EST POSITS. areful at- Valley. vshier. derson. ines. ositive ubt a- ER ie that > 1r ee r sack. 0. at ket! tl pened a new cet in Salis- hliter’s store. t and clean, respect. sh and Salt , ete. for Fat Cat- ultry, Hides, ASE YOU id be con- y your wants WAHL, » Butcher. (HI JKETS DY. NOW ER 1, THE ROHANGE- LE TICKET, BE SOLD AT FUND. ASSETT, enger Agent. affic SR o allow peo- igh the col- n advertise- tt i" y C.W. STATLER, RAERRBREEBE BNR RE BREESE £ oN THE SALISBURY HACK LINE «AND LIVERY. ~~ Proprietor. Z@=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........ 1PM Returning, No 1 leaves Meyersdaleat1 P.M No.2 leaves Meyersdaleat............. 6P.M E@=First class rigs for all kinds of trav- el,at reasonable prices. KILLw= COUCH ano CURE THE LUNGS “Dr. King's New Discovery ONSUMPTION Price FOR {| ouchs and 50c&$1.00 OLDS Free Trial. Surest and GuloRoet Cure for all THROAT and LUNG TROUB- | 15s, or MONEY BACK. » FOR SALE. Finest Graphophone Outfit in Salis bury Offered at a Bargain. This outfit consists of a $25.00 Columbia Graphophone, a $4.50 Record Case and $18.00 worth of Records—72 in all, which is the capacity of the case. The entire outfit cost $47.50, and all is practically new and as good as the day the goods left the factory. It is easily the finest “talking machine” outfit in this town and vicinity, and is offered for sale at a great bargain. The entire outfit can be purchased for $35.00 cash. : The Graphophone without Case or Records can be bought for $20.50. Record Case can be bought singly for $4.00 or, filled with 72 Records, for $14.80. The complete lot of Records, 72 in all, can be purchased separately for $10.80. Follow- ing is a list'of the Records: Tenor Solo—To my First Love. “ 4 —Qh,don’t it tickle you? Quartet—Nationality Medly. Whistling Solo—Home,Sweet Home. Quartet—The Old Oaken Bucket. 4 —On Board the Battleship Oregon Auction Sale of Furniture and House- hold Goods. . Tenor Solo—1’m not particular. Pr! JAF PEPE fiy, Love. 10. Circus Gallop—Susa’s Band. 11. Whistling Solo—Love’s Golden Dream. 12. Tenor Solo—Oblige a Lady. 18. Baritone Solo—When the Hebrews open Pawn Shop in Old Ireland. 14. Picalo Solo—The Skylark Polka. 15. Quartet—My Old Kentucky Home. 16. Orchestra—Hands Across the Sea. 17. “ —The Nations before Pekin. 18. Trinity Boy Choir—Onward Christian Soldier. Quartet—Barnyard Medley. Rehearsal for the Husking Bee. Minstrels—Upon the Golden Shore. Russian Hymn—Gilmore’s Band. Baritone Solo—The Clock of the Uni- verse. Orchestra—Light as a Feather, Baritone Solo—Break the News to Mother. Tenor Solo—Would you if you could? Cornet Duet—Come back to Erin. Scotch Medley—Gilmore’s Brass Quar- tet. Baritone Solo—Brown October Ale. Quartet—The Sleigh Ride Party. “« —Rock of Ages. Baritone Solo—Hosanna. Orchestra—T he Birds and the Brook. Italian Vocal Solo. Quartet—Hark the Herald Angels Sing: Hebrew Male Quartet, Cornet Duet—Mid the Green Fields of Virginia. 38. Quartet—I stood on the Bridge at Mid- night. 39. Quartet—In Old Alabama, with Barn "Dance and Negro Shouts. 40. Vaudeville—Pumpernickle’s Silver Wedding. Orchestra Bells—Medley of Popular Airs. Baritone Solo—The Holy City. Orchestra Bells—Waltz Medley. Two Rubes in an Eating House. Musical Congress of Nations. Negro Shout—Turkey in the Straw. Musical Monologue—Having fun with the Orchestra. Quartet--Camp of the Hoboes. 49. Recitation--The night before Christmas. 50. Quartet--The Vacant Chair. 51. Baritone Solo--Let All Obey. 52. Tenor and Orchestra--Bedelia. 53. Baritone Solo--Back, Back, Back to Baltimore. Killarney--Gilmore’s Brass Quartet. Clarinet Solo--Southern Plantation Echoes. Minstrel Jokes. Minstrels-—-My Friend from My Home. ® --Our Land of Dreams. Minstrel Jokes. “ “ ABRERR ® Baritone Solo--Deep, Down Deep. Tenor Solo--Safe in the Arms of Jesus High School Cadets--Columbia Band. Bridal March from Lohengrin--Band. Manhattan Beach March--Susa’s Band. Nibelungen March--Band. Selection from Il Trovatore--Gilmore’s Band. Weddirg of the Winds--Gilmore’s Band. In Cheyenne Joe’s Cowboy Tavern-- Orchestra. Medly March, Broadway Hits--Orches- tra. . Come Where the Lilies Bloom--Gil- more’s Brass Quartet. 72. Duet--Old Black Joe. For further particulars, inquire at STAR OFFICE, ELK LICK, PA, 2% JRRRARBBERTE FF = * ~ bt MONUMENTS! MONUMENTS! If you want to purchase a Monument, Headstone or Iron Fence, call at our yard at No. 99 N. Centre St., Cumberland, or. at Frostburg, where you will see the largest stock in Western Maryland to select from, sold at prices that defy competition. J. B. Wirriaums Co., The Low Price Marble and Granite Dealers. 10-11 All kinds of Legal and Commercial Blanks, Judgment Notes, ete., for sale at Tae Star office. tf Sextette—Through the World wilt Thou Desirable Residence Property for Sale. Large corner lot, 66x196 feet, front- ing on the main street of Salisbury borough, having thereon a very con- venient and desirable 8-room house, a stable, good well, fine fruit, good board walks, etc.® The house has been re- cently remodeled and given three coats of paint. Everything about the place is in good repair, and the location is one of the most desirable in town. The lot is large enough for an addi- tional building or two, and the price at which the property can be bought is very reasonable. For further partic- ulars, apply at THE STAR office, Elk Lick, Pa. tf Desirable Pesidence Property for a 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 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. SAFE AND GENTLE horses at the Williams Livery. All good travelers and suitable for either young or old ersens. J. W. Williams, proprietor alisbury, Pa. tf. 3HOE 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 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. BEST HORSES, best rigs and best general equipments in the livery line, at the Williams Livery, Salisbury, Pa. Somerset County telephone. tf WANTED AT ONCE !|—Two good girls, white, for kitchen work, at Hay’s Hotel. Good wages. Apply to or address D. 1. Hay, Elk Lick, Pa. 174 FOR BEST LIVERY service, go to J. W. Williams, Salisbury, Pa. Good horses and best of rigs. tf 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 allkinds 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 ret em 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 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, etc. tf ENGRAVED INVITATIONS for weddings, parties, ete., 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 H& WEDDING Invitations at THE STAR office. A nice new stock just re- ceived. tf. IF YOUR BUSINESS will not stand advertising, advertise it for sale. You cannot afford to follow a business that will Ht stand advertising. YES, WE CAN !—We can supply cuts suitable for any and all kinds of ad- vertisements and job printing. Call at THE STAR office and see our large as- sortment of specimens. We can show you cuts of nearly everything that ex- ists and many things that do not exist No matter what kind of a cut you want we can supply it at a very low price. 60 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &C. Anyone sending a sketch and description may SC a abi. Jrencabie. Communion: on tions strictly bonddental HANDBOOK on Patents sen dest agency fOr s te Patents taken through Munn & receive special notice, tific charge, in the dsomely illustrated weekly. Largest ely. Ar? n oF any scientific journal. Terms, $3 ewsdealerd 0! a MU four months, §1. Sold byall n DAN oer Now York F St. Washington. RERDHM 01S SMASHED Between Weaver and Wana- maker Interests. *NEW MACHINE” THE WORST Zharges of Bribery ans Other Damag- ing Revelations Play Havoc In the Quaker City. [Special Correspondence.] Philadelphia, Sept. 25. Mayor Weaver's break withthe Wana- maker-Van Valkenburg-Gordon politi- cal combination will have far-reaching influence upon both. local and state politics. : > It was the power of the city adminis- tration of Philadelphia which gave the Wanamakers, Van Valkenburgs and the Gardons a political following in the last campaign. With the Mack combine of ward leaders working in harmony, they had a political ma- chine which drew thousands of votes from the Republican state and local tickets in November last. Without this antagonistic influence there is no doubt that Mr. Plummer would have been elected state treas- urer, and the Republican ticket in Philedalphia would have been success- Working with the Wanamaker news- paper combination against the Repub- lican ticket last fall were the politi- eians who trained with the city ad- ministration, the ward leaders seek- ing patronage, the contractors desir- ing to “line up with the powers that be,” and even the denizens of the ten- derloin, always anxious to stand in with the police, shouted loudly for ‘reform’ throughout that campaign. The City Party was successful, and enough votes were thrown to Berry, the Democratic-Lincolnite nominee for state treasurer, to elect him also. Then followed a series of plotting and scheming by the ambitious ‘“re- formers” eager to take advantage of the situation for their own selfish in- terests. There were nearly as many candidates for office as there were com- mitteemen in every ward of Philadel- phia. Throughout the state men who were active in the counties in the Lin- coln Party aggregation began to hunt for the loaves and fishes. The Wanamaker lieutenants in the insurgent movement against the late Senator Quay were among the most conspicuous of those who immediately demanded recognition. Promises made to Mayor Weaver and his friends were forgotten, and the old Wanamaker outfit proceeded to set up in business upon its own ac- count. Combine of Newspapers and Millions. It was figured out that with the Wanamaker newspapers and the Em- ery millions, the logical thing to do was to name Emery for governor. To do this the Wanamaker political man- agers had to first howl out Mayor Wea- ver as a gubernatorial possibility. They proceeded to set up the Lincoln Party state convention for Emery, and sueceeded in landing him upon the ticket for governor. They had a Wana- maker supporter in the old senatorial fight for a place upon the proposed fu- sion ticket, E. A. Coray, of Luzerne, but they were unable to carry out their program. ‘While the Democratic leaders assent- ed to the deal, the delegates to the Democratic state convention broke the slate and put John J. Green, a Bryan- ite Democrat of this city, on the ticket for secretary of internal affairs. This resulted in ‘the “fusion ticket” having three Bryanite Democrat running on it with Emery for governor. Mayor Weaver’ friends branded the Van Valkenburg-Gordon combine as a band of political traitors, after the Emery game was pulled off. The breech between the mayor and the Wanamaker interests widened day by day, until D. Clarence Gibboney was trotted out by the Wanamakerites as a candidate for the City Party nomination for district attorney against Mayor Weaver's per- sonal friend, Frederick J. Shoyer, who had resigned the $10,000 a year office of director of supplies under the Wea- ver administration, to make a canvass for the district attorneyship. Soon the lines were sharply drawn between the Gibboney men and the Shoyerites. What Weaver Discovered. All of the Wanamaker newspapers turned in for Gibboney, and their news columns and editorial pages were fill- ed with eulogistic matter designed to promote the Gibboney candidacy. The same newspapers were employed to attack or belittle the mayer and Shoyer. These were the same journals which a few months before had been exploiting Mayor Weaver's administra- tion and praising the mayor and his work without stint. The mayor soon found that a num- ber of the most influential men in his cabinet were setting up their own po- litical fences regardless of his wishes or his personal interests. Some of them were accused of using the patron- age and power of his administration secretly to build up a Van Valkenburg political machine to promote the cause of Gibboney and destroy the chances of Shoyer getting the nomination for district attorney. These officials of the Weaver administration, like certain leaders of the City Party, seem to have concluded that the support of the Wanamaker newspapers, or at least their friendship, was more desirable for them to have than the good will of the mayor, There was a desperate battle between the Gibboney men, backed by the Wanamaker newspapers, the Van Val. kexburg lieutenants in the City Party, ihe Gordonites and what is left of the 514 Mack combine and the Shoyer cam- paigners, many of them young mem- bers of the bar or churchmen with whom Mr. 8hoyer has been associated for years in church work, and ths friends of Mayor Weaver, both in and out of his administration. Upon the face of the returns of the City Party primaries, Shoyer had a ma- jority. of nearly 100 delegates. The Van Valkenburg men had the machinery of the City Party city committee. They named the chairman of the convention, and got control of the committee "on contested delegates. So confident was he of winning that Shoyer was present in the convention hall with his wife prepared to accept the congratulations of his friends when he would be nomianted. The Mayor Charges Bribery. The Gibboney men were sparring for time. 5 They rushed through a resolution for the convention to take a recess, and when the convention reassembled, after much disorder, Mr. Gibboney was de- clared the nominee by a majority of 29 votes in a total poll of 1072. A change of 15 votes upon this return would have made Shoyer the nominee. The Shoyer men at once insisted that they had been robbed of victory. Mayor Weaver was one of the most pronounced in denouncing the men re- sponsible, and repudiating the tactics by which his friend Shoyer was de- feated. : In a public. statement he said:, “The methods of that convention were worse than any convention of the old corrupt gang. | think a ma- chine which is protected by newspa- pers is far more dangerous than the most corrupt organization with news- papers against it. “l want to say most emphatically that I am as much opposed to a cor- rupt machine in its incipiency as I am ‘to one that has grown gray with age. “It seems that notwithstanding the fight I made for 18 months against a machine that a more powerful one had arisen, Phoenix-like, from its ashes. “] believe the recess of the City Party convention was forced and that during that recess the work of changing delegates was done by means of bribery. Before that time Mr. Shoyer had a majority of the dele- gates, and he would have received that nomination without question had the convention been continued in ses- sion. “Months ago I pointed out the dan- ger that might follow when if one political machine were destroyed a new and more powerful one might grow up. “Whether this has come to pass I cannot say. I sometimes wonder whether there is more danger in being surrounded by corrupt advisers than by ambitious ones.” When Mayor Weaver was challeng- ed to prove his charges that bribery was employed to influence the nomi- nation of the convention for Gib- bony he promptly accepted the chal- lenge and immediately submitted the affidavits of a number of delegates who admitted they had been ap- proached apd he personally appeared before an investigation committee to press his case. The scandal which followed was a great disappointment to sincere re- formers who were not familiar with the character of some of the men who have taken hold of the City Party ma- chinery in some of the wards of the city. Emery Boomers Chagrined. Mayor Weaver followed up his in- terview by demanding the resignations of members of his cabinet, with an announce t that hereafter he pro- poses to have none but those who shall be directly interested in the success of his administration in his cabinet. There is no doubt that the upheaval has had a serious effect upon the plans of the managers of the Emery movement and the campaign against the local Republican ticket. The -Lincolnite forces and the City Party leaders are demoralized. Without the active support of the city administration, the rank and file of their organizations will disinte- grate. There are nearly 19,000 city em- ployes, and the employes of city con- tractors and others identified with the administration will foot up 10,000 more. . With the mayor and his cabinet working in harmony with the Lincolg Party aggregation last fall fully 15,000 of these men voted for the Lincoln Party ticket and they influenced many thousands more to vote the same way. Not only has the break between the mayor and the Wanamaker newspa- pers and allied. political interests dis- couraged the Lincoln Party and City Party leaders, but thousands of voters not identified with any political or- ganization have discovered the hypoc- risy and sham of the whole Emery movement in this city and will be found supporting the full Republican ticket in November. A Combine Without a Following. Not a few of the politicians in the interior of the state were induced to co-operate with the Lincoln party in the belief that the Van Valkenburg combinatien in Philadelphia was go- ing to build up a political organiza- tion with the patronage of the Weav, er administration. With Weaver and the great army of Philadelphia officeholders cut loose from the Wanamaker-Van Valkenbudg- Gordon interests, the latter have little left but the newspapers, with which they have for years .been fighting Re- publican candidates. There is evidence on every hand that former City Party men and former Lincolnites are going to support Ed- win S. Stuart and all of his colleagues or the Republican ticket. STUART STANDS FIRM FOR A TWO-CENT RATE OF FARE He Leaves No Room to Doubt His Po- sition In His Many Speeches On His Tour of the Counties. [Special Correspondence.] Harrisburg, Sept. 25. Reports received here from every eounty in the state indicate a growing sentiment in favor of the entire Re- publican ticket. Visitors here during the last few days from the sections visited by Ed- win 8S. Stuart and his colleagues on the Republican ticket in their tour of the state report that Mr. Stuart has been making a very favorable impres- sion with the voters. He is standing squarely upon the party platform, and his words and manner clearly show that he is honest in his pledges to give the people a popular administra- tion, to insist that the corporations shall obey the law, and that they shall not encroach upon the rights of indi. viduals or discriminate against any one, and that they shall be obliged to give a fair return to the state and the people for the franchises which they enjoy. Mr. Stuart points to his record made as mayor of Philadelphia in the treat- ment of corporations, where he broke all records by insisting that the street railways should give the city value for the privileges which they enjoy. His stand by the taxpayers in that one fight alone meant the payment of mil- lions by the street railways for the paving of streets, which they would have kept in their treasuries or dis- tributed among their stockholders. Mr. Stuart is committed to the en- actment of legislation making two cents a mile a maximum rate of fare on railroads, and for the creation of a commission which shall have super- vision over the railroads of the state. For a Square Deal. In a recent speech Mr. Stuart said: “Much has been said upon the ques- tion of corporations, and I desire to say that I have not gone through the state tearing down, upsetting and de- stroying corporations, because my principle and my ideas are that they should be regulated according to law. Common carriers, railroad companies, all who may receive special privileges must be compelled to exercise those privileges fairly and squarely upon a square deal to every man in every part of the state. There should not be one rate for one man and another rate for somebody else, but they must all be treated as equal. As to the Republican platform, I stand absolute- ly and unreservedly upon it and will do everything in my power, and I know that in saying that I also speak for my colleagues, to bring about such legislation that will correct according to law any evils we may have, and correct them solely for the benefit and in the best interests of the people of this state. (Applause.) Will Guard the People’s Interests. “I have had in years gone by, if you will pardon the personal allusion, some experience in treating with a legislation wanted by corporations. That record has been made, and it is a part of the history of my native city, and can be inquired into by any man or set of men who desire to do so, and you will find that in my pub- lic record im dealing with corpora- tions my first and only desire and my ultimate purpose has always been to see that the interests of the people I represented, and whom I was elect- ed to represent, were properly, legally and honestly taken care of and pro- tected. Without attempting to de- stroy or to tear down, I have prom- ised that if elected governor of Penn- sylvania the interests of the people will be safeguarded and taken care of .in every legal and proper way that lies in my power.” Chairman Andrews, of the Republi- can state committee, has planned to have the gubernatorial candidate and his colleagues speak today, Tuesday, at Lewisburg in the evening; tomor- row, Wednesday, they will be in Smethport in the afternoon, and in Bradford in the evening; on Friday they will visit Tionesta, Forest coun- ty, in the afternoon and Warren jn the evening. Saturday, September 29, will be spent in Titusville in the after- noon, and Erie in the evening. What Emery Must Explain. Candidate Emery, of the Lincoln- ite Democratic combination, has up to date failed to answer to the charges made against him by Homer L. Cas- tle, Prohibition nominee for governor, or Dr. Silas S. Swallow. Mr. Emery has not explained how his Pure Oil company works in har- mony with the Standard Oil company in fixing prices. Mr. Emery has not told how Mack, Durham, McNichol and other politi- cians got stock in his company, ner has he explained what their influence has done to advance the company’s interest. Mr. Emery has not denied his own statements made before the inter- state commerce commission that his company got rebates on freight rates, just as he charges the Standard Oil with getting. Mr. Emery has not answered Robert S. Murphy, the Republican nomines for lieutenant governor, who wants him to explain how he got so immensely wealthy “fighting” the Standard Oil company. These and other matters Mr. Emery has yet to explain to the voters in his éour of the state. FC | Crude A Column Thoughts Home { Dedicated As They J to Tired Fall Circle | Mothers From the | As They Editorial | | Join the Pen:— | Depart- |Home Pleasant i Circle at vening | | Evening Reveries. | ment. | | Tide. -1It is just as possible to 2p a calm house as a clean one, a cheerful house as a warm one, if the heads set them- selves to do so. Where is the difficulty of consulting each other's weaknesses as well as each other’s wants; each other’s tempers as well as each other’s health ; each other’s comfort as well as each other's character; “Peace rules the day, where reason rules the mind.” It is by leaving the peace at home to chance, instead of pursuing it by sys- tem that so many houses are unhappy. It deserves notice, also, that almost anyone can be courteous and forbear- ing and patient in a neighbor’s house. If anything goes wrong or is out of tune, or disagreeable there, it is made the best of, not the worst ; even efforts are made to excuse it, and to show that it is not felt ; or, if felt, it is attributed to accident, not design ; and this is not only easy, but natural, in the house of a friend. I will not, therefore, believe what is so natural in the house of an- other, is impossible at home, but main- tain, without fear, that all the courte- sies of life may be upbeld in domestic society, a husband as willing to be pleased at home, and as anxious to please as in a neighbor’s house, and a wife as intent on making things com- fortable every day in her family, as on set days to her guests, could not fail to meke home happy. Let us not invade the point of these remarks by recurring to the maxim about allowing for tem- per. It is worse than folly to refer to our temper, unless we could prove that we ever gained any good by giving way to it. Fits of ill humor punish us quite as much, if not more, than those they are vented upon; and it actually re- quires more effort and inflicts more pain to give them up than would be requisite to avoid them.” Then, “Since trifles make the sum of human things, : And half our misery from our foibles spring; Since life’s best joys consist in peace and ease, And though but few can serve, yet all may please, Oh, let the ungentle spirit learn from hence, A small unkindness is a great offense. LOVE. When we observe the actions of men and women it sometimes seems as though we were ignorant of the real meaning and value of love. Especially in the treatment of those who offer themselves most fully and freely to us are we often most ungenerous and un- grateful. Is any mother ever repaid for the years of patient devotion she gives to her children? She, of course, gives in the right spirit, looking for no reward, but we should receive in the right spirit by giving generously in re- turn of our time, our thought, our ten- derness. “It’s only mother; anything will do for her!” If the words are not often actually expressed, the thought is too often acted upon. And yet if we stop to think, common decency tells us that only the best is good enough for moth- er—that her devotion, which surpasses all other love, is deserving qf the deep- est respect and affection, and that to forget her is the blackest and basest crime that man can commit. Mothers are love incarnate, and because love is the highest thing a man may know, and the most precious gift a man or woman may receive, he who disregards or wounds it is the lowest and most despicable of created things. Have we not all seen young girls wounding the very soul of love by dis- regarding a mother’s counsel and by refusing to share the burden of house- keeping with the tired mother? Have we not known young men who wrung the mother heart by rudeness, or by dissipation, or by neglect? Every mother should take the time and the money to keep herself and her children neatly and becomingly dress- ed. It is especially necessary that children should be taught both by pre- cept and example the value of dress. In childhood, habits are formed. The children who are accustomed to seeing their mother with her hair becomingly arranged and in a pretty gown, and who are themselves compelled while young to pay attention to little details of cleanliness and dress, will never grow up into slatternly men and wom- en. “TO CURE A FELON,” says Sam. Kendall, of Phillipsburg, Kan., “just cover it over with Bucklen’s Arnica Salve and the Salve will do the rest.” Quickest cure for Burns, Boils, Sores, Scalds, Wounds, Piles, Eczema, Salt Rheum, Chapped Hands, Sore Feet and Sore Eyes. Only 25¢c. at E. H. Miller’s drug store. Guaranteed. 10-1 HAVE YOU A WANT?—If so, try a small “ad” in THE STAR. Many wants can and are promptly supplied if ad- vertised in this paper. tf
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers