Brolin. INK sLives.. ——Mr. Coolidge has found out ‘that it is hard to be “an easy boss.” ——One Congressman refused to accept the increased salary but “a lit- tle leaven” doesn’t always “leaven the lump.” Yes, there is sanity somewhere in Harrisburg. Some of the Members are of the opinion that Rockview ought to be finished before the State gets any more penitentiary irons in ‘the fire. — Astronomers and other scientists are engaged in a squabble as to the weight of the earth. We don’t get the big idea. We fail to comprehend what difference it makes. We know of no strong man who is trying to grab the «championship belt from Atlas. —With the passing of Walter Camp there is no one left to pick the all- American football teams. Camp’s choice was never unanimously accept- ed, but the player who hasn’t been on one of his teams feels that he never «quite got a niche in football’s hall of fame. : —We await with interest the vote of our Member of the Legislature on the Ludlow bill. It is a measure that should be made law#for it will save the tax payers thousands and thous- ands of dollars, but Mr. Grundy is against it and we shall be obsessed with curiosity until we know where Mr. Holmes lands on the bill: With ‘Grundy and the tax collectors lobby, or with the people who have the taxes to pay. —Having specialized in spring snows for the past thirty years we feel competent to officially decide that the one of Tuesday morning was the robin snow. It wasn’t heavy enough to bend the ‘saplins so it couldn’t have been the saplin bender. There are no onions in the gardens nor daffodils. venturing from the ground, so. it «couldn’t have been either the onion or the daffodil snow. Ergo; it was the . robin snow. —Philipsburg had a big public meeting last Friday night to discuss “her Pine street bridge problem. The town seems to be in earnest in the de- mand for a structure to replace the one recently washed away at the foot of Pine street in that place. It will be recalled that they sought aid from the Commissioners of both Centre and Clearfield counties and having been refused. .are now. W beginning t to (demand a . i ‘and ha just set aside two and one-half mil- lion dollars of it with which to edu- cate poor boys for any calling they desire. The only condition he impos- es is a probation of two years during which they must live clean lives and refrain from drinking. —Milady’s summer clothes are to weigh just two pounds, including her shoes. Her dresses are to be just be- low the knees, but not to cover them so that when she sits down they will be in full view. The arms are to be covered and the neck dressed high. In the mid-Victorian period there was a periodical descent in feminine inves- titure. Now the vogue is ascendant and the good Lord only knows wheth- er it will be stopped before the fash- jon makers issue the edict that ear ‘muffs alone will constitute the sum- mer girls’ wardrobe. —A bill that would put civil serv- ‘ice into effect in the various depart- ments of the government of Pennsyl- vania has been introduced by Senator Snyder, of Blair. It provides for a commission of three persons who would draw an aggregate salary of $14,000 per year and, if enacted, would amount to a positive waste of that much money. Republicans hold all the jobs in Pennsylvania and prob- ably always will, so we have no per- sonal interest in the matter, further than as a tax payer to protest on a plan to create three more fat ones. —While we have no desire to enter into a discussion with any one on the merits of the fight between the Pres- ident and the Senate we can’t refrain from expressing the thought that there are a lot among the President’s supporters now who were on the Sen- ate side of the argument when Wood- row Wilson was in the White House. Of course it is to be expected that they should be loudest in denouncing partisanship on the part of the Demo- crats because it is only by throwing up a smoke screen that they think they can conceal their own partisan- ship of eight years ago. —The Philadelphia Public Ledg- er, stronger than most of the metro- politan papers in many of its depart- ments, is more puerile than any we know of on its editorial page. Its fatuous pleading with its readers to believe that the Democrats in the Sen- ate voted against the confirmation of Warren, because he is a Republican, suggests the thought that a commis- sion in lunacy might well be engaged for occasional sittings in the editorial rooms of that journal. The Demo- crats voted against Warren not be- cause he was a Republican, but be- cause he is not the right kind of a Republican. They were unanimous in their approval of John G. Sargent, an inconspicuous country lawyer from Vermont. Sargent is more of a par- tisan Republican than Warren, but he’s clean. it may i. have Tad a STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL ‘UNION. VOL. 70. Bill Defeated Legislature. Governor Pinchot 1 lost his fight for dry legislation by a vote of 99 to 107. | The call of the bootlegger was louder than the voice of conscience and the practically unanimous vote of the big | cities overwhelmed the strength of the divided forces of the rural districts. | For many years previous to the enact- ment of the Volstead law the liquor interests and the Republican machine maintained a partnership. The com- bination seems to have resumed busi- ness with bootleggers providing the capital and the machine managers di- recting the operations. It is an un- holy alliance but for the time being has achieved its purpose. But the Governor made a gallant fight. His speech before the joint ses- sion of the Legislature, on Tuesday, was a masterpiece in force and logic. But his appeal fell upon deaf ears. Political exigencies are of greater consequence than public morals or ec- onomic welfare to those who control the Legislature and the source of slush funds more important than the lives sacrificed by thousands to the av- arice of the traders in poison. As Governor Pinchot stated “it is not a question of light wine or beer. It is not a question of unadulterated liquor of any kind. It is a question of stop- ping tke flood of poison drink poured out over the State.” The bootleggers may imagine: that: they won a great victory over the Governor in this contest. One of the speakers in opposition to the measure practically admitted that the fight was against the Governor rather than against the measure. Viewed from that angle it may be said that the ma- chine scored heavily. The Governor is certainly defeated. But it is a defeat that reflects honor instead of humilia- tion and before another election of Senators and Representatives in the egislature is held the truth will be ed and the Governor rather than chine will have Yedson to re- United Dry in the chance of passing had if not been. Hd ten off to a bad start by arousing the disapproval of the Grange and other organizations by incorporating objec- tional features that in reality were trifling, and could. have been added later, yet sufficed to provide a peg on which to hang considerable opposi- tion. Mr. Holmes, Centre county’s Mem- ber, voted for - the bill thus better representing the majority of his con- stituency than he did by his vote for ' Bluett for Speaker. Coolidge Determined to Boss. In pursuance of his purpose to boss the government of the United States President Coolidge has undertaken to deprive the United States, Senate of an important constitutional 'preroga- tive. In fulfillment of what may have “been a pledge of his party managers to reimburse the monopolies for the ‘money they spent in the purchase of his election he nominated an emissary of the Sugar trust for the office of Attorney General. After an exhaus- tive investigation of the subject the Senate refused to confirm the nomina- tion. Thereupon the President con- verted the White House into a trad- ing post and began negotiations for votes in favor of ratification. he thought he had secured enough he renominated the defeated candidate and set up the excuse that the Presi- dent has the right to name his own cabinet. In opposing the confirmation of Mu. Warren Senator Walsh, of Montana, showed that in his operations to sup- press independent beet sugar manu- facturers in Michigan Mr. Warren was not in the capacity of a lawyer. Legal talent wasn’t needed for the work. It was the task of a shrewd stock jobber and Warren simply the agent of H. 0. Havemyer, head of the Sugar trust. In that capacity he procured title to nearly a majority of the shares of the several Michigan sugar plants and forwarded the certificates to Mr. Havemeyer to be entered in the books of the trust as property of Mr. Wai- ren, thus making him an influential stockholder in the trust. In a court trial which followed it was judicially decided that the Michigan corpora- tions owned and controlled ‘by Mr. Warren were a part of the trust. In renominating Mr. Warren, after the Senate had refused to confirm his appointment, the President not only defied the Senate but challenged it in a statement that if confirmation were refused he would, after the ad- journment of the Senate, give him a recess appointment. In other. tion, the laws and the a of the government. And he is pursuing this course without the approval of the ablest lawyers and wisest leaders of his party. But it is in line with the commercial methods of Sena- tor Butler and other political pirates who came into prominence with Cool- idge’s elevation to office. The attempt of Vice President Dawes to boss the Senate was part of the plan but it failed. ——On the 4th of March President . Coolidge solemnly swore that he The Ludlow Bill in Danger. Gossip in the corridors at Harris- burg indicate that the question of the | passage of the Ludlow bill, which al- | ters the methods of collecting taxes, | has been put up to Mr. Joe Grundy, of | the recently formed political firm of Vare & Grundy. It has long been known that Mr. Grundy is deeply in- terested in tax questions but hitherto he has given more attention to the levying than to the collection of tax- es. The current reports convey the idea that he is equally concerned in the levy and collection of taxes and the fact is not encouraging to the hope of tax reform. Mr. Grundy is not much on reform. His aim is to exempt manufactories from tax, and | that result achieved he is satisfied. It has been shown by supporters of the Ludlow bill that the cost of tax collection in Pennsylvania is more | than double that of any other State in the Union, and that more money is paid in this State for the collection of county tax than it costs in some oth- er States for collecting all the taxes. | In our tax system there are school, | city, borough or county, and in the country districts road and township ! taxes. The tax collector gets a per centage on each of these several tax- es and in some sections the recom- pense makes the office of tax collector more lucrative than any county or city office within the gift of the voters. It is for this sinister reason that a cor- rupt lobby has been organized to op- pose the passage of the Ludlow bill. | With Mr. Grundy in charge of the | matter there is little hope for relief from the unjust burdens incident to the existing system of tax collection, | would “preserve, protect and defend , the constitution of the United States,” ' and ever since that he has been trying to violate it. An Absurd Claim. The most absurd claim that has re- cently been alleged in connection with public service is that offered in sup- port of President Coolidge’s efforts to usurp the right to appoint an At- torney General without the consent of ‘the Senate. Other Presidents have nominated men for cabinet offices which were not confirmed, but Mr. Coolidge is the first to defy the Sen- ate and renominate a man who has been rejected after due deliberation upon the ground that “it is custom- ary” and that he is responsible for the actions of his so called “consti- tutional advisers, and “it is nobody’s business but his own.” The constitution of the United States in Article 2, Section 2, para- graph 2, declares that “he (the Pres- ident) shall have power, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, to make treaties, provided two-thirds of the Senators present concur: and he shall nominate and by and with |® the advice and consent of the Sen- ate, shall appoint Ambassadors, . other public ministers and consuls, " judges of the Supreme court, and all other officers of the United States, whose appointments are not herein otherwise provided for and shall be established by law; but the Congress may by law vest the appointment of | such inferior officers as they think | proper, in the President alone, in the courts of law, or in the heads of De- partments. » There is neither uncertainty nor unless the people of the State prompt- | ambiguity in that language and there ly and vigorously assert an interest in the question. It is said that the lobby , is liberally provided with money to in- fact recent experience fluence legislation, but the voice of the people is more potent than money, | if it is expressed in the right way. Every citizen in the Commonwealth ought to get busy at once and let it be known to their representatives in the Legislature that this form of graft ; must stop and that Senators and Rep- ' resentatives in the General Assembly who fail of their duty in this connec- tion will be retired. is not much doubt as to the reason it was put in the fundamental law. In proves the value of it. If the Senate had exer- cised its best judgment the scandals i incident to the oil leases andthe ad- | ministration, would never have been heard of. A number of Senators real- ized that Fall, Daugherty and Denby were unfit for the offices to which they were appointed, but because Mr. Harding had been a Senator and was When | “s. personally popular they were con-" firmed. BELLEFONTE, PA.. MARCH 20, 1925. 7 Haak, or Imaginary Reason. The office of State Superintendent. of Public Instruction is “going beg- ging,” according to news dispatches from Harrisburg. - It is not because the salary is‘inadequate that none of the prominent and capable educators of ‘the country decline to accept it. The salary is $12, 000 a year, and $1,- 000 a month is generous reward for even a high order of talent. But for some reason the educators refuse to “sign up.” It was tendered to a Mas- | sathuseetts man some time ago and following his refusal was offered to a Maryland teacher who also declined. Next a California man, Dr. Will C. Wood, was importuned to come and ke the plum tree,” but after de- liberation he said “nay nay, dear Al- phonso.” Some of our esteemed contempor- aries attribute this eurious situation to the Finegan incident which occui- red two years ago. During the gu- bernatorial campaign the friends of Dr. Finegan, then holding down the job, exacted, or say they did, a prom- ise from Mr. Pinchot that in the event of his election he would reappoint Dr." Finegan. But after the induction into office Mrs. Pinchot changed his mind on that subject and he tendered the favor with a reservation which he knew Dr. Finegan would not allow. | Then he appointed Dr. Becht with or without embarrassing. conditions. Now Dr. Becht is in bad health and wants to resign as soon as the Legislature provides for a pension. ; It is said that Dr. Wood declined the office because he was informed that “acceptance would be regarded as a breach of ethics” by his profes- sional. : brethren There may be some foundation for this rumor, for the executive council of the State ‘Educational Association last week and the subject was disenss, ed. ‘But there is another theory that § or less plausible. It is said Mrs Pinchot has some peculiar ence, and possible that is the nigger in the woodpile.” ——The Senate on Tuesday passed the Betts bill validating the official acts of justice of the peace S. A. Rob- inson, of Snow Shoe, who failed to qualify for office following his re-elec- tion in the fall of 1921. The bill now goes to the House for concurrence. The Senate also passed the Quigley bill increasing the minimum salary of county school superintendents. —Secretary Mellon denied Gov. Pinchot’s inferential charge that he had instructed his workers in the Leg- islature to kill the United Dry bill. Mr. Mellon wired the Governor that he had formed no opinion in the mat- ter. It is significant, however, that most of the Secretary’s: followers in the Legislature had, for they all vot- ed to defeat it. ——Some ten or a dozen business men met together at dinner at the Brockerhoff house, last Friday even- ing, and discussed the advisability of reviving and reorganizing the old Bus- iness Men’s association. No definite conclusion was reached. : ——Chairman Madden, of the House committee on Appropriations, thinks the time for tax reductions are over. But the Republican managers will find some way to fool the people in 1927. ——The hunters of the State aré not likely to approve the proposition to put upon them the entire burden of reforestation. They only get a share of the expected benefits. ——Now that Coolidge and Dawes have both been rebuked the govern- ment at Washington may “resume business at the old stand.” ——Maybe those friends who pre- vailed on Pinchot to address the Leg- islature on his pet bill simply wanted to flatter the Governor. ——Don’t waste sympathy on Pres- ident Coolidge or chairman Butler. It is the Sugar trust that “got the worst of it” in the struggle. ——To revive the old song it may be said that Coolidge is the guy who tried to put the Sugar trust in the cabinet. _ —If it is true that man was orig- inally a fish it is natural that there should be a good many suckers now. ——The bossing program has been recommitted to the committee on rules of the Senate for revision. -—Get your job work done here. officers, but the prediction that G in - Pennsylvania. | | be. very valuable officers if the ‘not much room for them. NO. 18. Airships and nd Battleships. From. the. Philadelphia R Record. There has . been unngeessary J eal in the investigation of General Mi eh ell’s opinion of the relative opin airships and battleships, an hon suported by some naval officers antagonized by others. But i any consideration is given to the rel- ative merits of various figh ma- chines the imposition ‘of any restraint upon the expression of opinions, by of- ficers of the army and navy ought to be repudiated. Neither Congress nor the President can possibly know any- thing about the value of military and naval machines. They must get their information entirely from men in the two services. They ought not to be restricted to the information that comes through all the official chan- nels and is finally sanctioned by the Secretary of War or of the Navy. There should be the fullest possible disclosure of opinions, : This is not in accordance with mil- itary and naval routine, in which no one has any opinion except the. high- est officer. That may be necessary in warfare, but in peace, in the prepara- tion for war, all" sorts of opinions ought to be encouraged. ‘The War Department denies. ‘censorship Upon en- eral Mitchell would be relieved of his position has been verified. He has beeen punished for expressing opin- ions that are not these of the general staff or of his: immediate rior. That will make it more di t for the President and Congress to get full and honest Information. from ‘officers of both services. In regard selves, the di 1s not mote importan 1 that t between | army officers regarding’ lative value of the several’ Site Ue serves ice. . Officers of the-infantry, gavalry and artillery very natural Rg ly and advantageously | service to js Se ‘they lieve. fat rie the most important. ..T trenches and - fortifica officers had to admit ¢t never a war in which ar “And - in Die of, the | impTece- dented use of artillery, which was on) to fire at unseen targets, fortified po- | sitions were carried by infantry. The general judgment of military author- ities is that the foot soldier with his rifle is still the most vital element in an armed force. The cavalry and even the artillery are still adjuncts to the infantry. We do not know whether airships can destroy battleships. Of course they can if they can score enough hits with big enough bombs, but there are always going to be large chances of missing. Before the world war Ad- miral Scott, of England, declared that the submarine had put the battleship out of service. Yet after the war was over the highest naval authorities of all nations declared that the battle- ship was the determining factor in na- val warfare. Doubtless a battleship may be destroyed hy a submarine or an airplane, just as a soldier may be destroyed by a bullet. Yet the soldier is the determining factor. We need cavalry and artillery as well as infantry. We need battleships, and we also need submarines and air- planes. The conditions of warfare are changing constantly, and it is essen- tial that we should have a reasonable amount of all the arms and weapons and apoliances sanctioned by exper- ience. It would be the height of folly to discard all but one because that one has shown extraordinary efficiency on some occasion. Prisoners’ Indigent Dependents. From the Pittsburgh Post. An incident occurred in McKean county Saturday which directs atten- tion to the need of a reform in our penal system. The wife of a farmer convicted of violating the liquor law and sentenced to serve six months in jail brought her eight children, rang- ing in age from 14 years to twins 18 months old, to the County Commission- ers’ office and gave them to under- stand that since the family had been deprived of the support of the bread- winner the county would have to maintain them. Situations like this arise frequent- ly. One of the commonest excuses given for asking clemency for a con- victed criminal is that his family will be reduced to destitution if he is sent to prison or if he is not forthwith re- leased. The courts properly should not take cognizance of such a plea; yet the judges, being human and com- passionate, often are thereby influ- enced to be lenient to offenders who are not entitled to lenience and would not receive it if there were no danger of their dependents suffering. Trout Fishermen Growing Uneasy. From the Altoona Tribune. Now doth the trout fishermen grow more uneasy. Many a stream is call- ing. April 15 is the time in Pennsyl- vania. Just about a month. Between this time and the opening date, how- ever, the angler will get a lot of pleas- ure out of life by going over the fish- ing kit. fp pe —~Subseribe for the “Watchman.” to’ ot) opinions them SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. Titusville dtizens will vote “April 7 on a proposal to issue bonds in the amount.of . | $140,000 for street improvement. —James Foust, for twenty-five years ‘head of pure food law enforcement in Pennsylvania and since 1907 direstor of the ‘| Bureau of Foods in the State Department of. Agriculture, will retire in June. .—A- decision handed down at Pittsburgh on Monday by the State Supreme court upholds the constitutionality of the act passed by the 1923 Legislature placing county officials on a salary basis instead of the fee system as in vogue heretofore. —Clarence R. Sanford, well known Erie undertaker, died last Thursday, a victim of his profession. A week previous Sanford prepared for burial a woman who had died of smallpox. He refused to be vaccinated before taking charge of the body. Three days later he was siezed with the disease. —Dr. Charles B. Rowan, a prominent physician of East End, Pittsburgh, and son of the late Mr. and Mrs. George Row- an, of Hollidaysburg, was drowned near Cape Hatteras, off the coast of North Car- olina, last Wednesday. Dr. Rowan was swept overboard from the steamer City of Rome while en route to Jacksonville, Fla. The body was not recovered. The physi- cian was thrown overboard by a lurch of the ship during a storm. —Five young men, masked and armed, held up the Germantown office of the Yel- low Cab company late last Friday night and escaped with the day's receipts amounting to about $6,200. Three em- ployees were in the office when the robbers entered with drawn pistols. Commanding the employees to throw up their hands, the intruders snatched the cash box and sped away in a waiting automobile. Another cash box containing $3,000 was overlooked by the robbers. —~Clinton E. Cole, for five years super- vising principal of the Birdsboro schools, has resigned to take charge of the schools at: Muhlenberg, the only third-class school district in Berks county. He is a gradu- ate of the Keystone State Normal school, Muhlenberg College, and took special courses at The Pennsylvania State College and Teachers’ College, Columbia Univer- sity. He has been teaching for twenty- two years, at Northampton, Myerstown, Palmerton and Birdsboro. —Daniel -J. Shields, of Johnstown, Pa, was indicted -at Washington, D.C, on Monday by a federal grand jury charged with having bribed a woman stenographer in the prohibition unit to give him confi- dential information from government files eoncerning reports of alleged violations of the prohibition law by breweries in Penn- sylvania. He was charged with having paid Della M. Hayes, an employe of the internal revenue bureau,” a total of $3,400 during the years 1922, 2 and 1924 for the information. —Yeggs, who “spent , several days last ‘week at a- -Clearfield -hotel in ‘order to make a study of the surroundings of the local gis reds ‘and the various avenues afford- ing a hurried escape from town, blew the safe in the new postoffice on Friday morn- {ing, stole stamps and cash to the value of at least $6000, and departed in an automo- 3 bile. The total Amount of cash and useable stamps, exceeded $500 in value. Pre-can- stamps valued at $5000 to postmaster erry, but not worth a cent, t outside: of “1 Clearfield; were taken alse. om —The sum of $10,000 has been paid to the trustees of the University of Pennsylvania hospital, for the endowment of a free bed for the ailing of Emporium, as a result of the provisions of the will of Mrs. Ella A. Parson, of that place. This gift is only one of the many provided by the will of Mrs. Parson. Several scholarships for various colleges were started and other charitable institutions were benefited. After the estate was turned into cash, it amounted to about $67,000, of ‘which amount $30,000 went to charity. ~The temporary bridge across the Kish- acoquillas creek in Mann's Narrows was thrown open to vehicular travel of ten tons or less last Wednesday afternoon. The bridge collapsed the night of March 2, dropping a furniture van from Philadel- phia, into the creek. The rigging gang of the Standard Steel works removed the truck Friday night and J. C. McCarrell, of the State Highway Department, with twenty men, rebuilt the structure in four and one-half days. The detour via. Mill Creek, fifty miles, has been cancelled. —A Corry man, through a newspaper, has offered “to sell himself” for 30 months for $1,250. The man, who requests $300 be paid at once, and $700 more in 30 days, de- clares that “he must have work, and will do anything honest” so he can “repay friends who have trusted him.” The man states in his appeal that he has been ‘able to earn $110 to $175 a month, and he be- lieves this is a good chance for some per- son to ‘double their money.” To protect his employer against loss, should he die during the 30 months of voluntary service, he is ready to assign a life insurance pol- icy amounting fo $3,000. —The claim of Mrs. Ella Backas Christo- poulos against Mr. and Mrs. Constantine E. Contos, of Reading, for a wedding dow- ery of $10,000, was dismissed by Judge Thompson, in the United States District court at Philadelphia, last Thursday. Mrs. Christopoulos charged her aunt and uncle brought her from Greece on the promise of finding her a husband and giving her a dowry. She said she found a husband for herself, and after she did domestic chores in the Contos home for several years her aunt and uncle repudiated her. Judge §hompson said she suffered no financial loss, because her husband would have re- ceived the money had it been paid. —Mrs. Kathryn Cummings, of Erie, the wife of one man and the “fiancee” of another, was awarded $4000 life insurance on Monday in a decision by the United States circuit court of appeals. The in- surance was taken out in her behalf by Jesse J. Freeman, of Erie, whom she had promised to marry as soon as she became divorced from her husband. Freeman died July 11, 1921, after he had named Mrs. Cummings as his “fiancee and beneficiary” in two policies for $2000 each. After Free- man’s death his brother. Alfred J. Free- man, an auctioneer for the government, and Mrs. Cummings made demands on the insurance company for the money. The company filed a suit in the United States district court at Pittsburgh, and Judges Schoonmaker and Thompson decided the case in favor of the woman. The circuit court upheld the decision of the lower court after the insurance company had taken an appeal. It was pointed out in the decision that although Mrs, Cummings’ husband was alive, it did not have any , bearing on the case.