INK SLINGS. ——A doctor says that motoring impairs health. It certainly has that - effect on pedestrians that are run down. —The Prince of Wales will go to Canada on Sunday and nobody knows how much progress he made in learn- ing to play poker. ——Life imprisonment may be as "hard a sentence as hanging to those young fiends in Chicago but it is not as satisfying to the public. —Surely the Prince is growing more democratic every day. At the inter- national polo match on Tuesday he actually “walked a hundred yards on a dusty path used by the public.” At least that is the way the sycophantic news writers, who are following his comings and goings, put it. —There is iiothing they can say against Davis and as they have dis- covered that LaFollette is taking many votes from Coolidge the Repub- licans have turned all of their bag "guns on the Senator from Wisconsin. ' Meanwhile we are going confidently on our way securing the votes that will make Mr. Davis President. —Eighty thousand people paid from ten to one hundred dollars a seat for a chance to see the negro, Wills, punch the stuffin’ out of Firpo. And if a hat had been passed among them to put a little stuffin’ into the millions of starving children in the Near East ‘the contributions wouldn’t have rang- ed more than from ten to one hundred «cents. —Talking about peaceful mobiliza- tion for Defense day, the free dance that wound up the ceremonies in Bellefonte was as peaceful, placid and pleasant a Terpsichorean diversion as any one could ask to participate in. Everybody was there from Dan to Beersheba and the hoi polloi comport- "ed itself with a dignity that the elite of recent years seems to have had no sense of whatever. —On Labor day Joe Boyer sacri- ficed his life to make a holiday for Central Pennsylvania, Jimmy Mur- phy set the pace that urged him on to it. Monday Jimmy gave his life to make a holiday for the populace at Syracuse, N. Y. Why do they do it? Yes, why do the speed demons, the aerial acrobats, the steeple jacks, the ~ human flies go on with their death- defying exhibitions? Only because Nero fiddles while Rome burns. —In really valuable service to the people of Centre county William H. Noll is outstanding among those who ‘have served as a County Commission- er. In the Legislature he would be equally valuable. He knows the coun- ty, he knows its needs and he knows that its people are the ones to be rep- resented in Harrisburg. His platform is to represent you——not some politic- al machine or some ‘self-seeking indi- viduals who are trying to exploit the masses for their own personal ag- grandizement. —An advertisement in the “Watch- man” today announce that some one in Tyrone will pay an experienced cook one hundred dollars a month—also room and board. If it were not for two things we'd consider chucking this job and grabbing off the snit that awaits some one up in the place that Jack Johnson’s oratory has made as famous as a blue ribbon once made Milwaukee. We're a good cook. We've had experience with cooking for large families. The only chefistical blunder we have ever made was when we undertook to put warmed up pie dough over on the boys as mashed po- tatoes. We'd take this job if the ad- vertiser had not specified that the ap- plicant must be either a female, a Slav or a Hungarian, neither of which we are. - —Mighty interesting to us is the result of recent experimentation by old Doc. Steinach, of Vienna. He's " been working on a substitute for that monkey gland operation. By tying up a certain little gland he says some- thing better than DeSoto was hunt- ing for down in Florida away back in 1500, will be assured to all of us. He’s tried it on a thousand or more rats with the result that on the old and de- crepit ones the fur came back and they grew fat, agile and pugnacious. We care nothing about being fat, agile or pugnacious, but if you know any- thing at all of how the mustica do- mestica pesters a warm, barren dome in September you’ll understand why we're interested in Doc. Steinach’s experiment. Years ago Doc. Munyon told us: “There is hope!” Can it be possible that tomorrow Doc. Steinach will make the fur come back on us. —When the late President Wilson confirmed Secretary Baker’s selection _ of Jack Pershing to head the Ameri- can expeditionary force in Europe, in 1917, the Republican press of the country fairly frothed at the mouth. It charged him with playing politics in the face of a National crisis be- cause he had not selected Maj. Gen, Wood. The President ignored the ravings of those who were studiously trying to harass him when he was carrying greater burdens than any American - President has ever been called upon to bear. Last Saturday President Coolidge gave the lie to the defamers of Wilson in his own party when in an unprecedented Executive order he said of Pershing: “* * * he demonstrated his capacity for the highest military functions and his se- lection as the commander of the American expeditionary forces in the world war was a natural conse- quence.” { pledges fo the VOL. 69. Mr. Davis’ Middle West Tour. | With an out-door meeting at Fort Wayne, Indiana, tomorrow evening John W. Davis, Democratic candidate for President, will complete a most successful tour of the Middle West. Within the period of three weeks he will have spoken in Wheeling, West Virginia; Columbus, Ohio; twice in Chicago, Ill.; Omaha and Lincoln, Ne- braska; Denver, Colorado; Cheyenne, Wyoming; Topeka, Kansas; Kansas City and Bunceton, Missouri; De- Moines, Iowa; Gary and South Bend, Indiana. Besides these major speech- es he delivered a great many short addresses from the car platform and at points where brief stops were made and enjoyed brief but encouraging visits with the people in various com- munities. Few candidates for President have undertaken as strenuous a campaign and none has measured up to the re- quirements of such a task more com- pletely. In the prime of life and in the enjoyment of perfect mental and physical health Mr. Davis has made of this arduous and exacting work a source of keen enjoyment. Every- where he has been received with cor- dial expressions of confidence and giv- en sincere assurances of enthusiastic support. Altogether his “swinging the circle” has been a heartening ex- perience both to himself and his par- ty managers and may justly be de- scribed as “a continuous ovation.” It was an auspicious beginning of the most important political campaign in the history of the country. In the character of the speeches of the candidate there is a difference be- tween this tour of John W. Davis and those of most of his predecessors. Like the speeches of Grover Cleveland these addresses reveal the matured purpose of a sincere man and able law- ver. Instead of the platitudes and specious promises of a politician, made to entice the voters, John W. Davis speaks the language of a states- man, sure of himself, certain of the power of his office and confident of his courage and ability to meet his obligations. He offers no apology for his past because it is justified, and his ‘op. the future are equal rights] and exact Justice to all, rich and poor. During all of the year 1923 there were 3490 dog licenses issued in Centre county. For the first seven months of 1924, or up to August 1st, there have been 8142 licenses issued. . Joy Over Maine Brief. The exultation of the Republican managers over the result of the elec- tion in Maine was short lived. An analysis of the vote and comparison of the gains has taken the joy out of chairman Butler and the White House “mutual admiration society.” The total vote of the State four years ago was 197,631, of which 186,355 were cast for the Republican candidates. The total vote this year was about 240,000, of which 103,000 were cast for the Democratic candidate and 136,- 000 for the Ku Klux representative on the Republican ticket. In other words, the Democratic vote increased 45,000, or nearly fifty per cent. while the Re- publican strength had no increase. The increase in the total vote of the State is ascribable mainly to the wom- en. Four years ago comparatively few women exercised the privilege of voting in Maine, as elsewehere, while this year a considerable proportion of them are taking an interest in politics. It may be assumed that the Republi- cans in Maine lost some votes because of their affiliation with the Ku Klux and that the Democrats had a corres- ponding gain. But it is reasonable to conclude that most of the women in that State voted the Democratic tick- et and to hope that the same trend will be shown throughout the country. The high cost of living issue touches them more directly than it hits the male voters. The Republican managers never made a stronger effort for a decisive result in Maine than they put forth this year. They appealed to New England prejudice on sectional grounds and to New England bigot- ry on religious and racial grounds. But their efforts were futile. Instead of gaining on the record of four years ago they lost heavily and the result is simply a “Dutch victory in Hol- land” which is without value or sig- nificance. The same ratio of Demo- cratic gain throughout the country will hold Coolidge to about the same strength in the electoral vote as that of Taft in 1912. That is, he will trail as a bad third with the vote of two or three States while Davis will have a majority. : —————ar————— ——The Republican National plat- form declares against “putting the government into business.” Yet the tariff tax has no other purpose. m———— A — ——1If every Democrat in Centre county will do his best this year it will require four figures to express STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. Party Strength in Pennsylvania. Some careless or casual observers of political events are inclined to question the sincerity of our predic- tion that LaFollette may carry the electoral vote of Pennsylvania. The Harding majority four years ago, 705,013, was of such appalling pro- portions as to daze the average po- litical statistician and almost compels him to acknowledge that the party is invincible in this State. But facts frequently make figures look foolish. For example, in 1904 the Republican candidate for President had nearly a million plurality in Pennsylvania and in 1912 the nomine€ of the same party ran a rather poor third in the race, with a considerable plurality for the Independent candidate. The plurality of about a million in 1904 fell off to some 300,000 in 1908, and the 1912 campaign was waged with unusual vigor and earnestness. It was practically agreed that the plu- rality of 1908 about correctly meas- ured the strength of the parties. But there were three candidates in the field in 1912 and the supporters of the Democratic and Independent candi- dates felt hopeful while the suppor- ters of the Republican candidate were confident of a victory. The day be- fore the election, Senator Penrose, then the party dictator, issued a state- ment claiming a majority of at least a quarter of a million for Taft. The returns showed Taft 273,305; Wilson, 395,619 and Roosevelt 444,894. In the pending campaign the lines are drawn very much as they were in 1912. LaFollette may not be equal to Roosevelt as a vote getter but his ap- peal to the people is strong and his running mate, Senator Wheeler is a helpful figure in the fight. Moreover, the conditions are much more in fa- vor of the Independent party for the corruption in ‘Washington during the last four years is very offensive to the nose of decency. We have not claim- ed a majority in the State for Davis, but if Coolidge is a trifle stronger than Taft, and the vote between the two more evenly balanced, such a thing might happen, for it may be set down ‘as certain that Davis will poll 100,000 more votes than Wilson got in 1912. — The renomination of Senator Couzens, in Michigan, and Senator cans give little promise of support for Coolidge. Impending Trouble in Harrisburg. There is trouble brewing between Governor Pinchot and the Public Ser- vice Board. Some time ago the Phil- adelphia Rapid Transit Co. filed with the Board notice of an increase of rates. After appointing a time for hearing the Board authorized the cor- poration to make the increase pending the investigation which was promised. The suffering Philadelphia public pro- tested vehemently against the action and appealed to one of the local courts for an order restraining the increase of rates. The court promptly grant- ed the injunction and declared a su- percedeas until the evidence is heard and a decision is made upon the mer- it of the case. { At this juncture Governor Pinchot, who was in a New York hospital as the result of a recent surgical opera- tion, “butted in.” He asked the Board why it adopted the course com- plained of and failing to get a satis- factory answer called the chairman of the Board to New York for a person- al interview on the subject. Mr. Ai- ney, president of the Board, promptly responded and a conference was held in the hospital quarters occupied by the Governor. What the result of this conference was or will be has not been revealed but speculation is running wild on the subject. Some of the Governor's friends predict a summary dismissal of all the members of the Board. Whether this result ensues or not it is certain that the Public Service Commission as at present constituted is unduly partial to the corporations. Some months ago an electrical railroad company . operating near the State capital was allowed to increase its rates from seven to eight cents with- out reasons satisfactory to the com- munity it served. More recently the Bell Telephone company was allowed an increase in rates that was hardly justified by the arguments presented in favor of the action and finally the Philadelphia Transit Co. has been fa- vored in the same way. It is time the matter were looked into. ——— a —————— ——The friends of Mr. Coolidge are unjust to the Ku Klux Klan in claim- ing a victory in Maine for the Presi- dent exclusively. ——What’s the use of discussing the constitutionality of the road bonds. Most of the money has been spent. S———————etse——— ——When you see it in the “Watch- our majority. man” you know it’s true. Capper, in Kansas, by the Republi-- Luring the Woman Voter. In the “drive” of the National Women’s party “for the election of four women members of Congress in Pennsylvania” there may be conceal- ed a large sized and exceedingly ven- omous serpent. The four districts in which the drive is to be staged are so overwhelmingly Republican and so se- curely entrenched, that there can be little or no hope of accomplishing the result aimed at or pretended to be de- sired. Two of the districts are in Philadelphia, where the Vare machine is omnipotent; one in the Bucks- Montgomery district, where Mr. Grundy enjoys a strangle hold, and the other in the Erie-Crawford dis- trict, where the Prohibition party has about as much chance as the proverb- ial snow ball in the lower region. The Republican managers are mor- tally afraid of the woman vote this year. The excessive tax on every ar- ticle of necessity or ornament used or worn by women has aroused among the female voters an opposition to the Grand Oil Party, that means disaster unless it is diverted. The high cost of living hits the housewife fairly in the face, whether she happens to be in the kitchen, the parlor or the bed chamber. Those of them who are in- clined to reason things out see that a large part of the cost of maintaining a home is ascribable to the tariff tax and in self-defense set their faces against it. If their votes are wasted on hopeless contests the tariff mon- gers are greatly relieved. The women voters in Pennsylvania and throughout the country can cut a big figure in the election this fall if they will exercise only half the intel- ligence in their voting that they show in the management of their household affairs. The tariff tax is the most po- tent influence in depriving them of pleasures which would cheer their | hearts, and the way to abate the evil is by voting the Democratic ticket from top to bottom. The Republican machine has been able, by subsidy or otherwise, to enlist the support of a number of women conspicuous in the suffrage and other women movements, far their candidates ‘and their. meas- ures. But the real interests: of: wom- _| en are on the other side. ——Any good statistician might find pleasant employment in figuring out what per centage of increase in marriages has been produced by the automobile. sm—— A —————— Big Court Next Week. The regular September term of court will be held next week and it promises to be one of the biggest terms held in some years. While there are over one hundred cases listed on the criminal docket probably less than half that number will reach the grand jury. The big majority of the cases are infractions of the present liquor laws and many of the defendants have already entered pleas of guilty and their cases disposed of. Several such cases, however, will be brought to tri- al unless the defendants change their mind and plead guilty before they are called to face the court. The big case of the week, naturally, will be the Musser murder trial. Ac- cording to reports eight or more at- torneys will be engaged in the prose- cution and defense, the greater num- ber having been engaged to defend the men charged with the killing of William Musser. ——Members of the Brooks-Doll post of the American Legion are look- ing around for a property now on the market with a view of purchasing the same as a permanent home for them- selves. They are not looking for a valuable property in the heart of the town but something at a moderate price which they feel they can finance without becoming a burden to them- selves or the community. As the re- sult of the drive made two years ago there is at present a fund of approx- imately $3,000 in the Bellefonte Trust company which can only be used for the purchase of a home for the post, and with this as a nucleus they feel that they can venture the purchase of a property at a price not to exceed $6,000 or $7,000. If a suitable build- ing cannot be found they are also con- sidering the purchase of a lot and erecting thereon a moderately priced home. More definite action will be taken at the next meeting of the post on Monday evening. S—— ee ——————— ——Nine members of the Pennsyl- vania National Guard are to be ap-. pointed cadets at the West Point mil- itary academy, and the selection will be made at an examination to be held in Harrisburg in November. Any Bellefonte soldiers who aspire to such an appointment should start training for the examination. —————— fp Po ————— ——The picnic and family reunion season is over but we still have in view the world’s series, football and the hunting season. BELLEFONTE, PA.. SEPTEMBER 19. 1924. NO. 37. That “Hell-and-Maria” Stuff, From the DuBois Express. ; General Charles G. Dawes was brought forward by the Republican party as its picturesque candidate. He was to make up in pyro cs what Coolidge lost in ihe Tanker It was not the fact that the ker had been director of the budget and had served with Owen D. Young in a private capacity as adviser to the rep- arations commission that fitted him for the post of second man on the na- tional ticket; those qualifications were very good; but not extraordi- nary. It was the theatrical in Dawes that made him stand out above others ‘who might run with Coolidge. He could swear with rare facility; he smoked his pipe upside down; and, although he had never done any fight- ing, being strictly a service of sup- ply man in France, there was a legend that he carried a gun in one hand and a flaming sword in the other. He was just the candidate to attract attention. And so, when former Governor Low- den, of Illinois, declined the privilege of keeping cool with Coolidge, the general was drafted b the Republi- can statesmen at Cleveland. ? Now, however, it seems that Dawes is most too much of a “he-man.” He scatters strong language in such riot- ous profusion and with so little judg- ment that he has struck terror to the hearts of those Republicans who are depending more on the Puritanism of Coolidge than anything else to win this election. in New York the other day shocked the G. O. P. editors. He damned everything in sight, taking meticulous care to play no favorites and to omit nothing. He shot strong language at the movie operators; he let it be known in no uncertain terms what he thought of being himself in the mov- ies; he strode up and down, puffing his absurdly tilted pipe and declaring that he would be just Dawes, no mat- ter whether he was a candidate for something or not. r It is a matter of wide comment that the Republican papers, in printing the story, garesally omitted the language employed by the doughty general and proceeded to dress up his remarks with words befitting the dignity of a vice Presidential candidate. In the papers he appeared as a very gentle, if a somewhat peevish, little states- man, anxious to befriend everybody, but unwilling to suffer: eityi too profuse. The way he sti o be himself and nothing else, ly ‘was pathetic. Fie Te 2 Arthur Brisbane, in commenting on the wild western manner in’ which General Dawes shot up the metropo- lis with profanity, warned the Cool- idge running mate that he could do his chief a great deal of harm by too much indulgence of his explosive na- ture. The orthodox Republican ed- itors seem to feel the same way. The Reichstag Gives In. From the Philadelphia Record. The issue before the Reichstag was put in such a form by Foreign 'Secre- tary Stresemann that there was noth- ing for the body to do but to support the government. party will save The general's conduct. ee ——. 112 children, | gether with 25 grand-children, 40 great SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Jesse E. Boyer won the crow killing contest which ended this month, in Indi- ana county. Seventeen men killed 772 ‘crows, fifty-four hawks and thirteen owls. -—I. Newton Taylor, assistant postmas- ter, will retire October 1st, after complef- ing twenty-seven years in the Mount Un- ion office, having served as postmaster and assistant postmaster. —A safety pin, which she swallowed on Friday morning, was removed from the throat of Mrs. Joel Peterman, of Benton, at the Bloomsburg hospital on Saturday. She was dressing a child when she placed the pin in her mouth and did not realize until Friday night that she had swallowed it. —The Liberty Brewing company’s plant at Tamaqua was sold on Saturday for $39,000 by Sheriff Jenkins to A. L. Shay, attorney for some of the creditors. The sale included stables and bottling plant. The company was founded by J. F. Mc- Ginty and for many years paid 20 per cent. dividends. —A coroner’s jury summoned to inquire into the death of Arthur Elliot, on Friday, in Penn township, Huntingdon county, after hearing witnesses found that his death was caused by injuries received when hit on the head with a club in the hands ef Archie Younkers in self defense and recommended that Younkers be dis- charged. —A number of leading farmers of Mount Joy and vicinity, at a meeting in Garber’s drug store, Mount Joy, organized a night school, with a course for studenis ranging from 16 to 50 years of age. The course will be given at the public school and will benefit many children who work in facto- ries during the day, as well as students from the rural districts. —Lying apparently unconscious on a re- ceiving table at the Mary M. Packer hos- pital at Sunbury, last Thursday, after he was struck by an automobile, N. B. Clark, young son of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin E. Clark, screamed, jumped from between two doc- tors and made a dash for freedom before ether could be administered. It was learn- ed later he was not seriously injured. —Members of the Girls’ League of the Altoona High school, with which virtual- ly all girl students are affiliated, have adopted a uniform dress for school wear. A jumper of serge, flannel or jersey, with blouses of pongee, broadcloth or some oth- er soft fabric, and ties to suit individual taste, will be worn after the first week in October. The idea is to promote economy. —Judge Thomas D. Finletter, of Phila- delphia, has approved a nolle pros being entered in the cases of the remaining de- fendants indicted in connection with the riot at Lilly, Pa. last spring, but who were not tried. The action taken was at ‘the request of District Attorney Weimer, of Cambria county. The riot was the out- growth of a Ku Klux Klan demonstration. —Mrs. Mary Amelia Beake Hinkle, aged 102 .years, died on Monday at her home in New Brighton, near Pittsburgh. She was born in Allentown, June 22, 1822. On her twenty-second birthday she was married to Joseph Hinkle and the two crossed the mountains, locating in Rochester, Pa. They later took up their residence at New Brighton. Mrs. Hinkle was the mother of three of whom survive, to- grand-children and 11 great great grand- children. > ’ a —John Giles, line foreman of the Delta Electric Power company, was electrocuted while at work at Delta, York county, Sat- urday. Sixty-six hundred volts passed through his body. He had just completed his work on the top of a pole, just above a transformer, and planning to descend when he slipped and threw an arm across an uncovered high tension wire in an effort to regain his balance. The wire crossed his arm just two inches above the top of his rubber glove. He remained suspended by his safety belt until fellow workmen took him down. —Murderers who soaked a man’s body in oil and then waited until it was cremated, in a vacant house near Indiana, Pa., so Still, no political | successfully covered their tracks that not its country without the slightest clew has been unearthed. Of- getting something for itself, and it is ficer Check, in making a search near the reported that what the National party burned building, found a newly dug grave got was the promise of representation in the Ministry. If some of the Min- isters are taken from that party they can supervise the execution of the laws passed to put the Dawes plan in operation. Perhaps that will make them more content. Very likely it will satisfy the people better. If a Minis- try of all parties, or of several par- ties, can be formed it would be more representative than a Ministry of only one or two parties, or blocs, in the phraseology of Continental parlia- ments. ; : What Minister Stresemann remind- ed the opposition of was ‘the necessi- ty of employing the present psycho- logical moment to consolidate peace, for if we now ignore British sympa- thy we must keep in mind the danger that the ideas of former Premier Poin- care might return.” That is what brought the Nationalists to the sup- port of the government, even if rep- resentation in the Ministry were thrown in to sweeten the dose. Ever since the peace conference Great Britain has been trying to re- strain France from militant action. In spite of English opposition the Ruhr was occupied, but the consent of Poin-' care to the two committees of investi- gation under the Reparation Commis- sion was due to the fact that the oc- cupation failed to bring in any money. Then a parliamentary vote cost Poin- care his Premiership. Herriot has been much less belligerent. The fail- ure of the London conference was averted by French concessions, which strengthened the ties of the Entente. Parliament and the French Cham- bers ratified the London agreement. France and England were on the best terms since the armistice. Germany, was faced by the united Allies and not by a single one. If Germany should refuse the Dawes plan it could no longer have the sympathy of England. On the other hand, France would have the Syipathy and probably the sup- port of England in any steps it should ake for the collection of the repara- tions. ‘If Germany were disposed to measure itself against France it was too late. It would have to deal with: the Allies collectively. : The Minstry understood this, and we suspect that the whole Reichstag did. But the Minstry needed the votes of the Nationalists, and it probably paid for them with places in the gov- ernment. o it : within thirty feet of the house among the underbrush. The grave was about four by six feet and about a foot and a half deep. A big stone had halted further dig- ging. Rather than dig a second grave, it is believed, the murderers robbed their au- tomobile of sufficient oil to soak the body and cremate it. —Announcement has been made by Wil- liam C. Boardman, of the New York Con- struction companey, that his concern had been awarded a contract for the erection of an automobile factory between Blooms- burg and Berwick on four farms on which options were taken a month ago. The buildings will be from 60 to 200 feet long and from one to four stories high. He did not reveal the name: of the automobile company and efforts to learn the concern’s name have so far proven fruitless. The property includes about 300 acres and L. B. Ketcham, of the construction company, said $10,000,000 would be spent. —Seized with a stroke of apoplexy as his train was speeding along between Douglassville and Monocacy, shortly after 8 o'clock last Thursday evening, Edward Connelly, of Port Carbon, engineer of train No. 9, Reading flyer, between Philadelphia and Pottsville, managed to bring his train to a stop before he collapsed and fell to the floor of his cab. Fireman Leiby took the train into Reading where a relief en- gineer was furnished and Connelly remov- ed to the Reading hospital where he is re- ported to be in a serious condition. The train is one of the heaviest operated by the Reading in that section and usually « has from ten to twelve coaches south of Reading. ! —W. J. Barron, of Port Carbon, last Sat- urday dug up some old gold coins in his cellar which totalled $800. It is believed they were buried more than half a century ago, from the dates.’ The gold was in an old firkin and was found in the prepara- tions Barron was making to enlarge his home. It is not known to whom the mon- ey belonged, but it is certain that the own- er is dead and Barron has been informed by a lawyer that it is legally his. Barrom has remarked that he hoped to get some money to meet the cost.of the improve- ments just before he uncovered the gold. He is a Philadelphia and Reading passen- ger brakeman between Pottsville and Sha- mokin. Some of the coins are so ancient that. there is a premium upon them and with the gold were some old half dollars, one of which is dated 1829 and a big Eng- lish copper penny dated 1700.