BY P. GRAY MEEK. — ———————————— i — INK SLINGS. —And Philadelphia voted to retain the piggeries. —Corn husking had more attraction for many a farmer on Tuesday, than the polling places. --Even on a light vote Centre county registered a very decisive verdict against the good roads bond issue. —One lighted gas jet consumes as much air as four adults, then why sleep in a closed room with a light burning. —Former Judge Francis O'CONNOR, has been elected to the new additional law judgship in Cambria county by 236. —Cheer up State! If Bucknell can beat Pitt surely you ought to be able to find yourself by Turkey day and do the same thing. —The frequent complaints against the income tax simply show how the rich squeal when compelled to pay their share of the expenses. —Huntingdon county has elected two “dry” associate judges, which means that | the licenses recently granted over there | will not be renewed. —Johnstown is in the clutches of Evan- gelist BiLLy SUNDAY and Congressman WARREN WORTH BAILEY is in his cyclone cellar in Washington. ——The pig appears to have been the main political issue in Philadelphia this year. Heretofore the hogs have had their own way most of the time. —SINGLETON BELL Esq. defeated sit- ting judge ALLisoN O. SmiTH tor Presi. dent judge of Clearfield county by a ma- jority that will reach nearly two thous- and. —The election of DAvip I. WALSH, Democrat, to be Governor of Massachu- setts, looks as though the old Bay State is perfectly satisfied with President WiL- SON. —Tuesday was election and if you were a candidate and didn't get elected you have the satisfaction of knowing that the best men are not always chosen. That's some comfort, anyway. ——Those ruffianly British Suffragettes are achieving something at least. They are postponing indefinitely, and possibly forever, the extension of the suffrage to the women of the United States. —It is altogether probable that if PEN- ROSE hadn't come out for the good roads bond issue it would have carried. And, at that, we believe he only espoused it thinking it was destined to be a popular ——Mr. GABREl d'ANNUNZIO declares that he will commit suicide in two years “in a mysterious way that will startle the world.” All right GABE, but what's the use in waiting, two years. We need a little excitement of that sort now. ~Mr. GEORGE W. PERKINS never needed THEODORE ROOSEVELT as badly as Le needs him now. The suit against the Harvester trust has begun and the President will not instruct the Attorney General to delay proceedings “until you hear from me.” —Meantime those who are reading Mr. SuLzer's accusations against his former friends and associates should re- member that a man who has been con- victed of perjury is not a dependable witness and upon that point the Court of Impeachment was unanimous. ——Mr. JAMES J. HILL is confirmed in the belief that the fiscal affairs of this government will continue to run at high speed in the direction of the “deminition bowwows,” until the peopie compel him to take charge of them. Most every- body else thinks different, however. —President WILSON was not forgotten in New Jersey. The voters of that State | have too much reason to be thankful for the reforms he inaugurated there when he was Governor to stop their progress now. Accordingly they elected JAMES F. F1eDLER, Democrat, Governor because the President had put his seal of approval on his candidacy. ——On the second page of today's paper will be found an original story en- titled “The Man on the Train,” by Miss Martha Alricks Johnson, of Bellefonte: It is an interesting little story with a well defined plot and we feel sure that read- ers of the WATCHMAN will appreciate it. Miss Johnson has had published several interesting books and has contributed stories and articles to a number of publi. cations and her writings are always fluent and attractive enough to hold the atten- tion of the reader from start to finish. —The election of JOHN PURROY MITCH- ELL to be Mayor of New York is a great victory for clean government in America’s metropolis. The startling revelations of police criminality that were made in the BECKER trial and have become the more convincing through later investigations, the impeachment of Governor SULZER and its consequent expose of political rottenness on all sides, aroused the pub- lic conscience of New York to the point where it struck hard and positively for the reclaiming of the city from Tammany. It was not a party issue, for Mr. MITCH- ELL is a Democrat. It was a municipal house cleaning and the last office seems VOL. 58. Tuesday's Elections. The elections passed off quietly in Pennsyivania on Tuesday, though there was considerable excitement in the cities of Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and Scranton over local tickets. Fusion again failed to make good in its fight against PEN- ROSE and that city voted for the Machine candidates for all offices. In Pittsburgh the contest was on Mayor; ARMSTRONG representing the PENROSE—OLIVER fac- tion was victorious over PORTER repre- senting FLINN and the Washington party adherents. The one regrettable outcome of the voting is the apparent defeat of Hon. WEBSTER GRIM for Superior Court Judge, by Joun W. KEPHART, of Cambria coun- ty. The former was well and honorably known in legal circles throughout the State, prominent as a Senator of Penn- sylvania and splendidly equipped to add ability to a bench that does not have a surfeit of it now. Mr. KEPHART, com- paratively speaking, was unknown and kept himself before the public through newspaper advertising. He should not and would not have defeated Mr. GRIM had the Democratic State Central com- mittee made even an effort for the only Democrat on the ticket. While the ju. diciary is now supposed to be non-par- tisan that did not deter Repuplican pa- pers from exploiting HENDERSON, ALCORN and KEPHART their nominees. Therefor we think it was quite within the prov- ince of our organization to at least have advised the Democratic papers of the State and the local organizations, where there are any, of the special fitness of Mr. GRIM. His defeat is regrettable because it will have the tendency to make some Democrats inquire as to whether others are not persecuting them. For example, how could Mr. KEPHART have secured five hundred votes more than WEBSTER GRIM in Centre county unless many Democrats voted for him. And why did many Democrats vote for Mr. KEPHART, a Republican, in preference to Mr. GRIM, | a Democrat, especially when the latter's superior equipment for the place was ad- mitted. It is also an incident worth notice that Centre county is about the only Democratic county in the State where some of the members of our party have elected to keep the fight of . but they cost from ten to twenty million ' sionally they are useful as admonitory ' of the parties to the agreement and the | not expressed in eulogies of the Ameri- | or poking the Russian bear with a sharp , stick. Relieving the people of burdens ‘ are building battleships and other war STATE RIGHTS The administration at Washington re- | veals both wisdom and patriotism in | prowsptiy sespouding to the suggestion of | WinsTON CHURCHILL, First Lord of the British Admiralty, that ali the great gov- | ernments of the world take “a naval hol- | iday,” for a couple of years. By that! term Mr. CHURCHILL means that the sev- | eral countries which have been running | cent issue of the Century Magazine, that like mad men into the expense of build- | he is “sundered from the men who now | county court. ing battleships cease Sh Speraticns for | control and manage the Republican party | a time. He probably Germany in | by the gulf of their actual practices and | : : i to cease tting mind for the reason that the average of the openly avowed or secretly held of streams by Jermitting the vol AND FEDERAL UNIO BELLEFONTE, PA.. NOVEMBER 7, 1913. N. Roosevelt Assuring Us Again. If Col. ROOSEVELT’S assurances assured anything the country could rest easy about being annoyed with his candidacy as a Republican, for President again in 1916. Even from away down in South | j America, where he has gone, to keep | port. himself before the public, he sends back the word almost as he wrote it for a re- “=O ® NO. This course was taken after first noti- fying every manufacturer that stream ution their Englishman believes that the Kaiser's principles which rendered it necessary to A works, and then, after a lapse of some government is determined, sooner or lat- | er, to make war on Great Britain and | that for every warship built by Germany, England must build two. But the prin- ciple expressed in the suggestion is ap- plicable to this country quite as directly as to any other. The matter directly af- fects all countries. Battleships are beautiful National toys dollars a piece for construction and equipment and a vast sum annually for maintenance. They last only from ten to a dozen years and contribute nothing toward the public welfare during the in- terval. In the event of war it must be admitted, they are essential, and occa- signals to weak powers that it is unsafe to “monkey with a buzz saw.” For ex- ample it may be said that fear of the British navy has restrained Germany more than once in the past. But if all the leading governments would take the proposed holiday now the present ratio of naval st ‘ength would continue during the period, no harm could result to either saving in expense would be beneficial to all the people. The highest standard ~f patriotism is can eagle, twisting the British lion’s tail is a much more practical service. The proposed naval holiday will make for that result in the most direct way. We vessels at a cost of forty or fifty millions a year which amounts to a tax of eight to ten dollars annually upon the average American family. Tax is as certain a resort to these practices.” That is definite and emphatic. Even if the friends of the Colonel should force his nomination in the next National conven- tion as they came very near doing in the last, he couldn't accept. It would work a stultification and the Colonel could not stand for that. There could be no “so- cial and industrial justice” in such a turn of affairs. Colonel ROOSEVELT is equally clear in defining his reasons for his “sundering” operation. He is opposed to allowing the Supreme and inferior courts to interpret the constitution, which he frankly and unselfishly admits is the “fundamental : law of the land.” There was no real reason for this concession to the constitu- tion. The Colonel might easily have claimed that his own caprices are the fundamental law and BiLL FLINN would never have known the difference while Mr. Perkins would have had no ojections ' The election, therefore, ' time, establishing by investigation that { hardly any of them had done anything at all in the matter. This left only the on between permiting the low to and en . | go nst each offender. campaign is waged against one | water-shed at a time, and as the cutions are criminal, they are held i until positive evidence is secured i each offender. But the course en in- ' dicates that worse offenders than ' on the upper uehanna will 1 2% She upper Susquchan when | Fisheries Department comes to deal with | the big cities of the State, the | what it will do with them all puzzling, solely by reason of its size. m— : candidate has a majority of the votes. becomes null and void, and . This certainly fairs of which the United States must so long as the Harvester trust was taken 1S uly as Sopmizae | Hiena 38 care of properly. Even Mr. Munsey | !D power * might have been depended upon to “go | Sod man: Hie has made. Republicantm along” in view of ROOSEVELT’S past serv- in North America a word of shame. He ice for the Steel trust. | has humiliated citizen who believes But we are not able to discern with | i the Republican edd and the Regus: any degree of clearness the line of dis- | no peace with him. No Thes e NaC tinction between the “actual practices | be given him. Yet he is in power and is and the openly avowed or secretly held to be reckoned with. principles which rendered it necessary ' It is possible that the continued suc- for them (the men who now control and DUah0t evo Kiotlists wii slvethe Huefta manage the Republican party), and those at Washington of its present em which obtained when Colonel ROOSEVELT SiON, el inter vsReion by the - n S$ + exercised those functions. The managers | | tee. OER oo He He a who controlled the convention of 1912 resorted to except in the direst necessity. ere rank amateurs compared with those | — managed the convention of 1908 when ROOSEVELT was fixing matters for his renomination and election four years The Great American Hen. From the Chicago Inter-Ocean. : defeated. But four counties in the State charge upon the family purse as bread though not as necessary an expense and every battleship built adds to the high cost of living. In responding favorably to Mr. CHURCHILL'S proposition, there- ‘fore, the administration of President WILSON is promoting the public interests by trying to economize in the cost of government. Mr. Bailey and William McNair. two years ago going at whatever cost. In New York the returns indicate a partial victory for the Republicans, but this was accomplished more through a general fight against Tammany control than because of inherent strength in the opposition. The Democrats won notable | victories in Massachusetts, New Jersey and Maryland and really more than held their own in every place but Pennsylva- nia. Certain it is that the results do We are not surprised at the rumor not present a hopeful outlock for the im- ot. CO thot are-10.COme that our esteemed contemporary, Hon. year | WARREN WORTH BAILEY, editor of the While exact figures on the good roads lohstown Stinords, Sogaiie a Rew bond issue cannot be obtained at this ve Ly Mr. WitLians McNAIR, of Pitts- writing it is reasonably certain that it is Burgh; is olla tg: withclting nthe enterprise. Mr. BAILEY, like the prover- bial Irishman, is aiways “ag’in’ the gov- ernment.” Mr. MCNAIR is a constitu- onal and somewhat perennial malcon- recorded majorities in favor of the proposition and the negative majorities of the country counties was sufficient to overwhelm the favorable vote given it in | Phil a | tent. Until recently both of them pre- HLA | tended to be Democrats and probably be- — Hallowe'en was quite generally ob. | lieved that they adhered to that political served by the young people of Bellefonte | faith: But they were always against the in social festivities and promenading in | Organization which kept the Democratic costume. Probably a larger number of | PArty in existence during the period of promenaders were out last Friday night | its adversity and invariably made all the than in any former year. There was | trouble possible. but the crowd in the main was orderly, convention as claimant for a seat in that . . ency and before him little hope, necessa- ——Robert A. Love, of Tyrone, has|rily. But he made himself a laughing been awarded the John W. White schol- | stock by his absurd antics. After the arship at The Pennsylvania State Col- | convention he entered with more zeal lege on account of general excellence | than intelligence into the movement to during the Freshman year. The schol- | reorganize the party. Mr. BAILEY, who arship is worth $100. Love won the is a phrase maker of much skill, joinec McAllister scholarship last year for lead- | the movement with great enthusiasm. ership of his class at the end of the first Both imagined that it would open the semester. | way for them to advance as leaders. In Some ‘person or persons either | the beginning their expecta tions were carelessly or maliciously started a forest | fulfilled. Mr. GUTHRIE “adopted” Mc- fire on the point of the mountain above | NAIR and Mr. PALMER “accepted” Mr. burned fiercely during the afternoon and | Pave been expected. For a time they evening but the heavy frost of Sunday gamboled like lambs in pasture. . But even GUTHRIE and PALMER wea- night acted as a good extinguisher and » put out the blaze. | ried of their “wards” before long, and emeeeeme— | BAILEY and MCNAIR were soon relegated ——The first snow of the season fell | into the background of the new political last Friday, though it consisted only of arena. Both were thrown out of the snow flurries. In the mountains, how- | Executive committee of the rump organ- ever, enough snow fell to make the ization and naturally both turned their at- ground white, but it did not lay any | tention to the task of organizing a new length of time. Deer hunters would no party. It is to be called a “Single Tax” doubt be glad to have a tracking snow | contraption and will hold a convention in for next Monday. | Philadelphia in advance of the next nom- = | ination for Governor. At this conven- ——A trout about twenty-five inches | in length spawning on the gravel beds in | tion BAILEY itp Be nomingtid for Sov. Spring creek opposite the WATCHMAN | ro dunocsal fossa office, proved quite an attraction several Sikiehidjee ice i Pula a to have been swept clean of Tammany control; days the past week. The trout was al- some way. He is never out of anything most as big as a Susquehanna shad. supported by BAILEY and MCNAIR. later. Probably it was their inefficiency that turned ROOSEVELT against them. In any event there is no moral difference worth speaking about. But in any event the country will be happy to feel assured that this pestiferous blatherskite feels that he cannot even force his own nomi- nation, as a candidate, on the party be- tween himself and which such a terrible gulf now exists. No European Interference. We are not inclined to place much faith in the report, widely published the | other day, that the administration is striving to induce the powers “to indicate their support of its efforts to solve the problem, so that it may approach the Mexico city administration in a final ef- fort to secure the elimination of HUERTA.” The administration may have suggested | to the powers to remain outside of the contention, but in the face of tradition it would hardly go further than that. The interference by European governments with affairs on this hemisphere is equally repugnant to established policies of the United States whether in favor of or against the course our government is pur- suing. HUERTA is impossible in Mexico. Hav- ing acquired the office he holds under circumstances which involve suspicions of murder and clearly imply usurpation, the government of the United States can- not afford to recognize his authority or piece co-operate in his efforts to make his ten- ure permanent or his title regular. But neither can it afford to invite European governments to interfere in the determi- nation of questions in dispute. If Great Britain, France or Japan has a right to interfere on behalf of one side they have a right to interfere in behalf of the other side, Just rules run in both directions and such interference on either side is intolerable in view of our traditions. The government of the United States is morally responsible, in the eyes of civilization, for the maintenance of just government in Mexico. Just government there, as we understand it, is a govern- ment chosen by the people in the enjoy- ment of the free exercise of their rights as citizens. HUERTA was not so chosen to the office he now occupies and would not be chosen under the circumstances indicated. That being true he must abdi- cate, allow the people to elect his suc- cessor and permit the inauguration of the new administration thus chosen. But we don’t need either the help or consent of Europe or Asia to accomplish these results. We are fully able to do that for ourselves. ——Have your Job Work done here. The American hen has always been a t pv Nevertheless, she is growing iy wenty years ago requi assistance from the hens of the world in order to meet the American demand for her products. Today she not only sup- i »s almost the entire American market, ut is a big factor in supplying the world. Figures just published the ment of commerce show that during the fiscal year 1913 the United States ex- ported over 21,000,000 dozen of eggs, | against 1,500,000 dozen 10 years ago and 1 143,000 dozen 20 years ago. The 1913 | exports included 20,409,653, and of $67, '854 worth of yolks and canned eggs, making a total of over a quarter of a : billion eggs during the year. | The great American hen still receives a little assistance from the outside, but comparatively little. We imported dur- ing the fiscal year 1913, whole eggs, 1,271,- 765 dozen; yolks, 227,457 pounds, and dried eggs 20,284 pounds. imports of 1892 were 4,000,000 dozen eggs. Tantalizing the Editor. From the Oswego (Kan.) Independent. gS aboay y in town with a Jlsivie m to plutocracy n ng bacon, the 40-cent cut particularly thin, every morning for breakfast, and when the savor is wafted out to mingle with the crisp air of these autumn morns and it floats in upon the dev- otee of the print shop as he extracts the lacteal fnid m the cow with eh Borns missing, hunger ngs eternal n the human stomach, and as we sit down voting almost his entire time to it. Bill is Doing Nobly. From the New York Telegram. from a famine of capitai I's since Mr. Sulzer commenced talking. From the Memphis Commercial-Appeal. Sulzer says he “refused money? How, when and where? By the beard of the Sronhet. here is a tale that needs un- wil 1 | ee SUDSCIIOE TOI LIE WALLHMAN SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —“Fritz" Harmon, of South Williamsport, started out a few days ago to hunt squirrels and came home with a 150 pound bear that had wan- dered into his way. —Chief of Police Powers, of Lock Haven, was handed $25 a few days ago for the capture of a young man and a team of horses stolen from a Williamsport liveryman. —W. R. Sawyer, of Indiana, drilling a coal core near Barnesboro recently, was shot in the shoul- derby a man living nearby, who said he was shooting at mark. He was taken to Spangler. ~A man thought to be Barney Roc, aged 50, of Blossburg, was knocked from a forty-foot trestle on the Indiana-Blairsville trolley line a few nights ago by a passing trolley car and landed on the ground with a broken neck. —Constable Bruce Keefer, of Ralphton, shot and slightly wounded two men who interfered with his making an arrest to such a degree that he was compelled to defend himself. The wound- ed men were given attention and locked up. ~Williamsport’s Civic club sees a necessity for two women cn the city board of health and a policewoman on the street and at headquarters. The proposals will be acted on by the executive bossa before being sent out as recommenda- t —A large vat at the Newport tannery, which had been installed only a few days, burst recent- ly and the place was flooded with tanning liquid, Wesley Miller, who was near, had a set of false Rell VIReR i His touth ag was otherwise in- ured. ~In the habit of taking laudanum to induce sleep, Mrs. Emma Stivers, aged 27, of Greens- burg, picked up a carbolic acid bottle that was standing near the laudanum and took the wrong dose. She was sleeping her last sleep in a few hours. —~Almost every manufacturer along the Sus- quehanna above Williamsport has been arrested for stream pollution and will be given a hearing shortly. The state commission of fisheries had given warning to all and his warning has not been heeded. —The third robbery at Rossiter within a week was at the McClaren drug store, where cash and merchandise to the amount of $100 were taken. The town is without police protection and a move to prevent a repetition of such occurrences is under way. —While a Hallowe'en parade was in progress at Northumberland, a trained cow on which a boy was riding became frightened and plunged into a crowd of about 400 school children. One little girl is in a critical condition and others were badly hurt. =Two holdups are reported from Benscreek in one night. One man was tackled by four high- waymen, who had a lantern and a broken whisky bottle as weapons. He needed a doctor when they were through with him. Another man had all his money taken. ~The prompt action of Motorman Hanna, on the Lock Haven-Mill Hall trolley line saved the life of 8-year-old Florence Kramer, who tried to cross the track ahead of the car at Flemington. A number of Flemington children attend the kinderga ten at the normal and the near fatality points the advice that parents see the children safely on the cars. —Mrs. Sadie Keller, widow of David Keller, a former Sunbury hotel man, dropped dead in the Sunbury market Saturday morning. She had just bought two dozen eggs from a dealer, pay- ing forty cents a dozen. ‘That's the highest price I ever paid for ezgs,” she remarked as she handed over the money. An instant later she dropped lifeless in front of the stand. She was fifty-five years of age. —Lost in a coal mine without a light was thrilling experience of four Derry days ago. They had a lamp when but the oil gave out and they were dark without knowing the way out. matches and had burned their handkerchiefs as torches and were about to start on a shirt when one of them noticed a gleam of light and they were soon in daylight again. —Mrs. Max [ Cohn, aged 70 years and blind, was seriously burned a few days ago at her home at Punxsutawney. Her husband was out and it is thought she went to the gas range for hot water and came in contact with the blaze. Her daughter, next door, came in answer to her screams and the flames were extinguished, but her recovery is doubtful. The daughter is also in serious condition from fright and burns on her —Newberry is in the throes of an epidemic of diphtheria, and residents of that place are great- ly alarmed over the situation. There are now at least 20 cases reported. The board of health will hoid an important meeting Saturday afternoon at 4 o'clock at the city hall at which time the diphtheria question will be discussed. The num- ber of contagious diseases is reported to be re- markably large for this time of the year. New- berry is the storm center for diphtheria and everv possible effort is being made to confine the cases to that section of the city. t —It was said that Senator Templeton, of Blair, who is now serving a term in the Western peni- tentiary for embezzling, as attorney, trust and other funds committed to his care, will apply for a pardon in the near future, with a view of re- moving from the State to begin life over. Since his incarceration Templeton has lost all of this world’s goods and his home has been broken up by the death of his wife. If pardoned he will not be under parole and can leave the State, and he would like to have another chance which would be difficult to secure were he under parole. if tine against dogs on account of ig Mrs. C. K. Sober, of Lewisburg, was with Mrs. Vought but escaped injury.