- SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. . | «Stricken with apoplexy while beating | a carpet for a neighbor, Michael Volki, 64 years old, died the same night in the. Sa- cred Heart hospital, at Allentown. Volki lived alome in Rittersville, but said he had INK SLINGS. _—Within half an hour after taking a pledge to abstain from liquor John Regan dropped dead in New York. The moral is : —Anyway, the late spring will save us. from the blah of the fellow who some times has potatoes out of his own garden on the Fourth of July. _ — Jim Heverly got the consolation prize. He won the Prohibition nom- “ination for Assembly. But that is far from being a ticket to Harrisburg and if Jim really wants to go down he’d better start walking now. —In his speech to the Democracy of Ohio Senator Jim Reed said: “I won’t say Coolidge knew of the oil deal, for I'd never say that Coolidge “knew anything unless I knew he “knew.” Now, wouldn’t that send Cal’s nose a few tilts higher? —Will someone please explain to ‘us why Capt. Fitzmaurice, the Irish aero lion of the hour, always appears in high rubber boots when he has his picture taken. Are they ceremon- ial foot-gear in Ireland or does Fitz «expect to have to wade home? —Was it Jack Sharkey’s soporific punch that flattened Delaney Monday night or was “Bright Eyes so well ‘greased’ ” that he slipped and fell down? It was one or the other and, unfortunately for professional boxing, many are of the opinion that the knockout was “framed.” —Several weeks ago the Watchman pulled a good one that we expected to be razzed about, but since nobody else seems to have noticed it we repro- duce it here just to see whether you get the smile we got out of reading it. In telling if interesting spiritual services held in the county jail our co-worker, C. L. G. said: “they were greatly enjoyed by all those who had ‘the privilege of being present.” —Incidentally, we shall jump off on another mental tangent long enough to ask the West Penn Power Co., what’s the use of that Milesburg serve plant could be fired up and put into service in just such an emer- gency as was that of last Saturday. —A ten thousand ton Diesel engine propelled ship will cost $2,150,000 if you buy it in an American ship yard. A ship of the same specifications can ‘be bought in a British shipyard for ‘$720,000. What accounts for the dif- ference in cost. Probably wages for STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 73. Colonel Stewart “Vindicated.” Mr. Sinclair Needs a Guardian. Colonel Robert W. Stewart, chair- | - Something ought to be dome by BELLEFONTE, PA.. MAY 4, 1928. Mr. Ford's Inconsistency. Henry Ford, said to be the only man of the Standard Oil company of somebody to conserve the financial in- billionaire in the world, who is now Indiana, like Mr. Harry F. Sinclair, | terests of Mr. Harry F. Sinclair, of | of Teapot Dome fame, has been vin- | Teapot Dome notoriety, for the pro-. dicated. That is he has been assured, | tection of his family. It is true that for the present at least, of immunity he is a very wealthy man and his es- from jail sentence for contempt of the | tate could stand a good deal of Senate. Mr. Stewart was associated “drainage” before the wolves would with Mr. Sinclair in the operations of A be attracted to his door. But recent the Continental Trading company, of , incidents in reference to his habits of Canada, which is believed to have life reveal such a degree of careless- enjoying the time of his life, hob- | nobbing with Kings, princés and po- tentates in Europe, addressed a meet- ing of business men in London, the other day, and threw a surprise into his audience by declaring that he “doesn’t believe in anything else but free ‘trade all around. I don’t know what a tariff means except it means | stolen from the shareholders of the several concerns they were managing some $3,000,000 by a erooked deal. When the Senate committee investi- ! gating the matter asked Stewart how the profits were divided he swore pos- itively that he had received no part of them and hadn’t made a cent out of the transaction. ‘Having acknowledged the deal and admitted participation in it the com- mittee reasoned that he must know something about the distribution of the profits and insisted upon answers. But the haughty Colonel was obdur- ate, protested that the questions were irrelevant, and indignantly denied the right of the Senate to “pry into his private affairs.” The result was a citation for contempt and subsequent indictment by the grand jury of the District of Columbia Supreme court. Meantime the committee continued the investigation in other directions and discovered that he had been cash- ing the coupons on the bonds in ques- tion. This disclosure brought him to terms and he offered to “tell all.” ness in the disposal of assets or pros- pects as to suggest mental infirmities of so grave a type that no fortune, - however fabulous, is secure. Of course it is not proper for a rank out- sider to intervene but somebody might find some way of protecting him from an obvious danger. The other day a distinguished of- ficer of the United States navy testi- fied before the Senate committee on: public lands in Washington that in a poker game staged in his apartment in a Washington hotel Mr. Sinclair “laid down a winning hand.” This, in itself, could not be interpreted as an indication of mental weakness.” The participants in the game were guests whose friendship and favor he was trying to acquire. In such ecir- cumstances the “laying down of a : winning hand” may have been a very wise thing and the fullest measure of . diplomatic finesse. The beneficiaries of his generosity could hardly be in- sensible to the favors thus magnan-. imously bestowed upon them. But another incident more recently. | Accordingly the committee sub - developed by the testimony of unwill- | emergency plant if it won’t emerge. poenaed him to appear again and he 'ing witnesses before the same tribun- We have a hazy recollection of acknowledged that he had received al is of much graver importance. It having O. K’d for publication a story one-fourth of the tainted profits but was testified that Mr. Sinclair had sent out by that corporation some set up the surprising alibi that he had paid to Secretary of the Interior Fall time ago that contained what now ap- ' deposited his share in trust for the | $233,000 in Liberty bonds and $25,000 pears to have been a lot of “bull” company which had been cheated by in cash for a third interest in a ranch about how quickly the Milesburg re- the operation and that since his in- the assessed value of which is only dictment for contempt he had actual- ly made a legal transfer of the bonds in question. That releases him from the custody of the court but convicts him of perjury in his previous state- ments. Possibly that will satisfy the wealthy gentlemen with whom he is $125,000, and the real value about $200,000. Even if the purpose had been to purchase property no sane man would have paid more than dou- ble the value of the entire tract for giving one crowd an advantage over another.” This recalls to mind that some: twenty-five or thirty years ago, while ;the Payne-Aldrich tariff law wag in the making, Mr. Ford protest- ed against levying a tariff tax on au- ‘tomobiles, though at that time his en- terptise at Detroit was, in fact, an “infant industry.” At that time Senator James Cou- zens was treasurer of the Ford com- pany and took no part and had little interest in politics or public life. But he had brains of his own and faith in the head of his enterprise. With Mr. Ford’s consent and encouragement’ he went to Washington to oppose a prop- osition to tariff tax foreign made automobiles and before the Commit- tee on Finance of the Senate, to the dismay of the tariff-mongers in con- trol, ‘declared “that tariffs meant waste, inefficiency ‘and nepotism in every. business that was covered by them, since it gave a margin under which the business could be carelessly _ or l@¥ishly operated and still make money.” It seems that Mr. Ford is still_of that opinion. ge old-time: advocates of. prohibi- tion; when that service was per- formed by sincere teetotalers, were accustomed -to -vrging ‘men. who pro- fesSed sympathy with the cause, to “vote as they spoke.” In other words they could discover no value in lip service in favor of prohibition legis- lation by persons ‘who habitually voted for representatives in Congress and “Fegislatures: who opposed such legislation. The same objection may , Two Brave Men of the Air. From the Pittsburgh Press. No cleaner, brighter page of hero- ism and sacrifice stands in the book of aviation history than that on which is written the story of the death of Floyd Bennett. Though he died in bed of pneumonia, Bennett gave his life for his comrades of the air, the crew of the German Bremen, as cer- tainly as. if he had crashed on the bleak shores of Greenly Island. Interwoven in the story of Ben- nett’s fight for life is the bold flight of Lindbergh from New York to Que- bec with serum with which it was hoped to fight off death. The Lone Eagle’s feat was rendered futile by the development of the disease which gripped Bennett. But not even the epic flight of Lindbergh to Paris was so challenging to the world’s thought as his unplanned trip of mercy yes- terday in the teeth of a snow-laden gale up to the Canadian city. Commander Byrd, with whom Ben- net had flown to the North Pole, and with. whom he was to fly to the Ant- arctic late this year, soared up from Boston to be with his mate of the frozen spaces while the battle for life went on. With one of their own in desperate plight, the man-birds of the air went to him by the upper roads he himself had helped to chart, spanning the miles of ether as casually as one would walking across the street to a hospital. Bennett was ill when the word came to Detroit that a rescue plane was needed to carry supplies to the Bre- men, and permit it to rise from Greenly Island and complete its flight to New York. He should néver have started on the trip. But he knew ‘from experience the hazards of the air in the frozen north, his .airman- ship might prove the difference be- tween success and failure for the ven- ure. . ? ; 1 So unquestionably he stepped into a plane. with .Bert Balchen and hopped off. With less than half the, distance completed he became so ill that he was forced to come down. He was taken to a hospital in Quebec, pnen- monia gripped him, and death came in its trail. There have been more spectacular a one-third interest. Besides Mr. Sin- clair, according to the evidence, nei- be raised against Mr. Ford’s support flights, other adventures in the air of free trade.. He talks right but us- , which: caused the world to take .a ually ¥otes wrong, for while eulogiz- deeper breath, but none which hold a associated in business, but it will im- | ther asked for nor received any title press indellibly on the minds of all deed or other evidence of ownership. honest people that, like his partner Clearly cy: ‘he opposes .it by ing dave economic systems with his greater element of drama or so chal- no voting. for lenge admiration as the. a wife and several children in Europe; —8ix persons were drowned early on Tuesday when a small boat was over- turned in the Monongahela River between Masontown and Greensboro, Fayette coun- ty, when a floating log crashed into it. The boat was used to ferry passengers across the river and carried nine persons. —An 11-year-old West Leesport youth made a gruesome discovery early Tuesday evening when he returned to his home, in Berks county, to find his mother had ended her life by hanging. The suicide was Mrs. Clayton Davis, aged 39, mother of four children. She had been in ill health for six months. —Twenty ham sandwiches in 20 minutes flat is the record of Michael Harvan, of Westmoreland county. He performed this feat when challenged to eat the sandwich- es in 30 minutes. Although he won his $10 wager, Harvan said he has just about lost his appetite for ham. He is proprie- tor of a garage at Hecla. —Prisoners at the Snyder county jail will earn their board and clothes in the future. The county commissioners have decided to hire out the men as common laborers, and any funds received from their services, beyond their keep at the jail, will be applied to the maintenance of the prisoners’ dependents. —While his wife was driving him home from a. school entertainment, at Lewis- town, Monday night, Dr. James W. Mitch- ell, 58, member of the State Legislature in 1920-21, died of a heart attack in his own automobile. When he became suddenly ill his wife volunteered to drive the ma- chine. Upon arriving home she found Dr. Mitchell dead. —Mrs. Adah Kauffman, recently con- victed of embezzlement of funds of the Exchange Bank and Trust company, of Franklin, and sentenced to ten months in the county jail, was placed on trial, last week on a charge of making false entries in the bank’s books. John A. Kauffman, husband of the woman, is yet to be tried on charges of complicity in both cases. —Shot in the neck by a 38-caliber bul- let from his own gun, which was dis- charged when it fell from his pocket, Al- bert W. Thompson, paymaster at the Cam- éron colliery for fifteen years, is in the * Shamokin State hospital fighting for . his life. The accident. occurred when the. of- ficer - was . preparing to. alight from a touring car in which were thousands of dollars he was guarding. —Terminating 25 years of service, coun- ty engineer Charles 8S.’ Sanders resigned, on Tuesday, to enter the real estate de- velopment business. He erected more than three-score concrete bridges in Berks coun- ty, in the last decade, among them the Lindbergh viaduct, about to be thrown open in the city of Reading, his home town; structures over the Schuylkill at Birdsboro, three at Reading and another at Hamburg. " Milton Meckley, 35, and W. F. Mattern, 40, of Franklin, were instantly killed, last Friday, when they fell 100 feet from the roof of a tank at the Franklin steel works. JA ‘post. erected in: the ‘center of ‘the: tank there is a mental delinqu of ‘Benmett and “effort ut | and supporting wu Scaffold on the outside 2 it, but, certainly; not all -of - a oare opposed to them. This Sa ‘such a vast disparity. Keep these Jshrent, i figures in mind when someone gets to | o; he has escaped just pun-| According to Associated Press dis- arguing with you that a ship subsidy ‘bill should be passed by Congress so “that a great American merchant ma- rine can be built up. What they want :ship subsidy for is to build up the American shipbuilders. patches the Senate has already taken steps toward testing the question of culpability in the courts. It has cer- tified to the court parts of his. testi- mony on each occasion in which he ! contradicted himself “for study to de- ; . termine whether a jury charge should —Hoover has the Republican nomi- 1}, lodged against him.” There can nation for President about cinched. je no doubt as to the result of this He is the choice of the financiers and ,p51ysis, He deliberately lied on one ' the corporations, but from what we . ;ccasion or the other, and obviously hear the agricultural classes are not ,. the purpose of deceiving the com- turning handsprings over the prospect | :itaa Uttering a falsehood with ‘of his nomination. They figure that {10 purpose to deceive is perjury, ac- he did them a great injustice during cing to the literal definition. Le- ‘the war when he fixed the price of g,| technicalities or interpretations wheat. The farmers would not feel ,,u twist definitions but to all in- cas they do if Mr. Hoover had put the iti - same curb on other products of Amer- ous 8d gurposes 16s 2 case of por ‘ican industry, but he didn’t and they : are so sore that any Democratic nomi- | nee stands a good chance of carrying several of the Republican western . States. —So far as we are concerned we’re «off Mayor Jimmy Walker, of New York. Up to Monday we had thought “him a very colorful and interesting _personage, with a mind of his own Glancing at the volume number of and the courage to assert it. But the Watchman, in the heading above, “Jimmy isn’t what we thought him to readers will see that the paper is sev- be. He's afraid of his wife. When enty-three years and eighteen weeks the charming looking Mrs. Koel pub- | oid. “licly osculated the dapper Mayor, on | At his home in Unionville, yester- Monday, someone in the crowd yelled day morning a gentleman who had to him to slip a kiss to Mrs. Fitz- read the first copy of the Watchman maurice. The news doesn’t reveal and every succeeding one, up until ‘that she reacted in an unfavorable the time his sight failed, passed to manner to the suggestion, but Jimmy his last reward. flinched. No man who isn’t afraid of In the heyday of his physical and his wife would do that. imental activity George W. Rumber- — Always, there’s a fly in the oint- 8€r was a great man in Centre coun- ment. For years we have believed ty. Great in a way that has left a “that “the wet spring of ’37” summed More lasting impress, perhaps, than up everything that was bad in weath- } .er. Often we have used it as a ence in public affairs or amassed marker of time, just as you probably great wealth. Great, because he had use “before the war.” Then came the | the heart to be kindly and the will to “big snow of April ’28 and we thought | let it find expression in friendly serv- we had moved up into modern times ice to all humanity, high and low, with an event and date so unusual Yich and poor. La ‘that everyone would know just what _ The imaginary flights of “Domino we meant when we might have occa- in his aeroplane are ended but the ;'sion to say “we haven’t had a pair soul of the revered author is a-wing since the big snow of April, 28.” The to the haven of eternal rest. big snow of April 28 doesn’t seem tet——_p———— to have been a big snow at all. Capt. | —“Swearing she’d ne'er consent” Fry told us, on Sunday, that in the | France has agreed to pay the United middle of May, 1856, there was a States $11,250,000 on her war debt in three-foot snowfall. Oats and corn 'June. France is wise as well as wick- ‘had both been planted and up nicely, ed. ‘but neither was hurt. All wild birds | perished, however. We can’t corrob- | Germany is willing to sign a mul- orate the Captain’s story, of course, |tilateral or any other kind of a pact but we believe him, just the same, be- | to outlaw war, which proves that cause he said they had had the logs | “the world do move.” .cut for a barn and as a little boy he drove one of the teams that dragged ithe logs to the sawmill on that snow. ‘We believe the Captain because we have seen the log barn he says was ‘built of the logs he hauled on a May . SNOW. —Claude G. Bowers, who will be “keynoter” at the Houston conven- tion, is a newcomer in Democratic councils but he moves with surpris- ing speed and terriffic force. George Washington Rumberger. —A double row of Norway spruce trees is being planted along the Snow Shoe highway, which in due time will act as a snowbreak and take the place ed for the winter season. if he had achieved nation-wide emin- —The Spirit of St. Louis, having carried Lindy 40,000 miles through space and into the hearts of millions of people, is now an antique in the Smithsonian Institute at Washington. Secretary Mellon to Support Hoover. The primary elections, held in April, have not given Mr. Herbert Hoover a guaranteed title to the Re- publican nomination for President, but they have made it practically cer- tain that all he needs to secure it is the support of Andrew W. Mellon, Secretary of the Treasury. The re- sult of the vote in Ohio and Massa- chusetts has brought him to within a few votes of the necessary majority. The seventy-six votes of Pennsylva- ‘nia, which Mr. Mellon “carries in his ‘vest pocket,” will serve the purpose. Mr. Mellon has not yet indicated his preference among the candidates. He would undoubtedly be for President Coolidge if that gentleman were in- clined to take a “third cup of coffee.” i Mr. Mellon has developed a great . fondness for public life. Entering pol- itics late he has found it a vast reser- voir of pleasure and profit. With all his wealth and commercial prestige in , Pittsburgh he probably never dreamed of controlling or influencing import- ‘ant legislation until after he became ‘Secretary of the Treasury. -Accord- ing to his own statement, it cost him "only $2000 dollars, in the form of a contribution to the campaign fund in 11920, to acquire that office and within 'a few years he was able, by influenc- ing Congress in framing the income tax law, to save himself $800,000 a year ever since. It was probably one of the most profitable investments he ever made. Naturally, in view of these facts, Myr. Mellon is anxious to retain the office. It gives him vast power over the financial activities of the country, , which is flattering to the vanity of a man whose whole life has been dedi- cated to banking and corporation projects. He was for Cooldige be- cause his re-election would have made Mellon’s reappointment certain. He | can be induced to support Hoover by an assurance that he will be contin- ‘ued in office and his support carries the full strength of the Pennsylvania ' delegation in the Kansas City conven- tion. It remains to be seen how Mr. | Hoover, acocrding to gossip, but the will treat the problem. We predict | that Mellon will support Hoover. | —Mayor Mackey, of Philadelphia, is making great promises of reform | now to create a smoke screen for the iniquities to come later on. | —If Congress continues to award medals at the present rate the mak- ing industry. aid by Lindbergh. It is the stoic heroism of such men, their unassum- 1 ing challenge to peril, not for “stunt- ; ing” or glory but for the carrying on —The wise politician will spend as of jis world’s work, which advances little money as possible this year and aviation. : 2 : that little with infinite discretion. The world will stand in tribute to 1, brave men, the living and the ‘dead. Borah Invents a Comparison. | is. made plain in his support of Pres- ident Coolidge. Senator Borah has again proved himself the most consummate humbug in public life. Posing as a great law- yer and master of forensic art he pro- fesses sublime independence of ac- tion and thought, but invariably in- | vokes contemptible partisan tricks to serve the purposes of his political masters. Having been mentioned by some admirers as a suitable candidate for President he has completely lost all sense of proportion and indulged ‘in absurdities which would “make an- gels weep,” His proposition to “lift an obligation of shame” from his par- ty by presenting Sinclair with a con- siderable fortune was bad enough. But it was not the worst of his partisan follies. The other day, in addressing a Re- publican club in Chicago, he described the sort of man his party must nomi- nate for President this year by giving a pen sketch of himself as he sees himself in his mirror. He must be “courageous and clean,” in order “to demonstrate that the Republican par- ty belongs to neither crooks nor cow- ards.” I? the party fails to nominate such a man “he will not be responsible for the result.” This leaves the party in a bad plight. Mr. Borah is fully persuaded that he is the only Repub- lican in the country who measures up to that standard, and he employed all his eloquence to induce his audience to adopt the same view of the sub- ject. Having thus set the pattern Mr. Borah dismounted from his high horse and set about to convince the Chicago politicians present that he is quite equal to Big Bill Thompson in dema- goguery. He resorted to the methods of the frontier pettifoggers by com- paring the oil scandals in Washing- ton with a recent incident in Queens- boro, New York. In. that case it is alleged that a ward politician, by sin- ister means, had himself elected to a municipal office and betrayed his trust. The oil scandal involved three or four cabinet officers and several leaders of the Republican party. The Queensboro culprit was promptly re- . pudiated. The oil swindlers were vig- orously defended. Where is the par- allel ? } —Some politicians are bold enough jv say that Cooldige couldn’t get the nomination now if he tried. —Speaking of Presidential candi- of the temporary snow fences erect- ing of medals may become a promis- dates, “many are called but few chos- en.” S— A Real Show Place. From the Ilarrisburg Telegraph. | State Librarian Frederic C. God- “charles and Boyd P. Rothrock, ¢urator of the State Museum, display real vision in plans announced today for the transformation of the museum in- to a real historical show place. To visualize for all time the lost arts of early Pennsylvania is to per- form a real service. The time to do it is now, for in a few years the ma- terial for the reconstruction of those Colonial households, farm and trade scenes will have disappeared forever. Even now the tools and appliances are scarce and hard to find. The proposed display is of interest especially for the reason that when the early settlers went into Penn’s Woods they were able to carry little with them and means of transporta- tion were so crude that few tools or pieces of apparatus could follow them. But necessity is the nother of invention and they soon learned to de- vise the appliances they needed for their homes, their farms and the trades that sprung up to meet the needs of the people. Many of these were of original design, display in- ventive skill and mechanical dexter- ity. They have been pushed into the discard by modern factory products. But no historical collection: would be complete without them, and to display them as they were actually used adds a great educational feature to the work. Nor is Mr. Rothrock’s natural his- tory display, each group of birds, rep- tiles and mammals in the actual sur- roundings from which they were tak- en, of any less importance. Hundreds of thousands of people visit Pennsylvania’s capitol. The bus- iness of visualizing the history and the wild life of the State for their benefit is a great piece of advertising, the value of which, apart from its educational importance, cannot be ov- er-estimated. —Wall Street is offering odds on Hoover according to gossip, but the wide open spaces in the west tackle the subject from a different angle. —Lindy is to fly to Europe again. We are fearful every time the idol takes to the air, for his good luck can’t follow him always. ————————— A ————————— —The Senate committee on public lands will have a job for life if it un- dertakes to investigate all oil leases and contracts in the Salt Creek field. ———The Watchman gives all the news while it is news. collapsed, throwing the men to the ground. Meckley and Mattern suffered fractured skulls and broken arms and legs. William Rhoades, working on top of the tank, was narrowly missed by the flying end of ‘a broken guy wire, —Injuries sustained by a Pittsburgh woman with an artificial leg when her good leg went through the floor of a mov- | ing picture house are valued at $100,000 {in a suit filed by Mrs. Mary E. Abraham lagainst Nathan Rosen and Abraham ' Joseph, of the Model theatre. Mrs. Abra- ham says that on February 4, as she was leaving her seat in the theater, her left foot sank through a decayed board in the floor. She claims she had to spend $260 for a new artificial leg and was perma- nently injured. —Shoemakers, at McAdoo, Pa., had the thrill of their lives when John Mehalicks, a tunnel worker, dashed, half-dressed and with the grime of the mines still on his face and hands, through their shops, examining old shoes. His boarding mis- tress, in sending his shoes to be soled, had : included one pair that was his “bank.” | All his savings were in ‘them and when { Mehalicks came home from work and found them gone he started a tour of all ; the shops. He found the shoes in’ the last place visited and the money was ail there. % —So that retailers may be put on notice before laying in their stock of Fourth of July fireworks, Mayor Jacob E. Weaver, of York, last week issued a proclamation to the effect that he will this year place an absolute ban on the retail sale of all fireworks for use in that city. The police department will be utilized in enforcing the edict. In past years the city ordi- nance prohibiting the sale of fireworks for use in York has been rather loosely en- forced, but Mayor Weaver intends that this year its provisions shall be carried out. —A State Treasury voucher made in 1861 for $2500 has been found in the home of Dr. P. T, Fitzpatrick, at Lancaster, and will be presented to the State Treasurer for payment. The voucher, hidden away in an old pocketbook, was found by Dr. Fitzpatrick’s sister. She was about te toss the yellow paper into the fire when she discovered its value. The voucher was indorsed by the owner to the father of Dr. Fitzpatrick. It is doubtful whether Dr. Fitzpatrick will be able to collect in- terest, but if State records are intact he will be able to collect the face value of the security. : —Suit for $100,000 damages was started in common pleas court, at Doylestown, on Saturday, by Mrs. Rosa Fekete and her husband, Ernest, of Wismer, Bucks coun- ty, against John Funk, of Plumsteadville. An alleged fist fight over a crate of chick- ens led to the suit. Mrs. Fekete, alleges that Funk, through another party, pur- chased a crate of chickens at $1.40 a bird. When the chickens were placed in an au- tomobile, the woman alleges, Funk jumped from a hiding place in the truck and handed her $2.40 for the lot, saying it was the difference between a sum of money due him by the plaintiff and the value of the chickens. Mrs. Fekete alleges when she held onto the crate Funk struck her with his fists and knocked her unconscious. She is asking $75,000 damages for injuries and her husband seeks $25,000,