SRE ja bs AAR a - Ta aa - er Pe ~ TF The Somerset ® County Star. VOLUME II SALISBURY, ELK LICK POSTOFFICE, PA.,, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY o, 1893. Hstablished 1852. P. S. HAY, —DEALER IN— GENERAL . . MERCHANDISE. The pioneer and leading general store in Salis- bury for nearly a half century. For this Columbian year, 1893, special efforts will be made Unremitting and active in an- ticipating the wants of the people, my stock will be replen- "ished from time to time and-found complete, and sold at pri- ces as low as possible, consistent with a reasonable business Thanking you for past favors, and soliciting your very valued patronage, I remain yours truly, for a largely increased trade, profit. Salisbury, Pa., Jan. 2d, 1893. P. S. HAY, Hardware! Hardware! Do vou know that BEACIHY BROS, keep the fullest line of (‘ook and Heating Stoves on the market—alsu Guns and Ammunition, Paints and Oils, Lap Robes, Horse Blankets? ROGERS BEST SILVERWARE! Call on us for your Christmas and Wedding Presents in this line. and Road Wagons, which we will sell at this season at bottom prices. 3 And don’t you forget it we will have Sleighs on hand as ‘soon as the fleecy flakes appear. Headlight oll only 15 cents per gallon. Harness, We also have Buggies, Wagons, Spring Wagons Mrs. S. A. Lichliter, — Dealer In All Kinds Of GRAIN, FLOUR And FEED. CORN, OATS, MIDDLINGS, “RED DOG FLOUR,” FLAXSEED MEAL, in short all kinds of “CLIMAX FOOD,” a good medicine for stock. ground feed for stock. All Grades of Flour, Among them “Pillsbury’s Best,” the best flour in the world, *Vienna,” “Irish Patent,” “Sea Foam" and Royal. GRAYHAM 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. load lots, and will be sold at lowest prices. These goods are principally bought in car Goods delivered to my regular customers, Store in STATLER BLOCK, SALISBURY, PA. Bargains, Bargains! Cheap Holiday Goods Left Over. See them and you will want them and you will buy them. Ladies’ and Misses’ Fur Muffs I am selling very cheap; also Misses’ and Children’s Alaskas, Men's Winter Caps, Lumbermen’s Outfits, Elegant Dress Goods, Fine Flannels and Woollens, Cold-weather dry goods NEVER BEFORE ©) CHEAP AS NOW. All Domestics at ‘‘low-water-mark” figures. now is the time to buy. omy there is in trading with Prices within the reach of all, and Come in and learn what pleasure, satisfaction and econ- Geo. K. Walker, Salisbury, Pa. 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 guarantees to please the most fastidious. Honest weight and lowest living prices at Brandler’s. HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID FOR HIDES. Wahl's Meat Market is headquarters for everything usually kept in a first-class meat market. The Best of Everything to be had in the meat line always on hand, in- cluding FRESH and SALT MEATS, BOLOGNA and Fresh Fish, in Season. Come and try my wares. Come and be con- vinced that I handle none but the best of goods. Give me your patronage, and if I don’t treat you square and right, there will be nothing to compel you to continue buying of me. You will find that I will at all times try to please you. COME OI and be convinced that I can do you good and that I am not trying to make a fortune in a day. Thanking the public for a liberal patronage, and soliciting a continuance and increase of the same, I am respectfully, Casper Wahl. WHEELER And WILSON NEW HIGH ARM Duplex Sewing Machine. Sews either Chain or Lock stitch. The lightest running, most durable and most popu- lar machine in the world. Send For Catalogue Best Goods Best Terms Agents Wanted Wheeler & Wilson mfg. Co., Philadelphia, Pa. West Salisbury ROYAL ROLLER MILLS, headquarters for Fancy Flour, Grain, Feed, Ete. Custom exchange and hop. ping done promptly with best satisfaction: / Gill's Best Patent Flour a specialty 1am I. A. Reit Bi Pa. S. Lowry & Son, UNDERTRKERS, at SALISBURY, PA. have ‘always on hand all kinds of Burial Cases, Robes, Shrouds and all kinds of goods belonging to the business. Also have A FINE HEARSE, and all funerals entrusted to us will receive prompt attention .| 85 WE MAKE EMBALMING A SPECIALTY. It Has Cured Others ! WHY NOT YOU The Dr. G. F. Webb Elec- tro-Medical Appliances are the best now made for the cure of DEAFNESS, Catarrh, Rheumatism, Paraly- sis,"Loco-Motor, Ataxia, Lost Manhood, General Debility, Seminal Weakness, etc. £3 The only appliance that has been Success- ful in the cure of DEAFNESS. The Dr. CG. F. Webb Electrical Ap- pliances cure Sciatica, Prolapsus, Chlorosis, Leucorrhoea, Painful Menses, Sick Headache, Effects of Onanism, Spermatorrhoea, Sterility, Impotency, Seminal Weakness, Incontinence, Paralvsis, Diabetis, Nervous Debility, Insomnia, Lumbago, Kidney Complaints, Hernia, Spinal Disease, Dyspepsia, Constipation, Epilepsy, etec., ete. The only Successful treatment known. Thou- “Elec- which Sands of testimonials, tro-Medical Send 10 cents for Theory and Practice de- scribes treatment. mention this paper. B. B. Bliss, lowa Falls, la. BRUCE LICHTY, PITT SICIAN and STRGECLT, GRANTSVILLE, MD, offers his professional services to the people of Grantsville and vicinity. &£F" Residence at the National house. A. F. SPEICHER, Physician And Surgeon, tenders his professional services ‘to the citizens of Salisbury and. vicinity. Office, corner Grant, nd Union Sts., Salisbury, Penna. . A. M. ERA Physician And Surgeon. “ Office first door south of the M. Hey corner, SALISBURY, PA. Dr. D. O. McKINLEY, HSS » aN tenders his professioial services to those requir- ing dental freatment: Office on Union St., west of Brethren Church. WW. PF. Garlitz, Expressman and Drayman, does all kinds of hauling at very low prices. All kinds of freight and express goods delivered to and from the depot, every day. Satisfaction guaranteed. ’ Frank Petry, Carpenter And Builder, Elk Lick, Pa. If yon want carpenter work done right, and at prices that are right, give me a call. Will soon be prepared to do all kinds of furniture repair- ing. Wateh for my announcement. R. B Sheppard, Barber and Hair Dresser All kinds of work in my line done in an ex- pert manner. : My hair tonic is the best on earth—keeps the scalp clean and healthy. 1 respectfully solicit your patronage. THE VALLEY HOUSE, 2 nu. LOECHEL, Proprietor. Boned by the day, week or month. First-class accommedations. Rates reasonable. Tre ONLY LickNsEp HoTEL IN, SALISBURY. We take pleasure in ‘trying to please our pat- rons; and yon .will always find THE VALLEY & ed, oderly house. TOPICS find COMMENT. It will soon be an easy matter to or- ganize a full regiment of Statesmen-out- of wich. iEirise square pegs into round holes is an-edasy job compared to Presidential cabinet making. CALIFORNIA will for the first time be represented in the U. 8. Senate by a na- tive, when Senator White takes his seat. THE people of this country will know more about Hawaii in the next few weeks than ever before, and knowledge is al- ways desirable. Tar number of men of whom their friends say ‘‘he can go into the cabinet if he wants to” is already larger than the membership of the cabinet. GARzA’s men must have all been lead- ers. Another one of the “leaders” has just been captured. Why not corral a follower or two, just for a change? Tue House committee was appointed to get at the facts in the Panama canal scandal, not to suppress them by holding secret sessions. Do you hear, gentlemen? SENATOR VEST would better go slow in abusing the newspapers. ‘Tis a dan- gerous sport for a public man to engage in, as-he may learn to his cost, as others have done. : IF the Minnesota legislature pases that bill making it against the law to wear hoop-shirts in that state, every woman in the state will have one as soon as it can it be bought. DeMocCrATS charge Judge Jackson with being a Republican, and the Republicans say he is a Democrat. The Populists have not up to this time expressed any opinion of his politics: WrrH a gigantic type trust already in existence and a paper trust now forming, it would seew that the capitalists will soon be in a position to put the screws on the newspaper publishers. Tee killing of that amateur pugilist in New Orleans might be duplicated many times among both professionals and ama- tears, without serious detriment to the welfare of the rising generation. TreERE is danger that the University market may soon be glutted, if the craze for establishing new ones continues. By the way, are any of the existing universi- ties so crowded with students that they have to turn away applicants? THE Lincoln Call jocosely observes: “What base wretch has the nerve to say the west is not progressive? Look at Kansas. A double-ring legislative circus, with two clowns, two ring masters, any number of trick mules, monkeys and the like, and both going at once.” To wHat straits may the poor Indians be reduced next? An Indian princess is maid of all work in a Denver tamily, and she is said to” be a good one, too. 8he doubtless believes it better to hustle for ‘‘steen” dollars a month than to at- tempt to live on royalty and wind. -BoasT as we may of the wonderful stride this country has made in manufac- tures, in railways, in commercial progress, it is half a century behind in road-mak- ing. It is about time that the country should wake up and 1ake some interest in substantial road-building.—Toledo Commercial. _ THE old, old question of whether col- leges ean turn out ready-made journalists is being revived. At least one American college tried it and acknowledged Failure. A college education is a good thing for a newspaper man—or for any other man, or woman either—but a practical news- paper education can never be acquired outside of a newspaper office. PRESIDENT PALMER, of the World's Fair Commission, has eome out in the Detroit Journal in favor of Sunday open- ing of the exposition,. on constitutional as well as on moral grounds. The for- mer will commend themselves to Con- gress; the latter are commended to the well-meaning zealots who insist upon confounding the moral code with the obsolete Blue laws.—Somerset Vedette. Hon. Geo. V. LAWRENCE, of Washing- ton county, has prepared a bill repealing the “‘bounty on fox scalps,” which cost the counties in ‘the aggregate $40,000 a year. Mr. Lawrence claims that foxes are more beneficial than destructive, from the fact that they kill- large numbers of mice, which little animals; he says, do a good deal of harm to the bay ‘and other '| product of the farmer. "Ou the outside of a fox hole discovered recently he de- clared 161 dead mice were found, all of which were carried. there as food for the young foxes that had inhabited the dwell- ing: place under-the ground. i TIES ’ Tar Law aud Order Society of Pitts- burg having secured the conviction of the publisher of a Sunday paper, under a century-old blue law, announces its in- tention of preventing the sale and distri- bution of newspapers on Sunday. What these people need is a taste of their own medicine. Stop the street cars. Close the drug stores. Barricade the fruit and cigar stands. Lock the barber shops. Enjoin the livery stables. Make life on Sunday a misery for everybody who does not want to go to church badly enough to walk. A drastic and equal enforce- ment of the blue law will soon bring the bigots to terms.—N. Y. World. * THOUGH Ting in n'a Pittebirg jail and smarting under a sense of being wronged, Hugh O'Donnell had the manliness and courage to send out a letter to working- men, and this is his honest statement: “A number of alleged champions of our cause, who have been the source of con- stant injury to us, have been playing the part of the demagogue hefore the people of the country, pretending that the Home- stead strike was caused by the tariff. 1 was always a protectionist. I am a Re- publican and a Protectionist today, strong- er than ever, and although Iam in prison tonight, for the sake of myself and my fellow-workingmen who are interested in the cause of American labor, I beg of them not to think for a moment that pro- tection is not the greatest blessing that can be bestowed upon us.” Frew people are aware of the fact that women are eligible in this state to the office of school director, but such is the fact, nevertheless. Nearly every com- munity has some women that would make the best kind of school directors, and in many cases it would be good policy to elect them to the office; especially in places like Salisbury, where the ‘lords of creation” are always quarreling over school matters. Give the women a chance, for they can not do any worse than the men. The time is coming when tirey will all have the right to vote, any- way, and may God speed the day. The idea that women are not intelligent enough to vote and to hold office is a de- lusion. Some of the most. competent school directors in the world are women, and they can be found all over the West- ern states. In school matters the West is far ahead of the East, yet many of their most competent directors and county superintendents out there are women. And,” by tbe way, what class of men usually cry down woman suffrage? Al- most invariably the illiterate and unedu- cated class. There are exceptions, of course, but they are few. SENDING teachers and preachers to the World's Fair seems to be the latest adver NUMBER o. tising acheme among both city and coun- try newspapers. The Uniontown Stand- ard has determined to send the most popular preacher of Fayette connty, and the Genius of Liberty of that place has this to say concerning the purpose of its local contemporary : The Standard proposes to send the most popular preacher in the county to the World's Fair, free of expense to the preacher, his popularity to be determined by votes. Itis too much like “‘flyin’ in the face of Providence” to send a Fayette county preacher alone to Chicago.” The editor of the Standard should either go along and take care of him, or else send the preacher's wife with him. Chicago is a dangerous place for a popular preach- er to' be alone. The Genius would like to do something for the preachers, but isn’t especially concerned about the most popular ones, for they are'able to go if they want to. and we will take with us. and show him the sights, the poorest, meanest, most unpopular preacher in the county. He does=’t need to gel votes. We'll take his word that he fills the bill. If the other papers in the county will look a little after those between these ex- tremes, the preachers will be out of the way and we can give our attention to other unfortunates. Tar Democracy assured the people all through the late presidential campaign. that although they did not believe in the present tariff, nothing would be done too suddenly, or, even at all, to disturb the bus- iness interests of the country during Mr. Cleveland’s administration. We are glad to bie assured by a gentleman who is very close to the tariff throne, that this prom- ise has lately, in some way, come to the leading Republicans of the county, in such shape that they are convinced there will be no violent interruption of business or manufactares; and. while Congress will carefully reduce the heavy burden that has been laid on the shonlders of the peo- ple, by so-called protection laws, every move made will have regard to the pre- vention of any thing like panic or dis: tress.—Somerset Vedette. What dizzy rot the Vedette ean get off when it tries! What the Democracy as- sured the people all through the campaign and inits platform was this: “We de- nounce Republican protection: asa frand.” Many of the big men of the Demberatic party declared from the stump that the whole Republican tariff systerp would be wiped out at one fell swoop, ifthe peo- ple would return their party to power. But now, since Cleveland is elected, Dem- heratic politicians and newspapers are very busy telling the dear people that they .are not going to make any radical changes and tliereby cripple: the business interests of the conntry. H the Republi: can protective system was such a great evil before the election, why is it not so now? If it was in order to talk of tear- ing it ont, root and branch, before the election,’ why is it not in order to talk that way now? Simply because the Dem - ocrats have always disbelieved their own doctrine. Watterson on Lincoln. From Caesar to Bismarck and Glad: stone the world has had soldiers and statesmen who rose to eminence and pow- er, step by step, through series of geomet - rical progression, as it were, each pro- motion following in regular order, the whole, obiedient to well understood law of cause and effect. These were what. we call ‘‘men of destiny.” They were men of time. They were men whose cause had a beginning, a middie and an end, rounding off life with a his: tory; full, it may be, of interesting and exciting eveats, hut comprehensible and comprehensive, simple, clear and com plete. The inspired men are fewer. They rose from shadow and went in mist. They arrived, God's work upon their lips: they did their office. God's mantle about them: and they passed away, God's holy light between the world and them, leav- ing behind a memory half mortal and half myth. ‘Tried by this standard, and observed in an historic spirit, where shall we find an illustration more impressive than in Abraham Lincoln, whose life, career and death might be chanted by a Greek chorus as at once, the prelude and epilogue of the most imperial theme of modern times? Born as lowly as the son of God, in a hovel, reared in peaury, squalor, with no gleam of light nor fair surrounding, it was reserved for this strange being late in life, without name or fame or prepar- ation, to be snatched from obscurity, raised to a supreme command at a su preme command at a supreme moment and intrusted with the destiny of a na tion. Where did Shakespeare get his genius? Where did Mozart get his ma- sic? Whose hand smote the lyre of the Scottish plowman and staid the life of the German priest? God alone, and as surely as these were raised up by God, inspire by God, was Abraham Lincolir; and a thousand years hence no story, no irage- dy. no epic poem, will be filled with great- er wonder than that which tells of his life and death. If Lincoln was not in- spired by God, then their is no suelsthing on earth as a special providence or the interposition of divine power in the af fairs of men.—Louisville Courier- not Jour nal. lem ei sb ia RE i a A Rear Se