Bema atdn. INK SLINGS. —1It isn’t what you give that counts. It’s the spirit that prompts the gift. —We feel so toward everyone that ‘if it were in our power to make it so next Sunday would be the happiest Christmas the world has ever known. —How priceless good-will is. Ev eryone craves it. If you have been withholding yours from someone get ‘the spirit of Christmas into your “heart and give it to him or her. —The Philadelphia woman who is asking to be divorced from her hus- ‘band because he is “too wonderful” is evidently one of the kind who doesn’t like too much of a good thing. —The Mayor has five deer that are ‘to be cut up and presented to the needy in the community on Christ- mas. If a bottle of sherry were to go with each basket we fancy that the roster of the needy in the com- ‘munity would be appalling. —George Remus, the Chicago mur- derer, wasn’t too crazy to understand how to swing a temperamental jury. ‘The novelty of a man, who had con- fessed k.ling his wife, pleading his own case was something new again, so they found him not guilty of doing’ something he openly told them he had done. —OQur peace messenger to Mexico should feel flattered. He drew a big- ger crowd than ever attended a bull fight down there. Really that was as it should be for Col. Charles Augustus Lindbergh is something of a bull fighter himself. He fights that old “bull” “It can’t be done,” you Jknow. —Of course this is not the season «of the year to be making trouble for anybody and far be it from us to ‘be making trouble at any time, but if it gets out over in Philipsburg that ‘Senator Scott is going to furnish a ‘big dinner here for all who come over ‘from that baliwick to see Judge-elect ‘Fleming inducted into office we fancy the Senator will have more on his ‘hands than he thinks he will. —Inasmuch as we won't greet you -again until January 6, 1928, we have crammed this edition so full of local and personal news that you'll be busy until almost that time reading all of ‘it. However, if you should get through with it and crave more read- ‘ing pick up your Bible and read the fourteenth’ chapter of St. John. If ‘there be no other cheer in the Christ- mas season for you you can find full .and plenty of it there. : —1It looks as though Rear Admiral Magruder might turn out to be a red- ‘hot poker in the hands of the Navy Department. We shall not discuss “the ethics of his supposed criticism of his superiors. However great a ‘breach of discipline that might have been it doesn’t appear to us that it was for anything else:than “the good ‘of the service.” And if a man who has given his life to naval problems doesn’t know more as to their solu- ‘tion than a civilian official who sel- .dom has more than four years’ con- ‘tact with the service all we have to say is that he ought not to be a Rear Admiral. — Several months ago a reader asked us what we thought of H. L. ‘Menken. At the time we were so absorbed with other thoughts that we .couldn’t concentrate on the much dis- cussed writer long enough to tell what we really do think. Now that we have nothing else to do until bed- time we seize the opportunity to say ‘that we don’t think of him at all We have read much of his stuff, but ‘have never gotten enough from it to convince us that he is a philosopher of unusual erudition—in truth, that ‘he is a philosopher at all. We are more inclined to believe that Mr. Menken is not wholly sincere, that he is more or less hypocritical and writes with the view of attracting attention ‘to himself by antagonizing public opinion. He does his work well, but it’s all bally-hoo for H. L. M. —1In his new book “The Future of an Illusion” Sigmund Freud contin- ues his studied attempt to destroy religion. He laughs at “religious America,” says there is no God and. that psycho-analysis has spread the knowledge of this in widening circles. Freud is another of the Menken kind William James once said that the -great snare of the psycho-analyst is the confusion of his own standpoint with that of the mental fact about which he is making observation. Freud is another of the Menken kind —so-called profound thinkers, so ab- _sorbed in their own egoism that they think the walls of Jericho are going to topple over every time they blow their horns. Now that we have disposed of Menken and Freud we crave the floor a second time to state that psycho- analysis will never uproot common- sense. The gorgeous colorings of the heavens at sunset, their hopeful.ra- diance at dawn, the majestic grandeur of the mountains, the purpose of the rolling valleys and purling streams, the fragrance of the flowers, the in- stincts of the animals and the good that is in human hearts are not mere accidents. Common-sense will tell the simplest mind that there was a de- *gign in it all. And who might the -+designer have been if it:was not. God ?, rtal man might eventually conquer iniverse, but there'is nothing in : tory to give rise to even a fleet- ,-ing#thought that he might have cre- “ated it.. And it couldn’t just have . ; SAG VOL. 72. Concerning the Tax Cut. During the discussion of the tax bill in the House of Representatives, the other day, Republican floor lead- er Tilson admonished the members against adopting amendments “lest the entire programme of tax reduc- tion be defeated.” This action is sub- ject to two interpretations. It may mean that unless the Mellon bill is enacted in practically its original form the Republican majority will de- feat it entirely and continue to exact from the people three or four hun- dred million dollars in taxes in ex- cess of the needs of the government. In other words, “saving the face” of | the Secretary of the Treasury is of | greater importance to the Republic- ans in Congress than saving their earnings to the people. It is not clear to the average thoughtful mind why such deference should be paid to the opinion of Sec- retary Mellon upon the question of revenues. Three years ago he sol- emnly warned Congress that a reve- nue cut of more than $300,000,000 would result in a deficit. Congress voted a cut of nearly $500,000,000 and at the end of the period covered by the appropriations of the same ses- sion there was a treasury surplus of upward of $200,000,000. Last year the Secretary held before the eye of Congress another limit figure and prediction that a greater cut spelled national bankruptcy. Congress again cut a couple of hundred millions be- yond the limit and there was another considerable surplus. This year the Secretary has sub- mitted an estimate of receipts and ex- penditures which would justify a’ cut of $225,000,000 in taxes, with the ad- monition that any amount beyond that figure would be disastrous. The Republican majority of the House Committee on Ways and Means ex- pressed its want of confidence in the Secretary by agreeing upon a cut of about $250,000,000. The National Chamber of Commerce estimates that a cut of $400,000,000 is not only justified but advisable, and many of the leading financiers of the country boldly declare that even a greater cut might be safely made. But the repu- | tation which President Coolidge and others have bestowed upon Mr. Mel- lon as a ‘superman must be main- tained. —Of course, as Viscount Rother- mere states, Great Britain was to blame for the failure of the recent ar.s conference at Geneva. But our own delegates were hardly 100 per cent efficient. Mr. Hearst’s New Scandal. | The forger, thief or procurer who projected into the: current gossip of the period, the other day, the story that the government of Mexico had paid a large sum of money to four | Senators in Congress for some unde- fined but sinister service was unfor- tunate in the selection of the victims | of his malice. We are not obsessed | with admiration for either Senator Borah, of Idaho, or Senator Heflin, of Alabama. But it would seem that connecting their names with such a transaction is about as absurd as ac- cusing President Coolidge of shop- lifting. Associating the name of Sen- ator Norris, of Nebraska, or Senator LaFollette, of Wisconsin, is even more preposterous and malignant. It is positively inconceivable. If the! purpose were to create a first pagé newspaper sensation it would have been wiser to select less conspicuous Senators or leave the Senate out of it altogether and lay ‘the charge against one or more of the lobbyists who infest Washington while Congress is in session. In that case the probability of truth might have held the story on the front page for several days. As it is, probably less than one in a million of those who read it gave the matter credence for a minute. Nevertheless the ac- cused Senators were justified in promptly demanding an investigation, not to ‘exculpate themselves but to prove that President Calles, of Mex- ico, is not an egregious idiot. As an esteemed contemporary de- clares, ¥it is an outrage that the names of four United States Sena- tors should have been dragged in as the beneficiaries of a huge Mexican slush fund, and that a reputable American lawyer should be named as intermediary so long as there are widely ‘circulated newspapers in the country’ conducted solely for profit or used for the more despicable purpose of disseminating scandals. This Mex- ican scandal is the more atrocious be- cause it came upon the heels of a decisive action to preserve the dig- nity and integrity of the Senate in which three of the four accused ac- tively participated.” | —Mr, Schwab is also persuaded that prosperity is running strong. His employment is steady and his wages are regularly paid. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION, BELLEFONTE, PA.. DECEMBER 23. 1927. Perhaps—Ilike me In each and every Oh, ’twill be good to Grow bundles for « BUNDLES!” Every one carrying bundles, Carrying them—all day long, Some, in wistful sadness Some like the lilt of song. Some with the ease of flying birds— A-wing—through the Winter blue, And some, just happily trudging on, Bundles—and bundles—and bundles— But—every one has their own. To carry—uwith love—for some one No need to question the bundle— Its size?—Ilike a mountain or small! Or what it contains—no matter— "Tis a bundle—for love—that’s all. The Christ-Love Thought in the bundle, A gift for some one, today, Or something to lighten a burden— Carried on—for aye and aye. Each day through this coming year— Bundles, for love of others, So smile and carry your bundle— A smile for all whom you meet, And Peace on Earth will come to those Whom you greet or pass on the street. WINIFRED B. MEEK-MORRIS. Christmas, 1927. or vou. home. carry bundles, us—of cheer. Election Law Commission in Action. The first session of the election law | commission, created by the General Assembly nearly a year ago, was held, in Harrisburg last week: All except two of the members were present and Governor Fisher gave some excellent advice to “those present.” He urged them “to simplify the ballot to en- courage voting; safeguard the ballot as far as possible to protect the voter and make the detection of crimes against the ballot as easy as possible with severe penalties.” These are valuable as well as pertinent sugges- tions but are not likely to be adopted unanimously. The Philadelphia and Pittsburgh machines will not approve of thus interfering with the preroga- tives of the boss. The first session, though brief, de- veloped some differences of opinion on important points. The majority seemed to favor the voting machines but the Philadelphia member of the commission is not in accord with that idea. He said it would take longer for electors to vote than by the pres- ent method. “In my district,” he said, “almost eighty per cent of the vote is cast between 5 and 7 o’clock .and one machine would not take care of this number of people.” He also ex- pressed the belief that the machines might be manipulated so as to pro- duce a corrupt result. He had in mind, probably, the experience with the Baker ballot law when schools were established in Philadelphia to teach voters how to cheat. Mr. Smith, of Pittsburgh, proposed the elimination of paid watchers at polling places. “Watchers are mere- ly paid workers for candidates at elec- tions,” he said, “and we should abol- ish them.” This suggestion again brought the Philadelphia member to his feet. “Paid watchers can’t be eliminated,” he declared with em- phasis. The machines need them in their business. They provide the easiest and cheapest method of buy- ing votes that could possibly be de- vised. Paid watchers don’t have to be at the polls at all but they “bring home the bacon.” One paid watcher in a family of ten voters will do more service for the candidate than ten times the price they get will buy in any other way. -—The Supreme court judges of Kansas have decided to wear robes hereafter. That is conforming to an appropriate custom, and if the legis- lators of Oklahoma would adopt masks they would be moving in the same direction. —1It is to be hoped Mayor Thomp- son, of Chicago, will suspend his war against King George until after the Holidays. The people are too busy with Santa Claus now to keep tabs on Big Bill’s foolishness. A A ——— —A little salt sprinkled on the tail of the comet might convert it into a Christmas gift for the man in the moon. \ Governor Fisher's Fine Promises. In an address before the Pennsyl- : vania Society of New York, on Sat- _urday evening, Governor Fisher made «generous promise of improvement in the electoral system of the State. Af- ter referring to his pre-election pledge on the subject he said, “I shall ; continue to press the issue until ev- ‘ery citizen can feel in his heart the assurance that his vote will be re- ceived and counted as cast.” That will be a splendid consummation. If similar assurance could be given that only citizens legally entitled to the franchise would be permitted to vote an ideal political condition would be established. There would be no rec- ord of over 300 fraudulent votes in one precinct of Philadelphia as was shown in 1926. But on the subject of ballot regula- tion the promises of Governor Fisher are not always to be depended upon. His pre-election pledge was almost as strong as that made Saturday night, but the thousands of frauds committed in Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and Scranton, at the primary . and general elections this year, prove that they were “promises to our ear and broken to our hope.” He refused to approve the real reform legislation prepared by the Committee of Sev- enty-six and sponsored by Senator Barr, and afterward consented to “pulling the teeth” out of the series . of measures he had himself prepared, which though inadequate, were in the right direction. He yielded to po- litical expediency. It may be true, as the Governor declared, that “whenever politics is is required first of all, it will soon adjust itself to its own betterment and advantage.” But rendering moral and material support to the political methods of the Philadelphia “neck” and the Pittsburgh “strip,” as Gov- ernor Fisher has been striving to do in supporting a false claim to a seat in the Senate by William S. Vare, is not setting an example to politics that will give it the proper under- standing. If Governor Fisher sin- cerely desires to improve the political morals of his party he must “prove his faith by works” and contribute to the cause something better than lip service. —President Cosgrave, of the Irish Republic, will not be visited by Presi- | dent Coolidge when he gets to Wash- ington. Official etiquette and the un- certainty of the Irish vote are prob- ably jointly responsible. —It is estimated in Washington that the very ambitious, not to say extravagant, naval programme of the administration is somewhat of a bluff. But well-meaning governments never bluff. PL ——— AAA UII —In China they kill girls for wear- ing bobbed hair. This is a rather drastic form of giving a cue to Mon- golian flappers. | ernor. General. given to understand that good service NO. 50. | Now for a Gentler Policy in the > Philippines. From the Philadelphia Record. In nominating Henry L. Stimson as Governor General of the Philippines President Coolidge made a personal selection compargble in importance to that of Dwight Morrow as Ambassa- dor to Mexico. Whether the appoint- ment will result in more peaceful re- lations between Manila and Washing- ton remains to be seen. The constant friction which marked the former regime was due largely to resentment among Filipino officials and political leaders toward what they called a military administration. General Wood could not make them forget that he was a distinguished soldier, and more especially he could not overcome their distaste for the group of army sub- ordinates known as the “cavalry cab- inet.” The difficulty was that he had to work under the War Department and through the only aides available. He was himself in favor of develop- ing a more distinctly civil form of ad- ministration. Mr. Stimson is a civilian, but one with a military career and War De- partment training. Moreover, his ap- pointment follows rejection by the | President of Filipino requests of the Department of the Interior. His de- cision is that any modifications of policy found necessary shall be made under the existing system. To this extent the appointment conveys no- tice that American sovereignty is to be fully maintained, and the require- ments of the fundamental law under which the Philippines are adminis- tered shall be applied as completely as they were by General Wood, But this policy leaves wide oppor- tunity to introduce methods more satisfactory to the island leaders. Manuel Quezon and Sergio Osmena, who are now in this country, have de- nied that they seek revolutionary changes in the powers of the Gov- , Mr. Stimson has shown notable capacity as a concilia- tor, and if new regulations permit him to establish a really civil admin- istration he should be able to re- store that confidence and co-operation which have been so seriously im- | paired by forms of military rule, One Popular “Gringo.” From the Harrisburg Telegraph. Apparently there is at least one popular “Gringo” in Mexico. He is Colonel Charles A.. ‘and he is teaching ‘the Mexican people to un- derstand that after all folks north of the Rio Grande do not wear horns and that some of them, at least, are kindly disposed and friendly souls who desire nothing more than to live at peace and harmony with their neighbors. If the doughty Colonel can get that thought across he will have done more to establish friendly relations between the two countries than all the am- bassadors we have ever sent to the turbulent republic. One of our troubles with Mexico has been that we of the north do not know the truth about the Mexican people. We have been all too ac- customed to the cartoonist’s notion of the Mexican of the bloody knife and the smoking pistol, which bears about as much real resemblance to the real article as some of the old-time car- toons of Teddy Roosevelt and his big stick did to the man as he actually appeared. We have thought too much of Mexico and her revolutionary ten- dencies and too little of the tre- mendous problems with which the country is confronted and is endeav- oring to solve. The Mexican who sees in the account of an occasional gun- battle in Chicago a picture of what is transpiring in the average Amer- ican city has about as clear an idea of conditions in this country as has the American who thinks of Mexico only in terms of blood-shed and ex- ecution. Even more outlandish is the aver- age Mexican’s conception of the Unit- ed States and its people. The Grin- goes to them are terrible persons, sit- ting along the Rio Grande, rifle in hand, waiting only a favorable op- portunity to hop across the border and enslave the whole country. If Lindbergh can improve the opinion of Americans in the minds of Mex- icans he will have performed a great service—and from all accounts he is doing it. A —————— A ———————— Officeholder for Fifty Years. From the Clearfield Republican. County Commissioner Jesse Dale should give a banquet to his friends when he steps out of his present job on January 2nd. He owes it to them. Jesse has been feeding pretty regu- larly at the public crib for over fifty years. He was postmaster at New Washington in the early seventies; postmaster of DuBois late seventies and early eighties; Sheriff of Clear- field county 1886-1889; Justice of the Peace, Patton, Cambria county, for several years in the nineties; candi- date for Sheriff of Cambria county and withdrew after receiving the Re- publican nomination; back to Clear- field county and County Commission- er 1916-1928. A pretty long record at the receiving end. This suggestion is not offered with the hope of being in- vited to said banquet if staged. Jesse does not feel that way. rb ——————— — Probably “Lindy” attended the bull fight in Mexico just to show that he is a “regular fellow.” Lm a a AN TA a — SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —The York Telephone and Telegraph company has declared a stock dividend of 50 per cent, according to notices sent out to stockholders. It is the first divi- dend of this kind paid by the company. —With the lobby crowded with guests a fashionably-dressed youhg man Sunday night walked to the mezzanine floor of the Benjamin Franklin Hotel, Philadel- phia, held up the cashier and escaped with $700. —Lawrence W. Strawbridge, aged 24, of Franklin, Pa. dropped dead Friday night a few minutes after arriving home from doing his Christmas shopping. His wife was in another part of the house at the time. She heard a thud and found Strawbridge dead on the kitchen floor. He had been in apparent good health, but doctors who were called said he was & victim of heart disease. —Hints of a huge graft exposure have been made by John Parker, warden of the Coal Township almshouse, Northum- berland county. Parker said twenty-nine pairs of shoes have been purchased by overseers of the district at a rate of $19.28 a pair when they really represent shoes of a much inferior grade. Parker said he will also have other startling an- nouncements to make before he ‘is fired.” —A victim of starvation and exposure Harriet Metzger, 64 years old, died in the general hospital at Lancaster, on Sunday, 36 hours after the body of her sister, Catherine, 70, was found in a barnyard near their home, one mile east of the city. The sisters, according to neighbors and ac- quaintances, possessed sufficient money through leasing of real estate to live com- fortably. Instead they chose to live the life of recluses. —The malicious action of some hunter in shooting off the glass insulators along the power line between Belleville and Lewistown put Mifflin county in darkness for a few minutes Friday night. The lights along the line fluttered several times and finally went out until the switches could be thrown and another line put in- service. An investigation proved that a bullet shattered the insu- lator, causing the short circuit. —Robert Kahn, Brady township foreman of the Mapleton Limestone company, Ma- pleton, died at the J. C. Blair Memorial hospital, Huntingdon, at 10 a. m. Thurs- day, of injuries sufferc.« at the quarry. He was about to close one of the large crushers at 5 p. m. Wednesday when his clothing cought in the fly wheel and his body was drawn between the wheel and post standard. Officials of the company believe he suffered a broken back. —Fred J. Broad, New Kensington real estate dealer, on Saturday again became the benefactor of striking miners when he bought the furniture of twenty-two Ben- ton families at a forced sale and then returned the goods. The miners will re- imburse him when they are able, Broad said. Broad had acted in the miners’ be- half in previous similar instances. The sale was held by the Union Collieries com- pany, to which the miners owed back rent. —C. A. Confer, of Mill Hall, was thrown from the seat on his wagon into the bed of a swollen mountain stream in the Tan- gus, Scootac region, near Lock Haven, striking his head on a sharp stone and sustaining an injury which rendered him unconscious. George C. Snyder, a mem- ber of the Snyder hunting party, whose outfit Mr. Confer was bringing home fo Mill Hall, plunged into the stream and after a hard battle succeeded in getting the unconscious man to safety. —VWilliam C. Helmold, 19, a native of Curwensville, now a resident of Philadel- phia, has been awarded the Rhodes schol- arship for Pennsylvania. Helmold worked his way through three years at Oberlin college. He is a senior this year. Helm- old is majoring in the study of Greek and philology. He speaks fluently four languages, French, Spanish, German and Italian, and reads seven languages. Helm- old is a son of the late Arnold and Eliz- abeth Helmold, of Curwensville. —Highway inspectors working on a new road between Lock Haven and Renovo, which passes through much hitherto un- opened territory, have discovered an old Indian mill, probably once used by the Sinnemahoning tribe. The mill, carved in the centre of a massive rock, weighing probably ten tons, lies in the center of the right of way of the new road, near Cooks run in the northwestern part of Clinton county. Public subscriptions have been received to raise funds to have the mill moved from its present location for preservation as an historical object. —Dr. Jeremiah Vanderbilt Reeder, 74, died at Picture Rocks, Lycoming county, last Friday, a martyr to the profession which he pursued in Phoenixville for twenty-seven years. He left there a few months ago intending to retire. On De- cember 7, he was called back to Phoenix- ville to consult with the physician at- tending Mrs. G. L. Fetters, his former housekeeper. He remained at her bedside for twelve hours until hope was aban- doned and then started home by way of the Pennsylvania railroad. Near Sun- bury there was a slight wreck which necessitated two coaches being cut from the remainder of the train and left on a track with no heat for more than an hour. Dr. Reeder was in one of the coaches and contracted a severe cold which developed into throat paralysis. He was unmarried and leaves no near rela- tives. —That there is a difference between the proverbial burying of a lone talent in the ground and planting a single dollar is revealed in the story of a Clarion-coun- ty 4-H club girl told recently by John U. Ruef, assistant State club leader of the Pennsylvania State College. When Leona Burnham, of Corsica, received a dollar at the club round-up a year ago from the Kiwanis and Community clubs of Clarion, she wondered what she would do with it. In the spring she bought one and one-fourth ounces of Penn State Ball- head cabbage seed. Good weather con- ditions gave her a large supply of fine plants. After selling 1000 plants for $3 she transplanted the remainder. In early July it was hot and dry so Leona and her little sister hauled water to the field, putting a half-pint in each hole. Then the plants were set. They grew rapid- ly, and from late summer until the round- up this fall she sold 3,000 pounds of cab- bage at one to two cents a pound. From the cabbage she got $45, making $48 in all from her original $1. Leona has start- ed a ‘go to college” fund and'is quite pleased with this ‘substantial addition. At the round-up this fall she received the $5 prize awarded for the best essay writ- ten by a girl about what she did with her dollar. Re: =~ vr