INK SLINGS. —In nine days Christmas will be here. How near ready for it are you? —The fact that Popocatepetl is in. a state of violent eruption does not indicate that hell's broke loose in Mexico. — Which does the hunter enjoy most: The thrill of the chase and kill- ing the buck or the vanity of carrying the head and hide home from the hunt? —The attitude of Japan's delega- tion to the arms limitation conference seems to be one of demanding every- thing and being perfectly satisfied with whatever they get. —Ireland got so much more than most people expected she would that it behooves her to settle down and make so much of the liberties she has been given that more may be secured later. — Judge Landis’ decision in the | case of Babe Ruth is not without precedent. The court of public opin- ion long ago handed down a decision that the Judge has no right to “make money on the side.” —The accomplishments of the arms limitations conference will be many outside of matters of international Demortatic Wate | { ! VOL. 66. Big Stick of the Big Four. cratic Senators in Congress to vote for the ratification of the treaty sign- ed in Washington, on Saturday, by the representatives of the United States, Great Britain, Japan and France, for the reason that the pur- pose it aims to achieve is precisely the same that was expressed in the covenant of the League of Nations | and the Versailles treaty. It has less ‘merit than the other because it sub- stitutes force for suasion. It creates an offensive and defensive alliance of | four big powers to dominate or de- | stroy weaker nations that fail to obey | mandates. It is the recognition of 'the “Big Stick” in diplomacy as It is the plain duty of the Demo- | against a mutual agreement among importance, and the revelation of | gl] the civilized nations, great and Senator Lodge as the grandest hyp- | small. ocrite of all time is not the least of | The principal objection raised them. against the covenant of the League of — Marshal Foch left our shores on Nations was that Article X, of that Wednesday. While here he was easily instrument, created a super govern- the champion of everything and when ment. Article X provided that “the he sets foot on his beloved France | members of the League undertake to once more he can tell Carpentier and respect and preserve, as against ex- Mille Lenglen that he was neither ternal aggression, the territorial in- knocked out nor quit. tegrity and political independence of —_ Auditor General Lewis contin- | all members of the League. In case wes a fly in the Harrisburg dumplin’ of any threat or danger of such ag- of extravagance. His lates effort to | gression, the Council shall advise up- throw a wet blanket on magnificent | on the means by which this obliga- achievement is his refusal to approve | tion shall be fulfilled.” This express- payment of bills for the clothing of ed an intolerable thought to the jaun- drivers of state automobiles. | diced minds of Senator Lodge and his , —The “Watchman” has in mind a. mai who would make a splendid’ standard bearer for the Democracy in | the next gubernatorial fight in Penn-' sylvania. We are not informed as to whether he would answer such a call | of his party so will defer announcing | i his name until that assurance is given. | — Mr. Bertram Donald Holderman, psychological phenom of The Penn- sylvania State College wears the green cap of a Freshman probably with far less disturbance of his superabundant prosencephalon than is occasioned by heralding him as an “infant prodigy” as some of the metropolitan journals are doing. . —Everybody ought to be happy over the prospects of an early ratifi- cation of the Pacific treaty. Nobody | will be deceived by it; however. Twist, jarble, read into or out of Arx- ticle II as you may and it remains in spirit and principle the same as Arti- cle X of the covenant of the League of Nations. — Boston elected 4 Democratic may- or on Tuesday, and as only one of the : four candidates for the office was a! Republican the result was another straw. showing that the political pen- dulum is swinging back strong. With three Democrats in the field to divide the vote of their party, it would seem that the one Republican ought -to have romped away with the race. —The United States railroad labor ‘board has made a new ruling that cuts common labor, of course. Why ‘it is that all the slashing is done to ‘the poor souls who earn least we can’t fathom. Common labor is low enough | “at thirty and thirty-five cents an | ‘hour. The disparity between what it receives and what skilled labor com- mands is too great. In most instan- ces the man without a trade, the common laborer, is just as essential to industry as the man with one and {it is wrong to grind him down to the ‘point where mere subsistence is his lot while others who contribute rela- tively no more to the economic struc- STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA., DECEMBER 16, 1921. NO. 49, | Hope for Democratic Victory. The official returns of the recent election show that over half a million votes were cast for the Democratic candidate for Justice of the Supreme court of Pennsylvania. The candidate of the party, Judge Eugene C. Bonni- well, was nominated by the use of “stickers.” Until within a week of the primary election he didn’t know he was going to be a candidate and no one else had such an idea in mind. But an impression had gotten out that the managers of the Democratic or- ganization were willing to allow Gov- ! ernor Sproul’s friend, Judge Shaeffer, to have an unopposed election. To prevent that Mr. Bonniwell was pre- vailed on to offer his name. It was too late to get on the primary ballot. The primary election was held on ' weeks before the general election. But for some time after the primary the Democratic organization remained oblivious to the fact that the party had a candidate and the burden of dif- fusing the information was upon the candidate himself and such others as care more for principles than person- alities. The candidate was the only speaker in the campaign. Former Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo offered to come into the State but the supporters of the party hadn’t enough ‘money to meet the expenses of an "active campaign. Nevertheless Judge Bonniwell received more than half a Republican associates in the Senate. million votes and carried several coun- They imagined it involved odious ob- ligations. : "Article II of the treaty agreed up- that the Democratic party of (on in Washington on Saturday de- sylvania is strong enough and I clares that “if the said rights are threatened by the aggressive action of any other power the high contract- ing parties shall communicate with one another fully and frankly in order to arrive at an understanding as to the most efficient measures to be tak- en, jointly and separately, to meet the exigencies of the particular situa- tion.” The difference between these propositions is simply that “twixt twedledum and twedledee” that once | disturbed the mings of a couple of fools. But it set¥es to show that the Republican objections to the League of Nations were not only absurd but | were equally insincere. The objection ' was to Wilson. The League of Nations presented to the eivilized governments of the wars by diplomatic negotiation. The new treaty serves notice upon a group of weak tribes or governments in Asia that unless they kowtow to big bosses the mad dogs of war will them. It is a cruel method of accom- plishing a desired result but in the absence of the League of Nations is probably the only available way, and therefore it might as well be adopted people of the United States come to an understanding of the facts they will cast out the malignants and join the League of Nations. ert ere ' ties that had gone wrong. The plain lesson of this result is Penn- the 20th of September, just seven ' ' Lamentations of Republican Leaders. Mr. W. Harry Baker, of Harris- burg, Secretary of the Republican State committee, has been “stirring up the animals,” so to speak, in Washington. Mr. Baker is indisputa- bly the shrewdest politician in the Re- publican organization of Pennsylva- nia, and he seems to be greatly alarmed over party conditions. less the spoils of political warfare are made available for the faithful who served in the trenches,” Mr. Baker declared to the Senators and Repre- sentatives of the party in Congress, doom the sons of America “Un- ? “there will be little use in making 2° campaign in several Congressional ' districts in Pennsylvania,” next yeat. The remarks were addressed to the Congressional delegation but were in- tended for the Postmaster General. The Philadelphia North American, one of the most servile Republican newspapers in the State and easily the most hypocritical, bewails the present condition of the party. Sen- ator Crow, it declares, “represents a new type of Pennsylvania Senator. He is wholly and solely an exponent of machine politics,” and referring to Lieutenant Governor Beidleman, it adds, “after all possible weight has been given to testimony in his favor, Beidleman’s unfitness for the post of chief executive of the Commonwealth remains glaringly apparent.” The purpose of this attack upon the party organization is not apparent but it may safely be said that the North | American will support both men next ' fall for the offices to which they as- pire. mae League of a Few Nations. From the Philadelphia Record. Two years ago the Republicans ! { shouted that our liberties were endan- gered by the proposal to enter the League of Nations. We would be es- | . SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. — Charles Klines, of DuBois, was killed while hunting in the woods Saturday when he was attempting to put a rabbit which he had shot, into the pocket of his coat. He was standing on a log at the time and his gun slipped and was, discharged, the load of shot ploughing through his body. _Dr. F. W. Black, chief surgeon at the Lewistown hospital, offers a reward of $1000 for the arrest and conviction of the party who shot him in the back in his of- fice on the morning of November 15th. He was shot in his office some time during the early hours of November 15th, when he came downstairs in answer to a night call. Auditors sent to Meadville by Samuel S. Lewis, Auditor General, to investigate the accounts of Harry F. Miller, of Craw- ford county, Register and Recorder, said they had found a shortage of $13,256 in his accounts. They added he had failed to turn over sums collected as inheritance taxes. Miller is under arrest in Memphis, Tenn. Mrs. John Miller, 67 years old, is in tablishing a super-government of the ! the Cottage State hospital at Philipsburg world; we would destroy the constitu- tional powers of Congress; we would | the wilds of Patagonia in | with a bullet to death in | working at her home between Madera conflicts be- | Houtzdale, in the Mountz settlement when in her shoulder as the re- sult of an odd hunting accident. She was and tween the Auricanians and the Terra i a bullet from the gun of hunters shooting Del Fuegans if we should sign that | at game atrocious pact brought to us by Wood- | kitchen, 200 yards away, entered the hit the stove and richocheted into TOW Wilson, a weak man who was put- | her shoulder. ty in the hands of European states- | men, One divorce to every six marriages is I and at the same time a man of | the record made in Columbia county thus iron will and unyielding stubbornness, far this year. Last year the proportion who would not obey the Senate Re- | was one divorce to nine marriages. And publican caucus. And therefore, while the number of divorces is growing, the Senate rejected the number of marriages continues to de- the treaty of Versailles, and the great | crease. The price of marriage licenses has American people arose in their might ! been boosted during the year from §1 to and sustained the Senate by a majori- | $1.50. Fifty-eight divorces to 349 mar- ty of 17,000,000, and the country heav- | riages is the total to date for this year. ed a deep sigh of relief—according to | . —TRobbers early on Monday entered the all the Republican newspapers—when y y ) 3 { home of Dr. John Whann, at Kittanning, Woodrow Wilson was cast into the attacked him and then left him lying un- i Bg of piivsis Jife, 554 the { conscious on a bed after they had set fire § : i to the house. The fire was discovered by Homing Sos felt upon the tiller of the | employees at a nearby power plant. They A Mui 416 the present rescued the doctor and then extinguished : 3 | the fire. Dr. Whann was removed to a Vs Yarding has Top oles BR impor. | hospital where his condition was report- an nr Me a ed as serious. State police and county de- : : ’ . i tigating. naming in his message by referring pty re Ves agating thei int sist to All the Presidents Sho had refased |, -7°Dn Beam, of Jonnsiony, 2 aft early ‘to obey the injunction to abrogate the hour Friday night shot and killed his commercial treaties in the Jones ship- | FiI Aunt. then fired a shot into his own ping law of last year. { brain. Both died almost instantly. The The President would not think of ! tragedy was discovered a half hour later introducing the United States into the League of Nations, but he has nego- tiated a treaty to make the United , States a party to a League of a Few | Nations. We notice at the outset | But the statement of Secretary Ba- that, while one of Woodrow Wilson's suffi- ciently alive to fight a winning battle for Governor next year. No candidate t ever encountered such adverse condi- tions as those which confronted the nominee for Supreme court Justice "last month. The most hopeful Demo- crate dispaired of siecess and law- yers, proveérbially anxious for the fa- vor of appelate courts; had pledged themselves to his opponent before they knew of hi candidacy. Yet he polled a great voté and if there had been in the public mind even the shad- ow of a belief that he could win, if would have been increased vastly and he might have been elected. Where there’s a lot of smicke usually some fire, but Secreta~ ry of the Treasury Mellen declares { there’s : world én invitation to join in an ami- he’s not going to resign. | cable agreement to prevent future | Fooling the Service Men. Senator Penrose has notified the four managers of the Republican machine of this State that in framing the tick- ‘be let loose to scourge and destroy et for next year a world war service man must be named for the office of Lieutenant Governor. Neither Sena- tor Crow nor Mr. Beidleman served in the war and the third place on the ticket is to be offered to the overseas 'as a temporary expedient. When the heroes as a token of appreciation of their courage and patriotism. This is precisely in pursuance of the meth- ods of Senator Penrose’s predecessors ' as boss of the Republican machine. Immediately after the organization of —__Of course a letter is always the Grand Army of the Republic, suc- ‘looked for by those of your family ceeding the Civil war, some such sop | who are permanently away from the | old home, but a letter is essentially a . personal message. It doesn’t give | them all the news like a good, live home paper. Why don’t you send | them the “Watchman.” It would tell | them all the things you forget or haven't time to mention and wouldn’t A | mi ek in its visits. ture find life comparatively easy. | aS% 2 Weel an fis —All this publicity about how much | cof -a _stickler for civil service JR—— ed — Next Wednesday, was thrown to the war veterans to hold them to the party. But popular intelligence has vastly increased since the close of the Civil war and it is not likely that service men of the world war will prove as credulous as those of the Civil war. The record will be scanned more care- fully now than during the period be- | tween 1865 and 1890. In other words, subordinate favors and specious prom- December : pr ¥ : ises will not fool the war veterans of | Post- ' 21st, will be the proverbial shortest yp, hyesent time in the face of records “master General Will Hays has become day of the year and the beginning of (}ion prove insincerity. Such rec- since taking over Burleson’s job iS | the winter season. pure adelphia Record “play 1 their news sections as offending seek- | lengthen the cold strengthens.” : The weather so : il “bull” and we can’t understand ' far, though cloudy and wet, has been ors Fi now and will be why Democratic organs like the Phil- | comparatively mild, but bear in mind perershure ’ ker and the lamentations of the news- paper may be said to express the act- ual political conditions in Pennsylva- | nia today. The appeal of Baker for spoils will probably be recognized and satisfied in the near future. The Postmaster General has been tardy in “shaking the plum tree,” and Senator Crow and Lieutenant Governor Bei- dleman are quite as bad as they are painted. But they will both be nomi- nated next fall and unless the people the perversion of power, they will be elected. The remedy is in the hands of the voters, however. If they will support capable and fit candidates of | the Democratic party the problem will be solved. , ==—Secretary Hughes congratulat- ed Senator Lodge on his speech pre- . senting the treaty to the conference. ' And there are persons who think Hughes has no sense of honor. Judicial Investigation Needed. The right minded people of Penn- sylvania will be glad to learn “that the constitutionality of all bills passed by the rump session of Pennsylvania's House of Representatives is to be test- ed in the courts whenever it pleases “the convenience of the powers that be at Harrisburg to publish the Legisla- ‘tive Journal.” These measures in- clude some of the biggest and most most shocking indecencies was ap- pointing himself a commissioner to negotiate the treaty of Versailles, ! Warren Gamaliel Harding has ap- | pointed himself negotiator of the Pa- cific Quadrilateral. We observe in the second place that while the Republican Senators insist- | ed on the right of the United States to get out of the League of Nations, if it should enter it, at any moment, this Pacific treaty binds the States absolutely for ten ye d that for a ye Republican party has lost all its: in- terest in the universal and unquali- | fied freedom of action of this coun- | ry. Nothing stirred the patriotic souls of Republicans two years ago so much as that England was to have six seats in the Council of the League, and the United States only one. The League Council had to act unanimously, so the United States could not be out- United oovered the service of the road in May, BT 1 , by a neighbor, who went to the Beam res- | idence to use the telephone. Mrs. Beam | was sitting in a chair dead, her husband | lying stretched out on another chair. Ray | Carrol, aged 5 years, a grandson of the : couple, was in the room when the shoot- ing occurred. Five children survive. — Ira C. Neyhart, aged 65 years, of Wil- liamsport, one of the oldest engineers in point of service on the Williamsport divis- jon of the Pernsylvania Railroad, began his work with the company in 1877, and became an engineer in 1883. The oldest engineer in point of service on the Wil- liamsport division is J. Theodore Cherry, of Bellefonte, who runs a locomotive on the Bellefonte branch between the Centre county capital and Sunbury. Mr. Cherry and was sine 3u engineer on. April. 2 Judge Wickersham, of Harrisburg, on Friday refused to grant a new trial or set aside a jury verdict awarding $15,600 dam- : ages to Mr. and Mrs. Millard F. Zelters, of Middletown, for injuries which they re- ceived two years ago when struck by an automobile driven by Samuel H. Zimmer- man, an attorney. The verdict held Zim- merman and his wife jointly responsible. They asked that the damage award be set aside as excessive. A witness for the voted by six or sixty members from plaintiff testified at the trial that the car the British Empire; but from one end hurried away after striking Zelters. Zim- of the country to the other the Re- merman and his wife were shown to be publicans voted against the treaty be- | joint owners of the car. cause England would have six seats and America but one. What is our astonishment, therefore, to find the President has negotiated a treaty to which not only the King of England is a signatory, but representatives of | Canada, Australia, New Zealand and India are signatories! | The essence of Article I is that the high contracting parties “agree as be- tween themselves to respect their rights in relation to their insular pos- sessions and insular dominions in the regions of the Pacific Ocean.” These { ¥riday morning, objectionable appropriation bills and the news that their validity is to be judicially investigated justifies the . hope that the government of the Corn- ' monwealth may escape proceedings in bankruptcy. If the expensive Depart- ment of Public Welfare is wiped out and a few of the other profligate measures are annulled the revenues ‘may be sufficient to pay just claims | against the State. words mean nothing, or else they, mean a guarantee as between the par- | ties to the treaty. If a controversy , should arise, all four shall confer on means of adjustment, which is pre- cisely what the Council is to do in the League of Nations. If the rights of | any of the four shall be threatened by | an outside party, they shall confer | with each other “in order to arrive at an understanding as to the most ef- —Burglars entered the First National bank at Claysburg, Blair county, early pried open forty-nine safety deposit boxes, stole all the Liberty bonds in them and escaped. The work shows that at least two men were in the bank. They forced open a rear window. Using an acetylene flame, they burned a hole six inches square in the steel door of the vault, which gave them access to the safety deposit boxes and the bank safe. The safe was not opened. School and oth- er bonds in the boxes were tossed aside for the Liberty bonds, the value of which cannot be determined until the box hold- ers report the amount of bonds they own- ed. — After deliberating eighteen hours, a civil court jury was discharged by Judge William W. Hargest, in Dauphin county on Saturday, for failing to reach a verdiet in the $50,000 insurance suit brought by the Harrisburg Trust company in behalf of the estate of James Magee, 2nd, of against the Mutual Life In- For example, in | But that is not the only or the greatest reason why the proposed le- gal proceedings should be undertaken. The legal officers of the Legislature were thrown out of their lawful posi- | tions and deprived of their lawful au- thority by force, not openly but clan- | destinely. The House had been ad- : » io Tennessee, two war serv- | . : | him up” in the fact of that old saw, “as the days jee men were refused appointment as I of ers. of spoils. It does nothing more | nor less than leave the impression on | the public that General ing his Department out of politics and thereby becoming a great public serv- ‘oe annual reports for four years in ant rather than continuing the mere politician he was sand is... When anybody tells us that anybody gets a postoffice from this administration for | any other reason ‘than for political services rendered or expected he’ll have to prove it. — The Hon. Harry B. Scott, of Phil- ipsburg, spent a few hours in town Tuesday in consultation with some of his political and business associates. Rumor had it that Mr. Scott was to become interested in some big busi- ness undertakings on this side of the mountain, but rumor and fact often- | times get very far apart. He is going | to be a candidate for Senator from this District, however, and from what we can gather from those of his party who are in a position to know he will probably have little if any opposition. Centre county has not been represent- | ed in the Senate since the late Sena- | tor Heinle was honored with the of-! fice and we will be entitled to name the successor of Senator Miller. Whether he will be Mr. Scott or a good Democrat remains to be seen. Hays is tak- | The State administration would | have been all right if the newspapers . hadn’t been so “nosey.” The suppres- | until the press got busy. | Mr. De Valera complains that | Ireland didn’t get all she wanted from | the London conference. Hardly any- ' body ever does but Ireland got more | than some earnest and faithful friends hoped for. Funny things happen, strange | stories are told and imagination soars | absurdly. State Treasurer Charley . Snyder thinks he is a candidate for Governor of Pennsylvania. ————— A —————— — Senator Lodge spoke solemnly enough in presenting the four big powers’ agreement for approval of the conference “laughed in his sleeve.” BAC LMR La The amiability of the Japs is the surprise of the world. Anything that anybody asks of them in the | Gir it | postmaster and a politician v ith .ess was no power to reconvene the body rating in civil service examination ap- | except those provided by “orders,” le- pointed. 2 ficient measures to be taken, jointly | Bloomsburg, and separately, to meet the exigencies | surance company, of New York. The con- of the particular situation.” That is . troversy arose over an insurance policy precisely what the Council of the and Mr. Magee’s sudden death. Mr. Ma- League is to do in Article X, which gee had applied to the defendant company the Republicans singled out for at- | for $100,000 worth of insurance, and a $50,- ' tack. The Council was to advise what 000 policy was issued before his death. ought to be done. | The other $50,000 policy was held up and | Every constitutional objection of- | before the matter was settled Mr. Magee | fered to the treaty of Versailles lies - died. against the Pacific Quadrilateral, and | _ (1; relatives of John Chilcoat, of the latter proves that there was not ,. , ron, Ohio, were gathered at the home of one honest and truthful word uttered ther, Mrs. Rebecca Chilcoat, at | against the League of Nations of a ' Alexandria, Huntingdon county, awaiting In New Mexico a similar case is noted. Charles Mann Jr., with a rat- g of 96.40 and a splendid war rec- | kept the people in blissful ignorance ord, was thrown down and Menard L. | Albers, a politician, with a rating of | 82.53 appointed postmaster. A num- ber of similar cases might be cited but these are sufficient to prove the insincerity of Republican professions of friendship for the soldiers of the great war. But Senator Penrose im- agines he can fool the service men of Pennsylvania by putting one of them on the ticket with two machine poli- ticians for office next year. If he de- sired to honor the soldiers he might declare for and secure the nomination for Governor or United States Sena- | tor for one of them. There are plen- ty fit. The Chinese delegates to the but he must have Limitations Conference in Washing- ton will take home the awards with “5 amile that is childlike and bland.” — The Washington treaty will be | ratified, of course, but the League of Washington conference is freely and Nations will continue to function just cheerfully allowed. the same. gally adopted. Notwithstanding these ed and without authority of law pro- | ceeded to enact legislation, not ac- | cording to law, rules or “orders,” but | in violation of all of them. When the ! legally elected Speaker undertook to resume his seat on the following morning, he was prevented by uni- formed police force. If such acts of disorder and violence principles of government are subvert- ed. The constitution of Pennsylvania declares that “no bill shall be consid- ered, unless referred to a committee, returned therefrom, and printed for the use of the members.” During the | facts the House was illegally conven- | can be perpetrated with impunity the | nah a Marine guard fired at three men | ! Few Nations. This Marine Shot to Kill. | From the Philadelphia Record. In the course of time the bandits | will find out to their sorrow that mail | cars are guarded by men who can i shoot. Either they did not know of the new policy, or they failed to ap- preciate its significance, and several of them have been shot. Near Savan- who were robbing an express car, per- haps under the impression that the ju- risdiction of the guards was limited to mail cars. Two of the men are re- ported to have been badly wounded. After a few more shootings the ban- | the arrival of the former's remains, news | of whose reported sudden death at the | Greenland theatre, Akron, late Saturday night, had been telephoned, the mourning party was turned into one of rejoicing { when a long distance phone message from | the young man in question assured rela- ! tives that reports were very much exag- gerated, that as a matter of fact, he was very much alive, Some unknown person telephoned the parents Saturday night of the young man’s death and now an inves- tigation has been started to discover the perpetrator of the hoax. — Mrs. Margaret Scripko, of Cumbola, Schuylkill county, placed a novel claim before the State Compensation Board ref- eree at Pottsville last week, when she ask- ed compensation for the death of her hus- | dits will begin to understand what the rump session of the House assembled | Marines are there for. In the mean- clandestinely at midnight, bills were | while Governor Blaine, of Wisconsin, taken from the committees and put |is very indignant because the Post- upon passage without having been | master General will not surrender the voted upon by the committee or | guard who shot a man. The Governor | “printed for the use of the members,” | wants him tried for murder. Of | in direct violation of the constitution | cOUTSe if he could be convicted it, and in defiance of order and decency. | would afford much encouragement to It is important that the validity of the bandits. such legislation shall be tested by the | ET | eonrts regardless of its merits. — The political pot is beginning | | to boil and the chances are that some ' of the candidates may get scalded. —Subsecribe for the “Watchman.” band, who was shot by bandits while on his way home from Eagle Hill Colliery, August 11th, with his semi-monthly pay. The man was killed because he did not hold up his hands promptly when told to do so by the bandits. The Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Iron company will contest the claim, inasmuch as the man was not killed while in the course of his employment, but the United Mine Work- ers are backing up the widow and claim that, while the man was returning from work, he still was acting as an employee, and the killing took place on the compa- ny's premises,