. vheat, Ss; 15 bush- Meal, fore it e bus- value for 3 Mundell | 1d Provis- ; 100 Ban- Flour; Wm, Petry, : VOLUME L SALISBURY, ELK LICK POSTOFFICE, PA., THURSDAY, JUNE, 1892. NUMBER 27. : Professional Cards. 3 35d c. LOWRY, ATTORNEY AT Tio" ES Sounas™, Pa. A.M. LICHTY, . Physician And Surgeon. - Office first door south of the M. Hay corner, § SALISBURY, PA. A. F. SPEICHER, Physician And Surgeon, tenders his professional services to the citizens ot Salisbury and vicinity. Office, corner Grant and Union Sts., Salisbury, Penna. BR UoE LICHT Physician and Surgeon, : GRANTSVILLE, MD. ‘Successor to Ur. 0. GQ. Getty. Dr. D. 0. McKINLEY, : tenders his professional services to those requir- ing dental treatment. Office on Union St., west of Brethren Church. R.M.BERECHY, VETERINARY SURGEON, treats all curable diseases horse flesh is heir to. Has the latest and most Improved veterinary sur- gical instruments and appliances, also a com- veterinary library. sterinary Obstetrics a Specialty, omplete Stock of veterinary medicines al: hand, thereby saving trouble and an- orses taken for treatment for $2.50 per week ‘upwards, according to treatment required. © Consult me before killing your broken-legged : horses. I have treated tetantus or locked-jaw successfully. 5 of residence, 8 miles west of Salisbury, , Postoffice’ address, Grantsville, Md. A BOOK FoR OR EVERYBODY. DR. BATES TRUE MAR MARRIAGE GUIDE. BEAUTIFULLY ILLUSTRATED AND HANDSOMELY BOUND IN CLOTH AND GOLD, 275 PAGES. Oxuy $1.00. SENT BY EXPRESS PREPAID. A complete exposition of the science of life 4nd sexual physiology.. This book contains all the doubtful, curious or inquisitive wish to know Every man and woman—married or single— should read this book; it ¢ontains important truths about the laws of nature. applied to mar. riage, its uses and abuses. Young people on the verge of matrimony will learn the misery that ‘follows ignorance of its physiologiéal laws. It is 8 whole library of startling truths on Jue BG rights * and usages of.marriage, revealing all t ys e teries so essential to know in order to o foi divine command, “Max Know THYSE READ THIS BOOK! : It 1s the Multum in Parvo of a thousand things not mentioned here, 5 DR. J. W. BATE, The Eminent above aut who can be consulted on any or the al ze subjects, DEARBORNX 87., CHICAGO, ILL. . 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 -you if you give us your work. WW. BF. Carlitz, _ Expressmanand Drayman, does all kinds of hauling at very low prices. All kinds of freight and express goods delivered to and from the depot, every day. Satisfaction guaranteed, WAGNER'S GROCERY! The best place in Salisbury to get pure, fresh groceries, Candies, Nuts, Crackers, choice Cigars and Tobacco, Refreshing Drinks, Fresh Oysters and other things in the grocery line, is at M. H. Wagner's grocery. Yours for bargains, M. H. WAGNER. DON'T SKIP A WORD! YOU WILL LOSE MONEY IF YoU DO, Every word costs money and I . can’t afford to spend monev advertising, unless it brings increased sales. ‘‘Ads” ' goon lose the power of attraction, unless the public finds the advertisers up to their promises. I at all: times challenge all .* skeptics to bring my *‘ads” along and see if 1 do not offer the exact goods at the exact prices advertised. Japanese Silk Handkerchiefs, regular price 1c, SBE ease ens nvs .10e Embroidered White Handkerchiefs, Yogular price 10¢, at a .Torchon Laces, per yard 7c, at Fine Ruching 186, 8. .....ccoviuiiiinennnnins ' Base Ball Belts 2c, at ... .............. Base Ball Bats 45¢c, at Fishing Reels 25¢, at..... Fountain Pens 256, &t.....o.oonvueniain Oil Cloth Jackets, for children 25¢, at 18¢ Wade & Butcher Razors, guaranteed $2.25. at 81. 50 Salishurs, Pa’ 1852. 1892. established 40 Yea ~ 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 to enlarge our business and serve you better in years to come than our efforts were in the past. “Onward!” Is The Watehword. Diligence, Perseverance, Generous Dealing, | Low Prices, a matured experience and unflagging Stterprise are the keys to success. if ‘. ¥ ¥ We thank you for your patronage, which has made this stcre what it is today. A continuance, we hope, will be as fruitful in the future development and enlargement as it has been in the past, and your happiness will be increased pro- portionately. ‘We keep in stock a full line of Dry Goods, Notions, Boots and Shoes, Men's and Boys’ Clothing, Hats and Caps, Hard- ware, Queensware, Groceries, Confectionery, School Books, Stationery, Wall Paper, Coal Oil, Lard Oil, Linseed Oil, Cor- liss Engine Oil, Neatsfoot Oil, Lubricating Oil, Turpentine, Varnishes, Dyes, Paints mixed, Paints in oil, Putty, Window | 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- en in exchange at market prices. P. 8. HAY, SALISBURY, PENNA. sREAT HIT. Beachy Bros. have made a great hit by establishing in Salisbury one of the larg- est and best hardware stores in Summerset county. Buyers of Hardware and Agri- cultural Implements will make a great hit by patronizing this store, for they will find that Beachy ‘Bros. will please " thiem in both goods and prices. They are in the business to stay 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 up of the latest styles of goods. No shoddy goods will he kept in stock, but improvements will constant- ly be added as fast as American brain and skill can invent them. DON'T FALL INTO THE GRAVE error of supposing that you can buy hardware cheaper in other towns than in Salis- bury, for you can’t doit. Neither can vou buy better goods in the hardware line than those sold by Beachy Bros. Our goods are 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 undersold. We will sell you tne best goods at the lowest living prices. and we invite you to test us and see if our word is not good right down to the dotlet on the I. We have piles of goods on hand and many more on the road enroute for our store. Our stock will at all times be complete and embrace everything usually found in a first-class hardware and implement store. PREPRRE FOR THE INEVITABLE! Harvest time is approaching and yon may need some new farm machinery. We can save you time and money on your purchases and supply your wants speedily and satisfactorily. But we can not tell you in print of everything we carry in stock, for in order to do that we would have to charter this entire paper. But suffice it to say that our store will at all times be headquarters for Shelf Hardware of all kinda, Cutlery, Paints. Oils, Glass, Tinware, Woodenware, Guns, Revolvers, Buggies, Wagons, Stoves, Ranges, Agricultural Implements of all kinds and ingfact every. thing fh the hardware line that there is a demand for in this locality. We will do our best to please you, and we respectfully solicit your patronage. Yours respect- fully, BRAGCHY BROS. THE IMPROVED ROASTER 285 BAKER Posseases all the fine points of all other pans and then steps far ries tty OF Sore tion: mn, durabili and th thorough man: ner in which it does its work. beans, fostor 84 it hsnoequal. It does iis own retainsall the strength and flavor of the meat. We wantan agent in o county in the Unis | ted States, and will pay liberal commissions : Write fr dosoriphls Sy Address, THE STAR Hardware, STOVES and TIN, My 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. : Wy. asm to please the people. on giving fhe} LOWEST PRICES on shelf and other hardware, including Oils, Paints, Glass, Nails Pumps, Hollow Ware, Horse Pads, Blankefs, Robes, ete.. ete., and duck other things that may be found in a hardware store. In the line of Tinware we can furnish anything made of tin, and of any quantity or quality, from the cheap- est {0 the best of grades, at lowest prices. Spouting, Roofing and all kinds of job work, guaranieed to give satisfaction, at reasonable prices. Soligit- ing your patronage, we remain C. R. Haselbarth & Son, Salisbury, Pa. R. B. Sheppard, Barber and Hair Dresser. All kinds of work in my line done in an ex- pert manner. My hair tonic ig the. pesto on ‘enrth-keeps the sealp clean and healthy. § Tespeciuliy solielt your patronage, Bargains ! : —— Al H. C. SHAW'S, WEST SALISBURY. Look at the following quotatipns and govern yourself accordingly: Minehaha Flour, per barrel Pilisbury's Best, per barrel.... Vienna Flour, per barrel........... ... _ Reitz's Best, per barrel, Becker Flour, per barrel . Stanton’s Buckwheat Flour, per Shelled Corn, per bushel .... ........ a ; White Oats, per bushel .......... .... +48 ots. Salt, per sack Mining Powder. 1.78 Patent Meal and all kinds of Mill Feed at Bottom Prices. Give me a call Jl oN An money. BAYT Y’"S CELEBRATED ORGANS And PIANOS. : For Catalogues, Address Danlel F. Beatty, Washington, N. J. The Hay Hotel, CO. T. HAY, Propr, SALISBURY, PA, This finely equipped hotel is now open to guests, and the traveling public will find it one of the most desirable stopping places in Somer- set county. It contains as finely furnished rooms as any hotel in the county, the#¥ntire house having been fitted up with new furniture, new carpet and everything that goes to make a hotel attractive to the eye and add to the comfort of guests. The tables aresupplied with the best of every- thing that the market affords, and no pains will be spared to please guests and make them feel at home. A GOOD LIVERY AND FEED STABLE ‘will be run in connection with the hotel and nothing will be left undone that will add to the convenience and comfort of the traveling public. Rates reasonable aud public patronage solic- ited. THE VALLEY HOUSE, H. LOECHEL, Proprietor. Board by the day, week or month, First-class accommodations. Rates reasonable, Tae ONLY LioENseD HOTEL IN SALISBURY. We take pleasure in trying to please our pat- rons, and you will always find THE VALLEY a good, orderly house. 4 8.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 PF WE MAKE SVBaluiG A SPECIALTY. J) =I use Everywhere. For e address Daniel 2 Beatty, Washington, Ne Now Jerse TSey. EDITORIAL REMARKS, " NEWSPAPER compositors could largely increase their bills if the word “Blaine” was cast in one piece, instead of six let- ters. — WHEN the New York churches Sogn running bar-room annexes, the gold cure establishments will have to go ont of business. Has the Queen of Denmark red hair? If not, what did the Czar mean by send- -ing her six white horses, on .her golden wedding anniversary? THERE is a lively summer ahead of the staid Britishers. Dr. Talmage proposes going on a preaching tour through Eug- land, Ireland and Scotland. THE judgment which sentences a man to one year’s imprisonment for killing the man he found in his wife's bedroom is entirely too Frenchy for this country. Every man who looks restless and worried is not a victim of family troubles. Many of them have been trying to follow the Venezuela revolution, in the Ameri- can papers. MR CLEVELAND seems to control the shouting wing of the Democratic party, but it js still a question whether he will control two-thirds of the delegates to the Chicago convention. Bourn CAROLINA led the armed revolt in 1881 and its Democratic State conven- tion has given notice that it may lead an unarmed political revolt this year. if the Chicago platform doesn’t suit them. MR. CLEVELAND will probably endorse every word that Mr. Hill said about ‘the cultivation of a fraternal spirit,” the oth- er day. That spirit is notably absent Just now among the adherents of the two men. ‘PRESIDENT HARRISON and Governor ‘{ Flower were rival attractions at Roches- ter, on Decoration day. The President holds the largest office, but the Governor is the heavier man by forty or fifty pounds, - Ir about nine-tenths of the recent Eu- ropean cable news had heen blue-penciled ont of existence, and the galleys contain- ing the rest *'pied” {oo late to be reset, | American readers would have been ahead of the game. Ir was unnecessary trouble. for the Methodist General Conference to strike ont the word ‘‘obey” in the marriage ser- vice of that church. always been made by brides with a men- tal reservation. ‘ NEw ORLEANS has unveiled a monu- ment to Hennesey, her murdered Chief of Police, ,.and Minister Fava has returned to his duties—principally social—at Wash- ington. Now, the Mafia incident may be considered as finally closed. MURAT HALSTRAD has brought a storm of abuse upon himself by speaking of Senator Palmer, and Governors Boies, Campbell and Gray as ‘‘renegade Repnb- licans,” and he ‘is on every hand reminded of his own political course in 1872. Nor only has cotton been dethroned in the South; it has become a beggar. 80 says Rev. Thomas Dixon, Jr., of New York, who recently made a tour of the South. It is barely possible that Mr. Dixon, in his anxiety to create a sensa- tion, has overstated the case. ThE season, which always comes every fourth year, for the publication of la- bored arguments against a second term, consecutive or otherwise, for our Presi- dents, is now upon us, and the papers opposed to Messrs. Harrison and Cleve- land are brimming over with them: Tae bicycle army courier business from Chicago to New York ean hardly be called a success, inasmuch as the dis- patch arrived nearly fourteen hours he- hind schedule time. The excuse—bad weather—is hardly a tenable one, as it would be liable to occur any time. THE big steamship: companies have, it is said, delared their intention to have the scalp of the Commissioner of Immi- gration at New York; because of his strictness in barring out pauper and con: tract immigrants—in other words, be- cause the law is being too strictly en- forced.. How is that for andacity? er. Tae Supreme Court of Pennsylvania has decided that a bicycle is a vehicle and has all the rights in the streets that a wagon has, and that a teamster must accord a wheelman the same privileges he does another teamster, and the bicycle has no more right on the pavement than | a four-horse wagon or a carriage. . Are the Best. Write for] Dan-| are wling at the extravagance of their’ TrE poorly paid German workingmen The promise has Emperor. His latest is a special train of | twelve vestibuled carriages. costing more than 4,000,000 marks, and exceeding in the splendor of its appointments the fu- mous royal train of Queen Victoria's, which created lots of trouble in England a few years ago. No wonder socialism increases in Germany. : WHATEVER else can be said against : Bob Ingersoll, it cannot be said that he does not have a tine conimand of language. The following is a late saying of his and a fine sample of his oratory: O Liberty, thou art the god of my idol- atry! Thou art the only deity that hates the bended knee. In thy vast and ub- walled temple. beneath the roofless dome, star-gemmed and luminous’ with suns. thy: worshippers stand erect. They do. not bow, or crawl, or bend their heads to the earth. The dust has never horne cred aitar mothers do not sacrifice thei babes nor men their rights. Thou askest naught from men except the things that good men hate—the whip, the chain, the dungeon key. Thou carest not for ae 8 or mumbled prayers. At thy sacred shrine hypocrisy does not bow. Fear does not crouch, virtue does not tremble, superstition’s feeble tapers do not burn; but reason holds aloft her unextinguis able torch, while on the ever-broadening brow of science falls the ever-coming : morning of the better dav. : Tre Loxpox News struck the nail on the head when it said that “if protection he beneficial, farmers are equally entitled with manufacturers to be protected. ees! Somerset Democrat. The above is a fair sample of the idiotic gush with which many of our Democratic exchanges are filled these days. They are continually trying to make the farm- ers believe that they are the only unpre: tected class in America, well knowing at the same time that the farmers areabotitas much protected as any other class of peo- ple. The farmers are protected by a high tariff which saves them from the ruinous competition with Canadian farmers, which they used to have to contend with. Farm produce of all kinds brings better prices in market than it did away back = in the ‘‘good old Democratic days.” and where is the farmer who would want fo pay the prices for merchandise and man- ufactured articles that were charged for such goods in those days? One dollar today will buy more and better merchan- dise than two dollars could buy duriug the “good old Democratic days” that we :{ hear so much about, and every Demo- cratic paper in the country knows it. If protection is such a great bugaboo and so detrimental to the country as our Democratic friends try to make us believe. why does not the present Democratic congress repeal the McKinley tariff law? Is the Democratic party afraid to practice ‘what it preaches? Most assuredly it is. To carry out its pretended free trade the- ories would utterly annihilate it, now that the people can see what a protective tariff has done for the country. The whole thing in a nutshell is just this: The Republican party is a wide-awake, aggressive and progressive party. It has given the country nearly all the great blessings it now enjoys. It has and is still bringing about great and beneficial reforms, while the Democratic party has been advancing no new ideas whatever. The Republican party advances new and important idens, carries them out and points to its record with pride, while the Democratic party does nothing but croak at what the Republicans are doing. Ev-- ery Republican convention puints out what the party hds done, and resolutions ; are always passed pointing with pride to its record. The Democratic conventions, however, have very little to say about the things the Democracy has accom: plished, for they are only too glad that they are not compelled to rake up the history of that party. The history it has is what hurts it. Therefore, when there is a Democratic convention, all that is done is to nominate a ticket and pass a few resolutions ‘viewing with alarm” some of the things the Republicans are doing. The Republicans always “point with pride” in their resolutions, whila the Democrats invariably ‘‘view with alarm.” Who is there that has not noticed this? That alone tells which is the active, ener: getic and progressive party and which is the opposing, kicking and obstructing party. The former f8 the Republican party, the latter the Democratic party. And now, laying all prejudice aside, with which de you think, deep down in your * own heart, that you should cast your bul. lot next fall? Wise Sayings of the Hebron (Neb.) Journal. 2 Quills are things taken from the opin ions of one goose to spread the opinions of another. a The best and most wholesome part of the doughnut is the hole, and the’ larger the hole the better the doughnut. Woman is not gifted with a remarka- bly keen appreciation of humor, but it is a natural consequence, as 8t. Paul com manded her to learn of her husband. It is not wise to give advice without be ing asked for it. J There is no fan in early ising, unle one is a bird after worms. There is no use in turning over a