INK SLINGS. —March has done right well, thus far, in the snow business. —It is back to real conservation and the pines for Mr. BALLINGER. ~The first robin has made its appear- ance and it won't be long till BiLL LYON or GEORGE Buse is out with a straw hat. —If prices keep on soaring seven pas- senger touring car can be bought in Cen- tre county for less than a yearling hay motor. —It isn’t the sins of commission as much as those of omission that the last Congress will have to answer to the pub- lic for. —The Coinel is off on another tour of the country. Look out for variable winds through the south and west for the next six weeks. —It isn’t so much the strenuosityjof the campaign as what their opponents say about them that makes the candidates for office feel all run down. —It took three years to land ABE REUF, the San Francisco grafter and briber, in the penitentiary, but it will take ABE fourteen years to land himself out again. —Right or wrong the retirement of Secretary BALLINGER from the Interior Department will end a squabble that has been inimical to the dignity of our gov- ernment. —The mobilization of an army of twenty thousand soldiers on the Mexican border looks a little as if Uncle SAM were getting ready to benevolently assimilate something. —The Pennsylvania Legislature has given local option another set back, but it takes more than a machine controlled body like that to dampen the ardor of the local optionist. —If President TAFT really did say that he finds “much to rejoice in over the work of the Congress just ended” he must have meant that he rejoiced because it was no worse than it was. —Senator BAILEY, of Texas, is a very able man. There is no refuting that. But Senator BAILEY is not the alpha and omega of all that is wise and therein lies the folly of the stand he has taken in the Senate. —Adeclphus Busch, the millionaire brewer, was given a gold loving cup at his golden wedding anniversary on Tues- day. Atub’o suds. wera ‘have been ri fh -angl #4 Monday a large elected Democratic mayors to succeed Republican incumbents. —If that New England high brow is right in his statement that it was a pear and not an apple that ADAM and EVE ate it will be entirely proper to speak of your Adam's pear, if you are a skinny man and have just cut it while shaving. —The tortoise lives longer than any known animal. But science will recon- struct its views when it reads the memoirs of Senator BAILEY, should his hasty resig- nation be accepted. About threelyears as a private citizen of Texas will fit him to tell how long some lives really seem. —Every Democrat who is to occupy a seat in the next Congress should! see to it that some one knocks all fool notions out of his head between this time and April 4th. The country wants Democ- racy and sense. Nothing else will answer and if it doesn’t get that there will not be another Democratic Congress. —The call for the extra session of Con- gress may prove a boomerang that will force more than the Canadian reciprocity pact on President TAFT. The people voted for more than that and when the men they elected to give it to them get busy we fear the President will be unable to stem the tide that is unmistakable in its trend to a tariff for revenue only. —The Democrats of Centre county would do well to let the matter of reor- ganizing the party rest until after we get our county ticket elected. No matter which side you are on keep quiet until we decide the thing of most importance right here at home. A hasty word now may mean a good many votes against you or your friend in November and argument isn't going to settle the controversy any- way. Let's all pull together to get a good, strong, clean ticket. Then pull again to elect it; then argue our heads off, if we want to, about this reorganization busi- ness. —The Rev. Dr. AKED has grown tired of the professions of the ROCKERFELLER church in New York and has resigned. He declares that the professions of his wealthiest congregation in America are only “such stuff as dreams are made of” and he wants work, not professions. While we admire the ambition of the Doctor we are prone to think that possi- bly he might be failing in getting the “work” tecause he has failed to inject the right kind of religious ginger into his flock. It is certain that some people are hard to move. It is just as certain that all human beings, savage as well as civil- rel senti- VOL. 56. - The Reorganization of the Party. By the narrow margin of one vote the Democratic State Central committee, at "STATE Washington Was Surprised. The Washington correspondents in- form the public that the call for an ex- RIGHTS AND SELLEFORTE, PA-MARCI)O, FEDERAL UNION. 1911. NO. 10. Senator Bailey's Resignation. | Senator BAILEY'S resignation the other ' day was an exhibition of temper as little majority of her cities its recent special meeting in Harrisburg, adopted the recommendation of the Mc- CORMICK committee authorizing the ap- pointment of a special committee of seven to reorganize the State Organiza- tion. The reasons given for this revolu- tionary proceeding was that the Demo- cratic vote of the State, as expressed at the polls, had fallen to a meagre propor- tion. The party strength has been grad- ually diminishing, the supporters of the revolutionary movement declared, until at the last election it reached the mini- mum of less than one-third of its full complement. Inferentially the blame for this lamentable fact was shifted upon the shoulders of the present State Chairman. Nobody regrets more than we this de- cadence of Democratic strength and no one hasjlabored more assiduously to avert it. There have been influences at work within the large cities during recent years, over which neither the Democratic State organization nor the active Demo- crats of the State, have had control,which account, in part, for the condition. The traffic in federal and other offices, so eloquently reprobated by Senator BOURNE, of Oregon, the other day, is one of these agencies. Voters have been debauched by such methods of bribery, the high cost of living contributing largely toward the result. Honest differences of opinion among Democrats upon financial and economic questions have been contribu- tary causes of demoralization in the party ranks but these were not the only or even the most potential influences in the evil operations. During the last fourteen years there has been workingin the Democratic mind the spirit of faction. In the beginning those who believed in one system of finance repudiated the candidate of the party for President because he was an advocate of another theory. Gradually ! : a and though the party leaders in control in Pennsylvania had been faithful throughout, the followers of Mr. BRYAN resented the nomination of Judge PARKER and organized a systematic campaign to punish those in authority in the party be- cause Judge PARKER was nominated. Out of this unjust and unnatural quarrel has come the disaster which we all deplore. For six years or more this strife has been maintained. Professed Democratic newspapers have attacked with surprising vehemence party leaders who were guilty of no offence unless generosity in supporting the party candidates and unselfish fidelity to the principles of the party are faults. These same papers have worked assid- uously to discredit the organization in every way and to belittle every effort it put forth for party success. Men posing as Democrats, like those at | traordinary session of Congress was complete surprise. The President had stated in the most positive terms that in of the Canadian reciprocity agreement Senators and Representatives in Con- gress didn't believe him. They were bet- ting on the other side. As a matter of fact nobody takes TAFT seriously, except himself, and nobody has the least respect for his word. He prevaricates whenever it serves his purpose. He falsifies when- ever it suits his convenience. He doesn’t vilify men or bear false witness against his neighbor as his predecessor in office did. But nobody can depend upon his word. We own to an agreeable disappoint- ment in the issue of the call for the spe- cial session. We had read his positive statements on the subject but in view of his previous departures from the line of veracity, paid no attention to them. The Senators in Congress understood his re- lations to the trusts and tariff mongers, as we did. They believed that he would yield to the importunities of the “inter- ests,” as we did. But he disappointed their expectations, as he did ours. Dur- ing a lucid interval, in which courage as- serted itself, he fulfilled his obligations and carried out his threat. It was the life and the most gratifying. If Congress is equal to the emergency it will work splendid results for the country. Itis a safe guess, however, that TAFT will try to make the special session yield as little harm to the interests and as lit- tle good to the public as possible. He will try to limit the activities of Congress to the Canadian reciprocity agreement, which may dosome good, but can’t achieve much. The decrease of tariff taxes on woolens is of greater importance than puttting potatoes on the free list. But Tarr will exhaust every expedient to the decre: of the tax on wool- 3 time. If he had more intelligence and less conceit he would know better. The Extra Session of Congress. | President TAFT has called anextra ses- sion of Congress for the purpose of de- termining “whether Congress shall, by | the necessary legislation, make operative,” ithe Canadian reciprocity agreement. | Obviously his purpose is to limit the | activities of Congress to that proposition. There is a parliamentary maxim that a | legislative body in extraordinary session ! can consider only questions enumerated | in the call. President TArr has stated | that he will veto any tariff measure other | than this Canadian treaty, which may be | enacted and the call for the extra session | next month enumerates no other subject ' than the Canadian agreement. | It may be presumed, however, that the ! Democratic majority in the House and a creditable to him as some of his recent the event of the failure of the ratification he would call an extra session. But the most surprising incident of his official | , ties of the head of the present movement to as- the Democrats and Insurgents in the sume control of the organization without Senateof the new Congress will pay no at- consulting the Democratic voters, refused | tention to traditional restrictions. Article to do anything for the party, or to even 2 Section 3 of the constitution of the vote its ticket because they had not been | United States authorizes the President to chosen as its leaders or acknowledged as | “convene both Houses, or either of them,” its bosses. on extraordinary occasions. He regards Petty factional feelings controlled the | the failure of the Canadian agreement as actions of others who were constantly | justifying the exercise of this authority, throwing every obstacl® in the way of and he is right. But the right of Con. party success they could because their A gress to amend the agreement cannot be faction was not directing the party. | denied. Therefore itis not only the right These things brought discouragement but the duty of Congress to so alter the to the masses. Discouragement of the agreement as to make it apply to all masses brought hopelessness to the voter countries with which we have trade rela- and the result was a large stay at home | tions and to include all necessaries of life vote. as well as food stuffs. It is to the stay-at-home Democratic President TAFT is under obligations to vote that our present condition is most the tariff mongers and the trust magnates, . | but he will hardly dare to veto legislation And to the course of the very men and Which will instantly and effectively solve newspapers that are now seeking to take the problem of the high cost of living. He charge of the Democratic party that the is a candidate for re-election and with stay-at-home vote is attributable. the record of such a veto he wouldn't It was nota lack of diligence upon the carry a State in the union. But he will part of the Chairman or recreancy of try to prevent such a proposition coming leaders. | before him. He will exhaust every re- ' source to limit the action of Congress to ——1It is worth while to observe that carrying out his own program. Such a though more than half the time which course would beruinous to the Democrats usually marks the length of a session of in Congress who are responsible to the the Legislature has elapsed since the people. The Democrats of the House will beginning of the present session no im- be recreantif the tariff tax is not abolish- portant legislation has been enacted as ed on every necessary of life during the yet and some of the important bills have Session. not even been started. The school code, Hon. J.C. MEYER has as far as we the mine code and the road bill are in can learn the universal approval of the are yet to be introduced. It is either the of the State. Unfortunately for the tax- sion very long or the output of legislation [egisiature do not have the judgment or exceedingly short. the independence that Mr. MEYER shows wensiSptiag will die ere in Jess than | LogSln0, two weeks. | ——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. ‘votes and speeches. He was chagrined, : he says, because a number of Democrat- ic Senators voted to approve the consti- tution adopted by the people of Arizona, as the basis for Statehood. The people of that new State have written into their fundamental law some Populistic here- sies, he declares, and for that reason the Territory should not be admitted as a State. It seems to us that the eloquent but too opinionated Texan is asserting poor political philosophy, froma Demo- cratic view point. We have always un- derstood that home rule is a cardinal Democratic doctrine. We are as little inclined to the initia- tive, referendum and recall as Senator BAILEY, but if the people of Arizona want such things its their affair, not ours or Senator BAILEY'S. Oklahoma [has written a lot of those things into its con- stitution and seems to be getting along fairly well with them. Oregon and other western States have incorporated a lot of absurd things in the fundamental and statutory laws governing’ them, but we can see no reason why citizens of New York or Ohio should complain. A recent ‘incident in Seattle, Washington, revealed the absurdity of the recall, but the shame of it is orr the people of that city and not on those of Pennsylvania or any of its cities. ! Viewed from this distance it looks§as if the Democratic Senators who projected | themselves into the affair with the pur- ! pose of inducing BALEY to withdraw his resignation were “butters in.” BAILEY has been acting a good deal like a spoil- ed boy lately. He may be, as some of his colleagues estimate, a very able Sen. ator. He has proved himself to be a very persuasive and eloquent debater. But he is in the habit of misusing his talents and misapplying his influence. ‘He is largely responsible for the presence of briber LORIMER in the Senate and al- together blamable for some of the iniqui- the PAYNE—ALDRICH tariff law. ults of that measure are to be HARE BatLEY DE — - i ow om, Taft Prostitutes the Appointing Power. The failure of the permanent tariff commission bill to pass finally is one of the gratifying’ incidents of the last Con- gress. It was one of the President's favo- rite measures. He didn't care for it for the reason that it was needed or would be beneficial to the public. He wanted it because it would have provided a lot of official patronage. If it had passed he would have been able to take care of sev- eral of the Congressional “lame ducks” who, without it, will be obliged to earn their living by some sort of labor or serv- ice, honest or otherwise. TAFT hoped to be able to put them into comfortable berths at public expense. This expecta- tion has been disappointed. The President has revealed to us what he would have done with this tariff com- mission if it had been created. For the last ten or twelve years one of the Georgia Congress districts has been sending to the House an insignificant little nobody named HOWARD who hasn't enough brains to grease a gimlet. At the organization of the Sixty-first Congress HOWARD de- serted his party and supported the CAN- NON interests in the fight for improvement of the rules of the House. Inresentment of this recreancy he was refused a re- nomination and consequently failed of election to thenext Congress. In order to recompense him for thisloss TAFT has appointed him to a seat on the existing tariff board. It is a safe bet that HOWARD wouldn't know an economic principle from a flying machine. As a member of the tariff board he will be of no more use than a fifth wheel to a wagon. But in an emer- gency he helped the Republican congres- sional machine by sacrificing his honor and TAFT rewards him by placing him in | a lucrative position which if it were of any use at all would require the highest order of talents. Senator BOURNE, of Oregon, denounced TAFT the other day as a “huckster in official patronage” and this appointment of HOWARD, of Georgia, to a seat on the tariff board correhorates every accusation made. He is a briber and pays his obligations by trading in offices. | ——The Pennsylvania Democratic dele- gation in the next Congress hasn't been’ very generously treated in the committee assignments if the list of probable chair- men published recently is anywhere near accurate. Possibly, however, the Pennsyl- vania Democrats in the next Congress have formed a voting trust and are so elated over getting a seat in the Ways and Means committee for the “holding” mem- ber that they don’t care for individual honors. What Congress Did and Did Not Do. From the Philadelphia Press. Out of the smoke of the closing battle in Congress emerge these results of larg- er interests: POSITIVE RESULTS. Provision of $3,000,000 for the fortifica- tion of Panama Canal. Recodification of the judicial code—re- garded as most important for the amel- ioration of the law’s delays. Creation of forest preserves in the southern Appalachian and White Moun- tains. Providing for the construction of em- bassy and legation buildings abroad. sor iting the inspection of locomotive Creating Robert E. Peary a rear ad- miral on the retired list of the navy and Joswally tendering thant of Congress to Creating a commission of five Senators and five Representatives to investigate conditions in Alaska. NEGATIVE RESULTS. Failure of the Canadian reciprocity agreement and consequent calling of an Failure of the permanent tariff board bill, which the Senate but was killed by a filibuster in the House. Failure of the resolution to admit to Statehood Arizona and New Mexico, kill- ed by a filibuster in the Senate. Failure of the proposal to increase the rate of postage on the sec- tions of the large magazines; but a com- mission provided for to investigate the subject. Failure of the resolution for the direct election of United States Sen- ators. Failure of the general age pension bill. Failure to act on Ballinger-Pinchot in- tion reports. Failure to enact the ocean mail subsi- dy, passed by the Senate alone. Failure of the effort to unseat William Lorimer as Senator from Illinois on the ground of bribery in his election. Failure of fixing canal tolls and set- tling form of government for Panama Canal zone. Lorimer. From the Altoona Times. It is a significant and not al er agreeable fact that Senator illiam Lorimer, of Illinois, retains his seat in the Senate of the United States by the votes of the Senators, who have been dismissed by the withdrawal of public confidence and public support at the last election. The “lame ducks" were almost unani- ‘mously for the man whose main defense » did not have guilty know! pf the crobkedness which landad him the Senate. The opposition of Lorimer was no means an insurgent - tion. tor Root, who must be ited with some degree of intelligence and who is at the same time little given to radical moves, delivered a philippic against Lori- mer which must stand for many years as a brilliant example of patriotic oratory. Mr. Root declared that the future of the Republic depended on the United States Senate uttering a clear judgment against the sort of political corruption which made the election of Lorimer possible. The vote on Senator Lorimer is declara- tory of character and intention. It will be hard to convince the country that that vote does not imply full committment to the methods and purposes which have brought the Senate of the United States into no inconsiderable measure of dis- repute throughout the coun If per- sons of the rasher sort draw the conclu- sions that those who voted for Senator Lorimer believe in all the things which have made Senator Lorimer possible, we cannot much blame them. It is sufficient to say as the final comment on the whole case that the Lorimer vote will do more than any other event in our recent politics to push forward the demand that the election of Senators hereafter shall be by a direct popular vote. No Higher Rate. From the Pittsburg By a ruling of the Interstate Commerce Commission Saturday the Eastern and Western railroads will not be permitted to put into execution their proposed in- crease of freight rates, which were to have taken effect on the 10th of March. The Southwestern roads fare a little bet- ter, as they gain a few points in which the inequality was so apparent that an 2 fe £2 i AS DNR Gs sim or ri i ; tral Railroad of New Jertey. For SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Mill Hall is to have a National bank in the near future. A new building is to be erected for its occupancy. —B. F. Gregory, of Lewistown, has invented a street sweeping machine that is said to be a great improvement on any now in use. —Something of a sensation was created by the discovery that a man who had been handling pro- visions in a Harrisburg warehouse had small- pox. —A DuBois chicken thief was sighted by some young folks of that town a few evenings ago. The police got the chickens, but the thief got away. —After thirty-eight years in the Pennsylvania railroad employ, Samuel Walls, aged 58 years, a brakeman in the Renovo yard, was killed on Sat” urday. —Fires have been lighted at the big milk con- densary at Mill Hall. Within the next ten days the tests will all be made and the plant ready for operation. ~The epidemic of measles existing in Philadel- vhia shows no signs of abatement. Last week there were 518 cases of the disease as compared with 466 the previous week. ~Henry W. Maxwell, of Slatington, who died recently, left $100,000 to his widow as long as she remains unmarried. Should she take another husband she is to have but $4,000. —Seeking to gain possession of a $200,000 farm at Fairview, Erie county, A. F. Dobler’s children have sued him, while he is in a hospital and is said to be under a young wife's influence. ~Fifty-seven Zelienople wives wrote a local pas- tor that the ideal husband should be truth, eco- nomical, liberal with the needy, not join a club that has a sideboard and never gamble or swear. ~It is the theory of some health experts that the epidemic of typhoid fever which has been af- flicting Erie is due to the practice of throwing tons of decaying fish into the lake from fishing —Frank Lee, condemned to be hanged at Lewis town on March 9th, has been reprieved until April 10th. His attorney will make an effort to get the board of pardons to commute his sentence to life imprisonment. —Bricks from the Clymer plant are to be used in street paving operations at Indianz this spring. They will be hauled about one hundred miles by rail, although but nine miles is the distance be- tween the two places. ~The deputy attorney general decides that the State cannot be made to pay any part of the cost of certain cattle introduced into the State without a permit and killed as the cause of the foot and mouth disease epidemic of 1908. ~Valley Forge Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, at a meeting held at Nor- ristown, adopted resolutions protesting aaginst the removal of the remains of General Hancock from Norristown to Arlington. —Owing to the fact that there are several claim- ants for the reward of $200 offered for the cap” ture of Si Rizzo, the Clearfield court is asked to decide who gets the money. The case of Rizzo, who was acquitted, cost the county $476. —While returning to their home near Washing- ton on Saturday night, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pat- terson were halted by a masked robber, who pointed a gun at Patterson and compelled him to hand over his money, which amounted to $10. —Of a total of thirty-two new applicants for li quor license in Cambria county, Judge O'Conner granted two. He held over nine new applications and eleven old ones. Four new ones were with- drawn and eleven refused. In all, 338 licenses were granted. —William Schrock, an adventurous Pittsburg youth, aged 18, created a commotion in certain sections of the city by capturing a West Penn lo- comotive Sunday moming and taking a wild ride over the tracks for several miles. He was cap- tured and locked up. —Samue! Adams and his wife Mary, ended their lives by hanging themselves in the attic of their home on a farm near Hamburg. He was 35 and she 29. They couldn't agree and concluded to end their lives rather than ventilate their trou- bles before the public. ~The Huntingdon Home for Orphan and Friend - less Children closed its thirtieth year on March Ist. Owing to large demands made upon it, the name has been changed to Juniata Valley Chil- dren's Aid Society. A considerable endowment fund has been raised. —Thomas Hussey, of DuBois, who had just been released from the Clearfield county jail after making good worthless checks he had passed, worked the same trick successfully on a Punxsu. tawney grocer. He was arrested but the grocer was merciful and the man was allowed to leave town. —John Hoover, of High Run, near DuBois, killed a large wild cat last Saturday. Mr. Hoover'sdogs were being badly used in the battle when he brought the animal down with a rifle shot. It measured three and one-half feet from tip to tip. It is the third Mr. Hoover has caught this season, - besides a fine silver gray fox. —Lewistown wants Mifflin county to build a bridge over the Kishacoquillas creek in order that a street may be opened to connect the north and south sides of the town. As the town pays one- third of the county's taxes, it feels that it has “rights.” The county commissioners are non- commital as to their course of action. —The Pennsylvania railroad is shipping many railroad ties from northwestern Pennsylvania. Heretofore the company would buy only high- priced railroad ties, but nowadays any old thing is bought. The ties are treated chemically and the beech, maple and other woods that were formerly om aside become as lasting as white —~Workmen repairing the roof of the house of Nathan Chester, a Montgomery county citizen. were routed by a swarm of bees. Nine buckets of honey were obtained beneath the roof after the bees had been taken care of. Under the same wonderful roof were found bushels of walnuts which squirrels had carried into the place as prov- ender for the winter. —About two thousand men and boys will beem- ployed when the Stanton breaker in Luzerne county is reopened for operation in April. The new breaker, which has been in the course of con- struction for several months. while not one of the largest in this section, is one of the most modern in equipment and will have a capacity of 3,000 tons of coal a day. —There are over 4,500 signatures to the general remonstrances against the granting of liquor li- censes in Huntingdon county. Of these, over 2,- 500 are qualified voters. In Huntingdon 1,042 signers affixed their names to the paper. In Black Log valley only three voters refused to sign. Specific remonstrances have also been filed against the different hotels. The Interdenomina- tional Temperance committee of the county and the Woman's Christian Temperance Union took charge of the work. ~Residents of Avoca have been warned by mining men and old experienced miners that, ow- ing to the removal of coal pillars supporting the surface, the entire town may at any time drop in- to the abandoned workings. Many families in the town are preparing to move from the town. Caveins have occurred in the streets and under the railroad tracks of the Lehigh Valley and the Cen. some it company was Ea