INK SLINGS. —Go to it; you Democratic Congress. | —It's the self made man who objects | to having his work criticised. | —Anyway it ought to be a good ses- | sion. It’s an “extra” one, you know. | —Anyway it is patent that New York's | new Senator O'GORMAN is not of French —When the cat's away the mice will | play. Oyster Bay, ROOSEVELT'S home, | has gone Democratic again. : —Mr. CANNON now knows what it is to sit in the dress circle and watch other fellows monopolizing the lime light. —The new Democratic Congress has started with its one eye on the spigot. Let us hope that it focuses the other on the bung. —Even if Mayor MAGEE, of Pittsburg, is as bad as attorney WEIL, of that city, proclaims him to be, there are others in Pittsburg. —Diaz should be poking up that na- tional telegraph line of his. It hasn't squelched the insurrection row for about three days. —Well, we are glad to know that the re-organizers are going to have commit- tee rooms at least. Even this will be much better than having nothing. —The 1910 rye crop of the United States weighed thirty-three million tons. Is it any wonder then that so many men had to carry an occasional “load.” —So Mr. CARNEGIE is sorry that he never became a newspaper reporter. Too late! Oh! Laird of Skibo, have you dis- covered the lost opportunity to die poor? —The average farmer just won't per- mit himself to be happy until the familiar kick of the plow handles along his ribs tells him that his spring work is under way. —If they'd run a vacuum cleaner over some of those Pittsburg officials once in- a-while, the newspapers possibly wouldn't be kicking up such a dust about them all the time. —The opening of rival Democratic headquarters in Harrisburg will probably inaugurate a series of very delightful Five O'clock Teas. Mrs. Grouch will be the hostess at all of them. —No, Mr. Agriculturist, there is no ce for cheaper lime for some time. : > much white- _VOL. 56. The Public Service Bill. The so-called Public Service Compa- | nies’ bill was read in place, in the House of Representatives in Harrisburg, by Mr. ALTER, of Pittsburg, on Monday evening. It is labelled “an Administration Meas- ure.” In other words it was submitied to the Governor and obtained his approv- al before the Senators and Representa- tives in the Legislature were permitted to even glance at it. The Consiitution of the State declares that “the legislative consist of a Senate and House of Repre- sentatives.” There is an unwritten law as old as the British constitution which provides that one branch of the govern: ment shall not encroach upon the pre- rogatives of another. Nevertheless the facts are as stated. The Governor has enacted this law and the Legislature is merely asked to ratify. It is a political anomaly. There is a good deal of merit in this measure. It may be characterized as simply an amplification of the Railroad Commission bill, enacted four years ago- That was what might be called a politic- al job. Public sentiment demanded some sort of regulation of service corporations and the Railroad Commission fooled them, for a time, into the belief that they were getting what they wanted. But as a matter of fact it was only an asylum for decayed politicians. It provided good places for a few faithful party servitors at generous salaries and accomplished nothing else. The pending bill, on the contrary, if properly interpreted and vig- orously enforced, would work important reforms. It would compel all the public service corporations to serve the people in a reasonable way. It would put an end to the grafting of utilities companies at the expense of the public. But too high a price may be set on even the most desirable things and the power conveyed in the proposed legisla- tion, if improperly used, might work such ne to hope for a re- Spring creek than bridge it. —“Economy at Washington.” Well, it may sound funny and be something new down there, but all the same the microbe seems to have gotten a grip on things, and its the general hope that it can hold on. —The dearth of news concerning the QUIGLEY—HURLEY fight for the Republi- can county chairmanship gives rise to the suspicion that HENRY CUTE is going to put a gum shoe campaign over on the highly ambitious sheriff. President GEORGE F. BAER, of ine Read- ing, will probably be all the more con- vinced that some people have “a divine right" to certain things when he reads of the election of CARTER H. HARRISON to be Chicago's Mayor for the fifth time. —They talk about Arabian camels going two weeks without water, just as if that was something wonderful. Down in Lock Haven they have plenty of fellows who get along months at a time without either knowing what it is like or caring to try it. —A good roads movement on the part to make it a curse rather than oppressors rather than servants of the people. They regulate rates on the vi- cious principle of seizing “all the traffic will bear,” and laugh at protests against the iniquity. These are not only great evils but intolerable offences against the principles of right and justice. But the subversion of the principles upon which the government is founded by infringing the inalienable rights of the people to regu- late their own affairs in their own way, which this bill does, might work greater harm. New York’s New Senator. A month or more ago the WATCHMAN predicted that before the opening of the special session of Congress the Demo- cratic Legislature of New York would elect a Democratic United States Senator to succeed DEPEW who would be a credit to the party and of enduring service to the country. We predicted this expecta- tion upon a sublime confidence that in the end, and in ample time, the Demo- crats of the Empire State would come to- gether on rational and reasonable terms, of about three men right between this of- fice and the Bush house might scrape 4ff four inches of mud without marring the beauty of the town or causing regret on and fulfill their obligations. Such a course | can be depended upon in every State ex- cept Pennsylvania. Here we have a con- ' tingent of ambitious malcontents who are the part of those who have to drive or | determined to ruin if they cannot rule. walk through it. —Standing at the corner of Lamb and Water streets and looking into the back yards of three of the lately remodeled homes, on west Linn, a stranger might easily imagine that they proach to a “white city” or some other of the modern amusement enterprises. ~ —Returns from the election in Mil- waukee indicate that that city has grown al- the practical Socialist too Anarchical. —Philadelphia papers are happy be- —It will be works, not words, the coun- try has a right to expect of the new Con- gress and if they are not forth-coming we are American enough to insist that everything reasonable the public de- mands yet its work can bear no fruit if the Republican Senate and President stand in the way. { | of immediate tariff reduction, Canadian On Friday evening last the Democrats | of the New York Legislature elected Jus- "tice JAMES A. O'GORMAN, of the Supreme bench of that State, to fill the Senatorial | vacancy. He is 2a man of splendid ability, mark the ap- | high character and eminent fitness for the office. He declares that he isin favor , election of Senators by the people and an income tax. He declares with equal emphasis that he is opposed | a man will add strength to the Senate | and force to the Democratic minority in | the interests, are striving to destroy the Democratic party. It was brought against him in New York, to be sure, but un- availingly. The independents there are influenced by other considerations than personal ambition and lust for power, and Justice O'GORMAN’S Tammany con- nections helped rather than injured him. We are glad that the vexed prob- lem in that State has been so satisfactori- ly solved. It will help the in all ed a omy and ges addition: al security of success next year. lic place, and generously applauded by leading citizens of Pittsburg, a prominent member of the bar of that city recently accused the Mayor of embezzling public funds. In other words, Mr. WEIL, a con- spicuous lawyer, openly declared that the Mayor of Pittsburg had taken of the funds of the city out of the municipal treasury and converted them to his own use. This, continued Mr. WEIL, not only makes the Mayor an embezzler but degrades the City Treasurer into a defaulter. The Mayor answers the accusation with a denial and the statement that he has been elected to office since a similar accusation was made by the same lawyer two years ago. This is hardly an adequate defence. Mr. WEIL'S charge is that money was taken out of the treasury and the May- or’s due bill put in its place. If that is not true the answer should be an exposi- tion of the treasury books. In Pittsburg the Treasurer is appointed by the Mayor and presumably his power over his crea- ture is sufficiently potent to achieve such a criminal use of funds. But the books ought to show. Mr. WEIL declares that the books do show and the Mayor is con- tent with a denial and a claim that he has been vindicated. It is "a lame and impotent conclusion.” If the charge is false the accuser is a traducer and libeler and should be brought to justice. The books of the office will afford ample testi- mony. Of course we know nothing about the matter except what has been published in the newspapers. But it seems to us that the Mayor is pursuing the wrong course. If Mr. WEIL made such a charge two years ago, and it was false, there has been plenty of time to bring him to pun- ishment. The fact that the Mayor has been elected since and that schemes of his have been subsequently endorsed by the public is not evidence of innocence. A popular vote in Pittsburg is an exceed- el § Wil ‘prosecut : ! nd U the treasury records as evidence to con- vict him. —In commenting on the proposed in- clusion of Philadelphia in the legislative investigation of Pittsburg the Public Ledg- er of the former city, remarks that “the Legislature is not in need of any infor- mation about thie city.” Whether it is or isn't the rest of the State certainly craves no delving into the filthy political cesspool of its largest city. Good But Not the Limit. The Democratic majority in Congress is beginning business wisely and well. It proposes to effect a saving of $182,680 a year in the running expenses of the House of Representatives, by cutting out ! all sinecures and redundant offices. The salary list of the House is about $744,000 so that the saving will amount to a con- siderable fraction more than one-third. A similar pruning of the civil list in the Senate and the several departments would work an aggregate saving of well on to $1,000,000 a year and possibly might exceed that enormous total. It would be a great achievement, certainly, and go a long way toward fixing the Democratic party in the confidence of the public. But the Democratic majority in the House of Representatives in Washington must not delude itself with the idea that having effected such a saving in the ex- penses of legislation and administration it has fulfilled its obligations to the peo- ple of the country. Senator ALDRICH al- leged in a speech some time ago that he could conduct the government of the Unit- ed States at a saving of $300,000,000 a year. That would be a saving of nearly a million dollars a day. Compared with that offer the achievement of the Demo- crats of the House is a mere trifle. Sen- mind. Of course economies to be commend- able must be effected without impairing | the eficiensy of the service ali ALDRICH obviously contemplated some reductions other than in the number of offices and salaries of employees. Probably he has in mind a curtailment of expenses in building battleships and constructing for- tifications that are not needed and serve no good purposes. The Democratic ma- ' jority in Congress should look into this over $1,000,000 a day. The last Congress appropriated $1,025,489,661, nearly $3,000, 000 a day. Maybe the Democratic ma- jority can reduce the per capita cost of government to the figures of thirty years ' ago. In a public apeech, delivered in a pub- | matter. In 1880 the aggregate appropri- | ations amounted to $372,119,629, a trifle | liamsport last Saturday. Hon. WALTER E. RITTER was a member of the commit- tee of seven under an appointment by Chairman DEWALT. Mr. RITTER favored various propositions of compromise. But the irreconcilables would consent to noth- ing except destruction. Having deserted the ticket last fall they were determined to punish those who were faithful and in- sisted on aspersing the characters and humiliating the minds of Colonel J. M. GurreY and Chairman A. G. DEWALT. Mr. RITTER has been chairman of the Lycoming county Democratic committee for several months. The annual meeting of that committee to elect his successor was held on Saturday. The Keystoners in the party conceived the idea of pun- ishing RITTER by putting up a candidate against him for the chairmanship. In furtherance of this purpose the “leaders” in the destructive movement were ap- pealed to and used their influence in be- half of Mr. RITTER’S opponent. But they were unable to accomplish anything. The vote resulted in the election of Mr. RITTER by about three to one. The Dem- ocrats of Lycoming county put the seal of disapproval upon the methods as well as the aims of the deserters. This may be safely taken as an expres- sion of current opinion in the party throughout the State. By the narrow margin of one vote the committee of sev- en was authorized, not to asperse or hu- miliate Democrats, but to reconcile dif- ferences among leaders and unite the voters upon a sound basis. But the pack- ed majority of that committee usurped power to accuse and punish without hear- ing and so disgusted healthy Democratic sentiment that if the majority and minor- ity reports had been submitted to the Central committee the minority would have been almost unanimously approved. he majority refused to submit reports, RITTER to measure the temper of the people upon it. ——CARTER HARRISON has been elected mayor of Chicago for the fifth time as the Democratic nominee and in this achievement has scored a famous victory. He has always given the people good gov- ernment and as nearly just as possible, but he has never followed the devious paths of bogus reforms and made voting | ciary, for him an offence by filling the offices with those who opposed him most bitter- ly. In this last compaign the political Pharisees of both parties assailed him with marvelous vituperative energy, but he has emerged from the contest with a good majority. Reading the future from the signs of this result, with the recent senatorial scandal as a sidelight, it looks as if Illinois might be set down as likely to be with Ohio and New York in the next vote for President and if that should happen Pennsylvania wouldn’t matter much in the equation. ——We are not at all surprised at the rumors of a reconciliation between the Re- publican factions of the United States Senate. The so-called insurgents in that body are active only when activity doesn’t menace the sacred tariff. Senator CuMm- MINS, of Iowa, for example, is a rank tariff reformer when the stand-patters are se- curely entrenched and LAFQLLETTE is for all kinds of reform when the majority on the other side is safe. But the moment that insurging becomes likely to prove ef- fective, these gentlemen hasten to the coverts of the regulars and join in thede- fence of privilege and plunder. —If the Bellefonte were desirous of observing the Sabbath day and at the same time accommodating the pub- lic, before denying the people the deliv- ery of mail on Sunday he would at least arrange to give patrons what comes on week days during the week it comes. As | the he has now ordered, mail that reaches this office at 8:15 on Saturday, will be held until some time on Monday before the public can get it, unless it is for | fair some stranger who can get it by paying ten cents for thus being accommodated. Regular patrons of this office are denied even this poor privilege. —Mr. GErBERICH, of Lebanon, has in- troduced a bill in the Legislature prohib- iting the sale of any adulterated alcoholic drink. If his measure should become a law all bottles will have to be labeled showing the age, name and maker of the contents. Of course this is a very com- mendable move to secure pure liquors, but the fellow who drinks most of the booze will be the least interested because its the effect he's after and the sooner he i gets it the less it costs. ec ——————————————— —————————— i cone, aE pds i 83% 8 i Hi iz I i : | 3g 3 2 g 3 g # g : 5 : 8 i ! iz E il g 3 7 F ® pg g ] | : 0 ils ig : £ : : | HI i ? : ch £3 i From the Pittsburg Post. After one of the most bitter contests in the York of the New a United and brightest lights in the Metropolitan judi- , and fact that his name was suf- ficient to bring the factions together and smooth out the troubled surface that threatened to leave that State but half Topressnted in the United States Senate, the special session convenes next Tuesday, is a tribute to his popularity as a Democrat and a statesman. His name was introduced as a compromise early in the day, i) Shee due Consideration was w n opposing the Tammany element in the Legisla- ture. When the final ballot was taken early in the evening Justice O'Gorman received 112 of the 192 votes cast, 15 more than the number necessary to a choice, the Re- Piblicatis as usual voting for Mr. Depew. successful ballot was the sixty-fourth taken since the 6th of January, when the famous deadlock first developed, and it is a matter for general party rejoicing that the controversy has been so happily con- cluded and the Democrats of the State Sought together in their own party cam The and distinguished abil- ity of tor is an assurance that the Empire State will lose none of its prestige in high legislative body. Two Investigations. the by Mr. Leo A. Weil, it is proposed to Lexow that city. According to Mr. Weil's EE © A It is reported take advantage pr the introd Lexow resolution to : ig: eff iEsgF 8% E fl Fog g REE 4 Is: 8g i i fs g f : % = i i 2 : | SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. . | Saturday . | during the night. the the federal authorities on a charge of misusing _ —Owing to the destruction of many apple trees in Berks county by the San Jose scale, whole orchards have been cut down and the trunks sold for saw handles. —Pittsburg has just made a shipment of over 5,000,000 bushels of coal for southern points. The rise in the waters was the occasion of this re sumption of activity on the rivers. —Jumping into Conestoga creek with the in- _ | for acomfortable death and scrambled to shore. —Mrs. Bridget McCormack, an elderly resident of Big Run Mine, Schuylkill county, fell asleep in an armchair with a lighted pipe in her mouth, She Was go terribly burned that her life is despair: —It is six miles overland from Ebensburg to Colver, a new mining town, but almost twenty- eight by rail. A new branch from Vintondale has been completed for freight and soon passenger trzins will be running into the new town. —Sagamore, an Indiana county mining town, is to have twenty new houses built at once. Twen™ ty-six have just been completed and others tom down at Onondaga, will be rebuilt at Sagamore. Additional mining machinery will also be in- stalled in the near future. —Wayne county jail is practically tenantless. only one star boarder, George Adamities, who was convicted of complicity in the Lake Lodore riots last summer and sentenced to a six months’ more than $900 have been instituted at Patton by to own their own lines is at the bottom of the trouble. ~Rev. A. R. Day, of Alexandria, will or Easter complete a half century in the active ministry of the Presbyterian church. He is 76 yearsold and is in possession of his faculties to a remarkable degree, with prospect of still accomplishing great good in the cause to which he has given prac- tically his whole life. —Until the abandonment of the Delaware and Hudson canal at the close of the boating season in 1898, Honesdale was the greatest coal storage station on the face of the globe, no less than 575,- 000 tons having been piled on the decks at one —Jumping into the cab of an engine that had just been taken from the round house of the aged 21, opened the throttle and sped away. He rode twenty miles before lack of power stopped the engine. Then he left it and when picked up explained that he had just wanted to take a ride, —Fifteen thousand catalpa trees will be given to the school children of Erie on the first spring arbor day. They will be planted in that city. Such a work, if done with an appreciative sense of harmonies in proportion and location, will within a few years work a great benefit to Erie, which is already noted for its magnificent shade trees. ~The Clearfield Public Spirit suggests, as a neat way to boom Clearfield, that May 1st be “Postcard day.” Every resident of the town is asked to send out as many postcards as possible, each having a local view on it and a sentiment boosting the town. The postoffice clerks of that town will do some heavy lifting if the plan materializes. —Judge O'Connor, of Cambria county, has an unique legal knot to untie in the shape of a Hun garian divorce suit. The wife came first. The husband followed but, instead of landing in this country, went to South America. The wife wants a divorce and the court is of the opinion that there is legal warrant for granting it, but the technical law points are being looked up. —With a deed of ownership to a cemetery lot in * | his pocket, Charles S. Davis was found hanging to the bars covering his prison cell in Moyamensing morning, having committed suicide He had been sent to prison by the mails, the specific accusation being that he had written Black Hand letters to his aunt in Philadelphia. —A freight train more than six miles long would have been required to haul all the apples shipped from Adams county in 1910, had all the fruit been shipped at one time. Eight hundred and twenty-five carloads of apples were shipped from that county in the past year, as against 600 cars in 1907, the former banner year. Twenty thousand more barrels were shipped in 1910 than three years previous. The apple output in the county has increased 356 per cent. since 1903, —]Jt is stated that the Central Pennsylvania Lumber company will begin at once to cut out 50,000,000 feet of standing hemlock timber on their tract between Penfield and Force, along the Pennsylvania railroad. A crew of men has already started in to lay the switch from the Pennsy tracks and it is expected that the jobbers will shortly start in on the actual cutting. The logs will be hauled to the company's mills at Wil- liamsport where they will be made up into lum ber. —Alexandria is wrought up considerably over mad dog matters. A few days ago three dogs belonging to George Hutchinson, the butcher, showed signs of rabies. A horse belonging to Mr. Hutchinson was bitten by one of the dogs: The canines were at once penned up but not be* fore two of the neighbor dogs were bitten. All the dogs were killed that were known to have been bitten by the supposedly mad dogs and a couple of the heads were sent away for examina- tion as to whether the animals were really mad. The horse isbeing carefully guarded. —Ira A. Milliron, a lawyer, at one time a mem- ber of the Pennsylvania Legislature, and the son of a clergyman at Franklin, Pa, who was ar- rested on Wednesday in Chicago by postoffice in- spectors, was arraigned Friday at New York be- fore United States Commissioner Shields on the charge of using the mails to defraud. He was held in $2,000 bail for examination. The complaint charges that Milliron, alias Cole, by means of correspondence devised a scheme to defraud by offering to sell books to instructors in schools at two cents each. His victims are said to number nearly five hundred. —The first 17-year locusts which will appear this year have been seen. W. E. Mier, of Penns- ville, Fayette county, reports the discovery of numbers of the insects. Frank Richter, employ- CE