a we D ae had r= INK SLINGS. — Have you noticed how the days | are lengthening? — Wouldn't a January thaw make a peach of a flood now. — Senator Newberry may say that | he didn’t know so much money was being spent to secure his election, but only those who have never run for of- fice will believe him. __Bellefonte’s new pumpers have been in action and the fact that their first victim suffered more from water than it did from fire would seem to be proof that they pumped some. All the Centre county Farm Bu- reau need do hereafter, when it wants a large attendance at a meeting, is to let it be known that some movement is afoot designed to throw a monkey wrench into the machinery of Pomo- na Grange. —The Republican organization in Pennsylvania will never have another Penrose. Not because there aren’t hordes of them who would move heav- en and earth to get into his political toga, but because there isn’t the mak- ings of a Penrose among them all. — Decause turtles and crabs have | made their appearance in the Dela- ware old river-men about Wilmington | declare that the end of winter is at! VOL. 67. STATE | SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. | — Police aid was asked to prevent the { Rev. J. R. Bennett, pastor of the Calvary ! Baptist colored church, in Chester, from conducting the regular Sunday services, . but the church was well filled at the day's | services and no violence was attempted. | —The Anderson Construction company. i of Parnassus, has been awarded the con- tract for construction of 32,669 feet of state i RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. NUARY 13, 1922. NO. 2. George Wharton Pepper, Senator. Mr. George Wharton Pepper, the | newly appointed Senator in Congress for Pennsylvania, has ability and learning to qualify him to fill the high office with credit to himself and hon- or to the State. He is a high class lawyer and citizen of irreproachable character. He has never held public office and is without experience in the practical work of official life but he has been active and helpful in civic affairs and his legal training gives assurance of cfficient service. His ap- pointment marks a new departure in the policies of the party machine which he will represent in Congress, if he lives up to the ideals expressed in his social and professional life. We are not persuaded, however, that the appointment of Mr. Pepper hone Se is PORES oe | was influenced entirely by a purpose day. Immediately we searched the | ne dg ig sud ih banks of Sore i | wealth. Our Republican contempora- Not a crab or a ture was | vies have been framing a radiant halo seen; so we concluded that while the around the head of Governor Sproul winter might have went on the Del- | for the reason that he effaced himself aware it had just came on Spring | creek. —We note that Harry Baker, sec- retary of the Republican State com- mittee, is to have the last word on federal patronage in Pennsylvania | now that Penrose is no more. of course we can understand why Sena- tor Pepper would be agreeable to such an assignment but Senator Crow is a horse of another color. He is a poli- tician, pure and simple, and he must be either a very sick man or in bad in Washington if the only Senatorial work that he is really fitted for has gotten away from him. ¢ —Many people have called to com- ment on what a wonderful edition the «Watchman’s” first one in 1922 proved in the selection of Mr. Pepper when he might have secured the seat for himself by entering into a deal with Lieutenant Governor Beidleman. As a matter of fact there are strong symptoms of a deal quite as obnoxious to public morals in the appointment which has been made. Mr. Pepper in his statement to the public distinctly declares that he will only ask to re- main in the office until the end of Senator Penrose’s term and that is about the time Governor Sproul had fixed for donning the Senatorial toga. The people of the State have rea- son to be thankful that so capable a man as Mr. Pepper has been appoint- ed to the vacancy. In his previous appointment to the same office Gov- ernor Sproul was less discriminating . The praise is flattering and we | bli) little pride with iin to it. | and the same type of man named to The “Watchman” always was and, we | succeed Senator Knox would have had ie ) ab y ve | better chance of long tenure. It is hope, pImays v i fw Food i 2 od | Obvious, however, that Governor ‘paper, > R Oe g 1 Tast | Sproul covets the honor and that he ews 5 Yas igen al > OS isa | will have an opportunity to enjoy it w cause or ooht | at the expiration of Senator Penrose’s amount of news. course we Might | yoy; Meantime Mr. Pepper may be have fallen down in gathering and | serving it, but we didn’t. Everybody | doesn’t take the “Watchman” but, nearly everybody who can lay hands | on it reads it and they read it whether | they like it or not. —In naming George Wharton Pep- per to take the seat of the late Sen- | ator Penrose Governor Sproul has been more than mindful of the welfare | of Pennsylvania than of the exigen- | cies of politics. While the “Watch- | man” has always believed Mr. Pepper | to be utterly wrong in his evaluation | of the treaty of Versailles it regards | him as a man of signal ability and | relied upon to fulfill every obligation to the Republican machine. He will ‘by voting to retain Newbe: Eo TE ly as he supported J. R. K. Scott, for Lieutenant Governor, he will help along any iniquity that the party Jang deem expedient or desira- e. ——Senator Vare’s bluff turned out to be only a bob tail affair. The Newberry Case in the Senate. The Newberry case occupied the at- strong character. He is a partisan | tention of the Senate in Washington and he may be a politician but he has | Jast week. This case has been inter- other attributes and not the least of | mittently occupying the attention . of these is ability to represent Pennsyl- | the Senate for a couple of years and vania in the upper branch of Congress i has attracted considerable public at- comprehendingly and creditably. We | tention for even a longer period. It congratulate Governor Sproul. He |g 3 matter in which every citizen of chose from the best and not from the | the country ought to be interested. 1t mediocre of his party’s material. ‘involves the question of the right of — We've gotten into trouble every | an ambitious and conscienceless plu- time we have essayed a paragraph on | tocrat to buy a seat in the Senate of the Irish situation, so we face the in- | the United States and hold it in the evitable again with certainty of cen- | face of positive proof of the violation sure and small hope of approbation. | of the Act of Congress and the laws A lot of the sap in our own family | of the State which he aspires to rep- tree is of Emerald hue, but we don’t resent. It is a question which touch- claim that as justification. The Irish 'es the integrity of the ballot and the question in Ireland, we have finally | validity of legislation. concluded, is a question at all for | Mr. Newberry was nominated as th: the very same reason that our inter- | candidate for Senator in Congress by mittent elucidations of it have been the Republicans of Michigan in 1918 questioned by every Irishman around | over Henry Ford by a majority of a here who has read them. No matter trifle over 4000. His campaign was what we have said some have been for | an orgie of corruption and bribery. and others ferninst it, with never | An investigation developed the fact unanimity in anything. We are glad | that $178,568.08 had been spent in his that the Dail declined to reseat Pres- | behalf, and it was admitted by his own ident de Valera after he resigned and friends and supporters that probably we do believe that Cardinal Logue | as great a sum was spent and not ac- ‘gave his people wholesome advice counted for. In 1904 he was a can- when he told them to accept what they | didate for Congress and spent money got from England and make the most | so freely that the Governor of the of it. We'll hold open house to our | State urged the Legislature to enact Irish friends for discussion of this | legislation limiting campaign expens- paragraph Saturday afternoon at |es and penalizing corruption in the four. { future. The legislation was enacted — Because the congregation hadn’t but entirely ignored by Newberry and paid his salary the janitor of a Rich- | his friends in 1918. After his elec- .ardson Park, Del., church, closed the doors, cut the bell rope and wouldn't leave the flock worship in the build- ing. We have never heard of such an arbitrary performance on the part of a janitor. Bellefonte church who took the bull by the horns thusly. He didn’t appear | in the pulpit for the Sunday morning service and when some of the elders of his congregation called to inquire as to whether he had been taken sud- denly ill, for they had seen him the evening before, they were amazed to find him comfortably ensconced in an easy chair in his boarding house. Up- on inquiry as to why he was not going to conduct service the venerable D. D. politely informed his callers that in- asmuch as his salary had not been paid he did not propose to preach to them. It is needless to say that there was some excitement among us Methodists and some digging up of «delinquent ‘church subscriptions. We once had a pastor of a | | tion to the Senate he was indicted in | the United States District court at | Grand Rapids, Michigan, convicted of i violating both the National and State laws, and sentenced to prison. At the opening of the session of | Congress on March 4th, 1919, the vote ' of Newberry was necessary to give ' the Republican party a majority. The success of the conspiracy to defeat the ratification of the’ covenant of | the League of Nations depended upon a Republican majority of the Senate and Newberry was admitted to the seat notwithstanding his tainted title. His conviction in the District court was subsequently appealed to the Su- preme bench and reversed by a par- tisan vote on the technical ground that an Act of Congress doesn’t ap- ply to debauchery of primary elec- tions. The question now to be deter- mined is whether or not the Senate will admit to membership a man le- gally convicted of corruption. BELLEFONTE, PA, JA Ireland Secures Home Rule. The ratification of the treaty cre- ating the Irish Free State by the Dail Ereann in session in Dublin on Saturday justifies the hope that the seven hundred years’ struggle of Ire- land for self government has been successful. There will be both in Ire- land and England men and women to protest against the settlement for various and different reasons. There are those in England who believe that Ireland has been justly held in polit- ical bondage during all these years and there are those in Ireland who believe that absolute sovereignty and complete autonomy should have been allowed. But these are extremists who have hindered rather than help- ed the cause of Irish freedom and Inglish justice. Until very recently Irish leaders have asked only for home rule and the illustrious Irishmen who gave the best of their useful lives, as did Par- nell and others, never dreamed of more than has been given them in the treaty ratified by a meager margin on Saturday. The Home Rule measure enacted by Parliament on the eve of the world war, which fully satisfied the Irish statesmen who forced its passage, gave Ireland much less. If the war had not come the chances are that that bill would have become the law of the land and continued for years in the future. But the protest of Irishmen like Sir Edward Carson, who is content to be a flunkey, and the disturbance of the war intervened to defeat it. The new treaty places Ireland on the same level as Canada in the Brit- ish Empire. She will have her own army, her own parliament, collect and disburse her own taxes and govern her own educational processes. In fact it may be said the people of Ire- land will enjoy greater freedom from dominance by the central government than citizens of Pennsylvania. - The British parliament will not have the authority over Ireland that Congress has assumed and expressed in the pas- sage of the Volsted act and the adop- tion of the Eighteenth amendment to the Federal constitution. It is said that the leading Irishmen in America, and there are more here than in Ire- “gre” gatisfied” and alt - others ought to be. —The Republican party whip is to be cracked in both branches of Con- gress, and any Senator or Represen- tative of that party faith who lets conscience guide his votes will find life a burden. Mr. P. B. Belknap’s Grave Mistake. It is to be regretted that Mr. P. B. Belknap, the more or less erratic, al- ways critical and sometimes amusing contributor to the Philadelphia Rec- ord’s mail box, has tied a string to his consent to become a candidate for Senator in Congress for Pennsylvania. . Mr. Belknap lays down certain condi- tions as essential prerequisites to his ‘ candidacy, first among which is “that the nomination shall be tendered by a new party formed especially for the purpose and pledged to the policies” which he outlines. The first of these is economy, which he appraises as “transcendental.” The second is great- er Americanism, which contemplates the annexation of Mexico and Canada. Mr. Belknap being an analyst and philosopher must know that it is im- possible to organize a new party of the character he describes within the brief period of time between now and the May primary election at which the successors of Senator Knox and Pen- vose are to be named. There are a good many veters in Pennsylvania who might be allured to enlistment under his banner if there were suf- ficient time to canvass the State. But it would hardly be possible to cover the major lunatic asylums with prop- aganda within the limited time allow- ed under existing election laws. Therefore the more prolific sources of supply of voters likely to be enticed, the patients in institutions for feeble minded and cranks outside would re- main uninformed of the movement un- til too late. Besides most of those who are in sympathy with the policies Mr. Belk- nap professes to favor are already tied up in the Republican party. They have in the person of President Hard- ing a leader who has Belknap shunted off the map as a compromiser and fix- er. He has shown not only his ability but his willingness to take both sides of any question in dispute and, if nec- | essary, project a good word for the middle. Therefore Mr. Belknap makes a grave mistake in demanding a new party as a vehicle of catapult- ing himself into the United States Sen- ate. He ought to offer himself as an especially fit candidate for the Repub- lican nomination and appeal to Pres- ident Harding as a fellow laborer in the vineyard of sham. ete ——What Harding needs is some strong-armed guy who can knock the block off that agricultural bloc. » xB pe Trouble Over the Tariff. The rumbling of discontent against the absurd provisions of the Fordney tariff bill seems to have reached the White House. Nobody except Fordney appears to favor the measure though it was pressed during the special ses- sion under orders of the President. Iron and steel makers as well as con- sumers have protested and wool grow- ers and woolen goods makers are dis- satisfied. The plan of levying the tax upon American valuation is as offen- sive to importers as it is abhorrent to consumers and the only feature of the measure which has met with approval at all is the tax on hides, which is en- dorsed by the big meat packers who stand to make millions out of it. The other day the President called a lot of Republican Senators, Repre- sentatives and cabinet members to the White House to discuss the subject over the dinner table. who succeeded Senator chairman of the Senate committee on Finance, and is supposed to be a trifle heretical on tariff, was grilled. In ad- dition to Fordney, of the House, Mon- dell, the floor leader, and Madden, chairman of the Appropriations com- mittee, were in attendance. Of the cabinet Attorney General Dougherty and Secretary of War Weeks were fa- vored and it is presumed that the pur- pose of the conference was to come to an agreement to let the President fix the tariff rates. Fixing tariff rates is essentially legislation. The constitution of the United States declares that “all legis- lative powers herein granted shall be vested in a Congress of the United States, which shall consist of a Sen- ate and House of Representatives.” It has been agreed since the beginning of the government that Congress can- not delegate this power of legislation. The proposition of President Harding is that the power be delegated to him so that he might fix high rates for one citizen and low rates for another. It would put a potent force in his hands to make or break men engaged in bus- iness, and the fact that he has sworn to “support, obey and defend” the constitution makes no difference to kim. i i 3 ¢ | ——Ex-County Commissioner D. A. Grove, William Dreiblebis and Mal- colm Longwell had a thrilling exper- ience in an auto ride down Nittany mountain last Saturday that pales in- to insignificance the famous ride of Paul Revere, of revolutionary fame. They were on their way over to Cen- | tre Hall to attend the horse sale. Longwell was at the wheel and when | about half way down the mountain the hub on one of the rear wheels ground out and the dirver had nothing wherewith to control the mo- mentum of the car. It quickly picked up speed and notwithstanding the fact that he threw into low the momentum of the car could not be checked. In fact its speed increased every minute until the car and occupants were lit- erally flying down the mountain. For- tunately the driver did not lose his nerve but guided the machine with unfaltering hands. Mr. Grove want- ‘ed to jump but he was prevailed up- or not to attempt it and the wild ride continued. Under the skillful manip- ulation of the wheel, and with the good fortune of meeting no cars, the machine was kept on the road and took every curve and turn and finally thundered down the last grade and in- to Centre Hall. After running half | way through the town Longwell man- | aged to turn into an alley or side ! street and run up onto a bank where the machine was stopped and the | three men took a long breath, thank- | ful that they had come through the | ride safe and sound. —Did you read “The End of Steel” "when it ran in the Saturday Evening | Post last fall? It was the story of { travel in the great north. If you did | you will probably agree with our he- | lief that Dr. Meek’s Alaska letters ' running in the “Watchman” are quite | as interesting as tales of travel. i i — Snows like Wednesday’s may look | beautiful to people who live in apart- | ment houses but to the fellow with a | hundred feet of sidewalk to clean the beauty of them is less than skin deep. — With two or three more disap- | pointments President Harding is like- ily to reach the conclusion that he | can’t even fool himself most of the t time. cnn ene seem —— a — It may be remarked that vice | president Atterbury, of the Pennsyl- vania railroad, freely consented to the | appointment of Mr. Pepper. — If the Vare-Magee combination | gets its hooks in the people of Penn- sylvania would better supply them- selves with life preservers. A —— ie ——Governor Sproul’s halo is not on straight. ‘4, By no word or act has he sought Roosevelt, who assumed that his chief Senator Lodge Vv res nator McCumber, 3 : vas present and Sena gan il public affairs. | Mr. Wilson’s interest was never keen- | 1 | From the Louisville Courier-Jourgil > | features of the Taft Administration Woodrow Wilson at 65. From the New York World. When Mr. Wilson left the White House somebody asked him what he intended to do. In answer to the question he said that he was going to show the country how an ex-President of the United States should behave. He has done so. Mr. Wilson has a remarkable gift of speech, but he also has a remarkable gift of silence, and he has been em- ploying that talent ever since March to embarrass the Harding Adminis- tration or add to the difficulties of his successor. All attempts to induce him to criticise Mr. Harding’s policies have been unsuccessful. Mr. Wilson’s conduct has been diametrically oppo- site in every respect to that of Mr. mission in life was to pull down any- body else who was President. The silence of Mr. Wilson in re- spect to the Harding Administration is not the result of a waning interest On the contrary, er or more alert. Nor does he regard his political leadership as a closed chapter in his life. It is inevitable that while he survives a very large percentage of the Democratic party will derive its political inspiration from him, as it did from Jefferson after his retirement from the Presi- dency. In that respect it is a leader- ship of intellect and character that nobody can challenge, but it is also a leadership that Mr. Wilson shows no disposition to use for mere partisan ends, ..* & x = This is Mr. Wilson’s sixty-fifth birthday, and he can hardly fail to be gratified by the knowledge that the great policies for which he all but sac- rificed his life have been making steady and uninterrupted public prog- ress during the period of his retire- ment. The principles of internation- al conduct that he represents were never before so strong as they are now. He left his vindication to events, and events have proved a most eloquent champion. More clearly than ever he stands forth as the one states- man of his day who had clear and comprehensive vision of the means that civilization must adopt to escape destruction and insure peace. eee tee ple en ett. “Ballingerism.” Reports from Washington that “Old Guardsters” of the Republican party are seeking to place the Division of Forestry, now connected with the De- partment of Agriculture, under the Department of the Interior revive the memory of one of the most sinister when “Ballingerism” became a stench in the nostrils of the nation. ‘were due to accidental or careless Mr. Ballinger, Secretary of the In- terior at the time, was charged by Gifford Pinchot with permitting and aiding timber barons to denude Amer- ican forests for their own aggrand- izement. The issue was clear-cut. Mr. Pin- chot, a highly intelligent and patriot- ic man, resigned in disgust as head of the Forestry Division. His resignation was the beginning of the end of the Taft Administration’s popularity. Steadliy thereafter the tide of protest arose against the “Taftites” through- out the country. It was Gifford Pin- chot who met Theodore Roosevelt when that gentleman emerged from the African jungle and reported to him the reactionary trend of the Re- publican party. The rest is history. Now when public attention is en- grossed with the Arms Conference the leopard of unchangeable spots be- gins once more to prowl, being led about in this case, as it happens to be, by Albert B. Fall, Secrctary of the Interior, somewhat after the fashion ! he was paraded twelve years ago by | one Ballinger, occupant of the same office. ? Gifford Pinchot, however, is still “on the job,” ready and willing “to take a fall” once more out of the ex- ploiters of America’s forests. Behind Mr. Pinchot is the mass of the Ameri- can people. _ Stealth is at work at Washington in more places than in the Arms Con- ference. Low cunning once more is active there. The tiger that was wounded by Theodore Roosevelt and Gifford Pinchot, twelve years ago is daring again to come out of his lair. He and his keepers should be watched. ie mi paren | Almost a Perfect Day. highway in Clearfield and Indiana coun- ties, 6908 feet being in the former county. The figure is $267,452.50. It is a county aid project. —Eighteen of the deaths during hunt- ing season and 45 accidents were due to self-inflicted injuries, while nine deaths dis- charges of firearms in the hands of other persons, according to official figures re- corded at Harrisburg. —John Jones, 9 years old, was drowned when the thin ice broke while he was play- ing with several other boys on a small reservoir of the Morrellville and Cambria Water company at Johnstown, on Monday. The body was recovered by the police about twenty minutes after the accident occurred. _Seven nieces and nephews of the late Joseph Cassell, of Lansdale, lived up to the stipulation of their uncle’s will and profited to the extent of $1700 thereby. He directed in his will that the nieces and nephews should share in the estate provid- ed they attended his funeral or give a sat- isfactory excuse why they did not. 8. D. Conver, of Lansdale, the executor, reports that all seven attended. — Mrs. Bertha Hook, mother of six chil- dren, went before Judge W. S. McLean at Wilkes-Barre on Monday and pleaded guil- ty to two charges of forgery. She was sentenced to pay a fine of $5 and costs and to serve one year in the county jail. The woman admitted forging the name of Catherine Perry to a check for $35 and the name of Grace Mitchell to a United States government check for $419. —The meanest thief in Pennsylvania paid a visit to Nippenose valley one night last week. When Frank Bower, of Col- lomsville, entered his woodshed early in the morning to get an armiocad of fuel to make a fire in the kitchen range he first rubbed his eyes and then was convinced they did not deceive him. The woodshed was empty. During the night some one had quietly carried away his winter's sup- ply of fuel. — Laziness has become a ground for di- vorce when a husband suffers from it chronically, that being the cause for di- vorce given by Mrs. Mary K. Shannon, awarded a decree at Bloomsburg from Ralph Shannon. Shannon was indolent, his wife said, did not like to work and she was obliged to support the family, her tes- timony showed. Judge Whitehead, of Ly- coming county, specially presiding, grant- ed the decree. —-Convicted of the murder of William E. Neihaus, of McKeesport, an insurance agent, in Altoona, August 30, last, Gilbert McCloskey, of Altoona, was on Monday sentenced by Judge Thomas J. Baldridge, at Hollidaysburg, to die in the electric chair. Edward Yon and George BE. Laf- ferty, his accomplices in crime, are serv- ing twenty years sentences. All three men were charged with holding up the Manhat- tan Limited over the Pennsylvania at Gal- litzin last August. —Confronted by a masked burglar in the kitchen of her home, Mrs. Edward Elsnor, of Reserve township, Allegheny county, seized a large butcher knife and sprang at the intruder. With a shriek of fear he jumped backward, leaped through an open window and fled, with Mrs. Els- nor close behind. Several times the pur- suing woman was able to get within arm’s length of the highwayman to give him a jab with the point of the knife, causing the fleeing man to shriek. He finally es- caped. —The big plant of the Nickel-Alloys company, at Hyde, Clearfield county, which has had an erratic history in the last ten years, has just marked up another epoch, having been sold at receiver's sale to Har- ry B. Wassel, of Philadelphia, for $50,000, ‘he property was sold subject to mort- cages totalling about $150.000. Mr. Was- sel did not indicate for what interests he was acting, but residents of Hyde are hopeful that the new transaction will be followed by the resumption of operations at the plant. —Attorney Henry P. Keiser, represent- ing Helen Davis, the Reading girl who helped the authorities to capture the six Wyomissing bank bandits last year, has filed a claim in court for a share of the $5000 reward offered by the robbed bank. The latter recently asked the Berks courts to apportion the reward among numerous claimants. The girl accompanied the ban- dits on a motor trip to Philadelphia and New York, not knowing until after the robbery and the trip that the men were the bank bandits. —J. Harry Rakestraw, a Montoursville dairyman, found that one of his valuable Holstein cows was not producing its usual amount of milk. Accordingly, the cow was killed for beef, and an investigation made of its stomach, whieh was found to be punctured by nails and other pieces of metal the cow had eaten. In the cow's stomach were found a ten-penny wire nail, an eight-penny cut nail, an eight- penny wire nail and a six-penny wire nail, three shingle nails, two barbed wire sta- ples and other pieces of metal. The cow was valued at $500. —Judge Strouss, of Northumberland county, who took his oath of office a week ago, officially showed the new jury com- | missioners, Frank 8. Pilarsky, of Shamo- From the Philadelphia Record. | kin, and J. Stanley Lewis, of Mt. Carmel, From the veracious columns of the that he is the Judge when he read them Evening Bulletin, a great admirer of | Be i Yirecied Bia In nae Ary : : : nik e wheel containing Northumber- Dee Soon Ci jortn tine in jad jurors’ names in the vault in the of- lure of golf at Pinehurst was suffi- | Dos rere Phillips. oe Custom cient to divert him from his | for eighteen years has been to keep the the ye b im, Cot ah jury wheel in the office of the sheriff, ac- ‘at home’ to Eugene V. Debs, and also cording to Sheriff Martz, and the Sherif? sot across the table from William R,|2£reed that he 41d ‘not “eave If the jury Hearst at luncheon.” wheel was taken out and chopped up.” Truly a great day’s work! In the! —Colonel George S. Beck, retired news- morning a charming and familiar | paper man, who died at Reading last tete-a-tee with a “peripatetic vender week, left an unique will, probated last of State sedition,” to use Disraeli’s | Friday. He left only $5000, but establish- words, just released from the prison |ed trust funds for orphanages at Womels- to which he was properly sentenced ' dort, Topton and Reading, as well as mak- for preaching disloyalty to the gov- | ing bequests for two daughters and a ernment. At noon a cosy lunch with | housekeeper. Beck directed that his re- Hearst, the pro-German editor and | mains be not exposed to public view at his enemy of everything decent in Ameri- | funeral, and that a coffin, without silver can politics. What a pity that in the ! trimmings and of the kind used at alms- afternoon George Harvey or George | houses, be provided for his remains. The Sylvester Viereck could not drop in to | will further provided that the “poorest bring to its close a perfect day! paid pastor” in Milroy, Pa., place of bur- ial, was to conduct his burial, and to get Subscribe for the “Watchman ' $10 for the service.