ey INK SLINGS. —The new moon is so far around to the south that, methinks, we will not have any snow of consequence before Christmas. —If the producers, the miners or the railroads would orly absorb that increase in the cost of anthracite all of the Pinchot troubles would be over. They would have at least one plank to stand on on a Presidental platform. —Along with the Presidential boom of Mr. McAdoo has been born “The California Democrat” published once a week at Los Angeles, Cal, and promising to keep going at least un- til after Mr. McAdoo gets the Demo- cratic nomination for President. —We want you all, no matter where you live, to turn to page four of this issue and read the little story of what the Christmas seals are be- ing sold for. It is under the head “An Object Lesson.” If it isn’t the most appealing prayer to you to do a little for some one else then you haven’t the right conscience to tug at your heart strings. —Evidence is accumulating to show that the Sixty-eighth Congress is to be one notorious for attempted tink- ering with the constitution. Already eight amendments have been intro- duced in the House. Nobody will worry much about them, however. The country is through with ratifying con- stitutional amendments for many years to come. —Pity the poor hunters who shot spike bucks only to find the spike a quarter of an inch too short. That quarter of an inch cost them $100 fine. Surely this provision of the game law ought to be changed in some way that would not practically make it necessary for the hunter who wants to be safe to catch the buck first, measure his spike, then slay him. —We still have faith in Mayor- elect Kendrick’s revolutionary desire to take the Philadelphia police out of politics by the appointment of Brig. Gen. Smed. Butler as Director of Pub- lic Safety of that city. But, oh! What a shock it would be if it is later found out that Kendrick knew, when he an- nounced has preference, that the War Department would not release Gen. Butler for so long a time without sac- rifice of his rank. —Talking to the Lion’s club at Pottsville, an evening or so ago, Dr. Thomas, president of The Pennsylva- nia State College, said “there are too many young men trying to get white- collar jobs by studying non-technical subjects in college.” The Doctor evi- dently knows that the old white- col- lar ain’t what she used to be, but we’d like him to tell us how many of those engineering students who have “from three to seven positions open to them” immediately upon graduation have ambitions to be jigglin’ their Adam’s apple on a white collar as soon as they arrive. —Of course there are a lot of thor- oughly straightforward men holding public office today, but we want some- body to show us one of them entitled to rank with the Centre county asses- sor who gave the occupation of one of the citizens whom he was called upon to register as “Moonshiner.” We are accustomed to seeing “Gentleman” or “Lady” after the names of some whose occupation is more or less problematical. In fact it is somewhat distinctive but when it comes to being classed as a “Moonshiner,” well— that’s an occupation that it takes a brave man to assign to any one. —The Italian Premier, Mussolini, who from many angles is viewed as nothing more nor less than a dicta- tor, is certainly the most courageous figure that has come into world affairs in many, many years. In the height of his power he has asked and receiv- ed the King’s decree to dissolve the present session of the Chamber— which is unreservedly supporting him —in order that the country may vote for a new one. That seems to us to be putting the Fascist government which he inaugurated to the acid test. Also, it seems to us to be the slickest political move of which we have knowledge. —Up to Wednesday we had, for a period of thirty years or more, gloat- ed in the conceit that when necessity compelled it, we could cook as palata- ble a “rough stuff” meal as anybody who ever handled kitchen utensils. It’s all off now. The last claim we have nurtured as being good at any- thing is gone. Through illness of the one by nature endowed to perfectly function in the preparation of the family meal it fell to us to provide something for the invalid, the boys and “we.” We looked the refrigera- tor over and discovered the makings of a chicken pie that had been in con- templation before influenza flew into the family. We knew that there were some left-over mashed potatoes in cold storage also. Happy thought! Why not have stewed chicken and mashed potatoes? It was a mere matter of warming up both and mak- ing the boys think their dad about the best cook ever. We did it. But when the mashed potatoes came out of the oven they were worse than the gum- miest rarebit you ever ate and when we carried them off far enough to make an unobserved inspection we discovered that we had warmed up the crust for the planned chicken pie instead of the mashed potatoes that were standing in a bowl just behind it. It’s all off! We're not a cook, zt all. We're through with everything but a claim to being just as good a little fried egg and ham artist as ever lived. ca yy STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 68. BELLEFONTE, PA., DEC EMBER 14. 1923. NO. 49. Farmers Betrayed by Pinchot. The esteemed Harrisburg Patriot gives us this interesting but rather unpleasant information: “Because the State appropriation to fight the Japanese beetle was exhausted by the quarantine during the past summer, the State Department of Agriculture will ask federal funds from Congress and county appropriations from coun- ty commissioners to continue the fight next summer, Secretary Frank P. Willits said yesterday.” The Legisla- ture appropriated $50,000 at its last session to fight this formidable ene- my of agriculture but Governor Pin- chot cut the amount to $30,000. That amount was expended in enforcing the quarantine and fighting the beetle which “was ravishing all vegetation in southeastern counties.” In order to bolster up Governor Pinchot’s reputation as an economical administrator the farmers of Penn- sylvania were left open to an enemy of a most destructive nature. The menace was present when the Legis- lature made the szppropriation. Ex- perienced farmers urged a liberal cam- paign of defence. But Pinchot, who urged extravagance in other direc- tions, adopted the “cheese-paring” policy in this matter with the result that it will be necessary to go begging to Congress to protect the farms of the State or make a forced levy up- on the farmers themselves through the county commissioners. Economy of that sort is neither becoming nor desired by the people of Pennsylvania, farmers or others. Mr. Willitts proposes to visit Wash- ington to urge Congress to save our farmers. But even if he should suc- ceed in his begging enterprises the help would come too late to serve the purpose. A congressional appropria- tion could not be made available be- fore July, according to the statements of those informed on the subject, and the work of the extermination must be done in June. The $50,000 appro- priated at the last session of the As- sembly would have achieved the re- sult, for considerable progress was made last summer. But the enemy will have undisputed control of the situation during May and June next year and the farmers will pay a high price for the cannonization of Pin- chot as an agricultural Saint. ——We will soon find out the result of Governor Pinchot’s second confer- ence with the Governors of other an- thracite using States. It was in ses- sion in Harrisburg yesterday, (Thurs- day), and the failure will be known within a few days. Cordelia Not a Deadhead. In Governor Pinchot’s laudable am- bition to become President the amia- ble and versatile Cordelia “is no dead- head in the enterprise.” She may be over zealous in her activities or mis- taken in the line of her endeavors but she is certainly “on the job” in sea- son and out, and has a tolerably wise idea of the trend of popular opinion. Mrs. Cordelia seems to believe that the prohibition path is the shortest and surest route to the White House, and upon every opportunity she leads the way in that direction. Possibly she goes too strong or strikes too high a note in her efforts to set the procession in motion. But that is a matter of detail which can hardly be measured accurately at this time. Last Sunday Mrs. Cordelia address- ed a meeting composed of nine churches in the Eighteenth ward of Philadelphia. She was a trifle tardy in the beginning, for she didn’t arrive at the place of meeting until five o’clock, when she had been scheduled to speak at 3:45. But she made up for any delinquency in time by the ve- hemence of language. She accused the federal authorities, meaning of course Mr. Coolidge, who has “his eyes sot” on a renewal of his lease of the White House. She also took a fall out of the judges of the courts and the prosecuting attorneys who she imagines are not in complete sympathy with the strenuous efforts of Gifford to enforce the Volstead law in Pennsylvania or elsewhere. Incidentally Cordelia thrusts a keen blade between the ribs of Senator Pepper, punctures the hide of Secre- tary Mellon and levels a smashing blow on the features of chairman W. Harry Baker. “As long,” she de- clares, “as a United States Senator, a cabinet officer, a committee chairman, a county boss or an ordinary ward heeler can dictate the appointment of prohibition agents on political grounds, as is being done every day throughout the country, just so long will prohibition fail to prohibit.” This is probably the truth, so far as it im- plies that the Senator, the cabinet of- ficer and the committee chairman’s influences have been against enforce- ment. But there is no certainty that prohibition will ever prohibit. ———— A A ———— i ———— ——Mr. Bascom Slemp is an ex- pert at gathering in colored delegates but if Hi Johnson’s manager lives up to his reputation Bascom may slump. Right but a Trifle Late. Following the semi-official an- nouncement that President Coolidge is a candidate for a full term of the Presidency his message to Congress urging economy in expenditures of the government was timely if not al- together wise. Every rational mind- ed citizen favors economy in govern- ment and an appeal to Congress to cut appropriations to the bone will command approval if not tainted with insincerity. The average voter is likely to reason, however, that Mr. Coolidge has been identified with the government at Washington for some time and until he became a candidate for election never opened his mouth or wrote a line in favor of rigid econ- omy. Asa “sitter in” at Cabinet meetings he had his chance. Propaganda is a more popular than potent force in politics and it looks very much as if the President’s ap- peal for reduced appropriations at this time takes on the form of propa- ganda. This impression will be in- creased when it is remembered that in his first annual message to Con- gress delivered only a few days before he intimated that ship subsidy, the most atrocious form of graft ever conceived, should receive the favora- ble consideration of Congressmen. The ship subsidy defeated by the last Congress proposed to present to the ship owners anywhere from fifty to one hundred millions of dollars a year for fifty years and the influences be- hind it are reorganizing for another drive in its favor. We all want economy in govern- ment and the desire for reduced taxes is equally unanimous. But most of us have been urging those measures for many years and in so far as op- portunity presented itself have been talking and writing for them. But Coolidge is a new convert to the doc- trine or at least a new advocate and his appeal is tainted by strong symp- toms of false pretense. Like his predecessor in office he would save at the spigot by denying adjusted com- pensation to the world war veterans and waste at the bung by opening a flood of expenditures entirely unearn- ed and unworthy to the ship owners. An intelligent public is not likely to be impressed with such taeties. ——Probably Dr. Marx was made Chancellor of Germany in the hope that it would strengthen the market for German marks in this country. Coolidge is a Candidate. All doubts as to President Cool- idge’s intentions with respect to his candidacy for the Republican nomina- tion have been removed. As a matter of fact there have never been any doubts on the subject. A good many people may have tried to conjure up doubts, and Gifford Pinchot and Hi- ram Johnson may have gone so far as to entertain hopes that he would be content with the half term acquired by death. But Frank W. Stearns, of Boston, the Coolidge political “angel,” has directed another friend to defi- nitely announce that he is a candi- date, and that Mr. William M. Butler, Massachusetts member of the Repub- lican National committee, is to be his manager. There is really nothing about Cal- vin Coolidge to commend him to pop- ular favor. His message to Congress contained no expression on any sub- ject that could possibly command ad- miration. Representative Nelson, leader of the insurgent forces, cor- rectly appraised the message when he said “that in whatever he was deci- sive he was wrong and in whatever he spoke negatively he was right.” He pleased the corporations by declaring in favor of Harding’s proposition to consolidate railroads and the million- aires by approving Mellon’s plan to cut taxes on big incomes. But he set the war veterans against him in his emphatic declaration against bonus legislation of any sort. : It may be assumed, however, that he will be the nominee of his party next year, for the party organization is for him earnestly. There will be little enthusiasm in his support for he is not the type of man that in- spires enthusiasm. But his nomina- tion is necessary to the fulfillment of the bargain entered into between the Republican organization and big bus- iness in 1920, and the Republican lead- ers never willingly violate an agree- ment with big business. If Harding had lived no other candidate would have had a “look in,” and Coolidge is his legatee as well as his successor in office. He is not a strong candidate and unless the voters of the country are false to themselves he will not be elected. —————————— ————— ——On Monday the President sent 2000 nominations to the Senate for confirmation. The recruiting service is unusually active. ——Mr. Stearns, of Boston, seems to enjoy the ownership of a President. He wants to renew his lease on the ‘but “nevertheless, title. Senate Factions in Conflict. The Republican factions in the United States Senate inaugurated a war during the session on Monday which may develop an “irrepressible conflict” or end in a farce similar to that put across in the House of Rep- resentatives a week ago. The ques- tion in dispute is the chairmanship of the committee on Interstate Com- merce. Senator Cummins, of Iowa, is the present chairman and Senator LaFollette, of Wisconsin, the ranking Member. Mr. Cummins is also pres- ident pro. tem. of the Chamber and’ the contention has been set up that he has no right to both honors. Un- der long established custom if Cum- mins should relinquish the chairman- ship LaFollette would automatically succeed to the office. All legislation pertaining to rail- roads and interstate commerce is re- ferred to that committee. The ad- ministration and the Republican or- ganization are committed to policies expressed in the Cummins-Esch law and the Progressives, of whom La- Follette is the titular leader, are opposed to them. The railroad man- agers, Wall Street and the special in- terests generally are averse to plac- ing LaFollette at the head of the com- mittee and the insurgents, with the exception of Capper, of Kansas, a po- litical “porch climber,” favor his ele- vation. The lines are clearly drawn. Senator Cummins declares “he will not bargain with the supporters of Senator LaFollette.” If the other side is equally determined a prolonged war is inevitable. But we don’t look for such a con- flict of interests. Party exigencies forbid a long drawn ouf, battle be- tween the factions of the dominant party and selfish ambitions and lust for patronage will soon intervene and effect a compromise. The presidency of the Senate is a desirable job but Cummins is a crafty politician and wise enough to give up a shadow in order to secure a substance. Wall Street will guarantee reimbursement for all losses incurred by giving up one office in order to keep an undesir- able aspirant out of another. The pretense of contention may be kept up for a week or two because railroad iegislation may be deferred that long: but in the end Cummins will be the chairman. —In the parlance of the street sev- eral of the most important and meri- torious suggestions to Congress, made in the President’s message, are “old stuff” and of Democratic origin at that. His advice to put a lighter tax on earned incomes than upon unearned is exactly what Senator Harris, of Geor- gia, Democrat, offered in his amend- ment to the revenue bill in 1921. Mr. Coolidge then presided over the Sen- ate and the Harris amendment was voted down by thirty-six to twenty- one because Senator Penrose, then chairman of the finance committee, said it couldn’t be done. —Thus far, it is stated in Harris- burg, one-sixth of the commissions is- sued to Notarys Public this year have been to women. We're right here to bet that the percentage will be far greater next year. The women can and will answer the Governor's twelfth question as to their qualifica- tions without as much sacrifice as the men applicants. You know what the twelfth interrogatory is, of course. 1t is: Will you agree to abide by the constitution, especially the Eighteenth amendment. ——————— A —————— ——Up to this writing the Ink Sling man of the “Watchman” has not been buried under saddles of ven- ison or deluged with sherry dressing, notwithstanding,” as the Hon. James Schofield would say, a savory roast reached this office last week from the first venison kill- ed in the vicinity of Pine Grove Mills on the opening day of the season. The buck was brought to earth by George Burwell and we are indebted to Capt. W. H. Fry for our share of it. Mr. Coolidge is exceedingly generous in his praise of his prede- cessor in office. He is also doing his best to make the war veterans agree with him that the death of Mr. Hard- ing was a national calamity. If Senator Pepper, Secretary Mellon and chairman Baker are dele- gates at Large the fourth seat would hardly be comfortable for Mrs. Pin- chot. ——Premier Stanley Baldwin may adhere to his policy of tariff taxa- tion but the voters of England haven’t given him much encouragement. Governor Pinchot’s opinion of the morals of Philadelphia is not flat- tering but in view of the majority that city gave him is justified. ——It was unusually long between revolutions in Mexico but the one now in progress may last long enough to make the average. Our Pet Mania of “Be It Enacted.” From the Philadelphia Public Ledger. Congress was not twenty-four hours old, the Senate and House had not or- ganized, before the usual flood of pro- posed laws, resolutions and “be it en- acteds” overwhelmed both Houses. Days before the annual message of the President was delivered to the Congressional joint session the stam- pede to rush the legislative gates was on. Upward of 600 bills poured into the legislative hoppers fore the House had a Speaker or the Senate was organized. Congress passes laws by the hun- dreds and they are offered by the multiple thousands at every session. A vast majority of these bills are worse than worthless. They repre- sent the halfbaked ideas of some half- baked Legislator or some of his half- baked constituency who feel the American urge to pass a law about something. Many of them are introduced “by request.” ‘Some of them are the work of cranks and crack-brained folk. Others are merely piffling and harm- less arrangements of words. Many of them are dangerous proposals. When the Constitution is found to bar the way of some of these legisla- tive monstrosities and panaceas their advocates demand that the Constitu- tion be amended and remolded nearer their hearts’ desire. In 136 years there have been 3063 proposals that the Constitution be amended. That many have been actually introduced in one branch or other of Congress. Every generation has its own breed of tinkerers. : In the Sixty-seventh Congress 109 of these proposals were offered in the form of bills or resolutions. That rec- ord probably will be bettered in the Sixty-eighth, for their is little sign that we are convalescing from our re- cent spells of amendment fever. The undergrowth of the legislative woods in Washington is crawling with would-be amenders. all cast down by the fact that only nineteen amendments have been ap- proved since the adoption of the Con- stitution. Americans have a passion for law- making and law-changing that is not matched by a passion for law-enfore- ing. In Congress and the forty-eight State Legislatures tens of thousands of enactments and resolutions are considered every legislative year. Our State statutes have swollen to the size of unabridged dictionarigsig. our of city directories and our federal statutes are as weighty as the Domesday book. This goes on in the face of a grow- ing feeling that we need vastly few- er laws and vastly better enforcement of those we have. A great flood of these enactments, proposed and pass- ed, may be traced to a growing class- mindedness in American life that has shown itself in Legislative blocs. Many of them are due to a kind of national shiftlessness and political la- ziness due to the dying of our self- governing instincts. If a problem worries us, we want to pass it on to our Harrisburgs, Albanys and Tren- tons and, finally, Washington. “There ought to be a law” is a fa- miliar phrase of American speech. “Pass a law,” is the American panacea for all ills, social, moral, industrial and economic. Naturally enough, it has come about that we are saddled with a cast- iron set of bureaucracies that look after everything from hog cholera to whooping cough and from brown bears to babies. As a matter of course, we have a legion of inspectors, auditors, commissioners, collectors, enforcers of this-and-that and third aniston sub-deputies, world without end. The Nation is never quite easy in its mind while Congress is in session and the swelling stream of laws breeds that uneasiness. It is being crushed under a weight of statutes and confused by new and old legisla- tive mazes. The mills of Congress may grind slowly. They do not grind exceeding small and they do grind steadily. We have just completed the longest vacation from law-making permitted us for years, but the annu- al and well-nigh unending manufac- ture of more laws has begun again. About all we can do is hope for the beg 2nd yearn for an early adjourn- ment. mn —— ese Not a Closed Incident. From the Philadelphia Record. President Coolidge is, of course, only expressing his own personal opinion when he says that “our coun- try has definitely refused to adopt and ratify the covenant of the League of Nations,” and that “the incident, so far as we are concerned, is closed.” He is entitled to that view, but there are many millions of Americans who are just as firmly attached to the opinion that the incident is not closed, and that it never will be closed until the issue is settled definitely by the United States assuming its proper place among the nations of the world. Calvin Coolidge may think that this country has “definitely refused to adopt and ratify the covenant but much more than half of his fellow- countrymen think differently. As an issue in American politics the League promises to be a bone of contention until right has triumphed over polit- ical partisanship and the United States decides to do what it should have done four years ago. AA ——————— —TFor all the news you should read i the “Watchman.” They are not at ‘municipal ordinances ‘to the {hickiess '|SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. Dispatches from Elmira say Charles Shires, aged 53 years, residing in Willams- port, was robbed of $500 by companions ‘during a drinking party in that city. —Herman Geska, of Uniontown, convict- * | ed of attacking Mrs. Myrtle Boyd, a Con- nellsville nurse, is' to serve from five to ten years in the western penitentiary. —The Altoona school board has author- ized a bond issue of $250,000 for the com- pletion of the Roosevelt Junior High school and for the purchase of sites for new Senior and Junior schools. —George Trueman, aged 9 years, is a pa- tient at the Lewistown hospital, with a broken leg and injured head, received when he was run down by an automobile near his home at Honey Creek, near Reedsville, Sunday night. : —The Eagle Fire company, of York, Pa. will treat 1,000 children with candy, fruit and toys on Christmas morning. A large Christmas tree is also being planned by the South End fire fighters. The tree is to be transported from the Bald Hills, by members of the Eagle deer club. —Five workmen were injured by an ex- plosion of molten metal in the cupola of the National Radiator works at New Cas- tle last Friday afternoon. E. Stirpe and Joe Tefe are in the hospital badly burned and injured while W. Branden, Tony Mo- resso and Joe Devitto, were taken to their homes, not being seriously injured. —Hearings on the claims of John L. Kuhn, the State printer, will be resumed December 20th by Auditor General Lewis, and the sum of over $36,000 is hanging in the balance over the printing of the hunt- ers’ license tags. The State contention is that it is special work and not within the printing contract, but Mr. Kuhn claims he should have had it. —“My husband bought me for $300. He paid the money te my aunt,” Mrs. Abra- ham Barket, of Pottsville, told the police on Saturday. Friday night Mrs. Barket says her husband, a well-to-do merchant, pulled her out of bed by her hair when she disagreed with him. Barket is 44 years old, and his wife is 18. The husband was held under bail for court. —Charles Swogger, aged forty years, member of a prominent family of breeders of thoroughbred Holstein cattle, shot and probably mortally wounded his mother, Mrs. Oliver Swogger, sixty years of age, at their home in Lackawanna township, seven miles east of Sharon, on Friday night, when she refused to give him mon- | ey. Then he committed suicide. —@G. L. Randall, arrested at Ridgway Friday night charged with forging checks, was given a hearing before Justice Zelt in St. Marys and in default of $2,000 bail is a prisoner in jail at Ridgway. His case will come before the January term of Elk county court. Randall, who gave his resi- dence at Williamsport, is wanted in that city and also in Milton and Sunbury on similar charges. —Harry M. Benjamin, owner of the Ben- jamin Motor company, at Hazleton, a graduate of Lehigh University and mem- ber of the Hazleton Kiwanis club, died late Sunday night at the State hospital after being overcome with gas fumes in his garage. About seven years ago he had a narrow escape from death when his father, David Benjamin, was killed in an accident at the Eberdale anthracite coal strippings. —The body of Andrew Mauza, 54 years old, was found on Saturday near the Fer- ris Heights” school” puildifig in Columbia county. His head was crushed. Eight hundred dollars he had with him is miss- ing. Mauza was with two men the even- ing previous and they are being sought. The murder is the first in Columbia coun- ty in six years. Mauza had been a resi- dent of Berwick for about thirty years. The police believe a club or stone was used to commit the murder. —An all-day search by Constable Graff, of Lancaster, for a man wanted for larce- ny ended last Friday evening, when he found his quarry in the county jail. Con- stable Groff was armed with a warrant for the arrest of John L. Smith, of No. 33 east Walnut street, charging him with robbing his room-mate, Raymond 8. Wil- son. While the constable was searching for him Mayor Musser, in police court, was sentencing Smith to ten days in jail for disorderly conduct. —Close to a million dollars is said to have been invested by retail grocers in Cambria and Somerset counties in the American Grocers’ society, against which bankrupt proceedings have been institut- ed in Newark, N. J. Vice Chancellor Backes having granted a rule against the company returnable this week. According to the petition asking for the appointment of a receiver, the liabilities of the compa- ny are $2,500,000 and its assets not more than $150,000. The society claims assets in realty to the amount of $443,000. —Flames from a match she had struck to light a lamp in her room are believed to have caused the death of Mrs. Sarah Lydia, 67 years old, who was found burn- ed to death last Thursday at the home of her brother, Samuel Hays, of Antrim township, Franklin county. The woman's body was found behind the door in her room at the Hays home. The lamp she is believed to have lighted was burning, but the chimney was lying on the floor. Mrs. Lydia was subject to heart attacks, and it is believed that she suffered such an at- tack while lighting the lamp. Hays was attracted to her room by the smell of smoke. —By the use of X-rays, which showed the callous left where the bone had been knit in a broken leg, the ownership of an Airedale dog was established in Mount Pleasant, Westmoreland county. Two men claimed the dog was theirs, and the right- ful owner studied for some means by which he might prove his claim. Then he remembered that his dog once suffered a broken leg and that Dr. McNish, of Mount Pleasant, reduced the fracture. Dr. Mc- Nish said that the dog was but six months’ old when he attended it and that he could not positively identify it. He suggested the X-rays and the picture showed the leg had been fractured. —When citizens assembled at the First Reformed church at Pottsville, on Monday, to hear a prohibition lecture they were in- formed that it would be impossible to hold the meeting, as the Rettig brewery next door, which furnishes the steam for heating the church, had shut off the pipes on learning an anti-saloon meeting was to be held. William Shugars, president of the brewery, and Charles Ost, superintend- ent, said they did not wish to discommode the church members, but they did not see how they could consistently heat a build« ing where a meeting was to be held to at- tack their business. The meeting was cancelled, and the heating service was then resumed.