The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, August 09, 1900, Image 1

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VOLUME VI.
Just, Recelved
another large line of
(lie And=
Vipais 2 Wanitzio
Percale = Wrappers
. . > er written or \
direct from New York, {on.comsticcmns mm. Bi Jin hain on ihe
‘ennsylvania polities
Philadelphia
SALISBURY,
W. H. KooNTZ. J. G. OGLE
KOONTZ & OGLE,
COL WCLURE
Attorneys=- At-T.aw,
SOMERS y PENN’A.
Office opposite Court House.
FRANCIS J. KOOSER. ERNEST O. KOOSER. |
|
|
KOOSER & KOGSER, De ad a mn Sh ould Quit.
Attorneys-At-T.aw,
SOMERSET, PA.
CRUCIFIED BY HI
A. BERKEY
Attorney-at-T.aw, Col. McClure Shows How the Bosses
SOMERSET, IPA. Are Mizking Capital Out of the
Office aves Post Office. Beaver Man—Iis Days of Political
Power Are at An End—A Remark-
MEYERS, DISTRICT ATTORNEY.
Attorney-at-T.nw, the Quay Machine.
SOMERSET, PA.
subject of
appeared in the
Times in a recent issue.
all in the Taos
STVES ND PATTERNS AT 15 Co, 10 180. conn
It was manifestly from the pen of Col.
A. K. McClure, editor in chief of The
Times, and the almost lifelong friend
of Matthew Stanley Quay. In this ar-
ticle Col. McClure practically bids
political farewell to Quay. He points
out the cau of his downfall, and re-
veals facts about the Quay machine
and its bosses that are true to life.
The editorial in full is as follows
All work neatly and substantially done Bx-Senator Quay has been fearfully
on short notice, and persistently crucified during the
last two years by ill-advised and dis-
tempered friends, and he has commit-
ted the great error of his life Jy per-
mitting his name and his power to be
flung into hopeless battle solely be-
—DEALER IN— :
cause his retirement would have left
DD TT (a 2 his leaders stripped of thelr vocation.
1 \ xX OC With him at the fore they are a power;
. with him eliminated
Notions, less
Hats and Caps,
Boots and Shoes,
(
SALIS3URY, PENNA.
Office one door cast of P. S. Hay’s store.
LASTEST
OX. JARRETT,
LEADING WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER,
Salisbury, Pa.
A fine line of <p
Mens, Boys
And Children’s Sui
{Ml hinds,
and Boys’ Dress
Working Pants.
Children's Knee Pants af all Prices,
Overalls, Jackets and Duck
lowest prices
Fit ablished
P. 8S. HAY,
1=5.
they are power-
Ir. Quay is too intelligent and saga-
cious in politics not to na the
present political conditions in Pennsyl-
vania. Iii
R oC E RI ES Ir have retired
4k sen
own wishes and pe
QUEENSWARE, nein was on the
CIGARS, ETC.
han once duri
SALISBURY.
( at the slags of his last
Men's and
atorial term if he
rs . He
peint of retirement more
cted ¢
g the pro
i the last
but his retirement would have created
a new leadership in the state that his
friends could not command and that
they could not follow with profit. Quay
would have had conciliation, but his
friends could divide their power with-
o i e & Po ? out surrendering supremacy, and they
2 S = = have iy ng Quay to
o C give them the power in polities that
yspepsia fire they could not win for themselves.
uay missed a great o portunity on
Digests what You eat. — ay t Sr of the
Itartificially digests the food and aids i
Nature in strengthening and recon- |
structing the exhausted digestive 0
gans. It is the latest discovered dig
ant and tonic.
torial contest «
legislature
PA.
oats at the
sted upon crucify
k Lick Supnly Co.
+ Bio Reduction
5 (x
n All Summer Goo
SE
2 ” . . T . have given him a new lease of leader-
We will sell all of our Shirt Waists, ship that he could have utilized to
. ~ ~~ 5 strengthen himself and his par y, and
which ore 55 o18, ‘Bn ots. and St 00, Dr Humphreys’ would have saved him fi 4 a
« ~~ 1 ®
at 38, 49 and 75 cts. All Summer ze. : /
Specifics act directly upon the disease,
iating betrayal 1 refeat he suffered
in his effort to g
Dr SS Gi 00ds Undue arw ill also be without exciting disorder in other parts
of the system. They Cure the Sick.
senate.
No, CURES. PRI
(3 Ty 1—Fevers, Congestions, Inflammations.
C S 2
HS
But again c
2—Worms, Worm Fever, Worm Coli
2 ’ n — ~
dud] + Of Cost!
3—Teething, Colic, Crying, Wakefuls
4—Diarrhea, of Children or Adults
5—Dysentery, Gripings, Bilious Colic... 5
G—Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Vomiting. .23
We have just received an immense
line of shoes. The Tan Shoe is the
proper shoe for wear in warm weath-
er. We have a full line of them in all
the latest styles and widths. Prices
criminal c¢
nant politi
was a
tendercd the app
No other preparation |
can approach it in efficiency. It in- |
stantly relieves and permanently cures
to follow
's and pub-
Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn, appoint-
Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea,
Sick Headache. ,Gastralgia, Cramps, and
all other results of imperfectdigestion
Prepared by E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago.
Sold by Medicine Dealers.
ment and declaring his
tircment as a
That would have commar the re-
spect of political fii
lute re-
natorial
d foe, would
Quay as a
ficial victim. He
appeals and despotic d
who could he potent or
exposed to fresh
to the earnes
wounds
7—Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis. ............ 23 . ;
i >; and, after an exh
S—Neuralgia, Toothache, Faceache .... 23 comfiture; and, afte 2 exha
fort to make the senate reverse its un-
9—Headache, Sick Headache, Vertigo... .23
10—Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Weak Stomach.2
11—Suppressed or Painful Periods. ...
1:2—Whites, Too Profuse Periods. .......
13—Creup, Laryngitis, Hoarseness......
14—Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, Eruptions
15—Rheumatism, Rheumatic Pains..
16—Malaria, Chills, Fever and Ague.
17—Piles, External or Internal ...
18—Ophthalmia, Weak or Inflamed Eyes
19—Catarrh, Influenza, Cold in the Head
20—Whooping-Cough
close to the
proclaimed that the nation
the party can have no interc
habilitating the power of
state or nation.
Thus with 1
cept upen pr
upen line
the ecru
on of
and road S- |:
and fresh dis | is not recorded.
ELK LICK PORTOFFICE, PA
ADVISES QUAY |.» ers 5
Tells Old Pot He Ts Politically |
SUB-BOSSES |
able Exposure of the Mcthods of |
| “Save the Republie,”
Bryan, and then adds, sotto voice, “I
am the Republic.”
2annot have
[ the support of Tammany without its
taint. They go together.
| z ~——
Forr years ago the Democratic par-
ty favored an income tax. This year
| it didn’t. There are too many Demo-
cratic millionaires now.
—— —
Tire boy, Coin Harvey, will find that |
the present campaign can get
|
|
|
| without a new edition of his great |
| work on how to get rich by multiplica-
|
tion.
——
Ix 1896 there were 711,649 tons of un-
sold pig iron in the United States. Last
year there were 63,429 tons. The wage-
earner wants a continuation of the lat-
ter condition.
~~
For a man who spent good money
for a colonels uniform, Mr. Bryan’s
opposition to militarism can only be
explained by the poor fit his tailor must
have given him.
= re. 2
Ir might be well for Bryan to arrange
with his publishers to get out a limited
edition of the “The Second Battle.” and
begin to prepare matter for explaining
how it happened.
Tie failure of the Democrats to de-
nounce the annexation of Hawaii was
doubtless due to the fact that the vote
of Iawaii alone enabled them to revive
the 16 to 1 corpse,
JrRYAN may be too busy to otal about
the ratio. but his opponents may be de-
pended upon to remind him of it about
twenty-five times a day from now on
to the ides of November.
———— -
broken record, he fell by perfidy with- |
in the household of his friends and
throne, by hin it was
1 power of
st in re-
Quay in
. Quay has gone and he was gathered
og oO OVE 3 g |
ange fro itl $1 00 to S4. 00. up bleeding every pcre from the |
23—Scrofula, Swellings and Ulcers ghastly f the senatorial con-
3 . » ry 24—General Debility, Weakness. . WE + icak i ”
Respectfully 5 v, Fluid Accumulations.. oe > ni on fh $2 Jno an
26—Sea-Sickness, Nausea, Vomiting utterly hope se ovial contest he-
27—Kidney Diseases.
28—Nervous Debility..
29—Sore Mouth, or Canker.
30—Urinary Weakness, Dyeing Bed.
31—Painful Menses, Prurl 5
32—Discases of the Heart, at 1.00
fore the people. Never before in the
history of any political party in Penn-
sylvania has there been exhibited such
an carnest and terful purpose to
prevent the success of a candidate for
Barchus & Livengooc
33—Epilepsy, St. Vitus’ Dance senator.
34—Scre Throat, Quinsy. Diphtheria 23 County after
35—Chronic Congestions, Headaches.. 235 ¥
17—Grip, Hay Fever................... 293
sphroy if Manta) of all Diseases at your
f Do Ists or Maile:
Nil by wplst, bre nt on re: celpt of Dice e.
ded. Co., Cor. Wiliam & John Sts.
New York.
il
BIGGLE 500KS HUMPHREYS’
23
WwW H |
A Farm Library of unequalled value—Practical, 70H \ AZELD L
Up-to- date, Concise and Comprehensive— Hand- For Plles— Fxichal 1oFInte ternal, Blind or Bleeding;
somely Printed and Beautifully Illustrated. Fistula in Ano; Itching or Bleeding of the Rectum
ho rolief
By JACOB BIGGLE PRIOE, 50 I TRIAL SIZE, 25 OTS.
No. 1—-BIGGLE HORSE BOOK
Bold Ly Druggists, or sent post-paid on recelpt of pric
Allabout Horses—a Common-Sense Treatise, in over HUBPHUEYS AED. CO.) 1114113 William St., New Yorke
74 illustrations ; a standard work. Price, 50 C
No. 2_BIGGLE BERRY BOCK
Allabout growing Small Fruits—read and learn how :
contains 43 colored life-like reproductions of all le ding
varieties and 100 other illustrations. Price, so Cents.
No. 3—BIGGLE POULTRY BOOK
All about Pouitry ; the best Poultry Book in existence ;
tells everything ; with23 colored life-like re productions
of all the rinsipal breeds; with 103 other illustrations.
I'rice, 50 C
No. 4— BIGGLE COW BOOK
All about Cows and the Dairy Business ; having a great
sale; contains 8 colored life-like reproductions of each
breed, with 132 other illustrations. Price, so Cents.
No. 5— BIGGLB SWINE BOOK
Just out. All about Hogs—Breeding, Feeding, Butch-
cry, Diseases, ete. Contains over 80 beautiful half
tones and other engravings. Price, so Cents.
The BIGGLE BOOKS are piane) oO in) useful—you never
saw Lysunplie ce the tical, soseusible. The
are Eons Sh est, Nor and
South. ry e who keeps a Horse, Cow, og or
Chicken, or a Small ¥ ois ought to Ss right
away for the BIGGLE BOOK
FARM JOURNAL
Is your peer, fags for you and not a misfit.
old; it is th, oiled-down, hit-the-nail-on-the-head,—
quit-after-y we = ve-s a it, Farm a Household paper in
the w Bs biggest paper of its e in the United States
of America—having over a million and a-halfregular readers.
Any ONE of the BIGGLE BOOKS, and the FARM JOURNAL
& YEARS (r
to any hy
county where the Re-
publican party is la ly in the major-
ity, and where its candidates will be
elected, ed by solemn de-
has nom
direct vote
and repres
publicly j
to vote
of the people, sena
ntative candidates w
ed or publicly instructed
the caucus nominee of
the party for senator if the i
shall be Mr. Quay. Only one in hope-
leas senility or bent on tragic political
suicide would persist in such a contest,
and every sincere friend of Mr. Quay,
whether in sympathy with or opposed
to his political aims, must feel that
this -open and flagrant crucifixion
should stop.
It has disturbed the Republican
party of the state from center to cir-
cumference, and if persisted in it must
leave for Mr. Quay only the destiny
of a great political career ended in a
blunder that might well be classed as
a crime. Mr. Quay owes it to his party,
and above all he owes it to himself, to
end this fearful crucifixion by promptly
and peremptorily retiring from the
field as a senatorial candidate.
eo
10 are
A FREE PATTERN
ry
a“ ul oi th Tr ~
A strictly up-to-date
Me a Ll LS
re
ney ow
SEL oT
Tur Kansas City ticket and platform
is calculated to make things lively at
the exits instead of the entrances of
the Democratic party.
——
Ir has Tp out that “Timmie”
Scull is tryi up Ex-Judge Baer
as a candidate for the
Well, the
Demgoerats if they
It is 22 years
> lo set
with the
but we
he arly think the Sculls will be as sue-
Scullions ean fi
want
fir 0, I¢ v
A'pout XB or 1902 and = will be sent by mail s they were
Judge, som
FARM JOURNA
x,
PHILADELPHIA i
WILMER A SON. Address,
16
by the under
i! eh ton il £ hemes of the
Re ese to at i sy i Try is
ne i TE LC ivy Li si leaders of the Scull machine. This is
3 Me LL
88-148 West 14th Stree
not a Democratic year, Mr, Scull.
: : | that it we
liverance in county convention or by | that it v
Wacres have been higher during the
last few years than ever they were be-
fore in the United States. And this
was the period when the largest num-
ber of trusts were formed.
“I po not care to hold office unless it
enables me to do something to aid the
people in the fight against organized
wealth.”—\, J. Bryan.
Then why drop the income tax?
Bers of 4 to 1 that McKinley will be
re-elected President have already been
made. A New York Republican, who
had $10,000 to wager, at 3to 1, found
no enthusiastic Democratic takers.
—-—
Wnex the returns are counted next
November the Democrats would do
well to put their handsome minority in
the cold storage warehouse owned and
operated by the Tammany Ice Trust?
a >
Tire Democratic party is no longer
{ piration from the memories
and Jackson, These
o be appealed to in con-
i-expansion | campaign.
—-—
Tire shortage in the country’s stock
of lumber simply means that the lum-
bermen underestimated the extent of
the building operations. Building ac-
tivity always accompanies prosperity.
o a
Eicirey-oxe per cent of the delegates
to the Democratic convention recogniz-
ed that 16 to 1 was no longer a live is-
sue. But Boss Bryan wanted it, and
Prince David voted for it, so that set-
tled it.
X-Presiprxt CLEVELAND is still dis-
| gusted with the Democratic party be-
| cause of its 16 to 1
thinks
plank. Wkat he
former partner, Adlai
for running on that plank
of his
Steven
oe
A Berry dispateh states that the
Germans are hoping for the election of
Bryan and a Democratic Congress, in
order to prevent the passage of the
Suevienn ship subsidy bill at the next
ession of Congress.
———
It may be assumed with a good de-
gree of confidence that this campaign
| will not be as profitable for Mr. Bryan
| as was the last.
The people will be
slow to part with their good money to
hear hard luck stories
ro —
ATOR Bacon has been pounding
away at the Philadelphia platform.
Senator Bacon is the gentleman who
recently distingusibed himself by not
being able to tell the difference be-
tween toadstools and mushrooms.
-—
Frox the way Tammany acted at the
Kansas City convention, it would seem
s determined to make Bryan
| Democracy so ludicrous, and its defeat
so severe, that the old party would
never again be bothered with the Boy-
| Colonel-Orator of the Platte.
———
Tue production of wire nails in 1896
as only 1,719,810 kegs. Last year it
was 7,589,622 kegs. The increase of 60
per cent when the mills were open
meant a large amount of extra busi-
ness for all industries in which a large
amount of wire nails are used.
~~
Trose persons. who argue that the
election of Mr. Bryan would do no
harm because the gold standard is an
accomplished fact, utilize the same
species of logic as those who believe in
the exercise of the *pardoning power
immedintely after the conviction.
-— =
Tur imports and exports of Porto
Rico for the month of May, 1900, were
each about 100 per cent greater than
for the corresponding month of the
This is the poverty and
to which the Democratic plat-
form said the Republicans had doomed
the island.
>
Ture only interests thats wil ill be bene-
fited if the American shipping bill
passed 1 winter will be American—
American
or in the mines, factories,
id on board the ships. The
naturally; desire to pass
iocrats, just as nat-
i it, and suggest no other
than*the importation of for-
nu s that will benefit Amer-
ican labor not one particle,
THURSDAY,
shouts Mr. |
along |
AUG
A LANDSLIDE
| IN BRADFORD
{IST 9,
Quay Senator and Three stubbornly them
vo v They are wrong
| Representatives, In Porto Tico, wh
—_— a in predicting the doom of |
| QUAY REJECTED BY THE PEOPLE. | ublic in the event of MeKin-
ley’s ech n, and they are wrong
aa
|
Great Majority For the Anti-Miachine
Candidatex—Barrels of Cash and |
Into the |
Azainst |
Won.
Trust Profits Thrown
Fight—It Was the Bosses
the People, and the Pcople
A Remarkable Compais
(From Our Own Correspondent.)
Harrisburg, Aug By one of
largest majorities ever given
mary election the Republ a
ford county on Saturday last nominat- |
ed three anti-Quay representatives and
one anti-Quay senator. It was the
most emphatic repudiation of the ex- |
senator and the state machine that
they have recived since the sweep in
Allegheny county four months ago
when the Quayites lost practically
everything.
The anti-Quay candidates were fone |
ert S. Edminson, for the senate; Fred |
K. Taylor, Joseph E. Hamilton Pond
Frank J. Lomax. Mr. Bdmiston was a |
representative in the last house at
Harrisburg. He was one of the anti- i
Quay men who refused to go into the
machine caucus, and on this he was
attacked by the machine in his can- |
vass through the county. The other
candiates on the anti-Quay ticket were
Republicans of lifelong fidelity to the
party. |
The victory was practically a land- !
slide. The official figures are not in,
but it looks as if Edmiston and his |
partners will have a majority exceed-
fng 1,500. It is one of the most de-
cisive anti-Quay victories of the year,
and puts the anti-Quay men well to-
ward the front. |
One of the remarkable features of |
the campaign in Bradford was the ef-
forts of the machine to pull the wool
over the eyes of the farme The
machine sent Levi Wells, the former
head of the pure food and dairy de-
partment at Harrisbur ik who was
compelled to resign as ¢ sult of the
scandals in that department, out into
the f sold to work for the machine can-
didate Then it sent James Terry, |
di inspector at Pittsburg,
up among the butter workers to tell
them how he and the state adminis- |
tration were protecting them against
the bogus butter men. But while
Terry was giving the farme this
song and dance the North American,
f Philadelphia, sent its reporte and
detectives to Pittsbu where they |
purchased 17 samples of cleo
showed how 700,000 pounds of oleo-
margarine were being sold in Pitts-
burg monthly. |
This killed Terry's scheme, and
when the returns came in they showed
that he was beaten in his own town-
ship. The Quay candidate for senator,
Gen. Hill, a reput man with a
creditable army rec led the defeat
for the Quayites. county |
farmers had a high for Gen. |
Hill as a man and soldier, but as a |
Quay candidate they would have noth- |
ing to do with his aspirations. |
Louis Piollet, who made a record for |
himself at Harrisburg, and who was |
defeated two years ago, was one of |
the Quay candidates for the house.
He was snowed under and out ot |
sight, and his political ambitions |
wrecked for good.
The Quay bosses and orzans claim |
that it was cash that c he elec- |,
tion. They insult the of Brad- |
|
|
|
ford county by such Be-
sides, it is known that vas re
spent by the Quay machin Gen.
Hill made a fortune out of the leather
trust, and it was the profits of thi
monopoly that were thrown into t
campaign
Jut the bogus butter scandal, Gov-
ernor Stone's cut of th hool appro-
priation and all the cc ed crooked- |
ness of the machine w 1at defeated |
M. 8S. Quay in Bradford. And it is |
a defeat that has struck terror to tLe
bosses. They now clea yY see the
handwriting of their fate upon tho |
wall
Ss wl
— —-
|
|
|
Tor Somerset Herald did not show
|
|
|
up on time this week. You see, “Tim-
mie” isn’t done weeping yet, and he
still very sore over Judge Simonton’s
decision.
or pen, the
no more
Of all sad words of tongue
saddest are these:
“Barker’s Liniment”
Scull men.
There's
for sore
— a
Tue reception given to the Demo-
cratic National platform’s utterance on
the shipping bill by the patriotic press
of the country has been one of ridicule
and disgust. Nothing more partisan
and untrue was written in the Demo-
eratie platform than what it said in op-
position to that bill.
-
Exrvorrs to Porto Rico have more
than doubled under American
Admin- |
istration. So they will to the Phil
pines as soon as the Filipinos ace
the free pardon offered them by Presi-
dent McKinley, and settle down to the
agricultural and commercial develop-
ment of their country.
—
Ex-Goveryxor Groner IToapry, of
Ohio, is a stalwart Democrat who re-
pudiates the City platform.
He doubtless proceeds upon the theory
that, when one plank of political dec-
laration of principles is admittedly dis-
honest, it is safe to distrust the re-
mainder of the document.
Kansas
ExcGrLisit newspapers have been keep-
ing a keen watch on the deve lopment
of American shipping, and they express
well-grounded fears that the passa
next winter of the ship subsidy bill will
bring a large American shipping into
sharp competition with British ship-
ping in the American foreign trade.
BRYAN invites the support of the
traveling men of the count ry on a plat-
form which promisesto burst the trusts
and inaugurate another era of {ree
trade. This would result in the travel-
ing men of England, France and Ger-
many selling foreign goods to the mer- |
chants who now purchase homemade |
articles. |
—~ -
Tue man who voles the Re
ticket this year will vote
$200,000,000 in the United State
now annually paid to foreign ship
ers fordoing our foreign carrying
The County Nominates an Anti-|
| Democrats favor,
| are in the
ganized your
| received
| placed in
| but because
1900.
accuracy
|
|
|
|
ement.
by about a million and a half votes in
| their forecasts a
Cc
s to the election of their
ndidate in November
1
PRESIDENT ) , a3 the consti-
| tuted representative of a great Repub- |
lie, has lifted the yoke of oppressive
imperialism from the shoulders of 850.-
00 Porto Ricjans. from 0,000 Ca-
bans, and 10,000,000 Filippinos. He has
freed more subject colonists from the
tyranny of Spain than Washington de-
livered from the oppression of Great
Britain, yet in view of these faets of
history Bryan would have the country
believe that it must choose between
>| him and an EB mperor.
-—
Five hundred million dollars would |
be expended in the United States in
establishing shipyards and in building |
ships if the shipping bill were passed.
If it fails, this country will keep on
spending $200,000,000 a year ir paying |
foreign ships for doing what American
ships properly protected would do. The
Republicans favor American ships for
American commerce, but the
Demo-
| crats are opposed to legislation that
will cause their construction. The
rather, the purchase
of foreign (chiefly British) ships with
which to revive shipping
upon the seas.
American
— -
Tur Kansas City convention attempt- |
ed to square a circle when it tried to
constru ct a sound-money-free-silver
tform and nominate
a pair of free-
candidates. The
two things will not mix. One is right
and the other is wrong: and no amount
of word juggling,
silver-sound-money
wool pulling-hedging
or evasion can deceive the people.
Those who sincerely believe in the free
and unli
ratiojof 16 to 1, without awaiting the
uid or co-operation of any other nation
on earth, should vote for Bryan, for he
is pledged to that very thing. All oth-
er citizens of the Republie, no matter
what their previous political affiliations
may have been, should and must unite
the whieh, if
opie >d, would plunge the country in-
incial heresy,
to a state of business anarchy,
he
such as
never been experienced by any peo-
nce the invention of
-
ned money.
ine astute editor of the Somerset
Mr. George R. Secu
1, last week
announced between sobs and whines
that he would loyally support Messrs.
Koontz and Kendall, but
article wherein he declared his loyalty
to the afore 1
in the same
d gentlemen he used all
| manner of abuse and invective against
them.
ance,
with a venge- |
, and people voit |
and wink the other eye,
If Geo. I. Scull was ever loyal to any-
body but Geo.R.Scull,Matt Quay and the
devil, there are many people who have
never discovered it. Even Judge Si-
monton comes in for a large share of
“Timmie’s” although the ller-
Id elumsily tried to conceal it
That is loyalty
S$ seems to us
only smile at it
abuse,
between
ie lines. There's nothing to be gain-
Timmie,” for you
to stay there, and rich-
rye it.
ed by your whines, *
ly do you des Lini-
"decisions are not to be obtaiped
from an upright and learned man®ike
Jud
“Barker’s
ment’
ge Simonton, and you didn’t seem
|
mited coinage of silver at the |
NO. 29.
———
Uncle Ike’s Idea o
|
{
}
| But
And I cannot keey om th
© on our home.
ie
With their vo I m
on th gold
If Pm able to
dow i
iw
toil of Jim nud J
that tey’ll work both 1
| And redeem the dear old
their mother; so they
But I fear they'll not |
hi ind ¢
And the time
‘pears like
Then
in [forgive me, Pa
what 1 think,
Unele Ike haint long
feet are on the
to st
1 have seen so n
saints so worl Cy
That I've dot th
mansions in the sk
If it’s surely right and prope
here on earth,
And when comes the fatal pay day, take
the home for half its worth,
then ain’t it right in heavin? And
Why,
may not
Deal up there in lots ane
mort
dop
s and loa
No, I do not care to ¢ rw
1s right in heaven,
And if you've
pect
Leen p ch
Payinw
time to play.
On the golden harp
in’ round the t
That is left for dud
them no kin T own.
But I hope that you're mist
way to me \ :
And that mort
worrgin’ us in heavy
For it pears like I ren
oly Bok
How when God spoke to
their idols they forsook,
That they borrowed from «
no interest to pa
And the wo
of every d:
full wa
How debts
the enc
How the la
from worryin’
Of the landlord,
year of jubilee
nd was for tl
Got ‘round ‘cording
the people all were fi
And it ‘pears
3ook of Ac
’Bout the early «
hurches?’
quite import
I"ow they some worked 1 managed
SO as not to ru eht,
And there were no poor ai needy and no
cause to grigve and fret.
Did you ever read
things out of ds
For somehow you never pre:
youre tryin’ to say t
corporation
all our greatness built.
Somehow
people used te
‘Fore they bowe
sound like gospe
Seem a good deal
shoutin’ :
Singin’ songs and halle!
golden strand.
For they seem like tr
dom fi
Like the
It’s a
death bed’s Zioom
to cut any more of a figure wifhin the
court railing of the Hamishig court
house than you did in the ‘Somerset
court house when you, “Johnny” Scott
and little wooden “Jimmie” Cover or-
little, puny and insig-
rifiecant rump convention. This is no
joke, “Timmie,” and you know it.
|
——
A Just Decision,
The decision of Judge Simonton, of
Dauphin county, in sustaining the val-
idity of the nomination certificates of
William II. Samuel A. |
Kendall as the Republican candidate
for Assembly from Somerset county, is |
Koontz and
an entirely just and proper one.
Simonton finds that Messr
Judge |
Koontz and |
Il, who were supported by the
anti-Quay
at the regular
Ker
Republicans of that coanty |
Republican primaries,
majority
gally east and were properly
nomination by the regular |
county convention of the party. The
Quay people, when they discovered
that they were beaten, bolted, the con-
clear and honest
of votes
|
|
|
vention and held a rump gs withering, at |
which they attempted to place in nom- |
ination the two Quay candidates, W.H.
|
|
|
|
|
Sanner and Frederick Rowe, who had
only secured a minority of legal votes
cast at the primaries. Juc
has found that
for such
re Simonton
there was no excuse |
action, and has by
given effect to the will of the ms: ajority |
of the Republicans of Some orsat county. |
his decision |
The decision is partic )
ing, not only because it is a
sures the
the next le
ture of such
faithful public servants as Gen. Koontz |
and Mr. Kendall, who in the last legis- |
lature honestly represented the wishes |
of their constituents by opposing the |
re-election of M. 8. Quay to the United Bs
States Senate, and who stood for re- |
|
|
i
|
nomination with the express under- |
standing that they woul
take the same
d, if necessary, |
the future. |
y real doubt as to |
rried the
|
|
|
|
postion i
There was never
their hav
the Quay
primaries, but
wrt the will
Republicans of
sharp pr
oped tot
of -th
a of Judge
| had his
| ward of 85 cen
| on a stump mun
By some ente
ed hh sd home
Farewell, 1
the blessed MN
Dealin’ less in het
An undertaker doc
a newspaper puff, but her
an exchange that is wort!
| “One of the pleasantest si
had in this town in a long
g
artistic manner in’ which J
ried Bill
of Lawrence
died since our I: issue.
trade at
he hacdled our
| egility that was sta
prospects with
and soliciting busines
attendants at the fune
doubtless be able to 'get a
1ess in these parts.
ity weekly,
ying a [yea
hence this pur
——
There is a justice of th
in Tucker county, W.Va.,
er. A young couple latel
minister to get married, b
a license, the mi
“I can’t mar
irl and go to Helt
upon the young man br
ma
replied:
Somerset has the stir
earth, beyond doubt. At
rior in close-fistedne
They walked around the
bridal tour.
of stick candy for a wed
and then
their candy
*hild
A rust
mule, with a p:
on clover did r
came
xe of their fae-
ts will roam,
For they've prom I strong and faithful
jus
good Deacon Jones
‘hat’s right here
mbrel, or for loaf
tech like won’t be
winher
cr readin’in the
, Parson, or are such
them Bible stor
pictur
sn’t very often get
with the widow,
s fr
I Before leaving for
| home he subs Te d for this great fam-
ter very
“You go to hell yourself, s
is offered for his supe-
He got mar-
ried to a home girl tosave expenses
Ie Bonght an
's for the legis-
g honest ma-
aries, and
ss receive the
of the Dauphin
—Pittshurg
7
f Heaven.
son, 'bowt the
1d the spark-
will wands¥ and
1inkin’ "bewst the
happy with the
waters singin?
bout the world
ortgage and the-
and day,
homestead for
bles times are
payment and it
rson, if I tell you
ay here, for his
tice ‘mong the
e title to them
r to take usury
tions, gilt-edged
in’ gospel, I ex-
re, strugglin?
with but little
and with
aken ’hout the
readin’ in the
his people, and
ach other with
ses at the close
cancelled ag
ever free
irtless; for the
ment and
doings, several
wh them when
or and repu-
13, that they’ve
ies how God’s
Mammon,
en than a
s ona shinin?
e, free-
iption and the
n, to relieve the
es of the bless<
rth’s evil by a
nd justice, and
i
ions, more im’
zine.
e is one from
1 publishing :
ghts we have
time was the
ohn Griflin,
Kruger, who
Mr.
discussing
the farmers
om the other
ral. He will
11 the busi-
rin advance,
e peace over
named Heltz-
y applied to a
ut not having
kindly re-
you; take
Where-
istled up and
riz
st man on
any rate a re»
square for a
kel’s worth
ding present
they
save
ren.
hing eye,sat
\ 1 p-eared
: by
ile for mu-
hrot inh