INK SLINGS. ——We beg to assure the world that the resignation of A. P. Moore, Ambassador to Spain, will not entire- ly wreck the diplomatic service. "If you want a Judge on the Bench who will speed up justice and save you in the taxes you have to pay for main- taining our courts vote for W. Harri- son Walker. —If you want a District Attorney who knows the procedure of the office and who won't be compelled to call in assistance in the prosecution of the Commonwealth’s cases vote for Wil- liam Groh Runkle. —Vote for the lawyer who has made his reputation at the bar on sound ad- vice, attention -to detail and everlast- ing determination to ‘get the things of today cleaned up today and ready for the problems of tomorrow. —Judge Dale seems to have discovered that he is an “independent Republican” only after his ruse of be- ing “the Peoples’ candidate” failed to fool the Democrats into making. him their nominee at the primaries. —The Republicans who are disgust- ed with what their own party organ- ization did by way of corrupting the ballot in Philadelphia at the last pri- maries are with us in this campaign. Let us stick together and help them give machine politics a lesson. —A change in the political complex- ion of our courts is just as wholesome to the legal system as a change is to our physical being. We haven't had a Democrat on the bench in Centre county for ten years. Let's try one for the next ten. Vote for Walker. ' Show us the lawyer at the Centre county bar who is.always pleading for more time in which to bring his cause to trial and we’ll show you one who is certain to be against W. Harrison Walker for Judge.. If you happen to be the client of one of this kind he will probably advise you to vote against Mr. Walker because he doesn’t want any one on the bench of the “do-it- now” type. —Let us tell you this. Neither W. Harrison Walker, William Groh Run- kle nor James C. Condo has any ma- chine, clique or commandeered organ- ization back of them. No assessments on office holders or plums from the public purse are held out as a lure for them. They are not bound by any ob- ligations, either promised or implied, in this campaign. They are running on their own, pure and simple, hoping that the peoplé will realize that they offer the only’ escape from machine domination of the government of Cen- tre county. — What every State and the Nation. needs most is a law making it a crime, punishable by disqualification from ever holding office again, for any Leg- islator or Congressman attempting to put & new statute on the books for the next ten years. The country is hope- lessly enmeshed in a maze of legal en- actments that are so confusing, need- lessy irritating and often so grotesque that the public mind laughs them all to scorn. What we need most is law killers not law makers when we send men or women to represent us in Har- risburg or Washington. The fearful increase in crime in this country is not because of too few laws. It is because of too many. They overlap, nullify one another and offer too many alleys into which the violator can run. — Rebecca Naomi is home and mar- shalling her forces. They held meet- ings at State College, on Monday night, and as was to have been expect- ed endorsed Judge Dale. As we said last week she’s in an awful hole. After repudiating John Love for District Attorney three years ago she’s afraid to do it again because she would soon- er see him elected than William Groh Runkle. She’s the kind of temperance advocate who will make a choice be- tween two Republicans, as was the case when Arthur Dale and John Love were in the running. But when it comes to a choice between a Republi- can whom she fought in 1922 and a Democrat, she’s for the Republican. Rebecca has finally been discovered by the people whom she has been ex- ploiting. —Of course when a man is a candi- date for office it is to be expected that everything that he has done from the days when, as an infant, he regurgi- tated milk up to the moment he sallies forth in the political arena will be pa- raded in review. Much has been said of W. Harrison Walker’s having repre- sented liquor license applicants, away back in the dark ages. What if he did? Mr. Walker is a lawyer. All he has to sell is his professional services. And every lawyer is sworn to give his best service to any legitimate cause entrusted to him. The liquor business was legalized then and was legitimate. Mr. Walker had nothing to do with granting the licenses his clients ap- plied for. That was up to the court. He was exactly in the same position that the “Watchman” is today. We have advertising space to sell. Any- thing legitimate will be advertised in the “Watchman.” On pages three and six you will find fulsome praise of Mr. Walker’s opponents, paid for by the inch. Our readers can take it or leave it. Just exactly as the courts were privileged to take or leave the applications of the people he repre- sented years ago. God save the coun- try! God give us men and women with broad enough vision to see things as they are and not as pin heads are made believe them to be by malevo- lent gossip mongers. Doman STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 70. Confusion Causes Alarm. Republican leaders in this State are considerably alarmed on account of the confusion in the party ranks. The present signs point unmistakably to a free-for-all fight for the nomination for Governor next year and a four or five cornered struggle for the Sena- torial nomination. Until recently it was confidently believed that Senator Pepper and Governor Pinchot would have the Senatorial field to themselves and that each, or the friends of each, would select a candidate for Governor, thus limiting the contention to a nar- row field. It is true that there was some talk of a Vare candidate for Sen- ator, for it is well known that both Pepper and Pinchot are anathema to the Philadelphia boss. But the wet element in the party has projected the liquor question into the equation and made it probable that a third candidate for Senator will be entered. In that event either J. Hampton Moore, of Philadelphia, or Ralph Strassburger will be chosen to carry the wet flag. Both these men are ambitious and the friends of Moore claim that he has earned the favor of the party by long service. Neither Pepper nor Pinchot has been long enough in party work to chal- lenge this proposition, while Strass- burger has done nothing in the wide world except deefat Pinchot for dele- gate to the Republican National con- vention last year. Still that may have been a great service. Nobody knows what might have happened if Gifford had got into that convention. In this state of confusion about the only hope left is that after the elec- tion of local officers this fall the lead- ers will get together and by process of | elimination reduce the number of as- pirants for Senator and Governor to a number that will permit easy manipu- lation. There are no outstanding lead- ers to enforce obedience to orders with respect either to measures or men. But it is expected that party exigen- cies will influence some and the party whip others to a peaceful agreement upon two candidates for each office, and party loyalty hold the loser to the support of ‘the winner. But bolting is ‘bécomitig, = frequent if not fashiona- ble practiees and the’ future is not bright. % There are approximately 22,000 registered voters in Centre county. At the recent primaries there were 9632 votes cast, which is less than half of the total registration. The Democratic vote at the primaries was 48% of the total party registration and the Republican was 46%. The election should bring out a larger per- centage of the total vote, but it is doubtful if it will reach even 756%. Last Resort a False Alarm. The last resort of the Republican machine is an appeal to the assumed miserly impulses of the average voter. Dreading an extra session of the Gen- eral Assembly as the condemned mur- derer dreads the hangman, the servile organs of the vote-stealing organiza- tion are holding before the public eye an exaggerated picture of an enor- mous expense bill. An extra session, the fawning Philadelphia Public Ledg- er declares, will cost the tax payers of the Commonwealth the enormous sum of “a million dollars or more,” and ad- mitting the crimes of the machine, protests that is too much to pay for a cure. As a matter of fact an extra session will cost less than half that amount unless needlessly prolonged by the machine. Even half a million dollars is a good deal of money but if the expenditure of ten times that much would achieve such reforms in electoral legislation as would guarantee fair elections and honest returns of the vote, it would be “dirt cheap.” For nearly a quarter of a century the elections in this State have been controlled by the Republi- can machine through fraudulent votes and false returns and by equally de- vious methods untold millions have been taken from the pockets of the tax payers and distributed among the fa- vorites of the organization. This is not only robbing the people of their property but stealing from them their rights as citizens to a voice in the government of the State. The Republican machine is as re- sourceful as it is atrocious but in its appeal to public parsimony it has “o’er stepped the mark.” The people of Pennsylvania are prudent but not miserly. They are willing to pay and pay liberally for just purposes and they understand ‘that the enactment of legislation that will guarantee fair elections and honest returns will be worth the expense of a special session of the General Assembly which will not exceed half a million dollars un- less the machine emissaries in the Legislature prolong the session in or- der to defeat the purpose. If the call for an extra session is withheld it need not be on account of the expense. The taxpayers will cheerfully “pay the freight.” BELLEFONTE, PA.. OCTOBER 30. 1925. An Appeal to Reason. Whatever may be the outcome of the election next Tuesday—win or lose—Mr. Walker will have shown the people of Centre county how earn- est energy can be put into a judicial campaign without lessening the dig- nity with which a contest for that high honor has always been supposed to be conducted. Almost single handed he has made a fight that must command the ad- mi-ation, even of his adversaries. For four months he has been on the hustings, day and night, and is still going. Such energy, such a will to work cannot but have impressed the people who know that there is much to be desired by way of speeding up legal procedure. He loves work, thrives on it and is never happier than when in it up to the elbows. We all know that man is dominated largely by his habits and that habits once formed are rarely shaken off. Because we know this to be the fact we may be certain that when Mr. Walker goes on the Bench in Cen- tre county the energy he has shown all through his life will be concentrat- ed on the speedy handling of all court business. It will be of inestimable value to litigants and tax payers, as well, for keeping the wheels of jus- tice turning means reduction of suspense and reduction of expense. Besides showing the quality of energy in his campaigning our candi- date has demonstrated to the people that he is broad and fair. He has neither manufactured nor peddled stories about his opponents and we know has courageously refuted such of them that he knew to be untrue when silence might have meant a vote or so for himself. Another quality, courtesy and consideration, has made itself known in this grinding campaign that he is winding up. The average man be- comes irritable under excessive work. Not so, Mr. Walker. Those who may meet him today will find him just as courtly and considerate as he was the day he entered the contest for Judge. That he is self-reliant is proven by a glimpse into his career. He has become a successful lawyer purely by dint of his own efforts. Neither political pull, nor party plums have made the way to a place in the sun easier for him. His position today, not only as the candidate of our par- ty but as a lawyer of ability, has been won wholly because of his reliance on himself. His determination to do things and get somewhere. All of these qualities, energy, broad-mindedness, courtesy and con- sideration, and self-reliance are fundamental attributes most desirable in the character of a man who aspires to be our Judge. There can be no gainsaying any of them so far as Mr. ‘Walker’s possession of them is con- cerned. He has them all. He has shown them to you in the conduct of his campaign. There are only three other qualities that we regard as nec- essary for a full rounding out of the equipment a man should have who is to sit in judgment over us. They are caution, courage and a working "knowledge of the law. Mr. Walker has all of i AE aE tieae WE Rnow that He has caution because he has always made it a practice to study and weigh well any step he pro- poses making . We know that he has courage because he fights with de- termination for anything that he believes to be right or helpful. We know that he has a working knowledge of the law because he has been studying it for twenty-nine years and wouldn’t be where he is today in his profession if he hadn’t. Equipped with energy, broad-mindedness, courtesy and consideration, self-reliance, caution, courage and a working knowledge of the law who is there to say that W. Harrison Walker would not make an exception- ally qualified Judge of our courts? He can be elected if we Democrats help the Republicans who are ea- ger to join us in elevating him to the Bench. Our party ought to be proud of a candidate who is beholden to nothing other than his own qual- ifications for the position he has attained. It wasn’t a regrettable death and a self-seeking Governor, nor was it the exigencies of machine politics that made W. Harrison Walker the nominee of our great party for Judge. It was recognition of all the ster- ling qualities that we have recited. Vote for him. He offers the voters of Centre county the most to be desired in a Judge. The Peace of Locarno. At Locarno, Switzerland, a week ago, a pact was signed by representa- tives of five European powers, which not only solidifies those powers in commerce and industries, but outlaws war. For this great achievement the United States entered into the world war in 1917 and sacrificed hundreds of thousands of lives and billions of treasure. But in the final process the government and people of the United States had no hand or voice. On the contrary the language expressed by some of those concerned in the accom- plishment may be construed as a ges- ture friendly to the United States. M. Briand, of France, in what is said to have been the most brilliant speech of his career, said it “is the beginning of a new epoch, an epoch of co-operation and friendship.” When the armistice was signed in | 1918 the United States was freely and | cordially acknowledged by the whole world as the dominant influence in the splendid movement for enduring peace throughout the world. Our. armies . more than any other element checked , the vaulting ambition of the German ; Caesar and drove the German Kaiser into exile. Following this great serv- ice to human liberty President Wood- row Wilson took his place in the coun- cils of civilization and guided the Con- gress of Versailles to an agreement which made for universal peace for all time. But personal malice and polit- ical prejudice intervened through the instrumentality of the Republican party in Congress and defeated the benevolent purpose. Seven years of suffering has been the harvest of this misadventure. During all the time since the adop- tion of the Versailles treaty the best efforts of the finest minds'in Europe and America have striven zealously to bring the government of the United States into concurrent effort to com- plete the work. But it has proved un- availing, and now the powers of Eu- rope have taken it upon themselves with the result that our government, which ought to be at the head direct- ing the operations, is bowled out com- pletely and Europe is in agreement which may easily be used to the prej- udice of the people of this country in every way. It may not be so employ- ed but commercial rivalry is a danger- ous thing and the source of much trouble. It has caused more bloodshed than any other cause of quarrel, and such rivalry is certain to develop. —Page Mr. Know-it-all. We'd like to ask him where the pins go to. Three million pounds of copper are used up every year in the manufac- ture of pins and did you ever see a kid hauling a play-wagon load of old pins to the junk dealer? rts Ap ——Literally = interpreted a recent statement of the President would mean that if parents in Philadelphia had performed their full duty in the past there would be no reason for ex- tending the leave of General Butler now. ——Let us hope the controversy be- tween Secretary Mellon and Governor Pinchot, which occupied considerable newspaper space a few months ago, will not be renewed. ' It was neither interesting nor informing. ——The only real reason for hur- rying payments on our public debt is politics and ‘the only beneficiary is Calvin Coolidge. gi pone ——There is not an “air man” in the Mitchell court martial and proba- bly few who will understand why Mitchell spoke. NO. 43. The Song of a Tie. Some men long for the soothing touch of lavender, cream and mauve But the ties I wear must possess the glare of a red-hot kitchen stove. The things I read and the things I do are sensible, sane and mild, I like calm hats, and J don’t wear spats but I like my neckties wild! Oh, give me a wild tie, brother, one with a cosmic urge, A tie that will swear and rip and tear, ‘When it sees my old blue serge. Oh, some will say that a gent’s cravat should be seen, not heard, But I want a tie that will make men cry and render their vision blurred. I yearn, I long, for a tie so strong it will take two men to tie it, If such there be, go bring it to me; Whatever the price, I'll buy it. Oh, give me a wild tie, brother, one with a lot of sins. A tie that will blaze with a hectic gaze, Down where the vest begins. — Author Unknown. rb fy fn emt Family Discipline. From the Altoona Tribune. A prominent educator was asked a few days ago as to what he thought were the principal causes for the prev- alence of crime. He named a number of causes but the one that occurred to him first was the disposition on the part of the young people to demand a greater freedom from the family gov- ernment. In the case of the great majority, this enlarged freedom may produce no serious results. But as a rule it will be generally said, by the older folks anyway, that the boys and girls have more freedom than they know what to do with. Even if many of them do abuse such freedom, the majority of course do not go to any great lengths. After a few more years when they seem a little pronounced and noisy, and per- haps too lax in certain matters, the, commonly settle down and go to wor with steady indi . But there is a certain element of boys who escape from parental control at an early age. There families are not able to main- tain any athority over them. They real the | Streets 8 late hours x the night. ey seek society through the. toughest leaders of their gs, There they hear a great deal 5 » EOE hey making money than the slow path of patient industry. They see many things they want and they know it will take them a long time to get them if they just depend on the money they can earn. They learn from various sources of all kinds of lawlessness. When some tempter sug- gests to them that it will be easy for them to get money by some deed of evil many of them are in just the mood to accept the suggestion. The trouble began months or years before, Shien family government lost hold on em. Wars Alarums Again. From the Pittsburgh Post. It is ironical that just as Europe was rejoicing over the results of the Locarno conference as constituting a great step toward permanent peace trouble should flare upon the Greco- Bulgar border. But that’s the way it goes in this imperfect world. As the statesmen of the allied and associated nations in the great war were wearing their lives out trying to get some peace ideals to take hold they were taunted by their critics with the statement that a dozen or more little wars ap- peared to be following the big. But the peace work began to tell eventual- ly and finally all the wars appeared to be brought to an end. Undoubtedly the accord just reached at Locarno will be a safe guard against the spread of war from the Balkans. Meanwhile there is the hope that the troubles between Greece and Bul- garia may be brought to an end quickly. Such border outbreaks are more or less frequent. It probably will turn out that the Bulgars who fired on the Greek outposts were ir- responsible bands, such as those which in 1922 got their country into trouble with Greece, Rumania and the Serb- Croat-Slovene state. As the League of Nations was able to prevent war then it may be able to again. With the peace sentiment so strong on the tide of the Locarno rejoicing, this threat of war may not get much further than the border clash stage. Election Reforms. From the Wilkes-Barre Record. As far as the corrupt practices act is concerned, it is a dead letter. Fil- ing reports of expenditures is an un- qualified farce. Nobody ever contests the veracity of the reports and no can- didate is ever disqualified. What the Governor has in mind is to devise ways. and means by which the fraudulent practices going on in spite of the work of 1906 can be at- tacked. Experience has dictated cer- iain changes that promise good re- sults. Colonel “Billy” Mitchell. From the Norristown Times Herald. Col. Mitchell is to face an army court, but that’s nothing; think of the poor army court facing Mitchell. - —————— Ap ———————— ——Possibly’ the Tener gubernator- ial boom is keeping quiet because there is nothing in sight to make noise about. that does them _.no goad. pt the idea that there are easier ways of | 'SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —While her husband poured buckets of water on flames which had forced their way into a bedroom from the kitchen be- neath, Mrs. Robert Baldwin, of Lancaster, early on Monday snatched her four chil- dren from their beds and carried them through smoke filled rooms to the street. —A husband is boss in his own home, Judge U. P. Rossiter, of Erie, ruled on Monday when he discharged George Grego~ ry, who was brought into court on a charge of refusing to support his wife. Gregory alleged that his wife insisted up- on keeping boarders against his will and that he refused to pay the rent. ru —Charged with manslaughter in connec- tion with the death of Thomas F. Goodfel- low, killed in an automobile collision Sat- urday, Robert J. Belling, of Duncansville, and Randel A. Mock, of Tyrone, were oR Monday held in heavy bail for a hearing. They were in the car which crashed into the auto in which Goodfellow was return- ing from a funeral. —What is said to be the largest steam boiler in the world is now being intsalled in Pittsburgh, by a company which sup- plies heating service in the down-town business district. There are six miles of four-inch tubing in the heating and con- densing tubes of this apparatus, with a heating surface of 82,750 square feet, about threa-fourths of an acre. —One of the nursing staff of the Lewis- town hospital gave a pint of blood on Sat- urday in a blood transfusion to save the life of Miss Thressa Stayrook, a patient at the institution. The call was issued by Dr. H. C. Cassidy, but there were no of- fers until one of the nurses said she would submit to the operation providing her name was kept a secret. The nurse stood the loss of blood well and the patient is ime proving nicely. —Paul Blose, 40 year old civil engineeer who was found, an amnesia victim, in a cave near Pittsburgh a week ago, ended his life on Sunday by leaping from the window of a hospital where he was taken following the discovery of his plight by a mushroom hunter. When found Blose was very sparsely clothed and during his con- finement in the hospital never was certain how he came to be in the cave. He disap- peared July 20, last, while on his way to work at the Pittsburgh Coal company. —Judge John D. Shafer, in Common Pleas court at Pittsburgh, on Monday made an order revoking the adoption of the two year old daughter of Charles Ba- Ker, of Hollidaysburg, by Mr. and Mrs. Ho- mer Guy, uncle and aunt of the child. After the court annulled the adoption proceed- ings, Baker made application for a writ of habeas ‘corpus to secure possession of the child as the court’s ruling dissolving the. adoption did not deal with custody of the little girl. A hearing was set for next Fri-, day. —The Public Service Commission has “reluctantly” dismissed a complaint made by Mrs. Mary Temple, of Spangler, against the Northern Cambria Water company, in’ which it was sought to have mains extend- ed as three families have lost their source of supply by wells drying up, owing to mining operations. The company offered to place a hydrant near the houses, but: this -was not satisfactory. The line asked would cost $1,500 without cost of rock ex- n and the return to the company is —Five fishermen from the vicinity of Williamsburg, Blair county, C. A. Patter- son, W. A. Ryde, Fred, John and C. R. Fluke, were arrested last summer by game warden Jesse E. Haffly, of Blair county, charged with catching in Raystown branch nine bass less than nine inches long. Jus- tice Kelly, of Huntingdon, fined them $450 and costs. Their appeal came up in court at Huntingdon last week and the prose- cutor, game warden Haffly, not appearing, the defendants were discharged and the of- ficer penalized with the costs. —A special open season for hunting deer in Adams, Cumberland, Franklin, Hunt ingdon, Mifflin and Perry counties Decem- ber 18, 19, 21 and 22 was announced last week by members of the State Game Com- mission. A special license will be requir- ed for this hunting. The open season was declared to eliminate deer which are caus- ing damage to farmers and orchardists in those counties and the commission sug- gested that the huntingsbe done near the farms and orchards which have been dam- aged. There are several hundred surplus deer in each county. —“Cattle rustling,” long regarded in Pennsylvania as a thrill confined entirely to the movies, developed in reality near Kittanning, Armstrong county, when Har- ry Coulter discovered that his entire herd of milch cows had been stolen from the pasture field near his home, and probably hurried into Ohio or to some other western point of slaughtering. The cows were missed when Coulter went to the pasture field to get them, and a diligent search failed to locate them. Evidences were found to indicate that the cows had been loaded upon automobile trucks and whisk- ed away toward the Ohio State line. —Confessing to the theft of $900 from the postoffice funds at Tyler, Clearfield county, James Lesneski, postmaster, was arrested in Boston last Thursday, after having been absent from Tyler since Octo- ber 10. When he left Tyler, Lesneski stat- ed that he was going to be gone for a day or two, but did not state his destination. After three days elapsed, the shortage was discovered, and an acting postmaster was . placed in charge. Last Thursday while in an intoxicated condition Lesneski was ar- rested in Boston on a charge of disorderly conduct. Later he confessed to the embez- zlement of $900 from the Tyler postoffice. A local postal inspector left immediately for Boston and transferred Lesneski to Pittsburgh, where he will await trial in the next term of the Federal court. —Sharing the hospitality of the automo- bile of Walter L. Livengood, owner of the Sun Coal Co. mine at High House, nime miles southeast of Uniontown, a man said by Livengood to be Joe Miscovich, an em- ploye of the company, on Saturday held up Livengood at the point of a revolver and escaped with a payroll estimated at between $1,500 and $2,500, and escaped in the coal operator’s car. Livengood says he met Miscovich in Uniontown and that at the latter’s request he was made a passen- ger in the automobile in which the payroll was’ being conveyed to the mines. At a lonely section of the road near the coal plant, Livengood says Miscovich asked that the auto be stopped, and the driver did so. In a flash the passenger put-a gun in Liv- engood’s face and demanded his revolver, the operator says.’ Unarmed, Livengood then was forced to alight and stand by while the robber drove away with his car and his cash.