1 ket! meio ned a new in Salis- ter’s store. ind clean, pect. and Salt te. r Fat Cat- try, Hides, St YOU be con- jour wants AHL, utcher. SHBIEHIBIBKE 1k Lick his. ‘ RRR RRR ENS REE RRR Can be best supplied at HOY'S Deparment ioe. Call and see our immense line of pretty White Goods, Laces, Lace Curtains, Ladies’ Skirts and Suits, Boys’ and Youths’ Suits, Men’s, Women’s and Children’s Shoes, Straw Hats, etc. We Hove Them AIL Beal For Variely, Sie And Big Values. Don’t take our word for it, but come and judge for yourselves. New goods arriving right along, and they who buy without see- ing our immense stock are making an expensive mistake. HAY'S DEPARTMENT STORE, C. T. HAY, Mgr. AER THE LINDEMAN PIANO in the lead for 70 years. TIME IS THE TEST OF MERIT. Beware of imitations. ‘We believe that the 70 years’ ri. ence and feputation we put into our Piano, the care and attention we put into Is construction, have Tesuiied in one of gh ever e most i the market. Has all th Faprovements. Every one warranted. WHY NOT BUY THE BEST? when the priceis within the reach of any Piano. Send for free illus- one wanting a 0. Sen gor free ils trated catalogue and full n. LINDEMAN & SONS PIANO co., 548-550 West 23rd St., New York. ~ Cracked Corn 5 for the little chicks! Better than wheat! Cheaper than wheat! West Salishury Feed Co. 1g TERMS, G ou "y tl ‘with order price, = = ~ send us $15 instruct our nearest bank or Strom o We do Dalanee Upon deer res at Middletown, Ohio, @ deliver al eb 8 ipments ble freight rates for you. Reference: First Nat. Bank, Middletown,O. ANYONE Can build a sd material ind bp it 1s T4qaires skilled me AY ‘Geleribed in your aR lester, Belg ; EO) a goutie Aer Gp ste NN Fi Shien, Bib Sarai, Ky ‘We pack each yeh © as to obtain the lowest tariff freight rate to your town. Price in Solid Rubber Tires - $96.00. LING & VANSICKLE BUGGY CO. Middletown, Ohio. New Store! New Goods! «® We have opened a fine new general store in the M. J. Glotfelty building, Ord St., Salisbury, Pa., and invite you ~ to come and Wobect our nice, new line of Dry Goods, Shoes, Sb ete. We start with an entire new stock, AS we ind fhe best and purest brands of goods. We solicit a share of your pat- ronage, and we guarantee a square deal and satisfaction to all. iow Yong & Co. y 1 HASHBMNTI LN ® Farmers’ Favorite Grain Drills, Corn Drills, 1900 Wash Machines, Syracuse, Perfection, Imperial and Oliver Chill Plows, Garden Tools, & Farm Tools, ete., and still offer 2 & Se Dunas 1 Bugs, Sig Wop, E & Food, and all kinds of Horse and Cattle Powders. L® Also headquarters for Nutrioton-Ashland Stock % Our Pienss are the lowest. YOU ARE TO BE THE JUDCE! We will send you, FREIGHT PREPAID, upon receipt of your request, one of our FAULTLESS ® SPRUNG WASHING MACHINES r thirty days’ practical test FREE. it 30 ou are not satisfied re it oh — Beit washer made, and at Tie most reasonable e re urn it at our e nse. PE a with the SUCTION and SQUEEZ ING HEA and does not grind the clothes to pieces, like most of the other Jaethods. It washes anything m the daintiest fabric to the coarsest iece or a re tub full, with the same ease and it’s truly a wonder washer dag Shore's no doubt “Worl take all the in trying to prove its merits to you. Write to-day for farther information. ERICAN MFG. CO. 7 to 9 Main St. Lockland, Ohio. ROUND TRIP TICKETS GOOD FOR FULL DETAILS CALL ON BA Bavurmore & Ono RR ArLroaD: THURSDAY EXCURSIONS TO ATLANTIC CITY, Cape May, Sea Isle City, Ocean City, N. J, Ocean City, Md., Rehoboth, Del., and Return. July 12 & 26, Aug: 9 & 23, Sept. 6, 1906. $8.50 from MEYERSDALE. LUDING Aine 16 DAYS Ine DATEOF SALE. LTIMORE & OHIO TICKET AGENT. 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. Schedule: Hack No. 1 leaves Salisbury. at........ SA. M Hack No. 2 leaves Salisbury at........ 1PM Returning, No 1 leaves Meyersdale at 1P.M No.2 leaves Meyersdaleat............. 6P.M E@=First class rigs for all kinds of trav- el,at reasonable prices. New Firm! G. G. De Lozier, CROCER IND CONFECTIONER ———— eee Having purchased the well known Jeffery grocery opposite the postoffice, I want the public to know that IT will add greatly to the stock and improve the store in every way. It is my aim to conduct a first class grocery and confectionery store,and to give Big Value For Cash. I solicit a fair share of your patronage, and I promise a square deal and courteous treatment to all customers. My line will | consist of Staple and Fancy Groceries Choice Confectionery, Country Produce, Cigars, Tobacco, etc. OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE, SALISBURY, PA. 60 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &C. Anyones sending as speich and JescHipHon may may quic iY 83 oe DOO ae free nvention is p! aten om 18 probably pel AARDBO sent zres. Oldest agency “for Securing 10 Aaaen t MEY "Scientific Hrerican, A pangsomely Iinstiated yy coxly: arin, $35 culati scien ronal 2ths, » $1 by ali newsdealerd MUNK & Co; rorwe. New York St.. Washington. D, THE BEST BAKING comes from Wagner’s Salisbury bakery. Our Bread, Cakes, Pies, Buns, ete., can always be had nice and fresh at DeLozier's Grocery, Opposite Postofice. We also run a wagon for the conven- ience of our patrons. Bread sold from wagon at 4 cents per loaf. M. A. Wagener, Propr. 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 and 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 IF YOUR BUSINESS will not stand advertising, advertise it for sale. You cannot afford to follow a business that will nat stand advertising. 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 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. f TEACHERS WANTED! The Elk Lick Township School Board will meet at Springs, on Friday, July 20, 1906, for the purpose of hiring twenty teachers for the ensuing year. Salaries from $35.00 to $45.00 per month. Contracts for fuel will be let in the forenoon of the same day. M. E. HERSHBERGER, 7-19 Secretary, Elk Lick, Pa. Desirable Pesidence Property for Sale. One of the most desirable modern homes in Salisbury—14 rooms, heated by hot air, bath room, hot and cold wa- ter, electric light, good stable and other out-buildings, large corner lot, ideal location, ete. For particulars call on or address THE Star, Elk Lick, Pa. tf To prevent rust, use Highland Sul- phur-Proof Paint. For sale by H. G. Wilhelmi. 7-19 SHOE BARGAINS!—We have the biggest and best stock of Men’s, Wom- en’s and Children’s Shoes in town, and {we are offering special bargains in | Shoes at this time. Call and save | money. HAY’Ss DEPARTMENT STORE. {tf | Have you tried Thompson’s home- {made Gingerbread? Just the kind your grandmother baked. Get it at Thompson's, opposite Hay’s Hotel. tf Everybody is talking about the man- ner Oysters are put up in at Thomp- Any style. tf | son’s. Thompson has them. What? Why, McGee's celebrated Seal Count Oysters W. J. Lichty’s old stand. tf a Bring your friends to Thompson’s and try a plain or milk stew of McGee's Seal Counts. tf Thompson’s is the place where you can get your fine Confections. Head- ley’s Chocolates in bulk and faney packages. Alsofresh roasted Jumbo Peanuts. tf DRESS SHIRTS !—The finest line that ever came to town, at Hay’s Depart- ment Store. Prices, 50c., 75¢c. and $1.00. tf C.T. Hay, Manager. Desirable Real Estate at Private Sale. The heirs of Caroline E. Smith, de- ceased, offer their large double dwell- ing on corner of Ord street and Smith avenue, Salisbury, Pa., at private sale. Apply to Stewart Smith, administra- tor. tf. FOR SALE !—A fine Driving Mare; weight 1000 1bs. ; color, dark bay. Ap- ply to Frank Thomas, one mile south of Salisbury. Postoffice, Elk Lick, Pa. 712 | A Crude Column Thoughts Home D Dedicated As They : | to Tired Fall Circle | Mothers From the | As They Editorial | Join the Pen:— Depart- | Home Pleasant { Circle at Evening | ment | Evening Reveries. | | Tide. The best way to stop a wagging tongue is to let it wag until people are tired of listening to it. Have a bright bouquet of flowers in each room of your home to cheer and brighten it and its inmates. When men build a new boat and wish to test its strength, they turn its prow up stream, against the current. They do not let it drift with the tide. So it is with our lives. If we wish to try our strength, we must turn our faces to the current and face the tide. The life of the world is strenuous, and the door of the home should shut out the storm and stress, but it should not shut out new, wholesome and in- spiring influences. It should stand wide in hospitable welcome to friends. The home life that is narrow and self- ish is dull and enervating. A friend of ours once lost a fine Jer- gey cow—tied her too long. She got tangled up in the rope and broke her neck—a case of too much rope. How many instances there are in life that are counterparts of the above! The ® cherished of our hearts, our own flesh and blood, are often allowed to gradu- ally slip away from us and out from under our control, all because we love them so much and hate to restrict their pleasures or say “no” to them. They are out a little bit late, but they are our boys and girls, ard they will be all right. Perhaps later on it is the public dance, a case of beer and a game of cards with a ten-cent ante, and the first thing we know all is lost, and we awake to a realization of the fact, only too late, that it was just like our friend’s cow—a case of too much rope. Be boys and girls with your boys and girls, and at the same time be manly men and womanly women, and your boys and girls will grow up like you, be proud of you and you of them. THE HOME. Married people would be happier If home trials were never told to the neighbors. If they kissed and made up after every quarrel. If household expenses were propor- tioned to receipts. If they tried to be as agreeable as in courtship days. If each would try and be a support and comfort to the other. If each remembered the other was a human being, not an angel. If women were as kind to their hus- bands as they were to their lovers. If fuel and provisions were laid in during the high tide of summer work. If both parties remembered that they married for worse as well as better. If men were as thoughtful for their wives as they were for their sweet- hearts. If there were fewer silk and velvet costumes for the street, and more plain, tidy house dresses. If there were fewer “please, darlings,” in public, and more polite manners in private. If wives and husbands would take some pleasure as they go along, and not degenerate into mere toiling ma- chines. Recreation is necessary to keep the heart in its place, and to get along without it is a big mistake. If men would remember that women can’t always be smiling, who have to cook the dinner, answer the bell half a dozen times, get rid of a neighbor fwho has dropped in, tend to a sick baby, tie up the cut finger of a two-year-old, gather up the playthings of a four-year- old, tie up the head of a six-year-old on skates, and get an eight-year-old ready for school, to say nothing of sweeping, cleaning, etc. A woman with all these to contend with may claim it a privi- lege to look and feel a little tired some- times, and a word of sympathy would not be too much to expect from the man, who, during the honeymoon, wouldn't let her carry as much as a sunshade. There is perhaps no place where courage is more needed than in the home life by the tired housewife and busy mother. Her daily work is but a repetition of many a yesterday. She is but human, and must sometimes feel worn and discouraged, but a quiet con- fidence that we shall be able to perform whatever is right and necessary, gener- ally carries us safely through difficul- ties, keeping us strong and calm amid the most trying duties. No one fills a place of greater responsibility, nor one more worthy of the highest honors, than the wise and faithful mother and house- keeper, who loves her work and acts on the principle that *it is not what we do, but how, that makes us great.” Her example is worthy of imitation by the noblest of earth. There is nothing more beautiful in life than the brave spirit who thus lovingly performs her part of the labors of earth, asking no greater reward than the consciousness of having done her duty well. Price- less, indeed, must be the peace that stills her heart in the hour of death, and endless rest awaits the tired hands when life is done. “Beautiful hands are those that do Work that is earnest, and brave and true Moment by moment the long day through. “Beautiful twilight at set of sun, Beautiful goal with race well run, Beautiful rest with work well done. “Beautiful grave, where grasses creep, Where brown leaves fall and drifts lie deep, Over wornout hands—oh, sleep !” beautiful The first word a child utters is apt to be “mother,” and the old man in hisdy- ing dream calls “mother! mother!” It matters not whether she was brought up in the surroundings of a city and in affluent home, and was dressed appro- priately with reference to the demands of modern life, or whether she wore the old-time cap and great round spectacles and apron of her own make, and knit your socks with her own needles, seat- ed by the broad fireplace, with great black logs ablaze on a winter night. It matters not how many wrinkles cross- ed and recrossed her face, or how much her shoulders stooped with the burdens of a long life, if you painted a Madonna, hers would be the face. What a gentle hand she had when we were sick, and what a voice to soothe pain, and was there any one who could so fill up a room with peace and purity and light? And what a sad day that was when we came home and she could yreet us not for her lips were forever still. EER If you will learn the seriousness of life, and its beauty also, live for your husband ; be to him like the sunshine between the trees; unite yourself in- wardly to him, be guided by him, make him happy, and then you will under- stand what is the best happiness of life, and will acquire, in your own eyes, a worth with God and with man. Wom- an is designedly a companion and help- mate for man. She can assist him in the affairs of a humble home, or in the duties of public. - She is no less wom- anly when she enters the various arts, sciences, trades and professions than when she graces only the domestic circle. Successful men in public or private life often owe much of their success to the assistance rendered them by their wives, mothers, or sis- ters. THE ISLE OE HOME. From shadow-land of memory A golden dream comes unto me. In fancy I am back among The happy hours when I was young. In visions yet I see the day, ‘When I had been a year away— My first year—and I sought once more, Heart-sore and sick, my father’s door. And as I climed the winding road Up the last hill, a something glowed Within my bosom like a flame, An ecstacy without a name. For there, across the evening’s gloom, I saw the old barn darkly loom. And past it, from a window bright, A sword of glory pierced the night— The light of home. As from afar The wise men saw the heavenly star, So that sweet light, unto my eyes, Seemed leading on to Paradise. Again, in fancy, I draw near; Again I through the window peer; Again I pass the open door; Again I steal across the floor; Again I clasp my mother’s form; Again I feel her tear drops warm; Again I grasp mp father’s hand ; Again I feel my heart expand Into that overwhelming sense Of joy too deep for utterance. But ’tis a romance often told, A story that is sweet and old, A tale that’s found the world’s heart warm Since Jesus gave it deathless form; And many a heart with joy has burned Above some prodigal returned. So sweet that scene was unto me, It sheds a balm through memory. A sort of kindly influence brought To touch and gladden every thought. That night I slept within—O joy !— The room I slept in when a boy. A golden dream came unto me; I thought the whole world was a sea, Whose breaking waves rose fierce and high Beneath a black, tempestuous sky. And many a life I saw go out; And many a wreck was strewn about; But, safe amid the rush and roar, I stood uvon a happy shore, Aland that shone ’neath Heaven’s smile, A sunny, green and peaceful isle, On which the old house reared its form, An ark of safety in the storm; TI stood, amid the breakers’ foam, Secure upon the Isle of Home. ONLY 82 YEARS OLD. “I am only 82 years old and don’t ex- pect even when I get to be real old to feel that way as long as I can get Electric Bitters,” says Mrs. E. H. Brunson, of Dublin, Ga. Surely there’s nothing else keeps the old as young and makes the weak as strong as this grand tonic medicine. Dyspepsia, tor- pid liver, inflamed kidneys or chronic constipation are unknown after taking Electric Bitters a reasonable time. Guaranteed by E. H. Miller, druggist. Price 50c. 8-1 REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Wm. E. Baker to Sadie E. Marteeny, Lincoln, $372.40. Johan H. Veil to Charles Cresswell, Windber, $700. John H. Seibert to Frank P. Saylor, Somerset township, $1200. W. S. Matthews to S. C. Fechtig’s heirs, Southampton, $50. Jacob B. Gerhard to W. P. Kooser, Somerset township, $706.62. 8S. C. Livengood’s heirs to E. E. Kier- nan, Somerset township, $7000. Elizabeth Lucas to A. W. Middlecreek, $600. Alice C. Hayes to same, Paint town- ship, $4000. Wm. Bowlin to John H. Weaver, Paint township, $300. Geo. Hershenreoder to Mary Hersh- enreoder, Somerset township, $1. QC. 8S. Ickes to Andrew Pekar, Boswell, $600. Daniel Shultz’s ex. to C. R. Darrah, Meyersdale, $90. Bena Hoffman to J. D. Shafer, Paint borough, $25. Keystone Coal Co. to J. C. Hutzell et al., Summit, $300. Borron, WHEN THE WORLD GOES WRONG. Does evil still, your whole life fill? Does woe betide? Your thoughts abide on suicide? You need a pill! Now for prose and facts—DeWitt’s Lit- tle Early Risers are the most pleasant and reliable pills known today. They never gripe. Sold by E. H, Miller. 8-1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers