8Y P. GRAY MEEK. Tul Sitegs. i —Vote for KIMPORT. —The best man for Prothonotary is ARTHUR KiMporT. There is no guestion about it. Vote for KIMPORT. —Remember that HENRY W ETZEL is a candidate for county surveyor. He is a good one and deserves your support. i —1If yon want to inaugurate a term of | persecution in Centre county chose E. R CHaMBERS for your prosecuting attorney. —Mr. CHAMBERS is too vindictive 40 be a fair and sqoare District Attorney. With him io shat office he would harrass his per- sonal enemies as if they were public crim- inals. ~Don’t let any other engagement keep you away from the polls on Tuesday. It is the duty of every honest man to be there to vote his convictions and we hope youn are one of shem. —In five days more the election will be bere. Are you considering what your duty is toward reforming the government of Pennsylvania. Don’t fail to vote. The course is plain for every honest person. —The doings in Bellefonte at night lately have reminded one of frontier days. Mon- day night there was a mild attempt at shooting up the town, but aside from a few shattered street lights no serious barm was done. ——Elect CHAMBERS District attorney and the Philadelphia Inguirer wili be out next Wednesday morning with great head lines telling of the PENROSE victory in Centre county so successfully managed by Love and HARTER. —Everybody knows E. R. CHAMBERS well enough to know what he would do if put io the District Attorney’ office. He is after the coin and the bills that would be piled up on the county would be enor- mous. Don’t take any chances with such a man. —Mr. CHAMBERS has been deputy reve- nue collector and an Auditor General's at- torney for so many years that you have al- most forgotten that he has been anything else than an office holder. Now he wants to be your Distriot Attorney. Don’t you think thas the Colonel wants a good bit? —There is not a man who voted for BERRY who bas been sorry for it. In truth every honest person is proud of the part he played in puttiog that sterling character into she State Treasurer's office. Don't leave the work half done. Make the job complete by sending HARMAN to finish hie work. —QOut in Omaba and Chicago the big packers have reduced the price of meat in bulk and promise a still farther cut but 80 far as Bellefonte is concerned we bave not yet heard the Bellefonte butchers ory- ing themselves hoarse announcing that ‘“‘aassage’’ is any cheaper now than it wae betore. —Don’t imagine that the election of KiMpPORT is a foregone conclusion. He will need all the votes he can get to make his election a certainty. Remember that is will cost you only a little effors to go out to vote for him and if he should happen to be a few votes short and yours would be one of them you would feel very badly abous it. —It might be well for you to stop and think before voting for CHAMBERS for Dis- trict Attorney. He has bad so many years at the publio crib that be would imagine he onght to make as much out of that of- fice as he has out of his other pablic jobs. The watoh dog of the treasury would have to sleep with both eyes open if CHAMBERS were Distriot Attorney. — Every citizen of Centre county owes it to the Commonwealth to go out and vote next Taesday. It is a grave orisis that con- fronts the taxpayer. Shall the reform that Mr. BERRY bas inaugurated continue or are you ready to take a chauce on putting the machine back in a position to rob you again? There is no polities in is. It isa pure case of protecting your own pocket book and you should look after it person- ally. —JIf you bad a man looking after your financial affairs who would rob you to en- rioh his friends would you ever trust him again. That is what the machine did to you in managing your treasury at Harris barg. This same machine is begging yon for a chance to try it again. Are you going to give it the chance. If not go to the polls next Tuesday and vote for HARMAN. He is the one man who is running in whom the machine bas no friend. —Don’t let anything koep vou away from the election next Tuesday. It is ‘‘an off year” and so little enthusiasm that a short vote might result in the defeat of | ARTHUR KIMPORT for Prothonotary. Don’t let such a thing happen if you can help it. Go yourself and ges your neighbor to go. It might not mean much to you personally, but it means a great deal to this young man who deserves your support and who has already suffered losses that are irre. parable. ~—Look out for a last card to be sprung by Col. CHAMBERS. In all probability he will have a great story to tell you about a mysterious death up in Taylor township. The play will be to reflect discredit on Dis- triot Attorney RUNKLE. Don’t believe the story if is is told you as there is nothing to it. Is isonly a proof positive that the Colonel is entirely too ‘‘nosey’’ to be Dis. triot Attorney of Centre county and those who know him best know how true this | purchased for him had probably moved statement is. . STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 52 Stuart and Young not Reformers ings and the several fiscal boards, is that Auditor General YouNG and Governor | gognainted with the business of the office STUART being reformers, there is no danger | in the administration of public affairs,even | yy records that come within his jurisdiction it SHEATZ should prove recreant after the | ghas the people have ever had. There is eléotion. As a master of fact, however, we | bave no evidence that either YOUNG or | STUART is a reformer. STUART has con-| tinued all the crooks which were drawn to- | gether under the QUAY regime and YOUNG | retains STOTT, the notorious ‘‘lence’’ of the | PENNYPACKER Board of Public Grounds | and Buildings io his office,notwithstandiog | that public sentiments forced him out of the secretaryship which he disgraced. Governor STUART is not a reformer. He bas made a false pretense of a desire to pun. | ish the capitol grafters bus more thao a year has elapsed since the exposure of their crimes and over 9 months have passed since the inauguration of Mr. STUART. Bat the grafters have not been brought to justice and we can discover no signs which indicate that they ever will be. They have been indioted for political effect but show no signs of a fear of conviction for they volan- | tarily relinquished every technical ad- vantage which they might have secured. | Besides Governor STUART has made no at- | tempt to punish the insurance grafters whose crimes were exposed more than eigh- teen months ago. In {act most of those in- | volved in that scandal are still in office. The truth of the matter is, and every in- telligent man in the Commonwealth uvoder- stands it, that the election of SHEATZ will not only restore the machine to complete control of the state government bus it will result in a complete resumption of the grafs- ing operations. Daring the reconstruction period in the Scuth there were hordes of | corrupt carpet baggers in control. At ove time an eruption of public conscience frightened them so badly that some of them ran away from the danger. One, a trifle more courageous than the others, remain- ed, and later wrote to one of the fugitives, *'come back. Ther are two years of good stealing here yet.”” That is precisely the condition in Penosylvania today. The machine managers believe that the oppor- tunities for graft have not been exhausted and want to resume at the earliest oppor- tunity. Pennypacker's Foolish Talk. The fool-killer being on vacation last week former Governor PENNYPACKER took advantage of the opportanity to give an account of his stewardship, as he ex- presses it. That is to say he told a olub of which he has been president all about his nomination for and election to the office of Governor and the way in which he ad- ministered the duties. Of course it was fanny. That absurd old idiot is always funny when he wants to be serious and the narrative to which we refer surpasses any of its predecessors in its exuberauce of folly. Bat it is humiliating, too, that a man who bas heen so singularly honored by an in- telligent people should make such a speo- tacle of himself. Mr. PENNYPACKER'S harangue, for there is po other name that fits it, is mainly an exhibition of a stapendous personal vanity and a panegyric on the late Senator QUAY. He expresses the belief that he was chosen as the Republican candidate for Governor, ata oritical period of the history of his party, because the managers of the party were anxious to secure a man eminently fit for the office. After that he could say nothing that would surprise any one and when be adds that ‘‘the death of QUAY was like the fall of a dynasty,” and “Ido not believe in reforms,” the intelligent observer will accept such expressions as the silly vaporings of a diseased mind. There is only one alternative. It is hardly fair, either, to assume that PENNYPACKER is the silly and simple idiot which such expressions imply. In some incidents of his public life there is revealed the lowest measure of canning. For example the vanity which he admits influenced him to accept the nomination for Governor which QUAY had manifestly him 0 covet the honor and instead of going into open and honorable competition for it he wrote a fulsome enlogy on QUAY and accepted the office as a recompense for his time and trouble. There was no charaoteristio of the simple life in that any more than there waa in his consent to the looting of the treasury by a gang from which he expeoted fature favors. : E—————— Prothonotary import Deserves Re. election. During bis term of office WiLniam F. SMITH, of Millheim, was regarded one of the most popular prothonotaries who every filled that office and now the attorneys at the Centre county bar as well as the general public eay that there could not be a more BELLEFONTE, PA., NOVE The only reason given why it is not nec- | essary $0 continue minority representation | his office he knows no party hat treats Re- on the Board of Pablic Gronnd« and Baild- | The Responsibility Fixed. and that is the greatest reason of all why he should be re-elected. Though he is a Democrat in polities in | That Senator PENROSE received $15,000 | of the capitol grafs is now admitted. publican and Democrat alike, so far as | “But,” declares chairman ANDREWS, “it business is concerned. He is thoroughly | W8s used for campaign parposes. There | were several donbtful Congressional dis- | triots in the State in 1904,” continued the | foxy chairman, ‘and the money was need- ' ed to carry them.” It came from a con- | tractor who was robbing the treasury of and is one of the aafest keepers of the coun- not a lawyer at the Centre county bar MBER 1, 1907. | county, irrespective of party, obliging, accommodating and painstaking official than just ARTHUR B. KIMPORT; who can do aught but speak iv the highest | ‘only a small will make no | He eave the money because the or- terms of his efficiency and the voters of the mistake in again voting him into office. Sheats Falsifics Again. Mr. Joux O. SHEATZ, the Republican machine candidate for State Treasurer, re- vealed his mendacity anew in a speech de- livered at Uniontown the other night. He charged inferentially that State Treasurer BERRY paid for his bond by favors from the office. On the following day Mr. BERRY in a speech characterized the state- ment as a falsehood and demanded a re- traction. No truthful man would have made such an acousation unless it was justified by the facts and any honorable man having made it in mistake or through | misivformation, would have promptly cor- rected it the moment she truth was asoer- tained. But SHEATZ declared the false- hood and refuses to retract it. We have previously referred to his falsi- fication of his record in the Legislature on the Susquehanna canal bill. In that mat- ter he lied deliberately and maliciously and though his attention has been publicly called to the official records of the General Assembly, be remains silent, in the hope, probably, that the exposare of his infamy will vot affect the public mind. Bat das- tardly as that episode ie it is not 80 bad as this later plunge into the dirty pool of mendacity. In this case he has borne false witness against a fellow citizen. He has malicionsly traduced a man of the highest character who has performed distinguished service for the people of Pennsylvania. Lying of that sort is probably the most despicable of all human vices. No honest or honorable man ever haa or ever will be guilty of shat contemptible offence. In courts of justice the evidence of a liar is not allowed to inflaence the result of liti- gation. From the foundation of buman society the liar hae been ostraciced from association with honorable men. Yet this miserable falsifier asks the people of Penn- sylvania to decorate him with a badge of confidence notwithstanding the fact that he bas been proved a wretched liar. It is an insalt to the intelligence of the people and an outrage upon the conscience of the State. Decent men condemn rather than reward liars, Complete Rebuke of Hypocrisy. Easily the most interesting incident of the campaign was the reply of Hon. W. T. CREASY, of Columbia county, last week, to an invitation of a few self-styled indepen- dent Republicans to join with them in an effort to induce the real independent Re- publicans to support JOHN O. SHEATZ for State Treasurer. It was interesting for two reasons. It revealed the absolute want of principle among certain men who had been mistakenly accepted as leaders by the LiNcoLN Republicans of the two last cam- paigns, and it proved the entire absence of intelligence from she minds of those who so addressed Mr. CREASY. Apparently they didn’t know that he is a Demoorat,and one of the polarized variety. The letter to Mr. CREASY was signed by MauroN N. KLINE and a man named Foss, both of Philadelphia. It recited that Mr. SHEATZ had been nominated by the reformers ; that his record -in the Legisla- tare was substantial proof of his conscience and courage; that his election would be an endorsement of ROOSEVELT'S policies and finally thas it would promote the overthrow of PENROSE. There were a lot of other misrepresentations and absurdities em- bodied in this remarkable paper but it is bardly worth while to enumerate them. The purpose of those concerned to get back into fellowship if not partnership with the PENROSE machine is so obvious that it can hardly be misunderstood. Mr. CREASY’S reply was characteristic of the sturdy and oourageous ‘‘farmer.’’ He takes the statements in their order and riddles them from begioning to end. He shows that the only hope PENROSE bas of continuing in office lies in the election of SHEATZ. He proves that SHEATZ was nominated by a convention absolutely dominated by PENROSE and, inferentially, that it was the result of an agreement be- tween PENROSE and SHEATZ to promote PENROSE'S re-election. Fioally Mr. Creasy, who served in the Legislature with SEEATZ for four sessions, demonstrates that SHEATZ was one of the most servile followers of the machine in the Legislature during that time. It was a most complete rebuke of hypocrisy. —Get out every vote possible next Tues- day. | opportunity so loos. | sumed that the organization demanded it upwards of a million and amounted to per centage of his graft, ganization bad favored him with the In fact it may he as- for the reason that Seuator PENROSE be lieved that a division of spoils was just. Accepting Mr. ANDREWS’ explavation of the matter, the incident fastens upon the Republican party, as it is at present con- duoted, complete responsibility for the capi- tol graft. It is the babit of apologists for that colossal crime to say that the party cannot be held to account for the actions of a few individuals, As a matter of fact that is begging the question at best, for in representatives of the party and morally as well as legally the principal is accountable for the actions of the agent. Admitting therefore, that under certain conditions the party might escape responsibility, when the party shares the spoils the responsi. bility follows inevitably. If Congressman CASSELL had pot looted the treasury he wounldu’t have been able an amount of money for campaign or other purposes. If PENROSE hadn’s known that CasseLL was looting the treasury he wouldo’t bave dreamed of asking for such a sum of money. As a matter of fact the records of she investigation show that PENROSE exacted from CASSELL not only that excessive contribution but another sum nearly equal ino amount. When the Secretary of the ‘‘Homeless 26" the organi- zation which was lobbying for reduced railroad rates, demanded $10,000 from PENROSE for silence with respect to certain dew. uy the gras, daring the campaign of last year, PENROSE made CASSELL put up the money. Obviously the whole busi. ness was a partnership affair. —The Gazette wants to know if you will “let well enough alone.” That is exactly what we want to know. The Ga- zette tells you to *‘let well enough alone.” That means that it wants you to vote for HARMAN and continue a minority repre- sentation in Harrisburg. It means that it wante you to vote for KIMPORT and RUN- KLE and ‘‘let well enough alone’ in the offices they are now filling so acceptably. Get Cut the Vote. The work of the campaign,so far as argu- mentation goes, is practically ended. Noth- ing remains but to get ont the vote. This is really the mosi important duty of a party organization in any campaign. In one like that which is just drawing to a olose it is probably the most difficult. There has been no excitement to arouse enthusiasm. In fact the campaign has been a quiet but earnest appeal to the conscience and in- telligence of the people to continue an im- provement which has made some progress but is still far from completion. The cam- paigo bas been a ‘‘still hunt" in the inter- est of civic righteousness. There remain only two days, therefore, to perform the most important and arduons work of the campaign. But if all the latent energy of the manhood of Pennsylvania is invested in the work, it will be achieved. Nothing more can be done in the cities. The last days of registration completed that work in such communities. But in the country districts much may be accomplish- ed. The friends of good government have little to fear trom the diminished registra. tion in the cities. The lose from that source will be to the machine candidate. A fall vote in the boroughs and townships will determine the result of the contest on the right side. There ought nos to be a single Democratio vote lost in Centre county and there will nos be if the party workers are vigilant and energetio. It will be worth the time and trouble thai it costs, moreover, to get out a fall Democratic vote. If BERRY hadn’t been elected two years ago $20,000,000 would have been stolen in addition to the loot which was taken. That would amount to more than a day’s wages to every prop- erty owner in the State. If HARMAN is defeated next Tuesday the looting will be resumed in May and not only the twenty but other millions will be taken. Centre county Democrats should do their duty. at the Centre county bar for twenty-two years, says the Gazette. Since that Is so isn’t it strange that the Colonel should be after the little office of District Attorney ? There is something wrong, somewhere, You couldn’s find another lawyer in this county who has been practising that long who would take the office as a gift. a government by party the officials are the | the to present Senator PENROSE with so large he, NO. 438. The Big Stick or the Big Store? From the New York Evening Post. Now, we have steadily ex the view that a certain measare blame at- taches to Mr. Roosevelt. He, too, bas been sensational in his methods of dealing with vast questions which require, above all things dispassionate and sober treatinent He has been too excised, too sweeping, $00 ill-advised in she speeches he bas delivered within the few weeks. At a time when he should bave displayed great re- serve and self-control, he been far too talkative and im Furthermore, as the head of a party which has guaran- teed unruffled rity to the country, the President cannot bus be involved. Washington dispatches this morning repre- sent him as determined to do everything possible to afford relief to the situation, since he does not want his Administration to be “dimmed’’ by financial distarbance. All this is inevitable, and is admitted ; but when men go further and assert that Mr. Roosevelt is accountable for what has occurred in this city during the past week the thing becomes a howling absurdity. It was not Mr. Roosevelt who attempted to corner United Copper. It was not be NBO obi 000 of a chain of Banks, purely for ve purposes. It was not his name that had long stood as the symbol of all that is and abhorrent to sound and honest bonkers. No ; it was Heinges, the Morses, the Thomases nse of the machinery of oredis, t on its dieorder. Imprudent as the P ent may have been in his pub- lic utterances, he might have talked till doomsday withont cansinga thousand part of the trouble which these highway- men of finance precipitated in a single e have not refrained, and shall not re- frain, from criticising the President. Bat though mistaken, is at least honest, He is not trying to line his pookets with filohed money. He is not seeking to im- pose upon the public by glittering hubbles of financial es which are certain so collapse aud bring ruin to all concerned. Nor was it the President who laid his band upon one set of fiduciary institations after aoker to putvers them 30 nelarious ends. e cannot ge ev ng to the Stick when there has all the while lly work the Big Grab. The President must acoept his fair share of blame ; the news papers mast shoulder theirs ; bus the true and damning responsibility rests with the men whose greed and ouoniog and shame- less plots to uver-reach the publio have oreated the fear lest more of our fi) may prove to be as rotten as theiis. Capitol Loot in the Campaign Fand. From the Philadelphia Record. It was to the interess of she Capitol graft- ers who looted the State Treasury with the connivance of the acoredited agents of the Republican Organization to contribute liberally to the Republican campaign found. They contributed. The sum total of the license fees they thus paid for the privilege of plundering the people of their heart's content will probably never be known ; but circumstances have compelled State Chairman Andrews to admit that one of the favored Capitol contractors gave up $15,000. It was little enough in propor- tion to the swag the donor made off with i yet it helped the Party of Ideas to arouse the necessary election-day enthusiasm for the dear old flag. The perpetuation of Organization rule is now a more vital matter than ever of the Capitol thieves. Upon it will depend the vigor or otherwise of their prosecution. It is hardly to be imagined under the circum- stanoss that they have drawn taut their purse strings and refased to vote another dividend npon their booty in the intersst of the Sheatz campaign. Ope and all they want to see Harman beaten and a member of the Organization firmly installed in the Treasuryship, and they believe that money will doit. They have the money. [sit thinkable that they would be niggardly when their personal liberty is at stake ? John Oscar Sheatz probably does not troubie himself with the sordid details of campaign finance. Osherwise he might satisfy public curiosity by informing vs how much of the money stolen from the people of Pennsylvania during the con- straotion of the State Capitol bas been turned over to the Organization committee to defray the ‘‘legitimate expenses’ of the Penrose candidate for State Treasurer. Some Evidence Suppressed. From the Pittsburg Post. That the Stuart-Sheatz braud of holier- than-the-machine Republicavs is in sym- pathy and collusion with the gavg element of the party is ihenensingly evident. The whole conduct of the graft prosecution in- dioates this, and the story in this issue of “The Post” of certain facts of the investi- gation being su clinches the case. The majority of the le of this State firmly believe that m of this money taken from the treasury on these grossly fraudulent and extortionate contracts was used to help the machine out of the hole it had made in the State funds through re- lations with pet political banks and manip- ulation of the nunwiedly and unnecessary wyrplus. 1f Sheatz and Stuart are not in sympathy with the , if thay do not connt on the t Ip defeat Harman, this evidence would not have been surpressed as it has been. The decent element of the continue half corrupt and half is now trying to do. Stnart’s tactics of su on are calculated to help and save party. In thos the worst elements of his - Spawis from the Keystone. After being idle for more than a year, DuPont & Co.’s powder mills, near Tamaqua, resumed operations last week. ~It is now stated that the Waynesburg Farmers’ and Drovers, Natiotal bank, which failed last December, will not be reopened, —=A. G. Morris has purchased the plant of the Tyrone Foundry and Machine company, located = short distance east of Tyrone, for $23,500. —A large white goat, believed to be of the Bocky Mountain species, was shot in Bed- ford county the other day by Albert Koontz, of Johnstown. —G. W. Beard & Co., of Reading, bave been awarded the contract to build ao addi- tion to the state hospital at Hazleton ata cost of over $60,000. —Mrs. Sarab Rider, of Unityville, Colum- bia county, aged 101 years and the mother of eighteen children, was painfully injured by a fall a few days ago. —A. W. Cowder, of Bradford township, Clearfield county, put out nine and ome . fourth acres of buckwheat and has threshed from it a total of 366 bushels. . —Fifteen persons have announced them- selves as candidates for county treasurer in Jeflerson county, and there will be about as many for county commissioner. : —Harold Wilson, a 15 year-old son of, Audrew Wilson, of Hyner, Clinton county, . is the champion bear-bunter in that section, having shot six bears within ten days. “ ~The girl workers of the New Century Silk mill at Lansdale, Montgomery county, after a strike of twenty weeks, have won concessions and resumed work yesterday. —A syndicate of Cleveland, Ohio, which has purchased from Independence-Avells Coal company, 1,050 acres of coal lands in Independence township, Washington coun- ty, at $600 an acre. —John K. Grotz celebrated his 97ch birth- day anniversary.quietly on Wednesday at his home in Bloomsburg, where he had spent sll of his ninety-seven years. He isin full possession of all his faculties and walks out daily. —Malignant typhoid fever broke out in th | the family of John Boyle, at Worthington, ten days ago and two children died within two days, while a third is seriously ill. The father, who went away to hunt work several days before, cannot be located. —From a iist of filty applicants, eight of whom preached trial servions the congrega~ tion of the First Presbyterian church of Jersey Shore on Thursday evening voted to extend a eall to the Rev. P. H. Hershey, of Galeton, Fa., to fill the pastorate of that church. ~The village of Falls Creek, near DuBois, is having a scourge of the measles at this time and it is reported by the physicians and school teachers of the village that there are 150 cases in the town. The public schools have been greatly interfered with on ac- count of the disease. —Right car loads of apples were shipped m Mifflin station, Juniata county, on We lust week. while on Tuesday five more were shipped, all bound west. The fruit growers received about 50 cents per bushel delivered in the cars.’ About 800 bushels are loaded in a car. —8ix residences in DuBois were entered by burglars lust Wednesday night. The most valuable articles taken were a shot gun, four silver spoons and about £5 in money from # child's bank at the the home of Ever: ett Prothero, and a fine violin, valued at $150, from the home of C. W. Rodgers. —Miss Roberta Logul, a servant girl of Braddock, was arrested on Thursday for having made ugly faces and stuck out her tongue at members of the police lorce. At the hearing before the acting burgess she wus fined at the rate of acenta face and three cents for her tongue motions, which, with costs, amounted to $7.35. —Farmers through out northern Cambria county who optioned their hay to an Altoona dealer at $12 a ton are “kicking them selves” now that an agent of the Pennsylva- pia, Beech Creek and Eastern Coal and Coke company has been around offering them $14. The hay crop throughout that sec- tion this year was large and of good quality. —Mrs. Anuie Thomas, who killed her two little daughters by strangling them at the Cambria connty alms house recently, was exawined by a commission ‘appointed to in- vestigate her condition of mind last week, and was pronounced insane. During the in- vestigation she stated that she also tried to kill her two boys, but they wouldn't go with her. —George Deeter, aged 14 years, dressed in a blue serge suit, was inducedjby some evil influence to leave the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Deeter,of Carwensville, Clearfield county, on Tuesday evening, October 22, and run away. His parents are almost distracted at his leaving home and they ask the public to report his where abouts or return the boy to them. —A riot was started in front of the Adams Express office at Butler on Saturday night, while $5,000 worth of liquor was being dis- pensed to C. O. D. customers, and four men were seriously slashed with knives. The participants were all foreigners, who had given large orders for liquors as it was to be the last time that the express company would earry any such C. O. D. packages. —The borough council of DuBois on Tues- day evening awarded a five years contract to John E. DuBois for lighting the streets with 100 arc lights of 1200-candle power each, at the rate of $45 per light per year, and any above 100 to cost $40 each. The bor- ough has now eighty-three arc lights and fifteen gas lights costing in the whole $6,195 a year. So that by the new lease over $1,600 per year will be saved. —From orders issued by the Pennsylvania railroad officials, the Altoona shops will be busy all winter and between 400 and 500 ad- ditional men will be employed for work in the machine shops. At a meeting of the fore- men of the various departments of machine shops, Master Mechanic I. B. Thomas an- nounced that the output of the shops must be largely increased in the immediate future. The foremen were instructed to hirellmany new men, both laborers and skilled mechan. ies, and in all about 400 to 500 new men are wanted at once for work in the machine shops.