THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, PRL EFONTE, PA § 2 Wo. a 3 December 8 1933, a Page Six . hile aes a Tourist Business Normal in State Survey Reveals Pennsylvania Entectained Largest Num- ber of Travelers LT Pennsyivania*held its st business during the while practically every in the country sl This Is the result of a by OrspreN: Rileman, ¥ retary ab the Penns ubliglky Contmission Mr.” Ritaman upon State-wide repor tourt business in rants orvice station contended had there was a general business condit ic the tourist or vacation u ness did not below volume of £400,000 .000 Souvend SN it country dropped 1937 figure In ania’s nel ring travel BIS a thes own In ours 1918 season other state decrease made Hee Wedd nn rvey xecutivy Ivania his esiunate concerning Ais based NOLES, LANA It slump in bit t but that is wel busi fall 1937 during the 1988 lnilhed, all over the 11 percent below one ‘of Pennsylv- ites where the industry e sales dropped even lower. In Pennsylvania however al of souvenirs in 1938 equalled the 1837 volume. * In ne of the State small increase was in evi season aor ON dence Mr. Ritz be easily £100 000 000 Penn yx rman predicts that It wil Pox an extra busine in 1939 New J 4] ADDIo- rea the Ma m of the acti ing pro- wich v w Commi hs of April and m of £50.000 y Commis- lar purpose of cti hrough Pennsyi- vania on theh to or from the Workd's Fair. Out of its 1937 ap- propriation the Commission will also ha £ "in (5.8.4) 1 ¥ tried tourist i Prisoner Escapes, 2 Others Caught (Continued from page one) fven checking tool CRC ~1 be loca guard him did not attempt 1 rr eq condition. no al he whe i make morn Pd he fxiled to rance by 11:30 that alarm Way owned * aff began Ll Bloodhounds trace on IN Othery view vember Taken prisoners the aa {summer wee week. Deputy RI YO ad on July police at Both arrested and up offic’als whether to face whether they wiled to stand chses committed fled from Rockview in the custody of Francisco, California are believed hive been while commit crimes, nti] last tockview who 13. Sah 1s to inf rey ins nal 5 1 wotyled returned of ¢ be charees will first or the time of Trainor 3) pa f his escape last serving a term On a burglary He was was yearn eny county teamster at Rock- morning of the to a iree fled June of from 5 to cou nt in _ Allegh emplo ¢ view 1 404 he tied his team near the pr through the Cooper, wrving for burglary was employed on 150m woods fram 4 Lo 10 vears Allegheny oounty, the Rockview saw- mill. One Ju afternoon he quiets ly left the gang with which he was working and eflected liberty MORE THAN 113 CHRISTMAS TREES ALONG TOWN'S STREETS pwnd ariel m ite his Bellefonte pleted the 100 evergreen section of town as a holiday season Most business placed in front of them lighted at So far 113 cedar erected and it is bts men w program. H. © the commitiee in ort stated have com of more than the business part of the decorating program places have trees on trex iy fees In of nig trees have been hoped that more iil cooperate in the Yeager. who heads charge of the dec¢- iness ions cg large trees form a triangle at the safety gone on the Diamond and another large tree has been placed on the lawn 4€ the library bullding on N. Allegheny street Community singing will be held at the library be the week before Christmas itdine Ging - Wilh Inherit Fortune A former Altoons be a millionaire. Earl ¥ who for some time lived in city Will share in an eight million dollar estate as will soon Maloney. mab Lady Isabel Crichton-Stuart estate will husband, Earl mes The her ren and two child- es Mm — Moves to Pleasant Gap. Ur. F. M. Henninger, formerly of Btate College, who several months ago agpened offices bungalow al Pleasant Gap, Monday moved hig family to that town from Btate College. The offices will re- hain unchanged, the family occupy- ing the remainder of the dwelling. Ea CRE » Price reduetion womens shoes-»| dellars in eurreney was-found ohder | Yeager's. ¢ Plate and most : that | the result of the | death of his wife who was the for- | be divided among | in the Strunk | A Christmas “Aunhoning Kather ine Edelnan TITH Christmas near why drawing we get Mmaxoe read no ation, he back cant and Hon fogeth With calm delibe ly scrawled letter Hal." he r he never wn, t-of way had just talk he lunch- wht called ne in oe x mai! 2 familiar He opened t could Miss about? His an artistic naervalive sro) That was Fleanor n ( ed Was back in vyhaody was up H vbe crazy? ¢ through his n sod real sense i was he who la to Forget Business He Said “We're Going for Today,” tin read the letier in a “Let's give Dad and surprise of their lives and make one grand then. You can lum to someone else for This ¢ he different m Mother f.ot's gO Christmas for everything over a week—anyone can handle things like that—there's nothing personal or precious about them.’ Nothing about then!" ood the down personal or precious He turned the wards over in his mind. Hal was right Sameone could handle the things that had seemed so teriibly important. A few hours of confi gion, perhaps; then things would go as before. The world would for. get him in a day His fingers reached for the pen pon his desk Dear Hel" he began, "1 heartily agree with your proposal that we get together and make plans to'give Dad and Mother the biggest surprise and the grand: est Christmas ever~"" He was smil ing broadly, almost! laughing aloud, 25 he Anished the letter with a fourish Five minutes later Miss Denby eniered his private office to find 2 new Robert Dutton She almost dropped her book in surprise ‘al the expression upon his face, and the new way which he gresled elae in ner I'm on.’ made no mo of the dey We're going lo for today, Miss Christmas shopping want to help me ou! He fumbled with his tie as he spoke, noticing for the first time the soft curving of her while neck. "Your Christ mas card’ gome miracle business and making maney ever¥ihing in life. They're both Rne in their way, but there are other things, too; precious things that I've been overlooking.” He came closer ready’ to begin, Mr. ‘Dul she began nervously, when he m lo start the rouling business Denby. and go that is. ¥ you forget i've found out that Eyes. For instance, able secretary.” i © Western Newspaper Union a. — Relief Client Has $1,000, Slate Weillare officials of Okla«! homa are asking for the return of | {$512 paid to Joseph Johnson and his | iwife for old-age assistance, Upon | jthe death of Johnson, a thousand ithe wall paper in his home. he went on '‘wrought | mt to her side and Jooked hard into her | going shop | ping with a good-looking snd ador- | Wy yr | PIEMAKING CHAMP BOASTS } MANY KINDS Concocts 150 Varieties Out of Cherries Alone. Toronto. ~Monrce Boston Strause, a salary of 5100 a day, a cham of Toronto sandwich shops to al how fo make ore u ting the Sirause eats pie all the time and his waistline has not suffered from his gustatory exploits which earned him t of world's piemaker. He has ple contests and created new kinds of pie that he member them all ples 1 public palate champion 0 Many £0 many can't re ie Lille won have vated 1 he held the it nade He claims to eli pies ar secret vears before ' He recipe w orig n 1 sak for came “public Kn oul of the and traveled 30.000 miles in ar tw show and restau rants how to ma them He av erages that distance every year, Out of a Job in Los Angeles, his hon he heard about a $35. 000 prize offered for the best pie made in California, He went to the i & prominent hotel with a Jd they divided the $25, four hye wledge tune hile 1 hotels ke e town, yy Strause is of it. 1 have a good complexion and marvelous diges tion. T always tell people who say gives them indigestion to Uy pie firat and the rest of the They get indigestan just but if they eat only the pie they don't. It's overloading that ng, not the ple y kints of says the pis king. “1 ones every few days, I'm standing walch Out of cherries 30 kinds in we | cil food, pie eatu mcal last he same Rives Lhem the Nob dy knows how mal pie ere are thu ug ” usually while Ing a baker work and pineapple 1 made one lea Mt f cherries al ne Stra lieves that bakers make Mother was good, but not as i. The pie cham plon “gneaked™ hia pies into a score of big eonlexts and in every case won from the amateurs In Chi cago he won a contest in which 2.540 ples were entered Yousannot change Straus i. ise 4 the best pies consisting s mind ' as a dessert ple ops Indian Princess Learns Archery at University lem, Ore. Sitting Bull's grand daughter had to enroll in college to learn to shoot a bow and arrow The kinsy : y chief! whe fourht Cu in n recent wornan of the Sioux Is tet to Use utheastern Mon history i» now a Willamette university stand" | in here The young princess fromn Culbert son, Mont, has displaced her In. dian naroe, “Waste Agidiwihn' for the simple title of Evelyn Welsh Her Indian name translated means ‘Bring Pretty,” or, mare literally, that sone day she must do some. thing to bring honor and distinction to her tribe Miss Welsh has been prominent in Willametie student life. She i= nae tional historian of Daleth Teth Gim. mel organization for independent women, was twice president of the university's International club, and tokes active part in all choir and glee club activities Although her Mother of Ger man descent and her father pert French, she considers the Sioux tribe her people. Miss Welth was reared on a large Montana cattle ranch where she learned to shoo! and ride Sly, Long-legged Turkey Is Back in West Virginia Charleston, W. Va.—-The long-leg- ged variety of turkey-—one of the ie big reasons why the Pilgrims were | thank{ul—is reappearing West Virginia m The state conservation commis | sion has liberated more then 3.200 of | these birds in the stale game pre. serves during the last thres years The birds are exceptionally cunning and seem fo have 2 knack of svad. ing ‘the hunter. Twelve nimrods were set loose this seasen under the surveillance of game protectors, but only six were able io bring down one of the turkeys. Treasure Hunt on Cycles White Plains, N. Y.—-The Istest development in the new bicyels fad is the “"bicyele treasure hunt.” This sport was originated here when 130 girls at the College of Our Lady of Good Counsel staged a hunt on their campus Debate at 14 Cents 8 Word Victoria, B. C.«A mathematician in the parliamentary press gallery here has figured that every werd spoken by a member of the legis lature costs the laxpayer fourteen cents. Pearl le Too Large to Suit Its Owner Bombay-—-On the shore near Darwin an Australian seaman re. cenliy discovered a pearl so large that it I» doubtful he will be able te dispose of il. Peclect in shape and eolor, the gem is larger than a pigeon egg. It in too large for a ring. and can not he matched for a necklace. Thue lar Indian dealers have re. fused ta.setf a value on it - Berwick Plant Gels Ovder The Berwick plaht of the Athers ican Car and Foundry Company tlingworth, has received an | ufacture dof 00 [Ia iby the Bessemer Railroad, § for he man- i 3 q cars, for Mee Hospital, and Lake Erie day, where she co "ROME IS HONORING ITS FIRST EMPEROR Fame of Augustus Cele- brated in Great Exhibit. 1] ] telling i gusius fret now exhibit whieh | Halipns and to room building gionale ruler Me Aas cinpero ine ig celebrated ring th irisis to a Rome's it he new mn Na: “The exhibit contains of 1 lens odes cum eces recall ng the ‘(; vhich collection Pp v Augustus Geng reig Nat ional Two raphie hundred se well as ral replicas of historie ob and mard! seums in | seve ecls & NOW preser rope and As “The Rome August MAD inhabitant lived a social, mw ed marble ¢ flecked Wealt crowds Romans laces 1 an in thei teemed Its outdoor | togar thro yades and 8p ashing were folle ite woolen with men of friends an spent moje 1 tiey met! their frie ircures hey © and gla made snerif alched « (RE RE al conte rs to the gods ples i he; rad " the latest and con emi news {i gurled the ire Roman Tearment Houses “One of is a furnished rep! Moy 1's home usually built around a» those In Pompe private “Pose gether in | ally from four 10 and cbilained lie fountains he of frequent them ) wd unin ane or waler su rer elasses I "teneme sever ple » Ff Nimes tion and elar "Augustus thal he found lel It of murble mere i other build ar Still standing In modern Rome ide remaine of the Portico of Oetasly Jet nd naméd for 4 ihe foe rf 15 iy built me. Lis In dedi t staid vo Lave } ted Rome of brie and He rebuilt fg. if temples and reeflus, finish med for % Public Werks “More than his re tn his sub important memorials were the He drai ‘ry, ne Squeducts per public works the sure nding malarial ¢ repaired the hu at spar and built new ones He co cted good roads into the Cils Wine wagons rolled over them an do now. Into the 2x0) poured corn from Sieils ther eommodities from Sardinia. Alrics, and the East. From Egypt Augus- tue Drought obelisks to adom Rome's public plates, and from AL rica wild beasts (0 be slaughiered, hundreds al a time, in the arenas “In an #fert V4 reform Rome, the emperor organised 8 strong police svete. He glso extended the boun. davies of the Roman empire. In the Forum he set up » golden mile tlane from which distances were measured 10 every part oi the pros. fnees. The Mediterranean, Be folt was his lake, and most of the lands ge st ined 1 ghey they . and | surrounding it were made Reman | His mailed legions went | clanking through what is now Yuge. | provinces, shavia, Spain, France, and Germa. ny. his fleels sailed the Rhine and Danube, lished fortified colonies, triumphal arches, brifiges and aqueduct: were built, give remain, scattered throughomt | Exdrope, recall the sivength and tse dignity of the Colden Age.’ Invented Braille System fn 189 Louis Breille. a Wy Frenchman, made [1 possible other sightless to read and He invented the Braille wherein combinations of six raised dnts on paper stand for the various letters of the alphabet. Braille almost the universal “langusge the Hind, Phakespeare's works er classics, printed in H for writs ‘of oh even Magazines are Farm Laborers Young Washinglon <Farm laborers aoe young compared with other vecypy | tianal groups, according 10 a recent | survey in 11 states by the Depa. | ment of Agriculture. More than ong | third of the farm laborers included | tn the survey were between the spey | of twenty and twenly-nine years old | and two-thirds were under forty, | Minister's Daughter Has Operation Marion Elizabeth, Tive-year.old {daughter of Rev. and Mrs. Ralph W. of Pine Grove Mills i%as taken fo ‘the Johns Hopking | Baltimore, Md, on Bug. was scheduled undergo an operation Tuesday, 1 | operation was for the removal of Read the classilied ads snd profit is kidney. and wherever he eotuh. | Today, their erumbling mag. | {hig sled left the side of a hill and | svelem 1 in BE Flying Money" Nying money" re The term * is given {| by the ancient Chinese {0 currency, | i not : al en 2.000 years before Christ refer to their general use Probably the oldest of these ancient bills is one in the So. viet m at Leningrad, issued by the Imperial Bank of China in 1399 It is signed by & mandarin and, besides the dale num ber and a ligt of penaltie he aspnption that bar a modern development is Chinese ncy chronicle writ iseum has » sg for « nin ferfeiting a_i. Ancient Custom in Fgypt In ancient | it for sister way i yt the to at least his half sis custom hi In order Wo» In n Chara pharaoh ol guard he scent ie tions breed gela, the b that the aird Largest Island i ed large id [Bur Bb) en the Uare-miling and New Gu est spots on ea a veritable C ter Duich Ww » Greet One of the a few ears ago, arden of Fden and B ed 8 rt) pletely tan the wild tiger and TE and beauly fie » reir o ~ preme ———————————————— —— Guiana Has Many Rivers Gulana, properly understood belt of jungle country ered live respec and such an jaguar and the }§ mils 8 Parag iL Persons Whe Are Bern Deaf Persons who are born deaf grow dent r Ta ing he s guage Becords cent of the persons ad deal paretst nal about 8 born dea! Brandpar $ eal-gr parents, not Jer in the Pi € al Deafness is tun ug : clone relativ deal, heredity that one ol of resulting from 830 prove fo be deat eve the firiow the Rio Grande interesting how the Mexican refer to Americans “Gringos.” During the Mexican many of he America ments going South from wsreas in Geo nas and Kentucky, by Scotch emigrants marched inlo Mexico they sang Robert Burns' song in which ap. pears tas line: “Green Grow the Rushes, Oh!™, repeated again and again. The Mexicans mispronounced the first two words and evolved “Gringo.” I i Jeon ie came to war regi. ited aro were recru ria, the C largely peopled As they Fskime Mukluks Mukluks are boots worn on long gnowy trailer in winter; they are made of deerzkin, padded with sweet grass incide and beautifully beaded and dyed The Fakimo women soflen the toles of the boots by chewing the hide for sewing. If they are not sewn properly walter ing may set in. The most popular Eskimo gir] is one who has strong teethghe getzx all the beaux. vari MI A injured Lad is Placky In a coasting accident near the ireland school, Millon, R. D. 2, the face of 10-year-old Robert Boop was pierced by a sharp stick, when ran into a bank. The stick, which fnre | {entered the Jeft cheek near the oor- | inner of the mouth and emerged near {the left ear. was pulled out by the | plucky youngster, who was Inter treated by a physician for the pre- | vention of tetanus. The lad is the | {son of Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Boop i Cop's Guess Was Right | when W. J. Farley, of the Milton i la “hunch” forgot that he was using the license of the owner of the trugk, Gilbert | D. Evereit, of Olean, and wrote his | own name. Cornish, alsa of Qlean, is a prison. sonating the owner of the vehicle, —— —————— men-folk of Bellefonte go Lo church is at they oun funyrals, This is, perhaps, a bit late The local merchants are beginning | to display Christmas merchandise | and we suggest that you look their | goods over before deciding to trade ‘out of Lown, Meeting the family’s bills is enough 10 take the “fal” oul er. { detail of Btate Motor Police, played | and asked the driver of | CHRISTMAS SEALS a truck to wrile his bame, the man | | and castern Colorado i could lilerally : Accordingly Reginald | or in the Nerthumberland county jail. He was unabic lo pay the fine | of $10 for failure to have an oper- | ator's license and $50 for imper- About the only lime some of the | wi ome —_ Pere Marquette Picture Crowns 200-Year Search Milwaukee, Wis A for » porirait Jacques Marquetie through Fraoee, United Slots 8, has been in the opinion of sutl quetle university her A painting cepled as ab famous mi 20). year of Pere extending nd the ded, search Canad; dur been made by J watkes artist to the mm of the tercents 4 umver connection cites birth In 1900 an 5 i Ir wi pul High School Boys Take Home Economics Course ' 1 ast f Dust Bowl Will Bloom, Says Reclamation Expert A ie V s of pa Kansas Red Wheat Came From Two-Gallon Hoard fa ff Mennonites gr rr ii 1n see Ci the 1 er was planted war the seclion and In a Crop #0 unrelia to grow it had pract shandoned Surprisingly American neighbors of the Mennon ites, the "Turkey Red” wheat war known, flourished remarkably Additions] acreage the following year, from the seed nished by the first crop. and its suc. cess was #0 great thal American type grow the high plains it ble that allem cally wheat Nas pis been in the as i was gown fray. | farmers began 1o acquire the seed : : gels to the feet in winler and frees. | , © 0 Mills had formerly beer of the burr type in Kansas; they now began to be converted into the roller type necessary for the harder gram By 1885 the demand for the wheat was so greal that a Mennon ite miller seni io Russia for an en tire cariot of It for distribution The Kansas State college agricul tural department experimented, de veloped and crossbred the original “Turkey Red’ into a variety mn proved forms Land which had been considered of pew | ft only for grazing was broken in | western Kansas, Nebraska, Roma, and in the Texsr Panhandle of the World war, the "bread basket of the nation.” Help te Protect Your, from Tuberculosis Okla | By the time | the Southwest | lay claim fo being | Coroner To Probe Death of Hunter (Continued from page - — Couple Are Wed one) ETH HARE ALTT Bir) “|Service Station Damaged By Fire Pugs 1) fea of Lise d trom rock kn an gf —— 7" § GOL wei hat Ire alr 0d Al oq id Mdiy g« furtied thelr Ak in » ¢ d tat ang Hitch-Hikers and Driver in Accident Forty-Four Years Pi Women Jump BACON OLEQ rows my [LARD Pork Liver 21b 25¢ | Beef Liver BENT Aiethodisa PURS Episcopal Ib 15¢ | Sweetbreads Ib 39¢ Hind Quarter of Bee HAMBURG 2 Ibs 29¢ OYSTERS STEWING FRYING FILLETS hs ROZEN RESH BEEF HEART - - PORK LOINS - Ends BREAD 2 www ]3¢ Market Loaf ~ Sliced . COFFEE COUNTY FAIR 3:39 COFFEE WINNER BRAND 1b 17¢ 80 to 120 Ib 15¢ Pint 2le Pint 28¢ Lh %¢ Lb 15¢ Ib 1272 b 19¢ .3¢ COFFEE DON ROCA Ib 24c¢ Hurff Tomato Juice - 6 10-02. cans 25¢ Hurff Baked Beans - - .- 2 cons 25¢ ORANGES rw2 4 25¢ 2 doz. 25¢ Apples - 6 Ib 25¢ Turnips, 3 1b 10¢ Potatoes, pk. 23c G. Fruit 3 for 10¢ TANGERINES - /RINSO=Small » SUPER SUS Small . SUPER SUDS<-Large Pkg. CARROLL COUN Y TOMATOES CARROLL COUNTY PEAS ] MILL PRIDE "FLOUR YL Eon Back + 49¢ 12 x 25¢ 5 "aa Me T BLEND 125 prog b- Sonn Je GRAPEFRUIT Fekerson's « CHERRIES-All Geed or Del Monte DOLE PINEAPPLE SPEARS SPRY OR CRISCO. _;. - 13 COLONIAL TOASS “08 | | {A Delicious Toasled Cracker» 7 MAUAROONS * LR » ful re Tork re Luilding hurriediy wider of of ef h which al "ny | id 3 Ibs 29¢ | 31bs 25¢ Veal Liver - Ib39¢ t 4 3 pkgs 2c: 3 fore « Abe i cans 25¢ « 4 canis 2bc FLOL LoUR 1 oe 49c Baek 5 Pound « 2 cans 23¢ 2 cans 25¢ 2 cans 29¢ 3b can 53¢ = lly pkg 18¢
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers