BIG BARGAINY! here,”” she was saying. “I have ts 2 = - 7. A slight Difference: IN THE GLOOM = e { . CARPETS, MATTINGS, : Ty : ENS OF THE GALLERY i i Fire, Fire, Tn etl a» % = @ Crop. destroying By Edith Miniter. I 2 ° = furred and feathered so ; li ® kd Fo Pests are made short A theatre is like an Italian avart- . ! : 5 SLilft of wit a reliable ment house.. The first floor of the b . a : + : hetel may be occupied by a prince, Now is the time to get your Moor coverings for : 1 P e = unerring STEVENS. tho nos: by & revpocted merchant. : 2 nev spring, and we have a large stock to select from. 5 e Q For Sport or Service Shove them i Dewy wedded y - . 5 STEVENS RIFLES— ookkeeper and the struggling pro- s store. Velvet, Axminster, Body Brussells and many more SHOTGUNS_PISTOLS fessional man; under the roof is tne clean, grades. . | are unsurpassed half-starved family of the begging t. oN 2 letter writer. In the orchersta chairs d Salt . : HIGH IN QUALITY of the theatre on this cold January ‘ . Can you afford to have your LOW IN PRICE evening were gathered the fashion- at Cat- : dwelling or household goods go ables. Back of them sat those on hig 1 up in smoke without a cent of in- Teme —_— the fringe of society. Above stairs : SS ] d surance with which to cover your obtain fromyour| } stamps for came the middle-aged folk from the 9 Joss? Dealer, weship | | 160-Page sll suburbs, and still above, in the zal- : : = 2 direct, express Tlustrated and Mi 5 lery, one saw poor students with 5 . . 5 Prepaid, upon Peaciiptive Miss Maria—I've got a new ma- prepa, vo p ~hi ar heads full of artistic dreams and | W CY anton oa STE its = he ane I'm learning to run it. | pockets insufficiently supplied with 1 dalS ] at Septet i 4 Vis Motor-mad—Oh, what kind money. 0 : 3 on STEVENS general firearm bi , Happiness, though, was there be- r wants . ’ when ordering: | | information. Miss Marja—Sewing machine! side them. Happiness especially lin- —- : d near a boy and a wom hom : . STEVEN gere y and a woman, who ne M ohair { 00ds! Oalion B, H. Miller, at the Blk ! LoL CD Fully Rxviained, mere chance had placed side by side, her. : Lick drug store, and have him f+ Chiisopee Falls, Mass where they could lean over the brass show you how small the cost . rail and gaze down on the stage, as if into a well. The boy was charm- : : rould be to have a polacy written y i All the latest plaids and shadow stripes. woud BE pO ing—a curly haired student with insuring you against such losses. : earnest eyes, and the long nervous : . A Ke V fimgers of the pianist. The woman ; was perhaps two years older than { | + 13, ’ « y BF | he in years, but wrinkles had already z ) ~ gathered about her eyes, and her X Or S, 0es, X LO P( N x . ore \V er! ; mouth twitched when she was not gent for aware of it, as do those mouths that ‘ . . . : . have tasted the bitter draft of sup- Tan Pomps and Oxfords in Childs’, Misses’, La- reme wretchedness. Her attire dies’ and Men’s Pat. Leather. Shoes and Oxfords % B Cook } Son denced a desire to make the most of ; + U. . things, one saw such desire in her in all gr ades. 1 many times washed white bodice, be- . . s Co | Senne de~ked with carefully mended lace; Lome and examine our goods. The prices, you In her. white: gloves, 36 oyvioasty will find, are right. ~N home-cleaned; in her hair, adroitly i - BOUNCING arranged to “hide the premature i ° . : sprinkling of gray. 1k | 1ck Supply i 0 “It is odd that we should meet i K ® - Ih OF SALISBURY. ) Capital paid in, $50,000. Surplus & undiyided profiits, $15,000. © Assets over $300,000. § PER GENT. INTEREST H. H. MausT, Vice President. ¢ On Time Deposits. ing $1.00 Fountain Pens at 85c., and Paul E. Wert $2.00 Foun- tain Pens at $1.50. All kinds of STATIONERY. FRESH GROCERIES, BIC, at reasonable prices. To close them out, I am sell- = That’s what the superb Pittsburg Visible Typewriter is, and it doesn’t cost a small fortune, either, as some do that are not nearly as up-to-date. None: BelieraArdAny Price! The Pittsburg Visible is practic- ally fool-proof, and just a lit- tle better than necessary. Stakes—That plug I bet on fell down and crossed the line tail first' Otherwise I had won a million! Touts—Well, you see, you bet on the wrong end of the horse! Not Wasted. longed to see this play above all else, but somehow I did not seem able to manage it until tonight, when kind fate sent a lithograph pass in my way. So many of my pupils have gone to Florida, you have no idea how a cold winter interferes with the work of the music teacher for be- ginners. If it be mild, families re- main in town; let but the thermome- ter sink and presto! they’re off to a warmer clime, little ones and all.” The play began. The leading wo- can, a woman with a vibrant voice, exhibited in a simple role an emo- tional quality long appreciated by her loyal admirers, and lately acknow- ledged by the world. As the play progressed it developed that sort of pathos that presently brings a sym- J. L. BarcHUS, President. He uarter for Garden i pathetic audience to tears. Down- ) ArLBErT REITZ, Cashier. oS Seed i ap : Ye ds. Ch For sale at THE Star offie. Al y stairg there was deft wiping of eyes, f @&@ DIRECTORS:—1J.L. Barchus, H. H. Maust, Norman D. Hay, A. M. €3 eeds, breaklast Moods, Deo. so typewriter paper and car- 1 in the galleries people wept openly | 2 E. Livengood; L. L. Beachy. | lates, Candies, etc. bon paper. Prices fair. aT Na B34 Snagaamed Tha curley haired | : . E. J. EGAN ey) \ Pp gave himself up uUnteservedly ‘ . [iH to the luxury of an over-powering } y leh emotion. With the artist’s nature pg he forgot his material woes in the mental woes of the woman in the a ’ : , play. : 9 “I hear you kissed the wrong girl Occasionally he turned, his beau- { ’ Our store 18 chucked full of OS, KIDNEY CURE in the dark last night.” tiful eyes swimming in tears, and v om» 0 “Nonsense! No girl can be wrons ; whispered to the woman. Broken . : “ VV to kiss. It merely happened that I | sentences, these were, or even de- Ed | ( A SQUARE FROM EVERYWHERE.” WILL CURE YOU didn’t kiss the girl I had intended to | tached words, interspersed with sighs i g Ver ' 1Nn 00 “VV kiss, that’s all. of that supreme content which ac- A ; 2 An excellent restaurant where good | of any case of Kidney or cs companies self-abandonment to abso- service combines with low prices. z 5 Inadequate to the Occasion. lute misery. to eat and our prices are always fair. ROOMS $1.00 PER DAY AND UP. Bladder disease that is not With the woman it was different. 9 The only moderate priced hotel of beyond the reach of medi- She did not weep. She was conscious only of a tugging at her heartstrings | 2 : i a i : ' [or We aim to please our customers by courteous treat- ED cine. Take it at once. Do while before her vision unrolled inci- + ment and prompt delivery of goods. Call to see us. : not risk having Bright’s Dis- dents of a sordid and miserable past. Very Respectfully, BERKEY & SHAVER, ease or Diab T She had been always despised, grind- : etes. here is ing poverty had ever been her por- S. A. Lichliter, Salisbury, Pa. Attorneys-at-Liaw, Coffroth & Ruppel Building. ’ SOMERSET, PA. nothing gained by delay. 50c. and $1.00 Bottles. ERNEST 0. KOOSER, i | i ERNE : : A i! Price $2500 F. O. B. Bellefontaine, Ohio. Touring Car, 4 cylinder 43£x43%, Transmission—Selective Type, three 34 inch wheels, 4 inch pneumatic tires, 112 inch wheel base. | Model B.-8. Five passenger 32 Herse Power. speeds, forward and reverse. bmn r— Place your order now, all orders filled in order of] their receipt. BELLEFONTAINE AUTOMOBILE CO. 106 WATER STREET, BELLEFONTAINE, OHIO. . Remmi > Attorney-At-Law, SOMERSET, PA. REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. SOLD BY ELK LICK PHARMACY. Summer Normal School. R.E.MEYERS, Attorney-at-Liaw, DISTRICT ATTORNEY SOMFRSET, PA. Office in Court House. with Teachers’ Examination. commodation of all grades. ticulars address 5-7 JENET O. McKINLEY. W.H. KOONTZ. KOONTZ & OGLE Attorneys-At-Tuaw, Office opposite Court House. J. G.OGLE SOMERSET, PENN’A DENTAL NOTICE. * VIRGIL R. SAYLOR, Attorney-at-Law, : SOMERSET, PA. Office in Mammoth Block. practice of dentistry. pain or any bad effects. DR.PETER L. SWANK, Physician and Surgeon, ELK LIOK, PA Successor to Dr. E. H. Perry. not be broken. .| fit any mouth. E.C.SAYLOR, D.D. 8, SALISBURY, PA, Office Corner Unjon St. and Smith Ave LETTERS FROM USERS OF THE [syracuse “EASY” Washe “Your machine is a complete success. I learned more about washing out of your little booklet than I ever would have {rom all the women you could stand in a row. I have been paying $1.25 a week for washing when I can do the same in two hours with the *“ EASY.” J. M. BYRD, Hampton, Va «We have tried the “ EASY ” and find it just as you represent it and the only washer I ever saw that Goss the washis Sjean | Withont rubbing on the board. It is easy to work and hin, 0rou; . ce! as no equal. Hoes the washing ik YE. E. LIGGETT, R. D. 1, Box 4, Avella, Pa. Make the washing easy for one-twelfth of the year at our expense. Wash everything washable in the house. If you cannot make the ¢* EASY ” earn gerted in the best possible manner. Special attention given to the preserva- tion of the natural teeth. Artificial sets in- inlay work. call at our office and see for yourself methods. It will be done cheerfully part. W. A. CLARKE, Somerset and Economy Phones. Our Undertaking Rooms and Resi FUTero Direclor and Emoaime. All work given the best of attention. Night calls answered promptly. Both pain. patient claims to feel the least pain. I will allow car fare on all bills amount ing to $5.00 or more. Yours respect fully, P. P. RiTTER. Office, Center St., Meyersdale, Pa. 5-7 The Salisbury Normal School will open Monday, May 4, 1908, and close Provision will be made for the ac- For par- I wish to announce that after May 4th I will have Dr. J. J. Kenney, of New York, associated with me in the We will devote the. first 10 days to extracting’ teeth, positively without I have my affice furnished with all the very latest improved appliances for making ~bridge—and crown work, also for making metal plates that can- Same can be made to We are also prepared to do all kinds of gold filling, porcelain filling and gold We would be pleased to have you and ‘let us explain all of the new and this involves no obligation on your We want the people to see how easy teeth can be extracted without We make no charge when the In order to introduce this new work, The Golf Girl—Dear me! How an- noying! The Caddy—If that’s all she’s got ro say when she breaks a club, it's bardly worth talking about Iit.— Pick-Me-Up. The Kind He Needed. ’ “1 think I shall have to grow a | - cad, Molly, How would you like tion, disappointed ambition her only surety, and a poor little ambition at that. For a little while youth had been hers, but she had thrown it away in unappreciated self-sacrifice. Talent had been hers, also, but it was early lost in application to unworthy work. A body forced to bear heavy burdens before the age of strength will shrink; tais woman’s mind had been unduly strained before develop- ment, to result in decay. All thi, ever shading the background, came into full view while the stage picture was to be seen. It was too pitiful for weeping. When the heart bleeds the eyes are dry. As the play went on happiness seemed within the grasp of the wo- man in the play. She had money at command; she would buy happiness She would bave nothing ‘iat she could not buy—but this, it appeared, was to be purchased. The woman in the gallery sat up and breathed quickly. Was happiness indeed to be had for the buying? She had never before known this. And if so, wnat had she to give in payment? Unconsciously she spoke aloud: ““Can I buy happiness?’ she asked. A hand met hers in the hot gloom of the theatre. The long, slender fingers of the .planist crushed her tiny nand within their grasp. His fingers crept to her wrist. He seem- ed to be taking possession of her, She could not move, she could not turn her head. Fascinated, she gaz- ed on the stage, she heard the words of the play uttered in vibrant tones, and all the time that relentless hand was on her throbbing pulse. “Into the moonlght—over the rmow—out of my life—into the moon- light—over the snow.” Thus spoke the woman on the stage, and the woman in the gallery felt all the pity of it. Had not she, too, seen the fair promises of life obliterated by the snow—faded into nothing when moonlight drove away ‘the deceptive twilight? This time, it should not be. Happi- ness—of a sort—was in her grasp. It should not go out of her life. | though, its price during the house-cleaning season return it at our expense. The curtain fell. After their emo- For RENT!—The H. G. Wil-| dence are in the Zimmerman building, | th a beard? NELS AND Pages 26-27 of our free book on Washing Formulas give you valuable . : : ; tonal “ : es 1a th informati i next door to Will & Saler’s Furniture | : : 7 uld be enough, uncle?’— | tonal orgy people came back to ihe Fr A Sup 3 information on washing flannels. nome é t helmi property. Apply to Wm. >uld one be enough, u on a oie] cpt omers ed DODCE & ZUILL, 26 Dillaye Bldg.; Syracuse, N."Y. ff i MEYERSDALE, PENNA. H. Engle, Elk Lick, Pa. noses, and eyes like boiled lobsters.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers