—Frank Gross, of Axe Mann, | dropped in for a ‘“call” on Saturday morning. If you don't know Frank | we shall clarify what is to follow by admitting that he is one of the most expert carpenters we have ever known and that is a pretty broad statement, for we have employed many of them in our varous build- ing and repair undertakings. He came in to “call’ us for a paragraph that appeared in this column last week in which it was shown that at the price of fifty cents per bushel for wheat a farmer who needs a carpen- ter whose wage scale is eighty cents an hour would have to give up two hundred bushels of wheat to pay the the carpenter for twelve and one- half days of work. Berides being a carpenter Frank is somewhat of a philosopher and while he was very sincere in his admission that at present prices for farm stuff farmers are not being adequately paid for the products of their labor he was not willing to admit that carpenters are receiving too much for their's. That is the nub of the thought we tried to express in the paragraph that he came in to discuss. Car- penters, masons, bricklayers, plaster- ers and other skilled mechanics are certainly not getting more than we hope they can get and it is only human nature for everyone to strive to get all he or she can. But some- thing has always seemed wrong with an economic system that works out so that men or women of equal intel. ligence and equal aptitude for the vocation they follow should receive such widely varying returns for the products of their toil. Some will say that the law of supply and demand governs such things, and possibly it does in most cases, but we contend that in the present situation it doesn’t. For the carpenter, the mason the brick- layer, the plasterer, et. al, must have the products of the farmer on which to live, while the farmer could defer the need he might have for the craftsmanship of any of them. suming that this contention will be granted we swing around the circle and admit that the only reason the farmer is getting such little return for his labor is that he is producing #0 much that the carpenter, the mason, the bricklayer, the plasterer, can’t consume it all and, consequent- ly, buys it at his own price, because it is a drug on the market. So we have scribbled through four PAaragra) and gotten nowhere. Our house of cards appears to be Hig up ca th on thoughts as these: What if fifty per cent. of the farmers of the country should suddenly decide to become carpen- ters, masons, bricklayers, plasterers and other mechanics? Certainly that percentage is, mone too high in estimating the number of farmers who have the ability to go into oth- er vocations. Then there would be too many artisans and too few farmers and the shoe would be on the other foot, and the mechanic would be thinking the same of the farmer today as the farmer is think- ing of the mechanic. And what if the farmer should decide this fall—and we think he ought to do it—to sow only half as much wheat as he has ever sowed, eat up half of his cattle, hogs and chickens and, next spring, seed only half of the ground usually devoted to corn, oats and potatoes? He could live just as he has always lived, frugally, but the carpenter's eighty cents an hour, the bricklayers, the mason’s and the plasterer’s dollar and a quarter wouldn't amount to more than thirty cents when they came to buy bread, vegetables, beef, pork, chickéns, eggs and milk. Everyone has to have them, while the farmer can stave off the need for most everything others produce except clothing, sugar, coffee, a few spices fw i 2 c o ce very § Thus we have worked down to the point where we uncover the Frank Gross philosophy. He thinks they ought to organize. We do too, but farmers, because they are so isolated something for themselves. What the farmer needs is what Frank Gross suggested: Organization. Sense enough to understand that he and his co-tillers of the soil hold in their hands something as deadly as poison gas—the decision as to wheth- er the carpenter, the mason, the plasterer or any of the rest of us shall live or die. Incidentally, Frank asked us why we never wrote a “Column.” Since 18904 we have been under the de- lusion that we had been writing one. i As- . | several TC | ry According to press correspondents in Washington President Hoover is disappointed over the failure of the bargain between “Scarface Al" Ca- pone and the Department of Justice. Capone had been indicted on five or six hundred counts of violating the income tax law and the prohibition enforcement act. Much time and great pains had been expended in securing evidence against him and finally an agreement was made that he plead guilty to some of the charges and accept a nominal im- prisonment sentence as full punish- ment. The matter was hailed asa great achievement of administrative force and legal ingenuity. Capone had been able to defy the law and the courts for many years. The Republican leaders promptly set about to capitalize the incident for campaign purposes. Columns of newspaper space were filled with the details of the long pursuit and successful accumulation of evidence, and the close relation the adminis- | tration had to these activities. It was the abundant fruit of a plan formed in the engineering mind of the President and not only proved | his ability as an administrator but established his fidelity to duty, his {courage and determination. Other efforts to bring Capone to justice {had failed but when Hoover set ‘himself to the task the defense col- lapsed. Like Davy Crockett's coon | this master criminal “bowed to the | inevitable.” | But when the time came to put the agreement in force Federal Judge | Wilkerson balked. “There can be ‘no bargaining with a Federal court,” ‘he said. The district attorney who | negotiated the deal protested that the agreement had the sanc the Department of Justice in ington and inferentially the approval But the Judge was obdurate. A criminal who de. serves a sentence of thirty or forty years could not escape with a two or three year imprisonment with his consent and he called the bar- gain off. It may result lao thees- a on of the integrity of the courts, and it knocks the props from under a fine piece of propa- ganda. ——China is preparing to present Colonel and Mrs. Lindbergh with a special medal on their arrival there. But the entire population of this country will give them their hearts on their arrival home. One Fool Project Disposed Of. After two years study of the sub- ject the War Department engineers have completed a report that the proposed Nicaragua canal would be expedient but of little value. That terprise that it would be liable to destruction by an earthquake any day is refuted, and though it might be of some service as a defensive expedient it would contribute in very small measure to the commer- cial interests of the country. A saving of a few days in the passage from one coast to the other would hardly be worth the cost of con- struction, which is estimated at $750,000,000. It may be assumed that this re- port will not only dispose of the project for a considerable period of time will stifle the alibi by d American marines have been quartered in Nicaragua for several years. The real purpose of the marines there has been to protect investments made by Ameri- can adventurers and the pretense that they were to guard laborers em- ployed in digging a ship way from the Atlantic to the Pacific oceans to accommodate an imaginary increase in commerce is false and fraudulent. The Panama canal and the existing railway facilities are ample to serve this purpose for many years to come. Some jingoes and a few contrac- tors may still cherish the absurd idea that such a water way is need- ed now, or may be needed in the fu- ture, to protect the country from hostile enemies. But if we are sin- cere in our various movements in the interest of world-wide and all- time peace there will be no danger from that source. The Paris pact, which President Hoover has extolled as “the greatest diplomatic achieve- ment in history,” and the London conference of last year and the Geneva conference to be held next year for decrease in armaments, ought to relieve all of our minds of fear of hostile invasion. ———Senator Capper, of Kansas, had a great birthday party, the other day. There were 15,000 peo- ple present but none of the members of the Farm Board were among them. is to say, the objection to the en-| STATE RIGHTS AN There is an ominous note in the speech delivered by Governor Pin- chot to the officers of the National Guard, at Mt. Gretna, the other evening. According to the Asso. ciated Press report of the event the Governor said “he would not hesi- tate to call out the Guard if threat- ened trouble from unemployment, strikes and disorder in the western part of the State materializes.” Whether he intended to admonish the starving miners in the bitumi- nous coal regions to behave or toen- courage the mine owners to adhere to their present policies is left to conjecture. It is clearly susceptible of either interpretation. Congressional investigations and other agencies of | distressful conditions in the soft coal producing sections of Pennsylvania inquiry into the D FEDERAL UNION. PA., AUGUST 7, 1931. I ———_—— The Folly of Tariff Tax | In an address delivered at the opening of the Institute of Politics |at Williamstown, the other day, | Newton D. Baker sounded a true note ‘when he said: “It is fair to say that barrier tariffs have been erect- ed on every new frontier and many ‘of them are provocative, some of them frankly hostile and all of them an encumbrance upon that field of freedom in which progress and peace can best function. The spirt in which many of these tariffs have been enacted has been the war | spirit.” These expressions of ani- mosity among nations not only im- | pair industrial prosperity but ulti- mately lead up to physical conten- tion. in this country than in any other. | Since the big war the trend of in- This form of folly is more obvious | NO. 31. FIFTY YEARS AGO IN CENTKE COUNTY Items taken from the Watchman issue of August 12, 1881. | | | tion, held in the court house, last Taesday, was the largest and most harmonious gathering of its sort we ‘have ever known. The | capable and respectable gentlemen !were chosen as the party's candi- | dates for the county offices to be filled in November: Associate Judges, John K. Runkle, J. Gibson Larimer; sheriff, Thomas J. Dunkle; treasurer, D. C. Keller; prothonotary, J. C. Harper; register, James A. McClain; recorder, Frank E. Bible, commis- sioners, A. J. Griest, John Wolf; | auditors, John S. Proudfoot, F. P. | Musser. —H. G. Cronister, well known farmer near Martha Furnace, died |of heart disease on July 6th, last. He was 64 years, 5 months and 5 have invariably placed the blame on dustrial development has been inthe gays old. the mine owners. Governor Pin- direction of mass operation. Im- chot, in his campaign propaganda, proved machinery and intense effort james A. McCalmont, —Elizabeth McCalmont, relict of late of Ma- ‘gave endorsement to this idea and by individuals like Henry Ford and rion township, died on the Sth inst, abolished the coal and iron police as | proof of his But his voluntary offer of military protection to the system thus anath- medium of absorption is the foreign | ematized is perplexing, to say the least. It implies a reversal of his | attitude on the subject and a com- plete surrender to the force of cor- that is falsely christened over-pro- porate cupidity and capitalistic tyr- anny. The Governor said in his speech to | the guardsmen that “there are ru- corporations like General Motors ‘home consumption, and the only market. But the Grundy tariff law (has practically closed that market and caused accumulation of stocks |duction. The logical consequence {is the closing of mills and factories |and the increase of unemployment. | The administration at Washington | after a protracted illness. She was belief in the theory. have produced vastly in excess of 76 years old and the mother of Mrs. | William Shortlidge, of this place. —Dr. Brown, the corn and bunion extractor, is stopping at the Brock- | erhoff house, where you can have | yours removed—if you have any. —On Sunday last W. E. Hoster- man died at his home in Hublers- | burg, leaving a widow and a | family of children About a week previous he suffered a slight wound |on his nose, erysipelas set in and his i ‘mors flying on the possibility of and the Republican party profess to death followed. He was 39 years old. disorder during the coming win | Something more than rumors have ‘already been heard and disorder has | resulted in death in Washington | county and damage in other coun- ties in that section of the State. It 'is also probable that during the com- | government has taken any steps to | improve conditions or ameliorate the | suffering which provokes disorder. But Governor Pinchot might have! |found some other form of express- |ing his purposes in the matter. ; i ——One thing may be as a settled fact. ‘That is’ ocrats are not going to allow the Republican National committee to select our candidate next year. Politics in Philadelphia. The first skirmish of the conflict between the Republican factions in Philadelphia resulted in a substantial victory for the Vare gang. That is, the candidate for Mayor of the Hall- Cunningham contingent was scared out of the fight by a barrage of charges that he represented a bunch of contractors. That left the candi- date of the Vare-Salus combination, formerly the favorite contractors, without opposition. Having figured that a four-year term at $18,000 a | year is better than a two-year term lat $10,000, the Vare candidate, to employ his own language, ‘threw his hat into the ring,” under pre- tense of serving the public. The office of Mayor of Philadelphia is about like that of King in Italy. It carries plenty of dignity, reason- ably generous compensation, plenty of first-page pictures and abundance of opportunities for oratory. But the Mayor has little to do with the government of the city. That service is performed by the city council in conjunction with the county com- missioners and other county officials. Therefore if the Vare organization is able to sscure control of council and the county offices, it will have little reason to care whether the Mayor is for or against its adminis- trative or political plans and pur- poses. Present indications are that the Vare candidate for Mayor is entirely indifferent as to the character or af- filiations of his associates on the ticket. If Mr. Vare chooses for the important service of governing the city the political pirates who have been looting the treasury for years, it will be all right with the candi- date for Mayor. As was revealed in hig wise choice between the office of Mayor and that of Congress, “Hampy’ “can always take care of himself.” What happens to the people of Philadelphia is unimport- ant so long as he enjoys the salary, privileges and perquisites of Mayor. ——The infirmity of Thomas A. Edison gave the whole country a shock, the other day, and the entire world will hope for his speedy re- covery. ——New York cops are instructed by Mayor Walker to shoot gangsters on sight. That may be a good pol- icy if only gangsters are fired at. ——There are so many flyers in the air, heading in one direction or another, that it is almost impossible to keep track of them. be striving for world-wide and en- |during peace while it is pursuing | policies that make for war. When we adopt measures that destroy the industrial progress of large groups (of people in France, or Italy, or Eng- land we are not moving in the di- tion of ing winter distress will increase, rection of peace. On the comtrary, Wash. for neither the Federal nor the State we are creating enmities that soon- er or later culminate in hostile con- And the folly of it is that us. press the “dog in the manger” meth- od of spreading mischief. was the Hon. J. Banks Kurtz, of Al. and member of Congress from twenty-first district for five Kurtz assured us at the Watchman tics he didn't say to Centre coun- leads us to believe that J. Banks was “ "us a bit when he let go the idea that his vis- it to Centre county was merely cas- ual. The new apportionment of Penn- sylvania has upset a lot of Congres- sional apple-carts. Centre, Clearfield and Blair now constitute the new 23rd district. J. Mitchell Chase, of Clearfield, and Mr. Kurtz, of Blair, if both desire to continue their con- men can’t occupy one seat in Con- gress. Mr. Kurtz knows that and we that's what Centre county has for his visit on Monday. in E § not intend to Congress. However, it is said = g SEE S3EE Es is §2% 1 : i ——Wickersham wants more mo- ney to continue the crime investiga- tion, but would like some one else to do the work. ———Maybe Governor Pinchot is dodging politicians rather than con- serving his health by his frequent vacation trips. ~————Calvin Coolidge in the race for President next year would be surprising, but stranger things have happened. —The Sons of Italy of Pennsyl- vania have decided to erect a monu- ment to George Washington. at Rome. gressional careers, find themselves confronted with the fact that two rumor here to the effect —Charley Nelson, a 16 year old Philipsburg boy was playing with a toy pistol recently. It ed unexpectedly and the missile pene- trated his chest just above the heart. Although seriously hurt itis thought he will recover. —Wheat is $1.10, corn 50cts., oats 30cts., eggs 12% cts, butter 20cts., and ham 18cts. —William Lyon, of Howard, who was a candidate for nomination for commissioner, is not only a good Democrat, but a good loser, as well, as was attested by the following little pleasantry he got off when he ua Jack Griest and Joiimny the two successful contestan id: “Mr. oh ! to to run with a Lyon, but u'll have to be content with i vi going it seems —The Misses Mary and Jennie Ayres, daughters of Bucher Ayres Esq., of Philadelphia, and formerly of Pennsylvania Furnace, are in town for a visit with the Stewart Lyon family on Curtin street. —Benjamin Gentzel met with a very serious accident on Wednesday. The colt he was driving frightened ran away and upset the buggy; throwing Ben out head first. A Jie) Salk waa Ot 2 bia dead and he to be carried to the office of Dr. Hibler for treatment. —J. Gibson Larimer, of Pleasant Gap, who had just been nominated by the Democrats for associate judge, is the gentleman whom Col. Seeley, a former editor of the Watchman, always called “Pleasant Gib.” ~Editor's Note—These items are abbreviated this week for the very good reason that there is little but county convention news in the edi- tion from which they have been taken. Almost the entir¢ papor is devoted to a récord of the balloting for the various offides. old county conventions of délegates to select party tickets were great events in those days. In fact we note that on Tuesday the Garman house, alone, had one hundred and forty guests for dinner. Incidental- ly, we have long been convinced that the direct primaries have not work- ed out as it was thought would when the Act was passed. e be- lieve that the old system of delegate elections and county conventions in- sured a more carefully selected lot of candidates for local offices than the present method does. - “Hampy” Moore the Best Bet. From the Clearfield Republican Philadelphia's fight between the blican factions, the former close tical bunch known as the “Band of Brothers,” is likely to be settled by compromise. For a time the prospects were good for one crowd getting all the offices and dic who and why. Later events u the plans and there was another ap- parent element about to take con- trol and eliminate those they did not wont or were antagonistic to, for the moment. Now look different again. Neither crowd wants to Republican factional fights in elphia cost big. mon- ey. The great trouble A to the man or men or aggregation willing to “carry the and furnish the necessary wherewith.” Former May- or J. Hampton Moore looks today as the most probable man for the Mayoralty nomination. Who will Goeuny places on the same ticket with him is the next important ques- tion. Sure it is thera will be con- cessions, plenty of them, for the here- Josue cngaty who ae not want oore | placated, if they to accept him and go along Yor all they are worth. | Caledonia | Heistand, a Columbia youth, who weighs | almost 300 pounds, and wore out a new pair of shoes before ‘he found his way back to the { froma where he started his walk. following | |SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE —Columbia county prisoners who ride {to jail in their own cars to begin sen- | tences must pay fines and costs before | they can expect release. | —Miss Martha Butler, former chief {clerk in the car department of the Le- | high valley railroad at Hazleton, on Tues- | day became a call boy, the first of her | sex to hold that position. —Losing his way and eleven hours through the in Franklin tramping for mountains near county, Edward lost fifteen pounds cottage —A 365 pound ox roasted by Machael Probst, of Lockport and his cousin, Harry Probst, of Castanea, was a fea- ture of the first annual outing of the Clinton county Voters League, which | was held at the Legion Park, near Mill —The Democratic county conven-| Hall, Friday. The principal speaker was John A. McSparran, State Secretary of Agriculture, who discussed ‘'‘Reduc- tion of Taxes." —The safe in the office of District At- torney John L. Butt, at Gettysburg, waa robbed of silverware valued at $1500 dur- ing the noon hour Tuesday. When Miss Hazel Bream, stenographer, returned from lunch she saw a tall, thin man wearing a panama hat leaving the front door of the building. She discovered papers from the safe scattered about the floor and the silverware missing. —The motive for the suicide of Lucy Pityoniak, 17, Westport, on Monday, honor student at Renovo high school In June, remains undetermined while cor- | oner’s attaches announce no inquest ls | planned. The girl left the supper table at her home and went to her room. | Shortly afterward, others of the family heard a shot. They found Lucy dying, a .32 calibre bullet wound in her heart, | authorities reported. She had just re- | turned from a visit to Philadelphia and | was apparently in excellent health. —A motor transport service for freight and merchandise between Lock Haven and Philadelphia by two different routes | with a number of other branch lines was | proposed in an application filed by the | Follmer Trucking company, of Milton. | One route would operate by way of Wil- | liamsport, Sunbury, Harrisburg, and Lan- caster, and the other would go by the way of Sunbury, Pottsville, Allentown, and Reading. Branch lines would be from Lancaster to Ephrata, Northumber- land to Berwick, and Montandon to Mif- flinburg. | —Reports of the work during the past | year, recommendations for the ensuing | six months period, and serious consid- | eration of finances, featured the annual | meeting of the directors of the Central | Pennsylvania Odd Fellows Orphanage at the home, near Sunbury, last Thursday. | That there was an operating deficit dur- ling the past year is contained in the report of the finance committee. Expen- ditures for the year totaled $73,971.74, and the deficit was the largest in some time. The home has been operating at a loss for the last ten years, it was pointed out. —In a report to sheriff C. R. Wenker, of Clinton county, Frank Hedge, a bar- ber, of Lock Haven. slieges 8. Probst endeavored to ‘‘frame him" by placing liquor in his car. Hedge also i a little Wolf,” Mr. L; is a tall alleges Webb hit him over the shoulder gentleman and Mr, olf a very with a club without cause. He sald the short man. reason he was being ‘“‘framed’ is because he is a Federal witness in a wet case. Hedge turned a gallon of whisky he says was put in his car over to the sheriff. Webb was indicted May last in Federal court on a conspiracy charge and is out on $3000 bail and still on the police force, <€ —Three members of Lock Heaven's city police force were taken to the Clinton county jail on Tuesday, on warrants sworn out by two agents of the United States Department of Justice. The three officers, along with another policeman and five other city residents, are now under bail on charges of conspiracy to violate the prohibition laws. They are to be tried by the Federal court at Willlams- port in October. The three policemen arrested Tuesday were motorcycle patrol- man William T. Devling, taken inta custody while on duty; patrolman George R. Webb and motorcycle patrolman Mar- tin J. Peters. —Philip Magno, 61, of Hazleton, died Saturday, was buried on Monday in & $15,000 casket weighing 1350 pounds which h& bought two years ago and kept If storage for his funeral. He also had contracted with an undertaker and spec- ified the pallbearers were to receive $5 each. He directed that thé automobile following the hearse be unoccupied, but this part of the arrangements was not carried out. Such a great crowd turned out that an officer rode in the car be- hind the hearse so as to reach the church ahead of the jam. Thousands watched the burial in the parish Mag- no for years was a janitor and elevator [I ey —Five men, armed with pistols and three sawed off shot guns, lined forty- two men against the walls of a cigar store and poolroom at Bristol, Pa., early last Friday morning, and robbed them of money and jewelry, estimated to be worth between four and five thousand dollars. The robbers spent more than fifteen minutes searching their victims thoroughly to see that no articles of value were overlooked. The gunmen, police sald, were so sure of themselves that they shut off the motor of their pow- erful sedan and left no lookout while they were committing the holdup. After tossing the loot into two canvas bags, the robbers jumped into their car and drove toward Philadelphia. —When a bolt of lightning struck the home of Mrs. Rebecca J. Goss, at New- town, near Osceola Mills, during the thunder storm Wednesday afternoon, July 29, it ripped away half of the chimney, and sent an electrical charge through the building that knocked the enamel off the zinc kitchen sink, and tore open a number of water pipes, The stove pipes, also broken by the shock which rocked the house, spread smoke and soot through all the rooms. None of the occupants of the house received any physical injury. Mrs. Goss, who had been washing dishes at the sink, went out of the kitchen a few minutes before the lightning struck the house. An es- timate of the damage to the house has not been fixed. There was no insuranec to cover the loss. el