TT rv mt (Hn Wahl’s Meat Market! continues to be This. place ¥s.for 1 Choice Poultry, Sausage, hoadquarte Juicy Roasts, Pudding and I'resh Fish in Season. { aim, to, serve my patrons with I the best in my line that the market affords. Thanking the public for a lib-| eral patronage, continuance I am ing a of the same, Respectfully yours, t. WAHL AVE MONEY! I have gone to the. trouble to add to Salisbury’ s business interests a | them two senators. Salisbury, Pa. | Ww ell selected and complete stock of FURNITURE, ee When in need of anything in this Jine call and examine my goods and | get my prices. See if 1 can’t save you some mone. PRICES TOW «a Thanking the the public. for. a gen- erous patronage snd asking a con- | tinuance of the same, I am yours | for bargains, WM. R. HASELBARTH, Sali Ibarth’s Hardware. sbury, Pa. afore over Hasce HAY’S HOTEL > Salisbury, >man’a. This elegant NEW THREE- STORY HOTEL is one of the best equipped, hostelries in Som- ersct county. Modern IHguipments of all kinds, such as Steam Heat, Warm fand Cold. Baths, Tele- phane, Fine Bar, etc. Centrally: locatad: with fine sur- roundings. Tables supplieed with the best. the markets afford. Rates reasonable. C1 FEAY Proprietor. ii=tablished PLS. HAY, DE 1-573. | on ALER IN Dry Goods Notions, fIatsand Ca [3oots ~hoes GROCERIES RUEENSWARE, TOBACCO, GIGARS, ETC. SALISBURY, PRs 1 alld | legislature | Hastings. FPA. NK FERS ELK: Contracts taken, est ished nnd neat and PETRY & SONS, AND BUILDERS, 11C z, PA. ~¥RA ARP EX imi ite Ss Dprompty furn- | substantial work guar- | ! 'F Eranlk, Petry, Jr, is not meluded in this five: 3 B. KRAUSSE 0 ¢ SHOEMAKER, SALISBURY PAL i {) ilepairing a sp ecialty. Satisfaction suaranteéed. YW. IF: GARL ~y Expressman and Drayman, WEST SALISBURY, I vi Kinds of hauling and delivering of goods | t low prices. Your patronage is solteited, For the best-tpnsorigl work go to M. MAY, The Leading Barber. SHOP QyProsITE ITAY'S H OTEL. 3.& 0.R. R. SCHEDULE. Until further notice passenger trains will |! rriveat Meyer : | idnie as follows: EAST J, Daily. nis No. 45 A Neon 6, Nin BOUND, Daily WEST Daily... shail BOUND, 11, Daily... JOEN W RINGLER SOLICITS YOUR—: COATLILAULTITNG A kinds of hauling done promptly 1d at reasonable rates. SALISBURY, PA, ender Steak, | Dressed | QUAY'S LETTERS IN EVIDENCE. and solicit- | | travels 12 out of the | delphia who voted for John Wanama- | ker ji were | striking "Philadelphia | retary | cepting the nomination, | IXighth sen | nation. | myself. 1 | district, and to receive your nomination It { I ination of | Nineteenth district. [ which | politics | the floor | ence of | ruin my character and reputation, fling | prevent any dollar marks being placed | honest as any other senator | people, me | the | nominated | years ago, | ventions, | ipated at IIarrisburg in June | as | been hurled against him. | BIG ANTI AY VICTORY. Quay Loses Ten Members of the | Legislature in Philadelphia. Martin's Great Speech. Mr. Wanamaker’s Terrific Chairman Elkin—The Chairman De- nied That Quay Had Driven Colonel Stahle out of Office and Mr. Wana- Oil | committtee Rebuff to | the on m— | every particular and has been circulat- ed by persons who are engaged in an effort to defeat the Republican party.” Just a few days after this declara- tion of State Chairman Elkin, Joseph C. Sibley, Populist and Free Silverite, stamped as absolutely true the state- raent of the Press correspondent frm City, by declaring his intention: of cntering the contest for congress against Charles W. Stone¢\and when in course of his letter of acceptance in reply to the request of the Quay Re- publicans and Free Silver Democratic that waited on him, he spoke of his Quay Republican support- | ers as follows: | expression of a desire { such an honor, maker Produces Quay’s Written Or- | ders to That FEffect—An Affidavit That Tells Deal in York County. (From Our Own Correspondent.) Harrisburg, Sept. 27.~—The anti-Quay | movement in Philadelphia won a splen- | did victory in the primaries in Philadel- phia last week. Senator Quay lost 10 votes in the next legislature,” among It was a magnifi- cent achievement, and the Quay com- bination in Philadelphia is utterly rout- ! ed and downcast. As showing how the anti-Quay tide 3 men from Phila- for United States senator were re- nominated, while but five out of the 23 men who voted for Boies Penrose returned. One of the great and features of the conventions in was the speech of Sec- David Martin. In all the past vears in which Mr. Martin has been vilified and abused he has held his peace. Through misrepresentation, slander, false accusation, he has quiet- ly bided his time. No one before last Thursday knew that David Martin was a forceful, vigorous speaker; an orator whose words, well chosen, carried con- viction with them. In his speech ac- unanimously citizens of the Mr. tendered him by the atorial district, said: SECRETARY MARTIN'S GR EAT SPEECH. friends of the same political faith, All About the Crooked | | signed | devotion to the i under “Having been selected without the as their candidate for representative jin congress, not only by but also in the form of personal requests, a great number of letters and numerously netitions by those who in the past have been conspicuous for their republican party, and whose leadership it has so often marched to victory, | seems to come as a genuine and urgent Martin | | feat the “Mr. Chairman and gentlemen of the | convention: I thank you for this nomi- If IT did not 1 would feel that teful to you and unfair to in this I was ungra was born and raised for state senator is no small honor. | is the largest manufacturing district in { this state, and is the largest Republican | district in Pennsylvania. “I have felt for several years that I would not take any nomination forpub- office; but when the crusade was rde against me by the senate of ’95, threatened to drive me out of and ruin my renutation, the thought crept into my would be a chance for me some day to | strike back, and if elected I will, on of the senate and in the pres- | some of the men who tried to lie ma back in their teeth the tried to heap upon me. “1 will, if elected, be in a position to scandals they on me cause native or any friend of mine without and show to the citizens of my city that a politician can be as | man. “I will vote and work for the good of i the whole people,and I desire to impress the mings of the delegates in this | | sant with some convention that I am a Republican and will vote with my party on all party aguestions., 1 am not pledged to any one for nlace and will mae no such promises until after I am sworn in as a | at Harrisburg. I will not vote to cut down the school appropriations; [ wiil not vote to pay the expe: of the TLexow committee; I will not vote | any Ses | for any of the expense bills that were vetoed hy our Jarrisburg; the bilrs honest governor now at nor will I vote for any of | which were prssed bv the last | and vetoed by Governor | | sitions | story | and | played, SERVE THE PEOPLE; NOT QUAY. “It will be my aim to serve the whole and not one or two individuals. “I'he neconle who were in control twen - ty-four years ago, when this, the Eighth | senatorial district was formed, urged at that time to be a candidate for position which you today have | me for, but I declined. My | andidacy was ain urg:d when young Senator Henry S. Taylor died, nine but I refused, and the only reason I have now to go the senate of | this state is to serve the people of this | Gity ang of this state. i “One word. in.conelusion: I desire you | to go back to your people in your wards and divisions and say to them that | your nominee is a Republican,and never faltered in the duties he owed to his! party, and that the banner you have placed in his hands will be carried by him in triumph, not only for himself, but for. the entire Renublican ticket nomingted today in the various con- | and for the state ticket nom- last. “Gentlemen,again I thank you for the i honor you have conferred upon me.” Secretary Martin threw down the | gage to Senator Quay. The time has come when by deeds and not by words, a senator of Pennsylvania, Mr. Mar- | tin can refute the calumnies that have He will make a me:rorable career in the upper house; and more than this he will yet be one of | its orators and feremost members. The next most startling incident was the terrible rebuff given to State Chair- | man Elkin by Hon. John Wanamaker. It has been told in these dispatches how the Quay Republicans in. the Pwenty-seventh ' congressional district have ‘linked arm: with the Free Silver Democrats to d=feat Hon. Charles WV. Stone, late cardidate for. gevernor. hey are deing this to get Congressman Stene cut of the road; and to work ven-. geance on him because he ran for gov- ernor aceainst the wishes of Senator Quay. These facts were published in the Philadelphia Press of Sept. 10. A. few days after State Chairman Elkin, in an address before the county chair- men of the state at the Walton hotel; in Philadelphia,declared the statements to be falge. This is the way the Phila- delvhia Press tells ¢he story of the startling revelation: On the day foilowing the publication of this dispatch {about Quay men help-. ing Sibley) State Chairman Elkin in an address before the members of the Re- publican state committee, said: | ley matter Delaware county, which was addressed. call to service which no citizen may feel {| at liberty to refuse. | deference to the wishes of the sovereign | In this spirit of people I accept your call.” SIBLEY’'S OBLIGATIONS the same platform with Hon. George A. Jenks, at (il City, on last Wednesday night, Mr. Sibley still further e his obligations to the Quay Re publicans when he said: “I feel from the number of letters re- ceived from men prominent in the ranks that I am the nominee of the Republican party.” State Chairman Elkin denial of machine complicity in the Sib- at mass meeting at Media, by Candidate William A. Stone and himself on Saturday night last. He ex- in. the were Stone. Then he went a step farther, and in the most impressive manner declared that | Senator Quay had not interfered to de- nomination of Colonel Stahle two years ago, which resulted in that district going Democratic. State Chair- | man Elkin said: | litical disturber CHAIRMAN “Another ELKIN'S DENIAL. charge made by these po- is that Senator Quay and Colonel Stone defeated the renom- Congressman Stahle To this charge I re- ply that itis untrue. I answer positive manner because there is in my possession the convincing evidence that | | the Stahle was | sale Congressman a barter and friends of Mr. renomination of defeated by by the deal made | Wanamaker and in his interest.” mind that there | an i the | Congressman | and persistently , the machine | leged, | Fr | some correspondence with Senator | deputy ! the term 1.1200 I was to be | at York. widespread case of Colonel Stahle, a staunch Republican and an honest man, is now fact that if it can be Stahle was The present aroused in the old soldier, shown that deliberately pursued by the ma- chine and by Senator Quay; that his nomination was opposed and fought by on him, then the c4be can be re as proven as to Congressman Charles W. Stone also, who is, it has been marked for defeat, just as was Colonel Stahle two years ago. There is living in Yerk a gentle- man who more thoroughly conver- of ‘the secret detaiis of tl.e machine plot that defeated Colonel Stahle than any other man living to- de Ly, with the exception of Hen. M. S. "Bhiz gentleman is Mr. V. KK. cy, editor of the York Pennsylvanian. Frey was one of the conferrees eiected to represcat York county and Colonel Staule in the congressional con- ference of 1896. Almost Jrmettintily is on my part for | the nomination un- | | der those circumstances and conditions | | an alderman TO QUAY. | Still later, in a speech delivered from | reiterated his | and to Cumberland six votes. They re fused to accept this proposition. and proceeded to organize, casting three votes each for Hollar; six in all. Our conferrees from York organized in the same room by electing John Ruby chairman. Ten votes were cast for Colonel Stahle. I did not vote at all “Irarlier in the conference Mr. Hollar came to and ed me to support nim, aftem xd saying that Quay had told him to see me, as everything had been fixed satisfactorily with me, and that I would vote for him. The result of the conference's action that day was that Colonel Stahle was not nominated, and the Nineteenth district went Dem- ocratic, Hollar not polling anything like the full Republican vote. George J. Benner, a Free Silver Democrat of Gettysburg, was elected to represent the district. Mr. Hollar subsequently told me that he had been assured by Senator Quay that everything was ull right and satisfactory in my case, and that he had promised to take care of my interests if I Colonel Stahle and for Hollar. VV. KEK. FREY.” Sworn and subscribed to before me, in and for the city and county of York, this, the 19th day. of September, A. D. 1398. C. me F. KEECH. Alderman. SENATOR QUAY QUOTED. It is evident that Senator Quay did nof fully inform State Chairman Elkin | | on all of the facts connected with | defeat of Colonel Stahle. the Accompany- ing the above statement from Mr. | Frey are two letters to him from Sena- | tor Quay, a portion of whose contents are quoted in the affidavit. ters in full are as follows “Beaver, Aug. 27, Frey, Esq., “York, Pa. 1896. “Vy. 15. My Dear Sir:—I have your letter of 1 | the 25th inst., and if what you sugges | can be carried out your wishes will =~ endeavoring to | ment of Mr. i friends. | which in the | in this | interest | owing to ! simply to work vengeance | garded | al- | plicitly denied that there was any truth | lar statement that Senator Quay | I and his friends | defeat Congressman Charles W. gratified. I am very anxious that Hol- should be nominated. “When the time comes I take it for | granted that you will have the indorse- | Glessner and our other Very truly yours, “M. QUAY.” The next letter, the last sentence of is most exnressive of Senator Quay’s desire to knock out Stahle, written on the letter paper of the: Re- publican national committee,New York It reads: 7 “New York, Sept. 8, 1808. K. Frey, “York, Pa: Sir:—Yours of yesterday re- ceived. My understanding of the mat- ter was that it was settled. Yo ahead and nominate Hollar. “Bic. TW. F.-Y M.S. QUAY.” It is needless to say that the lcttters prove emphatically that Sena- tor Quay the defeat of Colonel Stahle. He con- fesces it in the letters given above, and of which facsimile copies with produced. “Mr. V: “Dear Then the Press reproduced in nearly a | space a facsimile of Sena- | the de- | half page of tor Quay letters calling for feat of Colonel Stahle. THE STATE AROUSED. The result of all this has whirlwind of indignation over Penn- sylvania, for it is shown that the Quay machine will stop ss at Media, Delaware county night last, Mr. house Saturday on Wanamaker | exhibitel Senator Quay’s letters and the after his appecintment as a conferree ef- | set on foot to induce him another candidate. By a pe- chain of circumstances Mr. induced to listen to the advanced by the machine. of his nart in of the part which is Lest told in Mr. Irey’s own words, in the following affidavit: ML. FREY’'S AFFIDAVIT. the rressional contest forts were to vote for culiar was preno- “In 1563, sylvania, cong of the candidates were James A. Stahle, of York county, -ank HE. Iollar, of ty. I was appointed one of the 11 con- ferrees to represent York county and Colonel Stahle S. Quay relative to the ccntest in this district. congressional As Frey The | he transaction, Senator Quay | Cuba in the Nineteenth district of Penn- | Colonel | and | Cumberland coun- | In August of 1896 I had | ()})( M. | ¥ a result of | that correspondence, Senator Quay,who | i was extremely anxious to defeat Stahle, {FT. agreed with me that if I would cast my i vote for Mr. Hollar in the hetween York, Cumberland counties, he would have me appointed collector cf internal revenue at in 1898, and on the expiration of of the present York “In a leiter to Senator Quay, Aug. 25, 1846, IT outlined my idea of the conferree’s work, with which he agre=d, conference and Adams | postmaster in | appointed postmaster | | dated | | and in a letter from Dcaver of Aug. 27, | “The story is false and malicious in, | he said: “If what you suggest can be carried out your wishes (meaning torship) will be gratified. 1 anxious that Holiar should be ated.’ In that would (less nomin- this same letter to me he he tock it for granted have the indorsement of ner and ‘our. other Iriends York. 1 saw Quay to avoid fulfilling his by a refusal of the local Quay leaders to indorse me. I wrote fect, ving that if T agreed to vote for Hollar in return for the of deputy collector and must be independent of the lecal lead- ers, and solely upon his and recemmendation. He this by a letter.of Sept. 8, 1896, tional headquarters in New which he said: SENATOR QUAY’S ‘“*My understanding vas that it was settled. nominate Hollar.’ “When the conference over on Sewvt. 10 or thereabouts, Adams and Cumberland county demanded the old three votes for each county. York county had appointed 11 conferrees, and was willing to concede to Adams four Mr. in from na- York, ANSWER. of the. matter men the collec- | am very | said | that I: in this a way for Senator! agreement | him to this ef- | anpointment | postmaster it | indorsement | replied to, in. Go ahead and met- at: Fan- | the | representation of { affidavit of Iditor I'rey. It was on the same platform where just one week before «State Chairman Elkin had de- clared that Senator Quay and William A. Stone had nothing to do with de- feating Colonel Stahle and district over into Democratic There nromises to be not anti-Quay victory, but an landslide this fall. V0 WANT THIS] I respectfully call the fact that 1 am agent for Gen. hueh Lee's great book on And The Spanish War. Don’t be deecived by bogus book the Cuban War, but get the . article—G EN, LEE'S OWN Boox. hands. only anti-Q 5 Oi This work, which has over is meeting with ancnormous sale, be cause it 1s the only anthentic work published on the one subject occupy- ing the yiinds of the entire world. Tt has Hundred Hlestrations. Wait until I eali on you ine an hm wir hool if vou want only reliable work Cahier. F. IEICE OINN, Fil Liclk, 1 before the rea; fre— 2620086800000 0000000000 > Going to Buy A Dictionary? CET THE BEST, epster’ Jimatien. Choice Gift - ey Grand fi Educator = Libray in Heelf “.- he Standard Authority 3 We A i A A T OOOEGHHHI0DS sd Oo hdd QOICESI¢ wv SOLD DY ALL PGOKSELLERS. 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Have been troubled for about three years with what I called bilious attacks coming on regularly once a week. Was told Ly dliterent paysicians that It was caused by bad teeth, of which I had goveral. I ha: the teeth extracted, but the at- tacks continued. I had secon adveridsements of Ripans Tabules in all (he papers hu@had no fouith in them, but about WeoRS sihoee a trend in duced me to try thon Have taken ttwocl the small 5 cont boxes of tho Tan 4 bave Lad no recurrance of the att L'ave never piven a testimonial fer anything before, Lut the grat amount of good which I belleve has Leen cone me by Ripans Tabules induces me to add mine to tho many testimonials you doubtless have in your possession now. A. T. DEWITT. exon I want to inform you, in words of highest “% » 3 1 have been a great sufferer from constipation for over five years. Nutiing gave me any rele. My feet snd legs and abdomen were bloated 80 1 could not woar shoes on muy fect and only a loose dress. I saw Ripans Tabules advertised in our dally paper, bought some and took them as direct. ed. Have taken them about three weeks and thore 13 such 4 change! Iam not constipated ny moro and ¥ own it ail to Ripans t seven years old, have no occupatior lLiouschold duties and nu:sing my He has had the dropsy and I a Tahules for him. He feels son | tale rome time, he has} n K.£00uE may wee my letter and name ss #on lik, Mrs. Aa ZORMAN CLARKE. I'ipans er bd will You I have been suffering from headaches ever I could never rideina ro faton crowded ce wiihout getting a since I wus a ttle girl. LARA Rta praise, of the: benefit I have derived from Ripans Tabules. I am a professional nurse und in this profession a clear head is aiwuys needed. Ripans Tabules does it. After one of my cases I found myself completely run down. Actingon the advice of Mr Geo. Bow- er, Ph. 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