Demorrahi; atc INK SLINGS. ——In any event the jokesmiths can’t have fun with the name of our candidate for President. — This was a bad year for college graduates. The political conventions absorbed too much public attention. —We await with considerable curi- osity the announcement of who is to direct the La Follette-Wheeler cam- paign in this county. —1It costs nothing and every one can give it. It affects every sphere of life, so why not, always, when some one asks you a question, give a civil ANSWET. —Bellefonte officers are enforcing the traffic regulations and already a number of violators have been haled before the Burgess. What the effect will be remains to be seen. —It seems to us that there was enough of tragedy in the end of poor old William Musser, without adding to it the unchristian quibble over a place in which his body could rest. —It’s queer reasoning that con- cludes that the loss of one United States Senator is more blasting to Democratic hopes than the defection of a half dozen or more Senators is to the Republican cause. —Having sewed up the Olympic games championship for 1924 the American athletes will proceed to break training and load up with a lot of stuff more liquid than laurels. They can get laurels at home. —Just now, when things are a lit- tle dull about Harrisburg, Governor Pinchot might stir the animals up a bit if he were to tell us whether it is still his intention to seek Senator Pep- per’s seat in the United States Sen- ate. —There isn’t a State that is nor- mally Democratic that Senator Wheel- er can take from Davis. There are six States that LaFollette and Wheel- er, combined, might take from Cool- idge. We should worry about the par- ty that put the wheels under Wheel- €r. —Three weeks ago when every one was discouraged and thought the hay and grain crops were destined to rot in the fields, the promise that “seed time and harvest will come,” seems to have been forgotten. Better weather for hay making and the grain harvest than we have had during the past ten days has rarely been known. —Headquarters for the work the Democratic women of the State are expected to do in the coming cam- paign have been opened in Williams- port. Inasmuch as Mrs. R. Fleming is the vice-chairman in charge, arouse both. —Council is acting like it intends to do something for Spring street. Not having the slightest thought that the agitation the “Watchman” start- ed in this prospective improvement some time ago had anything to do with the consideration that august body has given the matter we rise— not to pat ourself on the back, but to thank council for its evident intention to do something for a hard worked thoroughfare neglected too long. —We don’t always agree with what the gentleman who writes the adver- tisements for the First National bank of this place, that appear in oth- er columns of the “Watchman,” has to say. Very rarely do we refer to such matters in this column, but we want you to turn to page six, of this issue, and read in four inches, more good, sound “horse sense” than the average writer can “get over” in. six columns. Besides being a very exceptional bank- er Corp. McCurdy occasionally quali- fies as a very exceptional writer. —Of course Persia regrets the kill- ing of the Vice Consul of the United States at Teheran. To make amends Persia is perfectly willing to execute every one Uncle Sam wants to bump off in the public square. Aside from the fact that a public execution of one of their number is as much of a de- light to the average Persian as a Har- old Lloyd film is to the average Amer- ican kid and that Persia’s war re- sources are as a child’s toy pistol to Uncle Sam’s “Big Bertha,” the situa- tion is without serious diplomatic con- sequences. The little matter of the life of Maj. Robert Imbrie, its value to his family and posterity doesn’t seem to have entered the equation at all. —Mr. Clinton W. Gilbert, the gen- tleman who makes a double column mirror, about six inches long, reflect Washington in the Philadelphia Ledg- er every day, has a little of the silver scraped off the back of his glass. We see clear through his efforts to make it appear that Coolidge is more pro- gressive than his party. Coolidge isn’t anything; either conservative, reactionary or radical. He is merely “Silent Cal,” an accidental note in the elephants’ trumpeting for votes. Set- tling the police strike in Boston got him a Vice Presidential nomination and some knowing citizens of Massa- chusetts say he was away from his desk when that settlement was effect- ed—the untimely end of Warren G. Harding made him President and the failure of a Republican Congress to function in such a manner as would give any hope of election to any of the really able men in his party made him its nominee for a full term. The “Si- lent” prefix to Cal. was invented to give the impression that “still water runs deep,” but everybody knows that Je of still water is very, very shal- ow. ®» Ss Democratic STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 69. John W. Davis, Progressive. Senator Wheeler seems to have been influenced by impulse rather than rea- son when he wrote his letter accept- ing the nomination of the LaFollette party for Vice President. Otherwise he couldn’t have said that the Demo- crats in convention selected as the standard bearer of their party “an at- torney who represents these (Wall Street) interests, who lives and asso- ciates with them and who typifies all that big business stands for, just as much and just as truly as does the Republican nominee.” anything it casts an aspersion upon the legal profession. Mr. Wheeler testified before a Congressional com- | If that means | | New Democratic Organization. The selection of Clem L. Shaver, of Fairmount, West Virginia, as chair- man of the Democratic National com- mittee, will be cordially endorsed by the Democratic men and women of the country. He is a lawyer of abili- ty and a political manager of exper- ience. He was selected by Mr. Davis and is a life-long friend of the candi- date. The executive committee of the party is composed of men equally well qualified for the service. Cordell Hull, of Tennessee; George White, of Ohio; Vance C. McCormick, of Pennsylvania, and Homer Cummins, of Connecticut, | each having served as chairman of the | committee, and Daniel C. Roper, of mittee that he had become counsel for | New York, will guarantee an energet- an oil speculator of doubtful reputa- ic as well as an efficient campaign. tion in Montana. Is it to be inferred | Probably the least known of this that he was in sympathy with all the group of earnest working Democrats enterprises of his client? | is Mr. Shaver, the new chairman. But John W. Davis began the practice | "he is intimately known to and thor- of law in West Virginia about 1895, | | oughly trusted by John W. Davis, and : and soon afterward became an assist- ant professor in the law school of the University of Virginia. A few years later he was elected to the House of | Delegates of West Virginia and serv- ed one term, having declined a re-elec- tion. Resuming the general practice of law at Clarksburg, he remained there ten years. In 1906 he was elect- ed president of the State Bar asso- ciation and assigned te the committee on uniform State laws. In 1909 he was elected to Congress in a district overwhelmingly Republican and be- came a member of the Judiciary com- mittee, serving two terms. Then President Wilson appointed him so- licitor general, in which position he defended all the progressive legisla- tion enacted during Wilson's first term, including the eight hour law. He argued the case against the Harvester trust, the Steel trust, the anthracite coal cases involving the constitutionality of the income tax, the railway mail pay, the pipe line is- sue involving the validity of the In- | | terstate Commerce Commission, and | Chief Justice White appraised him as the ablest lawyer who had occupied | publican party has prostituted a gov- 5 service on the bench. to Washington was leading counsel for the coal miners in their frequent | and until his official duties called him | rights of the people. | Cordell Hull said of him “I am greatly | pleased to know that my successor as ! chairman of the committee is an ex- ceptionally able man with much suc- cessful political experience. The management of the campaign could not be placed in abler or safer hands.” Mr. Shaver was chairman of the West Virginia State committee while Mr. Hull officiated as head of the National committee and their joint efforts gave Republican West Virginia a Democrat- ic United States Senator. It may be expected that the same co-ordination this year will yield a Democratic President. No national campaign ever opened more auspiciously. With a ticket that commands the admiration of every fair minded man and woman in the country, who has given the sub- ject thought, and an organization en- tirely capable, absolutely honest and sincere, and thoroughly in earnest, the Democratic party, standing as it does for “a government of the people, for the people and by the people,” ought to win and will win. Within a period of less than four years the Re- that office in all the long period of i ernment of high ideals into a gang of i In his | pirates who have looted the treasury, ein West Virginia he. defended ; dissipated the resources of the coun- ; and “sacred tion’ as exemplified under Wilson or b————— pp —————— ——The memory of voters is pro- | controversies with the mine owners. yerbially short but the oil scandals Upon the death of Ambassador Page will not be forgotten before election President Wilson appointed him Am- day, as Republican chairman Butler bassador to London from which serv- | hopes. ice he returned in mid-summer of | 1921 and located in New York. Ir! that record has made a corporation | monster it got quick action. Senator Wheeler’s Candidacy. While it may be widely regretted | ! that Senator Burton K. Wheeler, of ——It was hardly necessary for Montana, has accepted the nomina- those Chicago fiends to Everybody knew they were guilty. Factional War Resumed. Governor Pinchot, having returned to Harrisburg after his summer vaca- tion, signs of the resumption of fac- tional war in the Republican party of Pennsylvania are appearing. Last week the Game Commission threw a harpoon into the gubernatorial anato- my by naming one of the State Game preserves after John M. Phillips, of Pittsburgh. Mr. Phillips had been president of the Commission for many years, but the Governor refused to re- appoint him for one reason or another, presumably because he was not in full sympathy with some absurd condi- tions established by Mr. Pinchot in. relation to the activities of the Com- mission. The honor conferred upon Mr. Phillips is interpreted as a rebuke to the Governor. Other evidences of a renewal of the quarrel between the Governor and the machine leaders are present. In the planning of the campaign for Presi- dent the Governor has been entirely ignored. Chairman Baker, Senators Pepper and Reed, Congressman Vare and others have held conferences with the President in Washington and among themselves in Philadelphia and at the seashore, but Governor Pinchot has not been invited nor even consult- ed. He may be permitted to contrib- ute to the campaign fund later on but that is likely to be the limit of courte- sies extended to him. Governor is quietly moving in his own way to build up a machine for use when his successor is to be elected. That the Governor will not relin- quish control of the State government to the old machine is certain. He in- tends to name his successor in office, if possible, and has already picked out the man for the place. The present Secretary of the Commonwealth is his favorite and unless his expecta- tions are disappointed will be named as the Republican candidate for Gov- ernor in 1926. The appointment of Robert L. Patton, to the office of Cor- oner of Philadelphia, was made with this object in view and within a short time other appoiritments will be made which will shock the machine leaders. The present row over the tenure of office of General Butler, director of Meantime the ! confess. | tion of the LaFollette party for Vice President it has caused no surprise. Senator Wheeler has been in sympa- thy with the ultra-conservatives for some years, and though he owed his elevation to the Senate to the Demo- crats of Montana he was more the candidate of a fusion party than of the Democratic organization. Mon- tana had fallen under the domination of a group of foreign corporations that controlled the Republican party and Wheeler, who had been appointed United States district attorney by President Wilson, was agreed upon as the candidate of the opposition and elected. In justice to Mr. Wheeler it must be said that he is a man of considera- ble ability as well as of unquestioned integrity. In his conduct of the inves- tigation of Attorney General Daugh- erty he revealed a high order of le- gal ability, and because of the at- tempt of the administration to “frame up” charges against him acquired an unusual measure of distinction. Pos- sibly this fact implanted in his mind an ambition that was disappointed. At least it was whispered among the delegates at the Madison Square Gar- den convention that he had aspira- tions for the Democratic nemination for Vice President. He attended that convention as an enthusiastic suppor- ter of William G. McAdoo. Senator Wheeler is entirely within his rights in accepting the nomina- tion and tendering his support to the LaFollette party as Senator Brook- hart, of Iowa; Norris, of Nebraska; Ladd, of North Dakota; Sterling, of South Dakota, and LaFollette, of Wis- consin, Republicans, are in their ef- forts for that ticket. Unlike the Re- publicans pursuing that course, how- ever, Senator Wheeler will do his for- mer party little or no harm. The only States the LaFollette party can hope to carry are such as would have given their electoral vote to the Republican ticket if there had been no other third ticket in the field. In common with other Democrats we regret Wheeler’s diversion but feel that good may come of it. ——New York wants a Republican National convention likely for purpos- cs of comparison. ——The Brazilian revolution is public safety in Philadelphia, is part, having a hard time to keep itself on { of the program. . the front page. BELLEFONTE, PA.. JULY 25. 1924. NO. 29. | Paramount Issues of the Campaign. The Democratic platform adopted by the New York convention not only invites but urges a comparison of the record of eight years of “unsullied Democratic administration with that of the Republican administration which succeeded.” The Republican Congress which assembled in Decem- ber, 1919, instituted fifty-one inves- tigations in the expectation of reveal- ing some sort of fraud in the conduct of the war. These “smelling commit- tees” covered all Europe and Ameri- ca and spent millions of dollars in fu- tile search. But not a single fraud was discovered and finally the pres- ent Republican candidate for Vice President drove them out of existence with his ‘“Hell-an’-Maria” denuncia- tion of the policy. During the last session of Congress several investigations were begun and { conducted by committees dominated by Republican majorities. “These in- vestigations,” the Democratic plat- form declares, “sent the former Sec- retary of the Navy to Three Rivers in disgrace and dishonor. These inves- tigations revealed the incapacity and indifference to public obligations 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 unfitness of the Attorney Gen- eral by exposing an official situation and personal contacts which shocked the conscience of the nation and com- pelled his dismissal from the Cabi- net.” These investigations accomplished other results which should be kept in the public mind. The shameful abus- es in the conduct of the Veterans’ Bu- reau, “with its fraud upon the gov- ernment and cruel neglect of the sick and disabled soldiers of the world war,” the fraudulent oil leases and various other iniquities perpetrated under the eyes, if not with the sanc- tion of the Republicaan party man- : agers, combine to form campaign is- sues which ought to not only defeat the party but force it out of exist- ence. This is the real issue now be- fore the people. It is a question of honesty and efficiency in administra- fraud and corruption as revealed by : the Republican administration. —A party of Pennsylvania railroad pose of looking up present business conditions and the outlook for the fu- ture, were in Bellefonte last Thursday and interviewed the heads of the var- ious limestone industries in this sec- tion. They also made inquiries re- garding the Bellefonte Central rail- road but were uncommunicative as to the company’s attitude regarding the recent announcement of Bellefonte Central officials that they will be compelled to cease operations unless the Pennsylvania can in some way ar- range to absorb a portion of the switching charge from the various limestone operations along the line. In the meantime officials of the Belle- fonte Central have taken no further action toward the abandonment of their road, but the switching rates now charged are probably one reason for the curtailment of operations at the limestone quarries up the branch, as hey have reached almost a stand- still. ——Secretary of the State Hughes imagines he can fool the British law- vers by his story that the administra- tion at Washington has no authority to act with other nations in the inter- est of permanent peace. ——-Some esteemed Republican con- temporaries are asking for reasons for the nomination of Governor Bry- an. One of them will be made clear when the election returns of Nebras- ka come in. ——1It is said that one of Clem Shaver’s hobbies is “breeding hounds.” Maybe his kennel will produce an ani- mal that will run the rogues out of Washington. ——Mayor Kendrick, of Philadel- phia, is between the good citizenship and the crooks very much as another was between “the devil and the deep sea. ——When de Valera was released he resumed delivery of the speech that was interrupted by his arrest a year or more ago. A ———— fe ————————— ——The Cleveland convention threw La Follette out of the party and it looks as if he is taking most of the party with him. Sr ———— ff —————— ——Jack Dempsey’s right arm was injured in an automobile accident the other day but the strength of his jaws is unimpaired. - ——There were nearly as many bal- lots at the Democratic convention as there were blunders at the Republican convention. HOME MAIL A HAPPY EVENT. Interesting Incidents in the Life of Mr. and Mrs. North in China. Chengtu, China, January 27, 1924. Dear Home Folks: Tonight has been a riotously happy time for me. Foreign mail just came in (the first good foreign mail in about three weeks) and I received fourteen pieces of mail from the Unit- ed States; two letters from you, one from Daddy, written at Elimsport, one from Berenice, a Christmas card from the Whitings, and the rest of the mail was from friends to whom 1 had sent Christmas cards. Most of them wrote me nice long letters, so I have spent most of the evening read- ing my mail. Now I want to get a letter off to you, for I am ashamed to say I have not written a letter for about three weeks. I don’t know where te time goes, but it certainly does y. Of course, five days in the week we spend in Language school, and by the time we reach home at about 4:30, the best part of the day is gone and we don’t feel much like writing let- ters. Then, we’re always being invit- ed out somewhere in the evenings and by the time we reach home it is bed- time. The social life here is very strenuous. It is not so in most mis- sion centers, but there is an unusual- ly large foreign population here, most- ly missionary, so that there is always something going on. I get very tired of it sometimes, but we have come so recently that we feel we must accept invitations or run the chance of not being invited in the future. Bill is always very anxious to go and, of course, I have to go along with him. Last week-end we spent out in the country, or what we call country. It is really just that region outside the city gates where the University is lo- cated and where many of the foreign- ers live. We went out Saturday afternoon, had dinner with the Brace family (Canadian Methodists) and spent the night and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Larkin, a young couple of our mission. I did something last Sunday afternoon which, you e-aldn’t have hired me to do at home—sang a solo in church. We have foreign church here every other Sunday, one Sunday in the city, and the next time in the country. Last week it was held officials touring the State for the pur- | kd in the country and almost the whole community (foreign) was present. I had to sing to an organ accompani- ment and it was pretty hard, but they tell me I did very well. I don’t want to do it again soon, though, for it is too hard on my nerves. I had a cold to begin with, and was afraid my voice would break on a high note, but noth- ing like that happened. Bill also sang, in a men’s quartette. So you see our family was well represented. I enjoy going out to the country. It is lovely out there and you hardly know you are in China, but every time you go out there for an evening’s fun! you have to spend the night, and I don’t like that. I hate to sleep in any but my own nice bed. I guess I'm getting to be an old woman. But here in China all places are not as nice as we think we have things here in our home. For instance, out at Larkin’s we had to dress in a cold room, no fire at all in their guest room, and we had to wait for the servant to bring warm water in the morning. ‘Here in our own bed-room we have a little stove which is always lighted by the serv- ant about a half hour before we get up so that we have a warm room to dress in and we keep a teakettle full of water on the stove all the time, so that when we have fire, we always have good hot water. To be sure, our teakettle is made out of an oil can buy it answers the purpose beautiful- y. What do you think we have to eat out here in the wilds of China? Ice cream! ! ! ! Honest to goodness—ice cream! Think of it. And they told us we would never have it. We've had it twice this winter, all we could eat of it. There are several ice cream freezers among the foreigners here in Chengtu, and every once in a while a group of people go together and send a coolie to the mountain (about a four day’s trip) for ice. He brings back enough to make about three big freez- ers of ice cream. We have been for- tunate enough to be invited to two different places to eat it. It certain- ly was delicious aud the only fault I could find was that I couldn’t eat more. We also have had another big treat recently. Dr. Freeman, who lives in our compound, just returned this month from a trip to Shanghai, and brought with him a box of Oregon apples and some lemons. He gave each member of the mission an apple and gave us a lemon. We had a deli- cious lemon pie. They do not grow lemons here at all and the apples that you get in the summer time are about as big as green apples at home. You can make very good sauce from them and can it, but they are not good eat- ing apples. Bill and Miss Aster and I shared our apples with our servants. {Continued on page 4, Col. 2.) SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONR —The life-time savings of the family of George W. Main, of Gettysburg, stolen last October, were returned with interest when a package containing $325.90 was found lying on a bench in the shed at the rear of their home. —A crow shooting contest will be held this fall under the auspices of the Clinton County Fish and Game association. Two prizes of high-grade 22 caliber rifles will be offered to the individuals who shoot the largest number of crows. The dates for the contest have not been decided. —The plant of the Elk Window Glass company, at Punxsutawney, which has ben shut down for some time, has secured sufficient capital from stockholders to en- able it to resume operations as soon as minor repairs are made. About seventy- five persons will be employed at the start. —The Rochester and Pittsburgh Coal and Iron company, owner of the blast fur- nace at Punxsutawney, operated by the Punxsutawney Furnace company, will spend about $400,000 for repairs and mod- ernizing the plant. The plant will not be enlarged, but will be equipped to turn out a larger amount of work. —Falling a distance of sixty feet into the sand screen of the Belmar Sand and Gravel company, at Belmar, Franklin county, on Sunday, Clem Boyer, of Knox, received injuries from which he died in the Franklin hospital later. Boyer was leaning on the guard when it broke and fell with the railing into the screen. —Attempting to adjust the motor of an electric washing machine at his home in Marion Hill, Beaver county, John Billic, 28 years old, was electrocuted. He and his wife felt a shock as they stood on the damp floor of the basement not far from the washing machine, and he moved to ad- just the motor. He placed his hand on it, then straightened up, walked about ten feet and toppled over dead. —A three-inch scarf pin was removed from the stomach of Jeanne Schneider, 2 years old, of Erie, by surgeons at Hamon hospital last week, and the child is ex- pected to recover. The child managed to reach on to a dresser in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Schneider," and obtained the pin. Her mother discov- ered her with the pin in her mouth just too late to prevent it being swallowed. An X-ray revealed the scarf pin lodged in the stomach. —Joseph Jago, of Mt. Carmel, a member of troop A, Pennsylvania State constabu- lary, under instruction at Hershey, is suf- fering from a severe fracture of the right leg between the ankle and the knee which was the result of his lying with his feet out of the window of passenger train No. 906 while it was passing a freaght train just east of Dauphin early Monday morn- ing. He was taken to the Harrisburg hos- pital where it was found that his injury is of a serious nature. —Probably the largest oil storage tank in northern Pennsylvania is being cton- structed at Rixford, McKean county. The tank when completed will hold 55,000 bar- rels of crude oil. Its size may be judged when it is recalled that large tanks with which most persons in the oil fields are familiar in that section are of 25,000 to 30,000 barrel capacity. The mammoth tank is 150 feet in diameter and 40 feet in height. Its cost is $60,000. The tank will be finished August 1st. —Harry Close, pilot, and Ray Dorr, of Smith Mills, were killed late Sunday after- noon when the airplane owned by Mrs. Ella J. Mountz, of that place, took fire in midair and crashed to the ground. Close was burned to death and Dorr died as he was enroute to the Philipsburg hospital. The big plane was recently purchased by Mrs. Mountz, and after instructing Close how to run the machine the pilot departed. On Sunday Close and Dorr, a nephew of Mrs. Mountz, had the plane out for prac- tice. —Purchase of a number of tracts for the establishment of more State game refuges was authorized by the Board of Game Com- missioners at the recent meeting. Many tracts of land have been offered for aux- iliary game refuges not only by large landowners of the State, but also by a number of individuals clubbing together and offering their lands in a block for ref uges and public hunting grounds. The creation of a number of these refuges has been authorized and will be announced as rapidly as completed. —While P. F. Malone, of Pittsburgh, was splashing in his Sunday bath, he felt a sudden blast of heat and heard an om- inous crackling. Turning he discovered that a small gas stove had set fire to wood- work and that the flames already were leaping threateningly. Malone had no time to dress and dashed dripping to the street, where he created a sensation as he yelled “Fire!” Malone then dodged into a sheltering alley, where police later res- cued him by skillful draping of their coats. In the meantime firemen had extinguished the blaze. —Fear of the consequences of an auto- mobile accident for which he regarded himself responsible is believed to have been responsible for the suicide of Stephen Commence, of Woodland, Clearfield coun- ty, whose lifeless body, with a bullet wound in the head, was found in the woods near his home, Saturday. Com- mence, aged 19 years, figured in an auto- mobile collision Thursday evening in which Harry Goss, of Spring Valley, suf- fered injury to his meck which required twenty-four stitches to close. Commence disappeared soon after the accident. -—A modern Rip Van Winkie came to life at Wilkes-Barre, last Tuesday, when Joe Birstan, of Hilldale, appeared before the police of that town and asked for assist- ance in locating his wife, three children, the greater part of his house furnishings and $4,000 in cash, which he had saved. Joe, at the suggestion of his good wife, took a much-needed rest that day. He went to the second floor of his home in the morning and went to sleep. When he awoke later in the day he found that his entire family had deserted him and had taken with them the furniture and all his savings. —That an unsatisfied mortgage for 1250 English pounds, that is 132 years old, holds up the purchase of a plat of land on the west side of the Susquehanna river near Sunbury for a $5,000,000 Pennsylva-« nia power and light company power de- velopment was indicated by title searchers last Wednesday. The property is the James H, Hummell estate and Wade H. Kruse, Allentown, has the option. Plans call for the super-power generators to take current to Harrisburg, Reading and Philadelphia. Sunbury was selected be-« cause water necessary for rolling the big generators 1s at all times available im the Susquehanna at this point.