INK SLINGS. - —Poor Walter Johnson! After -waiting eighteen years to get a chance in a world series the glory of a vic- -xory is denied him. : —When Edward R. Benson, candi- date for Congress in this District, was in the Legislature, in 1913, his vote on every bill of importance to the tax- payers was just what they could have wished it to be. —Amos Pinchot, Gif’s brother, is out hurrahing for LaFollette. And that’s where Gif would be right now if he were not trying to get a lot of “Come-ons” like Holmes elected to the next Legislature. —Dayvis is the real man in the Pres- idential race. Coolidge is only a pawn that fate is moving about on the board and LaFollette the frenzied sol- dier of fortune who knows the Cool- idge weakness and hopes to slide in on it. —To those fanatics who'd vote for a cow if they thought she was dry let us say this: “Hell-an-Maria” Dawes isn’t wearing any of the late Frances Willard’s white ribbons. He’s as wet as a soused rum-runner who has fall- en overboard. —President Coolidge actually smiled and waved his hat while at the world series ball game in Washington . on Saturday. The effort was so un- - usual that he had to take an over Sun- day trip down the Potomac, on the Mayflower, to recover from its ex- - hausting effect. —Did you get one of Joe Grundy’s letters? You know Joe, don’t you? He is the “fat fryer” for the Repub- lican organization in Pennsylvania. Joe’s scared. He says so in his letter to the heads of all the corporations of the State. With tears in his eyes he is pleading for Pennsylvania to vote for Coolidge. Think of it. Joe Grundy admitting that Pennsylvania is a doubtful State. —W. H. Lewis, foot ball, base ball .and track star at Harvard and assist- ant Attorney General of the United States, and colored, is stumping the country for Davis. Why? Simply because he “knows Coolidge.” He knew him at Amherst and evidently knows him well now, for he is said to have letters from that gentleman which go so far in expression of inti- macy as to be signed “Yours, Cal.” —Those who are using the straw vote being taken by the Literary Di- gest to bolster up their hope of Cool- idge’s election seem to overlook the fact that of the nineteen States re- ported in the poll only two are Dem- ocratic. And in the seventeen Repub- lican States the Coolidge vote has fallen considerably under that of Harding in 1920; whereas the Davis vote has gained greatly over that giv- en to Cox. —We haven’t an idea who she is, but the little lady who teaches the school out in Bush’s Addition is a girl with her head sitting right. On Tues- day her scholars marched in to be guests at the showing of Abraham Lincoln. When they reached the dan- gerous intersection of Water and High streets the thoughtful girl was first to step right into the middle of the street and there she stood until the last of her charges had crossed in safety. We viewed her action with the appreciation that only a parent can experience and a silent prayer went up of praise for her and petition for more of her kind. —Just because we have always made a point of being as accurate as possible ourselves we can’t resist call- ing the publicity agent of The Penn- sylvania State College to book for sending out dope to the effect that Andy Lytle “has been a foot ball rooter” up there “for more than forty years.” State didn’t play foot ball “more than forty years ago.” And, while we’d as soon steal a wilted cab- bage leaf from a blind cow as rob An- dy of any of the deserved laurels he has won as a later day follower and rooter for State teams, for the sake of history and accuracy, we are com- pelled to say that the grand old man of the Ancient and Honorable Order of State Fans was the great-grand dad of the present Sauers generation at State College. Dear old, loyal old “Baldy” Sauers was sitting on a play- er’s bench at every State game long before Andy new a foot ball from a pound apple. —Billy Swoope, our present Con- gressman, is almost desperate in his search for something he can point with pride to. His is a rocky road. [n Clearfield he undertook to pat him- self on the back for voting for the old soldiers’ pension increase. Then some- »ody asked him what the President 1e wants to go back to Washington to support did to that bill. Billy dropped ‘he subject like a hot cake. Then he started in to tell what the Fordney- VicCumber tariff has done for Ameri- ‘an industry and another inquisitive erson asked him why everybody is retting less under it “than they did inder the Wilson bill. Again Billy hanged his line of talk. Then he vent up to Bradford to play for the voman’s vote and there he spilled the ceans entirely. We know Billy. We ike him as a friend, so we won’t tell ‘ou of the hole two persistent women ut him in in Bradford. But we will dvise'you to vote against him for re- lection. Doubtless he is ornamental 1 Congress, but his record doesn’t in- icate that he is a particle of use rere. Voit: for Edward R. Benson. ive him. a chance to show you what man who knows nothing about strut- ' ng can do. VOL. 69. Davis May Carry Pennsylvania. Recent developments greatly strengthen the belief heretofore ex- pressed in these columns that the re- sult of the election in Pennsylvania this year will be practically the same as that of 1912. The regular Repub- lican candidate, Mr. Coolidge, will be the third in the race and a rather bad third at that. The vote in 1912 was Roosevelt, bolting Republican, 447,426; Wilson, Democrat, 395,619; Taft, reg- ular Republican, 273,305. Probably one-fifth of the Roosevelt vote was cast by Democrats influenced by per- sonal admiration of the Rough Rider and factionalism in the Democratic force. If the Democratic votes cast for Roosevelt had been given to Wil- son he would have had a majority over Roosevelt and a considerable plurality of the total vote. Roosevelt had elements of strength which LaFollette does not possess. A great many voters admired that spir- it of daring expressed in his testimo- ny before a Congressional committee in which he declared he had seized the canal zone in violation of the consti- tution and left the discussion of the question to Congress afterward. But LaFollette has elements of strength which Roosevelt lacked and LaFol- lette’s running mate, Senator Wheel- er, is infinitely a greater help to his chief than Roosevelt’s candidate for Vice President, Hiram Johnson. Both Roosevelt and LaFollette, as candi- dates for President, had and have the weakness of radicalism in about the same ratio. Roosevelt was about the first prominent public man to cast as- persions upon the Supreme court. Assuming, therefore, that the ele- ments of strength and weaknesses of Roosevelt and LaFollette are about balanced there is no basis for a claim that Coolidge will get a larger pro- portion of the Republican vote than Taft polled. "The votes of all the can- didates will be greater, of course, the women not having been enfranchised ! at that time. But LaFollette stands to lose the greater part, if not the en- tire bulk, of the Democratic votes cast for Roosevelt in 1912. There are no factional differences among the Dem- ocrats of Pennsylvania this year and | E the registrations in ‘the cities and thé | af enrollments in the rural districts in- dicate a measure of enthusiasm and alertness which give promise of a full party vote for the Democratic candi- date. The Republican party was wrecked on the rocks of inefficiency and venal- ity of the Taft administration then drawing to a close. Nobody accused Taft of dishonesty or even of partici- pation in the spoils of corrupt gov- ernment. a mere trifle in comparison with the colossal crimes of the Harding-Cool- idge regime, hung over the Republi- can party like a pall. What reason is there to believe that Republican voters who balked at Taft will support Coolidge who made himself responsible for the outrages of Albert B. Fall, Harry Daugherty and Charles Forbes by giving them moral sup- port? Who can imagine that con- sciences shocked by the carelessness of pleasure-loving Taft will be recon- ciled to the support of Newberryism and the appointment of Slemp? Because of a firm and abiding faith in the intelligence and integrity of a vast majority of the voters of Penn- sylvania the “Watchman” is persuad- ed that Calvin Coolidge will not re- ceive even a plurality of the votes of Pennsylvania at the coming election. Which of the other two candidates will be so honored is a subject of con- jecture. Even the earnest supporters of LaFollette admit that John W, Da- vis is the fitter man for the great of- fice and the better qualified to meet the burdens and obligations during the crucial period approaching. And if the Democrats of the State are just to themselves and true to their obli- gations to the country he will get the electoral vote of Pennsylvania on the 4th day of November. Let us of Cen- tre county do our part. —~Speaking of Senator Brookhart’s defection the Harrisburg Telegraph says: “It’s a good year to purge the G. 0. P. of undesirables.” Strange that the Telegraph never thinks of the purging business until after the “undesirable” has declared his inten- tion of deserting Coolidge. iene ss —Probably the most disappointed man in Philadelphia was Mayor Ken- drick when Gen. Butler swallowed whatever was ailing him and busted the plan to let him go. ——Attorney General Stone is proving himself a fit successor to Daugherty. He regulates the depart- ment of politics rather than law. ——=Secretary Hughes thinks Cool- idge is the only issue in the campaign. That is slighting Fall, Daugherty and Forbes without reason. Sat————— ina — ——Coolidge is free with lip service for peace but offers nothing more. But the Ballinger scandal, | STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. WILLIAM H. a few days ago, why he was going voters of Centre county. The gentleman said: them. the laws. the backs of the tax payers. He public pay-roll and how hard it is ker demands as the price of being and vote “Aye” for that. BELLEFONTE, PA.. OCTOBER 10. 1924. NOLL, WHY? There are many reasons that we might advance in support of the candidacy of William H. Noll for the Legislature, but the terse, com- prehensive answer that a Republican gave to a friend who asked him, to vote for Noll seems to cover the situation so perfectly that we pass it on for the consideration of the “It doesn’t matter to me whether Holmes is for Pinchot, whether he is for our organization or what he is for. Bill Noll knows more about Centre county, what we need and how to get it than Holmes could ever hope to know.” That expression sums up the situation as well as it could possibly be done. Mr. Noll does know Centre county. He was one of its Com- missioners for eight years and in that office he proved that, though a Democrat, his eye was single to the interest of the tax payers whether his action made for party expediency ar not. him to seize every opportunity to prociaim from the rostrum what he will do. He needs but ask you to turn to the county statements from 1911 to 1919 to discover what he has had a great part in doing. He will go to Harrisburg under obligation to no one but the voters of Centre county. If Governor Pinchot has any measures to introduce that will affect the people of Centre county favorably he will support If the Republican organization—which will oppose any pro- gram the Governor presents—introduces anything that will be of ben- efit to Centre county, he will support that. If the Labor party has any legislation to enact that will help the laboring man of Centre county Noll will be for it. He has labored himself and at present is a director of a corporation that employs hundreds of laboring men. If any proposals are made for more effective enforcement of the prohib- itory laws now on our statute books he will support them, unless they should give to some one the right to spend the taxpayer’s money lo employ other officers than those who are now being paid for enforcing It is not necessary for Mr. Noll is against the insidious grafting of political parasites on was in the County Commissioner’s office long enough to discover how easy it is to add some one to the to get rid of him. He will go to Harrisburg unpledged and uncontrolled. He won’t have to teeter between what Governor Pinchot wants and Harry Ba- regular. All he'll have to do is sit back and watch to see where the interests of Centre county come in Because Mr. Noll has a more intimate knowledge of what Centre county needs and because he will be FREE to vote for what we need is the answer to the question: “William H. Noll, Why?” In a speech delivered at Emmitts- burg, Iowa, a few days ago, Senator Brookhart finally and firmly fixed iW State on the Presi year. Senator Brookhart is the Re- publican nominee for United States Senator, having recently defeated the Coolidge candidate at the primary con- test by upward of 200,000 majority. What he says on.the subject may, therefore, be accepted as the voice of the Republican party of Iowa. What he says is that President Coolidge is against every principle that the Re- publicans of Iowa stand for and that i he favors every principle they are op- posed to. That being the case, Iowa is certain to cast its electoral vote against Coolidge. ator Brookhart declared that Mr. Coolidge is the candidate of Wall Street and the Republican machine. In support of this declaration he states that Coolidge was for Newber- ryism, ship subsidy, the Esch-Cum- mins railroad law and the Mellon tax bill, while the Republicans of Iowa are against those things. He charged that Mr. Coolidge opposed the inves- tigation of corruption and eriticized i the Senate for denouncing it, that the , President opposed the soldiers’ bonus bill and the postal employees measure and favors disccriminating taxes against the poor and in favor of the rich. In view of this difference in at- titude there can be no doubt of Iowa’s electoral vote. What is true of Iowa is equally cer- tain of Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado and Wyoming. So far as Minnesota, Wisconsin, Idaho and the Dakotas are concerned there has never been a chance of Coolidge getting an elec- toral vote. Then if the Republican managers are afraid of the election going to Mr. Bryan as a result of the failure of the electoral college to make the choice why shouldn’t they advise the regular Republicans of those States to cast their ballots for his sanity or disputes his safety. We do not share in the fears they express on this subject. We are fully convinc- ed that Mr. Davis will be elected in ithe usual way. But if they have doubts, a vote for Davis is the remedy. Since Kendrick and Butler have reconciled their differences the enter- prising Philadelphia burglars have re- sumed their burgling. ——The prosecution of Congress- man Hill for making cider like that of | Fall and Forbes will be held off until after the election. Senator Brookhart has located Coolidge.” He belongs to the “Wall Street bloc,” the Iowa Senator de- clares. } ——1It is suspected that Coolidge got hot when he read Dawes’ appro- val of the Ku Klux Klan. fixed the J In the opening of his speech Sen-' John W. Davis? Nobody questions | Towa Certain Against Coolidge. | Prosent Standing of Young Theodore, * Roosevelt. When the conspiracy to steal the oil ashington Edwin Denby, of Michi- gan, stupid but not exactly venal, was Secretary of the Navy, and under the law custodian of the oil reserves. Theodore Roosevelt, not exactly stu- pid but very obliging, was first assist- ant secretary and confidential adviser in the department. The conspirators, Secretary of the Interior Fall, Sinclair and Doheny were not willing to sub- mit the matter to Denby but used Roosevelt to persuade Denby to relin- quihs to Fall the control of the prop- erty who for and in consideration of bribes of generous proportions and in violation of law turned the property over to Sinclair and Doheny. Thus far in the proceedings young Roosevelt seems to have received no , reward for his helpful services in be- half of Sinclair and Doheny. It is true that subsequent investigation , showed that both he and his wife own- .ed stock in the Sinclair and Doheny , organizations, the value of which was considerably enhanced by the acqui- , sition of the leases. It was also dis- covered by inquiry that while the ne- gotiations were pending Archie Roose- velt, a rather helpless brother of The- ~odore, was given an office in the Sin- clair organization at a salary of | $5000 a year, which was increased later to $10,000, though he was de- ; clareds incompetent by his employer. : These substantial tokens of friend- ship may have had something to do with the matter. 2 oe For some reason as yet unexplain- ed the Senatorial committee investi- , gating the fraudulent leases of oil , reserves showed great tenderness to- ward Mr. Roosevelt. It might have placed him in position to appear in court as co-defendant with Fall, Sin- late and Doheny, but it passed him along with Denby. That is no reason, however, why he should insult the public conscience by asking the peo- i ple of New York to elect him to the office of Governor. It was generous | to shield him on account of his father in the report of the investigating com- mittee. But it is impudence on his part to interpret that expression of unearned favoritism as a condonation of his part in a grave conspiracy. —Judge Landis has advised those who criticized him for not blacklisting the entire New York base ball team, when two of the members were caught attempting to buy games, to “keep their shirts on.” The Judge's advice is equally pertinent in thousands of other situations. Every community has its quota of people whose meat and drink is criticism. They are so busy finding fault with others that they never have a thought of doing something constructive themselves. wswThe alluminum report dazed Secretary Mellon, according to Wash- ington dispatches. ‘ The Secretary : hoped it would be withheld until after | the election. : in eret United States and the World. From the Philadelphia Record. = The honor of the nation, the prog- ress of humanity and the supression of war demand the election of John W. Davis. For three and a half years a Republican Administration has put the country to shame before the world, continuing the infamous work of the Senate, which began a year and a half earlier. i During the war there was a univer- sal expectation in this country that the greatest of all wars would be the last. It was assumed by all that the i nations could not leave the way open for another such catastrophe. In fo- ‘cusing public opinion on this point i the lead was taken by the two Repub- . lican ex-Presidents, Mr. Taft, through i his organization, the League to En- | force Peace, and Mr. Roosevelt, by his | writings and speeches in support of what he called “the posse comitatus : of nations.” i hie | Public opinion emphatically de- : manded measures to end the needless | horror and barbarism of war. But the j election of a Republican Congress in : 1918 inspired Senator Lodge and oth- ; ers with the idea of “fighting Presi- ‘ dent Wilson.” ‘They broke the heart | of humanity, in Mr. Wilson’s word: to win a little partisan advant i The Republican party has not repen ed; it has not cast out the leaders w. ‘defeated the peace treaty and kept | the United States out of the Leagu and left to foreign nations the work of securing humanity against ano war. ne Republicans—some of them—voted for Mr. Harding under the influence of thirty-one men—two. of them now in the Cabinet—who said that the surest way of getting ‘the United States into the League of Nations was to elect him. Mr. Harding was elect- ed, and there is not the slightest in- dication that we shall ‘enter the League, or even join the. civilized world in maintaining the Permanent Court of International Justice, under | Republican rule, Mr." Harding was really enthusiastic about the Court idea, but’ Mr. Coolidge is not, and he’ describes the League of Nations foreign affair of no interest to us. The League is absolutely the only: agency that can reduce the danger of war. -It has already done netablé| day was so badly frightened by a bull work in adjusting international con-| | troversies and substituting negotia- tions for menaces, and driving out se- i od C 1 CY, t is ‘now pe C1 a plan to make the action of League more certain and more effi- ‘cient. But if the Republicans carry "the elections the United States will i have nothing to do with the most be- i neficent international action in all his- tory. With the accession of the Unit- ied States to the League, and with its acceptance of the Geneva protocol, the perpetuation of the world’s peace would be assured. The United States will never join the civilized world in averting war while the Republican party is in pow- er. Its barbaric disinclination to peace goes back of Mr. Wilson. When | Chief Justice Taft was President he negotiated universal arbitration treat- ies with England and France, and a Republican Senate mutilated them so that they were worthless and Presi- dent Taft dropped them. We can get no help for civilization from the Re- publicans. No adequate conception of the world can find entrance into the parochial mind of Calvin Coolidge. If the country will elect Mr. Davis, the United States will join the civil- ized world in proscribing war by-as- suring each nation of justice by peace- ful methods, and agreeing to prevent any bellicose and predatory nation from attacking a neighbor. pecs —————— A es————— Premier’s Boyhood Friend. From the Providence Journal. Some professional critics of the MacDonald government in Great Brit- ain are trying to stir up trouble for the Prime Minister because an old friend and benefactor was honored with a baronetey last June. Boyhood friends, they have retained for each other that great measure of mutual affection bred in earlier days. Neith- er had any large endowment of world- ly riches in youth. In fact, they work- ed their way laboriously from the bot- tom to the top, one in business, the other in public life. : In position to exchange some sub- stantial form of recognition for such a life-long friendship, the one of great riches made certain that his friend should have a little share in the com- forts which wealth brings. The other, head of Britain’s government, request- ed King George to bestow a baronet- cy. To try to draw false inferences in the case or to suggest impropriety is but te display one’s ignorance of the qualities of character and the hab- its of life that have made Ramsay MacDonald one of the great men of our times. Ma is Feminine. From the Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph. The eternal feminine came to the fore again when Mrs. Ferguson, who won the Democratic gubernatorial nomination in Texas, smilingly yet firmly declined to tell her age. rr ——— en ——=The first educational classes at thé Roc¢kview penitentiary, under the auspices of the school of engineering at The ‘Pennsylvania State Cilege, were held last night. About 125 in- mates answered to the roll call of prisonér students. as a] ] the 1SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Homes for more than 400 additional families have been provided in Altoona so far this year. (bs lhe —Because her husband would not accom pany her to Italy, Mrs. Matilda Manga- noro, of Pittston, took poison and died. . —The Pennsylvania Railroad shops at Altoona went on a 48 hour schedule Mon- day, affecting approximately 11,000 men. —Mrs. Dell deForrest, of Cassville, was appointed constable by the Huntingdon county court, being the first woman to hold that position in the county. : —@rant Reeder, of Beech Creek, is in the Clinton county jail under bond for $5,000, charged with burning the barn of G. Mack Johnson, of Beech Creek township. .- —Peter Lechman, of Freeland, was ad- mitted to the Hazleton State hospital with a stab wound in the abdomen, which he told the doctors was inflicted by his wife with a table knife, = - . i L + “—Governor Pinchot on Monday appoint ed Henry D. Brown, of Williamsport, & member of the board of trustees of The ‘Pennsylvania State College. The appointee ‘is publisher of the Williamsport Gazette and Bulletin, > ’ —The Shannon Oil company is drilling a test well on the William Baker farm, on the Roosevelt highway near Rexford’s bridge, in Potter county. The well, which is to go down at least 1000 feet and cost $5000, is said to be backed by Elmira, N. Y., capitalists. —Mrs. John Fitzoli, aged 45 years, her two daughters and her four sons were in- stantly killed and her husband was so bad- iy injured he may die, when their auto- mobile was struck by a Pennsylvania rail- road passenger train at a grade crossing near Port Allegheny, McKean county, on Sunday. ; (ono . . ~The Reading fair earnings this year were $50,000, according to a report by pres- ident Abner 8. Deysher. This, it is stated, ‘is the largest net profit for one year for {any county fair ever held in Pennsylvania. The total receipts were more than $115, 000 and the paid admissions were nearly 1120,000, also a high record there. The to- tal admissions were about 200,000. —The Highland pulp mill, at Johnson- burg, which has been shut-down for three months, resumed operations on Monday. ‘The plant employs 125 men, the majority { of them have béen employed at the Clarion paper mill on special work. Most of the pulp will be shipped to Lock Haven, to supply their needs owing to the recent ex- "plosion that crippled the pulp department of the paper mill in that place. { —For the first time in the history o Huntingdon county a woman has been ap- pointed to fill the office of constable, and to act with all the high authority pertain- ing to that office. The woman distinguish- ed by this appointment is Miss Dell De | Forrest, of Cassville, and her selection for ‘this position was made by the citizens of Cassville themselves, and confirmed jgdi- cially by Judge Bailey at a special session of court. She : ) 2 ,—Mrs. Kate Garner, an Oneida town- ‘ship, Huntingdon county, widow, return- ing from the home of her brother, william McElwain, a Civil war veteran, on Thurs- ‘that she became hysterical, fleeing into the woods, where she became unconscious. Sixty men scoured the country for her, day morning, when Mrs. Garner efnherged from the woods in an exhausted condition. —While William O’Hay and Albert Rob- inson, each 11 years old, were playing in a shanty, last Saturday, on the outskirts of Easton, Pa., the O’'Hay boy found two ri- fles, one of which ke knew was not loaded. He wanted to play with this and picked up one of the guns, but got the wrong one, He pointed it at Robinson and fired. Now Robinson is in the Easton hospital in a serious condition with a bullet wound near his left shoulder, and O’Hay is in charge of probation officer Miss Carrie Riddle, —Joseph Bach, of Philadelphia, pleaded | suilty on Monday on a charge of taking a gold watch from the home of a élergyman in that city, where Bach had been servilig as best man at the wedding of two Phil- adelphia friends. While the clergyman was making out the wedding certificate, Bach found the watch and later gave it to the bride as a wedding gift. Later the trio were arrested. The bride and groom were held in jail for several days, but were discharged when Bach confessed. Judge Schaeffer sentenced Bach to nine months in jail and fined him $50. —The reptilian population of Hunting- don county took a sudden drop recently, when Charles Rath, an Altoona boy, killed thirty-one copperhead snakes at a cabin on Spruce creek. One of the snakes was & female adult, three feet twé ifiches in langth, while the rest were her family of - | youngsters, froii &ix to eight inches long. Later in the same day another large cop- perhead snake was killed in the sdmé vi- cinity. The Rath family spent practically the entire summer at Spruce creek and saw no copperhead snakes excepting on this day, when the copperheads appeared in wholesale lots. —A damage suit in which defamation of character was alleged, was decided against the defendant by a jury in the Clinton county court last week, which returned its verdict after a trial lasting over two days. Mrs. Annie Salmon, of Beech Creek, al- leged that Frank Kunes, a neighbor, had circulated stories that she locked her hus- band in a corn crib and otherwise abused him and that this treatment was a con- tributory cause of his death. Sixty wit- nesses were called. Kunes denied the charge and said that he had not originat- ed any of the stories which were circu- lated. The jury placed all the costs, whi¢h will amount to a large sum, on Mrs. Salmon. —~Charles A. Thompson, former register of wills of Butler county, who shot him- self at Butler, is said to have been short $4,188.96 in his accounts with the State of Pennsylvania and a letter demanding that he make immediate settlement was sent him on September 29th by the Auditor General's Department. Thompson's term expired in January and in making an au- dit of the inheritance and other taxes due to the State from his office, one of the auditors from Auditor General Samuel 8S. Lewis’ office found a shortage of $3,000 due to failure to make payments of the taxes on an estate. The remainder of the delinquency was turned up soon soon after and early in September Thompson was asked to go to Harrisburg and make settlement, He sent word he had been overcome by the heat and on one excuse or another did not comply with notices. A peremptory letter was then sent him. The Auditor General has notified the com- pany bonding Thompson of the situation. continuing the search until ‘early >Satag= r=