Odd and CURIOUS in the + NEWS = HISTORICAL NOTE Historians now have establish- ed the approximate date when Abraham Lincoln began to grow whiskers. State Senator, Nor- man G. Flagg, of Alton, Ill, has found an old letter, written by an ancestor while visiting at Springfield. It said: “'Old Abe’ Is raising whiskers and is not as ugly as he was.” The date: Jan. 1, 1861, midway between the Ci- vil war president's election and inauguration. RAM IN TIME 8S. Jusachi, of Hood River, Ore., owes his life to his pet ram which proved more than a match for a 350-pound boar. When the 76-year-old rancher was attack- ed by the boar, his cries for help brought the ram on the run. The pet leaped a fence and battered the boar into sub- mission. Jusachi, seriously hurt, crawled to safety. ESCAPES BEES While working in a truck patch near Bloomsburg, William Taylor found himself directly in the path of a large swarm of bees, but escaped Injury by ducking to the ground until the swarm passed over him. A man, working at the nearby Yocum farm, was deceived by the noise which he thought was caused by a passing train. MILK AND MONEY C. Ben Ress, former governor of Idaho, finds farming much more remunerative than serving as governor. Says Ross who re- tired to his ranch in 1937, after three terms as Idaho's chief ex- ecutive: “In May those seventy cows I'm milking brought in $813 nearly twice as much as I ever got in one month for being gov- ernor, 10 YEARS LATE A cashier's check, issued April 10, 1901, by the Markle Banking and Trust Company at Hazleton turned up 40 years late, and was promptly honored. H. W. Wedge, of Jersey Shore, in whose name the check was made, found it in an unopened envelope while cleaning out his desk. HARD LUCK W. L. Judkins, of Havre, Mont, knows what it is to have bad luck haunt him, He was struck by a switch engine in the railroad yards and wag taken to a hospital. And while he was convalescing there, he tumbled from his and broke his nose. REASON ENOUGH John Bonning, of Sayre, was not on hand Thursday for his scheduled marriage to Miss Dor- othy Stevens, of Elmira, N. Y. He had the measles. Wisdom 1s the art of listening to the soft voice of truth rather than the ‘incessant babble of selfishness, ignorance and superstition. Britain's new radio plane locator device, slong the English coasts, was orig- inated in America by Cyril F. El- well, former Stanford University engineer, it was revealed this week. The secret of the device, it was stated, has been shared by a num- ber of American engineers for sev- eral years. Its most valuable feature was said to be towers about 237 feet high! spaced about ten miles apart along the English coast. Prom these tow- ers, a curtain of radio waves is transmitted continuously into space e— —__ Peaches 75 Bombs may be falling in London but the prices of fruits and vege- tables are not. Witness this: One store had a shelf of peaches which a grower wouldnt bother to send to market and the price was 75 cents each, “Yes, gir” sald the clerk, “we've sold quite a few. There's nothing like a fresh peach, you know.” Lots of strawberries—knotty lit-| tle specimens—were on display at bunch” said a clerk, “enough for | another store for sale at $380 a __—. T. R. Selfe, 80, and his wife over 74, of Sugar Run, Clinton county, had g terrifying experience Tues- hall storm. At the height of the ' Plane Locator The waves from this curtain pro- Story of Britain’ now working successfully Freak Lightning Strikes Home The Most Widely Read Newspaper In Centre County. A Visitor In Seven Thousand Homes Each Week. SECOND SECTION dhe Cenire Democraf NEWS, FEATURES VOLUME 60. BELLEFONTE, PA, THURSDAY, JUNE 2 6, 1941, NUMBER 26. State College Miss Mary Lois T Girl Killed, Companion Injured In Auto Crash at Albion, Indiana hayer, 24, and Miss Alice M. Murray, Victims of Distressing Acci- dent While Enroute to Chicago | An automobile trip to Chicago, [planned by two State College young | women came to a tragic end at Al- iblon, Indiana, Saturday afternoon | when Miss Mary Lois Thayer, 24, {was killed and her companion, Miss | Alice M. Murray, was painfully in- jured in a collision with a truck Miss Thayer died In Lakeside | Hospital, Kendallville, Indiana, after [the head-on crash. It was reported [that the car driven by Miss Mur- ray smashed into a truck after skid- ding on Route 6, near Kendallville Miss Murray is in Lakeside Hos- pital, Kendallville, suffering from shock, hysteria, and several cuts and bruises. Hospital authorities re- ported no broken bones yesterday Miss Thayer, who Was employed in the office of Dr. Warren Mack at the College, lived at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Danlel Krumrine, 345 west College avenue, as did Miss Murray, a member of the extension Deer Killed In | Crash With Car | ' Bellefonte Residents Escape Unhurt, But Have Car Damaged Mr. and Mrs McDowell Bennison | of Bellefonte escaped injury about | 5 o'clock Friday morning when | their automobile collided with a | deer, killing the animal, at Ben- | nison’s Hill. near the Centre-Clin- | ton coun'y line on the road between Cedar Springs and Bellefonte Mr. and Mrs. Bennison were turning to Bellefonte after a visil to | the home of Mr, Bennison's parents | Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Bennison nesj McClain's mil Their far, just purchased a week before, was | considerably damaged in the acci- | dent Mr. Bennison reported the mis- hap to Game Proector Niles L Reeder and the deer was taken (© the Clinton county jail to be served ito the inmates. nm A ———— re- New Theatre For Philipsburg. According to the Philipsburg Daily Journal business interests of that town are figuring on building a 500-seat theatre on Front Street in the near future. The new theatre, when erected, will be fireproof alr conditioned and modern in every respect: will have the projector and all equipment heated Dack i stage, thus eliminating unnecessary | a at the front of the theatre ject over the English Channel Whenever a plane approaches from the continent, it necessarily passes through these waves at some point. When a plane enters a wave sec- tor, radio energy in the waves strike it and “bounce,” back toward their | point of origin, which may be one or more of the radio towers Delicate electronic instruments detect any wave thus reflected Hence, every time a plane passes through a curtain, a detector regis- ters its presence, and the beam in- | tercepted locates the invader Cents Each—In London | pound. A shop offered unrationed chees® | from Wisconsin at $1 a pound. | Tomatoes, it is claimed, have | come down. You can get them at i many places for $1 a pound. { String beans sold for 90 cents a | pound. {| Asparagus, which has been diffi- | feult to obtain, wag on the market at $150 a bunch. “It's a large | two people.” | their bed and nearly threw Mr, Selfe | to the floor, | Mr. and Mrs. Selfe had retired { but were awakened by the hai] just! day night of last week during 8 |perore the lightning struck. Neither | | Mr, Selfe or his wife were injured. | staff In Economics The women were on their way to Chicago where Miss Murray planned to attend a Home Economies con- ference, After that they planned to visit at the home of Miss Murray's parents in Sugar Bush, Wisconsin Miss Thayer was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs Carlisle, R. D. 6. Mr Thayer for- The Oldtimer | | ¢OVPLE FEET THAT MAY PE AWFUL PRICE FOR IT, } | MY FATHER PLANTED THAT TREE WHEN HE WAS A BOY (TS THE OLDEST LIVING THING IN THE COUNTY | AND THE GRAND ‘DADDY OF THEM ALL. DONT BEM RIGHT TO DESTROY I(T, JUST TO ADD A $ TO THE WIDTH OF THE HIGH WA PROGRESS BUT ITS PAYING AN ' the department of Home | { | i Paul Thayer, now of | merly was a resident of State Col- | lege where he was employed in the College Extension Services, Miss Thayer lived in State College as a! little girl Miss Thayer was a graduate of Boiling Spring High school and of the Carlisle Commercial College She was a member of the Lutheran church of State College Surviving are her parents, a bro- ther, Sherwood, and a sister, Mrs Shippensburg Funeral services were held at the Lutz Funeral Home, Carlisle, Wed- nesday morning at 10:30 o'clock, with burial at New Freedom - - cst Ps ot py cap— Money for School Among payments to financially handicapped school districts ap- proved by the Auditor General's of- fice at Harrisburg this week, wa $1200 to Mahoning Township, In Montour County of West Virginia A. F. Bhank, of {Visor ws Plans for holding an Open House demonstration between June 23 and 28, of local work being done by the National Youth Administration are being made by the Centre County | NYA staff, it was announced by W I. Scott Bellefonte, NYA super- { Centre county OT of The demonstration will mark the! sixth anniversary of creation of th NYA as a federal youth agency ded- icated to helping find work experience, their place ir [he local “ young people Jobs and 1 American Democracy observance will te part of statewide ceremonies being held by RE — a Wenn Chg, of i id N | il wv) NYA PLANS OPEN HOUSE more than 25000 NYA youth In announcing plans for this He inspection ail ph NYA program Isaac State NYA Administrator, sald that “NYA not only wishes Ww give the public every opportunity to inspect its many projects and to the services (it extends but also take advantage of occasion to concretely demonstrate that NYA Is doing iu for ce fense program and that it is a truly American Answer some of problems of youth ' (Continued on page eight) pub- tt) wie of Ba of c Sutton. we Ove to youth 0 the part the to the contemporary Blanchard Ma n Gets Year In Jail for Knife Assault In Beech Sentenced In Clinton County Court Friday! Creek Fracas Morning After Jury of 8 Men and 4 Women Find D The trial] of Dean C, Kunes, of Blanchard, charged with aggravated assault and battery In the stabbing of Godfrey Laubscher of Castanea during an altercation in the early morning of May 17 at the Beech Creek Hotel, came to a close in the Clinton county court at Lock Haven last Thursday, when the jury re- turned a verdict of gullty F morning Kunes appeared in court and was sentenced hy Judge Henry Hipple to serve one year in the Clinton county jail. The court also ordered him to the costs and $1 fine The jury on the case consisted of Morris K Walle, William B. Bartges and Mrs. Lena Brungard, Logan- ton: Maines W. Poorman and Mrs A. Thomas, Renovo, Wilbur McClellan, H. W. Brillhart, Ches- Miss Myrtle M. Hancock James 8. Bodle, Charles E. Bower and Mrs. Harry 8. Young. The ver- dict was reached after a two-hours deliberation. Before passing sentence, Judge Hippie heard the plea of the defense attorney, who stated in behalf of his client that Kunes had always borne a reputation for good character and that he is needed home where, as the only physically sound person, he is head of his family which consists of his mother and two mute brothers riday rion pay Miriam H ter Murty at we al SO-THAT’S THE LAW The Human Interest Side of Legal Oddities By Elliott H. Marrus Thighs—The thickness of Con- stance Bennett's thighs was recently the issue of a law suit. This unus- ual situation arose after Miss Ben nett had hired a portrait painter to paint her picture When the painting was finished, the actres refused to accept and pay for it be- cause she claimed that her right thigh looked thick on the canvas while as a matter of strict fact, she had a beautiful pair of Hmbs The artist sued Miss Bennett for his fee back to “recopy t the correct form Within five minutes the jury was back with the proper form | but the sentehce had been chang- y two We changed our | er "e minds jury File 8 On ed t years sald the Kiss v. Kiss was the name of case in which a husband sued his wife for divorce in New York be-. cause of her alleged infidelity a {| companions the $47.000 verdict kind) wa: favor of an and passengers as a result of just ah accident The automobile had run into a number of cows which were being driven by a farmer along a road in the dark The car was damaged and the driver and his were severely injured Because his cows blocked the road of ita fury largest by a automobilist rendered in his such An ancient Chinese law provided and could nat be seen. the jury de- that a husband jand the case was put before a jury iwife upol any af the A which decided that the actress was right and did not have to accept a ‘portrait in which her thighs ap- peared too thick Luck—When a jury in Kansas City had a sudden change of heart after its verdict was in—an al- ready convicted man was sentenced to serve only two years in prison instead of five. The prisoner had been convicted on a morals charge and the jury had recommended a sentence of five years on the form sheet, When they returned to the court room, the judge noticed that {the verdict was made out on the wrong form sheet and sent the jury | {grounds neglect of husband's par-| ents, barrenness, infirmity, unchaste conduct, theft. envy, or bad temper In the United States thirty-seven legal grounds vores Red Lights—Just motoring often do nol mix safely, ! so do animals and automobiles! sometime make an unhappy com- bination here have been many | Iawsuils arising from accidents due to collisions between motor cats and such four-legped creatures such | As cows, horses, dogs and pigs there are for di- i i as alcohol and In California, — could divorce Riaisied that the farmer was negligent Perhaps some day we will have laws requiring red Who knows? Babies Because a mother insist. od upon wheeling her baby's car- riage into the front enirance of the apartment house in which she lived in New York City, she and her fam- lly were dispossessed Although they paid the rent on time, a court ruled that the landlord had a right to make the family move becuse they violated the house rule against tak- ing baby carriages in the front en- trance lights for cows Sharks—Law enforcement age n- some Lime ago, aicies throughout the country are try-| to catch up with loan who operate particularly among poor people victimizing them by making them pay hundreds of per- cent interest on their loans One woman who borrowed $50, paid back $4305 without even settling her debt. The loan shark charged inter- est at th each $500 she owed. At the end of one week, she owed $60, and the o ® sharks ir ns amount kept Increasing weekly Al-! | though she paid back $4.385, there Twas still a balance of $400 due. The law finally apprebended the man and he is now paying his debt to society—in a jail Grammar-—The Courts are called upon to decide all kinds of cases involving all kinds of prob- lems. One of the more unusual ohes was one in which the Supreme Court of the State of New York had to settie a question of for clerks, the applicants were re- quired to punctuate this sentence properly: “May I help you with your | problem of reorganization of the {| personne} (Continued on Page 5) Purchases Farm Thru Govt. Loan Lewis W. Baylets Acquires Wagner Estate, Located East of Lemont i Announcement that Lewis W. Baylets of Bellefonte has been granted a tenantpurchase loan was made this week by Oakley 8. Hav- nes, Farm Security Supervisor in | Centre county. | The farm secured by the Baylets family, known as the Jonas W. | Wagner place, is located about two | miles east of Lemont. | During the past three years, nine | | loans, amounting to approximately | $66,082, have been made to farm- | {ers in Centre County for the pur-| { chase of farms, the FSA supervisor | | stated. {| The Baylets are a real farm fam- ily. { cally his entire life in farming, and | housewife. There are four children, two boys and two girls, The par- ents and children were all born in { Pennaylvania. _| Beside the dwelling, the 103-acre farm contains a large barn and nee ceasary outbuildings. The new | owners are working out detailed | farm and home management plans | in co-operation with Farm Security Administration technical advisors. Mrs. Baylets will carry the respon- sibility for developing a live-at- home program by which a large part of the food consumed will be grown | Mr. Baylets has spent practi. | Mrs. Baylets is an experienced farm | ] i i | Violators Fined Vehicle Violation With Automobile Centre County Man Pays $100 For Killing Deer Out | of Season June has been an unusually busy month for wardens in the Clinton county ayea. Recent arrests for fishing violations included Danisl Tinney, Jr, of New York City,! {| Henry McPeck gnd Mrs. N. V. Mun. son. both of Olean, N. Y., who were | arrested on Rattlesnake Run for fishing without a license, At a) { hearing held in Lock Haven all three were fined $25 and costs, ! Charles E Seyler, fishing McEl-| hattan Run on a license belonging to John E Seyler, both of Logan- ton, on Sunday, June 15th. was found by fish wardens to have 36 trout in his possession. C. E Yox-| | heimer, also fishing the same stream | Sunday, was arrested with 11 trout | | Both men were given a hearing and ! fined, | ‘The law breaking was not con- | fined to fishing. Fish Warden Ceo. W. Cross, of Hammersley Fork, ar- | rested Joseph F. Alexander Wil- { Ham D. Alexander and Daniel A | Poskovich, all of Clarence, Centre | County, for killing a deer on Pan-| | ther Run June 15th. The men were ‘turned over to Game Warden Miles Reeder, of Lockport, for final | settlement. Alexander whs fined (Continued Bottom of Column) Sent to Jail For Orviston Man Pleads Guilty to Intoxication While Driving Car John Packer of Orviston, who plead guilty to driving his automo- bile In Beech Creek while under the influence of intoxicating liquor, was sentenced In the Clinton county court at Lock Haven on Friday to three months in the county jail and $100 fine, and directed to pay the costs. The State Motor Police told court that Packer was driving his car near the school in Beech Creek last month, zig-zagging from side of the street to the other while a num- ber of children were waiting for school to open, and that the Packer and ran into the porch of a home there -~ Killed At White Deer. Mrs. Mabel E. Pardoe, 32, of Pottsgrove, Northumberland Coun- ty, was fatally injured when her automobile collided with a truck along Route 15 at White Deer, seven miles north of Lewisburg. $100 by Game Warden Reeder and the others were exonerated of blame { in the matter, the | yelists Collide ’ ‘Both Riders Thrown From Motorcycle When Vehicle Strikes Car Stanley H. Ruffieid and Matthias K. Moore, both of Lock Haven, were painfully injured Friday afternoon on Route 64 in front of the Haagen | school house, when the motorcycle | they were riding collided with the rear of an automobile | Wilbur Decker of Montgomery According to an account of the slowed up as directed, but the mo- | | toreycle following was traveling too car finally mounted the sidewalk| close to permit slackening of its! speed in time to avoid running into | the rear of the sedan. Both Duffield and Moore were | | thrown from their seats when the | impact occurred. Duffield was taken to the Lock Haven Hospital where he was revived and treated body. He then returned home. Moore suffered brush burns of the face, arma, legs and body which were treated by the police at the scene of the aocident. Use our Classified Ad columns, o e rate of $1900 a week for gram- | imar. In a Civil Service examination’ driven by | accident, traffic had been slowed | down at that point by an employe | of the West Penn Power Co. while | | repairs were being made to a wire. | | Decker, driving east in a sedan, | for bruises and cuts of the face and | . efendant Guilty | The court heard these pleas with { & sympathetic ear, but declared that under the circumstances it felt that | Kunes could not be placed on pa- jrole, The defendant was very for- |tunate, Judge Hipple pointed out in that the six cuts which he {flicted on the body of young Laub- scher did not result fatally The court also sald that the case must also be viewed from the viewpoint of the publi He then informed Kuneg that the court had intended sending him to the penitentiary but recolisidered and sent him to jail instead for a year, adding that the court would entertain a motion for parole at the expiration of three months, but would not commit itself (Continued on page eight) Blanchard Sisters Hurt In Accident Car Forced Over Embank- ment Attempting to Avoid Collision in- P Courter and her 1 AT * ‘ Bolopue, both ef Miss Esler Louise Mrs, Harry Blanchard, were pal last Thursday afternoon in an ac- cident on Route 64 near Mill Hall when their car went over a 15-foot embankment null inured niully injurec * to Miss a coach on Courter, who she was pro- road, about a a mile west of the inter- just outside Mill Hall, when west by Mrs Jessie A. Kruth of Lock Haven attempted make a U-turn front of Courter machine According was driving ceeding east € rsp | fourth ol the section a sedan driven in he To avoid a collision Miss Courter said her car off r ! she ran h gal side of the road, traveled the length of the highway in front of the 8ny- der Bervice station there and in at- tempting to get back on to the pavement lost control The auto- mobile then swerved to the left side of the highway, struck the guard rail, went over the embankment and { Ianded On its side. Miss Courier suffered bruises of { the left arm brush burns and bruis- es of arms and legs Her sister, Mrs. Bolopue, sustained a laceration of the head a badly sprained left wrist and bruises on arms and legs Both were treated at the Lock Haven Hospital and then discharg- ed the wm — ‘Woman Escapes Electric Chair ' Governor Commutes Sentence to Life Imprisonment at Last Moment Just before Mrs, Josephine Rum- audi, of Philadelphia, was to have | been brought to the death house at Rockview for electrocution Monday morning, Governor James commu- | ted the sentence to life imprison- ment Mrs. Rumauldo had been sen- tenced to die in the electric chair for the poison slaying of her hus-| band, Antonio, a Philadelphia lamp- lighter, in the famous insurance case Both the district attorney's office at Philadelphia and Mrs. Rum- auldo’s attorney had advised the | pardon board that life imprison- ment would be “adequate to meet the ends of fustice.” Herman Petrillo, one-time Phil- adelphia spaghetti salesman mand member of the same murder-for-in- | surance ring, was also granted a allow his jJawyer to make a final appeal to the U. 8B, Supreme Court for re-argument in the case. Pe- | trillo, originally sentenced to be electrocuted June 30, was granted a nor James. Too Much Measles Those pesky measles finally be- came so rampant among a single group of Selinsgrove children as to cause a change in scheduled plans Sunday. First Lutheran church can- celled its Children’s Day service be- cause too many of the youngsters are {ll with the contagion “murder-for- respite from the electric chair to reprieve until October 20 by Gover- | Random “" [tems | el | “BENNER PIKE?” As this department goes to press, | Tuesday noon, the name the {new Bellefonte-Btate College high- | way has been decided by the judges, | but announcement will not be made tuntil after this section is on the | press. The judges are sworn 0 se- red bul grapevine reports received department are 0 the effect that the name is “Benner Pike” If { this is correct, this department has won part case We shall { henceforth be known as one of the | blokes (if anyone ever thinks about (it) who took the “turn” out of | “turnpike A “pike” is defined as | “any main highway.” which fits the | new road perfectly. We were not in | favor of naming the road for Gen- | eral Benner, because we felt the {restoration of his former home at Rock would be a more fitting mem- {orial. But we're not complaining two strongly, because the General's chief and most lasting accomplishment was the founding in 1827 The Centre Democrat, which been issuing this corner’'s salary check most gratifying regularity Again we wish to thank you readers for your interest and port when thi department was voor f ior y by this , of ils of hag su} & Whe "yr i naming the road “Benner “ARCHITECT'S MAN": This ¢ 4d Mr irnpike eparument owes Morris Campbell Caldwell, Altoona a who representative of the architect the Bellefonte High school job. Two weeks ago we persons who believed the was not being done satisfac- Ww up the architect's who would explain Only we referred the architect's man And now, it seems Mr Campbell who came here with the fine title of architectural is doomed to be nothing Architects : long school con- ruc continues. Some heartless person last week nalled on the new for Mr. Campbell's use on the Allegheny street gide of the & sign bearing inscription Th an apology wo of Hunter s y re ol I hitects is on oot; - struction advised work hunt sentative in 4 LRP EY The tie won cabin erected the artis- Arc schoo] ot 1 i1 4opet 8 y Lic hitect’s Man LIFE AMBITION: i ast Tuesday's Harrisburg Tele graj showing scenes at the wed- ding of Miss Sarah Gilbert, of Har- risburg, and John Tuten, formerly of Bellefonte, include a view of sev- of the Beliefonte guests. One of them who can't be recognized in the photo, mourns the fact that she didnt know the photo was being taken and was facing away from the camera. The same woman, whose lifelong ambition has been to “pat” /& governor, had that ambition reai~ | ied when she brushed by Governor James, who also was a guest at the wedding ROAD PATCHES: Motorists driving along the new part of the Pleasant Gap-Dale’s Summit highway express amazement that the highway built only last summet, is sporting numerous large ‘patches They can’t understand why & road only one year old should | require patching. Neither can we MISCELLANEOUS: Congratulations to the manage- ment and the operators at the local Bell Telephone offices for the fine telephone service for the past week or ten days. It's a pleasure to use a telephone these days We could never understand why federal gov- ernment employes are exempt {rom occupation taxes. Their jobs are se- cure and it seems only fitting that they should be required to do as much as the rest of us toward the support of the government which employs them. | SCHOOL NAME: With fiendish delight we suggest (Continued on Page 5) Milton Woman Killed by Train Mrs. Charlotte 1. Snyder, 62, of Milton, widow of John H. Snyder, was instantly killed Sunday morn- ing about 5:40 o'clock when she was {struck by the west-bound paper train of the Pennsylvania Railroad ‘Company, at & point south of the {Cameron Avenue grade Crossing. Mrs. Snyder, who lived alone at the rear of Railroad avenue, is believed {to have been picking coal, and evi- dently was between the two rails when struck. She is said to have {been deaf ahd apparently had her | back to the approaching train, which ‘had not yet begun to slow for the stop at the Milton station Car Damaged in Collision | Damages totaling $35 resulted Fri- | day night in Lock Haven when the jeft front fenders of cars operated ‘by John Bonaody, Mill Hall, and Wayne A. Showers, of State College, colliled on Bellefonte avenue, just west of the city limits The State Motor Police report that Bonsody was proceeding east and Showers ‘west. The Showers car was dam- iaged to the extent of $30 ih €ral He ii storm a freak stroke of lightning (Continued on Page 5) struck their home, raced through | bug the lightning did a great deal of | { damage to paper and plaster in the | the dining room, the front room, | rooms it visited, leaving what look- | the upstairs hall and their bed- ed like small bullet holes in the room, shattered the left side of | walls ‘KEEPING UP WITH By POP MOMANL THE JONESES’ — A Slight Misunderstanding!!! Two Injured in Crash When he turned his car sharply | to avoid hitting a truck making a | left turn in front of him H. E. Kel. | ler, 75, of Osceola Mills, and his | i companion, Russell Cross, 27, of | | Philipsburg R. D., were slightly in- | jured Thursday morning one mie ER Le I EE - Lewistown Mon Owns Freak Shoat R. J. Loht, McClure, R. D. 2, near [there is a form of a leg pointing Osceola Mills as. | Bunbury, has sold a shoat born! forward instead of down Ed at the! S0ItH of ¢ Keller 48 $he Howla- seven weeks ago, one of a litter of [tip are four finger-like toes. The face while Gross ua a Jon six, which has only three legs. new owner of the pig is Blain Mack-| or "id noe tear i Where the left front leg should be |nair, Lewistown, R pit Bees Are Active | {| Walter Dodd, Mansfield bee own- | er, cites a recent example of the | | activity of bees. He said that a hive, | I... albino Sey id Nite with | Rats have been killing chicks at the guiding on A Soules, was 2 pounds | nk eyes, and a e — WAS e ome h t'g | heavier at night than in the morn- | found recently in a {fap at the Home a ow nt, hon Mehta ing. He explained that until last | of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Wetzel, Selins- | ng yg | week very little honey was made by grove, R. D., near Monroe Mills, St the traps for the killers. | the bees. |
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers