a TITAS INK SLINGS. —It may be pronounced revolt up in Maine, but down this way it spells revo- lution. —The “harvest is past, the summer is about ended,” and many a Republican Congressman feels that he is not yet saved. —Pennsylvania can do as well as Maine, if its people are as wise. But it can't elect three Governors and defeat the Machine, all at one time. —Vice President SHERMAN'S presiden- tial boomlet must have been tagged wrong, when it left Missouri three weeks ago. It hasn't turned up anywhere yet. —The stand-patter, also, found some consolation in the Maine election. It re- tired the ROOSEVELT head lines so effect- ually while the returns were coming in. —The short and sure way to defeat Mr. PENROSE'S plans this fall is to vote the Democratic ticket. And it oughtn't to require a prophet to convince you of this, either. —With all of the hubbub that TEDDY has kicked up is there anyone who can point to a single idea or suggestion that he has advanced that Mr. BRYAN did not promulgate years ago. —Senator TEMPLETON'S honesty seems to have been much akin to ARTEMUS WARD's patriotism. The kind that was ready to sacrifice every relative he had rather than go (poor) himself. —Anyway President TAFT will not need to order out the army to quell the “insur- rection” in his own party. Every “regu lar” that he has command of has beenon duty on that job for some time. The war still progresses, however. —Organized labor has umpired Mr. TENER'S last game and decided that it was a very foul ball he pitched for the workingmen when he ran the regularly accredited organizer of labor out of Char- leroi, a few weeks ago. —An exchange that thinks it knows what it is talking about. says that “Mr. PENROSE has ordered a WRIGHT aeroplane to be delivered at the earliest moment possible.” He wants it, we presume, to aid him in raising Republican hopes. —The regulation step of the British army is one hundred and twenty to the minute. Large numbers of the men have been known to far exceed that, however. It was especially noticeable at certain times in South Africa a few years ago. —Mr. SIBLEY’S “getting down and out” is attributed now, by those who know the most about it, to an acute case of lost heart trouble. Which, by the way, seems to be a malady that is both epidemic and contagious among Republican Congress- men this season. —In the presentation of Mr. STEWART'S name for Senator our Clearfield friends have shown that while they may have forgotten much about what it takes to win they still know a good thing when they see it. There is no SHORTage in their Democracy in this case. --So far President TAFT hasn't been a bit more successful in getting Secretary BALLINGER out of his cabinet than Gov- ernor STUART has been in getting the state capitol grafters into the penitentiary. In both cases, however, the results seem to be about equal to the efforts. —Really we are beginning to fear that if their candidate—Mr. BERRY—keeps on with the same kind of talk and in the same tone, that has characterized his speeches so far, the people generally will come to the conclusion that our Keystone friends, in piace of running a campaign, are content and satisfied to “rush the growler.” —Qut in Chicago they have a new health rule that forbids children running to school. It may be for their good, as science believes, but why provide so fine an excuse for the tardy boy when the moment school is out he will run his legs off in a game of ball, skating, coasting or any of the other sports of the school children. —The withdrawal of Governor PATTER- SON from the race for re-election in Ten- nessee was a wise and unselfish act. He felt that his administration had not been satisfactory to his party and rather than encumber it with his further aspirations he voluntarily withdrew. Would that we had more men of this type, because so few are able to see their own failures. —Mr. ROOSEVELT hasbeen back at Oys- ter Bay since Monday. And yet the world keeps going round just as it did be- fore he made his 100 speeches and the ne- cessaries of lite continue at the same al- titude they occupied before he wert away. Really we don’t see that his hot air efforts effected anything except the cap I cases in the printing offices that undertook to set up what he had to say. ~Col. HENRY WATTERSON is of the opinion that ROOSEVELT will succeed in his efforts to BRYANize the Republican party and by doing it will slip into the Presidency again after he has worked the Republicans up to such a point of con- sternation that they will fall over them- selves in a panicky petition to him to save their party. Col. WATTERSON has doped the plan out all right enough, but will TEDDY be able to throw enough dust to blind the Republicans until 1912? We think not. VOL. 55. A Corrupt Conspiracy — Defeated. When the Congressional committee to investigate the charges against secretary of the Interior BALLINGER was appointed, the WATCHMAN expressed an opinion that it was organized to “whitewash” the ac- cused. During the progress of the inquiry we called attention to the fact that every witness who gave evidence against BAL- LINGER immediately became a target of the malice of the President and the enmi- ty of the majority of the committee. Mr. GLAVIS was put upon the rack and pur sued with a malignity without parallel in the history of the country and every other employee of the government called to tes- tify was dismissed from the public service unless he consented to perjure himself in the interests of BALLINGER. The culmination of this conspiracy to defeat justice occurred in Minneapolis last week when the committee refused to sit for the purpose of promulgating its re port. Three months ago the taking of evidence was completed and after each member had been provided with a copy of all the testimony, the committee ad- | journed to meet in Minneapolis on Sep- tember 6th, for the purpose of formulat- ing and issuing its report. On the day fixed eight of the twelve members assem- bled at the place designated inthe resolu- tion for adjournment, but when it was found that a majority favored the expos- ure of the facts, the others asked for time to get other members present, the absen- tees being Senators Roor, of New York, FLINT, of California, and representatives DexBY, of Michigan, and OLMSTED, of Pennsylvania. The majority consented to an adjournment from Tuesday until Thursday. At the time fixed the committee reas- sembled but none of the absentees had | put in an appearance and five members, being a majority of a quorum, determined to proceed and complete their work. Thereupon two of the mincrity vacated their seats with the view of breaking the quorum. The remaining “stand-patter,” Senator NELSON, of Minnesota, a servile slave of “the system,” was in the chair and as ghere was nobody on the floor to raise the point of no quorum, the four Democrats and one insurgent Republican issued a report condemning BALLINGER and declaring him guilty of the offences | charged by GLAvisS and PINCHOT. The minority of the committee in attendance at the meeting immediately issued a statement that the action was illegal and calling a meeting for the next day for fi- nal action. Next day brought forth noth- ing. The absent members remained away. There could be no other object in this trifling with public duty except the pur. pose of delaying the report until after the election and then issuing a report which, ignoring the testimony and perverting the facts, would vindicate the recreant public official. The GUGGENHEIM conspi- racy to rob the government of the rich resources of Alaska forced the appoint- ment of BALLINGER and is determined to keep him in office until its purposes have been consummated and the publication of the truth in advance of the election will have a damaging effect upon the party. Happily, the courageous minority of the committee could not be driven from its just purpose and the report and testimony will be given to the public before elec- tion. Roosevelt’s Sinister Methods. The “Coinel” appears to have treated the country to a free exhibition of that phenomenal achievement of ‘chokingona gnat and swallowing a camel.” That is to say he refused to sit at a banquet with Senator LORIMER, of Illinois, during his recent tour in canvassing for subscribers for a magazine, and took boss Cox, of Cincinnati, into a fond embrace. Un® questionably LORIMER is a “bad egg" and is accused of doing a year or so ago in his own behalf precisely what President ROOSEVELT urged “Dear HARRIMAN" todo in his behalf nearly five years ago But at his worst LORIMER “has nothing” on boss Cox in the matter of political in- iquity. Some three years ago, and just before the confidential correspondence between ROOSEVELT and HARRIMAN was exposed, President TAFT, then Secretary of War in the ROOSEVELT administration, went and, according to common understanding with the consent of his chief, into Ohio to participate in a pending campaign. In a speech at Dayton he paid his respect: to boss Cox. He denounced him as a polit- ical pirate and moral degenerate. Hetold the Republican people of the State that they would better be defeated at the polls than help Cox to put one of his servile tools in the executive office at Columbus. In fact he pictured Cox as a most atro- cious beast in human form. Now as a matter of fact Cox hasn't changed even a little bit in his political methods and morality. He is the same STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. SELLEFONTE DA, SEPTEMBER 16 A010 coarse and forbidding figure now that he was then. Neither has LORIMER changed - in any respect in recent years. He was The best expectations of the Democrat- the same reprobate when, as a member © leaders were more than fulfilled in the of Congress, he maintained confidential A cciebration of “Democratic Campaign relations with ROOSEVELT in the White Da¥» last Saturday. In nearly every H } titi I y | county in the State large and enthusias- Sous, But do nobody ere good or | tic meetings were held and the issues of harm now while Cox can elect or defeat the campaign eloquently discussed. In Mr. ROOSEVELT'S son-in-law, NICHOLAS LONGWORTH, who is a candidate for re- election to Congress. In other words, icy, the largest meeting took place and | the Democratic candidate for Governor, : Hon. WEBSTER GRIM, was the principal ROOSEVELT is not influenced by morality or patriotism in anything. He is selfish speaker. But exceptionally good meet. sordid aud unclean. , ings occurred in Philadelphia, Pittsburg, ——— : Harrisburg, Allentown, Altoona, Williams- An Esteemed Contemporary’s Fault. ii | larger towns of the State and it may be The esteemed Johnstown Democrat, the ' cid that Democratic Campaign Day has . most ardent and absurd supporter of the '.. established as a permanent institu- ‘ Keystone party ticket in the State, says It will be observed I . that its only complaint against the Allen- | ope i OEuyel Aum alent town convention is "that it was controll- with this auspici i spicious beginning the red. It was not a representative body in| pemocratic campaign of this Democratic | any sense,” continues our CONteMPOTArY | year has been inaugurated in Pennsylva- (and increasing in vehemence as it goes .. Ac the WATCHMAN suggested when deeper into the subject it adds: “It was |... plan was adopted, it was an ambi- | dominated absolutely by a special inter- ys enterprise and extremely hazardous. est and the nomination made was not dic- | The people of P Ivania, especiall | tated by the Democratic sentiment of the | the DE yan ED i State nor even by the members of the (ive ang reluctant to indulge in radical convention.” It is easy to see from that ; vations. But when the utility of a | that political bossism is not only abhor: ovement is proved in practice it is free- | rent but absolutely intolerable to our es- ||, ang enthusiastically supported. The teemed but absurd contemporary. very general success of Democratic Cam- The other day EUGENE C. BONNIWELL, paign Day is more than likely, therefore: of Delaware county, GEORGE E. MAPES, | 1, commend it to the thoughtful and of Philadelphia, and WiLLIAM T. CREASY, | practical minds of the Democratic peo- of Columbia county, assembled in a Har- ple and hereafter the movement will be risburg hotel and after the fashion of the 1 De . “Three Jailers of Tooley street,” resolved Sheuraged by all Democrats throughou themselves into a body politic and in the | The success of Democratic Campaign name and by the authority of the people Day, however, puts an obligation upon nominated candidates for Congress in| he pody of Democratic citizens which Erie county, Representatives in the Leg- | nat not be disregarded in the future. islature for Crawford county, State Sena- | That js to say a successful opening must tors for Philadelphia and other candi | pa followed vi prosecuti dates for other sections of the State. The Be ollowel By a Vitveaue omit active spirit in this preposterous transac |i that there is no abatement of effort tion was a political mercenary who has and energy in the work until the polls been known to draw salaries from three | cjoee in November. The future of the parties in one campaign and who is con- | party js radiant in promise. The next stantly gathering crumbs from the tables Congress will be Democratic beyond the of politicians, good, bad and indifferent. | gpadow of a doubt and that result will be | porary it makes a vast difference “whose | 304 improvements in administration as | ox is gored.” If the editor of that very .. 3 " ) i guarantee the continuance of the | able and interesting newspaper were per- | party in power for a long period of time. The share of Pennsylvania in the fruits of this result will depend upon the vote this year. | mitted to pick out the candidates of the party all the time it would probably sup- port the ticket invariably. But the trou- | ble is that in order to get the favor of | the editor of our contemporary a candi- date must be thoroughly immersed in some Populistic heresy that makes him impossible to men of rational minds, so that his nomination not only makes de- feat inevitable but makes support of such a ticket out of the question to self re- | specting citizens. It is not bossism that repels our Johnstown contemporary. It is the bossism of the other fellow. Revealed as Roosevelt a Humbug. In a speech delivered by Col. ROOSE- VELT, in one of the western cities recent- ly, visited by him in his capacity as adver. tising solicitor, he boasted of what “we” had done to the Sugar trust. That was a most fortunate incident. Generalizing is all right. Along those lines any sort of a claim can be set up and while people were prone to wonder what trust ROOSE" VELT had ever busted or even dinged, no- body could contradict his assertions that he was the greatest smasher of trusts ever. But when he specified he got in wrong. In that act he made himself amenable to the rules of evidence. In other words, he opened the way for proof that he is the most consummate fraud in public life. While ROOSEVELT was President the Sugar trust absorbed and dismantled the The High Cost of Living. The apologists for the ALDRICH tariff iniquity can discern no cause for the in-| creased cost of living other than the en- hanced prices of foodstuffs. The reasons for this are obvious. The ALDRICH bill has not increased the tariff rates on food- stuffs because there are practically no foodstuffs imported and the DINGLEY rates on such commodities were prohibi- tive. Besides, the farmers of the country | most complete sugar refining plant in the share to some trifling extent in the bene- | United States in pursuance of its policy fits of the high prices of foodstuffs and | of restraining the output of the product. the machine Republicans pretend a great | When the company which owned the tenderness for the farmers. Asa matter | plant became insolvent as the result of of fact, however, the prices of foodstuffs | this disuse of its property, Mr. GEORGE are a small part of the increased cost of | i ERLE, of Philadelphia, was appointed living. | receiver. He instituted an investigation meats and cereals are affected by the tar. | covered the facts. With the proofs in iff because the tariff shelters the beef hand he appealed to President ROOSEVELT trust and the flour trust in manipulating | to dissolve the illegal combination and re- them. If there were no tariff tax on |store the dismantled property to its own- those necessaries of life there could be no (ers. But Congressman PARSONS, of New trust control and the price would soon | york, and his father, solicitor of the Sug- find the level justly established by com. ar trust, were ROOSEVELT'S personal petition. But the greatest burden comes | friends and he refused to intervene. In from the tariff tax on woolens, cottons fact he sheltered the monopoly in itslaw- boots and shoes, implements and lumber’ | joss operations. The tariff tax on woolens is 105 per cent., Failing to get the support of the ad- so that every dollar's worth of blanketsf | yinistration in an effort to get justice for wearing apparel or other articie made of | the robbed shareholders of the insolvent wool costs the consumer in this {country ! sugar refining company Mr. EARLE began $2.05. And no part of this increased cost | 3 private proceeding in the courts against goes to the support of the government. | the Sugar trust. With the support of the If the increased cost of products of the | government in such proceedings his suc- farm went into the pockets of the farm-' cess would have been complete and cer- ers and there was no tariff tax on other tain. Without the support of the govern- necessaries of life, we could contemplate | ment he forced the Sugar trust to a com the condition with considerable equanimi- | promise by which it paid out of its vast ty for by saving on blankets, clothing, , stolen horde $3,000,000 by way of restitu- medicines, rent and other charges it | tion and restored the property toits own- would be easy to find the money to pay ers. ROOSEVELT'S absurd boast of what the greater charge for potatoes and beans, | “we,” meaning his administration, had Besides, the farmers being justiwould soon | done to the Sugar trust enabled Mr. volunteer to share with the consumer of | EARLE to reveal these facts and expose their products the money saved by his ex- | RoosevELT as a humbug. emption from the tax on blankets, cloth. | ing and implements. In other words, the —At least Mr. BONNIWELL'S farewell to high cost of living is not in the price of | the Democratic party didn't seem to dis- cabbages so much as it is in the tax on | courage the Democrats of Maine to any woolens and cottons. ' observable extent. | Berks county, the Gibralter of Democra- | port, Erie and in fact all the cities and | With our esteemed Johnstown contem- | followed by such exposures of iniquity Certain agricultural staples such as gq to the causes of insolvency and dis. | SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Harry Carlisle, of DuBois, recentiy sustained a broken thigh and other injuries when he was thrown out of a buggy in a runaway. —After they had poisoned four dogs belonging to John Lock and killed them, robbers chloro- formed the owner and his wife and robbed their home at DuPont of $360. —Lynn Hodges, of Warren, the day he was paroled from an indeterminate prison sentence for trying to murder his father, beat his wife senseless because she would not live with him, then drank carbolic acid and killed himself. ~While Mrs. W. W. Ritchie, of Lock Haven, recently was engaged in canning beans, and was sealing a can, it exploded and threw the scalding contents in her face, withthe result that she was badly burned. Luckily she was wearing glasses and thus her eyes escaped. —After he had speared a carp with a pitchfork, Robert Rohrer, aged 13, of Quarryville, was drawn by the fish into waterup to his neck. Rohrer is an exprrt swimmer and succeeded in getting to shore with his prize, which weighed thirteen and —Abram Hostetler, of Richland township, Cambria county, has brought suit at Ebensburg for $20,000 damages frota the Berwind-White Coal Mining company, for alleged damage inflicted to his farm by negligence of the defendant cor- poration in mining coal. =H. H.Cassler, a well known Holsopple mer- chant has brought suit at Somerset against the Johnstown Telephone company, asking for $2,500 damages on the charge that the company sur- reptitiously cut trees from his land and appro- priated a right-of-waycver his property without his consent. —The Ladies’ Aid society of the Lock Haven hospital is raising money to pay off the $6,000 debt on the furnishing of the new hospital, which must be met in October. One of their plans isto col- lect a mile of pennies from the school children and teachers. Each teacher and pupil is to be given an envelope that is to be returned to the society as soon as eighteen pennies are placed in it. A mileof pennies will amount to $844.80. —Thompson Hanna, living near Oxford, is mourning the loss of $300. Hanna went to a bank in Oxford and drew the money to pay off the mortgage on his farm and placed it in a bag in which he carried chewing tobacco. While walk- ing along the road on the way home he was met by a stranger who asked him for a chew of to- bacco and when Hanna pulled the pouch from his pocket the man snatched the pouch and ran away —After coolly trying several spark plugs ona big automobile standing in front of the Duquesne club, Pittsburg, a fine-attired thief drove away with the car and escaped. William H. Henderson, owner of the machine, was inside the club with a friend dining. The men had removed the spark plug to prevent thieves from leaving with the auto. The thief, in front of many people, calmly tried a number of plugs he had with him, until he found one that fitted. —After attacking Mrs. Jennie Pringle, aged 38, with a razor and so injuring her that she died shortly afterwards, William M. Williams, well known in Johnstown, tried to murder Laura Stonebraker, his alleged wife, and cut his own throat. The Stonebraker woman escaped, after an exciting chase, with a slight wound on her ; who isbeing guarded day and night in the Memorial hospital, will recover. The LR | National Joy Riders. | From the New York World. | Three ships of the United States Navy | habituaily used for personal and social { have cost for maintenance dur- ; the last five years: | | Total _ A bad habit grows. The bad habit here | indicated had small beginnings. Mr. i Cleveland went Bening aecasionally on a Mr. - | lighthouse tender. enjoy | ed a few excursions down the | on the Sylph. Mr. Roosevelt boldly con- : verted the Sylph to his own uses and in oe ne ower, | by common consent into the hands of | the gecretary of the Navy. | Ey ery och Sere | s u j2Jine of law and no waiiant whatever ta precedent. theory t | the President as Commander-in-Chief may ido as he pleases with public goes sot SPPIY, aiid In aniy case J cannot De Pleage? in behalf the Secretary, e extraordinary powers o Com- mander-in-Chief are not active in time of peace. If they ula We Should have a m espot instead of a constitution. al a, proposition to authorize the additional expenditure for the same purpose of al- I Lo, 3 hoe b ese vessels are not em in pul lic service. They are on call at Hortiern summer resorts in the summer. They cruise in subtropical seas in the winter. They meet favored relatives and friends at Quarantine. They furnish a delightful means of entertainment for visitors who have Weatied S ihe Jand. They are manned, equipped n repair from the naval funds. r officers and Saws Ste Sallops of the United Siatag Na. vy. 0! expense r up is due to the personal and social ends that they serve. There will be no effective check to ex- es. no scru murderer claimed his victim was the cause of all for law in official circles while Chief Mag- | his domestic unhappiness. istrates ves it. —A mail pouch, containing between 700 and 800 The salary of the t should be | letters on their way to residents of Sunbury from New York and Philadelphia, was stolen from the Pennsylvania railroad station at Sunbury early office from his pri- Shou Be sharply gd one morning recently. It came in on the mid. C 0 might train and had been placed in the baggage | tution, ke should receive no oa room. The railroad police and postal inspectors : ment, whatever. are trying to locate the thieves or their booty. In 1 _— = the pouch were letters to the local banks, con- i Why Prices Are High. taining checks for collection and in exchange | From the Johnstown from city banks. Their loss will mean immense Democrat. When a woman purchases $10 worth ! of woolen dress goods, $4.87 represents | the value of the goods and $5.13 the ‘ amount of the tariff. I This is because of the Taft-Aldrich ad | , valorem tariff of 105 per cent. Or in | other words, on each $1 worth of woolen | dress imported, the Taft-Aldrich i law levies a tax of $1.05. The consumer | must pay the $1 value and the $1.05 tariff, | or $2.05 for one dollar's worth of goods. This is but one of a thousand illustra- { tions that could be submitted to show how the tariff affects the cost of living. | Here is another sample illustration for the tariff arithmetic class, which is com- posed of some 90,000,000 American con- sumers, all of whom are more or less dis- satisfied with the awful increase in prices : A suit of clothes having an im | price of $10 and which costs an ish- | man $10 when ready to put on, all wool and tailor made, pays at the custom house an ad valorem tariff of 80 per cent. or $8 per it ping ihe it OR ue Ameri- can when it is put on isregarding | transportation and retail profits. {| Another comparison: An English! g woman a room 18 ft. square | careless electric crane, John Close, was merely with i carpet two ply No re- | turned into a human die, instead of being crush- quire yards at a dollar a yard flat, or | ed, at the Standard steel works at Burnham Sat- would pay $36. An American woman us- | urday night. Close was wheeling a barrow of ! tariff at the custom house, ay would | fell, and being crippled in one leg and rather ad- i vanced in years, he was unable to get outof the { make the carpet cost her $59.76. | The following table shows a number of way, The flask slammed him intoa bigbed of { sand and then held him down until fellow work- common articles of comsumption, the ad valorem tariff rate under the new . men could remove it. Instead of beholding a | lican tariff law, the real value of the arti- | ®hastly, crushed form, they found Close stamped i cles and the tariff additions on a basis of | down inthe sand, sufficiently hurt to require his amount of confusion and readjustment. —Clarence W. Lindauer, of Washington, form. erly of Tyrone, died in the Williamsport hospital on Friday last after suffering for two weeks from a fractured skull and ruptured blood vessels of the brain, the result of an automobile accident near Jersey Shore. The unfortunate man was the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Lindauer, of Wat- sontown, and for several years he was a wel) known employee of the Tyrone Shoe factory. He was married to Miss Ida Hewel, of Tyrone, who survives him with one son. Interment was made at Watsontown. —Shortly after the death Wednesday of Henry Beckman, a bachelor, in the aimshouse at Sha- mokin, a lawyer informed Peter Drumheiser, a life-long friend of Beckman, that! he had in his ‘possession a will made by the deceased in which he bequeathed all his earthly belongings to Drum- heiser. Several months ago Beckman entered the almshouse, where he died. Drumbheiser, with the will, went to that institution and claimed the body and belongings of Beckman. The warden turned over several hundred dollars and a bank book showing deposits cf §2,000. This, together with a property in Springfield, brings the value of the estate up to about $3,500. —With a two-ton flask dropped on him from a i ' ! $10 purchases: | dispatch to the hospital, but not killed, the soft Amount of tariff rate. Real value. Tariff | Ded having saved him. | Sugar, 60.80 per cent $6.00 $3.75 | —Samuei ligen, a prosperous farmer of Sugar : Giaw ae per Sent ont gn Fy | valley, died at his home in Logan township, Clin- i 46 per cent 6.84 3.16 | ton county, Thursday of that dreaded malady, Machinery, 45 per cent 6.89 3.11 | tetanus, more commonly known as lock-jaw. Tinware, 45 per cent 68 $1 | About two weeks ago, while at work about his ockings, $1 doz. 8 per cent 5.31 4.69 farm, Mr. ligen tred on a rusty nail sticking up in Shirt por cont oz L{3 1 3 viace of wood. The nail penetrated the bottom Fi Is. 40c a yard, 144 per cent 4.09 of his foot to a considerable depth, and the wound A littlestudy of this table by the house- | wer, SUL PU week later a stiffness of the wives might help them to figure out why | joints became apparent, with contracting of the the cost of living is so high. It tells an... jes Dr. Wycoff, of Loganton, was called eloquent story and it is absolutely true. | ang the ohysician pronounced the malady tet- Roosevelt Rooseve! { anus. Antitoxine was liberally injected into the wy it. | system of the unfortunate man who, despite all From the New York Evening Post. | the efforts of the physician, continued to grow Col. Roosevelt's “new-nationalism” plat- | worse. His jaws became firmly locked, so that form was filled with eternal truths in | nourishment administered with difficulty, which he had always believed. One of | adden pak wied He wflerrars. He wor these related to purity in the methods of | 76 years old. political cam e use of “corpo-| ry. pair Silica Brick com am 1 — pany is the name rate funds” in politics should be Probie of a strong corporation chartered on Wednesday ed by law, now that Cortelyou and Bliss at Harrisburg for the purpose of engaging in the Rooscectt, That being sotiid, the news | manufacture of silica fre brick at Claysbur. thing is publicity Se : he next | Bar count, on the line of the uew Midland rail- At Ossawatomie it was roundly declared: | ou rennin om Altoona to Cumberland. Me x is particularly important that allmon- | p, Ross Wynn, the well known fire brick men, of Purpose shoul Le publicly account or | PRLS: Willer I Shae snd Job ta not only after el but before election | ;'y.ei- Sandy Ridge fire brick plant, and David ist has spoken. But can he be the same |. “®H ey pany Theodore Roosevelt who, less than two | yt CJ years ago, took directly the te | und ? From a letter to Mr. ated at Washi | and signed * t, i learned at the time that it would be - {ly improper to make public cam i contributions before elections.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers