BY P. GRAY MEEK. INK SLINGS. —Not yet the pungent perfume of the pearly moth ball for your winter flannels. —Anyway the farmer who didn't get his oats in last week is happier now than the one who did. —How time does change the condition of things. Now it appears that Mayor GAYNOR, of New York, was only a near | presidential possibility. —The Democratic cinch is still cinch- ing. Baltimore city went Democratic on Tuesday in one of the bitterest fights they have had there in years. —The average business woman - just can't get over the habit of making a social call out of every telephone communica- tion she has with another woman. —When the dis-Honorable JACK JOHN- SON gets those three dress suits and thir- teen fancy vests on we fear he will be lit up so that poor King GEORGE V won't be seen at all at his own coronation. —It was a little too facetious for such an occasion but there was a vast lot of feeling voiced in it when they sang that old hymn about December being as pleasant as May at prayer meeting Wednesday evening. —Because there are ten thousand per- sons over 65 years of age dying in New York every year the Press of that city thinks it “the best old folks town in the world.” Perhaps it is, for the heirs of the old folks. —The initiative, referendum and recall received a setback in the State Senate on Tuesday. The trouble seems to have been that the Senate was taken by sur- prise and not one of the Senators would take the initiative in pointing the way to duty to the others. —Judged from his work thus far it looks as though the Washington manage- ment had agreed to take most of that seventy-five hundred dollar salary it is paying pitcher WALTER JOHNSON out in advertising. He certainly has been re- turning very little of it in pitching. —The esteemed but misguided Johns- town Democrat has a prize department that is nursing along a lot of amateur poets. It is all very pretty. But it will only be a few years until the Democrat will be wondering why the clamor for the location of a State asylum in Cambria county. —A poker game and cigarette stumps are now said to have been ‘the cause of the recent three million dollar fire in Bangor, Maine. Large as was that loss it is but a bagatelle in comparison with the anguish and distress these two per- nicious habits of man have caused since they came into vogue. —The Legislature is going crazy on the tax question. Representative BENTLEY, of Washington county, wants to tax the receipts of base-ball and foot-ball games. Now wouldn't the State have had to have a magnifying glass to have found anything to tax at the box office of those Mountain league games last season. —Those French scientists who have announced that flies do not bother any- thing painted or papered blue and that a hop vine growing over a cottage or sta- ble will keep the pesky fly away might be right so far as the aversion to blue coloring is concerned. But we have seen too many flies in ecstacies of delight on the nose reeking with the extract of the hop to believe that there is anything in the vine story. —The Carlisle Herald states that a Reading merchant who advertised for a servant girl and offered her good wages, all the comforts of home, the use of the telephone and automobile, got one in- stanter. Being in the same need as the Reading merchant and in a position to offer the same inducements we are de- terred from doing it only out of sympathy for the poor girl who might accept with- out a full knowledge of what that “old green devil” of ours is capable of doing at times. —P. F. STiMsoN, an “efficiency engi- neer,” predicts a future working day of four hours at higher pay than is now re- ceived for eight, greater results and no one being allowed to work who is under twenty-one nor over forty-five. It sounds a little as though Mr. Stimson might have a bug, but who can tell. The eight hour day succeeded the ten with a cor- responding increase in pay and efficiency, so why not the four hour day with scien- tific management most rigidly applied in all lines of endeavor. However, the thing that interests us most is the ad- vent of that happy day when the law won't even sanction our writing Slings. —The Democratic reorganizers are planning to form a league of the Demo- cratic clubs of the State. It should not prove a very difficult task, since there are so few. The WATCHMAN has always felt stay by their moorings, as well as to keep the older ones from becoming dis- gruntled and dormant. And we know of no other causes by which the Democracy of Pennsylvania has been so insidiously attacked as by these two, judges has been finally juggled through the Legislature. This measure has had “a rough road to travel,” but it has over- come all difficulties. It was introduced early and was the first bill to get through both Heuses. But upon the intimation that the Governor was opposed to some of its provisions, the votes for it at vari- reopen to public discussion the validity of legislation which is directly in conflict with the fundamental law of the State. The constitution of Pennsylvania provides that “no law shall extend the term of any public officer, or increase or diminish his salary or emoluments, after his election or appointment.” That would seem to be conclusive. It is plain language and prac- tical common sense. But the Legislature has more than once, since the adoption of the constitution, increased the salaries of judges and though every judge in com- mission at the time had taken an oath that he would “support, obey and defend” the constitution, all those in commission accepted the increased pay. curious interest in view of this action of the Legislature. The first judicial salary increase was enacted during the adminis- tration of Governor BEAVER who vetoed the bill, so that the temper or rather the temperament of the judges of that time was not put to the test. The second judi- cial salary increase was enacted during the administration of Governor PENNY- PACKER but the validity of it was not judicially affirmed until after his term of office had expired. Every judge in com- mission ‘accepted the increase, however, undes the'phetense that the decision of the court-made the law. The judges now in commission will justify the acceptance of the added compensation by the same line of reasoning. one in fifty of the judges of Pennsylvania believes in such an interpretation of the constitution. It may be asserted with equal confidence that among the capable lawyers of the State there is equal una- nimity in the opinion that the constitu- tion has been misconstrued. Yet the Legislature, every Senator and Represen- tative in which is under sworn obligation to “support, obey and defend" the con- stitution, has three times passed such a law and the judges have once and proba: bly will again acquiesce in it. Thisis a shameful moral condition to present to the view of the world but it is the condi- tion which exists in Pennsylvania. The Legislature and the Harrisburg House Committee on Ap- propriations will make good his promise to keep the appropriations within the er public outrage has ever been perpetrat- ed than that which has grown into a cus- amount of the appropriations. The con- stitution authorizes the Governor to veto any distinct item of an appropriation bill of which he does not approve, but the has grown up in recent years. Beginning STONE it has been continued by PENNY- PACKER and STUART. ant duty to perform than that of appro- priating the funds obtained by taxation to their proper uses. In the performance of that duty they are serving in a fidu- according to the constitution and the law. Therefore in recklessly appropriating the funds by legislation in excess of the amount available they are betraying both their moral and legal obligations. But the Governor doesn’t correct the fault by usurping the powers of the Legislature. Two wrongs do not make a right. tions this year to the revenue receipts the Governor will have no excuse for the by precedent. A man of finer moral or- ganism would have known that one fault The Judicial Salary Increase. | ruaRT didn't take the trouble to offer The bill to increase the salaries of Legislature will do its duty this year. Machine Managers to Fool the Governor. The Republican machiné has determin- ed to rip Governor TENER up the back in so scientific a way that he will not feel the injury, according to reports of a re- " | cent conference in Philadelphia. In other other salary raising measures of this ses- sion have been. It is not likely that the line will be drawn on the judges. Proper- ly controlled they are a valuable machine asset. Public Utilities bill in such a way as to leave him under the impression that the operation was unavoidable. The bill will pass the House practically in its original form. That is expected to fool the Gov- ernor into the notion that everybody is playing fair with him. But whenit reaches the Senate committee the strangling pro- cess will be introduced. That is to say it will be held in that committee so long that there will be no time to pass it finally. y There are some features of this bill of questionable merit. In some provisions it is drastic anddangerous. But the Gov- ernor and some of his friends believe that extreme measures are necessary to put needed restraints upon grasping coOrpora- tions and seem willing to take the hazard of reversal by the courts in order to achieve the purpose. Wiser counsel would probably recommend a more con- servative course. The modification of the so as to bring them The passage of this bill will, of course, The public will watch the judges with come of what promises to be a lively scrap with great interest. Meantime, viewed from this distance, it looks as if the machine managers are on the Governor's credulity. He has not had much experience in pub- lic affairs and probably lacks something in the matter of education along the lines are required to pass a bill and is also wise, probably, as to the possibilities of secret work in the committee. If his pet measure is held so long as to make its passage impossible he will be more than likely to correctly interpret such action and if he resents an injury as a Governor can there will be something doing later on, It is a conservative guess that less than ————————— Mr. Nathan T. Folwell Protests. Mr. NATHAN T. FOLWELL, president of the Manufacturers’ Club of Philadelphia, is strenuously opposed to the Canadian Reciprocity agreement for the reason, as he declares, that “it is an entering wedge of free trade.” All the tariff mongers in the country are of the same opinion and all the members of the Philadelphia Manu- facturers’ Club are tariff mongers. They have grown rich on the graft that the tariff affords them and are not willing to relinquish their advantage. It is the most contemptible form of robbery ever con- ceived by the human mind, but that makes no difference to them. It is like picking the pockets of a drunken man or rifling those of a corpse. But Mr. FOLWELL likes it. We are not surprised, however, that Mr. FoLweLL should declare himself in this way. It has been charged, and so far as we have been able to discover,never denied, that the members of the Philadel- phia Manufacturers’ Club have freely and contributed money to buy votes for candidates for Congress who believed in protection. Debauching the ballot is the gravest crime in the cal- endar. It is like poisoning the water supply of a community. It is infinitely worse than overt rebellion against the government for it is a cowardly form of treason. But the Philadelphia Manufac- turers’ Club indulges in it, according to report, and the members of that organiza: tion make money out of the perfidy. the Appropria- tions. It is to be hoped that the chairman of limit of the revenues this year. No great- tom of permitting the Governor to fix the framers of that instrument never contem- plated such a perversion of that power as with the administration of WILLIAM A. The Legislature has no more import not, as a matter of fact, an “entering wedge of free trade.” It is not even a step in the direction of free trade. From the foundation of the government the levy of impests has been a policy of the t and will continue to be so to the end of time, if the government en- dures. But it was never imagined by the founders of the government that the sys- tem would be prostituted to the base purposes of robbing the people as has been done by the political associates of Mr. FoLweLL. The Canadian Reciprocity agreement is a step in the direction of fair trade and justice between men and that will come notwithstanding the pro- tests of political pirates. ——The Bellefonte councilmen have decided to heed the demands of the bor- ough auditors and will turn over their books for an audit of the fiscal year end- ing the first Monday of March, 1911. ——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. If the Legislature limits the appropria- in which his im- does not make a precedent. Governor | questions, as they were before the Key- of statecraft. But he is hardly stupid | The Canadian Reciprocity agreement is |: UNION. posed the party that gave him his posi- tion. Under his administration, if you sure to be up against an agent and sup- porter of the Republican party, although many of them boasted ox being independ- ents. In this case he would do even now deny to the Democracy the right the law gives them to have a voice in seeing that the registry lists in his and other cities are not padded, and would put the power, of determining who shall go on these lists and be allowed to vote, entire- ly in the hands of the Republican ma- chiné and the tools it could find in the Keystone party. Nine tenths of the men who claim to be Keystoners, in the cities of Philadel- phia, Pittsburg, Harrisburg and other strong Republican districts, are just as much Republican today, on all political stone party came into existence,and would From the Portland resort to any devilment to defeat the Every man has the to the full Democracy, that the Republican machine value of his product. ake oo die would suggest. Mr. GUTHRIE knows this. guce whather tho Ha digger, He also knows that a mob, that has no | panker; what he praduces. bongs © fixed or recognized principles, no rules of | him, But if we tax the product of his guidance, no purpose other than to de- labor we take from him a part of his feat some organization that they could | Product. That is unjust. LECT rid not rule, is not a party in a legal sense, En), at fow-wends forth, 75 = Surely a man who would use to stand by the rights of his own party, or without an effort allow the Republicans to steal the few safe guards the law has given it, is not the kind of a person that should be allowed to carry its flag or could be depended upon to see that its in- terests were properly protected and its capitalized privileges defended and preserved. And Mr. GUTHRIE has virtually an- nounced that the Democrats should have no power to protect itself by protecting into its : g | i 8 : : sf : : : : : 5 3 : : i: g takes in taxes what it creates—the rental value of land? How long I hold a $10,000 lot out of use if you to pay to the community every year fe value the community adds to tha ~ a —— Representative UNDERWOOD, chairman The Democratic Program. of the House committee on Ways and | prom the Harrisburg Patriot. Means, in Washington, has already meas- | The present purpose of the Democrat ured up to the requirements of floor lead- ic. pasty, as raprassated by its real lead- ership. It is a difficult task and one that n adm requires courage as well as capability. | at the banquet of the Pewter Platter His antagonists are experienced and re- | club, of Norfolk, Virginia, on Saturday sourceful. Former Speaker CANNON, JOHN | evening. DaLzeLL and JAMES R. MANN are veter- ans and fighters. They are familiar with all the tricks of legislation and entirely free from the restraints of conscience. But UNDERWOOD is a match for all of them. He has proved his mental agility as well as moral courage and thus far “nothing has been put over on him.” The other day a shrewd plan was de- veloped to overturn his legislative pro- gram, but it failed completely. Under It does not_represent 2 revolutionary tem- the rules forced upon Speaker CANNON | Derorstate of mind Is puteoe i, to ing the Tat. sion Mondays were | ES SE Fai Cu designated as “suspension day.” That is fkitution: On the contrary, is object is to restore them to their first purpose sim- bills pending. The plot was to have a motion made last Monday to discharge the committee on Invalid Pensions from the further consideration of a pension bill introduced on the first day of the ses- farmers’ free list bill, and prolonged the session greatly as well as jeopardized the passage of the free list measure. Everybody knows that antagonizing pension legislation is a perilous thing and it was believed that UNDERWOOD would lack the moral courage to do such a thing. But that was a mistake. Mr. UNDERWOOD favors liberal pensions, but felt that the time for such legislation was an adjournment on Saturday evening, ending the legislative day, he moved to take a recess until eleven o'clock Monday and thus wiped out the suspension day for the time and left the order of proced- ure as the majority desired. It was a neat bit of parliamentary practice and proved UNDERWOOD'S ability as a leader. ——The Senior cotillion will be held at 12th, and more than one young Bellefonte is anxiously wondering if she will be there. o SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —One hundred and fifty men and boys have been thrown out of employment by the burning of the Pierce gas plant, at St. Mary's, ins olving the Suspension of a monthly ‘wage acc int of $10,000. hs 0 ~The 200 men thrown out of employment by the burning of the power house at the Barnesboro shaft of the Madeira Coal Mining company are at work again. Only four weeks was consumed in the rebuilding. —Hugh McCabe, a family man residing in Nor- ristown, is having troubles of his own. Four of his five children are in bed with scarlet fever, while the fifth has a broken collar bone sustained in afall from a chair. SC SSID OTS NEW WU aie for Hunting- —Trapper John Swope, of Huntingdon, had two good days last Friday and Saturday with his traps. On Monday morning he obtained the war- rants from justice of the peace Black on sixteen polecats and twelve weasels, caught cn those two —Laporte is probably the smallest county seat inthe State, the census returns giving it a popula- tion of 245. In 1900 it had 441. Eaglesmere has 184, in 1900 it had 312. Dushore, the largest town in Sullivan county, has a population of 813, in 1900 it had 784. ~The Wayne county jail at Honesdale became vacant Saturday when George Adanities, who has served six months for unfortunately getting mixed up in a fracus in which the state constabu- lary interfered at Lake Lodore last year, was re- leased. He has been a model prisoner. with this week's issue passes from the hands of J. C. McAfee, who has been editor and proprietor for well-nigh two years, into the hands of John B. Parson, of Duncannon. Mr. Parson has been in the newspaper business for twenty-two vears. —~William Claycomb was arrested at the Balti- more and Ohio construction camp at Husband, § ~The house in which the late United States Senator Matthew S. Quay was born still remains ty. It has not been occupied for a number of years. The ownership of the home has changed many times since Mr. Quay’s birth, but itis now owned by the Senator's daughter. Springs his money was gone and with it his tick- & So Big Home 11 Normandy. One suspect is in jail. ~The Conneaut Lake fish hatchery has com- - | menced the work of sending out white fish to Lake Erie, and 5,000,000 fry per day has been sent outto the lake since last Friday. The hatchery this year has only run about half capacity of their present battery, but a total of over 25,000,000 white fish will be furnished for Lake Erie waters. —Myron Gummo, of Bald Eagle township, Clinton county, was out fighting forest fires last Friday and during the day met an infuriated bear dt " ea “ ot! pe er.bear. Edwin Williams and James Gummo later captured the two cubs, one of ‘which had —~Plans are being made by the Milton Fair as sociation for the holding of a midsummer fair that promises to be the finest thing of its kind ever heldin Central Pennsylvania. It will take place on Monday and Tuesday. July 3 and 4, on the fair grounds, and there will be horse, auto- mobile and motorcycle races, as well as all kinds of track and field sports. —The tax collector at Titusville got disgusted when he looked over his long list of delinquents the other day. Then he started an innovation for that town. About twenty persons who had neglected to pay their taxes were arrested within an hour and the news spread like a declaration of war. It caused a rush to the treasurer's office: and about $5,000 were paid in in one day. —The Standard Steel works are beginning to show substantial evidences of returning pros- perity. One of its most recent orders was from the Pullman Palace Car company for 600 built up wheels. The foundries are very busy and itis believed that the coming month will be one of the busiest in the history of the plant. Night turn has been placed in the hammer shop and in the . steel foundry. ~The will of the late Henry W. Kurtz, formerly vice president of the Harbison-Walker Refractor- ries company, probated at Clearfield Monday, places the estate of $300,000 in trust for twenty years, one-half of the income to go to the parents of the deceased and half to be divided among three brothers and two sisters. Children of Dr. A. J. Kurtz, of Philadelphia, are beneficiaries. No . | public bequests are made. —Work on a trolley line which when completed will extend from Scranton to Binghamton, is under way. The road is being extended from Factoryville, Wyoming county, and it is expected that before the summer is out a whole new divis- ion of the road will be ready for operation. The indications now are that the road will go by way of Hopbottom, Brooklyn, up the creek to Hart Lake and through New Milford to Binghamton, leaving Montrose at least five miles away from the line. hinges, while on the floor lay an iron sledge and several horse blankets, the latter being used to deaden the sound made by the explosion. There is no clue to the robbers, but some weeks ago several suspicious characters were in Winburne and made an examination of the postoffice build. ug and other places in the town.