BY P. GRAY MEEK. san INK SLINGS. —Now is the time for every Democrat to start in and blame it on someone else. —Surely we were convinced that our next Senator’s name would be PATTER- SON. ——Anyway Mr. PINCHOT can have all the time he wants for his honeymoon Now. : —And the next President of the United States will be WooDROW WILSON, all the same. —Brother PALMER laid valiant siege to that “island in the sea of progress” but the island is still there. —The average Democratic vote cast in Centre county on Tuesday was just 381 less than the average vote in 1912. ——Turkey seems to have been forced into the war and it may be ominous that she got in just before Thanksgiving. —There were 4345 Democrats enrolled in Centre county this year yet the ayer- age Democratic vote cast was only 3003. —We missed the snow next day very much. But Democrats couldn’t have looked bluef had there been a blizzard raging. ‘—Turn about is fairplay. The Repub- licans had an election on Tuesday to which the Democrats were not generally invited. —Paraphrasing an expression or Big BiLL HOLLENBACK: Its a darned poor political carcass that can’t take a beatin’ once in awhile. Getting Together. ~ —1If the election has done nothing else it has rendered the country the inesti- mable service of putting the calamity , howler out of a job. —The war may have clouded some of | the interest of pre-election days, but the Republican guns evidently found the | range just right, all the same. —S. Woops CALDWELL, the veteran | | STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA. NOVEMBER 6, 1914. NO. 44. VOL. 59. Lessons of the Election. The lessons of the election are so plain that “he who runs may read.” In the first place they teach that the Demo- cratic party of Pennsylvania will not en- dure an alien mastery. The impression was carefully spread abroad that the candidates were chosen by the President and the people were influenced to ratify the choice by shamelessly huckstering party patronage. They teach that the Democratic. party of Pennsylvania has not degenerated into a common scold. During the entire campaign not one of the candidates uttered a single sentence that expressed a Democratic principle or favored a cherished Democratic tradition. They simply vilified other men and put absurd questions like a parrot might. The result of the election plainly pro- claims that the Democrats of Pennsyl- vania will not stand for the policy of proscription introduced into the party management by A. MITCHELL PALMER, VANCE C. McCormick and JAMES I. . BLAKESLIE. From the beginning of the i | national administration until the present —Maybe it will now soak into the! | no man known to have supported WEB- heads of those at the front that it is STER GRIM four years ago has been even about time to stop Reorganizing and start | considered for appointment by the Presi- | | | dent and PALMER himself is the only candidate on the ticket who supported the party nominee then and he did it ! grudgingly. Even the local Democratic | organizations were studiously ignored unless they acknowleged servile obedience | | {to the machine and every office dis- | tributed was made to perform the serv- ! ice of currency in buying support for the bosses. The verdict of the vote, moreover, hotel man of Lock Haven, was defeated | plainly points cut that the Democratic for Assemblyman from Clinton Co. by | party has fallen under the control of a the Republican candidate who ran on a | local option platform. —In all of the precincts but one on the Pennsvalley side of the mountain MILLER ran a little behind our party vote of 1912; while SCOTT gained in about the same proportion that MILLER lost on his party vote of 1912. —Centre county Democracy might have had its Assemblyman, at least, sav- ed out of the wreck had those who rule the party not succeeded in tying the county chairman’s hands before he got started to work. —We congratulate Colonel WARREN WORTH BAILEY, re-elected Congressman from the Nineteenth Pennsylvania Dis- trict. it also. They preferred a bright spot on the map of American statesmanship, to obscurity. —And Jim BLAKESLIE lit a cigarette, had himself interviewed as the “sure thing” prophet and told the people of Pennsylvania to look out for a landslide to Democracy. JiM would make a dandy Zeppelin if enough ballast could be found to regulate his flights. —Inasmuch as the Republican party was the only one that didn’t endorse Woman’s Suffrage in Pennsylvania it looks very much as if our beloved friends, the ladies, will have to continue to con- fine their activities to “clean-up” days and artistic Fourth of July parades. —Who would ever have thought that Centre county would vote wet? That's what it did Tuesday when it rolled up a majority of 440 for SCOTT, the wet nominee for Assemblyman. The issue. was clean cut in that fight and it proves the oft-repeated charge that there are quite a number of voters who fail to vote as they pray. —WiLLiaM F. McCoMmss, chairman of the Democratic national committee, an- nounces to the world that it was ROGER C. SuLLIVAN, of Illinois, who made Presi- dent WILSON’S nomination at Baltimore possible. But Ji.t BLAKESI IE has told us repeatedly that it was somebody else and, of course, JIM always knows more than other people. ——Of course the Democratic State committee will now revise the rules of the party so as to conform with the law as expressed in the recent decision of Judge McCARROLL. But it will never be able to remove from the minds of Democratic voters the impression that the bosses cre- ated the discredited rules for the pur- pose of usurping authority which belong- ed to the people. —State chairman ROLAND S. MORRIS made his pre-election forecast on Satur- day. He was so cock-sure that his two year’s experience in State politics had made him the wisest man in the party that he asked every Democrat to paste the prediction in his hat so that he could verify its accuracy Wednesday morning. Those who clipped the prediction out of the papers for the purpose of making such comparison are now requested to return them to the State chairman. He needs them for stuffing in his own hat which is much too large since the swelling has gone out of his head. ’ The voters of the District deserve | group of demagogues, hypocrites and opportunists, and that the Democratic voters will not submit to such a manage- ment. Absolutely stupid and at least under suspicion of venality, the party funds were misappropriated to finance the campaigns of certain candidates be- fore and after their nominations, while the interests of candidates for Congress, State Senate and the Legislature were grossly neglected. ' The Democratic vot- ers of Pennsylvania will not" submit to such recreancy and the vote of Tuesday is a grave reminder of that fact. If the faults are corrected the lessons are worth while. ——1In imitation of the Buy a Bale of Cotton movement somebody is trying to get up a Buy a Bale of Hay movement. The Buy a Bag of Peanuts movement is now a practical monopoly in the hands of the Italians. | sms core bss oe Roosevelt Must be Crazy. In a speech delivered at Princeton, New Jersey, the other day THEODORE ROOSEVELT stated that he has “seen the plans of at least two empires, now in- volved in war, to capture our great cities and hold them for ransom, because our standing army is too weak to protect them. I have seen deliberate plans pre-. i pared to take both San Francisco and New York and hold them for ransoms that would cripple our country and give funds to the enemy for carrying on war.” The Colonel's remedy is an army and navy strong’ enough to ‘‘coerce any re- calcitrant power.” He would compel “every man to have practice in marks- manship and some military training.” He would make militarism the dominant note of our policy. How long will this homicidal lunatic be permitted to run at large? Such a prop- osition is subversive not only of our form of government but of any form of popular government. It would convert the Republic into a satrapy. It is the essence of treason. The leaders of the southern confederacy were less guilty of a purpose to overthrow the government than the author of such a scheme. They proposed to withdraw from the union, peaceably if possible, and forcibly if necessary, but to leave the remnant of the government undisturbued. But the ROOSEVELT plan would tear our system of government up by the roots: and bury it in oblivion. It. would utterly annihilate every principle’ of law and liberty. Of course THEODORE ROOSEVELT never’ saw such plans. They were probably the reflection of a bad dream had during one | of his fever deliriums. But he should not be permitted to plant such ideas in the minds of credulous people. It has: been shown that anarchists may be si- lenced and their propaganda prevented. Then the promulgation of such rubbish may be checked by the same processes. Weak minded men might be influenced. to criminal operations by such advice coming from him and therefore. a menace ought to be removed. That he was once honored by the people is no excuse for his present follies. When he was elected President he was believed to be sane. No such belief can be entertained now. -practically unanimous. ' the campaign to fill the Panama canal. Important Legislation Coming. Unless members of t the General Assem- bly of all parties, chosen last Tuesday, are recreant to their pledges, there will be a vast amount of important legislation enacted during the session which begins on the first Monday of January next. Nearly all the candidates were pledged to support measures making for employ- ers’ liability, better conditions for work- ing women and children and other re-' forms upon which public sentiment is The Republican party is pledged, in a platform adopted by the State committee, to all of them and the Washington party, in a similarly constructed platform, is committed to all ' of them. The Democratic party had no’ platform. It is true that the Democratic State . committee met at Harrisburg a short time after the May primaries for the pur- pose of issuing a platform and that a | sub-committee was appointed to draft : such a document. But the committee adjourned before the sub-committee had | made its report and the platform was not ratified and could be binding only! upon those who made it. Therefore Democratic Senators and Representatives are under obligation only to their person- | al pledges and to their consciences but | as most of them promised to support the reforms in question it may safely be as- sumed that all of them will be enacted into law. It is true that Pennsylvania is shame-' fully backward in labor legislation and it is to, be hoped that during the coming session adequate workmen’s compensa- tion laws will be enacted. Laws making better conditions for working women and | children are also sadly needed and we hope Democratic Senators and Represen- tatives will give cordial and earnest sup- port to such measures. Pennsylvania’ ought to be in the advance column in all such matters instead of straggling along , in the rear and if the new Legislature is ' just to itself and fair to the public the’ Keystone State will assume its proper place in the column “of advancing civil- ization. In any event the Democratic | members should so align themselves. | Ere Hy ——Let us hope that former Senator | BEVERIDGE, of Indiana, will now find! some sort of employment that will keep : him out of politics. BEVERIDGE, of In- diana, and LAFOLLETTE, of Wisconsin, | are twin nuisances. Excellent Outlook for Commerce. The treasury report for October shows a considerable balance of trade in favor of this country. Between the 5th of October and the 31st of that month the: imports entered at Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, Norfolk, Newport News, New | Orleans, New York, Philadelphia, San | Francisco, Seattle and Tacoma were of the value of $106,341,261 and the exports ! from the same points were of the value of $139,963,631, the difference being $33,- | 622,370. The commerce of those ports represents about eighty-seven per cent, of the total imports of the country and: seventy-two per cent. of the exports. | The ratio maintained at all the ports; would considerably increase the balance. In other words during the month of: October the balance of international trade: was in favor of the United States at the: rate of upward of half a billion: dollars a: year. This does not.touch or even near- | ly reach high water mark but in view of | the paralysis to commerce caused by the. ! European war four months ago it - is far | better than could have been expected. Moreover, in view of the practically cut- | ting out of the expense of American tourists traveling abroad, this lesser bal- | ance will produce a larger amount of actual cash in the settlements than came | to us when our exports and imports were | at high tide. And after all it is the cash | balance that counts in business. We are not among those who measure the prosperity of a country by the bal- | ance of trade in its favor. Business men make profits on imports as well as ex- ports and transportation companies get | as much for carrying products to the sea | ports as from them, the distance being equal. Some times excessive exports | indicate poverty rather than wealth for ! nations like men may be compelled to make sacrifices of property to get ready cash. But we refer to the condition ex- pressed in this treasury report somewhat exultingly because it refutes the calamity predictions recently so commonly in- dulged in consequence of the falling off of foreign commerce on account of the war. ——And ROOSEVELT is also a new re- cruit in the army of the unemployed. But FLINN and PERKINS will be ungrate-. ful wretches 'if they allow him to go hungry. ——There was enough mud thrown in , of life and treasure in the interval but - and probably for years. ! only important country in Europe outside as firmly as if none of her soldiers had {| were unimpaired. ! this country. Every family in the Unit- : commodities and though there may be : some recompense in increased commerce | a result now. ! year outside of the annual commence- | there from Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and Four Months of War. The European war has been in prog- ress four months and there are no indi- cations of its end. In less time than that Germany subdued France and changed the map of Europe a generation ago and most people thought that the conquerers of that time would be destroyed in an equally ‘brief space of time now. But these expectations have been disappoint- ed and the legions from the Fatherland appear to be as vigorous and determined as when the declaration of war was is- sued. There have been vast sacrifices the lessons have failed of their proper purpose and it is safe td predict now that the end will not come for months Within a week Turkey has entered the strife and nearly all the participants in the recent Balkan war are likely soon to be involved. Thus far Italy has not been drawn into the struggle but she is the of the contention and is likely to be drawn in within a fortnight. Holland is almost as completely impoverished as if within the zone. Belgium is practically wiped off the map and France is crippled financially and physically almost to the. breaking point. But the German squad- rons continue to hold their line of battle been killed and her financial resources It is simply marvel- ous. : The fight is far off but its evil effect has been keenly felt in all sections of ed States has paid tribute to the forbid- ding god of war in the higher prices of and broadened zones of trade in the fu- ture, there are few if any signs of such As a matter of fact war is as repulsive as it has been painted and those who encourage strife among nations, other than in the peaceful form of commercial rivalry, are enemies of civilization and recreants to the spirit of ygress. If this war teaches the lessons of peace effectively, however, it ll be worth while. +—Next Friday will be a big day at State Coliege if the weather is favorable. It will be Pennsylvania day, one of the most important events in the college ment. Governor Tener and many state officials, as well as Senators and Repre- ! sentatives will be there, while this year Martin G. Brumbaugh, the Governor- elect, is also expected present. The day has grown to be one of considerable ‘ social importance and visitors will be i scores of towns throughout the State. Beginning Thursday evening house par- ties will be held at most of the fraternity houses and will continue over Sunday. One big feature of the day, if the weath- er is fine, will be the football game be: tween State’ and the Michigan’ Aggies. The Governor and his party. will occupy. seats in front of the granusiand and; s0- ciety will'be there in force.’ ~—— Passengers on the Bald Pasi Val. ley train. west at noon on Wednesday were treated to an unusual sight as’ ‘the strain sped along this side * of Howard., : Standing in an open field not over aj stoné’s ‘throw from the track was a: magnificent three pronged buck. The animal must have been used to trains as. it stood there watching the train speed by and was ‘still standing there when the train rounded a curve. This proves that there is at least one deer in Centre . county that is eligible. for the hunters. rifle. ——The rabbit and quail season opens ed on Ménday and while there are not ' enough of the latter in Centre county to ' afford good sport rabbits are unusually plentiful. The dry weather, however, has been against good. hunting jas it is difficult for a dog to take up the scent or. follow a trail. All the same quite a num- ber of the cottontails have been bagged in various sections of the county and | under propitious conditions rabbit hunt- ers should have some rare sport. ——Will Rees, a son of G." W. Rees, of this place, who was running for the Legislature in Cambria county on the Republican ticket, was defeated in a triangular fight up there that resulted in election of “wet” Assemblymen. —It is all right to extend a welcome to the Belgians for they have shown them- selves sturdy warriors. But unless the theatre of the war is shifted pretty soon a Belgian would have to swim across to get here. —If you always want to have the craft 4 wo a treaty is sometimes broken is no rea- best take the WATCHMAN and you'll have it. BR War and Business. From the Philadelphia Record. Representatives of a syndicate acting for the French government are in the market for 1,000,000 pairs of army boots. Of course, army boots are not kept in stock ready-made in 1, 1000, 000 pair lots, and the order would keep several large factories busy for a long time. The im- mediate placing of the order is delayed only by a difference over the manner of payment. The agents of the manufac- turers demand cash in advance. The reason why the manufacturers take this position is that on a recent occasion, after the execution of a large order, the French consignees would not pay cash, as the contract required, but tried to ef- fect a settlement with certificates of the French war loan. A similar position was assumed a couple of weeks ago by the Swiss. The German trade, which was heavily in- debted to the watchmakers of Geneva, made an offer through the chambers of commerce to square accounts by de- bentures representing subscriptions to the German billion-dollar war fund. The canny Swiss were assured that they would be making a good investment and in addition to the principal amount of the debt due them, they would get 5 per cent. interest for the rest of their lives and the lives of a generation or two yet unborn. Naturally, neutral foreigners would not take as optimistic, not to say enthusiastic, view of the matter as would a patriotic belligerent so the hard-fisted Swiss declined the offer,with considerable official indignation, and insisted upon payment down to the nail. Incidentally, the watchmakers were made conscious of one of the few advantages of neutral- ity. If Switzerland had become an enemy of Germany the debt would have been cancelled by the simple process of repu- diation. Overwrought Imaginations. From the Altoona Times. Perfervid imaginations have been at work for a week or more picturing the raids of a dramatic character which the Germans are to make on England and es- pecially on London. Zeppelins and aeroplanes are to swoop across the channel by the hundreds and to drop bombs right and left, while it has even been stated that an attack is to be made by submarines, aircraft, warships and troops combined. The Germans are to land a large force in England by means of troop ships mov- ing in conjunction with the fleet which is to come out and fight aided by the aie and the submarines. But, | would become of the Germans who wou get to England with the channel between them and their base? Does any general care to risk his army so far from its source of supplies, the line of communi- cation with which must always be kept open? It all seems to be very astonishing and impossible and there is little likelihood that the Germans are losing much time in planning such a melodramatic raid or that the English commanders are losing much sleep over the fear of it. Mr. Taft on Treaties. From the Boston Globe. Arbitration agreements between the United States and foreign powers, which have multiplied of late, need no defense, but former President Taft put the case in their favor very happily in an address to students at a Yale mass-meeting this week. “It is true that treaties are not ab- solute guarantee against war,” said he, “yet they are the best means we have of avoiding it. After the close of every ‘war treaties become stronger, and their efficacy becomes greater. Just because son why we should not make treaties.” Without faith nothing much can be ac- complished. i Occasionally a business man. fails to follow specifications or neglects to pay his honest debts. Do we, in consequence always refuse thereafter to make con- tracts or extend credit? No, indeed! If we did, ‘the wheels of industry and com- merce would stop instanter, leaving most of the population in danger of starvation. "This world is run largely on trust. A Recipe for War. Amos R. Wellsin Life. Take a wrong and keep it tillit is thor- :| oughly rotten, smelling to Heaven. ' Take also an army, fattened by high taxes to the bursting point. And a navy, similarly prepared. a Make an under crust, heavy and sod- en. ‘Make an upper crust, rich and swollen with pride. Mix your material in a bowl of na- tional vanity. ‘Season with misinformation, rumors, lies, tariff wars, colonial disputes, petty aggressions and sensational newspapers, chopped fine. Bake it in the oven of prejudice with the fire of passion, stirred by the poker of personal ambition. rve hot. Turkey Enters the War. From the Philadelphia Evening Ledger. . No effort to limit the European war seems to have any chance of success. The beginning of hostilities by Turkey .| may bring the very gravest consequences. Undoubtedly the. Balkan States will again be in flames.- Italy is more likely than ever to be drawn in on the side of the Allies. While Greece and the fleets of the Allies take care of what little there is of Turkey in Europe, Japan may be- come more active in Asia. The entire situation looks like the temporary break- down of civilization, with America only standing firm. ——For high class Job Work come to the WATCHMAN Office. SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE." —It is reported that Newton Hamilton is with- out either a doctor or an undertaker, although nobody hints that the one is the sequence of the other. — Jefferson Wyckoff, a veteran of the Civil war, aged 71 years, a resident of Williamsport’s south side, has killed two bears since the season opened. —Burglars entered the general store of S. A. Wilt, at Mill hall, the other night and appropriat- ed goods to the value of at least $100 and also carried off several hundred pennies. —Evangelist Peacock, who has been conduct- ing a campaign against sin in Irwin for the past four weeks, is ill with diphtheria and is quaran- * ‘| tined at the Presbyterian parsonage. —Clifford Cohan. aged 20, was sent to Hunting- don reformatory and Mary Cohan, his mother, was given a year in the Lycoming county jail for kindling a fire in the Williamsport house occu- pied by them prior to their arrest. —Misses Mildred and Laura Herring, daugh- ters of ex-Judge Grant Herring, of Sunbury, who died a year ago, are now employed as Red Cross nurses in the German army. They were study- ing music in Berlin, and when the call to arms came, volunteered and were accepted. —George W. Hoffman, 56 years old, widely known as a manufacturer of lumber, died sud- denly of a hemorrhage of the lungs at his home in Centre township, Perry county, one morning last week. He had been in seeming good health for some time past. His wife is critically ill with Bright’s disease, —William George, aged 69, and his daughter Alma, 26, died in a Bradford hospital on Sunday from burns sustained when their home at Duke Centre, near Kane, was wrecked by a gas explo- sion late Saturday night. George and his daugh- ter were thrown through a window of their home by the explosion. —A flow of gas which registers 20 pounds, and which is steadily increasing, developed unexpect- edly Saturday in one of the deep water wells at the Punxsutawney iron furnace. The flow is of sufficient volume to lead Superintendent George Grimm to believe that a drilled well would devel- op a marketable pressure. —After a shutdown of six months the plant of the Wilcox Window Giass company at Wilcox, near Kane, started operation at mid-night Sun- day and as a result 150 men are given employ- ment. Tank No. 2 at the plant of the American Window Glass company has also started opera- tions, giving employmemt to 300 men. —We learn from the Punxsutawney Spirit that Emanuel Thomas, whose foot was torn off in a threshing machine a week ago, died shortly after 11 o'clock Tuesday forenoon and shortly after his father-in-law, Emanuel Oxenreiter, was found dead in afield at his home near Ohl. Thomas was 59 years old, Oxenreiter, 74. —Mike Barberick, a well-known Austrian resident of Josephine, Indiana county, while on his way home from a dance the other night fell from a steep embankment, a distance of forty feet. He fell into a pool of water and was par- tially submerged for ten hours. He died on a street car while being conveyed to the Indiana hospital. " —Anton Toje, an Austrian 17 years old, who has been insane for three years, was restored to reason by an operation performed by the chief surgeon of the Williamsport hospital. By a blow inflicted with a hatchet in the hands of a com- panion three years ago his skull was depressed and pressed upon the brain. The operation re- moved the pressure. —William R. Hendricks, of Bald Eagle town- ship, Clinton county, is in jail at Lock Haven, charged with having burglarized the store of S. A. Wilt, at Mill Hall some nights ago. A consid- erable number of pennies were stolen from the t | store and arrest of Hendricks followed his efforts to have about 400 pennies ‘changed for money of a larger denomination, —Caught in a fly wheel at the Mercer broom works at Sharon, last ‘Friday, Quincy Ryhal, 21 years old, foreman of the plant, was whirled to his death. He stepped over a gas engine to shut off the power, when his clothing caught. He was pulled off his feet and whirled around a hundred or more times before the machinery was stopped. Nearly all the bones in his body were broken and his feet were beaten to a pulp. —Harrison Wesley Miller, who was born near Hyndman, Bedford county, July 18, 1882, met instant death Friday evening by falling down the shaft of the H. C. Frick company mine at Eden- boro, Fayette county. He was engaged in con- creting the shaft, lost his balance and toppled 500 feet to the bottom. Miller lived at Connells- ville. He was a son of the Rev. W. S. Miller and is survived by his widow and two children. —Wohile Mrs. O. E. O. Redoric, of Confluence, was assisting her son Winfield in cleaning a gun ‘on Monday as he was about to leave on a hunt- ing trip, the weapon was accidentally discharged and Mrs. Redoric was instantly killed. The young man is frantic with grief, being in such a condition that he is unable to give a clear ac- count of the shooting. Mrs. Redoric was about 55 vears of age and was a widow. Several chil- dren survive. —James Lavery, 19 years old, of Ambridge, Pa., died on Monday morning inthe Presby- terian hospital at Pittsburgh from injuries suf- fered in a football game Saturday. His back was broken when he was playing with the Am- bridge eleven against the Delmont Club. His death marks the second football fatality in Pitts- burgh this season. Two weeks ago Michael Ken- nedy, a Lawrenceville youth, was fatally injured in a game between two amateur teams. —John Pascolla, a young Italian coal miner of 24 years, residing at Jacob’s Mines near Roberts- dale, died at the Blair Memorial hospital, Hunt- ingdon, at 9 o'clock Monday night. He was the victim of one of the most dastardly and murder- ous assaults in the annals of Huntingdon county. He was shot-up by supposed friends, dragged from the road, cast into a clump of woods and left for dead. He regained consciousness long enough to reveal the identity of his assailants. —Judge John W. Reed, specially presiding in the Blair county court, has rendered a decision to the effect that the city of Altoona has the right to impose a tax of 50 cents on each electric, telephone or telegraph pole in the Mountain city. The Postal Telegraph company brought the suit to determine if the ordinance was con stitutional. A similar decision was rendered in. a case brought by the Bell Telephone company. What's the matter with Bellefonte trying the same game? ‘—The result of the investigation of the finding of a deer on the farm of Charles C. Young, who resides near Sylvan Dell, Lycoming county, has brought to light the fact that the yearling buck was shot and not killed by dogs. Game Warden Joseph Smith, of Muncy, has been making a careful investigation of the affair and there isa possibility that arrests will follow. It was at first believed that the deer was. run to death by dogs on the mountains. The animal is believed to have beenshot by some hunter in the woods and then chased to the open by dogs. —Released from jail at Bloomsburg, after spending five days of their honeymoon in con- finement for illegal car riding, Mr. and’ Mrs. George Krause, of Reading, began to walk the rest of their journey to their home because they had no funds with which to pay car fare. The pair had been taken from a caboose of a freight train by railroad cops. They were riding from Williamsport because they ran: out of money, and kind hearted railtoad men pitied the woman They now declare that they wills have ‘nothing ' more to do with railroad property.