Pemoreaic Wald BY P. GRAY MEEK. m— INK SLINGS. —If you can’t fight you can buy a Liberty Bond. — Centre county must do its share in subscribing for Liberty Bonds. —Do you think all the ladies who are knitting knit for patriotism? Nit. __All the soft corn in Centre county isn’t out in the farmer’s fields, either. —If you haven't yet realized that we are at war the new tax bill will doubtless clear you up in that matter. — The war is certainly expensive but “Uncle Sam is rich” and the glory of the victory will be great and endur- ing. — The new tax bill that has just passed Congress is thousands of words long, but boiled down it merely says from them that hath shall be taken. —So far as reports thus far made are concerned there has been an ap- parent increase of two hundred per cent. in the yield of potatoes in Cen- tre county. Of course there are some good citizens who will not be able to buy a Liberty Bond even of the smallest denomination, but every citizen who can should do so. — The ouly aim Germany had in starting the war was conquest and it is impolite to ask questions on the subject now that all her expectations are disappearing. * — The real newspaper of Centre county is the “Watchman.” Tell your friends what you honestly think of it so they will know what they are miss- ing, if they are not regular readers. __Don’t lose sight of the fact that Woodrow Wilson was chosen Presi- dent as a Democrat. Being a really great man, however, he recognizes no party divisions when our country 1s 1n peril. Surely Philadelphia will have to send someone to the electric chair for the wilfull murder of one of her po- licemen, but will it be the degenerate murderer or the mentally responsible man who commissioned him to do the job. — Think of the parents in Centre county who have given their sons to their country and think how little you are being asked to do when the gov- ernment merely asks you to buy one of its Liberty Bonds on which it will pay you four per cent. interest. — Gettysburg hotels have had to close their bars because they are all located within half a mile of the army cantonment there. Army mobilization camps are great business producers, but there will be lots of tipplers in Gettysburg who won’t be able to see any advantage in that without their" “eye opener.” __At least every farmer in Centre county should resolve to set aside twenty-five bushels of wheat with which to buy one government bond. Many of them are able to buy more and should do so. Not alone because it is the best investment they can make, but because the soil is theirs and, in the last analysis, that is what we are fighting to protect. __The French people are living on less than one ounce of sugar per per- son per diem while we are consuming more than four ounces. They have so little because we are using too much. Let us cut out part of the candy, all the icing on cakes and a few other non-essentials and be as good to our Allies as we would want them to be to us, were conditions reversed. Mr. Herbert Hoover has urged every farmer in Pennsylvania to raise three more pigs this year than he nor- mally would raise. Fats are running low all over the world and pigs are the quickest mediums through which the stock can be replenished, but Mr. Hoo- ver failed to reveal the legerdemain by which we farmers are to get the three more pigs. Pigs is pigs, but, unlike Topsy, they ain’t “jist growed.” It is quite evident that Germany isn’t figuring much on losing the war else she wouldn't be so persistent in driving the English mind into a per- manently antagonistic attitude by her repeated air raids over London. Mur- dering women and children, without gaining any strategical advantages, 18 only making the English more deter- mined to fight on and setting her mind against any leniency when the settlement day finally comes. —The first of the “Watchman’s” camp letters from the boys of Troop L appears in this issue and from its interesting character we feel warrant- ed in predicting that Corp. Keller will make this feature as attractive as Corp. Cohen did while the boys . were on the border. The “Watchman” sure- ly has been fortunate in securing cor- respondents who write in a style that is of interest both to the relatives back home and those who have no ties of blood with the boys in camp. — Editor John Short, of the Clear- field Republican, is a nominee for the office of burgess of that town We are informed that it was a case of honors thrust upon him. It must have been for John is such a natural born fight- er that had anyone had the temerity to have mentioned the matter to him before it was pulled off he would just naturally have started out to lick him- self. We trust that his opponent will withdraw from the race, not only to save himself the discomfort of the de- feat he surely is in for, but to make the way as rosy as possible to the thorny job that our friend Short has consented to hold down for four years in Clearfield. ema VOL. 62. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA.. OCTOBER 5, 1917. NO. 39. Perfidious Democrats Blamable. | The election day outrage in the Fifth ward of Philadelphia is a most disgraceful episode of that corrupt and contented city but the Democrats of Pennsylvania are not entirely free | from the blame that attaches to it. | During the recent session of the Leg- i islature measures were introduced which would have made such atroci- ties impossible. But they were defeat- ed because every Democratic member of the House of Representatives who could be controlled by the so-called Democratic organization of the State voted against them. Whether this was the result of stupidity or venali- ty is left to conjecture. But in either event, as the “Watchman” stated at the time, it was a crime against the Democratic party. When Mayor Smith was nominated by the corrupt contractors the an- nouncement was almost openly made that his election would begin an era of political brigandage unparalleled in the history of the country. It was the inauguration of a government of the contractors, for the contractors and by the contractors. The people of Philadelphia ratified this vicious bar- gain at the polls. But subsequently a small minority of the electorate dis- cerned the menace which hung over the community and prepared legisla- tion that promised to prevent part of the evil. If the Democratic Represen- tatives in the Legislature had voted solidly for these measures they would have been enacted into law. Possibly under the whip of Vare Brumbaugh would have vetoed the bills, but the Democratic party would have been ab- solved from blame. In view of these facts the Demo- cratic members of the Legislature who voted against this beneficent leg- islation were not only recreant to their party obligations but they have saddled upon the Democratic party of the State a share of the odium for the crimes perpetrated in the Fifth ward of Philadelphia on primary election day. Part of the blood of the murder- ed policeman is upon their hands and nothing they can do or say will excul- pate them. They are secure against arrest, no doubt, but they are morally as guilty as the New York hired gun- man who fired the fatal shot. The Democrats who elected them to the office they betrayed should see that they do not get another chance to be- tray. — Bulgaria will be allowed to quit the war when she has paid a fair share of the indemnities. King Fer- dinand went into the war as a money- making enterprise and has a right to pay part of the losses. First Duty of Citizens. The working men of the country are entitled to every advantage in wages and working conditions they can get from their employers. They have not always had what they deserved in this respect. Employers are sometimes grasping and frequently unjust in dis- tributing the joint fruits of capital and labor. Since the beginning of the world war this fact has been driven into the consciousness of thoughtful men too often. Considerable advanc- es have been made in wages but not in proportion to the increased cost of living or the enhanced value of the products of labor. Profits have soar- ed far beyond the increase in wages and that is not fair to working men. But this is no time to strike either for wages or changed conditions. Be- cause employers are unpatriotic is no reason why laborers should indulge in the same vice. An official report from Great Britain states that the subma- rine piracy is destroying shipping much more rapidly than the capacity of the allies to supply substitutes. If the war continues long enough and this ratio in the shipping industry is not changed, Germany will win and the American people will be reduced to serfdom subject to a brutal auto- crat. Working men of America ought not to promote such a condition. They should bend every energy and make every necessary sacrifice to prevent it. The men who have enlisted in the army or navy or those who have been selected for military service are not striking against wages or working conditions though they are taking on greater hazards than those who man the industrial plants. They are offer- ing their lives for the preservation of democracy without complaint while working men are only asked to con- tribute time and muscle. The man in the factory or mine or mill may be performing a service to the country fully equal in importance to that of the man in the trenches. But to meas- ure up to the patriotism of the man in the trenches those in industrial life must perform their part. ——1In estimating the advantages of the war the fact that the I. W. W.. is being fully exposed is an important item. —Tt is only fair now that the peo- ple of Philadelphia should “go the Philadelphia’s Increasing Shame. As the sinister events associated with the Philadelphia primary elec- tion murder reveal themselves public interest in the subject becomes less surprising. Government by fraud and violence has so long been the rule in that city that nobody expected ser- ious protest against any crime. But | when it is practically shown that the | high officials of the municipal govern- ment have conspired and agreed to murder in order to elect one set of | candidates and defeat another, the’ hazard of life and property becomes ! too great to endure. idents of the city of corruption and contentment. Anxiety has taken the place of indifferences for a brief per- iod at least. The millionaire tariff beneficiaries and the rough-neck denizens of the underworld have so long pulled to- gether to promote their mutual inter- ests, in Philadelphia, that indignation because of a brutal murder was more surprising than the crime. At mid- night of election day in 1910, these two elements of the community joined in parade over what seemed to be a Republican victory and raised their voices in unison in the beautiful bal- lad: “Hail, Hail, the Gang’s All Here!” As in 1910 the vast majority of the party was made by fraud in which both elements participated, one as the giver and the other as the receiver of the boodle fund. But happily there were no murders committed. The op- position wasn’t formidable enough to require extreme measures. Philadelphia has been “sewing to the wind” for many years and is now “reaping the whirlwind.” The Dis- trict Attorney has more reason to fear the operation of the police department than the activities of the burglars, the forgers and the thieves. There is greater menace to the peace and or- der of the community in the city hall than in the city dives. A criminal record gets greater consideration in official life than a christian character. And this is because of the long con- tinued and intimate relationship be- tween the millionaires and the mur- derers. Of course decent people out- side of the city sympathize with those who are decent within, but they seem so negligible in number as to be hard- ly worthwhile. — Representative Hefflin may have been indiscreet in his statement of suspicions against colleagues but he may easily justify such an expres- sion from some one not amenable to the absurd rules of the House. LaFollette and His Traitorous Gang. That Senator LaFollette is render- ing greater service to the German Kaiser than any German Field Mar- shal on the firing line must be obvious to any thoughtful man. Every day or two some German high in authority issues a statement that the part of the United States in the war will be neg- ligible. Among the latest expressions along this line is that of Admiral von Tirpitz, the other day, that our army in Europe is a phantom. Every such statement heartens the German pub- lic. For six months the courage of the German troops and the hope of the German people have been based upon such statements. They add to the strength of the army and to the deter- mination of the people. The only substantial ground for such statements lies in the delay of" Congress in voting essential legisla- tion for maintaining and equipping a vast army abroad. So long as the Representatives of the American peo- ple in Congress and other stations of authority, persist in opposition to such legislation the German people can be fooled into the absurd belief that the people of the United States are not sincerely in favor of the pros- ecution of the war. That it is a false impression is as certain as that it is harmful. But Senators LaFollette, Gore and Gronna are doing their best to establish sueh an impression. They are thus aiding and abetting the ene- mies of the country. On other occasions Senators have been expelled from Congress for less offences than these men have frequent- ly committed in the last six months. But we doubt the wisdom of adopting that course in relation to them. The better way would be to “sit” on them good and hard. Half a dozen traitors have no right to hold up legislation that is favored by ninety per cent. of Congress and a greater ratio of the people. Senatorial courtesy is all right where it is deserved, but traitors deserve neither courtesy nor consid- eration and LaFollette and Gore are of that type. In future their opposi- tion should be ridden down and their persons run over. Nothing is gained by indulging them. — The recent cut in the price of flour affords some justification for the creation of the office of food control- ler. But the fuel controller has not accomplished much in the matter of limit” against Mayor Smith. decreasing the price of coal. Hence there is some excitement among the smug res- | Save Wherever You Can on Sugar. | Our government has received a re- | quest from the French government | that we allow them to export from | the United States one hundred thous- ‘and tons of sugar during the next | month and probably more at a later . period. Our own situdtion is that we have just sufficient sugar to maintain our normal consumption until the first of January, when the new West Indian | crop becomes available to all. Our consumption is at the rate of ‘ninety pounds per person per year, a "little under four ounces per day per . person. The French people are on a ration ! of sugar equal to only twenty one pounds per annum per person or at the | rate of less than one single ounce per | day per person, a little more than the weight of a silver dollar each day. The English and Italian rations are also not over one ounce per day. The French people will be entirely without sugar for over two months if we refuse to part with enough from our stocks to keep them supplied with even this small allowance as it is not available from any other quarter. Sugar even to a greater amount than the French ration is a human ne- cessity. If our people will reduce by one- third their purchases and consump- tion of candy and of sugar for other uses than preserving fruit, which we do not wish to interfere with, we can save the French situation. In the interest of the French peo- ple and of the loyalty we owe them to divide our food in the maintenance of our common cause, I ask the Ameri- can people to do this. It is unthinkable that we refuse their request. ' The matter is one of considerable seriousness and we hope you will do all you can locally to secure this end. HERBERT HOOVER. Dr. Michaelis is mistaken when he says Germany’s war aims are se- cret. What he really means is that they are criminal and no man may be compelled to incriminate himself. The Revenue Bill Passed. The revenue bill which a few trait- ors in Congress have been holding up for a long time has passed finally and will be approved by the President, in all probability, today. It provides revenues in addition to the ordinary levies amounting to $2,535,000,000 and will send a thrill of confidence throughout the country which will be worth more than it costs. Singularly enough there was no opposition to the conference report in the Senate when the vote was taken on Tuesday. La- Follette and Gore sat silent in their seats. Their services to the German Kaiser ended with the viva voce vote. Other obstructionists spoke against the report but nobody voted in the negative. The passage of this bill puts the United States into the war on a basis becoming the wealth and strength of the American people. It will provide for an army of two millions, a navy equal to the greatest, an equipment in war materials superior to any other power in the world, and an assurance for the future which means ultimate if not speedy triumph. Our army abroad will be better paid, better fed, better equipped and better supplied than any other force in the history of the world and its achievements will be greater. We have not gone into given the world assurance that we are in right and will accomplish the pur- poses for which the step was taken. lions of people in this country who are not able to bear them without sacri- fice. But they will be borne cheerful- ly because the sacrifices are for a righteous purpose. Real patriotism is expensive but unselfish and every time there is a pinch it will be endur- ed for the reason that it is making the world safer for democracy and guar- anteeing immunity from greater bur- dens and more costly sacrifices. If the bill had been passed four months ago the war might have been ended a year sooner. But on the wise princi- ple of “better late than never,” its passage at this late day becomes a just cause for rejoicing on both sides of the Atlantic. — Official announcement was made at Harrisburg last Friday of the appointment of J. Linn Harris as bond clerk in the State Treasurer’s office. — This has been peach week in Bellefonte, three car loads having been disposed of since Monday morning, the war blindly and being in we have The war burdens will be felt by mil- | “The Last Dollar, the Last Man.” From the Lancaster Intelligencer. A despatch from Paris quotes Pres- ident Wilson as having given to an en- voy of the French Republic the fol- lowing earnest assurance: “To the last man, to the last dollar, the whole force of the United States is at your service.” When a nation goes to war, it is not impelled to subordinate all other con- siderations to the urgency of success, to bend all its energies to that achievement and fairly estimate the strength of the foe and the degree and kind of effort required, but it is also necessary to seek, by every means, to impress upon that foe an appreciation of the formidable character of its war power and the resoluteness of its pur- pose. That is why vast war appropri- ations have been made by our Con- gress with hardly any debate, enor- mous loans authorized, the war plans outlined upon a gigantic scale, al- though with due regard for the neces- sary secrecy of strategy. That is why the President ordinari- ly so modest and conservative in his manner of speaking thus gives to France this assurance of our deter- mination to devote the whole force of the United States, even to “the last dollar, the last man,” to the winning of the war which would be the great- est service to France as well as to our- selves. That should always be the spirit and that is one of the many good reasons why the war spirit should never be awakened save, as in this war, by the stern necessity of re- sistance to unbearable offense. But though our money flows like water through the war mill and our men are summoned by the million, we have serene faith that it will all be over long before we can be called upon for “the last dollar and the last man.” Hope for the Coal Consumer. From the Altoona Times, According to coal administrator Garfield, the householder need not worry about his coal supply for the coming winter. Mr. Garfield is hav- ing an estimate made of the amount that will be needed by small consum- ers throughout the country, and he says he will see to it that retailers re- ceive that amount, to be sold at gov- ernment prices, even if he has to com- mandeer it. Furthermore, Mr. Garfield advises the consumer not to be in a hurry to putin his supply, but to wit until after October 1, when the price ‘to be fixed by the government will be an- nounced. And the retailer will have to abide by that price, no matter if he has stocked up on coal during the last few months at a higher figure than Mr. Garfield’s board decides upon. Mr. Garfield’s statement should be reassuring to those who have antici- pated paying all sorts of fantastic prices for their fuel supply. How- ever, it may be assumed that some of the retailers will not view with com- placency the fading of their visions of big profits, but will resort to subter- fuge to evade the coal administrator’s edict. Mr. Garfiela will have the pow- er, though, to enforce obedience from these dealers, and he must see to it that they live up to the letter of the law. There is no reason why there should be any suffering from lack of coal, and the public is in no humor to tolerate it. It is becoming weary of talk about keeping prices of necessi- ties down at the same time it is dig- ging deeper into its purse to meet the rising! costs. Outlook is Not Glowing. From the Johnstown Democrat. Admiral von Tirpitz and his new party may be as enthusiastic as ever, but they can hardly expect to be taken seriously by the mass of the German people who realize that U-boat per- formance is falling far short of its promise, while German land forces continue steadily to lose ground be- fore the allies of the western front. Things are not greatly better for the Teutonic powers in the east, the Rus- sians having pulled themselves to- gether somewhat and the Italians making progress in the Isonzo and Balkan sectors. All in all, the Ger- man outlook-is anything but glowing and it will take something more stim- ulating than von Tirpitz oratory to re- vive the drooping spirits of the people for whom their appeal is intended. Re One of Fashion’s Burdens. From the Dalton Citizen. The only trouble we are having with our swagger stick is that when we have a cigar in one hand and the stick in the other we find ourselves trying to smoke the stick quite as much as we do the cigar. will Have to Come to It. From the New York Evening Post. Maximilian Harden told the truth when he said in Berlin that Germany could have peace if she would under- take to evacuate Belgium and pay for the damage done to that outraged country. The Hohenzollern dynasty and the military caste, fighting for their existence, are not yet willing to concede this, and are boggling over the step necessary to end the war. In time, they will have to come to it. Butler Rises in His Wrath. From the New York Evening Sun. Ellis Parker Butler threatens if the women of Flushing don’t get out their needles pretty soon to start a men’s Red Cross sewing society. If that isn’t courage, where will you find it? SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Squeezed between cars, Cornelius M. Campbell, aged twenty-five, a ¢-iver in the Ebervale mines of the G. B. Ma: le compa- ny, died at Hazleton State hos® "1. —Complaints against the Ac Express company rates and servic “ambria county have been made by °° . ison Ice Cream company of Porta; re the Public Service Commission. —Lawrence county int ’ aise $100,000 to be used in the 3e oars for the dependents of soldier and sailors from that county. The campaign was opened last week and will be continued un- til every penny of the $100,000 is secured. —The honors of appointments to West Point dealt out by Congressman Charles H. Rowland, have been bestowed upon two DuBois boys, Edward Sullivan, son of Dr. and Mrs. J. C. Sullivan, and Lynn Brady, son of Mrs. Sarah G. Brady. The appoint- ments, of course, are subject to a rigid ex- amination. —The Middleburg Spinning company was granted a charter by the Common- wealth last week. The concern is capital- ized at $75,000, and is headed by William F. Pritchard. The new industry will be one of the most substantial in all Snyder county and will mean a big boom for the thriving town of Middleburg. —Mahanoy and Hazleton divisien offi- cials of the Lehigh Valley railroad an- nounced that women hired to work on the section and track gangs of the local lines cannot swing the pick and wield the shov- el satisfactorily, and that most of them taken on_ hereafter will be employed as “gate ladies,” as they are officially styled, and as car cleaners. —For permanent injuries, a broken spine and paralysis, Miss Grace, Stone was awarded $8,700, and her father, Oscar Stone, was awarded $1,300 in a settlement of a suit against the Keystone State Nor- mal School at Kutztown, last Friday. Miss Stone, a Nockamixon, Bucks county stu- dent at the school, was caught in an ele- vator more than two years ago. —Fifteen cases of infantile paralysis have been discovered in Fayette county, ac- cording to announcement by Dr. O. R. Alt- man, county representative of the State Health Department. There are two cases in Uniontown and four in Leckrone. The others are scattered throughout the coun- ty. The Uniontown board of education met Thursday to decide on the question of closing the schools. —Mrs. Abigail E. Geissinger, who built the $600,000 George F. Geissinger Memorial hospital at Danville, has endowed it for $1,000,000 Announcement to this effect was made on Tuesday. She has named a Scranton Trust company as trustee. Last week Mrs. Geissinger asked the board of trustees, all prominent Danville men, to re- sign saying she had other plans. Mrs. Geissinger is more than 90 years old. —Placing a thirty-two calibre revolver to his breast, John L. Girton, a well-known resident of West Berwick, fired a shot which ended his life Saturday afternoon. Despondencey over the death of his wife which occurred about eight months ago, is believed to have prompted the rash act. For the past several days his actions showed that his mind was unbalanced and he constantly talked of his wife and of supposed enemies. —The curb market established at Hazle- ton by the committee of Public Safety was dealt a serious blow Friday when commis- sion men met the farmers on the road to town, bought up their produce in carload lots and are alleged to have threatened to boycott those who refused to sell to them. The committee of Public Safety has asked for legal advice on its right to prosecute the men back of the move, which reduced the attendance of farmers at the market to eight. —Tuesday, October 9th, has been pro- claimed by Governor Brumbaugh as “Fire Prevention Day” in Pennsylvania, and the people of the State are urged on that day to clean up and remove from premises all rubbish, trash and waste. The Governor also suggests that special efforts be made to see that properties are in good condi- tion and that heating apparatus and chim- neys are put into proper shape, while the protection on all buildings of a public and semi-public character be inspected. __The main State highways will be kept clear of snow this winter in order to facil- itate motor traffic, according to Highway Commissioner O'Neil. He is planning “fly- ing squadrons” of skilled road workers to be held where they can quickly mobilize for work at any point. Western States are sending trains of motor vehicles through this State as a result of the railroad con- gestion and it is to facilitate their move- ment that the winter work will be under- taken. __Charles H. Bird, of Addison, on Wed- nesday of last week had 7,000 pounds of wool delivered at Meyersdale for which he paid the growers 69 cents a pound. This represented the greater part of the clip in territory immediately tributary to Meyers- dale, including Elklick and Summit town- ships, Somerset Co. Mr. Bird, it is under- stood, represented Cumberland buyers. The price, 69 cents a pound, is about three times as much as wool sold for several years past. As the price is not expected to come -down for some years to come, it can readily be seen that farmers will find sheep-raising more profitable in the future than in the past. — Whether there is a plot to do damage at industrial plants or railway lines, be- hind the theft of 75 pounds of dynamite, two kegs of powder, with a quantity of fuses and caps, at the stone quarry, near Duncansville, Sunday night, is giving the authorities a knotty problem. An em- ployee of the quarry discovered the loss of the explosives Tuesday morning. The limestone operations are near the New Portage branch tracks of the Pennsy, Ex- plosives are frequently stolen from quar- ries but this is the first occasion in sever- al years that so large an amount was ap- propriated in that action, and is arousing the fear and suspicions of the authorities. —Angered because their rate of pay was lower than that of their male predecessors, who left their jobs to go to war, women employees of the Baltimore and Ohio rail- road, engaged in the Pittsburgh yards in wiping engines, struck for higher pay. James G. Souse, of the Boilermakers’ Un- ion, has organized the women into the Women’s Railway Shop Employees Local and the organization is now taking an ac- tive part in the Jones & Laughlin steel strike. The company made overtures to the women to return to work, announcing that a new system of pay will increase their daily stipend, but they have refused to return. The new basis of pay is on the amount of work done and the women de- clare it unfair.