INK SLINGS. —The season of the year is at hand when the sap begins to start up. Be careful lest you get too much in your head this spring. —Lock Haven is starting to wrestle with a municipal lighting plant. Belle fonte might be able to give her some val uable hints on how not to succeed. —RINGLING'S circus enterprise might hunt a long time before they could find a more efficient press agent than the one who handled the GouLp—DECIES wed- ding. —Many of the vociferous gentlemen who are most vociferous for reorganiza- tion of the party just now are the ones who, last year. were declaring that “there is no Democratic party in Pennsylvania.” —1It looks more every day as if WOODROW WiLsON were pointed right direct at the White House and the people of the coun- try gradually falling in behind to shove him in there whether he wants to go or not. —Go out and look at the board walk council had erected around RHOADS’ cor- ner, then call to mind that council elect- ed an engineer to take charge of the streets at its very next meeting, then have a laugh. —On Tuesday an English nobleman married one of the New York Go(u)Lp girls. The Lord deliver us from any- more of the CASTELLANE—de SAGAN scandals aired so frequently as a result of an earlier marriage in this same Go(u)Lp family. —Two million Chinamen are reported to be starving to death and Japan, Rus- sia, Germany, England and Uncle SAM go merrily on arming themselves against the day when they plan to blow the rest of the Chinks off the earth and snatch their wonderfully rich Empire. —Prof. MiLTON J. BRECHT, of Lancas- ter, has been appointed a member of the state railroad commission. Here ie where the Republican Keystoner has it on his Democratic ally of last fall. He is hand- somely baited back into his former loyal- ty to the Mac while the Democratic kicker is left with nothing to kick but himself. Vig —The PAYNE—ALDRICH tariff bill has been in operation eighteen months and notwithstanding the claim that it would prove the greatest revenue producer ever the government business still shows a def- wall is too high for foreign business to crawl over and we can’t use up at home all we can produce. .~An entire family has been found near Pittsfield, Mass., that never eats meats and subsists entirely on uncooked vegetables and cereals. Of course they are freak religionists, but the fact re- mains that they are healthy and thriving and do not have to wash their food down with a tonic and anchor it there with a load of dyspepsia tablets. —It has been discovered that a solu- tion of radium will infuse new life and youth into old horses. The experiment is being tried, of course, with the hope of finding an elixir of life. Ifit should prove as wonderful to the human system as ithas tothe horses experimented upon there may be hope of long years for many of us. That is, if we can raise the price, for radium costs several million dollars per ounce. —Bishop SAMUEL FaLrows, of Chica- go, has disagreed with THEODORE ROOSE- VELT on the large family proposition. The former maintains that it is the qual- ity of the family and not the quantity that makes for good and that it is better to have a useful small family than a worthless large one, as is so often the case. There is a certain Row in Belle- fonte where even Bishop FALLOWS' modifi- cation of the duties of citizenship will be sown on desert air. —Of course it was to be expected that the National Grange would oppose reci- procity with Canada, if reciprocity would reduce the price of our food stuffs. It took him some time to catch on, but the Granger is “next” all right now. If there is to be a tariff to fatten the steel mag- nate, the woolen manufacturer and the others, why not the farmer? is his ques- tion. And you can’t answer it. The truth of the matter is that there should be a tariff to support the government only and, after that, let every corporation, every individual look out for itself. —The would-be reorganizers of the Democratic party have discovered, what they should have known from the very first, that there is only one way sanc- tioned by law, by which the party man- agement can be changed and that way is by starting at the primaries in every elec- tion district in the State. We await, with interest, to see the result of their efforts in getting down to do some real work in the party. There never was a time when the management of the party could not have been changed had the voters so de- sired it, but the trouble with the gentle- men who are now so desirous of reorgan- izing is that they haven't the time, the in- clination or the party zeal to get out into the hustings and work. They are of the superior brand who want to manage after others have gotten together that which is to be managed. VOL. 56. The Grange and Reciprocity. ‘The Grangers are organizing to oppose the Canadian reciprocity scheme of Presi- dent Taft, according to published state- ments. The Legislative Committee of the National body has taken the initiative in the matter and at a meeting held in lution “protesting against the enactment of the reciprocity bill.” The Committee also “called upon the membership to ex- ert pressure upon Congressmen from their various districts to vote against the measure.” The reason assigned for this action is that the proposed reciprocity is discriminating in its operations. That is products of the farms and leaves the jes undisturbed. Of course this is only a subterfuge. Most of the Grange officials are tariff- mongers and oppose reciprocity for the same reason that Senator PENROSE, Sena- ator OLIVER and other congressional “stand-patters, object to it. They im- agine that it is an entering wedge for general tariff reduction which will culmi- nate in “tariff for revenue only.” In other words the Grange organization is rapidly degenerating into a close corpo- ration through which the officers hope to “farm” the farmers for selfish purposes, In this State, for example, the machinery of the Grange is being prostituted into an agency to conserve the political ambitions of a few of the Grange officials. The National body may have other purposes in view but they are equally selfish. We are not greatly enamored of this scheme of the President. It is a make- shift at best and the object which it pro- fesses to attain might more safely and certainly be acquired by abolished tariff taxation on the commodities included in its schedules, whether they come from Mexico, France or Canada. But the adoption of the measure would work an instant decrease in the prices of the nec- essaries of life, or at least in the food staples, and that is a step in the right di- rection. If, as the tariff-mongers fear and other hope, “it will eventuate in a constitutional and just system of taxation, all the better. But the officers of the National Grange who have so hastily and eagerly gone into an opposition move- | ment are not striving for that result. est———————————— ——Those Democrats who voted for a permanent tariff commission will be en- titled to popular felicitation when Presi dent TAFT appoints DUNCAN MCKINLEY, of California, and Senator BEVERIDGE, of Indiana, to fill two of these high-salaried places. Both of these gentlemen are among the Congressional “lame-ducks” which must be taken care of but so far as we are able to discover they have never done anything to entitle them to the help of Democrats in discovering soft snaps. Tariff Commission Likely. The hope that the tariff commission bill might fail of passage through the Senate is diminishing. The end of the session, three weeks from to-morrow, will strike from the pay-roll a number of Con- gressional “lame ducks,” and places must be provided for them. A permanent tar- iff commission will help in this direction. At least five of the repudiated patriots will find lucrative berths in this needless body. In view of that fact it is small wonder that “the Republicans are more strongly in favor of the tariff board meas- ure now than they were a few weeks ago.” As the necessity draws nearer it looms larger. Hence the matter is being pressed with unusual energy. Senator MONEY, of Mississippi, made a strong argument against the iniquity the other day while it was being considered in a special session of the Senate Finance committee. "The President is not war- ranted in undertaking tariff tinkering,” he said. “Such acticn,” he added, “is a function of Congress and this co-ordinate branch of the government can secure its own committees.” But the hungry horde of "lame ducks’’ cannot be diverted from their pursuit of spoils by such plain facts. They need the money and the Republican machine must provide means for getting it notwithstanding the constitution and the law. As Tim CAMPBELL put it "what's the constitution among friends.” Of course there is a chance of defeat- ing this iniquity. If the Democrats of the Senate will work together and as- tain that the House will prevent its pas- sage during the next Congress, though some Democrats voted for it in that body the other day. It will put an annual burden of several hundred thousand New York, the other day, adopted a reso- | | any person in the State, shall be prima to say it decreases tariff taxation on the | schedules on the products of the factor- | "STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA. FEBRUARY 10, 1911. Dangerous Powers Proposed. The bill to exact a license fee from the resident hunters of the State which was prepared by the Secretary of the Game Commission, is more preposterous than the measure which was defeated four years ago. For example, one of its fea- tures provides that "possession of the de- scribed gun or device where it might be used for hunting,or the possession of any dead or living body of one of the birds or animals, or any part of such a body, by facia evidence of violation of the law, and render the person liable to the pen- alty.” What other crime or misdemeanor | or offence can be punished on such evi dence. Assuredly none. Moreover the game wardens or other | officers authorized to make arrests under this law may do so “without warrant.” This is plainly an infraction of the Bill of Rights and should be prevented in all cases other than felonies. It gives to magistrates the power of “summary con- viction,” another dangerous proposition. ; Under such conditions it is easy to see how these servants of the privileged class might prevent all hunters except those who are within their favor, from enjoying the chase. A man who had prev- jously been in the habit of hunting on his own premises or those of his neigh- bors would be compelled to either take out a license or dispose of his gun for the inquisitorial game wardens could mulct him for penalties whether he hunt- ed or not. The advocates of this absurd measure hold out to the members of the General Assembly the promise of considerable revenues to the State. As a matter of fact it will provide no revenue to the State for the ample reason that all fines and penalties will go to the Game Com- mission to be disbursed by the secretary of that body according to his own ca- prices. The bill provides that the money | “The Wish is Father to the Thought.” plan. Audiences in this country have shall be used for the purposes of propo- | that no money can be paid for any propriations made by the In every respect this measure is objection- | able if not actually vicious and the Gen- eral Assembly should defeat it prompt- ly. ——In the school books of the olden | time there used to be an interesting story | of a man who had hold of a bear's tail | and couldn't let go because of the certain- | | ty of dire disaster after the bears re-| | lease. As the time for the Democratic | reorganizers to reorganize approaches, | they look as if they felt like the man who | had hold of the bear's tail. | While we have no sympathy with gov- | erning commissions of any sort we are constrained to hope that something use- ful will be developed from the proposed legislation for the creation of a Public Utilities commission. A committee com- | posed of Representatives in the Legisla- | ture and others is now engaged in the preparation of a measure of this kind, to be introduced in the near future. It will cover the operations of gas, electric, tele- | | graph, telephone and trolley railroad | companies and will be drawn on the lines | of laws for similar purposes now in force in Maryland and New York. i The proper way to regulate such utili- ty companies is through one of the exist Public Utilities Commission. | ine departments of the State govern- ment, preferably that of Internal Affairs. | Whatever legislation is necessary to ena- | ble the secretary of that department to | perform this service ought to be enacted. "In fact the duties of the Railroad Com- | mission ought to have been committed to him. It would have saved the State | many thousands of dollars annually. The | chances are, however, that the other | course was adopted for that reason. The | dominant political machine wanted pa- | | tronage and the Railroad Commission af- fords a good deal of it. The proposed Utility Commission will present the boss- ' es with another lot of juicy plums. | But something ought to be done to bring some of these utility corporations under reasonable control. They are in- tolerably arrogant, insolent and exorbit- ant in their charges. The proposed rem- edy will be expensive, of course, but the increasing use of telephone and other services provided by such corporations is becoming so burdensome to the people that restraints are necessary to prevent confiscation of the property of the public. Care should be taken, however, that such legislation is in the interest of the peo. ple rather than for the benefit of the cor- porations. ———A New Jersey law maker pro- gating game but the constitution provides | NO. 6. eS Tariff Selfish and Cruel. Mr. CHARLES M. SCHWAB, president of From the Altoona Times. i President Taft is said to be most deter- the Bethleham Steel company, has fallen mined and aggressive when he smiles. a prey to the fear of Japanese invasion And just now he is wearing his most be- and conquest. In a speech delivered in Paris, the other night, he amazed the French savants of finance and statesman- ship with a word picture of the little yel- low warriors forcing their way through : the Pacific seaports and deluging the ng land with the blood of victims of our un- ty preparedness for war. He said that these ' by the American and Japanese pigmies are ambitious for con- | will mean lower quest and covetous of power and that Other necessaries of life. | position on that t. But i unless the Congress of the United States | Por tears its head. and But specta] intsr- promptly authorizes the increase of the tack upon the industry of the nation is navy to enormous proportions and i proposed. the i | And, while President is advocati provides for the fortification of every foot a wry og of sea coast we are doomed. : ; } at the same time ounding his politic- Before going into conniption fits over & tite con t EE this dire prediction of disaster, however, | ous progressives w have made matters it would be well to consider who and | uncomfortable for all parties of stand-pat what Mr. SCHWAB is. As the head of the Bethlehem Steel company he is at present the largest manufacturer of armor plate in the world. When he acquired the property of that corporation at a cost of arrangement something like $3,000,000 he undertook | becomes a settled policy, they it is to unload it upon the Shipbuilding trust urged, be bog into Competifion at a valuation of $30,000,000, and had ac- armers pe ve tually issued the stock and disposed of less for the products of than I ) would otherwise be the case. more than half of it. Before the trick was are willing that there shall be turned, however, he was caught in the | reci ty for manufactured process, act and with the goods on him, and was Which would aifect the St 2 they compelled to disgorge. Then he began the | out products that might be x igh brought into development of his now enormous armor competition with the source of the unpar- late t. prospeti A PD Ade present concern is to The east Satisfied to let down the : 5 bars to western products and the west keep his machinery in motion so as to | holds the same sentiments towards the earn profits on the stock swelled from manatearad articles of She gt All three to thirty million dollars and the which serves to prove tariff, only possible way of achieving that result in theoly am) practice, is heartiess, sel- is to induce the government to build bat- eet tle ships and other war materials and his The Next Best Thing. Paris speech was obviously a part of his From the Johnstown Democrat. grown weary of war scares rather than | a f Fach! the centre @ on. Tt'too clea ageriatively prosperous tod: eals that “the wish is of the unham pciprocity between thought.” why not a little reci- To Abolish Fees and Pay Official Sal- g the devil. How long will Americans be aries. beguiled with the lie that we are a free country when we are governed by a bed- lam legislative body, many of the units of which are incapable of looking much beyond the little corners of the nation in abolish the fee system in all counties | which their several districts are situated? having a population of less than one hun- | But this is not the whole of the ugly truth. Many of the nder the in- dred and fifty thousand and put the offi- fluence and the pay ‘direct! ingot cials on a stated salary. In counties hav- of the gorporation; that have contributed ing a population of less than fifty thous- to send m to Washington. They are and and more than twenty-five thousand, not the representatives of the people, but the class to which Centre county belongs, the attorneys of trusts who serve their the bill provides for the following salaries: Representative C. A. BENTLEY, of Washington county, on Monday in- troduced a bill in the Legislature to masters by robbi the people. How gHhervise Could he nited States be S0 Sheriff, $2,500; prothonotary, $2,500; ' © en monarchies of Europe i : . and Asia in the emjoyment of a chea clerk of courts, $2,000; register of wills, | parcels post? Give us reciprocity, vo $1,800; recorder of deeds, $2,500; treas- | us a parcels post, give us free coal, free urer, $2,500; commissioners, each, $1,200; | lumber, free wool, free raw material and auditors, each, $150; coroner, $500; | free cooked, material. Couse Jagisiation solicitor, $500. Where the prothonotary | traditional Chinese policy now abandon- is also clerk of the court he shall receive ed even by the od of ph in on $1,000 additional to his regular salary of the rest of the world in order that inter- $2,500. | nal robbers may have unmolested play. om i mr AEA A OF ‘course the free dist in the Pennsylvania and the Tariff Pact. PAYNE—ALDRICH tariff law is absurd as | Ee Paselghin Recond. 0 ibe the capable cartoonist of the esteemed | e In the Lnion wi more Philadelphia Record shows that the free |; Ratly advantaged BY Cecio Sain list expressed in the Canadian reciproci- | mines and manufactories are the nearest dollars on the pulic for all time. But that poses to limit by statute the amount of is not the worst. It is subversive of the food his constituents can use dail : y. Just constitution and the people demand a ,, ; Republican prices had not cinched return to the true principles of the gov- that job long ago. ernment as expressed in the fundamental law. ——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. ty treaty is admirable. But the free list and cheapest source of supply for the | most densely inhabited of Canada, in the PAYNE—ALDRICH tariff bill is ex- | stretching south 2 within the envelop- actly the same today as it was the day ing chain of the Great Lakes. No rep- that President TAFT delivered his Wino- resentative of this Sete in either branch na speech in which he eulogized that ngres s can raise his voice or cast measure as the best tariff law ever en- Yolo Saint Se Foro Jgroemon nent acted. Other things huve changed, of | ency. Canada is rich in the products we course. The people have emphatically need. We get from her an givalent for registered their disapproval of the PAYNE— | €VeIY concession we t. no Aorcr schedules but there is tio upe in | SOMpilsion involved but the compulsion deifying TAPT because the public has re-| of opportunity; which ensbies buyers buked him. | on more mutually change commodities Advantages? TR ——The christian world has its eyes fo- cussed on the sick bed of the learned | and pious Catholic prelate, Archbishop a SAN, who Baas bran ut lie point of death | 277 ve New Westriuster Briish Columbian, at his Episcopal residence in Philadelphia for more than a week. Bishop RYAN is one of those men who has given his life to the service of religion and the happi- ness of the people and in his illness he has the sympathy of all christians, what- ever faith they may profess. ——The Standard Oil company is tak- ing an active part in the Senatorial elec- tion in Montana and naturally is exert- ing its influence against the Democratic diated by the people at the last election, has been a servile tool of the interests for many years and naturally the Stand- ard Oil company hopes to re-elect him. —When lightning decided to strike the capitol of Missouri Sunday night it did it with about the same vigor that a Mis- souri mule uses its nether limbs. Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. western Canada municipalities to the principle of the single tax. . . . Edmonton has exceedingly under this system of taxation in spite of the anomalies of the business tax. The taxon land has allayed the speculative fever, investors in city realty have found residences, line we should judge that he don’t expect to represent much of anything. SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. ~There are twenty-five students {from Clear- field county in the State College this term, a greater number than has been there for a num- ber of years. : ~The woven wire plant at Lock Haven has been running fifteen hours a day and expects to go on double turn to catch up with heavy orders for wire screen. ~Viewers from Clearfield and Centre counties have reported favorable for a bridge across the Moshannon, near the site of the old mill at the town of Osceola. —Nanticoke has finally landed the big cigar fac- tory which its board of trade has been after for the past month. The plant will employ upward of 500 people, and asked nothing from the towns- people. . —Recause their son came toa violent death by contact with a wire belonging to the Kittanning Electric company, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kahn have brought suit against the company for $25,000 damages. —Two unknown men, passing as bookbinders from Philadelphia, who sought board with Mrs. Mary Amos, in Allentown, turned out to be sneak thieves and got a diamond ring valued at $926 and $3 in cash. —A Sharon woman who was recently robbed of $120 was surprised to find $70 of the amount thrust under her bedroom door on Wednesday morning. while the balance was found outside the door on Thursday evening. ~The Selinsgrove board of trade has announced that a new industry—the Orwigsburg Shoe fac- tory—has been secured for Selinsgrove and that it will change its location as soon as possible. The plant will start with 100 hands. ~The end of the wooden telegraph pole is near at hand, as it is rapidly being supplanted by the improved concrete pole. All the poles erected in the Pennsylvania railroad yards at Northumber- land are concrete, and were made there as rapid- ly as needed. ~The directors in Lawrence township, Clear- field county, have had more than the usual trou ble in keeping a teacher in the higher grade of the Paradise school this winter and recently se- cured a third one and hope the final one for this term at least. —Within the past three weeks rabies have been ty | responsible for the death of ten head of cattle, three head of horses and a number of hogs in In- diana county. The losses will total about $2.000. It is likely that all dogs in the county will be quarantined for 100 days. —Almost every gas jet in a DuBois boarding house was found open by firemen when they were called to extinguish a small fire. Had its dis. covery been delayed until the blaze had gained more headway, a terrific explosion would have resulted. Police are investigating. —Postmaster Byron A. Weaver, of Montours- ville, has been relieved from duty and the office put in charge of his bondsmen. He is charged with having boomed the price of stamps in order to increase his salary, which has jumped from $1,000 to $1,700 under his administration. —Officers of the Williamsport Packing com- pany, whose plant was destroyed by fire recent- ly. are undecided as to whether to rebuild at that place or remove to Lock Haven. The board of trade of the latter place is offering strong induce- ments; so is Williamsport and the location is the balance. ~Osterberg is quite excited over the finding in a well at the home of George Defibaugh. Fhe well was drilled last summer but the oil itself only recently. Some people it ak in the Crescent Oil company’s hold with her husband any longer. She said he abused her. The man begged her to reconsider her purpose, but she declined. Then he swallowed sufficient carbolic acid to make her a widow. —~Two big mortgages are being recorded in the Somerset county court house. One is for $40,- 000,000 on the property of the Consolidation Coal company. It will cover about 100 pages and cost about $100. The other is for $3,585,000 on the Somerset Coal company’s property, taken over some time ago by the Consolidation company. It will cover seventy-five pages. —A. E. Hall, a produce salesmanof Baltimore, and who has operated in Lock Haven to some ex- tent is under arrest at York, Pa., charged witha multiplicity of crime. Accordingly to reports Hall has had a checkered career and aside from having Mormon instincts—a desire for numerous wives—he has a penchant for attempting to pay his debts with worthless checks. —An Indiana county farmer sold his farm re- cently for $3,800. It was no sooner done than he rued bargain but the purchaser, who was pleased with his new possession, didn't want to sell it back. Finally, when he saw how hard it would be for the man to leave his old home, he con- sented and the original owner bought it back for $450 more than he had sold it for. —The Hanover silk mill, which has been idle forseveral years, is expected to resume opera tions in a few weeks and give employment to a larger number of people than before. This is the only idle manufacturing plant in Hanover at pres- ent, and if the parties interested are successful in their project the industrial condition of Hanover will show unmistakable signs of prosperity in every branch of trade. market will be the principal business, and 25.000 barrels will be the capacity of the plant. —Contracts for 18,000 tons of steel rails will be placed by railroad within the stood that the orders bigger ones from time to time as the market per- mits of advantageous buying. Fi'ty more locomo- tives of all classes will be ordered during 1911.