To INK SLINGS. —Last year at this time most of the corn in Centre county was in shock. Now none of it is cut and can’t be for several weeks. ——The ministers are all back on their jobs and that little devil that has been playing merry h—I around Belle- fonte the past month will doubtless scurry to cover. —“There are smiles that make you happy, there are smiles that make you blue, but the smiles of “Miss Smiling Bobby Jones” are not even worth the war tax. —Hungry Hi Johnson is ominously silent, while Taft and Wickersham are pledging Harding to a League of Nations with another name. But Taft and Wickersham may go too far. —TItaly is in the throes of a social revolution that her government seems impotent to control. It has taken the form of Sovietism and has already gained such headway that the rest of Europe, outside of Russia, is quaking in its boots. —Anyway, all of the delay in get- ting Bishop street opened has not been without some result. The an- nouncement that it is to be opened to Perry alley will inform about three thousand, nine hundred and seventy- nine residents that the alley in ques- tion is Perry and not “Brockerhoff’s alley.” —Senator Harding’s latest eruption of wisdom is to the effect that condi- tions are changing so rapidly that it is impossible for him to announce a specific program for a new League of Nations or a substitute for the old League. It seems that he is so busy settin’ thinkin’ on that front porch that he hasn’t time to hatch a single idea. —Again Mr. Bryan is to head a new party and again Mr. Bryan sees “no reason why he should be read out of the Democratic party.” Really, it is funny how some minds work. If he needs a new party surely it must be because he no longer believes in the principles espoused by Democracy and if he doesn’t believe in them he reads himself out. No one else need do it for him. —The enforcement of the Volstead act will probably never be effected un- less the government hires about fifty- five million of our people to watch the other fifty-five million. The orgy of whiskey sales that is now being ex- perienced can’t be stopped without an army of officials. There is no use of expecting men to do the impossible so the “Watchman” still maintains its previously announced opinion that the ; ad - cheapest way to solve the to let the boot-leggers go ant stuff is all consumed and then there will be an end of the whole business. —There are just one-hundred and sixty-nine subscribers to the Watch- man in Bellefonte who evidently over- looked the appeal we made for re- mittances last week. We hope: they will look at the labels on this paper and accept this as a gentle reminder that their paper is not paid in advance as we would like to have it. They are not the only ones, how- ever. There are still lots of them in other sections and as we have to have $2040.00 by Sept. 15th we’ll have to get some one to endorse for us if it isn’t forthcoming soon. . And then we’ll have to get the blue cross work- ing again to protect the endorser against having to pay the note. —With the addition of the names of ten thousand women to the voting lists in Centre couny it will probably become necessary to further increase the number of precincts in the coun- ty. In some of the larger ones a gen- eral election has already made the work of the election boards so volum- inous that they have frequently not been able to complete the count for seventeen hours after the closing of the polls. With the number of voters practically doubled in these precincts it will probably require double the time so that unless they are divided re- turns cannot be compiled for a day after the voting is completed. More precincts mean more election boards, more constables and more incidental expenses as well. —The Rev. John Roach Straton, Baptist, of New York city, rises in holy horror to protest against the pro- posal of the National Association of Dancing Teachers to name a new terpsichorean stunt, the “Wesleyan Wiggle,” as a sop to we Methodists who inveigh against any form of dancing. While we agree with the eminent prelate that most of the mod- ern dances are vulgar and some of them even obscene we can’t lay the re- sponsibility for them at the door of the National Association of Dancing Teachers. If the mothers of the coun- try were to train their daughters to be the modest, refined girls that their fathers loved and respected sixteen years and more ago there would be an end of this thing of wiggles and shakes and bounces and shimmies, for they would refuse to learn them. If a bunch of Hootchie Kootchie dancers were to undertake to pull off a show in a carnival in Bellefonte tonight the town would be in an uproar in no time and the mayor and the police would be deviled until the hussies were run out of the burg. That’s what would happen, yet at the very moment some of our own might be putting it all over the itinerant belly-shakers on another dancing platform in town and around the walls would be a lot of mothers of fifty dressed like they were sixteen. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 65. BELLEFONTE. PA., SEPTEMBER 10, Cox Properly Labels Hays. In a speech at Milwaukee on Satur- day Governor Cox put the right label upon the testimony of Republican Na- tional committee chairman Hays be- fore the Senatorial committee of in- quiry. He said: “Mr. Hays has de- nied that there is any quota. I charge that there is a quota. I charge, fur- thermore, that Mr. Hays perpetrated a falsehood under oath at Chicago when he said there was not a quota.” In support of this assertion he cited from the “Official Bulletin” of the Re- publican National committee a state- ment of treasurer Upham that there is a quota. “This contradictory cir- cumstance,” continued the Governor, shows that either you (Hays) are a perjurer or Mr. Upham is a falsifier.” There is no escape from this idict- ment. Chairman Hays’ statement be- fore the investigators was explicit. His purpose was to discredit the ac- cusation made by Governor Cox in his Pittsburgh speech that the Repub- lican managers had set out to raise a vast corruption fund with which to buy the election of Harding to the office of President. Mr. Cox read a bulletin issued by the Republican Na- tional committee giving the quota of fifty-one cities aggregating more than $8,000,000. Chairman Hays swore there was no quota. Treasurer Up- ham, whose name was signed to the bulletin, admitted, under oath, the quota. One or the other committed perjury and it is safe to say that it was Hays. Mr. Hays was named as chairman of the Republican National committee not because of his eminence as a statesman or political manager. His only recommendation for the job was that he is “a successful money dig- ger.” His first important campaign as chairman of the committee was in behalf ‘of Truman H. Newberry, for Senator in Congress for Michigan. He succeeded by means that have since procured the conviction of New- berry, before a Republican Judge by a Republican jury in a Republican coun- ty of a Republican State, of buying the election. He is simply a political huckster who has undertaken to buy the Presidency for the use of Senator- ial conspiracy, Cox has properly la- beled him a perjurer. —The Philadelphia Ledger believes | the $15,000,000 campaign slush fund is all right if it costs that much to secure a Postmaster will allow the publisher of the Sat- urday Evening Post to rob the gov- ernment of four or five million dollars a year, without protest. Senator Harding’s Third Shift. Senator Harding has again changed his views on the subject of the League of Nations. In his speech of accept- ance he declared himself as diametric- ally opposed to the League and un- equivocally in favor af a separate peace with Germany. Several weeks later he proclaimed in one of his front porch speeches that while op- posed to the League of Nations he is in favor of resuscitating the Hague Tribunal and putting teeth in it. In an interview with former Attorney General Wickersham last Sunday he said he “would not wholly and finally reject the League but would take the lead in revising the covenant and put- ting it into practical operation.” Thus we have three pledges in about six weeks. As we have said before, probably Senator Harding never read the cov- enant of the League of Nations. The purpose of the League of Nations is “to promote international co-opera- tion and achieve international peace and security.” The best minds in the civilized world collaborated on the covenant with this object in view. But Senator Harding says it will work the contrary result. He declares that it would necessarily foment strife and cause wars. All the great minds that labored on the creation of this peace plan were wild and wool gathering. Only he understands the significance of the language employed. All oth- ers are ignorant or perfidious. They pretend one thing and mean another. The alternative is, that having read the covenant Senator Harding doesn’t understand it. That implies a depth of ignorance that is almost inconceiv- able in a man aspiring to the great office of President of the United States. Of course, it is possible that he has read the instrument and under- stands it. but deliberately and mali- ciously misrepresents it. This inter- pretation of the matter implies an as- persion upon Senator Harding’s char- acter for truth and probity. Only a man of criminal impulses would falsi- fy facts knowingly to deceive the pub- lic for selfish reasons. But Senator Harding has placed himself in an at- titude which compels the conclusion that he is doing just that. ene feet —Labor day seems to have been a busy’ day for Governor Cox. He not only made several speeches on that day but qualified for membership in the race driver’s union. General who | Holding Our Own Sufficient. The first gun in the Presidential battle of 1920 will be fired in Maine ! Ohio, who attained considerable prom- | Dig Up the Facts. Mr. E. H. Moore, of Youngstown, 1920. NO. 36. | What the Borough Dads Did on Mon- day Evening. | Seven members were present at the on Monday, but the old tradition “as inence as manager of Governor CoX’s | regular meeting of borough council | goes Maine so goes the Union,” no | campaign for nomination, who was a | on Monday evening. Mrs. Theressa { longer abides. Since the close of the | Witness before the Senate committee | McClure and James I. McClure sub- ! Sixty-fourth Congress the Democrats , of Maine have had no representative in the popular branch of that body, "and though there have been pretty strenuous campaigns there in recent years, it has long been regarded as a ' Republican State. At every Presiden- !tial election since 1848, when ‘she : went hell bent for Governor Kent” the | Republicans polled substantial major- | ities, though in 1916 the difference be- i tween Wilson and Judge Hughes was |less than six thousand votes, and in 11908 a Democratic Senator in Con- | gress was chosen. { The uncertainty as to the effect of | woman suffrage in the State casts a shadow of uncertainty as to the result | of this year’s poll and both parties have been making vigorous fights for | the mastery. There has been less or- i atory than usual, Franklin D. Roose- velt, the nominee for Vice President, [boing the only Democratic orator of | National fame, on the stump, while | the Republicans have had only second- raters on the job. But Republican National chairman Hays has been | busy and it is a safe bet that he has placed a considerable part of the slush fund where it will do the most good in the campaign. Maine is notoriously responsive to the arguments of hard cash generously distributed. : Reports from the seat of the con- | tests are to the effect that “both sides | are confident of victory.” It is safe, however, to assume that the -confi- dence of the Democrats is limited to i the belief that the usual Republican “majority will not be exceeded. In the | presence of the new clement in the electorate it is hard to get anything { like accurate lines on the subject of majorities. It is safe to say that the { women will vote as intelligently and i probably more conscientiously than | the men, but the matter of qualifying i them to vote was a work of organiza- i tion and expense and it can hardly be i expected that the Democrats were as successful as their antagonists in this respect. Therefore holding our own is enough. —It is plain that Senator Penrose would have worried himself into an ‘early grave if the Nineteenth amend- ment to the constitution had failed of ratification. Penrose . Lochinvar of the Suffrage cause. Important Collateral Issues. i While the League of Nations is un- | questionably the paramount issue in the Presidential campaign, there are | collateral issues of grave importance. | The Republican candidate for Presi- dent ‘has publicly promised the res- | toration of protective tariff taxation, rand his sponsors have almost openly i pledged their candidate and party to such changes in the Federal Reserve {bank act as will restore to Wall i street control of the finances of the ‘country. In the hope of the fulfill- iment of these promises the captains i of industry and masters of finance are {dumping millions of dollars into a ! slush fund to buy the election. For years following the Civil war the tariff tax afforded a source of graft which netted hundreds of mil- lions of dollars annually to those en- gaged in the manufacture of certain commodities. For nearly as long a period faulty financial legislation en- abled the masters of finance to create panics and milk the public of other hundreds of millions. The enactment of the Underwood tariff law shut off one of these sources of evil and the passage of the Federal Reserve act the other. But for the latter the ex- actions of the world war would have precipitated the worst panic in histo- ry. It is doubtful if the country could have survived the shock it would have occasioned. Therefore these collateral issues of the campaign are of great importance to the people of the country. Those who remember the industrial paraly- sis incident to the panic of 1873, that of 1883 and that of 1907, need hardly be reminded of the menace which a restoration of these conditions mean. But the favored few felt none of the pangs which distracted the sufferers. They garnered a beautiful harvest of prosperity out of the sufferings of the public and are anxious for a return of what Senator Harding calls the good old days of Republican control. They are willing to provide the means for making the purchase of an “under- shot of the government” and will do so unless the voters are vigilant. i ————— RL —— —An esteemed contemporary is glad there are only two sides to a question, because if there were more Harding would try to get on all of them and might fracture something. ——Senator Truman H. Newberry, of Michigan, also is of the opinion that investigating campaign slush funds is puerile. is easily the’ inquiring into campaign expenditures in Chicago on Tuesday, charged that the committee is not seeking the best | evidence it could get. “The com- ! mitte,” Mr. Moore said, “could get i first hand evidence from many men i proving his charge that the Republi- cans were prepared to raise a fund, not of $15,000,000 but $16,000,000, while his evidence would be second hand. If the committee wants evi- dence,” he continued, “it should call men who are in the confidence of the Republican leaders. I am not.” In this statement Mr. Moore sounds a note of suspicion which has been in the minds of thoughtful men from the moment the charges were first made by Governor Cox. All except two of the members of the Senate committee are Republicans, and with one exception the committee is unani- mously against President Wilson. It is true that in the inquiry previous to the nominating conventions some rather startling disclosures were made and some rather lively ambitions dam- aged. But the purpose then was not to impair the chances of the Republi- can party but to promote the interests of the candidate favored by the Senate leaders. Wood and Lowden had to be eliminated to make Harding possible. In those circumstances certain Republican Senators felt considerable interest in the inquiry. But there is no such zeal now. All damaging testimony affects the Republican ma- chine directly and incidentally the Re- publican candidate. For that reason the less that is learned the better for those directing the investigation. Senator Pomorene, of Ohio, was promptly shut off by the chairman of the committee the other day when his cross-examination led the witness close to an important revelation. Pos- sibly Mr. Moore’s charge that the com- mittee is not sincere may do some good but we have doubts. Still an ef- fort is worth while. There is plenty of proof if it can be dug up. —The anthracite miners have wise- ly cut out their vacation and resum- ed ‘work in forty mines. This will enable the President to consider their request for a rehearing of the wage dispute. : Many Women Kick on Paying Tax. | Registration assessors throughout | the county in making their returns | last week of the registration of the { women in preparation for the Novem- ! ber election had various tales to tell { of how some women protested against | being registered; and the bugaboo to most of them was the fact that they will have to pay a tax to vote. In fact many women were quite vehe- ment in their declaration that they wouldn’t register because they didn’t intend to pay the tax, however smail it may be. Of course the assessors registered such women regardless of their pro- test.. Quite a number positively re- fused to give their names, but for the benefit of these women it can be said that it was the assessor’s sworn duty to get the names and he got them, too. And now these names will all be cer- tified to the tax collector of the var- ious boroughs and townships in the county with the amount of tax to col- lect from each woman, and it will be the duty of the tax collector to get the money. Neither the registration assessor, the county commissioners nor the tax collector are responsible for the lay- ing of this tax. The law of enfran- chisement for women places them on the same plane as men in this respect, and now that woman suffrage has be- come the law of the land it carries with it the tax. And whether they vote or not they are subject to the same laws for the collection of taxes that the men are. —Mr. Bryan still remains silent on the subject of Presidential preference and presumably his heart is still in the grave. —The longest pole may knock the persimmon, but it was the hard hit- ting Pole that got the Bolshevik. —Well, taking it all in all, the Grangers have had a fine week of it at Centre Hall. ——Farmers in College and Fer- guson townships whose wheat crop was badly damaged by the fly this year are now favoring late sowing this year as one means of combating this destruc- tive pest. And yet, this does not al- ways work out right. In fact one far- mer in College township made three sowings last fall and his early sowing sowing turned out only about half a crop while the other field was not in- jured in the least. was badly damaged by the fly, his last |b ‘mitted a written notice to council , that the pole and wires of the Bell . Telephone company must be removed : from their property within ten days. | The matter was referred to the Street | committee. i Secretary W. T. Kelly presented the request of the Abramsen Engineer- ing company that they be permitted i to remove from the Phoenix mill plant some machinery belonging to them. The matter was referred to the Water committee and borough manager for investigation as to the nature of the machinery and the liability of owner- ship and report at next meeting. A committee of the Logan Fire company consisting of George Eber- hart, Alexander Morrison and John J. Bower reported that they recently made a test of the Logan steamer and found it in need of various repairs to put it in working condition, and further requested council to make some arrangements for getting the steamer to fires promptly. The mat- ter was referred to the Fire and Police committee and borough manager with power. The Street committee presented the written opinion of borough solicitor N. B. Spangler in the matter of the erection of a stable on Boroughs street by H. B. Kern in which he de- cided that the question of liability is entirely between Mr. Kern and abutting property owners, and that the borough has no jurisdiction. The Water committee reported that a new crank shaft had been put in place at the Phoenix mill pumping station, and that the water had been turned into the new main on Pine and Spring streets on Monday. Secretary Kelly reported that the | Bell Telephone company had installed i a phone in the sheriff’s office for fire alarm purposes, and that permission had been granted the sheriff to use the phone for calls in Bellefonte only. The Finance committee asked the renewal of a note for $1,080. dat- ed September 3rd, and notes for $700 $1,000 and $12,000 dated September 6th, all of which were authorized. An ordinance was presented and passed first reading providing for the sale of 1343 acres of mountain land in Worth, Taylor and Rush townships be- ing a part and parcel of the E. J. Pruner estate devised and bequeath- ed to and for the support of the E. J. Pruner home for friendless children in this place, to the Centre Game Propagating company for the sum of $3357.94, all mineral rights, etc., be- ing reserved. The board of managers of the Pruner orphanage have recom- mended the sale and Tyrone council is in favor of it, and the only ques- tion at issue so far as members of Bellefonte council are concerned is that of the timber on the land. Tyrone representatives report that there is very little marketable tim- ber thereon and the question of mar- keting what is there would be one of great expense, so that it would hard- ly pay the cost of operation. To be on the safe side, however, council con- sidered it would be a wise move to have a timber expert go over the ground before the next meeting of council when final action will be taken. The borough manager called atten- tion to the fact that a half dozen of the properties between Stony Batter and Pine street have no sewer connections and the cess pools filled to overflow- ing. The matter was referred to the Street committee and borough man- ager with power to act. Mr. Harris, of the Street commit- tee, reported that Bishop street will be opened this week from Allegheny street to Perry alley. Bills to the amount of $6857.03 were approved for payment after which council adjourned. for ——A meeting of all temperance forces of Centre county is called for Saturday afternoon, September 11th, in Petriken hall, Bellefonte. All men and women interested are urged to be present at this meeting. Mat- ters of great importance will be con- sidered. All Christian citizens should be there. All Together, Now! From the Kansas City Star. Irish sympathizers among the long shoremen of New York seek to tie up ocean traffic to force the British gov- ernment to make concessions in deal- ing in the Irish question. : ow, if the Polish sympathizers would tie up the industries in which they work to force the United States to send aid to Poland, and the Czecho- Slovak sympathizers would tie up their industries to get a rectification of the boundary of Czecho-Slovakia, and the Jugo-Slav sympathizers theirs, and the Greek sympathizers theirs, and the Italians theirs, all to ring Europe to terms, what a grand and glorious country we would have! ———Subscribe for the Watchman. SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE —Twenty thousand cars will be requir- ed this year to move the immense potato crop of Lehigh and adjoining counties, according to Reading Railway freight offi- cials, who have promised ample facilities to handle the tubers. Last year 14,000 cars were required. 4 —Leon H. Noll, twenty-six years old, of Lewisberg, an electrical engineer, a grad- uate of Bucknell University, class of ’17, was electrocuted while at work last Fri- day at Eldorado, Kansas. His body was brought east and taken to Lewisburg for burial Tuesday afternoon. ? .—A large tract of coal land, embracing coal north and west of Ebensburg situat- ed in Cambria county is being optioned to a number of eastern capitalists. The tract comprises in the neighborhood of 3,500 acres of coal land. It is said the option is being taken up at $200 per acre. —A moment after he jumped from a freight train near Irwin, Pa., and ram around the caboose, Leon Andolnally, 20 years old, an American soldier, whose home is in Philadelphia, was instantly killed on Monday, when another train go- ing in an opposite direction, struck him. The body was dragged for several hundred feet. -—Married a little longer than a monih ago, Mrs. Horace Tobias Jr., of Sunbury, a girl bride of seventeen summers, has brought suit in the Northumberland coun- ty courts for divorce, alleging cruelty. The girl is barely out of short dresses, accord- ing to her friends and only started to wear her hair up a short time before her wed- ding day. She was Miss Mary Burroughs, of a prominent Northumberland family. —Jennie Wreskeski, five years old, died at the Chester hospital on Saturday from burns. Police say playmates of the little girl soaked her clothing with oil and set her on fire when she joined them to dance about a blaze near her home. Attracted by her screams, neighbors rushed to the child’s aid and rolled her in a rug, some of the women being burned about the hands and arms. The girl died shortly after. Arrests will be made. —Mrs. Ellen Guss, fifty-seven years old, of Lewistown, died a few minutes after be- ing run down by an automobile on Satur- day night. Mrs. Guss was crossing Chest- nut street when she heard the horn of am approaching motor car, hesitated and step- ped backward into the path of another. Witnesses said the driver, Frank T. Roush, of Sunbury, was not exceeding a speed of five miles an hour, and he was exonerated by the coroner’s jury. —Given up for dead for more than & quarter of a century, Charles Struhm, who left his home at Northampton, Lehigh county, thirty-two years ago, and who was- heard from the last time seven years later, suddenly appeared at the residence of his sister, Mrs. Alfred Muth, on Mon- day. She at first failed to recognize her brother, but he soon established his ident- ity. He said he had spent most. of his time in the west and is prosperous. He will go back in a few days. —Mrs. Catherine Bobb, of Sunbury, be- queathed $15,000 to the Mary M. Packer hospital, Sunbury, and $300 to the Loys- ville Lutheran Orphans’ Home, according to her will probated on Friday at Sun- bury. ‘This was within a few hundred dollars of all she owned, according to friends. The will of Augustus Moeschlin, president of the J. & A. Moeschlin Brew- ‘ing company, Inc., Sunbury, probated at the same time, left all of his $100,000 es- tate to his widow for life and then to his six children. —Natrona, a suburb of Pittsburgh, has lost its chief of police, because after a search of more than a half year, he was unable to find a place to live. When M. P. McFadden was appointed to head Natro- na’s police department eight months ago, he left his wife and children in New Beth- lehem, expecting to send for them within a few weeks. He started at once on a hunt for a dwelling. The search was fruitless. McFadden, baflled, resigned to go back to New Bethlehem, where he knows of at least one place where he can live. James Montgomery was arrested at Berwick on Sunday at the home of his grandmother and the police said he con- fessed to his part in the theft of thousands of dollars worth of meat and produce from Armour & Co., at Chester, about three months ago. Montgomery declared Ches- ter business men are also implicated and furnished trucks in which the stolen ma- terial was hauled away. He was taken to Chester on Monday and has promised to reveal the names of the business men he implicated. According to the prisoner, fif- teen men were in the party. —Charges of conspiracy and forgery have been made against Rev. J. Sechinsky, formerly of Pittsburgh and later of the Saint Peter and Saint Paul's Greek Ortho- dox church, at New Salem, Fayette coun- ty. In the conspiracy case George Miter- ka is made a joint defendant. It is alleg- ed in the information that Rev. Sechinsky forged the names of the church trustees to a promissory note for $1800 and three checks for a total of $850. It is alleged that Miterka apropriated about $2500 church money. Rev. Sechinsky was ar- rested in the west two weeks ago and since that time has been confined in the county jail. __After chasing the Kkidnapers of five year old Danny Moser, of Fayette county, to the West Virginia State line, members of the state constabulary gave up the chase, but reported the circumstances to {he West Virginia authorities and asked them to continue the hunt for the three men. It is reported that the abductors beat the state troopers over the line by less than fifteen minutes. Mrs. Moser insists that the kidnaper was her husband, from whom she has been divorced about a year, and it is understood that she will give in- formation charging abduction against the three men in the automobile in which the boy was taken away as soon as their identity is known. After two days incessant grilling of witnesses and long night sessions of court President Judge Bailey, of Mifflin county, ordered the jury to find a verdict for $17, 180 in favor of the defendant, J. O. Yeag- er, against Walker D. Hines and the rail- road administration for damages in the burning of the coal shed and warehouses of the defendant at Lewistown on April 10, 1918. The buildings were alleged to have been set on fire by sparks from a locomotive on the Mifflin and Centre coun- ty branch of {he Pennsylvania railroad. Witnesses testified that “the locomotive was laboring hard to pull the heavy train up the grade and they saw sparks as big as hickory nuts flying from the stack. Fifteen minutes later they saw a patch of fire on the roof not more than six inches square.’ The principals got togeth- er and settled the case.