1d ad- eyers- Tuecil- thing The mpt- R. , be- you ete? ls. wi, 2 of - 5 its a ake per der TAR 1res he in every department. carry in stock the finest in town. SD SETS rere a em The Somerset County Star. VOLUME I1. Kstablished 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 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 hanking you for past favors, and soliciting your very for a largely increased trade. profit. valued patronage, I remain yours truly, Salisbury, Pa., Jan. 2d. 1893. P. S. HAY, BEACLHY Bros. Dealers In H ARDWARE, nre 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, Carringes and Phaetons. We also handle the best of Stoves, Ranges, Cutlery, Silverware, Harness, Saddles, 'Torse Blankets, Lap Spreads, Tinware, Guns, Revolvers, Pumps, Tubing, Churns, Wash Machines, etc. NOW IS THE- TIME 0 PAINT. brash up, improve and beautify your buildings, fences and general surroundings, aud the best line of Paints, Oils, Varnishes, found at our store. Brushes, Lime, etc., Thanking you for a very liberal patronage in the past, and soliciting your future 1rule, we are, respectfully, BEACHY BROS., Salisbury, Pa. can always be Mrs. S. A. Lichliter, — Dealer In All Kinds Of — GRAIN, FLOUR And FEED. ('ORN, OATS, MIDDLINGS, “RED DOG FLOUR,” FLAXSEED MEAL, in short all kinds of z.ound feed for stock. “CLIMAX FOOD,” a good medicine for stock. All Grades of Flour, «mong them “Pillsbury’s Best,” the best flour in the world, “Vienna,” ‘Irish Patent,” “Sea Foam’ » «1 Royal. GRAYHAM and BUCKWHEAT FLOUR, Corn Meal. Oat Meal and Lima Beans. I also handle All Grades of Sugar, =-luding Maple Sugar, also handle Salt and Potatoes. These goods are principally bought in car 1 dl lots, and will be sold at lowest prices. Goods delivered to my regular customers. Store in STATLER BLOCK, SALISBURY, PA. 00K HERE! Read, Ponder, Reflect and Act, A IND Act Quickly. Come and SER irhether yow can’t buy goods cheaper here than elsewhere in the county. BARGAINS Do you need a pair of fine shoes? 1 Do you need a pair Bro- I have the best and cheapest in town. Does your ve need a fine dress? It can be bought here very low. You use Groceries, do you? Call; I will be pleased to sub- + t my prices. I keep a full line of such goods as belong to a irst-class general merchandise store. 1 Y' siker Boots and Shoes. ( < C Clothing, MENS CLOT HING/ i desire to close out my stock of Men's clothing. Great »irzains are offered in Suits, Overcoats and Pantaloons. he early bird catches the worm.” | would announce to my patrons and prospective patrons .t I continually keep on hand a full line of the Celebrated , I also carry a line of the Fam- » ov Sweet, Orr & Co. Goods, Pants, Overalls, Blouses, 2airts, ete. Thanking you for past favors, and soliciting a »atinuance of same, I remain very respectfully f. L. BARCHUS, Salisbury, Pa. Speicher’s Drug Store! Behold We Are Come! Selah! And verily we are here to stay. Immov- able as the Pyramids of Egypt or a grease spot on a pair of ice cream trousers. And we have with us a full stock of the purest and freshest Drugs, Patent Medicines, Druggists’ Sundries. Soap, Perfumes, 1vi- let Articles. choicest assortment of Stationery and Books in town, Jewelry, Spectacles, ete. Arctic Soda Water and Hire's Root Beer constantly on draught. Ice Cream Soda every Saturday afternoon and evening. Prompt attention and satisfaction guar- anteed. A. F. SPEICHER, Prop., Elk Lick, Pa. 43000 PARGELS OF MAIL" FREE J \ Jui FOR 10 1-CENT STAMPS 3 VE Sa GF ra 30 days will be for 1 year boldly turers you'll receive, probably, thousands of valuable books, papers, samples, magazines,etc. All free and each parcel with one of yourprinted address labels pasted thereon. EXTRA! We will also print and Prepay. postage on 500 of your label addresses to you; which stick on your envelopes, books, etc., to \\ prevent their being lost. J. A. WARE, of Reidsville, N. C., writes: “From my 25 cent address in your Lightning Directory I've received my 500 address labels and over 3000 Parcels of Mail. My addresses you scattered bh among publishers and manufacturers, {\ are arriving daily, on valuable parcely DP of mail from all parts of tbe World.” World’s Fair Directory Co., 402 Girard and Frankford Avenues, Phila., Pa. BEN HUR, Best Value for the Money. Strong and Durable. 1%-Inch Cushion Tire, $75.00. Pneumatic Tire, $100.00. Central Cycle Mfg. Co. INDIANAPOLIS, IND. THE CENTRAL, Ap HIGHEST GRADE, $135. CATALOGUE FREE. P. L. LIVENGOOD, Agt. at Elk Lick, 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 ©& WE MAKE EMBALMING A SPECIALTY. What is this . SALISBURY, ELK LICK POSTOFFICE, PA. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1893. NUMBER 42. 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 HTDES. 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. 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, 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, IRELAND will be an independent nation about the same time the British House of Lords is abolished. GRORGTA is right “in it,” this year. Besides being liberally fed with official pie, she is developing paying gold mines. SARAH BERNHARDT now maintains for her diversion a menagerie including sev- erallions. Sarah is somewhat of a tigress herself, according to reports. “THERE is nothing new under the sun.” Coal was money among the Indians ages ago, and coal is still money, or a mightv good equivalent therefor. It's $12 a ton in London. Tue World's Fair will pan out finan- cially about on a par with the average stock company—the bond-holders will get their money, and the stockholders will get—left. “To mim that hath shall be given.” Labor Commissioner Wright has by au- thority of a special act of Congress heen given the additional office of Superintend- ent of the Census. CoNGRESSMAN COOPER, of Texas, wants Congress to wait until the people of the country can hold a special election on the silver question before finally dispos- ing of it. Not a bad idea, either. AN honest election is the noblest work of a Renublican and the shining mark of attack from a Democratic majority like that which is trying to repeal the Federal election laws in the House.—Philadelphia Press. the Democrats in the states where elec- tions are to be held is not to bet a cent on the success of any candi- date of their party.—St. Louis Globe- Democrat. this year Hoke Smiri has discovered that there is a Democratic party in the north as well as in the south, and that many northern members of the party are friend- ly to the old soldiers. That is one reason why his infamous pension order was modified. —Cleveland Leader. cause of their fear that the loss of it might cause another panic in the United States, was worse than absurd. THE constituents of Gov. McCorkle are still expressing their indignation at the course of the governor in abandon- ing the position he occupied last fall on the subject of protection, and it begins to look as if the Democracy of West Vir- ginia was badly divided upon the tariff. Gov. McCorkle finds it more difficult than he thought to run with the hare and hunt with the hounds. His honest party friends do not understand how he could denounce the tariff as an iniquitous fraud and robbery, last fall, and in less than a year thereafter implore Congress to per- petuateit. Hence these indignation meet- ings.—Cumberland News. Tae President of the United States is a Democrat. The Senate is Democratic by a majority of 5. The House is Demo- cratic bv a majority of 84. The Demo- cratic platform on which these majori- ties were secured promised the repeal of the Sherman act. The Republican mi- nority has heen prepared to note for the repeal of the Sherman act at any hour of any day since Congress first assembled The Sherman act is not yet repealed, and the Democratic apologists for this Demo cratic betrayal of trust are screaming that the Republican minority prevents the passage of the Repeal bill. Do they take the people for fools?—N.Y. Trib- une. . THE increased activity shown by train robbers has had the effect of pntting the railroad companies on their guard. Two attemps to rob have been frustrated. and apparently the Baltimore & Ohio Rail- road escaped an unpleasant experience near Pittsburg by being forewarned and forearmed. It is well for the railroad companies to take precantions commen- surate with the danger, but the Govern- ment should take a hand also. There is a bill pending to give the National Gov- ernment special power in such cases in the interest of inter-state commerce. It ought to be passed. It is of far more vital and present interest than the repeal of the election laws, which is occupying the attention of the House of Represen- tatives to the exclusion of everything else.—Philadelphia Press. A rEw weeks since the Democrats were howling that this was a silver panic and that no change for the better was to be anticipated until the Sherman law was repealed. Having, as they thought, impressed this belief upon the country, a portion of the Senators of that party de- termined, notwithstanding the charge that it was the cause of all our troubles, that the bill shall not be repealed and so far they have succeeded in their object. But the money panic has passed by, the scare has gone. money is abundant, and the fact is patent that silver was not the trouble. Mills are silent. business re- mains prostrated, thousands are out of employment, not because of the money panic, but because of the threatened de- struction of our manufacturing and min- ing industries by the passage of a Demo- cratic free trade bill.—Somerset Herald. TrE claim has always been made that the political party now in power was the party of the people. It has been set up as such and held up as sach with a species of idolatrous worship; as representing the masses, the wage earners and the toilers, and a class distinction was made between them and the rich. This exists no more. The sham fabric has been swept from the political workshop. The party now in power represents the rich, not the poor. It is a party of the few, not of the masses. Let the wage earners and the toilers consider what tiiey have received for their votes. Work? No. Employment? No. Food? No. Mon- ey? No. Loss of work? Yes. Loss of employment? Yes. Loss of food? Yes. Loss of money? Yes. The promises made to them before election have not been kept, but they have got the sure and true returns from their votes with full compound interest. But they are not all served alike. The rich of their party are It is a matter of history that during the long period of Republican supremacy from the end of the war to 1893 the aver- age rate of wages steadily increased, and the cost of living diminished. What will be the record of four years of Democratic supremacy, from the present outlook ?— Toledo Blade Ir the Van Alen incident should result in the abolishment of the entire diplo- matic branch of the government, the country would be just the amount of money paid out for the maintenance of It is the only bow (ring) which cannot be pulled from the watch. To be had only with Jas. Boss Filled and other watch cases stamped with this trade mark. Ask your jeweler for pamphlet. Keystone Watch Case Co., that service ahead, and no interest would suffer, except the individual interests of liplomats thrown out of a job. NEwspPAPER readers have grown ac customed to the absurity of much of the alleged news cabled from Europe, but the recent statement that English financiers hoped there would be no more gold ship- PHILADELPHIA. ments from New York to Europe, be- well cared for. The man with money, but with one vote onlv, has safely in- vested his money, but the masses with their many votes may starve. The Pres- ident of the people's party, so mis-named, has no use now for the votes of the mass- es. but he has been bought with the mon- ey of the rich man whom he sends as an Ambassador to Italy to represent the peo- ple at Rome. The people's representa- tive at the court of Rome is to be a rich man who has bought and paid for his position with money—with cold cash. Is this a fit representative for the people, for the wage earners. for the honest masses? Eradicate such rascals. They do not represent the people, they are the party of the few. Pull down the golden image.—American Economist. Little vegetable health producers: De Witt’s Little Early Risers cure malarious Democracy’s Responsibility. From the N. Y. Press. A few sillv Democratic organs are still trying to humbug their readers by cack- ling about the “distrust” eansed by the Sherman law. The sham is threadbare. It is time that it was dropped. The Sherman law has not caused the “distrust” that has closed hundreds of factories, bankrupted thousands of firms and impoverished multitudes of Ameri- can citizens. Under a Republican ad- ministration we had the Sherman law in full operation with marked commercial prosperity and the most encouraging in- dustrial development. The Sherman law has given valuable assistance to the West- ern silver industry, and furnished the country with about one hundred and fifty millions of urgently needed currency, every dollar of which is equal in pur- chasing power to the gold dollar today. With Benjamin Harrison in the White House the nation knew that the integrity of every dollar earned by toil would be protected by the whole power of the na- tional government. It knew that the Re- publican President stood ready to issue bonds to any amount that was necessary to maintain the public credit. It knew that President would never sign a bill framed to prostrate American industry and degrade the wages of Amer- ican labor to the level of foreign pauper- ism. The merchant, the banker, and the wage earner REE 3 RR Harrison pursued their callings in confidence and security, conscious that behind their just interests there was all the might and all the credit of the nation. The triumph of Democracy swept away every one of these safeguards. The poli- ticians who had threatened to destroy protection and beggar labor came into office with full power to execute their threat. The President stubbornly refused to issue bonds to maintain the Treasury reserve, and deliberately sacrificed the business interests to make an ‘‘object lesson.” The country knows the rest. The responsibility for the loss and de- struction of the last six months belongs not to the Sherman law, but to Grover Cleveland and the Democratic party. Lament of the Unemployed. Backward, turn backward, OQ Time, in your flight, Let the mill whistles sound promptly tonight; Just as they sounded anear and abroad Before we had voted Protection a fraud. Let the smoke pour again out of the stacks And we'll pay without murmur “the dinner-pail tax,” No one will grumble and no one will shirk, If you'll just give us work, Grover, just give us work. We have grown tired of walking the street, Little ones waiting for something to eat; Tired of hearing our Congressmen spout, Tired of reading you've got the gout. So if you care for us, as you pretend, Why don’t you hustle so matters will mend? Danger and suffering in idleness lurk, Give us some work, Grover, give us some work. If it’s true that the Tariff was robbing us sure, And with it prosperity could not endure, Since we all voted for it, now isn’t it strange That not the first man of us has any “change?” Except in condition, for it’s true that we all Have lost the good jobs we were holding last fall. Skilled artisan, laborer, book-keeper, clerk, We're all out of work, Grover, all out of work. If it’s true, as they say, that impatient yon yearn To do the poor man of your land a good turn. Why don’t you just do it, not talk through your hat? And then the dear people will know “what you're at.” Say that Wree Traders mav clamor in vain: Say that the Tariff unchanged shall remain, Loud. clear, and plain, without quibble or quirk, And we'll all go to work, Grover, all go to work. —F, 8. RANDALL. Soothsaying. In ancient times every monarch and prince, great or little, kept his soothsay- ers, or at least had recourse to some per- son who pretended to read the future in the stars or somewhere else. We have still persons who assume to be able to foretell the future, but the great differ- ence between past ages and the present in this regard is that then the great and often wise men of the earth believed in the soothsayers, while now only the fool- ish and feeble have any confidence in them. The decline in the credit and honor of soothsaying dates in a considerable meas- ure, perhaps, from a certain performance of John Galeazzo, Duke of Milan. Ile, too, had a soothsayer. One day the read- er of the stars came to him and said: “My lord. make haste to arrange your earthly affairs.” “And why shall I do that?” asked the Duke. “Because the stars tell me that you have not long to live.” “Indeed! And what do the stars tell you about your own lease of life?” asked the Duke John. *“They promise me many years more of life.” “They do?” ‘So I bave read them, my lord.” “Well, then,” said the Duke, ‘it ap- pears that the stars know very little about these things, for you will be hanged within half an hour!” He sent the soothsayer to the gallows with promptness, and lived many years disorders and regulate the stomach and bowels, which prevents headache and dizziness. A. F. SPEICHER. afterwards himself. Star reading fell in- to disuse in Milan from that time .— Youth’s Companion.