Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, September 08, 1922, Image 6

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    the
Denoraidpa.
“Bellefonte, Pa, September 8, 1922.
A LUCID DISCUSSION OF THE
BITUMINOUS COAL SITUA-
TION.
Everybody is concerned about the
coal situation and few know anything
FELLOWSHIP.
By James Whitcomb Riley.
When a man ain't got a cent,
An’ he's feeling kind of blue,
An’ the clouds hang dark and heavy,
An’ won't let the sunshine through,
It's a great thing, O my brethren,
Yor a fellow just to lay
‘His hand upon your shoulder
In a friendly sort of way.
If makes a man feel queerish;
It makes the teardrops start,
An’ you sort of feel a flutter
In the region of your heart;
You can’t look up and meet his eyes,
You don’t know what to say,
When his hand is on your shoulder
In a friendly sort of way.
©, the world’s a curious compound
With its honey and its gall,
With its care and bitter crosses;
But a good world after all.
An’ a good God must have made it—
Leastwise, that is what I say,
‘When a hand is on my shoulder
In a frieendly sort of way.
een eee fleets
“I’M A PENN STATE MAN.”
Three years of untold hardships, a
mad jumble of fear, cholera, plague,
starvation, massacres, prisons, march-
es, brutality, fighting, and then—ty-
phus. A tottering refugee, his mind
a blank, he could recall but two
things: That he wanted to go to
America, and that he was a Penn
State Man.
This is the story of “Tommy” Sred-
nik, of the class of 1912. Graduating
in the course in chemistry in 1912,
“Tommy” returned to Russia, his na-
tive land, to make good in his profes-
sion. In 1917, with his wife and child,
he was living in Petrograd, where he
held a responsible position in a man-
ufacturing plant and was rapidly ris-
ing to leadership in his work.
Then came the Bolshevist revolu-
tion, and realizing to a degree what
was coming, he started his wife and
child across Siberia to Japan and
America. As the revolution became
more virulent, he himself was forced
to flee. At Rostiv he attempted to
save his money by expressing it to a
bank in London, and then with a non-
descript horde of refugees he tried
desperately to leave Russia.
Followed the three years of horri-
ble nightmare which he but dimly re-
members. His one idea was to get to
America to his wife and child. In
February, 1920, he was found in Odes-
sa, wrecked by typhus, his papers
burned, his money gone, his mind
shattered, but with two things clear;
he wanted to get to America, and he
was a Penn State man.
This statement which he reiterated
with frantic earnestness, drew to him
the attention of the American Red
Cross which sent him across the Black
Sea to Prote, Turkey, with the first
lot of refugees. By the middele of
June he had recovered his memory to
the degree that he could give three
State College names: Di. Sparks,
Professor Willard, and Professor Pat-
tee.
Mrs. Margaret A. Caldwell, Red
Cross nurse at Prote, became attract-
ed by his case and wrote the details
of it to Mi. John H. Caldwell, of Bos-
ton, urging him to make investigation
and it possible to secure for Srednik
a permit to enter the United States.
An inquiry from Mz. Caldwell was re-
ceived by the College and it was a
matter of a few minutes to verify that
Srednik was a Penn State man of the
class of 1912.
Professor Willard, who alone of the
three men mentioned was at the col-
lege at that time, convinced the au-
thorities at Washington that the case
was genuine and permit to sail was is-
sued to “Tommy.”
The hardest blow of all, however,
was still to fall. Upon his arrival in
America, he found that his wife and
child had died two years before of the
influenza. Utterly without means—
the money he had sent to London hav-
ing been confiscated by the Belshevi-
ki—and in shattered health, he began
life again in Philadelphia.
Perhaps alone of all Penn State
men, “Tommy” Srednik can say: “I
lost my memory, but Penn State I did
not forget; and because I did not for-
get her, I am still among the living.”
Forbid that any one be put to the
test of Tommy Srednik, who, when his
mind was otherwise blank, did not for-
get he was a Penn State Man. Alum-
ni, students, and ail the citizens may
find a time when Penn State may be
of aid. The Commonwealth of Penn-
sylvania is our campus and our field
of public service. Now is the occasion
of Penn State’s need; now the oppor-
tunity for all to arise and meet it with
a subscription to the $2,000,000 Emer-
gency Building Fund and thus become
gr honorary, if not active, Penn State
an.
pte ly ln
Farmers Urged to Make Cider.
Farmers are urged to convert their
: surplus apples into cider vinegar, for
which there is an excellent market in
practically all sections of the State,
according to James Foust, of the
State Department of Agriculture.
Foust says it is an economic waste
to allow apples to rot on the ground
with apple cider vinegar bringing
from 20 to 23 cents a gallon. He
points out that under the rulings of
the prohibition authorities, farmers
‘may convert their apples into cider
and keep the cider until it has turned
to vinegar, without securing a permit
of any kind, all technical rulings hav-
ing been set aside.
When the farmer sells cider, how-
ever, he is in danger of violating the
prohibition laws of selling a beverage
containing more than the legal
amount of alcohol. :
Farmers who desire to sell cider,
should post themselves on the laws
by securing the latest rulings of the
prohibition enforcement officers, Foust
says.
———The “Watchman” gives all the
news while it is news.
about the real questions over which
| the miners, the carriers and the op-
erators have been wrangling since
early in the spring. They are great-
ly involved and as is usually the case
when the public suffers it takes snap
judgment and damns everybody con-
cerned.
The following statement by the
Watkins Coal company, one of the
large producers of western Pennsyl-
vania, is so clear as to the probable
effect of the “Cleveland Agreement,”
under which the soft coal men went
back to work on August 15th, that we
have published it with the hope, that
the “Watchman’s” readers, at least,
will be better informed of a situation
that all are vitally interested in.
" FIRST.—Abandonment of the “Cen-
tral Competitive Feld” as a method of
wage negotiations.—For 25 years a
basic wage scale has been negotiated
in four States of the Middle west, ef-
fective for two year periods. These
wage scales were invariably forced on
Central Pennsylvania and the mining
districts in 24 States without regard
to the competitive conditions sur-
rounding them, and caused frequent
and serious trouble. Our employees
have been drawn into two national
strikes within three years without
presenting to us a single grievance or
demand. This persistent cause of
strikes has now been removed.
SECOND.—Immediate resumption
of work on wages and conditions of
March, 1922.—President Harding, at
his Washington conference, proposed
a return to the “status quo” pending
a thorough investigation of all phases
of the industry, with arbitration of
wages and other disputes. This fixed
the terms of any provisional wage
scale.
THIRD.—Renewal untii April 1st,
1923, of former wage contracts.—
Wages payable until April 1st, 1923,
are not subject to revision or arbitra-
tion. Sufficient time does not remain
to conduct the necessary hearings and
make any complicated revisions or ad-
justments in the provisional wage
rates, which are effective for several
months.
FOURTH.—Provisions for impar-
tial @ommission of Inquiry to make an
exhaustive study of whole industry,
with recommendations.—Both the
United Mine Workers and the opera-
tors signing the Cleveland Agreement
have agreed to submit every fact and
figure of their industrial activities to
a public committee approved or ap-
pointed by the President of the United
States.
To assure the neutrality and the
prestige of this Commission it has
been agreed that a joint national com-
mittee of miners and operators will
endeavor to select a panel which com-
mands mutual and public respect.
Speaking plainly, both the operators
and mine workers want practical men
of national prominence and highest
character and are fearful of a com-
mission that can even be imagined to
have a political or partisan complex-
ion and appointed on the eve of an
election. On the other hand they rec-
ognize that the public and the Admin-
istration will probably distrust a com-
mission named by the operators and
miners. Therefore, they have made
the President’s approval a condition of
the naming of a commission, and have
furthermore asked him to appoint i
in his discretion in case they cannot
agree on a panel.
The personnel of this Commission
is of extreme importance.
FIFTH.—Coliective Bargaining re-
stored.—The deck having been clear-
ed of obsolete and dangerous practices
the U. M. W. of A. and the operators
agree to assemble on October 2nd, and
to attempt by collective bargaining to
establish a new and equitable system
of negotiating wage-agreements.
SIXTH.—Future Wage-Agreements
—Beginning January 3rd it is arrang-
ed that such scale committees, as may
be designated at the convention of
January 2nd, will immediately under-
take the negotiation of wage-agree-
ments to replace those expiring March
31st.
These scale committees will have
the recommendation of the Commis-
sion of Inquiry as their guide.
SEVENTH. — Protection against
another strike in April.—The public’s
greatest protection against another
strike in the spring lies in full public-
ity as to the causes of national strikes
and full knowledge of the conditions
existing in all bituminous fields.
These facts should be developed and
published in full by the Commission
of Inquiry in January, 1923.
The recommendations of the Com-
mission should be published at the
same time.
If another disastrous tie-up of the
nation’s fuel supply occurs, on account
of a failure of either party to comply
reasonably with the recommendation
of the Commission, the responsibility
can be easily and promptly fixed. The
Administration can then act to pro-
tect the consumer, backed by the irre-
sistible force of public opinion, based
on knowledge of the facts.
PEE——
Vacation is Over.
Again the school bell rings at morning
and at noon; again with tens of thousands
the hardest kind of work has begun, the
renewal of which is a mental and physical
strain to all except the most rugged.
The little girl who a short time ago had
roses in her cheeks, and the little boy
whose lips were then so red you would
have insisted that they had been “kissed
by strawberries,” have already lost some-
thing of the appearance of health.
Now is a time when many children
should be given a tonic, which may pre-
vent much serious trouble. No other is so
highly to be recommended as Hood's Sar-
saparilla, which strengthens the
perfects digestion and assimilation. It
aids mental development by building up
the whole system.
Equally good as a medicinal preparation
are Hood's Pills, which are so well adapt-
od for both children and adults. In small
doses they are a gentle laxative, in larger
doses an active cathartic. 67-35
a
———Subscribe for the “Watchman.”
nerves,
THIS STATE HAS MORE AUTO-
MOBILES THAN MOST COUN-
TRIES.
Pessimists and knockers and mem-
bers of the Ancient Order of Gloom
got a jolt when the 1922 automobile
registration figures for the United
States came out, according to Hibner-
Hoover Motor Co., Goodyear Service
Station dealer.
“Despite generally adverse business
conditions and the fact that thousands
of cars went out of service, the peo-
ple of this country own 1,428,773 more
automobiles and trucks now than they
did a year ago, an increase of 15 per
cent.
“It means just two things—one,
that this country is a long ways from
being broke, and two, that automo-
biles are not regarded by the people
of this country as a luxury to be
bought only in flush times.
“As a matter of fact Americans
bought within the past twelve months
nearly as many cars as the rest of the
world owns together. Statisticians
figure that there are about 12,800,000
cars running in the world, all of
which, but about 2,000,000 are owned
in this country.”
Some interesting figures in regard
to automobiles owned have been col-
lected.. For example, Great Britain
has about 497,000 cars, Canada 463,-
000, France, 236,000, Germany 91,000
and the next one down the list is Ar-
gentine with 75,000.
There are only twelve States, his
figures showed out of 45 in this coun-
try which do not own more cars than
Argentine.
“This State alone with a registra-
tion of 732,348 owns more cars than
any foreign country in the world.”—
Exchange.
BEING YOUTHFUL
PHILOSOPHERS.
When we hear the word “philosc-
pher” spoken, most of us naturally
connezt it with some gray-bearded pa-
triarch. We are given to believe that
all philosophers are old, and that phil-
osopny, as a thing to contemplate, is
meant only for old men.
The truth is quite the contrary.
Philosophy, as a rule of life, is as
much for young people as for cold. In-
deed, every young man or young woin-
an should develop an individual rule
of life, based upon uplifting princi-
ples, and make that a “living philoso-
phy.” No matter what our education
or training, or what vocation or call-
ing we elect to follow, we still have
our individual problems to solve. No
outside organization can solve these
for us—they can help and guide and
direct, but the actual solution, and the
actual living, is up to us as individu-
als.
From th beginning of time, the
actual advance of humanity has bee
promoted by individuals. In reading
history we read more about the gieat
personages that rise here and there,
and which predominated in certain |
areas, than we read of armies, cou
tries or of nations.
The greatest individual, and there-
fore the greatest philosopher was the
Master himselt.
himself a philosopher.
phy was a life of service. He “came
not to be ministered unto, but to min-
ister,” and in this He let the truth be
known that he who would be great,
must serve. Such was the philosophy
of Wesley, of Knox, of Calvin, of
Washington, of Lincoln.
‘The true philosopher, then, is not
so much the one who advises as who
actually lives. He teaches by doing.
And all of us, old and young alike,
can be philosophers of that sort. The
poet Whittier has told us in one of his
immortal lines: “To worship right is
to love each other.”
eee fleet eee.
Graduate in Chinese
Civil War.
Penn State
Serving as advisor .on technical”
matters to General Fong Yu Hsang,
Christian leader in the civil war in
China, S. M. Dean, a Pennsylvania
State College graduate of the class of
1912 has been in the thick of the fight-
ing there, according to a letter just
received at the college. Dean was
graduated in the mechanical engineer-
ing course and he is the representa-
tive in North China for a large engi-
neering firm.
According to Dean’s letter, General
Fong Yu Hsang has command of ail
the armies of Honan and Anwhen
provinces, which makes him ruler of
approximateely 60,000,000 people. He
has his own large arsenal and mint,
and Dean is now in charge of remod-
eling these plants to not only make
guns and cartridges but to also make
machines, hardware and agricultural
implements. During a recent battle,
the Penn State man was in charge of
the building up of a hospital train to
accompany the troops. °°
MEDICAL.
A Useful Pain
Bellefonte People Should Heed Its
Warning.
Have you a sharp pain ora dull
ache across the small of your back?
Do you realize that it’s often a timely
sign of kidney weakness? Prompt
treatment is a safeguard against more
serious kidney troubles. Use Doan’s
Kidney Pills. Profit by a Bellefonte
resident’s experience.
Mrs. Mary Lose, 212 E. Bishop St,
says: “A few years ago my kidneys
became affected and I suffered awful-
ly. I was hardly ever free from dis-
tressing backaches. I was so misera-
ble 1 could scarcely keep going to do
my housework. I also had spells of
dizziness and frequent headaches. My
kidneys acted irregularly. Doan’s
Kidney Pills, purchased at the Mott
Drug Co., were not long in bringing
relief. I have depended on Doan’s
ever since when I have had an attack
and I know they are reliable.”
Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t sim-
ply ask for a kidney remedy—get
Doan’s Kidney
Mrs. Lose had. Foster-Milburn Co.,
But He did not. calld.«:
His philoso=,
Pills—the same that |:
Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. 63-35
ROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE
P CONSTITUTION SUBMITTED TO
THE CITIZENS OF THE COM-
MONWEALTH FOR THEIR APPROVAL
OR REJECTION, AT THE ELECTION
TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY. NOVEM-
BER 7, 1922. BY THE GENERAL AS-
SEMBLY OF THE COMMONWEALTH
OF PENNSYLVANIA, AND PUBLISHED
BY ORDER OF THE SECRETARY OF
THE COMMONWEALTH, IN PURSU-
ANCE OF ARTICLE XVIII OF THE
CONSTITUTION.
Number One.
A JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposing an amendment to section one
(1) of article fifteen (XV) of the Con-
stitution of the Commonwealth of Penn-
sylvania.
Section 1. Be it resolved by the Senate
and House of Representatives of the Com-
monwealth of Pennsylvania in General
Assembly met, That the following amend-
ment to the Constitution of Pennsylvania
be, and the same is hereby, proposed, in
atehrasos with the eighteenth article
ereof :—
That section. one of article fifteen, which
reads as follows:
“Section 1. Cities may be chartered
whenever a majority of the electors of any
town or borough having a population of
at least ten thousand shall vote at any
general election in favor of the same,” be
and the same is hereby, amended to read
as follows:
Section 1. Cities may be chartered
whenever a majority of the electors of any
town or borough having a population of
at least ten thousand shall vote at any
general or municipal election in favor of
the same. Cities, or cities of any partic-
ular class, may be given the right and
power to frame and adopt their own
charters and to exercise the powers and
authority of local self-government, sub-
ject, however, to such restrictions, limi-
tations, and regulations, as may be im-
posed by the Legislature. Laws also
may be enacted affecting the organization
and government of cities and boroughs,
which shall become effective in any city
or borough only when submitted to the
electors thereof, and approved by a ma-
jority of those voting thereon.
A true copy of Joint Resolution No. 1.
BERNARD J. MYERS,
Secretary of the Commonwealth,
ROPOSED AMENDMENTS
P CONSTITUTION SUBMITTED TO
THE CITIZENS OF THE COM-
MONWEALTH, FOR THEIR APPROVAL
OR. REJECTION, BY THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY OF THE COMMONWEALTH
OF PENNSYLVANIA, AND PUBLISHED
TO THE
BY ORDER OF THE SECRETARY OF
THE COMMONWEALTH. IN PURSU-
ANCE OF ARTICLE XVIII OF THE
CONSTITUTION.
Number One-A.
A JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposing an amendment to article seven-
teen, section eight, of the Constitution
of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
authorizing the granting of free passes
or passes at a discount to clergymen.
Section 1. Be it resolved by the Sen-
ate and House of Representatives of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in Gen-
eral Assembly met, That the following
amendment to the Constitution of Penn-
sylvania be, and the same is hereby, pro-
posed. in accordance with the eighteenth
article thereof: —
That section eight of article seventeen,
which reads as follows:
“Section ‘8. No railroad, railway, or
other transportation company shall grant
free passes or passes at a discount to any
person, except officers or employees of the
company,” be amended to read as follows:
Section 8. railroad, railway, or
other transportation company shall grant
free passes or passes at a discount to any
person, except officers or employees of the
i company and clergymen.
A true Joint Resolution No.
copy of
BERNARD J. MYERS,
Secretary of the Commonwealth,
#*
NUMBEE 2-A.
A JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposing an amendment to article nine,
section four, of the Constitution of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
Section 1, Be it resolved by the Sen-
ate and House of Representatives of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in Gen-
eral Assembly niet, That the following
amendment to the Constitution of Penn-
sylvania be, and the same is hereby, pro-
posed, in accordance with the eighteenth
article thereof :—
That section four of article nine, which
reads as follows:
“Section 4. No debt shall be created
by or on behalf of the State, except to
supply casual deficiencies of revenue, repel
invasions, suppress insurrection, defend
the State in war, or to pay existing debt;
and the debt created to supply deficiencies
in revenue shall never exceed, in the ag-
gregate at any one time, one million dol-
lars: Provided, however, That the Gen-
eral Assembly, irrespective of any debt,
may authorize the State to issue bonds to
the amount of fifty millions of dollars
for the purpose of improving and rebuild-
ing the highways of the Commonwealth,”
be amended so as to read as follows:
Section 4. No debt shall be created by
or on behalf of the State, except to
supply casual deficiencies of revenue,
repel invasions, suppress insurrection, de-
fend the State in war, or to pay existing
debt; and the debt created to supply de-
ficiencies in revenue shall never exceed, in
the aggregate at any one time, one mil-
lion dollars: Provided, however, That
the General Assembly, irrespective of any
debt, may authorize the State to issue
bonds to the amount of fifty millions of
dollars for the purpose of improving and
rebuilding the highways of the Common-
wealth: Provided further, however, That
the General Assembly, irrespective of
any debt, may authorize the State to
issue bonds to the amount of thirty-five
millions of dollars for the payment of
compensation to certain persons from this
State who served in the Army, Navy, or
Marine Corps of the United States,
during the World War, between the sixth
day of April, one thousand nine hundred
and seventeen, and the eleventh day of
November, one thousand nine hundred
and eighteen.
Section 2. Said proposed amendment
shall be submitted to the qualified elec-
tors of the State, at the general election
to be held on the Tuesday next following
the first Monday of November in the year
nineteen hundred and twenty-four, for
the purpose of deciding upon the approval
and ratification or the rejection of said
amendment. Said election shall be
opened, held, and closed upon said elec-
tion day at the places and within the
hours at and within which said election is
directed to be opened, held, and closed,
and in accordance with the provisions of
the laws of Pennsylvania governing elec-
tions. Such amendment shall be printed
upon the ballots in the form and manner
prescribed by the election laws of Penn-
sylvania, and shall in all respects conform
to the requirement of such laws.
4 A true copy of Joint Resolution No.
BERNARD J. MYERS,
Secretary of the Commonwealth,
Number 3-A.
A JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposing an amendment to article nine
section four, of the Constitution of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, au-
thorizing the State to issue bonds to
the amount of one hundred millione of
dollars for the improvement of the high-
ways of the Commonwealth.
Section 1. Be it resolved by the Sen-
ate and House of Representatives of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in Gen-
eral Assembly met, That the following
amendment to the Constitution of Penn-
sylvania be, and the same is hereby, pro-
posed, in accordance with the eighteenth
article thereof:—
That section four of article nine, which
reads as follows:
“Section 4: "No debt shall be created
by or on behalf of the State, except to
supply casual deficiencies of revenue,
repel invasion, suppress isurrection, de-
fend the State in war, or to pay existing
debt; and the debt created to supply de-
ficiencies in revenue shall never exceed, in
the aggregate at any one time, one mil-
lion dollars: Provided, however, That
the General Assembly, irrespective of
any debt, may authorize the State to
issue bonds, to the amount of fifty mil-
lions of dollars, for the purpose of im-
proving and rebuilding the highways of
the Commonwealth,” be amended so as
to read as follows:
Section 4. No debt shall be created
by or on behalf of the State, except to
supply casual deficiencies of revenue,
repel invasion, suppress insurrection, de-
fend the State in war, or te pay existing
debt; and the debt created to supply de-
ficiencies in revenue shall never exceed,
in the aggregate at any one time, one
million dollars: Provided, however, That
the General Assembly, irrespective of any
debt, may authorize the State to issue
bonds, to the amount of one hundred mil-
lions of dollars, for the purpose of im-
proving and rebuilding the highways of
the Commonwealth.
5 a true copy of Joint Resolution No.
BERNARD J. MYERS,
Secretary of the Commonwealth.
Number Four-A.
A JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposing an amendment to section one
of article fourteen of the Constitution
of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
Section 1. Be it resolved by the Sen-
ate and House of Representatives of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in Gen-
eral Assembly met, and it is hereby en-
acted by the authority of the same, That
the following amendment to section one
of article fourteen of the Constitution of
the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania be,
and the same is hereby, proposed, in
accordance with provisions of the eight-
eenth article thereof: —
That section one of article fourteen,
which reads as foliows:
“Section 1. County officers shall con-
sist of sheriffs. coroners, prothonotaries,
registers of wills, recorders of deeds, com-
missioners, treasurers, surveyors, auditors
or controllers, clerks of the courts, district
attorneys, and such others as may, from
time to time, be established by law; and
no sheriff or treasurer shall be eligible for
the term next succeeding the one for
which he may be elected,” be amended so
as to read as follows:
Section 1. County officers shall consist
of sheriffs, coroners, prothonotaries, regis-
ters of wills, recorders of deeds, com-
missioners, treasurers, surveyors, audit-
ors or controllers, clerks of the courts, dis-
trict attorneys, and such others as may,
from time to time, be established by law:
and no sheriff, except sheriffs in counties
having a population of less than fifty
thousand inhabitants, and no treasurer
shall be eligible for
ceeding the one for which
elected.
A true copy of Joint Resolution No.
he may be
BERNARD J. MYERS,
Secretary of the Commonwealth.
Number 5-A.
A JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposing an amendment to article nine,
section one, of the Constitution of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, so as
to permit the exemption from taxation
of real and personal property owned,
occupied, or used by any branch or post
or camp of the Grand Army of the Re-
public, the Spanish-American War Vet-
erans, the American Legion, the Vet-
erans of Foreign Wars, and the Mili-
tary Order of the Loyal Legion of the
United States.
Section 1. Be it resolved by the Senate
and House of Representatives of the Com-
monwealth of Pennsylvania in General
Assembly met, That the following amend-
ment to the Constitution of Pennsylvania
is hereby proposed, in accordance with
the eighteenth article thereof :—
That section one of article nine be
amended so as to read as follows:
All taxes shall be uniform, upon the
same class of subjects, within the terri-
the term next suec- |
torial limits of the authority levying
tax, and shall be levied and collected
under general laws; but the General As-
sembly may, by general laws, exempt from
taxation public property used for public
purposes, actual places of religious wor-
ship, places of burial not used or held
for private or corporate profit, institu-
tions of purely public charity, and real
and personal property owned, occupied,
and used by any branch, post or camp
of honorably discharged soldiers, sailors,
and marines.
4 true copy of Joint Resolution No.
BERNARD J. MYERS,
Secretary of the Commonwealth.
5
Number 6-A.
A JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposing an amendment to section one,
article nine, of the Constitution of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
Section 1. Be it resolved by the Senate
and House of Representuiives of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in Gen-
eral Assembly met, That the following
amendment to the Constitution of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania be, and
the same is hereby, proposed, in accord-
ance with the provisions of the eight-
eenth aritcle thereof :—
That section one of article nine, which
reads as follows: |
“All taxes shall be uniform, upon the
same class of subjects, within the ter-
ritorial limits of the authority levying
the tax, and shall be levied and collected
under general laws; but the General
Assembly may, by general laws, exempt
from taxation public property used for
public purposes, actual places of religious
worship, places of burial not used or held
for private or corporate profit, and in-
stitutions of purely public charity,” be,
and the same is hereby, amended to read
as follows:
All taxes shall be uniform, upon the
same class of subjects, within the terri-
torial limits of the authority levying
the tax, and shall be levied and collected
under general laws; but subjects of tax-
ation may be classified for the
purpose of laying graded and progressive
taxes, and, in the case of inheritance
and income taxes, exemptions may be
granted; and the General Assembly may,
by general laws, exempt from taxation
public property used for public purposes,
actual places of religious worship, places
of burial not used or held for private or
corporate profit, and institutions of purely
public charity.
A true copy
6-A.
of Joint Resolution No.
BERNARD J. MYERS,
Secretary of the Commonweaith.
Number 7-A.
A JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposing an amendment to article three
(III) of the Constitution of the Com-
monwealth of Pennsylvania.
Section 1. Be it resolved by the Senate
and House of Representatives of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in Gen-
eral Assembly met, That the following
amendment to the Constitution of Penn-
sylvania be, and the same is hereby,
proposed, in accordance with the eight-
eenth article thereof :—
That article three be amended by add-
ing thereto the following:
Section 84. The Legislature shall have
power to classify counties, cities, bor-
oughs, school districts, and townships
according to population, and all laws
passed relating to each class, and all
laws passed relating to, and regulating
procedure and proceedings in court with
reference to, any class, shall be deemed
general legislation within the meaning
of this Constitution; but counties shall
not be divided into more than eight
classes, cities into not more than seven
classes, school districts into not more
than five classes, and boroughs into not
more than three classes.
A true copy of Joint Resolution No.
BERNARD J. MYERS,
67-31-13 Secretary of the Commouwealth.
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