INK SLINGS. BY GEORGE R. MEEK. —Pity the robins and blue-birds that were chirping so cheerily last Saturday. —Old Man Winter came back, ‘Sunday evening, March 6, just to prove that a man may be down but never out. —The Japs are still sending troops and ammunition into China. Since there is no war there they must be doing it for fun. —The weather being what it we are not so much interested in the number of days that intervene before the 15th of April arrives as we were last week. —The Japs must have been right ‘when they said they were not war- ring in China. It couldn't have been war, else the kidnapping of a twenty- month's old baby wouldn't have pushed it clear off the front page. —The American Telephone and Telegraph Company reports its business for 1931 as having been the best it has ever had. What else could have been expected? The less people have to do the more time they have to talk. —New Hampshire has Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt off to a hopeful start in his race for delegates to the Democratic Nation- al Convention. Gov. Smith was entered in the primaries there, but his vote was inconsequential. —If you have a twenty-months old baby don't go traveling with it unless you have no concern as to when you will reach your destination. Until the Lindbergh boy is found parents of a baby his age are going to have a lot of trouble proving when, how and where they got him. Will somebody please tell just why Mr. Merv Betz, the Jack- sonville Wanamaker, wants to take the job of being Republican State Committeeman for Centre county away from Senator Scott? Merv. has something up his sleeve and we have a pretty good idea as to what it is, but we'd like to have our con- vietion confirmed, started Chinese Col. Ken Wang, whom had They did it, they say, because arrests on such a charge are illegal, except in times of war and since they are not at war with China they don’t want to be charged with having imprisoned a citizen of that - country without warrant. My, what fine lines of distinction Japan can draw. -—Governor Pinchot, it is said, is undecided as to whether to cali another - special session of the Gen- eral Assembly. If he merely wants it to put its O. K. on a program ar- ranged by him he'd better not call it. If he will accept the advice of the men and women who have been elected to legislate for the people of Pennsylvania then the expendi- ture of another three or four hun- dred thousand Aollars might be -—Last week we set a trap to see how trout would jump. We said it would be thirty-four days until the opening of the season. Before ten o'clock Friday morning somebody called to tell us that we were fudg- ing, that it would be forty-one days. And who do you suppose it was: None other than the one gentleman who can always be caught when anything concerning trout is the bait. It was Coxey. —Death has taken two great men within a week. France mourns the loss of Aristide Briand and Amer- ica that of John Philip Sousa. Though their works were in very differing fields, both were distin- guished servitors in them. As Briand was devoted to the cause of peace, Sousa's music was “the thrilling, martial kind that stirs its hearers to thoughts of deeds of valor. Briand is gone, but France and Germany are nearer together because of his life. Sousa is gone, but we have his “Washington Post,” his “Semper Fidelis,” his “Stars and Stripes For- ever,” as memorials that will be more enduring than granite shafts. -—H. A. Werner, of Harrisburg, is’ us sm STATE RIGHTS VOL. 77. PRISONER WHO ESCAPED FROM THE COUNTY JAIL NOT YET RECAPTURED | | The month of March is mak- Ee AND FEDER BELLEFON TE, PA. SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE : —George Loesing, of Hazleton, who | chased chicken thieves with a high- - | ered rifle, got back his 11 pullets with | two chickens and two geese to boot. | Evidently the thieves had had a busy . might and as they dropped prize after | prize in their trail as they fled toward | their auto, and they gave Loesing back | more than they had stolen from him. -—~When Constable Ralph W. Keech, of York, Pa., peered under the covers of a baby coach being whee.ed along a street | AL UNION. | by Early Thomas, on Saturday, he saw | three dressed chickens. The official made i FAVORS A REDUCTION IN INSURANCE RATES Sheriff Boob Confident He Sew the DE Boodonits reputation. Starting Special Committee So Reported at | Man in Blairsville at Noon Thursday. At the present writing, W. G. Williams, the convicted prisoner who , made his after being sentenced to a term of seven and a half to fifteen years in the western penitentiary for his part in the robbery of the Citizens Building and Loan Association, at Philipsburg on December 7th, is still ‘at large, although it is believed that he is hiding in Pittsburgh. that he saw Williams in Blairsville ‘at noon last Thursday. The Sheriff was en route to Pittsburgh with | August and Hillary Viard, whom he was conveying to the western peni- tentiary. He was accompanied by his brother. Passing through Blairs- ville he saw five men standing in front of a filling station. One of them was minus a hat and overcoat and tallied with Williams’ descrip- tion in every particular even to the (spot under his right eye. Unfortu- | nately the Sheriff’s car was penned in a line of traffic, traveling at the rate of forty miles an hour, and (with a flow of traffic in the oppo- | site direction he was unable to get {out until he had gone almost a | mile. | He then turned around and drove back to the filling station. Arriving | there he found only four men. He number of the Sheriff's car, but he ber without prisoner, and were him at the time, an probably he was unable to espionage. jeave his car with the two prisoners {in it to make a search. He did hunt {up a policeman, however, and told ‘him his story, but so far nothing has come from it. While in jail Wiliams told the Sheriff that a man in Pittsburgh ‘owed him $200 and it is highly probable he was on his way there to collect the money and use it to make his escape out of the country. By profession Williams is a barber |and was in charge of the barber shop at Rockview during the time he spent there completing a previous term. . Since his escape it developes that’ he was the principal figure in the ‘robbery of the Citizens Building ‘and Loan Association, at Philips- burg, according to the story Thomas M. Anderson, one of the gang, told Judge M. Ward Fleming last week. It will be recalled that Anderson (entered a plea of guilty, on Satur- day, February 27th, and was sen- tenced to a term of six to twelve years in the penitentiary. Taken before Judge Fleming, in chambers, last week, he stated that the rob- bery had been Willlams' plan from start to finish, and that he consent- ‘ed to go along only after Williams ‘had pleaded with him for more than three hours. For making a clean breast of the affair to the court Anderson had his sentence reduced from six to twelve to five to ten, the same as imposed on J. W. | Woomer, the third member of the gang. Naturally there has been consider- able speculation as to why Williams should go back to Philipsburg after making his escape. It is now re- ported on fairly reliable evidence that he spent the night in the house occupied by Mrs. Jennie Philips prior to her being sent to the Alle-| gheny county work house, in Janu- ary, for a violation of the liquor laws. It is also reported that Wil- |llams, while in jail, was quite chum- my with a prisoner from Philips- ‘burg, and it is just probable that escape from the Centre county jail on Saturday evening, | February 27th, within five hours | conditions were equally bad. | that, however, led from some sections of the State, inquired about the other man and! was told that he had left. That he — There is much speculation in was a stranger to them and had | feet in his hand on! the license tag | mails missed connection and did not had a desire to be a candidate, on through him arrangements had been the Democratic ticket, for alternatc made to use the vacant Philips delegate at large to the Democratic house as a temporary hideout in national convention. Had he not with- | the event of an escape. The Philips drawn our party's ticket would have house is just around the corner been too large to go on the voting from where he got out of the auto- “machines in use in the State. That mobile that took him to Philips- would have made it necessary to burg.and when it was inspected a print paper ballots for the Demo- bed had been slept in and cigarette cratic primaries in districts using butts were found all around the voting machines. The paper ballots room. would have cost the counties five hundred thousand dollars. Mr. Wer- ed Sheriff John M. Boob for the es- ner's action is to be commended cape of Williams some people have and always he will have something wondered why he gave him the lib- to point to with pride. It is not often erty of the jail yard after he had a fellow can save five hundred | Deen sentenced to the penitentiary. grand for the public by making In the two months since the Sheriff such a little sacrifice. was sworn into office he has been Last In on Sunday morning with a rain, | by mid-afternoon the snow was falling and a regular blizzard fol- lowed. All told about four inches of snow fell, the deepest of the A high wind | prevailed Sunday night and Mon- day piling the snow in deep drifts (in unprotected places, and the Highway Department was unable to. keep all the main lines of roadway jopen to travel. ~ To make matters worse both | telephone and electric service down Sheriff John M. Boob is confident Nittany valley and over in dy satisfactory, and valley was disrupted by broken wires and fallen poles and repair crews were unable to get through the drifted highways to repair the interrupted service. At one time, | Monday morning, the West Penn company had four trucks stuck in drifts somewhere in Pennsvalley and the telephone company two, | because of broken down tslephune service their exact location was not learned until late in the day. Down Nittany valley the main. highway was blocked by blown, down telephone poles, on Sunday ‘night, and travel had to detour over side roads. Up at State College and | in the western end of the county At Centre county did| not get near the snow fall report- especially over mountains, where it the was said to | run from eighteen inches to two depth. 1 two to five hours late arriving in ‘ Bellefonte, and at that most of the reach here until their arrival on later trains. Any one who was ciate what it meant not out in the “Monday Evening’'s Meeting of Bor- | ough Council. Business men of Bellefonte will | be gratified to learn that at last there is every reason to hope for a | peduction in the deficiency schedule ‘on insurance rates in Bellefonte. L. | C. Beutler, of Philadelpiha, | gineer in the employ of the Under- ter's Association, was in Belle- |fonte last week and made a com- E plete survey of what | here to justify a {vugh examination | (he pumping stations, w! | Beutler. The streets and alleys were proclaimed a deterrent to quick ar- rival at a fire in those sections, the streets as a whole were rated 100 per cent plus. Water hydrants were tested for both efficiency and capac- ity and their rating in excess of 100 per cent. The same was true of the fire fighting ap- paratus. While Mr. Beutler could not give any assurance as to what the reduction might be he did state that conditions now are most favor- able for a reduction, and it is quite likely notice to this effect will be received in due time. Every member of council was present at the meeting with the ex- ‘ception of M. M. Cobb, who was, When the State Highw part- (confined to his home with illness. I Allegheny There were no verbal nor written communications. The Street committee reported trimming out the brush in a brush hole on Linn and Wilson streets, complained of at the last meeting of council to prevent the place being used as a dump. Also repair of the pavement at the Reformed church property which was paid for by the church trustees. Report was made C. F. Tate, the plumber, had a..sewer connection for the | an investigation and, he says, he learn- | ed that the chickens were stolen. Thomas ! Robert Chatman, Walter McMillan and | William Givens were arrested accused | of stealing 105 chickens Friday night WINS LARGE CASH PRIZE. from the farm of John C. Miller. Most — | of the loot was recovered, police say, Pearl Edwin Thomas, born in at the homes of defendants. Howard, Centre county in 1889, and —Jacob Reinheimer, a shoemaker, of {now living at Santa Monica, Cali, Reading, who had a habit of placing has been awarded the first prize, tacks in his mouth while at work, $10,000.00, in the contest for a suit- swallowed some occasionally. By and by ‘able new name for the magazine, he had quite a collection. Two weeks | Physical Cult | ago he was taken ill and was taken to | Physi ure. St. Joseph's hospital in what was thought Mr. Thomas was one of nearly a ,, ,, , dying condition. An operation | million persons who submitted new | ghowed that his stomach lining and | names and slogans for the magazine. His was: “Macfadden’s, the glorified other organs were studded with cobbler’'s tacks, about 200 in number. For the best | family magazine of a new American 'era.” : part of two days surgeons worked over Pearl, as we knew him, went to him to remove the tacks, and now the the Bellefonte Academy before en- NO. 11. his cobbler’s bench again. —High up in the mountains in a hunt- man is recovering. He may soon be at tering the Pennsylvania State Col- ‘lege from which institution he was | | graduated in 1909. He was catcher on the Varsity ball team in his sen- ior year and succeeded the writer ‘as graduate manager of athletics at ing cabin 22 miles from Clearfield, Gov- ernment, State and county officers last Friday, found a plant for making counterfeit coins. In a nearby cabin they arrested Lyman R. Haney, 35, and his stepson, Eugene Cover, 18. They were charged with making and passing fake coins. The raid on the cabin yield- ‘ed molds for making nickels, dimes and quarters. Many of the spurious coins were passed, investigators said, on mer- chants in Clearfield ana Penfield. Haney and Cover were each held in $2500 bail for trial in federal court at Erie. —Recently, Lester Hall, 28, of 420 Seventh street, Clearfield, a brother of Howard Hall, superintendent of the Da- vid Hall farm in Morrisdale, died in the College. He remained in that | | position a year or more and then for twelve years, ending in 1924, he was in the advertising department of the Armstrong Cork and In- sulation Company, Pittsburgh. Fol- lowed three years as sales and ad- vertising manager of Cork Import Corporation of Chicago and New York. In 1929 Mr. Thomas moved to California where, after building | Memorial hospital from a land selling two manufacturing the Clearfield Mem p plants, he , given Hufaety os fractured skull and internal cerebral writing. | hemorrhage sustained in an altercation | with Charles Mason, 16, colored, also of Clearfield. Clearfield police claim that | Mason struck Hall and death resulted from injuries received when Hall struck the sidewalk in the fall. Prior to Hall's | death Mason had been freed under $1000 ! bail, but after death he was iki | and placed in jail to await the fi gs a iiigiovay erweon | Sthe corour's jury Nich. Wil} weet near | tonight in the cou hy jot | the ry Nmjaia down a8 e arco —After pleading guilty to embezzling | widen the road. The land _ | $26,784 trom the closed Lansdowne Bank | i WAS OWN: | gpg Trust Co, Miss Anne Elizabeth joo by Charles F. Schad and he | prymire, former head bookkeeper, was | promptly put in a claim for dam- | sentenced. on Saturday, to three and a ages. His first claim was for $33, | halt to six years in the county prison. |000, and was based on the state. | Testimony Indicated the woman obtain- I ment that the land taken was what jd the money by making false entry ‘he had in view as the best location We congratulate our friend. ROAD VIEWERS REFUSE | TO AWARD DAMAGES | slips credited to her account and thens (for a concentration plant. Later his | Sowing checks. This and other details |claim was reduced to $22,000. ! J. Kennedy Johnston, J. to those whose | West Penn Power company, at their son Henry and I. J. HOME. {4dent of the bank, at Yarnell work compelled them to face the Lamb street building, without se- appointed a hoard of viewers to go fury of the tempest. West Penn curing a permit. Power crews were called out at 10 president Walker called th y { e at- o'clock Sunday night when the serv-| tention of the Street committee to entitled. Their report was filed, last 'on the ground and assess the dam- ‘ages to which Mr. Schad might be lice was disrupted in Pennsvalley. the fact that High school bo; Saturda, and it ded : ys, who | y, recommen no They went to Centre ziall througha|drive in from the country in cars, actual damage to property and made blinding snow storm and from there are not observing strict parking DO monetary award. It isnow quite to Millheim. Early Monday two of the men started for Madisonb ‘and did not reach there until time in the afternoon. They had not (had a bite to eat since Sunday eve- | ning and were almost famished but | managed to get hold of a loaf of bread and some cheese and ate | cheese sandwiches while {down the trouble on the power lines. | Of the five or six crews out none (of them got back to Bellefonte un- til Tuesday. Anybody who is skeptical about | the blocked highways can have all | deputy sheriff John Bower. He spent Sunday at his home in Aaronsburg (and started for Bellefonte early | Monday morning. His car got stuck in a snow drift and he (finally | abandoned it and came through on foot, reaching Bellefonte after seven o'clock on Monday evening. At one time, on Monday, upwards lof two dozen cars were marooned |in drifts between Centre Hall and | Spring Mills, some of them buried ‘$0 deep that only the tops were vis- !ible above the huge drifts. Conditions | through Brush valley were almost as bad. ~-—On Sunday afternoon Judge 'M. Ward Fleming, accompanied by his daughter Winifred and father, viting members of council to the gn. or $200, costs and serve rom | W. 1. Fleming, drove to Tyrone to meet Mrs. Fleming and daughter, Miss Mary, who were returning from a trip to Philadelphia. At the | Triangle, | Tyrone, of the Pitt basket ball team, { a car driven by the coach jon the wet and snow-covered con- crete and crashed headon into the | Fleming car. The occupants of both parking on both sides of narrow | cars were slightly bruised and streets and alleys, particularly the shaken up but none of them ser- jousiy hurt. Though the Judge's car was /considerably damaged he entire party. That evening the Judge left for Media where he has a two week's engagement holding court. visited twice by offcials of State Welfare Department, and was law he must give all prisoners two hours outdoors recreation daily, or he would be effected his escape. chasing | and | | containing his wife and two. chil- which was" heartily approved by! ‘dren in addition to himself, skidded every member of council. The com- an order paroling Mrs. Caroline rules. They are using too much the police. | The Water committee reported ‘repairs on Reynolds avenue and the | collection of $550 on water taxes. The committee also presented a list of errors and exonerations on ‘on the 1929 duplicate $402.41, which ‘they recommended be approved by eral council, and approval was given. The committee alse reported re- company, in which it was stated | that the bill of $198.43 for the me- | chanic who made the repairs to the pump at the Gamble mill will be | taken care of by that company. The Finance comrgittee reported |a balance in the borough fund of 1 $3542.44 and in the water fund $2- 1161.70. Borough notes totaling $13,- 500 were presented tor renewal and 'a water department note for $3000.- |00. The committee also reported | that Miss Pearl Royer, of Niagara i i | treasurer was authorized to make | payment. | A communication was received |from the Undine Fire company in- company’s St. Patrick's day ban- quet on Thursday evening of next | week. The Fire and Police committee | repapering the council chamber and a change in the | mittee also suggested that an effort be made to break up the habit of | latter, as it constitutes a menace in case of fire. | The Sanitary committee presented | Nissley, which showed seventeen |cases of communicable disease in | Bellefonte . at present, though none |of them are serious. Borough bills totaling $1765.29 and the Water bills $2011.60 were approved |i; one of the prisoners. By Monday | lithe owl had recovered and it was |for payment, after which While nobody has openly criticis- | informed by them that under the | 3djourned, i -——Some apples, averaging three- | liable to prosecution, quarters of a pound each, were pre-| celebrate St. and this was the reason why Wil- | sented to us, last week, by Mrs. John | their annual banquet next Thursday liams was released for exercise with | Hartswick. Of the Baldwin variety, | evening. The Undine banquets have the other prisoners on the day he the apples were as nearly perfect come to be great {fruit as could be grown. | likely that Mr. Schad will institute Urg space by parking their cars too far court proceedings in an effort to Some apart. The matter was referred to ' recover damages. | ———— pa —_ HUNTING STOLEN BOARDS i OFFICERS FIND BOOZE . Last Friday county detective Leo: the Boden and constable Daniel Brink, 11928 duplicate amounting to $579.49, of Philipsburg, armed with a search of her defalcations were revealed in a letter she wrote to Henry L, Price, pres- time ft closed last December 18. Counsel for Miss Fry~ -. mire said she used most of the money to help her family with household ex- penses and pay doctor's bills, —A letter mailed at Allentown July 1, 1980, has just been returned to the send- er after having been through approxi- mately a dozen foreign countries trying to catch up with the addressee. In vain the postal authorities of the foreign countries endeavored to deliver the mis- | sive, but finally gave up the chase and returned it unopened. The letter was mailed by Miss Marie Kressley, a teach- er in the Allentown High school. It was addressed to Miss Margaret Sandt, of New York, a classmate, who wus on a tour through European .countries at that time. The letter was addressed to Miss Sandt in England, but before it arrived | warrant, went on the hunt of sev- | boards stolen from the Bige- {low farm, along d¢he Tyrone pike, | lover two years ago. They visited there Miss Sandt had left with the tour. ing party. —In Philadelphia, on Tuesaday, Judge M. Ward Fleming directed a jury to ac- | Falls, requested payment of a $1000 | note and interest of $20.83, and the lighting system, | 'ceipt of a communication from Mr. the home of John McKofkee, not |doubts removed by interviewing giyies of the . Scranton Electric far from the Bigelow farm, and 'found not only the boards but two gallon jugs and a pint bottle of alleged moonshine liquor, a coil such | las ie used on a still and a 30-gallon | barrel of alleged rye mash in pro- cess of fermentation. McKofkee was | placed under arrest and at a hear- | ing before Squire E. R. Hancock, in| | Philipsburg, he was held in $300 bail on the theft charge and $1000 on the liquor charge. { —————————————— | LIQUOR LAW VIOLATORS : SENTENCED BY COURT At a brief session of court, last | Thursday, Ralph Johnstonbaugh, of | | State College, entered a plea of | guilty to a violation of the liquor law and wus sentenced to pay & | three months to three years in the county jeil | C. Arthur Thomas, of Bellefonte, lalso plead guilty to a violation of on the way down from reported completion of the work of the liquor law and was sentenced to pay the costs, $200 fine and ! placed on probation for three years. On the same day the court issued from the Danville | Baumgardner | State hospital. | —-—During the hard snow storm, | quit two members of a defunct fur farm of the charge of obtaining money udder false pretenses. The defendants are Wil- liam H. Hoffman, and Frank Besch, president and agent, respectively, of the Golden Seal fur farms. They were ar- rated in 1930 on complaint of several in- vestors. Some complainants testified they had invested from $150 to $300 in the purchase of ‘‘units’” of muskrats at the farms in 1929. The plan was for the company to run the farm and dispose of the pelts for profit. Judge Fleming, sub- stituting in quarter sessions Court No. 4, said the failure of business is not a crime, in Pennsylvania. —Some one was due for a surprise at Curwensville, on Tuesday, and it was Governor Pinchot who got it. The chief executive, in.an open car, rode through sub-freezing weather, to pay an unexpect- ed visit to a State road relief camp. Be- fore the Governor left Harrisburg, his office announced that the visit was to be a surprise in order that the chief ex- ecutive might have a fair opportunity to check up on the food and conditions, without camp attaches having advance warning. The weather, however, was so cold that only one workman showed up that day. The only others at the camp were the superintendent, the cook, two assistant cooks and two kitchen police. The camp normally takes care of several hundren men who are employed on State roads. —There are lots of people who can't afford to go to jail—but here's one who can't afford to leave. Walter Bridges, (Sunday evening, Sheriff John M.| cpaneysville, Bedford county, who has | Boob was sitting in the jail office peen occupying a cell in the Bedford non-payment | when there was a crack against one jail since January 25 for was able to drive it home with his the report of health officer 8. M.| of the office windows then a thud of taxes, is no longer a prisoner. He's | from some object falling upon the a mathematical jroblem, Ou the date of | : ound a | his arrest, Bridges ow: the county Sideporsh:. Golsg om he! flying $6.09 unpaid taxes, and $5 costs. Now ? he owes the county $38.39. For it is | against the window. He picked UP | sting Bridges just 63 cents a day to nside and gave it | gs y | the bird, took it i : | stay in jail. Back some time, shortly | after his arrest, Bridges’ friends raised what they thought was enough money. But then he owed for board and lodging for two days and they hadn't enough. Now Bridges is - resigmed to a life in jail. He figures that at 65 cents a day. in a year he'll owe the county $227.25; in 10 years, $2,27250 and in 100 years, he adds, (if you're Interested) he will owe the county $22725. Which ought to buy a new jail. released. ~The Undine Fire Co. will Patrick's day, with affairs among the local firemen and their friends.