ua rural Maton BY P. GRAY MEEK ——— INK SLINGS. — Just eleven days until Christmas. | — Renew your membership to the | Red Cross. — How about that Christmas shop- ping? Have you done it yet? — After tomorrow the deer will hawe a rest and, my, won't they enjoy it. —If all Bellefonte streets were like Water street we would have some town — The flu has started in to attack some communities in the county that had hitherto entirely escaped its rav- ages. — Governor Brumbaugh is on the hunt for a song for Pennsylvania. His own “swan song” will be published, no doubt, about the latter part of Jan- aary. ere are forty-two thousand people in Centre county and there ought to be the same number of members in the three Red Cross chapters in the county. — Next Wednesday the first of the aerial mail carriers is scheduled to arrive in Bellefonte. If you want to fly a little high stick a postage stamp on yourself at the rate if six cents an ounce and you can do it. —Many a woman has shattered her husband's confidence in her judgment by buying him a necktie for Christ- mas. Don’t do it unless he has pick- ed it himself and don’t buy him cigars unless you know the brand he smokes. ee 4 | { | | mmr or mre ETT REE ee I EI IIR STATE RIGHTS AND FEDE RAL UNION. VOL. 63. BELLEFONTE, PA Democracy in Pennsylvania. Sproul Keeps the Public Guessing. Governor-elect Sproul still keeps Legislature the Republican majority | the public guessing. In a speech at on joint ballot will be two hundred. | the dinner of the Five O’clock club in In the House of Representatives there | Philadelphia Saturday night, he gave are two hundred and four members | notice that his administration of the of whom one hundred and eighty-sev- | office will be progressive but not ultra en are Republicans and seventeen in that direction. “We can afford to Democrats. The Senate is composed | go a bit further in broadening our of fifty members of whom seven are : government,” he said, “than anywhere Democrats. This is the smallest | else in the world.” That must have number of Democrats in the General | sent a chill down the back of the Assembly in the history of the State. | Vares, who were guests at the feast, Even before the adoption of the pres- | but the paliative swiftly followed. ent constitution when there were only | «But at the same time,” he added, one hundred members of the House | “we are going to stick to the Penn- and thirty-three in the Senate, the | sylvania way of doing things. Above Democratic force was greater. : all let us adopt tried: and proven all party patronage was in the hands | things.” Even Dave Lane could hard- of the Republicans the Democrats in | ly find fault with that assurance for the Legislature were stronger. | the future. Since the so-called reorganization | In another speech delivered before of the party following the election of | the Philadelphia Republican City 1912 the Democratic force in the State | committee on Monday evening Mr. has been gradually but certainly re- | Sproul paid special tribute to the ceding. And there isa reason for | Vares. He thanked them cordially this fact. The reerganizers were and | for their work “during the recent are entirely selfish. Every man con-, campaign,” and expressed gratitude In the approaching session of the —The President hasn’t let the pub- lic very far into his confidence con- cerning the points he expects to visit while abroad, but he has told us in mighty plain language that one of the places he doesn’t expect to go is to Germany. It is reported that William Hoh- enzollern has made an attempt to get out by the suicide route. If it be s0 the one time Kaiser must have con- eluded that it is best for him to take up his permanent residence in hell without further delay. —Jt has cost millions of precious Yives and billions of treasure for the really civilized nations of the earth to get into a position where they can properly regulate Turkey and we hope for Armenia’s sake, if nothing else, the Sultan and his hordes of murderers will be tied hand and foot. —What of the Bellefonte Y. M. C. A. Our boys who have been abroad have come to have a great liking for the “Y.” It has meant a lot to them and it behooves us all to see to it that the home “Y?” is made so attractive that it will hold the interest and re- spect of the boys when they come home. ¢ i Centre county: Temperance Unjon nected with the movement and re- | to all Republicans of the State “who maining with it after its sordid pur- were instrumental in returning Re- poses were revealed got himself into | publican majorities in fifty-nine of the office. After that there was no inter- | sixty-seven counties of the State.” est in the success of the party. The What his feelings toward the Demo- office holders were safer in their ten- = cratic State organization that con- ure with the party in the minority , tributed so much to that result is left and they kept it in the minority for to conjecture, but probably the lead- that reason. In the recent campaign ers responsible for that party perfidy because the early indications prom- are satisfied with private assurances ised a victory they bolted the ticket of appreciation. In any event he vast- and destroyed every chance of tri- ly over credits the Republicans. umph. . ” But in both speeches and in all his The Democrats of Pennsylvania utterances since the election there is ought to be stronger today than ever expressed an under current of reform before. The President of the United ' that gives hope of better government States is an earnest and active Dem- ost 5 ve I) | than we have been having in Pennsyl- ocrat. He is and always has been vania during recent years. To the ready to use the influence of his great | feasters of Saturday night he said, office to promote the principles of the “we are going to be progressive” and party wherever and whenever it can! to the place hunters on Monday night be done without prejudice to the pub- | he promised “fewer but better depart- lic interests. But that help was wast- | ment heads.” No reformer can com- ed because those who have control of | plain of such a prospect for it implies the party machinery use it for their | improvement. But this subsequent “will be a regular selfish purposes. Instead of party! statement that he Republican Governor,” leaders we are under the control of a bunch political - hucksters who | “served in the ranks” and “done all the enemy for the things” which they have done, is trade ang traffic with selfish ends. If the ‘Democrats of the | somewhat discouraging. Some of must have felt funny the first time she found herself selling tobacco and ona Sunday evening at that, in France. But it is the war. Such an incident would be unthinkable if it were not for that, but, withal, we fan- cy there will be many a person com- ing back from the other side seeing as they have never seen before. — This has been an interesting week in quarter sessions court. Not so much because of the importance of most of the cases but because of the litigants themselves. Some of them have furnished unusual entertainment for the rather large attendance that has been attracted really by the gen- eral interest in the Gray cases which went to trial yesterday, after an ef- fort had been made to postpone them until the February sitting. —The Grand Inquest has recom- mended, the Court will approve and the Commissioners will probably ap- propriate sufficient money for the compilation and writing of a proper history of the part Centre county has taken in a war that most of us hope will be the last that the world will witness. Let it be a great record, fully worthy of this rich and historic county and such as will keep living for ages and ages the heroic and self- sacrificing character of our men and women. —Of course the Huns must pay to the limit. Didn’t they rub their hands and gloat, when their armies were smashing the way toward Paris and proclaim draining were going to make us pay the last farthing to make good every conceiv- able expenditure they had made dur- to the world that after | France and England dry they | "the public has little sympathy for Roosevelt. - Possibly, however, he was : welchers whether in purple or rags. satisfied with the work Roosevelt was doing free of charge. Teddy is Cherishing Wrath. Theodore Roosevelt, always ambi- tious and never sincere seems to have ‘lost his cunning as well as his con- | science as a result of recent disap- | Dinmenss, Ever since he was forc- ei “0 \ ed to relinquish the “bully” times he watch the Peace Commissioners In enjoyed in the White House he has France. The absurdity of the prop- 3 4 osition was too great even for a com- | been yearning to return to that fal ; low field of opportunity. But one in- Dives o fhe Ron Dugg ing | cident after another has arisen to de- : | feat his ambition and in despair he in defiance of precedent. Its purpose "1 .¢ peen nagging the President in was seditious and its effect mischiev- : d out. But that ous. But the Senate committee on SR ig of is hp es er Foreign Affairs was hardly fair to, wi gt 2 o o Roar) w. 2 re : Senator Cummins in condemning it. wu eir stomachs and as 1t Xkep by unanimous vote. In the history Teddy constantly in the limelight no- of Congress such an expression of ‘body was surprised. Lately he has contempt for a fember of the Sen-: been pursuing another course how- ate has never before been given. of | even and one of doubtful expediency. £ a course it was deserved but the thing : All the great men concerned active- ‘ tov: ” ‘ly and efficiently in the world war on called “Senatorial Courtesy” has 80Me | poy}, sides of the ocean have been gen- claims on the members of the body. | erous in praise of the achievements boo hs bi Rn) eu nge Shoe of the American troops who partici- hoy tad commie) S85 Evins | Pen the Being, MT 0) and the incident forgotten in a few | D g 1 eulogy of the courage and efficiency days. But in the case in point an in- , " of our gallant men and freely as- delible record is made cribed to them a large share in the that until the | end of time can be pointed to as com- | A Leds plete proof that in 1918 there was a A 1 splentd JisioN. Senator in the American Congress so Ce 1 a a feeble minded and so absolutely des. | Clamencaen, of Fane elm titute of the principles of decency that | same g gland, he deliberately tried to cast an asper- i Cummins “Only the Victim. The Senate committee on Foreign Relations by unanimous vote, the oth- er day, negatived Senator Cummins’ resolution to appoint a committee to : : their tribute to our men. Lloyd sion, not only upon the President, but | : upon the country. If Cummins had | George, Premier of England, loses no opportunity to praise the Yankee sol- been entirely responsible for this | . : : diers. But Roosevelt insists they crime against the country, we might | &. > < dismiss the subject with the remark | did nothing worth while. 3 that he deserved the punishment he Plans are now in progress to sen ing the war. It is not at all unlikely that they would have made us pay them for the money spent by the treacherous Bernstorff while he was enjoying our hospitality and plotting | death and destruction to the people and industries of our country. —Judge Gary of the United States Steel company predicts five years, at least, of the greatest prosperity our country has ever known. He believes that prices should be reduced, but so gradually that there may be no dis- turbance or loss either to capital or labor. This sounds sensible enough, but common sense isn’t a universal characteristic of our people and the disturbance is going to come when, after commodities have dropped, la- bor will be asked to accept a reduc- tion also. In the last analysis we are experiencing a period of inflation. Very few people are better off and many are far worse than they were when prices were normal. Lower pay envelopes can meet smaller store bills quite as satisfactorily as the fat ones of today are doing. And smaller store bills are what the large number of men whose compensation has not been materially increased during the war have a right to ask. | home these gallant fighters and it is expected that they will arrive at the | various ports “over here” at the rate | of two or three hundred thousand a | week. By 1920 there will be a couple of millions of them home and another tnd; ; couple of millions who wanted to be | De we 4 fs cagmaly | on the firing line but couldn’t will be | native author from the shame which | of voting age at the ii a attaches to the action of the Senate lection. at are they likely to say | committee on Foreign Affairs in! when Roosevelt who is now traducing | . . | unanimously rejecting the proposi- £ | tion, Serr of Utah, the Mor- | ambition | mon Apostle who may Jove four or House? ve bili 2 I iin i be brought to their attention and Ted- | the tenets of civilized society to mar | dy will pay the just penalty of his | ry at all, are probably more respon- | folly. | sible for the preposterous resolution | : } ——Unce “Dave” Lane knows ex- | than Cummins. They are the real actly how a State XS A Latration leaders of the Republican party Mm ought to be conducted and he isn’t too | Washington who make the pellets | : | that are fired by cheap pettyfoggers | modest to let Sproul into the secret. ‘like Cummins, of Iowa, and Sherman, | received. But Cummins was only the silly instrument of a traitorous com- bination now in Washington nagging the President. The resolution was and is the pro- duct of the composite brain of the Re- to return to the White ——————————————— We may not do as we used to of Illinois. Therefore, they ought to | go but we will certainly give him a | protect their victims from harm. hearty welcome when “johnny Comes ! eee ramet . —— = | 3 » | Probably Madill McCormick | Marching Home. | was elected United States Senator for' ——Pershing may not have heard Illinois as a recompense for the Ger- | that call from Ohio to enter politics | man propaganda work performed by but anyway he isn’t paying much at- ! the Chicago Tribune in 1916. | tention to it. because he has. the an State cast these perfidious traitors things they have done were out. victory will be the reward. .. naughty. ing opportunity when he overlooked | Germans seem to ~ be bad losers but Italy and Belgium are enthusiastic in | Presidential | | them asks them to support him in his It would hardly be polite to. quote them literally but the facts will | - DECEMBER 13, 1918 German Iniquities Revealed. | It is within the limit of moderation i | to say that the revelations of Mr. A. ‘Bruce Bielaski, “head of the Intelli- gence Service of the Department of | Justice,” are astounding. The crimes | planned by von Bernstorff and the | conspiracies organized by him to de- | stroy life and property and betray | faith among men mark him as among | the most wanton criminals of modern life. Enjoying the hospitality of the | United States as the representative , of a government which pretended to | be friendly, he employed every arti- fice conceivable to do injury to those thus honoring him. The records of no government show such moral tur- pitude and we search memory in vain liness. Of the public officials and private eitizens who were involved, directly or indirectly, with the conspiracies of while to. speak. pf Nebraska, William Randolph earst and the lesser lights engaged the work of embarrassing the esident were probably influenced y no greater reasen than personal ique to their perfidy and most of the others were enticed by cupidity into e schemes of the German diplomat. But a good deal of the mischief was ascribable to partisanship for the ab- of the administration could be coined to political capital was indulged by any men who ought to have known better. ° The inquiry is not yet finished and Mr. Bielaski promises more thrills as his narative proceeds. It may be hoped, therefore, that some light will be thrown upon a mysterious incident of three years ago. The German ly disturbed about the views of the after investigation, declared that A. Mitchell Palmer was employed to se- cure the desired information. Mr. “Palmer subsequently alleged that he was acting in a friendly way for John B. Staunchfield, of New York, ned that Staunch- ng for the German con- | — One year ago there was over a foot of snow on the ground, the ther- mometer was six to eight degrees be- low zero and the coal situation unus- ually acute. In fact many families had to carry their from the yards | owing to the ses s of men for de- livery purposes. this year we have got the coal and not the cold, with all other conditions very much improved over what they were a year ago. Let Us Help You Locate Your Boy. It will be a long time before the for a human creature equal in beast- son Bernstorff, it is hardly worth: Senator Hitchcock, surd notion that unavoidable mistakes propagandists were at the time great- | os NO. 49. Knows What He is Going Afier. { ¥rom the Clearfield Republican. Of course, President Wilson did not lay his cards on the table when ad- dressing Congress last week. t would have been worse than foolish. Every critic, every rofiteer, every sorehead, each and al representatives of the interests, foreign and home- made, in both branches of our alleged body would have { great lawmaking | been out with his knife, his hammer ‘and every other weapon available. : Such action on the part of the Presi- | dent would have opened the door to | every kind of suggestion, amendment i and all the crazy notions not only of our law-makers but our muck-rakers and the yellows generally. | President Wilson goes across the Atlantic for the of seeing ' that the principles for which America Siruggle in the late war are made the basis of the peace terms. He is going to see that all the moves are made openly and that the final terms agreed upon mean just what they are supposed to mean. ; e has pledged this Nation to back up the right of every pec 12 to select the kind of government they want to live under. He has impressed the world with the fact that the United States does not want anything out of ry new alignment of boun nes in Europe, Asia Afri And he will see that all divisions’ are in ac- cordance with the reason actuating the United States on entering the war —that the world will hereafter be safe for democracy. Lloyd George is fi hting the same . element in England t are opposing President Wilson on this side =f the and . Atlantic. England contains a strong : pany oppo to the perpetuation of democracy. That element wants a | return to the old autocratic powers | Rvjously enjoyed by the aristocracy. | They will fight hard for the old-time | underhand brand of settlement of the i war. They would be very glad io re- | store the Hohenzollerns and the Hapshurghs to power if by so doing ' they could get back the power that President upon a question then under was once, theirs in the government of discussion and the New York World, | Great Britain. | No, President Wilson knows what | he is going to France for. He knows | the inside of the game heis up | against better than any other man in the world. He doubtless has his plans well in hand and he will keep them to | himself until he decides to lay them | face up on the peace table in Fra { # ————————————" r ve FINE Only ‘afew “weeks ago the opinion was commonly expressed’ in thi country ‘that the United should never again be pared to defend s States be caught unpre- itself adequately this moment, in the enthusiasm over the defeat of the Germans, there is a tendency to throw overboard without further ado all the war organization of the United States. Men in high places talk of ce as though it had een fully achieved and settled, be- yond the possibility of fracture, and they are eager to demobilize the ar- my, rush the boys back from Europe, last of Centre county’s soldier boys will be home. Sonie of them will re- turn almost at once, especially those who have been located in cantonments in this country. But with the boys abroad it will be different. Some units are listed for early return while others will remain with the army of occupation and some, possibly even after its return, will remain there for police and re- clamation duties. In all this shifting about many par- ents are likely to get out of touch with their sons and in order to help such keep in contact the “Watchman” has arranged with the “Home Paper Service of America” to use its effi- cient organization for the relief of anxiety of Centre county parents by gratuitously undertaking to locate all men from here who are in the serv- | ice and who have not been heard from { for some time. If at any time you find that you i want to know just where a certain | soldier is located, if you will send his | | full name, and the unit to which he | |is attached the “Watchman” will as- quit the production of war materials and abolish all war rules affecting manufacture, food, agriculture and commerce. The government agencies have yielded to this tendency to a considerable extent, without waiting for the outcome of the war. Why is it assumed that the. world has entered upon universal and bliss- ful peace and brotherly love? What warrant is there for that assumption? Why do so many Americans jump to the conclusion that the cessation of shooting is the same thing as the per- manent settlement of the world’s trouble? If they would contemplate the situation a little they would per- haps admit that the suspension of hos- tilities does not by any means guar- antee the complete and permanent settlements of the questions that have torn Europe to pieces and inflicted well nigh mortal ‘blows upon many nations. _ War is an effort to attain a polit- ical object by the use of force. The political object is the thing desired, not the fighting. Is the political ob- ect of this war attained? Not yet. t must be Jura by mixed methods of force and negotiation. Negotiation "will become more important and force will play a minor role, if all goes well. | certain immediately, so far as the | War Department permits, the exact location of the unit to which the per- | | son indicated is attached, and forward | | the information to you free of any | | charge whatever. i | —The United States secret serv- | | ice department has issued a warning to the general public to keep a sharp | lookout for bogus federal reserve “bank notes, as it is reported that the | ' country is being flooded with $1 and $2 notes that have been raised to $10 and $20. It is also reported that $5 notes have been raised to a higher | denomination. | ——The new process of preserving | meats by drying appears very much like the old process of “jerking.” But! | there is no harm in a new name. i | ——————————— | ——If Germany is to have a period of Bolshevik control the Kaiser ought 'to be brought to trial during that time. | { ———————————— — All you need is a heart and a | dollar, and you share in the great | work of the Red Cross. | i — And Bernstorff had the assur- ance to try for a seat at the peace , . conference table. But not if all does not go well? Who can guarantee that all the nations of the world will lay aside their passions and cheerfully sacrifice their interests upon demand, for the sake of the gen- eral welfare? Is not that proposition just a little too heavenly for this wick- ed world? Receiver Needed. From the Philadelphia Record. The Allies and America will have to agree upon a receiver for Germany if Great Britain is going to press a claim for 40 billions, and the French claims are to be “infinitely larger” than the British, and the Belgian claim is far more than a billion on ac- count of property taken or destroyed, without regard Belgium’s war costs, and we shall have a right to claim 20 billions or something like that. As the avowed purpose of Ger- many was to “pleed France white,” and incidentally destroy England, and collect the entire German war costs, with war profits annexed at the usual rates, from us, Germany will have no right to complain whatever America and the Allies do. But, of course, it will complain; it has never been able to see why it should not denounce when practiced by other nations those things which it does, or {nreatens to do if it should get a chance. SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Thieves visited the farm _ George | Hutton, at Mountain Grove, near Hazle- ton, one night recemtly, slaughtered three | fine hogs in the pigsty, without attracting t attention, and carried them off. They alse i took two large geese and some chickens. i —Beginning work as a breaker boy, at | a wage of 25 cents a day, John W. Jones, | of Plymouth, has advanced to the posi- ! tion of superintendent of the mines of the West End Coal company, in Luzerne county, at a salary estimated at $5000 a year. —Falls Creek comes forward with claims of having the champion sock-knit- ter of Jefferson county. She is Mrs. Elia- abeth McCullough, of Short street, a mem- ber of Falls Creek branch, DuBois chap- ter. Mrs. McCullough has 102 pairs to her credit, with needles still clicking. —Bandits who made their escape were responsible for five hold-ups in Warrier Run and Sugar Notch, Luzerne county, late Sunday night and early Monday mora- ing. Felix Kohawk, a resident of Sugar Notch, attempted to evade the robbers aad was shot through the right leg, shatter- ing the bone above the knee. against any possible enemy. Yet at} —Preferring death to going to school, Emerson Trick, the twelve-year old sem of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Trick, who reside on a farm in Moreland township, Lycom- ing county, went into the barn Monday and hung himself. His body was found by a younger brether. The lad had beea ordered by his father to attend scheol but did not go. —At the opening of December court at Reading on Monday, William J. Horaber- ger plead guilty to the charge of invel- untary manslaughter and was sentenced to six months in jail as a warning te speeding motorists and motorcyclists. Hornberger was riding a motorcycle em the night of August 5, when he struck aad killed nineteen-year-old Howard Dunkel- berger. : ~—Some second-story man has been pull- ing off daylight stunts in DuBois and has had little trouble in getting away with it. Walking into private homes and bed chambers of hotels, he has taken several hundred dollars’ worth of jewelry and $60 in cash, and then he evidently continued his walk out of town, for the police have not been able to find the slightest trace of him. ; . —The Northumberland county court has named Harry McKinney, former bur- gess of Sunbury, county commissioner to fill the unexpired term of P. Joseph Schmidt, of Shamokin, who died of stab wounds, alleged to have been inflicted by Robert Brantlay, a piano tuner, after am altercation in Schmidt's saloon. McKin- ney is a Democrat. He will serve until the first Monday in January, 1920. —TFor the first time in the history of the Northumberland county criminal courts, an alleged murderer admitted his crime, pleaded guilty and threw himself om the mercy of the court. Peter Smollak, ef Kulpmont, Was accused of slaying his wife with a hatchet. When the time came for trial his counsel announced that the defendant wanted to plead guilty. Under the law, according to the attorneys, the court will now fix the degree of crime, as to first or second degree murder. : —Vacancies existing in the four troops of the state police for the last six or eight months ‘vill soon be filled and a waiting list be re-established according to people at the offices of the department. The sign- ing of the armistice and the preparations | for demobilization of the army have caus: 4’ed- numerous applications for enlistment in the state force to be made. The depart+ ment sent a number of its men into the ar- my and has been unable to hold many mes after their enlistments expire because of the desire for active service. —Two masked men followed the cashier and teller of the First National bank of Bridgeville, near Pittsburgh, as they en- tered the building on Friday, bound the cashier and forced the teller at points of . revolvers to open the safe, which they looted of $19,000 in cash and Liberty bonds and escaped in a waiting automobile. In view of hundreds of persons in the heart of the business district, Elmer I. Vinyard, oil operator, of Tulsa, Oklahoma, was held up Saturday by two armed bandits and robbed of $200 in cash. The robbers escaped. ——More than 400,000 dogs will proba- bly be registered in Pennsylvania this year under the dog license code of 1917. Thous- ands of dogs whose owners did not pay a license fee or which were homeless were shot, especially in the sheep raising coun- ties. The license code placed the enforce ment in the hands of the Secretary of Ag- riculture and early this year it was heo- essary to call in state police to shoot dogs where local constables and officers refus- ed to kill the unlicensed animals and to prosecute owners and keepers who would not secure licenses. Some of the consta- bles were arrested. Charles Geiger, who was the first Oil City resident to be wounded in action, and who was invalided home a year ago, has been appointed Consul General at Gote- burg, Sweden, according to a message from Swift & Co., received at Oil City. Mr. Geiger lost his leg as the result of his wounds, received in the first battle of Cambrai. He went to Oil City five years ago to act as book-keeper for Swift & Co., being later promoted to manager. He en- listed in the Engineer corps, and was with the first to go to France. He was the first member of the Oil City Lodge of Elks to enter the service and the first wounded. __Auditor General Charles A. Snyder has sent letters to county commissioners no- tifying them that if mercantile appraisers in their 1919 returns do not show increas- es over the totals for this year, the De- partment will refuse to approve vouchers for payment of postage, mileage and ad- vertising the appraisers’ lists until an in- vestigation has been made to determine whether the returns are correct. The com- munication states it is “a notorious fact” that some appraisers accept returns from merchants which have not been sworn to or returns of nominal amounts. Attention js called to the decrease of $1,500,000 in taxes to the State which will come next year with the passing of saloons. —Paul E. Schrey, of Watsontown, sig- nal man at the Dewart tower on the Penn- sylvania Railroad, admitted at the coro- ner’s inquet held to inquire into the death of six men in a fereight collision near the Dewart tower, on November 23rd, that he had given the wrong signals and assum- ed blame for the fatal crash. Schrey stat- ed he had orders to hold a light engine and caboose at his tower until an east- bound freight, running on the westbound track, had passed, but instead he gave them a “clear” signal, resulting in the col- lision a few minutes later. Schrey alse admitted he had misrepresented his age, he being only twenty years old. The dis- trict attorney stated Schrey will likely be ——— — Subscribe for the “Watchman.” charged with manslaughter.