—— INK SLINGS. —And this is the Glorious Fourth! —Many farmers are making hay, while some just finished planting corn last week. A strange seasonal condi- tion, indeed. —LaFollette wisely declined the nomination of the St. Paul convention but when a real third party nomina- tion is offered he will be perfectly willing to accept. A good many moonlight stills are being destroyed, according to of- ficial statements, but from other sources it is learned that a good many are also being “found.” —Former Secretary of the Interior, Albert B. Fall, says he welcomes his indictment by a federal grand jury. Albert is only whistling to keep up his courage as he passes into the political grave yard. —Rumor has it that as he ap- proaches the thirtieth anniversary of his birth the Prince of Wales has de- cided to look around a bit with a view to making some girl a Princess. Bet- ter do it, old top, or you'll fool around until ‘you will be making her an old man’s darling. —Our district delegates were divid- ed in their votes during the early bal- loting in the convention. John F. Short, of Clearfield, voted for Smith and R. M. Foster, of State College, voted for McAdoo. Mr. Short voted to insert the plank denouncing the Ku Klux Klan by name in the platform and Mr. Foster voted against its in- sertion. —The insult to our flag flying over our embassy in Tokio was an unpleas- ant incident and one for which Ja- pan will speedily apologize for as an act of irresponsibles. It will be seized upon by the jingoes, however, as a far more serious matter. Of course the jingoes always want to fight with some one providing they can incite others to do the fighting for them. — There'll not be another edition of the “Watchman” published until Fri- day, July 18th. Instead of taking this week off, as usual, we decided to work this and rest next in order to get the final report of the National convention to you. As it looks at this hour, 10 o'clock Thursday morning, we might have to wait until September for our convention to make a choice so we are going to press now in order to get in- to the mails so the paper won’t be held ‘up by the rest from deliveries that the postmen have today. —It’s a little tough on the Klan, but more power to George Grise, of Pittsburgh, if he gets it over. Grise is an expert stereotyper. D of his earnings in that capacity was eighty-five dollars a week. That was too small, so he projected a Klan newspaper for Pennsylvania, had him- self voted a salary of sixteen thous- and dollars a year for fifteen years and hired Samuel D. Rich, a Pitts- burgh promoter, who is.the King Kleagle of Pennsylvania, to sell the stock in the new enterprise. Every- thing was going fine for Grise until the State Securities Bureau called a halt on selling stock of a concern that had no other visible asset than Grise’s ability as a stereotyper. —We admire William Jennings Bry- an today more than we ever did be- fore and we loathe those who hissed and booed him in Madison Square Gar- den Saturday night when he was mak- ing what will probably be recorded in history as the greatest speech of his life. Well might Bryan have used the words of his Master and turned on the hooting galleries with: “God forgive them! They know not what they do.” “The boy orator of the Platte” with his “crown of thorns and cross of gold” never rose to such heights as he did when he—a Presbyterian— bent under the derision yet fought to finish his plea to save his party and the country from the menace of making political issues of religious creeds. —As we sit writing this paragraph, Monday, the reports of the explosion of cannon crackers—or whatever they are called these days—come from three directions. Two weeks ago we published the order of the Burgess that the Fourth of July is the one and only day on which such patriotic dem- onstrations are permissible. A few weeks before that we noted that coun- «cil had raised the salaries of our po-. licemen to very desirable figures. Now there are sticking up, all over our town, notices of a new public nuisance ordinance, which is, in effect passed. ‘We rise to inquire what the Burgess and the policemen have to say about the evident contempt there was of their court. Of course today, the lid is off, but why all the laws and no en- forcement before? —We don’t think for a minute that any delegation to our party conven- tion in New York had the slightest idea of injecting religion into politics when it took sides, for or against, the committees’ plank that failed to de- nounce the Ku Klux Klan by name. They were all playing politics, but, unfortunately too dull to realize that the weapon they were using was a two-edged sword. Until hot-heads are suppressed and others are given brains enough to see the danger of injecting religious feelings into politics in this free country God preserve it. The christian’s greatest obligation is to his God, his government comes next and last of the three is his church. Always we will have a God, for both Protestant and Catholic to worship, but we might not have a government or a church. The peak © VOL. 69. STATE RIGHTS AN D FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA.. JULY 4. 1924. THE BATTLE OF BALLOTS GOES ON. In It’s Thirteenth Session the Democratic National Conven- tion was Balloting Away Yesterday Morning With- out an Indication of Who will be the Final Choice. 1st sth 10th 15th 20th 25th 30th 42nd 44th 443.1 471.6 479 432 436% 415% 503.4 4844 Yeddoe LA 5 0 261 2001, 305% 307% 308% 323% 318.6 319..1 COX ........uee 59 Bs 0 Ss 60 59 57 55 cones 43 2 Harrison 10% 37 08 30d wow 3u 3% 25 2 Davis .eveeenes 31 34 57% 60 122°.1267 12644 67 mn Ralston ....... 30 30 30%, 31 30 31 33 30 31 Glass ..oconanes 25 25 25 25 2B 29 24 281% Ritchie ....... 22 429 1% 17% 17 1h 17% 17% Robinson ..... 21 19 20 20 21 23 23 C. W. Bryan . 18 19 12 11 11 This table shows the 42nd o last ballot taken Wednesday night and part of the 44th which was polled at 11 o'clock yesterday morning. The Democratic National convention finally got its platform made and adopted late Saturday night, midst a scene of wildest confusion and discord. Minority reports of the Resolutions committee were carried to the floor of the convention on both the League of Nations and Ku Klux planks. Wil- son’s Secretary of War, Newton D. Baker, made a most impassioned and dramatic speech pleading for the adoption of a plank that would com- mit the party to support of the League as Wilson had hoped it would. Mr. Baker threw himself so utter- ly into his effort that when he had concluded he collapsed and had to be helped from the platform. His effort was without avail for the convention voted, 742 to 353, to adopt the major- ity plank of the resolutions commit- tee which favors American member- ship in the League of Nations after there shall have been a popular refer- endum favorable to such action. The thrill of the argument on the League of Nations fight was intense because it was so masterfully present- ed, but it was as nothing when com- pared with the scenes that were en- acted while the defense of the minor- ity report on the Klan plank was be- ing made. Even William Jennings Bryan, idol of a large element of our party since 1896, was hissed, booed and drowned out of hearing while he was pleading with the delegates not to drag religion into politics. Great Protestant and Catholic churches, side by side, were working among the fren- zied delegates for more dispassionate vision of the danger that menaced and it was well into Sunday morning be- fore the vote was finally taken and it was found that in all that great as- semblage the most momentous ques- tion that has ever confronted any po- litical convention was decided by a majority of one to adopt the plank as presented by the majority report. The minority report, that was defeat- ed, merely added a paragraph to the majority plank in which the Ku Klux Klan would have been denounced by name rather than by influence. HIGH LIGHTS IN THE PLATFORM. The platform is so long that it would take up two full pages of this paper so that we cannot publish it in full. It is a splendid document cov- ering all the principles for which De- mocracy stands in forceful language and without recourse to pussey-foot- ing on so many issues as did the one adopted at Cleveland two weeks ago. It declares for: Referendum proposed on League of Nations issue. Further tax reduction and the re- vision of the tariff. Enactment of legislation designed “to restore the farmer again to eco- nomic equality with other industrial- ists.” Readjustment of freight rates and revision of the Transportation Act to eliminate section abolishing Railroad Labor Board. Strict public control and conserva- tion of the Nation’s resources, recov- ery of oil reserves “fraudulently” leased, and vigorouus prosecution of any guilty wrong-doing. Governmental control of the an- thracite industry. Operation of a Government-owned merchant marine. Revision of the Corrupt Practices Act to prevent excessive campaign contributions and expenditures. Enforcement of the Constitution and all laws. Maintenance of Asiatic tion exclusion by legislation. Immediate independence for the Philippines. BALLOTING FOR PRESIDENT. Sixteen candidates had been pre- sented in nomination last Friday, but turmoil over the platform prevented a start of balloting for them until Mon- day. The nominees were: Oscar Underwood, of Alabama. Joseph T. Robinson, of Arkansas. William G. McAdoo, of California. Willard Saulsbury, of Delaware. Samuel M. Ralston, of Indiana. Jonathan M. Davis, of Kansas. Albert C. Ritchie, of Maryland. Woodbridge N. Ferris, of Michigan. David F. Houston, of Missouri and New York. Charles W. Bryan, of Nebraska. Fred H. Brown, of New Hampshire. George S. Silzer, of New Jersey. Alfred E. Smith, of New York. James M. Cox, of Ohio. Carter Glass, of Virginia. John W. Davis, of West Virginia and New York. The first ballot gave McAdoo 431%, Smith 240%, Cox 59, Harrison 433% Underwood 42%, J. W. Davis 31, Rals- ton 30, Glass 25, Ritchie 223, Robin- immigra- son 21, C. W. Bryan 18, Saulsbury 6, Silzer 25, Brown 17. There was very little change in the voting up to the 10th ballot when New Jersey gave up hope of landing Silzer and threw her solid delegation to Smith. Fourteen ballots were taken on Monday and at the hour of adjourn- ment that night very little change had been made. There was no indication of a break in the deadlock though on the 14th McAdoo had reached 475% ay Smith had increased his vote to TUESDAY’S BALLOTING SHOWED LIT- TLE CHANGE. All day Tuesday the convention caucused and balloted. All to no pur- pose, it seemed, for when mid-night came and the tired assemblage ad- journed there had been no change in the showing of strength of the candi- dates such as would indicate a possi- ble break to any one of them. Throughout the day there were ru- mors of a swing to a dark horse and Newton D. Baker and William Jen- nings Bryan were mentioned as possi- bilities, but day waned and night ran into the small hours without the slightest indication that any of the nominees intended releasing the dele- gates bound to them. McAdoo polled only 415 on the 29th ballot which was 64 less than he had had on the 15th. Smith had run up to 321 on the 29th, greatest poll up-to neither change indicated much, 'as most of the changes were at the be- hest of party leaders who were jock- eying to feel the convention out. We publish every fifth ballot up to the 40th here in order to show just what inappreciable changes there were. This concluded the work of the convention up until Wednesday morn- ing after having been in session six full days. On the 16th ballot Mississippi, that had been voting solidly for Senator Pat Harrison dropped him and swung to Davis, as did some other delegates rushing Davis up from 65 to 122. This was only a feeler. Mississippi was at heart for McAdoo as was de- lope in the later voting Wednes- ay. THURSDAY MORNING LITTLE CHANGE The convention was opened Thurs- day morning with a fervid prayer for wisdom and decision in the choice of a nominee. It was 9:45, our time, be- fore the delegates had been seated and chairman Walsh started the roll call of States for the thirteenth consecutive session of the convention. It was the 43rd ballot, the convention. having ad- journed at 10 o’clock Wednesday night in order to give the tired officers and delegates a long night’s rest. It was hoped also that possibly caucuses would be held and some sort of com- promise effected wherehy the morning session would open the way to a choice so that there would be some hope of conclusion before the Fourth. The 43rd ballot was concluded at 10:15 our time and just as chairman Walsh started to announce the result the aviation field cut in with its 4000 wave length machine and our little 360 was blurred so we couldn’t hear a figure. Comparing the votes of the State on the 44th with that of the 42nd, the last ballot last night we are of the opinion that there was very little change yesterday morning as a result of the night’s conferences. IMPORTANT PLANKS IN THE PLAT- FORM. LEAGUE OF NATIONS. _ “The Democratic party pledges all its energies to the outlawing of the whole war system. We refuse to be- lieve that the wholesale slaughter of human beings on the battlefield is any more necessary to man’s highest de- Yelopment than is killing by individ- uals. “The only hope for world peace and for economic recovery lies in the or- ganized efforts of sovereign nations co-operating to remove the causes of war and to substitute law and order for violence. “Under Democratic leadership a practical plan was devised under which fifty-four nations are now op- erating and which has for its funda- mental purpose the free co-operation of all nations in the work of peace. “The government of the United States for the last four years has had no foreign policy, and consequently it has delayed the restoration of the po- litical and economic agencies of the world. It has impaired our self-re- spect at home and injured our pres- tige abroad. It has curtailed our for- eign markets and ruined our agricul- tural prices. gations to: which that being hia | Sot “It is of supreme importance to civ- ilization and to mankind that America be placed and kept on the right side of the greatest moral question of all time, and therefore the Democratic Party renews its declaration of confi- dence in the ideal of world peace, the League of Nations and the World Court of Justice as together constitut- ing the supreme effort of the states- manship and religious conviction of our time to organize the world for peace. “Further, the Democratic Party de- clares that it will be the purpose of the next Administration to do all in its power to secure for our country that moral leadership in the family of nations, which in the providence of God, has been so clearly marked out for it. “There is no substitute for the League of Nations as an agency work- ing for peace; therefore, we believe that in the interest of permanent peace, and in the lifting of the great burdens of war from the backs of the people, and in order to. establish a permanent foreign policy on these su- preme questions, not subject to change of party administrations, it is desira- ble, wise and necessary _to lift this question out of party politics, and to that end to take the sense of the American people at a referendum election advisory to the government to be held officially under act of Con- gress, free from all other questions and candidacies, after ample time for full consideration and discussion throughout the country, upon the question in substance, as follows: “Shall the United States become a member of the League of Nations up- on such reservations or amendments to the covenant of the League as the President and the Senate of the Unit- ed States may agree upon?’ : “Immediately upon an affirmative vote we will caary out such man- date.” REPUBLICAN INEFFICIENCY CORRUPTION. “Never before in our history has the government been so tainted by corruption, and never has an Admin- istration so utterly failed. The Na- tion has been appalled by the revela- tions of political depravity which have characterized the conduct of public af- fairs. We arraign the Republican party for attempting to limit inquiry into official delinquencies and to im- pede, if not to frustrate, the investi- ; ich in the beginning the Republican party and leaders assent- ed, but which later they regarded with dismay. : “These investigations sent the for- mer Secretary of the Interior to Three Rivers in disgrace and dishonor. These investigations revealed the in- capacity and indifference to public ob- ligation of the Secretary of the Navy, compelling him, by force of public opinion, to quit the Cabinet. These investigations confirmed the general impression as to the Attorney Gen- eral by exposing an official situation and personal contracts which shock- ed the conscience of the Nation and compelled his dismissal from the Cab- inet. These investigations disclosed the appalling conditions of the Veter- ans’ Bureau, with its fraud upon the government and its cruel neglect of the sick and disabled soldiers of the World War. These investigations re- vealed the criminal and fraudulent na- ture of the oil leases, which caused the Congress, despite the indifference of the Executive, to direct recovery of the public domain and the prosecution of the criminal. “Such are the exigencies of parti- san politics that Republican leaders are teaching the strange doctrine that public censure should be directed against those who expose crime rath- er than against criminals who have committed the offenses. If only three Cabinet officers out of ten are disgrac- ed, the country is asked to marvel at how many are free from taint. Long boastful that it was the only party ‘fit to govern,” the Republican party has proven its inability to govern even itself. It is at war with itself. Asan agency of government it has ceased to function. This Nation cannot af- ford to entrust its welfare to a polit- ical organization that cannot master itself or to an Executive whose poli- cies have been rejected by his own party. To retain in power an Admin- istration of this character would in- evitably result in four years more of continued disorder, internal dissension and governmental inefficiency. “A vote for Coolidge is a vote for chaos!” FREEDOM OF RELIGION, FREEDOM OF SPEECH, FREEDOM OF PRESS. “The Democratic party reaffirms its adherence and devotion to those car- dinal principles contained in the Con- stitution and the precepts upon which our government is founded, that Con- gress shall make no laws respecting the establishment of religion, or pro- hibiting the free exercise thereof, or abridging the freedom of speech or of the press, or the right of the people peaceably to assemble and petition the government for redress of grievances; that the church and the State shall be and remain separate, and that no religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office of public trust under the United States. These principles we pledge ourselves ever to defend and maintain. We insist at all times upon obedience to the orderly processes of the law and deplore and condemn any effort to arouse religious or racial dissension. “Affirming our faith in these prin- ciples, we submit our cause to the people.” rmm— fr ————— AND ——Read the “Watchman.” 4 NO. 27. The Efficiency Expert. From the Philadelphia Record. Since the world war the political philosophers, in books and magazine articles, have been pointing out the failure of democracy. We are told it has broken down all over Europe, and, dissatisfied with the futility of representative institutions, people are confessing that they cannot govern themselves and are appealing to bosses to rescue them from popular government. Even in our own be- loved land the keynoter of the Repub- lican convention said that the people by a vast majority were looking for leadership, not to Congress, but to Calvin Coolidge. It looked bad for government of the people and by the people and for the people. It seemed as if it might per- ish from the earth to the general ad- vantage. Dictators were so much more efficient. And just at that mo- ment something went wrong with the most perfect piece of political efficien- cy mechanism that has been devel- oped. An opponant of the Government in Turkey disappears. In Russia, if he escapes the Cheka’s firing squad, he disappears into Siberia, just as he would have done under the Czars, who had a piece nf political machinery which was unrivaled for its efficiency until it collapsed. But west of Tur- key and Russia there is an almost un- iversal opinion that if a man is not against government itself, but only against the Ministry of the day, he ought to be as safe as a man who is loyal to the party in power. In Italy an opponent of the efficiency expert disappeared. There are stories of his assassination. Instantly confidence in the efficiency expert’s methods has been shaken to its foundations. No- thing in the world could be more ef- ficient than the elimination or the an- nihilation of a man who threatens to read a lot of documents highly dis- creditable to the efficiency expert’s beautiful machine. But the Italian people resent it; they don’t feel safe. The spread of democracy is not due to the conviction that “all of us know more than any of us.” It isn’t true; the persons competent to govern are not the majority, but the minority; but there is no known way of getting this wise minority into power and keeping it there. The neare roach to accomplishing this ow the le t ¥ lers at ‘frequent intervals: NOris the spread of democracy due to theories of equality, or any divine rights that men have to rule themselves; as a matter of fact, 49 of them are ruled by 51, and they are finding out fast enough that a majority can be quite as oppressive as a monarch. Political philosophy does not inspire action; it is invoked simply to explain or justify action that has been taken. The spread of democracy is due to the impetus of self-preservation. Men wish to express their opposition to the persons momentarily in possession of power, and protest against the acts of the Government, without danger that their property will be confiscated, or that they themselves will disap- pear from this world by sudden and surreptitous means. The efficiency ex- pert is admirable—within certain lim- its. If he is too effective in eliminat- ing the opposition he is liable to have elimination applied to himself. De- mocracy may not be perfectly efficient, ' but it is safe, and men care more for that. A A a So Debunking the Campaign, From the New York World. To the home folks gathered on the lawn, Gen. Dawes declares that the country is suffering from an “orgy of demagogism,” that he hopes to come back from the campaign with his head high, and that when he sees political buncombe running away with common sense he is going to smite it hip and thigh. “I ask no quarter and will give no quarter.” Typical of the man, it will be pointed out; from Dawes we shall have directness and plain talk. The General may choose to date his on- slaught from the day the Democrats have picked a candidate; but there is no need to mark time if he is ready for a start. Debunking the Repub- lican platform is a man’s-sized job. Who asks a better target when he’s canonading bunk than the Republican promise to the farmer? After pro- per preliminaries, and at the end of a long rush of words the party pledges itself—to what?—"“to what- ever steps are necessary.” Who asks a better target than Re- publican silence on the $220,000,000 scandle of Col. Charles R. Forbes? Forbes and his betrayal of the war veterans aren’t mentioned in the Cleveland declaration. Gen. Dawes, if bunk interests him, has a rare chance to explain why that is so and what the Republican party has in mind when it talks of the “thoughtful consideration” to the veterans it has always shown. We are glad to see a man who al- ways means what he says start out on a campaign of this sort. To Gen. Dawes we wish the best of luck and lots of time. A n———— A TR———— Beyond Human Nature. From the Cleveland Plain Dealer. A Massachusetts court rules that a pedestrian is not obliged to jump out of the way of an automobile. Maybe—but it takes a lot of faith, hope and stubbornness not to. I ER —— ——1It’s all in the “Watchman” and it’s all true. st ap- SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONR —Thieves forced an entrance to the Sunbury Barber Supply company estab. lishment, at Sunbury, early Saturday morning and escaped with merchandise valued at $250. Among the loot were five dozen imported razors, a hundred pairs of shears and a quantity of clippers and combs, some of the articles being found in different places in Sunbury. —Although she has a fortune in her own right, Miss Mary Cameron Packer, grand- daughter of James C. Packer, millionaire lawyer and horseman, who died several years ago, at Sunbury, will become a train- ed nurse. Miss Packer will enter the Pres- byterian hospital, Philadelphia, September 1st. She has been a student at the fash- ionable National Park school at Washing- ton. —Mrs. Daniel Cave, while shopping in Sharon, last Friday, admired a diamond ring in a 5 and 10 cent store. She paid the clerk a dime for it and presented it to her mother, Mrs. George Clayton. It was later discovered that the ring, valued at $800, was accidentally dropped in the store the day previous by Mrs. Lloyd Thompson, of Hot Springs, Arkansas. The ring was re- turned and the purchaser liberally reward- ed. . —The State conscience fund was enrich ed $25 on Monday by a contribution from Seth E. Gordon, secretary of the Board of Game Commissioners, who received the money from a man who said he shot and cooked a ring neck pheasant out of season in 1921. The letter accompanying the mon- ey declared “the Lord has laid it on my heart to make it right. I prefer to with- hold my name.” The letter was post- marked Altoona. ; al —Suit for $20,000 for breach of promise of marriage was filed in Blair county court on Monday by Pasquale Cerullo, 22 years old, against Lucy Mirabaldi, aged 18, of Altoona. He alleges they obtained a mar- riage license November 22, last year, but when he was unable to buy a home the en- gagement was broken. Cerullo also al- leges he gave the girl a diamond engage- ment ring, breastpin, necklace, clothes and perfume. The clothes were returned. —All the Protestant churches of Hazle- ton last Thursday night joined in a com- munity service at Trinity Lutheran church to celebrate the golden jubilee of that con- gregation and also that of its pastor, the Rev. John Wagner, who organized it and has been its only minister. Tribute was paid to the long career of Doctor Wagner as a leader in the religious and civic life of the city. Local pastors associated with him in church activities made brief ad- dresses. ; : (my —Warren Grubb, aged 19 years and mar= ried, ringleader of a trio of youths, who, a week ago stole $300 from the safe in the office of the A. 8S. Kreider Shoe company at Lebanon, on Monday was sentenced by Judge Henry to Huntingdon reformatory. LeRoy Snyder, 18, was sentenced to four months in the county jail and Robert Peif- fer, aged 14 years, was paroled. Grubb admitted he knew the combination of the safe, having been formerly employed by the Kreider company. oa —John B. Delevan, an organizer for the Ku Klux Klan, pleaded guilty to embez- zlement of $4200 of the Klan’s money, in 3 [BIL iana county, obtained the money from candi- dates desirous of joining the Klan. That was too much money for Delevan, and he skipped out, deserting his family. He was arrested in Louisville, Kentucky, ” —A murder mystery confronts Somerset county police following the finding of the body of an unidentified man in the Que- mahoning dam, near Somerset. Three bul- let holes were found in the body and a rock weighing about 150 pounds was tied to the legs. The pockets in the man's clothing had been rifled, and all marks of identification had been removed. Dr. H. 8. Kimmel, county coroner, said the man probably had been dead ten days. He es« timated his age as 32 years and said he ap- peared to be an Italian. —Former Governor Martin G. Brum- baugh has sold his home in Germantown, and will leave that city to become presi- dent of Juniata College, Huntingdon, Pa. it was learned Friday. He is an alumnus of the institution, which is operated by the Church of the Brethren. Governor Brumbaugh purchased the Germantown residence in 1912. The present sale price was $40,000. His acceptance of the presi- dency of Juniata College marks the former Governor's return to the pedagogical field, since from 1906 until his election as Gover- nor in 1914 he was superintendent of schools in Philadelphia. —Charles Pitello, former Mount Carmel mail carrier, who is under bail for a $12,- 500 theft from the pouches has been held in $1000 bail before Federal Commissioner Engle, of Sunbury, on a charge of bootleg- ging. At the same time John Rocco, a friend, was held in $1000 bail as an accom- plice in the mail theft. According to the commissioner, the bootleg charge followed the finding of a large qunantity of whis« key, gin and wine in the Pitello cellar. Pitello denies knowledge of the theft, says he never made a confession, and avers that he was put through the third degree by state cops and government employees for five days. —Walter J. Herman, the nine year old son of Henry E. Herman, of Lock Haven, was fatally injured when struck by an au- tomobile driven by Russell Snyder, of Mill Hall, about 7:30 o'clock on Saturday even- ing. Snyder and Albert Bowman, owner of the car and who was in the machine with Snyder, were arrested after the ac cident but were released when it was defi. nitely established that the accident was unavoidable. The lad, who was playing in the street, ran in front of the machine, which was declared to be traveling at a moderate rate of speed. The injured youth was picked up and started to the hospital but died before that institution was reach ed. —Resignation of the Rev. C. L. Hunter as pastor of the First Baptist church, at Huntingdon, because a number of his con- gregation objected to his being a member of the Ku Klux Klan, was followed Sun- day night by a klan demonstration in which more than 1000 hooded men from Altoona, Johnstown and other western Pennsylvania places participated. The hooded gathering was addressed by Hunt- er from the steps of the church, after which there was a parade and band con- cert. “I resign for the good of the con- gregation,” Hunter said, “but I shall still preach wherever I am needed and shall re« main here to work for the klan cause” A big Klan demonstration is scheduled to be held in Huntingdon today.