Page Four The Centre Democrat, BELLEFONTE, PENNA, WALKER BROTHERS A. C. DERR PAUL M. DUBBS CECIL A. WALKER Proprietors Editor Associate Editor Business Manager CURR Aino a Wr ! Issued weekly, every Thursday morning Entered in the postoffice at Bellefonte, Pa, as second- class matter TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION $1.50 per year if paid In advance $2.00 per year if not paid in advance ———————————— The date your on the label bearing by a change month. We send no quest. Watch date on iption expires is plainly printed vour name. All credit date of label the first | receipts unle upon label after you remit subset wre given of each re on the Lie special YOu Matters or publication, whether new must reach The Centre Democrat office Tuesday noon to insure publication that tising copy after morning its chances All reading ne or | not ls than week, Adver must run ler received Tuesday tices marked are advertisement Legal and all real estate advertisement cents per notice he each wtoffice Subscriber tifying u All subscription directed changing are lable faIne + contin CIRCULATION OVER 7000 COPIES EACH WEEK NATIONAL €DITORIAL ASSOCIATION clio SHembor. EDITORIAL JUST A REMINDER When Prance asked for an armisti early Summer of 1940 in public as the news reac! Was over and the victory won Later, Berlin was all set for of the British Isles cause Marshal Goering's luf quer British Royal Al army deciined tc ndertak control of If Germ & year ago suspect that Consequently that Hit termination Agains the Ad whi the dat there ning t The member the British ean be no vanquished many Today and in the Uniteg St: Of ner nda 1 or British. The assu from this country mean Ish and German | nificance of wh We move Ui with WOT 3 Le Suppiies an Thus, despite Germans face less they can come eleiny acros the that will overwhelm all o sity, rather th Hitler, if grand a the prospect « ) ged war n determined decision thi wrstiialls eventually MHOSILION (a NECER« that ead the if reason he succeeds against ault against Eng DISHONEST AUTO SERVICE It is a if § r ment of nation, that Reader's Digest A twelve- inaict- the the hocking revela riou and revealed 51] i 8 5€ § il ric ie in garage, and and held viinder used car was purchased thoroughly overhauled. A 14500 mile trip, back forth across the nation, led to 347 places that out help for the motorist in trouble The procedure was simple. Just a garage the car was stopped and a connected. The man got out retary Hmp up to the needed nothing at all small wire which was was lifted Honest refair men saw what was wrong at once, fixed the connection and either made no charge or a small one. Not so, however, with the majority of repair men who something wrong, from a cirty carburetor to a ruined clutch plate. Of the 347 placeg tested only 129 gave the Indy driver 4 square deal Nearly two-thirds charged for work ‘they did not do, found unnecessary things to fix or charged for unneeded parts which they some- times did not furnish Interesting is the report that “in general towns and small garages proved larger ones.” belore mall wire Woman sec. k car, which of the when the reaching dis- reconnecting in plain view hood tl 119 found small more honest than WHY WAR DESTROYED PEACE The war in the East reporting breakthroughs contrary No man knows what is happening men are being slaughtered. The clatter of mackines and the clash of mechanized armies may capture the imagination but it is human beings who are do- ing the dying That mankind has no better way to differences is a reproach to all peoples, those of us who live In the United States It is ours to admit that this republic refused to take any steps to line-up with peaceful nations in a plan to prevent war by making it a crime, pun- ishable by concerted action of powerful, peace-lov- ing peoples To say that the United States worked for peace, during the early twenties and thirties, because we foolishly disarmed and swallowed a lot of Hunk ebout nations never using war as an instrument of national policy, is merely to remind us that, like the’ British: and French, we were sucked in by ag- gredsive, self-seeking nations, It is foolish to talk of peace unless one is will ing to serve, if necessary, as a soldier of peace. It is idle to sign non-aggression pacts if one is not ready to. do something about enforcing non-aggression pacts, It is absurd to disarm without being willing to cooperate in the defense of the disarmed, if they are threatened by sudden might Peace is possible in the world only if those who want peace possess the power to enforce it, To leave peace to the mercy and decision of nations that wor- ship the gods of war is as foolish as possible and yet that is what the democracies of the world did, ‘1'o~ day they are paying the price of folly. Germany the continues, with and Moscow poserting except that settle its including BRITISH PLAN BOMBER OFFENSIVE H. H. Balfour, British Under-Secretary for Alr, savs that the bomber will be the determining factor in the present war and offers the way to win the struggle against Germany, by using bombers to take the offensive and blast German industry Col. J.T. C. Brabazon, British Minister for Air- craft Production, promises that what has happened to London will be “child's play to the raid we will be able to makes on Berlin” Halling the big-bombet program, called it a new aeronautical conception, and declared that “we are getting more and more of the moderate-weight-carrying bombers and also big ones from the United States and we hope finally to reach the position where every machine from the United States will deliver itself by air’ Prime Minister Winston Churchill asserting that Londoners, who have suffered heavy losses from Cierman raiders, would favor any agreement to stop the bombing of cities. He says, "It is time that the Germans should be made to suffer in thelr own homeland and cities something of the torments they Jet upon thelr neighbors the not have 100s and upon world Mat out that the Churchill point the British "have inten months past yslematic, method bombing on a wale of the German cities t other military objectives to keey ) } ied or Hirge and 4 Cid Papo add ! we it to Ix hdd in ow Fining YC WE tide, month Nazi regime Det ler til tom to themselve proces v steadily ar, until the of ”y k } FRIENDS" from ¥) connected We run ER Y FINE, elreshing Ww turn matte manking E. I Hen we Consider that for AWE many wrsonal contact position where f the good Aen prison CIVINZIEG ( Droxen men mu v ) were ITO? at ivi RE all IS WHERE #4 BEN could Have een British Meanwhi Fe end of tit that Hitler rea gO Lake th F partner ~inN~Cru ana } thie thie The eternal snd Der that JUunioy forget rench a Italian friendship Fuehrer, is fading enito « do about about an IN SERVICE Army x 4 ary KEEPIN( It i unfortun for militia + MEN 5 ate tha Staff Chief of 10 recominenda continued in | 4 fo which they thought he it nee th he men ru In Service be their 1 Cf ja they w wa we assigned b unfortunate to ta citizens unfairly. It i ome men, DOW in service to under- hould not be released and replaced And, if they st in service, they will doing more men thelr country t Bre no nation extremely because wishe difficult stand why they tv other men undoubtedly be the defense of These plmervati sound military reasons that demand that the tinlly trained men be kept in ranks, To charge all men at the end of a one-year erm would disrupt much of the present organization and place erent difficulties in the way of preparing the army for an emergency. It is not necessary for arguments that have been advanced by army lead- ers. They have convinced the President and they seem to be having a telling effect upon Congress- men. In lime, will great influence upon the voung men who are calied upon to continue their present service ay than many other i there are pare dis- is are true, and yet the us to try and restate the they have President Roosevelt says: “We, as a people of many origins and diverse cultures and spiritual al- legiances, can, in full loyalty to our individual con- vietions, work and pray for the establishment of an international order in which the spirit of Christ shall rule In such an order alone will our cherished freedoms, including freedom of conscience, be ze- cure, Let us unite in labor and prayer to hasten its coming.” Although some of the wilder-eyed appeaseola- tionists immediately saw horrible implications in otir naval cecupation of Iceland, to most Ameri cans this action will seem a sensible and logical move in defense of the Western Hemisphere and in our program of aiding the defeat of Hitler. Wheth- er Iceland is actually ‘in the Western Hemisphere’ is a quibble, since hemispheric limits are purely artificial, Alreraft officials estimate pounds of aluminum to build a pursuit plane, 10.- 000 for a dive-bomber, 18000 for a medium two-en- gine bomber, and 300060 for a heavy four-engine bomber that it takes 5.000 The Japanese will make a bad mistake if they get the idea that the United States and Great Brit- ain are unable to do anything about what happens in the Far East What the people of this country need to un. aerstand now is that you can’t wait to ree the enemy before geiting ready to prevent him from seeing you All that Hitler would ask of the United States iz that we permit Wheeler, Taft and Lindbergh to continue talking until he gets ready to act. | | a mad dog. THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA. — _—— THE OrrFice CAT “A Little Nonsense Now and Then, Is Relished by the Wisest Men" Inspected So (Taken from the Milk Producers Review) hese milk inspectors sure by Gum, do make us feel like cussing some One tells ug this, the other that "till we don’t know where we are at Everything's wrong, there's nothing right; the bucket’s dinged, the barn's un fright I'he milk house must be painted white, the tollet moved out of sight Yes, things have changed a lot you know, since we have got inspected so I'hey've spoiled the ol us Old Brindle used to behave good And if she switched us in the eye of that wis against the rule: cows with all this fuss, ‘till they're the boss instead and give us all the milk she could or maybe let her one™oot fly course we lammed her with the milking tool All that have got inspected no has changed I'l have you know, since we Now every time she gets the chance, she'll up and kick you in the pants, And knock your bucket Calley West, and Kick the butions off your vest And If you start to make a fuss-—-pick up your stool and start to cuss ne minute you have turned your back she'll give you another whack And say You hit me if you dare—4f you as much as touch a hal You know full well what I will do~the milk men I will tell on you Now that is hard to take, I vow, off any Orery Kicking Cow jut we have Ww do it don't you know, since we have got inspected When we went out to milk By Jing, we used to sit on anything Or maybe didn't sit at all but hunkered down right in the stall Now we must make a stool of oak, well you may laugh-—it's not a joke And then we have to paint ft white and put the thing to bed at nignt Dobbins mad enough 0 take a Nt, and I don't blame him--not a bit It surely a dirty trick, 1 wouldn't blame him if he'd kick He works and sweats the summer through, to raise his grub and Brinaje's Loo And even they have figured out somehow that we must bulld partitions ugnt that Brindle will be out of sight hauls it mow, but right night BAA NO Gay or while she is asleep no fit companion for Kick Dile peep at Brindle omehow he’ hin rear he mustn't even a COW ahd Cus re t ied Ou make ve Tig and and and don't you know, since we have got inspected so believe it hear of we don't by the way did you ever such a thing? enough Wo carry off a man awful when You think of It bugs beyond a bt, and found it how Johnny grew: grafhdpa kept hearty on them too we bugs galore, and even thrived on them before worse vou know, since we have got inspected so I'll tell yo Our 1 another thing they say full of bug By Jing thousands in all a it; It Mik is hundreds of one can gh WW give Ww those do never even out on them id drank th may be musth i the I'm s we all for this day yearn what we please just anything and lam Old Brindle all we picase them in the days of yore We got Inspecied Deadtdes us Poor worm will tu By Jing and milk in ease we did before Kicks are When we Yes, when When we can do things as before The way we used UW Vou KDow When { some again can sit we can sit 50 Old y Of Country omeone else will ge ¢® 4 & 9 A Catastrophe schoo] picnic f the haa Two litte entrance. The pastor came rural Sunday boys on either Ceorge how much side © said man irmonade? a8 Eas how much do y¢ stand do you charge for your replied George 4 charge?” he as ning to Harry, wh he tier ing y cents a glass” replied Harry $ Wir passed n ! upon Ueorge and said to Harry a glass of yours censorious eve ug my bov' That's good getung his giass, he smacked h Hipe and said when thought he was other gias ) Kinsses at “Teil and he snilled lesx than George asked for one to ents? sald Ww sell your » Kian a sald Harry the cat fell in * * & Done Easily Enough referring to the miracle of the loaves and that had been fed with fishies Le cent son, Rarry, “how you afford two } asking five bucket when my riest one Sunday mis.ake aving loaves: and two small of five pepe of the congregation discussed the statement a miracie, he himself could do the same £IVICH ared that SOENE if IL were having heard of this, brought the sub- have told iast Sunday he sald, “that five five loaves and two small fishes You do The inday, the up again, “1 oussrsl people had been fed Then, looking down al Murphy pi) Murphy, could you? “Ach I gave "em next 8 pries should you he added could not that 1 could aisily enough,” replied Murphy left over from last Sunday * * 4 0 Taking No Chances The census taker was inquiring of the mountaineer how many child- ren he had “Four,” “Why.” said the census taker “Cee whiz, becus,” said the hill-billy, “I just read in this here &i- manac that every fifth child born in the world is a Chinaman.” ® & & 9 Wouldn't Hold Still First Priend-"Did they take an X-ray photo of your wife's jaw at the hospital?’ tire, Yer nv rence what was was the answer, “an’ Cosh, thats all I'm going to have Second Friend—"Yeah, they got a moving picture.” ® © & 9 i The Deadly Gas The following sign is posted by the roadside as you eniler a Western town. IL says: 4076 people died last year of gas 29 inhaled it, 47 put a lighted match to it And 4.000 stepped on it ® oo & Wrong Color "What's the matter, Mose, you look mad.” Mose—"Who wouldn't be. That doctor operated on me and then sew- ed me up with white thread.” Pat-"'Mike, who gave you that black eye?” Mike-—"Nobody gave it to me, I fought for it.” ® & oo 9 Chance of a Lifetime prominent business man had the bad luck to be bitten by ¢ was rushed to the city for Pasteur treatment While the anti-rables serum was being prepared, the attending phy- sician noticed the patient was very busy making out a long list of names, and he asked: “Are those the names of the people you Wish to be notified if your condition should become serious?” “No,” said the victim, “This is a list of the people I'm going to bite A certain if 1 go mad.” ® & ¢ 0 The Poor Fish It sounds a little finny to us, that story about the heat being so In- tense out at Fishermen's Paradise one afternoon recently that the fish were seen swimming about with their heads above Walter and the per- spiration streatning off their faces, y ® 4 0 0 No Cause For Complaint Proprietor Beer Parlor--"You come into my place, you order a glass | of water, you drink it, you smack your lips, you rise, and you calmly walk out.” Patron—"An’ what were you expecting me to do—stagger out?” * ® oo 0 Sounds Like Our Line First Neighbor—“"May I use your telephone?” Second Neighbor— Certainly, 1s yours oiit of order?” First Neighbor—"Not exactly, but my sister is using it to hold up the window, Ma's cutting biscuits with the mouthpiece, and the Laby is teething on the cord” : ¢ & oo That's all, folks. Love is the only game that isn't postponed on ac count of darkness. —— _ ——"BCAT." | with all LOUISA’S LETTER Dear Louisa: I've tried to do the best I can for my fanily and while my work is not 80 hard now, there were times in the past that 1 felt unequal to cope I had Ww do, Times are better now and I think I had a little part in what success we, as a family enjoy. If we sit down to g meal it is why don’t we have something else instead of what we have, or why wasn't It prepared in a different manner If I try to get anyone simple task around the grow positively indignant I have one maid, they say have Lhe money hire my done and not Ww call on them, Of course these are possibly jobs that the mald never does, but they think Its up to me, and speak as if 1 have untold wealth at my command when as a matter of fact, I can carcely make ends meet, 1 am get ing awfully tired of it but am decided how Ww meet the situation DISGUSTED —lowa to do some house they Because that 1 ww wore Ui ANBWER It is effective now rather late to do anylning Ww TOU sound as though you have a very spolled family You know there are some people who are chronic grumblers gnd they impossible good in anything or anybody To hear them tell jt, they have always been imposed upon. Their teachers nev- er had any sense they knew more than the teachers from the first grade on 3. Their family never appreciated them probably wanted them to do trivial tasks when thelr were wing: when (hey get out in world all of the competition will be unfair I'he other feliow will be suspicious sly and envious fin it . r fang it 0 Bee u ’ set on higher the These ig what 4 that for that elf ~centere with conceit egolists they are nothing but a world will take out of them. It is a pity that you did not start Carer teach them graciousness and amiability. A grumbler finds it so much harder to get along in the worid and 0 Anes riendly are »o “Wrasse” any of the the 10 succeed than unassuming the person We get out of the world ju what we put into It who is Uilie more than ends up having very things that make ile friends. afraid that PArticCuIarny, AS | SEE IT By HORACE SENTZ 80 Moscow J perhaps he pal Adolf moved Lox Joe's nerves 10 creepin of paper thal Joe signed Cagey } t Place worth a rap Adolf might play, to mess n'make him way. Adolf’; Place, n'while er gs carn dont 51 Matty n BJ UT Joe pull that up his politickal goll, pay the game their been boardin al Joe's Joe's eals is said Ww rate, Adolf aint pald fer quite a space, 50 Joe jist pulled Plats Now Joe's closed up his front door 100, Adolf gilts no more Russian eats now all them Nasti boys kin do, is go back to cabbages n'beets Besides that Russian bill o° fare aint good for Adoll’s tummy, when he eats too much kavavaire, Joe thinks he gis too chummy. What them there Nas- tis want right now, is Turkey roast- ed nice nbrown, served up with Dardenell chow chow. NO wonder Joe closed his place down. Joe's Place has got a name-highbrow, it's called Kafay Youkrane n'while Adolf don't eat there now, Joe's seared that he'll come back again Joe might've waited a mite too long to save hisself some trouble, fer if Adolf gives them Turks the gong. Joe's woes is sure to double Joe's plenty smart but kinda slow, he's foolin ‘round with Pate Some day the whole dern worldll know if Joe's Place got shut up too late Injured Girl Returns Home from page one) Eger: oid dij Continued the State Motor Police, she has maintained that she Joes not re- member anvthing which occurred that evening after she was about a block away from the carnival on Vesper street She had left the carnival alone about 10:30 o'clock after being in the company all evening of her bro- ther, Frank Peters, and two girl friends, Misses Betty Rote and Reba Half Schreckengast of Flemington, an hour later she was found in- jured lying on the grass between the curb and sidewalk at the Fullmer {had heard her crying a block and a | Half west of that spot and had fol- {lowed her until she had fallen i - | STATE COUNTRY LIFE { CONFERENCE PLANNED | The sixth annual Pennsylvania | Country Life Conference will be ‘held at Indiana, August 4 to 6, | announces RB. W, Kerns, extension i | ruraj sociologist of the Pennsylvania As- | residence, 426 West Main street, who | July 24, 1941. — A a Query & Answer Column wo — PROBLEM--Do you know which type of plane has the pight-of-way at any airport? Is it an army plane, ascending plane? descending plane? passenger plane? 1t is one of the four types. (Answer elsewhere in this | department) H. F.--What Is America’s of Rhodes? Ans There Is no such animal officially. Pennsylvania's new highway is an outstanding eligible for honor W. L~What Is meant by the "Stone Age? Ans~~The Blone Age Is a period of time (not definitely fixed) which is marked by the use of Wols and weapons made of stone instead of met- als, It is known that warriors fought with flint Bears as early as 10000 B. C.. and that ended about 1000 B. C. It is possitie the Bone Age extended million of before hat UUme, but no evidence has been theory M. V.How of ocean or Ary Colossus Super -~ Wiat headed the perio back ever or billion adduced yeRIrs W substantinie that fhe fathom body of deep Is a when referrin Ww the wiler? Pe phn any other large One fathom is 26 Teel, whethe or anything eine J. T~Where ure North ground the bBouth Pole around Lhe Al Nell { ol GiViLiK the Poles } ! gh land lo i Whi remarkably hore There Wn bey breeding ang ne win PELEULNS oung { tr lh oh harnoring min in Ux an the penguin Lhe Hemisphere Blraits Kilieqd in and Northern Fir Dome grea tlent te shores of Lhe Here th ure 164 Aerica to 30.000 A G~Wa I Penn a Quaker? And William Penn the Quakers He published a work enti of B the Ans Early in Calle a mini } Foundation Shaken other teaching: Joined Ler sect Andy ana sig in aloweqg Ww goctrine © . ivinity He wa which opposed ished Ch When 1 Tie Hnprisoned he Kept Americy Hi prison come to Philadelphia Quaker in Ruscomibx rok to the ancl 1868, when yielded $00 galior tent, Discov Pa led fistincuon as Lermany ark, 1864 eye Ji Wes woras How - WG anlelopes Human beings sufficient activity particular food De as leaves eaves { lettuce May nree Limes as inner. more tender in Honolulu? It has Honolulu Theodore Roosevelt? Museum largest sjuare Lhe sige action set off by a steel] H. C.Are the IBIOS i the Ans The R. W.-—-Is title of Ans office Soldier paid? Dearing a Tomb of puard the Hn pi i reeiiiar pas saltsit & Citizey . SCRE against a izenn of this country a fareie CRETE a fglegn governments iAW nobility conferred by The Constitution expressly ty wt ¥ Lory fit or trust unde; person holoing without oon~ irom any King provides that no any of States shall sent of Congress, accept any prince or foreign stale G. T~What is the most valuable fur-bearing industry in the United £57 Ans —1t is silver-fox farming M. B. C.~Is the cod a prolific fish? Ans i‘ Pro title 1940 which vieided 350.000 peits in The cod is ane of the mos! prolific of sll fish, a nine or forty inches long producing about 3.000000 egg: forty-one inches at least 4.000.000 C. 0. T~How the new Penneyvivania Turnpike other roules between same points? Ans On numbers 11 and 30 passing through the same termini as the new Turnpike there are 938 road and street intersections and tweive railroad crossings, as well as twenty-five traffic lights, while on the new Turnpike there are none. The latter is tunneled through the mountains and is a smooth concrete pavement with 110 miles of Straight roadway and only ity miles of easy curvature and one of dows compare with the —————— Answer to Problem-—A descending plane always has the right-oI-way. __ ——— | | Health and Beauty unless promptly and effectively treated pass it on to others. | If you see a reddish spo on your foot, which appears pale in the center, but red and scaly on the edges, you had better paint it with jodine, Jet it dry, then varnish ib with collodion which is flexible. It will probably heal readily. lodine is an old but very effective remedy | for curing ringworm. The treatment is the same for different parts of the | body. However, infected hairy re- gions should be shaved before ap- plying the remedy. Another cure for ringworm is by washing ip with gasoline which con tains an equal amount of tetrach- ride, a non-inflammable cleaning {fluid for clothes, Of course, care must be taken to keep the gasoline away from a flame and be careful i RINGWORM OF THE FEET Ringworm of the feet is a very common and annoying complaint, especially in the summer when so many people frequent swimming pools and bathing resorts. It is also | a serious problem where children sleep in dormitories or are grouped together in orphanages or other in- stitutions. Numbers of them walk barefooted over the floors and use the same bathtubs, The disease, which is also known ax athletes’ fool, is serious is ne- iglected. It is caused from a very! small parasite, of which there are | several varieties, each of which has | an especial affinity for certain paris of the body. For example, barbar's iteh attacks the hairy part of men’s , It is conveyed by unclean | razors that have not been sterilised {after shaving an infected customer | po = at the cleaning fuid into or by the use of contaminated | ds | cloths or implements. : | ah Sue hii Te SR | There is another germ that al-|. op qroxquinoline, sodium perbos hairy poruons . rate, boric acid, and alumninumn | gilicate. The druggist will mix i, | after which rub ji between and | underneath the toes. See that it | enters every fold of the skin, Use this after washing and drying the gon gn he Bo this meth ne cle athletes’ fee! in many institutions where the treatment was properly given, {of the hands and the feet. It will even appear on {top nails As well as the finger nails. | The symptoms are redness, itch- ling, thickening of the skin, and break and fall out. $85 | Spectacle: denouncing government : ences with business, asking legisia- tive body to pass a law to Reflisls - : " £98 i Ey if is it 2 g F353 fe Et 35 : £
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers