Bruen (INK SLINGS. —Lincoln would have been one hun- dred and seventeen years old had he been alive to celebrate this anniver- ‘sary of his birth. —The Legislature is scheduled to adjourn next week. It hasn’t done anything yet and probably won’t do much more than draw the salary allowance. - —Persons who think they just can’t get along without anthracite coal should remember that three quarters of the homes in the country have prob- ably never had anthracite in them. —Bellefonte wants a government building and all prospective candidates for Congress should be notified that unless they work for one for us there’ll be nothing doing so far as votes from this district are concerned. —Psychoanalysis is given credit for having reunited the Stillmans. After five years of front page scandal we are waiting to see whether this psycho stuff will point with pride to or under- take to pass the buck in the matter. —The base ball teams have started for their southern training camps, robins have been seen aplenty this week and we'd be all set for spring if we were only sure that the pesky little ground hog has all the snow out of his system. —From the way many Episcopalian clergymen are jumping on the Rev. Dr. Empringham, because of his decla- ration favoring a modification of the Volstead act, he will begin to think that there are more kinds of intemper- ance than one. ——Of course the season is about over now and we're thinking of out of door amusements, but we just can’t resist the impulse to ask the gentle- man who thought he was appalling us with his statements of what “the new one hundred thousand dollar theatre” was going to do, what became of all those Shubert bookings he said he had. —When we come face to face with the fact that on Saturday it required the attention of the courts of Centre county, the mayor of Bellefonte, the juvenile court officers, the president of the Red Cross, the community nurse, the chief of police, the poor depart- ments of Bellefonte and Spring town- ship, three “or four women welfare workers, countless cakes of soap, scrub brushes and clothes to clean up and properly attire one family is it not time to organize a Near Home Relief drive ? —If everybody gets behind the mayor he'll collect so darned many fines that we’ll have no taxes to pay. Here’s councilmen Cunningham and * Bradley -and borough “manager Sei-" bert; they just worked their heads off to make the lock-up environment the beauty spot of the town. And after they have it all dolled up nobody wants to stay there.. The police drag guests out there almost every night and among them the first one has yet to be found who wouldn’t give up twelve dollars and a half, rather than occupy his room for five days for nothing. —Just by way of proving the wis- dom of the advice we gave the credit- ors of the Centre County bank three years ago we want to call their attention to the fact that the average earnings of the trust com- panies and state banks in Philadelphia last year was 29.44 per cent on their capitalization. It has been reported to us that the national banks, in the same period, had average earnings of over 35 per cent. If the Centre Coun- ty creditors had listened to us instead of those who are exploiting them they would not have been out of the hole now, but they would have had an in- stitution going so that it would have had them out by the time the receivers will be able to close their business out finally. —We’d like to have a little hard coal just as much as anybody, but we're right here to applaud President Coolidge’s notice to the Senate that he doesn’t propose to meddle in the strike. Let the operators and the miners fight it out themselves. Gov- ernment interference of any kind is certain to leave one side or the other with a grievance that will result in another strike next fall, just as it has done annually in the past. The coun- try isn’t suffering for want of coal. It is only wrought up because some want the kind of coal they can’t get and others want to make political capital out of a dispute that will be settled in twenty-four hours when operator and miner each comes to realize that obstinacy gets no one anywhere. —It seems strange to us that there have been few defenders of the charge that Governor Pinchot has spent more in three years than Gov. Sproul did in four. We know nothing of the substance on which the accusa- tion is made and the figures cited in- dicate that he has, but is it not perti- nent to inquire as to the relative re- sults of the expenditures? It is just possible that Gov. Pinchot has more to show for what his administration has cost than the Sproul regime can point to. For that matter Governor Sproul’s administration cost within -eighty- three million dollars as much as all administrations from 1840 to 1895, put together. Be fair with Gif. It isn’t the amount of money he has spent that counts, its the return he’s getting for it that the business-like citizen :should be interested in. : VOL. 71. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. Secretary Mellon for Pepper. Secretary Mellon, having finally de- clared his purpose to support Senator Pepper for re-election, it may be said now that Republican organization lines are laid so far as that office is concerned. The Secretary was a trifle tardy in expressing himself on the subject and now that he has spoken it may be assumed that he at least believes that Governor Pinchot will be the opposing candidate. Mr. Mellon is a shy creature and averse to entering into or inviting antagonisms. In fact his most intimate friends believe that as between any other aspirant than Pinchot he would have refrained from a public declaration of preference. But his antipathy to Pinchot is so deap-seated that he cannot conceal his feelings. There is still a possibility that Mr. Straasberger, of Norristown, will make a try for the nomination. He has been in Europe for some time but is now on his way home for the purpose of looking the situation over. It is practically agreed among the politi- tions of the party that Congressman Vare will not announce, now that Mel- lon has declared for Pepper. The “wets” of the party, and there are more of them than the prohibitionists like to acknowledge, are anxious to put a candidate of their views into the con- test. Pinchot being bone dry and Pep- per having been converted to the faith the “wets” feel that allegiance to their cause requires them to make an im- posing gesture at least. Vare would have been satisfactory to them but he will hardly run without Mellon’s sup- port. It is a safe guess, therefore, that Pepper and Pinchot will be the oppos- ing candidates for Senator at the Spring primary, but no substantial sign has been given thus far as to who the candidate for Governor will be. Usually interest centers in the gubernational candidate but this year the Senatorial contest dominates. There are those among the “close-ins,” however, who imagine that the. align- ment of Secretary Mellon with the Pepper interests-may indicate a- pre- ference for: John A. Tener for the other favor. “Tener is closely identi="] fied with Mellon’s ‘business and politi- cal friends and his record in public life shows a strong leaning toward “big” interests. Some of the wisest freely-declare that such a combination is at least probable though within the last day or so rumors are afloat that Mr. Mellon does not look with dis- favor on Secretary of Labor Davis as a gubernorial suggestion. ———————— ete. ——-The tax bill seems to be moving along smoothly in Congress but the “worst is still to come.” Anthracite Coal a Public Utility. In a published statement protesting against the action of the committee of the Legislature on the “coal bills” Gov. ernor Pinchot scores heavily. “I doubt whether there ever was a more per- fect example of the betrayal of public rights,” he declares, and adds, “in my opinion the time has come to take the anthracite monopoly in hand and to show it that in a contest of power the people of this Commonwealth are stronger than any hard-boiled mo- nopoly whatever. In dealing with an- thracite as in dealing with gas, elec- tricity and transportation, the men who have so long defied the interests of the people should be made to recog- nize that in Pennsylvania the public good comes first. In support of his promise that the anthracite coal interest is a monopoly Governor Pinchot shows that one of the units of this trade combination within five years from 1919 paid an average of upward of sixty-four per cent on its capital: another during three years paid in dividends 124 per cent a year on its capital: another paid 121 per cent, and for the years 1921 and 1922 another corporation in the group paid its shareholders the enor- mous aggregate of 395 per cent, or an average of 197 per cent. a year.” If these dividend payments do not afford sufficient proof that a monopoly ex- ists the report of the Federal Coal Commission appointed by the late President Harding supplies it. The coal bills submitted to the Leg- islature by the Pinchot administra- tion proposed to declare anthracite coal a public utility which might in an emergency be taken under control of the State. After a prolonged and searching investigation the Harding Coal Commission, composed of an eminent mining engineer, an equally eminent lawyer and a business man of high standing, officially reported that “the mining and marketing of anthracite should be regarded as af- fected by public interest and regulated as a public utility.” The implied menace to the monopoly brought the then pending strike to an end and the passage of the bills in question might have had the same affect at this time of danger. : $ Ballot Reform Bill Reported. Favorably On Monday evening the Senate Coolidge delivered an address in which | Committee on Elections reported for | consideration on the floor all the bal- | lot bills. © The Governor’s criticism of { the stifling of the coal bills put a stop | to that process of elimination. The machine managers are hard-boiled but not impervious. But the action is no - guarantee of substantial reform leg- islation.. The most important meas- ures may be defeated in the end. The machine is not willing to relinquish the advantage which existing laws afford it. The bill to compel the open- ing of ballot boxes on petition will be passed and that improvement will be worth much. But the measure limiting the assistance to voters is the para- mount reform. The plan of the machine managers is to make a false pretense of reform. This purpose is embodied in Senator Shantz’s bill to appoint a commission to investigate the subject and report at a later session. It ought to be en- titled “a bill to promote fraud and protect criminals until after the next gubernatorial and senatorial elec- tions.” It would enable the machine to excel its past performances and guarantee the nomination and election of a machine Governor and a corpora- tion Senator. Thus entrenched the : ballot thieves would be secure for an {indefinite period regardless of the finding of the commission. In other ! words the Republican machine is i fighting for its life. But there ought to be no uncertainty of the result of this contest beween fraud and honesty in elections. Out- side of four or five centers of popu- lation the people of Pennsylvania favor honest elections. Except the comparatively few who profit directly by the frauds, the people of Pennsyl- vania derive no advantage from cor- ruption of the ballot. In view of these facts every Senator and Representa- tive in the General Assembly who votes against the reform legislation betrays his constituents and violates his obligations. Such perfidy ought to be rebuked and if the voters are just to themselves none of them will be ostracised from public favor. ——The miners are trying to entice the Governor to run for Senator and the Governor’s political enemies are afraid they will succeed. Satan Rebuking Sin. The very efficient and fairly versa- tile chairman of the Republican State committee, Mr. W. Harry Baker, im- poses a rather heavy tax on public credulity in his reply to Governor Pin- chot’s recent inquiry as to the atti- tude of the Republican organization with respect to the prohibition en- forcement legislation pending in the extra session of the General Assem- bly. He says: “Having recommended to the Assembly certain drafts of leg- islation for the enforcement of the prohibition amendment you are now striking a staggering blow at the very cause you pretend to serve by trying to make it the sport of party poli- tics.” This is a fine example of “Satin rebuking sin.” The day before the session began i Mr. Baker called at the office of the Governor and speaking for the Repub- lican organization assured Mr. Pin- chot that his proposed legislation would be treated fairly and courteous- ly. The first important act of the or- ganization-controlled Legislature was to clandestinely summon the oppo- nents of some important bills and summarily eliminate them from the calendar. Mr. Baker had voluntari- ly assumed the character of “spokes- man” for the organization, which he had a right to do as chairman. But in the act he had conveyed not only to the Governor but to the public an understanding of the fact that he spoke for the organization on all sub- jects of legislation. In the circumstances it was entirely reasonable for the Governor to assume that as the machine had worked so smoothly and destructively on the coal bills it might act with the same un- animity and celerity in considering the prohibition enforcement measures, and as a tactician on the other side of the question it was wise to seek infor- mation from the well established source. It was not trying to make the question “the sport of party politics.” The organization had already achieved that sinister purpose. It was a move- ment to divorce a purely moral sub- ject from party politics and it failed for the reason that Chairman Baker had determined to degrade the General Assembly into a party machine. ——As for us the handle of the that of the snow shovel. —— Speaking of the Stillmans it may be said that if they will stay in Europe much will be forgiven. trusted again. They should be forever lawn mower looks much better than BELLEFONTE, PA.. FEBRUARY 12. 1926, Coolidge Planning for Another Term. | Recently, in Washington, President he dwelt on his favorite theme, {economy in administration. He spoke -of the savings which have been ac- , complished since the restoration of the government to Republican control five years ago and ascribed the result to | the wise policies of his party. “To i me,” he said, “all these proposals for conservation and economy do not seem either selfish or provincial, but rather they reveal a spirit dedicated to the service of humanity.” Then as proof of the achievements he spoke of the tax reductions which have al- ready been made and declared that other tax reductions will be made pos- sible by pursuing the same wise pol- icies. When the Mellon tax bill was tak- en up for consideration in the Com- mittee of Ways and Means of the House of Representatives the Dem- ocrats on the committee protested that conditions of the treasury and the revenues would justify a de- crease of taxation to the extent of $500,000,000 instead of the $320,000,- 000 provided for in the bill. The spokesman for the minority then stat- ed that the policy of the administra- tion was to create a considerable sur- plus: for the current year in order that another reduction might be made by the Congress immediately preced- ing the next Presidential campaign. The pending reduction was enough to make campaign claims during the coming congressional contest and an- other two years hence would serve the same purpose for the Presidential contest. Mr. Coolidge, in his speech, con- firms that estimate of the Republican plans. The Democrats forced a tax cut of nearly fifty millions more ‘than that contemplated by the administra- tion and in order to benefit the several million tax payers whose incomes are less than five thousand dollars annual- ly consented to a cut in the income tax of Secretary of the Treasury Mellon to the extent of half a million dollars. Bu the tax payers of the country hax beens cheated by the administra- ton, For "it 1s how evident that a re- duction of more than the half billion proposed by the Democrats might have been safely made without the least impairment of the service or cheese-paring of any kind. ——Reduced to the last analysis it is a contest between fraudulent and honest elections in Pennsylvania. Disappointed Hope of Improvement. As the work of the special session of the Legislature progresses our con- fidence in the value of the enterprise weakens. Before the event we firm- ly believed that substantial ballot re- form legislation would be promptly enacted. This belief was based on a theory that the Legislators of the State are men of average intelligence. The current impression covering a number of years had been that elect- oral frauds were common in Phila- delphia and Pittsburg. The exposures which followed the primary elections in those cities and Scranton last fall emphasized the popular protest against this dangerous form of crime. We reasoned that in the face of such facts no Legislator would dare vote against reform. The Legislature assembled in extra session for the purpose of correcting this evil on the 13th of January. It is now completing the fifth week of its labors. At the beginning of the second week the date for final ad- journment was fixed for the 18th of this month. This limited the session to a period of six weeks. Five weeks of that period have been consumed and nothing has been done in the line of achievement. A resolution providing for payment of the expenses, includ- ing salaries of the members has pass- ed one branch and that is the sum total of accomplishment. The en- tire time of the session has been giv- en to jockying and devices to confuse and discredit the Governor. But the extra session may not be entirely without value to the people at that. Even a cursory scrutiny of the proceedings reveals the cause which has brought disappointment to a vast majority of the people of Penn- sylvania. ‘The Republican machine is obsessed with the absurd notion that the people are indifferent to justice and right. It believes that the peo- ple of Pennsylvania will not only tol- erate but approve any crime that aids | it in perpetuating its power. In this attitude it pays scant respect for the intelligence and even less for the in- tegrity of the people. This attitude, plainly shown, may arouse popular indignation throughout the State and compel the reforms which have been defeated. ——The State Senate favors law enforcement but the House of Repre- sentatives has the last say. NO. 7. The Farmer and the Tariff.’ From the Philadelphia Record. The President’s attempt some weeks ‘ago to convince the farmers that the protective tariff was a great benefit to them and cost them extremely little failed to convince Professor John D, | Black, of the University of Minnesota, who explained that the President’s idea of the lightness of the tariff burden upon the farmers was due to the fact that his estimate rested only on the amount of imported goods that the farmers consumed. “It failed to take into account the extra amount the farmer consumer was required to pay upon protected American, pro- ducts.” z This omission is vital. The main purpose of protected duties is to “hold the umbrella” over the American manufacturers, Under the protection of a high duty on a foreign article the American manufacturers are able to raise their prices proportionately. Sometimes the domestic price is the full amount of the foreign price plus the duty. In many cases it is less than that; there is enough domestic competition to affect the price in some small degree. But all prices of do- mestic products are enhanced by the . The Democratic National Commit- tee has been at some pains to ascer- tain how much the tariff costs the American people. Several . private economists have made approximate computations of the proportion be- tween the increase of domestic prices and the amount the tariff adds to the cost of foreign articles. . The most conservative estimate we have seen is that the increase of domestic prices is five or six times the duties collect ed on imported goods which the Treas- ury gets. There are estimates of the amount the tariff adds to the prices of domestic articles that run above! this. It is perfectly evident upon a, moment’s reflection that the consumer, whether farmer or urban- resident, is affected by the jarit fn his domes- tic as well as his imported purchases. The increased price of the import-. ed article goes to the Treasury; the increased price of the domestic article goes to the manufacturer, and it is from five or six to eight or nine times: -as much as the Treasury gets. consumer does not. escape t : The duty | by buying 8 Jomestie article; he merely pays it to-a_ age Interest instead of to'the Treasury. Of esurse’ the manufacturer says he in wages, but he is mistaken. The duty is generally more than the-en- tire labor cost in this country, and. this was pointed out last year by the New England branch of the Ameri- can Federation of Labor in its denun- ciation of wage reductions in the tex- tile mills. The President indicated that the tariff added only two per cent. to the prices paid by the American farmer. Some eminent economists have put it as high as 40 per cent. The very conservative Professor Black put it at somewhere between 10 and 20 per cent. His figures are certainly low enough. They are probably a good deal too low. Daredevils “Not Wanted” in Mills. From the Pittsburg Post. The Standard Steel Works at Lewis. town states that none of its 5,000 em- ployes has lost time through a mishap since early in October. It would be a highly creditable record for a village of such population in which a large percentage of the inhabitants did not come in contact with machinery or furnaces or the other things wherein danger lurks in steel works; for a great industrial establishment it is unusual. In explanation of the Standard Steel Works’ enviable record it is stated that “safety first” has been a hobby with the company for more than a dec- ade, and it has such a horror of mis- haps of the kind that cause workmen to be killed or disabled that it will not retain in its employ any man who shows lack of regard for his own safety. : That is an attitude that is worthy of the consideration of other manu- facturers and employers generally in whose establishments mishaps are liable to occur. The reckless work- man should not be kept; he sots a bad example. There are remunerative jobs in the movies for men and women who are willing to risk their lives in spectacu- lar “stunts.” Daredevils are useful in some kinds of circus and theatrical performances. Praise and promotion await the soldier who in time of war gives no thought to his personal safe- ty. In time of peace we honor those who scorn danger in the performances of some heroic act such as the rescue of a person confronted by death. But while, as thus indicated, bold defi- ance of peril is commendable under some circumstances it is not virtue when exhibited in an industrial es- tablishment in the ordinary routine of labor. On the contrary it is rep- rehensible in mill or mine, for the workman who is not concerned over his own safety is likely to imperil his fellows as well as himself. ——That Washington lawyer who is attempting to restrain the Secre- tary of State from certifying our adherence to the World Court believes that “it pays to advertise.” —Subscribe for the “Watchman.” - operators. pays'it out | SPRAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Seized with a heart attack while on his way to a physician’s office in a taxi- cab, G.-W. Kreider, 50, of Reading, died last week at Atlantic City, where he had been visiting. . : —Six firemen were injured last Thurs- day while fighting a fire which followed an explosion in the Star Theatre at Tar- entum, near Pittsburgh, with a conse- quent loss of more than $30,000. —Many friends and charities are named beneficiaries in the will of the late Senator John P. Harris, which was filed for pro- bate in the Allegheny county court. The estate is valued approximately at $1,500,- 000. . —-A fossil of a tree branch, believed to be more than 100,000,000 years old, was found by a workmen in the Harmar mine of the Consumer Mining company, near Pittsburgh. It was removed to the Car- negie Institute of Technology. —Falling under a moving box car which he was riding, Charles Richards, a brake- man in the Allentown yards of the Central Railroad of New Jersey, was instantly killed when the wheels passed over his body. —Charged with attempts to extort mon- ey from proprietors of pool rooms by promising to return to them slot ma- chines seized in raids upon payment of 350 to $75, Constable Joseph Reed, of Free- mansburg, was arrested by Bethlehem police. —Money was won and lost by a num- ber of persons in Hazelton, who bet that the coal strike would be settled during the last conference of the miners and Odds of five to one were giv- en by persons confident in the termina- tion of the strike. —Pleading guilty to a charge of asault, Joseph Mackanski, of Edwardsville, was sentenced by Judge Fuller, of Wilkes- Barre to stay in the county jail until the end of the miners’ strike. Stanley Bog- azyk, of Hazleton, charged with violation of liquor laws, met a similar fate. —Adhering to promises of economy dur- ing his administration, Dr. LeRoy E. Chap- man, elected last fall as burgess of War- ren, near Kane, last week, vetoed a res- olution of the borough council raising his salary. The council, it is believed, will raise the salary of the burgess over his veto. —Use of stickers at the election and the ‘violation of the right to secrecy was charg- ed in the petition of twenty-five residents of North Girard who request the oust- ing of a burgess and seven members of council elected at a special election held on January 5, when the community was elevated from a township. ' —The American Window Glass com- pany’s plant No. 5, in Kane, Pa., will go into operation February 17 after a shut- ‘down of three months. Former employes are given the preference in getting men on the jobs. The factory expects to rum steadily for two years aside from the short periods of idleness while tanks are being repaired. —The elopement and marriage at Elk- ton, on Thursday of last week, of Gordon Weld Strawbridge, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick H. Strawbridge, socially prom- inent in Philadelphia, to Miss Elizabeth M. Echternach, a. stenographer in a pub- lishing house where young Strawbridge was working, was made known there the same evening. —The Altoona-Harrisburg east bound passenger local was held up last Wednes- day night on the west side of the Spruce creek tunnel by a black bear seated be- tween the rails. The bear paid no atten- tion to the approaching train and the en- gineer, seeing the living obstruction out- lined on the snow, was forced to stop. The bear finally left of his own volition and the train proceeded. —John McCann, 40 years old, of Dun- cannon, was severely injured Sunday night when he fell fifteen feet from a ladder in the engine room at the capitol. McCann had crawled to the top of the "adder to turn off a valve on one of the boilers. Other workers in the room witnessed his fall. In falling he struck a piece of pipe on the floor and suffered numerous deep cuts of the hip and back but no serious injuries. —Open fire places and the old-fashioned wood-burning stove, the Saturday night bath tub and the outdoor pump slowly are passing from Pennsylvania's farms. A survey completed by the State Depart- ment of Agriculture showed 39,538 farm houses equipped with furnaces, 22,889 with bath tubs and 20,104 with running water. The greater part of these improvements have been made within the last fifteen years. » —The farmers of Pennsylvania, accord- ing to the first figures ever compiled by the bureau of markets of the State Depart- ment of Agriculture, did a business of $32,- 409,000 through their co-operative buying and selling organizations in 1924. Five of the large co-operative organizations oper- ating in several of the eastern States trans- acted business amounting to $26,049,000 with Pennsylvania farmers, while ninety- four local organizations made total sales aggregating $6,360,000. Over 14,000 farm- ers in the State are affiliated with these organizations. —A truck containing finished silk val- ued at $150,000, caught fire last Thursday morning at Farmersville, six miles west of Easton, and the contents completely de- stroyed. The truck belonged to the Ar- row Carreir corporation, of Paterson N. J., and had left Allentown for New York Wed- nesday night but became disabled the greater part of the night along the high- way. While the driver, Marinus Jery, and his helper, Charles Abel, both of Pater- son, were drinking a cup of coffee in a hotel they were informed of the fire. A call: was sent to the firemen of Wilson borough, but they could use only chemicals as there was no water to fight the flames. —Sheriff Pettit, of Bloomsburg, on Fri- day uncovered the third jail delivery plot in the county jail since January 1, when a hole eighteen inches in diameter and par- tially through the wall was found under the cot of Stephen Lucas, of Mount Car- mel, awaiting trial. The sheriff blamed Albert Kumites, awaiting sentence for at- tempted bank robbery. The discovery was made after Kumites had been seen in Lucas’ cell. A knife blade, fork and sharp- ened chair’ rung were found in the cell, “the dirt being kept in a paper under Lucas’ eot. The hole would have led into- an abandoned jail yard from which escape would have been easy. The cell was one “of the few not steel lined.