—With ALDRICH eliminated, Rhode Is- land will possibly get down to a size that it can wear some of its old clothes again. —No, we haven't seen the comet. The spring bonnets have been so plentiful and big that opportunity to see anything else has been entirely out of the question. ~The minister who sized up hell as “a place of unquenchable thirst” was proba- bly speaking from experience—as a resi- dent of one of the “dry” towns of the country. —]It was the Rev. SAM JONES who an- nounced that Texas was only 100 yards from hell, and even at that there are peo- ple who think he made the distance en- tirely too great. —DAVE LANE is still of the opinion that Philadelphia is the best governed city in the country. And possibly it is for the people who like the kind of a government Philadelphia has. —It is usually when men get most hope- less, that they act the most wreckless. Which will possibly account for much of the fool work being done by the leaders of the G. O. P. these days. "—Anyway Mr. RoosEVELT will not be here to try to attract our attention and obscure our view of the comet, on its next seventy-six years round. Let us all re member this fact and take hope. —Pittsburgers insist that there is noth- ing wrong with that city, and probably there isn't from their point of view. But this only proves the diseased conditions through which they see things. ~—Will all you people who have been complaining about the rain just re. call what you were saying about the weather, with its low streams, dry wells and empty cisterns a few weeks ago. —Everything has come in for its share of notoriety as a result of the recent cold and storms but that Delaware peach crop. Can it be possible that this old time spring bogy has been pushed clear onto the shelf? —When we reflect that Gen. LEONARD WooD is now the head of the army, itis not to be wondered at that there are those who doubt the truth of the general belief that “success comes to him who most de- serves it.” ~CuAMp CLARK, minority leader in has no belief in the truth of TAFPT’S statement that he doesn’t want a second term. But then Mr. CLARK is from Missoory where one must see before he believes. serious symptoms of the congressional cold---foot malady. We sincerely hope not. His wad and those whiskers, out of the campaign, would leave our friends, the enemy, in this district without incentive of any kind. —And now it is said that Attorney General WICKERSHAM is in no way dis- turbed by the criticisms of his fool Chica- go speech, and that Secretary BALLINGER is equally oblivious to the opinion the public entertains of his official integrity. Strange, how densely stupid some men can be. VOL. 55. Mr. Srv in Indians Politics. Mr. WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN, who has just returned from a prolonged tour in South and Central America, has already projected himself into the Democratic politics of Indiana. Mr. Bryan doesn’t live in that State and presumably has no more interest in the management of party affairs there than any other Dem- ocrat not a resident within the limits of the Hoosier Commonwealth. If Senator CuLBERTSON,of Texas, National Chairman Mack, of New York, or Representative CHAMP CLARK, of Missouri, had “butted in” in the local affairs of the Democrats But Mr. BRYAN feels that he has a right toexercise paternal authority over the party everywhere. Candor compelis the acknowledgement that in his interference in the local affairs of the Democrats of Indiana, Mr. BRYAN has associated himself with the better element of the party in that State and acted in the interest of political morality. Tom TAGGART, a political adventurer, if not a party mercenary, aspires to a seat in the United States Senate and has money enough, and force sufficient, to make his ambition a menace to the suc- cess of the party in the State at a time when conditions are otherwise most aus- picious. Mr. BRYAN has undertaken to lead the opposition to Mr. TAGGART and if he were a citizen of Indiana it would be a righteous as well as a meritorious course. The danger of TAGGART'S nomi- nation would probably influence thousands of Democratic voters to support Republi can candidates. But we recall the fact that Mr. BRYAN is largely responsible for the menace which Tom TAGGART'S candidacy in- volves. Previous to the campaign of 1904 ‘Mr. TAGGART was a self-assertive but com- paratively harmless local leader in Indi- ana. After the nomination of Judge PARK- ER for the Presidency that year the real the chairmanship of the Democratic Na- tional ¢ Mr. BRYAN was then,as he is now, very much opposed to the Penn- sylvanian, however, and clandestinely got a number of southern and western mem- bers of the committee together and elect- ed Mr. TAGGART chairman. The result | was a farcical campaign and an inordi- nate TAGGART ambition to plague the party in the future. If Mr. BRYAN had kept his fingers out of the pie then there would be no neces- | sity for him to thrust his thumbs under | the crust now. Mr. TAGGART had been STATE | owes a good deal to the Hoyt family. The late Governor HoYT was a warm | friend of Senator QUAY and his son, So- The full measure of moral degradation licitor General Hoyt, has been a faithful adherent of the PENROSE machine for many years and gave it respectability when it sadly needed such support. Will the Senator silently assent to the dismis- sal of the Governor's nephew and the So- the truth ? Bright Prospects for Democrats. The result of the special congressional elections in Massachusetts, Missouri and New York is already showing a salutary influence on the politics of Pennsylvania. Three of the machine Congressmen have announced their purpose to retire at the «| close of the present term. No one in the delegation seemed more firmly entrenched in his seat than COOPER, of Fayette coun. ty, HUFF, of Westmoreland, and PALMER, of Luzerne, and none could have been more enamored of his job. But the election of a Democrat in the Old Colony district of Massachusetts frightened PALMER out of the running and CooPer and HUFF de- clared that they wiii not run for re-elec- tion immediately after the vote in the Rochester district. the twenty-two Congressional districts of this State outside of Philadelphia and Pittsburg. There is a fighting chance to carry three of the four districts in Alle- gheny county this year and with the ra- tio of change that was shownin the elec- tions in Massachusetts and New York every district in this State would be Dem- ocratic. We don’t make such claims, how- ever, for Pennsylvania is different from other States. The voters in this State are not as alert mentally or as keen of con- science as those of Massachusetts and New York and the people of Philadelphia are slaves to graft and servile to the ma- chine. But there are chances for vast im- provements. With the very best candidates and prop- er energy in the campaign work the Dem- ocrats can carry every district this year which Mr. MUNSON carried last year and at least two of the Pittsburg districts. This would give us seventeen out of the most influential of the States in the next Congress which will be Democratic as cer- tain as fate. There is in this prospect an incentive to effort on the part of every Democrat in the Commonwealth for with a Democratic majority in Congress the absurd prices of the necessaries of life would fail to a just level. We hope the ; Democrats in this district will contribute | their share. i i —No matter how little they can do for RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. Last fall MR. MUNSON carried fifteen of thirty-two Congressmen for this State and | ‘was heaped upon Pittsburg, the other day when the District Attorney of Allegheny county joined in the petition of one of the accused “grafters” for a change of venueon the ground that “the halls and corridors of the court house as well as licitor General's cousin because: he told [the pavements outside, swarmed with jury-fixers and persons whose : itis to influence jurors on the e panel.” Several of those crimi” nals are scheduled for trial at the ap- proaching session of the criminal court, : some of the wealthy and influ- tial malefactors. One of them, Max G. LesLiE, appealed to the Supreme court for the transfer of his case to another coun- ty and the Disirict Attorney joined in the eq giving the reason above quoted. v1 of a hundred councilmen, city and county officials, bankers, business sn and others, have been indicted for living or taking bribes in that city, in with municipal legislation. Un- and it is rumored that a large sum of money has been raised to defray the or- dinary and extraordinary expenses of such litigation. LESLIE probably thought that this corruption fund might be used more safely and successfully in a juris- diction that was less closely watched. Evidently the District Attorney entertains a different idea. ‘This incident implies a shameless mor- al degeneracy in that community, but it is not surprising. That state of affairs is the logical consequence of conditions which have led up to it. For years the leading business men of Pittsburg have been deriving vast fortunes from special privileges and the most respectable and influential leaders in the social, commer- cial and industrial life of the city have shared freely in this form of “graft.” In fact they have become so inured in the vice that they assumed it was a just re- ward for their labor or sagacity. Natural- they gave out of their abundance thus for other privileges that they did not possess with the result that the whole community is steeped in iniquity. It is to be hoped that this expedient will not work immunity. —We are glad that Mr. ROOSEVELT has had such large audiences for his lectures throughout Europe. The people over there will now understand the affliction that, for fifteen years, has been upon us of | gold this side of the water, and can so much the better appreciate our patience. g 5 il g iH - | li ; J : : i i Bag i pi 2 i i ; : ; i: its ge if 2 ] £ li i f i a g “4g a A SP AR EA 5 SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Five victims of a recent natural gas explosion at Puritan have entered a suit for $70,000 damages against the Fayette Natural Gas company. ~Dr. Parcels, of Lewistown, who recently returned from a tour in Oriental countries, brought with him a two-thousand-year-old mum- my which is now on exhibition in that place. ~The Central Pennsylvania Synod of the Luth- eran church will meet in annual session in Belle- fonte next autumn. The Woman's and Foreign Missionary society of the Synod will hold . | its annual meeting in State College about the same time. ~Charles M. Schwab will build a twenty-five- mile railroad from Durham to his steel works at Bethlehem, connecting withthe Lehigh and New England railroad, hear Nazareth. The road will cost $250,000 and is to be built to avoid the paying of excessive freight charges. ~Nearly every house in Oval and vicinity, Ly- coming county, is quarantined on account of mea- sies. The disease made itself known in a single night, when twenty-five children became ill. All the trouble seems to have been caused by ome child who went to school when he was in the first stages of the disease. —Petitions signed by 417 persons were present- edto the Clearfield council at a recent meeting asking that the citizens be allowed to keep hogs within the borough limits. Council, after consid- | eration, put the matter upto the board of health. The latter body alro has a rule forbidding the keeping of the swine. —One child is dead and seven others are ill of scarlet fever in the family of Mr. and Mrs. An- drew Gindelsperger, near Mt. Zion's church, Som- erset county. The dread disease broke out in the AT€ | family less than a week ago. Blanche, aged four years, is the child that died. She was unconscious for hours before she passed away. ~Frightened when her clothes caught fire from a kitchen range at her home on Monday Mrs. James Sutcliffe, aged fifty-six, of Patton, died of heart failure. As her body lay on the floor, the clothing was burned entirely off and the carpet on the kitchen floor was ignited. Mr. Sutcliffe, who returned from his work, found the kitchen ablaze and rescued the body of his wife from the flames. ~A deal has been closed whereby the John H, around Ebensburg, in charge of H. M. Alexan- der. Mr. Alexander will have chargelof the Min- eral Point operations, also. ~—Fire, starting from an unknown origin in the lumber yard of Hyde, Murphy & Co., at Ridgway, early Saturday morning, spread rapidly and de- stroyed property valued at $400,000. The mill and lumber yard were destroyed as were also the and having in his possession and passing counter- feit5 and 10 cent pieces. He was sentenced by Judge James S. Young to pay $125 and to undergo imprisonment in the United States penitentiary at Ft. Leavenworth, Kan., for four years. —DuBois expects to obtain an appropriation * | this session of Congress for the purchasing of a “ | lot and the erection of a federal building in that town. The bill calls for $125,000, but it is hardly tal likely that all this will be granted. In the fiscal year ending March 31 the gross receipts were the —unless some way can be found to raise the value of gold dollars. But that might not be so difficult. Gold dollars are standard now at 25.8 grains of gold nine- tenths fine. Why not s ize them at some higher point—say 38.7 grains, or more or less accord tothe depreciation of gold? Listen to the little birds, and —It will be observed that Lord KITcH- | Mayor of Indianapolis and was the pros- | others the doctor is usually able to “heel” ENER. who has just returned to England, | Perous proprietor of an unusually suc- | himself. didn’t waste I in trying to pump cessful summer resort hotel. He was and milltary ideas out of the head of our Amer- | '* # shrewd political manager and by the | : ican army. Which compliments not only free use of his money had acquired suf- THEODORE ROOSEVELT is still pursuing Mr. KITCHENER'S judgment of men, but | ficient popularity to secure him a seat in | his triumphal tour through the “Old his knowledge of where such ideas are to | the Democratic National committee. But | World.” Wherever he goes he is acclaimed largest in the history of the DuBois postoffice. They were $32,635.83, $4,000 more than the previ- ous year, and approximately $2,23) more than any other year in the history of the office. —During a heavy storm about:3.30%0'clock Mon- day morniug the large bank barn on the farm of J. J. Twigg, south of Philipsburg, was struck by lightning and so quickly was it enveloped in Mr. Sheatz Ought to “Show Us.” We took occasion last week to pay a tribute of praise to State Treasurer JOHN SHEATZ for his judicious and equitable distribution of the public funds among the banks of the State. The pernicious Roosevelt’t Triumphal Tour. RR be found as well. —It is a safe guess that Senator La- FOLLETTE will not be on Mr. J. PIERPONT MORGAN's visiting list hereafter. Trust I had never dreamed of occupying a seat in the United States Senate and | probably never would have thought of | such a thing if Mr. BRYAN hadn't lifted | him away above his political level! in the great man of his day and generation. | He is entertained by the “crowned heads” and feasted and flattered by men in all conditions in life. In Italy, Austria and Hungary he was honored as no other promoters of his type have no hesitancy | order to prevent the bestowal of an ap- | man, prince or pauper, had ever been be- in being “beefy, red-faced, thick-necked | propriate honor upon a Pennsylvanian | fore. In France statesmen, scientists, financial bullies, drunk with wealth and | who was not always ready to deify the | literati, alike bowed down to him. It has power,” but they don’t hanker after the fellow who tells them how they look. —If the cold-footed Congressmen, who fear to take their chances again at an election, expect the public to express re- gret because of their retirement, they are very likely to be grievously disappointed. scene of their political activities it looks very much as if the country would get along fully as well without as with them. —It is strange how the elimination of self will aid us in getting a correct focus on things. Here is Gen. CLARKSON, who | has just been choked away from the pub- | lic trough, predicting that “the Republi- can party is in a more critical condition than at any time in its history.” Under other circumstances Mr. C. would simply | have refused to see what we all know | confronts him, and would have been the last man in the country to acknowledge the thinness of the ice upon which his party is cavortin’. —The defeat of the common council man GEORGE H. RILEY for re-election in Pittsburg, on Tuesday, is certainly a most startling affair. In fact it will appear al- most beyond the conception of the peo- ple outside of that city. He was one of six councilmen in that city whom they all conceded “could not be reached,” yet in the face of the fact that nearly all of his colleagues have either been sent to the penitentiary or are under indictment for accepting bribes this one of the very few honest ones in the governmental body of a great city is defeated for re- election. Surely Pittsburg morality is be- yond the ordinary understanding. | Nebraskan. i Ee ~. | Will Senator Penrose Resent? | The BALLINGER--PINCHOT war has been carried into Pennsylvania at last. HENRY | W. Hox, Attorney General of Porto Rico, | has been forced to resign because he tes- i tified against the Secretary of the Inter- { ior. President TAFT ordered the investi- | gation and declared at the time that his | purpose was to ascertain the facts. But it appears that he oniy wanted facts for one side of the case. Testimony on the other | side is offensive and punishable by what | is equivalent to dismissal from office. This is anything but a square deal. It puts it up to witnesses in government employ to perjure themselves or lose their jobs. After this President TAPT can lay no claim to fairness or justice. He practical ly confesses that BALLINGER is culpable and that he knew of his culpability before he appointed him to the office he holds. It has been alleged that the land pirates | secured the appointment of BALLINGER. | It has been asserted that the GUGGEN- HEIMS, who were in conspiracy to steal the coal lands of Alaska, demanded his ap- pointment in return for campaign sub- scriptions. Of what use is it for President | TAFT to deny these accusations in the | face of this incident in relation to Mr. { Hoyt ? Only the most credulous can be fooled in this matter any longer. But meantime what are the Republi- cans of Pennsylvania going to do in re- | sentment of this outrage upon one of | their number? Will Senator PENROSE permit such an abuse of power against 'one of his constituents. The machine been arranged that when he reaches Ger- | many the Emperor will embrace him and : "kiss his cheek,” after the fashion of he- | reditary rulers and Divinely appointed , monarchs. No other American was ever so welcomed abroad. Of course there is reason for these marks of distinction and manifestations | of favor, but they have not been revealed. | President GRANT'S tour through Europe was a continuous ovation but he had not only acquired the distinction of being one of the great military geniuses of the world but had been twice elected to the office of President of the United States. Besides it was at the time suspected that his friends had in contemplation for him another term in that office and were preparing the way for the consummation of that pur- pose by enlisting the popular approval of | the world. Their expectation was disap- pointed but, comparatively speaking, their work was’ poorly done. THEODORE ROOSEVELT never cut much [Ee a soldier and he achieved little as President of the United States. In more than seven years of bluster and braggadocia, he never punished a "male- factor of great wealth,” or perceptibly restrained the criminal practices of the predatory corporations. Then why is he so fulsomely flattered by men of all con- ditions abroad? Simply because a syndi- cate of politicians are exploiting him for the Presidency on his return in order that they may make personal profit as they did in the Panama affair. The MORGANS and CrOMWELLS understand the value of such a man at the head of the government and are making the best of a promising op- portunity. 5 and dangerous custom of his Republican predecessors of depositing upward of a million dollars in a single bank which would accommodate politicians like “Bull” ANDREWS or QUAY or other favorites, with large loans, as in the case of the People’s bank, of Philadelphia, and the Enterprise National bank, of Allegheny, has been “honored in the breach,” during his administration, and the fact is worthy | and of approving comment. It is probably the reason that the machine is anxious to get rid of him. But there are other things in connection with Mr. SHEATZ’S administration of the office that are not so commendable. In referring to this matter last week we said: "According to the recent statement of Mr. SHEATZ the largest deposit in any bank on the 31st of March, this year, was $190,000 of the general fund surplus, and $90,000 of the sinking fund.” A closer scrutiny of the matter, however, reveals the fact that three of the banks holding deposits of $190,000 are the Columbia National-bank, the Colonial Trust com- pany and the German National bank, of Pittsburg, and that the Union Trust com- pany, of Pittsburg, had $100,000 and the Farmers’ Deposit National, of Pittsburg, held $101,000. These Pittsburg banks, according to the evidence presented to the Allegheny county grand jury by District Attorney BLAKELY, of that city, are the identical banks which raised a vast corruption fundto bribe Pittsburg councilmen to enact an ordinance making them the depositories of the city funds. It may be that there is no significance in the fact that these banks are favored more than others by Mr. SHEATZ. As a matter of fact the incident may be susceptible of an entirely satisfactory explanation. But if we lived in Missouri and had the same interest in safe-guarding the resources of Pennsylvania that we have under exist- ing conditions, we should want Mr. SHEATZ to "show us.” maybe they will tell you ge soon that Soulething like this is to be attempted by Signs of the Times. From the Philadelphia Record. In the Sixth Missouri district the Dem- getatic Plutality in 1908 Was 2% on it was 3778. In our- a Republican plurality in 1908 of 14,250 a Democratic plurality last month of 5650. In the second New York district there was a ublican plurality of 10,167 a year and a half ago and on Tuesday there was a Democratic plurality 5831. Aldrich, these are signs of the times. Bryan and Roosevelt—A Contrast. From the South Bend (Ind.) New Era. Mr. Bryan has | museum at Lincoln, and has been | home a lot of queer animals from place of the maple trees cut down at va- rious times. But it will be years before they will be able to do that, as now they are only six feet high. In selecting weeping elms the commissioners possibly had in mind the fact that they might | come in handy as mourners at their own political funeral after they get through with the court house. | flames that it was impossible to save even the machinery and other contents, soon reduced to a heap of smouldering ashes. Twothorses also per- ished, and the loss, reaching no’doubt much over $1000, will be keenly felt by Mr. Twigg, and put him to great inconvenience in doing his spring work. —Work on the Huntingdon, Lewistown and Juniata Valley Traction company's trolley line will be begun in a few days with from 400 to 600 men. There have been surveyed already four miles of the line from Mill Creek towards Reeds- ville, and two more corps will continue the furth’ er work of surveying. The terminus of the line at Huntingdon will be on the south side the river on the grounds of Mr. Jacobs, where it is purpos- ed constructing a large receiving depotlfor the produce of the Big valley, and also a passenger station —Traveling 10,000 miles to claim his bride, there was solemnized at Montrose, Susquehanna county, Tuesday evening, the marriage of Miss Beatrice Larrabee, for fourteen years a member of the faculty of the Bloomsburg Normal school, to Joseph Albertson, formerly of Bloomsburg, but for a number of years employed as district superintendent of the public schools in the Philip- pines. Both bride and bridegroom are graduates of the Bloomsburg Normal school and since grad- uation both have been teaching. Immediately fellowing the ceremony they left for the Philip- pines. ~New boiler shops are to be ereted at Renovo by the Pennsylvania Railroad company at a cost of $118,000, including equipment. All the repair work to the boilers of the engines of the Philadel- phia and Erie, Northern Central and Buffalo and Allegheny divisions will be done in the Clinton county town. Forty per cent. more men will be needed and an average of ter boilers a month will be overhauled and repaired when the shops are completed. The building wili be of brick and steel construction and will be 250x80 feet. The plant is expected to be completed, with the ma- chinery installed, by September 1. —Progress is being made in the work of prepar- ing the former car shops in the west end of Hunt- ingdon for the use of the Atlantic Radiator 'com- pany. O.P. Simler, formerly manager and sec- retary of the Union Radiator company, of Johns- town, has charge of the Huntingdon work and will be general manager of the plant when it is ready. The old machinery in the plant has been disposed of and $50,000 worth of new machines or-