5 BY P. GRAY MEEK. INK _SLINGS. —What kind of a Fourth of July is Bellefonte to have? —A prophet is not without honor save in his own country. —And the mountains heaved and brought forth a mouse. —Anyway the farmers can’t complain because they have to haul water. —Reorganization is complete. Will reconciliation be just as complete. —We Democrats fought like pirates at Harrisburg, on Tuesday, but it's all over now. —TEDDY i3 too busy just now bran. dishing “the big stick” to think anything about a "square deal.” ——TAFT is hardly equal to his pred- ecessor as a lip fighter but he is devel. oping speed very rapidly. —In New York they are employing the Boy Scouts to swat flies and we can’t imagine a more useful purpose to put them to. ~The milliners have no objection to an all-around decrease in the cost of liv- ing but protest that hats shouldn't bear all the burdens. —Talking about the way that Missouri houn’ dawg was kicked around, do you think it had anything on the Old Guard at Harrisburg on Tuesday. ——S0 far as TAPT is concerned it is not likely to make much difference whether the constitution forbids or favors a second term for the President. —It is funny what devilish things many Republicans believe all Democrats to be and yet how courteously candidates WiL- SON and CLARK treat one another. —We are ready to make a wager that the Hon. WEBSTER GRIM will treat candi- date BERRY more courteously than the Hon. WiLLiAM BERRY treated candidate GRIM. —The farmer who hasn't his oats sowed is worrying about as much as the one who sowed his too early. Surely the farmer sees too much of the hole in the doughnut. —TAFT says ROOSEVELT is dangerous and ROOSEVELT says TAFT is useless. So there you have it. Believe both of them and you'll vote for the Democratic nomi- nee for President. —You farmer! If you are uneasy be- cause the season is so late and you haven't your oats out yet pick up your bible and read the 22nd verse of the 8th 5, Chapter of Genesis. ——The beef trust magnates recently escaped imprisonment as the result of an expensive trial and now proposes to reimburse itself by increasing the price of meat. In other words you can't scare the beef trust. ——Texas is a southern State, all right, but New Jersey's candidate for President appears to have developed an immense popularity in that “neck o' the woods.” But then Woobrow WILSON is a south- erner by birth. —Since our naval high-brows have de- cided that the first thing this country should do, in the event of becoming em- broiled in a serious foreign war, is to evacuate the Philippines, wouldn't it be a little more creditable to evacuate right now. —It didn't take Messrs. PALMER, GUTH- RIE and McCoRrMICK long to force the unit rule down the throats of those reorgan- izer delegates who were sent to Harris- burg with the understanding that they were to be free agents and take orders from no one. —Talking about bosses, read the pa- pers and see if Mr. A. MITCHELL PAL- MER, GEORGE W. GUTHRIE and VANCE McCormick didn’t play the part to the limit at Harrisburg on Tuesday. The unit rule was forced on the delegates and the “slate” that had been made up weeks before went through without a jar. —That parade of twenty thousand Suffragists in New York city was certain- ly a corker. They say it was impress. ive. It must have been. Think of how much happier those women were brazen. ly tramping the streets than they could possibly have been at home preparing cheery welcomes for twenty thousand | husbands. —A Sunday baseball game in Wilming- ton, Del., broke up in a free-for-all fight in the eighth inning. With the field cov- ered with a riotous mob the band in the grand stand struck up that late popular air, “Everybody's Doin’ it Now,” and then the fight stopped. There is no ac- counting for the tangents at which a lot of excited baseball fans will shoot off. ~—Mr. PALMER'S little scheme to have the Pennsylvania delegation to the Na- tional convention as his own personal trading stock, in order to pay CHAMP CLARK for having put him on such im- portant congressional committees, was beautifully balked. If the Regulars couldn't accomplish anything else they did force that ambitious young gentleman to permit the Pennsylvania delegation to be instructed to stick to WILSON to the finish. It was a bitter pill for PALMER but we smoked him out so effectively that he didn’t have the courage to pull off the trick that he has been working for for months. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. _VOL. 57. The State Co Goaveation. The Democratic Stat State convention was disappointing in some respects but it nominated a ticket that we hope will meet the approval of the Democratic vot- ers generally. and adopted a platform that will doubtless be accepted and en- dorsed by every one who desires a change from the rotten conditions Republicanism has brought upon the country. We had hoped that the factional spirit which has disturbed the harmony and im- paired the prosperity of the party for the past two years would be completely ex- orcised by a reorganization of the party on a basis of exact justice to all. This expectation was not fulfilled in the or- ganization and proceedings of the con- vention, but notwithstanding this, the fact that a Democratic convention, speak- ing for the Democratic people, has nam- ed its candidates and expressed its principles, we sincerely hope that all Democrats will acquiesce in the work it has done, and do their duty as Demo- crats. The so-called reorganizers have no claim to leadership of the Democratic party of Pennsylvania. GEORGE W. GUTH- RIE and VANCE C. McCorMmicK, for ex- ample, are not Democrats either in prac- tice or precept. Neither of them has voted the ticket regularly or consistently for sixteen years. Both are ambitious to rule and ready to ruin if the ambition is disappointed. Their active associates in the political revolution are equally ambi- tious as is shown by the fact that each of them has grabbed for himself a large part of the honors. Mr. PALMER is a del- egate at large and wants to be member of the National committee. Mr. GUTH- RIE is delegate at large and wants to be chairman of the State committee. Mr. McCormick is delegate at large and as- pires to be the dispenser of patronage and Mr. BLAKESLIE is a district delegate to the National convention. But as we have already said the voice of the Democratic people of the State has, through its regularly chosen repre- sentatives, been registered by the action of its convention and all should overlook Mens demugreso¢ he affair and_join in an to elect the ticket and restore the party to its rightful place in the civic life of the Commonwealth. The manhood of the Democracy of Pennsyl- vania will not long endure the leadership of men who have heretofore been recre- ants and before long these political huck- sters will be relegated to oblivion. We have no desire for the restoration to pow- er of the old leaders, any mcre than they have themselves. But we do hope and believe that the management of the par- ty will soon be committed to men who have been faithful to their party obliga- tions. ——An esteemed contemporary says that “a few years ago it was not a com- mon thing for the President to go on the stump.” Quite true. But it wasn't cus- tomary, a few years ago, to elevate such rough riders as ROOSEVELT to the office of President and then permit him to name his successor. The Archbald Inquiry. The charges against circuit Judge ARCHBALD, of the United States’ court, are assuming serious proportions. He is ac- cused of participating in some business enterprises incompatible with his public obligations. At first the accusations were treated as trifling. It was said that the ARCHBALD concerned was not the judge but his brother and that no harm had been done and no law violated. But those interested refused to accept such explana- tions and continued to demand an inves: tigation and now information comes from Washington that a real and searching inquiry will be instituted. The public is to be congratulated upon | this issue of the question. Public officials are altogether too willing to engage in commercial enterprises in which their in. terests may be promoted by information which comes to them in their official capacity and which is closed to all com- petitors. This is the most objectionable form of special privilege. It is subversive of moral as well as business principles. If Judge ARCHBALD has been concerned in any such transactions he ought to be punished to the full limit of the law. But the greatest care should be taken to as- certain the facts before the punishment is meted out. Judge ArcHBALD acquired « reputation both for ability and integrity while he oc- cupied a seat on the Common Pleas bench of Lackawanna county. But that is not a guarantee of fidelity of high ideals in an office in which the tenure is presum-: ably for life. If he has been indulging in evil practices since his promotion to a higher court he should pay the penalty. It keeps them under restraints which are needed for the orderly performance of their duty to the people. ~Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. went through the farce of calling a State convention of their own, and on three different occasions since, the WATCHMAN assured its readers that there wouid be but one Democratic State convention and that that would be the regular con- vention called by Mr. RITTER, the chair- man of the regular Democratic State committee. It gave its reasons for so asserting that Mr. GEORGE W. GUTHRIE, claiming to be State chairman, knew as well as did any one else that his pretensions and claims had neither legality nor a shadow of reg- ularity behind them, and that as a conse- quence he had no more right or power to call a State convention, or if one was held under his call, to certify a ticket than any other individual, or combina- tion of conspirators who might presume to usurp authority to do so. The result of last Tuesday shows how clearly right the WATCHMAN was in its prediction. It also shows Mr. GUTHRIE'S acknowl- edgement that his claim to the chairman- ship was without grounds. In that acknowl edgement he admits that the only legal Democratic State committee in Pennsyl- vania is the one recognized last Tuesday and which is presided over by WALTER E. RITTER, Esq., of Williamsport, whose term of office expires, under the rules, on the 1st of January, 1913. On the third Wednesday of July next the election of a chairman to follow Mr. RITTER will occur. Mr. GUTHRIE can then get title to the position by getting himself regularly elected, if that is pos- sible. And then he will have nothing but the title. His term will not begin until the 1st of January, 1913, unless Mr. RITTER sees proper to turn over the work and the responsibility of the cam- paign to his successor. So that after all our disorganizing friends may have a good wait before they can assume the authority they think they now have, or direct the actions of the party they are seeking to have abso- lute control over. ——1It might be well for some people jo to remember that there are over 4,000 Democratic votes in Centre county. That of this number but 1537 were interested enough to come out and vote for what was called “re-organization,” notwith- standing the appeals that were made to them to do so, and the efforts that were put forth to falsify the condition of the party. If the party in the county is left to depend upon this number of its voters, it will be a pitiful showing it will make next fall. Those who imagine they are at the head of it now should bear this i fact in mind. The President and the ‘‘Coinel.” The quarrel between the "Coinel” and the President is increasing in intensity and interest. It may safely be said that in Massachusetts it was a draw though it must be admitted that the “Coinel” got the oyster while the President had to be satisfied with the shell. But oysters are not really succulent at this season of the year or altogether wholesome and possi- bly the President fared as well as the “Coinel” in the division of the spoils and the rewards. There are several battles to be tought yet, however, and they will be watched with curious attention. It may safely be predicted that the “Coinel” is hopelessly crippled but it is equally certain that the President is limping badly. According to his campaign manager he is within a few votes of the number necessary to nomi- nate. But a nomination by a close mar- gin would be an empty honor for it is practically certain that if the “Coinel” is defeated in the convention he will bolt and such action would make the Presi- dent's endorsement a hollow mockery. The “Coinel’'s” personal following is suf- ficient to defeat any candidate he does not support. Really we can hardly imagine a more satisfying situation from a Democratic standpoint. If ROOSEVELT could be nominated which is practically impossi- ble the conservatives in his party would defeat him by voting for the safe and sane gentleman who will be named at Baltimore and if the President is nomi- nated, and he will be if he insists upon it, ROOSEVELT will become an independ- ent candidate, not in the hope of being elected but with the view of defeating Tart. The quarrel has progressed to a point where compromise is out of the question and however it proceeds the Democrats must get considerable benefit | Miles. from it. Under the circumstances more power to both their elbows. they produce that result there might be worse things even in the east. Tuesday Judge GORDON, of Philadelphia, who have been professing so much polit. ical virtue. It was the obvious intention of MITCHELL PALMER to bind our delega- tion to Wooprow WiLsON with a bond of straw, which could be broken at the ca- price of the conspirators. In other words it was the intention to instruct for Mr. WILSON on the first ballot and then go to another candidate who has PALMER'S pledge, at the crucial moment. Judge GORDON forced instructions for WILSON so long as his name is before the con- vention. On Sunday, in Pittsburg, Mr. WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN declared that CHAMP CLARK will be nominated for President by the Baltimore convention on the sec- ond ballot. He appears to have had an understanding with the conspirators on this point. The withdrawal of the prac- | three tically unanimous vote of Pennsylvania from WILSON on the second ballot and the polling of it for CLARK would have easily created a stampede and made the nomination of the Speaker certain. But this little trick was checked in its infancy by Judge GORDON who noticed the am- biguous form of the resolution as it was reported by the committee on platform. It will not do to say that the omission of the original resolution to make the in- struction binding until the end of the balloting at Baltimore was an accident. Mr. PALMER, who was chairman of the committee on platform, was asked before the committee acted to put the resolu- tion in the form which Judge GORDON'S amendment presented it and he promised to do so. But in the committee he vio- lated his promise, emasculated the in- structions and hoped the fact would not be discovered. But he reckoned without his host for the moment the platform was read the omission was noticed and when the demand for correction was made PALMER acquiesced because he was afraid to refuse. ET Fortunately for the Democracy of State ‘all its voters do not believe that the way to strengthen or buildup a party is to try to discredit its organization'and | bolt its tickets when these do not suit them personally. This fact will possibly give us a peaceful condition of party af- fairs, for a time at least, even if it don't insure an enthusiastic and hopeful cam. paign. Another Hat in the Ring. Boss FLINN'S hat is also “in the ring.” We are not to be understood as stating that the ex-municipal contractor of Pittsburgh is a candidate for President. That would be out of the question un- less the constitution of the United States be first abrogated. Boss FLINN was born abroad and is therefore ineligible to the Presidency. But he has certainly cast his cady into the oratorical ring for he has challenged Mr. GEORGE W. OcHs, editor of the Philadelphia Ledger, to meet him in joint debate, the platform of the recent FLINN State convention to be the theme, or to speak more accurately, the bone of contention. Our esteemed Philadelphia contem- porary recently expressed a rather ad- verse opinion of Boss FLINN's platform. It characterized it as “a base and danger- ous appeal to the reckless,” a “desperate and unscrupulous incitement to unrest” and the "product of shallow-brained the- ories.” Other newspapers were equally free in condemning the screed and some of them were more extravagant in lan- guage than the Ledger. But Boss TLINN paid no attention to the others and seems to have centered his resentment upon Mr. Ocus. Therefore he invites Mr. OcHs to join him in the expenditure of several thousand dollars to amuse the curious public by an exhibition of ama- teur oratory. Of course such an entertainment would add greatly to “the gayety of nations,” and we feel like encouraging all rational forms of amusement. But Boss FLINN has a newspaper of his own and we can’t see why he doesn’t propose an intellectu- al duel in the columns of the respective papers. Verhal quarrels are not usually damaging to life or limb but in the case of such competitors as FLINN and OcHs a disturbance in the audience might do bodily harm. On the other hand a news- paper controversy could hardly havesuch an effect, especially when the contestants are separated by three or four hundred ——Clean-yp week means that every person living in the town is a to help in whatever way possible, in this an- nual effort to make Bellefonte cleaner and more attractive. A little effort will do for you what it did for your neighbor. Make it, if not for your own sake, for the sake of that neighbor. BELLEFONTE, PA., MAY 10, 1912. — NO. 19. TF ane Shasta ds Stisls Totty: | - ous Palmer Trick Defeated. I ig Immediately after the disorganizers | In the Democratic State convention on | From the Johnstown Democrat. It is really amusing to hear apparently well-informed Ee that Roose- velt 1 ts the great popular cause— the i A CO ems ve nst the conservative, the ‘ory against Democrat. What justi- ion is there for such a statement, such a belief? It is said that Taft filled his cabinet with corporation lawyers. But did not Roosevelt do the same? Elihu Root, a cororation la of the most pronounced type, wap t's Secretary of State. M. Shaw, the most subservient tool of the corporations, was his secretary of the Jor six years. Ethan A. Hitchcock was secre- tary po the interior, with the notorious Ballinger as his commissioner of the land Office. Roosevelt had iad six, Serataties of e navy, among them orton, who, as a railroad president, was indicted for violations o the anti-trust 2uj interstate commerce Se jaws, t was protected from prosecution by Roosevelt's order. He had ive postwmasters general. them the notorious corporation Nr Payne, of Wisconsin. He Franklin MacVeagh, Taft's secretary of the , is not a bit more friendly to the interests than was M. Shaw. Elihu Root, who was Ties secretary of war bifore he batame more of State, bio iE te a L. Stimson, Taft's secretary of war. Hicheoek, Tatts postaster general, will gompars favorably with either Henry C. Lg A TL a 10 the trusts, prosecuted as many trusts and secured as con victions as Knox or as storeys gefieral. J by the cor- on mow is as much of a corporation tool as Taft, if in fact not more so. To think for a Tome: that such 3 shallow as leader of a popuar popular cause, is really nau- seating. Another Taft Blunder. From the Harrisburg Star--Independent. President Taft scored blunder in what he hoped Se one of the crowning achievements of his ad- ministration; or rather the 5A was Snother made when biished hd 3 letter to Theodore t in ERE home and and the direct a will be notion of the Roosevelt can- didacy for the nomination of his party. The t declared for reciprocity with Canada, assisted in negotiating with the British ment a reciprocity agreement, and recommended the enact- ment of a bill embodying its features. That was well enough. But while the matter was pending he wrote a letter to the Colonel in which he spoke rather more openly than one writing on State matters usually Last week he made the crowning blunder of giving the letter to i gs The Bri press and some British tors, who heard of the letter which was given to the publiclast Thurs- day night, are furious over this sentence in the missive: “Meantime the amount of Canadian products we would take would uce a Surrent of of business be- tween Western and the United States that would make Canada only an adjunct of the United States.” A more discreet and politically shrewd man Would not hia have Siven publicity to that part of the e omitted other parts of it Rig blunderingly publisied the part that would be most harmful to him. The furious Britons are and- ing the recall of their Am , who negotiated the eaent for his govern- ment that make Canada “an ad- junct” of this country. How “Dissolution” Helps. From the Altoona Times. Standard Oil and tobacco trust stocks have increased greatly in value since the recent “dissolution” decisions of the Uni- SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Judge J. IM. Welodeg president of the Hunting: | den county courts, was much improved in health Carma He spent several weeks —An Osceola citizen, who was having a good | time at Philipsburg a few nights ago found him- | self $50 short when he was ready to quit. The | chief of police located it. —Frank Fagan, of Braddock, who had a habit of shocking his friends by pretending to commit suicide, tried the joke once too often. His trick was to place just one cartridge in his revolver. —Work started this week on a new Pennsylva- nia spur at Bolivar, to reach the new workings of the Lacolle Mining company a short distance from Bolivar. Thattown expectsa considerable | boom. —At a post mortem held at Indiana, the heart of R. T. Longwill, supposed to have died of tuber- culosis, was found to be twelve inches long, the abnormal growth having been the cause of his death. —The “last raft” made at Cherrytree went down the Susquehanna last week. It was of pine timber, 24 by 80 feet, with anold time shanty. It took two hours to get safely over the Mabaffey dam, there being no shute. ~—State Senator Joseph Alexander, of Madera, Clearfield county, after two months spent in the south and Florida, seeking health and recreation, has returned. He is looking rugged and has gained five pounds in weight. =Mr. and Mrs. August Lung, of Greensburg, have buried three sons who met violent deaths— two on the railroad and one in a mine. The fourth is in the hospital at that place, in a critical condition because of injuries received at the iron works. —Annie Lancronie, a 9 year old Italian girl of Janesville, was taken to the Philipsburg hospital last week with a bullet wound in her abdomen. The bullet came out at the back, yet she has a chance for recovery. She had been plaving with a revolver. ~In Wednesday morning's fog, H. R. Juries, a section hand on the P. & E. railroad, was run down and killed at McElhattan. It is the first fatal accident to happento a member of the crew under J. H. Taylor, who has been foreman for many years. —Sixty horses belonging to a gypsy camp near DuBois, had been pastured in a nearby farmer's meadow for two nights before the farmer discov- € | ered their presence. The third night thirty-four of them were rounded up by police and held for $1,000 damages. —Residents of Glenn White, many of whom are Polish, are recovering from an epidemic of measles that raged with unabated vigor for two months, ending with the death of two children of Stephen Burick. Joseph and Francis Burick died within forty-eight hours of each other. —Governor Tener haspromised tc make an ad- dress at the meeting of the state board of agricul- ture, which will be held at Towanda, Bradford county, May 21-25. More than 300 Pennsylvania farmers will be in attendance. This will be the first meeting of the boerd in Northwestern Penn- sylvania. —Seven hundred pounds of dynamite exploded in the Dull mines of the Pennsylvania Glass Sand company, near McVeytown, failed to do the ex- pected work. The public road had already fallen in because of the cavein of the mine. The proper authorities will get together on it now and formu- late some other plan. ~The mystery of the disappearance of Thomas Scott, of Reynoldsville, who had not been seen since November 18, 1911, was solved on Sunday when a boy walking along the creek near Brook- ville, saw the badly decomposed body of a man on a saw mill pier. It had been washed there by the To Waker anil Was identified asthaiaf Scott, ~Arrangements for a great n meet to be held in Altoona are now by the Blair County Road Drivers’ association. The aviator is to be no one less than the great Walter Brookins, world famous as one of the pioneer flyers in the United States and well known to everyone in this country for his many great feats in aerial stunts. —Over 35,000,000 pike perch have been sent out from three of the state's hatcheries the last few days, the shipments being made at rate of 12,000,- 000 from each of the three establishments. The fish are distributed throughout the State, the Sus- quehanna and Delaware getting large shares in the east and the Allegheny, Monongahela and Kiskiminetas rivers and French creek in the west. —Two and a haif years ago Edward Shrecken- gost, of Butler, left home for the west, promising to write when he located. Before he had time to do so he had his skull fractured, and when he re- covered his memory was a blank. Recently he had typhoid fever and with his recovery came his memory. His home folks received the long looked for letter and expect him homebefore the week is over. —G. H. Gibboney, whose large planing mill at Everett was destroyed by fire last Tuesday night, entailing a loss of almost $200,000, announced that he will at once begin to rebuild. Mr. Gibboney employs over forty men and this news causes re- joicing in that community; also among the busi- ness men, among whom Mr. Gibboney holds a prominent position. Excellent offers were made to induce Mr. Gibboney to locate elsewhere, but he will remain at Everett. —~Miss Ella Lattimer, the New Bethlehem stenographer and bookkeeper in the postoffice, who successfully juggled her accounts until she embezzled $6,118.80, is now a federa! prisoner con- fined in the Armstrong county jail. She is serving a term of 30 days which began last Monday even- ing, and is a part of the sentence imposed upon her by the federal court judge in Pittsburg when she plead guilty to the charge of embezzlement. The rest of the sentence is to pay a fine of $5,118.- 80, which covers her shortage. =The banks throughout the State have been notified that there are counterfeit ten and twenty dollar bills abroad. The advice is sent out by Captain Matthew Griffin of the gevernment secret service force at Philadelphia. The notes are the cleverest that have ever been floated and require extra vigilance to detect. They are said to have come from the south. - The notes are printed on two pieces of paper between which silk threads are run, according to Captain Griffin, and they are so hard to detect that extra caution should be used by all persons handling money. —Definite arrangements were completed on May 1st by a company headed by Samuel Morris» of Altoona, for the purchase of the Wopsononock railroad, New York Central and allowing that road an en- trance at Altoona. On tep of the mountain at Wopsononock the hotel destroyed by fire is to be rebuilt and the resort improved and rehabited. ~When the nine men who had been selected to carry the body of Isaac Bordner, of Point town- After several ineffectual efforts to get it in the body was carried back to the house, followed by the relatives and friends, where it remained until the undertaker made atrip to Northumberland and returned with a larger vehicle. Mr. Bordner was one of the largest men in that section. He was six feet eight inches tall and weighed about 320 pounds. He was 60 years of age,