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The Globe-Republican,
Official City and County Paper.
1 I I I 1 I I I 1 I I I
Catered at the rostoffice at Dodge City
Kansas, for transmission through the mails
m -second-class matter.
Osb Dollab x Tkak, f Payible i l ldvance.)
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each subsequent insertion.
ED1TOB AMD PUBL1SUKU.
THURSDAY, SEPT. 29. 1898.
BErUBLlfASI STATE TICKET.
"For Governor W. E. STANLEY
For Associate Justice W. K SMITH
Tor Lieut. Governor H. E.KICUTER
Tor Secretary of State.. ..GEOKGE A. CLANK
1'or Auditor of State GEORGE E. COLE
J-'or State Treasurer, . . FRANK E. GRIMES
For Attorney General A. A. GODARD
1'orSupt. of Public Instruction
FRANK NELSON
CONGRESSIONAL. TICKET.
" Tor Congress, at Large W. J. BAILEY
JTor Congress, 7th Dist.... CHESTER I. LONG
COUNTY TICKET.
Tor Representative C. M. BEESON.
For District Clerk LLOYD S. EVANS.
TorCouuty Attorney (unexpired term)....
W. W.JACKSON.
For County Attorney (full term)
W. W. JACKSON.
For probate Ju:lge J. L. FIX LEY.
For County Superintendent.. CU AS. E. LOPP.
For Surveyor (unexpired lerui)
T. L. DELLINGER.
For County Commissioner, 3d District (un
expired term) NIC MAYRATH.
TorCouuty Commissioner, 3d Dlsti let (full
term NIC MAYRATH
Tf you wish to continue good times
xntinue the Republican party in
4ower, and the way to do that is to
vote the Republican ticket straight,
- from top to bottom.
The Democratic Boston Globe, af
ter filling its columns with lying re
ports of the neglect and starvation of
the soldiers, asks, "How many men
"would respond if President Mclviuley
should call now for 100,000 volun
1eers?" "Well, we answer, at least
iive bundled thousand, for the patri
otic people of this country take no
utock in the rot being printed in the
mugwump aud Democratic papers.
"When Americans are in full con
trol in Porto Rico, Cuba, and the
Philippines, and in Hawaii, free
-schools will be established, good
.roads will be built, and the taxes will
-be reduced to less than half what
"they now are in those countries, and
the taxes collected in Porto Rico,
"Cuba, the Philippines and Hawaii,
" will pay all the expenses incurred by
the'TJnited States in those countries,
and the taxes imposed by the United
States will be less than half of what
collected by Spain.
Whenever they are permitted to
do so the Democrats are dodging
-national questions this year and
""talking about local issue?. This is
significant. It foreshadows defeat.
A party which, iu a congressional
'year, is afraid of national questions
confesses that its chauces are hope
lass. Altgeld, Stone aud all the
other Democratic orators in the west
show a suspicious shyness of national
questions. Their conduct this year
is strangely different 'from what it
' "was in 1896. This fear can not help
-"being demoralizing to the Democra
tic masses. It shows that the Demo
cratic leaders look for another defeat
A stubborn cough or tickling in the
-throat yields to One Minute Cough Cure.
Harmless in effect, touches the right
pet, reliable and just what it wanted.
It acts at once. The Palace Drug Co.
OATOniA.
,fb ?TtoMYMKmAtamivtt
60
&&c
Jerrv SimDson said that McKinley
was a tool of Mark Hanna, and that
Hanna would never allow a war with
Spain. Is it possible that Republi
cans in this district are going to re
elect this man Simpson because they
have a spite at Chester L Long? We
hope their good judgment will rescue
them before they make so fatal a
mistake.
Gen. Shafter remarks that with
no more than 13,000 men on the
fighting line he captured 27,000 pris
oners. Neverthless Mugwumps and
Democratic newspapers pronounce
Shafter a failure and his campaign
an awful example of neglect and in
competency. But Shafter's cam
paign will go into history as one of
the most brilliant in the world, while
history will also record that, all
things considered, his troops were
better cared for in camp campaign
and hospital, than the troops of any
other army at any time in any part
of the world.
Only five weeks separate us from
the congressional election. There
has been a complaint of Republican
apathy in two States which have re
cently chosen State officers and con
gressmen. These are Vermont and
Maine. In both these State?, how
ever, the Republican majority was
overwhelming. There was no espe
cial incentive for the Republicans to
make any effort to poll their full
vote, and, therefore, many of them
did not take the trouble to go to the
polls. But there will bono Republi
can apathy, it is safe to say,, in the
rest of the States. The Republicans
have an excellent chance to hold their
predominance in the House and to
get control of the Senate, and they
are likely to do both. Much depends
on the result of the coming election.
It is of especial importance to the
country that the Republicans be in
entire control of all branches of the
government during the next two
years.' Many issues of transcendent
impoitance will have to bo dealt with,
and the Republican is the only party
which has the balance and the sanity
to deal with them wisely. Every Re
publican should, and undoubtedly
will, do his duty on November 8th.
Globe-Deraocrut.
The disgusting liars of the mug
wump and Democratic newspapers
who print lying stories about the
neglect and suffering of the soldiers
are confusing the people in foreign
countries who have watched the pro
gress of the war between the United
States and Spain. The London
Journal says:
We cau not understand it all. The
Americans won a war with a celerity
aud brilliaucy that seldom has been
equaled in the anuals of the world.
Tliey lost comparatively nothiug
either on land or sea. The death
rate from sickness iu the armies iu
Cuba, Porto Rico and the Philippines
has been nothiug when compared
with British losses in Soudan or on
the very islind over which the Ameri
cans went to war. In such a record
it might be supposed there was
uothing with which serious fault
could be found. To read their papers
one would suppose that they had lost
all, that their iieets hud been de
stroyed, their battles lost aud their
armies perished. It seems to us that
the Spaniards in the defeat are con
ducting themselves with more manli
ness and propriety thau the Ameri
cans in their victory.
Bests' German Salve
is used in every bouse, writes one man
from a country town. Entire neighbor
hood used it for Piles. Cuts, Burns
and all skiu diseases. The fame of its
cures necessarily spread from town to
town; friends tell frieuds what Beggs'
German Salve lias done, and the whole
people acknowledge its merit, its healing
qualities and its power of allaying paiu.
For sale by W. F.Tine.
No More Hogging,
Hugging while waltzing is now
under the ban. The decree has gone
from the men who teach waltzing
that no more hard pressures shall be
permitted during the process of the
fascinating whirl. Reprimands are
in store for any young men or young
women who persist in hugging in the
dance. All this has been decided at
the twenty first annual convention of
the American Society of Professors
of Dancing, which has adjourned
after a four days session in Lyric
hall, in New York City, after adept
ing the new dances for the coming
season, electing officers and settling
other matters interesting to the danc
ing worlJ.
One of the contemptible newspa-
'pera that whine about the bad treat
' & ..11ai2 nrinfa in errASt
headlines, "nothing but coffee, hard
tack and bacon" for our brave sol
diers in the trenches at Santiago.
j The idiot probably imagines that
Little Neck Clams and ice- cream
should have been served in 'the
trenches. After the battle of Chicka
manga the 92d Illinois was stationed
north of Chattanooga guarding the
Tennessee river. A pack train of
seventy mules belonging to that
regiment was sent over the moun
tains to Bridgeport for rations, and
while that pack train was gone all
army rations were exhausted, and the
men and officers were living upon
such scanty supplies of corn gathered
in the fields, and green chestnuts ob
tained by cutting down the trees and
whipping the white nuts, not full
grown nuts, ont of the burrs, as each
one could obtain for himself, when,
one night it was known 'that the pack
train camped on Walden's ridge, at
Poe's tavern, would come down the
mountain in the morning loaded
with army rations for the regiment.
But in the morning, just before the
pack mule train reached the regiment
an order came from General Garfield
to send the train direct to Chatta
nooga, without taking off a single
ration. It was a bitter disappoint
ment to the Ninety second regiment.
Did they complain? No. The regi
ment, without orders, formed along
the road and cheered as the seventy
mules, loaded with their rations, kept
on to Chattanooga They knew that
the soldiers in Chattanooga needed
the rations more than they needed
them themselves, and they were glad
to see them go by their camp and on
toward Chattanooga, while they con
tinued to live on scant supplies of
parched' corn and green chestnuts.
They would have been glad to have
had "coffee and hardtack and bacon,"
but they were happy when the coffee
and hardtack and bacon that belonged
to them, was seut to their comrades
in Chattanooga who needed them
more than they did. That was not an
isolated case. It is only typical of
thousands of others. When the
army of the Teunessee started from
Chattanooga to the relief of Burn
side at Kuoxville the troops were
poorly clad, some were bare-footed,
for they had marched fr 3m Vicks
burg to the relief of the soldiers
cooped up in Chattauooga, and when
Bragg was driven away they started
on another march of eighty miles to
the relief of Buruside at Knoxville,
and the only rations issued to them
was one ear of corn to each man.
Did they whine and complain? No.
They cheered as each man marched
by the pile of corn, and was permit
tod to take a siugle ear, the only
rations there were to issue to them
as they began that eighty miles forced
march to the relief of Burnsido be
sieged at Knoxville. That was the
kind of men aud soldiers who pre
served the Union and upheld the
the honor aud glory of the American
flag iu the great civil war. Freeport
Weekly Journal.
It is true (lint others imitate the meth
ods employed iu advertising Beggs' Ger
man Salve, otheis claim to heal and to
cure disease because Beggs' German
Salve, the only true ointment, has been
so wonderfully successful. But in thou
sands ol cases, as shown by grateful tes
timonials, Beggs German Salve actually
and permanently cures when atber medi
cines fail to do an7 good whatever. For
sale by W. F. Pine.
First -Assistant Postmaster General
Heath has taken the first step in the es
tablishment of postal sayings banks. It
is in the form of a rule authorizing post,
masters to issue money orders payable at
their own ofliees. In other words, it per
mits any patron of a money order post
office to deposit his cash there aud re
ceive in return what virtually amount to
a certificate of deposit or a certified check
payable on demand at the place of issue.
Persons afraid of banks or of thieves are
thus enabled to put their money where
its safety is assured.
When you call for DeWitt's Witch
Hazel Salve the great pile cure, don't
accept auything else. Don't be talked
into accepting a substitute, for p?Jen, for
sores, lor burui. The Palace rug Co.
4tIn the spring the yontig man's fancy
lightly turns to thoughts of love1 and in
the fall he becomes serious, gets married
and goes to housekeeping. If you want
to do the right thing by him get him one
of those stylish lamps or a chamber set
at the Central Grocery for a wedding
present, and tell him to bny his dishes
from the same place, because we carry
the largest stock of fancy queeasware in
Western Kansas.
I SXKFIOirS OFXHXOK 07 Xc-
dTLXT.
I Has the following opinion of Presl
deat McKinley, his integrity of pur
'pose and his manhood beeu justified by
jbistory since made? On January 20,
J898, In the halls of Congress, Jerry
Simpson made a speech (bee page 12 of
the Congressional Record of that date)
4n the course of which he said:
"1 was about to say, Mr. Speaker,
.that in my opinion the bond holding
interest is to-day one of the great fac
'tors in this contest orer Cuba. That
BOND HOLDING INTEREST CONTROLS THE
ACTION AND POLICY OF T1IIS GOVERN
MENT as much as it did when Mr. Cleve
land was in the White House; and no
action will be taken on this subject
until that bond holding interest is guar
anteed that whatever form of govern
meut may be set up in Cuba, the pay
ment of those S400,000,000 of bonds will
be secured. The gentleman from Ohio
(Mr. Grosvenor) said at the extraor
dinary session, when this question was
up, that in good time the Republican
party would give the watchword, and
the party would march in step and
time to thatkej'note when it was given.
Now, I want to make the prediction
that that keynote will never be sound
ed, and the word will never be given
until the bond holding interest of the
country and of the world gives its con
sent, and that consent will never be
given until the payment of the bonds
is guaranteed, because the revenues of
Cuba are what the bondholders must
depend on for payment, if they look to
Spain."
Mr. Simpson could not have said more
plainly that President McKinley was
corrupt; that his actions and policies
were being controlled by mercenary
considerations; that the intolerable
conditions then existing in Cuba, the
inhumanities of the Spanish nation,
the unparalleled miseries of the Cub
ans, and endangered American inter
ests went for naught with him; that
his sole care was to make sure that
the holders of 5400,000,000 of Cuban
bonds were protected from financial
loss. Is there a man who believes these
vile aspersions upon tiie character of
President McKinley to-day? Did Jerry
Simpson believe them when he uttered
them? Or was it malicious aiander?
For purity of purpose, wisdom hi
counsel and steadfastuess of design,
McKinley stnnds to-day without a
superior in the estimation of the Am
erican people. He is now confronted
by the most important problems grow
ing out of our new insular possessions
that have fallen to the lot of a presi
dent within the past quarter of a cen
tury. The people of the Big Seventh
believe in McKinley, his prudence,
judgment and policies. TJ.ey will not
return to Congress a man who will op
pose him upon all occasions.
FAMILYTECraLES AT HOME.
Jerry Simpson is not camping on the
trail of his opponent this year to any
alarming extent He is having family
troubles of his own at home. Many
Populists of his own county are fight
ing him. They accuse him of disloyalty
to the Populist county ticket iu Barber
county, aud he dare not deny the accus
ation. The Populist organization in Barber
count j- in 1S97 as well as the Populist
nominees were unfriendly to Simpson, j
Jerry announced that he proposed to i
show his enemies that they couldn't
have a Populist party in Barber county
without reckoning with him. He
caused a Democratic ticket to be nomi
nated and then openly advised h;s per
sonal friends to vote the Republican
ticket The result was the election of
the Republican nominees with one ex
ception. Last fall in answer to a letter of in
quiry from the Hutchinson News, J.
W. Potts, chairman of the Populist
committee in Barber county, wrote the
News for publication as follows:
"My opinion is that Mr. Simpson did
not support the Populist ticket in Bar
ber county this falL From what I
have heard aud from what I have ob
sered 1 feel very sure that the third
ticket was put in nomination through
his influence. I know that his most
enthusiastic supporters in ths county
advised this course. Mr. Simpson was
requested to assist us in the county this
fall, but ho refused to do so. I have
it from a leading Democrat in this
county that Mr. Simpson and his
friends advised the defeat of the Po
pulist ticket, and I kuow that many
Populists who pride themselves on be
ing "Simpson"' men knifed candidates
ou our ticket I have no positive proof
that Mr. Simpson did not vote the Po
pulist ticket, but I am satisfied that it
is a fact, liis political backers here do
not claim that he did anything for the
ticket, and it is folly for foreigners to
make that contention."
Many Populists who do not believe
in the "rule or rnin' policy will follow
the example set them by Simpson and
fail to put a cross opposite his name
next November.
SHOULD EAVE A ES0Z1VJSA.
It may be iudecorous for us to inter
fere in the arrangements for Novem
ber's obsequies inasmuch as we are not
to furnish either the corpse or mourn
ers. But we trust that a natural de
sire to &ee such functions pass off de
cently and in order will afford an ex
cuse for a suggestion or two to our
friends, the political enemy.
The first suggestion, made with de
ference and modesty, is that the Demo
Pop managers get the leaders of their
triune forces together on the question
of the conduct of the war. On the one
side are Governor Lcedy, Jerry Simp
son, Jerry Botkin and Webb McNall
declaring to vast audiences of from
twenty to fifty that McKinley is weak
if not dishonest; that Alger is incom
petent and dishonest; that the whole
management of the war from the high
est official to the lowest has been
marked by brutal inhumanity, the
vilest corruption and puerile misman
agement On the other side etand Attorney
General Boyle, Chief Justice Dostcr,
Senator Harris and Col. Hank Lindsay
who are unstinted in their praise for
McKiny, Alger aud their manage- I
ment of the Spanish war. Boyle es
pecially complimeata McKinley; Seaa
tor Harris is even fulsome in his praise;
Judge Doster declares the Spanish war
the best managed and its armies the
best fed, best clothed and best cared
for iu history; Col. Lindsay announces
as the result of his experience and ob
servation that McKinley and Alger
were exactly the right men in the right
places and heartily approves of their
every act and policy.
Which of these two crowds are the
"plain, common people" to believe?
Jerry Simpson when he declares that
if they only knew aa much as he does
about the festering rottenness of the
government at Washington they would
arise in their wrath and drivo the last
official into the river, or Judge Doster
when he declares such talk to be the
quintessence of meanness and false
hood? Governor Leedy when he de
clares McKinley to be a wealc tool in
the hands of designing scoundrels or
his appoiutee, Col. Hank Lindsay, when
he declares McKinley's course to have
been the most admirable and billiant
in the anuals of our country?
Would it not be a good plan for the
Demo-Pop managers to have a receiver
appointed, at least until the leaders of
their cohorts can agree upon some
homogeneous plan of conducting their
campaign.
F03 McglSTLBT 0B AGAINST ETC
The issues presented to the people of
this district iu the present congression
al camps ijrn are vitally different from
those of lS'JC and 1S94. The campaign
of 1SPG was waged, von and lost, on
the free silver issue. Other subjects
were discussed but only incidentally.
Today the people are not talking about
free silver; public speakers, no matter
what their talents may be, can inter
ese any audience in the subject Peo
ple generally recognize the fact that
this subject is settled for the present at
least; that nothing can be accomplish d
by the next Congress that will in auy
material manner effect the silver ques
tion. The campaign of 1894 was fought,
lost and won on the tariff question.
But nobody is talking tariff today.
Everybody recognizes that question as
settled during the preent admiuifetra
tiou. No orator could hold an audience
today who would make the tariff speech
that interested everybody in 1894.
No matter who may be elected to
Congress from this district this year,
nothing that he may be able to do will
effect either the silver or the tariff
question, because these questions are
settled right or wrong until after the
next presidential election at least For
this reason the question to control the
voter this year in selecting a Congress
man is not how he voted in 1S9 1 or
1S9G, or how the candidates stood in
1894 or 1896 on the tariff or silver ques
tians; but rather what are the issues in
this campaign and how do the candi
dates stand upon them?
The issues in this campaign are very
distinctly outlined. They relate ex
clusively to the Spanish war and the
territory acquired or to be acquired in
consequence of it and the enlargement
of the standing urmy aud navy rendered
necessary and desirable inconsequence
of these new insular possessions.
The issues include the proper govern
ment and development of the Hawaiian
islands and Porto Rico, the extent of
our acquisitions in the Ladrone and
Phillipine islauds, the future relations
of this govornment to Cuba, and the
judicious control and government of
these acquisitions from Spain. Aud of
equal importance is the development
and fostering of the":r resources and
the extension of our commerce with
them.
No questions of graver consequence
or of greater moment to the people at,
large wore ever presented to any pres
ident for solution. President McKin
ley's magnificent management of the
intricate aud delicate questions that
presenteJ themselves prior to and dur
ing the war has earned for him the ad
miration, esteem and unbounded
confidence of the American people.
The nation is willing to trust Mr. Mc
Kinley. They believe in the souud
ness of his judgment, the integrity of
character and the purity of his mo
tives. The queotion precented to the people
of tiiis distrio. is whether they desire
to be represented by u Congressman
who will sustain the president in his
plans and policies, or one who will op
pose him. The world knows that Ches
ter I. Long is with McKinley, and that
Jerry Simpson is against him.
In none of the debates on any ques
tion relating to the war, either before
or after war was declared, did Mr.
Simpson ever speak a kindly word of
the president or of any of his plans or
policies. On the other hand he em
braced every opportunity to criticize
his recommendations aid to vote
agaiust them. He would do so if re
elected. Mr. Long would pursue the
opposite course. Vote for the man who
represents your wishes, your beliefs.
A Pertinent Queitton.
Old Aunt Dinah wa3 a colored wom
an with a remarkable strong voice who
would sing and cry "glory" with such
vigor as to be heard above all the rest
of the congregation, but she was of an
unpleasantly "saving" disposition. It
was the custom at the missionary
meetings which she attended to take
up the collection during the singing
of the hyiaa "Fly Abroad.Thou Mighty
Gospel." In the midst of which Aunt
Dinah always threw back her head,
closed her eyes and sang way at the
top of her lungs until the plate had
been passed. The collector, who was
an old man of plain speech, observed
this habit, and one evening when he
came to her 6eat he surveyed her
rapt countenance and then said blunt
ly: "Look a-heak, Aunt Dinah, what's
de good ob yo a-slnsln an a-singin'
Fly Abroad, Thou Mighty Gospel,' ef
yo doan gib nufln' to m2ke her fiy?"
v For external piles, cats, banM MM
bruises, old sores, eczema and all WKjr
diseases Beggs' German Salve stand &":
day without a peer. It is an old rclMMr
CIIICUJ AMU II IKVH !.; J nvuilH WM Igrf
tiea i wiiiKHU a scar, im: eareiui w gev
.Kffrtra" nml bit Mire of m. t.nMdv inn.
For sale by W. F. Pine. " , fc
Tiuth wears well. People have learned
that DeWitt's Little Early Risers are re
liable little pills for regulating the
bowels, curing constipation and sick
head aces. They don't grip. The Palace
Drug Co.
A Wonderful Xetficiae.
Jieggs Little Gianc Pills" for weak
stomach, impaired digestion, disordered
liver, sick headache, constipation, female
ailments, are absolutely without a rival.
Take no substitute, ask for "Beggs.""
or sale by . t. riue.
You invite disappointment when yon
experiment. Den itt's Little Early Ris
ers aie pleasaut, easy, thorough little
pills. They cure constipation and sick
headache just as sure as yon take them.
The Palace Drug Co.
For diarrhoea dysentry, colic, cholera,
flux aud all summer complaints, uothing
is so gentle, soothing and effective, as
Beggs' Diarrhoea Balsam. It never fails
to give relief and if takeu iu time will
effect a speedy cure. Be sure that you
get "Beggs" the only remedy with tt
national reputation. For sale by W. F.
Pine.
DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve has the
largest sale of any Salve iu the workl.
This fact and its merit has led dishonest
people to attempt to counterfeit it. Look
out for the mau who attempts to deceive
yo: when you call lor DeWitt's Witch
Haze! Salve the great pile cure. The
Palace Drug Co.
It Absolutely Has Xo Eqital
and all others who claim their's is as
good as Beggs' German Salve are imita
tors. A fair trial will convince any one
that there is no preparation yet discover
ed, that stands even an equal in allaying
pain aud in is healing qualities. For
sale by W. F. Pine.
For broken surfaces, sores, insect bites,
burns, skiu diseases aud especially pilrs
there is one reliable remedy, DeWitt's
Witch Hazel Salve. When you call for
DeWitt's don't accept counterfeits or
fraud'. Yu will not be disappointed
with DeWitt'3 WUcb Hazel Salve. The
Pa'ace Drug Co.
Beggs' German Salve
is an imaluable remedy for ems, burn",
bniise, scalds, chapped hands, Mac nip
ples, sore lips, eczi-ma. ulcers, chronic
sores, skiu eruptions, fever sores, and all
skiu diseases. For sale by W. F. Pine.
More than twenty million fiee samples
of DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve have
been distributed by the manufacturers-.
What better pmof af their confidence in
its merits do you waut? It cures piles,
burns, scalds sores, in the shortest ppace
of time. The Palace Drug Co.
20Cts. Given Away.
Cut this out, write your name across
it in ink and take it to the druggist
named below and he will gieyoua
23c. bottle of Dr. Sawyer's Ukatiue
for acts. Ukatiue ciiics all forms of
Kidney difiicultie. pulled eyes, mud
dy complexion, makes sallow and yel-j
low skin white, enre.4 water biash. I
curc. oains in stomach aud liver. I
cures constipation.
W. S. AMOS, Druggist.
One Minute Cough Cure surprises peo
ple by its quick cures and children may
take it in large quantities without the
least danger. It has won for itself tin
best reputation of any preparation used
tuday lor colds, croup, tickling in the
throat or obstinate coughs. The Palace
Drug C' .
The Highest Prize - . .
it y i u lTTTr
World's Columbian
Exposition !
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