Bemorai itn | INK SLINGS Appropriately the = President offers an apology to the country for approving the Grundy tariff bill. — Up to this writing nothing has developed to prove that our old friends the “Afaletics” are so hot. And Mr. Al Simmons’ bat. basn’t been making a noise that’ would justify his spring hold-out. — Now that the sweet girl gradu- ates have had the spot-light shifted from them they're out on the mad chase for most anybody who has money enough to pay for an oc- casional five cent drink at a fizz club. —That Sharkey-Schmeling contest for the heavy weight championship had the aroma of over-ripe fish and if you've ever been kissed by a Siwash squaw after she has dined on that Siwash delicatessen you'll know exactly what we mean. —The new tariff bill is passed, the President has signed it and no- body seems to be happy. Everyone knew that Mr. Hoover was a good engineer, but there are many who are beginning to fear that good en- gineers are not necessarily good Presidents. — Wednesday news from Harris- burg was to the effect that the east wall of the new State building is eighteen inches out of plumb. In- asmuch as none of the engineers have offered an explanation as to how it got that way we venture one: Secretary Dorworth might have used it as a leaning post while pondering over his political future. —Wheat is under a dollar a bushel, grass is short and thin, cut worms are in the corn, milk prices are down thirty per cent and receiving stations are grading two milk as three and the pledge of the St. Louis convention to do something for the farmers—which Mr. Hoover thinks he is keeping— is being kept like the old woman kept tavern out west. —The mew tariff bill has passed both the Senate and the House and the people who think a tariff isany- thing more than a local issue are seeing things already. They are seeing the farmer getting two dol- lars for his wheat and they are see- ing men greasing up the wheels of industry and they are seeing a helluva lot of things being done by a tariff that only the natural law of supply and demand can do. _So far as we have heard the Hon. Holmes has not started his campaign for the Legislature yet. When he does we'll bet he won't be pinning any roses on himself for, hoving ~ voted for the gasoline tax pill. Everytime you take a ride in your car just remember that the gas that is making it go cost you two cents a gallon more than there was any necessity for it costing you and the Hon. Holmes voted to put the tax on you. — Jean Millet has gone to jail for a year for selling paintings as his grandfather's, painter of the “Angelus,” own work. Poor Jean! It's just too bad. Especially so, since the chances are great that not one who bought the spurious canvases knew or ever would have known that they were not genuine Millets. People who buy books by the foot and paintings by the square yard aren't worth sending the person who sells them to jail a minute for. —The appeal we made last week for all our readers to get paid in advance has met with some re- sponse. While it has not been near- ly as general as we would like it to be, we have hope that everyone of our subscribers will take it as seriously as it was intended and get into the advanced class before the thirty days have expired. We know our readers. Uncle Sam doesn’t. And we'd like to introduce him to a subscription list that will tell him on its face that it should be the least of his worries. . —Mr. Morrow's overwhelming ma- jority in the New Jersey senatorial primary is another straw that shows which way the wind is blowing. He was « the first Republican of any eminence who had the courage to stop trying to ride a “wet” and a “dry” horse at the same time. His victory means just two things: The public is tired of pussey-footing politicians and the public compre- hends many people who are gaining courage enough to vote their honest convictions, regardless of political expediency or ranting fanatics. —The lady who wrote from State College to tell us that she didn’t want to see us have to go to jail is as dear. During the eight years that ended last June seventh so many ladies thought jail was far too good for us that we had lost some faith in the gentler sex. The idea of going to jail isn’t so horrible after one becomes inured to it—the idea we mean. Life has become such a struggle and turmoil that nine or twelve or eighteen months surcease from fighting to get the meal ticket each Saturday night seems almost like basking in the Elysian fields with nothing but a «gun suit” on. Gosh, we must snap out of this morbid frame of mind. The first thing we know we'll be batterin’ on Sheriff Dep’s big door and be asking or our number. RAR VOL. 75. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. Grundy Tariff Bill Passed. The monstrous Grundy tariff bill passed the Senate finally on Friday of last week with forty-four votes in the affirmative, five of which were cast by Democrats, against forty-two negatives. It carries a burden of taxation much higher than any previous legislation in the history of the country. It has been forced to passage in violation of the Kansas City platform, and in con- tempt of the wishes of the Presi- dent and against the protest of more than a thousand of the leading political economists of the country as well as a majority of the fore- most manufacturers, farmers and business men. What malign in- fluence led to this result can only be conjectured, There was no excuse for increased tariff taxation at this time. The pretense that tariff taxing agricul- tural products will benefit producers is absurd. Products of the farm have never been, are not now and never will be imported in sufficient quantity to make a tariff tax bene- ficial to farmers. The statement that manufacturing interests need additional tariff taxation is deliber- ately falsifying the facts. The only purpose which the legislation achieves is the fulfillment of the pledges made by Joe Grundy that contributors to the Republican cam- paign fund would be reimbursed by increased tariff taxation. This will be accomplished at an expense of a billion dollars a year to consumers of the country. The temporary triumph of the tariff mongers in the passage of this larcenous legislation will be short-lived. Past history proves that voters of the country resent such crimes against justice and reason. The tariff law which Presi- dent Taft first denounced and sub- sequently signed, not only defeated his party in the following Congres- sional election but made him a one- term President. The Grundy law will not be an exception. If it has not already taken Mr. Grundy of official life it will take his party out of control of Congress next November. And it will prevent for- all time the establishment of an organized trading post on the floor of the Senate chamber. — The President-elect of Brazil is having a fine time in this country but the new tariff bill is likely to undo the friendships he is trying to establish. Chairman Huston’s Lame Defense. Chairman Huston, of the Republi- can National committee, shows scant respect for the intelligence of the members of that body in his recent | letter justifying the misappropria- tion of funds entrusted to him as a lobbyist. In a form letter sent to each member of the committee he protests that (‘the charges against him growing out of his activities concerning Muscle Shoals legislation are the result of a campaign direct- ed by partisan opponents in the hope of injuring the Republican Na- tional organization, the National ad- ministration and myself.” As a mat- ter of fact the accusers of chair- man Huston are mostly friends of the National administration who are | striving to shield the President. The complaints against Mr. Hus- ton are that he was a conspicuous figure in a conspiracy to convert an immensely valuable property of the government to the ownership of the power trust and thus defeat a laud- able purpose to provide cheap fer- tilization to the farmers of the country, and that he had misused funds contributed by a subsidiary of the power trust to strengthening his margin account in Wall Street speculative operations. To both charges he pl:ads guilty in his form letter to the committeemen and then trusts to their credulity to swallow the statement that the charges are based on malice. On the day that chairman Hus- ton’s limping defense was made public the newspapers of this State carried an account of the suicide of a Wilkes-Barre banker who had embezzled a large sum of money from the bank in which he was employed. His trial for the crime was approaching and to escape the certain penalty he took his own life. In using money contributed to Muscle Shoals lobby fund for an- other purpose chairman Huston committed the same crime and the turpitude of one rests upon the other. Instead of trying to injure the National administration by mak- ing the charges against Huston the complainants are trying to save it. It is Huston who is injuring the President. ——TIt looks profession of reform was a thinly disguised false pretense. out ' as if King Carol's | Interesting But Useless Adventure. i A new altitude record in aviation has been set. On June 4th, at | Anacostia Field, Washington, Lieu- tenant Sousek, United States Navy. drove his small plane to a level of 43,166 feet above the surface of the earth. His ship is a Wright Apache, BELLEFONTE, PA.. JUNE 20. 1930. NO. 25. The .Only Sure Remedy. Both the major political parties | of Pennsylvania have reorganized | for the impending campaign. The Democratic State committee | as- sembled at Harrisburg and by unan. | imous vote and with much enthusiasm | "re-elected John R. Collins chariman, | powered with a supercharged Pratt & Whitney Wasp engine. Lieuten- ant Sousek had previously acquired the world’s seaplane altitude record,’ having just a year previously, in the same plane, fitted with pontoons, made a record of 38,560 feet. The previous record for all types was 41,829 feet and held by Will Neuenhoffen, of Germany. The rules required that that figure be exceeded by 328 feet. Lieutenant Sousek had more than 1000 feet to spare. At the 43,000 feet altitude the temperature was 89 degrees below zero, an almost intolerable cold. “In this blasting cold,” he says, “with the air so thin that it held the plane with difficulty, I remained twenty minutes trying to force the machine a little higher.” He felt like ly- ing back against the side of the cockpit “and letting everything go.” But he didn’t do anything of the kind. When the feeling of despond- ency came upon him he “pressed the valve of the oxygen tank tube and gave himself a good shot of the gas.” This restored his strength and courage and he repeated it as ' often as necessary. But when he returned to the earth he was very much exhausted. These daring and grueling ex- periences are interesting to see or read about but to the average mind they are of little practical use. They contribute little, if anything, toward promoting the art or science of aviation. They are of no value , either in offensive or defensive war , operations, being too high for en- | counter with an enemy and too far | from the target to drop bombs with ' efficiency. They may serve the pur- pose of gratifying adventurous spirits or flattering the vanity of ambitious = operatives, careless of ithe lives of themselves or others. Of course Lieutenant Sousek showed ‘wonderful courage, splendid endur- ance and much fortitude, and he is welcome to all the glory of his achievement. ——The Senate lobby committee kept itself alive too long. In the | beginning it rendered some valuable service but in the end it degenerated into a public nuisance. rr ———————p A ———————— Interesting Problem to Politicians. It may be assumed that the polit. ‘ical minded element of the public | will await with intense interest for further developments in the contro- versy between the Lobby committee of the Senate and Bishop James Cannon Jr. The Bishop has been treating the committee rather cav- alierly since he appeared before it as a voluntary witness and finally, the other day, practically “thumbed his nose” at those members who were interrogating him. In other words, instead of answering perti- nent questions relative to the sub. ject under investigation he declared he would answer no more questions and left the room in a manner which led Senator Walsh to believe was “for the purpose of defying the committee.” Since the general conference of his church, in session at Dallas, Texas, recently, exculpated Bishop Cannon from charges of misconduct in connection with political activi- ties and speculative operations of questionable character, he seems to have grown bold. The evidence of another witness revealed the fact that he had received a consid. erable sum of money for use inthe campaign against Governor Smith which had not been accounted for, and the records of New York brok- er's office indicated that he had been engaged in some spurious transactions in bucket.shop specula- tions. But for some reason, against the protest of many members of the conference, that body gave him a clean bill of moral health. When the Bishop first defied the committee by refusing to answer relevant questions, the chairman, Senator Caraway, justified his attl- tude. But Mr. Caraway insisted on answers to similar questions by other witnesses, even to the extent of threatening them with contempt proceedings. Other committees of jof the Senate charged with the same service have sent witnesses, including the multimillionaire, Harry Sinclair, to jail for refusing to | answer questions. In view of these | facts what will be done in this case isan interesting question. It is ‘true that Tom Cunningham, Phila. | delphia politician, has escaped the penalty for several years. Probably . Bishop Cannon will be put in his class. ‘Democratic meeting was t i tr ‘and spiteful. a quarter of a century. The Republi- ‘can party ‘Democratic ticket, chosen by unan- imous consent, is composed of per- ‘machine, which Mr. Pinchot has de- ing as his friends claim, but in the | i Senator Reed admits that the The Republican State committee | met in Philadelphia and after an exceedingly vitriolic contest, re- ; elected General Edward Martin, | State Treasurer, chairman. The! cordial, | confident and harmonious. The Re-: publican session was acrimonious | Each convention ac- | curately expressed the spirit and temper of the party it represented. ! The Democratic party is in the pest form for a successful battle in Pennsylvania that it has been in for is. in the worst. The! sons of highest type. Bach meas- ures up to the Jeffersonian standard and commands not only the respect but the admiration of all right. minded men and women. The Re- publican ticket, with the exception of the candidate for Governor, is the hand-picked product of the Vare nounced as a band of thieves bent on looting the treasury of the Com- monwealth. It is for the people of Penn- sylvania to decide between these two offerings. It will not do to say that Mr. Pinchot’s election will afford a guarantee, or even a prom- ise, of integrity in the government of the State. He may be as deserv- | event of the success of his party the Legislature and all the fiscal offices will be under control of the Philadelphia and Pittsburgh political pirates, and the looting which Mr. Pinchot deplored will become inevi- table. One man can’t check the flood of corruption. The only way to guarantee honest administration of the government of Pennsylvania is to elect the Democratic ticket. Grundy tariff bill is bad, but The voted for it for the reason that a bad bill is better than no bill, Hoover’s Lame Apology. President Hoover's apology for ap- proving the Grundy tariff bill wasa lame performance. A measure with the faults which he admits impair that piece of legislation, ought to have been vetoed. That it is so burdened had been previously point- | ed out both by Senator Reed and | Senator Grundy, of Pennsylvania. Even the Republican floor leader of the Senate, Mr. Watson, of Indiana, lamented its weaknesses. The Sen- ators may offer the excuse of polit- ical expediency. They are slaves to partisanship. But the President of the United States can present no such alibi, Besides, Mr. Hoover's is palpably insincere and deliberately misleading. At the outset of his apology Mr. Hoover states in sub- stance that the Grundy bill fulfills the Kansas City platform promise of tariff legislation that will benefit the farmer equally with the manu- facturer. He certainly knows that is not true. As a matter of fact it provides no benefit to the farmer for the reason that farm products are rarely imported. But the in- crease in the tax on shoes, sugar, implements and many other commod- ities which the farmer has to buy affects him adversely and multiplies the burdens he has to bear. If Mr. Hoover imagines he can fool the farmer with such talk he is mis- taken. He will be equally disappointed in his expectation that the general public will be deceived by his plati- tudes with respect to the operations of the flexible provision. Before that feature of the bill can be em- ployed a tariff commission must be appointed and the commission must make investigations and reports. These proceedings will consume SO much time that both the patience and the resources of the farmers will be exhausted before relief can come to them by that process. It is a purely manufactures’ bill and a complete fulfillment of Joe Grun- dy’s promises to campaign contrib- utors. -——Anyway Joe Grundy is much better equipped to adorn a seat in the lobby than to occupy one in the Senate. A ———— i ———————" ——The smoke screen raised by Senators Reed and Grundy was en- tirely too transparent to fool any- body. —— A ——————— —Read the Watchman and get all the news. ~ FIFTY | out more than one mishap. i was brought YEARS AGO IN CENTRE COUNYY. Items from the Watchman issue of June 25, 1880. —The Democratic National Con- vention held in Cincinnati last week concluded its labors with the nomi- nation of Gen. Winfield Scott Han- cock for President. Only two bal- lots were necessary. Hon. W. H. English, of Indiana, was the unani- mous choice for Vice President. —Citizens of Spring Mills are en- gaged in making a public picnic ground among the lofty spruce trees that cover the base of “Egg Hill” just to the south of the rail-road station in that place. —The large addition to the barn of Chaney and Thompson near Port Matilda was raised last Saturday. About seventy-five men turned out to help and every thing moved with That occurred when a stick fell and slight- ly injured Frank Foust. —James Marks, of Port Matilda, has in his possession a gun barrel that was found on Muncy mountain with nothing but the muzzle stick- ing out of the ground. It is four | feet, nine inches long and has large ! open sights. Some think it must have been the weapon of an Indian. —They are cutting wheat on some farms in Spring township. —The new census gives Belle- fonte a population of 3,005. —W. F. Reber and Miss Gertie Butts, both of this place, were mar- ried on Wednesday the 23rd inst, at the residence of the bride's mother, by Rev. Wm. A. Laurie. Miss Butts is the eldest daughter of the late Jere Butts and is a rather fine looking young lady. Mr. Reber is the court reporter for this judical district, a lawyer by | profession and a very clever young man. —The new census gives the popu- lation of the principal towns of the county as follows: Bellefonte 3005, Philipsburg 1780, College Twp. 1430, Unionville 398. —Words fall to express the weather is. — John Martin, a citizen of How- ard, was killed at a barn raising on the “farm of James Garner last Tuesday. . —A fire in the wood house of Samuel Decker, below Zion, de- stroyed the building, a lot of wood and, some farm implements. Just when the fire was at its height a shower of rain came on, which probably saved Mr. Decker’s house and barn. —Last Monday a stock of wine rhubarb from the garden of G. W. Lonberger, on Nittany mountain, into this office. The leaf measured thirteen feet in cir- cumference, three feet across and three feet and a half from butt of how hot .{ contest. | stem to end of leaf. —On Sunday night last, between 9 and 10 o'clock, quite a portion of the main steeple on the Presbyter- jan church here fell with a terrific crash, startling residents about Spring and Howard streets and crushing the church steps and side walk. For a long time some people have been saying that the steeple is unsafe while others insist it is the strongest part of the church. However that may be the Rankins who live on the corner across the street are uneasy and have a right to be.—(This steeple blew down during a windstorm in the after- noon in the fall of 1915, and’ the church was not damaged ED.) —Mr. Frank P. Blair, place, was burned badly in the face and eyes by the explosion of a large fire cracker with which he was attempting to create conster- nation in a crowd at the Brocker- hoff house. He was standing on the balcony dropping the crackers to the pavement and while watch- ing the effect of one he had just dropped another still in his hand went off with direful results to him. —The Logan Hose Co. sixty men strong and accompanied by the band, will go to Altoona to participate in the big firemen’s parade there on the 5th. — Our citizens are all gratified to learn that there is now a prospect of getting a new rail-road station in Bellefonte. Last Tuesday Supt. Pugh of the main line and Supt. Blair of the Tyrone Division, were here. After they left some hemlock seed and acorns were sown and just as soon as they grow into lum- ber we will have a new station. — Ambassador Dawes has been offered the job of cleaning up Chicago, and if he accepts the offer it will be his biggest undertaking. ——There is likely to be some- thing doing in Washington now. Bishop Cannon has ordered swift action on the prohibition bills. —-One source of present satis. faction lies in the certainty that the session of Congress will soon ad- journ. of this SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Coming in contact with an electric wire in the Gautier mill of the Beth- lehem Steel corporation at Johnstown, on Sunday, Anthony Costlow, 27, electric repair man, was killed. He was work- ing alone when the accident occurred and the body was found by a fellow workman. —The insurance department of the Lock Haven Chamber of Commerce has been instrumental in securing a 7-cent cut in the fire insurance rates for mercan- tile buildings in the city of Lock Hav- en, because of the improvements to the Lock Haven water system made cover- ing a period of more than a year. —While seated at his desk calling the roll of officers a few minutes before midnight, last Thursday night, Wesley W. Guthall, 70, captain of the night watch at Pennsylvania State Industrial Reformatory, at Huntingdon, died in his chair. He had a record of 30 years continous service at the reformatory. —Franklin J. Graham, of Philadelphia, former assistant U. S. district attorney of Pennsylvania, was indicted by the special federal grand jury in Williams- port on Friday, on a charge of con- spiring to violate the national prohibi- tion law. The indictment presented against him was on one count. If con- victed he faces a jail term of two years, a fine of $10,000, or both. —Several of 400 money orders stolen from the Rennerdale, Pa., postoffice have been cashed in different sections of the State and warnings have been broadcast to be on the watch for the forged or- ders. The person who has been cashing the stolen orders is described as follows: Between 40 and 50 years old, dark com- plexion, heavy, dark beard, stocky build, about five feet, seven inches tall, weight 175 to 190 pounds, and has the appearance of a farmer. —Alfred C. Marshall, Jr., of Warriors Mark, and Camden W. McConnell, of Punxsutawney, are listed among those who have received commissions as sec- ond lieutenants in the United States army, having been graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point this year. Both students were active in scholarly and athletic lines. Both have left the academy for Balti- more, Md., from which point they will proceed to a regular army post to re- ceive further military training. —Dr. T. C. Harter, former member of the Legislature from Columbia county, was arrested on Monday, charged with the sale and possession of liquor, and was released in $1000 bail to appear at the October term of court. Seven gal- lors of alleged whisky were found in a raid on the doctor's office. A youth ar- rested for drunkenness told police he had obtained the liquor from the doctor. Monday State trooper Unger visited the doctor and bought half a pint for $1. The raid by State and local police fol- lowed. —In the first year that graduates of the landscape architecture course from the Pennsylvania State oCllege were in- vited to compete for the Rome Fellow- ship, which provides $2500 annually for three years to be expended in study in Burope, H. Gordon Whiffen, a member of this year’s class, was selected as one of the six finalists from the preliminary Whiffen, who came to Penn State from the Selinsgrove High school, will start on his final problem this week, being given one month in which to complete it. __Radio station WNBO, of Washing- ton, Pa., was off the air two days fol- lowing the snapping of a 100-foot radio mast three feet thick, after a family of wood peckers drilled a hole through the cedar pole. The station cancelled its program from 8.30 o'clock Friday night | and resumed under temporary arrange- ! ments Sunday afternoon. It is believed the whining and singing caused by the | tension of the antennae caused the birds !to believe the pole was full of worms. | Not only was the program interrupted, | but hundreds of dollars of extra ex- | pense was caused, as the big poles are very expensive. ‘ Two bandits who held up and rob- bed a Pittsburgh bank messenger of $2,300 on Monday morning were captur- ed shortly after by police who used armed riot guns and tear gas bombs when the bandits abandoned their auto in which they were attempting to es- cape and fled into the cellar of a house at McKees Rocks. The men held up Joseph Stauff, the bank messenger for the South Hills Trust company, grabbed the money in a satchel and fled. Stauff was enroute to the Union Trust company to deposit the money when the holdup occurred. The officers were attracted to the men in the cellar by the barking of a dog. : 8 __A rail road telegrapher who set the stop’’ signals on his block before he dropped dead in his tower near Mt. Carmel, last Thursday, was credited with averting a collision of two trains Stricken with a heart attack, Evan Protheroe, operator at the Mount Carmel junction tower of the Philadelphia and Reading railroad, managed to flash the fact that he was ill to the train dis- patcher at Shamokin. The latter quickly sent back word to set the signals. Sev- eral minutes later a freight train pulled to a stop at the tower in response to signal and the crew found Protheroe dead in the tower. Another freight pulied up a few minutes later and railroad men said had the signals not been set the two trains would have collided. —The biggest subterranean body of water in the eastern part of the State lies underneath Shamokin and Coal township. One year ago the lower lev- els of the old Cameron mine were abandoned, pumps withdrawn, and the sections permitted to fill up with water. This week found the water up to thc level of the present workings and al pumps in the section working at to; speed in an effort to hold it back. Of ficials were confident this could be ac- complished but if the force of the wate: accumulated underground proves to: great, a serious situation will develor. A new double slope with electric hols’ is being sunk at the mine just beyond the abandoned area. It is down 17C feet and must go down 140 feet morc before it reaches the basin, Here, again, officials feel the huge subterra- nean body of water will have no effect on the progress of the work but should the calculations prove amiss the new slope will be ruined. :