————————— INK SLINGS. —Garden seeds will soon be appear- ing in the store windows. ——The bankers in session at Har- risburg, the other day, assured us we are enjoying “unprecedented prosperi- ty.” Thanks for this information. —The calendar tells that in twenty- three days spring will be here. Lets hope that the calendar does better by way of making good than the ground- hog did. —If there were no jobs and other perquisites to be handed out there would be no machines in politics and the really fit man would then be elect- ed to office. ——-It looks as if Vare really in- tends to run for Senator. He has al- ‘ready promised his seat in the House to another fellow, according to news- paper gossip. ——The Patriotic Sons of America, of Dauphin county, in session on Washington’s birthday, adopted reso- lutions condemning Legislators for killing the ballot reform legislation. —Some day we're going to turn the pile of “unfinished business” on our desk up-side-down and then two spe- cially facetious readers——one in Col- orado, the other in Maryland are going to have an entire column -de- voted to them. —The new bird is a starling. Joe Undercoffer, Tom Lamb and George Brown are nature fakirs. They were only trying to scare us when they de- clared it to be the “cow-bird”. Any- thing alar, with cow attached to its name strikes terror to us. —Only a few weeks ago new May- ors and Burgesses all over the State were in the spot-light because of the general reformations in municipal con- duct they promised. Today we hear little or nothing of them. Have they made good or are they back trackin? ——This matter of worriment about getting Bellefonte “on the map” would be taken more seriously by a lot of us if it wasn’t invariably the disease of someone who only located here because Bellefonte is on the map and was put there, long ago, by her unselfish men and women. —Just wait until the next Congress of the D. A. R. When the ladies get into session they’ll put a stop to this unseemly scramble of the “wets” and “drys” to raise the ghost of George ‘Washington at the head of their armies. Their’s is the right to see that George reposes in peace and we’ll bet they’ll resolute with many whereases and therefor be it resolveds just as soon as they convene in Wagsh- ington. —Mrs. John O. Miller is on the stump again. This time, she says she is out to urge the League of Women voters to “get out the vote” in order to rout the gang. Isn’t Mrs. Miller just the best little applesauce peddler in Pennsylvania. What she is really trying to do is get out the vote to keep the gang in. It will name the candidates of the Republican party and it will control them after the Mrs. Millers of Penn- sylvania have elected them—and she knows that far better than we do. —The Republican party made Pin- chot Governor of Pennsylvania. Its Governor called the special session of the Legislature. Whether the special convention was necessary or not is im- material. The fact remains that it cost the tax payers nearly half a mil- lion dollars and simply because the Legislature that the Republican party has given the State was out of harmo- ny with the Governor the Republican party has given the State the time was frittered away without a single constructive enactment toward law enforcement as applied to the poisoned rum traffic or corruption of elections: Isn’t it time that those Republicans who are honest, christian men lay aside the narrow partisanship, that drives them into party lines at elec- tion time, long enough to purge their party of little men and make it some- thing that away down in their hearts they don’t feel like having to apolo- gize for. —After we get through reading all the communications we have received in response to our inquiry for informa- tion as to the unidentified bird we think our alma mater would be justified in decorating us with the degree of Doctor of Onithology. They've written from California, Maine and Florida and one whom we had always regard- ed as a friend sat down at his desk in Wilmington. Delaware, and crushed us with the following: “Anyone as fa- miliar with ‘chippies’ as you once were, and who has looked over as many ‘chickens’ as I know you have becomes a pathetic figure to me when he has to ask someone else to intro- duce him to a new bird.” Isn’t it awful, the mess we've gotten into. Even the family cat brought a starling in and laid it at our feet on Sunday morning. We mention this latter fact because of the pleasure we have de- rived from the discovery that the papers we find spread over the freshly mopped kitchen linoleum are not put there to protect it from the smudges of our sloshy foot wear. They are there for the erudition of the cat. And the Sunday morning episode has convinced us that the cat is reading the Watch- man else, why would it have started out to catch a starling just after in- tently eyeing one of those papers on the floor. Bema ftn Demgera i VOL. 71. BEL STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. LEFONTE, PA.. FEBRUARY 26. 1926. NO. 9. rama Woodward Bill Wisely Vetoed. Governor Pinchot has wisely vetoed the emasculated Woodward bill, the only ballot measure passed by the General Assembly during the extra session. It had been previously re- pudiated by its author and justly con- demned by all sincere supporters of ballot reform. Under existing law judges “may” order the opening of ballot boxes on petition of five voters resident in the district, alleging fraud. Under that provision judges who favor honest elections would be likely to order the opening of boxes. The Woodward bill substituted the word “shall” for “may.” It meant an im- provement. But it was amended by order of the machine, so that if the alleged fraud were not shown the com- plainant would be penalized. The Woodward bill was a substitute for a measure recommended by the committee of Seventy-six which pro- vided that the petitioners might be residents of other voting precincts within the county. The committee was influenced to its recommendation be- cause in the election districts in which the evil prevails the party machine terrorizes voters to such an extent that they are afraid to complain. But the Woodward bill was an improve- ment on the present law and in its original form was accepted by the re- formers. But with the amendment of Senator Stites, it became a shelter for ballot box stuffers. For that reason the machine managers gave it eager and earnest support. They have even agreed to reward Stites. Under existing law an election board may withhold the announcement of the result of an election and the re- turn of the ballot boxes indefinitely. In the event of a petition to open a ballot box the board has ample time to secretly open the box and correct the fault complained of and the peti- tioners may then be prosecuted for perjury. The Stites amendment, there- fore, becomes a most ingenious scheme to protect fraud and encourage ballot polution. In vetoing it Governor Pin- chot has courageously performed a valuable public service. If the Repub- lican machine rewards Senator Stites with the nomination for Lientenant ‘Governor it willbe a high and im- perative duty of the electorate to de- feat his election. ——Senator Pepper is now in favor of branch banks but the Senator is likely to be for anything from this time until the primary election. A Growing and Menacing Evil. There is one evil, probably of recent origin but of increasing proportions, both in Washington and Harrisburg, that presents a menacing aspect. It is the encroachments of one branch of the government upon the prerogatives of others. Both the federal and State governments are based upon the theory of three separate and inde- pendent departments. Of late years there have been maintained a constant and some times a threatening conflict between the executive and legislative departments of the governments at Washington and Harrisburg. During the recent extraordinary session of the General Assembly this conflict has been present and menacing from start to finish. The constitution of the United States and the constitution of Penn- sylvania alike authorize the President and the Governor to give Congress or the General Assembly information of the state of the Union or the Com- monwealth but neither is authorized or expected to draft legislation or frame bills for passage and offer them as personal expressions of public policy. Until within recent years no- body ever heard of “administration bills,” and such a thing as group or bunch legislation marked as adminis- tration bills was never dreamed of until a comparatively short time ago. During the extra session of the Leg- islature some measures were opposed by some Legislators for no better rea- sons than that they were “administra- tion bills.” The Governor of Pennsylvania has a legal and moral right to resist en- croachments upon his prerogatives by the Legislature, and it his duty to do so in order to maintain the dignity of his great office. But it would be just as well and possibly a good deal bet- ter if he refrained, in future, from framing legislation “in bunches” and sending it to the General Assembly stamped with his approval and marked “administration bills.” If the Senators and Representatives in the General Assembly are incapable of framing legislation they desire to pass, they are unfit for the position they occupy. But fit or unfit for the job, the Gov- ernor has no right to force his meas- ures upon them. —-Some of the alibis delinquent One Issue Clearly Defined. One of the important issues of the impending campaign in Pennsylvania is so clearly defined that it will not be necessary to write it into the platform of either party. The extra session cf the Legislature fixed it indellibly. The Republican party has declared posi- tively and unequivocally in favor of ballot pollution. The committee of Seventy-six, a group of men and women of high character, uninfluenced by partisan considerations, unani- mously recommended a series of bal- lot laws which would have made fraudulent voting hazardous .if not impossible and the Republican organi- zation deliberately killed every one of them. That was a willful, wicked and wanton declaration in favor of ballot frauds. For many years the Republican or- ganization has maintained political control of Pennsylvania by fraudulent votes and false returns of the elec- tions. This evil had become so flagrant that thousands of honest men and women of that party faith have be- come disgusted and asked for correc- tion. But the leaders of the party, in their zeal for plunder, forced a ser- vile Legislature to defeat every meas- ure that promised reform. They rea- lize that an honest vote and correct return will drive them out of power and possibly send them into prisons. The defeat of honest ballot legisla- tion is a confession of weakness. They see the “hand writing on the wall” and tremble for the consequence. In the campaign soon to begin one of the dominant issues will be fair or fraudulent elections. The Republican managers realize that thousands of voters who cherish the principles which influenced Lincoln to accept the political philosophy he adopted will vote against their candidates. But they believe that frauds in voting and false returns of the vote will compensate for such losses. It is a sinister hope based on criminal impulses. But the challenge has been issued and the Democrats will accept the guage of battle. The Democratic party has done all it could to correct the great- est evil of present day politics and if it is vigorous and vigilant it will win the fight. : ——The Democrats in Congress didn’t get all the tax reduction they wanted but they got nearly a hundred million dollars more than the adminis- tration wanted to give. mm Malice Plainly Shown. On the last day of the extra session of the General Assembly Senator Barr, of Pittsburgh, not only refuted the statement of Auditor General Martin with respect to comparative expenses of the Pinchot and Sproul administrations but proved that the Republican machine has been wickedly perverting records of the government in order to discredit Governor Pinchot in the public mind. Auditor General Martin reported to the Legislature that within three years the Pinchot administration had cost the public $54,000,000 more than the four years of Governor Sproul’s term. Senator Barr shows that the excess was used in paying debts of the Sproul term. When Pinchot entered upon the duties of his office he found unpaid claims against the State amounting to a trifle more than $31,000,000. The Legislature of 1923 increased the ap- propriations for schools and other pur- poses to an amount in excess of $24,- 000,000. The Sproul debt and in- creased school appropriation totaled a sum greater than the increased ex- penditures referred to by Auditor General Martin. When it is consider- ed that the Pinchot administration paid the Sproul administration debt, the increased school appropriation and had a balance in hand at the close of the last fiscal year, it is plain that it was economical rather than pro- fligate. This “bearing false witness” is of itself a grave crime and the malice behind it is clearly revealed in the circumstances attending it. On Tues- day, February 9th, the resolution ask- ing for a comparative statement of expenditures of the Pinchot and pre- vious administrations was read in the Senate. On Wednesday, February 10th, Senator Barr offered a resolution asking that the report define the uses to which the expenditures were put. Auditor General Martin was able to make his false report in response to the McDade resolution on Monday, February 15th, but was unable to re- ply to the Barr resolution of a day later by February 18th, the day of final adjournment, ——Pinchot still withholds his an- nouncement but it is a safe bet it will come in due time and cause a lot of noise. Legislators will invent will be amus- ing, but all of them will be absurd. ——The just and unpust walked in slippery places yesterday morning. Exposure of the Aluminum Trust Coming. Recent incidents justify the hope that the iniquities of the aluminum trust will be revealed. The adminis- tration has been employing every available expedient to shield this monopoly from exposure. But ap- pearances indicate that its defensive resources are about exhausted. The Democratic Senators having dispaired of forcing a Senatorial inquiry now propose to ask the President to em- ploy special counsel, as was done in the Teapot Dome scandal, “to take such action, civil or criminal, as the facts might warrant.” The adminis- tration Senators will oppose such pro- ceeding, of course, just as they op- posed an investigation of the mono- poly. But it is believed a majority of the, Senators will adopt it. The aluminum trust, the most dan- gerous monopoly of all, has been op- erating from the beginning under the protection of the administration. The leading figure in the combination is Andrew W. Mellon, Secretary of the Treasury. For more than five years, in fact ever since the beginning of the Harding administration, it has been robbing the people by excessive charges on aluminum ware which has come to be a domestic necessity. For more than three years strenuous ef- forts have been in progress to check its plundering processes. But the admin- istration has been able to defeat every measure proposed to expose its methods or check its operations. It is hoped now that a plan has been de- vised that will succeed. The opposition of the administration to the plan has already been indicated. Senator Cummins, chairman of the Judiciary committee, protests that “it would be usurping the functions of the executive department of the gov- ernment.” Even if that is true there is a precedent for it. When the Tea- pot Dome oil scandal had attained such proportions that it could no longer be concealed the Senate not only directed but ordered the Presi- dent to take precisely the same course. Harry Daugherty was at the head of the, Department of Justice then and was discredited because of his venal- | ity. The present Attorney General may be honest enough but he is so stupid that nothing can be expected from him. I ———— fp —C——C— TT ——A good many landlords in Belle- fonte have added another boost to their rents this spring, running any- where from ten to as high as thirty- three per cent. The high cost of everything these days, the increase in property valuations and the demand for comfortable homes are the reasons given for the increase, and the ordi- nary workingman and the average salaried employee are the ones who will be hit the hardest by the increase. There has been no advance in wages and salaries and many families will have to figure closely to meet the raise in rents. Washington had a variable birthday in Bellefonte on Monday. The banks and the postoffice were closed tight but all other business places were open as usual. It was 194 years on Monday since the birth of Washington and 150 years since he won the declaration of independ- ence. In his wildest imaginings at that time he probably never dreamed that the day would come when the country he fought so hard to free would one day become the greatest government on earth. ——Did you read the Tree Survey for Bellefonte, in last week’s Watch- man, if not, do so at once, that you may be sure to plant the right kind of a shade tree and put it in its right place. By this you are only doing for posterity what your ancestors did for you, in addition to having the satisfac- tion of knowing that Bellefonte is your home town, and what you do for it, in adding to its beauty you are do- ing for yourself, in increasing the value of its properties. ——If the county commissioners make all the changes and improve- ments recommended by the grand jury this week they have a busy time ahead of them. One recommendation made is one that should have been done long ago, that of a separate place in the jail for the detention of female pris- oners. The main question to decide is whether the present office will be the proper place for such quarters and whether it will be big enough to hold them all. ——Senator Stites is trying his best to earn the promised favor of the ma- chine, but unless signs are misleading it will be an empty honor. ——Governor Tener proposes “to prove his faith by works.” He is going An Indefensible Session. From the Pittsburgh Post. The lack of results of the special meeting of the Legislature from the standpoint of public interest leaves the session itself in an indefensible position. It is true that Governor Pinchot was unable to convince the public of the necessity of a special session, which is supposed to be summoned only to meet emergencies, and that the personal politics of the Executive cropped out at times in an offensive manner. It is true that the Republican state organization played ruthless politics in connection with the session, acting at times as if it were more disposed to favor bootleggers and election crooks than to serve the public. But the unwisdom and shortcomings of neither Pinchot nor the Republican state organization afford an excuse for dereliction on the part of the Leg- islature. The Legislature is supposed to have some standing, independence and re- sponsibility in its own right. It is supposed itself to know something about the conditions of the State and to have some regard for the public in- terest. With the session called, whether it was generally deemed necessary or not, it was the duty of the members of the Assembly to make the best of the situation in the interest of the public. The legislators knew that frauds mark every election in the State and that legal procedure against those engaged in such treasenable crimes was difficult. Irrespective of how they stood in principle on the subject of prohibition, they could not be expected to be indifferent to such phases of bootlegging as manufactur- ing and selling poison as a beverage. Regardless of their attitude toward Pinchot or toward the Republican state organization, their regard for the public should have been such as to cause them to keep the public in- terest constantly above their factional prejudice. When the majority of the Legisla- ture virtually ignored the election re- form measures simply because Pin- chot advocated them they were deal- ing a blow not at the Governor but at the very heart of the American sys- tem of government. Pinchot himself had been censured for not aiding such propositions when they were be- fore the regular sessions timed with his. administration. They Were not Pinchot measures so much as they were proposals that had been put for- ‘I ward for years by civic bodies and supported by the great majority of newspapers of the State. The adop- tion of a resolution to amend the con- stitution to open the way for installa- tion of voting machines, looking to- ward final action at another time, cannot take away the taste of the spurning of the other measures and the mangling of the bill for the com- pulsory opening of ballot boxes so that at this writing there is a debate over whether it will operate against election crooks or those who attempt to expose them. The starting of the process of con- stitutional amendment to enable con- solidation in the interest of Greater Pittsburgh was, no matter what its importance, wholly incidental to the Pinchot program for the session. Throughout, the session did not sit well upon the public mind and the re- sults make it indefensible. Since the Republican party of the State is responsible both for Pinchot, whom it elected, and for the organiza- tion, it has its share in accountability for the latest “mess” at Harrisburg. 4 Te special session has left a bad aste. A Sordid Confession. From the Philadelphia Record. The slaughter of the entire pro- gram of election reform by the gang- controlled Legislature at the late special session has a significance which should not be lost upon think- ing voters. By refusing to enact laws for the protection of the ballot the Legisla- ture deliberately created an issue which in the next election will turn many thousands of votes against the Republican party. It is quite evident that those who control the action of the Legislature weighed in the bal- ance the loss of votes that would re- sult from an honest count against the loss that would result from the flout- ing of the popular will, and decided that the fictitious and fraudulent vote returned by crooked election officers is an absolutely indispensable asset. That decision was cynical and bru- tal, but extremely practical. What does it matter how many votes the gang loses by affronting the people of the Commonwealth so long as its agents do the counting, under what amounts to a guarantee of immunity ? If 200,000 indignant and disgusted Republicans should vote for Demo- cratic candidates next fall as a re- buke to the leadership that has brought disrepute upon their own party, it will serve only to make gang election officers a little more active with the pencils. ——The Philadelphia Public Ledger declares it will oppose Mr. Pinchot for Senator. The Governor should worry. The Ledger strenuously op- posed tolls on the Delaware river to tour the State in his canvass for the nomination. r bridge and there was one vote on its side. aaa i ——————————————————AS——_————— SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Two big snowstorms and a blizzard are still in prospect for the season, James B. Yeager, of Hazleton, weather prophet, said yesterday. —Thieves broke into the Hallowell gar- age on the Bethlehem pike, near Ambler, for the third time last night and stole tires and automobile accessories valued at $2,500. —Resdents of Raubsville, a suburb of Easton, are eating and sleeping with guns at their sides as a result of an epidemie of petty thievery in the community. The thieves take vegetables, chickens and horses. . —Contracts on the Delaware River bridge totaling $1,250,000 were approved yesterday following the authorization by the Joint Commission of drawing up a tolls agreement between New Jersey and Pennsylvania. —While a driver of a coal wagon was in the office of his company in Lancaster obtaining the necessary delivery papers for his load, a thief backed another auto truck up to the loaded machine and re- moved the entire load. —Trolley and motor traffic over Free- port road between Springdale and New Kensington was interrupted by slides of tons of earth and boulders which were loosened by recent thaws. Traffic on the Pennsylvania Railroad was not delayed. —Charged by the father of his bride of two days with falsifying her age by swear- ing that she was 18 when in reality she was 16, Arthur Buttle, 23, of Chester, was arrested by police and returned to Garrett county, Mr., where the license was obtain- ed. —One thousand dollars in awards and certificates, donated by Edward Bok, was given to relatives of two Philadelphia policemen, a third member of the force and two firemen for deeds of herosim dur- ing the year. The awards are given annu- ally. —Nelson Stackhouse, restaurant propri- etor at Phoenixville, and Thomas Ettinger, clerk, were held under $600 bail each on charges of conducting a disorderly place, following the finding in the restaurant of two intoxicated girls, one of whom was 13 years old. —The February term of Montour county court scheduled for Monday, was called off because of the illness of Judge Evans, giving an entire year without a jury trial. Two previous terms were called off because of lack of cases but this term there were three, two criminal and one civil, for trial. —Because of his critical illness with Bright's disease, David D. Coleman, for- mer justice of the peace of Juniata, was released from the Blair county jail last Thursday, one week before he served his sentence of forty-five days for malfeasance in office. He refused to eat or take medi- cine. —Availing itself of the ‘efficiency oper- ation” clause contained in the new agree- ment with the miners, the Delaware and Hudson Coal Company, of Wilkes-Barre, closed the No. 4 shaft of the big Loree Colliery, declaring it unproductive and throwing more than 300 miners out of work. —The Gazette and Bulletin, Williams- last Saturday, when interests headed by Albert W. Fell, general manager of the Pennsylvania Publishers’ association, bought the property outright. Control as provided by the ownership of over 80 per cent. of the capital stock is vested in Mr. Fell, —Overcome while they slept, by gas eg. caping from a stove and a light, Jas. M. Dautrich, 58, and his wife, 55, were found dead in a room at the hotel of James Janorski, in Reading, on Sunday. Discov- ery of the tragedy was made by a daughter of the proprietor, who passed the room and smelled gas. A large four burner light in the center of the room was turned on full but unlighted. —Paralyzed for months after his neck was broken in a bathing accident at Nar- ragansett, R. I, last summer, Rody P. Marshall, Jr., 16-year-old son of a prom- inent Pittsburgh attorney, has regained a slight use of his fingers and physicians are holding out hopes for his recovery. Physicians said the boy’s ability to use his fingers indicated there was a regefle eration of the injured spinal cord, —The measles epidenic which has been steadily increasing at Shamokin, on Tues- day reached its highest point when seven- ty-six children were reported ill with the disease, according to the health authorities. The total number of afllictions since Janu- ary 1 is over 225. Many classes in the pub- lic and parochial schools are depleted and in some families as high as six children are down with the disease. —According to report, the contract for the new State road on Route 29, on the Mifflin county side of the Seven Mountains, has been awarded to the Lod Contracting company, and it is said the work will be started as soon as the weather permits. The project will make work plenty in that sec- tion during the summer, as the job is a big one and will require a large number of men and a big quantity of material. —Worry caused by the fact that he would have to sentence two men who had been friends of long standing, is believed to have caused the death of Judge John Faber Miller, of the Montgomery county courts, in his home near Norristown on Friday night. Judge Miller was 61 years old. The two men to have been sentenced by Judge Miller on Saturday are J. Tru- man Miller and Walter R. Moyer, officials of the Norristown Penn Trust company, for their peculations from that institu- tion. —Four days after their marriage, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Searfoss, of Port Alle- gheny, are in a critical condition as the re- sult of what is believed to have been a fit of temporary insanity suffered by the former late Saturday night. The husband shot and dangerously wounded his 19-year- old bride, shot himself twice and then drove to the Port Allegheny hospital. The shooting took place in the motor car which Searfoss had given his wife as a wedding present last Tuesday and occurred while the pair were returning from Smethport. Searfoss first shot his wife and she drop- ped from the car. Then he turned the gun on himself, inflicting two serious wounds and then drove his car to the hospital. A passing motorist picked up the injured woman a few minutes later and took her to the hospital. Searfoss says he does not remember anything about the shooting and admits suffering from a mental ail- ment for some time. port’s morning newspaper, changed hands Ne