oh ho ATT mame THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA. - . Page Six | STRANGE SUPERSTITIONS By Edwin Finch —_— — : sie SIAMESE BELIEVE THAT THE SUPREME JUDGE OF THE SPIRITUAL WORLD 1S CONTINUALLY TURNING PAGES (N A GREAT BOOK WHEREIN IS KEPT THE DEEDS OF EVERYONE, AMD WHEN HE TURNS THE PAGE OF EACH INDIVIDUAL THAT PARTY SNEEZE, HENCE THE SALUTATION "MAY THE JUDGMENT BE FAORABLE ToYou” RIF You WIDE AWAY PERSPIRATION WITH YOUR HAND YOu WIPE AWAY YOUR LUCK, \"YIHEN A SUPERSTITIOUS PARISIAN SPILLS SOME SALT HE THE CAUSE OF TRE ACCIDENT. WRITES LETTER TO EDITOR OF HARRISBURG NEWSPAPER Beshore, of Harrisburg, di- the Bureau of Rehabili- tation for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, wrote an interesting letter to the editor of the Harris- burg Patriot, which was published in Monday's edition of that news- Sy apel A 8S. rector of Mr. Beshore's letter writer a former resi- xfonte and Centre Hall, wn in Centre County, ise the subject of the let- of general interest. In Defense of Cripples To the Editor of The Patriot As Director of Vocational habilitation for the Common- wealth of Pennsylvania, permit me to reply to the alicgation widely publicized in connection with our Governor's “Safety iving Cam- paign,” that the lame are largely nsible for the many accidents that they must be taken from behind the wheel” Why place the reprint s the WE PEE es an ang blame upon the man with minor physical impalr- ments when, as a matter of fact, the persons largely responsible are * possessord ‘of crippled heads—eari®h niortunately, the State does not pe of driver? But it every crippled driver—all ally handicapped have a mark on their operators C. O., meaning “crippled op- n desiring specific in- mn relative to the menacing { C. O, drivers need but an investigation with the De- Revenue: and they urprised to discover that proportion of crippled drivers ived in accidents is insignifi- cant in comparison with those who hysically normal It is conspicuousiy inconsistent ments to spend upward of three for the State and Pederal Govern~ hundred thousand doliars per year to rehabilitate the disabled and thus assist them in becoming econ- omically independent through phy- steal restoration, education and prost and at the same time insist that even though they aré largély innocent of any transgres- sion they must be deprived of the one® pleasure that many crippled people can enjoy, that of driving a car; simply because” a few pre- judiced people insist that they are a menace, even though this is con- § trary to fact. If President Roosevelt lived in this State, he would be numbered among these unfortunates, The ! writer has driven a car for the past twefity<oneg years, nine times across the continent an average of more than twefity thousand miles per year, or more than four hundred thousand miles, and has Dever beet involved In a ma jor decident. He carries an operator's card + marked “C. O." * We have twenty-two thousand crippled drivers in the State. They are generally recognized as men of eourage; and, if they propose to compel these men to surrender this means of locomotion which has as- gisted many of them in earning a livelihood they will rise in their § might inh everlasting protest against this unfair discrimination. A. 8. BESHORE, Director Bureau of Rehabilitation Harrisburg, Jan. 20, 1938. ale hesi FAMED BUFFALO NICKEL IS DONE AFTER FEBRUARY We're going to have a new nickel the first in 25 years. The treasury announced yester. 4 doy “that the familiar Bulfalo nicks] will be succeeded by one honoring Thomas Jefferson, third presicient of the United States. The Inw says a nickel design can ! be issued only every 25 years Becretary Morgenthau decreed that the new nickel must show Jef- ferson's Iace on one wide and his f famous home, Monticello, on the other, Tom Mix Home Brings $450 The boyhood home of Tom Mix, movie and efrcus star, was sold for $450 at sheriff's sale. The original dwelling on the fa or red two Driftwood — EE | Britannia Standard Set for Silverware in 1696 During the last quayter of the Seventeenth century when the ex. travagant display of wealth at the court of the Stuart kings and in the homes of the nobility reached a height which caused historians to call it the “silver age," demand for plate became so great that silver. smiths, faced with a shortage of bar | gllver, melted down cains to get ma. terial for making their wares. Nat. urally, by the end of the century there was a distinct scarefty of coins and of silver for the mint, writes Alice H. Cutant in Amer} can Collector, Accordingly, in 1690 It de creed that all silver objects, other than colng, shotld be mdde of a higher standard than “sterling” namely 958 parts pure silver in 1,000. This became known as the “Britannia standard” because it was marked with the figure of Britannia in place of the lion pas- sant. It was enforced from 1600 un. til 1720. After the latter date, it was allowed if a craftsman wished to develop a piece In the finer metal Whenever this happens the piece is always marked with the figure of Britannia. Much of the “Jubilee” gilver was made in this standard. London is and always has been the most important assay town in Great Britain. From the year 1478 until the end of the reign of George IN in 1821, the matk was that of a leopard's head crowned. Since then the Jeopard's head uncrowned and looking more like the face of the famous Cheshire cat has been in use was Fragonard, French Artist, Patronized by the Court Jean Honore Fragonard, Eight centh century French master, fis best known for his sumptuous ple tures of the extravagances of the French court in the years before the revolution, notes a writer in the St Louis Post-Dispatch. Fragonard, born in 1732, enjoyed fame and the patronage of wealthy members of the French court in the days before the revolution. He dec. orated the apartment of Mme. dv Barry and one of his paintings, ac- quired by King Louis XV in 1765 when Fragonard was admitted Yo the French academy, is in the Louvre. The artist’ fled from Pavis in 1790, and when he returned, early in the Nineteenth century, lived in obscur- ity until his death in 1806, He studied under Chardin and Boucher and mastered Boucher's style so thoroughly that he was per. mitted to ‘do reproductions of his work. Later, after Ne had won the Prix de Rome, Fragonard was in fluenced by the paintings of Tiepolo. Thre Chameleon, The three-horned chameleon grows to a length exceeding 12 inches and the males appear to re. tain some of the characters of the prehistoric Triceratops, with three curious horns an inch to an inch half in length, protruding for- ward from the nose and between the eyes. These horns are used with extraordinary effect. The males are extremely pugnacious and fight fu. riously. At times the contests do velop into a tedious pushing match, when the horus are interlocked. At other times a really vigorous fighter will dispose of its adversary in a fow moments. The coloration of the males, chiefly brilliant blue, greem and yellow, is particularly vivid and atlractive. betel Oxygen, $aff of Life Oxygen, rather than bread, is the siafl of life. All vital functions re quire energy, and this energy is ob- tained when the atmospheric oxy: gen dissolved in blood attacks and cousumes the sugar and fat in the animal organisa. But oxygen is a deplorable nuisance when it takes a shart cut and attacks human food before we have had time to eat it. asserts an authority in the Chicago Tribune. This undesirable action of oxygen is not exactly the sathe ag that which takes place Wn ‘he boty. The latter 3 a complete oxidation, similar to burning. which the fat and sugar are entirely converted Into carbon dioxide and water -> Islands in Great Saf Lake Great Salt lake is about 75 miles long, with & maximum width 50 miles and covers an area of about 1750 square miles. The principal islands number seven and include Gurinison, Curringion, Fremont, Antelope, Stansbury end . Bird or Hat islands. They are gederally high and rocky and contain an abundance of bird life. The largest is Antelope island. 15 mites long, with a large cultivable ares, "on * ‘which is ogsted a cuttle mach and 1 Word Alcohol Has More —— i} i Than Only One Meaning | The word alcohol has two mean- | ngs. One refers to a volatile liquid | produced by the fermentation of | beverage, where alfalfs is successfully cults | vated Perfection The great Italian seuiptor; Miche) | angele] ‘was once visiied By un ae. qudintance, who remarked, on eb tering his studio: “Why, you have | : Hal | Heh fons to us, ** done nothing to that figure since I wis here ast" “Yes,” was the sion, touched off that projection, and made other improvements.” sald the visitor, “those are mete trifles.”” “True.” answered Michel i angele, “but remember that trifles make perfection; and perfection is ne trifle” i : * he state | yas. awa oe ‘ “On” | : : on boaffair™ ie reply: “I ave softened this expres. | $ifongest superistize | eountryromn ean find sugar solutions, which is used as a solvent, an antifreeze liquid, and a The other meaning is a fore general one devised by chem- ists; it refers to a class of orgaie corupounds, of which grain, or ethyl alcohol js one of the simplest memn- bers : The thing that distinguishes this group, ‘according to a writer in the Chieago Tribune, is the fact that its pambers contain a partnership | of an oxygen and a hydrogen atom, known as a hydroxyl group, in come | bination with any of a great num ber of combinations of carbon and | hydrogen atoms. The simplest | member of the alcohol family is methyl, or wood, aleohol (CH3IOH). Next comes ethyl alcohol (CZHBOH) | followed by propyl alcohol (CIHTOI, butyl alechol (C4HVOH) and so on indefinitaly. b . The lowest members of the group | in carbon content resemble ordinary ethyl Alcohol ‘In properties. As the | number of carbon atoms increases | the alcohols become progressively less soluble In water. Eventually they become insoluble oils, then in: | soluble, odorless waxes. Fatty acids are soluble oils or waxes outwardly identical with the higher alcohols that can be made from them. However, the molecular structure ‘is different: The acids consist of long chains of carbon atoms stadded with about double the number of hydrogen atoms. and at one end of the chain is a group of carbon, oxygen and hydrogen atoms known as a carboxyl group and represented by the letters COOH. “This is a group that gives the molecule its acid and soap forme. ing properties. Letters of the Alphabet Used to Mark Silverwars Toward the end of the Fourteenth century cities in England were priv ileged to sét up asshy offices. The mayor or. governzess in theve tities placed the stamp of quality on all silver that passed the required test The maker's mark was added and also one distinctive of the city where it was assaved. It is this letler that gives the age | of a piece of silver, write} an aw thority in the Log Argeles Tunes. In 16680 a chart was arranged and adopted by the Worshiplal Cofupany | of Goldstuiths for ready relerence for all concerned. On May 30 of | eich yéar a new punch was brought | «itito use, and for twelve months TL lowing every piece afssved beurs one letter of the alphabet. In Lon don the cycle is always twenty Jets ters, beginning with A and ending | at U, the letter J being omitted. To prevent! confusion the style of the letter is changed Tromn cycle to cycle. A further distiiction is ob | tained by changing the shield by which the letter is surrounded. The | use of a letier lo indicate the dale bas prevailed since the reign of Fd- | ward IV. The type used has beth Blackietler, Roman, Lotnbardie, Italics and Court. The custom hak been generally followed and pro. | vides a helpful mark of identifica. tion War Cry of Crusaders The battle cry of the Crusaders was "Dieu le véul" pronounced in the language of the thre, “Dien volt.” According to “"Oue Thousand Sayings of History,” it arose during the ecclasiastical council? called by Pupe Urban IT at Clermont-Ferrand in France, on November 28, 1005 After Peter the Hermit hud spoken to the muliituidle gathered in the square, Urban 24i-=gsed them from a high throne, concluding with “If your must Have blood, bathe your hands in the bicod of the infidels. | Soldiers of hell become soldiers of the living God" The knights rose in one great wave and rattled thelr sworsls, © “Diet le veut” meaning “God wills {t") rose the cry from avery (hroat and wpe first Crusade Began. According Yo this mithority, | while Peter the Mermit's predching infivenced a rabble following. the | real tropetus’ was @ven by Urbee II and the &xy “"Diew Je veul™ Mohammedan Prayers The Mohammedan prays to God five times each day. Before a pray or is ‘begun. he perforfog certal religious purification préparations, witieh muy be of two Kinds: he “ghusl™ or toll Immersion of the body 6 the “wudu,” a partial abhs | tion, which consists of washing the | hands, face, tars and fect up to the apkles, If water is not available | sand may be used. The five pray. | Urs are: the “fajr™ (said at day- | Prophecies,’ bleu, \ | Were | was passed only fo . . -asp . “Mother Shinton" Poem First Appeared in 1641 | pact “Nother Ehinton's | 2 '* or that paft which prophiesios about ‘carriages with. out horees™ and alrships, as if ap. | peared from thne to time toward | the middle of the last century iy given here: Carriages without! horses shalt go And aceldents 611 the world with | woe, Around the world thoughts shall fiy | In the twinkling of an exe * *¢ ¢ Under water men shall walk, Shall ride, shall slecp. shall talk, In the air mew shall be pean, In white, inh black, in green: Iron i the water shall foal As easily as a wooden boat, And the world to an end shall come In eighteen hundred and ofghiv.one, | These last lipes caused 20) ing of 8 commotion among the eredus but’ the vear came and wont vithout eslmnit! wir Shipton x a chara winewha! doubtful The tradition je that in Yor JTC of indifle dige gO ere The A. 4 0» Wi! Lid dot ter of mithontictty, | she wos bom } mn 1408 rand school d sa rio er teact )¥ hér |} ‘ marred a Supa when she thal she Correctly ihe time of her death, which y #aid to have occurred in 1561 the suggestion that she wind entirely a fictitious pérsonage, there 2 8 #tone near Shipton, Eng. Lined. voltich ‘bears thie epitaph: Here lies she that never I¥'d skill 50 often has been try'd shall stil survive, Ad ever keep her name alive propuécy”’ first pubs lished In London, anonymously, In 1641, which wal 80 years after the reputed date, of her death Dred thal she Thot worry Sour. foretold was and Deéspite Her prophacies Her was i Amazon Valley Natives First Users of Rubber OF TU er rats Calrigse tyes, an nilat produced in Engl i first pleut to produce lar lice of rubber aru tablished in Roxbury, At first rubber articles ali batic defect—they were sensitive to teriparature ‘cifange=s. “The refried, vileanization of rubber, wis discoy- eréd by Thurles Goodyear [nn 1839 Gon dyear found thit by ribber be could ‘make ft perma gently Bfexiblt and mnmaffecied by | temperatire conditions After this dlrcovery” tictorics sprang up in New England fo make robber booty and shoes and wales proof falrivs With the coming of fic automobile and edoption of! mass Production methods factories were set up throughout the com 10 feet needs for tres, tubes, and other accessories, he “les was Mais heal ry White Bread for Nobility In ancient days it was only in tre hitigelioldy of ‘thie nobility iat while bread wat starved. Even (herd i the family and guests who sat above the salt This type of bread in Elizabethan times war Known ad “matchet™ 1 was often regefved for feast days while the family #t other Umés ate a whale wireat bread from which the codrsest hran bad been taken. For ome unknown reason this bread was called “chedl™ The tapk bregds for the evrmmon people dere, however, made from coarser grains. the west quality containing very Bittle fowr. Bread dn olden | times was judged Ly color, texture and Saver, Grammar Written in Hebrew The fizst Hebrew grammar to be blished ir America was wriltsr 1798 By Judah Modis, n rabbi, who, under the infherice of lnerease | Mather and others, ermbraced the bristian ti" He was tie fra | fefctier “of Hehrew In Wie country and 3 member of the faculty of Harvard college during the Eight | eenth gentufy. ‘His ®ork recalls he tardy days when Hebrew, lke Lotin ard Greek, was § requirement of 4 | cultural or geatleman's education Raficodlish, ib phfbuothy, ie de fined ap Dé Moory hat reison is a sbtirce of knowledge Mm itself su. | perior to and Independent of serve perception; in theology, it is defined | &3 an explanation according to rea. ron of what appears superfatural | Rationalization in psychology is de. | fined as the act or Practice of max | ing up plausible reasons 10 expluin prayer are announced by the mues. | zing from the minarets of the mosques. English Just us American peculiar 10 the Epgiib, sa trugic and ‘Dartowing. ‘a is far strongdr hab “very.” “A tidy few” may be many. “a bit of a draft,’’ a strong gale, and “a drop too much,” a de to oneself or others bahavior for which one's real motives are dif. ferent and unconscious ON City of Grecve * Corinth Is one of the oldest cities | as aficient af the pyra- It way » city he ——— g ' na , such as “Lightning.” |, shall January 27, 1938 Variety of Names Given to Old Canadian Coaches : The days of leisurely journeys by | horsesdrawn stage coach are a thing | ofthe past, but, né doubt, oir fore. fathers enjoyed traveling In stage coathes with their es, observes a Montreal” Herald. Some characteristic names were “Reliance,” ‘The Gdod Intent’ “Accommodation.” ‘‘Clock-Work,"” writer in the | and “The Regulator.” These names seem ‘to hold out a guarantee of regularity and punctuality Two coaches which used to run were named respectively Spitfire and Vixen. Perhaps the appropri- atencss of these names is apparent when if is recorded that these two fan in opposition to one another Deflance was 4 common pame in use during the stage coach period, and , was, withal something more than a mere name; it really amounted to a challenge, defying, as | it were, all competitors on the road, Sporting ndmes were also used to a Targe extent. Such ‘were “Tally Ro." “Tantivy,” "Highflyer,"' ‘Hie. over,” “Higiwmettled Racer” and YFlying Childers.” The lgtter ap parently took its name fram a fa mous racehorse of the period, A wellknown and favorile stage coach wis named ‘“‘Peveril of the Peak. '' Its great rival was named “The Royal Bruce. Another elass of names included “Quicksilver, “rélegruph,’’ “Express,” and “Swiftsure.” Some of ‘the stage coaches were named after the famous people of the period, and here we have “Lord Kelson,” "“Corawallis,” “Rodney,” “The Prince of Wales,” and “The Duke of Wellington.” Two rather significant names were “Give and Take," and ‘Live and Let Live." Term “Dunned” Known as Far Back as Henry VII It is unfortunate but by no means gmeommon to be “‘dunned™ for taxes end other debts, Irritated cit. izens, however, can console them- by reflecting that the word far back as the selves “dun'' originated as reign of Henry VII observes a writer in the Montreal Herald, there was a bailiff of 4 city of London who rejoiced in the name of Joe Dunn. 50 successful wos Joe Duin in getting money out of delinguent deblors thet the mer chants of that day used 0 say: “1 bave Ww Pun him” when they resolved ss a last resource to take proceedings to recover their debt. Hence the name of this pio. neer professional collector of debts erept gradually into the language, antl tt was adopted to signify wr get and persistent demands for payments. Slang is frequenfly more expres. tive than orthodox English. The word “skedaddie’’ i 8 care in point , In an old Bible printed in Yreland #hout the Cromwellian period ap- peared: “For it is sritten } will shite the shepherd, and the sheep of the Sock shaM be squadadal,” vidusly a misprint for “stattered.” The word evidently impressed itself on the minds of the descentiantis of the Cramwellian troopers who had seitled in Ireland, and so reached the New World, and eventually be- came enshrined in the language. Ab that ob- Indian Archers The Indisn archer cartied his ar rows in a quiver usually made of skin, but sometimes of tough bark: this was slung at his back or side and was large enough to hold from fen to twenty arrows. The feathers used for making the vanes on the shafts were taken from the wings of wild geese, turkeys, eagles, vultures and herons, for which reason these birds were much sought after. Boys from infancy were tavght the use of weapons, but thelr arrows were pointed with heavy wood instead of stone or ‘bone. They were able to Ef seriall Birds, and in the clear water of shallow streams they wad. ed 4nd shot fish, of ‘whith they were very fond, often eating them raw. Agiiclse Namen of Cities One of the interesting by-products of travel according to an authority, is the realization that the names by which we know European cities are, in most cases, Anglicized versions of the names by which they were christened True, no geography book is needed to help one ferret out the identity of Roma with Rome, Milano with Milah and Ggiova with Genoa! put ‘pot’ all Americans know that hometown residents eall Florente | pot Florence ‘but Firenze; Venice, Veneria, and Leghorn, Livorah, Nor fy It so ®hsy to ‘spot &t a glante goch ¢fties as Wien, Anvers snd Kolt—known in this vountry as Vi Grind, Autwery end Cologhe—unless you've actually heen there. ey picturesque | Lights of NewYork By L.L. STEVENSON A peculiarity about New York is that there is no right side or wrong | side uf the tracks, In the midst of slums, exclusive, high-rent colonies may be encountered. Tudor city is one example. The society of the did-dime arigtocracy clusters in the ride strects off Fifth avenue. But only for & few blocks In the Sixties ad Seventies. These side =treets in turn shade off into ordinary apartments and as they proceed on cast, change to tenements. And the further east, the more dingy and populous the structures. So Tony Cabooch, who makes $18 a week may live on the same street as a scion of a first family with an in- come’ from millions, Park avenue, where the money aristocracy dwells, has two business sections One dignified, domineering and sub- stantial." The other, away up where the rallroad tracks rige from sub lervanean depths. Jo those same {rack who formerly dlers $ efsll i. Bla Hs under were » . LJ Filth avenue, witlin th yeurs, has changed con character so far as res concerned. As is well oid marble mansions have almost all given place 10 towering apart ments. Society and wealth reside in some of the apartment bulldings magy of which sre co-operative that is, owned by the tenants. But as Fifth avenue goes on ups t changes in character as The homes and hu apartments give way to tenements. Mayor F. H LaGuardia lives on Fifth avenue but beyond the fashionable stretch and Just below the te: Ard not mary blocks from the mavor, after One Hu n has beer crussed, Fifth avenue resi dents are colored wi, does Park ements r nared and Tenth street In the 1argest Nodern siruclures are su by tenements. Also many a ture that looks modern ts merely a lenement in a new . eled into a modern state. But with the same old bricks in and the same old foundations with much hig dress—remod hy walle But err » . . Another peculiarity of New © iz that so many residents don't | like story or screen versions of city slickers. Instead, their general ap pearance is very similar that of residents of the old home town. The reason, of course, is that most New Yorkers did come from sone other town. Another reason is that the New Yorker is no different from anyone else Scratch Broadwayile and you reveal a hi When O. Henry had his gentle gr er, Jefl Peters, remark he hated % work old games in New York be- cause it was too easy, be hit the nail right on the head. indeed 10 City types there are in abundance A Iittle search, however, reveals the pophisticate, the social light clety playboy. First nights py bunting grounds. B others. Coming from a furhion; doctor's office the other afternoon 1 noticed a dowager with more than @ trace of a mustache and a stout golt-headed Tans she wos helped into a car that cost 4 Jot of or 20 years ago. A grand deme right out of the pages the 3 little farther along. 1 noted a Newlyrich, fresh from an beauty paris: and decked out fortune fn furs. poise and diguity of the the limousine. Great York. the so are hap he 1 it there ar OY. of past EXT vE ma without the id lady of Wwwn, New But In a midtown club the other night, Alice Cornel! got into a con versation with a famous movie pro- ducer “T think you are doing a grand job ih Hollywood." she offered. “T guess it’s because you put your heart into your work." “You bet.” came the quick reply “She's been in my last three pic tures.’ * - » Overheard in Times square. ‘She thinks he's the boss of the depart ment, so she goes out with Bim, and the next day finds but he ain't the boss—he's only the son of the DRAIN WATER FROM TUNKELS ON ALL-WEATHER ROUTE | Completion of the first gontract op the projected Carlisle-Pitls- burgh super<hlghway was reported ‘today hy the state turnpike com- The contractor, George Vang. Ine, Pittsburgh, drained impound - od water from the 16 flooded tun- nels along the 162-mile right-of - way of the old South Penn rall- road abandoned a half-century age {by Col. Willlmn H, Vanderbilt ana | associates after the project was | fiveseighths completed, | "Three other tunnels along the | ronte that will be enlarged to earry higliway have | a new outlet for his steel plants at | Pittaburgh, PAINTERS GO MODERN IN PROTHONOTARY'S OFFICE Next time you of Prothonota Court Hot notice a marked change in pearance of the room mark the change down as another 4 rhe § ff rire : { the march of progress the the ap- You can t evidence « di~ and some House fin- Prothonotary” jommissioners decided of lighting engin- » remodeling the Pro- rdance under the MeGinley hu for the Court when thes A crew ol painters rection of A. L gong, have Leen time repainting of floes ished office: to heed a cers, and 1 thonotary {fices in acco thelr suggestion sual cream color and walls, and the woodwork green woods finished, elec the ndere ispended UNIFORM BUDGETS FOR ALL STATE BOROUGHS LITLE HED 1B8Y HEIGHT OF ECONOMY Pork Loin Ends - - Pork Chops - [b Pudding - Scrapple - Souse - - Sausage - ¢ Centre Slices Pork Liver Sauerkrout, Ib 4¢ Spare Ribs, |b 15¢ Neck Bones, Ib Sc Pig Feet - Ib 5¢ ornare 1h 18¢ ib 25¢ 1 Ibs 19¢ ze P rt OYSTERS Stewing - pt. 22¢ Frying - pt. 27¢ FILLETS 3 ibs 29¢ OLEO-Winner Brand - PRINT ROLL BUTTE 3 lbs 39¢ 2 Ibs 75¢ 2 Ibs 73c¢ LARD-Best Pure - - - 2 lbs 23¢c HEINZ DILL PICKLES - 4 for 10¢c CHICKENS-fresh killed - 1b 29¢ Shop and Save at Winner Markets ! Macaroni & Spaghetti - 41b 25¢ Spry or Crisco. .Ibcan 21¢c 3 Ibcan 53¢ Michigan Pea Beans. 4 Ibs 19¢ Campbell's Tomato Soup. .3 cons 20¢ Dried Prunes, 50-60’s. 2 Ibs 13c¢ P.&G. SOAP - - 10 cakes 35¢ SPECIAL FLOUR VALUE PILLSBURY 20h sack O95¢ Jumbo Bread Sliced and Wrapped 3 we 25¢ NEW LOW PRICES ON FRESH ROASTED COFFEES ! Grandpas veo 2 Ihs 29¢ Winner rewmnw 2 bs 33¢ Don Roca wo 2 Ibs 39¢ Colonial Club SALTINES, Cello Pkg. - Ib 17¢ Silver Floss SAUER KRAUT N.B CGC 2=2Y2 cans 19¢ SHREDDED WHEAT .2 pkgs. 23c¢ C—O AT Produce Prices Slashed ! Penna. Potatoes - - - peck 2lc Tangerines, 176s - - doz. 15¢ Icebe Giant QUAKER ky Scratch Grain » [INNEREMARKET Lettuce - 2 heads 15¢ § ascal Celery - stalk 10c
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers