Republican News Item. VOL. VII. NO. 22 Roger's Record at Harrisburg. List ol 255 Important Bills on Final Passage Which Were Voted On While He Was Absent. WAS PRESENT TO VOTE FOR CORPORATION Rapid Transit Bill, But Was Absent When These Important Measures Were Being Voted On. Look Over the List and See How Many Bills of Importance to You and the County He Has Neglected. Number of Page Given Where Vote is Recorded in the Legislative Record. Requiring statements of expenses to be prefixed to the report of the bends ot de partments ol the state government. Page 13(10. Compensation of the directors of the poor of county of Cambria. Page 1331. Increasing the daily pay of the county commissioners and county auditors ot' Cambria county, Page 1332. Relative to the county commissioners of Cambria. Page 1333. Relating to marriage licenses, I', 1344. Safely guards upon passenger and frei ght elevators, P, 1351. Incorporation and government of cities of the third class, Page'l4os. Election ol boards of revision of taxes, Page 1405. Governor veto of bill No. l it). P, 149-1. Judicial sales and preservation of the liens of mortgages, Page 1503. Relative to roads in East Marlborough and New London Twp, Chester county, I'age 1500. Consolidating the city of Philadelphia, Page 1508. Authorizing chattel mnrtgagas, P,1509' Semi monthly payment of wage workers I'age 1514. Regulating and maintaining of lences, Page 1519. Regulating and maintaining ol fences. Page 1599. Maintaining and care ol paupers, P,1003 Providing for the payment lor the cost ol prosecution, Page 1953. Salaries ol county officers, Page 1059. I.aw libraries in counties, Page 1059. Limiting the right to recover unseated lauds, Page 1000. Malting it wilful trespass to hunt upon cultivated lands, Page 1609. Reimbursement ot John P. Condo, Ward representation in the school board ol the borough ol Ihinmore, P,177G. Prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors in the Borough of Monongahela City, Page 1935. Directing county commissioners to pay constables for making returns to the court ol elections, Page 1941. To prevent the sale of intoxicating liqu ors in the Borough of Kavette City,F,2oo4- Acditional law judge of the eighth ju dicial district, Page 2004. Authorizing the county commissioners to construct any public road leading to either end of a county bridge, Page 2000. Adknowledgement of deeds, P, 2008. Maintainance and repair ol abandon ed turnpikes. Page 2009, To enable foreign corporations to hold real estate. 2009. Exempting from taxation public prop erty used lor public purposes. Pag* 2001. Relating to the shooting of deer. P2013. Amendment to the constitution, P2013, Decrees of the Courts to be entered and indexed. Page 2014. Verdicts in actions of ejectments. 2014. An act to repeal part of an act. entitled an act to prohibit sale of intoxicating liquors in the Borough ol Monongahela city and Carroll Twp, Page 2020. I neor|ioratioii and government of cities of the third class. Vote on Senate amend ments. Bill No. 177. Prohibiting the sale of adulterated milk. Page 2100. Authorizing utilization lor domestic purposes waters used for transportation. Page 2107. To incorporate subscribers to articles of association. Page 2112. Relative to roads in Lancaster county. Page 2209. Relative to roads, highways and bridg es, Page 2215. Authorizing appeals Irom the court of Common Pleas to the Supreme and Su perior Courts. Page 2231. Encouraging county historical societies. Page 2252. Authorizing the state treasurer to re fund <'olateral inheritance tax. P, 2254. Authorizing county commissioners to erect, monuments at county seats.P, 2255. Burial ol honorable discharged soldiers and sailors Page 2250. Granting of permits for the empting of cess|iools. Page 2295. Authorizing county treasurers to refund alien tax. Page 2315. LAPORTE, SULLIVAN COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1902. Protecting offish. Page 2324. Relative to accounts of jrunrilihi»h; 2329. Regulating the salaries ot the judges ot the several judicial districts. Page, 5382. Granting an annuity to S. B. Lysenger. Page 2408. Relative to taxahles, Page 240S Creating a sinking land, Page 2110. To provide revenue by taxing artificial gas companies, Page 2415. To establish an intermediate court ol appeals, Page 2445. helming the ollense of disorderly con duct, Page 2449. Regulating proceedure in trespass and trover, Page 2450. To facilitate the labors ol the justices of the supreme court. Page 2454. Proposing :111 amendment to the con stitution, Page 2450, I •eclating the species of lish which are game lish and tisli commercially valuable as lood. Page 2450. More just ami safe transmission and secure enjoyment of real and personal es tates. Page 2403. Authorizing occupants of land by notice to torViid entering thereon lor the purpos es of fishing and shooting. Page 2405. Authorizing any borough to confine any creek, run or natural water way other than navigable streams. Page 2407. Exempting from taxation buildings and funds ol Iree public libraries. Page 2408. To enable the Governor to appoint notaries public. Page 2408. Providing revenue by imposing a mer cantile license tax on dealers in merchan dise. Page 2504. REGULATING TRUSTS. Pag" 2579. Authorizing county commissioners to assume control ot township and borough bridges, page 3850. Schools tor Instruction in the Mechan ical Arts and Kindred Subjects. Page,l6s. School Districts and Sub-School Dis tricts in cities of the second class. P. 245. To establish a department ol Forrestry. Page 207. Study and practice of physical culture in the public schools. Page 208. Compensation of county officers. P. 209. To puuish kidnappers. Page 270. Authorizing the State Treasurer to re tund collateral inheritance tux paid iri er ror. Page 271. To enable tax collectors to collect tax for the payment of which they have be Home personally responsible. Page 271. Making valid certain elections of muni ripal corporations. Page 272. Cost and expense of grading, curbing md paving sidewalks. Page i'age 273. Better government of cities of the first class. Page 273. Connection of property with public sew ers in boroughs Page 487. 1 of institutions ol learning 1 age 497. To consolidate, revise and amend tl»<* nenal laws. Page 507. Itegulating the sale ol vinous and spit .!ions malt or brewed liquors. Page 060. Amendment to constitution. Page 737. Making it the duty of Sherills to sigr. ind acknowledge one deed lor all proper "cs sold at the same sale to the same , urchaser. Page 755. Authorizing railroad cor|iorations to u-X|iiirc franchises. Page 755. Study and practice.of physical in the jublic schools. Vote on Amendment. P. 435. Enabling tax collectors to collect taxes for which they have become personally liable. Page 756. .Ratifying and confirming all paving done in cities ot the third class. P. 758. improvement of the main traveled pub lic roads. Page 758. AV'hen any corporation or surety com pnnv becomes surety. Page 759. Authorizing the overseers of the poor to furnish relief. Page 759, Providing for the erection of a poor house. Page 762. Promotion of medical science. P. 763. Incorporation and regulation of banks o! discount and deposit. Page 765. Providing for the raising of revenue for state purposes. P. 766. Requiring non-resident gunner* to secure a license beJore Hun-ding. Page 767. CONTINUED ON PAGE FOUR. Two Hustling Congressional Candidates. Men Who Have Earned Their Bread By Hard Labor and Know the Value of a Dollar Earned In This Manner. BEST ACQUAINTED WITH OUR NEEDS. They Are Believers in Sound Money. They Are in Favor ot Compelling Large Corporations to Be Under Strict Control of the Law. They Will Endeavor to Promote Our Interests. .. Am HON. FRED. A. GODCHARLES. (LONG TERM.) Endorsed By Democrats. Correspondence to News Item. Trevorton, Pa. Sept. 2.'{.—A dem ocratic mass meeting was held last evening. Some speeches were made and some whooping for the ticket was done. Hut the most significant thing that was done was the endorsement of Hon. Fred. A. Godcharles for Con gress. Mr. Godcharles is not to be on the ticket usually voted by these citizens but they know a man who will work work in their interests when they see him, and they have seen Mr. Godcharles in the State Legislature, and he was not found skulking out of his duty there. Nov it can be confidantly predicted that he will do his duty if placed in a higher position where there is great er opportunity for good work for the interests of our people. 89 Cents a Day Enough for a Common Laborer. This statement is now confronting Chas. 11. Dickerman, the democratic aspriant to Congress. He is now known to have possibly changed his mind on this subject at the eleventh hour. In cases of this kind it is no uncommon experience for candidates thus opposed to labor to get dumped at the last minute. This case of Eighty-nine Cents vs Eleven Hours Hard Labor, will be appealed to a higher tribunal and will be called for trial during the coming fall. Those in position to judge are san guine that the outcome will be ex tremely humilating to Mr. Dicker man when the sealed verdict is ren dered in November. How many of our readers believe C. 11. Dickerman, if elected to Con gress, will aid in restricting the Trusts? He is one of a number of millionaires atthe head of the Amer ican Car Trust. He has several near relatives holding high salaried offices in this Trust. Is it not reasonable to suppose that he will first look to the interests of his family and his own wealth. The trust problem is sure to come before the next Congress for proper adjustment, and the Trust magnates are striving for a seat in that body. Hon. Fred. A. Godcharles is in no way connected with a trust. He is openly opposed to trusts ami will support President Roosevelt in all his measures in restricting this evil. These are the plain facts for you to deliberate upon. Which one of these men do you prefer to represent you in Congress? Answer at the polls with your ballot. FROM COAL PIT TO CONGRESS. William K. Lord, the Republi can Nominee lor Congress Began Life as a Slate PicKer. Wm. K. Lord whose portrait ap pears between these lines, was nom inated by the Republicans of the Six teenth District to till the unexpired term ofßufus K. Polk in Congress, stands more markedly than any oth er man in this district, perhaps, for the rise of the workingman. Born in Schuylkill County thirty eight years ago, his early life was spent between the coal breakers, where, as a slate picker he began to learn the value of a hard earned dol lar and the public schools, where he gathered permanently that sort of lasting education which has made a success of so many lowly-born Amer icans. Ever since those days he has been climbing. He moved up the ranks of colliery hands until he became clerk. Then he opened a small store which has grown to be the leading store of the town, while its owner takes liis seat at the directors table of the (JuaranteeTrust Company and is present at the meetings of the Hoard of Trade in his native town. Mr. Lord is a man of more than the usual intellectual power. He is an omniverous reader, a forcible and ready speaker and would goto his new work thoroughly well versed in the past doings and future plans of the national Congress. The tax payers of Sullivan County do not want a Member of the Legis lature who is hide bound by the Un ion Tanning Co., and working in the harness of the Leather Trust. When Rogers voted against tin* bill to pre vent the pollution of streams he proved himself a willing tool for these wealthy corporations. A. L. Dyer is not an office seeker He did not seek for the Republican nomination. The nomination sought him. He merely yielded like a good citizen, to the demands of the peo ple. He has made no pledge. He will goto the Legislature a free man, ready to do his whole duty for the interests of his constituents. He is a man of the people, and for the peo ple, and has brains and business abil ity enough to serve them well. Is there a man who does not feel it to be a shame and a disgrace that beautiful streams of this county are loaded with death to trout, and made to carry seeds of typhoid fever and that vile disease, anthrax? Let us not have a representative of the Leather Trust in liarrisburg. The Miltonian, published in the town where our candidate for Con gress resides, noticing the attack made by John G. Scouten 011 Air. Godcharles says:"The Godcharles family—not the candidate—was as sailed in a cold-blooded, cruel and heartless way, in order, if possible to weaken Hon. Fred. A. Godcharles. We know the writer and Mr. C. A. Godcharles both, and if the former had earned the esteem in which the latter is held here, he would be too much of a gentleman to contribute so much dirt to a campaign. Hon orable men everywhere will be led Ito vote for Mr. Godcharles because lof this vile attack upon his father and family. When a man steps so | low as to attack women and children ! to weaken a candidate agai.ist whom I not a word can be said, he has reach ted the limit of cowardice and mean ness and r >ectable people every- I where should give him the go-by." W. K. LOIT>D. (SHORT TERM.) W. K. Lord who has been named for Congress (short term) is one of Pennsylvania's most successful busi ness men. lie has succeeded in life through his own thrift and energy ami his own unerring judgement, and few men will bring to the posi tion a more practical knowledge of the practical side of the labor and business interests of the United SUites. More men of business ex jK'rience and less of those of the Society and Trust Tribe in the Halls of Congress w ill be more to the in terests of Americans in general. Vote for W. K. Lord, no one can more consciensciously represent the interests of his constituents. ■Scouten answers for Roger's action in voting against the measure to pre vent the pollution of streams,by say ing that the bill would be obnoxious to cities, and that it would create ad ional officers. Let us stop and think for a minute. Rogers was sent to liarrisburg to represent Sullivan County and her interests. If he hon estly was opposed^o the bill because new offices were created why did he vote for the bill to create niore'offi c or the House of Representa .. /es. Consistency is a jewel. It may be he voted in the interest of the cities for the same reason he favored the Rapid Transit bill. Rut the fact re mains that 011 one of the most im portant bills affecting Sullivan Coun ty, he voted in favor of the city and against the country interests. We not feel sure what theeft'ect would have been on the cities if they were made to burn, disinfect or otherwise dispose of their sewerage, but we do know what effect it would have had on Sullivan County. It would have prevented the pollution of our streams by the tilth consisting of de composed flesh, hair etc. which now flows into our streams unchecked from every tannery in the county. It would have caused the Cnion Tanning Co. to build reservoirs where this filth could be disinfected before running in our streams. Per haps such reservoirs would have cost each, a great expense to that corporation, but the result would have been that the health of the peo ple and the lives of the fish would have been preserved. We can't al low Rogers and Scouten to wriggle out of this vote. Rogers i' : d not vote against the bill for fear v more officials, or for fear that Reat \g or Norristown could not take t eof themselves. He voted for it UMIUHC he was anxious to please a power ful corporation althoug he knew that his vote was strictly against the well being and desires of every farmer in Sullivan County. And in his next issue will Scouten tell who Rogers saw when he left the House when the :trd amendment to the Rapid Transit bill was lieing consid ered. Will he tell us what argu ments were used to make Rogers change his vote, and whether he honestly thinks that a Member of Assembly who changes his mind on a "boodle" bill and afterwards votes along with the "boodlers" is a safe man to represent Sullivan County. 75 CTS. PER YEAR. INOT WANTED | IN CONGRESS And Not Likely to Be Seht to Congress From This District This Year. Mt. Carniel Daily News. The Hon. Chan. 11. Dickernoan, of Milton, who hopes to write "of Washington"after his signature in the near future, takes exception to a statement in the N KWH of recent date in which it was said that "a man who said K9c her day was enough for a working man to live on"was not the proper sort of man to represent any district in Congress. The DAILY NHW» knew that was a weak point of the would-be-Con gressman and the alacrity with which lie has taken up the subject is proof that it is a point he does not care lo discuss. It was said at Sun bi.rv on the day of the democratic nomination that a man asked .Mr. Dickerinan if it were true that he had made such an unbecoming dec laration a few years ago. And it is reported that Mr. Dickcrman an swered "I may have made such an expression, hut if 1 did I am not too old to change my opinion of things." There is no evidence except the uncorroborated statement of Mr. Dickerman himself that he has changed his mind upon that subject. Mr. Dickerman states in his letter to the NKWS of the 22nd inst that the companies with which he has been associated "always paid the highest current wages in the locality they were operating in." The writer of this article worked in the Milton nail mills in the spring of 1881 for #1.20 per day and in the same spring worked in the Milton car shops where Mr. Dickerman was at that time one of the managers, for sl.lO per day. At the present time the wages paid by the big car trust of which Mr. Dickerman is an integral part pays the munificent sum of $1.21 per day at the rate of Ilc per hour for II hours. Mr. Dickerman also nays in his communication to us that he never was associated with any company tl - * paid so low a wagts. Mr. Dick er. m has been associated with the Mil ai car works for many years and the Milton cai ">rks have paid wages as low as Bi)c day. And these wages were paiu -ing the years that Grover Cleveland occupi ed the White House at Washington and advocated the principles that .Mr. Dickerman stands for now. Again we sa~ No, that may work in fishing Cre> nit it will not work in the coal rej, is where the men are now struggling for an increase in wages. Uodcharles will sweep this neck-o woods on election day, because he stands for a decent wage rate and be cause he has been obliged to do h »* work himself and knows wha it means to putin ten hours that opens the pores and forces the sweat from the face. Editor Streby says that the men op the Democratic ticket are much superior to those on the Republi can ticket. He is riglit in some particulars. Rogers is superior to any one existing as a "bill dodger" in the Legislature. As space per mits we will name them for you. Suppose you take your wife into your confidence ami see what she thinks of 89c a day for your labor. This seems to be what Dickerman, the Trust capitalist on the Demo cratic ticket for Congress, believes to be enough for you. Ed. Rogers is in the dumps. His shining record is in the hands of the people, and they are giving him the cold shoulder on every side. His companions on the ticket arc drop ping him and looking out for them selves. He is finding out the truth of the scripture which says"The way of the transgressor is hard." Albert L. Dyer shows his appre ciation for the farmers of this county when he spends among them an nually from, SI2OO to SI4OO for cattle when he coiK '»uy the same in the Wilkesßarre et for less money. He believes in aiding home interests. That is the kind of a man to repre sent you at Harrisburg.