INK SLINGS. —The higher-ups in the ship-build- ing concerns are making their man Shearer the “goat.” He should wor- ry. We'd play most anybody's “goat” for the money he got. —Judge Fleming is holding court in Pittsburgh this week. Dan Grove and Bill Zimmerman ought to be out there, for then they could walkinin their shirt sleeves without fear of a tipstaff looking ' at them with that sort of a “you git” look. ‘—_We have been urged to take a crack at the Court for allowing his tipstaves eight days for a five day court week. We're fair. We have never wilfully made an unfair attack on anyone and as there were three night sessions of court during the week we think the Court was justi- fied in making the order he did. — Having plead guilty to highway robbery, bank robbery, larceny of an automobile and several other offenses Mr. H. M. Kline and Raymond A. Shope have saved Clinton county a lot of court costs and insured them- selves a meal ticket for about as many years, We imagine, as the law allowed Judge Baird to give them. —Shope and Kline must have zained a very high appreciation of the work of the state police as they sat up in the woods near the Furl olace and watched the force running wround in circles. Our uncommon sounty detective was on the job, too, jut maybe he was only there as a spectator. You know he’s “no common yoliceman.” —Evidently Mr. Eugene Tunney 1as grown peeved at the lack of at- -ention the press has been paying to 1im. He has sued Mr. Fogarty, hus- >and of the lady who says Gene yromised to marry her, for one hun- ired grand, but the news only made he inside pages of the metropolitan »apers. Tunney was a front page 'eature for sometime but he boored iimself off of them. —1It appears from the record that senator Howell, of Nebraska, has the >resident backed "farmers, tariff mongers, ship-build- rs and peace advocates might as vell give up hope of getting relief rom the government soon. Senator Jowell has given the President oth- r fish to fry and Herbert's got to mow a lot about handling hot pans r he is going to get his fingers burn. d. —It was hard luck for Carson who aign, Ill, on Wednseday. He escap- d from Rockview in 1923 and had een free ever since. Hard luck for ‘arson but what a victory for the ww? It is such evidences of persis- ant determination on the part of law nforcement officers that will finally onvince society that some how, some ime, the day of settlement will come. ‘here should be no escaping that. -—Gosh, in a few years there’ll be othing at all for men to brag about. :altimore physicians have compiled tatistics that prove that drinking mong women has increased twenty er cent. within the last ten years; ‘hereas the best men can show is yme ten or twelve per cent. less. If 1is keeps up it won't be long until -e males of the genus homo won't gure any more in what's going to appen than a drone bee does when 1e queen tells her affinities: He's no ood. Kill him. —There has been much ado over 1e wedding of John Coolidge and lorence Trumbull. The fact that > is a former President’s son and 1e the daughter of the Governor of onnecticut possibly makes their ings “big news.” But why should ? John and Florence probably ab- or their radiated notoriety, but they in outstrip their illustrious fathers , after six months, they can prove » the world that they are actually ving on nothing more than John ill then be earning. —We own to having quite a sur- ise on Wednesday. The “watch- )g” of the Watchman’'s treasury :alled” wus for having devoted so uch time and spent so mu®h money getting a true story of the chase ‘the Beech Creek bank robbers. 'e were surprised at the idea that ere is anyone sticking around the op who imagines that the Watch- an has anything approaching a easury. Also at the inference that »ssibly things don’t go as well here hen we are out as they do when are in. —If you disagree with our belief at the Watchman’s story of the ndit chase is a pretty thorough id accurate record of the facts, you » and interview the principals in it id see what kind of a story you 11 come back with. We spent the eater part of three days talking to ople who were there, or said they re, and checking and rechecking eir stories and we know how, un- r the stress of excitement, no two servers get the same impressions m the same incident. Why, there re nearly a dozen people swore to that they had taken the money ! Delaney’s body. Three of them + found out later, hadn't even been the scene of the tragedy. into a corner.’ ot VOL. 74. BELLEFONTE. PA.. SE The “Rich Man’s Delight.” There is no cause for surprise in the announcement that the new is- sue of $500,000,000 treasury certifi- cates was vastly oversubscribed within the period of three days. It has been appropriately called the “Rich Man’s Delight.” It exempts holders from income tax, sur or com- mon. It provides a source of invest- ment the proceeds of which are “all” velvet.” It was authorized by Con- gress on the recommendation of Sec- retary of the Treasury Andrew Mel- lon, whose family and friends prob- ably absorbed a large part of the is- sue. The only source of surprise in relation to it is that it is a short term loan. With Congress and the White House under control of Uncle Andy it might have been made to cover a long period. When Secretary Mellon was urg- ing a material decrease in the tax rates on big incomes he descanted freely upon the evil of driving rich men into the bad habit of investing their money in tax-free securities, such as State and municipal bonds, to the great detriment of industrial and commercial prosperity. In fact he discoursed on his theme so elo- quently and forcefully that Senators and Representatives in Congress were persuaded to cut the tax on big incomes to an extent that saved’ him upward of a million dollars a year on his personal income. This new tax-free offer of the government will enable him to invest that consid- erable saving without in the least’ measure impairing his capital. In fact it is a real boon to the million- aires. > One of the well-established princi- ples of fihance is that tax-free secur- ities are inimical to business inter- ests. Commenting upon this loan the New :York Nation observes that “even in the enormous stress of fi- nancing the World war the govern- ment was most reluctant to exempt federal obligations from any but nor- mal taxes, and as a matter of fact only a small portion of some $25.- ties issued in that period was so favored.” But Wall Street had less influence on operations of the Treas- ury Department then than now, and Mr. McAdoo was less concerned about profitable investment for his surplus funds than Uncle Andy. Pub- lic rather than personal interests controlled then. my Ap ——— — It is encouraging to learn that the ticket scalpers haven't got hold of the world series pasteboards as yet. Shearer Chalked For the Goat. The shipbuilders have abandoned William B. Shearer to his fate. His work in Washington and Geneva seems to have disappointed them and they are calling him hard names. Mr. Grace, president of the Bethlehem Steel ' company, has written to the President repudiating him and Mr. Schwab is free in denouncing him as a fraud. But they admit that he was on the pay-roll of their corpora- tion and was sent to Geneva as a sort of “watcher.” It remained for Mr. Bardo, president of the New York Shipbuilding corporation, however, to fix him in his place. Testifying before the Senate investigating committee Mr. Bardo stigmatized him as a skunk. Grace and Schwab were less candid or more polite. Maybe Mr. Shearer does emit an unpleasant odor but he served the purpose of the shipbuilders for a time, and the purpose didn’t look like a lilly or smell like a rose. He was their representative in Washing- ton while the Jones-White ship sub- sidy bill was pending and he disburs- ed $143,000 to promote the passage of that measure. He was sent by them to California to enlist William Randolph Hearst in an ambitious shipping enterprise and they employ- ed him .in various other matters. How he spent the vast sum in fur- thering the ship subsidy bill has not been revealed but it is certain that his methods in that case met with their approval for they continued to pay him for some time afterward. We have no desire to defend Wil- liam B. Shearer and even less to ex- cuse propaganda employed for selfish or sordid purposes. But it is impos- sible to condemn one form of an evil and silently acquiesce in another, in- finitely more mischievous. The Pow- er trust lobby has been more insid- ious and damaging than anything Mr. Shearer has done or tried to ‘do, and President Hoover has not spok- en a word or sounded an alarm against it. In the matter in mind the ship builders are more culpable than their agent, but it is a safe predic- tion that he will be condemned while they will escape even a censure. The failure to find out who got the ship subsidy boodle is evidence of that. The result of the primary election in Philadelphia confirms the impres- sion that that city is “corrupt and contented.” The result in Pittsburgh justifies the belief that the Republi- cans of that city prefer vice to virtue. In Philadelphia a well-meaning group manacled good intentions by blun- dering management. In permitting Mayor Mackey to appear in the role of leadership it assumed a burden that no organization has strength enough to carry. The name of Vare is anathema to thousands of good citizens but that of Mackey is even more abhorrent. Every plea he ut- tered, every speech he made for the League ticket, made scores of vojes for the Vare political banditti. With alignments thus formed there was little difference except in the character of the candidates. The Vare ticket, hand-picked by the boss | and Tom Cunningham was made up of servile followers of the machine. The League ticket was constructed of better material. With a single exception it was composed of men widely known in business life for civic virtues and unselfish effort in public interests. In these circum- stances they ought to have been pre- ferred by an overwhelming majority. But the activities of Mackey in their behalf cast a doubt upon theinteg- rity of their purposes and influenced thousands to “rather bear the ills we have than fly to others that we know not of.” / : But conditions were different in Pittsburgh. There the voters had full opportunity to choose between | vice and virtue in public life and they not only selected the evil but adopted the greater. offender against virtue. Mayor Kline has not only en- couraged political corruption but is charged with having defied the laws and official decency in planning bal- lot frauds. ‘One of his competi- tors, Malone, is said to be little better, but Judge Martin is not only a fine lawyer but dan excellent citizen who has long been active in efforts for clean politics. 3 and just government. He defeated the Mellon machine when he was elected Judge and his election as Mayor would have guaranteed honest government. ——According to current gossip in Harrisburg, the employees of the State are secretly circulating propa- ganda against the voting machines. The Senatorial Trading Post. The Hawley-Smoot tariff bill is likely to debase the United States Senate to the low level of a trading post for commerce in legislation. Already several blocs have been or- ganized with a view of “log-rolling” in the interest of one =roduct or an- other. The latest development along this line is the lumber bloc, the os- tensible purpose of which is to ex- act from the Republican machine a tariff tax on logs and shingles. These products of the forest are on the free list in the administration programme, though Senator Pitman, | of Nevada, was promised a tax rate in consideration of his vote against the motion to limit increases to agricultural products. He will prob- ably figure in the organization. The Senators thus far active in the new movement are all Republi- cans. At the organization meeting McNary, Oregon; Jones, Washington; Steiwer, Oregon; Oddie, Nevada; Thomas, Idaho, and Johnson, Cali- fornia, were present. They claim to have sufficient strength to hold “the balance of power” between the ad- ministration followers on one side and the Democrats on the other, and thus be able to exact favors from either or both elements in the con- tention. In a game of grab, suchas is contemplated, the only considera- tion which enters into the matter is “everybody for himself and the devil take the hindmost.” The effect upon the interests of the public is of no consequence in commercial states- manship. Of all the tariff iniquities this is easily the greatest. So far as public interest is concerned the wisest thing that could be done would be to en- courage the importation of forest products in all its various forms. The time is coming, and it isnot far distant, when the scarcity of Amer- ican timber will become a national evil. Already the scarcity, and in- evitably the high price of lumber, is retarding building operations of the country and checking the pro- gress of industrial life. To avert this danger would be an infinitely greater service to the country than reimbursing slush fund contributors with tariff favors. ——The Shearer , episode merely shows what fools some big business managers are. "STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. _ | Corruption Wins in Two Cities. | Hoover Chargea with Delinquency. | ‘When Senator Howell, of Ne- braska, declared the other day that prohibition law . enforcement in Washington is not quite up to the highest standard of efficiency he pro- voked the resentment or aroused the conscience of the President. The | Senator inferentially saddled the blame for this ' President. That is, he declared that ‘ the President has power to hire and fire: the enforcement agents and that if he served notice that the delin- | quents would be fired there would be ' no further deliquency. This occurred on Saturday. On Sunday the President issued a statement asking the Sen- "ator to produce proof of laxity and promising to make “Washington a model for the country.” When a conflagration is properly started it moves rapidly. On Monday Senator Cole Blease, of South Caro- lina, in a speech discussing the How- ell episode, stated that he “is reli- ably informed that within two squares of the peace monument. on Pennsylvania avenue, four narcotic . joints are being run and it is known to the people who are supposed to ‘stop it.” The Narcotic law is a Fed- eral statute and the obligation for its enforcement is upon the same , agencies as are required to enforce ‘the Volstead law. Therefore if the President has been remiss in one he “is equally culpable in the other. The only important difference in the matter is that Howell is a Republi- ‘can and Blease a “pseudo” Demo- crat. . ; It is possible, of course, that Presi- dent Hoover has adopted the idea of Clarence True Wilson, Bishop Can- non and others more or less respon- ‘sible for his election, that there is only one article in the constitution, the Eighteenth, and a single act of Congress, the Volstead law, that are deserving of enforcement, and that he will not think it worth while to answer the indictment of Blease. But the public mind will focus it the Bhs that Mr. Hoover 1s so absorbed in problems of engineering that he is overlooking many impor- | tant obligations of his office. His in- experience in public life may account for delinquencies but will hardly ex- cuse them. ‘ : —We opine that President Hoover was only talking big when he ex- pressed the determination to made Washington the model American city. It seems to us that he is in a position to make it as dry as a piece of Fourth of July punk if he wants to. If he isn’t, the President of the United States isn’t the potentate in the District of Columbia we have al- ways imagined him to be. * -——According to figures compiled by the United States Department of Commerce, in Washington, Centre county had 260 marriages and 21 di- vorces in 1928, against 293 marriag; and 24 divorces in 1927. : ——Harry Sinclair complains that he has not been fairly treated by Washington courts, and we agree with him. He ought to have gotten nine years instead of nine months in jail. ——Maybe Wakeman, vice presi- dent of the Bethlehem Steel com- pany, will be the goat, but Shearer will be tagged the “evil genius.” ——The proposed tariff on sugar will cost the consumers $50,000,000 a year, but Senator Smoot needs money for the Mormon church. . ——Senator Caraway is a maste magnet but he can’t draw an opinion of the pending tariff bill out of President Hoover. ——Clarence True Wilson has’ and he is setting himself to a hard job. < I wad] r ——————— A ————— ——Lindy is earning his salary as an air mail carrier and preserving his reputation as a first class citizen. tie popstar inein, What Is Men’s Work. From the Harrisburg Telegraph. There is much discussion. about the invasion of men’s field of work by women. There are almost no exclu- sively masculine occupations left. Perhaps the shoe is about to be put on the other foot. A news item from: New York says a German young man has been serving as a maid in various New York homes for the past four years. The young man has now put -on his male attire and returns to - Germany with money ahead. ; If women can take over-all of men’s jobs, perhaps men can make a successful invasion of the feminine domain EMBER 27. 1929. condition on the a different angle and come to will market any surplus, started a crusade against cigarettes. NO. 38. WHAT WE GIVE AWAY. Lewis Ginsberg in the American Hebrew. Love that is hoarded moulds at last Until we know some day The only thing we ever have Is what we give away. And kindness that is never used, But hidden all alone, Will slowly harden till it is As hard as any stone. It is he e things we always hold we will lose some day; The only things we ever keep Are what we give away. To Form a New Politieal From the Rhiladelphia Inquirer. Third party movements Party. in this country have never met with any considerable success; but, undeter- red by past experience, a group of enthusiasts have determined to or- ganize a new national political party in opposition to the two existing major organizations. In its present state it is called The League for In- dependent Political Action. Profassor John Dewey of Columbia Universily is the chairman. He is to be assisted by a committee of one hundred to be selected from the various States of the Union. The purposes of the new party are rather sweeping. In the initial an- nouncement it is said that it stands for “public ownership of public utili- ties, unemployment and health in- surance, old age pensions, relief for the farmer on virtually a free-trade basis, high progressive taxes on in- comes, inheritances and the increase in land values; the independence of the Philippines, non-restriction of negro and immigrant labor suffrage and a sincere and determined effort to eliminate the economic, psycholog- ical and political causes of war.” Some of these things will have tobe elucidated before they can be fully understood. The rest seem to be a hodge-podge of the principles of the Single Tax and Socialistic parties. The seceretary of the new organi- zation declares that the greatest need of our Nation politically is crit- ical opposition. One might think that this was already furnished by the Democratic party, but he does not concede the facts. “The Democrats,” he declares, “have not one funda- mental issue that distinguishes them from the Republicans. The only hope of liberals in this country lies in slowly building up a new party which will compare with the British Labor Party.” The idea is to con- struct from the bottom. In pursu- ance of this plan it is proposed to “send a battery of nationaily known speakers” to take part in municipal campaigns. All this is rather vague; so much so that it will surely be a long while before the new party can make any impression upon the politics of the Nation. Indeed, it is far more like- ly to die in early infancy. “The Farmer Shifts the Burden. From the Philadelphia Record. Observers state that the officials of the Department of Agriculture in Wi n are beginning to wear a worried look. There are evidences that what they have feared is coming to pass. Winter wheat acreage is to be in- creased 1.2 per cent. over last year. according to their own surveys. This despite the warning broa cast by the department that the world wheat outlook for next year does not promise a continuance of high prices. It may be that the short world crop of the present year has en- couraged the farmers to sow more wheat, but the department is be- ginning to wonder. They fear that the wheat farmers have come to the conclusion that with the formation of the Farm Board all of their troubles are over. They fear that the impression has gone abroad that the Farm Board 3, no matter how large, at prices that. will repay the individual agriculturists well for their season’s work. : The department's “intention to plant” survey has been made annual- ly for several years past. Whenever such surveys showed that acreage was increasing to such an extent that a price collapse mig! pected the department has broadcast a warning. There is little evidence that such warnings have had much effect. Every farmer, it would seem, decides that the other fellow will cut down his acreage and then goes ahead as he planned. How different would be the effect of such a warning from the Depart- ment of Agricuture if the McNary- Haugen law were in effect. Then the warning of too great acreage would carry with it the threat of an equally great equaliza- tion tax on every bushel of wheat The farmers would pay for their own folly. ! : —— Mayor Mackey announces that he will support the Vare ticket and it may be predicted that in the near future he will be begging favors from Vare. ——President Hoover understands the art of “passing the buck,” but in trying to make & police sleuth out of SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONR. —Auto license tags in Pennsylvania next | | year will ‘be orange and blue numerals - jand they will be three inches shorter | than the present tags. A report that the colors would be red and grey is erroneous State officials said. ~~ —Members of the State highway patrol are continuing their inspection of garages and repair shops which have asked to be 1 designated as official stations during the , compulsory period of automobile inspec- tion October 1 to November 15. —Jealous of its competitor, a vicious African monkey caused a riot among the animals in the game exhibit building at the opening of the seventh annual Doyles- town fair, when it bit off three inches of the tail of a mokey in an adjoining cage. —High school girls of Carmichaels High school, in Greene county, who have adopt- ed the stockingless fad are indignant over the action of the Cumberland township school board, which has decreed that girls who appeared with bare legs would be barred from the school. : —Married life was just one black ey: after another, Mrs. Esther F. Palermo, 21, of Pittsburgh, told Judge Richard W. Martin in common pleas court, last week, in asking for a divorce. ‘When one black eye he gave me would clear up, I would get another,” she said. —H. R. Smith, 50, former cashier of the Citizens’ National bank, Slippery Rock, has been held in default of $150,000 bail by a United States commissioner for trial on charges of embezzling $3,060 from the bank. Bank examiners said they ex- pected a check would reveal Smith's de- falcations as approximately $35,000. —Adjutant General Beary announced on Monday that examinations will be held November 13 and 14 for guardsmen who seek appointment to West Point. Gov- ernor Fisher will select five guardsmen to enter the military school in July, 1930. Candidates between 19 and 22 years old with one year’s service are eligible. —Paul Olinick, 63, Forestville, Schuyl- kill county, choked to death on Sunday while eating a ham sandwich. The man had stopped at a Minersville hotel on his way home from church, and was eating the sandwich when a piece became lodged in his throat. A physician was summoned but Olinick was dead when he arrived. —A lead slug the size of a quarter was removed from the esophagus of 3-year-old Lois Horn, of Pottsville, with the aid of a bronchoscope by Dr. R. D. Spencer. The child swallowed the slug nine days ago and her parents became alarmed when she was unable to eat solid food. An X-ray revealed the obstacle at the en- trance to the stomach. : —Suit for $75,000 damages against the Pittsburgh & Lake Erie railroad has been instituted at Pittsburgh, by the Waverly Oil Works company, charging destruction by fire of refinery buildings in Coraopolis last October as the result of hot coals dropped from a locomotive. Tank cars of the plaintiff also were dam- aged, the action alleges. —Helen, 4-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Bidlack, of Ghent, near Towanda, fell into the farm well, which is 26 feet deep and half full of water. ‘When she slipped in her playmates spread . the alarm. : Her father ' found the child clinging to a small ledge. Her 6-year- ° old brother was lowered into the well and held her while both were pulled up in the bucket. —A hearing was held, last Friday, be- fore Judge Watson R. Davison, in Frank- lin county courts, to declare Samuel Rus- sel Statler legally to be dead in order to settle an estate. Statler, a graduate in civil engineering at State College in 1911, left his home at Marion, Franklin coun- ty, two weeks after graduation to seek out-door work in the west and has never been heard of since. —Citizens of Clearfield, where the busi- ness slump and industrial depression, due to conditions in the central Pennsylvania bituminous coal field, has been felt more keenly, are in high spirits over the pros- pect of having a manufacturing plant of considerable magnitude locate there. Clearfield now has 25 or more small in- dustrial plants, which proved the town’s salvation since the slump in the mining industry set in: i Because Charles Lewis, Beaver Falls, charged with taking two Pittsburgh girls to Beaver Falls for improper purposes, signalled to witnesses during his trial he will have to serve out his sentence of four years in the penitentiary. Judge W. A. McConnell, in sentencing Lewis, said the court had been inclined to parole Lewis until he learned from a juror that Lewis had been making signs to witnesses, ap- parently in order to influence their testi- mony. —A note, pinned to the door of his shack and reading, ‘Have killed myself, you'll find me in bed,” led to the discov- ery, last Thursday, of the body of Alonzo Hinton, 35, in the building beside the railroad tracks near Youngdale, Clinton county. Death had been caused by a bul- let and a rifle lay by the body on the bed. He had lived alone. Hinton was believed to have been brooding over domestic dif- ficulties which resulted in his wife taking their children: and moving to Lock Haven about a year ago. —Three private policemen of the Pitts- burgh Coal company soon will be put on trial for the murder last winter of John Bercoveskie, a miner, after arresting him on a minor charge. The miner's death is said to have resulted chiefly from the ter- rific beating given him by Lieutenant W. J. Lyster, a discharged former State trooper. Frank Slapika and H. P. Watts, coal and iron policemen were also charg- ed with aiding Lyster ip the pummeling of Bercoveskie. Lyster was formerly a member of the State police and. several years ago was located in Bellefonte. —Investigation of alleged election ir- regularities in Clearfield county is to be made by district attorney A. Lee Hd- wards, who has been directed by the Court to submit all testimony to the December grand jury. Judge A. R. Chase, stirred to action by news stories and ed- itorials in a Clearfield newspaper, which referred to the existence of affidavits charging fraud and irregularities in the Republican primary election of two years ago, advised the district attorney to pro- ceed, in a long statement read in open court. Mr. Edwards replied that he had made repeated efforts to have the Sep- tember grand jury launch an investigation, but had been balked by the attitude of the foreman, a Senator he goes too far.