know the probabili- ties of your getting such a position? Inquire within! What are you doing to make yourself valuable in the position you now occupy? If you are doing with your might what your hands find to do, the chances are two to one that you soon. become so valu- able in that position that you cannot be spared from it, and then, singular to relate, will be the very time when you will be sought out for promotion for a better place. ’ Ir is more pleasant to be invited to take a higher seat than to be deprived of it. It is more pleasant to be king of a cottage than a servant of a palace. It is better to be a good five-cent piece than a bogus quarter; in other words, it is better to hold ourselves at what we are honestly worth. The world is full of people who never know or learn anything, because they think they know enough to begin with. Thou- sands are teaching when they ought to be taught; thousands believe them- selves wise when their ignorance is lamentable ; thousands believe them- selves clothed in gold when they are only thinly plated, and the eopper shows through in many places. The wisest are comparatively ignorant, and thousands of men who have grand ideas of their own abilities will some day wake up to the realization that they have been laboring under a large sized delusion. Many a young man’s life is gilded by bright dreams that come in the early stage of the game, but later he finds that these dreams are. only 1 empty, and O, how bitter is the change when it comes! SENSATION AT BERLIN. Honors and Trouble Thrust on Ex- Editor Marshall at the Same Time. Last Thursday President Roosevelt sent the name of W. V. Marshall, who has been recommended for postmaster of Berlin, to the U. 8. Senate for con- firmation. About the same time Mr. Marshall was arrested on a charge of furnishing liquor on election day for the purpose of influencing voters, on information of Wm. Powell. Mr. Mar- shall was arrested by Deputy Sheriff Schrock, but promptly gave bail in the sum of $500 for his appearance at court. Marshall was for many years the ed- itor of the Berlin Record, and as he is a man who has always stood well in Berlin, his arrest has caused a great sensation. It seems to be the general opinion among unprejudiced people, that spite work and jealousy are at the bottom of Mr. Marshall’s arrest, and the ex-editor’s friends are of the opinion that the prosecutor will fail in proving his charge. They declare that the arrest is nothing short of the meanest brand of persecution, but as to the real facts in the matter we are not in a position to pass judgment, hence we’ll wait and see. what the outcome will be. RISING FROM THE GRAVE. A prominent manufacturer, Wm. A. Fertwell, of Lucama, N. C., relates a most remarkable experience. Hesays: “After taking less than three bottles of Electric Bitters, I feel like one rising from the grave. My trouble is Bright's disease, in the Diabetes stage. I fully believe Electric Bitters will cure me permanently, for it has already stopped the liver and bladder complications which have troubled me for years.” Guaranteed at E. H. Miller’s, druggist. Kodol Nyspepsia L Cure Price only 50e. 3-1 SALISBURY. ELK LICK POSTOFFICE. PA.. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7. 1907. CHARITY BEGINS AT HOME. No reward comes to him who robs himself of what he needs to sustain life and health, or what is needed to care for his own, merely to give to those who ask. No man has a right to give what is not fully his own; no right to give away any time that which belongs to another, to create poverty in order to relieve poverty ; to lose the respect of his home ones, or to do what will weaken their faith in him as a pro- vider and a protector. Man’s first duty is to his family, and he discharges the duty when he is true to the family that is the restlt of his making and begetting. Men err by withholding when they have means to spare as well as not, and they err by giving heedlessly to the endless asking of those whose great aim in life is to attach themselves to those inclind to charity. Help those who are in sick- ness, in trouble and distress, if you can do so without robbing your creditors, yourself or your family. Be just, and then be generous. To give wisely is an art, to give well is to give successfully. To provide employment is even hu- mane and wise, but you should .give it or find it to those who try to deserve such assistance, not to those who are lazy, dirty, shiftless, careless and in- different to your success. Let those who will not try to come up just a lit- tle higher, with your help, remain where they are. No man has a right to walk deliber- ately into poverty in order to prove his manhood a disposition to humanity. This is not the way to help mankind, or to serve your country. When a man is stricken down, then help him if you can, but do not encourage him to fall again and to keep on falling simply to be helped. Do not be a miser, nor yet a spendthrift. Do not be selfish, but be careful to preserve your own health, means and ability to help those who are willing to help themselves. A VALUABLE LESSON. “Six years ago I learned a valuable lesson,” writes John Pleasant, of Mag- nolia, Ind. “I then began taking Dr. King’s New Life Pills,and the longer I take them the better I find them.” They please everybody. Guaranteed at E. H Miller’s, druggist, 25c. 3-1 ey efitipne SEA LIFE IS WHAT WE MAKE IT. Ella Wheeler Wilcox has faithfully expressed as common truth in a little poem entitled “Companionship,” com- mencing: “Laugh, and the world laughs with you, ‘Weep, and you weep alone; For the sad old earth must borrow its mirth, But has troubles enough of its own. “Sing'and the hills will answer; Sigh, and it is lost in the air; The echoes bound to a joyful sound, But shrink from voicing care.” One of the first and hardest lessons which the novice has to learn upon entering the great busy world of toil and tumultis that the rushing, strug- gling; striving public has no interest in the grief of any individual. It is too fully occupied with its own advance- ment to spend a thought or a care on what does not concern or effect its wel- fare. > When we come to investigate we will find that trouble is universal, and is more equally meted out than we sup- pose. It comes to us all in one form or another, sometimes in disguise, but it is the same ugly spectre when the mask is thrown aside. Every heart has its own burden which wealth cannot lighten, nor honor alleviate. It. may be in the hidden depths, unseen by hu- man eyes, but it is there nevertheless, and will be until the spirit throws off this “mortal evil” and leaves it behind with its earthy tenement. The only difference is that one has the moral courage to meet or overcome, or else submit bravely to the inevitable, while the other makes no effort to lift him- self from the stream into which the tide of circumstances has placed him, but wastes the strength in vain re- grets and useless repining, which, if properly exerted, would put him on his feet. Whatever your trials and disappoint- ments, keep them to yourself; they only worry your friends and vex those who have no claim upon your confidences. Keep a bright face, a cheerful word and a hopeful heart. Carry in your bearing the dignity of self-esteem, and let the air of prosper- ity fit you like a garment. Extend to the world a cordial hand, and remem- ber that life is for the most part what we make it. HOW TO BEAUTIFY YOUR SKIN. The principal ingredients in Laxa- kola tablets are cascarinand dandelion, vegetable laxatives known to have a beneficial action upon the skin and complexion. Mild, safe, sure, 40 choco- late coated tablets, 26 cents. E. H. Miller. ? 3-1 NO. i. Stan] | DEATH’S HARVEST. Samuel J. Lichty, one of Salisbury’s Best Citizens, Passes Suddenly Away. It is with deep regret that we this week chronicle the death of our good neighbor, Mr. Samuel J. Lichty, who passed suddenly and unexpectedly away at his home on Grant street, last Friday evening. His death was a shock to the entire community, and the news was as surprising as would be a flash of lightning from a clear sky. It is true that Mr. Lichty was one of our oldest citizens, but as he was a man of wondeful vigor and rugged health, his death was not in the least anticipated. He had been hauling coal all day with his horse and sled, for he usually enjoyed the best of health, and never could content himself in idleness or inactivity. In the evening, at the close of his day’s labor, he complained of having a severe pain in one of his hands, also. of a shortness of breath, and while sitting in his comfortable home, surrounded by his aged wife, daughter and grand- children, his son, Dr. A. M. Lichty, was sent for, but before anything could be done for his comfort, he suddenly ex- pired in his chair. The sad news was at once flashed over the town, and on all sides much regret and sorrow was expressed, as well as surprise. It can be truly said that Mr. Lichty was a noble man, and as a citizen he was esteemed and be- loved by all. He was one of our near- est neighbors, and we knew him inti- mately for more than thirty years. He was a plain, blunt citizen, free from all shams and outward show, yet very cons siderate of the feelings of others—kind, generous and manly. One admirable trait that Mr. Lichty had was his disposition to keep silent on the faults of others. He preferred to speak only of the good that he saw in others, and he was at peace with all the world. Another beautiful trait was his fondness for children, and he was never more happy than when driving - about with his wagon or sled, surround- ed by a bevy of little folks. The lads about town were always eager to do errands for him, but no more so than he was to do a good turn for a neigh- bor whenever “opportunity presented itself. : Mr. Lichty will be greatly missed in this community. Not only on account of his many good traits of character, but on account of his general useful- ness. For many years he was a sort of general utility man in the community, for he could turn his hand to almost anything useful, and his services were always at the disposal of any and ali comers, rich or poor, and at extremely modest charges, and many, many times without money and without price. His was a peaceful and a happy life. He strove not for great riches, but was content to live in ordinary comfortable circumstances, working more or less every day, but never taxing his strength beyond the point of discretion. He was a man temperate in all things, and his daily life was an open book, as it were, every page of which contained a wholesome lesson and a good example for his fellowmen. Deceased was aged 79 years, 3 months and 26 days. He was a son of the late Mr. and Mrs. John C. Lichty, and a brother of Solomon, Jonas and David Lichty, Mrs. Daniel Miller, Mrs. Mich- ael Kimmel, Mrs. John W. Beachy, Mrs. Sally Sipe and Mrs. J. D. Liven- good. The only surviving brother is David Lichty, of this place, and the sisters are all dead, except Mrs. Daniel Miller, of Illinois, and Mrs. J. D. Liven- good, of this place. Samuel J. Lichty was the father of three sons and three daughters, as fol- lows: W. 8. Lichty, of Lincoln, Neb.; Daniel, of California; Dr. Albert M., of this place; Mrs. Albert G. Keim, of Missouri; Mrs. C. Rowland, deceased, of Illinois ; Mrs. M. H. Wagner, of this place. Besides the surviving brother, sisters and children, deceased is also survived by his aged wife, who is oniy about a month younger than her la mented husband, The funeral service was at the Ger- man Baptist Brethren church, Monday afternoon, conducted by Rev. W. A. Gaunt, of Huntingdon, Pa., assisted by Rev. Geo. Yoder, of the local congrega- tion. Deceased was a member of the aforesaid denomination for a little more than 58 years, and a deacon of the same for more than 50 years. The funeral was attended by a large concourse of people from various parts of the county, although the weather was very inclement at the time, all of which goes to show that the people care not for weather conditions when it comes to paying their last sad respects to a departed friend and brother. The remains were interred in the I. O. O.F. cemetery.