» iy gobi out. The their tresses to Dame : discover that she the District as well ld us on Monday that | Jongressman Billie Swoope can be icked easily if Mr. Benson makes any ind of a canvas. —Unless we are greatly misinform- d the LaFollette vote in certain sec- ions of Centre county is going to sur- rise the politicians. Happily for us t is going to be strongest in what are mown to be heavy Republican pre- incts. —Senator Couzens, Republican, has ecided to run for re-election in Mich- zan on a wet platform. Isn’t it aw- ul that a Republican should do such . thing, but won’t it be grand, if he 5s elected, and his vote should prove he one necegsary to defeat some leg- slation proposed by President Davis. —John Campbell, of Antrim, Ire- ind, who lived to be one hundred nd twelve years old, ascribed his ealth to his determination not to rorry about anything. Perhaps verybody- could attain John’s years * they adopted his motto, but if they id the world would stand still ever fter. —In the east the. Republican man- gers are pooh, poohing what the dis- flection to LaFollette might do to ‘oolidge in the north-west, but in the orth-west the Republicans are beg- ing for any sort of a combination rith the Democrats in order to lick aFollette. It all looks to us as ough Davis is the best bet to save 1e country from the Reds. —The accidental killing of a young irl in Snow Shoe, Wednesday even- 1g, resulted in the exoneration of the ian whose revolver caused her death. ; has probably not occurred to the athorities to inquire what right John inchock had to be totin’ a gun around ith him. There would be fewer kill- 1gs, intentional and accidental, if the ww against carrying deadly weapons ere enforced. —Dave Windsor, otherwise known 3 the Prince of Wales, is a very rich oung man. His income is supposed » approximate nearly a million a sar. The most of it comes from the sown lands in the Duchy of Corn- all from which he gets his heredi- wy title. The English subjects con- ibute very little in taxes to his main- mance. The tenants on his lands iy the haberdashers for the clothes \at set the styles for those who roll o their pants. ‘when it's raining in ondon. —The ten questions that young eopold, the Chicago murderer, had slunteered to answer after he had sen swung across the Styx for the -utal killing of little Bobby Franks, ere very interesting indeed. He .emed to have not taken into consid- ation, however, the possibility of s probable landing in a place where 1 the wires to any mundane medium ould be burned off as quickly as they wuld be put up. Judge Caverly has ntenced him to prison for life and en added ninety-nine years for kid- \pping so that he will have time on rth to revise his atheistic theories. —According to our dope Davis arts in the race with the greatest set. Unprejudiced analysis must ve him 183 votes in the electoral llege. Coolidge is reasonably cer- in of 145. LaFollette, if he has iything like the strength he is sup- ised to have, will get 62 at the out- je and there are 141 votes that are wubtful. In this we haven’t given avis the vote of a State north of the ason and Dixon line. We have put elve States in the doubtful column d given seven to LaFollette. Con- cticut, Delaware, Idaho, Illinois, In- ana, New Jersey, New York, North ikota, Rhode Island are the real b table States and if Davis can up 83 votes from them he will be ton From the same uncertain setorates Coolidge will have to get 1 or nearly 90% of those certainly ubtful. It looks to us that if Da- 5 isn’t elected directly the decision almost certain to go to Congress. —We railed like a common scold out being compelled to buy new 1ses and have our lights focused. st people love to rail. And some- nes there is justification for it. yre often there isn’t. A few even- ys ago we motored sixty-four miles ter darkness had set in. The route is over a much used highway and it probsbly not exaggeration to say it we met several hundred cars. ery one of them was passed th a feeling of perfect safety d comfort without lessening our ‘ed or palling into the ditch ve certain of avoiding colli- n.', It-was all because other motor- s, 'who had probably railed, had sn compelled to discard 32 bulbs, t lenses with proper refraction and wus their lights to the road instead our eyes. When the order was first ymulgated we threatened to stand ne one a suit before we would fat- anybody’s rake-off from the lens nufacturers, but we are grateful to + Highway Department now for wing us that we have probably :n blinding the other fellow quite much as he was blinding us. . Mo- ing at night has been made a great- pleasure and given much more ety. by the new regulation, ‘tion will be multiplied and cheapen- Mr. Davis and the West. 2% After spending a few days in Chi- cago, for observation, John W. Davis, Democratic candidate for President, paid a visit to his running mate, Gov- ernor Bryan, at Lincoln, Nebraska, last week, and made a speech last evening at Denver, Colorado. His ‘westward trip has been a series of ovations. In every section hé finds the Democrats active and his pres- ence inspires enthusiasm. His speech- es are forceful and eloquent and draw instant and obvious responses from the people. In Nebraska his appeal was to the farmers and he pointed out the exact relations between tariff tax- ation and agricultural prosperity. His theme at Denver was the effect of scientific irrigation and crop produc- tion. In a speech delivered in Nebraska, a couple of weeks ago, “Hell-an-Ma- ria” Dawes tried to “buncoe” the far- mers with a promise of government regulation of farm products. That is the favorite specific of economic quacks everywhere. It used to be called overproduction and was round- ly condemned as the influencing cause of declining prices. As a matter of fact there is no such thing. The cost of production may be excessive and the result abundance and high prices. Mr. Davis showed this clearly and proved that by proper irrigation in the arid sections of the West produc- ed, and prosperity vastly increased by the safe and certain process of de- creased cost of living. It isn’t the overproduction ‘of crops but the under supply of markets that causes distress in the agricultural re- gions of the country, and whatever cause impairs the prosperity of far- mers stifles the progress of industrial and commerical life. Mr. Coolidge states that wages are higher than ever. But the high wages don’t pur- chase a greater quantity of the. nec- essaries of life. Irrigation in the West will affect agricultural produc- tion precisely as machinery did in the manufacture of shoes. That is, it will increase and cheapen. production without in the least decreasing the wages of operatives in that industry. Mr. Dawes would limit. acreage and S. withgut benefit. 1 ——The “Republican managers are still in a state of terror over the pro- posed Pinchot speeches. It is safe to- bet that his praise of Coolidge will be of the “feint” variety, and everybody knows what “feint praise” does. Benson Endorsed by Labor Party. The LaFollette supporters in this Congressional district, acting under the designation of the Labor party, have wisely and properly filed a pe- tition naming Edward M. Benson, the Democratic nominee, as their candi- date for Congress. If the Democrats of the district do their full duty in the campaign and on election day, this will guarantee the election of Mr. Benson, assure the people of the dis- trict a faithful and capable represen- tative in the National Legislature and give John W. Davis as President of the United States, a sincere and ener- getic supporter. This “is a consum- mation devoutly to be wished.” The Democratic President would be sadly hampered if the Congress were against his policies. This district is nominally Republi- can, mainly for the reason that the Democratic voters are negligent in their political duties. Upon a full poll neither party would have much margin. But in recent years the Dem- ocratic voters have been delinquent and the results have been a considera- ble Republican majority. Neither Clearfield nor Centre county is at heart Republican and the majority for that partyin McKean county isnot great. The personal popularity and obvious fitness of Mr. Benson will easily get him a majority in the county and the split in the Republican party between LaFollette and Coolidge ought to re- sult in a majority for the Democratic candidate in both Clearfield and Cen- tre counties. Our fight in Pennsylvania is for Congress and the General Assembly. The election of John W. Davis, our su- perb candidate for President, is as certain as that day follows night. At this time the indications point to the success of LaFollette for President in this State. Roosevelt, as an independ- ent candidate, carried it against Taft, the regular party nominee in 1912, by a considerable majority and LaFol- lette is quite as strong in the State as Roosevelt. That being the case it is only necessary for the Democrats to get out their full strength and con- centrate on the Congressional contests and candidates for the General As- sembly. We can strengthen the hands of our splendid President by sending to Congress men who will help him. Emn—— en —————— ——If Governor Pinchot would sub- mit the manuscript of his proposed speeches to W. Harry Baker for ap- proval he would remove a great anxi- — ety. Mr. Davis on Organized Labor. The Republican mar managers and news- papers have taken great pains to im- press upon the minds of wage earn- ers throughout the country that J ohn W. Davis, being a corporation lawyer, { wi is hostile to organized labor and the interests of labor. It having been stated that on an occasion Mr. Davis appeared in a Federal court at Clarks- burg, West Virginia, to defend Eu- gene Debs, Mr. Debs was induced to declare that he had never employed him, though he added that Mr. Davis had served as attorney for the coal miners in West Virginia in a case in which “Mother” Jones was in custody charged with picketing. The World's Work, a high class magazine has tak- en the trouble to get the facts and gives them as follows: “One of John W. Davis’ early court cases was his suit for a writ of habeas corpus to gain the re- lease of eight striking coal miners and labor leaders who had been arrested for marching down a line near a colliery while an injunc- tion was in force against picket- ing. Simultaneously two other groups of labor men were arrest- ed under similar circumstances and their cases were in the same court for judgment. By stipula- tion, judgment in all three cases was joined in one decision which was favorable to the laboring men, largely as the result of a ,- four-hundred-word brief prepar- ed by young Davis. = Among one - of the other groups was Eugene _V. Debs, so that while the famil- iar story that he was one of Mr. Davis’ earliest clients is not lit- erally true, it is true that Mr. De : efforts in behalf of others e peril incidentally pit ey ‘Mr. eh his freedom.” It is quite likely that Mr. Davis’ op- position to the too careless use of in- junctions is ascribable to his exper- ience in the case in question. While in Congress he made a strong fight to restrain the issue of injunctions in labor contests and hoped that under the provisions of the Clayton act he had achieved the result. But under the administration of the Department of Justice by Harry Daugherty, ap- pointed by President Harding and re- tained as long as possible by Coolidge, | ; that ex ‘has ‘ed. In his Labor 8 Joan iste | ever, Mr. Davis shows that his inter- est in the subject has not. subsided and made it clear that in the event of his election his ideas will be put into operation. meres fp fee ——1In view of the Teapot Dome op- eration, the Veteran Bureau record and various other shady transactions it takes a strong nerve to ask support of the Republican ticket “on the rec- ord of the party.” Coolidge’s Private Labor Party. President Coolidge is widely known as a cautious man but with all his care he makes some most egregious blun- ders. One of these, and one which is provoking wide spread criticism among those it was intended to please, was his little private party at the White House on Labor day. Mr. Da- vis, having been invited to deliver an address on that day before a large gathering of organized labor bodies, and LaFollette having arranged to broadcast his views on labor day, Mr. Coolidge jumped to the conclusion that he must do something worthy of a first page story of interest to labor. Accordingly he sent out an S. O. S. to the labor leaders on the govern- ment pay roll and confidentially “slip- ped” his views on the subject to them with the understanding that they would convey them to the rank and file in whatever way might be deemed expedient or effective and persuasive. They were all “white collar” men, of course, who have been chosen to fill fat jobs because of a belief that they controlled large blocks of votes and could cast them for any candidate they favored. It is altogether likely that they could accomplish a good deal in that direction at the time they were named, but things have changed considerably since then. Most wage earners select their own candidates now. That is particularly true this year. The past three and a half years of Republican administration has taught working men a lesson. Every activ- ity of the government has been di- rected to promote the interests of mo- nopoly and destroy those of labor, and though a few recreant members and agents of labor organizations are in office they no longer exercise influence among the voters who work at skilled or common labor. Mr. Coolidge’s se- lect party of office holders and expec- tants were delighted with his plati- tudes on labor, but will be influenced on election day more by the language used in vetoing the bill increasing the meager wages of postal employees. A —— A ——————— ——Senator Couzens,. of Michigan, has disappointed public expectations. Nobody imagined that he could be di- verted from a purpose by the securi- ty of a Senatorial nomination, : “The Result in Maine, The’ New York Tr Tribune and other leading Republican papers were wise in ia result of the election in Maine “be without significance. If it had. shown a Republican majority in- creased in the ratio of the enlarged vote incident to the enfranchisement of the women, it would have been sig- ificant. Or if the Republican major- ity had been wiped out it would have shown a decided trend in the direc- tion of the Democracy. But nothing of the kind happened. The Republi- can candidate for Governor, with the help of the Ku Klux Klan, carried the State by a majority of something | like fifty per cent. less than his par- ty polled at the State election four years ago. In 1920 the Republican candidate for Governor of Maine had a majori- ty over his Democratic competitor of 65,116 on a toal vote of 195,000. This year on a total vote of 225,000, the in-- crease representing the augmented female vote, the Republican majority | is in the LEcthe nt of 35,000, which by any process of reckoning shows a considerable loss to the party. In 1920 the Republican majority was a trifie more than half the total vote and this year it is a little above one- sixth. : But the result has ratified the compact between the Ku Klux Klan and the Republican machine of the en- tire country. Previously it had only been in existence in a few localities. Now it covers all the territory. The . Republican machine always makes ‘strenuous efforts to maintain a big majority in Maine, presumably under the assumption that “as goes Maine so goes the Union,” an old su- perstition. But the Republicans car- ried Maine at the State election in both the years when Cleveland was elected as well as in both years of | will be Wilson: victories. This year they worked harder than ever, invoking every New England prejudice and all the known sectional animosities. Yet victory i is only a shadow, for while it gives them a Ku Klux Klan Governor it shows a very considerable decrease in majbrity. The same ratio of loss throu ut the country will put Cool- th lass established by Taft “ . a = gnEL —The heavy frost that fell in all parts of Centre county yesterday morning might not have done very great damage, but it certainly didn’t help the corn or late garden products. Get-Out-the-Vote Campaign. The National League of Women Voters has started a campaign in the United States to get out a larger vote in the coming election than there has been in the past. This effort is to in- clude all parties, and is aiming to in- crease the vote by at least 25 per cent. - Pennsylvania has been behind most of the other States by about 15 per cent. so she will need a special ef- fort. The Pennsylvania State League has decided to send a caravan of automo- biles through a number of counties. Starting October first from Independ- ence Square, Philadelphia, it will cross the State to Pittsburgh, and re- turn to Philadelphia by October 30th. This caravan is scheduled for Lock Haven and Bellefonte on October 8th. Local automobiles are to meet it at the county line and conduct it to the county line on it’s way to Philipsburg. There will be material for decorating automobiles and there will be speak- ers to address the towns through which it passes. Any organization or individual that wishes to join in this effort to make our country a better Democracy will please send word to Mrs. Robert Mills Beach, Bellefonte, chairman Centre county. —If the weather man doesn’t do better the Prince’s visit will be over before he gets to witness one of the international polo matches that he came over to see. ——Three reasons why Coolidge should be defeated are Albert A. Fall, Harry M. Daugherty and Edwin Den- by. But there are lots more. mt ———— iy fe —— ——Estimating the cost of tobacco to the American people the expense of maintaining a war ship at Samsun, Turkey, is no small amount. ——— fp ———— ——1It may be noticed that they are already canvassing for a successor to Senator Pepper, though he hasn't said a word about retiring. ——-It is not surprising that the Ku Klux Klan carried Maine. That New England colony is based on bigotry. ———Mr. Davis’ brief visit to Ne- braska settled the question as to how that State will vote in November. I; — Keep in mind that President Davis will need friends in Congress icting, in advance of the event, # * NATION AL DEFENSE | A Many Bellefonte Pe People Have En rolled for Big Parade This, Afternoon. sr op HER When thé whistles start blowios and bells ringing at 12 o'clock today just remember that this is National Defense day and the whistles and the bells will be. simply performing part in ushering in the patriotic move- ment. At that hour all business in Bellefonte will be suspended for the day, the stores remaining closed in- stead of taking their half holiday yes- terday. The banks will also be closed as well as all business offices. LF | As stated last week enrollment of private citizens who have volunteered for the day only will take place at | the armory from 9 to 12 o'clock. this , morning, when every man will be giv- en a badge of honor, assigned to cer- , tain divisions and told where to report ' for the big parade. The employees of the Titan Metal , company ‘have volunteered in a body j and will be enrolled as the 367th ar- | tillery. They will be commanded by | Lieut, Col. David Dale. The P. O. S. of A. will be enrolled as Battery B, 305th artillery. The Headquarters troop and Troop B, of the National Guard, will be in line, ‘the latter 101 men strong. Oth- er units will be the Red Cross, Boy Scouts, the one day volunteers, Odd Fellows and other civic organizations, Music for the parade will be fur- nished by Wetzler’s band, of Miles- burg, the Odd Fellows band, of Belle- fonte, and the P. 0. S. of A, drum corps. All organizations anid individuals taking part are requested to report at the armory or on Linn street at one promptly at. 1:30. The line of. march exactly as: published in last week’s “Watchman,” At the conclusion of the parade Col. H. S. Taylor will deliver the address of the day from the reviewing stand in the Diamond after which everyhody is invited to attend the free ball gam at Hughes field “between Bell 0 and Snow Shoe. : Remember that a free dance will be held in the armory this eyeni ‘Wetzler's “orchestra will’ furm ; music. The Sportsmen’s Big Day. Every sportsman in Clearfield and Centre county - should look forward with keen interest to the basket pic- nic to be held under the auspices of the State-Centre Game, Fish and For- estry Association, at Lakeside park, Morrisdale, September 19th. Seth E. Gordon, executive secretary of the board of Game Commissioners; Mr. Spencer, a member of the Fish Commission, and L. E. Staley, repre- sentative of the Forestry Association will be in attendance and will make addresses. An event of this kind will of course bring out the target and trap shooters, for which ample pro- visions have been made. There will be all kinds of game and park amuse- ments for the children, shooting, mu- sic and dancing for the grown ups. The different committees are work- ing hard to provide a good time for the sportsmen and their friends, who will attend. The State-Centre Game, Fish and Forestry Association has hung out the invitation: “Everybody Welcome.” Take the whole family. Treating the Officer Rough. Shortly before six o’clock on Tues- day evening an officer in plain clothes was driving up the Snow Shoe moun- tain. About 200 yards above the Dim Lantern another motor coming down ran him so far to the side of the road that his Overland sedan toppled over the embankment, turned completely upside down and was only stopped from rolling into the deep ravine by a six inch sapling. Strange to say the officer was not hurt, but was so busy protecting him- self while his car was rolling over that he couldn’t get the number of the other machine which sped on. Harry Hall, who happened along, drove him to Snow Shoe for assistance and when he came back, scarcely an hour later, three of his tires were gone, rims and all. The officer then hired Sam Furl to watch the wreck for the rest of the night and next morning Sam found two of them hidden in the brush near the wreck. ——An item has been going the rounds of the State press depicting how twenty-two enforcement officers swooped down upon Bellefonte last Saturday evening and scooped in four- teen booleggers. : This is a mistake. Lock Haven was the place where the raid occurred. ——After reading one of his speech- es it is easy enough to “keep cool to- ward Coolidge.” o’clock p. m., so the parade can ‘move’ 3 dangerous. ing closed, a detour via Lewisburg and up over the Pennsylvania Railroad tracks at Vail, just north of Tyrone, thereby elim inating a. very dangerous grade crossing. The new bridge. will connect the two por- tions of conerete road between Tyrone and Osceola Mills. . - —Luzerne county authorities are Iaves- tigating the death of William Klimeck, 60 years old, of Dupont, who was found dead, with a fracture at the base of his skull, along the Lehigh Valley railroad tracks in Dupont early on Sunday morning. -. The man had been to a wedding and had lef a few hours before his body was found by a trackwalker. : —For preventing a wreck on the New York Central railroad John Burfield, of Keating, was given a check for $25 by that company. The lad discovered a break . in one of the rails as he was walking ‘along the tracks and knowing that a passenger train was soon due, he hurried to the home of the operator and notified him of the condition of the rail. —Bucknell University is awarded $10,000 by the will of Mrs. Jennie Williams, wid. ow of Dr. W. T. Williams, of Mount Car- mel, which was probated on Monday at Sunbury. Mount Carmel Chapter, Amer- ican Red Cross, is given $2000; Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio, $5000; Baptist Women's Foreign Missionary society, New York, $5000; and Harry Geist Post No. 101, American Legion, Mount Carmel, a player piano. —Artonio Apostolico, reported arrested at Caserta, Italy, last week, is wanted for the killing of Frank Materia, a grocer at Burnham, near: Lewistown, in August, 1923. It is charged that Apostolico shot Materia after a quarrel, the result of the latter refusing to permit Apostolico to marry his thirteen year old daughter. Apostolico fled to Wilkes-Barre and is be- lieved to have left the Suni by way of Buffalo, N. Y. \ —~Immediate steps will be taken by the State Old Age pension commission to ore ganize the meeting to be held in Harris burg November 13th for the discussion of the problems of ‘administration and legis« lative prospects. Governor Pinchot. will be the chief speaker. The appeal of the Su- preme court from the decision of the Dau- phin county court against constitutionali- ty of the act has been completed by the Attorney General. ‘—Wilkes-Barre and Luzerne county offi- cials are searching for the individuals who early last Friday morning entered the ci- gar store and = pool room conducted by James P, Munley, at Sugar Notch, and stole his entire stock, including the cash register. When the proprietor opened his store at the usual opening time Friday morning, he was surprised to find it en< proximately $1000. + —Closing of the inter-county bridge be- tween Milton and West Milton was order- ed at a joint meeting of the Northumber- land and Union county commissioners. This action was taken following reports from the engineer in charge of the re building “of ‘the bridge that the structure is in a weakened condition and is highly As a result of the bridge be- the west. shore of the river will be meces~ sary. . Sallie Hulsizer, of Milton, on Sat- vy filed her claim in her suit against £3 oe Lonyivenis Power and Light com- \ pany as a result of the electrocution of her husband, Harry Hulsizer, in Milton, on the night of July 2nd, 1923. She asks $20,000 for the loss of her husband. Af the same time William Hulsizer, brother of the victim of the fatal accident, filed a claim for $3,000 damages. He narrowly escaped a like fate when he came in con- tact with the death-dealing guy wire. —“That’s how I would do it if a high- wayman would attack me,” said William Conrad, Shamokin High school Senior, on Sunday night, as he whipped out a big re- volver and fired a shot through Edward Vv allish’s right lung. The boy fell with a scream and was rushed to the Shamokin State hospital, where he is in a serious condition. Both boys are 19 years of age. Conrad said he didn’t know it was loaded.” Wallish begged for his friend’s release from custody. Conrad is still being held. —Fines on the installment plan are be- ing tried by a Bloomsburg justice of the peace to keep prisoners from going to jail for an indefinite length of time, but a jail sentence will be the punishment if the law violators are even one day late in pay- ing their installments. Six young men, charged with dynamiting Little Fishing creek, were fined $100 each and permitted to pay the fine in $15 monthly installments. Six months in jail is the penalty hanging over each if the money is not in the hands of the justice on the appointed day each month. —E. H. Wakefield, of Altoona, had a nar- row escape from death Friday when he came in contact with high tension wires while helping to install the Lilly sub-sta- tion of the Penn Central Light and Power company. Wakefield was knocked from the platform on which he was standing and fell ten feet through a number of other highly charged wires. He was uncon- scious when reached by fellow workmen. Dr. Lynch, of Cresson, treated the injured man and he was taken to his home in Al- toona. He is suffering from burns and contusions of the body, but his condition is not serious. —Mary Benchuk, 40 years of age, of But- ier township, Butler county, was sentenc- ed in criminal court last Thursday by Judge Henninger to pay the costs, a fine of $800, and serve one year in the Alleghe- ny county workhouse on a charge of vio- lating the liquor law. She had pleaded guilty to the second offense. The time for beginning the prison term was extended to December 1st, because of the fact that her husband, Nick Benchuk, now in the workhouse, will have completed a six months’ term for bootlegging by that time and can go home and run the farm and take care of two children while his wife takes her extended vacation, —M. A. Davis, Mifflin county detective, fell “victim to the chain gang, and spent Saturday night in the open with a prison- er. Farmers in isolated districts of Mif- flin county have been pestered by persons who have had automobiles wished on them in more prosperous times, and are now using them to collect vegetables and chick« ens in the dark. The farmers have pad- locked all machines parked along the | cornfield fence, and settled with the own- ers when they return for their car. The county detective was watching for a moon- shiner in’ Ort valley when a farmer, seeing msn lp sr and vote accordingly. —Subscribe for the “Watchman.” | his car parked, padlocked it, leaving the detective and his prisoner out all night. tirely vacant. The loss is estimated at ap. - Ne Tp py