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The Daily Deadwood Pioneer-Times from Deadwood, South Dakota • Page 2

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Deadwood, South Dakota
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2
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TUESDAY, OCiOBER 1 HE DAILY TIOKEEH-TIMES, DEAD WOOD, B. D. 1906. an's fallacies or MINII i ed out the inconsistency an A80, of the democratic leader! on question and tore the imperii militarism bogy man Aside from being a fluent IN THE FIELD OF POLITICS. BE DEADW00D PIONEER ESTABLISHED JUNE 1874.

IHE BLACK HILLS TIMES ESTABLISHED APRIL 7, 1877. CONSOLIDATED MAY 13. 1897. IIIHtl(lllillllllHHItHtriMtl Modern Woodmen' of America Is a fraternal insurance order. Men Join it because of tbe fraternal benefits and that at their death beneficiaries may receive tbe pecuniary considerations stipulated in their policies.

They do not join it to be led around and told how tbey shall exercise their prerogatives as American citizens, and any member of the order who will endeavor to drag it into politics should forfeit bis standing. stumper, Mr. Martin i8 cuiiarly pleasing addrc pie who had the pleasure ofTH him are loud in bil Bra? PIONEER-TIMES PUBLISHING CO. make for South gressman. model i majority in the state at 7000 to 10,009.

It was bis first visit to Madison, and he made many friends in his speech last evening. Bridgewater Tribune: About 60 voters listened to a discussion of the political issues by Hon. B. W. Martin, republican candidate for congress, at Salem on Tuesday.

Martin puts up arguments that cannot be answered by the opposition. He iseasy of address, eloquent and makes votes for himself and the cause. Highmore Bulletin: Hon. E. W.

Martin spoke in tbe court room Wednesday evening to a fair-sized audience, the attendance being considerably lessened by a heavy raitn just before the hour of meeting. Mr. Martin's address was forceful, convincing and entertaining. He touched up Bry. SOME ROOSEVELT GEMS.

"We stand on the gold standard, and we stand on it on the Atlantic seaboard and in the Rocky mountains, anywhere. We are fortunate in having issues that don't wear thin in any part of the country." then hundreds of our foremost' orators, and of nearly ail shades of opinion, but for forcefnl logic, clear diction and tbe art of stating things plainly and comrpehensirely, have nnei since heard equaled or approached. A word of J. liryan. The writer heard buu speak four different times.

Physically he is fine specimen oi manhood With the most magnificent mouth it has ever been my fortune iii listen to- will say that in one Yankton Special the Black Hills TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: DAILY Every Morning. Except Mooday. One 10 .00 Bis Months 6.00 Oo Month I Wt WEEKLY Issued Every Thursday: One Year 2 00 Six Months 1 "0 Entered as Second-Class Matter at the Dead wood Postofflce. for gress on the remihli.an Senator Pettigrew's recent trip to the Hills seems to have been something of a boomerang. The candidates for office on the fusion tickets of the several Black Hills counties liave a pretty strong belief that they are to be trader! off me legislative ticket iicner Rn, to a packed house at Turner hall and his speech was well His audience was made upof reDr tative citizens, who sav( "I don't wonder that when a man feels sick and doeen't know what is the matter with him and ryinot find out, that he shoiiiu try quack medicines, but if he tries it again I question his "Common, sense, courage, honest these are the qualities needed In nation and no nation can eee.l limit them any more than the pmaie closest attention f.

ft half i have heard, that more sophistry than 1 I to from Abe Lincoln to We are the hick of a and from now hour mou ha ISiih ing his remarks. ami I ellll' II -tell. I i i an i. nti.il I I I and Andy Lee an senator passed the word to the faiuul that then- is no possible hope for the State tiiket, and Joe Moore, mat. everything he saelillceil in effort to sae the I legislature and Lee.

Xo sooner bad I ell (if eei I lllil. l'ep! i un. ic concert pM. sin es that is really worth hie "The legislation lilliot u. the fall MAXTi tiie tip been given ihjin bets irig offered on Lee and the m.

ti Hay, Grain, Chop be ho put HIN I. i if. money hav. li a hiim li. SFeed, Flour, P-, STAGE JOTTINGS.

success save to those v. bo hiim that bad legislation can -olufely impossible for Me i' -r to prod ii, any resu 1 1 old Noah, the pat i i h.i dieted drouth instead of a floo. a system instead of building an ai i more thoroughly l.sap oil his relatives than lias I i flim flammed his support. i I the country." PRETENDER. udge lie prom-i lids, when they he would at once THE MAN AND lie; Springs Star .1 pop ih: in n.

1 1 him. liia jgWood aw Coal. $PM prevalent tone of the draniatii ventures of the season is quite at a liaine with that of the preceding season: the prevailing color of last winters productions was a bit murky, also sensational tho eminently dramatic. From the plays that have appeared this fall, as well as 'he judgeship. Me has not leic 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 of the kind, and prob-lM never intended to.

Vet the has been interpreted by this anie to say that a circuit judge rX vvny If-il Suou'd ou ko Dead- 1 isTlot eligible to an elective office. "In republican times the American labor is to get I democratic times the prol American labor has to so to hold oil the niiseranle I 1 fl rjr Or I.M,1 II Moore's record for keeping his won proiib mi mori li letn 1 1 I 1 is how nmaiiT oi future oi from the forecasts of coming events, one judges that, aside from Shakes-perian production, the drama that this winter offers will 1( largely a rehash of last season's popuTar novels, anil hence not filled with real dramatic power. So far. there have appeared dramatizations of Richard Carvel, Ca- lei. West and the Battle of the Strong.

1 while visions of Janice Meredith. 1 is way below par in the northern Hills, and Moore is adding to that kind of a record every day. i W. Maitia has been doing excellent work for republicanism in the i astern part of the state, and has made himself strong and popular with what it has left "1 believe that the whol" society is wrapped up in of organized labor in shor'i hours of toil, that a mot. 5 in Con'Ial for less money, Aly exPens09 lislit and m'j usstomers reap the licnefleL F'Kr IONLASK TxiaJ- Ordei im'Cif'iiiiii Miry TfxmrmrmwmMmmm -mn-g Sll.

I nin' the ti'lliTllllS THE LABORING FRIEND. The affidavits of Peter Temperino and Gio Virenzo. as published in the Pioneer-Times, shows that Joseph It, Moore, fusion candidate for Congress, is indebted to the miners in the following amounts Kir work done on the Almeda mine in -Name. Days. Amt.

Peter Temperino 21 73.50 Oio Ferdinande 64 234.00 Gio Gaspero 67 234.00 F. Marchiando 103.25 Gio Verenzo 28 2 99.75 the people. lie will return to tl His next Monday and begin a cam paign in these counties. Mr. Martin is certain to be one ot the lngli vote getter i on tne ticr.et, hecam ol lii.i FIRST NATIONAL BANK own ability and personal character.

When Knighthood was in Flower and 1 other works of fiction will shortly; malfe their metropolitan appearances. I The result is a perceptible deterioration in tne art of the drama, for those qualities that make a successful novel do not always do as much for a drama. Richard Carvel was an emi'ient- ly popular novel, but as a play it is in- I nd on the other hand because of the leisure may be given to mankind for intellectual and moral culture." "Let nie tell von that it is more important for you to have food for your family, shoes and stockinys for your children, books for thefr schooling and a winter overcoat for yourself than it is for Senor Aguinaldo to have the immediate benefits of the writ of habeas corpus." "The only army that this country has to fear is Coxey's army, a strictly populist institution." 1, A POLITICAL AND PERSONAL RE- unpatrio! ii stall meats of his oppo- DEAD WOOD, SOUTH DAKOTA. nenl. coherent, wordy and lacks savor.

Ca United States Depository DIRECTORS: 0. J. SALISBURY. T. J.

GRIKR, K. SPARKS P. Ol'SHUROT. d. a.

Mcpherson. i OFFICERS: I President O.J. SALISBURY I Caabler D. A. UcPUtm Tf Annlt CanhiAr J.

8. DENMAN It would make most men sit at heart to be a candidate for Congress and asking the laboring men for their votes ajld then have a number of la boring men make affidavit that they had been hireij by that candidate for had been hired by that candidate for Congress to work in mines and never received their pay therefor. That is the way Joe Moore is running up against things. And still he goes about trying to convince laboring men that his E. W.

Martin, Is not entitled to their support, and that he (Joe Moore) is, Mr. Martin has always proven himself a friend to the laborer, and a friend to anyone who deserves friends. He always pays the highest wages and he doesn't beat men out of their wages either. iv Vlee-Preldent T. J.

OR1KK leb West, as a play, can never hope to equal its reputation as a novel, and it is safe to say that When Knighthood Was in Flower will be the only thoroly satisfactory and dramaticc adaptation. It Is a relief, however, to metropolitan theatre goers to note an absence of the dingy French farces that contaminated so many of the. theatres last winter. Only one, The Husbands of Leontine, has been presented, and thai is practically inocu-ous, compared with its predecessor. Among Shakespearean re vivals, one Is glad to note Hamlet as presented by E.

H. Sothern and Virginia Har-ned, and a very elaborate presentation by Mansfield of Henry V. While critics differ as to tbe value of Mr. Soth-ern's charater interpretation, thev all agree in commending his venture and In congratulating him for his able and exemplary effort along classic lines. The stage-settings, the costuming and the support, in both companies is GEO.

AYERS CO, Successors to Ayres Wardman Hardware Company. TROSPECT. Late in the year '57 a chunk of a boy landed in the middle of a large cornfield near Cnampaign, Illinois. His money and car-fare gave out together. But, as ne was always willing to work, he soon had a corn-knife in hand and in an awkward way was cutting into the giant staple of Illinois.

Thereafter for nearly four years he did as the young men oi that day worked at anything that came to hand, and for what would now be called a meagre pittance, 50c a day, by the month. (Sundays out,) though the work was just as hard. Please bear in mind this was in good democratic money, not even "one to sixteen." We called it state bank money, but the proper name was wild cat, when every merchant or man carried his list or detector, and compared it in the norning with ms bills to see how much it had depreciated over night. And with all the glamor, cast around it, that is just what 16 to 1 means. The working man along with the merchant and all others pays for what he gets on a gold basis, let the currency he makes the payment in be what it may.

It was so in '57; the same In el 'C3. So much for state banking under democratic administration. Still, small as the pay was, win ever complained, and when we could make a dollar a day thought we were dofng finely, even when working 12 and 11 hours, for a year or two it was an Klyseum, but soon was heard lotal $734.50 These mineta.took out. ore which was shipped to the Spearfish Cyanide mill and, paid for in tash before the ore was all delivered. As a matter of fact Moore drew $200 more than the value of the ore which he refuses tore-fund.

Notwithstanding all this he continues to tell the men that he has not been paid for tne ore. Here is another sample of his great love for the laboring man. On September 15, referlng to a joint meeting of the labor unions to discuss needed legislation, he said in 'the Lead Call of that date; "The joint meeting of the union wag called for the purpose of deciding the dimensions of the growler." ANOTHER FRIEND OF LABOR. B. H.

Lien, the fusion candidate for governor, will probably give the Hills a wide berth during the campaign, as his coming here will lead to some unpleasantness, unless he comes prepared to settle in full with a number of miners who have been waiting four years for pay due for work done on the Cuttysark of which Lien was the principle owner and promoter. Last week Ben Simonson received from Lien a part of the wages due him, which was an acknowledgment of the debt Lien is a rich man, able to pay labor bills Instend of beating them, RIDING THE FRATERNITY. Jerry S. Green, of Davenport, Iowa, who was In the Black Hills a few weeks ago, delivering lectures on Woodcraft, was paving the way for a political tour of tue Hills. It transpires that he was using his office as lecturer for the Modem Woodmen of America to open a channel for him to ring in a few ryan 'speeches, in dirtfet violation of the laws of the order, and is now going over the same trail, making the mnke3t Kind of populist speeches, hoping thereby to get the ears of men who would otherwise take no stock in him.

The fact Is that Green is a pretty common class man to taxe stock, in iimnttttiMiriiHiirirtti THE CROWN OF THORNS. Tbe New York Herald, under the date of October 1, gives a table of the probable presidential vote which foots up as fqflows: McKinley 258 Bryan 168 Doubtful 21 It predicts Idaho. Indiana and Montana in the list of doubtful states; gives Maryland and Kentucky to Bryan; California, the Dakotas, West Virginia and Kansas to McKinley. The Herald can never be accused of favoring the republican party, and It probably has better means than any other paper in the country by which, to obtain a forecast of the results, so that the above can be taken a fair prognoscis of the situation as it exists today thruout the country. The people in the east are apathetic because tney are too lirisklv engaged in seizing the business oppor Hardware and Mining Jean Cowgill, well known to all Black Hillers, Is at present playing leads thru the Atlantic states with the Aubrey Stock company.

The company, said to be an unusually able one, is presenting "We Uns of Tennessee," "The Red, White and Blue," and others. Sanford Dodge is organizing a new company and will tour the west, presenting "The Two Musketeers," and "The Count of Monte Christo," "Quo Vadis," and "The Merchant of Venice." Mr. Dodge was married last month to Miss Leslie, who was in his company when tney played in Dead wow last spring, John Dillon, the delightful comedian who has played sq often in the Hills, Is now playing the part of Joel Whit-beck, in "The Dairy Farm," which is running at present in St. Paul. Mr.

itiiiiitisiurfMiiiftiiiui the growls of the coming eartnejuake. tunities to waste anv time in vain HVXfxim Sit. Deadwoocl Now conies the period of the real American expansion. April, the war came. People, both North and South went war-mad and the cause was at hand slavery trying to expand." By August, '61, we be Otnn Thinl Leans'8 any.

way. He ia coming into tbe! Dillon, who Is an old-time comedian, gan to know what it meant in earnest. Tens of thousands, like the writer, left the crops unharvested; other tens of thousands left their work unfinish wnt nlnrf evnn rnn nnf fiAO rrnni tno gyjmjp mum political discussions. Their minds are made up and with every factory and machine shop in full blast and every snip yard overcrowded with orders, tney do not even recognize the echp of the calamity howl which tho democrats are so loudly vaunting but they are sawing wood and getting ready to take all possible advantage of the prosperity which is ready for us. What is th? uses of sitting down and trying to borrow trouble because the late Col.

Bryan wants to be president of, these United States; do we have to endorse opinions and believe in his ideas; do we have to give TO YOU. -j 4 press. ALL OUR Miss Mattie Cho; who played it ftflMMPD HOODS 2 ed in shops anckfactories, and to war we went. The writer and fifty neigh-bors went into 'the Thirty-seventh Illinois and a proud, high-steppTn'g' body of mem that regiment was. Of-cered by as gallant a set of officers as ever drew breath or sword.

As an Deadwodd and tne other Hills towns with the Bittner 'ineatre company, is playing leads In the east with the 'Wil Ail ILwiy V-a Snow and Heron Stock company. This company played the first week In Ginghams. Dimities and Percalss Si THOSE THAT FORMERLY SOLD FOR instance we were called to strike caurp" September In New York City. The up all our faith in the integrity of our man at me wheel because this man from Nebraska who has some dramatic papers contain many com mendatory notices of Mylss Choate's 25c NOW GOtf We hve a nice new line ofMunlin Underwear which WA 1 U. tf.lllnn Mas 35c.

NOW GO AT 1 I fame as a speaker, but none whatever as a statesman tell us that the gov wora after midnight, were on the road before dawn, marched 110 miles in three days and rushed into one of the most fiercely contested battles of the war. Did we expand? V.ell, should say We did all over eleven southern states and as the constitution those days i Or Brgln. A beanttful line ol I lQC. bed tpreadi. laee curtains, IJJsl ernment of Washington is dragging Black Hills with nothing to recommend him save tnat he belongs to the Modern Woodmen of AmtricaL The notorious fact that all flocks have black sheep, and all herds outlaws, should be borne in mind and members of the Modern Woodmen would better remember that Jerry S.

Green, la speaking of them as a politician, is violating one of the fundamental principles of Woodcraft, and is therefore entitled to less consideration than the stranger who comes into their midst; the stranger may be honest and inclined to conform to their laws and usages he has sworn to up-bold, and should be given the benefit of the doubt, w.ie Green has proven himself a gross transgressor. He Is taking Into pontes an order that promises every candidate for admission that the obligations he Is about to undertake contain nothing to Interfere with his religious or political beliefs. The by laws of the order provide that shall not become an instrument to furtner the cause of any political party or candidates; that its members shall be at perfect liberty' to worship God In their own way and Among last season successes this nation down to destruction, and They all fo at atacilfice. ic com a erg and get In on the GROUND 3 THE LADIES that he, the said late colonel, has aris en up like a second Lincoln to throw still making good headway, are "Bar bara Ftietchie" at the World in which Mrs. Le Moyne stars; Pride of with Hackett jn the Jeadi a guardian arm around our liberties with the copperheads of the Adlai Stevenson type was the paramount issue, we expanded so.

fast that the constitution had a hard time catching Oh) when we hear late colonel daring to tamper with, to usurp the "The Lady of Quality," with Eugenie Blair In the title1 role, and "The Only Way." Henry killer, who played the Did it ever strike you up with us. Expansion did. I-Bay, even tne south expanded as never, before. Even thru that bitter agony memory of our glorious dead, tell him not to add his crown of thorns to the cross which recalls the, trials sufferings of our mighty dead, one of lead In the last named play has been obliged, on account ot his health to they were touched by the magician's THAT wand oi progress until the sons and take a rest His place is filled by E. J.

Morgan. daughters of the men and, women of whose chief crosses was the bitterness with which he was' assaulted by this same 'democratic p'arty which the Good Liauor is a Goo; Sti those, davs have exnanded until the VTola'Allan. In "The Palace of the late Colonel Bryan the leader. width of the continent Is. too small to hold tnem.

Great Is a nation King," another dramatization of a popular novel by Marion Crawford. of 75.000,000 people and such people to be forever chained to the brake- INDORSED EVERYWHERE. Madison Sentinel: Hon. E. W.

Mar While Poop Liquor is a For Pure Old California Sherry, Angelica, Port, or Mus COME TO US. beams of an unpatriotic, unprogres- tin took the 10:40 passenger at Flan-dreu, where he speaks today. Mr. Blve, demo-populistic-unsound-money-negro-shooting faction of the American people? If so, a good many of us wartta'droye, from Salem after" four 1.50 PER CALLON 60cPER o'clock last evening, arriving barely to vote for whom they choose, without any restraint and free from all Influence one way or the This writer is a member of the order and knows "what he is speaking of. Such practice on the part of an officer representing the supreme camp la an outrage on ai.

order whose purpose in the world Is th- exercise of the principles of charity, hope and fraternity not to see that some political -v mt boosted into office. The 'opened what promises to be a successful season. Clara Thropp is playing in stock In Texas, and Walter Green 'who supported her during her financially disastrous Ibsen tour, Has a part in "Secret Service." James A Heme's new pastoral play. Sag Harbor," bids fair to be one of the greatest successes of the season. have lived In vain, which I don't be In time for the meeting at fh Opera Or for fine Old Whiskey and Brandy atV-l an lieve.

In the fall of 5 the writer houses He as spoken in a majority had the exquisite pleasure of listening of the counties east of the river dur FAMILY LIQUJR STORE fl ase beer delir ered free residence'- 6.35 Ma1? ing the past five weeks, and he finds to a speech of Abraham Lincoln delivered in the largest hall at Bloom- the' republican sentiment growing ev Ington, 111. 1 have heard since erywhere. He the republican.

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About The Daily Deadwood Pioneer-Times Archive

Pages Available:
89,243
Years Available:
1877-1928