At ket! alii ned a new t in Salis- ter’s store. and clean,’ spect. and Salt te. or Fat Cat- try, Hides, iE YOU be con- your wants WAHL, Butcher. es, and ‘ools, offer , EL. 1 Stock 5 ® ETN MTS AT LICH & : ZOU LD LOLOL ABR INS 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 Call to see us, and you will be treated courteously and right. 2] = = UE LITER'S Vienna. liso, #0 SAVE when you can buy of us direct at a great price the lowest. Write us for terms and THE INTERNATIONAL SILOS FEED—Labor 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 THE INTERNATIONAL SILO CO., Jefferson, Ohio. saving. Our Silos are the best. Our Special Introductory Offer. Feed Home- Why? best Because it is pure: Made Chop! Made from the grades of corn and oats. Con- tains no screenings or sweepings. 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, We carry three kinds of Home-Made Chop —Corn, Oats and Corn and Oats. Prices very reasonable. West Salisbury, Pa. SAVE TWO PROFITS. From factory to user at wholesale EMPIRE STATE Positively the best range ever built. Made from new process fire-proof steel—the heavi- est ever used in a range. All parts exposed the fire are reinforced and ER i bestos. The top is made of charcoal malleable —you can’t break it with a sled e fire box and oven large and roomy. The ~ heat circulation perfect and temperature even sweep and clean under it. It is elegant in desi our free catalogue—we can save you money. STEEL RANGE. ge hammer. § throughout. The saving in fuel will pay for the range. The only steel range made that sets on legs—you can and finish, handsomely nickeled and highly 5 ished. It is practically indestructible. Send 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. Brewing G0. KILL» COUCH g ano CURE ve LUNGS WITH Dr. King’s New Discovery FOR (Cama rice 50c & $1.00 OLDS Free Trial. Surest and Quickest Cure for all THROAT and LUNG TROUB- LES, or MONEY BACK. 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Track MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &C. h and description may one sending a sketch an tion may an ® Largest cir. kly. . A handsomely illustrated weekly. Terms, $3 & on of any scientific jou Hi four ORNS, SL Sola by all newsdealers. UNN & Co.zereresewa. New York ¥ St. Washington. D. ‘Branch Office. The Windsor Hotel. Between 12th and 13th Sts., on Filbert St. Philadelphia, Pa. Three minutes walk from the Reading Ter- minal. Five minutes walk from P. R. R. Depot. European plan, $1.00 per day and ap- wards. American plan, $2.00 per day. FRANK M.SHEIBLEY, Manager. THE SALISBURY HACK LINE « AND LIVERY. ~~ C. W. Statler, - - - Proprietor. H@—Two hacks daily, except Sunday, be- tween Salisbury and Meyersdale, connect- ing with trains east and west. Schedule: Hack No.1 leaves Salisbury at........ SA. M Hack No. 2 leaves Salisbury at........ 1P.M Returning, No 1 leaves Meyersdale at 1 P.M No.2leaves Meyersdaleat............. 6P.M L@ First class rigs for all kinds of trav- el,at reasonable prices. ’ ORIGINAL 4 | AXATIVE HONEY ao 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.,Chicage, U.S.A. SOLD BY ELK LICK SUPPLY CO. owirs Early Risers The famous little pills. : Our Fall : and Winter I | Wednesd. Sept. 20. S. P. YOUNG, : SALISBURY, PA. } Safe, Quick, Reliable Regulator | Superior $0 other remedies sold at high ‘prices. 3 8 BN se pete Cru ay ! gists or by mail. os Prien is booklet free. Dr. LaFranco, Philadelpkia, Pa, Franklin Breadmaker FREE A family that uses Wheatlet, Flour or Pancake Flour can secure a Franklin Universel Breadmaker frce of charge, Ee or y FRANKLIN MILLS co. 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 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- ialty. When in ne of anything enumerated bere, 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. tf IF YOUR BUSINESS will not stsnd advertising, advertise it for sale. You cannot afford to follow a business that will ">t stand advertising. me relel ee BUTCHERING OUTFIT FOR SALE! A fine outfit in Salisbury, Pa., con- sisting of a fine new refrigerator, meat blocks, hooks, counter, scales, tools, grinders, delivery wagon, etc. Also a good slaughter house and equipments. A big bargain for a quick buyer. For particulars, call on or address THE Star, Elk Lick, Pa. tf. ENGRAVED INVITATIONS for weddings, parties, etc., also engraved visiting cards and all manner of steel and copper plate engraved work at TER STAR office. Call and see our samples. All the latest styles in Script, Old Eng- lish and all other popular designs at prices as low as offered by any printing house in the country, while the work is the acme of perfection. tf Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar Cures all Coughs, and expels Colds from the system by gently meviag the bowels. uwws Farly Risers The famous little pills. Crude A Column Thoughts Home Dedicated As They L to Tired Fall Circle | Mothers From the As They Editorial Join the Pen:— Depart- Home Pleasant Circle at Evening vening Reveries. ment. Tide. HERE'S A DADDY'S SONG. Must all thy songs be mother songs, My bonny baby boy? Do poets write no other songs, That father’s name employ? Then I’ll right the monstrous wrong; Come, boy, and hear thy daddy’s song. But first a toss high in the air, To hear his merry shout, And then a tickle here and there, To bring the dimples out, And then a romp upon the bed, Oh, precious little tousle-head! Now, then, wee barefoot boy, take care! Run swiftly o’er the floor, And father’ll be a bruin bear, And growl and bite and paw! ‘Why, bless us boy, what flimsy stuff! Dad’s song is rag time, sure enough. There, now of play we’ve had our fll, "Tis cuddle time, I know. (How very bright his eyes are still!) “Hush, baby mine, by-low 1? Come, come, you little rascal you, Dad’s had enough of peek-a-boo! Hush, hush, my boy, to sleep with thee! (I wish his mamma’d come!) Thy father’ll turn into a bee If longer he must hum. Ah, well, to lull a child to rest, A mother’s song, perchance, is best. Some one has wisely said that so- ciety’s “brow” needs to be decorated with womens jewels who are not too highly educated or cultured to love their husbands and to be faithful to them; not too brilliant to be good mothers and wise consellors for their children, and not too progressive to wear their husband’s names and re- flect credit upon themselves. Actions die—sometimes : words live. “Be sure you are right, then go ahead,” was Davy Crocket’s motto in life. Have a purpose in life—a right purpose— then press on! Success will finally erown your efforts. If the world de- spises you because you do not follow its way, if you are right, show it by your life, and finally the world will turn to your way of thinking and give you credit. “Girls, you cheapen yourselves by lack of purpose in life,” says Rena L. Miller. “You show commendable zeal in pursuing your studies; your alert- ness in comprehending and ability in surmounting difficult problems have become proverbial ; nine times out of every ten you outrank your brothers thus far; but when the end is attained, the goal reached, whether it be the graduating certificate from a graded school, or a college diploma, for nine out of every ten it might as well be add- ed thereto, ‘dead to. further activity,’ or, ‘sleeping until marriage shall resur- rect her.”” If my boy should leave school with his head full of history and grammar and the classics and modern languages, and all the other studies of the cur- riculum, and yet should not have in his heart to yield a willing obedience to law—the law of the school, the law of the community in which he lives, the law of the state and nation—we should feel that his time had been thrown away. We need in all our schools in- gistence upon obedience to proper authority, for boys of today are the citizens of tomorrow, and everywhere throughout the length and breadth of the land we must have more prompt and willing obedience to law. Fathers now basking in the sunset of life may not readily recall all their early experiences in life, their struggles and triumps of early manhood, but every feature of their childhood home, the playhouses they helped their sisters build are photographed upon the heart’s tablet and will never fade away. The golden light of eternity will not dim the brightness of this pic- ture. One will never forget the place of his birth, the little broken cart, the sled and kite, and the older brother who led the way to the hillside where the fairest wild flowers bloomed. These sacred memories will never grow less bright or dim with age. BABIES IN THE HOME. There is nothing which brightens and completes a home so much as those merry beams of sunshine called babies, and God pity and forgive the sinful, shallow-minded woman who considers their advent and care a reproach rather than a sacred trust from God. Truly, when conscientiously filled, the office of motherhood is woman’s masterpiece of life. Why should she care about woman suffrage? “The hand that rocks the cradle is the hand that rules the nation,” and I dare say there are greater powers and mightier possibili- ties for mothers to attain in the nobler and broader education and culture of the rising generation than in the ballot. There is not a mother so deprived of the luxuries of this world who cannot give to her children life’s sweetest and richest gift, a mother’s companionship. She may be unable to adorn their bodies with fine clothing, but she ean adorn their minds with pure and lofty ideals, which will be worth more to the world than all the crown jewels of em- pire. Someone has said that no one can advise so readily as one want- ing in experience, but I assure you the writer is a wife and mother, one who has entertained an unseason- able guest, when the grocery supply was low, the fuel wet and the little girls peevish and cross. My! a real patience breeder, isn’t it? We all love to see patience, but it cannot be cultur- ed in fair weather. Patience is a child of storm. When we have everything desirable and things move on system- atically, we have no need for patience, but when we stand chin deep injannoy- ances, it is time for us to swim out to- ward the great headlands of Christian attainment. You wateh the artist as he touches his canvas again and again, and won- der why he does not dash it on with one stroke. No, it requires 5000 of those touches. Ani so it is, dear friend, these seemingly humble duties of life, these 10,000 trials patiently borne, are making up the picture of your life, to be hung mt last in the galleries of heaven, a glad spectacle for angels to look upon. A READER. 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- ant 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 REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Jesse Liston to Eugene Cook, et al, in Addison. $2000. Salome Phillippi to Ella Yoder, in Somerset township, $331. Albert E. Rayman et al. to James L. Pugh, in Stonycreek, $200. Mary Moore to Catharine Good, in Lincoln, $120. Angeline Glessner to Margaret A. Shaffer, in Wellersburg, $475. Susannah Barkley to Miles Barkley, in Allegheny, $100. Mary Zimmerman to John Blanset: in Stoyestown, $525. John L. Saylor to Albert E. Rayman, in Somerset twp., $165. Mary A. Walker to W. H. Blough, in Lincoln, $125. Albert W. Hemminger to George H. Hemminger, in Somerset twp., $1000. Conrad Habel’s heirs to John D. Ha- bel, in Larimer, $1300. Anna OC. Eisler’s heirs, to John D. Habel, in Larmer, $116. Samuel Brown to John 8. Brown, in Larimer, $2200. Wilmore Coal Co. to Benedict Shuto, in Windber, $425. Emanuel Swerman to Wilson Gaum- er, in Summit, $455. John G. Hoyles’ Adm’r. to same, in Summit, $325. Wilmore Coal Co. to Hungarian Re- formed church, in Windber, $300. Samuel Brant to Somerset Coal Co., in Summit, $300. Frank A. Maust to Belle Gray, in Elk Lick, $950. NO UNPLEASANT EFFECTS. If you ever took DeWitt’s Little Early Risers for biliousness or consti- pation you know what pill pleasure is. These famous little pills cleanse the liver and rid the system of all bile without producing unpleasant effects. Sold by E. H. Miller. 10-1 Lumber Grades. A subject of increasing importance to every lumber producer and con- sumer is that of grades. That these grades should be uniform where prac- tical is well reeognized, and many ef- forts to arrive at some general rules have been made. In view of these movements to standardize grades, the Forest Service has undertaken to bring together the specifications of the var- jous lumber and manufacturers asso- ciations and to put them in such a form that they may be compared. The object of the study is not to de- vise a system of standard grades, but to make, simply, such a compilation of the grades now in use as will be of service to lumber producers and con- sumers, though it is hoped that a great deal of information may be accumu- lated that will be of value in eventually preparing the way for a standard sys- tem. It is planned to get the views of those concerned partly by interviews and largely by correspondence. A repre- sentative of the Forest Service will en- deavor to visit the secretaries and members of grading bureaus of var- jous associations and learn their views in regard to the practical workings of the various rules. A large number of mill men and manufacturers will be reached by correspondence and their views sought. 1t is especially desired to find the important points of differ- ence in grades from the view points of both producer and consumer of lumber, and also to ascertain the chief difficul- ties in the way of devising and exe- cuting a system of standard grades. The assistance of manufacturers and consumers of lumber is earnestly de- sired in this work. Suggestions con- cerning 1t will be gladly received by the Office of Forest Products, Forest Service, Washington, D. C. A “Tribute” to a Wife. On a monument in a Cumberland (England) churchyard may be read the following amazing inscription: Here lie the bodies of Thomas Bond and Mary his wife, She was temperate, chaste and charitable, But She was proud, peevish and passionate. ’ She was an affectionate wife and a tender mother, But Her husband and child, whom she loved, seldom saw her countenance without a disgusting frown; While she received visitors whom she despised with an endearing smile. Her behaviour was discreet toward ‘strangers, But Imprudent in her family. Abroad her conduct was influenced by good breeding, But At home by ill temper. She was a professed enemy of Hattery, and was seldom known to praise or commend ; But The talents in which she principally excelled Were differences of opinion and discov- ering flaws and imperfections. She was an admirable economist, And, without prodigality. Dispensed plenty to every person in her family, But Would sacrifice their eyes toa farthing candle. She sometimes made her husband hap- py with her good qualities, But Much more frequently miserable with her Many failings, Insomuch that in thirty years’ cohab- itation, He often lamented that, Maugre all her virtues, He had not on the whole enjoyed two years Of matrimonial comfort. At length, Finding she had lost the affection of her husband as well as the regard of her neighbors, family dis- putes having been divulged by servants, She died of vexation, July 20, 1768, Aged 48 years. Her worn-out husband survived her four months and two days, and departed this life November 22, 1768, In the 54th year of his age. William Bond. brother to the deceased, Erected this stone as a Weekly monitor to the wives of this parish, That they may avoid the infamy of having Their memories handed down to pos- terity with a patchwork character. BEST FOR CHILDREN. Mothers, be careful of the health of your children. Look out for Coughs, Colds, Croup and Whooping Cough. Stop them in time—One Minute Cough Cure is the best remedy. Harmless and pleasant. Contains no opiates. Sold by E. H. Miller. 10-1 PA AN’ MA. When ma comes runnin’ down th’ stair She stops right in th’ door, - An’ sort o’ makes a picture there, An’ taps upon th’ floor Till pa looks up, an’ then she cries, “Well, how is this for style?” An’ pa jus’ grunts an’ drops his eyes— An’ then I see him smile. My pa sometimes he gets so mad— It’s awful how he blows About th’ money ma has had To keep herself in clothes. An’ ma she tells him how she’s tried To please him all the while, An’ pa be snorts an’ looks aside— An’ then I see him smile. An’ pa he growls an’ looks so grim, An’ then begins to knock, When ma upstairs calls down to him, “Please come an’ hook my frock.” But ma she sof’ly smoothes his hair In such a lovin’ style, Jus’ where th’. gray is comin’ there— An’ then I see him smile. > My pa has got a temper bad— He's always full of fight; He scolds at ma an’ gets so mad— But ma ain’t scared a mite. An’ yesterday I said to pa— "Twas after tea a while— «T guess you think a lot of ma”— An’ then I see him smile. —Cleveland Plain Dealer. How Enemies Are Made. I once heard of a man who, discuss- ing a name on the visiting list, said to his wife: “You know perfectly well that I don’t like that man.” “Don’t you think you are a little unreason- able?” asked the wife. “Your dislike arose because he did not answer a let- ter you wrote him, and you found af terward that the letter was hung up all summer in the pocket of your over- coat and was never sent to him at all.” “Yes, I know that,” was the rejoinder, “but it was so long before I found it out that I couldn’t overlook his rude- ness, and I never forgave him, and I don’t believe I ever shall.” There is a good deal of ill-feeling in this world that is without any firmer foundation. —Printer’s Ink.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers