or. | society. Sal ‘is published every Raye s k Tas ®'is pub! ay, at EI Lick, 4] atl the ie following rates; > oon, £0 nena BR One 4 Ee By ois wont dence is far gel £h TN a Ho ence ARKe Al Ta orders, ete., EER oP. L. *ivengood. TRANSIENT | Locan No- § for first insertion: 5 cents 4 line for additional insertion. To regular vestisers, 3 ¢ ‘cents a line straight, except when ert ng news or editorial matter. No business aie will be mixed in with loeal news or editorial matter for less than 10 cents a line for Sach and every insertion. Eptrorian Purrs, when requested, invariably 10 cents or line, LreAL ADVERTISE EN. at legal rates. 3 A BRIAGE, BirrTH Ata Norioes wiil be charged for atd oenis a yj Hon but all such mention as the editor sees fit to make concerning such ot anyone's request, be gratis. s will be published free for 4 but non-patrons will be is OF RESPROT wil! be published for Raras Por Dispray AnvERTISEENTS will be made known on application. No Sree advertising.» will be given to anything Anakin £ character. Nothing will be 1 this paper, except free lec hone and all such things as are Cc. All advertisements | will be run and charged for until ordered discontinued. No advertisement pi be taken for less than 25 cents. —THE STAR office bas aah, ass i ine quipments, 8, thins out all e BUSINES RENTION, WANTS fing ~ finnoancements. The Blanks We Keep. Tae STAR keeps constantly on hand all kinds of blanks, such as Notes, Receipts, Probate Blanks, Criminal Warrants. Sum mons Blanks. Notices of Claims Due, Subpoenas, Commitments, Boaods, Mart- rages, . Leases, st¢., ete. All these goods are put up in, _nest and convenient form and sold rt eheap. Call and. in- ‘kpeet our stock A in need of ‘such goods: x EH A RNR [2 Buy your Fore fd. T sir. Don't get your per Onrds’ nntil you see ont gampl Over 100 styles 10 select from, 8 at THE BAR office. dbp sal 4 Boy y Your Farm Wagons, Grain Drie, kes, Mowers and 4 Binders of 3. T. Shivteys pei 3 w% ) tf The finest Invitation Cards in the coun- ty, at ThE Stan office, | IT Shipley. just’ received a onrload + of Buggies. if. Old papers for sale at this ‘office at 25 cents a hundred or 5 cents per dozen. They make good wrapping paper. also good cartridge paper for the miners. They are also good to put under carpet, on pantry shelves, ele. = A Handsome Christmas Present. Christmas will soon be here, and if you want to make your wife a handsome present. eall at THE STAR office and buy that handsome New Improved Wheeler & Wilson Sewine Machine for her. Itis the handsomiest and best Sewing Machine ever shipped to this town, and the price —well, it will make vou smile all over. BEATTY'S PIANOS AND ORGANS. Hom. Daniel Fo Beatty, the great Organ and Piano er, is building and st tore Organs and Pianos than ever. In 1870 Mr. Beatty left homé a penniless plow-boy, and by his indomitable will he has worked his way up <0 as to sell so far, nearly 100,000 of Beatty's Or- gang and Pianos since. 1870. Nothing seems to dishearten him; obstacleslaid in his way, that wonld have wrecked any ordinary man forever, he tars to an advertisement and comes out of it brighter than ever. - His instruments, as is well known, are very popular and are to be found in all parts of the world. We are ‘informed that during the next ten years: he intends to sell 200 000 more of his make. that means a business of $20,000,000 if we average them at $100 each. 1¢ Js already the largest business of the kind in existence—Send to Daniel ¥, Beatty, Washing- ton, New Jersey, for Catalogue. Cabinet Photo, Enyelopes for sale at Tre Stan office—just the ¢ ting you want to wend pictures sway Fancy colored Tissue Paper for snle ‘at Tae fiTAr office. Just the thing for la- dies’ fancy work. Get your blotters st’ THE BTAR office. We keep the best. i CORRESPONDENCE. | 3 LH Rockwood. : “Dosasional® is still in the land of the Hi A number of oor people may be met at the Connty Institmte. | We good Repnblicans haven't yet em- “marked on Balt river. = We will tarry a while and quietly observe our Democrat- “ie friends start the ‘governmental ma- chine” arunning, Republicanism is at a low ebb: Demoe: racy at flood tide. Where's dat ‘coon? He's all right—96. A full set of instruments have been or dered for thie Rockwood CurnetBand. The members desire to thank the public for sn liberally ‘contributing and making it possible to organi a first class band A protracted’ meeting will be com: menced on Thursday evening, in the M. Brooks. their newly Ap- pointed pastor, will officiate. We urge ‘ried at'the house of the bride's parents, last Wednesday evening. They are among the number of Rockwood’s best We join hands with their many friends in wishing them a happy. and prosperous voyage on the sea of matri- mony. : ; ~ C. L. 8. C., will meet at the residence of Henry W. Werner, on Friday evening of this week. Much interest is mani fested in the work and the meetings are . | regularly attended. We bespeak for the continuance of the same and know that beneficial results will be attained thereby Rev: MeQhay, of the T1 'B. church, preached an able sermon, jast Sundav. ‘Thanksgiving was observed: in its old time glory at this piace. As usual, a fatal day for “Mr Tarkey.” Next to the credit of Rockwood will be a new cornet hand. OCCASIONAL. Nov. 20th, 1892. The laws of health are taoght in the schools; but not in a way to be of mitch practical benefit and are never illustrated by living examples, which in many cases might easily be done, If some scholar who has just contracted a ¢Hld was brought before the school so that all conld hear the dry, loud cough and know its signifi: cance; see the thin white coating on the tongue and later, as the cold developéd. see the profuse watery expectoration and thin watery discharge from the nose, not one of them would ever forget what the first symptoms of a cold were. The scholar should then be given Chamber- Iain’s Congh Remedy freeley, that al might see that even a severe cold could be eured in one or two davs, or atleast greafly mitigated. when properly treated a8 soon as the first symptoms Appear. rv | This remedy is famous for its cures of coughs, colds and eroup: Tt is made es- pecially for these diseases and is the most prompt and most reliable medicine known for the purpose. 25 and 50 cent hottles for sale by Copland, the Druggist, Mey- ersdale, Pa. 4 Boynton, Mrs W. W. Grove. is visiting relatives {at Pair Hope, this week. The members of the Boynton hunting club have éhanged their aftention from ‘coons te turkeys, pheasants, ete. If they will be as successful in the latter asin the former, they will bring down a num- ber of feathered beauties, “Doney is the name of a. new town near’ | here, which owes its éxistence to the oil | excitement of some time ago. The town is one-fonrth mile north of Boynton and promises 10 be the leading town of the two, jn the near future. A store room is “Lalreadv-built and will possibly be fur- nished in the near future, and the site | for a large hotel is selected. Work on the latter will be pressed as fast as possi- ble, and a change of the postoffice from Boynton to Doney, “after March 4th, is aniong the possibilities. Mr. Wm. Doney, the founder of the town, is now living a retired life. Chas. May spent last Sunday at Hynd- man, with parents. 8. H.F. A son of Mr. M. D. Passer, a merchant of Gibraltar, N. C., was so hadly afflicted with rheumatism for a year or more as to be unable to work or to go to school. His futher concluded to try Chamberlain's Pain Balm on the boy. It soon cured ‘him and he has since walked one and a half miles to school snd back every day. 50 cent boftles for sale by Copland, the Druggist, Meyersdale, Pa. + : Arthur, 1H. We are having nice weather all fall Some people are plowing for corn and others are husking corn. We have had no snow yet, and but one good rain this fall. Wheat was an average crop, oats a poor crop, in general, corn about two- thirds of a erop and hay a good crop. Prices of grain, etc., are as follows: Wheat, 55 to 60 cents; oats, 27 cents; corn. 81 cents; hutter, 20 cents; eggs, about 19 or 20 cents, Noy. 22nd, 1892. JouN T. LEE.. For pain in the stomach, colic and cholera morbus there is nothing better than Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. For sale by Cop- lan, the Druggist, Meversdale, Pa. : Concerning the Defeat of President Harrison, EprTor STAR: —There are a great many different opinions given in regard to the causes of the defeat of the Republican party. at the late election. I have no doubt that the canses are qgunite numer- ous. Some appear to think that the ‘Homestead strike’ bad something to do with it, but T can not see that the girike the election. either way, hut 1 have ne doubt that things that happened while the strike was going on had some effect. For instance. the treatment that Private ‘Tama received at the hands of Col. Streat- er and the sanctioning of it by the courts of Allegheny conntv, Pa.. had the effect to cause a great many voters throughout the United States to come to the conclu- and the law-making power. equal, in ‘a government of the people. in itself could have had much effect on sion that it was about time to have a change in the heads of the government ‘In a government that 18 founded on the principle that all men are born free and not want anv Jaws that will give one man, . ; in the heat of passion. the power to de- ORGANS And PIANOS, Fshaved. he ot ‘of your uniform, dis-] "honorably discharged from the State Guards, be forever disfranchised and be. drummed out of camp.” The people do not want laws that will Bive c one man the power tocarry out such & “sentenge. with- out having the man tried by a court, gith- er military or civil, 10 ascertain whether he is guilty of (reason or anything else; and it is more than the majority of the people of a free government are willing to sanction. 7 have been a soldier in "a late war and served in the capacity . of company officer for three years, in active service. From experience and observation I know that no man, in any position is more hon- ored. obeyed and respected than a brave, generous, kind-heanted, humane military officer. 1 have known men of that kind commanding men “that every man in his command was ready at all times to sacri- fice his own life ‘to. ‘aave. the life of his commander. But an officer who had that kind of influence and ‘control over his men never resorted to corporal punish. ment for every imaginary breach of dis- cipline or mistake ‘that one of his men wonld make. A slight repremand was all that was necessary. : On the other hand, an excitable, ill-na- tured, narrow-minded officer that was al- ways ready and willing to inflict the se- vercst corporal punishment on his men for every mistake they might make, in- variably came to grief. sooner or later. He wonld soon be without a friend in his entire command. His men would naturally hate him and would do noth: ing for Him. except what they were com- pelled to do, and it would go from bad to worse. In some instances he wonld see that he was not master of the situa- tion and would resign. Others would try and fight it out and wonld hang on too long, and sometimes in the next en- gagemerit one of their own men wonld kill them. which wonld be the end of it From experience, I am satisfied in my own mind that corporal punishment is all wrong and should he aholished. 1 do not think that I am naturally a cow- ard. I had a great deal to do with all kinds of men. I have been on public works where T had several hundred men under my command at one time. and oft- en times the very roughest kind of men; but there never was a time that I had reason 10 he afraid af any man doing me bodily harm. But if ‘I were a military officer. and wonld hang up one of my men by the thumbs until he became un- conscious, and then take him down and shave one side of his head and face, and then let him go without killing him, . I would then begin to feel that I had better’ make peace with my God. 1 would feel pretty confident that the first opporinni- ty he got he wonld make an angel of me. And if I ever did happen to cross his path, and he wouldn’t at least try to as: sassinate me, 1 wonld feel like stringing him up again and shaving the other side of his head and face for being a fool. Jor HOOKER. Mr, Carleton, Aged 88, Was Ready, . Thirteen years ago Mr. Carleton bought in Buffalo the pine lumber for his coffin, kept it seasoning in his own house for three years, and then brought it to War- saw for the coffin to he made immediate- ly. It was 7 teet 4 inches long, ashe wished it to be “roomy and comforiable,” painted white inside and black outside, It was Mr. Carleton’s intention to take the coffin home, in ordef that it might be “handy” when required. but his wife de- murring fo this, it remained in Lawrence's undertaking rooms during the last ten years. The remains of the eccentric’ man were placed in it on Tuesday. At the sume time the order was given for the coffin, in October, 1882, Mr, Carle- ton also contracted with Hugh Curry to dig for him, when required. a wide. deep grave, to be laid up with brick; and with John Hanigan for a tombstone in. the shape of a miniature house with windows, doors and chimneys, and over the front door the words, “Home, Sweet Home.” The monument was constructed and has ever since heen in Mr. Hanigan’s marble warehouse. Monday Mr. Curry went to Carleton Hill, in Middlebury, and made the grave according to contract and Mr. Hanigan will soon place the monument at its head.—Cor. Buffalo Courier. Bargains! govern yourself accordingly: Minehaba Flour, per barrel Pillsbury’s Best, perbarrel...... ..... oil Vienna Flour, per barrel Reitz's Best, per barrel, Becker Flour, per barrel. ... Stanton’s Buckwheat Flour, per » Shelled Corn, per bushel White Oats, per bushel Salt, per sack Mining Powder... .. i iievvernsbisasins v1.40 Patent Meal and all kinds of Mill Feed at Bottom Prices. Give me a call and. 1 will save you H.C. STTAW. money. y 2 for the people and by tlie people, they do B BA w w w BD “CELEBRATED For Catalogues, Address Look at the following quotations and’ . \ ’ 0 ; v Having again embarked in the Grocery and Cotifectionery business, T will be pleased to wait upon ‘all my: old customers, and 48 many new ohes RE possible, dnd I invite the public generally sud a : 1 shall keep nothing’ my prices will be ‘found pig as. the lowest, No pains will be spared to and give them honest alue for their money. Yours for bargains, an Sal “ha BILLMEYER & BALLET, EIK LICK, PEN NA. —Manufacturers Of— Pine, Hemlock and Oak Lumber. Having purchased ‘the Beachy tract of timber, adjoining the borough of Salis- bury. we are especially well prepared to furnish first-class Cliestiat Féncing Posts, which we will sell at very Teusunabie prices. ©: - end CASPER LOECHEL, SALISBURY, <0 PENNA, EALER IN— BOOTS and SHOES. Repairing o of all kinds done with neatness and dispatch ive me your patronage, and Iwill try to Please you. City Meat Market, N. Brandler, Proprietor. —— A choice assortment of fresh meat always on hand. If you want good steak, go to Brandler. If you want a good roast, go to Brandler. Brandler gulrente es to please the most fastidious. living prices at Brandler’s. . HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID FOR HIDES. Insurance Agency Of Wm. B. COOK, Meyersdale, Penna. Agent for a full line of the best American and Foreign companies, representing over Forty-four Million Dollars of assetls. Uement of claims. Ww. B. COOK, - M, F. SMITH, Agent, General Solicitor and Collector. 8S. Lowry & Son, UNDERTRKERS., at SALISBURY, PA., have always on hand all kinds of Burial Cases, Robes, Shrouds and all kinds of gonds belonging to the business. Also have A FINE MEARSE, and all funerals entrusted to ns will receive prompt attention ¥" WE MAKE EMBALMING A SPECIALTY. THE WILLIAMS HOTEL, D. I. HAY, Hay's Block, | Sok Bill hla Stocialy, Honest weight and lowest PROMPT ATTENTION given to set: WEST SALISBURY, PA. (Elk Lick P. 0.) This hotel is large and commodious and is in, every way well equipped for the accommodation of the traveling public. _ It is situated just a few to guests. Board by the day, week or mouth at reasonable rates, This is a licensed hotel and keeps a fine assortment of pure, choice liquors. A Good Livery In Connection. Horses bought, sold or traded. Your patron- age solicited and courteous treatment assured. THOMAS 8. WILLIAMS. PROPR. R.B. Sheppard, | Barber and Hair Dresser. Al kinds of work in my line done in an ex- pert manner, My hair tonic is the best on earth—keeps the sealp clean and healthy. 1 respecifully solicit your patronage. SALISBURY FOUNDRY. The Salisbury foundry has been purchased by M. Knecht & Son, who have remodeled the plant and now have it in operation adjoining the depot grounds at West Salisbury. Machinery Repairs of All Kinds will be turned out in good shape and on short steps from the depot, which is a great advantage | are ; Do mot : Sostpt a Subsiiute, If your druggist does’ not sell them send 10c. or 2bc. in Read, Ponder; Reflee ane Ae : Act Quickly. Come and i in every department. carry in stock the finest in town. Do you need a pair Br gans? I have the best and cheapest in town. Does you wife need a fine dress? It can be bought here very low. You use Groceries, do you? Call; I will be pleased tosub- mit my prices. I keep a full line of such goods as Selec io a fest £lass gencral merchandise ¢ store. “The early bird catches the worm.” I would announce to my patrons and. PHOSpECvE that I continually keep on hand a full line of the Celebrated Walker Boots and Shoes. I also carry a line of the Fame ous Sweet, Orr & Co. Goods, Pants, Overalls, Blouses, Shirts, etc. Thanking you for past favors, and soliciting a a continuance of same, I remain very respectfully = “<0 J. L. BARCHUS, Salisbury, Pa. BUSINESS Established In 1857! Jer. J. Livengood & Son, Carriages, Buggies, Pha- etons, Spring Wagons, Mleighs, Ete. Se KP TS Any kind of a vehicle bulit to order, on short notice and at rock bottom rices. : : Repairing of all kinds neatly and promptly done. We also do general blacksmithing. prio no your old buggies, carriages, etc., and have them painted and made to look as well as new, ‘Don drive your faded and weather-worn vehicles, when yon can have them painted at a small cost. Give us your trade. We guarantee to please you in both workmanship and prices. Thanking ae you for past patronage, and soliciting a continuance of the same, we are very respectfully Jer. J. Livengood & Son, Salisbury, Elk Lick P. O., Pa. A FREE PASS o the rld’s ir! To the World’s Fair! The only consideration is that you buy your goods at L. Morrell's Mammoth Furniture rooms, whereyon will find a well selected stock. of all kids of Furniture, Carpet Sweepers, ‘Window Sl Shades, Wall Paper and border of all descripti and everythl taining to a first-class’ Furniture and House Pe store, All Furniture ovine for. guaranteed No. 1. You will also find one of the grandest, best and most complete stock of Organs, Pianos and Sewing Machines to be found in the state. The Chicago Cottage Organ 1a FINE, i : Get no other. The Gabler and Selivbers Planog pig JUST a yitg the lord Wherover ows. : a happy home, 3 The New Home and the Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Machines stand list—th best in the world, Get no other, ‘Al ‘goods sold dy FOR CASH OT on, tthe Dead of the 2 : Now, remember, on all the above goods you worth bought and paid for, before Sept. 1st, 1808, entitles you to one red ticket, and 266 red tick- ets entitle the holder to one first-class round-trip ticket to the World's Fair, free of Gharge. “Piek: ets are all transferable, and the lucky holder draws. he prize. Do not miss the Opportunity of a {| tifetime, but come and go with us. Get your tickets of ‘ROCK BOTTOM cash prices, and every dollar's 8 he = own : Lire TT Wars: an Ty Late pte a a Ad ance upon the part. of the | clare one of his fellow men guilty of notice. Square dealing guaranteed and pnblic 1 ominations and public gener | treason and say to him: *‘Your sentence ly. ? is that you be hanged up by the thumbs TR - "Miss Gertie Parks ‘and Chas. 0. “Wolt-| for 80 minutes, then be taken down and | $5000.00. mEA TTS Organs atBa ins. No cnlars, cat ©, both ‘of Rockwood, ‘were mar- have one side of your head and face Daniel F. Beatty, PWashington, oe ersey. Daniel F. Beatty, Washington, N. J. patronage solicited. . P address, ELK LICK, PA. MORRELL & SHAFENBERG. Main Office, Meyersdale, Pa. Cumberland, Md., nic Temple, Food} Pa, ; Large branch stores at 63 Balto. Maso
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers