Beworaic iatdan. re INK SLINGS. ; —Vote for Stover and Condo for Auditors. " —Any way, no one can say that a change in all the county offices could do the county any harm. : —Forest Ocker surely would make a splendid Register. No cleaner, more competent man could be found for that office. ——Weather prophets are predict- ing a cold winter, but weather proph- esies like dreams frequently go by contraries. —Democrats, go out and vote next Tuesday. Thousands of Republicans are going to help us bring about a change. Do your part and they’ll do theirs. —There must be a lot of glory or a lot of pickins in being a councilman in Milesburg. They have thirteen candidates in the race for that office down there. —Next Tuesday will determine whether Centre county is to be gov- erned by the people or continue to be misgoverned by a little clique that calls itself the Republican party. —Rather than betray his country Dick Taylor said: “Shoot” when the Germans stood him up against the wall and tried to wrest military se- crets from him. What are you going to say to Dick next Tuesday? : —The tide is running strong for Lyman Smith for Treasurer. From all parts of the county we hear re- ports that Republicans who are not pleased with Pinchot are not going to support Heverly because he is a Pin- chot candidate. —Remember this. If the Centre county court house is to be cleaned out it will be possible only if every Democrat gets to the polls. There are a lot of Republicans eager to do their share, but they can’t do it alone. Every Democratic vote will be needed. —If Lyman Smith isn’t the next Treasurer of Centre county it won’t be the fault of the Republicans. Hordes of them are for him and they are expecting the Democrats of Pennsvalley to get out to the polls to the last man and woman to cinch his victory. Lyman L. Smith made a record for honesty and fair dealing when he sold hay and grain to Bellefonte deal- ers. He also made friends at that time who will support him now, irrespect- ive of politics. Isn’t that a good rea- son why he should be elected County Treasurer? —We have told you all we know about the candidates we have been urging you to vote for. If we had told you all.-we know and what the organs of the Republican party really know about some of the candidates they are beseeching you to vote for there would be nothing to the contest next Tuesday. —For several errors—not sins—of omission and commission last week we have been called to account by sev- eral friends who enjoy ridin’ a fel- low when he pulls a boner. There's a lot of satisfaction in having people come in and put it all over you when you slip up. You know, “nobody both- ers to ride a dead one.” —Having failed in his efforts to draw President Coolidge into a con- troversy over the enforcement. act Governor Pinchot has turned his pea- shooter on Andy Mellon and Andy may not say much now, but when he and Reed and Pepper get busy on the Pennsylvania delegation to the next National convention Gif. will get the answer he doesn’t want. —Since the Republican thinks the Jocal fight in Centre county has so much to do with the next Presiden- tial election we would like to ask it where it stands. Is it for Coolidge or is it for Pinchot? It must be for Pin- chot, since it is supporting Heverly for County Treasurer. He defeated Gehret and Burket for the nomination because they divided the organization forces so that Heverly’s Pinchot back- ing slipped him through. If Heverly is elected Pinchot will be strengthen- ed just that much in his fight to get Pennsylvania away from Coolidge and the Republican will have played its part in the game. —Don’t be worried about Centre county electing the President of the United States next year nor who will be chosen President Judge of the county two years from now. The Re- publican would have you believe those offices are involved in this campaign. They are bridges we’ll cross when we come to them. Centre county will have about as much to do with elect- ing the next President of the United States as we will have with the set- tlement of the troubles in the Bal- kans. As to the next Judge, unless present signs fail utterly, that will not be an old party fight. It will be a clean cut “wet” and “dry” fight. Mark the prediction. The Republi- cans will nominate Quigley, or Keller or, possibly, Fleming, though the lat- ter is not a candidate now. The Dem- ocrats might nominate Spangler, or Zerby or Johnston, the latter being the only one of the three who is even a receptive candidate. No matter what the line-up, however, nor the relative fitness of the men, nor their party affiliations it is going to be a fight for either an out and out “wet” or “dry” judge in Centre county. The drys will support no candidate with a “pussy-footin’” or “trust me” plank in his platform and the wets are going to say “them’s my sentiments too.” Next Tuesday’s results will have no bearing whatever on the contest of 1925. VOL. 68. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA.,, NOVEMBER 2. Republicans Reverse Themselves. The changed attitude of the admin- istration in relation to foreign affairs is ascribed to recent activity of the German-American vote. It will be re- called that during the period of Presi- dent Harding’s occupancy of the White House “isolation” was the loudly and frequently proclaimed pol- icy. During the campaign three years ago not only the candidate but most of the party leaders declared that this country should and would refrain from any part in the adjustment of conditions abroad. Just ‘before his death Mr, Harding proposed to join the world court, but the suggestion was net only opposed but resented by Senator Lodge and most of his asso- ciates in the management of the party. But there has come over these lead- ers within a brief time a great change in their attitude on this question. Even after the ratification of the League of Nations had been defeated, and there was no likelihood of a re- versal of judgment on the subject, the bitter-enders reiterated their opposi- tion. The invitation to participate in the deliberations of the reparations commission was rejected with much greater firmness than politeness. But a change has come over them. The time for a Presidential election is coming on and the necessity for strengthening political lines is ap- pearing. For this reason a recent in- vitation to participate in the work of the reparations commission has been eagerly accepted. Now it appears that the reason for this startlingly sudden change of at- titude is traceable to the German- American voters. The prejudice of that element in the electorate three years ago had considerable to do with the election of Harding. They now threaten that unless the administra- tion turns about, and by interposition on the reparations commission saves the Fatherland, they will themselves turn around and vote against the par- ty which deceived them, at the com- ing election. That sort of talk ap- peals directly to the heart of the mer- cenary politicians who dominate the Republican” party, and we see them now rustling to do what they prev- iously declared they would never do. ——The radical Senators in Con- gress threaten to vote against the confirmation of ex-Senator Kellogg, of Minnesota, for Ambassador to Great Britain. What they say about Kellogg may be true, but in any event he will be an improvement on George Harvey. Pinchot Accuses Mr. Mellon. Governor Pinchot’s open letter to Secretary of the Treasury Andy Mel- lon, is timely and to the point. He di- rectly charges Mr. Mellon with re- sponsibility for “the breakdown of federal prohibition enforcement in Pennsylvania,” and practically proves the accusation. He states that the people are being affronted by open de- fiance of the law, and that the evil is ascribable to Mr. Mellon. “You, as Secretary of the Treasury,” he writes, “have the power to cut this flood off at the source by revoking these per- mits and by refusing to issue others, except upon conditions sufficient, with honest enforcement, to make viola- tions substantially impossible.” There is no disputing the facts thus stated. Everybody knows that any- body who has “political pull” with the Republican machine can get permits to withdraw whiskey or other intox- icating beverages from bonded ware- houses anywhere in the country, and that the bootleggers who handle the “real stuff” get their supplies in that way. The issue of permits during the period in which former State Senator William C. McConnell was prohibition director developed a scandal which is still pending in the Federal District court. His successor in office did lit- tle better, for favorites of the Repub- lican leaders were able to get permits whenever they wanted them and the bootleggers always wanted. But we are not so certain of the sin- cerity of the Governor in laying com- plaint against Secretary Mellon. In other words, we are not entirely per- suaded that the Governor’s purpose in arraigning the Secretary is to pro- mote the causé of prohibition or ad- vance the work of enforcement. The Secretary has indicated a disposition to oppose the aspirations of the Gov- ernor and the Governor would like very well to discredit the Secretary in the minds of a majority of the Re- publican voters. According to tradi- tion the cry of “mad dog” has a po- tent influence on the public mind in its estimate of the value of the dog. The pious Giff. is not above “ways that are dark and tricks that are vain.” ——Senator Frelinghuysen, of New Jersey, who was defeated for re-elec- tion last year, wants the nomination again this year, and we hope his par- ty will gratify him. He is the easiest man in the State to beat. Now for the Verdict. Next Tuesday the tax payers of Centre county, men and women alike, must decide what they are going to do about the management of their county’s business. The register at the polls will be final as to whether they are con- .tent to let things drift on as they have been or whether they want a change in the offices at the court house. Certainly there can be no doubt in the mind of the man or woman who pays the taxes that a change is desirable. Since 1919 county expenditures have jumped out of all propor- tion to the increased expenditures necessitated by state legislation during the period. When the present Board of Commissioners took charge nearly four years years ago the county debt was down to $45,503.73 and there wasn’t a note of the county outstanding. Today the debt is very little, if any, less than it was four years ago and there are at least $63,600.00 of unpaid notes outstanding. In all probability this amount is much greater, but we have no way of ascertaining what it is today so have to go back to the Auditor’s state- ment and show only what it was January 1st, 1923. The tax rate has been advanced two mills during the past three years and valuations increased $1,775,750 so that the present Board has had $58,330.75 more cash to work on each year than their pred- ecessors had, yet with all this extra money they have been unable to make things go without piling up notes upon notes on which the tax payer must pay the interest. It seems incredible but it is easily explained when the Auditor's statements are referred to and an analysis of where the money is going is made. Glance over this comparative statement and you will see at once the difference betwen lavish and prudent management of your busi- ness. Dem. Board Rep. Board Republican 1917-19 1920-22 INCREASE Amounts paid to Assessors...$17,204.38 $24,222.64 $7,018.26 Amounts paid to Clerks..... 6,259.73 11,029.02 5,769.29 Amounts paid to Janitors.... 4,412.66 5,915.69 1,503.23 Paid Comr’s delivering ballots 310.27 560.55 250.28 Amt. paid County Solicitors.. 1,200.00 1,800.00 600.00 Millage rate .............. 4 Mills 6 Mills 2 Mills Outstanding notes .......... . 00,000.00 63,600.00 63,600.00 Assessed Valuation ..... $14,597,990 $16,373,740 $1,775,750 Income on valuation ......... 58,391.99 98,242.40 39,850.41 Total receipts all sources..... 225,613.63 410,594.65 184,981.02 Com. costs: Justices, wit- 1919 1920 nesses, '6tC.,.. . J. eaves 2081 a . $5,354.98 $2,673.16 “ Court House supplies ov. 772) Sn 4 221.97 1,908.15 Miscellaneous accounts ..... 1,824.39 2,775.32 950.93 Sundries ........i. ave. 1,259.25 Widows’ Pension fund ...... 1,316.25 Why should this be so? you will ask! It is so because the entire court house is in control of a machine that is using your money to keep its members in office. There are wheels within wheels and every cog must be greasd with your money to keep the machine working to keep itself in control. Extravagance is winked at because no officer has had the courage to stand up for the tax payer. All contribute their part to the orgie of wastefulress or decline to object to it for fear of what will happen to their future ambitions to secure the machine favor. Assessors have been paid grossly disproportionate sums for work almost identical. The Commissioners gave up $1677.00 of your money for assessing Bellefonte and $762.00, less than half as much for as- sessing Philipsburg; there being a difference of only 96 perons in the populations of the twc towns. charges of manipulation. And in this department there are We don’t know how well grounded, but some assesors claim that they were notfied not to make return of their 1922 assessments until January 2nd, 1923, too late to get the return into the last statement, whereas always before the return date was not later than December 31st. We have presented nothing but facts during this campaign. We have appealed to your business sense rather than partisanship for the reason that there are no party principles involved in the choice of men for county office. Politicians might try to make you believe that there are, but they only do so to coerce you into voting to keep their men in office and so keep furnishing the grease for their machine. We need a change. All will admit that conditions couldn’t be much worse. We urge you to make them better by cleaning out the entire court house next Tuesday. Let your verdict be an overwhelming one for Taylor, for Smith, for Ocker, for Hoy, for Dale, for Herr, for Swabb, for Spearly, for Stover, for Condo, for Jones, for Shattuck. Lyman L. Smith for County Treasurer In presenting Lyman L. Smith, of Centre Hall, to the voters of Centre county for the office of County Treas- urer the “Watchman” unhesitatingly endorses him as a man worthy of the confidence of every man and woman, irrespective of party allegiance. As one Republican statéd in this office, his word is absolutely trustworthy. Mr. Smith was born in Centre Hall and that has been his home all his life. His father died when he was four years old and as a boy he worked on a farm during the summer and went to school in the winter. As he grew older he learned the carpenter trade and attended the Centre Hall High school. With advancing years he became more ambitious and em- barked in the coal and grain busi- ness, also buying and selling hay and straw on commission. Later he became a salesman for the International Har- vester company and seven years ago engaged in the automobile business. From a barefooted boy working on a farm with a hoe he has developed in- to one of the most substantial busi- ness men of Centre Hall, all through his own exertion and perseverance. Mr. Smith has been a tax-payer for thirty-two years and this is the first time he has come before the people of the county for an office. Consider- ing his eminent fitness for the place the voters of the county will be con- serving their own interests by elect- ing him. Thousands of marked ballots are being sent out from Republican headquarters this week to voters all over the county with the urgent re- quest to vote the straight ticket. That is the customary eleventh hour proceeding, but it will hardly bear fruit this year. Every intelligent man and woman in the county can understand what they read and facts and figures cannot be smothered in an appeal to party loyalty. - The people want a change and this is the year to make it. ——General Wood’s administration of the government of the Philippines has made many a heart glad that he wasn’t elected President of the Unit- ed States. Andy Mellon is celebrated for taciturnity, but Pinchot having smok- ed him out is likely to find that he has a sharp tongue as well as a long purse. ——————— ———Dr. Steinmetz died poor, ac- cording to the appraisement of his es- tate, but many ‘a millionaire would ex- change inheritances : with his heirs. ——————— A ———n. . ) ——Even advice which .is offered too freely is of little value. wl 1923. the assistance of those three NO. 43. France’s Friends. From the Philadelphia Record. It was a peculiarly foolish thing for General Dumont, French officer, to conclude his remarks in St. Louis with the exclamation, “May the Lord pro- tect us from our friends!” The next day Mr. Lloyd George said he never heard a Frenchman offer that prayer between 1914 and 1918. And from that scathing retort he launched into one of the greatest bursts of his im- passioned oratory in reply to the speech of the Frenchman. General Dumont had reference spe- cifically to Mr. Lloyd George, who was to speak in St. Louis the follow- ing day, but he also included Great Britain, which has never concealed its disapproval of the French occupation of the Ruhr. Frenchmen say that nothing but such action as the inva- sion of the Ruhr would have forced Germany to pay. Well, Germany has not paid yet. The occupation of the Ruhr has not afforded the desired re- sult, but it has for months endanger- ed the prosperity and even the peace. of Europe. If England had not been the friend of France in 1914 the campaign of 1870 would have been repeated. And of all Englishmen there is not one, military or civil, who did so much to arouse England to its utmost exer- tion as Lloyd George. If Italy had not assured France at the beginning of the war that it need not guard the Italian frontier, and in 1915 attack- ed Austria-Hungary, it is doubtful if France could have been saved. And if the United States had not entered the war when Nivelle was defeated, the French army was mutinous and the “defeatists” had pretty thorough- ly undermined French national senti- ment, England would have been driv- en to the Channel, France would have been overrun, apd the annexations de- manded by the German Six Associa- tions late in the war would have been effected. England, Italy and the United States, the saviors of France in the war, are the friends protection from whom General Dumont prays. Eng- land has never concealed its disappro- val of the Ruhr action; Secretary Hughes has urged an investigation of Germany’s ability to pay, which France flouts, and Italy has given no support to the invasion of the Ruhr. France was thankful enough to get as. during the war, but in endang the peace which they did so much t win France is perfectly willing to act alone. General Dumont voiced the feeling of his country when he begged the Lord to deliver France from its friends—after Germany had been dis- abled. In the collection of the reparation it was vitally important that the Al- lies should act together; that one of them should not take action apart from the others. Under the terms of the peace treaty the right to use force to collect belongs to no one nation, but to the Allies collectively. And the first step toward the collection of the indemnity should be the ascertain- ment of what Germany can pay with- in a reasonable time. France acts alone, and refuses to entertain the idea of an examination into Germa- ny’s ability to pay. The next time France is in dire distress it is not like- ly that its friends will embarrass it. Federal Control of Wheat. From the Chicago Tribune. Projects for government purchase of wheat seem to us a product of hys- teria. They mean that the wheat grower shall be secured against loss by the rest of the nation. If wheat is bought by the government at a higher price than it can be sold, the tax payers of the country will have to make up the difference. One of the results of that would be interesting even to farmers. We mean that the diversified farmer, the dairy farmer, the stock farmer, would be taxed to pay the farmer who elects to raise wheat only. That is a form of gov- ernment aid that will not appeal even to farmers. 2 And where after alli would it lead us? The price of hogs, another farm product, has fallen some $3 in the last year. How about a government pur- chase of hogs to sustain a given price? Commodities fluctuate, some- times, as in 1921, disastrously. How far are we to rely upon government aid to protect the producer, and who must really pay in the end? This is a method of liftihg ourselves by our bootstraps. One consequence of tinkering with government aid is that it is likely to fix a bad situation instead of remov- ing it. If the government undertakes to sustain the price of wheat at a lev- el which assures a profit to the grow- er, he will not attempt to adjust him- self to the economic situation but he will go on raising wheat. That would happen in any similar case, and as other interests won special support we should presently have an econom- ic chaos supported by artificial means until the whole structure came down in inevitable ruin. ——A New York broker convicted of dishonesty has been sentenced to five years in prison or five years in Germany, and strangely enough he has indicated a preference for Ger- many. tm ——— A pin, ——Some scientific investigator has discovered that the dashund didn’t originate in Germany, which removes one cause of complaint against the Fatherland. : ‘est in the show. SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —As a result of building activities this year, housing facilities have been provid- ed for 300 additional families in Altoona. —In recognition of 25 years of service on Mrs. Mary A. McMurtries’ farm in Su- garloaf valley, Harvey Duncan received a bequest of $2000 under her will. —Thomas Tanner, watchman and signal- man. at Wiggan’s Station, a Shenandoah suburb, was found dead at his post when he failed to signal a passenger train. —Coming in contact with a high-tension wire, John Thomas, an electrician employ- ed by the York Haven Water and Power company, was burned severely and is in a critical condition at the York hospital. —A record crop of apples, estimated at more than 20,000 bushels, is being picked at the Altar Run orchards at Bald Eagle. A large force of workmen is engaged in taking the fruit from the trees and plac- ing it in storage. The peach orchards also yielded a large crop this year. —Seven prisoners awaiting trial escaped from the Erie county jail early Sunday morning by sawing two bars from a cell window on the fifth floor and sliding to the ground by means of knotted blankets. Three other prisoners, one being held up- on a murder charge, remained in the jail and reported the escape. —Every day for forty years Mrs. Mary Cummings, of Hollidaysburg, visited St. Mary's Catholic church to worship alone early in the morning. Members of the congregation entering the church for ear- ly mass on Sunday morning found her body lying in the aisle. She had been stricken with heart failure. —Miss Claudia B. Aurand, postmistress of Beaver Springs, last week tendered her resignation effective November 1st, after serving nearly two years. At the time of her appointment, it is claimed, she was the youngest of her sex to be put in charge of a postoffice in Pennsylvania, and probably in the United States. —The congregation of the Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, in Allentown, on Sunday evening surprised its rector, Monsignor Peter Masson, by presenting him with a purse of $1,000 to pay the ex- penses of a trip to his old home in Bel- gium. It will be the first vacation Mon- signor Masson has had in fifteen years. —A family of foxes, three in number, have become quite friendly with Mike On- ynskow, a farmer living near Meadville, While the cubs play with Mike's dog in the rear of the farm house, the mother: visits the hen-house., And now Mike knows why the foxes are so friendly. More than 100 chickens have disappeared. —Discovery of a case of leprosy in Phil- adelphia is interesting State Health offi- cials because it is the first to come to light in years. One of the leper cases which attracted much attention was that in Dauphin county some fifteen years ago. The city of Philadelphia will take charge of the case and the State make observa- tions. —“Did you have your arm around me?” asked Mrs. Lucy Barrett, of her escort, in a moving picture show at Sunbury on Fri- day night. When he declared he did not, she replied: “Well, some one did.” When she left the theatre she found that her purse, containing $45, carried in her bo- som, had been taken by a person who took advantage of the darkness and her inter- EE + —From the wife of a $200 a month car inspector to a fortune of more than $100,- 000 was the advance Thanksgiving gift re- ceived by Mrs. John D. Heim, of Sunbury, on Saturday. The will of her uncle, James A. Muthersbaugh, who died in Lewistown, bequeaths to her $7.,000, the home she lives in and part of the residue. Heim de- clares that it makes no difference in his young life, and has indicated that he will not quit his job. —Weekly radio information is to be giv- en Pennsylvania sportsmen under arrange- ments which have just been concluded, Seth Gordon, secretary of the game com- mission, announced last Friday. The broadcasting is to be done each Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock on the state police radio. The service will include interpre- tations of the game laws and game condi- tions in each section of the State, besides other news of interest to hunters. —When he went to sleep with a lighted cigarette in his mouth, Henry Mann, of Ambridge, Pa., caused a sensation. The cigarette slipped from his mouth down in- to a leg of his trousers. A neighbor tried to turn in a fire alarm, but the alarm box wouldn't work. Finally patrolman Whit- more arrived with a chemical extinguish- er and found Mann doing a Highland fling. Whitmore extinguished the trous- ers. After that Mann needed a barrel. —~Clemens Harberger, aged 54 years, a sawmill operator and lumber manufactur- er, of St. Marys, met with almost instant death when he was buried under an ava- lanche of timber that toppled over upon him. Preparatory to closing his mill, Mr. Harberger, with a crew of men, was in- specting the stock. He stood beside a pile of hardwood fourteen feet high and six feet wide when it toppled over upon him. Several other members of the party had narrow escapes. Harberger was rescued from under the timber within five minutes, but his neck was broken and he died with- in a half hour. —Two masked bandits last Friday after- noon held up -F. E. Pratt, superintendent of the Dexcar coal mines near Ashville, Cambria county, and robbed him of the mine payroll of $6,200. They then forced Pratt and his wife to leave their motor car and escaped in it, but abandoned it a mile away and took to the woods. State polide are searching for them. The rob- bery occurred on a lonely road leading from Ashville to the mines, which are owned by Dexecar and Carpenter, of New York. Pratt did not see the men until they jumped on the running board and forced him to stop, threatening him with a pistol. The money, which had been ob- tained in Altoona, was in pay envelopes ready for distribution to the miners. —Rev. W. H. Roosevell, of Millerstown, Juniata county, has instituted a suit in the Huntingdon county Court of Common Pleas against the Mount Hope Baptist church of Mount Union, through his at- torney, H. H. Waite, for a balance which he claims is: due him while serving that pastorate. Rev. Roosevell served the con- gregation for two and one-half years and was to receive $75 per month, which he states was paid regularly until January 17th, 1921, when the salary ceased. He severed his relations with the church July 15th, 1922, and claims $1,350, less $700 which was paid since he left, leaving a balance due him of $650 with interest. The Mount Hope Baptist church is a col- ored church, with a good sized congrega- tion.