The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, June 01, 1893, Image 1

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VOLUME II.
SALISBURY, ELK LICK POSTOFFICE, PA.,, THURSDAY, JUNE 1, 1893.
NUMBER 25.
Hstablished 1852.
P. S. HAY,
—DEALER IN—
GENERAL .. MERCHANDISE.
The pioneer and leading deneral store in Salis-
bury for nearly a half century.
For this Columbian year, 1893, special efforts will be made
for a largely increased trade. 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
profit. Thanking you for past favors, and soliciting your very
valued patronage, I remain yours truly, P. S. HAY,
Salisbury, Pa., Jan. 2d, 1893.
BEACHY BROS,
Dealers In u AR E,
are now before the people with a most complete line of Shelf Hardware, Agricul-
tural Implements of all kinds, the Celebrated Staver & Abbott Farm Wagons, Bug-
gies, Carriages and Phaetons. :
We also handle the best of Stoves, Ranges, Cutlery, Silverware, Harness, Saddles,
Horse Blankets, Lap Spreads, Tinware, Guns, Revolvers, Pumps, Tubing, Churns,
ty Me TIVE I P A NT
NOW
brush up, improve and beautify your buildings, ‘fences and general surroundings,
and the best line of Paints, Oils, Varnishes, Brushes, Lime, etc.. can always be
found at our store.
Thanking you for a very liberal patronage in the past,
trade, we are, respectfully,
BEACHY BROS., Salisbury, Pa.
Mrs. S. A. Lickliter,
GRAIN. FLOUR Aud BLED.
CORN, OATS, MIDDLINGS, “RED DOG FLOUR,” FLAXSEED MEAL, in short all kinds of
ground feed for stock. “CLIMAX FOOD,” a good medicine 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.
All Grades of Sugar,
including Maple Sugar, also handle Salt and Potatoes. These goods are principally bought in car
load lots, and will be sold at lowest prices. Goods delivered to my regular customers. Store in
STATLER BLOCK, SALISBURY, PA.
LOOK HERE!
Read, Ponder, Reflect and Act,
A IND
Act Quickly. Come and
SEHR
whether you can’t buy goods cheaper here than
elsewhere in the county.
‘BARGAINS
in every department. Do you need a pair of fine shoes? I
carry in stock the finest in town. Do you need a pair Bro-
gans? I have the best and cheapest in town. Does your
wife need a fine dress? It can be bought here very low.
You use Groceries, do you? Call; I will be pleased to sub-
mit my prices. I keep a full line of such goods as belong to
a first-class general merchandise store.
Clothing, MEN'S CLOTHING/
I desire to close out my stock of Men's clothing. Great
bargains are offered in Suits, Overcoats and Pantaloons.
“The early bird catches the worm.”
I would announce to my patrons and prospective patrons
that I continually keep on hand a full line of the Celebrated
Walker Boots and Shoes. I also carry a lice of the Fam-
ous Sweet, Orr & Co. Goods, Pants, Overalls, Blouses,
Shirts, etc. Thanking you for past favors, and soliciting a
continuance of same, I remain very respectfully
J. L.BARCHUS, Salisbury, Fa.
and soliciting your future
I also handle
J. A. BERKEY,
ATTORINEX-AT-TLASKN,
SOMERSET, Pa.
J. C. LOWRY, }
ATTORNEY -AT-LLATR,
SOMERSET, PA.
A. L. G. HAY,
ATTORNEY -AT-TLAR —
—and WOTART PUBLIC,
Somerset, Pa.
W. H. KOONTZ,
ATTCRITE XY -AT-TLARR,
Somerset, Pa.
R. M. BEACHY,
VETERINARY SURGECOXT,
P. O. address Elk Lick, P a.
Treats all curable diseases of horses. Office, 3
miles southwest of Salisbury, Pa.
BRUCE LICHTY,
PETSICIAN and SURGECIT,
GRANTSVILLE, MD.,
offers his professional services to the people of
Grantsville and vicinity.
® 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 and Union Sts., Salisbury,
Penna.
A. M. LICHTY,
Physician And Surgeon.
Office first door south of the M. Hay corner,
SALISBURY, PA.
Dr. D. O. McKINLEY,
IDB NWSI , +
tenders his professional services to “nose requir-
ing dental treatmezt.
Office on Union St., west of Brethren Church.
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. I also do
all kinds of furniture repairing. Bring your
work to my shop.
THE VALLEY HOUSE,
H. LOECHEL, Proprietor.
Board by the day, week or month.
accommodations. Rates reasonable.
First-class
A fine bar room in connection with a choice
assortment of liquors.
We take pleasure in trying to please our pat-
rons, and you will always find THE VALLEY a
good, orderly house.
THE WILLIAMS HOTEL,
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
steps from the depot, which is a great advantage
to guests. Board by the day, week or month at
reasonable rates. This is a licensed hotel and
keeps a fine assortment of pure, choice liquors.
A Cood Livery In Connection.
Horses bought, sold or traded. Your patron-
age solicited and courteous treatment assured.
THOMAS S. WILLIAMS, PROPR.
Place Your Orders For
Monuments,
Headstones
—and—
Chimney Pipe,
—with—
J. B. WILLIAMS,
FROSTBURG, MD.
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
5" WE MAKE EMBALMING A SPECIALTY.
R. 8S. JonNs. Rurus HARTLINE.
Johns & Hartline,
CONTRACTORS.
Plain and Ornamental
Plasterers.
Jobbing, Kalsomining and Paper
Hanging Promptly Attended to.
ELK LICK, PA.
New Bark
Wanted!
The Standard Extract Co.
will pay $6.00 per cord of 2000
pounds for Chestnut Oak Bark,
delivered attheir worksat West
Salisbury, Pa. Bark must be
of this year’s peeling.
Upton H. White, Manager.
Beprorp County
Marble and Granite Works.
Monuments and Tombstones
of all kinds.
Lowest Prices and Best
Work.
$= Write us for EsTIMATES before buying else-
where.
Geo. W. Grose & Co., Hyndman, Pa.
David Enos, Agt., Elk Lick, Pa.
City Meat Market,
IN. 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.
HICHEST CASH PRICES PAID FOR
HIDES.
HIMMLER’S PIONEER
RYE WHISKEY!
In quantity to suit the pub-
lic. We guarantee its purity
and strength. Also a full line
of
WINES,
BRANDIES,
GINS, ETC.
—Also—
MONTICELLO,
OVERHOLT and
GUCKENHEIMER
RYE WHISKEYS.
Send $2.25 and get one gallon of PIO
NEER RYE WHISKEY, boxed. Sold
only by
John 3. Stump & Co.,
(Successors to F. Himmler & Co.)
20 & 22 Bedford St., Cumberland,
P.O. Box 190. Md.
TO CONSUMPTIVES.
The undersigned having been restored to
health by simple means, after suffering for sev-
eral vears with a severe lung affection, and that
dread disease CONSUMPTION, is anxious to make
known to his fellow sufferers the means of cure.
To those who desire it, he will cheerfully send
(free of charge) a copy of the prescription used,
which they will find a sure cure for CONSUMPTION,
AsTHMA, CATARRH, BRONCHITIS and all throat
and lung Marapies. He hopes all sufferers will
try his remedy, as it is invaluable. Those desir-
ing the prescription, which will cost them noth-
ing, and may prove a blessing, will please ad-
dress,
Rev. EDWARD A. WILSON, Brooklyn, New York.
TOPICS find COMMENT.
CuiNA to Uncle Sam—‘Enforce the
Geary law if you dare.”
BisMARCK says war is thankless. So
is the Kaiser, eh, Bizzy, old boy?
Hicm prices appear to be ‘‘doing” the
World’s Fair very thoroughly; likewise
the railroads.
IF the professional ‘funny men” are to
be given diplomatic places, we nominate
Bill Nye for ambassador to Mars.
HARMONY is so far an unknown quan-
tity in the musical department of the
World's Fair, and it is not over plentiful
in any of the departments.
Tae World's Fair management won
the first fall in the contest with the Gov-
ernment for Sunday opening, and 125,000
i eople attended last Sunday.
TweENTY hours between New York and
Chicago! And yet there are people los-
ing sleep every night trying to devise
THERE'S a fortune ahead of the ingeni-
ous man who can devise a method of
utilizing the coldness hetween politicians
for the manufacture of artificial ice.
Gov. PATTISON vetoed the compulsory
education act. We think he made a mis-
take, but then he was probably looking
to the preservation of the Democratic
party.
Ir there were more women like the
Texas widow who shot and killed a man
for circulating stories against her char-
acter, there would be less slander in the
world.
ATTORNEY GENERAL OLNEY savs the
World's Fair shall not be opened on Snn-
day; the Chicago people say it shall be.
Which will win? THE Star will bet on
Chicago.
Dax LAMONT's eye-sight must be very
bad, if the statement that he has been
looking for a man to be Assistant Secre-
tary of War ever since the 4th of March
be correct.
Tae U. S. Congress having made a
failure in its alleged attempts to curtail
the power of trusts, the anti-trust Con-
gress, which meets at Chicago, June 5th,
will now try its hand.
tection against cholera.
The time may
vet come when all danger of catching
that well known disease,
avoided by vaccination.
love, may be
SENATOR VORHEES will have a catch-
as-catch-can wrestle with the Civil Serv-
ice Commission to settle the dispute about
the Terre Haute postmaster, and Grover
Cleveland will be the referee.
THERE is a lesson for those business
men who are disposed to devote much
time to politics in ex-Secretary Foster's
reason for his failure—‘‘neglect of busi-
ness occasioned by mv devotion to poli-
tics.”
THE report that the Infanta winked
the other eve at Grover and tickled him
under the chin, while Mrs. Cleveland and
the Prince were looking the other way,
is probably a campaign lie started by
some anti-royalist Spaniard.
THE promoters of the Nicaragua canal
would like nothing better than for the
United States to establish a protectorate
over Nicaragua; but the rest of the peo-
ple might be curious enough to want to
know where they would come in.” See?
SOME people appear to be greatly sur-
prised at the recently announced inten-
tion of the Mohammedans to send mis-
sionaries to the United States. They
have as much right to try to convert us
as we have to do the same for them
and doubtless their success will be fully
equal to ours,
ArtorNEY JonN R. Scott, of Somer-
set, spent the day in this city in the in-
terest of several of the candidates from
his county in whom he is interested.
Mr. Scott has the name of being a good
*‘button-holer,” and those who witnessed
his operations were somewhat reminded
of the methods of a New York confidence
man, from the manner in which he would
take hold of the old farmers and try to
make them believe that they should do as
he bid them.—Johnstown Herald.
The Commercial Shows its Ears.
The chronic case of bellyache that
presides over the uncertain destinies of
that would-be newspaper known as the
Meversdale Commercial, last week slop-
ped over to such an extent as to make
people wonder whether its editor is a
fool or a crazy man. Many have come
to the conclusion that he is both.
He first finds fauld with a poster job
that was printed at Tue STAR office, but
as the person for whom it was printed
was satisfied with it, it does not matter
much whether it pleases the cross-eyed
critic of the Commercial or not. We ad-
mit that the piece of poster work was
none of the best, and that it was a little
on the order of the Commercial’s black-
smith work, but we couldn’t very well do
any better just at the time it was printed.
We were caught right in a time when we
had nearly all our poster type set up in
other jobs, and as this one had to be
printed on very short notice, the best we
could do was to do the best we could,
and so we resorted to patch work. This
same thing has bappened time and time
again to many printers that have more
type than can be found in THE STAR and
Commercial offices combined. When it
comes to doing poster work, we take no
back seat for any printer in this county,
and we can show samples of our product
that are far superior to anything the
Commercial can trot out. We are readv
and willing to pick out a dozen or more
of our best samples of poster work, let
the Commercial do the same, and then
secure a committee of competent printers
to decide whose work is the better. Now.
put shut up. Any printer will
once in a great while turn out a job that
is not first-class, and such blacksmith
shops as the Commercial seldom turn out
work that 7s first-class. All that hurts
the Commercial is the fact that THE STAR
scoops in so much of the work that it
(the Commercial) would like to secure.
But where our esteemed contemporary
gets off its base the worst is in its half-
column of childish babble headed ““Crook-
ed Politics.” Tt tries to make it appear
that becanse Tue Star made favorable
mention of Adam Fogle as a candidate
for the nomination of County Commis-
sioner, that we are making an attack up-
on the other candidates. But as Tur
STAR has never said an unkind word con-
cerning any candidate at present in the
field, as all our readers well know, we
fail to see how the Commercial can sub-
stantiate its charge. If expressing our
choice of candidates for certain offices
and saying a few favorable words in their
behalf is wrong, especially when making
no remarks about other candidates, either
pro or con, then men
“Crooked indeed!
Lou Smith ought to be the last man in
Somerset county to accuse others of he-
ing crooked in polities. It will be re-
membered how he tooted his bazoo for
Ed Scull, last fall, and how he ridiculed
the candidacy of J. D. Hicks. He wrote
as though Mr. Hicks had no right to be
a candidate, but that gentleman got there
just the same. And in speaking of Mr.
Scull, it will also be remembered by hun-
dreds of our readers how he was vilified
and abused by the Commercial. several
years ago. All the vile epithets that
could be heaped upon man, this
same Lou Smith heaped upon this same
Mr. Scull. We appeal to you, citizens of
Somerset county, did he not do so? Yes,
fellow citizens, he did and you all know
it. The Commercial at that time was a
weekly tirade of abuse, the vilest and
blackest ever published in any paper that
ever existed in Somerset county. But all
of a sudden ‘‘a change came o’er the sea,”
and the Commercial ceased its ugly charg-
es against Mr. Scull and began to laud
him to the skies. In fact it began to
slobber all over him and refer to him
only in the most endearing and compli-
mentary terms. The Commercial has
been a staunch supporter of Mr. Scull
ever since. But what caused this sud-
den and great change of heart? What
was the price paid to you, Mr. Smith?
Thou vile scavenger and manipulator of
crooked politics, please answer. Did yon
swallow your own vomit for nothing?
Did you lie about Mr. Scull when you
abused him or when you praised him?
Surely youn could not be acting justly and
honorable in both cases. Show the peo-
ple another case of politics so crooked as
yours, if vou dare. Now that you have
opened the subject of crooked politics,
we will show vou how to close. If we
can not do you justice, there are several
honorable and we'l known gentlemen in
the county who will help us, and who
will write over their own signatures, too.
As to our attack upon Mr. Colborn,
which the Commercial speaks of, we care
not who likes it or who does not like it.
We had sufficient grounds for the attack,
but we will never swallow our own words
as the Commercial did in Mr. Scull’s case.
Money can’t buy us, which is a fact that
Mr. Colborn well knows, even if Lou
Smith does not.
In conclusion we wish to say that the
Commercial’s chief object in view, at the
present time, is to injure THE STAR'S bus-
iness. Slippery Smith hates to see a
newspaper in Salisbury and does every-
thing to harm it that he can. This has
been his sneaking game ever since we
located here. He wanted to locate here
himself, shortly after he was ousted out
of the office now occupied by the Regis-
ter, but because he was so well known
here that he was not wanted, and because
the citizens of this town offered Tur
STAR good inducements to locate here—
because of all these things, gentle reader,
he is like the dog in the manger. Old
slippery can call us ‘‘small” if he wants
to. We do not claim many angelic qual-
ities; but if we can not show up a clean-
er, more honorable and more manly rec-
ord than Lou A. Smith in our dealings
with our fellow men, then may God have
pity on us. A man of his age that can
get patronage only through undeserved
pity, as has been the case with him for
the past few years, should be satisfied
without trying to injure the business of
others through falsehood. There is some-
thing wrong with a man of that kind.
We have a right to publish a paper in
this town without Lou Smith’s consent,
and whenever he tries to unjustly injure
THE STAR or the town in which it is pub-
lished, we will defend our business and
our town. We will never put up with
an uncalled-for attack like he made upon
us last wéek. We will maintain our
rights, first, last and all the time, let
come what may.
up or
indeed are all
’
wrong. polities,’
any