Bellefontz, Pa, May 29, 1981. > SHOULD ONE MAN DICTATE TO A COMMONWEALTH Inasmuch as there are two sides to the argument as to the wisdom of giving one man in Pennsylvania the absolute power to “hire and fire” men who serve the Commonwealth in its most important relations with the people we publish the following: It is the viewpoint of the head of one of our greatest public utilities. The Watchman has no other inter- est in the matter than one in com- mon with all the people who want efficient service at the lowest rate that will maintain the companies se! us; allowing them, of course, ample earnings with which to pay reasonable dividends to their stock- holders, fair wages to their employ- ees and depreciation charges suffi- cient to take care of obsolescence. Many people look upon Gov. Pin- chot's proposal to put the appoint- ment or dismissal of members of the Public Service Commission entirely in the hands of the Governor from an impersonal view point. Granting that he would not abuse such power, what guarantee has he to give them that his successors in office might not. Pennsylvania is overwhelmingly Re- publican, A great leader of that party once said: “They make Gover- nors out of anything in Pennsylva- nia.” Such a truism is not calculated to be any too reassuring to those who are not impugning Mr. Pinchot's motives so much as they are con- cerned about what future possibili- ties of destruction there might bein his plans for the present. Let Mr. Kinnard, president of the Bell Telephone Co. of Pennsylvania, present his side of the question. The following is a copy of the letter he recently wrote to members of the Senate of Pennsylvania: It is, in my opinion, appropriate for me to speak in the interest of the investors in and management of this company, and it's twenty-two thousand employees, as well as the millions of people of Pennsylvania whose reasonable expectation is that the present high quality of telephone service shall not be destroyed by legislative imposition. There are a number of principal respects in which the e these pending bills would, altogether, not only produce this last effect but jeopardize three hundred millions of conservative telephone investment in Pennsylvania. I shall be brief in reference to each. The proposal that members of a Fair Rate Board, although appoint- ed with the approval of the Senate, might be removed at will by Chief Executive would substitute for the collective judgment of the ate in the direction of public utility regulation the dictates of adminis- trative expediency. This appears to be neither wise nor reasonable; the matters proposed to be placed under the control of the Fair Rate Board are, in Te a va: Father too, Vital) The proposal that a public utility company by contract give up ils constitutional rights and lieu of present value, what is termed “the prudent investment” basis for earnings, when and as the company applies for certificates of conven- ience in order to grow and spread, would generally result in stifled pro- gress of public utility service. I can- not conceive of the attraction of is set off by the deer coming incon- ; the | "i which alluring of legislation discloses its ultimate purpose to turn over the complete managemen | of the public utilities to the sugges 'ed Fair Rate Board—financing, con- | struction. expenditures, rates, service and everything else. I may, per- | haps, be excused in believing that |such service will fare better in the ‘hands of company management. If |the public wants to experience the | virtual effect of government owner- | ship, here is an opportunity. But, ‘because I believe they do not, I urge | your close consideration of the fore- going, and emphasize my strong con- | viction that the proposals referred to are hostile to the interests of Penn- sylvania and its people. PUBLIC CHANGES IN COAL NEEDS Buckwheat coal, considered waste and sold very cheaply, has today be- come, along with pea, the most popular of the anthracite sizes, re- cent market surveys indicated. The aristocracy of the larger sizes, chestnut, stove and broken grades, has been broken and no longer does the demand for them lead the trade, it was shown, Many of the operators are run- ning the larger size coal back through the breakers again and turn- ing out the smaller sizes almost ex- clusively. Several breakers are bhe- ing run as washeries in order to keep pace with the demand. During recent years heating engi- neers have perfected furnaces and heating plants that utilize efficiently the coal sizes that were once con- sidered a loss on the market. Small- er grates and forced drafts have been responsible for the change and the decrease in the demand for the larger sizes, it was said. Formerly the operators sold pea and buckwheat at a loss concentrat- ing on high prices of the large coal | to carry the burden of making min- ing profitable. With the announcement of spring | | prices it was noticed that for the first time in years the prices of pea, buckwheat and other steam sizes had been increased. In spite sizes continued to be as brisk as be- | fore. | The increase in price from the con- | sumers’ point of view meant that! (homes burning the large sizes and | those using the smaller sizes shared walls and no fire stops between floors |alike in making mining show a pro- to prevent flames from racing through | | AN UNUSUAL | fore considered practically unusable. to be that we would rather have a fit. However to the operators it meant profits from a source hereto- PERFECTS TRAP TO SECURE LIVE DEER. Although game commission officials Sen. were able in recent years to success- fully design traps for taking beav- ers cently that their painstaking efforts land experiments were successfully | rewarded in a trap for | taking live deer. According to H. |H. Groinger, chief of the bureau of predatory animals, a new type trap |has been designed by the commis- |sion’s trappers and recently four { accept, in deer were caught in seven nights in | | the Mifflin county section. The new {trap is 12 feet long, 3% feet wide ‘and 9 feet high, and is constructed | of heavy Jotuy wire. Trap doors ‘are placed at each end and are | dropped by a trigger arrangement in | the middle of the trap. The trigger sufficient capital to keep these serv- tact with two wires which are plac- ices healthy and expansive if ‘“pru- ed over corn and apples used as dent investment” would, in my opin- bait, On all sides of the trap are jon, require litigation over many rolled curtains which drop when the years at enormous cost. |trap is sprung, rendering the inter- It is proposed that public utilities | ior dark. The dropping of the cur- shall not be allowed to adopt rates tain causes the deer to become quiet for service until approval of the Fair and it is not as apt to make a fuss Rate Board is secured. There could or injure itself until it can be trans- be no reasonable objection to this were it that the Board shall er its decision within a reasonable time, perhaps three or six months. But to permit the Board, wilfully or otherwise, to persist in the disallowance of rates for an in- terminable time, is to say that the service of public utilities flour- ish or stagnate, entirely by the suf- ferance of the Board. This is a possi- bility which fair minds do not care to contemplate. “Recapture has been proposed as a principle hereafter to apply in Pennsylvania, notwithstanding the fact that the Interstate Commerce Commission, after many years of ex- perience over a wide variety of con- ditions, has recommended that it be abolished. I know of no quicker method to vitiate present investment and to drive away future investment in these enterprises than to adopt “recapture.” Furthermore, unless the State desires to increase its own revenues by some such process, I fail to see how it enters into the question of reasonable and adequate ro aon. is a proposal that cost of rendering each element of the serv- ice shall be the basis of the rates therefor, regardless of its relation to all Der, dlements, This, of course, could no ve been suggested anyone familiar with & service thy that of the telephone. This business has grown to its present respectable dimensions in lasge part because growth has been encouraged by development rates and by gradu- ations of which take some account of the values of the several services, both local and toll. To adopt charges based on the principle now proposed would impose rate in- creases where they could not be borne, and lessen other rates which are now acceptable in their relation to the rate structure as a whole. This would be chaos. The proposal that charters and franchise rights be limited to fifty years would, in its ultimate effect, be most serious to the plain manor woman who has invested in public utility securities. Tt would say to him: “Your investment may be all right until 1940 or 1960 or whenever your Company's charter or franchise expires; but st that time everything ferred to the shipping crate. EXPECT HIGH MARK | IN PHEASANT EGGS. | Pheasant eggs are being laid at a high rate at the State Game Farms, the number so far produced exceed- ing 10,000. At this rate the 60,600 to 70,000 eggs expected by the Com- mission will be produced, officers said. It is planned to furnish the sportsmen and interested farmers with about 50,000 eggs and Game Refuge Keepers with about 12,000. Some eggs will be hatched at the farms. Over 600 wild turkey eggs have been produced at the turkey farm. At this farm it is hoped to secure about 2500 eggs this season. Due to the tendency of the female turkey to secrete her nest, itis very difficult for the game farmer to lo- cate them in many instances. Inasmuch as it is becoming more difficult each year to secure bcb- white quail in the open market, the Game Commission may experiment with the pro tion of these birds on as e, Weather condi- tions in the southwest have made it almost impossible for shippers to se- cure any birds at all. FOUNDER OF MOTHER'S DAY DEPLORES ITS EXPLOITATION The founder of Mother's day de- plored some of the ways in which she said it has been exploited. Miss Anna Jarvis, for whom Thomas Heflin introduced a Moth- er's day resolution when he was Representative from Alabama in “They say a million dollar's worth of flowers are sold for this day. I never thought it would mean t. “But even stranger than commer- cialization by tradesmen is that the public has allowed onal wel- fare workers to loit its senti- ment for mo in a manner more than amazed; I am dismayed. “I deplore particularly that com- mittees of prominent men and wo- men have commercialized this day in the name of needy mothers.” —Subscribe for the Watchman I SMELL SMOKE Half-past three in the morning. Mr. John Doe, asleep on the top | floor of his suburban home, is par- tially aroused, then sits up with Smoke! t and in two jumps is across the floor. | He yanks open | Doe is done for, What | Well, Mr. Doe did what thousands |of others have done—he inhaled air ‘heated to a temperature around 700 | “whites” | degrees. Though the fire that Leat- led the air was 35 feet below, it kill- ed him. The cellar door was, of course, light- ly built. The flames ate their way through it. Pent-up until now, this outlet increased their fury. Smoke and intense heat poured into the ground-floor hall. With a swish | they were sucked into the open stair well, and in the next moment a solid column of heat was pushing against the hall ceiling on the top floor. Right at that moment Mr. Doe jerked open his door, And since his windows were open, creating a perfect draft, the heat whipped through his door like a streak of lightning. This may all sound unreal, but it is exactly what causes more fire deaths than any other single hap- pening. I've counted 13 bodies in one upstairs room, all dead without a burn. So you can see why exper- ienced firemen, when they roll up to a blaze in a dwelling, throw anxious eyes to the top floor, even though the fire may be plainly confined to the cellar. If you are ever caught in this | predicament, never open that door until you have felt it with your flat hand and found it cool. If it is hot, make for an open window immedi- ately. If the height is such that you can get out safely go. If not, yell for help. As long as that door is closed behind you, the time you can safely wait for rescue wili be | prolonged. If it is open, your chances are pretty thin. Twenty-eight people die every day from fire in this country, them die in their homes. {home burns somewhere in the United | States. To my mind the curse of this country is its poorly built houses (with deadly open stair well; with, of the rise, the demand for the small | flimsy ground floors that let a cellar fire loose in 15 minutes; with defec- tive chimneys on unsound founda- tions; with furnaces built close to wooden partitions; with tinder-box | roofs; with cheap lath-and-plaster | their entire area. { Our failure as home builders seems (sun porch than a fire-stcpped cellar; {or a cute little breakfast nook in- | stead of a fire resisting door. i But having been a fireman for 43 years, | those dead bodies on the top floor | always impress me more than the | handsome orchid-and-green bathroom and bears alive, it was only re- that we saw when we went through | on the overhaul. DOCTOR CLAIMS SURGICAL CURE FOR ALCOHOLICS out superfluous brain | fluid is a new surgical cure for chronic alcoholics, offered by Dr. Edward Spencer Cowles, of the Park Avenue hospital. In his article in the current num- ber of the Medical Journal and Rec- rord, Dr. Cowles advances the theory !about the cause and cure of incorrig- {ible desire for alcoholic drinks: “In case of the alcoholics there !is an irritation set up in the nervous | system that drives them to drinking. The cause of this irritation is a pressure created upon the brain b, | the overflow of intracranial fl Some irritation in the covering of the brain increases this fluid out- pour. “By a simple operation the excess | fluid can be drained out. When the | irritation is thus removed, the brain pressure becomes normal. The globulin and albumin becomes nor- mal in the spinal fluid. And the patients entirely change. They no longer have the same im to- ward and irra be- havior. They experience a change of character.” Neither preaching, education, ex- ercise of will, nor any other similar measure can rmanently make a sober person a chronic alcoholic. The craving for drink passes off only when the psysiological cause is removed, the article says: Certain have brain cells that become irritable under the in- d is Others might safely indulge in moderate drinking, . Cowles. by a number of prominent surgeons, incl Dr. George Kir- by of Institute. WARM EARTH The earth is slowly warm- er and drier, as it was many thous- ands of years ago during the inter- glacier periods of relatively recent geologic history, assorae to re- ports by Professor P. L. Mercanton of the University of Lausanne. Pro- fessor Mercanton, head of the scien- tific committee which has recorded the advance and retreat of glaciers since 1881, bases his statement on the fact that the glaciers of the Swiss Alps have been retreating for several years. The report advances. Alpine weather stations, quring this year and last, have report that snows have been far less than normal and that there have been, as a result of the warmth, an | Late in February the | States Navy played its great annual |g built, against attacking forces, i That blaze broke out in the cellar. | Most of ¢ Every | two minutes of day and night a i NAVY PLAYS WAR GAME i DOWN AT CANAL ZONE ‘game of naval warfare, This year war game was concerned an Nicara- such as may some day The two sides were named the and the “Blacks,” The officers of the navy, with-| out of course causing a single shot | or s a single ves- | engaged in the game of! trying to outwit their opponents. War vessels of all types sped here and | there, in accordance with the rules of the game. In the air above | them the navy dirigible, the Los | Angeles, and numerous naval air- | planes participated in the manoeu- | vers. There were, according to naval ex- | | perts, two main results of this mimic warfare: 1. Lighter-than-air aircraft were | found in many ways more useful | than heavier-than-air craft. In oth- | er words, the Los Angeles justified it- | self. For this reason the Navy De- | partment is expected to recommend | definitely the construction of the | ZRS-5, the second of the new dirigi- | bles planned for the navy. The first one, the ZRS-4, is now being built at Akron, Ohio. It will be the largest of all dirigibles and will cost $5,- | 375,000. 2. Battleships rather than cruis- ers, destroyers and other smaller vessels are pronounced the backbone of the navy. The reason for this de- cision is the fact that they are the only ships that can “take as well as give punishment. “Thus the time- honored standard means of naval de- fense is justified. Much the same situation exists in land warfare, for it is commonly claimed by military experts that the infantry is the backbone of the army. In spite of the great value of the artillery (can- non), cavalry and aircraft, it is the foot soldiers in any army that con- stitute its greatest strength. Mistress—I'm glad to hear aS will be staying on with me you're married. Do I know the {lucky man? Maid—Oh, yes ma'am, | It's your son! United with defense of the Pana- | | children's hospital, gave | was adopted, and by WOMAN ORIGINATED CHRISTMAS SEAL The Red Cross Christmas seal was introduced in the year 1907 by Miss a CTuEe t Wi oe he But a ashington. Jacob A. Riis, the social reformer and author, was responsible for its adoption. An article by Mr. Riis in the Out- look in 1907 on Christmas stamps and seals and how they had been sold in Denmark for the support of a Bissell her idea. She accordingl before the central commi with a stamp bearing a red cross and the words “Merry Christmas and Happy New Year,” which that chapter de- sired to sell for the benefit of anti- tuberculosis work. raised $1,000 toward paying site of the first tuberculosis sanitar- ium in Delaware—Hope farm. The nation-wide sale of seals was thereafter sponsored as a means of funds and as an educational | Red Cross. The dis- | raising device by the tribution is now, however, in the hands of the National Tuberculosis association and its many state and local branches, and the double barr- ed cross which ap on the Christ- mas SLEEP WHILE YOU RIDE WITH NEW HEAD REST, Her suggestion seals is the symbol of that or- | ganization. ATTORNEYS.AT.-LAW Q RENE woopRNG— pumas S gm mise, Fr Fr Y JOHNSTON.—Attorney-at- J Ensue REE | East High street. © brad | Y M. KEICHLINE. — Attcrney-at-Law | and Justice of the All | prompt attention, Offices second SE Remple “Court i i G. RUNKLE. | man. oie in Bellefonte, Pa. Saleen D R. R. L. CAPERS. { OSTEOPATH. | Bellefonte Crider’s Ex. 66-11 in | ouse, from 2to 8 p. m. to 4:00 p. m. Bell Phone. So that motorists may travel in| comfort, sleeping while riding if they | desire, M. A. Montenegro, of Tampa, Fla. has devised a head rest for use in autos. Straps suspend the rest from crosspieces in a car's top, The FIRE INSURANCE At a Reduced Rate, 20% 33% J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent ! device is equipped with “ear flaps” to prevent the noise of travel dis- turbing the sleeper. Shocks and jars of rough roads are eliminated by its elasticity. A head rest for every passenger may be fitted in any car with a top. They are expected to prove a convenience for bus passengers and motor tour- ists on long runs. Fonda Love—Suppose I should steal a kiss? Miss Pert—I defy you. Fonda Love—And suppose I should steal two or three? Miss Pert—I should keep on defy- ing you, | | VALUE AT i 55 to 65 miles an hour Economy CHICHEST | i FEEDS! We have taken om the line of Purina Feeds We also carry the line of Wayne _ Feeds per 100lb. Wagner's 16% Dairy Feed - 1.65 Wagner's 20% Dairy Feed - 1.75 Wagner's 329% Dairy Feed - 1.90 Wagner's Pig Meal - - - Wagner's Mash Wagner's Scratch Feed Wagner's Horse Feed Wagner's Winter Bran Wagner's Winter Middlings Wagner's Standard Mixed Cho Wagner’ s Chick Feed Wagner's Chick Grower and Starter with Cod Liver Oil Wagner's Medium Scratch Feed Blatchford Calf Meal 25 1b sacks gS: haEEaELE THE FORD ROADSTER SES RT Everything you wanlt or need in a motor car at a low price Beauty of line and color Attractive upholstery Quick acceleration Fully enclosed four-wheel brakes Triplex shatter-proof glass windshield Four Houdaille hydraulic shock absorbers Rustless Steel More than twenty ball and roller bearings Reliability See your dealer for a demonstration THIRTEEN BODY TYPES *430 to "630 F. o. b. Detrois, plus freight and delivery. Bumpers and spave tire extra ot small cos. You can buy a Ford on economical terms through the Ford Finance Plans of the Universal Credis Company. Long life Wayne Egg Mash - - - - 240 Wayne Chick Starting Mash - 3.10 Wayne Growing Mash - - - 2.50 Oil Meal 349, - - - - - - 210 Cotton Seéd Meal 43% - = 200 Gluten Feed - - - - - - 190 Hominy Feed - - - - - - 170 Fine Ground Alfalfa - - - 2.50 Meat Scrap 45% - - - - - 3.00 Fish Meal - - - - - - - 875 Tdnkage 60% - - - - - - 3.00 Fine Stock Salt «el oiw 190 Round Grit - - - - - - 130 Lime Grit - - - - - - - 100 Oyster Shell extra quality - 1.00 Let us grind your Corn and Oats and make up ur Dairy Feed, With Cotton Seed Oil Gluten, Alfplfa, Bran, Midds and Molasses. We will make delivery ontwo ton orders. All accounts must be paid in 30 days. Interest charged over that If you want good bread and use Our Best and Gold Coin Caldwell & Son Belielonte, Pa. Plumbing and Heating Vapor....Steam By Hot Water Pipeless Furnaces Full Line of Pipe and Fit~ tings and Mill Supplies All Sizes of Terra Cotta Pipe and Fittings ESTIMATES Cheerfiilly sad Promptly Furnished -