ng By » lay- gola sease, (ness. tive. buy. ) 4 ANS VOER feed dan’s is n the SSUres ments eggs. strong. to pre- > like it. rst. copy of 1, Mass, fet ot in a ng nd, in- OGNA n. be con- goods. 't treat ing to ou will u. od and a day. ronage, of the tor. fresh gO t, go west ) FOR rks. ones est ng else- n, Pa. | Le The omerset County Star. VOLUME II. SALISBURY, ELK LICK POSTOFFICE, PA.,, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1893. NUMBER gg §° - Established 1852. P. S. —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 Thanking 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. HAY, P. S. HAY, Mrs. S. A. Lichliter, GRAIN. FLOUR And FEED. CORN, OATS, MIDDLINGS, “RED DOG FLOUR,” FLAXSEED MEAL, in short all kinds of “CLIMAX FOOD,” a good medicine for stock. All Grades of F'lour, among them “Pillsbury’s Best,” the best flour in the world, “Vienna,” ‘Irish Patent,” “Sea Foam" ground feed for stock. 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 load lots, and will be sold at lowest vrices. Goods delivered to my regular customers, Store in STATLER BLOCK, SALISBURY, PA. THEY HAVE GOT to 60! HARD TIMES, HIGH PRICES and BIG PROFITS can’t exist in this town, be- canse I have got the goods and make the prices that save people money. MY NEW SPRING STOCK of Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps, Furnishing Goods, Notions, etc? Jive me a call and see my line of Ladies’, ford Ties and Slippers, also a nice line of Men's, Bovs’ and Children’s Straw Hats. I remain your friend, GEO. K. WALKER. C. T. Hay’s Block, Salisbury, Pa. seen Many thanks for past favors. THE LAST CALL TO BARCAINS. Have you Misses’ and Children’s Fine Shoes, Ox- Established in 1880. Fisher's Book Store, WHOLESALE DEPARTMENT: This large and heav- ily stocked establishment is now fully stocked and ready for the Fall and Winter trade. The Wholesale 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 coal regions is called to our stock, and their orders and the orders of others solicited. Blank Books, Letter, Legal Cap, Foolscap and Box Paper. Envelopes. Inks, Pens, Pencils, Mucil- 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. 1y attended to. Somerset, Pa. Mail orders prompt- CHAS. H. FISHER. The County Fair affords an excellent opportunity for the pick-pocket to get your watch. If you would be proof against his skill, be sure that the bow (or ring) is a This wonderful bow is now fitted to the Jas. Boss Filled Watch Cases, which are made of two plates of gold soldered to a plate of composition metal. Look equally as well as solid gold cases, and cost about half as much. Guaranteed to wear 20 years. Always look for this trade mark. None genuine without it. oF Sold only through watch dealers. Ask any jeweler for pamphlet or send to the manufacturers. KeystoneWatch Case Co., PHILADELPHIA. 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. WE ARE OVERSTOCKED —WITH— Bicycles! We are giving our agents Fara Induce- Eg 8 ments for cash orders. BEN HUR, $75 and $90. CENTRAL, High Grade, $185. Write for Big Discounts to Agents. Address, Central Cycle Mie. Co., INDIANAPOLIS, IND. P. L. LIVENGOOD, Agt. at Elk Lick, Pa. 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 attention and satisfaction guar- anteed. A. FF. SPEICHER, Prop., Elk Lick, Pa. 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 Rm, a g nd Pou P 35 z hE £ 2¢= BE iggy 1.0.2 - A = >» E88! E Ly =0"5 3 oy ZT = = > By tcc a ey 2 ATE. 2 gEzZ28 | " Em = *Re2: EE a2 EEE. Sop == 0 Bp for O wf EE we ZL T 2d = ® >= EE bl Bro £ > res Dams og eet I =» i za 524 = i 2 3 © i = BETS 2) A ii &E m= . a i EE o- s “7 i s f= e 2 el © — ET = — = o = =m Z £ Zz Ea 0 = =n 7 - z Ziv it = = TEEF © = = Q > a oe PD = lil @ fey m=EEZ= 2 p O er SE o v—t ~~ ly ATR =z So» = 22% E =) = Fre | em = m_ 8 = peg ~~ -- OB Fae ~ w= > o> d A) nn HEwh 7s = ZEEE hr © 5B —~ Euql Zong] 1 we 2 ip Tr eH z Sn = IgE Fl 23 =m =e s Eq 0 =0 Id &" - 3 & = — Py Tp => 8 Zk ish and serviceable, as fine as the tinest sold in the county and at prices that will agreeah : 5 : 0 : po : Qiv.z: am J fits: BW Ny giir: a Gf Eic:: 8 ff ffl 2:98:21 gd S38:3 9. mo OF 2:2: 5: ND RESEC BS © g $5 $10 and $20, Genuine Confederate s Bills, only tive cents each; $50 and $100 bills, 10 cents each; 25¢. 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 st, At- lanta, Ga. 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. T also do all kinds of furniture repairing. Bring your work to my shop. T. W. GURLEY, JEWELER AND OPTICIAN, MEYERSDALE, PA. REPAIRING AND ENGRAVING DONE. THE VALLEY HOUSE, H. LOECHEL, Proprietor. Board by the day, week or month, First-class 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. 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 vou if you give us your work. Beprorp County marble and Granite Works. Monuments and Tombstones of all kinds. Lowest Prices and Best Work. £5 Write us for estnraTes before buying else- where. Geo. W. Grose & Co., Hyndman, Pa. David Enos, Agt., Elk} ick, Pa. Wall's Meat Marke is headquarters for everything usually kept in a first-class meat market. The Best of Everything to be had in the meat line always on hand, in- cluding FRESH and SALT MEATS, BOLOGNA and Fresh Fish, in Season. Come and try my wares. Come and be con- vinced that I handle none but the best of goods. Give me your patronage, and if I don’t treat you square and right, there will be nothing to compel you to continue buying of me. You will find that I will at all times try to please you. COME ON and be convinced that I can do you good and that T am not trving to make a fortune in a day. Thanking the public for a liberal patronage, and soliciting a continuance and increase of the same, I am respectfully, Casper Wahl. 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 aud keeps a fine assortment of pure, choice liquors, I respectfully solicit your patrouage and will spare no pains to please my guests. R. L. WALTER, Proprietor. Seminole Bitters! A purely vegetable tonic. Increases appetite, strengthens action of stom- ache. acts on liver, increases action of kidneys and purifies the blood. A FIRST-CLASS ANTI-BILIOUS REMEDY. One of the best medicines in the world. Try it and save doctor bills, Sold at nearly all stores. Prepared by SEMINOLE BirTERs Co. 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 MarLapies. He hopes all sufferers will try his remedy, as it is invaluable. Those desir- ing the prescription, which will cost them mnoth- ing, and may prove a blessing, will please ad- dress. Rev. Epwarn A. WiLson, Brooklyn, New York, TOPICS find COMMENT. Tne next President of States will be—a Republican; his name is a secondary consideration. IF the party intended as a successor to the populists can find not better wet nurse than Jerry Simpson, its grave should be prepared at once. Tir Earl of Warwick made kings for an existing kingdom, but Grover Cleve land goes him one better and queen for a detunct kingdom. makes a the United WoxDERs will never cease. They have actually arrested seven men in Arkansas for taking part in a lynching; but they are, of course, all negroes. SympaTay for the striking trainmen of the Lehigh Valley railroad cannot blind one to the fact that this is a very inau- spicious time for a strike of any kind. RestaNATIONS are becoming epidemic in European cabinets. The country would feel greatful if the disease in its worst form would strike the Cleveland cabinet. Ir the report made by Paramount Blount is all the excuse Mr. Cleveland has for deciding to restore the Hawaiian monarchy he is to be pitied as well as condemned. INSTEAD of finding himself the admin- istration candidate for the Democratic Presidential nomination, Walter Q Gresham may ere long find himself out in the cold. Tur $65.000,000 of surplus reserve— the largest ever known—now lying idle in the New York banks, is a silent, but significant protest against Demoeatic tar- iff tinkering. WheN the administration undertook to help Gresham “get even” with Gener al Harrison it did not probably expect the task to be so dangerous as it has al- ready proven to he. A. U. S. jupgesHIP is understood to be the price of Chairman Wilson's agree ment to put coal and iron ore on the free list. Crippling his home industries is not the best preliminary occupation for a judge. IT was the restraint of the republican Senate which gained Mr. Cleveland the reputation for conservatism during his first term which he has entirely lost he- fore one-fifth of his second been served. Tar section of the Democratic tariff bill that will, unless present information is wrong, provide for the imposition of an income tax, ought to be headed: “For .he promotion and encouragement of the crime of perjury.” term has MURAT HALSTEAD says Cleveland's election was accomplished by “a combina- tion of flukes, fads and frands.” which is largely true: but the people are already disgruntled, disgusted and determined— to make amends. AFTER all the Democratic abuse of the sugar bounty it is to remain on the stat- ute book for eight years more. How about those democrats—Gov. Hogg, for instance—who have denied the constitu- tionality of the sugar bounty? IT now costs $5 and one hour in jail to send a challenge to ficht a duel. in Virginia. Reforms move slowly, but the time mav come when even Virginia will be controlled by a majority of the legal voters within her borders. GOVERNOR McKINLEY condense d a whole volume of political economy into a short sentence when he said: ‘The more there is to do, the better wages will be paid: the less there is to do, the less wages will be paid for what is done. It isn’t a bit of consolation to the fellow who has to wear the hair off the top of his head trying to think how he can get the four or five tong of coal re- quired to carry his household through the winter, to be told that the erniser Colum- bia consumes 570 tons a day. IT does seem as though some newspa- pers were over anxious to make conspie- uous the fact that the death rate among the old soldiers is increasing. Thev are careful, however, not to mention one of the factors in the increased death rate— their treatment by this administration. It is folly to say that an income tax will not be felt by the poor. The rich are never lacking for ways to shift their burdens to the shoulders of the poor. It is like expecting a tax upon usury to he paid by usurer, when evervbody knows that it is always the unfortunate borrow- Even the free trade New York Herald has at last discovered that the new tariff “must be moderate and framed with care- ful regard to the interests of trade and industry,” and that “any reckless tariff legislation, any sudden or sweeping changes, would unsettle business and in- dustry and bring on a panic.” Still it | lacks the courage to advise the Demo- crats to let the tariff alone. Gov. McKinney has been asked to make a protective tariff speech at Birm- ingham, Ala. Itis not apparent, how- ever, what benefit such a speech can be at this time. It does not require the | eloquence of Gov. McKinley to tell the Alabamians that the future prosperity of upon a protec- | their state is dependent t ve tariff; they know it. and knowing! it still support a national free trade par- y. - Tue McKinley magnetism is spreading and working wonders throughout the land. When Morris Lamb, of Hillsdale, Mich.. who had been a helpless invalid for several months, heard the news from Ohio, last week, he shouted: “That's good enough to make any man well.” Then he got up, dressed, and is now sound as a dollar. Take the Protection faith cure. It is good for every ill.— South Bend (Ind.) ‘I'vibune. Tae industrial revival which was to follow silver repeal has not struck Phila- delphia. Of the 90.000 hands employed in the 500 textile factories a year ago, only 17,500 are at work, and only ninety of the establishments are in operation. In August only seventy-five per cent. of the workmen in the city were idle and this mumber has increased to ninety per cent. All are waiting for the develop- ment of the tariff policy of the adminis- tration.—Troy times. NEVER before now has an American executive undertaken to stamp out repuh licanism and to cet up a monarchy in any part of the world. Never before. we he- lieve, has an American president issued orders for the assassination of a free and successful government. Never has any officer of this government under- taken, upon his sole responsibility and hefore without consulting congress or the peo ple, 16 decide the destiny of a foreign country in diplomatic relations with our- selve. Never hefore has a president in- vited or commanded his eabiuet advisors to assist him in the odius business of set- ting up again a rotten and broken throne. Was there no American spirit in the eab- inet when this policy of infamy was de cided? Walter Q. Greshan would have done well to tear his commission pieces and fling the pieces in the face of his master, rather than to sign his name to the document which carried to the na- tion the announcement of the nation's shame.—New York Sun (Dem.) mito WE gather from the convention which met in the First United Presbyterian Church, of Allegheny, last evening, that this country isin a very bad way. In deed, one of the members authorized to speak for the convention declares that the country is threatened with destruc- tion by evils which are steadily rising to supremacy. ‘They are assuming the control in the administration of Govern- ment, national. state and municipal. They are corrupting the currents of our national life at their very fountains. The slightest glance at the moral condition of our land discloses these facts.” That is grievous. or would be if true. That there are evils in the land, no one denies; that they must be combated no one denies; that they are combated, and successfully, is not denied bv any one who remembers the last elections and is candid enchgh to acknowledze the mean- ing of them. Saying nothing about the result of the elections in this county in two notable instances in which a lawless class was crushed in a way which aston- ished some others not less than itself, how was it in other places? In New York all party distinctions seemed lost to sight while the people united to defeat a man whose presence in the court of the state they thought dishon In Chicago they united to vin- dicate a judge who had the courage to do his duty In New Jersey they united to put down a bund of gamblers who im agined themselves securely in power. issue raised the people subordinated all party and material interests to maintain thd supremacy of righteousness. In the face of «ll this to denounce the highest ored it. established Wherever there was a moral great mass of the people as corrupt, as enconr aging evils which imperil the life of the nation, is slanderous. We say that this is successfully com bating evil, because it is moral progress. The convention will not agree to this, becanse the convention there is no hope of such believes thut progress until the people have given in their subserip tions tH) certain have had these incorporated into law. These gentlemen have a perfect right to labor to that end. That there is nothing religions dogmas and except death more certain than that their labor will be in vain, is wholly their business. If they are satisfied everybody else ought to be. But those who do not accept their theory of reform object to being described as yielding to and encouraging vice and disorder be- cause they do not accept this theory, and especially in the face of the truth which may be read of all men in the last elections, that they are willing to subor- dinate every party and material interest when necessary to preserve and perpetu- ate the great principles of morality. — Pittsburg times. No better aid to digestion, No better cure for dyspepsia, Nothing more reliable tor billiousness and constipation than DeWitt’s Little Early Risers, the famons little pills. A. F. SPEICHER. PER Tr