Dewar apn. BY P. GRAY MEEK. INK SLINGS. —And we are to have steam heat tomorrow. —Have you started that Christmas shopping ? There are just eighty-six days yet and you know how fast they fly. ; Yoh J. L. Spangler and Dr. Jos. M. Brockerhoff are the Centre county members of the Democratic State finance committee. ' —The 45th Penna. Vols. had a fine day and a fine time during their re- union here, but then visitors always have a good time in Bellefonte. —~Senator Cummins seems to have gone about as far as he could without calling candidate Hughes the real name that is frequently given to per- sons who don’t adhere to the truth. Mr. Bacon might have been nominated for Senator if Roosevelt had kept out of the scrimmage. The hyphenates refused to take both Ba- con and Hughes even though Hughes was their first choice. Of course it costs money to keep the Naticnai Guardsmen on the Mexican border but they are learning the art of war and if they hadnt gone there a war might have broken out that would have cost ten times as much. . —Ten thousand more troops have been ordered home from the border but Troop L is not included in the list. Being cavalrymen our boys are of more service than infantrymen so that they will probably be among the last to get back. —Just now the woman who has never been able to bake good bread has it on her more expert sister. We never eat as much bad bread as we do good, so that the one who bakes the bad bread is the one who is really saving the dough. —The Bellefonte Gas Co., seems to have been revived within the past two or three days. Actually the gas has been bright enough to make a light and they say it is all because someone accidentally discovered that the gas pump had been pumping more air than gas into the mains. —7You can fool all of the people some of the time, some of the people all of the time, but you can’t fool all of the people all of the time. This old epigram is really the platform on . which candidate Scott places his hope of re-election to the Legislature. It all depends on whether he can fool enough of them this time. —The “Watchman” is authorized to received contributions for Woodrow Wilson’s campaign fund. If you feel like you would like to help defray the expenses of re-electing one of the greatest Presidents the country has ever had bring or send your contribu- tion to this office. It will be grate- fully received and will be acknowl- edged directly by the national treas- urer. —Anyway, the Germans were the foxes. It took them two years to gobble up a lot of Ally territory and now the experts say that it will take the Allies two years to get it back again and by that time both sides will be so exhausted that they can fight no longer. If this should be the way it will work out Germany will prob- ably have to settle, but her territory will not have been despoiled by war- fare. —The acquittal of the three men who were on trial here for man- slaughter during the week was not much of a surprise. It will be recall- ed that upon the occasion of their first trial Judge Johnson, of Union county, who was presiding, indicated that the jury would be quite justified in returning a verdict of not guilty and when it did not he gravted the new trial wnich resulted in the free- dom of the defendants. —Governor Brumbaugh has sprung a wonderful new plan for the future of the Republican parly in Pennsyl- vania. He has had a “prevision,” as he calls it, of what will make the party impregnable for the next twen- ty years. The Governor had better stop peeping so far into the future and take to looking in the mirror. He will see more of himself there than he will in the future of the Republican party in Pennsylvania. —The motto of the Philipsburg “Ledger” is: To Speak his Mind is Every Freeman’s Right.” As the “Ledger” has not yet put candidates Rowland’s or Scott’s names on the Republican ticket that it publishes weekly at its masthead we are won- dering whether they might have thought the motto means what it says and said something unpleasing to the vanity of brother Boulton or brother Richards. The attitude of the “Ledg- er” is strange, indeed, and they say that both Rowland and Scott are secretly showing symptoms of being worried about it. : emir VOL. 61. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA.. SEPTEMBER 29, 1916. "NO. 38. Hughes Insincere or Incompetent. Senator Cummins, of Iowa, is a! Senator Borah, of Idaho, known as | Republican and a supporter of the Re- publican candidate for President. But he will not stand for the demagogic methods which Justice Hughes and his party managers have adopted. Chairman Wilcox of the Republican National Committee some time ago issued a statement charging that the child labor law enacted by Congress. at the instance of the President, con- tains a “joker,, which destroys its merits. Candidate Hughes, without investigation, adcpted the statement of Wilcox and in a speech at Milwau- kee added, “our opponents claim to have emancipated child labor. If our opponents are genuinely devoted to the interests of children, let them act in States under their control and there will be no child labor problem in the United States.” This of course is an assertion of the States’ rights principle that the regu- lation of labor conditions is a preroga- tive of the State Legislatures and that Congress has no authority to act upon it. Generally speaking that is true, but the act of Congress in-ques- tion limits its operations to child lahor which produces commodities in inter- state transactions and under the pro- visions. of the article of the constitu- tion which regulates interstate com- merce the courts have held that Con- gress has a right to so legislate. . Mr. Hughes’ attempt to hide behind the State rights principle is as insincere as it is discreditable. He doesn’t be- lieve in that policy and never did. His assertion of it under existing con- ditions is a false preterse. Senator - Cummins refuses to jus- tify false pretense, however, even to win votes for his party and in a let- ter to Owen R. Lovejoy, Secretary of the National Child Labor Committee, fitly rebukes the demagogy of his candidate. “The child labor law,” he writes, “received . in the Senate the most exhaustive consideration and thoserof us who were for it, employed the utmost care to exclude every pos- sible objection to its validity consis- tent with its effectiveness.” Not- withstanding this direct statement on the subject. however, Hughes con- tinues to declare it invalid and to reiterate the statement which pro- voked the Cummins rebuke. It is small wonder that the Iowa Senator added: “These criticisms are without any foundation whatsoever, and the persons whe are giving them public- ity are either insincere or incompe- tent.” Not a Defensive Campaign. The Philadelphia “Public Ledger,” the most unfair partisan organ in the State, says that President Wilson’s defence of his surrender to the rail- way brotherhoods and the action of Congress in passing the railway wage law is an adroit piece of special plead- ing and wil! undoubtedly have consid- erable weight with those who are con- tent to accept his arguments at their face value and to accept without ex- amination all his premises.” There may be a few voters in Pennsylvania who will be fooled by such assertions but not many. It is too absurd to de- ceive any man with reasoning power. In the first place President Wilson has not made a defence, adroit or otherwise, of his action with respect to the law in question. His action in that matter requires no defence. In the second place President Wilson did mot surrender to the railroad brother- hoods or anybody else. He was in- fluenced to his action by his con- science and his sense of justice. In his speech at Shadow Lawn last Sat- uurday afternoon, he explained the eight-hour law and outlined his ex- pectations with respect to the legis- lation te supplement that law which he contemplates. But there was noth- ing in the nature of a defence. So far as the Democrats are con- cerned this is not a defensive cam- paign. Our candidates for the var- ious offices to be filled from President down to Representative in the Legis- lature are men of the type that com- mend themselves to the public mind and need no defence. Whatever de- fence is projected into the campaign will be on the other side. Hughes may defend himself against the obvious fact that his nomination was procured by the German-Americans who openly declare their allegiance to the German empire rather than to the United States of America. If he is able to invent a defence against that charge he will be busy enough. ! Senator Borah’s Loose Tongue. the blatherskite of Congress partici- pated in the factional effort, at York. to make the Vares aprear as leaders of the Republican party of -Pennsyl- vania. Borah who owes his political distinction to the friendship of the Mormen voters of his State prefesses to be greatly outraged because the appropriations made by the last ses- the last session controlled by the Re- publican party by a matter of $500,- 000,000. “If I were not speaking from a partisan platform,” he said, “I would call the record of Demo- cratic extravagance just what it should be called, pure, naked, un- adulterated, impudent graft.” Manifestly- Senator Borah is one of those loose-mouthed adventurers who such a thing as thought to control it. We admit the increase of appropria- tions but call attention to the fact that nearly $700,000,000 of the total amount was appropriated to the in- crease of the army and navy and to preparedness for defence that every intelligent man, woman and child in the country approved of and that therefore by his own figures Scnator Borah proves that for ordinary ex- penses of the government the appro- priations of the last session were at least $200,000,000 less than those of the last Republican Congress. Unhappily for this country 2 period immediately following the Civil war produced a bunch of slovenly think- ing or half-baked persons some of whom in later years were projected or broke into public office. Borah is a fair sample of this peculiar brood and his loose talk about graft and extrav- | agance is a fair sample of his trend of thought. He knows, if he knows anything, that no part of the appro- priations of the recent session has been disbursed and that money hon- estly expended and in pursuance of the public good ‘is not graft whether the amount be great or small. He probably thought his audience was made up of men as ignorant as him- self, however. Let Us Accept the Issue. The Democratic managers may well accept the challenge of candidate Hughes to make President Wilson’s action on the eight-hour law the main issue of the campaign. Mr. Hughes insists that the approval of the meas- ure was a great outrage. Standard- izing the eight-hour day, he declares, puts a grave injustice upon the trans- portation corporations and that Presi- dent Wilson ought to be defeated be- cause he permitted the railroad train- men to coerce the government into enacting such legislation. Of course there was no coercion in the matter. Congress enacted the law because it expressed a just principle and avert- ed a great calamity and the President approved it for the same reasons. The President’s programme of which the eight-hour law is a part contemplates a series of laws which will make labor strikes impossible in the future. The eight-hour feature will make contentment among work- men which removes the principle cause of strikes. The other features will eliminate other causes which lead to strikes and thus the heaviest tax on transportation corporations will be removed. Is such legislation to be condemned ? The attitude of the Re- publican candidate for President would imply that it should. But in- of the question. They will see in the a cause for rejoicing, a popular be- neficence. The eight hour day will not put a Justice Hughes declares. On the contrary it will work an advantage to employers quite as certainly as to employees. It will make employees more fit for work and add mentally to the producing power of the laborer. causes of quarrels and dissensions be- tween employer and employee, and as the President has said, will eliminate strikes. Let us, therefore, accept the challenge of Mr. Hughes to make this the leading issue of the campaign and appeal to the intelligence of the vot- ers and the justice of the workmen to sustain the President. It will make victory both certain and overwhelm- ing. sion of Congress exceeded those of | give the tongue free reign without | telligent men will take another view action of Congress and the President: hardship upon employers of labor as’ It will diminish, in an equal ratio, the | =——For high class Job Work come to’ the WATCHMAN Office. Crow and Penrose at Odds. Senator Penrose and State Chair- | man Crow of the Republican commnit- | tee were in Harrisburg at the same {time the other day but they were : heading in opposite directions. Sena- . tor Penrose was on his way to Pitts- : burgh to attend a reception to Candi- | date Hughes. Chairman Crow, who | lives near Pittsburgh, was on his way | to York to attend the meeting of the League of Republican clubs, a func- tion under the auspices of the Vares. This incident lends color to the cur- rent report that Crow has abandoned Penrose and joined the Vare crowd. Senator Crow deried this report, ac- cording to the Harrisburg papers, but it is not recorded that he met Pen- rose in Harrisburg. Senater Crow has always been a faithful henchman of Penrose. He wanted the Republican nomination for United States Senator but Penrose bestowed that party favor upon Sena- tor Knox who is better.able to take care of the railroad interests in the Senate. He gave as a reason for turning down Crow the financial trou- bles of Mr. Thompson, of Union- town, with whom Crow was to some extent associated in business opera- tions. At the time Crow seemed to be satisfied with the arrangement and consented to putting his friend Har- man Gephart on the ticket for State Treasurer. But if Crow affiliates with the Vare faction public opinion will take it that he has had a break with Penrose. The truth of the matter is that the Republican party of Pennsylvania is broken up into fragments to such an extent that the State may be lost to the party entirely. The Democratic leaders are already confidently pre- dicting the election of the Democratic State ticket and claim a considerable : gain in Congressional seats and leg- islative strength. Brumbaugh has | been cutting up capers ever since his : Presidential ambiticn was cut off by Penrose and if Crow has also aban- i doned the Penrose machine there is | little chance of reconciling the fac- tional differences. But Penrose has : Hughes at his command anyway and whatever else happens he will keep i the Vares away from the National ' crib. | ——The first man of Troop L to return i home since going to El Paso, Texas, in | July, was John Morrison, who returned ' on Saturday afternoon. John’s term of | enlistment expired before the soldiers left Mt. Gretna but he consented to go along as veterinarian until they could get somebody to take his place. John continued veterinarying right along until the officers tried to induce him to re-enlist when he decided that he had soldiered long enough, and with his honorable discharge in his pocket took the train for the north and good, old Bellefonte. Mr. Morrison came home the very picture of health and if every member of the troop is as rugged as he is their trip south will have done them good physically as well as military. EE ————————— —-Women of Lycoming, Centre and Clinton counties are again reminded of the tri-county one-day conference of Women’s clubs, of T.ycoming, Cen- tre and Clinton counties to be held in the Lock Haven Central State Normal school Saturday, October 7, frem 10 a.m to 4 p. m., the hostess club, the Lock Haven Civic club, serv- ing hot coffee and ice cream to the guests. A most interesting program, including club reports and several formal speeches, will please everyone. Make your plans to attend. EE —————— The Brumbaugh circus will fin- ish its farewell tour today and the whitewash will be scraped off the elephant tomorrow. It wasn’t much of an attraction but it served the pur- pose of feeding Brumbaugh vanity for a time. . —If Hughes had lost his voice before his speaking tour was begun his chances of election would have been much better. But by losing it now he may save the pieces. —— Former President Taft is try- ing his best to be a hypocrite and after his reconciliation with Roose- velt he may be able to fool the major- ity. ——The Mexicar peace commission is not making rapid progress but it keeps Hughes busy hoping for the worst. 2 ——Roosevelt and Taft have made up and now there is nothing left of | Taft except the smile. Of Divergent Views. From the Johnstown Democrat. There are two classes of statesmen that are always present among us. One takes cognizance of the fact that the “av- erage American” is a worker who has a family and who most of the time finds it rather difficult to make both ends meet. The other style of statesman does not ; concern himself with the “average Amer- iican.” He takes the view that the stock { broker, the wealthy manufacturer, the banker, the money captain is the chap who deserves consideration. President Wilson, when formulating his policies, had the “average American” in mind. Candidate Hughes takes the “big busi- ness” view. : | At the present time there are a great : many keen financial leaders who are ! planning to extend the commerce of the United States. These keen captains think in terms of millions. They repre- , Sent capital. Their schemes are worth { while. The country needs such men. - There should be no disposition to curb their operations. But statesmen of the | Wilson stripe are inclined to question | the promoters with a view of ascertain- | ing whether or not any thought has been given to the question of making the worker and the general public a partici- pating partner in the enterprise. It will not do to say that if a few vigorous men manage to increase the trade of this country that the laborer will benefit in- directly. He should benefit directly. And, while your money captain might not agree, it is not worth while extend- ing trade at all if theonly benefit is that a few men who already have a great many million dollars manage to collect a - few more millions. President Wilson, to ‘state the proposition simply, is mostly concerned as to the general benefits that result from the great enterprises under- taken by our people. Candidate Hughes is mostly concerned as to the special benefits. The President views proposi- tions from the standpoint of the public. His opponent views problems from the standpoint of the captains. The Presi- dent is inclined to ask regarding every campaign as to whether it is agood thing for the army. Candidate Hughes is con- cerned as to whether the various moves contemplated are a good thing for the generals. The difference in those points of view is fundamental. Ru—————l Inconsistency of the Partisan. From the Wilkes-Barre Times-Leader. The Philadelphia “Ledger” has been hammering President Wilson for avert. ing the railroad strike and is now callin -upon Governor Brumbaugh | a Calling that the contending forces inl the. Wilkes. - Barre Street Railway controversy get to- gether, settle their difierence and restore normal transportation facilities to this valley. : Wonder how the “Ledger” figures it out that it would be just the thing for Governor Brumbaugh to butt in and set- tle a local street car strike, but was ab- solutely wrong for President Wilson to use his great office to avert what would have been a thousand fold greater ca- lamity? And by the way, those of this commu- nity who condemn President Wilson. for averting the nationwide railroad strike in one breath and then complain bitterly of the existing conditions causing incon- venience and losses in this valley due to a street car strike, should stop and con- sider what a nation-wide tie-up of trans- portation lines would have meant and thank Providence for Woodrow Wilson who averted such a calamity. Paying for Preparedness. From Capper’s Weekly. L Congressional appropriations for the present fiscal year, closing next June, will exceed those of the last year by half a billion dollars, of which 400 million dollars is the extra cost of military “pre- paredness.” Congress appropriates ordi- narily about 180 millions for the army and 140 millions for the navy, with addi- tional appropriations for fortifications. In round figures the purely military ap- propriations this year are 650 millions, to which are to be added 20 millions for fortifications, 20 millions for a nitrate plant and about 20 millions for increased army and navy expenses. Military and naval appropriations all told for the pres- ent year will go far over the 700 million mark. This is 63 per cent of the total cost of government, this being estimated now at 1,126 millions. The total appro- priations exceed this figure by several hundred million. What it finally comes to is this: That though the United States has not been engaged in an im- portant war for upward of 50 years, yet its disbursements this year are to be 800 - millions for purposes relating to war and 265 millions for all other. Educators Line Up for Wilson. From the Springfield Republican. Charles W. Elict, president emeri- tus of Harvard, and Harry A. Gar- field, president of Williams college, and son of a Republican President of the United States, are supporting President Wilson for re-election. They are not doing it, however, as members of a mystic order of present and former college presidents honor- ing a fellow member. They are the first and second Vice Presidents of the Woodrow Wilson Independent league of Massachusetts. ee A— ——The singular thing about the i Hughes brand of Americanism is that it pleases the hyphenated Germans quite as much as the Kaiser's esti- mate of the merit of kultur. —The rumors of Villa activities are simply a part of the Republican cam- | paign. Villa activities would be a great help to the Republicans. {SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —The lodge of Elks located at Clearfield has autrorized the trustees to proceed at once with the erection of a $10,000 build- ing on a lot owned by the society. —Portage will hold an election on No- vember 7 to decide whether or not a bond '| issue of $25,000 shall be floated to pay present floating indebtedness and provide & sewerage system. —Some few hours after he had said: “When I have to die I want to go with my boots on,” Uncle Peter Lalley, of North Wales, Montgomery county, fell dead. He was aged 74 years. —Thus far the citizens of Williamsport have subscribed $13,496 for the support of soldiers from that city on the Mexican border, and of that amount more than $11,000 has been paid in. —Miss Caroline Nase, whose home is near Pennsburg, Montgomery county, who has just celebrated the 99th anniver- sary of her birth, has never been ill more than two days at a time during the whole of her long life. —The Cunard Coal comapny, whose new mining operations near Morrisdale, Clear- field county, are giving employment to a large number of men, will erect fifteen dwellings not far from the plant for the use of their employees. —Former Commissioner Harrison D. Taylor, who was tried in the quarter ses- sions court at Huntingdon last week on the charge of embezzlement, growing out of the settlement of an estate, was acquit- ted but ordered to pay half the costs. —Probably for the first time since its invention the cow-catcher on a moving train caught a Westmoreland county cow, carried her some distance and gently dropped her off by the side of the road, without apparent injury. This happened one day last week. —Mrs. John Smutz, of Somerset, was struck by an automobile and sustained a broken leg. The driver stopped his ma- chine, got out, approached the injured woman and apologized. Then he drove off before anybody inquired his name or took the number of his car. —Bucknell University opened last Thurs- day with an enrollment of approximately 800 students, agaicst a total of 725 last year. The incoming Freshman class num- bered 250. At the Woman's College condi- tions were crowded last spring, and it has been found necessary to rent a second house. —Even in the face of the exclusion of children, on account of infantile paralysis, the Allentown fair this year broke all rec- ords, both as to attendance and receipts. Outside of the hotel rental, which runs about $6,000 the receipts this year were $71,494, as compared to $71,488 last year, a gain of $6. —During a recent electric storm in Clear- field an automobile was struck by light- ning. No damage was done to the car, but the lights were lit by the flash and could not be extinguished by using the button switch. It was necessary to tear out all the batteries before the lights ceas- ed buraing. —Mystery surrounds the finding of a suitcase containing the dead body of an infant, at Arnold, Westmoreland county. The find was made by a woman who was burning paper and refuse in the rear of her lot. The condition of the suitcase and its contents indicated that it had been placed there some time ago. —With one side of her face crushed by the kick of a frightened horse as it wes being taken from a burning barn, Mrs. Jesse Anthony, of Blacklick township, In- diana county, returned to the burning building and rescued the only other horse in the barn. The building collapsed as she left it. A calf and practically all the season’s crops were destroyed. —Samuel Immel, aged nearly 70 years, undertook to drive across the railroad at Centre Hall some days ago, when the bug- gy in which he was riding was struck by an engine. The old man was thrown on the cowcatcher and thence to the ground, but was not injured. He carried two half pint bottles filled with whiskey on his person, in addition to what he carried in his stomach. The bottles were uninjured and not a drop of their contents spilled. —Residents of Curwensville are consid- erably agitated over a ‘“Peep-a-Boo” indi- vidual who has been doing some spying at windows along the row of houses near the finishing tannery. He makes his appear- ance about ten or eleven o'clock and peers through windows at the inmates. Just what his object is residents have been un- able to fathom, but a load of shot in the right place some night when he is at work, might help to clear up the mystery. —Russel Nichols, of Goodville, Pa., was killed by a bull at the Glen Mills Reform school Sunday. The animal crushed the boy against the side of a stall in a stable. The boy went to the building with other boys to do the stable work. There were no guards about and he teased the bull which was tied in a stall. The animal, which had been dchorned, resented the teasing and caught Nichols with his head and threw him into a corner of the stall. He then lunged against the boy's body with his head, crushing the ribs. —Mr. and Mrs. David Grove, of Lewis- town, filed deeds for record last Thursday in which they transfer real estate valued at $40,000 to the trustees of the Central Pennsylvania conference of the Methodist Episcopal church. The deeds cover prac- tically all the real estate holdings of the aged couple located in Lewistown and will be used in the annuity fund for aged and infirm ministers of this conference. Mr. Grove is now 78 years old, has been one of the active and prosperous business men of Lewistown since the Civil war, his name still remaining on the sign of Grove & Rice, although he no longer takes an ac- tive part in the business life of the firm. «Andrew Ruble, 64 years old, was struck and almost instantly killed at Lew- istown Junction at 7.35 Saturday evening by train No. 61. His body rolled at the feet of his son to whom he was talking a minute before the accident. Mr. Ruble, who was deaf, went to the Junction from his home near Milroy by automobile in company with his aged wife and two grown sons, to take the Pnensy's excur- sion to Niagara Falls. The party were standing at the corner of the depot in conversation, when Ruble stepped to the curb of the brick platform, leaning over on the tracks to expectorate, just as the locomotive of train No 61 flashed by strik- ing him fairly on the side of the head. His skull was fractured and death result- ed 15 minutes later, The wife and two sons witnessed the accident. Ruble fre- quently visited at Centre Hall and was wel! known by many Pennsvalley people,