INK SLINGS. Ruthless Yanks just couldn’t win. : —There are plenty of coal bins that | "are empty only because the family - purse is in the same depleted condi- Things are coming toa pretty pass when leading Republican papers of the country start calling the pres- ent one “a calamity Congress.” ; —Our treaty with England was . wrong, but the recent practical repu- diation of it through the action of Congress on the Panama Canal tolls makes a bad matter worse. Is it a Germanized Washington that is view- ing treaties as scraps of paper? __We notice that William Jennings Bryan's testimenial to the Ingersoll watch is to the effect that he always times himself with one when speak- ing. It is interesting to know that Mr. Bryan uses an Ingersoll. If he were to use a Ford car, a triumvirate of noisy efficiency would be formed the equal of which is beyond conjec- ture. __ Bituminous coal can be bought at the mines for less than it costs to transport it to Bellefonte, but how can the railroads haul it any cheaper when their employees won’t help re- duce the cost of operation by accept- ing wage reductions. Certainly it 1s not the bituminous mine owner or the railroad stock-holder who is getting the money. — The calibre of the men in charge of affairs in Washington could not have been more strikingly revealed than it was through the announce- ment of the list of distinguished men who will be invited to attend the cer- emonies at the burial of America’s unknown hero, in Arlington, on Arm- istice day. That Woodrow Wilson was not definitely on the list is a smirch on the honor of the Nation. That he was not is because our gov- ernment is now in the control of men obsessed with jealousy, short of intel- lectuality and far too small for the great places they bluff at filling. —_ The national conference on unem- ployment has concluded that there are three things that should be done at once if business is to be revived and employment furnished for the mil- lions of men who are idle. Railroad freight rates must be cut, taxes must be revised and some sort of a tariff bill enacted. Just how such things are to make jobs for men now is rath- er more than we care to attempt to explain. The unemployment confer- ence is looking too far in the future. Bread and coal are needed instanter, not after Congress has fiddled months and months with taxation and tariff. “The starving’ workers wilt all be dead’ before succor can be hoped for from such a dilatory body. __We are delighted to hear that a Princeton professor was robbed while traveling in Rome. We are more than delighted to hear that another profes- sor at Old Nassau can’t support his | family on less than $42,000 a year. Up to the moment of learning of these interesting incidents we had been laboring under the impression that a preacher, professor or editor never could be robbed for the very good reason that they have nothing to rob. And as for that $42,000 Prof. his predicament proves our oft ex- pressed theory that there’s no use olf paying preachers, educators or we ed- itors good money anyhow, for none of us seem to have brains enough to hold onto it and that is the reason Wwe VOL. 66. BE STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. LLEFONTE, PA. OCTOBER 14, 1921. NO. 40. Judge Bonniwell for Supreme Bench. Though the official vote has not been declared it is certain that Hon. Eugene C. Bonniwell, judge of the Municipal court of Philadelphia, has been nominated by the Democrats of Pennsylvania as their candidate for Justice of the Supreme court. He was not a candidate for the nomina- tion. The party organization having neglected to provide a candidate some friends of Judge Bonniwell projected him into the arena. They knew that he would assume any burden the par- ty could impose upon him. Thus far he has not indicated his purposes in the matter, but we feel that he will accept the nomination, even though it seems like “a forlorn hope.” As a matter of fact, though, it is not that. The framers of the constitution of Pennsylvania contemplated a non- partisan judiciary. For years, with the consent of both parties, the mi- nority party was represented on the Supreme bench. Since the death of the lamented Judge Mestrezat, how- ever, there has been no Democrat on the Supreme bench. Certain corpora- tions which control the Republican machine and through it manage the State government prefer a unani- mously Republican and completely servile court. Governor Sproul, through appointment, has already placed three men on the bench. One of them is now an aspirant for elec- tion and it was the hope of the ma- chine that he would be able to slip through without opposition. Friends of Judge Bonniwell, not in sympathy with those plans, presented his name been nominated. This gives the people of the State an opportunity to make effective the intention of the framers of the con- stitution to give the minority party a voice in the court of last resort. Moreover it affords a chance to place a man on the bench of the Supreme court who is not ready and willing te obey the mandates of the corpora- tions. If ever there was a time with- in the history of the State that such representation was needed it is now. Most important questions are likely ) udged within the next few to be adjudged years and a mil people rather than the corporations is needed to pass upon them. It is the duty and ought to be the pleasure of every Democrat in Pennsylvania to vete for Bonniwell. ——If the impression that the dis- armament conference is for the pur- pose of defeating the aims of the League of Nations increases much the conference will be a failure. The League is a fixture. ete eee. Confused Political Conditions. It looks as if the Sproul faction has actually got under the Penrose faction of the Republican party of Pennsylvania at Washington. This is the more surprising because Pen- rose is on the ground and capable of didn’t know any of the trio could be “frisked” of anything. —The sudden death of Senator Philander C. Knox, at his home in Washington, on Wednesday evening closes a life that has been distinguish- ed in Pennsylvania for years. Sena- tor Knox was a Republican of the old | school, a very able lawyer and a gen- tleman of unimpeachable character. His public life, however, has contrib- uted little of the initiative or con- structive. Neither as Attorney Gen- eral, Secretary of State oras a Sena- tor in Congress has he written into the record any outstanding achievement that might establish claim for him of a place among the country’s great public men. He was a good man and may be the influence for good that he had over his fellows may be more lasting and of greater real value than great leadership in affairs of state. —On the occasion of the inaugura- tion of Penn State’s new president; today there will be such a gathering | of high brows at the College that in- numerable conferences had to be ar- ranged so that each one of them might have opportunity to pursue the lines of least resistance. = While the big problems of the arts and sciences all came in for a bit of solution the particular problems of State seem to have been entirely lost sight of. What was the use of theorizing on the rela- tion of the College to the basic indus- tries, the relation of the engineer to industry, the future of chemistry, the social significance of home economics and kindred subjects when the State's parsimony permits the College to function in no closer relationship to any of them than that of a forty-sec- ond cousin. What they needed up there yesterday was a fellow like Bill Hays. He knows how to get the money and with all respect to the ul- tra honorable vocation of the educa- tors we know a very few of them who know the first thing about that very essential requisite to the development of the seats of learning of the coun- try. doing infinitely: more good or harm for the President. The Republican party in Washington is “all tattered and torn.” The leaders can’t even agree on a tariff bill and on all other questions they are as wide apart as the ocean. The western Senators, all more or less tainted with Populism, are opposed to the administration tax bill, the administration bill for help- ing the railroads and are not over friendly with ‘the separate peace treaty. Under. existing conditions Penrose could create havoc. ; But the President doesn’t seem to understand the situation or appraise the danger. Senator Penrose had chosen a nice little friend of his in the person of Judge Witmer for Gov- ernor, and to make his undertaking | ed prohibition agent. It is a power- ful job viewed from a political slant. Booze is a potent agent at all times. Now it is a greater force than ever, and as the State agent can appoint as many subordinates as he wants, McConnell promised to be the domi- nant influence in selecting candidates next year. But “there’s many a slip twixt the cup and the lip,” and just as McConnell was getting his forces in order, the Sproul influence inter- vened and threatens his tenure in the office, according to current gossip. Anyway there’ are rumors in the air that a lot of spies have been dis- patched from Washington to check up on McConnell and that their re- ports are very unfriendly. Gossip as- i the Governor who might have been | President if Penrose had been willing. | Probably this is the solution of the { problem and possibly not. Pittsburgh | seems to have developed a candidate for Governor in the person of John A. ' Bell, a banker and coal operator out | there who is likely to be favored by | Secretary of the Treasury Mellon, a | close business associate. Treasury is boss of the prohibition agent. do with it all, to the Democratic voters and he has | easy had Senator McConnell appoint- EE Nobody Cares Now. The esteemed Philadelphia Record declares “there must be something rotten in the records when those who have been in charge of them appear: to be afraid to exhibit them to the light of day.” There is something rotten. Since the present Auditor General entered upon the duties of his office, less than six months ago, he has dismissed frem service a num- ber of useless employees, whe upon the statement of his predecessor in office, were held on the pay roll to pay political debts and discharge party obligations. During the term of his predecessor in office embezzlements and misuse of public funds by em- ployees were of frequent ocurrence and no prosecutions were made for partisan reasons. The Auditor General in office dui- ing that period is now State Treas- urer as a reward, probably, for feed- ing and sheltering the “lame ducks” and embezzlers. The publication of the records would expose the names of the beneficiaries of this malfeas- ance in office and might impair the in- terests of the party. For that rea- son no records have been published covering the Tour years in which State Treasurer Charles A. Snyder was Auditor General. One of the em- bezzlers has since been arrested and indicted by the Dauphin county grand jury. But his trial has been post- poned for some reason. Possibly the purpose is to further delay the expos- ure which the evidence might force. It is said he was a confidential clerk and familiar with the operations of the department. | Our Philadelphia contemporary al- so complains that the school appropri- ations have not been paid. “Who cares,” the Record states, “despite the fact that the Philadelphia school district alone lacks over $1,000,000 of the appropriations due it by the State, and almost every other school district in the State is short of the funds due?” Nobody, of course. It is the rule of the party. When Mi. Berry was State Treasurer, school ap- propriations were paid promptly but immediately after his retirement the next few old practice of withholding the funds. ysé fealty to the was resumed. The money is n for other uses. The party “lame ducks” must be fed and sheltered and besides, there is no money to pay. The treasury is bankrupt. — Henry Ford wants judicial sal- aries raised to a high level and he may have a good reason for his inter- est in the matter. But we haven't heard of any judges threatening to resign because they are underpaid. Vierick or His Personal ‘Choice. | President Harding is a cruel and ungrateful creature if he refuses to yield to the demand of Mr. Sylvester _Vierick and his associates in an or- ganization of German sympathizers which succeeded the German-Ameri- can Alliance, forced to dissolve dur- ing the war. Mr. Vierick visited Harding at Marion, after the election, ] when the “great minds” of the party | were being summoned for consulta- tion, and must have been promised something substantial, for he came away pleased with his interview. It was freely believed that a cabinet portfolio was to be the reward for the six million votes Vierick assured the President-elect he had delivered. But this expectation was disappointed. What Dr. Vierick now demands is a trifle, comparatively speaking. It is that upon resumption of official re- lations between this country and Ger- many an Ambassador to Germany be appointed from among those ardent German sympathizers in this country ‘who applauded every atrocity perpe- ‘trated by Germans, approved the sinking of the Lusitania and aided in the various acts of sabotage that cost the country so much and gave Presi- dent Wilson mental anguish. He names a few from which choice may | be made with his approval and gives a list of those who are anathema and Hunting Season Will Soon be Here. The attractive displays of guns and | ammunition in various shop windows all over the country emphasizes the fact that hunting season will soon be here. In fact raccoon and woodcock are now in season, having come in on October 1st, but woodcock are too scarce in this country to afford good sport and it is yet a little early for . ‘coon hunters to be abroad. But hun- dreds of hunters in Centre county are anxiously waiting for November 1st, only seventeen days away, when the season will open for wild turkeys, squirrels, pheasant, rabbits, quail and bear—in fact for all kinds of game native to this section with the single exception of deer, which do not come in season until December 1st. | Naturally with the opening of the | season so near the average hunter is | already getting his paraphernalia in ! order for the opening day. The tang i of winter in the air sets the blood of i the average American to tingling, not | so much with the blood-lust to kill or for the pure joy of killing, but mainly with a desire to match his wits with of the forests in an effort to capture them for the sole purpose of getting a taste of wild meat. Here again the primitive man is in evidence. There domesticated animals is more palata- ble fot eating purposes than any wild meat, but there is a delicious taste about a nice plate of broiled par- tridges, roasted pheasant or wild tur- key that cannot be had from any oth- er bird. Of course, the main thing Centre county hunters are interested in is the quantity of game in the woods this fall. This question can only be definitely determined when the hunt- er goes on the trail, but game of all kinds ought to be fairly plentiful. The hatching season was most favorable and the summer was just about right for young game of all kinds, so that taking everything into consideration there ought to be good sport ahead of the hunters this year. ¢ —=The people of Milesburg expect on "Armistice day, November 11th. While the program for the event has not yet been made public the people of that town can be depended upon to make the occasion one that will ap- peal to the patriotism and American- ism of every individual. Looking backwards, it hardly seems possible that three years have passed since the termination of the great world war. Three years in which there have been so much of political bickerings and party strife that reconstruction both at home and in the countries devas- ‘tated by the war has been woefully neglected. Today every man, woman and child is paying the penalty, not of the war, but the aftermath which has followed in its trail and which our present government at Washington seems unable or unwilling to cope with. —They say the atmosphere on Mars is so thin that a person living on the planet would be able to lift seven times as great a load as he could lift on earth. My, how Presi- dent Harding must long for a Mar- tian atmosphere to help him lift the load that his party is staggering un- der in Washington. ——A good many hard conundrums have been put before the world but “Where does the Soviet government | of Russia get the money.” — Senator King, of Utah, wants the profiteers sent to jail. Maybe he | hopes to solve the unemployment | problem by setting a few million of i . 3 Pa ! men to building jails. — While feeding babies in Russia | care should be taken to leave some- | thing for the children of the idle mil- | lions in this country during the com- the cunning of the birds and beasts is no question but that the meat of ; none more difficult of solution than Bankrupt Leadership. From the Philadelphia Record. The existing situation in Washing- ton, where the so-called agrarian bloc in the Senate has forced chang- es in the tax bill that nullify prac- tically all the Republican pledges of reform and reduction, recalls strong- ly the blundering performances of the Taft Administration, regarding whose head somebody wittily remark- ed that he was “a large body entirely surrounded by men who know exactly what they want?” We would not ap- ply this cutting phrase to President Harding, but it is certainly applicable to the Senate, where the Republican leadership is so feeble that it is ut- terly unable to make any effective re- sistance to the strong and determined group of western Senators who place the interests of their constituents above those of the rest of the coun- try, especially of the Eastern States. They know exactly what they want, and they have forced the members of the Finance committee to adopt their Jems in the changes made in the tax ill. It is now nearly three years since the war ended, and it is two years and seven months since the Republicans came into control of both branches of Congress. urged upon them a vigorous reduction in Federal taxation, but they scorned his suggestions. For two years noth- . ing whatever was done in this direc- tion by the logislatite branch of the ' government. Since March 4th the in- competent leaders have been wrest- ling wearily with the problem, but have made little or no headway. Be- ing politicians, they have regarded every suggested change from a polit- | ical standpoint and have shown little | patience with the recommendations , made by Secretary Mellon and busi- | ness men. In the muddle thus creat- ied the agrarians of the West come | forward with certain fixed ideas of i their own, and, because they are posi- | tive and determined, they compel the i vacillating so-called leaders to capit- ulate. It is a remarkable situation because it reveals the mental bank- | ruptey of the men now nominally in| | control at Washington. | One must go back to 1910, when the . Progressive rebelled against the au- | tocratic methods of Senator Aldrich : and Speaker Cannon, to find anything | at all paralleling it. Republican le ip was then decisively . re 5 pountry,; and ti { be a: repetition of that r 11922. To go from gene | sonalities, we find in that thoroughly | independent journal, The New York | Times, a very accuraté deseription of | the men from whose feeble grasp the | Western group has snatched the real | control of legislation. In denouncing the changes made by this group in | the tax bill of the Senate’s Finance : committee The Times says: "The Republicans in Congress are in a | condition of moral auperism, economic | destitution and intellectual beggary. | Leaders, they have none worthy of the { name. It is only the shadow of the name | that remains in the Senate. Nobody any longer pays much attention to Mr. Lodge. ! Mr. Penrose is enfeebled by illness. He has not the courage and the strength for the responsible position he holds as chair- man of the Finance committee. Mr. Knox D has no qualification whatever for leader- ship. e rest are nowhere. In the House, there are Mr. Fordney and Mr. Mondell, to be sure, but they live in the past, in a past hopelessly remote. No- body speaks with the authority of the party in either house; there ix no dis- Nobody is listened to with re- spect. There are few or no ideas advanc- ed worthy of respect. The farmers “ploc”’ appears to have made political cowards of them all. reer A Policy of Bad Faith. From the New York Tribune. Senator Colt, who was for many years a Federal Circuit Judge, has at- tacked the Borah Panama Canal tolls bill from a new angle. - In his opinion the Borah measure attempts to settle a judicial question by statute. Treaties exist between two govern- ! ments. If there are differences of opinion as to their interpretation the proper method of settling them is by joint action. Conflicting interpreta- tions may be submitted to direct ne- gotiation or to arbitration. To dis- pose of them by legislation on the part of one signatory is a brusque and offensive expedient, even if it be conceded that Congress has the power to modify or annul a treaty, so far as cipline. President Wilson strongly - od | fax 2s 13, Knows Be ons othe ities to per- SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. , —Infantile paralysis has caused one .ideath in McKean county, according to re- _ ports from Bradford. ‘ —Montour county’s lone jail prisoner is : causing all kinds of trouble. The furnace { in the jail was taken out several days ago, “with the intention of putting in a new one, ! but the.new one hasn't arrived, and the _cold nights are severe on the prisoner, he | says. A temporary heater will be placed for his accommodation. —While a fire that destroyed $200,000 worth of property at Braddock on Sunday was at its height, Mrs. Joe Balsome was seen to plunge into the burning frame- work of her home. She emerged almost immediately with $2,500 in bills which she had hidden behind a picture and which had fallen from the wall on a pile of clothing kept moist by the firemen’s hose. —Burgess E. Katz, of Jeannette, has ‘gone on record emphatically against the practice of joy rides. “Girls who S8irt with men on Jeannette streets in order to secure an automobile ride, and men who flirt with girls for the same purpose are going to find themselves behind prison walls,” said the - burgess in instructing Jeannette police officers to place all of- fenders under arrest. Helen Peha, 13 years of age, of Port- age, was seriously injured when she was struck by a bullet fired by a man in a passing automobile. She was taken to a’ hospital in Johnstown. The girl was walking home from a store when two men passed in a speeding auto. As they passed, the one man fired a revolver and the bui- let lodged in the girl's right shoulder. The identity of the man has not been dis- covered. —John Hoffman and his son, Russell Hoffman, of Mifflin county, were taken to the county prison at Lewistown last Fri- day and held without bail on a charge of inveluntary manslaughter on the infor- mation of M. A. Davis, sheriff. Justice of the peace Robert W. Patton, before whom the information was made by the sheriff, ignores the fact that the charge is not a felony and refuses to admit them to bail. The charges grew out of the shooting of Irma Rhoades, 14 years old. in front of the Hoffman farm house on the night of April 27. — That bears are as plentiful in north- ern Columbia county as rabbits, is the declaration of many who have visited that section. Returning from a trip to the inountains, one day last week, Frank Hos- ler, Ralph Knouse, Harry Welliver, A. J. Hartman and Omar Ash say they were compelled to stop their automobile be- cause of a “bear party” in the road ahead of them. There were ten bears romping in the highway, two old ones and eight cubs. This is the largest number ever seen together in that section, old hunters declare. —Kvery day last week “Clover,” the 51 year old horse of Rev. Dr. TU. Myers, a Lutheran minister at Catawissa, attended the county fair at Bloomsburg, the min- ister driving him to and from Blooms- burg each day, Bred in Kentucky, the animal was foaled in 1870 and was on the , race track for six years, having a record | with the old-fashioned high-wheeled sul- | ky of 2.17. Dr. Myers has owned the ani- | Mal for 38 years and has definite record for. 13 years prior te his ownership, So “Clover” is the oldest Liv- ~ —“Personally I would like to work en { you three fellows for ome solid hour in ithe woodshed,” Judge George A. Bald- win told three Beaver county school stu- dents last 'Phursday, whe were before him on charges growing out of hazing. Luther Arnholt, David Cullen: and Harold Marr were alleged to be three of thirty upper classmen, whe used nitrate of silver on the faces of Freshmen, causing burns and. sears that may be permanent. Judge Baldwin sentenced them to pay the costs, ! doetor bills and fines of $30 each. They | were placed on parole for two years. —“I am going to fine you $1 for euch potato—$7 or seven days im jail,” said Magistrate Borland in the Pittsburgh po- lice court last week to Joseph Linchopski, 60 years old, of Twenty-seventh street. “Judge, my wife and T needed food and I took the few petatoes for we must live,” pleaded the old man. “Can you not show me a little merey.” “I ean, and I will,” declared his honor. “I remit your sen- tence, and here is some money to get food. Also, take this card and go see the man whose name is on it. He will give you a job suited to your age, that will pay enough to keep you and your wife.” —The J. H: & C. K. Eagle Co., Inc, the largest silk manufacturers. in central Pennsylvania, announced last Thursday, | according to a Shamokin dispateh, that all plants would be put em a three-day-a week working schedule effective at once. Curtailment of operations was made nec- essary by the unexpected slump in the silk market, executives stated. The com- pany employs 3000 operatives in Shamo- kin, Kulpmont and Treverton. The or- der also affects plants in Phoenixville, Kulpmont and "Treverton. The order al- so affects plants in Phoenixville, Bethle- hem, Gettysburg, Mechanicsburg, Austin and Bellefonte. | —Two years and six months in theeast- | ern penitentiary for stealing chickens wag i the sentence imposed on Hobart Benner, of near Dry Sawmill, Juniata county, by the United States government is con- | Judge Barnett at a special session of court cerned, by subsequent hostile legisla- | held last Friday, with associate judges tion. : | Meiser and Boyer on the bench, Benner The Senator from Rhode Island is a brother of Charles Benuer, now in carries the Borah argument to its log- | jail at Mifflintown, awaiting trial for the ical conclusion when he says that if | murder of constable Thomas M. Ulsh, of cribes this activity to the influence of Now as a’ | matter of fact the Secretary of the | Maybe that has something to consequently must not be favored.’ 1 , His demands were presented in the | ing winter. form of a resolution adopted by the _ Society in which he is the leading | ——1If it is true that the earth has light. | fourteen movements it is safe to pre- There can be no doubt of the value | dict that President Harding will try of Dr. Vierick’s services to Mr. Hard- | to get on both sides of all of them. ing during the campaign. Vierick | > - : himself claims that he delivered six | ~——FProhibition officer McConnell million votes and everybody knows |has resigned his seat in the State Sen- that every ‘voter in the country who ate and he will be in hard luck if his actively sympathized with Germany | other office is taken away. during the war, voted for Harding, § whether the number was one million +———1If prohibition has made no per- or six.’ It ‘is equally certain that | ceptible improvement in crime condi without this element of the electorate | tions it has certainly had the effect Harding could not have been elected. | of multiplying liars. It follows, therefore, that the Presi- | - dent owes Dr. Vierick a debt of grat- | ——There are signs that the dis- itude and the custom of Republican armament conference is to be chang- officials is to pay personal-obligations ed into a committee for butting into in the coin of political: patronage. Far Eastern affairs. Taking one consideration with anoth- | er the German Ambassador should be | | Vierick or his nominee. ——Judging by present industrial conditions Germany is the only com- | batant in the late war that came out ——Come here for your job work. ahead of the game. le rule here, every treaty ratified by this - government ought to contain a provi- | so reserving the right to Congress to { put its own interpretation on the ‘treaty’s provisions, regardless of the | wishes of the other contracting Pow- | er or Powers. Such a program is one | of international lawlessness. | Congress made the mistake of | passing a tolls exemption bill gimilar | to Mr. Borah’s. It afterward: honor- | ably repealed it. ‘Why fall into the error a second time? No occasion certainly. could be.less propitious than | the present one for an. experiment in would create doubt as to the value of | international engagements into which the United States had voluntarily en- tered. Queer Divorce Plea. | Irom the Washington Post. A Chicago woman is suing for di- vorce because her husband wouldn't ! give her a nickel. A woman who asks for only a nickel ought to have any- thing she wants. islative nullification is to be the | | one-sided treaty amen dment, which i having recovered consciousness. Liverpool, in Turkey valley, Juniata coun- ty, on the 1st of September. In imposing { the sentence Judge Barnett stated that he | was’ going to be severe because this was i Benner’'s second offence and, also because (of him having . been implicated, in the | stealing whit led to the murder of Con- stable Ulsh. , Pe — With his head and face covered with lacerations, his right ear torn off, his chest { ¢rushed and twelve ribs broken by the {‘hoofs of the old family horse, John Weis- | er, a merchant and farmer of Roadside, {near Waynesboro, 35 years old, died at his home last Wednesday evening, without Weisner | was removing the harness from the horse { Phen it knocked him down, continuing to kick and trample him. It was with the utmost difficulty that the mangled victim | was removed from the stall. The horse | had been in the family for twenty-five vears and ordinarily was very gentle, but had a peculiar aversion for blood and was thrown into a frenzy at the smell of it. It is supposed that the blood from the first kick crazed the animal and made it vie- ious beyond control. It was shot the next morning.