INK SLINGS. .—Vote for Benson for Congress. .—Vote for Noll for the Legislature. — When the W. C. T. U. forces meet, Monday afternoon, for their hour of prayer for guidance as voters they might do a little penance for having let their endorsement for Congress fall where it did in this District. — William H. Noll rendered a great service to Centre county when he was 2 Commissioner. He had a large part in pulling the county out of debt and reducing the taxes. Send him to the Legislature. He can do a lot for us there. — Vote for Edward R. Benson for Congress. Vote for a man who is a man. One who doesn’t wabble and wiggle and squirm on any question. When he was in the Legislature his every vote was for the people. If he is sent to Congress his votes will be the same way. —Now, honestly, what has Billy Swoope done for you since going to Congress? Name one thing that he has done that has had any beneficial effect on the District that he repre- sents and we’d vote for his re-election, if it were not that he appointed a boy from Allegheny county to West Point, when four boys from the District he is asking to re-elect him wanted the opportunity. —Really Coolidge might have been laughed out of the Presidential race. Partisanship aside, the situation is laughable. Here is Cal. pleading for votes because through him the Con- stitution can best be protected, yet in every important legal disputation of the constitution, of record, since he hung out his shingle as a practitioner Uncle Sam never thought of retaining Coolidge, the lawyer. He always hunted up lawyer John W. Davis. —_We don’t want to believe it and we can’t, notwithstanding the fact that he hasn’t undertaken to deny the charge. A Vice President of the Unit- ed States charging for a memorial speech is unthinkable. Yet the Amer- ican Legion of Bridgeport, Conn., in- sists that he was paid $200.00 and ex- penses for delivering a memorial speech there on a Sunday. And the then Vice President, now President and aspirant to succeed himself, hasn’t denied the statement. — Last week we promised to tell the old line Republicans how their Willy- nilly Congressman had turned yel- low on their President. Here we make good. Swoope voted to over-ride a veto of the President. We're not say- ing that he didn’t do the right thing. We're only showing up his inconsist- ency in playing for votes. He can’t ride two horses at the same time. He can’t ask the dyed-in-the-woolers to stand by him because he stood by the President and grab off independent votes because he turned on the Presi- dent. 2 — We're after information. Short- ly after midnight, Saturday, a party of young fellows picked the shade of our domicile as a likely place to park while the moonshine in them waned to the point where it was safe for them to start home. The laughing jags amused us out of the wrath we should have felt at being wakened from se- rene slumber, but the “sob sister” among them piqued our curiosity. We'd like to know the boy who was crying. We know what he was cry- ing about. But we want to know him, because we'd like to have his nose rubbed in something like the regrets he left on our neighbor's pavement. —To others the editor of the Ga- zette may have the appearance of be- ing jealous. Last week he gave voice to such a spirit by saying that we have so frequently boasted of having a “private boot-legger that some people are really inclined to believe we have.” While we don’t recall ever having act- ually boasted we do admit that on sev- eral occasions, we blabbed on ourself and told the public we had such a cov- eted factotum in our entourage. We don’t care a hang whether “some peo- ple are inclined to believe it” or not. We're certain our friend Tom doesn’t, for if he did he’d have been stickin’ around a little closer than he has of late. : — Advertising the sheet a bit, par- don us while we say that last week we published three simple little notices. One was that a tourist through Cen- tre county had lost a lot of golf sticks while befuddled as to the way from Bellefonte to State College. was to the effect that the Children’s Aid society *has five boys to place in good homes. The third fold of a kitchen range that a lady was offer- ing at a bargain.” On Sunday morning: the golf sticks were in this office. On Monday morning homes were offered for two of the five boys and by Tues- day morning the owner of the kitch- en range had so many inquiries that she is thinking of starting a stove store in town. —No, dear Gazette, we didn’t work strenuously to get opposition to Holmes for the Legislature. His friends got it for him, when they un- dertook to induce certain Democrats to sell their heritage for the $500 that they said Holmes would contribute to the hospital-drive if he had no oppo- sition for the Legislature. That’s where the “boner” was pulled. Wheth- er he was a party to it or not it put Mr. Holmes in the position of playing “a heads I win, tails you lose game.” It was trying to get the glory of mak- ing a handsome contribution to a wor- thy charity for him and then getting it all back through saving in cam- paign expenses. Another VOL. 69. Dangerous Dabbling in Politics. Frequently, of late, the rumor has reached us that State College is “going unanimously for Holmes for the Leg- islature.” While we believe nothing of the sort the fact that such rumors are afloat indicates that some thought- less persons in that community are working to consummate such an eventuality. State College as a voting unit, is a borough. State College as a great educational institution is something entirely different. In the old days the differentiation was “the Village” and “the Campus.” The line was clearly drawn and we might add that the feel- ing between the two was not as it should have been. Of a sudden Pandora’s box was pried open a bit by “the Campus” and great extension programs were car- ried to completion. The result was increased values everywhere in “the Village.” “The Campus” grew and with it, “the Village,” until it became a borough and the third town in pop- ulation of the county. If our Commonwealth had not awakened, at least partially, to its ob- ligation to The Pennsylvania State College, State College, today, would be the village of one street and a half that it was thirty years ago. We think no one will refute this as- sertion. We have made it solely to bring home to that borough the thought that all it is and can ever hope to be is dependent entirely on what happens on “the Campus.” From a long and fairly intimate knowledge of what has been going on up there we feel justified in saying that “the Campus” has never actually organized in support of any particu- lar candidacy for public office. It has been charged with doing so. In fact, Governor Pinchot, after he had been inaugurated, with impudent inference, charged Dr. Thomas with just such an undertaking. Why? Because State College, as it naturally should have been, was strong for Gen. Alter for nomi- nation for Governor in preference to Pinchot and later gave McSparran a generous vote. “The Campus” had little to do, with. either result. The borough did it and both have suffered in consequence. Governor Pinchot was so mad that it will be recalled that when on his itinerary through Centre county after he had left the Granger’s picnic, two years ago, he sped through State Col- lege so fast that the crowds who had gathered on the streets to welcome his anticipated stop scarcely recognized him. All of this is recited merely to sug- gest the danger there is to a commu- nity like State College in dabbling in politics in a contest where it has so much at stake. Mr. Holmes is a very reputable cit- izen of that borough. He has acquir- ed somewhat of a reputation as a soap-box orator. We are told that he has become comfortably affluent through real estate transactions made possible only because of what has hap- pened on “the Campus.” The Repub- lican, last week, undertook to make the public - believe that the county hoped there would be no opposition to his candidacy for the Legislature. The county hoped nothing of the sort. Outside of three townships, not five voters in a hundred knew or ever had | heard of Mr. Holmes. The truth is that his contribution of $500 to the Centre County hospital was exploited for the purpose of stop- ping any nomination against him and the milk in that cocoa-nut was that if he had no opposition he would haye no campaign expenses and would be saving money by making such a coa- tribution. Now what is going to happen if by | any chance, Mr. Holmes should be sent to Harrisburg to represent Centre county? : : Either he must be for Pinchot or Harry Baker, as exemplifying the old organization of the Republican party, the one that under Tener and Sproul, did more, relatively, for State Col- lege, than Pinchot did or: will, Bak- er’s is also the organization that will have the appropriations to make two years from now. In the face of these facts, what is Holmes going to do? And who is going to suffer, either im- mediately or in the future? The only sane answer to these questions is: “The Campus” and when “the Cam- pus” suffers State College borough suffers. : We have too much confidence in the judgment of the voters of that dis- trict to put any credence in the ru- mors that “State College will be unan- imously for Holmes.” Their own wel- fare will warn them of the danger of sending a man to Harrisburg who if he tries to pull them away from the jaws of Scylla will throw them in- to those of Charybdis. The real advantage to State College lies in the election of Wm. H. Noll. Neither Governor Pinchot, nor Harry Baker would advance a claim on him. His vote would be free of future con- sequences, because he is a Democrat (Continued on page 4, Col. 1.) STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE. PA.. OCTOBER 31. 1924. NO. 43. * Noll Should be Your Choice William H. Noll is a candidate to represent you in the General As- sembly of Pennsylvania. Next Tuesday, if you go to the polls, you will be face to face with the question as to whether he could do more for you in the Legislature of the State than his opponent. Neither one of them have been tried there, so all the guide you will have is as to what the two candidates have done for you when opportunity of service has presented itself in the past. Mr. Noll has something more than promises of what he will do to support his request for your vote. He has had eight years’ experience in the very office of the county through which moves the business that directly effects the taxes. The business of assessment, taxes, poor accounts, road inmprovement, bridges and all the other avenues through which the Legislature works to effect the fortunes of the tax payer. We have previously published a resume of what was done by way of paying off debts, reducing the tax millage and general progress while he was a Commissioner of Centre county. All of this was very gratifying. But the experiences there by way of coming in personal touch with every class of business, industry and society in the county was the very thing that fits him so specially for the office he now seeks. Who could help with legislation that may affect Centre county very directly most intelligently? A man who knows the county’s needs or one who merely offers to try to find them out. Mr. Noll knows because he has had opportunity to learn. He is splendidly equipped for the Legislature and will make a record of service for Centre county in Harrisburg just as he did in the court house from 1913 to 1920. Who Will You Send to Congress? Next Tuesday the voters of the Twenty-first Congressional District will have the opportunity to put their seal of approbation on their pres- ent Member, or recall his commission to longer represent them in the highest legislative body in the land. Two years ago they accepted William I. Swoope, of Cleariield, at his own and the'word of his advocates, that he had the ability, the back-bone and he will go to Washington and serve the District in a manner that would reflect credit on it. Mr. Swoope is pleading that he be returned for another term. | On Tuesday you will have to answer his plea with your ballot. Nat- urally you should ask yourself: in voting to have him represent me in Congress for two iy i i a Sage come the only answer that is y OF 11701 truthful: Nothing. What has this man done to justify me years more, “else,” a Er Mr. Swoope has been a district disappointment. He is a well dressed, well mannered and pleasant spoken gentleman and that’s all. His polish isn’t merely veneer. It’s real. But there’s little else than the polish. Search his record through the last session of Congress and you won’t find one constructive utterance. You will find, however, the signs of a wob- bling trimmer who was thinking more of getting back for another term than he was of the good of his country or the party that sent him there. No one knows this better than some of the men who were behind him two ° years ago with their influence and their money. He is running as a Republican, a Socialist and a Prohibitionist. A powerful Republican in the District, told us a few weeks ago that he did not believe Swoope knew anything about being a Republican, and proved it from a purely party standpoint. Is he a Socialist? If not, what kind of promises did he make to get the endorsement of that party? He is not a Prohibitionist, we know that, so how did he get the endorsement of the good people who are called to pray for guidance next Monday after- noon as to how they shall vote? Why did they fix their choice before they started to pray for-the wisdom that would tell them what it should be. He would be on the Labor ticket too if John Brophy, president of the Miners Union of the Central Pennsylvania fields hadn’t known him bet- ter than the Republicans, the Socialists or the Prohibitionists. Mr. Swoope went to Mr. Brophy’s office and plead for the Labor endorsement. However, the voter should not be so much concerned about his pres- ent equilibristic attempts to carry the Republican elephant, the red flag of Socialism and the water wagon of Prohibition, all on the same shoul- der as. it should be as to what he did during the last session of Congress. He did nothing. Absolutely nothing but betray the President by voting to over-ride one of his vetoes and appoint a boy from Allegheny county to West Point when two boys from Clearfield and two from McKean county had asked to have a chance in a competitive examination for the great opportunity. You will find the name of Edward R. Benson, of McKean county, as a candidate for Congress, next Tuesday. Naturally, you will wonder who he is. Let us answer that question for you. Mr, Benson is a Democrat. He is of Swedish ancestry, but a four-square, red blooded American citi- zen who doesn’t temporize with anything. So square and fair and sensi- ble that McKean, where Democrats are few and far between, sent him to the Legislature in 1913 and while there he voted “Yes” on such important bills as equalization of taxation, minimum wages for women and children, Woman’s suffrage, local option, workmen’s compensation, and “No” on Bigelow’s plan to Bigelowize township roads. Mr. Benson has the endorsement of the Labor party, not because he plead for it like Mr. Swoope, but because Labor recognized in him a man who is something moré than polish and froth. A real man who is think- ing and working for the good of his fellows and it endorsed his candidacy without his solicitation or knowledge of it. Comparatively speaking, Mr. Benson is the man who represents an honest purpose to sérve; whereas Mr. Swoope kepresents nothing more than personal ambition. Which: of the two aré you going to vote for when you go to the polls next Tuesday? If Gaston B. Méans had not been so intimate with high public of- ficials he wouldn’t have so many se- crets to tell, ——1It would be worth something, even to an optimist, to know how Re- publican managers keep up hope of the election of Coolidge. ——Thé€ President. charged $250.00 for addressing ex-service men, but he vetoed the bonus bill to oblige Wall Street for nothing. ,~——A vote for LaFollette is a vote thrown away, yet the Wisconsin war horse served a good purpose in split- ting the Republican party. | Yankee Coolidge. 0 Yankee Coolidge came to town, Upon a load of ice, sir He didn’t find it cold at all, But very warm and nice, sir. And when he rose to highest place The gang stepped in behind, sir, And shouted: ‘“He’s the boy for us— He's deaf and dumb and blind, sir!” CHORUS Yankee Coolidge, ha, ha, ha, He would never tell on Forbes and Burns and Albert Fall And Daugherty and Mellon. Then Fall he took his job one day And started in to sell, sir; He made a hundred thousand bucks, A simple bagatelle, sir. But Coolidge said: “So long I've seen Great mountains ‘round my home, sir, I cannot condescend to note This puny Teapot Dome, sir.” Chorus. And Daugherty, with taking ways He breezed into the town, sir, He jimmied everything in sight, Including things nailed down, sir. But Coolidge said: “Oh, let him stay! "Twill help remove the smudges, And he can use his office force To frame-up all his judges.” Yankee Coolidge, ha, ha, ha, He would never tell on Forbes and Burns and Albert Fall And Daugherty and Mellon. —G. W. Putnam. —Vote for Noll for the Legislature. Mr. Coolidge as a Good Claimer. From the Pittsburgh Post. Reading President Coolidge’s ad-~ dress before the Chamber of Com- merce of the United States one might get the impression that it was his ad- ministration that settled the.repara- tions question and his leadership that produced the tax reduction measure. No one, of course, questions the sin- cerity of the President’s own belief as to the importance of his acts or would withhold from him any credit that may be due him. The whole trouble is that he and his friends appear to put a vastly higher appraisal upon his performances than the average eiti- zen. It is a matter of regret that he does not appear to have a clear title to any of the acts of greatness attrib- like the credit given him in the ending of the police strike in Boston. Yet it was the impression created of him at that time, that he was the chief fac- tor in the restoration of order, that brought him prominently before the country and led to his being placed in the exalted position he now holds. Lately his partisan supporters have attempted to usurp for him the credit for the settlement of the reparations question after his administration had refused to have anything officially to do with it. Similarly they are now seeking to usurp for him credit for the tax reduction measure put through by Democrats and progressive Repub- licans, and which he signed reluct- antly. What the President looks upon as action on the part of the administra- tion others consider either as non-par- ‘| tisan accomplishments or “unofficial observing.” The Washington confer- ence came about as the result of Dem- ocratic agitation rather than Repub- lican, and Democrats in the Senate, , showing an infinitely broader spirit | than the Republican Senators did to- ward the peace work of the Democrat- ic President, joined promptly in the ratification of the treaties of the Washington conference. The Repub- lican administration has no monopoly | of ‘credit for that Washington meet- ing. ‘It is difficult to see where the Coolidge administration can claim any credit at all in connection with the settling of the reparations question. The commission of experts was form- ed in accordance with provisions of the reparations commission and it was the latter that selected and appointed the American members of the body. All that President Coolidge did was to signify that his administration had no objections to the Americans named by the reparations commission, He made it clear when the American members left for Europe that his administra- tion accepted no responsibility for them. They were to act wholly in an unofficial capacity. General Dawes and his associates so understood their position. When it comes to defense of the Constitution or American independ- ence, it is absurd on the part of any one to seek to give the impression that these vital principles would be safer with Calvin Coolidge in the White House than with John W. Davis there. John W. Davis was defending the courts against radicals before the counsry ever heard Calvin Coolidge or General Dawes on the subject. The eminence of John W. Davis in the law and in statesmanship is unchallenged. There is no dispute over his title to important accomplishments. The American people “owe it to themselves and to their country to vote for the candidate best qualified for leadership—and John W. Davis is clearly the best. E —Vote for Noll for the Legislature. —If the Republicans had been half as anxious to save the valuable assets of the country as they. profess to be to save the constitution the na- val oil would never have been leased. : BR A ———— ~—Vote for Benson for Congress. iat he. was. entitled to, any=iRing | re red s SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —George L. Lowe, of Bloomsburg, has been named temporary receiver of the Sus- quehanna Shoe company, at Catawissa, at the first meeting of the creditors, last Fri- day. The assets of the company were re- ported as $46,000 and the: liabilities $50,« 000. 4 —An epidemic of hog cholera is reported by farmers in the Roaring Creek valley, Columbia county, and losses of more than $3,000 have been sustained. Quarantines are being established and everything pos- sible done to prevent the spread of the dis- ease, which is the worst in a number of years. i —A jury in the Northumberland Com- mon Pleas court on Friday found for the defendant in the damage suit of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Conley, of Rock Glen, against Dr. George A. Dieterick, of Sunbury, and ¢. Robert Fertig, of Jersey Shore. They sought $35,000 damages for injuries Mrs. Fertig suffered in an automobile wreck at that place last summer, i —Swooplng down upon the little tailor shop of Charles Levin, in Erie, last Fri- day, five men in a truck knocked Leviil to the floor and while he was unconscious made away with his newly invented com- bination gas and electric clothes-pressing machine. Levin values the machine, which he has patented, at several thousand dol- lars. No trace of the machine has been found. —Two Venango county doctors—Dr. Mayo Robb, of Senca, and Dr. E, L. Dick- ey, of Oil City, have just been sued for $25,000 by Fred Sutley, of Cranberry, who alleges that they reduced the fracture of his leg in a fashion that left it three inch- es shorter than the other. In his bill of complaint Sutley declares that the phy- sicians did what he claims was a “bung- ling job.” —At work on an oil lease, two miles from Franklin, last Thursday afternoon, Frank M. Davis, 53 years old, father of ten children, had his right hand ground off when it became eaught in the gears of a gasoline engine, Davis, with rare presence of mind and despite terrific pain, threw off the engine, stopped the cogs, pulled out his arm and ran a quarter of a mile for help. Then he endured an automobile ride of two miles to a doctor's office. He will recover. —William M. Seward, colored, aged 47 years, of Altoona, was burned to death, his daughter, Margaret, aged 10, was perhaps fatally injured and six others narrowly es- caped injuries on Monday morning when the automobile in which they were riding turned over on the Catfish road, one mile west of Hollidaysburg and was totally de- stroyed by fire. The party was returning from Bedford, where they had spent Sun- day evening. The accident occurred about 1:40 o'clock.” ! —Accepting a dare of several compan- ions to climb to the top of a steel tower carrying high-tension wires of the Penn- sylvania Power and Light company, on the mountain south of Shamokin, Matthew Zarick, 14 years old, was electrocuted when he came in contact with a wire car- rying 20,000 volts of electricity. His clothes were set on fire by the electric cur- rent - and he dropped fifty feet to the ground, a flaming torch. The boy was dead when companions reached his side. His body was badly burned, » “Taking with him the shoes of his guard and the coat and vest and $35 be- longing to a United States deputy marshal, Eugene Warren, 17 year old postoffice rob- ber, who was being taken from Kansas City to a reform school near Washington, D. C., made his escape from the officers early .on Monday morning when the train on which they were riding slowed down to. enter the Gallitzin tunnel. Warren eluded the officers by leaving the train through a window and as yet no trace has been found of him, although railroad and state police have been notified of his escape. —Officials of the Penbrook National bank in Dauphin county on Saturday identified Albert Best, of Middletown, as one of the ..'0 men vho held up the institution last Monday and escaped with approximately $2270, of which $715 was mutilated money. Louis Lauitus, of Philadelphia, also is be- ing held as a suspect in connection with the robbery. Best was arrested when he attempted to pass two mutilated $20 bills at a Middletown bank. He claimed he had won the money in a dice game. ' At a hearing on Monday he was discharged be- cause of lack of sufficient evidence con- necting him with the crime. —Oscar Young, 22 years old, is in the Bloomsburg hospital with a probable frac- ture of the. skull and his father, Michael, and brother, Melvin, are in the Columbia county jail, following a fight on Monday on their Franklin township farm, in which Jerry Oberdorf and son, of Bloomsburg, were also hurt. The two men in jail are also seriously hurt and are said by the police to have been severely beaten after they attacked the Oberdorfs, striking them with an automobile piston rod. The rod was taken from them and used by the Oberdorfs before the fight ended. Police said the fight grew out of a dispute be- tween the Oberdorfs, owners of the farm on which the Youngs are tenants. = —Turned back at the pier in New York city because he had no passport when he’ tried to board ship to return to his native Poland, Michael Krovak, a coal miner of Portage, Pa., shot himself through the neck in Broad Street station, Philadelphia, on Saturday, rather than return to the mining town. He was taken to the Hahn- emann hospital, where physicians said he probably would recover. Krovak shot himself while seated in the waiting room. Scores of persons saw him draw the re- volver from his pocket and place the muz- zle under his chin. Krovak said he had worked as a miner for ten years, saved $500 and decided to return to Poland. He was turned back at New York for lack of a passport. “The thought of going back into the mines was too much,” he said. —Turning from the deathbed of his young wife, Charles F. Snyder, 39 years old, walked from the Lenhart hospital at Selinsgrove, on Saturday, to a store, can- celed an order for week-end groceries and explained he was determined to carry out his part of the love pact with his wife, that life to either of them was unbearable without the other. On his way to his big farm adjoining the borough he stopped at thie village undertaker’s parlors, where he told attendants they should hurry and bring his wife's body out there to prepare for burial, as they would find more work than they expected. The prediction proved true, for in the childless home.the under- taker an hour later found the body of Sny- der. He had used a rifle, Téaving a note, “I said I would be with her again today and I am.