~ INK SLINGS. . —Red Cross week begins today. Enroll if you would help the greatest and most unselfish humanitarian movement the world knows of. —The swivel chair department of the army seems to be having more trouble lickin’ Col. Bill Mitchell than the rookies had in putting the boche to flight. —The favorite pastime down in Texas seems to be charging some member of Governor “Ma” Ferguson’s family with taking a little more than the law allows. —Gen. Groener’s idea of “a beauti- ful death” for the Kaiser evidently didn’t look so beautiful to Bill. He much preferred being a live coward to a dead hero. —Italy wants satisfaction from Ju- goslavia for the attack on her consu- late at Belgrade last Sunday. What foreign country is there that doesn’t want everything it can get? —Things are breaking nicely for the Kellers. On the heels of the father’s elevation to the bench comes the an- nouncement that a son has been made head of an important department at The Pennsylvania State College. —We look upon the approach of Christmas unmoved. The peak of the day’s pleasure for us was the sight of the great brown turkey waiting to be wrecked. The prospect of a baked ham or a roast chicken as a substitute doesn’t lure us into pleas for the fes- tal day to hasten. —At last the world has found out why the Kaiser fled to Holland. Gen. Groener, who became Ludendorf’s suc- cessor when German arms were wa- vering, sent word that the only hope of reviving the morale of the army was in getting Wilhelm into the trenches. Confronted with making a little cannon fodder out of himself Bill preferred sawing wood at Doorn. —If the railroads only stick to it the time will come when those who value their lives will realize that it is safer to sit in a railroad car than it is to undertake to keep out of the way of fool and drunken motorists on the highways we are building. Already the motorist who values his life is be- ginning to inquire as to the unimprov- ed roads, where traffic is less, that will carry him to his destination. —PFrancis Carney is in jail at Greensburg charged with having cut down and hauled away timber that be- longed to others. Ordinarily this would be just a bit of police news and have no place in this column, but Car- ney’s physical condition lifts the item into the realm of “he unusual. So un- usual that probably some of you read- ars will say: What a lie, when we tell you that Carney has no arms. —More power to the Governor and the committee he has invited to help devise ways and means of purifying elections in Pennsylvania. The coun- try counties are honest. In Centre, for instance, everybody knows every- body else and an attempt to'register and vote dead men, dogs, cats, etc. would be futile. It is in the big cities and the counties of large foreign pop- ulation that manipulation is easy and the majorities that sweep gang favor- ites into office are piled up. —Neither cannibals nor Bolsheviks ould have been as brutal as Congress- man Vare was in Philadelphia at the recent election. Think of the depths that man Shoyer has plumbed if he nas any conscience at all, by allowing ais name to be stuck on a ballot in or- ier to get in to a dead man’s shoes be- fore rigor mortis had even set in. If Republicans of Pennsylvania are proud of such leaders God save the Commonwealth. If they are not, God make them men and women big anough to see that such things are not part of their imagined divine right to rule. —Just by way of confirming our be- jef that the “Watchman” usually looks pretty straight and sees pretty straight let us remind the creditors of the Centre County bank that we ad- vised them, months ago, to “reorgan- ze their own institution or somebody slse would slip in and start a third sank in Bellefonte.” The effort is now oeing made. Feelers are on the streets and they are not actuated by che same motives that the “Watch- man” was when it suggested the idea ;0 the creditors. They are hoping to ‘cash in” on the good will and loyal- ;y that was always a great asset of the old Centre County. —The coming of Billy Sunday to Bellefonte awakens memories of “the Brewers Big Horses Can’t Run Over Me,” “Brighten up the Corner” and ‘the sawdust trail.” Fifteen years ago there was scarcely a person in the United States who didn’t know of Bil- y, his two outstanding songs and the rail over which thousands upon -housands went to repentance. Wed- 1esday a fairly well informed lad of ifteen asked us: “Who is Billy Sun- jay?” It all comes to this. The 1ewspapers make men as well as werything else. Billy hasn’t been in he papers much during the last dec- Ade and the coming generation loesn’t know there ever was an ex- all player who swayed the inasses nore than even Bryan or Roosevelt sould. By the way, who remembers who Francis Murphy was and what he vas doing in Bellcfornie and how Hen- v Ward Beecher happe ed to be here it one time and what jingle Will Jarleton started his lectur:z in the sourt house with? STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 70. Prohibition Enforcement the Issue. Governor Pinchot’s answer to Sena- tor Pepper's appeal for support is characteristic. In his preliminary speech Senator Pepper said: “If you send a man to the Senate who is op- posed to the President and hostile to Secretary of the Treasury Mellon, it will make tax reform difficult; it will obstruct every administration policy and it will waste the great victory won at the polls last year.” The Gov- ernor’s reaction, expressed in a speech in Chicago on Sunday evening, was “the present era of disraspect for the law can be laid at the door of the con- spicuous political leaders at Washing- ton who set the example. The 18th amendment was betrayed in the house of its friends. They “sowed the wind and the nation is reaping the whirl- | wind!” Thus the issue is drawn between the two candidates for Senator in Con- gress. Pepper pronounces himself the servile follower of Coolidge and Mellon and Pinchot declared that “Pittsburgh, the home of Secretary Mellon, whose good citizens have ap- pealed to him over and over again to put an end to open and notorious vio- lations of the law, is the one excep- tion. It is so because the controlling ° in Pitisburgh have succeeded in nullifying every effort of : political forces the State administration to reduce bootlegging and make the town dry.” All other cities in Pennsylvania, he states, have shown improvement, but Pittsburgh continues in its evil course because Secretary Mellon is the domi- nant figure in the political life of that city and he is not in sympathy with the cause. These diametrically opposite decla- rations of the candidates make it cer- tain that the dominant issue of the campaign will be prohibition enforce- ment. The Senator may try to dis- guise the facts by professing fidelity to the President and deep interest in tax reform. But the Governor will not allow such deception to be imposed upon the vast force of voters in the State who believe in prohibition with almost religious zeal. Coolidge and Mellon pretend to favor enforcement and at intervals give out statements of a purposé to enforce the Volstead law. But actions speak plainer if not louder than words and the prosperity of the bootlegging industry in and about Pittsburgh seems to corrobo- rate the statements of the Governor on the subject. - —Red Cross, with its wonderful work of succor is on the scene of every disaster, no matter where it may oc- cur. You will be represented there if you enroll in the drive for members which starts today. Borah Likely to Make Trouble. Those who expected, or hoped, that his elevation to the chairmanship of the Senate committee on foreign rela- tions would moderate the sentiments of Senator Borah with respect to the out- side world are likely to be disappoint- ed. The Idaho statesman has been rath- er intolerant in his talk and action to- ward foreign governments, more es- pecially those known as allies in the world war. His uncompromising op- position to the League of Nations and the World Court has been based large- ly upon an aversion to “foreign com- plications.” Because of his attitude on such subjects there was considera- ble opposition to giving him the chair- manship to which he was entitled up- on the death of Senator Lodge. Responsibility has considerable in- fluence on temperament and the lead- ers of the administration element in the Senate felt that as chairman of the committee Senator Borah would be more amenable to reason than he had been as a member, and his seign- iorage rights were reluctantly recog- nized. But he has held firmly to the policy of exacting all that is coming from our recent allies in the matter of repayment of monies loaned or ad- vanced during the war. In discussing the failure of the French debt com- mission to agree on terms of settle- ment with our government, he is par- ticularly caustic. He declares that France is fully able and ought to be equally willing to settle in full and with interest. In his expressed views on this sub- ject there is likely to be a general ! concurrence. In a letter to a Chicago correspondent he says that France has maintained since the close of the war an army of from 700,000 to 1,- 000,000 men and “has loaned large sums to other countries to maintain military establishments, and therefore he does not feel that it is any part of our duty to put the load of the pres- ent imperialistic war and France's military establishment upon the tax- payers of the United States.” It will be hard for the administration and Wall Street bankers to refute this i line of argument. It is about what a large majority of the people think and many of them say openly and above board. Governor Pinchot’s Committee. rn ees. The “committee of seventy-six” as the Governor sentimentally styled the body of men and women he had pre- viously appointed to devise a way to | prevent election frauds in the future, held its first meeting in Harrisburg on Friday. Nearly every member of the { committee was present and an atmos- | phere of determined purpose pervaded i the meeting. In opening the delibera- i tions Governor Pinchot said: “I have i asked you to come to Harrisburg for ! the purpose of considering and assist- ing in solving a problem which goes i straight to the root of free govern- ! ment. Election thieves are rampant in parts of Pennsylvania. It is no- torious that the stealing of votes has | i Senators boasted that the Republican After a buffet luncheon spread by | become a habit.” i Mrs. Cornelia Pinchot at the execu- tive mansion and the statement of the purpose of the meeting by the Gover- ‘nor some time was spent in discussing the primary election frauds in Phila- delphia and in offering suggestions as to preventives. Judge Renshaw, the victim of the Philadelphia frauds, ' suggested the enactment of a law which would facilitate rather than prevent the opening of ballot boxes where fraud has been perpetrated, and Democratic State chairman John H. Bigelow proposed a return to the con- vention system of making nominations. “I do not know,” he said, “whether it i was worse to debauch a Legislature in the election of a United States Sena- ' tor, as was done in Illinois in the Lor- imer case, or to debauch a whole State as was done in Michigan, in the New- berry case.” Certain Republican members of the committee were plainly disturbed by the drift of the discussion and Judge Butler, of Chester county, protested that the committee should get down to work. Thereupon a sub-committee was appointed to frame such legisla- tion as may be expected to accomplish the desired result. The discussion was then resumed and in addition to de- scriptions of the frauds in Philadel- phia on primary election day full de- tails of the effort to dispose of former Judge Patterson as the Republican candidate for district attorney by the process of stickers were given. Judge Fox, formerly of the Supreme court, told of the atrocity of this enterprise and with it in mind the committee ad- journed. —So Gen. Smed Butler is to leave Philadelphia. The crooks have at last succeeded in prying him out of his po- sition as head of the police force in that city. Philadelphia has been bad enough, even with “the fighting ma- rine” struggling to clean up the city, but can you imagine what it will be after he is gone. recente eens ener Party But Not Revenue Gain. A careful examination of the pro- posed tax bill now under consideration in the committee on Ways and Means of the House of Representatives, in Washington, leads to the opinion that President Coolidge is shrewd if not actually wise in urging a decrease in the income tax rates on big incomes and leaving undisturbed the burden- some tariff taxes on the necessaries of life. The measure is not intended to produce revenue. Its palpable pur- pose is to create propaganda for the Republican party in the impending congressional campaign. Neither the President nor the leaders of his par- ty are concerned about revenue for the government. The government might function without revenue for a few years. But the Republican party can’t en- dure for that length of time under an adverse majority in Congress. Such a contingency would cut off all the special privileges upon which the par- ty machine has lived and thrived in the past. Such favors judiciously dis- tributed are the source of campaign contributions, which in the last Presi- dential campaign mounted up to an aggregate of nearly twenty million dollars and without which President Coolidge wouldn’t have been able to carry a dozen States. The object of those now engaged in the formation of a tax bill is to secure a Republican majority in the next Congress and a continuation of the special privileges as an asset for future use in the same way. With this object in mind the Presi- | dent is now urging a tax decrease of half a billion of dollars instead of the lesser amount he had previously rec- ommended. By strenuous efforts of his “one-track” mind he has figured ! out the larger cut may be made by | omitting provision for payment on the ; public debt and the average tax payer iis always delighted with a smaller tax (bill. The tax payer is not likely to in- | vestigate the cause of tax reduction { and the Presidernt’s pretense of econo- { my in administration will'look like a | great achievement. But it is nothing ! more or less than a huge humbug in- | vented to fool the people. The bill ought to be so entitled and the respon- sibility for the fraud clearly fixed. | | 1 BELLEFONTE, PA. NOVEMBER 13. 1925. Important and Gracious Service. Nearly all the men and women in- vited by Governor Pinchot to sit in a committee to devise ways and means to prevent electoral frauds have aec- cepted the service and it may be as- sumed that within a brief period of time the work will be begun. It is an important public service. The elector- al frauds in Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and other populous communities have impressed a stigma upon the good name of the Commonwealth annually for more than a quarter of a century. More than that, they have been in- strumental in defeating the will of the people in more than one instance. After the gubernatorial election of 1910 one of the Philadelphia State candidate had been elected by fraudu- lent votes and claimed for his city the credit. In the movement now about to be undertaken, moreover, it is a gracious publie service. The ladies and gentle- men invited by the Governor to per- form the difficult and arduous work are promised no recompense for the time and labor which their acceptance will involve. The only reward they can expect is an approval of their own consciénces and an appreciation of their sacrifices by the decent citizens of the State, and that is not certain. The difficulties they will necessarily encounter will be multiplied, too, by the politicians who have profited by the frauds in the past and hope to gain by them in the future. These ad- vantages will not be relinquished free- ly and the unselfish men and women may as well realize first as last that they have a “hard row to hoe.” Ballot reform legislation is not a new conception in this State. It has been fried at various times and in sun- dry ways in the past by well meaning men of both parties who have been shamed by the spectacle of corrupt government and more or less discour- aged by the failures of their efforts at improvement. One reform law after another has been misused by election officers: or mutilated by political judges with the result that they have aggravated instead of abated the evils, But the impending effort may achieve the result. The personnel of the commission created by the Gov- ernor justifies this hope, at least. It is unfortunate that it wasn’t begun sooner. The inevitable impression that it is placed in a setting of self- ishness will almost necessarily mili- tate against the progress if it does not defeat its purpose. —“Boot-leg” coal is the newest thing. The striking miners are doing it up in the anthracite fields. Out in Kansas they “boot-leg” cigarettes, everywhere they “boot-leg” hooch, but “boot-leg” coal: Well, that’s some- thing else again. Philadelphia Election Frauds. Since the primary election in Sep- tember much evidence of fraud com- mitted in Philadelphia has been re- vealed. Absolute proof has been ob- tained that in nearly every voting dis- trict false returns were made for the purpose of building up great majori- ties for the organization candidates. The processes of gathering the evi- dence were hampered at every stage so that it was impossible to complete the work before the frauds were rati- fied by the general election. No doubt those engaged in the work were earnest in their purpose to correct a great evil. It may also be assumed that they were diligent in their efforts. But the intricacies and tardiness of the law defeated their purposes. Almost annually, “since time out of mind,” the same thing has occurred. Fraudulent votes and false returns in Philadelphia have reversed the result of the vote in State-wide elections fre- quently, and the outrages thus perpe- trated are indignantly denounced by good citizens in and out of the city. Frequent attempts have been made to punish the perpetrators of these crimes but after a brief period of time they have been abandoned, either be- cause they were too expensive or too difficult to pursue to the end. Gen- erally speaking the criminals respon- sible for the frauds have been reward- ed by generous party favors rather than punished for the most dangerous crimes in the catalogue. In the present instance considerable progress has been made in the sincere effort to punish the perpetrators of the frauds. A considerable number of election officers have been arrested and a vast amount of evidence of their guilt accumulated. But no good will come of this unless the movement is continued with unabated energy to its logical conclusion. In other words, if electoral reforms are to be obtained from the recent exposures of fraud it is essential that the prosecutions he pressed until just punishment is met- ed out to the criminals. It will be a hard task and heavy burden for those who have undertaken it, but it will be worth the effort and cheap at the cost. ‘to go on unchecked, would have been NO. 45. The World’s Wheat. From the Philadelphia Record. A Russian agricultural authority, Professor Ossinsky, of the Agricultur- al Academy at Moscow, has given some more detailed information about the wheat of his country than has been previously stated. He says the nor- mal pre-war production of wheat was 759,000,000 bushels, and that the pro- duction this year was 660,000,000 bushels, besides a large yield of rye and oats. And rye is more used in Russia than wheat, so that a good deal of this wheat production should be ex- portable, and shipments to France and Germany have been reported several times. The wheat harvest this year is more than three times what it was in 1921. The professor is making a tour of the United States and has been giy- ing special attention to ranch econom- ics and cotton production. Secretary Jardine has been warning the farmers against increasing their wheat production because so much is being produced abroad. Before the war Russia was our chief competitor in the world’s wheat markets, but when Turkey entered the war Russi could export nothing, and until this year it has cut no figure in the world’s supply. If it fed itself it was regard- ed as doing very well. Wheat has had to be shipped to Russia to relieve fam- ine sufferers. This year the harvest is nearly up to the pre-war average, and hereafter Russian competition must be reckoned on. . The area sown to wheat in Argen- tina is slightly more than last year, and the temperature and rainfall have been very favorable. The Australian area sown to wheat is slightly less than last year and climatic conditions have been unfavorable, and it is un- likely that the harvest will be nearly as good as the last one. The wheat production the past season in 29 countries, producing 98 per cent. of the Northern Hemisphere wheat out- side of Russia and China, was 8 per cent. above the crop of last year, put not equal to the crop of 1923. . The American farmer may look for something more remunerative Jan wheat, but he need not get into a panic because Russia is back in the ex- porting class and other countries are doing better than they have done in some recent years. It will be a good while before the domestic consump- tion absorbs all of the domestie pro- duction. Many countries ¢ wheat every year, ~~ 7 7A The Test. From the Cleveland Plain Dealer. The League of Nations has done one of the major things it was created to do. By prompt and vigorous action it has stopped a war. It could not prevent the beginning of a war. Nations may at any mo- ment begin to fight if they are so minded. The League offers means for the settlement of disputes without recourse to arms, but it is not gifted with prescience and cannot forestall a fight which it cannot foresee. In the Greco-Bulgarian conflict it has done the next best thing. It has stop- ped a war by issuing an ultimatum. Defiance of this ultimatum would have been ruinous in either Greece or Bulgaria. Compliance with the de- mands of the Council of the League means that both nations will receive fair play. A majority of the Council is composed of representatives of the Great Powers, and there is no doubt that these Powers would have taken any coercive steps prescribed by the Council. This is the greatest test yet faced by the League of Nations. Had war bee been permitted to blaze unchecked in the Balkans the opponents of the League would indeed have had cause for jubilation. With something concret crete to stand as a record the boubt- ers will find small basis for argument. Fact is stronger than theory. Of course it is to the interest of peaceful nations to do their utmost to prevent war, but in the present in- stance there has been a minimum of selfish concern. There is little doubt that the conflict, had it been permitted strictly localized. Greece and Bul- garia alone would have been the suf- ferers, as neither the Balkan nor the extra-Balkan States would have been dragged into participation. The promptness of the Council’s action is, therefore, doubly commendable, and is admirably justified by its instant ef- fectiveness. rr amin Election Problems. From the Wilkes-Barre Record. We believe the voting machine af- fords the best solution of the problem. It has the approval of a great many people who have had experieence with it and already there is considerable sentiment for its adoption in Pennsyl- vania. The election reform commis- sion appointed by the Governor is competent to make an honest inves- tigation of the results elsewhere and it can throw considerable light upon the subject. oe SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE —Recently discharged from the Harris- burg hospital where his right leg was am- putated following the development of am infection, John Hoops returned to the hos- pital on Monday with a fracture of the left leg. Hoops sustained the fracture when he fell down stairs at his home in Linden street. rv \ . £F —Mrs. Florence Thompson, 63 years old, of Clearfield county, is dead as the result of an explosion of a gallon can of kero- sene. She attempted to fill 1 lamp while it was burning and the explosion which followed ignited her clothes, and her burns were so serious that she died shortly afterward. a —Merle Hennaman, 11, son of George Henneman, of Mapleton Depot, is critie- ally ill in the J. C. Blair Meemorial hos- pital at Huntingdon, as the result of a fall Monday afternoon from the top of a sand quarry at Penn Glass Sand company, alighting 48 feet below on a railway track. He suffered internal injuries, including collapse of the left lung and broken ribs. —A short time after she had witnessed an automobile accident at McElhattan, last Friday, Mrs. Nancy Chubb suffered a heart attack and died at her home. Mrs. Chubb had been in good health prior to the al- tack and it is believed that excitement caused by the accident brought on the fa- tal attack. Lawrence Messerly, the station agent at McElhattan, whose car was struck by a Pennsylvania passenger train, escap- ed with only slight injuries. —The Rev. John W. Long, for the last five years president of Dickinson Semi- nary, Williamsport, has refused to allow his name to be considered for the presi- dency of West Virginia Wesleyan Univer- sity at Buckhannon, W. Va. Annocunce- ment of his decision was made at the fall meeting of the board of directors of the school last week. Before going to Wil« liamsport Rev. Long was pastor of the Methodist church at State College. —Merchzndise valued at $5,000 stolen from the freight station of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad, in Pittsburgh, has been recovered, following the arrest of six men Saturday in connection with disappear- ance of freight from the station over a period of two years. Confessions made by those arrested resulted in the recovery of the merchandise, detectives said. A total value of $25,000 was placed by police on freight reported missing from the station during the last two years. ‘ —Because of his failure to satisfy a ver- dict of $1,500 returned by a jury in a civil suit’ brought against him by John M. Sides, of Harrisburg, for alienation of the ‘affections of Mrs. Sides, Nick Demas was returned to the Dauphin county jail on a ‘¢apias. “Unless he settles the account he “must remain in prison at least fifty-five ‘days, according to Harrisburg attorneys. He had been held previously for five days for failure to pay the damages allowed, but | was ‘discharged upon petition to court. —Frank Cesaro, 48 years old, of Phila- delphia, was arrested Sunday night charg- ed with killing his wife by striking her on the head with a heavy shoe. The woman was found unconscious in her home during the day by neighbors who had heard a commotion in the house. She died from a ‘fractured skull. Cesaro told the police that he had not meant to kill his wife. He said they bad been tossing the shoe back and | forth to each other in play and that he had thrown it with too much speed, the shoe striking her on the head, as she tried to dodge it. —A conscience stricken thief performed good work up in Lehigh county on Satur- day night. During Friday night somebody robbed the Hersch hardware store at Cat- asauqua of $500 worth of goods. On Sun- day when the manager, Harry Aubrey, gave the store the usual looking over, he was indignant at signs of a further dis- turbance. He thought there had been another thief, but investigation showed that all the stolen goods but a revolver had been returned. The thief had employed even more skill to return his loot than originally to steal it. —Judge J. M. Barnett, of the Juniata county courts at Mifflintown, on Saturday sentenced Howard Hartman to serve three to six years in the western penitentiary, pay the costs and $1,000 fine after being convicted of stealing $1,600 from John Shearer, an aged man who is mentally un- balanced. Hartman committed the offense two years ago and made his get away, but Bradford Brown, a local undertaker, while hunting in Tuscarora valley a few days ago, saw and recognized Hartman. Brown marched him at the muzzle of his gun to the nearest justice of the peace where he was held in lieu of $2,000 bail. “—The will of David A. Howe, a promi- nent business man of Williamsport prior to his recent death, was filed for probate last Thursday. It contains a bequest of $50,000 to the Brown library to be used as a building fund for the erection of an ad- dition to the present library, of which he had been president of the board of trus- tees for seventeen years. Other bequests of a public nature were $2,000 to the Cove- nant Central Presbyterian church, and $1,000 to the Wildwood cemetery company. It also directs that the bequests shall not be reduced by taxation, but that the es tate shall pay the inheritance tax. —The fire which started twenty-three years ago in the old Black Diamond mines is still burning in the neighborhood of Mount Carmel, The fire started during the big strike of 1902 and was the result of dumping hot ashes from the boiler house in an open mine hole. In the twenty-three years that the fire has been raging it burned up close to a million tons of coal and put the Lehigh Valley company to an expense estimated at over a million dol- lars. Many of the mine chambers adjoin- ing and being a part of the Sioux No. 3, were dammed and walled off to stop the fire communicating to these workings. —Confessing nearly one hundred robber- ies of dwellings in Mt. Carmel and its vi- cinity, three young girls Monday lay bare a brief but sensational criminal career, when ararigned before Judge Strauss, at Sunbury. Not only did they enter dwell- ings and stores in order to steal garments of silk and satin, they admitted, but in a coal shed near the home of one of their —Col. George Nox McCain remarks, in a recent reminiscent article recall- ing the Quay Senatorial fight of twen- | ty-six years ago, that all of the then leading Republicans are dead, while a | number of the Democratic leaders of | that = period: still survive.” Nothing strange about that. Having their front feet in the trough all the time the Republicans eat too many plums and die of pclitical indigestion. number they arrayed themselves in the stolen raiment. Thus attired, they waited until the manager of a road house came along in an automobile and took them out of town, where they participated in the gay life of the resort until the early morn- ing hours. Then, returning to the coal shed, they changed back to their shabby everyday clothes and slipped into their homes. Two of the girls were sent to a State reform school and the other held for a court trial.