» Demon faidpen. BY P. GRAY MEEK. INK SLINGS. SE —Week after next the circus will be | here. —P. is for PENROSE and P. is for PALMER and p. is for pole and p. is for persimmon. —Many a man who is talking prohibi- tion or local option today didn’t vote it on Tuesday. : —The A. B. C. countries all being with us we are now a: liberty to make Mexico a peaceful country p. d. q. —BRUMBAUGH didn’t do so bad in Cen- tre county. In fact he made a better showing than we thought he would. —The politics of Pennsylvania still re- mains in the.vest pockets of the two bosses who control the Republican and Democratic organizations. —If the women of Bellefonte persist in these semi-annual rummage sales there are a lot of men in town who will have to be wearing their wives dresses or re- main in doors. —Tuesday’s rain was in the nature of a blessing, both to the farmer who had his corn planted and to the one who had not. The ground was hard and dry and needed moisture badly. —Gradually the European war is at- tracting less of public attention in this country. The golf and base-ball seasons are on and America never did stick to one subject very long at a time. —Are you getting ready for clean up week? Look about your premises and remove all of the unsightly rubbish. It will please you and be an inspiration to your neighbor to go and do likewise. —So little interest was taken in the primary contest in Bellefonte on Tues- day that a number of the most ardent workers in both parties forgot all about it until late in the day when they scampered off to the polls to vote. —1It is not exactly the language of the Bench but you'll all understand it when we tell you that Judge QUIGLEY certainly “soaked” PAUL SWARTZ on Tuesday. If he lives to serve the ten years term in the penitentiary it will be about the longest period of his life that he has been able to keep out of trouble. —Was. it desire to save the county money or was it eagerness to get back to unfinished corn and oats ground that actuated the grand jury that performed the remarkable feat in court this week of reviewing bills of indictment, finding true bills, inspecting the public buildings and getting discharged from further duty all in one day. It was some record, but we have our suspicions as to what was back of it. 1 —It will just make Williamsport sick when it discovers that the State High- way Department is so impressed with the importance of Bellefonte that it even sends special messages of apology to our council when it can’t find ways and means of meeting our EVERY demand. You know, Lycoming county and Wil- liamsport have ‘about one mile of state road to our ten and some of the good roads advocates of Mayor FISHER’S town are a bit jealous. —Again Centre county has witnessed the spectacle of the prohibitionists, who are so vociferous on every other occa- sion, failing to make good when the real opportunity to strike presents itself. The issue was clean cut between GRAMLEY and ScoTT and the Legislature is the only place where the matter of prohibition can be settled, so that those who advo- cate prohibition and did not take the trouble of voting for it on Tuesday might command more public respect by keep- ing quiet on the subject in the future. —The preferential primary, so far as it is applied in Pennsylvania, is nothing more nor less than a farce. Take for instance, the action of our own party organization. A few men gathered in Philadelphia and picked candidates who were placed on the ballot and then in support of them the organization flooded the State with specially marked ballots, prejudicial to every other candidate who - aspired to any of the offices they had chosen men for. The first unit of a political organization is the county or- ganization. Now what do you suppose would happen in our party right here in Centre county, if three years from now, when there may be dozens of Democrats seeking the nomination to the various county offices then to be filled, our coun- ty chairman, whoever he may be, and a few other Democrats, should meet and declare for certain men for the stated offices and then send ballots marked for their choice and against all others, to the voters of the county. Would you stand for such a proceeding? Would it be fair or would it be Democratic? Yet this is exactly what our State Organiza- tion has done in this primary and we are predicting right now that if such things are to continue there will be no Demo- cratic party in Pennsylvania before we are aware of it. The WATCHMAN an- nounced weeks ago that it had no favorites in the contest that was closed on Tues- day, so that this statement is not en- gendered by disappointment or pique. It is putting a plain truth to you and if you will not see it that way, you will know upon whom will rest the fault when the party meets with greater reverses that are sure to come in the wake of sucha subversion of a cardinal principle of Democracy. aan RE STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. The interest shown in the outcome of the Republican National conven- tion which will be in session in less than three weeks is out of propor- tion to ‘its importance. Of course the inspiration to interest is Roose- velt. . If he were eliminated from the equation it is doubtful if a full con- vention could be secured. But the anxiety of one set of politicians to nominate him and the determination of another faction to prevent his nom- ination have made the event epoch- ical. It will probably be the most largely attended and bitterly contest- ed National convention ever held by either party, and incidentally the most turbulent and expensive to the managers of the party. . It is reported that George W. Perkins, the Roosevelt “angel” has secured or reserved four floors of one of the leading hotels in Chica- go at an expense of nine thousand dollars a floor. That is certainly “going some,” but in view of the service Roosevelt rendered to the Harvester trust during his last ad- ministration, Mr. Perkins owes that much to the Colonel. Other wealthy friends of the third term aspirant are equally liberal in manifesting their devotion. Bill Flinn, of Pitts- burgh, for example, will spend a considerable fortune in an effort to cinch the prize for Teddy and there are others in various sections of the country ready and willing to go the limit. " And when it is all summed up what will it amount to? No matter who is nominated, he will “lead a forlorn hope.” The people of the United States are determined to re- elect Woodrow Wilson and whether the candidate of the Republican par- ty be Roosevelt or Root, Cummins or Fairbanks, Burton or Weeks, the result will be the same. The weaker the Republican candidate the greater Wilson’s majority will be and it is weakest. In any event the Democrat- ic convention will assemble a week later and in orderly manner will name as the standard bearer of the party that splendid statesman and tried public servant Woodrow Wilson who will be elected. Held by Force of Plunder. We are not carried away with ela- tion as some of our Democratic con- temporaries appear to be, over the gaping chasm in the Republican ranks. It is true that the fight has become exceedingly bitter and that each faction leaders have been say- ing things about the other faction leaders. But the ruction is all about spoils and after the primaries they will be drawn together and held to- gether “by the force of public plun- der.” Vare and Penrose hate each other with an intense hatred but they have a common purpose in political life and when their interests may be promoted by peace the dogs of nels. The growling will end when the spoils are divided. There is no great difference be- tween the leaders of one faction and those of the other. Penrose is a man of liberal education while Vare’s col- lege was the cart shed. Penrose was brought up in an atmosphere of re- finement and in an environment of luxury while Vare lived in a neigh- borhood dedicated to piggeries and squalor. If the product of the slums had developed the characteristics of the collegian, it would be greatly to his credit. But the signs fail to in- dicate such results. Though the brothers have acquired vast wealth as the fruit of their efforts, they have not developed the moral qualities which commend the self-made man to popular favor. The aim of Penrose and the Vares is the same sordid purpose to wield power and control plunder. Their dif- ferences are not upon questions of principle. They may fight like cats and dogs over the spoils of their bri- gandage but when common interest invites harmony they are equally ready to join forces in iniquity. The Vares have got the better of Penrose in the last couple of deals. Brum- baugh and Mayor Smith, of Phila- delphia,have beth deceived and dis- appointed the Senator. But now that Brumbaugh has been safely shelved and Smith menaced by removal from office, the tide will turn and both fac- tions will join in a strife for more plunder. It’s the nature of the men. Interest in Republican Convention. | -a ‘good guess: that Roosevelt is the war will be returned to their ken-! BELLEFONTE, PA. MAY 19, 1916. Penrose Threatens Prosecution. | “When rogues fall out, honest men ~ come by their own,” is an old adage, and the Penrose threat of a Federal i probe into electoral frauds in Phila- ‘delphia may give it fresh verification ‘as well as force. Everybody has "known that fraud has controlled the ‘elections of that city for years, but nobody has been able to apply a rem- edy for the reason that in the fear and face of just punishment the ! rogues responsible have shielded each other. This year the Vares faction of the Republican machine seems to have got all the profits of the roguery and the Penrose faction ' threatens an exposure. It is to be hoped that the Senator will adhere ‘to his declared purpose of investiga- : tion. | : | The particular. complaint which Senator Penrose makes against his | antagonists is that the primary elec- tion law was violated by allowing voters to take assistants into the ‘booth. “All cases of assistance and | other violations of the law had been carefully watched,” he says, “and pro- | ceedings will be instituted in the | Federal courts to punish the violat- (ors. Praticularly in South Philadel- 'phia,” he added, “are Republicans ! determined to end the high-handed methods and illegal proceedings which have been practiced there so long.” At this distance from the scene of operations it would appear that “assisting voters” is about the least of the electoral evils from which the people have patiently suffered “so long.” Of course Brother Ed. Vare im- agined that the threat is a “Penrose bluff,” and possibly it is. But it ought to be made a reality for as the Senator says it has been going on there a long time. After the election of Governor Tener the Vares open- ly boasted of the triumph of fraud in their section of Philadelphia and complained bitterly that the sinister service was not more fully appre- ciated and rewarded by the spoils of office. Then the prosecution ought to have been undertaken in the inter- est of honest citizenship but it was not for the reason that it was a friend of Penrose who profited by the fraud. Now, however, the shoeis on the other foot and something may happen. Centre County Primaries. One of the smallest votes ever recorded at a district primary in Cen- tre county was cast on Tuesday, less than thirty per cent. of the Democrat- ic vote being out and only about forty per cent. of the Republican vote. Of course through the country districts the farmers were all busy with their farm work during the day and the hard rain storm in the even- ing doubtless kept many away from the polls. On the other hand, the small Democratic vote can also be ascribed to the fact that there were no vital contests or issues at stake, and a few hundred votes more or less did not count. With the Republicans, however, it was different. The lines were closely drawn in every contest on the tick- et. It was a plain question of stick- ing to Penrose and the organization or supporting Brumbaugh and his ad- ministration policy and principles and the organization forces won easily. In fact Centre county Republicans registered a very emphatic disap- proval of the Governor and his po- litical methods. The issue between Representative Harry B. Scott and C. L. Gramley was fought out on the local option basis and Scott won. Owing to the size of the tickets voted and the many candidates on each one the task of counting the vote was a tedious one, and it took some of the election boards until seven o'clock in the morning to complete their work. The task of computing the total vote cast is a big one so that it is impossible to give full results in this week’s paper. The results on the most important contests will be found in this issue, and next week we will be able to give the total vote of all candidates voted for. . ——GRAMLEY carried the following precincts in the county over ScoTT, How- ard Boro., Snow Shoe Boro., College, north Curtin, west Ferguson, north Gregg, east Gregg, Marion, east Miles, Middle Miles, north and west Potter, west Snow Shoe, north Spring, Union, and west Walker. : | | cerned in conspiracies to blow up ling of civic and military honors upon Overtaxing American Credulity. | The emperor of Germany ovéres- | timates American credulity when he : makes promises of improvement in | his methods of warfare on one hand | and decorates Boy-Ed, the recently | retired attache of the German lega- | tion at Washington, with high Im- | peral favors, on the other. Captain | Boy-Ed was more or less conspicuous | in several conspiracies to murder ! men and women and destroy prop- | erty in this country between the timo ' of the beginning of the war and that of his enforced retirement from offi- cial life here. He has done nothing | ‘since to entitle him to civic honors or | i military orders. Yet the Emporor has recently honored him with one of his | rarest decorations and favors him | with high honors. ! According to evidence generally believed to be accurate Captain Boy- Ed was concerned in the conspiracy to organize strikes in American mu- nition factories. He was also’ con- powder mills and dynamite indus- trial plants. It is generally believed that he promoted. the conspiracy to blow up the Welland canal and com- mitteed cther depredations within the United States and Canada. The heap- a man with such a record, for un- explained reasons, compels the im- pression that he is rewarding crime and recompensing atrocities. Cap- tain Boy-Ed has no recent distin- guished service to his credit. He has no just claim upon Imperial gratitude. If the Emperor believes that the acknowledgment of a submarine out- rage which was already proved and the promise of the punishment -of the officer responsible for it will make us overlook or forget his tribute to Boy- Ed, he is sadly mistaken. Americans are a generous and magnanimous people but they are just and will not tolerate false pretense expressed in crocodile tears for one outrage while a greater one is being rewarded by decorations. The submarine crime was of ‘more recent occurrence, it is true, but the crimes of Boy-Ed have not been forgotten and will not be for- given until reparation has been made. Even an Emperor can’t “fool all the people all the time.” ——If Penrose and Roosevelt should form a political alliance what would become of Bill Flinn? It is hardly possible that Bill and Boies could sit at the same table for any length of time without throwing things. If Carranza is wise he will co-operate with the American troops in Mexico instead of urging their retirement. He may need them be- fore long to keep his head on his shoulders. ——Whatever other candidates for the Republican nomination for Presi- dent may do Roosevelt will not run away from it. He purposes to be in Chicago during the time of the con- vention. ——There were 135,000 marchers in a recent “preparedness parade” in New York but that is no guarantee so many men of that city would en- list in the event of a call for troops. ——Now who will be the goat? Governor Pennypacker might serve the purpose without “making-up” at all, but Shunk Brown is the natural choice. ——Brother Bill Vare may not be as gay in the immediate future ashe has been in the recent past but itis a safe bet that he will know more. ——The beet sugar growers have done fairly well during the time since the passage of the Underwood bill. But we need revenue. ——What happens to Justice Hughes at Chicago next month will be a standard by which to measure the wisdom of the sphynx. ——These are evil days for tramps. Nobody can make anybody believe that he can’t get work if he wants to at present. ——LIEBEL tied PALMER in Snow Shoe borough and west Ferguson and beat him in South Philipsburg and east Rush. ——Thomas Fanning, son of Mr. and Mrs. Foster Fanning, of Bush’s Addition, isa member of ‘the Fourteenth U,"S. infantry now stationed somewhere in Mexico. dels Dew Those Swelling Exports. rn - From the Johnstown Democrat. If we exclude munitions, what is it we are sending to Europe these days? What constitute the items upon our export list? The question is interesting. Excluding munitions, the articles we are sending abroad are articles that people can eat or wear. If such is the case, is it not possi- ble that we are overdoing the export business a bit? May we not be’ robbing ourselves simply because we are being paid excellent prices for our products? Suppose a stockman, tempted by high prices, were to sell all his steers, all his cows, all his calves, all his hogs? That man would have a tidy sum of money on hand. And, if all the other stockmen were following his example, where would we get our young stock? There is a certain sense in which the country is playing the role of the short- sighted stockman. We are selling a great deal of produce, but we are robbing our- selves in many lines. . Moreover, we are selling so much that we are boosting the prices on ourselves. In order to acquire as large a bundle as possible of British promises to pay, we are rushing production—and charging our home folks war prices. During the last nine months we have sold Europe goods valued at three billion dollars. If Europe had sent us no goods in return, we would have been paid in whole by notes and by securities of the allies. It is plain our people could not eat these securities or these promises to pay. The only way. they could be put to a prac- tical use would be to use them at some future time to exchange for goods manu- factured in Europe. If we had all the gold in the world and all the securities in the world, bread would be just as hard to obtain in this country as it is now. The only way we could increase our visible supply of wheat would be to trade our gold or our securities for wheat grown in some foreign land. So it will be seen that .our mounting exports are not an unmixed good. We are sending abroad a great many products that we could put to good use right here at home. ; Called Carranza’s Bluff. From the Harrisburg Star Independent. There is no longer any use in the United States parleying with Carranza about the disposition of American troops now-in Mexico in pursuit of Villa. The head of the de facto government has been a stumbling block in the way of Uncle Sam’s mission ever since the puni- tiveexpedition went in search of the murderous outlaw. The time has; now arrived for the United States to pibteed on its course without any counseling on the part of Carranza or any of his ilk, for it is evident any further negotiations with them will only tend to delay and probably defeat the object sought. - After two weeks of constant dickering with Obregon, Generals Scott and Funs- ton have reported failure to reach an agreement on the disposition of American troops in the disturbed republic. Several times Obregon, be it said to his credit, was on the point of acquiescing in the plans of the American generals, ‘ but in each instance Carranza would interfere with new and drastic demands which would put a damper on the seemingly amicable adjustment of the difficulties and throw the situation back to the very starting point of the negotiations. This being the case, there is but one course to pursue, the only wise one—send the entire army of the United States into Mexico, if necessary, and keep it there until the object sought 1s accomplished, the capture of Villa and the rounding up of his gang of murderous followers. Since the conference of the American generals and Obregon has proven a fail- ure it is said the whole matter will be referred back to the United States and the defacto government with the hope of settling it through diplomatic channels. While this, too, is a proper way to straighten out the tangle, there should be nothing done in any way to show lack of determination on the part of this government to keep on until it has suc- ceeded in doing what it set out to do— get Villa. And he should be gotten. Uncovering the “Slush.” From the Clinton Dispatch. That was an apt and happy retort United States Attorney Humes made to the announcement that his probe of the Penrose-booze-special privilege funds used in the 1914 and other campaigns was gratifying to Governor Brumbaugh and his political friends. Mr. Humes has gone right ahead with his duty regardless of politics, so he said: “If Governor Brumbaugh and his political friends get any gratification from the announcement that an investi- gation is to be made, it is gratification such as they themselves could provide for themselves at any time. The Gov- ernor’s chief publicity agent, Attorney General Brown, at any time could con- duct an investigation of violations of the corrupt practices act of Pennsylvania. If either the Governor or his Attorney General suspect that there have been violations of that law, they have the power and it would be their duty to in- vestigate them.” 4 ' Mr. Humes is entirely right. The Brumbaugh administration has the au- thority and the funds with which to show exactly how the “slush” was spread in the election which brought the ad- ministration into being. All that is need- ed is the courage to go ahead and un- cover the plague spots no matter whom they offend. Furthermore, it’s not a question of preference; it is a duty which cannot be dodged. Who Broke Open the Tomb? From the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. . Taking advantage of the present po- litical confusion, Judge Alton . B. Parker, he of 1904, has been unable to resist his ifitense ‘desire to give his Democratic comrades an earful.” SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —The Keystone Silk Mill company, located in South Williamsport, is about to enlarge its plant so as to do double its capacity. —James Simcox, of Woolrich, Clinton county, has ten common hens that laid 57% dozen eggs during the first four months of the present year. —The contract for the erection of a new home for the Moose of Johnstown has been awarded to Charles A. Clawson, of that city, at the price of $41,000. —A new gusher on the Thomas L. Kane lease five miles north of Kane, was struck at a depth of 1800 feet last Saturday and a mercury test shows it to be producing about 3,500,000 cubic feet of gas daily. —All sorts of new-fangled experimenters are now roaming about the larger towns of Pennsyl- vania advocating many interesting improvements and incidentally gathering in a few dollars for themselves. —Benjamin Roma, of Williamsport, was held up a few nights ago by two thugs who knocked him down and inflictzd severe injuries. They were frightened away, however, before they got any of his money. —A pair of colored men with the Hagenbeck- Wallace circus at Kittanning, got into an alterca- tion on Thursday and used razors to carve each other up more or less. Neither was killed and no arrests were made. —Casper Weaver, a veteran resident of Greens- burg, cast his 66th ballot at the First ward poll- ing place of that town on Tuesday. This coun- try contains very few men who have cast 66 con- secutive votes in the same precinct. —Judge S. E. Sloan, of Kittanning, has refused a new trial to J. Tressler, who was convicted of manslaughter in connection with the killing of an aged farmer named Kennerdall, near Kiski- minetas Junction when Tressler’s auto struck the victim. : + —The last request of Mrs. Henry Darroch, of Newell, Fayette county, who died at the home of a daughter, in Donora recently, was that her eight eldest grandsons should carry her body.to the grave. The request was complied with. The old lady was 77. —George Albert Ferry, a well-known citizen of Latrobe, was taken sick one day last week and went to his room, where he lived alone. Not ap- pearing next day, a friend went to look for him and found his dead body lying on his bed. Heart disease caused his death at the age of 47. —Seventy-one railroad ties were made from one chestnut tree felled by B. R. Williams, of Pine township, Indiana county. It was one of the largest trees ever cut down in that county and measured three and one-half feet in diameter at the butt. The first limb of thetree was more than 50 feet from the ground. A —Some days ago the barn on the Miss Lizzie Curren =farm, near Van Wert, Juniata county, tenanted by William H. Sellers, was destroyed by fire, together with all of its contents, including one span of two-year-old mules, one mare and a colt, three head of young cattle and eight hogs. The origin of the fire is unknown. : ~—MTrs. Bessie M. David, wifeof Ellsworth Da- vid, died at hef home in South [Huntingdon last Sunday evening of pneumonia which followed'a ° severe attack of _measles. She was in her 26th year and is survived by her husband and five - young childcen, as well as by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Miller, of near Tipton. —A christening at Crabtree, Westmoreland county, last Saturday night and the usual inci- dent, a murder, followed. Mike Pruginic, aged 26, was shot and killed by Andy Kusick, aged 29, the result of a quarrel. It is said that Pruginic slashed Kusick on the left shoulder when the lat- ter rushed to his boarding house, secured a revol- ver and did the fatal shooting. —Some nights ago a’ wanderer named John Wilson was given lodging in’ the woman's depart- ment of the Wiliiamsport city prison. Later he was removed to the city hospital. Some days later a dilapidated vest was found and investiga- tion disclosed the presence in one of the pockets of over $60. It was Wilson's property and was restored to him at the hospital. —Judge C. B. Witmer in the federal court at Sunbury last Thursday sentenced John B. Bei- gle, postmaster at the substation at Wilkes-Barre, to nine months in jail and $300 fine when he pleaded guilty to robbing his own office. Beigle broke the safe and door at his store and made it appear as if the place had been robbed. He went to Canada and later returned and surrendered. —Louis C. Herbert, former postmaster at Sha- mokin Dam, pleaded guilty in the United States court Saturday to a charge of making false re- turns of stamp collections, alleged by the govern ment to amount to $560, and was sentenced to - pay a fine of $350. The average pay of the Sha- mokin Dam office is $25 a month, but Herbert re- ported stamp cancellations at $45 and his arrest followed. —Second story workers believed to be travel- ing with the Hagenbeck & Wallace circus enter- ed the home of Ralph Snook, at Lewistown Sun- day night, breaking open the children’s banks and taking the contents, with a watch and revol- ver, made their get-away before the family re- turned from church. Snook resides next door to constable Leonard Saxton, who was asleep ona lounge less than ten feet from where they forced an entrance. —Going to a cupboard recently, Mrs. Ella Nor- ton, of Oliver township, Mifflin county, saw what she believed was a rope wound about a crock of jam, but closer investigation proved it to be a large blacksnake. Mrs. Norton is not particular- ly scared of snakes, but she don’t like them tak- ing liberties with her jam closet so she procured an ax and carved the word *‘finis” in the anato- my of his snakeship. The reptile was of the blue racer species and measured five feet. Just how it obtained an entrance to the closet is a mys- tery. but there is no question that its timely cap- ture saved a small son a sound spanking, as the jam crocks had been previously tampered with and suspicion rested heavily upon his unhallowed thatch. —Through their attorney, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Tulicki, of Coal township, Northumberland coun- ty, on Monday morning brought suit in the coun- ty courts against Coal township, seeking to recov- er $9,000 damages for injuries sustained by Mrs. Tulicki in a fall on a township street. In their statement of facts, the plaintiffs alleged that they were traversing a township street one night about a year ago, when the woman stumbled over an unprotected drain pipe and suffered a broken ankle, together with internal injuries. As a result she claims she has been permanently in- capacitated and asks damages to the extent of $6,500, while her husband seeks to be re-imburs- ed for the loss of his wife's service to the extent of $2,500. —The State Treasury of Pennsylvania was pre- sented with $70.00 by six young men from Sandy Ridge last week. The young men were deter- mined to fish on the land that is reserved and un- der the control of the Tyrone Rod and Gun club at Gardner, and although two special men are pa- troling the stream every day, they managed in some way to land. State Game Warden Jacob Sizer, of Huntingdon, happened to be over the mountain on the day of the fishing excursion and on his way back to Tyrone he noticed six men fishing near Gardner. He dropped off the train at that point and interviewed the men and at the same time took a peep at the speckled beauties. 'In the basket he found enough fish un- der six-inches to run the day’s pleasure to a sum of $70.00, enough to pay one of the guards at the Ritual Sh Sl bee scion adn on on the club the Sandy Ridge sports for property.