INK SLINGS. —1If it is true that Japan is steadily moving eastward Hiram Johnson is likely to throw a fit any time. ——The usual fatalities among hunters are being reported but the real killings will not begin until the deer season opens. ——Colonel Harvey, who exhausted the vocabulary of denunciation in “fighting Wilson,” is now protesting against criticism of Coolidge. —The demonstration in Washington on Sunday evidenced the place for- mer President Wilson holds in the ‘hearts of the American people. —If the Allies permit the ex-Kai- ser to return to Germany they might just as well begin equipping the com- ing generation of their youth for war. —My, but we’re glad the election is over! It’s always easy to get out copy in a political campaign but the ease of the work is more than offset by its unpleasantness. —Next Monday night the problem of the Bellefonte hospital will be up for solution and whether its solution be worked out by addition, subtraction or division you ought to be there to do some figuring. ——Senator Pepper and Governor Pinchot spoke at the same meeting in Harrisburg, on Monday, but no prom- ises were exchanged to “drink out of the same canteen” at the Republican National convention. —Madame Galli-Curci has declined to sing with the Chicago Opera com- pany. She became peeved because the managers of the company were simple enough to think that they had any right to select what operas should be sung. —Governor Pinchot is going to have the Governors of thirty-one States come in to Pennsylvania to help him settle the coal problem. If they succeed in making the mess thir- ty-one times as bad as Gif. made it the Lord help the people to keep warm, —Mr. Mellon’s tax reduction is supposed to have a strong appeal to the common people because it takes care of even those with an income so low as four thousand a year. We often wonder why it is that so many otherwise well informed men know so little about the common people, —If you can spare the dollar at all you should be a member of the Red Cross. Read the intimate story of its activities in this community, publish- ed in another column on this page and if you can figure out a way that your dollar can de a better work than is there revealed write and tell us about: it. —Right here let us announce that we are going to publish the picture of and crown the hunter who sends us the first saddle of venison as the mightiest nimrod since Daniel Boone stood on top of Pikes Peak in Kan- sas and viewed the silvery waters of the Susquehanna as they wound their sinuous way through the blue grass of Kentucky. —The American farmer, as a class, is paying twenty per cent. of all taxes collected by Federal, State and local governments. His ratio of taxes to income is 16.6 whereas that of the rest of us is 11.9 per cent. Of course this disproportion is due largely to the low price of the farmer’s product and, strange as it may seem, “the vultures of Wall street,” whom the farmer has always regarded as his greatest ene- my, are starting a movement to open up foreign markets so that the prod- ucts of American farms will come in- to their own again. —The Pennsylvania Public Service Commission has just announced the results of recent investigation of the cost of producing power by water as compared with its generation through steam by coal. Eight tons of coal are saved each year by each electric horse power developed by water. This be- ing fact, not guess work, we are won- dering how many tons of coal might be saved annually were Spring creek again to be harnessed in the old car works dam instead of being permit- ted to flow on indolently and unpro- ductive to the Bald Eagle. —We are not surprised at the reve- lations that were made at a union service in Philadelphia last Sunday when many pastors of churches stood up and told that attempts had been made to bribe them into letting up on their insistence of enforcement of the ‘Eighteenth amendment. Some of those pastors must have been wrong, however, when they stated that “boot- leggers” had approached them. The “hootleggers” are for the Eighteenth amendment. In the effort to have it enforced they are the driest of the «dries. It is their meal ticket. —We note in the report of the Na- “tional Bureau for the advancement of music that Christmas caroling was “taken up last year by eleven hundred and fifty-four cities and towns in the United States. In the list Bellefonte -is credited with having taken up this beautiful custom for the first time in 1922. This is not the case. Belle- fonte is one of the country’s pioneers. The writer happens to have been the person who organized the first group of carolers here and that was more shan a decade ago. Every year since -#hat time a splendid male chorus has sung on the streets of Bellefonte from four o'clock until daylight Christmas morning and it has been a joy to our little world that we hope will never be denied it. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 68. To a group of hand-picked partisan ladies assembled in Harrisburg, on Monday, Governor Pinchot gave a fine exhibition of self-praise. His theme was “Ten Months in Office—a Report of Progress,” and he exhausted the possibilities in “blowing his own horn.” He admitted failure to fulfill the first promise of his campaign platform but placed the blame on the Legislature. “The Legislature under pressure of the administration passed a law which outlawed the saloon in Pennsylvania,” he said. “Under pres- sure from the brewing, distilling and bootlegging interests,” he added, “it later refused to pass two laws for which the administration asked, one to give control of the breweries, the other to give control of the distil- leries.” : It is a well-known fact that from the beginning to the end of the recent session of the Legislature Governor Pinchot exercised absolute control of the proceedings. The abnormal lust for the patronage which the Governor had to bestow developed among the Senators and Representatives in the General Assembly a degree of servil- .ity which had never previously been known in this or any other State. At the outset of the session there was some show of resistance to his auto- cratic demands but his inferentially declared purpose to punish “disloyal- ty to his person,” soon disrupted and dispelled it. After the first week of the session it was so plain that “he who runs might read” that the Gov- ernor’s will was the only law or rule of action in either chamber. : In view of these facts if the “brew- ing, distilling and bootlegging inter- ests” brought pressure on the Legisla- ture they applied it through the Gov- acting. His boasting of his present efforts to enforce prohibition, his re- duction of public expenditure and the increased efficiency in the public serv- ice may be dismissed as the foolish | vaporing of an egotist. The only practical work that has been done for prohibition enforcement is ascribable to federal officials, and according to. the fiscal officers of the State the ex- penises of the State government have been increased rather than diminish- ed during the ten months covered in the “Report of Progress.” In his false pretense of improvement Gov- ernor Pinchot pays seant respect for public intelligence. ——It is to be hoped that the big majority for the “Road Loan” will not be interpreted as an endorsement of extravagance which has marked some of the work of the Highway De- partment in the past. Election Results Not Bad. While the results of the elections throughout the country last week are not such as to cause Democrats to jubilate over much they have given no reason for despondency. Outside of Pennsylvania the best expectations of the party leaders have been ful- filled and in Pennsylvania, with the exception of Philadelphia and Pitts- burgh, gratifying returns are shown. Of twenty-five - third-class cities in Pennsylvania which elected Mayors fourteen. returned Democratic victo- ries and the Republicans only secured nine, the other two being Prohibition- ists or Socialists. Besides that the per centage of gains in the total vote in the various counties is considerably in favor of the Democrats. In some counties the vote reveals a lamentable absence of organization as well as interest among the Democrats. As is frequently the case in “off- year” elections voters of the minority party in many of the counties assume the position that it isn’t worth while to vote for the reason that the ma- jority party is certain to win any- way. This mistaken interpretation of duty caused the Democrats to lose in several counties. Take Dauphin county, for example. According to statements made by Democrats since the election less than half the total vote of the county was brought out. The Republicans failed to vote be- cause their ticket was insufferably bad and Democrats failed because they had no hope. There is no election as important to the people of a community as those which determine the local officers. It doesn’t make ‘much difference to the average man who is judge of the Su- preme court but it makes a great dif- ference who is judge of the election in his district, Yet little interest is taken in these local elections and the majority party managers feel perfect- ly safe in putting up servile toois without character or fitness for the duties of the offices because they know the minority will not avail themselves of the opportunity to serve them- selves and their communities by cast- ing their ballots for fitter and better candidates of their own party. ——Most of us will defer analysis of the condition in Germany until after the football season is over. ernor, who was omnipotent and ex- | BELLEFONTE, PA., NOVEMBER 16. 1923. Pinchot’s Report of Progress. | L, WHAT BECOMES OF YOUR RED CROSS MONEY ? One of the willing volunteers seeking, this week, to enroll mem- bers in the American Red Cross had a door unceremoniously closed upon her with the remark, “We are not interested in the Red Cross since the war is over; besides we don’t know what becomes of our money.” What becomes of our money? The money is divided between the National Red Cross and our community, the amount depending upon the membership, as fifty cents out of each membership, whether $1, $5, $10 or $25, goes to National work; the remainder staying in the community where it is collected. The Junior Red Cross membership of twenty-five cents remains, entire, in the community. The money sent to National headquarters, Washington, D. C., is used (1) In maintaining an organization that can quickly and effect- ively administer relief where needed; as was rendered in September when, within ten working days, by request of President Coolidge, $5,000,000 were raised for the Japanese Relief and another $5,250,000 within a month. . Apart from the cost of maintenance of the National organization, only one of the many avenues of disbursement will be cited: “In six years there have been spent more than $163,000,000 in service to Ameri- cas disabled veterans of the world war and their families. During the last fiscal year $7,000,000 were spent in this work and for the current fiscal year $2,065,854 have been set aside under the heading “Assist- ance to disabled ex-service men and women.” How has the money kept in our community been spent? At the close of the war there was a surplus in our treasury which was used to purchase a car and start the Red Cross Public Health Nursing service which has operated continually for three and one-half years in Bellefonte and vicinity. Monthy reports of the work have been pub- lished in the town papers; three weeks ago the annual report with ex- penditures was published, and two weeks ago the itinerary of the nurse for one day. Cost of maintenance of the service was shown to be be- tween $1500 and $1600 yearly. Since a record of so many nursing vis- its, so many social welfare visits, ete., conveys little meaning to the reader, a few specific instances will help to show in what diverse ways the Red Cross nurse serves our community: One. The district attorney had reported to him a family in need, three miles from Bellefonte. He calls the nurse, asks her to in- vestigate. She finds house in squalid condition, husband earning small wage as incompetent farm hand, wife too shiftless to make best use «of even the small wage, children rag and dirty. Nurse furnishes soap, instructs woman how to clean; also how to bathe and care for baby, then goes to poor overseer of township to get aid, if possible. Reports case to Needlework Guild and secures clothing for children. Returns to home with clothing and sees children bathed and clothed. Several days later she carries them Christmas dinner and toys provid- ed out of Elk’s donation. “Supervision of this family. continued at in- tervals for over a year, and mother cared for when sick. Two. Telephone call to visit patient living near Curtin. Finds her paralyzed from stroke. Visits her three times a week, bathes and does everything possible for her comfort until her death several months later. Three. Receives anonymous letter telling that an orphaned child is ill-treated by family. Nurse reports case to president of Children’s Aid, who sends her to investigate. Story found true and child is removed and placed in good family who treat him kindly, finally adopi- ing him. Four. Visits school. Teacher calls attention to pupil whom she thinks looks sick. Nurse examines- child, finds pulse is 120, lips and _ fingers blue, and other evidence of serious illness; learns she had only fried potatoes and coffee for breakfast. Takes child home, discovers father has been killed in accident, leaving seven children and no source of income. Nurse instructs mother how to. care for child and departs to start agencies operating for relief of family. Will continue to vis- it and aid family in every way possible. Five. Wednesday afternoons, every mother who wishes her baby weighed, measured and looked over by a physician is welcomed to the well-baby clinic. Eighty-three babies are now being brought and nurse keeps record of all, supplies literature, makes home visits to sick ones when desired. Six. In one year the nurse assisted in the medical examination of eighteen hundred school children and followed up many cases, that is, visited the home to consult and advise parents, made arrangements for removal of tonsils and adenoids, accompanied children to oculist and dentist. Where tuberculosis was suspected, took children to State clinic in Lock Haven for treatment and, when necessary, to Cresson. Took several bone cases to Philadelphia for operation. School medical examination is futile unless cases are followed into homes by nurse and an effort made to have defects remedied. If rural communities, that have ceased to function as Red Cross units since the war, would resume the annual roll call for membership, funds could be thus secured for follow-up work by the nurse—a service of inestimable value in the future health of a community. Irrespective of creed, race, color, social conditions, the nursing service “carries on.” If this community thinks the membership mon- ey isnot properly administered, select a new committee, as its mem- bers, who serve without salary, are elected by popular vote in Decem- ber. If it does not like the nurse, see that another takes her place, but don’t give up the nursing service. Our babies, our school children, our aged, forlorn and sick need it. Be interested in it to the extent of becoming a regular contributor and helping to make it increasingly successful by constructive criti- cism! ——All the excitement incident to | the election has subsided and most | L > Out of fourteen women who were everybody has settled back into their | qh gidates for office at the election normal grooves. * Sheriff-elect Dick last week nine were elected, as fol- Taylor went to work on Tuesday at ||,cc. Mps. W ; + y his old trade as a plumber for Cald- | f 5 Noung, Julge o f Sloe: Women Elected to Office. {tion in th well & Son; John Spearly has been | i clerking sales and looking after the | Inspectors, Sara Goodhart; Centre work about his home as usual while | ga). yu1ia Parsons, Unionville: Fan- James W. Swabb must. have been niet: Dumbleton : : tit i , north precinct of overcome with his majority for Coun | Rua township, and Mos. Bowes, west | precinct of Rush. seen in Bellefonte since the election. | + > Lloyd Stover, the Recorder-elect, was | donno firester, Emma W. Womels- y ’ : in the ditch at Coleville, on Monday, | = A. 3: Alig 310 but he had a perfect right to be there | Auditor; Minnie OS nanuile: because it was the ditch of that vil- | : : : Tages new Water lie which he Wet) lan, Harris township, and Elizabeth working on. All the other officers- | Hrees, Patton, elect have settled down in their regu- | ’ lar occupations where they. will re- It begins to look as if Premier main until sworn into office the first | Poneaire is cooking up a sad mess for Monday in January, which will be on | the ‘people of France to dispose of in the Tth of the month. . some way. NO. 45. Armistice Day. From the Philadelphia Record. It is rather a remarkable coinci- dence that the fifth anniversary of Armistice day comes at the very me- ment when Europe seems to have reached an impasse in its efforts to find a way out of the difficulties cre- ated by the world war. The stubborn attitude of France on the question of reparations has chilled the desire of Washington to be of some aid in the crisis, and unless Poincare withdraws his proposed restrictions and shows a more receptive spirit our govern- ment will decline to be represented in the commission that has been propos- ed to investigate the capacity of Ger- many to pay the stipu indemni- ty. At the same time Germany, threatened by revolution and harassed by financial, industrial and political troubles, seems to be rapidly falling into a condition of chaos that may threaten the peace of the world. . It is impossible to contrast this ver- itable devil’s broth with the high hopes of peace and progress that were entertained on November 11, 1918, when the war was brought to a close, and not to feel that there has been a sad decline from the fine spirit that gave the moral as well as the physical victory to the Allies five years ago. In seeking to place the responsibility for this condition of affairs no little share of the blame must be placed upon the United States. Under the inspiring leadership of Woodrow Wil- son” this country réached a pinnacle of moral grandeur never previously achieved by it. Without any thought of selfish gain it placed ‘ over 4,000, 000 soldiers and sailors in the field and on the sea, thanks to their hero- ism and self-sacrifice, it proved the decisive factor in the winning of the war. The splendid story of our youth- ful warriors at Belleau Wood, Cha- teau-Thierry, the St. Mihiel salient and in the Argonne has been told a thousand times and makes a magnifi- cent chapter in. American history, When the end came there were. more American than English soldiers on French soil, and the morale of France, which had sunk almost to the point of acknowledging defeat, had been mi- racylously restored and a ed. os That November 11, 1918, was a glorious day for the people of this country. Since then it has been im- possible to look with equa ; tion upon the divided cou bined to destroy much of the influ- ence for good wielded by this nation five years ago. This policy of provin- cial isolation and aloofness, replacing that of hearty and generous co-opera- tion that made our participation in | the war so effective, has reacted upon Europe and has done much to nerve France in the ruthless policy it has adopted toward Germanv. All Eu- rope has thus suffered through fail- ure to agree upon a feasible course of rehabilitation, and November 11, 1923, sees the world still torn by the pas- sions and hatred that helped to pre- cipitate war in 1914. The immediate prospect is not bright, but it is im- possible to believe that mankind has learned nothing from the long agony it endured. If civilization is to en- dure there must be a return to the high idealism and fine spirit of five vears ago, and it will be the hope of all good Americans that their coun- try shall display some of that moral leadership which was once hers. What Meddlers Do. . From Howe's Monthly. There lives in Kansas City a man named Grubb, who had a job paying $19 a week. The meddlers got after him, and he was discharged. First committees of women complained be- zanse certain of his children remain- ed away from school on certain days, to help their mother. He was com- pelled to leave his work, and appear before the Court of Correction. An- other committee dragged him into court because his premises were not sanitary; various pastors’ assistants heckled him because his wife did not go to church, nor his children to Sun- day school. Women from the school branch of the civic league filed com- plaint against him because he did not send his children to a dentist, to have their teeth fixed; a medical branch of another society warned him that his children had adenoids. and that they must be cut out. The judge who tried the man last was a bold one; he said: “This man has been hounded by meddlers until he is discouraged and ruined.” . The Farmer and Wall Street. From the Johnstown Democrat. The farmer who denounces Wall street is slowly wakening up to a real- ization of the fact that the people who are trying hardest to secure a market for the farmer are the leaders in the Wall street crew of financial devils. No man is more anxious to secure a world market for the farmer than the international banker. The banker may be a tough customer at home, but he plays on the same side with the farmer when the two travel abroad. In his speech before the Repub- lican women at Harrisburg, the other day, the Governor made no mention of the coal strike achievement. ——It is a safe bet that Senator Lodge is no fonder of Woodrow Wil- son now than he was on the day that famous “fight” was begun. Sy e | bitter partisanship, the feeblenéss and timidity in high places that have com- | SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —The body of John Nesselhauf, a far- ‘| mer, was found in Peck road, near Erie, early on Tuesday. He had been shot three times by some one unknown. —Visitors to the farm of William Har- man, of Maple Hill, near Milton, are sur- prised to see a dog mothering a pig. The dog has four babies of her own, but when she saw the owner trying to feed the pig- gie from a bottle, the dog picked it up and took it to a box with the puppies. —Mrs. Ada J. Miller, of Camp Hill, near Harrisburg, has been pronounced cured by Dr. L. Guy Baugher, osteopathic phy- sician, after she had suffered from paraly- sis, resulting from a broken neck, received in an automobile accident fourteen weeks ago. Mrs. Miller's neck had been broken in two places, an X-ray examination reveal- ‘| ed, but the spinal cord was not injured. '—The State Banking Department has made public a letter sent by Secretary Pe- ter D. Cameron to all county prosecutors in Pennsylvania asking co-operation in en- forcing certain provisions of the State se- curities act. The letter declared a New York concern, through its agent, has been offering certain bonds for sale in Pean- sylvania without complying with the law. —The identity of Smull's Legislative Hand Book will not be lost through the purchase of the copyright by the State, Director of Publications Dietrich has an- nounced. Although the reorganization code provided that in the event of the pur- chase of the copyright, the name was to be changed to the Pennsylvania State Man- ual, Governor Pinchot approved the reten- tion of the former name. —Traveling game warden C. B. Baum, of Penbrook, was fined $200 and ordered to pay costs amounting to $137.46 for wan- tonly pointing a gun at J. Edward Hall, one of Adams county's poor directors. Baum apealed from a verdict convicting him, but was overruled. Judge Donald P. McPherson pronounced sentence on Mon- day of this week. The act was committed during the game season last fall. —Michael Jescho was killed, another man is missing, and a third was injured seriously late last Thursday night when they were caught under a stream of mol- ten metal at the Clairton plant of the Car- negie Steel company. The victims were in the ladle pit when the hot metal showered down on them. Pescho died in a hespital Friday morning. John Cook, a laborer, is missing and it is feared that he was cre- mated. Norton Zelten, laborer, was burn- ed and is not expected to recover. —Robert Treese, of Blair county, was given a hearing in the office of Samuel I. Stoner, of Altoona, United States’ commis- sioner of the Western district, on Tuesday of last week and in default of $5,000 bail was taken to the Allegheny county jail for a hearing before the United States court at Pittsburgh on November 12. Treese was arrested by Harry L. Getchell, post- office inspector, earlier in the week on a charge of breaking into the postoffice at Cove Forge and'stealing $20. The robbery was ‘committed ‘on October 22nd of this year. —Fire when a gas flow ignited, threat- ed for a time to completely destroy all Fork done, attending the bringing in of a - 50-barrel well of oil on the Osgood .and Jamison tract in Forest county. The well was drilled five feet into the third sand when the rich strike was made. It is con- sidered that it will held up as the best gan well recently drilled in at 50 barrels near Plumer, Venango county, having set- tled to a 40-barrel a day production. The fire at the Forest county well was. only ex- tinguished after a hard fight by volunteer fire fighters. —A motor transport survey on all im=- portant Pennsylvania roads was started under the direction of the department of highways, last Friday. The United States road department will join in the work, ac- cording to William H. Connell, deputy secretary of highways. The survey will be the most extensive ever undertaken by any State or foreign country, and information gained is to be used in determining the width and thickness of the pavements to be put down, department officials state. There will be 78 truck weighing stations and more than 300 recording stations dis- tributed over the State's primary and sec- ondary highway systems. —More than a billion dollars in money and securities was transported through several streets in Pittsburgh on Sunday when the Union Trust Company moved the contents of its safe deposit vault to the recently completed vault in the new Union Trust building, which the bank purchased a year ago from the Henry C. Frick estate. Officers of the bank, sup- ported by a score of heavily armed pri- vate detectives and police, closely guarded the trucks in the most notable transfer of funds in the history of Pittsburgh. Few knew of the scheduled transfer, and the guarded trucks attracted little attention as they moved through the downtown dis- trict. - aa —James H. Rhoads, of Castaned,” saved the small daughter of Mr. and Mrs.’ Clyde Shaffer from death when he snatched the child from the trolley track in Lock Ha- ven, on Saturday, just as a car bore down upon her. Rhoads was riding his bicycle in Henderson street with the street car just behind him. The child ran from be- hind several cars parked by the side of the street and collided with the bicycle. She was thrown across the track in front of the trolley. Rhoads, in attempting to avoid striking the child, had his tire caught in the street car track and was thrown to the ground and fractured two bones of his right hand. In spite of his injuries he caught the child by the skirt and pulled her out of the way of the car which could not have stopped in time to miss running over the little girl. The child sustained minor cuts and bruises, but escaped serious injury. —One of the most costly fires occurring in Mifflin county in some years partially destroyed the Burnham school building early Monday morning, entailing a loss of nearly $100,000. The blaze, attributed to a defective flue, started in the western end of the structure, which contained quarters for both the grade and high school pupils. In spite of the efforts of the Burnham vol- unteer fire department and that of the Standard Steel works, the grade school quarters burned to the ground. An ap- peal for aid in checking the blaze was sent to Lewistown and Lewistown Junction and four companies responded. The combined efforts’ of these six fire companies pre- vented the fire from reaching the high school building. Unless temporary quar- ters can be secured, the grade schools will be discontinued for the rest of the year but the high school pupils returned to their studies on Tuesday, as usual. The fire loss is fully covered by insurance. well of the year in that territory, the Fog- . ..