Odd and CURIOUS in the The Most Widely Read Newspaper In Centre County. A Visitor In Seven Thousand Homes Each Week. . SECOND SECTION NEWS, Che Cenfre Democraf = + NEWS VOLUME 60. BELLEFONTE, PA., THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1941, NUMBER 20. | ADAMLESS TOWN Women seeking husbands should avoid the town of Roberts, Mon’. Uncle Sam has called all the ell: gible young men. Roberts counted 400 inhabitants in the last census yet every man eligible for military service either has enlisted or has been drafted. John R, Sparks, re- cruiting sergeant of the district, said 90 per cent of the young men signed up for three-year enlist- ments and the remaining 10 per | cent were drafted. CAT WOULD HATCH Investigating the cause of the dis-| tress of two mocking birds in her yard, Mrs. H. E. Rice, of Kinston, N. C. found a cat sitting on th eggs in the birds’ nest which Was seven feet off the ground ‘TRAGEDY TABLE’ Ola Thompson, of Grinnel, Iowa, has built a table of 576 inlaid pleces, | each of which was taken from the! wreckage of. automobiles involved In fatal accidents A cst Minister of Music For Two Churches Thomas Welding Ward, B. M.| graduate of the Westminster Choir | School, of Princeton, N. J., has been | engaged as a full time minister of | music by the Methodist churches of | Howard and Beech Creek, Jjolotly) served by the Rev. Wallace J. Cum-! mings, of Howard Announcement of this appointment came following! action by the official hoards of these | ¢hurches last week. Mr. Ward had) previously served both churches for a month In each, and trained the] o | Injuries to 40 volunteers fans of | warehouse and store rooms, on Lew- isburg’s central square found caught the ladders the wall he had been scaling, and was not missed until appear at his home for lunch Two Die From $150,000 Fire at Lewisburg When Explosion Wrecks Store Three-Story Building; Ten Companies Send 200 Firemen fire and explosion at A $150,000 Lewisburg early Sunday resulted In | the death of two firemen, and minor and civil- all that remains hardware A front wall is C. Dreisbach’s Bons Charles D. Stephens, 56, was 12 hours after the blast him and other firemen on He was buried beneath to he falled Charles L. Liddick, 22. was pulled | from the wreckage five minutes af- {ter the explosion, which occurred Girl Hublersburg Is Graduate Nurse Mill Hall and Lock Haven Also Represented in Hos- pital Class The annual commencement exer- combined choirs of the Beech Creek cises of the Williamsport Hospital and Howard churches, in coopera-| tion with the neighboring churches) at Milesburg and Unionville, for an Easter cantata participated in by, nearly 75 voices. Driver Arrested After Crash East of Martha Lawrence Spomtak, of North Braddock, driver of a car which lel! the highway 5 miles east of Martha Furnace about 12:90 Sunday after- noon, and crashed into a power pole was charged with reckless driving by Motor Police from the Pleasant Cap substation who Investigated the accident. Spontak was traveling west at the | Hublersburg | Mil Hall itorf and Miss Dorothy H lof Lock Haven | Bellefonte, Episcopal church. Williamsport, pre- sented {ceived ducted by Miss Lulu M ‘rector of the school School of Nursing was held Friday evening in the Lycoming ballroom, Williamsport roster were Miss Listed in the class Mary C. Hall of Miss Rita Mayes of and Miss Beatrice Bot- Fornoff, Canon Stuart F. Gast, formerly of now rector of Christ the commencement address and the members of the class re. their diplomas and school an impressive service con- Hipple, di- pins at Members of the class will contin- ue at the hospital until September when their preparatory training will end. Alt that time the honor stu. about 5:30 a, mm. an hour and a half after the fire was discovered, He was taken to the Evangelical Hospital, suffering head, back and chest in- juries and shock, and died during the night Thousands of persons swarmed to the scene, the crowd being augment. Forty Others Hurt as Blast of Flames Destroy | Jw |! ed by hundreds present for Mother's, Day at Bucknell University Although no definite cause for the fire could be outlined, Fire Chief John A. Walters said the fire appar- ently started in a packing room, in the center of the structure Adjoining Store Damaged Flames were discovered by Loui H. Harris, proprietor of a men’ clothing store adjoining the Dreis- bach building on the west, He said he was awakened by smoke and heat Harris" property was the other to suffer heavy losses, him placing damages at mately 815.000. He said only with the explo- rlon crushed and cracked the plas | {ter walls in his bullding, that 30 windows were broken, stock and approxi- | - WHY WHEAT QUOTA IS NEEDED | The Centre County Agricultural Conservation Committee, the mems bers of wnich are W. F, Rishel Blair M. Pletch and D. J Beck all county farmers, discussed yes- terday some the things tha have coniributed to the present sur- plus of wheat which will probably er of | Local Showers Juri 18 an o! tee year AVErage wheat ti ¢ Exports an outlet for produced tated 1 farmer 109 han ng Ade past have produced million bushels was consumed In 0 more inte wach Pe much « of in the have furnizsh- ed ff the wheat domernti in exoes: Centre County Operators ~ May Run Mines at Lower Than Present Price Scal Proposed Hearing in Washington Will Deter- mine Extent of Change in Cost of Coal Production; May Drop 25 Cents producer in the Centrelestablished minimum price; Cone vieinity may be required to trary to popular belief, production on a minimum price sched costs as reflected in the District ule based on production cost figures! including Centre county shown as much as 25 cents below those on by preliminary figure which the present price scale is ped sharply in the three vears based. ax the result of bearings! basie production were whi will open in Washington on lished Mas Tt Centre Democrat was The 1937 cost informed Tuesday minimum The hearing has bee placed at $2 3887 per ton H Gray. Director of it had dropped to nous Coal Division, Interior De- 1830 to $2.1943 1 partment, to determine ihe extent The 1840 cost, on which of change in the cost of con] pro- minimum prices will] be based duction and, later, to revise min- (Continued on page six) imum price schedules in the light . of present production costs Preliminary compilations Coal Divicion show thal the weight ed average cost per lon of produc. ing coal in District |, which cludes the Centre county mine 25.44 cents less In 1940 than in 1837. Present minimum schedules are based 3 Conl county OPerats are KiNcCs COs estab. Ld upon wi are 1 present Pricey n called by A the Bitum.- and by “ of the Farmer Guilty of ‘Mercy’ Slaying wa. iL war price 1937 Northumberland Jury Con- viets Man Who Killed Ailing Wife pot Lhe cost figures The act creating the Coal sion provides that when the duction cost in any price area shall be shown (oo have changed as much hn H. Bogendobler, 52-year-ol umberland out pr to have drop- | |equipment damaged by smoke and| no... necessary the proclaiming of water. A fire wall between the bulld- | oheat marketing quotas for hand- ings, constructed approximately 35] ling the 1941 crop years ago, prevented the spread of | The farmers of this country pr the flames, officials sald ¢ hain the home (Continued on page five) use the commil- Fe 1 3 { duce more wheat i market is abie to the committee zald, bu! outbreak the present wheat exports have been al- off by blockade. | wheat has piled up la (Continued on page three! as 2 cenls per ton, “the Division shall increase or decrease the min- imum prices accordingly.” In the present case Lhere Appears to be no question but that the hear. n will result in 8 decrease in the ng needs since the of War The loilowing brief but interes. ing historical narrative was writ ten by Richard J. Detwiler and pub- lished in The Centre Democrat a number of years ago. Quite recent. { ly it was handed to this department with the request that it be repro- duced for the benefit of the young- er generation who will profit py the historical Macts it contajns. The {ascinating } Ley are only no evidence lo & ald out founders was with the intention oi ite that it was one day lo become the capital of Penngylvania Aaronsburg was lald out upon the Alexander Grant warrantee by Aaron Levy October, 1788, and therefore bears the earliest date toy +0 os time, and damage to the car was ©3- dents and ihe recipient of the Mc- timated at $200. Eimer Spontak, al passenger, suffered bruises of the | left arm. Beech Creek Woman | Injured In Fall Mrs. Jane Ellen Miller, of Beech Creek, was treated in the emergency | room. of the Jersey Shore Commun» ity Hospital last Wednesday after-| noon after it was reported that she fell out of the car she was driving | on Bridge street. ! . She escaped serious injury when a Hollidaysburg man and his 500 | of the State. These stories make that his Town would some day ac- burg and Aaronsburg the driver of a truck traveling be- | Sunday afternoon as the latter two oooq newspaper articles but to the hind her avoided hitting her by a| narrow margin. The car she was driving came to a stop alter contin | ying a short distance. | She was alone in the car and lit-| tle could be learned of the cause of the accident. She was later dis- charged from the hospital Two Mt. Union High School Youths Killed While watching a freight train approach on the next track, Donald Mclean, 16, and James Riley, 15, students at Mt. Union High school were killed by a Pennsylvania Rail- road passenger train as they walked along the tracks near Mill Creek, Thursday. State police sald the youths, who were watching the freight as they walked down the tracks, failed to sec the passenger train approach. The train struck them head-on, killing them instantly. State College Youth Enters Marine School Edwin 8. Jones, of State College, wai one of the six Penn State sen- jors selected to attend the Marine Reserve Officers’ Training School by It. Robert T. Raby of the Marine | Corps, who interviewed 25 seniors, it was announced this week. The group will report to Phila- delphia for active service during the first part of July. On comple | tion of the training, the men will be commissioned second lieutenants in the Marine Corps Reserve, Snow in Maine A two-inch snowfall routed sume. mer-<like weather In Northern Ar-| ooslook county, Maine, Sunday, and | ‘Marau Cormick award will be announced. a ding Pair Fire at Pursuers Shoot at Father and Son When Discovered Breaking Into Cabin Two stockily-bulit and khaki. clad youths, one of whom fired on gave chase after seeing them break | into an Altoonan’s cabin at Canoe Creek, are the object of a stalewide state police hunt Clarence Leaper of Hollidaysburg | Raymond, who lives | and his son, near the cabin, owned by nk Maloy, Altoona told state motor po- lice they saw the pair emerge from the cabin, which they knew was unoccupied, The father and son chased them into nearby woods, police sald, until the one marauder turned around suddenly. pulled out a pistol and the nation’s defense program will ies and a 57-year-old man was kill- Middle Division of the Pennsylvania fired a shot. The Leapers said they then aban. county. They, with three others who Timber and Flinton when a Penn- | brothers of Rt. Rev. Wm. Downes of doned their chase and told their article follows: [paris then the little i village of Brush Motintain and the Seven Probably no town in Centre Coun- | tv Is more talked about in foreign | large bodies of real estale in Centre official name whith Desties between and any loan Centre County. In 1804 he conveyed all his interests Iu ii | County to Simon and Hyman Grats, ator tat fitted to Tot Were te. rived from the Cra'zes Levy wa DAYS OF YORE Fes FY urvey on 612 idered very strongly probably it lacked an ample wales and because of ite location eastern extremity A hea'ed battle raged be- Milesburg and Belielonile, Milesburg having the edge on Belle- fonte because of its location at ih junction of Bald Eagle Creek and Spring Creek—the head of naviga- tion. Bellefonte finally secured the! ne main “Oa Woe which | wide, Levy named {f hime. : ey sireet rTP supply the of Lhe Aaron’; The main intersecting street named Rachel his tahe would have her way). Wine Chestnut, Blackberry Alley, Mul- berry Alley, Apple-iree Alley, Googe berry Alley. and laberty Alley wer Square in honor of county we tween 5 way, lor wife of fleas [4 iad wa der convicled ast week in th ing of ig wile The returned of eight men and fou | H mre NS Han ro Das allt verdict an carried recom! EN r a mparisonment sentencing Defense Attorney who Indieated he would trial, tol } that Hogendobler adult's mind and c¢ guish between right Hogendobler » Clara In } hotise last tion aon iG * Apri] 8 "Ww of her misery becaus asthma and was gic Trooper Albert Bacesk! Hogendobler at one time 1 } shot his wife for $1.36 she had ada tif testified oid nh Ww 5 falled to sign a deed to their farm some of Lhe names given the streels cl the town. "Aarotsburgh™ was the given the town in Lhe It may be thal some Aaronsburg original plan le get confused | willy Northumberiang when speak-' county seal because of the liberal donation of lands by Col James | Dunlop and James Harris, Bsq— carly lang holders of Belielonie. i ty lang hoider. of Be ‘Pomona Grange to permit him in secure relief.” Bellefonte, | desirots of securing the county seat, | Mountains in eastern Penns Valley. a Jew. but his religious scruples did However, much of the alleged bis. | not prevent him donating a jot tory connected with the town 3] Jacob Stover and Michael Motz for only surmise and imagination which | the establishment of a Lutheran is the product of the active minds | church. The church was built of people who have passed through 1704, and was called the Salem the town and then invented an in- | Evangelical Lutheran Church, teresting story which was inspired | first Lutheran church Centr by the wide streets and the town's | County location in the geographical center | Apparently Aaron Levy had hops fey an 3) Wi ir Ha | quire considerable size for his Orig- ing of a town giving Harrisburg close compelilion in the vote for the state capitol-—Northumberiand failed in the heated contest by only a few voles, Aaronsburg. accord. ing (0 avallable records, was not ons=idered in 1800, wi! established contest between and realizing Miesburg's superior | commercial location, hed some of its | inhabitants tow a raft-load of oid furniture up Spring Creek io the town and then procesded io notify the Assembly that “the first boat- load of furniture has arrived a Bellefonte.” This message was sup- posed 10 have awakened the iegis- latory to the commercial importance of Beliefonle so (hey duly selected (Continued on Page 5) wen Centre County there Was a Wan trianguiar Beliefonte, Miles to obtain Aaronsburg was th ve county seal not 15 Youths Called Train Kills Man From Clinton Co. Near Coalport Contingent From Two Draft Three Others Escape Injury Boards Will Leave Lock When Truck is Hit on : Haven Today R. R. Crossing The tenth selective gervice call in Three escaped with minor injure take 15 young men from Clinton ed last Thursday belween Fallen will fill the places of three men who sylvania Railroad engine crashed story to police, who revealed later Were rejected at the Altoona Induc- into a truck on a grade crossing tha: a preliminary check by Maloy disclosed nothing missing from th? cabin. Both men were carrying black | Board No. 1 are: Ammon Schrack. tryck and two boys. Kenneth Keith, (Osceola Mills and Tyrone, were R square suitcases, and wearing khaki |Loganton, R. D. 2; Melvin R. Gren- [15 aon of the accident victim, and | A- coats and trousers black and white (Obie, Vito Ricardo, James G. Rockel. | pay Bdminston, 18, were slightly |J. 1+ Downes, train disoatcher, and | hurt. Tne boys were riding on the |C Harold 8. Bierly, La- roar end of the truck at the time! C. M. Myers caps and black shoes, police sald. Mules Run Away A twelve-year-old boy who lives {at the home of Arbose Levan, of Catawissa , Columbia County, suffered lacerations and contusions of the abdomen when a team of mules ran away, He was dragging a field and was pulled along the ground by the mules be- fore he was able to free himself. -> Ridgway Man Indicted William C. Salberg, formerly em- ployed at the Ridgway Post Office, has been indicted by the federal grand jury at Pittsburgh on charges of embezzling a money order for $1,400, The alleged offense took postal inspectors. > The people of (ton station Monday, will leave to- day, Thursday, May 15. i Those who will go from Draft {Robert L. Glaze. | Lock Haven; imar, and Charles C. Mann, Lock Haven. Replacements from this Floyd E. Mark, lona, and Donald C. Arndt, Lock Haven. will send Charles B. Powell, Flem- ington; Guy T. Kryder, Woolrich; Herbert 1. Ergott, Avis: Harold E Englert, Lock Haven, R. D. 1; Roy Lorenzo, Renovo, and Harry W Morgret, Farrandsville, Walter FP. i placement. Naval Officers Al Penn State The 30 Naval Reserve officers who are undergoing intensive training | sylvania State College are gradu- the important spring potato plant- | support to thelr schools, churches | the degree of doctor of science. 's ing. and community organizations. Needed Money to Buy Wedding Suit Paul J. Hatch, a 25-year-old job- less Blair county resident, confess ed to Justice of the Peace C, A. Petterson. of Williamsburg, to set- ting fire to nearly 400 acres tim- ber near his home in Woodbury township so he could fight the fires Rs | a ——— 0 Bo and make enough money to get a | suit of clothes to get married. After Hatch joined the fire fight- ers three times, fire wardens be- came suspicious and detained him. He was not paid for fighting any of the fires. Pheasant Conquer Game Protector Lewis Estep, of | Berwick, while traveling from Cata- wissa to Danville last week wit- neseed a fight to death between a! four-foot blacksnake and 8 ring-| neck pheasant rooster, | 4-ft. Blacksnake When he first ter was shaking Dhehsans few swag ot i t away at Mr. Estep's approach, {t left the snake with a broken back and with its flesh bad- ly cut by the bird's beak. w them, the roos- snake much as and when the a leutenant, junior grade in th» Navy and the others are ensigns. The men were sent to Penn State from Naval districts in all parts of the country to lake the same 16- weeks course of training that was completed there last month by 39 other reserve officers. The train- ing fits them for posts as engineer officers on Diesel-operated warships, 700 Cars Ordered An order has been received by the American Car and Foundry Com- cars, for the Atlantic Coast Line. The order, which is the largest for freight car construction received in a Jong period. is for fifty-ton cars, 40 feet, 6 inches , single sheeted cars with 14-foot ¥ Most of the people we know ars baffled by their own iguoratice. Ad The county's Draft Board No, 2! |H. Overdor!, Renovo: Ralph A. De-| | Baughman, of Mill Hall, is the re-| pany at Berwick for 700 automobile | John Keith, Palien Timber, a pas senger ii the cab of the truck, was ikilled. W. M. Black, driver of the iof the collision | Keith, who was rushed to a Coal- [time after being taken there, All four men were returning from itending a truck garden. The ma- ichine was driven from a {section on a private road up over a {steep grade and then onto the rail- (road tracks Coroner Patrick McDermott, of | cambria county, said the engine, iwith a caboose, was not traveling fast at the time w—————— FAMOUS FEATURES IN 2 BIG COMIC SECTIONS | | For fun and adventure turn lo { place March 4, 1041, according 10 | in Diese] engineering at the Penn: the big Comic Weekly “Puck” and two great supple- {ateg of 15 different colleges and iments in color. Every Sunday with | Centre County | universities, including the U. 8.| the Baltimore American. On sale at threatened to delay by several days might gain much by giving loyei | Naval Academy. One, who hoids| {the Comic Book, all newsstands. wooded | Youths Arrested In Forest Fires Four Clinton County Young Men Charged With Firing Wooded Section Four Noyes township, Clinton Co. youths were given g hearing before | Alderman T. Mark Brungard, Wed. | nesday afternoon, May 7th, on charges of setiing forest fires their home section, Noyes township Retired R.R. Men Are Honor Guests Te nth Annual Banquet is Held at Osceola Mills Catholic Church Twelve retired railroaders of the | Raliroad, among whom were two Bellefonte, were guests of honor Saturday night at the banquet held at the Osceola Mills Immaculate on Mav 1 Conception church 4 | Two of the boys, Clifford E. Sum- The honored guests. employed at), 0, "17." of ‘Brewery Run, and | | Harold 8nyder, 13, of Shintown, will | Downes, assistant train master, en eau? tr be returned to the juvenile court by Alderman Brungard, and the other | bE, P. Blair, engineer. all of Tyrone: | brakeman, Julian: | t%0. Joseph Bretinan, 18 and Jame | Paul Dietzel, clerk, Clearfield: Ww. P| bockhart, 21, both of Drurys Run Carroll, engineer, H. MH. Hale, car Wore remanded to the Clinton board are Willlam J. Kreamer, 8a- | uort physician's office, died a short | inspector. 8. P. Black, machinist, | County Jail in default of $1,000 bai’ | HL. Hughes, operator, O. H. Peigh- | ©ach for the next term of Clinton | tol, conductor, all of Osceola Mills, | County Criminal Court, | fand Joseph Haywood, trackman,| Information was made by J. Allen | | Houtrdale | Underwood. acting district forester | | John Redding. burgess of Osceola of the Sproul District, Renovo, ani! [ Mills, welcomed the retired rail- | partial confessions made by some | | roaders. Introduced at the banquet] of the boys implicated the others. | ‘were the RL Rev. Wm. Downes, | | Bellefonte, whose two brothers were | a rut wal Wedties. (among the guests of honor, E. C.! cross of Hammersley Fork, who | Gegenheimer, superintendent of the Was called in by the district for- { Middle Division, Altoona, and Con- | wctery office to investigate ries | | gressman James VanZandt, H.C | of fires covering a wide ey 3 ei Shintown district. The arrest of! i Hall, Osceola Mills, was toastmaster | at the banquet i i The banquet was the tenth ane the Yuaptat followed his investiga- | nual railroad event to be held in| 00 Of We bons | Osceola Mills for retired railroaders’ who work in the Osceola ares, The, Democracy is not assisted by care- | majority of the guests had been re- | \c% Criticism of officials, whether tired from the railroad during the DY serve local. state or federal (past seven months, governments. “KEEPING UP WITH | of To Meet May 24 To Convene at Pleasant Gap With Walker Grange as Host The regular Centre counts quarterly meeting of Pomona Grange will be held in Logan Grange Hall at Pleasant Gap turday. May 24 with Walker Grange as host. Three SORSIONE as usual mormiang Session promptly at 10 o'clock The afternoon session will ocon- sist of the annual Memorial service followed bY a short period on What the Grange Is Worth, At 3 pm numerous conferences will be held with all Pomona officers as leaders of the various groups All officers the subordinate Granges are urged to make a special effort to attend the conference devoted par- ticularly to his or her office, There will also be conferences for those not interested in any certain office Alter the closing of the afternoon session, during the period from 4 Random [tems COINCIDENCE: Dr. J. W. Claudy, Buperintendent of Rockview relates that prison of firlals were overjoyed, Moray al- ternoon, when the report ca from Potters Mills that a one-armed man was trying to get WS from motor- sis In that community. Early Monday morning Earl Pierce, one-armed trusty taken unauthorized place. Guards rushed Mills bring the But they're stil one-armed prisoner the same day Lihat ranger was humboing Ferm ' Ry thro ¥e county i a had Lv at the priso: eave of to Potter: fugitive back ] wondering why had 0 escap £4) one -4rmen t Ww ah 1 GOSSIP: Man Pui Bellelonte Wa rowdyism fell 10 hi v atiy yeas jall for when sidewalk “Bu : cr " ne gE wi nk of : He talked hi en! 8 yo tiny 1 LIME DUST REPORT: and Bone Compan dec 14 to Council, iared Any Com} had appropriated for the eliminatior » ae! frimtp from Belielo | me +5 0] 4 nut ing the firs thar C io take a pl times the flash bulb and Hewitt, glinking back to his chalr was seen 10 mutter (hing: self ROAST BEEF: Thanks 10 the Kira: the first roast bee! this depari- | ment ever remembers having eaten ist g public dinner or banguet Fish or fowl usually head banguel menus, AGREEMENT: Centre County's iwo for District Attorney Litke, Democrat, and Musser Getlig, Republican. are reported to have reached an agreement are 10 draw straws as shall kiss the babies under 1 of age, and which O 16 Politics seems more practical every day RADIO DEALERS: We'd like {0 see every single radi dealer in Beliefonte turn out for the regular meeting of Council Mon. day night, to demand why Council makes chronic fibbers of them When they sell radios they assure patrons that they're the “latest thing.” that they're powerful, have 800d tone. and can grt good recep tion of nearly every station. Wheo the buyer settles himself beside his new machine for an evening of en- Jovment, what does hie heat? Buzz- ing, grinding scratching, clicking, and, if he’s Jucky, he gets a little p 0 ialiec, y ib 1 candidale: William W WJ wr ve 0 {and all others interested { dishes land other helpful aid for busy wom- Other slate dignitaries of the order (sale at all newsstands, {line on which she | ez p.m. to the supper hour, games and | SBatch of song or voice once in a amusements for the young people | while. As one who dabbled in Crys- will be! tal sels back in the days when you led by Miss Laura Weaver and Mr. had arrived if your set picked ip Herbert Gilmore, of Penn State | the Arlington time signals, we feel Grange. {that we know what we're talki The cvening session will feature @boul when we say that even those play by the Progress Grange “ignals were more salisfactory than be od ie {young people, followed by conferring | ibe pandemonium we geil over our tof fifth degree, completion of busi-, modern and expensive radios these ness matters and closing ceremon- | days. Mos: of the noise could be feos | eliminated through enforcement of Come to Pomona Grange, we'll be the boro radio noise ordinance looking for you there. The Grange: RED LETTER: is worth a lot to you, if fun and effort you will share Monday was a red letier day for simian — | Bellefonte Women of the Moose, Tested Recipes Helpful for they entertained the Hon James New ways to prepare delectable J. Davis, Director General and Pil- hints to lessen housework grim Governor, and also many en will be found in the Housewife's: This corner always is somewhat Almanack, regular feature with the amazed at the boundless enthusi- Baltimore Sunday American, On| asm of The Woman of the Moose | Whatever apring it is that gives imei asin them their energy. interest, activity Unusual Accident and loyalty, should Be piped into Mrs. Ralph Losier, of New Al- Bellefonte's Big Spring to help out bany, fell from her porch when the | the rest of us fumblers. was hanging | g ANCASTER ALMANAC: clothes broke. She is a patient a: the Robert Packer Hospital at We know & Beliefonte woman Ww Sayre, suffering from a fractured | ¥hom practically mo world event, ! (Continued on page four) UE Oveércharged, Is Right!!! AS oh theca ic iin ot EE —— —————— By POP MOMAND ——— -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers