>d a new n Salis- r’s store. d clean, et. nd Salt Fat Cat- y, Hides, EO e con- ur wants *y nl oe | | | ol a | ue | oc nls § - . 3» = > a ‘We carry three kinds of Home-Made Chop) — a = - = SG ss eG aman A QTE ATTA STOP IAPS IAAP ANTES AT LICHLITER'S ZIAD BIL AIAEBAA ACER IIR LI LIDS You will always get the best fresh Groceries. oo - -> > - r- - ! AA 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. ° ° ® 9 | 9 ° LAD Safe, Quick, Reliable Regulator {Superior to other remedies sold at hign prices. ¥ d. Successfully used by over 200,000 Women. Price, 23 Cents, drug- | gists or by mail. Testimonials & booklet free. d Dr. LaFranco, Philadelphia, Pa, Franklin Breadmaker REE A family that uses Wheatlet, Flour or Particulars in or mailed u Lockport, X. Y. THE INTERNATIONAL SILOS FEED—Lahor THE WHOLE CORN CROP TIME—MONEY Our Silos are in use by some of the best Dairymen in the country whose 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 wholesaler’s 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. Feed Home-Made Chop! Why? It is nothing but pure corn and oats, ground by the latest improved methods. Try a hundred-weight, and you will have no other. Manufactured by : : WEST SALISBURY FEED CO, West Salisbury, Pa. SAVE Made from the Con- Because it is pure. best grades of corn and oats. tains no screenings or sweepings. —Corn, Oats and Corn and Oats. Prices, very reasonable. . ) SAVE TWO PROFITS. From factory to user at wholesale price. EMPIRE STATE STEEL RANGE. Positively the best range ever built. Made from new fire-proof steel—the heavi- est ever used in » range. All to the fire are reinforced and lined with as- bestos, The top is made of charcoal malleable ol can’t break it with a sledge hammer. e fire box and oven large and roomy. The heat circulation perfect and Vinge even > throughout. The saving in fuel will pay for the range. The only. steel range made.that sets on Jogi=you can Weep Ard clean under it. It is elegant in design and finish, handsomely nickeled and highly pol: ished. It is practically indestructible. end fo PIANO LESSONS !—Pupils taken by Miss Linna M. Perry, graduate in music. Theory and harmony taught. Grant street, Salisbury, Pa. tf 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 prinesd on good cardboard with blank ine 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- ialty. When in need of anything enumerated here, call on Ben. Wagner, General Mechanic and Repairman, Sal- isbury, Pa. tf 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 market. Will be sold for less than its value. Inquire at Star office, Elk Lick, Pa. 34 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 our free catalogne—we can save you money. very reasonable prices. Perfect DRAKE HARDWARE COMPANY, Friendship, NY. satisfaction rendered. 9.7 Crude A Column Thoughts Home Dedicated S 00 As They . to Tired Fall Circle | Mothers From the s They Editorial Join the Pen:— Depart- | Home Bleasins Circle at vening vening o Reveries. ment. Tide. 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. Wg G0. THE SALISBURY HACK LINE «AND LIVERY. C. W. Statler, - - - Proprietor. | @—Two hacks daily, except Sunday, be- tween Salisbury and Meyersdale, connect- KILL» COUCH ano CURE ve LUNGS «= Dr, King's New Discovery ing with trains east and west. Schedule: ONSUMPTION Price Hack No.1 leaves Salisbury at........ SA. M FOR OUGHS and 50c & $1.00 fl | Hack No.2 leaves Salisbury at... .... 1P.M OLDS Free Trial. Returning, No 1 leaves Meyersdale at 1 P.M No.2 leaves Meyersdaleat.............6 P.M Surest and Quickest Cure for all | g@ First class rigs for all kinds of trav- THROAT and LUNG TROUB- el,at reasonable prices. LES, or MONEY BACK. | 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE ORIGINAL LAXATIVE TradE MARKS DESIGNS CoPYRIGHTS ac Anyone sending a sketch and description ma: rtain free whether an WH A Communica- €0! den al. Handbook on Patents pi gy prob nv: tions strictly confi o. Oldest tents. : ge EE yg AND! T. R Scientific af, [TT £ \ - A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest eir- An improvement over all Cough, culati scientific journal. Terms, $3 a our ORES, | SL Sa by all newsdealers. WUNN & Co.asverosews New York | Cures Coughs, ‘Branch Office. 625 ¥ St. Washington, D.C. | Lungs, gently moves - | Pleasant to the taste and The Windsor Hotel. |aike for Yousg and oid. Between 12th and 13th Sts., on Filbert St. | Prepared by PINEULE MEDICINE C0.,Chicage,U. 8.8. : s SOLD BY ELK LICK SUPPLY CO. Philadelphia, Pa. Three minutes walk from the Reading Ter- | 1. Five minutes walk from P. | ’ ” a gine Enropean plan, $1.00 per day and up- DeWitt's Early Risers American plan, $2.00 per day. | FRANK M,SHEIBLEY, Manager. | The famous little pills. and Bronchial Remedies. Strengthens the the Bowels. good Lung Depot. wards. WOMAN’S WARS. In her woman’s heart was a poem, A grand and tender song, A word of hope for the weary, A stern rebuke to the wrong. 1t often pleaded for utterance, For voice to reach the world, To be raised where all might hear it, A banner of love unfurled. But she never found the moment, With days so full of care, To breathe out the burning heart words Of her poem nestling there. There wore always household duties, Dull rounds for every day, And just before, step by step, Some task unfinished lay. Her children grew up and blessed her, And honored her sainted name; She has guided their childish footsteps, But she had missed the road to fame: From the many snares and pitfalls Along the youthful way, Her watchful eye had saved them; Not one had wondered astray. The good angel wrote down her life-work, A pure and shining page, More sweet than dreams of a poet, More grand than seer or sage; She had met each homely duty, Striving not for earth’s renown, Her life was a poem of beauty, Her reward in heaven—a crown. Fault-Finding is a good deal like the drink habit. Once begun in a family, it is very easy to continue, and very difficult to arrest one’s self. But we believe more families have been wreck- ed by fault-finding than by drink. It is hard to decide which of these two vices is the greatest enemy to a happy home. We sometimes wonder if our readers sufficiently appreciate this department. ‘We believe in time it will have an in- fluence for good in any community. It cannot fail in a measure, at least, to mould the character of those who weekly read it. If our readers appre- ciate it they should not be backward in giving to us an encouraging word. If you can make any suggestions where- by we can improve upon this feature, we would be pleased to listen to them. Our only aim and object is to give our and good homes. If you enjoy this de- partment of our paper, in your own way and manner make the fact known to us. A little encouragement from subscribers is a great tonic for the weary editor. Our readers all doubtless have a de- sire to be happy, and are ever watching for the road to happiness. You. have doubtless had many roads to happiness pointed out to you. The young as well as the old have their dark days. The days in May time of life are just as cloudy as in life's November. The grandmother and granddaughter breathe the same deep sigh. It is a false idea that we are happier in child- hood and youth than we will ever be again. If we live right, the older we get the happier we are. As you ad- vance in life, as you come out into the world and have your head and heart full of good, honest, practical work, then you know what it is to begin to be happy. The longer the fruit hangs on the tree the riper and more mellow it grows. The longer you live the right kind of a life the more useful and happy you become. Our readers who now have “silver threads among the gold” can well re- member the good, old-fashioned home, where upon a stormy night they would sit by the old hearthstone, while the great fire up the chimney roared. They can yet see reflected from the ever changing golden sheen of the blaze the images of merry boys and playful girls, or with their slates and pencils and school books solying by the flickering blaze the problems assigned them by the old schoolmaster. What visions they can see in the fire, visions of the forgotten long ago, of joys and sorrows strangely mixed; visions of romping boys and laughing girls, vise jons of love’s first dream, of eyes that caught the broken story from lips that could not speak it ; visions of the bridal queen crowned with coronet of maiden blushes ; visions of life’s stern battle; visions of sorrow’s first shadow ; visions of all life’s checked pathway as: it winds through flowery fields or pain’s hot desert sands, through the fragrant spice groves of joy or over sorrow’s mountain crags. We would not be an “old fogy,” but our modern and besuti- ful homes of today, with their darken- ed parlors so the sunlight will not fade the carpets; where a nurse instead of a mother amuses the children, if per chance there be any. As one recalls to memory these incidents and pictures of the far distant past, it brings a sigh for a return of the good old days, be- fore weslth and fashion united in rob- bing home of half its real injoyments. WHAT TO READ. When you have the “blues” and can see no silver lining to the dark clouds that are constantly above you, read the twenty-seventh Psalm. When: your pocket-book is as empty as an editor's, read the thirty-seventh Psalm. _ When your neighbors are unkind to you, and even those near and dear to you slight you, read the fifteenth chap- ter of John. When you are discouraged about your work, and nothing seems to go right, read the 126 Psalm. When you are all out of sorts, and hardly kfiow what the matter is, read the twelfth chapter of Hebrews. When you are losing confidence in mankind, read the thirteenth chapter of I Corinthians. If you can’t have your own way, then silence is golden, and you will get re- lief by reading the third chapter of James. When you want all the late news from a reliable source, read the paper which you now hold in your hands. GOT OFF CHEAP. He may well think he has got off cheap, who, after having contracted constipation or indigestion, is still able to perfectly restore his health. Nothing will do this but Dr. King’s New Life Pills. A quick, pleasant, and certain cure for headache, constipation, ete. 25¢. at E. H. Miller’s drug store; guar- anteed. 10-1 M. E. Conference at Beaver. When the Pittsburg conference of the Methodist Episcopal church meets in Beaver, Wednesday, October 4, the problem of how to place 287 ministers in 280 pulpits will have to be disposed of. Bishop Earl Cranston is now fish- ing in Canadian waters, and is sup- posed to be endeavoring to solve this problem. The officers of this conference are likely to make but few changes or new appointments this year, and the com- ing conference promises to be an un- usually quiet one. There are no pre- siding elders to appoint this year; no delegates are to be elected to a general conference, and no memorials to be voted upon. The church has begun to adjust itself to the removal of the five-year limit on pastorates, and the elimination is giv- ing the greatest satisfaction. Under the new system there is no limit in which one pastor can serve a congre- gation, though he must be appointed from year to year, thereby insuring the possibility of flexibility and sta- bility. | readers just the kind of reading they most relish, and at the same time be outspoken on the side of good morals swe Early Risers The famous little pills. THE ART OF “DOING” PEOPLE. Under this head Tae STAR will from week to week expose some of the fraud- ulent advertising schemes by which shrewd charlatans in various cities and towns gather in the hard-earned coin of unsuspecting persons who are usual- ly on the lookout to get something of considerable value for a trifling con- sideration, or who are looking for easy employment at good wages. Read this column closely, as it may save you from being g “sucker” and foolishly parting with your money. THE AUTOMOBILE SWINDLE. As a rule the swindlers who operate through the mails are satisfied with a small profit from each dupe, some con- tenting themselves with as little as ten cents and the more ambitious ones with a dollar or two. Once ina while, however, a high-roller appears among them who raises the limit to ten or even twenty dollars. On June 1st, a fraud order was issued against an in- dividual at Greycourt, New York, who was running a twenty dollar game. Like the ring-game people he uses cir- cular letters. Here is one of them: DEAR SIR—I am about to put on the market a new breakfast food and want a good name for it. I am told that the great Uneeds was a layman’s idea, and in the hope of unearthing another such I offer to a few the following: Suggest a good name for the food, one with advertising possibili- ties. - If I decide to use your idea I will give you as payment a Winton Automobile, your only expense to be the freight to your home. Answer at once, as I shall use the first good name received. To all who answered this letter sug- gesting a name, the following commun- ication was sent: DEAR Sir—I have decided to use your idea of U-Auto-Eat (or whatever the name suggested happened to be) it fits all “ad” plans. The auto is yours. I will ship it to ou on receipt of the freight ($20.00). Ex- cuse brevity, but I am rushed to death. Needless to say those who sent the twenty dollars to “pay the freight” are still waiting for the automobile. The mail-order fakir is always on the outlook for some new scheme. Know- ing this one of the trike, who evidently takes no stock in the saying that there is no honor among thieves, prepared an advertisement that would appeal to his brother scalawags, and is said to have reaped a rich harvest of dimes before the Postoffice Department put him out of business. This individual, hailed from Long Branch, New Jersey and used the following “bait :” AGENTS WANTED: Over a quart of dimes received from one small adver- tisement in Sunday paper. Only 40 cents capital required. Will send copy of ad for ten cents coin. To those who sent him ten cents the Jersey genius mailed a copy of the very advertisement that had produced the response. A promoter of fake mail-order schemes against whom a fraud order was recently issued says, in one of his circulars, that “the American people want something for nothing.” That is the theory that nearly all these sharp- ers work upon. The man who is him- golf honest, and who has learned that every good thing commands a good price, is reasonably safe from their wiles, but all men are not wise, and some men—as Mr. Artemas Ward re- minds us in hisadvertisements of Hand Sapolio—are not even good. ee A LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUP. “A cold or cough nearly always pro- duces constipation—the water all runs to the eyes, nose and throat instead of passing out of the system through the liver and kidneys. For the want of moisture the bowels become dry and hard.” Kennedy’s Laxative Honey and Tar is the original Laxative Cough Syrup. It meets and corrects the above conditions, by acting as a pleas- amt cathartic on the bowels—expels all colds from the system and cures all coughs, croup, whooping cough, La- Grippe, bronchitis, ete. Sold by E. H. Miller. 10-1 Baseball Players Dined. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Berkey entertain- ed the members and officers of the Somerset baseball club of the County league at dinner, at the Berkey resi- dence, on East Main street, Monday evening, at six o'clock. The boys en- joyed a good time, and the toasts re- sponded to were by no means an in- terior part of the entertainment. MENU. First Inning: Soup A La Spangler. Second Inning: Fried Chicken A La Babcock, Mashed Potatoes, Creamed Onions, Browned Sweet Potatoes, Buttered Beets, Hot Biscuits, Corn-on-Cob. Third Inning: Fish A La Berlin, Ursina-Humbert Olives, Reiley Pickles, Love Crackers, Fourth Inning: Stuffed Tomatoes A La Frostburg, Sliced Ham. Fifth Inning: Garrett Pudding. Sixth Inning: Rockwood Ice Cream, Cake and Nuts. Seventh Inning: Championship Coffee. Eighth Inning: Adams’ Ale. Ninth Inning: Meisenberger Cigars, Foul Tips. Some of Our GOOD Subseribers. Since our issue of last week the fol- lowing named subscribers have favored us with cash on subscription: Calvin Fuller, $1.00; Alfred Ringler, $2.50; E. C. Welch, $1.50; J. H. Yost, $3.43; A. L. G. Hay, $2.75; A. J. Thomas, $3.90. We thank you, gentlemen, one and all, and trust that many others will follow your example. ————— ALWAYS SUCCESSFUL. When indigestion becomes chronic it is dangerous. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure will cure indigestion and all troubles resulting therefrom, thus preventing Catarrh of the Stomach. Dr. New- brough, of League, W. Va, says: “To those suffering from indigestion or sour stomach I would say there is no better remedy than Kodol Dyspepsia Cure. I have prescribed it for a num- ber of my patients with good Jsuccess.” Kodol Dyspepsia Cure digests what you eat and makes the stomach sweet. Sold by E. H. Miller. 10-1 Inter-Denominational Sunday School Convention. The First Inter-Denominational Sun- day School Convention of the Elk Lick district, comprising Elk Lick and Greenville townships, will be held at st. John’s Reformed church, Sept. 12, 1905. There will be an afternoon and evening session. Speakers represent- ing the different denominations have been secured to give addresses. Every- body, especially in Elk Lick and Green- ville townships, and as many others as ean come, are cordially invited to at- tend. N. D. MURRAY. ARE YOU ENGAGED? Engaged people should remember, that after marriage, many quarrels can be avoided, by keeping their digestions in good condition with Electric Bitters. 8. A. Brown, of Bennettsville, 8. C., gays: “For years my wife suffered in- tensely from dyspepsia, complicated with a torpid liver, until she lost her strength and vigor, and became a mere wreck of her former self. Then she tried Electric Bitters, which helped her at once, and finally made her entirely well. She is now strong and healthy.” E. H. Miller, druggist, sells and guar- antees them, at 50c. a bottle. 10-1 W. C. T. U. Program. The W. C. T. U. will meet at the home of Mrs. Annie Emerick, Monday evening, Sept. 11th, 1905. Following is the program: Singing—‘What a friend we have in Jesus.” Scripture reading by the President. Prayer. Singing. Reading of minutes. Recitation—Lulu Beal. Reading—Mrs. Emerick. Recitation—Harriet Wagner. Reading—Almira Lichliter. Business. Roll call. Singing. COMMITTEE. LIKE FINDING MONEY. Finding health is like finding money —so think those who are sick. When you have a cough, cold, sore throat or chest, irritation, better act promptly like W. C. Barber, of Sandy Level, Va. He says: “I had a terrible chest trouble, caused by smoke and coal dust on my lungs; but, after finding no re- lief in other remedies, I was cured by Dr. King’s New Discovery for Con- sumption, Coughs snd Colds.” Great- est sale of any cough or lung medicine in the world. At E. H. Miller's drug store, 50c. and $1.00 ; guaranteed. Trial bottle free. 10-1 Annual Reunion of the Veterans’ Association of Somerset County. The Committee in charge of the ar- rangements for the G. A. R. picnic, to be held at Rockwood, September 15th, have arranged the following program: Arrangements have been made for excursion rates from Ohio Pyle, Con- fluence, Ursina, Johnstown, Hoovers- ville, Stoystown, Friedens, Listie, Som- erset, Berlin, Meyersdale, Sand Patch, Glencoe, Williams and Hyndman. Hon. W. H. Koontz, of Somerset, and Col. Horace W. Rose, of Johnstown, and others, will be present and ad- dress the assemblage between the hours of 11 and 12 o’clock. From 12 to 1 o’clock the luncheon will be served; those not prepared with luncheon baskets can procure substantial meals at the restaurant on the ground, at reasonable rates. Hot coffee and regular old-fashioned army bean soup will be served at 5c. a cup. From 1 to 2 o’clock there will be a series of five-minute camp-fire speeches by comrades, and other amusements to entertain the people present. At 2 o'clock a baseball game will be played by two of the Somerset County League clubs. The Wilson Creek Cornet Band and the Berlin Drum Corps will furnish the music for the occasion. Those not caring for baseball games can interest themselves in various ways among the spreading oaks of the beautiful grove. IF YOUR BUSINESS will not st>nd | advertising, advertise it for sale. You | Those present were Messrs. Spangler, | cannot afford to follow a business that Adams, Kinzer, McMichael, | Meisenberger, Roach, Derby, Rhoads, { < Lantz, | Picking, Witt, Uhl, Landis, Matthews, will >t stand advertising. | Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar Levy, Wood, Miller and Coffroth.— | Cures all Coughs, and expels Colds from Somerset Democrat. | the system by gently moving the bowels.