' ET —— em come Bellefonte, Pa., October 25, 1912. History Demolishes Republ.can Glaim That Democrats Make Hard Times. 1893 WES UNDER HIGH TARIFF Every Panic Since the Civil War Has Been a Republican Panic—Lessons From 1907 Upheaval. The enemies of Democracy are mak- ing their anticipated and regularly re- curring how!—they are predicting bard times if Woodrow Wilson is elected president on a Democratic tariff revi sion platform. The Republicans are claiming all credit for present prosperity. A glance backward will be worth while at this time. Every panic since the civil war orig- inated and developed under Republic- an rule. The Republican campaign textbook of 1904 devoted much space to the many business disasters occurring from July, 1893, to November, 1804, intend- ing the public to attribute them to the inauguration of President Cleveland in March, 1803. But the Republicans fail to refer to the fact that the Republic- an tariff law was in force during more than twelve of the sixteen months of greatest business disasters. This fact must be remembered—the McKinley tariff bill became a law Oct. 6, 1890, and the first indications of the 1803 panic were seen Nov. 11, 1800, scarcely more than thirty days after the Me- Kinley law was passed. and the panic reached its worse stage in 1893 and early In 1894, during which time the McKinley law was in full force. Millions Lost Their Jobs. It may be recalled. too, that the panic of 1873 under Republican rule and in a period of twelve years or high tariff taxation. was most disastrous. It continued five years, 3,000,000 work- ingmen were thrown out of employ- ment and bankruptcy ran riot. In 1890 the McKinley high tariff bill was passed. and there wore 10,673 fail- ures, followed by 12.394 in 1801. The tariff was raised io nearly 50 per cent, but wages stood still or declined while the cost of necessaries advanced. The most serious labor troubles in the history of the United States have occurred under Republican high tariffs. Some Lessons From 1907. The Republican panic of 1907 fur- nished another forceful refutation of the Republican claim that Democratic administration and hard times, lower tariffs and panics have been co-ex- isting. In 1007, in the midst of prosperity, thousands of leading banks, with hun- dreds of millions on deposit, suspended cash payments. The trouble began as a result of a struggle between great New York financial institutions for bus- iness. ! The New York Post in October, 1907, said: Condemn Themselves. “The certain and significant thing is that it will be known as a Republican and high tariff panic. Protest as Re- publicans may, they will be held re- sponsible. Out of their own mouths the Republican party and the Dingley- ites will stand condemned. They fixed in 1896 the standard by which they cannot escape being judged. In the party platform of that year they refer- red to the panic of 1803. and the hard | times following, squarely to charge up the entire accountability to the party in control of the national government, and the political inference was stated with merciless logic: “ ‘Every consideration of public safe- i ty and individual interest demands that the government be rescued from the hands of those who have shown them- selves incapable of conducting it.’ “Now, what are the Republicans go- ing to do when the Democrats hand them back their poisoned chalice?! ® & + A great emergency has come and the high tariff is seen to be of no | It was to keep us all | avail whatever. rich and prosperous.” “Because the country has just got over the results of a Republican panie the president and his friends are urging | to perpetuate the Republican admin- stration,” says the Philadelphia Rec- ord. Business Depression, “As soon as business was checked five years ago the steel corporation, which was encouraged by Mr. Roose velt to swallow the Tennessee con- cern, then its most formidable poten- | tial competitor, drew its fires and threw about half its workmen out of employment. Other industries did much the same thing. * * * There was an extensive stoppage of mills in Phila- delphia. “The Republican candidate for con- gress in the Kensington-Richmond dis- trict is using the ‘soup houses of 1898’ as a means of scaring the wage earners from voting the Democratic ticket. Those soup houses existed under the McKinley tariff. But there have been more recent ones. After 1907 there were soup houses in the Kensington. Richmond district. and everybody who was charitably disposed was begged for contributions to feed the people who were out of empleyment.” ~——For high class Job Work come to! the WATCHMAN Office. COULD HAVE CARRIED OHIO. But Big Bull Moose Took to the Ver mont Woods—Noted Woman Exposes His Change of Front. BY IDA HUSTED HARPER. The Progressive party had its first opportunity to show its loyalty to the woman suffrage plank in its platform when the vote was Laken in Ohio on a new constitution. Forty-two amend: ments were on the ballot, and all were adopted except the one for woman suffrage! Ohio is one of the “banner” Progres- sive states, and Mr. Roosevelt expects to secure its electoral vote. In order to do this a plurality of the electors must be Progressives, and they could therefore have easily carried the suf- frage amendment if all the others had voted against it, as the vote on the con- stitution was very light, only a few hundred thousand out of more than a million who were eligible. Did he is- sue any orders to this effect? Did he say to his followers: “Now, here is our first chance to show the women that we mean business. Of course if we win in November we will give the franchise to all in the United States, but just now we can make good by giving it to those in Ohio, so let every Progressive vote for the woman suf- frage amendment?’ Did he do this? | On the contrary, he completely Iig- | nored the matter, although he passed | through Ohio the very day of the elec- | tion. A few days before, at St. Johnsbury, ' Vt., Mr. Roosevelt had devoted a large | part of his speech to showing how | strongly he believed in the ballot for women and how anxious he was for them to get it. The question was not | an issue there or likely to be, but it was a vital issue in Ohio, to be settled in four days, and yet not by spoken or written word did he show to the people of Ohio that he knew of its existence. | Two days after the Progressive party in Ohio permitted the defeat of this amendment its state convention met. If any women were elected delegates | the press dispatches failed to mention | it, and in the platform a woman suf- frage plank was conspicuous by its ab- | sence. “The Progressive party pledges | itself to the task of securing equal suf. frage to men and women alike.” says its national platform. and Ohio has | Just given the first example of the way it apparently means to keep that pledge. In Mr. Roosevelt's second term the | suffragists determined to make every ! possible effort to secure an indorsement | from: him. As Miss Susan B. Anthony's | most eloquent letters to him received no answer, she went in person to see | him in November, 1005, just four | months before her death. With all her powers of persuasion she pleaded with | him to recommend in his forthcoming message some recognition of woman's claim to a voice in the government. Laying her hand on his arm, she looked up into his face and said, “1 beg of you to be the emancipator of woman as Lincoln was the emancipator of the slave.” He was not resembling Lin- coln so’ much in those days as he is at present, and he remained totally un- moved by her appeals. Scant Courtesy at White House. Shortly before he left the White House several officers of the Nationa! Suffrage association, realizing his great influence on public opinion, made one | last effort to have him speak a favor- able word He came into the outside , lobby of the executive office, required | them to state their business before the crowd waiting to see him and would i hardly give them a chance to speak, but kept saying. “Go and get another | state.” He shrugged his shoulders and - turned on his heel. and then they said, | “If we will get up a petition of a mil ! Hon names will that influence you?" “No,” he replied, “not one particle.” | That was in 1909. The next year i letter from him was rend at an anti- suffrage meeting in the Berkeley thea- ter, New York. in which he said: *1 wm very tepid on woman suffrage.” The cause of woman's enfranchise- . ment has no more implacable enemy than the Outlook. and Mr. Roosevelt is on the editorial staff. Last February . he had In that magazine a ten column article entitled “Woman's Rights,” but Waverly Oils the only right considered was that of the suffrage excellent exposition of the attitude of women who do not wish to vote that the Anti-suffrage association ordered copies for distribution In this article he said again, “In our western states where the suffrage has been zranted to women | nin unable to see that any great difference hax heen caused as compared with neighboring states.” And yet just four months after tis publication, when Mr Roosevelt had definitely decided to make the contest for the presidential nomination. all his scruples about forcing suffrage on a hostile and indifferent majority van- ished in thin air because a million and a half already had votex and the colo- nel wanted them. and he knew they wouldn't stand for any nonsense about a referendnm CIRCULAR TO 6. A. R. POSTS. Sought “Means” and “Harsh” Ex- pressions by Wilson Supperters, but Finds Facts the Reverse, Ignoring the fact that the Democrat- fc bouse pussed the most liberal pen- sion bill in the history of the United States and that it was the Republican senate that reduced the appropriation , the editor of the National Tribune of . Washington has appealed to grand army posts all over the country to sap: ply campaign material for nse against the Democratic party. Colonel (Sergeant) John McElroy, the editor. hus not met always with the co-operation he desired. This is evi- denced by the fact that indignant grand army men have forwarded his circular letters to Democratic national headquarters in New York with their protests aguinst the playing of such politics within the old soldiers’ organ- ization. Quest For “Mean” Things, Editor McElroy's appeal was sent out, mimeographed. on the letterhead of the National Tribune. with his own name at the top. The letter read: Sept. 13, 1912. Comrade--We are anxious to get the ex- pression of editorials on pensions from the papers supporting Wilson in your neighborhood. Will you kindly look over the files of vour local papers and send us anything purtictclarly harsh und mean which they have published. We want to show conclusively the attitude of the men | who are supporting Wilson and who will control his administration If elected. Please send these at your earliest cone venience, as the time is short. Fraternal- iy, THE NATIONAL TRIBUNE. One of the replies seut to the Trib une was: Headquarters Cushing Post, No. 14, G.A.R. Astoria, Ore., Sept. 28, 1912. National T'ribune, Washington, D. C.: Gentlemen —~ Your communication ad- dressed to me as adjutant of Cushing Post, No. 14, of the 17th inst. | found to- day on my return from the national en- campment at Los Angeles, Cal. Thus the | delay In answering You wish me to look over the files of our local papers and send you “anything par- ticularly harsh and mean” which they have published regarding pensions. As you have specified that these “harsh” and “mean comments must be from pa- pers supporting Wilson I must inform you that the papers supporting Wilson throughout the state, so far as I have been able to learn, are friendly toward the interests of the civil war veterans and indorse the action of the Dumocratie house of the United States congress in its passage of the pension bill in the special and last session of congress and have no fault to find with Senator Kern for his eloquent appeal in the senate in behalf of the civil war veterans. If you are really looking for ~'mean” and “harsh” editorials along this line, if your object In this search is for the In- terests of the old soldiers, you will find enough “mean” and “harsh” things in the papers that are supporting Mr. Taft And if you wish to prospect away out here in Oregon (politically) for other than pure gold please excuse the adjutant of Cushing Post, No. 14, department of Ore- gon, G. A. R., In assisting. B. F. ALLEN. It's a great deal easier to spend mon , than to get it. It's a great deal pir lose the health than itis to recover it. It is not reasonable, therefore, ro expect that a few doses of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription will undo the results of years of disease. But every woman who uses “Favorite Perscription” can be sure of this: It always helps, it almost always cures. Women who suffer with irregu- larity, weakening drains, inflammation, ulceration, or female weakness, will find no help so sure, no cure so complete, as that which follows the use of “Favorite Prescription.” . | ——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. —— = — erate. First semester of February; Summer 57-26 | The Pennsylvania State College. The : Pennsylvania : State : College EDWIN ERLE SPARKS, Ph.D, L.L. D., PRESIDENT. Established and maintained by the action of the Unit bri) joint on nited States Government and the ns middle of September; second semester for Teachers about the third Monday of June of each year. For catalogue, bulletins, announcements, etc., address THE REGISTRAR, State College, Pennsylvania. ld. FIVE GREAT SCHOOLS—Agriculture, Engineering, Liberal Arts, Mining, and Natural Science, offering thirty-six courses of four each—Also courses in Home Economics, Industrial Art and Ph y Education—TUITION FREE to both sexes; incidental charges mod- the first TWYTTYY YY YY YY ve ve vv The article was sach an | CLOTHING. CLOTHING. EEDEPEEOEE S331 J | | : 7 ; I g ; y | : | : If You Want to BE SURE THAT THE CLOTHES YOU BUY ARE GOOD CLOTHES THEN COME TO FAUBLEYS. We say to you, that if at any time you think you did not get Your Money's Worth Bring your purchases back to us and get Your Money Bac You to be the judge. Do you know of a safer way to buy Clothes? We know our as- sortment of Suits and Over- coats is larger than any two of Bellefonte’s stores combined. FAUBLE'S. ESE BE BIBI II KI IRE IE REET IREEEH BHESHHREEERSEERESEESEKR