A Visitor In Seven Thousand Homes Each Week. cue The Centre Democvad EVOLUTION OF IRON | INDUSTRY IN COUNTY IS INTERESTING EPIC ‘Bellefonte Attorney Delivers Address On Sub- | ject Before Teacher Group Meeting At State College Odd and Curious News The Most Widely Read Newspaper In Centre County. I EWS: Random FEATURES SECOND SECTION [tems NUMEER 18. | | ———————— —— RAL — A—— co" _-h - ————————————————— ——————————— ——E———— BELLEFONTE, PA, THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1939. Good Food and Wine Celebrating her 103rd birthday Friday, Mrs. Dorothy Dinardo of | Corapolis, credited her good food | and two glasses of wine dally for her | long life. “I've always had good food and good wine and I've never worried,” she said. "1 like to be alone and I'm always happy.” She mends her clothes, washes dishes and last summer worked in a garden. Born in Italy, she came to this country in 1912 after the death of her husband to join her children here wii plar The once flourishing but now ex- | tinct tron Industry, with its setting of numerous charcoal furnaces, will always remain a romantic back- | ground in the early history of Cen- tre county. It brought fame and fortune to courageous pioneers who evolved it, as well blazing the way for developing other natural resources of the county S50 many dissociated bits of indus- {trial history have been printed {from time to time that The Centre |* { Democrat considers it a privilege | Which | to present the following article | furnisl | compiled by J Thomas Mitchell Esq., of Bellefonte, and used in his faddress to the college and high school teachers of historical sub- jects who convened at State College Saturday, April 16th by the In & brief but enlightening talk, | 2nd See Mr. Mitchell spoke of the evolution | 9€Puty surveyors in wo! famous meen {of the iron industry as follows ork hens wt commonwealth, Willlam and el Maclay, Joseph J. Daniel Tumer Centre Hall Pair .."0 0 i . . land which their lines covered and vania Injured in Crash its geological formation. Upon thelr Ambitious bridge return to land office at Phila- ; incorporated in the I delphia they reported bet Harrisburg and ™ quality of hardwood timber found were publi § on these surveys the large quan- for bids tity of outcropping limestone, and tie viaduct acres sie Juniat iver, val £ eer above two aKa (Continued on Page 6) near Bedford miinued on page five) be touched upon in twenty minutes |or 50, hence 1 have reduced my talk WO a written paper and must {dense my and omit a great deal should be de scribed In order make my topk fully understood “Iron ore was the Keeps Pledge Sheriff Harry Elelson, of Spring- field, Ill, after traveling 2.298 miles and visiting 208 schools, sald he thought he had fulfilled the cam- paign promise of his daughter, Judy 9. that he would “give every kid in Sangamon county a candy bar” i he were elected last November. Eiel- gon said he had distributed 16360 | candy bars. “1 think I contacted every youngster in the county,” the sheriff said “and quite a few old- sters.” Con- THE LAST GIRL. Announcement reference +» of what is departmen last made to maa | ’ Io _ | ER ARMY CHANGES? local army May Pole gossip has It that when Machine | | fonte, becomes Batiery E 166th | R A | in June, Caplain | Herbert M NEAR SCOTIA BARRENS “i mir ie | promoted from Bergesnt to Second | Lieutenant . BUGLESS BEANS What well Burnings — One Fire Wiped Out Entire kiiown Bellet int Clie Family Who Lived In Shack oi rg Bog Who Be girengin I We Deliel List —— ted after morn | ATK? umn in Altoona Tribune). off their coats and most of Lem The recent report that the pictur | DEVer recovered them, as the fire cut . 4 ‘ re that all 1} w in i that Barrens” near Cutesburg, Centre | Was in hat fire that all of the Wat th County have burned over again de- | kins family, who y juating by George H. Wirt's erews of to death in their shack. The hound fire fighters, recalls od il, She only | Gun Troop, Ward Cavalry, Belle. Field Artlllers Beezer will become a a Captain, and Victor Emel will be » . . i Says Historic Region Has Mad at Least Fifteen a Bellefonte couple planted beans w We aid of & lantern Deelies | ——————— - Serbs bar tii wii net allack t (From Henry W. Shoemakers Col- | when it became 100 hot they Uirew soque and romantic “Great Pine | them off from thelr belongings. I tar in the Foster MceGover: ! hicag 15 Lhe rif gov f $1 Arrel ' Te I spite the valiant though fruitiess ef- enter of Wig Jas Oe om: Ia FTgy i that as more precious than early colonists of IVa Iron wa whicn they unbrokes make the lmplempents with they ( i forts gold to cen the need eariier survivor * GANA Hunter of . ! COVeT ths Eliger, efficient deputy & of sd et teh 1 ‘ ! Register J L tre Ary 1 £3 wal Pennsy Sane basis af the tool ed to cut Ls to down the for the only girl member not married nid til the ground, to l tires for nail thelr buliding, as many other useful articles 1784 the first land warrants were laid in Nittany Valley covered the properties now Pennsylvania St Western Penttentiar thelr wagon a 1i1cd for well a THOSE DOGGONE DOGS AGAIN. Now hat ( nell has ¢ Te ’ seg 34 nee he having been LOrn near 1865, whi region has been burned ¢ paler si average every Ve yeurs sil s Lae like the whit fi of the dog { the Civil wi Many wild pigeons came to the Bar. | been MY people ; { the Council page mix) nana when fine gam ird 44 arger than a |» Wie parking problem fo the time being, the Borough Bolons well 1 . Considerate A constable arrived at a farm near Lancaster to make an arrest, but | stayed to work beside his prisoner and other farmers. As the officer | was about to serve a non-support warrent at a barn-raising, the farm- er pleaded he needed every one of his neighbors to get the framework up before darkness. The constable pitched in with the others, then took his man to town when the job was qone Idle; Digs Grave Miner L. F. Wiley, of Uniontown, is still digging despite shutdown of | the bituminous fields but it's his own grave instead of coal that’s gccupying his time. The 48-year-old | man said he had no fear of immed- late death but wanted to be pre- pared. Wiley obtained State Board gf Health approval of his plans a year ago but didn’t find time to dig the grave in a cemetery near his home until the wage deadlock left him without work Will In Cook Book Following the death of Jacob Heist, near Gettysburg, in January, 1938, his will was found stuffed be- tween recipes in an old cook bOOK. | he Centre Hall operator The will provided that his $1600 es- |... i100 to pass tate go to Mr. and Mrs. George E.| pe right side of the sedan col- | Hons Kemper, of York, R. D. for kindness | qed with the left side of the truck ip “afiording him a home." Al- forcing the sedan into a culvert though Heist's nephew and other |p, 00 (0 the sedan was estimated welatives contested the will, the. cools $176 and to the truck about Adams county court ruled that the |. bequest was valid and must be paid | % the aged man had indicated { improvement, and has many fine I free schools ] » ‘4000 Idle Miners the pagsage schools to its credit. But this con " 3 rT To Get Checks dition did not always exist, as | 183 ba for % ’ » . utd beco natural when we CONSIGeT with what skepticlsin free In Scot in 160 MILE SUPER HIGHWAY a wh WILL CONTAIN 268 BRIDGES and i rue owned College The mignt iran thelr attention to matler has ften Oy art, before T's disposed of 80 that we can reg Just what will lake place Council does consider the question. Someone will propose in Council that dogs should be curt All members of Council] will e isxlicaliy . a splendid Philipsburg Man Injured in © gl “ : . ihe Pres Fall While Washing Apart. State Dog Law abi ment Windows i * called In to 1 400 ¢ ’ weariness tt) ¥ HEAVY : SeTy . w ree ' } 5, but other Council- a 1.4800 fO« ring aenr g JU vi ste problem Wo J ' charg: " on (Cantinued on F - that were of vice the Barren Lert £4) } yearn oad or ot Viinig Lmneliildag “My subject is one which can only Janitor Plunges From 2nd Floor boys cal May, 1865 ¢lebration Hurveys ' unon tt quality o pounce upon Uh | nd Galesburg t the Sedan in Which They Were Riding, Sideswipes Truck in Passing the splendid ween stmoreland on con Pan IHW) quesiaon Losing his grip when his foot ¥ ¥ » slipped while washing windows on the floor of Gleske a- Herman n—— ————— ————————— second the partments ESIS OF FREE EDUCATION = ircay wl —— _— . ¥ ret Two Centre county people were e- ; = 3 bo i be learned {injured Saturday moming at 8 o'- rgv \ , \ clock in & crash two miles west of ; 4 . 4 Miffiinburg when the sedan operat- A yj 4 led by L. A. Wagner, of Centre Hall and the truck of Thurlow Strickler — of Weikert, collided Mr. Wagner suffered of the chin and chest Miss Lena Fetterolf Hall, suffered a cut eye. Their sedan wa truck, which attempted to turn off the highway at the en fell he Thomas Wat Ceorge Boal, Ferguson, Howard, John n Adams Pat Rush William a efonte atin, Be Bog Free School System Over A Century Old the How many of us know that free schools have Drm Toperwaita “been in operation in Centre county for over a cen- wn. A R Walt tury? Following their creation by the Pennsylvania Legislature in 1834, Bellefonte was one of the first Ose boroughs in the State to establish the common school system which was designed to provide free education for every boy and girl who desired it. The expense was to be met by placing a tax on real signed to separate various age | estate. * groups Centre county has kept pace with | « k — _- all advancement in educational great many taken place yf Centre cows ring ye man : veteom of our school’s : I change: aoerations . bruises and of Centre the left wing the eft time at- 10iM also few Vears over fall t | eh almost forgotten oe the Gamble sroposl- | 1y taken 10 the IpSDUrg Oate | ofll be reported by Phil § 151 § Gregg of the wire is rusted away and Robert Eider, Haifmoon, Gearge ported gooc torn down, and that it would need Hubler, H Paul Frantz, Lo- 1 eye «5% to the socident repairs (it doesnt gan, Dr. Samuel! Strohecker, Miles; | said the janitor was washing the | anyway, for no one really David Love, Potter. The measure | outside of one of the Windows Near / cores gnything about the dog carried by a majority of 3 votes, and | the alley between (he aDartmedls | pound) By this time Counc] will 8 tax for the support of the schools | and the Moose lodge. Marx Was | .orgider that it has gone into the was fixéd at one and one-half mills. | holding the upper section of the | ogeepr pretty thoroughly. and be- A similar meeting was held window with One hand snd wash- | fore you know it theyll be off on Bellefonte, May 4, 1835, and the | Ing thé pané with the other When ' come other subject and the town's te on appropriation resulted as | his foot slipped from the DOMOm 'acer can guilivant through the follows: For, 10; agsinst, 6 The tax Holding on with one hind for | streets ifke wolf digging wp was again fixed at one and one- 3 fraction of a second the man then | oorderns and shrubbery with thei: Lad once A A " 8 half mills The district elections plunged down onto the hard con- gz they've done since time immem- of Cex carat ion wo A ’ mt ang | 8 } operation was Wo hes sere held May 23, 188! crete and brick pavement Marx it married and the father | <q) snd just as theyll keep on do- ing as long as the present borough Dorough In (hw of one young child - administration is in power Memorial on School Lawn - nemoridl to Paul Siifer, 150 Aa 3 MEMO. 18 : BICKETT OUT — CHAMBERS rose bushes of a rare and choice . sa ol . bloom will be planted on the lawn | IN? W. W. Bickeit, of Bellefonte, is “out” g¢ Health Officer to suc- |? wisburg High School by his Cher goer Siifer of Brook ceed Homer P.Bames, according Park The youth graduated from | 10 Teporis. “Wes had been named Lewisburg High School in 1926, as 10 the post. but the Centre County class valedictorian and died a fey | ReP ublican Patronage Board at a years later. while attending Buck- meeting Friday right decided thes neil University. The roses will be |GIGHT &Pprove the way the an- transplanted from the Slifer home php a Bans appelis- and Lamar Paton and Halfmoon in West Lewisburg and placed on 3 BE the I Recameds or ro” Accepled in 1828 wi hr tte aid "7% | bosrd—tantamount to an sppoint- Logan became part of Clinton TABIRy a Na AEWA ment, it is understood—is Roy A county in 1838 and continued its Chambers, well known resident of struggle against the schools Clarence Miles accepted In 1838 schools by 116 against 87 In (Continued on page six) ten Mars Lave perhaps same who opposed in ne 4 Daniel Kline progres: ing demand for better educa- facilities The antequated one-room school, where all branch les of learning were taught by one teacher, i= rapidly giving way to modern bulldings of a character de- greatest wr ETeQLes Lt wer mies considerable matier Lhe —— so Pp at Robbed In Jail Dauphin county jal authorities ae keeping a sharper waich thieves wiiliin thelr midst! It ap- ars thal a man was robbed in jall court, John Marvetic of Steel- toy pleaded guilty to robbing a cell- mate of $6 Marvetic was about to “check out,” said jail authorities, | when the theft was discovered. The court decreed that Marvetic’s “check | out” should be to the Eastern peni- tentiary to serve a one and one half were iH the law of after the Act BW, ma alirens made Prior io . - : Basi i534 and . requireg ne » tre ¢ vv # ¥ ¥ 4 « ro y a ) ' RS hid ERIN ; 3 ‘ wel { “FETS mprehensive mind val Coal Shut Down Results n ‘ : gocepted at their beginning jant te tie A " SoRint g Unusual Unemployment It way be interesting to know its suppor ettassst the Relief Demands Wwwn- A in SCHOOLS Fadi] FRE delegate Wh Ww tient of his this King of Which president and M secretary Thirteen of the favored the schools and four stood opposed At this meeting the delegates agreed a tax of three mills convention of May 2, 1836 files was Rankin delegates Wid The asi head Joseph PRT~ Was delegates were Bellefonte that Bellefonte Severn Ihe Gen ships of the county were among the operate under free , " school system following its adoption from Clearfield and Centre coun- | pe act of Legislature in 1834 and ties, out of work since the coal shut- 1835. Prior to that date wealthy down a month ago, will receive un- ' 4.0 received ei wducatior 217 mrence employment checks this week or Srirate tuition: EE ey Nearly 1500 men have already be- | were taught at home that were come eligible for their first checks | possible, or In most received Gets Buried Gold e for 1 , i land about 2500 more have walled | no learning at sll A fortune of $2880 In twenty dol- | » . lars gold pieces, which lay buried | the required 4 Wee's sifiee EY st It followed, then, that the fright- in the celiar of a home at Blooms. | *PPlied and are now becoming elg- | o number of children growing up burg for almost 8 half-century, was | in ignorance led legislation on | what » ‘ of what considered heavy taxes this week directed by the Columbia | this subject. A checkup of the! _, akaln t them ed heavy laze county court, to be delivered to FP | State's showed that out ; co e, S80 f T ” of about four hundred thousand viv yl buried te a “holiday,” some 8,000 to 11.000 men children only twenty thousand the cellar prior to his death. The |%™ affected in. the Clenrfield-Centre | found their way to schools, such as they were { county area No active efforts in the direetion might be expected of an inno- { this kind, a certain meas- 10 feel in cCnvention al opposition cropped up, and fie county commissioners 10 the free school system was nol as deliberate the question of ao favorably accepted and as easily O®Plance of the free school system obtained as it deserved Por one 20d taxation for the on thing it meant 8 new system of Pport of Lhe But the ac- taxation to landowners. To another Hon of nvention which fol- cass it seemed an URNEORSSRTY final, for the ques waste of time and expense Samad 1 a Vole of the ang John vatiop first to the ure of Nearly 4000 miners and truckers on the rate of arhoarnle ” 5 Phi Thus the common schools Were aecepted and pul Into operation al jifferent periods of time In 1835 It were started in Bellefonte Boges, Bald Eagle, Perguson. How. ard, Patton, Rush Spring, Walker he £ WWE war cane ' shox county In getieral. the ar of poor were in fav. while the rich who would have 0 bear the burden meeting of took place st Bellefonte on 1834. An organization was effected by the ag Pp dritmnent of Rev. David McKinney president and Dr. Curtin When the question of i sporopwiation be made apport of the oommon announced, the foliow- voted In its favor: Dr delegates November 4 the sehogl ary n TAA I home to Between 3500 and 4500 miners and others are out of work in the Mo- shannon Valley because of the coal ——— Religion in Science. A great English scientist tells why science and humanity must believe | in God and a future life and explains why it is both possibile and necesstry for science and religion Wo agree Read this sbsorbing story in the May 14th issue of The American | population Yet it the latter class citizens not to ciate were noble exceptions harbor the fallacy would be an of injustice Centre county that there who did not that dollars and ing —————— CHURCHES GET NEW NAME The Bellefoute Methodist church is {Do longer the Methodist Episcopal church. Its correct name is the First Methodist Church. Similarly, voted Do en mal nd 1 1840, Ser has been In MNgation since) The Moshannon basin was one of e34ly In 1928 {the leading coal fields of the nation Raid In Full | yen 5 be —— EE ——— a — EE i dt A — For a year David George Sabol, | WPA worker, of Akron, Ohio, has saved pennies. Last week a son was horn to his wife. Sabol paid his hospital bill with a three-quart jar of 3500 copper coins. “It was hard saving the money out of my PWA | pay,” Sasbol said. : When Jean Erwin, 3, of Wichita Kans, refused a dish of Ice-cream, | | A Reason | H Ber parents knew something was | wrong. A doctor was consulted and | an X-ray resulted. A penny, lodged | in Jean's throat, was removed at a | hogpital Your enemy may become your friend but you might as well keep ; malca, N. Y. recently Longer Lasting Panis Crease Here's good news for natty dress. ers! Alfred J. Steinberger, of Ja- obtained a patent on a method of reinforcing seams and making the crease in pants longer-lived by the use of a narrow ribbon of cellulose attached to the seams or crease, Glamour of Hollywood. Pictures of favorite stars, movies in the making. news from the film colony. You'll Agd it all in the Green Spotlight Magazine, distri buted every week with the Baltimore Sunday American. On sale by all progressive newsdealers A good meal is one of the best ways for any club 10 increase its at- es pe Eleven Years Ago Last Saturday ? Those of us who stretch our mem- | es occasionally to recall some | litstanding local occurrence, were | sbout on Saturday asking other: "Remember whet hap- “eleven years ago?” “Here's the answer, folks, and we hope you don’t shiver: When Centre county awoke on morning of Saturday, April 28, , it found itself blanketed in one the most damaging snow storms t had occurred here in the past y years, Rain, which began on Friday, that t turned to sloppy snow and . All night long the downpour jtinued in force, clinging to light d* telephone poles and wires, and ng them to the ground like ) many straws. . The result was that sich come v¥ in Centre county found it- f completely isolated, be nei- able to travel the ¥ {over the county for a time nor communicate by telephone Electric power was disrupted all when the powerful trunk lines supplying UNION COUNTY P. O. 8. OF A. On the night of April 28th the very efficient P. OB. of A. degree team of Mill Hall camp conferred the initiatory degree On a large class of candidates {rom the various camps of Union county in the large | hall of Lewisburg camp Before the regular session, be- cause the speaker had another en gagement, Judge Albert W. Johnson delivered a thirty minute talk on world affairs as they may effect this country. Judge Johnson is a mem- ber of Winfield camp. dent of the State Camp of Pennsyl- that was very well received Attendance was quite Jarge and came from a wide scope. Camps West Milton, Milton Loyalsock. Carroll Salona, Mill Hall, Beech Creek, Lock Haven and Centre Hall | ‘Those who attended from Centre | Hall camp were P. H. Luse, A H Bpayd, P. C. Spayd. and EW. Burk- | of Homer ton charges of Following the initiation Elmer F Keller, of Emaus, Pa. State Presi- fand taken to the Philipsburg hos- | pital vania, delivered an instructive talk | shot himsel! in the toe. | holder, Centre Hall, | Walker, A. J. Zimmerman and J, B White, of State College, Geo. A "Reed, of Pine Grove Mills; Norman Duck, of Miflinburg, and Byers | Ripka, of Millheim. The big night wound up by a fine light lunch serv- ed in the social room. Girl Licensed Pilot this district were crashed to earth, More than 200 telephone poles were torn from their moorings or broken off, throwing out of commission ap- proximately 1000 telephones, Tem- porary lighting facilities for Belle- fonte were secured from the steam power plant at Milesburg. Enough power was also furnished by the Milesburg plant to keep the rotary | Huntingdon of the American Lime & | Miss Ruth Skinner, of Hunting- ne Co. in operation as well as don, has the distinction of being the maintain pumps at the limestone Only licensed woman pilot in this mine. The match factory and Titan | district. Miss Skinner received her plant were compelled to close down. | pliot's license last week after suc That Is what happened in Centre cessfully passing her examination coubly eleven years ago. Ua recol- | before E. O. Goff, Jr. federal inspec- lection was anything but a pleasing reflection as Sunday's hall and snow bore down upon us with the | ominous threat that history was about to repeat. | OSCEOLA MILLS MAN 1S INITIATION AT LEWISBURG | SENTENCED TO PEN Pleading guilty to charges prefer- red against him, James Williams of Oscegla Mills, was sentenced to 34 | to 7 years in the Western Peniten- tiary following special court held Saturday at Clearfield Willlams wag turned over to Clearfield county authorities Jan. 5 aggravated assault and battery and intent to kill fol. lowing a fracas near the Osceola brickyard January 5 when Williams i shot Willlam Gladney, also of Os- ‘eeola, In an alleged drunken brawl Gladney was shot in the right hip Williams also accidentally Williams was arrested by Chief {of Police William Delansky of Osce- {ola Mills represented were Emaus, Lewisbure, | | Winfield, New Berlin, Milimont, Al- | lenwood, New Columbia White Deer, | CONTROL SPRUCE APHIDS BY IMMEDIATE SPRAYING pecies of aphids attack and spruce trees by causing galls on the new growth ding to H. E. Hodgkiss, ex- entomologist at the Penn. syivania State College, the spruce gall attacks the red, the white and the black native spruce The blue spruce gall aphid attacks the Colorado blue spruce, Engle- man spruce, and Sika spruce. It uses Douglas fir as a secondary host Hodgkiss warms that fir and Spruce trees on the home ground often have small infestations of gall aphids In the case of small trees having only a few galls, the best plan is to remove and burn the galls while green and before they open Two injure to form Ace tension aphid | Since they contain the aphids. This | {is not possible with larger trees or | Rit {here that There are American citizens who | : Saying is suggested | seldom read any of the President's | utterances that attempt to set forth the principles of this nation. extensive plantings and #t is More specific information on the Loonitrol of aphids may be obtained from the | eXtension representative local county agricultural ‘KEEPING UP WITH THE JONESES’ Superintendent and Wife Resign Mr. and Mrs. C L. Titus, superin- tendent and matron of the 1. 0. O PF. orphanage near Sunbury for three vears, have resigned, effective May 1. to return to their native Al- legheny county, to take similar posts with thé Boys Industrial Home at Hopedale, 25 miles from Pittsburgh This is an independent, chartered home, sponsored by clergy and bus- iness men. for the care and train- ing of underprivilegad boys. Mr and Mre. C. C. Crone, of Shamokin will fill the Sunbury positions tem- {porarily New Official Record for Cow. A new record, exceeding the aver- age of the Guernsey breed for her age and class hag just been complet ed by a two year old cow Kemah Doldardot 488328 of State Coliege, Pa. tested and owned by Peansyl- vania State College. Her official record supervised by The Pennsyl- | vania State College and announced by The American Guernsey Cattle Club Is 1048562 pounds of milk and 472.2 pounds of butter fai in class | GG Weekly, distributed with the Balti- more Sunday American. On siié by | all newsstands Aged Woman Hurt in Fall merely Methodist churches other Masthodist churches through- out the county are no longer Meth- odist Episcopal churches. They are These late in became effective | changes April when the three branches of Injured in a fall down a flight of | Methodism, the Methodist Episco- stairs early Thursday moming, Mrs Marie Show, 79, of Bald Eagle Valley, was admitted to the Altoona Hos- pital for treatment. The mishap woman's duuphter, Mrs Banks, in Altoona painful bruises about the face ——————— Captures Large ‘Snapper.’ Robert E Latimer, game warden, home is at Muncy Valley, Lycoming county, caught a large snapping turtle in Ceulestia Pong last week The turtle weighed 21% pounds be. fore dressing Cleaner Takes a Finger Mrs. Mary Stepd, of Laporte, guf- fered the Joss of the middle finger ed into the blades of an cleaner, while the motor was run- ning. | Methodists | occurred at the home of the aged | She received Kar] E. Kusse, secretary | Bellefonte Chamber of pal. the Methodist Episcopal South, and the Methodist Protestant churches united under the name of A uniting conference is now being held in Kansas City, William | Missouri, to fron out the details of | the union of the three branches FROM WINCHELL of the Commerce, who wrote 10 Waller Winchell to LETTER | tell him about the horsehair cloth a {lom! tailor ‘trousers before his engagement | Hecla Park recently, yesterday got {the following reply from Winchell: { “Many thanks for the laugh. It was iswell of you to go to the bother of | writing Good wishes” of her right hand, when she reach- | electric | { citizens who think they ought w | have seats on the rostrum sewed In Ben Bernie's at The world && bothered by two many ~ Why Bring the Police Into This?
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers