The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, October 26, 1893, Image 1

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\ County Star,
VOLUME IIL
SALISBURY, ELK LICK POSTOFFICE, PA. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1893.
NUMBER 345.
Established 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.
Your Watch
Insured Free.
A perfect insurance against theft or accident
is the now famous
City Meat Market,
N. Brandler, Proprietor.
A choice assortment of fresh
meat always on hand.
If you want good steak, go
to Brandler.
the only bow (ring) which cannot be pulled
or wrenched from the case. Can only be
had on cases containing this trade mark.
~—~MADE BY —
Keystone Watch Case Company,
of Philadelphia.
the oldest, largest, and most complete Watch
Case factory in the world—1500 employees;
2000 Watch Cases daily.
One of its products is the celebrated
Jas. Boss
Filled Watch Cases
which are just as good as solid cases, and
cost about one half less:
Sold by all jewelers, without extra charge
for Non-pull-out bow, Ask for pamphlet, or
send to the manufacturers.
Mrs. S. A. Lichliter, - -
CRAIN FLOUR And FLED.
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, Sienna “Irish Patent,” ‘‘Sea Foam
and Royal.
GRAYHAM and BUCKWHEAT FLOU R, 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.
LOOK HERE!
Read, Ponder, Reflect and Act,
A IND
Act Quickly. Come and
SEHR
whether you 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. BARCHUS, Salisbury, Pa.
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.
\
S. C. HARTLEY & Co.,
Dry Goods Merchants
Of MEYERSDALE, are Headquarters for
LADIES’ WRAPS. Over 100 STYLISH COATS
and CAPES in stock, bought from the largest and
most stylish manufacturers in the country. La-
dies, call and see them. Prices low—from $2.50
to $18.00. 1—18
WANTED
1000 Men,
women and children to call at
our studio and be convinced of
the excellence of our photo-
graphic work.
Photographs in all reasona-
ble sizes and styles, and rea-
sonable prices.
From this time on, our stu-
dio will be open for business
on Saturday of each week,
stead of Tuesday and Wednes-
day. We believe this arrange-
ment will be more satisfactory
to you. Note the change.
We will be on deck every
Saturday. Call and see our
Frames and Mouldings.
Respectfully,
B. K. CONRAD.
S. Lowry & Son,
UNDERTAKERS ,
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.
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.
"3000 PARCELS u MAIL" Fas
turers you'll
iil probably, thousands of.
i groan books, papers,
samples, magazines,etc,
receive,
ey) 1 free and each parcel
with one of v your printed Bui rons bels
pasted thereon. EXTRA! We will
also print and prepay Sd on 500 of
your label addresses to you; which
stick on your envelopes, books, etc., ww
\\ prevent their being | lost. J. A. Wa
of Reidsville, N. C., writes: Shoe
ji 3 U my 25 cent address in pur Lightning
7 FFEe\ Directory I've receive y 500 address
i) labels and over 30 000 ED atoots ot
Mail 8 you scattered
among publishers net manufacturers,
are arriving daily, on valuable purcely
of mail from all parts of the
World's Fair Directory Co.,
402 Girard and Frankford Avenues, Phila., Pa.
° 9 y
Speicher’s Drug Store!
Behold We Are Come! Selah!
And verily we are here to stay. Immov-
able as the Pyramids of Egypl 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, Toi-
let Articles, choicest assortment of Stationery
and Books in town, Jewelry, Spectacles, etc.
Arctic Soda Water
and Hire's Root Beer constantly on draught.
Ice Cream Soda every Saturday afternoon
and evening.
Prompt atlention and satisfaction guar-
anteed. A. F. SPEICHER, Prop.,
Elk Lick, Pa.
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. 2nd may prove a blessing, will please ad-
hig Epwarp A. WiLsoN, Brooklyn, New York.
TOPICS find COMMENT.
THE jollycholy days have come,
The gladdest of the year;
When eaadidates are shaking hands,
And setting up the beer.
—Pittsburg Times.
Tae fourteen people who dropped 200
feet. in a World's Fair elevator, know
what rapid transit is.
A goop.many opinions have lately been
very much revised. so far as they relate
to Senator David B. Hill.
THE governors seem determined to
boom the Corbett-Mitchell fight bv
threatening to prohibit it in their respec-
tive states. A
AT last something has been found that
is tougher than a New York policeman.
It is a cable grip car, which knocks out
policemen with ease.
WHO says rood times are not upon us?
Under Republican rule, workingmen had
to labor for their bread; now they get it
free—at charity agencies.—Kansas City
Journal.
Tur Indians show their natural shrewd-
ness bv regarding with suspicion the
proposition to make a state out of Indian
Territory. They scent the job in the
scheme.
By a vote of 89 10 22, the v. S. Senate
has decided that $30,000 campaign con-
tributions are good credentials for the
highest diplomatic honor the country has
to bestow.
Ir there be anything on earth that con-
tains more crookedness to the square inch
than New York Citv politics, the papers
of that city should all be indicted for
criminal libel.
Tere are 2,000,000 unemployed wage
earners in England, against one-fourth
that number here. Such is the difference
between having Free-Trade and merely
being threatened with it.—Providence
News.
Tar Russian bear and the French eagle
would certainly make a strong team, if
they could be made to work in double
harness. Even the great Napoleon made
a failure in pitting them against each
other.
IT has been estimated that 60 per cent.
of the male population of the United
States would willingly give up heir pres-
ent occupations to hold Federal office.
And perhaps 39 per cent. of the others
could be persuaded to hold office.
SomrEBoDY—Frank Hatton, we believe
—_has been trying to prove that the life
of a Congressman is one of misery and
suffering. This may be true, but if so,
why do not Congressmen resign more
frequently or decline re-election?
WEN President Cleveland and Sena-
tor Hill fall on each others necks in the
wind-up tableaux of the great concilia-
tion act, care should be taken to see that
the tear receptacles are numerous and
large and that the principals are unarmed.
ANy system under which the labor of
convicts is allowed to compete with that
of honorable persons, is wrong and vici-
ous. Under the present laws all imported
goods have to be branded with the name
of the country in which they are pro-
duced. Why not a law compelling all
convict-made goods to be plainly branded?
AN explosion in connection with a vol-
canic eruption was, itis claimed, heard
1,700 miles away and was consequently
rated as the loudest noise ever made in
the world. The daily explosions in the
U. S. Senate may not be as loud as that
of the volcano, but they are heard much
farther—all over the civilized world, in
fact.
Ir Amos Cummings will amend his bill,
“for the better protection of animals in
transit,” by adding *‘and for their proper
classification,” he can count upon the
support of all thos¢ who have met hogs
and other animals in parlor cars, and
nearly everybody has. If Mr. Cummings
can compel the hogs to travel in cages,
he will become a public benefactor.
Do tae ‘‘daily prayers” of President
Cleveland ever beg of the Almighty that
soup may be provided for the unemployed
and their families, now that they are out
of work under his administration, or does
the Almighty Cleveland forget ‘the plain
people,” now that they are in the soup,
or are all the ‘‘daily prayers” needed to
get himseif and his party out of the soup?
—American Economist.
WaEAT sold in New York, the other
day, for 68 cents per bushel for Decem-
ber delivery. ‘This is the lowest price re-
corded in the dealings of the Produce ex-
change for upward of 80 years.—Berlin
Record.
But the farmers were told, last fall, to
vote for Cleveland and get $1.25 per
bushel for their wheat. Democracy, thou
art a jewel, yea, a daisy in full bloom.
Wit Van Alen in Italy. and Hawaii
drifting back to British domination; with
the country prostrated by the failure of
Cleveland and his party to fulfill their
promises, and with workingmen starving
because of idiotic tariff agitation, the
way-faring man, though he be a fool. can
appreciate the glorious benefits of living
under a Democratic administration such
as is in power at the present time.—Phil-
adelphia Press.
Tae Democratic Galveston News proph-
esies the dissolution of its party. It says
the Democratic party can not long sub-
sist on the ruin it has wrought. The
Dallas News, also a Texas Democratic
paper, sizes up the situation in about the
same way. Itsays the Democratic roost-
er cannot long hold the barnyard by
crowing on the fence, and adds that the
party must come off the perch, stop its
foolishness and do something.
HARD times force many alleged busi-
ness men to hide their faces and bemoan
their ill luck. They also force many,
through inaction, to fail. It is, however,
the golden opportunity of the bright,
plucky man who has the nerve to adver-
tise and push his goods. He talks to
buyers through his advertisements, mak-
ing them larger and inserting them often-
er, so that his goods are continually mov-
ing. He thus has a clear field. and.
knowing how to use it, gets the publics
money.—EX.
The greatest joke of the season is that
there are still a few Democratic papers
in the country that pretend to’ believe
that the Sherman law is responsible for
the present panic. However, most of
our Democratic exchanges have quit
springing that transparent excuse on the
public, some time ago, and are silently
trying to hatch ont something else to hide
threatened tariff tinkering, the real cause
of the panic. They must invent a lie
that looks more like truth than the howl
about the Sherman law.
Ir the men who voted for Cleveland
and tariff reform are satisfied with the
present condition and future prospects of
the country, let them continue to vote the
Democratic ticket. If they are not, they
can have no better opportunity for mak-
ing their dissent known than to join in
swelling the majority for Fell and Jack-
son, the candidates on the Republican
State ticket. Pennsylvania is the very
keystone of protection, and if she senda
forth the mandate, ‘hands off the tariff!”
her voice will be potential at Washing-
ton.—VPittshurg Commercial Gazette.
It is at all events the duty of the peo-
ple to hasten to undo the folly of last
November by recording their votes wher
ever possible to express their disapproval
of the avowed policy of the Adminis ra-
tion, until the constitutional opportunity
arrives in 1896 to return to the safe and
successful policy under which our coun-
try has so long prospered. Until that
time shall have arrived and the general
wrong been undone, it is our conviction,
most regretfully uttered, that he who
hopes for a return of the wages or busy
industry of last year will be doomed to
disappointment.—Irish World.
It is a curions coincidence that the
Democratic party oceybies upon its return
to power very much the same critical
position before the country as it occupied
when it went out with James Buchanan.
Itis confronted by an issue vital to the
nation and to its own existence. And it
is prepared to meet it in the same way
it met the issue of 1860. Itis split into
three factions, each at war with the oth-
er two, just as it was when it came out
of the Charleston convention and con-
tinued to be until national calamity fol-
lowed its indecision and bickering. As a
minority it has proven itself strong, alert,
resourceful, combative; as a majority it
is again week, vacillating, disunited. It
is afraid of its own shadow. —New York
Herald.
GraxDp old John Sherman recently
“read off the riot act” to the Democratic
United States Senate in the following
sensible and clear-cut way-
“In times past, when the Republicans
were in the majority, we never shrank
from the responsibility which is now up-
on the Democratic party. We were Re-
publicans because we believed in Repub-
lican principles, Republican men and Re-
publican measures, and whenever a ques-
tion came up in this chamber to be de-
cided, we never plead the baby act.
We ask our brothers on the other side,
for whose ability and standing we have
the highest respect, to meet together and
consult with each other. If they do not
like the President's plan, give us some
other, and in God's name let us settle this
important question for the people of our
country. Then we will take it into our
consideration. If we can agree with you
we will. We will not follow your ex-
ample. If we do not agree with you, we
will give you a manly no.”
¢ —————
Hints on the Dervection of Glanders or
Equina,
Tne following able and valuable article
was recently contributed to the Cumber-
land Courier, by Stuart E. Paulet, the
English veterinary snreen, who had his
office in Salisbury, last fall. It ic so full
of valuable information that we take
great pleasure in reproducing it:
“It having been reported to the Veter-
inary profession that there have been
outhreaks of glanders in Ohio and adja-
cent states, it might be interesting to
some of the stock raisers in the county
to know something of this dread disease.
Glanders is a malignant, very contag-
ious and fatal disease, due to the intro-
duction into or generation in the animal
economy of a virus consisting of an or-
ganism—the baceillus mallei—which in-
fects the whole svstem, more especially
the mucous membrane of the nose, the
lungs, and upon the lymphatic glands
and ducts.
Glanders and farcy originate spontane-
ously in the horse, ass and mule, and
are capable of transmission to man, in
whom the virus increases in malignancy.
Glanders internally develops an inter-
stitial pneumonia. The submaxilliary
lymphatic glands are unusually enlarged.
Very often the earliest noticeable symp-
toms is a rise of temperature, followed
by diabetes or profuse staling. Then we
get a limpid watery discharge from the
nostrils; the discharge becomes thicker,
amber colored tnd sticky; gets smeared
all over the stall and fittings. You may
get a peculiar form of lameness which
moves about like rheumatism. In a few
days yon will have bulging of the facial
bones, the pulse will be accelerated; the
discharge from the nose becomes very
purulent, mixed with a starchy looking
mucous; temperature about 104 to 106
degrees; appetite often remains good:
the mucons membrane of the nose ap-
pears red and congested. and in a few
davs turns a leaden gray color; little
pimples crop up in a few hours, turn to
vessicles and then to pustules that rup-
ture, with a purulent discharge streaked
with blood; the eves are weak and a dis-
charge issues from them: the breathing
is hurried and irregular; abscesses form
along the lymphatics of the face. Farey
has little nodules like buttons, which
burst. discharging a thin purulent yellow
liquid that dries, forming a yellow crust
on the surface of the uleer: itis common-
ly confined to the extremities, the whole
limb being engaged. The flesh is con-
tagious and wild animals have contracted
it from eating the meat. In the buman
subject it is invariably fatal, No cure
for glanders has ever been found. Even
were there a possibility of recovery, the
animal would be a continual source of
danger to other horses and to human be-
ings. It is therefore in the end economy
to immediately destroy glandered horses
when detected, even were human life not
endangered by their presence. - When
glanders appears in a stable, in addition
to removing affected animals, vou should
attend carefully to ventilation, drainage,
food and water, and the cleansing and
disinfection of stable, fittings,
ete. Remove and destroy all contami-
nated wood work, paint all fixtures, scrape
and lime-wash walls, mangers, etc., the
wash to contain a pint of crude carbolic
acid to every bucketful. Give all horses
that may have come in contact with af-
fected animals, two ounces of hyposul-
phite of soda with every meal.” :
harness,
Familiar With the Subject.
Good News.
Teacher. “Why can’t you learn to cal-
culate interest as nicely as Tommy Trad-
dles?”
Dull Boy. “Iain’t had so much exper-
ience as he has. Our house ain’t mort-
gaged.
a
ale