wn, be- lve you ns, etc? 8, Ox- Hats. . Tr! TOOIS, Vindow ing per ade and f 'S known. to make ist—the dollar's red tick- . Tick- ity of a \ Ne St.» nd S— d. His oom to ere car- e heard: ad tem- it, you , r is the system. I throw- arilla is is oper- CHER. several e, with ing. We not sat- for two ordera as pay man to dit, and ‘ou pay 1arness? , $50 for can do no risk. you ac- lit if we ago we d wonld ad not Address TG CG ana. "HE STAR pictures yunty, at dhe Somerset v County Star. VOLUME II. SALISBURY, ELK LICK POSTOFFICE, PA.,, THURSDAY, AUGUST 3, 1893. NUMBER 33. 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. BracHHyY BROS, Dealers In H ARDWARE, 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- vies, Carriages and Phaetons. We also handle the best of Stoves, Ranges, Cutlery, Silverware, Harness, Saddles, tlorse Blankets, Lap Spreads, Tinware, Guns, Revolvers, Pumps, Tubing, Churns, SNOW IS THE TIME TO PAINT 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, and soliciting your future trade, we are, respectfully, BEACHY BROS., Salisbury, Pa. Mrs. S. A. Luchliter, CRAIN. FLOUR And FEED. CORN, OATS, MIDDLINGS, “RED DOG FLOUR,” FLAXSEED MEAL, in short all kinds of «round 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. I also handle All Grades of Sugar, including Maple Sugar, also handle Salt and Potatoes. These goods are principally bought in car 1oad lots, and will be sold at lowest prices. Goods delivered to my regular customers. Store in STATLER BLOCK, SALISBURY, PA. J. A. BERKEY, ATTORNEY -AT-LATX, SOMERSET, PA. J. C. LOWRY, ATTORNEY -AT-LAN, SOMERSET, PA. A.L.G. HAY, ATTORNEY -AT-LAN — —and WOT.ART PUBLIC, Somerset, Pa. Beprorp COUNTY marble and Granite Works. Monuments and Tombstones of all kinds. Lowest Prices and Best Work. 3 Write us for ESTIMATES before buying else- where. Ceo. W. Grose & Co., Hyndman, Pa. David Enos, Agt., Elk Lick, Pa. W. H. KOONTZ, ATTORNEY -AT-LANKY, Somerset, Pa. R. M. BEACHY, ‘ TETERIINNARTY SURGECIV, P. 0. address Elk Lick, P a. Treats all curable diseases of horses. Office, 3 miles southwest of Salisbury, Pa. BRUCE LICHTY, 1 PITT SICIAIN and STRGECXT, GRANTSVILLE, MD., offers his professional services to the people of Grantsville and vicinity. §-&™ Residence at the National house. W. POTTER SHAW, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, tenders his professional services to the people of Salisbury and vicinity. {2&™ Office, next door to Dr. Lichty’s office, Sal- isbury, Pa. : A. F. SPEICHER, = = . Physician And Surgeon, tenders his professional services to the citizens of Salisbury and vieinity. 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, tenders his professional services to those requir- ing dental treatment. Office on Union St., west of Brethren Church. Frank Petry, Carpenter And Builder, Elk Lick, Pa. If you 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. W.F. EAST, Painter and Grainer House and sign painting and all other work in my line done in a substantial and workmanlike manner. Your patronage solicited and satisfac- tion guaranteed. P.O. Address, ELLIE LICK, P.A. OOK HERE! : Read, Ponder, Reflect and Act, A IND Act Quickly. Come and SER 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? 1 carry in stock the finest in town. Do you need a pair Bro- vans? 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 line 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. THE VALLEY HOUSE, H. LOECHEL, Proprietor. Board by the day, week or month. First-elass accommodations. Rates reasonable. 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. West Salisbury House, (SUCCESSOR TO THE WILLIAMS HOUSE) 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 mouth at reasonable rates. This is a licensed hotel and keeps a fine assortment of pure, choice liquors. 1 respectfully solicit your patronage and will spare no pains to please my guests. R. L. WALTER, Proprietor. 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. 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 assets. PROMPT ATTENTION given to set- tlement of claims. W. B. COOK, M2 SMITH Agent. General Solicitor and Collector. WwW. F. 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. 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 MaLApies. 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, Put not your entire confidence in Con- gress, and your disappointment will be less. Tae fact should not be lost sight of that more swimmers than non-swimmers are drowned, and it’s about the same in politics as in the water. SECRETARY MoRrTON seems to be doing his level best to exhaust this year's sup- ply of red-hot weather before Congress meets, and when a man does his best he should be given credit for it. IT seems a little strange that every time a wealthy man is carried into court charged with wronging a poor girl, the cry of ‘“‘blackmail” should be raised, aud stranger that it should be so generally accepted. MANY national banks have failed, but no man isat all uneasy who has a pocket- book full of bills issued by the broken banks. They are Republican bank notes and are as good as gold at all times. There is no wildcat in national bank bills. —Blue Valley Blade. 1892. Grandfather's big hat. Wheat $1 per bushel. Wool 20 cents per pound. Homestead labor, $6 to $18 per day and striking for more. 1893. Grover’s big collar. Wheat 60 cents per bushel. Wool 10 cents per pound. Labor out of a job. Which did you vote for last fall? During the protective administration of President Harrison, the business in the country so prospered as to warrant an increase of 26,000 business concerns newly started up, but, notwithstanding this unprecedented addition to our mer- cantile institutions, the failures during the last year of his administration were 335 less than in the last year of President C'eveland’s first administration, and the total amount involved in such failures was less by $9,786.000. Immediately af- ter the election of President Cleveland in 1892 came the speedy contraction of business and preparation for unknown impending dangers, and the amounts in- volved in commercial failures increased over 200 per cent. in six months, compar- ing the first half of 1893 with the first half of 1892. THERE are some people who imagine that the only road to an office is abject obedience to a boss. When you find such a man you will see that his senti ments are curbed, his convictions are re- pressed and his independence is buried in a deep, deep grave. He wouldn't cherish an idea of his own for the world, for fear he might be accused of being dis- loyal to his party. If a thing emanates from the boss it is right, if it emanates from some other source it can’t be right. That is the head, body and tail of his creed. Legislation suits him or unsuits him, not according to its effect upon him, but according to whether itis made by his party or the other partv. Use me and abuse me, rule me and fool me, but give me an office. That is his motto, and what does he generally get? Fleeced by the bosses who make the laws and left by the bosses who parcel out the nominations and offices. What is the moral? Taboo the bosses and think and In speaking of the great improvements being added to the Meyersdale water works, the Commercial calls attention to the fact that other towns talk of improve- ments, while Meyersdale goes ahead and makes improvements. And that’s just where the Commercial tells the truth. What the people of this town must do is to act on improvements as well as to talk of them. Almost daily you can hear our citizens talking of the great importance of changing the name of this borough, also of the great importance of having electric light and a board of trade. But it all ends in talk, which should not be the case. Salisbury is to becomplimented for her enterprise in certain directions, but there are yet many things lacking that could easily be obtained—things that would add greatly to the town’s prosper- ity and growth. Fellow citizens, why talk and nod ap- provingly of the improvements suggested from time to time by Tue STAR, and then let matters rest at that? Why not make an_ effort to carry out the ideas you all seem to approve? Take a lesson from Meyersdale and profit by it. In some re- spects our town is far more favored than Meyersdale, but owing to a lack of en- terprise, it is doing without many things that would make it almost the equal and in some respects the superior of the large thriving borough that has grown out of the little hamlet that not many years ago From the N. Y. Press. One year ago the prosperity of this na- tion was at high water mark. Eighteen hundred and ninety-two was the banner year of American industrial progress. During the twelve months ending at midnight on the thirty-first day of last December the American people produced more and consumed more than in any year of their history. Our foreign trade broke all records by its magnitude. The volume of our industrial production and of our exchange of products among our- selves went far beyond all precedent. We produced a million tons more of pig iron than in 1891, and $2,000,000 tons more than Great Britain. We produced 200,000 tons of steel rails more than in the preceding year. We consumed 59,- 000,000 pounds more wool than in 1891. Capital and labor were alike fully and profitably employed. The factory wheels revolved unceasingly. Wages were high- er than ever before. Confidence was universal. Credit was freely extended. The integrity of the currency was assured. There were fewer commercial tailures than in any vear since 1882. The crea- tion of wealth for the nation and compe- tence for the toiler went on apace under the shield of America’s second Declara- tion of Independence, the McKinley law. Until the Bourbons and the Socialists elected Grover Cleveland there was ev- ery prospect that the same conditions would prevail during 1893. The capital of the nation, the executive ability of its leaders of industry, the enterprise of its merchants and the skill of its trained workers were at the highest point on No- vember 8 when the Democratic party triumphed on a platform that declared war on every American interest. With the election of Cleveland manufacturers and merchants began to trim their sails in anticipation of the coming storm. With the inauguration of Cleveland the storm burst. Confidence vanished. Cred- it led. Capital hid itself. Securities in which a large proportion of the coun- try’s wealth was invested rapidly dwin- dled in value till the loss to the people ex- ceeded $1.000.000,000. Bank after bank went to the wall. The liabilities of com- mercial failures for the first six months of the year were more than double those of the corresponding period of 1892. Menaced by revolution, American indus- tries ceased to expand and began to ret- rograde. Production has fallen and wa- ges have fallen with it. Every plate glass factory in the country has shut down. The great iron mines of the Northwest have suspended operations. Blast fur- nace fires are being banked. Trade bal- ances are against us. Textile mills are everywhere closing or restricting their product. The prices of wool and wheat have sunk to a ruinous figure. The farm- er suffers with the merchant and the manufacturer. Tens of thousands of American workingmen who last vear were busy and prosperous are idle and facing destitution today. The Press asserts explicitly and direct- ly that the prevailing conditions of disas- ter have been brought about by the threat of Demoeratic free trade. It asserts that the loss of the people through the depre- ciation of securities, the paralysis of cred- it and the stagnation of industries would not have taken place if Benjamin Har- rison had been elected instead of Grover Cleveland. The Press challenges Demo- cratic newspapers to deny this statement. Is there one Democratic organ that dares to assert that the disaster which has come upon the country since March 4 would have occurred if the Republican party had continued to control the gov- ernment? Many men think that men are persistent dunners. By way of comparison, let us suppose that a farmer raises 1,000 bushels of wheat a year and sells this to 1,000 persons of the country, a great portion of them saying, “I will hand you a dollar in a short time.” The farmer does not want to be small, and says, ‘“‘all right.” Soon the 1,000 bushels are gone and he has nothing to show for it, and then he realizes that he has fooled away his whole crop and its value to him is due in a thousand little driblets, con- sequently he is seriously embarrassed in his business because his debtors each ow- ing him a dollar treat it as a small mat- ter and think it would not help much. Continue this kind of business year in and year out as the publisher does, how long would he stand it? A moment's thought will convince anyone that the publisher has cause for persistent dun- ning. —Ex. We are informed that there is an Amishman up in the country, one who claims to be well posted, but who at the same time exposes his lack of knowledge by declaring that Abraham Lincoln was assassinated before General Lee surren- dered. We have been asked to inform him of his mistake. The man can in- form himself of his mistake, if he will re- fer to the pages of any United States his- tory. Almost every 10-year-old school boy knows that Lincoln was not assassi- nated until after Lee's surrender. Occasionally there afe people who set up a howl because they are visited hy some of their friends and the fact is not recorded in the local paper. Evidently, some people think an editor ought to be like God—able to see all people, at all times and in all places. But an editor isn’t built that way. There are lots of visitors coming and going that he knows nothing of, unless some one tells him. We are always glad to receive news items from our friends, but those people who do not take enough interest in their home paper or in their guests to report the news to the editor, should not make a laughing stock of themselves bv growl- ing about the non-appearance of things that they would like to see in print. Some people can not see very far into things that ought to be plain even unto fools; but there are no others so blind as those who do not want to see. A very interesting meeting of the Jr. O. U. A. M,, open to the public, was held in their hall on Centre street, Tues- day evening. It is not often that so much talent is represented in a single evening's program, and those who at- tended were well rewarded for their pains. The Junior Mechanics are a no- ble organization, which is doing much to neutralize the mischievous and un-Amer- ican influences of foreign socialists, an- archists, and other disturbers who abuse our hospitality while seeking an asylum on our shores, bv encouraging the spirit of patriotism and loyalty. Such an or- ganization should receive the hearty en- dorsement of the American people.— Meyersdale Register. A Perplexing Family. The strangest combinations resulting from the marriage of relatives. that we have ever heard of is that in the family of Lewis Osborne, who has recently re- moved to Pomona from Selma, Fresno county. Mr. Osborne tells us that he has been 10 years trying to unravel the per- plexities of relationship that his second marringe has caused. In 1888 he married a young widow, who was his own grand- father's third wife. little son. The couple have a Given this simple statement and a num- ber of peculiar family relationships may be deduced. For example. Mr. Osborne is a grandchild of his wife. His son be ing also a son of his (Osborne’s) grand- mother, is uncle to his own father. Os- borne becomes a brother to his uncles and aunts and also a stepfather to them. The boy, being the child of Osborne as a grandson, is thereby a great-grandson of his own mother, while his father may re- joice in the title of great-grandfather to his own child. Thus the boy becomes a granduncle to himself and his parents’ great-grandchild. Osborne is the boy's father and great-grandfather at the same time, and, being the husband of his own grandmother, enjovs the distinction of being his own grandfather as well. —Po- mona (Cal.) Progress. Charley Plitt had an experience with a calf at Rockwood, yesterday, he won't forget soon. He had it at the station to ship, when it kicked him in the stomach and bruised him considerably. Then it skedadled, and crossed the river, followed by Charley and two others; there it leaped over him as he was about to grasp the rope tied around its neck and escaped in the laurel. Charley returned home a sadder, wetter, and badly-used up man. —Commercial. Wives and mothers, do not fail to read the large advertisement of the Ohio Chem - ical Co., in this issue. It may be the means of saving your son or husband.