Bema ican INK SLINGS. «~The hope that they have a “kick” coming is the one that springs eternal in the breast of the “wet”. "—If they keep on cracking up the ships and killing their pilots the New York to Paris hop will be indefinitely postponed. ——Senator Pepper may “sign up” as president of one of the big leagues. Well, he didn’t “make a hit” in polities. ——President Green, of the Amer- ican Federation of Labor, expresses faith in China democracy. Mr. Green is very optimistic. ——Herbert Hoover has been giv- en another chance for a period on the front page and it strengthens the ru- mor that he is the legatee. —The boys are not so much inter- ested in amplifiers for the political candidate’s voice as they are for am- plifiers for his pocket book. —One but needs look at the many musical programs that are presented in Bellefonte to realize that most of them are founded on Bible. —Talking about revivals, the Odd Fellows band seems to be having one. I¥ was on parade, Wednesday even- ing, greatly augmented in numbers. . —Come to think of it wouldn’t it be cheaper in the end to dredge the channel of the Mississippi deeper than to build the levees higher and stronger. —-There is still time for the onion snow, but we fear we'll have to scratch the “saplin bender” as a pos- sible spring entrant. It’s surely got- ten lost, somewhere. —All we have to say about the Snyder-Gray case that is causing a sensation over in Queens Village, N. Y., is this: If Ruth Snyder had been “straight” Judd Gray might not have been “crooked.” —The electric service to the rural districts of Centre county ought to be extended at once. So many can- didates are getting into the race that more poles on which to tack their pictures are sorely needed. —It is very easy for traveling pro- ducers of amateur shows to order lit- tle children to rehearsal at the mid- night hour, but it isn’t conducive to the peace of mind of their parents or necessary, under any circumstances. “Hampy,” Moore has entered George B. Cortelyou, of New York, into the Presidential race. Mr. Cort- elyou has held lots of offices and is rich in political experience, but Cool- idge has “an edge” in the patronage. —Bottom land along the Mississ- ippi is wonderfully fertile. The cli- mate of California is gloriously sal- ubrious. Florida offers great oppor- tunities in truck gardening and is a lovely place to winter. There are flies in all their ointments, however. Floods, earthquakes and land sharks, for instance. —Gee, how the time flies. It seems but yesterday that we were writing our New Year’s greeting to you and this is the seventeenth edition of the Watchman since. Only eight more and the year will be half through. In boyhood it seemed a century from ‘Christmas to Christmas. _ Now we scarcely get rid of the old tree be- fore we have to start the hunt for the new cne. —The war in China is over tempor- arily. All sides having run out of ammunition a general order to cease firing has gone out. China used to have just as good a time carrying on warfare with wooden guns as she is having now with modern arms and she never ran out of ammunition for them, for they were used only as clubs. Let’s see—who was the slick chink who equipped the army with wooden guns? His name has slipped us. —Boomers of Bellefonte should al- ways have at their tongues end the slogan that this is the best paying station on the best paying single tracked railroad in the world. Other towns might have furnished their State with as many Governors. We know of at least one with a bigger spring than we have: There are two ‘that we know of that can boast of the fish in the brooks that flow through them. But where is the town that holds such a record for originating freight. —The Prince of Wales evidently has a heart, notwithstanding the be- lief to the contrary of all the dowa- gers with eligible daughters. He has declined to go to a bull fight that had been arranged as part of the enter- tainment for him during his visit in Spain. It appears that Wales saw one and that was enough. We have never seen a bull fight, but from no less authority than the lamented edi- tor of this paper we have it that of all brutal, heartless spectacles con- jured up for public entertainment the national sport of the Castilian is the lowest. —We had a bad spell, the other evening. During a period of retros- pection and self analysis the ghosts of the days when we wrote all of the obituaries for the Watchman ap- peared in the dying embers of the fire we were ensconsced before. Out of the little wisps of blue grey smoke that curled up as the logs broke and fell into the embers below them came the wraiths of hundreds. Not one Pointed an accusing finger at us, for Wwe had sent them all to Heaven. We wondered, . afterwards, however, ‘whether we had been laying up treas- ures there when we did it. : STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 72. Governor’s Profession will be Tested. The sincerity of Governor Fisher’s expressed desire for honest elections in Pennsylvania, now widely ques- tioned, will be put to an acid test when he appoints Registration Com- missioners for Philadelphia and Pitts- burgh. In an interesting article in The Forum, for May, recently issued, Mr. Thomas Raeburn White, a promi- ; nent lawyer in Philadelphia and ' chairman of the Committee of Seven- : ty, tells of an investigation of an election in that city in 1925. “In one division,” he says, “sixty-four false names were registered. Some of them were names of persons who had once lived in the district and removed, others of persons who had died and others were fictitious. The record showed that votes were falsely cast in the names of fifty of these persons | and that many names had been voted two, three and four times. The total : of illegal votes shown in this district | was 101 out of 375 recorded.” It is understood that William S.| Vare is making a great fight to get | men of his own selection. The law provides for minority representation on these boards and Mr. Vare pro- poses to name the two Republican members and one Democratic mem- ber while Joe Grundy claims the right to name the other Democrat. Of course the purpose of this conspiracy is to make the board unanimously Republican and Mr. Vare the abso- lute controller of their actions thus perpetuating zero returns when need- ed to overcome the honest vote of the people of the State as was done in the Senatorial election last fall. The Democrats whom these two machine bosses will select will be of the per- fidious type who register as Demo- crats for the purpose of betraying that party. A precisely similar de- mand has been made in Pittsburgh by Senator Max Leslie and it is be- lieved Chairman Mellon will support them. Governor Pinchot gave a good deal of attention to this subject while he was in office and organized a board in Philadelphia which the Public Ledger declares rendered faithful and valuable service. Under th~ existing system it was Smpessible to weed out the fraudulent ‘names in the brief time allowed by the law. But not- withstanding this fact the names were stricken from the list and a great deal of fraud prevented. If Governor Fisher will name for this important service the men chosen by Vare and Grundy in Philadelphia and Leslie in Pittsburgh it will show that he is in full sympathy with the politi- cal pirates whose only aim is to steal elections. The honest people of Phila- delphia favor the retention of the present board in that city. The mem- bers have proved their integrity and in so far as it was possible demon- strated their efficiency. It is up to the Governor to show his sincerity. ! ' ——The gathering of state news- paper corespondents, politicians and others at the estate of Col. Theodore Davis Boal, at Boalsburg, last week, was something more than merely one of the Colonel’s many evidences of hospitality. It is said that plans were laid for a continuation of the effort to have the State buy the immense tract of land in “Barrens” of Pat- ton and Halfmoon townships for use as an encampment ground for the National Guard. The project was up before the last Legislature, but was defeated by alobby from Lebanon county which was interested in retain- ing the site at Mt. Gretna. The latter place is said to be too small and en- tirely inadequate for use as a prov- ing ground, especially for the modern long range ordance. ——Aimee McPherson is threaten- ed with the loss of her church. The loss of her reputation didn’t bother her much but the loss of her church touches that tender spot, the pocket book. : ——The Mississippi flood has beat- en all records as a devastating agent, and the relief of the sufferers in the region covered makes a strong appeal to the benevolence of the country. SAE RRL ——Aviator Byrd, who is about to make a non-stop flight to Paris, has the nerve. The other day he broke his wrist in an accident and set it him- self. ———— ye te— -——Governor Fisher is “patting himself on the back” for his work in favor of honest elections. His work also greatly pleased Mr. Vare. ——O0ld King Coal appears to ‘be “coming into his own” again. Ship- ments on the Lehigh Valley last week touched close to the record. ——DMint and eloves have served their purpose fairly well for a long time but a recent invention promises Local Interest in Hospitals. There may be some reason for the complaint of Mrs. E. S. H. McCauley, recently appointed State Secretary of Welfare, expressed at a meeting of the Hospital Association of Pennsyl- vania, held in Philadelphia the other day. Local communities in which hospitals are located may not be as liberal as formerly in contributing to the support of this worthy form of benevolence. The prosperity as well as the efficiency of the local hospital used to be a subject of great care and pride to the charitably inclined men and women of Pennsylvania, of | to make contribu- According to Mrs. McCauley subsided. It has mighty hard sufficient means tions. this interest has been getting some knocks. Within a few recent years the Sys- tem of conducting these admirable local enterprises has been greatly changed. The spirit of beneficence which created and subsequently to a great extent maintained them has not in the least abated. But the splendid men and women who freely gave time, money and labor to the work are no longer allowed to exercise the meas- ure of control to which they are en- titled, and which is the only recom- pense they ever received or desired for the sacrifices necessarily made in procuring the hospitals. greedy hand of centralized authority at Harrisburg has been stretched out in every direction and set those most interested aside in the management. Under the system of administra- tion devised by the authorities at Harrisburg control of local hospitals has gradually been centralized in the Department of Public Welfare and local management is really in name only. Standards have been raised The too. BELLEFONTE, PA.. APRIL 29. 192%. Ripping to Begin Shortly. The new has announced that the weeding out process in that department “will be begun shortly.” Several of the more important officials have been “slated for the toboggan.” Of course he will not be influenced by factional politics the public that the impending reor- increasing efficiency “in the best pos- sible manner.” Among those to go are W. H. Connell, chief engineer, for some time acting commissioier, W. A. Vanduser, chief of mainten- {ance work and Thomas Fry, fiscal officer of the department. Benjamin G. Eynon, register of motor vehicles had been slated for sacrifice, but pow- | erful friends rescued him. According to the Harrisburg cor- espondent of the Philadelphia Rec- ‘ord the three officials named above (have “incurred the enmity of the Grundy faction in State politics” and it is easy to see that they are ineffi- cient public officials. Besides that the ! Mellon machine in Pittsburgh is hav- ‘ing trouble and it is believed that the . tender of the place held by Mr. Con- ‘nell, chief engineer, will go a long way toward “calming the troubled waters” in the boss’ home town. If that be true and it seems to be, the best possible way of increasing effi- “ciency in the service will be in the ap- pointment of Emanuel D. Foster, of Pittsburgh, who is now an aspirant {for County Commissioner and a dis- | turber of Chairman Mellon’s peace of mind. Rumors have been running in polit- { ical circles for some time that the Secretary of the Department, Mr. | Stuart of Pittsburgh, has resigned or !is about to resign in the near future, Secretary of Highways ! in making these changes. He assures | ganization will be for the purpose of ' and charges fixed without regard for | but he denies it. Admitting that he the ability of the community to meet accepted the office somewhat relue- them. This is done under threat that tantly he now says he has no inten- appropriations from the State will tion “of his own accord of stepping either be reduced or with-held entire- | out.” Mr. Stuart is not a practical ly unless all such arbitrary rulings | politician and the orders to “rip up” are complied with. | the department may have provoked It’s small wonder that local phil- him to say things which were inter- anthrophy grows cold. It is only the | preted as an intention to resign. But things in which people feel that they ; if he had such an intention he has have a voicg in directing that arouse his mind, and it-may be safe- the earnest interest of the individual. |ly said that the good of the party And Mrs. McCauley would do well to | rather than of the public service is look to the insidious usurpations of the influencing reason for the her own department if she would change. oilly Sal the cause of the indiffer- | ence she complains of it. tn It is true not only of the hospitals, ———The West Chester Legionaires but of the roads and the schools of the | appear to have started something State. We elect supervisors and that’s hard to finish. school directors, but they are so | hedged about by political appointees | at Harrisburg as to be little more | | ‘ that rubber stamps. 2 i President Coolidge is wisely a si- OE ——e—————— ; lent man, for when he speaks he con- —Well, the “Afaletics” got off to a fuses rather than informs the pub- poor start, but may be that’s a good j lic mind. Only a short time ago he omen. was practically threatening Mexico, through the Secretary of State, with invasion, because of alleged but un- defined infringements upon the rights . . s i ially properties, At a hearing of a’ defendant in the “and Properties, oper! 8 office of one of the Aldermen of Har. | © Citizens of this country. So far isburg, th . as the public has information the gov- as 2 sine day, on a charge of ernment of Mexico has not receded in reckless driving of an automobile on ; a public highw G _ the least from its attitude on the a us a ane sii v Tages | questions then in controversy, but in by counsel forthe defendant why he 2 en the as ls Sher 3 } ply was that he is the owner of ua Of newspaper publishers that the automobile and in pursuit of his busi- | ove of Deurs Bs now gro ness activities drives approximalely apne Tis Sw acre et. vou bel.” 80,000 miles a year, This fact vests re a. for EY hy, in our indi a dosp Interest in safety on | a Mexico Ts to the public highways, and the surest the! Predidert. lies 3 he fact ne a way to secure safety is to prosecute , “© t Bl er : Jos In has: bee : and punish those automobile drivers | a ors ~ ng ois A who recklessly run their machines IA 2 Co es e oan a jeopardize the lives and proper- Coolidge om aShington, ; Automobile esents Bem eecome Hotu but Squaly sive. ang : : mewhat mysterious. He abhors $0 numerous and destructive of life se , t th h ficial and property in recent years that the heyy s=rep PR bn oe « 3 » men tal, energy ok en and women, in telligence and the fairness of the peo- 0 oi authority, is constantly le. Th titution of Mexico a pr I a Sr AA) 2 Meri ga e evil, gislation, however “7 : ar ie rn exo | 00 Seep] inte pin Sony an e police power seems inade- bite : A quate to the task. For that reason the i) apg the P jesiens wpe witness in question declared that he | ba d 0 -. our a ms i d ) has resolved to do all he can to assist fale 1 e Syiden Y Jesoried to the authorities in their beneficent Serre SD omass: hich it hoped work, He is willing to appear and tes- the dh d e Syus w a as Ropes tify against any reckless driver whose dil wa o mina derstandi dangerous action imperils the lives of iD Macy 33 od en ib nn i others, even though inconvenienced Se = EN Eran the add In nin ii Dirposes if the case Sota of No Wilson 1 comes within his observation. 5 : : i the event Gérmany was defeated in It must appear to ‘any reflecting that struggle. But according to the mind that this statement of a case in |. nfere tc be d fr th point suggests the best preventive Pe, SEL Nem te that has been offered. The vast ma- on Monday evening, as soon as he dis- Jority of automobile users are ecare- covered that he couldn't terrify Mex- ful and conservative on the highways. ico he entered into secret ne tian But there is a considerable minority, with her Ambassador at Washi composed largely of boys and men and. found din Agor angie Secret Diplomacy Revived. ————— eens Recklessness on the Highway. | is not only proverbially: | their © way. to put them out of buisness. ¥ , ,|2nd women addicted to indulgencies and joy riders, who plunge at high rates of speed into perilous situations and in trying to extricate themselves smash into any obstacle in the road and kill whoever happens to be in If every‘ conservative driver would adopt the policy of the witness referred to above there would be less recklessness on the road or more penaltiés inflicted. “cause of quarrel,” between the two Republics, and that Mexico had no intention of injuring any one or im- | pairing any contract with Americans or anybody else. ——The ‘ground was frozen fairly stiff, last Saturday morning, and be- tween six and séven in the evening snowflakes were flying. NO. 17. | THE SOUL OF OUR HOSPITAL. A vacant house is little more than a pile of cold stone—it takes people to make it a home. Likewise, a hos- pital depends upon its personnel to make it a live and effective institu- tion. In proportion to the enthusias- tic, forceful service to the people who ,man and operate an institution of , this character, its vital influence and power will be felt in the community. , Those who visit the Centre County hospital on Florence Nightingale day, May 12th, which date has been set apart as national hospital day. will be surprised and pleased with the dexterous activity and cheerful at- mosphere of philanthropic service displayed in every department. It is a real pleasure to see the eighteen attractive young ladies, arrayed in neat uniform of white and blue, glid- ing noiselessly, here and there, throughout the various halls and wards, intent on their errands of mercy. These young ladies are under the direction of Miss A. E. Eckert, superintendent, and Miss Helen Neese, night superintendent of nurses. Whether you visit the hos- pital in the day time or in the wee hours of the night you will find the same rythmic and silent activity to- gether with the almost meticulous at- tention necessary to render it an efficient, life saving institution. It operates twenty-four hours every day with clock-work precision, and Miss Eckert’s careful and systematic or- ganization is very much in evidence everywhere. It must be remembered, also, that ' these young ladies are students in the school of nursing and are pursuing a course of scientific and technical study under the direction of Miss V. Jane Hartman, instructress of nurses. They must find time somewhere in the course of their busy hours to delve into the intricacies of anatomy, materia medica, bacteriology, thera- peutics, gynaecology, obstetrics, anaesthesia, surgery, and other branches of medicine contiguous to the art of practical nursing, so that Me they have finished their course ey are prepared to take their $laces [in the most up, to date ep 5 in the land, or to render the most effi- cient service to the public in private nursing. Miss Hartman is regarded as one of the best instructresses of ‘nurses in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. She has a long list of applicants who are anxious to take her course of training and is extreme- ly rigid in her selection of candidates as to personal qualifications in ap- pearance, health, mentality, education and adaptation to the profession of nursing. This largely accounts for the high grade quality of nursing at the Centre County hospital. Miss Hartman has the assistance in this splendid work of Miss Helen E. Neese, night superintendent, Miss Margaret Krape, private floor super- intendent, and every person serving the institution all of whom have the single goal to make the Centre Coun- ty hospital as nearly perfect as pos- sible. Their patience and efficiency constantly attest this fact. One of the most important depart- ments which has to do with the life saving qualities of the hospital, also, is that of dietetics, which is headed by Miss Helen E. MacLean. The physicians depend largely upon the character and quality of food served in the dietary department for the im- provement of their patients. Their surgery and medicine may arrest the disease, but healthful metabolism and convalescence depend upon proper nourishment. This art has become definitely scientific in its application during recent years. A properly balanced ration, studiously adapted to the disease and condition of the body “has been found to be the most es- sential part of medical treatment. Miss MacLean takes a personal in- terest in each patient, providing a suitable dietary, carefully observing the case for improvement in health, making out all menus and supervising the preparation and serving of foods, insisting that they be served in a dainty and attractive manner, with the result that the patients are almost unanimous in their praise of the dietary. There are several other important , members of this organization who contribute incalculably to the success of the hospital. There is the patho- logical and X-ray technician whose valuable services have been described in these columns and which is so es- sential in the diagnosis of disease. There are the faithful physicians of the medical staff, some of whom are on hand practically all the time, pass- ing in and out among the various wards, with a word of medical wis- dom here and the searching scrutiny of a clinical chart there, making sure that every patient is responding properly to the treatment he has pre- | scribed, and that every department is operating as efficiently as possible. Not least among this company of busy people is' W. H. Brown, business (Continued on page 4, Col. 2.) i | SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Professor Robert R. Abernathy, prin- cipal of the Tyrone High school for five years, tendered his resignation last week to accept a similar position at Lebanon, Pa. - He is the third Blair county high school principal to change positions this term. —Trapped in his automobile when it plunged 30 feet into the Cheat River, John Bender, of Cheat Road, near Port Marion, Pa., was drowned on Sunday. The ma- chine landed, wheels upward, in 15 feet of water. Bender was caught behind the steering wheel, unable to free himself. —Hazel Rudy, 20, of South Brown street, Lewistown, pleaded guilty to forgery at a hearing before Justice of the Peace Charles W. Kase Tuesday after noon and was held in the Mifflin county jail in lieu of $500 bail for court. The check she forged was drawn on the Rus- sell bank. —Jail confronts about 1,000 women of Darby, a suburb of Philadelphia, unless they pay a delinquent personal tax of $4.05 by May 5. Albert Shaw, deputy tax collector, said he had obtained commit- ment papers and engaged a van to take the women to the Media jail if the tax payments are not forthcoming. —Police at Reading are looking for a man giving his name as F. S. Donohue, Chicago, who obtained $250 from a local girl, employed in an office, on a promise of getting her a better position. The money was to have been deposited in a bank as a pledge. Then the man vanished and the bank named has no deposit. —Guy D. Bear has been relieved as post- master at Rohrerstown, with irregulari- ties in his accounts and abandonment of the office, charged, it was reported last Thursday. On the recommendation of Congressman W. W. Griest, Herman C. Starr is acting postmaster. The Civil Service Commission has been requested by the Postoffice Department to hold ex- aminations to fill the position. —Adopting the theory that Joseph A. McClain, of Burnham, was killed by a ‘hit-and-run’ motorist, county and State police have exonerated Alden Cor- son, Burnham, of any connection with his death. Carson is held in default of $500 bail on the charge of possession of intoxi- cating liquor. Police believe MecClain’s body was placed on the railroad tracks. after being hit, to make it appear as if: he was killed by a train. : —The courts are to settle who is to pay for the funeral of William Tackett, who died last January 23 in the Westmoreland county home. County Controller Weber A. Arter refused to pay the bill on the ground that no appropriation had been made by the county commissioners for the purpose. The county poor directors contended no separate appropriation was necessary. The undertaking firm now. has appealed to the courts. —Dr. ¥. R. Wise, a York, Pa., physician was robbed of $1175 Saturday evening, and Sunday his chauffeur, John Lewis, was in custody in New York, charged with the theft. Dr. Wise, on returning to his office, found two bill folds in the top drawer of . his dresser empty. His chauffeur had left in the morning and had not returned, causing suspicion to rest upon him. The case was placed in the hands of Constable Pickes, and Lewis was arrested in New York. - in oC —Augustus Knox, of the Owl's eamp on Licking creek, Mifflin county, was caught . in a bear trap, last week and painfully injured. A dead deer was found and traps set about the ecarcas in hopes of catching vermin and noxious animals that were feeding on the meat, Knox attempt- ed to set a bear trap by standing on the spring, but his rubber boots slipped and the sharp jaws cut into the flesh of his | wrist and gave him an uncomfortable hour until released by ‘Paddy’ MeGarrah., —Leon Schovern, of Shamokin, escaped from the Northumberland county jail, at Sunbury, on Monday, by sealing a forty foot wall and leaping to the side walk below, less than a half hour after he had been sentenced to the electric chair for the slaying of his sweetheart's brother. Schovern was returned to Jail after re- ceiving sentence but instead of being placed in a cell was permitted to roam the corridors. He wandered into the Jail yard unnoticed by jail attaches and with-, out the aid of a rope or ladder mounted the wall and jumped to freedom on the other side. He was captured near Sha mokin, on Tuesday, by state police and returned to jail. —-Damage to the extent of $23,000 wag caused at Johnstown early Sunday morn- ing when five bombs were exploded in the Plaza billiard parlor, a second story Main street establishment, The explosion wrecked the interior of the billiard room and damaged the Grant department store over which it is located. The explosions were some seconds apart and two mem- bers of the Johnstown police force were smashing their way into the Grant store when the last two explosions occurred and showered debris and material about their heads. Practically all of the 19 pool tables were torn to shreds. Police are working on a number of clues, but as yet have made no arrests. —The Rev. D. J. Benjamin, aged 31, pastor of the Flemington and Avis charges of the Church of Christ, residing at Avis, was placed under arrest, on Saturday, by corporal Albert Davis and privates A. Gil- bert and T. A. Buckley, of the State police, on complaint made by the parents of several girls of nine and ten years of age, charging him with a serious crime. The pastor was arrested as he was leaving a house in Flemington before which his car was parked. He was remanded to the Clinton county jail as no alderman or local justice of the peace could give bail: for the offense of which he is charged. He will be given a hearing some time this week, The pastor has recently concluded a series of successful evangelistic services at Flemington. —Walter N. Steel, aged 50, an Altoona locomotive engineer, has been awarded $35,000 against the Pennsylvania Railroad company by a federal jury in Cleveland, Ohio, after seven persons had testified that injuries received in a wreck would bar Steel from his cab forever. Steel, whose testimony was corroborated by physicians, said the erash had so unnerv- ed him that he would be unable to put his hand to the throttle again, that his back was injured and that steam had burned his throat so severely that he is unable to eat certain foods. The wreck occurred in February of last year when the Gotham Limited was derailed near Altoona. Steel was engineer of the second engine of the train. The engineer and fireman. of the first train were killed and Steel said his fireman was seriously .injured.