Wahl's Meat Market! a mn a © ee —— TE LS This place continues to be licadquarters for Tender Steak, Choice Poultry, Sausage, Pudding. and Juicy Roasts, Dressed Fresh Fish in Season. [ aim to serve my patrons with the best in my line that the market affords. Thanking the public for a lib- eral patronage, and solicit- ing a continuance of the same, I am Respectfully yours, C. WAHL, SAVE MONEY! I have gone to the trouble to add to Salisbury’s business interests a well selected and complete stock of FURNITURE. __.. Salisbury, Pa. When in need of anything in this | line eall and examine my goods and get my prices. See if I can’t save you some mone. PRICES L.OWSs a> Thanking the the public for a gen- erous patronage and asking a con- tinuance of the same, l am yours for bargains, = WM. R. HASELBARTH, Salisbury, Pa. store over Haselbarth’s Hardware. C.E. STATLER & BRO, —DEAERS IN— General Merchandise, Salisbury, Pa. We carry in stock at all times a complete line of everything usually | found in a large general store. OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT! For Fine Dry Goods, Groceries, No- tions, Country Produce, Miners’ Sup- plies; ete., our place is IEADQUARTERS, Call and be convinced. C. EB. STATLER & BRO. HAY'S HOTEL Salisbury, Penn’a. This elegant NEW THREE- STORY HOTEL is one of the best equipped hostelries in Som- erset county. Modern Fqguipments of all kinds, such as Steam Heat, Warm and Cold Baths, Tele- phone, Fine Bar, ete. Centrally located with_fine sur- roundings. Tables supplieed with the best the markets afford. Rates reasonable. CC. TT. HAY, Proprietor. Ji=tablisherl PS. 1I1IAY, Dry (Goods Notions,’ 1=7:3. ITats and Caps, Boots and Shoes, GROCERIES, QUEENSWARE, TOBACCO, | CIGARS, ETC. SALISBURY, TFA. B. KRAUSSE, BOOT & SHOEMAKER. I use the best of material and my prices are the lowest consistent with good workmanship. REPAIRING A SPECIALTY. I respectfully solicit a continuance of your valued patronage. ‘Bernhard Krausse, Salisbury, Pa. C. M. MAY, ee TIL Eee Tieading Barber. Iiair-dressing, RBhnving, Shampooing and Hair Dyeing done in the finest style of eRr——— ———————————— Taner Repairing A Specialty. Soaps: Tonics and other Barbers? Sup- plies for sale at all thues, | “S:ior OrrosiTE HaY's HOTEL, » - { { | | one of Quay’'s most subservient leu- | | being selected by office holders, without | i | | i torious Senator Vest, - 10lds good. Salisbury, Pa. | QUAYS MILD Where Did He Get Vast Sums to Purchase Three Mansions, Two Farms and a Plantation? QUESTIONS FOR PLAIN PEOPLE. The Gaug of Small Dosses at Work on Stone’s Canvass—IIlow Quay Ilas Re= fused to Profit by a Warning of SIX Years Ago—A Startling Arraignment of the Boss and Ills Disastrous Lead- ership—Some Questions For Think=- Ing Men. ! (From Our Own Correspondent.) Harrishurg, Feb. 15.—No man in the state, rich or poor, will be deceived by the cry that the opposition to Quay and his gang of bosses is composed of millionaires. There wasn't a man at the Bourse meeting which invited John Wanamaker to become a candidate for governor that was worth a million, or a half a million, or a quarter of a mil- lion of dollars. It was composed of farmers, merchants, lawyers, doctors and editors. There were only about four Philadelphians present, and the only speaker outside of those from the country who took charge of the con- ference was a young lawyer of that city. It ill becomes Senator Quay’s friends to raise the cry that millionaires are behind the movement to crush his power. No mah interested in fighting Quayism owns a $75,000 residence in Al- legheny county, another fine residence in Beaver county, a mansion in Wash- ington, a 300 acre farm in Lancaster county, cnother big farm in Chester county and a plantation in Florida. And Quay owns all of these; has bouzht them within the past 20 years, and out of a salary of $5,000 a year!! AGAINST QUAY AND CORPORA- TIONS. The fight this year is against Mil- lionaire Quay and the corporations which have always helped him to maintain his grip on the state. It is really the fight of the people against the millionaires; the people against the Quays and the sugar trusts and the Standard Oil crowd. No intelligent be deceived by the specious cry which Quay has always raised that he is ‘the | The | Pennsylvania have | friend of the men in blouses.” workingmen of never had a more bitter antagonist than Millionaire Quay and his minor bosses. It was Charles F. Kindred, tenants in Philadelphia, a paid lob- byist of the Reading railroad, who last vear at the legislature in Harrisburg did everything®in his power to defeat the bill to punish corporations for blacklisting workingmen. legislature who defeated Hon. Seth Ormes’ store order bill. It: was Mil- lionaire Quay’s lieutenants who killed every labor bill that failed to pass the last legislature. And yet Millionaire Quay, from his Florida plantation, and his bosses have | the effrontery to declare that they al- ways ‘stand with the men in blouses.” What rot this is to every intelligent, thinking man who earns his living by the sweat of his brow. Can any farmer in the state name a single instance in which Matt Quay has assisted hig, or helped his business, or done anything at all, for him, except to use him as a political tool? It will do the Pennsyl- vania farmer good in more ways than one if he will just sit down and think wherein Millionaire Quay cver turned his hand to help him in all the years that he has been in control of the ma- chine in the state! In the senate he has cven gone back on'his party, as in the case of his vote for free silver two weeks ago. Millionaire Quay has al- ways voted for corporations and as they desired him-to vote, but he does not explain where he got the money to buy a residence in Beaver county, a $75,000 residence in Allegheny county, a palatial mansion in Washington, a farm in Chester county, one in Lan- caster county and a plantation in Flor- ida. ut a new era is at hand. Mr. Quay knows that his end is near. He is com- ing un» from Florida next week to Philadelphia, and there hopes to meet some of the men who are opposed to him and make a deal. He will try to make a deal with Secretary of State Martin, but he might as well attempt to deal with a stone image. Martin, Magee, Flinn and every other self re- specting Republican in the state will make no deals with Matthew Stanley Quay. Millionaire Quay has chosen his friends among such men as William H. Andrews, the discredited Crawford county politician, the man with the asparagus appetite, the individual who led the Republican party to defeat in the notorious Delamater campaign. He has "chosen as his Democratic friends ex-National Chalrman William F. Har- rity, of the Democratic. party, with whom he tried to make a dea] six weeks ago for the defeat and ruin of the Re- publican organization in Philadelphia. Millionairet Quay's bosom companion in the senate. and the guest who is in | Florida fishing with him now, is the no- of Missouri, the free silver champion of the senate. In Philadelpgia. Charlies I. Kindred, the man who fought labor bills in the last legislature on behalf of the Reading railroad, is one of his nearest friends and advisors, and so a long list might be made up in a similar way. BRAVE, INDEPENDENT MIEN. What a different gradg of was there that made -up the conference at the Bourse! The independent, big brained, manly men of the Republican party. Veterans of the civil war, like General Koontz, who presided, and Generals I.ciper and Stewart; clean handed legislators, real champions of the people, such as Senator Kauffman and Representatives Crothers, Keator and Stewart. Feariess editors, like Zerbey of Pottsville, Hiram Young of York and Donath of West Chester. Manufacturers, like Tilden of Philadel- phia and Deemer of Williamsport, and $0 on through the list of country mer- rhante, country lawyers and farmers. — One of the most valuable contribu- ions to the literaturc of anti-boscsism, nd Matt Quayism in particular, was hat nut ‘out when Quay was last a andidate for the senate, and which It shows that Quay has «ot profited by six years of warning. | years ago. It was Mil- | lionaire Quay’s lieutenants in the last : The Pennsylvania ciation then said: "A point has been reached where, un- less prompt action is taken within thea Republican party to deprive Mr. Quay of further capacity for disastrous lead- ership, the party in this state will ut- terly fail to achieve its true mission, and will, sooner or later, meet with final overthrow. “We oppose him because he has forced nnpopular nominations and platforms tvhich have brought defeat to the party. ‘Because he has instigated, or coun- tenanced, the defeat of the party's can- didates to achieve some personal end. “Because he has repeatedly induced delegates and legislators to misrepre- sent the wishes of the majority of their constituents. “Because he has aided in defeating legislation to secure a free ballot and a fair count In the south. to the enact- ment of which the party had been pledged, and which. as its “national chairman, he was in honor bound to have suported. ALWAYS OFF FISHING. “Because by reason of his frequent absence from the senate, and the di- version of his time to oflice getting, he has failed to do the work he should have done In behalf of legislation of vital importance to the state of Penn- sylvania, or to initiate and secure the enactment of a single important na- tional measure during his years of ser- vice at Washington. “Because he has both by words and actions discredited the pledged policy of his party In behalf of a genuine eflicient and business like reform of the civil service, and has compelled office holders to devote thejr time and money to political work in his behalf.: “Because so long as he dared to do 80 he opposed every change of party rules calculatgdl to increase the power of the voters In county, district, state or nation. Republican asso- ‘Because he has had primaries and | conventions ‘called long before there was any necessity for so doing in order to forestall a growing public sentiment against him or his candidates. “Because ke has insisted that no rec- ognition should be accorded to any ele- ment of the party, or to any of its lead- ers who were not willing to act with or be subservient to him. DRIVING MEN FROM THE PARTY. “Because the system which he has upheld has driven many able and hon- | est men out of the Republican party, man in the state of Pennsylvania will | or has discouraged them from taking active part in public life. Because he has placed men in offices or positions $0 hampered by pledges to him that they cannot faithfully perform their | duties to the state or to their party. “Because we belleve the Republican voters have a right to choose their United States senators, Instead of their regard to character, ability or fitness." The above document was issued six Read it carefully and see how closely it is in line with all of Quay’'s action since then. He has re- fused doggedly to change his course. In- stead he has added insult to injury by still further endangering party success in congress by helping to defeat Re- publican congressmen in Pennsylvania. He has assisted the common enemy, the free silver Democracy, by voting for their measures in the senate of the United States only about two weeks ago. And, in spite of all this, he is once more on his knees whining and supplicating to be returned to the sen- ate. At the same time his chief boss, Asparagus Andrews, late of Crawford county, is endeavoring to repeat the disaster of the Delamater campaign by forcing Willlam A. Stone upon the peo- ple as a candidate for governor, in the sole interest of Andrews and Quay. Do the people propose to submit to this? Democratic Folly. Connellsville Courier, (Democratie.) The Teller resolution was on a par with the action of the Reading Conven- tion in declaring vacant the seat of William F. Harrity in the Democratic National Committee and electing in his stead Colonel James M. Guffey. Both of these political movements were ill-advised, being calculated only to do mischief without having even the hope of accomplishing any other purpose, good or bad. The Teller resolution had no pros- pects of passage in the House, nor of approval by the President. Itspassage in the Senate could accomplish noth- ing for the silver people, and its agita- tion was productive of but one result, namely, the injury of the national cred- it, and consequently the detriment of individual welfare and prosperity. It was therefore not only foolish, but ab- ' solutely vidfous. It was the invention of an unscrupulous Republican politi- cian now degenerated into a Populist, certainly not a safe leader for Demo- crats to follow. ; The fierce assault upon Harrity and the frantic effort to take from him the | empty honor of a place on the National | Committee, which will not meet antil | 1900, and then only to fix a time and place for the next National Convention cannot rationally be accounted for, save on the ground of wanton political brawling. If the Democrats want to get back to power, it is time for them to cease brawling among themselves, repudiate the leadership of Populists and broken- down Republican hacks, and get to- gether on common ground for the com- mon good. Sontag a The Women and the Colleges. Pittsburg Times. The action of the ninth annual con-! vention of the Young Women’s Chris-| tian Temperance Union of New Jersey, in advising that young men be kept awav from colleges like Yale, and sent to such others as throw about the stu- dents more restraints in the matter of morals, eannot be disthissed as merely the work of enthusiasts. The recom- meéndation of this convention opens a subject that is of vital importance to the young men and to the country as well, for it is the young men who will be the responsible men a few years later. One of the worst things to be said of many of the colleges of the Uni- ted States is that the student is thrown into contact with others who are too ready to leok upon school life as a pe- riod when restraints are turned aside, and when vices must be cultivated in a moderate degree to remove the “Miss Nancy” and unsophisticated manner of the boy fresh from home. There is a time in a boy’s life when he entertains | half an idea that it is manly to laugh at the simple, home-taught virtues, and that it is effeminate to be above re- proach. Young men cannot be tied toa moth- er’s apron strings all their lives, it is true, but it would be better for many of them if they could. Yetif they can- | not it is not the best thing in the world for them to be beset on all hands by temptations as they are emerging from boyhood to manhood. The riper judg- ment of the man does not require that the boy shall have passed through every kind of danger and proved in- vincible. There are good schools and colleges where the surroundings are of a high moral character, and where the young men are made amenable to dis- cipline. The graduates prove just as useful men as those who are educated under the belief that the boy himself must furnish the restraining influence. It is not wisdom to hedge about a young man with dangers and then tell him to take care of himself. The high- er the moral and religious tone of any school, the freer the surroundings from infectious vices, and the less induce- ment there is for the young man to be- come familiar with dissipation and sin, the better it is for him, even though it lacks the one virtue of proving his abil- ity to withstand temptation—if indeed he does withstand it. - : i Back From Alaska. William S. Evans, a Hiawatha jeweler and optican, reached home, Monday, straight from the Klondyke country. | While walking over the terrible White pass he sprained his ankle, and upon his arrival home he at once called a phy- sician to treat it. Many citizens have called on him at his rooms, and there hasn’t been a mtnute since his return that he has been free from eager ques- tioners. He left Hiawatha for Dawson in July and reached the gold regions in October. He says the dangers of the awful mountain ways have never been exaggerated. He went over the Chil- koot pass and came down the White pass, and though the weather was 42de- grees below zero, he says he did not suf- fer from cold. He is in fine health, rugged and plump. Fat meat and sugar could be had in plenty at Dawson, but he could never eat all he wanted of either. He drank grease and ate sugar without any sense of sickness, some- thing his dyspepsia would not permit him to do in this climate. Mr. Evans says all who can are getting away from Dawson, and it is not probable that those remaining will suffer for lack of provisions. All supplies are sold at an average of $1 a pound, beef costing $1.25 a pound. Tallow is worth its weight in gold and can’t be had. There are few lights in Dawson except candle lights, and candles are scarce at fifty cents each. The saloons have cornered all the coal oil, which sells at $10 a gallon. He says the possibilities of the country have been greatly over estimated. There are men there who have been prospecting for more than a dozen years without striking pay dirt. Mr. Evans brought home many specimens of nug- gets and twenty ounces of gold dust. He did not stake out aclaim or attempt to prospect. He intends to return as a merchant, believing there are enough miners at Dawson—the $10 a day paid miners being no more than $1.50 here, where supplies are cheap.— Wathena, (Kan.) Star. An Appropriate Report. The “funny man” of an exchange was recently assigned to write upthe mark- et reports and produced the follow- ing: “Butter is strong at 12 cents and is able to hold its own. Yeast cakes are rising steadily. Banannas are slip- ping along at the old price, with an oe- casional drop. Watermelons are going down more rapidly than they were a week ago. Cheese is lively and stiring. Syrups are sticking at the former price and are about a pint more to the quart than they were last winter. Dried ap- ples are swelling the market. Chick- ens are picking up a little. A Progressive Newspaper. 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 i 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—po- litical, religious, markets, sporting, edi- torial, society, near town news—and Lyou’ll find the Times may be depended upon. $3 a year, 8 cents a week, Progressive, Newsy Newspaper, ‘containing a large and varied assortment of | ‘news from far and near. | Ably edited and in all respects a Good, Clean Family News- paper. Read It! Subseribe For It! Advertise In It] # If you want to see a thoroughly up-to- { f date newspaper permanently established in Salisbury, give it a liberal patronage. —=a>[,O0K OVER TH E--<2u—_ (ONTENTS OF THIS ISIE. Editorial, Local News, Correspondence, Historical Matter, Poetry, Humorous Mat- ter, Agricultural and Horticultural Notes, > Poultry Notes, Cycling Notes, Industrial and Labor News, Market Reports, Doings of Congress, State, National and Foreign ~ ™ . ‘o eo oo News, Short Stories, Fashion and Scientific | Notes, Special Reading for Women, Sermons by Eminent Divines, Soldiers’ Column and ~ 3 § in fact news pertaining to almost everything. = <WHAT MORE DO YOU WANT?> Do you want this locality to boom? Then patronize THE STAR. Do you want all the latest news? You will find it in THE STAR. Nothing is of more benefit to a town than : a good newsy local paper. THE STAR is that | kind of a paper and you can’t deny it. Com- , pare with it any other paper in Somerset: county. We are not afraid of a comparison. -23INLY 81.20 4 YEAR: Cheap, isn’tit? Less than 24 cents a week. | That is all it will eost you if you pay in ad~ vance, and if you pay in advance the paper will always prosper. Anybody can afford’ the home paper at that price. PL LIVENGODD. Biitor and Pulet, Elk Lick, Pa.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers