BY GEORGE R. MEEK. -—If there were a little more pray- er for strength there might be less whimpering over the consequences of weakness. —Others may think as they like about the reported break between Al Smith and Franklin D. Roosevelt, but we stick to the belief that Al will be found in Roosevelt's corner when the final show.down comes. —Since we have already heen hooked we have no interest in Leap Year other than that it makes it ninety-six days, five, until we can start out to do a little hooking on our own account. | —Tuesday, January 5, 1932, takes ' a place in our memory something akin to “the big wind in Ireland” and “the wet spring of '34.” On that day we saw Nittany valley farmers plowing both sod and cornstalks. Surely that was a sight we never recall having seen in mid-winter. —QGovernor Pinchot was down in Washington on Monday blabbing about what he is giving to the poor and what Mr. Mellon isn't giving. It would be interesting to know just what proportion of his income Mr. Pinchot was giving to anything be- fore political ambition awakened his generosity. —The Hon. Hampy Moore is again Mayor of Philadelphia and is talk- ing his head off about curbing profii- gacy and cleaning up that city. All of which might sound good if every- body didn't know that when Hampy was in the same office, just twelve years ago, he didn’t do a thing to justify any faith in his present promises. —Maj. Eugene H. Lederer, burgess | of State College, has thrown a mon- instead of ninety- VOI. 77. BE OLD BOROUGH COUNCIL PASSED ISLAND ORDINANCE BEFORE ADJOURNMENT. New Council Organized by Electing John S. Walker, President, W. T. Kelly, Secretary. The final session of borough coun- cil which has functioned during the past two years was very quiet and orderly, and devoid of any sensation- !al incidents. Every member was present with the exception of the retiring member, Robert Kline, and | the last official act was passing the borough ordinance taking over “The Island,” in Spring creek under the right of eminent domain. Every one of the eight members of council voted for the ordinance. When council convened a Mr. Wag- ner, representing the Travelers Acci- dent Liability company, presented to council a proposition to place acci- | dent insurance on the water depart. | ment for a premium of $100 per year. The matter was referred to the Water committee. Secretary Kelly read the annual’ report of fire marshall John J. Bower, for which a vote of thanks was extended. (The report is pub- !lished in full in another column.) | The Street committee presented the request of the Johnston Motor | Bus company that their allotted park- STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. LLEFONTE, PA., FIREMEN SCORE RECORD DURING THE PAST YEAR. Bellefonte firemen hung up anoth- er record for efficiency during the! past year when they held the total value of property destroyed by fire within the borough limits to slight- ly more than five thousand dollars, according to the annual report of fire marshall John J. Bower, sub- mitted to borough council on Mon- day evening. Mr. Bower's report, in full, was as follows: To the President and Members of the i Town Council of Bellefonte: | In accordance with the ordinance devoid of any unusual features, The defendant, Musser J. Coldren, | governing the fire department of the borough I beg to submit the follow- ing report for the year ending De- cember 31st, 1931: The department responded to sev- enty-five calls, divided as follows: Twenty-eight general alarms, thirty still alarms and seventeen out-of- town calls. In so doing they trav-| eled one hundred and seventy-five miles, laid seventy-four hundred and fifty feet of 2'¢ inch hose, used sev- en hundred and thirty-three gallons of chemicals and five hundred gal- lons of water through booster lines, raised five hundred and sixty feet of ladders, and were in service forty- three and one half hours. i ) was twelve o'clock noon, JANUARY S, 1 NEW COUNTY OFFICIALS SWORN INTO OFFICE ON MONDAY MORNING Ceremony Took Judge Fleming on the Bench. 932. NO. 2. JUDGE FLEMING REFUSES TO LIFT NON-SUIT IN DETWILER-COLDREN CASE. Place in Open Court, In an opinion and decree handed | ‘down, on Tuesday, Judge M. Ward Fleming refused to lift the non-suit For the first time in a quarterof ;, the famous Detwiler-Coldren case the county officials chosen by the voters in November having been in ducted into office on Monday morn- ing. The ceremony took place at ten o'clock in open court, before Judge Fleming. It was brief and save the fact that County Commissioner J. Victor Brun. gart and Coroner W. R. Heaton, failed to arrive on time, |& century every major county office which has been hanging fire for al- is now in the hands of a Democrat, most three years, and was brought |to determine the ownership of a nar- * | row strip of land on the top of Nit- The bus, a great Eastern stage, left the 'tany mountain. When the case was originally tried in the Centre coun- ty court it resuited in a verdict for the plaintiff, J. H. Detwiler. two officials, took an appeal to the Superior court and the case was sent back to the lower court for retrial. It came up doubtless at the November term of court and | SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Four masked robbers held up four- teen men at a card game in Philadelphia and escaped with $300 in cash and jew- | elry valued at $500. —According to a compilation made by | the State election bureau there are 3,- 859,985 registered voters in Pennsylvania. The census report for 1930 fixes the pop- | ulation of the State at 9,631,350, so that | there are approximately 5,771,365 who | had not attained voting age when the | rast census was taken. | —A nephew to whom he had given a | home eloped with his wife, Arthur | Hosler, of Beaver township, Columbia | county, told police in asserting he want- | ed his wife back. Hosler's wife, 28, | and Frederick Hosler, 23, left with their | belongings several days ago, Hosler , said. He said they tried to steal his | car and when they failed took his new | license plates. —Thirty-seven persons, among them a | number of cadets returning to West Point after holiday vacations, were in- | jured near Stoyestown, on Monday, when an east bound bus left the high- way, overturned and caught fire. The accident took place on a curve on a hill | Lincoln Highway, leaped a two-foot | ditch and overturned. Fire broke out immediately. Stoyestown firemen ex- tinguished the blaze. —A bullet from a New Year's cele- brant’'s revolver wounded Miss Dora Smiley, 53 years old, as she leaned from | a window at her home in Dunbar. She lis in the Connellsville hospital. The revolyer was fired by John Burnice, 40, under the impression that the hour when the plaintiff sought to submit whose home is about 100 yards from that were sworn thonotary. S. Claude Herr, Prothonotary- and they certain testimony in contravention to of Miss Smiley. in later by the Pro- tne deed the court refused to admit niece had gone upstairs to retire. it, decreeing that the deed, ‘was the proper evidence. itself, It was |elect, was sworn in by Judge Flem- then that attorneys for the defend- ing. Before administering the oath ant made a motion for a non-suit, the Judge took occasion to say to which was granted. Mr. Herr that his relations with him gecree, this week, leaves Coldren the during the past four years had been rightful owner of the land in ques- exceedingly pleasant; that he had tion, but an exception for the plain- made a very capable and efficient tiff was noted and he can carry the The total value of the buildings court officer and he anticipated case to the Superior court if he 80 ihe duties of the office. The court's involved was $371,800.00. Contents another four years of congenial as- desires. $176,200.00. Insurance on 1 $258,525.00 and on contents $1 300.00. The loss on buildings was ! "| | sociation. He then administered the oath. Prothonotary Herr then adminis- key wrench into the Chase-Kurtz ;,. o,,00 in the Diamond be chang- congressional muddle in our District. | 4" from along the side of the court The Major has decided to become 8 ,,56 yard to the north corner in| candidate for the nomination himself |g. 0: of same, which was referred and relieve the two sitting states- |; the Street committee with power. men of any squabble as to which of rhe committee also called the at- them is to have the one seat in tenjon of council to the bad condi- Congress. — New Hampshire has elected her er Chevrolet building, on High street, first Democrat to Congress in ten and the secretary was instructed to years. And it can’t be said that notify the owners to make repairs. he was elected because he is wet. His opponent also ran on a wet and is a very popular ex. Governor of the Green Mountain State. It was a clean cut victory for Democracy and an unmistakable index of the changing tide of politi- the fact that the Linn street sewer, at the corner of Allegheny and Linn streets, is again clogged up and sug- gested as the only remedy for a recurrence of the trouble is to put down a new and larger sewer. The matter was referred to the Street | tion of the pavement long the Deck- Mr. Emerick called attention to $4010.00, and on contents $1208.00, tered the oath to the other officers or a total loss in the borough of : $5218.00, or a per capita loss of in the following order: Sheriff John $1.08%%. This is in excess of the per | capita 08s last year but the per. | F- Hunter, Register John L. Wets- ler, Recorder D. A. McDowell, Coun- centage of loss this is only 1.00116 as against "0072 last year, ty Commissioners John S. Spearly | and the average loss per alarm was and County $10.64 less than last year. | Auditors Robert D. Musser, David The causes of the various alarms A, Holter and Clarence A. Yearick, were as follows: Burning flues 14; defective flues 9; sparks on |and County Surveyor J. Thompson 8 . | Henry. from fives 15: buck fre in autos 3; | After all had been sworn in . Judge Fleming, in a few brief re. grass fires 2; short circuit 2; marks, extended a welcome to all the | works 1; sparks from cupola 1; new officials and their appointees, | overheated gas engine 1; defective assuring them of the co-operation | wiring 1. and support of the Court in making their administration in office not cal sentiment in the country. —All the new county officers are at their posts. Here's that their service to the public will be without fear. or favor and with an eye single to the best interests of the taxpay- ers and to the credit of the Demo- cratic party. It made the gratifi- cation of their ambitions possible by them its standard bearers. It pledged its faith in them to the voters of Centre county. It is now their's to see that that faith is kept. —We are not given to blowing our own horn, but because “a proph- et is not without honor save in his own country” we get some com- pensation for our efforts to produce an unusual country newspaper out of the knowledge that the Watch- man is probably the most quoted weekly in Pennsylvania. Last year its news or its views were given poxes in the front pages of thetwo greatest dailies in the State and written into the Legislative Record at Harrisburg during the recent jpecial session of the Legislature. —While walking near the White House, on New Year's day, Mrs. Hoover discovered pansies blooming na flower bed and pointed out her ind to her distinguished husband. lhe incident made the front pages >f the metropolitan pages. While walking in our back yard on Christ- mas morning the woman whose sternal “the furnace needs attention” Ss the news we have no nose for slucked a boutonniere of pansies ‘or our button-hole. We wore them all day Christmas and even the Watchman forgot to mention it last week. —In Bellefonte the New Year wasn't ushered in with the usual jin. Of course some whistles blew, s>ut the sexton of the Methodist shurch fell down on his job terribly. Usually he hangs onto that old bell rope long after all other welcomers jave been tired out. A few feeble were all he could do for 1932. On Sunday morning we heard ‘he pastor very adroitly refer to the ‘act that his own salary for Novem- ser had not yet been paid and at mce we began to wonder whether he sexton’s lapse on New Year's we was due to the same cause. —If we are to believe what Sus- juehanna county people say the Pin- shots have abandoned the old prac- dce of building political fences. They are building roads instead. he Mrs, you know, is going to se a candidate for Congress again n the Fifteenth District and when ‘he Commissioners of Susquehanna :ounty called on Highway Commis- sioner Sam Lewis, last week, to in- juire as to who is bossing location ind construction of the roads they wre helping to pay for all they ould find out was that ‘Mrs. Pin- hot's representative” in the district 8s the dictator. committee with power. The Water committee reported minor repairs and the colléction of $350.00 on water taxes. The Finance committee presented water fund $2656.69. Notes totaling 1$31956.40 were presented for renew- al. The committee, however, re- | ported that the treasurer had an opportunity to borrow almost five thousand dollars at five per cent in- terest and recommended that he be | | authorized to do so and pay off a similar amount of bank notes now drawing six per cent. Council so authorized. The Fire and Police committee recommended that the annual appro- priation of $250 be made to each fire company, which was authorized. The Sanitary committee presented the monthly report of health officer S. M. Nisslgy. Neither the Town Improvement nor the Special committees had any reports to offer. As the final matter of business the the report of the borough treasurer °& which showed a balance in the bor- iough fund of $3668.08 and in the, ah Ag Jepaita and supplies was ; care of apparatus {washing hose $154.50; $72.38. : | condi chemi- inch | during | gallion | ing capacity of 2350 min ‘ute. During the year a new block ‘has been placed in the White pump- ler and all the equipment is ex- | | cellent condition. i | Though we responded to seventeen | out-of-town cai's, not a single dollar was received for this service and I! | believe, as in most departments,’ there should be some fixed | for service outside of the bo! | land would that this matter | be considered council. i On behalf of the department, and | personally, I wish to thank council | for its hearty co-operation and aid. | JOHN J, BOWER, Chief. | PEN EASTER THIS YEAR WILL Hy BE UNUSUALLY EARLY. | Easter this year will fall on Sun- Island ordinance was taken up, read for the third time and passed. | day, March 27th, which is unusually Borough bills amounting to $2,- 868.71 and water bills for $2152.05, and approximately $500 for interest and a West Penn Power bill for $909.20 for pumping during the year (provided it is found correct on in- vestigation) were approved for pay- ment. adjourned sine die. Burgess Hardman P. Harris, be- ing present, administered the oath of office to the councilmen elected W. H. Doll, of the South ward, and M. M. Cobb, of the West ward. He also administered the oath to poor overseers Alexander Morrison and Edward Klinger, and borough audi- tors C. L. Gates and John W. Smith. The burgess then called the new council to order and an organization was perfected by the re-election of John 8. Walker, as president; W. T. Kelly, secretary, and George Car- peneto, borough treasurer. The burgess then made a brief talk to council in which he stated that he had refused to endorse an application for the installation of a new gas and oil service station at the corner of Bishop and Wilson streets, and recommended that no more such permits be granted, and that an effort be made to reduce the number of such stations now on the streets. He also suggested that council make an effort to clean up the streets, alleys and garage lot parking space of the derelicts of old cars which are such an eyesore to any town. He also advocated a general cleaning up of the town, es- The minutes of the meeting were then read and approved and council in November—John S. Walker, of the North ward; Harry Badger and | {early. In fact only a few timesin /the past fifty years has this feast 'day been so early in the season. | Ash Wednesday will fall on Febru- | lary 10th. Both Memorial day and | the 4th of July will fall on Monday | this year and Christmas on Sunday. | Electign day will be the latest, this bro it can possibly be, November = pecially the approaches thereto, call- ing specific attention to the dump along north Water street which {could be made a beauty spot by cleaning up the old tin cans rubbish and planting trees and evergreens, which can be secured from the State Forestry department free of cost. To do so now would also furnish work for men out of employment. The burgess also read a telegram he received, on Monday, from United States Senator James | J. Davis asking if Bellefonte is in| need of federal aid for the unemploy- ed, and to which he had answered that it is not. The new council having reorgan- ized secretary Kelly presented the written applications of Harry Duke- man for re-appointment as chief of police and Thomas Howléy for re- appointment as police officer, both of which were referred to the Fire and Police committee. The secretary also presented the bonds of poor overseers Alexander Morrison and Edward Klinger, in the sum of $2000, which were ap- proved by council. There being no other business council adjourned. —S8ubscribe for the Watchman. ‘commissions in hand and ready take. charge of his office at twelve o'clock noon, the hour for the (change, with the exception of Coun-|gnq in another block with only his | ty Treasurer Hunter, whose com- mission had not yet arrived. The retiring County Treasurer, Lyman L. Smith, had on hand ap- tne same man proximately $32,000 to turn over to cymstances it would not only be il- | his successor, which was several thousand dollars more than he re- ceived four years ago. The retiring Sheriff, Harry E. Dunlap, turned over to John M. Boob practically a jail full of prisoners, or to be exact, thirty-one, which was just twenty-one more than he received from Sheriff Taylor four years ago. Sheriff Boob has in. duced Mrs. Dunlap to continue in charge of the clerical work in the office, for a while at least, and she has consented to do so. He has also appointed John J. Bower as his attorney. All other appointees have already been published in the Watchman and they were all on hand on Monday | morning. The Commissioners, at their first meeting on Monday, appointed Mr. and Mrs. John Breon as janitors for the first floor of the court house and Lewis Wian to have charge of the second floor. ECONOMIES TO SAVE RAISE IN TAX RATE The new board of County Com- missioners, this week, decided to county expenses but provide enough money so that some can be used to reduce the floating indebtedness. The Commissioners have also changed the days for holding their stated meetings each week from |EU™ Tuesdays and Fridays to Mondays and Thursdays. Every person should make a note of this fact in the event they have business to trans- act with the board. ——The passenger train on the Lewisburg branch, due in Bellefonte at 9.03 o'clock a. m., did not reach Bellefonte, on Tuesday, until 1.40 p. m., having been held at Sunbury on account of a big freight wreck on the P. and E. division, near Ingle- nook. Ten cars were piled up, one box car being shoved on top of another and both being thrown side. ways across the tracks. Nobody was injured. JUDGE FLEMING RULES ON | SCHOOL DIRECTOR CASE. | Down in Liberty township two |at the election in November. Four | | names appeared on the ballot: L. S. | Bolopue and Norris I. Harter, Re- publicans, N.I. Harter and Raymond Gardner, Democrats. Bolopue re- ceived 184 votes; Norris I. Harter 114; N. I. Harter 58, and Raymond Gardner 119. In counting the votes the return board did not consolidate the vote of Norris I. Harter and N. I. Har- ter for the geason that they had no way of knowing if the two names the same man and the matter was left up to the court to on Tuesday, Judge Fleming stated |that any man who had his name |placed on the ballot, first with his | christened name spelled out in full, | | initials was misleading to the voters, some of whom might, and in this in- stance probably did, vote twice for Under such cir- legal but might work an injustice | to other candidates. And while | Mr. Harter, if all the votes he re- | ceived were counted for him would |have 172 votes ind thereby be the | second highest man, in common | justice to all only the votes cast for him as Norris I. Harter could be considered, and as this vote of 114 was five votes less than that of Raymond Gardner, who received 119, the latter was declared the duly elected school director. i While this was the only case at the last election in which there was any doubt as to the result. there were a number of instances where a man who wa# a candidate on both | the Republican and Democratic his full name on one Miss Smiley and a The former leaned from a second floor win- dow to listen to the noisy greeting of ! the New Year when she was hit by the bullet, | —Thomas S. Stephenson, of Altoona, was on Monday named by President Hoover to be Surveyor of Customs at Philadelphia. The appointment is ex- pected to be ratified by the Senate next | week, when Mr. Stephenson will assume | Mr. Stephenson | succeeds James E. Rininger. also of Al- toona. He was chairman of the Davis- | Brown committee of Blair county in the 1930 primary. Rininger, a candidate for re-appointment, supported former Sena- tor Grundy during the 1530 primary. Boob, County Treasurer Robert . hoo] directors were to be chosen —Eight-four Pennsylvania farmers qualified for membership in the famous Keystone 400 bushel potato club in 1881, Three 600-bushel yields were recorded. H. J. Walton and Sons, Chester county, | who grew 696 bushels in 1928, the high- est yeild in the history of the club, again have the leading yield of the year 637.3 bushels on a measured acre. Gustafson Brothers, McKean county, produced 605 bushéls and Harry Callie, Northampton county, raised 604.5 bushels, the first time either had qualified for the club. ~The Baltimore and Ohio railroad com- pany took possession of the B. R. and P. offices in Clearfield, Friday, the change being part of the re-allocation of railroads approved some months ago by Federal authorities, and which has been unofficially in existence since then. The personnel of the office was not changed. however, they will adopt the Baltimore and Ohio system of managing the office. The Clearfield office, and line running into Clearfield is now known and operat- ed as part of the Baltimore and Ohio system. —Three armed men who last week held up a truck loaded with sixty bales of silk valued at $30,000, near Mount Po- cono, are still at large, although de- tails of State police are searching the mountain region for them. Horace Marsh, of Scranton, driver of the silk truck, was on his way through Mount Pocono when the gunmen jumped on his truck, he | told police. They ordered him from the machine and he escaped | woods and gave the alarm. State troop- through the ers quickly on the scene found the ban- 'dits had fled and left the truck of silk behind them. —The equivalent of a train nearly six miles long will be turned out of the Berwick shops of the American Car and Foundry company, in filling its order for 500 all-steel subway cars for New York city. In each of the new cars will be 10,371 feet of electric wire, varying from 19 to 637 strands which, if made into a tickets used single strand, would be 43 miles long. party and only his initials on the Other items in each car will include 20.- other. ‘This decision of the court 000 rivets, 12,300 screws, 1200 cotters, should result in candidates being 1200 bolts, 5000 nuts, 4600 lock washers, more careful in the future and, | 787 pleces of conduit with a total length when candidates on more than one °f 3% Jeu: M31 piéCen iol 1s vive, Wg | 1600 different pressed. forged or cast party ticket they should use their , =." 0 sea or aluminum. names the same way on both. . Ridgway and St. Mary's police cap- ROBBERS tured three men early on Sunday at a POLICE AND roadhouse between St. Mary's and Ridg- BATTLE IN PHILIPSBURG. | yy for the robbery of the Shaneen Ga- | . rage in Ridgway. The thieves drove Philipsburg was aroused at 1:30 | yp oir car into the garage and loaded in o'clock yesterday morning by a reg-|; 4 gmall safe, a radio set and some ac- ular cannonading on the lower end cessories. Police raided the roadhouse of Presqueisle street. | known as the New Moon and arrested Watchman Hickson of the First! the proprietor, H. E. Rosenhover, who, | National bank discovered two or it was understood, implicated Roy Rog- three men trying to break into the ers. 35. and Lyle Shaver, 25, of Ridgway, in the robbery. The safe was found Mo ; ke Moms Jo: Bo ae Porenk: | buried in a 12-foot well. The bottom had been knocked out, All valuables, Jeffries and the two opened fire on | papers and the $4000 worth of diamonds the robbers. The shots were prompt- | were found except one ring and a dia- ly returned and there was a regular | mond. Police say three more are im- fusiliage tat } brought Mickey Mc- plicated in the robbery. , watchman at the Swift] : What his wife leaves of his estate at plant, near by, into action with his |, . gon is to be turned over to First | National bank of Shickshinny, as trustee, Shots flew thick and fast, Win-| for investment and re-investment until it dows in Small's barber shop, the reaches $1,000,000, Dr. Ellis A. Santee, Hudson building and a parked car former health commissioner of Cortland, were broken and Cochran got a bul- N. ¥., and retired lecturer who died re- let through his trouser leg. | The robbers escaped, however. The Moose have been robbed twice re- cently. ——For a fortnight special meet- ings are planned for the Bellefonte Methodist church beginning Sunday, Jan. 24. The will be as- sisted by Dr. G. 8. Womer, of Phil- ipsburg, Pa., and B. Vincent Gal- braith and daughter, Miss Kather- ine V., who specialize as pianist, guitarist in wonderful sacred song programs. cently at Muhlenburg Luzerne county, directed in His will filled on Friday for probate. When and if the fund reaches $1,000,000 it is to be used, according to the will, as gifts under the direction of the education board of Pennsylvania State Grange. If the education board fails to function, the net income of the trust is to go to the Children’s home of Cortland, N. Y., a residuary legatee. The estate is valued at $15,000. Use of the estate and household goods is left with Dr. Santee’'s widow, Jane Wood Santee, during her life. From the fund the will proposes deductions are to be made for the care of burial lots and caretakers.