EE — ——Only the very optimistic farmers expect to “get out of the) mud” within the period of Pinchot's term of office. —Local tonsorial artists are hav- ing a price cutting war. Hair cuts that were fifty cents are down to twenty-five. War is something to be | deplored, but we don’t think the ~~ VOL. 76. public will make any move to have the League of Nations settle this one. —Mayor Jimmy Walker, of New | York, certainly exuded a mouth-full | when he in that “the coun- 3°08 far a growing opinion at the has gone mad higher educa- | P vernor Pinchot's re- ib However, Da needn't have CeBt activities are generally misin- said that “pretty soon we'll have terpreted. The current belief is men with two or three degrees glad ‘Nat he aspires to the Republican to get jobs as plumbers or brick- nomination for President, next year, layers.” We've got them right now. |and that his persistent agitation of , the utility problem is a lure to And we've got a lot of fancy. tch th plumbers and bricklayers who would ow iy hes of the mid-western be glad to find a job digging diten. {That Mrs Pinchot’ i ovens a —A prophet is not without honcr the White House is beyond question, save in his own country. On June and that Gifford hopes to gratify 1 Wijierock Quatsiés share holders | ner ambition some time is equally rece their us per cent certain, But he realizes the im- dividend checks. Local investors possibility of that achievement next are just like a canny fishing camp . He knows that the renomi- sogk once Sold Ls ua I ere] ‘nation of Herbert Hoover is a party er we e utiful ' necessity. Trout Ris ir Jront oe eamp | What Mr. Pinchot has in mind’at y where, | this time is not the nomination for said: “The reason our fellows don't president. The present Republi get any fish is. because hey are Ji {oan organization is compelled to re- ways running es away catch nominate Mr. Hoover. He has what is lying right at their oWR come to be the embodiment of all front door. it stands for and the nomination __A note from Mr, H. P. Parker, Of any other candidate would in- the gentleman who has been giving |Volve the stultifying of every a the Watchman its very valuable and e interesting weather reports, suggests Years. The leaders recognize his the idea that we might be invited Weaknesses and appreciate to go fishing with the party which See ro Somiue ling hd same cut he implies he “pimps.” lo em wo prefer Sena- tice a. the gentleman that while he | tor Morrow Bog their Sandidate Bul has caste an almost irresistible bait they “see hand on the before this old trout we shall not | wall” and interpret it to mean thal rise to it until he assures us that no | the nomination of any other man such butchers as mutilated Johnny than Hoover is equivalent to a dec Nighthart on one of its recent ex- |laration of political bankruptcy. cursions will be’ permitted to oper- | . Gifford Pinchot ‘is a peculiarly ate on us if we get a hook in ou shrewd politician. He is as cau- tious as a cat and as bold asa lion, alternately, With the ambition of army of College boys and | cgesar he ventu 1s is forming on the horizon for | pe ® ye ey WheR the Pinchot for Vice President. —— There are very substantial rea- { 8% assualt on an industrial world | gergtands that the doors of the was crying for them four years situation has White House are closed against him gat The s of tter ZELEERE 835: g g if Bf hl i BFgBEEEEREZRE Ma eal sisi i: fgets - 43 a% 1 : gt il g ii gis foc Li i g¢ i 5k: g publican nomination for President Mr. Hoover stressed the idea that ges ge it g 2 g §, ATREIREES pithy g g ¢ Ree e made Bellefonte fil £ body of water that no more belongs |the President is entirely responsible to it than we do to the gentleman and deserving of condemnation. It who put the atrocity over, is not unjust, but fair. ‘gossip, has been completely elimi- ‘pated from the political leadership both in Philadelphia and the State. At a meeting of the Republican City committee in Philadelphia, the oth- er day, Mr. Vare was not present ‘and his name was not mentioned during the p . The Phila- delphia Inquirer says, “William Scott Vare is no longer the acknowledged and accepted leader of the Repub- lican organization of Philadelphia The mantle of leadership has been draped about the broad shoulders ‘of sheriff Thomas Wilbur Cunning- ‘ham. That is the sequel of a sad story of ingratitude. For many years the Vare family has labored assidiously and spent ‘money freely to build up the ma- ‘chine that has not been an entirely | unselfish service. First George. then Ed. and finally Bill Vare en- | joyed lucrative contracts and party 'honors fully equal to their merits. But they made others rich and con- 'spicuous in the public life of the ‘city in expectation of reciprocal serv- lice in the event of need. But when physical disability overtook the man the dan- who had thus befriended them, they |abandoned him as ! sinking ship.’ Probably it is just as well, how- (ever, that Mr. Vare be retired from the office of supreme party boss. | Physical infirmities have inpaired ‘his capacity to perform the arduous labors of the office and existing con- ditions require greater, rather than less, energy in the performance of |the duties, But it is not certain | that enthroning Mr. Cunningham is |exactly wise. The party boss, to | secure the fuilest measure of effi- ciency, must be on the job all the time and it is quite possible that Mr. Cunningham may be unable to meet that requirement. He might be detained, part of the time at least, in the District of Columbia “rats desert a man Atterbury of perfidy quotes from General Martin's cam- paign speeches to prove his charges. If, as he assumes, his personal are the principles of the party, his indictment is commitments between the party leaders and the utility corporations the Governor undertook to reverse the practices of the Public Service Commission. No party had ever been written to justify his ac- It had the cordial approval of the National platform as well as the support of the State organi zation and in supporting Hoover for President Mr. Pinchot endorsed it. In fact favors to utility corporations there Was Republican gospel, But we have no complaint against Governor Pinchot for inaugurating an war among the Re- publicans of Pennsylvania évén though it be predicated upon a false pretense. There is a time honored adage to the effect ‘‘when rogues fall out honest men come by their own.” The charges made by Mr. Pinchot against Atterbury, Martin and others and his vituperative at- tacks upon Senators and Represen- tatives in the General Assembly are the beginning of such a conflict and unless the signs are misleading ex- press “the of the end” of Republican control of Pennsylvania, “a consummation devoutly to be wished.” ————————— A — ——The Governor is inviting a factional war in his party next year and it is a safe guess that he'll get the worst of it when it comes. ——A Chicago woman is accused of having five husbands and fourteen others in order to collect insurance. Well five is too many husbands for one woman. - | STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA. | Bill Vare, according to current | There is a good deal of anxiety ‘and considerable speculation in po- litical circles as to what disposition | Governor Pinchot will make of the | Congressional apportionment bill fi- ‘nally adopted at the last minute of ‘the recent session of the General | Assembly. It is the measure written ‘for the Republican State Organiza- tion and is particularly obnoxious ‘to the Governor who sat in the con- ference in the expectation that his presence would terrorize his ene- mies, This hope was dissappointed ‘by the friends of Grundy on the | committee. Two days previously |the Governor had urged the passage |of some legislation to which Grundy ‘was opposed. The yielding of Flynn ‘and Spangler, Grundy followers, de- ‘cided the matter. | The bill is about as vicious a 'plece of leg.slation as could be framed. It is neither equal in popu- lation or contiguous in territory, in the formation of districts, asthe constitution requires, The main pur- [pose of its authors was to prevent ‘the election of Democrats and the side issue to disappoint Pinchot and | | Grundy, who were in cordial sym- pathy with the main purpose. But ‘Mr. Pinchot wanted a home dis- | | trict which would elect his wife and | |Grundy insisted on a district for ‘Bucks county which he could con- trol. Both would have preferred no | Bill to the one enacted. But Grundy | felt that Pinchot had betrayed him ile fi toration of prosperity. an over-abundance of idle money which yields nothing while unem- ployed and a small return from such investments is better than none. If government policies gave promise of better conditions in the near future capital would not be so eager to absorb low rate securities. ——After two days and JUNE 12, 1931. {the association meeting held at the of- | fice of county agent Mitchell on Monday ; m—— night. YEARS AGO | —The Pennsylvania Power & Light IN CENTRE COUNTY company brought in a 2,500,000 cubic- | foot gas well on Tuesday morning on ithe M. A. Burdette farm, Lawrence township, Ticga county, by shooting it with 40 quarts of nitroglycerine at a {depth of 3840 feet. This is the eleventh producer in the Tioga county fields. —Claiming she had lost her ability to sing due to injuries suffered in an auto- Items taken from the Watchman issue of June 17, 1881, —We now have twelve candidates for nomination as sheriff, six for treasurer, one for prothonotary, four | for register, three for Fecordes: Tout for associate judge and me, tor mobile accident, Mrs. Helen 8S. Kelley, county commissioner. | vocal soloist of Monongahela, is suing —The Logan Hose company has Clara F. Staumn, of Pittsburgh, for $25.- received an invitation to participate 000 damages. Mrs. Kelley lost two in the Fourth of July celebration in teeth. Her face is scarred and she Huntingdon. | claims her nervous system Is affected. —Mr, John Noll, of Pleasant Gap. | —The Baltimore and Ohio railroad is proud of his pretty children, two station at Rockwood, Somerset county, of whom are handsome little ris | was badly damaged, on Friday, when and to one of whom we are indebted two freight cars jumped the tracks and for the gift of a rose. Many thanks, ' smashed into the station, tearing half of little one. [it away. John Lafferty, the station — The barn Ww. y | agent, was in the half of the building farm, in Re en which was undamaged, and escaped in- ri ra | jury. and n ha —David P. Schrum was called for jury eighbors ving been there 10! Guty in Dauphin county court on Mon- assist with it. A couple of fingers I to. hls were mashed during the erection, name deputy sheriff William Hoffman, but otherwise it went off well. | found him in jail. Schrum, a for- —Gottlieb Haag, of Pleasant , | mer city volunteer fireman, was sentenc- celebrated his 52nd birthday - ed last March to serve from one to two last, on which Years as a member of a gang that set pleasure of fire to buildings for the thrill. taking dinner with him. | —Lock Haven council may have to ad- — Next winter the public schools vertise for a Pied Piper as complaint will be obliged to receive colored has been made to council about rats in- children, as well as white, under a fest! a part of the residential section new law just signed by the Gover- | of thé city. These animals have be- nor, abolishing all tion on ac- come so bold that they move about over count of race or color. This will porches and lawns in daylight. do away with the necessity of em- liceman sent to investigate said he had a colored school teacher. as counted hundreds of the pests. as maintaining a separate —The body of Leslie Weir, 67, an in- building. From what we hear neith- mate of the Mifflin county home, was er the colored, nor the white people | found Saturday - evening half a mile are pleased with the new arrange- from the home near Kishacoquiilas creek. ment. heart attack, Dis- raised on Tuesday; his many ® he was of the opinion that no ap-|jast Thursday evening, m the whose son, Richard, had told Be Alomment. mould serve his personal | teack a mils west of Buch Creek of seeing the body in the bushes. interests best. He imagined he could land both passenger coaches andthe | —During a scuffle early on Tuesday, group the candidates so sa to’ give | baggage car luted over an em-|with two men he caught looting the re- him a majority on a state-wide ent. teen WOR hoa: Philip Evans, Hoot, But his advisers Wore 1008 | echs. he A or ae in ped. y so. . The thieves this wild his bruised; Near who has a bullet wound under Moon valley, received |his heart, was unarmed and he was get- wh ting the Jer of the fight when one of about Jor- | the thieves drew a revolver and shot what he would like to do dan, of State College, had his jaw him. John —Two lives were lost in tragic acci- back dents in Washington county. Raymond Nickerson, 8, near Washington, Pa. —Because her husband told her to sell the furniture and that he did not want to be bothered with a wife as he was taken to the Ohio State penitentiary, Mrs. Gladys M. Davis was granted a divorce in Dauphin county court late on Monday. She charged desertion by her husband, William J. Davis, Akron, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Davis were married March 11, 1921. Four years later the husband pleaded guilty to a charge of larceny and robbery, his wife testified. —A contract which will furnish em- men for ols g ® ov work. | —BEdward G. Strickler, former clerk of the courts in Franklin county, on Satur- was sentenced to from five to ten in the eastern penitentiary after ig £ ; & : : T g : 5 7 HIG ib 25" z : : § gi? of “Davy” Glenn street is undergoing £5, 8 iE ob agk £ g E gE 3 that Hi resisteth not a very Shuvming ure that resideth in that John W, Moore, our local photog- rapher, has invented and been Framed, fen ae i fo gol m their ores. All John needs now is lots of gold bearing ores. —Startling as it may seem one out of every seven in Penn- sylvania is receiving assistance, in one form or another, from the State ent of Welfare. In our —Breaking the lock on the of the Clinton county jail forcing the door of the jail ard Seyler, 22, and Albert Clark, escaped Friday night. Sherift Irvin Wenker, the Lock Haven detail of State police and a posse of more than 50 men conducted a search within a ra- dius of 30 miles without success. Clark was arrested on forgery charges and Seyler in a prohibition raid. Both were Description of the police sald This means that every man, woman and child in Pennsylvania is carry- ing on enth of expense in- 3 3 :