at ket! een vened a new et in Salis- liter’s store. and clean, espect. h and Salt ete. for Fat Cat- 1ltry, Hides, Bot YOU i be con- 7 your wants WAHL, Butcher. IBHBHENBHENS HBHBNSNANBNS Da | girl, too, is e sort on his ting to know m. ly those used and it will try to find her emblem es. silver stars, d States be- ws three sil- er stars. silver star. | eagle. two silver , ars at each bar at each ’ lain straps, tacle. d to shuffle ping himself wife found after in the her interpo- had left me ore I would His ‘wife re- would have d over heav- on, wouldn’t VED. ic attacks of constipation King’s New writes John , Ind. The teed to give verybody or 5c. at E. H, 9-1 Ble CLOTEING Aug. 1st to 19th, 1906. { Men's Men’s 14.00 suits at - 17.00 suits at - Men's Men's 30 PER CENT. REDUCTION on Boys’ Knee Pants Suits! In order to reduce our stock of Men's and Boys’ Clothing quickly, we will cut ~ prices as follows during this sale: 3 Men's $ 9.00 suits will go at | 10.00 suits will go at 12.50 & 13.00 suits, at - $ 6.50. 1A: 30 PER CENT. REDUCTION on Young Mens Suits! 30 PER CENT. REDUCTION on Men's lightweight Trousers! This is an excellent opportunity to fit your boy out in clothes for the coming school term, at a big saving in price. 2 One-half price for all Men's and Boys’ Straw Hats in dress shapes. h We will also put on the Bargain counter some more shoes, which will = be sold at our usual bargain prices, during this sale. @ Sale will close on August 15th. Come early, & Remember the dates. before the best is all picked out. BARCHUS & LIVENGOOD. Kos Store] Nov 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, etc. * We start with an entire new stock, and we handle 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 Meager Co A AIA AIA AY 7 9 VA AA ATA ATA (. h. HASBLBARTH & SON, ® Farmers Favorite Grain Drills, Corn Drills, 1900 Wash Machines, Syracuse, Perfection, Imperial and Oliver Chill Plows, Garden Tools, Farm Tools, ete., and still offer £ los 0 Bogs, S00 Wg, Ee @ I Also headquarters for Nutrioton-Ashland Stock & 2 Food, and all kinds of Horse and Cattle Powders. Our © prices are the lowest. ge OR THE LINDEMAN PIANO) in the lead for 70 years. TIME IS THE TEST OF MERIT. Beware of imitations. ‘We believe that the 70 years’ expert ence and reputation we put into Piano, the care and attention we hh oe its construction, Have resulted in one of {ne most sa instruments ever ut on the market. Has all the latest Pu Every one warranted. WHY NOT BUY THE BEST 2? the priceis within the reach of an Wen De a Piano. Send for free id trated catalogue and full information. LINDEMAN & SONS PIANO CO., 548-550 Wost 23rd St., Now York, ~ Bavrmore & Omnio Rarmroan: THURSDAY EXCURSIONS TO ATLANTIC CITY, Cape May, Sea Isle City, Ocean City, N. J, Ocean City, Md., Rehoboth, Del., and Return, August 9 and 23, September 6, 1906. BRIE? $8.50 from MEYERSDALE. DIN TIOKELS $98 ~a 16 DAYS NOEXRE: sarm. FOR FULL DETAILS CALL ON BALTIMORE & OH10 TICKET AGENT. 4 i Cracked Corn i i for the little chicks! Better than wheat! West Salisbury Feed Co. 8 Can be best supplied at HOS Deparment store, Call and see our immense RN ne semen line of pretty White Goods, ae 1 I Crartains Ladies’ Skirts B Suits, Boys’ and Youths’ Suits, Men’s, Women’s and Children’s Shoes, Straw Hats, etc. We Have Them All Beal For Variety, Style And Big Valles. 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. Cheaper than wheat! RE 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. Eg SAFE AND GENTLE horses at the Williams Livery. All good travelers and suitable for either young or old persons. J. W. Williams, proprietor, Salisbury, Pa. tf. 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 le aE BEST HORSES, best rigs and best general equipments in the livery line, at the Williams Livery, Salisbury, Pa. Somerset County telephone. tf Desirable Pesidsiice Property for ©. 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 Fall Term Opening. THE TRI-STATE BUSINESS COL- LEGE, Cumberland, Md., Sept. 4, 5. 6. Write for catalogue and terms. 8-23 FOR BEST LIVERY service, go to J. W. Williams, Salisbury, Pa. Good horses and best of rigs. tf DRESS SHIRTS !—The finest line that ever came to town, at Hay’s Depart- ment Store. Prices, 50c., 75¢. and $1.00. tf ~C.T. Hay, Manager. The ““Courier’s’’ Recrudescence. In a carping, disingenuous “broad- side” the esteemed Connellsville Cour- ier of last Tuesday makes a pitiable at- tempt to dissect a Leader editorial of two weeks ago on the subject of vac- cination. . The Leader article was written in good faith. The Leader believes the children of the State should be educat- ed by the State, because throughout the civilized world public education has come to be recognized as one of the highest duties of government. The State has assumed to educate its young, irrespective of race, color or national- ity. It has done more. It has made attendance in its schools, by all the children of school age, compulsory, be- cause compulsory attendance makes the schools efficient. In an evil hour a fanatic propaganda of “vaccination” prevails upon the Leg- islature to enact a law making the or- deal of “successful vaccination” an in- dispensable condition for every pupil's admission into the schools. Parents who are not cruel enough, nor cowardly enough, to inflict upon their children a barbarous “treatment” which they would resist upon themselves, take the issue into the courts. The courts up- hold the “vaccination law,” but the ab- solute right of every citizen to protect his own person can not be over-ridden even by the courts. Neither can a leg- islature pass laws to compel the pupils’ attendance and enact another law ex- cluding them. One or the other of these laws had to go. In this case the compulsory-attendance law had to yield, because it is the older of the two. The result is a travesty upon legisla- tion. It travesties the compulsory law. It travesties the State’s public school system, It travesties liberty. It travesties common sense. The Courier’s attempt to make the Leader’s article appear self-contradie- tory would be ludicrous, if journalism were not a serious profession. Its mutilation and shameless garbling of the editorial cannot be adequately characterized within the bounds of po- lite discussion. No newspaper can de- scend to wilful misrepresentation with- out losing the public respect for its ut- terances that is indispensable to its reputation. We resent the Couriers -| bare-faced garbling of the editorial, of course ; but above and beyond all our virtuous resentment we pity the Twen- tieth Century journalist who resorts to such metheds, and the Courier has our unfeigned compassion. The arguments which the Courier adduces for the perpetuation of the vaccination outrage are so puerile that it is impossible to believe that the Courier editor, usually so lucid and “perceiving,” can have given them serious thought, The rule of “the | greatest good to the greatest number” | applied to “vaccination” is preposterous in the light of what has transpired all over Pennsylvania within the past year. The public schools of Pennsyl- vania are too sacred a trust to be made the vehicle for the imposition of the impossible hobby of the “vaccination” cranks and fanatics. The “vaccination law” must go.—Rockwood Leader. THE BLANKS WE KEEP. The following blanks canbe 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. tt REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. E. H. Bittner et ux. to Lydia E. Ram- hoff, in Larimer, $25. Mahlon W. Keim et ux. to Babcock Lumber Company, in Shade, $1200. Noretta Ringer et vir. to Joseph Kimmel, in Stoyestown, $1300. Daniel Stufft to Joseph G. Kimmel, in Stoyestown, $35. Wilmore Coal Company to Olivia Swanson, in Wiadber, $425. Eli Bender et ux. to Willis Bender, in Addison, $1200. Aaron Will to E, E. Sullivan, in Rock- wood, $85. C. L. Shoemaker et ux.to W. H. Stod- dard et al., in Somerset township, $1. D. L. Miller to Ephraim Brant, in Meyersdale, $500. Rachel Wilt et vir. to Wm. H. Engle, in Elk Lick, $150. Samuel Meyers et ux. to Thomas E. Gallo, in Conemaugh, $11. ‘Wilmore Coal Company to Maggie L. Snoeberger, in Windber, $650. Olivia Swanson to 8. C. Halverson, in Windber, $450. Alex. A. Casebeer te Mary A. Shaulis, in Lincoln, $450. J. W. Foster to Thomas Jones, in Hooversville, $100. : R. E. Lamberd et ux. to Charles N, Crouse, in Allegheny, $30. Commissioners of Somerset county to Ephraim Wirick, in Ogle, $7. Julian Bittner to John Fleming, in Black, $250. George E. Reitzet ux. to S. & C. R. R. Co., in Somerset township, $1. Wm. W. Scott to J. C. Scott, in Mey- ersdale, $1507 J. C. Scott to Sarah A. Scott, in Mey- ersdale, $150. Boswell Imp. Co. to Dominick Nurari, in Boswell, $350. Paul Miller to W. W. Dempsey, in Middlecreek, $853. Ananias J. Growall et ux. to John M. Weaver, in Rockwood, $1250. Noah Scott et ux. to Giaceondino De Pompe, in Upper Turkeyfoot, $195, Frank Ripple et ux. to Joseph Tom- chick, in Jenner, $240. Wm. J. McKee et ux. to Hannah E. Williams et vir., in Somerset twp., $1. Edward B. Maurer to Fred Zipf, in Jenner, $800. Elizabeth Witt to C. E. Durst, in Somerset township, $135. Boswell Imp. Co. to E. A. Garvey, in Boswell, $351. Harry N. Cohen to Israel Morgan, in Boswell, $5. Edward Lowry to P. C. Isaacs, in Stonycreek, $2750. George W. Grove et ux. to same, in Stonycreek, $3362. GALVESTON’S SEA WALL makes life now as safe in that city ason the higher uplands. E. W. Goodloe, who resides on Dutton S8t., in Waco, Tex., needs no sea wall for safety. He writes: “I have used Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption the past five years and it keeps me well and safe. Before that time I had a cough which for years had been growing worse. Now it’s gone.” Cures chronic Coughs, La Grippe, Croup, Whooping Cough and prevents Pneumonia. Pleasant to take. Every bottle guar- anteed at E. H. Miller's drug store. Price 50c. and $1.00. Trial bottle free. 9-1 Marriage Licenses. Austin Nickleson Snyder, Harndesville. Alma Elizabeth Holliday, Harnedsville. Ambrose Brant, Holsopple. Elizabeth E, Wechtenheiser, Holsopple. Anthony Strapel, Windber. Annie Miller, Scalp Level. { Austin Condy, Garrett. Cora Ida Belle Getz, Garrett. Edward C. Liston, Upper Turkeyfoot. Lillie E. Romesburg, Upper Turkeyfoot. John Moon, Humbert. Ella Moon, Humbert. Eli Shaffer, Paint township. Hannah B. Diehl, Locust Grove, Pa. Jacob Gillenberger, Jr., Ursina. Alice B. Imhoff, Berlin. James D. Karns, Loysburg, Pa. Minnie Maude Little, Confluence. Albert Welch Zimmerman, Ralphton. Mollie J. Bowman, Stoyestown. Charles Andrew Beal, Elk Lick. Elizabeth Jones, Elk Lick. Ira Webster Friedline, Somerset Twp. Margaret M. Gardner, Lincoln. Lightning Would Rather Strike Oak Than Any Other Tree. Very curious facts about the prefer- ence of lightning for certain kinds of trees have been collected by the bu- reau of forestry at Washington. Ithas long been noted that oaks are far more frequently damaged by lightning than beeches. = As a partial explanation it has been suggested that the smoother leaves and bark of the beech, by producing a uniform wetting of the surface in a storm, may cause lightning to reach the ground from such a tree with less damage than in the case of an oak. But the statistics gathered by the bureau of forestry indicate that the beech is comparatively exempt from lightning strokes. Between 1 and 1905, within a certain district, 56 oaks, about 20 firs and three or four pines were struck by lightning, but not a single beech was struck, although the beech was actually the most abundant tree in the district, outnumbering the oaks almost seven to one. a E& WEDDING Invitations at Tee Star office. A nice new stock justre- ceived. tf.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers