Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, September 13, 1929, Image 1

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    Democracy
INK SLINGS.
—A few days ago Dr. Wilmer H.
Krusen, of Philadelphia, voiced a
warning against neophobia. We pre-
sume most people passed the advice
up as just another one of them things
that the M. Ds are eternally drag-
ging out of the bag to scare us with.
We didn’t. We've always been in-
terested in what ails us. From the
time that we grew out of catnip and
peach limb tea, and nitre and Jayne's
expectorant and camphor bags and as-
afoedita and a woolen stocking pin-
ned around our neck for sore throat
and eelskin around our wrist to keep
the muscles pliable, to the present
we've always been ready—aye, even
anxious—to try every new disease,
at least once. We've had everything
from mastoids to falling arches. It's
just a shame how infested with dis-
ease our heart, lungs, liver, kidneys,
stomach, gall duct, colon and arter-
jes have been at times when we've
had to have something or be sick.
None of them ever “took” very hard.
That is probably why we survived
to keep up the eternal quest that is
the obsession of those who enjoy
poor health. But this “neophobia”
stuff is not for us. Since it is a mal-
ady that inculcates “a fear of new
things” in its victim, we are not go-
ing to take it at all. That's one dis-
ease we shall immunize ourself
against. All the joy of life would
be gone for us if we became afraid
to imagine we have appendicitis ev-
ery time we get a pain at the centre
of a line drawn from one right hip
bone to the billy-button.
SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE.
—Mrs. Leonard J. Robb, of Beech
Creek, Clinton county, fell from a stool
while papering a room in her home and
broke both bones of her left arm at
the wrist. . i
—Miss Hazel Lucas and Miss Ruth
Fleck, both 18 years of age of Winburne,
Clearfield county, drowned in the waters
of Lycoming creek at Williamsport,
Tuesday afternoon.
—A count of the traffic at the Pennsyl-
vania railroad crossing at Mill Hall in
STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION.
VOL. 74. BELLEFONTE,
Vare’s False Pretense Stopped. |
The resolution introduced in the
Senate, on Monday, to finally dis-
pose of William 8S. Vare’s absurd
claim to a seat in that body was
both timely and proper. For three
years the question of his qualifica-
tion has been pending. Under one
pretense or another the det2rmina-
tion has been postponed. A bi-par-
tisan committee spent two years in-
vestigating the charges that his
nomination had been procured by
fraud. Nearly a year ago ihe com-
mittee unanimously reported that
«the said William S. Vare is nof en-
titled to a seat in the United Stales
Senate.” Yet during all this time he
has been exercising all the preroga-
tives of a Senator except the right to
sit in the chamber and participate
in the deliberations of the body.
Some time ago Senator King, one
of the members of the investigating
committee, declared openly that not
more than ten per cent of the Sen-
ators would vote toawardthe seat
to Vare. In presenting his resolu-
tion, on Monday, Senator Norris ex-
— Last week we told you that
Nathan Koffman had commissioned
us to write something that would
make the Turks lay off the Jews over |
in. Palestine. If memory serves us
right we also told you that we were
not equal to the occasion. This
week we have another commission.
A number of aggrieved tax payers
of Centre county have come to urge
us to give Judge Fleming hell be-
cause they were invited to leave his
court room and stay leaved until
they could find a coat to cover the
shirt sleeves in which they were in-
vested when they ventured into the
august presence. We bring this up
merely to show how guileless poor Na-
than is. He wanted us to prove to the
Turks that - every one is happier if he
or she lives in peace with the other.
As a hypothetical proposition his idea
is all right, but the futility of itall
shows up when old reality comes
tramping on the heels of theory.
Had we given way to Nathan's com-
mission and hied off in foreign mis-
- gionary work we wouldn't have been
ary field, where missioners are need-
ed more to stir up hell than urge
people to live in peace with one an-
other. We are in whole hearted sym-
pathy with any order that Judge
Fleming may promulgate that
makes for conservation of respect
for the dignity of our courts. When
court is in session we think the
auditorium in which it sits should
rival the sanctuary of the cathedral
in the confidence it inspires. But it-
is not necessary to humilate men
for unintentional offenses. KEvery-
one knows that there are enough at-
taches to the Court’s staff to spare
one who might stand out in the
foyer of the court house and explain
to persons, who have no thought of
offending, before they enter the
court room, so that if they venture
in on hot days, minus coat, they will
not suffer the embarrassment of be-
ing ordered out after they have
found a seat. The order is all right,
but its manner of execution has
been all wrong. :
Why couldn't that twenty-four
hundred dollar county detective have
been delegated to stand out in the
lobby and remind men who meant
no offense or disrespect that a recent
order of the Court prevented any-
one entering the chamber in shirt
sleeves. That would have been a
good job for Boden, but possibly he
might have wrapped himself inthe
dignity of his office and declined to
do it on the ground that he is ‘no
common policeman.” Up at the ball
game, the other day, a drunken indi-
vidual was making a spectacle of
himself and one of the spectators
asked the county detective to re-
move the piflicated nuisance. Mr.
Boden replied to that request in this
highly illuminative language: ‘I'm
no common policeman.” And he evi-
dently knows what he is talking
about, for only last week a grand
jury ignored a bill against him for
assault, notwithstanding the fact
that a prominent business man of
Bellefonte swears that he did assault
him in the office of the County Com-
missioners. And the same grand
jury pinned a rose on him in its re-
port to the Court. We'd say that a
policeman so uncommon as that
could fall into the Big Spring and
come out brushing dust off his uni-
form.
"Since we all strive to have jus-
tice prevail why wouldn't the Court
be lending a hand to that desired end
if an order were promulgated to ex-
clude all women from the court
room who are not as well covered
as the men have to be?
—Babe Ruth has announced his
ideal ball team and it is a cracker-
jack. But it will never be assem-
bled in an aggregation.
pressed a similar estimate of
the sentiment of the Senate.
, “The only reason the mat-
i ter was not disposed of last June,”
he added: “was because it was rep-
resented that Vare was a very sick
man and too ill to appear and defend
himself. Vare’s health has now ap-
parently improved and there is no
| further reason why action to declare
Vare not entitled to a seat should be
! further delayed.” This is literally the
truth. He has had ample time and
abundant opportunity to present his
defense. :
Senator Norris had no political
“axe to grind” in presenting his res-
olution at this time. The final re-
jection of Vare will not inure to his
personal advantage. In fact it will
strengthen the Senate Republican
machine for the reason that it will
invest Governor Fisher with power
to name a successor who will sup-
port every iniquity that may be de-
sired. There is a contest for the
seat pending and in the interest of
justice no appointment should be
But the Republicans need votes for
the tariff bill and other party meas-
ures and they have sufficient
strength to admit to membership
any one whom the Governor may
name. But the Vare false pretense
ought to be stopped anyway.
——The weather of Wednesday
ers that summer is on the wane.
en ———— A Ss
Tariff Fight in the Senate.
the Senate is now in progress and
it promises to be as furious as its
result is uncertain. Some sort of a
bill will be enacted and the schedules
will be increased. But it is within
reason to hope that some of the
‘rates on manufactured products, as
expressed in the committee bill, will
‘be cut down considerably and others
| may be stricken out altogether. With
' a few exceptions the Democratic Sen-
tors will be against excessive rates
on all subjects other than products of
‘the soil. It doesn’t matter much
| whether the tax on such products
‘are high or low, for importations are
' negligible and taxation will not ma-
| terially effect prices.
| But the purpose to increase the
tax on manufactured products in the
ratio of increase on agricultural com-
modities will be strenuously resisted
by the Democratic as well as a con-
'
ators. Senator Capper, of Kansas,
leader of the farm bloc, expresses a
determination to fight the pending
measure. “Agricultural rates needed
boosting above industrial rates,” he
said, “in order that agriculture
might be equalized with industry,
but that since industrial rates have
been raised agriculture is still at a
disadvantage.” As a matter of fact
the present discrimination against
‘agriculture is vastly increased, be-
cause agricultural products are rare-
ly imported.
Senator Harrison, of Mississippi,
proposes to throw a bomb into the
camp of the tariff mongers early in
the contest. He will introduce a res-
olution demanding “a statement of
the financial condition of companies
seeking tariff increases.” The Re-
publican platform pledged the party
(to ask for tariff increases only for
| industries that were operating at a
loss or earning less than fair profits.
But the pending bill provides for in-
creased rates on products that al-
ready earn larcenous profits to the
manufacturers. The Harrison resolu-
tion, if adopted, will expose these
facts to public information and show
that the measure is not for publie
good but to reimburse campaign
contributors.
|
—Subscribe for the Watchman.
and yesterday were forcible remind-
4
President Hoover gave a fairly
good imitation of official indignation,
the other day, when he publicly de-
clared his purpose to “free the
country” from lobbyists who ‘had
deliberately attempted to create in-
ternational distrust and hate.” It
had been revealed to him that three
of the leading ship building corpora-
tions of the country had been
paying large sums of money j
to a professional lobbyist for
preparing and disseminating, propa-
ganda in favor of an extensive nav-
al construction programme and
against the policy of the administra-
tion to reduce naval equipment. One
W. B. Shearer, who posed as a naval
expert, has ‘brought suit against
the ship building corporation for un-
paid salaries and thus “spilled the
beans.”
This is all very fine and looks like.
a radical new departure in policy of
a Republican administration.
It will be recalled that Woodrow
Wilson, during his first term of of-
fice, sent a great number of lobby-
ists, representing various interests,
scurrying in all directions by a sim-
ilar declaration of purpose. But
upon the return to power of the Re-
publican party the lobbyists return-
ed and for eight years have been as
thick as flies and as pestiferous as
the Japanese beetle. But so long as.
they refrained from opposing the’
President’s pet measures, they were
allowed full opportunity to prey up-
on the public at will. It is gratifying
to know, however, that their licenses
have been revoked and that their
operations will be curtailed, if not Byt the schedules of the Hawley-
entirely cut out.
When the late Senator Lodge, of
Massachusetts, organized a “round
robin” against the —atification of the
he was deliberately creating
national distrust and hate.” But
that wasn’t the real purpose of his
sinister enterprise. His aim was to
preserve to the shipbuilders and the
munition makers of the country a
market
wares, and in this vicious
was supported by a'large
of his paily lu and out
But President Hoover is not in
pathy with this system of rewarding
party service when it interferes with
his plans. He could see no fault,
however, in the infinitely more dan- :
gerous propaganda organized and
purpose he be
{maintained by the power trust. |
‘was able to get through but the aspirations. On the other hand it
| other was compelled to come down is & civic duty imposed on every vo-
.in Bellefonte, the mail . being sent ter, regardless of party, to do the,
The battle for the tariff bill in on by train Tuesday morning. And
|
|
siderable number of Republican Sen-
i —— Arcee
——Monday night was a bad one
for the airmail. One of the pilots
Corruption in Philadelphia.
There is to be a new grand jury
investigation in Philadelphia. As an
incident of the Republican factional
fight Mayor Mackey, the other day,
mailed letters to employees of the
street cleaning bureau of the govern-
ment, directing them to the addresses
as of record in the bureau. Some 200
of the letters were returned with |
the notation that “no such persons
were known at those addresses.”
This suprising incident aroused in
the Mayor's mind a suspicion that
the pay roll of the bureau has been
padded and he called the district at-
torney’s attention to the matter.
The head of the bureau is a former
employee of Mr. Vare and a ser-
vile member of the Vare machine. |
It will be remembered that about
a year ago a grand jury investigation
of the police department of the city
was instituted. After several months
of diligent probing a vast system of
corrruption was exposed, one or two
machine politicians were tried and
. convicted and more than a hundred
officers and men of the force were de-
nounced “as unfit to hold public offi-
ces.” But the Vare machine, having
control of the civil service board, most
of them have since been restored to
the service. In justice tothe district
attorney and the new superintendent
of the police department, it should be
stated that the restoratiion was
against their protest. It was surely
a Vare gesture.
The impending inevstigation may
produce more enduring results. The
action of the civil service board nul-
lified the work of the former grand
jury. The personnel of the board is
chosen by the city council and that
body chosen by Mr. Vare, is amenable
only to the machine. The lesson to be
drawn from these facts is plain. The
only real remedy for the evils which
abound in Philadelphia is to “turn
the rascals out.” Investigations, how-
ever thorough and searching, are of
no value while corrupt men are in
control of the municipal govern-
ment. The Vare machine is putrid
'and the government of the city will
. be corrupt as long as it remains in
power.
PA.. SEPTEMBER 13.
3 T 3 TTT
Hoover Hits the Lobby Hard. United States of Europe Probable.
1 i |
‘popular mind of Europe where each
our Congress has manifested a pur-
‘mind the fear of another danger,
] f wid
covenant of the League of Nations a Frtuis fear - i8¥ widespread. is
“inter-
countries.
for their death-dealing per commerce and industry, and that
| this obligation extends to, the selec
measurement was
Aristide = Briand, Premier of
France, submitted his long cherish-
ed plan for the creation of a “United
States of Europe” to the League of
Nations, last week, and it met with
enthusiastic approval. This has been
a pet enterprise of M. Briand’s for
some years, but heretofore has been
“laughed off” by other statesmen of
Europe as an “irridescent dream.” cent. were caused by incompetence.
But to his mind it has seemed the The largest single factor was lack
‘basis of a hope for perpetual peace of capital. Numbers of men go into
. business on the proverbial shoestring
al x ; He
nd prosperity. In his address be. | and in times of stress go to the wall.
. Mistakes in credit policies also make
fore the League, the other day, he
appealed to the nations of Europe to
mak a deep study of the proposal,
and according ‘to press reports of the
incident generous “applause greeted
his remarks.” :
Before the World war such a prop-
osition carried little appeal to the
nation was concerned only with its
own prosperity and happiness. Since
the war, until very recently, there
has been nothing to alter the mental
attitude of our cousins across the
sea. Each people was striving in its
own way to conserve its own inter-
ests and promote its own welfare.
In some cases there were conflicting
interests to consider and, anyway,
they were getting along fairly well
in comparative isolation. But since
pose to organize a commercial war
against Europe public sentiment has
undergone a change. A United
States of Europe doesn’t sound bad.
In the beginning Premier Briand
had no purpose to go beyond politi-
cal lines in his proposed federation.
Smoot tariff bill has arousd in his
not only to France but to all Europe.
shown by the great number of pro-
tests that have come from all sec-
tions of Europe, as well as from:
Canada and the
No nation will submit
quietly to a policy on the part of an-
other which implies destruction of
: inevitable result to Europe
the United States.
——Good government always be-
gins at home, and that is the reason
why very earnest consideration
should be given the various candi-
dates for local office at the primaries
next Tuesday. Every man has a
certain foliowing of friends who
‘might naturally feel that they
should stand by him in his political
Best he can for his home town. And
tion of the best qualified men or wo-
men to: fill the various borough
offices. For this reason consider
the candidates carefully before
voting next Tuesday.
Latin-American
1929.
“| convincing case for any rise of exist-
|The committee wisely resolved to
— As evidence of how low Centre
county streams have been as the
result of the prolonged drouth Bald
|
Eagle creek, on Saturday, was just
seven-tenths of an inch lower than
any former record known. The
taken on the
abutment, where the railroad crosses
the stream, by P. H. Haupt, state
weather observer. The rains of Sat-
urday and Sunday, however, raised
the creek six inches. Out at Rockview
penitentiary they wore out eight doz-
en plough points trying to do their
| fall plowing then decided to wait
for rain.
— The Centre county court is
now operating with strictly enforced
dignity. Under a new ruling men
in shirt sleeves or wearing overalls
and jumpers are barred. Last week
when the theremometer was soaring
around the ninety mark, a former
county commissioner was invited to
leave the court room when he ap-
peared minus his coat and two men in
overalls were refused admittance at
the door. A visiting attorney, it . is
alleged, who appeared at the court
house without a coat, borrowed one
from an office holder down stairs in
order to appear in open court.
—— Tle various rain storms which
passed over portions of Centre coun-
ty during the past week have fresh-
ened up vegetation considerably, and
may be of great benefit to the late
potato crop. Corn, however, is too
far advanced to be much benefited.
The rains, however, have not been
sufficient to wet the ground enough
for fall ploughing and farmers are
still wondering when they will get
their seeding done.
——Conservative estimates indi-
cate that fully twelve thousand peo-
ple visited the campus at The Penn.
sylvania State College for the vari-
ous conventions and demonstrations
held there during the summer,
a re
valuable that the money which
‘continued uninterrupted.
. Mackey cabinet, has come out in fa-
twenty four hours showed that 6970 mo-
tor vehicles and nineteen railroad trains
passed over the crossing during that
time.
—Jersey Shore officials’ would rather
have a nice paved street fixed up by the
State than a rough brick pavement and
a trolley line, so they have served .notice
on the railway company to either rebuild
its roadbed under State specifications or
get off the street.
—Suffering an attack of dizziness when
she was dipping a bucket into the waters
of the Juniata river last Thursday, Mrs.
Mary Mussellman, 23, wife .of Berry
From the Philadelphia Inquirer.
Dr. Julius Klein, Assistant Secre-
tary of Commerce, in an address in
Chicago, said that failures in retail
business were due more to incom-
petence than to comvetition. He
declared that statistics showed that
three per cent. of the business fail-
ures last year were brought about
by competition, while thirty-one per od Tate the same afternoon.
forced to drop $2,000 worth of the Ash-
land high school band instruments when
police appeared as they were about to
school building early Sunday.
the instruments were damaged.
a terrific drain on the resources of
the retailer.
Mr. Klein advised his hearers—who
were business men—to dress up their
stores so that they be attractive fo
the women. “This is most impor-
tant,” he said, “because with eighty-
five per cent. of the buying in retail
stores to-day being done by women—
even in hardware and paint stores—
the far-sighted retailer is graciously
considerate of milady’s whims and
foibles. As one discerning observer
put it, ‘Shall we join the ladies?’ is
no longer a perfunctory after-dinner
query. It is an important problem in
merchandising. And the answer is
‘yes,’ emphatically.”
We have here counsel from a man
who is in a position to know what he
is talking about. And it is a foolish
retailer indeed who overlooks the im-
portance of women in the business
world.
day night when they found in it a cold
keg evidently containing strong drink
disappeared from the rear of the city
the United States fish nursery at. St.
Thomas, near Chambersburg, has caused
the death of at least 1000 brown trout.
The limestone water irritates the gills
of the fish and a fungus forms which
smothers them. Many of the trout were
saved by giving them a bath in salt water.
The limestone water does not affect the
rainbow trout in the nursery.
—Leaping from a fourth-story window
afternoon, Mrs. J. H. Gates, of Reading,
died within a few minutes. Mrs. Gates,
who had been visiting in that city, was
removed to the hospital last Wednesday.
She was suffering with melancholy and
was in charge of two nurses. The pa-
tient asked for a drink and as one of
the nurses started for it, the woman
leaped from the window before she could
be halted.
—Sylvester Quiggle, of Lycoming
township, Clinton county, = sustained a
$10,000 fire loss on Saturday when a
large barn on his farm was destroyed by
fire of unknown origin with all the season’s
crops, all of the farm implements, a
team of horses and three cows. A wag-
on shed also was burned. Neighbors as-
sisted in saving the house and other
farm buildings. The telephone service in
that section had been crippled for two
days and men went from one farm to an-
other in automobiles to take helpers to
the scene of the fire.
- —Herbert Sunderland, 70, of Horton,
Potter county, died at the Renovo hos-
Slicing the Sugar Duty.
From the Philadelphia Public Ledger.
The Senate Finance Committee has
done well to cut the high sugar du-
ties of the House bill, but the ax
should have sunk deeper. The House
raised the rate on Cuban raw sugar
from 1.76 cents a pound to 2:40 and
on world sugar from 2.20 to 3 cents.
The Republican Senators have decid-
ed that a Cuban duty of 2.20 and a
general duty of 2.75 are sufficient.
recommend no restrictions on sugar
from the Philippines.
This action isa compromise satis-
factory neither to the producers nor
the consumers. The sugar growers
have been contending for even higher
rates than those in the House bill,
and’ they - failed to make out a
ing duties. Senator Smoot’s sliding-
scale compromise blossomed only tor
a day. It quickly wilted under the
criticism from both consumers and
producers. Senator Borah has a
sugar-bounty plan which he will
press on the floor of the Senate.
Virtually all the Senate committee
tariff schedules are tentative, sub-
ject to radical revision by the main
body, to say nothing of the ordeal
they will undergo in conference with
the House. But none will provide a
more bitter battle than the sugar
schedule, which has no power to
sweeten the tempers of its advocates
and opponents.
—————— ne Mp A IS
“Heartless” Big Business.
From the Altoona Tribune.
The theory that big business is
heartless was rather upset Thurs-
day night when the Transcontinen-
tal Air Transport, Inc.,, ordered a
suspension of service so that all com-
pany planes might aid in the search
for the missing “City of San Fran-
cisco.” .
It is obvious that the Transcon-
tinental Air Transport thought more
of the lives of the eight persons
aboard the missing plane than it
does of the monetary return which
will be lost through the suspension.
In addition T. A. T. officials offer-
ed $5,000 reward to the- person
finding the missing air liner.
Such concentration of resources in
search for endangered lives, with
utter disregard of the demands of
business, is worthy of commendation.
The public esteem which will
certainly be gained through such
humane procedure is far more
injuries eustained an hour and a half
earlier when he was crushed under a
steam roller on the State highway about
a mile west of Renovo. Sunderland was
shoveling gravel behind the roller and
failed to note that it had been reversed
and was operating in his direction. His:
right leg was entirely crushed and was
amputated above the knee in an effort to
save his life. He was a widower and is
survived by three brothers. Cy
—Many an erstwhile dutiful husband is
lured from the home hearth by the
charms of a modern siren but Leonard
Edwards, of Bloomsburg, is believed to
be the first to be lured by the enticing
wails of a moaning fire siren. Mrs. Ed-
wards told her story to a sympathetic
court. Her husband, she said, had left
her so that he could be nearer a fire
whistle. Her testimony was . supported
by other witnesses and Edwards did not
deny the allegation. Ordered by the
court to pay his wife $18 a month, Ed-
wards announced he would rather go to
jail. He went. :
—The family dog was pressed into
service at Scranton, last Friday night by
persons who sought to dynamite the home
of Joseph Melnick, 661 Clearview street.
Several sticks of the explosive were at-
tached to the dog’s tail, and the animal
then chased home. As he reached the
door, the charge exploded. and tore . off
the porch, shattered windows in. the
building, killed the dog and: caused . su-.
perficial injuries to Melnick’s daughter,
Nellie, 12, who ran to the door when she
heard the animal whining upon his ar-
rival. Six of the children in the house
were uninjured. Their parents were not
at home when the detonation occurred.
—Stanley Morris, night clerk in the
Hotel St. George, of Lancaster, faced au-
tomatics in the hands of two bandits early
on Sunday, and saved $155 which he had
taken from the cash register several
minutes before the men entered the lobby
| of the hotel. Morris looked up from his
desk and faced the automatics. ‘‘Stick
‘em high, Buddy,” one man demanded.
Morris obeyed and the other ‘man opened
the drawer of the cash register. It was
empty. ‘Where's the money?” the
bandits demanded. Morris said the boss
had left the hotel five minutes & before
with the day's receipts. The bandits
without another word backed from the
hotel, keeping Morris covered. The
clerk explained that he had placed the
money in his pocket. The bandits for-
got to search him. a
—Gerald Rupert is in the Lock Haven
hospital in a critical condition as the re-
sult of being stabbed Saturday night by
Tony Di Cello, divorced husband of Rup-
ert’s wife. Mrs. Rupert recently secured
a legal separation from her former hus-
band and was married to Rupert on Fri-
day at Jersey Shore. Saturday evening
the couple were being entertained by
friends at the home of the bride's parents
when Di Cello made his appearance, forc-
ed his way into the house and stabbed.
Rupert in the chest near the heart. The.
injured man was taken to the. hospital
where it was found necessary to perform
an operation. Di Cello returned to his
home and barricaded himself inside but
was subsequently arrested by Lock Haven’
police. ‘who forced their way into the-
kingdoms. house and took him into custody.
ry
might have been made-if service had
————— pp e—————————
Fight to Finish in Philadelphia.
From the Harrisburg Telegraph.
The situation in neither Pittsburgh
nor Philadelphia was changed ma-
terially with the passing of the last
day for withdrawals from the pri-
mary ballot. With Vare in Atlantic
City, ready to direct the fight against
the Mackey-Republican League tick-
et, “Young Tom” Watson, leader of a
very independent ward, whose fath-
er “Old Tom” is a member of the
vor of the Vare slatte. Senator Salus
has attacked the Mayor's sincerity in
his spoken opposition to the Mitten
interests and points out that the May
or and his friends tried to kill the
Woodward bill which the Vare organ-
ization had passed in the last Legis-
lature over the opposition of the Mit-
ten people. Prospects are for a bit-
ter fight to the finish in Philadelphia.
ne t————— pl ee ———
—All the ministers of Bellefonte
are now back on the job after their
summer vacations and any little
devils that may have been chasing
around the town during the past
two months had better make haste
to their own underground.
oR AS ay tai
Mussellman, Claysburg, fell into the rive .
er and drowned. Her body was recovers.
—Thieves who had ears for music were :
carry the instruments out of the old high--
Some of
—An automobile which Williamsport
police officers had confiscated late Satur-
hall while the officers were carrying the
liquor into the police station for storage. .
—Limestone content of the water at.
at the Williamsport hospital on Sunday
pital, Wednesday night, of last wool; of