The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, August 29, 1907, Image 1

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    VOL. x1.
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g Coit) | Str.
BERKEY & SHAVER,
Attorneys-at-T.aw,
SOMERSET, PA
Coftfroth & Ruppel Building.
|
ERNEST 0. KOOSER,
Greatly Reduced Prices!
As we » must have room for the large
line of Fall and Winter
will soon be coming in, we are offering
what is left of our Silk Mulls, Silk Tis-|
sues, Figured Lawns, Dimities, Batistes
and Shirt Waist Goods at
> Capital paid in, $50,000.
A
& DUELS
AY NA NAY NIN
N
2 GY SK
>
&
soseuesss BBR RRB
geseses : BRBBRBRB!
%
:
2
IRR
There are some beautiful patterns
Do not delay, as they
Co.
to select from.
will not last long
k Lick Supp
wry, Pa
SALISBURY.
Surplus & undiyided profiits, $15,000.
Or
Assets over $300,000.
J PER GENT. INTEREST
AL
On Time
Deposits.
. 2; 4 oh
J. L.. Barciius, President. Mausr, Vice President.
ALBERT REZ, ie
Barchus, H. H. Maust,
A Maust, A. E:
IRIN ILI
DTI II,
Norman D. Hay, A.-M.
IL. en
DIRECTORS :—J. L.
Lichty, F. Livengood, I.
AP OP OB AP EP OB AB
REI
5 AS
BH RB RHR RBRBY
aT
call
3 ap
ROUTES
5
HB HHR
Before buying your seeds for spring sowing, and
Go
examine our line of fouey, recleaned
VX
0 ON
D8
A
Menivnm CLOVER,
AILSIRE,
MiLLer,
Mavyorn CLOVER,
C
(Q
ONY
RIMsON CLOVER,
Timority,
BARLEY.
\Y/
HO
3
N
We buy in large quantity, and prices are always inline.
Q ~hli 2 CY ).
S. A. Lichliter, Salisbury, Pa.
HROBBOHBBDE
NAY AAA
SHR
AN
A
g 2
RBBB RBBB
n Bart ii
I
The
of
&
{i Best
That's what we claim for pure home-ground Chop.
&
>
3
0 C4
A
does not pay to buy imported adulterated feed.
best is the cheapest in the We the
Feed and Grocery line.
Re
end. have best
everything in the Flour,
Binder Twine and Phosphate!
for
AYA
Y
CNG
Hr
Buy your Binder Twine from us, also Phosphatv
We have the best of it, and our
your fall crops. prices
are always fair.
We handle the choicest and purest of country produce,
and deliver goods promptly.
West Salisbury EF eed Co.
4
ARYA)
SRSA
YUN UNG
<== A present duty: Subscribe for THE
| RoE.
Goods that
WwW. H.
2 tle
“A SQUARE I
grocery opposite the postoffice,
public to know that
the stock and improve
way.
grocery and confectionerystore,and to give
Big Value For Cash. |
Attorney-At-I.aw,-
SOMERSET, PA.
MEYERS,
Attorney-at-Tiaw,
SOMERSET, PA
| Office in Court House.
Koox~NTzZ.
KOONTZ & OGLE
Attorneys-At-T.aw., :
SOME
Office opposite Court House.
VIRGIL R. SAYLOR,
Attorney-at-I.aw,
: SOMERSET, PA.
Office in Mammoth Block.
DR. PETER L. SWANK,
Phy=ic¢ian and Surceon, w=
ELK LICK, PA.
Successor to Dr. FE. H. Perry.
C. SAXLEOR. D. D.'S.
SALISBURY, PA.
Mrs, M. DYvely Residence,
Street.
Office in Grrant
Special attention given to the preserva-
tion of the natural teeth. Artificial sets in-
serted in the hest possible manner.
THE CHANNELL,
KNOWN AS THE NEW BRADY HOUSE,
15& 17 SOUR ARKANSAS AVE.
OCEAN VIEW.
from. Boardwalk and
One-half:
Two minutes walk
Young’s new million-dollar pier.
square from Reading Railroad Station.
ASONABLE.
two hundred.
Good table.
Write
TERMS RE
Capacity of house,
for hooklet.
HANNELERIL,
Proprietor,
Citsey No Jo
DSOR HOTEL;
20 RILBERT SH. 3
FROM BVERY WBE
e101 ‘our SUeNiS,
rs Rooms £1.00
Fhe only moderate pric
fon and conseque nee in
ADELPHI, A.
5:0 ©
IY Eics
—.: | Wagons
W [N \
PILL,
o Insure
~ Child’s
Life.
NO MORE
CROUP.
Also for
Whooping
Cough,
Sore
Throat.
SOLD UNDER A
POSITIVE CUARANTEE
Contains no Opiates. Pleasant to take.
50 Doses for 35 cents
: AT YOUR DRUCCIST.
Write to-day for Booklet that tells you all
about CROUP. Don’t buy something else
claimed to be.‘ just as good.”
DERBY’S PURE
KIDNEY PILLS
for all Kidney, Liver and Bladder Troubles.
60 Pills—10 days’ treatment, 25 cents at your
druggist. Write to-day for free sample.
DERBY MEDICINE CO.
Eaton Rapids, Michigan.
Coa Try
TR
hin Lak
New Firm!
G.
G. De Lozier,
GROCER MND CONFECTIONR
ased the well known Jeffery
I want the
I will add greatly to
the store in every
It is my aim to conduct a first class
Having parc!
I solicit a fair share of your patronage,
and I promise asquare deal and courteous
line will
Groceries
Produce,
treatment to all customers. My
consist of Staple and Fancy
Cholee Confectionery, Country
Cigars, Tobacco, ete.
OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE,
SALISBURY, PA.
ows Early Risers
The famous little pills.
J. G. OGLE |
DISTRICT ATTORNEY |
{
|
|
|
TPemocratic ;
J Sunday newspapers must
&* cation, and everything else that bears
{ own virtues
| Remedy,
“Dubois,
chureh.
OFFICIAL DIRECTORY.
Below will be found the names of the
various county and district officials.
Unless otherwise indicated, their ad-
dresses are, Somerset, Pa.
President Judge—Francis
“Member of Congress—A. F.
Uniontown, Pa.
State Senator— William
Bedford, Pa
Members of the
Endsley, Somerfield; A. W. Knepper.
Sheriff —William C. Begley.
Prothonotary—Chas. C. Shafer.
Register—Chas. F. Cook.
Recorder—John R. Boose.
Clerk of Courts—Milton H. Fike.
Treasurer—Peter Hoffman.
District Attorney—R. E. Meyers.
Coroner—Dr. 8. J. H. Louther.
Commissioners—Josiah Specht, Kant-
ner; Chas. F. Zimmerman, Stoyestown ;
Robert Augustine, Somerfield. Solici-
tor—Berkey & Shaver.
Jury Commissioners—Geo.J.Schrock ;
J. C. Harding. Windber.
Directors of the Poor—J. F. Reiman,
J. B. Mosholder, Somerset; and Aaron
F. Swank, Davidsville. Attorney for
Directors, ‘HH. F.. Yost; Clerk. C.
Shaver.
J. Kooser,
C. Miller,
Assembly—J. WW,
Auditors—W. II. 1. Baker,
J. S. Miller, Friedens; Geo.
Stoyestown.
of: Schools—D.
County
Rockwood ;
Steinbaugh, §
~ Superintendent
Seibert. : :
County Surveyor—A. E. Rayman.
Chairmen Political Organizations—N.
B. McGriff, Republican ; Alex. B. Grof,
R. M. Walker, Berlin,
O. P. Shaver, Friedens,
W.
Prohibition ;
Lincoln.
THE SUNDAY CRANKS.
Mayor of Dubois Proposes to Give
Them Enough Sabbath Obser-
vance to Make Them Sick.
For some time the Sabbath obser-
vance fanatics have been very active in
Pa., and row Mayor Louis
Boyer proposes to give them all the
Sabbath observance they are looking
for. He recently issued an order to go
into effect last Sunday to stop almost
everything on Sunday.
Street cars. must
must. appear
running
the
cease publi-
stop no
on streets.
the least semblance of work must stop.
ut. the Mayor goes farther, and
orders that paid church choirs must
stop singing, organists stop playing,
and that worshipers must not drive to
, [He is opposed to the new Sun-
day ober varie law, and his order is
aimed at its supporters.
He threatens to stop the taking up of
collections in church, declaring this has
the spirit of commercialism well
being work for those who pass the plate
- Should he not also try to make paid
ministers stop. preaching on the Sab
bath? One of ithe Ten Commandmen:s
tells us that cn “that day thou shalt
not do any. work.” ‘What right
preacher to work for wages on the
bath any more than any other
We have known some of the clergy io
get angry when told that preaching
isn’t work, yet they insist on working
the Sabbath, for wages, . of
course. Why, it is even hard work to
keep up one’s patience to listen to some
of the labored efforts at preaching
some men have to make every
they want to talk, and many talk for an
hour without saying much of anything.
What this state needs is less Phari-
seeism, and more true religion. The
man who is a Sabbath observance fa-
will bear
as
as
n
has =
Sab-
man?
on and
time
natic is usually a man who
watching on week days—a mere Sun-
day Christian wearing religion as a
cloak, one who delights to preach his
and piety from the house-
top.
All the Sabbath observance we need
is the kind that will keep us within the
| bounds of decency, and which will not
interfere with the rights of others who
may not wish to spend the day as their
neighbors do. We do not believe in
Puritaniec Sunday observance, nor any-
thing that in any way resembles it.
The Sabbath was made for man, and
not man for the Sabbath. People
should enjoy themselves on hth un:
and thereby get recreation an est in
its true sense. Christ and his disciples
were even accused of being Sabbath
breakers, and their accusers were fa-
natics of the same order as those howl-
ing for more Sabbath, observance now.
LIFE INSUR ANCE.
For twenty-five cents you can now
insure yourself and family against any
bad results from an attack of colic or
diarrhoea during the summer months.
That is the price of a bottle of Cham-
berlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea
a medicine that has never
been known to fail. Buy it now, it
may save life. For sale at Miller's
Drug Store. 9-1
@ WEDDING Tavitations at THE
STAR office. A nice new stock justre-
ceived. tf.
Cooper, | : :
must pass laws which, while increasing |
|
|
|
Extracts
velt’s Speech at Provincetown,
Mass.
What 1 said about desirable
and undesirable citizens re mains true.
have
Ultimately the national government
| the supervisory and regulatory
the government,
useful combinations
power
of permit such
made
the
also
with
repre-
as are
absolute openness, and as
viously approve.
Almost every big business concern is
engaged in interstate commerce, and
dextrous shifting of
been too often the
position, has
in the past, to
escape thereby all responsibility either
to state or nation.
as
case:
We have found by actual experience
that a jury which will gladly punish a
corporation by fine, for instance, will
acquit the individual members of that
corporation if we proceed against them
which the corporations which they
rectaand-control has done.
During the last few years we have
the road of proper regulation of rail-
road corporations, but we must
stop in the work. I believe in a
tional incorporation law for corpora-
tions engaged in interstate busines.
not
na-
There is, unfortunately, a certain
number of our fellow countrymen who
seem to accept the view that unless
man can be proved guilty of some par-
ticular crime he shall be counted
good citizen, no matter how infamous
the life he has led, no matter how per-
nicious his doctrines or ‘his practices,
i
1
a
to capitalist or ‘labor leader, to rich
man or poor mai.
MEN PAST SINTY
More than half of mankind over sixty
suffer kidney and
IN DANGER.
years of age from
ol prostate glands. This is both pain-
ful and dangerous, and Foley's Kidney
Cure should be taken at the first
corrects irregularities
many old men of this
Rodney Burnetc, Rock-
port, Mo., “I suffered with en-
larged gland and kidney
trouble for years. and after taking two
bottles of Foley’s Kidney Cure 1
better than I-have for twenty years, al-
though IT am now 91 old)”: Seld
by all Druggists. 9-1
sign
of danger, as it
and has cured
Mr.
writes:
disease.
prostate
feel
years
-
The Lash in Delaware.
The resignation of a prison
-
warden
his to
will probably revive
on account of the
whippingpost. the
agitation over that form of punishment
state. The warden in
whois a penologist as well as a state
officer, frankly acknowledges that
while he did his duty, that duty was
most abhorrent to him personally, but
that his opposition comes not much
on the personal unpleasantness of ad-
ministering the lash as on a conviction,
based upon observation and experience,
opposition
in the
SO
sults, the punishment aggravates mat-
ters by rousing all that passionate
and revengeful against the law the
prisoner, and acts as a deterrent rather
than as an aid to reformation.
To a certain class of criminals,
as wife-beaters, abusers of children
and wilful torturers, the lash
tlie only appropriate form of punish-
ment, as such criminals are too hard-
ened to be affected morally by it, and
the pain’ endured acts beneficially in
making them wary of repeating their
offenses, and so protects their victims.
But when the lash is used for ordinary
and petty offenses, as it is in Delaware,
and on boys and men capable of suffer-
ing tortures from its degradation, and
who might be easily reformed by other
means, it is simply a relic of barbarism
.and unworthy our enlightened legisla-
tion. Delaware is only disgracing her-
self, as well as her prisoners, in keep-
ing such a brutal form of punishment
Only in the ex-
where brutality
can its be
is
in
such
seems
in her penal system.
treme cases cited,
fears brute force only,
justified.
use
TEN YEARS IN BED.
“For ten years I was confined to my
bed with disease of my kidneys,”
writes R. A. Gray, J. P., of Oakville,
Ind. “It was so severe that I could
not move part of the time. Iconsulted
the very best medical skill available,
but could get no relief until Foley’s
Kidney Curelwas recommended to me.
It has beem a Godsend to me.” Sold by
all Druggists. 9-1
from President Roose- |
sentatives of the government may pre- |
such a concern must not be allowed by |
criminally, because of those very things |
di-|
taken marked strides in advance along |
Such a view is wicked whether applied”
bladder disorders, usually enlargement |
in Delaware who gave up his position |
question, |
that instead of producing any good re-
“Oe
ede
N O. 3: :
id PENRIVLVANIA GAME LAWS.
| Ss
| A Nnmber of Important Changes
Made by Last Legislature.
| po .
Fhe last-session of the Pennsylvania
| Assembly made a number of important
[changes in the game laws.
interest,
Of great
says a Pittsburg exchange, is
| the Brann amendment to the general
1905. Its principal pro-
visions are as follows:
The open season for woodcock and
ruffed grouse or pheasants is from Oe-
tober 1 to December 1; wild turkeys,
prairie chickens, English, Mongolian or
Chinese pheasants, October 15 De-
cember 1.
{ game law of
to
{The quail season is unchanged, No-
| vember 1 to December 1, but additional
provisions for the protection birds
made. It is unlawful to or
injure quails when bunched upon the
ij ground; or to Kill any game birds at
night ; or kill any game at all by the
foes of any gun other than the kind
| usually raised at arm’s length and fired
| from the shoulder.
| By another act rabbits may be taken
of
are shoot
or Killed from October 15 to December
l in any manner except with the aid of
|-a ferret. ]
The change the im-
portant. The open season is from No-
vember 15 to December 1, but hereafter
only male deer with may be
Killed. Does and fawns are absolutely
protected. - This became necessary by
reason of the fact that the number: of
hunters is so great that deer in season
are practically driven from cover to
cover as if they were pursued by dogs.
The penalty for violation of the law
$10 or a day in jail for each dollar.
will be safest to leave the head on
the deer killed
in deer law is
horns
is
It
the
carcass to prove had
horns.
Besides the incidental tabooing of
heavy duck guns and other weapons
that cannot be fired from the shoulder,
the Legislature, passed an
cally prohibiting the use of automatic
act specifi-
shot ZUrs.
AN AVWEUL
HAD TIME.
Bur
AND
CHOLERA
CUREl
Col FC,
Diarrirors REMEDY
Har.
CHAMBERLAIN!S
that 1
this unsolicited testimonial.
It is with pleasure give you
About =
year agojwhen I had a severe case of
measles I goticaught out in a hard rain
and the measles settled in my stomach
and bowels. I had an awful time, and
had it mot beenjfor the of Cham-
berlain’s’ Colic, Cholera Diarrhoea
Remedy 1 could have possibly
lived” but a few longer, but
thanks fo thisjremedy I am now strong
written the
and |
for
Concord,
use
and
not
hours
above
shall
this
and well. I have
through simple gratitude
always speak a good word
remedy .— HH:
[For sale atiMiller’s Drug Store.
—N AM Gwin; (ra
9-1
- -
Child Labor and Child Idleness.
advocates of antichild
| labor legislation may find food. for
much thought in the published results
of certain investigations made by
Speed Mosby, pardon attorney of Mis-
souri, as to the causes of crime among
the youth of the land. In article in
the North American Review, Mr. Mos by
such
Enthusiastic
an
contends that most criminals are
because they have learned to
earn a living, and he offers the sugges-
tion that there is danger of carrying
the prevention of child labor to a harm-
ful extent. ‘Before making it impos-
sible,” says Mr. Mosby, “for the youth
to acquire practical as well as theoret-
ical knowledge of gainful pursuits, we
should reckon the latent dangers that
lurk within the possibilities of a gen-
eration brought up without effective
knowledge of useful work.”
Mr. Mosby’s conclusions are based
upon statistics secured from the penal
and reformatory institutions of the
country. He shows that of 52,894 con-
viets in the penitentiaries. of the
country in 1890, 31,426 were ignorant of
any trade. In one institution, where
3,154 boys were confined, not one had
any knowledge of any trade. In the
largest penitentiary in the country,
containing 2,000 convicts, more than 65
per cent. of the prisoners are without
acquaintance with any means of living
except crime, The general rule holds,
says Mr. Mosby, that criminals are not
made out of working. boys and girls,
but out of those who are idle and whose
energy finds vent in michief, which
leads to erime.—Omaha Bee.
>
HAY FEVER AND SUMMER COLDS.
Victims of hay fever will experience
great benefit by taking Foley’s Honey
and Tar, as it stops difficult breathing
immediately and heals the inflamed
air passages, and even if it should fail
to cure you it will give instant relief.
The genuine is in yellow package. Sold
by all Druggists. * 9-1
riever