Wahl's Meat Market! continues to be Steak, This place headquarters for Tender © Choice Dressed Pudding and Juicy Roasts, Poultry, Sausage, Fresh Fish in Season. I aim to serve my patrons with the best in my line that the market affords. = for a lib- and solicit- "the Thanking the public eral patronage, continuance of ing a same, I am Respectfully WAHL, Salishury, SAVE MONEY! I have gone to the trouble to add | to Salisbury’s business interests a | well selected and complete stock of FURNITURE. When in need of anything in this line eall and examine my goods and | get my prices. See if 1 can’t save you some mone. os I’RICES LJ OWe a Thanking the the public for a gen- | erous patronage and asking a con- tinuance of the same, I-am yours | for bargains, WML R. HASELBARTH, Salisbury, > YOUrs, Pa. | Pa. Store over Inscelbarth’s Hardware. CFE STATLER & BRO. General Merchandise, Salisbury, Pa. We carry in stock at all times a complete line of everything usually | found in a large general store. R PRICES ARE RIGHT! I'or Fine Dry Goods, Groceries, No- tions, Country Produce, Miners’ Sup- | ete., | 80 { am willing to go | drummer | hour | asked OU JL plies, our place is IeapqQuarrers. (:all and be convinced. C. E. STATLER HAY'S HOTEL, Salisbury, l & BRO. enin’a. This elegant NEW THREE- STORY HOTEL one of the best equipped hostelries in Som- erset county. is Modern I<quipments| of all kinds, such as Steam Heat, Warm and Cold Baths, Tele- phone, IY'ine Bar, ete. Centrally located with fine sur- roundings., Tables supplieed with the best the markets afford. Rates reasonable. C.T.HAY, Proprietor. Ii<tablisherl P.S.1HIAY, —DEALER IN— 15:3. | from the enemy’s camp. Drv (Goods Notions, Liats and Caps, 13oots and Shoes, GROCERIES QUEENSWARE, TOBACCO, CIGARS, FIC. NALISBU IY, | ours. | tend to our own business, | must | Pennsylvania are doomed for years, i not forever.” | again, PA. Co MM. MAY, —TH EK ading Barber. Hair-dressing, Shaving, Shampooing and | Hair Dyeingdone in the finest style of the art. ve 1.4€ Yazor Repairing A Srecialiy, Soaps, Tonics and other Barbers’ Sup- | plies for sale at all times, SHor OrposiTE HAY’s HoTEL, Salisbury, Pa. | » FRANK PETRY & SONS, CARPENTERS AND BUILDERS, ELK LICK, PA. Contracts taken. Estim: ates promptly | furnished and neat and substantial | work guaranteed. B. KRAUSSE, BOUT & SHOEMAKER, SALI SBU RY, . Repairing « specialty. Satisfaction | guaranteed. | . Hon. { made, i date, {am at his'’command at any hour day or 1 night, | and he replied ‘I am going first to be | a { nothing. ! gubernatorial campaign, ception of the great Hastings tour of [ hour { long roll call. | sides with the president’s enemies. Sad | it is | truth. | dent were our two Pennsylvania sena- | of their i sight of | Blaine, | send us again men, unbargainin ! straight path. At Clearfield Mr. I Liexow bill for $65,000. | concerns the | Senator Quay and his bosses propose to | a cost of $455.72 per hour. WANAMAKER'S OFFER. Will Raise a Regiment and March | With It to the Field. GREAT STATE FIGHT GOES ON. | present. The Ex-Postmaster General Greeted | With Packed Ilouses Wherever He Ilas Spoken—The Pennsylvania Sen=- ators Are Torn Up For Thelr Treach- eryv—A Nameless Senator Who Wants to Be Lieutenant Governor. (From Our Own Correspondent.) Harrisburg, April 26.—On Saturday last Hon. John Wanamaker again dem- onstrated his genuine patriotism and | sincere love of country by reiterating the offer of his services to Governor Hastings, not as an officer, but as a private in the ranks of the regiment he has ready to march. This telegram, as ! received by the governor, reads: Philadelphia, April 23. Daniel II. Hastings, governor of | Pennsylvania, Harrisburg: . Anticipating the call likely to be I desire again to tender and urge accentance of a thousand men to be | ready to report 'to you for service in 48 | hours. If the fact that I have not had! military experience stands in the way | I waive all preferment of place and will be willing to take subordinate position or go in the ranks. 1 earnestly beg your early authority to form this regi- ment. JOHN WANAMAKER. Governor ITastings was obliged to re- ply to Mr. Wanamaker, as follows: Harrisburg, April 23. Hon. John Wanamaker, Philadelphia: Replying to your telegram of this the entire National Guard of the state has been tendered to the presi- dent. Until we receive a response to that tender no arrangements can be made for enlisting volunteers. I thank you for your patriotic offer. DANIEL H. HASTINGS. Carlier in the week, in his speech at | Dubois, Mr. Wanamaker said: READY TO ANSWER THE “Answering in this public CALL. way the | letters that are waiting for me wher- ever I go through the state, let each man put his affairs in order to respond to the governor's call for volunteers when it comes. I conversed with over the telephone from Dubois this morn- ing and put myself at the call of the adjutant general, offering to return to Philadelphia by the next train or by a special car if I could get it and com- plete my offer to raise a regiment. 1 He informed me that the Na- tional Guards have the first call and then the way is open for volunteers. “Some people say that I propose to as a colonel. My answer is that I as colonel or corporal, private. What the is a man. Some one when a young fellow do with his life or high calls for Garfield what he intended to It XY fall: in man. that I shall be Mr. Wanamaker’s tour last week in the Twenty-eighth congressional dis- trict was a whirlwind success. Men by hundreds were turned away in Dubois, Clearfield, Phillipsburg and Bellefonte. Nothing like it has been known in any with the ex- three years ago. QUAY A TRAITOR TO MRINLEY. Mr. Wanamaker scored Quav and Penrose for voting with the Democrats against the president on the Cuban recognition matter. It was a base and ungrateful desertion of the party in the of its trouble. Mr. Wanamal:er, at Bellefonte, said: “Standing at the wheelhouse, the old ship rocking in the gale, President Mc- Kinley, in Washington, called out to the engine room of the Capitol of the dangers ahead on the Cuban shore, where the Maine men sleep until the Some of the old senate speculators, apparently unconscious of the grave situation of affairs, scorncd their Republican garments and took to say it, and sadder to be the Among these foes of the presi- tors, and remained so until driven out dihonoring positions when in the last vote, about to go against them, when they hurried in Stevens or James G. Harrison? God gS, un- in such an “Do you think Thaddeus would have done that, or Benjamin speculating, unswerving hour who are from the patriots and very day but deepens the shadows that fall upon the Repub- lican party in other states as well as It will be enougn for us to at- and that we Republicans of if attend to or the THI: LEXOW LUURIES. also scored the Lexow luxuries showing what the people would have to pay for W. H. Andrews and others if Quay can “own a governor.’ Wanamaker said: A FEW EXAMPLES “I will give you a few examples: The This Lexow bill whole state, though the expenses were incurred by a bogus in- vestigation of Philadelphia affairs. But He make the whole state pay for his at- tempt to frighten a few dephia into making terms with him. William H. Andrews, late of Crawford | county, and the manager of William A. ! Stone's campaign, was chairman of | that committee and prepared this ex- pense bil. / “The committee only sat once awhile, and if all its sessions wore lumped they would not amount to over men in Phila- | an | { 30 full days of actual work. Yet their bill was $65,908.96, and here are some of the items that you people of Craw- ford county are asked to pay: Ex- | | penses for witnesses, mileage and fees, $28,071.06; pert witnesses, | | | stenographer, $9,812.25; ex- | $4,951.16; bill at Hotel | Walton, $5,912; clerk hire and detec- | tives, $5,162; attorneys’ fees, $12,000. The | committee held 57 meetings at a cost of | $65,908.96, or $1,156.28 per session. The ! committee was in session 137 hours at B PRINCELY PAY FOR WITNESSES. “Just 435 witnesses were examined at i | stenographer. | operators would be delighted to get for | bill incurred by wi. the political sponsor ! maker's | It found nothing irregular, | torial, | you’ll find the 7imes may be depended | at low prices. B.& 0.R. R. SCHEDULE. Induce your friends to subscribe for | { upon. 8 «+ al cost of $060 12 or at the rate of $75.73 per witness. Compare thin princely pav with the witness feces paid in Cleagiield county. “The expenses of the committee at the nalatial Hotel Walton, in Phila- delphia, because only the best hotel and accominodations will satisfy the bosses, for 57 sessions were $5,912.40, or alone, a rate of $23 for each senator employed was $9,812.25, or an average of $172.14 per session. committee paid $71.23 per hour to its Thousands of shorthand a month's work what the Lexow com- mittee paid for an hour's work. | “As there were 436 withesses examin- | | ed, the stenographer got or he will get, | his man | if Senator Quay can elect governor, $22.50 for reporting the testi- mony of each witness. “If you add the stenographer’s charge of $22.50 per witness to the average cost for mileage and fees for cach wit- ness, viz., $75.73, you have the sum of | com- | mittee to summon and examine each | | witness. $93.28, which it cost the Lexow And you, the people of Craw- ford county, are expected to pay this S. Quay and Will- fam H. Andrews, of William A. Stone. “The counsel fees for the Lexow com- mittee, the sum charged by the three lawyers employed by the committee, though there were at least two lawyers members of .the committee, were $210.53 per meeting.” A NAMELESS SENATOR. The nameless senator who figured in the insurance scandal at Harrisburg, and who now wants to be lieutenant governor, was touched up at Phillips- burg in this fashion in Mr. Wana- speech: a cost | ! of $103.72 per meeting for hotel expenses | The bill of the stenographer | At this rate the | W. H. KooxT2. KOONTZ & OGLE, Attorneys-At-Tinw, J. G. OGLE. SOMERSET, PENN'A, LOMee opposite Court Housce. I'raxcis J. Koosen., I KOOSER & KOOSLR, Attorneys-At-l.aw, SOMERSET, 1 TRNEST O. KOOSER. | | J. A. BERKEY, Attorney-at-T.aw, SOMERSET, IPA. Office over Fisher's Book Store. A. MO LICHTY, Physician and Surgeon, SALIS3URY, PENNA. Oflice one door east of P.S. Hay’s store. Wh obuters International Difiinnpry Successor of the Unabridged”? o ; Standard of the U. preme {: ourts, amdof ly ull the Schoolbhooks Warmly Commended “You have all heard so much of in- J: vestigating committees way. Let us go a little into details and see some of the self fixed values your representatives have placed upon themselves. “I wish to make the sweeping state- ment that no investigating committee | of the | | legislature accomplished any good, and and fakes | anpointed at the last session those that were not frauds were failures. Chief among the fakes was the committee to investigate the management of the state treasury. nothing to criticize, nothing to recommend. Their in a general | report had scarcely been adopted when | the state treasurer confessed large sums of money had been ad- vanced without authority of law. For that | the while that it was used to cover up the mismanagement of this ment, the state The few meetings the committee held were all in Harrisburg, and that the legislature was in session. “Fake No. 2, to investigate that certain state senators, one of whom was Quay’s chosen chief of the | senate, had demanded $50,000 of a New York insurance company to kill an in- surance bill. NAMES ‘The star committee were most effective in hand- ling a bad mess. So well was 1t handled that until this day the name of a senator who was most intimately connected with the story has not ap- peared in any paper in Pennsylvania, though every menber of the legisla- ture knew his name. He is now a can- didate for lieutenant governor, claims to have the support of Senator Quay.” Mr. Wanamaker has not decided on his programme for, this week, but the fight will still go on as hard and as fast as ever. NOT DISCLOSED. Morehing Southwerd, Again the fire of Bunker ill I'ills every martial band; Again the sound of marching feet Is heard throughout the land. The hosts through South Along historic ways, And Chickamauga sees again The campfire’s fiftful blaze. are streaming Now Southron marches side by side His friend from lands of snow, And every blade is drawn against The Nation's common foe. Among North Georgia's somber hilis The bugle ealls to strife, And ghosts that dwell on Kennesaw Are stirred again with life, —Atlanta Journal. tr The Times has a larger criculation by | many thousands than any other daily | newspaper published in Pittsburg. This is admitted even by its The reasons for it are not hard to find. The Times is a tireless newsgatherer, is depart- | was charged $4,734.81. | on days rumors | THE BEST FOR PRAC Se USE. Itis easy to find the word wanted. Itis easy to ascertain the pronunciation. It is easy to trace the growth of a word. It is easy to learn w hat a w word means. The New Yorl Tri! ) > The latest e dition comes from th completeness that implies the most | torial and typographical supervisio Sada pate, tio, ids Hiss @owork 10 whi ch i "ss eft to reter.— Aprils » 19%. "GET THE BEST. EF Specimen pages sent on application to G.& C. MERRIAM CO., Publishers, Springfield, Mass. - U. 5. A CAUTICN. Do not be deceived in buying small so- called ‘‘ Webster’s Dictionaries.”” All authenticabridgments of the International inthe various sizes bear our trade-mark on the front cover as shown in the cuts. eo horn New Brick Ac Tile Works! chamber meetings of this | [ have Shi in A\WEST BURY a steam plant for the manufac- ture of BRICK and DRAIN TILE and | wish to inform the public that 1 can and | | vince you. "and TILE i no heavy freight charges to pay. ror competitors. | edited with extreme care, spares no ex- | pense to entertain and inform its read- ers. It prints all the news in comp ct ! shape, caring always more for quality ! than quantity. clean, but at the same time bright. Nothing that is of human interest is overlooked by it. rather than sensational. It Keeps its columns | It aims to be reliable | It believes in | the gospel of get there, but it gets there | with due respect for the facts. Test any department of it you choose—po- litical, religious, markets, sporting, edi- society, near town news—and $3 a year, 6 cents a week. tere smi Tur Star. less than 21; cents per week. paper in the county. Only $1.25 a year, a little The best | fr. Notice to Exchanges. Some of Tue Stir’s exchanges will | please take notice that our post- -office | address is Elk Lick. Some of our | { i No. 46, Daily. | ex- | changes are not being received regular- | ly, on account of being addressed “Sal- | 1 isbury.” tf rar TAPER! CARTRIDGE can get enough Cartridge Paper for a few cents, at Tie Star oflice, to las them for several months. parr Fill Orders Promptly. I have the best of clay for this busi- | SALTS ALL ROADS ARE ALIKE TOA MONARCH. Perfection is the result of our long experience: MONARCH AND DEFIANCE BICYCLES ‘are the product of mechanical ingenuity. $40.00 $50.00 $60.00 Monarch Chainless $100.00 | Send for 1898 Catalogue. Agents wanted in open territory. MONARCH CYCLE MFC. CO., Lake, Halsted and Fulton Streets, Chicago. Branches—New York, London and Hamburg. Send ten 2-cent stamps for a deck of Monarch Playing Cards illustrating ning Green established at ton and all Catalogues mailed to anybody on ap JUSTICE Lillian Russell, Tom Cooper,Lee Richardson and Walter Jones. db, GRADE. BICYCLEN Bi = IS NModels, —aa the Celebrated, B1CYCLLES, Uniontown, Connellsville ney A few more local agents wanted for Fast-run- ANDRA Johnstown, Aeents already West New- other leading cities. £5 6 A few wanted. Write to the A gt Sey Just ask any Andrac rider. more good agents plication. . : °9 AC ° L't'd.,, Gen LIBIITEY PITTSBURG, PA. CYCLE (CO, Tal WINN ANVIL Xo T15 i ness, as a trial of my product will con- | The people of this locality | can save money by getting their BRICK | ME AND SAVE MONEY. JOHN A. KNECHT, FLKN LICK, PA. 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &C. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communica- tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest ngency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American, A handsomely illustrated weekly. T.argest cir- culation of any scientific journal. Terms, $5 a year: four months, $1. Sold by all new sdealers. N & Co,30 18am. New York Branch Office, 626 F St., Washington, D. C. IINDERTAKING! at my WORKR, as there are | CY Address. Stoves, Tinware, C. R. Hasclbarth & S yuoar-Makig Utensils a i Supply your wants in this line where you can get the goods for BUCKEIS, Gnauls, ugar Pans. oyu Gans, EL. > also carry at all times a large line of up-to-date HARDW ARN. Collars, Paints, Oils, Glass, Ltc., Etc ALES and SMALL MARGINS.” the least money. S00 Heelers W Harness, “LARGE S. Our motto 1s, Son, Salisbury. Penna. The junior member of this firm has late- ly been taking speicinl the city of Pittsburg, in the art of IMBALDMING. come: Weare therefore in a position to give instructions in | the public better service inour line than | ever before, and we are still doing busi- ness at the old stand. Thanking public for their mg a continuance mala of the same, we =. liowry & Son, = Salisbury, VW. LExpressman and Drayman, WEST SALISBURY, PA. IF. GARLITZ, All Your patronage issolicited. the | patronage, nnd solicit- re- | a. | kinds of hauling and delivering of coods MEANS aR WHEN wid ED 10) Pronounced hy Eta the Standard of the World. Ask your dealer for WINCHESTER make of Gun or Ammunition and take no other. FREE :--Our new lllustrated Catalogue. WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO., New Haven, Ct. v ntil further notice paswpnze] r trains will | ive nt Meyersdale as follows EAST BOUND. BE DALY wei i eas ral 12:48 . cos FE:22 AL) 1058 ALM. NO. Daily. Daily No. 6, No. HK, 4 WEST BOUND. No. 9, Daily NO. in. Daily. No. , Daily. =alixbury Hack Line, SCHRAMM BROS, ScueEbpvLE:—Hack No.l Proprietors. wes Salisbury ats AN arriving nt Moye The miners | sed Returning leaves Meversdale at | riving at Salisbury at 3 po. M. HACK No. 2 leaves Salisbury at | rv. on, ar- riving of Meyersdnle at 3 p.m. Returning feaves Meversdale at 6 Mp urriving at Sul- isbury ats ro. IN THE KOONTZ BUILDING! Having some time ago purchased the Koontz property, all those interested in Monumental’work will find me in what was once I known as 3:03. A. M. | 0 THE KOONTZ MARBLE WORKS I am prepared as never before to offer to all those in need of Monumental work, | from small Headstones to Granite Monuments. PRICES HERETOFORE UNHEARD OF, None but the best of Marble and Granite, and workmanship the finest. I | ! make Granite work a specialty: You will be surprised at my prices. Call and | see me. | | ALBERT J. HILLEGASS, Berlin, Pa.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers