YEARS AGO FIFTY IN CENTRE COUNTY. | i | Items taken from the Watchman issue lof December 9, 1881. The r that P. Gray Meek edited and published for fifty-seven years and | BOW pub by his Estate at the Watchman Printing House, Bellefonte, Pa. | Editors, GEORGE R. MEEK CHARLES L. GATES Published weekly, every Friday morn- Teo Cuprespondsnts. to i | . Entered at the postoffice, Belle- published ess accompanied by the real ported in the Watchman that the firemen didn't try hard enough but TY Pa., as second class matter. hame of the writer. i 3 | Excelsior Bible class out there bust because if there was a fire it was Terms of Su ~Until further In ordering of address always of up because it couldn’ i notice at the follo ray give the old as wel as the new address. | o0 POPU rch in Jay i it out by the time they arrived. Paid strictly in advance ~- - $1.50 1t js important that the publisher be | him f mak. But what we want to do here is Paid before expiration of year - 1.75 notified when a subscriber wishes the met eighty cents due him for a in beltalf of te 4 Paid after expiration of year - 2.00 paper discontinued. In all such cases ing the fires that kept them warm. | Speak word 9pet A sample copy of the “Watchman” will the subscription must be paid up to Hig version is that the trustees of ators in the telephone exchange. be sent without cost to applicants, date of on, DECEMBER 4, 1931. EE —— A TRYING SITUATION. Congress will convene on Monday. With its organization the Democratic party should be greatly concerned, since responsibility for what may be done by way of legislation during the session will | weigh heavily in the election of the next President. As the membership of the House stands the Democrats are in position to organize it. The wisdom of taking advantage of numer- ical strength, however, is the debatable question under existing con- ditions. Rumors are coming out of Washington to the effect that several of the best Republican minds in the Senate are of the opinion that it would be wise to force the Democrats to organize that body, also. Such intimations should be warning to our party to fear the Greeks bearing gifts.” In control of both House and Senate the Democratic party could properly be held to accountability for legislation during what will be the most trying situation our country has ever known. Aside from unprecedented depression and the economic chaos in our own coun- try, there are extremely critical and delicate problems in our foreign relations to be met. Billions of American dollars are invested in German securities, as well as those of other foreign countries on the verge of bank- ruptcy. France is obdurate in her demand that German reparations shall be paid her before Germany provides for the integrity of pri- vate loans made in this country. France appears to be selfish to the point of making every plan for relief of Germany subservient to her own enrichment. In the far east China and Japan are at swords points over Man- | churia and our Secretary of State, Mr. Stimson, has involved us in an unpleasant controversy with the Tokio government. Under ordinary circumstances it might be regarded as merely an incident for diplomatic notes to close, but the nerves of nations are strained to the point where a snap in anyone of them might precipitate world-wide war. Such conditions may not be chargeable to the Republican party, but admission of probable failure to find any palliative for them is very apparent in the suggestion that opportunity to organize the Sen- ate be wished on the Democrats. In such an event our party would be responsible for all legisla- tion. If any of it should appear to have merit a Republican Presi- dent could veto it and we would be without power to pass it over his head, the net result being that we would go into the campaign of 1932 with a record of having accomplished exactly nothing when given a chance to show what we could do. Public confidence is a very fickle thing. The mind of the mass- es thinks only of today and tomorrow, rarely of yesterday. It would give no thought to the fact that the Democratic party is not even remotely responsible for any of the impending great problems. It will measure it solely by what Congress does during the coming session by way of their solution, For that reason control of either the House or the Senate, or both, might thwart what now scems the certain election of a Demo- cratic President in 1932 MACHINES ADD TO ELECTION EXPENSE. One of the several arguments used in launching the campaign for introduction of voting machines in Pennsylvania was that they would effect a saving through the elimination of printed ballots that would, in time, pay the cost of the machine. The claim MARY GRAY communications | —Mr. James Steel writes from Of alarms and at one in partic- | | Pleasant Gap to say that our cor- ular, that on t from that place stretch- they were unable led the truth slightly when he re- This, of course, was not (the church wanted sixty cents a They will go the limit in case of a {night for rent and as the class was fire to notify the firemen or have it couldn't pay so much. the alarm sounded, but the large |—Those who remember him will be | majority of people in reporting a | small interested to know that the late W. ‘Francis Speer, originator of the | A HODGE—PODGE OF NEWSY INCIDENTS. know of the capacity of | went out for dinner and what we some of the | men we conclude that the P. G. willing During the past week Bellefonte girls must have been very ‘firemen have responded to a number | workers to feed them for four bits. breezy “That Column” still running lin the Keystone Gazette, was the teacher of the class—Editor's Note. —Mrs. Mary Lemon, aged 63 years, died at her home in Ferguson township on Saturday, Dec. 3, 1881. Typhoid fever was the cause of her ' death. —A handsome iron fence is to be placed in front of the Episcopal church building on Allegheny street. —Pomona Grange, No. 2906, is | building a very handsome hall at Sprucetown. -—The Zion band has purchased a | operator is unable name of the person making the call ‘or the exact set of silver instruments that cost' them $800.00. ~The hod carriers on the new Centre county bank building struck the other day. They came to the | conclusion that carrying hods of mortar and brick up a perpendicular ladder three stories high was worth more than a dollar a day. They got a slight increase and went back to work. —Word comes from the Robert Haynes hunting camp at the head of ‘we have not yet been able to figure 'ty one of the candidates at the re- | cent election filed his account show- the Fishing run dam that they have nine deer hung up. In the party |are Mr. Haynes, J. H. Holt, of Snow Shoe; John W. Gardner and the Messrs. Lucas, of Howard. —The largest woman in Centre | county, Mrs. Kline, of Philipsburg, |died last Sunday. It is said that her casket was so large it couldn't |be gotten into the hearse and had ‘to be taken to the cemetery on a | wagon. | —Professor Hayden, former prof- essor of music at State College, is ‘now in the Blair county almshouse. { The Professor was a wonderful mu- 'sician. He was a wonderful drink- er, also, and that caused his down- | fall. | —Maj. James Gilliland, at one time Treasurer of Centre county and |now living in Maryland, was | town last week. ‘he was looking hale and hearty. | —John Corman, of Hublersburg, was badly bitten on the hand by a hog he was butchering last week. in At the age of 70! | ~The new nail works here are | expec | by February 1st. ted to be ready for operation | The Bellefonte glass works were put in operation again last Thurs- |day night. The first batch of glass |is said to have been of a very su- | perior quality. | Mr. Charles McCafferty, of this | place, and Miss Catharine Williams, 'of Philadelphia, were married in | that city on Wednesday, Nov. 30th. Miss Williams is of the Bellefonte | Williams family and is a relative of | Mr. McCafferty's first wife. She is rofile was taken |the woman whose | from which to mi the “Liberty” sounded | that adorns the silver dollar of the | i | | i reasonable enough because printed ballots for election districts when U. S.—The Williams family referred | there are many offices to be filled, many parties filing tickets many candidates for places are intricate and costly work, upon which penalty prices are quoted because they must be rushed to comple- tion regardless of what other pressing work the printing plant might |ing a Centre county historical so- | have in process. Actual use of machines has revealed the surpris- ing fact that they have added to, rather than decreasing, the cost of holding elections. In Luzerne county, where machines were used for the first time this fall, the combined cost of the primary and general elections was $40,000 in excess of that for 1931. Other items of expense not necessitated by the machines might have contributed to this unusual increase in Luzerne. As to that possibility we are not informed, but the experience right here in Centre county gives support to the belief that the whole increase might be chargeable to them. In Philipsburg borough, the much discussed machines that Mr. Secretary Beamish ordered against the protest of the Commissioners of Centre County, were used at the last general election. They worked very satisfactorily and the returns from the wards of that borough were known almost before election boards in other precincts of the county had gotten the ballots out of the boxes preparatory to starting the count. : Now that the bills have come in | their descendant, the late Mary EIl- {len McQuistion, left the residue of | her estate for the purpose of found- ciety Editor’ Note. | —Ome, James Stimson is suing the ‘city of Altoona for $50,000 to his character. He was standing {in front of a church there waiting ‘to take his girl home when a police- ‘man nabbed him and chucked him ‘in the “jug.” Because of the dis- |grace his girl broke their engage- ment and a rich maiden aunt, who 'had made him her legatee, cut him | off without a cent. And so he ! proposes to make the city produce |some balm for his troubles. BELLEFONTERS AROUSED BY EARLY MORNING FIRE Three-fourths of the people of Bellefonte were awakened from their | “beauty sleep,” about 5.20 o'clock on Tuesday morning, by a double alarm | and to were pioneers in Bellefonte and | i | i | i | i i i | the price of getting early re- |of fire, which proved to be on the | turns is taking the edge off the enthusiasm for machines that was roof of the James R. Hughes resi- | manifested on the evening of November 3. ballots per district in Centre county was $12.00. The cost of printing dence at the Bellefonte Academy. A | There are three spark from the smoke stack at the districts in Philipsburg, so paper ballots for that borough would have heating plant evidently caused the | involved an expense of $36.00. The cost of printing the labels for the various levers and other gadgets on the three machines used was $72.00. Just twice the amount the ordinary ballots would have been done for. | blaze, which started at the cornice on the rear part of the roof. Both fire companies responded and | the fire was extinguished by the use | fire are not explicit enough. They rattle off the call into the telephone so fast and unintelligibly that the to catch the location of the fire. Frequently the person hangs up the phone before the operator has time Thanksgiving evening, | to find any fire. | to question him or her in regard to the property or location. All fire calls | should be made in a distinct and! plain tone of voice, and the person | making the call should never leave | the phone until he is certain the operator knows the exact location of | the fire. This will enable her to! give the firemen explicit directions | and save endless confusion in get- | ting to the scene on time. We have always wondered what is gained by the law compelling candi- dates to file expense accounts, and it out. Right here in Centre coun- ing expenses well along in the hun- dreds and later a man bobs up who says that the candidate told him that his campaign cost him over three thousand. Now one of the men must surely be mistaken. | i The Lutheran church at Pleasant | Gap has a class of “Willing Work- ers” who served a Thanksgiving din- | ner of chicken, Etc., for 50 cents a plate. A number of Belletonters | Sth FOREVER | THANKFUL for this new for ithe. AND THIS OLD DUTCH OVEN GOODNESS TO HER MEALS ‘Wonderful meals that cook by themselves! Foods rich with the flavor of old Dutch Oven Cooking! Basting, tend- ing, watching, stirring vanished replied: man who sold it to me.” After ex- plaining that he had not bought a car and didn't intend to buy one, he said he considered it quite a compliment to be placed in the class of Buick Six owners, and that it was the third such compliment he had received during his life. The first was when a stranger asked him what big league ball club he played with and the second when a man stepped up to him and asked him for change for a hundred dollar bill. Granite markers have been placed | at the four corners of the new fed- eral postoffice site on the corner of Allegheny and Howard streets, evi- dence that borough engineer H. B. Shattuck and his assistant engi- neers have completed their survey of the plot. Granite markers were probably used so they would last until all the legal preliminaries have been disposed of and the government is ready to erect the buiding. With over seven thousand hunters in the Centre county mountains on the trail of deer neither the male nor the female of the species will have half a sportsman's chance of escape. And the slaughter will probably continue until the end of the season on December 15th. —-The annual fair and country store of the Bellefonte Presbyterian church will be held in the chapel, on Spring street, on Thursday af- ternoon and evening December 10. | There will be all manner of articles suitable for Christmas gifts, aprons, The candy, cakes and other foods. fair will open at 3 p. m. ad all like a dream! That's what the gift of a Flavor Zone Range means to a woman. The infallible automatic control OUR and retained heat feature of a Westing- house Range will lift a hundred cares from her shoulders. She'll only cold foods in the oven, adjust the clock and thermometer, to serve have to place the most der STATE COLLEGE Matinee daily at 1:30 Evening opening time 6:00 p. m, FRIDAY — Joan Crawford, Clark Gable in “POSSESSED” Slim Summerville Comedy | SATURDAY— Lilyan Tashman, Kay Francis in “GIRLS ABOUT TOWN" MONDAY AND TUESDAY— Lawrence Tibbett, Lupe Velez, Jimmy Durante, in “The Cuban Love Song” WEDNESDAY — John Gilbert, Leila Hyams in “THE PHANTOM OF PARIS” THURSDAY— James Dunn, Sally Eilers in “OVER THE HILL NITTANY THEATRE FRIDAY— Ronald Colman, Fay Wray in “THE UNHOLY GARDEN” SATURDAY— “POSSESSED” TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY Alfred Lunt, Lynn Fontaine in “THE GUARDSMEN" THURSDAY — “THE PHANTOM OF PARIS” A WORTH WHILE A GIFT of oll SPECIAL | CHRISTMAS OFFER ees As Low As $€).50 : In the light of such facts it is easy to believe that the increase of the chemical Sppasatas Hough | which Luzerne county is wondering about is directly attributable to |tionary measure to wet the roof and | the use of machines. loutside of the building. The dam- | |age was not large and is covered by | —Mayor Jimmie Walker, of New York, is in California to make insurance. a personal appeal to Governor Rolph for the pardon of Tom Mooney, | whe is serving a life sentence in San Quentin prison for supposed | f celebrated their thirt bombing of a pre-paredness day parade in San Francisco, in which { oF, Fomor, a Mn ey a number of persons were killed. = Whether Mooney was an actual y g ) te ; . A |day. Prior to her marriage Mrs. | participant in the murderous outrage was not definitely established |gihhs was Miss Minnie Kline, of at the time of his trial. His record as an agitator in defiance of law | Bellefonte. Rev. Gibbs is a retired | was a long one and it was known that he was in sympathy with the | Presbyterian minister. spirit of the bombing, so that his conviction was regarded as a just | one, if for no other reason than it put a very dangerous man in a| place where he could no longer be a menace to society and govern- | R. G. Cole and Vivian M. Poor- ment. Mayor Walker's unusual interest in the case has caused! man, both of Bellefonte. : much speculation as to its real motive. To many it well appear as| wiliam H. Callahan, of Linden | heing more a play to the gallery than anything else. |Hall, and Virginia E. Bailey, of! Boalsburg. et . . . . Paul Edward Bohn, of Centre | —The State Department of Mines is crowing because deaths ga) and Alice Emeline Ralston, of | i have decreased in the bituminous fields. Why shouldn't they? State College. | T'here are so few soft coal mines going in Pennsylvania that casual-| Lester Wiliam Schmoke and | ties ought to be few. Twila E. Fye, both of Moshannon. i i | ——Rev. and Mrs. William Gibbs, | MARRIAGE LICENSES. licious meals her family ever tasted. Westinghouse Down Then as long as 12, 18 or 24 months to pay the small Flavor Zone Ranges balance? 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