es and bare feet for the laborer. Has oes fiying vo long and high at the Los Angeles aviation show that there is some ground for the fear that he may go up some day and never come down. —Sure, this is an old fashioned winter in every respect except that we didn't have to pay so much for butter, eggs, meat, shoes and clothing in the days when old fashioned winters made their reputations. ~—]If that New York shirt waist strike continues much longer manufacturers will be so far back with their orders that they will have to make them more peek-a-boo than ever for next sum- mer in order to catch up. —We hope the JEFFRIES-JOHNSON mill is pulled off before the Hon. TEDDY comes home from Africa. Really it would be too much to undertake to read what they will all have to say should their chance come about the same time. —Senator GORDON, of Mississippi, paid a dollar for a shave in Washington on Tuesdzy. There is a shop in the capitol in which the senatorial whiskers are re- moved without charge, but the new Sen- ator didn’t know where it was and it cost one “buck” to find it out. —That Chicago man who has been married sixty years and has just found out that the only way to get along hap- pily with his wife is to humor her has probably really discovered that a broom- stick wasn't the proper instrument to ex- press his feelings toward her with. —That Cleveland agreement not to eat meat until prices are reduced may just now be effecting the six thousand persons who signed it, but it has been over two years since the laboring man was forced to deny himself meat because the price ormet To 2Hem wd a lg aominate good men for your local offices. Good men are easier to elect than bad ones, they are more of a credit to you as a cit- izen and will help to put down the grow- ing suspicion that American public office and graft are synonymous. —Governor HUGHES has decided not to make another campaign for the position he holds now in the Empire State. This will relieve Democratic and Republican politicians as well, for the Governor has been so much of a free lance since going to Albany that their calculations on mat- ters political would not work out. —The performance of the stock market recently may be for the purpose of in- timidating Washington but, if it is, the gamblers who had so much faith in the way TAPT was expected “to go along” with all of Wall street's plans, must be lying awake nights wondering who “took them over” during the campaign for his election. —The suicide of JoHERBERT STEVEN- SON, of Merchantville, N. J., adds another to the list of deaths that have followed the State capitol scandal. The finger of fate has been pointing from the great palace of graft and one by who were tainted in its seek- ing the solacz of the grave in the vain endeavor to flee from their ‘consciences. —Governor HARMAN, of Ohio, is of the opinion that the White House is quite an attractive place to live in. Infact he said so during his visit there during the fore part of the week. Of course the Gover- nor facetiously remarked that he would have to get his wife's ideas about it, but we fancy he might be a little more con- cerned about the opinion of the voters on the matter along in 1912. —New York is planning to hold a world’s fair in 1913. Good work. New York never had a world’s fair and if some of those sign readers up in Massa- chusetts know what they are talking about she never will, for there will be no world in 1913. And this just reminds us: Are you ready? Big meetins’ are going on everywhere now and there is no time like the present to be done over. —There is likely to be some fun at the North Republican primaries tomorrow night as a result of Mr. CHas. F. Cook's | ced ou of all propustion We VOL. 55. The Coming Campaign. The coming campaign in - this State will be the most important of any in re- cent years. There will be a Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Secretary of Inter- nal affairs and probably a State Treasurer to elect, this depending upon the con- struction of the present law by the courts. The number of delegates in the Demo- cratic State convention this year will be 298, as against 375 last year, the decrease being attributable to the lethargy of Democrats during the last campaign. Pending that contest we stated thata poll of ninety per cent. of the BRYAN vote of the year before would give the Democratic ticket a majority. The re- sult proved the accuracy of this estimate. Fidelity to duty would have given the party control of the most important boards in the state administration. Since the election of last year the trend of public opinion has been increas- ingly in the direction of Democracy and public incidents have uniformly acceler- ated the motion. The country has come to realize the fraud perpetrated upon the people in the enactment of a tariff law which has increased the cost of living immensely without adding to the wages of labor in the least. The irrepressible conflict between the factions of the Re- publican party in Congress and the scan- dals exposed by Forester PINCHOT in re- lation to the spoliation of the public do- main have added vastly to the already overwhelming disgust of the public with the party in power. All these facts will give strength to the Democrats in the coming campaign if they are wise in selecting candidates and vigilant in sup- porting them. But Republican blunders and Demo- cratic wisdom will be equally futile of proper results if the Democratic voters are as indifferent in the future as they have been in the recent past. Our ticket last year was an ideal one and the Re- publican candidates represented the pre- cise antithesis in every respect. The vast decrease in the Republican vote shows that in so far as the body of that party was concerned a Democratic vic- tory would have been welcomed. But DCFALic: voters it. nearly equal 1 | consequence i sRepablican victory. It was a triumphiby default and we hope such a thing will not occur again. To avert it, however, Democrats ought to get busy now. Secure the best possible can- didates and support them faithfully. The State Treasury Succession. The concensus of present opinion in political circles is that Governor STUART will appoint a State Treasurer at the ex- piration of the term of Mr. Joun O. SHEATZ. No great legal luminary alleges his right to appoint, under the circum- stances, for there will be no vacancy to fill, Mr. SHEATZ holding a commission to serve until his successor is duly qualified. But the machine wants control of the office and has sufficient confidence in the servility of the Supreme court to believe that the trick can be “pulled off.” The highest court has not been morally strengthened since it decided that the convicted capitol grafters must have another chance of escape. It is also confidently given out from political headquarters in the BETZ build- ing, Philadelphia, that the appointee will be a Lancaster county man to be selected by Mr. W, W. GRriesT, Representative in | Congress. Some years ago Mr. GRIEST threatened to make trouble for the ma- chine and was placated by his appoint- ment to the office of Secretary of the Commonwealth. The defeat of JOHN P. ELKIN for the gubernatorial nomination in 1902 again incensed him but his wounded pride was salved by the promise that he would be permitted to name the nominee for State Treasurer in the near future. In 1907 he relinquished his right because he was afraid that a candidate who would serve his purpose would be defeated at the polls. Mr. GRriest is largely concerned in electric railway enterprises and the con- trol of large amounts of money is of great advantage to him. Last year he would have given him free hand with the balances. But unhappily Mr. STOBER died, before qualifying for the office and left things “up in the air.” Now GRIEST probably demands that another man,equal- ly amenable to his wishes,be appointed to occupy the place and probably supports his demand with a reminder that he | carries one Senator and four Representa. procured the nomination and election of | a candidate for State Treasurer who determination to contest the renomina- tives in the Legislature, in his ample vest director. Both are active and wily politi- | | awkward position. But bosses must be cians and there is likely to be a good old | | obeyed. timefight. In fact the school directorship me——— has invariably been the source of much, -——Mr. BALLINGER protests that he fighting in the North and this develop. will not be kicked out "under fire.” But ment promises to revive some of the old the indications are that he will have to go animosities that have grown out of former even if against the desire of his friend contests for the office. | Mr. TAFT. Mr. Taft's Harmony Deal. The President has succeeded in partial- ly bridging the chasm between the Re- publican factions in Congress, according to gossip at the national capitol. He didn't say, he now declares, what Mr. ROSEWATER, of Omaha, says he said, with respect to patronage and the insurgents. On the contrary, he now asserts, he is quite as willing to buy cabbages from a peddler as from a merchant. A speak- easy suits him just as well as a licensed saloon if it contains the goods and is will- ing to sell. Our President is not punctil- ious in such things. He wants what he wants and he doesn’t care much how he gets it. Like his predecessor in office and the late Mr. HARRIMAN, he is a prac- tical man. The harmony deal which the President has negotiated between the regulars and the insurgents of the House of Represen- tatives covers only one point, the dis- patches indicate. That is to say the in- surgents, for some consideration not re- vealed, have agreed to attend the caucus of the party for the purpose of selecting members of the special committee to in- vestigate Secretary of the Interior BAL- LINGER. The insurgents know, of course’ that the committee will be packed against them for the regulars will have a majori- ty in the caucus of about three to one. But insurgents are human and want pat- tronage and the President is so anxious to have that committee packed that he has probably made liberal promises. But the President makes a wretched spectacle of himself by participating in such deals. A just committee and an honest investigation would probably show that Mr. BALLINGER was not only counsel for the land pirates at the time of his ap- pointment but that he was appointed for that reason. It might prove, also, that he is now counsel for some or most of them and that if Mr. PINCHOT had re- mained silent, they would have robbed the country of most of its public domain before the end of the administration. But even such an exhibition would hard- ly present the President in a worse light than that in which he stands. He looks Keep the Important Matter in Mind. There is plenty of scandal in Washing. ton to absorb public attention. Between the usurpations of Speaker CANNON, the quarrels of the President and the expos- ures of Secretary BALLINGER'S grafting operations, there is abundance to think about. But the people of the country should not permit their minds to be di- verted entirely from more important sub jects by these trifles. No doubt what PINCHOT says about TAFT is substantial ly true. It is equally probable that the worst that has been said of Speaker CAN- NON is within the limits of accuracy and nobody who has watched the career of BALLINGER will doubt even the story of petty grafting which Representative HITCHCOCK has just revealed. But these things do not explain the in- creasing cost of the necessaries of life or justify the conspiracy between the trusts and the Republican leaders in Washing- ton which produces the increase in prices. The newspapers informed us the other day that wholesalers have ordered an ad- vance in the price of shoes and on the same day, through the same medium, we learned that the price of underwear will be vastly increased by the same process: Clothing has already advanced in price or depreciated in quality because of the greater tax on wool and blankets and other products of the woolen factories are “going out of sight.” These facts are of much more importance than the public scandals, evil as they are. These outrages are the logical and in- evitable result of the tariff legislation of the special session of Congress. They are the natural fruit of the conspiracy to give the trusts control of the industrial life of the country, in consideration of money contributed to the Republican cor- ruption fund during the last campaign. The Beef trust controls the product and prices of hides, the Woolen trust the sup- ply and value of clothing and woolens and other trusts the other necessaries of life. No doubt these scandals in official life will aid in diverting attention from the greater questions; but the people ought not permit themselves to be de- ceived. ——Farmers throughout Centre county are feeling some alarm over the fact that the heavy covering’ of ice and snow might smother the young grain in the fields. The fact that there was no covering of snow on the ground to protect it when the sleet and rain fell which rap- | idly froze into a coating of ice is tbe cause of their fear. Nature, however, is generally a well protector of both forest and field and the probabilities are the | grain will be more protected than ruined. a eae STATE RIGHTS AND | FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, , PA. J ANUARY 21, 1910. fead the world if the people had now like a huckster caught disposing of i HO | mol . rp to vote Jor their |, A Militant Democracy ‘ ‘The British Parliamentary Election. | Te The parliamentary election in Great Britain has resuited in substantial victory for the people as against the privileged class. The Liberal party lost a few seats | nf Miso on in Ak. 10, the occasion of Jack- retains a substantial celebration ; . but a majority though | son day mre rectly, fc the opposition is said to have spent $15, | 000,000 to corrupt the electorate. But | Gught to be the people would not be bribed. They! gin seem to put a higher estimate upon the of value of the franchise there than here or Sift have & kewct iuligense in weigh- the consequences of a triumph of the that preparations for The contest was waged with in- gle cannot be made ment in taxing wealth Father than pover- hs tims of the greatest political budget for the coming year Premier As. | This alone ought to be sufficient to QUITH had practically declared in favor of | 8ssure Democratic victory. Uuqualified, taxing the earned increment on land val: | equivocal and rere Vil ues. The purpose was to compel the liam Howard Taft in his speeches invit- Lords to bear a share in the burdens of | him. Instead government proportionate to the advan. | tages derived from the government. En- life of the country. In this country, however, the people bow to the injustice, Ever since Great Britain threw off the tariff yoke they have been improving in social and industrial conditions notwith- standing the injustice of a tax system which exempted the rich and burdened the poor. Now that another vital step has been taken in the interest of the peo- ple it will be surprising if an era of com- mercial and industrial prosperity, un- equalled in the history of the world, doesn't follow. With the greater advan- tages of a vastly more extensive area, a newer and more fertile soil and more ® em started fixing up their new home, the old Curtin home: stead on High street, they have decided to make a thorough job of it and there- But there jo nothi fore will give it a thorough overhauling. | icy to give Every room in the house will be repaint: | ea a, ia Harm to the | ed and papered and fully equipped with | pacanrly shoes x te poe the electric light. Inasmuch as their new | in case any of the insurgent mem of congress 1 be . home will be considerably larger than the | tion—the cue to Fann building they now occupy, it will require | nominees rather than for Cannon Repub- more furniture to furnish the same when | licans. This should apply to every dis- th it. trict where good Democrats are nominat- y OCCUpY 4 pam— ee Ss oe of Cannonism and ——We congratulate the editor of the | Aldrichism. esteemed Philadelphia North American on | of of progressive as this plan of n made'and ao Bar a5 1t shall Do t, itis merely an attempt to have | discipline. the ltd in this buldozing es a t his acquittal of the charge of libel in the | A3 Autos shig Situation. acqu! n the | J Schuylkill county court. Little is expect- oe “easton i Repukiiess. ew ifs live ed in that jury-packed and ballot polluted | come to such pass. Whatever his county and it is a pleasure to know that fats of a: Mr. [pisicsor is some of that little has come in a form | justly as a person most that makes for freedom of speech wy J op sed 2 and the most public- spirited otives: His public service in the liberty of the press. Neuganising the forestry bureau and in- TT spiring President Roosevelt with the ideas ——An esteemed contemporary announ- | which animate the movement for the con- cesin headlines that the tion's Ire ' servation of the nation's natural re- Rises,” and adds that the living is the most acute issue to-day.” arily Probably, but the people voted for tne | sum RL office high cost of living when they elected works, within less than a TAPT and a Republican Congress mutual. retirement of his eminent ly committed to the interests of the {son { trusts, ——President TAFT has organized a pu moma Republican opposition to the Democrats chosen to represent the minority on the BALLINGER investigating committee. President TAFT'S obvious anxiety to pack that committee invites all sorts of sus- picious as to his personal relations with ways. the rads rr nn | List of the Dead in the Capitol Scandal. ——On the petition of a number of | JoHN H. SANDERSON, cont tor for far- the voters of Burnside township Judge nishings. Orvis on Wednesday issued a decree WiLiiam L. MATHUES, exState Treas. changing the voting place of said town. urer, indicted with Sanderson and others ship from a vacant store room at Pine in the first case. Glenn to the residence of William Hipple, GEORGE 2: PAYNE, contractor for the about one-half mile east along the main JAMES J lerk in Audit: roa mama | or General's office. ——A tariff ‘war with Germany would FRANK IRVINE, auditor in Auditor Gen- be bad for the ultimate consumer but the eral’s office. ultimate cousumer cuts a small figure in _ JOHN E. STOTT, former secretary of the the eyes of the President whose dilated pupils can discern no interests other than those of the trusts. | ~The poor (?) farmers. They are office at midnight to inspect books. always getting left. Their rain spouts} He a Cale ho were so full of ice that they caught very was to have testified in the Huston trial. little of the precipitation on Tuesday. ——The professional aviators are reach ing high altitudes but the cost of living MAT FRIDAY, clerk in the Auditor Gen- eral’s office during capitol building. Benjamin THOMPSON, watchman in ! the Treasury, who admitted Mathues to From ——1t looks as if another ANANIAS club sant fo is inevitable and editor ROSEWATER, of Omaha, is likely to be the first member, ——Subscribe for the WATCAMAN Board of Public a Buildings. | Ee a nto — SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. ~Clearfied has 200 widows. —Next Sunday the new Church of Christ will be dedicated at Philpsburg. —Four thousand miners received word in the Greensburg-Irwin field that the Keystone Coal and Coke company had raised their wages 10 per cent. The advance came as a surprise. —~Barnes & Tucker, coal operators at Barnes- boro, have filed three suits against the Pennsyl® vania railroad company charging car discrimina tion. The aggregate of the claim is $409,000. ~Several dozen counterfeit §2 bills have beea found in circulation in the Ernest and Creekside regions and a dozen have been received at Indiana stores and banks. They bear number B 53579933. —Going for three days without food. Henry H. Hipple, a veteran of the Civil war, walked from Lancaster to Philadelphia through the snow. Af- ter asking the police for his dinner he started out to find work. ~The Pennsylvania railroad will hereafter pay dividends quarterly instead of semi-annually. The next dividend will be declared February Ist and will be payable February 23rd to stockholders of record February Sth. ~E. J. Jones and Co., of Huntingdon, scom will be operating their mines on their recently purchased Heverly coal lands in Beccaria town- ship, Clearfield county. They have begun te drive their headings. —Mrs. George Weymouth, of Lock Haven, fell from the second-story of her home when she was —A stock train was wrecked at the upper yards of the Pennsylvania railroad yards at Harrisburg, Friday, and 400 pigs escaped, mnning in allidirec- tions among the hundreds of cars standing on the tracks. Only about half of the animalsZwere re- covered. —Twenty state policemen are to be appointed his week to fill vacancies, over half of the empty places being in the western troops, stationed at Punxsutawney and Greensburg. Over fifty per. sons have acknowledged that they are anxious te get the jobs. ~—Meyersdale is in the throes of mumps, measles, whooping cough and other maladies and asa re- sult all the amusement places and schools have the | been closed for a period of twenty-one days. Children are not the only sufferers as some’grown- ups have contracted the diseases. ~Thirty representative Lock Haven citizens met recently to talk over the need of a modem fireproof hotel, the securing of finances to con- struct such a building and the possible pecuniary returns. The town needs a good place at which traveling men can stop and the plans that are being laid call for a $150,000 building. —En route to the hospital at Bloomsburg from Millville on Monday to be operated on for appen- dicitis, accompanied by Dr. Everett, Matthew Lamton leaped from the sleigh when the horse became unmanageable and stopped the horse. The sleigh overturned and Dr. Everett was pin- ned beneath it. Lamton's condition was serious. ly aggravated by his experience. —Thirty-seven prisoners were received at the Huntingdon reformatory during the month of December. The total number of paroled prison- company will be run as separate and distinct cor- porations. —Martin Mannion, one of the best known farm- ers in Clearfield township, Cambria county, has by its masters, F. O. Meagree and digan, of Scranton. The price w. H. D. Riley, of Philadelphia, but the owners de- clared that the bird's price is $12,000 and it will not be sold at that until after the Scranton poul- try show next week. Lady Washington weighs a5 —Mrs. Harry Bates, Mrs. Thomas Wilkinson and John Church, of Portage, are trying to geta fortune of about $500,000, with accruing interest for forty-nine years, it having been left by Mrs. Susan Church, in England. She left the money for the erection of a home for the infirm and the home never was built, the heirs contend the money reverts to them. Burgess Green, Portage, has received word from the identity of the Portage people has 500 reis, having just come from Brazil. When he asked her for $15 she grew suspicious and went to cash the check. She found it was ‘worth 24 cents. : —~Gas started to flow froma well that Humes Brothers were sinking for the Ohio Oil company, at Benscreek, for the purpose of getting water. The well had been sunk to a depthfof 767 feet. ‘The flow is so weak that it is not expected to last and the water in the well contains so much salt that it would ruin the boilers. The well cannot be used for what is was intended. Much excite- ment has been caused among the’ residents of Benscreek over the strike, but they are being kept away from the well for fear that somebody will ignite the gas. —Williamsport's new industry, the Kenmore shoe factory, will begin operations next Monday morning when work wil be started in the cutting department. When fully equipped with ma- chinery the factory will give employment to near- ly 200 persons, but for the present the Morce will not be so large. Eight traveling salesmen will be put on the road and everything points to the new industry soon becoming one of the most important inthe city. The outpi of the factory will be men's high grade shoes and boys’ shoes. No women's shoes will be made. —Guarded hy two private detectives and an at- torney from New York to prevent the serving of a summons in the divorce suit instituted by her husband at Franklin, and by the local police who wish to provent her leaving town, Mrs. Emma A, Miller, wife of General Charles A. Miller, the wealthy Franklin, Pa., oil magnate, is practically a prisoner in the home of her sister at Sharon. The detectives and attorney so far have blocked | all attempts to serve Mrs, Miller with 2 summons, both by the sheriff and the local police. Sheriff Williams declared Mrs. Miller has asked for $100,- 000 and will not permit the summons to be served until this is guaranteed.