‘officially closed yesterday. Heroes in- ssmumerable were made in the College —Sunday said “Swastika!” to Indian summer and started right in to do a —Chewing gum, a pinch of soda or! pepsin will probably relieve that Thanks- | giving feeling you have today. : —The scent of the browning buck- wheat cake is the lure that tempts many a man from his warm nest these mornings. | —Get the bills for the Thanksgiving dinner paid right away, else the little folks won't have the kind of a Christmas they deserve. —We have failed to note the enthu- siastic approval of the Harrisburg Patriot | of the proposition to give Mr. BRYAN a place in the WILSON cabinet. —Violet is the mourning color of Tur- key. Violet, you know, is a bluish pur- ple color. The Balkan allies are putting | the blue in the Turkish mourning just now. —If a real European war comes out of the Balkan troubles there will be a lot of near soldiers on the other side trying to convert their side whiskers into side- wheelers. —A man who has been big enough to be President of our big United States ought certainly to be big enough to take care of himself without being CARNEGIE libraryized. —Not all the hogs in this community have the cholera. Some of the species are suffering with a tightness around the heart that stands in the way of the prog- | ress of our community. —The University of Southern California having instituted a chair of automobile science we may look for a motor, soon, educated way beyond the ignorant habit of quitting miles from home. —The one ineffacable memory that ANDREW CARNEGIE will leave will be that money talks. Can you recall anything that the great iron master has ever done that has not been emphasized into great- n ess by United States steel bonds. ~The war talk in Europe may be without foundation in fact but it will serve the purpose of the American jingoes in Congress and we can easily imagine RicHARD Pierson HoBsoN howling for a dozen battleships during the coming ses- sion. —Except for the Army and Navy game tomorrow the 1912 football season was gridiron firmament and, fortunately, fewer cripples than usual are left to carry their scars through life. —Hoot Mon! If I fix up the ex-Presi. dents with the income from steel bonds the ex-Presidents will surely see that nothing is done to impair the value of steel bonds before they become ex-Presi- dents. The Laird of Skibo is certainly trying to put the “Kibosh” on the gov- ernment. —JAY E. House remarks that “in mak- ing up your list of martyrs to duty do not overlook the woman who bends over the red hot stove three times a day.” Martyr she is, but an altogether unnec- essary one. What of the man who has to buy the coal to keep the stove red hot three times a day and what are fireless cookers on the market for. —Penn State is going to ask the next Legislature for $590,000, solely for the use of the School of Agriculture. What the rest of the budget will be is merely con. jecture. The entire bill will probably run well above a million dollars. It re- mains to be seen what the much vaunted progressive Legislature will do with this wonderfully progressive institution of learning, —Those Philadelphia suffragists are arguing for the right to vote on the state- ment that it cost only four cents a vote to carry Kansas. Such a statement will act as a boomerang sure. If the ladies put the price down to that figure surely the old election day regulars who have been drawing down from two to five dol- lars ever since they were twenty-one years old won't stand for the admission of a cheap class like that. — Aside from the possible loss of con- trol of the United States Senate through the death of Hon. ISADOR RAYNER, of Maryland, the Democracy of the country will mourn the sad eventuality because it has removed one of the ablest ex- ponents of party doctrines. Brilliant and incorruptible, profound and far- seeing, Senator RAYNER was one of the country’s really great legislators. His death is a double misfortune to the Democracy for he will be needed in the next Congress more than any in which he served, —A Spokane man has sued his physi. cian for damages because he did not die after the doctor had told him he would. Believing that there was no chance for him to survive the patient sacrificed his property in order to meet certain obliga- tions before death and now that he is well and unhappy again he has brought suit to recover for his losses. It will be an interesting case, to say the least, but dangerous should the victim win. For if this physician gets soaked for not making good when he told the man he would die what chance will there be for other sick men in the same predicament who really The Financial Problem STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE: PA JSOVFVMBER 201919. Mr. Carnegie’s Pension Scheme. NO. 47. Will Pennsylvania Ratify? Various esteemed contemporaries Secretary of the Treasury MACVEAGH The press of the country has fitly re- From the Johnstown Democrat. within and without the State, in mak- | uttered a great and grave truth when he sented the impudent proposition of ' If the coming session of the Pennsyl- ing cabinets for President-elect WiL- said the other day, that existing condi- ANDREW CARNEGIE to pay out of his Y2nia Legislature SON, suggest the names of Hon. A. tions place “in the hands of the Secretary private charity a pension of $25,000 a' MiTcHELL PALMER as Attorney General | Of the Treasury a power greater than year to ex-Presidents of the United and Mr. GEORGE W. GUTHRIE as Secretary | any American should have.” In other States. It wasa rather ingenious : of Interior and one New York paper, the | Words under our fiscal policies the Sec- to form a partnership , suggested Mr. VANCE McCog- | retary of the Treasury may create panics ment upon which his i : with head other to phy 47. SugBested Mr the office of ' at pleasure and has absolute power to have been set. His last proposition in’ Secretary of the Navy. Just why these : control interest rates and make currency this direction was to take | gentlemen are considered for such public Plenty or scarce. The process is to re- service has not been stated by any of the duce or enlarge bank deposits of govern- National university, its endowment with the government in establishing a | papers responsible for the fact. Mr. | ment funds. In proof of his proposition to be predicated upon Steel trust bonds, | PALMER has acquired some distinction as he cites the fact that during the panic of of which he has a great quantity. Of a Representative in Congress mainly for | 1907 the government deposits in fbanks course the proposed Presidential pension the reason that he electioneered himself A friendly to the interests amounted to $256,- would be drawn from the same source into a seat in the House committee on 000,000 while three years later they were and either scheme would make the gov- Ways and Means. But we have not | heard of any great service either of the | others has performed for the party or the country. It may be presumed that the gentlemen Steel trust. Through connivance with from office. But those which are inclin- are a oe responsible for the asso- Mr. ROOSEVELT'S Secretary of the], Treas- ed that way favor a government pension ciation of their names with the offices in | Ur, during a brief period previous to rather than a private or personal annual question, and it is possible that they im- | agine they have earned the distinction | implied by their services in “reorganiz- | | ing” the Democratic party in Pennsylva- | nia and conducting the campaign for the election of Wooprow WILSON. But in| bbing Il the honorary offices that | holders of Tennessee Iron and Coal se- simply conjuring evils that are improbable | and gras BE a ary preliminary | curities and forced them to sell in order if not impossible. With the present Presi- campaign, that is during the period pre- | to save themselves from ruin. After the dential salary, and it will never be de- vious to the nomination of the candidate for President, they were fairly well re- warded for that work. Mr. PALMER had himself appointed member of the Na- tional committee and Delegate-at-Large to the Baltimore convention; Mr. GUTH- RIE secured his own appointment as chairman of the State committee, Dele- gate-at-Large to the National convention and chairman of the delegation and Mr. McCorMICK catapulted himself into the National convention as Delegate-at- Large. These were generous party favors be- stowed upon gentlemen and for what? They did reorganize the party with the skill and deli that a drunken black- smith might ex ‘in repairing a watch and they conducted the campaign with about the measure of success which at- tended the efforts of Admiral CERVERA in conducting the Spanish fleet out of the Havanna harbor, into which it had been enticed during the Spanish-American war. They had to start with a practically united and harmonious party. They had a candidate more popular with all classes of Democrats than any the party has had ina half a century. They had a hopeful army of voters to command. They had a broken, divided and discour- aged enemy to contend against. They told us they had all the money they need- ed and were so sure that they could com- mand all that would be required, that they went into the campaign promising $100,000 to aid the fight in other States and produced less than one twentieth of it. They spent $35,000 contributed by Democrats of the State on the distinct and positive promise that they had so “re-organized” the different counties that WiLsON was certain to secure a plu- rality of the vote with its thirty-eight votes in the electoral college. And what then? With all these assurances and promis- ing conditions they got to the polls for the Democratic nominee-Wooprow WiL- SON-11,983 votes less than was given HANCOCK thirty-two years ago; 51,014 less than CLEVELAND had in 1888; 56,645 less than he received in 1892; 31,507 less than BRYAN had in 1896-when there was a PALMER-BUCKNER professed Democrat- ic ticket in the field,~with both Mr. GUTH- RIE and Mr. MCCORMICK supporting it; 28,613 less than Mr. BRYAN received in 1900; and 63,173 short of the vote given Mr. BRYAN only four years ago. Really, when one gets his glasses wip- ed off and has a square vision of the re- sult, for which our Pennsylvania lead- ers(?) are now demanding these cabinet positions, (in addition to the places the party has given each of them,) he is con- strained to wonder if some people under- quisition as political modesty. A —— ——Of course it would be improper subscribe money to be used in juries in the dynamiting cases or other cases. But there can be no objection to a movement among workingmen of the country to pay legitimate expenses of the defense in cases now on trial in Indianapolis, 8 use in wasting time and energy upon might want to live? work that will not be effective. reduced to $4,000,000. As a matter of fact this was a part of the program in the absorption of the Tennessee Iron and Coal companylby the the taking over of the Tennessee com- pany the funds of the government were sequestered in the vaults of the treasury until money became so scarce that the | MORGAN banks easily controlled it. Then | they refused accommodations to the sale had been completed the treasury. funds were released to the extent stated by Mr. MACVEAGH., Obviously it was a! That such a thing ought to be impos- | sible is certainly true. That they will be possible until our banking and currency | laws are altered, is equally obvious. But the remedy is not in the currency com- | mission's plan of creating a central bank. | That would simply transfer the perilous | power from one source to another less | amenable to popular control. The ALD-| RICH plan would invest the central bank with authority to expand or contract the | volume of currency and it may safely be said that MORGAN, ROCKEFELLER and ! their banking associates would see the central bank authorities would be responsive to their wishes in the matter, ' The financial problem must be solved in a safer way. —We agree with the esteemed New York World that the cost to the govern. ment of the franked political literature which helped elect Woobrow WILSON was worth all it came to. But the coun- try would be better off if the “franking privilege” were cut out altogether and parties as well as individuals were com- pelled to pay postage on all matter sent through the mails. The Coming Legislature. There will be no test of strength be- tween the PENROSE and FLINN forces in the Legislature at the opening of the ses- sion, according to the political dope bul- letins being issued by both sides. It was expected that the vote on the Speaker- ship would reveal the “master of ceremo- nies” for the session. But this expecta- tion is to be disappointed, for the reason, mainly, that neither PENROSE nor FLINN can command a majority of the Repub- licans in the House. Mayor MAGEE, of Pittsburg,holds the balance of power, the figure men now declare, and he will be for the side that offers him the greater return for the use of his dummies. Ma- GEE is a past master at political dealing. The inference to be drawn from these facts is that the next Legislature will not be much different from its predecessors under the control of the Republican party. The session of 1905 was probably the most unsavory in the history of the State but upon its reassembling in spe- cial session in 1906, after a scourging at the polls, it repealed some of its own bad laws and enacted some measures tending in the direction of reform. Pos- sibly the session of 1913 will enact some of the measures promised in FLINN'S platform, but it is a safe guess that there will be greater effort to entrench the ma. chine than to serve the people. Mr. FLINN is not likely to let the reform spirit get beyond his control. The State gains nothing by the trans- fer of power from PENROSE to FLINN. There is no sincerity in FLINN'S profes- | sions of reform. He may deem it ad- visable to pass some bills which the people want and for which the Democrats have been striving for years, but there will be serpents in some and jokers in others and in the end the advantage to the people will be nil. In this estimate we as sume, of course, that FLINN and MAGEE will enter into a "traffic agreement,” if we may so designate it, and that the purpose of both will be to serve themseives. PEN- ROSE might not be averse to such an agreement with either, but will hardly sound the depths of iniquity to which the others go. ~Subscribe for the WATCHMAN, ernment an endorser of the bonds. We regret to say that all Democratic newspapers are not averse to the idea of pensioning Presidents after retirement donation. They are influenced to this paternalistic notion by the possible danger that some ex-Presidents having been ob- liged to work after retirement others might not be able to get employment suitable to their station in life. They are creased, there is no danger that any ex- President will ever want. Mr. ANDREW CARNEGIE has accumu. lated a vast amount of bonds, mortgages, bank and other corporation shares, by coining the sweat of other men and steal- ing the proceeds of the operation. For fifty years he has contributed money, in- fluence and energy to maintain a system of taxation which gave to him and his kind the benefits of government while shifting the burdens upon the shoulders of others. Only recently he begun pro- ceedings to release him from tax obliga- tions which less ortunate men have to pay in proportion and by practicing such | Strength methods all his life he is now able to play part of Sir Bountiful to men who | don’t need his help. Out upon such men and measures. t — Mr. Sheatz’s Curious Idea. Mr. JounN O. SHEATZ, of Philadelphia, who has been elected State Senator by some combination in politics only possi- ble in Philadelphia, is in the public prints with a suggestion that primary elections | another. be made nonpartisan. That is to say he would have the voters come to the pri- mary polls and vote for one candidate on the Democratic ticket, another on the Republican ticket and if so inclined other candidates on other tickets. A ticket thus nominated would be voted for at the general election in the same way. There would be no parties and no party organi- zations but a sort of free for all contest for all offices. This would be the fulfillment of the sceme to commercialize politics. To make it complete men would have to | iP8 order abandon party principles and make the question of electing public officials an entirely personal or pecuniary one. The candidate who “is a good fellow” to the majority of voters would be chosen both at the primary and general election and upon his induction into office would be committed to no code of party ethics whatever. Every political principle would be thrown into the discard and public officers would be absolved from all obligations except such as they recog- nize as having been created by the fa- vors bestowed upon them by the voters who supported them. Mr. JouNO. SHEATZ is not made of the weather than this the time of the year is here when we cannot expect much of it, and those farmers who have any corn out in the field had better get it in the crib as fast as possible. ~———When you want good JOB WORK the place to get it is the WATCHMAN of- fice. You'll find it always right. is as progressive as progressive newspapers it then undoubtedly it will ratify ~ Ee 2 § i il iE Ze 3g gx Ph & 5 F : | : 8 5 gi E e F | E £ s § 8 { 3 = f : ; : I: Is From the Philadelphia Record. vould nave on oir de ia ex- e offer had never been made. Quite 2 > 75 gs sk i fi fo i i i i ~The Colonel is tolerably quiet now but it can hardly be hoped that he will remain so very long. ——For high class Job Work come to the WATCHMAN Office. SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —DuBois announces that a bottle factory, which will give employment to 260 men, is assured for the town. —Cambria county has on hand three murder trials, arson, criminal libel and embezzlement cases as features of the coming criminal court. —Six horses, a number of hogs ready to be butchered, and the season's crops, valued at $4,. 000, were lost in a fire that destroyed W. A. Hoff- man’s barn, near Muncy. ~The school board of Lewistown has refused to pay its teachers for the two weeks’ time lost by the diphtheria epidemic. The teachers are quoting the school code and are not likely to drop the matter. ~Ten children are orphanded by the death of Mike Remo, shot six times in front of his home at Luceme. Angelo Dominick, who shot him, es- caped. Heis thought by some to have been a Black Hand gangster. ~Sylvester Myers, aged 93, of Mifflintown, re- cently took as his bride his housekeeper, Mrs. Anna R. Mackey, aged 52. He is a veteran of the Mexican and Civil wars and is as energetic as many a man at thirty years his junior. =A brakeman for ust t ree weeks, George Decker, aged nineteen years stepped off his train in front of one of the throug, trains near Johns town. His lifeless body was carried back to Der- ry, his home town, fcr funeral services. have held up payment of fees in two cases in which the coroner deemed inquests imperative. ‘The difference of opinion will be aired in court. ~Robert S. Brouse, aged 28, of Shamokin Dam, wheeled a tank of carbonic acid gas from a cold car into a warm wareroom at Northumberland and was blown to pieces before he could get away from the steam pipe near which he had placed it. —Johnstown police have a mystery in an as- sault upon Maurice Beerman, who was struck and rendered unconscious by an unknown assail- ant as he was about to enter his barn. A passer- by happened to hear him fall, but his assailant had escaped. —The Rev. Charles Oscar Waters, who, until the last conference was pastor of the A. M. E. church in Johnstown, has been arrested on a war- rant sworn out before Alderman M. R. Brennan charging him with larceny. He was apprehend: ed in Fairmount, W, Va. —Fayette township, Juniata county, contributes two important items to the week's budget. Drill. ing for oil will begin within the next ten days near McAllisterville. The Sponhour woolen mill, closed for several years, will be reopened in the spring. Fayette township is likely to be busy. ~Mrs. John Aston, of Mt. Carmel, is dead and her husband is fatally injured as the result of a collision of their auto with a fast train on the Reading railroad at Locust Gap, near Shamokin. . | They had been calling on friends at Shamokin and were on their way home. The fatal grade crossing again. ~Somerset county has a great trial list for next week. Road supervisors of four townships are charged with neglect of duty. The right of a brewery to sell and deliver beer is to be settled. There is a kidnapping case and also a murder trial, John Mans being charged with killing mail carrier Brown, near Beachley. —William Reynolds, of Okome, was left by his bride to be, almost at the door of the parsonage in Williamsport. The license had been zecured, and the time for the wedding was set for two o'clock. Shortly after lunch, Reynolds notified his intended wife that he would meet her at the parsonage. He waited in vain. —Surrounded by mortages and securities worth $33,000, Mrs. Lulu Waslee, aged 45, of Philadel- phia was found dead after a seven year's debauch. Investigation into the woman's history revealed a sordid tale of degradation. Twenty years ago . | the woman had been a Germantown belle. She was twice married and twice divorced. Just a moment after Mrs, J. H. Cummings. with a baby in her arms, had passed an outside . | door at her home in Punxsutawney, abullet came through the door and crossed to the opposite wall. The shot is supposed to have been a stray, but had the woman passed the door a moment later the effect would not have been less disas- trous —Having procured a bottle of bed bug poison and drinking a portion of the same Friday even- ing, while his mother went to answer an agent's knock at the door, little William Hudson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hudson, of DuBois, died Saturday morning, the efforts of the physicians, who were immediately called to save the child's life, proving futile. —The Ebensburg Coal company has obtained options on about 3,000 acres of coal lands lying north of Ebensburg and it is expected a deal will be closed for their purchase before the options expire December 15. The tract in question ad- joins other holdings of the company and is being surveyed. The option price is said to be in the neighborhood of $85 an acre. —Charles Shunkwiler, a well known citizen of «-Lock Haven is excited over the fact that a hair snipper is at work in the town. Within past few weeks four young girls discovered their return home from one or another of play houses of the city that they had been of their plaits or curls. The thief seems managed to get behind the girls and carefully snip their tresses without attracting attention, so that the loss would not be discovered until they reached home. —When she saw a little girl playing on the rail road tracks close to her home near Sunbury Wednesday, Miss Marie Everett seized a :loth off the dinner table, and running out to the tracks, frantically waved a signal to the engineer. The engineer applied the brakes and reversed his comotive, It came to a standstill with the its lease the company paid him $3,000 and will get a deed for the siding ground. Heck said that he got paid at the rate of $25.000 per acre for his —A new railroad, 26 miles in length, from Marklesburg to Paradise Furnace, in Huntingdon county, will soon be in operation. It will extend ard guage. It will be known as the Pennsylvania in the new company, which is financed largely by Lock Haven and Williamsport men.