The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, July 01, 1926, Image 2

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    West Point.
dinal Bonzano, 3—
academy at
Car-
NEWS REVIEW OF
Revealed to the Senate
Committee of Inquiry.
by EDWARD W. PICKARD
¥yrocosy rather than astonish-
ment was the emotion generally
of political
the senate
recent
Though
expended in the
Republican
! other of
aroused by the revelation
corruption made before
committee Investigating the
Pennsylvania primary contest.
the total of
campaign for
torial nominatior
extraordinary—in round figu
000,000—the fact that pol
tions the systone state
ten
money
the
Hices was
in
was not .
William
defeatad ! Senator Pepper
Pinchot for the n
"he rem
in the interest
Belidleman for
Heutenant governor, Wie
tary of in ; affairs
of con state
stat precinct
men « J
tion,
the
aint
governo
gressmen,
onstit
and a
of 5,000 candid
in
DOCes|ary
that I
ter-writing
newspap
against
backed
ivi
MITDOse ir
purpose in
the
ght
Ia
leaders
anizatic
Treasury
gaid In
ti ©
penditure
tial in
were paid
in great
these
the Pent
the
very
Inquire
an
committee
were
"ny
nu
In wi
ing
they
pred
tren
the report
the unt
scribed fr
Kline
some o
Harry Mac
Philadelphia and cl
Vare campaign committee,
and ghtened the
his frank testimony,
that any of the contenders in the
mary had spent a penny to buy
or that there was any debauchery of
the ballot box in Pennsylvania. He
asserted that Vare's candidacy was a
mere incident in the whole campaign
and that every cent af $506,000 or
more that was spent for the ticket
would have been spent If the senator.
ship had not been at stake at all
Wayne B. Wheeler, general counsel
of the Anti-Saloon having
etated publicly that liquor dealers and
wets generally had made large
tributions to the Vare eampalgn fund,
was promptly subpoenaed by the com.
mittee. Reed then had a chance to
examine Wheeler concerning the
league's pay roll in
political activities
names of many senators and repre
sentatives who are pald for dry
speeches were revealed,
nit
ously
but
of
the speech was tran
Aeee
gtenographic reports
have
uted to him
said
might
things attri}
s i ’
key, city treasurer of
the
entertained
committee with
but he
enli
pri-
Yotes
league,
con.
congress and
generally.
| Joust CARDINAL BONZANO was
| glven an extraordinary welcome on
{ his arrival in New York, Gov. Al
demonstration
of the pope. Monsignor jonzano
| then, with nine other cardinals
other high churchmen, was carried In
| a specially designed and decorated
train to Chicago for the
| Congress. There the party
hy cheering thousands and
through the handsomely bedecked city
in an impressive parade to the Holy
Name cathedral, where a te
was sung and the legate was forn
welcomed by Cardinal Mundelein,
Sunday the Eucharistic Congress was
pened by the of
was met
escorted
deum
celebration
thedral, which was la
orated. President Coolld
able t r *hicago,
the ca
ge Was
but was
of Labor Day
Woe Et om
Mini
wily
South and C
A DOPTING
for "existir g
Chiles government cabled
bas
the iplomatic
tlement of
Thus
pose that
lapsed, and ft
ton that the
blow the
states
its
hreak
for set
with Peru.
whole effort
dispute has
feared In Washing
will be a
prestige of the
throughout the western
The Chileans are enrag
ton to
negotintions
quarrel
the
old
the
seemingly
con col
ia
allure
United
hemi-
ged, and
fo
sphere.
and cheered leading members who
Lassiter and attacked
doctrine,
General
Monroe
and
the
chief alde to Marshal Pilsudskl,
in Cracow,
the the bullet
The count then
adversary’'s head and
wenpon without firing,
fired,
the count's scalp.
aimed at his
dropped his
| saying: "1
i and I don't want to kill. I refrained
| from firing. Whoever In Poland, In
general grazing
his honor or th
me
him
he
that
conscience, inks
and
I represent, let shoot.
won't shoot back.”
The referee the honor of
all parties had been vindicated, The
affalr grew out of the general's re
fusal to accept the ex-premier's prof.
fered hand after a political dispute.
decided
TINDER the terms of the debt-fund.
/ ing agreements, ten nations pald
into the United States treasury
week a total of $77,783,127 Great
iritain and Jtaly pald in securitie
Belgium, Czechoslovak Esth in
Hungary, Poland, Rumania
and Finland pald
Inst
Lithonia.
in cash
“OL. CARMI A.
THOMPSON of
Mrs
RETARY MELLON
S an he
corn
th blow
st of Reg
inson
Republi
the Det
dvantage
After
Re
situation, conference
Senator
of the
of leaders,
his party stand,
corn-bhelt bill,
measure providing
loans to prox
of American farm products
favor of tariff revisi for the
of the farmer. Senator Rob
inson called upon his fellow Demo.
crates and the dissatisfied western Re-
publicans to join now and keep con.
gress in until the tariff is re.
vised and arm relief legislation
passed, .
defined
is the
avor of the Carl
for gov-
ign
hinson
against
note fore
buying
mn
session
WELVE senators, mostly from the
lake states, have made an agree-
i
rivers and harbors bill because it ear
ries the authorization for the lllinois
link of the lakesto-the-gnlf waterway,
The filibusters are led by Willis of
Ohto and they planned to delay the
measure as long as possible in com-
mittee and to talk it to death on the
penate floor. Senator Deneen of IH.
nols sald the bill could not be killed
by such tactics, and house leaders
declared congress would not adjourn
until the bill was passed.
REVEAL ORIGIN
OF WILLARDS
“The
Do
it is?
Ask
the ay ‘rage
of
you know
Spirit
6°17
how
these questions of
and
head
pletun
American
he
He
enough i he
of Perhaps
shake his
Knows the
has
fores
1
pt
of that
would
tive
of his
ndertook
quently
of: fi pros
At 1 Suge
Willard
“"
1H
restion
one «day u
wthin cheerful, somet
This undertaking
popular picture
the attention of
I wer, and
labor
duce “son
comic resul
his first
work t
brought
to Cleveland's
freed him
of
wtograpl
the
leading p
forever
making.
“Pluck Number One” wag the title
given to this creation, and it suc
ceeded with the public largely because
it realistically portrayed childish eag-
erness and action. Willard's three chil
their soap-box cart, and their
dog, gave the artist his idea
It showed vividly the |
wild ride, trying their |
from wagon.
family
Payne’s Immortal Words |
“These are the times that try men's
The summer soldier and the
sunshine patriot will, in this crisis,
de- |
man |
is not
this
he that stands it now
love and thanks of
Tyranny, like hell,
yet we have
try; but
gerves the
easily conquered ;
the conflict the more glorious the tri
umph. What we obtain too cheap. we
NEWS
Now
Spirit
per
for
{
of iG,
the opening sition
redth
anni
of the Declara
tion of Independence, the terprisi
Ryder was looking
appropriate for such an oe-
something that
would be
casion.
Finally it. cs
he explained it
Doodle— just put
something, the more
ter,
the big show opens.”
to
to
him. It
Willard
Yankee
ori
ime Wag, as
“Yankee
Doodle into
ginal the bet.
esteem too lightly ;
that gives everything its value, Heav-
its goods; and it would be
strange indeed If go celestial an article
freedom should not be
Thomas Payne,
Why British Were Spared
Some historians state that
British,
bardmwent were mada Unofficially and
The pictur
nd ten feet
1875 in the studi
Euclid
high. It was
o of Willis Adams
Cleveland It was
unveiled at the centennial
year. Its first name, “Yankee
wae changed while the work
exhibition in Boston to its
“The Spirit of "78."
avenue,
¥
the next
Doodle,”
Was on
port of
between
informally a
into
agreement was
the opposing
embarkation they wonld
town substantially as It was,
There was no formal communication
bétween Washington and Howe, but
this was an understanding. Washing
algo, from want of ammunition,
wag obliged to use his artillery spar-
ingly.
on
The silky marmoset is a white mon.
key with orange ears \