Demorvaic datum, Er TES INK SLINGS. —Don’t be too sure about Governor | Pinchot’s impotence with the next Legislature. He might “settle it” like he did the coal strike. —If this kind of weather is to keep up until spring there’ll be a new na- tional gm about Febru- ary and it will be God save the coal pile. —New York barbers have voted to boycott all of Valentino’s pictures be- cause he has grown a beard. Now what do you suppose they’d do to us _if we should grow some hair? —Wouldn’t this be the drab, dreary world if it were not for the fellows who buckle the red surcingle about themselves and strut at the head of the parades that some one else’s sac- rifice or gratuity has called forth. —There are just thirty-five days left. Of course you’ll fool around un- til there’s only one. If you do and ~can’t think of anything else, send them the “Watchman” for a year. It will be the most acceptable present anyway. —A little red Licker was left in a Los Angeles home the other day and the Prohibition sleuths havn’t gotten on the job up to the time of our going to press. There’s a reason. The Stork left it in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Licker in that city. —Yes, dear skeptic, there are a few of the big kind left. On Monday a gentleman walked up High street and, as he was about to pass the room where the Red Cross enrollment is be- ing made, he stopped, voluntarily, and “dropped ten iron men into the empty box. Would that there were ninety and nine more men whose satisfaction comes from unostentatiously doing such acts as this. —What we can’t understand is why the government thinks it better to sink the George Washington, for which we have already paid sixteen million dollars, than to give the un- completed hulk to the soldier boys to knock down and sell as junk. Our friend Nathan would make himself rich out of it and there are plenty of incapacitated service men who are just as smart as Nathan. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA.. NOVEMBER 21. 1924. _ VOL. 69. Cambria County’s Congressman. The disputed result of the vote for Congressman in the Cambria county district of this State has taken a sur- prising turn. On the face of the re- Signs that the Republican machine | will show scant consideration to the | interests and wishes of Governor Pin- chot during the coming session of the Machine Will Snub the Governor. i Promise of an Interesting Event. Senator Couzens, of Michigan, who was elected to a full term the other day, without expense to himself or anybody else, has broadcast informa- turns the Republican candidate had fifty-eight majority. On motion the computing judges ordered the open- ing of some of the ballot boxes which developed a majority of fourteen for Legislature are increasing. The Vare | tion that upon the reassembling of influence in Philadelphia and the Max | Cofigress his investigation of the pro- Leslie forces in Pittsburgh appear to hibition law enforcement operations be positively hostile and are likely to of the Treasury Department will be oppose any proposition, good or bad, | renewed. This is interesting and like- 'gressman from the district. —Commenting on the opening of ; -another grocery store in Bellefonte a - gentleman remarked to us: “I think isdiction is that of affirming or re- which he offers. In the Philadelphia , delegation there is but one man inde- pendent of the Vare power, while in | Pittsburgh there are three groups! with Leslie in absolute control of about one-half the delegation. Half, ‘of the other half is under control of the Magee-Oliver faction which might . be annexed to the Governor and the the Democratic candidate. Thereupon the lawyers for the Republican candi- date raised the point that because, under the constitution of the United States, Congress may regulate the election. of Congressmen the comput- ing Judges had no right to direct the opening of the boxes, they being State officials. Similar action has been tak- en by the computing judges frequent- other half is marked independent. ly. There is some talk and a remote There are two judges in Cambria chance of an alliance between the county and the court is equally _divid- | forces friendly to the Governor and ed in politics. Judge Evans is a Re- ' the element yielding allegiance to Joe publican and Judge McCann a Demo- | Grundy, the famous “boodle chaser,” crat. They sat on Tuesday to hear of Montgomery county. The only argument by counsel of the contest- barrier to such an alliance is a differ- ants as to certification of one or the ence of preference for Governor in other as the properly elected Con- 1926. Grundy and Auditor General The Lewis have been close friends for Judges agreed to disagree notwith- , many years and if Lewis becomes a standing the fact that Judge Evans candidate for Governor, which is more had previously joined with Judge Me- than likely, Grundy will espouse his Cann in directing the opening of the cause. That, of course, would conflict ballot boxes that resulted in depriving With the plans of the Governor be- Walters of his majority and giving it cause Lewis is his “pet aversion.” | to Bailey, the Democratic candidate. | TWo years ago Grundy favored John Then they asked for a third Judge to Fisher, of Indiana, and Pinchot would sit with them to cast the deciding vote. not object to him. But Lewis was not Judge Baldridge, of Blair county, in the running then. has been chosen and as he is a Repub- | The first break will be on the lican the political complexion of the Speakership and thus far neither side court is adverse to Bailey. | has expressed a choice. It is believed In ordering the opening of the bal- that the Governor will favor the re- lot boxes the Cambria county judges election of Mr. Goodnough, who was concurred and the only question be- SO generous to him during the last ses- fore the court on the challenge of jur- ' Sion, and Grundy has no objection to his choice. Thus far the opposition has gone no further than a declara- In that ‘its obligations to the public. ly to add considerably to “the gaiety of nations.” This purpose of the Sen- ator for Michigan expressed during the last session made history. It de- feated Governor Pinchot’s ambition to be a delegate-at-Large to the Repub- lican National convention and his op- portunity to throw a harpoon into somebody. Besides it made an egre- gious fool of Senator Watson, of In- diana. These were more or less important consequences of Senator Couzens original announcement of a purpose | to investigate the Treasury Depart- ment activities in the matter of law enforcement. But they are not all. It made Secretary Mellon threaten to resign and forced the President to re- buke the Senate for trying to fulfill It al- most made the Republican machine organize opposition to the election of Senator Couzens and actually did cre- ate a seandal which, if the voters had not been morally palsied, would have driven the Republican party out of ex- istence. Taking one consideration with another this purpose of the Mich- igan Senator was a striking episode. in polities. But most of these things were only “might-have-beens.” It is true that Watson has never recovered his for- mer status in the party, and that Couzens appears to have “compromis- ed with vice” to save his Senatorial bacon. But we sincerely hope he will . we have more now than the town can | versing their own decision. support.” Perhaps we have, but as event, if the Republican judge shall “there will be only fifteen groceries 'declare for reversal he will stultify after the new one is opened they will himself. Possibly party exigencies still be four short of the filling stations : may influence him to take that step, _we boast. And it would be interest- but if they do he ought to resign for know which costs the most: it will be a confession of incapacity. The human stomachs or the gas tanks In any event the matter is interest. of the motors, “© {0 ore Damoeratie candidate, War- —The Superior court has upheld the | ren Worth Bailey is a man of marked Sieg fhe aT Be Se alin on Tiloy t= 2 wan of marked of Cambria county, Judge Finletter in Congressional legislation. But if presiding specially, in which fourteen ' the question is determined on its mer- of the K. K. K.s who participated in its and in the interest of honesty, the fatal riot at Lilly last April were , Bailey will win. sentenced to two years in prison. We | are sorry for the unfortunates, of | ——The “strip” political boss must course, but we’re grateful for the les- have been out of the city when a Pitts- son that their foolishness should teach burgh judge decided that the State those who think they have the right law for padlocking is valid. to take the law in their own hands. —Taking responsibility as it comes | we rise to ask who is to blame for | . SEIT . freezing the potatoes, celery, hydrants | Sis pmally te 2pbolotment of nd everything else that had a right |; 20nd! chairman William B. ut 2 ller to fill the vacancy as Senator in to expect a few more weeks in which ' to get into their winter flannels? If Congress caused by the death of Sen- Gal's lection into be given the lary | 107 Luda, of Massachusetts, calls t of making millions already for the | lowed the election of William MeKin- “ticker” business men of the country | : why shouldn’t Cal’s election step up ° ley in 1896 when Mark Henna wos Lap : : inted Senator for Ohio. and admit that it gave the back-yards, Dolnie Ws . . the $ruos patches and the water pipes’ er rei a the jee? ful in business. Each came to the —It was to be expected that EVeIY- | service as “guide, philosopher and body would have a cure for the sleep | fring” of the candidate for President, ing sickness which in the final diagno- | ; 1, 40r obscure son of the State in sis, is what is ailing the Democratic | party, but we have no faith in those doctors who want to give it the reor- ganization panacea. The Pennsylva- Coolidge Luck Maintained. ped the expensive methods of cam- | paigning which Mr. Butler developed ‘to perfection and both had personal | which he lived. Mr. Hanna introduc- nia Democracy took that dose some years ago and has had one foot in the grave ever since. The party doesn’t need any more nostrums. What it needs is a little osteopathy to put : something into the back-bones of the ' young and a monkey-gland infusion for the old Democrats. —~Cheer up, the worst is yet to come! All you Bellefonters who have been abominating the night noises, ! since obsolescence robbed you of the ' urge to make a lot of them yourselves, had better take residence in the coun- try after April 1st, next. The gov- ernment has arranged to have two mail planes arrive here just after the last . night motor visitor has warmed up his engine, ground his gears and sounded a farewell honk under your windows. They will drone around in the sky hunting the land- ing field, just long enough to keep your nerves a quiver until it is time to get up for breakfast. —The Philadelphians who have de- clined to take a portrait of their niece from an artist whom they had com- missioned to paint it are getting the lady into a very embarrassing situa- tion. They refused it because, they say, he made her appear “too fat.” He has sued to recover eight hundred dollar for his work and, we think he’ll get it out of court. When it comes ‘down to parading nature’s endowment before a jury of twelve men we have vet to see the lady who wouldn’t rath- er die than do that. -She can turn the portrait to the wall, but she can’t sup- press newspaper notoriety. Besides, what’s eight hundred dollars to a girl who is in danger of having a court re- veal that straight-line gowns are only a smoke-screen for obesity. interest in legislation. carry out his present purpose of re- tion of hostility to any candidate the | OPening the question. The Volstead Governor favors. W. Clyde Harrer, | law ought to be enforced or repealed of Williamsport, is talked of among | and the investigation which was the leaders. He was a candidate for | checked last spring by the illness of the honor two years ago but gave way | Senator Couzens will result in one of in the interest of harmony and to these things or the other. If it is please the Governor. Representative Proven that the Secretary of the Marshall, of Beaver, is also mention- | Treasury has been in league with the ed as a possible aspirant but no defi- booiggers, he is unfit for the high nite lines have been drawn between POSHIon he occupies in the public life them. ‘of the country. | | The State is going to provide —A year ago we acclaimed Musso- | : Tie ii: + street mark lini, the iron man of Italy, and pre- ers x oliley And towns, | ] { After awhile our old friend, Local dicted that he was riding to his fall. | 1£- i thi Fall has came and is almost went, but [3 Eovernimants Wl Lave nothing to A J id ist. things are beginnng to look as though | 2 but Preronl togxit |. Musso will be with the dodos by the! . ’ time spring arrives. | —We are wondering what the Phil- ; | adelphia sports writers would have Se p said had it been Ernie Couzens and not Sure of a “Bully Time. { Ted Artelt who scooped up that fum- poy Sgrieuliune] commission. wiih | 10S) 16 sisty yards for 3 tuck lent i as pro ised Nicol + that the officials for college football fs valuable iii as monte Se | games are designated only after noti- dence that at i some of the ib (fication of acceptance by the contend- : led | ing teams and that Crowell probably ps Sessa i be Fo0osmed | did rule the play as he saw it, but we Bore te ey = 7% know that the attitude of Phila- west and middlewest in support of the | Siar nT hl ay ovard Sats al- Ruy ticket. The fulfillment | flect Penn’s So ro vi Shave little beyond that of fool- | ward the Centre county institution, so ig WW dg postod of ms. | that had the “break” in last Satur- 0 complaint can be found wi e ) : : personnel of the commission and when (rs ame ’ Pro oe Other Se the is said about all features of the | ing rors a ns ¢ am li covered. It is.a harriess | plaining a ruling that needed none, if The members of the commission [it was fair, Ie result of the game paid their respects to the President | vo 2 bitter disappointment to Penn. on Monday and assembled for organi- ogy is characteristic of Mr. Coolidge’s Zation on Tuesday. They will spend luck. Hanna wanted to get into the @ Week or two pleasantly in Washing- Senate to promote tariff legislation on | ton and talk cautiously on the subject iron and steel. But the seats for for which they were called together. Ohio were filled, and though Sherman | The two or three measures pending, was old, he showed no signs of an ostensibly for the benefit of agricul- early death. Therefore he had to be | ture, will be gone over and the sev- ! “bought off” and the lure of a cabi- | eral propositions contained in them net portfolio was dandled before his | compared with the view of reconciling eyes. Mr. Sherman imagined that he | the differences in a compromise bill. was a financier and accepted the office. | But the chances are more than even He became one of the most inefficient | that they will fail to come to an agree- Secretaries of the Treasury in the his- | ment. They will have, however, what tory of the country and finally wor- | the late Colonel Roosevelt would call ried himself into the grave. But Han- | “a bully time.” na became as successful in the Senate | But no member of the commission | as he was in business. No tariff ad- | Will point out the real trouble of the | vantage ever escaped his keen eyes. | farmers and neither the President nor | Mr. Butler is also deeply interested | any of his official advisers will sug- in tariff legislation as a millionaire gest it. The excessive tariff tax is the | manufacturer of cotton fabrics and has expressed a desire to operate on the “ground floor.” It is generally understood that President Coolidge was in full accord with his ambition, but if Lodge had lived it might have been a difficult matter to arrange. Nothing less than the office of Secre- tary of State would have induced Lodge to resign from the Senate and his palpable unfitness for that station as well as his obligations to the pres- ent incumbent, Mr. Hughes, made the offer of that place practically impos- sible. But the “Coolidge luck” hap- pily solved the problem and Butler may become as dominant a hoss as Hanna was. SO —— ly Financial experts are advising investors to be careful, but stock gamblers are not likely to take the advice seriously. The one striking break in the anal- vin this country. It deprives farmers | of an abundant and safe market and | that is precisely what they need: Eu- | rope can’t buy the products of Amer- ican farms for the reason that the | products which Europe has to ex- change are excluded from our mar- kets by atrocious and absurd tariff levies. A revenue tariff would cure this evil and that, too, without de- pressing prices to a dangerous level. ——One bootlegger to one-hundred in population is the ratio in Washing- ton, D. C. When Congress is in ses- sion the sources of supply will be greater in proportion. ——Pennsylvania has been without representation on the Federal Su- preme court a long time but has man- aged to get along fairly well, She wanted to win, for then she could have carried out her contemplated plan of dropping State from her next year’s schedule with better face than she will have if she does it now after having been consistently beaten in nearly every contest played since State has developed beyond the prac- tice game class. Sr rr ——— ——While it is being done very qui- etly it is true, nevertheless, that men are being laid off from jobs in Belle- fonte for some time, which doesn’t augur well for the good times prom- ised before the election. . rr It is said that von Tirpitz sees no hope for the future. If he had his just dues he would see nothing but hot coals at present and in the fu- real cause of agricultural depression | “Wr€ mat ——There is some comfort in the practical certainty that LaFollette will not be threatening to run for President in the future. The prohibition enforcement of- ficials have their own opinion of Con- gressman Hill, of Maryland, but that doesn’t disturb Hill. ——The lust for spoils is on in full force and the hope is that it will dis- rupt the Republican party within two years. Strange as it may seem Gover- nor Pinchot doesn’t know that he is politically dead. ——The turkey that survives today may only strut for another month. Official Omniscience. From the Philadelphia Record. po There is a story of a girl who list- ened for some time to her best young man’s opinions—he was a sophomore —and finally exclaimed: “If must be lovely to know everything. And he calmly replied: “Itis.” ~~ It is a very natural thing for every convention to wish to see the Presi- dent and hear him talk, but it really can’t matter much what he says on many occasions. Of: course, an earn- est and very serious son of Massachu- setts must be able at any moment to make an entirely correct address on education and religion and the domes- tic virtues, and the holy influence of home, and what we owe our mothers. But when he feels it a part of his offi- cial duty to instruct bankers in bank- ing, merchants in trade, and farmers in agriculture, the labor is y more than he ought to assume in addition to his strictly official work. Official omniscience is not imposed upon him by the Constitution. : : The President has recently been talking to the farmers about the vicis- situdes of their occupation since the war. He sees the home demand for food products increasing so fast that within 25 years we shall have to im- port food, and in the meanwhile he commends co-operative marketing to the farmers. the authors of the McNary-Hauton bill to have the government take charge of agricultural exports and fix their prices, has no faith in co-opera- tive marketing, except for limited special crops, say prunes or olives. As our birth rate is decreasing and’ we are shutting out foreigners, our population is not going to increase in the next 25 years as fast as in the: last, and we shall not attempt to pass judgment on co-operative marketing. But we invite attention to some of the most obvious vicissitudes of agri- culture since the war which hardly Seem to admit of governmental con- trol. ii When all Europe was fighting the | demand for our food was enormous. When all Europe gave up fighting and returned to farming there was less de- mand for our food and prices fell. The high prices of wheat and hogs sent up the prices of land, and the peak was reached in 1918, when great numbers of farmers in the Northwest bought additional land on mortgage at the top figures. It was bad enough to have the prices of farm products. «ome down, but the mortgages didn’t" down, and many of them matured in 1923. Some mortgages were extend- ed; many were foreclosed. This in- creased the depression of prices of both land and products. There were two other contributing causes to the low prices of 1923, when agriculture became an acute issue in politics. One was the Capper-Tincher law, which drove many speculators out of the grain markets. The far- mers demanded it, they got it, and it contributed to the low price of wheat. The other was that the Canadian wheat crop was phenomenal; it was 474,000,000 bushels. Wheat in Chica- go went below $1. This year Euro- pean wheat crops are less than last year, the Canadian crop is 203,000,000 bushels less, and December wheat in Chicago has touched $1.56. We do not pretend to have exhaust- ed all the elements of the problem, but we have presented the most strik- ing of the vicissitudes of agriculture ‘since the world war, and unless the Capper-Tincher bill was a mistake-— which it probably was—we do not see much here that the action of the gov- ernment could have prevented. Problems of the Farmer. Henry A. Bellews in The Forum. Fundamentally, the problem of the farm relief can be solved only by the farmers themselves. They must learn to get as much out of their land as it is capable of producing, and they must learn to be business men. Specifically, the wheat farmer must cease trying to make a living out of raising eight or nine bushels of wheat to the acre from land that successive years of wheat cropping have robbed of its fer- tility. At any price there is no profit in the nine-bushel wheat farm—and the average wheat yield per acre in North Dakota in 1923 was 7.1 bushels. In Western Canada in 1923 the aver- age wheat yield was 22.1 bushels to the acre. Virgin soil, yes, but in France, where every available foot of ground has been made to bear crops for centuries, the wheat yield per acre in 1923 was 21.8 bushels. Eight bush- els of wheat to the acre, at one dollar a bushel, means a gross return hard- ly more than enough to pay interest on the purchase price of $100 land; 20 bushels an acre, at the same price, yield a fair profit above all expenses. No law can make the farmer rotate his crops so as to increase his yields to a point where they can earn money for him, but the iron rule of economic necessity, supported by education, is actually accomplishing it. rent pr eirinenioiin Ought to Have It. From the Harrisburg Telegraph. One familiar with that section of the State can readily understand the desire of the people of Lock Haven and Renovo for a through highway joining those places and going to Driftwood and beyond. Not only should these important communities be linked up by a modern road for purposes of neighborhood communi- cation but for the benefit of the tour- ist as well: The suggestion that the State Highway be asked to make a survey of the route is in good form. Senator McNary, one of | SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Two: bandits entered the Standard Ci- gar company offices in Pittsburgh, seized a payroll of $8000 and escaped in an au- tomobile, : et —Five hundred miners of the Pennsyl- .| vania Coal company in Pittston, struck be- cause of a dispute over the use of dyna- mite for blasting. —Lewistown Eagles purchased the Raf- fensberger property on West Market street for $16,000 and will erect a five-story busi- ness and club building. ; —The third fire of supposed incendiary origin in the Beech Creek section destroy- ed the hay shed belonging to John H. Hunter, last Friday night. Authorities are investigating. » : —York county's oldest resident, Mrs. Casandra Stein, who would have reached the 102nd milestone in life today, died at her residence at Windsor, last Friday, at 1:15 p. m. Mrs. Stein, who was an invet- erate user of tobacco, smoking at least one pipeful each day, leaves 137 direct descend- ants. —Clinton Diehl, an East Stroudsburg business man who on Saturday night es- caped from the Monroe county jail where he was awaiting sentence for a statutory offense, returned to the prison on Sunday and surrendered. He told Sheriff F. A. Bosner that he had just gone out “to see the kiddies and my family.” —The body of Howard Blair, of Wil- liamsport, was found hanging from the Reading Railroad trestle at the foot of Susquehanna street in that city, about 7 o'clock on Sunday morning. He had plac- ed a rope around his neck after fastening it to the trestle and had jumped to his death. He was a man of middle age and married. —Because a payroll bandit was foiled a night or two ago in his efforts to rob pay- master J. W. Scureman, of the Burns Brothers Coal company of Grampian, of $4,000, the same man early on Monday morning set fire to a number of poultry houses on Mr. Scureman’s chicken farm and besides destroying the building burn- ‘ed about 500 chickens. —Joseph Guinter, who was born in Platt township, Lycoming county, in 1854, holds an unique record. He is a tenor and has sung in the Pine Street Methodist church, in Williamsport for thirty-seven years. Prior to that he was a member of the choir of the church at Larryville for eighteen years, making fifty-five years in consecu- tive service singing in two choirs. —Sixty-five pouches of second-class mail, twenty-two parcel post packages and twenty-three reels of moving picture films were destroyed when a freight car of the York Railways company was set on fire on Monday at Blairs station, York county. The freight car was ignited by a broken trolley wire. It was entirely con- sumed by the flames. The damage is es- timated at $20,000. —Seventy persons were arrested in a raid by state police on an alleged gam- bling house at McKees Rocks, a suburb of Pittsburgh, early Sunday morning, Ac- cording to the raiders, thousands of dol- lars were in play at various tables when they entered, but much of the money was Snatched up by players during the excite- ment. The state police said $1,665 was left on the tables. It was seized for evidence. —DBecoming hysterical when she discov- ered that she had burned her husband's pay envelope with an old pair of trousers, Mrs. Edward J. Dougherty, of Catasauqua, took poison. She is in the Allentown hos- pital and will recover. During the excite- ment Homer McHose, who recently moved to Catasauqua from Port Jervis, N. J., and who is suffering from a nervous break- down, drank some of the same poison. He, too, is expected to recover. —Free on parole for the last five years, after having served ten years of a twenty- five-year sentence in the western peniten- tiary for complicity in the kidnapping of Willie Whitla, wealthy Sharon, Pa., boy, Ilelen Bovle, now of Chicago, is seeking absolute freedom. Formal application for release from her parole, in effect a pardon, has been made to the State, Warden Ashe announced on Monday. The Boyle wom- an’s husband, Jimmy Boyle, who died in prison a few years ago, was given a life term, —The old covered bridge near Beech Creek is to be extensively repaired, fol- lowing a conference of the commissioners of Centre and Clinton counties. This bridge is an old landmark, and one of the few covered bridges left in that section. Several hundred persons use it each day, and motor traffic will be heavy over it since it is in the direct route to the mew Pennsylvania Railroad station being con- structed at Eagleville, to which place the agency will be moved from Beech Creek the first of the year. —The Pennsylvania Realty Investment company, of Allentown, has taken title to a tract of land along the west side of the Susquehanna river, at Shamokin dam, for $20,000. This is the holding company of the Pennsylvania Power and Light com- pany, which controls all of the lighting corporations in the northeastern part of the State. Upon the newly acquired site a $7,000,000 super-power plant will be built. Due to the almost inexhaustible supply of river water the corporation plans to make this one of the biggest plants in the east, it was said. —A strange case of mistaken identity was revealed at Pittsburgh, last Friday, when Patrick J. McDonough returned to his home after a week’s absence, to find his family mourning him as dead and gather- ed about the body of a stranger. The body had been identified as that of Me- Donough at the city morgue Thursday by the Rev. B. McDonough, a son, and also by a nephew. The body is now believed to be that of James Jones, a resident of a lo- cal hotel. The man had died of heart dis- ease last Thursday at the hospital. After McDonough’s joyous reunion with his family, the body of the stranger was again removed to the morgue. —After a chase of seven years by postal detectives Edward Bowser was arrested on Thursday at his home in Lajose, Clearfield county, on a charge of having robbed the postoffice at Winslow, Jefferson county, in August, 1917. At the time of the robbery $142.20 was taken from the postoffice. Three men were implicated, two of whom, Edward Eccelbarger and James Smith, were arrested at the time. Bowser escap- ed. He was known to have spent some time in Chicago and other western points. Some time ago he returned to Lajose and secured work in the mines. Upon learning this fact postal authorities soon located and arrested him. He was taken to Pitts- burgh for trial.