Brule BY P. GRAY MEEK. INK SLINGS. ——Speaking of coffee that “third cup is more than likely to be absorbed in the | dregs. ——Again permit us to remark that the Democracy is a party of principles rather than a common scold. —In the light of recent results that vote of WEBSTER GRIM’S, back in 1910, wasn’t so pathetically small after all. —Let us start a campaign for brick roads in Pensylvania, but don’t let us get VANCE MCCORMICK or MITCH PAL- MER to lead it. —As yet Mr. McCorMICK hasn't filed his expense account. When that is done it will be time enough to figure out how much each vote cost him. —Whatever else may be said of the developments of the foreign war about the only thing that is certain is that someone is going to get a good lickin’ ere long. —If certain Democratic near leaders in. Pennsylvania had been quarantined for the foot and mouth disease last spring there wouldn’t be so many sore Democrats now. —A report that two Akron, Ohio, girls are afflicted with the foot and mouth disease naturally suggests the query as to whether all the girls will be put under quarantine in the affected States. —Nothing is as easily changed as the mind of the American voter. He hops from one side to the other with the ease of a kangaroo and our side is the one to which the next hop will be made. Mark that. ——The defeat of Congressman ROB- ERT E. LEE is one of the regrettable inci- dents of the recent election and JIM BLAKESLIE ought to be summoned to “show cause.” It is the Postmaster Gen- eral’s move. —A resolution was presented at the meeting of the American Federation of Labor, in Philadelphia, on Tuesday, call- ing upon the Federation to work for leg- islation making a six hour day manda- tory. Verily, after while no one will have to work at all. —Already J. LEE PLUMMER, of Blair county, is being groomed for the Repub- lican nomination for State Treasurer. Why not? PENROSE is in control in Pennsylvania and shouldn’t he have his favorite “Messenger boy” in Harrisburg, if he wants him there. —Some of you Democrats who expect to run for county offices next fall had ” better busy yourselves right nows digging { a few post-holes to set those political fences in that you will be starting to build in the spring. Seed sown in a gar- den that hasn’t been well prepared never yields prolifically. —Experts have figured out that eggs for which farmers are receiving only seventeen cents the dozen are selling in New York at fifty. Experts alwaysjwere handy with figures and shy of facts. Any Centre county farmer will tell you that he is getting twice seventeen cents for every dozen eggs he can market. —Two questions come up in our mind as a result of a story that is being told to the effect that certain Democratic precinct chairmen offered four dollars for votes for the Washington ticket. We can’t understand where they got the four or why they wanted to spend money to get votes against their own candidates for the Legislature, Senate and Congress. —That Progressive candidate for Con- gress, in the First Kentucky district, who agreed with his wife to prepare to get to Heaven, since there was no chance for him to get to Washington, must stand in a bad light before St. PETER. For the way he put it makes it look very much as if there might not have been any thought of Heaven had there been a way to Washington. Incidentally, there’s a lot of others in the same boat with this luckless candidate. About the only time they think of Heaven is when every other place is closed to them. —In lamenting over the defeat of our local candidate for the Legislature one of the old-time Democratic war horses of the county remarked, the other day, that he hadn’t much of physical energy to give any more, but he thought he was still capable ‘‘of imparting a little sense” to people who apparently need it. We believe he is too, but we were amazed to infer from his remarks that he is outside the breastworks also. The ownership of the Democratic organization in Centre county is a far closer corporation than we imagined it to be. More power to the owners. The further they go the less they have to own. —Something surely must be wrong. Can it be possible thdt Congressman- elect Col. WARREN WORTH BAILEY'S Johnstown Democrat has at last seen the light? When the WATCHMAN warned .the leaders of our party months ago that it wasn’t Democracy to foist a star cham- ber platform on the party in the State and that they couldn’t expect men to stand on a platform they had had no hand in building the Democrat accused it of being “sore.” Hearken now to these words from the sage of the Conemaugh: “The personally conducted party plat- form is not likely to become a habit in this State. One trial of it has, perhaps, been sufficient.” VOL. 39. Gem of Campaign Literature. For the real gem oof the literature of | the recent campaign in Pennsylvania, we are under everlasting obligations to Harper's Weekly. Out of the prolific brain of tke “immortal” abnegation expressed when BRUTUS re- SHAKESPEARE | there came the marvelous story of self- | fused the crown of the Roman empire, ! thrice tendered him by the political boss- es of that time and place. But BRUTUS events amply proved, for his abjuration. those in Mexico now and wearing the crown was more or less hazardous. tion” so richly fertilized the campaign literature of 1914, however, involved no such dire consequences and the hero of | STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA. NOVEMBER 13, 1914. President Wilson and the Election. | i Since the election three members of the President’s cabinet have issued state- ments to assure the public that the re- sult is in no respect a rebuke to WoobD- ROW WILSON or a popular condemnation of his policies. Secretary MCADOO was prompt in this service, having gone into print before the actual figures had be- come available. Soon afterward Secre- tary Daniels, the perennial fountain of had substantial reasons, as subsequent ! corroborative evidence. The ! story with which the “journal of civiliza- | | balderdash, “spoke his little piece” and ! the other day Mr. BRYAN, having returned Conditions in Rome then were much like | from a western trip, added his opinion as All these state- ments were supererogatory. Nobody with a grain of sense believed, or could have bzen made to believe, that Presi- dent WILSON or his policies were respon- sible, directly or indirectly, for the re- it stands as the luminous center-piece of ' sult of the election. a radiant page of the history of friend- ship and fidelity. 1 Candor and conscience combines, how- | ever, to compel a denial of the statement, by inference, that the story was withheld from the public out of consideration for the modesty of the hero. Ever since the Baltimore convention the intimates of the “six feet of Quaker flesh and blood,” | | with “fire burning in his bones,” have been stalking abroad trying to fasten it in the minds and force it into the con- sciousness of the public. That this may | | | inet had a good deal to do with the Dem- But it may be said with equal accuracy | that in Pennsylvania, at least, some of the members of President WILSON’S cab- ocratic slump. When GRANT was Presi- dent the pernicious activity of federal officials, from cabinet members down, in politics, became so general and offensive that legislation was enacted against it. In fact it was the one abuse that was “denounced by all reformers as offensive , and destructive, and the opposition to it be understood it is well to say that the story is JIM BLAKESLIE'S absurd fiction ' that somebody had offered the Presiden- became so great and assertive that the evil was practically eliminated. During the administration of ROOSEVELT it was revived, however, and within the last tial nomination to A. MITCHELL PALMER, year DANIELS and BRYAN have done little of Pennsylvania, in consideration of his abandoning the support of WOODROW WILSON and casting the vote of the Penn- sylvania delegation for CHAMP CLARK. Mr. PALMER could no more have cast the vote of the delegation for CLARK than he couid whip the German army with a popgun. Some months ago at a meeting. of Democratic club members in Scranton Jim BLAKESLIE sprung this preposterous piece of fiction upon the surprised dele- gates but as they say of vaccination which fails, “it didn’t take.” JiM embel- lished it somewhat with details of his own conspicuous part in the comedy. “I lit a cigarette,” he said, “and thought a few minutes, and told ‘MITCH’ it wouldn’t do.” What JiM thought with he didn’t reveal and why he indulged in the naugh- ty cigarette is left to conjecture. But he made it plain that either the cigarette or the thought or his solemn admonition that “it wouldn’t do,” not only nominat- ed and elected WoODROW WILSON and rescued civilization from impending dis- aster but it saved this glorious Republic from the “demnition bow-wows.”” Veri- similitude is a useful element in romance. But the story of our esteemed heb- domadal contemporary is no less absurd than the figures of speech with which it is introduced. It presents “MITCH” in the form of a great crusader in the cause of righteousness. “Bucking the bosses” was “fine sport for him,” according to the author of this story, and he is a “birth-right reformer,” who previous to the Baltimore convention “had risen rap- idly to power in his own State.” Asa matter of fact, if there is a creature of the bosses living in this broad Common- wealth it is A. MITCHELL PALMER. The leaders of the party not only catapulted him into public life but financed his ambi- | tions and paid his expenses until VANCE MCcCoRrMICK, for purely selfish reasons, expressed a willingness to become “his angel.” Then, McCorMICK having more money than the others, PALMER denounc- ed them as bosses. The campaign is over and we have no inclination to pour vitriol into old sores. The Democrats of Pennsylvania are all for Wooprow WILSON and this news- paper suggested him as an available can- didate for President before some of the opportunists who now profess to own him knew there was such a man. But the most popular man on earth and the most deserving public official can alien- ate public confidence and if President WILSON undertakes to force upon the Democrats of Pennsylvania a leadership that is abhorrent, his friends will desert him just as certainly as “the day suc- ceeds thenight.” Therecent vote proves that the demagogues and hypocrites who stole the livery of the Democratic party three years ago are not the leaders of the party and all the patronage of the government will not debauch Democrats into consent to such mastery. ——An esteemed contemporary sug- gests that “Progressiveism in California is developing ‘too much JOHNSON."” ' As a matter of fact Progressiveism in the entire country has fallen down under the burden of too much TEDDY. Ee —— ——The cotton problem is about solv: ed in a rational if not the natural way. That is to say, the banks of the country | have practically completed a pool to finance the crop without government in- termeddling. else than offend in this respect. They have been butting in everywhere and do- | ing as much harm as possible. : In the primary contest for the Demo- cratic nomination for Governor of Penn- | sylvania, both DANIELS and BRYAN took the stump. in behalf of a candidate who has since proved to be exceedingly un- popular and against one who has an un- | broken record as a winner. There was no objection to the participation of Sec- | retary of Labor WILSON in the campaign, for he is a citizen of Pennsylvania. But! BRYAN and DANIELS had no more right to come into Pennsylvania and misrepre- sent the President than they would have had to dictate to the Emperor of Ger- | many or the Pope of Rome with respect | to the affairs of the German empire or the Catholic church. Democrats of ' Pennsylvania resent such interference in their affairs and the loss of several Con-' gressmen is abundant proof of that fact. | | ——It is intimated that Governor TEN- | ER will distribute a number of official | commissions to his friends as “Christmas | presents.” The Governor should bear in | mind that paying personal debts with , public offices is poor policy. Making | patronage a currency is putting a good thing to bad use. soo Olie James’ Huge Joke. Of course Senator OLIE JAMES, of Ken- tucky, was only joking when he suggest- ed BoIEs PENROSE as the Republican can- | didate for President in 1916. Senator JAMES is a giant in stature and good hu- | mor radiates from his ponderous frame. The idea is absurd, to be sure, but Sena- tor JAMES’ jokes are in the proportion of his person and his suggestion with re- spect to PENROSE and the Presidency is a natural ebullition of his joyful spirits. But it won’t take. Senator PENROSE him- self will be the first to see the absurdity of it, and to laugh it away. But Senator JAMES might have made himself quite as preposterous by naming others. As a matter of fact PENROSE does rep- resent the Republican party of the coun- try more nearly than any man we can think of. He is in favor of a prohibitive tariff and pretends to think that high tariff taxes produce revenue whether i there are importations or not. In that! respect he appears'to be in complete ac- cord with the majority of voters of the Republican party. He is also in favor of monopoly, against reforms of all kinds and “for the old flag and an appropria- | tion” in every case. What other man could better represent the policies of the Republican party in this broad land of promise? Moreover, Senator PENROSE is not over particular concerning the character of his associates in politics. He is against local option, employers liability and the conservation of the health of women and ' children. Well so are the managers of | his party in Pennsylvania and elsewhere. : and so must be the voters of his party | | for they vote for him with great enthu- | siasm. Then why not nominate him? He might break the solid South through | the tariffites in Louisiana and ‘the whis: | | keyites in Kentucky and no other ‘man | could achieve that result. : —Quite a number of Bellefonters will go to State College today for the | Pennsylvania Day exercises. A special | train will be run to the College this ‘morning, and a return train this evening. ! Protest Against Bad Management. { : | NO. 45. So Much to be Done. The difference between VANCE C. Mc- | From the Johnstown Democrat. CoRrRMICK’s vote and that of his associates on the ticket represents the strength he acquired by his immoral commerce with BILL FLINN, the atrocious and unspeak- able boss of the ROOSEVELT forces in Pennsylvania. That is to say it may be assumed that McCORMICK’S bargain with FLINN for a place upon the Washington party ticket netted him about 150,000 votes. It may be said that he received in the neighborhood of 50,000 independ- ent Republican votes, representing his personal friends of Republican antece- . dents throughout the State and those of that part affiliation who knew him only through the estimate of the Harrisburg Patriot, freely distributed during the cam- paign. McCorMICK’s total vote in the State will probably reach 425,000. Taking from that total the 150,000 cast by the | Washington party adherents, in pursu- "ance of the corrupt deal with FLINN, and the 50,000 cast by personal friends and misinformed independent Republicans, it is clear that not more than 225,000 Democrats voted for him. That is less than any Democratic candidate for Gov- ernor has received for Governor within half a century, with the single exception of WEBSTER GRIM, against whom Mr, McCorMICK and. others formed a con- spiracy in order to create an opportunity to seize control of the Democratic organ- ization. His small vote is the just expres- sion of indignation for his perfidy on that occasion. The Democratic party is not in the . minority in Pennsylvania to the extent indicated by the vote of November 3. This year it might and probably would have been in the majority, notwithstand- ing the vicious fight made by MCCOR- MICK for the nomination, if the organi- zation had revealed the least atom of capacity in the conduct of the campaign. But the stupid chairman of the State | Committee and the worse than stupid candidates repelled rather than invited the defeated contingent in the primary : fight and the result is precisely what ' might have been expected and was en- tirely deserved. The resultis nota re- buke to President WiLsON, however. It is a protest against incompetent manage- ment. ——Big trout and little trout, trout ' three inches long and trout two feet in i length, with trout most any other size can be seen in Spring creek every day opposite the WATCHMAN office and be- tween the bridge and the falls. This is | spawning season for trout and they al- : ways hunt the sandy and gravelly shoals in shallow water on which to deposit their eggs. Regulating Canal Tolls. That the financiers of the country : hope to regulate the rates of toll in the ‘ Panama canal is already apparent. In an address before the ROBERT MORRIS . club of Philadelphia, the other evening, EMORY R. JOHNSON, a member of the : faculty of the University of Pennsylvania and of the State Public Service Commis- sion, declared such a result is inevitable. “Today, through the medium of the canal,” Dr. JOHNSON said, “a 5000-ton ship, sailing from New York to San Fran- cisco, saves $38,000 on the voyage.” The money trust can’t patiently contemplate such a result. +The remedy, according to this “author- ity on transportation facilities,” is for the Interstate Commerce Commis- sion to fix the toll ratés on a basis that will equalize the expense of shipping by raii or water. Probably these economic doctors would consent to a small difference in favor of the water route to balance the difference in time by the rail shipment. But it is incon ceivable that there should be a saving to | the consumers of so much money on so small a quantity of freight. It would literally divert all except very urgent deliveries to the water course and great- ly impair the incomes of railroads. But that is precisely what the canal was built for. Does Dr. JOHNSON or any other spokesman of the money trust imagine that the people would ' have consented to the spending of nearly half a billion dol- lars for the building of the canal if noth- ing was to be saved to the people? If he does he is a blooming idiot. The pre- tense is that the canal ought to be put upon a paying basis. But his plan would simply prevent that result. With rates the same, all shipments would be by rail, and the cost of the canal a clear loss. ——SULZER may be the “same old | BILL” but it must be admitted that he is a badly battered specimen of the “has beens.” =—The Democratic reorganizers seem to have reorganized, rejuvenated’ and re- suscitated the Republican Machine. Now that the political campaign is all over people begin looking around to dis- cover that there is so much to be done. Stricken Belgium cries out to us for aid, and there should be a generous response. Then there are boots to be made, blan- kets to be fabricated, ‘military gear to be collected for the warring hosts in Europe. We must help the suffering civilians on the one hand, while supplying the wants of the fighters upon the other. The role may seem to be a contradictory one. There are idealists to whom the thought that we should cease to supply any materials that might in any way give strength to the nations engaged in the war or enable them to prolong the slaughter i isbound to occur. But after all it is altogether likely that the nations whose financial resources are exhausted will be the first to fall. We cannot re- frain from selling goods to Canada and whoever sells to Canada sells to England. Moreover, there is but little mercy in the idea of sending a soldier to his death hungry instead of sending him forth to fight amply provisioned. Evidently just so many men must fall before this war is ended and it will mat- ter very little in the long run whether they perish as a result of slow starvation or as a result of rifle fire. So there is plenty to be done. . In ad- dition to meeting the demands placed upon our resources we must keep the peace, we must manage the affairs of many nations in many different capitals and we must do the major portion of the seed sowing and manufacturing for the world. Conditions created by the war may hamper us in the performance of those tasks, but those difficulties will be conquered one by one. For, even though Europe become a wilderness, we must survive in the interest of civilization. It is our duty to preserve the ideals of peace and the arts of peace. Noman living can estimate the possibilities that lie back of the war fires now burning. It is within the range of possibility that an exhausted Europe, a Europe rendered desolate by a prolonged war, might yet be swept by fanatical Moslem armies. Africa, Asia, Europe are now all involv- ed. To attempt to define the limits of the conflagration is to attempt the im- possible. So there is plenty of work ahead and itis well that we have as President a man who can be relied upon tp “watch his step.” The “Doubtful” States. ; Ey oJ From the Philadélphia Record. : oe We learn from a Washington dispatch to a Protectionist newspaper that the Democrats are bitterly disappointed by the results of Tuesday: This is particularly true in regard to the election returns from the States with the big votes in the electoral college. which are ordi- narily counted doubtful, and upon which every Democratic candidate for the Presiden- cy must depend for his election. Such States are New York, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Illinois and Ohio. Reflect upon what this means of the decadence of the G. O. P. Pennsylva- nia, Massachusetts, Illinois and Ohio are doubtful States, Republican gains in which are highly cheering to the Repub- licans. Pennsylvania is one of those doubtful States which a Democratic can- didate for President must carry in order to be elected. Here is a fine revelation of political geography! It isn’t a great many years since the Republicans would have scouted the idea that Massachusetts and Illinois were any less certainly theirs than Pennsylvania, and now they are reduced to the point of making gains in Pennsylvania an oc- casion for cheerfulness. Evidently there is nothing in the country that is safely Republican. In Massachusetts, where they are cackling over their gains, the Republicans failed to elect their candi- date for Governor, who is one of the big- gest and strongest men of the party. But he was beaten in the Bay State by only about 10,000, and that is a hopeful indication to the crushed Republicans. They failed to elect their Senatroial can- didate in Illinois, but they made gains in the State of Abraham Lincoln, and in their present mood that is enough to thrill the souls of Republicans with hope. They have probably elected a Senator in the State of Grant, Garfield, Hayes, McKinley and Taft, and for this they are giving thanks and congratulating each other, and pluming themselves upon en- couraging signs. The Democrats retained the House of Representatives after “tinkering with the tariff.” That is more than the Republi- cans did in 1884, 1890 and 1910. But the phenomenal Democratic majority in the House has been reduced to normal pro- portions, and that is enough in this Dem- ocratic era to awaken hope and confi- dence in the party of Mark Tapley. T. R’s Foes on the Result. From the New York Sun. The salient feature of the voting throughout the United States, or rather throughout that part of the country which is reasonably indicative of politic- al change, was the compelling evidence of Republican reunion. The Progressive advance is not only checked, the Pro- gressive forces are almost annihilat- "And what does it signify to the great architect of Republican ‘disruption? His discovery of November, 1914, is no river of doubt, this time. It is a positively, definitely, unmistakably onflowing and overwhelming tide of disaster for him and his larger hopes. Col. Roosevelt, who labored for weeks with a strenuous altruism of which he himself was per- fectly unconscious to persuade the voters that the issue was what it was not, gets —well, as the copy books used to say, virtue is its own reward. elf you always want to have the best take the WATCHMAN and you'll have it. SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Having authorized a bond issue to the amount of $32,000, the people of Hastings are looking for- ward to the erection of a municipal lighting plant. —*“0ld Man” Wallace, a famous hunter living in Clearfield county, had a streak of luck last week when he slew a bear, three coons and a few birds, and found three well-stocked bee trees. —Mifflinburg has ten well-defined cases of diphtheria and several children are ill with symptoms of the disease. The schools, churches and theatres have been closed for the present. —The Star Glass plant at Reynoldsville which cost $100,000 to build was sold last week at sheriff sale to Charles Herpel for $5200. The sale was made at the instance of the bondholders of the company. —An effort is now on to extinguish the present indebtedness of the Clearfield hospital, amount- ing to $4,000, A. W. Lee agreeing to give the in- stitution $25.000 in that event. November 28th, is the closing day. —Charles P. Munch, a prominent citizen of Du- Bois, hasbeen arrested on the charge of having fraudulently concealed $500 of the assets of the C. P. Munch Coal company, a bankrupt. He denies the allegation. —Anna Boyer, of Sunbury, was stricken with diphtheria. She passed into a comatose state, and was pronounced dead by a physician. When an undertaker arrived 10 hours later she sat up and greeted him to the great joy of her weeping relatives. The girl is recovering from the dis- ease. —Paul Caro and Ralph Mastriano, the two Italians who killed a fellow countryman at Clearfield on the 19th of June last, were sen- tenced by Judge Bell at Clearfield on Monday morning. Caro was given from fifteen to eigh- teen years in the western penitentiary and Mas" triano from five to eight years. —William Hendricks, the Clinton county man who was arrested on suspicion of having had a hand in a store robbery in Mill Hall, because he tried to exchange about 400 pennies for money of a larger denomination, was completely exonerat- ed at thehearing it having been shown that the pennies were the property of his wife. —While Miss Blanche Ives, a resident of Hun- tersyille, Lycoming county, was running a cream separator her hair was caught in the machinery and her head was drawn in. Her screams at- tracted the attention of her mother who stopped the machinery, but not until the girl’s head was badly injured and a blood vessel ruptured. —Anna C. Ritter, 20 years old, a prominent member of the German Lutheran church of Sharpsburg, Pa., ended her life by swallowing poison. She was despondent because she be- lieved there was so much crime in the world and individual efforts failed to improve conditions. She had threatened several times to end her life. ~The European war is declared to be respon- sible for the failure of the Eastern Facing Mills company, manufacturers of foundry supplies, with plants in Williamsport, Jersey Shore and Antes Fort, whose personal property was sold at sheriff’s sale Tuesday. The concern was doing a prosperous business up to the outbreak of the war. —Railroad Officer C. M. Kerns on Saturday while covering his beat in the Altoona yard hap. pened upon a young man by the name of James A. Smith. The fellow proved to be a deserter from the United States army. He deserted from Fort Howard and was making his way west. Officer Kerns took him back to Fort Howard on Sunday. —Wendell Ream, aged 45 years, a prosperous farmer of Fairview township, was - instantly kill- | ed shortly after five o'clock Monday evening when he was kicked by one of his mules after he fell from the wagon seat while he was driving to his home. The accident occurred a few minutes after he conversed with his brother, Eli. A widow and four small children survive. —The Punxsutawney Water Company has filed suit against that borough for a water bill of nearly $3,000. This is not for fire plug rental which has not been paid for since June, 1913. The contention of the borough is that the borough was not getting the fire protection it was paying for, hence have not been paying the bill. The water company now sues for the amount they claim due them. —Because boys in Sandy township, Clearfield county, have been in the habit of standing on the trolley track until the car almost reached them and then jumping off, a 10-year-old girl named Lillian Daesy, had her right foot practically cut off the other afternoon. The motorman thought she was trying to fool him, but her foot was wedged between the car rail and a plank. The foot was amputated at the DuBois hospital. —Calvin Gensimore, aged 16, who resides near Tyrone, came near bleeding to death on Satur- day morning when the tendons and arteries in his right wrist were severed by a corn shredder at the farm of D. H. Waite. The knives in- flicted three deep gashes, just back of the palm of the hand. The boy was given first aid treat- ment, after which he was rushed to the Altoona hospital, where the injury was further dressed. —Frank G. Hohl, bank bandit and fugitive from justice, driving a big blue touring car bear- ing an Indiana State automobile license tag, drove up to his formor home, 315 North Court street, Harrisburg at 12.30 o’clock Sunday morn- ing, unlocked the door with a key, entered the house and emerged a minute later with a hand- bag. This he threw into the automobile. Then he drove rapidly away without letting anyone know of his destination, according to the Harris- burg papers. —On his way home through the South Moun- tains the other evening State Forestry Com- missioner Conklin was proceeding slowly by automobile along the road above Mount Holly, looking at the forest fires on the hillside. As he. turned to look ahead three fine deer crossed the ' road about 60 feet in front of the car, and they did not seem to be in very much of a hurry. One of them, a huge buck, to show his agility, leaped clear across the road in one bound, stopped and looked at the Commissioner as if to say, “You can’t do that,” and then strolled leisurely into the underbrush. —Clarence McSherry, a farmer living near Seven Kitchens, lost half of his apiary Monday and had the fright of his life when three bears tore his hives apart and devoured the contents of six of them. He heard a commotion among his hives and went out to look after them. He was stunned when he saw three bears devouring his honey with much gusto. They paid little or no attention to the surprised owner, but appeared as happy as children with candy. he said. Re- covering from his fright,he summoned neighbors over the telephone, but when they arrived the animals were gone. —Agents of the Pure Food Division of the State Agricultural Department have been or- ‘dered to keep a close watch on those who are disposing of eggs that are not fit for food, the dealers taking advantage of the cold weather to dispose of stale eggs, hoping to avoid detection. Reports were received recently that in Philadel ‘phia nine dealers in rotten eggs had been found, all of whom have been prosecuted, along with one dealer in rotten sausage and one dealer in rotten fish. The department is also after food gamblers who have stored a great amount of food in cold storage warehouses and are now bringing it out for sale. This food is remarked with a different date of storage and made to the law. wi appear as fresh, which is strictly a violation of *