—— BY P. GRAY MEEK. EET) INK SLINGS. —There is nothing like self-control. It’s the greatest trouble saver we know of. —Italy ard Turkey have about come to the conclusion that they must stick a finger in the die. —The Granger's picnic next. Here's hoping they will have as fine weather as we had for the fair. —Both the Emperor and the Czar of Russia are following the advice of HOR- ' ACE GREELY to go west. —Tax paying time is almost here and that reminds us that taxes will have to be paid if we expect to vote. —If sugar goes as high as experts pre- dict Santa Claus will have to popularize sour-balls by Christmas time. —If the war keeps up much longer poor old St. PETER will probably be kick- ing for an eight hour “trick” on his job. —The Dutch want to dine in Paris and the Russians want to sup in Berlin and they are trying to beat each other to it. __Judged by the illuminating quality of the lights in it Bellefonte might be re- garded as having gone back to the tal- tow-dip era. —There seems to be nothing else to it than PATTERSON in this Senatorial dis- trict. That he is the best man for the office is the general opinion. —The downfall of COLE BLEASE, in South Carolina, has somewhat retrieved the good sense of the people of that State. He was a dangerous man, very dangerous to society. —The boy or girl who always knows that their parents don’t know what they are talking about are glad enough, some day, to have the old folks extricate them from some fool scrape. —The great American colleges having ordered their foct-ball armies to mobilize we may expect to see general skirmish- ing until November when the real big ‘engagements will take place. —More sugar was exported from this country last month than during the en- ‘tire year of 1913. Because Europe is ready to pay fancy prices for the neces, ‘sity we'll have to do the same thing un. less Uncle SAM can stop the exportation. —Anyway there is one candidate the war hasn’t eclipsed. DAVID MILLER, of Ferguson township, our candidate for Assembly, is on the move all the time and the further he goes the more general be- comes the opinion that he is just the man Centre county should send to Har- risburg. = "Forts don’t seem to have counted for much in the present war. The French frontier forts failed to stop the German invasion and the German fron- tier forts have ‘failed to stop the Russian invasion. Forts would be all right were opposing armies to linger long within the range of their guns but when the enemy has slipped by them they are not only useless but a hindrance to the defence of the country that relies 6n them. —Did you ever stop to think that, after all, the single necessary thing to our ex- istence, outside of the air we breathe, the sun that warms us and the water we drink, is labor. The last farthing of capital could be wiped out, all values, other than those in the earth we live upon, could be destroyed, and we could live and start anew. Wipe out labor, however, and there would be nothing. Labor is the embryo from which springs every phase of our existence. —Brother CORRELL, of the Easton Sen- tinel, is protesting against spending State money on such publications as the 152 page book recently issued by Dr. H. A. SURFACE, State Economic Zoologist, on the “Economic Features of the Amphibi- ans of Pennsylvania.” Brother CORRELL, being somewhat of an iconoclast, and more of a pessimist, doesn’t see much good in anything and has evidently for- gotten the debt we Pennsylvanians owe Dr. SURFACE for having told us that the cabbage worm is good to eat. —Suppose those who were jeering had goaded Mr. BONNEY, the aviator, into at- tempting a flight -on Wednesday in his machine when it was out of “tune.” And suppose he had fallen and been dashed to death for their entertainment. Do you suppose they would have® been sorry for the unfortunate victim of their jeers or sorry that they had jeered at all. Every instant an aviator is in the air his life is hanging on the exact balance of the working of his machine and he, and not the fellow who sneers in Esafety, should be the judge as to whether the machine is going to carry him success- fully or to his death. —Just now when you are feeling so secure and proud because you have a man in the White House who does not keep you on tenter-hooks about your own country’s becoming involved in the awful foreign war you should resolve to back up that quiet, conscientious, dispas- sionate President who is guiding your good old ship of State so true. The only way you can express your gratification to him is by putting Democrats in Con- gress. Men who will support him and his policies. Not those who will oppose. Therefor we ask you to vote for W. E. TosiAs. He will be with President WiL- SON. Mr. ROWLAND will be against him if he is chosen. : STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 59. Choose the Lesser Evil. “That government is best which gov- SON's political proverbs. Opposition to paternalism has always been a funda- mental principle of our political philoso- phy. Therefore when it was announc- ed, a few days ago, that Congress con. templated the appropriation of funds to purchase ships with the view of engag- ing in international transportation, we were concerned. Such a step would be subversive of the doctrine of the Demo- cratic party which holds that the govern- ment should not go into competition with citizens in any enterprise. There are services, the postal service for exam- ple, in which this policy may be renounc- ed safely and properly. It is too big for individual efficiency. A cursory view of the subject would lead one to believe that the proposition to buy ships for the purpose stated would be obnoxious to both the princi- ples and traditions of the party. But ob- viously the President and the leaders in Congress had inside information on the subject. Necessary service must be per- formed by public or private medium. The transportation of our products to the markets is a necessary service. The facilities which have hitherto performed the work are no longer available. Con- gress enacted legistation which invited private enterprise to the work. But pri- vate enterprise declined to perform its duty. The ship owners and ship build- ers want something more than a fair field and opportunity. In other words the ship builders and ship owners want a ship subsidy. That is the form of graft they have coveted for years and out of the confusion and necessity now before us they hope to ex- act it. In this they ought to be disap- pointed. Tke proposition for the govern- ment to own and operate ships is repul- sive and hazardous. In the event that one of the ships were attacked it would be hard to keep out of the war. pulsive and hazardous as it is the own- ership and operation of ships by the gov- ernment is preferable to subsidizing ship owners and ship builders. Under exist- less than organizing a conspiracy to loot the treasury. lesser. ——The chances are that Justice Mc- REYNOLDS will point with pride to the fact that Senator against his confirmation. times loved “for the enemies they have made.” | Too Much Paternalism. There is entirely too much inclination to rely upon the government for success in individual: enterprise. = Whatever in- dustry men are engaged in they appear to expect the government to intervene in their behalf, in some way. Wealthy Americans traveling in Europe look to the government for relief as confidently as if it were a legal obligation. Ship owners want help and cotton growers imagine that the government ought to provide for them in case the market for their products is temporarily inaccessible. Expert commissions, at government ex- pense, have come to be the first thought broad land the moment perplexities are encountered. : : Of course this is the logical fruit of the long continued paternalism expressed in the tariff. Tariff pensioners have come to think that the government owes them a living and that a Congress which fails to guarantee them ‘reasonable profits” from their undertakings, is delinquent in its obligations. Naturally others fall into the same habits of thought and govern- ment activities spread in all directions and multiply like locusts of Egypt. The result is a deterioration in individual en- deavor, a disposition to “let others do the work.” But there are no others to keep the machinery in motion. “tired feeling” becomes an epidemic of the most dangerous type. We point with pride to the records in achievement of individual Americans of a hundred years ago. They were taught to rely upon themselves and create what they needed. Civilian pensions were never dreamed of and though resources were less abundant and opportunities less common, there was proportionately less crime, less suffering and less poverty. A crop failure never suggested a govern- ment bounty in those days and a public calamity only stimulated individuals to greater exertion. The world is growing better, no doubt, as we are so frequently assured, but it is not because the average man is fulfilling his obligations to the community in fuller measure. ——There is more or less inspiration to hope in the fact that the head of the English War. Department is an Irishman, Lord KITCHENER. i i i The European war has already exploded erns least” was one of THOMAS JEFFER- tWO popular and expensive fictions. The But re- | ing circumstances that would be little Of the two evils take the | VARDAMAN voted | Men are some- | of every man, woman and child in this The : | Popular Fictions Exploded. first is that a big army serves as a guar- antee of peace. Germany, Austria, Rus- sia and France have been maintaining big armies for a number of years and they are all involved in the war. The second is that a big navy is certain se- curity of the merchant marine. Germa- ny had built up a navy second in strength and efficiency to only one in the world but the end of the second week of the war found her superb merchant marine completely driven off the seas and into the shelter of neutral ports wherever such asylums could be found. Both of the claims, almost universally accepted, are Big armies and big navies accomplish but one certain result. They keep the’ people so poor as to make them helpless - in an emergency which requires inde- pendence of thought and action. A hun- : BELLEFONTE, PA.. SEPTEMBER 4, 1914. Passing of Roosevelt. THEODORE ROOSEVELT appears to be in the “sear and yellow leaf” period of his political life. The recent disorders in Mexico kept him out of the lime light for a time and since the European war “has held him off the first pages. To a man of his superabundant vanity this forced eclipse: must have been almost unendurable. But it is not the only, or for that matter, the principal sign that he is on the toboggan. - There are more practical as well as more convincing evi- : dences of his passing. Even in his own party he is no longer the master. His voice is not the only sound which can be heard in the Bull Moose corral. ‘ his influence is not absolute. consigned to the junk heap. | Some time ago under the mistaken hope of cinching the Republican nomina- tion for President in 1916 he announced his preference for Senator HINMAN, a Republican, as the Progressive nominee ‘for Governor of New York. He naturally gry man is without the spirit to resist : expected that his preference would con- even the most flagrant wrongs. mies and big navies keep men hungry | and in the proportion that they suffer from privation they submit to outrages upon their rights and liberties. This is the reason why predatory corporations are always urgent for big armies and big navies. They understand that poverty. helps to make men in their employ do- | cile under conditions which might other- wise find them rebellious. Profligate government is an essential element in increasing the cost of living. For years there has been in active op- eration in this country a propaganda striving for a big army and a big navy. It has been financed, mainly, by the man- ufacturers of arms, ammunition and ord- nance at home and abroad. Its princi- pal protagonists are the plutocrats who oppress labor and the army and navy of- ficers who hope for promotions. But the burden is upon the men and women who earn wages by physical or mental labor. They pay directly or indirectly the taxes which meet the bills of expense as they come due. But the experience of the ' past few weeks has burst the bubble. “No intelligent mind can longer be de- ceived bythe absurd fiction that “big ar-" mies and navies are desirable except in war. , [| ——Wheat has advanced at least fif- teen per cent. in the local markets and ' there is hardly any question but that the ‘war in Europe will keep the price up ' during the next year or so, higher than it has been for some time. This will be occasioned by the fact that so few able- bodied men in the war-ridden countries will have a chance to put out the crops. For this reason wheat growers in the United States should sow more wheat ' this year than usual in order to be able to supply Europe's deficiency, and this likewise. Palmer Accuses Penrose. The Hon. A. MITCHELL PALMER made a statement before the Senate committee on privileges and elections, in Washing- ton, the other day which ought to pro- duce some important reforms in political campaigning. He accused the support- ! ers of Senator PENROSE and that Senator ' of violating the corrupt practices law of ' Pennsylvania and the publicity act of Congress, and asked for such amend- ments to the act of Congress as will pre- vent a recurrence of the offence. The gist of Mr. PALMER'S accusation is that friends of Mr. PENROSE organized, con- tributed money and in other ways work- ed for his nomination as the Republican candidate for Senator and failed to file a statement as the law requires. If Senator PENROSE failed to reveal the amounts and disposition of his campaign fund as the law requires, he ought to be condemned. During the recent primary campaign it was publicly charged that Mr. PALMER had done something of this kind and a good many voters were alien- ated by the charge. He didn’t disprove it at the time and when judicial proceed- ings were inaugurated to discover the truth, he resisted them by every legal expedient. But Mr. PENROSE is not justified in violating the law simply be- cause some one else did so. In this great country equality is the rule and every man is obliged to stand upon his own feet and be responsible for his own acts, public and private. Mr. PENROSE has denied personal re- sponsibility for what individuals or an organization has done in his behalf and declared that his primary campaign ex- | penditures were accurately expressed in the statements he filed at Washington. Possibly he may be misrepresenting the | facts and in that event there is neither | injustice nor impropriety in calling him to account. The beneficiaries of tariff | legislation may have been free with i funds in his primary campaign and if that is true they ought to be rebuked for : wasting money. Big ar- | trol the nomination of HINMAN by both the Republican and Progressive parties and with a devoted friend in authority at Albany, he figured that both parties would be for him on the momentous oc- casion. But the Progressives rebelled and sent a delegation to protest. At the Oyster ‘Bay conference which followed he stuffed himself full of humble pie and loudly declared that he would support ‘nobody except a Progressive. Then SuLzER who misappropriated campaign funds two years ago and was impeached for that “high crime and mis- demeanor,” appealed to him and TEDDY fell upon his neck. There is ‘a natural affinity between these two bogus reform- ers and a fellow feeling, and ROOSEVELT adopted SULZER as his candidate for the Bull Moose nomination for Governor. But the rank and file as well as the leaders of the party refused to acquiesce and at a conference since held SULZER only re- ceived six votes of those present out of a total of one hundred and ninety-seven. In other words ROOSEVELT is no longer a potent force in the Bull Moose party and may be dismissed as “down and out.” #5. The Pennsylvania Department. of Fisheries will begin the shipment of fish for stocking streams on September 15th. The fish are all one year old and some older and are in fine condition. Several hundred thousand small trout are at the Bellefonte hatchery ready for distribution, | but they will be sent out only on properly signéd requisitions. Application should be made to the Department of Fisheries, Harrisburg, Pa. ——Of course everybody is glad that COLE BLEASE wasn’t nominated by the Democrats of South Carolina for Senator in Congress, but there is no certainty | that the defeat will end him. These re- is a tip to Centre county farmers to do | form cranks always reserve the right to bolt the ticket and COLE BLEASE is one of the type now somewhat conspicuous in Pennsylvania. ——It may have been simply a coinci- dence but it is nevertheless a fact that the day after some more or less needy American tourists appealed to Secretary BRYAN’s married daughter in London the Secretary issued an official warning to all American tourists abroad to come home. ——The ‘German army may occupy Paris and thus gratify an absurd ambi- tion which has been carefully nursed for | a quarter of a century. But it isn’t easy to figure out any advantage that the capture of Paris would give the Kaiser if Berlin were lost about the same time. —It is all right to appeal to God when you are going out red-handed to murder in job lots but it is the god of battles who listens to such appeals. The God of Peace Who is the only God that counts, has neither ear nor heart for that sort of business. ——President WILSON has richly earn- ed the brief vacation he is now enjoying at the summer capitol in New Hamp- shire and every right-minded citizen of this broad land will hope that he may have both pleasure and profit from it. ——We still believe that a luxury that costs fifty millions of dollars a day will not long endure, notwithstanding the ad- age that fools and their money are soon parted. : ——And the worst of it is THEODORE ROOSEVELT will be a nightmare to future generations, rather than a memory. ——Wonder if ROOSEVELT will recog- nize an admonition in the defeat of COLE BLEASE. ——One more day of the big Centre county fair, and the best races of the week will take place this afternoon. Don't fail to see them. A —————— ——Have your Job Work done here In fact. mm— NO. 35. | Vindication for the President. | From the Philadelphia Record. | Now that practically all Europe has | been plunged into war over a pretext ' that must be considered trifling—indeed | absolutely contemptible in view of the i untold human misery involved—it is to be hoped that fair-minded Americans : will begin to estimate more at their true ‘value the wisdom and ‘justice of that proved so successful in President Wil- _son’s handling of the Mexican question. + The United States had far more pro- | vocation for intervention in Mexico than i Austria-Hungary had for its truculent attitude toward Servia. Huerta proved himself a peculiarly exasperating person, with much more ability and a greater command of resources than were at first credited to him, and there canbe no doubt that a war of invasion, and possi- bly even of permanent occupaticn, would have proved popular with a large part of the American public. After the landing at Vera Cruz nothing would have been easier than to find a pretext for such a warlike policy. It is infinitely to the credit of President Wilson and his advisers that notwith- standing the sneers and jeers of the empty-headed, the malevolent and the : selfish interests that desired to exploit Mexico for the benefit of their own pockets, he refused to take advantage of the weakness of a sister republic, but ad- hered firmly to a line of action that was high-minded and patriotic. ~Contrasted with the bullying arrogance of Austria- Hungary, which has set all Europe aflame, the President's course has shown the highest statesmanship, and his country has benefited immensely by his patience and tact. This fact is now generally recognized by intelligent Republicans. The Boston Herald, a loyal standpat organ, after praising the President for resisting the clamor to attack Mexico and comparing his course with that of the authorities in Vienna under less pro- vocation says: “But the President exercised a staying and a steadying hand. We did not go in. We have saved ourselves the horrors of war, and the long legacy of hate through- out Latin America which would surely have followed. If the example of our own President could find imitators among the crowned heads of Europe it would be : a blessing to humanity.” Americans Abroad Warned in Time. From the Harrisburg Star-Independent. Secretary Bryan is solicitous concern- ing the safety of Americans now in Eu- rope and has cabled all Amarican em- bassies and legations iff the war. zone to urge Americans to leave for home with- { out delay. In an official note he says that | “war creates uncertainty, so that predic- ! tions about the future cannot be made ! with any certainty or accuracy.” Fur- : ther delay, he says, is unwise. Despite Secretary Bryan's warning there are many Americans in Europe , who will choose to remain there and run a great risk rather than miss what they ‘call “the fun and excitement of a big !war.” To the average mind it would ‘ seem that they would better leave while they can. If they do so they are likely | to have no cause for regret and will have | no occasion to trouble the American le- | gations should they want to get out and | be unable to in the hereafter. i It is history that among the worst suf- Iferers in the siege of Paris during the { Franco-Prussian war were Americans ‘I who, while they had had every opportu- I nity to get out of the besieged city in { plenty of time, nevertheless declined to ; go and remained “to see the fun,” as ‘they put it. i Conditions in the present war seem destined to be the same, in many re- spects, as more than forty years ago, ‘and if any Americans suffer after the warning and opportunity they have had to escape the dangers, it will be their { own fault. They have had ample notice Ito get away from harm, and on their {own heads rests the responsibility for | their own safety if they elect to remain | Keep Us Out. i From the Johnstown Democrat. : “Keep the United States from being involved in the terrible world-wide war!” | This is the appeal that is being made to members of Congress from every part | of the United States. Men who seldom, if ever, write to their Representatives at Washington are so anxious that this gov- | | ernment take every precaution to avoid | entanglement in the war whirlpool that they are breaking their custom and ap- pealing to their Representatives to use the utmost vigilance to the end that this nation remain at peace with all the world. This is because the reports of the aw- ; ful massacres in Europe have stirred the ‘people to a realization of the horfors of war; the people do not want war, they "not only request, but they demand of | their Representatives in Washington that i this nation shall not become involved in war. Members of Congress feel the same way the people feel on this subject, un- | less it be that they are even more re- | solved that war shall not come to us. : Only conditiens over which the United | States has no control whatever could | draw us into a quarrel. The people can trust Congress on this question, and they can trust the man in the White House. Lest we forget, it was | to preserve our honor—and peace—with | the nations of the world that Woodrow Wilson requested Congress to pass a bill | repealing the free tolls clause of the | Panama canal act. | “Malefactors and Mollycoddles?’’ From the Philadelphia Inquirer. Judging from the way Colonel Roose- velt appears to be “slowing up” we wouldn’t be the least surprised to ob- serve the Progressive league asking waiv- "ers on him in the near future. policy of watchful waiting which “has. SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Two veterans, who fought side by side in the Civil war, met the other day for the first time in forty-nine years, while in attendance at are- union held in Pittsburgh. —While snapping a picture of her brotherin the family orchard, Miss Elizabeth Bumgardner, of Penn township, Perry county, dropped dead, the result of heart leakage. —Isn’t it funny? 'Reedsville pays 3 cents per kilowatt hour for electric light, the borough of Huntingdon 6 and the people of McVeytown 12 cents. Somebody is getting the short end. —Mifflinburg was stirred up last week when it was learned that Arthur Aurand, in a fit of in- sanity, had made a desperate attempt to kill his mother, by shooting at her with a 32 calibre re- volver. —In the eastern part of the State a judge im- posed a sentence on a farmer for not allowing an automobile to pass his wagon, and the old man is still wondering what this world is coming to, anyway. —According to a report made by a Pittsburgh bacteriologist, who made analyses of samples of Reynoldsville’s water supplv. the water now being pumped to the town is unfit for drinking purposes. —Owing to a lever being set in the wrong po- sition, while Simon Marteeny was cranking up his car in Meyersdale, the machine started ahead and rolled down a thirty foot embankmant. It was a Ford. —The poor directors of neighboring counties having large foreign populations are worried over what they will do with the families of the men called back to their home countries to re- spond to arms. —The leader of the West Bolivar Latter Day Saints society is under arrest for the charge of assault and battery preferred by a woman whom he claims to have been full of devils which he could drive out. —Thomas Parker, of Langton, who twice es- caped from the Clinton county jail, after having pleaded guilty to a charge of forgery, has again been convicted, this time to serve, at hard labor in the western penitentiary. —At the annual meeting of the stock-holders of the Newton Hamilton Camp association, T.J. Armstrong and H. L. Wilson, of Altoona, and I. M. Watters, of Bellwood, were elected, with four others to constitue the directorate. —Deaf and unable to hear the frantic cries of trainmen and of a tower watchman, John Stein- backer, of Williamsport, walked in front of a slowly moving freight engine on the Pennsylva- nia tracks at a city crossing,and died a few hours later at the hospital. —Believed to have been robbed of his money, beaten up and then sent over an embankment in his machine, Jacob Blank, a well known taxi- driver of Greensburg, was found unconscious down over the side of the road about three miles out from Greensburg. —The product of the typewriter plant at Kit- tanning is sold almost entirely in Germany, 90 per cent. of the machines going to that country. As the people of Germany are too busy to write letters, the works have closed down until after the war clouds roll by. —When M. H. Canan, president of the Central Trust Company, of Altoona, and his daughters returned from a dance at the Altoona Cricket club, early last Friday, they found their home ransacked and $1000 worth of diamond-set jewel- rv missing. A cook employed a week ago was not to be found. —Dr. Martin Griffith, of Monessen, Pa., con- victed of man-slaughter by the death of Prof. William L. Robinson, whom Griffith attacked during an alleged assaulting of Mrs. Griffith in her home, was sentenced to six months in the work house. Judge Doty declined to consider a parol petition of hundreds of signatures. —Miss Gertrude Keister, daughter of Isaac Kiester, residing about three miles east of Thompsontown, was fatally burned a few days ago. She spilled some coal oil on the floor and tried to remove it by setting it on fire. Her clothing ignited and she was horribly burned, dying twelve hours later. She was twenty-eight yearsold. —-Eulallen J. Schwoyer, the veteran liveryman and driver of race horses in the big fair Circuits, was instantly killed and his daughter Elizabeth fatally injured at ‘Allentown on Tuesday when their team was struck by an empty engine on the Jersey Central railroad at Newport. Two men on the wagon escaped by jumping. Miss Schwoyer was carried 400 yards on the smoke- stack of the engine. —Governor Tener has issued a requisition for the return to this State for trial of Peter Ruben, who is under arrest in Baltimore. Ruben and another man are alleged to have held up Julian Morss, paymaster of the Crown Slate Company, near Argyle, Northampton county, and robbed him of a satchel containing $1,700, money to be used in paying workmen. The men fled to Balti- more, itis alleged, where Ruben was arrested, but the other man escaped. —Speeding toward Latrobe in a double-seated motorcycle, George L. Lucas, of Greensburg, overtook a stranger walking in the same direc- tion. The latter who proved to be Jos. Greenler, of Latrobe, accepted an invitation to ride. Later the driver lost control of his vehicle; there was an upset and Greenler sustained a compound fracture of the right leg which will keep him housed up for many days, while Lucas was knock- ed senseless, but escaped serious injury. —Warren is threatened with an epidemic of typhoid fever. During the last few days 23 cases have been reported to the health authorities. Dr. Samuel Dixon, head of the State Depart- ment of Health, has been no ified and sent two of the Department’s best typhoid experts to Warren immediately to combat the disease. The cause of the epidemic is said to be from impure milk and an inspection, of all the dairies has been made with the result that several are expected to lose their licenses. —Arthur Williamson, of Ant:s Fort, dropped dead at the Avis shops Monday morning shortly after he began his work. Doctors who were called pronounced death due to heart trouble. Mr. Williamson left home Monday morning in his usual health, but for some time back he had not been well. He had not been working long until fellow employees saw him fall and when they ran to his side he was dead. Mr. William- son was aged 37 years and is survived by a wife and two little daughters. : —Simpson R. Miller, the well-known postman and stock-breeder, of Chambersburg, is confined to his home suffering from injuries received Sun- day evening at his stock farm when he was at- tacked by an angry Holstein bull. Mr. Miller had his back to the animal, when the bull charg- ed. He was tossed into the air. When he landed the bull pawed and kicked him about the ground until hisson, Jay B. Miller, and others arrived and rescued him. Mr. Miller's body is a mass of bruises and two teeth were knocked out. —The big quarries of the Pittsburgh Limestone company at Clover creek, in the southern end of .| Blair county and which furnish limestone to the mills of the United States Steel corporations at Braddock, resumed operation Monday, giving employment to about 200 men. The resumption caused a general jubilation among the workers and also tended to increase optimism in the entire neighborhood, the resumption of work bringing a feeling of optimism and a general be- lief that work will be plentiful at all the quarries _atan early date.