INK SLINGS. —A Pottstown tax collector levied on a delinquent’s goose. Possibly he thought it might lay a golden egg. " —1In many instances the sweet girl graduate and the June bride are in ‘the same boat. looking for work. : —The announcement of the death «of William H. Berry was a very great surprise to us. Surprise, because we thought he had died years ago. —Mr. Hoover is a very able man in "his line, but his line is not being President of a country he has lived in ;scarcely long enough to gain a voting residence. —Wouldn’t it be funny if the Dem- wocrats at Houston should do to Jim Reed what the Republicans did to Curtis at Kansas City. Al and Jim would make a whale of a campaign team. —Having absolutely nothing of pis- catorial achievement to brag about we satisfy the old urge to blow by announcing that observations taken in our garden recently indicate that we: will have new peas before July Fourth. —According to radio messages from the Nobile party lost in the Arctic regions the aeroplanes search- ing for them seemed to be playing blind man’s bluff with the Italian ex- plorer up until Wednesday, when they finally located him. Pity poor Jimmy Walker and Grov- er Whalen. When this Earhart girl and her companion fliers come back from the other side Jimmy and Grov- er will have to pull another reception. Being mayor of New York and chair- man of his entertainment committee will become very boresome if these trans-Atlantic flights keep on. A lot of them are i “Engineers and scientists are dig- ging themselves in on Chilhowee mountain, Tennessee, where they have twenty thunder storms a month, in order to develop a means of stopping lightning. The results of their work will be very interesting, of course, but not half so much so as will be that of watching the Mellons, the But- lers and the Vares trying to stop Smith. —The Bellefonte mother who re- cently entertained her son and four of his college chums must have come to ‘the conclusion that gastronomics is highly specialized in at State. When five boys. will- eat eight quarts of strawberries, two quarts of cream and enough short cake to ride them gracefully, at one sitting, we opine that tape cultures must be ram- pant up at the big College township school. : 1 “““Zith the event that Goyernor Smith, of New York, is nominated for Presi- dent at Houston, next week, we will be in for a campaign that is going to " prove the most beneficial one in the history of American politics. While it will doubtless engender much bit- terness begotten of bigotry we fore- see a great and lasting good in the certain bringing out into frank and open discussion the heretofore whis- pered matters of Protestantism and Catholocism. Neither should have anything to do with government of a free country, further than to insist that it shall be a Christian govern- ment. And both can be counted on to do that. We're all striving for the same Heaven so why quarrel about our routes? With Al Smith, a Roman Catholic, as the Democratic standard bearer, religion more than anything else will be the sneaking, poisoned ar- row that will be injected into the cam- paign, by those who care for nothing but the jobs that follow success of ‘the Republican party. Whether Smith “is nominated or not we want to tell you this. Vision today is deeper and broader than it ever was before and if the nomination of Smith amounts to nothing more than the further ‘broadening of that vision it will not have been a vain service the Demo- cratic party has rendered the coun- try. We say vision is broader today than it ever has been. We know it is. Protestants are discovering that Catholics really don’t “have horns nor tails,” and Catholics are more and more realizing that Protestants are not bigots and heretics. The under- standings are becoming more and more mutual and that augurs well. Last Saturday night we fell in with three men whom we had never met be- fore. All of them were Democrats. All were Lutherans. Born and raised in an isolated little valley where there “is only occasional contact with the outside world we thought to gain a slant on the reaction to Smith’s nomi- nation in such a locality. Imagine . our surprise when all three of them, almost in one voice, answered our question: “Who are you fellows for? with “We're for Smith!” Those men know that Smith is a Catholic. They said they did. “That makes no dif- ference with us,” one of them said, “a Catholic, if he is a good man, has - as much right to be President as a Lutheran and Al Smith must be a darned good man or he couldn’t have been elected Governor of New York four times.” There's the philosophy of very plain country folks from whom we had expected no such tem- perate declaration. It's spreading and, as we have said before, if the nomination of Smith should amount to nothing more than taking the dan- gerous question of religion forever out of politics the convention at Hous- ton will have done a great service if : it names him as our standard bearer. VOL. 73. The withdrawal of Governor Al- bert C. Ritchie, of Maryland, from the contest for the Democratic nomina- tion for President is an expression of self-abnegation worthy of high praise. Governor Ritchie is a man of Presidential proportions. In 1924 the Democrats of Maryland presented him as their choice for President and he developed considerable strength. This year he was honored in the same manner. But like Senator Walsh, of Montana, Governor Ritchie realizes that a majority of the voters of that political faith favor the nomination of another candidate, and in obedience to the fundamental Democratic prin- ciple of “majority rule,” he has un- selfishly taken himself out of the con- test. . There is an organized conspiracy, inspired by the Ku Klux Klan and supported by a group of religious bigots and prohibition fanatics, the purpose of which is to dead-lock the Houston convention, pervert it into a rabble of selfish and quarreling mis- chief makers and thus destroy all hope of victory at the polls in Novem- ber. . Senator Walsh discerned this danger: after the primary vote in Cal- ifornia and promptly separated him- self from affiliation with it. Govern- or Ritchie has now followed his wise example and it may be expected that former Senator Pomerene, of Ohib, and such other so-called favorite sons as sincerely believe in the political philosophy of Jefferson will join the procession. The Democratic party is the minor- ity element in the government at Washington now because of fissures in the ranks and factions which pre- vent unity of action. The principal reason given by those opposed to the nomination of Governor Smith, of New York, is that he is believed to favor some amendment to, or altera- tion of, the Volstead law. Presideat Wilson vetoed the Volstead law so that he must have been of the same opinion as to the merits of that mea- sure. That is not the reason, how- ever, why Governor Smith should be nominated or defeated. It seems that he is tHe choice of a vast majority of the De -the-country and that entitles him to fair consideration at Houston. —Governor. Smith, of New York, supplied police protection to Senator Heflin during his tour of defamation. Governor Smith has a correct esti- mate of the influence of a blather- skite. : Vare Tries to Usurp Glory. from his chief at Kansas City, the other day, would have been amusing if it hadn’t been utterly contemptible. After it had been determined by the Pennsylvania delegation to vote for Hoover on the first ballot it wae agreed that the announcement would be made by Mr. Mellon next morning. It was; the event of the convention, waiting for. It meant the end of the contest, the culmination of the hopes of a majority of the delegates. In- stead of waiting for the official an- nouncement by Mr. Mellon, Vare that it was the fruit of his influence. Mr. Vare is always “on his toes” ready to grab any passing personal advantage. When at the delegate con- ference in Philadelphia, a month ago, Mr. Mellon spoke of Mr. Hoover as the man “most nearly approaching the standard” he had set for the can- didate,. Mr. Vare immediately issued a “statement” expressing his partial- ity for: the Secretary of Commerce. His purpose to usurp the role of lead- er was so obvious that it deceived no- body and only provoked ridicule. But the convention incident expressed a more flagrant purpose to commit lar- ceny. It revealed to plain view the sinister ambitions of a petty boss to pose as a party leader of dominant influence. Of course those who know Vare and and have correctly measured the re- cent maneuvers of the Republican managers of Pennsylvania were not deceived by his absurd gesture. But there were a lot of people in Kansas City, last week, who are familiar on- ly with Vare’s operations as the head of a corrupt conspiracy and may have accepted his statements at the value he puts upon them. But he is “riding for a fall.” Andy Mellon had his measure and he is as vindictive against those who harm him as he is taciturn in public. It is safe to pre- dict that in the end Vare rather than Mellon will get the worst of the lit- tle trick that gave him a momentary place in the sun. a—————————————— —Senator McNary’s interest in the farm relief bill wasn’t very deep rooted. He is already reconciled to the Coolidge and Hoover estimate of that measure. Mr. Vare’s attempt to steal glory the news everybody was anxiously, clandestinely issued a statement not only containing the news but claiming STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. Governor Ritchie's Unselfish Act. |The Republican Candidate for Viee President. : It may be assumed that the Kansas with the view of reconciling the corn belt to the head of the ticket previ- ously chosen, notwithstanding the Having served in the Senate for sev- eral years Mr. Curtis is fully capa- ble of presiding over its deliberations as either of the other aspirants, and if his nomination will serve the pur- pose in mind it was a wise action. The corn belt is disgruntled and it has reason to be. The party leadevs jin control of the party policies have deliberately and somewhat malevo- 'lently discriminated against agricul- ture and in favor of manufactures many years. Senator Curtis was born and has spent his whole life in the center of the corn belt. It may be justly sai that Kansas is the heart of the corn belt and it might be expected that his sympathies would be with the inter- ests and aspirations of the people there. But the records do not support that assumption in full measure. For many years a contest has been pend- ing in Congress to give the farmers . equality of opportunity with the man- i ufacturers, and though Mr. Curtis has been in position to help vastly he has done little in that direction. He vot- ‘ed for the McNary-Haugen bill, but ! never spoke in its behalf, and when | the President vetoed it he voted fo sustain the veto and kill the measure. Senator Curtis is a partisan of the most confirmed type. He realized | that passing the farm relief bill over the veto in which the President had condemned it in the bitterest terms would impair the party interests and | he sacrificed the interests of the corn belt in order to conserve those of the party. In rewarding him for this per. fidy to his neighbors the Republican leaders showed scant respect for the intelligence of the people of the Mid- dle West. They assumed that the dis- soning from cause to effect, and that they will endure suffering indefinite- ly in order to bestow honors upon i mies. —It is encouraging to learn that Henry Blackmer, one of the oil scan- dal’ conspirators, is to be tried in Den- (ver. Washington jurors will have no chance to buy block-long automobiles out of the proceedings. Kansas City Made a Botched Job. In nominating Herbert Hoover for President the Kansas City convention probably selected the fittest of the ‘group of candidates who set up claim | for the favor, measured by the stand- ard of the Mellons, the Butlers and the Vares, now the dominant figures of the Republican party. He is es- sentially a corporation product. His entire mature life has been devoted to organizing corporations and syndi- i cates for European capitalists and ex- i ploiting the public where they were : operated. He is a capable engineer, ‘an expert manager and so far as the available records show, a keen and clean business man. His experience in public life is limited to two terms ‘as Secretary of Commerce. Senator Norris, of Nebraska, would be an ideal candidate for President if the purpose were to secure honest, unselfish and efficient service for the people. But he never had a “look in” at the Kansas City convention, and fully realized that fact. Former Gov- ernor Lowden, of Illinois, has a repu- tation for intelligence and ‘integrity and has had considerable experience in official life, having served some time in Congress and a term as Gov- ernor. The ambition of “Jim” Wat- son, of Indiana, to aspire to the Pres- idency was absurd and that of Guy Goff, of West Virginia, a joke. So “taking one consideration with an- other,” as a comic opera writer put it, the convention did the best it could. The platform is a long drawn out collection of vain boasts and “ponder- ous platitudes.” It claims that every good that has come to the people of the country within the last half cen- tury is ascribable to the wisdom, pa- triotism and integrity of the Republi- can office-holders. It eulogizes Pres- ident Coolidge fulsomely but passes over the iniquities of the Harding ad- ministration, the oil scandals and the corrupt elections. It straddles the prohibition issue and renews the prom- ise made four years ago, which is still unfulfilled, for farm relief. Altogeth- er the work of the Kansas City con- vention is a botched job which will fool nobody except those who were born that way. —If Hoover should be elected and the Republican pledge on prohibition enforcement be fulfilled the bootleg- gers will enjoy a renewed license to operate for “four years more.” City convention nominated Senator’ Curtis, of Kansas, for Vice-President: vigorous opposition of that section. tressed farmers are incapable of rea-: ho las betrayed them to. thelr ene. {roe-of tariff - BELLEFONTE. PA.. JUNE 22, 1928. Tariff Taxation. Impairs Prosperity. der the inspiration of its new nation- al leader, William S. Vare, ably sup- ported by that equally distinguished economist, Joseph R. Grundy, has re- add a schedule on agricultural pro- ducts so that the levy on turnips will equal that on products of the Alumi- num trust, it might be worth while for the farmers to analyze the sub- | ject with a view to ascertaining the effect. In a letter to the New York Times Mr. Henry T. Scudder, of Wis- consin, has presented some data upon which such an investigation might be ‘based. He, at least, is not deceived by the pretense that lowering tariff rates would “submerge our industry.” As an illustration of his point of view Mr. Scudder cites the effect of placing wool on the free list, as was done by the Underwood tariff law | which was in force during the years | 1895, 1896 and 1897. He makes com- | parison with the wool taxed periods of 1894, 1898 and 1899. In 1894 the domestic wool clip was 298,000,000 pounds, the importation 58,000,000 pounds and the consumption 364,654,- 904 pounds. In 1898 the clip was 266,720,684 pounds, the importation 130,795,302 and the consumption 396,- 891,015. In 1899 the clip was 272,-/ 191,330, the importation 76,736,209 pounds and the consumption 334,632,- 204 pounds. If the clip, importation and consumption had receded from these figures during the tax-free per- ‘iod there would be some reason for favoring the tax. But as a matter of fact the op- posite result obtained. In 1895 the clip was 310,000,000, the importation | 206,033,906 and the consumption 509,- | 411,716 pounds. In 1896 the clip was 273,000,000, the importation 230,941,- 473 and the consumption 490,939,256 pounds. In 1897 the clip was 259,- 153,251, the importation 350,852,026 and the consumption 601,304,679 pounds. In other words, during the three years that wool was admitted free the country consumed 582,477,- .528 pounds more than during the same three years that wool was admitted ' people were benefitted by better cloth- .ing and industry improved by the la- | bor. involved in converting raw ma- terials into finished products. | | —It seems that Mr. Vare was act- ing under the instructions of Francis Shunk Brown when he scooped Uncle | Andy at Kansas City. Francis ‘Shunk is an expert in tricks other than politics. League of Women Voters Enjoyed Annual Picnic. The annual picnic of the Centre county branch League of Women vot- | ers, held at the home of Mrs. W. A. i Ferree, at Oak Hall, last Friday, proved an enjoyable outing and was deemed a splendid success by those ‘in attendance—the number being con- sidered very good, Bellefonte, State | College, Boalsburg and Linden Hall having good representations. The weather for the day was ideal and luncheon was served under the stately trees on the Ferree lawn. Af- ter luncheon Miss Lucille Buchanan, a State organizer, gave a splendid | talk on “When Will Women be Polit- ically Wise?” This was followed by ia general discussion which ran the ‘gamut of all the important political issues of the day—voting machines, bond issues, farm relief, the marines in Nicaragua and the Republican con- | vention at Kansas City. . All those present had no hesitancy in declaring that the pleasure of the day was largely due to Mrs. Ferree and her family, to whom the League is greatly indebted. —The Republican bosses are not going to fool the farmers with Curtis ias a vice presidential candidate. A Vice President can’t do anything but preside over the Senate. If you don’t | believe that ask yourself what Dawes has done by way of promoting legis- lation during the past four years. ‘Hoover is not for the farmers, never |was and never will be. He is the progeny of the great corporations, His mind is mechanical, not agricul- tural. That was shown during the war, when the product of every in- dustry except that of agriculture sold at the highest figure known. Coal, for instance, sold for four times its customary price, but Hoover saw to it that the farmers who had to pay the big prices got less than double the usual price of their grain. —Now that Mr. Coolidge’s “do not choose to run” has been taken at face value it may be said that he is per- manently out of the picture. S—— A ————— —Those who are trying to dead- lock the Houston convention are —— Now that the Republican party un- affirmed its devotion to the policy of high tariff taxation and promised to - NO. 25. . Amelia Earhart Makes Successful Flight Across the Atlantic. Atlantic ocean in an airplane, and the two men who aided her in the cross- | ing, reached Burry Port, Wales, Mon- ‘day afternoon. Shortly after noon . Miss Amelia Earheart, of ‘Boston, with Wilmer Stultz, of Williamsburg, Pa., and Louis Gordon, mechanic, landed their tri-motored monoplane “Friendship” in Burry . Estuary, completing in 20 hours and 49 min- utes the flight from Trepassey bay, New Foundland. It was shortly after the dinner hour that watchers on the Welsh coast saw an airplane approaching from the southwest, but it was not until the big ship flew over Llanelly railway sta- tion (four miles from Burry Port) that it dawned on the curious crowds that this was the Friendship and that aboard it was the first woman.to cross the Atlantic in an airplane. - Then the Stars and Stripes painted on the fuselage and the printed let- ters of its name could be seen. Once Burry Port had seen this insignia it was a town transformed by excite- ment. fhe After circling gracefully over the town the plane continued at a low al- titude along the river to the coast. There it narrowly escaped disaster when it passed only a few yards to the side of the Burry Port copper works chimney stack. Observers held their breath, but the plane slipped by to make a graceful landing a few minutes later in the Estuary, taxiing up to a buoy where the fliers made fast while launches and boats scurried out to greet them. ; The entire population of the little town soon had rushed to greet the fliers, and the entire district was soon in a ferment of excitément. Not in years had the vicinity been so awak- ened. or Boatmen ‘rowing out to the plane saw first Miss Earhart, :bobbed ' hair swathed in colored bandeau, and face wreathed in a tired, happy smile. They stretched their hands up from their skiffs te the cabin of the plane and grasped her hand, congratulating | her with almost their first words. She thanked them ‘simply, one of them said upon returning, adding: “I’m the proudest woman in the world.” = The ‘greater part of ‘the trip across the Atlantic it was well ~impos- ‘sible to see anything at : of heavy cloudbanks and driving rain, world by means of the radio and the occasional greetings from passing ships. “We were quite cheerful,” he add- ed. “Our only anxiety was that our fuel would not last. It was beginning to run low when finally we sighted land.” Two other women who attempted flights across the Atlantic were lost at sea while one got as far as the Azores. Labor’s Activity in Politics. From the Philadelphia Record. Even among the most insurgent el- ements represented at Kansas City there is little serious talk of a third party movement. Bitter as the Re- publicans of the corn belt feel over the rejection of their demands, they perceive no promise in repeating the futile effort of 1924. In the other field where such a tendency might be important its absence is still more pronounced. Organized labor is less than ever inclined at this time to adopt the European method of enter- ing politics as a separate force. Its decision is unreservedly an- nounced in the appearance at the Re- publican convention of the Nonparti- san Political Campaign Committee of the American Federation of Labor. Having presented its demands there, it will present them in precisely the same form at Houston. us the principal labor organization will as such leave the contest to the two es- tablished parties. It will neither take the field itself nor seek an alliance with one or the other. Moreover, la- bor’s strategy will be directed to in- fluencing not the parties, but their in- dividual representatives. Despite the formidable array of planks it urges, it is less concerned to have them adopted in the Republican and Dem- ocratic platforms than it is to pro- cure the election of Congressmen fa- vorable to its cause. This was the policy of Samuel Gom- pers, and it is the policy of his sue- cessors. The A. F. L. indorsement of the La Follette ticket in 1924 was given by the slender margin of a six- to-five vote in the council, and was, in fact, a formal expression of sym- pathy rather than an active alliance, for it laid no obligation upon any af- filiated union or individual member. This year it is unlikely that such a venture would receive a vote. Another Mystery Solved. From The Springfield Republican. Russia has solved the mystery of the disappearance of its grain sur- plus, the very simple explanation be- ing that the poorer peasants, who con- stitute two-thirds of the population, are now consuming about 75 per cent of the crop instead of 40 per cent as formerly. Substantially it means that for the first time they are getting enough to eat, which is all to the good, but they may also be getting working for the election of Hoover. more to drink than is good for them. The first woman ever to cross the “gfviaccount” Stultz said in describing the flight. | They kept in touch with the outside |. | SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONR —Five weeks ago, Mrs. Martha Kirby, 40, of Harrisburg, fell and broke her left leg. She was just recovering from this injury when she fell down the basement stairs last Friday and broke the same leg “sl ilior a second time. —Shamokin borough has a $25,000 bond issue bearing four per cent interest which it is willing to sell. Thus far no pur- chasers have appeared and the borough officials are considering raising the In- terest rate as the money is badly needed. —Joseph Chevenski, 20, escaped, on Sun- he had been placed in default of $2000 bail on a charge of stealing automobiles. ‘When he vanished, so did the car of An- thony Crokamo, parked in a nearby street, —While serving as a federal juror, in Pittsburgh, last week, the Rev. T. W. Ev- ans, of Nant-Y-Glo, Cambria county, was held up and robbed of $25 while walking along an East Liberty street a: night. The hoid-up men returned his empty pocketbcok, the minister told his fellow jurors. —Twelve miles of new highway were constructed by contractors for the State Highway Department last week, the de- partment anounced on Monday. There were 196 contracts under way and T7217 men employed by contractors during the week. The highway department’s main- tenance force numbered 7756 men. —Part of half a million dollars loot from a train robery in the middle west in hidden in a barn somewhere near Harris- burg, according to a story told detectives by John P. Carroll, escaped convict. Car- roll is under arrest in Philadelphia and previously told where $50,000 of the loot was hidden in New Jersey and Delaware. —A thirty-twe-inch carp, weighing twenty-six pounds, was the record of Daniel Carstetter, 71-year-old fisherman of Pine Top, Burnham, Thursday morning. Landing the huge fish, while in the mid- dle of the Juniata river, a mile west of Lewistown, Carstetter proceeded to tell envious fishermen about his luck. Two full quarts of eggs were taken from the fish. —Miss Hazel McGuire, of Renovo, while attending the Republican convention, at Kansas City, as an alternate delegate from her congressional district, stated that she attorney general of Pennsylvania, twenty. feet from a car from which six masked bandits sprang and held up a Kansas City bank, shooting two policemen and a by- stander in making their getaway. —Walter E. Hess, 17, a messenger for the Western Union Telegraph company, at Lewistown, has beein arrested by M. A. Davis, lieutenant of Pennsylvania Rail- road police, charged with systematically robbing the cash drawer of the Dughi ice cream and confectionery store. Adam Dughi, proprietor, says he has lost ap- proximately $100 in the last four weeks. Marked bills in his possession led to the arrest. : -—Four new buildings will be added to the equipment of the Lewistown fair grounds, this summer, Samuel B. Russell, secretary of the association, has an- rounced.: These will include a building of fifteen stalls to take care of the extra horses that constiiute the overflow of rac- ing stock ‘each year, and new -cxhibit buildings for horticulture and agricultural exhibits. : 2 —Stanley Martin, a 17-year-old Negro youth, known as the “Terror,” was sen- tenced to from 17% years to 35 years In the Western Penitentiary, at Pittsburgh, Tuesday, after he had pleaded no defense to several charges of attacking women, robbery and felonious assault. “I am sor- ry that I have to be so lenient,” the Judge remarked. A detective testified that the vouth had confessed to more attacks than were on the police records. —Margaret Smith, 20, arraigned before Mayor Joseph Cauffiel, in Johnstown, charged with taking jewelry, clothing and shoes from a home and shoemaker’s shop in her neighborhood, was paroled on Mon- day on condition that she attend church once each week, read one chapter of the Bible daily and report to the mayor every three months for a period of two and one half years. The city executive ordered that the girl’s parents be charged with the responsibility of seeing that she carried out the conditions of the decree. —Theodore O’Dell, 19, of Munson, was cut in half by engine No. 3088 on the New York Central railroad, near Young- dale, last Thursday. With his father, George O'Dell, he was working on the track about a mile and half below Young- dale, and was told to go a mile east of the Shoemaker crossing to flag a train. When the engine approached the crew saw the man sitting on the track with his head in his hands, apparently asleep, and blew the whistle loudly. Dr. W. J. Shoemaker, of Lock Haven, Clinton county coroner, investigated the case and decided that an inquest was unnecessary. —Although falling 1500 feet, when an engine and plane parted company in the midst of a loop the loop and landing on Lehigh street, a busy South End thor- oughfare, in Allentown, on Monday, nei- ther William Brooks, pilot, nor Walter Harleman, a passenger, were injured. Harleman’s only hurt was a scratch of the little finger. The plane was being ope- rated by the Gates flying circus in a field west of Allentown for the past few days. Harleman, an oil salesman from Potts- ville, had gone up with Brooks for a ride and they had just entered the loop when the engine fell clear of the plane. Brooks guided his craft so that it volplaned a dis- tance of almost half a mile, coming io earth on the busy street. The place where the engine fell is almost half a mile away, the impact driving it into the earth. —Leon Chubb, 27, was instantly killed on Friday afternoon when struck by train No. 8, a fast express on the Pennsylvania railroad at Vandyke, near Lewistown. Chubb was a single man, lived with his parents and was employed as a section laborer. He was engaged in tearing up crossties with an automatic trip hammer and had just completed his last tie and stepped into the guage of the rails to talk to his companions when train No. 25 west- bound went by on an adjacent track, it and other trip hammers drowning the sound of the approaching eastbound ex- press. His body was thrown high in the air, both shoes knocked from his feet, and virtually every bone in his body crushed. The two companions saw the approaching train in time to get away, because they were working on the outside of the rail, but Chubb standing between the rails was just a second too late. 2 day, from the lockup, at McAdoo, where was standing with Miss O'Hara, depuly’ for poultry and dogs, cattle shed, a barn