A{ ket! min ’ ened a new t in Salis- iter’s store. and clean, spect. y and Salt ete. or Fat Cat- Itry, Hides, BEY be con- your wants . WAHL, Butcher. “pit ¥ > Ay Ve * 3 eral 1S 1904 0 ilk Lick this. : Crude : A Column | she does not begin with exhaustive at- : Can be best supplied id Thoughts Home Dedicated | tention to the multitude of etiquette, ’ BBavrmore & OuIio RAmLroan: Be oe Circl to Tjred knowing that way lies the danger of 2 ill { Deparment Sloe : Fel the Ircie ds They making her boys prigs and her girls = : THURSDAY EXCURSIONS TO Editorial Join the [self-conscious society misses before & - Pen:— Depart- | Home they are in theif teens. She lays down 2 Call and see our immense Pleasant Sucle at | gs the laws of her household the broad RE SR A SA Ei line of pretty White Goods, y a ment. | Tide. DS | principles of respect for elders, rever- Laces, Lace Curtains, Ladies’ Skirts and Suits, Boys’ ana Youths’ Suits, Men’s, Women’s and Children’s Shoes, Straw Hats, etc. We Hove Them All Beat For Variely, SIyle Anu Bio 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. THE LINDEMAN PIANO In the lead for 70 years. TIME IS THE TEST OF MERIT. Beware of imitations. ‘We believe that the 70 years’ experi. ence and Seputation we put into our [iauo, the care and attention we put into ts construction, have resulted in one of Jswamenta ever e latest provements. Every one a WHY NOT BUY THE BEST? price is within the reach of an bib Ls a Piano. Send for free illus. trated catalogue and full information. LINDEMAN & SONS PIANO CO. 548-550 West 23rd St, New York. ~ YT Cracked Corn 2» for the little chicks! Better than wheat! West Nalishury Feed Co. ANYONE Guabaild 8 olieap eap buggy, but it requires skilled me- chanics, nd years of rience to a a EE that will give sa ‘When you invest your Gadi in our get your money’s worth. Every part guaran ana built under St apes tions to urs Jou, wi yas a Osdering state width of track and kind of trimmin terial wanted. Aus n_ wool indigo’ ay broad cloth= De pearl Con Cord or Machine Buffed Cheaper than wheat! ar Ife t! A hanges wanted should be J Tay carefully. RAR in youre letter, being LY ¢ 2 EO) OE OL it ian All buggies gon, mak BL a SS With high bend 4o fis, Brad- h bend double braced sha. ley Shatt Couplers, side nat storm apron and wrench. ack ORR vehicle 80 as to obtain the NT tariff freight rate to your town. Price in Solid Rubber Tires = $96. 00. LING & VANSICKLE BUGGY CO., Middletown, Ohlo. Reference: First Nat. Bank, Middletown,O. LK ee win a? and Joan stant you prefer, end office to cole ipthrotign Sony ht rates for you. SE f si i ERR shipmen TT 0:5. Lr at 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 inspect our nice, new line of Dry Goods, Shoes Groceries, 2 j : ® Prices As Low As The Lowest CII] We start with an entire new stock, and we a only the best and purest brands of goods. We solicit a share of your pat- ronage, and we guarantee a square deal and satisfaction to all. Howard Joost & £0, Farmers Favorite Grain Drills, Corn Drills, 1900 Wash Machines, Syracuse, Perfection, Imperial and Oliver Chill Plows, Garden Tools, & Farm Tools, etec., and still offer & Spe gains in Bogs, Sg Wags, > g@F Also headquarters for Nutrioton- Ashland Stock §8 3 Food, and all kinds of Horse and Cattle Powders. Our 9% prices are the lowest. YOU ARE TO BE THE JUDGE! We will send you, FREIGHT PREPAID, upon receipt of your request, one of our FAULTLESS & SPRUNG WASHING MACHINES r thirty days’ practical test FREE. If Jou are not satisfied pS it ; the pest washer ads, and at the most reasonable return it at our Price, Te the only washer with the SUCTION and SQUEEZ- ING principle, and does Sot grind the clothes to pieces, like t of the other meth THOR washes an g from the Jejiities fabric to the coarsest clothing, ous iece or a whole tub full, with the same ease and oR} s truly a YS aN yasher and 2 Shared Be doubt bout it. oll take all Tryin prove ita me: foyon. Write to-day for further TE AMERICAN MFC. CO. 7 to 9 Main St. Lockland, Ohio. ROUND TRIP URN 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. TICK APS SANG 16 DAYS INCLUDING FOR FULL DETAILS CALL ON BALTIMORE & OHIO TICKET AGENT. DATE SE SALE. THE SALISBURY HACK LINE «AND LIVERY. ~~ C.W. STATLER, - - Proprietor. E@—Two hacks daily, except Sunday, be- tween Salisbury and Meyersdale, connect- ing with trains east and west. Schedule: Hack No. 1 leaves Salisbury at........ 8A. M Hack No. 2 leaves Salisbury at........ 1P.M Returning, No 1 leaves Meyersdaleat 1 P.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, GROCER AND CONFEGTIONER. —_—_— Having purchased the well known Jeffery grocery opposite the postoffice, I want the public to know that I 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. Anyone sending as Sketch and description may quickl Sacertajy r opinion free whether an vention fs pro) iy piienter tani of SmInunice tions strictl ln, on Pateni sent free. Oldest a throug 3 A NDBOOK Wa) taken t Spon ah 5 ove ice, withou "Scientific American, A handsomely illustrated weekly. Jaruess oS cuiation of 209 Aclentinig ournal. Term TT four months, $1. d by all ora NN & Co,z1sreacwa. New York THE BEST BAKING comes from Wagner's Salisbury bakery. Our Bread, Cakes, Pies, Buns, etc., can always be had nice and fresh at DeLozier's Grocery, Opposite Postoffice. We also run a wagon for the conven- ience of our patrons. Bread sold from wagon at 4 cents per loaf. M.A Waener, Prop. 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 n >t stand advertising. ret — 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 cC—— pe ——— 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 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 vear. 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 Pesidenee 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, electrie 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’S 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- son’s. Any style. tf Thompson has them. What? Why, McGee’s celebrated Seal Count Oysters W. J. Liebty’s old stand. tf Bring your friends to Thompson’s and try a plain or milk stew of McGee's Seal Counts. tf rm Thompson’s is the place where you can get your fine Confections. Head- ley’s Chocolates in bulk and fancy packages. Alsofresh roasted Jumbo Peanuts. a oy tf DRESS SHIRTS I—The finest line that ever eame to town, at Hay’s Depart- ment Store. Prices, 50e¢., 75¢. 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 lbs. ; color, dark bay. Ap- ply to Frank Thomas, one mile south of Salisbury. Postoffice, Elk Lick, Pa. 712 Life Prisoner Pardoned. Governor Warfield, of Maryland, has pardoned Jeremiah Barkholder, after having served nine years of a life sen- tence in the penitentiary, where he was sent by the Circuit Court for Gar- rett county, in 1897, upon conviction on a charge of felonious assault. His victim was his niece. Among the pe- titions for executive clemency was a letter from the victim, who has since married, and who takes the blame for the act largely upon herself. LOOK A LITTLE AHEAD. It is always well to have a box of salve in the house. Sunburn, cuts, bruises, piles and boils yield to De- Witt’s Witch Hazel Salve. Should keep a box on hand at all times to pro- vide for emergencies. For years the standard, but followed by many imi- tators. Be sure you get the genuine DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve. Sold by E. H. Miller. 8-1 Let the Kicker Get Out. There is no reasonable excuse for any man to live in a town if he doesn’t like it. If you have no word of commenda- tion to say for your own town, its in- stitutions or people, emigrate. You won't stop the town clock by going away. The church bells will have the same musical ring, the little dogs will play just as well, and the pure air, bright sunshine and sparkling water will have the same health-giving prop- erties. Speak a good word for your neighbors, if you can; if you cannot, don’t everlastingly enlarge on their faults. If you have become thoroughly disgruntled, move away; go some- where where things will suit you.—Ex. We have seen signs that indicate that gambling in various forms is get- ting a foothold in the community. No- tice the effect of this crime upon do- mestie happiness. It has sent its ruth- less plowshare through hundreds of families, until the wife sat in rags, and the daughters were disgraced, and the sons grew up to the same infamous practices, or took a short cut to de- struction across the murderer’s scaf- fold. Home has lost all charms for the gambler. How tame are the children’s caresses and a wife’s devotion to the gambler! How drearily the fire burns on the domestic hearth! There must be louder laughter, and something to win and something to lose, an excite- ment to drive the heart faster and fil- lip the blood and fire the imagination. No home, however bright, can keep back the gamester. The sweet call of love bounds back from his iron soul, and all the endearments are consumed in the flame of his passion. The home that possesses a cheerful wife and mother is not only a veritable haven of rest, but the safe harbor whose beacon light will guide her bread-winners safely past all rocks and shoals with unfailing certainty. The woman whose cheerful spirit can take that brave attitude toward life that en- ables her to bear courageously the in- evitable burdens of her life's environ- ment ; that strengthens her determina- tion not to fret or worry those who, for her sake, are fighting the hard bat- tles in the world, has reached that alti- tude that proclaims her price above rubies ; and her influence and example are not felt only within the limits of the four walls she has made the unas- sailable bulwark of state and society, a happy home, but reach to those she knows not of. Good resolutions need more winding up than an eight-day clock. The best way to keep the boys at home is to make it an object for them not to go out to seek amusements, for these they will have. Every farm home ought to be made a very heaven on earth to its inmates. Not alone the farm home, either, but all the houses in the land. Learn each child’s na- ture, and then work some home charm to keep him in your circle. Childish rage unchecked, will, after a while, become a hurricane. Childish petulance will grow up into misan- thropy. Childish rebellion will de- velop into the lawlessness of riot and sedition. If you would ruin the child, dance to his every caprice and stuff him with confectionery. Before you are aware of it, that boy of six years will go down the street, a cigar in his mouth, and ready on any corner with his comrades to compare pugilistic at- tainments. The parent who allows the child to grow up without ever having learned the great duty of obedience and submission has prepared a cup of burning gall for his own lips, and ap- palling destruction for his descendant. Every father and mother who reads this paper and have a child in the home have enough on hand. A throne, a crown, a scepter, a kingdom under charge. Be careful how you strike him across the head, jarring the brain. What you say to him will be centen- nial and millennial, and a hundred years and a thousand years will not stop the echo and re-echo. Do not say, “Tt is only a child.” Rather say, “It is only an immortal.” It is only a mas- terpiece of Jehovah. It is only a being that shall outlive sun and moon and stars and ages quadrillennial. God has infinite resources, and He can give wants to give the richest possible gift to a household, He looks around all the worlds and all the universe, and then He gives a child. Yea, in all ages God has honored childhood. What absurd little things people quarrel about! What trivial matters cause ill-feeling in families! The mut- ton being roasted too little or the beef too much ; an opinion about the tem- perature of the house, the style of cur= tain that ought to be bought for the front windows; the definition of a word, its pronunciation are things that might be argued pleasantly about, but surely are not topics worth a quarrel when peace and good will are of so much. importance in the home. A little ill-feeling is like a seed that may grow into a large tree which will shadow the whole house. Many men and women must look back with regret on the hasty word or the cold reproach which was the entering wedge that split the household in two, and yet how few make a point of uttering the soft word that turneth away wrath. Your wise mother is not given to worrying over trifles. She does not ex- pect perfection in a day. And she has put from her, as far as the east is from the west, the ghastly possibility of set- ting vanity up in the room of love. So presents of great value, but when He | ence for women, kindliness for all; and she permeates the home atmosphere with the finest conceptions of the def- erence and sympathy due from soul to soul. Her children very early delight to place a chair for grandmother and to save father steps. They learn to be proud of that restraint which enables them to keep self in the background, and to defer to brother and sister. It never enters their heads that servants are less worthy of respect than other people. They are as unabashed in the presence of wealth and power as they are tender toward suffering and pov- erty. When she teaches them from time to time her code of manners—and she is careful to perfect it according to ber best judgment—she teaches it for home use, and it becomes fixed by be- coming natural. MAKING A HOME. It seems a pity that the young wom- an who is about to establish a home and has the money to spend for its garnishing can not be persuaded from laying it out all at once. She robs her- self of so much future enjoyment. The spick and span sets of furniture which are carelessly ordered from an uphols- terer, and carried home and stood around her parlor by his men, will never afford her half the satisfaction she can get in a room in which today she buys a chair, and next week, seeing there must be a table to aecompany the chair, she starts on a fresh shop- ping excursion, and finds a table which is exactly what she is looking for; and in another month, discovering the need of a bookcase or screen,she has again the delight of the hunt, and the grati- fication of obtaining the prettiest screen and bookcase in the: eity. Such a room is a growth, a gathering together of household treasures, little by little, and piece by piece. Each ar- ticle, bought only when the need arises or when something is happily found to just meet the need, will have a family history which makes it an entertaining as well as a valuable possession. Each couch and footstool is an achievement ; each rug and curtain represents a tri- umph. Such a home built up gradu- ally, with careful planning in each part, with thought and loving consideration in all its details, acquires a meaning far deeper than could be purehased by the longest purse from the most fash- 1onable cabinet maker. AN OVERWORKED STOMACH. Try a little KODOL FOR DYSPEP- SIA after your meals. See the effect it will produce on your general feeling by digesting your food and helping your stomach to get itself intoshape. Many stomachs are overworked to the point where they refuse to go further. Kodol digests Syour food and gives your stomach the rest it needs, while its re- constructive properties get the stomach back into working order. Kodol re- lieves flatulence, sour stomach, palpi- tation of the heart, belching, ete. Sold by E. H. Miller. 8-1 List of Cases for Special Term of Court to Begin Aug. 13th. Jacob L. Menges vs. Berwind-White Coal Company. John A. Weaver vs. Berwind-White Coal Company. Nancy Lehman vs. Berwind-White Coal Company. Wm. Long vs. John H. Meyer's exec- ator. Pittsburg Commercial Exchange vs. E. C. Murphy. John H. Phaler’s guardian vs. Som- erset Coal Company. John Ream vs. T. F. Bental, manager. Wm. S. Power Co. vs. Vulean Soot Cleaner Co. Howard C. Cook vs. W. K. Dupont. Thos. Henry vs. Dr. B, Liehty. Stanton B, Cole vs. G. W. Kemp et al. Isabella Custer, executrix, vs. John H. Shaffer. Sarah J. Thompson, executor, vs. Jno, H. Shaffer. Simon Brocht vs. Company. John Lemon Davis vs. Hughes. American Soda Fountain Co. vs. W. S. Barefoot. Carter Webster & Co. vs. Fred Rowe. Samuel McAtter vs. B. & O, R. R. Co. L. L. Weimer vs. Harry G. Witt. Bruce Blubaugh vs. Harry G. Witt. Fisher & Co. vs. Harry G. Witt. Strauss & Co. vs. Harry G. Witt. Justus Volk vs. A, W, Beatty. Somerset Coal John W. Belle Boger vs. Conrad H. Acker- man. N. D. Hay vs. Merchants Coal Com- pany. Borough of Meyersdale vs. Somerset County Telephone Co. Sarah A. Burkhart vs. B. road Company. Herring & Carpenter vs. W. S. Darr. C. J. Duncan vs. Marcus Wohl. Belinda Hite vs. D. B. Zimmerman, two cases. Frank E. Berkey vs. Belle Arthur. George W. Logue vs. 8. W. McMil- lian. A. H. Coffroth vs. D. A. Louther. & O. Rail- F. W. Beisecker vs. Dr. J. A. Louther. Sa i LO