to f i —Few of our readers knew him, but we drop a tear to the of a devoted friend who slipped out | use the previous administration effect on Monday, We shar miss Harmon Kruse as much for his cheery salu. tation when we met him on the ! —Dr. Compton, Nobel prize win- ner for physics in 1928, has just, come to the profound conclusion that | since the world had a beginning it very probably ison its way to an end. | If the judges had heard of that one! from the Doctor before they made | the award in 1928 they probably | would have given him two prizes for constrained to ask who is running | Bellefonte: Some department clerk in Harrisburg or the councilmen in whose ent this borough had Criticised some of the Fisher policies made to [i ie opposition to the is, every gas tax, the Governor's pet be made other words, is Bellefonte a sovereign Measure. In revenge for that Fish- mitteemen concerned s0 much confidence that it commit- | ted its management to them. In! entity or is it merely a tail to i kite of whoever happens to be in| authority at Harrisburg? Thumbs are said to be down on the loose tongues, loose morals and loose joints of the last few years, This | loud-mouthed he-girl business is! passe and young women are going to | be less hard-boiled. od hasten the to be if they can't be hard-boiled. head on the Pinchot ’ block and he no directs the ETE oT Ee a oa the risburg. the Hon. Tom would tation. Through both ancestry and | ommend him to the consideration of he had The announcement was a that he has succeeded: | But it is not that that was the §ieat surprise to us, for we thought | Bt reason for his attack on | Purchase of the Virgin Islands was the ex-Governor. During the recent 2& blunder. - campaign Governor Pinchot freely Some measure, but « was a trifling personal service he had a lot to rec Mogriigy ili nid y affair compared with the farm board the new Governor. And we are Pledged the farmers 20,000 miles of enterprise of which he was author | escape decapi- sen the primary election last Spring an of Commerce, last week, Mr. Lewis now supported by said “the State Highway Depart- sued by ment is without sufficient funds be- spent not only all the col- m Ever since the organization of Fisher administration there has and Fisher. Lewis had been a ful element in the campaign confidently expected a cabinet folio. Like other professional iticians Grundy. and by and sponsored the four-cent er prevented his nomination for Gov- ernor last year. In his Bellevue speech Mr. Lewis not only accuses the ex-Governor of in office involving “ab- solute bankruptcy of the motor li- cense fund,” the “holding up of con- tractor's estimates” for a time ing “the financial embarrassment many contractors and material m The reason for this condition, Mr. | Lewis adds, was the of Mr. Lewis was to ernor Fisher it must be indulged ies i i vast campaign slush funds used every Per (important election have been obtain- S8nization hold Herbert Hoover in Sylvania are exorbitant, why is it caus- | of ministration this was openly asknowl- ey fa # oo EQ | peste. of the fast that the treasasy 1 ¥ 0" Tammany is an inex- as a political STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. Et aa ———. BELLEFONTE, PA., APRIL 3, 1931. Robbing The State for Party. It is hard to determine whether A new and serious charge of mis. of Commissioner of Highways Lewis’ feasance has been brought against | there is a lot recent vitriolic attack on ex-Gover- the Fisher administration. In one of horse sense in his latest pronun- nor Fisher was an expression of re- of his recent radio speeches Gover- tment of Mr. Fisher's attitude in nor Pinchot declared of gasoline taxes. Benjamin missioner 2 Charl La fs 3 ch was dated June 19, 1930, | + i t and that the men allow politics to have port- too great an influence on their work. | pol- | All of the men are political commit- and perennial office holders teemen and reluctant to offend some no particular place in mind member of the organization. Under accounts are very difficult.” The Of his party backing of only response to this statement of But he was disappointed, fact made by Commissioner Johnson way of reprisal, publicly was that * and thus impairing the efficiency the Republican party machine It has been for some years, ter of common knowledge that the Republican organization in i ed by levies upon the State and local | job holders. During the Fisher ad- | produces majorities in Pennsylvania has not been realized. Whether the defeat of one faction and the suc- cess of another element will cure remains to be seen. President Hoover thinks : the Possibly that is true in . The Legislature of New vestigate the Democratic administra- pyramiding until it has become as bad as Philadelphia and rotten necessary that something be done about it. Mayor Walker, whose self out trying to correct the faults, but without perceptible improvement, and now the Legislature has under- the task, . Of course the investigation will be partisan and malignant. Its pur- pose is to create a smoke screen to divert attention from the delin- quencies of a stupid and stubborn , rather than in the interest of municipal and judicial reform. Equally of course ix was inspired in Washington instead of Albany. By the skillful use of patronage Herbert “¢inched” the nomination for President next year, scrutiny of his present administra- tion must be averted at any cost or tial campaign a state of bankruptcy, Eighty cent of the leaders of the or- utter contempt. Yet they realize that it is impossible to prevent his ‘momination. Their only hope of pre- venting the election of a Democrat is to arouse fanaticism and inflame haustible fountain for this ——The indication or the failure right here to say that he was one of hard-surfaced roads; he promised and sponsor, | the very few prominent Republicans in this neck-o-the-woods who was openly supporting him last fall. —When Governor Pinchot left Harrisburg after his first term there | was a surplus of seven million dol- lars in the . When he back for his second he found sligh of the Senate, and ought to be au- thentic. So far as we are concerned we prefer to believe them rather than Pinchot's inferential statements to the effect that Fisher spent all the States’ money and left him with | nothing to do anything with. ~—When some fanatical tells | Pennsylvania and New Jersey there | born | Maryland, Kentucky | as a pup S0 miserable that the rod, the reel and the book of still where we put them In our present state of the morning after the night before. And we want to say, right here, that we have two misguided friends who haven't contributed anything toward recovery from our low mental state mails us pictures of fellows landing trout a darn’d sight bigger than any we might catch, even if we are able to g0. Their intentions are good, so we forgive them because they know not what we do. automobile owners a cut to half of the license plate fees; he promised motor vehicle drivers a cut to half Another Proof of Insincerity. of their fees. If he knew anything The refusal of the administration he must have known that fulfillment forces in the House of Representa- an alibi. was no element of revenge in the Bellevue speech but . Lewis thrifty idea of stone” entrench- may be selected for Bellefonte's federal building, and while a ber of places have been suggested as available one has been overlooked, the former location of the old Belle- constructing an athletic ground in connection with the High school building, but as council has refused to permit closing of Lamb street the lot, in its but the specifications make the job difficult. He must be a 100 per cent Hoover man and “there are only a |few of them left.” ——What seems to Haywood Broun doesn’t matter so much since it seems to nearly everbody else that he is degenerating into a common scold. ——A light snow fall, on Tuesday night, turned out to be an April fool, as it rained on Wednesday. the Auditor General, certainly knew Pinchot's campaign pledges. (the impossibility of fulfilling these bill was introduced ‘pledges and the present necessity of tive Sowers, i i i | | i { | i | | | of these promises would cause a loss tives in Harrisburg to consider a {to the treasury of several millions bill to red uce the license fee for auto of Mr. The Representa- | It the excuse for delay in reporting it to the House was lack of time. Cur- | ously enough the friends of the ad- that it was con- ministration were completely organ- solely as an ized. There was plenty of time for | might that. i There are a good many automobile | drivers 'n Pennsylvania and the prom- | ise of a cut of a dollar on the N- cense fee wus an enticing proposi- | i A Suprising Judicial Decision. The Carbon county court has hand- ed down a decision validity of Representative William A. Coyle's certificate of election as | Representative in Congress for the Thirtieth district The certificate was turn of approximately 900 majority in the district. Following the issue of the certificate the opposing date, Everett Kent, demanded a of Pennsylvania. TT ———— The Investigation of New York. A Square Deal for Business. Republican i York has properly determined to in- For more than a month, the in- | From the Altoona Tribune. | tensely ball investigation of | the blic utilities of Pennsyl int | the pu u es vania ‘has do the news from Har- All the normal legislation of an assembly session has been side- | tracked. | As a result, the met acco {ment of the Legislature to date is practically nothing. : But the Cost of the suion to the | taxpayers not been reduced or | eliminated. | This situation might be overlook- led if the investigation had made {any Progress, had justified its insti- But no solid, irrefutable evidence of the * . ao that was supposed to exist has uncovered, The Tribune has upheld the in- vestigation because, after the unrest and distrust aroused by the guber- natorial cam last fall, the pub- lic is entitl to the facts of the situation. Those facts have been obtained: The public utilities of Pennsylvania, been as a whole, are entitled to a clean bill of health. Charges have been made of “goug- ing” by exorbitant rates, of exert- eve effort had been Sacrifice, and the investigation of ing political pressure. No evidence er the accounts.” That the Democratic administration of N2s been submitted, effort was made that could New York city was the only avail- Senate or to the Pinchot-directed House committee, to substantiate such charges. The one hope of sensational dis- closure collapsed when the letter (cited by former Congressman Farr, of Scranton, was proved to be an en- tirely innocent document. Many questions might be asked. For instance, if utility rates in Penn- | that the average rate in this State is lower than that of the United | States as a whole? Perhaps there is sound founda- tion for the belief that the entire inves was instituted If this country has one outstand- | ing need right now, it is public con- | The ie utllity inv are work- Hane x So jo Be oa; RT 1 Cl Svar COMMIMILY. |sult. And, while such lack of con- fidence in an integral industry exists, | restoration of normalcy is well-nigh { ssible. t is only natural that the public will lose faith when it sees men it | has trusted, men it has looked upon ‘as stalwart citizens, haled to Harris- ‘burg, there to be questioned, grilled {like criminals, It is only natural ‘that a feeling of suspicion will be (awakened when the Governor of the | utilities and the character the men who lead them. The effect upon business can easily 'be visioned. The caution, the back- business recovery, factor in re will be redoubl | In all fairness, in justice to the = | tuberculin test, following - i» | {head of cattle by State inspectors after s | was only a week after the theft, he said, {that he went through with his plans, married the girl and settled down in another town. —In an hour's time, while traveling | from Williamsport toward Lock Haven, Wednesday afternoon, G. H. Gustin, of | Lock Haven, State game protector, saw 300 wild geese in a flock, sixty-eight ‘black Mallard ducks, twenty-five red head | ducks and seven white swans swimming north in the west branch of the Susque- | hanna river, toward Lock Haven. There were groups of gulls and smaller ducks |as well, he said. | —Harry Wetzel, prisoner in the Butler | county jail, was pretty good at figuring but sheriff Lawrence Thompson went him one better. Wetzel presented the sheriff with a biil for $14 for scrubbing and other work done about the county | jail while he was confined there Sheriff Thompson countered with a bill for board ‘and lodging which amounted to just $15. | The ‘guest’ was allowed to check out without paying the difference. —A sealed verdict returned in the Northumberland county court awarded Mrs. Mamie E, Laudenslager, of Sun- | bury, the sum of $22,607.50 in her dam- | age suit against the Pennsylvania Power and Light company for the loss of her husband, A. L. Laudenslager, who was electrocuted in front of his home on October 22, 1929. A motion for a new 'trial was made by the power company’s ‘attorney, who alleged that the verdict was against the law and evidence. ~Awakened by a crash while asleep on {the second floor of her home, in Colum- | bla county, Mrs. Theodore H. Clewell | went downstairs and found an automo- bile in a front room. Furniture was smashed, plaster covered the floor and a huge gap had been made in one wall, where the carh ad crashed through. Mr. and Mrs. John Gipple and Mr. and Mrs. G. P. Hummel, of Bloomsburg, occupants of the car, were severely bruised and cut. They said they had been forced from the road by two other cars attempt- ing to pass, and Gipple, the driver, had lost control of the machine, ~The weekly wash of Columbia, Pa., housewives was reposing in its custom- ary place on the clothes lines in perfect safety on Monday. Silk stockings, lin- gerie, table liners and other articles which grace the lines every Monday have ‘past few weeks and several caused the police to investigate. What was belleved to be a case of petty lar- (ceny turned out to be nothing more than {a number of hungry goats who were eat- ing their Monday breakfast from the clothes line. The owner of the goats, Joseph Weisser, was instructed to keep his animals penned up in the future, —J. W. Stephenson, of Johnstown, pres- ident of the Penowa Coal and Coke com- pany, was held for court trial at Wash- the State persists in attacks upon public ington, Pa.. on Monday, on ecHarges of unlawful conversion of funds. He was unable to supply $4,000 bond and was placed in the county jail. The charge was preferred by M, J. Hanna, of Pitts. issued on a re- Wwardness which has been a potent burgh, head of a commissary company ‘which had boarded men working in the Penowa mines near Avella, Washington county. Stephenson is alleged to have - | welfare of this Keystone State and taken money from the pay of miners for re- its people, Governor Pinchot should their board and then failed to turn it count of the votes and complied with | make clear just what he is driving over to the commissary firm. Claims of the provisions of the law “in a he A a his efforts to the 132 workers have been filed with sheriff cases made and provided.” good deal of Spent by the contestant, » faith and according to law, The result of the recount not only wiped out the majority claimed by more boxes were opened of concentra upon activities that | only ne weaken that confi- ' dence. | Appropriation Bills Now Before the Legislature. Among the appropriation bills ion to some of them, a couple of Mr Coyle but revealed that a substan. | tial | before the ture is one Everybody in Bellefonte is nat- TI1On at least, who are not blessed now Legisla urally interested in the site that “iL abundance. The rules of the new | House provide for the discharge of | _ the committee from consideration of a measure which seems to be unduly | delayed. The bill in question was referred to the committee on March | 3rd, It would seem that four weeks ought to be long enough to consider, analyze and digest a bill of four lines. The fact is that the promise was made to catch votes, and having ac- | complished that purpose it is > the | Present intention to repudiate it un- der the false pretense that there | wasn't sufficient time to consider it. Most of the other pledges will be vio- | lated in the same way. There will be an attempt to fulfill the 20,00-mile | road promise, but even that is doom- ed to failure for the reason that it is impossible to fulfill it, and sponsors were aware of that fact when it was introduced. But blame for all the failures will be shifted to the Legislature. | ——Good may come out of Naza- | reth. The investigation of the Public Service Commission will probably | result in a law suit that will give service to the people. i ———Meantime the Democratic Na- | tional committee is functioning in fine form and “flourishing like a Green Bay Tree. ——Dave Reed blames all the ills of the time on the soldier's bonus. Speaker and the which has served during the last continue to feature of the affair courages fraudulent future, not only in in all sections of the S it justifies and increases suspicion of the courts is not an incident. 2 Fees iiss tate the ty : ——After all there is deal of difference between poses of Pinchot Each is striving sonal aggrandizement. g RE i Ef ¥i1i introduced by Representative J. Laird Holmes for $4,844,781 for sup- is in addition to one for $960,000 * | for new buildings which has already been reported out of committee. For the western penitentiary at | Rockview $358,200 is asked, $258,- 200 for a new cell block of 256 cells capacity, $90,000 for a new boiler house and boilers and $10,000 for a piggery. A bill appropriating $337,000 to the Huntingdon reformatory has also been introduced, $185,000 of the amount to be used for a new cell block, $165,000 for replacement of the central service buiiding, $25,000 for an addition to the boiler house and $12,000 for wages for the in- ——— a fp ———— ———We have on the desk a very {interesting communication concern- ing the Bellefonte public schools. The authors requested that we pub- lish it, but since they failed to sign their names we cannot do so. The Watchman is always ready to give space to those who have constructive criticism to make of anything con- cerning the welfare of the communi- ty, but will not publish anonymous communications, ——-Qur excess of wealth would be a fit subject for boasting except that our excess of poverty is almost equally great. Several building of public confidence instead J. A. Seaman. , =—J. F. Snook, cashier of the Beaver | Springs bank, sat for two hours, satur- day night, looking asnto the dangerous end of a bandit's pistol, arguing with the would-be robber that an attempt to | take money from the bank's vault would be futile. The bandit entered Snook’s ‘house while the cashier was across the street at a store. The house adjoins the bank, and there isa connecting door. When Snook returned he was held up, | He then began the argument, telling the bandit the bank's burglar alarm would ring even if he opened the vault, After two hours the bandit was convinced, took [$4.25 from Snook and left. | —A $1,000,000 check that Reese Edwards |found on the streets of Pittsburgh wasn’t ‘as good as it looked, gut it proved con- | clusively that Mr. and Mrs. Frank Grif- {fin are very much in love, Edwards, | driver for a baking company, sighted a woman's purse lying on the pavement | while making his rounds. The check was {in the purse. It was made to Mrs. Jean | Griffin, and Edwards, being honest, ana [sensing a big reward, rushed to the | Griffin home. There Mrs. Griffin, a bride of six months, blushingly explained that the check, written by her husband, only signified how much he would like to give her if he had 1t. She pointed to the romantic “X's” with which it was signed. —A settlement effected in a civil suit |at Lock Haven, a few days ago, by Mrs. J. Boyd Mader and sister in law, Miss Vanetta Mader, against S. W. Rososky, of Coalport, for injuries sustained Jan- uary 24, 1930, when the car in which they were driving was struck by that of Rososky, resulted in the awarding of $3,000 to Mrs. Mader and $1,750 to Miss Mader. Miss Mader, driver of the car, sustained injury to her leg and shock, and Mrs. Mader suffered a fractured skull, and shock. Dr. J. Boyd Mader. Clinton county treasurer, who was anoth- er occupant of the car at the time of the accident, was uninjured. Mrs. Mader. who is deputy county treasurer, is seek- ing election for county treasurer on the Democratic ticket.