1e M. J. vite you ~ Goods, Stl SRS nly the our pat- to all. 0. ty, re. Car- Sweepers Line, 1 gifts ON, ALE; PA. LE| y is ran- cases of Dis- Scratches, DBs, yes cers, c effects are 8 with poor i. Valuable en the Tonic. i and ny. ce, B50 cents. ster, . H.} AS Durable | THE 'ORLD.§ - 1} tld Has three Irilled, with 1es in diam-' : Simmering §*® 1er, and one’ le. Swelled §° ornaments. § > = t handle the fj s Ohio. KE, Tine. f attention. ptly. Both nes. i and Resi- \n building, Furniture {a s & - “VOL. XIV. SALISBURY. ELK LICK POSTOFFICE, PA. THURSDAY, MAY 21. 1908S. NO. 19. 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 J. Kooser. Member ot Congress—A. F. Cooper, Uniontown, Pa. State Senator—William C. Miller, Bedford, Pa. Members of Assembly—J. W. Ends- ley, Somerfield; A. W. Knepper. ’ Sheriff —William C. Begley. Prothonotary—Charles C. Shafer. Register—Charles F. Cook. Recorder—John R. Boose. Clerk ‘of Courts—Milton H. Fike. Treasurer—Peter Hoffman. District Attorney—John 8. Miller. Coroner—Dr. C. L. Friedline, Stoys- town, Commissioners—Josiah Specht, Kant- ner; Charles F. Zimmerman Stoys- town, Robert Augustine, Somerfield. Solicitors—Berkey & Shaver. Jury Commissioners—George J. Schrock, Joseph B. Miller. Directors, of the Poor—J. ¥. Reiman, William Brant and William W. Baker. Attorney for Directors, H. F. Yost; clerk, C. L. Shaver. Superintendent of Schools—D. W. Seibert. Chairmen Political Organizations— Jonas M. Cook, Republican ;% Alex B. Grof, Democratic; Fred Groff, Berlin, Prohibition. tf. WINNING an oratorical consest in a university seldom helps a young wom- an to win a husband. A Dr. Dopsox has succeeded in get- ting into the limelight with the decla- ration that nations should not “turn the other cheek.” It might also be a good idea for some nations not to dis- play too much cheek. ’ Tre Omaha Bee says a society for the suppression of unnecessary noise is being organized in Denver. It will certainly have its hands full next July, when the Democratic National con- vention is held in that city. lp pee PisroL carriers without a license are now to be séverely punished in Chicago; but a man who is held up and robbed at the muzzle of a gun would hardly think to ask the man behind it whether he had a license. “Lire can the native American know,” says Andrew Carnegie. “what it means to the born Briton to read of a land where one man’s privilege is every man’s right, where there are no ' classes, no man born to rank or office, ' but every man born to what he can at- tain to, and where merit, not birth, not what your father was, but what you are, are the only tests. This is the prime prize every American is borh to. ~ This is the ‘fair deall,” and it lies at the root of our sturdy independence, and makes the American boy more of a man than the British boy can possibly be, and the American less of a snob than the Briton. Matthew Arnold once said to the writer, explaining an inci- dent, ‘My dear Carnegie, we are all snobs. Fight hundred years of .snob- bery in our veins; we can’t help-it.’ ’— The Outlook." 2 SoME time ago the Sunday cranks, otherwise known as the Law and Order League, had 45 foreign laborers" ar- rested for working on Sunday. The men had been engaged in putting in a switch for the B. & O. Railroad Com- pany, at a place where the~work could not well have been performed on any other day of the week, owing to heavy and important traffic that would have been impeded. Judge Van Swearingen, before whom the men were tried, very properly discharged them, holding that Sunday labor is often necessary. In his opinion Judge Van Swearingen holds that the testimony shows that Sunday was the only day that the work of putting in the switch at!Dunbar could have been performed to safe- guard life and property, and for that reason has ruled that the case be dis- missed against the defindants. He alse holds that one information should have been made instead of 45, and costs be collected in but one case. It never seems to dawn upon the Sunday cranks that this is no longer a one-horse com- monwealth. as was the case in 1794, when the Blue Laws were passed, and that there is much labor actually necessary on Sunday. We do not be- lieve in useless or senseless work on Sunday, or in Sabbath desecration in the generally accepted term ; but of all brands of Sabbath desecration, none is more hideous in our estimation than that indulged in by the Sunday cranks who delight in sneaking about on that day and resorting to all manner of de- ception and playing the spy in order to have men arrested for committing Barmnless nfractions against the Blue JAWS Of 1(94. WAS HE INSANE? The following account of a horrible deed committed by a Methodist cler- gyman has been sent out in the form of a United Press telegram: ~ Fairmont, W. Va, May 18—Follow- ing a series of revival meetings which he had been conducting at his church near Rossman, near this city, the Rev. C. 8S. Cossman, aged 50 years, a promi- nent Methodist minister, slashed his beautiful young wife’s throat with a carving knife, early today, causing in- stant death. The minister declars he was suffering with a fit of temporary insanity. and that reason returned to him when he gazed upon his. wife’s lifeless body. . The revival has been an unusually successful one, and many new mem- berships have been added to the church. In discussing the . revival with his wife, the Kev. Cossman sud- denly seized a butcher knife from the table and made for Mrs. Cossman She escaped into the yard, where she was overtaken by the minister. The woman battled desperately for her life, but Cossman cut her throat from ear to ear. He then surrendered himself to the police. Mrs. Cossman was 30 years old, and was a member of a prominent Fairmont family. Now, the question arrises, was Coss- man’s insafiity real or feigned? It is as liable to have been one as the other. Many of us who live in the country have seen so-called religious revivals that resembled a lunatic asylam turned loose, more than anything else—preach- ers and layman, self-styled saints and self-acknowledged sinners, all jumbled together in a confusion of shouts, groans and frenzied screams that would rival any Indian ghost dance ever indulged in by the savages of the Western plains. When people allow their religious zeal, or rather their fanaticism and bigotry to get away with their brains, they are liable to commit any crime from fornication to murder, and many ate the instances when such crimes are committed, and the perpetrators there- of set up the plea that they were labor- ing under the delusion that they were but doing the will of God. Revivals of the howling, roaring, jumping kind are not’ a part of the Methodist creed. neither does the Methodist church or any other denom= ination sanction them. Such carry- ings-on are indulged in only in certain localities, and misguided, frenzied, emotional people, and not the church are responsible for them. Only preach- ers of the shallow-brained variety tol- erate revivals of the Ghost Dance variety, and we are pleased tonote that revivals of that kind are rapidly dying out. 7 Whether the Rev. (?) Cossman com- mitted wilful murder in order to get rid of his wife for another that he may have fallen in love with by coming in close contact at his revival, or whether be was really insane at the time he slew his wife, is an open question. Whether a dangerous criminal or a dangerous fool, his awful deed should be thoroughly investigated, and he | should be dealt with in such way and manner as to make others safe from any further depredations on his part. SERIOUS RESULTS FEARED. You may well fear serious results from a cough or cold, as pneumonia and consumption start with a cold. Foley’s Honey and Tar cures the most obstinate coughs or colds and prevents serious results. Refuse substitutes. Elk Lick Pharmacy, E. H. Miller, pro- prietor.’ 6-1 A Delightful Musicale. A very delightful and creditable mu- sicale was given in Hay’s opera house: Tuesday evening, by the pupils of Miss Della Brown, Salisbury’s able piano instructor. The pupils who participated were Florede Lichliter, Ruth Shaw, Grace Brown, Helen Shaw and Florence Maust, all of Salisbury, and Irma Hay and Louise Seibert, of Berlin. Miss Ada Livengood was also on the pro- gram, but could not participate on ac- count of sickness. The audience was large, and all who were present agree that the young misses showed marked ability for ama- tears. The skillful manner in which the various selections were rendered was very creditable to instructor and pupils alike, and will undoubtedly prove to be a good advertisement for Miss Brown, as it ought to. CHRONIC CONSTIPATION CURED. One who suffers from chronic con- stipation is in danger of many serious ailments. Foley’s Orino Laxative cures chronic constipation, as it aids digestion and stimulates the liver and bowels, restoring the natural action of these organs. day, and you will feel better at once. ate or gripe, and is pleasant to take. Refuse substitutes. Elk Lick Phar- macy, E. H, Miller, proprietor. 6-1 = : | there. Commence taking it to- | Foley’s Orino Laxative does not nause- | € to get into, the sweeter THE STANDARD’S POOR LOGIC. + On Friday afternoon, a large traction engine was run over the paved streets from the Somerset House to the ‘depot, | chipping the bricks in the course of its path. There should be an orginance against such use of the paved "streets, with'a heavy fine penalty. Owners of traction engines do not contribute to the cost of paved streets, and they should not be permitted to use them, especially when destinations can be reached otherwise.—Somerset Stand- ard. The above from our esteemed con- temporary, which appeared under the caption of “Improper Use of Paved Streets,” strikes us as containing very poor logic. It would be a piece of rank injustice to the owners of steam threshers to be forbidden to use the streets of Somerset, simply because the streets are paved, and because the owners of the traction engines did not help to pay for the paving. If che pav- ing is not sufficiently substantial to withstand the weight of traction en- gines, then it is not as substantial as it ought to be, and that is no fault of the men who own traction engines. The people residing in Somerset borough help to wear out the township roads without coptributing a cent towards the building and repairing of the same, but the Standard would strenuously object to the town people being de- barred from using them for reasons as flimsy as it seeks to debar the traction engines from the paved streets of Som- erset. / , Since the people of our county-seat are getting enough moss off of them- selves to indulge in a few public 1m- provements that they should have had a quarter of a century ago, they should see to it that the improvements are of a sufficiently substantial character for all needed and legitimate. purposes. Furthermore, they should not be so nasty nice with their improvements as to threaten the honest yeomaury of the county with heavy fines for using them. The average man with the traction engine is not as big a nuisance on the paved streets of a town, as is the average town automobilist with his ma- chine on the country roads. Partly Wrong Again, as Usual. Young America is progressive. Mr. “Juck” Beachy, of Elk Lick township, aged about 18, and Miss Huldah Im- hoff, aged 16, went to Cumberland, Saturday, and procured a marriage li- cense. They were married Sunday af- ternoon, at Grantsville. The bride- groom is one of the graduating class of the Salisbury High School.—Meyers- dale Commercial. The Commercial is partly wrong again, as usual. The bridegroom above mentioned is not a graduate of the Sal- isbury High School, or of any other school. Our high school seldom turns out a graduate from the ranks of the young men, as most of them prefer to neglect their education and bitterly regret it afterward. The youthful bridegroom in this case is the second son of Mr, and Mrs. Lloyd Beachy, and the bride is a Meyersdale girl. Of course, it was a marriage without the consent of the fathers and mothers, their best friends and safest advisers, and there isn’t a particle of doubt that the young couple would have acted far more wisely by putting in at least a few more years at diligent study, in school, before being joined in wed- lock. - Marriages of this kind sometimes turn out all right, but in most cases they do not. However, we hope that in this case everything will work to- gether for good, and the young couple has THE STAR’S best wishes. Advice to a Young Man. Remember, my son, you have to work. Whether you handle a pick or a pen, a wheelbarrow or a set of books, dig ditches or edit a paper, ring an auction bell or write funny things, you must work. If you look around, you will see the men who are the most able to live the rest of their days without work are the men who work the hardest. Don’t be afraid of killing yourself with overwork. It is beyond your power to do that on the sunny side of thirty. They die sometimes, but it is because they quit work at six p- m., and don’t get home till two a. m. It’s the interval that kills, my son. The work gives you an appetite for your meals ; it lends solidity to your slum- bers; it gives you a perfect and grateful appreciation of a holiday. There are young men who do not work, but the world is not proud of them. It does not know their names even; it simply speaks of them as “old So-and-So’s boys.” Nobody likes them ; the great, busy world doesn’t know that they are So find out what you want to be and do, and take off your coat and make a dust in the world. The busier you are the less harm you will be apt will be your sleep, the brighter and happier your | holidays, and the better satisfied the | world will be with you.—Bob Burdette. | FINE SHOWING. Bl ei Such is the Last Statement of the First National Bank of Frost- burg, Md. The report of the condition of the First National Bank of Frostburg, Md.. at the close of business on May 14th, 1908, is, as usual, highly creditable to that institution, as well as most satis- factory to its many depositors, many of whom reside in Somerset county. Pa. The First National of Frostburg is a top-notcher in every sense of the word, and ranks high among the many safe and conservative national banks in the United States. Few banks have en- joyed so phenomenal a growth in. busi- ness, and none are managed by a more courteous, yet safe and conservative set of business men. They are good advisers, and have the most up-to-date banking equipments to be found any- where. No element of safety is lacking, either in the equipment or the man- agement of the bank, and with its re- sources of over a million aud a quarter of dollars, the First National has a dis- tinction seldom attained by banks lo- cated in towns the size of Frostbnrg. The bank aforesaid is a United States depository, pays interest on time de- posits, and welcomes accounts, whether large or small. It is one of the strong- est banks in Maryland, and offers every accomidation consistent with good banking. THE HOUSE BY THE SIDE OF THE ROAD. mere eres (He was a friend to: man, and lived in a house by the side of the road.—Homer.) There are hermit souls that live withdrawn In the peace of their self-content; There are souls, like stars, that dwell apart, In a fellowless firmament; There are pioneer souls that blaze their paths Where the highways never ran; But let me live by the side of the road And be a friend to man. Let me live in a house by the side of the road, ‘Where the race of men go by— The men who are good and the men who are bad, As good and as bad as I. I would not sit in the scorner’s seat, Or hurl the cynic’s ban; Let me live in a house by the side of the road And be a friend to man. I see from my house by the side of the road, By the side of the highway of life, The men who press with the ardor cf hope, The men who faint with strife. But I turn not away from their smiles nor their tears— Bothare parts of an infinite plan; Let me live in a house by the side of the road And be a friend to man. I know there are brook-gladdened meadows ahead, ; And mountains of wearisome height; That the road passes on through the long afternoon, $ And stretches away to night. But still I rejoice when the travelers re- joice, | And weep with the strangers that moan, ,Norlive in my house by the side or the road Like a man who dwells alone. Let me live in my house by the side of the road, “Where the race of men go by— They are good, they are bad, they are weak, they are strong, Wise, foolish—so am I. Then why should I sit in the scorner’s seat Or hurl the cynic’s ban? Let me live in my house by the side of the road And be a friend to man. —Sam Walter Foss. Heywoop declines to become a can- didate for President. He wys very re- cently a candidate for something de- cidedly more unpleasant, says the Connellsville Courier. The fact is he was a candidate for the gallows, having been charged with complicity in the murder of Ex-Governor Stunenberg, of Idaho. Many people think it a great pity that Heywood was not elected when a candidate for the gallows, and even THE STAR is of the opinion that he was justly entitled to an election of that kind. A little good hemp properly applied to Eugene V. Debs would also be a fine thing for the country, for his blood-thirsty, insane vaporings have made assassins and other criminals by the score. : May Have Fusion in County. On Friday, several prominent busi ness men from other seciions of the county came to Somerset to confer with parties at the County-Seat, rela- tive to effecting fusion in the county, next fall, on candidates for the Legis- laturd. It is proposed to endorse one of the men on the Democratic ticket, and select some Republican as his run- ning mate. A meeting will be held at Somerset in June, at which representa- tives from the various districts will be present, when the matter will be fully discussed { Fusion has been attempted repeated- | ly in Somerset county, but it has met | with very little success.—Somerset | on the back seat arose, | the following: EVERYBODY HAPPY. Everybody’s happy as far as I kin see, Though when it comes to reasons we are bound to disagree. Folks thai talk prosperity are happy for the cheer That comes when crops are loomin’ up in plenty far an’ near. Happy ’cause the country’s got mater- ials an’ men ‘To take whatever starts out wrong an’ set it right again; Happy for the present, which is silenc- in’ regret, An’ happy for the future which is look- in’ better yet. Of course, we don’t pretend that life is all a grand, sweet song; But folks can’t sing forever; they are bound to tire fore long. But there’s room for everybody in this big old world of ours, An’ those that like the briars, they kin easy dodge the flowers. 5 There is always some one comin’ out stirrin’ up a row That will bring a passin’ wrinkle to the most contented brow— An’ some of us is happy ’cause the blessin’s fall so thick, An’ some of us is happy ‘cause we've got a chance to kick. —Exchange. Chasing the Wild Elephant. From Forest and Stream. Long before the elephant camp is made, the trackers understand pretty thoroughly where the wild ‘elephants are to be found, and when they have learned of this they keep constantly in touch with the herd. The hills which the wild animals range are rough and broken, covered with forests, and full of ravines and underbrush. Down to- ward the lower ground are flat river valleys and parks where but few trees grow, and again there may be great beds of reeds or high grass over which a man on an elephant can hardly see. To follow the wild elephants at top speed over rough ground and through tangled forests is difficult and dis- couraging for man and beast alike, and it is the business of the man- who man- ages the hunt to so use his domestic animals and his beaters as to drive the wild ones out of the rough ground and down on the flats. They do not willingly start off in a race of this kind ; they much prefer to hide. to move silently among the trees and vanish into a thicket. or among the scrub of some nullah, or they may get into some patch of high grass, or reeds, where it is impossible to see them, and where the domestic elephants some- times quite lose themselves. Some- times they meet the wild ones, and fight with them, and if a tame elephant can hold a wild one, until another tame one comes up, the wild one’s capture is quite certain. Then the driver of one of the tame elephants throws his noose over the wild one’s head. It is a large noose, and while a part of it rests on the back of the neck, another part falls down in front and touches the ele- phant’s sensitive trunk which he at once curls up out of harm’s way under his chin, so that the lower part of the loop falls under his neck, and the men who hold the end of the rope can draw it tight. Now comes an effort to tire out and discourage the captive. His enemies of his own race butt into him, knock him on the sides, and two of them get- ting on his right and left lean up against him and squeeze him. At last he gives up and ceases to resist, and presently his legs are tied by men who slip under the bellies of the domestic elephants and put ropes around the feet of the wild ones, and then the tame elephants push the captive along te some point where he can be tied to a stout tree. This may be the elephant camp, or some other place nearer to the point of capture. Here he may struggle and fight for a long time, or he may give up soon. There is as much difference in the temperaments of ele- phants as of people. Once the captive has reached the camp, he sees men about him all the time, he is constantly guarded by the tame elephants, and if he attempts to resist instruction he is punished. After a few months’ training he can be mounted, and within a year he is prob- ably as learned as most of his tame fel- lows. -— ——— A Wonderful Institution. A school teacher, after spending 45 strenuous moments explaining the mysteries of physiology to the primary class, sounded their intelligence at- tention by asking the dofinition of “vertebrae.” | Standard. “The vertebrae is a long, wavy bone. My head sits on one end of it, and I sit | on the other.”—Philadelplia Public Ledger. : i | A Perplexing Alternative. | In Prince Georges county, Tuesday, prohibition of the liquor traffic was de- feated by a big majority, a result achieved by ‘‘the almost solid voting strength of the negroes.” It is further stated that the liquor people won so largely by “promising to return the favor in a combined effort to defeat the disfranchising amendment, which will be voted on in the fall of 1909.” Which raises the question—what will the temperance voter of Allegany—re- publican, democrat, or prohibitionist, who believes disfranchisement as well as the liquor traffic is a erime—what will he do at next year’s election? Will he vote against disfranchise- ment and save the liquor traffic? Or for disfranchisement and thus secure prohibition? In briefer terms, which “crime” will be vote for? For nothing is surer than this—that a fusion between pro-liquor and anti- disfranchisement in Maryland will wipe out prohibition for years and years to come. And if fusion be necessary to mutual success, the saloon man and the darkey will fuse.—Frostburg Mining Journal. Looked After He Leaped. “Prof. Helbach, T presume?” said he. “Yes, sir.” “Are you alone?” “Yes, sir.” “May I lock the door?” And he did so; then, having satisfied himself that no one was in, he placed a large bundle done up in a yellow hand- kerchief on the table and opened it. It contained a yellow mineral substance. “There, look at that.” “Well,” said the professor, “I see it.” “What do you call that, professor?” “I call it iron pyrites.” “What!” said the man; “isn’t that gold?” “No,” said the professor; “it’s good for nothing—it’s pyrites.” And putting some in a shovel over the fire it soon evaporated up the chimney. “Well, said the visitor, with a woebe- gone look, “there’s a widow in our town has a whole hill full of that, and I’ve married her.”—Detroit News Tri- bune. Unionized Hennery Rules. No hen shall lay more than one egg a day, unless by unanimous consent of the Amalgamated Federation of Barn- yard Animals. Pullets shall not lay more than one egg in two days, and only under the direction of a union hen. Apprentice pullets shall only cackle,. hut shall not lay at all. Fryers, broilers and roasters shall neither cackle nor lay, except by special dispensation. Wherever possible, hens that have’ been admitted to full membership shall lay in out-of-the-way places, such as beneath old barns and corncribs; in haystacks and other places as shall be difficult to find. ‘ Cackling within fifty feet of a new- laid egg is positively prohibited. Hens that lay storage eggs are ex- empted from the operation of all these rules, save Rule 5.—Ex. Another Kicker. Uncle Abraham was fishing in the mill pond. Forthe fifth time he had baited his hook, only to find that some wary denizen of the sluggish pond had gotten away with the worms. “Land sake, Marcus,” drawled the old man as he raked about in the can, “I don’t blame Marsy Roosevelt for doin’ so much kickin’.” “What about, pap?” asked his small son “Why, dis heah re-batin’ system. It am a perfect nuisance.”—Trade. ———————— A Great Convenience. “But don’t you sell suits on instal- ments?” “Yes, but we charge more that way.” “How much more?” “Twice as much, and you pay half down.”—Boston Transcript. WHEN A MAN TELLS YOU it does not pay to advertise, he is simply ad- mitting that he is conducting a busi- ness that is not worth advertising, a business conducted by a man unfit to do business, and a business which should be advertised for sale. tf BUY A TYPEWRITER !—See the Pittsburg Visible, at Tae Star office. None better, no other quite so simple in construction, Holds world’s record A small and anxious boy | and delivered | for speed. Veryeasy tooperate. Price very reasonable. tf P. L. L1vENGoOD, Agent San All kinds of Legal and Commercial Blanks, Judgment Notes, ete., for sale | at TEE STAR office. tf 7