—————————————————————————— INK SLINGS. —Slemp made the assertion and Coolidge denied. It’s Slemp’s move. —It’s back to the simple life for Calvin and to “Hell and Maria” for Dawes. - —Whether they finally name a tick- et in New York or not you all know where we stand. We're ferninst Cool- idge and Dawes. —Of course there was nothing else for the boys to do when the girls took to knickers than retaliate by strut- ting in wide-bottomed pants. —That fellow who had the big ‘moonshine plant up at Scotia deserv- ed to be discovered and raided. What right had he to make it in Centre and haul it all up to Blair to dispense? — Lieut. Maughan’s successful flight from New York to San Francisco, from daylight until darkness, adds another clincher to the superstition that “the third attempt is the charm- 2d one.” —The flower boxes are on the lamp posts, but, considerately, they have been suspended high enough to leave anchorage below for any who might come staggering under their loads of rye, barley or corn. —This thing of eating mackeral ‘and smoked herring between the fif- teenth of April and the first of Au- gust is a humiliation that we never ‘thought of enduring until the trout -season of 1924 proved a “flop.” —From a burning tailor shop in Washington seven suits of clothes be- longing to Chief Justice Taft were rescued. Isn’t it too bad Congress has adjourned? Otherwise we might have an investigation as to what right any man has to have seven suits of «clothes. —Everybody was complaining about ‘the cut and dried dullness of the Cleveland convention—there was noth- .ing breaking, as the news writers would say. There is so much break- ing in New York that if it all doesn’t -get through pretty soon most of the delegates will be broke. —The spectacle of Vance McCor- mick loitering about hotel lobbies in New York hoping to get a ticket with which to get into the convention might have appeared tragic to some, but it wasn’t. It was only the fortune .of politics. In 1912 the wheel turned him up and twelve years later it turn- ed him down and that is the fate of many, in politics, society and business. —What’s the use of the band prac- ticing all winter to get its pianissimo movements as soft and smooth as they shoud be when motor horns and racing engines drown all the beauty of the music of the open air concerts. If-we were the band we wouldn’t play another note “of concert music in Bellefonte unless the burgess roped off the square in which we were play- ing. —The Pennsylvania delegation to New York played true to form. It dedicated its headquarters in the Ho- tel Pennsylvania, by staging a fight the very first time they got together. Judge Bonniwell thought enough def- erence was not being paid him by Na- tional committeeman Joe Guffey; Miss Archer accused Joe of short-changing some of the delegates on convention tickets and somebody asked Bill Ber- ry to have a drink, then the fight was on. It was all “piffle,” of course, but knowing as much of our party’s lead- ers in the State as we do we are con- strained to say that they thrive on “piffie.” They couldn’t forget it for a minute. If they did there’d be noth- ing to fight about. — Philipsburg is to have what her newspapers call “a real, old time Fourth of July celebration” with a pa- rade, sports and fire-works. Philips- burg is going to have nothing of the kind. Doubtless there will be a lot of money spent on bands, decorations, floats, pyrotechnics and entertainment and everything will be as fine as Phil- ipsburg usually does things, but the Potter house, the Passmore, the Coal Exchange, the Continental and the other hostleries of that place will not have improvised bars running clear back to the alleys behind them and “Uncle Jack” Graham will not be wearing the grand marshall’s sash, so Philipsburg is not going to next week, nor will it ever again have a “real, old fashioned Fourth of July celebra- tion. The truth of the matter is that there are only a few Philipsburgers today who know anything about the. riproarious times they had on the Fourth in their town thirty years ago. —We are glad to note that many of the State delegations to the New York convention seriously discussed the advisability of a return to the old form of party conventions for the nomination of State, county and local candidates for office. We have been for that ever since we discovered that the direct primary proved a failure as a guarantee that better men would be named for office by a public referen- dum than through a convention of delegates. Since the direct primary became operative men have gained nominations and been elected by de- fault, who would never have received the approval of any party convention. Aside from this abortive result there has been a general decadence and dis- integration of parties. The conven- tions were the opportunities for men of all parts of the counties or the State to meet, form friendships and discuss party principles. The result was there was more real interest in politics, more cohesive devotion to a principle and a greater realization of the duty of every one to fight for good government. VOL. 69. Hopeful Information from Europe. The most hopeful information that has come from Europe in recent years is contained in a statement from Ber- lin to the effect that the League of Nations is about to undertake an ad- justment. of the differences between France and Germany and the dis- putes among other countries on ac- count of boundary claims growing out of the war. The process is for the League to take over the functions of the Interallied Commission and as- sume responsibility for policing Ger- many, Austria, Hungary and Bulga- ria. It is stated that Great Britain and France have consented to this proposition and believed that Germany will acquiesce. In that event there would be little cause for quarreling among those people. The occupancy of the Ruhr valley by French troops has been the dis- turbing element in every attempt at adjustment of the reparation question since it began nearly two years ago. At the time it was deemed by the French government a necessary step and full of promise. But Great Brit- ain failed to give it moral support and the “passive” resistance by Germany proved too formidable to overcome. Subsequent offers of Germany to re- sume payments of reparations were contingent on the evacuation of the Ruhr section and France would not agree to that. The result has been years of expensive and destructive bickering which got neither party anywhere and brought advantage to nobody. Meantime the League of Nations has been making progress and doing good in various ways without feeling able to extend a helpful hand in this major controversy until now. But it is better late than never and its prop- osition to assume the obligation of policing Germany will make possible the evacuation of the Ruhr by France : and the restoration of complete peace throughout Central Europe. That will be a great step in the direction of world wide prosperity and the only reason for regret is that because of blind partisanship the government of the United States has no part in this beneficent achievement. moving in the direction of member- ship, but Mexico and Turkey are still with us outside. ——The repeal of the war tax on telephone and telegraph messages, theatre admissions and amusement fees of fifty cents or less, becomes ef- fective next Wednesday, July 2nd. The Slemp-Butler Mystery. The mystery that envelopes the break between the President’s secre- tary, Mr. C. Bascom Slemp, and the President’s campaign manager, Mr. William M. Butler, increases in inter- est as its details are developed. Mr. Slemp, a more or less shady politician, was appointed secretary to the Presi- dent because he enjoyed the reputa- tion of being the most expert dealer in colored delegates in this country. In pursuance of expectations he secur- ed for the President all the southern delegates in the Cleveland convention. Having accomplished this result he went to the convention expecting to exercise considerable influence in the deliberations. Manager Butler simply flouted his pretentions. Mr. Slemp naturally resented this treatment of him by an amateur whose blunders became the laughing | stock of the convention and upon his return to Washington made complaint to the President. At this point the mystery sets in. The President was obliged to take one side or the other of the controversy and after reason- ing for an hour and a half with Slemp, agreed Mr. Butler's power as campaign manager would be with- drawn, and an advisory committee ap- pointed to manage the campaign with Slemp as an important figure in the organization. The President proba- bly imagined this would be a secret arrangement and that Mr. Butler would never know that he had been so summarily demoted. But Slemp “spilled the beans.” In his elation over the victory over But- ler he took the newspaper writers in- to his confidence and they revealed the plans. What Butler said or did in the matter has not been disclosed but the President has since seen fit to repudiate the statement of Slemp, in doing which he revealed his own du- plicity. Slemp is away from Wash- ington on personal business at pres- ent and his reaction to the President’s statement is left to conjecture. But all in all the incident has created a situation that must necessarily be em- barrassing to all concerned. It proves Slemp a liar or Mr. Coolidge a pre- varicator and the public can pay its money and take its choice. ——It may be set down as certain that the fellow who asks for a late vacation has a hunting trip in mind. A —— ——1If Europe really wants to bor- row Herbert Hoover we freely give ! our consent. STATE RIGHTS AN D FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA.. JUNE 27. 1924. Right but on Dangerous Ground. The friends and neighbors of Gen- eral Dawes, Republicaan candidate for Vice President, assembled at his home in Evanston, Illinois, the other evening, to felicitate him upon his nomination. It was a nonpartisan af- fair and the General appropriately kept politics out of his interesting talk on the occasion. “I know you want me to say something,” he re- marked, “and yet upon such an occa- sion as this it would be unseemly in me to speak in a partisan manner, but it occurs to me that there is one sub- ject which may be called political and ject upon which all good citizens must agree, and that is the curse of dema- goguery in political discussions in this country.” This is a wholesome declaration and a promising predicate at the begin- ning of a campaign which is likely to be both vigorous and intensive. But if General Dawes pursues it he is practically certain to get himself into an uncomfortable mess before the crucial period of the contest is reach- ed. For example, it would be more or less embarrassing to get into a men- tal conflict with his associate and chief on the ticket. That is during the convention Mr. Coolidge acted very much like a demagogue while he was instructing his friends to be for one candidate for Vice President and as- suring the public that he had no choice. There is a good deal of dema- goguery also in his treatment of Sec- retary Slemp in the matter of com- plaint against chairman Butler. Then the platform upon which Gen- eral Dawes stands for election is reeking with demagoguery. “We rec- ognize the duty of constant vigilance to preserve at all times a clean and Germany is’ | bar of justice for speedy or | prosecution, All this looks like dem- honest government and to bring to the bar of justice every defiler of the public service, in or out of office,” is a declaration which can hardly be rec- 'onciled with Mr. Coolidge’s attitude toward Albert Fall, Harry Daugherty, Detective Burns and Mr. Forbes, de- spoiler of the Veterans’ Bureau. There was certainly an absence of vigilance while they were looting the country and they have not been brought to the agoguery to us. ——Whether the two-thirds rule is abrogated by the New York conven- tion or not it is not a good rule. Ma- jority rule is a Democratic principle and the two-thirds rule enables an or- ganized minority to worry a majority to death. + Corruption Fund Committee. The Senate committee to “investi- gate campaign subscriptions and ex- penditures” this year has an import- ant and probably difficult work to per- form. The committee is composed of Senator Borah, of Idaho; Senator Jones, of Washington, Republicans; Senator Shipstead, of Minnesota, Farm Labor, and Senator Bayard, of Delaware, and Caraway, of Arkansas, Democrats. Senator Borah has been chosen as chairman and the headquar- ters will be in Chicago. The resolu- tion creating the commission author- izes it to demand from the campaign committees of each party a statement of receipts and expenditures every ten ‘days with a list of the contributors and the amount of each contribution. It is well known that the ‘election of the Republican candidates four years ago was bought with money contrib- uted by special interests and that how- ever careless the administration has been with respect to other pledges it has tried hard to fulfill all obligations to the slush fund contributors. In some instances, as in the case of the ship-subsidy legislation, it was disap- pointed. But in the tariff legislation and the disposal of the oil reserve lands the recompense to the beneficia- ries was sufficient to balance the books and hold out the hope for equally lib- eral contributions this year. The ac- tivities of the Borah committee may defeat their expectation, however. When a partisan court practically nullified the corrupt practices act of a previous Congress, as it did in the Newberry case, the Democrats in Con- gress set about to enact a law that would prevent a recurrence of his of- fense. But the Republican leaders prevented its enactment and up until the closing hours of the last session it looked as if the boodlers would have a free hand in debauching the ballot this year. In fact the Coolidge campaign committee of Massachu- setts served notice that immunity was assured. But finally a resolution cre- ating the committee of which Mr. Borah is the head was passed, and if it is sufficiently vigilant and coura- geous, it will achieve much good. ——Two national conventions have been held, one at Cleveland and the other at St. Paul, but the next Presi- dent will be nominated in New York. . I ———— SE ——————— yet is thoroughly nonpartisan, a sub- ——The “Columbus crowd” is unanimous for Coolidge and Dawes. DEMOCRATS OF THE NATION PICKING A PRESIDENT IN NEW YORK The National Convention of Democ- racy in Session in New York, with no Definite Indication of Who the Choice Will be. Madison Square Garden, New York, is housing its last historic gathering. Soon it will be torn down and forgot- ten but forever will the work of the Democrats of the Nation who gather- ed there Tuseday to select a Presiden- | tial candidate and build a party plat- i form be remembered. Notwithstanding the excessive heat it is reported as being the most en- thusiastic and earnest gathering of party workers ever assembled under the banner of Democracy. Repeated- ly since the sessions opened the thous- | ands of delegates have brushed aside i bitter rivalries over candidates and | policies and staged such militant demonstrations of party enthusiasm that even the casual observer has been impressed with their determination that the fires of Democracy shall not flicker and that they all realize that it is far better for the American peo- ple and the future of the Democratic party that they deny themselves some vaunted expression or surrender some temporary advantage and win than to persist tenaciously and lose. The convention convened at noon on Tuesday and little was done other than listen to the brilliant keynote speech of Senator Pat Harrison, of Mississippi, the temporary chairman. After three hours of oratory, music and wild demonstrations the body ad- journed until 11 o'clock Wednesday morning when it was opened by an invocation by Bishop Thomas F. Gai- lor and after hearing the reports of various committees settled down to enjoy the speech of the permanent chairman, Senator Walsh, of Montana. The committee on resolutions—the platform committee—worked all of Tuesday night under the chairman- ship of Homer S. Cummings, of Con- necticut, and on Wednesday named a sub-committee to consider the various platform drafts which have been pre- pared by individual groups of party leaders and planks submitted not only by members but by a number of or- nizations. le proposal by the Texas delega- to abolish the time honored rule gates to insure a nomination and sub- stituting a majority, like the Republi- cans have, was supported by only Florida and Utah. Had this proposal prevailed McAdoo would probably have won since he has nearly a major- ity of the delegates already pledged to him. Under the two-thirds rule, 732 votes are necessary for nomination, there being 1,098 votes in the convention. PENNSYLVANIA'S DELEGATION BE- STOWS FAVORS. The assignments to the big Penn- sylvania delegation of 79 members were bestowed by it at the first cau- cus as follows: Hon. Thomas H. Greevy, of Altoo- na, for temporary chairman and Mrs. Clarence Renshaw, of Pittsburgh, for vice chairman. was given a place on the resolutions committee and Charles B. Lenahan, of Luzerne county, was made chairman of the delegation nothwithstanding there was considerable insistence that the honor should go to Judge Shull, of Monroe county. When McAdoo was placed in nomi- nation on Wednesday those Pennsyl- vanians supporting him took the State standard and joined the howling pro- cession of his delegates through the aisles, There was protest on the part of the other delegates from Pennsyl- vania at this but no harm was done nor votes made or lost. Only the names of Underwood and McAdoo had been presented to the convention up to yesterday morning. The body reconvened at 10:30 yes- terday morning when it was expected that if the platform committee was not ready to report the names of oth- er candidates would be presented. As this edition went to press at 2 o’clock yesterday afternoon no fur- ther definite report was obtainable. It is likely that no nomination will be made before Saturday and proba- bly not then. BETTING ON THE OUTCOME. While the gambling fraternity know little of politics they do know a lot about the way the political game is played. Inasmuch as they have no personal favorites and don’t care a whoop about who is to be the next President of the United States their dope is always canny and based on only cold-blooded judgment. They were placing bets a plenty on Tuesday and you may gain some idea of what is to happen by reading how the wa- gers were placed, the odds offered on the various open candidates, ete., on Wednesday—Governor Smith took second place to Senator Underwood, of Alabama, in convention betting. Thousands of dollars of Underwood money found its way into Wall Street to be placed at odds averaging 1 to 3% on his nomination. The shortest odds previously quoted on the Alabama Senator had been 1 to 4. The largest single bet yet plac- ed on any of the dark horses was $5000 to $17,600 that Underwood would be the Democratic candidate. The company which handled this wager placed about $100,000 in elec- : tion bets during the day. Smith went | definitely from 1 to 2 to 1 to 23, and ! rn ere rs 0) NO. 26. $5000 was bet at 3 to 1 that he would not be nominated. McAdoo money became rather scarce. One firm has $10,000 to place at 33% to 1 that the Californian will not be nominated but can find no takers. A good deal more at 3 to 1 against McAdoo was also unplaced. The drift to Underwood was largely at the expense of the other dark horse candidates. Backers of Davis, Ral- ston, Glass, Walsh and others did not look on the prevailing odds for their candidates—ranging from 1 to 3 to 1 to 12, as particularly favorable. There were also bets of 4 to 1 that neither Davis, Ralston, Glass nor Cope- land will be nominated. Odds of 7 to 1 were offered that no candidate prominently mentioned will be nomi- nated. One bet of $200 to $1200 was recorded that Smith will be the next President. About the hotels and along Broad- way it was different. Here Smith was a hot favorite and several bets were made at even money on his chances. The Governor’s backers in the lobbies, barber shops, theatres and street cor- ners had about $100,000 to lay and most of it was taken. As in Wall Street, McAdoo men were hard to find but money was bet on both Ralston and Davis at 1 to 2. THE KEYNOTE SPEECH. The oratory of Senator Pat Harri- son, of Mississippi, is always as vig- orous as it is picturesque. For that was he chosen to sound the keynote at the Democratic National Conven- tion. Comment upon the manner in which he acquitted himself, in a speech loaded with TNT and spark- ling with epigrams, seems almost superfluous. It must be read in full to be appreciated. There is not a dull paragraph in it, nor one which fails to ring out loud and clear as the sledgehammer of logic strikes its ti- tan blows upon the anvil of truth. His declaration that we need a Paul Revere, not a “Sphinx” in the White House, brought the great audience in the Garden to its feet with a mighty roar of approval and, when talking of the rejected Mellon tax proposal, he laid his finger on the most vital point of cleavage between the ideals of Democratic and Republican forms of government, he expressed a thought that every man and woman in the country should ponder over long and well. What is this melon that Mellon ought to cut? Asked Senator Harri 1,089,039 icome a -paye Ss in Amer- ica 51 per cent of the total reduction. Under its benign provisions an in- come of $5,000,000 was to receive a reduction of $1,331,832, while an in- come of $3000 would have received only $8.75 reduction. Through its un- restricted earned income provisions it would have opened an avenue of es- cape to every tax dodging capitalist in America. Out of the total 38,585,985 income tax payers in America 3,580,585 will receive a greater reduction in the Democratic plan than they would have received under the Mellon plan. And this service was rendered to those least able to pay by a Demo- cratic minority in Congress because Democracy has ever striven to exact less in taxes from the less favored ew. ‘ : vad THE PLATFORM NOT COMPLETED. Because of the number of planks that have been suggested and because from the first the convention has held yidely divergent opinions on the way the Ku Klux Klan and the wet and dry issues should be handled, the plat- form will probably not be presented for approval until today and, at that, many planks might be presented from the floor thus throwing the conven- tion into lengthy debates and bal- loting. ‘ Most of the McAdoo supporters are pro-Klan. Naturally all of the Smith people are against the order and de- mand an out-and-out condemnation of it in the platform. While it is hoped that our conven- tion will not pussy foot as did the Cleveland gathering on the question of the Klan or the Volstead Act the less radical members of the commit- tee hope that planks can be built that will clearly state the policy of the party without giving too great offense. CONVENTION MAY RUN INTO NEXT WEEK. As it looks now there is a strong possibility that the candidate will not be named before the fore part of next week. The early balloting will show McAdoo and Smith as the leaders, but as their’s is a fight of elimination it is probable that neither one will win. If they see the futility of holding their deligates longer then the dark horses will come into the open and probably scoop up more of the Mec- Adoo and Smith delegates than any of the remaining avowed candidates. Senator Underwood, of Alabama, will scarcely profit much because of the mistaken notion that a southern man couldn’t win. Senator Ralston, of Indiana, might carry off the prize though that is doubtful because of his age. Were he a younger man we think there’d be nothing to it. John W. Davis, of West Virginia, former Ambassador to Great Britain, the most conservative of all the candi- dates, could win and would be a splendid choice, but his chances are not so good because of his conserva- tism, There are left Carter Glass, of Virginia, Secretary of the Treasury under ‘Wilson; Governor Silzer, of New Jersey, and Governor Ritchie, of Maryland, all receptive candidates, (Continued on page 4, Col. 6.) many than from the highly favored ' Judge McCann, of Cambria county, | f y : gnly SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE —A. hailstone, which struck Thomas Kane, of Shamokin, under the left eye while he was driving through Irish valley on Sunday, caused the wrecking of the machine and injuries to Kane and his wife. Kane lost control of the car when blinded by the hailstone and crashed into a stone wall. —A wife is not guilty of desertion just because she refuses to live with her moth- er-in-law, was the opinion delivered last Friday, at Pittsburgh, by Judge Carpen- ter. In refusing to grant a divorce to Richard Wonderly, the judge disregarded the report of the master in the case who recommended a divorce. —Penrose 8S. Boyer, of Altoona, who looks after the enforcement of the dog tax law in central Pennsylvania, is working in Clearfield county and during the past few days has caused the arrest of one hundred or more dog owners who failed to pay a tax on the dogs they own. It cost each one of the defendants $8.50 fine and costs, and the usual dog tax. —Falling from a raft into a deep pool at Elysburg, on Sunday, Jean Paul, of Shamokin, chauffeur for federal marshall John H. Glass, went down the third time when D. Harry Kline, 21 years old, pulled him to safety. He was unconscious and lay in that condition half an hour before companions could resuscitate him. Doc- tors say he will recover. —John Tracey, top filler at the furnace of Lavino and company, at Watts, Lan- caster county, was severely burned about the arms on Saturday night. Tracey was overcome by the gases from the cupola, and fell on top of the large bell, from which material is dumped into the fur- nace. Medical aid was necessary to re- store Tracey to consciousness. —QGrief over the death of his wife, which occurred April a year ago, was the motive, apparently, that caused William A. Steph- ens, retired farmer, of Scalp, Sinking val- ley, to commit suicide by shooting himself in the head, on Sunday afternoon. Steph- ens was alone in the house at the time, the other members of the family having gone to Sunday school in the afternoon. Upon their return they found him with the top of his head blown off. —During a heavy electric storm which passed ever Lancaster county on Thurs- day night, Paul Kruger, 38 years of age, was struck by lightning and instantly kill- ed. With three other workmen, Kruger was on top of a fifty-foot elevator shaft at the quarries of the Penn Lime company, near Rheemes. The bolt of lightning which caused his death traveled along a high-tension wire, which is strung close to the shaft. The other workers were shock- ed, but not seriously injured. > —Diving twenty-five feet from the toll bridge into the Susquehanna river at Sun- bury, on Saturday, Harry B. Hager, 18 years old, of Sunbury, High school foot- -ball star, saved Miss Margaret Reitz, 18 years of age, and Miss Sarah Phillips, 16, from drowning. The young women were bathing and becoming exhausted cried frantically for help. Without hesitation the young man made the perilous dive and quickly brought the girls to shore. First« aid methods revived them and they were none the worse for their experience, ¢ —For thirty minutes, Joe Buela, of Har- 1sburg, clung to a dam breast in, the. EES nin ed him to safety. Buela had been canoe- ing and his craft was swept over the dam breast by a high wind. William Hamford and John Dravenstadt, the rescuers, row- ed out below the dam and performed the difficult feat of saving Buela. Joseph Utzy and Fred Welkenmeyer tried to reach him from above, but were swept over the dam in their boat. -—-A bandit was so befuddled when he was handed a pound of tea instead of the money when he held up the P. H. Butler grocery store, at Wilkinsburg, shortly be- fore midnight, Saturday night, that he tured and fled. Miss Elizabeth Winter- mantel, clerk, and F. R. Shriver, manager, vere preparing to close the store when a stranger entered and leveling a revolver at Miss Wintermantel ordered her to put the money in his sack. Acting on an impulse Miss Wintermantel poured a pound of fea into the sack and handed it back. The bandit looked at her and dashed frem the store. el —Mrs. Alexander Marshall, 50 years old, was instantly killed in her home at Col- orado, near Shenandoah, last Wednesday, when a shotgun in the hands of her son Michael, 16 years old, was discharged. The woman had watched the boy clean the gun and remarked when he had finished that it looked bright and new. *Yes, mother, it’s good and clean now,” said Michael as he handed the weapon to his mother for inspection. The woman had not touched the gun when it was discharged. The boy swooned and neighbors found Mrs. Mar- shall dead in her chair and the youth un- conscious on the floor. Young Marshall said the gun had not been used since the close of the hunting season, mn —A joint meeting of the Mifflin county commissioners, engineers of the Public Service Commission Pennsylvania rail- road company, officials of the State High- way Department, Lewistown and Reeds- ville Electric railway company and of the road supervisors of Brown and Derry townships was held at Lewistown on Sat- urday, when plans were submitted for the erection of a bridge over the tracks of the railroad company at Mann’s Narrows, near Yeagertown. Each of the townships agreed to contribute $1,000 toward the new bridge. It is planned to provide trolley line facilities on the structure. The bridge will eliminate a dangerous grade crossing and replace the present bridge, condemn- ed by the Public Service Commission. —~Confined in the Friends asylum at Frankford, near Philadelphia, during the night hours as an insane patient, James KE. MaCusker for more than a year has been permitted under a court order to leave the institution during the working day of the week, journey to the central part of Philadelphia and there conduct his business of issuing a weekly paper. Lit erally, he is adjudged sane by day, but insane by night, according to the inter pretation placed on the unusual ruling by those versed in the law. The strange case of MaCusker, experts in judicial proced- ure declare, has no parallel in this State. During the daytime he attends to all the details of the publication he owns, and, in addition, advises his guardian on the con« duct of a $50,000 estate, which was taken from his charge after the court found him insane, When darkness descends he re- turns to the Friends asylum and is treat ed as the other inmates who are mentally TU pana unbalanced.