THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA. OCTOBER 23, 1909, S——— (AY RG 10 TARR VERYTENG IN SGT / What Would Follow the Election of r ) Pennypacker, A CLEAN SWEEP OF SPOILS Philadelphia to Be In the Grlo of a | Qigantic Light, Power and Transit Combination. | has been already shown. | local and state, was swallowed up. The [ght com | bine, gas and electric, Including too, heat and power, have heen edging up to the trolley combine and now all hande are ready to pool thelr issues, puting & steel band around this helpless city for generations to ceme, with a eombined ‘capital, money and water—of at loast one hundred mil lion dollars. This new collosus is to “take over” the city water works after nearly twenty million dollars have been spent, millions of it squan dered in filtration schemes that will never protect the public health, as Legislation, required to will be | enable these plans to be carried out MORE LEGISLATION IS NEEDED | (Special Correspondence.) Philadelphia, Oct. 20.—~The last ses- sion of the legislature showed what the allied forces of public plunderers could do, but if the people of Pennsyl- vania think that high water mark was then touched they will find themselves mistaken, if they give a new lease of power to the same grasping and con- | sclenceless element. What complished indicated what could be done along the same lines and plans are being laid for still greater schemes Strengthened by its own audacity and encouraged by its sweeping tri- umphs, the machine proposes to take everything in sight next time. Was ac- If it | succeeds at the polls in November fit | will claim that {ts policy has been vin. dicated and proceed to entrench itself for the next twenty-five years. certainty, If the projects now on foot are carried out. The whole state | be helplessly subject to the gigan‘! combination of selfish interests now at work. Elections will be a mock- ery and tribute to the amount of scores of millions of dollars will be exacted from the When AX is reached it will be the culmination of work that has been going on for ten years past. How They Raise Campaign The financial bulwark of the people, the cif Funds. Quay This | i { M } is not only possible, it is an absolute | phia, will | | public advantage | publi | diverted is money | who | franchise machine has been and is the misuse of | the state funds, their control of the | | treasury and the secret support of cer- | tain interests that keep out of sight Barrels of money have raised whenever needed and now it is Intend. ed to spend more than ever before in a single state campaign, the been {| sovereignty of the peop . i firesides of deliberate | purpose being to debauch the degraded | election boards by violence and cor- ruption. If the agents of the machine can give satisfactory assurances, they can get the money-—all that is demand- ed. They always do No one is al- lowed to become ring favor who not pay the freight, For several years a prominent citizen of Philadelphia, having large business Interests, backed the local bosses most liberally. He died sud- denly and instead of leaving a million Or more as avery his estate was surprisingly small been almost bled to death—financially A successor was found, who put up the money, by the bag full. He was given fleeting public honors, but being thrifty minded he got in on the ground floor with the speculators in public fran- chises and came out far ahead. corporations have been compelled to stand and deliver to these public pi- does one supposed, He had | shops | ernor on | the | mean | thing the beneficiary of | | portion of the electorate and control | ha¥e the front yard With Quayism triumphant in Novem ber and February, everything would be in fine shape for another carnival of debauchery and the enslavement of the greatest city of the common- wealth. It remains to be seen what the plain people will do about it, not only the long plundered residents of the city to be affected, but the self-respect ing citizenship of the state It within their power to smash this new combine and all otherg of the sam kind. They ean knock out Quayism with one blow and the rising tide of public indignation and patriotism vis ible in every part of the state indicates that this is what they propose to do on the 4th of November, THE SUPREME ISSUES is Guthrie On the Interest of the Fireside in Honest Government. In one of his speeches in Philadel Mr. Guthrie, Democratic candi date for lieutenant governor, sald: There Is no other part of the monwealth where the wrongs of bad government fall so heavily as on the city. There Is no possiblity of growth and progress unless resources of the city are husbanded and used for In no place is evil effect felt so quickly if no public funds be diverted to private profit If the city is to be what it should be all the public re es must be husbanded an ised exclusively for good ar : ) ven from the man in any station A publi diverted to private profit is were money stolen from com the out improperly labors of ring rule are so many not time ount them Wrongs « are th to re n ne wo Your state is but front yard of your hs and your homes are your cast which gather all nearest and dearest to you would have the fireside the YIN) at the hat are If you © ton The distinguished candidate for Rov. the machine ticket says that matters raised by us in this can paign are o ment. t Oh, the small State One the and mean’ government are t} hould fireside BAY that of the { come right to the fireside Thes not narrow and small and it is to the state mean you must look | your privileges, protection and safety | of | and | who represent only fraudulen | of Republican Great | It is the state which gives protection One might suppose the remarks of the distinguished didate that he does ; of the police the us poli from Can he duty to be in it protection £ dives vd policy We have permitted the building up a machine system debasing destructive to the liberties of our country than the African slavery. The machine sends men to the legislature ballots In the whole history government there has never been known a case where an of- more not the people { fice has been flithed for an honest pur- rates until some of their master spirits | have at last called a halt today praying for the complete over- throw of the grafters Millions More in Sight. In Philadelphia it is proposed to sup- plement the immensely profitable schemes of the past few years people have been so deeply wronged that it is thought they will rights, to any new burdens that may be laid upon them. Ject to onerous local transit monopoly Th ey are | gence of its people | fair name | of history. not The | weakly | submit to any new trespass upon their | Yania No other city in | the United States Is so completely sub- | home of freemen. worthy to be snuch It will be remembered that when the street rallway franchise bills were pushed at Harrisburg it was loudly pro- pose The distinguished jurist says the vernment of our commonwealth Airly represents the virtue and intel! taat they who speak of its wrongs are slandering its Such a statement taelf casts a stigma upon the people Some men may live In such a cloud even history, but just petty familly incidents, that they lose all touch with things of the world The men who live in the world know that these things of which we speak are known to the eltizens of Pennsyl- Let us free our state from this We have the opportunity now The eople are aroused as they never have wen before Our state must be the How It Looks In Schuylkill, The Pottsville Chronicle has the fol | lowing claimed that the benevolent purpose | of the projectors was to break monop- | | fect upon the Republican county, sen oly and bring about better conditions furiously denied. To the last of secrot combination negotiations, di rectors brasenly declared there was “nothing in it.” There has been a vast sum of money divided since and now | this city (8s doomed to monopoly and high fares for fifty years . bine controls trafic on the under the ground and above ground the | against The com | ground, | | ment I CAD Another Gigantic Combine Scheme. | Five yoars ago the gas works were | taken by a corporation that had grad- ually worked its way to the front. service had been demoralized in its di- rect interest grieviously wronged they were ready to surrender on almost any terms. Facing a winter without coal, or at ox~ tortionate prices, when they demanded cheaper gas they were pointed to the hard and fast terms of a one-sided bar. #aln for twenty-five years more. Ex- perts have shown that the company could make big money at one-half the rate they secured. This contract, if it Is vot changed, will cost the people , of Philadelphia fully thirty millions of dollars more than it should. It com. prises the most gigantic grab in the history of municipalities in this coun- “A comunity of Interest” prevails been no comvetitlc The | | county on the 4th of next month {| other reason The people had been so | : : : : | | | Quay | nauseates men who wish to do thelr The large independent Republican vote which beyond doubt will be polled for Pattison is like ¥ to have a bad of { atorial and legislative ticke Every statement to the contrary was | e tickets and will hour | be the means of Democratic ticket by ing anywhere from 500 to 3.500 it the election were held tomorrow the Republican party would be snowed un. der by the mightiest majorities ever recorded in this county at any salectior That the Republican party fs up it In regard to the big strike is evident to all who are witnessing the franctic endeavors of the Republi. can politicians to bring it to a settle. We all know that the Republi- party is entirely responsible for the condition which makes this strike pos OF necessary This is one of the real reasons why the large Indepen dent vote is going to be east for the entire Democratic ticket In Schuylkill The is that the Independent Republicans cannot vote for the candi dates of & party controlled by Mr The dose even at a distance electing the entire majorities rang ioe own thinking. They yote the Democratic ticket, and the Republican ticket will be buried out of sight on election day. fo 8 man will Workers In Every School District. State Chairman Creasy has named a commities of workers for every school district in the whole state, and the at- fachen of Sate Bemocty headquar- ors are wy sendin out sev thousand letters of notification “the men selected In the counties commonwealth, The chal raneed for. one of the torial cam aver u will have nty. { night, | They | doubtless will safe you must | ’ arrow and | . the voters | nearly PENNYPACKER AS A MASK An Independent Republican's Bcathing Reply %o Quay's Appeal For Campaign Boodle. Rudolpa Blankenburg, the well known Independent Republican, has declined to contribute to the Quay campaign fund. He has couched his refusal In a charaoteristically vigor- ous letter, In which he says: Whenever the machine is in daner it is seized with a fit of virtue and at tempts to cloak its hideris skeleton with a garb of alluring os HO Con structed, however, that the machine survives to continuge its shameless ca- reer of plunder and ¥. It nominated Judge Pennypacker, not on account of his Irreproachable personal character but because you hoped that his nomi- nation might save the machine once more from richly merited defeat. Judge Pennypacker at the head of the machine ticket Is as absurd a proposition as would be an orthodox minister at the head of a congrega- tion of avowed Infidels or a band of thieves, with “Thou shalt not steal” for thelr motto, Judge Pennypacker's article on the {lls of Pennsylvania, supplemented by the fulsome eulogy of his political god- {| father, the invidious Fomparison with I nm an impos think men Clay and Webster, make bh sible candidate for men who more of country than of party; | who place duty above friendship, men who honor and appreciate Clay and Webster for their unselfish devotion to duty their unsulliied characters, their exalted patriotism Endorses Pattison. Ex-Govarngr rattison, who has twice acceptably fi®ed the office of governor, | has again been nominated on a plat- form that calls in clarion tones for the redemption of the poor, boss-ridden, plundered and disgraced common wealth; a platform to which every pa- triotic citizen, be he stalwart or inde- pendent Republican or Democrat, can subscribe. sor honesty, integrity of purpose, public zeal, he seeks his peer; even his most pronounced political op- ponents, strongly Republican papers and partisans, united in unstinted praise when he relinquished the im portant offices of controller and gov- ernor, while his associates on the state ticket are infinitely superior to the candidates selected by your organiza tion A Great Opportunity For Philadelphia. Earnest words were those spoken to his fellow of Philadeip! ex-Governor Patti says the Harrisburg have the ring of framed In conscious strength of the rectitude of the cause sented by the Democratic candidates in the pend- ing campaign They should. as send the thrill of § en ry " on on M repr nant and patriotic through honest population of the great city o the banks of the Delaware and cause such a revolt against machine methods that for years have kept Philadelphia in the wy of universal contempt, viewed from the standpoint of electoral integrity, as to render impotent machinations of the political outlaws who have defied the will of the people a8 expressed at the ballot box Governor Pattison tells his towns men that he has been face to Mace with the commonwealth in two-thirds of the counties of Throughout the interior he has found the sentiment alert. active Aggressive in the purpose to rescue Pennsylvania from the grip of the cor ruptionists who have throttled manhood and the unbought citizenship of a great mmonwealth Shall the will of the voters of the other 68 coun- ties of the state be rendered nugatory by the pollution of the ba box the single county of Philadelphia? Mr. Pattison; and by the very of his plea he sooams (0 answer i very with a detarmined no that bids alr be echond at the polls three woeks henos hat speech of Robert E Pattison to his neighbors of Philadelphia should be worth tens of thousands of votes to the eandidates of the Democratic and Independent organizations. It Is the plea of decency In politics against degradation; of purity ainst pollu tion in legislative and administrative affairs. it has the note of authority and command In its entreaty for a higher and nobler order. It should have au answer from the banks of the city of Penn that will rehabilitate that com- munity In the eves of the state at large and echoe the volume of patriotic protest that promises to come rolling across the Alleghenles and down the valleys of the eastern section of the state pride the of the state ot in in QUAY ON BAYONET RULE How the Republican Boss Would Set tie Labor Troubles. Guay has been wo londly peotending a desire to settle the great coal strike peaceably snd posing as the “friend” of the miners it 1s well to recall what he sald In a speech at Phoenixville, Chester coun ty. on the night of October 27. 1900 Here it In “Good government is to erect a eftizen soldiery which ean be thrown to any point In the commonwealth to sustain outraged law at 24 hours no tice, and which ean furnish FIFTEEN THOUSAND BAYONETS for the United States service on call” While Boas The Quay shouters were ton provi ous, declaring their boss had settled the until this arch politieal trickster quit meddling. The operators and miners knew he had but ene purpose, and that Was to use the situation to make polit foal capital. In this he falled utteyly Had it not been for the betrayal of the miners’ cause at Harrisburg there would have been no strike, coal strike. Nothing was done Qertaln mischevious and selfish po tical elements worked hard to use John Mitchell as a political club, but they mistook their man, The miner's chieftan carries a level head on his shoulders. He sticks to his text and his great work, and bas made a record #8 a friend of humanity of which any the THE TRUTH ABOUT THE GOAL TRUST. An article In the last number of the Lehighton (Pa.) Press entitled “Coal trust organized under Pattison,” sent out by the Republican state committee, contains some statements which en- title its author to the first prize for both mendacity and stupidity. No one could have written the article without malicious purpose of misrepresenting the facts, for it contains statements that must have been the invention of the writer. No one could have writ- ten the article who was possessed of ordinary intelligence and foresight, for the examination of the history of the case, and its official records, will disclose the falsehood and impale the falsifier, After reciting the well-known fact that in 1862 the Reading, Lehigh Val- ley and Jersey Central most cursery coal carrying roads, undertook to form a combina- tion, it goes on to allege that Governor Pattison received a complaint against this terfere,"” “refused to this combination, and it on his part as "a black and damnable in- characterizes neglect record.” Let quickly this how Twenty ug now see and prove lie can be nalled four hours after the first notice of this combination was b wo of it rought Govern Hon attorney gene Pattison W. U. He of tention wr ferred ral official Immediately summoned companies compinined of hefore hi: he gave them a falr and impartial ing. and, at the con that the spirit, if not $4 ¢st immediat Dauphir equity plained swer, and the vari Eation are 1} of his official report to son the state at the a 1893 iy of After such hearin half of the rails £ and arp slate ints the that attempted ’ YOURS on Ma Hin ; Lo I Ble t Phi Compal y irt of Con Hil IR equity and Reading Railroad and Reading the Port Read the Lehigh Valley of New Jersey, the Navigation Com and Wilkesbarre ing the facts, as | of the combination of the Hiroads asking for a discovery of leases contracts and agreements, and for a de cree that they be deciared null void, and that the property of had gathered Th - fe | the That | the | } ! | Wood, Grain, Hay, | | and | leased lines and companies be surren- | dered to thelr former owners and the companies sperating them In due time the companies defendant | filed answers and demurrers bills. The court appointed J. C Alarney and Charles H. Bergner aminers, and from time to time th have held many meetings in Harrie. burg and in Philadelphia. taking test mony In the cases. The facts have been secured by personal inguiry and examinations, and the commonwealth succeeded In obtaining admissions from the defendants from time to time of the accuracy of the statements maps and other evidence which been prepared to sustain the averments of its bill. The testimony in on behalf of the commonwealth about concluded, and but for an avoidable interruption in the matter could have been s for argument in the Dauphin County Court of Common Pleas the close of the year have he un Hey before case | is | ite pre reas | tted | In November, 1883. all the companies defendant annulled these leaves and | agreements, and filed an aswer In the | in which the leases complained of had been for felted nated ant had courte they set forth annulled, vacated and termi and that each company defend reopdered into possession control and operation of thelr respec tive properties, and upon this showing that | and after they had paid all the co ta | the courts of Dan the bills to of the proceadings phin co dismissed inty allowed be | Everything that was complained of was promptly made the subject of ju dicial proceeding; everything that was demanded by the situation was pushed promptly to a judicial conclusion; and not a single complaint of this, or any other kind, against any combination, trust or corporation was ever made to Governor Pattison that was not prompt ly taken cognizance of and pushed to a termination in the courts Philadelphia last week gave Pat tison and Guthrie the biggest kind of & welcome, after thelr great tour of the state. The local organization, we are assured, is doing fine work this time, and a great vole to turn the ras ols out at Harrisburg is now certain. The machine's bluff about 100,000 ma Jority for Pennypacker is laughed at, even by the lightning ealoulators themselves. They know they will do wall if thay can get the third of it COALS. Gained Forty Pounds in Thirty Days, For several months our younger brother had been troubled with indiges. tion. He tried several remedies but got no benefit from them. We purchased some of Chamberlpin’y Stomach and | Liver Tablets and be commenced taking | them, Inside of thirty days he had gained forty pounds in flesh, He is now fully recovered. We have a good trade on the Tablets. HoLLey Bros, Mer. chants, Long Branch. Mo. For sale by Green's Pharmacy. R.B. MONTGOMERY. We Don't Promise More Than We Give You, But-- We Gire You All we Promise of IN THE LINE OF se ] waste vour time | Wall Paper, House Painting, When You Hunt but don’t minting for Sporting Goods ame, #n never find Paper Hanging, [aris be : t welts Or “ Eiri n for want, emand, Graining, Ete, R. B. MONTGOMERY, K. W. Corner Public Square BELLEFONTE,........PENN'A. EK. RHOADS At hs yard opposite the P R. R. Passenger station, | sells only the best qualities | ANTHRACITE and Brruminous | & Co. e, Pa. » We promt bamte 11 NER Bend model, sketo! free report on ity. For free Wie RTS book, tox vec TRADE - MARKS “2% 9.8) (1) OPPOSITE U.S. PATENT OFFICE WASHINCTON.D.C. Also all kinds ot hoto of Invention for Straw and Sand. | Superior screenings for lime | burning Juilder’s and | Plasterers’ sand. TELEPHONE CALLS: Cettrdl =» « « » « 4 . Commercial ada SESS 4SS82050800003 04,000 Given (0 Women Prize Competition Open to Women Only. Prizes amounting to FOUR THOUSAND DOL.- LLARS will be given to the Forty-tnree Women giving the best reasons why the “DOROTHY DODD SHOE is superior to spects | all other Shoes in the following re- The Style of a “DOROTHY DODD.” The “rFaviTiess mit” of a “DOROTHY DODD.” The extreme lightness of a “DOROTHY DODD.” “DOROTHY DODD.” he wear f walking The Arch Supporting This Areh Supp 3 4. Featurc of a DODD ness rting Veatu a “DOROTHY Flexibility of PRIZES AS FOLLOWS : 1st PRIZE, 81,000. 2d PRIZE, 8750. 5 §00 87 400 WO 10th Prize 11th 1 2th 1 3th 14th 15th 16th 1 7th Prize 1 8th 3rd Prix 4th = Sth *« 6th ~ 7th Sth oth 19th to 28th 200 y # Prizes cach £10 150 100 he) 20th to 43rd Prizes each £5 To insure that the writer's reasons are based upon ac tual experience it is necessary to purchase a pair of “DOR- OTHY DODD" Shoes and receive from the dealer a Com petition Blank signed by him. - One blank is given with every purchase of “Dorothy Dodd” Shoes. This competition will be open from Sept. 1st to De ist, 1902, The “Delineator” will judge and award the prizes about Dec, 25th, 1902. : DOROTHY DOOD SHOE COMPANY § BOSTON, MASS. : YEAGER #DAVIS§ CLLL ELE IRI NIN TINT TITIT TT ITITT TIT I FTTTTTTINT TTT TTI NITION OIIIS, a yy