The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, November 16, 1893, Image 1

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The Somerset
Star.
VOLUME II.
NUMBER 48.
SALISBURY, ELK LICK POSTOFFICE, PA.,, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1893.
Established 1852.
P. S. HAY,
—DEALER IN—
GENERAL .. MERCHANDISE.
The pioneer and leading Seneral storein 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.
valued patronage, I remain yours truly,
Salisbury, Pa., Jan. 2d, 1893.
Thanking you for past favors, and soliciting your very
P. S. HAY,
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 Flour,
among them “Pillsbury’s Best,” the best flour in the world, “Vienna,” ‘Irish Patent,” “Sea Foam"
und Royal.
GRAYIIAM 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
load lots, and will be sold at lowest prices. Goods delivered to my regular customers. Store in
STATLER BLOCK, SALISBURY, PA.
THEY HAVE GOT fo GO! "5 oo one
HARD TIMES, HIGH PRICES and BIG PROFITS can’t exist in this town, be-
cause 1 have got the goods and make the prices that save people money.
seen
Have you
MY NEW SPRING STOCK
of Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps, Furnishing Goods, Notions, etc?
Give me a call and see my line of Ladies’,
Misses’ and Children’s Fine Shoes. Ox-
ford Ties and Slippers, also a nice line of Men's, Bovs’ and Children’s Straw Hats.
Many thanks for past favors.
I remain your friend,
GEO. K. WALKER.
C. T. Hay’s Block, Salisbury, Pa.
Established in 1880.
Fisher's Book Store, Somerset, Pa.
WHOLESALE DEPARTMENT: This large and heav-
ily stocked establishment is now fully stocked and ready for
the Fall and Winter trade.
The Wholesule department sells to 90 town and country merchants in this and ad-
joining counties and states.
The attention of merchants and others in the Elk Lick and Meyers-
dale conl regions is called to onr stock; and their orders and the orders of others solicited.
Blunk Books, Letter. Legal Cup, Foolseap and Box Paper. Envelopes. Inks, Pens, Pencils, Mueil-
age. Pen Holders, Slates, Tablets, Justice's Blanks, School Books, School Supplies and everything
usually sold at a well organized and well stocked stationery store, at best wholesale prices. The
retail trade is solicited for such goods as your home merchants do not supply.
Iy attended to.
Mail orders prompt-
CHAS. H. FISHER.
Every Man whose watch
has been rung out of the bow
(ring), by a pickpocket,
very Man whose watch
has been damaged by drop-
ping out of the bow, and
Every Man of sense who
merely compares the old pull-
out bow and the new
will exclaim: “Ought to have
been made long ago!”
Itcan’t betwistedoff thecase.
Can only be had with Jas. Boss
Filledand othercases stamped
with this trade mark
Ask your jeweler for pamphlet,
Keystone Watch Case Co.,
Philadelphia.
8S. 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
2" WE MAKE EMBALMING A SPECIALTY.
WE ARE OVERSTOCKED
—WITH—
Bicycles!
We are giving our agents Extra Induce-
ments for cash orders.
BEN HUR, $75 and $90.
CENTRAL, High Grade, $135.
Write for Big Discounts to Agents.
Address,
Central Cycle Mig. Co.,
INDIANAPOLIS, IND,
P. L. LIVENGOOD, Agt. at Elk Lick, Pa.
Speicher’s Drug Sore! |
Behold We Are Come! Selah!
And verily we are here to stay. Fmmos- ] : :
able as the Pyramids of Egypt or a grease]
spot on a pair of ice cream trousers.
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 Oream Soda every Saturday afternoon
and evening.
“Prompt attention and satisfaction guar-
anteed, A. F. SPEICHER, Prop.,
Sng Si ve x
S. C. HARTLEY & Co.,
Dry Goods Merchants
Of MEYERSDALE, are Headquarters for
LADIES" WRAPS. Over 100 STYLISH €OATS
and CAPES in stock, bought from the largest and
most stylish manufaeturers in the country. La-
dies, call and see them. Prices low—from $2.50
to $18.00. 1—18
The Celebrated
Our Children’s and Misses’ shoes of the Merri
The Ladies will here find the shoes that will tickle their fancy and fit their feet—neat, styl-
ish and serviceable, as fine as the finest sold in the county and at prices that will agreeably
sd
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the purse.
surprise
READ IT!
BOOTS and SHOLLS! The largest stock, the most reliable and complete assortment ever displayed in Salisbury.
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10n.
Overcoats, Children’s and Boys’ Clothing—an elegant assortment
This Valuable Informat
&il _§
x =
SWeet, Orr & Co.'s famous Pantaloons, Shirts and Overalls.
and cheap.
I buy direct from the manufacturers and give you the best values tliat can be had for the money.
Walker Boots and Shoes will give satisfaction.
am ntake are unsurpassed.
$5 $10 and $20, Genuine Confederate
9 Bills, only five cents each; $50 and
$100 bills, 10 cents each; 25c. and 50c. shinplas-
ters, 10 cents each; $1 and $2 bills, 25 cents each.
Sent securely sealed on receipt of price. Ad-
dress, CHAS. D. BARKER, 90 S. Forsyth sSt., At-
lanta, Ga.
Frank Petry,
Carpenter And Builder,
Elk Lick, Pa.
If you waui 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.
And]
Elk Lick, Pav |
JEWELER AND OPTICIAN,
MEYERSDALE, PA,
ed
TO CONSUMPTIVES.
The undersigned having been restored to
bealth by simple means, after suffering for sev-
eral vears with a severe lung affection, and that
dread disease CONSUMPTION, is anxions to make
known to his fetlow sufferers the means of cure.
To those who desire it. he will cheerfully send
e of charge
a copy of the prescription
ich they will Trees Re,
N,
THMA, CATARRH, BroNcmiTIs 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-
ress. :
Rev. EpwaARrDp A. WiLsoN, Brooklyn, New York.
TOPICS find COMME T.
In everything we take high place,
The mart, the field. the forum:
Our yachts are first in every race,
In short. high cockalorum.
We may not have the skill and brains
To beat the whole creation,
But we kill more people on railroad trains
Than any other nation.
—New York Press.
THE populist party is, it seems, in dan-
ger of becoming depopulated.
Poor GROVER! Gresham told him the
plaguey old gun wouldn't kick.
THE Democrats have not yet agreed
upon the scapegoat, but other people
have.
Ir Mc¢Kinleyism is dead, as many Dem-
ocrats have so often asserted, it has prov-
en a very lively sort of a ghost.
WHAT is to he the financial policy of
the administration is still an unanswered
question. Repealing laws will not make
a policy.
THE word “junket,” as applied to Con-
gressional picnics, i8 now well-nigh
obsolete. They are now “tours of in-
spection.”
TIN, tin, 'Merican tin, McKinley at the
fore again. That ie not inch on poetry.”
but alas! it is great in fact.—Indianapo-
lis News (Ind.).
TRERE are few people who mistake
vindictiveness and personal enmity for
statesmanghip, but Secretary Gresham is
evidently one of them.
CLEVELAND to Hill—* ‘How about May-
nard?”
Hill to Cleveland—*“How about the
rest of the country ?’'—St Louis Globe
Democrat,
Ir the Mexican revolutionists can only
find some descendent of the Aztec Kings,
they can count upon the assistance of the
Cleveland administration in restoring
monarchy in Mexico.
Tie Royalists of Europe may applaud
the Cleveland-Gresham Hawaiian
gram, hut Americans—well, just wait un-
til they get a chance to show their disap-
proval with their ballots.
pro-
Tur tariff-smashers are slowly, but
surely, finding out that (he wage-earners
of the country prefer regular employ-
ment and high wages to irregular em-
ployment and starvation wages.
Borers, Hill and Flower might use the
most powerful microscope ever made,
and still be unable to locate even the
slightest trace of what they once thought
to be promising Presidential booms.
IN announcing their intention to restore
the imperial government of Brazil, if
they are successful, the Brazilinn revolu-
tionists are evidently trying to secure the
aid of the Cleveland administration.
Ir is likely that the Democrats in Penn-
sylvania and Iowa were fooled by the
name Jackson and helped to pile up the
big Republican majorities, thinking they
were voting for old Andrew Jackson.
Tur men who purchased diplomatic
positions under the present administra-
tion may not find their residence abroad
as pleasant ag they expected; European
napers some facts about
them.
are printing
ACCORDING to the Gresham idea, every
white man in this country is an “‘alien”
and the Indians are the only *‘Simon-
pure” Americans, of this country. Really,
it looks as though the nursing of hatred
has affected this man’s brain.
ONE of our exchanges devotes editorial
spage to a remedy for the removal of
warts, which reminds us that the ballot
in the hands of intelligent voters has late-
ly proven itself to be the best remedy for
the removal of political warts.
Gov. FLOWER became so “rattled” over
the election returns that he actually ap-
pointed a Republican to the bench of
the New York Supreme Court. Well,
that is one more good effect of the Dem-
ocratic defeat than was expected.
THE Populists are rapidly going the
way of all the other third parties the coun-
try has seen. Even those men who a-
greed to a certain extent with some of
the party's ideas, . were disgusted and
driven off by the brainless freaks it
elected to office.
IT is now announced that the New
York bankers are to aid Secretary Car-
lisle in maintaining the gold reserve at
$100,000,000. Isn't this the administration
that a few months ago announced its de-
tevmination to ran its finances independ-
ently of Wail street?
Way doesn’t Mr. Cleveland aet more
consistently 2 Tf he has a right to set up
a monarchy in Hawaii, why should he
object to the exercise of a similar right
in Brazil by European governments?
Does he hanker after a monopoly of the
monarchy business?
Tie Prison Trusty, a newspaper edited
by convicts in the Kansas penitentiary,
and bought by many persons as a curios-
ity, is most enthusiastically in favor of
Popuiists. It is edited by a friend of
Gov. Lewelling, who is doing time for
10 years.—Pittsburg Times.
Corn. Karr ,FIeLp says in her paper
that the reason no newspaper has ever
called itself the moon, is because that
planet is understood to be made up of
worn-out matter. Colonel Kate is'in er-
ror, the true reason being the fact that
the moon gets “full” so often,
Prrraps those who presented the roy-
al crown that was once the property of
his royal highness the late Duke of
Essex, uncle of Queen Victoria, which
was on exhibition at the World’s Fair, to
the new Columbian Museum, had an idea
that it might at some future time come
in handy to his royal highness Grover
Cleveland.
McKINLEY to-day is the most pictur:
esque character in American politics,
He fought his way intrepidly “through
the toils of a Congressional gerrvmander,
he-led-the Republican. eolumn to vietory
in a year of gerieral defeat, on the issue
of which he is the personification, and
stands in triumph in this, the hour of a
thundering protest against the destruc-
tion of the legislative fabric which is
largely his own handiwork.—Albany
Journal.
Now that the eleetion is over, one
fact may be recalled with interest, In
the great fight in New York state against
dishonest politics and the besmirching of
the Judiciary, the people received no aid
from Grover Cleveland. He never by
word of month indicated opposition to
Judge Maynard. He did not even go to
New York to vote against him. Yet Mr.
Cleveland is regarded as a great reformer
of bad politics and base politicians. —
Philadelphia Press.
Tre Cleveland Plain Dealer, an out-
and-out Democratic paper, remarks that
Senator Cameron's eccentricities do not
seem to have greatly disorganized Rep-
ublican polities in Pennsylvania. No,
we should say not. If Cameron wants
to do the Ghost Dance act with the wild,
wooly, Populist cranks and ranters of
the West, let him dance: but the people
of Pennsylvania will favor sound money
and vote the Republican ticket, just the
same. Cameron would make
dime museum freak.
a good
Ar Dayton, Ohio, there is, unfortunate-
ly, reason enough to remember the exist-
ence of the Soup House Administration.
The Dayton Evening Herald made inqui-
ries from only 37 of its hundreds of busi-
ness enterprises, and found that where
7,904 hands last year
there was work now for only 3,242 hands.
With 4,662 people finding no employment
from among only 37 factories, we can
readily imagine that business has not
been booming in Dayton and that the
good people there ‘‘want a change.”
were employed
REFERRING to our recent industrial
census; the Home Market Bulletin, of
Boston. says: Of course such a loss of
wages is a tremendous impairment of the
purchasing power of the people. Men
who don’t work cannot buy. Thus the
merchant, the loeal mechanie, the teach-
er, in short, everybody in the community
suffers, sooner or later, and all this be-
cause a party has heen into
power whose declared policy impairs the
imperils the business of
brought
confidence and
the people.—American Enconomist.
WirrH the Tariff issue settled and re-
duced to a Free-Trade basis, the indus-
tries of the United States, already estab-
lished, might work. We
might have to manufacture because we
have the investment on our hands, but
farewell to the prosperity of the Ameri-
again resume
can workman: farewell to the stability of
American labor: farewell to the prosper-
ous communities with prosperous work- .
men; farewell to the growth of our man
ufactures and to the inauguration of new
enterprises in the United States. The
way would be opened to long disastrons
strikes by discontented labor. Capital
would avoid enterprises where its pofits
depend upon the stability of labor, and
in the end labor and capital would both
suffer.—American Economist.
Tue Nicaraguan Congress, to keep for-
eigners out of the country, has passed a
law which subjects them to everything
but hanging. If we understand Ingalls,
at Wilkesbarre, night before last, he is in
favor of something like that in this coun-
try.—Pittsburg Times.
Yes, and so is TAR STAR. It would be
different, if the same class of people
would continue coming to our shores
that used to land here. Butinstead of re-
spectable Englishmen, Germans, Scotch,
Irish, ete., the kind of people that used
to emigrate to America, our country now
serves as a dumping ground for the dirty
Dagos of Italy, the filthy Huns from
Hungary and the prnupers and criminals
from nearly every other country on earth.
They come here and sow the seeds of
anarchy and pestilence, and every Amer-
ican may well tremble for his country if
this state of affairs continues to exist.
THE re-election of Judge Gary in Chica-
go is an event which order-loving men of
all parties can rejoice at. It has a much
wider significance than the city on whose
bench he will sit. He stood for law
order embodied, as no other
could have done, the hostility of a great
majority of Americans to Anarchism,
The fact tint he presided at the trial of
the Haymarket Anarchists would of it-
self have given him this distinction, but
it became doubly his due when to it was
added the attack Governor Altgeld made
on him when pardoning the Anarchists.
His defeat would have been a blot on.
Chicago that not even all the honor won
by the World's Fair could have wiped
out. The stinging rebuke Governor
Altgeld received ought to penetrate even
his hippopotamus. hide and show him
how profound the public contempt is for
him and how deep is the obscurity that
yawns for him when he leaves his pres-
ent office,—Philadelphin Press. :
and
and man
Tur Democracy is now on its second
term of office within thirty-three years.
It has with the country a reputation for
bad administration, which Mr. Cleveland
in his first term did something to remove.
because he went into office with—if we
may use the expression—civil service re-
form on the brain. But it will take
more than one term to convince that por-
tion of the people which makes majori-
ties that it can be safely trusted with the
Government. The notion which seems
to have taken hold of the Administration,
that the people’s vote against the tariff, last
year, was in some sort a vote of confi-
dence in the Democratic party, is an hal-
lucination. It would take a long period
of good behavior to get people to believe
in the Democrats as they have believed,
and do believe, in the Republicans. The
Democrats have not a day to spaie in the
matter of right living. There is nothing
whatever standing to their credit. They
cannot afford a single escapade. Their
performances in this state. therefore, sur-
passing anything in American history in
audacity and atrocity, must be set down
as little short of York
Post (Dem.).
OF all the sad Democratic
newspapers we have yet seen since the
last election, the Hebron (Neb.) Register
takes the cake.
oughly disgusted with its party and is
not content with printing a large cut of
a jackass on its editorial page and label
ing it “The Democratic Party,” but it
wails and scolds Democracy as follows:
insane.—New
looking
The Register is thor-
“Behold what Democracy has made of
itself—an ass. the tail of an ass.
The ox knoweth
ass his master’s
knows nothing.
She weepeth sore in the night,
hath none to confort her, for all
friends have become her enemies.
For the congregation of
shall be desolate and fire shall
the tabernacles of bribery.
A grievous vision is declared unto me;
the treachierous dealer dealeth treacher
ously. Iam bewed down with the hear-
ing of it.
Oh! that I had in the wilderness a lodg-
ing place of wayfaring men, that [
might leave my people and go from them,
for they be adulterers—an assembly of
treacherous men.
OW! Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that
selleth out the prophets and scratcheth
the tickets which are sent unto thee,
how often would I have gathered thy
children together, even as a hen gather-
eth her chickens under her wings, and
ye would not!
Ohio, Towa and Massachusetts gone.
Kansas taken at one fell swoop and noth-
ing left Democracy but Hill or bell or
both!
For sale—A few votes left over from
last Tuesday. Object in selling: Sick-
ness and ad d strong desire to 1e-
tire from business.”
and the
Democracy
his owner,
crib; but
but
her
hypocrites
consume