Pemorvalic; tcp INK SLINGS ——1In any event the Philadelphia ang will not move its base to Har- isburg, this year. The President hurried home n Sunday to find out that he oesn’t know much about tariff uilding. —The “wet” party was an unknown uantity in the equation. Hereafter s strength may be estimated more ccurately. The navy men are opposed to x inch guns at any price and a illion dollars is a sum of at least ight inch calibre. — Senator Borah is rushing ac- on on the London treaty. He doesn’t ant public sentiment to develop an the wrong side. — The threat of an extra ses- on of the Senate seems to have had ore force than all the arguments i favor of the London pact. ——The astronomical scientists ave decided to call the new planet luto in honor of “dark and distant gions” through which it rides. ——Senators and Representatives . Congress have now tackled a job ! their own size. They are holding “horse shoe pitching tournament” . Washington, to-day. —When the Democratic State entral committee meets at Har- sburg, next Thursday, to select a ate chairman for the coming year should elect John R. Collins, if 3 can be persuaded to continue the gnal service he has given the arty since assuming that office. His 18 been a labor of love, but it 1s been a mighty creditable labor. —Mr. Grundy admits that his fort to get a chance to succeed meself in the United States Senate st him $291,000, Of this sum rery cent but $40,000.00 came out "his own pocket. Probably a 1arter of a million dollars means thing to Mr. Grundy. When we ink of that much money we can’t mceive of any office we'd trade it r. —Parking conditions are becoming » serious in the, central sections of ellefonte that something will have be done for the business houses 1d residences affected. By way of solution we suggest to council that pass an ordinance making it un- wful for any one to park a car rectly in front of the entrance to business place, residence or garage or in this borough. People living syond the boundaries of Allegheny shop, Spring and Howard streets wve no conception of what park- g means, on Wednesday and Sat- ‘day nights, to those who. live: ithin those boundaries. There is ) more reason for a doctor or a tel proprietor having a preempted ace than there is for a grocer, a inting office or a resident. In ct the resident is most entitled it because he or she is only ask- g for a chance to get into his vn home. —Jf the Philadelphia Republicans ant candidates who can beat Pin- lot why don’t they impress “Amos id Andy.” There's a team to mjure with” The country is so azy about them that they’d actual- find a host of supporters were ey injected into a presidential race. nd why have they made countlesss ymes in this broad land change eir dinner hour since they start- | their patter on daylight saving me, We can tell you one rea- n: No one has ever heard either Amos” or “Andy” utter a blasphe- ous word, no one has ever heard ther one of them resort to a risque ory or a shady insinuation. They 'e clean as hound’s teeth, their iccadillos are just what everybody se gets into and “Amos” vein of udence and caution and “Andy’s” niable thoughtlessness of the mor- w are types of exactly what all us see every day of our lives. To ose who really get “Amos and andy” it is easy to understand their 1d on the millions who make no gagements for the period that ey are on the air. —In a speech in Philadelphia, on onday, Mr. Pinchot took it for anted that the fight for Governor to be a “wet” and “dry” con- st. How the gentleman gets that 3y only those who know how xy he is understand. He is in- ming the church people, bam- ozling them into flocking to his nner with statements that are ly half truths. Mr. Hemphill is candidate for Governor, also. He Ss made no statement as to where stands on the prohibition ques- yn. Until he does that Mr. Pin- ot is assuming a condition that does t exist. Besides, it dcesn’t matter iether the Governor of Pennsyl- nia is “wet” or “dry.” He can’t ange the Eighteenth amendment, Smith, a “wet,” was Governor of sw York when Pinchot, a “dry,” 1s Governor of Pennsylvania and 10 is there to say that conditions sre any worse in New York city an they were in Philadelphia or ttsburgh? In the election of United States Senator this ques- n is important; for a Senator has voice in manking enforcement vs. As it happens Mr. Pinchot’s nning mate, James J. Davis, is “wet” at heart. And we would e to know whether Mr. Pinchot hoping that the church people 11 rally to Davis, also. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA.. MAY 30. 1930. VOL. 75. Bishop Cannon’s Operations Reviewed The general conference of the Methodist church, South, in session at Dallas, Texas, has exonerated Bishop Cannon from blame on ac- count of his activities in the Presi- dential campaign of 1928. The rec- ords of the Senate Lobby commit- tee, which were available to the conference, show that he received for use in that campaign some $48,- 000 more than he reported to Con- gress under the provisions of the Corrupt Practices law, so that he must have committed perjury in fil- ing his report. The constitution of the church organization forbids such political activity as he practiced in that campaign. In view of these facts it would seem that he ought to have been censured, at least. Such church dignitaries as Bishop James Cannon Jr. bring reproach, rather than honor, to organized Christian religion and shielding them vastly impairs the value of church work. If Bishop Cannon used the $48,000 in campaign work and reported under oath that he receiv- ed a much smaller sum, he is guilty of perjury. If he appropriat- ed the money to his own use or to some other purpose than that for which it was given him, he is guilty of embezzlement. He has certainly impaled himself on one horn or the other of this dilemma. Unless his fellow-Bishops are mental- ly blind they must have seen this fact and their white-washing report exculpating him from blame is absurd. It is true that the general con- ference has determined to put Bish- op Cannon on trial on another charge of conduct unbecoming a Bishop of the church. The lobby inquiry brought into public view that Bishop Cannon was actively engaged in the gambling orgie of Wall street, during or just before the distastrous panic of last fall, and the conference has determined to put him upon trial for “bucket shop speculation.” Of course thatis not as serious an offense as per- jury or embezzlement, but it is suf- ficiently obnoxious to moral ethics to deserve punishment. It remains to be seen what the conference will do in the matter, but if it is just to the great body which it repre- sents it will be plenty. ——John J. Raskob’s expectation that prohibition will end within two years in this country is likely tobe disappointed. The Anti-saloon Lea- gue war chest will not be exhausted that soon. No Cause for Worry. If the tariff bill should die in the conference committee, as now seems probable, the country would have no great cause for regret. It would prove that the Republican party is incapable of governing. For more than a year Congress has been wrestling with this measure of leg- islation with the result that the Senate and the House of Repre- sentatives are dead-locked on some of its most important provisions. If they are unable to come to an agreement the present law will re- main in force. It can hardly be said that that would be a calamity. The present law is bad but the proposed measure is infinitely worse. It satisfies nobody and defeats the purpose it was intended to promote. According to information from Washington the ireconcilable dif- ference between the chambers is on the provision for the so-called deb- enture on farm - products written inte the bill by the Senate. The debenture scheme is objectionable on economic grounds but no more so than the ship subsidy now in operation or the Farm Board boun- ty plan which has the cordial ap- proval of President Hoover, The flexible provision, adopted by the House, is abhorrent to that provision of the constitution which vests all legislation in Congress, During the campaign for President Mr. Hoover denounced it as a dangerous usur- pation of power by the President, but which he as President now covets. With the system of mass produc- tion which now obtains. in the country open markets are essential to prosperity. Factories can’t en- dure if there are no markets for their products. There are already | signs on all sides that if the pro- | posed tariff act becomes a law the best markets will be closed to our | wares. France, Canada and Ar- | gentina have already taken steps in this direction and dozens of oth- er customer countries are prepar- ing to adopt the same policy. In view of these facts we see no rea- son to worry because there is a prospect that the tariff bill will die in the conference committee. A just tariff bill might have been enacted .months ago and would have served ‘a good purpose. Democrats Nominated Pinchot. Can They Elect Hemphill ? So far as our memory carries the result of the recent primary | has never had a parallel in the Even a thought that the minority party in the State could nominate the candidate for Governor of the majority party would have been congeption prior to last Tuesday; considered too ridiculous for that is exactly what happened. Democrats who had changed their registration in order to vote for | him at the Primary. If you think this is not so, take Centre county as a base for a bit of computation. The records in the County Com- missioner’s office show that exactly 358 Democrats changed their registration this spring. This is not guess work. It is fact, for each one of their certifications is on file and can be seen by anyone. addition to these personal certifications of change the assessors changed the registration of many ascertained by comparison We have every reason to believe, for we of a number of them, that ninety. per cent of those who changed their registration did it for the Sole purpose of voting for Pinchot. This changing of party affiliation was a matter of pre-primary interest all over the State and it ig reasonably certain that it went on, more or less, in every county in the State. Leaders of the Women’s Christian Temperance Union urged it. They were even so insistent upon its being done that they told officers of local Unions that if they failed to do so they would be unfaithful to their organization and should resign their offices. With such an influence at work on those who visualize and idealize Pinchot as a second Roosevelt isn’t it probable that fully as large a percentage of the electorate changed in every county in There are sixty seven counties only four hundred Democrats in each of them professed to be Repub- to vote for their idol in the primaries they would least, twenty six far in excess of his majority over Mr. only be the State as did in Centre. licans in order have given him, at the very dred votes. This is a total Brown. Waiving discussion of the moral delinquency in such a practice we are at a loss to understand the mental processes of Democrats If elected Governor Mr. Pinchot will not do a thing for Pennsylvania that Mr, Hemphill, the nominee of the Democratic Mr. Pinchot promised to do a lot of things that he knew he couldn’t do unless he had a favorable Legislature with him and in those promises practiced deception on the credulous who far enough to discover the deception. who indulged it. party will not do. didn’t think cannot reduce the tax on gasoline. driver's license down a cent. Norcan he reduce the motor license fee without the consent of the Legislature. While not so pyrotchnical Mr. honorable as the Sage of Milford and, he could get more by way of beneficial of the General Assembly than Mr. Pinchot can if he finds himself in the executive mansion after next Democrat and as Governor, legislation from the next. session November. As Governor, Pattison did m a did, Refute that if you can. As State Treasurer, William H. Berry did Pennsylvania than Pinchot did as Governor. Refute that if you can. We are not impugning Mr. Pinchot’s motives or his desires. We are stating facts. Already the forces of the Republican organization in the State are at work to circumvent his election. They might not be able to accomplish that purpose, but they will make sure that the Senate and the House are made up of enough Members who can be depended upon to deny Pinchot any legislation that would tend to exalt him into a national political figure. the heart of Pennsylvania’s Republican organization than tohave a Presidential nominee, but it will die fighting to keep that glory away from Pinchot. And if heis elected Governor it will fight him in Har- risburg from January 1931 until January 1935. the first time have a real chance to elect a Governor. crats for? Surely it has not been for the political loaves and fishes. We are Democrats because of a conviction that our ideals of government are better than those of the opposition. We proved the truth of that con- viction when Robert E. Pattison had a chance in the gubernatorial chair. We proved it when Woodrow Wilson was in the White House. Let us grasp this chance to prove it again by electing Hemphill Aside from this, for Governor of Pennsylvania. Opportunity to show that the party we are affiliated with is something more than a name is knocking at our door mow, but we won't grasp it if too many of us are Pinchot minded and the facts revealed by the recent primary indicate that many are. us make no fusions, no deals with anyone. Let the campaign fairly and squarely party State, than anything time to either. And there will fof the old and new registry lists. org for Pennsylvania than Pinchot eager to show Pennsylvania what we can do if the reins of government are thrown into our hands next November. A Democratic administration at Harrisburg would be better for Pennsylvania, it would be better for the Republican party in the else, politically, that could happen at this ’ be a Democratic administration at Harrisburg if Democrats and the “wets” and the “drys” and the warring Repub- lican factions join us in the offer of a truce give them time to ponder whither they are drifting. | | political history of Pennsylvania. | yet Mr. Pinchot was nominated by In | emocrats. Just how many, can have the personal statements and if thousand, eight hun- Mr. Pinchot He can’t put the cost of a motor Hemphill is just as able and it is our belief that as a immeasurably more for Nothing is nearer in years, the Democrats And what are we Demo- Let us face as Democrats, a cohesive, virile long enough to Morrow Surprises the Country. Has Ambassador Dwight W. Mor- row written a new political map of the United States? = A week ago Mr. Morrow was widely believed to be the Hoover candidate for the Republican nomination for United States Senator for New Jersey. A lot of machinery had been set in motion to compass this = purpose. He had somewhat distinguished him- self as Ambassador in Mexico and been favored by the President with an appointment as delegate to the London naval conference. Senator Edge had been induced to resign the toga to make room for Morrow and to accommodate his convenience a temporary appointment was made. Finally he determined to defer en- trance into = the Senatorial arena until elected by the people. Upon his return from London, where he may have been a very useful though an inconspicuous member of the naval conference, he was offered the Senatorial commis- sion under the original agreement supposed to have been approved by the President, but declined the hon- or. Last week, however, at a meeting held in Newark, he not on- ly announced his candidacy for the Senate but phrased it in language which has been interpreted by al- most the entire press of the coun- try as an invitation to nominate him for the Presidency in 1932, The scheme to put him into the Senate was an expedient to guarantee the renomination of Mr. Hoover. It is more likely to defeat than promote that purpose. In his speech announcing his can- didacy for the Senate Mr. Morrow said a good many things that de- serve and will receive popular favor. He is not opposed to prohibition, exactly, but he is opposed to the processes which have failed to en- force prohibition, and he is practi-: cally in favor of the plan promul- gated by Governor Smith during the campaign of 1928 for the regula- lation of the traffic in liquor and the promotion of temperance. In fact there is a good deal of the spirit of Jeffersonian Democracy in his plan of dealing with this vexed | problem. It may not get Mr. Mor- row into the Senate or promote an! ambition to be President, but it, marks him as a man of independ- ence and courage. | | The rum runners may Solve the prohibition problem if they keep on killing each other. NO. 22. BORROWING FROM SMITH. From the Boston Post. Former Governor Smith's solu- tion of the prohibition question, as put forward by him the 1928 cam- paign and sharply criticised by the Republican campaign speakers, now receives the formal endorsement of Dwight W. Morrow, who makes it the chief plank in his platform in his quest for the Republican sena- torial nomination in New Jersey. Mr. Smith proposed the repeal of the eighteenth amendment by the substitution therefore of an amend- ment restoring to the States the power to determine their own policy toward the liquor traffic. This proposal has been adopted by Mr. Morrow in its entirety. The significance of the Morrow stand on prohibition rests in the close personal and political relation- ship between Pres. Hoover and Mr. Morrow. It would be very far fetched to argue that Mr. Morrow's stand commits the President in any ‘way, but at the same time, Mr. Morrow would be hardly likely to run on a platform which was dis- tasteful to President Hoover, Mr. Morrow goes the full dis- tance as a wet. He evidently has little sympathy with “modification” ideas. He is for “repeal.” The Literary Digest poll has shown that repeal sentiment is vastly stronger than modification sentiment among the opponents of prohibition. New Jersey is emphatically a wet State. Mr. Morrow’s stand is cal- culated to help him politically. Nev- ertheless, so high-minded a man as Dwight Morrow can hardly be accused of shifting his position from motives of expediency. ; Just how far Mr. Morrow's views will affect the Republican campaign is a question. Candidates in dry States will repudiate it with scorn. But a number of Republican can- didates who are at present on “the fence” may be influenced to take a position in favor of repeal. Meanwhile, former Governor Smith may contemplate the situation with an amused smile. He has made a convert of one of the most power- ful (if not the most powerful) fig- ures in the Hoover administration, who appears to have rejected the policy of his chief for prohibition that of the leader of the Demo- | cartic Party. Political Probing, From the Harrisburg Telegraph. The Forbes magazine declares that political probing has been run- ning amuck and asks, “why not a thorough-going probe of the prob- ers?” fluence of politicians on business that a jury of American peuple, conducting a probe of efficiency, the business-like methods—rather the in- efficiency, the unbusiness-like meth- ods— of the United States Senators would declare as thoroughly capable the business executives who are the victims of the Senate critics. Vari- ous Washington politicians, it is as- serted, are aching to inject the gov- ernment still deeper into business. What proof, asks this magazine, have politicians given in the past of their superlative capability for running or directing the running of business or other enterprises. Mus- trating this point reference is made to the government's attempt to run the nation’s railroads during the war, which required railway mana- gers years to undo the colossal blunders then perpetrated. Then the government entered the shipping business on a grand scale, making another deplorable failure. Even the politicians have become reconciled to the entire necessity for turning over shipping to those who know it. Prison doors were opened for punishment of those who inject- ed politics into the administration of the Veterans’ Bureau. It is further argued that politi- cally-appointed judges have favored friends in alloting fat receiverships and the losses suffered by creditors have been staggering. So scandalous did conditions become in New York city that drastic action was finally found necessary as a remedy. Serv- ices of large banking institutions were enlisted. Other flagrant abuses resulting from the injection of poll- tics into business are presented in support of this stinging arraignment as to the shortcomings of the so- called statesmen who have made a holy show of themselves at Wash- inton in recent months. John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers, who lives in Illinois, seems to have “granted, bargained, sold, aliened, enfeoffed, released, conveyed and confirmed” the votes of the min- ers of Pennsylvania to the Vare machine. — If Mr. Curran, of New York, president of the Association Against the Prohibition Amendment, has good sense he will keep his fingers and mouth out of the Pennsylvania campaign. ——The big vote for Pinchot in Luzerne county is an appropriate response to the order of President Lewis, of the United Mine Workers’ organization, to vote for the other fellow. It is pointed out by the in-. SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE —James Maurer, of Reading, who served for sixteen years as president of the Pennsylvania State Federation of Labor, advocated a four-day week anc a four-hour day in an address at the or- ganization’s twenty-ninth annual conven- tion in Altoona this week. —A separate judicial district for Mif- flin county has been sought for several years and is expected to be realized at the next session of the Legislature. This is due to the fact that in the census just reecntly taken Mifflin county has gone over the 40,000 mark. —As the result of a dynamiting case that ocurred in DuBois nine years ago “Big Angello” Carmella, who was ar- rested in Buffalo recently, must serve a period of from 6 to 12 years in the western penitentiary, in compliance with a sentence passed out in Clearfield court Monday by Judge A. R. Chase. —In a desperate defense of his realm against an invader a bald eagle perished in Buffalo Valley, Perry county, last week. Farmers saw him make a furious swoop at an airplane as it appeared over the mountains. He hit the propel- ler head on. The farmers found the de- capitated body. The wing spread was six feet. When a sliver from a large spike which he was driving into a railroad tie flew off and severed his jugular vein, while at work on the Western Mary- land Railroad in Franklin county, Charles O. Nichols, 26, employed as a section hand by the railroad company, died in the Waynesboro hospital Friday evening. —Eleven persons were driven to the street and damage estimated by fire- men at $30,000 was caused by fire which ate its way through the third floor of the Journal building at Braddock early on Monday. The fire was believed to have originated from an overheated water heater. Firemen from nearby towns helped local firemen fight the blaze. —Pennsylvanian’s Associated, Inc., an organization of men interested in at- tracting visitors to this State, with Governor John S. Fisher, as honorary chairman of the administrative advisory committee, is planning a gathering which will be asked to formally endorse a program. This meeting is to be ad- dressed by men successful in gaining business for their communites. —A joint fee of $500,000 for services as counsel of the Rodman Wanamaker es- tate, of which $100,000 already has been paid, will go to Owen J. Roberts, re- cently appointed associate justice of the United States Suprenie court, and Maurice Bower Saul, Philadelphia at- torney. The Wanamaker estate is ap- praised at $53,434,907, and the income tax on same, federal and State, will be $2,800,000. 5 — When three of the four living grad uates of the class of 1880 of the Pennsylvania State College meet at the College for their fiftieth commencement anniversary this June, they will see a class being graduated which will make the year's graduation total more than one hundred times as large as their own. Seven were graduated in the class while more than 700 will receive their diplomas in 1830. Of these 620 will be granted on June 10. —A new menace to the conservation of ruffed grouse has turned up in Mifflin county. While driving his grocery truck, R. S. Kauffman, of Lewistown, sighted 10 young grouse stuck fast in tar recently put on the new highway near Three Springs. He rescued. the birds, took them to Orbisonia, and noti- fied deputy game warden S. H. Price, who placed the birds with a chicken hen, but the coat of tar on their feet and exposure had so weakened them that they all died. _-State Librarian Frederic A. God- charles is preparing to have conveyed to the State museum at Harrisburg the Indian collection of Jerald B. Fenste- macher, well-known Lancaster county authority on Indian life and habitat. The collection embraces more than 30,000 pieces, running all the way from beads up to Indian pots and pipes. The collection was made, for the most part, in Lancaster county. It is one of the largest and most valuable in the country. It represents a lifetime of work on the part of Mr. Fenstemacher, and has been bought by the State for a nominal sum. More than $1000 in counterfeit money was found by State policemen in the home of Dominick Lardinelli, of Mocana- qua, Columbia county after he was ar- rested on a charge of passing counter- feit money. He is held in the Columbia county jail for further investigation be- fore being turned over to Federal au- thorities. His arrest followed the pass- ing of counterfeit money at four gaso- line stations between Bloomsburg al fle. In his home Corporal ew- Dard found 47 $10 bills and 17 $20 bills, all counterfeit Federal Reserve notes. They are described as being good imitations. —The search for Anthony Celin, 50 years old, of North Fork, Elk county, was brought to an end Monday after- noon at 2 o'clock with the finding of his body about 1,000 feet from a camp in the mountains, hanging to the limb of a tree. Celin disappeared from his home two weeks ago last Saturday with- out hat or coat, and his family feared that he had been overcome by illness in the woods. The body was found by John Mullhaupt and a detail of St. Mary's junior traffic police, after an in- tensive 6-hour search of that section where he was last seen. He leaves & wife and four children. —Many problems of vital importance to boroughs of the State will come up for discussion at Beaver Falls June 11, 12 and. 13, at the twentieth annua’ convention of the State Association o’ Boroughs. The matter of uniform traf- fic ordinances will be one of the fore most topics, and the speakers who wil discuss the subject include Benjamin CG Eynon, State Commissinor of Moto vehicles. Stephen G. Rush, financial di- rector of Cleveland, will talk on matter pertinent to borough finances and Chas. H. Young, State Public Service Com- missioner, will speak on the topic, “The Public Service Commission and Its Re- | lation to Municipalities.” United States Senator David A. Reed and Secretary of Labor James J. Davis are expected to address the annual banquet on the eve- ning of the 1ith,