Bellefonte, Pa., September 21, 1906. People Must Get What Democratic Leg teintors Ask, : rr 1 3 ' (Continued from page 4.) 9,000 iO < state . S-einth of our Tevenuss that we are geiting from the corporations. If we keep on awhile longer it will ! take the entire revenues of the | Sigte to maintain the National ! “Charity Department” Blocked. Mr. Creasy himrelf was surprised by his success in knocking dead the’ bill, which the machine failed to make es law, ! “creating the department of state charitable institutio providing | for the appointment of a commis- sioner, Ww! shall head be the thereof, defining his duties, fixing his compensation, designating the number and salaries of his assist- ants and making an appropriation therefor.” ; Mr. Creasy sald of the measure when it was before the house: “Just a few days ago I talked with one of the leadi members on the other side of the who said he thought it was about time to stop this salary busi- ness and this creating of new de- partments. Here we are between $36,000 and ,000 I don’t think we new departmen wer to a few men, and I am sat- ed the work this commission is to do will be no more than what is being dome in the state . and I cannot see, if we want to something, why we cannot do it by a cheaper method than this.” How They Fought the “Rippers.” ' Mr. Creasy, Mr. Harman and other Democratic representatives spoke vig- orously against the Philadelphia “rip- per” bills. Seeing that they could not defeat them, they strove to amend them so as to have the directors elected by the people Instead of by the machine controlled city councils, as the bilis provided. But all in vain. Phat struggle alone sufficed to show the necessity for an arousing of the people of the state so as to elect a trustworthy majority to the next leg- islature. Representative Flynn said during the discussion on one of those “rip- per” bills: be passed during this session favor- able action should be taken upon it today. because, as I, understand, this is thé last day. “For some reason this bill, to- gether with the bills for personal registraticn. civil service reform and the bil! with reference to our election laws, is still slumber fn this committee, These are all nt mat‘ers and I think ths either this committee re ng them, 4 in the discharge of the commit- * tee and reiurning the bill to the senate. As the constitution re- that the state be divided to senatorial districts every 10 Joats, 7 think that we ale deluiici n our duty if we do not make some effort to pass some fair appor- tionment."” Mr. Grim was sustained by Senator Arthur G. Dewalt, of Lehigh, who paid: “There is no more important sub- t with which the senate and ouse has to deal than the control and supervision of the action of the different committees serving in either house or senate. I call your attention to the fact that the gover- nor in his last message to the gen- eral assembly told us that the con- stitution directs that immediately after each decennial United States census the general assembly shall apportion the state into senatorial and representative districts. Not only is the mandate of the consti- tution disobeyed, but the existi condition of affairs is unjust works great injury to a portion of Th SHisane hoa this apporti ey are en ment and it should be given them. The governor says in his m that ‘not only is the mandate of the constitution disobeyed, but the ex- {sting condition of affairs is unjust to Allegheny and other counties who have not the re tation to which they are entitled. With the passing of each decade and the shifting of population the unfitness of the present apportionment is in- “No wonder the people of this state have cried out in stentorian tones for the last 20 years that they demanded a senatorial apportion- ment bill. No wonder the governor has said I not only request it but I desire you to enforce it when speaking of the constitution and its various provisions. The cry has gone out not only through Alle- gheny county, not only through Lackawanna county, but it has come from every quarter of the state, except, perhaps, from Phila- delphia, and I say at this time that we pursue the recommendation pro- posed by the gentleman who occu- fies the governor's chair. This reso- ution is only asking this commit- tee to perform its duties and send this bill out from it.” and the same can be done in Phila- delphia. Under our system of - ernment oll men, whether conduct- ing a business involving millions of dollars or inmates of our charit- able institutions, are alike before the law upon election day. The bal- lot of the president of the Pennayl- vania ra! courts no more than the votes of miserable vultures who infest the dens of vice and thrive u the offal of human society, ow terrible, therefore, to conto plate that these same miserable wretches, many of whom scarcely read or write our lausguage, and are unacquainted with our Jud. ples of ernment, can poll prob- ably a f dozen votes the same day and thus put it into the hands of the leaders of wards or divisions to defeat the registered will of the e. “But you say that you are able to care for your own affairs in r cities, Our answer is that it in the govt of the fraudulent voters in the cities to control the affairs of this state, It is therefore of vital interest to the whole state that the elections in the cities should be made as fair and honest as it is possible for legislation to make them. “1 well how that Lis about Fo dangerous many of us orders as it is to scale the famed Matterhorn of the Alps. That fact has become too patent in both branches of this legislature at this session. “We do not expect you to break any orders in vo aE n this -mo- tion. If your organ on has de- creed that there is to be no per- sopal fegistration law ad th that th vote of the people upon q tion Is to me disregarded, say so in your votes upon this resolution, for it must be as clear as the noon- day sun that if you vote this resolution that it is notice to the people of this commonwealth that your organization is against peisoiial registration. The responsi- lity will then be placed where it belongs, and of this action the peo- ple may take due notice.” Herbst and Dewalt Against Stone Wall Senator Dewalt also appealed for action on the bill and was followed by Senator Edwin M. Herbst, who said: “Where men not entitled to vote, do vote, and when votes honestly cast are not honestly eounted, free vernment has ended and despot- sm rules. Honest citizens and true lovers of our state's welfare ¢f all parties demand personal registra- tion in our cities. They have said so emphatically by the adoption of an amendment to our constitution. Political hoboes and sharks course do not want it. The governor of the state strongly recommends it in his message, and let me remind you, gentlemen of the majority in Your Moneys Worth : In every article you buy. Everything sold for just what it is. No misrepresentation and we stand back of our statements. Our new lines for fall and winter service are for every member of the family. We are prepared to priced them all and the goods are placed strictly on their merits. Examine what we have to of- fer and satisfy yourself. No trouble to show goods Our premiums are useful and ornamental. Entirely free. this 3O4Y. that as a party you have : Great Fight For Honest Elections. promi it to the people. pve member o this oie : Equally ineffectual were the ap os & personal ww OB law who votes ‘aye’ on © pas- r many mage of this bil nds hitheelf 1. i Deals made by Senators Grim and De- | oxigting evils, The opportunities | walt, among other Democratic mem-| for manipulation and for grosser frauds would be curtailed to a no- table degree by any bill that mark- ed even a step toward the condi- tions that every good citizen must want to see. The position that good citizens should take, without re- gard to party affiliations, in this directly to all the evils which have been charged against the Philadel- |! bers, to get the personal registration phia machine” ! bill out of the senate committee. Kind of Men to Check Corporations. Upon a resclution which he offered tc Mr. Creasy, in a clash with Thomas discharge the elections committee V. Cooper a the bill from its “consideration” of that bill YEAGER & DAVIS OPEN EVENINGS. HIGH STREET, BELLEFONTE. | Mr. Grim sata: matter is apparent. The biindest of “to authorize foreign corporations | f fate lawfully engaged in the manufac: | “This bill was introduced nearly ih oe eos yr "a change, ture or production of articles of | two months ago. Therefore, the Whether Governor Pennypacker trade or commerce in Pennsylvania | Ae as hal ape time to does favor such legislation the own land in $s common- e senate. been ted, wealth,” ! They have not done so, and it is extent that has intimated, Bis further showed what a sharp eye was kept upon corporate encroachments by Columbia county's representative, | now the fusion nominee for auditor, general. Mr. Creasy said: “1 would iike to call the attention of the gentleman from Delaware to one of the veto messages of the governor at the last session where something similar was up, in which he says: ‘This bill proposes to give to certain corporations incorporat- ed in other states substantially the same powers which they would have had if they had been incor- porated in this state. They m erect buildings and maintain build- shes” 8 cetera, and then fo ve ‘Ever since the passage o e ac of 1874 it has been the custom among some of the residents of this state to evade the provisions of the act by securing incorpora- tion in other states where the re- quirements are less strict and where it may not be necessary to y any proportion of the capital nto the treasury in cash.’ “The corporation laws of Penn- |! sylvania, I believe, are in advance | of the corporation laws of many other states, and if these ra~ tions want to do business in Penn- sylvania we have a department here where they can get their charters by paying for them, but the object of these co fons in getting charters outside of the state is in order that they may evade some of the restrictions which the state of Pennsylvania places on them, and for this reason and the reagon ven by the governor of the state n his veto message, I believe this bill should be voted down. “We want corporations to come to this state and get their charters. Under our law they will one-third of their italiza- on. Under this measure to another state and get a char- r, perhaps for $40 or $50, come here, and if they buy land they pay no taxes on it, but will enjoy the same privileges that our corporations do when they pay one-third of one per centum of their capitalization.” Men of the type of the Democrats who thus strove to check the law-de- fying corporation magnates are such as will be wanted in the legislature upon which the people will rely for enactment of just and comprehensive corporation laws. Grim and Dewalt Appeal. In the senate, during the last regu- lar session in the winter and spring of 1905, there were many notable efforts by the Democratic members to bring about action upon reform meas- ures or to draw public attention to “evils worthy of mention.” Senator ‘Webster Grim, of Bucks county, after offering a resolution to force a report from the committee which had charge of his senatorial apportionment bill, said: the clceire 10 Jeltetute what 1 sala Be a bY apparent that they do not intend to report it. As a member of committee and as the one who in- troduced the bill, I have asked the chairman more than once to call the committee together and con- sider the bill. The chairman has treated me with entire courtesy, but he has not called the meeting, and so far as I know the committee has never held a fneeting. Yea, more, Mr. President. so far as I know, and I have at all times been ready to perform my duty, the committee has never been organ- ized. More than two months have Slapsed sirce we have gotten down to hard work. We have been con- sidering hundreds of biils upon the floor of the senate, We have even fixed the date for final adjourn- ment. We have even passed a res- olution against the introduction of any new bills unless by unanimous consent. All this suggests to us that the period of the work of this ses- sion is rapidly drawing to a close, and that unless this bill is passed no other similar bill can be passed, and yet in the face of the over- whelming demand from every part of this commonwealth for a law that will prevent fraudulent voting and repeating in our cities, in the face of the verdict of 165,000 ma- jority for the constitutional amend- ment, in the face of a practically unanimous press which sub the wishes of the people of this commonwealth, this committee is apparently giving no heed to these demands. To our shame will it be said that we have neglected the most important subject before the people of this commonwealth. a Ps e is p perso - tration, to a fair election law, and to the enactment of a civil service law, but, gentlemen, we are not alone in this demand. You mistake the importance of the movement if you do not realize that there are thousands of voters in you friends would like to know that he held such views. If he did hold them and secured the needed ligis- lation he would find the number of his friends greatly increased. “By a reign of terror at the polls organized with consummate and merciless skill, the decent citizens of our first city are held panic- stricken at the machine's feet. Its business interests are subject to and in many instances have e mere instruments of this central despotism. Legislatures and coun- cils asserable only to sanction by statute the unscrupulous acts, de- sires and tyranny of the bosses. Arbitrary taxation, arbitrary fran- chises, arbitrary statutes to annoy and vex a people once so proud of its liberty, all due to fraudulent registration followed by fraudulent elections, Ak! well, may decent men exclaim: ‘Liberty, what crimes are not committed in thy name!’ "” Of course in the senate, as well as in the house, the Democrats forced everybody present to go upon record when such demands as the foregoing were made by the friends of honest government. But the machine hench- men brazenly fwent the limit” in de- fiance of the popular will. The same machine leaders and the same hench- men are now struggling to control the next legislature. Explosion of White Slave Bomb. Of all the bombs exploded in the MceNichol-Penrose-Durham camp none caused more consternation than the following resolution offered by Sena- tor Herbst on March 13, 1905, but of course it was voted down by the over whelming machine majority: “Whereas, it is ¢ by news- papers, civic organizations, clergy- men’s associations and grand jur- fes in Philadelphia, that vice of a most revolting character is pro- by the police authorities of that city; that immigrant girls, ignorant of the and country, are lured into dens that exist there under po- 1 and launched upon a career of shame, and that - a e es of June 1, i 18 Ser judgment po Mr. Herbst went on: “The Tin Pe explanatory. | The en slave trafic Is a Serious 80 serious that the t States senate but last week it ; consideration Jn the Ti 5 1 ; A ———, tion of a (reaty. i uwup. . senator in this body will vote upon this resolution as a Christian not a heathen, as a civilized citizen not a barbarian, as a patriot not a par- tisan. May every one vote as his sainted mother, his good wife, and his virtuous sister or daughter would like to see him vote.” But the large majority voted under the same lash that is now being wield- ed by Penrose and colleagues in the hope of defeating the people's eandi- dates. PACIFIC LINER AGROUND The Mongolia Goes Ashore On Reef Near Hawaiian Islands. Midway Island, North Pacific Ocean, Sept. 17.—The Pacific Mail steamship Mongolia. a sister ship of the Manchu- ria, is aground on Midway reef, north- west of the Hawaiian Islands. The ship is being lightered and her passen- gers are being landed safely. The steamship Mongolia sailed from Yokohama for San Francisco Septem- ber 10. The steamer is owned by the Pacific Mail Steamship Company of New York and is a sister ship of the Manchuria, which went ashore on Rabbit Island August 20 and was only floated yes- terday (Sunday). The Mongolia was built at Camden, N. J, in 1904. Hor length is 600 feet, beam 65.3, and she registers 13,638 tons gross. Medical. RR (FENERAL DEBILITY. Day in and day out there is that feeling of weakness that makes a burden of itself. Food does not strengthen. Sleep does not refresh, It is hard to do, hard to bear, what shouid be easy—vitality is on the ebb, and the whole system suffers. For this condition take HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA It vitalizes the blood and gives vigor and tone to all the organs and functions, In usual liquid form or in chocolated tablets known as Sarsatabs, 100 doses $1. oa Negro Lynched for Trivial Oeffnse. | Houston, Tex., Sept. 17.—At Rose- bud 100 farmers hanged Mitchell Fra- gzier, a negro, because he pushed | Frank Hess, a white farmer, from a walk. Hess struck the negro and the . latter used a knife on Hess. The mob stormed the town prison. Mayor Stip- | ing tried to stop them. They pushed | him aside, and, breaking in the door, took the negro to a scaffolding sup- | porting a tank and hanged him. Fell 350 Feet to Death. ! Mahanoy City, Pa., Sept. 17.—John | Llewellyn, a contract miner, made a | misstep and plunged 350 feet to his | death in the St. Nicholas colliery of : the Philadelphia & Reading Coal and Iron company. Llewllyn was 33 years of age. Coal and Wood. EVAR EK. RHOADS i Shipping and Commission Merchant, nn DEALER [Now ANTHRACITE axp BITUMINOUS snd other grains. ~BALED HAY and STRAW— BUILDERS’ and PLASTERERS’ SAND cae Rg o be Plumbing etc. A. E. SCHAD Fine Sanitary Plumbing, Gas Fitting, Furnace, Steam and Hot Water Heating, Slating, Roofing and Spouting, Tinware of all kinds made to order, Estimates cheerfully furnished. Both Phones, 4243-1y Eagle Block. BELLEFOXTE, PA r calls by Prompiy as You woud to an: Ne in giving Sood service. If Your Time Has Commercial Value, If Promptness Secure Business. If Immediate Information is Required, If You Are Not in Business for Exercise stay at home and use your Distance Telephone. Our Bight rates leave small 47-25-40 PENNA. 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