AANA Odd and Curious News Married Graduate The diploma that James of Pittsburgh receives from school of business administration at Pitt this week will bring happines to his wite well as himself. Mal ried four years ago, the cou ple have managed college studies themselves Steines ploma in two years ples come to us | FOI ing married Accustomed To It When Jame Uniontown right Steiner the MA young 0 continue then while upporting through odd job Mi wihio plans to a di sald receive now cou aqavice Randolph, 16, went Hospital with arm vesterda to fected Just another In the past ine yea there one of those times kull and tonsil gunshot wo IX reasons auto tomy and now i acoiaent ection ci nau Wooden Nickels Legal The admonition, "don’t take any wooden nickels,” won't good at Lebanon during the June 30-July 5 Wooden nic will be the official city's bicentenary be legal ary old hold WeeK of els the and will anniver souveniu celeDrall fender durin week School Days Old i mile ave tamer who to the little red Ung on i-year Leader not Godirey ol claims be grader in the to ne Lrg nation leads his class ir miles & day w Pleasant Surprise A Negri Ca Mis return $600 in know wa found it on le ad at its ownership Slow Travel In 1928 Mis Manchester mas card to i Frit now Mi Mount Wolf, Pa eo vemntly delivered, two miles apart. Plenty of Mothers A mother cat at the home of Guy Jones, of near Waynesburg, is shar- Mg her our two Rhode Island red hens or the kittens night of ‘Mary ay) of i A friend, Mis: Edward Kul The card was re- The towis are Kittens with The mu ing the at a“ unde # i ep uncer the wing feeds dur out Ley hens. we Wi Election Tied Up Dr. Mary Wolfe will be as superintendent of the Laureiton State Village, it re the fact that the failed to ion Prid 4-4 Catherine relained Board elect t her a 1000 re-elected Blanchard Man Gets John B. Coder, Jr, of Bl was recently appolt Hed inspe highways for the State Depa of Highways serving a territ cluding Clinton lear- field counties, at a salary $1. 430. He was formerly employed at the White Rock quarries at fob nchard of tment LOL re y ory in Centre an Cl of Pleasant Gap and is now working out of the Clearfield office Hospitals Kind toMan A young Job-hunter, exnmusted] from lack of food, found lying along the road near the offices of the Am- erican Lime and Stone Company, Bellefonte, last Wednesday night was permitted to return home the following day after undergoing treatment at the Centre County Hospital The man, Cyril Stype, 24. of Mid- dietown, was taken to the by Borough Police Officers Donald Johnson ard Ralph Eyer. When found the young man was too weak to waik. He told officers he had not eaten since Monday According to authoritative sources, Stype has received treatment for hunger and exhaustion at four hos. pitals in this area within the past hospital Stranger Acts Peculiar Dr Ralph Brandon, aged 39, of Eliza- bethport, NJ, wis committed to the County jail, Sunday, after resi- dents of Boggs township, near Milesburg, informeg State Police at Rockview that the man was act- ing peculiarly. Before police reached the scene residents of the area had brought Brandon to jail. They reported that he wis wandering about in the woods in his bare feet. Pastors’ Short Course Town and country pastors will at- | and the Pennsylvania State Sabbath | tend their second annual short course at the Pennsylvania State College June 17 to 21, announces Dr. M. E. John, rural sociologist Co-operating with the College in presenting the coutse are the town and country department of Pennsylvania Council of Churches CHATHAM A RAMA the | The Most Widely Read Newspaper in Centre County. A Visitor in Seven Thousand Homes Each Week. * | SECOND SECTION “ VOLU ME bY —— MINE OWNER FATALLY GASSED NEAR OSCEOLA MILLS; TWO RESCUED Dr. Charles Chase, Former Clearfield Dentist, is Victim of Monoxide Fumes While Removing Rails From Mine from a the fumes that both the mine oxide fumes which caused by black monoxiae INCONSsd carbon ou gasoline pump Most offi may mine Owii Nas nd two others were tated been abandoned gases abal mine Phi doned have The ipsburg last 15 years ago, wi brother of Judge A gressms tant Tearfield Kobolinsky the mine dis tragedy Vere Lhe he walked Into the hafl 450 naide iy ver Holl and carried two to the When he was and vived him About leet he tripped body urface Holt nse ng a after ration told two other Cigars For Little America ] Mend but h wWOl became wext spring America Mi: Siple Woman Gets Post In Defense Plan BELLEFONTE, P A, THU RSDAY, . JUNE 5 1940. Above the ood “4 y £2 he y <= rs Zhe Centr Democraf - ——————— Wh —————— NEWS, FEATURES NUMEE R 24, STATE MAY BAR AID TO MEN WHO ARE FIT FOR MILITARY DUTY = State Assistance Board Warns That All Able. |” bodied Who Make No Move For Employ- ment to be Dropped From Relief more ovyeQ, | Ling purge ingle bodied irom Us ef re FIRE accord retary 1¥ Howard recomim enfor President Assigns College Dean of Women to Commission (As told by an old Centre county resident to his grandsen after ree turning home from a visit to Cole Bro<, Circus in Lock Haven last week.) | are {al a glance be placed menag { hi breakfast horse tent dome bef We poss bie all hand piece ieee Lakes pocket and of # long tapelin h red how fixes the a red pin fe requir ana woman to De then the piace 5000 Demo Thomas P. Mc) lis r Blind Man Shoots ie “= Self With Shotgun Ellis Irvin, of Allport, Takes Own Life Without Warn- montis ing Family six) i Jind for over 18 years, Ellis Ir- vin, 50. of Allport, near Philipsburg, ended his life in a it of desponden- last Wednesday morning on the back porch of his home With no waming and no threats i to end it all, Mr. Irvin went to the { enclosed porch during the early morning hours while fils wife and family were in bed, and loaded his Memorial Day at Lock Haven He 12-gauge shotgun and fired two | was taken to the hospital at that|Shots. The first shot missed iis in- | place, treated and discharge] the| tended mark and tore through the next day {facing of a nearby door. The blind | Two days later the same thing | MR is Delieved 10 have leaned happened at Renovo and he ; | REAMNst the end of the barre] as he : fired the second shot which ripped taken to the Renovo Hospital, where through his chest The cane which kindly attendants administered to Mr Irvin used in getting around him. After his discharge from Re- was found lying on the floor near novo, he made his way to Willams- | ogo 14 had evidently been used | pags, Where aguin Ne was Mrealaiat 4, firing the trigger. - p ER | Surviving Is his wite, Martha, and | Ba ing tis. the following children: Mrs Agatha | known National week : Aas President Roosevelt guarding summers’ al Defense program Mr McAllister Miss El (Continued on Col interests in recalled: lott zpent page ten days i including County Hospital the Centre The youth was scious condition found in an uncon-| at night on inte latest experience at | loft for parts un-| ] \ IeiL for paris ub-{ carson, of Centre; Verna, Philadel- {i phia: Perry, Blair, William and Thomas, of Aliport 10 Tong of Butler Burn When a tie rod broke on a big truck tRansport as it was going | down Tunnel Hill, near Emporium, 21.000 pounds of the dairy product | became prey to one of the hotest | fires the vicinity has ever known | When the rod broke the driver Jost He truck ran u e | Brandon responds to treatment, he Sontrol and over and hn fire. | will be charged with vagrancy. If} qm, hatter was consigned to New | his condition doeg not Improve some | v4 from the Kansas City section. | other steps will be taken to dispose | » ro 00 fire started by the burning | of the matter. | butter, was quickly extinguished. pr Sentences Sunbury Boy William J, Palmer, 16, of Sunbury, | was one of two U. 8 Marines from | School Association {the Quantico, Va. base who were | The course will include study of sentenced lo 15 years imprisonment | adult education, agricultural eco-| each. by the federal court at Alex. nomics, community organization, { andria, Va., for the slaying of Sid- discovering the church parish, the ney M. Little, 29, tobacco salesman | family, rural leadership, rural relig- | of Washington, D. C. The other ma. jous education, rural social psychol- | rine was Joseph Stevenson, 28, or) ogy and rural sociology. Andalusia, Pa, William J. Schwariz, sum- moned to the Jail to examine the man, declared that he wag suffer- | ing from alcoholic psychosis, which | is described as having been Caused | by the excessive use of aleohol, Jall attendants sald that if) I nt train, ing from Arisies to Ringlown, { day morning, carrying to his death | | Paul Birch, 21, of Ford City, a can- | vasman employed by the Wallace the med ITE 5 COLLEGE MURAL HALL FINISHED oted Amer. executing a Henry Varnum Poor muralist who is fresco mural in Old Main bullding the Pennsylvania State College now completed his painting of than half of the wall space of 276 square feet. The central fig- ure, President Lincoln, has been fin. ished, and is attracting wide atien- tion among campus visitor The mural, a gift of the class an has move of ' 1932, depicts the agricultural and in- | | dustrial background of Pennsylvania at the time of Penn State's found- ing, and Lincoln's signing of the Morrill Land Grant College Act Penn State is the land grant col lege of Pentayivatia ss ns Roses Bloom at Hershey The Hershey rose garden at Her- shey, one of the nation's largest, is reported to have come into bloem {over the weekend, Hfting the curtain ‘on a floral show of | 000 plants that will last until frost more than 23 - time. More than 700 varieties of roses will be on display Cireus Employe Killed A careening truck, one of a circus’ ran wild down a steep moun- tain road in Columbia county, lead- Bun- Brothers shows, which had shown in Mt. Carmel, min equires the ground pile extra stakes the ground Carry Dr. Waterworth, Specialist, Dies Oustanding Clearfield Physi. cian Found Dead in Bed at Home Wiaterworth, 66 i goilre spec was found dead Dr. Bamuel J prominent cancer alist of Clearfield in bed last Thursday morning as the result of a8 heart attack. The well physician had workad the day before was in good spirits hen he retired for the night. When familly members went to call him Thursday morning they found the bed light on and a magazine which he had been reading, at his side Dr. Waterworth was considered an outstanding surgeon and a pi- oneer goitre specialist. He was chief of-staff of the Clearfield Memorial Hospital from the time of its organ- ization until his death ai known anda A native of Baltimore and grade] unte of the University of Maryland, he began practice at Adrain, Pa. and moved to Clearfield in 1885 He | the Clearfield Hospital | eatablished in 1900 Dr. Waterworth was chairman of the Pennsylvania cancer control commission for six years Interment was made in the Clear. field cemetery on Saturday. Only the last batlle of a great war is the decisive battle seigtants know: belongs The men SARE ¢ ground snfold it unig it page six) WOMEN'S CLUBS PLAN PROGRAM A notable program has been ane nounced for the annual Institute of Social Relations to be held at Peimsylvania State College June 17 21 under sponsorship of the Pennsylvania Federation Wom- {en's Clubs, assisted by the College Introduction of a blanket fee for local women's clubs, replacing the individual fee of previous years, is the 10 ’ LA expected to swell the attendance be- | who | normally attend. Club workers from! yond the approximately 200 all parts of the state will be pres- ent to hear nationally known ex- perts and obtain forecasts of the fu- ture Among the outstanding { will be Dr. Peter F. Drucker, assoc- | author of “Germany, the Last Four | Years.” Dr. Gerald Wendt, former dean of Penn Stale’s School Chemistry and Physics and now di- rector of science and education at the New York World's Fair; T. A Bisson, specialist in Far Eastern Af- | fairs for the Foreign Policy Associa tion; and David H. Popper. traveler and writer and a research associate {of the Foreign Policy Association | Paculty members of the College twill speak on questions of education and Penmevivania government si ——— eo To any one who lived through the World War there is a familiarity to the stories of “new weapons” and human suffering. | bia, of | men | tle Vio anda in Blanchard Boy Is Injured In Crash : Five-Year-Old Lad Falls From Family Car When Door Opens night Prive et ed immer te the result COAL SHIPMENTS SHOW INCREASE Coal Clen this shipments for May In which Look eos) the rfield region entire includ arya with § mg Jer ap in hipment & for month year, figures Pennsyl Rail- Osreol Mills show This year's May a hope of 300 cars ! : ast May from Clearfield region 1338 cary while last were 10368 cars Snow Shoe region also show- Snow Shoe shipped 335 cars of comparison with the 174 ped in May, 1839 Ninety per cent of the {i from the C comparison the same Ley vard at : release the ania road iments Shin show the were totale ine an month ed increase ship- Cars coal ship- learfield region orig- Houtzdale branch railroad statement sm tniim—— SU MMER VACATION CAMPS PLANNED POR FARM WOMEN camps y Pennsylvania women are highlights during immer months Seven women's different sections the planned for this vear, ac- Professor Margaret Brown, in charge of home econom- jes extension at the Pennsylvania State College Vacation farm the camp ¥ slate . WN in of are cording to These seven camps have been Op- | successfully the last summers erated few during ric ipated under the June 3 at county, with women from Colum- Luzerne, and Wyoming coun- ties attending. June 25 is the open- ing date for the Montgomery coun- ‘ty camp. Other camps are scheduled speakers! in July and August for women from iat least iate editor of Fortune magazine and | 15 counties, The average camp period is three days Handicraft projects, swimming fa- cilities, group singing, nature study, and campfire programs are features {of the camps. Last year 33 Pennsyl- vania farm women attended the sev- en camps Hand Badly Hurt. When her glove became caught in | { mountain the revolving spikes of a fertilizer box on a corn planjer which she was operating, Mrs. Bdgar Wenner, of Stillwater, R. D., near Blooms burg, suffered severe injuries. The spikes of the machine cui between her fingers to the palm of her hand; one spike punciured the palm, the end of her thumb was cut off and a finger nail tom off, ARAL VIVA year's May and hundreds of farm | women have pa | direction of county home economics | | extension representatives | The first of the camps opened on | Harvey's Lake, Luserpe | i Random i Items CEPHRLHLLLILRRRW oy WHAT po You Bomeone h Le Chamber Commerce for pose of staging a July 4th celetration here should Over Jo the Hed Cross |! In other ed In gWwing armis Clspiny would THINK? ue wyenied Te) that 1 Bellelonte Lhe pur firework De turned for mone nos Ww COs of by Lhe ing War wWora 0 ry fi has (ts good points De a favor there wil sentiment mriment ie own Moses LOST: Heniry A fonte, newly Bro Belle. appointed Stal Treas. bought He or wer of the Democratic 8 new straw hat last maccustomed to of type of hat Henry while ne engeavored Wu nvino “ that these part week aperoning { down me real skeptic thers party in Unit the debate was what ang later QiGn hat TURNPIKE: " of Pent week either bores mount evel. Around bre TOA wWas sides. The turns The bull nized no obstacles un ation to make a Gigantic cuts and mam other types of the road thon ugh svivania turnpike tron m Appearance right-of-way to avoid MISSED THE BUS! We are fact that a matier while driving near unitains P into bank- res sad) gee the are well ed der pparent] their determin. raight ang level fills. bridges engineering road galore fog t & feat and 2 of mark the route Bo Prey i uthern of obvi rves. (#7 Ors 411s hills currently bemoaning the we misseC a $50 reward by f minutes. Sunday McAlevy's Fort saw 2 bloke walking mg the road in the rain He nonde - script clothing and we litlle attention to him. So lita fact that when a Rockview guard sta- tioned at Pine Grove Mills homting for traces of an escaped prisoner asked whether we had seen anyone walking on the road we answered “no” Two minutes after driving away from the officer we recalled the guy at MeAlevey's Fort, but in- {stead of turning around and going (Continued on page four) Ir——— — Hitler Has Own Rasputin To Deal Out His Future night ail had on paid €. in An astrologer is the most impor- tant figure in the German Third Reich, next to Adolph Hitler, de- clares Pauline Kohler in an article in current Liberty Magazine, The seer is Karl Ossietz, an indiv- idual hated by every member of Hitler's staff, according to the writ- er, a former maid in the Fuhrers home. Osgletz, known as the Raspu- tin of Germany. is consulted by Hitler concerning every move the Fuhrer makes, Fraulein Kohler writes The maid reveals that in Hitler's fastness, Berchiesgaden, he had five rooms constructed for Ossletz known as the "Chambers of the Stars” These claborale rooms required the work of the best opti- cal workers in Jena for over a year before they were completed fo Hit ler's satisfaction. Only two people have entered the room where Hitler works out his coups. ‘KEEPI UP WITH THE JONESES’ — Now
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers