Ly A SRE ERR oo po ep ————————— — : TL > a Paws FROM THE KEYSTONE. I Tr ~~... rr = —Sixty-five hundred dog licenses were Beworratic afl a = - | issued by the York county treasurer In mn —— sn em—— { { January. INK SLINGS. x —Among 43 aliens naturalized in the —The wild geese are flying north, the ball players are starting south and spring is not far off. —The Turks got cold feet at Lau- sanne just at the moment that their bluff might have gone through. —When the Governor’s new prohi- bition bill becomes a law your home might still be your castle, but not your castle still. —Harold Lloyd, the horn-rimmed film comedian is going to be married; at least his engagement is announced. Harold must be slipping. —The Hon. Jack Dempsey and the Hon. Jess Willard, having discovered that this is a poor season for fistic suckers, have decided to call their pro- posed revival of the Youngstown farce off. —The tomb of old King Tutenk- hamum has revealed so much wealth that almost we are persuaded to think that he must have been in the oil bus- iness or boot-legging some three thousand and more years ago. —The Reds of Russia have been seeing things ever since they conspir- ed to take over the job of the Czar. Evidently, however, they haven’t seen enough, for they have decreed that twenty per cent. more alcohol shall be put in the vodka. —Governor Pinchot’s demand that the School of Forestry now at The Pennsylvania State College shall be re- moved to Mont Alto doesn’t square with his demand of 1906, when, as chief Forester of the United States, he demanded that the school be es- tablished at State. —The value of German money is il- lustrated by a recent offer of the French government to indem- nify the parents of a little Ger- man girl who was accidentally shot by a soldier of the French army of occupation. They were offer- ed one hundred thousand marks. Mon- ev in six figures sounds big, but as the real equivalent at the present rate of exchange is only two dollars and ten cents the indemnity looks ridiculous. —President Harding has announced that though he would much prefer re- tirement he will be an aspirant for re- nomination by his party because he will not quit under fire. To us this statement is the strongest thing his administration has thus far revealed. It shows the President as a positive character in something, at least. It iz also notice to Congress that if it continues its do-nothing policy and then tries to “pass the buck” to him in 1924 he is going to pass it right back. —=Strange how the judicial ermine freezes up the gallantry and temporiz- ing spirit of men. Here’s Judge Wil- liam H. Keller, of the Superior court, talking to the women of Lancaster in this manner: “Women on the jury will not bring the millennium in justice any more than it has brought the mil- lennium in politics * * * * A re- cent trial in Philadelphia showed them to be just as easily swayed by cheap sentimentality and mush as were the men.” Who of those who recall the vouth of the early eighties in Belle- fonte imagined that this Chesterfield of the frivolers—we didn’t have tea- hounds and lounge lizards in those days—would ever acquire the temeri- tv to talk rough to the ladies? —Talk about getting old. We heard more news in a half hour’s chat with a youngster Sunday morning than has flooded our ear in the past twenty-four months. Gleaning it carefully the outstanding incident of interest was a statement that a reg- ular boot-legger’s car makes a stand, once a week, at a certain corner in town where all who have the price can be served. With the fifteenth of April looming and with nothing in sight but a keg of home-made pars- nip—that was supposed to be akin to sherry but turned out mother of vin- egar—we delved for the corner on which this car is to park tomorrow night. Nothing doing. That was the news the boy wouldn’t help break and that is the reason the boot-leggers get away with it. —The Rev. J. T. Brabner, of the committee on conservation and ad- vance of the Methodist church, said in an address, in ' Chicago, on Sunday, that every church should set aside and pay money for its advertising. He added that “every church member should help the newspapers for “they speak to thousands and millions where the preacher speaks to hundreds only,” # * * criticism of newspapers and their editorial policies is harmful. The pulpit and press should pull together and not apart.” Here’s one of the very few ministers who seem to have the right outlook. He recognizes the power of the press and appraises it as a power for good. Too many of them fail to see that it wiélds that power only because it strives to be a true mirror of the life of the commu- nity which it serves; frank, honest and fearless without regard for creed, race or color. The “Watchman” has been criticised more by ministers than any other class of its readers and yet it has been giving good, uplifting, wholesome thoughts to thousands every week for sixty-five years. And its congregation is growing whereas many of the ministers find theirs dwindling. We think we speak for the reputable press of the land when we say these things and we think the clergy, generally, would do well to heed the advice of Rev. Brabner. enact y a » : & VOL. 68. BELLEFONTE, PA. Cheering News for Democrats. Information comes from Washing- ton, welcome to Democrats at least, that President Harding will be a can- didate for another term. “He is un- willing to quit under fire,” is the rea- son given by correspondents and “he can’t be forced out” is the concensus s Apparently Unjust Criticism. : | “A cat may look at a Queen” and | irresponsible politicians who have no hope of official favor may criticise a Governor. It is not surprising, there- fore, to find that some of the “small- fry” Republican partisans are casting reflections upon the economy program ! Pinchot Prohibition Started. The much discussed Pinchot prohi- | bition bill has been started on its | course through the General Assembly { at Harrisburg. On Monday evening it | was read in place simultaneously in both branches and faded all other pub- Ilic questions off the legislative map. of opinion among the shrewd observ- ' of Governor Pinchot. The Governor, 'It will probably become a law sub- ers in the press gallery. of the elections last fall is justly in- terpreted as an expression of popular : opposition to Harding and he refuses to accept the responsibility. In fact he has already “cast his hat into the ring” and gone into training for the battle. He is arranging an itinerary for “a swing around the circle” next summer and it will be a comprehen- sive one. President Harding is a rather skill- ! ful word juggler and confidently be- lieves that he can persuade the peo- ple that his administration has been a brilliant success rather than the dis- mal failure that it appears to the vast | majority of the thinking people. Even if he should fail in his expecta- tions of his proposed trip his friends reason that the office holders could easily control the nominating conven- ! tion and make him the standard-bear- ' er in 1924. This was done for Pres- ident Taft in 1912, notwithstanding the vigorous opposition of Colonel Roosevelt. It brought disaster in its wake in that instance and the Harding bcosters are not unmindful of that. But there is no Roosevelt to revolt now. Of course the nomination of Weor- ren Gamaliel Harding as the Republi- can candidate next year will be the extreme measure of partisan folly. His measure as a statesman has been taken and is bulletined in the brain of every voter not blinded by political bigotry. The office holders will be for him with all the enthusiasm of self- ishness and the bitter-enders will sup- port him with the earnestness of mis- guided prejudice. But the carefully considered judgment of thoughtful voters was clearly expressed in the Congressional elections last fall, when the Democrats gained a dozen Sena- tors and seventy seats in the House of | Representatives in Washington. Hard- ing’s purpose “is cheering “to Demo- crats. ——The groundhog may have caught a glimmering shadow of him- self last Friday but it wasn’t anything very substantial. However, Sunday gave us real winter weather, with the thermometer down to within ten de- grees of zero, and yroundhog or no groundhog it is quile likely that the weather influence will be directed by higher power than a little varmint from a hole in the ground. Pinchot is the Real Boss. Governor Pinchot may not be famil- iar with the provisions of the consti- tution of Pennsylvania but he appears to thoroughly understand the psychol- ogy of Republican politicians of the State. When, after his election and before his induction into the office, he began functioning as Governor nine out of ten of the experienced observ- ers felt that he was riding to a speedy and hard fall. But as a matter of fact he has forced all the machine leaders to accept his plans and present indica- tions point to a personal triumph un- precedented in the history of the Com- monwealth. There actually appears to be no man with courage or temerity enough to raise a voice against any proposition he presents. We refer to this fact not in a spirit ! of derogation but as an expression of appreciation. The Republican ma- chine in Pennsylvania was rotten to the core. It had been looting the pub- lic for years by devious methods in ad- ministration. Within the period of a score of years the taxes had been doubled and notwithstanding the enor- mously increased revenue a vast mountain of debt had been created to menace the industrial life of the fu- ture. Governor Pinchot has set out to correct the methods and cure the evils of this misrule. legal processes in accomplishing his purpose. After the fashion of Roose- velt he acts and lets the people talk afterward, That he has completely squelched the arrogant and infamous Republican machine is beyond question. The Vares, the Leslies and the Eyres are as docile under the lash as whipped dogs. Tt is possible that he will make concessions on the question of the ap- propriation for the Delaware river bridge, but that will be in obedience to the suggestion of Auditor General Lewis rather than in deference to the wishes of the old machine leaders. On main questions he will compel acquies- cence and, at least until after the pub- lic patronage of his office has been dispensed, he will be the actual as well as the titular boss. What may happen after that is left to conjecture. Ambition to boss has wrecked many a life. 8usee He has not held | himself within constitutional lines or | to “clean up the mess at Harrisburg” and curiously enough, owing to some form of mental strabismus, he imag- ines that profligacy was the only fault ; to be corrected. So he framed up a system of disbursements which will greatly diminish the cost of adminis- tration and personally appealed to the General Assembly to enact it into law. . The Legislature will probably comply. Naturally one would imagine that every right thinking man and woman in the Commonwealth would give cor- ‘dial support to this amiable purpose to save them money. Probably the critics are not tax payers and have no interest in cutting down expenses, but ' even some of those who have more or less to do with providing funds for the State point out the strange fact that the Governor does not propose to de- crease the allowance to his own de- partment or the departments under the immediate direction and control of his closest friends. i under the budget $430,000 will be ap- ' propriated to the Attorney General this year against $249,000 for the last biennial term and $281,000 to the i Secretary of the Commonwealth as ‘ against $172,760 for the last term. All the other departments of the State government are shaved down to ‘a minimum and in the absence of an ‘ explanation this is perplexing to say the least. We all know that Pinchot is a reformer and though he took $3000 a year more than he was enti- tled to as Commissioner of Forestry in the Sproul administration he pro- poses to take $8000 less than the law allows as Governor. This shows the real spirit of reform but unhappily he provides increases in the executive contingent fund and other side-line allowances which amount to consides- ably more than the saving in salary. , These are curious . should withhold complaints for a time ' at least. : —Evidently the Governor has been hearing from the plain people of Pennsylvania about his attitude to- : ward their own institution of higher ‘education. Developments during the week indicate that he has discovered that he is “in wrong” in that matter, at least. Penaity of Our Default. { Late news from the Near East ‘holds out the hope of a peaceful set- ‘tlement of the vexed question in that section of the world. On Monday Lord Curzon, British representative in the Lausanne conference, left for home in dispair. Ismet Pasha had : positively refused to sign the treaty ' offered and there was nothing left to ! expectation. But when Ismet realized : that his bluff was called, he came ‘down to earth. Like the late Davy 'Crocket’s coon, he wisely adopted | “safety first” as his policy. Accord- "ingly he called upon M. Bompard, of the French delegation, and signified his willingness to accept the terms proposed by the allies. With the departure of Lord Curzon from Lausanne war clouds gathered rapidly and menancingly. The Greeks i are willing and even anxious to fight and a renewal of the war would al- most inevitably force Great Britain and France into the conflict. How ! jecture. It has already revealed the futility of the Washington conference, said to be the greatest achievement of the Harding administration, for in- stead of guaranteeing enduring peace lin the Near East, it seems to have ' created differences and promoted war spirit. It was a masterpiece of fu- tility. ; When the armistice was declared in 1918 the world was ripe for an assur- ed and everlasting peace. The pride i of German militarism was completely | humiliated and the cunning of Turk- ish perfidy exhausted. If the United States Senate had promptly ratified the covenant of the League of Nations and taken her rightful place at the head of that benevolent undertaking there probably never would have been another war. Germany promptly signed the peace treaty and Turkey was ready to sign anything that would give promise of life to her leaders. But the United States betrayed her obligations and the whole world is paying the penalty. ——Ismet Pasha pretended to think that the Turks will not get full jus- tice in the proposed settlement of the disputed questions. But his real fear is that they will. For example, facts Dut no doubt i much further it would spread devasta- | ‘ tion and suffering is a matter of con- | The result as we all know, has made up his mind ! stantially in its original form, for the : Governor’s heart is in it. But there { will be more or less opposition and the | resistance will be stubborn and per- sistent. In fact no other suggestion of the Governor has been so openly attacked. There was mild protest i against the budget scheme. A few Legislators interested in local chari- | ties protested mildly against it. But | the opposition to this measure is earn- ! est. | The measure is somewhat drastic . in some respects. For instance, it au- ' thorizes search and seizure of a pri- | vate dwelling whenever any person ! declares under oath before a magis- ! trate “that there is probable cause to | believe that intoxicating liquor is un- lawfully manufactured, sold, offered for sale or possessed in any room, house, boat, vehicle, structure, recep- tacle, premises or any other place or thing whatsoever.” This is a vast and dangerous power to invest in a mischief maker influenced by good or bad impulses. The nuisance provis- ions of the bill are equally drastic and mischievous. Under them malice might easily convert a community in- to a neighborhood of nuisances and get away with it. But after all experience has proved that drastic remedies are required to gress and the constitutional inhibition of intoxication. In providing drastic legislation on the subject Governor Pinchot is deceiving no man or woman who voted for him. He frankly de- clared in advance of his election that his prohibition policy would be the ex- tinction not only ‘of the traffic but of the indulgence in intoxicants. Those Senators and Representatives in the Législature of his own party who are protesting now have no ground to stand on. If they imagined that Pin- chot was fooling somebody else it is ng like themselves DOEtIC Jus ——According to a press dispatch 457 millionaires and near millionaires chartered the palatial ship Maureta- nia for $1,250,000 and sailed from New York yesterday for a six week’s Mediterranean cruise. It is quite evi- dent that there aren’t any country newspaper men in the crowd as the cheapest accommodation on the big liner is one thousand dollars, while for the two regal suites Elbert H. Gary and a party of friends put up $40,500. Judging from above prices if we were inclined to ocean travel we would of necessity be compelled to go in an old | tub. | —By way of conjuring up some- | thing to write about the borough coun- , cil must be hitting on all cylinders ; these times. We haven’t heard of a scrap around in the town hall for so long that really we are puzzled when i trying to recall who are the solons | who seem to be feeding on olive | branches. ——No matter what happens in Eu- rope or Asia this great country is safe. “Jimmie” Sheehan, of Philadelphia, has been securely anchored in a new office. ——Unless the administration at Washington has lost all humanitarian- ism it will do something to restore Ambassador Harvey's voice. ——Turkey has finally accepted the | terms of the allies in the Near East ! controversy. The bluff was no bet- ter than the strut. e———————{eeeesmeeaset— ——A Philadelphia broker lived to be 101 years of age but most of his life was passed before moonshine be- | came a necessity. ————— i Rp min, ——Now that the influenza germ {has been identified let us hope that i somebody will discover a method of | strangling it. ——Possibly the new “baby” in the Pennsylvania Republican family is the cause of the affliction in chairman Baker’s nose. ——Mr. J. P. Morgan says “Europe must help herself,” which is precisely what France is trying to do in the Ruhr valley. ——Germany hadn’t near as much respect for the scanctity of territory in 1914 as she pretends to have now. ——The annual testimonial dance to the football team of the Bellefonte Academy on Friday night, February 23rd. Dave Harmon’s orchestra will ‘furnish the musie. FEBRUARY 9. 1923. enforce the prohibition law of Con- oh NO. 6. The Fragile Entente. { From the Philadelphia Record. If we may judge from the expression; in several English papers of differing | polities there is very general British ! opposition to the French occupation: of ' the Ruhr and considerable resentment { at the French attitude toward Tur- key, and a common belief that the en- { tente cordiale between England and ' France is not likely to survive long. i In regard to Lausanne the French | are warmly protesting that they have {not acted independently of their Al- | lies, and that they have not promised i the Turks to negotiate with them if the treaty of Lausanne fails. But it is perfectly evident that the English delegates in Lausanne do not fully ac- cept this, and the course of France for more than four years prepares one. to believe in the truth of the charges. | The immediate effect of Bonar ! Law’s warning that if France did not support Great Britain on the Dardan- elles England would withdraw from ; the continent was to bring France , around to the British position, to the | disgusted astonishment of the Turks at Mudania. But then came the | French occupation of the Ruhr, dep- : recated in England because it is un- ; questionably a menace to the world’s i peace. England declined to take any | part in this, and, although it will not | withdraw its army on the Rhine, it | does not conceal its lack of sympathy with France in its present move. The question is not whether Germa- ny shall pay indemnity, but whether it can and shall pay at once the install- ments determined by the Reparations ! Commission. Germany has paid a good deal; in gold and in commodities, and the English feeling evidently is that it is wiser to be patient with Germany than to take steps which might very probably involve serious consequences. France resents this attitude on the part of Great Britain, and it is not a violent inference that France is not supporting England at Lausanne any more warmly than England is sup- porting France on the Rhine. From both sides of the Channel, therefore, there are increasing indica- tions of friction between the two coun- tries, a friction that cannot long be maintained without completely dis- solving the Entente. The conse- quences of this would be most unhap- py for the world, and particularly un- fortunate for France. The latter can- not possibly gain anything in the Le- vant that will compensate for losing ish support .on the Rhjney It is possible that France does not realize this. France may feel strong enough to deal single-handed with Germany but it is not certain that this is true. What is unquestionably true is that Germany is watching eagerly for signs of a break between the two leading Entente nations, and if it shall become a little clearer that there is a real break between Great Britain and France the attitude of Germany to- ward the latter may undergo a sudden and unpleasant change. A dissolution of the entente cordiale accomplished by Edward VII nineteen years ago would remove nearly all re- straints from Germans, Russians and Turks, and their freedom to follow their own instincts cannot be contem- plated with any comfort. A ———————— eee. Look the Part. From the Field. Whether you call it auto-suggestion, self-esteem or something else, think well of yourself, and look the part. The world is much inclined to take you at your own estimate of yourself, Just as your customer buys your goods at the market price. If you are down in the mouth, take a brace. Believe in yourself. _ Among the ten thousand occupa- tions in which men address them- selves, there is one at least about which you can succeed. And don’t lose control of your mind, for your mental poise is your business balance. You may have failed. Every fail- ure should make you stronger for another effort. And each effort should stand upon its own bottom. Assert yourself. Try it in a small way right now. Say to yourself, “I am capable and I can do what any one else in my position could do. I am a man and men must respect me.” And they will. mie me ems es Pinchot Slaughtering the Regulars. From the Clearfield Republican. All those hundreds and thousands of men on the payroll of the State Highway Department, who were so active for George E. Alter in the Re- publican primary campaign, and said they had word from Harrisburg to go the limit, will now be wondering “where they are at.” The removal of Commissioner George H. Biles, by Governor Pinchot last Monday, and the appointment of William Connell will cause much anxiety all along the line. Looks as if the fellows who went so strong for Alter are all mark- ed for slaughter. Not a single organ- ization leader has so far been appoint- ed. The successor to Biles is not strong for concrete roads. He rather prefers Warrenite and other mixtures, it is alleged. What he thinks of brick is not yet of record. ——1It is reasonably certain that if the League of Nations had been ac- cepted by the United States Turkey would neither be bluffing nor strut- ting now. ! Fayette county courts was Charles A. Kai- ser, aged 73, a German. | —Frank Lender, aged thirty-five, com- ! mitted suicide by hanging with his belt in +a cell in the Monessen police station. —It is estimated that one-half of the pepulation of Uniontown, or about 10,000 persons, are suffering from severe colds. —The will of Joseph Noraconk, a Nor- thumberland Civil war veteran, gave all of his estate to Mr. and Mrs. John Gilbert, who carried meals ‘to the aged man and otherwise befriended him. He is said to have been worth $3000. —Because Charles Calvin, of Coatesville, pleaded guilty to stealing two chickens from the farm of Richard Schroder, of Coatesville, he was sentenced in criminal court at West Chester to serve from two to three years in the eastern penitentiary and to pay a fine of $100. —Watsontown citizens will vote on March 6th, on a proposal to issue $50,000 worth of bonds for the erectidn of a new high school with a community auditorium. The board of education recently purchased a site for the proposed building on Canal street, away from the railroads and town’s industries. —Fifteen tons of chocolates constituted part of the cargo that was consumed early Wednesday morning when two freight cars on the Lehigh and New England siding at Allentown were destroyed by fire caused by gasoline that escaped from a passing train becoming ignited. The loss is more than $10,000. —A burglar entered the home of Irvin Walter, near the Pennsylvania Pump and Compressor company’s plant at Easton, on Saturday night, carried off a small safe, and took it to a field some distance from the house, where it was smashed with a sledge hammer. They got a gold watch, consid- erable money and a number of insurance policies. —Burglars working during Saturday night at the home of J. Ward Jordan, principal of the Hazleion High school, were scared away by the crying of a child awakened by their operations. Principal Jordan hastened down stairs when he heard the men, but they fled as he came upon them. The attempted Jordan bur- glary occurred after the residences of sev- eral neighbors had been looted of silver- ware and other articles! —David King, of Butler county, seventy years old, entered a plea of guilty on Sat- urday, before Judge A. E. Reiber, to the charge of second degree murder for Kkill- ing 8. Clair McClung, forty-two years old, of Butler, in a hotel in that city Decem- ber 9th. He was sentenced to from six- teen to eighteen years in the western pen- itentiary. King told the court before sen- tence was passed that hé had been drink- ing and that the shooting was accidental. King has served a term of seventeen years for a murder committed in Clarion county thirty-five years ago. —A steer owned by Jonas Bucher, near Brunnerville, became wild last Friday and escaped from his place. It made a break for the hills around the Lebanon pumping station. It jumped fences like a deer, going as far as Miners’ village, near Leb- anon. Men on horseback with guns pur- ‘sued it and although they saw it twice that day the animal was too wary and made its escape. On Saturday it was tracked in the snow by men following oun foot. At Brickerville a shot crippled the animal but it continued running as far as Brubaker's dam, where it was fatally shot by Harry Gochenour. —A detachment of state police went into Pottsville on Saturday with $17,000 seized at Orwin, in the western part of Schuylkill county, on Friday night. Given warning that a eock fight and erap game were to- take place, the police arrived just when the sport was at its height and arrested 40 of the participants, who were all fined on Saturday. The participants were young miners. It has not been decided what will be done with the large amount of money that was seized. Gold was stacked high and winnings were easy just as the police stepped in the door, placed their hands on the cash and notified all present they were under arrest. —Six counterfeiters, with pockets bulg- ing with wads of bad money, arrived in Shenandeah, Pa., one day last week and unloaded about $100. One of the gang, a faultlessly dressed young man, about 31 years old, slim built, nearly six feet tall, entered the butcher shop of T. G. Dangora and asked for some pork chops and other articles and from a bag filled with $10 and $20 bills paid for the purchase. After get- ting the change Dangora became suspicious and questioned the stranger on the legality of the money. The visitor beat a hasty retreat from the store, followed by Dan- gora, who summoned the police, but the stranger picked up five confederates and disappeared in an automobile. —According to reports from the big oil field at Tidioute, Pa., it is estimated that the daily perduction of oil from the I’rop- er No. 3 well, on the Hoffman farm, is 125 barrels. The well, drilled four feet into the Queen sand, on Friday started to flow at the rate of from twenty to twenty-five barrels every half hour, the flow of oil be- ing accompanied by gas production esti- mated at 1,000,000 cubic feet. The well on the A. E. Daniels’ farm, owned by the Tri- umph Oil company, was drilled two and one-half feet into the sand Monday, with a good showing of oil and gas. This well will extend the Tidioute field about four miles to the west. The drillers struck the sand at a depth of 1376 feet. Norton & Carnahan are preparing to drill another well. The Pequignot well, it is expected, will be drilled in next week. —Bent over the steering wheel of his au- tomobile, George Fox, of Rockville, uncon- scious from a blow suffered in a collision, rode for three miles along the main line tracks of the Pennsylvania railroad near Harrisburg, on Sunday, before a towerman stopped his car. The automobile which Fox was driving collided with a tree at a grade crossing at Lucknow. Glass from the windshield struck him on the head, rendering him unconscious. The auto was turned from the road to the railroad tracks. The rails kept the wheels of the automobile along their course. The car was traveling about ten miles an hour. A towerman saw the automobile, telephoned to a tower three miles away, where anoth- er railroad employee was able to board the runaway automobile and bring it to a stop. ¥ox is in a serious condition.