The citizen. (Honesdale, Pa.) 1908-1914, August 02, 1911, Page PAGE 8, Image 8

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    I' AGIO 8
1HE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2, 1011.
LEY BEATEN
(Continued from Page Ono.)
The third out was pulled off on
a freak play. Wilson was at bat.
One strike had been called on him,
when he retired in favor of Ben
nett. Hessllng threw the ball over
the plate, and the umpire declared
the batter out, since the rules forbid
the substitution of a player after a
strike is called on the batter.
Honesdale didn't do anything In
the eighth, although Sandercock
singled to right and Kupfer to leftv
after Ross grounded to Sheridan."
Polt filed to Thielke and Schilling
filed to Wilson.
A black dog ran across the dia
mond at the opening of the ninth.
In the face of such a hoodoo, Haw
ley could do nothing. Sheridan
"rode" to Mangan. Sweltzer singled
to left. Rose hit to Kupfer who
threw the hall to Mangan and
Sweltzer was out. Gilpin fouled to
Sandercock.
"Duffer" Weaver opened the ninth
with a corking single to right.
Hessllng followed suit, advancing
Weaver. 'Mangan filed to Rose.
Captain Brader smashed one through
Wilson, and Weaver ambled home
with the winning run.
Hawloy has a fine team. They
gave us the best game of the season.
Here's hoping to see them soon
again!
The score:
HAWLEY.
R. H. O. A. E.
Sweltzer, lb 0 3 5 1 0
McNamara, 3b 1 2 4 0 1
Rose, rf 1 1 1 0 0
Gilpin, cf 0 1 0 0 0
Seller, c 0 2 4 0 0
Thielke, If 0 1 4 0 0
Gibbons, 2b 0 1 3 0 0
xWilson, ss 0 1 4 1 1
Sheridan, p 0 0 0 3 0
SxBennett 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 2 12 25 5 2
xWilson out for interference in
the fifth.
xxBennett out for substituting for
Wilson In the eighth, after a strike
had been called on, Wilson.
xxxOne out when winning run was
scored.
HONESDALE.
R. H. O. A. E.
Mangan, 3b 0 1 2 2 0
Brader, 2b 0 1 1 3 0
Ross, lb 0 1 8 0 0
Sandercock, c 1 2 12 1 0
Kupfer, ss 0 1 2 4 3
Polt, cf 1 0 0 0 0
Schilling, rf 0 1 1 0 0
AVeaver, If 0 1 1 0 0
Hessllng, p 0 2 0 0 0
Totals 3 11 27 10 3
liawley ....2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
Honesdale .00000200 1 3
Two-base hit McNamara. Struck
out By Hessllng 9; by Sheridan 3.
Bases on balls Off Hessllng 2; off
Sheridan 1. Hit by pitcher Brad
er. Hits Off Hessling 12; off
Sheridan 11. Double play Brader
to Kupfer to Ross. Umpires Bal
les and Boiand.
CANDIDATE for PltOTHOXOTAltY.
To the Republicans of Wayne Co.:
I take this means of announcing
myself as a candidate' for the nomi
nation of Prothonotary at the pri
maries, Sept. 30, 1911.
JOHN N. SIIAIU'STKHN.
To most of you I am known per
sonally. During my seventeen years
of service as a clerk in the Hones
dale postoffice my efforts have been
to perform my duties faithfully and
courteously to the patrons of the of
fice and the public generally.
To the voters with whom I am not
personally acquainted I would say
that, since a severe injury sustain
ed by my father a few years before
his accidental death when I was six
teen years old I have tried to make
an honest living. My birthplace was
in Texns township, district No. 4,
Wayne county. .My school days
were limited to the district school
and the Honesdale High school. As
a boy of eleven years I spent my
summers slate picking on the Dela
ware & Hudson dock and attended
school during the winter. I also
spent several summers working on a
farm in Cherry Ridge.
After school I entered the office
of the Honesdale Iron Works, known
now as the Guerney Electric Elevator
Co., where I stayed a number of
years and later entered the Hones
dale postofllce serving two years un
der William F. Briggs. I then went
to the Carbondale Lumber company
as a bookkeeper, remaining with
them until the apolntment as post
master of iMiss Mary E. Gorety, who
later becamo the wife of Hon, C. A.
McCarty. In June, 1896, I returned
to the Honesdale postoffice where I
have been employed ever since. In
coming bfore the people and asking
their assistance and vote at the com
ing primaries, let me say that I am
no tool of any boss or bosses. I
simply desire In common with every
American citizen to better my condi
tion. Your support will be appre
ciated and it nominated and elected
I will devote all my time and atten
tion to the duties of the office to
which I aspire.
Most cordially yours,
J. N. Sharpsteen.
HAW
BOUGHT JURORS?
Charges of Big Graft In
Perkins Trial Made.
SAY $75,000 WAS SPENT.
Names and Amounts of Money Paid
and Received to Be Mads Public
at the hearing of Detectives
For Retrial.
Erie, Pa., Aug. 1. A chargo of Jury
fixing In the Perklns-Franklln caso
sprang to light, and it 19 said that no
less than $70,000 was spent in "buying
Jurors" during the last flvo dnys of
the trial. Of this sum ono member of
the Jury who, it is alleged, boasted
that he "controlled" the rest of the
members, is reported to have received
$20,000. The other eleven men re
ceived $5,000 each, it is alleged. It is
stated publicly that names and
amounts would be furnlshod Judge
Charles P. Orr when arguments are
heard for retrial of the case Wednes
day or Thursday.
Charges from the attorneys retain'
ed In Perkins' defense are flying thick
and fast One man prominent in the
defense of Perkins and Franklin, who
Saturday was sentenced to the Leaven
worth federal prison for blackmail,
said that ho had direct evidence that
a member of the Jury was inebriated
at the Reed IIouso in this city one
night during the oloven days of the
trial. He is said to have boasted
publicly that before the trial closed he
would "have a bundle of money big
enough to choke a horse."
Later this man, so the attorneys say,
displayed n roll of currency, the out
side bill showing a $100 mark.
TO BE STEUBENVILLE'S QUEST
President Taft Will Be Present at Un
veiling of Stanton Statue.
Pittsburg, Aug. L President Taft
will be the guest of honor at the old
home week celebration to bo held in
Steubenville, Sept. 3 to 10, and will go
to the Buckeye town especially to 'be
present at the unveiling of the statuo
erected in honor of Edwin McMaster
Stanton, once secretary of war. Oth
ers who will be present include Robert
T. Lincoln, Lewis M. Stanton and Jus
tice William R. Day, with a pageantry
of United States troops under com
mand of General Frederick D. Grant
nnd state troops under command of
Adjutant General Charles C. Ebrecht.
The unveiling ceremony will take
place on Thursday of the week of the
celebration.
Steubenville, according to its citi
zens, is going to tender the president
the greatest reception ho has ever been
given anywhere else in the country,
i' ormer residents of the old tonvn now
living in nil parts of the United States
tyiye signified their intention to come.
MAEION TO HANG NEXT MONTH
Wife
Murderer to Pay Penalty For
Crime Sept. 28.
Wilkesbarre, Pa., Aug. 1. District
Attorney Valentine of this city has re
ceived the date of the hanging of
George L. Mnrion, the New York tre
atrical man who was convicted hero
of murder. He is to be banged on
Sept. 28, almost two years after ho
had murdered his wife, Frances Lee
Brooks, in the office of the chief of
police of this city. She had run away
with another man. Marion traced her
to this city and under pretence of ef
fecting a reconciliation had the police
take her to the office of the chief of
police. There, when ho was left alone
with her for a minute, he shot her
twice and killed her.
HELD FOR STEALING MAIL.
Night Driver at Lancaster Arrested
After Many Complaints.
Lancaster, Pa., Aug. 1. George
Harry Macklnson, eighteen years old.
Is under arrest for stealing from the
malls. Macklnson was night driver
botween tho postoffice and the railway
stations.
Many thefts have been reported dur
ing the last several months. They
were mostly of a mall addressed to
George W. Park, a nurseryman of La
Parke, and large packages of opened
letters addressed to him were found In
quarry holes and creeks. He estimates
Ills losses during tho past six months
ut $1,000. Macklnson has a wife and
baby.
SLEEVE SETS OFF DYNAMITE.
Man Loses Hand as Result of Applying
Friction to Cap.
Philadelphia, Aug. 1. Trying to rub
the rust from a dynamite cap, James
Bltooy, twenty-six years old, 4000 Un
brla street, Manayunk, used the sleeve
of his shirt and tho friction caused the
explosive to lgnlto.
The tips of two fingers nnd his
thumb were blown from Sttocy's left
band. He was hurried to Bt Timothy'i
hospital, where tho hand was ampu
tated. Tries Suicide on Street.
Philadelphia, Aug. L Mrs. Anna
Powers, sixty-three years old. Is in the
Woman's Homeopathic hospital as the
result of having swallowed a small
quantity of poison. A policeman found
the woman aa she was drinking th
poison from a bottle at Twenty-fifth
street and Ridge avenue.
BEGIN NEW SUBWAY.
Crowd of 15,000 Overpowers New
York Potioe at Ground Breaking.
tt-3 , a
t'lioto by American Press Association.
New York, Aug. 1. In the presence
of a crowd of 15,000 that swamped the
police detail, overflowed the entire
neighborhood and completely stalled
car traffic on Lexington nvenue the
work of construction of the now sub
way system was formally begun at
Sixty-seventh street and Lexington
avenue. President William R. Wilcox
of the public service commission turn
ed the first shovelful of earth, there
was speechmaklng nnd bouquet toss
ing and nfter the crowd had dispersed
and the public officials had adjourned
to tho Hotel Plaza for a luncheon tho
Bradley Contracting company started
to tear up Lexington nvenue In twenty
different places.
Tho exorcises began when Chief En
gineer Craven handed Frank Bradley,
the contractor, his permit to begin
work nnd sold:
"You have been awarded contracts
for three sections of the Lexington
avenue route and these, with your1
work on the original subway. Center
street loop, nnd the Fourth avenue
subway In Brooklyn, represent work
aggregating In construction value
about $31,000,000."
FAVORS THE COMMUTERS.
New Jersey Patrons of Pennsylvania
to Save $2 a Month.
Washington, Aug. 1. The Interstate
commerce commission has granted re
lief to New Jersey commuters living
along the Pennsylvania railroad. It
ordered that company to reduce its
rate from New York to New Bruns
wick from $12 to $10 for a monthly
ticket and to file proportionate commu
tation rates from New York to other
New Jersey points.
The new commutation rate3 on the
Central of New Jersey and the Lehigh
Valley are found to be reasonable, and
those put into effect by the Erie, Dci-
aware, Lackawanna and Western and
the West Shore are also declnred on
the whole not to be excessive except
In a few particular cases. The Erie's
commutation rates to points thirty
three miles or more distant from New
York city are held to be unreasonable,
as are nlso tho commutation fares
charged by tho Lackawnnna and the
West Shore to points toward the lim
its of the suburban zones.
The commission, , however, enters
no orders in regard to these latter
rates, but suggests that the defendants
will at once revise their schedules so
ns to bring them Inside reasonable
limit. The commission finds that the
new fifty trip tickets of the Erie, Lack
awnnnn and West Shore are higher
than they should be, and in this caso
also the commission instructs the rail
roads promptly to take these fares un
der advisement and to suggest reduc
tions in keeping with the commission's
findings.
The commission's decision in regard
to the commutation rates on the New
York Central and the New York, New
Haven and Hartford is deferred pend
ing an investigation which is now be
ing conducted into tho subject by the
New York state public service commis
sion. Trolley Car Hlta Wagon.
Holllston, Mass., Aug. L Seventeen
persons were injured, two fatally, in
a collision between an electric car on
the Mllford and Uxbridge street rail
way and a, wagon.
Market Reports.
BUTTER Firm j receipts, 6,654 pack
ages; creamery, specials, per lbM 27c; ex
tras, too.; thirds to firsts,' lSttaS4c. state
dairy, common to prime, 18Ha25c.; process,
seconds to specials, lSftEc; factory, cur
rent make, 18a20o.; packliig stock, ISalSo.
CHEEBE. Firmer; reoelpte. 674 boxes;
state, wholo. milk, specials, colored, HHc;
white, iniaj fanoy. white, Ulialic.: lan
oy, colored, UKalzc.; undergrade!, tfca
UV4c; dairies, best, lSUc; state, part
skims. 4a8c; hard skims, lMaSe.
EGOS Easier; reoelpta, 11,781 cases;
fresh gathered extras, SlaUo.; extra firsts,
lSaSOo.; firsts, 17alSa; seconds, Uaiec.
POTATOES Firm; Long Island, No. 1,
per bbl., $l!Bo8.; Jersey, pear bbt., No. 1,
tS.2tSa3.C0; per bag, No. 1. JteJ.GO; Dela
ware and Maryland, No. 1, per bbl., (3a
3. C0( southern. No. 1, XtBOat.BO; seconds,
U.2Saz; culls, 76c.aH.
HAT AND. STRAW Steady.
LIVE VEAL CALVES Common to
choice, per 100 lbs., Sa8; onus, 0t.M;
lire buttermilk and grass calves, tl.S0a
4. M.
IK
Parent fe;3ny to Goii
bine as ftfomifacturers.
WILL DISSOLVfc AS A TRUST.
Stock of Thirty-three Subsidiary Com
panies to Be Given Holders of
Standard of New Jersey Certifi
cates To Continue Business.
New York, Aug. 1. Stockholders in
the Standard Oil Company of New
Jersey will receive today from the sec
retary of the corporation a letter
which indicates the plan by which the
company will conform Itself to thv
decree of the supreme court. They nre
Informed that by Dec. 1 next they
will have certificates of stock in thirty
three corporations which at the time
of the decision were owned by tho
Standard Oil company.
This does not wean, so M. F. Elliott,
chief counsel for the Standard Oil
company, points out, that tho Stand
ard Oil Company of New Jersey will
go out of business on Dec. 1. It "will
continue as a manufacturer of petro
leum products, and it will continue to
run the biggest oil refineries in the
world.
Besides the stock which the Standard
of New Jersey owns In tho thirty-three
corporations, of which it is ordered to
rid Itself, it held shares in many other
corporations.
What will become of this stock Mr.
Elliott refuses to say. There appears
to be nothing In the supremo court
decree or in that of tho lower court,
however, which prevents the Standard
of New Jersey from maintaining own
ership, Mr. Elliott says.
The scheme by which the Standard
will dissolve connection with the
thirty-three companies, which have
been regarded as subsidiaries, has
been under consideration by the di
rectors for many months. It was said
at 2G Broadway that to apportion the
slock among the stockholders in the
major corporation was the only way
of meeting tho letter of tho supremo
court's decrep. Mr. Elliott ndded that
Jhe company proposes not only to meet
the letter, of the order, but the spirit
nlso.
"I nm not prepared to say," remark
ed Mr. Elliott, "what is to become of
the stocks owned by the Standard Oil
company in corporations .other than
.those indicated In the decree of the
court. But you may believe that the
Standard Oil company Is not propos
es to go out of business. Indeed,
there is nothing in the decree of tl'
court which obliges it to do so. Its
stock will not have the value that It
(ins at present, of course, because the
cpmpnny will hnve given up its stocl:
ownership In at least thirty-three cor
pornrlons, bnt the Standard of New
Jersey will be very much alive never
theless'
Tho accountants will have some in
trlcate work to do in figuring out the
fractional shares in tho minor corpo
ration which the stockholders In the
present Standard Oil Company of New
Jersey will .have when the dissolution
Is completed! Tho basis of figurlnj:
must necessarily be on n single share
of Standard ''Oil of New Jersey stock.
Of the 6,000 shareholders there nre
many who own small lots ranging
from a single share to ten or a dozen
Of the total capitalization of rite
Standard Oil Company of New Jersey
there Is outstanding $08,333,300. Ac
cording to recently published figure
more than half of this is held by
twelve persons or estates. John D
Rockefeller's holdings amount to 247.
G02 shares. The estate of Charles
Pratt comes next with 02,802 shares.
C. W. Harkness has 42,400 shares; Col
onel Oliver H. Payne, 40,000; lienry
M. Flagler, 80,B00; Henry H. Rogers.
10,200; W. L. Harkness, 13,000; the
estate of H. H. Houston, 11,775; Wll
Ham Rockefeller, 11,700; L. H. Sever
ance, 7,244; V. E. Macy, 7,800, and tho
estate of John Huntington, 0,500.
This is a total of 601,213 out of n to
tal authorized issue of 1.000.000 shares.
STAND BY HOUSE BILL.
8enate Minority Supports Farmers'
Free List Bill.
Washington, Aug. 1. The Democrat,
of the senato in caucus decided to
stand for the farmers' free list bill as
It came from the house without amend
ment. In the event of the bill belnt
defeated a motion will be made to
reconsider It, nnd Senator Kern of
.Indiana will introduce an amendment
providing .that meat and flour shall be
admitted free from any country which
in turn admits free from duty wheat.
corn, oats, hay, cotton and hogs.
The effect of this amendment would
be to admit meat and flour free from
Canada and thus meet the most seri
ous objection made to the Canndlnu
reciprocity legislation.
POPE IS EEP0ETED .WEAK.
Condition of Pontiff Causing Anxiety,
Rome' Hears.
Rome, Aug. 1. The pope is reported
very weak. He has bad falnjing spells,
but rallied quickly. It is the extreme
weakness of his holiness that is caus
lag anxiety.
Professor Marcblafava, the special
ist, is attending the pontiff.
Weather Probabilities.
Fair today; , Wednesday, showers:
light variable winds, mostly southerly.
SlANiiARO
ClPIHECIiS.
Members of Parliament Ao
tive In Canada.
RECIPROCITY IS THE ISSUE.
Both the Government and Opposition
Leaders Hold Dally Conferences
With Aids From All Parts of
the Dominion.
Ottawa, Ont., Aug. 1. Tho Cnnndlan
reciprocity cnmpalgn has boon opened
In many parts of the country by mem
bers of parliament
Tho two party leaders, however, will
not start on their speaking tours until
next week.
Daily conferences between the lead
ers and their provincial campaign
managers are scheduled. Robert Rog
ers, who will conduct the fight against
reciprocity in Manitoba, is hero for a
conference with Opposition Loader
Borden.
R. C. Hendors nnd Robert Macken
zie president and secretary of tho
western grain growers, came in from
tho west to give their advice and co
operation to tho government.
In furthor explanation of the gov
ernment position In dissolving parlia
ment ono of tho Dominion ministers
said:
"If reciprocity had been forced
through at this time it would have
been put in Jeopardy within a year, as
by nw a general election would have
had to come after another session.
"By bringing tho election on now we
expect to bo able to mako reciprocity
tho solo Issuo. If tho election were
deferred for a year and reciprocity put
through the chances nre that it then
will bo only ono of tho issues.
"Tho Liberal government might be
turnod out on some other question, and
tho Incoming Conservative government
would undoubtedly put through an act
repealing reciprocity.
"If tho government Is sustnlned in
September It means that tho people
wnnt reciprocity, that it will be rati
fied nnd thnt its opponents will not got
another chance nt it for at least four
years."
TURNS ON PE0SE0UT0ES.
Qoorgo Brown, Phllosophlo Anarchist,
Causes Arrest of Single Taxsrs.
Philadelphia, Aug. 1. George Brown,
tho philosophic anarchist, who served
flvo days in Jail last week for break
ing up a meeting at tho single tax col
ony, Arden, Del., is having his Inning.
Ho swore out warrants for the arrest
of eleven of his prosecutors. Chief
nmong tho number is Upton Sinclair,
nuthor of "The Jungle," prominent
resident of tho colony of'Henry George
followers. Sinclair and ton of his as
sociates aro charged with violating tho
Sunday blue laws. Tho author is ac
cused of playing tennis, nine of tho
others took part in a ball game nnd
one man Is charged with selling Ice
cream.
The warrants were Issued by Magis
trate Morrison, bofore whom Brown
himself appeared a week ago and was
fined the $2. that he refused to pay.
All of tho accused were allowed to go
on their own recognizance for a hear
ing tonight Tho flno for Sunday vio
lations in Dolawaro is $4, or doublo
tho flno imposed upon Brown.
MORE WIRE MEN PAT FINES.
Government Has Now Reoelved Total
of $71,400 From Trust Officials.
New York', Aug. 1. Thirteen more
of tho Indicted wire tniBt officials en
tered pleas of nolo contendere in the
United States circuit court nnd were
flnod $1,000 each. Those indicted on
extra counts were fined an extra $100,
Commissioner Shields received from
these thirteen men 95,000 in fines,
which brings tho total payments to
date up to $71,400. Of a total of
elghty-threo indicted, sixty-two have
now pleaded nolo contendere. Judge
Archlbatd will sit again on Friday to
recelvo more pleas. Horbort L. Snt
terlce, it Is understood, will thon ap
pear nnd plead.
CHOLERA BEYOND C0NTE0L.
Plague Situation Beyond Majority of
European Health Boards.
London, Aug. 1. There seems to be
a complete state of demoralization
among the European health boards so
far as the cholera situation is con
cerned. As an example tho health
bureau of Trlesto roported no new
cases and fit tho same time tho im
perial sanitary commission at Vienna
reports nine now cases of cholera
thore.
The heat and scarcity of water, to
gether with the lack of dlsclpllna
among the French health officers on
the frontier, add greatly to the diffi
culty of coping with the sltuntlon.
8tlmson to Visit Cuba.
Ban Juan, Aug. 1. Henry L. Stlm
ton, the American secretary of war,
and his party sailed today by the
North Carolina for Banto Domingo,
from whence they will proceed' to
Cuba.
Relief For Albanians.
Washington, Aug. L The American
Red Cross has cabled $1000 to Monte
negro far the relief of Albanian refu
gees and wounded.
BETHANY.
Special to The Citizen.)
BETHANY, Pa., August 1. Mrs.
Fred Lohman, Honesdale, is spend
ing some time with her dauehter.
Mrs. John Ballou.
Alice Ward is visiting relatives at
Beachlake.
Mrs. E. O. Moorehouse and Atlas
Addle Jennings, Prompton, spent
Thursday with friends here.
Miss Edna Lavo snent last week
with her sister, Mrs. Homer Ballou.
Clarion Hauser visited relatives in
Honesdale last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Judson Noble re
turned from Fallsdale on Friday and
spent Sunday here.
Bertha Evans and friend. Hones
dale, visited at the homes of John
Smith and Ernest Bodlo last week.
Mr. nnd Mrs. W. O. Avery and
children spent Sunday at Pleasant
IMount.
Mrs. Amos Ward was taken sud-"-"lv
111 during the week.
Edward Woodward, New York,
camo last week and onenetl his
house. He expects his family dur
ing tne weeK.
Mr. and Mrs. Colt. Miners Mills.
are visiting 'Mr. and Mrs. J. B.
Faatz.
Airs. Horace Noyes and baby, of
Honesdale, spent Sunday at the
Starnes home.
HAMLIN.
Special to The Citizen.
HAMLIN, Pa August 1. The
haying season Is about over and a
fair crop reported.
The L. T. L. will hold an Ice cream
social on Saturday evening, July 29.
a loau ot young ladles chaperoned
by Mrs. Sallnda Jones, attended the
picnic at Mooslc Lake, July 24.
Mrs. O. G. Russell has returned
from an extended visit with her
daughter, Mrs. Corey, of Herrlck
Centre, and with her mother at
Windsor, N. Y.
Miss D. P. Hamlin Is entertaining
her niece, Mrs. H. B. Clearwater, of
New York City.
A. M. Simons nnd a party from
Scranton are occupying Lazy Acre
cottage ror two weeks.
Dr. O. J. Mullen has as his guest
a college mate, Mr. Hazard, of Phil
adelphia. Mr. Scheen, the Episcopal minister,
preached at Zlon on Sunday last.
E. Polley and Eugene Chapman are
harvesting the hay on Earl Williams'
farm.
Dr. and Mrs. W. A. Stevens spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Chapman.
Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Stocker, Miss
Mae Walker and their guests, Mrs.
Bell and Miss Lucy Bell, Hartford,
Conn., picnicked at BIdwell Pond on
Monday.
Miss Edna Chumard, who has been
ill, Is Improving.
Rev. Robert Bllckendorfer, rector
of St. David's church, Scranton, was
the guest of Miss ,M. A. Hodgson the
first of the week.
Born, to Mr. and 'Mrs. Fred Ed
wards, on July 23, n son.
CANDIDATE For PR OTJIOIi OTAIt Y
To the Republicans of Wayne
County:
Pursuant to the requests of my
many friends in the county and the
general understanding three years
ago that I should again offer myself
as a candidate for the nomination
for Prothonotary at the coming pri
maries, September 30, I would state
that after a short start by way of an
education In the public schools of
Wayne county, I completed a course
at the A. M. Chlsbro Seminary in
Monroe county, New York. My post
graduate course was about thirty
years In the school of hard knocks
as a farmer and lumberman in
Wayne county. Have mot many peo
ple In the varied relations of a busi
ness man and this long experience
has enabled me to meet many whom
I esteem as my friends and gain at
least enough knowledge to appreci
ate the needs and requirements of
my fellowman.
My aim has steadily been to deal
honestly, frankly and fairly with
all and to dearly cherish all of our
country's institutions, and to en
courage and assist every true effort
to maintain and advance them. I
Invite tho fullest investigation of my
record and with pleasure refer you
to the expression given at the polls
by my home district three years ago
as indicative of the feelings of those
who know me best. Although al
ways a resident and largo taxpayer
in Wayne county, I never asked for
office except on the aforo mentioned
occasion when I was defeated by M. J
Hanlan who, though opposed to me,
never, to my knowledge, said or did
anything detrimental to me. I
therefore earnestly request your
support and promise If nominated
and elected to faithfully perform the
duties of the office to the very beat
of my Judgment and ability and in
all things observe the spirit of the
Golden Rule. '
.' Faithfully yours,
, WALLACE J. BARNES.
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