Dem iatdn. INK SLINGS. — Next Tuesday will be the thirsty | first of July. —What will Mr. Barkeep make of himself after next Monday. —Tomorrow Bellefonte will look and feel like the morning after the night before. — Wheat harvest will be on in Centre county next week and a bumper Crop it will be. —Two weeks of glorious sunshine were all forgotten in the dreary weath- er of yester lay. —The “Watchman” has been right in its repeated declarations that the Ger- mans would sign. —Pennsylvania has ratified the suf- frage amendment. Ours was the sev- enth State to do so. —Everybody seemed to enjoy the air evolutions except a few of the distin- guished visitors from Lock Haven. —Few thought that grape juice would outlive William Jenning Bryan, but its era is just about to commence. The next unconditional surrem- der will be staged in Washington. The Senate will ratify the treaty “as she is wrote.” —The daily fiights of airships over this section are causing a lot of people to look up, who never thought of doing so before. —Traveling carnival companies might have to spend more time at their “cash registers” if they spent less in “crabbing.” —It was probably because Centre county had planned for a whale of a time that the weather man sent enough rain to keep the whale comfortable. ‘Which is the ‘“‘deadest,” Senator Knox, of Pennsylvania, or Senator Reed, of Missouri, would be a fit sub- ject for a juvenile debating society. There may be an abundance of food in the world, as Mr. Herbert Hoo- ver states, but at present prices the question of quantity is unimportant. —Now that all of the war excitement and celebrations are over candidates may hope for a patient hearing of their peculiar fitness for the office they seek. —If some people could put the at- mosphere in which they seem to be congealed to practical use there might be relief from the ice shortage we are suffering now. —The Legislature of Pennsylvania is adjourned. In doing so little it really did a great work for the Common- wealth, for there is nothing so danger- ous as too much law. —Nobody complains that the new an- ti-sedition law is an infringement of his rights except the fellow who fears proper punishment for infringements on the rights of others. —Anyway the sinking of the surren- dered German fleet in Scapa Flow re- moves from the realms of possibilities any unpleasantness over the mooted question as to how the ships should be disposed of by the Allies. —So far as Centre county is concern- ed the war is formally over. We have welcomed the boys home, there is enough money in sight to pay the bills and all that remains to be done is set- tle down to business again. —With Germany deflant even at the moment of signing the peace terms a League of Nations to keep her in her place doesn’t look bad to peace loving people who want to keep their sons at home and get rid of paying war taxes. —The “Watchman” will not greet vou again until after the great drouth is on. It hopes that by July 11th the last of the obsequies over poor old John Barleycorn will have been through with and the country reconciled to a liba- tion of buttermilk. —The big noise is really all over and Fourth of July in Bellefonte will be about as noisy as a cemetery, but in Snow Shoe: Ah, that will be the place on the Fourth, if a real old fashioned rip-roarin celebration is possible with- out something to light it up. — William Howard Taft is the best chance the Republicans have for a Presidential candidate. We are not long on predictions, but we are of the opinion that he will be the nominee of that party and the League of Nations will not be a political issue in the next campaign. —Talking about how nice big crowds will be when there is no booze to spill over in them they can’t possibly have anything on the one that was in Belle- fonte yesterday. Either two and three-quarter per cent. beer hasn't any power in it or everybody was get- ting in training for we have seldom seen so few jags. —Great big Williamsport and Liycom- ing county didn’t raise as much for their welcome home celebration as we did tor ours and they have a deficit of nearly a thousand dollars. They never did seem to know how to do things down there and. this is probably one of the reasons Lycoming motorists look with such covetous eyes on the good roads through Centre county. —If President Wilson takes our ad- vice he will decline to take any further action on the war time prohibition measure. He recommended that Con- gress declare no further need for it and Congress refused to act upon the advice. Had it done so neither party could have claimed any advantage of consideration for the wets, but since it has refused the President would clearly lay himself open to the charge of a play for the wet vote if he were to take the matter in his own hands and by declaring the army demobilized make the law inop- erative until January 15th next. From the very first the “Watchman” has had no patience with attempts to tempor- arily prolong the leases of life of the liquor traffic. It is to no purpose. The country is going dry and the quicker the drouth comes on the quick- er it will become adjusted to it. In other words, it will get alcohol out of its system and be in a position to judge whether it has been for the bet- ter or worse. a VOL. 64. STATE RIGHTS AN nmarape, SoC = D FEDERAL UNION. 7, 1919. Trying to Defeat Ratification. The Republicans who are organiz- ing opposition to the ratification of the peace treaty have followed the example of the liquor dealers who are trying to nullify the prohibition amendment to the Federal constitu- tion. That is to say they have em- ployed former Secretary of State Eli- hu Root, of New York, to devise a plan or create a path which they may follow. In his efforts on behalf of the liquor dealers Mr. Root has not thus far met with substantial success. He procured an order from one of the Federal courts in New York to re- strain revenue agents from interfer- ing with the sale. But a higher court has already dissolved the injunction and the enforcement of the amend- ment is left to the revenue agents. Mr. Root is a good lawyer and re- sourceful. Before he had been re- tained by the Republican Senators to guide them in their fight against the peace treaty he had openly expressed the opinion that it should be adopted. Only a few days ago he advised Lodge and his associates that the Sen- ate has nothing to do with treaty making under the constitution until : the work has been completed by the President and submitted for ratifica- tion. But since he has been retained as attorney for the objectors he has undertaken to achieve their purpose without infringing upon the preroga- tives of the Executive. In other words he suggests that in the ratify- ing resolution they insert a provision which may influence the other signa- tories to refuse acquiescence or con- cur in something they may claim as their own. ‘If the result were refusal to acqui- esce the treaty would, of course, fall, and the triumph which had been achieved at so great a cost in life and treasure, be nullified. Meantime, however, the. American troops would have returned home and the allied ar- mies disbanded, so that Germany could begin a new war under the most auspicious conditions. If the amend- ments proposed by Root were concur- red in by the other nations in inter- est, the Republican Senators could claim that the world peace was their master work;.and that Woodrow Wil- son deserved no credit. - Either of these results would be entirely ‘satis- factory to them for they would rath- er deluge the whole world in blood debt than see President Wilson hon- ored. ——He laughs best who laughs last maps and the fun the Republican Senators are now having with President Wilson will look like the dreariest gloom when compared with the fun President Wil- son will have with them when he is vetoing their tariff legislation. Germany Signs the Treaty. RAT The German National Assembly, sit- ting at Weimer on Sunday, voted 237 to 138, to sign the peace treaty agreed upon at Versailles and based on the fourteen points suggested by President Wilson in his address to Congress in January, 1918. It was the only course to pursue. General Foch, with an ar- my of half a million trained troops, was on the border, ready to move on Berlin. The memory of the depreda- tions and destitution inflicted in France and Flanders during the four years of hostilities, rankled in the brain of every soldier in that vast force. The time limit for action was ap- proaching and the new Chancellor of the German government could discern no alternative The peace terms may have seemed hard to the Germans but they are not. During half a. century Germany has never revealed a single generous im- pulse. Obsessed with lust for power those in control of the destinies of that empire invoked every form of cruelty to terrorize those they desired to sub- due. They murdered women and chil- dren ruthlessly and destroyed cher- ished property wantonly in the war - just ended. The idea of exempting them from the just penalties of their crimes could not be entertained for a moment. A demand for full and com- plete reparation would have been with- in the bounds of reason and justice. But it would have been impossible of fulfillment within a thousand years. The war was begun by Germany as a speculative investment. It was prosecuted in the cruelest forms that wicked hearts could conceive. It was lost to the perpetrators of the crimes because the Allies and associated peo- ple could not be terrorized. The agree- ment to sign made on Sunday at Wei- mar was the beginning of the end. The signing will complete the greatest vic- tory for humanity and civilization since the birth of the Savior. There are no reasons to sympathize with the sufferers. They deserve all they can possibly get in the way of punishment. They approved the cruelties inflicted by their armies and merit the full measure of the penalties. The G&rman government was cruelly unkind to the Republican Sen- ators and Jim Reed in agreeing to sign just at the time that the Senators im- agined their help was materializing. Senator Knox has a special reason for complaint. ———————————————— The President will be home in a few days and he will be welcomed by Republican Senators in Washington as cordially as a smallpox patient in a crowded play house. BELLEFONTE. PA., JUNE 2 Senator Sherman’s Visions Lie. ator Sherman, of Illinois, was speak- ing the exact truth when he said the other day that he was making his speech “against the advice of many of his friends.” The speech to which he referred was delivered in the Sen- ate last Friday and in it he made the amazing statement that the League of Nations may “bring the civilized world under the domination of the Vatican.” is appeal to religious . bigotry was inspired by the fact that | several of the countries which will be | included in the League, when it is i formed, are known as Catholic coun- ! tries. In support of his statement he ; enumerated the countries in which the | populations profess the faith of the 1 Catholic church. By inference Mr. Sherman said | that because of the religious faith of { those peoples and for the reason that i “the occupants of the Vatican have: believed in the inherent right of pa- ' pal authority to administer civil gov- ernment,” the creation of a League of Nations is a menace to the Protestant religion. “The Vatican,” he added, “is a most earnest advocate of the covenant of the League of Nations,” and he asserted that the Pope was in- fluenced to that conclusion by Presi- dent Wilson, who visited him during his recent sojourn in Rome. “It was,” he continued, “a miraculous conver- sion of the deep, traditional wisdom of the Holy See.” Unless the Illinois Senator was too drunk with prejudice to know any- , thing he knew that his utterance on ' that subject was a malicious lie. The Vatican has made no claim to author- since Italy established a civil govern- ment independent of the Vatican in Rome and neither the Pope nor an¥ one in his behalf has pretended infal- libility for nearly as long a time. The present Pope is an ardent advocate of peace and if he was converted to the support of the League of Nations by any influence it probably was the be- lief that it is the surest and quickest way of guaranteeing enduring peace to a world that has recently been dev- astated by the wickedest war of all time. on. —Von Hindenburg refused to sigh the treaty for the reason that it would seem like signing his own death war- rant. He is among those who will be summoned to trial for the atrocities perpetrated during the war. 1 ——————————————— | The Legislature of 1919. The 1919 session of the Pennsylva- nia Legislature is a completed though not a perfect page in the history of the Commonwealth. It was a session of varying moods and surprising episodes. It began in bright promise, dragged along in aimless inactivity and wound up in fairly creditable achievement. The ratification of the suffrage amend- ment to the Federal constitution was its best performance. But that was less the work of the Legislature than the will of the Governor. From begin- ning to end the session was servile to a boss. The Governor and Penrose al- ternated in control. In the final oper- ations Mr. Sproul was master and in a benevolent mood. : The value of the work of the 1919 session of the General Assembly is a matter of conjecture. The Prohibition amendment to the Federal constitution was ratified under compulsion and sub- sequent legislation went to the limit in the direction of nullifying it. The Philadelphia reform measures were cut and slashed to such an extent that no estimate can be made as to their utility. The appropriation bills were constructed in a hap-hazard manner that alternately caused hope and dis- pair. But there is some reason to hope that in the end something like justice has been obtained. The State College appropriation was finally brought to a figure that will enable that splendid in- stitution to fulfill its great work. In the matter of volume the record of the session leaves nothing to be de- sired. An unusually large number of bills were introduced and more than the usual number were passed on to. the Governor. But quantity is not the measure of value in legislation and it’ would be difficult at this time to pick out enough meritorious work to justify the long session and considerable ex- pense attending it. If, however, the new charter for Philadelphia and the reform election bills enacted will guarantee something like fair elect- tions in that city, the work of the Leg- jslature will be worth all it cost and the people of Pennsylvania may rise up and bless it. Now that nothing more can be done for the Kaiser the Republican Senators in Washington might turn their attention to helping Villa in Mexico. ———And Senator Knox hoped that his perfidy would get him the Republi- can nomination for President where- as it has only procured popular con- tempt. ——Mr. Lenine, of Russia, has cer- tainly operated an expensive machine for a considerable time on small re- sources. — The news from France ought to admonish Mexico to behave. ——Subseribe for the “Watchman.” It may easily be believed that Sen- ity to administer civil government ! Knox’s Resolution Buried. Senator Knox’s plan to prevent the ! ratification of the peace treaty has ' proved a dismal failure. After all his ' labor in preparing his resolution and ‘ the speech supporting it, his fellow ' conspirators have practically aban- 'doned him to public ridicule. In de- livering the oration at the funeral Senator Lodge said he would like to have seen the resolution adopted. No doubt that is true for next to the Kai- ' ser himself there is no human crea- ture as anxious to embarrass Presi- dent Wilson as Senator Lodge. But the scheme was so absurd that even _ malice couldn’t stand behind it “with a straight face” and the pressure of important business gave a plausible ‘ excuse for letting it drop. : | But Senator Knox’s resolution can’t “be buried without putting Senator | Knox's reputation as a constitutional | lawyer in the grave with it, or in ‘ another grave by its side. The ques- tions involved are purely and entirely constitutional. The fundamental law provides the processes of making treaties and until Elihu Root, of New York, was called into the case the Re- publican Senators may have actually believed that they had a right to in- tervene at any stage of the proceed- ings. But Root promptly warned them to “keep off the grass.” He told ‘ them how and when they had author- lity to act and his instructions left ! them no alternative to the fact that Knox’s plan was preposterous. Meantime the. Peace Conference at Versailles went on with its work, ap- parently oblivious of Senator Knox { and his absurd scheme to defeat the peace treaty, and completed it while he was “wind-jamming” in Washing- ton. Taken together these incidents were too much for Lodge and Borah and Reed and Lodge as the chief mourner was called in to perform the obsequies. It was a grim joke from the beginning and properly ended as a farce comedy. It created hope for a short time in Germany and promis- ed to make a holiday for the Hohen- zollern family. But it began too soon and couldn’t be kept up to any other conclusion than that which was reg- istered when Senator Lodge preach- ed the funeral sermon. “INTERESTING AVIATION NEWS. "A big White truck, skillfully cam- ouflaged, pulled into Bellefonte on Monday morning with representatives of the U. S. army aviation service. i Major A. H. Gilkison was in charge | and with him were John P. Wood- { ward, Arthur E. Bittle and C. S. | Thornton. They came from the avia- tion field, Mineola, L. I., and their bus- | iness was checking up the Wilson | aerial mail route to see whether it i will prove available for use in con- | junction w.th the army service. The { men spent Sunday night in Sunbury i and it developed during their stay "here that officials of that town are | making strenuous efforts to land a | station for that place, even going so ! far as to assure Major Gilkison that , they rarely have any fog in that town. Major Gilkison was shown the aviation field in Bellefonte and all the . advantages of this locality, and in or- der to give him a clearer idea of the {lay of the land in this section of the | State he was taken to State College "and shown the big topographical map ,in the corridor of the main building. Then to give him an idea of the coun- | try hereabouts he was taken on to- ward Pine Grove Mills, to the high i point in Ferguson township, from : where the big white cross on the top ' of Point McCoy, put down as a mark- | er, was plainly visible with the naked ; eye. While the Major gave no inti- ‘ mation of what his report would be he seemed favorably impressed with ‘the advantages of Bellefonte and | treatment shown him while here. The ' party left Monday afternoon for points further west. oo H. Praeger, son of Otto Praeger, ' and Herbert Blakeslie, not a relative of | fourth assistant postmaster general James I. Blakeslie, both of Washing- ton, D. C., arrived in Bellefonte on Sunday and will remain here as part of the official force of the aviation . field. E. F. White, the daring avia- tor who recently made the non-stop ' flight from Chicago to New York, was ' also an arrival in Bellefonte on Sun- day under orders to report at the Bellefonte aviation field. No Paper ‘Next Week. No paper will be issued from this office next week, in accordance with an old established custom of giving the employees a midsummer holiday of one week. The office, however, will be open as usual for business and our friends are always welcome. Come in and see us when in town. — Now that you have officially welcomed the soldier boys home show your heart is in the right place by giving them the first jobs you have at your disposal. It will be the best way to show your gratitude for what they have done. ——For high class Job Work come to the “Wa an” Office. ipm— second assistant postmaster general,’ Philander’s Motive. From the Philadelphia Record. The Peace Conference began its ses- sion on January 18, and it has, there- fore, been nearly five months in per- fecting the terms of the peace treaty, the most elaborate document of the kind in the history of the world and epoch-making in its importance. The work has been enormous and the diffi- culties almost insuperable because of the conflicting interests of the na- tions engaged in the task. This is so nearly finished that it is expected to give Germany the final terms aua to demand a definite answer from that country this week. In view of all the obstacles encountered the time spent in drafting the Lace treaty is not considered remarkable. According to ex-Senator Root between 2000 and 3000 men have been engaged in this labor. . Now along comes Pennsylvania's junior Senator, Mr. Knox, with the bright (Suggestion that practically everything that has been accomplish- ed in five months of hard work should be scrapped and a fresh start be made according to ideas of his own. This statesmanlike view is hardly likely to commend itself to the reprc- sentatives of the 32 nations gathered at Paris. Just as they see the end in sight Philander proposes to cut out a new job for them that wet!ll require months more of study and discussion. Of course, the delegates of other countries assembled at Paris can’t be expected to know that this is only a move in the American Political game, and that Mr. Knox really has no ser- ious convictions on the subject of the peace treaty or the League of Na- tions. He has, however, some well-de- fined opinions on the desirability of Republican success in 1920 and the es- pecial availability for the Presidential nomination of a distinguished corpor- ation lawyer from Pennsylvania. So he projects himself into the limelight, even at the possible expense of his own country’s welfare ‘and of great international confusion. Doubtless the German peace delegates are well pleased with Mr. Knox's sideshow. It is difficult, however, to see why any- body else should approve a move which is so obviously political in its origin and which, if successful, will only complicate an already difficult situation. : Get Back to a Peace Basis. From the Lancaster Intelligencer. At the recent Democratic national conference in New Yor] os k, 8. olwion : e National committee ‘advecating the repeal of the Espionage Act, the aboli- tion of postoffice censorship and op- osing compulsory military. training. t is a pity that these three matters were tied together in one resolution, for opinion upon the last named is not likely to be as unanimous as upon the other two. The war fully convinced a good many people that universal military training would be a mighty good thing and that, for a at war, selective draft is the only just and effective re- liance, but there is very little dis- agreement upon the advisability of getting rid of such war-time necessi- ties and nuisances as the Espionage Act and the postal censorship; meas- ures not at all to the taste of the American people or of any people who value personal liberty and don’t like official nosing in private affairs. It may be that we will yet need, for a considerable period, some such safe- ard against the sinister plotting of oreigners as the Espionage Act sup- plied, but it would seem that that should be furnished by a new meas- ure particularly designed to meet Bolshevist and other crazy propagan- da rather than by the Espionage Act, which was made to deal with furtive menace of the sort offered by the late German government. As for inquisitive postal censorship, we should have no use for any other form of it than may be necessary for keeping the mails as clean and harm- less as possible. The National Democratic commit- tee may be expected to consider these matters in the right spirit and par- ticularly with a determination that the Democratic party shall hold the leadership in putting the country back on a peace basis, while seeing to it that it is also a basis of ample pre- paredness for war until such time as the League of Nations, or other ef- forts toward millennial peace, shall show reassuring progress. France to | Buy U. S. Equipment. From the Williamsport Sun. A commercial transaction before .utes. os - | SPAWLS FROM THE KE® ONE —Pleading guilty in Blair c¢ iy court to operating an automobile v . le intoxi- cated, George M. Hoover, of Y_llow Creek, was sentenced to pay $150 fine, serve until September 1 in jail and lose his license. Hoover said he never would run a car again. —The final account of an estate in Mer cer county was filed in the office of the clerk of court the past week and among the items charged was one of $15 by the son-in-law of the deceased for horse feed and meals for the mourners who atteng- ed the funeral. “a Weems I —Captain W. C. Kress, of Lock Haven, has celebrated the eighty-third anniversa- ry of his birth. Captain Kress has been an attorney in Clinton county for nearly 60 years, and for several years was Su- preme court reporter. He is one of the few surviving members of the old Cata- ract Steam Fire Engine company, of Lock Haven. —Mrs. Charles Yurasleviz, 20 years old, a bride of five months, was killed by lightning during a severe storm on Fri- day at her home near Hazleton. Teresa Titer, aged 14, a berry picker, was killed by lightning near Tompickeni, and her sis- ter Mary was badly burned. Fourteen« year-old Mary Pinter was struck by light- ning in her home at McAdoo and died in- stantly. —Walter 8S. Greevy, superintendent of the State Employment Bureau, Altoona office, was acquitted on Saturday of the murder of Edward H. Steckroth, near the Greevy home, May fourth. The trial last ed four days and the jury was out a little more than an hour. Greevy is the son of Thomas H. Greevy, prominent attorney, and is the man who instituted the Belle- fonte Lodge of Moose. —DMissing since May 4th, when they broke out of the Northumberland county prison, John Culp, of Shamokin, and Charles Herod, of Milton, held for trial for the alleged robbery of a number of Milton stores, have joined the United States field artillery, according to word received by Warden Barr, of the Northum- berland county prison. It is considered probable no effort will be made to bring them back. —St. Marys is to have a modern, fully- equipped hospital. The old Benedictine Monastery building has been secured for such an institution. The equipment will be furnished by the three daughters of the late Andrew Kaul, Mrs. Julia K. Reilley, Mrs. Bertha K. Kistler and Mrs. Joseph- ine K. Powers, It is planned to secure the services of an architect, working in conjunction with a committee of physi- cians, to draw up plans for remodeling the building. —A tribute was paid to Lieutenant Dan- iel 8S, Keller, son of Superior Court Judge William H. Keller, by the Lancaster bar, when a painting of him in uniform was unveiled and placed on the wall near the Judge's bench on Saturday. The lieuten- ant got a furlough while in training at Camp Meade to go home to be admitted to the bar. He was the youngest member and he was the first to be admitted to practice in full uniform. He was killed in the Argonne at the head of his company. —Farmers in Blair county are complain- ing that the elderberry bushes are being denuded of their blossoms by persons who desire to provide against the long dry spell. The elderberry blossoms make a wine which, when it becomes a little aged, has a decided “kick” in it. But there will be no shortage of berries. Reports from the rural districts show there will be an immense crop of huckleberries, raspber- ries, blackberries and elderberrics, if the wine distillers do not ruin the latter crop by taking all the blossoms. —Patrolman Tracy Miller, of Scranton, proclaims himself the champion egg eater in the United States. This announcement was made after he had eaten forty-eight eggs in twenty-four hours. Miller's feat was started when a wager was made that he couldn’t eat twenty-four in fifteen min- Miller won easily. A few hours later another wager was made that he could not duplicate the feat. At the end of his day’s work he ate the twenty-four eggs and complained that he was hungry and would like to have a steak. —Charging that his wife was atacked by a big rooster and that as a result of fright she died two weeks later, William Frank Naylor, of Newburgh, N. Y., last week started suit against J. M. Fey, a Hazleton grocer, asking $30,000 damages. In Janu- ary, 1919, Naylor charges that he and his wife lived near the Fey residence in Ha- zleton. The rooster came to the Naylor yard, it is charged, and as Mrs. Naylor at- tempted to pass it the bird flew at her. Mrs. Naylor, her husband alleges, suffered a nervous breakdown and died two weeks later. —Lancaster county farmers have dis- posed of their fat cattle at fancy prices, as fancy in soce cases as 18 cents, and they made money feeding them, but cattle dealers have been less fortunate. The turn in the tide of high prices was to be expected. Nevertheless, dealers remained bulls on steers, and they are believed to have lost barrels of money. When steers go up in price beefsteak keeps perfect step to the rise, but when steers come down in price it has no more effect on the price of beefsteak than if the steers were coming down the lane. — While on the mountain near Blakely, ‘Lackawanna county, on Friday, looking after the family cow, Peter Knapp, seven years old, sat down to eat a sandwich, Oliver Deider, aged ten, and John Dell, aged fourteen, came upon him, command- ing him to hold up his hands, while Dei- der pointed a revolver at Knapp and it was discharged as Dell took the sand- wich, Knapp falling over dead. The re- which all other deals that have mark- ed this as the greatest age of business | in the history of the world pale into | insignificance, is soon to be completed | between the United States and! France. Negotiations, which have been under way for some time are to be completed with the sale to France | of all the overseas’ property of the! American Expeditionary Forces, cost- | ing $1,500,000,000. The selling price is not yet divulged and may not be when the transaction is completed but it will not be over the original cost as value of much of the property is no longer estimated on wartime stand- ards. The property includes the larg- est ice plant in the world, the Bor- deaux harbor improvements, ware- houses, railroad tracks and supplies, motor equipment, foodstuffs, lumber mills and many other materials. France will undoubtedly get a bargain but that method of disposing of this vast equipment is nevertheless the only feasible one. ——TFor high ciass job work come to the “Watchman” office. | volver was stolen early in the week from the room of State Trooper Merrifield, at Mahon's hotel, Olyphant, by Deider. His mother is employed there. The boys con- fessed their crime, telling its full details to the state police. After shielding her father, James De- cello, until he escaped, Margaret Decello, 16 years old, of Kane, McKean county, last Friday confessed that her father, and not she, shot and killed Tony Grecco at the Decello home on New Year's night. Until last week the girl was charged with the murder on her own confession that she killed Grecco when he attacked her. Since the night of the tragedy she has been a prisoner at the county jail at Smethport, and was to be tried at the next term of court. In making her new confession Miss Decello said that her father killed Grecco because he was an all-around bad man, a «Black Hand” operator who had terroriz- ed Italians, among them was her father. Four weeks before the murder Grecco came to the Decello home, the girl said, and under his threats her father gave Grecco It is believed that the girl's’ father 13 now in Italy.