We [.RSET, PA. . SET, PERN’A’ geon, > .K LICK, PA. AW MERSET, PA, LW : RSET, PA. Smith Ave. he preserva- ficial sets in- ner. AL CTIONEER. re # Sales, Live state. "ION SCHOOL. action guar- LE, PA. - KE, 1G , wide- ys have kind of ATION ith the ored - J ) are and s handle t obtain, y prepaid rice. mps for Catalog. te. wi ing cover Ors. EVENS TOOL CO. ox 4099 alls, Mass. 0S. \NT! ysters, Ice ete. cals—Beef- 1sage, Hot at All cee. s Groceries, * ars, ete. ns, and we are of your THERS, ISBURY, PA. ETRY u by your arments. 4 ke ood : re of them. yur closet or ardrobe ay look the me if you e Set. 1.50 x will insform the ver visible, . 0 a spuce ere order vails, and ere you see a glance 3 garment aired. The Somerset 3 ees VOL. X1V. SALISBURY. ELK LICK POSTOFFICE. PA.. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3. 1908. — NO. 17. ) We are all neighbors in " them. business. —— for the town and community, despite his occasional mis- takes, may be a great deal more than the kickers themselves are doing. Did THAT ever occur to you? helps the others. What hurts one hurts the others. Every community is a mutual benefit association, whether organ- ized or just running wild. The printer is a charter member. If you had no printer=—no newspaper—how would you like that? Do you know what happens to towns that don’t support a newspaper? Nothing happens. Nothing ever happens in a town like that. happen in a town the newspaper comes along and tells about The newspaper boosts the town. and offers suggestions, by the editor or the readers, as to further progress. Every copy of every issue advertises the town. This is all free advertisement. It costs the town nothing. It costs the people nothing. It is a part of the In view of this fact, which nobody can dispute, it is much better to pat the printer on the shoulder now and then or to speak kindly of him than to kick him. In the city of Brook- lyn, N. Y., there has been- for many years a eon- spicuous signboard out- side an office which reads, “KICK THE PRINTER.” Bibulous persons sometimes go inside to carry out the apparent reguest, but they dis- cover that the printer is ‘a gentleman by the name of Kick. In every town there are persons who, if they do not actually feel like kicking the printer—the newspaper man—at any rate do a lot of kick- ing at the way he con- ducts his paper. Please DON’T kick the printer; he is doing the best he can. And what he does this town. What helps one As soon as things begin to It records progress | Ivo: DON’T KICK THE PRINTER. THis is a season of the year when a sentimental mother appears at the school house with her sissy boy and tells the teacher he is very high spirited, and must not by whipped; that he can be ruled by kindness and kisses. And thjs js the time of year | A TowN that never has anything to {do in a public way, is on the way to the cemetery. Any citizen who will do | nothing for his town, is helping to dig [the grave. A man that curses the | town, furnishes the coffin. The man | when the boys in school make a note | Who is so selfish as to have no time of what the mother of the sissy boy says, and resolve to thump the sissy boy as soon as they catch him on the | play ground. As 17 is with right and wrong, good and evil, so it is with failure and sue- cess. Perseverance is the chief in- of the compound that brings suecess. There may be other elements required—and usually there are—but without this one, the mixture is idef- fectual. Talent, intellect —genius itself —may al} combine for a certain end, bug if the foree of persistent industry is not behind them, they will lag upon the road and never reach the goal. A NEWSPAPCR is in no sense a child of charity. It eatns twice over every dollar it receives, and it is second to no enterprise in contributing to the up- “building of a community. Its patrons reap far more benefits from its pages than its publishers, and in calling for the support of the community in which it is published, it asks for no more than in all fairmess belongs to if, though generally it receives less. Patronize and help your paper as you would any other enterprise, because it helps you, and not as an act of charity. —— THE matter of teaghing music in our public schools is a feature that should not be overlooked. Some schools have introduced this feature with marked success, and making melody in the heart is found to make better pupils, more studious pupils, and imparts to | them an acquisition to one of «the greatest profitable pleasures in life. We hope our school marcagers and faculty will consider this feature, and at no distant day make this one of the | requisitions. A singing people are a Joyous people, good-natured people, more law-abiding people, will make better citizens, live longer and die hap- pier. | from his business to give to city af- | fairs, is making tke shroud. The man | who will not advertise, is driving the | hearse. The man who is always pull- ing back from any pablic enterprise, throws boquets on the grave. The man who is so stingy as to be howling hard times, preaches the funeral, sings the doxology, and thus the town lies buried. | " GUILTY OF COUNTERFEITING. | Passing counterfeit money is no worse than substituting some unknown worthless remedy for Foley's Honey and Tar, the great cough and cold remedy that cures the most obstinate coughs and heals the lungs. Elk Lick |- Pharmacy, E. H. Miller, proprietor. 1-1 J. B. Jackson Leaves an Estate Es- timated at $1,100,000. | The will of John B. Jackson, late psesident of the Fidelity Title & Trust Company, was probated yesterday and letters testamentary were issued to the Fidelity Title & Trust Company. The estate was estimated by the executor at $1,100,000. The will was made May 25, 1892, and two codicils were added, one dated June 4, 1894, and the other Jaauary 27, 1896. After making several specific be- quests of pictures, vases and silver- ware to his two sisters, and other rela- tives, he gives $7,500 to the Church Home Association, $10,000 to his nephew, George W. J. Bissell, $5,000 to | Henry R. Scully and $10,000 to Arthur | M. Scully, cousins, and $5,000 to George | A. Gofmly, his confidential clerk. The residue of his estate he leaves to his sister, Mary L. Jackson, with the direction that she pay her sister, Anna M. J. Bissell, one-third of the net in- come therefrom.—Pittsburg Gazette | Times. 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 S. 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 Schrock, Joseph B. Miller. Directors, of the Poor—J. F. 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. J. THE GREATEST PROBLEM. There is no problem before the peo- ple of such magnitude as the open dramshop. It concerns the happiness of the home—the people and the very existence of the nation. You say that there are other great questions before the people, and we admit it. You say there is the tariff question and the re- vision of the tariff. But ask that wo- man you meet in tears, poorly dressed, what is the great question before the country today, and she will not tell you it is the tariff, but it is the open dramshop that is ruining her happi- ness and her home. -Viewed from the standpoint of the financier, enough wealth is wasted an- nually by the drink habit to build and equip two railroads from New York to San Francisco. We are proud and justly so, of our educational system, of our public schools, of our colleges, of our rapidly increasing halls of arts and sciences, but apply the lurid touch of the incen- diary to every one of these schools, colleges and halls, and in fifty-two weeks we could rebuild them all with what goes into the till of the dram- shop. Do you say in the light of all this great waste that this question is so small as to be only laughed and sneered at and made the butt of ridi- cule? Every mechanic and workingman is made the poorer by this traffic. Ban- ish the saloon, and what do you sup- pose would become of all the thou- sands of dollars that now go into the dramshops? All your lumber yards, groceries and dry goods stores would feel the impulse of increasing trade, and there would be a rapid demand for carpenters and mechanics of all kinds. We read the other day the astonishing fact that forty per cent. of the wage- workers of the country do not own the houses they live in, and twenty per cent. live in crowded tenement houses in our larger cities and towns. Take $150,000,000 of the money worse than wasted in drink, and you could build 150,000 homes. HOW STATES GO DRY. The foolish manner in which the re- tail liquor business is conducted is so patent and general that it may easily be rated asthe most important single factor in bringing victory to the anti- saloon leaguers throughout the coun- try. A typical illastration is about to be given by the liquor men of White Plains, according to reports from that suburb. A local option law is in effect there. Instead of submitting to the clear will of the citizens, however ob- noxious to them the mandate may be, the liquor men are doing just what thousands of their brethren elsewhere have done to the ultimate injury of the business—they are making ready to avail themselves of every discoverable loophole in the law. It is estimated that the local option measure will not eJectively close more than ten or fifteen of the fifty dramshops against which it was aimed. Only the wholesalers seem to be decisively routed. In the long run such tacties will bear bitter fruit, as they have done repeated- ly in other districts. By deliberately and boastfully dodging the command of the electorate, dealers must bring upon their trade the enmity of many citizens | who, though tolerant toward respect- they would be infinitely better off able saloons, set: their faces sternly against the salgonkeeper who mocks law and public opinion. When he Sh a small community, where his methods and their results are clear- ly visible and observed by virtually the whole papulation, he invites his best friends to turn against him. The strange thing is that he has been blind to the trend of public sentiment, while nearly forty million Americans have been banishing saloons at every local election for the last five years. The saloonkeeper who reads in this unparal- leled crusade only a fanatical dread of alcohol, has not the intelliger.ce of a tadpole. The bitterest foe of the liquor busicess is the man who refuses to join in maintaining the law and keeping good order.—N. Y. Tribune Farmer. THIS IS WORTH READING. Leo F. Zelinski, of 68 Gibson St., Buffalo, N. Y., says: “I cured the most annoying cold sore I ever had, with Bucklen’s Arnica Salve. I applied this salve once a day for two days, when every trace of the sore was gone.” Heals all sores. Sold under guarantee at E. H. Miller’s drug store. 25¢. 1-1 WHAT’S WRONG WITH THE HOME? What’s wrong with the home? asks the Pittsburg Gazette Times after commenting on a recent visit to Pitts- burg by Judge Lindsey, of Denver. Judge Lindsey has probably done more towards making good citizens out of bad boys than any other man in the United States. He has made good, truthful, honest, manly boys out of scores of lads who were on the high road to penitentiary and the gallows, not be- cause they were worse by nature than the common run of boys, but because in their cases there was something wrong with the home. In Denver, ar in most other towns and cities, many of the worst boys are regular attendants of the Sunday schools, yet are growing into criminals and thugs at an alarmingly rapid rate. This is not directly the fault of the Sunday schools, but of the foolhardy, negligent parents who have come to look upon Sunday schools as insti- tutions for the purpose of relieving them of the care and trouble required to bring their children up in the way that they should go. Too many par- ents allow their children to do about as they please, except that the young- sters are compelled to be regular at- tendants at Sunday school, catechism. etc. In other words, they expect the church and the Sunday schools to give them all the moral training they need to make good men and good women of them. To such noodle-headed parents and their families the work of the church and the Sunday school is of little or no benefit, for without proper home-train- ing, the work of the church and the Sunday school availeth nothing. The children of such parents grow up with the feeling that the only place folks are expected or required to be good is in Sunday school and in church, and that any old thing will go at home or on the street. Consequently their fluency in repeating the catechism or extracts from their Sunday school les- sons is fully offset by their. fluency in using profane language and all manner of street slang and general impudence. If such children were subjected to good home discipline and never saw the inside of a Sunday school room, than under existing conditions. We have even known of instances where good, level-headed parents would not peranit their children to go to Sunday school, because they did not want them to be associated with evil-minded and spoiled children there that were unfit associates for well diseiplined children on the streets or in their homes. And they could not be blamed for it, either. Evil associates contaminate those they come in contact with as readily in Sunday school as elsewhere, and talk and argue as we will, the grest truth still remains that good home discipline goes farther toward making good citi- zens than all the Sunday schol and church training in Christendom. We do not need to go outside of our own little city to see how utterly un- availing is the moral training of the church and the Sunday school when not supplemented with good moral training and. discipline at home. Go through the Sunday schools of this town and note the children in attend- ance, and then watch their conduct on the streets and elsewhere. You will If you are a close observer, you will day school pupils, boys who are cign- rette stinkers and pimple-faced physiec- ial and mental wrecks before they are out of knee pants—boys who ean curse and swear like sailors, show their smartness by being impudent and saucy to older people, and in a general way proclaim their general” worth- lessness to the world, and advertise the fact that their parents are doing nothing for their good in the home, Not long ago about a half-dozen boys came into THE Star office to see our printing presses in operation. Some of the lads were of the town’s prominent families, but not one of them showed any better breeding or home training than the commonest kind of a cur pup. Each of them had a large quid of to- bacco in his mouth, and one and all seemed to think it smart to see who could squirt the most tobacco juice over the floor. When we remonstrated against that kind of conduct, we re- ceived only a few insolent replies and idiotic grins. The boys were all Sun- day school pupils, too, and we know that the parents of some of them have often contributed money to foreign missions. How much better it would be for such parents to stamp out heathenism in their own homes. commenting on this subject, the Pitts- burg Gazette Times gets off the fol- lowing timely remarks, all of which are only too true: “Parental responsibility has come to a low ebb, and discipline is almost obsolete. The sacredness of the home has become a farce in too many cases, the father thinks the bowling alley is far more sacred, and the mother plays bridge or euchre as relaxation from household cares. Children are hustled off to school at the earliest possible age, just to get them out of the way, and then parents too often lock to the school to do the rest. The breathless whirl of pleasure-seeking also reacts upon the child. Vaudeville shows and skating rinks absorb the time, and nervous energy that used to be con- served at the fireside, around the even- ing lamp. The solidarity of the family is impaired—each member goes his own way ; lodge, missionary society, dance, basketball game, pool room or street, and anon the saloon. No care is ex- ercised over the young people’s choice of companions; late hours are kept without reproof or question. Does the father who reads this know where his boy was last night? Does the mother know where her girl was? Do they both realize that the enactment of a curfew law is an insult to them. It means that many parents are so erim- | inally careless about their children that the authorities must threaten action to get them to do their duty. “We would need no truant officers nor juvenile courts if homes were con- ducted as they should be. If cheap amusements and soul-deadening pas- times were tabood, and home-keeping habits were revived, and parents re- alized that they are responsible for their children, not the teacher or the policemen, penitentiaries would be less crowded and socialists would have less to talk about. The home is the basis of society. It is sad, but true, as Judge Lindsey has said, that ‘some- thing is wrong with the homes.” ” WAS IT GREEN? A Matter for Garrett County Re- publicans to Investigate. During the late Presidential cam- paign, a letter appeared in the Oak- land Journal, signed “A Republican,” purporting to be written at Grants- ville, and in it the writer attacked Candidate Taft on account of his re- ligion, and urged all voters, irrespec- tive of party, to vote for Bryan. The ignoramus who wrote the letter dubbed Mr. Taft an infidel, and de- livered himself of much other foolish and narrow-minded rot too numerous to mention. . There was much speculation at the time as to who was guilty of writing such silly twaddle, some blaming one Republican and some another. Tae STAR was not long in arriving at the conclusion that the letter referred to was not written by a Republican at all, but by a big, whisky-fuddled, mushy-brained Democratic lobster, and we still believe that we were right in our surmises. However, there is nearly always room to be mistaken in such matters, and since a well-known Grantsville Dmocrat has recently informed us that then readily see just how many parents school to give their children all the | moral training they need, and you will | also readily see what a sorry failure | that kind of training is when it is not | discipline in the home. note a large number among the Bun-: In | ce— publican conduet, his Republican con- stituents should promptly “sit down’ on him good and hard. If not guilty, he should be given a speedy vindi- cation. Mr. Green should explain, and the editor of the Oakland Journal should also explain, for Tae Star's in- formant said: “The editor of the Journal called me in and showed me the letter, which had Mr.Green’s signa- ture to it, adding that he did not pub- lish the name because Mr, Green re- quested him to keep his name a secret.” If our informant told the truth, the editor of the Journal should explain why he betrayed the confidence of a correspondent who requested that his identity should not be made known, That kind of a request is always con- strued as one of the conditions of the publication of a communication, and no publisher has a moral right to be, tray the confidence of a correspondent, unless the publisher was imgposdd upon by an untruthful or an unlawful ar- ticle, which he had accepted in good faith, but learned afterwards that it was false. We shall not disclose the name of our informant, as we promised not to do so, unless we can obtain proof that he lied. In that event he shall be thoroughly exposed, as he should be. eee TROLLEY NEWS. P. & M. Trolley Now Completed to Garrett—Network of Electric Lines for Somerset County at an Early Date. The P. & M. Street Railway Com- pany, whose object is to build a system of electric lines that will connect the principal towns of Somerset county, and also connect with the Johnstown and Cumberland systems, now has a continuous line completed from Salig- bury to Garrett, via Meyersdale, with the exception of the B. & O. crossing, near Meyersdate, which is still in the hands of the court. Passengers will be transferred at the said crossing until such time as the court grants permis- sion for a grade crossing, or until an underground or overhead crosging can be constructed at that point. Follow- ing we reproduce an item which ap- peared in a recent issue of a Pittsburg financial publication called “Money.” The things set forth therein are doubt- less somewhat exaggerated as to the alleged short time in which all the lines enumerated are to be built, but that they will be built within the next five years is not only a possibility, but a strong probability. We publish the following paragraphs for what they are worth: “Somerset county will, within a year or less, be covered with a network of trolley tracks, which will connect all the large towns of the county. Con- nection will be made with trolley lines running to Johnstown, Connellsville and Cumberland, Md. The Pennsyl- vania and Maryland Street Railway Company is the owner of the rights of way over which the interurban trolley service will be established. This con- cern was recently victorious in a pro- tracted battle in the courts of equity in Somerset county. The Meyersdale & Salisbury Street Railway Company, which was organized several years before the present traction company, claimed certain rights of way in Elk Lick and Summit townships. The present company also claimed this property, and Judge W. Rush Gillan, of the Franklin county bench, deceded the case in favor of the P. & M. com- pany. This concern recently gave a mortgage to the Farmers’ Loan & Trust Company, of New York, for a million dollars, this mortgage to se- cure an issue of 250 $5,000 five per cent. bonds, and 875 $1,000 five per cent bonds. “During the year 1909 the Pennsyl- vania & Maryiand Railway Company will construct and place in operation trolley lines leading from Somerset to Berlin, via the Plank road, from Som- erset to Garrett by way of Beachdale, thence to Meyersdale, and thence to Salisbury. The lines from Meyersdale to Garrett and Salisbury have been constructed and are now in operation. Trolley lines leading from Rockwood to Somerset via the Cox’s creek road, from Somerset to Friedens and thence to Boswell, will also be constructed. It is stated on reliable authority that before snow flies a large force of men will commence the work of grading the rights of way leading to Somerset, as the reported intention of the com- pany is to complete the lines leading to the county capital before commenc- the letter alluded to was written by publican member of the Legislature, guilty of such monkeylike and unre- | ~ ! STAR office. ing work on the lines leading to other depend on the church and the Sunday | none other than Lawrence Green, Re- | parts of the county. Local people are Maryland | from Garrett county, it weuld be well enough for the Republi- | cans of that county to thoroughly in- | supplemented by good training and ' vestigate the charge. If Mr. Green is! highly in favor of the project, and are ready to do anything in their power to assist the traction company.” tg CARBON PAPER for sale at Tue tf