Demorra iain enema ———— BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —Winter is evidently getting ready to linger in the lap of spring. . —The Rev. Auz1 C. Dixon, of Chicago, says President ROOSEVELT is another Prophet Isatan. Why dido’s he make him Erisam IV and call him to command in Zion oity. —Gradually the list of gentlemen who |" are willing to serve their country by fill- ing the county offices is growing. It is likely that by March 21st, the last day for filing papers, there will be a fine field to pick from. —In Alabama and South Carolina the laws prohibit the carrying of pistols less than twenty-four inches long. It is evi- dent that when a mao is held up down there some one must have pulled a real gun on him. —1I¢ is nice that Mr. C. F. BARCLAY bas announced his desire to represent this die- triot again in the lower house of Congress, otherwise few people would know that we have anybody representing us at Wasbiog- ton at this time. —Look Haven, Renovo and Jersey Shore are planning to bave Bellefonte join them in a baseball league for next season. All that we need to ges in is some gentleman who hasn't found oat yet how easy it is for baseball to separate one from bis coin. —The resals of going to a party at which there were thirteen guests was a blockade of thirteen hours in a snow-bound train on Saturday night and Sunday, for a few Bellefonte gentlemen. Of course they are pot superstitions but shey just coanldn’t help thinking of it a little. —Three handred and thirty persons bav- ing on deposit over $700,000 in the defunct Kniokerbooker Trust Co., in New York oity, cannot be found. How much bap- pier they are in ignorance of the crash than if they could be found. Why hunt them up to tell such bad news ? —Euglish investigations have proven that the death rate in communities baving soft water is 19.2 while in those using bard water it is only 16 5. All the more reason so be thankful for our own heauntifol spring, with water so hard that it will soarcely make lather enough for a decent bath. —1It is evidently proving very difficult for the prosecutors in the capitol grafs trial to settle the matter of whether it was lin- ear or cubic feet that they measured by. Anybody ought to know that it was both. Who ever heard of such hogs not getting both feet in the trough when they bad the chance. —Mr. BRYAN'S versatility was never better shown than daring hie recent visit to Philadelphia. As a politician, as a statesman and as a lay preacher he appear- ed pre-eminent. Whatever else may be said of him it cannot be denid that he has a head full of brains, a lot of good red blood and a christian character. —It might be well for our Presbyterian elders, who are concerned to know why there are over two thousand pulpits in the country for which they cannot find preach- ers, to understand that she price of chick- ens has kept so steadily skyward that the dominies are not getting it every place they call for dinner nowadays. —It seems strange that the man who had been earning from two to three dollars a day, every day he would work for years prior so November first, should already be on the brink of starvation. It is true, however, and though experience is a sorry teacher, few of the laboring classes ever think there is a tomorrow to be provided for or of the proverbial ‘‘rainy day.” —Mayor MCCLELLAN, of New York, did the right thing in vetoing the ordinance passed by the board of aldermen of that oity, prohibiting women from emoking in public cafes. As a matter of common sense women have just as much right to smoke as men, but the habit is so peculiar- ly nubecoming to a gentle woman that we can imagine none of them doing it public: ly or in private. —Mr. THAW is in Matteawan for an in- definite stay. Matteawan is the place of confinement for the criminal insane of New York State. As to whether THAW is in- save or not remains for the future to re- veal, hut certain it i# that bad most any other person done half the things he did before the murder of STANFORD WHITE they would not have had their liberty long enough to commit such an act. —The horrible tragedy in Portugal is only ao expression of the acuter form of the mania that has seized the minds of the American masses, Unless there is greater oivio righteousness in this coontry we can- not but expect the time when blood shed will be resorted to as the only remedy for the ill of the common people. Then, woe betide the Republic and those who are try- ing to run it as a corporation monarchy. ~The vast army of the unemployed in the country today indicates an economic condition that could easily be improved upon. At times when private and corpor- ate industries are going through a period of depression would is not be entirely prop- er to make all the municipal, state and federal improvements possible. This would furnish employment for thousands when there is nothing else to do and they could all be turned back into other fields of labor the moment a demand for their services arose. The sensation of the season, it may safe- ly be said, was the special message of the President sent to Congress on Friday last. Such a barangue bas never even been dreamed of before. In it the President has literally exhausted the vocabulary of vita- peration. He hurled epithets at every man who doesn’t agree with him and denounc- ed every institution that is not of his own creating. He scolds Congress like a mad woman in a fish markes, traduces private citizens like an outlaw and denounces everybody and everything from the courts down or up. Yet there is much truth in what the President bas said. The abuse of the pow- er of injunction by servile judges should be checked, interstate commerce should be held under reasonable regulation by Coo- gress, the swindling of the public by spec- nlators in worthless stocks should be stop- ped, predatory wealth should be restrained from exploiting the public and the flagrant dishonesty of a few men should be punish- ed to the fall limit of the law. Bat Mr. RoosEVELT should remember that these re. sults cannot be achieved by scolding Con- gress in special messages. Besides the spirit of the message is not to be commended. It ia like a wail of dis- appointed ambition. Aeoribing the panic to ROOSEVELT absolutely destroyed his hopes of a re-election and Le resents that which seems to him a personal outrage. If he had done this in a different manner no fanlt could be found with him. Bat his method is petulant and peevish, He at- tacks from behind an entrenchment that ie impregnable. No man can answer the President of the United States for the great office shields him. Moreover President RGOSEVELT is as mach to blame as any one for the abuses of which be complains. If the election had pot been bought for his party in 1806 there would he no ‘‘malefactors of great wealth’ to prey upon the public now. If MARK HANNA had not promised aud procured for she ‘‘powerfal wrongdoers’” whose tainted money corrupted the electorate in 1900, the special privileges which made them predatory, we would vot have the evils of which ROOSEVELT complains now. If his party bad not, with his help, main- tained a tariff system thas robs the masses to enrich the olasses, there would now be no sach cancer on the body politic as that against which be inveighs. In any evens ROOSEVELT'S screed to Con- gress would have been in bad taste. Under existing circumstances it is not a paper to be proud of. The Demoorats in the House of Representatives were justified m ap- planding it because it expressed some wholesome truths and for the reason that it confused aod humiliated the Republi- cans. Bat it was not inspired by a lofty impulse or expressed in becoming terms. It was designed either to help TaA¥r for the nomination agaivst a fitter man or to revive the third term corpse which already smells throughout the country. Neither purpose is patriotic. Mr. Berry's Mistaken (dea. — State Treasurer BERRY was a trifle too lenient, in his great speech on Saturday night, to that element in the Repablican party which has “simply failed jto observe how far their party has drifted from the traditions of LiNcony. ‘‘In this class of Repablicans,” he added, ‘‘is the; hope of Pennsylvania.” If that be true Pennsyl- vania is ‘‘leaning on a broken reed.” Measured by his own standard of right- eousuess the representatives of that contin. gent bave failed. Measured by any stand- aid of righs there is practically no differ- enoe between one faction of the Republican party aod another. The reformers and the gangsters are equally selfish and there is no material difference in their methods. In the same speech [rom which we bave quoted Mr. BErmrY stated that he had “tried to induce the Legislature to author- ize the treacurer to receive bids, subject to rigid provisions as to security, eto., and deposit the money at the nommercial rate of interes established by competition, but she Legislature was Republican, and though it was then in the throes of a spasm of reform, 1t was dominated by that cass of mind that does not see injustice in a legal process by whiob an individual is enabled to take the property of bis neighbors with- oat rendering a just equivalent, partionlar- ly if she individaal is a liberal contributor to the party campaigo fund.” Mr. BERRY couldn’t bave brought the subject to a fair- er test, Awong the Senators in she Legislature who pas-ed upon thatquession was VIVIAN FRANK GABLE. He was elected by a fu- sion of the Demosrats and the so called re- form Republicans of his distriot, the Dem- oorats being vastly in the majority. But veither McNrcHon, nor KEYSER, vor BROWN, nor any other machine Repabli- can on the floor was more zealons in the fight againss Mr. BERRY'S obviously just proposition than Mr. GABLE. He was for reform when reform promised to gratify his inordinate ambition for office and vos- BELLEFO inated from she memory of the | STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. NTE, PA., FEBRUARY 7, 1908. ed for Mr. BERRY because it helped bim- | sell. But when the issue was drawn be- tween genuine reform and political plan- der, be joined the gavgsters and helped them hold on to the spoils. The Berry Testimonial. The testimonial to Hon. WiLniam H. BERRY, State Treasurer of Pennsylvania, at Philadelphia, on Saturday evening, was worthy of the man and the occasion. Near- ly four handred citizens of Pennsylvania and adjacent States assembled to express their esteem and admiration for a man who had performed not only for bis State aod country, but to the great cause of public morality, a substantial service, When the charges he had made against a corrupt ring were investigated he wae refused, for parti- san reasons, the recognition to which he was entitled. Because of this injustice the banquet in his honor was given and for that reason, moreover, its splendid sucoess is a subject of popular felicitation. When Mr. BERRY was elected State Treasurer by the people of Pennsylvania, the fi