BY P. GRAY MEEK. — A — INK SLINGS. ——Late advices from the seat of war at Armageddon indicate a change of gen- | erals. ~—[llinois and Pennsylvania. Corrupt | and not only contented but proud of | their iniquity. | —It was one time we didn't have to wait on the returns from the back coun- ties to know where we were at. ——Moreover it is practically proved | that buttermilk is not a strengthening diet for Presidential candidates. ~The Socialists polled more than double the number of votes in this Con- gressional district than were polled by the Prohibitionists. —No, dear reader, Col. ROOSEVELT has mot gone into winter quarters on the plains of Armageddon. He is back at Oyster Bay planning 2 new campaign to further inflame the restless. —It is to be hoped that the covetous- mess of the other European powers will mot prevent the Balkan allies from im- posing such terms on vanquished Tur- key as will guarantee to the world a per. manent cessation of the atrocities that have been practiced by the followers of Mohammed. —Mr. TAFT says he will practice law just enough to make a living for his family which reminds us that he never, hitherto, practiced law or anything else except politics since he was born. Mean- ime it may be said that ROOSEVELT will eontinue to fool the public in one way or another, but “at the old stand.” —President WILSON continues to be delightfully frank with the American people and, above all things, his recent assurance that he proposes having an “open door” administration in Washing- fon points to a successful and satisfacto, ry administration. He says that he is still the servant of the people and pro- poses that nothing shall be transacted in his office to which anyone of them may mot be a personal witness. —Those more or less interested pa- triots who are spending time in arrang- ing cabinet or other appointments for President-elect WILSON may as well con- serve the mental energy thus wasted. President-elect WILSON is tolerably well informed with respect to the capabilities of the several gentlemen who are willing t0 serve the public in official capacity and will be able to pick out men for his eabinet without much assistance. —President-elect WiLSON should call Congress into extra session immediately after his inauguration. He and Congress were both elected for the purpose of do- ing something and the time to do it is right away, so that the people will be able to judge the results before the next Congressional election, two years hence, and approve or disapprove by their vote at that time, It would add greatly to she successful outcome of Democratic legislation if each fool Congressman who happened to be swept into office last week, will just resolve to let the men there, who do know how, mix the first dose of Democratic medicine for the eountry and not try to spoil it with de- mands that some of their dope be put in. ~The extraordinary size of the roos- ter we had to use to properly crow for the WATCHMAN last week made it im- possible for us to extend congratulations to WARREN WORTH BAILEY, editor of the Johnstown Democrat and Member-elect from the 19th Pennsylvania Congression- al district. It was a noteworthy victory and, happily, the people of that district have secured a Congressman with brains enough to make a few others, we know of in Washington, brilliant if they could only absorb the overflow. While we never did have much faith in the consis- tency of brother BAILEY’S Democracy he has been clever enough to make most of his readers believe he was right each time he has shot off at a tangent and they certainly put the Buffalo sign on HARTMAN and BRruA for him last week, Here's hoping, above all things, that he will not be an obsiructionist in Congress and that he will leave all those little bugs to continue doing business in the sanc- tum in Johnstown, at least, until after the first session has tried its hand at tar- iff reduction. —It is quite inconceivable that JouN MoRiN, convicted in open court, only a few weeks ago, of improperly managing the office of controller of the city of Pittsburgh, should be chosen to any of- fice by the electorate of Pennsylvania, but such has been the case. And that Congressmen- at-Large. In fact he received more than double the number of votes on the Re- publican ticket of President TAPT and over a thousand more on all tickets than Mr. ROOSEVELT. The only places that there seems to have been an expressed disapproval of such men as MORIN ask- ing for office, when they have been de- clared incompetent by the courts, are in the Bull Moose, ROOSEVELT Progressive and WASHINGTON party tickets, where he was cut sufficiently to show that a few voters had some sense of their duty to | been the 3tuie a= well as to themselves, a, ¥ § VOL. 57. President Taft’s Defeat. : Mr. Bryan and the Cabinet. It may be said justly that President; Of course Mr. WILLIAM JENNINGS TAPT was the architect of his own de- | BRYAN will not be Secretary of State in feat. When inaugurated nearly four | President WILSON'S cabinet, though it is years ago, he was singularly favored in | not improbable that the office will be popular estimation. He had been elected | tendered to him. But Mr. BRYAN will by an overwhelming majority, largely ac- | hardly make the sacrifice which accept- quired by false promises. On the stump | ance of the office would entail. He is an he had declared that his first efforts | exceedingly thrifty man and if he ever would be toward a downward revision of had any aversion to wealth he has prob- the tariff No doubt he was sincere in | ably given it up. The salary of a cabi- making the pledge but when the time | net officer is $10,000 a year apd Mr. came for fulfillment, he completely fail- | BRYAN can make that much on the lec- ed. Without having tried to get down- ' ture platform in a month. The office STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. ward revision he approved a bill provid- ing for upward revision and subsequent- ly eulogized the measure as the “best tariff law ever enacted by the American | Congress.” With his Winona speech the President shattered public confidence in his in- tegrity and his patriotism. But he wasn’t satisfied with that. Following that ora- torical folly a largely Democratic Con- gress was elected upon the issue of tariff | reduction and he vetoed every bill en- acted upon the subject during the special session. The cost of living was constant- ly increasing and the legislation to check the evil was destroyed by his disapproval. Even school children could see that such service of the predatory interests would ; not be tolerated by the people, but TAFT ! never tumbled. During the regular ses- could give him no personal distinction. As it is wherever he goes he is “the ob- served of all observers.” Where Mc- GREGOR sits is the head of the table on all occasions and Mr. BRYAN prefers to be where the money flows freely. We would not complain, however, if Mr. BRYAN were called into the cabinet. He is a man of high character, splendid ability and wide experience and President- elect WiLsON is likely to consider only that sort of material in constructing his official furniture. But we cannot agree with certain enthusiastic supporters of Mr. BRYAN that Mr. WILSON owes him a seat in the cabinet for services perform. ed at Baltimore. One of these has said that but for Mr. BRYAN's help WiLsoN would not have been nominated at all. As a matter of fact Mr. BRYAN couldn't The official returns have been exceed. ingly slow in being filed. Many of the States have only furnished unofficial re- ports giving the majorities for the va- rious candidates, which prevent correct comparisons of the total popular vote cast for the different candidates. Enough of facts, however, have been given to show that WiLsON will have 446 electors; TAPT 8, and ROOSEVELT 77. This gives ROOSEVELT Pennsylvania, 38, Michigan 15, Minnesota 12, Washington 7 and South Dakota 5; while TAPT has but two, Utah 4 and Vermont 4. The electoral vote of all the other States will be cast for WiL- SON. Official returns received at Washington up to yesterday, Thursday morning, show that the Democrats will have fifty votes or two of a majority in the next United States Senate, and that the next Congress will consist of 297 Democrats, 138 Republicans, Bull Moosers and other brands of professed Progressives. It is possible the Democratic strength in the Senate may be increased two or three votes, several of the States counted as Republican are getting very close as the official returns are being counted. Nineteen States elected Democratic Governors and eight Republican. Penn- sylvania is also backward with its com- plete returns. Enough have been filed at sion he repeated the blunders and his have defeated WILSON if he had tried and | Harrisburg to show that ROOSEVELT'S overwhelming defeat is the logical result. | the chances are that if he had obeyed | plurality will be between 45,000 and 50,- TAPT is an amiable, pleasure-loving person who would probably much rather do right than wrong. But he accepted the office on terms which inevitably spell- ed disaster. Four years ago ROOSEVELT retired from the office reiuctantly, upon an implied promise that TAPT would keep it comfortable for him until he was ready to re-enter. TAPT was the only man he could depend upon to perform this sin- ister service and he forced TAFT upon his party and the country. When the time came to fulfill the obligation, TAFT refused. He hadgot a taste of the sweet: ness of power, and coveted more of it. Foreclosure proceedings ensued and TAFT protested that he was being badly treated. As a matter of fact, however, each had been trying to get the better of the other. In other words it was a case of “dog eat dog,” and neither got any benefit from the meal. We have no patience with ROOSEVELT’S lust for office, but neither have we any sympathy for TAPT in his imaginary wrong. If TAFT had had the spirit of man he would never have allowed T to form the impres- sion that the office was to be relinquish- ed on demand. If ROOSEVELT had had a modicum of patriotism he never would have formed the impression. But they! are equally lacking in these essentials to just and capable administration and if they are suffering mental anguish in consequence, let them suffer. Those Turkish Atrocities. Of course there can be no genuine pleasure in human suffering and the hor. rors of the Balkan war are not mitigated by the fact that Turkey has earned a severe threshing and appears to be get- / ting it. But we hope some way will be discovered to put an end, for all time, to the atrocities which the Turks have been practising for many years. There is a sort of an unwritten law of nations that outsiders are not to meddle in the domes- tic affairs of a people even though the elements of civilization are not highly de- veloped. But Turkey has been offending so frequently and so outrageously for vears that the ordinary international customs are insufficient in dealing with her. When a short time ago the Sultan was dethroned and a promise was given to the world that something like a just gov- ernment would be established at Con- stantinople hope was raised high that no more would be heard of the practices which had been common, The reformers were to administer the affairs of the government in something like a spirit of decency if not equity. But all expecta- tions along these lines have been disap- pointed and the new agents have proved quite as bad as their predecessors. Since the beginning of the present war outrages have been perpetrated equal to the worst performances of the deposed Sultan and that without protest from those in au thority. Thus far the results of the military operations of the allied forces have been entirely satisfactory. The Turks have had the worst of every encounter. But the chances are that before there will be intervention of some sort will pre- vent wiping the Ottoman empire off the map. ID 10 be er that the work has been so fitly it should be continued until com We sincerely therefore, that what- ever contain provisions the It is neither wise nor to monkey with the rattlesnake until his fangs have extracted. A good Turk is a dead one. {lic calamity. Mr. BAILEY was held in : the instructions ot his constituents to: vote for CHAMP CLARK, WILSON would have been nominated several ballots earlier. But whether Mr. BRYAN is invited into the cabinet or not he will have to abandon his pernicious habit of trying to boss the Democratic party. At the organization of the present Congress he “butted” in and undertook to control everything until he was finally rebuked. At the Baltimore convention he pursued the same course and when the nomination of WILSON became inevitable, he abandoned the leader in the fight for whom he was instructed, and arrogated to himself the leadership of a force already foreordained to victory. According to the newspapers he has already pitched his tent in Wash. ington with the view of directing the proceedings of the next session and if that be true he is electioneering for | another sharp rebuke and will deserve it. | ——Really BOIES PENROSE is a pathetic figure. He could have put himself in po- sition to recover control of his party by defeating FLINN'S candidates for Auditor General and State Treasurer, but he was afraid. And “God hates a coward.” Resignation ot Senator Bailey. The information that Senator BAILEY, of Texas, has, or will, resign his seat in the United States Senate will not cause much regret throughout the country. There was a time that such an announce- ment would have been regarded asa pub- high esteem by the people of the coun- try for the reason that he is able, elo- quent and was then believed to be scrup- ulously honest. But half a dozen years ago this popular estimate of the man was changed. It was discovered that his pre- tense of serving the people was false and that he was one of the agents upon the floor of the Senate of the predatory monopolies. In fact he was literally “caught with the goods on him.” Strangely enough the exposure of Sen- ator BAILEY'S connection with the Stan- dard Oil company didn't lead him to mending his ways. Previously he had professed virtue and the exposure shock- ed the public conscience. He had appar- ently been faithful to his party obliga- tions and stood steadfastly for the rights of the people. But the moment his hy- pocrisy was revealed he became a polit- ical wanton and boldly and openly flout- ed his party obligations. His voice was no longer raised in defense of the consti- tution and the traditions of his country and his party. On the contrary he ap- peared to take pleasure in showing his recreancy. But now we are or soon will be, rid of him. He is going to practice law in Tex- as and New York, the newspapers say, and as he is an able lawyer he will prob- ably succeed to the full measure of his expectations. He has already grown rich, we understand, from big fees re- ceived in the service of corporations and we hope he will continue to prosper. But it would have been better for him and for all concerned if he had maintained his character for ability and integrity even though it had been necessary to sacrifice some of the emoluments of a successful law practice. He had vast op- portunities of achievement along the lines better worth while. ~Speaking of the great battles of the world that little scrimmage at Armaged- don, the other day, will hardly claim a place among the leaders. 000. That YOUNG will have a majority, over BERRY, for Auditor General in the neighborhood of 100,000, and the balance of the Republican ticket will be elected by majorities slightly exceeding this. There will be twelve Democratic Con- gressmen from Pennsylvania during the next session. Two of the present Demo- cratic Congressmen were defeated—WiL- SON, of Tioga, and GREGG, of Westmore- land. The next State Senate will have 17 Democratic Senators, against 12 in the last, and 52 members of the House against 44 in 1911. WILSON’S vote in the State is over 50, (00 less than that given BRYAN, in 1908, ——The chances are that President TAFT is wondering why so many people took his calamity predictions seriously, As a matter of fact, however, nobody took him seriously and his vote repre- sents mainly the hopes of the tariff mon- gers for a renewal of their license to plunder. Action Must be Immediate. We cordially agree with those esteemed contemporaries that favor the very earli- est consideration of tariff reform legisla- tion. The party is clearly pledged to such action. Excessive tariff taxes are in the main responsible for the high cost of living. The remedy of this evil was the paramount issue of the campaign. It will not do, therefore, to postpone the work for considerable time or for any time. What is to be done should be done promptly. Delay is dangerous as well as ng. Parties can no longer violate their pledges to the people. This is especially true of the Democratic party at this time. We must make good at every stage of the game. Excessive tariff taxation costs the peo- ple of the United States $2,000,000 a day easily. In six months that drain upon the resources of the country reaches an enormous aggregate. At best it will be impossible to enact the remedial legis- lation short of that time. President-elect WiLsoN will not be inaugurated for near- ly three and a-half months. He can hardly assemble the new Congress in exira session until a month after the inauguration and it will probably require a month and a-half to get the measure through both Houses for the representa- tives of the “interests” will fight bitterly for delay. Why should the action be postpone) a minute longer than neces- sary If the party fulfills its obligations to the people promptly and effectively its lease of power will be long and honorable. The reduction of the cost of living is the most important of these obligations. Foodstuffs are not the only element in the expense of maintaining the family, though an important feature. But the cost of clothing, the price of shoes, the expense of education must likewise be taken into account. Tariff taxation effects all these things and every penny that is taken in excess of an amount necessary to main. ta n the government must be saved. And it will not do to prormse this saving in the future. It must be immediate. ——————————— ——In the next Congress the investi- gations will be more thorough for the reason that both branches of Congress will be interested in the exposures and there will be less chance of dodging troublesome questions. —*Is it Bull Vioose or vamoose?” asks an esteemed contemporary. Well it was Bull Moose but now it is vamoose, . sa ——————— p——— ® — amen NO. 45. Should Lose No Time. i ; I : i : i HOHE ft ii} i 3 hart fosevt [0 } - I PER i; 25 °f g j 3% F8 the tari uy, and particularly their th their wailing. The results might be a serious reverse. There is very little doubt thatthe Dem- ocrats will control the Senate after March 4. March 5 President Wilson should From the Pittsburgh Post. No one can measure the magnitude of the suffering and distress due to the war in southeastern Europe, for the story has not been told. Imagination, however, can picture the desolation that one short month has produced, whole States devas- tated, thousands of families homeless and in penury, and tens of thousands of wounded men crowding every hospital or slowly dying where they fell. The coun- tries at war have no time to care for and protest these sufferers, for in the clash of they are busy adding to the num- ber and throwing the withering hand of waste over many more square miles of fertile territory. Famine and pestilence threaten the non-combatants and soon a cry will go up to the world for si ccor. the American Red Cross, an organization that is familiar to the na- tions of the world, has been appealed to for early action in mee! the great problem. Madame Bakhmeteff, wite of the Russian Ambassador at Washington, and Madame Slavco Grouitch, the Ameri- can wife of the Servian minister to Lon- don, have written letters to President outlining the necessities of the Red Cross in taking up the work of alleviation. The advent of winter is bound to add to the suffering, and the indications are that the Red Cross is going to be put toa very severe tesi in the o_o, SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Sandy Ridge schools have reopened after am enforced vacation on account of whooping cough. ~A new creamery at Belleville, erected to re: place the one destroyed by fire a month ago is open for business. —Mrs. William Scott, a bride of only a few weeks, died of diphtheria near Lewistown. The epidemic has become alarming. —Arthur Thomas, of Morrisdale, had $756 in paper money in his house when fire destroyed it. The money also went up in smoke. —Williamsport is taking subscriptions for the relief of typhoid fever sufferers at Troy, where seventy-five families are in charge of the relief committee, —In Somerset county court a few days age Mrs. Evelyn Smith, of Berlin, was awarded $3.- 635 for the death of her husband in a mine be- longing to the Stoner Coal company. ~Doyle Hummel, of Philipsburg, killed a twea- ty-seven pound wild turkey a few days ago near Martha Furnace and took home with him a bunch of honeysuckle blossoms found on the mountaia. ~—Matthias D. Bastian, of Sunbury, in his wil} recently probated left $100 to “the person I am living with at the time of my death for the pus- —Work on the erection of a machine shop to cov- er 12,000 feet of floor space, as an addition to the are going to be remarried. Both had spent a number of years in the west and met at the same time. Their return to the scene of their early life was accidental, —Judge Hyde, of Carbon county, in an opinion handed down recently, states that the constables are entitled to $2.50 for making their returns and also are entitled to circular mileage at a rate of six cents per mile. The county commissioners of Carbon county refused to pay the mileage and the opinion followed. ~—Mrs. Melotte Mercer, bewildered by fright, jumped from a buggy directly in front of a pass enger train at DuBois and was instantly killed. The driver had forced the horse across ahead of the train and the other occupants of the vehicle escaped. They had tried in vain to orevent Mrs. Mercer from jumping. ~=An oii portrait of Bishop W. P. Eveland was presented to Williamsport Dickinson Seminary tay Dr. S. S. Koser and wife, of Williamsport. The portrait was painted from life during the sum- officers. In these communities there have bees 151 cases of the disease and numerous deaths. —People passing the home ef William Fallon, of Centralia, at noon a few days ago saw him standing in the front door then fall. Going to his assistance they found his wife dead and his grand- son unconscious from the effects of fumes from a stove. Had not Mr. Fallon bocome nauseated there would have been three deaths instead of one. =A team owned by Adam Weaver, of Prospect’ went over an embankment at Johnstown and hung suspended ia mid-air about one hundred feet above the P. R. R. tracks. One horse stram- gled todeath und the other was raised uninjured by hoisting tackie. The harness was then slash. ed and the dead one fell to the tracks. It was valued at $250, =H. N. White, of Indiana, is sorely afflicted. While his wife is lying between life and death at the hospital, battling with typhoid fever, he has just returned from the funeral of a two-year old daughter. The child had pneumonia, devel oping into spinal meningitis. She is the fifth child of his to die within two years and he has on. ly one left. The mother could not be told of her little daughter's death. —Conductor John C. Sherman,of Punxsutawney» standing on the engine board of his slowly mov- ing train, saw a young lady jump from in front of a passenger train directly in front of the one im his charge. He leaped forward, swung the gis to safety, and in so doing struck his foot on the footboard of the engine. It was almost by a mira- cle that he was able to fling himself clear of the wheels. The girl's name was not learned, but the man’s friends think he deserves a Carnegie medal. ~Six children in a little over thirteen months is the remarkable birth record in the family of Ste- twelve years and thirteen of them are living. September 10th, 1911, she gave birth to iriplets, two girls and a boy, and last week three sturdy boys arrived. Of the children born last vear twe are living. Mrs. Nageotte's sixth and seventh FE 58 i HH for ail that his represents, Jam Sh the con Rifucucy Sat swed degert Him, put ¥t did, hos art Tor | di i | 1 i ; i si i 2 gunsrally good record a9.a representa. tive of people, is defeated. One would have fancied that his constituents would have kept him in the harness be- | | It goes without saying that what the voters did in both cases was unusual, although the successors of both incum- bents are worthy of their confidence. There are times when results of an elec- tion do not seem to prove anything. charged from the National Guard, it to the commander-in-chief he is * to dis charge the duties of his office,” hav" ing disclosed the fact that vouchers filed with the a AO, SR SRO