Through the great campaign : with Hastings and his spellbinders . ^ andoratorical gifts more appears else-where. Mr. John Gregg, also ofthe Pittsl)urg Times, was an ac-. HowARD H. Derr ceptable addition to the partybe^ond the AUeghenies. Mr. Crum, the widely known legislative correspon-dent and political writer of the Pittsburg Commer-cial Gazette, spent several days as the guest ofGeneral Hastings. Mr. James Israel, who for a number of yearshas been one of the bright particular stars of thePittsburg Dispatch, journeyed across the Stateto describe the Norristown meeting in his cleverdescr
Through the great campaign : with Hastings and his spellbinders . ^ andoratorical gifts more appears else-where. Mr. John Gregg, also ofthe Pittsl)urg Times, was an ac-. HowARD H. Derr ceptable addition to the partybe^ond the AUeghenies. Mr. Crum, the widely known legislative correspon-dent and political writer of the Pittsburg Commer-cial Gazette, spent several days as the guest ofGeneral Hastings. Mr. James Israel, who for a number of yearshas been one of the bright particular stars of thePittsburg Dispatch, journeyed across the Stateto describe the Norristown meeting in his cleverdescriptive way. Mr. Charles R. Dorworth,the Bellefonte corrCvSpondent of the PhiladelphiaInquirer, represented that paper on the tour fromstart to finish. Mr. Stephen Bolles, of the Erie 142 Dispatch, the partys historian for the North-west, while in the Southeast, Mr. Louis , the Philadelphia Times gifted specialwriter, and Mr. Peter Hoban, of the PhiladelphiaLedger, told the stor^^ of the closing hours ofthe campaign in graphic lines. To the hundreds of othernewspaper men throughoutthe State, who participatedin the great campaign in allits various st
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectpennsyl, bookyear1895