We have a hazy recollection of having said, two weeks ago, that we intended spending our vacation in towns that we have never seen be- fore. ‘We did it. We oozed the Chev. over eleven hundred and nine miles of unfamiliar roads and got into so many towns we had never seen be- | fore that the old bean gets all in a whirl when we try to conjure up some particular incident, place in any of them that might dif- ferentiate it from the others. We're too old to step so fast. We found that out after we had reached St.’ Albans, Vt., in time for dinner in the evening of the second day. The spirit was willing enough but the flesh couldn’t get out of bed the next morning and a physician had to be called to the Tavern. We thought, possibly, it was auto-intoxication, but ae put the sphymanometer on our arm, the stethescope on the heart, amped our tongue, rolled the eyelids >ack and looked wise. We were not nuch perturbed until he got fooli’ round with our eyelids. Then we had 7isions of his gently closing them, aying on the coppers and posing at yur bedside as the doctors do in such icenes in the movies—you know how ve mean. All at once it struck us iow inconvenient it would be to be lead in St. Albans. And dead of nere auto-intoxication when there vas another kind possible just forty niles away, in Canada. We had heard so much of the jreen Mountains of Vermont that we lecided to get an allopathic dose of hem and get through with it, so we tarted in at Pownal, on the Massa- husetts border, and hit right north hrough Bennington, tutland. Middlebury and Burlington o St. Albans. Generally speaking 10st of the route was over historic nd hallowed ground. For the most art the roads were good, gravel reated with nitrate of potash to eep the dust down, the houses were 11 painted white with green shutters nd the landscape just about what ne would see driving along the foot- ills of the Alleghenies from Yarnell > Romola. There was so little to rite home about that we never even ought of buying a post-card until ¢ got to Bennington and there we id sit in front of the house that en. David Robinson built, in 1796, nd qualified as a real tourist. Who en. Dave was and what he did we on’t recall that Barne’s U. S. his- ry ever told us, but he must have en a gallant fellow for Bennington: oks with much reverence on that use. They don’t seem to have the hot )g fever up there because we ran iles and miles without seeing a and at which they are dispensed. 1 fact it was discomfiting because lere were so few places to enquire i-to whether we were on the right ad. Of course there was only one ad through that valley but you 10w how uneasy one gets when he 1ows he’s on the right road and n't find anyone to reassure him. Near Rutland we saw frame uses resting on marble foundations din Manchester, where many Re- blican millionaires and Mr. Orvis re- ie, they actually have marble side- ilks. Marble in Manchester how- er means just about as much as nestone in Bellefonte, for it is only out thirty-five miles from Rutland iere our marker would probably ve come from had we not fooled em in St. Albans. So far as we could see the princi- 1 1ieat and only here and there little tches of corn and oats. is a dairying country and while we w plenty of milk receiving stations : actually saw fewer cows all the ly through Vermont than we later ~ on four New York State farms, tween Cooperstown and Mt. Upton. When we started on this vacation p we had no idea where we were ing. s-conscious that landed us in Que- >. However that may have been, did us no good for the St. Albans serience was still a hang-over en we were seated in the dining ym of the Chateau Frontenac and ard everyone else demanding the 1e list first. That's what they prob- y went to Quebec for. We're not 'e separating the sheep from the its, but we do want to say that we re more concerned about who our npanion might take on after she 1 shed her weeds than as to wheth- t would be a martini or a man- tan. All in all the jaunt was delightful. de so because we had only one ,» saw much country we had never n in before and met no one who sn’t just as courteous as the most cting could hope for. Aside from transcendent glory of the outlook m the embattlement in front of ‘Chateau Frontenac we saw noth- by way of grandeur that could pse the view of Penns Valley m the top of Nittany mountain. t north and just south of Towan- on the Lakes to the Sea highway, more far reaching views, but y don’t so perfectly comprehend ad, fertile valleys nestling be- en towering mountains. face or Manchester, | crop was hay. There was no Evidently : It was probably something : Demoerali SED STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. allman “4. BELLEFONT E, PA.. JULY 12. 1929. NO. 27. Grundy Invited to Move. ers in Congress have found it nec- essary to put a restraint on the ac- tivities of Joe Grundy, president of the Pennsylvania Manufacturers’ as- sociation, in c(nnection with tariff legislation. Since some time before the opening of the special session Mr. Grundy has been maintaining an ex- tensive lobby in Washington for the purpose of influencing action on the pending tariff bill. The House of Representatives submitted to his im- portunities quietly and in most in- stances complied with his demands. But when he shifted his base of ope- rations to the Senate he encountered a different atmosphere. His med- dling provoked resentment. The other day, according to a re- porter of one of the news services, Mr. Grundy “received pointed inti- mations that his presence in Wash- ington is embarrasing rather than helping the administration in its ef- forts to write a new tariff bill.” From other sources it is learned that his methods are crude and his man- ners arrogant and offensive to the ' Senators. Even Senator Reed, of Pennsylvania, has become disgusted | and “feels that the cause of the ad- ministration tariff bill would be serv- ed best by Grundy if the latter were to absent himself from Washington | forthwith.” Senator Smoot, chair- [man of the Senate Finance commit- tee, is said to concur in this view. | They say “he has overplayed his { hand.” | This turn of affairs comes as a | surprise to the friends of the Penn- i sylvania slush fund grubber. They {had come to the opinion that Mr. ! Grundy had earned the right to do ' and say whatever came into his mind 1in relation to tariff legislation, and a considerable lee-way in framing the policies of the party both in and out of Congress. In the recent Pres- idential campaign he raised the larg- est fund of any individual and his demands for excessive tariff sched- ules on manufactured products is for ‘the purpose of providing means to reimburse those who helped him..to earn the only distinction he ever ac- quired. This is a cruel world, and Republicans as well as Republics are ungrateful. —————— eer ———— J. C. Hosterman, owner and editor of the Millheim Journal for thirty 1 years, has disposed of his interests ‘to Charles E. Musser, who has been associate editor the past six years. the Journal wil continue in its high standard of excellence. ; Uncle Andy Again Rebuked. Some days ago Secretary of the Treasury Mellon specifically stated that the administration had no pur- pose of tax reduction in mind in the ‘near future. He was somewhat i boastfully reviewing the operations | of the department during the fiscal year ended June 30, and announced that the approximately $200,000,000 surplus in the treasury would be us- ed reducing the public debt. The sur- | of the stock market speculation and the canny mind of the Secretary could conceive no better purpose in which to employ it. If the speculative frenzy continues, he intimates, there may be another surplus next year, [but “sufficient unto’ the day is the disposal of it.” A. day later President Hoover, ac- cording to press dispatches, announc- ed that “we are giving careful study to the possibility of tax. reduction” during the life of the present Con- gress and treasury experts have al- ready been instructed to determine what taxes could be best reduced. | Of course the measurements will be | made by political yardsticks in the hands of skillful party engineers and due consideration given to the inter- ests which promise generous contri- butions to the slush fund. Secretary Mellon, being more a banker than politician, probably failed to discern the possibilities: of such a policy and ing the “board of strategy.” To further confound the confusion caused by these diverse statements a day later an announcement was is- sued from the White House to the effect that there is no difference be- tween the President and the Secre- tary of the Treasury on the subject. The unidentified voice declared that “the President’s statement of yester- day had been approved by Mellon be- fore it was issued.” Possibly that is frue, but it language of Hoover with that of Mel- lon. What it does imply is that the Secretary of the Treasury was offi- cially notified that he is not the fram- er of the policies of the administra- tion. But as we have said before, Uncle Andy likes his job too well to resent a rebuke. Even the hard-boiled tariff-mong- | ——Owing to continued ill health With Mr. Musser in complete charge plus was an unexpected development issued his statement without consult- fails to reconcile the | “Barkus” Davis is Willing. Mr. James J. Davis, Secretary of Labor in Washington, has made up his mind to “crash the gate” of the Mellon machine. In a statement re- cently issued he modestly announced that he “will run for Governor of i 1 ‘ Pennsylvania if the people want him and if he is assured of an honest count.” cerity in this statement he prompt- ly enlisted the services of the chair man of the legislative board of the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen to urge members of that Brotherhood to ask Mr. Davis to become a candidate. Sixty thousand letters have been written in pursuance of this plan of campaign and a postcard enclosed in ,each with a request that it be mailed to Mr. Davis. If a considerable number of the 60,000 trainmen take the trouble ™ sign the postcards and deposit them in the mail receptacles will be interpreted as proof that the people of the State want Mr. Davis to run for Governor. quire a great force to persuade a man to follow his own ardent incli- nations. But the second “if” presents a more uncertain proposition. As- surance of an “honest count” of votes cast at a Republican primary election in Pennsylvania is practical- ly impossible, and the recollection of the last contest for Governor prob- ably inspired the proposition. Things happened on that occasion, accord- ing to popular belief, that cast doubts on an “honest count.” : Mr. Davis wisely sets forth, more- over, that he is not willing to enter upon a contest ‘on a commercial basis.” It is generally understood that he is financially “well fixed,” even as fortunes are now rated, but ‘others have thousands where 1 have pennies,” he added, thus dep- precating the futility rather than the immorality of an auction sale of the favor in this case. But’ he implies a willingness to spend money in the levent the other conditions are met, He offers to finance an organization in the 8000 election precincts in the "sive. For example, 60,000 letters with enclosures already sent out by the Brotherhood official must have cost a good deal. me ———— A ———— ——The air-rail = service between New York and Los Angeles was suc- cesfully inaugurated, on Sunday, and those who can afford it may now cover the distance from the Atlantic to the Pacific in forty-eight hours. Sr —— A ——————— As an evidence of his sin-. the result It doesn’t re- ‘are ‘expén-. —— mmm Bellefonte Kiwanians at Unionville Milesburg Highway Bids to be Opened Grange. A large delegation of: the Belle- fonte Kiwanis club were guests of the members of Union Grange, in their spacious hall at Unionville, on Tuesday evening, where they were entertained with a chicken and noodle dinner. The meeting was one of the best of the inter-fraternal gatherings held this year by the Kiwanis mem- bers and their farmer neighbors. Among the visitors were Harry W. Butts, of the Lancaster Kiwanis club, ex-Lieutenant Governor of State “clubs, who came here from Bradford in order to have credit for a perfect attendance at four sessions; C. A. Callahan, of Pittsburgh; E. F. Smith, of Indianapolis; Musser Gettig and W. H. Geissinger, of Bellefonte, and Elliot Hollobaugh, of Franklin, N. J. Kyle Alexander, on behalf of Un- ion Grange, welcomed the Kiwanians in a brief but witty address, which was responded to by president W. Harrison Walker. The latter then turned the meeting over to Kiwanian JBlaney, chairman of the Farmers- Kiwanis committee, who introduced Edward Hall. of Union Grange. That gentleman proceeded to give a brief historical sketch of that organization from the date of its institution on ‘August 11th, 1874, by the late Hon. Leonard Rhone, at that time State deputy and later Master of the State Grange. The first meetings were held in the Plum Grove school house but ‘as the Grange widened its influence and prospered a building was rented in Unionville which was later pur- chased and made over into the spa- cious hall of the present time. It ‘now has a list of sixty-one active members. The late Dr. W. U. Irwin ° was an ex-master of the organization. { Fred Leininger, of the farm and research bureau, State College, was the principal speaker. He dwelt principally on farm management and discussed the relationship of the present farm bureau with the farm- er, especially from the standpoint as to whether it will eventually solve Arg many problems which have made the farmer question one’ of - national issue for some years past. Considerable amusement was furn- ished in auctioning off a fine hand- made quilt by auctioneer L. Frank ‘Mayes, which was later presented to | Miss Freda Edmidson for her hope chest. During the evening a group picture of the gathering was taken by Kiwanian Ralph Mallory. Bellefonte Banks Have New Money. Over fifteen thousand doliars of , Movement Inaugurated for County the new paper currency, bills of the Home for Poor. { Petitions are now being circulated ‘for signers in connection with a movement for the establishment of a county home for the poor and friend- less. Such petitions, which must bear the signatures of not less than fone thousand legal voters, will be presented to the county com- missioners and the question of the establishment of such a home will then be put up to the people of the : county to vote upon at the November election. The movement has the whole- hearted approval of Judge M. Ward Fleming, is favored by the county commissioners and warmly sponsored by the juvenile court officer, Rev. W. -C. Thompson. : Just how it will stand with the av- erage voter. throughout the county is another matter. There are some townships in the county where the poor tax is unusually high, and in such places the voters are likely to favor a county home. But there are others where the tax is so small as to be almost negligible. These will probably be against it. It is also quite possible that senti- ment against it will develop in the fact that it will be taking from each ' borough ‘and township a prerogative ‘ distinctly local and centralizing it under a county management. In oth- er words, it will do away with all poor overseers, and make the coun- ty commissioners responsible for the ' management of the home, for which | they would be paid an increased sal ary. | © But a county home, properly ope- ‘rated, would provide for the deserving poor a place of comfort and a means of partial support. That is, providing i the home should be established on a farm, where the inmates could work according to their physical ability. These are things that will probably 'be given due consideration when the . question is presented on the ballot at the November election. ——There are signs that “the {worm may turn.” Rumors are cur- | rent in Washington that Uncle Andy | may resign. —Subscribe for the Watchman. the smaller denominations, were re- ‘ceived by the three Bellefonte banks, on Wednesday. The First National Bank and the Bellefonte Trust com- pany each received $6700, while the Farmers National bank got less than three thousand. Inasmuch as the Treasury Depart- ment, at Washington, was unable to supply an amount sufficient to re- deem all the old paper money in cir- culation at this time the supply of new bills was sent out pro rata among all the banks in the country, which accounts for the limited amount received by the Bellefonte banks. In the meantime the bureau of engraving, at Washington, is turn- ing out the new bills as fast as pos- sible and as old and worn out cur- rency is sent in to Federal Reserve banks for redemption they will be re- placed by the smaller bills. At that it might be a year before the old bills have passed away from general cir- culation. —————————————————— New Highway Patrol Might be Sta- tioned Here. Announcement was made at Har- risburg, on Monday, of the promotion- of Lieut. J. M. Bender, of Troop B, State highway patrol, to a captaincy and to be placed in charge of the new troop created by order of Governor Fisher and to be known as Troop C. The troop will consist of eighty-five men, and will have its headquarters in Bellefonte if a suitable building and location can be obtained as troop barracks. Captain Bender has been here look- | ing around for a place for headquar- ters for the new organization. Sev- eral places have been inspected but so far no decision has been reached. While the new troop will consist of eighty-five men, it does not follow that a house large enough to accom- modate this number will be requir- ed, as most of the men will be sta- tioned in details. at other places throughout the central portion of the State. ——Sheriff Dunlap has twenty-six regular boarders in the county jail ‘at the. present time, which is about up to the average since he took charge eighteen months ago. —— Next Week. According to SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Suit for $500,000 was filed against the county of Mercer, on Tuesday, by William D. Reed, of Youngstown, O., who claims to have been injured while working on the Mercer county hospital building at Sharon in 1910. —Cliff Woodbury, veteran automobile race pilot, who was seriously injured at the time Ray Keech was killed at the Al- toona track June 15, has made known that he has retired as a speedway driver. The announcement came as Woodbury was discharged from the Altoona hospital, where he had been a patient since the ac- cident. —Seeking vangeance after they were re- fused a night's lodging, two tramps built a fire under a porch at the Maus farm, at Mausdale, Montour county, owned by | the Geisinger Home for Women, and then fled. Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus Gerring, ten- advertisements pub- | ants of the farm, discovered the blaze and lished in Philipsburg papers bids : called aid from the Geisinger hospital, be- for the reconstruction of the State | fore serious damage resulted. highway between Milesburg and Bellefonte will be opened at Harris- burg on Friday of next week. The i advertisements call for bids on the’ reconstruction of 8908 linear feet of —Unconscious for thirteen hours, Ben- ! jamin Carrollo, of Shamokin, stung by a tropical insect, probably a tarantaula, is in a serious condition in the Shamokin State hospital. Carrollo, with other employees i of the Jalmisano Fruit company, was un- one course cement concrete roadway | loading a car of bananas when the insect 20 feet in width. From the number of lenear feet given it would appear that the High- way Department is not figuring on bit him on the right hand. tip of a finger of the He staggered to the com- pany’s office and fell over. —Having lived for eight days with a rebuilding the road into Bellefonte, as | bullet in his brain, Ernest Guerra, eight no definite arrangements have yet been made as to the route determin- ed upon. The department favors an entirely new route over the course of the old Central Railroad of Pennsylvania from the sharp curve north of Bellefonte into the borough limits. Uptown business men opposed this plan because they believed it would result in diverting most of the traffic down town. Borough council is not strongly in favor of it because of the expense it will entail. As veiwed now, the damages entailed and the expense to the borough of building the extra width provided in the highway’s survey will aggregate $25,000, or more, and the finanical condition of the borough, at this time, is not in shape to meet such an expense. Uptown merchants contend that the most feasible route would be right out Allegheny street and down the road to Red Roost. This, of course, would be the shortest way, but highway officials contend that | the expense of construction would be too great. And so the matter stands at pres- ent.. Whether council will take any action at its meeting next Monday evening remains to be seen. ————————ee————— Church Corner Stone Laid at War- riors Mark. The corner stone for the new Methodist church, at Warriors Mark, appropriate services. Dr. J. McKen- drie Reiley, district superintendent, was in charge, and the speaker was |’ Dr. J. E. Skillington, of Altoona. The men’s quartette from the State Lollege, Methodist church, assisted with the music. The stone, a nicely cut block of marble, was a free will gift of J. Will Mayes. of Howard. The church will replace the one destroy- ed by fire last January, and will be the fourth edifice in the history of the congregation. The first was built in 1810. In 1840 the congrega- tion had outgrown its church and a new edifice was built on a site more centrally located. In 1873 it was re- placed by a two story church which stood for fifty-six years. The new church will be built of native stone and will be a modern structure in every respect, with provision . for Sunday school, grades church school work, social hall, kitchen, etc. It is planned to have it completed by late fall or early winter. Rev. L. L Owens is the pastor in charge. mp ——— Bellefonte Had Safe and Sane 4th. With no disturbance during the day and no jollification at night Bellefonte had a reasonably safe and sane Fourth of July. This is accounted for by the fact that sixty per cent of the town’s population went elsewhere to celebrate and when they returned home were sad- ly lacking in enthusiasm. A good crowd was in attendance at the Logan fire company’s picnic, at Hecla park. the American Legion 1drum corps and a good representa- tion of members went to Clearfield for the Legion celebration, while members of Troop B attended the ‘horse show of Troop K, at Lock Haven. Bellefonte’s crack riders led in the various events of horse- manship, scoring a total of 18 points, against Troop K with 16 and Boal troop 11. Private Howard won the privates’ jumping contest, Sergt. Garbrick the contest for non-commissioned officers, and Sergt. | Fanning the Roman jumping contest. i ——The twentieth annual summer session which opened July 1 at the Pennsylvania State College with an enrollment of more than 3000 stu- dents, the largest for any summer session in the history of the college, has been ushered in with a full week's schedule of classes. On account of | missing one full day for registration, | all classes were held on July 4th. Nearly 100 teachers and administra- | tors from all over the country are | registered in the three-weeks insti- tute of progressive education, and ap- proximately 75 advanced students are enrolled in the French institute. Large enrollments also are reported ‘ for the English and music institutes. new : { years old, of Charleroi, died on Monday. A post-mortem examinatiol disclosed the bullet had lodged an inch and a half from ‘ the back of the boy's head. The lad was i shot by a playmate, Frank Hidek, 22. Hidek fled but returned home three nights after the shooting. The police said he !told them he was firing at a target and | shot Guerra. —The A. W. Lee homestead, on South . Second street, Clearfield, has been sold to the Bell Telephone company for $26,000. | The property includes a lot 80 feet by 200 ‘and the buildings thereon. The sale did i not include the old Huntingdon and Clear- | field telephone building, which is owned "by A. W. Lee, Jr. It is not known what the Bell company intends to use the prop- erty for but it is supposed that a modern exchange building will be erected on the-- site at some future time. —The coal tipple, bin, conveyor and electric equipment of the Deer Run Coal Mining company, at Mahaffey, was de- | stroyed by fire, Thursday afternoon, July | 4th, with a loss estimated at about $30,000. i The mine had not been operated for over 'a year and it is not known as yet how i much of the inside property was stored "in the tipple. The mine is owned by Wil- liam Eck, of Carrolltown, and William Thompson and Andrew Rhody, of Patton. The origin of the fire was not learned. —The home of Colonel James M. Guffey, in Pittsburgh, former Democratic Nation- al Committeeman for Pennsylvania, was sold at sheriff's sale, last Friday, in ‘fore- closure of a mortgage for $248,568.70, in- cluding interest, held by the Pittsburgh Trust company. The bank bought the property for $1,772.35. Furniture in the residence recently was sold at public sale. Several months ago Colonel Guffey was carried from his home when .the. place took fire. He is nearly 90 years old and in feeble health. — Prospecting for oil and gas is under way in the northern end of Columbia county. Local residents took a lease on several hundred acres of property there i about five years ‘ago, but nothing was done with it until this summer. ‘The lease still has a year to run and before renewing it, decision was reached to have the prospecting done. Some years ago i prospecting there revealed small quantities of copper. Other metals were sought, but , the presence of gas indicated to the en- | gineers that their efforts were in vain. | They were not intrested at that time in either oil or gas. | —While walking on ihe mountain near "his Lome at Mt. Carmel, in the western part of Adams countv, In ompany with his father, Robert Shindledeckes, 7-year- oid son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shindle- ‘ Gecker, was biter twics on the right leg { by a copperhead snake. The tatker cut | each hole made by the poisonous fangs of the serpent with his pocketknife and al- ‘lowed the blood to wash away some of the poison. He then took the boy toa physician in Cashtown who stated the | father’s presence of mind in cutting the | bites will save the boy much suffering. The father killed the snake. —JIn saving a little boy from serious injury and possibly death, Elwood Burn- ley, of Richmond, Va., with the carnival company showing at Clearfield, last week saw a little fellow about 5 years old car- rying a nine inch dynamite bomb, Friday morning, and hunting a place to set it off. Fearing the lad could not fire it with safe- ty he induced the youngster to let him fire it. After lighting the short fuse he was 7An the act of throwing it from him into the park grounds when it exploded, mang- ling the hand horribly. It was necessary to amputate it at the wrist. V. F. Ston2, another carnival man, was cut about the face by flying particles of the bomb. —The annual reunion of woodsmen of this section will be held at Shoemaker park, at McElhattan, on July 20. It will be sponsored by Col. Henry W. Shoe« maker, who has held these reunions for the lumbermen for several years. A un- ique feature of the program this year will be an accordian contest in which accordian players from among the ranks of the old lumber jacks will compete. These cld lumbermen cleared the Black Forast fer the sites of Clinton, Potter and Tioga counties. Nearly all of them are cver eighty years of age and some are over ninety. Special prizes will be offered for the best accordian player and the oldest contestant. —Just as the Washington and Waynes- burg narrow guage railway train pulled around a curve and out of sight of the station at Waynesburg, on the last trip of its existence, on Tuesday, Leasure Shull, conductor, for 83 years in the em- ploy of the road, dropped dead. On Tuesday the road, which had run eight trains daily since 1877, suspended opera- tion and the 55-year old man who had been conductor for 25 years appeared to be grieving as he collected tickets over the 25 mile run on all but the last trip. He declined to make the final run and his place was taken by ‘a brakeman. Shuil stood on the station platform watching the little train out of sight. Just as the last car turned a curve he collapsed and died.