cet! EL d a new 1 Salis- ’s store. | clean, et. nd Salt rat Cat- , Hides, Ol » con- ir wants ." ATTA SEATS SHAE TRARY AT LICHLITER'S fe ntl —— — — ri — = SALMA AAMAS You will always get the best fresh Groceries. We do not keep goods, we sell them ; therefore they are always fresh. We have on hand the three leading brands of flour— Minnehaha, Pillsbury’s Best and Vienna. : Call to see us, and you will be treated courteously and right. lls, pl Safe, Quick, Reliable Regulator i Superior to other remedies sold at high prices. Cure guaranteed. Successfully used by over | 200,000 Women. Price, 25 Cents, drug- | gists or by mall. Testimonials & booklet free. Dr. LaFranco, Philadelphia, Pa, Frankiin Breadmakenr REE A family that uses Wheatlet, Franklin Flour or SAVE Our Silos are in use by some of THE INTERNATIONAL SILOS FEED—Labor THE WHOLE CORN CROP TIME—MONEY testimonials, as their worth, may be had for the asking, as well as our free Book on Silo Building. Why pay a large agent's commission or wholesalers profit when you can buy of us direct at a great saving. .Our Silos are the best. Our price the lowest. Write us for terms and Special Introductory Offer. THE INTERNATIONAL SILO CO., Jefferson, Ohio. the best Dairymen in the country whose Feed Home-Made Chop! be Why? Because it is pure. Made from the st grades of corn and oats. Con- tains no screenings or sweepings. Tt is nothing but pure corn and oats, ground by the latest improved methods. Try a hun other. Manufactured by dred-weight, and you will have no WEST SALISBURY FEED CO, ‘We carry three kinds of Home-Made_ Chop) —Corn, Oats and Corn and Oats. Prices, very reasonable. West Salisbury, Pa. EMPIRE STATE to the fire are reinforced and ished. It is practically indestructible. our free catalogue—we can save you money. SAVE TWO PROFITS. From factory to user at wholesale price. STEEL RANGE. Positively the best range ever built. Made from new process fire-proof steel—the heavi- est ever used in a range. All jens exposed ned wi th as- bestos. The top is made of charcoal malleable —you can’t break it with a sledge hammer. i The fire box and oven large and roomy. The “5% teat circulation perfect and temperature even k k= throughout. The saving in fuel will pay for the range. The only steel range made that sets on legs—you can sweep and clean under it. It is elegant in design and finish, handsomely nickeled and hi; IY pol end fo: DRAKE HARDWARE COMPANY, Friendship, N. Y. Is Good ‘BEER! We use the best malt and hops, and pure Sand Spring water. We produce a good, wholesome beverage. Sold at All Leading Hotels. Orders Promptly Delivered. BIg G0. KiLL w= COUCH ao CURE vvE LUNGS «Dr, King's New Discovery ONSUMPTION _ Price FOR { oOucHs and 50c &$1.00 OLDS Free Trial. Surest and Quickest Cure for all THROAT and LUNG TROUB- LES, or MONEY BACK. 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Trav MARKS ESIGNS I pain ao. Any sending a sketch and jon ma: ofp RS Sir Salen ore Cathey al Invention 18 Pro ential. Handbook on P rictly dest ncy for securing ts. Bont rants ey ay h Munn & Co. receive el epecial notice, without ¢ in can. it cl erm cientific erica . Fi ted A handsomely illustra fourna a months, $1. Sold byall newsdealers. culation of any scientific MONN & Cozeerosers New York ‘Branch Office. 625 F St. Washington, D. C. Ee The Windsor Hotel. Between 12th and 13th Sts., on Filbert St. | Philadelphia, Pa. Three minutes walk from the Reading Ter- THE SALISBURY HACK LINE AND LIVERY. ~~ C. W. Statler, - - - Proprietor. L&T wo hacks daily, except Sunday, be- ‘tween Salisbury and Meyersdale, connect- ing with trains east and west. Schedule: Hack No. 1 leaves Salisbury at........ 8A. M Hack No. 2 leaves Salisbury Beare ess 1P.M Returning, No 1 leaves Meyersdale at 1 P.M No.2 leaves Meyersdale at............. 6P.M E@—First class rigs for all kinds of trav- el,at reasonable prices. : ORIGINAL IP] AXATIVE HONEY zs TAR An improvement over all Cough, Lung and Bronchial Remedies. Cures Coughs, Strengthens the Lungs, gently moves the Bowels. Pleasant to the taste and good | alike for Young and Old. | Prepared by PINEULE MEDICINE CO.,Chicago, U.S.A. jsoLD BY ELK LICK SUPPLY CO. minal. Five minutes walk from P. | DeWit's % - Depot. European plan, $1.00 per day and up- | arl Risers ora American plan, $2.00 per Gay. Little E y FRANK M.SHEIBLEY, Manager. The famous little pills. PIANO LESSONS !|—Pupils taken by Miss Linna M. Perry, graduate in music. Theory and harmony taught. Grant street, Salisbury, Pa. tf —eel- Fall Term Opening. Tae Tri-State Business COLLEGE, Cumberland, Maryland, September 4, 5, 6. 8-31 TO LAND OWNERS:—We have printed and keep in stock a supply of trespass notices containing extracts from the far-reaching trespass law pass- ed at the 1905 session of the Pennsyl- vania Legislature. The notices are printed on good cardboard with blank line for signature, and they will last for years in all kinds of weather. Every land owner should buy some of them, as the law requires land owners to post their lands if they want the protection of the latest and best trespass law ever passed. Send all orders to THE STAR, Elk Lick, Pa. tf PICTURE FRAMING, clock, gun, bicycle and umbrella repairing a spec- jalty. When in need of anything enumerated here, call on Ben. Wagner, General Mechanic and Repairman, Sal- isbury, Pa. tf Fall Term Opening. Tae Tri-STaTE Business COLLEGE, Cumberland, Maryland, September 4, 5, 6. 8-31 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 WANTED AT ONCE !|—Two good girls, either white or color- ed, for kitchen work, at Hay’s Hotel. Address D. I. Hay, Elk Lick, Pa. tf FINE GUN FOR SALE!—A fancy new double-barrel Shotgun, brand new, 12 gauge, made extra strong for smoke- less powder, One of the finest guns on the marker. Will be sold for less than its value. Inquire at Star office, Elk Lick, Pa. tf MR. H. C. WHITE, the well known fashionable merchant tailor, of Chambersburg, Pa, will be in Salisbury about Sept. 12th to 13th, with a choice line of Fall and Winter Suitings, at very reasonable prices. Perfect satisfaction rendered. 9-7 Harry S. Kifer Badly Burned. Restauranteur Harry 8. Kifer came within an ace of losing his life, and as it is was frightfully burned, by an ex- plosion in his gasoline peanut roaster about 9 o'clock Saturday night. His head was entirely enveloped with flame for a brief period, long enough to change the color of his face to that of an over-ripe tomato, and to cause him the most excruciating pain. His hands and wrists were also badly burned and blistered. During the temporary absence of Mr. Kifer from the peanut roaster, located in front of his place of business, street loafers are supposed to have monkeyed with the gasoline cocks. At all events when the owner returned and struck a match to ignite the gas, a wave of flame enveloped him with the result stated. The peanut roaster was only slightly injured.—Somerset Herald. PUBLIC IS AROUSED. The public is aroused to a knowledge of the curative merits of that great medicinal tonic, Electric Bitters, for sick stomach, liver and kidneys. Mary H. Walters, of 546 St. Clair Ave, Co- lumbus, O., writes: “For several months, I was given up to die. I had fever and ague, my nerves were wreck- ed ; I could not sleep, and my stomach was so weak from useless doctors’ drugs, that I could noteat. Soon after beginning to take Electric Bitters, I obtained relief; and in a short time I was entirely cured.” Guaranteed at E. H. Miller's drug store ; price 50c. 9-1 ———— A ee— Look Pleasant, Please. Do not blame , your newspaper man for what happens in the community. If there is anything in the life of the place you do not want to go abroad to the world, blame yourself if it exists— not the newspaper for saying some- thing about it. It isthe editor's duty to make a typographical photograph of the town each day, and if you take a homely picture, don’t kick the instru- ment, but try toget a better expression on your face the next time, says the Oakland Republican. Crude A Column Thoughts Home i Dedicated As They . to Tired Fall Circle | Mothers From the As They Editorial Join the Panes?! | Depart- | Home Plagsant Gicle at vening vening Reveries. ment. Tide. BY THE GATE. In a robe of lace and satin, With a sash of palest blue, With a picture hat and roses— Roses red and wet with dew; In the freshness of the morning I have often seen her wait, Drumming with her dainty fingers On the pillar by the gate. “All in white'and crown’d with blossoms By the gate she stood one day, ‘| And she held her sweetest roses That her hands could be r away From that cool and fragrant garden Where the sunlight kissed the lawn, Fragrant with the breath of heaven On that happy bridal morn. Still it seems I see ber standing, Sweet of form and fair of face; Weeds have overgrown the garden That her presence used to grace. By the gate which is forsaken, Clings the ivy to the wall, And the roses there are fading— Those she loved the best of all The highest need of human society today isa bold and fearless spirit of in- dividuality. A thousand years agoone could be conservative and not fall be- hind the race. But now, while human- ity rides on steam and lightning, one cannot afford to imitate the clumsy gait of those who went through life on foot. A man thinks he loves his wife and children, and because he works hard for their support he needs no other evi- dence that he loves them. Perhaps he does, but when he constantly reminds them of the expeuse they are to him, and seems to begrudge every dollar paid out to maintain the home and sup- port the family, he spoils the happiness of that family circle by selfish thought- lessness. . The home sentiment is the strongest in the human heart. The mere men- tion of home awakens all the better impulses of the heart. Manya darken- ed mind is dead to every appeal save that magic word “home.” The lives of scores of hundreds who have been snatched as brands from the fires of temptations can testify to the magic power of a sister’s early love, while the sudden remembrance of a mother’s “good night kiss,” has stayed the assas- sin’s dagger. In our most degraded dens of vice, could an unseen hand write the name “mother,” lips would quiver, and eyes would moisten with tears from those whose every impulse had seemed dead for years. NATURE'S WORK. Nature is a great economist. She makes the most of every opportunity, she works up all odds and ends. After you are wrecked and useless she leaves the wreck upon the rocks or reef on which you were stranded, and hoists her signal of danger, as a warning to others. You lose your life, but nature wants to use you for a warning. You lose your health, but the tell-tales are left in your face to show the world how it went. If by drink,nature hangs out as her sign a red distress, it may be, on your nose, in front of your eyes, where you can’t escape it, and where everybody you meet reads the terrible warning. Though your life is a failure, and you have become useless, nature can still afford to keep you as an ob- ject-lesson to warn your fellows. TRUE MANLINESS. Every boy belongs to a man. It may not be amiss to study the character of a true gentleman. What is a true gen- tleman? Manliness is a true virtue, virtue means purity, purity means power. Never imagine that the swag- gering braggart is a powerful man, or that such characters as Corbett, Fitz- simmons, Sullivan or their tribe are ideal American citizens. The braggart and bully is always a weak character. The true gentleman is strong. The man who endures and overcomes and lives to bless other lives is the true gentleman. The true gentleman is not made of clothes. Fine feathers do not make fine birds. So no art of the tailor can make a man out of a tough by dressing him in a fine suit. Some of the men with the roughest exterior possess the truest and tenderest spirits, while some dressed in the height of fashion are demons incarnate. We like the man with a sunny smile and a loving heart, an honest voice, and a firm grip of the hand, a clear eye, keen- witted, with boundless energy and a never-failing smile, a man sincere, sub- limely unselfish, inspired by a true warmth of heart. Give us such a man, obedient to the claims of others, rather than the prim and porapous man whose heart has the frigidity of an iceberg. We believe what we need today in the home and in the church and in business is not an austere and unbending Puritanism, but a large-hearted, cheerful-spirited Chris- tian brotherliness, inspired not by dol- lars and acres, but by obedience to our highest and best nature. The man who encases his life in business claims or wraps his being in a mantle woven out of selfish acts can never save the world. What we want is sympathy. There are many who have fallen in the trag- edy of life; they are bleeding from ! atus. some wound; what they need is a brother’s hearty hand-shake, a loving voice saying, “God bless you, my boy, all is not lost; your life is not gone; there are yet unwasted days in which you can win back a good name and an honorable place in society. Be a man; T’'ll stand by you; you can count on me.” FIENDISH SUFFERING is ofted caused by sores, ulcers and can- cers that eat away your skin. Wm. Bedell, of Flat Rock, Mich., says: »Y have used Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, for Uleers, Sores and Cancers. - It is the best healing dressing I ever found.” Soothes and heals cuts, burns and sealds. 25c. at E. H. Miller's drug store ; guaranteed. 9-1 Some of Our GOOD Subseribers. The following named good people have our thanks for cash on subserip- tion since our issue of last week: Geo. P. Walker, $2.25; L. E. Fallon, $2.00; Burtin Blough, $1.25; A. D. Johnson, $1.25; Mrs. Sadie Fernsner, $3.15; U. M. Stanton, $5.75; Chas. Boucher, $2.00; Mrs. S. F. Sanger, $4.50; W. D. Thomp- son, $2.28. Two Items Printed in the Johns- town Tribune 50 Years Ago. The census of Chicagohas just been taken. The present population is 87,- 800. Last November it was 60,140. In- crease in seven months, 27,760. The yellow fever is still raging with fearful effect in Portsmouth and Nor- folk, Virginia. Hundreds of citizens have been attacked, and many have fallen victims. Great difficulty is ex- perienced in securing nurses. The pop- ulation has been reduced to 1,500 per- sons. In New York, Baltimore and Philadelphia, meetings have been held to procure relief for the sufferers. ADDITIONAL LOCAL. Mrs. George Newman was bound over to await the action of the grand jury, on Monday, by ’Squire Ww. B. Cook, on a charge of conducting a dis- orderly house, the complaint against her having been made by Constable Dayton. The evidence before the jus- tice was of a most incriminating na- ture, and the justice held her to court. Alexandar King was her attorney at the hearing, and John Smith appeared for Officer Dayton. It is about time that a halt was called in this case, if one-half of the stories are true that have been told, but it was hard work for the officers to procure the evidence to convict, but they seem to be of the opinion that they now have a good case.—Meyersdale Republican. James D. Boyd, of Towa, Wm. Wag- ner, Sr., and the editor, had a pleasant little picnic all to themselves, last Sun- day, out in the woods near one of the finest springs in the country. The editor furnished the eatables for din- ner, and the spring water was free; but for some strange reason we didn’t drink the spring dry, in fact didn’t try to. At supper time we all partook of a fine supper prepared by Mrs. Wagner, at the Wagner home, and the day was spent most pleasantly, notwithstanding the fact that Mr. Boyd and the knight of the quill were tormented all day with hay fever, of which distressing malady both are subjects. Mr. Boyd suggested the outing, saying: “Lets take to the woods, where we can blow our noses all we durn please,” and it was a capital idea. We enjoyed the yarns told by Wagner and Boyd con- cerning the good old days of forty years ago, and when we broke camp the “Old Sledge” games stood as follows: Boyd, 4; Wagner, 5; Livengood, 7. A large crowd of Salisbury people at- tended the picnic at Jennings, Md. last Saturday. Most of them went there in a side-door palace car hauled by Uncle Josh Messersmith’s faithful engine, with Uucle Josh at the throttle. It was a free train, and started from West Salisbury at about 9:30 a. m., re- turning in the evening. The picnic was a great success, but the ball game between Salisbury and Jennings ended in a row, The Salisbury boys charged that the umpiring was outrageously unfair, and threw up the sponge” in the seventh inning, when the score stood 7 to 5 in favor of Salisbury. The hotel did a rushing business, and the meals served were fine. Owing to there being no liquor sold at Jennings, the crowd was very orderly, and it was a treat to many persons to go through the large model sawmill owned and operated by Jennings Brothers. Another thing that attracted much at- tention was “Hook” Billmeyer’s patch of cultivated ginseng. ‘‘Hook” has a patch of the valuable plant that is valued at about $5,000. THE ONLY WAY. There is no way to maintain the health and strength of mind and body except by nourishment. There is no way to nourish except through the stomach. The stomach must be kept healthy, pure and sweet, or the strength will let down and disease will set up! No appetite, loss of strength, nervous- ness, headache, constipation, bad breath, sour risings, rifting, indiges- tion, dyspepsia and all stomach troub- les that are curable are quickly cured by the use of Kodol Dyspepria Cure. | sy qrew Lichwar Kodol digests what Sold by E. H. Miller. 9-1 ‘the trustees, { Nellie Bastian................ W Rice Hulls—A Dangerous Bran Adulteration. BY WILLIAM FREAR. The Pennsylvania Agricultural Ex- periment Station has recently examin- od a sample of bran submitted by a Westmoreland county farmer with a statement that cattle refuse it, and when they do eat it are purged, and that hogs eating it sicken and die, one farmer in that county having lost six hogs in this way. Upon examination the bran was found to contain rice hulls. These hulls, produced abundantly as a waste from the rice milling industry, differ materially from the hulls of bar- ley, wheat, rye and oats, because of the fact that they contain sharp particles of silica. These are extremely irritat- ing to the mucous lining of the diges- tive tract of the animals eating the hulls. The irritation produced is so in- tense that many animals are sickened and often killed because of this action of the rice hulls. Hogs and heifers have been especially injured where at- tempts have been made in the Southern states to feed this product, and the ex- perience in that locality has shown these hulls to be an absolutely danger- ous ingredient of stock food. Rice hulls have been found in west- ern samples of wheat bran sold in New England and in the Middle West, but this is the first case, to the writer's knowledge, in which the adulterant has appeared in Pennsylvania. The sample in question showed large par- ticles of yellow hulls that were readily detectable upon a careful examination of bran by the unaided eye. With a low power lens the outside surface of the hull is seen to be marked by fine parallel lines covering the whole sur- face quite uniformly and extending parallel to the long axis of the hull. This appearance is quite different from that shown by barley and oat hulls. Owing to the extremely dangerous character of this adulterant, buyers shoutd be especially on their guard against it. TAKE KODOL AFTER EATING. After a hearty meal a dose of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure will prevent an attack of Indigestion. Kodol is a thorough digestant and a guaranteed cure for Indigestion, Dyspepsia. Gas on the Stomach, Weak Heart, Sour Risings, Bad Breath and all Stomach troubles. Sold by E. H. Miller. 9-1 at What’s in MeClure’s. MecClure’s has always something that compels attention, something immedi- ate and significant that is important to all Americans. The September num- ber adds to an unbroken series of “Me- Clure Articles” an illuminating study of commercial piracy, the first half of Miss Tarbell’s study of the Kansas Oil War, and an excursion into the marvels of modern biology, “Prolonging the Prime of Life,” which is an authorita- tive account of the discoveries of a group of scientists who have determin- ed that old age is a disease. Color printing has never achieved more perfect results than in the eight full-page reproductions of Lungren’s paintings of the Grand Canon of the Colorado, which accompany William Allen White’s description of the won- ders “On Bright Angel Trail,” a bit of descriptive writing which may well take place with the classics of our language. Eugene Wood, George Randolph Chester, Mrs. Wilson Woodrow, Jean Webster, Arthur Train, and Norvell Harrison supply a round of short stories, stirring, humorous, light or serious to fit every mood. DANGEROUS'AND UNCERTAIN. For sunburn, tetter and all skin and scalp diseases, DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve has no equal. It is a certain cure for blind, bleeding, itching and protruding piles. It will draw the fire out of a burn and heal without leaving a scar. Boils, old sores, carbuncles, ete., are quickly cured by the use of the genuine DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve. Accept no substitute, as they are often dangerous and uncertain. Sold by E. H. Miller. 9-1 eet Church Announcement. The Rev. J. F. Murray, D. D., Me- Keesport, Pa., will hold the fourth and last quarterly meeting of the confer- ence year in the Salisbury M. E.chureh, Saturday evening, Sept. 2, 1805, at 7:30. This is an important meeting, and all stewards and Sunday school superintendents are urged to be present. Rev. ALBerT K. TRAVIS, A. M. pe. Marriage Licenses. John W. Wilber............. Pittsburg Grace G. Walker........ Somerset twp James 8S. Garrett............ Boswell Nora E. Hofman............... Jenner Elliot B. Edie.......... New Haven, Pa Mabel Daaby............... Rockwood Harry Jones.......c..oeeennn. Summit Minnie Smith .........c.e0..s Summit Christian J. Bender............ Garrett Cora Hershberger............ Elk Lick Henry C. Beek......... Falls City, Neb Bessie V. Keller......... Somerset twp Austin D. Shaffer........ Somerset bor Stella L. Burgess.......... Pitcairn, Pa Andrew Dery................ Paint bor Katie Subulanka............. Paint bor Stasco Sovindo......... Brothersvalley Hilo Coval............. Brothersvalley ..Boswell you eat and Susan Parane Knup........... Boswell strengthens the whole digestive appar- Homer W. Robinson. Hollidaysburg, Pa /indber SR RR 5 i i