8Y PRP. GRAY MEEK. A —— Ink Slings, —The spirit of reform is not created by law. It is the product of righteousness. ~The Carroll Comedy company played the Devil at Garmaos Wednesday night. Really they did. ~The man who hedges bimsell about with a spirit of antagonism will never be able to see the truth in any argument. —Mr. FORAKER'S days in the Seuate are numbered, all right enough, which prob. ably accounts for the fact that heis no longer weighing his words. —Between the TILLMAN pitchfork aod the TEDDY big stick there has come a clash that is likely to produce a riot of language and a sarleit of liars. ~The Tenuessee night riders are to be given a little rope-riding to do avd when they get to the end of the line they won't be back to terrorize any community again. —The Tennessee Legislature has juss passed a State-wide prohibition bill. I$ is designed to stop old JOHN BARLEYCORN from doing any more wight riding io that State. —It was real mean that Toy LAwsoN didn't have even a little Trinity or Bay State Gas laid out for those burglars who visited him a few nights ago and had to go away empty handed. ~The time for the spring primaries ap- proaches and with it the time for honest men to look out for honest men to ran for office. Nominate none but those whose life reveals their fitness for the place. — Whether the new battleship Delaware be christened with champagne or with water she will take to water anyway so why all the fuss that the ‘‘wets’’ and ‘‘drys’’ of the honored Commonwealth are making about it? —There may be a difference between sending a type writing machine belonging to the government through the mails and using a government hoat for one's personal pleasure, but il there is it seems to be merely a matter of who does it. —The discovery shat it cost the govern- ment twenty million dollars to maintain the secret service last year makes it look as though the discovery that BEN TiLL- MAN bad sent a typewriter through the mails was a pretty high priced revelation. —Mr. promise to give Philadelphia the post su perb grand opera that city had ever seen. He is now goiog one better. Philadelphia a season of rare opera boufle, with himself as star, caste, chorus and or- chestra. ~Lnst Friday thirty-five hundred per- sons were served in the free soup houses in Philadelphia. Of course they were only eating there becanse business was revived with such a rush by TAFT’'s election that the hotels and boarding houses could not accommodate them. —Ahoat all that one really learns from the crimination and recrimination that is going on in Washington is that there are alot of men eatirely too narrow to fill wide submerge positions. Men who cannot personal malice in public matters should have no place in public affairs. —The offer of Mr. E. T. STOTESBURY fo thousand dollar loan on Mr. OscAR HAMMERTYN'S new Philadelphia opera honse insares a con- tinuation of real grand opera for the people of that city; that is for those who have the It is not snoh a wonderful thing for finance a four hundred price. the masses after all. —We fail to see why 80 many papers use the word *‘colored’”” when they refer toa Easter eggs are colored. (A bet is hereby recorded that within a week some negro. reporter even on this paper uses that word. )—Johustown Democrat. Juss so, but wasn't it the curse of the Lord that made HAM black? Q. E. D. The negro is color: ed. —Mr. J. C. DUNCAN, of Lewistown, N. Y., is on the program to make an address on “Mutton Making'’ before the Pennsyl- vania Dairy Union, at Harrisburg, on Jan- vary 20th. As every one knows that mat. ton making isa mere matter of allowing the lambs to grow up, Mr. DuNcaN will probably be talking on lamb growing and not mutton making. —City papers are just pow handing around the information that the only sar- viving daughter of the Revolution, in the person of Mrs. HARRIET ESTES, bas just passed away at Ithaca, N. Y. They prob. ably don’t know that Mre. MARY ANN ALLISON RISHEL, a daughter of a Revolu- tionary soldier, a sister of a soldier of 1812 anu the mother of a soldier of the rebellion, in still living and revered at Clintondale, Pa. —It does seem funny that ROOSEVELT wasn’t struck more forcibly with the fact that TILLMAN ‘‘franked’’ that government typewriter BACK to Washington. Sending anything back to Washington that belongs to the government is a crime that should bave made the whirl of the ‘big stick” look like a sun burst. It is altogether so unusaal to send anything back to Wash- ington, after it is once gotten away, that the Senator of South Carolina might well be drawn and quartered for the pleasure of the pusey-foot President whose administra tion spends twenty million a year for d teotive service and bas found out that Senator wanted to buy some land at government's own price. HAMMERSTEIN made good his He is giving VOL. 54 The Route of The State High-way. The WATCHMAN does zos understand that thie proposed route of the State high- way, recommended by Governor STUART, to be built by the State between the cities been located or agreed upon, or even map- ped ous. His suggestions named but three points, —Philadelphia, Harrisburg and Pittsbarg—which if adopted would still leave to those who will be charged with wher to them would seeru best. That it should be located where it will be of the greatest good to the greatest number—where counties not directly along its live can most easily and at the least expense build to it—where it will touch the most central points and most thickly populated localities, goes without saying. It is probable that from Philadelphia to Harrisburg the old Lancaster pike would be chosen as a basis. From that on there would be great difference of opinion as to the best and most feasible route. If Al- toona, which is the largest town in this, the central part of the State, was to be reached by it, then the most direct, shortest and by far the cheapest route to build, would be along the line of the old Philadelphia and Erie pike, through Perry, Juniata, Mifflin and Centre counties, where it would diverge up the Bald Eagle valley to Tyrone and thence to Altoona. This route in addition to being in the neighborhood of twenty- five miles shorter, than it would be if bails along the Juniata away down to Mouut Union and then back up to Huntingdon, would bave the advantage of having a well graded and solid road-bed all ready to build upon, the entire distance to Altoona with the exception of about twenty-five miles from Milesburg. Or if it was thought to be important that this State bighway should reach, and help make more accessible, the State's largest and most important educational ivstita- tion—and one in which every county and ‘every section is deeply interested, the State College—then it could diverge from the old pike at Potters Mills, a distance of about twenty miles west of Lewistown and cut directly across the upper end of this coun- ty to Tyrone and Altoona. Ol ali the routes yes suggested this would be the most direct aod shortest from Harrisburg to Altoona. Another very feasible route would be over the old Erie pike spoken of, via Lewis- town and Bellefonte across the Alleghenies to Clearfield, thence via whatever route would hest accommodate the people of western Pennsylvania. This route would enable the counties of Huntingdon, Bed- ford and Blair to make easy connection with the State road at Unionville, and would give Lycoming, Clinton, Potter, Tioga and the connties lying along the Sus- quebanna river, western conuection with it at Milesburg, a distance of about fifty miles west of Williamsport and exactly in the centre of the State, going [rom the New York to the Maryland live. When the matter of the route is to he determined—il ever it is—it is to be hoped that only the wisest counsel will prevail and that the best interests of the entire State will be the controlling influence that will fix it. Oar people want no more jobs, no more steals. No more favoritism and no more disgrace because of the johbery and thieving of our public officials. Better by far have no State highway. Mr. President—Tos Small. Too Small, A quarter section of land, as surveyed and chained off by the government contains 160 acres. For this the government price is $2.50 per acre. Senator TILLMAN is charged by President ROOSEVELT with an attempt to get nine quarter sections,or 1440 acres, which all told would amount to $3,600. And its behind this little $3,600— (call it steal if you will, although the South Carolina Senator would have been required to pay for it just as any other citizen wonld) that the President of the United States imagines he can hide all bis viola- tions of the constitution ; all his outrageous usurpations of power ; all his interference with the rights of other departments ; all his arrogance, his insolence and his insalts to the Senate and Congress and through these to the people of the country, as well as the flagrant extravagances thas have characterized both his public adwinistra- tion and his private life. For after all it is only to draw public attention from hic own acts, that he has seized on this TILLMAN affair,and hopes in this way to put the Senate and Congress on another trail. Bat think of it. Why, that $3,600 wouldn’s hide the one twentieth part of the graft he bas had out of a single pleasure trip be and his family have taken down the Potomac bay, oo the government vessel he had fisted ap and maintains at publio ex- pense, through all his administration for his own private use and personal pleasure. Oh! no, Mr. ROOSEVELT, no such a mole-hill as $3,600 will hide your sins ard short comings. It only shows how anxious of Philadelphia and Pittsburg, has either | locating the road the power to fix the route BELLEFONTE. PA, you are to bave public attention drawn to some other subject, and away from the wrongs you have committed against the position yoa have been honored with and the people who have honored you. Let The Fight Go On! While others are deprecating the un- seemly wrangle that now promises to devel- op into a fight to the finish between the President, Congress, and the various de- partments at Washington, the WATCHMAN can see no reason for feeling badly over is, or no cause for wishing that it may be either stopped or settled without running its full conrse. Out of all the fuss and fury, the bitterness and blathering, the suspicions and spying that are heing re- sorted to, by and between those who make our laws and these who are supposed to ex- ecate and enforce them, some good is sure to come and whatever little does, will be that much for us to congratulate oorselves over. It bias been years since there has been a general shaking up between the different departments of the government at Wash- ington, and now that someshing of the kind is not only probable but almost certain, everyone of us should join in and do our best to help it along in every way possible until we have such a war, such a digging up of matters, such a layiog bare of official sores, official wrongs and official short comings, as the country bas not witnessed in a century. It will tend to the purification of every department. It will be a warning and a danger sigoal to every public official. It will be a notice to every individual who assumes to represent, act for or serve, the people in public capacities in the futare that the day may come when rottenness and wrong, incapacity and dishonesty will be exposed, just as it promises to be at this time; and in this way prove a check to those inclined to do wrong aud an incen- tive for greater effort and watchinlness on the part of those who are disposed to do right. And then, it Presidential arrogance and extravagance are curtailed, it will be that mach for the better. If congressional carelessness and jobbery is lessened it will be that much for the public good. If de- partmental insolence is checked and ioca- pacity expoeed it will be that much wore to the credit of the conntry and the benefit of the public. It may not stop all, but it will surely end some of the wrongs that have been, and still are, inflicted upon the country. Let us all hope for its continnance. Let us pray for its intensity as well as its effectiveness. Roosevelt's Reel in Lawlessness. Senator CULBERTSON'S resolution to in- quire into the relations of the President to the absorption of the Tennessee Iron and Coal company by the Steel trust is signifi- cant because it will reveal the utter in- sincerity of THEODORE ROOSEVELT. By his own confession President ROOSEVELT guaranteed the Steel trust managers im- munity from prosecution or punishment in the event of the violation of the law hy that transaction. Judge GARY and Mr. HexNry C. FRICK pointed out the fact that the SHERMAN act would be violated in case the deal was consummated. But Roose. VELT advised them to proceed notwith- standing the probibition of the act and subsequently wrote the Attorney General instructing him to refrain from prosecuting. The President of the United States is sworn to see that ‘‘the laws are faithfully executed.” He has no authority to abro- gate or suspend the operations of a law. Alter conviotion he may order the suspen- sion of sentence or pardon or commute. Bat he bas no more right to make an agree- ment in advance of the event to promise immunity than he bas to assist in the prep- arations for a marder or a burglary. That being true his agreement with GARY and FRICK was equivalent to compounding a felony and justifies impeachment aud re- moval from office and prosecution in the criminal courts. It involved not only that but marks him a perjurer. It was a violation of his cath of office, and a prostitation of hisjofficial authority. President ROOSEVELT boasts of his fidel- ity to the principle of equality before he law. He shrieks to the galleries his im- partiality to wealthy malelaotors. But when multimillionaires come to him with their schemes for plundering the people, he readily acquiesces in their plans. This proves that he is nos sincere. It shows that his attempt to seize coniroi of the business of the country was nos for the purpose of regulating it in the interest of the people but to gratify his lust for power and his vanity to control. He is neither honest, courageous normanly. His ad- ministration has been a reel of lawless. ness which isa disgrace to the civiliza- tion of the country. ~The board of auditors are now at work auditing the accounts of the various county officers for the year 1908. The differences between Congress and the President bave reached au acute stage. Neither can recede now without acknowl- edging a fault. The President doesn’t want to avers the impending encounter, probably. In his absurd vanity be imag- ines that his course is something like that of ANDREW JACKSON. But there is a vast difference between bis quarrel with Con- gress and that of Old Hickory. JACKSON was candid, courageous and truthful. ROOSEVELT, on the other hand, is a woral and physical coward. He is afraid to walk across the street without half a dozen secret service men about him. Besides that be is a vilifier and a falsifier. No man of bis temperament can hold the admiration of the American people. But the public is largely to blame for the mental and moral infirmities of Presi- dent RoosevELT. Ib the beginning they applauded hie iniguities. When he made a corrupt bargain with Quay orao advan- tageons deal in patronage with some other scarvy politician, the achievement was com- mended as freely as if some meritorions service bad been performed. Congress was servile because Congressmen found it con- vepient to engage in corrapt commerce with bim in dispensing the patronage of the government. Now we are reaping the harvest. Drunk with usurped power ROOSEVELT has come to believe that his caprioces are the law of the land and some drastic corrective measare will be necessary to disabuse his mind of that dangerous illusion. Of course Congress will be obliged to ap: ply the remedy or sacrifice every vestige of popular respect. It makes no difference to Speaker CANNON, naturally. Repre- sentatives like Joux M. RevyNoLDs, of Pennsylvania, are not outraged either. A few official plums will reconcile him to any indignity or outrage. But the self-respect. ing American citizen will resent the ruf- fianism which puts a stain upon the honor of our law-making body. Because of this fact there can be no compromise so far as Congress is concerned. The President can back down, for like all bullies he is with- out self-respect or a sense of decency. Bat Congress mast vindicate its honor and Con- gressmen resent insults, The people have no time for poltroons. The Sprisg Primaries. One week from tomorrow evening both the Democratic and Republican primaries will be held for the nomivation of eandi- dates to be voted for at the February elec- tion for she various horough and ward offi- ces. The WaTcHMAN has no axe to grind and in keeping with its polioy refrains from advocating the rights or cisims of any can- didate for any office prior to the nomina- tion, as it is only fair that all should have a free field and no favors. The only thing we do urge is for the voters of Bellefonte to make their fizhs at the primaries for the nomination of good men. Do not wait until afterwards and then reflect on your party because the candidates nominated do not size up to your estimation of what they should. There are plenty of good men in Belle- fonte who are willing to serve the borough, and by the time of the primaries there will be enoogh of them that the voters will have ample opportunity to make a very good choice. The borongh election this year is an important one. Every office from burgess down to the smallest ward office is to be filled and ouly competent men for each and every place should be selected. Therefore, let the voters turn oat on January 23rd and vominate good, strong men for the various offices. Senator Dimeling Honored, Senator DIMELING bas great reason for feeling proud of the compliment paid him by his fellows Senators and the Demooratio members of the House as Harrisburg, last week, in naming him as their choice for United States Senator. As he neither sought nor expeoted such a distinction the fact that it came to him unsolicited and avanimous only emphasized the goodly feeling and enviable opinion thas those who have learned to know him, entertained for him. In naming Senator DIMELING for this important position, the Democratic Senators and Members not only honor him bat the distrios as weil, and the WATCH. MAN takes pleasure in extending the thanks of the more than ten thousand Democratic voters, who are proud to be among his constituents, for the distinguish- ed honor that has been shown bim and, through him. conferred upon the district. ~———1t is leas than three years since Sena- tor TILLMAN produced the evidence prov- ing President ROOSEVELT'S close relation- ship to the Honse of ANANIAS. We all know who shese people were. Everybody understands how natarai is would be for them to magnify an «fort to locate a sec- tion of land into an attempt to steal a state, and knowing these things the general public will be inclined to wait for the fall returns from Oregon rather shan accept Mr. ROOSEVELT'S report of results out there. > From the Lancaster Intelligencer. What Senator Tillman did was to direct certain land agente to secure for him and his at the government price certain desir. able lands .thas were supposed to be for- feited to the ment ; as he bad a per. fect right to do unless it is considered that senators should be withheld hy coosidera- Sioa of caation from buying government a. Senator Tillman has made his explava- tion to the Senate of the president’s aconsa- tion and charged that it was made in mal- ioe ; which charge is fully shown to be trae, since that agaiost the senator is shown to involve no criminality and to afford basis at worst for no more than a obarge of indiscretion, and the ground for even that is slim. Senator Tillman fairly criticises the pres- ident for thus taking note of his desire to get some 1,400 acres of government land at the government's price, while he, as presi- dent, has so far failed to obey the direc tion of the law to deprive a railroad inter- est, controlled by Harriman, who seems to be the president’s alternate friend and foe, of some two million acres of a land grant which has been declared so be forfeited. This is a fair bit and it is one to which the president is justly open. This Till- man incident is one very illustrative of hie character, which leads him into any depth of meanness and todo any degree of wrong to his enemies, when it is safe todo it; but which moves him to make them bed- fellows when his own interests demand it. He is thoroughly selfish with an eye single to himself, and a disposition to self-service which po imagination can estimate too highly. ‘ Demonstrates His Malevolence. From the Lancaster Intelligencer. The attack made by the president on Senator Tillman is manifestly malicious. It is evident that is bad been elaborately prepared and pigeon-holed to be brought out on demand. The demand came when the president was assailed in Congress for his use of the secret service, and was brought out and sent to Senator Hale, whose tardiness in publishing it made it necessary for the president’s that he should himself publieh is, that it mighe come in to meet the resolutions of the House condemning him for his imputation upon congressmen and the utility of the seoret service in keeping tab on the conduct of its members, The Tillman papers have carefully sought to impute wrongdoing to the sen- ator in connection with an application made by him for land thrown open to pub- lic entry out of a lapsed railroad grant. Of course, it was proper for Senator Till- man to make an entry of land thrown open to the public for entry in payment of the price. Tiare This is all that he seems to have done ; and certainly his being a senator did not forbid his doing what any eitizen could do. * % # XX ¥* % % ¥ ¥ * ® = We are of opinion that the president will make nothing by this assault upon Senator Tiliman save the demonstration to the people of his small-minded malevolence. From the Springfield Republican. Nothing traer or more cleaving was ut- tered in the House debate on the resolu- tions laying ou the table the Secret Service paragraphs of the President’s annual mes- sage than Chairman Perkin’s remark that ‘“‘no legislative body will be respected by the people unless it respects itsell.”” By an overwhelming vote of 212 $035 the House demonstrates that it will not re- ceive from the Executive unjustifiable and untruthful aspersions upon its honor as a legislative body, and thus leaves no possi- ble doubt that it will maintain its self- respect at whatever cost. Nor can the President’s counoter assanlt upon Senator Tillman affect in the sligbt- est degree the merits of the question which the lower branch of Congress has met. The South Carolina Senator may he a knave, bat at least he had no fear of the Secret Service or of official inguiry into its own acts, inasmnch as it was Senator Tillman himself who initiated by his own request the Goverument investigation by postal in- spectors which has fornished to the Presi- dent the ammunition which he now uses against him. If Senator Tillman, however, or any other Senator, has disgraced the Senate, that body will know how to deal with him. For the Senate bas yet to act on the issues raised by the President in connection with the Secret Service. The House bas vindicated itself. The House Is Justified. From the Philadelphia Press. The house of representatives bas par- liamentary jastification for adopting the resolutions on the president’s message re- ported by its special committee yesterday. There are doubtless a few congressmen who need watching and who objeot to any zeal- ous and efficient federal secret service. There are jobs ontside of congress. There are men inside of congress ready to aid them. But this did not justify the presi. dent in his sweeping assertion, which be has since modifiad, and both houses of con- gress have a tangible grievance in his atter- ances, with which each is dealing. How Much Better 'Twounld Be. From the Florida Times-Union. We build Socatidg forts now. How long before we shall build floating hospitals instead to take the weak and sick into summer seas on the of winter ? Is it not nobler to millions to save life than to epend millions in the expecta- tion of taking it ? ~The Senior class of the Boggs town- ship High echool will hold an ice cream and cake festival in the ball over Wetzler's store tomorrow (Saturday) evening. Pro- ceeds for the benefit of the High sobool li- brary and other equipment. The public in general is invited to attend and all are assured of a royal good time. Spawls from the Keystone. —Big preparations are being made for the celebration in York, on Tuesday January 19, of the one hundredth birthday anniversary of the poet, Edgar Allan Poe. —An epidemic of scarlet fever has appear- ed in the twin boroughs of Pennsburg and East Greenville, Montgomery county, twenty cases having been reported. —No. 2. furnace of the Pennsylvania Steel works at Harrisburg has been started after a year's idleness, and No. 1 Paxton furnsece will be put in operation in a short time. —For the first time since September 15th, there is now sufficient water to supply all the collieries in the Mahanoy region, Schuyl- kill county, the recent heavy rains baving started the dried up springs. —Thieves broke into the Mzsonic temple in Reading, on Tuesday night and stole offi- cers’ jewels to the value of several hundred dollars. The Orpheum theatre was also for- cibly entered and a lot of articles belonging to actors and attaches stolen. —John Krouse, a confectioner of Lock Haven, has an apple, in good condition, al- though it was grown two years ago last sum- mer. The apple was received by Mr. K rouse over two years ago in a consignment of fruit from the state of Washington. ~The first all-steel dining car ever built by the Pennsylvania Railroad company was put into service at Altoona Thursday. It was built at the Altoona shops. The new car is elaborately equipped and will accom - modate 30 persous at the tables at one time. —A record breaking shipment from the Adams express office at Latrobe was made on Friday morning, when fresh beef and pork, totaling 13,900 pounds, were shipped by the East Liberty Home Dressed Meat company, of Latrobe, to various dealers in and about Pittsburg. —The voters of York will be called on at the election in February to decide for or against a loan of $450.000 for the completion of its sanitary sewage system and the erec- tion of a disposal plant. The proposition of making such a loan last year was defeated by the voters. —Altoona bas been selected as the next mecting place for the convention of the State Association of Postmasters, which will be held June 16th and 17th. The meeting will be the second annual convention of the organization, which was formed at a meeting held last year at Harrisburg. —The quadrennial weighing of the mails handled by the Pennsylvania Railroad com- pany will begin on February 1st snd contin. ue for a period of thirty to ninety days. A man will be stationed on every train to do the weighing and on the result the contract for the next four years will be made. ~—Michael Niedemeir, eighty years old, of Altoona, a Pennsylvania Railroad company pensioner and a veteran of the German ar- my, while on his way to his lodging house Wednesday night, fell into a diteh along the sidewalk and lay there all night usnoticed by passersby. His body was found Thursday morcing frozen stiff. —Joe Koltilfky, a Polander, aged about fifty-three years, employed as a miner at Olanta, Clearfield county, while opening a keg of powder on Thursday was smoking a cigarette, when a spark fell into the keg, ex~ ploding the powder and very badly burned him about the face, body and left leg. He was taken to Cottage hospital Philipsburg, for treatment. —Alleging that the jurors drank intoxi- eating liquor during the trial, counsel for Harry Fisher, convicted for the murder of Miss Sarah Klinger, at Shamokin, are en- deavoring to get another chance to make a fight for the life of their client, They hold that the jurymen were unable to appreciate the value of the testimony introduced. The jurors deny the accusation. ~The Goodyear Lumber company, of Galeton, will during the coming summer, remove all the timber on the Nine Mile tract, which is located in tho vicinity of the Farnum Lyon place, and is estimated at twenty million feet. This means that a great amount of work will be done in that section during the coming year, and that the stock of the mill at Galeton wiil be greatly increased. —The next annual encampment of the Sons of Veterans of Pennsylvania will meet in Milton in June next, and it gives every promise of being the largest and most im- portant meeting of the division ever held. At a preliminary meeting in Milton a few days ago it was announced that Governor Stuart had consented to be there to review the parade on Thursday, July 1st. The de~ partment officers of the Grand Army of the Republic will also be there on that day. —Viewers that were appointed recently to assess the damages on the farm belonging te the Latta estate near Derry, Westmoreland county, by reason of taking eight acres for constructing a sewage disposal plant thereon by the town of Derry, met on the premises last Thursday for that purpose. Heirs of the estate claimed damages to the amount of $25, 000, as part of the ground is laid out into building lots, and different witnesses esti= mated the damages at from $300 to $20,000. The jury’s award was $1,250. The owners say they will appeal. ~The funerals of father and daughter, Charles Crouse and Mrs. John Cashen, oc~ curriug at one time, was the sad service con- ducted at the St. Bonifice Catholic church at Williamspori, on Tuesday. The father and daughter died on the same day, Saturday, and their bodies were laid in the grave fol- lowing one funeral serviee. Mrs. Cashen died in the Williamsport hospital at noon from an attack of Bright's disease. Her father died that night from the effects of a stroke of paralysis. He was proprietor of the Junction hotel, South Williamsport. ~JIt will cost the State of Pem sylvania about $150,000 to pay for advertising the fact that constitutional amendments are on their way through the legislature. Up till today all the newspapers have sent in their bills but twelve, and the amount totals thus far about $147,000. The advertisements were sent out from the office of the Secretary of the Commonwealth and bills were rendered to that department. These bills, however, will have to pass inspection in the Auditor General’s department. Every newspaper has its own advertising rates, and in the case of the amendments the prices range from 5 sents to 25 cents a line. sv pl