AER Dwain INK SLINGS. —They have everything so there can be no alibis during the next four years. —Who ever heard of a man taking his hat off in a polling place before last Tuesday. — Now that the election is over Senator Newberry, of Michigan, may be called up for sentence. —Many a man did something on Tuesday he never did before. He walked to the polls with his wife. —1It’s all over and we are willing to abide by the result; principally be- cause there is nothing else for us to do. —Centre county barns are bulging with hay to be baled while hay presses are idle because not a pound of baler wire can be procured. —TIt would be much better to im- prove the quality of Congressmen in- stead of increasing their numbers. But we have to take things as we find them. —My, how we could use that two- fifty we paid for the two column pic- tures of Cox and Roosevelt that we or- dered some time ago for possible use in this issue. ——A debate between Professor Taft and Senator Johnson as to Hard- ing’s real sentiment upon the League of Nations would be diverting as well as interesting. —From the way they turned out here on Tuesday the good Lord surely will have to help the men if the wom- en ever get together on any local po- litical undertaking. —1It is just as well that Cox didn’t get elected because when we came over to the office Wednesday we found every one of the “Watchman’s” roos- ters had started to molt. —Have you stopped to think what would have happened had Mitch Pal- mer been the candidate. We might not even have had the South left for the small consolation there is in that. —1If it could be truthfully said that William Jennings Bryan has been permanently eliminated from the po- litical calendar there would be some- thing worth while in the result of the election. —There’s no use in post-mortems. There’s no use in blaming it on any one or anything. It seems to us that nothing could have stopped such a del- ‘uge. It might have been reduced but Tot stopped. . .—0Of the 1049 Republicans who vot- Ein Bellefonte on Tuesday we pre- me not one has thought of being the ext postmaster. Oh, no! Probably ‘not more than 1048 of them has. given it a thought.