—The equinoctial storm was a lit- tle belated, but it was mighty wel- | «come since it brought such a copious rain. 'soent ‘'—Somebody has said that a sun- beam is something ‘that'll go ‘ ‘through pollution and come out un- polluted. Would that all our sons| could say that the sunbeam has noth- ing on us.*- diy —William Feather never said any- thing truer in his life than when he expressed this bit -of philosophy: “The boy who does not lead a normal life in youth usually takes his vices at one gulp the moment he becomes a free agent.” Mothers, if you are making a Little Lord Fauntleroy of your son or daughter your - apron Strings are lashing you to the pillory of many heartaches. —According to the records of the Danville State hospital the rate of admissions for alcoholic disorders is now seven times greater than it was jn 1919-1920. With the asylums, jails and penitentiaries bulging with vic- tims of bad liquor we think our col- leges ought to extend their extension departments so that moonshiners can ‘talte a correspondenc course in how to make better stuff. h —We are not particularly interest- ed in what Mr. Shearer might have done by way of compromising us while ‘at the Geneva conference. We would be interested, however, in learning whether any of the Sena-, tors, who have him on the rack, have a record for constructive en- deavor and loyal citizenship that will equal the one their spies have re- ported him to possess. —For goodness sake, if you love us, give us a recipe for firing a house heating plant so that it will please everybody when it’s 50 degrees in the morning and 70 degres at noon. Ever since we discarded the cherry old coal range inthe kitchen there’s been trouble in the home. Gas is wonderful, it is at the cook’s com- mand when she comes down stairs in the morning. There is no waiting for it to “catch up,” but it hasn't done what the good old coal range did, work while we slept, and had the chill taken off the bath room. od, how we hate the smell of a new- ly lighted oil stove, the hope of the orudent wife who attempts to bridge he gap between the mild weather f summer and the crisp nights of all. It takes more of an engineer shar we are to keep a house hot snough to get up in the morning and :001 enough to stay in at midday with \ furnace designed to keep it com- ortable in zero weather. If you have \ recipe for mot forgetting the fur- ace or of keeping. it just right with. ut using any coal please put us wise. Shearer in His Own Defense. In his testimony before the Sen- ate committee, the other day, William B. Shearer, practical lob- byist and professional patriot, failed 'to present an imposing figure of himself but he did somewhat punc- ture the reputation for idealism which Mr. Charles M. Schwab has been building for some time. It will be recalled that Mr. Schwab testified before the same committee that as soon as he learned that Shearer was .on the payroll of the Bethlehem | Steel company he ordered the revo- cation of the contract. Shearer testified that Schwab was “the real inspiration behind the lobbying and propagation at Geneva,” and that a threat that Secretary Kellogg would prosecute a suit for $15,000,000 against the Bethlehem corporation unless Shearer was discharged, was the actual reason for cancelling the contract. - : : didn + By his own evidence William B. Vare Probe on a New Lead. Senator Norris seems to have di- Mr. rected his probe as .to the source of Vare’s slush fund into a promis- ing direction. He has already dis- covered at least one contributor of the phantom variety and is likely to uncover others. There is a deep- seated suspicion that a considerable part of the fund credited to business men of Philadelphia was in fact contributed by Mr. Vare himself. There is an equally wide-spread be- lief that much of the $50,000 - listed in the name of Sheriff Cunningham was drawn from bootleggers and other protected operatives in * the criminal life of Philadelphia. The purpose of Senator Norris’ undertak- ing is to develop the facts in the matter. 8 With this object in view he first procured a list: of the contributors as filed and sworn to by Thomas F. Watson, Sr., treasurer of the Vare campaign committee, in the office Shearer stands condemned as a of the Secretary of the Common- conscienceless adventurer preying wealth, at Harrisburg. To each of upon public credulity in whatever those credited with large subscrip- direction and by any methods that promised liberal recompense. His principal capital is what Samuel Johnson defined as “the last refuge of a scoundrel.” The first question put to him by the chairman of the committee was “what is your name? and his reply was “William Baldwin Shearer, American, Christian, Na- tionalist and Protestant.” After the chairman had promptly ordered that “all except the name” be stricken out, the witness added that he had letters from almost every patriotic society in America which reflects no credit on the patriotic societies of America and seems to have been of little advantage to Shearer. But that is of little impor- tance to the question at issue. ~The simple facts are that William Shearer, an adventurer of doubtful character, was employed by three shipbuilding corporations to attend the Geneva conference sitting for the purpose of devising means to decrease or procure a parity in the naval equipment of the United States and Great Britain. That he performed the work for which he « was liberally . _that he inade A a ar mitt Na Merally, Dai, jhat i of ear the radio from the living room xuding its program. Reception is ine and both ears are cocked so that oncentration on the work at hand is ot without its difficulties. We are isening, while writing, to a soprano rom somewhere singing “After the tall.” It might not mean much to ou, but it does to us, for in the ummer of 1893 we had a minstrel how out on the road and Hard Har- is, our present Mayor, was the en- semble tenor. If Hard can't throw ff that awful cough he has and has > march up to greet St. Peter we rant to place something in his hand iat might prove an open sesame to 1e pearly gates. Hard was the first 1an, east of Omaha, to sing “After 1e Ball’ from a stage. Notwithstand. ig what Mr. Chas. K. Harris, the uthor of the song, might have said, \ his reminiscences published in the aturday Evening Post some time 70, about the song that really made im famous, we had a copy of the viginal of his manusceript. from a incinnati music publishing house be- re it was in print and the echo of ie applause Hard got when he sang in Tyrone and Clearfield, specially, music far sweeter to our ears than iy we are now hearing from the .dio—possibly that is because Amos id Andy have just come on. —The rather striking bit of verse, ¢ published several weeks ago, Jawn and Dusk” the authorship of hich we ascribed to someone in afton, Pennsylvania, because it re the post-mark of that city, ems to have had even more merit an: we ascribed to it at the time of tblication. It has been published in any of our exchanges and credited the Watchman, ‘an honor to which » are not entitled. We have been rprised and elated, however, with e discovery that the author is none her than our nephew, Thomas King srris;Jr., whose modesty prompted n to resort to the subterfuge of onymity to get his fine thoughts 0 print. The youth of the land is leed a mystery. Looking down at from the pedestal to which exper- \ce raises those of mellowing years are too prone to think it hopeless. | » know nothing of what they are in their devil-may-care way. might be because we know least )$¢" whom we love best that the t person in the world whom we uld have thought to be the author “Dawn and Dusk” is the one who lly wrote } Whistler's notes, the Bird's sweet song, » rising sun and Faith, how long 1 these withstand the age old test life? Not long I fear unless— me—there comes at close of day . peaceful hour when creatures pray. I's Aronise for the day is Dawn; wake and live, the I are drawn, sunset rests my weary soul then I've won through to my goal; now I know I like by far dusk that brings the evening star. his operations to his employers and that if he had not brought suit for money which he claimed was due him the world would never have known the affair. Clearly the pres- ent purpose is to make Shearer the goat, and the chances are it will succeed, But the corporations which employed a super patriot to serve a treasonable purpose ought not to escape blame entirely. Besides, the practice is a policy of the party. Hoover Wants Great Power. President Hoover is somewhat in- consistent in his communication to the Senate urging the adoption of the flexible provision of the pending tariff bill. At the outset he declared that “he will not at any time discuss specific rates as he regards that as an interference with Congress.” It certainly would be usurpation of the prerogatives of Congress which un- der the constitution has, alone, the power of legislation and fixing tariff rates is essentially legislation. But he covets the power of fixing the rates of tariff taxation through the medium of the flexible provision, now in force under the Fordney-McCum- ber act and he asks to have it con- tinued under the pending bill, not- withstanding. tin The flexible provision of the exsist. ing tariff law creates a Commission to investigate complaints against rates. Originally it was to be com- posed of economic experts and non- partisan. But it was to be appoint- ed by the President and under prec- edents established by President Coolidge it may be “packed” in the interest of high protectionists. As a matter of fact whenever any mem- ber of the Commission revealed an in- _clination to favor a decrease in rates i he was induced to resign so that his place could be filled by a man in favor of increases. In that way every change in tariff rates made by Presidential proclamation was to a higher level. Patronage was freely used in promoting such results. The value of a flexible provision in {the tariff law to an aspiring Presi- dent may easily be imagined. The , danger of such legislation can hardly jue measured. It conveys to the Presi- dent power to enrich or impoverish ‘any man orgroup engaged in manu. factures or commerce. In a cam- paign for re-election the President might easily, by the employment of this extraordinary power, conscript the wealth of the country into his service and make his tenture of office perpetual. ter has not been influenced by these considerations to urge that this pow- er be bestowed upon him. But the fact is that the danger is not only present but imminent and public safe. i : ty requires it's removal. Possibly President Hoov-: tions he has written a letter asking how much he gave and whether in cash or check. In cases where checks were used he asks the name of the bank upon which it was drawn. The Senator states that one of the alleged contributors has posi- tively declared he made no contri. bution and it is intimated that oth- ers have followed his example. Of course some of them will refuse or neglect to reply but that policy will expose them to suspicion. It has already been proved . that Vare himself contributed more than he ought to secure his election. He acknowledges personal contributions amounting to upward of $71,000 whidh is more than the salary for the full term and asit costs a good deal to maintain the dignity of a Senator in Washington he must have expected to find some source of revenue other than the legal compensation. But it will not be so easy to find out where the Cunningham contribution came from. Mr. Cunningham may be sent to jail, as Sinclair was, and that would shut off every source of in- formation. But on the other hand conclude that "it would be wise to tell the truth. ——A new religion has been start- ed the purpose of which is to teach | “How to Get Along with Each Oth- er.” That is certainly a laudable purpose and the first feature of the creed ought to be “behave.” Mystery of Lobby Operations Mr. William B. Shearer must have had other sources of revenue during the period he was employed by three ship building corporations as lobby- st. The officials of those corpora- | tions acknowledge that they paid him i $7,500.00 for lobbying in Washington ' during the Sixty-ninth Congress and . $25,000.00 for “observing and report- ing” at Geneva during the conference ! for reducing naval forces. In a let- ship building corporations upon his return from Geneva he said his ex- penses “over the period of time 1 have devoted to this fight are well in six figures.” It might be worth while to find out where the rest of themoney came from. There is some distance between $32,500 and $100,000 which is the lowest total that can be expressed in six figures and the difference must ‘have come from some source other than Sunday school collections. Go- ing into details. Mr. Shearer stated the “other than my expenses of nec- essary entertaining both here andin Europe, there has been considerable expense for stenographers, stationery, stamps, multigraphing, printing, au- tomobile, train and steamship travel. My mailing list runs from 1200 to 4000.” Such luxuries and necessaries do run unto money and it may well be believed that he was anxious to get an understanding “as to the stat- us of my just claim based on our un- derstanding.” x The books of the ship building cor- porations fail to show any payments on account of these lobby activities but as the fiscal officers of them ac- knowledge, under oath, payments of $7,500 and $25,000, it may be assumed that much was paid. But stenogra- phers stationery, stamps, multigraph- ing, automobile, train and steam- ship service are cash commodities and as Shearer is not a wealthy man where did the six figure differ- ence come from? Of course the steamship corporation officials may have overlooked or forgot about some contributions or Mr. might have persuaded patriotic or- ganizations or religious societies to chip in. Anyway it is an interest~ ing and mysterious problem. ——The courts of this State are gradually raising the penalty for IGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. isp i PA. “Gown abd out he may ter addressed to the officials of the Shearer : OC | Law Enforcement in Washington. . The question of prohibition. en- forcement in Washington is increas- ing both in interest and importance. Senator Howell's statemeat that the President is to blame for the mois- ture has encouraged others to speak out. Senator Blease told of narcotic joints within the shadow of the capi- tol and Senator Brookhart followed with a startling story of a Senator- ial dinner at which the souveaivs ‘were silver flasks filled with whis- ‘key. This function, under the ‘anus- pices of a Wall Street broker, was for the purpose of introducing newly ‘elected Senators into the ways and methods of legislation as practiced in Washington under a Republican administration. It was known as the “Wall Street Dinner.” . Of course there were some Sena- tors at the feast who were already familiar with the processes. There were Charlie Curtis, now Vice Presi- dent; Reed Smoot, now Chairman of the Committee on Finance; George H. Moses, now President Pro Tem. of the Senate; Wesley L. Jones, author of the famous ‘five-and-ten” prohibi- tion law; James W. Watson, now Re- publican floor leader in the Senate and other veterans as well as ex- perts in partisan legislation. Their part of the programme was to intro- Suse the “greenhorns’ to their Wall street hosts and recommend them as worthy “guides, philosophers and friends,” who knew exactly what legislation was needed and precisely how it might be obtained. The banquet was held at Willard’s and was the recherche event of the session of 1926. Senator Brookhart'’s present purpose is to have the pro- prietor or manager of the hotel brought into court to answer for the flagrant violation of the Volstead law. That is a laudable purpose and clear- ly essential to the promise of making “Washington a model city.” But it isn’t the solution = of the problem which confronts the authorities of t Washington and the administration of President Hoover. A searching inquiry into the purpose of a dinner to Senators in a sinister aspect explanation. Fe ny ; t. It De | that needs 1 | —A relatively unimportant elec- tion in the State is approaching. That is, there are only two State of- fices to be filled and few county offices of importance figure in the contest. t | ; along non-partisan lines. Nothwith- standing this phase of the campaign word comes out of Harrisburg that a “shakedown” of from one to three per cent. of the salaries of all State chine politics. That's how enough voters are hired to go to the polls in an “off” year and elect to office the little cogs in the machine’s wheels while the good people stay at home. —Bellefonte can kiss hope of a new public building good-bye for at least ten years. We fear the Hon. Mitch. Chase hasn't been nearly as much interested in Bellefonte as he will be when he comes up for elec- tion again, ——— i ——————— ——Maybe Senator Brookhart is a trifle off in form in exposing the sil- ver flask episode of the Wall street dinner to Senators but it is one case in which the purpose justifies the breach. | pp ———— i ——The State Highway’s oiling schedule for the week ending Octo- | ber 10th includes two stretches of road in Centre county, from Hublers- burg to Howard and Madisonburg to Nittany. ——— A eng ——=Senator Norris is trying to find out who contributed to the Vare slush fund in 1926 and may incident- ally start a procession toward Cherry Hill. : epee gp————— fp ———— ——Mr. Vare has resumed leader- i ship of the Republican machine in Philadelphia but he is making little progress toward a seat in the Sen- Hate. uous ——Senator Couzens may be plan- ning a final blow to Secretary Mel- lon in his movement to probe the re- cent power mergers. ——President Hoover's week-end parties may develop into an institu- tion unless the Sabbatarians enter a . protest in time. ——Senator Copeland of New York ought to have come home sooner or secured a “pair” before he left for Europe. ——What the city of Easton really drunken driving to a level that “fits the crime.” needs is a hospital for the treatment of moral maladies. TOBER 4. 1929. SUMMER IS SLEEPING When the mist and fog and late sun All get together to tell us quit ‘Gay Summer is passing, t’will again.” Oh, isn’t it nice when the Fall days come, Summer e plain We greens, We Thase a few flies and close all the For cool days are coming bringing Winter once more. The noise and harsh dins of the stree don’t exist, out by the mist And you ‘“‘putter about,” in the quiet in side, For Winter is comin d as— ate : g and Christm i easy to speed the long Summer And Jrelcome the Fall, with its blanket of y For we know u | _ ‘and chill ra again. 1 i i September, 1929 They Lifted Canal Boats Over the | Mountains. From the Philadelphia Public Ledger. Mountains near of the old Portage Railroad, since abandoned. er, is especially i link in the system of “public works’ connecting these cities in 1829, which represented one of the greatest en- gineering achievements up to that time. ern doctrine and practice. | the term “main line,” referrin Pennsylvania Railroad's : route from this enterprise. As the first link in these “public Congress, new or old, by works,” the State built a railroad Wall Street manipulators of finance from this city to Columbia. Thence ngers and freight were convey- to Hollidays- | burg. From that point the Portage i Railroad climbed over the mountains to Johnstown, whence a second canal ‘ed in boats on a can , completed the route to Pittsburgh. Se i | i one time over the Portage. transportation, "as a perilous adventure. Historians have taining ! | phia. But State. years. line of public wor stone State. their canal boats on wheels and tri tops of the Allegheny Mountains. For Speed and Accuracy. From the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. ing - machines, fraud - naturally has been of fundamental importance. by the voting machines. “honest errors” have been discovered. returns. ! boards had committed no frauds, the were the numerous instances, as us- ual, of boards in large districts hav- ing to lose a night's sleep, with the tabulation holding them from the close of the polls until late the next 1 be Winter take down the awnings and pack away screens, and out from the gardens we ‘‘catch up” he nerve racking sounds are closed der Winter's deep snow Summer is sleeping, but will come back WINIFRED B. MEEK-MORRIS The unveiling next Tuesday of a monument high up in the Allegheny Cresson will com- memorate the hundredth anniversary long This memorial, erected with State funds by a com- mission appointed by Governor Fish. interesting to the people of Philadelphia and Pitts- burgh, for the Portage road was the It is customary to regard “public ownership” as a comparatively mod- But a century ago the State of Pennsyl- vania owned :and operated this “main line of public works,” as it was call-, ed, comprising two lines of railway and two canals. And, by the way, to direct west from Philadelphia, dates The Portage Railroad included a ries of inclined planes up which canal boats were dragged in sections. | A special Segsigy permitted te Hvis ! sion of a boat so that its parts For the most part the campaign’ could be mounted on huge trucks , will be for townsaip, town and city ' drawn by hempen cables, the power offices in which the inclination has , being furnished by a sationary .en- been steadily developing to vote gine at the top of each plane. At thirty-three changes of power were needed to move a boat Charles Dickens was among the distinguished passen- gers who marveled St me Wontes of 2 an e has left a employees is to be levied. That's ma- vivid account of what he regarded shown the part played by the old : Portage in main- "the early importance of Pittsburgh as the gateway to the West. Without this system of trans- | portation, its prosperity might have been affected by the popularity of rival routes of trade. To a somewhat less degree, the old Portage had its on the welfare of Philadel- it was a factor in the commercial progress of the entire Due credit should be paid to the wise foresight of the Common- wealth’s officials at that time in pro- moting this great enterprise. The Erie Canal across New York State had then been ' in operation four Its adverse effect on Phila- delphia and Pennsylvania through its diversion of trade would have been far more marked without the “main ” across the Key- Express trains now traverse this route daily in nine hours and less. But the initial conquest was achiev- ed by those courageous engineers of a century ago when they mounted umphantly trundled them over the In arguments for the use of vot- the prevention of stressed chiefly. It is difficult to imagine a worse crime against popular govern- ment than the corruption of an elec- tion. ‘Any device that gives an add- ed safeguard against it is obviously But the news from the official count of the vote in the recent pri- maries contains some reminders of other great needs that will be met In a num- ber of instances throughout the State In Chester county five ballot boxes had to be opened to straighten out It was found that the discrepancies being accepted as of a nature purely accidental. Then there SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONR. —Dr. J. Bruce McCreary, deputy sec- retary of health, has announced that 850,000 copies of the Pennsylvania baby book are now ready for distribution. They will be distributed by the bureau of vital statistics on certificate from the attending doctor or may be obtained by ‘writing to the pre-school section of the State Health Department. —Alfred G. Shissler, 50, chief burgess, of Shamokin, had his pocket picked of a wallet containing $200 while in Sunbury, ‘on Monday, by two youths, who had en- gaged him in conversation. Shissler told police he was on his way to a hotel when the youths stopped him to ask questions. He didn’t discover his loss until the thieves were out of sight. . : —George A. Stuart, director of the bu- reau of markets, State Department of Agriculture, is authority for the state- ment that the garlic moth is reducing the value of wheat grown in the State thou- sands of dollars annually. He urged farmers to give close attention to the kind of seed sown, fumigation of bins and cleaning up all wheat about storage places before next spring. —Suit for $75,000 damages was filed at Ebensburg, last Friday, by Michael Sak- mar and Savanna Sakmar, his mother, against the Johnstown Traction company, Johnstown, for injuries they alleged Sak- mar suffered when a street car collided with another car in Johnstown August 22. Sakmar was a passanger on one of the trolleys. The mother asks $25,000 damages and the son seeks $50,000. ..—Mrs. Frances Latchaw, 20, wife of Theodore Latchaw, of York, was placed in the York county jail after a fight at the supper table, during which she is al- leged to have stabbed Ler husband in the back with a butcher knife and burned bis neck with a hot pancake turner. She was committed to jail by Alderman Jacob Stager in default of bond in the sum of $500 on charges of aggravated assault and battery and threatening to kill her hus- band. —John F. Dietrich, 53 years old, one of the ‘‘vanishing race” artisans of the days when carriages were made by hand and later in small factories, is dead at his home in Reading. Deitrich’s body was found on the banks of the Perkiomen creek, near Collegeville, where he had gone fishing, by another angler. Heart disease is believed to have caused his - death. He was a blacksmith, learning the craft in boyhood, and at one time had a factory of his own in Tamaqua. —The Rev. Charles Donnelly, evangel- ist, of Pittsburgh, who claimed his ton- sils and throat were injured go that he was totally disabled for three raonths af- ter conducting a revival campaign at the. Burnside church near Mahaffey, Pa., has been denied compensation bv the State workmen’s compensation board because the claim was not filed for more than a year after the occurrence. The minister asked that the Pittsburgh conference of the Methodist Episcopal church compen- sate him. 3 _—Seventy per cent. of all cattle in Pennsylvania are now tested for tuber- culosis, the State Department of Agricul- ture has announced. With bovine tuber- culosis eradication work on an area basis under way at the present in 976 townships in fifty-eight counties, the department es- timated that all herds in at least forty of ‘the State's sixty-seven counties will have received the test by January 1. The area work is now being conducted Mn Clinton, Bedford, Centre, Juniata, Schuyl- kill and Wayne counties. —When a quantity of dynamite explod- ed on the back porch of his home, John Kvasknick, aged 27, of Hudson, Luzerne county, was blown to pieces, and his wife was critically injured. She was taken to a hospital, where it is: believed that she will lose one arm. Neighbors stated that Kvasknick was experimenting with sev- eral dry cell batteries which he expected to use to set off blasts in the mines where he was employed. Mrs. Kvasknick was watching her husband from the kitchen door when the explosion occurred. —There have been bridal showers, rice showers, flower showers and rein showers in Reading, but the most exciting shoew- er of all took place when a bag contain- ing 10,000 pennies was dropped while be- ing taken to a bank. Police formed a cordon around the pile of pennies after scores of pedestrians had scuffled through it, and after a lot of small newsheys had taken advantage of the situation. After all the coins in sight had been scraped up and bazged ,it was officially announced that every cent had been recovered. —Burgess A. G. Shissler of Shamokin, has announced that he will ask council at a meeting in the near future to draft an ordinance to prohibit the use of any soft coal in that borough. The burgess ex- pressed himself forcibly on the subject. Within the past several months, he de- clared, he has had scores of complaints from residents who protest the use of soft coal—in machinery of construction and by paving companies. Most of the complaints are to the effect that dust from the fuel damages the appearance of homes, settles on paint and discolors surfaces. —District Attorney Samuel H, Gardner, of Pittsburgh, asserts that the three coal and iron policemen acquitted Saturday of the murder of John Borkowski, miner, will be brought to trial some time in Oc- tober on charges of involuntary man- | slaughter. The three, W. J. Lyster, Har- old P. Watts and Frank Slapikas were in the Allegheny county jail early in the week in default of $5,000 bail each, but expected to secure their release. The po- licemen, formerly employed by the Pitts- burgh Coal company, were charged with beating Borkowski to death last Febru- ary. The defense contended he was in- jured in a scuffle after he had stabbed Watts following an argument. t —Becoming suddenly deranged, Edna Langraf, 22 years old, of Allentown, ser- iously injured her mother, and attacked a policeman with a hatpin, before she was subdued and placed under observation in police headquarters on Sunday. The woman was found a year ago in an un- conscious condition on a Bethlehem street. A milkman picked her up, and she told a variety of stories as to how she came to be there. The girl’s peculiar actions as she left home on Sunday attracted the at- tention of neighbors who were about to notify police when her mother appeared. She tried to persuade the girl to return home, but was attacked and thrown to the ground. Her leg was broken. Police were then summoned, but the girl was not to be found. She suddenly appeared from around a porch, and lunged vicious- ly with the hatpin at Motorcycle Officer Beisel, inflicting a painful wound in his right Teg. ey :