Through the great campaign : with Hastings and his spellbinders . ^ of love, there is no place in his heart forwife and mother at the same time—and mothercomes first. In the great campaign of 1894 hisname is inseparably associated with its great re-sults. He is a native of England, but his parentsemigrated to this country when he was but ababy. He has been an Abolitionist and a Re-publican all his life, like his father before him. They used the Weekly New York Tribune asa blanket for my cradle, he jokingly remarkedonce. Henry Hall worked in a coal mine till 1875,then he taught school. From thi


Through the great campaign : with Hastings and his spellbinders . ^ of love, there is no place in his heart forwife and mother at the same time—and mothercomes first. In the great campaign of 1894 hisname is inseparably associated with its great re-sults. He is a native of England, but his parentsemigrated to this country when he was but ababy. He has been an Abolitionist and a Re-publican all his life, like his father before him. They used the Weekly New York Tribune asa blanket for my cradle, he jokingly remarkedonce. Henry Hall worked in a coal mine till 1875,then he taught school. From this on up to thepresent his career in brief is as follows : In 187S, Recorder of Mercer County. 1881, editor andpart owner of the Mercer Dispatch. 1886, elected to theLegislature. 1888, re-elected, and was made chairman of 48. Hon. Henry Hall. the Judiciary General Committee of the House. Since1891 connected with the Pittsburg Dispatch and PittsburgTimes—now with the latter—as Legislative correspond-ent, special writer and Washington correspondent. is a member of the Mercer Bar, having studied inthe office of the present President Judge of that district,Hon. S. H. Miller, being admitted in 1886. He was atone time a member of the editorial staff of the PittsburgCo))inicrcial Gazette, and during 1894 represented thePittsburg Times in Washington. Mr. Hall made his firstpolitical speech in the Garfield campaign of 1880, andsince then has taken part in every Republican generalcanvass in the State. Mr. Hall ivS a graceful and forceful writer. Heis one of the few men who can make a table ofstatistics read interesting in print. He is a de-scriptive writer of rare power, his letters fromEngland a few 3^ears since being widely read andcopied. There are few men in any State who have somany friends as Harry


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectpennsyl, bookyear1895