8-"X---XE-INT-8 SPELLS STANDARD, SAFETY, and SHOOT STRAIGHT BN Our RIFLES, PiSToIS AND SHOTGUNS Bre cover postage. oy attractive three-color Aluminum aoye will be sent anywhere for 10 cents in sta. J. STEVENS ARMS AND TOOL co., P. O. Box 4095 CHICOPEE FALLS, MASS., U.S. A. Sewing Machine STANDARD GRAND. SWELL FRONT. LOCK AND CHAIN STITCH. TWO MACHINES IN ONE. BALL BEARING STAND WHEEL. Wé also Hipgulciure sewing machines that retail from $2.60 up. The ome Rotary runs as silent asthe +ick of a watch. Makes 800 stitches while other machines make 2! ply to our local dealer, or if there is no aa in your town, address THB Standard Sewing Machine Co., CLEVELAND, OHIO. REICH & PLOCK. AGENTS, MEY ERSDALE, PA. Backache Any person having backache, kidney pains or bladder trouble who will take two or three Pine.ules upon retiring at night shall be relieved before morning. The medicinal virtues of the crude gums and resins ob- tained from the Native Pine have been recognized by the medical pro- fession for centuries. In Pine-ules we offer all of the virtues of the Native Pine that are of value in relieving all Kidney and Bladder Troubles Prepared by PINE-ULE MEDICINE: CO., CHICAGO SOLD BY ELK LICK PHARMACY. THE CTIGITIAL LAXATIVE COUGH SYR? Cures all Coughs and Coot Red assists in expelling sc*1and the Colds from the Pty Des System by Sy, bore 4 gently moving the bowels. A certain cure for croup and whooping-cough. / {Trade Mark Registered.) KENNEDY'S chun HONEY== TAR PREPARED AT THE LABORATORY OF E. O. DeWITT & CO., CHICAGO, U. 8. A. SOLD BY E. H. MILLER. KILL w= COUCH ano CURE vv LUNCS » Dr. King’s New Discovery ONSUMPTION _ Price FOR QUGHS and BOC &$1.00 Free Trial. Surest and Quickest Cure for all | THROAT and LUNG TROUB- LES, or MONEY BACK. ois Early Risers The famous little pills. Shave Early Risers The famous little pliis. Kodol Dyspepsia Gure Digests what you eat. Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar Cures ail Coughs, and expels Colds from the system by gently moving the bowels. | Crude ! lA Column | Thoughts Home | Dedicated As They | | to Tired | Fall | Circle | Mothers From the | | As They Editorial | | Join the Pen: — i Depa rt- | Home Pleasant | ! Circle at Evenin | | Evening Raeome ment. i Tide. i i MODEL HUSBANDS. Perhaps every married woman in our community supposes she possesses a model husband, and we should be sorry to say anything that might be the means of dispelling the delusion. We feel sure no two women weigh man- kind in exactly the same scales. What one woman may regard as virtues another may regard as faults. A model husband in our opinion is not a man who alone brings wealth to his home ; nor one who endows his wife with a fine social position ; but the one who gives to his wife the best of him- self; who appreciates her virtues and pardons her faults. A model husband may be a day la- borer who returns to his home at night with a hard-earned dollar clasped in his honest hand, and adds it to the family fund to be used to provide necessary comforts for the family. He shares faithfully with his wife whatever he may earn by trade or profession. When business matters perplex, he does not go nome with a woful tale of his hard- ships, and turn the bright side of his character to his associates, but he comes into his home with a cheerful face that inspires his wife with new courage after a day of perplexing du- ties which women alone have to meet, and in their monotony become distaste- ful to the most patient of them. A model husband does not hang ‘up his fiddle at the door, to be taken up as he goes out to entertain outsiders, and comes into his home as devoid of any suggestion of music as is the face of a monk. A model husband is one who will share every hardship or sorrow life may bring to his wife, and sweetens suffering with his words of love and sympathy, and when age and infirma- ties rob her of her personal charms and wrinkles take the place of dimples, his love is like the bolly that blossoms in the winter of adversity. The model husband does not allow his selfish nature to accord to himself all the blessings which come with a well kept home, and permit his faithful wife to bear all the burdens. A model husband prefers the society of his wife and children to that of club, opera or dance,and when his wife shares in these recreations they are a pleasure to him, when she is absent they cease to amuse. A model husband is not only tender and kind, he is manly and brave. It is a pitiful sight to see a strong, well-bal- auced woman yoked to a pigmy of a man who never had an aspiration higher than his stomach; who whines when he is hungry and grunts when he is fed. A model husband must be an honest men ; not only honest with his fellow men, thus keeping his commercial rep- utation above reproach, but honest in p ying his obligations to his family. When he allows vice and dissipation to rob him of his manhood and selfrespec:, he cheats his wife out of her legal rights. Model husbands as a rule are not the outcome of circumstances, but they are natural products. A kind, loving son will become, after marriage, a model husband. A selfish, arrogant son will grow into a tyrannical, unreasonable husband, because he loves himself bet- ter than any one else, and his wife wiil always occupy a second place in his af- fections. A model husband delights to bring happiness to the heart of the one he calls wife, and never forgets to cherish and protect the atom of humanity the law made his own. His marriage vows are not made on Thanksgiving to be broken on Christmas. "We believe in the existance of model husbands; in truth we have known great, noble, self-sacrificing men who would scorn to impose on any creature dependent upon them for care and pro- tection. Yet we are skeptical of the abundance of such men, and we too often find a vast gulf between the real and the ideal, which cannot be bridged by human prayers or human tears. Some men may run well for a season, then drop their masks at intervals; later these are laid aside, revealing the true character of the man. Then the beautiful bubble bursts and the rainbow tints vanish in mid air, leaving wiser and sadder women to mourn over their shattered idols. When a woman does possess a model husband she should crown him with earth’s brightest and most precious diadem, a woman’s love. YOUR BOY. You do not know what is in him. Bear with him ; be patient ; wait. Feed him; clothe him; love him. He is a boy, and most boys are bad. You think him so light-hearted, and fear he is light-headed as well. But remember he calls you father. When he played in your lap, you fondly hoped he would some day be a great and useful man. Now that he has grown larger, and his young blood drives him into gleeful sport,and makes him impatient of se- rious things—rattling, playful, thought- lesa—vyou almost deepair. But don’t be snappish and snarlish, and make him feel that you are disappointed in him. He is your boy, and you are to live in him. He bears your name, and is to send it on down the stream of time. He inherits your fortune and fame, and is to transmit them to generations to come, It cannot be otherwise. A daughter divides your fortune, transmits less of your fame and losses your name. A boy is more nearly yourself than any- thing else can be. It is through your boy you go down in history; through your boy you are to live in the future; by him you are to act upon the genera- tion that is to come. It may be difficult to govern him, but be patient. He may seem adverse to everything useful and good; but wait. No one can tell what is in a boy. He may surprise you some day. Hope. Let him grow. While his body grows larger and strouger, his mental and moral nature may expand and improve. Educate your boy. You may think money spent in this way is money spent in vain. There is nothing in him; he has no pride, no aspirations. You don’t know. No one can tell what is in a boy. Besides, there may be an une kindled spark, an unfanned flame, a smoldering fire, a latent energy, which the teacher’s rod may stir, the associa- tion, which the books and men may arouse, develop and direct, and thus start a boy going, with such enetgy and determination that no power on earth could stop him short of the topmost round in the la ladder of fame. FOLLOWING THE FLAG. When our soldiers went to Cuba and the Philippines, health was the most important consideration. Willis T. Morgan, retired Commissary Sergeant U. 8. A., of Rural Route 1, Concord, N, H., says: “I was two years in Cuba and two years in the Philippines, and being subject to colds, I took Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption, which kept me in perfsct health. And now, in New Hampshire, we find it the best medicine in the world for coughs, colds, bronchial troubles and all lung diseases, Guaranteed at E. H. Miller’s, druggist. Price 50c. and $1.00. Trial bottle free. 7-1 REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Matthew Long to Trustees St. Paul’s Reformed Church, in Black, $15. Nelson Gerhard to Wm. H. Stahl, in Somerset township, $3500. Emma Brady et vir. to Harvey J. Fritz, in Somerset township, $95. Jacob B. Blough’s heirs. to Daniel Yoder, in Quemahoning, $2851. J. McMillan. in Boswell, $450. Michael Szakmar to John Lluta, in Boswell, $250. in Rockwood, $1000. Hannah E. Critchfield et vir. to Jos. Weisel, et al., in Rockwood, $3400. Henry Hostetler's Adm’r to L. E. Shaulis, in Jenner, $3000. Chauncey Cramer to Jonathan Pile, in Upper Turkeyfoot, $1000. Jacob Maust et ux., to Joseph A. Brant, in Brothersvalley, $750. Nora Jordan to Anthony Gerensky, in Boswell, $1500. Lucy A. Muir to “The Busy Bees,” in Paint township, $800. E. J. Weld to James M. Turner, in Northampton, $1. Miller, et al., in Southampton, $2425. A. F. Speicher to Julia Engle, in Elk Lick, $400. in Boswell, $400. in Meyersdale, $5050. in Windber, $325. Wilmore Coal Company to Stephen Furszi, in Windber, $525. Pearson Ling. et ux., to the Babcock Lumber Co., in Shade, $5250. WORRY WEARS YOU OUT. There is no use worrying along in discomfort because of a disordered di- gestion. Get a bottle of KODOL FOR DYSPEPSIA, and see what it will do for you. Kodol not only digests what you eat and gives that tired stomach a needed rest, but is a corrective of the greatest efficiency. Kodol relieves in- digestion, dyspepsia, palpitation of the heart, flatulence, and sour stomach. Kodol will make your stomach young and healthy again. You will worry just in the proportion that your stom- ach worries you. Worry means the loss of ability to do your best. Worry is to be avoided at all times. Kodol will take the worry out of your stom- ach. Sold by E. H. Miller. 7-1 Dunkards in New York. It is not generally known that the Dunkards cut quite a figure in the re- ligious life of New York. This sect has, however, flourished sufficiently in Brooklyn to outgrow its present quar- ters, and plans are now making for a handsome new place of worship. Seven years ago the present Brooklyn church was organized with ten members. The increase since that time has been rapid, and the church now numbers over 150 members. This is remarkable, as few would suppose such a quiet sect would flourish in the wild and worldly metrop- olis of the country.—Oakland Journal. Boswell Improvement Company to S. Jervis Stark et ux. to Robert Hyatt, Margaret Hosselrode, et vir, to J. H. Boswell Imp. Co. to Harry Arisman, Annie M. Fike to Ross J. Hemminger, I. Warren Louder to Juliana Fraoezi, " OPPOSES EARLY COURTING. Bill to Prevent a Man Wooing Be- fore He Is 24 Years Old. New Orleans, La., June 8.—T. Spence Smith, of Rapides, introduced into the state legislature a bill to regulate marriage contracts and prevent race suicide. The bill only applies to whites, and provides: It shall be unlawful for any young man to attempt to eourt any young woman before he is 24 years of age. Before making such attempt he shall inform the parents or guardians of the woman he proposes to court of his in- tentions to do so. He shall also make affidavit before a justice of the peace that his court- ship will be in good faith and for the purpose of trying to convince the young woman that it will be profitable for her to marry him. It shall be unlawful for widowers over the age of 50 years to attempt to court any woman under the age of 18 beyond the confines of the parish or their residence. After the passage of the act all chil- dren born to persons legally married in this state shall be raised and edu- cated at public expense. All boy children shall be sent to the state university at Baton Rouge, and all girl children to the state normal school at Natchitoches. An appropriation of $17,000,000 to carry this educational feature out is provided for in the bill. THE G. 0. P. Just fifty years have rolled away Since Pennsylvania saw The party born which stands today For reason, right and law, “Republican,” ‘twas christened then And still that honored name Survives and sets the hearts of men With patriotism aflame. Two cities to the nursling lent Their sponsorship and aid, Pittsburg and Philadelphia spent Their energies, nor laid Aside the task maternal till They saw their precious charge Mature and with its prestige fill The universe at large. The cause of Fremont at the start Was championed. From that hour The nascent party played a part Of dignity and power. A following in ev’ry state It gained and rose at length This whole broad land to dominate, And gloried in its strength. When there was mutiny it stood As solid as a rock, A bulwark of the true and good Withstanding ev’ry shock. With Lincoln as its chief it braved The foeman’s fierce assault. The Union from collapse it saved And made sedition halt. To industry it guaranteed Protection. On our soil, The ruling pow’rs are bound to heed The rights of those that toil. Hence prosperous and satisfied The nation marches on. All this—record the fact with pride— Republicans have done. And, mark it well, the lapse of time Has left no evil trace. The Grand Old Party, still sublime, Retains its honored place, And therefore to the Keystone State A joy it is to see The stanch old T'rue Blue celebrate Their golden jubilee. — Pittsburg Gazette Times. Marriage Licenses. Benjamin Miller, Windber. Grazila Newronaidzia, Windber. Elmer Freeman Nedrow, Jones Mills. Hattie Meyers, Donegal, Pa Ezra C. Saylor, Salisbury. Edith M. Glessner, Brothersvalley. Frank Budo, Ralphton. Mary Gojeck, Ralphton. Ermininio Marochi, Ralphton. Elvira Berti, Ralphton. Harry F. Yearick, Harrisburg, Pa. Mary M. Wengert, Windber. Jacob D. Shaffer, Latrobe, Pa. Mary Coates, Greensburg, Wm. W. Hartman, Allegheny. Ida M. Mishler, Northampton. Walter H. St. Clair, Indiana, Pa. Annie Hankerson, Windber. John A. Bricker, Laughlinstown, Pa. Annie G. Hoover, Jefferson. Emery G. Musser, Salisbury. Mary Alice Wagner, Salisbury. James I. Rininger, Conemaugh. Nannie E. Barclay, Jenner. Harry Winfield Evans, Windber. Bessie Elizabeth Hunter, Windber. Wasco Nido, Brothersvalley. Catharine Minco, Brothersvalley. rr ——p ree. Food Fish Disappearing. Unless strong measures are taken by the governments of the United States and Canada, the perch and whitefish of the lower lakes seem doomed early to extinction. The fishermen in the De- troit and 8t. Clare rivers and Lake St. Clare, where they have been abundant, complain that they are fast disappear- ing. The great demand for perch and whitefish has naturally resulted in their depletion to some extent. But the millions of carp, suckers and mullets are their worst enemies. They devour reat quantities of the roe and count- ess minnows. The government hatch- eries are unequal to the task of keep- ing the lakes stocked with these two kinds of fish, chiefly because it is yearly becoming more difficult to find them during the spawning season.—Cleve- + land Leader. The Worid’'s Coal Supply. According to recent figures compiled by 8tahl and Eisen, » German publica- tion, there does not appear to be any cause for worrying about the coal sup- ply of the world for several thousand years to come. The showing is partic- ularly favorable to Germany, whose deposits are placed at 280,000,000,000 tons, which will last, at the present rate of consumption, a couple ot thou- sand years, and in any case, making allowance for probably increased de- mand, should suffice till the year 3000. The other European countries are given a less favorable position. The coal deposits of Great Britan and Ire- land are placed at nbout 193,000,000,000 tons, and with an annual consumption twice that of Germany, that country will have exhausted the supply in less than 400 years. The estimated coal deposits of Belgium are 23,000,000.000 tons of France 19,000,000,000, of Aus- tria 17,000,000,000, and of Russia 40,- 000,000,000. North America’s coal deposits are estimated by the same authority at 682,000,000,000 tons. The total for all Europe, adding minor supplies to the preceding figures, is placed at 700.000, 000,000. But these gigantic figures are said to be dwarfed by Asia’s deposits, which can not at present be even ap- proximately estimated. China is sup- posed to possess inexaustible supplies of coal. Indeed, a German scientist is credited with estimating the deposits of the province of Shansi alone at 1,200,000,000,000 tons. Siberian and the island of Sakhalin are also credited with vast deposits, of unestimated ex- tent. The richness of China in coal throws an illuminating side light upon the en- deavors on the part of individuals and nations to secure a foothold on Chinese soil. Under present conditions China will, as time passes, come to occupy a more and more prominent place indus- trially. Cheap labor and cheap coal is a combination that possesses rare ad- vantages. China controlling the coal supply of the world and a syndicate controlling China is a remote possibil- ity, it is sure, but nevertheless one that must be considered by the thinkers who would forcast the future.—Johns- town Democrat. ————— Meaning of Names. Susan is Hebrew, a Lily. Alma is Latin, the Kindly. Guy is French, the Leader. Margaret is Greek, a Pearl. Paul is Latin, the 8mall One. Job is Hebrew, the Mourner. Rachel is Hebrew, the Lamb. Clara is Latin, the Bright One. Edwin is 8axon, a Conqueror. Lionel, Latin, is a little Lion. Hugh is Dutch, the Lofty Man. Jacob is Hebrew, the Supplanter. Gilbert is Saxon, Bright as Gold. Eunice is Greek, the Fair Victory. Ernest is Greek, the Serious One. Martin is Latin, the Martial One. Lucius is Latin, the Shining One. Peter is of Latin origin, the Rock. Arabella is Latin, the Beautiful Altar. Moses, a Hebrew name. means Drawn Out. Florerce is Latin, the Blooming One. Agatha is a Greek name, the Good One. ee The Independent Farmer. Buy a farm, young man. No matter how small it may be, buy a farm and prepare it go that your land will pro- vide you a living. Twenty years from now the man who owns his own farm will be independent and will have at his command the means of a livelihood. The expansion of manufactures eannot go on forever, and there will come a day in this country, as there has in others, when the supply will exceed the demand, and the only absolutely sure occupation will be farming. Buy a farm while one may be had!—Troy (Kansas) Chief. Paid Him to Advertise. He didn’t have a dollar; he didn’t have a dime. His clothes and shoes were looking just as though they’d served their time. He didn’t try to kill himself to dodge misfortune’s whacks. Instead he got some ashes and he filled five dozen sacks. Then next he begged a dollar. In the paper in the morn he advertised tin polish that would put the sun to scorn. He kept on advertising, and just now, suffice to say, he’s out in California at his cottage on the bay.—Ex. ea A Mother's Time Table. The following time table should be preserved by every mother, as it is often a source of the greatest anxiety to know whether or not a child will de- velop a disease after having been ex- posed to it. Chicken-pox symptoms usually appear on the fourteenth day: diphtheria, second day ; measles, four- teenth day; scarlet fever, fourth day; small-pox, twelfth day; typhoid fever, twenty-first day; whooping cough, fourteenth day.—Ex. THE BLANKS WE KEEP. The following blanks can be obtained at all times at THE 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, ete. tf LUMBAGO, SCIATICA {NEURALGIA and] KIDNEY TROUBLE ‘‘5.DROPS’’ taken internally, rids the Dio f DR. 8. D. BLAND Of Brewton, Ga., writes: +I had been a sufferer for a number of years Bal dred disease, Te 3 of “5-DROPS,* and test {t yourself. Ie fl *'5-DROPS" can be used any length of time without soquiring & ‘drug habit,” as It is entirely free of opium, cocaine, £8 alcohol, laudanum, end other similar jf § ingredients. ; ize Botth “5.DROPS? 800 Des ; Large roo. “For Salo by Druggiace. & SWAKSOR RHEUMATIC CURE COMPANY, 5 Dept. 80, 160 Lake Street, Chicago, Ei THE “HOME RULE?” Oil and Gasoline Can. SAFE- OLEAN NEAT-GONVENIENT. SIZE, 5 GALS. airectty yy the pan i hori to the Has a Seo fitting Hinged Cover over the top and are rain, dirt and SY2poration tight. his is the only ro Family Can % and is needed in every home where O11 or Gasoline is used; does away with the objection 9fiiting an] d pour- ing from large Cans, aud the an- that le k and waste contents, This is truly the HOUSEKEEPER'S FRIEND. EVERY HOUSEWIFR SHOULD READ The Joy of Home Making.” Send to us for a free copy at once, THE WINFIELD MANFG. CO., Warren, 0. DO NOT ACCEPT SUBSTITUTES. TORNADO (Bug Destroyer and Disinfectant. An Exterminator That Exterminates. A Modern Scientific Preparation. A Perfect Inssctide, Germicide and Dsodorizer. Will positively prevent Contagious Diseases. Positive Death to All Insect Life. And their nits or money refunded. Sold by all druggists or sent by mail, Price 25 Cents. TORNADO MFC. CO., Columbus, Ohio. Fits the Lunch! Fits the Pocket! THE IDEAL FOLDING LUNCH BOX represents the end of possiviliiy in a Lunch Box, for the reason SSeS every Sestighio feature that a Lunch Box can pos- e859 d has more than one valuable advan- e that no other lunch box ever had. t is strong and durable, and will give years of continued service. It is convenient to carry both in and out of use. It is attractive in en ana | Decaure of its being used for more p than one, is a great relief] to apes people w who dislike the idea of being seen dinner basket. The Ideal Lunch Box is so low in price anyone can afford to buy it. Can be folded up in 8 moment to fit pocket, with no more inconvenience than an ordinary pocketbook. ROCHESTER LUNCH BOX MFG. CO, Cox Building, ROCHESTER, N. Y. = =~ rn =e L TTI ISI AARP ANAT S TOOL aim
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers