INK SLINGS. — It may be said that Lloyd George has renewed his lease on that Downing street mansion. Soviet Russia has®*many trou- bles, one of which is that she can’t get rid of Emma Goldman. —So far the doctors of Bellefonte have not been swamped writing pre- scriptions for medicinal beer. When reformers begin to count up the candy bill the girls may look for a crusade against chocolates. —The average small game hunter came back from the woods Tuesday night drenched to the skin and swear- ing he’d never go out again, but he will. — If the shoe operatives accept the twenty per cent. decrease in wages the shoe manufacturers ought to con- sent to a reduction in the prices of shoes. —The milk handlers of New York city are on a strike and the metropo- lis has been without baby food for several days. Strange, we haven’t had a strike of bootleggers. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. NO. 43. VOL. 686. Startling Figures in Road Building. In his energetic campaign for a seat on the Supreme court bench Judge Eugene C. Bonniwell makes fire fly with oratorical volley. In a speech at Reading, on Saturday evening, he directed his aim at the State High- way Department and laid some start- ling figures before the public. He showed that within the three years since 1918 the Highway Department has disbursed over $100,000,000 in the construction of 896 miles of highways, an average of more than $100,000 a mile. In this account of disbursements the salaries of em- —A Washington ruling, Wednes- day, was in effect that beer is now available as a medicine. If you have | the beeritis hunt up a doctor who will | accommodate you with a proper diag- nosis of your case and a prescription. ployees and expenses of maintenance of the department are not included. The appropriation for these items, as approved by the Governor amount to $3,500,000. The cost of highway construction in Ohio and New York, according to —The much touted Elk’s carnival | Judge Bonniwell, averages $30,000 a fulfilled all the touts and demonstrat- | ed that G. Washington Rees is quite | as handy as a manager of festal oc- | casions as he is when he sets himself | to upset the plans of some of the po-! litical bosses. | —The breathing spell between strikes wasn’t very long. No sooner had we gotten over the fright of an impending railroad strike than the miners decided they are next and threaten to go out unless somebody undoes what Federal Judge Anderson has done. —That cargo of whiskey which teached Bellefonte at an early hour Monday morning was evidently in- | tended to add hilarity to the big Hal- lowe’en demonstration, but the sher- iff got his dukes on it before the cele- bration began and the only cheering in evidence on Monday night was the honest to goodness applause given the | paraders. | 1 i __Six counties in the State are. closed to the hunting of wild turkey,’ three to ruffed grouse, or the ordinary pheasant, and twenty-one to ring-, necked pheasants, and hunters from every one of them must have come to | Centre county to get a shot at the | game here from the number of | strangers in hunting toggery seen on i the streets of Bellefonte early in the | week. That is one of the reasons why | game is becoming scarce in Centre ' county. Hunters come here from all | over the State and every one of them | makes it a point to slaughter all the | game he can. — Don’t fail to vote next Tuesday. | Your borough and township officers really are of more importance to you | than the President of the United | le: mile. Why the same work should cost more than three times as much in Pennsylvania is not revealed, | though Judge Bonniwell’s statement affords a basis for conjecture. In 1919 the average contract was for $45,500 per mile. But a system of harrassing independent contractors was inaugurated so that though there were 475 bidders in 1919 there were only 68 bidders in 1920, and the av- erage low bid was increased from $45,500 to $75,735 per mile. The dif- ference between the contract price, $75,735 in 1920, and the average cost of construction makes up the salaries and expenses of maintenance. Everybody in Pennsylvania wants | good roads and the most effective ar- gument advanced in favor of a con- stitutional convention was the absurd fiction that it was necessary to the continuance of road construction and improvement. But no sane citizen is willing to have such plundering op- erations as Judge Bonniwell has ex- posed, continued indefinitely. Penn- sylvania is rich in resources and gen- erous in rewards, but even this grand .old Commonwealth cannot endure the drain of such profligacy long. The validity of some of the legislation un- der which these disbursements were made is likely, to come before the Su- preme court and® it would be’ wise to have a man on the bench who is not allied with the looters. — If Senator Penrose were in ro- | bust health there would probably be less cutting up both in Washington and Philadelphia. Senator Borah Jabs Harding. Senator Borah, of Idaho, slips Pres- : BELL States, the Congressmen or the Stale | ident Harding a rather vicious jab in’ Gk) They lay Be Inost 5 id the ribs in a letter urging moral sup- axes, they plan and varry, ou the sd- | port of the disarmament conference cati t hild they have! : es Gi nd — d 3 di sii | the other day. The letter is addressed their work affects the physical value Lit Hee hn . - . ) a of your property and your pride in the sachusetts, with the purpose of ex- community in which you reside. Vote : et 1 > for the best men on the tickets pre- | pressing appreciation of that journal's | support of the movement. “Some- sented. Don’t let partisan prejudice | ine I th : drag you into doing what you believe | 1 is TgEe0f 5 papa Is ‘against your pwn bess mises. lated, if not intended, to wholly dis- —If Armistice day 1s made a legal | courage the people and break down holiday all the more should we pray | the morale of this movement,” the for a peaceful outcome of the confer- Idaho Senator declares. He urges the ence gathering in Washington. While | friends of peace to counteract this we enjoy a day off probably as much | work by actively supporting the con- as anybody we are not blind to the! ference. stupendous economic loss occasioned by universal cessation from labor. | The eight hour day, the Saturday | President Harding suggested that it half holiday, the legal and proclama- | would be unwise to expect much from tory holidays are all parasites on the conference. Senator Borah must economy and when we consider with have had that statement in mind these the many, many special holi- | when he said in his letter to Mr. Myz- days celebrated by various foreign ick: “The people are being almost _elements among our producers the | daily advised that they must not ex- loss would be appalling if it could be | pect too much from the conference, calculated. If we are to go on fight- It will be remembered that a short. time ago, in discussing the subject, | ing there may be no end to the holi- ‘days eventually and then who will do the work that is to be done. —We have always contended that those of our people who register themselves as Prohibitionists and thereby involve the county in the ex- pense of having a ticket printed for them should either be more careful of their privilege or voluntarily give it up. For years the Prohibition ticket in Centre county has been but a snare which politicians set for the purpose of catching unwary voters. Why there should be one at all nobody seems to know. Rarely are there any candidates on it, other than those of the two dominant parties who may have captured the endorsement of the Prohibitionists by false pretense. And we all know that in local or county elections the Prohibitionists interrogate the nominees of the Dem- ocratic and Republican parties and then vote for the ones who reply that they are dry. Why not vote for them directly as Democrats or Republicans and save what is certainly a needless expense and avoid such iravesties as will appear on the ticket in one of the wards of Bellefonte next Tuesday when it will be revealed that a man who is now serving a sentence for complicity in a liquor robbery is the Prohibition candidate for an import- cant ward office. : that the outlook is discouraging, and that we must not allow our hopes to rise too high—a warning, as it were, it would seem in advance, that the conference will accomplish little, if anything.” No doubt the Senator has i correctly interpreted the language of | the President. But what is he going 'to do about it? It may safely be said that President Harding never intended the disarma- decreasing armaments. Lodge and other leaders of the Re- publican party he is under such obli- gations to the manufacturers of war materials that any sincere movement for disarmament would be treachery. He was forced by public opinion to | call the conference and after having | done so loaded it down with other | subjects so as to make success impos- | sible. That is why the eastern dis- putes and difficulties were brought within the scope of the conference. He knew that no agreement on the | subjects of difference between China | and Japan could be made. i eee eer | So long as they don’t make face powder out of poison war gasses | the country may be comparatively safe. ; — If the President didn’t make a fool speech every now and then he i would be forgotten. oo ment conference to be productive of ! Like Senator | | Senator Reed’s Amiable Purpose. Senator Reed, of Missouri, who wasted a good deal of energy during the last Congress helping the Repub- lican leaders to “put President Wilson in a hole,” is spending some of the same force now trying to lift the Re- publican party out of a hole. Some months ago President Harding ap- peared in the Senate chamber to de- feat the soldiers’ bonus bill and suc- ceeded. But he “sowed to the wind” in that operation and the just indig- nation of suffering service men all over the country has been stewing ever since. Now, just as it was about to get expression in the Kansas City convention of the American Legion, Senator Reed has brought forward a plan to revive the measure and pass it. It is doubtful, however, if the Re- publican leaders will accept the vol- unteer services of Senator Reed, much as they would like to be rescued from a dangerous situation. His plan is to continue the excess profits tax and use the proceeds for discharging the obligation to the soldiers. The Re- publican party is committed to a con- siderable reduction or absolute repeal of this tax, which amounts to $450,- 000,000. That was the consideration promised to the corporations for the vast sums contributed to buy the election of President Harding, and a | majority in both branches of Con- ' gress, and if it is broken the corrup- tion fund will be cut off in the next campaign and thus the party will be , defeated. In this instance Senator Reed has most, if not all, his Democratic col- ‘leagues behind him. The justice of liberal provisions for the soldiers has ‘been felt and asserted by the Demo- crats, and most of the Republicans of the country are of the same mind. But the Secretary of the Treasury re- alizes that it will be impossible to provide for the soldiers and fulfill the obligations made during the campaign to the fat fryers. The fat fryers are exacting, and being experts in busi- ness, know exactly how to resent de- linquencies, while the soldiers may be hoodwinked. For these reasons we “haye doubt of Senator Reed’s amia- ble enterprise. But it will hold the situation until after the Legion con- . vention. — While the real soldiers are dis- porting themselves in Kansas City old General Apathy is leading the pol- iticians of Pennsylvania in a listless battle. eee pee Senator McConnell’s Status. i 'The Pennsylvania public, in so far as it takes interest in politics, is deep- ly concerned, if not actually woiried, about the present official status of the . Hon. William C. McConnell, of Sha- 'mokin. Mr. McConnell was, until a few weeks ago, “in quiet possession,” as the lawyers phrase it, of a most attractive place in the public service of the Commonwealth. That is to ' say, he was an undisturbed occupant of an easy chair in the Senate chain- ber of the General Assembly, with free access to the Governor’s office and all the other departments of the State government. It is easily the “softest job in public life, taking one | consideration with another. | A few weeks ago, as hove indicat- "ed, Mr. McConnell was lured into the acceptance of another office by the promise or impression that it would make him a potential figure in the po- | litical life of the State, and inciden- | tally invest him with a title to part | ownership of a Governor. Owning a | Governor is a great thing in Penn- | sylvania, as may be inferred from the | fact that the late Senator Quay set it {as the zenith of his ambition. The ‘new office being incompatible with ‘that of the State Senator, Mr. Me- | Connell resigned his Senatorial seat to give his entire time and all his tal- | ents to the administration of the new office. Since that, according to cur- | rent gossip, he has been shorn of all the power of the new office except ' that of drawing his salary. A cursory reading of the newspa- | per gossip touching the subject of ' Senator McConnell’s official status conveyed the impression that the | worst had come and gone. It was | made clear that he has been shorn of ‘power and relieved of the labor of ad- | ministration but as he retained the i right to draw the salary, it was rea- ' soned that to a man of his tempera- | ment, conditions would be at least en- ‘ durable. But we now learn through | a Harrisburg dispatch to the Phila- ! delphia Record that there has been | an actual removal, in which event the | salary would cease, and that the ac- | tion is “heartily commended” by the | Anti-Saloon League. This is what . gives the public concern. Se ee . ——It would be polite, at least, for | the government to ease up a trifle on {war ship building while the confer- ' ence for disarmament is in session in | Washington. EFONTE, PA. NOVEMBER 4, 1921. Order of Doubtful Value. It will be difficult for those in whose interest it was made, to justi- | fy the order of Judge Anderson, of | the United States District court, , handed down at Indianapolis on Mon- ' day, forbidding the collection of dues of the members of the United Mine Workers by what is known as the “check-off” system. By that system coal mine operators take from the miners’ pay the amount of their dues and hand it over to the organization. If this operation were a matter of compulsion there might be reason in a restraining order. But as a matter of fact it is the result of a mutual agreement. In any event there has been no complaint on the subject. Judge Anderson imagines he has discovered a conspiracy between the union miners and the mine owners for the reason that some of the mon- ey thus acquired by the mine labor organization has been used to enlist miners not affiliated with the organ- ization in the union. It is a matter of record that every labor organization, as well as every fraternity of every kind, employs part of its revenues in propaganda and enlistment work. The strength of an organization is measured by its numbers and its ef- ficiency by its numerical strength. The United Mine Workers of Ameri- ca like the Railroad Brotherhoods or mutual insurance companies want as many members as they can get. In a statement supporting his or- der restraining mine operators from practicing the check-off system Judge Anderson states that the purpose of the effort to unionize the West Vir- ginia coal fields is not to benefit the miners but to prevent competition in the price and sale of coal in the pub- lic market. So far as the published statements of the recent conflict be- tween the mine owners and mine workers in West Virginia goes there was nothing of that element in the contention. the check-off system is a hardship. That being true it would seem as though the courts might well have kept out of the controversy altogether. J en ea ihe 1 Recurring to the Elk’s carnival, a complete report of which appears in another column, the people of Belle- fonte should encourage making it an annual event, not alone because of the fun and entertainment provided, but because it furnishes an excuse for in- nocent diversion on the part of young people of the town who, but for the carnival, might engage in some of the old pastimes with which Hallowe'en was observed, and which invariably Neither has there been. any complaint from either side that | : The Strike Menace. From the Philadelphia Public Ledger. By calling off the strike order the railway brotherhoods bowed to public opinion and yielded to the mandate of the Federal government; but there is nothing in their action which offers any guarantee to the public that their threat will not be renewed. It would be a mistake to look upon their pres- ent surrender as indicating any inten- tion on their part to give up the gen- _eral strike as a weapon to be used | against the railways and the public at some future stage of the wage con- troversy, when they may deem it nec- essary to carry their fight to the last ditch. The public and the govern- ment will not make the error of over- confidence. The best that can be said for the changed situation is that it offers a breathing space, both for the contin- ued operation of the slow and clogged machinery created by law for the ad- justment of the relations between the railways and their employees and for the precautionary measures necessary ' to be taken for the protection of the . public—the last to be considered, ap- | parently, by the immediate parties to 1 the wage controversy. There may be ' some reassurance in the intelligence | that elaborate preparations had been made, principally by Secretary Hoov- er, for the marshaling of every pos- | sible resource of the Nation to nulli- fy the purpose of the railway unions to cripple the country. But the arm- istice will have lost its chief value if it is not utilized for careful thought and preparation to ascertain what can be done by legislation to remove every legitimate cause of complaint in the railway enactments. President Gompers, of the Ameri- can Federation of Labor, is quoted as bitter in his comments on the new turn of events. He is not less em- phatic in his condemnation of the "Transportation Act in general of the Labor Board in particular than are the critics of that law on the side of the railway corporations. But all that Mr. Gompers has to suggest, aside from his denunciation of the personnel of the Labor Board and the congested state of its docket, is a re- ' turn to conditions which it is only too well known, failed in the past to bring about that ideal relationship between employers and employed for which all men of good will aspire. be BR Most people will agree with Mt. bor difference when each side appears jin the role of a litigant, pressing i maximum demands in the hope of , winning something less; there will be | less unanimity in approval of his bit- | ter objection to the interposition of | the courts to enforce agreements. Mr. ' Gompers knows only too well that it! is idle to hope for lasting results, even from the operation of his pro- ' gram of a round-table conference and existing system under the Federal | Gompers that it is an unfortunate way to approach a settlement of la- | ) : ts | a free exchange of views between the resulted in the desecration and de-| employer and employed, whe struction of private property some- |g no guarantee that agreements there times running up into the hundreds | reached will be lived up to. It does of dollars. Time was when Hallowe'en | not matter whether the fault lies on was viewed with apprehension by one side or the other, the fatal de- every property owner in Bellefonte, | fect being lack of confidence. and with just cause, too. Nothing ! he interposition of government, that was loose or detachable was safe | the employment of external force, is : : | an unfortunate necessity. If it is to out of doors, while broken windows ! be eliminated, as Mr. Gompers sug- were of frequent occurrence. On | 4 | gests, by the repeal of the Esch-Cum- Monday night, so far as the writer mins law and a abolition of the La- has been able to learn, there was not | hor Board, he and the interest for a single act of trespass performed in | which he speaks will have a responsi- Bellefonte, while the carnival was | bility to the general public which they clean and wholesome as a Sunday | ¢an no longer safely ignore. The uni- school picnic. For this reason, if mo | versal condemnation of the strike pro- other, the Elks deserve great credit | gram of the brotherhoods is to be ex- Ep : | plained solely by the fact that the foo hove Foi Zarpivl any | people recognized that their interests J : : were being totally ignored and that bigger and better with each passing | their sufferings A be used as a year. {weapon of coercion. Under the cir- epee | cumstances, the government was ful- — Our usual breezy “Pine Grove ly justified in the measures that were Mentions” have gone a glimmering | falter, and even in the warnings that this week because the writer is up od were specifically directed against the rorkers. Scranton as a juror in the United Yor ore States district court. In a letter to | No Way to Win. n there | the “Watchman” he says he is up: there “helping Hon. Charles B. Wit- mer deal out justice to bootleggers, and it is not only a lazy man’s job but d—n poor pay at that.” He fail- ed to state, however, whether he was obliged to sample any of the boot- legger’s merchandise, but that would be the only way to render a verdict “according to evidence.” PEE— ed , ——The churches of Bellefonte have finally broken into the advertis- ing columns of the local newspapers, and the Bellefonte Ministerium this week proclaims next Sunday as «Armistice Sunday” and urges every- body to go to church that day. The “Watchman” joins with the minis- terium and urges the readers to go— go for the reasons the Ministerium assigns and for the additional one of showing them that advertising brings results. ————————————————————— — Marshall Foch is the outstand- ing figure in the United States today quite as certainly as he was the lead- ing personality in France three years ago. ; on pogdie,oddi., | ——Are you going to church next Sunday? Armistice day services will be held in most of the churches. Bet- ter go! ——————————————— ——Come here for your job work. | From the Ohio State Journal. | President Harding’s warning to the public not to expect so very much from the armament limitation confer- ence is doubtless kindly intended as a means of averting possible disap- point in the actual outcome. But it is a little as it would be if the coach of a football team should announce just before a crucial game that it had no chance to win, but might be able to hold its opponents’ score lower than there was reason to fear. Such a spir- {it never won a victory. The coach | who believes his boys will win, what- ever the odds against them, and in- spires them with the same idea, some- times sees the seemingly impossible accomplished. There is no doubt what public sen- timent, not only in this country but among all the world’s taxpayers, is with the respect to the policy of maintaining vast armaments in prepa- | ration for wars made infinitely more i likely by that very policy. Public | sentiment is solidly arrayed against | the armament manufacturers and the | naval experts on this issue, and it | would win if only it would assert | itself with all its might, for then the politicians and diplomats around the conference table would not venture to stand out against it. | ibid iiind — The recall may have served a useful purpose in the recent North Da- | kota vote but it made a hard bed for ! the succeeding Governor to sleep in. SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. ! died last Thursday __¥idden beneath the cellar stairs in tin cans and other things more than $1500 was uncovered by appraisers of the es- tate of Dr. Milton Acker, who died sud- denly in Tylersport, Montgomery county, last week. He was seventy-four years old, ! worth $30,000 and for two score years was runner for the Souderton bank. Tred P. Miller, who became a letter carrier at Sharon 31 years ago, has walked 131,000 miles while on duty. He has lost but ten days through illness. In his first twenty-three years of service he did not lose a day. Miller is 27,000 miles ahead of a New Castle postman, who recently claimed a record for long-distance walk- ing. Entering pleas of no defense to sev- enty-one indictments charging burglary and housebreaking, after he had been convicted of burglary and criminal as- sault, Paul Harris, a negro, was sentenced to serve not less than twenty-five years nor more than thirty-two years in the western penitentiary, by Judge C. H. Kline, at Pittsburgh, last Wednesday. william R. Zimmerman, one of the best known citizens of DuBois, and agent for the Singer Sewing Machine company, was instantly killed on Friday afternoon near his home when the Ford car he was driving overturned and pinned him under. There were no witnesses to the accident, but people were on the scene shortly after- wards, and Mr. Zimmerman was found to be dead. Several persons escaped death at Phoenixville when the air tank at the garage of Gambel & Shutes exploded last Thursday and disappeared through the | ceiling of the business office, traveled on through the second story that is used by Shutes as a living apartment, and shot through the roof of the building. Sev- eral of the men were in the office a mo- ment before the crash, and Mrs. Shutes had just been sitting in the path of the tank. The office was completely wrecked. The cause of the explosion is not known. The docility of the celebrated “Mary's Little Lamb” in no manner was exempli- fied by the ram belonging to Mrs. Eliza- beth Sproul, of Farmington, a village near Uniontown, Fayette county, and as a re- sult Mrs. Sproul is defendant in a damage suit instituted by Mrs. Ida Rholf, a prom- inent resident of the same town, who seeks | $10,000 for ‘personal hurts, injured feel- ings and chagrin” inflicted by the ram. Mrs. Rholf says she was walking to church and was attacked by the ram in such a manner that neighbors had to lend wraps to her to wear home. Three men were arrested in Pitts- burgh on Monday in connection with the robbery occurring at the home of George Hoover, of Uniontown, Pa., Saturday night. They were Fred Heinbaugh, his brother, George Heinbaugh, and Joseph Kurtz, all of Smock, Fayette county. Bonds, sccurities and jewelry valued at $250,000 are said to have been stolen from the Hoover home while the family was at- tending the informal reception given Unit- ed States Senator William E. Crow, upon his first return to his home in Uniontown after having been sworn in to succeed the late Philander C. Knox. —Pennsylvania’s world war medal, au- thorized by the Legislature for all hon- orably discharged officers and enlisted men who were commissioned or enrolled iff the national-guard of Pennsylvania up to August 5th, 1917, and served in the war, is ready for issuance, according to an or- der signed by Adjutant General Frank D. Beary. August 5th was the date the na- tional guardsmen were drafted into fed- eral service. Applicants must set forth on the proper blanks for the purpose the rank and organization they were connect- od with. The medal shows William Penn in armor, and has an allegorical design. Investigation of reports of an out- break of fifteen cases of diphtheria at New Germantown, Perry county, resulted in a quarantine being placed upon the village last Friday by state health authorities and Colonel J. Bruce McCreary, head of the division of communicable diseases, was placed in charge. It is also reported that there is not a physician in the town. Arrangements have been made by the State to secure medical aid from Blain and near by places. The State sent supplies of anti-toxin and asked that a committee of citizens be formed to assist in sanitary measures and enforcement of quarantine. — Because Mrs. Thomas Kline, of Read- ing, told a woman confidant that she had five children, but gave three away and «drowned the other two last night,” and because of other amazing statements, her husband has instituted a contest of her will before Judge Schaeffer in orphans’ court in that city. Mrs. Kline, who died several weeks ago, had no children. She left a will to which she made her mark, being too ill to write, in which half of her estate, more than $6000, was left to her husband, Thomas Kline, and the other half to relatives, Anna G. Bushby and Wil- liam I. Hess. Mental incompetency to make a will and undue influence are al- leged by the husband. — Henry Clay Chisolm, aged 62 years, for thirty years a well known physician of Huntingdon and central Pennsylvania, evening at Niagara Falls, where he had gone to recuperate from a general breakdown due to over- work. After graduating at Hahnemann hospital, Philadelphia, he settled in Mis- sissippi, but was compelled to leave that State after the Ku Klux Klan had mur- dered his father, Judge Chisolm, his brother and sister. He represented the Franklin-Huntingdon district in the Sen- ate from 1897 to 1900 and was a member of that body at the time of the famous fight against United States Senator Quay. He leaves a widow, two daughters and a brother, William W. Chisolm, of Hunting- don. —William Haney, aged 70 years, made certain of death by suicide at Alexandria on Sunday morning when he first shot himself and then swung off a step-ladder to dangle at a rope’s end in the woodshed of his daughter's home. Haney resided with his daughter, Mrs. Benjamin Isen- berg, and during the morning he gave no evidence of committing any rash act. He has been troubled with eczema for some time but bore his sufferings without com- plaint. When Mr. Isenberg went to church he inquired of his daughter if she were not going to service and she informed him that she was not feeling well and was going to bed. The man left the house, went to the wood-shed and with the use of a step-ladder he adjusted a noose. He then mounted the ladder and shot himself through the head with an old-fashioned one-loader pistol, the ball going through the brain. He then plunged off the lad- der and dangled at the rope's end.