—Be sure to pick out the best ones to-morrow. —Because the sugar beet is scarce the price of sugar goes up and the consumer is “beat” indeed. —The President will probably wait until his tariff board reports to find out what happened in Canada. —That Canadian reciprocity bill was a! sort of gold brick game that the Presi- | dent put over on our people. —Many a poor candidate will take along the splinters when he slides off the v anxious bench tomorrow night. —The farmer who has been putting off his seeding until the frost kills the fly may have to fly to get it done before the snow flies. —Anyway neither Chicago, Pittsburg nor Detroit will have to bother with tak- jng care of the world’s championship series crowds. —Watch your neighbor tomorrow and see if it isn't the fellow who deplores the “condition of affairs” almost daily, who hasn't time or has forgotten to go to the primaries. —We don’t recall just how much that extra session of Congress cost us, but whatever it was that was just how much we paid to find out that the Canadians didn’t want reciprocity. —If anybody tells you the world is not growing better ask him what has become of the street fights, bar room brawls, “big day” carousals that were so frequent even right in Bellefonte not so many ’ years ago. —Remember when you come to the tair next week to wear enough clothes to protect you from the deceptive fall air It will be a good deal easier to do that D than suffer and pay for a possible case of pneumonia. —Paris is preparing to send us the hoop-skirt. From the hobble to the hoop will be a great jump, indeed, but what liberties the nether limbs of the fashion- able lady will have after she makes the transformation. —The entire hop crop of the world for this year is estimated at one hundred and thirty-two million pounds. These will make plenty of beer to make big heads and plenty of soothing hop pillows to lay the big heads on. —Tomorrow will take place the first weeding out of the candidates who have been on the anxious bench since January. 4 And though some of them are certain to fail it will be some satisfaction for thcse who do to feel that the worry and anxiety of it are over. —The Philadelphia Record makes the announcement that monkeys are frequent- ly seen in the woods in York county, this State. If our esteemed contemporary means the real simian we're from Mis- souri. If it doesn't, we'd like to know who saw them. —The Commissioner of Corporations has just announced that there are one hundred and ten millions of “water” in the stock of the American Tobacco Co. This, however, does not account for the amount of spitting done by the boy who is just learning to chew. —The cool receptions that are being given President TAFT in the west seem all the cooler when he recalls the warm hospitality of the south on one of his former tripe. But probably the southern heat has cooled off a little too towards . the Executive who preaches one thing and dces another. iy —It is inconceivable to think that the French battleship Liberte was blown up by laborites in retaliation against the government, yet such a belief is held in many parts of France. Two hundred and thirty-five sailors died from the .ex- plosion. What an awful toll and how fruitless, if there is any foundation for recent rumors. —The people are looking to the Demo- crats to nominate a good, strong ticketin Centre county tomorrow. Republican misrule and wastefulness has been ram- pant during the past three years especial- ly and voters want a change in the coun- ty offices. It is the duty and it should be the pleasure of the Democrats to place in nomination tomorrow a ticket that will in every way inspire the tax-payers of Centre county with the hope that if it is elected there will bean end of extrava- gances and increasing taxes. Do your duty as a Democrat. Attend the primar- ies and vote for the man who you honest- ly think would make the best official for the office he aspires to fill. i ~The WATCHMAN has never beforeen- dorsed the candidacy of anycne at a primary election. It has advocated the selection of the two women who have been sought to take places on our local school board because it sincerely believes that their election would prove a benefit to the schools. Certainly it can work no harm and we opine that the experiment is worth trying. Two women are most efficient members of the central board of education of Philadelphia, and in nearly every State west of Pennsylvania women are the most useful and helpful members of school boards; especially is this the case in Iowa, Wisconsin and] Minnesota, where the public school systema are far in advance of those of our own State. 7a ia VOL. 56. © Mr. Pamers Compimcy. | Under the direction of Mr. A. MITCHELL PALMER, Representative in Congress for the twenty-sixth district, congressional committees are being formed throughout the State. This work is ostensibly under the sanction of a rule adopted by the GUTHRIE contingent of the Democratic State Executive Committee, recently held at Harrisburg, at which there were only two legally elected members of the com- mittee present. The rules of the Demo- cratic party of Pennsylvania provide that amendments must be recommended by the Democratic State Central Committee and approved “by the succeeding Demo- cratic State convention,” before they be- come effective. This rule adopted by a rump committee has not been ratified by a State convention. It is therefore not a rule of the Demccratic party. But that fundamental fact makes no difference to Mr. A. MITCHELL PALMER. The congressional committees are crea- tures of his own brain intended for use in a conspiracy to re-elect, or at least re- nominate all the sitting Democratic Kep- resentatives in Congress for this State. Mr. PALMER understands that he cannot be renominated in his own district unless some exterior agency is invoked to ac- complish the result. The congressional committee is the agency he has in mind and he has induced other Representatives in Congress to aid him in the creation of this body by assuring them that it will be helpful to them as well as himself. In other words he is using them as cat’s- paws to pull his chestnuts out of the fire as he usedthem to get his seat in the Committee of Ways and Means. Mr. PALMER, who is suffering from an acute attack of aggravated amegalophina, imagines that he is above the law and | under no moral or legal obligations to obey the rules of the Democratic party. He is ambitious to become the party boss and hesitates at nothing to promote his purposes. The organization of a rump | committee which is employing emissaries ' at other people's expense to canvass the State in his interest is in pursuance of his ambitions and the fact that it threat- ens to disorganize and demoralize the party all over the State makes no dif- ference. He wants to rule and if he can't do that he invites ruin. Such men are dangerous not only to the party but to the public and the sooner this up- start is rebuked, good and hard, the bet- ter for the Democratic party. ——And why not two good women for schoo! directors ! Surely they couldn't “make worse" than some who have al- ready served in the capacity of “making good.” Imitating Roosevelt. Attorney General WICKERSHAM is fol- lowing the example of former President ROOSEVELT. A few days ago an esteemed New York contemporary sent a correspon- dent to interview him. Mr. WICKERSHAM is in New Hampshire for the summer and the assignment involved a ride of 700 miles for the reporter. But it was worth the labor and pains. He found this dis- tinguished politician in a loquacious mood and pumped him freely. He declared most emphatically that he will not resign | and added that he would like to have the | Spowerful corporations and trust mag- | nates” try to force him out of the Cabi- net. Then he indulged in some other in- ' teresting statements which sounded well, | probably, but looked bad in print. i Among the things the Attorney General | said were “if [ continue to serve as At- | torney General till the end of Mr. TAPT'S term, I intend to send some rich trust offenders to jail.” That was rather start- | ling but hardly a marker. “The men! under indictment in the beef trust,” he | continued, “will also go to prison if I have my way.” Then he added, “I can’t under- | stand Judge ARCHIBALD'S not sending | JAcksoN—that quack doctor of the law— to jail,” and finally, “the United States Steel corporation is plainly a combination in violation of the law.” In that enter- taining but somewhat reckless manner Md Was therefore possible.” There was the Attorney General ran on to the extent of four or five columns of small news- paper type. But when he read it next day it looked | different. Plainly it was putting upon the administration responsibility for any fail. | ure to put trust magnates in jail and quite | as certainly entrenching the Attorney General in his job, or at least making it impossible to remove him without sus- picion of trust influence upon the admin. istration. But he was equal to the occa* sion. The minute he found out that he had talked too freely he went to a tele- graph station and declared to the agent of the Associated Press that he hadn't said such things at all and that the interview was simply a figment of the reportorial trom The Sweat °4 labox and be vil gi How wonderfully like ROOSE- VELT that sounds. The “Coinel" could | TORE and opportunity, brain. not have done better. | ' procity in Canada is attributable to two “make us tired.” Constantly prating | by the tariff board. But four years ago he upon whom they are bestowed. Then The VARE machine has evidently set se- | but invariably supports the party and | | ignorance but of the increase of knowl- The Canadian Election. took everybody by surprise. Where “the women for a place on wish was father to the thought,” there reminds us of the comedy “No Gentle- | may have been individuals, here and man in France” | there, who imagined the defeat of the ago in Philadelphia by the Mask and Wig | government of Sir WILFRED LAURIER a club. MARIE Louise and the ladies of | following probability. But the overwhelming ma- | the court decided to rule France, arrayed | jority obtained by the opposition was as themselves most charmingly in gayly | unexpected to the antagonists of the Pre- colored satin bloomers and made things | mier as it was to his friends. Hardly a so interesting (?) for NAPOLEON that he that the famous “reason- cabinet were defeated for re-election. Boardwalk with scores of infatuated and Oil Happily the great leader was himself suc- pink ladies eager to push their chairs cessful and in the coming session of and dance attendance at every turn. Parliament he will be the capable and | Let the women in—IN everywhere— efficient leader of the minority. council, school board and any other old Analyzing the result after the event, | place they want if it means no more car- however, it is not difficult to discover the | rying coal, shoveling sidewalks, hustling reasons for it. It is not ascribable, as off to work when there are ball games, many of our contemporaries assume, to | etc., to attend and plenty of pink ladies an absurb fear of annexation, though | waiting to be ogled at Atlantic City. that hobgoblin was held before the men- | We're jolly sure we're ready to be exiled tal vision of the more illiterate voters | to the Boardwalk any time the women constantly, and may have influenced a | want to shoulder our work and responsi- few of them. Public schools have not | bilities, for we always thought it unfair been as efficient in Canada as within the | to allow them so little to do while we States and popular intelligence is less | hustle so long and hard. widely diffused. But the idea that sucha | Hasten our liberation fellows! Vote fear would influence a general election is | for the women and thus insure our long preposterous. Even with the limited | deserved vacation on the Boardwalk. facilities for educating the masses pos- ar sessed by Canada, the majority of the ——The auditor's statement of the people are not as ignorant as that fact receipts and expenses of Bellefonte was would imply. circulated the past week and it shows the As a matter of fact the defeat of reci- | Dorough to be heavily burdened with debt. The statement is for the fiscal year ending March 6th, 1911, and at that time the bonded debt was $106,000, while the supreme court's 5E¢ 3 &g 3% p i g E | E § i ; i 7 a2 i os &E i : h § ; Ie f : i ; i ! 5 a : | i : g i | i i J i if § i | | causes. The principal of these was the activity in bribing voters of the Ameri- can trusts, the opportunities of which to plunder the people would have been cur- tailed by the policy. Having failed to defeat the measure in our own Congress they set themselves to the task of fool- ing the Canadian electorate. In this they were materially aided by President TATT'S vetoes of other tariff reform measures enacted during the special ses- sion recently closed. It was oned that as the other bills were vetoed the aim of that one was to get some advant- age in commercial relations with Canada and the reasoning proved effective. g : & i 8% ! § 5 g for the relief of the poor during 1910 $7,099.41. —Tomorrow will be the day for hold- ing the primaries and the large number of candidates for county, borough and township offices assures more than the ordinary interest and it will not be sur- | an prising to see almost as many votes cast troit: as at a general election. And the matter of selecting the right men for the ticket should be inducement enough for | every Democrat to go to the polls. ——If those people who are fighting, ——Recorder VARE in his campaign for the movement to place two of our town’s ' the nomination of the Republican party most efficient women on the school board for Mayor of Philadelphia, has figurative- this fall, would spend their time familiar- , ly “burned the bridges behind him.” In izing themselves with a few of the pro-' other words he has made such a vicious gressive movements going on about them | attack upon Senator MCNICHOL that they both in this and every other State in the | can't possibly support him in the event of ’ union, it might serve to broaden their | his success at the primaries and without views beyond the petty peanut politics in | their support he hasn't the ghost of a which they are now indulging. : chance of election. Si i Mr. Carnegie’s Cant Phrases. Hi Bl 5 : 3 li @ fl i i i : 8 g : 8 The people of the west overjoyed to learn, as Mr. that the days of the trusts have away. House Cleaning is Needed. From the Pittsburg Post. Now that the public has been led to understand that the recent vindication of Dr. Wiley did not have the effect of un- ing his official hands, there will be more an ever a demand for a thorough house the Department of Agricul- t branch of the service has probably will be Taft passed | ——President TAFT has assured the | people of Kansas City that he will sign Mr. ANDREW CARNEGIE'S cant phrases | any tariff reduction bill recommended cleaning in ture. ‘ atime that the impression prevails within . that it is in dent of restraint and gifted. with full authority to do as it pleases. Secretary Wilson is to all ap- pearances dominated by influences that ought to be subordinate, and the public will agree that the time has come when there should be an uncoveringof condi- tions and the working of reforms that are clearly demanded. The reason for Dr. Wiley’s present help- lessness is that the board of food and drug inspection still controls the situation, and stands between the chief chemistand capable of performing. posed of three men, of other two about his philanthropies, he clings with | assured the people that he would sign any marvelous tenacity to every fetish which | taziff reduction bill passed by Congress makes for the conditions he deplores. For | and since repudiated the pledge. In view example, he pretends to believe that ex- | of that fact the people will take his prom- cessive wealth is disgraceful but he holds ' ises only at a heavy discount. on to every means of creating excessive | ———— wealth for himself. Even his philan- —]It was left for Mr. GIBBONEY to raise thropies are hedged about by conditions | 2 question as to the political integrity of which make them burdensome to those | RUDOLPH BLANKENBURG, of Philadelphia. | mill he must expect dirty work. However, - continuance of the tariff. In other words | GIBBONEY is equal to the task set for him. ’ Mr. CARNEGIE is an egregious hypocrite | ___y. np Garman, formerly of this tors of food and and an arrant humbug. | place, is a candidate for select council in | The other day the New York World | the 46th Ward in Ph cabled to Mr. CARNEGIE asking “for his | po som ceds jin Bilstein Nelo view of the present labor unrest and its | oa ted for then we would be sure that solution.” In response he drops naturally | 01, was one honest, capable man inthe into cant phrases which to the cursory councils of that city. ion the reader make him appear in the light of Ca an apostle of beneficence. It is “a healthy | ——There seems to be such a diversity sign,” he writes, “and not a result of | of opinion as to the efficiency of women men who are certain to strive for the sity is so apparent out of the edge.” That is literally true but it is an increase of knowledge which he has al- evidently been governing itself for solong | | ways striven to repress. “The unequal | distribution of wealth and contrast be- tween the lives of the rich and poor,” he | continues, “passed unnoticed in early days no such “unequal distribution of wealth” in early days to pass noticed or unnoticed. The unequal distribution of wealth began when Mr. CARNEGIE and others of his type began perverting government into an agency for promoting their in-| Hiresis at tho sips of the Mitertsts of century, Mr. CARNEGIE has indirectly con- tributed vast sums of his tainted money to bribe voters in the interest of this “unequal distribution of wealth,” and notwithstand- ing his cant phrases about the spirit of Democracy, he will do the same thing at each recurring election as long as be lives. Mr. CARNEGIE'S money has been coined E——— ~—=Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. ask, this fall, then judge their ability by Caee the results shown. helpless member, there should be a clean- | ——The whole world sympathizes with | vantage. France on account of the loss of a battle- | Berm ma a ound syrpathy for. the —It was 2 Grand jury. It approved Nebraska r man ds _— the new bridge plan for High street. milk. another town in that vicinity, has a number of ~The Lock Haven paper mill will make the postage stamp paper for the United States gov- ernment, an announcement which is causing considezable joy in that town. —It proved expensive for David Van Kirk, of North Bangor, to shoot flickers out of season and onSunday. He was arrested by Game Warden Geary and fined $60.97 for killing two birds. ~The Mann Axe company whose Lewistown | plant was recently destroyed by fire will erect a | concrete and structural steel plant of enlarged capacity. It is expected that it will be running | by December 15. | ing a bribe, isin jail at Fairmont, W. Va., and the | detective who caught him is under bail to answer | a kidnapping charge for arresting him without a ' warrant. ~The calf in the case in which Henry Depaedo was acquitted of larceny, proved a rather expen- sive one, for Indiana county, the costs of the case | and the witnesses amounting’in all to $154, having | been put on the county. The calf was worth §10 ~The transmission line ofthe Raystown Water the last of the wires being strung, The line is five miles long. ~—Luther Sutton, of Lewisburg, Indiana county, was caught shouting grey squirrels and when the game warden went to arrest him he resisted. He was finally overcome and compelled to pay a fine of $50 for killing squirrels and $100 and costs for resisting an officer. ~Three men who asked for work at the Eyre Shoemaker Construction company’s operations near Somerset and were refused, disappeared at the same time as did some brass fixtures. The men were found at Husband, where they were trying tosell the brasses. —Six men working in the Wilson Reynolds orchards, Mont Alto, Monday, picked 370 large basket of peaches, that were immediately shipped to the Philadelphia market. These six men didn't count the amount of culls they picked along with the good ones. —Preferring to serve a sentence of ten days in the county prison instead of becoming an inmate of the county home Joseph Lowe, 78 years old, was sentenced before Magistrate Harry at Norris- town. It was Lowe's first visit to his old home ~Henry H. Hurd, of Chest township, Clearfield probably for the last time, on T of last week. His first visit was in 1842, when was 24 years of age and he visited ona raft rus from Chest creek. preceding his 94th birthday anniversary and was made in an automobile. —Chauncey Black, grandson of the famous jurist Jeremiah S. Black, caught a burglar in his home, near York, the other night and aftera rough and tumble fight mastered the fellow and carried him to York in his automobile, turning him over to the police. When captured the fel- | low was wearing one of Black's best suits. —That high heels and hobble skirts are respon- i sible for a large proportion of the injuries sustain- od by women getting on ad off trains and | mounting and descending stairways in stations, is the conclusion reached by the Pennsylvania railroad after an investigation covering three months in which 73 such cases were recorded. —Theodore Klaproth, aged 17 years, of Pitts- ton, who was arrested on Saturday night on a } sharge of robbing lock boxes in the Pittston post- | office was given a hearing recently before United States Commissioner Moore. It was shown that he secured $2,000 worth of negotiable paper, jew- elry and money. He was committed to the Lack- awanna county jail for a further hearing. —The fifteen mile stretch of the Midland-Penn- sylvania railroad extending from Millersburg to Gratz will be completed by October 15th, itis expected, «nd the gangs of men are working day and night with that idea in mind. The whole road will extend about 43 miles, from Millers- burg to Ashland, Schuylkill county. It is hoped to have the entire road completed and in opera, tion before next spring. —~Workmen are engaged in all parts ot DuBois cutting down the poplar trees which are used as shade trees along many of the streets, The rea- son for the destroying of these trees is that they have a very fast growing root, which clogs the sewers and in several places cracked the cement pavement. Council passed an ordinance to the year ago. —A class of journalism, which will be conduct" ed in connection with the school of economics of the University of Pittsburg, opened Monday night. Twenty students have already registered in this new branch of the University, and the in * dications arethat a much larger number will be next week. The class is in charge of 5 | cut above one of Mrs. Harry F. Lord's its, steve, the 4 in thirty-four years. He was charged with beg. last visit was but two dags.