The LYON Improved “BALL-BEARING”’ Egg Beater| Beats eggs quicker and makes § more material than any other beater. Ur creamwnippoe 4 up batter for cakes, ete. ball bearings at both ends. beaters. For Sale by Dealers. a aa THE ‘“‘ SARATOCA" SLICER Bea 6 and vegetables easily, perfect- i ly and rapidly. Double cut— one side cutting thick, the other thin. Reversible handle; insert in cither end. Made For Sale by Dealers. MILFORD MFG. CO. Sole Manufacturers MILFORD - NEW YORK rh bal 8 Q 3 ° = = G o ° a 0 &. “wn © a @ £ ET —————C——: MTT sr RCT TRS TT WIRE Do not be deceived by those who ad- vertise a $60.00 Sewing Machine for $20.00. Thiskind of a machine can be bought from us or any of our dealers from $15.00 to $18.00. WE MAKE A VARIETY. THE NEW HOME IS THE BEST. The Feed determines the strength or weakness of Sewing Machines. The Double Feed combined with other strong points makes the New Ifome the best Sewing Machine to buy. Wiite for CIRCULARS Een avis er ferent styles of we manufacture and prices before purchasing Sewing Machines THE NEW HOME SEWING MAGHINE G0. ORANGE, MASS. 28 Union Sq. N. Y., Chicago, Ill, Atlanta, Ga., st. Louis, Mo., Dallas, Tex., San Francisco, Cal FOR SALE BY STEVENS Single Barre Gin Te THE MOST POPULAR GUR MADE This gun is fully up to the quality of our rifles, which for 38 years have been STANDARD. It is made in 3 styles, and in 12, 16and 20 gauge. Bored for N1TRO PowpER and fully guaranteed. No. 100 . . $7.50 No. (10 . . 8.50 No. 120 . . 10.00 Send stamp for large catalogue illustrating complete line, brimful of valuable information to sportsmen. . J. STEVENS ARMS AND TooL Co. P. 0. Box : CHICOPEE FALLS, MASS. ’ | Patronize - | The Home Bakery! | | i i Having purchased the Salis- | bury bakery of Henry Dersch, | I wish to inform the people of | Salisbury and vicinity that I | solicit their liberal patronge. The Best Of Everything | | | | | in my line will be sold at rea- sonable prices, and Mr. Dersch will run the delivery wagon as heretofore. Prompt attention will be given to special orders, and no efforts will be spared to please my customers. John Schramm. fave You Tried Heinz's Sweet Pickles? They are fine—10 cts. per dozen or three dozen for 25 cents, at W. D. Thompson & Company's Store. Laundry Twice A Week! We are agents for the Meyersdale Steam Laun- dry. We send and re- ceive laundry twice a week ; send Tuesday and Thursday mornings and receive Wednesday and Friday evenings. First class work. W. 1. Thompson & Co. Man Shall Not Live By Bread Alone! That what our Saviour said the devil tried to tempt him on the mountain top. No one wants to live by bread alone. Good Mxar wanted by all us, and even The Devil Is Going About lion. ix when 1s like a roaring seeking whom he may devour. But don’t let the devil put it into your head that you ean buy TraDE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &cC. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communica- tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scienfific American, A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir- culation of any scientific journal. Terms, $3 a Mi four months, $1. Sold by all newsdealers. UNN & Co.261eraaver. New York Branch Office. 625 T* St.. Washington, D. C. W. H. KOONTZ. KOONTZ & OGLE Attorneys-At-Law, J. G. OGLE SOMERSET, PENN’A Office opposite Court House. ERNEST 0. KOOSER, Attorney-At-Law, SOMERSET, PA. J. A. BERKEY Attorney-at-Liaw, SOMERSET, PA. Coffroth & Ruppel Building. R. E. MEYERS, DISTRICT ATTORNEY. Attorney-at-I.aw, SOMERSET, PA. Office in Court House. A. F. SPEICHER, Physician and Surgeon, SALISBURY, PENN’A. Office corner Grant and Union Streets. better Meat than is sold ur my shop. TI kill good eattle and al- ways sell asx low as curren prices will allow. Lor the be-t Mear and the lowest living prices, always call on your servant. KIDNEY DISEASES are the most fatal of ali dis- eases. KIDNEY CURE Is a FOLEY’S Guaranteed Remedy or money refunded. Contains remedies recognized by emi: nent physicians as the best for Kidney and Bladder troubles. PRICE 50c. aad $1.00. Salisbury Hack lane, SCHRAMM BROS, Proprietors. SCHEDULE :—Hack No. 1 leaves Salis- bury at 8 a. m. arriving at Meyersdale at 9.30 a. m. Returning leaves Meyersdale atl p.m. arriving at Salisbury at 2.30 p. m. HACK No. 2 leaves Salisbury at 1 p. m.,ar- riving at Meyersdale at 230 p. m. Return- ing ledves Meyersdale at 6 p. m. arriving at Salisbury at 7.30 p. m. B.& 0. R.R.SCHEDULE. Summer Arrangement.—In Ef- fect Sunday, May 18, 1902. Under the new schedule there will be 10 daily passenger trains on the Pittsburg Di- vision, due at Meyersdale as follows: Hast Bound. Fess... ....... . 6g—Throngh Mail............... . 46z—Through Train............. . 16*—Accommodation............ 5: West Bound. Night Express.............., 2: Accommodation ........... : hrough Train............. 5d—Through Mail............ No. 49*—Accommodation ........... 4:50 P. M *Regular stop. zDo not stop. xFlag stop. g Stop to take on passengers for Wash- ington avd points beyond. d Stop. to take on passengers for Pittsburg and west. J.C. CORRIGAN, Agent. | WORD 10 WORKERS Beneficient Results of the Republi- can Policy of Protection. VOTE FOR PATTISON DANGEROUS It Epcourages Tariff-Smashers—Euro- pean Labor Underpaid, While American Labor Fares Well—What Is a Distinguished Financier Says About the Conditions In Europe and Here. Pennsylvania voters who contem- plate giving their support to Robert E. Pattison, Democrat, should pause a moment before they decide on such a momentous slip. A vote for Pattison is a vee of lack of confidence in Re- publicanism. It strengthens the hands of the Democrats who seek to tear down our tariff policy, and ruin our present prosperity. Particularly. should the voter who has to depend on th toil of his hands for daily bread halt before he makes this mistake. THE WAGES OF EUROPE. Mr. James R. Keene, the well-known financier, who has just returned fron an extended visit to Europe, says the condition of the laboring classes in Hungary, Austria and part of Germany is really pitiful. The rate of wages barely admits of existence, and when he saw the workmen in those countries he wondered what we would do with- out a tariff. “America is the paradise of earth,” declared Mr. Keene. ‘Here is the greatest return offered to the man who has muscle and brain to mar- ket. Here is the place for the man of ambition to discover that energy and worth find their way to the top more suddenly than anywhere else on earth.” This statement of a man of large and careful observation should command the attention of American workingmen. The more intelligent of them of course know that labor is better rewarded in the United States than in any other country. They know that the wage worker has greater respect here than in any other land. But do they gener- ally appreciate why this is so? Forty- five years ago labor in this country was in about the condition that labor is now in most of the countries of Europe. THE CAUSE OF HARD TIMES. It was not steady employed and it was poorly paid. In 1855 Horace Greeley wrote: “The cry of hard times reaches us from every part of the coun- try. The making of roads is stopped, factories are closed and houses and ships are no longer being built. Fac- tory hands, roadmakers, carpenters, bricklayers and laborers are idle, and paralysis is rapidly embracing every pursuit in the country. Tne cause of all this stoppage of circulation is to be found in the steady outfiow of gold to pay foreign laborers for the cloth, the shoes, the iron and other things that could be produced by American labor. but which cannot be produced under our present revenue system,” TARIFF FOR REVENUE ONLY. Then the country had a “Tariff for revenue only,” which not only failed to yield sufficient revenue to meet the expenditures of the government, but kept the industries prostrated. In his message to congress in 1857 President Buchanan thus presented the situa- tion: “With unsurpassed plenty in all the productions and all the elements of natural wealth our manufacturers have suspended, our public works are re- tarded, our private enterprises of dif- ferent kinds are abandoned, and thou- sands of useful laborers are thrown out of employment and reduced to want. We have possessed all these elements of material wealth in rich abundance, and yet, notwithstanding all these ad- vantages, our country, in its monetary ever experienced was in 1857 and it was particularly disastrous to labor. There were bread riots in New York and some other cities and destitution and suffer- ing among the laboring classes was general. A change came with the inauguration of the economic policy of the Republi- can pagty and it is needless to point out what has been accomplished under the operation of that policy for Ameri- can industries and American labor. All intelligent men are familiar with it and it is this which the wage workers need to bear in mind when they are ap- ppealed to to strike down or seriously impair that policy. - Labor conditions in the United States may not be in all cases what could be desired. Improve- ment in some respects is to be wished for. But on the whole American labor is vastly better off in every way than is labor in any other part of the world and this is one of the beneficent results of the policy which has made the United States first among the indus- trial nations. A PURE BUTTER CIRCULAR Philadelphia Merchants ‘Issue a Cir cular to Farmzrs and Dairymen. The combinzd pure butter interests of Philzdeipnia have issued an unusual circular during the past week. It is addressed to the Farmers and Dairy- men of Pennsylvania and reads as fol- lows: “We, the undersigned dealers in pure butter, being especially interested in the success of the Grout bill, made re- peated visits to the national capitol when this measure was under consider- ation in the Senate and House. “We take great pleasure in stating that the Hon. Boies Penrose of Penn- sylvania was untiring in his efforts to aid in the passage of this bill, which is of inestimable benefit to the dairy interests, and we very much doubt if it would have become a law. with its interests, is in a deplorable condition.” | One of the severest panics the country | many desirable features, if Senator Penrose had not labored so earnestly in its behalf. “Wealthy oleomargarine dealers and manufacturers, from various sections of the United States co-operating with other powerful interests. worked with unceasing zeal to defeat this measure and thereby seriously cripple the great dairy interests, but on account of the unswerving fidelity of Senator Penrose to the farmers and dairymen, their efforts were rendered unsuccessful. “In view of this we would respect- fully urge all farmers and dairymen to advocate the election of members of the senate and house of representa- tives in Pennsylvania who will support for re-clection to the United States Senate, the Hon. FEoies Penrose, of Philadelphia, Pa.” This circular is signed by W. R. Bryce & Co. 23 South Water street, Bickel & Miller, 322 South Front street and twelve other of the largest whole- sale butter merchants and firms in the city. PATTISON OFPOSED BY LABOR Tinplate Workers Urce Wage Earners to Oppose His Election as Governor. At the recent tin plate conference of the Amalgamated Association the following recclutions were passed: — “Whereas, R. E. Pattison has been selected as one of the candidates for governor of this great commonwealth; and “Whereas, It is well known to organ- ized labor that said R. E. Pattison is a most bitter enemy of organized iabor as was evidenced by his action during his last administration by his vctoing Sen- ate bill No. 19, session of 1885, provid- ing for a better protection of wages of labor and providing for a better system of collection, and his vetoing House bill No. 626, securing to mechanics and la- borers the right to file liens on real es- tate for wages due. “Also by sending troops to Home- stead during the strike of 18392, after he had promised a committee of the workmen that no troops would be sent there in view of the fact that Adjutant General Greenland had reported that peace prevailed and that the presence of troops was not necessary for the pre- servation of order; and “Whereas, It was stated to a com- mittee of citizens of Homestead by General Snowden, the representative of Governor Pattison, that ‘the mills are open, and any one who the com- pany permits to enter to work will be protected by the troops.’ “Therefore, in view of all these facts, it is resolved by the members of the conference committee and the other members of the Amalgamated ‘Associa- tion of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers, that we do condemn unqualifiedly and without reserve, the action of former Governor R. E. Pattison, and we recom- mend that all union men vote and use their influence to defeat tnis enemy of organized labor.” The Road to Anarchy. One of the most dangerous tenden- cies of modern Americar life, appar- ently becoming every day more preva- lent, is the disposition wantonly and recklessly to speak ill of those who are charged with the performance of public duties. Instead of the respect which in the days of our fathers was exhib- ited toward those selected by the peo- ple for office, it is the habit of our time to offer them only abuse. If we ever succeed in entirely destroying the con- fidence of the people in those who ad- minister the government we shall have reached the time when the government itself is ready to perish. It is a kind of slander which is closely akin to treason and leads directly on the road to anarchy and the overthrow of our cherished institutions. It is the breed- ing ground where grow the sentiments 2nd impulses of creatures like Guiteau ind Czolgosz.—From Judge Penny- acker’s Eric speech. Pennygacker’s Tour. The tour of Pennypacker | through the western part of the state | | | | Cos | Judwe 1as heen an enthusiastic and endless succession of ovations, At Johnstown on Saturday night he spoke to an au- dience of thousands that filled the big Opera House. Attorney General John P. Elkin also spoke from the same stage and was accorded an enthusias- tic reception. The meeting was one of the largest ever he¢ld in Johnstown. General El- kin paid an eloquent tribute to the high character and purpose of Judge Penny- packer, pledged his undivided support and predicted an overwhelming vic- tory for the Republican ticket this Fall. — Began Where He Left Off. An old story is told of a boarder who asked for an egg. The waiter asked him how he wanted it cooked. Just than a flash of lightning knocked him sense- less, and for eight years he remained unconscious and speechless. He was at last able to speak, and his first word was “poached.” It was a case of sus- pended animation and the intervening time was a blank. He resumed just where he had left off eight years be- fore. This reminds us of the Demoerat who is again talking free trade. In 1894, after the country was wrecked by free trade legislation, the lightning of public sentiment struck the Democrat- ic party. Word was sent along the line that free trade must not be mentioned. For eight years not a free trade squeak heard. At last the effect of the stroke of lightning has worn off suffi- was sume his free trade conversation at the precise point where he left off eight years ago.—Ex — re | #& WEDDING Invitations at Tue | Star office. A nice new stock justre- | ceived. ti, ciently for old man Democracy to re- | Though We Do Say It Ourselves— You can get the largest and best bottle of Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil that is to be found at the ilk Lick Dure More. Our Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil contains 50 per cent. Pure Norweigan Cod Liver 0il, or 162; per cent. more than any other Emulsion on the market. Our Emulsion is pleasant to take, easily digested, and is highly recommended for Con- sumption, Coughs, Colds, Bron- chitis and General Debility. Your Next Bottle, Miller's! Satisfaction Guaranteed. The Blk Lick Pharmacy. A Weal Stomach Indigestion is often caused by over- eating. An eminent authority says the harm done thus exceeds that from the excessive use of alcohol. Eat all the good food you want but don’t over- load the stomach. A weak stomach may refuse to digest what you eat. Then you need a good digestant like Kodol, which digests your food with- out the stomach’s aid. This rest and the wholesome tonics Kodol contains soon restore health. Dieting unneces- sary. Kodol quickly relieves the feel- ing of fulness and bloating from which some people suffer after meals. Absolutely cures indigestion. Kodol Nature’s Tonic. Prepared only by E. C. DEWITT & 00.,0bicago. The §l. bottle contains 2 times the b0c. size. SOLD BY E. H. MILLER. LADIES, YOU MUST SEE our new line of La- dies’ Suits and Wraps. We have your style, because we have ALL THE RIGHT .. STYLES in Suits and Jackets for the swell dresser as well as for the con- servative buyer. You won't find fault with the price. ‘Nobody does. 1S. C. HARTLEY, Meyersdale, Pa. Geo. D. Hamill, nnTHE:: HIGH GRADE TAILOR. A large assortment of latest Suitings, Trouserings,Vestings, and Overcoatings always on hand. In Salisbury A WONDERFUL WORK. - To be a man who can excel one hundred thou- sand men in any one lire is good; to be one ina millicn is better; but 2, to be the only liv- ing man, (and the second one in the history of 9 tor of “ Around the Cap- has done in his Kinley. Price on paper, $1.00. Js the Capital,” § P Lndred and filly ngton life pen and ~~» five hundred pic- "7 nent Americans, in- men, ambassadors e Pan," a ital,” ($2.00 books drawing of Mc best Japanese His ** Around containing one full-page Washi ink sketches and \ tures of promi \. cluding the states and commanders participating in the Spanish-American ar—comprising by far the greatest collection of facts and faces ever pro ume in condensed duced in one vol- form, will interest the entire civilizec world. The draw- ings equal, if they }%4 do not surpass, those of John Ten ji tA niel’s, for which work he was fi 2» knighted by Queen Vic - toria. The umor is SENATOR QUAY. contagious. TH | The Czar of Pennsylvanin. |Q H EB LL E NU' PUBLISHING COMPANY. New York, U. 8. A. b Will grind Ear Corn and all kinds of small grain into a first-class Chop-Feed. By its use the farmer saves his grain, toll, hauling his grain to the mill; improves his stock and ¥ lines his pocket-book. s FE Write us for book on Ground Feed and Feed-Grinders. Agents Wanted STAR MANUFACTURING CO. 72 Broad St., NEW LEXINGTON, OHIO * i» Wine Making in Portugal. In great emergency when all the men are demanded in the vine- ok yards, women are called to assist * | in wine treading. Our correspon- dent saw young women wear- ing their own garments which they skilfully gather up around them { until they assume the biggest and most abbreviated of Dutchman’s “britchen” costumes, while in the : winery. THIS IS A SCENE IN THE VILLAGE OF QUINTAS, PORTUGAL. 47 An improved method of mash- ing by machinery is adopted At the Speer Oporto Grape Vineyards, PASSAIC, N. J. by which a barrel of grapes a minute is dumped in the hopper, that feed two large rubber rollers, between which the grapes are crushed. The Port Wine from “peer'sVineyards beats the world for its valuable medicinal qualities. None put on the market now, until nine years old. Weakly persons, invalids, Females, and Aged persons, should always have a bottle in the house. If properly used it will restore health and prolong life. It is by all odds the Wine for wed- dings, social entertainment and fm family use. ) SOLD BY DRUGGISTS AND GROCERS WHO | DEAL IN HIGH GRADE WINES, Barts. Swedish Asthma | AND... Hay Fever Cure! Asthma and Hay Fever posi- tively cured by this medicine. USED BY PERMISSION. Hart’s Swedish Asthma Cure Co. Buffalo, N. Y. Sirs :—If I could, I would like to send a bottle of your Cure to every sufferer from Asthma in the United States as a Xmas gift. I have taken three bottles and I knew its value before I had tak- en one-third of the first bottle. I could breathe free and sleep like a child. My weight then was 140 pounds. At the present time it is 172. Am on the Po- lice force at night ; exposed to all kinds of weather. Am 53 years old. Am ac- quainted with a gentleman, Mr. Long, a jeweler, No. 80 S. Market St., who has been a sufferer for years; often not able to do any work, and it has wrought: wonderful results in his case. I gladly recommed it; especially to my old Army Comrades. W. J. BRowN, 195 N. Buckley St., Wooster, O. Sold by all druggists or sent Price $1.50 per bottle. A > -- direct. HART'S SWEDISH ASTHMA CURE C0, BURFALO, N. XY: BANNER SALVE the most healing salve in the world. C of Col C colors « in La many goods .garme A your gone. A and O BL suit e \ every and s The SAM H TQ PITTS] Fine - pairing promp! “ Fol Beals