Beuacaif Yim INK SLINGS. ——Now set your speedometer to register the velocity of Bill Vare's re- turn to health. —If Elihu Root gets us into the World Court he will render a greater :service than getting signatures to a toothless treaty. —As long as the penitentiaries and Jails have accommodations for them there seem to be plenty eager to make reservations. —The K. K. K,, Tom Heflin and Bishop Cannon evidently scared Mr. Hoover out of his apparent desire to have “Col.” Bill Donovan in his Cab- inet. —Anyway the flood on Tuesday had the effect of compelli. g us to scrub out and so far as spring house- cleaning is concerned we've probably beaten all of our readers to it. —It matters little how March comes in: Whether it be like a lion or a lamb. It’s how it’s going to go out that’s concerning the fellows whose coal piles are running low. —Well, Lindy is really human. ‘Cupid got his nerve, whereas all other attackers failed. Cracking up a plane was inconceivable, so far as the Colonel was concerned, until Anne Morrow's charms made him a bit nervous. —Senator Reed refused to put in the finishing wallop in the Vare case because he couldn’t “hit a man when he is down.” That’s a fine spirit, of course, but it remains for the open- ing of the new Congress to reveal how completely down Mr. Vare is. —Judge Fleming put Coleville’s “millionaire” on the water wagon last week, but it is reported that he wouldn't stay put and now he’s fac- ing punishment for failure to com- ply with an order that, in the case in question, was utterly impossible for him to do. —It is the first of March and the first day of spring is only three weeks off. My, before we know it, we'll be spading up a little plot for onions and lettuce. That's what we think right now, but it is highly probable that when the time comes somebody else will actually do it. —The Legislature promptly voted fifteen thousand dollars of the tax- payers’ money to pay its way to the Hoover inaugural. This, in the face of the fact that that an extra cent tax on gasoline is being advocated in order to raise enough money to keep things going at Harrisburg. —The reason the country is pro- * ducing so few statesmen is because everybody wants to be a statesman naw... Fime was when the people of a community got behind an outstand- ing man among them and pushed him to the fore. Nowadays they are all fighting to get in front of him. —The Sharkey-Stribling fight at Miami, Wednesday night, was more or less of a pink tea affair. A four hundred thousand gate to see two second-raters punch each other takes only a little ballyhoo to reach, yet what months of toil it takes to raise such a sum to build a church, a hospital or a library. —Everybody who wants to pay four cents tax on each gallon of gaso- line he buys should write to Senator Scott and tne Hon. Holmes telling them of their desires. Otherwise our worthy representatives at Harrisburg will not know how “the folks back home” feel about the matter. If they don’t hear from anybody, after this notice, it will be understood that no- body wants to pay the extra cent tax. —Mr. Hoover is believed to have selected a Democrat for Attorney General in his Cabinet. William D. Mitchell, of Minnesota, is the gentle- man who is supposed to be the Pres- ident-elect’s choice for the important government post. It is rather a joke ! on our Republican friends that no big lawyer in their ranks was quite dry enough to suit the Anti-Saloon Lea- gue and, in consequence, Mr. Hoover had to pick one out of the party that is supposed to be so wet. —Every time a political campaign or Lincoln's birthday anniversary comes around the wets and drys get into a squabble as to which side of the question Abe was on. We can't see that it matters much, one way or another. If he ran a store in 1833 he probably sold liquor. They all did then. It is generally supposed that he split rails prior to that time. We are not trying to stir up an argumen- tation, but we are just a little cur- ious why some one hasn't done some- thing to make it unlawful to split rails. —Only forty-five days remain in which to get the old fly hook fixed, the rod shellacked and the license button pinned on your coat. Better start soon, because time certainly flies. The real fisherman never be- lieves the stories others tell about there being no fish. He goes out and settles that matter for himself. We don’t know whether the fishing dur- ing the coming season will be any better than it was during the last, but by way of encouragement let us tell you that eight sardine fishermen got so many in their net, off the coast of California, the other day, that they swamped the boat and the fishermen would have drowned had not another boat seen their plight and gone to their rescue. allman: STATE RIGHTS AN D FEDERAL UNION. VOL. “4. ELLEFONTE, PA. MARCH 1. 1929. NO. 9. Borah Declines Cabinet Offer. | Senator Borah h has decided to re- main in the Senate for the reason, as he modestly states, “that he can be of more use to his party and the coun- try by remaining in his present in- fluential position.” He is chairman of the Committee on Foreign Relations, which within late years has been a very important office. But with the Kellogg treaty in operation and the movement for another conference for the decrease in naval equipment mov- ing forward it will exercise less in- fluence in the future. But it may afford opportunity to promote one of Mr. Borah’s pet projects. He may be able to advance the interests of the Soviet government of Russia in its efforts to secure recognition as a member of the family of nations. Senator Borah has had a long and interesting career in Washington. Entering the Senate at a compara- tively early age and favored with a reputation for eloquence and skill in discussion he soon attracted attention of the country. Elected as a Repub- lican he alligned himself with the so- called independents, among whom he soon became a leader. But his work along those lines was lip service, for in every emergency he deserted his associates and voted with the admin- istration machine. The result of this attitude was that neither faction re- lied upon him and his influence in the body was diminished. Upon assum- ing the office of chairman of the Com- mittee on Foreign Relations he threatened to oppose the policy of the administration but soon after- ward fell into line without giving any | reason for his change. Mr. Borah is ambitious as well as able, and eloquent and his recalci- trance was getting him nowhere. He had been not only a bitter but a vi- tuperative enemy of Herbert Hoover, but when the signs pointed to his nomination Senator Borah enlisted in his force and practically controlled the activities of the campaign. Since the election he has been recognized as the probable “power behind the throne.” It is said he was offered the portfolio of the State Department and -it is certain that he has been’ tendered the office of Attorney Gen- eral, which he has declined. But we are not persuaded that he was in- fluenced by consideration of the “good of the country.” The ambition of Borah had something to do with it. ——Congressman McFadden, of Pennsylvania, chairman of the House committee on Banking and Currency, hints that foreign financiers are di- recting the policies of American bankers. em————— re e——— Well Meant but Inadequate Remedies. Three or four bills have been intro- duced in the General Assembly for the purpose of abating or correcting what Governor Fisher has justly de- nounced as a vicious system, refer- ring to the coal and iron police. Each of these measures has merit, but neither of them is entirely adequate. One of them would limit their opera- tions to the property of the employer. Another would require a searching inquiry into the Jualifications and character of applicants and “rigid State supervision of their official activities.” Still another proposition is that such officers be required to give bonds for the proper perfor- mance of their duties. All these remedies are desirable but inefficient. At the time this force was created, nearly three-quarters of a century ago, it may have been justified if not exactly economically wise. Just af- ter the close of the Civil war there was more or less lawlessness in in- dustrial centers and the purpose was to shift part of the burden of main- taining order from the communities to the corporations interested. It served fairly well at first but soon degenerated into a menace. Outlaws and ruffians were employed by cor- porations which had no concern out- side of selfishness. In many instances these irresponsible thugs were more active in creating disturbances than a protective force. When a committee of Senators vis- ited the bituminous coal producing sections of Pennsylvania, a year ago, the evil influence of the private po- lice force was clearly pointed out. But nothing was done to check the operations until the recent murder of John Bercoveskie, near Pittsburgh, a few weeks ago. That outrage not only aroused the Governor but stirred the people of the State. The bills in the General Assembly are the result, but they fail of their purpose. The complete elimination of all such forces is the true remedy. Pennsyl- vania is rich enough to police itself, and it is under legal as well as moral obligation to do so. Our splendid State police is a nucleus which will require little expansion. S————————— What Cae Over Seriator Reel? The dominating fact expressed in the report of the Slush Fund com- mittee of the Senate is that the ma- jority for William S. Vare in the Senatorial election of 1926 was ob- tained by the grossest frauds. It was made equally clear, though not so candidly stated, that the frauds were deliberately planned by the leaders of the Vare organization with the knowledge and assistance of Mr. Vare. In view of these conditions it is not easy to imagine what impulse or influence appealed so strongly to Senator Jim Reed's magnanimity that he quit the fight at the moment ; that the triumph of justice was about to be achieved. He was certainly not deceived by the absurd claim that Vare had not had a fair chance. The evidence of the opened ballot | boxes proved that the frauds were systematic as well as general throughout the city. The records of | the tax office showed that the issue of thousands of bogus tax receipts was by collusion. The records of the registrar's office indicated careful | planning and complete supervision by , the ‘division leaders.” As a result! of this systematic fraud the commit- tee unanimously declared that “the average chance of a Philadelphia vot- er to have his vote for United States | Senator counted correctly was less | than one in eight.” The records of | the courts show the Vare organiza- tion defended every ballot thief brought to trial. In fact every charge of fraud was proved and responsibil- ity fastened on the organization. The records show that Mr. Vare was given ample opportunity to ap- pear in person before the committee to present his defense while he was physically able to do so, and that when his counsel did appear he pre- sented no evidence. The plain in- ference is that he had no defense to make and refrained from appearing because of that fact. He adopted the legal quibble of “confession and avoidance” because in his cunning mind that seemed the safer course. The Republicans on the committee were not . deceived by his. tactics’ They registered their abhorrence of his methods by signing the report. Why should chairman Reed and his Democratic colleage, Senator King, become so sentimental and sympa- thetic ? ——Somebody has suggested that Grundy ought to pay the expenses of Pennsylvania at the inaugural. Grun- dy never assumes bills he can saddle onto the State. Slush Fund Committee’s Report. The Slush Fund committee of the Senate expressed a just verdict in its final report, submitted a week ago, in its unequivocal declaration that “ijt is the opinion of the committee that William S. Vare js not entitled to a seat in the United States Sen- ate.” This opinion was not arrived at by careless mental processes or a cursory examination of the facts. 1t was not influenced by partisan prej- udices or grudgingly tormed with reservations. It was the unanimous opinion of a body of highly trained men after a searching investigation of the facts covering a period of two years of patient analysis. THe plea for further delay by Senator King, Democrat, was an unwarranted ex- pression of sentimentality. The committee was composed of three Republicans and two Demo- crats and the report is signed by all. But it does not guarantee the exclu- sion of Mr. Vare from the seat. That is left for the Senate to determine. The fight is now on and in all prob- ability will continue until the expira- tion of the present Congress, which will be at noon next Monday. But it will not be conducted on the high plarz set by the committee. It has already degenerated into a partisan strife in the interest of political ex- pediency. The Dave Reeds, Jim Watsons, and other political hijack- ers will manage the campaign for Vare and: they will sacrifice every principle of justice and patriotism to accomplish their purpose. In the history of the country there has never been a parallel case. There have been scandals in Congress and elsewhere that brought the blush of shame to the faces of right-minded citizens. The oil scandals which in- volved in perfidy members of the cab- inet were shameful, but no Senator or other high official of the govern: ment openly defended the culprits. But in the hope of securing party advantage dozens of Senators are ready and anxious to sprag the wheels of legislation in order to le- galize a fraud which threatens the foundation of the government. For two years this defense of crime has been in progress and present indica- tions are that it will succeed. | General! Asseinbly Abdicates. The chances of the repeal of the anthracite coal tax appear to be van- ishing as the time limit for action by the Legislature diminishes. The latest proposition of those op- posed to the repeal is a compromise which would cut the levy from eight to four per cent. of the ton price. Of course this would defeat the purpose of the repeal which is to reduce the cost of the fuel to the consumers. So long as there is a tax there will ‘be no material decrease in the price of the coal. Unless the proposed leg- 'islation produces a reduction in the cost of the commodity it is of no earthly use to the public. In the ab- sence of such a result it can’t be of | very much interest to the mine own- | | The compromise proposition is the I product of the fertile brain of Mr. ! Grundy and according to published re- | corporation share owners from taxa- jon It is said that Governor Fisher is in sympathy with the plans of Mr. | Grundy and acording to published re- | ports the question is to be determined at a conference to be held in Phila- , delphia in the near future. It is rea- soned that the operators might easily be persuaded to accept the compro- mise because it would reduce the tax [they are obliged to pay by four per cent. without compelling them to cut the price to consumers. In other | words it would simply put four per i cent. on their bulk sales into the pockets of the ‘coal companies. The constitution of Pennsylvania declares that “the legislative power of this Commonwealth shall be vested in a General Assembly which shall | consist of a Senate and a House of Representatives.” The statute on the subject provides that the seat of the General Assembly is Harrisburg. But according to the programme above stated the General Assembly has not only abdicated its powers but has transferred the theatre of its opera- tions to Philadelphia, where the Gov- ernor and the principal lobbyists may meet at their convenience and deter- mine what legislation shall be enact- _Are the Senators and Represen- fatives of Pennsylvania ready to con- firm a report which so asperses their manhod ? { ——-A letter from the Hon. Willis Reed Bierly advises us that he is re- covering from what he calls the Hoover flu, No. 2. That means, we presume, that he had a No. 1 dose of it. Mr. Bierly has been physically unfortunate lately. If our memory fails us not it was only a short time ago that his surgeons nearly made hamburg steak out of his rotund an- atomy and he was just beginning to recover from that dismembering or- deal when the two flus got him and he is now down to the middle-weight class. He's a fighter, however, in any division. In fact his letter has a chip on its shoulder which we are wise enough not to attempt to knock off. We might go so far as to ven- ture the sugestion that he got that “Hoover flu No 2” as retribution for having jumped the political traces last fall. Mr. Bierly has left Harris- burg and is back in York again so as to get nearer to the publishing house that prints his “Quarterly Digest of Pennsylvania Decisions.” ——Ex-sheriff “Dick” Taylor has had sufficient experience trying to run a farm by proxy. He has sold his live stock and farm implements and rented his farm on the Jackson- ville road to Peter Lyons, who will plow and dig and reap the crops the coming year. John Shutt and family, who occupied the farm the past year, have moved back to Bellefonte. rn ———— a serene. ——Miss Adella Sterrett, of Erie, Penna., has been made associate sup- erintendent for the young people's division of the Pennsylvania Sabbath School Association. Miss Sterrett is a graduate of Boston University, school of religious education. ——The Protestant Episcopal di- ocese of Pennsylvania is having a hard time hunting a Bishop Coadju- tor. If a laymen could serve the pur- pose there would be no trouble in getting a candidate. ——Probably the recent harmony deal among Philadelphia politicians has had something to do with the renewed gang gun operations. —— ——The boom in speculative stocks has knocked the bottom out of indus- trial and commercial prosperity. ——The Vare campaign before the Senatorial election was one of boodle, and, since, one of false pretense. —— i ——Lindy’s heart is in the right place, all right. Look where he went to spend Sunday. | MONDAY NIGHT'S RAIN FLOODED THE “WATCHMAN.” The regular February rain and thaw arrived this week and depart- ing left a trail of mud and slime in its wake. In this we speak from ob- servation and experience because the water was high enough in Spring creek to flood the Watchman press room to a depth of 17 inches—which was not as deep as it had been once or twice before, but plenty deep enough to cause considerable incoa- venience and a lot of work in clean- ing out the dirt. But the Watchman was not the only sufferer by any means. Every cellar in the row of houses on the west side of south Water street was flooded, and those equipped with furnaces were compelled to go with- out heat as the fires were drowned out. The furnace pit of the Beatty motor company had eleven inches of water but not enough to affect the fire in the furnace. It rained hard most of Monday night, which naturally melted the! snow which had already been soften- ed by the warm weather of Monday With considerable frost in the ground there was no place for the water tg go only to flow into the streams, and it was a toss up where the larg- est volume went, whether into Spring | creek or Logans Branch. Out at the Phoenix pumping station the water in the dam overflowed its banks, com- pletely flooding the road leading out to the Valentine home and also breaking through the bank along the railroad, with the result that the wa- ter flooded the lower part of the old mill and ran down in a stream on both sides of it. J. D. Seibert finally managed to open the flood gates which prevented the water from do- ing any great damage. The Buffalo run overflowed its banks at the intersection with Spring creek, where the water was over the railroad tracks, though not high enough to do any damage. Notwith- standing the high water in Spring creek Bald Eagle creek, especially from Milesburg west, was not unusu- by its rush of waters. At “Red Roost’ the run that comes down through Armor’s gap became a raging torrent and because of the high water in the McCoy dam backed up around the houses there so that several of them were completely ma- rooned. Out near Roopsburg several homes on the dam bottom were completely surrounded when Spring creek swept out of its channel and covered the entire flat. No damage was done, aside from the annoyance of having water in the cellars and being unable to get away from the houses except in boats. The water flooded the basement of the Bush house and a: centrifugal ! pump had to be installed to keep the water out of the furnace pit so that there would be no interruption of the heat in the hotel. The water was almost knee deep in the cellar under Ed Garbrick’s cigar store, and it came in so quick and | in the flood before they could be re- from $150 to $200. Down at the office of the Chemical | Lime company, on north Water street, water flooded the cellar to a depth of three feet, drowning the fires in the boiler . used for heating purposes, and the result was the of- fices above had no heat all cay. While in town most of the snow ap- pears to be gone there is still lots of it in the woods and on the north sides of the hills. Continued warm weather is likely to keep the streams high for several days and another hard rain might bring another flood. ————————————— ——XKing George was able to smoke a cigarette, the other day, so it may be assumed that it’s all over except the shouting. re ———— ere ees. Aviation Future. From the Pittsburgh Press. Somehow the west coast does not seem nearly so far away from New York since Captain Hawks made his record-breaking flight from Los Angeles to Roosevelt Field. Think of it—eighteen hours from ocean to ocean—and it took our grandfathers as many weeks. To be sure Colonel Goebel did it last summer, taking only thirty-six minutes more than Hawks, but you can never be sure of what a stunt like that means until it has been done at least twice. The future of aviation grows more certain day by day. The air mail flies on schedule . night after night and just to show that the time for unblazed trails can be calculated accurately, Colonel Lindbergh, open- | ing the new line from Miami to Pan- | ama, arrived only three minutes late. ally high and no.damage was caused SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Two dollar bills that had been raised to tens by means of pasting a fake num- eral “10” over the center of the notes have appeared in Sunbury. —Gilbert D. Melhorn, 65 years old, was found dead in his home in Williamsport, by an employee of the Pennsylvania Pow- ‘er and Light company who went to the house to read the gas meter. Mr. Mel- horn had been employed by the A. H. Heilman and company store for thirty- eight years as a collector. He resided alone. —Frederick Meeker, of Hunlock Creek, and John R. Weber, of Sunbury, suffered burns about the head and face on Mon- day when an explosion occurred in the chemical laboratory of Bucknell Univers- . ity, at Lewisburg, in which they were working. Their injuries were described as not serious. The explosion was caus- ed by fumes from a five-gallon can of gasoline being ignited by coming in con- tact with an overheated stove. —Locking the doors of her home in Reading, Monday night, Vera Davies, 37, went to bed and then set fire to the bed. Neighbors sent in a still alarm of fire, but the woman refused to unlock the door and policemen had to break in the door and bat- tle with the woman, part of her clothing burned off, to subdue her. She was burn- ed only slightly, but the furniture was damaged. The woman was taken to police station after first aid treatment. —Plans are being formulated for the annual meeting of the Presbytery of Huntingdon to be held in the First Pres- byterian church, Mount Union, April 8 and 9. The Rev. Robert S. Burris is the pastor. Charles Howard Welch is cor- respondent for the committe on entertain- ment. The Rev. Dr. Robert E. Speer, of New York, a son of the Presbytery of Huntingdon and frequently in that church in early youth, has been invited to be one of the speakers at the meeting. —The historic stone bridge of the Penn- | sylvania railroad at Johnstown, one of the few spans which withstood the ‘‘Johns- town flood’ of 1889, will be widened 12 feet during the present year, Pennsyl- | vania railroad engineers said on Tuesday. The four tracks which at present run over { the bridge will be relocated to provide i more clearance, it was said. No additional tracks will be laid at this time. A total of $140,000 has been authorized for the work. The bridge was erected in 1887. —An appropriation of $5,000 each for five Presbyterian colleges in Pennsyl- vania was made on Tuesday at the an- nual business meeting of the Synod com- mittee of the board of Christian educa- tion of the Presbyterian church. The colleges are Wilson, Waynesburg, Lincoln, Grove City and Lafayette. Beaver college made no request. Other appropriations were $4,000 for University of Pennsylva- nia; $4,500 for Penn State, and $5,000 for University of Pittsburgh and Carnegie Tech. —George Smith, 24, who has charge of loading cars at the plant of the Empire Oil works, Inc., at Oil City, was found dead inside a tank car on Sunday, the ap- parent victim of gas fumes. The car had been used for transporting gasoline and had just been emptied when Smith enter- ed it. It is a rule at refineries that none shall enter a tank car without another man at the opening on top. It was said, however, that Smith went into the con- tainer without taking precautions. He was a resident at Franklin. —Six persons were compelled to leap from second-story windows into the snow on one of the coldest nights of the win- ter when fire destroyed the home of Wil- liam Dibble, ten miles south of Towanda. Pa., early on Sunday. Mrs. Dibble re- ceived burns and was injured as a re- sult of her jump but her husband and their four children escaped with minor bruises. None had time to obtain clothing and all were forced to walk in night- clothes and bare feet a quarter of a mile to the nearest neighbor’s house. — Samuel Hamaker, of Manheim, Lan- caster county, who hasn't shaved since 1 1889, was 75 years old on Sunday. His ! peard is six feet one inch long. He be- lieves his facial adornment the longest in the world. He was born in Donegal township, Lancaster county. When a young man he wagered with his father that he could grow the longer beard. When his beard reached a length of forty Linches he was declared winner, but shav- He im- ! ed when he lost an election bet. fast that several cases of cigarettes, | | mediately ceased shaving after paying the cigars and cut tobacco were caught | pet. — Herman Marks, arrested by Baltimore moved. Mr. Garbrick’s loss will be | and Ohio Railroad police for train riding, doesn’ t believe in jails as a place of safe- | keeping. Last Friday when he awoke ! after a refreshing nap on his iron bunk i the jail at Connellsville, Fayette coun- , he discovered his total gapital, $6.73, fv. missing. Chief of police Grubb made a search of the other prisoners and re- ported finding $4 in $1 bills pinned in the shirt sleeve of Wade Kimmel, another railroad company prisoner, and the re- mainder in silver packed into the toe of a shoe worn by Ray Gougeon, also ar- rested for train riding. —QGeorge Gibson, 22, of Grovania, Col- umbia county, was committed to jail at Bloomsburg, in default of $10,000 bond on fifteen charges of forgery. Corporal Carr, of the State police, who laid the informa- tion, said Gibson had forged his mother’s name on notes during the last year in Northumberland, Montour and Columbia counties. Gibson is alleged to have at- tended public sales, making numerous purchases, and giving notes for them, forging the name of his mother as indors- er. The total amount the police do not know, but Carr said he believed a number of cases had not been reported. The bond fixed is one of the highest ever set in that county. —Two bills to restore the right to suf-- frage to tenant farmers of Pennsylvania are now before the Legislature. Hundreds of farmers who rent their land were dis- franchised in 1927 when the General As- sembly, in a spirit of fair play, removed the tax on horses, mares, geldings, mules and meat cattle over four years of age. It was not until the following election that the farmers discovered that they were without a vote under the State law which requires a tax receipt as a pre- requisite to registration. Representative Albert B. Davidson, of Allegheny, is au- thor of a measure which would restore the tax on these farm animals. The amount of tax varies in. the different counties. In 1926 a total of $294,361 was collected under this tax.