© INK SLINGS. —Just twenty days intervene. Have you done it? , —Senator Wheeler did great ‘wrong and some harm by joining La- Follette, but he can do vastly more re- pair work within ‘than ‘without the party. © —It must have been the scissors. Certainly it couldn’t have been the pen that made the Clearfield Rafts- man’s Journal admit, last week, that “business is rotten.” —We haven’t an idea who the next ‘Governor of Pennsylvania will be, but it is a foregone conclusion that the million Republicans in the State will have nothing to do with his selection. Andy Mellon will name him and they will vote him into office. —The Vancouver Sun says that a statesman is a man who understands that Wall Street is an extension of Main. Charley McCurdy said that long before the Sun gave the thought pub- licity. We believe it too, but we're not going to make any attempt at converting the other 114,999,998 peo- ple in this country of ours. —A Hazleton miner was born with ‘two thumbs on one hand. Recently he had them both cut off in an acci- dent. His compensation insurance guarantees him twelve dollars a week for sixty weeks for the loss of a _ thumb. But he has lost two and wants twenty-four dollars a week. If you had to decide that one what would you do about it? —OQur State chairman, Mr. Bige- low, has something to point to with pride. He cut down the debt of the organization he inherited and prom- ises to go into the next campaign with the slate clean. Cutting down the debt is very pretty, but when that means cutting down the vote as a con- sequence we think the Democrats would sooner have a few offices—even if they should necessitate “paying for a dead horse.” —Governor General Wood is consum- ing columns in the metropoltan jour- nals in which to tell us of the Ponzied condition of our wards, the Filipinos. We ought to be alarmed at what he _ says, for the Governor knows, or ought to, what Ponzied means. If our memory serves us aright there were reports not so long ago that a Republican national convention was nearly Ponzied into making him its nominee for President. - _ —The all absorbing question on the streets of Bellefonte now is: “Who “you think will be appointed Judge ie county ?” People are not mere- us in asking the question. It iter of concern to every one, rn which fanaticism, preju- exponent and we think the sentiment of the people of Centre county, if it could be expressed, would be over- whelmingly of the same opinion. —The ‘Altoona Tribune is thankful two turkeys aboard the ark. Of course it was a nice thing for Barn- um’s predecessor in the menagerie business to have done, but Noah could have saved a whole flock of turkeys from the flood and the Tribune’s par- agrapher wouldn’t be bleating his thankfulness had it not been for the angelic little dove that lit on its roof in the person of Col. Henry W., and told all hands that turkey was possi- ble. —It wasn’t State that was licked at Pittsburgh on Thanksgiving day. was a team on which there have been too many players who think: “That’s the bunk,” when college spirit is spok- en of. The brain, the brawn and the coaching are there, but the heart and the will seems to be delving ’round in Russia to find what Wood, Atherton, Robinson, Sweet, Fay, McCaskey, “Mother” Dunn, Henry, Vorhis, Mauthe, Very, Berryman, Miller, Lamb, Killinger, real State heroes have left lying at their very door. "dice or incompetency should have no | It: | i 1 i i a Themen ir _VOL. 69. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. Pinchot “Starts Something.” In a letter addressed to the Sena- tors and Representatives in the Gen- eral Assembly Governor Pinchot im- plies some rather grave for the general fund out of which cur- rent expenses are to be paid. The Governor appears to see no reason for such a prediction and recites former faulty estimates of the Auditor Gen- eral to show that he is unreliable. In recent years the collections during each biennium have progressively in- creased over those of the preceding equal period and Mr. Pinchot thinks there will be no reversal of the rule. There thas been some feeling be- tween the Governor and the Auditor General for some time and it is pos- sible that the letter in question was inspired by a spirt of resentment. It will be remembered that during the recent campaign, in a speech at Wil- liamsport, the Auditor General ac- cused the Governor of falsely claim- ing that he had saved a large amount of money to the people by wise econ- omies in administration. The contro- versy which might have been started then was averted by a machine order muzzling the accuser “until after the election.” The Governor may imag- ine the present an auspicious time to start something and without reflec- tion as to how it will end opens the battle. The Governor’s letter contains a confusing jumble of figures intended and expected to show that he was not responsible for the increased taxes imposed by the last Legislature ‘and will not be responsible for the in- crease which will be necessary during the coming session. He seems to be an adept at “passing the buck” and persistent in claiming credit for re- sults never achieved. But for the present he has the advantage of his adversary. Nobody can understand his figures and because of his high of- fice public credulity will give him the benefit of the doubt. But it is a safe guess that his statements will be ans- weredy mditot General is not a man of the ‘timid or shrinking type. In an entirely casual way it may be remarked that the vote of New York city at the recent election . yy 8 1 because Noah had wit enough to take {Will not, gredtly | promote . Governor Smith’s chances for election as Pres- ident in the future. ‘ Automobile Revenues Properly Used. It is said that during the coming session of the Legislature a strenu- ous effort will be made by Senators and Representatives of Philadelphia and Pittsburgh to so amend the high- way laws as to divert a part of the automobile revenues from the State to the local treasuries. Chief engi- neer Connell, of the Highway Depart- ment, though a Philadelphian, is op- posed to the proposition, wisely and justly. He reasons that all the mon- ey so acquired is and will be needed to keep the highways of the State in proper repair. The road program for the next two years is both comprehen- sive and important. There is some reason in the propo- sition that the big cities contribute in , large proportion to the automobile Wilson and other | yevenues and are entitled to a fair share of the advantages of good roads. But it must be admitted that —In another paragraph we have they cause in “equal ratio the damage to stated that ‘Andy Mellon will name the highways which _absorb the reve- the next Republican candidate for nues in making repairs. The big city Governor. Since writing it, we have learned that Andy’s finger of prefer- ment is showing signs of pointing to- wards Hollidaysburg and singling out Judge Baldridge. Whether the Judge would give up the eight years of his unexpired term on the Blair county bench for a chance to have four in the executive chambers in Harrisburg would be a matter for him to decide, but if he did, and won, Pennsylvania would have a very pleasing as well as able Governor and a Republican about whose stalwartness nobody could have a doubt. —The State Game Commission, the sportsmen and the farmers—of the South. Mountain particularly—have been meeting to solve the problem of destruction that deer do to the trees and crops of farmers in sections where they are over plentiful. Some have advocated fencing against them. Oth- ers want to kill off a lot of the does. And some think the State ought to pay for the damage done. Fencing against them would seem almost im- possible, certainly very expensive. Killing off a lot of the does would be no assurance that those left would not continue nipping tree buds and brows- ing on young grain. Paying for the damage done is the proper corrective, to our mind. It would be more satis- factory and not half so expensive as helping to keep up an eight foot wire fence around all the cultivated land abutting on mountains where deer run. ! | automobles have almost the exclusive use of the city streets. Now and then a country vehicle is driven into Phil- adelphia or Pittsburgh on time sched- ules made by the . city authorities which inflict little harm. But all the time the country highways are used by city automobiles, usually running at high rates of speed, to the full en- joyment of their occupants. The people of the country offer no objection to the free use of the high- ways by city automobile owners. On the contrary they welcome them with generous hospitality. But they feel that it is fair and reasonable that the revenues acquired from automobile taxation are properly expended under existing laws in the maintenance of the roads in such conditions as to give pleasure to the owners and users of the machines, whether living in the city or country. It would be a hard- ship, as Mr. Connell says, to divert any part of the highway revenues from the purpose contemplated by the present laws. ——Recurring to the proposed sus- quicentennial it appears that the only thing Philadelphia can raise is a Re- publican majority, and that is accom- plished by fraud. ——Republican managers are wast- ing time in urging Secretary Mellon to accept the party leadership. A ten- der of the office to Pinchot will solve the problem instantly. charges against Auditor General Lewis. Gen- eral Lewis, in a recent estimate of the | revenues for the ensuing biennium, in- | dicated a falling off of the receipts The Triumph of a Personality. It isn’t with sorrow that we attempt | tribute to the memory of Henry Cros- | ky Quigley. Only those of his blood could feel more keenly the shock of his passing than we of his friends, so out of the sadness of it all comes sol- ace in the thought that his impression on our lives was worth while. The career so abruptly ended, yet certainly completed, was unusual in that it reveals no great, outstanding achievement such as we are prone to “acclaim in the professonal, the sci- entific, the business avocations of men. It was one in which a soul, seeking to be known, expressing itself in the twinkle of an eye, the break of a smile, burrowed irresistibly into the hearts and affections of his fellows. When Henry Quigley, the lawyer, became “your Honor,” President Judge of the courts of Centre county the chrysalistic shell split and there was a strong, dominant, full hearted character, so shorn of superficialities, that all could see the worth that had been unseen. With dignity, fairness and compassion he sat in judgment of us all and who can say that he was not a just Judge? : Long since have we admitted our failure to properly appraise the char- acter of our friend. No paper pro- tested his fight for a chance more earnestly than the “Watchman.” But he lived and wrought to show that what we thought to be froth was only the quartz that had concealed real gold. Judge Quigley, in almost his first official act, abandoned the needless and expensive practice of spreading ‘our court sessions out over two week periods. He devoted himself so dil- igently to his duties here that the bus- ; iness ‘of the court was always up and without prejudice to it he found time to preside in many other districts of the State. The honor of the impres- sion and friends he made abroad was his, but Centre county and Bellefonte, specially, preened itself in the reflec- tion of the tributes that were paid him. He was almost the last link in the chain of men who have held the eye of the. outside world on a town known from -its- founding fer-distin- guished sons. He could wither with a look. He could scourge with a torrent of vin- dictive, but following after always came the smile of the soul that made his a rare personality, the very witch- ery'of which cemented friendships and disarmed enemies. ——Speaking of our old friend Barkis, Bill Vare is equally willin’ to accept any leadership that is offered. Then and Now. In expelling Senators LaFollette, Brookhart, Ladd and Frazier from the Republican party, the Republican Senatorial caucus reverted to the methods of Quay and Penrose in Pennsylvania. Appropriately the Pennsylvania Senators sponsored the movement. Senator Reed introduced the resolution and Senator Pepper in- terpreted it as an expression of Penn- sylvania policy. “We get results in Pennsylvania by party organization,” he declared. “If the efficiency with which the party is managed in Penn- sylvania is to be duplicated else- where,” he continued, “the principles of party organization which we recog- nize in Pennsylvania must be insist- ed upon, no matter who is affected.” For years Mr. George Wharton Pepper cherished an inordinate lust for the power, patronage and emolu- ments of public office. But he didn’t understand the “principles of . party organization,” then as now recogniz- ed in Pennsylvania. He talked of : church obligations and moral stand- ards as essentials in government serv- ice and Penrose consistently opposed his ambitions. After the death of Penrose, however, Mr. Pepper was in- tiated into the mysteries of party or- ganization as recognized in Pennsyl- ,vania. “A renegade is worse than ten Turks,” and now that Pepper has been installed as a party leader he has become an extremist. Penrose wouldn’t allow him in office but never | , “read him out of the party.” In 1912 Mr. Pepper was one of the most active supporters of the Roose- | velt “bolt” of the party nominee for | President. Senators Brookhart, Fra- | zier and Ladd committed no greater party crime this year than Pepper perpetrated then and LaFollette is no more culpable now than Roosevelt | was then. But “the principles of par- ty organization” as recognized in Pennsylvania were not so widely pop- i ular then as now. Corruption was not | then recognized as a claim for public | favor and bribery and perfidy were | penalized rather than rewarded then. | Fortunately for Mr. Pepper Penrose is dead and hypocrisy has become a virtue in politics in order to secure ef- ficiency in party management. —————— ye ————— ——Photoradiograms may be nov- elties but they cut a poor figure as utilities. ! Vague Promise of Improvement. { Magistrate O’Connor, of Philadel- { phia, has made public proclamation | that he will prevent the re-election of | William S. Vare to Congress. This is ! rather a vague promise of improve- | ment in the Congressional personnel in Pennsylvania. The next election of { Congressmen is two years in the fu- ‘ture and Philadelphia politicians | transfer their friendships and shift | their enmities frequently. About two : do something to Mr. Vare and did ! make a fight against one of the Vare satellites for a seat in the Republican city committee. But their differences ‘seem to have been adjusted in one way , or another for Vare has been elected | twice since. It is rather pleasant, however, to ‘hear of a contemplated rebellion | against the dominance of the corrupt boss of Philadelphia politics even though it is difficult to put faith in the execution of the threat. The Phila- delphia machine is the source of most of the political iniquity in Pennsylva- nia and the defeat of the principal op- erator would necessarily impair its efficiency for evil. Moreover there is encouragement in the prospect of a war among the crooks that inspires hope. Magistrate O’Connor is un- questionably a force in the slum re- gion of the city where the Vare self to the task he might accomplish the result he professes to desire. But we don’t intend to lay any wa- gers either on the ability of Mr. Mr. Vare or the sincerity of his dec- laration on the subject. Possibly the Magistrate was influenced to make the threat against Vare by some purpose entirely outside of the Congressional election. Maybe O’Connor wants some servile supporter put into a berth that will provide a meal ticket through the winter and that he imag- ines Vare will take him seriously | enough to hand out the patronage. i On the other hand it is possible that he cherishes resentments of past dis- to put up erce anc a ye courage. ——If Senator Curtis is true to the traditions of his race he will start a war dance whenever conditions be- come critical in the Senate. “Rattling the Saber.” Ten years ago an Austrian noble- man, while traveling in Servia, was assassinated by an irresponsible crank on the street. Urged by the German rations. Servia offered to comply with most of the requirements but protested against some of the condi- tions. Still under the spur of the Kai- ser’s urge Austria demanded “the pound of flesh.” The greatest and the world ensued. Some time ago a distinguished cit- izen and public official of Great Brit- ain was assassinated in the street in Cairo, Egypt. The government of Egypt had nothing to do with the af- fair either as principal or accessory. But the British government promptly made demands for reparation and be- sides asking for two-and-a-half mil- lions of dollars as indemnity to the Sirdar’s family named other = condi- tions which were regarded by Egypt- ian statesmen as unreasonable: Im- mediately the British authorities be- gan “rattling the saber” and threaten- ing all sorts of condign punishment unless their demards were complied with. t Experience is a dear teacher and sometimes inefficient. The experience of ten years ago ought to have taught Great Britain that bullying a weak competitor is a poor way of obtaining results. Happily in this case Egypt is too weak or lacks the spirit reveal- ed by Servia and therefore what might have resulted in another world war is averted. But the methods of coercion applied under direct orders from Lon- don will not win the admiration of a i civilized world, however effective it | may be in achieving results. | —The young Mr. Senator Reed might well have a care before he reads { too much of the brains out of his par- i ty. It is not in evidence that he has anything to compensate for the loss of the minds that he wants to purge it of. ——1It would be interesting to spec- ulate on what General Dawes will say when a Senator appeals from his de- cision. ——Members of the Legislature are now in the favored class. They are on the State pay roll. ————————— ——State secrets in England ap- . pear to consist of nasty things about I nasty people. O’Connor to prevent the re-election of | appointments along that line suffi- BELLEFONTE, PA.. DECEMBER 5. 1924. NO. 48. Penrose and Reed. From the Philadelphia Record. | Senator Reed, of Pittsburgh, is comparatively young in politics, State or national, but he emphasized the new order of things in Washington when he was put forward in the con- { ference of Republican Senators to in- : troduce the resolution inviting Sena- tors La Follette, Ladd, Brookhart and Frazier to absent themselves from fu- ture Republican conferences and de- claring that none of them shall be i | years ago Mr. O’Connor threatened to | ¢hosen to fill any Republican vacan- cies in Senate committees. The Reed resolution was adopted, of course, and at the same meeting Senator Curtis, of Kansas, a bolter himself only a few years ago and supporter of a Demo- cratic Senatorial candidate, was chos- en leader in place of Lodge. Many of the vociferous “ayes” shouted by Re- publican Senators came from men who followed the insurgent Roosevelt into the Progressive fold in 1912. Party discipline must be maintained—if pos- sible—but it all depends, after all, on whose ox is gored. National chair- man Butler approved of the Reed pro- ject of political ostracism, while Sen- ator Borah, with a better understand- ing of western sentiment, shakes his long, black locks and expresses vigor- ous dissent. To the casual observer it may look Year to see the young Senator from ennsylvania take such a determined stand against La Follette and his ‘ small following in the Senate. It isa matter of camparatively recent histo- strength lies and if he would set him- ! ry that the late Senator Penrose, who was a good deal of a regular Republi- can himself, maintained intimate re- | lations with the Wisconsin Senator. { i . proval. He sought and obtained La Follette’s help to hold his place at the head of the powerful Senate Finance commit- tee. It is a safe guess that if Penrose were living today no Republican -Sen- ate conference would have considered, much less adopted, sucha resolution of rebuke to La Folletté and his friends as Senator Reed presented. Mr. Coolidge and the World Court. From the New York World. 2 Whether or not the World Court proposals will be neglected in a com- mittee of the Senate during another session of Congress, as Senator Swan- son, of Virginia, fears, is a matter which Mr. Coolidge may help to deter- “mine. - It is riot at all likel DI ey will go through unaided or of their own weight. Mr. Coolidge took over from Presi- dent Harding the plan of American participation in the World Court. As a matter of duty he gave it his ap- But, however strongly he may believe in it, he has been more : languid than vigorous in its support. It has fallen to Secretary Hughes to i figure as its active advocate on behalf | | i of the administration, and the Secre- tary of State, as an occasional public speaker, possesses no such powers of persuasion with the Senate as Mr. Kaiser the government of Austria | Coolidge acting in his own right. made preposterous demands upon the | people of Serva in the matter of repa- | World Court proposals gather dust, he If Mr. Coolidge is content to let the will hardly find Republican Senators eager to go counter to his wishes. They : will accept his indifference as a signal for doing nothing. But if he really holds the World Court close at heart and intends to commit the administra- tion by word and act to the promotion most destructive war in the history of | of world peace in co-operation with other nations, he will not subseribe to a policy of inaction. The President is not helpless, ex- cept as he decides to remain helpless. If he wants encouragement in pressing the issue of the World Court, let him listen to the voice of the churches all over the country and of citizens who look to him for leadership. He must , be prepared to face opposition, honest and malicious, and stand firm. Mr. Wilbur Guards a Secret. From the New York World. « When the firing ceased and the su- per-dreadnaught Washington sank under the waters, there was one of two conclusions to be drawn by naval experts. Either we were away behind all modern standards in the matter of guns, because they took so long to sink the Washington, or because the Washington went down before her sinking might have been expected we were away behnd in armor plate. Secretary Wilbur, however, isn’t satisfied with this much or content to let the navy go about the business of applying what it learned without some public comment on his own part. Bred to the telling of bed-time stories in years gone by, the desire to rush into print never fails him: No sooner has the Washington gone down than up he comes with a pronouncement. All sorts of fascinating facts, he says, were learned by his bomb-bursting off the Capes. Tell anybody what they were? Not much! This is our secret. “To state with any detail the nature and character of the experiments con- ducted upon the hull of this ship would be not only to give foreign nations the advantages of the expenditures in- volved on our part, but”—and so forth. Then why not keep still about it in- stead of broadcasting the news that we have something to conceal? Be- cause broadcasting is the Secretary’s second nature. Who ever heard of a small boy having a secret without trumpeting the news to everybody in his block? Mr. Wilbur started out with bed-time stories and has never quite grown up. —1If you see it in the “Watchman” it’s all true. SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Lester Ogden, 19 years old, accidental- ly shot and killed his brother Alvin, aged 8 years, ‘at their home near Clearfiield on Friday night. The boys had taken two guns not supposed to be loaded and went out in the yard to fight a duel, but the one gun, unfortunately, was loaded. —Missing from her home for over a week, the body of Mrs. Mary Ostrawski, of Mt. Carmel, was found lying underneath a tree near Centralia by three hunters. A piece of her dress found tied around her neck and another shred hung from a limb of a tree, leading authorities to believe she took her life. —There are more than 200 cigar facto- ries in Red Lion, a town that was incor- porated in 1880. More than 50 per cent. of the inhabitants are connected with that in- dustry. The town’s streets are paved to a total of 71 per cent., five of the seven miles of highways being thus improved. The paving has been done within the last three years, at a cost of $500,000. —4“I don’t want money; I want my Bil- ly back,” tearfully said Mrs. William My- er, wife of a Pennsylvania Railroad freight conductor, whom she cited into eourt at Hollidaysburg, on Saturday, for separate maintenances after a quarrel two weeks ago. Myer shook his head. They had been married 31 years. Judge Baldridge de- creed that Myer should give his wife 25 per cent. of his wages monthly. —The twenty-one thousandths of an acre of land caused an action to be brought in the Northumberland county court last Wednesday. It is located at Elysburg and is worth probably $10, lawyers said. The Pennsylvania Railroad claims it is the owner and is seeking to take the property from E. P. and Martin L. Vought, millers. Court costs will eat up the value of the property many times, it was said. —Refusing to sew a button on her hus- band’s ‘vest until she dried the dishes, Mrs. Mary Redidsky was shot and serious- ly wounded by her husband John, who then killed himself at their home in Dai- sytown, Fayette county, late Friday night. Mrs. Redidsky’s condition is critical. Eight children, ranging in age from 7 to 20 years, survive the domestic quarrel, which result- ed in an attempted murder and suicide. —Two bandits, masked and armed, on Saturday gagged Arthur Etienne, lone clerk in the office of the Marion Center Coal Mining company, near Barnesboro, Cam- bria county, and got away with $6000. They left behind close to $15,000, the re- mainder of the company’s payroll. Good descriptions of the men were obtained from two women who saw them leave the office building and who spread the alarm. —Work of the young men running lines for ‘the new construction of the Harris- burg bridge attracts much attention from people who walk and drive over the big island. The preliminaries to actual work are well in hand, but some lines are being run. The approaching job is to be seen in the cutting down of trees which have grown along the sides of the causeway, one long on the lower edge having gone the way of the ax. —Mrs. Luther K. Gerth, of York, has brought suit against the Pennsylvania railroad for $100,000 for the loss of her husband, who was shot to death in a mail car near Sunbury a year ago. Gerth was killed, when a revolver dropped from a fel- lew mail clerk's holster as he leaned over - to do some work. The widow alleges neg- ligence in train operation, saying the jolt in stopping was too heavy. The case will be tried in the federal court. —After drilling for 30 months, engineers in charge of a test well at Longbridge, near Latrobe, Pa., struck gas at a depth of 7,428 feet, the deepest well in the world. The gas is flowing at the rate of 500,000 cubic feet a day. The engineers brought in a producer in the Oriskan sand at 6,- 822 feet in the same region several years ago. At that time the Oriskan sand was the deepest ever reached by a drill. Work on the 7,428-foot well was started in 1922. —Eflie, aged 3, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. mil Offenbach, was burned to death last Thursday, when fire destroyed the Offen- bach home at I{yde, near Clearfield. The fire is supposed to have been caused by an overheated stove. Mrs. Offenbach and another daughter, Edith, aged 20, were also imprisoned on the second floor by flames and smoke. Edith was forced to jump from a second story window and in s0 doing received a fracture of the leg and suffered internal injuries. . —Playing the role of “human fly,” on Saturday, Carl Kagel, young son of Thom- as Kagel, of Northampton, climbed up the front of one of the town’s highest build- ings. When he turned to wave greetings to admiring young friends, he fell forty feet to the sidewalk. He landed on his feet, but immediately collapsed and was picked up for dead. He revived soon, however, and when examined by a physi- cian, was found to be more frightened than hurt. —Charged with murdering her thirteen days old baby, Mrs. Helen Warfield, 32 vears of age, a widow, and Mike Marku- lick were arrested at Mount Union Satur- day night. The body was found in a glow- ing ash deposit at a factory in Hunting- don, where Markulick, it is alleged, con- fessed he secreted it. Marks on it, police say, point to strangulation. Previously it had been hidden four days in the wom- ans home, it was alleged. Mrs. Warfield was transferred from jail to a hospital on Sunday. —Harry W. Jackson, president and man- ager of the Jackson Vitrified China com- pany, of DuBois, and William Darden, of Chicago, the sales manager, were shot and killed at noon last Wednesday by John Soukup, of Cleveland, according to the po- lice, who declared that Soukup then shot himself through the head, dying instantly. A dispute over wages claimed by Soukup to have been due from another company which formerly operated the china plant, was said to have been responsible for the tragedy. —~Cletus Yoder, seven year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel K. Yoder, residing a short distance west of Belleville, Mifflin county, met with a tragic death on Satur- day afternoon, at the Belleville flour mills, where the boy accidentally stepped into an open. trap door into the hopper of the mixer of the mills, and was instantly killed. The revolving machinery of the mills was stopped as soon as it was pos- sible, but not until the lad had been crush- ed to death in the mixer which prepares the grain for grinding into flour. The belting leading .to the mixer was quickly cut to save the boys life, but-the little life had been crushed out before the belt was cut in twain. The boy's head was severe- ly cut, indicating that he fell through the open trap deor into the mixer head-first.