ee —————————————————————— INK SLINGS. —The stars and stripes no longer float on the Rhine breezes. —We are inclined to the belief that the Senate is only irritating Secretary Hughes so that he can’t sneak into the League of Nations without public no- tice. Citizens of France and Belgium are not admitted to hotels in Berlin but seem to go anywhere they like in Essen and other points in the Ruhr valley. —Talking about prestidigitators, Governor Pinchot waived his magic wand over “Capitol Hill,” and instant- ly an army of official snails were transformed into centipedes. —In cold weather every front door ought to be equipped with a sliding board for the guests who insist on saying good-night all over again after they have exited to that point. —The outstanding difference be- tween this Mr. Boyden and Col. House as “observers” seems to be that Boy- den has eyes, ears and a mouth and Col. House has only eyes and ears. —There are likely to be lots of as- irants for county office next fall. Al- ready there are so many ears to the ground that the wily political leader has to watch his step mighty well lest he tread on one unawares. —The Norristown man who was granted a divorce because his wife neglected him to go swimming prob- ably thought she counted him a poor- er fish than those she dabbled with in her favorite swimming hole. —At¢t least the signs indicate that ‘Governor Pinchot is starting off as well as we could have hoped for Mr. McSparran to have done. Let us hope that as an old broom he will be sweep- ing just as clean as he is trying to do as a new one. —Nature is doing her best to stiffen up the weak backs in this community. A short handled shovel and fifty feet of side-walk covered with snow beats Walter Camp’s “daily dozen” all to pieces as stimulation for that part of the anatomy. —Why is it that so many of those who are so fortunate themselves that they don’t have to do such things in- variably drop in for a call with the woman who does, just about the time she is due to start preparation of the family meal ? —PFrance has just announced the sixty miles and our army experts have perfected a rifle that has a range of eight miles. Of course both are tech- nical and manufacturing triumphs, but what of the recent spasm for disarm- ament?- ma Cre CL —Philadelphia housewives declare they can’t use bituminous coal be- cause some one told them it requires specially constructed stoves in which to burn it. Many a stove in Bellefonte that never saw anything but anthra- cite until last fall has been getting on very nicely since then on bituminous. In nine cases out of ten it isn’t the stove, it’s the manipulator that can’t burn soft coal. —The overwheiming victory of George Sprowls, Democrat, for Sena- tor, at the special election in the Washington-Greene counties district, looks as though the Democratic swell of last November is still swelling. In the fall elections he and Col. James E. Barnett, Republican, were tied for ‘election so a special election was call- ed and Sprowls came through with a majority of over two thousand. —Just naturally Charles Evans Hughes is irritated because the Sen- ate wants to know what his big idea is with regard to our foreign rela- tions problem. Waiving discussion of the possibility of Secretary Hughes’ having a big idea on the question we get to the point where we want to say that his predicament affords us great glee. He is one of the gentlemen who thought the Senate ought to know and do everything while Mr. Wilson was President and now that he finds himself impaled on another horn of the same dilemma he becomes irri- tated. —Dr. Ellen Potter may prove to be a very capable and understanding head of the Department of Public Wel- fare and might dispense the State’s aid to hospitals equitably, but would it be wise to put such a club over the charitable institutions in the hands of any one person. Dr. Potter will not occupy her present position always, but the precedent established in her tenure would follow through to the years when others, possibly less fair, might find themselves in the position of compelling every hospital in Penn- sylvania to stand and deliver to some political machine. —To our mind the most interesting and at the same time significant fea- ture of the Governor’s budget is the inclusion of the University of Penn- sylvania and the Universtiy of Pitts- burgh in the list of the educational in- stitutions the State is obligated to support. The allowance to Pitt is cut only $115,000 under that granted two vears ago, that to Penn is cut $155, 000, while the amount suggested for State, the real ward of the Common- wealth, is $521,000 less than the Leg- islature of 1921 granted. It was pol- itics, pure and simple, that drove the entering wedge into State bounty for both Pitt and Penn and it looks mighty like politics that is now attempting to permanently link them up with the one institution that the State is lawfully chiigated to support. VOL. 68. : STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA., JANUARY 26. 1923. Confession of Senator Pepper. Senator George Wharton Pepper was among the most virulent oppo- | resentatives in the General Assembly nents of the League of Nations. While | are running true and compelling at- the question of ratification of the cov- | tention. We referred last week to enant of the League was pending in a triumph in the House of Represen- Good Report from Harrisburg. | The Deomcratic Senators and Rep- the Senate he was a private citizen but he availed himself of every oppor- tunity to poison the public mind con- cerning it. His object was, of course, to ingratiate himself in the favor of that group of party bigots who open- , tatives ascribable to the unity and . courage in preventing snap action in changing the rules. Last Monday evening they forced an adjournment ;of the session because the resident | clerk had treated them unfairly in the ly declared war against Woodrow | seating arrangement. He arbitrarily Wilson. Foremost among these in scattered them all over the chamber Pennsylvania were the late Senators thus making it impossible to consult Penrose and Knox, and William C. in emergencies. Before the recess Sproul. Senator Pepper probably be- the minority members entered a pro- lieved that iterating their venomous test which was ignored by the stupid expressions on the subject might lead clerk who had perpetrated the trick. to the fulfillment of his ambition to On reassembling on Monday night a become Senator. | “roar” brought promise of correction. In a speech delivered before the This was fine but not the best thing New York bar association, the other that occurred in Harrisburg on Mon- evening, Senator Pepper admitied that day evening. The Democratice Sena- if the League of Nations had acquired : tors and Representatives held a cau- the full force which its projectors con- | cus and openly declared their purpose templated it would have averted the to stand united in a movement for the impending conflict between France i repeal of the anthracite coal tax law and Germany which is more than like- | and abolish the offices of fish and ly to culminate in another world war | game wardens. Fish and game war- more cruel and atrocious than the one | dens might do a lot of good if their recently ended. “Had the League fol- | activities were limited to the service lowed the strict provisions of its cov- | for which the offices were created. enant,” he declared, “it would now be | But as a matteer of fact they have engaged in steps preliminary to a been used as partisan agents to con- concentration of actual force to com- | trol elections almost exclusively, and pel France and Germany to settle | have become not only a nuisance but their quarrel amicably.” He might ( a menace in the communities in which have added that the failure of the . they serve. If the Democratic minor- United States to join the League is ity succeeds in abolishing them it will the reason it has not “followed the be good work. strict provisions of the covenant.” The minority Senator and Represen- The sublime purpose of the League | tatives have set themselves to achieve- of Nations was to guarantee the world | ment of other important reforms in against future wars and compel the | the affairs of the State. They will amicable adjustment of petty or grave | solidly demand legislation authoriz- difference among nations. Henry 'ing and requiring the Auditor General Cabot Lodge didn’t want such a con- | of the State to audit the accounts of dition for the reason that the muni- 'a]] the departments of the State gov- tion makers and manufacturers of war | ernment. For some years several of | materials in New England would be the departments have been employing perfection of a big gun that will shoot deprived of a source of profit in such | large forces of “traveling” and other ' of Washington. circumstances. = The Pennsylvania they wanted to disappoint and humil- iate Woodrow Wilson, and George Wharton Pepper joined them for self- ish personalyreasons. Now that he has secured the favor he coveted he acknowledges that the League of Na- tions would have achieved the splen- i did results expected of it. A government bulletin recently issued tells folks “how to keep the cellar dry,” but the greatest anxiety among the largest number of people is “how to keep the cellar wet.” One Fond Hope Disappointed. claim that he has not been a resident of Pennsylvania long enough to be- come familiar with the fundamental law of the State. Put such a state- ment on the stationery of the Execu- tive Department wouldn’t look well, and besides it wouldn’t be true. He has been a nominal resident of Penn- sylvania since 1914, when he ran for Senator in Congress, and nine years is ample time for an adult of average intelligence to master so plain a code of principles as is expressed in the constitution of Pennsylvania. It must be assumed, therefore, that he understands the provisions of the constitution but doesn’t care much whether he obeys them or not. Soon after the returns revealed his election in November Mr. Pinchot be- gan functioning as the Governor of the State. Even before the election he appointed commissioners to do cer- tain things and assigned them to service. He had no authority to do such things but nobody complained and really no harm was done. But since his inauguration he has been cutting up capers that have caused some alarm. For example, he has been threatening to usurp certain functions of another elective depart- ment in order to justify a demand to be made on the Legislature to create political obligation incurred before he was nominated, but probably essential | to his success. The office of Secretary of Internal Affairs was created by the constitu- tion of the State and under the same ‘high authority certain duties were committed to the Secretary. Gover- nor Pinchot, on assuming the office of Governor, discovered that he had al and proposed to bore another hole in which to place a particularly in- sistent peg. To accomplish the pur- marplots opposed the League because | Governor Pinchot might set up the ' an office with which he may pay off a | auditors to audit their accounts. This process costs a lot of money because big salaries are paid to the party pets thus employed and are a source | of fraud besides. The elimination of | this horde will go a | Te | the “cleaning up the mess,” | Democratic Legislators are right. In apologizing for the contin- ued bachelorhood of the Prince of | Wales the dean of Windsor says “the ' day is past when Princes were called {upon to marry girls selected for them i by statesmen.” In other words he is { of the opinion that Princes have de- i veloped into “regular fellows.” | | i | Taking Joy Out of Official Life. | Governor Pinchot appears to be de- termined to not only drive all the sa- loons out of the State but to take most of the joy out of official life in Har- risburg. A list which he has had com- piled shows that the State owns 350 | passenger automobiles, 727 trucks rand 74 motorcycles. Most of the pas- i senger cars are high-powered and + high-priced machines and have been used by public officials for joy riding and other personal purposes at the ex- pense of the State. The Governor has ‘issued an order that all these cars be | painted and marked so that everybody will know that they belong to the State, and that unless they ave in offi- cial use those operating them are loot- ing the treasury. i It has also been revealed by investi- gations made by Governor Pinchot that some forty-three telephones in- stalled in residences of employees of the State have been operated at the expense of the public treasury. The cost of telephones in Harrisburg run from $2.50 to $4.50 each month for lo- cal service alone. One of the users of a State-provided ’phone is said to have run up a bill of $96.00 within a very short period of time for tolls on long distance service and all of them ernor has ordered the Board of Pub- lic Grounds and Buildings to cut out ‘all these ’phones, so that hereafter ' prived of this luxury of official life. Of course this is precisely the righ i thing to do. These favors to certain ' officials are part of “the mess at Har- ‘risburg” which Governor Pinchot | promised to | i run long on the toll board. The Gov- i the swivel-chair favorites will be de- P hiladelphia. Republican Machine Rebuked. At the recent general election in the Forty-sixth Senatorial district of this State the Democratic voters supported George E. Sprowls and the Republican nominee was Colonel James E. Bar- nett. Both candidates were popular, Mr. Sprowls having served the public in local offices and Colonel Barnett served with some distinction in the Spanish war and a term as State Treasurer. The official count of the vote revealed the fact that Mr. Sprowls was elected by one majority. “Jim” Barnett being a pet of the ma- chine a contest was entered in his be- half and by throwing out the vote of one of the precincts the court declared the result a tie and a special election was ordered. The special election was held last Thursday. Both parties had renomi- nated the candidates supported at the previous election and the contest was intensive. The district had always been strongly Republican. The big vote polled by Sprowls in November was a tribute to his personal worth and popularity. But it served also to indicate a drift of public sentiment in favor of the Democratic party in that section of Pennsylvania as well as in other sections. On the vote at the special election last week this trend was greatly accentuated. The official returns show for him a majority of nearly 2500, he having carried both counties in the district by large ma- jorities. The reason given for declaring the November vote a tie was that one of the precincts in the borough of Me- Donald is in Allegheny county instead For years the vote of that precinct has been counted in the Washington county returns and if Barnett had been elected it would | have continued to be so counted, in ali probability, for years to come. But the covetous political machine of the Republican party couldn’t consent to a Democratic Senator for that district. In the gerrymander which served the purpose of apportioning the State in- to Senatorial districts two years ago the Forty-sixth was considered safe for the Republicans. But “there is ——How many people who read of the death in London, last week, of La- dy Francis Cook, formerly “Tenny” Claflin, the pioneer suffragette, know that she was born at Beech Creek, Clinton county? Her father “Buck” Claflin, came to central Pennsylvania from the New England States with the influx of Yankee woodsmen and log floaters before the Civil war and located at Beech Creek. For a num- ber of years he kept a store there on the site now occupied by the store of W. F. Hess & Son. It was while liv- ing there that “Tenny” and Mrs. Bid- dulph Martin were born. “Tenny” as a girl wore her hair bobbed, being the first and only girl in this part of the State to wear abbreviated tresses. was probably this same independence of spirit that induced. her in later life to take up suffragism and become a pronounced Suffragette. ——From our Pleasant Gap corres- pondent we learn that members of the sportsmen’s association at that place are feeding the wild turkeys and other birds on Nittany mountain and intend keeping up the good work as long as the ground is so thickly covered with snow. The sport-loving fraternity in that place are to be commended on their thoughtfulness and if hunters everywhere would only do likewise more birds would live for nesting next spring. tr ——— eter tesa ——Ambassador Harvey has gone back to his post in London after leav- ing a train of trouble in Washington. President Harding had to be put to bed and Secretary Hughes threaten- ed to resign as the result of his visit. ——We take no stock in the claim of the Oneida Indians to property in Political pirates have controlled everything in that city for ¢ So long a period that “the memory of man runneth not to the contrary.” ——Senater Borah, of Idaho, is rea! “clean up” and it is grati- indignant over the French invasion of | fying to know that he is trying to ful- the Ruhr region but Marshal Foch fill that promise. There are other 18 more than likely to go on with his “more pegs than holes” at his dispos- | and even bigger abuses in the admin- Plans just as if Borah were in com- | istration of the State government Plete agreement with him. | which will demand attention and no | | doubt will receive it in good time. The | —If France has fooled Washington pose he concluded to take from the | Governor is starting right and we he needn’t feel overly cocky about Secretary of Internal Affairs duties ‘ hope he will have the courage and te- | it? The present administration is imposed upon him by the constitution ' nacity of purpose to finish the job likely to gulp any kind of flapdoodle and hand them over to the official peg placed in the newly created hole. But jected to being thus denuded of power and patronage and the scheme has been halted. How would it be to try the “gi- lant tvenimont” on. the Fall Aine le case? well. We feel certain that the Demo- | in order to dope itself into “normal- | crats in the Legislature and good citi- vy.” i body will give him hearty support. { But it will be hard on the machine. ————— i sna Nobody knows who put the pinch in Pinchot but Secretary of In- ty 1 Yrs Woodvard is the guy ho took il out. PARR the Secretary of Internal Affairs ob- | zens of all parties in or out of that | | -——The official joy rider will look rather cheap when the accusing finger is pointed at him as he passes the crowd in a high-priced car. —- you want all the news read the “Watchman.” : re bya slip *twixt the cup. and the and the !1P." : It “Day by day in every way,” My cold seems nothing better, I think I might in such a plight Write Coue now a letter. He might—forsooth, inspect my “roof,” To tell me what I Auto: ! What nerve to pull, to open full ! My breathing apparato; | Or else, perchance, to throw in trance | My sneezing abligato; : There seems a ban on every plan I've tried for my digestion— I pray that he will give me soon A merciful—“Suggestion.” Last Stand of Job-Mongers. From the Philadelphia Public Ledger. Secretary of Internal Affairs, James F. Woodward is one of the first, per- , haps the only one, of the politicians at | the State capitol who has openly ar- | rayed himself against the Governor's ' program to introduce order and a bus- i iness system in the government of | Pennsylvania. He has announced his i intention to oppose—in the courts if -necessary—the transfer of any of the i duties of his office to the Department | of Commerce when created. i The explanation is not far to seek. | The office of Secretary of Internal Af- | fairs is a totally unnecessary encum- | brance on the State’s system of ad- | ministration. A strong movement , Some years ago for its abolition, in | the interest of economy and greater | efficiency, was blocked by the politi- cians, who saw in the office jobs and opportunities for patronage more im- portant to them than the welfare of , the people. Governor Pinchot’s program has , commended itself to the judgment of i the business men of the State. The office of Secretary of Internal Affairs is an anarchronism, and the resistance of the incumbent to any change will ‘not deceive any one as to its motives. If he should carry out his present threat, it will be not because he is de- ‘fending a needed agency of adminis- tration, but as the representative of a vicious system, the spokesman for that type of job-holding, job-manipu- lating politicians who have worked ; the State for all it is worth solely for selfish ends and who see in the new 1 regime dawning at Harrisburg the end ‘of sinecures, the elimination of ex- travagance and waste and a new spir- it of loyal service to the public offices of the State. Re a Sabotage on a Grand Scale. From the New York World. . On Wednesday 2500 iron miners in Newfoundland were thrown out of work because of the seizure of the Ruhr. Soon, no doubt, Swedish iron miners will be thrown out of work for the same reason. It will not be long before Italian factories will have to curtail production because they are not getting German coal. With the ‘mark at 24,000 to the dollar, Germa- ny’s ability to buy American cotton, copper and wheat is much worse than Austria’s ability a year ago. The blow which Poincare has struck to the Ruhr will be felt throughout the world. It is an example of eco- ‘nomic sabotage more deliberately vio- lent and destructive than any ever un- dertaken by a civilized nation in time of peace. To be sure, the French have not destroyed any physical property, but they are destroying in the most reckless fashion the industrial skill and organization which alone gives property an economic value. They { are tearing apart the industrial organ- ization of the Ruhr. They are tearing the Ruhr away from its natural maxr- ‘ket in Germany. They are tearing : Germany out of the world market by smashing credit. The notion that this can produce | reparations is moonshine. It can pro- duce political convulsions, starvation, . death, hatred and disgrace. But it | will not rebuild a shattered French , village, or pay a war veteran’s pen- { sion, or save the credit of France, or ! make France secure. France indeed i will be lucky if she escapes from the | muddle into which Poincare has led her without a catastrophe. Governing in the Open. ! From the New York Tribune. Governor Pinchot has started gov- | erning at Harrisburg with the lack of i privacy which a humorist has noted in the environment of a goldfish. A . big sign on the door of his workroom | reads: “Governor's Office—Walk ‘Right In.” There are no formalities. ' Visitors have simply to wait their turn while the Governor, in full view, receives all comers, answers the tele- phone and dispatches business as it piles up at his desk. No hardened prevaricator is em- ployed to ward off citizens at the out- er portal with the formula, “The Gov- ernor is in conference.” The caller can see for himself what occupies the | Governor. There has never been, we | judge, a freer opportunity to watch a pilot steering his ship of State. Mr. Pinchot is getting as close to the peo- ple as he can. He is not an isolation- ist. -It is profitable for a Governor lo cut as much red tape as he can in his daily contacts, especially if he has a | personality so pleasing as Mr. Pin- chot’s. We have had, though not re- cently icebergs at Albany, and they froze affection. Governor Smith's nickname and his wonderful gift as a mixer are his invaluable assets, Who can doubt that Mr. Pinchot is as sin- | which afford an opportunity for outside” coerely democratic as our Al, though : . . 1g fi a taey do not call him “GiT"—yet? | SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. 1 . —Wayne Miller, convicted of second-de- | Bree murder, at Lancaster, was sentenced | to twenty years in the eastern Penitentiary | for killing his wife. : —Alfred H. Coon, of Wilkes-Barre, has i been appointed a captain of artillery and | assigned as adjutant of the First Battalion | of the 109th Artillery. i —Mrs. Clifton A. Verner, president of i the Pittsburgh Women’s Voters’ League, | Sustained a fractured leg when knocked down by an automobile. —Twenty-seven eases of typhoid fever at Cherry Tree has caused the state health of- ficials to dispatch two state nurses to that town to take charge of the situation. —Edmund Murphy, Earl Moyer and Joseph Flynn, of Mahanoy Plane, were ser- iously injured at Lawrence colliery, when a rope broke, allowing heavy iron plates to fail on them, —Burglars Thursday night broke into the First Presbyterian church of New Cas- tle and blew open the safe in the secre- tary’s office, but got nothing. The bur- glars overlooked $22 which the pastor had placed in his Bible the night before, in- tending to put it in the safe later. —Measles are epidemic in many sections of Lancaster county. In Columbia hun- dreds of houses are under quarantine, while just as many are not quarantined, as the victims are being treated with old- time remedies by mothers. The epidemic has made great inroads on the attendance of pupils in the lowest grades of the schools, : —Falling asleep at a table at his board- ing house in Northampton, Sunday night, Sebastian Mesha had a dream. In his wild gesticulatinns he swung his arms so freely that he upset an oil lamp and sc the house on fire, In fighting the flamos Mesha's clothing caught fire, and he was seriously burned before help came, The house was badly damaged —For ma=ching with the Robert Patton club in Harrisburg during the inaugural of Governor Pinchot, Louis Hansbury, of Philadelphia, was dismissed on Saturday by Sheriff Lamberton. The sheriff had warned employees a few weeks ‘ago not to take any part in the exercises at Harris- burg, and said that disobedience of hig or- der would result in dismissal. Another employee who was absent on inaugural day was excused by the sheriff when it was learned he was ill on that day. —At the annual meeting of the Colum- bia County Fair Asseciation, held at Bloomsburg last week, the officers were directed to proceed with plans for the erection of a modern grandstand that will seat at least 6000 persons, but so that the Space under the stand can be used for ex- hibition purposes to relieve crowded con- ditions in the building. All of the officers of the association were re-elected, and re- ports showed that a profit of nearly $20,- 000 was realized through the 1922 fair, —Weighing thirty pounds less than his 170 pound wife, Edward Stickel, of Dun- lap, Fayette county, obtained a divorce when he proved to the master in the di- vorce suit that he was cruelly and barbar- ously treated by Myrtle Stickle. He testi- fied that she threw a skillet at him, got a butcher knife and threatened to kill him, and many times said she would poison him. On account of the difference in their sizes he was unable to protect himself in a manner that “insured his" Safety. The Stickles were married July 17, 1919, in Pittsburgh. —The Clinton Natural Gas and Oil com- pany, in which a number of capitalists are financially interested, has struck enough gas already to supply Lock Haven. Several months ago a well was brought in with 2,000,000 cubic feet flow and recently one with 1,500,000 feet flow was tapped. Prev- iously to this a number of paying wells were capped, waiting until a sufficient vol- ume could be found to warrant piping. The company has two rigs drilling contin- ually, and it is probable that the gas will be piped to Lock Haven the coming sum- mer or next fall. —Fayette county's jail population in- creased about 30 per cent. last year, ac- cording to the official report of warden Hugh A. Gorley, just made public. During 1922 exactly 3524 persons were committed to the county jail, as compared with 2296 the previous year. The report shows that 1309 persons were unable to read or write, having never attended school. The pres- ence of the state police in Fayette and the crusade conducted against violators of the Woner act and the automobile law are re- sponsible for a large percentage of the per- sons committed to the county jail. —Locked in an interior room in the house by their mother who had gene to visit a neighbor, two children, aged two and one-half and five and one-half years, daughters of Mrs. Chester Holmes, near Judith Mine, Bedford county, were burn- ed to death late Sunday night. An. hour after Mrs. Holmes, the wife of the miner, who was at work at the time, had left the house, the story and a half tenement was seen to be enveloped in flames. Despite the heroic efforts of neighbors, attempts to rescue the imprisoned little children were unavailing. The origin of the fire is un- known, —Charles Brown, yard boss at the new Luzerne plant of the Heilman Coal and Coke company at Maxwell, Fayette county, was shot dead last Saturday morning by a negro laborer who had been discharged by Brown on Tuesday. Brown, who lived in Masentown, took charge of the coal yard on Friday, and discharged a negro for failure to obey orders. As he sat at the breakfast table on Saturday morning in the company boarding heuse the man on- tered and ordered Brown to throw up his hands. Brown refused and was shot twice with a pistol. He was one of the best known men in the region and formerly conducted a business of his own in Ma- sontown, where he was prominent in ama- teur athletics. \ —Four correctional institutions to be known as the Pennsylvania state farms are authorized in a bill presented in the House of Representatives at Harrisburg, on Monday night, by Mr. Edmonds, of Philadelphia. These would eventually take the place of county prisons and if possible accommodate also the inmates of the pen- itentiaries and of the Huntingdon reform- atory. The bill, according to its sponsor, was introduced at the request of the pres- ident judge of the Common Pleas court of Philadelphia. It has the approval of the Pennsylvania State Bar association and was offered as the first step in prison re- form. Institutions are to be provided work. Of conrse the bill may never be- come a law,