continues to be Steak, Dressed This headquarters for Tender place Juicy Roasts, Clioice Poultry, Sausage, Pudding and Fresh Fish in Season. ] aim to serve my patrons with the best in my line that the market affords. T Lanking 0 public for a lib- eral patronage, and solicit- ing a continuance of the same, I.am Respectfully yours, WAHL, -— Salishury, Pa. SAVE MONEY! 1 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 ¢all and examine my goods and get my prices. See if I can’t save you sone mone, 1 PRICES Ss T.OWes qe Thanking the the public for a gen- erous patronage and asking a con- tinuance of the same,l am yours for bargains, WAL HASELBARTH, Salisbury, Store over Haselbarth’s Hardware. C.E STAILER & BRO., General Merchandise, Salisbury, Pa. R: ERY) We carry in stock at all times a line of everything usually large general store. ICES ARE RIGHT! ine Dry Goods, Groceries, No- ‘ountry Produce, Miners’ Sup- our place is I[EADQUARTERS. (all and be convinced. C. E. STATLER HAY'S HOTEL, Salisbury, complete found in =o JUR PR For FF tions, ( plies, ete., & BRO. Penn’a. This elegant NEW THREE- STORY HOTEL is one of the equipped hostelries in Som- sel-county. Lost Modern IHqguipments of all kinds, such as Steam Ieat, Warm end Cold Baths, Tele- phone, Fine Bar, ete. Centrally located with fine sur- roundings. Tables suppliced with the best the markets afford. Rates reasonable. CC. TT. IT AY, Proprietor. . M=tablis=hed PSM HAY, —DE. 1 8=5 L 3. ALER IN— ~~ 2 4 ® ; Dry ( roods Notions, “3x Iats and Caps, Boots and Shoes, GROCERIES, QUEENSWARE, TOBACCO, CIGARS, ETC SALISBURY, TPA. FRANK PETRY & SONS, CARPENTERS AND BUILDERS, ELK LICK, PA, Contracts taken, estimn 3 promptly furn- «1 and neat and subst: x tial work guar- i ced. TAKE NOTICE! I'rank Petry, included in this firm. Jr, is not 3. KRAUSSE, BOOT & SHOEMAKER. SALISBURY, PA. Repairing a specialty. Satisfaction guaranteed. WwW. F, Expressman and Drayman, WEST SALISBURY, PA. All kinds of hauling and delivering of goods at low prices. Your patronagéissolicited. GARLITZ, For the be:t tonsorial work go to C. M. MAY, The Leading Barber. sSmoP QrrosiTeE HAY’S HOTEL. THE NEW." YORK .". WORLD, THRICE-A-WKEK EDITION. s a Week. 150 Papers a Year. FORONEDOLLAR. 18 Page Published every Alternate Day Ex- cept sunday. The Thrice-a-Week Edition of They New York World is first among all “weekly” papers in size, frequency of publication, and the freshness, accura- cy and variety of its contents. It has all the merits of a great $8 daily at the price of a dollar weekly. Its political news is prompt, complete, accurate and impartial as all its readers will testify. It is against the monopolies and for the people. It prints the news of all the world, having special correspondence from all important news points on the globe. It has brilliant illustrations, stories by great authors, a capital humor page, complete markets, departments for the household and women’s work and other special departments of unusual interest. We offer this unequaled newspaper and THE SOMERSET COUN TY STAR together, one year for $1.90. The regular subscription price of the two papers is $2.50. Address orders to THE STAR, Elk Lick, Pa. New Brick And Tile Works! [ have erected in WEST SALIS- BURY a steam plant for the manufac- ture of BRICK and DRAIN TILE and wish to inform the public that I can Fill Orders Promptly. I have the best of clay for this busi- ness, as a trial of my produet will con- vince you. The people of this locality can save money by getting their BRICK and TILE at my WORKS, as there are no heavy freight charges to pay. BUY OF ME AND SAVE MONEY. Address, JOHN A. KNECHT, ELK LICK, Nutriotone. A pure and safe restorative for farm ani- mals—a Nutrient Tonic. Aids digestion, tones the stomach, purifies the blood, pre- vents and cures all diseases, contains no poison and ean be fed with safety to all kinds of stock. PAYS 100 PER CENT. Bae... ON COST. Try it. It is beyond doubt the best powder vou can get for horses and cattle. We have very flattering recommendations from peo- ple in Salisbury and Elk Lick. For sale by (. R. Haselbarth & Son. I A . 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE [NTIS TrapE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &cC. 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 agency ‘for gecuring BLODER, Patents taken throug unn special notice, without charge, in the “Scientific American, A handsomely illustrated weekly.. Largest cir- culation of any scientific jousnsl, erms, $3 a year ; four months, 8oid by all newsdealers. MUNN & Co 3s 1erosawer. New York Branch Office, 625 F St., Washington, D. C. a hust le r. For particu- fh Ek Soll BICYCLE To Agents as a sample. POWER CYCLE (0, INDIANAPOLIS IND. This is the opportunity for Salisbury Hack I.ine, SCHRAMM BROS, Proprietors. ScuepvLe:—Hack No.1 leaves Salisbury at 8 A. M., arriving at Meyersdale at 10 A. Mm. Returning leaves Meye rsdale at 1 p. M., ar- riving at Salisbury at 3 P. MM. HACK No. 2 leaves Salisbury at 1». ua, ar- riving nt Meyersdale at 3 pP. M. Returning leaves Meyersdale at 6 p.m. arriving at Sal- isbury at 8 p. Notice: to Exe shanges. Some of Tue Srar’s exchanges will please take notice that our post-office address is Elk Lick. Some of our ex- changes are not being received regular- ly, on account of being addressed “Sal- isbury.” tf Tne Star and the Nickell Maqasine, both one year for only $1.50, cash with order. The Nickell Magazine is beauti- fully illustrated, and its contributors are among the best writers in the coun- try. Address all orders to THE STAR, Elk Lick, Pa. One Minute Cough Cure, cures. That is what it was made for. ANOTHER J0B HALTED. A $16,000 Catalogue For the State College That Was to Be a Gem. THE OOLLEGE NOT RESPONSIBLE. The Old Bira Book Gang at Work Again—They Proposed to Have the People Pay For Advertising a Brown- stone Quarry—One of the Most Cold- blooded Schemes Yet Hatched—But It Was Halted by the Governor and the Pcople’s Money Saved. (From Our Own Correspondent.) Harrisburg, July 19.—Revelations of crookedness among followers of the Quay machine come to light with start- ling rapidity. The latest came to the surface last week in the exposure of a Job to rob the taxpayers through a discredited “Bird Book’ scheme. It will be remembered that one of the principal scandals of the present year at Harrisburg was the exposure of an attempt to secure about $53,000 of the people’s money by the republication of another costly edition of the now no- torious “Bird Book.” The bill as it originally passed the legislature was harmless enough in itself. It provided for the publication by the state printer of a sort of pamphlet on the subject of poultry and the enemies of poultry. When the work was about ready for publication it was discovered to be a gorgeous volume, replete with many colored engravings, and which, when finished, would cost the state not less than the enormous sum above stated. It was only the action of the gov- ernor, prompt and decisive, that halted the job. Now a companion piece of knavery pops out. It was evolved by one who wanted to work up the plates cf the discredited Bird Book job. The State college at Bellefonte is a most worthy and excellent institution. It has a large and well paid corps of instructors. Dr. George W. Atherton is the president of the college. Dr. Atherton is a gentleman of learning and executive ability. It is to be re- gretted that the college has been made the victim of the schemers’ plots. But ft has, and the result will be that the friends of the college must be prepared to hear it denounced, even though it is innocent It is the custom of the institution to issue a catalogue every year. The catalogue is unusually a nicely bound pamphlet, which discusses the progress of the experiment station and: other branches of its special work. Taking advantage of these well known facts, the schemers in Harrisburg decided to work into the State college catalogue a lot of stuff about poultry, birds and mammals, and brownstone. ter is the most interesting part of the exposure. Just what brownstone has to do with the State college of Pennsylvania is not made clear, even in the catalogue. There is not a vast amount of brown- stone in this state, and the people who started to advertise it in the State col- lege catalogue took good care to see that the name of the firm owning the quarries in question was conspicuously placed in the catalogue, so that any person desiring to purchase this par- ticular style of building stone would not be at any loss to know where to write for information. Thus the schemers, part of the same old gang on the hill at Harrisburg, tried to turn the catalogue of this state institution Into a cold blooded advertising scheme. For this it was proposed to make the people pay something like $16,000. There are guilty parties in this trans- action, There was collusion c¢n the part of some one, and that guilty one will yet be brought to account. It will have to be explained how the person engaged by the college to prepare the annual catalogue of that institution managed to let the old “Bird Book” gang get the costly cuts and highly col- ored , plates into the catalogue. How the catalogue was deliberately turned into an advertising scheme for a firm of brownstone dealers. To the lasting credit of the president, Dr. George W. Atherton, he promptly and emphatical- ly denied any knowledge of the affair. Nobody acquainted with Dr. Ather- ton would, for an instant, believe him to have knowledge of any such affair without exposing it. mains that some one had guilty knowl- edge of the transaction. The above sufficiently demonstrates that no matter what precautions are taken the ‘gang’ is always on the lookout to fleece the people. As fast as one exposure is made another fol- lows. There is but one way to end this systematic robbery of the people, and | that is to turn the rascals out. The whole brood must go. The treasury looters and salary grabbers, along with the schemers who try to work in their discredited jobs, costing thousands of dollars, where no one suspects it. And the time is coming when the ras- zals will be turned out. ae The Times has a larger circulation by many thousands than any other daily newspaper published in Pittsburg. This is admitted even by its competitors. The reasons for it are not hard to find. The Times is a tireless newsgatherer, is edited with extreme care, spares no ex- pense to entertain and inform its read- ers. It prints all the news in compact shape, caring always more for quality than quantity, It keeps its columns clean, but at the same time bright. Nothing that is of human interest is overlooked by it. Tt aims tobe reliable rather than sensational. 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—pe- litical, religious, markets, sporting, edi- torial, society, near town news—and vou’ll find the Times may be depended ss upon. $3 a year, 6 cents a week. The lat-- But the fact re- | The Scientific American Navy Sup- plement. The Scientific American, which has al- ways been identified itself very closely with the interests of the Navy, is to be congratulated on the extremely hand- some and valuable “Navy Supplement” which it has lately put before the pub- lic. We think that, if the average read- er had been asked beforehand what kind of a work he would prefer upon the Navy, he would have asked for just such an issue as this. Both the illustrations and the read- ing matter are of the straightforward explanatory kind which is necessary to put,a technical .subject clearly before the lay mind. It was a happy thought to preface the work with a chapter up- sert a few diagrams by way of explana- tion of the subtle differences between cruisers, monitors and battleships; for after digesting this chapter one is pre- pared to follow intelligently the detail- ed descriptions of the various ships which make up the bulk of the issue. One of the best things about this num- ber is that it does not merely give an external illustration of each ship, but it takes the reader down below decks, and initiates him into the mysteries of the magazines, handling rooms, amm- rition hoists and motive machinery. The sectional views of the interior of the turrets of the monitors are excep- tionally fine, as are the large wood en- gravings of the engines of the “Massa- chusettes.” The last page of the num- ber contains complete tables of the new Navy, the auxiliary fleet and the various naval guns. A handsome col- ored map of Cuba and the West Indies is furnished with this issue. We extend our congratulations to our contempo- rary on the production of a work which is well conceived and admirably car- ried out. This work is published by Munn & Co. of 361 Broadway, New York, for 25 cents. rt elie rere Just received, at Tur Star office, a nice line of Visiting Cards. eee deen rd AGED HARVESTERS. One Who Has Helped Gather the Golden Grain for Ninety Years. Everett Republican. Our venerable friend Squire Samuel Staily, of Ray’s Hill, was in Everett on Tuesday last for a few hours. He said he was going home to help in the har- vest field on Wednesday, ns is his cus- tom. For the past seventy-three years he has performed a like service. Mr. Staily is in his eighty-sixth year, and is hale and hearty for a man of his ad- vanced age. We thought he was thecldest harvest hand who would assist in gathering in the abundant crops this year, but the Waynesboro Record knocks us out in the first round by saying that Rudolph Herr, of Clear Spring, Md., who has as- sist.d in every wheat harvesting for the past ninety years, is again in the field this year. Notwithstanding his advanced age of ninety-three years, he cradled for over an hour with as much sprightliness as many of the young har- vesters. te 23d National Encampment G. A. R., Cineinnati, Ohio, September 5th to 10th, 1898. B. & O. R. R. For this occasion tickets will be sold at the low rate of one fare for the round trip from all points on the B. & 0. R. R. east of Pittsburg, Parkersburg and Wheeling, inclusive, good going on September 3d and 4th. and good return- ing not earlier than September 6th, | nor later than September 13th ex- cept by depositing ticket with Joint | Agent at Cincinnati, between Septem- { ber 5th and 9th, inclusive, and on pay- ! ment of fee 25 cents, when return limit may be extended to leave Cincinnati, to and including October 2d, 1898. | Owing to the great patriotic wave | sweeping the country at the present time, great interest will be manifested iat this meeting. Solid vestibuled trains {of elegant coaches, Pullman sleeping | ears, observation cars and splendid dining car service. Three through trains daily from New York, Philadel- phia, Baltimore and Washinton, and two from Pittsburg. Get full particulars Agent, B. & O. R. R. te from Tne Star, the Nickell Manocing and the New York Weekly 7ribune, all one year for only $2.00, cash with order. By this arrangement you get a good coun- ty paper, a good city paper and a first- class illustrated magazine all at a trif- ling expense. Address all orders to Tue Star, Elk Lick, Pa. es pp ee. FOR SALE !—Several gross Braham Patent Pens. These pens are a new inyention and an excellent thing. By their use blotting is an impossibility ani one penful of ink will write an or- dinary letter. They save ink, save time and avoid blots. They last twice as long as other pens. We have them in stubs and all other styles. Will close them out at 15 cents per dozen. Reg- ular price is 25 cents per dozen. Try them and you will use no other. Law- yers, ministers and clerks buy them by the gross. You can get them at Tue ? STAR office, on the classification of warships and in- Ticket | For Fine Job Printin(G, CALL ON The Star, =) Type, New Press, New Stock, (rood Printers, 1.0WwW Prices. Prompt Attention To Mail Orders.