~ would make a capable Sherif. Vote for indeed. Les Mr. Humiey live in the before be wants 0 get into one of its3best —TAYLOR—HURLEY—BROWN is the ' combination. Everyone else must look out for himself and HURLEY and BROWN also for TAYLOR will drop like a hot cake when - he has profited all he can by their help. —FRED SMITH is a real native Centre countian. He bas been a farmer all bis life and is an active member of the Episco- pal church. Vote for him becanse he isa good man and would make a good Sheriff. ~The friends of the Hon. JAMES KERR, of Clearfield, will be very sorry to know that he is very dangerously ill in a private hospital in New York City and his condition is regarded as being exceedingly grave, —Last October the business troubles were all laid at Roose VELY's door. Those who were loudest in berating him then are strangely silent now. Will they have the courage of their convictions and vote fora change? — Remember that it is the men who are ruanuing for office you should size up. Not their families, nor their friends. Look well to their character, fitness and dispo- sition for these are the requisites of good officials. —The Gazette's attempt to belittle can- didate SMITH because his farm is small will work no injury to Mr. SMITH, who would rather be a good big man on a little farm than a miserable little man in a big newspaper. —Dr. FISHER bas the flag flung to the breeze on the roof of his home at Zion and he won't have any occasion for dropping it " to half-mast the morning after the election for the Doctor is going to be re-elected to the office of County Coroner. —New York, Okio, Indiana, West Vir- ginia, Maryland, Nebraska, Colorado, Wisconsin and Connecticut are the donbs- ful States in the campaign. Both sides ad- mit that. BRYAN does not need them bat he sees almost certain to get enough of them to insure his election, ~——If you know of any one who is in- different about going to the election youn should see that he gets there. The contest is too important, especially for Centre county, to leave one man away from the polls in this great fight against the gang of incompetents thas is trying to get into of- fice. —All through the campaign certain seo- tions of Centre county have been flooded with liquor and invariably the boys and young men who get drank on it say *‘It is on TaAyror and HURLEY.” If Centre county voters approve of this then they are not the oharaoter of people we bave always supposed them to be. —When one of Centre county's bpative sons, and a farmer at that, is ranning for the high office of Sheriff is would look as though her voters had no appreciation of the men who have worked and paid their taxes here always if they were tojfvote for HURLEY who bas been in the county only seven years and does not own an inch of property here. —According to the best Republican in. formation we can secure New York and Indiana are both conceded to BRYAN and Obio holds the balance of power. The Public Ledger, of Philadelphia, says this editorially and at the samejtime claime Obio for TAFT by oniy 25,000. In all moderation such concessions are encour- aging to the BRYAN cause. —When HURLEY and BROWN tied up to TAYLOR they showed what kind of persons they are. Men are known by the company they keep aud, politically speaking, this alliance isn’t going to help either, one of them. The people of Centre county kuvw what TAYLOR ia, they know what he is in politics for and in two weeks they are going to put their stamp of disapproval on him and the others who are trying to boost themselves by playing for strength hejean’t give them. ~-JosgPH G. CANNON, speaker of Cob- gress, impudently insulted the ministers of the land when a body of them called on him in Washington to consult about needed legislation. He is a candidate for re-election to the same powerful office. Mr. BARCLAY, who is one of the nominees for Congress in this district, will vote for CANNON, if they are both re-elected. Mr. WALKER, who is our other nominee for Congress, will not. As a christian man, then, yon ought to vote for WALKER. { i 8 a plamber io [AD estatlishment in ; ber of years and has the re being a very competent workman. It is generally supposed that R. B. TAYLOR, the Republican nominee for the Legislature, forced his nomination on the Republican party because the same intereste that were for TAYLOR were for BROWN and where the one developed sirength the other developed it also. In fact at the time of the primaries Mr. Tay- LOE made no secret of his desire to have BROWN in the field, the only object of which could have been to try to force LaAIrp HoLmgs, of State College, who was aleo an aspirant for the Recordership to in- duce W. L. FOSTER, of the same place, to withdraw from the race for the Legislature. Mr. Foster was TAYLOR'S most serious opposition and by making BROWN a men- ace to HoLMEs for the Recordership TAY- LOR evidently expected HOLMES to per- suade FOSTER to get out of his way. Both FosTeERr and HOLMES were encour- aged to remain by the better element of their party and they were defeated because their friends did not turn ont to the pri- maries while the crowd that was backing the other fellows left not a single vote at home. All of this is to explain the possible tarn of the political fortune wheel that gave Mr. BROWN the nomination. It is hardly prob- able that under any other ciroumstances he would bave secured it; for Republicans know as well as Democrats shat it takes more than respectability and good charac- ter to make a Recorder. They know that Mr. BROWN has not bad even a good com- mon school education consequently is en- tirely unfitted for such a responsible posi. tion as Recorder of Deeds. Why he has not that education has noth- ing to do with the question. Either he did not secure it because of indifference to his needs or because his surroundings were such as to make the master of his earning his own livelihdod a neceseity when be might have been at school. Iv either case he was uofartapate. The fact still re- mains, however, that the people of Centre county are not, called upon to take the chance of having a man so utterly anquali- fied in charge of their deeds and morteag- ee. The slightest flaw in a title might mean the loss of a home to most any one, it certainly would mean expensive litiga- tion to have the error corrected, and know- ing this the sensible man will think well before casting his vote for Mr. BROWN. is Barclay for Cannon. Congressman CHARLES F. BARCLAY was in Bellefonte last Friday while touring the county on an electioneering trip. While bere he approached a representative Re- publican and of course asked for his sap- port. The gentleman in tarn asked Mr. Barcray whether, if eleoted, he would support JosePH G. CANNON for speaker of the House of Representatives and BAR- CLAY declined to answer the question. This, in itself, is pretty good evidense that should he again he returned to Congress he will be the willing servitor for anything Mr. CANNON may desire. It is a well known fact that BARCLAY during the past two vears has been noth- ing more than a stoolpigeon for PENROSE. Every recommendation for postoffice ap- pointments in the district was made ac- cording to the diotation of the Philadel- phia bose, and every postmaster appointed was a man who could be depended upon to support him and do his bidding. This should be reason enough why every self: respecting voter should not support BaAR- CLAY for re-election. And now when by his refusal to declare himself he makes it plain that he will sap- port CANNON for re-election as speaker there is still greater reason why he should not be returned to Congress. Mr. CAN- NON’S record is suoh that he ought not be in Congress at all, let alone in the speaker's obair, and no intelligent man can afford to vote for any candidate for Cougress {who will not openly declare against him. For this reason, if no other, the voters of this district should elect W. HARRISON WALK- ER as their Representative in Congress. ———Don’t let sympathy warp your judg- ment on election day. It is not a personal matter yon are called upon to vote for. It is a matter of the most competent men. You want the best there is available to fill the local offices and therefor we urge you to compare the character and fitness of SMITH aod HURLEY, MILLER and FINK, MEYER and TaAvyror and MUSSER and BROWN particularly. We feel certain that your sober, honest judgment will tell you that it ie your duty to vote for the first named of the candidates for their respective offices, ——-Eleotion day is less than two weeks away and the candidates are doing some tall hustling. asking him for bis honest opinion paign. this to say : | election of BRryaN. - DN E, PA., A : The Great Labor-Leader’s Advice 1 Workingmen who have faith in the honesty of parpose as well sa io | judgment of the great leader and friend of the laboring men of the Unit States—JOHN MITCHELL—will cast their ballots without hesitation for War J. BRYAN. Following is his reply toa telegram from the Buffalo Republic, as to which party merited the sup- port of the workingman and the honest interests of the country in this can: SprING VALLEY, ILL., Sept, 15, "08. 70 the Buffalo Republic, Buffalo, N. Y. “Answering your telegram of today I have I sincerely believe that all honest interests in this country, including those of the workingman, would be greatly benefited by the Legitimate business and honest wealth would have nothing to fear in such an event. and that is the reason AN. “The predatory rich fight. their advocacy of Mr. : where the rest of the people should stand in the “The platform on which Mr. Brvan stands fully recognizes the rights of organized labor and gives specific assurances of legislation that will protect the rights and liberty of organized | labor. The platform on which Mr. Tarr stands gives no such recognition and no such assur- ances. The issue, therefore, is clearly drawn Mr. Gosirers and the executive council of the American Federation of Labor advised trade unionists to vote for Bry- who are so zealous in Tarr clearly indicate JOHN MITCHELL, Second Viee President, A. F. of L. Gigantic Criminal m— Conspiracy. An investigation instituted hy the New York World bas revealed thefaot that the records showing who received the $40,000, 000 paid to the French company for the Panama canal have heen destroyed. There have been doubts in the public mind on this subject for some time. WILLIAM NEL- SON CROMWELL, Mr. HARRIMAN'S per- sonal counsel, sold the Frenob franchise and property to the ROOSEVELT adminis tration. The transaction was denounced at the time as a grafting operation. GEORGE R. SHELDON, treasurer of the Republican Nasional committee ie believed to have been a member of the syndicate which received the money. Mr. CroM- WELL bad Mr. SHELDON appointed treasurer of the Republican National com- mittee. Mr. CROMWELL is bimeelf a mem- ber of the executive committee of she Re: publican National committee, The suspicion that the government had been robbed in the transaction which re- sulted in the wransier of the property and franchise of the French Panama caval bas prevailed for rome time. The ablest of the engineers who were concerned in the mas- ser recommended the Nicarauga route but the Panama property was acquired claudes- tinely and that enterprise fastened upon the country. Subsequently the govern- ment of Colombia refused to convey the franchise and the ROOSEVELT administra tion organized a bogus rebellion and es- tablished the Republic of Panama under the protection of American marines. It was the greatest ontrage of modern civilization bus becanse ROOSEVELT was behind is, it was allowed so be consammated. Subse- quently the building operations were begun under the direction of WiLLiam H. Tarr. When CROMWELL was appointed a mem- ber of the executive committee of the Re- publican party and he prooured the seleo- tion of GEORGE R. SHELDON as treasurer of the committee, the suspicions which had lain dormant for some years were re-awak- ened and with characteristic energy the New York World concluded to discover the facts. Bat its investigation stopped short when the archives cf the government were reached. The records had been abstracted or destroyed and the culpability shue con- oealed forever. If RoosEVELT had not con- sented to this criminal suppression of rec- ords, it could never have been acoomplish- ed. The plain inference is, therefore, that RoosevELT, CROMWELL and SHELDON have robbed the treasury with the knowl. edge and acquiescence of TAFT and that they are now striving to eleot TAFT in or- der to conceal their crime against the gov- ernment, ~The WATCHMAN has always main- tained that one term is too much for a poor official and two terms certainly the reward of competent ones so we ask yon now if DUNLAP and WEAVER ar not entitled to a second term in the Commissioner's office. They have money in the treasury to pay every debt the conuty has the moment it falls due. —Along with the other good men on the Democratic ticket, youn should not for- ges to vote for BECK and CoLE for auditors. They are both splendid men and you will make no mistake in supporting them. ~—Dr, R. G. H. Hayes has practically olosed negotiations for the lease of the Orvis residence on east Linn street where he expeots to move his family in the near fature and make it their residence for this winter, at least, Taft's Moral Delinguency. In his speech at Danviiie, Virginia, last Satarday, Judge TAFT revealed the bond which binds bimself and ROOSEVELT to- gether. Having asked whether persons in his andience favored the proposition to guarantee bank deposits and received an affirmative reply he declared: “You are in favor of any man opening a bank with $10,- 000 and then going to his neighbors and saying ‘‘give me $100,000 deposits that I may speculate with it because ROBINSON who bas a bank up here has $500,000 de- posits and be is responsible for every dol- | lar of my deposits.” If Judge TAFT doesn’t know better than that be is not fit to he a justice of the | peace. The proposition contained in the Democratic platform to guarantee bank | deposits provides for a nominal tax on | banks which accept the conditions to create i afund from which depositors will be paid in the event of the failure of the bank in | which they bave deposits. But it requires | banks to be solvents before they oan getin | and com pels them to sabmit to examinations | which will prevent the misuse of the funds and provides that if, through unavoidable loss, the dishonesty or delinquency of bank | officials or for any other reason the solvency | of the bank is brought under suspicion, the | bank shall pass out of the control of the | dishonest or incompetent bank cfficers and | into the hands of expert and honest bank- | ers who shall operate it for the benefit of | creditors and stockholders if it is not | irretrievably lost. If itis so completely swamped the depositors will be paid, not | out of ROBINSON'S bank but out of the | insurance fund created for that purpose. | Now if Judge TAFT kzows the truth | with respect to the guarantee of deposite his perversion of the facts in his Danville speech, on Saturday, was a measure of demagogy which would have been diegrace- ful to any scurvy politician. Bat it is probable thas recklessness of speech which has commended him to the fellowship of THEODORE ROOSEVELT, the only President of the United States who has been aconsed and coavioted of falsification, betrayed him into this absurd blunder. ‘‘Birdsof a feather flock together,”” and while Roosg- VELT might have selected any other man to sucoeed him he chose TAFT because of temperawental sympathy. The Duty of the Prohibitionists in “ihe Toanty. While the Prohibitionist vote in Centre county has never been one of very great numbers, yet it has frequently ocourred that swinging as a unit to one or the other of the two dominant parties is would have represented the balance of power. It might be the same controlling factor in the election of November 3rd. This probabili. ty prompts us to call the attention of the Prohibitionisie to the fatility of voting for their own party nominees for county office. They can serve the connty better by help- ing to choose good and competent officers for the local positions than by practically throwing away their votes on men who have no chance of winning. The Prohibitionists have a plainjduty to perform. The emergency in Centre county is too great to permit of their shirking it. They might have the responsibility of com- petent or incompetent officials resting upon them, therefor it behooves them to study the candidates of the two great purties and vote for the ones who are best equipped for the offices they seek. Subscribe for the WATCHMAN, § y 8s . Eieslsf iL Feel EF came upon us with a crash about a year ago. The fact that these papers published this report so prominently indicates that they could not it, for the Repub- lican newspapers of Chicag: are not alert to publish disagreeable information just be- cause it happens to be important to their readers. The conditions exist, they are demonstrated, and they are dreadful. And no doubt these conditions among school children in Chicago exist everywhere. No doubt they exist among others also shan school children. Beyond further questicos, we are in the midss of bard times. This condition is likely to tell beavily against Mr. Taft's candidacy at the coming election. And so it ought. His party bas demagogically olaimed oredit for the periods of good times, charged to its adver- sary responsibility for the periods of had times which this country has experienced in the past forty years. Nos oaly has his party persistently and deoeitfully done this, bus he himself only a few days ago in Kansas quoted cooked statistios to prove that Republicans make good times and Democrats hard times. Is would be only political justice, sherefore, were Mr. Taft to go down in a popular avalanche of con- demnation because he and his party have been caught with a virulent case of hard times on their hands. The political party that has been living by a lie should die by one. An Inexhamunstible Letter-File, From the New York World. Apparently the letter-files of the White House are inebaustible, No sooner bad the World printed Mr. Harriman’s lester to Sidney Webster ask- ing “Where do I stand ?’’ than Mr. Roose. vels dragged from the archives a letter written to My Dear Sherman in 1906 re- pudiating Mr. Harriman as an undesirable citizen, Harriman having declined to con- dibme again to a Repu™iosh campaign and. Mr. Hearst exposes Senator Foraker as a paid astoruey of the Standard Oil company, Mr. Roosevelt promptly publishes a letter written hy Mr. Taft declining to make any truce with the senator which would involve Foraker’s return to the senate. The [act leaks out shat the Standard Oil company bad contributed $100,000 to the Roosevelt campaign fund in 1904, Mr, Roosevelt had already taken the precaution to bave a 15 cent magazine print his letter to Mr. Crotelyou ordering this consribution returned. There is much applause except by the Standard Oil company, which did not get its money back after all. Now comes another magazine with con- fidential letters exchanged between Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Taft in the spring of 1906. A great administrator is hesitasing between the presidency and the supreme bench on the ground of duty. A most Eminent and Exalted Person is showing him the field of greatest usefulness to the people. It is needless to say that the cor- respondence geflects great oredit upon Mr. Taft and is by no means uncomplimentary to Mr: Roosevelt. The presidential letter-file is adequate to all occasions. It can prove anything Mr. Roosevelt wishes to prove and disprove anythiog he wishes to disprove. There has been nothing like it since the Arabian Nights, From the Pittsburg Post. Wherefore this sadden deluge of esti- mates in Republican organs all naturally predicting Mr. Taft's election ? No careful reader of the views of the correspondents in the several donbtful States fails to know that these organs welcome such an inunda- tion of figures now, not because she prophe- sied result is accepted as probable, bat the estimates are hoped to furnish a new di- | version, another indispensable distraction, No disoussion of a platform can be under- taken which seeks to have the Government guarantee a reasonable profit as an addition to the tariff bounties of manufacturers. Figures are tossed in to fill the void. Silently the trust magnates contribate to maintain their gri upon the schedules, and no “‘drastio’”’ New York law stops sach individual giving. Hereafter the corpora- tions may repay the personal donation from some large haul made by tariff exactions from the consumers. Campaign publicity unnerves the mavagers and arouses the people. Throw in more figures. Guaranty to baok deposits looks not so alarming when inserted in the Fowler bill and indorsed by the always amenable Mr. Tate, for the people see it is less revola- tionary than guaranty of industrial profits. Hurl in more figures. Mr. Taft says he is a Roosevelt imitator, signs himself simply “‘ditso’’ wherever he stops, but the Eastern Republicans call him a falsifier and declare he hates his sponsor. Shovel in more figures, Republicans Claim Everything. From the Harrisburg Star-Independent, The game of the managers of the Taft campaign is to claim all of the debatable States and even some that are absolutely certain to be in the Bryan column, The Taft newspapers have been given the tip to claim, claim, olaim until election day. The fact is that the Taft mausgers are terribly frightened and, like the boy pass. ing the graveyard, are whistling to keep up their courage. —Sabeeribe for the WATCHMAN, a field nearby. : ‘ wig ~The public schools of Muncy, Lycoming county, which have been closed for the past ten days on account of an epidemic of diph. theria, were reopened on Monday morning. There have been over 200 cases of the disease among the children of the borough since the epidemic first broke out and the schools were ordered closed by the board of health. —Meyersdale’s magnificent new High school building was formally dedicated last Friday, almost the entire population of the town turning out to participate in the exer. cises and to manifest the deep interest they take in educational work. The building is by long odds the most imposing and best equipped school structure in Somerset coun - ty. — Farmers in some sections of Lycoming county are complaining of the depredations by bears in their corn fields. Jacob Kieffer and John Lovett, whose farms border on the woods near Swissdale, report that many of their shocks have been torn apart and much of the corn consumed, and in order to pre- vent further loss they are hurrying the work of husking the crop. —Domestic troubles landed Clarence Wolfe and his wife, of Tyrone, in the Altoona hos- pital. Wolfe, itis alleged, shot his wife in the left arm and later went to a vacant lot, where he tried to blow out his brains with a shot from a revolver. The bullet which he intended to wind up affairs struck Wolfe on the temple and instead of penetrating the brain the leaden missile was scattered. —Riddled with small fragments of stone so that bis body presents the appearance of hav ing been on the firing line in a battle, John Snook, aged 30 years, of Milroy, liesin the Lewistown hospital in a precarious condi- tion. A blast at the Naginey quarries “‘fak- ed” and Snook went to the mouth of the hole to ascertain the cause. As he stooped the powder exploded, scattering sprawls into his body. Fellow workmen picked him up and he was hurried to Lewistown. —Judge James W. Shull, who presided in the case of Sheriff Charles D. Gillas vs. the county comissioners, of Franklin county, in a rule granted to show cause why an increas ed compensation should not be allowed for the boarding of prisoners, has handed down his opinion to the effect that the allowance of twenty-five cents per day for prisoners and convicts is to remain unchanged but the allowance of twelve cents per day for tramps and vagrants shall be increased to fifteen cents. —A mortgage for $1,000,000 on the prop- erty of the Pennsylvania & Maryland street railway company and in favor of the Farm- ers’ Loan and Trust company, of New York, has been placed on record at the court house in Somerset. The company has extended its line from Meyersdale to Garrett and will shortly be operating its cars between Garrett and Salisbury, a distance of nearly eighteen miles. It is expected that this line will ulti. mately be extended to Johnstown and will connect that city with Cumberland. —Although an electric current of over 2,000 voits held him rigid several minutes, John Hancharik, a miner at the Forest Hill mines of the Ellsworth coal company, is expected to recover. Just as Hancharik jumped upon a trip of ears his neck caught on the trolley wire. There was a flash of blue flame and the trip stopped almost im- mediately. The man stuck to the wire while the flames ate into the flesh of his throat and face. Other miners uncoupled the cars and pushed them back and the burning man dropped to the rails. All thought him dead but he soon showed signs of life and doctors say he will probably recover. bu —Friends of Lenus Sauker, a: well known farmer living about three miles from Gre: fire was comm Aatdd to OR from the burning woods tearby, the b being practically destroyed before ¥ ker or any of his family were aroused. In the barn were consumed all of Mr. Sanker’s crops, csttle and some machinery. The flames next attacked the “home and outbuildings, and these, too, licked up in very short order. Mr. ker's loss is partly protected by insuranes but his loss is nevertheless very heavy. —As a temporary expedient to defer a crisis in the water situation, the board of water commissioners, of Altoona, has com- pleted negotiations with the Allegheny Water company for the purchase of 30,000, 000 gallons from its supply. The Allegheny Water company has probably 50,000,000 gsl=- Jons stored in its reservoir at the head of Mill Run which is sufficient with a flow of its streams to meet the demands of its consumers and leave some over for Altova, The ar- ni is that Altoona is to take a a Te iinon gallons a day, quite a substantial addition to what the city is receiving but enough to warrant relaxation of the precau- tionary measures that have been taken to conserve the supply. oF PL