THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA. July 10, 1941. RECENT WEDDINGS Lowery-—Barrett Mr. and Mrs. James Barrett 8; of Curtin, have announced the mar- riage of their daughter, Beverly Lorraine, to Sheldon I. Lowery, son of Mrs. Merrill Lowery of Hublers burg. The ceremony was performed by the pastor of the Evangelical and Reformed church, Westminster Md. The couple was unattended The bride is a graduate of the Belle- fonte High School and has employed at State College The bridegroom is a graduate of Walker Township High School and is em ployed by the Pennsylvania Stat College. They expect to go to house keeping in the near future been } Nel¥ A pretty wedding Ww nesday July 2, 14) the home M D Gardner, Blanchard when tl daughter, Mi Lo becam bride of Billy A. Net f Mill The ceremony was performed by the Rev Howard G. Young Baptist minister from Lock Haven, under an arch fashioned of fen drangeas. The of Alice blue « of delphinium Her maid Brungard blue chiffon phinium Brungard ceremony served decorated wedding ington, D. C, and the couple will live at Mill Hall. The b ployed by the Casselberr) Company, Lock Haven. The a graduate of the Lock Haven Hi School Gardner xk lace afternoon of Mi and al bride wore a di wffon with a « sllow M } ire ana ye of wore wit} and Wa man. Alle wedding uj guests. The pink roses Gettysburg Alexandr artmer a per 17 with trip to tabi All Wa ia ' to iy in Hutchenson—Hart At a cerem at her home Hart, daughter performed June Mi Chai Le of Mr. and Mu J D. Hart f East Foster avenue State College, became t : Clyde C. Hutchenson Rock. The was performed Babcock of Sally Kocher maid of honor, and the b was attended by Edward of Butler. The bride was giv marriage by her fathe The cou received congratulati ur cheon held lowing was attractively roses and larkspur 0 sSiligie oy tate af Petersburg wa rid rid Tram: PE TOON egroom on » al the cerem a graduate Teachers © SON Is State State tany Mi Ohio and a m fraternit Avenue § Hut moer of io y. He is +» ! Butler Floor Comj following silon dent of the Immediately the newlyweds departed for ding tour to Ashevill N the I Smoky ! North Carolina Upon their return home arily of the parents Fo Grea tempor bride Bohn—Meckley Maria Mi: Miss daughter Geraldine M: Mrs. 1 f nA Ok and | Meckley, of Charles Wert State College, and Bohn, son of David Bohn, of Boalsburg, were married Saturday night, June 21, at the home of the bride's parents, Rev M. 8. Mellott performed the ring ceremony, Miss Martha Etters was maid of honor, and William Leath- ers, cousin of the bride, was best man. Virginia Nef niece of the bridegroom, was train-bearer Le roy Meckley cousin of the bride played the wedding march The bride, given in marriage by her father, was dressed In aqua blue with white accessories and carried red and white lilies, Miss Et- ters pink with white acces- sories carried red roses, The home was decorated with roses and ferns, and the ceremony was per- formed in front of bank of flow- el A reception followed, Guests at the wedding wert I'he Rey M1 Mellott Benjamin Mellott Betty Mellott Mrs Mild Foreman B Mead Mi and Mrs re. M and white Vir- Mrs. Wil McClellan Kathe Mr. and ar Mi Mi: Eliza Ha LAS roses wore and ed wi Reber Nett John Mi uvel Du and da Houser Rodn M1 Dale M y n y 1 John DUrg <3 - The chance of a lifetime to buy a beautiful modern oil | range at a price lo ease your budget! You $£9.50 fun with a Quick Meal. will think cookingis SEE NEW MODELS TODAY! oe H. P. Schaeffer Hardware Phone 20 Bellefonte, Pa. So-That's the Law (Continued from page one) EXERCISE the courts follow the doctrine that| If You were not fortunate enough every dog Is entitled to “one free !0 have been born with a love for bite.” In other words. the owner is the out-doors, you must cultivate it. not responsible if his dog bites | It Will bring joy into your life that someone, unless the vicious charac- | ¢an be found in no other way. ter of the animal is known to him, | Walking is the very best all- No charge for samples around wing It is exhilarating and delightful to swing along with A Word From the Wise . . . The |... "..4y siride, breathing the fresh late Justice Holmes is reported to al ' . have once told the present Chief fie iv, Sag it Wie sume time ob Justice, Harlan Fiske Stone, then |, _°,, " How lovely the aky. th 61 years old “My boy, about 75 ng, ings ow love'y the sky, Lhe Vers ago, 1 learned that 1 was not birds and myriads of other interest- God. And 80, when the people of ing and beautiful objects! It makes the various states want to do some- | YOU glad to be alive In spring, nes thing and I can't find anything in ‘fe comes to all the world. You the Constitution expressly forbid. | Sense It In your own soul. Sap ding them to do it, I say, whether | rises In the plants and trees and I lke it not: ‘Damn it, let them nature rejoices that winter is past do It In the autumn you are seized by No Joke impulse lft your arms and un package of one of the betler run with the eddying leaves as they known brands of cigarettes from a | come swirling down the wing vending machine in Syracuse, N. Y of the wind In great ou'- He opened the package and lighted doors we forget the cares that have Suddenly there was a Pest weighing us down The blood the cigarette exploded, | circulates more freely as the breath- injuring one of the smoker's ing becomes deeper. Cobwebs ar? Mr. Lindner is suing the manufac- brushed from the brain. When we turer claiming that the explosion enter office we cua was due a foreign substance work with a wil] because we have which was negligently permitted by ' been invigorated and refreshed by the manufacturer to be contained , the exercise out world in the cigarette The Americans their legs 50 litle for walking tha seientisis have predicted they do not mend thelr way ture generation ol De born without legs HEALTH & BEAUTY or the Lo Mr. Lindner bought on God's a cigarette bang” and eyes the nouse oO! to door the in are using SOI that the fu wil a fl i It operate cost $15. the New $3.000 000 United court Expensive Law | 000.000 year Ww York courts, This more it costs the States maintain its 108 which include those in the Philip. in Mammoth Cave are born without Hawaii and China) hey ture destroyed that nature not of a City than to Lhe : Yes did no, use them, 4 them remove pines Is quite ’ t Lal It Marriage After Death . . . Under parts the German law a woman may mar- ry a man after he is dead. This un- sual regulation has been adopted ince the present war began. Under | statute, a soldier at the front would declare to his commanding of his intention 0 marry. On the trength of this declaration tl . bride-to-be may register the mar- : J ar riage within two months of the '° = VARY You de even though ler ithout exercise the time sickly, go to ue are used, or at least them of deprive 1 and developments or vigor vod « rit spall hould Ising i atrophy become you YOUur arm this can ficer the arm To iteraliy wd SU east y N : aia » be useful ar " al a Cannot If Work ETO Ale weak remaks 3 you laration the sold dis " ot and x lead Go tn Odd Names of Casey Spooner gre Lovejoy, In Massachusett May Fall her husband will Fail Hiinok for a cally and willch you probably are If you wed Mn in ’ 4 then you Church Wedding . . . James Brad- rvs. svabim of New York, at the time of : He SNALOw narriage (by a civil ceremony) promised his bride have a church thereafter sued in wre fee Can that cerem keep his annulment was because her husband promise. A word U we Annulment: { broken for ne ner broken his husbands—Dont t granted SET TY aren every Lilies . The late Alfred J. Crane well-known turist several mont foster the is cousing are now u ak the on the ground Crane was not in the full pos- seasion of his faculties when he made his will DOrsicuil 18 Br ty : ¥ i ago § th wing neath closed by ads in ving ews i} that ceived ven the old open cars were betler purpcses health, because Ii s Impossible not 0 breathe abun- in ar Nile traveling In of os Angels . . . A lawyer and a doctor were arguing over the relative mer- thelr professions. Said the 1 don't say that all law- crooks--but you will have that the legal profession does not make angels of You're right agngwered the law- You doctors certainly have better of us there oi w aem : - WCian Ale admit COLLEGE PLANS VEGETABLE AND FLOWER FIELD DAYS ] wv } yers /! to Vegetable and flower variety and Lieeding fleld days are scheduled ath the Pennsylvania State College for August 14 and 15 Dr W. B Mack, head of the department of horticulture The firest of the two days will be devoted to the vegetable variety tests and other field experiments, includ- the vegetable breeding experiments Variety and strain tests are being run on 40 samples of carrots. 178 of sweel corn, § of popoorn, M of beets 65 of bush snap beans, and 94 of to- matoes, The vegetable breeding ex- periments are concerned with cab- bage, peppers, rhubarb, sweet corn, and tomatoes On the second day the flower and ornamental experiments will be in- spected. These include 263 samples of marigold varieties and 338 sam- ples of other annual flower species Besides these, 47 samples of annuals which are to be judgd for All-Amer- ica awards, 27 new samples of her- baceous perennials, 115 varieties of gladiouls, and 10 varieties of roses wiii oe shown. The test plantings of a large number of ormamental shrub and evergreen tree species also will be seen nen ver the announces Random Items (Continued from page one) is the honor of being a Councilman, and there are times when this cor- ner wouldn't give two cents for the honor LAMB STREET: t's time Bellefonte citizens began thinking seriously of closing Lamb Street from Spring Street to the alley at the Episcopal Parish house. When the new school is com- pleted, it will completely fill the “island” bounded by Allegheny, Linn. Spring and Lamb Streets Across Lamb Street will be the pilay- ground. Across Spring Street will be the Armory school building, and across Allegheny Street will be the Dale building. To compel young- sters to cross Lamb Street every time they go to the playground seems like an unnecessary danger Then too, the closing of the street would add considerably to the size of the playground which is at best far from adequate to meet the mod- ern requirements of playgrounds. Anyhow, whit objections are there | to the closing of Lamb Street? (If you have any, drop us a note. We're willing to air both sides of the ques- i tion.) HYDROLOGY (CONFERENCE HELD AT PENN STATE A conference of far-reaching nat- ional importance was recently held at the Pennsylvania State College when three national scientific or- ganizations met to discuss new pro- jects of flood control, water power development, and soil erosion Professor FP. T. Mavis, head of the | department of civil engineering at the College, was chairman of the conference | Approximately 200 delegates heard i 50 speakers who came from all parts of the country. Sponsors of the conference in addition to the Col- lege, were: - ‘Declares Roosevelt Should Decide Ee (Continued from Page 1) ithe people; but T do not believe | that questions of national security, | iin an epoch of crisis, should be! | submitted directly to them. It would | ibe a lumbering process involving ! i {fatal delay, and fatal leakage of for the Promotion of Engineer [Pins to potential enemies. | Education, and the ron prio | Baying that he had no confidence | mittee of the American Society of iin anyone who “seeks ih a time of Civil Engineers. ferisis to undermine legitimate au. | thority; whe, ” Slsharagingly lor distrustfully our highest mag- | “the work” suffers when enthusi- | Istrates.” Bishop Hurley added: | asm leads to intolerance. i =a them is a small but noisy | igroup of Cathalics. We have suf- {fered long from their trantrums x. {x x. Years ago they established the! {crank school of economics; latter-| ly they have founded the tirade’ school of journalism; they are now engaged in popularizing the ostrich school of strategy. x x x. They will | disappear in time like those other lexhibitionists--the marathon danc- {ers and the flagpole sitters—who lamused America for a while and vanished.” engineering division of the Society What some people refer to as Biggest Growing Bird Bugaboo Is Coccidiosis The growing age in chicks is the critical age and the biggest - ler is coccidiosis, That's why so many poultry raisers always keep Dr. 's Rakos handy. See us for Dr. SALSBURY'S RAKOS, ‘Hecla Poultry Farms Bellefonte, Pa. Phone 83 A Member of Dr. Salsbury’s Na- tion-wide Poultry Health Service — 4 Any newspaper editor can tell you that it is impossible to run a newspaper to please several thou- The hydrology section of the Am- | erican Geophysical Union, the civil | Wheat Marketing Quotas Explained (Continued from page one) agricultural conservation is eligible to oblain a card from his county his county commitiee marketing commitiee He also, may then market all his wheat The farmer who has more than 15 acres of wheat planted and who has over-seeded his wheal acreage allotment, may ob.ain a wheat mar- keting card from the county agricul- tural conservation committee under one of three conditions 1. He may a penalty a bushel on his excess wheat 2. He may deliver his exces wheat Lo Secretary of Agricuil- ture through the county agricuil Al commitiee which be used for rellel Of WW pay cents Lhe Ir conservation in case It would uch di tribution lor Becretahy may 3 He may under se wheat | for purpose Lit determine exce Cane Ww w if Lorage De ellgibe ol heat the np~ tore his which ealed il in i“ wil 60 OPeralors will afle proved loan ne for nh on iL at percent loan ra. ¢ offered JORnN y commiliee pr luce: wd bie A SOO A Pose roaucer ! wheat Lo with no marketin A Warehouse feeder OF OK MN man } intermediate buyer 49 cen's PENN STATE SCIENTIST STRESSES EGG VALUES poultry in the uces to ¢ “This wo of 47.450 000 00 B18 000.000 m 30 per duce Bi al ion mens gE LE th a cent would resul and a more ¥ pb 7 + 1% w+ s MOLLIATY ff our essential meal, are high on foods > Repeat Vows On 50th Anniversary {Continued from page one) Mrs Harry Philipsburg; Ciyde a her, both of Sandy Ridge Ciloze friends of the family who were present at the delightfu; din- ner which marked the occasion were Mrs. William Haller Altoona; Mrs Joseph Cowher of Sandy Ridge; and Miss Dorothy Baton of Philipsburg. A handsome wedding cake was presented to the couple by the Haller Bakery. They also re- ceived numerous floral remembran. Ces and gifts from relatives friends Mr. and Mrs. Cowher were pre- sented with a purse of $100 from their children and grandchildren Mr. Cowher will celebrate his 76th birthday in October and Mrs. Cow her, her 7ist in November, Both are in fair health Stiles Mil- Cowher, of Jack Cow- of yt ana Philipsburg Youth Drowned In Dam (Continued from page one) body was recovered at 9 o'clock A large number of people lined the banks of the dam during the search and rescue. Firemen roped (off an area to keep onlookers back. | Robert Carl Richards would have when school opened next fall ball squad and played junior var- sity football. He was born at Hollidaysburg on April 3, 1925. He is survived by his parents, two brothers, Thomas any James, and a sister, Rose Marie. been a member of the senior class | He | {was a pitcher on the school's base- | Most Monel saving lowest 4 price can we ever owned, More miles per gallon, say happy owners! \ Million-dollar ride and handling ease! Lowest repair cost in owners’ experience! More money when you trade in! See America’s newest, most beautiful car SKYWAY SERIES STUDEBAKER on President Eight and Commander Chassis TORSELL & SPENCE MOTOR CO. ALLEGHENY ST. AND CHERRY ALLEY FHONE 244 BELLEFONTE, PA HOUSEHOLD HINTS Wi a Nn Wal ¢ Brighten Dingy Rug een | rough While on Vacation It May Be 90 Qutside, But It's Only 75 In Here! Worm Killer Your home will be as cool and { le “as ooler Bed refreshing as an ocean breeze insulated. Insula- to anee you ve tion enables you maintain an even, comfortable tempera ture inside no matter how blis- tering the sun. Save yourself hot and sleepless of the sticky days the rest Summer it nights by having installed now cracked $5.12 a month that It costs only common De a : an investment will pay for self in fuel savings dur- Moths in Carpets oY ing the next few winters O. W. HOUTS LUMBER CO. N. Buckout St Phone 703 STATE COLLEGE, PA. ved Ls a for rémoving Mika, css y excellent $350,000 Bellefonte Building Corporation First Mortgage 3'2% Bonds Deted May 1. 191 Due Serially Fach May 1, 19) to 1887, Incl. Caliable in whole or in part payment date and if in part in the rider of 0 tweed Terese | thew nun pan any inierest Ry ar 103 with imteresd TRUSTEE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF thirty dave published notice & BELLEFONTE The Company will refund 5 mills Pennsylvania Personal Property Taz upon proper application. MATURITY SCHEDULE 1952 $4,000 1961 1953 5,000 1962 - 1954 1963 1955 1964 1956 1965 — 1957 1966 - 1958 1967 — 1959 1968 1960 1969 — Due Each May 1st as Follows 1970 89.000 1971 9,000 1972 9,000 1973--10,000 1974--10,000 1975--10,000 1976-11,000 1977 12,000 1978--11,000 1943--$3,000 1944 — 3,000 1945 3,000 1946 3,000 1947 — 4,000 1948 3,000 1949 4,000 1950 4,000 1951 4,000 1979-—813,000 12,000 14,000 13,000 15,000 15,000 15,000 16,000 6,000 These bonds are to be secured by First Mor on property purchased from the School District of the Borough of Bellefonte situate in Bellefonte Borough, snd on 8 high school building, together with fixed equipment therefor, to be erected and installed thereon. Seid property together with the high school building and fixed equipment to be leased to the School District The Bellefonte Building Corporation is incorporated under the Pennsylvania “Non Profit Corporation Law" ot 8 non-profit corporation and has as its stated purpose the power to purchuse, own, mortgage and lease res) and persons] property snd to construct and maintein ¢ suitable building of buildings in order to provide more ample facilities for sducstionsl purposes Officers and Directors «f the Bellefonte Building Corporation ave: Affiliation MAHMLON K. ROBB Assistant to the President Bs Trust Officer of the Belle N fonte Trowt Company WILLIAM H. BROUSE School Director LEWIS LENHART Assistant County Superintendent of Schools HORACE J HARTRANFT President of the School Board NEWELL B LONG Pressdent of the First Nations! Bank of Bellefonte President Vice President Secretary ® Treasurer Director Director This offering is made when, as and of jsmued, and subject to the favorable legal opinion of Messrs Saul, Ewing, Remick ® Saul of Philadelphia, for the bankers and John G. Love, Esg of Bellefonte, for the corporation Price: 101 and accrued interest for all maturities Funeral services were held at the | {home on Twelfth street at 1 o'clock | in charge of | (Rev. Charles W. Maclay, Presbyter- | | Saturday afternoon Offering of these bonds is made only by prospectus which can be obtained from the undersigned ot your local Bellefonte bank. Offering of these bonds is confined solely to Pennsylvania residents. ian pastor. Burial wae made in the Williamsburg cemetery. ! i Car And Truck Cellide A truck owned by Thomas G. ‘Haugh and driven by J. H. Mec- {Glinsey, Jr., of State College, was damaged to the extent of $55 last Wednesday afternoon when, accord. ing to borough police, it was struck while moving east on Beaver ave nre by the car of William Capazo, State College, R. D., which, its driver said, pulled into the Intersec- tion from Barnard street after stop- ping at a stop sign, Damage to the Capazo car was placed at $35, E. H. Rollins & Sons Incorporated WILLIAMSPORT: Richard G. Lowe, Manager, Susquehanna Trust Bldg. Telephone: Williamsport 2.6141 TYRONE: G. T. Nolan, Representative, P.O. Box 58 Telephone: Tyrone 244 NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA BOSTON CHICAGO SAN FRANCISCO LOS ANGELES
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers