Wahl's Meat Marke! This place continues to be headquarters for Tender Steak, Choice Poultry, Sausage, Pudding and Juicy Roasts, Dressed TFresh Fish in Season. I 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 Yespectfully 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. om When in need of anything in this line call and examine my goods and get my prices. See if 1.ean’t save you some mone. TPRICES .OWea ew Thanking the the public for a gen- erous patronage and asking a con- tinuance of the same, 1 am yours for bargains, WM. R. HASELBARTH, Salisbury, Pa. 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 I'ine Dry Goods, Groceries, No- tions, ‘Country Produce, Miners’ Sup- plies, ete., our place is HEADQUARTERS. (ail and be convinced. C. E. STATLER & BRO. HAY'S HOTEL, - Salisbury, Penn’a. This elegant NEW THREE- STORY HOTEL one of the best equipped hostelries in Som- erset county. is Modern Iquipments of all kinds, such as Steam Jleat, Warm and Cold Baths, Tele- phone, Fine Bar, ete. Centrally Jocated with fine sur- roundings. Tables supplieed with the best the markets afford. Rates reasonable. on . Cc. T.HAY, Proprietor. Histablished PS ITAY, —DEALERIN— Dry (Goods Notions, 1533. Tats and Caps, Boots and Shoes, GROCERIES, QUEENSWARE, TOBACCO, CIGARS, ETC. SALISBURY, PA. FRANK PETRY & SONS, CARPENTERS AND BUILDERS, ELK LICK, PA. Clontraets taken. Estimates promptly furnished and neat and substantial work guaranteed. B. KRAUSSE, BOOT & SHOEMAKER. SALISBURY, PA. Repairing a specialty. Satisfaction guaranteed. W. FF. GARLITZ, Expressmangand Drayman, WEST SABISBURY, PA. All kinds of hauling = delivering of goods at low prices. Your patronage is solicited. For the best tonsorial work go to C. M. MAY, The Leading Barber. sSuop OPPOSITE HAY’S HOTEL. | | | Mr. THE FIGHT WILL G0 ON. Quay and His Machine Must Be Driven Completely from Power. THE PEOPLEAREFULLY AROUSED Quay’s Creature Named at tho Harris- burg Convention by the Bosses—Del= | egates Driven Under Whip and Spur. | Hon. €C. W. Stone Declares Against Quay—He Was Defeated Directly by | the Work of the Big Boss. | first vote in 1862. ! other ticket since. (From Our Own Correspondent.) Harrisburg, June 7.—The state con- | vention which met here on Thursday | of last week completed the work Sen- ator Quay and his machine started out to accomplish. It nominated William | A. Stone, of Allegheny, the Quay can- | didate, the man whose campaign was conducted by William H. (Lexow) An- drews; the mon whom Andrews se- lected so that he might know what it would be like to “own a governor.” Both Senators Quay and Penrose con- | ducted the affairs of the convention in | person. Senator Quay came on from | Washington, and by the use of 2ll the power of the machine, forced enough delegates into line to accomplish his | purpose. Senator Penrose was the tem- | porary chairman of the convention. The convention itself was a counter- part of the notorious Delamater con- vention of eight years ago. There was no enthusiasm, no genuine rejoicing. The Quay delegates were sullen and discontented. Williamn A. Stone had his speech of acceptance ready and in the hands of the newspaper correspond- ents the night before the convention. But the delegates did not even appoint a committee to wait on him and notify him that the convention had nominated him. As a result his speech of accept- ance was never delivered. WANAMAKER WITHDREW. Hon. John Wanamaker did not per- mit his name to go before the conven- tion to be voted upon. The notorious manner in which the state commit- tee had been used to drive delegates into line, the brazen spectacle of two United States senator8 leaving their seats in Washington to come here and “stand up’ delegates for the machine was carrying the matter too far. Early on the morning of Thursday 50 represéntatives of the IDourse meeting met in Harrisburgand asked Mr. Wana- maker, in view of the above facts, to { withdraw his name from before the convention, Mr, Wanamaker did as requested. As a result the Wanamaker delegates voted solidly for Hon. Charles W. Stone, of Warren county, as the most | available man with which to defeat the | Quay machine. The delegates of Hon. C. W. Stone were anti-Quay men with | few exceptions. Mr. Stone” was the choice of the people in a large number | of counties, and it was on the advice of | the best posted anti-Quay leaders that Wanamaker recuested his dele- gates to vote for Mr. Stone, of Warren. ! But Congressman Stone, Warren, | wag defeated. He was defeated by the | ring of Quay politicians. Senator Quay himself forced, under threat and prom- ise, over 20 delegates away from Charles WW. Stone and into the columns of William A. Stone, the machine can- didate. | But though the convention is over, | the fight against Quay and the bosses | and the machine will still go on. 1n | what shape it is not known; but at least one man will, it is believed, carry on the fight against the machine, and that is John Wanamaker. As for Hon. Charles W. Stone, the -man who had 199 votes to begin with, and who, when the voting was ended had but 164 to Willlam A. Stone's 198, will also still | fight Quay within the party. The fol- | lowing is what he said in an interview within two hours after the convention | had adjourned on Thursday last; STONE AGAINST QUAY. “Up to 6 o'clock last night we had our fight won, and wen honorably. There were 199 delegates ready to cast their | votes for me, but Senator Quay came | down here and put on all the force and pressure that he could exert, with the result that before morning he succeed- ed in drawing away 23 delegates who | were favorable to our cause. My state- | ment that was given out for publica- ! tion last night predicting my success, | was {fully justified by the number of delegates who had promised to give me their support, and if Senator Quay’s influence had not been exerted as it was I would have been the nominee. Not | only did we have the perscnal influence and presence of Senator Quay against | us, but the entire force of the party organization as represented In the state committee was also opposed to us. “I want to express my hearties: thanks to the Wanamaker delegation | for their support. Their attitude show- | ed that Mr. Wanamaker sincerely tried to nominate the man in whom he be- lieved the people had confidence. In- |; deed my thanks are due to all the men who, without regard to partisan feel- | ing, gave me their support. The atti- ' tude of the Lancaster delegation merits my warmest thanks, while the sup- | port of the two delegations from Sen- ' ator Quay’s own county of Beaver was particularly gratifying. ‘“The successof Senator Quayin alien- ating delegates pledged to me was | shown in the Joss of the Lawrence | county delegation, a delegate from But- ler, one from Washington, two from | Fayette and others that jt is not nec- | essary to mention here, I made my fight single handed. I had no machine | at my back. Indeed, Mr. M. A. Myers, the county chairman of Warren county, conducted my eampaign entirely alone, but for the assistance of the people, as my duties compelled me to remain in Washington. My campaign was con- ducted fairly, openly and honorably before the people. I am a Republican, I am in this fight to stay, and from | now on ‘my friends will be foundinoppo- sition to the machine which has arbl- trarily prevented my nomination. I | am for the ticket nominated yesterday, but from this time forwdrd the persons who Celiberately interfered to prevent a free expression of the will of the peo- | of of witnesses of yesterday's | tunes, | counting | buttercups. | the Bourse meeting: Me can expect no favors from me or my friends." JOHN WANAMAKER'S VIEWS. Hon. John Wanamaker has not ute tered a word as to his future intentions. His views of the result can best be obtained from the following taken from his speech the the convention at an immense extract | day after | mass | meeting held at O»ford, Chester county, where a thousand people gathered to | { hear him speak: { to have been It was as a Republican I cast my | I never voted any I was a Republican when I accepted the call of 400 Repub- | licans at the Bourse conference of Feb. 2. I was not a volunteer in their ser- vice because I never wanted to be gov- { let me also say that even at the con- ernor, but as-a drafted man I loyally | took up the flag. | to I went to the convéntion yesterday | as a straightout Republican, and I came home from the convention a bet- ter and more hopeful Republican be- cause of the 164 representatives of the people who stood up in convention and were counted against the machine. There are two developments of Repub- licanism in existence today: the small, but strong body of Republicanism of the Lincoln, Grant, Blaine and Harri- son stripe, and the other the latter day | saints of Republicanism that has grown up in Pennevivania under the Cam- eron-Quay-Andrews dynasties; it is a | body composed maily of officeholding politicians and their secret and open beneficiaries. It is not of the pecple and for the people, or with the peonle, but dead against the people. It is an oathbound, banded and belted machine, pledged to the machine, wholly for the machine. and stwrdily against every idea and every man not with the machine. NOT WITH THE MACHINE. In the presence of these 700 witneses, In this midday meeting of the cultured, intelligent and important people of Chester county, I record myself anew as not in or for or with the Republican machine limited, limited to Quay, An- drews and officeholders and officeseek- | | Judy” ers only. That such a political machine should | exist today, chartered by the blindness and indifference of the people, is in special evidence this morning through- out the state, from the full accounts given by the newspapers and living perfunctory proceedings of the convention at Har- risburg. It is a slick and sly machine, tees, bought candidates to trick coun- ties to nominate favored sons for timely transfer a la Connel, Reeder and Coop- er, tured scarecrows, farcial primary elec- tions, legislative steering committees, piled up promissory political notes, like those in state banks, and printed dyna- mite planted with fiendish, Turkish and human life. It is an ingenious machine; courses music in the air, nostoffica collectorship solos, state ticket quartettes, county ticket choruses; it { I must not fail to add that the Repub- Spangled Banner,” the land of the free voter, and the hore of the brave Re- | publicans, I wrote my hasty letter, un- | finished when the speech nominating me was going on, and hurriedly dis- | patched to thiow down a challenge to unite in the nomination of Charles W. Stone, who up to almost the assembling of the convention had in the conven- | tion more than enough votes to momi- nate him. Why they did not nominate Charles | W. Stone, and why his votes are said | bought away from the | plucky hero of Warren, is no mystery; vention hour Charles W. Stone could have been nominated if he hag bought back his then missing votes, and I add further that all through the two*days preceding the convention I held in my | pocket a signed letter offering to deliver me for cash a certain number of votes to give me a majority in the con- vention for any candidate I wanted. I lican political machine is an all power- | to machine newspaper manufac- | ful machine; it commands national and | state leverage; it includes in its run- | ning gear steam railroad corporations, | electric corporations, gas and armor corporations, contractors, jury fixers, | council lobbyists and emploves of city | departments who go to conventions and | vote and make speeches against green- | horn adventurous citizens who think it worth while to attend Bourse citi- | zens' meetings. It was indeed rather a sorry sight and sound to see and hear a Philadel- phia boss as old as the Leeds-Disston- Rowan combine, indeed, the oldest of | them, slapping in the face 400 business | men whose candidate was in order in carrying out their instructions; pity a | resolution had nct been offered there | excluding letters from absent candi- dates and uncertain voters generally. This political machine with all its newest patents and attachments is best operated by its inventors. The senat? of the United States must do without two of them when the war revenue bill | {s up in the senate, hurry away to Har- risburg to see that the machine does | not get out of. order until: the tune is | finished, and to play the “Punch and of politics to. the farmers of Pennsylvania. SITUATION IS SERIOUS. My friends, it wculd be delightfully | ridiculous if it was not also“serious. We night be quite willing to be amused, half witted, unsophisticated clodhop- | pers of city and country, were it not coyly. in hiding behind state commit- that the consequences are all tremend- | ously fraught with evil. What do ycu and I care who is gov- ernor if he be a man that owns him- | self and can be certified as honest, in- | telligent and guaranteed for fidelity to the people and not to any one man or i a dozen men of the political machine | | ZWhat | Spanish malice by adroit political en- | Bourse conference but a heartfelt, man- | Spanis » 'b) ( é | | gineers out of sight, like the treacher- ! | ous mines in Cuban waters, to destroy it dis- | | earnest, plays on slatcs, on Sundays by the sea, | gubernatorial anthems, and culminates in the grand spectacular performances red fire and brass bands at Har- risburg. with the brass bands of poli- tics sufiicient, perhaps, to hold fast the gouty footbound peonle, but cannot make the rank and file of the younger | and coming party dance either obedi- ence or votes to its old worn out airs. It is an automatic machine; you set it for a stone; it plays the stone you set it for, and there is certainly a great difference in stones. hereafter? | at. the | be built deliverance built or to was the now ly Republican appeal, and notice of de- | termined and continued protest against the Quay-Andrews machine? What was the three months’ long, | laborious, enthusiastic, fruit- | ful crusade in a dezen counties of this | state but an unfolding of the reasons why the political machine can no long- er command support for long slated, boss marked, machine riveted candi- | dates? What was the meaning of the great assemblages of people, like this, | day and nicht, throughcut the com- monwealth; the earnest, forceful ex- ecutive werk of the old and true, but not new style, Republican press in our | own and other states, counseling Penn- | ! pointing out dangers if slate and ma- It is also at times a nickel-in-the-slot machine. receiving assessments or fees, and holding them until the day of ac- without registering your {ed to weight or will, and refusing to return ! the paid in charges. You put in your machine receives it, but is deaf, dumb and blind, especially after | substances, your service, or your vote, | | and the recently opened in one of the cities was | found to contain nickels, wire, tacks, | hair pins, buttons, buckles, bones, nails, | sticks, postage stamps, strings, { checks, railroad tickets and stones. | When the June 2d Republican nickel- | in-the-slot nominating convention ma- it | chine is opened In November next may be found to ¢ontain a stone that has been a millstone for us. IS NOT DISAPPOINTED. I sunpose that there will be some De ri poke | the handles of the political basket, to people ready to say Wanamaker is talk- | ing like a disappointed candidate; kind- | ly save your free criticism and unnec- essary sympathy, most willing but un- thinking gossiper. I wish you could have slept the dreamless, luxurious sleep I tumbled into last nizht with that convention behind me. One wants to knit up the tangled sleeves of care with refreshing sleep to be strong for the next duty. I would like to have the whole of this gorgeous June day to roll in the ! a reminder grass and revel with the daisies and! Where is the man that can say 1 ever asked him in or out of con- vention to vote for me for governor? There are two men I was hard against for governor; one was W. A. Stone, { and the other was John Wanamaker; one of them wanted it too much, the | other didn’t want it at all In the fray preceding the convention I simply did what I wanted to do— represent honest Republicans diametri- cally opposed to the machine. At the convention I did exactly what I always wanted to do, and had agreed to do, which was withdraw whenever the in- terest of the Republican party could be furthered thereby. I came into the ac- tivities of the campaign by request of I retired of my own option and upon my own judg- ment after conference with conferrees. It was a double quick movement when the enémy were in battle line, and intended to spike their guns. You are entitled to know that it was as- | serted on the streets and in the con- | vention at Harrisburg that Wanamaker epuld not be persuaded to unite on any candidate, but was holding out for him- self. The fact was that no one ever asked me to unite upon either of the old or any ‘of the new candidates; they { eould have asked me or any one, for the | orders had gone out, better be defeated utterly than surrender the one and only candidate—W. A. Stone. THE LETTER OF WITHDRAWAL. By the ietter hastily written while the & nvention was listening to the “Star am the service is done or the vote given. | back | One of the nickel-in-the-slot machines sylvania Republicans to caution, and | chine methods were this year persisted in? The convention has come and gone. What cid it do? Exactly what it want- do, and all the time doggedly | meant to do; exactly what public senti- | ment, never before more crystalized, asked and urged it not to do. Who has it served? The bosses, and the bosses only, and their retainers. Who are its candidates? Their chief is the long | chosen manager who shall ope- rate the machine for four years, with the power of the governor's office, and his appointees assisting him. Who are the others? Respectable soldiers, hon- | ored civilians, each to have hold of | | help to carry it through the crowd and deliver it safely to the machine fsher- men. THE STATE PLATFORM. What iztheplatform? Aconfusedcoms= pound of mixtures not up to its credit- ed author’s, ( al Bingham'’s, bright standard; 1:..haps it was afterward edited or un«i:ited. As it stands it is my clock point to 2 and it strikes 11, I know it is half-past 7. form is the congratulations to the brewers as supporters of the state and benefactors of the people in relieving | them by license fees, saying nothing | of the close to a million dollar appro- priation to penitentiary and work- the curse of intoxicating liquors, and saying nothing of the larger blight on i families broken up by the business pa- | surrender the Republican party to help raded in that platform, by small two- penny statesmanship as reducing and | relieving state taxation. Bear in mind I am not discussing a brewer’s or liquor selling business; I am speaking of the infantile statesmanship that mistakes the condition of taxation and makes the farmers and all who live inside the state of Pennsylvania to pay their taxes, a class of charity patients at the door of the brewer and barkeeper. I am also a Republican unwilling to any Populistic, Liberty, Prohibition, Independent or Democrat by insulting the taxpayers with being dependent on the distillers and brewers. Honestly, where is the man that is thinking all around large thoughts over all the situation and not a small patch of the war, or the present situation of politics? I believe I only know one in the country, and his name is William McKinley; in Pennsylvania I cannot find another, not even by looking into my own looking glass. SUMMARY OF THE SITUATION. Let me shorten today’s speech by a brief summary of the situafion. The forced nomination of William, A. Stone for governor stands for all that Quay wants and for all that Quayism means. The credit or the obloquy of the nom- fnation is clearly defined in the special- .y-selected candidate who is absolutely | lection { of William A. Stone, 1 test against such {| surely bring incvitable { nominee. | agement. ! upon by imperative | freys, to be taken for light headed, ! {er had been | kind of a work he would prefer upon the Navy, he would have asked for just | ed descriptions | which make up the bulk of the issue. one man's way of tell- | ing the tirzie cf day who said when the | | hands of | ber contains complete { new Navy, the auxiliary fleet and the | houses, known to be largely filled by | ¥ 3 : ried out. 92pendent on the power of the machine for his preferment. The history of this state is barren of a single instance in which a candidate, named and elected by Quay, was strong enough to assert official manhood in opposition to the corrupt demand of his exacting master. This boss makes no mistake in the sc- of the agents to execute his will, and after months of dodging and deceit, of plotting and scheming, comes into the open and avows himself he | for William A. Stone in confirmation of | the cabal of mercenaries who met at | Avalon on that fateful Sunday in May. | Whatever may be the individual merit it is wholly lost | three times a week by reason of the corrunt advocacy of | | his nomination by such infamous man- | agers. From almost every election precinct | in the state is heard an earnest pro- machine methods, and the deep regret that the arbitrary power exercised at the convention must danger to itg PEOPLE WILL SAVE THE COM- MONWEALTIIL. {isbury.” ——— ts So at rn nist Notice to Exchanges. Some of Tur Star's exchanges will please take notice that our post-office address is Elk Lick. Some of our ex- changes are not being received regular- ly. on account of being addressed **Sal- tf Tur Scar and the New York: Bald, oie Year for only $1.40, cash with order. The Wo. td is better than the average d: ily newspaper. Address all orders to Tur Stag, lKlk Lick, Pa. RIL Thrice-a-Week both Tur Star, the Nickell Magazine and [the New York Weekly 70ibrue, all one year for only $2.00, cash with order. By I this arrangement you get a good coun- ty paper, a good city paper and a first- ! class illustrated magazine all at a trif- | Tue Star, Elk Lick, Pa. The outraged people arc determined | to save this magnificent commonwealth from infamy and shame by The repeated charges, swered and undenied, that this has systematically robbed the ury of the state, thwarted and dent in maintaining the national speculated in the public unan- clique treas- vresi- honor, funds, fed- | eral appointments and corrupt legisla- tion, and defied public sentiment, fur- nish grave reasons of warning when these bosses now seek to extend their power so that the vicious legislation | which was defeated by the valorous 76 in 1896, shall be revived and confirmed by their governor and their legislature | in (1899. Honest men everywhere are called necessity as this lawless band in control of the Ilepub- | lican party leads another march to- ward the treasury and its poweragainst | | the real welfare of the people. My argument is not ended, but must | bul- | wark againgt what I doubt not will be | close today by saying your only worse than the legislature of 07. I mean thereby the legislature of '90. I came here today expressly to ask | you to give your votes to WW. M. Dow- dell and for the three true men, your | neighbors and trusted friends, Jef- Phillips and Moore, who were tried in the fire of the last legislature and came out unburnt by fraud and dishonor. Keep your county right in the next | GREATEST LIGHT To wait for some other time to | legislature by sending these men back again. strike a blow at the machine is haz- ardous in the extreme, to strike now at the first election at the primaries is | the duty of the hour; strike while the iron is hot, and make it hotter by strik- ing. THE STATE AFLAME. The state is aflame over the outrage at Harrisburg, and the fight will never { end until Quay is driven from power. A | The Scientific American Navy Sup- plement. The Scientific American, which has al- ways been identified itself very closely with the interests of the Navy, is to be congratulated on the extremely hand- some and valuable “Navy Supplement” which it has lately put before the pub- lic. We think that,if the average read- asked beforehand what such an issue as this. Both the illustrations and the read- ing matter are of the straightforward explanatory kind which is necessary to put a technical subject clearly before | the lay mind. It was a happy thought | to preface the work with a chapter up- on the classification of warships and in- | cert a few diagrams by way of explana- | tion of the subtle differences between cruisers, monitors and battleships; for after digesting this chapter one is pre- pared to follow intelligently the detail- of the various ships One of the best things about this num- | ber is that it does not merely give an external illustration of each ship, but | it takes the reader down below decks, and initiates him into the mysteries of | the magazines, handling rooms, ammu- nition hoists and motive machinery. | The sectional views of the interior of The most pitiful part of that plat- | the turrets of the monitors are excep- { tionally fine, as are the large wood en- gravings of the engines of the “Massa- chusettes.” The last page of the num- tables of the various naval guns. A handsome col- ored map of Cuba and the West Indies | is furnished with this issue. We extend our congratulations to our contempo- rary on the production of a work which is well conceived and admirably car- - This work is published by Munn & (lo., of 361 Broadway, New York, for 25 cents. —- 2 The Times has a larger ericulation 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 clean, but at the same time bright. Nothing that is of human interest is overlooked by it. It 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 you’ll find the Times may be depended upon. $3 a year, 8 cents a week. rescuing | | the party from such disgraceful man- I try. ling expense. Address all orders to HI : Tue Stan and the Niekell Magazine, both one year for only $1.50, cash with order. The Nickell Magazine is beauti-- fully illustrated, and its contributors are among the bestwritersin the coun- Address all orders to Tie STAR. Elk Lick, Pa. Just received, at Tire Star office, a nice line of Visiting ‘ards. - al ; Order Tne Star sent to your friends abroad. It will be letter from the old home to them and they will ap- preciate your kindness. like a ——— = CARTRIDGE 1 APER !'—The miners can get enough Cartridge Paper for a few cents, at Tur Star office, to last them for several months. a — Tir Star and the New York Weekly | Tribune, both one year for only $1.50, cash in advance. Address all orders to Tne Srar, Elk Lick, Pa. a a DeWitt’s Little Early Risers, The famous little pills. ~0N WHIELS! . Twentieth Century Bicycle Headlight we NID. Driving L.amp. (an be attached to any bieyele or other vehicle and is as far ahead of most other lamps as electric light is ahead of a tallow- dip. It ismade of brass, fincly nickle plated and polished. No sodder: no smoke; no soot; burns kerosene; never jars out; no lenk; simple to understand; easy to handle; hinged front door; finest crystal glass; req moval aluminum parabola reflector; out- side oil filler; a beauty; a marvel; a won- der. This famous lamp is greatly improved for 1898 and no wheelman or driver can atford to be without one. Dirt cheap at $5.00, but Cu PRICE ONLY $2.50, 20 Century Mfg Co., 17 Warren St, NEW Y ORK. sac ~ «.THE... (TRADE MARK) Cyclometer NO SPRINGS 10,000 Miles and Repeat Exact Bize of Cyerometer. = Price, $1.00. HANEY MFG. CO. 286-202 Graham St. Brooklyn, N. ¥. TO INVENTORS. Iiave you invented, orean you invent anything that you think you ought to havea patent for? If so send it to me and for a reasonable fee, I will make the ap plication for you. Sometimes a single invention will bring a fortune to thein- ventor if properly handled. Twenty year’s practice in patent law. Associ- ates in all foreign countries. Send two-cent stamp for pamphlet. GEORGE COOK, (: egistered), PATENT SOLICITOR AND PATENT ATTORNEY, World Building, New York City. Salisbury Hack T.ine, SCHRAMM BROS, Proprietors. ScnEDTLE:—Hack No.1 lenves Salisbury at 8 A.M, arriving at Meyersdale at 10 A. M. Returning leaves Meyersdaleat 1 Po M., ar- riving at Salisbury ats 3 pv. M. HACK No.2 leaves Salisbury at 1 P. M., ar- riving nt Meyersdale at 3 pr. M. Returning leaves Meyversdale at 6 pM, arriving at Sal. isbury at 8 P.M.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers