2 x Jar- ers POTERE BERBERS ry BEEEES por ERE, 0 a's g a = >! bo tho ates GConnty Star, VOL. XV. SALISBURY. ELK LICK POSTOFFICE. PA.. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 11. 1909. NO. 5. z > freniesenenenetetetote frevrefre roto ge we ehooNONORONON ORONO HOTONON OO TOTIONE Cs evoonaeNoRet OOO eToReoo ooo oteeroteroterotetottokoioroY "_ghould be given a term in the Peni- - set county from April lst, 1909, to _ April 1st, 1810. For the general good "lived who was so sound and wise in his offspring. Fact, Judge, and you know a barren desert. It was the newspapers were suspended. ~Butte’s experience proved was happening. False rumors spread like bad ax butter. Fake stories ¥$ about citizens circulated : by word of mouth until s several duels almost re- : sulted. There were no &% newspapers to tell the truth about things. Business suffered worst of all. Merchants tried handbills, which didn’t fill the bill. They work- ed the billboard over- time, but only bored the ~ public. The people cried for newspapers as babies cry for— (See ad.) For once in the his- tory of the world it was demonstrated beyond peradventure that a town “without a live newspaper is a dead ome. Stores paper space. time. fegoReooteatoroToooYoTOrO TOYO TOON OYOtOYONE TOTO OTOIONTO space. town—this one, for instance: aN steve OB WOTOXONOWONOLOTOTOTTOTO HofrofetroreoofrorOreretIoro : When Butte Was : A Barren Desert. For five weeks last winter the city of Butte, Mont. was ‘water supply was all right, but owing to a strike all the ~ local newspaper is a public necessity. Nobody knew what could not do business without properly advertising their wares, and they could not advertise properly without news- Butte merchants are now advertising to make up for lost Business men who didn’t think much of advertising before have learned its value and are using newspaper: The experience of Butte carries a lesson for every other rr rr An A Tr Ar rrr Ar Pr Ar rn rr rr fr Ar rr rin Ar rir fet ADVERTISING PAYS ITS OWN WAY. ZAZARANE RA ROA XL RRL TL TUN SL RN RL RE RRS RR RI SN SSA RTS SU SN RRO RL REE 2 HONONOROLOLOLONONOLONOL0101010110 10110110 Reali in nt i etetenonoteretoronenesone. > Trier rir dren rex ezLle ‘driest place on earth, The that in this day and age the" 0000 O ONO NOOO N00 0N0NOL0S0NONONOROLOLONOLONONONOKONOLONOONS Boperee ele lele ele 0i0l0l0 00 zredsgenexrepesesenesenseieonensiolleone ROROJONORBOLONLONOLOLOLOROROLOLOLONOLON Zeetese ie 0 0 tote OOONONON OL OL 0L0L0 SOO. “Heres re Last Thursday evening John Echard, who was wanted in connection with the alleged attempt fo bribe a juror in the celebrated Rinehart case, was ar- rested in Pittsburg. He was unable to | give bond for $2,500, the amount re- quired, and as a result is now in jail. Officers were looking for Echard for several weeks before they succeeded in eapturing him. If found guilty, he tentiary equal to that of Rinehart. ee etl em 2 EIGHTY -FIVE petitions have been filed for license to sell liquor in Somer- of Somerset county, Judge Kouser should turn down every one of them, and he knows it just as well as he knows his own name. Will he turn them down? His conscience would no doubt permit him to do so, and we think his wishbone would, but we hard- 1y think his backbone is strong enough to stand for so great an amount of good all at once. But, as the great paper over at Frostburg womld say, we hope for the best. Among the applicants are many whole-souled, genial, kind- hearted fellows—men who are good in many respests, but that man never judgment as to be able to dispense liquid damnation to his fellow men as a beverage without doing incalculable harm to them and to their wives and it! tee etl ee. Dr. A. O. BARCLAY, of Somerset, who was arrested several weeks ago on the very serious charge of having commit- ted an abortion, has jumped his bail and fled to parts unknown, according murderous doctors who have been erim- inally responsible for the death of moth- ers and unborn babes, they have thus far escaped punishment. Some of them have been tried and found guilty, but they have in no case had to suffer the penalty for their crimes. Through the connivance of spineless judges and scheming, rascally lawyers, they were turned loose upon the public to ply their hideous and damnable crimes again when it-may suit their gruesome pleasure or their greed for gold. And the unpunished vagabond doctors found guilty of the awful crime of abortion continue to go about among respectable people, without so much as a blush of shame upon their hardened, criminal countenances. Yet, red-hand- ed; as it were, with the mark of Cain set upon them and the blood of their innocent victims crying aloud to heav- en against them, they have the brazen- faced impudence and audacity to mix with people who should consider them beneath the notice of all decent men and women, and who should ostracise and pillory such red-handed; brazen- faced, eriminal trash to the end of their criminal, worthless lives. People de- plore lynch law, but is there any won- der that Jynchings are frequent? When red-handed abortionists are turned loose without punishment after they are convicted, then there should be a general lynching, not only of the erim- -inals so turned loose, but also of all who aided them in escaping unscathed, WHEN a. too pointed publicity is di- rected to an eyvil-or impure thing, it has always been-the case, and so yet remains, that the promoters of them become aversed to the source originat- ing that light-giving feature, and de- nounce it bitterly. They bombast and to news items which appeared in last week’s Somerset papers. Every effort should be made to capture him, and if | his guilt can be established, of which | there seems to be no doubt, he should be made to suffer the extreme penalty of the law. of the abortion business going on in Somerset county for many years, and, luckily for the red-handed villainous, There has been too much | | lambast in every conceivable way the | hand that directed “the writing on the wall.” When a newspaper decries the evil of the saloon traffic, the rum-seller | curses and abuses the paper. When the paper denounces the tin-horn gambler, and censures his nefarious the paper depicts and “shows up” the 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—W. H. Floto, Meyersdale; A. W. Knepper. Sheriff —Charles H. Weimer. Prothonotary—J. B. Gerhard. Register—Bert F. Landis. Recorder—Norman E. Berkey. Clerk of Courts—F. A. Harah. Treasurer—Russell G. Walker. District Attorney—John 8. Miller. Coroner—Dr. H. 8. Kimmell. Commissioners—Josiah Specht, Kant- ner; Rush 8. McMillen, Rockwood ; Hiram P. Hay, Berlin. Solicitor— Charles W. Walker. Jury Commissioners—George J. Schrock, M. L. Weighley, Jenners. Directors, of the Poor—J. F. Reiman, William W..Baker, J. C. Dietz, Listie. Attorney for Directors, H. F. Yost. Superintendent of Schools—D. W. Seibert. ; County Auditors—Jacob 8. Miller, Friedens; W. H. H. Banker and Samuel A. Kretchman, Rockwood. Chairmen Political Organizations— Jonas M. Cook, Républican ; Alex B. Grof, Democratic; Fred Groff, Berlin, Prohibition. tf. vicious tendericies of those institutions and contraptions that portend or sug- gest obnoxious practices, the operators of same open up their vitupurative “mud mortars, and call the paper and its staff fools, idiots, butters-in and all sorts of unapproachable epithets, and then from out among the rabble, comes the incoherent cheers of similarly dis- posed individuals, who make bad mat- ters worse Ly pulling the trigger of a gun a fool would have known was load- ed, and sticking a finger in a fire any idiot would have seen was hot. Above the smoke and ashes of it all, however, there has always been noticed this great fact. Yhese fellows never offer you anything to commend themselves or their institutions. They have nothing to say in praise of them. If you say stealing is outlawry, they call you liar; if you say murder i§ a crime, the erim- inal calls you a fool; if you say gamb- ling is bad, and that gambling houses ‘have no place in a civilized community, the gambler tells you to shut up and quit “buttin’ in.” If you condemn licentious novels and dramas begotten from them, the novel fiend, and drama promoter snaps at you with gnashing teeth, and growls out that you have “no right to meddle with other people’s affairs,” overlooking in narrow-minded selfishness that a newspaper is as any moral-fostering citizen a part and parcel of the whole community, and that which threatens and shames the dignity of the civic fabric, is as much the concern of the paper as it is of any citizen. On all great reform waves you will find people alligned with the interests on both sides, and the moral status of the adherents of each is easily discernable by the cause to which they attach themselves. A newspaper’s errand is to commend the good and condemn the bad in all things that come before its notice. —Ex. THE SECRET OF LONG LIFE. A French scientist has discovered one secret of long life. His method deals with the blood. But long ago millions of Americans had proved Elec- tric Bitters prolonged life and makes it worth living. It purifies, enriches and vitalizes the blood, rebuilds wasted nerve cells, imparts life and tone to the entire system. It’s ajgodsend to weak, sick and debilitated people. “Kidney trouble had blighted my life for months,” writes W. M. Sherman, of Cushing, Me., “but Electric Bitters cured me entirely.” Only 20c. at Elk Lick Pharmacy. 3-1 a ee Sure Cure For Baldness. An eminent French physician posi- tively asserts that the following simple remedy will cure baldness of any kind : Take of croton oil twelve drops, oil of almonds four troy drams; mix well and rub a little into the scalp twice a day. A soft fur down will appear in three weeks and continue to grow.— The March New Idea Woman’s Maga- zine. Se REVOLTS AT COLD STEEL. “Your only hope,” said three doctors to Mrs. M. E. Fisher, Detroit, Mich., suffering from severe rectal trouble, lies in an operation, ” “then I used Dr. King’s New Life Pills,” she writes, “till | vocation, the gambler, with his coterie | of selflike adherents, becomes loud and angry in his abuse of the editor. When | 25¢. a r cured.” They prevent Appen- | world, ie “rich beyond ‘the dreams of IS MARRIAGE A FAILURE? The above question is one that is very frequently asked and variously answered. It all depends on circum- stances whether marriage is a ‘failure or not. For a man and wife to be mis- mated must be a calamity to both, a hell upon earth, and, necessarily, a fail- ur. Bot on the other hand, when a man and wife are naturally adapted to one another, when they are striving to make each other happy, when they are companions, partners and helpmates to each other in evety sense of the word, and especially when they are blessed with interesting and healthy children, then marriage is a success, a pleasure, a glad, sweet song. True itis that advérsity and misfor- tune may overtake any couple, but it must be remembered that such mis- fortunes . overtake the -anmarried as well sis the married, and the poet has well said: 3 “Into each life some rain must fall, Some days must be dark and dreary.” The man who has a good wife, even though he may not have a dollar in the avarice;” for not all wealth can be measured by dollars and cents, by houses and lands. And the same can be said of the woman who has a good husband. When marriage is a failure it is because the contracting parties are failures, or at least because they failed to find the affinity of their souls. In some cases they deserve pity, in other cases only censure. Next Sunday, if the editor and wife live until that day, they will round out their first score years of married life, and we wish to be counted among those who regard marriage as a success, a delight, a supreme pleasure. Of course, we have had our sorrows, our cares and our worries; but who has not? But we have had no family ructions, no serious disagreements, and not a single break of the affection that should al- ways exist between man and wife. We are thoroughly satisfied with each other, and we hope to so continue to the end of life’s journey. And, in conelu- sion, the editor wishes to pay the high- est possible tribute to every good wife by declaring his honest convictions to the world that no husband, ro matter how good he may be, is not, and cannot be, the equal of a good wife and mother. We are told in Holy Writ that God created man a little lower than the angels, and somehow we believe that He created good women at least as high, if not higher than the angels. A good wife is a radiant gem, a priceless jewel and the most valuable of all earth's treasures. Gold, silver, diamonds, lands and castles are as nothing in com- parison to that most desirable of all earth’s blessings, a good and noble wife. The Turkeyfoot News Has a Just Grievance. The Turkeyfoot News, the sprightly little paper published at Confluence, has a grievance. It is a just grievance, too, and THE Star holds the same opinions as the News on the topic which that paper so ably discusses in the fol- lowing lines: “Sometimes we go to church, and wher we do, it is with some well de- fined purpose in view. Sometimes we want to hear the singing and see the pretty girls in the choir, and again we may want to see the preacher and listen to an instructive sermon. But whatever the purpose that leads us to the Lord’s sanctuary, we are there to see as well as to hear, and if at such times we find ourselves environed by a multitude of towering hats with nodding plumes and Merry Widow rims, and only able to gét perhaps one little corkscrew peek at the preacher during a service, we feel that we have a grievance, and on behalf of the men folks of the community we intend to give it some air. Every boy and every man, no matter where he lives, was taught in his bib-and-tucker days to remove his hat or cap whenever he entered a house, theatre or church, and so well has the lesson been learned that it rarely becomes necessary to tell anyone of the male persuasion to remove his hat at any indoor public gathering. It is a beautiful custom, and the removal of hats when we enter a church is an indication of our respect for the Lord’s house and His service. It does not concern us when we enter a church whether our hair is parted straight or not, or whether we have any hair at all—off goes our lids, and our thoughts busy themselves with higher and nobler things. Now if this is the correct caper for the gander, Why, oh, why is it not also the proper caper for the goose?” — et THE ACCIDENT-GRANTSVILLE (MD.-PA.-W. VA.) GEOLOGIC FOLIO. Important New Pupliecation by United States Geological Survey. The latest addition to the geologic map of the country which is in prepa- ration by the United States Geological Survey and is being issued in parts called folios, describes two adjoining areas situated for the most part in the northwest corner of Maryland. By the Survey these areas are called the Ac- cident and Grantsville quadrangles. Each covers one-sixteenth of a square degree, or about 230 square miles. Nearly all the area of these guadran- gles is in Garrett county, Md., but a strip about 2 miles wide, exlending across the northern edge of both quad- rangles, lies in Fayette and Somerset counties, Pa., and another strip two- thirds of a mile wide on the western edge of the Accident quadrangle is in dispute between Garrett county, Md., and Preston county, W. Va. The largest towns of the Accident quad- rangle are Friendsville and Accident, Md. ; those of the Grantsville quad- rangle are Salisbury, Pa. and Grants- ville and Barton, Md. CO-OPERATION WITH THE MARYLAND SURVEY. These quadrangles were surveyed in co-operation with the Maryland Geo- logical Survey, the field work having been completed by G. C. Martin, now of the Federal Survey, while he was still a member of the State organiza- tion, and the folio was prepared under the supervision of William Bullock Clark, the co-operating geologist. Full discussions of the areas are published also in reports issued by the Maryland Geological Survey, particularly in those on Garrett county, by Mr. Martin. MINERAL RESOURCES OF THE REGION. The areas contain important mineral resources, as yet in a very early stage of development. Coal is now, and will probably long continue to be the most important product ; but deposits of fire clay have been found which are ex- tremely promising,and it is not un- likely that this and other important clay and cement industries will be established in the future. The supply of limestone in this region is inexhaust- ible, bat it has been drawn upon only for local use. Iron-ore depositssimilar to those which in neighboring regions have been of great value in the ‘past are also found here, yet they hold only remote possibilities for future develop- ment. Some of the sandstones and limestones are suitable for local use as building stone and road material. ~ AGRICULTURE AND MINING. Portions of the areas poorer in miner- al deposits contain rocks from which a rich soil has been formed. These re- gions will be much benefited through the development of the mining areas, by the market which will thus be pro- vided for agricultural products, and the mining regions will in turn receive much benefit from being surrounded by rich and prosperous farming re- gions, : Maps AND DESCRIPTION OF THE REGION, The folio text describes in detail the areal distribution, sequence, and struc- ture of the rocks and the valuable minerals contained in the formations, and the same details are shown by the geologic maps and sections. A topo- graphic map of each quadrangle ex- hibits faithfully the surface features— the hills, streams, roads, and even the location of isolated houses. The Accident-Grantsville folio is one of several describing the quadrangles that lie along the northern border of Maryland between the Allegheny pla- teau and the sea. to be published in co- operation with the Maryland Geologic- al Survey. These folios will form an educational series to illustrate the geology of the middle Atlantic slope. In accordance with the provisions of Jaw, the Survey maps and folios are sold, but the prices fixed (for this folio 25 cents) cover merely the cost of pa- per and printing. Prepayment is oblig- atory, and applications should be ad- dressed to the Director of the United States Geological Survey, Washington, ,.C, SOLDIER BALKS DEATH PLOT. It seemed to J. A. Stone, a civil war veteran, of Kemp, Tex., that a plot ex- isted between a desperate lung trouble and the grave to cause his death. “I Then I began to use Dr. King’s New contracted a stubborn cold,” he writes, “that developed a cough that stuck to me, in spite of all remedies, for years. My weight ran down to 130 pounds. PRICES OF MERCHANDISE IN 1844. Ye, Kickers, Compare these Prices With Present-Day Prices of Store Goods. Every time there is a panic or de- pression in business, you can hear the stereotyped remark on all sides that times were never before so hard. Dur- ing the past year, especially, the re-- mark has been freely made that alk manner of store goods were never be- fore so high in price and the general cost of living so great. Let us see whether such are actually the facts. For example, let us go back to the good old days of 1844, long be— fore the great Civil war caused thes prices of all kinds of merchandise to soar skyward. In 1844 our oldest men: of today were young men, fully grown. strong, healthy and excellent workers, receiving from 20 to 75 cents per day for their labor, according to the season of the year and kind of work they had: to perform. In those days people lived. in poor houses with bare floors, the: rudest and cheapest of furniture, nc modern conveniences of any kind, few: books and newspapers; no magazines, no musical instruments, in fact prac- tically nothing but actual necessities. They wore poor clothes, very little an- ‘| derwear, few overcoats and wraps, ate plain and inexpensive food, and the children all, as well as many of the men and women, went bare-footed in summer, and a day’s work was any- where from 12 to 14 hours. But what did they pay for store goods? We will give you some figures and itéhns from a day book used in the store of the editor’s grand-uncle, the late Christian C. Livengood, plainly and neatly written with a goose quill pen. And “Uncle Christ’s” prices always ranked too low for his own profit, for he was a man of great gener- osity and kindness of heart. Follow- ing are figures and other data copied from his book, all for the year 1844. Peter Gundle, to 8 yds. calico, 75¢. Philip Baits, to 1 quart bottle, 12}5c.. David Livengood, to essence pepper- mint, 12%¢. Solomon Durst, to 8% yds. muslin, 1.06. Samuel Engle to 2 yds. flannel, $1.25 Israel Welfley to 1 gal. cil, 87c. Conrad Mayer to 1 yd. check, 18)sc. Solomon Durst to 29 lbs. sheet iron, $3.62. Sally Swartzendruber, 1 yd. Mareno and 1 comb, 87%c. : John Arnold to1 oz. cloves, 12%4e. and 16 lbs. iron, $1.00. John C. Livengood to 2 sheets paste-- board, 12%4e¢., and 2 yds. calico, 37sec. Jonathan Miller to 414 yds. cotton flannel, 85e¢. Jacob Folk to 10% $2.381%. Henry Patton to 8 yds. calico, $1.75. Sally Shultz to 18 yds. muslin, $2.25. John Rosenbaum to 1}4 yds. red flannel, 75c. Levi Shockey to 825 lbs. tallow, 68ec.,. and }4 gal. molasses, 44c. Samuel 8. Miller to 1 pair mits and 3 handkerehiefs. $1.81. Jacob Heinbaugh to 5 lbs. cotton, $1.25. Jacob Yoder to 4 yds. Canton flannel, 75¢. Wm. Wagner, per Philip, to 1 paper tacks, 12%5c. John Shook to 5 lbs. scrap iron, 50c. Benjamin Dellaven to 2 yds. cloth and trimming, $9.44; 3 yds. casanet,. $4.12; 114 yds. Kentucky Jean, $1.46. Hannah Lane to 2 yds. drilling, 87sec. Samuel Gletfelty & Co. to one half- round file, 37c. Jacob Livengood to 8 lbs. blister steel, $1.00. Samuel Heinbaugh to 12 sheets pa-- per, 12¢. Peter A. Beachy to 4 lbs. batting, 75c.. Solomon Durst to 34 yd. Irish linen,. 87%ec. James Linsey to 1 quart whiskeyg, 12%e. Conrad Bittner to 15 lbs. nails, $1.05 We could give many other figures, but the foregoing will suffice to show the difference between the prices of merchandise of those days and now,. also the difference in the articles pur-- chased then and now. In the large: book before us, there are comparatively yds. ticking, things as they could raise and supply from the woods and streams. Canned: goods ‘were practically unknown, as were also the various brands of cereal foods, ete., ete. Those were good old days, to be sure, and whiskey was cheap, but let us give thanks that we completly. For severe Colds, IT IS BAD BUSINESS to allow peo- ple to look in vain through the col- re Constipation, Headache. Lick Pharmacy. 3-1 {| ment of your business. tf umns of THE Star for an advertise- | Pneumonia it’s unrivaled. 50c. and $1.00. Trial bottle free. | by Elk Lick Pharmacy. 2.1 o=1 obstinate Coughs, | you say? Hemorrhages, Asthma, and to prevent | and since the Civil Guaranteed of younger generations grew up and Discovery, which restored my health |live in 2a much more desirable period I now weigh 189 pounds.” | of our country’s history. Panic, did We who were born during war have never seen a panic that wasn’t better than the most prosperous days of our fore- | fathers. few purchases of groceries given, for- the people lived principally on such