INK SLINGS. —Vote for “Dep” Dunlap, the clean, upstanding young ex-soldier for Sheriff of Centre county. —Frank Boal would make a good ‘Register for Centre county. Why not elect him? . —Every time we refer to the vote «cast at the primaries it convinces us the more that there was a Fleming— Wilkinson—Holtzworth combination. —God, how proud broad minded people should be if Centre county would overwhelmingly rebuke aspir- ants for office who personally or through their workers, attempt to «drag religion into politics. —Dr. Parrish guarantees that he will see to it that if he is elected a Com- missioner that the taxpayers of the county will get one hundred cents in service for every dollar - of public money that is spent. The doctor has been in business long enough to know just exactly what that means and we know that he has been successful enough in managing his own business to make a very profitable manager for ‘that of the county. —If Mr. Wilkinson really is the only man in Centre county who is capable of being Prothonotary we're in a helluva fix. He can’t live for- ever—and what are we going to do when the Grim Reaper cuts the ver- satile Roy down. Old Charon is going to pilot him over the Styx, some day, just as sure as the Yank’s won the world’s series. What are we going to do then? Don’t let us wait for the awful day. Let us start train- ing a substitute. Let us put Claude Herr in the office and see how near he -can come to taking this super—Pro- thonotary’s place. * —The person who signs himself ‘manager of “Richelieu Theatre Co.” is among others who are tryng to make us believe they are putting Bellefonte on the map. We are not supposed to know, but everybody but this person does, that it was only because Belle- fonte stood out big on the map that they found their way here. We have always been told that fish is good ‘brain food, but we don’t think there are enough suckers in this vicinity to stimulate Mr. Richelieu’s gray matter to the point of understanding that “knocking” on “Toner’s bologna” isn’t ‘going to make the sucker business any better. -'—Howard Holtzworth is still stick- ing to the idea that it is lawful to step from the Commissioners’ office into that of County Treasurer. The act of 1841 says it isn’t. However that may ‘be Howard is probably figuring it this way: If] am elected and: my right 1% a commission is successfully challeng- ed I still have the chance that if my friend Fleming is elected Judge ne will appoint me to fill the vacancy caused by my elective ineligibility. Punch that theory full of holes, you lawyers. It’s just as good law as the advice that has been given to Howard that he doesn’t come under the act of 1841 because he was appointed to his present office and not elected. —We know that the Patriotic Sons of America in Centre county are be- ing played up to by certain candidates for office who are really only after their votes. The Order is old enough to have learned from experience that the motives of those who join it only after they have developed an ambition to get a political office are not ‘patrio- tism. We don’t care who he is, any man who has lived in a community long enough to feel that he has a chance to be elected to office and then joins a fraternity on the eve of his candidacy, is worth watching. We have known many “joiners” in our days. Most of them have been sickeningly loyal brothers until the election is over and then—? —In Pittsburgh it is openly charged ‘that one hundred thousand dollars was offered as an inducement to a candi- -date if he would get out of the way of a machine aspirant for the same office whose candidacy was imperiled. In Philadelphia J. Hampton Moore, who is a Republican and the Independent ‘Republicans nominee for mayor of that «city, says that he was offered a big bribe to quit.” Who are offering these :stupendous sums? Why are they offer- ing them? It’s the machine. What is the machine? It isn’t real Repub- licanism. It isn’t real Democracy. f(t is a parasitic growth conceived in the minds of rich men who want power and reared by those who are willing to be their tools. Tuesday, November 8, will be the day when Centre county «can throw a monkey wrench into the ‘machine. —Have you seen “Metropolis,” the movie idea of what the world might be a thousand years from now? If you have, you will understand what John Mastermen typified. He was the > VOL. 72. Corrupt Politics at Both Ends. It has been alleged that an inde- pendent candidate for the office of County Commissioner of Allegheny county was offered $100,000 if he would - withdraw from the contest. The statement, which is supported by three or four credible witnesses, is that the offer was made by an official of the internal revenue service, an emissary of the Mellon machine. Mr. J. Hampton Moore, the independent candidate for Mayor of Philadelphia, has publicly declared that he was of- fered a substantial bribe by an agent of the Vare machine if he would with- draw from the contest in that city. Thus the Mellon-Vare partnership is working at both ends of the State to control the elections by corrupt meth- ods. The salary of a County Commis- sioner in counties of the class in which Allegheny county is listed is about $8000 a year, and the remuner- ation for a full term is $32,000. If the Mellon machine is willing to pay $100,000 for a practical guarantee that its slated candidates will be elect- ed it must have some sinister plans in mind to make its books balance. The Mellon candidates for the office have denied personal responsibility for the offer and demanded the name of the person who made it. This de- mand was promptly complied with and the testimony of the witnesses who heard it published. But noth- ing has been done since to refute the statement or punish the official charg- ed with the crime. The independent candidate who was thus corruptly approached is the present County Controller, having been appointed to that important of- fice by Governor Pinchot several years ago. He has repeatedly accused the County Commissioners of extrava- gance and waste, totalling hundreds of thousands of dollars. The anxiety of the Mellon machine to prevent his election to the office of County Com- missioner is plainly evident in this corrupt offer of a competency for life in order that the ex- trayagance and waste may be contin- ued indefinitely in the future. If the voters of Allegheny county are: true to their obligations as citizens, Mr. McGovern will be elected by an over- whelming majority. ——-Press “agencing” is attracting distinguished votaries. President Coolidge is performing the service for Secretary Mellon and Governor Fisher for Congressman Vare. Election Officers Convicted. In congratulating assistant district attorney Park, who conducted the prosecution, on the conviction of three election crooks in the Allegheny coun- ty court, former U. S. district at- torney E. Lowery Humes said, “these convictions represent a splendid start. They will throw a fear into the hearts of dishonest election officials and form the best guarantee, after a long per- iod of fraudulent elections, of clean- er elections in the future.” The de- fendants were Charles Golden, J. W. Bolster and Mrs. Anna Conklin, who were members of the election board at the 1926 primary election which dumped the ballots into a sewer to prevent a recount after a charge of fraud. : Golden is a captain in the fire de- partment of the city of Pittsburgh and chairman of the Republican Ward committee, and Mrs. Conklin a clerk on the board. The judge of the elec- tion, J. A. Miller and Charles Carr, the other clerk, have not been arrest- ed thus far and John Downey, the other inspector, was the principal wit- ness for the prosecution. The defense was that the absent judge did the crooked work but the evidence revealed the fact that Golden was the “boss of the job.” The penalty is a fine of $500 and imprisonment not to exceed three years. The jury recommended mercy for Mrs. Conklin, who appears to have been a rather reluctant par- ticipant in the crime. Strangely enough this flagrant violation of law did not occur in the “strip” where such methods of con- ducting elections have been the rule for many years. But it was the more alarming on that account. In pre. vious elections the fraudulent prac- character who, by force of ambition and money, had subjugated a great city to the degree of subserviency that his wink or nod meant life or death, sunshine or sorrow to everyone in it. | extended to districts which had pre- ‘He was the Boss, the arbiter of the destiny of every creature in the com- munity over which he had gained con- trol. To be sure, the picture is only an allegory, but it preaches a serious sermon. In Centre county, today, the question isn’t nearly as serious as to whetlier its new officials are to be Democrats or Republicans as it is as to whether our.voters are going to play into the hands of a would be John Mastermen. tices were confined to a small part of the city. But in the primary cam- paign of 1926, both in Pittsburgh and Philadelphia, corrupt methods were viously been regarded as independent and conservative. Obviously the pur- pose of the machine was to corrupt the vote of both cities in all parts, thus making more certain machine control of the vote of the State. It is to be hoped Major Humes’ predic- tion will be verified. Trans-oceanic flying females enlist wide public interest but are liable to make people “tired.” STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. one that should be associated lez Judge. chooses to do so. regularity. And what for? for no other reason than that the What happened then? The State ) the Capitol building scandal was That, as well as the many o in choosing your local officials. - worth while, just as sure as the your ballot on Nov. 8. plunder out of the State Treasury. color or their creed may be. As we have said so often about county officials; there isn’t one of - them who has the slightest legislative function that could effect the fundamental principles of any of the great parties. In their official capacity there is no party platform, no policy, nothing they can do that would uphold or tear down the tenets of either Democracy or Republic- anism. Everyone of them, from the Judge down to the Auditor, has to do solely with affairs as they are found in Centre county and no where else. The only possible way this statement might be distorted into even a slight deviation from the fact is through admission that the newly elected judge becomes the titular head of his party’s organization, if he The traditions of the law itself are against partisanship in the Judiciary. Partisanship means partiality and partiality is akin to favor itism and all of them contribute to the defeat of justice. : Notwithstanding this self evident truth the exigencies of machine politics never have and possibly never will cease their attempts to grasp for this exalted position through the plea of party loyalty and party . The machine doesn’t care a baubee . about the qualifications of the candidate it attempts to elect. All it wants is a friend in the office. That accomplished, it works subtly to get the rest. Its candidates may be eminently good or notoriously bad. That depends on its psycho-analy- sis of the public temper at the moment. No one can say that the laté Samuel W. Pennypacker was not a good man. It is a matter of political knowledge that a machine threat- ened with destruction by an outraged and indignant Commonwealth set him up as its candidate for Governor of Pennsylvania and elected him rs that have followed it, was the con- tribution of machine politics to the record of the Republican party in Pennsylvania. Yet the Republican party was not in sympathy with it. It should be held to accountability only for its negligence in having per- mitted its organization to fall into the hands of men who had no ideals. Nothing but lust for power and plunder. We are not wandering from our suggestion that we have a non-par- tisan judiciary in Centre county. We are only trying to bring home to you the danger that lurks in it before we ask you again to cast it aside Bellefonte, long ago, discovered that a councilman who happened to be a Democrat, couldn’t destroy the tariff and empty the full dinner pail, so it discarded partisanship im its local elections and who will say that we haven’t been the better for it? : This would not have been so, however, had their been any borough offices fat enough to have furnished grease to keep the wheels of a ma- - chine turning. Were there enough.in the offices of our town to make it machine attempting to lash the dominant Republican electorate into line with the false plea of party loyalty and reguarity. Morally, mentally and physically, man for man, the candidates on the Democratic ticket are the equals of those on the Republican ticket. In- deed, in some. instances, they are notably superior. With such a condi- tion: why should you let partisanship guide your pencil when you mark It is not only proper to dicard partisan feeling when one visits. the polls on election day. It is often a patriotic duty. We believe that the zero hour for those who will respond to duty’s call has arrived in Centre county. No matter how honorable Mr. Flem- ing may be; no matter how learned he is in the law; he is not more so in either than was Samuel W. Pennypacker and there is a machine in the of- fing that ought to be wrecked before the tentacles of the Philadelphia octopus wiggle up into Centre county. Keep in mind the fact that we are not striking at Mr. Fleming. He might be as guiltless as the sage of Wetzel’s swamp who was so busy chasing butterflies that he didn’t see the machine grinding millions in might be wise to keep partisan politics out of the election of local offi- cials, especially so in the selection of a Judge who is to sit in judgment of all the peope, no matter what their politics, their nationality, their NO. 42. BELLEFONTE. PA.. OCTOBER 28. 1927. Let Us Have a Non-Partisan Judiciary. | Of all the offices that are filled by the suffrage of the people’ the st with partisan politics is that of eople knew he was a good man. d its head in shame as news of “over the land. ill rise tomorrow, there would be a We are only suggesting that it Philipsburg Journal Pays Tribute to Dr. Parrish. In its issue of Oct. 5, the Daily Journal of Philipsburg made the fol- lowing complimentary reference to the candidacy of Dr. C. M. Parrish for the office of County Commissioner. “C. M. Parrish, business man of Bellefonte and one of the Democratic nominees for County Commissioner, was a caller at the Journal office this afternoon. He is friendly, sensible 3nd apparently possesses sound judg- ment, and if elected would doubtless prove a valuable member of the board that has disposal of the people’s taxes. With his pleasing personality Mr. Parrish is sure to make many friends during the campaign. —We notice that the Gazette, last week, challenged the accuracy of our statement that the Prothonotary’s office pays approximately seven thous- and dollars a year. If the Gazette can prove to us that we were in error we shall be glad to revise our belief that Mr. Wilkinson has already taken down fifty thousand dollars in emolu- ments and has been very well served. We based our statement on the opin- ion of two attorneys who examined the records in his office, checked up the fees that he had charged and {agreed that they are even in excess 'of the amount. We have been told that Mr. Wilkinson, himself, has said that the office is good for nine thousand a year. While we know that Roy is a very garulous gentleman—almost we regard him as a personal competitor in that respect—we can’t believe him to have been silly enough to have re- i vealed a goose that is laying such | golden eggs. —1It is gratifying to be able to announce that Princess Ileana, of Ru- mania, has not eloped with a naval Charles P. Long Will Not Run as an lieutenant or anybody else. Independent. Charles P. Long, of Spring Mills, Pa., who was a candidate for the nom- ination for the office of County Treas- urer on the Republican ticket at the Primaries, held September 20th, wishes to express his thanks to those who supported his candidacy and vot- ed for him. Mr. Long, it has been rumored, would be an independent candidate for ‘the office of County Treasurer at the coming election to be held November 8th, but when inter- viewed by the writer states that he will not be a candidate for this office at that time. _ —Ordinarily a candidate for office 1s content with claiming a favorite son’s share of the vote in only one home town. Not so with Mr. Flem- ing. He claims two, both Philipsburg and Bellefonte. sR RL past week he, | December Court Session Changed to Suit Deer Hunters. Judge James C. Furst, who loves to follow the trail of the wild and 20 gunning for small game and deer, has taken compassion on the hunters of Centre county and issued a decree changing the date of the December term of court so that it will not con- flict with their sport. Heretofore the court term has begun on the second Monday in December but the court’s decree makes the date the third Tues- day. The decree is as follows: In the matter of changing the time for the meeting of the grand jury and the regular December term of court for the year 1927, only. And now, to wit, October 20, 1927, it appearing to the Court that a large number of those men-who would ordi- narily be drawn for jury duty at the December term of court would desire to go to the woods for the deer sea- son, which runs from December 1st to December 15th, and because of the fact that those men look forward throughout the entire year to their annual vacation to be spent in this way, it seems like an imposition to deprive those persons of the pleasure and benefit they receive from their annual outing, and on the oiler hand it seems unfair to the Commonwealth and to the litigants to try cases be- fore juries from which men of the type who go to the woods are stricken off .by excuses. or lem Under the regular rules the grand jury would meet on December 5th, the traverse jury for the quarter sessions on December. 12th, followed by civil term of court on December 19th. The Court’has concluded to make a change for this particular term as follows: The grand jury is directed to day, December 19th; the traverse jury quarter sessions court will appear on Tuesday, December 20th, at 1:30 p. m. The “traverse jury called for the civil week of court will appear on Tuesday, December 27th, at 10:30 a. m. This order shall not effect the regular standing order for the calling of the regular terms of court. : .~ By the Court, BRST, P. J. JAMES C. F » 5 Game Commission Will Not Kill Does Unless Requested. Hunters all over the State are up in arms against the proposition of the pert marksmen into the woods to kill off the surplus does, but according to game protector Thomas G. Mosier the purpose of the Commission much misunderstood. deer promiscuously. The Commission has issued a small card on which is asked the questions: “Are the deer doing excessive damage to your crops? Do you want the Game Commission to send men to kiil them or do you not?” These cards have been distributed among the farmers and property own- ers adjacent to the mountains, where the deer are the most prolific. To date two hundred of these cards have been filled out by Centre county farmers and returned to the game wardens, and only one of the number has asked that men be sent to kill the deer. That one is a Mr. McKivison, living near Pennsylvania Furnace, in Ferguson township. Al the others state posi- tively that they don’t want the deer killed. In this connection it might be stated that some of the land owners on the Seven mountains are putting up “No ing the Game Commission’s purpose to kill the does, but this is really an unnecessary precaution, as men won’t be sent to kill the deer unless they are requested. Game protector Mosier believes, however, that five thousand does could be killed in Centre county and not affect the hunting at all. During the accompanied by Joe Compani, took a drive through the {wilds of the Seven mountains, going in at Walter Gherrity’s and coming out at Colyer, and on the trip counted ——The “balance” of export trade for September was the greatest ever | but when the rest of Europe adopts the French tariff system the record | will be different. an ——Senator Borah no longer wishes “to be placed in the attitude of criti- cising the State Department.” The President has probably hypnotized the Idaho Warwick. i ——The Mexican system of shoot- ing opposition candidates reveals less finesse than the methods used in the “neck” of Philadelphia and the “strip” in Pittsburgh. ——Speaking of glass house dwell- ers the New York World admonishes young Roosevelt against throwing stones. ne 216 deer. The biggest herd they saw contained 27 deer. ——The Bishop of London, address- ing American Legionaires, asks that American children be taught to love rather than hate England. His idea might take better if it were made reciprocal. ——A convention of aviators will be held in Washington in December to consider means of promoting commer- cial aviation. A plan to decrease the number of fatalities ought to be part of the agenda. The number of prisoners in custody has increased thirty-four per cent. in four years. The number of bootleggers has probably increased in greater ratio. convene at 10 o’clock a. m. on Mon-- called for the regular meeting of the: ee eee RRR RRR OOOO I, SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Four men and two women are being held in Pittsburgh by Federal authorities investigating an alleged counterfeiting ring which has flooded Pennsylvania and Ohig with spurious $20 bills raised from $5 bills. : sh he —Mrs. Jacob Kanagy died at the Lewise town hospital on Sunday, from. a fracture of .the skull sustained a few hours earlier when she fell down the cellar stairs at the home of Rev. Hess in Belleville, where she was a guest for the day. Mrs. Kanagy opened the cellar door in error, believing it to be the door to an adjoining room. —Mrs. Hannah Holmes, of Lansford, Pa., last Friday celebrated: the arrival of her forty-third grandchild, a daughter having been born that morning to Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Granger, of Singston. Mrs. Holmes, widow of the late John Holmes, mothered five sons and five daughters, all of whom have followed her example in rearing large families, ; —Alfred B. Bowe, who was removed as post-master of Port Carbon last week, sur- rendered to the authorities when he learned a warrant was out for his arrest, and on Monday was held in $1000 bail. There was a shortage of $1800 in his accounts, but this has been made good by friends. Ed- ward Beddall, of Port Carbon, was ap- pointed acting postmaster. "—H. CA. Moyer, a Norristown lawyer and real estate operator, and his stenogra- pher, Isabel Thomas, 23, 103 West Wood street, Norristown, were publicly horse- whipped on the street by Moyer’s wife last Saturday night. Mrs. Moyer had pre- viously bought the horsewhip from a Nor- ristown harness dealer, and several pass- ersby witnessed the flogging. —George Bell, aged 15 years, of Tusca- rora, can thank football for the removal of a .22 caliber bullet from hi§ head. where he carried it for nine years. When six years old a playmate shot Bell in the fore- head and the ball could not be found. In a football game he was bumped and a lump appeared over the right eve. A doc- tor who lanced it found the bullet inside. —Arthur R. Thompson, of Middletown, on Tuesday paid a fine of $7.50 for playing football on Sunday in violation of Penn- sylvania’s blue laws. He announced that another game between Middletown and the Ephrata Yellow-jackets would be played next Sunday at the Middletown aviation *| field, which is Federal property. If Dau- phin county officials have jurisdiction over: thie field no more games will be played, he said. —One workman was killed and two others hurt when a five ton radiator they were moving fell in the basement of the First Presbyterian Church at Greensburg, on Friday.” Robert B. Sweitzwe was ‘caught. under the radiator and crushed to death. - ‘Charles EB. Altman narrowly es- caped death. Although pinned beneath the apparatus he suffered only from shock. John Carrol, the third workman, suffered lacerations. —Three members of Homestead borough council and two other men entrained for the Atlanta penitentiary on Tuesday to serve sentences imposed in the Homestead liquor conspiracy case. The three coun- cilmen, president Edwin Kline, John Rich-. ards and James L. Oates, are to serve one year each and their codefendants, Joseph Frank and. Sam ‘Stein, are under sentence of fifteen months each. Two other Coun: cilmen convicted took appeals. : —H. H. Spayd, of Minersville, Pa., form- er department commander of the Grand "Army of the Republic, died on Thursday State Game Commission to send ex- is very speaking, but It is not the : until he was prevailed upon to stop when intention to send out the marksmen in a state of willy nilly and have them kill off the prominent educator in Schuylkill county. | night in a hospital at Washington, D. Cc, where he had been taken after collapsing on the speakers’ stand with President Coolidge at the dedication of the General Meade monument. He was taken ill while insisted upon continuing collapse. He once was a —Several hours after she had -been stricken suddenly with a heart attack, the body of Mrs. John Hillpot, Lansdale, was’ found on the steps of a Columbia avenue house, a block from her home, on Tuesday morning about 3 o'clock. She attended a masquerade party at St. John’s Reformed church on Monday evening and started for her home alone. When she failed to ap- pear at midnight Hillpot became alarmed, a searching party was formed and the en- tire borough was covered. - About 3 a. m. her body was found at the home of Isaac Trumbauer, No. 631 Columbia avenue, ‘A physician said death had been due to heart disease. —After camping in an auto for three days along the Slatington pike, several miles from Allentown, George Rado, a tramplike Frenchman, was taken to police headquarters in Allentown, on Monday and detained for the night. On being searched ! prior to a hearing he was found to possess Trespass” signs as a means of thwart- $400 in cash, $800 in good checks and $32,000 in bonds. Owner's card and driver's license showed that the auto is the property of Rado, and a receipted bill proved that he had bought the machine several days ago for $1350 in cash. It developed that he had worked as a laborer in and about the city during the summer -and was looking for a pick and shovel job - when suspicion was aroused. ‘to pay the tax. —Two perfect bridge hands and two other bridge hands lacking but one card each of being perfect were dealt at one table in a game at Bloomsburg, one even- ing last week. The players were 50 ex- cited they exposed their hands and did not play them. Mr. and Mrs. Richard White and Mr. and Mrs. Edgar McHenry had been playing about an hour when the in- cident occurred. The cards had been well shuffled prior to the deal. McHenry re- ceived 13 spades, White 13 hearts, Mrs. Mc- Henry 12 clubs and one diamond and Mrs. White 12 diamonds and one club. With a perfect hand held only once in some mil- lions of times, it is figured such an ineci- dent could occur only about once in a cen- tury. —Because she repeatedly refused to pay her 1926 school tax, amounting to $5.25, Mrs. Lillian Reed, Amagh Township, Mif- flin county, must remain in ‘the Mifflin county jail until the tax and costs of $4.40 are paid, President Judge Bailey, of the Mifflin county court, ruled on Saturday. Mrs. Reed spent two days in the county jail about two years ago, when she refused Last month Mrs. Reed again was arrested and after spending three days in jail was released pending a decision in her case. The woman has made no attempt to get bail and is said to re- gard the matter as an attempt to gain a decision exempting housewives from pay- ing this tax. Her husband has taken. no action in the case.