MEMORIAL. In dedicating this column to th memory of a talented sister we pay tribute to one whose lovely thoughts in verse have often gracedit. Wini- fred Meek-Morris must surely be known to every reader of the Watch- man because for years she has been singing songs of love, and faith and encouragement through its columns. They are ended now, for she is gone—and all that is left is the consolation that comes from the thought that when she was singing out her soul possibly it started echoes in those of others. Echoes that might have made life sweeter, nobler for them. Once she was a musician of sur- r+—3sing skill and when her health, broken by war work twelve years ago, gave way to a virulent attack of influenza, the hands that once moved so rhythmically over the key board of her piano became So gnarled that they could no longer give the soul expression she so loved. Then it was that she started to write verse. And, always, we could read into her printed word the little benedictions we felt as we sat, years ago, in the darkened parlor at home on Sunday evenings while Winifred improvised at the piano. It was her soul singing then, just as it was singing to her mother when she wrote LIFE’'S GARDEN Out in life’’s garden where sympathy grew You planted a soul, ‘twas the soul of you Life’s wonderful garden love, seeking, went through 'Til it found a heart, 'twas the heart of you. I sought through life's garden of roses and rue And I found a sweet blossom all jeweled with dew. Love, sympathy, faith—all wondering and true : And the heart of my flower, dear mother, tis you. The hands are stilled now. The songs to us are ended. Somewhere in the garden of eternity she has found the real flower whose image she found ir her garden of life. CHRIST LOVE Charity—full, “free for each day. Hope—to hearten us on our way ‘Reason—to balance right and wrong, Xdeals—to ‘‘starr’” us through the throng. Staunchness—for friend and foe, alike, “Temptations—enough to prove our might. Love—to- broaden our clouded sight, Order—to place all thought aright. Virtue—and deeds, and actions done, Enough to gladden each day begun, AWAKE This morning, some time before day break, I heard a strange bird sing And it seemed to me at that hour To be an unusually lovely thing. And then, just out of the silence Of that quiet moment gone Someone passed under my window Whistling a quaint old song. Softly he carried the familar theme Sure of its beauty, rare, I wondered if he, too, had heard the tune Flung out by the bird in the air. And was carrying it on through the dawning : For each of us, waking, to hear The songs of the souls on a city street And the song of a bird in the air. SUGGESTION. When you stop for a chat of a moment or two With folks you meet on the street Remember, they might have more troubles than you In their head and their bodies or feet. Don’t pass on sad tales of some other one's woes : Or a trite bit of gossip you've heard Just remember, that very same tale might be their's And might be their death song, knows? who The world is so full of such beautiful things Just stars, alone, we each see Are enough to gladdéen the day, as comes, To the souls of you or of me. CONTENT To keep on forever, going on One must have courage in one’s heart for joy and song. Without start, or an ending Or of bluster, or of pretending Just enough to carry hope To trek along. To keep on forever, hoping on, Make the song you started not so long, For a day may space a life In these times of stress and strife And the night, perchance, Might bring an endless dawn. We republish these few bits of her verse, taken at random from the Watchman’s files, not so. much as examples of her best We to reveal the Godly naturé woman we mourn. In every one them nobility of thought speaks out to us and the wells of love for her fellow beings are running over. God may it be that her days and nights of suffering have brought her into her ‘endless dawn.” it tives eliminated the appropriation, -_.-—-——— Se mmESESSMS————————— SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE — Twelve days after birth, Joseph Murrell, ‘son of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Murrell, of Sayre, was found to have two molars in the lower jaw. Physicians at the Packer hospital said the teeth had been there for at least six days before being noticed. —Richard Yannee, of Hazleton, lost $300 in checks cashed to oblige friends when fire swept his home and those of E. R. Evans and John Yarnell. Sixteen persons were trapped in the blaze and STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA.. NOVEMBER 14, 1930. slid down porch posts to the ground. The fire; whecih started from a furnace, did $16,000 damage. —A campaign to raise $650,000 for Susquehanna University was determined NO. 45. VOL. 75. Result of the Election. The exact figures that express Gifford Pinchot’s plurality for Gov- ernor are of little consequence. His vote was not as big as he ex- pected nor his preponderance in the rural communities as universal as he predicted. But it was enough and it carries with it grave obliga- tions and heavy burdens. What in- fluenced the result is equally un- important now that it is registered. The Prohibitionists will claim, of course, that they turned the trick and to a considerable extent they are right, for the policies they pro- fess make strong appeal to the wo- men voters and it is clear that they contributed largely to the result. But there were other and equally potent influences at work. From start to finish Mr, Pinchot’s campaign was a false pretense. He made promises which he knew were impossible of fulfilment and he made charges that he knew were false and slanderous. But the voters were credulous enough to accept his promises and believe his charges. For example, he promised that the State will take over, construct and maintain 20,000 miles of country roads and at the same time de- crease the cost of road maintenance. He charged that Mr. Hemphill had entered into an agreement with the Philadelphia politicians to recom- pense them for party service by of- ficial patronage. This was not only false but malicious, but it served the purpose of influencing many voters. ; The election of Mr. Pinchot will not abate the rapidly increasing op- position to the Eighteenth amend- ment but it will serve the purposes of prohibition fanatics. It will pre- vent the repeal of the Snyder act for four years and guarantee the continuance of the blue laws for that period of time, for Mr. Pin- chot stands pledged to veto any legislation unfriendly to those meas- ures. Mr. Pinchot can do nothing to restrain utility corporations that Mr. Hemphill would not have ~ac- complished in better form, But the people of Pennsylvania like to be ‘fooled and as a result of the elec- tion of Mr. Pinchot they will get what is coming to them in full measure. i eee ace | — Jim Watson refrains from | criticizing the generous statement of | leading Democrats that there will be no partisan fight on the administra- tion in the next Congress. Jim is trying to appear. a benevolent dem- agogue, Begin With the Wagner Labor Bill 1 Three years ago Senator Wagner, ! Democrat, of New York, introduced three measures of legislation per- | taining to unemployment. Near the ! end of the last session ome of these | bills, after having been mutilated, was passed, but died in the confer- ence committee. This bill provided | for the future planning of public works and appropriated $100,000,000 | as a “revolving fund” available” in | times of unemployment stress.” It passed the Senate in its original form but the House of Representa- thus robbing it of all force and value, though an unemployment stress was present at the time. Another of Senator Wagner’s bills proposed to set up machinery to procure, by coordinating with State bureaus, an accurate census of un- employment with the view of rem- edying the evil. Senator Wagner, cordially supported by his Demo- cratic colleagues, finally got this measure through the Senate, But it never got out of the House com- mittee to which it was referred by Speaker Longworth. The passage of that bill would have made it impos- sible to deceive the public by false estimates of unemployment, as was then being done nearly every day by Secretary of Labor Davis and | other members of the President's cabinet. In view of these facts the pro- posed coordination of effort to re- store industrial activity, between ! the Democrats and Republicans in | Congress, upon reassembling next month, might well begin by the unan- | imous adoption of the Wagner bills. The President has expressed a | desire to act along the line laid down by them. It would be entirely possible | to restore that one now in confer- | ence to its original form and thus | make the revolving fund of $100,000,- | 000 available within a week from the | opening of the session on December 1st. Ifthe Republicans refuse to adopt this course they will write themselves down as insincere. { | —— Charlie Johnson, commissioner | of revenue, is slated for the first decapitation by Pinchot. But Charlie | has had fifty years in office and is due for a vacation. 2 Democrats in Congress and Hoover. The seven eminent Democrats who have voluntarily given assurance to the public that the party will not misuse the power bestowed upon it by the recent vote of the people have correctly expressed the pur- poses and interpreted the senti- ments of the Democratic electorate. The Seventy-second Congress, wheth- er organized by the Democrats or not, “will not be an obstructive body.” But it will clearly disap- point the expectations of the voters who completely wiped out the big Republican majorities in both cham- bers if it deliberately assists Presi. dent Hoover to restore his own wasted political estate and recuper- ’ \ Defeated but Still Admired. No Pennsylvaniaa voter has rea- son to regret his support of the Democratic ticket this year. No party in any State ever presented to the voters a more worthy ticket." John M. Hemphill, Sedgwick Kistler, ' Guy K. Bard, Lucy D. Winston, Henry C. Niles, Aaron E. Reiber ‘and George F. Douglas, though they failed in the purpose of their en- deavor, made such an impression upon the mind and conscience of the electorate as will for all time re- flect honor on the party and com- ‘mand respect for themselves. Mr. ‘Hemphill and Mr, Kistler were not swidely known previous to their nomination. But their conduct of ate the Republican machine for ‘the campaign was on such a high future incursions upon the rights of i plane that they are now recognized upon, on Monday, at a conference of 200 Lutheran clergymen and laymen from the institution’s field, following an ad- dress by president G. Morris Smith. He stressed the need of $150,000 for a new classroom building and $500,000 addition- al endownment. —Believed to have fallen asleep while driving alone in his car, Franklin C. Harman, 28, of Clearfield, was killed, on Monday, between Bigler and Woodland. His car failed to make a turn on the road and crashed into a telephone pole. when | He was the son of W. D. Harman, of you're sleeping on the floor. | Mill Hall, and represented his father's The Master of the National firm at Clearfield. Grange, L. J. Taber, says thefarm-| Fire believed to be the work of an er's fix is so bad there is only one ' incendiary destroyed the large barn on "change possible, and that would be the Richard Gregory farm in Shavers a change for the better. | Creek valley, owned by Armour Eberle. The farmer gets 1916 prices for Ten horses and mules, 37 registered wheat, 1903 prices for cotton and Ayshire, Holstein and Guernsey cattle, tobacco. He pays 1930 prices in 500 bushels of oats, 300 of wheat, 60 transportation and taxes and for tons of hay, 40 of straw and 11 acres of , manufactured goods. { corn fodder were destroyed. OYSTERS R IN SEASON. An oyster met an oyster. That makes them oysters two. They fell into a bowl of milk. That makes them oyster stew. Authorship The Only Way the Farmer Can Go | is Up. From the Philadelphia Record. You can’t fall out of bed ‘patriotism promoted iniquity. ‘party to legislative control. It should ‘and salve the bruises of a weak and ,of the party. {world as a typical leader of men the people. After the election of 1920, when | the lamented , Woodrow Wilson, | stricken in health and disappointed in his most cherished hopes, the Republican leaders in and out of Congress expressed no sympathy and offered no words of comfort. They even pursued him to his death chamber to express their cruel’ enmity. Of course we don’t want the Democrats in their season of triumph to imitate this form of brutality, But we do expect those who have been delegated to act for | the party in Congress to avail them- selves of the opportunity to make | the victory achieved an enduring’ triumph of the people over graft, corruption and monopoly. This can be achieved without obstruction to proper legislation. President Hoover has been in office nearly two years and his par- ty has had ostensible control of both branches of Congress. From the beginning of his administration Democrats in both Senate and House were willing to support any just legislation he suggested. But he took counsel with the political wolves of his own party and professing The result has been the elimination of his party power in Congress and be, and will be, wisely exercised, but to achieve this result it is not necessary to set the broken bones thoroughly discredited politician. ——The airmen are still making records and incidentally inviting dis- asters. Picking Candidates for President, There is plenty of time to pick the Democratic candidate for Pres- ident for the campaign of 1932, and happily there is abundance of ma. terial from which to make choice. But picking candidates for President is a fascinating mental exercise to a vast number of people and the grati- fying results of the recent election in nearly every place outside of Pennsylvania, makes the present an auspicious time for such delightful day dreaming. Naturally, therefore, names of worthy party leaders are being suggested as available candi- dates and the firm belief that the nomination will be equivalent to an election then every suggestion be- comes interesting to the electorate Probably the most frequently sug- gested name for the honor and favor of the party thus far brought for- ward is Franklin D, Roosevelt, re- elected Governor of New York by a record breaking majority. Even be- fore the election there was a wide- spread impression that in the event of his re-election as Governor, by any majority, he would be in the first line for promotion. He has all the qualifications for the office. An accomplished statesman, a profound scholar, an experienced executive and a reputation for integrity that de- fies even the finger of suspicion, he stands before the country and the and a just administrator of govern- ment. His character inspires con- fidence. But as the phrase goes ‘there are others,” and plenty of them. For instance, there is ¢sovernor Ritchie, of Maryland, re-elected by an in- creased majority for the fourth time. There is Senator Joseph T. Robin- experienced in statecraft. there are still others worthy and | willing to serve the country, and! there is a good deal of time be- | tween the present and the assem- | bling of the next nominating coven- | tion for the development of suitable | as well as available candidates. For | these reasons there is no occasion for haste in the picking of a leader for the campaign of 1932, but there is no harm in trotting them out for | public consideration. ——A Honduras hurricane, Saturday, seems to have said we have no bananas to.day.” last “Yes, party leaders. It must be a pleasure to every Democrat in the State to review the incidents of the campaign and feel that he or she was faithful to the principles and traditions of Jefferson, Cleveland and Wilson, and did full service in an earnest effort ‘to restore to the country the poli- cies which their eminent services ex- pressed. It must be equally grati- fying to them that their candidates presented the issues of the cam- paign candidly and courageously. No false promises were made to deceive the credulous, no slanders were uttered to create animosities and no vilification was employed to provoke prejudices. It was an earnest, clean and proper appeal to the intelligence of the voters. The Democratic candidates were neither professional politicians nos perennial office seekers. They were called to the service which they so voice admirably performed by the of the Democratic people. They had no sinister purpose or selfish ambition to subserve. If they had been chosen they would have ful- filled every moral and legal obliga- tion that result would have imposed. But even though defeated they are |, sent administration was put in | viaduct, not without reward. They have ac- ed the respect and ation man © within or without the party organization and a leadership among the best element of the voters of Pennsylvania which will endure as: long as they live. ——The three days open season for doe is likely to cause trouble among hunters in Clinton county. Both Porter and Lamar townships, in that county, are included in the territory in which doe can be killed the last three days of November, but when the men who own the woodlands in those townships went to the Game Commission, in Harris- burg, to get a special doe license they were told that the allotment for Clinton county had been ex- hausted, it is said, and they were unable to get any. Considerably peeved the land owners banded to- gether and posted all the land, for. bidding hunting thereon. What will happen now remains to be seen. ——Justice has “traveled with a leaden heel” in the case of Tom | Cunningham, of Philadelphia, but a ‘control of the country, has the full recent Supreme court decision prom- ises a speeding up at least. ——Senator Watson, of Indiana, imagines that the wiping out of Republican majorities in both branches of Congress is not a de- feat of that party. Franklin Roosevelt has wisely determined to attend to his business as Governor, of New York rather than waste time in trying to be- come President. ——The death roll of the present hunting season is unusually heavy which indicates an increasing meas- ure of carelessness on the part of gunners. ——The War Department Washington approves Sunday foot- ball whatever the other parts of the administration think on the sub- ject. ——=Senator McKellar, of Tennes- see, interprets the election as “a mandate to repeal the Hawley- | son, of Arkansas, clean, capableand'gq, oot tariff bill” at once An ° ——The death of General Tasker Howard Bliss removes one of the real generals of the world war and of the American army. ——Mr. Hoover has not yet in- dicated even partial appreciation of the generous offer of support made by leading Democrats. Amelia Earhart has winged her way into the millionaire Putnam family, of New York. —Subcribe for the Watchman. jer to act. at | { His income is about 8 per cent ‘above the prewar level, says Mr. Taber; but his costs are 50 per cent higher. Quite a few millions of city peo- ple, white collar workers, not fac- tory workers, are meeting 1930 costs on 1916 pay, too. They are a much less local class than the farmers. organization whatever, They suffer in silence. If they were better off, the farmers would be, too; both in respect of active public sympathy with their difficulties and in respect of a ready market for their product at 1930 prices. Farm buildings ‘in need of paint- ing. Farm fences to be repaired after the time of cheeseparing econ- | omy. These are part of the familiar circle. When the farmers can sell, the farmers can buy. When the farmers buy, trade is good, and the ‘army of “city fellers” all along the line of business can purchase more farm products. Congress, giving industry higher and higher tariff protection, ob- stinately refuses to give the farmer the equalization fee or the export | debenture. Subsidizing Big Business {it shrinks with horror from the idea | of giving agriculture any practical help—and thus the party pledge of economic equality on which the power fades out of the picture, so far as governmental measures are 20 e d. A eG 2 = i From the high cost of govern- ment, expressed in taxation, no re- lief is in sight, for either urban _communities or rural regions. Mr. Taber is “darn tootin’” when he says the immediate hope of im- | provement for the farmers is in better organization of marketing , methods. No Premature Recognition. - From the Philadelphia Inquirer. Although the sudden overturn at Rio de Janerio forecasts an end of civil war, the State Department has acted wisely in declining ‘to rec- ' ognize prematurely any new Gov- ernment which may be established ‘there. It is clear that the Federal ‘troops are yielding to the rebels, ‘and that the inauguration of Senor ‘Prestes next month as the new | President is in the highest degree { unlikely. Both he and President Luis ‘are prisoners with no apparent pow- But there is as yet mo Government which meets the require- ments of legitimacy. The Depart. ment holds that, whatever degree of authority it exercises, it must fulfill three conditions: show that it is in support of the people and is pre- pared to meet its national obliga- tions. At present no assurance that any of these conditions have been met is possible. That the civil war should be brought to an end is, of course, de- sirable. Brazil, if they are such, have still to show their capacity for orderly administration. That they have not yet done so is shown by the con- tinued disorders in Sao Paulo, where mobs have wrought great destruc- tion. The most serious incident in- ternationally which has so far occurred is the shelling of the Ham- burg-American steamship Baden in the harbor of Rio, with injuries to many of the passengers and the loss of more than a score of lives, The claim that the shelling was ac- cidental and that the ship display- ed no flag cannot satisfy the Ger- man Government or the Spanish of those killed were Spaniards. An “accident” like this requires a good deal of explanation. It might be well if warships were sent to demand it. The Meanest Road Hog. From the Ohio State Journal. The experienced metorist finds constant irritation from drivers who disregard the American rule of keeping to the right onthe highway. The modern road is ample for safe passing, if both drivers act fairly. If they donot, no pavement is wide enough to insure safety. . The driv- er who uses the middle or left of the road not only is the meanest hog traveling, but causes accidents need- lessly. He needs discipline. Unfor. tunately the only method of dis- ciplining is a suit for damages if he becomes involved in an accident. Alife may have to be sacrificed to bring that about. They have no | But the new masters of Government, either, since a number | | —After scratching his hand on a ! sharp point protruding from his leg, . between the knee and thigh, Clayton E. | Moul, of Spring Grove, York county, had X-ray photographs taken. The | photos revealed the presence of a needle an inch and a half long. Surgeons who | removed it said Moul had prob: oly | swallowed it when a child. —The condition of Walter Shaffer, who was shot by his wife in Frankstown last Friday night, is reported as good at Mercy hospital, Altoona. His wife, ! Mrs. Susanna Shaffer, who surrendered to police shortly after the shooting, is being held in Blair county jail and will | be given a hearing just as soon as her husband is able to be present. | —Progress is being made in construc- ! tion of the new main building for the i only Catholic Slovak girls’ Academy in ‘the United States, located at Danville. {The new building will accommodate 200 , students. It will cost approximately | $1,000,000. The main tower, 275 feet i high, will be surmounted by a cross ‘and by an airplane beacon light. | __At the place at which members of | the Continental Congress crossed the | Susquehanna river on a barge ferry to | re-locate the capital of the country a $3,- 000,000 bridge was dedicated on Tues- { day as a memorial to the men and wo- | men of Lancaster and York counties who | served in America’s wars. The concrete i 7,000 feet in length, carries the ! Lincoln highway over the river between Lancaster and York counties. I~ —Joseph Delaney, Plymouth confec- tioner, had been in the habit of keep- ing money in the firebox of a stove in the rear of his store. The stove was also used as a waste paper receptacle. Saturday morning he ordered a clerk to remove the paper and burn it in an in- cinerator. A few moments after the blaze was started Delaney though of his money. The fire was extinguished, but ! not before it had consumed $156 in bills. Mrs. Jennie Berry, 72, of Beech Creek, was shot, last Friday, while standing on the back porch of her home. She was taken to the Lock Haven hospital where it was said she would recover. The shot lodged in her face, chest and legs. It is not known who fired the shot but a boy was seen to run from a nearby clump of bushes and it is believed he ran away when he saw that his shot aimed at a rabbit or bird had struck the aged woman. —Joe Israel, 50, of Gallitzin, is sure he knows the answer to the one about how long it will take a man to get out of a well if he slips back one foot every time he climbs two feet. He fell down a 50-foot well two times on Mon- day. None the worse for the first fall Joe had climbed to within a few inches of the top of the well, when he lost hold and fell to the bottom a second time. Then neighbors called out the fire department and he was rescued, with only a few minor bruises. —The first time George Peternel, 46, , Wickhaven, Fayette county, took his ! new car out, it swerved from the Laura- dale road and crashed into a fence. Motorists who stopped to offer aid, slapped him on the back and called him ‘a “lucky guy” when it was found neither the driver nor the car was any ' the worse for the crash. And so they left him. That was last Thursday. Friday ‘police identified the body of a man | found dangling from the limb of a tree {right where the car had crashed. The dead man was George Peternel, who had i hanged himself. | —An important link in the Lewistown— . Bellefonte highway, Route 53, will be | thrown open to traffic within the next ten days after having been concreted. The new road starts at Reedsville and joins the concrete laid two years ago over the Seven Mountains, just north | of Milroy, five miles in length. The last concerete was poured early last week and it is expected that the road will be opened its entire length within ten days. The Burkett Construction company started operations the middle of July and encountered considerable difficulty in excavation due to the lime- stone rock which is very plentiful in that vicinity. —John Stoffko, of Girardville, got an added thrill out of becoming an Amer- jcan citizen. He was in the courtroom at Pottsville when naturalization court was on, and Judge Koch informed a dep- uty sheriff to place six prisoners who wanted to enter pleas of guilty in the courtroom cell until he was ready for them. In the scuffle seven prisoners instead of six were herded in to the cell. Attorney Nowacoski, of Shenan- doah, had a great time finding his client when he was called for examination, and when his voice was finally audible it was found that he was the seventh man in the cell. Stoffko said he thought being locked up was part of the cere- mony.