The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, September 12, 1907, Image 1

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    The Somerset
S AL 15 SBURY.
KL
K LIC K POS
Watch Out
for the new Fall and Winter Goods
daily arriving at the big corner store.
Don’t buy your
Fall
and Winter
Bonds until you see our line.
3 Lek S
Or
Capital paid in, $50,000.
Assets over $300,000.
d PIR GENT. INTEREST
FE
Cashier.
Maust,
A Jaume A. E.
President.
ALBERT
Barchus,
J. L..BArcnus,
; REIT7,
CTORS:—J. L. H. FH.
8,
DIR]
%
UPPLY
SALISBURY.
Surplus & undiyided profits, $15,000.
glo
5
2 )
: Go
On Time >)
Deposits.
H. Maus, Vice President.
=
9
ES)
&
%
oo >
Norman D. Hay, A. M.
Me L.: L. Sey
Te
%
or
BERKEY & Fron,
Attorneyvs-at-I.aw,
SOMERSET,
Coffroth & Ruppel Building,
| ERNEST 0. KOOSER,
cA ttormey-At-l.aw,
SOMERSET, PA
MEY ERS, DISTRICT ATTORNEY
Attorney-at-I.aw,
SOMERSET, PA.
' Office in Court House.
W. H. KOONTZ, : JG
KOONTZ & OGLE
Altorneys-At-Tiaw.
PENNA
SOMERSET,
office opposite Court House.
VIRGIL R. SAYLOR,
Attormney-at-l.aw,
SOMERSET,
| Office-in Mammoth Block.
DR. PETER
I. SWANK,
Physician and Sarveon,
ELK Lek, PA.
successor to Dr. E. H. Perry.
C. SAYLOR,
SALISBURY, PA
Ars. DM;
D.D.S.,
Dively Residence Grant
Street.
| Office in
Special attention given to the preserva-
{-tion of the natural teeth. Artifleial sets in-
serted in the best possible manner
WINDSOR HOTEL,
1217-1229 FILBERT ST.
| “A SQUARE FROM EVERYWHERE."
| Special automobile s-rvice for our guests.
| Sight-seeing and touring ears. Rooms $1.00
per day and up. The only mod {Efe priced
i hotel of reputation and consequence in
PHIT.ADEILILPIHIA.
Waoner
AVERY,
Salishury. Penn
rank Wagner, Progr.
Harvey Wa
gner, Mgr.
of
to
(ood horses,
Ul kinds.
the needs of traveling men,
and good rigs
Speeial attention
and
ple-
sleighing parties.
extra good equipments for
nicking and
Horses well fed and carved for,
le rates.
al reasonab
. Somerset County telephone.
>
Dio
X BB :
: examine our line of fancy,
4 % :
Before buying vour seeds for spring sowing,
call
and
: J J
1reched ped
2 Mavyorn CLovER, MEDIUM CLOVER,
ALSIKE,
#3086 El
CRIMSON CLOVER,
Tivoriy,
MiLLET, BARLEY.
We buy in large quantity, and prices are always inline.
es A. Lichliter, Salisbury, Pa.
‘
5B
BR
Sheer
8
SBR CEE wdfn BEE
PRBS SeBe |
2
BP®B
HB Bn
BE
0K
I Best On Earth}
og
RHE
everything in the Flour,
Be
SBR
Binder Twine
We have the
Buy your
4
your fall crops.
always fair.
A
are
We handle the choicest and purest of country produce,
and deliver goods promptly.
best is the cheapest in the end.
That’s what we claim for pare home-ground Chop.
does not pay to buy imported adulterated feed.
Feed and Grocery line.
Binder Twine and Phosphate!
from us, also Phosphate
best of
BI
It
The
We have the best of
He
Hi
6368
for
it, and our prices
3
BB
os Na isbury © Feed C
WEE A present duty:
STAR.
Subscribe for THE
: New Firm!
Gi. G. De Lozier,
| in AND GONFEGTIONER
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. Itis my aim to conduct a first
grocery and confectionery store,and to give
Big Value
I solicit a fair
and I promise asquare deal and courteous
treatment to all customers. My line will
Staptes amd -Fancy
Confectionery, Country
Tobacco, ete.
POSTOFFICE,
SALISBURY, PA
class
For (Cash.
share of your patronag
Groceries
Produce,
consist of
Choice
Cigars,
OPPOSITE
60 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
Parents
TRADE MARKS
DESIGNS
COPYRIGHTS &cC.
Anyone sending a sketch and ro wheine may
quickly ascertain our opinion free w eth or an
invention is probably patentable. Com
* tions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on tents
sent free. Oldest agency for Fecaring patents.
Patents. taken through Mu hn & Co. receive
special notice, without charge, in th
Scientific American.
A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest Lin
f any s Sojenting carnal Terms, $*
year; four months $l. Sold byall oonbi
& Co 36 1eraavar. New York |
Branch Office. 625 ¥' 8t.. Washington. D.
ows Early Risers
The famous little pills.
Pa. f
OGLE |
- | Robert Augustine,
|a monumental
TOT FIC E. PA THURSDAY.
SEPT E
OFFICIAL pIRECTORY.
Below will be found the names of the
various county and district
Unless otherwise indicated,
dresses are, Somerset, Pa.
President Judge—LFErancis
Member of Congress—A. F.
| Uniontown, Pa.
State Senator— William
| Bedford, Pa.
Members of the Assembly—J. W.
“ndsley, Somerfield ; A. W. -Knepper.
Sheriff —William C. Begley.
Prothonotary—Chas. C. Shafer.
Register—Chas. F. Cook.
ecorder—John RR. Boose.
Clerk of Courts—Milton TH.
Treasurer—Peter Hoffman. ]
District Attorney—R. E. Meyers.
Coroner—Dr. S. J. H. Louther.
| Commissioners—Josiah Specht, Kant-
t-ner ; Chas. F. Zimmerman, Stoyestown ;
Somerfield. Solici-
tor—Berkey & Shaver.
Jury Commissioners—Geo.J.Schrock ;
J. C. Harding.-Windber. Le
Directors of the Poor—J. F. Reiman,
J. B. Mosholder, Somerset; and Aaron
I'. Swank, Davidsville. Attorney for
Directors, H. F. Yost; Clerk: C. L.
| Shaver.
their ad-
J. Kooser,
Cooper,
C. Miller,
Fike,
H.: H.
Friedens;
Jaker,
Geo.
County Auditors—VW.
| Rockwood ; J. S. Miller,
| Steinbaugh, Stoyestown.
Superintendent of Schools—D. 1.
| Seibert.
1
County Surveyor—A. E. Rayman.
Chairmen Political Organizations—N.
3. McGriff, Republican; Alex. B. Grof,
Jemocratic; R. M. Walker, Berlin,
’rohibition; O. P. Shaver, Friedens,
I
I
I
Lincoln.
all he
In love
Mgr. ROCKEFELLER says that
has done he has done in love.
of what?
|
|
|
|
|
|
June PARKER has destin never to
run for any office again. Colonel
ryan could not find anywhere a
nobler example.
—
must nominate a
factions can unite.”
contemporary. Just
matter who is
will unite
“Tar Democrats
man on whom all
Southern
says a
now it looks as if no
nominated all
jumping on him.
factions in
—
“SuovLd wives get salaries?” asks a
habit of handing
week
Men who are in the
their pay envelopes
will think rather
spring a question like that.
~~ -—
over every
this a late day to
Tir two-cent-a-mile fare law has
officials.
medicine and it cured me, I
a bottle home and have Just used the
woman writer in one of the magazines. |
jolt in the Com-
of Philadelphia by
Audenreid, in the
been given a severe
mon Pleas Court
Judges Wilson and
road Company to test the constitu-
tionality of the Dunsmore act. The
judges aforesaid have decided that the
act is unconstitutional, and the case is
to go to a higher court, where the out-
come will be watched with interest.
fone =
Secreranry Tarr, who is now on his
way to the Philippines, will be absent
from the country for several months,
but that fact somehow seems to add
idency. Mr. Taft has bad a wider
perence in public affairs than
other man mentioned for the great of-
fice which seems to be calling for him
He solved the diflicalt problem of the
Philippines, stopped the insurrection in
any
condition in a few days, and above all
he is successfully conducting the most
undertaking
to be found anywhere the world’s
history—the Panama Canal. So this
long record of successes seems to hold
him out conspicuously as one eminently
fitted for the ‘High Office.”
stupendous engineering
in
* lon, W. T. Buspick, of Virginia, who
is stumping this county in the interest
of the Prohibition ticket, delivered two
able speeches in Salisbury, last Sunday,
in the forenoon, the other in
Lutheran church, in the evening.
There was a pretty fair turnout of the
church people, but many others who
would have attended the meetings if
The general public is not in the habit
of going to church to
whom the Prohibitionists would like to
reach, fail to hear their speeches.
campaign blunder to
| hold political meetings in the churches,
for almost invariably the old dyed-in-
church member, and church members
| are about the only kind of people that |
will go to a church to hear a political |
speech. Thev will go, look and listen,
|and in many instances nod their ap-|
| proval, but on election day they usually
vote as they have always voted.
| changeable citizen, the one who is tied |
to no creed or party, but is largely in-
fluenced by what he hears and reads, |
will seldom go to a church to hear a]
political speech, but invariably attends
| not the case.
case brought by the Pennsylvania Rail- |
| signed by them, but was not made un
| der oath, as the Republican had alleg-
| ed,
{ claimed that the Republican accused
| them
{ a true bill on that charge,
interest in his availability for the Pres-
exX- i
: ) | did so.
Cuba and put the island in a healthy |
{ Martin Bell, of Blair county,
| hearing the plaintiffs and a number of |
| evidence of damage so flimsy
{ non-suit in each
| but wiser men,
| Bell’s
one in the United Evangelical church, |
the |
| was intensely
3 { esteemed local and political contem-
held in a public hall, were not present.
hear political |
speeches, and that’s why many people |
It is |
| are finally disposed of.
| the outgrowth of several roastings this
the-wool Republican or Democrat jg ni paper administered to George B. Walk-
The |
street meéetings or meetings in public |
halls. The changeable, free-thinking:|
citizens are the ones who wield the |
balance of power, and théy are the ones |
to be reached, but not many of them
cin be reached through the churches.
—-
SUDDEN ATTACK OF
CURED.
A prominent lady of Brooklyn, N.Y.
writes to inquire-where she can obtnin
Chiamiberlain’s Colic. Cholera and Diar- |
Remedy. She. says: “While |
| stopping at ich in South Dakota 1
seemed to be
me of this
brought
RDYSENTERY |
rhoea
a rai
| was taken ill of what
cholera. They gave some
|-tast of it Mother taken
suddenly ill of a and it helped |
her immediately.” For sale at E. H. |
Miller’s Drug Store. 10-1. |
tod: was
A RIGHTEOUS DECISION.
Meyersdale Republican Wins Two |
Libel Suits—Plaintiffs Make Reg-
ular Monkeys of Themselves.
last Friday, we
the |
|
|
|
|
|
|
While in Somerset,
had the pleasure witnessing
trial of two libel suits in whieh Calvin
Ankeny and Clinton ~Wagner, respec- |
tively, were the: plaintiffs, and S. A ]
Kendall, proprietor of the Meyersdale
Republican, the defendant.
The cases grew out of a severe roast-
ing that the Republican gave the plain-
tiffs in the year 1905. In that year
Ankeny and Wagner were candidates
for nomination to office at the Repub-
lican county primary, and when they
announced their candidacy, they signed
a statement in the hands of the Re-
publican county chairman, declaring
that if defeated for nomination at the
Yepublican primary, they would abide
by the result of said primary and sup-
port their successful rivals.
After the Republican primary had
been held, the vote showed that both
Ankeny and Wagner had been defeat-
ed.” However of standing by |
their signed pledge, they went back on
their word, and at the general election
in the fall they both candidates
on a fusion ticket for the
they sought at the Republican primary.
Then it was that the Meyersdale Re-
publican gave them a severe and much
deserved but through
wrong impression or wrong informa-
tion, the Republican declared that
Ankeny and Wagner had violated
pledge which that journal alleged was
made by them under oath, which
of
instead
were
same offices
roasting, a |
a
was |
pledge made
was merely
The facts are that the
by Ankeny and Wagner
and the two aggrieved men. then
accordingly
Ac- |
and
damages.
perjury,
brought suit for heavy
tion had also been brought for criminal.
libel, but the Grand Jury failed to find
the Repub- |
lican having duly the
neous portion of its accusations.
The two suits, last Friday, were civil |
and if
of
corrected erro- |
actions for damages, two men
| ever made monkeys of themselves ir
| trying to
{ had
show that their
been damaged by
Ankeny and Wagner
characters |
a newspaper
article, certainly
Judge |
after |
The tried by
who
cases were
their witnesses, evidently regarded the
and far- |
fetched that he declared a compulsory |
case, discharged
jury and thus ended the matter.
The plaintiffs, of course, are
and we heard Judge
decision warmly endorsed by |
many who were in attendance at the |
trials, even by who are warm |
friends of Ankeny and Wagner, but |
recognized their mistake going to
law from the start.
Naturally the editor of Tue
interested in the
suits brought against one of its most |
the |
poorer,
men
in
STAR
two
poraries, for behold Tur Star has also |
two libel cases pending in court.
We congratulate Brother Kendall on
his merited legal victory. and we firmly |
believe that our own cases will also be |
a victory for the defendant when they
Our cases are
er, Salisbury’s police officer, who has
sued us for criminal libel and has also
| brought a civil action for $5,000 dam-
| ages.
We fail to see wherein the plaintiff |
| can possibly substantiate his allega- |
tions that we have charged him with
perjury and embezzlement, and as to
{ the other charges, we will take care of |
those when the cases come to -trial. |
Everything goes to show that Walker
| is acting on the advice of malicious
|
| ed to come off at
| ber
| use whatever in ranning
| over to court
{of an-extra trip to
| case the defendant loses the case.
cation is evident in
| upon himself, and
| fever,
| grayate
{ used Foley's [Honey
| occurred
{ Francis
| weapon.
I of the boy’s sister,
| who are habitually constipated.
{ and bowels, and restores
| action of the bowels.
2. 1907.
enemies of ours, for every move he has
thus far made in the proceedings shows
malice of the deepest dye.
The criminal libel case was sehedul-
the September term
of court, but owing to the absence of a
material witness or two on our side,
| the case was ontinusd to the Decem-
term. However. Walker took
large array of withesses ro Somerset on
Monday in order to get the be-
fore the Grand Jury. Of course only a
he well
knew would bethe case before he went
to
case
few of them were heard. as
Somerset. Besides, there was no
his witnes
at
#1
ti
the September or “3
1e trial 3vould not
up before December :
before the Grand
knowing that come
A
, when the hearing
Jury, the trial and
all could come off without the expense
by the
But Walker being on the
commonwealth side of and
the commonwealth to
[ pay all costs if he loses, he is evidently
aiming at piling as much needless ex-
pense as possible on the defendant. i
Somerset
witnesses.
the case,
| depending on
n
This
we claim looks like an act of malice on
his part, and it seems to be generally
construed as such by the general pub-
lic Where malice rather than a vindi-
a lawsuit, the
gant resorting to it usually does
self mueh more harm than good.
The Grand Jury~which hears but one
side of a case, has returned a true bill
in Walker’s first prosecution, but
liti-
him-
we
have no fears of losing the case when
it comes fo trial. The great majority
of libel suits end very disastrously for
the plaintiffs, and do believe
that ours will be exception to the
general rule. Tt is a pretty hard prop-
osition to soak an editor for a roasting
that a public officer needlessly brings
these $5,000
damage pulls, they are exceedingly
hard to get, especially when an editor
has practically nothing but a wife and
children, and
we not
an
for
as
seven when everybody:
4knows the plaintiff was not in the least
damaged in either character or purse.
The Kendall libel eases
ducted by Valentine Hay
Lowry for the plaintiffs, and Derkey &
Shaver for the defendant.
Tre Star's cases will be conducted by
A. C. Holbert and Distriet Attorney
Meyers for the plaintiff, and Berkey &
Shaver for the defendant.
were con-
and J. C.
FEVER
COLD.
CURED HAY AND SUMMER
Batesville, Indiana,
I suffered for three
AL
writes: “Li
months with a
ing that it interfered with my business.
[ ‘had many of the symptoms of hay
and a doctor’s preseription did
not reach my case, and 1 took
medicines which seemed to only ag:
my Fortunately I .in-
sisted upon having Foley’s Honey and
Par in the package, and
quickly cured me. = My wife has since
and Tar with the
Sold by all Druggists
Nusbaum,
1sC year
summer cold so distress-
several
Cas.
yellow
success,”
same
10-1
-
Little Girl the Victim of a Shooting
Accident—Will Likely Die.
Last Sunday morning a sad accident
it the Mr. and
Shunk, with a
family, reside a few miles east of Salis-
bury. One of the boys of the. Shunk
| family was handling a revolver when it
fell from his hands, the hammer strik-
chair and discharging the
The bullet entered the brain
who was standing
near by, inflicting a wound which their
family physician says will surely prove
home of Mrs
who, large
ing on a
| fatal.
is about
She
The victim of the accident
seven or eight years of age.
| been unconscious much of the time
ince the accident, but at this time
Thursday morning) she is still living.
hag
S
(
Many serious accidents are due to
the fact that boys possess and handle
fire arms who have no business with
| weapons, and the sad accident above
referred to is more proof that weapons
in the hands of boys are very much
out of their proper place.
LATER: Just as we go to press a
report reaches THE Star oflice stating
that the vietim of the shooting acei-
dent is now able talk and walk
around, and some for her re-
to
hopes
| covery are entertained.
HOW TO AVOID APPENDICITIS.
Most vietims of appendicitis are those
Orino
Syrup cures chronic
stimulating the liver
the natuarl
Orino Laxative
Fruit Syrup does not nauseate or gripe,
and is mild and pleasant to take. Re-
fuse substitutes. Sold by all Drug-
gists. 10-1
Laxative Fruit
constipation by