Bema fiaina INK SLINGS. —The red men have been here and gone and so far as we have heard not even a “flapper” scalp is missing. —~Centre county bull-dogs must have been all penned up on Wednes- day. At least we haven’t heard of any canine lamps being doused by the senatorial sputum of George Wharton Pepper. —And now the figures from the Treasury Department make it appear that the second year of this econom- ical, tax reducing Harding adminis- tration is to end with a greater defi- cit than the first. The Lord only knows what will be staring us in the face when the fourth and last year of it rolls round. —It has just come to light that it was the much maligned Josephus Dan- iels, Secretary of the Navy, who steadfastly stood out against the Standard oil in its efforts to grab con- trol of the last remnants of oil terri- tory in the United States that were reserved for the use of our navy. No wonder the controlled press of the country tried to make the world be- lieve Josephus was a little peg in a big hole. —Democrats! When you go to the primaries on May 16th remember to vote for the candidates who were en- dorsed by the state-wide conference of our party. The conference was called for the sake of harmony. It suggested a good ticket and if we are to have harmony we should support it. Vote for Shull and Kerr for Unit- ed States Senator, for McSparran for Governor, for McAvoy for Lieutenant Governor, and for Thompson for Sec- retary of Internal Affairs. —Pseudo-science has been absorb- ing the attention of intellectuals a lot of late. They say it is spreading the philosophy of the easiest way and is building round the world a broad primrose path over which are troop- ing thoughtless thousands. Generally speaking the subject is too deep for us to discuss in the midst of trout-fish- ing season, but that primrose path suggestion has a lure that would be hard for us to fight off were not the fate of the Persian kitty that went that route not still one of our sad memories. —Yes, we have to hand it to Mr. Director Dawes of the budget bureau. He’s the real thing. He can make the five inch trout look six inches long when the fish warden meets up with him on the stream. He has just an- nounced that he is going to save the government one hundred and thirty- six million dollars this year in little things and one of the little things is an item of seventy-five hundred dol- ] : lars which was voted to the widow. of | Senator Proctor, who died in 1908 and she died long before Dawes or his “hell and Maria” were heard from. —If the Altoona Tribune really thinks that Geo. E. Alter did the hon- est thing in appointing an eminent Democrat and jurist to investigate charges of irregularities in the depos- it of State funds and if it really thinks that Gif Pinchot timed his charges so ‘that they could not be refuted before ‘the primary, as it intimates in its Tuesday edition, why doesn’t it de- .clare for Alter? Henry W. stands for the clean things in everything else. Why doesn’t he see to it that his Tri- bune does the same thing? It can’t be possible that Pinchot has promised to reforest the mountains he has dev- .astated in climbing. —The latest dope from the Alter .campaign headquarters is to the effect that he will carry Philadelphia and Allegheny counties by one hundred .and fifty and fifty thousand votes, re- spectively. The claim is set forth that he will carry twenty-one other coun- ties of the State. While we are still unable to see how Pinchot can win the Republican nomination with the ma- chine against him we fear the Alter prognosticator doesn’t have his in- struments adjusted just as fine as the -exigencies of this campaign require. “The tide has been noticeably changing during the past ten days but it isn’t going strong enough yet to warrant a positive statement that Mr. Alter will carry “twenty-one other counties in the State. — Centre surely has been a Repub- lican battle ground this week. The faithful and the heretics have been busy from early morning ‘till late at night with Scott, Pollum, Swoope, Jones and Pepper cavalcades. In fact it has been so conspicuous in country districts of the county that some of our Democrats, chaffing under the wonderful harmony that has healed the fights we have been having for ten years or more, have telephoned in urg- ing us to start something so they can have some fun too. To them we would say: Wait until after May 16th. Then we can show the Republicans a fight that is a fight. If Billy Swoope beats the Hon. Evan Jones for Congress we won’t be just slapping Billy on the wrist like the Hon. Jones is doing. We'll be kickin’ the stuffin’ clean out of him. If the Hon. Harry Scott | beats that Dr Pollum fellow we’ll quote Tom Harter clear up to elec- tion day. And if he doesn’t beat him we'll tell you some things about Dr. Pollum that his opponents don’t know or are too polite to use against him. And, oh boy! what we have laid up: for either George Alter or Gif. Pinchot. Don’t get fighting in ‘the dressing room, you Pine Grove Democrats. Wait till we get in the ring and the’ gong sounds. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 67. Dawes the Swashbuckler Tamed. Some months ago a rollicking swashbuckler named Dawes came to Washington “out of the west” and swore himself first into popular ap- proval and then into public office. He had been with the army in France in the capacity of disbursing or supply officer and acquired the rank of Briga- dier General. He was called to testi- fy before one of the numerous com- mittees created in the Sixty-sixth Congress to prove profligacy in the management of the war. He “swore like a trooper” and cavorted around the committee like “a drunken sailor.” But he exposed the hypocrisy of those who were trying to besmirch Presi- dent Wilson and compelled the con- spirators to abandon their plans. This is why he was publicly applauded. General Dawes’ testimony left the Republican Congressional machine in a state of panic. For some inexplica- ble reason men and women admire a man who swears in places where such language is unexpected. A preacher who utters the oath or indulges in some glaring solecism in the pulpit gets more popular applause for that single incident than he would have received in fifty years of eloquent and capable sermonizing in the usual way. Thus General Dawes literally swore himself into distinction and in order to square the party with an outraged public opinion President Harding gave him an office, newly created, and en- titled Director of the Budget. It was a “sop” to Cerberus” and quieted Dawes. He eats out of the boss’ hand now. Since that Dawes has been the most tractable and servile politician in Washington. His entire time has been spent and all his energies centered in efforts to show that the Harding ad- ministration has been the most eco- nomical ever and that vast sums have been saved to the people by the vigi- lance, efficiency and industry of War- ren Gamaliel. In pursuance of this purpose he submitted to the President the other day, and the President pass- ed on to Congress, a report showing that $136,000,000 had been saved dur- ing the first six months of the Hag Tg curl a aay kod for a bill of particulars and it is shown Shai the report is false from start to nish. ¥ —On the local Republican calendar May 16th will be the big day. We should worry about that date. Our troubles were all composed by the committee of seventy-two. May 19th is the big day for us. A circus will be here then. Both Delinquent and Unworthy. Itis not surprising that Mr. Gifford Pinchot should promptly avail him- self of the opening for a blow at the State Republican machine afforded by the Auditor General’s recent expos- ure of unlawful manipulation of pub- lic funds by the late State Treasurer and present deputy in that office, Har- mon M. Gephart. For more than four years the effort of the machine has been to conceal from public view the financial operations and standing of the Commonwealth. Auditor General Lewis has “let the cat out of the bag.” He has shown that during all that period the funds of the State have been juggled in violation of law so as to favor bankers and interests affiliat- ed with the machine. Commenting upon the exposure Mr. Pinchot has appropriately declared: “No one can deny that false state- ments have been issued by the State Treasurer. No one can deny that ap- propriations have been made and are now in effect far beyond the estimated revenues. State Treasury is able to tell us how: much it pays out for salaries, how ‘much for expenses, how much under contract, for we have their official statement that they do not know. * * * * As Governor I will turn on the light and clean up the whole mess.” Attorney General Alter, his competit- or for the nomination, also enters what might justly be termed a plea of nolle contendre. He also says he doesn’t know but will investigate and punish any one found guilty. Mr. Pinchot states that these jug- gling operations have been in progress for seven years. During the last three years of this time he has been a part and parcel of the administration that has been flagrantly guilty of these crimes against the State. For nearly two years Mr. \lter has been asso- ciated - intimately with the same organization. Why is it, then, that Mr. Pinchot has remained silent con- cerning these grave matters? He must have known. Mr. Alter admits he didn’t know. He must have been “asleep. at the switch.” Will voters now, consider either ‘one a fit guardian of the. interests of the looted public and outraged people? The plain du- ty of .the people is to elect John A. MecSparran Governor. He knows and ; will act. No one can assert that the. BELLEFONTE, PA., MAY 12. 1922. | Admonition to Pepper. The nomination of a blatherskite like Alfred J. Beveredge, of Indiana, for the great office of Senator in Con- gress would be a cause for regret un- der ordinary conditions. But strange- ly enough his nomination by the Re- publican party the other day for that office has been hailed with approval. There are reasons for this unexpected development. It is reasonably certain that he will be defeated at the elec- tion by the Democratic nominee in No- vember. Besides his nomination was a rebuke to the present Senator, Har- ry S. New. Mr. New was among the most virulent of the opponents of Woodrow Wilson, a leader in the op- position to the covenant of the League of Nations and a supporter of the in- famous Newberry. The defeat of the covenant of the League of Nations was the result of a vicious conspiracy to prolong the evils of commercial and industrial confusion in order to discredit the Democratic administration of Wood- row Wilson. The ratification of the purchase of a seat in the Senate by Truman H. Newberry, of Michigan, was a feature of that conspiracy. Every Senator who participated in this crime against justice and the peace of the world deserves popular and permanent execration. Senator New, of Indiana, is the first to pay the proper penalty. One after another of the Senators who supported the pre- posterous claims of the infamous Lor- imer, of Illinois, were relegated to obscurity. New is the first of those to pay the penalty in the Newberry case. In this gratifying result of the Re- publican primary election in Indiana there is a note of admonition to George Wharton Pepper, of Pennsylvania. He was not in position to participate in the conspiracy against the League of Nations. But his first vote as Sena- of Newberry. It was his first attempt at “spitting in the eye of a bull dog,” for it was a public insult to every principle of justice and every consid- eration of decency. A Michigan ju- ry, presumably Republican, had con- : judge had: sentdpeed him- to prison. Both of these acts had been approved by public opinion. But George Whar- ton Pepper voted a reward instead of penalty. : ——Republicans may be ungrateful but the present Republican President is not guilty. Every delegate in the National convention of 1920 who was instructed for another and voted for Harding has been rewarded by ap- pointment to office. Perfidy as well as virtue “is its own reward.” Juggling the State Funds. The loose, if not actually criminal, juggling of the funds of the State un- der the control of the Republican ma- chine, now asking for a renewal of its license to loot the public has been re- vealed by Main & Co., certified ac- countants, employed by Auditor Gen- real Lewis to audit the accounts of the State Treasury during the adminis- tration of Harmon M. Kephart, now deputy State Treasurer. The law for- bids the deposit of more than $300,000 in any bank in non-active depositor- ies. It also prohibits the deposit in any bank in excess of a certain per centage of its capital and surplus. The audit shows that certain banks were given funds in excess of the lim- it, in both classes. At the end of each month the State Treasurer is required to publish a statement of the deposits under oath. In order to favor certain banks, or for some other unexplained reasons, Treasurer Kephart certified under oath that they held less money than was actually on deposit and other banks held proportionately more. It is not alleged that there was less mon- ey in the treasury at any time than ought to have been there, but the law was violated nevertheless and the statement was falsified. One bank, for example, was said to have only $200,000 when it actually had $400,- 000 and two other banks were said to have each $100,000 more than they actually held in order to balance the total accounts. The then State Treasurer protests that the State lost no money by this manipulation of accounts which is probably true. But one bank was fa- vored, and by a strange coincidence the president of that bank had been promised a seat in the United States Senate and in turn is supposed to have agreed to pay Sena- tor Crow’s debts amounting to more than a quarter of a million dol- lars. Neither does the fact of no loss to the State absolve the manipulating treasurer of the penalty for swearing falsely as to thé amount of the depos- it, or for violating the provision’ of the law -which forbids the deposit in any bank’ of an amount in excess of $200,000 -when as a matter of fact $400,000 was deposited. tor was an endorsement of the crime. victed him of crime and a Republican} mag Democrats Vote at the Primary. Because the admirable candidates recommended to the Democratic vot- ers of Pennsylvania by the committee of Seventy-two are practically with- out opposition is no reason why voters of that party faith should refrain from voting at the primary election next Tuesday. On the contrary it is a strong reason why every Democratic man and woman should be interested in polling the full vote of the party. A full vote of the party at the prima- ry election next Tuesday in Centre county will encourage the voters of the party in all other counties to strive for victory at the general elec- tion in November. It will indicate a cordial approval of the harmony es- tablished and a ratification of the work of the committee. It would be impossible to imagine a more auspicious condition for the Democracy of Pennsylvania. The op- position is divided, demoralized and engaged in a bitter war of factions. Mud-slinging is the order of the day in the Republican camp. The candi- dates, influenced by the first law of nature, self preservation, are plead- ing for peace. One says that the oth- er faction is creating an ammunition factory for the Democrats and the other declares it has no regard for consequences. Both are making votes for the Democratic ticket because a conscientious and intelligent public is repulsed and disgusted by the multi- plying proofs of a “corrupt combina- tion masquerading as the Republican ” But these generous promises of the future should not be converted into a potion to put the Democrats to sleep. “Eternal vigilance is the price of lib- erty” and insistent and energetic work is essential to victory. We have every incentive to perform our full duty. Pride of opinion, faith in our princi- ples and confidence in our purposes combine to influence us to effort. Be- sides we have a duty to perform for our families and neighbors, an obliga- tion to posterity to fulfill. It is for us to rescue the government of the State from the political pirates who have been despoiling us for years. We e=v. fulfill these sacred obligations hy will be nominated and the time to be- gin is Tuesday. ——United States Senator George Wharton Pepper visited Bellefonte on Wednesday, coming here from Lock Haven with Hon. Richard S. Quigley. He was scheduled to arrive in Belle- fonte at eleven o’clock but it was al- most noontime when he arrived, con- sequently his much heralded talk in the court house was greatly abbrevi- ated. But that didn’t mar the pleas- ure of the local Republican luminar- ies who took him in tow. They brought him down to Spring creek, near the “Watchman” office, and showed him the big trout, then took him to the Bush house for lunch. In the afternoon he visited the public schools and told the children that he really ought to be in Washington at- tending to his arduous duties as a na- tional lawmaker but he couldn’t resist the temptation of a trip through the State. The Senator went to State College where he talked to the stu- dents in the evening. ———————— a ———— ——The County Commissioners have been busy this week distribut- ing the ballots for next Tuesday’s pri- maries. Inasmuch as the only real contest of any importance is between the two candidates for Governor on the Republican ticket the probability is for a light vote, especially if the weather is favorable for farm work. ——The demand of Russia for rep- aration of 50,000,000,000 gold rubles from the allies in the late war is sim- ply an echo of Senator . Lodge’s speeches opposing the ratification of the covenant of the League of Na- tions. ——Senator Pepper certifies that he has spent $14,979.11 in his campaign for the Senatorial nomination. Like his friend = Newberry he probably doesn’t know how much the corpora- tions have expended in his behalf. ——The only sure way to get a job in the revenue service is to acquire a criminal record. Nearly all the pro- hibition enforcement officials have al- ready qualified-in that way. ——Anything to put the discussion of the juggling of public funds over until after the primary election will be satisfactory to the Republicans. ——Senator New has been properly disposed of. Senator Pepper will be the next to pay the penalty. of voting to ratify Newberry’s purchase. — A ————— ——The real acid test of toughness is to “spit in the eye of any bull dog you meet.” electing the admirable ticket ‘which: NO. 19. The Farmer’s Hide. From the Washington, D. C., News. Is the tariff an economic rather than a political question? It is. Proof? Why, even Republican Congression- al leaders —“regulars,” not “insur- gents,” if you please— are opposing some of the principal schedules and opposing them openly on the floor of the House. The Republican majority of the Ways and Means committee, which framed the bill, is split wide open on the important schedule of a tariff on hides, and the leader of the oppo- sition is no less a member than Hon. Willis C. Hawley, from the strictly rural First district of Oregon. Hawley spends mighty little time in speeches, but the other day he tore loose for five minutes and literally nailed the tariff on hides to the fence. Here’s what Hawley said: “The American production of hides is 850,000,000 pounds annual- ly. The imports are 700,000,000 pounds annually. * * * The pro- posed duty of 4 cents a pound is supposed to be laid for the benefit of the farmer. Then every pound of hide taken off in this country must be advanced 4 cents a pound. One billion five hundred and fifty million pounds at 4 cents the pound would amount to $62,000,000, of which the farmer, if he got every cent of the benefit, would get $34,- 000,000. “There are in this country 6,800,- 000 farm operators having a total population of 30,600,000 persons. Each person uses 2.5 pairs of shoes per annum? That is 76,000,000 pairs of shoes bought by the far- mers annually. “Each cent a pound on hides, ac- cording to our tariff commission, means 10 cents additional on each pair of shoes. Four cents on hides means 40 cents on each pair of shoes. Therefore, the farmers who might get the $34,000,000 duty, would pay back $30,600,000 addi- tional for their shoes and $8,000,000 more than they could possibly get from their hides. “But there are 203,500,000 pairs of shoes used by persons other than farmers in the country, upon which a tax of $81,000,000 additional would be levied, for which there Yond be no compensating advan- above is enough. | Hawley said a lot more, but #ia ¥ A Republican Monopoly. From the Philadelphia Record. It seems to be a cardinal point of Republican doctrine that a Democrat is congenitally incompetent to admin- ister a political office, quite regardless of whether or not its functions have anything to do with the execution of partisan policies. This amusing no- tion was typically expressed by Sena- tor Pepper the other night when he said: “We are not out to poison Re- publicans, but to smother Democrats. The Democrats know little about gov- ernment,” etc. Now, everybody knows that the Governor of Pennsylvania has no hand in shaping the policies which guide the nation, and that it does not make a particle of difference in what goes on at Washington whether he be a Re- publican or a Democrat. There is no Republicanism or Democracy in the. administration of the Governorship of Pennsylvania or of the Mayoralty of Philadelphia, any more than there is in the running of the Baldwin Loco- motive works or the Bethlehem Steel Corporation. Is there any real reason why the most hidebound Republican should regard a Democrat as neces- sarily ignorant of the science of State or cily government because he hap- pens to differ with him concerning the path that should be followed by the nation? What is required of the Governor of this State is honesty, executive capac- ity and business ability. To say that Republicans have a monopoly of these qualifications would be as foolish as to claim that a man is incapable of run- ning a big business because he hap- pens to be a Methodist, or a Catholic, or a Jew, or because he has red hair or a large nose. Senator Pepper is insincere when he makes such statements; he is merely endeavoring to win the support of voters who are incapable of thinking. If only Republicans know how to gov- ern, how is it that a Republican ad- ministration of this State, supported by a Republican Legislature and a Re- publican judiciary—and absolute Re- publican monopoly—has got the busi- ness affairs of Pennsylvania into such an awful mess? aegis Good Campaign Provender. From the Clearfield Republican. Tom Harter, erstwhile Penrose fol- lower and virile editor of the Key- stone Gazette, Bellefonte, is out hard and loud against Harry Scott for the Republican State Senate nomination. He gives plenty of reasons for his stand .and will go the limit to boost the Pollum vote over the mountains. Should Scott take home the bacon at the primaries some of Tom’s anti- Scott deliverances will make good reading during the coming campaign. Vo ————r——— ——How Senator Vare acquired the admiration of George Wharton may never be known but Senator Pepper won the affection of Brother Ed by “spitting in the eye of a bull dog.” SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Jury trial ‘to determine whether gro- cers must pay for sugar bought from re- finers at the peak prices but delivered after the price had fallen, has been ordered by Justice Simpson, of the State Supreme court. —Governor Sproul has appointed Samuel T. Bodine, Villa Nova; Alfred M. Collins, Philadelphia, and M. I. McCreight, DuBois, to represent the state at the second nation- al conference on state parks to be held at New York May 22nd. : —Stephen Popet, held a prisoner in the Northumberland county jail, tore the wa- ter pipes off the wall in his cell and lay down in the spurting water, saying he wanted to drown. After guards rescued him he was caught trying to put himself to death with his suspenders for a noose. —When a steer driven by 8S. V. Manifold, of Wrightsville, York county, became en- raged it attacked several men. Clarence Manning was internally injured and How- ard McKinney’s left arm was fractured and he was badly bruised. The bull jumped a five foot wall in Stewart Brothers’ yard and was captured after ruining the gar- den. —A company of the Pittsburgh fire de- partment was instrumental last Friday in preventing a hold-up in the Hill district. Albert Pye, a tea company collector, was attacked by three negro bandits. He was badly beaten but kept hold of a satchel containing about $2,000. A pedestrian turned in a fire alarm and the clanging of bells and roar of motors scared the rob- bers away. —State troopers rounded up several Ro- meos who parked their cars along state roads, near Hazleton, turned of the lights and conducted sessions with their Juliets, regardless of the rights of the traveling public and the danger of accidents. Each young man paid $10 fine and costs before Alderman E. J. Fallon. The state police declare the highways are not the place for courting and announce they will keep up the campaign. —'Squire John E. Bertsch, of Mountain~ ville, Lehigh county, justice of the peace, deputy clerk of the quarter sessions court and county tax collector, returned home late Friday night with $160 in collections in his pockets. Too tired to put the mon- ey in the safe, he hung his trousers on the bed post and went to sleep. Saturday morning they were missing, and about the same time his wife found them under the dining-room table. The money was gone. —The whereabouts of the bandits who held up the First National bank of Craf- ton last January and killed Harold T. Moss, assistant cashier, have just been ascertained. Two are dead, two are dying and the fifth member of the gang is serv- ing sentence in the Stark county work- house, near Canton, Ohio. The deaths and woundings resulted from a battle last ‘Thursday between gunmen and a posse of armed citizens on a road leading to Can- ton. —The May term grand jury at Blooms- burg, the first in a year and half without a woman member, last Thursday raided confiscated liquor stocks held at the Co- lumbia county jail and drank eight bot- tles of contraband liquor before Mrs. How- ard Gunther, the sheriff's wife, stopped the party. The sheriff believes the jury- men also sampled some of the whiskey that is’ being held in barrels. The court ‘had discharged the grand jury raid was reported. ~ —Recently re-appointed as tax collector in Uniontown, Miss Alice Baer has issued an appeal to all women voters to settle their taxes in order that they may be eli- gible to vote. Miss Baer is of the opinion that women should pay their own tax bills and not depend upon their fathers, hus- bands or brothers to pay them. The col- lector says that it gives a woman voter a sense of responsibility, and that, if she pays her own taxes, she will be more like- ly to go to the polls on election days. —After firing five shots at himself Dom- inick Bomnerituo, of Philadelphia, finally succeeded in slightly wounding himself with the last bullet. He told the police he was in love with a married woman, who would have nothing to do with him and he had intended to end it all. After buy- ing a revolver he engaged a room in a ho- tel on Market street, pointed the weapon at himself and started firing. The first shot shattered a mirror. The second and third shots tore into an unsuspecting chair, while the fourth hid itself in a bureau drawer. The fifth managed to scratch his hip. Bomnerituo was arrested but Magis- trate Toughill discharged him with a warning. —Students of the Yeagertown High school have won their strike for the re- turn of school pennants which were re- moved last Wednesday from the roof of the High school by Professor H. W. Firgh of the faculty, whose action precipitated a strike at first among the boys of the Sen- ior class and finally the entire student bo- dy. At a big public mass meeting Mon- day night at Yeagertown the Derry town- ship board of education met with the par- ents of the children and after a lengthy discussion in which the case was aired both pro and con, the board ordered that the pennants be returned to the students and that the pupils who had been out on strike be reinstated. —Harry Pritchard Sr., of Kingston, for many years in charge of payrolls of the East Boston Coal company, was arrested last Friday charged with having forged due bills and taken from the company $5500 in the last two years, and $13,000 in the last ten years. He is under $4000 bail. The company charges that Pritchard took the money in small sums, doctoring the records each pay day to cover the short- age. Recently company officials got trace of the alleged crookedness, and had an au- dit made, which resulted in the discharge of Pritchard and caused his arrest. Pritch-- ard has been a member of a church at Ed- wardsville, singing in the choir and serv- ing on the board of trustees. —TFoul play is feared in the sudden dis- appearance Monday of the Rev. J. 8. Potts, aged 54, pastor of the Methodist church at New Alexandria, near Greensburg, friends admitted, following a fruitless search which led them into the mine districts. The Rev. Potts left his home early Mon- day morning to call on a parishioner who lives several miles from New Alexandria. Complaining that he was not feeling well, the minister started for home. Later it was learned that he went to the New Al- exandria bank, withdrew his entire sav- ings account including several Liberty bonds, totalling, it was said, about $2,000. Shortly afterwards 'the Rev. Potts was seen driving in the direction of Crabtree; a mining town. before the . . . . :