J 7, 3 er pn or a ro a ¥ 2 i » i : | : fr \ RSET, PA. ! 7 « : T. PENN’ 4 i n * : i .- VOL. XIV. SALISBURY. ELK LICK POSTOFFICE, PA.. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 15. 1908, ron, LICK, PA. REPUBLICAN NATIONAL TICKET. | : with each recurring election hjs can- | This procedure set the precedent for es . vass becomes correspondingly Sosy he entire country, the order being For President, His opposition amounts to practically | amplified later to meet a general con- > . WILLIAM H. TAFT, nothing in the present campaign. His [dition that was rapidly becoming ra $ Of Ohio. popularity may be justly attributed to ! alarming. RSET, PA, i For Viee President, the generally recognized fact that his Much of the eredjt for the appoint- { JAMES 8S. SHERMAN life in a public and private capacity | ment of a commission and the appro- { oF Now York > has always been above question and | priation of $150,000 to investigate the > - : beyond reproach. ! cause of the recent appalling mine i STATE. ’ While Mr. Cooper’s political success disasters, properly belongs to Mr. 2 Jud {8 for. Court is the admiration of nearly every leader | Cooper. His short, crisp speech in its BT/PA. nc go of Buperio : : in either party in the state, there is no | favor, when he predicated his remarks . A WILLIAM D. PORTER, WORTHY REPU BLICAN CANDIDATE secret about it. Seghere, by the Rel, on the fat oa presented the : RICT. are something that do not appea to | greatest fuel distriet in'the world, and hn DISTRIO To FOR RE-ELECTION. him. He is plain-spoken, mild-man- his vote in its behalf, had much to do ave ot Congress, 23rd Districe, nered, extremely sociable to all, a | with the passage of the measure. Fesery i v= is ALLEN F. COOPER. staunch Republican—and in politics he As a member of the Committee on Pets In. | . ¥ has never been anything else. As a Foreign Affairs—one of the most im- P 1 COUNTY. member of Congress he never plays | portant in the House, and of supreme . Legislature, ¢ | political favorites, and all complaints | importance in case of war and the set- FONEER. y WM. H. FLOTO, 4 or appeals to him universally com- |tlement of international imbroglios— A. W. KNEPPER. ' mand the same prompt and effective | Mr. Cooper's influence has been felt les, Live Sheriff, service. Every foot of the territory in | more than once. His activity has Ae. . CHARLES H. WEIMER. his district has the same relative im-'| taken the form of advancing the trade N-8CHOOL. : > portance to him, every unit in its popu- | relations of the United States with the ion guar- °* . Auditor, 3 PA. NT! ers, Ice e. —Beef- re, Hot All oceries, ete. and we of your ERS, RY, Pa. i ee en ab bcd, dn AI % W. H. H. BAKER, JACOB 8S. MILLER. Recorder of Deeds, NORMAN E. BERKEY. Clerk of Courts, F. A. HARAH. Register of Wills, BERT F. LANDIS. hy Treasurer, RUSSELL G. WALKER. Prothonotary, JACOB B. GERHARD. Poor Director, JACOB C. DEITZ. County Commissioner, R. 8. McMILLEN, JOSIAH SPECHT. ‘ County Surveyor, . IRENIS 8. PYLE. Up to date Colonel Likins has not advanced a single argument why he should not be permitted to remain in Uniontown.—Somerset Herald. SomERsET county voters do not take L . kindly, to the line of talk the Prohibi- tion eandidate for ongress is hand- . ing out. If a tithe of the “hot stuff” he is pouring out on this side of. the mountain is true, Likins should run for Constable, where it would be his duty io imform upon his neighbors 3 who overstep the law. Decent people have no time for his unsupported charges and nastier insinuations.—Som- + erset Herald. -— A poLL which was taken by a promi- nent New York newspaper in a prom- inent New York theater, the other * night, resulted as follows: Number of votes cast, 318; for Taft, 223; for Bryan, 83; for Debs, 10; for Hisgen. 2. As this poll was taken by a paper that is strenuous in its opposition to Taft, it ~ cannot take out of its poll anything more than the satisfaction that it is apparently honest with its readers. — Uniontown Herald. Wixpy Bini Likins, in his People’s ~ . Tribune of last week, makes fun of us because we are poor. That comes with bad grace from a man who is pleading for votes on the ground that he is r. poor. He even says we are having a « hard time to keep out of the Poor House. That would be bad enough, if ‘true, but we are not so all-fired poor as that. In fact we are in a position to lend “Windy Bill” some money, if he can give the proper sécurity. And furthermore, we have issued many hundreds of checks in our. time, and snot one of them ever went to protest ° or eame back marked as worthless. But how about yours, Billy? ©" “QongrEssMAN CooPER is oerralling the votes of some of the Democratic war veterans,” says the Connellsville: Courier. This is only natural, as the old soldiers, without regard to party, ¥* have found in Mr. Cooper the most ac- tive and effective champion that has yet represented. this district in Con- gress. The only person who has ever , found fault with Mr. Cooper for his un- © tiring Work in behalf of the old war veterans is the red-headed Kentucky mutt and common puke known as “Windy Bill” Likins, who is now going about traducing Mr. Cooper and beg- ging votes for the same office Mr. Cooper is sure to be re-elected to on ol Nov. 3rd. “Windy Bill” is trying to make much of the fact ‘that he chal- } lenged Mr. Cooper for a joint debate, and that the ehallenge was not ac- cepted, a fact which is highly creditable » j= "to the gentleman challenged. Should Mr. Cooper ever so far forget his manly principles as to accept a challenge from a dirty blackguard and insignificant , nonentity of the Likins stripe, thereby lending prominence to such an addle- pated human microbe, he would in i that event deserve to lose the respect i and support of all honest and manly i men, casion. Congress pledged to support him is the only Yay in which to perpetuate the policy of the Government as now carried on. fel that all the aid that can be given to this, policy by every good citizen sdould be given; forthis is far more than a merely partisan matter.— Theodore Roosevelt in his letter to Hon. William B. McKinley, Chairman of the Republican Congress- ional Committee. > While the election of a President may be regarded as the supreme political outcome of the year, it is doubtful if it transcends in national interest the re- sult of the Congressional elections the country over. If the voters of this, the Twenty-third Congressional district, keep this thought in, mind and weigh the importance of this election from the supreme standpoint of the indorse- ments of the Roosevelt administration and the continuance of the Roosevelt policies, together with the support of Mr. Taft and his program and the pro- tection of the great industrial interests of this district in the extremely 'im- portant approaching revision of the tariff, they certainly cannot afford to ignore the claims that the Republican candidate. Allen F. Cooper, has upon their consideration and suffrage. If they weigh the importance of this Congressional election from ditional standpoints of able representa- these needs, they are bound to return | Mr. Cooper to Congress by the largest | majority ever accorded any candidate | in this district. | But however strong his claims may | be, Mr. Cooper is not the man to in- hd HON. ALLEN calamity to the country; and it would be | folly, while electing him, yet at the same i . : : of his cons s ; time to elect a Congress hostile to him, a | he . hi Pilon thousands of whom ws 'S > Congress which under the influence of |p. be oy re ya Bg, partisan leadership would be certain to years, and many of them all their ? . | lives. It is not only as a thwart and baffle him on every possible oc- | : member of To elect him and at the same time elect a | the ad-| tion, ample experience, a clean life, an | admirable business, professional and | Congressional record, a keen realiza- | tion of the needs of this district and | the disposition and energy to secure] COOPER. As a loyal Supporter in €ongress of Roosevelt, Mr. Cooper Pledg- es His Support to Taft, to a Continuance of the Present Government Policies and to that Revision of the Tariff Which Will Best Conserve the Paramount Industrial Interests of Somerset, Fayette and Greene Counties. F. How Well Mr. Cooper Measures Up to the Roosevelt Congressional Standard—Six Years of Tireless Endeavor for His District, Its People and Their Interests. ‘| dulge in speculati To fail to elect Mr. Taft would be ol KR “peculation as to the extent of his majority. He is content to let his [chances rest on a justifiable friendship | Congress that Mr. Cooper meets the | people of his district ; it is more as a | friend and neighbor; for he was born, (raised and sghooled among his ¢on- | stituents, and he has lived among them | since the day of his birth or a farm in | Franklin township, Fayette county, | Tune 16, 1862. Mr, Cooper needs no in- | troduction to the people of his district. | They know him, they understand him {and they know what he has done and [can do. Their friendships are as mu- tual as their interests. However, in the hope of emphasizing the importance of the approaching Congressional elec- tions in general, and that in this dis- trict in particular, we deem it proper to call attention to the career, ‘qualifi- cations and record of Mr. Cooper in the following resume: — a As soon ag Mr. Cooper was able to work, he had to tackle. the farm. He wintered in the country school and summered among the crops. And when he was old enough to command authority, he taught school for six years, always in his own county of Fayette, fHe was pripeipal in the Belle Vernon schools for two years, and his last year of teaching was for the normal term in Ohiopyle. But Mr. Cooper was ambitious. In [the fall of 1866 he entered the law de- | partment of the University of Michi- l gan. at Ann Arbor. He graduated two years later, was admitted to the bar in Fayette county, December 4,1888, and while he prospered in business and ad- vinced in his profession, he never of- fered him-elf as a candidate for any office until he entered the lists for Congress. That was six years ago, and [he has been there ever since, growing { more aetive in behalf of his constitu- ents, and becoming “more valuable to weir interests, until his hold on their affections has become so strong that lation has the same claims upon his consideration. He represents the peo- ple of the Twenty-third Congressional district—that is all. If there be an element ia the citizen- ship of his district that appeals to Mr. Cooper, to his instant consideration and the imperative dictates of his heart, it is that of the veterans of our nation’s wars. If there be anything in his Congressional career of which he is particularly proud, it is the knowledge which generally obtains in Washington among his fellow-members and the newspaper correspondents, that he is one of the best friends of the old soldier on the floor of the House. That Mr. Cooper’s patriotic offorts in their behalf are appreciated, was evidenced at the last meeting of the Fayette County Veterans’ Association, in Uniontown, on Thursday, October 1, when the hundreds of old soldiers present at that gathering unanimously adopted a ringing resolution of thanks to him for his untifing efforts in look- ing after and advancing their interests at Washington. One of the last meas- ures for which Mr. Cooper worked and voted at the recent’ session of Con- gress, was the Widows’ Pension bill, making the minimum allowance $12 per month with the removal of any property disqualification. Mr. Cooper was also largely instrumental in se- curing the passage of the bill granting medals to the soldiers of the Spanish- American war, who, at the instance of President McKinley served in the Philippines after their original term of enlistment had expired. President McKinley promised them that he would recommend that Congress provide suitable and proper recognition for their patriotic service. Next to Mr. Cooper’s pride in -his efforts for the old soldiers. comes the satisfaction he feels in having. as a member of Congress, stood for every policy and measure advocated by Mr. Roosevelt that received the considera- tion of Congress. Mr. Cooper support- ed Mr. Roosevelt in, and voted for such measures as the Meat Inspection bill, those providing for the type and con- struction of the Panama Canal, the Employers’ Liability bill, the bill to make the Government liable for injury to employes, the Hepburn bill, the Pure Food bill, the Railway Safety Ap- pliance bill, the bill limiting the work- ing hours of‘ railway employes, the Anti-Rebate bill, an improved system of naturalization, the law forbidding child labor in the District of Columbia, and the bill providing for a currency commission. An instance of Mr. Cooper’s effective work in Washington arose in connec- tion with the orders issued during the recent money stringency, forbidding the shipment of currency out of the country districts where such moneys were collected and kept on deposit in the banks of those districts. When currency was so scarce that tke people were forced to the almost general use of script, pay rolls could not be made up, and there was an extravagant premium on money, the depository banks in Pittsburg undertook to drain the banks of Fayette county of the thousands of dollars collected weekly in the shape of postal and money order receipts and internal revenue collec- tions under regulations made to suit their selfish ends. The metropolitan banks all over the country were doing the same thing, to the detriment of the country districts and their imminent ruin. The bankers of Fayette county then appealed to Mr. Cooper. Together | with J. V. Thompson, of Uniontown, | Mr. Cooper went to Washington, saw [ the Secretary of Postmaster General and even Presi- dent Roosevelt himself, with the result | that an order went forth from Wash- ington that drafts would have to be ac- | cepted for these moneys, an | rency kept in the Fayett {for the benefit of the Treasury, the | South. American republics, and with the nations of the world, to the end that there shall be the greatest possible demand for the products ‘which have made the Pittsburg district the great- est industrial district in the world; and Mr. Cooper’s own district the scene of the most marvelous development in the world’s history. Even along hu- manitarian lines has he been active, for the highly important Tuberculosis Congress, which has just adjourned its sessions in Washington, was called to- gether at the instance of the United States, upon a resolution affirmatively recommended to Congress by the sub- committee of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, of which sub-committee Mr, Cooper was chairman. As a leading member of the Com- mittee on Irrigation, Mr. Cooper has done much to aid in the reclamation of thousands of arid acres in the West. As a member of the Committee on Railways and Canals, he materially assisted Congressman Dalzell in sccur- ing the passage of the Ohio River and Lake Erie Ship Canal bill, connecting the Great Lakes with the Ohio river, an improvement that will prove of in- estimable transportation value to the great Pittsburg district. It was large- ly through Mr. Cooper’s efforts that the new lock and dam No. 5, at Browns- ville, is being constructed, his idea be- ing that the improvement of the upper Monongahela would permit of. the de- velopment of the new coal fields of Fuyetie and Greene counties, and get these valuable deposits into touch with the southern markets. It was through Mr. Cooper's efforts that the project of canalizing the Yough river was reopened; that the people from West Newton to Connells- ville might be given a rehearing in the NO. 10. ] Fayette to recount a few of his efforts in their behalf. | Mr. Cooper has been successful in | securing rural free delivery through- | out Somerset county, se that practice | ally every farmer has his mail deliv- ered at his door. He has persuaded the Government to take up the propo- sition of city free delivery in the town of Meyersdale, and the Government has promised its early establishment. He succeeded in getting free delivery established in the town of Somerset, some time ago. Mr. Cooper has also been instrumen-- tal n getting the Department of Geo- logical Survey to undertake a topo- graphical and geographical survey of the entire county, with a view of get-- ting a complete and early report on the: resources of the county and bring; them to the attention of the business world. His devotion to the interests of the old soldiers of Somerset county has been fully on a par with tha- for the veterans of Fayette county. . As for Greene county, it may be said that Mr. Cooper has done as muel to hasten he early coal development: h-re as any man, with the exception of J. V. Thompson. No man has done more for its industrial extension. Mr. Cooper has extensive interests in that county, which make its development a matter of common interest to him and the people of Greene. It is possible to recount the personal and Congressional efforts of Mr. Cooper in behalf of the reople of his entire district to an indefinite degree, but that is unnecessary. It is sufficient to say in closing—and there is ample evidence to bear out this oft-repeated remark— that Mr. Cooper has done more for this district than any other member of Con- gress that ever represented it. His election, as Mr. Roosevelt says, is far more than a merely partisan matter. His candidacy demands the support of every good citizen without regard to party. NOT A SINGLE OBJECTION TO RE- PUBLICAN TICKET. From the Somerset Herald. Not a single objection can be raised against any of the candidates on the Republican ticket, from Taft and Sher- man down to the end of the list. There is not the slightest doubt that every man on the ticket will be triumphant- ly elected. but the Republicans of Som- erset county should do their full duty by seeing that the mujority 1s the largest ever polled in this Republican stronghold. Congressman Allen F. Cooper has no opposition worthy of the name. He was fairly cominated at the primaries, and as the candidate of the party is entitled to the votes of all matter of securing a new survey, to the end that the enormous shipping of the Yough valley should be developed, and Conrellsville accorded her just trans- portation due. ” It was Mr. Cooper who secured an appropriation of $90,000 to secure a site for and provide the erection of a fine postoffice building in Connellsville, the first public building to be secured for any city or town in this district. But all this is a matter of retrospect. More important than all is the pros- pective. No matter who is elected President next month, there is bound to be a revision of the tariff at an extra session of Congress to be called im- mediately after the fourth ef next March. The platforms of both the great parties demand this. The in- terests of the people of this district, as well as those of the great Pittsburg district, of which this is considered a part, are at stake in this proposed re- vision. There are certain schedules which must be accorded that treatment calculated not only to preserve the in- dustries which have made Fayette, Greene aud Somerset counties part of the richest and most prosperous dis- “trict in the United States, but to con- tinue their development so magnifi- cently begun. This revision demands careful, cour- ageous, inteliigent and experienced treatment, such treatment as can only be accorded by a man so keenly alive to the industrial importance of his dis- trict as Mr. Cooper is known to be. In this connection it may be said that a new man would be of little service. For next to Mr. Cooper’s pre-eminent qualifications for this duty, his charac- ter and standing with his fellow-mem- bers of Congress are such as to enable him to enlist their co-operation and | support in behalf of any measure or | policy calculated to extend the inter- | | ests of his constituents. Congress recognizes his conscientious devotion to duty and his capacity for fairness, a recognition in. | and this is that takes years to att 2} In this ske o him an listrict outs of Mr. Cooper it is but he othe just r counties his Republicans, if for no other reason. But there are other reasons why Mr. Cooper should be returned to Wash- ington at this time. President Taft must have the aid of a Republican House in order ‘to carry forward the Roosevelt policies to which he stands committed, and for which Republicans are united everywhere. Mr. Cooper has served acceptably as member of Congress for three terms, and his fa- miliarity with his duties and the re- quirements of the people of this im- portant mining and manufacturing distriet ably qualify him to represent them at Washington. Mr. Cooper has shown his friendship for the veteran soldiers on many occasions, .and they are for him almost to a man. Every candidate on the county tick- et is worthy of the support the Herald is confident they will receive at the polls on November 3rd. Not one of them is beholden to a party boss for his nomi- nation, and all were chosen at open and fairly conducted primaries. Let us make the majority for the whole ticket, National, State and County, the largest ever given in Somerset county. TE People’s Tribune says a vote for Cooper is a vote for Rinehart. This statement certainly needs a diagram. Rinehart isn’t running for anything, and if he was, he wouldn’t be running on the Republican ticket.—Connells- ville Courier. GREAT GUN - BARGAINS —We have for sale at Tak Srarjoffiee, five brand new Stevens guns, and offer any or all of them at a special bargain. They consist of a Double Barrel Ham- merless Shotgun, Single Barrel Ham- mer Shotgun, and three very fine Rifles of 22, 25-20 and 32-40 caliber. No better made guns to ‘be had, and no handsomer ones. These are all; late models. Now is your}fopportunity buy a fine gun cheap. t a ERS for sale at the tl} “hd torre en or