K SLING . ¥ H - cogs] ii er svi We are right on the threshold of the last of the summer months. © «This weather is distressing but imagine what it would do to us if it came in January. he — Since the Volstead act has become operative a new meaning has been given to the word rob. — Russia is sick and Russia a friend would be, but when Russia gets well, the devil a friend she’ll be. —1If rear views were popular in por- traiture many a dame of seventy could palm herself off as seventeen. Anyway Chief Justice Taft got on the pay roll in time to draw a check for the summer vacation period. — Chewing tobacco may be a fil- thy habit but the way some folks chew the rag is positively vicious. — The weather of the past ten days has been wonderfully favorable for farmers who have had grain to haul in and oats to cut. —If you want to be a candidate for any borough or township office the last day for filing your nomination papers will be August 23rd. —Jtis to laugh when a feliow squirms far enough out of the uphol- stery in an eight thousand dollar Lim. to tell you how hard the times are. . Sandwiches were known to the ancient Romans under another name and we suspect that some of the old stock is being sold under the new name. The impression that Judge Wit- mer, of Sunbury, is the Penrose choice for Governor is spreading rapidly. The Philadelphia papers took it up on Sunday. — Tt is a slow and humiliating pro- cess to train the skin that only silk has touched for the past four years to get accustomed to the harshness of cotton again. —The department of law and justice can’t possibly be as much interested in the proprietors of hootch caches as are those of our friends who hope to connect with some of it. — The aeroplane fare from New York to Atlantic City has been mater- ially reduced; business having fallen off appreciably since the crusade to clean the shore resort up began. — English society women have abandoned smoking because it has be- ‘ come too common, you know, and probably the habit of aping the Eng- lish on this side, which many of us have decried for years, will now prove a blessing. — With Japan showing signs of re- ally wanting to sit in at the disarma- ment game and Soviet Russia ex- pressing a tentative willingness to Ph [| y — ho po other injuries, Mrs. Ida Rholf, of Fayette county, has filed suit for $10,000 damages against Mrs, Elizabeth: Sprowl, keeper of the sheep. Mrs. Rholf says she was. at- tagked by the ram while walking on the ° STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. | public highway: The suit charges negli- | gence in allowing the ram to roam." > —Alleging that a liquid mole remover VOL. 66. BELLEFONTE, PA., JULY 29, 1921. applied in a careless and negligent man- ner permanently disfigured his face, Har- NO. 29. old H. Murphy, of Philadelphia, ‘has Grange Opposes Constitutional Con- vention. The Legislative committee of the State Grange has issued a timely warning to the farmers of Pennsylva- nia, against the proposed constitution- al convention. After characterizing the law providing for the convention as “very objectional legislation,” the ‘statement of the committee adds: “Never has the fundamental law of the State been so viciously attacked as is proposed in this act. The consti- tution of the State is the Bill of Rights of its people, and its revision should only be accomplished by the most fair and open processes. For the following reasons it becomes our duty as the Legislative committee of the State Grange, to earnestly advise fluence at the September primary election to defeat the plan for the holding of a constitutional conven- tion.” The reasons given are not new to the readers of the “Watchman.” Some weeks ago they were expressed in these columns. But they are so true and timely that they deserve repeti- tion. “The time is not favorable for deliberate judgment on so important a matter,” the committee declares. “Distress, unrest and uncertainty are everywhere, and these distempers could not fail to be reflected in the work of a constitutional convention.” This is a sufficient reason for opposing gives other Election of delegates ought to be By Legislative rather than Congressional districts, the Grange officials allege, ty-five delegates by the Governor would be. without precedent in the | United States,” and “it would place {in the convention delegates not elect- ' ed by nor responsible to the people.” i What purpose, sinister or otherwise, . the Governor has for asking the peo- i ple of Pennsylvania to confer upon | him this extraordinary power of con- | trol of a convention to frame a funda- i mental law, has not been revealed. It | is almost equal to requesting author- | ity to direct the destinies of the peo- i ple for half a century, for that is | about the liffe'#6f a ~ constitution in | Pennsylvania. # But this is not the our people to use their votes and in- the convention but the committee. reasons equally sound. and finally “the appointment of twen- | "Coal Tax Law to be Tested. The Department of Justice of the State is preparing for an early judi- cial test of the constitutionality of the recent Act of Assembly levying a tax on anthracite coal. Some years ago a similar law was passed and approv- "ed but after the coal producers had “collected several million dollars from the consumers the act was declared uneonstitutional by the Supreme court ‘on the ground that it was class legis- lation. The price of coal had been in- ased to cover the tax two or three & over and it was expected that the money would be refunded after the "was invalidated. That expecta- tiont was disappointed, however, and the excess price has been continued ' ever since. | What reason the recent Legislature “had for assuming that the court will revajse itself in interpreting the law this* year has not been revealed. { Thete is no material difference be- | tween this law and the one declared void. Both levied tax on anthracite { coal and left all other kind of coal un- | taxed, thus clearly discriminating | against anthracite coal. Both are ob- | noxious to that provision of the fed- | eral’ constitution which forbids levy- ing tax on exports of products. And the Legislature was admonished by the previous decision of the Supreme court that such legislation will not stand. Yet the Legislature passed the law’ and the Governor approved it. “And carrying the analogy a step further the price of coal has been in- creased since the approval. : » late Senator Quay, in one of his Mellon’s Reasons Unsound. ! Secretary Mellon’s reasons for op- posing the soldiers’ bonus bill will not stand the test of careful analysis. He says it would embarrass if not actual- ly bankrupt the treasury to pay the soldiers some $300,000,000 in 1922 and about a similar amount in subsequent annual payments covering a period of eight or ten years. But he is willing and even anxious to pay the railroads $500,000,000 right away and fund or cancel European war debts to this country to a vastly greater amount. The interest due on foreign loans would not only cover the expenditures of the soldiers’ bonus, but leave a large balance in the treasury. Why let the soldiers suffer in order to ease up on European debtors? ; Of course the European govern- ments recently engaged in war are in financial straits. But the soldiers who saved those countries from a worse fate, or at least many of them, need money. And the debtor European na- tions have other means of everting the dangers and inconvenience of pov- erty. They can cut down expenses sufficiently to meet the interest ac- count on their indebtedness. France is maintaining an army almost on a war footing. Great Britain is spend- ing more money on her army and na- vy than before the war and lending with a lavish hand while unable to pay even the interest on money ad- | vanced by the government of the Unit- ed States, when it was a matter of national life or death. ' It may be a wise policy to help trading communities to a safe and “sound financial position if there is a | perigdical diatribes against. offending . reasonable hope that commodity ex- | members of his own party, insinuated | changes and commercial intercourse | that the Supreme court bench was fill- ‘ will work reimbursement. But we are | ed bf catapulting unfit men into the buildi.g a Chinese wall of tariff taxes , At the time the other coal tax about this country - which will make “was declared unconstitutional trade relations and commercial trans- | ther i was one Dem ~vat on the bench, actions with the outside world impos- | the late Justice Mc ezat, who had a sible. Without opportunities to reach | who some habit of insisting on cor-. foreign consumers our factories will soon be obliged to shut down and in- dustrial paralysis become inevitable. And for what reason? Because Pres- ident Harding and Secretary Mellon want to cultivate friendly social re- ‘lations with the people of Eengland and to-accomplish that -are-willifig to sacrifice our interests. Sinc2 that. time Mr. Mestrezat has | “joined the vast majority” and the court is now unanimously Republican and ‘mostly filled by the catapu 2 metftod Can it be that assu has a ion thatiit Ye event the machine creased revenue. 0 any n in- is depending 0 rect legal interpretation of laws. take some advice from the rest of the | greatest evil in the matter. As the world really there seems to be some Grange committee states the appoint- : —Of ‘course mild methods some- signs of the dawn of peace. —OQur misrepresentative at coat. ing more than a “slap-stick.” — When you have a picnic dinner in the woods don’t leave egg shells, wax- ed paper, empty shoe-boxes, paper i lic service in saying so. plates, fruit rinds, etc., as a monu- | Some | e may be looking for a lovely | that “a wife cannot steal from her : be said to have ment to your thoughtlessness. body els spot for a picnic and not realize what attractions the one you used had be- fore you marred it so. Besides, paper and other litter in the woods often help forest fires in starting and breed flies as well. —The State Grange has gone on record as being opposed to the calling of a constitutional convention at this time. The reasons it advances for the opposition are practically the same as those that the “Watchman” has been urging for months. The farmers of the State are vitally interested and they would be well advised if they were to follow the suggestions that have just been made public by the leg- islative committee of the Grange. — Famine and pellagra are said to be raging in the South because the de- pressed condition of the cotton market has reduced the standard of living there to the point where many are without food entirely and most have been unable to procure that variety that is needed to maintain a constitu- tion hardy enough to ward off pella- gra. While it is a sorry commentary on the prudence of a section that three years ago had so much money it couldn’t find ways to spend it fast enough, it is a fact, none-the-less. Calls for help are already going out and the Near East and other relief movements should properly give way until the nearer South has been fully succored. : —The earnings of the United States Steel Co., for the last quarter were the lowest that have been reported since the spring of 1915, just prior to the war boom. While no one could expect any corporation to make such showings as were reported from 1916 to 1918 the reduced earnings of “big steel” are significant in that they re- flect the impracticability of greatly re- duced production at almost war- boom costs, for only recently did the steel corporations ask its em- ployees to take their first reduc- tion in wage. Judge Gary views the situation hopefully. Optim- ism helps a lot in getting back to nor- mal, but we fear that many of our great industrial concerns will find con- siderable difficulty in readjusting, to the economic consumption of a peace time basis, plants that were extended or built wholly for the waste of war. the | convention by the Governor, is with- court of St. James runs true to form : out precedent. Bestowing such power when he wears a silk hat with a sack | on the Governor in this particular The club with which President | ease would create a precedent, how- Harding thought he was hitting his | ever, which is fraught with the grav- predecessor has turned out to be noth- | est danger. It would not be wise to | ment of delegates to a constitutional times produce results and the Presi- . dent seems to have silenced Harvey effectively in a quiet way. But a good many people think an axe would have . been the proper instrument to use. create such a precedent. On the con- Fordney Bill Passes the House. trary it is important to avoid it and | the Grange committee performs a pub- There are recreants in every. party on all occasions but the six Demo- { crats in the House of Representatives | in Washington who voted for the ——A New York court has decided A Fordney tariff bill the other day may “gone the limit.” The husband,” and a court in another : Pennsylvanian who registered in this State has decided that a husband may ' class, Mr. Guy E. Campbell, lives in chastise his wife for misbehaving. | Allegheny county, and probably im- | agined that his constituents favor the | absurd economic principles express- red in the measure. The others are | representatives of Louisiana and Cal- : ifornia constituencies and were influ- foremost Publicist,” is quite as enthu- ! enced by purely selfish considerations. siastic in praise of President Hard- | Principles do not cut much figure in ing’s proposed movement for disarm- | those localities. The mighty dollar ament as he ‘is vitriolic in denuncia- | is the only magnet that draws them, tion of the Versailles League of Na- and they are responsive to the jingle tions. In a statement published in | of coin. the New York World of last Sunday During the discussion of the meas- Mr. Harden says the “Versailles [ure Mr. Fordney admitted that the treaty of peace was a monument to | purpose of it is to exclude imports. anger, and vengeance and internation- | That is to say, it is intended to elimi- al jealousy,” while “the forthcoming | nate absolutely international com- conference in Washington is to be an | merce. If that result is achieved this open well where all may quench their | country is appproaching the most de- Harden and Harding Agree. Mr. Maximilian Harden, who is commonly designated as “Germany’s Tm - — Those who worry because they believe that Germany will control the markets of the world show scant re- spect for the genius and industry of the people of this country. Where Are the Candidates? So far there doesn’t seem to be any great rush of candidates for the office of burgess in Bellefonte as successor to the present incumbent, W. Harrison Walker. Of course the office is en- tirely in the “honor” class and past experiences of those who have filled it have not been of the kind that places a halo around the head of the presiding genius. It may be a dis- tinction when a man is away from home to be known as the burgess of a town that has furnished three Gover- and damned if you don’t” job at home. Then there is the office of borough councilman. The old members, whose terms expire this year, have so far shown no great activity as candidates to be anybody who wants to dispute their right to continue in that capac- ity. But there is still plenty of time for all who may aspire to either of the above offices, as the last day for Sine nomination papers is August 23rd. nors to the great State of Pennsylva- nia but a thankless, “damned if you do | for re-election and there doesn’t seem thirst and where none can deprive a neighbor of indispensable treatment.” In this estimate he appeals to his hopes rather than his reason. This may be accepted as the Ger- man interpretation of the subject. Mr. Harden is a German through and he was not always in accord with the plans and purposes of the Kaiser and the militarists who surrounded him and influenced his official actions. But he never faltered in his national- ism and frequently acquiesced in things he knew to be wrong because they expressed the policies of the Ger- man people. In other words, he be- lived in the precept of another nation- alist who declared as a sublime prin- ciple: “My country right or wrong.” But Mr. Harden has expressed the views of a majority of the Republi- cans of this country quite as accurate- ly as he has voiced those of the Ger- through. Before and during the war structive industrial paralysis in the history of the world. During the last decade fully one-fourth of the pro- ducts of American factories, mills and soils have been sold in foreign mar- kets. Even with this foreign demand we have not been able to find market for all our products and more than one-third of our productive capacity has been idle or wasted. If the for- eign market is cut off entirely, the idleness will vastly increase and dis- | tress multiply. The chances.are, however, that the measure will be defeated in the Sen- |! ate. President Harding favored its | | passage in the House but his mind ‘changes over night and somebody cap- “able of thinking coherently may get | his ear before the bill gets out of the . Senate committee. Not long ago Sen- , ator Penrose, who is chairman of the ‘Senate committee, declared that his ——1It is said that the corn and rye crops are fairly abundant but with the | Eighteenth amendment and the Vol- stead act in operation what good is there in such abundance. : ——1It seems that Dempsey has nev- er voted and as he escaped the draft by somewhat devious methods he may be characterized as an all around slacker. ——The sea shore hotels complain of poor business this year but that was to be expected. The silk shirt makers have also noticed a decline in demand. ——1It is a perfectly safe bet that the international disarmament confer- , mind has undergone a change on the man people. Senator Philander C. | tariff question. The late President Knox, who will be a candidate for re- | McKinley changed his mind cn the election to the office of Senator in | subject before he died and it is not Congress for Pennsylvania at the com- | improbable that enough other Repub- ing election, protested against the lican Senators have seen the light to Versailles treaty in almost the iden- | postpone for a considerable time and tical language employed by Mr. Har- | modify the measure or defeat it. den. All the other Senators who vot- There have been great changes in re- ed against the ratification of the Ver- cent years. sailles treaty ‘inferentially adopted | ree ren the same idea of the subject and the —— Temperance is admirable in only advantage the proposed confer- ' every respect but it looks as if the ence has over the other, with respect enforcement of prohibition will be as to disarmament, is that it delays the | expensive and long drawn out an en- consummation se “devoutly to be | terprise as Great Britain's struggle to ! wished for.” govern Ireland. ence is simply a back alley way into the League of Nations. — ee — ——The Fordney tariff bill is not yet law but it has progressed far enough i to cause a considerable advance in prices. | pe sare. ——The fellow who paid thirty dol- lars for a seat at the Dempsey fight has no valid excuse for not paying his rent.” } | ——Probably a course of treatment for locomotor ataxia would help Con- | gress in its legislative progress. brought suit against Guy Girillo, a barber, for $5000 damages. ‘.Murphy contends Gi- rillo prevailed upon him to take the treat- ment six weeks ago, while he was getting shaved. The moles are gone, he alleges, but the liquid burned blemishes in his face. 8 : EAA —One man is dead and six others are in a serious condition as a result of drinking “white mule” at a party in a woods near Blaine City, Clearfield county. “Wade Har- kins, aged 37 years, of Blaine City, died ’ last Wednesday. Harkins and the others were on a picnic, and one of the men went for some booze. After drinking almost a gallon of the liquor he obtained, the party became unconscious and were found a short time later. —Within twenty minutes after a crime is committed in Pittsburgh, news of the deed and descriptions of the ¢riminals will be in the hands of police throughout the United States and Canada, officials of the Department of Public Safety of that city announced last Friday. The Department | Haiiling Down “Old Glory.” = | sian : 2 rom the Philadelphia Record. Ti The shipping Board has seized five steamers which it had loaned to the United States Mail Steamship compa- ny on the ground that the company hadn’t paid the rent of them. But what has that got to do with it? Are we running a merchant marine for the sordid purpose of making money; or to keep © ld Glory on the Se Seas?” Senator Jones, who wrH laws about the merchant marine; Savs we've got to have a merchant marine, whatever the cost may be. He is will- ing to pay subsidies. Of course, we've got to have subsidies, millions of them. If it costs more to build and operate vessels under the American than under the Japanese or the Greek or the Norwegian flag, the Ame! taxpayer has got to foot the bill. can’t expect the United State: 1 Steamship company, or anybody else, to incur the enormous expense of | has arranged with a manufacturer of wire- keeping “Old Glory on the Seven jless apparatus to use a powerful trans- Seas.” : iagie mitting “set” to flash the details of crimes One way of meeting the deficits in- curred by corporations that undertake this expensive task is to pay subsi- dies. But that amounts to very little. Congress would be afraid to vote sub- sidies of several hundred million dol- lars, and last year it cost the Shipping Board $380,000,000 more than the earnings to keep “Old Glory on. the Seven Seas.” Thirty years ago Con- gress voted what was regarded as a pretty liberal scale of subsidies; but all, or almost all, the lines that took advantage of it, except the American Line, afterward a part of the Interna- _ tional Mercantile Marine, gave up their subsidies; the cost of Keeping “Old Glory on the Seven Seas” was. ~ more than the subsidy. The American Line got $4 per mile on the outward. trip, say $13,000 a trip, and has con- tinued the service, but complained that it was inadequately paid. ~~ It is pretty easy to keep the British and the Japanese and the Dutch flags | on the Seven .Seas—probably they" could be kept on 17 seas. They cut their expenses to what they can earn, ~and they come into our ports anc . seek cargoes that they are anxious to ~carry to any part of the world where there is water enough, at rates that our shipping men have difficulty in meeting. But Congress tells o in that city to the’ cities. — Professor J. 8. Gottlesbein, choirmas- ter at St. John the Baptist Catholic church, * of Pottsville, on Saturday saw a string sticking up from the ground in his yard. Pulling on it, he drew out of the earth a . bag containing $309 in gold. A wealthy family formerly occupied the home where ‘the professor lives, at No. 1009 Howard av- enue, and it is believed the money was bur- ied treasure. For years it reposed nearly on the surface of the ground, ready for any one to pick up. ' ~The finding of three large deposits of calcareous marl in Franklin county within the last few weeks, a second deposit in Huntingdon county and the knowledge phat beds exist in Erie and Tioga counties | ‘gives assurance that a large number of Pennsylvania farmers have opéned to them an unusual and good supply of agricultur- al lime. The location of a marl bed in northern Huntingdon county last fall by extension representatives of The Pennsyl- vania State College has led to greater in- vestigation, with the result that thousands of farmers will be benefitted. authorities of other —Magistrate J. J. Sweeney, who conducts hearings in central police court, Pitts- | burgh, bluntly declared last Saturday “that he did not consider it an infraction of the law for a man to carry small quantities of 4 shipping men what they must os | liquor intended for private use. At the thors crews, and what they mus f Pennsylvania station: special policeman 1dit ¥ James “Waddell arrested a man calling ° fhem on 0. “salt horse “plum duff,” and how much: spa A and a ' on steel for the purpose of enhancing | the prices of shipbuilding material, I and the cost of keeping “Old Glory on ‘ the Seven Seas” is pretty stiff. Com- | panies that are not very liberally paid for the patriotic job tire of it and drop it, except one or two companies that | get the biggest pay and growl about i its inadequacy. This enterprising and patriotic cor- poration, the United States Mail : Steamship company, is keeping Old ' Glory on one of the seas. Apparently _it does not get its money back, and it j can’t afford to pay for the use of the | himself “Smith,” trate That Smith -was trying to sp thirty Nalf pints” and ‘several “quarts of whiskey in his luggage. Smith said he was starting on a camping trip. The liquor was restored to Smith. : Waddell told. the —The executors of the estate of the late M. F. Elliott, of Wellsboro, former general solicitor of the Standard Oil company, who died a few months ago at Mansfield, have filed their final aecount with the register ' of Tioga county, disposing of $500,000. The only public bequest that Mr. Elliott . made was the sum of $50,000 to the pro- posed Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Memorial hos- pital at Wellsboro. After the specific leg- acies, there remained $420,000 to be divided | steamers. But what of that? It’s | among the residuary legatees in sums the merchant marine that we want, | ranging from $16.21 to $18,271.30, of which isn’t it? It’s “Old Glory on the Sev- | en Seas” that we are pledged to, is it ‘not? Then why haul Old Glory down because the vessels that fly it do not earn expenses? Is that not the rea- son why we pay subsidies, and a lot of our patriots want to pay a lot more subsidies? It only cost $380,000,000 last year. i there were fifty-eight, all told. —George Meily, of Lexington, Columbia county, has three baby pole cats. They were found by one of his sons after the mother was shot. The little orphans were given milk and bread and started eating with a good appetite. They are black and white striped and very pretty. They =are becoming very tame and are frequently left out of their cage, showing no desire to run away. George says they will make pretty and affectionate pets and will prove better mousers than cats. They were successful- - ly operated upon to remove the objection-" able disposition for which they are noted.’ Farming Pennsylvania. From the Philadelphia Public Ledger. Urban Pennsylvania, complacently consuming what rural Pennsylvania provides, is imperfectly aware of the enormous investment represented by our farming interests. No other State supports so wide a variety of industries on so considerable a scale, and it is Pennsylvania’s glory that colossal manufacturing and. mining enterprises co-exist with agricultur- al interests of such magnitude. Our farms are valued at $1,330,254,- 700, which is a gain of 28 per cent. in a decade. Each farm is worth $6577, if the average is struck. The reason Pennsylvania has led since 1756 in the production of iron and steel and holds at the same time so commanding a position in a multi- plicity of manufactures and in hus- bandry as well is not merely the opu- lence of natural resources, wherein the Keystone State is singularly fa- vored. Other countries havé been blest by Providence; and the inhabit- ants have been too slothful and im- provident to delve and plant. It is not |so- in Penn’s plantation. We had drones in his time and drones plague us yet, but the greatness of the Com- monwealth is chiefly due to a general willingness to work, without which no industrial supremacy or lasting social felicity is to be won. : — Theodore A. Boak, of Hughesville, last week opened to the public the beautiful trout pond grounds between Hughesville and Muncy. The property recently came ° into possession of Mr. Boak through pur- chase. He intends to give its use to the - public free of charge, and to keep the ponds, which were first stocked with trout in 1872, well stocked as one of the attract- ive features of the park. The ‘idea of pur- chasing the grounds and preserving them for the public's use was conceived in Mr. Boak’s mind when he learned some months ago that the fine stand of timber on it was being cut down for lumber. _Mr. and Mrs. Imro Broomall, Harry ’ Broomall and daughter, Miss Anna 8. Broomall, all of West Chester, have insti- tuted proceedings in the Chester county courts against Samuel J. Miller, of Lancas- ter, Pa., to recover $20,000 as the result of an automobile accident which occurred on . of this year. Mrs. Broomall was injured, and her neck was permanently scarred. Imro Broomall sustained injuries, includ-’ ing a fracture of the arm. Harry Broom- all was prevented from going to work the - day following, and as a result lost his po- sition, while the daughter, Miss Anna, sus- . tained a fracture of the collar bone. It is charged that Miller was driving his auto- mobile on the wrong side of the road. Chance for Preacher Mayor. From Town Topics. If the Rev. Dr. Maitland Alexander should be elected Mayor of Pittsburgh what would happen? It seems hardly likely the pastor of the fashionable First Presbyterian church, who declin- ed to leave it to accept the chancellor- ship of the University of Pittsburgh, would be willing to be Mayor of the city should he be elected. Dr. Alex- ander offers no opinion as to what he might do. He listens a lot and talks little. en———— —————— Normal Costs Solve Problem. From the New York Herald. The American ' farmer, like other producers, is discovering that more | normal prices do not spell perdition when his costs are more normal. —The army's champion eater returned to Sunbury last Saturday with an honor- able discharge, having eaten himself out of a job. Samuel Ding, of Hartleton, Un- jon county, enlisted at a Sunbury recruit- ing station eight months ago and was sent to Camp Jackson, 8. C. He came back un- der escort of a corporal, who had orders to be sure and get him home safely. “Why, he ate the potatoes, skins and all,” said the corporal. “Two loaves of bread and a half-dozen helpings of meat were his sin- gle meal capacity, and he cried all night ' the other night when he couldn't have a meal at taps. That settled it. Sam got his discharge, and I was sent along to see that he got here safely.” Ding admitted that he was “some eater” as he ordered two sir- loin steaks with a double order of pota- toes at a local restaurant. —_——. the Lincoln highway near Berwyn in June