ODD and curious NEWS AAMAMAMAMAAAIARVWY Human Stone Pile Physicians at Wilson, N. C,, havt searched medical books for a Case that matched one at a Wilson Hos- The Most Widely Read Newspaper in Centre County, A Visitor in Seven Thousand Homes Each Week. SECOND SECTION he Cenfre Democrat NEWS, FEATURES VOLUME 59 . BELLEFONTE, PA., THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 1940. sn ge 35. NUMBER Veteran Freight Conductor, Native of Ce pital where 5384 gall stones were | taken fram a 50-year-old Negro woman, The woman nicely and hospital attendants sald she would recover. The stones var- fed from the size of a pea to a grain of salt, It took nurses twi nights to complete the final count of the stones ‘Paul Revere,’ 1 Elane Summers, attired in a Paul Revere costume and mounted on # gray mare named Daisy, rode up ic the capitol steps at Washington ang handed Senator Holt (D-WVa) a petition against the pending con- scription bill, Miss Summers, 20 came from Chicago on behalf of the emergency peace mobilization com mittee to defend America by keep- mt of war ing . Rough Justice Justice of the Peace Joseph B Herr, of Lititz, feels he hag a right to sing the blues. In a single week he—skinnd a shin; burned himself; tried to hoist a porch post and it fell on his foot: accidentally pen- ned himself on his roof when a window shut down and a neighbor had to release him: was stung twice by a wasp and barely escaped a third sting by shedding his4rouse: Cash Value E. Rhodes and § reading jetters her wi serving in the Army in 1918 were surprised when a $10 bill fluttered out of one them Then Rhodes, executive director ol the Blair-Bedford County Boy Scout Council, recalled malling he: the money just before leaving France 1} hi over Ne ol for Excuse, Please! Mr. and Mrs. Emil Rieke, of Lin- coln, Neb, thought Dan Cupid had gone haywire when went to the First Presbyterian church to attend a friends wedding. A strange started down the aisle, on a strange bridegroom's arm, Pretending sick- ness, they got out just time for the right wedding-—in Presbyterian church they girl in the Flood Names Two children Louisiana refugee parents occasion remember the that inundated their homes summer of 1940. A boy born week at Crowley, La, wag christen- ed High Water Broussard. A Negro poy born the same day Was named Submarine Johnson Hurts Who? Obliged to shoot his pet but ail- ing cat, Harry Atkinson, of Berke- ley, Cal. affectionately said: “This will hurt me more than it will you Then the gun exploded, the cat con- tinued to live, and Atkinson went to the hospital to get a six-inch metal fragment extracted from his chest. ’ Bully Sight Pete Baukmight of Walahalla, 8 C., parked his auto near the home of a farmer, returned a short time later to see it being smashed pieces by a ferocious bull. The bull's fre was aroused by the sight of his image in the car's headlights, Bauk- night said i———— born to southwest will have floods to this Freight Train Derailed Twenty cars and tone engine of 8 Pennsylvania freight train ‘were de: in the! was domg | 4 setting ciose —— ntre County, Is Fatally Injured By Train Frank P. Weaver, of Tyrone, Dies After Being | Squeezed Between Freight Car and Shanty Along Track Frank Weaver, of Tyrone, well known Middle Division freight con- ductor and native of Centre Coun- ty, was fatally injured on Saturday evening at 6:15 o'clock, while en- gaged in his duties as a freight conductor Mr. Weaver, a burly man, was riding a draft of cars in the vicinity of “GD tower when he was sueezed between a car and a shanty to the tracks. Fellow crew members hearing his cries ran to assistance, gave all possible hig | aid and called the Altoona hospiial wile, ol car's run at Pleasant Valley aven-| | to change the trolley for his trip railed on the Renovo division near DuBois, the enging and four cars) gliding over a 10-foot embankment Engineer C. T. Hackett, of DuBois, fiffered arm injuries and 8 sprained back, but Fireman 8 A. McCool, of New Kensington, escaped injury aM AAA Bas Kills Livestock Claims for damages from owner: of livestock killed in six months by the Seaboard Air Line Rallway mo- | tor coach operating between Jack- sonville and Tallahassee, Florida | amoutited to $2434, officials stated as the reason they wanted to dis- | one man as wearing a mustache, continue the service, "WORLD'S YOUNGEST MOTHER, 5 & Lina Medina, 6, proclaimed by South American physicians as “the youngest mother in history,” will be brought to the Untied States by air- | plane within a month for examina- tion by a five-man medical mission, Richard 8, Kaplan, coun- s¢] for Chicago and Peruvian busi- | ness men, announced last week. Kaplan sald business men whom he represents would bring the child mother and her 15-months-olg son i com-~ | in which he died before reaching the institution Conductor Weaver and his hag delivered their train from Os- ceola Mills and were engaged In making up their train for the re- turn trip when the fatality occurr- ed Frank Pierce ambulance crew t Weaver was born a liness Fatal To Retired Minister David Y. Brouse Record of 37 Years Rev. Had of Service The Rev David Y. Brouse, 74, of Williamsport, retired pMethodjst minister, gied Thursday afternoon August 8, 1940, at the Willlamspor Hospital. He was admitted abou! 12 days ago. He survived by his wife, following sons and daughters: Dav id J. ang Jacqueline, at home; Mir Henry Birkenstock, Willlapnspopt and J. Alfreq Brouse, Harrisburg five grandchildren: a brother, Wil- liam, Boal YRe! th sii! 1. Warrior: Mark, Williamsport Market Street Houtziale, York (Grace), Mount Union, Harrisburg (Epworth), and Altoona (Grace). He was a memoer of the Masonic Lodge, P. and A. M., Mount Union ang the Harrisburg Consistory. Services were conducted at 2 P m. Monday at the Pine Street Methodist Church and burial made t Wildwood Cemetery, Escape After Securing $15 From Workman at Point of Revolver of Altoona, was held up at the end of Third avenue and Logan Valley street car line, one night recently | and robbed of $15. The motorman had just reached the end of the ue ang had alighted from the cal back to the business district, “While at one end of the car which wal vold of passengers, two men accdsted hild--one shoving @ revolver into the pit of his stomach while the other rifled his MOnEY changer and emptied ¢ bi-fold from his cost pocket, Moptgomery said the unarmed man had a sack into which he dumped his loot—which consisted of about $15 in cash. The pair then made their escape in an automobile which was park- ed near Rose Hill cemetery—in the immediate vicinity and headed east. The motorman described the Gerardo, to a Chicago hospital for the examination by an endocrino- { logist, a gyneocalogist, an obstetri- | cian, a urologist and a pathologist. He said the child's parents, Mr, and Mrs, Tiburcio Medina, would ac- company her from Lipa, Peru. Lima authorities said the child had given birth to her son by | Caesarian section May 14, when Ling was 4 years eight months old. According to her birth | certificate, Lina will be six Sept, 26 NEW DOCTOR AT BEECH CREEK 1939 | Port Matilda, Pa., November 15, | 1888, a son of Thomas and Cather ine (Harpster) Weaver, On Sep-| tember 3, 1906, at Port Matilda, he | was united in marriage with Leah Mabel Bennett, He had been a re- sident of Tyrone for the past 3) Years Members the the wife, two sons, Harold Weaver Matilda, William Weaver, Ty- SIX grande n, two broth- Rev aver, Part Ma- William ver, Altoona, 4 brotl WwW. Williams Matilda, sister, Mrs Leah Cowher, Tyrone He was a member of the First United Brethren church of Tyrone Mr, Weaver served the P. R. R. In the freight train service for 36 year a membér of the B. of R He was a member of Allegheny Gateway Lodge, No 187 1. O OF TY very prominent affair; lodge ol family Include Port rane ers Joseph : Wea John a hall tiida half Port er alld wa T one and passed having | Ru College Man Honored J Rowland, of State Col- wis named chairman of committee on education for : Pennsylvania Institute of Certified Public Accountants, acoprding an announcement by Frank W main, of Pittsburgh, president of the group which has 736 active members throughout the state sm i WS —— ~ Chet all the news for $1.50 a year, Charles lege (#41 tha [#4] Reporter at the Fair The Inquiring ERIRRERCBRSRGY an WELL WE JOsTMaDE |. UP OUR MINDS TO [#5 WIN THAT RIBBON, y i wat NRT 1A LESSON IN A ART mowy AREY Dwr WELL Sim, THE FIRST FAR 0 OF OWE SOME NOW, wiTh HOTHIN CG BUT 0 WS IN 1910 m0 MISSED ONE # q 765 MY FATHER Won THE RIBBON LAST YEAP AND #5 FATHER THE YEAR. ARMY WORM APPEARS A 3 norning August Maney, County Age: hmond, Extension Wed nes. ' R ¥ Spe immediate the the fact al- must caterpill Now Gal Veale be g con - teniion tral of thi RELAVELY Oh al ing heads started fields Le migrate are always present low pastures very year break out in thi ’ seh s0r suCo ana meadows i © y AL some The exact oblematical Wire in abundance country peace red outbreaks is pr perature, mci drougg and the ever pres- and parasiu important fa fecundaiyt from 500 t materially u ent } enem Douby de ol principally weal might x wood and where they ar the sun the al- observed vicdn uay ime they SONNE + heat of ¢ os | During ter be ET TIO0!8 | (Continued on page six) Two Youths Lose Lives While Exploring Coal Mine Near Osceola Mills ‘Smothered Under Tons of Dirt As Car They Are Riding Jumps Track and Knocks Out Two boys lost thelr lives in collapse of a mine ceiling at the Centre operations, two miles from Osceola Mills, on Sunday afternoon The victims were: Kenneth Thompson, 14, of Osceola Mills, and Amos Cowler, 15, of Philadelphia Bamue] Cowfer Amos sO superintendent of unhurt Samuel Cowler intendent, together With his Amos Cowler, who was visiting Osceola Mills, ison, had gone to the mine expecling an afternoon of fun in riding in and ‘out of the mine The youths } hilched up the mine mule lo a car ig the mouth of jumped the cousin of Cowfer CR ped 11. a of William the wile and mine, es son of the super- cousin, al ad and were approachi the mine when the track and struck Amos Car th Cowler and Ti ed mine been riding ! received only minor jeg an while Lhe mule wa " ve the fall Juries ed by rectly behind it parently Car stated Panic HISTORIC AND BEAUTIFUL (By F. McNaughton Johnston in the July 25th isswe of the Fulton Democrat) Centre County is one of the teresting of the €7 counties abounds with t of nature, tate It pr beauties places Towering mountains and vas! ferile valleys cover the landscape From the summit of the mountains most beautiful scenes meet the eye Following U_8 322 from Lewistown one crosses the group of Seven Mountains, or The Seven Brothers as the Indians named them. They comprise the Path Valley, Short Bald, Thick Head, Sand. Shade and Tussey Mountains. They cover large area of the county. which would require more than a day" auto driving to beholq all the en- chanting sights within their limits One of the most charming pic- tures, aside from the scenic views is the bloom of the ornate rhodo- dendron with its Jong, leathery {| evergreen leaves like the rubber plant, which fills the guicheg by the lucid water streams. The flower has been considered by botanists as one of the most beautiful of Penn- HL ¥ ic T0SL0rK from "purest while Some SPE name of ol iis, bears the suphonius Bellefonte, a Prench name, meaninglasting'y fountain spring besutiful Here mammot of clear the name of the own with beautiful, large rainbow trout it forms a very large siream, thal furnishes power Lo operate a num- ber of mill rises 2 waler filled n ai hence is a pleasant quie! the foot of Egg Hill Moun- which a silk mill, flour creamery, is located in lovely Penn's Valiey, and through the town, divid- ing it into two parts flows Penns Creek, whose source of water Is in Penn's Cave, five miles distant. One mile west is the little town of Penn Hall. Penns view ia a high preci- pious point on a of the Seven Mountainsg—eight miles east Famous Penn's in Cave, located mouniain-—one | and gescrip- Cave very inler- beanatitully compiled WwW. Bhoemaker of in t Penn’ In the oid iy eEen i tion of Penn and Henry Fy Pa 118 t gays iynxes, foxes made the head- camped winters DEArs mammals chambers Indians severe naller a and there (0 escape the Tradition has furnished many ro- mantic tales of Indian Ore associal~ ed with the surroundings of histor- Penns Cave. One of these re- lates of Quetajaku, the deaughte: of a chief, whose family had been wiped out by other warring tribes She longed to get away from her unhappy surroundings where she could forges her grief, Her roman- tic ming held the thought that some day a handsome warrior would ap- ie pear ai her side, load her with gills make love 10 BWAY Fi: ch rar Panel SAO DEG Indian artist Queiajaku 1 ang be bull him- her abode Shi anderer g 1 and asked him Niganii, an hon igily Py gor nel near Ww paint on the wall fissure in the rocks of (he cave In which she would be buried. in vivid colors, a portrait of a handsome young warrior coming towards he! with outstretched arms He grasped her idea, bul suggest- ed that the warrior be mounted on a pony, © which she consented After an all winters work ang the portrait was compieted, he invited her to inspect ii. She gave a little cry of surprise then turned anc gazed at Niganit searchingly. Then she dropped her eyes and began iC cry softly to herself, “ls the pic- ture such a disappointment,” he asked? She composed herself anc replied that it was beyond her ex- peciations, but the face was Nig- anit’s and oddly enough, ii wag he face she had dreamed of all her lile And they were happy ever {Continued on page six) Loganton Plans 100th Anniversary 'Loganton Community Club to Sponsor Centennial Observance loganton is preparing to observe its 100th anniversary And has set aside the period from September 22 fo 25. inclusive, for special programs marking the occasion. Arrangements for the celebration are being made by the Loganton) Community Club with its president | Miss Myrtle Morris, heading the! committees, ‘ Tentative plans call for a devo-| tional service Sunday evening Sep- tember 22, under the leadership of | the Revs, Arthur Yeagy, T. RB. Hus-| ler and Miller, Monday night will] be devoted to a concert by the Sugar | Valley Vocational School Band, Al-| len Lamey directing. i A pageant portraying the early | history of the town or valley willl ‘be presented Tuesday night. The committee in charge consists of] Miss Kathryn Klaer, chairman, Mrs. | Laura Meyer, Mrs. Edith Schroyer and Mrs. George Douty i Climaxing the observance Wed-| 'nesday afternoon will be a parade! in which floats depicting interest | ing early history are expected | [take a leading part, Mrs. Grace | Waite is chairman of this commit- | | tee, assisted by Charles H. Held and 1G. W. Hancock. | Miss Mabel Rittle Burns Fatal To | Salona R. D. Boy Find Clothing Ignited While Youngster Played With Matches When matches with which he was | believed 10 have been playing set fire to his clothing, 5-year-old Eu- gene Kriedler, son of Mr. and Mrs Charles Kreider, of Salona, R. D../ was fatally burned Saturday after- | coal mine tipple at the Jeffries mine | burns, | which Lock Haven Hospital atten-| nerve | noon. 80 extensive were the dants said had destroyed centers, that physicians at first line-fed flames. Death occurred at the hospital Burned over three-quarters of his body, the boy is believed to have changed his overalls after his burn jed clothing had fallen from him, his father informed today. The young victim's parents had left him with ‘an sunt. Miss lois Heckman, while they attended curb market in Lock Haven. Miss Heck- man had taken his three sisters to the home of their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene E. Heckman near the Kreidler home, while Eugene was left to feed his rabbits. The grandmother, Mrs. Heckman, (Continued on page six) Aged Man Falls Vietim in Se m i:Conscious Condition, Remains Criti- cal at Hospital {caria resident, remains critical in a semi-conscious condition at Philipsburg State Hospital where he was brought Saturday night after having stumbled and fallen off a at Beccaria, near Houtazdale Suffering a possible fracture of iscalp, and several fractured ribs, [thought they were caused by gaso- | Evanskey was rushed to the hospi- ital in an ambulance He was admitted to the hospital at | {8 o'clock Saturday night, a short | time after he was found by his son, { Mike, at the foot of the tipple | While no one saw the sccident, it fis believed that the man stumbled fand phinged from the tipple sever- {81 hours before he was discovered -. As we see the international se! up, the other nations of the world are potential friends and potentia enemies of the United States. samen us mo——. The United States is well-defend- ed, according to plans that will be- come effective in a year or two. Off Mine ‘Tipple Harry Evauskey, 60-year-old Beo- | i | plane escaped injury shortly after) the | the skull, severe lacerations of the | Escape Injury Pilot Misjudges Landing at State College; Second Air Mishap in Two Days Four occupants of a small cabin 3 o'tlock last Thursday afternoot when the pliot misjudged his Jand- | ing at the Slate College Air Depo: and the machine plowed through 2 fence, made a ground loop and | came $6 rest facing in the opposite | direction, The accident happened the day after the plane crash near the Cen- tre Hills Country Club in which Pilot Sherman Lutz and a student Charles Neyhart, both of State Col- lege, were injured. The plane was piloted by Dr. W | Dale Jamison, of Saginaw, Mich who was accompaniad by his moth- Grove City, Penn State summer session that night. (Continued on page six) the | of the ant Kenneth Thomp. | | Haven opposite to the! after | In Plane Crash accident Bamue] Cowler was the mine and heard the of the youths and the roar dirt and rock fall althotgh rescue workers expressed the fon that the was Wo and excited accident give a clear explana Clearfield Co Erhard, who | dent the tw outside shouts of the youth upset about Lo the 4 E E BOC) ~ Coroner tigated the s had been He sald cident: there would be nc SBummoned wh f/f Louse the mine William Hughe Stanley Baughman Bleve Haney Kephart ther of Bamuel the mine and digging in the cover Lhe proximately 1S in roof fell Only constant g of the pot where the roof had fallen pre- (Continued on page six) Plead Guilty To Theft of Clothing Man Who Claimed to Have Worked in Bellefonte Held at Lock Haven art sald cident ran Ww a mile from of the tragedy Hughes, Keller Ear) bro- eq a qua and told David Martin Clayton Kephart Edward Cowfer Cowler, r immediately falien earth They ule ng to began fo un- arriveg bodies Bp after the waiching oid lock | § oi WwW Bm v ITAA poLce John a, who thal a hotel a arrested in Lock Thursday. and together law wife Jose remanded alter plead alderman arnorilies Dee) Bellefonte, had employed in Was jast Was ¥y B® I gulity be g the charge of & a local store Both are Negroes, about 33 age. and were traveling in a blue being Ohio years of Ford license plates pliowing their arrest the couple are sald 10 have admitted the thefl of a man’s suly from the Weaver & Probst store in Lock Haven ang an- other man’s suit found in a sult case in their car, at some WWD between Lock Haven and Ohio. It is said that the man is now on a years parole gfter serving 20 months of a one (0 16-year sen- tence in the Mansfield, Ohio, Re- formatory, inposed in 1937 for bur- glary and larceny. Unless friends come to their aid the couple will be compelled to re- main in jail the next session of Clinton county court Car teat Ailes . ——————— ‘Man Found Dead Near Lock Haven | firancing Mills Meets Death Along Railroad ty coroner, Dr. W. J. Shoemaker. into the death of Forest Stevens, 35. Woolrich woolen mills worker {whose body was found on the Penn- | isylvania Railroad tracks near Lock | Sunday morning, revealed! | THREES: | Haven, that the victim had been train Death, the coroner said resulted hit by a of the body, and was inflicted sev- eral hours before the man was found by Charles Mulgueen, of Lock Haven Members of the Stevens family ‘advanced the theory he was en- ‘route to visit his sister, Mrs. Adam HRippey., in Lock Haven, when the | JUMBLE: Sx ome” .. + Thanks to W. W. Sieg for handsoine souvenir letter-open- jer made of Titan Metal {distributed them among rnocident occurred. Survivors include his wife, { children, two sisters and a brother | A ! Student Prize Winner { David Robinson, of Stale College, er, Mrs. Jane Jamison, of Grove a high school student was one of ing, Tuesday City: his wife, Mrs. W. Dale Jami- | four prise-winners in the Summer some fresh ideas to work on in the son, and Miss Jean McCoy, also fo | Session exhibition of student work Taylor murder investigation There's iin Hobson Pittman’s class in oil The group left New Oastle at 1:45) painting at the college. His winning | you 8 house . o'clock last Thursday afternoon tc exhibit was “Eleahor at the Piano” | Brockerhoff: There are still some come to State College where Dr Other winners were Ear] Palama- | mosquitos in Bellefonte . , . After- Jamison's sister, Miss Maude Jami-|tier with “Grave Diggers,” Helen {noon movies here are 30 cents. You son, was {0 be graduated from the Hildebrand with “Barn,” and Elea- can take an afternoon nap in the nor M. Pyle with “Late Afternoon” { There were about 30 participants in | {ine exhibit. Random [tems opin~- | i might have with LETS GO: | less " 3.3 : | surely | Employe of Woolrich Woolen | ; | jeast halfway modern, sanitary | decently equipped-—which is not the { case under present circumstances, An investigation by Clinton coun- | EHH | TIME STALLS: {| Time around the Diamond has | been in a chadtic condition for the last several weeks, owing to the {allure of the clock on the Belie- fonte Trust Company building function properly. In an interview yesterday with K. Robb, trust officer at p this departzoent learned that a fel. low was here last week fix the { clock; that he worked with the ma- | caunery hat he reported ev eérything in order when he left, Re- i gardiess of his report, the clock has been hanging 4 o'clock for the past several days Mr. Robb hinted that the fellow is being called back WHAT? NO MUSIC? Baturday precedent in the history of Beliefonle, for when Bat- very E., 166th Field Artl camp no band the Guardsmen a 10 to ar ang at and pr eh 8 ery left for turned out Wo g sendofl THE FLY SITUATION: The common v be unus Iy ¢ on Ye Lig PAE Ges UCh the world and which has quered by man many years } would become whose only Wo be in crossword tion to habits through ia present oul The filling PUZZIE fly, in addi- naving nauseating personal extremely bothersome ang slicking great tice they therefore are fewer Year than usual NEW ASSOCIATION: Bince we lear Cliger adi ned the other even- ng that we bend bottle {| (with either rig or lefy hand have been considering the organize tion of society to be The Amalgamated i Those Wi Can CAPS we a ap J request C hosen at given cap wold i hurried survey 1{ day vealed possible member { Deputy Warden ©. C. Rhos Rockview penitentiary, wi Je to reports, can bend with tne fright hand He wasn't tried on the elt, but if he makes the grade we i hereby nominate him as Vice presi- { Gent. We'll be glad to list any other | proepective members, together with any further achievements they the botile cap olher one The Bellefonte School Board has ironed out its inner i rail troubles | CAN DOW present a more or less unite ed front against its chief problem —buflding a new school We hope the board Keeps working toward a solution of thai problem. We need & pew bullding, and the further the nalional defense program goes the likely it is that we'll grt any | federal or stale help. We need na- | tina] defense and we need a school If there ig no government aid, the board should turn to a thor. cughgoing study of other ways of a bu'icing Bellefonte afford 10 educate fis building that fag and Can chilviren in 3 a is OCCUPATIONAL DISEASES: According 90 reports persons who work long hours behind steam tab- ides, such as in restaurants hot-dog | emporiums and the like, sometimes contract a Kind of blindness The steam ig supposed to Cause the mal- ady. but We're not superstitious, ‘events of a certain kind usually run from a heavy blow on the left side] in cycles of threes. There have been itwo airplane accidents in Cenire | county in the last week, and we | wouldn't get into an airplane for | the next several weeks for a King's | ransom. Of course, never having been in an airplane, it would take la king's ransom fo get us in one at any time. Or would it? Destription: “He was beery bore- He also Kiwanis | Club members ai the regular meet. . . . Police would like ‘a big enough reward in it to build i .. Page Henry A iH imovies in almost any other town for 28 cents . . . Most of the alleged {Continued on page four) ‘KEEPING UP WITH THE JONESES’ — Maybe It Could Have Been Worse i is in charge of | i Dr. W. H. Dreibelbis, Snow Shoe | Much pressure was brought upon | 4 has purchesed the residence of | him by the residents {decorations; W. A. William E. Zeschler on Main Street | in Beech Creek, which he and his | Morris, of an of the Snow tiques; Allen Lamey of music, and Shoe area to have him remain bu Harvey O. Wren of publicity. Those wife and two sons will occupy Sep-| he and the family considered the | wishing lo enter Bouta a uke part tember 1. Dr. Dreibeibis has been | change of location advisable and © any oe anoH on a practicing physician at Snow more desirable in many Xeapecia ¢ 8 Shoe for the past six years and will He assumes his new field prac- | open an office in Beech Creek upon | tice with an excellent record. He) Bank Buys Flour Mill | Mifinburg Bank & Trust Com- his arrival, | Is aged about 35 years, ! —— ; ____ | pany bought for $3200 real estat | ON HIGHWAY Friis fod mut (0) Flour and Peed Mill at a bankrupt- cy sale week, The bank holds a on the property of $9.- An emergency landing on a highe | wing struck a guard rail. Cherry 900. Personal properie including ceessfull Juck suffered only minor injuries. The a truck and stock in the mill was Was Was. Su y made by landing was made at Force, Elk sold to individuals for an approxi. Cherry, 28, Lock Haven pilot, Fri-| oy on the Million Dollar High day night, although his Cub plane way after Cherry's engine had be swerved into a field when the lefticome overheated. : HULLO = YEAM - THIS MA! Mal MAll mate total of $1000. ~The family's newspaper. 4 a AAA