patrons s strict- ur pat- | profit and sell : cordial sk your ftom! 11 value for n's Mundell and Provis- ality. ave the bar- ou for past Pa. El Ir; 100 ls Ban- Flour; gs; 15 > bush- 1 Meal, | $1.00. SWNT BY EXPRESS PREPAID. BR . terles divine command, “Max KNow THyss EB BSE “Candles, Sky Rockets, Pin Wheéls, Ser- * goods at prices below any others. Un. . 8ee, examine and price my goods; it will VOLUME L Professional Cards. J. C. LOWRY, ATTORNEY -AT-T.A, Somznewny, Pa. A M LICHTY, Physician And Surgeon. Office first door south of the M. Hay corner, SALISBURY, PA. _ A. F. SPEICHER, ) 2 le Physician And Surgeon, tenders his professional services to the citizens of Balisbury and vicinity. Office, corner Grant and Union Sts., Salisbury, Penna. : ) BRUCE LICHTY, Physician and Surgeon, GRANTSVILLE, MD. Successor to Lr. 0. G. Getty. Dr. D. 0. McKINLEY, : Yoo = a ig ~JDJ Hy JR 1 5 tenders his professional services to those requir- ing dental treatment. Office on Union St., west of Brethren Church. R.M. BEECHY, 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- plete veterinary lbrary. ‘Veterinary Obstetrics a Specialty. A complete stock of veterinary medicines al- ways on hand, thereby saving trouble and an- noyance. Horses taken for treatment for $2.50 per week and upwards, according to treatment required. Consult me before killing your broken-legged ond tetanised horses. I have treated tetantus or loeked-jaw successfully. Place of residence, 8 miles west of Salisbury, Ps. Postoffice address, ; Grantsville, Ma. A Book FOR EVERYBODY “DR. BATE'S TRUE MARRIAGE GUIDE, - BRAUTIFULLY ILLUSTRATED AND HANDSOMALY BOUND IX CLOTH AND GOLD, 275 PAoBE. ONLY A complete exposition of the science oflife and sexual physiology. This book contains all the doubtful, curfous or inquisitive wish to know Esery man and’ woman—married or single— shouid read this’ book; It contains important ‘trgths 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 physiological laws. It is & whole ibrary. of startling truths on the rights usages of marriage, revealing all those mys- 80 essential Soy in order to fulfill the LY. READ THIS BOOK! It is 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 of the above subjects. : 323 & 325 DEARBORN Sr, CHICAGO, ILL. John J. Livengood, GENERAL BLACKSMITH, i 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. Grarlitz, Expressmanand Drayman, 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 fwoceries, Candles, 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. WACNER.. 4TH JULY 4TH. I herewith announce to the public that I am better than ever prepared to meet the wants of all wherewith to celebrate the dth of July. Confections, Cakes, etc., «in plenty, also Boft Drinks, Fresh Dates, Figs. Prunes, etc. Lemons, 8 for 5 cents; Orginges: Bananas, 2 for 5 cents. At all ‘times you will receive a good measure of Fresh-roastéd Peanuts; I roast them my- self, once a week. Have as usual the finest lot of FIRE WORKS in town and cannot be competed with by any other house in the city. Roman pents, Flower Pots, Gas Wells, Sprays, Lights, Torpedoes and Fire Crackers. SUMMER GOODS. Have received a full line of the above derwear, Overshirts, Hose, Socks, Scarfs, etc., also a good many nicknacks, Come, cost you nothing and I may be able to do You some good. Wa. PETRY, STATLER BLOCK, SALISBURY, PEnNa. 18652. ES ——— : ; b | | On the Corner of Grant and Ord Streets. And yet we are not content. growing year by year, we are today working as diligently to enlarge pur business and serve you better in years to come than our efforts were in the past. “Onward!” Is The Watehword. been in the past, and your h portionately. : We keep.in stock a full line of Dry Goods, Notions, Boots d Shoes, Men’s and Boys’ Clothing, Hats and Caps, Hard- ware, Queensware, Groceries, Confectionery, Schuol Books, Stationery, Wall Paper, Coal Oil, Lard Oil, Linseed Oil, Cor- liss Engine Oil, Neatsfoot Oil, Lubricating Oil, Turpentine, n tho . does all kinds of hauling at very low prices. All jna 3 those sold by, Beschy Bros Wagons, Stoves, BEA 8 Organs ning, | or partion talo, | — (Diligence, Perseverance, Generous Dealing, Low Prices, a matured experience and unflagging enterprise are the keys 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 appiness will be increased pro- 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. an error of supposing that you ¢ bury, for you can’t'do it. Neither can vou buy better goods in the hardware line THE IMPROVED ROASTER 2% BAKER Possesses all the fine points of all other pans and then steps far ahead of them in quality of ma | the thorough man- EE —- k acl ever placed in tho kitehon bread, beans, pota- toes or fish, it hasnoequal. It does : strength and flavor of the meat. | Wewantan agent jn I sok Writs tor description clroular and + Address, THE 8 BRACHY BROS. ~ est and best hardware stores in Somerset nothing undone to please their patrons skill can invent them. / an buy hardware cheaper in other towns than in Salis- 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 tiie statement that we will not be undersold. We will sell you the 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 you may need: some new farm machinery. We 2 and money on your purchases and supply your wants speedily ¥. 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-onr store will at all times be Lieadquarters for Shelf Hardware of all kinds, Cutlery, Paints, Oils, Glass, Tinware, Woodenware, Guns, Revolvers, Buguies, Ranges, Agricultural Implements of all kinds and in fact every. thing in 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- PATENT Applied for. Beachy Bros. have made a great hit by establishing in Salisbury one of the larg- county. Buyers of Hardware and Agri- cultural Implements will make a great Lit by patronizing this store, for they will find that Beachy Bros. will please them in both goods and prices. They are in the business. to stay and will leave 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 be kept in stock, but improvements will constant- ly be added as fast as American brain and .| olic faith who believes in our public While our trade has been . | sects and societies have different ‘views J ence of a Supreme Being as the Creator | of free education, opposed to any union | tainly plain to any of the readers nf your say to you that you must not attack any man’s religion. We are American citi- Zens, must play in the defense and as long as the people, the churches, and the. sectarian institutions let us alone, iis our duty to let them alone. Maryland is this, that in one-half of this and other states where our order exists, I find members in our order who are members of the Catholic church. Ihave had the pleasure of addressing councils | in their executive session, and I have | addressed large public audiénces, where | 1 have been appealed to not to hurt the ersel Coun — SALISBURY, ELK LICK POSTOFFICE, PA, THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 18092. 1802. ITs It pains us to observe the bitterness that occasionally crops out in this vicinity % between some of the Catholics and some ! of the members of the Jr. 0. U. A. M. i This is not as it should be, and we be- lieve it is all due’ to misunderstandings. For the Oonsiderstion of Our Catholic Friends and Some of the Members of the Jr. 0. U. A. M. To show that there is no occasion for hatred between the Catholics and the Jr. 0. U. A. M., we publish herewith a letter from a Jr. 0. U. A. M. State Organizer, which was written to the editor of the Lonaconing Review, in which paper it cerned some good, especially those of the Juniors who are always slopping pver at the mouth and doing ail they can to annoy the Catholics, as well as those of the Catholics who are always doing all they can to insult and abuse the Jr. O.U. A. M. : While it is true that all upon certain questions, it should also be remembered that all of us have equal rights to believe as we please and to per- petuate thie doctrines we believe in. But there is no reason why we shonld abuse each other concerning onr beliefs. Fol- lowing is the letter referred to; read it and profit by it: Eprror ReviEw—By request of a num- ber of our order and some of your busi- ness men of the towns ‘along George's Creek, I address you in regard to what our order is, with a short declaration of its principles. : : First. our qualifications for membership areas follows: Any white male person born in the United States of North Amer- ica, its territories, or under the protec- tion of its flag, who shall have attained thre age of sixteen years, who is of good moral character, a believer in the exist- and Preserver of the Universe, in favor of church and state, shall be eligible to membership. g Our general Jaws of the order provide that subjects of a sectarian or partisan character shall not be introduced into any meeting of the order, nor shall any mem- ber make use of any doctrines of church in 8 meeting of this order. Now itis cer- paper that we do not debar any church: nor creed from joining our order. We are a patriotic organization and intend to protect our free and public institutions of America. # "Any person who is between the age of 16 and 50; has a good moral character. and born in America can join us. We oppose no church, we allow evéry denomination, both Catholics and Protestants to wor- ship God according to the dictates of their own conscience. Our ritual gives every member the privilege of answering this question in the anti room before tak- ing the obligation. There is no reason why a member of the Catholic church should not become a member of the Jr. O. U.A. M. Many people who are good Catholics and are trying to serve God to the best of their ability, think we are opposed to their sectarian schools. This I deny. Weare opposed to any sectarian school. no dif- ference what church has it. We are not 80 particularly opposed to the church having her school as long as our govern- ment is not constantly appropriating public furnids should be appropriated only to public institutions. ; There must be no sectarianism, wheth- er political or religious, in our public schools. Now any member of the Cath- schools and the reading of the Holy Bible therein, is eligible to membership in any country of the Jr. O. U. A. M. on the continent of America. We say no union of church or state! No interference with religious liberty! No public moneys for sectarian schools or asylums! To all who come to us we say: Respect our free institutions and we will respect you; but if you touch those you become our enemies, and must be treated as such. This is the only point that any charch could object to in our principles. [know that there are a number of our members who make cranks of {hemselves and op- pose a man on account of his religion, but this is wrong, and should be pro- hibited in every council. Now to the members of the Jr. 0. U. A. M., let me My experience as State Organizer of feelings of the Catholic members, Those were members who were of the appeared some time ago. We trust that .| the said letter will do all parties con- fn S opinion that a member of the order had to abuse or attack the church. This is wrong. A man who cannot speak of the true principles of the Jr. 0.U. A. M. without abusing any member of a church. because he does not think as he does, is not fit to be a member, much less a public speaker from the order's principles. While visiting Howard Council, No. 26. at Ellicott City, and after a pleasant council meeting, I was invited home with one of its best members, and after we ar- rived at his home and in conversation I ar, _ NUMBER 29. THERE is sense in the proposition to have women drug clerks, although it might interfere with the sale of whisky by the drink by drug stores. A polite woman would be a decided improvement upon the overdressed batch of masculine conceit one meets all too often behind the counters of drug stores. Itisa light business, and, barring the long hours, is peculiarly adapted to the ways and ca- pacities of women. Tur Baldwin Locomotive: Works of learned that he was a member of the | Philadelphia have just delivered a loco: Catholic faith. There I learned that he | tive to a railroad company in Sweden. was in favor of free institutions and was | Bids were invited from Swedish, English paying a large amount of taxes to our | 8nd American builders, and the contract government and its institutions, yet he | Wn8 awarded to this American firm, which had his amount to pay. out to their sec- | 387eed to deliver the locomotive in ten tarian school also, and this was his busi- | Weeks, while the British wanted a vear's or refer to sect or use any political power |’ funds to support them. We believe the | J Italy, is a rare official; he belleves, or at something entirely original when they got up a donkey show. Donkey shows have become 80 common in this country that they no longer excite comment. ticians are gathered together there also is a donkey show. gentleman who is at present Governor of: Massachusetts and who is believed not to be averse to being *‘cnlled up higher,” al- ways privately addresses him as “‘Gov- ernor” and is always in return addressed by him as “Colonel,” somebody ought to as possible the heads of councils through. eapeciallv those who are young and un- pose of opposing any church, - that they worship God as he thinks best. But in ready to allow every man his own opin- ion, and at all times Keep our secrets within our membership, and not be giv- ing away the doings of your council meet- ings, how you give the grip, and what have to take in our council chamber. under the impression that we are banded togetker to appose any church, may now soe the error of their wavs and repent. I am fraternally yours, fen _JauEs A. MuLLIN, National Representative and State Organizer of Maryland. BOITORIIL REMARKS. THERE are not half so many innocent men in prison as there are guilty men outside of prison.. hat when Republicans talk about the cer- tainty of McKinley (n 1896. THE man who “never bad a doubt” ia now having his innings. Wonder if this chap waa not one of the plagues of Egypt? frets err eons os a Some fine journalistic hair-splitting ie being exhibited on the editorial page of the New York Herald, which opposes “Harrison and supports Reid, who was its own candidate for vice. ALTHOUGH composed entirely of native Obioans the Republican ticket has by no means exhausted the Ohio presidential timber. 8he can furnish all the parties without materially depleting the stock on hand. Mo A raw that would keep office-holders and Congressmen away from nominating conventions of all sorts would be a long step in the right direction. and for that very reason there isn’t much probahility of its being enacted. . How. A. G. PorTER, U. 8. Minister to least he says he does, that it wonld be wrong for him to become a candidate for nomination for Governor of Indiana while holding his present position. sg E. Statler recently purchased the Sam- uel Glotfelty land on the west side of Grant street, opposite the residences of John Rees and 8. R. McKinley. Con- sideration, $1,115. This is one of the fin- est building sites in town, and Mr. Statler always knows a good thing when he sees it. THE pilot of W. EK. Vanderbilt's steam yatcht appears to have about the same feelings towards the public as that ex- pressed upon a notable occasion by'the late William H. Vanderbilt. After kill- ing two people he did not even stop his yacht to see if their bodies might be picked up. : ~ LoxDoNERs thought they had struck Wherever two or three professional poli-, el Irit be true that the brother of the kindly steer the foul-killer in that direc- ness and not ours. I hope that as much out the country will do all they can to prevent this opposition to this particular church. Inform your membership and der the impression that we as an organ- ization are banded together for the pur- are wrong, and all we wantany man todo after we receive him asa member is to practice our objects which are in the hands of every member, and allow everybody to every instance be certain to always be the pass words are. because if this is not our own. then every man is a member without taking that solemn obligation we Hoping this may prove to be a benefit to our membership and fo those who are ‘Bie Tom Reed does not throw up his] time. In a contést between the United States and Great Britain the latter coun- try does not get a place. JER retest dc. a Tur Democratic House cut the pension appropriations down to the lowest notch, not leaving sufficient to pay the pension- ers at present un the pay role. The Re- publican Senate very promptly put the tigures up sufficient to cover those on the roll and leave a margin for estimated in- crease, but the sum is not yet up to the estimates of the department. There ought nog to be any quibbling over this important subject. The money is there and it could not be devoted to a better ‘| purpose. The Senate should amend the bill 80 as 10 bring the sum appropriated up to the departmental estimate.—Somer- ; set Herald. vt ~ WHAT effect would it have on Ameri: can commerce if England should adopt a Protective Tariff? : That would depend entirely on the articles or classes of articles upon which England would levy Protective duties. If, for instance, she would levy such dn- ties upon our farm products she might do us some harm. Bot it is highly im- | ptobuble, in fact quite impossible, that England would do this. Fifty years of persistent : Free-Trade have so nearly ruined British agriculture that a duty levied on foreign farm products would be little more than a revenue duty. There is scarcely any home industry to protect, and revive English farming would take so much time that her arti- in his speech denouncing the British Free. Trade policy when he said: 3 “What we want the United States to furnish us with mostly are articles of food essential to the feeding of the peo- ple and the raw materials necessary to ‘} our manufactures, and we cannot exclude one or the other without serious injury to ‘ourselves. Now, I am not the least pre- pared. for the sake of wounding other nations, to inflict any serious or danger- ous wounds upon ourselves. We must confine ourselves, at least for the present, to those subjects on which we should not suffer very much whether the impor- tation continued or diminished.” s It is to be seen from this statement of the British premier that nothing is fur- - ther from his mind than the idea of ex- cluding the products of American agri- culture. As for the other things on which Great Britain could levy retaliato- ry duties, she could not injure bur com- merce to any great extent. England buys nothing from us to-day which she does not absolutely need, and she will con: tinue to buy the things which she finds necessary in the future, Tariff or no Tar- iff. On the whole we can look forward to the adoption of Protection by Great Britain with a great deal of serenity, feel- ing pride in it more than anything else. as a triumph of American Protectionist doctrine. We should remember, too. that only because of our Protective sys- tem do we need to feel so little anxiety at the pruspect of an English Tariff; for that system bas given us a home market to which no foreign market can be com- pared in importance. Continue that sys. tem and we will so extend our home market, that in a very short time the American farmer will not need to export any of his surplus, since all of it will be eonsumed by our own people. When that time comes our farmers can anap their fingers at England or any other country, whether they adopt a Tariff of not. Grassy Run Plcnio. Local assembly No. 10,839, K. of L., will have a grand picnic. July ‘4th, in Fairview Grove. Grassy Run, Pa. This promises to be the best 4th of July pie- nic in all this neck of the woods. Every. body is cordially invited to take part in the enjoyment, and Tar STAR will vouch: for it that all who attend will meet with excellent treatment and have a royal good time. } Tem————— Virginia may be the mother of Presi dents and Kentucky of Speakers of the House, hut New York is decidedly and emphatically the mother of Vice Presi- dente, Eight New Yorkers—Anron Burr, George Clinton, Daniel D. Tompkins. . Martin Van Buren, Millard Fillmor William A. Wheeler, Chester A. Arthi and Levi P. Morton are all on the r already. Whitelaw Reid will m sans and mechanics would starve in tue interim. Lord Salisbury recognized this
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers