. Any one who has had business in the ~ “inet who 'bamshed liquors from. the dinners in Washington. "It was Pres- fe ed INK SLINGS , —Let us hope for a little dry weather and sunshine. . —Don’t let the election go by de- fault. Every good citizen should go out and vote next Tuesday. —Seven of the twelve nominees on A OY -— the Republican ticket have the Pro-| — = hibition endorsement. Did they steal VOL. 64. BELLEF STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. ONTE, PA., OCTOBER 31, 1919. NO. 43. —Just why Frank Smith wasn’t given the Prohibition endorsement in- stead of its going to his opponent, Frank Sasserman, will take more than a Solomon to figure out. x 4 yds : ment invariably fixes the minimum —Prohibitionists -who might have price on a level considerably higher met chief of police Dukeman late on a i the night of the primaries are no I than that existing under conditions of : : ! competition or monopoly at the time. Sot bE ues he 20 he It ‘will be recalled that during the re- : cent war Mr. Garfield, a Republican, — Are you going to help Bill Brown | was appointed controller of the fuel bust the two term precedent in Cen- supply and his first order fixed the tre county? What do you think Bill | price of the grade of coal used by would say about you if you were try- | poor people at a dollar a ton more ing to grab off more than your share | than the producers had been asking. of county office? There are thous- | The other day Attorney General Pal- ands of other competent men in Cen- | mer, who seems to be vested with the tre county who have a right to expect | power to regulate the prices of food preferment at some time or other but | products, issued an order to beet how in the world will they ever get a sugar producers to limit the whole- chance if the same man is to have an | sale price of their product to ten office all the time. Vote for Wagner | cents a pound. Geiss for Recorder. He is qualifiedto | An inquiry into this question re- fill the position, is a man of good | veals the fact that hitherto the whole- character and deserves a chance. sale price of beet sugar, f. o. b. at the —We have great faith in the good refineries has been nine cents a pound. judgment of the people of = Centre Why does Mr. Palmer increase pe county. For that reason we feel that | PTI to ten cents a pound, under the there will be many voters who will pretenses reducing the high cost of rise above party next Tuesday and living? It was easy to form a plaus- quietly go to the polls and vote for Capt. “Dick” Taylor. We mean men who are not active in politics, men whose sense of right and wrong is the principle that guides their action, men who know and feel an obligation to the soldiers whe fought the great war for them, men who do not want to see the county of Centre repudiate 2 hero for the chief of police of Belle- fonte. —Why not put a man in the: Pro- thenotary’s office who knows enough of the real routine of court work to be of immediate service to the public. Harry Meyer has been Commission- er’s clerk long enough to get well ac- quainted with court house ‘procedure. jt or don’t the Prohibitionists know Mr. Palmer's Plans Changed. them? One vital trouble I with government Garfield, He probably wanted to dis- credit the Democratic administration which had mistakenly put him in a position to make that purpose easy. But Palmer pretends to favor the ad- ministration which has heaped honors upon him to the amazement of those who know him best, and yet he is do- men suspicious of the President. The price of sugar is not the pot tial factor in-the high cost of living. The seat of the trouble against which everybody complains is in the offices of the packing companies which not only enjoy a monopoly of the meat supply but are rapidly acquiring a monopoly of all other food products. Comniissioner’s office’ knows that: he has been” most courteeus, always, and has gone ‘out of the ‘way to give in- formation needed by all inquirers. He is far superior in qualification to his opponent and, being a man of. ir- | reproachable character and affable nature, would make an ideal Prothon- etary.’ Vote for him.: gs —Lest we forget, it was President Wilson and members: of his first Cab- thing ‘with these ‘“malefactors of great wealth?” He started out with a full band, and got the front page in every newspaper of the country, in a and now comes forward with an at- tack upon the beet sugar refiners which jncrcsys their prices, proba- ‘bly beyond anything they had hoped for in their wovetous hearts. = PRT ‘White House table and other: state ident Wilson who: gave Prohibition its great impetus by’ the open ‘stand he took in advocacy of it and for wom- an’s Suffrage, which, in the last anal- ysis, means the same cause. Merely because he has vetoed a political trick bill designed to keep war-time Pro- hibition in force until constitutional Prohibition becomes operative a few people with short memories forget the good he did when it really was needed and counted for something. —Frank Smith should be the next Register of Centre county. He made a splendid official when in office four years ago and should have been given a second term then. He was defeated, not because of any derelictions in of- fice but because the general temper of the people was expressing itself on great political issues and he went down when really defeat for him was not the real wish of the voters. Its different now. There are no outside questions to be settled. This election is merely a Centre county matter. A business of picking good and efficient managers for our local offices and the chance to do the right thing for Frank Smith is here. Do it. —It’s hard lines when boys have to be bought to cheer for candidates. One night last week the pictures of certain Republican nominees for county office were being flashed on the screen at a local movie house and standing on the curb, outside, was a ward worker who was gathering up all the kids who loaf about the place and paying their way in. The only condition was that when so-and-so’s picture was shown they should cheer as loud and as long as they could. The result was very satisfactory, but the following Saturday night the same popular idols (?) stared the au- dience in the face between each reel but nary a cheer or a sign of approv- al was heard. There were no boys in the house whose admission had been paid to cheer for the cheering they would do. — James E. Harter is the type of man about whom never a breath of suspicion has been raised. He is a |, clean cut, christian gentleman who wants to be Treasurer of the county because he knows he is competent to act as custodian of your funds. He is not before you at the expense of another man who was promised and then denied the chance to be his op- Republicans. When that stalwart journal editorially acknowledges that the days of protective tariffs are done and backs its own vision of the future needs of the country by quoting Alba B. Johnson, president of the Baldwin Locomotive works, and a stalwart of the stalwarts, there are certainly signs of ‘a new light dawning on hitherto warped’ minds. Four years ago the “Watchman” pointed out that high tariff would never again be a political ~ issue and this swan song day looks as though it is getting its readers prepared for the eclipse of the old bogy in the campaign of 1920. H . It is to ‘Laugh! last week painted Bill Brown as one of the county’s greatest philanthro- pists. ‘They would have us believe drew Carnegié in his effert to die peor. i i According to their usual campaign practices of deception they spread broadcast the announcement that Bill is recording the discharge papers of the soldiers FREE OF CHARGE and, therefor, his efforts to grab a third term in a fat county office ought to be encouraged by every young soldier in the county. Bill doesn’t need to see a There is no danger of his dying of enlargement of the heart for thelaw doesn’t permit him to charge any- thing for recording such papers any 1 way. Under the Act of the General | Assembly, No. 178, approved June 2nd, 1919, the county is required to pay Bill out of the public treasury for recording each such instrument and he knows it full well so do the Republican and the Gazette. They all prefer, however, to feed the public this kind of Bolsheviki so they can qualify once more for the Ananias club. ee ee Up until the present moment no- body has been able to discover why fondness for Chinamen and such a hatred for Japanese. King Albert, of Belgium, is generous in praise of Republican institutions but we don’t imagine ponent. He is a fair and square can- § didate who got his name on the ticket that he will go back home and abdi- without the manipulation of any or- cate. ganization or crowd of political Been pare rand German bosses and represents the free and un- trammeled wishes of the voters who nominated him. Mr. Harter is worthy of the vote of every body who wants to see fair play; especially of those who feel that Ad. Hartswick was bad- ly treated by a crowd for whom he had worked long and hard. * commerce may come to this country ultimately but it is too soon after the trench experience to force them now. — Colenel House hasn’t talked much since his return from Paris and the Republican: Senators hope his ret- icence will continue. - control of prices is that the govern- Why doesn’t Mr. Palmer do some- crusade against the packing compa- | nies. But he has taken in his horns | the county; before the primaries; threw a bomb which . certainly must have had. an exeeedingly shocking ef- | fect on .old .fashioned, .old thinking which the Ledger published Wednes-. The Republican and the Gazette | that Bill is emulating the late ‘An-| - doctor. | | Summing It All Up. | So far as newspaper publicity is concerned the campaign for of- fices in Centre county closes with this issue of the “Watchman.” We have tried to be absolutely fair in presenting the merits of the various nominees who are soliciting your suffrage next Tuesday and we feel that we have not made a single untruthful or unwarranted statement concerning any of them. Realizing that more and more people are coming to view county elections as non-partisan affairs the “Watchman” has been encouraged to hope that there will be enough of them at the polls next Tuesday to put only the best men in office. While we have told you either directly or by inference whom we regard as the best men for the various posi- tions we have not made the proof as conclusive as we might have done “in some instances. That would have involved revelations that might "have given the Gazette a very real reason for calling the Democratic | papers “stink sheets,” as it does in its issue of today. Inelegant lan- | guage, to be sure, but quite in place in the Gazette. | For instance, we might have referred to its own files, which we pre- | serve in this office and published a certain short article .it car- | ried some years ago. 3 So for B plak We might have gone to court records that don’t ible conjecture as to theaction of Mr.| gq. \ ..} credit on the candidate whom they concern, we might have published numerous letters which we have received recently reflecting on the character of several others. We might have published a letter | that arrived as late as yesterday afternoon, from M. L. Brewster, secre- | tary of the Tax Payers League, of Cambria county, in which he states that they are trying to impose a two million dollar bond issue for roads ing the thing that makes thoughtful on that county and adds that he knows that a party of gentlemen got to- en. | gether in Centre before they decided who they would work for for their nominees for County Commissioners and discussed a bond issue of $500,000 for Centre. Then they called in one of the men who is now a candidate and he gave the scheme “his hearty endorsement.” * Yes, we | might have said many things that we have left unsaid, but we have pre- ferred to appeal to the good sense of the voters of Centre county, rather than arouse them with facts that are far better forgotten.’ : The one outstanding fact in the whole situation is the very appar- | erit-manipulation and trickery that was employed to secure nominations | on the Republican ticket for favorites of a few party bosses who evi- dently regard their party’s organization as their own personal property. The “Watchman” had hoped to be able to produce in this issue a photographic copy of a letter which ‘county chairman Davy Chambers is generally believed to have sent to his trusted lieutenants throughout te Dr aus directing them to work and vote for The Publi¢ Ledger of Wednesday, | the slated ticket. ‘Such a letter was undoubtedly sent’out, for at least eight Republicans have told us that they knew of it and one gentleman promised to produce a copy for our use. "He failed only ‘hecause the person who had it didn’t understand plate making and: was fearful it might be destroyed by the-engravers. In proof of this evidently unfair method of treating candidates at a primary we need but refer to pre- cincts like Snow Shoe, Philipsburg, Spring and others where the vote and money both. ‘Bill Brown given a fourth? der to put him on the ticket. i ers of Centre county. for the slated ticket was altogether unnatural and showed manipulation Why was this done? There were other men deserving of a chance. Men who would have been a credit to their party, men who deserved recognition at its hands. - But they were all cut down for a purpose. And we still think that the principal motive is just what the Tax Pay- ers League of Cambria county writes to us of, referred to above. * How did it happen that over half of the men runming on the Re- publican- ticket. have the Prohibition endorsement? Surely most of them must be laughing in their sleeves at the way this trick was put over for they know themselves to be flying under false colors. Why was it that Ad. Hartswick was deceived and mistreated ? Why was it that Isaac Miller was denied a second nomination and Why was it that lieutenants were paid to go to the primaries and ‘work for the slate? Surely it was not for the good of the party, for signs are everywhere that better thinking Republicans are rebelling at it and you can’t tell a man who knows anything that Harry Austin is a better type of citizen than is 'Squire John Way, Ralph Hartsock, John S. Dale, M. R. Johnson and the other good men who were knifed in or- Surely there is irregularity enough about it to make us suspicious | and warn the prudent man against voting his own pocket book into the | hands of a crowd that has ridden rough shod over good men who were | not sitting in at their game. Let Centre county rise next Tuesday to nip whatever scheme they have in the bud. | trick that has been played on them. Let the real Temperance people rise in righteous indignation at the Let an avalanche of ballots bury the attempt to deny the first of Senator Lodge has developed such a’ Centre county’s heroes a reward he has won on the field of battle. Let sound sense, your own personal interest, and not a partisan la- | | hel guide your hand when you mark your ballot next Tuesday. | —When the Prohibitionist goes in- | to the voting booth next Tuesday and {looks his ballot over surely he will | come to the conclusion that the exi- | gencies of politics make strange bed- fellows. Shades of Frances Willard rise in protest against the travesty on Prohibition that is being imposed upon the people of Centre county by a gang of political manipulators! They ‘have stolen the Prohibition en- dorsement for candidates who are so i wet that the ballot on which their names are printed ought to ooze like a bar-room mop. The hypocrisy of it all lies in the fact that in several in- stances the stolen Prohibition en- dorsement works injury to men who have devoted their entire lives to fighting for the cause that is now be- ing used to stab them with. —Vote for D. Wagner Geiss for Recorder. } : .- It is a matter not come here, because | | Effect of a Coal Strike. i From the Philadelphia Record. A London dispateh says: | of labor conditions in States orders for steel and. tinplate ‘are pouring into South Wales from all over the world. * * * One or- der for tinplate ran into 1,000,000 boxes.” sali 2 A few weeks ago the ‘British steel and coal interests were viewing Amer- ican competition with grave appre- hension. Orders that for years have gone to England were going ‘to the United States. Wages here are high, but production is greater per capita, and American exporters were meet- ing English and German prices. § en came the steel strike, and now the bituminous coal strike for a re duction of work and a very great in= crease of pay is almost certain. The earnings per hour in the steel mills have advanced 221 per cent, in four years, and the increase in coal has been nearly 100 per cent. The result has been a great increase in the c st of living and loud complaints of s hardships ensuing. Now, the stee workers strike either for a mere form or for the purpose of controlling ‘the business, and the bituminous : mine! are going to strike to reduce their working hours to 30 a week and in crease their pay 60 per cent. i Of course, these strikes will furth- er increase the cost of living, a they will increase especially the price of steel and coal. We do not ask the bituminous miners to practice self- denial for the sake of the rest of the community. They have the right of every man to get as good terms for themselves as possible. But is it for their own interest to divert the world’s orders for steel and.eoal to South Wales? France wants 22,000,- 000 tons of coal next year. Digging that coal would : furnis! ployment six days a week for a. great number of men. But a dichied in- crease in price would divert the or- ders from America to other sources of coal supply. ! vir Ta Td The Steel Corporation has built up a great export trade. In other words, many thousands of steel workers in this’ country are employed in produc- ing steel for foreigners, and : pont of this product brings gold ut if the steel strike is to be follow- ed by a bituminous strike, th ders ‘will go to England or possib other countries; at any ate, “the; “Because Uni hours of men of ‘self-interest for the miners to work on terms that will bring export orders to this country. If we cease to export coal and steel if.'the wages and. materially, to the | there will be a great deerease in the number of men employed in’ theseiin- dustries. ty 1 Russia. From the Philadelphia Record. ~ However to be desired the fall of Lenine and Trotzky may be, we have yet to take with one or more grains of salt the various prophecies that are being made here and in other Allied. . day tripled its production by jumping ap- quarters. : gs > nl A number of sanguine editors are at pains to explain military oper- ations of the several” Russian armies in the field against the Bolsheviki. Denikine is within 200 miles’ of Mos- cow; the Lettish and Esthonian forces: are holding the Dvina, near Riga; the Poles are reported at Dyvinsk; the northern Archangel, and Admiral Kolchak is pressing forward in Siberia.” So,” we are told, there is streng hope that Moscow and. Petrograd will be taken, and the-Bolsheviki will fall before Christmas. aieTh 55 “But about this time of each year in the long period of the great war we were always informed that the time was at hand when military operations must cease in Russia because of the approach’ of winter. Our chief hope from the operations so far must be in the moral effect they will have upon the tyrannical Bolsheviki, now said to- be thoroughly scared. There seems little doubt that when Lenine and Trotzky quit they will quit in a hur- Knowing all of these things to be absolute facts there is only one’ deduction that a thinking voter can draw from them and that is that it at was all part of an “inside” scheme to put something over on the tax pay- ry. They are yellow at heart, and they will make no desperately pro- longed stand. The break may come any time, ‘but prophecies of any sort about Russia are wild things. Business Conditions. From the Northampton Democrat. Despite the widespread labor un- rest, prosperity and good business are reported from all sections of the country. There does not appear to be a pronounced dewnward tendency in prices, although there have been declines here and there in foodstuffs. The continuance of the high cost of necessary supplies has had no effect, however, upon consumption, and the demand for luxuries and the better rades of goods continues steady. leas to the general public to save have had no more effect than appeals to industrial workers to increase their output. The dangers in the present situation are understood by every- body, but there is no pessimism any- where. The confidence of the average citizen in the ability of the United States to weather any storm is pro- found, and there is not the slightest chance of any revolutionary move- ment making headway. ne ti — In the achievement of the Lit- erary Digest there is a strong warn- ing against printers’ strikes without good reason. That esteemed contem- porary has pointed the way to publish without printers. ant} = ‘creases, 1 SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —A snow white deer was found dead, caught in a barbed wire fence near Trox- elville, Snyder county, on Monday. —The million dollar additions to the New York Central railroad shops at Avis, adjoining Jersey Shore, are virtually completed, with the result that Jersey Shore has one of the largest and most modern groups of railroad repair shops in Pennsylvania. pet —Seven thousand pairs of trousers were ‘stolen from the Montgomery Clothing company plant at West Chester early last ‘Thursday. The garments were taken away in an automobile truck and a tour- ing car by burglars, who jimmyed a lock on the front door of the factory. . —Swapping clothing, shoes and hats at the muzzle of a revolver is the latest stunt to be tried by a highwayman in the neigh- borhood of Scranton. Eugene Dolan, 22 years old, was the young man held up and: compelled to take off his trousers, coat, shoes and hat and hand them over to & youth who clutched a revolver in his hand and pressed it against Dolan’s head. : . —Rev. C. E. Correll, of St. Paul's Re: formed church, at West Hazleton, declared last week that certain members of the con-~ gregation want his scalp because "he Pieachied such strong patriotic sermons uring the war. It is claimed by the pas- tor that the pro-German element is back of the efforts to force his resignation. Rev. Correll said he had been asked to sign a paper agreeing te serve at $75 a month for a term of five years which he refused to do. —Boring a hole in the floor of a room in the Lochiel hotel, Harrisburg, a thief last Thursday night lowered himself into a haberdashery store and stole articles worth $1000. On Wednesday a stranger registered at the hetel and was assigned to a room just above the store. He lower- ed himself into the store and then with the use of tape measures pulled the goods into his room. He departed early Friday morning with the plunder in sample cases. Two of the cases were later found at Al- toona. —Hazleton grocers have organized against ‘sugar grabbers’ who have devik- ed all manner of ways to get more than a proper share of the commodity offered customers in limited quantities. It has been learned that some women have sent six or seven different persons to stores, each with 4 totiching tale of woe, While others borrow. their neighbor's baby and try the “sympéthy racket.” Grocers claim, they can supply evéry ome with a small amout of sugar each week if some people would not grab all they can get. fos —Pennsylvania. is believed to have more wild turkeys now than in twenty-five years, according to Seth E, Gordon, aet- ing secretary of the Game Commission. He has just returned from visits to cen- tral and southern counties. The weather conditions have been favorable for propa- gation and the State authorities have bought numerous turkeys and turned them loose to breed. In some sections. where turkeys had been almost extinct this plan has resulted in noticeable in- Flocks of as high as twenty-five birds have been reported from some coun- ties. : —The Penn Public Service company, of Johnstown, has announced a new power plant te be erected at Indiana, Indiana county. The company recently authorized a $20,000,000 bond issue, $2,000,000 of which army is coming down from games of pool, | twenty-seven, proprietor of the pool-room, "od to pay for the games. OTk- | is to be expended .on the mew plant. At present all the - electric power furnished , by the ‘compaiiy is" developed ‘at “Johns- -- | town, but the new: plant will: furnish cur- ° ‘ rent to patrous in-Indiana, Clearfield, Jef- ferson, Westmoreland and Armstrong ' counties. The company has 150 substa- tions at this time, and when. the new pows-. ‘er plant is completed this number will be doubled. 3 “One of the “greatest gas strikes in Ee | Washington county has been made by the Manufacturers’ Light and Heat company, on the J. B. Andrew farm, Morris town- ship, The well is producing at the rate of 14,961,570 cubic feet daily. The strike was made a few days ago and the first show- ing was at the rate of 4,500,000 cubic feet. Then it increased to 5,500,000 and on Fri- proximately to -15,000,000 cubic feet. Drill- ing has not ‘been completed and there is a chance that the well will prove the largest in the history of drilling operations in this country. > : ——An epidemic of bombs and dynamite has struck DuBois, and it ‘is a dull day when one or more is not reported as be- ing found on the porch or under thle foundation ‘of the residence of some prom- inent citizen. The general tendency .to blame the work on the local I. W. W's or Socialists received a jolt Wednesday morn- ing when it became known that a dyna- mite fuse and cap had been found on the’ front porch of J. ‘'M. Brady, Socialist can- didate for mayor. In speaking of the in- cident Mr. Brady said: “Well, if I had ‘not been running for office I don’t think this would have happened.” —A poel-room fight in Shamekin, has adced another murder to the long list of such cases in the criminal records “of Northumberland county. As a result of a dispute over payment for a number of John G. Saviolis, aged is dead; his brother, Andrew, is in the Shamokin state hospital suffering from serious stab wounds, and George Voulelis, their assailant, is also in that institution suffering from wounds received in the fra- cas. It is stated that the Saviolis broth- ers had won all of Voulelis’ money and then made fun of their victim, who refus- There was a flare-up in the temper of all three and cues came into use as weapons. Voulelis then drew a knife and began a savage at- tack. John Saviolis was stabbed in the abdomen. He staggered to the street, where he fell dead. —Yeggmen blew the safe in the postof- fice at Indiana, Pa., some time last Thurs- day night and escaped with between $3,- 000 and $4,000 worth of cash, stamps, money orders and savings stamps. Dis- covery was made on Friday morning when postmaster H. W. Fee found the side door of the postoffice torn completely off and the interior of the office thorough- ly ransacked. Mail sacks had been used to muffle the sound of the explosion. But one person has been found who heard even an inkling of the explosion. It is believ- ed that the work was done between 1:30 and 2 o'clock in the morning. Police in- vestigating think that the yeggs arrived in Indiana on an afternoon train and studied the situation befere carrying out their plans. Noise of a high powered au- tomobile driving away from town at a furious rate was heard shortly after the robbery is believed to have been commit- ted and it is thought the yeggs escaped in that manner. Numerous registered let- ters and packages were opened but nene were taken. >»