x i I INK SLINGS. A PROPHECY AS TO JOSEPH— JOBCANNON came in from the west With a greatly swelled head and big chest, He'll go back to his town With both head and tail down And the people will “do him" the rest. —Manifestly Mr. BRYAN is trying te annex the Prohibition party to his polit- ical assets. —If Old Probabilities has anything on the ground hog it is not discernible at this distance. —The fellow born with a craving for strong drink has a great start on the one who isn’t. In most cases it costs a for- tune to acquire it. —After all some good can be found in every condition. Not nearly so many people are making gluttons of themselves now as would be if food prices were lower. —Senator BURTON is opposing Presi- dent TAPT's savings bank bill. And both men from Ohio, too. Verily Republican demoralization must be in the air out in that State. —Speaker CANNON declined to rule on a question of order, the other day, and submitted its decision to the action of the House. A slight symptom, at least, of possible repentance. —The old saw that assures us that “whatever goes up is sure tocome down," evidently was a stranger to these times when the trusts, the tariff and Republican prosperity (?) run things. —The Lock Haven man who boasts that he never kissed a girl may not be much of a liar, but most people will put him down as too much of an ass to know a good thing when he sees it. —Jt will be noticed that under the boasted prosperity of a tariff bill that is doing so much for the trusts, the size of the working man’s dinner pail has not in creased to any observable extent. ——“Antique” collectors are advised that a most promising field awaits their explorations in that Jersey city cold stor- age house, that boasts of having thirty- six millions of eggs under its roof. —The Pullman company has just de cided to declare a dividend of $2,000,000. After it has pocketed a few more of the kind this poverty stricken corporation may feel able to pay its own porters. —Anyhow the ground hog has no need to offer excuses for a failure to keep its platform pledges. It's on the job and making good every day, which shows the difference between a G. H. and a Presi. dent. —Mr. CARNEGIE is also enthusiastical- ly in favor of abolishing taxes on person- al property. In this connection it is not irrelevant to remark that most of Mr. CARNEGIE'S vast fortune is in that kind of goods. —President TAFT, it is now reported, will not insist on the passage of the Fed- eral Incorporation law. This suggests the probability that Mr. MORGAN'S man, PERKINS, “winked the other eye" when he declared such legislation desirable. —A Pittsburg contemporary is anxious to know “what Wall street will find to fuss about now.” Really we are unable to teil it; but if it will keep its eyes open it may discover people very near home who have found plenty to “fussabout Wall street.” ——There must be a serpent some- where in the pending postal savings bank bill or else Senator ALDRICH would not consent to it. Probably the Standard Oil agent in the Senate imagines that it may be made the nucleus for his central bank scheme. —It is greatly to be regretted that the ANANIAS club will take no part in the reception proposed to Mr. T. ROOSEVELT on his ostentatious return from Africa. It would be so appropriate for that organi zation to lead the parade and occupy the place of honor. —1It is the opinion of Mr. JOHN KEN- pRICK BANGS that ADAM was the first hu- morist. Possibly brother BANGS is right, but if so, it must have been only a side entertainment for him. If our recollec- tion is reliable ADAM'S first fun and busi- ness was to raise CAIN. —It is really surprising how wonderful ly quick the temperature in certain local- ities can change. Whenever Commander PEARY visits the Navy Department, at Washington, the thermometer drops to about the same degree of frigidity he found at the north pole. ~—“Republican prosperity is not an im- aginary blessing at this time, it is a real one that people everywhereare enjoying,” says a Republican exchange. Possibly our contemporary thinks so, but he can’t prove it by us, or by the size or contents of the working-man’s dinner pail. —Just now the multi-millionaires are working over hours to make the public believe that prosperity is surging over the land like waves over the sea. Unfor- tunately the pay envelope of the working- men and the dinner tables in most fami. lies fail to confirm their statements. —What is the limit of usefulness of the storage egg. — Johnstown Democrat. That depends, brother, entirely upon the purposes for which it is to be used. If to raise a smell, its limit would far out- do the tail of HALEY'S comet, and as to time, would be in good working order long after that sky-wonder had disappear- A emocrlic “VOL. 55. High Prices and the Causes. Statistics of the Agricultural Depart- ment at Washington show that during the period from 1899 to 1909 there was an in- crease in the number of food animals greater than the increase in population. Unless the statistics are worthless, there- fore, the present increase in the price of meat can't be ascribed to a scarcity of cattle. The same statistics show an in- crease in the number of milk cows, in the same ratio to population, within the same period, so that it can’t be said that the increased price of butter is attribu- table to a scarcity of milk. Chickens are raised in vastly greater numbers now than ten years ago and cared for and fed bet- ter. Therefore the price of eggs must be attributed to some other cause than scarcity. As a matter of fact all these commod- ities are dearer now than they were ten years ago for the reason that under con. ditions brought about by laws enacted by a Republican party, trusts have acquired control of the products and manipulate prices as they please. The natural laws of supply and demand have nothing to do with prices now. The trusts regulate not only the production but the prices upon the basis of "what the traffic will bear,” to borrow the language of one of the transportation magnates, and the peo- ple have neither redress nor recourse. The tariff system and other economic policies of the Republican party are re- sponsible for the trusts and the remedy jies in the defeat of the Republican party at the coming congressional elections. It is not CANNONism or ALDRICHism. It is Republicanism that is at fault. If the increased prices for the products of the farm benefitted the farmers, the evil might be endured, for the farmers are vastly in the majority and their pros- perity is invariably shared by the general public for they are a progressive and generous people. But unhappily the farmers get little, if any, part of the in- creased cost, and what they do get is immediately absorbed by the increased cost of the things they are compelled to buy in order to keep their soil up to the necessary productive standard. There is, in view of all the facts, no ex- cuse or justification for the condition that is spreading poverty and diffusing suffer- ing all over this land of plenty. All Re- publican candidates are alike in this mat- ter and the only safe way is to vote against all of them. Dr. Krauskopf's Faulty Diagnosis. The Rev. Dr. Josep KrAUSKOPF, of Philadelphia, is only partially right in his diagnosis of the malady which afflicts that city. Rabbi KRAUSKOPF is among the most eloquent preachers of that "city of churches.” He is among the profound thinkers of the country. Not only that but in practice and precept he is a model citizen. But in attributing those iniqui- ties which have earned for Philadelphia the unenviable reputation of being “cor- rupt and contented,” to that element of the citizenship which takes no part in the political life of the city, he is not only inaccurate, but he subjects himself to the suspicion of being wilfully and deliberate- ly unjust. Rabbi KRAUSKOPF justly arraigns those citizens who neglect their civic duties as wanting in civic virtue. It is as much the duty of a man to vote at the primary and general elections as it is to provide food, raiment and shelter for his family. The affairs of the community, under our system of government, are very much like those of the family. Of course the first duty of a man is to his family under the high law that self-preservation is the first obligation of nature. But the tem- poral and spiritual necessities of the family provided for, the concerns of the ‘community next demand the attention and care of the individual. To that ex- tent Rabbi KRAUSKOPF is right. But in Philadelphia, because of the severity of the governing class and the iniquity of the dominant party, the high- est aspirations of citizenship are stifled under a deluge of fraud. Probably if all those in the community who prefer right to wrong would assert themselves sim- ultaneously in behalf of right, they would prevail. But in the final analysis so vast a proportion of those who mean right are influenced by selfish and sordid consider- ations to give their moral support to those who are fundamentally wrong, that the remnant of right-thinkers are sub- merged in the deluge of unrighteousness. The most potent proof of this proposi- tion is concealed in Dr. KRAUSKOPF'S masked apology for the municipal evils of Philadelphia. ——Some of the fellows who are swear- ing off their just taxes under existing con- ditions are losing sleep through the fear thatsome other fellows will perjure them- selves in order to evade payment of in- come tax, in the event such a tax shall be levied. 213 ® 7B BELLEFONTE, PA. FEBRUARY 18, 1910. An Infamous Perversion of Law. ; The decision of the Philadelphia court that an elector shall himself determine his right to call an assistant into the booth where he is preparing his ballot, is not in the least surprising. The language of the law is: "If any voter declares to the judge of election that by reason of any disability he desires assistance in the preparation of his ballot, he shall be permitted by the judge of election to se- lect a qualified voter of the election dis- trict to aid him in the preparation of his ballot, such preparation being made in the voting compartment.” That implies, clearly, that some mental or physical disability must exist. The fact that an elector has sold his vote on condition of proof of his part of the bargain, is not sufficient. We have long since come to expect that the courts, the pulpit, the business and professional life of Philadelphia, are all ready to give moral and material help to the political machine. The judges, as the late Senator QUAY once observed, are chosen because of their servility to the machine and catapulted on to the bench as a reward . for sinister party services. Judges thus selected have no option in the interpretation of the law. They nec- essarily accept the mandates which come from political headquarters and hand down decisions without respect to law but in conformity with political exigen- cies. Thus far this iniquity has been limited to Philadelphia. It is a question how long it will be confined within that area. The provision of the law upon which this corruption breeding decision was made, was intended to protect the political rights of men who couldn’t read or write or were physically unable to mark a bal- lot. For years it was used only for the assistance of such voters. But after the practice of bribing voters came into vogue it was found necessary to pervert this provision in order to "keep tab” on the voters who had been bribed. Now this infamous misuse of a doubtful power has received the sanction of judicial approval and we will not be surprised to hear, in the near future, that the Philadel judges have been obliged to ask - ance in the booths. Their commissions are the bribes given to them and why shouldn't they be compelleed to “show down.” ——Congressman REYNOLDS has intro- duced a bill into Congress providing for an appropriation of fifty thousand dollars for the erection of a monument in Al- toona commemorating the congress of Governors held there during the war of the rebellion, and in which the late Gov- ernor ANDREW G. CURTIN tock such a prominent part; the appropriation, how- ever, if passed, to be available only when the citizens of Altoona and the public at large shall have raised twenty-five thous- and dollars additional, making a fund of seventy-five thousand dollars available for the building of the monument. This is in line with a movement for the build- ing of such a monument started by the citizens of Altoona some weeks ago and which has been heartily endorsed by the Governor of every State represented at that congress as well as the public gen- erally. aa : STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. 4 Ay ky LITT . - RS Taft’s Petty Grafting. The Tale a Day Nursery President TAFT is not revealing the nice moral distinction which should char- acterize the office he occupies, in per- mitting the congressional machine to make the use of his LINCOLN day speech that is contemplated. It is proposed to make it, by resolution of the Senate, a “public document,” which entitles it to free transportation in the mail. That is a petty type of graft that is rapidly com- ing under popular condemnation. It is one of the causes of the deficit in the Postoffice Department which amounted, | ? last year, to nearly $20,000,000. It con- tributed to the waste which threatens a curtailment of useful postal convenience. The President's LINCOLN day speech was a political harangue, entirely ont of place and in bad form. No other Presi dent, except ROOSEVELT, has ever offend- ed the proprieties in that way, as glaring- ly as TAFT has done. ROOSEVELT prosti- tuted an opportunity afforded by an invi- tation to deliver the Decoration day ad dress at Arlington cemetery, some time ago, by making a partisan speech. TAFT has now made the same monumental blunder by turning his LINCOLN day speech into a political declamation. But bad as that is, the proposition to make a “public document” of it and distribute it through the mails at the expense of the public is infinitely worse. TAFT seems to have a passion for graft- ing, however. His acceptance of a trav- eling expense fund of $25,000, voted by Congress in violation of the constitution and in consideration of his signing the ALDRICH tariff bill revealed him in a most odious light. But there was something big in that. The amount involved was considerable and his passion for junket- ing is abnormally developed. This scheme to get his speech printed as a “public document," however, in or- der that it may be circulated free of ex- pense to himself and his party, is graft of the trifling sort that suggests the temper- ament and inclination of a petty criminal. ——Under the constitutional amend. ment abolishing spring elections it has just been discovered that the terms of ‘forty common pleas judges in the State will be lengthened one year, as the law provides that judges of the common pleas and quarter sessions courts shall be elect- ed in the odd years, at the same time that municipal and township officers shal} be elected. Under thislaw the term of Judge Eris L. Orvis will of necessity be extended one year, or from the first Mon- day of January, 1915, to the first Monday of January, 1916, inasmuch as his suc- cessor cannot be elected until theelection in November, 1915. This inakes three county officials who will be affected by the constitutional amendment, the other two being prothonotary ARTHUR B. Kim- PORT and district attorney WiLLiaMm G. RUNKLE, both of whose terms will be lengthenad one year. The terms of the other county officers will not be affected at all. —-President TAFT appears tobe more anxious to bust Governor HARMON'S pres- idential boom than to bust trusts. At m 8 i g Hh gigs g § fed Hy i i! Hi fl i iit i E if i 3 § bi j fe f = : i ix 2 : 7 i i] eee A ———— ii ii 8 e¥g hie i g g & g 7 | iii 1 | <3 4 i] it HY PH SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —C. R. Spangler, of McConnellshurg, who owns over 1,000 acres of timber land in Fulton © , expects his holdings to yield 6,000,000 feet of . ed lumber. —3. Berlin, a resident of Tyrone, offers to give $1,000 towards the erection of a hospital in that ‘place and $5,000 for its maintenance if the people of the town will raise at least $20,000. ~The Rev. H. M. Laye, of Lock Haven, has expected to arrive in that city about March 6th. ~Meat dealers in DuBois have decided to cut their prices two cents a pound to prevent a con- tinuation of the boycott. DuBois was one of the towns that went into the boycott with a vengeance. —Every day the health officer at Lewistown has a dozen or more new cases of measles to quar- antine. The spread of the disease at the present time is as great as it has been since the epi- demic set in. —Rabbits destroyed 2,500 plants on the truck firm of J. P. Watts, near Kerrmoor, Clearfield county, last year. It is hardly to be wondered - | that he is in favor of exterminating the frisky little animals. —After celebrating Lincoln's birthday anni- versary Saturday, Henry Wentz, of York, one of the guards of honor over the body of the martyred President, died on Sunday. Wentz was 86 years Pid adstrwéd Sate Union army teouglont the war. ~The Ross library at Lock Haven will be open- ed to the public next summer. The city now is in possession of all the stocks, bonds and cash that were held by the Lock Haven Trust and Safe late Annie H. Ross. conclusion of the January business. The rest of the state has $5,387,832.10 on deposit, active and on call. Huntingdon county, to take her life by her own hands at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Miller, near Shirleysburg, where she had showing that it had had an encounter with one of those animals. Its teeth were badly worn and it evidently had done away with its share of deer. ~The plant of the Harbison-Walker brick works at Monument started last Friday morning to make brick and the works will be run to their fullest capacity. The quality of brick made at - | that plant is of a superior quality, and with the improved machinery recently installed, the re- sumption of operations means employment to a large number of laborers. —Dr. Thomas L. Johnston, a former resident of Duncannon, died last week and brought back the memory of the crime in which he was the central figure. He was a prosperous physician and, while working under an insane delusion, shot and kill- ed Dr. George Henry, a pharmacist. He was convicted of manslaughter and served about fif- teen years of a twenty year sentence in the east. ern penitentiary. He died in the Lebanon sani- torium and was a physical wreck. —Putting his coat over his head and dashing through a sheet of flame, John Sheib Jr., saved three valuable horses from cremation, when the boarding stable of John Scheib & Son was burned heard of the fire and is confined to his bed. Mrs. phoned to the fire department. She ran into the street where she met Scheib going to waken the stable hands, told him of the fire and he did the rest —Plans for the forty-second annual convention of the Y. M. C. A. at Oil City were completed at the state headquarters Saturday and copies of the program are being sent out. The convention will begin Saturday and will last until Tuesday evening, February 22nd. Among the speakers will be D. Clarence Gibboney, of Philadelphia, and Moses Friedmann, of Carlisle, superintendent of the Indian school. The music will be again a feature of the gathering and willbe in charge of Fred L. Willis, general secretary at Worcester, Mass, ~William T. Creasy, grand master of the Penn- sylvania State Grange, intends to work up that society in Berks county and the State Grange will meet in Reading next year if sufficient enthusiasm can be aroused. In speeches at Blandon and Geigertown, Mr. Creasy made the statement that the reason that young people leave the farm is because farms do not furnish the social enjoy- ment for which the youngsters long. This social enjoyment he said, is provided by the grange and wherever good granges are located, the younger generation remains on the farm. —At the mammoth coal shutesof the Philadel- least he has persuaded WADE ELuis, the| Even the are not finding it | ,.. 2.4 Reading company, just below Schulykill most successful trust buster, to resign his So had io } She next house Deo Haven. on Saturday. ten men were buried under office in the Department of Justice in sider—iirst, the result of the recent con- about 1.000 tons of coal. following an avalanche : !inavast bin. One man was killed, another in- Deposit company, executor of the property of the’ in Pittsburg. His father was prostrated when he Washington to accept the office of chair- man of the Republican State committee in Ohio. ——Mayor GAYNOR, of New York, or- dered the immediate suspension and trial of acouple of policemen charged with jured fatally and the other eight men hurt more or less severely. Owing tothe recent cold weath- er, the coal had become frozen to a depth of twenty feet. The men had undermined it in the assaulting a woman, the other day. A few years ago an attache of the White House brutally assaulted the sister of a Con- gressman, and President ROOSEVELT im- mediately promoted him to the office of chief of the District police. The tem- peramental differences among men are vastand varied. ——President TAFT draws the line on Secretary KNoX’s "shot-gun” diplomacy in Nicaragua while cordially endorsing his commercial diplomacy in the far East This seems like "straining at a gnat and swallowing a camel.” The fact is, how- ever, that the MORGAN money trust fa- vors the Eastern and objects to the other and TAFT knows his master. ——OLIVER SPITZER, former dock su- ——A note from our old friend, James Wolfenden, of Lamar, says that Sunday’s high winds so completely drifted the roads shut between that place and Clintondale that it took two teams with snow plows and a gang of ten men almost half a day to clean the snow away and open the road for travel. —1If, as former Attorney General BONAPARTE declares in a magazine arti- cle, ROOSEVELT will be remembered as “a President who wasnot afraid todo right,” how will they discover why he didn't kick BONAPARTE out of office the moment he discovered what an egregious ass that sycophant is? : ——That the people of Bellefonte with- out regard to party approve of P. H. perintendent of the Sugar trust, and | recently convicted of participation in the weighing frauds at New York, protested | on his way to jail, that the trust had | , made a \"goat” of him. Cardinal WooLEs- LEY was a more conspicuous exemplar of | the ADAM policy but hardly a more con- | temptible one. ——Governor Hucues, of New York, | might have served predatory wealth bet- ter in some other way than opposing the income tax but his mind is so set on serv- ing the trusts that hs is incapable of dis- criminating wisely. i ~The meat boycott is geseniiy ue knowledged to be a failure. The only way to remedy the evil at which it aimed is to vote against tariff advocates. Gherrity’s administration as poor over- seer is evidenced in the fact that he re- ceived practically the total vote of both parties in the borough. ——When Mr. J. PIERPONT MORGAN'S man PERKINS carries measures to Washing- ton for Congress to enact into law it is high time to ponder on the wisdom of the advice of "beware of the Greeks bearing gifts.” ——The Mighty Hunter has officially asked for an audience with the Pope on his return trip from Africa and presum- ably the Methodists of Rome will not in- vite him to address them. ——Edward Gehret, who was elected ' borough treasurer on Tuesday, will serve for almost four years, or until the first Monday in January, 1914. | effected. bin and had directed a stream of hot water to the top when the whole thing came down on them. A rescue force started at once and worked like madmen ~That seventeen of the twenty children of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Carl, of Reading. died as the result of witchcraft was the startling statement made recently by the parents of the children. A daughter, 28 years old, died a few days ago. The majority of the others died quite young. The parents were neverill, while the children wasted almost to skeletons. Physicians say that several fever or apparent disease, while the “pow wow™ doctors declare the little ones were bewitched by an aged woman. Coroner Strausser is waging a waron “pow wow" doctors, but they are still doing business in Berks county. Eastern Pennsyl- vania is a stronghold of superstition. —David A. Wilson, a hotel keeper and politician than eighteen months or not morethan six years . | for using a forged ticket on the Pennsylvania rail- road in this county last fall. During the hunting season, Wilson, with other Harrisburgers, was in Penn township, this county, hunting. When he came to go home he had another party buy a ticket from Grampian to near Clearfield, a dis- | tance of twelve miles. When the ticket was pre- sented to the conductor by Wilson it had been changed to a point near Harrisburg, a station the name of which had to be written in. ~The Nanty-Glo Coal Mining company is mak. ! ing preparations to put electric haulage and min- improvements will cost about $50,000. The com- pany’s engineers have been called to Nanty-Glo from Idamar, Indiana county, to locate the drill holes to place the electric power close to the face ' of the coal. Compressors willbe used to cut the ing machines in its plant near Nanty-Glo. The