a — 1 ket! mle ned a new in Salis- er’s store. nd clean; pect. and Salt te, r Fat Cat- ry, Hides, St YU be con- our wants AHL, uteher. i - Why? A ITT TAT A TAT SPP I TAT OILS Ts = = AT LICHLITER'S — yn ~~ ZBI BAL SL BBR IS 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 threé leading brands of flour— Minnehaha, Pillsbury’s Best and Vienna. Call to see us, and you will be treated courteously and right. RAIA! . THE INTERNATIONAL SILOS FEED—Labor SAVE {| 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! B bes It is nothing but pure corn Made from the Con- ecause it is pure. t grades of corn and oats. tains no screenings or sweepings. 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. EMPIRE STATE Positively the best range ever built. Made from new process fire-proof steel—the heavi- est ever used in a range. All paris exposed to the fire are reinforced and lined wih as- bestos. The top is made of charcoal malleable —you can’t break it with a sledge hammer. The fire box and oven large and roomy. The heat circulation perfect and temperature even The only ste swee our free catalogue—we can save you money. SAVE TWO PROFITS. From factory to user at wholesale price. STEEL RANGE throughout. The saving in fuel will pay for the range. el range made that sets on legs—you can |i and clean under it. It is elegant in design and finish, handsomely nickeled and highly pol. «:#" ished. It is practically indestructible. Send for Y DRAKE HARDWARE COMPANY, Friendship, N. ’ 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 0 KILL w= COUCH ano CURE THE LUNGS ~~ Dr, King’s New Discovery ONSUMPTION Price FOR { oOucHs and B0c &$1.00 OLDS Free Trial. Surest and Quickest Cure for all THROAT aad LONG TBOUS. LES, or MONEY M—— 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE TRADE MARKS DESIGNS vit ey 3 Ty Anyone sending a s! an os ay So ntion is TRADI. or > ns stri eonfiden sent free. Oldest opi tice, without charge, in the Scientific American, A handsomely illustrated weekly. Larges$ cir- ry oR of By eS la bral 2 N & Co 2e1emaer. New York St. D.C MUN ‘Branch Office. 625 F Washington, The Windsor Hotel. Between 12th and 13th Sts., on Filbert St. Philadelphia, Pa. Three minutes walk from the Reading Ter- nal. Five minutes walk from P. R. R. Depot. European plan, $1.00 per day and up- 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.2 leaves Meyersdaleat............. 6P.M H@-First class rigs for all kinds of trav- el,at reasonable prices. ORIGINAL, LAXATIVE HONEY ano 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 €O.,Chicage, U. 3. A SOLD BY ELK LICK SUPPLY CO. | opus Eaply Risers The famous iittie pills. 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 Tre Star, Elk Lick, Pa. tf. It’s only fair while attending the Fair to see our cemplete line of Boys’ and Children’s Cloth- ing. MiLLER & COLLINS. PIANO LESSONS !—Pupils taken by Miss Linna M. Perry, graduate in music. Theory and harmony taught. Grant street, Salisbury, Pa. tf Largest stock of Shoes in the county. This sounds big, but we can back it up. MiLLEr & CoLLINS. 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 Pennsyi- vania Legislature. The notices are rinted 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 pest 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 You will find a splendid line of Ladies’ Waists, Silk and fan- cy materials, Sweaters and gen- eral furnishings at Miller & Collins’. 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 Visitors to Meyersdale will find it of interest to visit Miller & Collins’ establishment and make their fall purchases. No better place could be found to get the newest styles of Men’s, Women’s and Children’s Cloth- ing, Shoes or furnishings. ———————— 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 Miller & Collins, Meyersdale, Pa., are showing their Fall styles of Ladies’ Suits, Coats, Raincoats, Skirts and Children’s Coats and furnishings. You will always find the most fash- ionable styles at their store. 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 - It will pay you to come to Miller & Collins, Meyersdale, to purchase your Fall outfit. You will find in their large store the very newest designs and colors of Ladies’ Suits. The styles are unusually handsome this year. 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 High Art Clothing is handled exclusively by Miller & Collins. It’s guaranteed to hold the shape. IF YOUR BUSINESS will not st snd advertising, advertise it for sale. You cannot afford to follow a business that will >t stand advertising. We know you want your money’s worth. You always get it when you wear the “Tilt Make” of Shoes. Sold only by MiLLER & COLLINS. rete ENGRAVED INVITATIONS for weddings, parties, etc., also engraved visiting cards and all manner of steel and copper plate engraved work at THE Star office. Call and see our samples. All the latest styles in Seript, 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 ee THE BLANKS WE KEEP. The following blanks canbe obtained at all times at Tas STAR office: Leases, Mortgages, Deeds, Judgment Bonds, Common Bonds, Judgment Notes, Re- ceipt Books, Landlord s Notice to Ten- ants, Constable Sale Blanks, Summons Execution for Debt, Notice of Claims for Collection, Commitments, Subpoe- nas, Criminal Warrants, etc. tf OLD PAPERS for sale at THE STAR office. They are just the thing for pantry shelves, wrapping paper and cartridge paper for the miners. Five cents buys a large roll of them. 17 MUST HEED VACCINATION LAW. Health-Commissioner Dixon Warns Seliool Teachers They Are Re- sponsible for its Enforee- ment. Harrisburg, Sept. 14—State Health: Commissioner Dixon is mailing circu- lar letters to school authorities through- out Pennsylvania, calling their atten- tion to the compulsory vaccination law of 1895. This act requires persons in charge of public, private, parochial, Sunday, or other schools, to refuse admission to any child to the schools under their charge or supervision except upon a certificate signed by a physician set- ting forth that said ehild has been suc- cessfully vaccinated or that it has pre- viously had smallpox. Dr. Dixon warns school teachers and principals that they are responsible, not to the school directors, but to the health authorities of the state, for the enforcement of the law, and that no action of the school directors can su- persede the requirements of the law. The above dispatch states all the tacts in the case, and the only remedy the people of Pennsylvania have is to submit quietly to the unjust vaceina- tion law and bide their time to rid the legislative halls of Pennsylvania of the tyrants and vagabonds responsible for the said law, which is the most dam- nable piece of infamy that ever dis- graced the statute books of this eom- monwealth. This state is tightly in the grasp of a lot of medical grafters that are oppressing the people with fool legislation passed by thoughtless legislators who take no time to investi- gate the crime of vaccination, but who blindly swallow any lying and fraudu- lent statement that is made to them by medical vampires who would see the bodies of the whole human race pol- luted if it but brought ill-gotten gain into the pockets of the doctors. We believe that any reasonable per- son who will take the time to read the best literature published to sustain vaccination and that published de- nouncing it, will readily agree that the anti-vaccinationists have by far the better end of the argument. Send to Frank D. Blue, Secretary of the Anti-Vaccination Society of Amer- ica, Kokomo, Ind., for a list of books and tracts on the subject of vaccina- tion, then spend a few cents for litera- ture that will open your eyes and your understanding. Also look up vaccina- tion in the Encyclopedia Britanica. Don't be ashamed to join the anti-vac- cination forces and work in a cause endorsed by such men as Herbert Spen- cer, the eminent philosopher; Prof. A. R. Wallace, the great English scientist ; W.E Gladstone, late Premier of Eng- land ; Dr. George Gregory, fifty years director of the Smallpox Hospital of London; Sir James Paget, Surgeon Extraordinary to Queen Victoria; Dr. W. J. Collins, 26 years public vaccin- ator of London; Dr. John Epps, 25 years director of the Jennerian Ipsti- tute of London; Bernarr A. Macfad- den, Editor Physical Culture, which has 500,000 readers; and many other men and physicians equally as great. Also take notice during the coming winter that the smallpox will be the most numerous and malignant in the cities and towns where the most vac- cination is done. It’s always the case, and it “was thoroughly demonstrated right here in Salisbury, when smallpox existed here, that vaccination was the rottenest kind of a humbug. There’s no use in cursing the teach- ers who refuse to admit unvaccinated children to the schools, for they are subject to a fine and imprisonment if they don’t comply with the fool law they did not help to pass. Of course, if they should ignore the criminal man- date (for that is all the vaccination law ig) it is not at all likely that they would ever be prosecuted or punished for it, but most teachers are easily scared, these days, especially the gentle schoolma’ams. We would rather see every man re- sponsible for the compulsory vaceina- tion law hanged by the neek until dead than to see one innocent, rosy-cheeked child have its blood poisoned by vac- cination. And if we were a doctor, we would vaccinate the child of ‘no person opposed to the damnable outrage. Dr. J. E. Rulison, one of the many learned and respectable physicians op- posed to vaccination says: “The sacrilege of vaccination is a moral cancer, a satanie contagion, and an unsanitary absurdity. Do not poi- son your body. Vaccination only adds to the dangers of smallpox, and at the last it biteth like a serpent and stingeth like an adder. This superstition of killing disease causes more disease. It is a source of revenue to medical bood- lers, and tax upon the pockets and bealth of the community. It is the fraud of frauds. All this can be easily proven. The danger of vaccination is infinitely greater than that of small- pox. Its benefits are based only on ridiculous assumption. It is an un- mitigated curse, and the most destruc- tive medical delusion that has ever afflicted the human race. It is the most outrageous insult that can be of- fered to any pure-minded man or wom- an. It is the boldest and most impious attempt to mar the works of God that has been attempted for ages. This stupid blunder of doctorcraft has wrought all the evil that it ought, and it is now time that free thinking Amer- ican citizens should rise in their might and do away with it. The laws that govern the body are better than a con- signment of horse-grease poison that builds a putrid sore; cow-pox—syphil- ized vaccine—glycerinated ‘pure calf lymph’ and the damnable stuff that now belongs to a self-appointed, power- ful and commercialized medical prac- tice. Let this most atrocious and in- human blasphemy against the human body ‘go ’way back and sit down.” pa ATTACKED BY A MOB and beaten, in a labor riot, until cov- ered with sores, a Chicago street car conductor applied Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, and was soon sound and well “J used it in my family,” writes G. J. Welch, of Tekonsha, Mich., “and find it perfect.” Simply great for cuts and burns. Only 25c. at E. H. Miller’s drug store. 10-1 THE ORPHANS’ PARTY. On Tuesday John Calvin Lowry, the perpetual office-seeker and general | political outcast who gets buried under an avalanche of votes every time he bobs up for office, appeared before the County Commissioners and pre-empted a column for a mongrel political ag- gregation of soreheads to be known as the “Orphans’ Party.” The signers of his petition for the column mentioned are Isaac G. Jones, Charles Landman, W. W. Gustin, J. E. Faidley and Robt. Carolus. Ye gods and little fishes, what a spectacle! Jones and Gustin are Pro- hibitionists, Landman a jolly lager beer Dutchman and Democrat who would like to have license to sell liquor, and Faidley and Carolus are an unknown quentity and inferior quality. Of course, “Edwie” Werner and other po- litical nondescripts are back of the movement, and the sorry aggregation is enough to draw tears from a grind- stone. We had intended to say a good deal on this topic, but we can’t do it for lsughing. “Orphane’ party!” Ha!ha! ba! “Orphans’ party!” He! he! he! “Orphans’ party!” Ho! ho! ho! Gee whiz! Now, wouldn’t that rattle your slats? Haw! haw! haw! May God in his infinite mercy temper the chilly November after-election winds to the shorn lambs and outcast political rams. a 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, etc. Sold by E. H. Miller. 10-1 Trouble Galore in Setling the Me- Kinley Estate. New complications have arisen inthe settlement of the estate of Abner Me- Kinley, late of Somerset borough, by reason of a petition filed in the Orphans’ Court, Monday, by the attorneys of Mrs. Annie E. McKinley, asking that she be removed as executrix, and that the Somerset Trust Company be ap- pointed in her stead. Early in June the Seaboard National Bank of New York, claiming tobe a creditor of the McKinley estate, filed a petition asking for her removal as exec- utrix, and that she be compelled to file an account of the estate in the Regis- ter’s office. The executrix says she has settled the estate as far as it is possible at this time, and that on ae- count of ill health and a change of residence it is burdensome for her to continue as executrix. The statement filed by the respond- ent bank denies that the estate has been settled as far as possible, and avers that large sums of moneybelong- ing to the estate have come into ber hands and into the hands of others, which have not been accounted for in her account filed. The respondents say when the time comes for Mrs. McKinley to vacate as executrix of the estate, she would not be entitled to nominate her successor. —Somerset Standard. 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 Will Employ all Graduates. The Pennsylvania railroad company has adopted a novel plan by which it hopes to induce the boys of Altoona to complete the high school course. It has sgreed to take into its employ and prepare for railroad honors all students who graduate from the institution. They will be classed as special appren- tices at a special wage rate in excess of that paid regular apprentices. The plan is original with the ‘corporation, and it is believed that it will result in a large number of boys taking the course, instead of seeking employment on completion of the grammar grade studies. Following the suggestion of the railroad authorities, several induse trial branches have been added to the high school. SAME CROWD UNDER ANOTHER NAME. In State politics the latest is the Lincoln party. There is nothing new about it except the name. Behind it is the same old crowd. As the Hon. W. H. Aadrews aptly said the other day: “Wanamaker is the powder behind the wad.” It is the chronic party of Wan- amaker for the United States Senate. The revered name of Lincoln has been adopted this year because the cxcel- lent name Union has been discredited by the party wearing it. There is noth- ing connected with it except the name, that appeals to any honest voter among the common people. During the campaign of this year the Lincoln party will play in the role of its predecessor, the Union party, as a Democratic annex. The purpose is to defeat, if possible, the Republican party. The end to be accomplished is to obtain control of the Republican organization, no more, no less. Be- tween this time and the seventh of No- vember the Democratic press, the ren- egade press, and the Wanamaker spell- binders will talk of reform. They will traduce the good State of Pennsylvania and its government and try to make it appear we are all going to the dogs to- gether, and will go there unless Wil- liam H. Berry, Democratic and free silver fanatic, is elected State Treasur- or. Back of it all is the object on the part of the Democratic machine to get hold of one State office and on the part of the “powder behind the wad” the desire to become the “power behind the throne.” It is a queer alliance; this of the Democratic machine. It is queer be- cause the power back of the Lineoln party wants control of the Republican organization, for itself, and desires to oust Colonel Guffey from control of the Democratic machine to put James Gay Gordon there. It is remarkable to find the well oiled Democratic machine go- ing along with this plan striving to unhorse its capable boss for another. Somehow, and in some way, this is sup- posed to be pelitics. It is politics in the name of reform and in the name of Berry—Berry, of Delaware. Stranger than anything else is the apparent expectation of Democratic- Wanamaker politicians that they can fool the people inte support of this movement. Especially that they can induce Republican voters to further their object in this manner by pretend- ing to them that Republicans have no power to change their leaders without electing a Democrat. The result will be the fall of these expectations. The genuine Republicans in Pennsylvania know they can change their leaders, whenever they desire to do so. They will not be fooled by the cry of reform or of the exhibition of decoy ducks.— The Pittsburg Gazette. Mothers of Presidents. The following is a full list of the presidents in the order of their office and the maiden names of their moth- ers: George Washington, Mary Ball. John Adams, Susanna Boylston. Thomas Jefferson, Jane Randolph. James Madison, Nelly Conway. James Monroe, Eliza Jones. John Q. Adams, Abigail Smith. Andrew Jackson, E. Hutchinson. Martin Van Buren, Maria Hoes. William H. Harrison, E. Bassett. John Tyler, Mary Armistea, James K. Polk, Jane Knox. Zachary Taylor, Sarah Strother. Millard Fillmore, Phoebe Millard. Franklin Pierce, Anna Hendrick. James Buchanan, Elizabeth Speer. Abraham Lincoln, Nancy Hanks. Andrew Johnson, Mary McDonough. U. S. Grant, Harriet Simpson. R. B. Hayes, Sophia Birchard. James A. Garfield, Eliza Ballou. Chester A. Arthur, Malvina Stone. Grover Cleveland, Anna Neal. Benjamin Harrison, Elizabeth Irwin. William McKinley, Nancy Allison {ii Theodore Roosevelt, Martha Bulloch. WIVES OF PRESIDENTS. George Washington, Martha Custis. John Adams, Abigail Smith. Thomas Jefferson, M. W. Skelton. James Madison, Dorothy P. Todd. James Monroe, Eliza Kortright. John Q Adams, Louisa C. Johnson. Andrew Jackson, Rachel Robarbs. Martin Van Buren, Hannah Hoes. William H. Harrison, Anna Symmes. John Tyler, Letitia Christian, Julia Gardiner. James K. Polk, Sarah Childress. Millard Filmore, Abigail Powers, C. McIntosh. Franklin Pierce, Jane M. Appleton. James Buchanan, unmarried. Abraham Lincoln, Mary Todd. Andrew Johnson, Eliza McCardle. U. S. Grant, Julia Dent. R. B. Hayes, Luey W. Webb. James A. Garfield, Lucretia Rudolph. Cherter A. Arthur, Alice Herndon. Grover Cleveland, Frances Folsom. Benjamin Harrison, Caroline Scott, Mary S. Dimmick. William McKinley, Ida Saxton. Theodore Roosevelt, Alice Lee, E. K. Carew. What a striking array of good old solid names do we find were borne by the mothers and wives of the presi- dents. Not a Mayme, Daysey or Glad- yee in the whole list.—Ex. 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 Care is the best remedy. Harmless | and pleasant. Contains no opiates. | Sold by E. H. Miller. 10e1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers