ye ket! ES ed a new in Salis- r’s store. id clean, ect. and Salt Fat Cat- y, Hides, All be con- our wants 4 *9 (EXOD . « > er . le ‘improved methods. AIR APTI SHEP SRP APAAITAYY AT LICHLITER'S = ZAUMCALL LATVIA LAA LLAMA ALTARS You will always get the best fresh Groceries. = —B Ee — -_ iD o> = — — tl | 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. All THE INTERNATIONAL SILOS FEED—Lahbor THE WHOLE GCORN 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 directata 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 Try a hundred-weight, and you will have no Manufactured by : WEST SALISBURY FEED CO, We carry three kinds of Home-Made Chop) West Salisbury Pa 9 ® —Corn, Oats and Corn and Oats. Prices very reasonable. § 9 ° SAVE Made from the best grades of corn and oats. Con- Because it is pure. tains no screenings or sweepings. other. SAVE TWO PROFITS. IFrom factory to user at wholesale price. EMPIRE STATE STEEL RANGE. Positively the best range ever built. Made from new process fire-proof steel—the heavi- se r and oven large and roomy. The heat circulation perfect and tgmperapare even throughout. The saving in fuel will pay for the range. The only steel range made that sets on legs—you can | Seep and clean under it. It is elegant in desi and nish, handsomely mnickeled and highly pol- = ished. It is practically indestructible. Send for our free catalogue—we can save you money. DRAKE HARDWARE COMPANY, Friendship, N. Y. 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. 08 ewig THE SALISBURY HACK LINE «AND LIVERY. c. W. Statler, - - - Proprietor. £@-Two hacks daily, except Sunday, be- tween Salisbury and Meyersdale, connect- ing with trains east and west. KILL COUCH ao CURE ve LUNGS «= Dr. King's New Discovery Schedule: ONSUMPTION Price : FOR OUGHS and 50c & $1.00 J | Hack No. 1 leaves Salisbury at........ 8A. M OLDS Free Trial. Hack No. 2 leaves Salisbury at........ 1P.M Returning, No 1 leaves Meyersdale at 1 P.M Surest and Quickest Cure for all @l | No.2leaves Meyersdaleat............. 6P.M THROAT and LUNG TROUB- LES, or MONEY BACK. E@F-First class rigs for all kinds of trav=- el, at reasonable prices. 50 YEARS’ | EXPERIENCE | ORIGINAL, FP [ AXATIVE TraoE NIARKS DESIGNS Convair &c. es Nn MA, ning Be eee Becher on An improvement over all Cough, mely illustrated kly. RT oh ee Feat Terms.%3 | Lung and Broachial Remedies. M NN & Co as1srondway, aw YOIk | Cures Coughs, Strengthens the Branch Office, 625 ¥ St. Washington, D.C. Lungs, gently moves the Bowels. Pleasant to the taste and good alike for Young and Old. Prepared by PINEULE MEDICINE €0.,Chisage, U.8.A. SOLD BY ELK LICK SUPPLY CO. A 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 up- American pian, $2.00 per day. FRANK M.SHEIBLEY, Manager. sopid oI SNOWS) OYL saosiyl Alue3 «ills e—— 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, ete. 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. Miller & Collins invite the ladies of Salisbury to see their special display of Coats and Suits on Monday and Tuesday, Oct. 16th and 17th. The very newest styles will be shown. 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 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 Miller & Collins feel fortunate in being able to show their pa- trons one of the largest manu- facturer’s lines in the country, of Ladies’ and Children’s Coats and Suits, on Monday, Oct. 16th. FINE GUN FOR SALE 1—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 LOST |—Somewhere on the streets of Salisbury, or in one of the stores, a small pocket day book. The finder will be suitably rewarded for the re- turn of same to W. B. STEVANUS. The ladies will be able to see the very latest designs of Suits and Coats at Miller & Collins’ special display on Monday and Tuesday, Oct. 16th and 17th. MONEY FOUND !—Between the Elk Lick Supply Company's store and Broad Lane, a pocketbook containing a sum of money. Owner can obtain same by describing pochetbook and paving for this advertisement. ee PIANO LESSONS !—Pupils taken by Miss Linna M. Perry, graduate in music. Theory and harmony taught. Grant street, Salisbury, Pa. tf —_— The traveling salesman who will show his line of Ladies’, Misses’ and Children’s Coats and Suits at Miller & Collins’, Monday and Tuesday, Oct. 16th and 17th, will have the very latest styles the season has pro- duced. IF YOUR BUSINESS will not st «nd advertising, advertise it for sale. You cannot afford to follow a business that will +t stand advertising. 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 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 ee 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 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 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 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 bu conducted by a man unfit to do css, and a business which sho advertised for sale. tf THE BLANKS WE KEEP. The following blanks canbe obtained at all times at TaE STAR office: Leases, Mortgages, Deeds, J udgment 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, ete. 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. tf @ The Pittsburg Daily Times and Tre STAR, both one year for only $3.76 eash in advance. Send all orders to Srmnf™ | Crude | A Column Home | Dedicated Thy om bp e ; | to Tire Fall ~ | Circle |Mothers prom oe | $s x Berane | Depart- fon the Pleas | Gxcle at vening | | Evening Reveries. | ment. | Tide. ee ee “When we come to the end of life it is not the wisdom we have acquired, or the wealth we have gained, or the fame we have won that we like to remember, but the love we have given and re- ceived.” As a rule the children’s progress at school is regulated by the home atti- tude toward school. If parents are in- different, children also are indifferent; if parents are interested in school work, a new impulse is given to the children’s interest. Parents should strive to un- derstand the teacher and to hold her at the highest standard. No teacher can do justice to himself and pupils if he iz made an object of constant and severe criticism ; expressions of disap- proval should never be made in the presence of children; antagonism be- tween the home and school destroys the value of school to the children. er She was just an ordinary woman without much time for culture. She did not know the difference between an Tonic and a Doric column in architect ure, and she was not up on China paint- ing or Roman emperors, but she brought up her three children to tell the truth, to love their brothers and to do honest labor with their hands and not be ashamed of it. When she died the papers didn’t notice it, but the Re- cording Angel said, as he took up a fresh pen and turned over to a clean page: A queen is coming, Get ready her throne; She hath wrought nobly— She cared for her own. The home is the grandest institution known to mankind. What could be any nearer to heaven, on earth, than a happy home, with a loving father and mother, with their little family? When God created man he said it wasn’t good for man to live alone, so he made him a helpmate, not a slave. But men don’t seem to understand it that way. If the wife shares our sorrows and trials, she should also be partaker of our joys. If she asks you about your business, don’t snap her up and tell her it is none of her business. Always speak kindly. Kiss her once in a while, and tell her she is pretty, for no man who loves his wife can fail to see some pretty trait about her. If you haven’t done this, try it. Nothing would please her better, and she would repay you a thousand times for it. When she is feeling badly and worried, show a dis- position to sympathize. And the wife should do the same for her husband. Nothing would please him more when he comes in after a hard day’s work than for her to meet him at the door with a loving smile and a Kiss. Tt makes him feel that she appreciates what he has done for her. Nothing can make home more loving than kind words. THE MODEL GIRL. Her motto is: “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.” The real queen of the rosebud garden of girls is she who scatters kind words, kind smiles and sweet courtesies along the way, who remembers her friends at all seasons with equal cordiality. Another characteristic of the model girl is quiet dignity. It is the perfect virtue that results from the mingling of gentleness and self-respect with an atom of consideration thrown in to make the different parts mingle per- fectly and make a delightful type of girlhood. Her dignity diffuses itself like the perfume of a rose; you delight in it as much as you respect it. Patience, self-control, kindness and veracity also characterize the model girl. She bears in mind that “Rome was not built in a day,” and so bides her time, not in too big a hurry when any object is to be accomplished. Self- control is the base of all virtues. Char- acter exhibits itself in control of speech as much as in anything else. The crowning virtue of the model girl is charity. It pervades her whole life just as the fresh odors of the trees fill the air with a thousand sweet gcents. It makes the word that she says better, the deed that she does worthier, and permeates every act of her life, so that to the world at large ghe seems an outward signal of good- ness and kindness. When Your Competitor Cuts. Price-cutting is not a profitable way to get business. The man who chops down his profits in order to beat his competitor out of business seldom profits by his actions, and it does not pay the competitor to meet such com- petition. Figureon a fair margin of profit and stick to it. If the man across the street wants to do the work, or run the advertising, at a less price than can show a fair profit, he, in time, will be the looser. The urchaser of advertising space, of printing, or of any other commodity, does not expect the producer to work for nothing, and he will not withdraw his patronage from the man who asks only a fair margin of profit. If your competitor cuts, let him cut, and in time you, and not he, will be the gainer.—Publishers’ Auxili- Trg STAR, Elk Lick, P tt ary. The Foul. Crime of Vaeceination Causes Much Trouble in Wind- ber and Other Places. Last Monday morning the principal and teachers of the public schools of Windber refused to admit to the schools all children who did not present a doc- tor’s certificate setting forth that the child had been successfully vaccinated. Probably twenty per cent. of the pupils were sent home. Many of the parents of the children who were sent home re- fuse to comply with the conditions, and it is their opinion that the laws of the state will not compe! them to vaccinate their children. Many people seriously object to vac- cination on account cf the disastrous results that sometimes follow. Aec- cording to reports, 2 per cent. of those vaccinated die, and it is said that a woodsman at Ashtola, who was vac- cinated sometime ago, was a victim to the effects. It is a question whether the state would compel a person to in- flict on his person something that en- dangers life. In a case brought before Judge Fan- ning, in Bradford county, he has decid- ed “that the vaccination law is not compulsory; that the option is left with the parent or guardian whether the child shall be vaccinated or not, subject to the penalty that if the child be not vaccinated, it shall be debarred from the privileges of the public schools. He further holds that the compulsory education law requires the parent to send the child to school; when he has done so the requirements of the statute have been met. The act does not require him to make the child eligible by compelling him to undergo vaccination. If the authorities refuse to admit the child for want of a certifi- cate of vaccination, as they have a right to do, this is a complete auswer to a prosecution under the compulsory education law.” Windber is not the only place having trouble over the vaccination business. At Somerhill, last Monday, at least three-fourths of the children were sent home, and the difficulty is far from being settled. Some have decided that the easiest way out of the muddle is to get their dhildren vaccinated, while others expect to fight the authorities to the end. Over in Scalp there is considerable opposition, too.—Windber Journal. The Journal alleges that according to reports two per cent. of the people vaccinated die of the effects thereof. That statement may be challenged, and it is not likely that two per cent. of the people vaccinated die as a direct re- sult from the vaccination, but it is a fact, nevertheless, that a much larger per cent. die asan indirect result there- from. A very large percentage of the people who undergo vaccination are never as healthy afterwards as they were be- fore, and we have many people right here in Salisbury who freely acknowl- edge this and speak from experience. To be vaccinated is to foolishly have your blood poisoned, and thereby your system is prepared to invite all manner of disease, and there is where the dam- nable greed and graft in the medical profession gets in its legalized criminal work for revenue only. Some of the vaccinated children in this town are now going about with arms that are frightful tobebold, many of them suffering intensely, while the poor mothers’ cares are increased two fold, to say nothing of the heartache it brings to them to see their rosy-cheek- ed children needlessly and criminally made sick, and in some cases perhaps ruined. We wish some of the old maid and old bachelor school teachers throughout the country, those who are doing all they can to have the fool vac- M. E. Ministerial Appointments. The 82nd session of the Pittsburg M. E. conference closed on Monday, the oth inst. Following is a list of the ministerial appointments for the Me- Keesport district, which embraces the various M. E. charges in Somerset county: J. F. Murray, presiding elder; Addi- son, A. K. Travis; Alverton, 8. O. Smith, supply ; Bellevernon, Ww. E. E. Barcus; Blackburn, W. L. Wilkegson; Brad- dock, First church, C. L.E. Cartwright ; Fourth Street, W. J. Lowstuter; Brownsville, Firs: church, A. H. Acken, Second church, C. H. Miller; Cirele- ville, W. T. Robinson ; Coke Mission, S. W. Davis, Matthew Hnuta ; Confluence, Thomas Charlesworth; Connellsville, M. A. Rigg; Dawson, J. D. Brison; Dravo, ¥. L. Teets ; Dunbar, J. N. Mun- den ; East McKeesport, G. 8S. Pollock; Elizabeth, J. T. Steffy ; Fairchance and Point Marion, J. T. Eastburn, supply ; Fayette City, H. R. Morris; Glassport, W. H. Kirkland, supply : Layton, J. H, Enlow ; Ligonier, N. H. Sanner; Me- Keesport, Bulah Park, F. H. Callahan; Christy Park, J. M. Mason; Coursin street, C. W. Hoover; First church, J. W. Miles; West End, James Law ; Mad- ison, C. P. Salladay ; Meyersdale, J. W. Langdale; Monessen, J. V. Wright; Mount Lebanon, H. E. Lewis; Mount Pleasant, J. KX. Howe; Perryopolis, L. M. Humes ; Pleasant Unity, J. E. Bill- ings ; Redstone, H. J. Hickman; Rock- wood and Berlin, 8. W. Bryan, supply; Roxbury, T. B. Cooper; Salisbury, L. Z. Robinson; Scottdale, E. S. White; Smithfield. F. R. Peters; Gi T G. Hicks ; Stahlstown, J. A. amilton ; Stoyestown, H. L. Humbert; Union- town, J. J. Hill; Ursina, L. 8S. Pancoast, supply; Vanderbilt, M. M. Hildebrand ; Versailles, S. W. McCorkler Webster, Judson Jeffreys; West Newton, ¥ GG Loughry. FAITH NOT NECESSARY. You may be just as skeptical and pessimistic as you please, Kodol will digest what you eat whether you eat or not. You can put your food in a bowl, pour a little Kodol Dyspepsia Cure on it and it will digest it the same as it will in your stomach. It can’t help but cure Indigestion and Dyspepsia. It is curing hundreds and thousands—some had faith and some hadn’t. Kodol will cure you if medicine can cure you. whether you have faith in it or not. Sold by E. H. Miller. 11-1 Marriage Licenses. Calvin P. Sufall.. ...... Connellsville Ella F.Show....coeoieeenns Confluence William H. Dickey..... Brothersvalley Alice G.Suder......... Brothersvalley James H. Kimble ......... Meyersdale Catherine Herring......... Meyersdale Edward Sandridge. .... Youngwood, Pa Bertha Shualtz............. Meyersdale Scalp Level Scalp Level Richard Lawrence........ Agnes Mitchell .......... Harry Queer............ Somerset twp Effie Stutzman.......... Somerset twp David C. White..............ene Berlin Mary M. Buckman.............« Berlin Paul R. Baker........... Somerset twp Rose E. Darr............ Somerset twp Elmer E. Miller.............. Jefferson Grace M. Brougher...... Somerset twp Pieter Rylih.....oooeinnaeneees Windber Maria Podstawshie........... Windber Frank O.Shaffer............... Jenner Marian B. Schmucker..... .....Jenner Albert Clevenger....... U. Turkeyfoot Jessie Snyder..............ee Elk Lic Lloyd M. Walker........ Somerset twp Cora J. Coleman......... Somerset twp Stanley Wilson.......... Somerset twp Bertha C. Kantner....... Somerset twp Robert A. Kidner............ Salisbury Cora Livengood..... essary Salisbury Frank Hochstetler.......... Greenville Minerva Miller......... ... Greenville Monroe MoOre......cecveennenes Lincoln Annie Atchison.............oen Milford DON'T BORROW TROUBLE. cination law enforded, would have to take care of the little semi-murdered victims, dress their wounds, ete. They would then look at vaccination in a different light. If the doctors who caused some of the sore arms we haye been shown dur- ing the past week, could look upon them without feeling some remorse of conscience, withcut feeling that they have committed a crime against man and against God, we wouldn’t give much for their kind of conscience. The Sunday schools are paying no at- tention to the vaccination edict, yet the vaccination law 1s as binding upon Sunday school superintendents as it is upon public school teachers. The Sun- day schools simply ignore the law for the good of the schools, and if the public school teachers would do the same, a very bad law would soon be- come a dead letter, whieh just fate many other bad laws have met, and no attempt is ever made at enforcing, be- cause the job would be too big. But with a doctor in the school board, and a sister of a doctor as principal of the Salisbury schools, the school patrons of this community need expect nothing else than to be worked to the limit to swell the revenues of the medical pro- fession. The fool vaccination law has been on the statute books since 1895, but it was never inforced here until the people of this borough were so feolish as to elect a medical man to the school board. Many of them are now repenting their folly. £® OUR GREATEST BARGAIN! — We will send you this paper and the Philadelphia Daily North American, both papers for a whole year, for only $3.75. Subscribe now, and address all orders to TaE STAR, Elk Lick, Pa. tf It is a bad habit to borrow anything, but the worst thing you can possibly borrow, is trouble. When sick, sore, heavy, weary and worn-out by the pains and poisons of dyspepsia, bilious- ness, Bright’s disease, and similar in- ternal disorders, don’t sit down and brood over your symptoms, but fly for relief to Electric Bitters. Here you will find sure and permanent forget- fulness of all your troubles, and your body will not be burdened by a load of debt disease. At E. H. Millers drug store. Price 50c. Guaranteed. 11-1 ye. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Wilmore Coal Co. to Paul Bukov- eshy, in Windber, $675. Peter Beeghly et al., to J. B. L. Coop- er, in Rockwood, $50. Peter Beeghly et al, to same, in Rockwood, $65. Sylvester Kimmell to Reading Iron Co., in Quemahoning, $400. Sarah Zimmerman to same, in Que- mahoning, $250. Maria Clay to Jacob Bowser, in Mey- ersdale, $900. J. 0. Keefer to M. J. Uncapher, in Berlin, $24. Wilmore Coal Co. to Lucian Farbo, in Windber, $375. John L. Saylor to L. M. Walker, in Somerset twp., $150. Emma G. Nichols to same, in Somer- set twp., $1. A. W. Snyder to Mary B. Davis, in Somerset bor., $260. Mary B. Davis to A. W. Snyder, in Somerset bor., $475. Ed. J. Baker to Hiram Baldwin, in Jefferson, $4400 Harrison J. Weimer to Adaline Lohr, in Milford, $2000. oe