mn, Boi itd INK SLINGS. “Dead men tell no tales,” so it is perfectly safe to blame the Vestris tragedy on Captain Carey. —If Al Smith is alive in 1932 and is not drafted by the Democratic par- ty for its standard bearer his next best friend, Franklin D. Roosevelt, will probably have developed into po- tential presidential timber. —Farmers are hauling water in Centre county while out in the mid- west they are fleeing from 't. If our party was in power our Republican friends would be blaming it for the scarcity here and the floods there, but we're going to heap coals of fire on their heads by going so far as to ad- mit the possibility that neither Mr. Coolidge nor Mr. Hoover has anything to do with the vagaries of precipita- tion. —Come easy, go easy. A College township farmer who is supposed to have cleaned up ten thousand dollars by opening a toll road-way through his farm while a highway bridge was in course of construction, knows the truth of the old epigram. The other day his farm hand gave a calf he had paid two hundred dollars for to the butcher who called for a “dunghill” that had been sold to him by tele- phone. : —The correspondent with whom we offered to share our political comfort last week comes back with the charge that we are a socialist: One of those fellows who wants to divide up every- thing he hasn’t any of. And that re- minds us of a plaint that the depart- ed Al Roberts habitually voiced. In speaking of a certain distinguished citizen of the town, also departed, Al said: “He never has anything for you when you need it and is always want- in’ to give you something when you don’t want it. —An eminent and fearless Judge of the Courts of Philadelphia county says that the Director of Public Safe- ty down there ought to resign. The Director in question is responsible for ‘the police of that city and the whole world knows what has been found out about police and crime in Philadel- phia. Mr. Vare, however, steps into the controversy and says, in sub- stance: Director Davis will not re- sign and the Mayor dare not remove him. In Philadelphia, evidently, gov- ernment is of the people, for the peo- ple and by Vare. —1It is possible for a free people to vote themselves completely into the power of those whom they chose to govern them. While the office hold- ing class in this country has not yet reached proportions that could or- ganize to perpetually perpetuate it- self who can say that the future holds no such possibility. With the spirit of development and the idea of pa- ternalism rampant government de- | pendents are multiplying by the thousands, annually. Each one of them controls a few votes and it is not mere fancy to say that the time might come when the constantly wid- ening circle will reach out far enough to completely control elections under the present system in this country. —A rumor that intrigues us is one to the effect that recently a boot-legger, with a thirty-six thous- ; STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. | SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Members of the Lock Haven motor club who are arrested for driving while intoxicated will receive no aid from the club. A recent announcement said that while the club was ready to lend assist- j ance in cases of accidents and other dif- : ficulties, its stand for safety on the high- | ways precluded a helping hand in the case of a drunken driver. —An explosion of 100 25-pound kegs of black powder in a roll milling steel plant of the Du Pont Powder company at Lau- i rel Run,near Wilkes-Barre, last Friday, ! destroyed the structure and caused dam- age estimated at $30,000. Two men, Lewis VOL. 73. BELLEFONTE, PA... Governor Smith’s Valedictory Story. Governor Smith’s address to the American people, delivered in New York last week, was characteristic. It was the expression of a candid, courageous and resourceful leader. It conveyed no feeling of resentment or desire to evade responsibility. Gov- ornor Smith accepts the result of the election without complaint and with- out dismay. He sees in it “that the Democratic party is alive, a vigorous and forceful major minority,” and de- clares “the Democratic party to-day is the great liberal party of the na- tion. It leads the progressive thought in all the country. It holds out the only hope of return of the fundament- al principles on which the country was built and as a result of which it has grown and thrived.” The mission of the party is not to win victories but to help the people. It is not unreason- able to say that this has been ac- complished in some measure in the campaign just ended. The fourteen and a half million votes cast for Governor Smith for President may admonish the successful party against policies and practices of the past eight vears which have brought shame and disgrace to the country. That in it- self will be achievement of ines- timable value to the people. And that is not the only source of satisfaction in the vote for Governor Smith. It proves that the Democratic party is not only alive but is increasing in strength and steadfast in purpose. Such a force under such leadership cannot be slighted. Governor Smith is neither a sniper nor a dodger. He may have been dis- appointed in the result of the election but he cherishes no spite. He appeals for fair treatment of his successful antagonist in the contest. “It will not do,” he says, “to let bitterness, rancor or indignation over the result blind us to the one outstanding fact that above everything else we are Americans no matter what party we. aligned ourselves with on election day. Our concern should be for the future welfare, happiness, content- ment and prosperity of the American people.” In pursuance of this senti- ment he asks all the people to support the President-elect. “He is entitled to i a fair opportunity to develop a pro- gramme calculated to promote the welfare and best interests of the country.” Mr. Vare may be boss of Phila- idelphia but most of his followers are likely to be in prisons or fugitives be- fore he fully recovers. Beck Fights for Fraud. James M. Beck, of Washington, is still trying to break into Congress as and dollar cargo, was held up just outside of Bellefonte and had to give up twelve hundred to get on with his contraband. Not having that amount in ready cash he is said to have come in to town, put up a hand- full of loose diamonds as collateral, procured the money, paid the agents! who held him up and went on his way. ! If you can imagine a boot-legger with | a caravan of three Cadillac cars and thirty-six grand in liquor without twelve hundred in cash then you! might well believe the story and start | nosin’ around to find out who held him up, who loaned him the twelve hundred and who got it. 1 —The proposal presented to coun- | cil Monday evening that a milk in- | spector be ‘employed by the borough : should be of utmost interest to every | resident of the town. In bacterial count milk is probably far and away | the dirtiest commodity offered for | daily consumption. There is no such | thing as perfectly clean milk. Even | the high grade products of the ex- tra-fancy dairies that produce certi- | fied milk contain enough bacteria to scare the life out of the lay consum- | er, were he to know the count and be- | lieve that every bacillus spells infer) tion of some sort. Everybody wants of Pennsylvania. Representative of the First district On dubious tech- nicalities he occupied the seat dur- ing the first session of the Seven- tieth Congress against a contest which is yet undecided, based upon non-residence of the district. At the spring primary this year he was re- nominated by the Vare machine and by the unofficial returns appeared to have been elected by seventy major- ity. The official count reduced this figure to fifty and his opponent ap- plied to the courts for the opening of the ballot boxes in several divisions of the Seventh ward upon the ground that substantial errors had been made. Judge Harry S. McDevitt and Judge Edwin O. Lewis, composing the re- turn court, after hearing arguments of counsel disagreed upon the ques- tion at issue. Judge Lewis denied the application and Judge McDevitt hand- ed down a decision granting it and fixed Friday morning for further argument. An appeal was made by | counsel for Mr. Beck to the board of | judges, but that body refused to in- terfere. Thereupon Mr. Beck’s law- yers announced the purpose to appeal Judge MecDevitt’s action to the Su- preme court of the State. Judge Lewis based his opinion on the inef- milk as reasonably free from con- ficiency of the petition and absence of tamination as possible. approve the proposal, others will pro- test it and still others will wonder why it is necessary to add another official to the borough payroll. Some will | We | must admit that some ground can be jurisdiction. Judge McDevitt held “that public policy demanded the opening of the boxes.” Mr. Beck, and those whose willing instrument he seems to be, loudly pro- fess to favor honest elections and found for this latter state of mind. | fair returns of the vote. But their Already there is the State Pure Food Department, with its inspectors con- stantly on the go. There is a State health officer located within five miles of Bellefonte. And the town has a secretary of health and a health of- ficer, as well, both of whom are draw- ing salaries regularly for work that probably doesn’t take up ten hours of their time monthly. So, whilz we all agree that clean milk is most de- sirable, there might be an honest di- vision of opinion as to the means of getting it. Rather than encourage such a multiplicity of officials coun- cil might help the property owners who have to pay them by working out a plan that would secure the desired service without any more outlay than is being made now. (action in resisting the petition to open the boxes in the Seventh ward, where fraud or substantial errors are believed to have defeated the candi- date honestly elected, and elected the candidate justly . defeated, belies their pretenses. If mo fraud has been committed or errors made there can come no harm to Mr. Beck by re- counting the votes under the super- vision of the courts. The fact that Mr. Beck objects to this “acid test” of the question is substantial evi- ‘dence that he knows fraud has been committed and hopes to profit by it. The first real step toward ! stabilizing aviation has been taken. A conference for the discussion of fin- ances has been held. Democratic ! Monopoly Moving Forward. The smoke of the recent political | battle had scarcely blown away when the logical results of the election of Herbert Hoover began to reveal themselves. On Saturday last, the daily newspapers carried two signif- icant stories dated New York, Nov. 14. One stated that “bankers, finan- cial promotors and ultility managers today sat in sub-committees complet- ing the plans for one of the biggest ‘electrical power mergers in history.” The other stated that “negotiations which eventually hope to bring about the combination of four steel com- panies into a corporation with assets of more than $250,000,000 are now under way, it was learned today.” Big business is in the saddle and is pre- | paring to ride down all opposition. The electric power merger, accord- ing to the programme, “will include , practically the entire power resources of up-State New York and Pennsyl- vania. Ever since the election of Herbert Hoover with his announced policy of private control of power,” the narrative continues, “the giant merger which connects the Morgan and Mellon interests, has been a fore- gone conclusion. Properties worth well over a billion dollars will be brought together by the combination and the interconnection of power lines will make one giant power pool stretching from beyond Niagara Falls to Southern Pennsylvania.” Small enterprises will have little chance in competition with this gigantic mo- nopoly. The proposed steel combination is equally powerful in its field. It in- cludes the Atlas Steel corporation, the Ludlum Steel company, each enjoy- ing a monopoly in certain lines; the Central Steel corporation, the Repub- lic Iron and Steel company, the Trum- ! bull Steel company and the Steel and Tube company, Incorporated. All of these concerns specialize in high class . tool steel and in no respect interfere with the business of the United States Steel corporation or the Beth- ilehem Steel company. But when i these giant combinations are‘effécted. and these monopolies are established | the business of the people will be put ‘under tribute to pay unearned boun- ties to the conspirators. i —Albert Ottinger has finally ad- mitted that he was not elected Gover- nor of New York. He has not only | done this, but he has assured Franklin ' D. Roosevelt that he can carry out all 'of Ottinger’s plans for the govern- ment of the Empire State without {fear of being charged with plagiar- Ottinger the nice lism. Isn't Mr. man? Vare Reasserts His Leadership. Mr. Vare’s dramatic gesture at | Atlantic City, on Sunday, is a matter fof more than local significance. His | resumption of the leadership of the :Vare machine in Philadelphia is quite unimportant. Even with the vastly .increased Democratic vote in that city 1it may mean a reformation of lines and a restoration of control of the ‘municipal government in substantial- ‘ly the old way. But that is not the ‘purpose DMr. Vare had in mind when he said to a group of politicians “I still am boss.” His vision was soar- ing above and beyond the city limits. He was contemplating State-wide con- trol of the Republican party of Penn- sylvania from a seat in the United States Senate. The defeat of Herbert Hoover, or even a material decrease of the Re- publican majority in Pennsylvania, would have meant a requiem to Mr. Vare’s hope for even an ill-fitting jority acquired largely in the rural districts where machine methods are not in practice or popular favor, has planted in his mind a confidence that with the increased party majority in the Senate and the reassertion of leadership in his home State, he may duties of the office which he bought and paid for at an enormously high rating in 1926. To achieve this re- sult the Wilson contest will have to be thrown out. No doubt that was the thought that City convention to force the Penn- sylvania delegation, in advance of the balloting, to declare for Hoover. It was the turning point in the contest and inevitably left a feeling of grat- itude in the heart of Mr. Hoover. The was simply ‘“cashing-in” on expecta- tions. The big majority in the State will be appraised as a popular en- dorsement of the previously discred- ited political machinist and justify ercising what power he can command in favor of seating Vare. The big- oted Democrats who voted for Hoov- er helped Vare amazingly. —Bill Vare declares that he is still boss of Philadelphia. But he got a pretty rude jolt on election day. Senatorial toga. But the million ma- be allowed to qualify and assume the | influenced Mr. Vare at the Kansas gesture at Atlantic City, on Sunday, | Mr. Hoover, in his own mind, in ex-' NOVEMBER 23. 1928S. contra ~~ Scramble for the Surplus. The Governor, according to current gossip in Harrisburg, “expects a scramble” for shares of the surplus during the coming session of the Gen- eral Assembly. State Treasurer Lew- is estimates that at the close of the fiscal year, June 1st, 1929, there will be approximately $25,00,000 in the State treasury. This is an enticing lure for hungry, not to say avaricious, politicians. The failure of the sever- al bond amendments to the constitu- tion will afford excuses for all sorts of demands though the party machine will control the distribution of the favors and place the money “where it will do the most good” for the party, it antici- pates a good deal of trouble. The Highway Department will ask’ for a considerable slice of the sur- plus and as Governor Fisher favored the adoption of that amendment it is believed that that department will get about what it wants, It is whispered about the capitol corridors that an increase in automobile licenses and gasoline tax will be necessary unless the Highway Department is well pro- vided for. The Welfare Department also appears to stand in high favor and Governor Fisher estimates that $10.000,000 ought to go to buildings for that department. The reforesta- porters and the State armories are insistent. people, is State College. The party bosses have been for some time indulging the hope that in view of the surplus it might be possi- | field, if it can be purchased at the ble to reduce taxes at least a trifle, without impairment of their plans. | will mean a permanent institution for But in anticipation of the impending “grabfest” that expectation hasbeen abandoned. Economy is a poor cam- : paign argument anyway, as recent | incidents have shown. There is | more likelihood of a tax increase than decrease. In any event it is a safe. bet that there will be no surplus at | the end of the next biennium, and the ! next session of the General Assembly | viti ‘be a continuous orgie of appro- priation grabbing. The machine has the power and the money. | } —If the recent election was a “wet” and “dry,” referendum the dries won. But we can’t quite get the idea of the victory celebrants. We have seen an unusual number of drunks on the street since election day and know ! most of them voted dry. Doe Hunting Season Will Open in One Week. : | The doe hunting season—for doe | it is to be according to the latest rul- ing of the State Game Commission— will open one week from tomorrow and the slaughter of the female of the species will be legal for a period of fifteen days. While there have been many arguments, pro and con, on the advisability of killing off the does, and vigorous protests have been made to the Game Commission against its ruling to do so, there is a strong probability that when the time comes many of the old-time hunters will take a crack at one. As proof of this fact it can be cit- , ed that county treasurer L. L. Smith has issued over eight thousand spe- cial doe licenses, which is evidence that a good many men have a doe in mind. Practically all the hunting clubs in Centre county are making their plans to go into camp during the open sea- son for deer, and as it will be against the law to kill bucks the only thing they can shoot is doe, unless they put in their time hunting bear, raccoon and rabbits. While eight thousand doe licenses have been issued to hunters who ex- pect to go on the trail in Centre coun- ty mountains Mr. Smith still has on hand about five thousand, as Centre county’s total was a little over thir- teen thousand. j | ——The new Premier of Rumania, Juliu Maniu, proposes to establish “a government of the people, for the people and by the people,” which will ‘be “a noble experiment” in the Balk- | ans, | ——It’s hardly worth while to wor- ry over the future of Al Smith. A man of his ability, integrity, courage and industry may be depended upon to take care of himself. i ——Lloyd George says “the na- tions are sharpening their knives on the stones of the temple of peace.” Wonder if the Coolidge speech inspir- | : ed that metaphor. ——European newspapers interpret Coolidge’s Armistice day speech as notice that Hoover will follow the same policies as his predecessor. | ~—The President-elect is off on his good-will tour and he carries with him the best wishes of all American citizens. for appropriations and , , tically at cost, and which should be ‘used on the day of the celebration, ( ; . I , ten any time and placed in the post- tion project has some influential sup-- Last in the favor of poli- ticians, but first in the minds of the | + on Arbitration vas Friday Herbert Beezer Searfoss and William Haven, who were in the building, escaped. Cause of the "explosion has not been determined. —George M. Wertz, former representa- tive in Congress from the Cambria county district and for the past 30 years a prom- inent figure in Cambria county politics, died on Monday. Wertz, a Republican, was elected to the State Senate and at the ed as county commissioner. In 1908 he was elected to the State Senate and at the close of the 1911 session was elected presi- dent of that body. He also served as coun- ty controller and was elected to Congress 'in 1922, —Activity of a family of beavers is causing residents of Sunbury concern. Unless a halt is called, the town may be flooded. The outlet to a pond was blocked by the beavers, causing the water to rise several feet. Railroad men removed the debris. The beavers made repairs. The war has been going on for weeks, the bea- vers repairing the dam every time it is destroyed. Since it is against the law to kill the beavers, the officials are in a quandary. —Two more strips of land purchased by agents of the New York Central Railroad company from the Price Estate and the T. B. Bridgens farm west of Lock Haven between the Susquehanna river and the (avenue of that name, bring the erection of a low grade line connecting Chicago and New York through Lock Haven and Keat- ing, just a little nearer, and brings the amount of land in that section purchased by the railroad for this purpose last sum- mer to $25,000. —Tripping over a floor obstruction while engaged in household work, Mrs. Alex- ander Conton, 80-year-old Trevorton resi- dent, met death when she stumbled into a huge tub of scalding water. Writhing in pain, but unable to help herself from the | vessel, the aged woman lost unconscious- ness and died a few minutes after her husband, who is an employee at the col- liery, had returned to the house and found her in her torturous position. Coroner Fisher is conducting an investigation. —Mayor Joseph Cauffiel has abandoned his attempt to enforce the closing of all business establishments in Johnstown on Sunday. The mayor on Friday issued a statement renouncing his intention of en- | forcement of the “blue laws.” He also de- | nied having made statements to that ef- | fect, notwithstanding that the city police | officers, carrying out his orders, had no- tified proprietors of drug stores, gasoline ‘service stations and others that they must keep their places closed om Sunday. —Hugh Vail, 47, committed suicide uf Altoona, last Friday in a dramatic relig- ious setting. Vail, who had been ill since 1921, prepared for bed, fixed a mirror so he could see his face, placed a lighted candle and a crucifix on a chair and, with a Bible in one hand and a revolver in the other, shot himself through the head. Vail's body was found by his wife, Mar- garet. She and one daughter survive. The family were making preparations to re- turn to their old home in Philipsburg. —Twelve shool teachers who talked too much and too loudly in their balcony seats at a Uniontown theatre during sessions of the Fayette county institute on Friday were ordered from the building by County Superintendent John 8. Carroll. The sup- erintendent previously had warned them to be quiet. In addition to ordering the "12 talkative teachers from the building as he pointed them out in the audience Su- perintentent Carroll informed them they would receive no pay for their week's at- tendance at the institute. NO. 46. Bellefonters Should Boom Airmail Celebration. The committee appointed by the Ki- wanis club to arrange for a proper celebration of the tenth anniversary of the establishment of an airmail field in Bellefonte, and of which Geo. , T. Bush is chairman, is anxious to have Bellefonte people, and mer- chants especially, waken up to the fact that it is another good oppor- tunity to advertise the town, and should not be allowed to pass unheed- ed. Mr. Bush has already received over four hundred letters from persons and firms away from here to be mailed in Bellefonte that day, and Bellefonte business men should also take ad- ! vantage of the opportunity to leave the outside world know that they are still alive and kicking. The Postof- fice Department has already recog- nized the steps that have been taken toward a celebration to send Mr. - Wadsworth, general superintendent of airmails, here to confer with the com- mittee. The Kiwanis club will soon have for sale specially designed envelopes and cachets which they will sell prac- December 12th. Letters can be writ- office for mailing that dav. Such letters, however, should be dated De- cember 12. While it may not be generally known it is a fact, nevertheless, that the Department of Commerce is con- . sidering taking over the Bellefonte right price, and should this be done it Bellefonte and with the establishment of air passenger traffic may develop into a first-class station. A Double Significance. From the San Francisco Chronicle. The appointment of Ambassador Henry P. Fletcher as secretary-gen- eral of the Pan-American Conference and Conciliation is significant in two directions. It is evidence of the importance which Secretary Kellogg attaches to the conference opening in Washington next month. On the other hand, the appointment is a deserved tribute to one of the country’s diplomats who has won his way from the foot of the ladder by sheer ability. Ambassador Fletcher is pre-emi- nently a “career man.” Politics has been no factor in his advancement in the service. Republican and Demo- cratic administrations alike have rec- ognized his ability and entrusted him with important and delicate missions. Henry Fletcher was a court sten- ographer in a little Pennsylvania town when the Spanish War broke out. The manner of his getting into the Roosevelt regiment was typical of his tact and persistence. When he arrived in Washington he saw that the roster of the Rough Riders was filled and that all applicants were be- ing dismissed with a kind word but a firm refusal. He took himself out of the line and went to the very foot. When he got to Roosevelt there was no other applicant waiting. This gave Fletcher a chance to talk to the great man and persuade him to add one more to the roster. The friendship thus formed got Fletcher an appointment to a legation staff when Roosevelt became Presi- dent. Fletcher worked his way up through the grades until he was made Minister to China. Later, as Ameri- can delegate successively to several Latin-American countries, he became an outstanding figure in that field. President Wilson sent him to Mexico at the most tangled and threatening period of our relations with that Re- public. In the Harding administration Fletcher was made under Secretary of State to get the benefit of his tact and knowledge during the Washing- ton disarmament conference. His ap- pointment to Italy was a reward for services rendered. Calling home the Ambassador to a first-class European power to participate in a an Annet can Sisoussion 13 Tiss). 1 eas ' gasoline problems by using pulverized forth-coming conference. It also tells coal or even such odd explosives as pow- a pleasant story of the development dered rice husks, was explained to the sec- : i bitumin- Tr ermanent ond international conference on Emeriss Sims ds of P ! ous coal at Pittsburgh, on Monday, in a paper by Rudolph Pawlikowski, general manager of the Kosmos Company Gorlitz, s Germany. Pawlikowski described the suc- idrove his new Studebaker coupe cess of tv combustion engines built up to his home, on east Curtin by his company and operated experiment- street, and left it stand on the drive- | ally for several years. The present need way while he went into the house. A | for such engines, he thought, is confined hard gust of wind started the car and, to countries with plenty of coal, but lack- with no brakes on, it ran down the ing the rich oil deposits of the United driveway, through the open door of States. the garage, ploughed through the rear | —Trapped in a burning bedroom in her wall and ended up in the lower lot, home in Philteniis ux Mavguret Dus | gan, 24, was burn 0 death early las 2 badly wrecked ar | Friday, and her husband and their two | small children were injured. The fire, be- : lieved to have started from an overturned ' oil stove, swept to the second floor through !a circular hole in the ceiling, cutting off | the family’s escape before they were forms have already been ordered. aroused. Samuel Dugan, 35, saved the The West Penn Power company has ' children by dropping them from a second {also decided to uniform its meter floor window to a cousin of Mrs. Dugan, readers. | who is a boarder at their home. He then ! leaped to the ground, where he believed tea : ' his wife had already made her way. Mrs. —If it is news you are looking for pygsan’s body was found beneath a burned take the Watchman. | mass of blankets and bed clothing. —Houses were umroofed, trees uprooted. wires levelled, and hundreds of windows smashed by a furious wind and rain storm that struck sections of Wilkes- Barre on Monday. On Hazle street, the main artery leading to Ashley and Haz- leton and other points to the south, roofs of several buildings were torn off and dis- play windows were smashed in practical- ly every business place from the Jersey Central tracks to Ashley. Heavy damage" was also wrought in the Newton section and Ashley. Parrish street and the heights section of Wilkes-Barre also suf- fered severely. —_ Beaten and bruised, the body of Hm- ma Alley, 16-year-old Syrian girl, was found lying in a stream of water four miles from her home in Shenango town- ship, Lawrence county on Saturday, by a searching party. Her head had been plac- ' ed beneath the surface of the water. Get- ting out of her bed and dressing hurried- ly the girl left her home Friday night when an automobile drove up in front and sounded the horn. When she did not re- turn in the car after several hours her parents asked neighbors to join them in a search which resulted in the finding of her dead body Saturday morning. —A possibility of solving motorists’ ——A court order was issued dur- ing the week requiring all court offi- cers to appear in uniform at the De- cember sessions of court. The uni-