Bewrai faan INK SLINGS. —Davis had the brains, but Cool- ‘ idge got the votes. . —Democracy might be a trifle dis- figured, but it’s still in the ring. —And to think! It’s only fifty- eight days until Christmas. Have you begun it yet? ——Common sense as interpreted by Mr. Coolidge is keeping quiet about public rascals. ——The vote hunters as well as the rabbit chasers had fair weather for their work on Tuesday. ——Another thing worth while is the proof that election predictions _.are as uncertain as weather prognos- tications. ——We have probably seen the last activity of the Ku Klux Klan in pol- itics and that is something to be thankful for. —1It’s all over. And from an analy- .sis of the vote we are compelled to ad- mit that it must have been all over al- most before it was started. —The LaFollette strength turns out to have been all noise. It was terrible sounding enough, however, to scare a lot of Democrats into the «Coolidge camp. —Measured by all standards of ‘ability and fitness for the office he sought John W. Davis remains great- er in defeat than is President Cool- idge in victory. —Clem Shaver might put one of “Ma” Ferguson’s petticoats on the Democratic donkey and ride it over ‘the country as a consolation exhibit for the unterrified. —It is a great satisfaction to be licked right. When you are you don’t lie awake at nights regretting the failure to turn the one little trick that might have changed everything. Iowa will be represented by a Democrat in the United States Senate for the first time in sixty-five years. Senator Brookhart has been defeated for re-election by Daniel F. Steck. —To move the last vestige of doubt, that might be lingering in the minds of the faithful, as to what happened on Tuesday, we’re here to admit that we're licked. And licked darn good. —LaFollette declares he is “enlisted for life?” What in, Bob? The Re- publicans have read him out of their party, the Democrats don’t want him and his effort to make one of his own was a flop. —It seems that while giving Cool- «edge nearly a million majority in New York the Empire State did stop long enough to figure out that something “more than a name was desirable in ‘governing its domestic affairs. Ld “be high in price. It’s a sort of “dog in the manger” spirit that prompts us to make such an unpleasant comment, with Thanksgiving and Christmas drawing nigh, but it’s the truth, none- the-less. —The Bellefonte High football team has a lesson to learn from the fracas of last Saturday afternoon. To be clean and big and outstanding in sports it must remember that itis not what the other team does, it’s what it -does that counts. —The vote given Mr. Holmes by State College borough, as well as that given Mr. Noll, by his home township of Spring, were significant expres- sions of the esteem in which the gen- tlemen are held in the communities that have opportunity to know them best. —LaFollette’s strength was all on paper. Put there by the publicity de-. partment of the Republican Na- tional committee. The reason was this: It scared a lot of votes into the Coolidge camp and then milked them for the boodle that enticed the Wis- consin Senator’s support away from him. —These “cross word” puzzles are threatening Mah Jong with consign- ment to the oblivion to which Mr, Da- vis was sent on Tuesday. What we can’t understand about it all is the anomaly of the man who is tickled pink while working one of them and then rages at the cross words his wife is compelled to use to get him to leave his “cross-word” puzzle long enough to rake up the furnace fire. —Let us hope that when the final returns have filtered through it will be discovered that President Coolidge will have a Senate and Congress whol- ly subservient to his leadership. The country has been almost unanimous in acceptance of his alibis and if their causes have been removed it will nat- urally be interested in seeing how Coolidge can lead after he has been given an unfettered chance. We never did believe that he had the makings of a leader, so we will welcome the ca- tastrophe that gives him the chance to show that we have underestimated his ability. —Now that the election is over the interesting information is brought to us that Mr. Holmes never asked for the Prohibition endorsement, feels no obligation to the ladies who flooded the county with literature in his be- half, and expects to vote as he pleases when he gets to Harrisburg. If our information is correct it would sug- gest that our new Member has already taken steps to flee from the sinking Pinchot ship and line up with the reg- ular Republican organization in the House that will do everything but pro- mote the legislation that the women are working for. ; VOL. 69. One of the Important Lessons. The smoke of battle having moved off the opportunity to study the les- sons of the campaign are offered. They are various and important. Probably the most significant is that “money is becoming the predominant influence in politics,” to quote the lan- guage of an esteemed contemporary. itself in the campaign for President in 1896 when Mark Hanna, then chairman of the Republican National committee, literally bought the elec- tion of the candidate of his party. In every campaign since. the beneficia- ries of special privilege have invested freely in the expectation of generous profits. They have not always real- ized but they have persisted. In the campaign of four years ago vast sums of money were paid by a group of capitalists for a pledge that a ship subsidy law would be enacted at an aggregate expense to the public treasury of one hundred millions of dollars a year. The party leaders were unable to fulfill the promise and the contributors were disappointed. But the promise this year of a great reduction of taxes on big incomes opened up the purses of the million- aires and it is estimated that upwards of fifteen million dollars was paid in- to the campaign treasury. Part of this money was spent legitimately but most of it was used to buy votes in doubtful States and Congressional timent of the people. The miscarriage of Newberry’s in- vestment in Michigan, the disappoint- ment of the piratical ship owners in 1920 and the failure to deliver other favors for which prices were paid ought to have admonished the specu- lators in privilege of the futility of such investments, but they didn’t. The Stotesberrys and Vauclains gave as cheerfully and liberally as ever to reward the ballot box stuffers for their vicious work at the polls this year. again, of course, for Congress will not dare enact the legislation they are paying for. But they are drawing cl the time when the wages of t ill be terms in prison of gover ment. fe an ? The president of the Baldwin Locomotive company can see nothing wrong in buying legislation which benefits him at the expense of the public. There are various types of moral perverts. Advice to Pennsylvania Hunters. The precautionary proclamation of Governor Pinchot prohibiting the opening of the game season on Satur- day was justified but futile. Most of the city hunters were out of the reach of newspaper information before the proclamation was issued on Friday afternoon. There was much danger of forest fires at the time which has not been greatly abated since. But the Governor's action may have the effect of making some of the hunters careful and thus avert some of the disastrous fires which come annually with the hunting season. Such admo- nitions ought not to be necessary. The good sense of the hunter ought to be ample protection. generous to the sportsmen who de- rive so much pleasure from their an- nual outings in the woods in pursuit of game. Everything possible is done to propagate and protect game birds and animals. But every effort in that direction would be wasted if the for- ests were destroyed. The protection of the game shelters is up to the hunt- ers. If, through carelessness or mal- ice, they let the woods burn down the game will seek other sections and the sport will be lost. Every hunter ought to exercise the same care to prevent fires in the woods that he em- ploys in his home or about his own premises. No doubt a good many forest fires ascribed to hunters are started by other agencies and putting the blame on the hunters is unjust. But it is the result of the carelessness of hunt- ers and for that reason it should be the common purpose of hunters to pre- vent fires rather than create them. There will be fires this year, do doubt, for the conditions are favorable for minimum and the hunters will earn the good opinion of property owners if they do their best to achieve this re- sult. Forests reduced to ashes are sad sights and bad for game and hunters. SER Lo GA La ——Newberry was canned some sealed up during the next canning sea- son. uses. They develop the propensity for lying and the capacity of liars. Sr ———— fe ———_—— Now that election is over busi- ness may be resumed at the old stand. This sinister influence first asserted districts to defeat the patriotic sen- | They will be disappointed The State of Pennsylvania is pretty ° certain that some of the damage is | them. But they can be reduced to a | time ago and Stotesberry ought to be | Election campaigns have their Clergymen Divided on War. That all clergymen are not all ul- tra Pacifists was revealed in an in- teresting discussion which was devel- oped during the annual session of the Eastern Synod of the Reformed church rat Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, the other day. The report of the committee on ! social service declared that “war is contrary to the spirit of the Gospel which we proclaim, that it is the most destructive social sin of our age, that it threatens the foundations of civili~ zation and the church itself, and that as an instrument of righteousness and the just settlements of disputes and as a means of defense and the protec- tion of innocent, it has outlived the very last vestige of effectiveness.” i Most persons, whether preachers or ' parishioners, would be inclined to ac- cept that doctrine. But some of the most influential churchmen of the Synod protested that it was a step too far. Of course such distinguished members of the body as the venerable Dr. Ellis Kremer, of Harrisburg, and our own worthy representative in the Synod, Rev. Dr. A. M. Schmidt, are in favor of peace and against the hor- rors and evils of war. Both these ' gentlemen have recently visited Eu- rope and know fully its repulsiveness. But they protested against the report on the ground that it was premature and that war, evil as it might be, is justified as an expedient of self-de- fense. The report was finally adopted and "it may be said to put the Reformed | church in advance of all others and of {all diplomacy on that subject. The contemplation of another war in view ' of the certainty that it would be more cruel and destructive than any prev- {ious conflict is certainly forbidding. { But the idea of refusing to declare l war in self-defense is quite as intol- erable, and for that reason it is both wise and expedient for the govern- ment of the United States to maintain such a defensive force on land and sea as will guarantee safety. Nobody ‘wants war and the aim of statesman- ' ship should be to avert it. But not at | the expense of sacrifice nor until oth- |T er nations are in co-operation. tution will never wreck the country but corruption in politics before the election and by politicians after may. Tuesday’s Election in Centre County. | For the Presidential election Tues- day’s battle of the ballots was about | as devoid of excitement and sensation- !al enthusiasm as it was possible to ‘make it, and this notwithstanding the fact that a larger vote was polled by | about eight hundred than four years ago. This is probably accounted for by the women becoming more accus- tomed to their right of franchise. The total vote cast for the presidential as- pirants on Tuesday was 13230, while four years ago the total was 12401. Of course the absence of any local contests aside of the personal inter- est shown in the candidacy of W. H. Noll, for Assembly, had a lot to do with the lack of enthusiasm. Of course there was a large stay-at-home vote, and also, as usual, the larger number of the stay-at-homes were Democrats. This is what helped ma- terially in piling up the big majori- ties for every Republican candidate. Among those who went to the polls and voted were two octogenarians, Mrs. Nancy McMeen, of Curtin, who is 95 years old, and Mrs. Hannah Green, of Milesburg, 91 years old. The complete returns of Centre county will be found in the table on page four of this issue. Radio is a great thing but as a political instrument it costs more than it is worth. Static is a more provok- ing interrupter than the heckler. Diphtheria Spreading Sligthly. There are now ten cases of diphthe- ria in Bellefonte. The disease broke out about three weeks ago and caused considerable alarm, but evidently it has been held in good control. : | The Board of Health met Wednes- day night to take action and after a general discussion of the situation it was decided that neither the schools nor other places of public assembly will be closed at present. However, it urged preventive care on the part of every one, the use of disinfectants and temporary quarantine for all children who have been exposed in any way to the disease. The measures adopted by the Board would be published here, but they were received too late to get in type for this issue. , In general the Board put in imme- | diate effect and intends to rigidly en- | force every quarantine regulation in the law and asks for the co-operation of the public in preventing what might become a serious epidemic. a — ——Let us hope that the next Pres- idential campaign will be less expen- sive. | ANOTHER REPUBLICAN LAND- SLIDE. President Coolidge Swept into Office by a Vote Almost Equalling that Given Harding Four Years Ago. Unlimited expenditures of money, fear of a red-uprising and the disor- ganizing effect of the New York con- vention were the factors that contrib- uted most to blinding the public to the real issues that were involved in the campaign that closed with the polls on Tuesday evening. The voters forgot the scandals at Washington, the wobbling foreign pol- icy and the urge to help himself in- stead of the predatory interests that feed upon them and herded to the polls to strike at the menaces to their gov- ernment that the paid publicity agents of the Republican organization had so cleverly conjured up to frighten and distract them. The following table will show how completely Coolidge and Dawes swept the country: ELECTORAL VOTE CAST BY STATES. LaFoll- State Coolidge Davis ette Alabama 12 Arizona ... Arkansas . California Colarado Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia . Idaho .. Illinois Indiana ... Iowa Ransas ....,....... Kentucky . Louisiana . Maine Maryland . rs Massachusetts ...... Michigan Minnesota Mississippi . Missouri .. Montana .. Nebraska . Nevada New Hampshire .... New Jersey *New Mexico New York .... North Carolina..... North Dakota ...... 5 OREO ....cccvvvvnei. 24 Oklahoma Oregon Nennsylvania Rhode Island . South Carelina ..... South Dakota erases co 9 12, fuk fk fd jd | Low 10 ALXD fod fd ed ww 10 uk WED — Ha e Se serena sears H sens Ve V, g, “West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Totals 379 *Still slightly doubtful. Returns up to early yesterday moin- ing gave the Republicans the best of it in the upsets in both the House and Senate, but it appeared that final re- ports from all districts would be nec- essary before there could be a deter- mination whether President Coolidge could expect a real working majority in the next Congress. Returns from 390 of the 435 Con- gressional districts gave the Republi- cans an actual majority—218—but in this total are included nearly a score of the LaFollette insurgents. The Democrats, meantime, had made certain of 170 seats and the Farmer-Labor party of two. On the basis of these returns the Republicans had made a net gain of 16 over the Democrats, recapturing 20 seats, as against four now held by Re- publicans, which were moved into the Democratic column. : At adjournment last June the House line-up was: Republicans, 225; Dem- ocrats, 207, and three scattered. In the Senatorial contests the most surprising results were in Iowa, where Smith W. Brookhart, Republican, who publicly repudiated his own national ticket, had conceded his defeat at the hands of Daniel F. Steck, a Democrat- ic lawyer of Ottumwa Mr. Steck was generally credited with receiving sup- port from many regular Republicans. REPUBLICAN GAINS IN SENATE. The Republicans, however, appar- ently had gained three Senatorial seats on the basis of returns received. These were in Massachusetts, Ken- tucky and Oklahoma. The Democrats had elected 11 Sen- ators, while 17 Républicans had been chosen or had such leads as to make their election practically certain. In the six remaining contests, all in western States, where returns still were coming in slowly, the results were uncertain. In Minnesota, Representative Thom- as D. Schall, Republican, had what his supporters regarded as a commanding lead over Senator Magnus Johnson, Farmer-Labor. Johnson still insisted, however, that missing rural precincts would return him a winner. Senator Thomas J. Walsh, Demo- cratic prosecutor in the Teapot Dome investigation, was leading the field in Montana, with a sufficient margin as to make him appear reasonably cer- tain of re-election. The result in both New Mexico and Wyoming was surrounded with much uncertainty because of the slowness in gathering the returns. In Colorado, where two Senate seats were at stake, Senator Phipps, Republican, was lead- ing Adams, Democrat, and Rice W. Means, Republican, was ahead of Mor- rison Shafroth, Democrat. A DOLEFUL RESULT IN PENNSYLVA- NIA. The Keystone State has given Cool- idge and Dawes nearly a million ma- jority. In this great avalanche of votes for President what little repre- sentation the Democratic party had in Congress and in the General Assem- 924. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. a BELLEFONTE, PA.. NOVEMBER 7. 1 NO. 44. Bly has been almost entirely wiped out. : Only two counties in the State re- turned majorities for Davis, Monroe and Greene. In the next House of Rep- resentatives we will probably have only 25 members as against 41 in the last session and in the Senate we will only have 7 of the 50 State Senators. Upon the face of the returns every one of the six Democratic Congress- men in the State have been defeated and the only hope of the party in the State being represented at all in the next Congress is through the still doubtful contest in Cambria county where Warren Worth Bailey, Demo- crat, claims victory by a majority of something over 100 votes. PINCHOT LOSES CONTROL. The new Legislature will be con- trolled by leaders who are not overly solicitous about the political welfare of Governor Pinchot. For that reason it was said the Governor will have lit- tle, if any, part in organizing the House. In this connection it has been learned that C. Jay Goodnough, Speaker at the last session, stands lit- tle chance for reelection. He was put over two years ago at the suggestion of Pinchot. At that time, however, Pinchot was at the beginning of his four-year term and the regular lead- ers, with an eye on patronage, were inclined to go along on some of the Gubernatorial whims. The poor showing of LaFollette in Pennsylvania was a surprise. In only one industrial centre, Allegheny coun- ty, did his vote result anything like it was predicted it would. TWO WOMEN GOVERNORS ELECTED. In Wyoming Mrs. Nellie T. Ross, Democrat, was elected to succeed her late husband as Governor of that State. In Texas Mrs. Miriam Ferguson who was running for Governor to vii- dicate her husband who had been put out of the gubernatorial chair by the K. K., was elected by an over- ‘whelming majority. : Vic Donahey, Democrat, has been re-elected Governor of Ohio and Al Smith’s personal popularity carried him to victory in New York, notwith- standing the tremendous majorities given all Republican aspirants for the other offices in that State. THE RESULT IN CENTRE COUNTY. There was heavy voting in the towns of Centre county and only about half the normal poll in the country districts turned out. The result was {that Coolidge has carried the county by 3283, with the State ticket running only slightly behind. LaFollette poll- ed 693 votes, showing little strength except in Philipsburg, State College, the Rushes and Snow Shoe townships, where two-thirds of his entire vote was piled up. The only local interest in the fight was in the contest for Legislature. William H. Noll, Democrat, lost to John L. Holmes, Republican. Many factors contributed to Mr. Noll’s de- feat the principal one being, of course, that it was a presidential year and a bad time for a worthy minority can- didate to make an appeal purely per- sonal. Though Mr. Noll is not “a wet” he was bitterly fought by the “drys” because he steadfastly refused to pledge himself to support legisla- tion in advance of its presentation. I'm for Ma Ferguson. Football and Education Mix at the Penitentiary. In addition to conducting the night classes twice a week at the Rockview branch of the western penitentiary, members of the engineering extension staff at The Pennsylvania State Col- lege are giving their assistance in an athletic schedule at the “pen.” Each week-end the prisoners enjoy a football game between rival teams made up of the penitentiary inmates, and the college extension men act as officials for the contests. Professor C. G. Gaum, who was formerly assist- ant football coach at Alabama Poly- technic Institute, acts as referee, with professors N. C. Miller and W. W. El- der as his assistants. The games are no pink tea affairs, but considerable skill is shown by the players. Some of them are of the old line plunging school, but the modern forward pass- ing game is the most popular. Prac- tically all of the 500 or more inmates at Rockview turn out for these games, which afford them great pleasure as they cheer for their favorites. Academy Students Win Laurels. While Bellefonte Academy is win- ning laurels on the gridiron and ath- letic field, she is also conspicuous for her honors achieved in literary lines. Leon Kutz, a senior at the Academy, won second prize last spring among about 17,000 contestants throughout the State in an assay contest promot- ed by the State W. C. T. U. During the past year Edward Free, of Du- Bois, who prepared at the Academy for Cornell, and at graduation was made an assistant instructor in mathe- matics at the University, has been SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Final papers will be filed in the Su- preme court this week in the old age pen- sion appeal. This case and the bond is- suance act will be argued in the Supreme court November 24th, in Pittsburgh. —~Charles ‘Olinsky and Mike Thomas, were arrested in Blairsville last Thursday for alleged complicity in the $33,000 payroll robbery of the Russell Coal company from a street car siding at Rising Siding im June. —Another gas well has been struck om the land of the Clinton Gas and Oil com- pany, several miles from the group of eleven or twelve wells near Hawumersley Fork, Clinton county. The well was struck at a depth of 11,000 feet, and has a co- pacity of 87,000 cubic feet a day. —While eating a piece of pie and driv- ing a tractor on Saturday marning, John Clifford Pickel, aged 21 years, of Lancas- ter, fell to the ground and the machine passed over his body. He was injured to such an extent that he died in the Lancas- ter General hospital on Sunday. ® —After deliberating twelve hours, a jury in Warren county civil court returned a verdict of $10,831 in favor of Miss Adelaide Campbell, of Mayburg, who lost her right leg on January 19, 1923, when the passen- ger bus in which she was riding was struck by a Pennsylvania railroad train at a Warren grade crossing. —Burglars broke through a skylight over Landau’s jewelry store in Wilkes- Barre between 6 and 7 o'clock on Monday evening and stole diamonds valued at $3,- 000, and made their escape through a rear door. The scene of the robbery is in the heart of the city and hundreds of people passed the store while the thieves were at work. —TFarmers living in the vicinity of Mill Hall are alarmed over the progress of a peculiar disease which has attacked their hogs. The ailment is baffling the local veterinarians and as a consequence fifty hogs have died within a short radius. The animals are dead twenty-four hours after showing signs of being ill. For want of a better name, the disease has been locally called hog diphtheria. —A verdict for $1000 damages was awarded last Thursday by a Lehigh coun- ty jury to Mrs. Clara Schmidt, of Allen- town, in her suit for damages against Syl- vester Kratzer, of Alton Park, for the death of her husband, who was killed six months ago, three hours after his mar- riage. Schmidt and his bride and other members of the wedding party were on their way to Allentown when they were run down by Kratzer’s automobile on the Emaus pike. —It cost Ralph Anthony, of Jefferson county $800 for “peppering several tres- passing cows with birdshot.” Including the costs the case stands him $1000. It was testified that several cows belonging to Gust Beezer, his neighbor, trespassed on his property and that Anthony notified Beezer and the next time the cows set foot on his property he shot at them. Suit for damages followed and the case was about ready to come to trial at Brookville when Anthony decided to settle the bill. —A spoon, several needles, a bone hair- pin and several steel hairpins were remov- ed from the stomach and chest of Mrs. Frank A. Bostwick, forty years old of Liverpool, at the Harrisburg hospital on Saturday. One of the needles had punct- ured her stomach. The metal spoon when removed had broken in two pieces. One of the hairpins was two and one-half inch- es long. A handful of needles and small hairpins were found. Mrs. Bostwick will recover the attending physicians said. —With dragnets thrown out for a ra- dius of ten miles around Greensburg, Westmoreland county, state police, detec- tives and borough police are without a clue as to the identity of a pretty young woman, whose body, almost nude, was stumbled upon by a party of hunters in a woods near the Westmorelaand county home on Saturday. The body revealed ev- i'ence of a brutal crime. Until it is iden- tified officers working on the case enter- tain little hope of running down the wom- an’s murderer. — Charles Wisler, 36 years old, of Wil- liamsburg, a student at Susquehanna Uni- versity, where he is studying to enter the ministry, was admitted to the Altoona hospital on Monday morning suffering from wounds of the right hand received while hunting in the mountains of Blair county. The third and fourth fingers of the hand were torn off and the others punctured by small shot when his gun, which he had rested on a tree limb, was discharged. His condition at the hospital is regarded as good. —An entire community, Concrete City, in Luzerne county, will disappear within one month as a result of the decision of the Glen Alden Coal company to destroy its forty homes rather than meet tax demands of Hanover township. Notices have been served on the families to vacate the prop- erties by November 30. Decisions of the company to destroy the properties was reached after officials of the State Depart- ment of Health had served notice that the homes must be attached to the township sewer system. To do this work would re- quire at least $250,000, an expense which would have to be borne by the company. —When the big engine which drives the machinery in the Hyde City plant of the American Nickel Alloy company ‘ran away,” last Friday, it killed one man, injur- ed a number of others, and wrecked the engine room of the plant. Some sections of the broken fly-wheel went clear through the roof of the building and landed many hundreds of feet from the plant. Paul Teats of Rockton, was killed when a piece of the fly-wheel hit him. The plant start- ed up that morning and the engine driv- ing the machinery moved along smoothly for a few hours and then it became un- manageable, and despite the efforts of the engineer he was unable to stop it. It gained such speed that the big fly-wheel burst. —Believed to be dozing over a letter at a table in her kitchen late Sunday night, Mrs. Emma Stover, 63 years old, wife of M. G. Stover of Nazareth, Northampton county, accidentally knocked a lamp off the table on to the floor. Her clothing was ig- nited and she ran screaming through the three first floor rooms, setting fire to the house. Neighbors broke in through a win- dow and found her lying on the floor in flames. Claude Messinger extinguished the fire by wrapping her in a rug, but she was so terribly burned that she died on Monday morning in the Easton hospital. Her: husband, ;who is quite ‘deaf slept through the excitement, and was awaken- ed only after the fire, which did not as- made editor in chief of the Scientific | sume serious proportions, had been extin- American, guished.