Bera aidan. INK SLINGS. Well, nobody ever accused the Ital- ians of being too modest. —This and next week Centre coun- ty’s corn crop will be planted. —Anyway the Pennsylvania Legis- lature does less harm the more it loafs. —If Holland refuses to give up the - Kaiser why all we can do is take Hol- land too. —A man never finds himself com- pletely tied fip until he gets to the end of his string. —Rains are essential of course, but they do add a lot to the miseries of a man who has to mow his own lawn. —May is half gone, June will soon be here and, come to think of it, it is only two hundred and twenty-three days until Christmas. —The North ward team having got- ten away to a victorious start in the Red Cross baseball league we are con- strained to remark that the fight is on. —The new fad of the girls, that makes a sweater worn without a waist under it quite the swagger thing, may be chic but it looks more like “chick- en.” —The Salvation Army is asking Centre county to give it seven thous- and dollars next week and it is up to us to see the doughnut, not the hole in it. ——Don’t waste too much sympa- thy on. those who are assessed under the luxury tax. There are a good many others less able to pay taxes on necessaries. : —Germany threatens to cease to exist if forced to accept the peace terms offered her. What a calamity it would be to lose the source of so much kultur. —Germany yelled “enough!” before she got a taste of what Belgium and northern France suffered. The peace terms are, therefor, so much the hard- er to accept. —The new Congress has convened and the country may expect fulfill- ment of the many promises that it has been cajoled with during the past eight years. —The problem of the unemployed is being solved by the city of Wil- liamsport through a movement to place more benches around the court house in that place. —The price of beer has fallen three dollars a barrel on the Hazleton mar- ket. Brewers in that section have doubtless made up their minds to sell while the sellin’s good. —After Austria complies with the peace terms she could mobilize her entire navy on the smallest pond at the Bellefonte fish hatchery and still they wouldn’t keep much sunshine off of the embryo trout. —Centre county’s welcome home celebration for her soldiers and sail- ors is to be quite up to the high stan- dard we have maintained in giving lavishly and doing splendidly ever since we entered the war. —Because the women elect to wear tight skirts the council of Youngs- town, Ohio, is considering compelling the street car companies of that city to lower the steps on their cars. What a useless waste to gratify a whim of fashion. —What are we going to do for par- agraphs when peace has finally come, the army is home and the country has gone dry? We should worry. Life surely is just “one d——d thing after another,” so something will turn up to furnish food for our pencil. —Mme Eleanor de Cisneros, who of- fered to kiss every man who subscrib- ed one million dollars to the Victory loan and got twenty-three takers at one meeting in Brooklyn, has gone broke. Pity the poor lady, who can’t turn her osculatory charms to her per- sonal benefit. —The Salvation Army is modest- It wants only thirteen million dollars and it wants it next week. Well, git- tin’s good now-a-days and the lassies of Sally’s Army deserve and will make good use of every penny of it, so let your contributions be both gen- erous and cheerful. —It was the prodigious prepara- tion we made for war that brought the war to such an early end after our entrance. Prodigious preparation ne- cessitated prodigious expenditures. Some call it waste, but then they don’t stop to calculate what the cost might have been had the war gone for a year longer. —As days pass Italy is seeing things with a broader vision. Her delegates are now actually proposing that they make certain concessions of their demands for territory. Italy al- ways was all right, yet she wasn’t just prepared for such a new order of things as the Peace Conference has endeavored to bring about. —The German delegates at Ver- sailles are occupying most of their time writing notes to the “Big Four.” They are not the kind of notes that are wanted just now. What the Al- lies want is one of those “shirt tail” fellows that will guarantee all the payments the Huns are asked to pay for the destruction they have wrought. —The contract for the new highway from Bellefonte to Nittany mountain having been let the summer promises nearly a quarter of a million dollar’s worth of new business for this sec- tion. Aside from the utilitarian val- ue the good roads movement has oth- er compensations and Centre county has no kick on the share she is get- ting of all of them, { SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE —The Bethlehem Steel company has planted 60,000 pine trees at Cornwall, to beautify a neighborhood. —Earl Jeardon and Guy Calkins were arrested in McKean county for fishing out of season and on Sunday. The fines and costs, for these early sportsme Sa n footed —Modern machinery has its disadvan tages. Edmund Whitelaw, of Crosby, is in the Bradford hospital recovering from injuries received when his clothing caught STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. in the revolving shaft of a farm tractor. —Despondent over recent illness, Mrs. Ida Blecker, of Danville, committed sui- cide by hanging. Her lifeless body was found suspended from a joist in the cel- VOL. 64. Peace Terms Just But Not Hard. The war seems to have ended too | soon. The attitude of the German people with respect to the peace | terms indicate that they are not! aware they were licked. They suffer- ed none of the horrors of war which | were so ruthlessly inflicted on other participants in the conflict. And they appear to believe that they have a right to a voice in fixing the condi- tions of the future. If the armistice had been delayed a few months they might have obtained a different con- ception of the result. If the forces of the United States and the Allies had moved on to Berlin and the ravages of even an humanitarian war had been inflicted upon the people of the terri- tory invaded they would have a bet- ter understanding. . The German people protest that the peace terms laid down by the Paris Conference are hard. As a matter of fact the terms are, relatively speak- ing, mild. In the Franco-Prussian war no damage was done in Germany and comparatively few German sol- diers were killed. Yet Germany im- posed conditions upon the conquered their cruelties. In the treaty forced upon Russia during the recent war the conditions were brutally severe and that which Rumania was compel- led to =zccept, equally destructive. But now that Germany is to suffer the just penalties of her numerous atroci- ties, her people squeal like stuck pigs, and plead for mercy. Let them have exact justice. The German people cannot escape just punishment on the pretext that the war was brought on by the mili- tary authorities and the atrocities perpetrated by the army. The busi- ness element of the German popula- tion and the land owners of Germany encouraged the military authorities to force the war on the world and every atrocity committed during the war was applauded by the German press and public. The sinking of the Lusi- tania and all its horrible consequences were jouously celebrated by the Ger- man people and when the fiends oper- ating submarine craft were decorated for some especially cruel performance the entire people rejoiced. The peace terms are not too hard. Any fault is on the other . ide, ——The refusal of the court to ac- cept “straw bail” for Bill Haywood, the I. W. W. leader, is not really a great source of regret. It may be disappointing to Bill but the country will get along without him. Two of a Bad Kind. Senator Lodge, of Massachusetts, has at least one supporter in his claim that Italy is entitled to the port of Fiume. Prince von Buelow, who was a member of the German cabinet dur- ing the early part of the war, de- clares that the “title of Italy to Fiume is good. Everything in Fiume,” he says “is Italian. Most of the Hun- garians living in Fiume are more fa- vorable to Italian than to Jugo-Slav rule.” That is substantially the way Senator Lodge expressed it. These two distinguished advocates of autoc- racy may have been influenced to their views by different reasons. But the result is just the same. Their purpose is to make the work of the peace makers more difficult. Prince von Buelow is probably look- ing for a safe asylum in which to hide himself when that feature of the peace treaty that provides fit punish- ment for those responsible for the war and its inhuman cruelties and imag- ines that taking the side of Italy in its controversy with the United States, Great Britain and France up- on the Fiume problem, will provide a zone of safety. His wife is an Italian and her relatives may take care of him if he “behaves.” Besides he hasn’t much interest in treaties as he was at the beginning of the war con- spicuous among those who believed that treaties are simply “scraps of paper.” Therefore he has strong rea- sons for siding with Italy. But Lodge has no reason other than partisan bigotry. He imagines that the success of the peace conference will add vastly to the influence and popularity of Woodrow Wilson and he {is willing to sacrifice half the man- ‘hood of the country to prevent that. . He believed that the quarrel between | Italy and the other powers concerned { in making the treaty, would defeat it. | He probably knew that the defeat of | the treaty would mean a resumption | of the war and the killing of other { thousands of American soldiers. But | it would also discredit President Wil- i son and that has become the purpose of Henry Cabot Lodge’s worthless | life. But he is welcome to his com- : panion in thought, Prince von Buelow. ——There is probably no founda- { tion for the published statement that | Holland will refuse to give up the Kaiser for trial. The chances are ten to one that Holland would willingly give trading stamps to anybedy who will take him out of that country. ——1If you want to help the Belle- fonte hospital go to the Academy minstrel show next Thursday night. French that appalled civilization by minded men. BELLEFONTE. PA., MAY 16, 1919. Opinions of Two Public Men. In the esteemed Philadelphia Rec- ord of last Saturday there are ex- pressions of two conspicuous public men on topics of present popular con- cern which are interesting mainly be- cause of contrast. Former President Taft is quoted as saying: “The fact that we had 2,000,000 men in Ameri- ca ready to cross, just as good as those who were across; the fact that we had more airplanes building, rifles and shells and ammunition coming faster, a deadlier gas ready, were de- ciding factors in ending the war. The fact that all these things were ready shows that the money spent for them was not wasted.” Having declared these pertinent truths he sharply up- braided those “foolish enough to say there was no use for expense after the war ended.” They are necessary to restore peace and bring men home. On another page of the same issue Senator Penrose is quoted as saying: “] favor a proper investigation of war expenditures and activities. I do not believe the investigations should be conducted in any spirit of partisan- ship and full allowance ought to be made for the peculiar conditions pre- vailing in the crisis of the great war. I would feel rather that the inquiries ought to be conducted on broad lines so that we may know what mistakes, if any, have been made in economical matters, incuding price-fixing and other regulations, as well as the methods of making contracts and the wisdom of such projects as the hous- ing scheme.” The only broad lines which ever appear to Senator Pen- rose’s mind are such as may be used for partisan purposes and the inves- tigations he contemplates will have the partisan aim of discrediting the administration. The voice of Mr. Taft expresses the impulses of a patriotic heart, in- fluenced by intelligent understanding of great questions. The voice of Sen- ator Penrose expresses the pernicious hope of a scurvy politician bent upon the promotion of selfish partisan in- terest at any price. Mr. Taft can see no reason for even complaint. Sena- tor Penrose sees a hope that parti- sans with the instinct of a ferret may discover some error of judgment or carelessness in execution that will jus- tify criticism. It is- admitted that mistakes have been made and in his bigoted mind they have already been magnified into crimes. But he is wel- come to his false opinions. They be- come his small mind and meantime the administration will proceed se- renely in the full confidence of fair ——Germany was warned long ago that it would be a “dictated peace,” and negotiations are barred. ! Senator Vare is Happy. The Legislative mill at Harrisburg : has not been making much progress this week. “Absence from the capital of United States Senator Penrose, a ' dinner to the Governor on Monday night, a base ball game on Wednes- | day afternoon and the journey of State officials and members of the General Assembly early Thursday morning to Philadelphia to join in the welcome to the 28th division,” writes one of the Philadelphia newspaper correspondents, “are among the many reasons for marking time in both branches this week.” The other rea- sons are left to conjecture. Probably among them might be found that tra- ditional adage that “when the cat’s away the mice will play.” As has been indicated in these col- umns before the Legislature was aim- lessly dilly dallying until Senator Penrose butted in three or four weeks ago and forced something like activi- ty into the indolent membership. He had an axe to grind, of course, and the only available instrument for ac- complishing the purpose was the leg- islative grindstone. Senator Vare was becoming increasingly trouble- some and the only remedy is destruc- tion. Accordingly Penrose went to Harrisburg and entered upon the task. The Governor thrust a sprag into his wheel here and threw a monkey wrench into his machinery there. But in three weeks of strenuous endeavor he achieved much. Then his energies were diverted to another source of an- noyance. His political fences in Washington were set on fire and he had to go there to extinguish the flames. ; But his absence from Harrisburg played havoc with his plans in Penn- sylvania for the Legislature has re- lapsed into the state of lethargy from which he had retrieved it. All his friends appear to have laid down and the Governor has ordered a complete review of his work and a possible re- versal of the legislative policy. Meantime the country Members are becoming restive over the prolonga- tion of the session. Under the law after the hundred days have expired they get no recompense for remaining in session and as a rule they believe that “the laborer is worthy of his hire” whether his services are of val- ue or not. This is the outstanding , situation at present. And Vare isen- | joying it to the limit. i Big Fight Impending. At the assembling of Congress next From the Philadelphia Record. week there is likely to be staged in Washington the most cruel war of modern times. Senator Borah, a blatherskite from Idaho, declares that | {ory In 1871, with its iron-shod boots he will not consent to the election of | trampling the third of its victims in Senator Penrose to the chairmanship of the committee on Finance, tradi- tionally the highest office in the body. Senator Kenyon, of Iowa, and Sena- tor Norris, of Nebraska, are said to entertain the same views on the sub- ject and Senator Johnson, of Califor- nia; Senator McNary, of Oregon; Senator Jones, of Washington, and Senator Cummins, of Iowa, are in sympathy but not willing to go the limit. Senator Penrose is entitled to the office by rules in force “since time out of mind.” Senator Simmons is the present ca- pable chairman of the committee. Be- ing a South Carolinian and a Demo- crat he naturally expects to be de- moted upon the reorganization next week but is probably willing to, con- tinue in the event of the failure of the opposition to muster strength enough to oust him. If Borah, Kenyon and Norris vote against him or withhold their votes, Penrose will not be elect- ed for one absent Republican Senator with those Senators not voting will leave the Republican candidate with less than a majority. On the other hand Penrose is said to have declared that rather than let these recalci- trants control the election he will vote for Simmons and thus secure his re- election. The importance of this contest, however, is not in the persons imme- diately concerned. It lies between the predatory corporations and spe- cial interests on one side and the low tariff and anti-corporation Republi- cans on the other. The corporations want Penrose for the reason that with him in the office there would be a hope for the restoration of all the sources of graft which excessive tar- iff legislation promotes. They freely offer any amount of slush funds which the Republican organization requires for the ensuing Presidential campaign and threaten to withhold their contri- butions if this expectation is defeat- ed. That is the significant feature of the fight and lines the machine with 10o8e. « id - . Senator Cummins is already exercising the functions of chairman of the committee on Intrestate Com- merce though he hasn’t been commis- sioned as yet and if he continues to monkey with Penrose may never be. Considerable curiosity was manifested on Wednesday by a sight of burgess W. Harrison Walker and chief of police Harry Dukeman meas- . uring the principal streets of the town . with a tape line. manifest. The object is very Last week the “Watch- man” told of Burgess Walker’s deter- mination to break up the speeding habit within the borough and in or- der to do so council has granted him the right to import a stranger as traf- fic officer, whose special duty it will be to catch violators of the automo- bile laws of the State and borough. The very fact that the burgess him- self assisted in measuring off the speed traps may be taken as a hint that if his special officer is not al- ready in Bellefonte he will be pretty soon, and this is a hint to automobil- ists to keep within the rules and reg- ulations or some of these days they are liable to get a little notice to ap- pear before His Honor and settle. Naturally Senator LaFollette is opposed to the League of Nations. We have every reason to believe that General Hindenberg is of the same mind on that subject. It is a pro- German weakness. Col. J. L. Spangler left on Mon- day afternoon for Chicago where as a member of the United States com- mission to adjudicate labor troubles between employers and employees he went to meet with the other members to arrange a scale for the big pack- ing concerns and their two hundred thousand workmen. Just about a year ago the commission was appealed to to settle the labor trouble that threat- ened to interfere with the packers making good on their contract to fur- nish one thousand car loads of meat, ete.,, a day to the government, and the arrangement they made at that time proved so satisfactory to both sides that the commission has been asked to lend its assistance in com- pleting arrangements for another year. “Tt is said that the German del- egates at Versailles are standing on President Wilson’s Fourteen Points. But if they refuse to sign they will be standing on their heads in the near future. Those whe won the war will make the peace and neither the Ger- man delegates in Versailles nor the Republican Senators in Washington had anything to do with winning the war. —For high class Job Work come to the “Watchman” Office. i ‘ much of what it took from Denmark and Poland, is restored to its victims i their consecrated head. tes . We doubt if there ever was in this . unanimous worshipers of their com- NO. 20. - lar of her home by neighbors who made a Sic Transit Gloria Mundi. search for her. —Thieves forced an entrance to a To- wanda meat market last week, took sever- al pieces of jewelry from the safe, 32.50 from the cash register and overlooked $500 in bills in the safe drawer, this latter likely paid in.by some belated customer. —Announcement was made last week by the Susquehanna silk mills, with general offices in New York, that it will build a $200.000 plant at Milton, to replace the plant now there, which employs 200 hands. The new plant when in operation will em- ploy from 400 to 600 hands. —The R. & H. Simon Silk company is about to begin extensive improvements on its mill in Easton, which will entail, itis said, the expenditure of about $300,000. It is planned to erect two additional one- story brick buildings, one to be 125 by 230 feet, and the other 115 by 170 feet. —Montandon wants a postmaster, Frederick G. Garber, who held the Sue tion for six years, resigned, the place has gone-a-begging. No one seems to want it, although the place pays $600, approxi. mately. An examination was held on Sat- urday but no appointment has vet been made. —A suit for $50,000 damages has been filed for Arpad Kaneso, aged five, by Charles Kancso, his father, of Bethlehem, against the Bell Telephone company of Pennsylvania, for injuries caused to Ar- pad Kancso, when knocked down and run over by a vehicle belonging to the defend- ant company, —Woods Rich, of Woolrich, had a nar- row escape from death in the flooded Sus- quehanna Sunday night when lights from another car blinded him, causing him to lose control of the machine which he was driving. The car jumped the bank above McElhattan and plunged partly into the stream. He was bruised and suffered strains in the neck. The car was badly damaged. —Twenty years ago, Falls Creek, Du- Bois’ interesting suburban village, was an interesting town. Two big glass factories were being built. car shops were contem- plated, steel mills were looked for, big stores were being built and things were humming. As soon as the town lots were sold, however, and building enterprises ceased, the town went on the blink, where it has remained since. —Mrs. Anna Guelich Heisey. Clearfield county's oldest resident, quietly celebrat- ed her 103rd birthday, on Monday of last week at the home of her daughter, Mrs. George XI. Hall, near Clearfield. Among those seated at dinner with her were her brother, Henry Guelich. aged over ninety years; her son-in-law, George Hall, past ninety-one years of age, and her daugh- ter, Mrs. Hall, aged eighty-one years. —Peter Smollak, of Kulpmont, Nor- thumberland county, found guilty of the first degree murder of his wife and sen- tenced to die in the electric chair at the Rockview penitentiary, has evidently been overlooked by Governor Sproul’s secreta- ry in fixing the dates for the electrocu- tion of murderers. Smollak was found guilty last September and refused a new trial, but as yet he does not know when his turn to die will come. —When Joseph Munster, assistant mine foreman at the Phoenix Park colliery, Minersville, was married in November, 1905, a gypsy fortune teller who read his hand predicted his bride would present him with eighteen children. During the week the tenth child was born and Mun- ster is beginning to believe the gypsy was conservative. He is very proud of his big family, though admitting it is a great re- Less than fifty years spans the per- iod between the greatest glory of Ger- many and a humiliation deeper than that of any considerable nation in his- seven years, Prussia erected itself in- to the German Empire and placed the imperial crown upon its brutal fore- head. In 1919 it listens to a decree of dissolution, disarmament and dis- grace. What it took from France, and in wars that turned its head and made it the bandit of the world. Its army and navy are to be reduced to the di- mensions of a modest police force. Its western front is to be left without de- fenses. Its colonial empire has disap- peared. The greater part of its mer- chant marine will be taken to pay in kind as far as it goes the damages wrought by its submarines. It will be hedged in on the east by Poland and on the south by Czecho-Slavokia. The most remorseless enemy of Germany, the most revengeful of its victims, could hardly ask for more, for in addition to all these penalties it must toil for a generation, perhaps for a century, to pay a pecuniary pen- alty the full dimensions of which are not stated, but must be accepted in blank, and the first installment of which is four times as great as the unprecedented ransom it extorted from prostrate France. Its former Kaiser, now a fugitive from his country, which has disowned him, must stand trial for crimes against civilization, and his subordi- nates must go before the bar of alien courts on charges of specific viola- tions of international law. Yet the peace treaty is not one of vengeance, but of justice. It is notan expression of hatred, but the stern judgment of the civilized world upon the nation which precipitated the greatest of all wars for the least of all reasons, for the gratification of the most criminal of all ambitions. Will the German plenipotentiaries sign? They must. There is nothing else for them to do. Germany cannot live without imported food and ma- terials, and if it does not sign an ab- solute interdict will be issued against it. The Allies and America have the means of closing every port and guarding every frontier. It was able to import a good deal during the war, yet not enough to maintain perma- nently its physical existenge:: or “its industrial activity. dt will be imvos- |’ sible to import anything if it shall re- fuse to submit to the penalties, which, appalling as they are, fall short of those with which it threatened its neighbors for years before this war broke out, and for the imposition of which it rejected all overtures of ne- gotiation and conciliation and launch- ed its bolts against France, Belgium and Russia. Yet, not as a matter of justice, but as a matter of expediency, it is open to question whether it is wise to keep Germany struggling for a generation or half a century to pay what it owes. But Germany has no right to object. It cannot undo the wanton harm it has done. It can never pay for the suffering it has caused. The nation as well as the Kaiser made this war, 25 cher or in, penany 1 sponsibility for one man to take upon him- 1 ; not greater than Germany deserves. Sef in those rimes = —Amos 8. Fishel, a widely known Ad- ams county farmer, is dead at his home near Arendtsville as the result of injuries received Sunday afternoon, when he was attacked by a bull. He was tossed by the animal for some minutes before his wife and son were attracted by the noise and beat off the bull with shovels. Mr. Fishel suffered great loss of blood through the main artery in his right leg being torn. Tirst aid given by his son. Emory Fishel, formerly in the medical corps of the ar- my, prolonged his life many hours. 3 Napoleon and the Kaiser. From the Hartford Courant. On the bleak and altogether unin- teresting island of St. Helena 98 years ago, Napoleon Bonaparte, the great military genius of France, was passing the last days of his life upon this earth. May 5, 1821, he died. His body is now in his beloved France, and descendants of the people whom he misguided during his ambitious and graphic career go to his tomb and pay due and willing reverence. Nine- ty-eight years after the death of this great Frenchman, the leader of another great nation is in exile, not far from the land of the people whom he also misguided, misused and false- ly led in the blind and futile role of In his self- appointed exile, William Hohenzol- lern cannot be compared to the great Napoleon. The only comparison that can rightfully be made is that each of these rulers of a great people became obsessed with the mad desire to ex- tend his rule to the uttermost ends of the earth. But this modern blood- thirsty ruler of the German Empire, who wrecked his kingdom and him- self, is, in a sense, just as much an exile today as ever Napolean was. Anent the Soldier Vote. ¥rom the Philadelphia Record. One of General Wood’s most enthu- siastic boomers makes the prediction that he “will have the solid soldier vote.” “There ain’t no sech animile!” —The Ferguson Packing company of Johnstown, Pa. is a new organization capitalized at $250,000. At the head of it is C. L. Ferguson, one of the city’s leading financiers and church men. The company, which will employ fifty men in the pack- ing business has bought the Germania brewery, which formerly employed twelve men. In transforming the brewery into a packing house the boilers, generators, compressors, etc.. have been left intact. The other machinery has been changed and an additional building is being erect- ed. —That western Pennsylvania may have another tuberculosis sanitarium has been intimated by Colonel Edward Martin, State Commissioner of Health. The sani- tarium at Markleton, Somerset county, which was used by the government during the war and which was returned recently to private ownership may be taken over by the State for use in caring for tuber- culosis patients. Colonel Martin made an inspection of the hospital lately and ad- mitted that there was some ground for the reports that the institution would be taken over by the State. The State now controls three tuberculosis sanitariums, Mont Al- to, Cresson and Hamburg. country a “solid soldier vote,” even among those early fighters for our liberties whom we like to believe —Pennsylvania state constabulary, de- tectives of Allegheny and Beaver counties and Pittsburgh police are searching for the persons who late Sunday brought down a balloon containing two United States naval officers with high power ri- fles near Baden, Pa. The bag was pilot- ed by Lieutenant Robert Howarth and En- sign Wm. White, of the Akron, Ohio, na- val reserve training station and was one of seven balloons which started from Ak- ron Sunday in a race to the Atlantic coast. According to the police ,the shooting oc- curred near Beaver, Pa. The first bullet struck Ensign White's cap. Then a fusil- mander-in-chief and the Father of His Country. It is certain that the soldiers coming back from overseas now show no wild fervor at mention of the name of any high officer who happens to be considered for the Pres- idency. So far as Pershing is con- cerned, politics seems not to have touched him, and his record as a fight- er is not likely to affect the individu- al political faith of any of the fight- ers under him. Most of our men were voters—or prospective voters following in their fathers’ footsteps— | lade of bullets tore the gas bag but the before they became fighters, and | pilots opened the safety vaives and sue- when they put on their “civies” again ceeded in landing near Baden without ac- they’ll be the same sort of voters. cident. :