INK SLINGS. —Just to show you that we are right on the old job let us remind you that it is just ninety-two days until Christmas. . ——With wages at the top notch it will be hard to make intelligent earn- ers believe that additional tariff taxes would benefit labor. —Millheim entertained the great Commoner Wednesday night, that is, all of him but his heart which, you will recall, has been in the grave ever since the San Francisco convention. —So the sleeping traffic ordinance in Bellefonte is to be wakened up and started after the speed-demons and other violators. More power to those who are being looked to to enforce it. - As a matter of fact Professor Taft appears to have degenerated in- to a political mendicant who hopes to secure an office by stultifying himself on the subject of the League of Na- tions. —If the Altoona Times-Tribune re- ally means what it said on Wednes- day: “No man who believes the American Presidency can be bought is fit for the place” it should put up the Cox banner at once. —The wise ones tell us that coal may be a trifle lower about December 1st than it is right now, but inasmuch as we have to be kept warm up to De- cember 1st there is nothing left to do but buy coal at the present market. —Well, Well, has it come to the point where there is danger ofthaving to close the doors of the Democratic National campaign committee for want of fnuds to keep them open? Could it be possible that Will Hays got all the money ? —Henry never did succeed in get- ting the boys out of the trenches be- fore Christmas of a few years ago, but he is marking down his flivvers to a point where it is reasonably sure he will get a lot of them out in the dust before next Christmas. —The blight is gradually killing all of the chestnut trees in this county. Science has been utterly unable to check its ravages and while we will miss the raw, the boiled and the roast- ed chestnut we surely hope that the nice big, fat, juicy white worm that so often oozed between our teeth when eating chestnuts in the dark will somehow be preserved. We fear some very finished expletives will be- come extinct if it goes into the Dodo class. —Mzr. Naginey’s candidacy .for the Assembly is creating considerable in- terest for an “off year” in the county elections. There being no question as to his fitness as a Representative eople are viewing him with favor be- with all parts of the county and their needs. He is a positive man with the tenacity to get things done or know the reason.why and it is such an one as he that would be very useful to Centre county in Harrisburg. —No matter which way the cat jumps we are bound to have a news- paper man in the White House after next March 4th. Let us get in line by sending a newspaper man to Congress from this District. James D. Connelly is editor of the Clearfield Progress and some say he is the man who put the Progress in that paper. Be that as it may, we are all ready to admit that this District needs some more forceful character in Washington than the ‘Hon. Jones and we are taking no chances in that respect on Mr. Con- nelly. —Ever since we saw the announce- ment that the annual convention of the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union of Centre county is to be held at Boalsburg next week we have been wondering. Wondering whether there is any particular significance in it. -Boalsburg has become rather a large splotch on the map of Centre county in recent years and many pilgrims trek thither, but when the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union hot- foots it there so soon after the officers of the 28th Division have gone we confess a mild curiosity as to the pur- port of it all. —~Col. House’s most recent inter- view given the Public Ledger surely must set those who have had doubts as to the workings of the League of Nations to thinking. He has just re- turned from a three month’s trip abroad and announces that the League is functioning perfectly and also tells us that if we want a League of our own make there will be no one else to go into it but Soviet Russia and revo- lutionary Mexico, as all of the other nations of the world are already in the big League and are getting daily proofs of its advantages. Col. House is no longer on the same friendly terms with the President that he once was so that his statement is all the more significant. —If the women really wanted the vote in order to help clean up the po- litical life of the country those of Pennsylvania will probably have their greatest opportunity when they go in- to the polls for the first time next November. Senator Penrose is a candidate for re-election. All of his long life in politics he has opposed practically every measure that women have been and are specially interested in. He opposed giving them the fran- chise very likely through fear that their votes would be a menace to the kind of governmental action he stands for. Viewed from any but a purely partisan standpoint no woman of Pennsylvania can vote for his re-elec- tion to the Senate. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. _VOL. 65. BELLEFONT Why Penrose Abused the President. Obviously Senator Penrose’s recent vicious attack upon President Wilson was merely an expedient to divert public attention from his own moral delinquencies. There was no occasion for him to open his mouth, as he did the other day, and belch out rade of vituperation. But he realizes that party passions must be aroused to save himself from a humiliating de- feat at the polls. The enfranchise- ment of the: women may make a vast difference in the result of the election in Pennsylvania. Presumably most of these newly enfranchised voters will stand for a higher order of public morality and a fuller obedience to the requirements of civic righteousness. Shortly before Boies Penrose was first elected to the Senate he aspired to the office of Mayor of Philadelphia. Philadelphia Mayors of the past gen- eration have not been exemplars of Penrose in that office so aroused the religious element of the city that the ministerial association in public meet- ing vehemently protested and even the Republican machine was forced to event were brought before the public view at this time only the most in- tense party passion would blind the mental optics of the average woman to his unfitness to represent the great State of Pennsylvania in the highest parliamentary body in the world. Six years ago, when Mr. Penrose was last soliciting the support of the voters of Pennsylvania, the late Theo- dore Roosevelt denounced him as “a moral monster.” Mr. Gifford Pinchot, now an influential member of Gover- nor Sproul’s cabinet, was equally se- vere and vehement in denunciation of Penrose’s moral deficiencies and Mr. Dimmock, of Scranton, and Mr. Ai- ney, president of the Public Service Commission, were little less severe in their condemnation of him. A rehear- sal of these records of protest, all from Republican sources, would al- most surely turn any good woman against Penrose, unless she were so obsessed with partisan passion as to be incapable of exercising her power of reason in the matter. = Drab ably Senator Penrose imagined that he might so arouse the partisan passions and prejudices of the women of Pennsylvania that they would over- tacking the President. But we believe he has reckoned without his host. A good many of them are bitter parti- sans and some of them may have slov- enly notions of public morality. But the vast majority are gifted with a tion of moral and civic obligations and will resent the temerity of Boies Pen- rose in asking for their support in the face of the many and pressing reasons why they should vote against him. We have faith alike in the intelligence and integrity of Pennsylvania women. ——Borough council has finally de- cided to enforce the traffic ordinance regulating the operation of all kinds of vehicles within the limits of Belle- fonte. This ordinance has been a dead letter in Bellefonte ever since it was passed, and among the most flagrant offenders have been residents of the town. That so few accidents have oc- curred is little short of miraculous, ‘and now that council has decided that the ordinance must be enforced the out regard to who or what the offend- er is. —lh lL ——The County Commissioners of- otherwise duly entitled to vote who, through neglect of the assessor has the tax collector, even though her name does not appear on the sixty women if reported to the commission- er’s office on, or before October 2nd, 1920, will be. placed on the voters check lists for the coming election to be held November 2nd, 1920. been heard from as yet, but it is a safe bet that before the New York mystery is cleared up some Republi- can newspapers will point the finger of suspicion against Postmaster Gen- eral Burleson because anarchistic lit- erature was found in mail boxes. ——Of course the Republican news- papers are villifying President Wil- son shamefully, but he may comfort himself in the fact that Washington and Lincoln were traduced with equal venom and impotence. ——The text of the covenant of the League of Nations has not been pub- lished in the Republican campaign book. The Republican managers want the voters to see only false statements of that instrument. ein ——1If you want all the news you can get it in the “Watchman.” public morality but the menace of turn him down. If the history of that look his delinquencies, by brutally at- keen intelligence and a just concep- only thing to do is to enforce it, with- : ficially announce that any woman | not been assessed, can pay her tax to day lists now in the hands of the tax collectors; and the names of such ——The back townships have not Harding Only Fooling Himself. | With the German vote securely “wrapped up” and safely stored away |in the promise of Sylvester Viereck, ! Senator Harding has issued a solemn | warning against the hyphen. In his i front porch speech on Saturday, ad- dressed to a group of foreign born against the President a noisome ti- | voters paraded before him by Senator | are of the McCormick, of Chicago, he said “let us pray that America shall never be- come divided into classes and shall never feel the menace of hyphenated citizenship.” But the boys who are getting the money to buy his election are constantly striving to create classes, and those who are fighting the League of Nations keep always in mind the hope of solidifying the Ger- man-American vote for Harding. | Before the war the so-called hy- phenated vote was divided among the various parties on lines formed by en- vironment. ‘Among the Germans thera may have been a majority of Demo- crats, taking the country over, though "in communities like Milwaukee the | Republicans had a decided preponder- | ance. But the attitude of the Repub- | lican leaders during the war allured | practically all voters of that national- ity into affiliation with the Republican ‘party. In the open or masked oppo- sition to the policies of President Wil- son, German sympathizers imagined there was a chance for ultimate Ger- man victory over the allies. The vague promise of a separate peace with Germany in the event of Repub- lican success this fall has finally and firmly bound him to service in that | party. : | Senator Harding is deceiving no intelligent voters by his false pretense ; of patriotism and altruism in his cam- paign for President. Every well-in- formed voter in the country under- stands: that the predatory corpora- tions and selfish interests are contrib- uting vast sums of money to buy his election for their use in spoliative en- terprises, and that in pursuance of that purpose they are creating class. es and organizing foreign-born and foreign-sympathizing voters to sup- port him. His platitudes of patriot- ism and professions of virtue are wasted. The public schools have dif- fused intelligence too well and wide- ly for ‘such ‘demagogy to work - cessfully, and though the hyphenated vote may be won it will be impotent. The Philadelphia commercial travelers who go to Marion today pay ninety dollars a piece for car fare, which suggests that even the cost of politics is increasing. Absurd Statement of Justice Hughes. In a speech at the New Jersey Re- publican State convention last Satur- day, former Justice Hughes said: “It is, indeed, an amazing thing that it should have been necessary to demand an amendment (to the covenant of the League of Nations) in order that the Monroe Doctrine should be safe- guarded.” It is, indeed, infinitely more amazing that a man who has oc- cupied a seat on the bench of the Su- preme court of the United States, and once enjoyed hopeful aspirations to become President of this Republic, should utter such an absurd thing. There is not even an inferential men- ace to the Monroe Doctrine in the cov- enant of the League of Nations. It simply expanded that instrument so as to cover the world. But that is not the greatest absurd- ity uttered by Justice Hughes, now | fortunately an “ex,” in his Trenton speech. Referring to Article X of the covenant he says: “In case of future ! conflict, whatever our opinion of the merits, and however removed it may be from any interest of ours, we are i bound to go to war, if necessary, in ‘order to preserve as against external | aggression the territorial possessions of a member of the League.” The ' language of that Article plainly re- : futes every assertion contained in that statement. It says: “In case of any ‘such aggression or in case of any ‘threat or danger of such aggression, , the council shall advise upon the i means by which this obligation shall be fulfilled.” ; In the first place the action of the j council must be unanimous, and as ‘| this country would have a seat at the council table no agreement could be i reached without our assent. .Then there are various methods of proced- ure before resort to arms is possible. The offending government is first ad- monished. Next, trade and commer- cial relations of all members of the League are withdrawn and finally a boycott against it is declared. If all these corrective methods fail and the council unanimously agrees to declare war the question is put up to the sev- eral governments, and as in this coun- try Congress alone can declare war, Congress would decide the matter and the utterly preposterous statement of Justice Hughes goes glimmering. ——The only resemblance between Harding and McKinley is the front porch. And Harding is about to aban- "don that. E. PA., SEPTEMBER 24, 1920. NO. 38. Three of Kind Oppose Wilson. “The Democratic candidate is im- possible. He Woodrow Wilson and the League of Damnations,” writes Sylvester Vier- i eck in a magazine article. The late + German Kaiser and his recent asso- i ciates in the government of Germany same mind. Mr. von | Bernstorff protests that it does great i injustice to Germany. Senator La- : Follette, who would have been ex- i pelled from the United States Senate for treason if his vote had not been needed to control the body for the Re- publicans, is bitterly opposed to the League because President Wilson had an important part in the construction of it. Senator Lodge favored a League of Nations until President Wilson framed one and then changed his mind. What has President Wilson done that such an opposition should have been raised against him? He has com- mitted no crime against the govern- ment and people of the United States. He has not proved faithless to an ob- ligation as President. He has betray- ed no interest of the people. He has worked as no man in public life since . Lincoln for the good of the country and the prosperity of commerce and industry. He broke down his health and almost sacrificed his life in the performance of what he conceived to be his duty. But the Germans in Ger- many and the German sympathizers here hate him and Senator Lodge de- tests him because he has kept the Re- publican party out of power and Re- publican grafters. out of opportunity for eight years. ih. The League of Nations is the prom- ise to the world of a future of peace and prosperity. It is the only hope of that result. It will avert the cost to the world of vast armies and navies and lighten the burdens of govern- ment in every civilized land. It will stop the needless waste of material and the cruel sacrifice of life which war necessarily entails forever. But if the United States should ratify the treaty of Versailles and become a member of the League of Nations it creates, Woodrow Wilson would get dice ». of this fact ‘Sylvester. Vi : William © Hohenzollern and Henry : Cabot Lodge join in opposition to it. The result of the election in Maine and of the Republican primary in New Hampshire casts doubt upon the hope that women voters will be guided by conscience rather than prejudice. Senator Vare Defies the Law. State Senator Vare, of Philadelphia, has finally determined to put the question of his ownership of the courts of that city and the appellate courts of the State to the test. Re- cently a vacancy in the office of city councilman was created by the death of one of his agents in that body. Senator Vare, having selected a suc- i cessor, called his personally control- | led city committee together to make the nomination. Some of the voters protested that under the law a pri- mary election is necessary to make a | nomination and demanded the submis- sion of the question to popular vote. But the Senator brushed all objections away and ordered the committee to act, which it did promptly. Section 1, of the Act of Assembly approved May 18th, 1917, provides “that hereafter all candidates of po- litical parties as herein defined, for the office of United States Senator, for the office of. Representative in Congress, for all elective State, coun- ty, city, ward, borough, township, school district, and election division or district offices, and for all other elec- tive public offices except that of Pres- idential elector, shall be nominated. and delegates and alternate delegates to national party conventions and State committeemen shall be elected, at primaries held in accordance with the provisions of this act, and in no other manner.” To any mind not ob- sessed with a sense of ownership that would be sufficient. But Senator Vare appears to be af- flicted with that obsession. The rules of the Republican party of Philadel- phia provide that a vacancy on the party ticket, which happens between the dates of the primary and the elec- tion, may be filled by the city com- mittee, and Senator Vare interpreted the vacancy in the city council to be a vacancy on the ticket. He was ad- monished of his error in construing the statute but paid no attention to the protest. Feeling that he controls the courts as completely as he controls the committee he proceeded to make a nomination and will take chances on being vindicated in the courts. This is a surprising attitude for a party leader to assume but Senator Vare is always surprising. ——Corn cutting is now well under way in Centre county and with anoth- er week or ten days of nice weather most of the crop will be on shock. is the candidate of | Patriotism in the Discard. From the Philadelphia Record. Two years ago every patriotic American was proud of the position of the United States in the world. All ; nations ‘looked to us for inspiration and guidance, i onel House, , widely printed in Republican papers, | says: How is it now? Col- whose views are now “Europe has stopped puzzling over us, and they on the other side are beginning to be careless about what we think and what we do. They are becoming more indifferent as to our opinions and probable action on the League of Nations and on other matters in which the world has a com- mon interest.” . What is the occasion of this? Why is it that at Paris “we were stronger and had much more influence than now ?” It is the work of the Repub- lican oligarchy which did its utmost during the peace conference to dis- credit the President and weaken him in his tremendous struggle against predatory influences in EE roi His- torians of the peace conference have told us in several volumes that the Republican success in the Congres- sional election and Republican attacks upon the President were used con- stantly to weaken the President and defeat his efforts to have the treaty embody the high and enlightened Fourteen Points. It is the Republi- can oligarchy that has brought the United States into disrepute. Colonel House says of Senator Harding’s vague and evasive proposal to kill the covenant and substitute “something just as good:” Our assumption that we will plan some new international organization, based largely upon - the discredited Hague Tri- bunal, occasions surprise. When planned it is wondered what we will do with it, As we would frame it, it is not probable that it would suit either soviet Russia or Mexico—the only two other countries not now in the League which would be open to eur invitation. Soviet Russia, Mexico and the Unit- ed States! Is any American proud of the company to which the Senatorial oligarchy consigns us? Director Miller, of the Republican Spellbinders’ Bureau, directs all the stump speakers to call it “Wilson’s League.” It is hoped to discredit it with Republican voters by fastening the name of the President to it. The part taken by him in shaping this credit for the greatest achievement in | League will be recognized by the next statesmanship of modern times. Be- | generation as conferring immortal int group of the world’s greatest statesmen and benefactors. But it is not “Wilson’s League.” It was adopt- ed by the peace conference, in spite of very strong and persistent opposition. The United States is the only one of the nations allied against the Central Powers which has not signed the treaty. Those participating actively in the war which have not signed are the United States, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria .and Turkey. It is a noble company that the Senatorial oligar- chy have doomed the United States to! Thirty-nine nations have joined the League. If the covenant would im- pair our sovereignty, what does it do to the sovereignty of 39 nations? Do they care nothing about their inde- pendence and their national rights? The United States, soviet Russia and Mexico are on the outside, and if Sen- ator Harding shall be elected we shall remain in that noble triumvirate. Is it likely that the American people will remain in such a position? The Index of Trade From the New York Evening Sun. A clear indication of the business activity of the nation is seen in the announcement of Comptroller John Skelton Williams that deposits in the national banks have increased nearly eight per cent. during the twelve months ending June 30. A year ago they were $15,924,865,000; today they are $17,155,421,000, a gain of $1,230,- 556,000. This marked advance occur- red during a period when inflation and wildcat methods were not con- spicuously on the increase. During the years from 1914 to 1919 deposits in the national banks increased from $6,268,692,000 to $15,924,865,000, but this was an indication of little save the declining value of money and the skyrocketing of prices. In the past twelve months, however, there has been no pronounced change in the price level, the increase in certain commodities being largely offset by decrase in others. Solomon Had Some Car. ¥rom the South Charleston Sentinel. Another advantage Solomon had over the other young fellows of his day was wealth. When he built that chariot he “made the pillars of silver, the bottom was of gold, the covering of purple, and paved with love for the daughters of Jerusalem.” That would catch most any girl for a Sunday evening ride. An Alarmed Candidate. From the Louisville Courier-Journal. Wise men change their minds, but the manner in which Mr. Harding flops on the League proves thut some- body’s been trying to put him wise to his error and that neither his adviser nor Mr. Harding has the wisdom to get an alarmed candidate out of a deep hole. ie pi ——After the election of Cox it will be interesting to watch the investors in the Republican slush fund trying to “cash in.” | identity has not been determined, SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE —In one day at Top Hill mine, Hast Riverside, Sam Whittenberger mined 2# cars of coal, earning $28.85, or at the rate of $173.10 a week. —At Uniontown, Mrs. John Maver, weighing 115 pounds, was convicted eof beating Mrs. George Dazer, weighing over 200, so badly that her leg was broken. —More than $21,000 has been raised foe the purchdse of a home for the American Legion post at York, Pa. The York Haven Water and Power company contributed $500 to the fund. —L. P. Stannert, a Lewistown restau- rant man, holds the record fer bagging raccoons during the present season, he having taken fourteen to date and the sea- son is young as yet. Stannert has made five trips, on each of the four initial trips ‘he brought back three ‘“‘ringtails,” and the last trip two fell to his faithful hounds. —Shelley brothers have located a saw- mill in the Scheyer grove, near Mifflintown, and it will be denuded of everything that will make a match stick or tooth pick. This traet of timber has always been a fa- vorite resort of Sunday school picnics and& bush meetings in years gone by, and was one of the few tracts of virgin timber im that section. —The call of the commercial life and business field, and the attraction of higher salaries in other educational institutions has, during the last six months, cost The Pennsylvania State College the loss of for- ty-five faculty members. The resulting vacancies and growth of the college evem in the space of one year has necessitated a total of 107 new faculty appointments just approved by the college board eof trustees. —There appears to be an outstanding reason why a number of residents of Swedesburg object to having that place merged with the borough of Bridgeport, Montgomery county. It has been learmed that should the consolidation be effected no swine will be allowed to be kept in Swedesburg, and at present it is said, about 40 per cent. of families in the place have a pig sty in their yard. From four to eight pigs are kept in each sty. —J. B. Kepler, of Shintown, a suburb of Renovo, Pa., has growing in his garden a rare plant, probably the first to be grown in Pennsylvania. This is the New Guinea butter bean. These beans do not grow im pods, but singly, and some of the beans ‘grow to be 34 inches long and weigh 12 pounds. They are prepared for eating in the same manner as an eggplant, or can be cut into small pieces and used the same as any bean. There are four beans on the plant in Mr. Kepler's garden. The largest weighs 12 pounds and the smallest sevem pounds, —~Carmelo Ripepi, of Willlamsport, was foung guilty by a jury of highway rob- bery on Friday of last week and was sen- tenced by Judge Harvey W. Whitehead to two years in the eastern penitentiary. Ripepi, who was a garage attache, wax hired by Frank Updegraff, of W.ycoming county, a farmer, to teach him how to op- erate an automobile. Ripepi drove to an unfrequented spot near Sulphur Springs, where he robbed the farmer of $100 and then forced him out of the automobile, im which Ripepi escaped to the city, where he was later arrested. —Park Patton, 23 years old, of near «Gap, Lancaster county, was shot and prob- - ably fatally injured by an auteist whose early Sunday evening. Patton and several com- panions were fooling autoists along the Lincoln highway with an auto tire te which they had a rope attached. As the victims of their joke would stop to pick up the tire, the jokers would pull it out of their reach. The man who fired the shot became outraged when he became a victim to the trick and fired at the youth. He then fled in his automobile. —Working on the smokestack at the plant of the American Swedo Iron compa- ny at Danville, John Delanty had a nar- row escape from death. The damper at the top of the stack had rusted and when he pulled the damper chain the damper fell, striking him on the right leg with such force that the leg was broken near the knee. Delanty clung to his post until other workmen saw his plight and aided him to the ground. The damper, which weighs 300 pounds, crashed thmough the roof near where other workmen were standing. Delanty is in the Geisinger hospital. —As they huddled around a big crap game in Pittsburgh last Friday afternoon, eight men, in a down-town garage heard a sudden order to hold up their hands. Turning, the players and bystanders saw two masked men with revolvers approach from the froat entrance. Ordering John E. Colvin, of Beechview, to stand aside, one of the bandits reached inside his coat pocket and took out a wallet containing $2000 in $10 notes. After counting the booty, the two hold-up men backed out of the garage without molesting the other seven men. Colvin reported the hold-up to the police. One man was arrested, but was released on proving an alibi. Colvin admitted he had ‘flashed the roll” in sev- eral places before the game began. —Experienced gas men say the greatly boomed McKeesport gas field or pool is passing. It is said that the field, into which millions have been poured, is giving no more than 7,000,000 feet of gas daily. One well alone at the beginning of the boom was producing more than seven times that amount. It is admitted, how- ever, that some of the companies are not taking all the gas that could be taken from the producing wells, and that a num- ber of wells have been closed for the win- ter months. Small wells are being struck daily, but most of them are being ‘“plug- ged.” In a number of instances drilling has ceased before reaching the Speechley sand, promoters agreeing that it was use- less to drill that deep. Despite the slump in gas production nearly 200 wells are un- der way. —@Grafton Mahoney, 21 years old, an in- mate three months in the Pennsylvania In- dustrial Reformatory, at Huntingdon, sen- tenced from Pittsburgh, escaped last Thursday night. His means of escape is indicated by the theft of clothing from deputy superintendent Joe Lang's wife. Mahanoy was house boy for Mrs. Lang, and was a well-behaved fellow, whose chief attribute was slowness. Thursday night he donned Mrs. Lang's dress, hat, silk stockings and veil and, with Mrs. Lang’s powder box and puff, walked out of the reformatory unsuspected At the Pennsylvania station he flirted with a young Huntingdon man, who accompanied him as far as Tyrone, where they separat- ed. Mahanoy continued on the train for Pittsburgh, but it is believed he will not show himself soon in that city, for he is known there.