es 2 all tie He shle and Josithy.. SALISBURY, ELK LICK POSTOFFICE, PA, THURSDAY, DEC, 17, 1891. BE. E x a Reeonthy Apdietiire ly » BAVE,. and tha best is always 4 by many patents, and tte logit: ly on scientifie prin- » TA CLAS = =f] 5 ho Beg to announce to the people: of this Vicinity that they have gone into parthership for the Holiday season and expect their | | Philadelphia, and thie hospitals of that Give Everybody A Good Zor ime. Do not let anyone deceive you by misrepresentation . into believing that Santa Clause is in any way interested in any {other stock or store. 7 his is Santa C laus’ Headquarters as will be proven by the abundance and variety of our stock, and by the liberal way in which customers will be treated. ¥ We have in store A Great Series Of Surprises for those who visit us. Great surprises in the variety of our display, great surprises in Christmas novelties, great surprises in Holiday bargains, and above all else Our Prices Arve Big Surprises: so surprisingly low that they offer the greatest inducement possible to those who know what a bargain i is. =P. S. Hay, Salisbury. 3 Mrs. S. A. Lichiiter, Deal In AY Kinds of : GRAIN, FLOUR And FEED. CORN, OATS, MIDDLINGS, “RED ‘poe FLOUR.” FLAXSEED MEAL. in, ‘short all kinds of ground feed for stock. “CLIMAX FOOD," a good medicine for stock. All Cirades of Flour, among them “pillsbury’s Best,” the best flour in the world, “Vienna,” “Irish Patent,” “Sen Foam" and Royal, GRAYHAY and BUCKWHEAT FLOUR, Corn Meal, Oat Meal and Lima Beans. I also handle . All Grades of Sugar, including Maple Sugar, also handle Salt and Potatoes. These goods ate ‘principaily bought in car- load lots, sud will be sold at lowest prices. Goods delivered to my regular customers. Store in STATLER BLOCK, SALISBURY, PA. The Holidays! Valuable Presents For Christmas! Ladies, Gents’ and Children’s Linen and Cambric Handker- chiefs, Silk Mufflers, Silk Ties, Hosiery, Gloves, Corsets, La- dies’, Gents’ and Children’s Underwear, Shawls, Skirts, Dress Goods, Towels, Table Linen, Blankets, Comforts, Ladies’ and Children’s Muffs, Children’s Fur Sets, Autograph and Photo- graph Albums, Dolls, Trumpets, Ladies’; (Fascinators, Ladies’ Hoods, Infants’ Sacks, Bootees, etc, 1 also have a nice line of . Ladies Carlisle Shoes and Men's Latrobe Hand-made Boots and Shoes. Have alsb just received 1A Nice Line Of. Fresh Groceries, such as Prunes, Raisins, Currants, Citron. Lemon Peel, Mix- ed Nuts, Mixed Candy, Crackers, and Sweet cakes. Thanking my friends for ? past patronage, 1: am Fespuirlly EDITORIAL REMARKS. Tir Pennsylvania railroad has gobbled the Allegheny Valley road. JoaQuin MILLER, the noted poet of the Sierras, has a son. who was recently im- prisoned for stage robbing. + A REPUBLICAN president and senate be. ing i in the way, it is not likely that the present democratic congress will be able to do much harm. Major ‘McKixLry, governor elect of Ohio, is very ill. No visitors are allowed to see him. He is suffering with a severe case of In grippe. “La GRIPPE is raging in all its furv in city mre reported to be over-crowded with victims of the disease. France has decidedinot to submit to | the dictation of church and priests will. be required. to respect the laws of that republics That's right, hurrah for France! Church and state should always be seper- ate institutions. Taz eldest son of the crown 2 prince of Denrgark is said to be geriously ill with 1a grippe. Perhaps the doctors are mis- taken in the name of the disease, us ‘his royal giblets” may only have that disease so common in royal families—insanity. Oun state superintendent of public in- struction recommends a longer school term -and compulsory education. His head. is level, especiily un compulsory education. Compulsory education is what the whole United States ought to have. Gro. Ww. 'DELAMATER. ‘the late repubii- can candidate for governor. of Pennsyl- vania, is now practicing aw in Tacoma, Wash: Any republican who gets let down as he did. inn republican atate like this. no donbt feels like taking: up his residence in afar countrys “Tar women of Madison, Kan., recent ly maided 8 drug store where whisky was soldand-demolished things in great shape: Everyone of them ought to be locked up | for s while, Not that we uphold the Hq: nor traffic. but hécausz one class of an- archiate js no bever than another. The| = outlaw druggist, ‘women and ol, Hn the muddle should bétsent to prison. - A PrrrsBURGR company ling just re- ceived w curload of tin from the tin mines of Durdngo, Mexico. McKinley's little bill'did it, and it is going to make this ‘| the grewlest tin manufacturing nation on earth, which will not only give employ- ment to thousands of American work: men, but will also cheapen *“the poor man’s dinner pail.” Hurrah for Bil Mc: Kinley’s billt ALL good citizens unite with Speaker Crisp in his hope that the inhors of this congress “muy result in the advancement ot the prosperity, the honor and the glory of our beloved country;” aud all rejoice that Speaker Crisp ‘is now so loyal a citi- zen of “our beloved country” against which but a few years ago he took up |. arms. This is a great and forgiving country. —Pittsburgh Commercial Ga zette, } Baa GIT Tar daily papers are every now and then telling us about bank cashiers ‘‘go- ing wrong.” When a poor man takes a loaf of bread to feed his starving children, it 1s called stealing and the thief is sent to prison. But bank cashiers neversteal; they only ‘go wrong.” Every man who goes to parts unknown with thousands of dollars of other people's money, in. stead of going to penicentiary, goes | wrong, Sava the Meyersdale Commercial if re- cent date: * Pupils who disobey the rules of a school should always be punished, and the punishment should bear some proportion to the magnitude of ‘the of- fense. That mode of punishment whiels consists of sending a pupil home is the acme of absurdity and should not be tol- erated by any intelligent school board.” Right yon are, Bro. Smith. This thing of being sent home is just the identical | thing that every wayward schoolboy in these days wants, Any, teacher who is Jin the hahiy of sending. upils home for misbehavior, is a snide and. A huinbug B te be sent t ome, 10 his mother Bro: Soa of jhe Meversdule Regs. ter, stoutly denies that lie refused to print} a certain issue of the Commercial on ac: count'of an alléged article that was unfit to pass through the mails. Well, since that subject has been broached, we will just state that Tae 81aR also has a ‘crow to pick” with Mr. Sulirie, becanse we have been informed that he tried to keep ‘the last copies of the Carleton Times that we sent 10 Moyeradale from being deliv- such a sul! trick, for there wasn't one} obscene word iu the item referred to; bat remembering that one whole issue of the Register was rejected at the Meyersdule postofice, on aceount of an alleged ob- scene article, and remembering that mis- ‘ery loves company, perhaps it would be well to nsk Mr. SBuhrie whether he has | anything to sny why sentence should not be passed upon him. If he is guilty we would like to have him confess his guilt and give his reasons for meddling into a ‘brother publisher's business, and if he is innocent we would like to have him as- sert his innocence. For our part we think it a very small picce of business | for one publisher to meddle with another publisher's private business. If a pub- Hsher publishes anything obscene in his paper; and thereby makes his paper un- mailable, it is his own lookout and his own biasiness. Tue and Feathers for Monkeylng’ With . Another Man's Wife. The following, which we clip from the Hebron (Neb.) Register, will beread with much interest by those of our readers who remember the Inte and highly re- spected Dr. D. P. Welfley and his way- ward son Richard, the family having once resided in this town: A special 10 the Bee from Auburn, | duted the 4th inst. suys: The particulars © of an exciting affnir has Just reached this eity from Johnson, a village ten miles west of here. - For some time past Dr. R. H. Welfley of that pluce has been pay- ing marked attentions to the wife of |. Charles Dreher, proprietor of a restau- |. raut there. For the past month Mr. Dreh- mer has been confined 10 his bed with sickness at his father’s house. Just across the street from the restaurant, Wednesday night while sitting in his office Wellley was surprised by eight masked men who took him to the outs skirts of town, stripped him of his cloth: ‘ing. poured a half gallon of tar over him, rubbing the festhers into this and then hauling him nearly to Tecumseh, dropped him with the warning that a hanging ‘would be the result of his reappearance in Johnson. The victim has lived in Johnson for ten years and has frequently been too in- timate with other men’s wives and was reported to have been on intimate terms with several other women at the time the citizens concluded to ship him. There is no clue to the identity of the masked nten; nor is any effort being made to disclose their names. WHAT THEY SAY ABOPT US. -. Somerset, Pa., Dee. 12th, 1801. Eprror 8tak;—1 congratulate you on the appesrance of your new.paper, TRE SOMERSET COUNTY STAR. It Jd knew how, 1 would also congratulate your con- stituency, on account of its good fortune in getting so bright u champion as TRE Bran. ; y : it : ’ Send one copy to this office regularly. And while [think of it, I will suggest that vou also send one copy to the Poor House, and you will get your pay from the Musselman fund, which was devised for the purpose of supplying the inmates of the Connty Home with literature; und there is a special claude in the contrat that inclndes all the newspapers pub- fished in Somerset county. With best wishes for your success, 1 am very truly yours, Pn E. BH. WERNER, Clerk of Commissioners’ Office. From the Somerset County Democrat, Tae SomMrrseT COUNTY Sram pub- lished at Salisbury, in this county, 9a new candidate for public favor. e have the issue of Dec. 10th on our table, JUST THINK OF 17 The Monopoly Busted 0 ou WANT A SEWING MACHINE? : $17.60 10 $30.00 Warranted 5 Years, WITH ALL ATTACHMENTS. Write for Mustrated Circulars of our Singers, New Home, Bto. By ordering a Machine direct fro nEAbyU AR ERS. NEEDLES for any ny machine, 28 ots per dozen, In Stamps. Address fhe Louisville Sewing Machine Cc G. 520 Fourth Avenue, oe LOTT Te 3 oa B|ESH and it is a very flattering record of the «. enterprise of its editors. Mr. P. L. Liv engood is the editor and publisher, and Mrs. P. L. Livengood 1s associnte editor. Until recently Mr. and: Mrs. Livengood |. published and edited a paper at Carleton, Neb., but removed the plant to Salisbury and started up this new publication. which is to be pablished Thursday: From the Somerset Herald. A new candidate for public favor, Tae SomerseT CounTY STAR, appeared Fri- day. TaE STAR is published at Salis- bury. this county, and is edited by P. L. Livengood, assisted by bis wife. Mr. Livengood is u native of Elk Lick, snd for a number of years past has published a paper in Nebraska. THER BTAR is au eight page six column sheet and the Her- ald extends it a cordial welcome and Wishes it abundant success: Oorrespondents Wanted. Ww e want news gatherers and itemizers in all pasts of the county, but want noth- ing but actual news reported—ho Hon- sensical rat, such as we sometimes see in gome of the communications tua few of | our esteemed contemporaries. We want nothing but sensible news items, plainly’ written. un one side of paper only, con- cerning snueh things as accidents, sinnse- ments, births, burglary, change of busi- ness flerms, ‘crops, crime, church news, deaths, discoveries, arrivals at hotels or elsewhare, divorces, elopements, election | news, fires, facts and figures concerning various things, festivals. improvements,” inventions. lectures, marriages; new en- | terprises; “persons. fenving the community, sales of 'redl estate. shows, exhibitions] and fairs, schools, secret societies, strange | Bhenomens, Juggestions or improvements *{ needed, ickness, argh ical « poration io. Ta Bran. tor atsionerr, : It has permanent] SE cured THOUSANDS of cases Proneun gue he ation orn
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers