INK SLINGS. - —Anent the = commencement of work of remodeling the Moose theatre our mind runs back to. the time when the late Daniel Garman built the play house. It was opened by Frank Mayo, in “Davy Crockett,” a two night engagement and a wonderful produc- tion. The literature of the opera house advertised Bellefonte as the “capital of Centre county with a pop- ulation of five thousand, two monster blast furnaces, two charcoal blast furnaces, a chain factory, Universal manufacturing company, three im- mense roller flouring mills, a glass factory, a nail factory, four rolling mills, a boiler works, two large ma- chine shops, four puddling furnaces, an axe factory, steam heat, eleven churches, sixteen schools, five rail- roads and an excellent fire department with a new steamer.” That was only so long ago as the early nineties and friend Al Garman, the manager of the opera house, didn’t stretch much but the borough limits. He had to do that to get population and some of the in- dustries he credited to Bellefonte. ‘The point is this: We want to call at- tention to how completely the indus- trial life of a community can change in a few decades and how indifferent most of us are to what is going on about us. Just glance over the list given above and note what changes have occurred. The town is a far bet- ter place than it was in those days, larger industries have come to sub- stitute for the many little ones, but we don’t believe it’s a happier place for the reason that everybody wants 80 much now, that he or she can’t have, that nobody is satisfied. —Some weeks ago we were wonder- ing what had become of the silver sugar bowl that the late Anthony Gatens always insisted he had snitched from Robert E. Lee’s mess tent at Appomattox. On looking over the Morgantown, W. Va. Post, a few days ago, we noted a story of the peri- grinations of the botany class of the High school in that city. It had been up in the mountains looking for colt’s foot, hepatica, Jack-in-the-pulpit and such other herbs and wild flowers as the students might find native for identification. When the noon hour arrived and coffee was made it was found that they had forgotten the sugar. A house was spied in the dis- tance and from it a bowl filled with the sweetening was borrowed. The house turned out to be that of Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Kelly and the bowl that contained the borrowed sugar was “the one that was in Robert E. Lee’s tent during the Civil war.” Murder will out. So Dave Kelly is the fellow who happened to be in pos- session of Anthony’s treasure at the time he croaked. That's exactly the circumstance under which we said it would turn up. —You might be wondering what we are writing all this old stuff for any- way. Truth is we have such an ac- cumulation of it on the desk that we want to reduce the pile a bit before starting on our annual fishing pil- grimage. That is, get the pile low enough so that any checks on sub- scription you send in before our re- turn won’t topple off into the waste basket and be dumped into the baler by the devil when he gives the place its semi-annual cleaning—if he does. —Here’s a Linn street antique: Do vou know that the present Green home was the first building started on Linn street. The foundation for it was broken before Judge Linn started to build the second house which occu- pied the western half of the present Reynolds property and the late F. ‘Potts Green lived sixty two years in ‘that house and was continuously in the drug business here for sixty-five vears. When he started to build, Alle- gheny street ended at that corner and everything north, east and west was cow pasture. —Strange, but immediately under ‘the memo slip from which the above was written we find a copy of a hand- some brochure commemorating the semi-centennial of the First Presby- terian church of Bradford, Pa. When we first picked it up we wondered what in the world it had to do with us or what of interest it might contain for Centre county readers or by what distortion we might dispose of it and -still maintain continuity. Well, leave it to us to work out of a hole. In the brochure we find the name of Charles K. McCafferty as a member of the church and it was Charles’ father who built the house on the next corner above the Green house, the present Baum property, and it was Charles’ father who built a section of the Bellefonte, Nittany and Lemont rail- road and all of Prossertown. —How many of you recall the Me- Cafferty building that stood just west of the rail-road tracks, on west High street; the rambling, one-story frame structure that housed seven stores and two tenements and the “Holly Tree Inn” that occupied one of the rooms. It was launched by the Tem- perance folks of the town and, my, the bowl of delectable vegetable soup we “bad boys of Cheapside” could get there for a nickel. —We’re in an awful hole now. Tha column ig just seven lines short. Not enough space into which to crowd an- other reminiscence, yet too much to lead out, so there’s nothing else to do but fill it up by telling you that its easy enough to start something but ‘a helluva job to finish it. VOL . 72, BELLEFONTE. PA.. JULY 1, 1927 STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION, May Be in Extra Session. Senator Wesley L. Jones, of Wash- ington State, Republican whip of the Senate, is precisely correct in his con- jecture that “until the Vare and Smith cases are out of the way purely legislative business confronting Con- gress will be jammed-up hopelessly.” The consideration of these cases will consume a good deal of time and pending the determination of them legislation concerning the Mississippi flood, tax reduction, farm relief and other important subjects will be obliged to wait. The Senate cannot organize until the validity of title to a seat acquired by fraud and corrup- the decision is adverse to the claim- ants the Democrats will have a ma- jority. The Republicans of the Senate have themselves to blame for the embar- rassment which this question imposes upon them. In order to prevent com- pletion of the inquiry into the right of Mr. Vare and Mr. Smith to qualify as Senators under their purchased and fraudulent claims, Senator David A. Reed, of Pennsylvania, organized a fillibuster, presumably with the as- sent of Mr. Jones, the party whip. If that action had not been taken the in- vestigation then in progress would have been completed before the time for the reassembling of the Senate in regular session and the now cer- tain delay in the organization would have been avoided. But the Republi- can Senators then imagined that de- lay might help their unjust purposes. Senator Reed, of Missouri, chairman of the Slush Fund committee, is not in sympathy with the ‘proposition of Senator Jones. He discerns a “nig- ger in the woodpile.” If the right of Vare and Smith is determined ad- versely to the claimants, which is practically certain, the Governors of Pennsylvania and Illinois would have fill the vacancies and thus prolong Re- publican control of the Senate. Of course Senator Jim Reed’s objection will not restrain the President from adopting Mr. Jones’ suggestion. Par- ty exigencies have greater influence upon the mind of Mr. Coolidge than consicence, and the party needs help. There may be an extra session of the Senate. ——Whatever else the political schemers in Washington may make of “Lindie” they failed to make him a militarist. He refused to wear the colonel’s uniform provided for the re- ception. Attorney General Sargeant Speaks. The principal speaker at the first day’s session of the Pennsylvania Bar Association, held at Bedford Springs, last week, was United States Attorn- ey General, John G. Sargeant, of Ver- mont. His theme was prohibition en- forcement and he threw some “hot shot” into the ears of the considerable number of lawyers who indulge them- selves in the luxury of quietly con- suming the products of moonshine stills. This was probably a surprise to the members of the association, for though the Attorney General is in a enforcement, Mr. Sargeant has not, hitherto, manifested any great zeal in the work that has been done under the direction of the administration. “When intelligent, educated men hold up to ridicule the rules for its conduct which society has made; in- timate and by innuendo and sugges- tion advise that such rules ought to be violated; ridicule and revile as un- desirable members of the community, men sworn to defend and enforce its rules, devote their intelligence, wit and resources to making crime and the Attorney General observed, “why is it not to be expected that the thoughtless, the unfortunate, the ig- norant, the vicious will try to get rid of the oppressors of the criminals in any way, by any means, any violence that will be most effective?” Any lawyer who defends a criminal might Of course lawyers must defend their clients charged with offences, whether guilty or innocent. There may be lawyers who will refuse to accept a retainer for a client who is guilty, but they are few and far between, and even the highest standard of profes- sional ethics places no such obliga- tion on practitioners at the bar. If a man accused of crime is unable to employ counsel the court will direct one of the lawyers present to defend him without regard to his guilt or innocence. It may be wrong, as a rule, to make sport of or ridicule of- ficers engaged in the enforcement of the Volstead law, but considering the practices of some of them in this State it is not surprising. : rr ———— ep e—————— ——TIt is rumored that Mr. Coolidge doesn’t want %Hel’n Maria » fora running mate next year. tion has been definitely decided. <1 | authority to appoint Republicans to | position to take an active part in law | criminals interesting and attractive,” be charged with sinning in this way. | Trouble in the Geneva Conference. | | There is no just cause of complaint | against the appeal of the delegates to the conference in session at Geneva for the purpose of decreasing the naval strength .of Great Britain, the United States and Japan. Every man or woman engaged in any enter- prise that drags along at a disap- pointing rate of speed urges patience on the part of all concerned, and that is precisely what the American, British and Japanese delegates have done. The people of the respective countries were led to believe that all these delegates had to do was meet, lay their cards on the table and take | what they wanted. This expectation | has been disappointed. The represen- | tatives of each power appear to have “something up their sleeves.” The trouble seems to be that Great Britain asks for a revision of the action of the Washington conference. The representatives of the United States objected to this for the very good reason that five powers partici- pated in that agreement and three have no right to alter or annul it. At first Japan was inclined to concur in the objection but subsequently, under instructions from Tokio, switched to the other side and dead-locked the proceedings. Of course every move- ment of the conference must be unamimous of Great Britain and J apan could force their policies through. The result is that arguments must be presented and compromises made which will consume time and tax pa- tience. One of the troubles which this situation brings to mind grows out of a suspicion that neither of the parties in controversy is exactly sincere. The American delegates probably feel that it is their duty to maintain the agreements of the Washington con- ference because it is the one achieve- ment of the Harding-Coolidge admin- istrations that commanded wide ap- | proval. But even that achievement is tainted because there is a deep-seated belief that it was a political gesture to embarrass the organization of the League of Nations, and that the pres- ent conference is more to confuse the we had gone into the League of Na- tions there would have been’ no need of such conferences. —— ei ——————— Chairman Greene, of the House Ways and Means committee, declares that the revenue cut to be made at the next session of Congress I will not exceed $200,000,000. What ! does he want to do with a $600,000,- {000 treasury surplus? | —_— | Corporation Control Continued, i. The reappointment of W. D. B. | Ainey to the important office of chair- i man of the Public Service Commission {clearly signifies that the utility cor- | porations will continue their strangle- thold on the throats of the people of i Pennsylvania for “four years more,” His appointment was announced by the ' Governor after a conference in which ! chairman Mellon, William S. Vare and Eric Fisher Wood participated. i These gentlemen compose the secret force, the “invisible government,” | which controls the administration at Harrisburg, not in the interest of the | people of the State but for the enrich- | ment of the favorite few who have | the public. | During the administration of Gov- | ernor Sproul the Public Service Com- ‘mission was organized with the pur- I pose of developing public service or { utility. corporations. Members of the body who had revealed symptoms for the people were carefully “weeded out” and others commissioned who ! favored the corporations in all mat- ‘ters of dispute. Under the auspices of these corporation agents utility corporations were given license to loot every community in which they | operated. Every complaint of the suffering public was turned down and ‘every demand of the corporations - granted. Trolley car rates were in- creased and electric lighting charges advanced to excessive figures. ' Governor Pinchot, who had made a | searching investigation of these out- , fageous decisions, tried to protect the 1 people against these violations of the ‘principles of justice but was defeated ‘by prejudiced and partisan courts. Mr. Ainey, as chairman of the Com- ‘mission, was largely responsible’ for ' the injustice to the public and it was hoped that with the expiration of his term of office he would be retired. It (may even be surmised that if Gov- | ernor Fisher had been allowed to ex- ercise' his own’ judgment he would retired. But the hidden force, the “power behind the throne,” | responsible to nobody and concerned {only in party success, decided to re- ‘ward him for “services rendered.” ———— pe ——— | ——Judge Gary, head of the Steel trust, says he could have prevented the World war but the government , wouldnt let him do it. have ‘been League than to promote economy. If j acquired franchises to levy tribute on ! Judge Furst’s ‘Ruling a Disappoint- ment to Many in Spring Township. The finding of the Hon. James C. Furst in the much discussed Spring township school case, which was pub- lished in full in this paper last week, has been a bitter disappointment to many who are interested in solving the rather serious problem that con. fronts that district. The matter has been in controversy for over two years and from what we have been able to glean is not so much a difference of opinion among the tax Payers as to the actual need of a better school building, with more com- modious and modern facilities for the rapidly growing section about Pleas- ant Gap, as it has been one of petty differences as to where such a build- ing should be located. Mountains have been made out of mole-hills. Politics, business, person- alities and everything else have been injected into the fight over the project with the result that the school district now finds itself in the position of hav- ing spent several thousand dollars for plans which would meet the require- ments of the State Board of Educa- tion and confronted with a decree of the court restraining its board of di- rectors from going ahead with the work. Since it is the fact that some of the schools are now being conducted in an old factory building, part of which has been condemned, it would seem that the children of the district are not properly housed and that a new building is to be desired. The squab- ble over its location, however, grew to such proportions = that all else has been forgotten and the district is fac- ing considerable financial loss as well as serious delay in getting adequate facilities for the education of its children. { wo 5d ‘Within the week we have received the following communication, which seems to be such an unbiased exposi- tion of the controversy that we give it space here: To the Democratic Watehman: - ge James C. puns decree @Hunst the Spring township school bond issue to build a much needed school building at Pleasant Gap was a great disappointment to the citizens of this village. (Except the few who = responsible for what has happen- ed. The turning down on a technicality, which to us seems insignificant as compared with the real merits in the case, has caused much indignation to some of the people of our community, | Who have listened to the entire court proceedings and are thoroughly con- vinced that the school board have act- ed according to their best judgment and within their rights. What they have done has been fully approved by the Department of Public Instruction school fight, a statement of the real them. Briefly, condition for the past 15 years. town has grown until we have a popu- lation of about 750 including about 200 school children, and only three school rooms, owned by the township. For a number of years an abandoned knitting mill that was turned into two rooms was used for school purposes. The State Department of Public In- struction was not satisfied with these rooms, and informed the school di- rectors that better quarters must be provided for our school children. Hence the directors called a meeting of the electors of Spring township, which was held in the court house the fall of 1925 and told them a school building at Pleasant Gap must be built, and that the meeting was called for the purpose of working out a plan to finance it. This resulted in asking the electors to vote for or against a bond issue at November 3, 1925 gen- eral election. The bond issue carried by a large majority. After which a site to build upon was carefully look- ed over by the directors and members of the Department of Public Instrue- /tion at Harrisburg. The old site | along state highway, our main street, | where school buildings have stood for the past 100 years, was selected. { This site is not only the geographical { centre of our town; but also the cen- i tre of ‘population. It lies on high ' ground, has good drainage, and was ‘recommended. by the State Depart- , ment as site No. 1. I After selection of location, an , architect was employed to draw plans jand specifications, which were taken , to Harrisburg for approval of Depart- { ment’ of Public Instruction. | rectors were anxious to put up a ! plain, ‘substantial building at the i lowest possible cost. = Their plans when submitted to the Department | were turned down, and new plans with many alterations had to be made to meet state requirements. = After ap- proval of plans, letting for the work was advertised and bids for the build- ing received; but as bids were in ex-’ 1 cess of ‘what the directors thought it | should cost, all bids were rejected. | Everything that could be eliminated + Was cut out, and new lettings held, which finally resulted in awarding the PORTAL to the lowest bidders. r whom the putting up of building was ! accorded, then at Harrisburg. As the public in gen- | eral has taken much interest in this | facts may be of further interest to | the school housing at Pleasant Gap has been in a Seplorale ] | Our di- James Longwell, contractor, to | of lumber and « | ground for the build 2 after this, a few citizens who claimed they wer satisfied with the central location se ected, in- sisting it should be built at the ex- treme north end of our town (which i would have caused the children of the central and especially of the south end of town a much greater distance to walk to school) agitated injunction proceedings. J : Boyd A. Spicher, H. E. Garbrick, { Frank Beezer, Lloyd White and Thomas Beaver then instituted pro- ceedings in equity to restrain the | school board from Sresting a new | building on ground selected by them. i A petition was drawn by their counsel | and presented to Judge Keller, who ' grantéd them a fomps af injunction. | Later at the hearing b ! Keller not one of the econ | of statements contained i to break ediately his place, | tion was sustained, 3 ge Keller | told them plainly t had no | case; but on account ed errors their attorneys claim ed in the minutes of the sch 00] ors’ meet- ings, he allowed i i revised bill, which ras !cal. This remained in { files until after his d { April 20, 1927, the came be- | fore Judge Furst for a ent. The i attorneys at once comm ed to argue against the resolution the school | directors, which was drawn up by | their attorney, John Love, and acted j upon at a meeting of ichooi board "held August 8, 1925. (This resolution | being somewhat lengthy and being | published in "the county papers last week, we will omit.) This rin, was discussed from all angles by the attorneys. Counsel favoring the injunction claiming that (on account of omitting the words. “We express a desire”, before making the resolution, ete., it did not comply i with the law. Judge Furst finally told them from the bench that his { court could not see that it was neces- I sary to use that exact language. The | fact that the school board did pass i the resolution was sufficient evidence i that they had a desire to do so. The argument on this technicality was | immediately dropped. I Just why the ‘Judge changed his | mind on June 20, when he made the | decree Byains; the Sehaol board, mak- and void everything the aol._bdard. have been Yatkiis ne |! {ing null ! sch thard to do for almost two years, spending over $2,000 of- the taxes of the district to get to a point where a . school building could be built, is. be- ‘yond our comprehension. The court’s ! decree has been a body blow to our ‘town that may take us years to re- cover from. People who are looking for locations to build where they can (have all the modern conveniences side-step this town on account of the deplorable condition of our schools. To say many of us were grievously disappointed about it only expresses it mildly. You will please pardon this long letter, but could not give you de- ‘tails in fewer words. Respectfully, “CITIZEN” ral de "H. E. Holzworth will Stay in Fight for County Treasurer. Howard E. Holzworth, about whom , Some question has been raised as to this eligibility as a candidate for coun- ity treasurer while holding the office i of county commissioner, has author- ized the statement that he will con- {tinue in the fight. ed several of the ablest attorneys in i the State and it is on their advice as i to his eligibility that he will stick. | Mr. Holzworth has already made | considerable progress in his campaign among the Republicans of Centre county and it is just and right that his supporters should know that he is considered entirely eligible by the best of legal advice. © been repeated rumors of illegal fisher- men getting in their nefarious on Spring creek. On one or more oc- casions fishermen on the stream have found what they believed to have been evidence of dynamiting, but so far no one has been caught in the act though game protector Thomas has kept 2 fairly good ‘watch on the stream. Last Friday night, however, four men were seen on the stream about nine o’clock and there is every reason to believe they were there for no good purpose. The men had park- i when observed each man was wearing a lighted miner’s lamp on the visor of his cap. Some of them, if not all, car- ried tin buckets. To the men who saw them the procedure looked like an out- line party. ——-Burgess Hard P. Harris arrang- ed with local dealers not to sell fire- works until the second ‘of July, and so far as known they have all kept their agreement. But this did not deter those determined to celebrate. They went out of town and bought a sup- ply and last Saturday night sounded much like the night before the Fourth, In fact some. young men were not satisfied with celebrating on Saturday night * but kept ‘at it’ Sunday night, much to the annoyance of people go- ing to and from church. He has consult- ! ———-For some time past there have | work | G." Mosier | ied their car half a mile away and SPAWLS FROM THE KEYTSONE. —Mrs. Frank Spunk, of Rummel; , died Supday night’ of a strange alady, be- lieved to be sleeping - sickness. ‘ —An all-steel train with buffet car at- sached will take more-than 250 Bika from Shamokin to the annual State convention at Easton in August. More than a hun- dred members have signed up already. —Wives of Snyder county farmers who complain about traveling several hundred miles to buy their winter furs need worry no longer. T. H. Spigelmire, a merchant of Selinsgrove, has secured a 147 acre farm to raise silver foxes. —Singing with the choir at the Rush Baptist church near Shamokin, on Sunday night, Mrs. Wellington Rothermel, 53, suf- fered a heart attack and died several min- utes later. Her illness brought to a close the church services when Children’s day exercises were being conducted. —The Rev. Dr. Jacob H. Diehl, pastor of Trinity Lutheran church, Selinsgrove, has been elected executive representa- tive of Susquehanna University by the ex- executive committee of the board of direc- tors to fill the vacancy caused by the death of the Rev. Dr. Charles T Aikens. —Margaret Miller, aged 15, of Johns- town, was struck on the head by a batted ball at an amateur game in that place on Saturday noon and died the same night at Mercy hospital. The girl recovered rapid- ly after the accident and was taken home, Later she became unconscious and a broth- er took her to the hospital. Death was caused by hemorrhage of the brain. —William F. Donovan, 52 years old, of Williamsport, shot himself to death last Friday morning rather than submit to ar- rest on charges of drunkenness and dis- orderly conduct. Policemen summoned by a telephone call granted Donovan permis- sion to step into another room before go- ing to police headquarters and a minute or so later heard the shot which claimed the man’s life. —A man pretending to be a physician drove to the home of Mrs. I. M. Kester, at Shickshinny. He assured the woman he could cure her of a disease which other doctors had pronounced incurable. She paid him a $100 retainer. Then he sent her for some pure spring water. When she returned she found the stranger had disappeared and $800, concealed in a “u- reau was also missing. —David Bush, of Grange, near DuBois, an employee of the Penn Public Service corporation, met a tragic death on Fri- day. Mr. Bush, while working on a tow- er near Heilwod, Indiana county, -came in contact with a high power line, and was knocked off the tower, falling a distance of 92 feet. He, K was dead when fellow workmen reached him, and it is believed that the electric current caused his death. —With a piece of flesh bitten from his right arm near the elbow, William Hamp- ton. a negro, was taken into custody at Sunbury, on Saturday, following a battle with his landlord. C. Freeman, a white man. Freeman insisted that the negro started the fight, but admitted sinking his teeth in the flesh of the negro’s arm and tearing loose a sizable portion. The negro was taken to the office of a nearby physi- cian where stitches were required to’ close the wound. . —J Calvin Haas is suing John ‘DeHaas and Frank Rowe, all of Milton, for $2,500, for the alleged barking of dogs belonging to Frang Rowe and kept at the DeHaas home, were Rowe boards. This is one of the queerest cases that ever came before the Northumberland county courts. Haas claims that the dogs, sometimes two and three in number, howl at night, thereby keeping his family awake. He claims that through their barking his wife has been made a nervous wreck, and that he has been necessitated to spend a large sum of | money for doctor bills. ——Four boys with red bathing suits they used for flags almost upset the schedule of the whole of the Shamokin division of the Reading railroad. on Sunday, wher “they walked half way across the bridge over the Susquehanna river, at Sunbury, and flagg- ed passing trains. A Philadelphia Wil- liamsport express and another southbound train were flagged. A freight was stopped, as were several other trains. Railroad i police were notified and arrested four children from Shamokin, who admitted fooling the railroad men. They were sent home in the custody of their parents. —Joseph Ippolito, of Johnstown, charged with murder and found guilty of man- ' slaughter, was sentenced to serve sixty , days and to pay the costs of prosecution fin court at Ebensburg on Monday. The | Sentence was to date from the time of his | incarceration and Ippolito has been in jail | more than sixty days. Another charge of | murder was nollie prossed and Ippolito was discharged Monday night. Ippolito shot and killed two men who are alleged + to have called at his barber shop at Johns- | town in March and who it is said threat- | ened his life if he refused to pay a bill which was owed to a New Jersey grocery- ; man by his brother, who was murdered at { Fohnstown a year ago. i —The Supreme court, in an opinion { handed down on Saturday, ordered the i discharge from the western penitentiary of i Frank Holinko, who has been serving a sentence of from seven to eight years, im- | posed in Armstrong county, December 31, 1921. Holinko had pleaded guilty to ob- taining money by false pretenses, fraudu- lent conversion and conspiracy to cheat | and defraud. For the first offense the pun~ { ishment is a fine and imprisonment uot | exceeding three years: for the second im- ; prisonment not exceedng five vears, and for | the third imprisonment not exceeding two vears. Council for Holinko took out a writ , of habeas corpus against Warden Stanley { P. Asche, of the western penitentiary, con- tending that the sentence was illegal. —Jules Base, who lives along the state road near the village of Allport, lost 'a valuable horse recently in a very peculiar manner. He was plowing in the field ad- jacnt to his residence when suddenly the : horse disappeared and sank, out of sight into the bowels of the earth. If the har- ness had not broken the horse would have dragged the plow and driver into the hole with it. The field in which Mr. Base was plowing had been underlaid with a 5-foot seam of Moshannon coal, which was mined cut during the boom without breaking the surface, Mr. Harry Todd, of Philipsburg, owns the mineral rights under the Base farm and when Mr. Base told Todd of his loss, he gave him a check for $100, al- though he was under no obligations to compensate for damage to the surface in removing the mineral.