OAR 35 Ss SSE OIRO eto —Right at the partioular moment we are feeling as though the hook worm bas a book on ms. —Pioking the Thanksgiving turkey ab the markes iso's balf as bar@ a job as piok- ‘ing it at home. ~The TAFT junket is over and we baven's yet seen many fiogers pointing to the great good it did. ~The weather man has been acting very much as theugh he intends to give us snow when is really should be rain. —80 poor Jom D. is still ssroggling ! What for, pray ? Since a public baving pothiog left to give up but the hook worm ought not to cause much of a struggle on his part. ~The resuls of the last two yeas, lol lowing the lapse of athletic relations, seams to indicate that State bas permanently left she olass of foot-ball teams to whioh Baok- nell belongs. —Thie édiot has gone out against rats in the poblic schools of Philadelphia. This does not mean that the rodents are to be exterminated but that the girls must leave them out of their hair. ~The fact that the treasurer of the “Big Four’ was able to embeszle a clean million dollars before he was caught looks a little as though one rail-road corporation, at least, needs an injection of modern busi- ness methods, —Mrs. JOHN JacuB ASTOR bas been granted a divoroe which carries with is fil- teen million dollars and the custody of her daughter. That ought to be enough, bus then you kuow those LEACHES were born with gold spoons in their mouths. —Dr. COOK, if he is a faker, is certainly tbe smoothest one we have ever seen Op- erate. What will is matter to him, after be bas gathered in all the dough on bie lectures, whether that Copenhagen society deoides be found the pole or not. —Wiat has become of the amendments ? Twelve days have elapsed sinoe the eleo- tion and she resuls of she vote on them is not known yet. Can it be possible that the machine made city returns are heing held back with a view to padding them to whatever extents may be necessary to over. come the vote againet she amendments in the country distriots. —Hypnotism will receive a baokses through the death of a subject at Somer ville, N. J., on Monday might. Tae vio- ¢im bad been put into a state of total cata- lepey from which the operator was unable to arouse him. While a post mortem has disclosed shat death was due to natural causes it has resalted in bringing to pub- lio attention the danger of permitting ama- teurs and unskilled operators to practice hypootism, and it should be followed up with laws that will prevent the exercise of hypnotic suggestions except in the pursuit of scientific research. —While in Philadelphia a few days ago Col. W. FRED REYNOLDS submitted to an interview for the Philadelphia Record and as an outoome of it the Colonel is proolaim- ed by the Record as “‘the Republican lead- er and champion peach farmer of Centre county.” While it is not our desire to question either of these titles that the Col- onel evidently modestly assumed to stand up under yet we do feel a little curiosity to know bow the Hon. BARCLAY, of Sin- pamaboning, will negotiate with the Col- onel when it comes to getting Centre coun- ty’s endorsement for his third try for Con- gress. You kuow that the Colonel is being groomed for that place by some of his liea- tenants and a private or two. —The Republica seems to be working itsell into a veritable spasm because some Republicans in Centre county voted for the Hon. C. LaRue Muxsox for Sapreme Court Justice. What if they did, that isn’t going to make Pennsylvavia a Demo- oratio State. Though we fancy that the Republicans who had the interests of the State so much at heart that they preferred to support Mr. MUNSON to that corrapt Philadelphia gang’s candidate would not feel badly if Pennsylvania were to go Dem. ooratio once in a while. They are of the olass who hold government above partisan. ship and would far. rather see a good Dem- oorat eleoted to office once in a while than to continue having their Republican prin- ciples traduced by a orowd of crooked gralters who have no farther interest in elections than to eeoure plunder for them- selves and their henchmen. —No sooner has labor found itself with plenty of employment than it talks of strikes for higher wages. While the time seems most inopportune there is no contro. verting the fact that labor will have to bave higher wagee if it hopes to subsist. The orying need of the country jast now is an economic adjustment whereby the great disparity between the price of necessities and wagesmay be equalized. Conditions slmost convince us thas food stuffs will never be materially lower ia price than they are now and if this should prove to be the case labor must either receive a higher wage or starve. PAYNE and Arn. DRICH tarifl measures, Central bauks, and presidential junkets through the comamy will nos help the situation. It is a condi. tion, not a theory thas coufronts the Amer- ioan laboring man, when he bas to pay present prices for meat and groceries and finds that his pay envelope is no fuller than it was when all the things he eats and wears were swenty-five per cent. lower in cost. The insincerity of the pretense that Re- publicans in this State favor a pon-parti- san judiciary wes strikingly revealed in the campaign which has just olosed. olose observer has been deceived by this false pretense in recent years, for one inoi- dent alter another has intervened to dis- olose she truth. In Philadelpbis and Pittsborg the Democrats bave refrained from making nominations for the beoch except in such cases as two vacancies ab onoe when respeot for the spirit of the oon- stitution required the naming of a csvdi- dste. Four years ago the Democrats nom- inated Justice JOHN STEWART, a Republi- can, as their candidate for Justice of the Supreme cours, and have never regretted the fact. But the Republicans never man- ifest she same liberality for they invariably nominate partisan candidates, whether the sitting judge whose term is about to expize be a Democrat or Republican. In the recent campaign judicial vacan- cies were filled in Allegheny, Armstrong Berks, Chester, Fayette and Westmoreland counties. Io all except two of these, Alle- gheny and Armstrong counties, the judges whose seats are to be filled are Demoorate. In Berks county, it is true, the Governor had appointed a Republican to fill a vacan- oy caused by the death of a Demoorat who had been elected by the people, and the constituency being everwhelmingly Demo- oratio, the party properly nominated two candidates sud elected them. In Arm- strong county public sentiment was 80 ap- parently against the re-election of Judge PATTON that the Demoorats felt isa civio duty to nominate a candidate against bim. Bat in Allegheny ocoanty, the ouly other county in which a Republican incumbent's term was about to expire, she Democrats made no nomination and supported for re- election the Repnhlican nominee. In Berks county Judge ENDLICH was opposed for re-election though his jadiocial record is unassailable. In Cheater connty Judge HEMPHILL, who bad twice before been elected on a mnoo-pariisan platlorm aod enjoys a reputation for judicial fair- ness and ability that might be envied by soy jurist, was bisterly fought by the Re- publican mackine in the interest of a parti- san candidate. Ia Fayette county Judge UMBLE, who is completing a ten year's gervioe of rare merit on the bench, was fought with all the bitterness that partisan rancor could command and in Westmore- land county Judge Dory, who is complet: ing twenty years of distinguished service on the bench, was opposed with equal earn- estuess to the end that partisanship might be enthroned in the courts of that county whioh already has two Republican Judges. These facts settle the question of a noo- partisan judiciary so far as the Republican party can fix it. —————————— An Unenviable Distinction. It ie of record that upwards of 40,000 Philadelphia voters were ‘‘assisted’’ at the recent elestion. There may have been ten or twenty thousand more than that num- ber of voters in that city who took persons into the booth with them to mark their ballots or see that they were marked as the machine wanted them to be, of whom no record was made. Watchers can’t be every place at one time and the chances are that a considerable number of the ‘‘assisted’ voters escaped notice. In any event it is agreed that upwards of 40,000 bribed voters participated in the election in that oity and voted the machine ticket. That num- ber about equals the majority received by RoraN for District Attoraey. This fact bestows upon the Republican machine candidate for District Attorney in Philadelphia a rare distinction. He was nominated, according to the best evidence attainable, as the June primaries, by stuf- fing the ballot boxes in his interest. At least it was oharged that some three huo- dred or more ballot boxes had been stuffed in his interest and when is was proposed to open the boxes by judicial process, for the purpose of discovering ‘She truth, the ma- chine nearly went into conniption file in its soxiety to avert that operation. If those concerned badn’s known that the ao- ousation was true, they would bave promptly consented to the opening of the boxes for investigation. But they exhaust- ed every legal expedient to prevent the ex- amination, Therefore Me. ROTAN ie a public official, or will be when bis nexs term begins, who was nominated by stuffed ballot boxes and elected by bribed voters. These facts do not convey the sort of notoriety that pro. vokes the envy of honest men and decent citizens. In fact is is a sale proposition shat no self: respecting citizen would acoept office, the title to which was tainted in that way. Bat Mr. Rorax is not likely to be bothered any with companotions of conscience, He probably reasons that no man of oharaoter and integrity will acoeps any nomination from the Philadelpbia Re- publican maphine for it is so completely saturated with vice and crime that any fa- vor it confers is tainted. Therefore he is no worse than the rest. rm 11 a | S| SAM RT PT SHA spawis from the Keystone, —A trustees’ sale of the property of the Pittsburg Industrial iron works which is lo cated at West Huntingdon, brought $10,000. —Rankin Edwarde, a respected farmer seventy years old, was shot and instantly killed Tuesday night at his home near Muncy, by Eilis Deeter, a quarryman. ~Twenty- two thousand, seven hundred, forty-three tons of coal were transported over the Huntingdon and Broad Top railroad STATE RIGHTS AN Senator SHELBY CurwoM, of Illinois, gives the managers of his party » hint that is sigoificans. The Illinois Senator is a veteran politician. He bas been in con- tinnous service in the Senate for nearly thirty years aod served some time in the House of Representatives, in Washington, before going to the Senate. He imagines that he looks something like LINCOLN and is as onnniog as a fox. He is among those who have freely used the colored voters by appealing to sheir ignorance and supersti- tious, bat now that is seems their help is no longer needed, he is willing to sacrifice them. Senator CULLOM discerns the fact that the Republican party can no longer depend upon the “solid” North for party viotories. With almost any other candidate than the distinguished gentleman who was nominat- ed by the Denver convention, the vote of Northern States would have been split in two in the clection of 1908. Iu the eleo- tion of 1912 the Middle West and moet of the Middle Northern States are practically certain to vote for the Democratic candi: date and the Republican party must look to the Sonth for support to give it even a fighting chance for the election. It is for this reason that President TAFT is working #80 desperately to break up the solid Dem- oocraoy in the Eounth. Under these conditions Senator CULLOM, of Illinois, comes forward with the sugges- tion that his party offer the negroesasa saorifice. In other words be proposes tha® his party take the ioitiative in a move- mens to disfranchise the negroes both in the North and she South for the reason, as he states is, that in the event of the elimi. pation of the colored vote from the political equation some of the Southern States could The protective sentiment has heen growing among the selfish element in the South and Mr. CuLLOM imagines that if the danger of negro domination were removed some of those States would vote the Republican ticket. The chances are that the Illinois veteran is mistaken in this conjeotare but even if be is accurate in his judgment his party would derive no advantage and get nothing for its treachery but popular contempt. Louisizoa and Georgia might possibly vote with the Repablicane on she tariff question but the obange of action on the negro question would work such disaster to his party in the North, thas the gain in the South would be no benefis. The negro vote is the balance of power in Pennsylva- nia, New York, Massachusetts, Ohio and a dozen other Northern States and without is the Republican party would be helpless. Roosevelt Shicids the Sugar Trust, The iniguitien of the Sugar trast are now coming into pablic notice. Of is the New York World says: “Through sworn testimony taken in cours, in legislative and congressional investigations and in other prooeed- ings,” it i* shown to have been guilty of “bringing political committees, seeking to influence United States Sen- ators by stock tips, accepting rebates in violation of the Interstate Commerce law, stealing from the United States government through weighiog frauds, conspiring to rain independent sugar relives Violating Bie SHERMAN ask. aw, ng short-weighs scales, blacklisting grocers who handle inde: pendent sugar, importing cheap con- tract labor and viclating factory and health laws.” All these offences against the law were perpetrated during the entire period of the first ROOSEVELT administration and nearly two years of his eecond term. In ample time to have prosecuted and punished those responsible for these offences against the laws of the land President RoosEVELT and his Attorney General were informed of all the facts. Mr. EARLE, receiver of one of the refineries which bad been ruined by the truss, begged both the President and bis absurd Attorney General to prosecute the truss magoates and save the share- holders in the concorn viotimized from tarther suffering. But po prosecutions were undertaken until after the statute of limitation bad run and immunity for the ‘‘male-factors of great wealth” was thus The reason for this official delinquency is well known. The Sugar trust bad con- tributed liberally to the ROOSEVELT cam- paign of 1904 under an implied if not ao- tual agreement that it would be permitted | to rob the publi in viclation of the law until reimbarsement was complete. It was part of the work performed by Comr- TELYOU,as chairman of the Republican Na- tional committee, and it stamps THEODORE ROOSEVELT as the most unconscionable grafter who has ever disgraced the public life of this country. re —1% wae Senator 818s0N's efforts and influence, possibly—more than those of suy other individual, that defeated the soldiers State Pension bill. And yet at the recent election he was given joie i Mg gg i of endorsed his opposition to shat ey be beguiled over to the Republican party. D FEDERAL UNION. Beform Leaders to Blame. Tbe so-called reformers of Philadelphia | are blamahble for many blunders but itisa question whether they should be censured or pitied. That they are themselves to blame for most of their disappointments is true. They proceed on sach silly lines thas she ohances are they are they would be defeated if they were ten times as strong as they are. Bas itis pot because they want to be defeated. On the contrary we believe shat they are ae sincerely anxious to win as it is possible tn be and thas the reason they make such exregiouns blunders is because they don’t know any better. It it were a matter of lradirg a german or planning a cotillion they would probably be all right. In the recent campaign, for example, they strengthened the machine immeasure- ably on local issues by relieviog the Re- publicans of all danger -of defeat on the State ticket. No party ever nominated as noworthy a ticket for State offices as that of the Republican machine. Bat for the reason shat the reformers in Philadelphia refused to fight these exeorable candidates, the machine io Philadelphia felt thas it | P' was safe and not only diverted all the money they could command but all the energy they oconld acquire, toward the election of she focal tickets. Hall a million dollars raised throughout the State were expended in Philadelphia, whereas if the Philadelphia reformers had fought the ma- obine State ticket enough money would bave been spent in other parts of the State to make the result on the Philadelphia tiokes a matter of doubt. Four years ago the reformers in Phila: delphia set ont to conduct the same sors of a campaign as thas of this year but a few practical politicians who bad gone into the movement for revenue, probably, prevailed on them to change the plans. The result was a diffasion of energies and effort and the machine lost both in the oity aod Stata. CI course the election of a machine District Attorney in Philadelphia is imporé- ant to the gang. Bas the election of ma- chine men for Auditor General and State Treasurer is ofjinfinitely greater importance and if the entire reform force hadn't been affligted with paresis, Shey would bave divided the forces this year as they did in 1905 and defeated the machine candidates local and State se they did in shat in- stance. The Constitutional Amendments, The resalt of the vote on the constita- tional amendments is involved in doubt. The moss objectionable of the lot, the one whioh contemplated the abdication of all oiwil power hy the people, is probably beaten for the reason that)ithe majority against it was so great that it couldn't be altered by false counting. It is more than probable that the others were defeated, also but the computation of the vote has been held back in Philadelphia and a few other places for the palpable parpose of chang: ing the resalt. The machine isanxious to ourtail the power of the people and its managers imagine that thejadoption of the amendments will promote that sinister re- salt. On the night of the election the Associat- ed Press, as sourvy an instrument of the PENROSE machine as can be imagined, an- nounced that the amendments were adopt- ed by a large majority. Obviously ‘“‘the wish was father to the thought,” for every intelligent observer of events knew that public sentiment was so decidedly against the amendments that if they were adopted at all, it muss be by a close margin. But the Philadelphia agent of the Associated Press, learned in the school which teaches ite pupils to “claim everything’ promptly “sipped the wink’ by a bogus dispatch, claiming that the amendments were adopt- ed. The actual return: whenever they were made promptly, flatly contradicted the olaim, however. As a matter of fact the amend ments were all defeated though some of them may be counted in. One or two of them bad suffi- cient merit to make the question of their adoption debatable. That is to say there is some reason for the opinion that; we bave too many elections and some sense in the proposition that uniformity in the tenure of the various offices might be of public advantage. But these propositions were simply masks for the major iniquity which proposed to take trom the people the great- | io accommodate both ped teams and all other kinds of ordinary pub- lio travel, paying the entire cost of con- est of all their constitutional rights, thas of selecting their own election officers. Happily this great evil has been averted because the proposition has been beaten so badly that it can’s be reversed by [alee counts or frandulent returns. ——A majority of over 1200 agatost the Philadelphia gaog’s candidate for Supreme Court Judge in Centre county, pats the cur ious hereaboute to wondering whether the effusive praise of that nominee by the new editor of the Republican, who aspires to be the boss of his party, or the disgruntled of | and jealous silence, as to his fitness, exhib- ited by the editor of the Gasetle, who thinks he is the boss, bad moss to do with the result. ll... during the week ending October 30th, This is a decrease of 1,143 tons. ~—Raymond Patterson, of Clearfield, whe was injured in an explosion in the State Col~ lege chemical laboratory when he was make ing a test, will retain the sight of his left eye but may lose that of his right. —It is thought by those interested in the company that the Fitzpatrick glass plant, at DuBois, will be put into operation this win- _ | ter. All the machinery has been removed ment | 80d the works will be run on a hand basis in E S33EEE ik 1 i i i duoed at ola m that body in his dently realizes that very convincing d aon ey i must support anything that ons. Io bis Ch professing no is trae that the obaoge that might shook that e unless we are on the right track the progress may only mean the greater danger. How to Get Rid of Weeds. From Harper's Weakly. Io view of the presens prices of food pro- doots and the oatlook for the ar the A of the for er, but is will make a deligh tender and wholesome. The the dandelion in this pow well koown., Wild obarlook, another bane of the a delicious flavor to soup, as will 28 £3 i 2 i £ 3 £ £ 2 gE E ary eommimion. Soqaior Al went bok. Ho is He is ited as an economist by the senator rather and progtess the times warrant she doing of some ate es m common weeds are table ose. Wild chicory is bitterly hated by the farm- | the future. —~Fifty thousand dollars’ property loss was caused by a freight wreck near Strouds- burg, on the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western railroad. There were sixteen cars in the wreck, which was the result of a side~ swipe in a cut. ~Thirty looms have been installed to date in the Susquebanna silk mill at Lewistown and operations are expected to begin inside the next two weeks. A large number of operatives will be employed, with promise of permanent work, —One thousand dollars’ reward has been offered by the Ohio Oil company for the ar- rest and conviction of the person or persons who blew up with dynamite the pipe line of the company on the night of October 9th on the Webster Curfman farm, in Cass town- ship, Huatingdon county. —Dodds & Day, of Philadelphia, have progressed almost to completion in the line of steel towers that will carry the heavily charged wires of the Lewistown Light, Heat and Power company from the Warrior Ridge ago” | power plant to Lewistown. The line is ex- of Andrew Jackson,” of either, but she forse of suoh lessons may not be entirely lost. If is pected to be in operation in fifteen days. —One hundred and sixty two persons are already on the payrolls of the Whitmer Steele saw mill at Hawk Ran, Clearfield county, which will soon begin work. There will be more added when the plant is in actual operation. From this it will be seen the new concern will bring prosperity in that section of the State, —Samuel Lowry lost a pocketbook con- taining $68 in money and a check for the same amount in the woods near Lock Haven. Fred W. Swope found the wallet and return- ed it to the owner,tracing him through news- paper advertisements. Before the money was found a heavy lumber wagon had pass ed over one end of it. Lowry is the general superintendent of the Kistler, Lesh & Co., tanneries. ~After being closed two weeks on account of an epidemic of scarlet fever, the Glen Campbell, Indiana county, schools will re- " | open this week. There have been sixty ing. tne place of bay leaves | cass of the disease in the town this fall but sage, thyme ig the place of b weeds are | Done bas proved fatal. How the epidemic astonishingly hatd to discourage, s6 in|started is a mystery, Itis thought that some Europe use botb the broad-lesfed of the children remained in school after they ourly- varieties as table vegetables. | had contracted the disease. The danger is Nettles are mach use in Scotland, Poland and Germany so greens when young and n is boiled with other veg- etables to give thedish a piquant flavor. Sorrel is looked upon as a great pest by moss farmers, but choice leaves picked from sorrel ‘weeds’ make a splendid sal- tender. Pars ad for a game dinner. Most people th milkweed poisonous, but is is, infact, a medicinal vegetable with flavor all own. The young leaves seem a oross tween spinach and asparagus, and ina salad are delisions. President Taft's Sueer at Oklahoma, From the Chicago Public. In view of his judicial alleged knowledge of the ernment and bis into the v tions, Pi training, ential while to explain the d of the Oklahoma constitution—to ea definite bill of complaint. Still, one n not marvel! that the president who praises Aldrich as an unselfish statesman, and the Talt-Aldrich- Payne tariff law as a good law, stands io Arizona and throws a brick at the people of Oklahoma because they knowingly adopted a oonstitation that enables them to govern themselves. An Insurgent Who Insurges. From the Portiand Journal, neiples of gov- ability to look marrow of great public ques- ent Taft should not bave con- teated bimeelf with throwing an epithes at the Oklahoma constitution when he spoke at Phoenix, Arizona. It was worth the now about over, ~All the Juniata valley, including Hunt. ingdon, Mifflin and Juniata counties, is to be embraced in a big charity combine the ob ject of which will be to support the Hunt- ingdon orphan asylum. Five thousand peo- ple are to be organized and $1 a year is to be asked from each one. Professor Emmert, the head of the orphan asylum, is the origina. tor of the idea. The proposition was launch. ed at the meeting of the brotherhood com. nected with the Methodist Episcopal church, —Santon Grace, imprisoned in the Ebena~ burg jail for alleged complicity in the hold. up at Portage when the paymaster of the Puritan mines, Patrick F. Campbell, was in- jured and his driver, Charles Hayes, was killed, is alleged to have made a written con. fession saying that he and three other Italians made the plot which included the killing of both men if necessary. The original plans miscarried. He says the affair was postpond then and he bad nothing to do with the actual robbery and killing. —In an official statement issued from the executive department at Harrisburg, Attor. ney General Tood makes these allotments of the reward of $15,000 offered by the State for the apprehension and conviction of the party or parties who abducted Willie Whitla': Patrick O'Reilly, Cleveland, O., $5,000; Wm. H. Hunley, Cleveland, O., $2000; T. C- Cochran Esq., Mercer, Pa., $500; Q. A. Gor- its be- his eed | . Senator Bristow of Kansas has the coar- don Eiq., Mercer, Pa., $500 Martin; Crain, age of his convictions. His insurgency is not a mere feint or pretense. He does profess one thing and g £ : i ous of iw ided Thanksgiving day, November 25th. Pager bags will be distributed in due time and everything in the way of provisions, sup- plies and linen will be appreciated. Money to help complete the new bailding is aleo badly needed and liberal contributions in cash would come in bandy at this time, practioe another. He does vot say the Republican leaders are wrong sud then sapport them or men who will support them. In the coming campaign be wili take the stump in Kan- ican nominees who sup- Sharon, Pa., $100; pension fund, Cleveland police depariment, $6,900. Total, $15,000. —Proxies are being solicited from the stockholders in the Citizens’ Light, Heat and Power compauy, at Johnstown, who cannot be present at a meeting when the business that comes up will have to do with the proposed merger of the light, heat and power interests of Johnstown. The merger may be completed, but if it does the company will take a risk, as court proceedings are now on to prevent the combine. Action will be taken on the proposed increase of the indebtedness of the merged company from $555,000 to $3,555,000. —Much interest is being manifested in cross suits being heard at Ebensburg by a board of arbitrators. It is between the Cam- bria Lumber company, of Kaylor Station, and Hugh I. Noel, who had contracted with the company to cut lumber, haul it to the mill and then take the cut lumber to the station and pile it. He did not take it to the station, alleging the water was too bad. The company refused to pay the full contract price aud Noel sued for $1.700. The com, pany then instituted suit for between $4,000 and $5,000 for damage to the lumber. —As the result of the shooting of the Gummo oil well in Bald Eagle township. Clinton county, the expected oil was not found. One hundred and eighty-nine pounds of nitro glycerine were put into a tubs that extended into the earth forty-five feet and the charge was shot off by a professions shooter. Thare were a namber of Lock Hay en business men interested in the affaiy Much disappointment is felt over the failure, as it is said that oil lies under the ground iu that section. The failure may bave the ef- fect of causing no more wells to be shot in that township, not the