The r that P. Gray Meek edited and published for fifty-seven years and now published by his Estate at the Watchman Printing House, Bellefonte, Pa. Pub weekly, every Friday iia, F215 a dale male - a ru "change of address always A Ee 5.50 Be ae bublaher be Pala ahver Cexpiraton of year - E90 Lolfed a med In a re w Rls NOUY 3 ng "Wanghinn™ win date subscription oust nd w BELLEFONTE, PA, DEMOCRATIC COUNTY TICKET Sheriff County Commissioner JOHN M. BOOB JOHN 8. SPEARLY of Millheim of Spring Township J. VICTOR BRUNGART County Treasurer of Rebersburg ROBERT F. HUNTER of Bellefonte County Auditor IRVIN A. MEYER of Coburn CLARENCE A. YEARICK of State College Prothonotary 8S. CLAUDE HERR of Bellefonte Recorder of Deeds Coroner D. A. McDOWELL DR. WALTER J. KURTZ of Spring Township of Howard Register of Wills JOHN L. WETZLER of Milesburg County Surveyor J. THOMPSON HENRY of Huston Township : For Y YEARS AGO WE MADE THE BED. LET US LIE IN IT. In the days of the Punic wars Caius Graccus was to old Greece and Rome, just what Herbert Hoover is to the United States and Gifford Pinchot to Pennsylvania today. Caius gave corn and soon had cities overflowing with idlers and beggars. The President of our country, the Goveronr of our State have been running hither and yon for a year to find a legislative panacea for a country that has no malignant malady, a country that is suf- fering only from nerves that have been strained by excesses of every form. The President can appoint commissioners until there are no more eligibles for such duty left. The Governor can call extra ses- sions until the crack of doom and nothing more will be accomplished than Caius Graccus accomplished when he threw corn to the Greeks and Romans, The U. 8. A,, the world, is learning a lesson today. Anything that the President or the Governor might do by way of urging pater- nalistic legislation will only be spreading corn and circumventing the lesson that was given to the world centuries ago when Sodom and Gomarrow were wiped from the face of the earth. Drunk with wealth our country has strayed a long way from the ideals for which its founders fought. Man made laws can be nothing more than sops to those who will not look for the real reasons for present conditions, What is needed is moral fibre in our citizenry. Sense to know that what we are going through is the consequence of our own improvidence. And courage enough to face it without groveling at the feet of our President and our Governor; beseeching them to be as unwise as Caius Graccus, THE COUNTY NEEDS A VICTOR BRUNGART. It would be a very wholesome thing for the taxpayers of Centre County if J. Victor Brungart were elected to the Board of County Commissioners, Someone is needed in that office to call a halt on the riot of spending and with the courage to stand up and fight against outside domination of the business office of the taxpayers of Centre county. Mr. Brungart is just such a man. If he is made a County Commissioner there will be an end of this thing of using public money to pamper political favorites, He's a fighter, just the kind who will want to know why and for what any dollar in the county treasury should be paid out. ‘There is too much of this “Oh, that's all right” stuff in the management of the county's business. It might be all right to those who are getting theirs but it isn't all right to the people who will go without clothes enough to keep them warm this winter in order to save their prop- foes from being posted for tax sale in the corridors of the court ouse, How are men who are desperate as to where they might get even bread and molasses to feed their families with tomorrow going to get money enough to pay taxes for wax to polish the court house floors, for voting machines that a Pinchot satellite shipped to Phil- ipsburg the other day, law books in $2400.00 lots that litter the floor of the library in the court house, for salaries of officials as useless as fifth wheels to wagons? ‘ ; God save the county. Victor Brungart can't do it alone, but he'll try. We know he is free enough from political entanglements, to be under the thumb of nobody. We know he is clever enough to forestall any attempt to put anything over on him. We know he has been so successful in his own occupation as a farmer that the salary of the office is of little consequence to him. We know that all he wants is a chance to show the taxpayers of Centre county that their business should be managed for their benefit, instead of that of building up a machine, whether it be one of his own party or that of his opposition, ~The ides of November are approaching and county candidates are hot-footing it day and night. We hope that none of them are troubled with “dogs” as mean as Mr. Andrew H. Brown would have his radio audience believe his are. Whatever they do at the coming extra session of the Legisla- ture we hope some way can be devised for getting the State's help to the needy without taking fifty or sixty cents out of every dollar for cost of distribution, —Thomas A. Edison was an exceptional genius, The Watch- man has no thought of undertaking to dim a single memory of his wonderful usefulness to mankind, but does anyone suppose that we would not have had electric light, the phonograph or any other of his revolutionizing inventions had he never been born? —D. A. McDowell needs no praise from us. His uncomplain- ing acceptance of physicial affliction that would have knocked nine out of every ten other men dewn into the mendicant class, his strug- gle and success under such a handicap, his record as tax collector of Spring township are things that those of us who have no cross such as he bears can view with nothing less than admiration. Let us give “Sandy” the office he seeks. He would be an excellent Record- er and, being a Scotchman, we know that two terms in that would insure him a much needed competence for his old age, IN CENTRE COUNTY Items taken from the Watchman issue of October 28, 1881, their owners thought a Bought they £ riekn Bought. then them | At the annual mee Bellefonte Y. M. C, A. ton S. Balley; treasurer, J. W, hart; directors, F. W. Crider, Abram 'S. Valentine, Dr. J. W. Rhone, F. Potts Green, W. 8. Zeller and James A. Beaver. The Association then proceeded to the work of selecting its first general secretary in the person of J. Willard iller, at present principal of the High school at Shickshinny. ~The inaugural meeting of the Philipsburg Driving Park Associa- tion was held four s last week. There were a lot of entered in the races and large crowds ent to be thrilled by their speed. The half-mile foot race for a purse of $100.00, was won by John Rey- nolds, Abe C. Steele was second and | Wesley Hargrave third, ~Mr. Abe Weber, of Howard, was in Bellefonte yesterday. He brought his wife and baby up to have their picture taken, - Wolf, one of Bellefonte's brag tinners, is now making a spe- clalty of setting up stoves and get- ting spouting ready for the winter. —Gotleib Haag has completed his grist mill at Pleasant Gep and it is ‘now running full blast in custom grinding. —Soclal circles among our Jewish fellow citizens are considerably ex- ‘cited by the approaching nuptials of Mrs. Dora Sussman, the fair widow of the late Abraham Sussman, to ‘Abraham Hirsh, a wealthy merchant | and realtor of Lancaster, -—Miss Ada Gill, 18 old i year daughter of Amos Gill, of Gilltown, | near Pleasant Gap, died last Sunday from typhoid fever, ~Did you notice the big, new eggstove in the Bush house office? It is a regular furnace. ~~New and second hand buggies ‘and spring wagons are being offered at bargians at Bartruff's carriage works on Bishop street. ~-A nail works for Bellefonte ap. pear to be a certainty. Gen. Beav- er has announced that work on the buildings will be started shortly. ~Mrs. Hoop, of Philipsburg, ac- companied by her niece, Miss Alice | Flegal, and Dr. John McGirk, left ‘week before last for Idaho Springs, Col,, where she will join her hus. band Dr. Hoo who has operations in t section, Girk made the trip just to see the country, | A charter has been | the building of what is to be known as the “Nittany Valley railroad.” It is to be a narrow gauge line four miles long and will run from the Annesly ore bank to Bellefonte, through Armor's gap and connect. ing with the Bald age valley R. R. near Cowdrick's brick yard. —Luther Rishel, of GQ town- ship, and D. C. Keller, Centre Hall, have just returned from Can- ada where they purchased a cars load of full blooded Leicester lambs for stock in Centre county. I —Lucy, the two ear old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Dunklebarger, of Pleasant Gap, choked to death last Saturday morning. She had gotten some popcorn in her windpipe and it could not be got ten out. HOWARD. Mrs. Stella V. Williams entertain ed the members of the Civic club at her home, Wednesday evening. Dr. and Mrs. J. J. Kilpatrick and daughters, Edna and Kathyrn, of Bellefonte, were Sunday guests of Mrs. Stella V. Williams. Mrs. Claude Confer is spending this week with her husband, at Ket: tle Creek, where he has been em: ployed the past several weeks. Mrs. Mary DeHaas fell down stairs at her home, Tue morn. ing, and fractured her I arm near the wrist, j Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nata oi Stn soa’ Hw sind e, e, were Su - /lers at the home of Mr and Mrs. H. T. McDowell. | The Woman's Home Missionary | society of the Methodist church held their ar monthly meeting at the home Mrs. W. C. fhompson, last Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. Robert Benison, who has been a surgical patient in the pris vate hospital, at Lock Haven, re- ‘turned home Saturday and is get. ting along very nicely. The W. C. T. U. institute wiil be held Thursday, October 20th, at the Christian chapel. There will be two sessions, beginning at © A, M, land 1 P, M. Everybody is urged to (attend these meetings. | John Wetzler, Democratic candi- [Jake oor Ruglater was in Powis Mon- and was accompanied b his brother, Frank Wetzler and th | Milesburg band, which sev. eral selections at the intersection of |Main and Walnut streets, They also visited Blanchard, Monument, | Orviston and Mt. Eagle, The annual school fair was held |in the High school building, last | Friday. Children and their parents [were very much interested in bri |ing fruits and tables for dis | ay, and many splendid drawings | were on exhibition from the primary | cessful fair ever held here. granted for NEWSY INCIDENTS, | A plainly lettered cardboard sign, case. It was inspired through the embarrassment of 8 young couple who got into the Treasurer's office Gep* py mistake, one day last week, and to their request for a license the (young lady deputy handed out a dog license and a tag. Depreasion, hard times, no work, no money, form the toplos of nines tenths of the discussions these days in most any crowd and gathering, and we wonder if a lot of it isn't psychological, Up to the first of October the borough tax callector had taken in eighty per cent of the pres= _ohool tax duplicate, or about $1400 less than last year. And the fours teen hundred discrepancy was not the result of people being out of work but was the resuit of a num- ber of large taxpayers falling to get under the wire before the five per cent was added. Strangers coming into Bellefonte by way of north Water street can. not help but be impressed by the improved appearance of the ap proach to the new Lamb street bridge. The trees and brush along the banks of the stream have been trimmed up, giving a splendid view of the stream and new bridge. Lamb street around the old Gamble mill has been widened and much improved so that the approach to town from that direction is on a par with that of any other road leads ing into Bellefonte, ——— Centre county farmers are selling their porkers at 6 cents a pound on the hoof. The butcher does the killing and sells the meat to cons sumers at 20 to 20 cents the pound, The head meat is made into pons ‘went down to Yorktown, Va, Sat. ‘haus, the liver and heart into liver wurst, the fat is rendered into lard, ‘the small intestines are used as caseins for the sausage, pig feet ‘have a ready sale for pig feet jelly, ‘and the bristles are probably sold to the tooth brush maaufacturer, So (we'll let the reader figure out for ‘himself how much profit the man ‘who eats the pork pays to the butcher who bought the hog from ‘the farmer who raised the pig to {pay his taxes which Pinchot prom. [ised to reduce but didn't. The Centre County hospital did a business of approximately sixty thousand dollars last year, accord. ing to the annual report of the busi ness manager. The hospital poration has a membership in ex: ‘cess of twenty-three hundred There are fifteen members on t's ‘board of managers, eight of them ‘being from Bellefonte and vineity, and only eleven people, just five of ‘whom were members of the board, manifested sufficient interest in the institution to attend the annual meeting of the corporation last week. This is not intended as a reflection on the hospital, It is doing a splendid work for humanity in Cen. tre county, but the people at large, and the members of the board of managers in particular, should exert ‘a greater interest in it's welfare than is exemplified by the small ate tendance, every year, at the annual meeting of the corporation. Any one who read the report submitted by the Woman's Auxiliary, publizh. ed exclusively in the Watchman last week, must admit that the members of that organisation were active dur. ing the year. A total of 2601 sep. urate articles was their contribu. tion, in addition to taking an sotive part in the hospital drive last spring. That is the kind of work that is worthy of commendation, From now, henceforth any man who wants to be appointed a game warden or forester in Pennsylvania will have to undergo a regular civil ‘service examination to determine his fitness for the position. Politics are not supposed to cut any figure. All the man will have to do to get the “job, when there's a vacancy, is to (show that he has a good knowledge of wooderaft, knows the habits of wild animals and birds, ix not afraid of a bear and has been and will continue to be a Pinchot supporter | Forty-seven years ago, this fall, W. Miles Walker was elected shers iff of Centre county, hence is the ‘oldest living ex-sheriff by quite a [number of years, At that time [there were but 42 voting districts lin the county, now there are 60. |The actual voting strength in those ‘days did not excesd 8,000 and the | | A baby daughter arrived at the | prescated to " The Roy Snyder home last Wednesday. churches were decorated with flow John Harm and daughter Mae evs and ferns and alt the oo have moved from Saulsburg to Rock casion proved quite thal. George : after i matters. ‘only nominee on the Republican and Mrs, C. A. Breon and daughter pemocratio ballots. He 18 a laws | Anther wars weekend Visitors in| yer by profession and a Justice of lamaport. the Peace and has the qualifications Miss Rosella Reed, of State Cols v0 an the office. 41.8t lege, is in town, this week, visiting Mrs, Charles Smith has gone to UNIONVILLE, State Coll for a week's visit with | Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Kokenroth a le a of, the Stes: | NSE 4 the homie of MN avd abe. city, are spending a week Amon | Tey eon $51 Runove, tue day (a motor Ors | county was decidedly Democratic, Now the voting registration is over 121,000, which includes the women, and the Republicans are in the ma. jority, i | wewuVote for J. M. Kelchline for [Justice of the Peace. He is the ‘only nominee on the Republican and | Democratic ballots, He {8 a laws yer by profession and a Justice of | to MI the office, ‘United Lutheran chureh of Amerloa. Lent, | office | grades, making this the most suc. the Peace and has the qualifications wished for 41.3t | many more years of continued sues | old friends in section, On October 38th Fred B, Tate will | offer at public sale his full line of farm stock and implements, Mrs. Rose Lytle and Mrs, Maude McCormick spent the latter end of the week in the Mountain city. Mrs, Laura Krebs went out to In. diana, Pa, on Friday, to visit her brother, A. J. Musser and family, Mr, and Mrs, Charles Homan and three children, of Centre Hall, spent Sunday with the Royal Kline family. Mr. and Mrs, C0 W, Swarta mo: tored to DuBois, tne latter gant of’ the week, to visit Dr, GQ. R, rte. G. B. Jackson, Mr, and Mrs, W. 8. Jackson and Miss Claire Jackson Hon last week at Watkin's Glen, Rev, Samuel B, Brown, GQ. B Fry and D. 8, Peterson attended the Sun. day school convention, in Altoona, last week, Mrs. Ada Krebs went up to Jun. fata, last Thursday, to help take care of the little daughter who ar. rived at the J. C. Corl home, W. H. Roush and wife, who spent the summer in Ohio, are here ming. ling among old friends, making their Hoaiquurtere at the J. NH, Balley e. When John Hess came back from his tp to Altoona, last week, he brought his gun along to have it for another hunt with the Modocks during the deer hunting season, A number of People from here at tended the family gathering held at the Joe Kepler home, on Wallace Run, on Sunday, An elaborate din. | ner was served by Mrs, Kepler and daughter, CM, Fry and John Molaughlin urday, for the big celebration, On their way home they will visit a number of the battlefields of the Civil war, Mra CH, Goss, with her son Charles and wife, of Houtadale, made a brief visit with Mrs, A, F Goss, on Sunday, on thelr way to Stone valley to see the George A. Goss family. Daniel M. Clemson, with a party of friends from Pittsburgh, was th h this section, last week, on trip and noticed many changes in the half century that has since he left the old ore mines at Scotia to take a job with the Carnegie Steel company, at Pittsburgh. On Monday night three separate rties went out coon hunting on y mountain. One coon was Ng and members of all of the rties claimed it with the result at there was some trouble sets tiing the dispute, Finally one of the rties got the meat, another the ide and the other ene nothing, 8. Wilson Cummings, of Tyrone was 80 yoars old, last Saturday, and a birthday dinner was given dn cel. ebration of the event, to which a fow of his closest friends were in vited, Mr, Cummings was born in the Kishacoquillas valley, but be- fore moving to Tyrone i a long term of years at MoAlvey's Fort. He married Miss Alice Irvin, of Balleyville, who passed away two years ago. -———— HOAL BURG, Alfred Lee Is having a new heats ing plant installed in hia residence, Mr, Jacob Meyer, who has been ill for a month, is yet confined to bed. Henry Dale and sons, Jack and Charles, of Mifftinburg, were in town on Sunday. Mra, Harry MoeGirk, of Bellefonte, spent the week-end with her slater, ss Anna M. Dale, Mra. Frank MoFarlane, of Belle fonte, was a guest of Mrs DB Thomas, of the Rranch, over the week-end, Miscos Anna Mary Hess and Ruth Crain accompanied a friend on a drive to New York, on ra ute turning to attend teachers inst in Bellefonte this week, Vietor Grange entertained their friends at a Hallowe'en party, on Tuesday evening, A grand march, mes and refreshments were . ures of the evening's entertainment Very Interesting services were held in the Lutheran church on Sunday, at 1080, in honor of the ator, Rev. Wm, J. Wagner, Rev, agner entered the ministry forty Joars ago and for the past ten Nat as been the very efficient pastor of the Boalsburg charge. The sermon for the occasion was preached by his son, Rev, John HW, Wagner, of Hudson Heights, N. J, who also read a number of congratulatory messages, among them one from Dr. Kneubel, president of the A la and attentive audience pars ticipated In the services, friends from other nearby towns being pres. Another service was held at St. Marks, Pleasant Gap, in the eves tng Rev. J. I, Harkins, of State Calle , bringing the m , The church and Bund prin. room | Mr and Mrs, Earl Waite, of War vioramark, and Mrs, Walte's par. ents, Mr, and Mra, J. RK \ were guests of Miss Laura Rumbers ger, last Sunday. Guests at the home of Mrs, Fran. ces Hall, last Sunday, were Dr and Mrs, H, C Lovell and two sons; Mra, Ela Root and Mr. and Mrs, Lo. M. Kask, all of Bellwood, At the meeting of the board of managers of the lower (Stover) cemetery, on Monday evening, it was planned to serve a baked ham supper in the Community house, No- vember 13th, 30 and per plate, Don't forget the chicken and wat fle Supaor is (Satu ) evening, at the Hotel Union, by the ladies of the M. K. church. 30 and 80 ¢ per plate, with pienty of trimmings and ple, Home made icecream and cake extra ——— —— Altoona Booster Merchants Invite You to Come to Their Stores for the Things Your Home Stores Cannot Supe . NOW IS THE TIME, and ALTOONA Booster Stores THE PLACE, 10 BUY YOUR FALL AND WINTER NEEDS! Your dollar never had more magic power than it possesses today! Not for many years has it been able to buy as much desirable 4, either for personal use or r the home, as it can buy In issn Booster Stores Right ow NOW I8 therefore the TIME to buy and Altoona Hooster Stores the PLACE to make your pur | chases If you wish to make your dollars bring you the greatest ible return In merchandise and satiataction, No matter what your needs may be, whether for the various mem- bers of the family or for the home you will always find greats ent matisfaction In shopping at Booster Stores where values are not only attractive, but where you also have the largest variety from which to make selections! EVERY WEDNESDAY 18 SUBURBAN DAY IN ALTOONA BOOSTER STORES There are hiwade apecial ats traction offe by Hooster Mtores that are of interest to HUBRURMBAN DAY Shoppers! Many people plan to visit Hooster Mtores Kvery Wedness day to meet their friends from other sections an well as to profit by the NURURHBAN DAY offerings, Altoona Booster Association were filled with interested friends who extended congratulations and | Rev, and Mrs, Wagner |