_ INK SLINGS. ~~ | —Anyway Governor Sproul has been denied a chance to write a new constitution for Pennsylvania. . —Bellefonte registered an emphatic “No” to the proposal to hold a consti- tutional convention at this time. . —The proposal to hold a constitu- - tionl convention in Pennsylvania was ~ , overwhelmingly rejected on Tuesday. ~~ —About the only business that the Harding administration has put any pep into thus far is that of the pho- tographer. —While burgess Walker was being put through the 33rd degree up in Boston his rival, Mr. Johnston, was being put through the 3rd right here in Bellefonte. —Sitting judge Thomas J. Bald- ridge defeated District Attorney Mar- ion D. Patterson by nearly three thousand votes in their contest for ju- dicial honors in Blair county. —Marshal Foch is coming to visit us next month but as he is not going to stack up against either Mr. Demp- sey or Mrs. Mallory he will go back to France as great an idol as he left. —The Vare victory in Philadelphia was accomplished on a fifty-fifty slate. After the election the contractors will turn the other side around and the Brotherly Lovers will discover the real figures—ninety-nine—one. —This word agenda that we hear rolled so glibly from the tongues of real and near statesmen means merely what is to be digested at a stated sit- ting. In other words, it includes everything from soup to nuts. —The New York architect and fur- niture manufacturer who are in court wrangling over which one of them will be entitled to recognition in history for designing a chair recently present- ed to President Harding might do well to ask for a suspension of judgment. ‘The fellow who designed the chicken coops for Rutherford B. Hayes isn’t in the spot-light in the Hall of Fame. —The primaries are over. The men of your choice may not have succeed- ed on getting on the ticket. If they didn’t it was only because the majori- ty of the voters didn’t view your fa- vorites with the same appreciative vision. Be that as it may, you still have many to pick from, for the elec- tion that is to come is not like the pri- mary just past. At the election you can vote for any of the primary nomi- -nees, no matter what their politics choice was confined to only such per- sons as sough lace on your own RR heat works here last week wasn’t en from the postoffice at all. The de- termination of that point isn’t worry- ing us half so much, however, as the may be, whereas at the primary the! stol- | VOL. 66. Those of us who recall the hysteria of Republican Senators over the dis- position of Shantung in the Versail- by a new development concerning that province in China. It will be recalled that long before the world begun Chi- na had ceded Shantung to Germany. After the beginning of hostilities it became an exceedingly useful and im- portant army and navy station for Germany in her operations against Russia. For this reason the Allies en- tered into an agreement with Japan to dislodge Germany from the port and pledged the German title to Japan as a reward for the service in the event of the successful issue of the enterprise. The Versailles treaty confirmed and fulfilled this pledge after Japan had given a promise, at the demand of President Wilson, that in the course of a short time it would be restored to China, the rightful owner. It was at the beginning of the war as much the property of Germany as any of the provinces and property of the German empire and the conquest by Japan gave that country as valid a title to it as France obtained to Alsace and Lorraine. But the Republican Sena- tors went into hysterics over the great wrong which had been done to China and in the absence of a better reason cited that as one of the causes of their opposition to the ratification of the | Versailles treaty. Senator Lodge “threw a fit” over it. Now the surprising news comes that Japan has been trying to fulfill its promise to restore Shantung to China and China refuses to accept it. What the real reson for this attitude is, is left to conjecture, but it may be as- sumed that there is some subtle polit- ical scheme concealed in it somewhere. | China declares that she is willing to | take Shantung back but wants the | United States government to make the | conditions and define the terms of the i restoration. Possibly there is no sig- i nificance in this but the late Bret Harte had a thorough understanding of the “Heathen Chinge,” and his ri In any event it would be both Vi afe to keep clear of Asiatic | ——Even if the Harding conference | fulfills the expectations of its friends les Peace treaty are again perplexed , slander that is being cast upon our it will not accomplish anything in the profession by the rumor that one of | way of progress. It may make it pos- the few of us who has been professed- | sible for big nations to boss small ly true to the teachings of Frances | ones but we had that condition before Willard and Mr. Murphy got four bot- | the world war. tles of the illicit stuff and said he had only one when the officers called to re- plevin it. Of course we would have No Infringement but Dodging. had to give him the brown derby if he had given up the other three, but we’ll have to take the white ribbon away from him because he didn’t. —Years of dabbling in it have con- vinced us that when it comes down to playing politics our Republican friends are about the meanest specimens of humanity we have ever met up with. Of course we Democrats never expect anything better from them than to be kicked ’round like a miserable houn dawg, but how they pull that kind of stuff on one another and then all pull together for the grand old party is something too abstruse for our single- tracked mind. Monday night one of the Republican aspirants for a place on his party ticket in Bellefonte hired a band to parade the streets and stir up enthusiasm for his cause. He had handsome banners flaring enticing as- surances to the voters and the parade moved as scheduled. But one of his Republican rivals for the same office evidently got a tip as to what was do- ing and had a lot of banners made to sing his praises and then he hired a lot of boys to earry them ahead of the ! band and grab off all the thunder the other was paying for. hear of such a trick? A Democrat couldn’t pull such a thing and get away with it. —Burgess Walker carried Belle- Did you ever | We have seen comparatively little comment and practically no criticism on the recent act of President Hard- ing in personally appearing on the floor of the Senate to lobby against the passage of the soldiers’ bonus bill. When Mr. Harding’s predecessor in of- fice invited Senators and Representa- tives in Congress to visit the White House and confer on pending legisla- tion, not only all the Republican Sen- ators but most of the Republican newspapers condemned it as a gross infringement of the prerogatives of Congress. Such epithets as Czar, boss, and other offensive names were applied to him, but when President sive act, they all remain silent. What President Harding did, how- ever, was not an infringement on either Senatorial prerogative or dig- nity. It was simply a rather scurvy method of “saving his face.” If the President had gone to the floor of the Senate chamber to lobby for the pas- sage of a measure of legislation, he might be open to the charge of dis- courtesy, for such a thing has never ! been done. The constitution specific- ally authorizes him to “recommend to their consideration such measures as he shall judge necessary or expedi- | ent.” Therefore he was not infringing ' Senatorial prerogatives. He might Harding did an infinitely more offen- . fonte for renomination by a majority | €asily construe his act as within that of 210 votes over all opponents with- | Provision if he had been favoring a out even having been in town while measure. But he was opposing pend- his political fat was in the fire. That | ing legislation. ; is going some. There may be those ' The constitution invests in the Pres- who will attempt to minimize his vic- | ident of the United States the power tory by claiming that he had weak op- [to veto any measure of legislation position, but as a public official it can | Passed by Congress and unless two- scarcely be said that Mr. Johnston, | thirds of the members present of both his principal opponent, was any more | Houses pass it again, “the objections vulnerable than he. Both were charg- | of the President to the contrary not- ed, and not without reason, of derelic- | Withstanding,” it is dead. Therefore tion of duty in their present offices, | courageous Presidents have never in- but it seems that the voters preferred | terfered with the passage of offensive the “trust me” policy of the burgess | legislation while pending in Congress. to the pledges of the tax collector. We | They simply wait until it comes into hope that Mr. Walker will now talk | their possession and then swipe it turkey to council, decide once and for | With a veto. But Harding hadn’t the all who is boss of the police of Belle- fonte and run the town just as wide- open as some of his advocates believ- ed he would or as tight shut as others would like to have it. Who cares whether automobiles menace them by | day and boot-leggers seduce by night. The Big Spring flows copiously on and them that don’t like Bellefonte can take Charles Pickle Snyder’s ad- vice and move to some other town. | courage to treat the soldiers’ bonus | bill in that way. He wanted it killed { but was unable to avail himself of his | constitutional right to kill it. He hid { behind the togas of the Senators. | { ——If the correspondence between { Lloyd George and Mr. DeValera ac- i complishes no other result it keeps an . anxious people of two hemispheres ' guessing. Demonic STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. Surprising News of Shantung. | Secretary Mellon’s Curious Idea. | It may easily be believed that Sec- retary of the Treasury Mellon is cor- | rectly quoted in a statement that whatever improvement there may be discernible in business conditions is ascribable to the boll-weevil, though the esteemed New York World pro- tests that he could not possibly enter- tain such an opinion. Mr. Mellon’s statement, which is endorsed by other high officials in Washington, is to the effect that the boll-weevil worked such destruction to the cotton crop that a scarcity ensued and prices advanced. In sympathy with this incident prices of other commodities increased to an extent that started a purchasing movement and an apparent activity in trade operations. No doubt the cause and effect are both present. Of course the proposition is absurd, and as the esteemed New York World states, “if the boll-weevil has such a miraculous effect on cotton every good patriot will pray from now on for grasshoppers in the wheat, drought on the pasture, smut in the corn and frost on the fruit blossoms. Come cinch-bugs, hail, flood, cyclones, sah- otage and all the plagues of Egypt— every visitation will leave us better off than before it came. The short cut to prosperity lies through calam- ity.” Our contemporary might have added a pious invocation for war be- cause it is the most destructive agent BELLEFONTE, PA., SEPTEMBER 23, 1921. One Menacing Ghost Laid. By a substantial majority of the people of Pennsylvania the ghost of one absurd ambition of the Republi- ‘can machine has been laid. The pro- posed constitutional convention has been defeated and it may be safely predicted that no attempt will ever be made again to organize a convention on the plan which has been rejected. It was preposterous from the begin- ning. A constitutional convention is the voice of the people and its mem- bers should come from the people rather than from an individual or a partisan machine. The value of the victory of the people in this instance, therefore, lies in the fact that it has placed the seal of popular condemna- tion on an attempt to usurp power. | The campaign made by the Repub- lican machine and others influenced ‘by selfish ambition, was one of false pretense. The most effective argu- ; ment in its support was the statement : that unless the convention is called ' the building and improvement of the i roads of the Commonwealth would ‘have to be discontinued. As a matter of fact nothing except the profligacy { or inefficiency of the Highway Depart- ment will check the road building in . this State. The operation is not a pro- : gram of the Highway Department or | the work of a political clique. It is a matter in which the people are enlist- ed and the interest of the people in NO. 37. Interesting News for Disabled World War Veterans. Red Cross Chapters have received notice of the “Clean-Up” campaign organized by the Veteran’s Bureau for the purpose of reaching every vet- eran of the world war who may be en- titled to benefits under the war risk insurance act. The purpose of the campaign is to assist disabled ex- service men to secure compensation, medical treatment, and hospital care in cases where compensation claims have not yet been filed. Men whose claims are pending will be helped to secure final action in cases where further evidence is necessary to con- nect their disability with service. To effect this “clean-up” of cases, the bureau has created in each State a “clean-up squad” consisting of a medical examiner, a compensation and claims examiner, and a member of | the district manager’s staff. To each squad there has also been assigned a state representative of the Red Cross and a representative of the American Legion. The squad will not actually , make compensation awards, but they {will have considerable authority in i making decisions and recommending ‘final action. Immediate physical ex- amination will be provided when nec- | essary. The Pennsylvania squad has been in | operation for some time in the east- | ern part of the State, and are in Pitts- known to the human mind and affords | the work will guarantee its continu- | burgh this week. Their exact loca- the greatest opportunity for profiteer- ing and high prices. But it is not surprising, as our New | sylvania is an admirable expression of | nounced. York contemporary imagines, that Secretary Mellon should express such thoughts. They voice the fundamen- | spects has fallen behind in the march | ance until completed. { The present constitution of Penn- statecraft. But it was made nearly half a century ago and in some re- i tion in this vicinity and the date of | their arrival have not yet been an- ! In the meantime, however, i all ex-service men whose claims are | pending, or who have a disability for which they have not yet claimed com- tal principle of protectionism and the | of events. If conditions were favora- | pensation, should get in touch with favorite argument of tariff mongers. | ble and the public mind in proper . the nearest Red Cross Chapter, where They have always contended that frame good results might be obtained , they will be assisted in preparing all heavy taxation and high prices cre- by the writing of a new constitution. necessary papers ready for. the consid- ated and promoted prosperity and In fact it may be expected that within (eration of the clean-up squad, The made a good many credulous voters a few years a convention will be as- ; work of the squad will be much more believe that to be a fact. The late Mr. Blaine protested against such an absurdity after he had given up hope of election to the Presidency and the late President McKinley backed away from it before he died. But it is sa- cred doctrine in Pittsburgh yet and no doubt Secretary Mellon fully ~and firmly believes it. : ——We refuse to believe the cur- rent reports of the abundance of oil in Bolivia. If oil could be scooped up in buckets full in that country the Stan- dard Oil company would have acquir- ed title to all the land there long ago. World Opinion of Our Attitude. The world opinion of the attitude of this country with respect to the League of Nations was tersely and truthfully expressed by Zinavasta Zastri, representative of India in the | Assembly of the League, now in ses- sion at Geneva. Mr. Zastri is a law- ver and though native of India, speaks English admirably and eloquently, ac- cording to the Associated Press re- porter of the meeting, and his speech “made a profound impression on the delegates.” “I have no patience with those who have been mentioned in this debate who remain outside and criti- cise,” he declared, adding, “it is easy enough to find fault but it is not al- ways useful.” ! Among those “mentioned in this de- bate” was the government of the United States. Since the organiza- tion of the League we have done noth- ing officially but criticise and in every case “the wish was father to the thought” expressed in the predictions of failure. We have sneakingly tak- en advantage of every provision of the covenant of the League which prom- ised advantage and. shirked every ob- ligation it imposed. This fact is prov- ed by the text of the separate peace with Germany which in itself was a | dastardly and infamous act, according to Senator Lodge’s speech in Boston at the beginning of our activity in the war. This is why the world condemns us. M. Leon Burgeois, one of the French representatives in the Assembly, re- fuses to believe that the people of the United States are not in full sympa- thy with the purposes and progress of the League. “It is not to be expect- ed,” he said in an impressive speech in the Assembly, “that a country which sent 2,000,000 men across the Atlantic to fight for liberty would afterward renounce a part in future affairs.” So far as the people of this country are concerned M. Burgeois’ estimate is accurate, but he is appar- ently unfamiliar with the aims and aspirations of the petty, partisan pig- mies who are now in control of our government. It may be only a coincidence but it is true, nevertheless, that bur- glar insurance increases in price in just about the same ratio that booze increases in cost. ——The declining value of the Ger- man mark is certainly a vindication of the law of supply and demand. ‘ sembled for that purpose. But when such a proposition is approved by the | people it will be laid on a just plan : and assembled under auspices more inviting to public confidence than the { one, which has just been rejected by | the voters of the State. The conven- + tion" ill ‘be responsible to the people. ~——Autumn was ushered in on Wednesday with one of the hardest rains of the season; or perhaps the “downpour was sent purposely to wash | away any animosities engendered by : Tuesday’s primaries. eet. ee ee ee ee Revenue Legislation Agreed Upon. i | finally agreed upon a revenue bill and . i The Senate Finance committee has ' effective if evidence in each case is properly lined up before they arrive. Unadjusted questions of vocational training will be taken care of as well as compensation matters. { Ex-service men in Bellefonte and vicinity whose claims have not heen. . settled are advised to "get’in™ touch {with the Bellefonte Chapter Red - Cross, or Miss Helen K. Shipps, execu- 1 tive secretary of the State College i Chapter. Miss Shipps can be reached : at the Red Cross office in the basement ‘of the bank building at State College . from nine to twelve in the morning, or ' by letter sent to the same address. | She will be glad to give immediate at- tention to all calls from ex-service men, or from others who may know oi ‘ cases that should be taken care of. i will report it this week. It represents | i the skeleton of the House bill clothed ' It may be said that Republican in the language of the Senate com. | statesmen would rather have another mittee. But the changes are of little j Yar than 2h enduring peace made by importance to the general public. ® Democratic President. They show material alteration in | WE ; phrasing but no important difference | ——Admiral Sims is again denying in effect. The rich man is benefitted | things, If the Admiral would hold a at the expense of the less fortunate in tighter tongue he would have less rea- i settled in Pennsylvania. both measures, the greatest difference being in the fact that the House bill was retroactive to January last while the Senate committee bill becomes ef- feetive in this respect next January. burden another year. It is estimated that the measure as framed by the Senate committee will produce a revenue of $3,200,000,000, for this year, which is the amount ry. But provision is made for borrow- ing about $2,000,000,000, so that it is practically admitted that the pretense of reducing taxes is false and fraud- ulent. The estimated yield of the measure for next year is $2,700,000,- 000, but as the congressional election of next year will be over before that deficit is revealed, it will be easy to get deficiency bills for any amount through. All that is needed now is a “good enough Morgan until after the election,” and it is hoped the bill will serve that purpose. Of course the Democratic members of the Senate Finance committee were not consulted in the framing of the bill. What their opinions are on that subject or this is of no conse- quence to Senator Penrose and his col- leagues. But the people will have a voice in appraising the measure after it becomes a law and it may be pre- dicted that they will speak plainly and to the point. Juggling of figures will not fool all the people even part of the time in this period of educational progress and Republican statesmen are likely to change their estimate of public intelligence when the popular verdict is expressed in the ballot box. But the trick serves its purpose for the present. et orbits ——The Boston police have stopped the auction sales of laboring men but the price of food has not even declin- ed in price. ——The big trout are coming up Spring creek, which is evidence that the spawning season is about due. Chairman Penrose believes the heavy | campaign contributors will stand the | Secretary Mellon believes is necessa- | ! son for explaining. | ; | ——The “joy-riders” are also im- { pairing their health by burning too { much midnight oil. The Resignation Rumors. From the New York Times. For some weeks Washington gossip has been whispering of an impending break-up of the Cabinet. In clubs and hotels the names of members about to resign have been knowingly mention- ed. First it was Secretary Hoover. He was going to wash his hands of policies he could not approve. Then the report was most positive that Sec- retary Mellon was going to get out. His financial plans had been inconti- nently rejected by Congress, the Pres- ident had not backed him up and he in- tended to retire from public life. Fi- nally, with great detail and appear- ance of authenticity, came the state- ment that the Attorney General meant to leave the Cabinet in order to be- come a candidate for the Ohio Sena- torship. Thus one-third of President Harding's official family were making ready to desert him! . All the stories have been denied, and presumably had their origin only in rumor. But who started the ru- mor? This is the question that deep- ly interested the Washington corres- pondents, who have been trying to run down the answer to it. And they are said to have discovered a surprising thing—namely, that the unfounded and malicious yarns were put in circu- lation not by marplot Democrats but by disgruntled Republicans. The trail seems to lead in the direction of Rep- resentatives and Senators who have not hit it off any too well with the President, and who are taking this means to annoy him and to give the party leaders. concern. It is a good deal like taking pot shots at an ene- my from behind a hedge. Even if he is not hit, he is startled and worried and does not know where the next fir- ing will be directed. No doubt the gossip mongers at the capital will soon have other members of the Cabinet planning to quit their posts. Meanwhile, Mr. Harding bears himself as one who has an unfaltering faith in the Jeffersonian dogma that few die and none resign. fos SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE —Although John Freyman, of Lehighton, is 90 years old, he recently cut six acres of grass with a scythe, . —Senator Charles E. Donahue, of Lock Haven, has been appointed district deputy exalted ruler for the B. P. O. Elk§ of the Central Pennsylvania district. 1 ” —Governor Sproul granted respites for two Lackawanna county men sentenced to. be electrocuted. Frank Palmer was given a respite from October 3 to 24, and David 3 Jones from September 26 to November —Attorney W. L. Woodcock, wife and two daughters, have returned to Holli- daysburg from a six week’s tour of Europe, during which they visited many of the bat- tlefields. The Woodcocks are residents of Hollidaysburg. —Arthur M. Replogle, for seven years connected with the staff of the Second Na- tional bank of Altoona, has been elected cashier to succeed John D. Meyer, now vice president of the First National bank, of Tyrone. W. S. Kilgore and C. K. Nagle have been appointed assistant cashiers. —Pickpockets, believed to be members of a gang “working” the crowds at the Read- ing fair, and spending their evenings in station and theatre crowds in that city, made a big haul when they stole the purse of Frank Gerhart, of the Independent Gun Club. It contained $500 and a lot of checks. —The state forestry department is erect- ing more than 100 huge steel signs on state forest lands, cautioning visitors to prevent fires. Pictures of a burned area showing the charred stumps and devas- tated land are shown on the signs. It is said that this is the first time any state forestry department has attempted an ex- tensive use of out-door picture signs as propaganda for the prevention of forest fires. —The Penasylvania State Firemen’s As- sociation will hold its annual convention in Wilkes-Barre, October 3rd to 8th, in conjunction with the celebration of the city’s old home week, the fiftieth anniver- sary of the incorporation of Wilkes-Barre as a eity. Among the speakers at the con- vention will be Judge Eugene C. Bonni- well, chairman of the State Firemen's As- sociation executive committee: Charles H. Grakelow and Samuel B. McCormick. —Dr. Ellen C. Potter, formerly of Phil- adelphia, and. connectéd with American educational work in Indiana, will become director of the bureau of child welfare of the department of welfare of Pennsylva- nia. She is now chief of the division of child health in the Department of Health. Dr. Mary Riggs Noble, of Philadelphia, will be advanced to succeed Dr. Potter. Miss Mary Moss, of Reading, will leave health department social service work for a position with the welfare department. —No time has yet been fixed for the sen- tencing of the six men held in jail at Read- ing since last March for the $180,800 rob- bery at the People’s Trust company, Wy- omissing. Four were convicted and were last week refused a new trial, and two pleaded guilty. Copies of the opinion by Judge Schaeffer refusing a new trial were mailed te the men's attorneys in New York. Sentence may not be imposed for a week or more to give counsel an opportu- nity to take further steps if they see fit. Mrs, Clara Kibler, 43 years old, of | Neffsville, Lancaster county, has been. ae- quitteéd "of the charge of killing her hus-. band, by a jury in Lancaster quarter ses- sions court. The verdict was returned after deliberation of fifteen hours. The defense claimed the act was committed by Mrs. Kibler while in a somnambulistic state and called physicians to prove that such was possible. Her husband, Christ- ian Kibler, was shot in the head twice as he lay sleeping in bed on the morning of May 12, 1921. —dJohn 8. Myers, of Birmingham, nearly 102 years old, was born in Missouri, on a plantation owned by his father. He left . there when 11 years of age, surreptitious- ly, and went to Irance, the land of his grandfather, who had come to America with Lafayette, where he remained six years. Returning to America in 1837, he He has lived in Montour, Lancaster, Huntingdon and Blair counties. He enlisted in the navy in 1847, served during the Mexican war and was mustered out in 1852. —The ancient doctrine that a man has a right to beat his wife and cannot be pros- ecuted for doing so was involved in a case in court at Pottsville, on Saturday, when John Ceocpini, of Shenandoah, prosecuted for beating his wife, asserted that in Eu- rope he had a legal right to beat his wife, and he thought the same right existed in America through the English common law. Judge Berger directed the defendant to pay $30 a month for the support of his wife, who does not like her husband’s doc- trine and is not living with him. —Frank Valoroso, tried for the murder of the Rev. Felix Novak, his wife and three children, at their home on Pond Hill, Lu- zerne county, was found guilfy of murder in the first degree, last Friday. The jury deliberated for three hours before inform- ing the court that a verdict had been reached. The evidence against him was circumstantial. District attorney James told the jury that the Rev. Novak was shot to death, then the house was ignited and the wife and three children lost their lives. He charged that there was ample proof that Valoroso committed the crime. —Coming upon a large wounded bald eagle while they were hunting groundhogs near Leckrone, Fayette county, three men battled with the bird for some time. be- fore they managed to place it in a sack. Frank Sova, who first noticed the bird, wounded it the second time, and it at- tempting to get it home he was attacked as he crossed a fence. Frank Enzer, who heard Sovo’s cries for assistance, was bit- ten on the hand when he attempted to free Sova from the bird's beak. Andrew Spawtz, who attempted to subdue the ea- gle, was so badly bitten on the arm that medical attention was necessary. —May Slagle, aged 17 years, of Johns- town, who lost both legs when run over by an interurban car Thursday night, admit- ted to the district attorney on Saturday that she was responsible for the action. According to the girl's story, she placed her legs across the rail and propped them in place with stones, then waited twenty minutes for the car to pass. She explain- ed that she intended to commit suicide, but wanted death te come slowly, so that she could have time to make peace with God and her parents. Immediately after the accident, Miss Slagle had maintained that a man gagged her and placed her on the track. She said that her home life was unhappy. The girl's condition is still crit- ical and her recovery is doubtful.