trons strict- r pat- profit : d sell Stdial your: | om! aTue for Mundell Provis- ity, the bar- for past Eola matured experience and unflagging enterprise are the ered . {to sucgess, TE : han pei land Shoes, Men's and Boys’ Clothing, Hats and Caps, Hard-[{ on the Corner of Grant and ord Streets, And yet we are not content. While “our trade has ‘been {growing year by year, we are today working as : diligently 1 to enlarge our business and serve you better in years to come | than our efforts were in the past. “Onward!” Is The Watciword. mal Diligence, Perseverance, Generous Dealing, ee Low Prices, We thank you for. your patronage, which has made this fruitful in the fut been in the past, and your Sappiness wil be increased pro- Ad portionately. ia We keep i in stock a fall line of Dry Goods, Notous Boots | ware, Queensware, Groceries, Confectionery. School Books, | Stationery, Wall Paper, Coal Oil, Lard Oil, Linseed Oil, Cor- liss Engine Oil, Neatsfoot Oil, Lubricating Oil, ‘Turpentine, tom Bas Varnishes, Dyes, Paints mixed, Paints in oil, Putty, Window | JOHN sumAsTIAN, | i Sen Ts 4 Fa dat, “ TaamenEy ad in tbe meat ine aways on hand, in- FRESH and. SALT MEATS, BOLOGNA and try my wares, Come and be con: atl hundie none but the best of goods, are and rignt, there will be nothing to u to continue buying of me. Yon will - will ut all times try to pidase you: nvinced that r ean do you good and not trying to make a fortune in a day. tig the public for a liberal patronage. citing a continuance ang increase of the curable disenses horse flesh 1s heir to. latest and most tmproved veterinary Bur Obstetrics a Specialty, stock of veterinary medicines ‘ul. d, thereby saving trouble aud an- : tor treatment for $2.50 Soi week 4 , according 10 treatment required. nie before killing your broken-legged horses. I have treated tetanus or | Glass, all kinds of Miners’ Tools, Ropes of all sizes Wood and Willow-ware, Trunks and Valises, Mining Powder and Salt by the Carload! ~ Royal Flour, Minnehaha Flour, etc. Country Produce tak- len in exchange at market prices. or Ss HAY, SALISBI RY, PENNA Beachy Bros, Nave made % Feat nit by est and best. hardware stores in Somerset : county. Buyers of Hardware und Agri ; - cultural Tmplements will make u great will find that Beachy Bros, will please them in both goods and prices. They are in the business to slay and will leave nothing undone to please. their patrons and give ‘the people what they want in the hardware line. Their stock is bright = and new and made ap of the Jutest styles = of goods. No shoddy goods will be kept % instock, iit. improvements will constant. Iy be added as fast ns ig bratn and i skill oun invent them, DON'T PALL INTO THE GRAVE error of supposing that yon can by hardware cheaper in other towns than in Balis- | bury, for vou can’t do it. Neither can you buy better goods in the hartlare line: | than those sold by Beachy. Bros. Our goods see all new and the best that the mark: et affords or ready money can buy. We want to PAINT THE EARTH RED with the statement that we will not be andersold. We will sell von the best goods good right down to the dotlet on the I. We have piles of goods on hand and many more on 1 The road enroute efor our store, | Our stock will at all times be ‘complete and embrace evsryihing usually found ina first-class hardware and implement store; PREPARE FOR THE INEVITABLE! can save you time and money on your reliases and supply your waiits speedily ‘and satisfactorily. But we can not tellgon in print of everything we earry in stock, for inorder to do that we would hav But suffice. At to 8 ardware of all Kinds, Cutlery, Paints, Oils, Glass, Tinwate, Wondoneors Guns, Revolvers, ‘Buggies, Wagons. Stoves, Ranges, Agricultural Implements of all kinds and in fact every- thing in the hardware line that there is a demand for’ in this locality. Wa will do fully, : TRA Ey Gartits, stcre what it is toda 3). A continuance, we hope, will be as| & development and enlargement as it has| sTovEs and TIN. We handle the celebrated. line of Cinder: ella Stoves and’ Ranges, “also the Sunshine and Rival Ranges, or almost any kind of stove that may | be. desired. : We aim 10 please the people in giving the LOWEST PRICES on shelf and otfier hardware, tncluding Ole; | Paints, Qlass, Nails Pumps; Hollow Wore. Horse Pads, Blankets, Robes, ¢ic., ete.; and | such other things that may | be found in a fiardiare store. pa An the tine oor ea any hissy or Ay from the mg ost © the Yost of grades Se pnprices and all Hinds Fd Hy guarantd » give | sulifaction, at Toasonab ble prices. Solicit {H.C SHAWS, pir SALISBURY. ’ establishing in Salisbury one olthe larg- = = hit hy patronizing this store, for they | TR. 5, Sherrard Barber and Hair Dresser. All kinds of work in my Ane done nan ex- pert manner. My hair tonic is the best on carih—koeps the scalp clear and healthy. i ood Ietponifully golich Jone patronage. Bargains! ! Look at the following quotations and govern yourself accordingly: Minehaha Flour, per barre } Plilshury’s Best, per. barrel. ‘Vienna Fionr, per barrel. *."Reitz's Best, per barrel, . Becker Flour, per barrel © ey Stanton’s Buckwheat Flour. per >. Shelled Corn, per bushel .... .. ‘White Onts, per bushel 3 Mining Powder. . a 5 1.55 Patent Meal and all Kinds of Mill Peed at Bottom Prices. 5 Give me a call and 1 will save you money. CHL C. SHAW. \irailroad. | Mesers. Harrison, Hill and Cleveland are est prices on reeord. S—— REMARKS, Is tr glory, or revenge, that has brought ex-Benator Ingalls back into politics? Tre Farmers’ Alliance is now reaching out fora U. 8. senatorship, in Louisiana. TrATsMay snow storm in Nebraska was undoubtedly indicative of =n sold day for somebody. i INGALLS i8 going to Washington to live. Not the Kansas Ingalls, but M. E. Ingalls, President of the Chesapenke and Buio Jay Gourp isn't sick; he only needs a tonic in the shape of a railroad or two io drive away “that tired feeling” which always comes in the spring. THAT epidemic of withdrawal, which: was billed to acenr about this time, must have been “hung up” somewliere. still in the TAce. KAER Bry has at least one want ‘that is familiar to fhe average American— money. Tt nfust be confessed, however, that his opportunities for obtaining loans are a long way ahead of ours. 5 No flies on’ that Jersey’ preacher who put an exécntion on his ehureh for mon: ey due him. Just as “they who dance must pay the fiddler,” go the¥ who Histon must pay the preacher. Lorn deliver ns! The old eontrOversy | about Sherman’ 8 terms to Joe Johnston is getting a fresh start in newspapers, af: ter a Rip Van Winkle sleep. Will some- bdy Please ‘administer an opiate. er oe Ha In shite of the “Kicking” of her noble ‘relatives, Countess Russell, the wife of a British. nobleman, proposes to indulge her high kicking propensities by hecom- ing a professional skirt dancer. Let her lek, Ir fad ‘to come. For twenty years or more, as regularly as leap year rolled around; Senator Sherman has been one tof those “prominently mentioned” for jthe Presidency, and jost as regularly that flirtatious girl, Columbia, has fooled Bim, Pe 1748 an act was passed in England which made the importing or wearing of | foreign cambrics and French lawns a | misdemeanor punishable by heavy fines. | It was under such laws that Eagland’s greatness as a manufactaring uation was 8. | achieved. : Foran pig iron $19. 76 a ton, Bossemer pig i fron $14.50 a ton, and steel billets $28 a ton; are some sample McKinley prices with which the Tariff “reform” prophets of the eampnign of 1890 are just now wrestling. These are absolutely the low- HERE is a sample of reciprocity’s work. at the Towest living prices. and we invite you 10 test us and see if our word is not [hotel the county, the entire house having been | 8nd Jacksonian type. Samuel J. Randall Harvest time is approaching and yon may need some new farm machinery. We ] B = A = pp w a Tain quurter ending March 31, 1891, were 92.125 bags, 85,874 of them coming from ; CELEBRATED Spain, the other 6751 from the United ORGANS And PIANOS. States; imports of flour into same port for the similar period this year under reciprocity were 101,510 bags, of which 101,060 bags came from this country and 450 bags from Spain. oa For Catalogues, Address. Daniel F. Beatty, Washington, N. J. “ANDRRW JACKSON Houston, the son of The Hay Hotel, General Sam. Houston, isa Republican Co: T. HAY, Prop, SALISBURY, PA, Protectionist, and is the candidate of that party for Governor of Texas, The This finely equipped hotel is now open to | Son of Steplicn A. Douglass is a promi- guests, aud the traveling public will find it one nent Republican leader in Illinois. There of the most desirable Stopping Plates 1n Somer | is no raom in the Democratic party of to- seteounty, ; TH coniatig us finely. furnished 7001s asahy day for Democrats of the old Jeffersonian Atted np with new furniture, new carpet dnd | was the last, and he was “read out,” everything thai goes to make a hotel alttactive = 0 the eye audadd lo the comfort of guests, {important thing thatall the coun: The tables re supplied with the best of every- OSE Impe gh 0 thing thet the market affords, ‘and uo pains will | $V committeemen will do well to remem- ve spared fo Please guesis and make them telat | ber iy that under the new ballot law, home, oi oi Iv FEED ST 8 which went into effect March 1st last; all A GOOD LIVERY AND ED STABLE will be rut iu connection with the hotel and township nominations must be made ten convenience and comfort of the traveling public, primaries seven days previous, and the Rates essotinble aud publie : result of the primaries submitted to the fed. township and borough auditors. who our best to Please you and we respectfully solioit your E Datonage. : Yours jespect : ni and you wilt Blways find Tas Yarunya must-have the tickets printed for the elec- THE VALLEY HOUSE, tion, .—~Somerset Democrat. " Lasoust, pro; pristor. A AMERICAN Free-Trade originated with Board by the day, week or month. First class the slave owners, who were interested in accommodations. Rates reasonable, the degradation of labor and ‘considered Tar ONLY LiceNsup Horan, In Saussuny. almost anv business other than planting as beneath the dignity of a ‘gentleman.’ . We take ‘pleasure in trying to please our pate The bitter controversies th at grew out o t] | slavery and the sectional. fssies since the | | Expressman and Drayman, does all kinds of hauling at very low prices. An ki kinds of freight and express goods delivered to | sud from the Sept, every gay. Satisfaction all busty | guaranteed, ¢ Civil ‘War have kept the Southern people united against the Republican party on the Tariff question. If there were no ‘conflict of races in the South, or ‘if the Southern people could be convinced that § TRepablican success does not mean negro Imports of flour into Havana, Cuba. for | nothing will be’ left undone that. will add to the (days prior to the election, and borough { paper read before the late Fayette .) Farmers’ Institute; quoted fr to show the chitnge that has tke hn du the farmer's condition since that t We select the flowing items: ; 1bs, pore. ph isle 1 Nov. 3. To bu. sw Ibs. iron, at cts. per By 111s, iron worth 1iot] To 4 bas. potatoes, 8E25 ots. To 4 bus. apples, at: 12% ets; per If our farmers could onty those good old times, how hay would be to be sure. SHORT TANIFE SER Free-Trade lias had five peri ntive prevalence in the histo; United Stutes—i. ¢., there het distinetly marked periods wh competing imports have bee at any others enter our por subversion and overthrow of competing industries. These w 1..The Colonial period, endi; throwing over of the tea in Be ‘bor and the battle of Lexingtor The British Parliament forbade law to manufacture in order ‘might monopolize our marke chiefly impelled us toward the independence. : 2 The ‘peace under conf period from 1783 tu 1789, wh tional duties on imports existed chiefly impelled us to adopt th Constitation. 8. The period of the s0-callnd ity treaty with England in 1816 eulmintiting in the financial crisis ~19. 4. The Compromise Tariff pe 1886-39. : op 8. The Walker Tariff period "87. intensified by the further re in’57 and thus prolonged t 1881. This period was marke eral poverty or “hard tim ting in in the summer of 1 into a bankruptoy and no ¥ bankruptey crisis in a in and this reacting produced the wis in America in 1857, alter whi couniry struggled on in a Dan condition until 1861. Without a single exception, approach to Free-Trade brought particularly to farmers and) w kin ple. ; Do we want any more fur A, Decoration Day. : Decoration day will be approj oliserved in Salisbury, this yen German Baptist church has been for the occasion, and on that'd propriate religions and patrio will be held therein, beginning a o'clock. ; The services will consist of pi orations and singing, after whic soldiers’ graves will be decorate flowers. the Salisbury cornet han ing the procession for ihe cemeter The whole service will he be and impressive, and everybody is to take part and join in the par well as attend the services at the ch The nrrangement for the ocea being gotten up by the loeal co Jr. 0, U. A. M., but the services w be of a sectarian nature and no se ciety doctrine or principles will pounded on that day. The gole ‘will be to do honor to our dead he A patriotic and religious manner. ! : It is to be hoped that every busin house in Salisbury will be close few hours and that all will atte services. Ho AT BSL REA Never Liked Sprinkling. The following bit of innocent was reported to Taz Bran a few Rov, Silas Hoover. who Is noted marked that the weather was very and disagreeable. I Yes,” sald Prof. Dickey, © water coming down these days, water.” ; “1 am not afraid of ih
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers