SE. —— i, INK SLINGS. ——How about buying Thanksgiving turkey early. —Let us have a new deal all the way through the court house. ——Getting it in the neckis all right if it is really the “bottled in bond” variety. —Everybody will be at State Col- lege tomorrow and most of them will be hoping to see State’s lion eat up the Navy’s goat. —Vote for Condo and Stover for Auditors and assure yourself of hav- ing a full statement of the county business transactions. —The Yanks have won the Nation- al baseball classic and while Babe Ruth was a party to the victory he wasn’t the whole show. ——1If Governor Pinchot imagines he can scare the coal operators into a decrease of prices he has a rude awakening coming to him. ——Senator Vare is about to resign his seat in the State Senate in order to resume his seat in the House of Representatives in Washington. —The Governor's round about way to have “capitol hill” declare for him for President will either make a lot of hypocrites or a lot of vacant places. ——Secretary Mellen also got a jab in Pinchot’s Washington speech but it was coming to him. It is understood that he positively refused to be for Gif. for President. —There is a counterfeit ten dollar note in circulation and we should wor- ry. Such large pieces of mazuma rarely get through the door of a coun- try printing office. —When Governor Pinchot goads President Coolidge just a little more he will discover that there is just as positive a man in Washington as there is in Harrisburg. ——What the Governor of North Carolina said to the Governor of South Carolina is vastly different from what the Governor of Kansas said to the Governor of Pennsylvania. ——Pinchot may get a seat in the next National convention to preserve a long established precedent. But he is going to have a “heck” of a time to get credentials for the Mrs. —All the way from top to bottom of the ticket, any one can vote for the Democratic nominees with the feeling that he or she is helping to put only clean, capable men in office. —Claude Herr is making an im- pressive campaign for Prothonotary. Wherever he goes voters are rally- ing to his candidacy. They see for themselves that he would prove a ca- pable, courteous official. —Vote for Lyman L. Smith—fer- County Treasurer. He is just the type of man for that office of peculiar trust. Nowhere could a better one be found and the county funds in his cus- tody will be properly taken care of. —His settlement of the coal strike having proved a boomerang as a pop- ularity maker Governor Pinchot is out with another attempt to keep in the Presidential spotlight. He has been telling President Coolidge what to do. If Cal. gets as mad as he was at the time of that Boston police strike he’ll likely tell Gif. where to go. —Anyway the cat jumps we are bound to have a Republican in the of- fice of District Attorney and a Demo- crat in the office of Recorder. Both Arthur Dale and John Love are Re- publicans and both Forest Ocker and Harry Rossman are Democrats at least the latter, who is now the Republican candidate, was a Democrat only a few years ago. —Thomas A. Edison doesn’t believe his friend Henry Ford ought to be President. He thinks Henry can do more good for the country outside than in the White House. As to that we have nothing to say. But we do want to relieve Mr. Edison of any fear he may have in the matter. Henry will never park a flivver in the presi- dential garage. —The last three years Noll and Grove were Commissioners they had $225,613.63 on which to run the busi- ness of the county and they did it without issuing a note. During the three years the present board has been in they have had $410,593.65 to use and have $63,600.00 in notes out- standing. Think of it! They have had $184,981.02 more to run the coun- ty with, for three years, than their predecessors had and still they have to issue county notes to keep going. And the tax payers pay the interest on the notes. wor s— your Messrs, Austin and Yarnell, Coun- ty Commissioners, publish a signed statement in the Gazette of this morn- ing in which they very naturally try to gloss over the vast increase in ex- penditures ‘during the three “years they have been in office. We have no objection, whatever. In fact it was expected that they would try to ex- plain away the startling revelations the “Watchman” made last week as to the way the money of the tax payers is going. We~do object, however, to their conclusion to the effect that the “Watchman” did or ever has charged them with dishonesty. It never has entertained such'a thought nor has it given expression “to anything that might be distorted into belief that we have. As to whether they have been incompetent is a matter for the voters to decide. We have been publishing facts, not personalities, and propose to continue doing so. Comparative statements from which the voters, themselves, can decide as to the com- petency of the gentlemen to continue in the offices they hold. VOL. 68. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. Pinchot Demands Loyalty. If the Old Guard leaders succeed in coraling the Pennsylvania delega- tion in the coming Republican Nation- al convention against Governor Pin- chot they will achieve it without the open help of the State job holders. The Governor intends to secure the fidelity of his own employees. In an order made public the other day he says “no person will be retained in public office who is disloyal to the ad- ministration. Giving aid and comfort of any sort, or in any form, to the en- emies of good government or of the administration is disloyalty. Disloyal persons will be removed from office at once upon discovery.” In the opin- ion of the Governor “good govern- ment” and “the administration” are synonomous terms. Senators Pepper and Reed, Secre- tary of the Treasury Mellon and State chairman Baker are striving to send an uninstructed delegation to the convention. Their principal purpose is to prevent Mr. Pinchot from using the eighty delegates of the State as capital in trading for personal advan- tage. Incidentally they have in mind some trading on their own account. The federal patronage for the period between this time and the convention is of considerable value and control of the delegation is a powerful force when the dispensing agent is “gar- nering” strength. The realization of these facts has probably influenced Governor Pinchot to issue his admo- nition to employees to be “loyal to the administration.” The indications are, however, that the Governor will fail in his efforts to control the delegation. His orders to the job holders will make them cau- tious, no doubt, but not friendly. In fact there are signs of clandestine support of the Old Guard program in various sections of the State by State officials whose work counts in their communities. The Governor seems to have adopted a misttken policy in his treatment of the subject. Pennsylva- nia Republicans have been used to an “easy” boss, while he is exacting and his open slurs upon the memory of Penrose and the methods of Sproul are likely -to provoke resentments. But this is his own affair. If he im- agines he is a Roosevelt he is indulg- ing in a dream. ——The United States is partici- pating in a pending conference of the League of Nations at Geneva, through “official observers.” In other words we are still sneaking under the can- vass to see the show. ‘Passing the “Buck” to Coolidge. That President Coolidge inveigled Govenor Pinchot into a trap skilfully laid for suckers, in the matter of the coal strike settlement, is generally believed. That Governor Pinchot is now trying to force President Cool- idge into a trap is equally certain. In an address delivered at Washington, on Sunday, Governor Pinchot said: “The federal enforcement service in Pennsylvania lost its soul through politics and will never be worth its salt until it is taken wholly out of pol- itics. This is the first step in my State, and, I infer, in the others also. The second, in my judgment, is to make the head of it, until the present situation is cleaned up, responsible directly to the President of the United States.” This is literally placing the “buck” in the hands of the President. In some sections of the country that will work to his advantage but there is an increasing impression that in other sections, and at vital points, it will have the contrary effect. In New York, for example, which has the largest number of votes of any State in the convention, the strict enforce- ment of the Volstead law will alien- ate the majority of the Republican voters. New Jersey has also shown a tendency to the wet side and Massa- chusetts and Maryland are in doubt on the question. If Mr. Pinchot | should succeed in forcing Coolidge to identify himself with the radical “drys” it might seriously impair his chances of nomination. In presenting the matter to the cit- izenship conference the Governor availed himself of an opportunity to make insinuations against the Cool- idge supporters in this State, more- over. “The thing that has protected the liquor criminal from the law,” he declared, “is politics. Politics first, law enforcement a poor second has been the order. Bad whiskey, with beer to help, has supplied the sinews of war,” he added. That is the whole truth and to make it impressive he fastened the responsibility upon the Old Guard party leaders. He denounc- ed McConnell’s appointment as a scan- dal, and censured former Governor Sproul for his failure to promote law enforcement. What he said is prob- ably true but not diplomatic. ——It is said that Germany con- templates a new currency issue. Let us.-hope it will not-take the form of a new issue of marks. sus gave it a population of 3996. identical in area and population. BELLEFONTE, PA., OCTOBER 19, 1923. Bellefonte and Philipsburg-—a Com- parison. Bellefonte is supposed to be just one mile square. The last cen- We are not advised as to the area of the corporate limits of Phil- ipsburg, but we are familiar enough with the town to know that it is not much, if any, smaller than Bellefonte. The last census gave it a population of 8900, just 96 persons less than Bellefonte. In facilities for getting around, character of buildings, vacant lots, etc., the towns are not greatly dissimilar. In 1922 it cost $1677.00 to assess Bellefonte. In the same year the Philipsburg assessment cost $762.09. In 1923 the assessment in Bellefonte cost $1816.59. In 1923 the assessment in Philipsburg cost $607.78. In two years it has cost tax payers $2123.72 more to assess Belle- fonte than it has to assess Philipsburg. Yet the two towns are almost The Commissioners explain it by saying that the Assessors swear to the time they put in and there is nothing left for them to do but pay the bills—with your money. What would you do? The price paid for Bellefonte this year is higher than it would have been if one man had been employed at $150.00 per month and taken every day in the year to do the work $41,283.65 on January 1st, 1922. standing. four years ago. ing notes mean. ditures. affairs. They couldn’t quite understand how that statement could be cor- rect if there were, as we also stated, $63,600.00 of current notes out- What it Means. Several persons have asked us to explain a statement made in the “Watchman” last week to the effect that the county was in deb & Both statements were correct, if the statement of the County Auditors published in April was correct. The county could be in debt only $41,283.65 and still owe notes of $63,600.00. And such is the case because revenues owing the county that have not been collected are counted as assets. tax duplicates have been permitted to remain unsettled and in order to get money to run the county the Commissioners have borrowed on current notes $63,600.00, paying interest for it of course. sumption and hope is that when these old duplicates are settled the money received from them will pay the notes. But will they? : im 1919, when the present board took control of the Commission- er’s office there wasn’t a single note outstanding against the county. Their predecessors had been operating for five years on a four mill tax and a total assessed valuation in the county of $14,597,990.00. We want to be entirely fair in discussing these questions with you. We have no desire to do anybody an injustice and for that rea- son we here reiterate a statement this paper made in the campaign We then said that no matter who might be chosen Commissioner, whether the Democratic or Republican nominees, the probability was that the county millage would have to be raised, if the county hoped to finally wipe out its debt. In other words, The pre- As we all know the present Board was chosen and almost the first thing it did was to clap two mills extra on the taxes. To us this was not unexpected then, but in addition to adding the extra millage val- uations were increased from $14,597,990.00 to $16,373,740.00 and as a result of both increasing the taxes and increasing the valuation the present board had $139,156.03 with which to carry on the county gov- ernment in 1922 whereas their predecessors had only $80,825.28 to operate on in 1919, which they did without issuing any notes, left all bills that were due paid and a nice cash balance in the treasury. From this we think you can see what the $63,600.00 of outstand- It means delinquency in collections and extravagance in expen- Paying interest on notes to take the place of money that should be gathered into the county treasury. Poor management is the most charitable comment any one can make on such a condition of Retirement of Joseph R. Grundy. The declared and voluntary retire- ment of Mr. Joseph R. Grundy, of Bristol, Pennsylvania, and Philadel- phia, from the political arena, pre- sents that veteran “bearer of bur- dens” in the light of a pathetic fig- ure. For many years he has been the fiscal agent of the Pennsylvania Re- ‘publican machine and the “guide, phil- osopher and friend” of the party lead- ers. The late Senator Quay leaned on him whenever financial stress threatened and the late Senator Pen- rose was equally dependent upon him. As president of the Pennsylvania Manufacturers’ association and a lead- ing figure in the Manufacturers’ Club of Philadelphia, he was able to col- “lect funds in"vast sums for any par- tisan enterprise.” { Like the late Cardinal Wolsey, the ! fruits of Mr. Grundy’s labor are dis- ! appointments. Ingratitude came as the reward of all his recent efforts. He delivered the message which made Warren G. Harding the Republican nominee for President, at Chicago in | 1920, as the emissary of Penrose, and ! Harding rewarded him by slights. He “made William C. Sproul Governor of i Pennsylvania and Sproul . spurned y him. He organized and directed the forces which made Hampton Moore mayor of Philadelphia and Moore turned a deaf ear to all his importu- i nities for recognition. Finally he | turned the tide which was about to immerse Gifford Pinchot last year and contributed $80,000.00 to his cam- paign fund, and Pinchot gave him the cold shoulder. In view of these recurring disap- pointments it is small wonder that Mr. Grundy has announced his retire- ment from politics. Probably it is not to be regretted that he has adopt- ed that course, for his methods were not to be commended. So far as ap- pearances indicate he had no ambi- tions to hold office himself. But he had friends who wanted office and who contributed money in the hope of such rewards, and his disappointments came from his failure to meet such sinister obligations because of the in- gratitude of those who had profited by his work. If the evil of corrupt- ing the ballot is diminished by his ab- sence from the scenes of his former activities his retirement will be for the public good. ——Col. Henry W. Shoemaker’s Al- toona Tribune came to our desk on Monday morning enlarged to an eight column, sixteen page paper, instead of seven columns to the page as here- tofore. The Tribune has always been a clean, newsy paper and the extra column not only gives it a more met- ropolitan appearance but affords more space for advertising as well as read- ing matter. ——Governor Pinchot has appoint- ed Howard J. Thompson, of Curwens- ville, but for a number of years a res- ident of Bellefonte, a member of the board of trustees of the Huntingdon reformatory. ~——Lloyd George didn’t know he was so popular. in this country and he probably never will know why. NO. 41. Grand-Stand Plays, From the Philadelphia Record. We entertain the highest regard for the attainments of the Governor of Pennsylvania. He is a man of great ability, decent instincts and boundless energy; and there can be no doubt that he desires to serve the people faith- fully and with a distinction that shall heighten the contrast between his ad- ministration and those of some of his boss-ridden predecessors. And yet— and yet, we could wish that he were a little less given to grand-stand plays. : mines 3 TE ren? wr * * * * * * * Governor _ Pinchot made a grand- stand play in the settlement of the coal strike. There was a deal of fuss and notoriety about his selection as mediator, about his handling of the affair at Harrisburg, and about the telegrams of felicitation that passed between him and the President after an adjustment which the lapse of but a few days showed to be not as rep- resented. The Governor held out false hopes to the consumers as to the re- sults of his strike settlement, they were especially dashed. He did not achieve a settlement on a new basis; he used the same old formula; all the costs, as usual—and they exceed those he fixed as a maximum—were saddled on the consumer. . The strike settle- ment, and the official statement that accompanied it, constituted “an act done to draw applause,” i. e., a grand- stand play. Next the Governor descends upon the coal regions and the city of Phil- adelphia with a formidable body of state troopers and announces that he is going to close all the saloons by the simple process of serving notices upon their proprietors to dismantle their establishments and quit. He serves the notices. The saloon-keep- ers laugh. In 48 hours, he tells us, the saloon-keepers will learn that he means business. Several times 48 hours havé elapsed, and the saloons are still open, and the United States District Attorney, whose business it would be to prose- cute them, announces that they can- nok be closed. Another grand-stand play. We have no doubt that the liquor situation in Philadelphia is just as’ bad as the Governor represented it to be, and we are in hearty sympathy with his desire to apply a remedy. We wish that his plan might have suc- ceeded. But we Tne Som NE fe. and the Governor himself must have known, that it was another grand- stand play. ' There is much that the Governor can accomplish toward the enforce- ment of the Volstead act, and possibly a little—though this we doubt—to- ward ameliorating the effects of his strike settlement; but in either case, and in all governmental affairs, he had better dispense with the brass band and trust to the public to dis- cover and appreciate his achieve- ments. Advertising is a wonderful force, but only when the goods are as mer- itorious as the advertiser represents them to be. . Sr ——— ly ge sin. When a Man Fails. From the Kansas City Star. When business is booming even the incompetent man may make a suc- cess. It is in time of stress that the sheep are separated from the goats. Often we overlook this fact and blame general conditions for a man’s failure when the real blame should fall on his extravagance and poor management. A Kansas banker recently cited these two instances which he knew personally. Years ago in organizing a bank he picked a promising young German as a comer who would have influence with the German farmers, helped him get a few shares of stock in the bank and made him a director. The honor went to the young man’s head. He overreached himself in buy- ing land, he was not a careful man- ager and now is in danger of losing everything. About the same time another young fellow from Germany got a job as a farm hand in the neighborhood. He was earnest and industrious. The banker hired him at $18 a month. In two or three years he had saved some money and asked his employer for help in buying: a farm. The banker had enough confidence in him to lend him the necessary money, up to 75 per cent. of the value of the land. This man is now a successful farmer, with a large farm worth $200 an acre, free of incumbrance. At one time this year the banker learned he had had $6,000 on deposit in the bank. The neighbors all point to the case of the first farmer as showing that conditions are runinous; that they have forced the man to the wall. They say nothing about the second farmer. who has gone on prospering under conditions that smashed the first man. Occasionally a competent man is overwhelmed by adverse conditions. But ordinarily success or failure is a personal matter. The intelligent, en- ergetic, thrifty man usupally prospers. He makes circumstances instead of al- lowing circumstances to make—or break—him. ——1It may be gratifying to delin- quent subscribers to learn that two dollar bills are gladly accepted at face value in most newspaper offices. ——If the highway cops will drive the reckless motorists off the high- ways ‘they will achieve something worth while. SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —While exploding dynamite caps, Theo- dore Mowery, aged 11 years, of Kittan- ning Point, lost three fingers and a thumb of his right hand. A finger nail was im- bedded in his cheek. P —Joseph Harris, of Sayre, won $1,000 on the Giants in the first game of the world's series. He hid $200 of it in the oil stove at home. His wife was cold on Monday. Joe is now only $800 winner. —Plasterers have been offered $17.50 for an eight hour .shift by an agent repre- senting Philadelphia builders. Bricklay« ers working on several large jobs have been given a voluntary advance, and their wages now amount to $97.50 a week. —As the result of a pea lodged in the Wwindpipe on Sunday evening, Charles D. Evans 8r., a prominent Johnstown man, died on Monday in a taxicab while being taken to the Lee Homeopathic hospital, where a throat specialist intended remove ing the obstruction. >, —It was determined on Saturday that the loss of forty or more geese belonging to foreign residents of Freemansburg, Le- high county, first thought to have been due to cholera, was caused by imbibing too much moonshine, which found its way into a nearby creek. >» —Mrs. Clara Leonard, of Lancaster, was refused compensation last Saturday, al though her husband fell dead while in the employ of the John Farntim company, of that place. It was shown that Leonard entered the plant, sald ‘good morning,” and almost intsantly fell dead. Physi- cians said he died from heart failure. —The six-wire power transmission line from McCall's Ferry to York is finished and ready to operate as soon as the sub- station, near Violet Hill, is completed. A steel tower was erected near the breast of the dam, on the York county side, 152 feet high. The men who built this tower re- ceived $1 an hour, against 65 cents an hour, the usual rate. —Thieves forced a rear door entrance to the W. F. Hufford silk mill at Weissport, and carried off silk stockings to the value of $22,000 last Wednesday night. Most of the stockings were in boxes ready to ship. Two motor trucks which were housed near the mill, one of which belonged to con- tractor U. Lesher, and the other to Her- bert Arner, were also stolen. —Mervin C. Henry, aged 40 years, of Hanover, and Herman KE. Keasey, aged . 40, of Pleasureville, York county, commit- ted suicide by hanging, Saturday night. The wives of both men found their bodies suspended from ropes. Each suicide chose the barn at his home to kill himself. Hen- ry was despondent over continued ill health, Keasey, it is declared by coroner McConkey, was drunk at the time he hang- ed himself, : —Daniel H. Kennelley, aged 24 years, of _Fairpoint, near Lock Haven, was cut in two by a New York Central eastbound freight at the Bridgens farm, two miles west of Lock Haven on Monday morning. Young Kennelley had been staying with his cousin, William Kennelley, who resides on the Bridgens farm and had crossed the track to take a cow to pasture. Failing to see the train as it rounded the curve, he was struck and instantly killed. —Big Run, a Clearfield county borough of 1,200, near DuBois, is having difficulty in inducing one of its citizens to accept the :job of -constable because the place has no lock-up. If an arrest is made it is nec- essary that the person making the arrest either ‘keeps the prisoner in his home or takes him to a aear by village, all of which are smaller, but have lock-ups. A town of 1,200 people without a jail is con- sidered a novelty in that region. —Jiggs, a puppy, was the indirect cause of the death of his little master, Louis Rex Brown, aged 5 years, son of Clifford Brown, of Roselawn, near Altoona. When Rex and his younger brother returned from their great-grandmother’s Friday, they found their home was locked. Jiggs led the way to6 an open cellar window, through which the boys entered and built a fire. Rex’s clothing ignited and he was so terribly burned he died on Sunday. —Plans to reopen the city bank at York, Pa., which institution was closed last April after shortages of more than $1,- 000,000 were uncovered, have been approv- ed by the depositors’ protective commit- tee. Under the plan all persons having deposits totalling less than $200 are to be paid in full and the others are to receive 75 per cent. in cash and the remainder in stock at double par. The authorized cap- ital stock, under the reopening plan, will be $750,000. = —Charles L. Cully, 29 years old, former ticket agent for the Chesepeake and Ohio railroad at Huntingdon, W. Va. was ar-- rested at Reading on Sunday on informa- tion furnished by railway police. An au- tomobile was one of the clues to his ar- rest. He is charged with embezzling $900 from the railway company two years ago. He lived at Reading with his family and was in the roofing business. He is said to have traveled from coast to coast while officers hunted two years for him. —Antonio Gracello, an Italian of Arm-. strong county, sold more than 2000 cans of common cheap corn oil under the name of “finest imported Italian olive oil” be- fore he was discovered by State pure food agents and arrested. Gracello was tracked to his cache in the wilds of the county, where fifteen filled barrels of corn oil and twelve empties were found. Gracello being caught in the act of filling his cans. A sample was purchased by the agent and Gracello was arrested and fined the max- imum of $460 and costs. —A supposed telephone lineman, armed with a screw driver, called one day last week at the home of J. Horace McFarland, of Harrisburg, president of the American ‘Civics association, and went over the tel- ephone lines to make repairs. He spent several hours in the house. The next day the police announced they were search- ing for the man-in an effort to find $2000 worth of old jewelry and valuables report- ed stolen from the McFarland home. The loss was discovered after the ‘lineman’ had left. Telephone company officials said no repairmen had been sent there. — Bertha Pinkerton, 16 years eld, of Lancaster, is in a serious condition in the General hospital from poison she took on ‘Monday night while seated in Reservoir park with Francis Foster, aged 21, and Carl Herr, 23 years old. She spent the afternoon at home with her sister and the two young men, and about 5 o'clock went out with her beaux. No one saw her tak- ing the tablet.. When Herr asked her .if she wanted a doctor, she said, “You. will soon see I don't need a doctor, I'll need an ambulance.” Five minutes later she was rushed to the hospital in an ambu- lance. Later she declared she swallowed the poison because her father beat her.