VOLUME L SALISBURY, ELK LICK ‘POSTOFFICE, PA, THURSDAY, JUNE. 6 “1892. > ‘NUMBER 28. Professional Cards. J.C. LOWRY, “ ATTORNEY ATLA. = Sousnssr, Pa. 4 AM. LICHTY, Physician And. Surgeon. Office first door south of the’ M. Hay Corner, SALISBURY. PA. A. .. SPEICHER,. Physician And. Surgeon, ~ tenders his professional services to the citizens of Salisbury and vicinity. Office, corfier Grant and Union Sts., Salisbury, . Penna. 3 oN BRU UCE LICHTY, . : hysician and Surgeon, GRANTSVILLE, MD.: Sucoessor to Dr. 0. GQ. Gety, tenders lis professional services to those requir- ing dental treatment. Office on Union St west of Brethren Church. RR. M. BEACHY, : | VETERINARY SURGEON, _ tients all curable diseases horse flesh is heir to. Has the latest and most improved veterinary sur- _ gical instruments and applistioes. also a com- plete veterinary library. Veterinary Obstetrics a Spedialty. A complete stock of veterinary medicines al- Ways on haud, thereby saving trouble and an- npyance. - Horses taken for treatment for $2.50 per week and upwards, according to treatment required. + Consult me before killing your broken-legged and tetanized horses. I have treated tetantus or loeked-jaw successfully. Place of residence, 3 miles west of Salisbury, Pa. Postoflice address, - Grrantsville, Md. A Book FOR EVERYBODY. ey "DR. BATE'S TRUE MARRIAGE GUIDE. BEAUTIFULLY ILLUSTRATED AND HANDSOMELY BOUND IN CLOTH AND GOLD, 275 PaAeEs. ONLY $1.00. SENT BY EXPRESS PREPAID. A complete exposition of the science of life and 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 contains important truths about the laws of naturé applied to mar « riage, its | and abuses. Young people on the verge of matrimony will learn’ the misery that follows ignorance of its physiological laws. It is a whole library of startling truths on the rights |. and usages of Durisde revealing all those mys- teries so essential to know in order to fulfill the divine command, “Max Kxow THYSELF." : READ THIS BOOK! It 1s the Multum in Parvo of a thousand things © not mentioned here. By ; DR. J. W. BATE, The Eminent Specialist, who can be consulted on any nL the 8 ve subjects. & 335 Danna Br., CHICAGO, TnL. John J. Livengoed, 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. _ W.F.Garlitz, Expressman and 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 . proceries, Candies, Nuts, Crackers, cholce Cigars and Tobacco, Refreshing Drinks, Fresh Oysters and other things in the grocery line, is at M. H. Wagnr 8 grocery. Yours for bargains, ; M. H. WACNER, DONT SKIP A WORD! |: You WILL LOSE MONEY IF YOU DO. Every word costs money and I can’t afford to spend money advertising, unless it brings increased sales. ‘‘Ads” soon lose the power of attraction, unless the public finds the advertisers up to their promises. 1 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. Sapaness 3 Silk Handkerchiefs, regular price 15¢, ..10¢ Torehon Yoon, per yard 7c, at Fink Ruchig 6c, at... Base Ball Belts 25¢, at , Base Ball Bats 45¢, at.. | Base Ball Caps 15¢, at Fly Pishing Hooks id at... Fishing Reels. Be, at... Fountain Pens 256; at oil Cloth Jackets, for children 25¢, at, .... Wade & Butcher Rasors, guaranteed $2. at $1.50 : Wm. - Petry, : ee Salisbury, Pa’ $5000.000, BEATTY'S. cEigter: MB For particulars, catal Daniel 7. ent, B Waahiogton. Rew Jerse aint, Hl ls 1802. 0 Years On the Corner of Orant and Ord Streets. And yet we are not. ‘content. growing year by year, we are -| enlarge our business and serve While ‘our trade has been today working as diligently to} you better in years ! to come than our efforts were in the past. “Onward” Is The Watchinord. ~ | Diligence, Perseveran ce, Generous Dealing, Low Prices, a ‘matured experience and flaking enterprise a are the. keys 5 to success. We thank you for your patronage, which ok ide 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 and Shoes, Men's and Boys’ Cl ware, - Queensware, Groceries, of Dry Goods, Notions. Boots othing, Hats and Caps, . Hard- ‘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 Flokr, etc. Country Produce tak- en in exchange at market prices. P. S. HAY, SALISBURY. PENNA. , will find ‘that ‘Bechy Bros. them in hoth goods and prices. HIT. Beachy Bros. have made a great nie by establishing in Salisbury one of the larg: est and best hardware stores in Somerset county. _ Buyers of Hardware and Agri] cultural Implements. will make: a great hit by patronizing. this store, for they | will pléase They are in the business to stay and will leave nothing undone to please their. patrons ‘and give the people what they wantin ‘the hardware line. Their stock is bright : ‘and new and made up of the datest styles of goods. No shoddy goods will be 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, foryou can’t do it. than those sold by: Beachy Bros. et affords or ready money can buy. PAINT THE Neitlier can vou buy better goods in the hardware line Our goods are all new and the best that the mark- We want to EARTH RED with tiie statement that we will not be undersold. - We will sell vou tue best goods at the lowest living prices. and we invite you to test us ands see if our mward | is not’ good right down to the dotlet on the I. We Lave piles of goods on hand and ma # ny more on the road ‘enroute for our store. Our stock will at all times be complete and embrace everything usually found | ina first-class hardware and implement store. PREPRRE FOR THE INEVITEBLE! , Harvest time is approaching and yon may need some new farm machinery," can save you time and money on your pt We irchases 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. say that our store will at all times be headquarters for Shelf Hardware of all kinds, Cutlery, Paints, Oils, Glass, Tinware, Woodenware, Guns, Revolvers, Buggies, Wagons. Stoves, Ranges, Agricultural Implements of all kinds and in fact every- thing in the hardware line that there is a our best to please you, and we respectfully solicit your patronage. fully, demand for in this locality. We will do Yours Tespect THE IMPROVED ROASTER 283 BAKER -Possesses all the he fine points of all other pans and then steps far ahead of Shes in quality of ma-. terial, simple construction, durabili e thorough man- nerin'w a does its work. Is one of the test labor-saving utensils ever placed in the kitchen As a baker of bread, beans, pota- toes or fish, it hasno equal. To: does “i's own and allthe strength and flavor of the meat. We want an agent in every countyin the Unie ted 2d Se and will pay liberal commissions. ciroular asd disoousts to agents, PATENT Applied for. for dpsoriptive "Address, THE STAR,BAK KER CO. told-you-gso” But suffice it to | R. =, Sheppard, Barber and Hair Dresser. = All kinds 'of- ‘work in my line done in an ox- pert manner, Hh My ifn Ee is the best on 3 sirib-Roeps the scalp clean and healthy. ,1 respectfully solicit your patronage. ‘Look at the Sa quotations hd govern yourself: accordingly: : : Minebahs Flour, per barrel. Pillsbiiry's Best, per barrel, Vienna Flour; per barrel.. * Reite's Boat, per barrel, ... Becker Flour, per barrel . =. Stanton's Buckwheat. Flour; por >. _pheiled’Gorn, per bustel . “White Oats, pert bushel Salt, per sack . . : . Mining Powder. : IN bs ana esa an va aha T sn 1.7 Patent Meal and all kinds of Min Feed at Bottom Yoes Give me a call and 1 wilt save you money. EL 4 SITAW. 3 2% cts. a "7s , Are the Best. Write. for 4 h. catalogue. Address Dan- el F, Beatty, Washington, New Jersey. a EDITORIAL RI RERIRKS, ONE good term deserves another. NuMERous Presidential boomlets are ‘now about on a par, in value, with a last- vear's bird nest. KrLuiNe the man who springs the *‘I- chestnut ought to be made justifiable homicide. : WHITE-WASHED walls may again come into fashion: if the new $14,000,000 wall- paper trust hecomes too greedy. HARRISON in all right. Bo is whitelaw Reid. The Democrats can’t put up a ticket half as. good as that—no- -gir-ra dieR. : Fi readers are to be congrat- ‘I ulated that national political conventions are held only once in four years; so are newspaper writers. Now that it has been stated that eating rose leaves and butter will make a girl plump, there ought to be a big jump in the price of butter, * THE, woods is, full. of Harrison men. They are much more numerous than they ‘were. last week. All the Republicans are Harrison men now. . NAMES sometimes appear very much out of place. For instance, Andrew Jackson Houston is the Republican nom- inee for Governor of Texas. THis is the season when the profession- al politician sits up o'nights trying to find ont whois to be the winning tan, in order that he may support him. A New York printer who, if is son speaks truth, has been despondent seven years, recently blew his brains out, A despondent printer is something new. SrxTY editors” were in a railroad wreck onthe C. B. & Q.. and not one of them was hurt. It takes something mors than a railroad wreck to knock out newspaper men. = ie es ALL newspaper men are not impecuni- ous. The New York Press Club proposes spending lialf a million dollars i in the pur- chase of a site and thie erection of a build- Angin thay city. ~STRIRING oil” is not alwaysa fortunate thing. It was the striking of oil by light- ning or by a spark from a locomotive, that caused the recent horrible disaster in Pennsylvania.’ THERE was one commendable feature about’ the resignation of Secretary Blaine and its acceptance by President Harrison. Neither of them played the hypocrite by ‘writing nice things to each other that they did not mean. : A weaLTHY London Hebrew has given the fathers of eloping daughters a poini« er. His daughter eloped and.came to New York, but before the steamer landed she was arrested, as a lunatic, and the next steamer carried her back home, DR. BURCHARD, JR., according to the New York papers, has inherited some of his father’s ability as a knocker-out, ‘The young man’s victim, however, was a lawyer, while the old gentleman's fame was attained by knocking out a Presiden- tial candidate. : Ir free raw materials will give us the markets of the world, how is it that in 1891 our exports of manufactures of cot- ton, a free raw material, were only $14,- 000,000; while our imports of cottons amounted to more than twice that Aum, * about $30, 009, Bug: ? | Welsh makers. Torre men and an old cannon, together within/ fpw pounds of powder and a few shots, are all that is necessary to capture a:town-andget up a first- class Pan- Amiefican revolution.” In: this‘coun- try the same ingredients, minus the balls, makes a Fourth. of July celebration. : | EVERYBODY Knows that the present Democratic ‘congress has as yet done nothing bat draw. salaries, and the Som- erset. Democrat knowing this, gets off the following: : “The Democrats in Congress ought to hurry and manufacture a Jitile more good material for the Chicago platform. Ac- tions speak louder than: words.” In Carlyle's opinion, Fred. Tende ‘was the most intense nonsense that gver pro- voked human patience: 7 “fhe people of Australia were quite right,” said le, “10 protect their industries and.to teach their young men trades, in complete dis- regard of Parliamentary and platform palaver. No nation ever, got manufac tures in any other way.” ~ Fataer MOLLINGER. the priest who or the last year or mofe did a wholesale defrauding business by making poor sick men and women believe hes could. cure them, died yesterday. The noted father should have been able to cure himself, if he could cure thers. The Lord dida good job for suffering humanity when he sent the grim reaper after Father Molling- er. © . THERE is a somewhat general idea in this country that thé McKinley Tariff bill will be repealed before long, or at all events be so much modified’ that thé sting will be taken out of those clauses most objec- tionable to British manufacturers; and it is for this reason that the hopes of the Democrits for the approaching Presiden- tial election are so largely shared in this country. —London Engineering, April 8. * AX improved machine for the manufac: ture of tin plate: has been invented by Samuel Y. Buckman of Philadelphia. This machine, it is claimed, will turn out in the same time a product five times as great as that turned out by the old method: The guestion that naturally suggests it- self is: What incentive would Mr. Buck- man have had to make his invention had not the MeKinley Tariff made the manu- facture of tin plate ‘in the United States possible? ‘ ALREADY American génius has berun to improve on the antiquated methods of tin plate manufacture in vogue among A Philadelphiacompany has in operation a machine which pro- duces terne plates in a ‘continuous roll. The blank stee! sheets are simply fed in- to a set of rollers and they come out, at the other end of the machine all coated, polished and soldered into. a continous sheet. Thisis how the Yankee manufac: turers are going to give us cheaper tin and terne plates than ever before, if we only give them a little time. IN his own estimation, the Mugwump is nothing if not honorable. The policy of the Mugwuwp newspaper is always “independent, open, manly,” &c. Yet here we have the New York Evening Post printing an article on the effect of the Tariff on felt, full of the grossest mis- representations, and when Mr. Alfred Dolge, the well-known felt manufacturer of Dolgeville, N. Y., writes to the Post courteously asking for space to correct a few of the ‘‘mistakes” found in this arti- cle, his letter is returned to him with the curt reply, “Not wanted.” How weak must be that argument which will got bear the light! 4 Tae unanimity with whic h the Free- Trade ofgans denounce Lord Salisbury’s great Protection speech, the impudence with. which they try to give England's Premier points on what Free-Trade has done for Great Britain, is something re- markable. In that speech the American Cobdenité sees his doom. The people of. the United-States are in no mood at pres- ent to experiment with an economic sys- tem which has been repudiated by nearly every civilized nation, and the failure of which is just beginning to be acknowl- edged in the very country where its falla- cies and weakness have been most thor- ougnly illustrated. - Edt THE passage of the bill granting Amer- ican registry to two steamships of the In- man line has naturally created quite a stir in British shipping circles. Fair Play, the organ of British shipbuilding inter- ests, says: ‘Dismal forebodings cannot be repressed: We remember the days when the Yankees had a practical mo- nopoly of the Atlantic trade, and the Stars and Stripes were found flying from the peak of the smartest vessels afloat in every European port..... ..Nobody who knows anything of yachting butis power- fully impressed by the Americans’ natural skill in construction and scamanship, wherein they cannot be ranked second even to ourselves.” British shipbuilders ‘may be assured that they have the hearty sympathy of their American brethren of ' the Free-Trade persuasion. : tate of wages. WagEs in this country are at least 100 per cent. liigher than they are in England. Does this mean that every individual em- ployer here pays his workingmen just 100 per cent. more than is received, by - men employed at the same’ work in: the former country? Evidently not. “This difference in wages does not ‘hold in in- dividual cases; it is aw average difference. In the fact, therefore. that the average wage, what may be called .the general is’ higher in the United States, is found the necessity for the Pro-. tective duty. Tx: The compensation of Inbor is Wiles in ‘one part of the country than itis in an- other as a natural result of differences in the demand for and supply of labor in different localities. - If, there are 51.000 mechanics in New York City. and there is only work for 50,000. while there are 50,000 iir Chicago and there is a demand for 51,000, then mechanics’ wages will be higher in Chicago than New York. It is ahsurd to expect that under these condi- tions. they would be the same in both cities. Protection’ cannot regulate the conditions of demand and supply which rule at any particular time in a particular locality. What it does regulate and com- pensate for is the general average differ- ence between wages in the United States and other countries. : Tue Republican Presidential ticket is one that no true Republican will refuse 10 support. It is a ticket that is an honor to the Republican party. It is a ticket: headed by two clean and able men, not a stain or blot being op the character of any of them. The administration of Benjamin Harri: son has been one of the most prosperous eras the country has ever known, and there is nothing in Mr. Harrisons entire Presidential career that he can justly be censured for. Heis one of the best Presi- dents the country hasgver had. and if there will be any influence at work to prevent his re-election. it will be of a purely per- sonal nature, a8 it is conceded by all that no fault can be found with the adminis tration. , President Harrigon has masin-. tained the. dignity of the nation and proved himself a geat statesman and a wise ruler. or rather a discreet and effi- cient seryant of the people. Tt is “true that some of the ‘political bosses’. ‘do’ not like Harrison, and they will doubitiesstry’ to defeat him, but we believe that the people: will re- -elect him in spite of the bosses. Harrison has steadfastly refused to be a tool inthe hands of the political bosses, and for that reason alone he is unpopular: with some of them; but we believe that he is strong enongh witle the rank and file of the party - to be elected for a second term, all of which he richly deserves, Ir Protection is national and not local: why are not all sections of the country affected alike under it? So far us Protettion has operated at all, so far as its advantages have been put to the test, it has proved itself essen. tially ‘a national policy, benefitting and aiding all sections alike. If some parts of the country have been more peculiarly the gainers by our Tariff system than others, the fault lies not with the system itself, but rather with those sections that have refused to-take advantage of the op- portunities offered by it. Thus, if the people of the South. still ‘clinging to the Free: Trade ideas of their fathers, persist in raising cotton, of which the supply is already greater than the whole warld’s demand,’ instead of establishing cotton mills, iron foundries -or other manufac turing industries, or of diversifying their agriculture, although all the elements of natural wealth are at their command, and the chance to do this is given them by our Protective policy, they can only blame themselves if their section is not as prosperous as some other where the benefits of that policy. are appreciated. Protection guarantees the American peo- ple an opportunity to create industries in this country, and yet pay the higher wages which our workingmen’s standard of living demands. That is all. It can- not compel those industries to be estab- lished, any more than it can create the enterprise of the employers or the brains of the laborers necessary for their success. Which Shall We Hellove? - ThE 8TAR would. like to know which: of the two great truth (?) emporiums of Meyersdale i is to be believed. The Regis- ter makes a big ado about a $250,000 ex: tract works that Meyersdale capital is go- ing to erect, but here is. what the Com mercial says about it: { ‘There has nothing specially appeared as to the $250,000 Extract works. The ‘parties said to be in the move disclaim all knowledge of it. The sum has come down this week to $200,000 and is likely: to drop ut an increasing ratio. Itis a safe rule to use salt freely when business | enterprises are surrounded by mystery and hatched in the dark: We all want good enterprises here, but they don’t grow that way.” 5 An exchange says that when a rich man is dead his money is gone to the dev il. If that is the case; many a rich man will find that where his money is there : bp, gall be also.