ALL INS. rn, be- Ve you §, etc” ats. ) poms, ndow g per e and OW1. make —the llar’s | tick- Tick- y of a thy ttle rrect iver, 1 the R. le at th ? Store illa. R. i { he AE vm omerset County Star. VOLUME II. SALISBURY, ELK LICK POSTOFFICE, PA. THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1893. NUMBER 3s. KEstablished 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 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 i 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- 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, Wash Machines, etc. NOW 5 THE TIME TO PAINT, fences and general surroundings, brush up, improve and beautify your buildings. 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. Lichliter, — Dealer In All Kinds Of — GRAIN, FLOUR And FEED. 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 F'lour, emong 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. Goods delivered to my regular customers. STATLER BLOCK, SALISBURY, PA. LOOK HERE! Read, Ponder, Reflect and Act, AIND Act Quickly. Come and SER whether yow can’t buy doods 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 lire 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. BARCHLUS, Salisbury, Pa. and soliciting your future These goods are principally bought in car Store in J. A. BERKEY, ATTORNEY -AT-LLANK, SOMERSET, Pa. J. C. LOWRY, ATTORNEY -AT-ILAYK, SOMERSET, PA. A. L. G. HAY, ATTORNEY -AT-TLANK — —and NOTARY 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. Crose & Co., Hyndman, Pa. David Enos, Agt., Elk Lick, Pa. W. H. KOONTZ, ATTORNEY -AT-TLAY, Somerset, Pa. R.M. BEACHY VETERINARY SURGEOCIT, P. O. address Elk Lick, P a. Treats all curable diseases of horses. Office, 3 miles southwest of Salisbury, Pa. BRUCE LICHTY, PE TSICIAIT and SURGECIT, GRANTSVILLE, MD., offers his professional services to the people of Grantsville and vicinity. 8 Residence at the National house. W. POTTER SHAW, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, tenders his professional services to the people of Salisbury and vicinity. $F 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 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, ! 2 n> tenders his professional serviees 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, ELE LICK, T.A. 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. 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 liqudrs. 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 $F WE MAKE EMBALMING A SPECIALTY. Insurance Agency Of Wm. B. COOK, Meyersdale, Penna. Agent for a full line of the fest American and Foreign compandes, representing over Forty-four Million Dollars of assetts. PROMPT ATTENTION given to sel- tlement of claims. W. B. COOK, MF. SMITH, Agent. General Solicitor and Collector. WwW. F. Garlitz, Expressmanand 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. R. S. JoHNS. RuFus HARTLINE. Johns & Hartline, CONTRACTORS. Plain and Ornamental Plasterers. Jobbing, Kalsomining and Paper Hanging Promptly Attended to. ELK LICK, PA. POTTY HORSE AND CATTLE POWDERS No Horse will die of Cor 1c. Bors or Lune FE. VER, if Fontz's Powders are used in time. Foutz's Powders will e ure and prevent Ho CHOLERA. Foutz’s Powders will prevent GAPRs IN FowLs. Fontz's Powders will increase the quantity of milk anrjeon cromp twenty per cent.. and make the butter firm anc Fonz s Powders will eure or prevent almost EVERY Disrask to whjch Horses and Cattle are subject. Fourz’s POWDERS WILL GIVE SATISFACTION. Sold everywhere. - DAVID E. FOUTZ, Proprietor, _ BALTIMORE, MD. For sale Ly J. L. Barchus, Elk Lick, Pa. RR. 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. I respectfully solicit your patronage. John J. Livengood, GENERAL BLACKSMITH, SALISBURY, PA. All classes of work turned out in a neat and substantial manner and at reasonable prices. If you are not aware of this, we can soon convince you if you give us your work. TO CONSUMPTIVES. T he 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, AsTaMA, CATARRH, BRONCHITIS and all throat and lung MaLapiks. 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- ress. Rev. EDWARD A. WILSON, Brooklyn, New York. TOPICS find COMMENT. TaE bachelors in Congress will never get married if the sketch artists are no! called off. Wy does a man’s system require more rest and recreation after he becomes an office-holder? TrE 1893 crop of receivers seems to be entirely out of proportion to the other products of the year. IN Chicago he is no longer spoken of as Prof. Theodore Thomas, but as “‘Ted- dy, the horn blower.” CoNGRESS is long on talk and short on ideas, if it be fair to judge by the Silver discussion int the house. Muwregs ¢ of the House are not discuss- ing the Silver question to influence votes in that body so much as to satisfy con- stituents. WE are rapidly approaching the period when the man who isn’t financially em- barrassed will be regarded with suspicion by the community. Ir private scrip and checks are to be generally used as a remedy for the scarci- ty of currency, the remedy may prove more disastrous than the disease. THE country is now in the hands of Congress. And Congress is in the hands of the Democrats. Sympathy for the county is apprapy iate.—Omaha Bee. Tae English are experiencing some of the troubles which follow having a big navy. Their war are so thick that they cannot maneuver without ram- ming each other. vessels Dip you ever notice that the man in front of the grocery knows more than anybody else about what Congress ought to do in the present crisis is usual- who ly the fellow who has the poorest credit | inside the establishment? AN exchange refers to the farm. which | it calls the mud bank, as being all right | amid the crash. Yes, the mud bank is solid enough, but it limps terribly in dividend-paying department. Silver question settled has excused the revolutionary manner in which the mat- ter was brought before the House, but that will not prevent its being a trouble- some precedent at some future time. A WASHINGTON preacher sums up the financial situation thusly: “Atheism is the cause of our trouble at this time. Politicians say it is legislation, but the people have lost confidence in God, and when they do that, it is no wonder they lose contidence in their fellow-men.” Ir during a Republican administration the price of wheat had gone as low as it is at present, the fact would have furnished a text for columns upon learned editorial dissertation in the Tarift- reform press, upon tariff robbery and Re- publican ‘“‘cussedness.’ columns of "—Peoria Journal. Tne difference between parties on the pension question is easily the two great expressed: The Republican party seeks for reasons to put the old soldiers on the pension list; the Democratic party is straining itself to find reasons for taking old soldiers off the pension list.—Iebron (Neb.) Journal. Tue Chicago Herald comforts itself by saying that Republican legislation has placed the country where it is now. Bunt that is a false comfort. Republican leg islation placed the country where it was a year ago. The fear of what the Demo- crats have pledged themselves to do has put the country where it is now.—Buffalo Express. Ir there is one question which Mr. Cleveland especially desires to keep in the background, just now. it is the ques- tion of tariff revision. The Silver issue is the one he wants kept excinsively be- fore the people in the vain hope of blind- ing them to the real cause of the present business and financial troubles.—Pitts- burg Times. CIRCUMSTANCES alter cases. The Dem- ocrats are now claiming that the change of administration has nothing to do with causing the hard times; but if things were just the revetse—the country more pros- perous than ever, this year, every Demo- crat in the land would declare that to the change of administration alone belongs ail the credit. DURING the last campaign the Demo- crats of this city displayed a banner in their processions bearing this inscription: Vote for Grover Cleveland and get $1.25 a bushel for your wheat. A liberal reward will be paid for that banner at this office, and no questions asked. —Greensburg (Ind.) Review. Diwocratic Conaressman Conn, of In- diana, promised the 100 workmen in his musical instrument factory last fall that if they agreed to vote for him, and the National Democratic ticket was success- ful, in a year they earning 10 per cent more money. He got their votes, and Cleveland and Stev less than enson were elected, an increase of wages his workmen just been all laid off for a four shut down, and his reputation as a proph- et is below par with them. —Pittsburg Times. weeks’ We don’t seem to hear The hols shout- ing just now who rent the air with wild cheers when the news came over the wires announcing the trinmph of the Demo- cratic party and its platform of tariff butchery. No, those bovs are older now. They are not doing anything in particn lar except to wonder what hit them, and this does not work them very hard. They want to know when the mills are to start up, when suspended work will began again, when they ave to hear the old-time rattle of the dollars on pay day. — Wheeling Intelligencer. Durixess and lack of confidence have continued prevalent in the wool trade. Not money stringency, but the fear of tariff changes. is the chief obstruction to business. Already there has been a great curtailment of production, which has re- sulted from the dearth of new.orders and the unwillingness of manufacturers to make goods for stock. Imports of wool have been checked by the drop in values, but the increase in demand for domestic wools, that would ordinarily have resulted from a stoppage of imports, has not been experienced, because so much machinery has been forced into idleness by the fear of the effect of tariff changes. —The Man- "ufacturer. going | | | would be | thas a suggestion to | { _ | which goes to show but instead of getting | g have | Ix the summer of 1892, when the gaunt specter of cholera threatened our Alantic seaboard, President Benjamin Harrison { hastened from the side of a sick and dy- ing wife to direct and superintend meas- lures of protection against the invasion. its | | In the summer of 1893. when the business interests of the nation were in the throes THE anxiety of the people to have the | of panic and banks were crashing on all sides, factories and furnaces were dis- charging thousands of sturdy workers, and every day brought its fresh list of calamities, President Cleveland stolidly fished on or enjoyed the breezes of Buz- zard’s Bay on the yacht of his Wall Street friend. When danger threatens, the place of the Chief Magistrate is at his post of duty. for just and Journal. His absence affords reason proper criticism.—Albany OPENING of Presiden: Harrison's mes- 1892: — “In submitting my annual message to Congress T have great satisfaction in being able to say that the general conditions affecting the commereial and industrial interests of the United States are in the highest degree favorable. A comparison of the existing conditions with those of the most favored period in the history of the country will, 1 believe. show that so high a degree of prosperi- ty and so general a diffusion of the comforts of life were never before enjoyed by our people.” Opening of President Cleveland's mes- sage to Congress eight months later, Au- gust, 1893: — “The existence of an alarming and extraordi- nary business situation, involving. the welfare and prosperity of all our people, has constrained me to eall together in extra session the people's representatives in Congress, to the end that through a wise and patriotic exercise of the legis- lative duty with which they solely are charger, present evils may be mitigated and dangers threatening the flture may be averted.” sage to Coneress, December, Quite a change, isn’t it? for the change? If so, it? Did yon vote how do you like Iris a disgrace to this connty that any kind of an ignoramus can be elected school director. No man that eannot read intelligently and be able at least to write a good letter business to fill such an office. To show our readers has any what kind of things are sometimes hon- ored with the office of school director in this county. we publish the foliowing letter, which was recently written to a Somerset gentlemen by an ex-director: Pr August first 93. your Letter of July 26 is at lland. Tam Sory to Say that I Hand a 8chool Director Eny More and dond Know When the Board Will give the school out vou can. rite to— He is the Seratary of School Bonrd His adress is —_ Pa yours. me With such men tors, acting as school direc- is it any wonder that we sometimes see teachers county schools that enough to presiding over some of onr “haven't got sense pound sand in a rat hole?” We know of some Somerset county school directors that can neither read nor write at all. Any voter that will vote to elect such ignoramuses to such an office, ought to be kept behind bars, for the good of the countrv. prison arabid is in a sad Tue Hebron Nebraska Register, Democratic dilemma. free trade paper, It wanted a change, that the change is beginning to materiyl- ize, the Rewister getting alarmed. It is evidently to that journal that the threatened legislation of the Democratic party with the country, causing mills and banks to close by the thousands, thereby caus- ing one of the greatest panics but now seems to be plain is playing havoc on record. At any rate our western contemporary make, the tone of that the country is not realizing the great prosperity that was last fall promised by the Democrats. | Here is what the Register has to say: | “The man who is possessed of ability, and brazen-faced impudence to go right ahead at the present time and by an exhibition of his own *git up and git” create and inspire confidence in those with whom he has business transuc- tions, is in a position to render the people a serv- ice for which he should be canonized. The sit- uation at the present time demands nerve and a show of I don’t careadam.” Yes, the situation truly demands nerve and lots of it. It demands a great nerve than the Democratic party has or ever will have. The present administration has created a panie, owing to threats of and this, lashing them- selves into fury because capitalists have no nerve to invest their capital and keep the wheels of That there is a lack of nerve, is quite true, and the lack of nerve is due to a lack of con- fidence in the Democratic administration. deal more fool legislation, seeing Democrats are now OZress moving. = S A Rockford on Sunday last in- corporated into Lis forceful following: *‘O Lord, of the United States, arduous duties; of the different states, especially the Goy- ernor of Illinois. Be alight to him in wisdom to him in his ignor pastor prayer the bless the President stand by him in his bless also the Governors his darkness, ance, but above all make his heart as soft as his head. Teach him that this is a government of the people and for the people. and that he can in no wise become the government of the people.” port (Il11.) Journal. —Free-