Odd and CURIOUS in the WS AMAIA CHURCH BY MAIL Rev. Allen W. Clark, of Dan- vers, Mass, has perfected a plan of Go to Church—by mail. He explains his “mail-order” church plan in this manner: Each week he malls out a mimeographed Sunday service including an opening prayer, a Bible reading, a 400 word sermon and a clos- ing prayer. The mail is sent to the “shut-ins,” those tem- porarily sick, men and women who have to work on Sunday, mothers kept at home by the very young, men in prison, the deaf young men in military camps, parishioners away for vacation and rural families. Al the comforts of church but the collection box. LOTS OF LIG HT When an electric light bulb burned out in the kitchen of the home of Mrs. Joseph LaSitis, at Emporium, while they were ab- sent on a shopping tour, Patricia Anne, aged 11, was not disturb- ed. At the door, her 4-year-old hrother, Robert, met his parents. “Gee, daddy, Patty knows how to fix lights,’ he beamed, proud of his sister's achievement. “It's just like daytime.” The kitch- en, indeed, was flooded with bril- Hant light. Patricia, unable to find an ordinary bulb, had made the replacement with a large photo-flood lamp from her fa- thers enlarger. EVERYTHING'S DITTO Merlin and Marshal Roberson, 12-year-old twins, of Atlanta, Ga. are identical in every respect. They weigh the same, have the same number of freckles in the same places (or look to have); get ill at the same time with the same illnesses and run the same temperatures for the same time; they get hurt the same time in the same places; and they have been operated on eight times for the same troubles at the same time. TOO MANY CATS Cats that sat on the dining room table and dogs that group- ed themselves wistfully around the diners’ feet made a Coraop- olis woman lose her appetite and a resulting 25 pounds in weight, she told the judge in divorce proceedings at Pittsburgh on Friday. She got the divorce. IT DIDN'T HURT Dr. John Kurumada, dentist of Salt Lake City, had 18 teeth pulled with no anasthetic— just “burglar extracted the gold molars from a plaster cast in the doctor's office, STATE COLLEGE MOTHER AND DAUGHTER INJURED Mrs. Edward HA Adamitz daughter, Betty, aged 8. of College avenue, State College, fered slight injuries about 7:15 o'- clock last Wednesday evening in a motor accident near Lemont Mrs. Adamitz received lacerations of the right arm and head bruises; her daughter suffered a bruised thumb, knee and bruises of the body Mrs. Adamitz was driving west on the Bellefonte-State College High- way and was attempting to pass a truck driven by Charles W. Witmer, of State College, R. D. 1, truck began to make a left turn Mrs. Adamitz, to avoid the crash, turned into a side road and the ma- chine veered sidewise on the road and came to rest against a guard West suf- | | {city | | Williams, | Mrs | the head by | | street as s The Most Widely Read Newspaper In Centre County. A Visitor In Seven Thousand Homes Each Week. SECOND SECTION dhe Cenfre Democrat NEWS, FEATURES VOLUME 60. BELLEFONTE, PA. THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 1941. NUMBER ! Attacked Within 3 Days on Two Lock Haven Women In City’s Streets; Suspect Held | | | Miss Emily Williams Struck on Head Friday Evening; Mrs. Georgette Welty Grabbed By Assailant Sunday Evening Two attacks on young women On the streets of Lock Haven over the weekend bringing the series of such occurrences to four within recent weeks, has stirred the police of that to feverish activity to hend the guilty parties On Friday evening, Miss Emily 28, daughter of Mr. and williams, was struck on an unidentified assail- 10:45 o'clock on Main he passed the property of n- PW ant about the Church of the Immaculate C | ception { hospital at | { | { { | } | i | | | | { | | nights | thunder st | lands, | ries {to the hos { fled { suicide | | fore, | | was {and he i otherwise i { seekin | 15-mile {ray examination the private where X- she is suf- rushed to Lock Haven showed She was | Man. 60, Spends 5 Days In Hills Following Attempted Suicide, Victim Escapes From Hospital from the Ri dgway Hos- pital where he had been a patient, | 60-year-old Carniro Bartolett|, | Elk county, spent five days and five through hot weather and orms. in the nearby wood- with blackberries and teaber- as his chief items of food He was picked up Friday by state motor police and re pital from which he had he had attempted two weeks bee is throat Escaping of "no LEM mornis turned Police sald in his by slas! hi Hospital attaches wound, not fairly he had been brought care. Bartoletti's clothir howed sign was all said he slept in g his way home of Ridgway. He radius reported rious in the begin well healed by the time back to their g was torn tigue, but caves and Was 30 miles had wandered in a during his five-day He east flight RE — Girl Near Death and! when the | fence. Damage to the Adamitz car | ileal attention was estimated at $75 tn s— A ——————— Huge Picnic is Planned More and guests of the Forest Protective Association of Bouthern Clinton eounty are expected to attend the sixth annual pienic of that organi- tion to be held at the Jamar Fish Hatchery Saturday, August 8 Wil- liam Barner, of Tylersville, is pres- jdent of the association, elaborate program of sports been prepared. The association is one of the oldest and most active in the state nisi WF ———— — Not Pleasant Drink than a thousand members | \rg nas fer and Smith, Dilisburg. Memory of Another Who Re- called Seeing Her Enter, Brings Rescue Jones, 15, daughter of George E. Jones, proprietor of a restaurant at Hollidaysburg and a member of the State Legislature, es- caped possible death by freezing In a supply refrigerator Sunday night because of another girl's memory Miss Jones was accidentally lock- ed in a rear compartment of the restaurant refrigerator where the temperature was two degrees above zero After she had been missing thirty minutes another girl in the restaur- ant remembered she had gone the refrigerator for a can of cream ed Miss Jones was near collapse She recovered after receiving med- Pegg: misses AMI ——————. To Improve Road The Highway Department at Har- announced that Stray- ficial low bidders at $202280 on a contract for 342 miles of 24-foot concrete between Northumberland and Danville, on Route 11, in Point i Township, Northumberland County and an! has | { Wills Bucknell £50,000 Bucknell Universily, Lewisburg, will recenve $50.000 in distribution of the $200,000 charitable bequests of Daniel Roberts, millionaire store | magnate at Wilkes-Barre, $25,000 for | the Lewisburg school and a similar | Jimmy Sommers, the young son of | amount for the Junior College at Mr. and Mrs. Nyle White Hall, near Danville, is recov- | ering from the ill effects of kero- sene, which he drank. He was found in an unconscious condition by his! ed mother and was rushed immediately to the Geisinger Hospital, where | | en students. The fraternity is bulld- first aid was administered, Classified Ads bring results. ling # new home on the Sommers, of | Wilkes-Barre. Frat House Sold Bucknell University has purchas- the Delta Sigma Fraternity House, and will renovate and re- model it as a dormitory for 20 wom- campus, ground having been broken July 22 i p—— Sr— Hitchhikes 35 Miles to Return Rings George L. toona, is telling friends of receiving a 815 reward for returning two rings valued st $1500 to radio's Kaufman, 20, of Al- the rings in a rest room of the sta- tion Saturday night and turned {them over to him. Andrews sisters, appearing at Gal- ltzin Saturday night. Kaufman. a student at Lock Ha- ven State Teachers College, who works as a service station attend- ant at Lock Haven during the sum- Later he received a telephone call | from Gallitzin, where the Andrews | sisters were appearing, asking if the | ‘rings had been found Kaufman hitch-hiked 35 miles to | Altoona and took a taxi to Gallitzin to return the rings. “I would have returned them | ELITES Baby Born Dead to Wounded Girl Mrs. Trease Feedsco, 22, of Al-|at their home Saturday night, has toona, was still reported in serious been acting surly and condition Tuesday night at Altoona’ failed to answer satisfactorily questions put to him about the shooting. appre | State to | fce- | When the door was open- | are unof-| ling to Beech Creek with her par- ! Baylor, into that section a large following | 1801 are second cousins, Mrs, Mary H. | | Pearon and George P. Hess. H H. | Fearon and Miss Edith Fearon were fracture of the skull on the left side and a deep | laceration over the left ear The victim, a primary school teacher Jersey Shore who Is attending summer session of the Lock Haven Teachers’ College, lost con- for only a few second Private R. O. Parsons of Motor Police she was the way home from the She sald she heard foot. behind her and that the as- sailant started to run when he neared her, She was knocked down by the blow before she could turn around. she told Parsons Store Employe Attacked The most is Mr Georgette Welty escaped unhurt Sundav was attacked bv a man as she walk ed through Willard's Alley toward Bellefonte avenue, where she to meet a girl friend Although badly frightened and shocked she was more fortunate than the other three attack viciim all of whom suffered from beating: on the head. The victim had her dress torn when the man grabbed She is employed at the Lock Haven store of the Widmann & Teah company fering a depressed | at the sciousness and told the State struck on movies steps recent victim 23. who evening when she her Quarry Employe Arrested of at (Continged Solution least one of the on Page | Where It Will Sep Nobody Knows MUST DENOTE LOYALTY Applicants fo nia will be Pe the relief in red in statement test nnsyi futs ire fying uu of req their Atriotism, Secretar sistance Howard L nounced this week The new step in procedure will b taken short out the I barring any of ly Lo carry a new law relief rolls overthrow y force the wor boards will n to include in their eligibility form Board Assistance persona gov- {3 he | the new | T™he act { 194] versive activities ed by sub two doe - il and one of three pa Legislature The m-Ameri publi he to curb other we with rom the An Payro ballot - | tecruiting Officer at State College. presantative of the Re- ae Navy £1 Oiiioe at will or Altoona college Thurs prospectiy The MITAr vice representa - tem v headquar- Bull ip Post hours of Office ding 10 | When Train Three Killed In Wreck Hits Trailer On Watsontown Crossing Freight Train Strikes Truck, Hurling It Into Path of Passenger Train; Engine Crew Victims of Accident Raflroad trainmen were killed shortly after one o'clock Friday morning near Watsontown, Northumberland coun- tv, when a freight train crashed in- to a «talled motor truck ang spilled the wreckage into the path of a passenger locomotive The deralled plunged over a ment crushing Eng der, of Northumberland, Freeman H. F. McHenry, of Sunbury, and C K. Shalbley, of Williamsport, road foreman of engines who was on an inspection trip. All were dead when removed by Watlsontown firemen The wreck occured at 1:20 a m Four men transporting a steam sho- vel over a rural route in a trailer truck sald after their machine stal- led they tried In vain flag the freight as it sped from Altoona to Wilkes-Barre They were crossing the at the Watsontown Brick Company, one mile south of Wat- Three Pennsvivania engine embank - E Snu- YA SSCNRe! SiX~ foot ineer P to track: sontown O. A Long the freight sheared ofl which burst into carried 200 yards engine before being the adjoining track bound passenger Long sald when he saw the pas- senger approaching. he and Brake- at Murphy of fireman locomotive truck WAS the onto front of the Tyrone the cab the flames and front of dumped ty of sald the on of in nnrt} nora man 1 also Tyrone SO-THATS THE LAW The Human Interest Side of Legal Oddities By Elliott H. Marrus Insanity and Marriage—In 27 states. insanity is not a ground for divorce Connecticut law provide that the estate of an Insane nDus- band must pay alimony to the di- vorced wife, but if a man divorces his insane wife in that state he need not support her Indiana has a statute which permits the State to sterilize a lunatic if neces- sary In Missouri, a divorce from an insane spouse can only be ob- | tained if the spouse was insane be- | fore marriage and had concealed In Refrigerator that fact. No state forbids the co- habitation with an insane husband or wife even though doctors say tha! such cohabitation is bad. In 1941 Maryland and Texas made insanity a legal cause for divorce. Similar laws failed to pass in New York and [owa. In Wisconsin a divorce can- not be granted on any grounds un- tii the insane mate has become sane. In many of the states I which divorces are not granted for insanity, ofien annulments are se- for that comedian cured the reason movie hig wife's in- remarried fod- on the ground of He has Traffic Rules eral reguiation 1926. In 1938 the Authority ly CAA, was formed velopment and vide for the regulation of civil aero- nautics, The CAA has gone 50 ia: as to sel up traffic rules for the air One of these states “When Urses since There of Was no planes until Aeronautics the alr Ch common called promote and to pro in ge afely two aircraft at wae are on approximately aircraft ft shall } el and other alrcraf! Cross - ing same altits he other on its gy) right Of Way shall give way Law Makers the greatest law makers Lycurgus (850 B. C.) wrote a new constitution ancient Sparta The story is told that he made ti il citizens of his the has t the Some more about of histor for i at ¢ promise no country i 0 ¢h | British ange these laws until] he } According went away and commitl- that the laws would Draco 600 B laws of Athen wn 10 be severe a0 B.C) the “lather democracy modified Draco’s laws making them more democratic, Confucious (500 B. C), is often the wise man of China, sought 16 reform the rulers rather than the laws them- selves. He has had a tremendous even todas hina, The first Octavian (27 B. CO Julius Caesar's sis- ter. He was known to have reform- ed drastically the laws of Rome About 500 years later, Justinian wa: the emperor of Rome. He i} re- vised the whole Roman legal sys- tem, bringing the laws up-to-date Female Witchery-—-In 1700 the Parliament enacted a 1aw never altered £32 £ They jaws calied He De difted kn ion the were Sn very often of calied Ro Man eMperor was adopted by en hat ured wsoman a by means J° high hoops OF marriage was ® I imo IY art stating man to mal COST th ica heed ses boils ered hip vold and the woman would be pun for being a witch Wills—Although many realize it, wills are very (echni- uments and should be drawn by attorneys. Sometimes even law- yers do not draw wills which will stand up in Court. The most Ia- mous flustration of this is the tes. tamen: of Samuel J. Tilden, states- man. and Democratic candidate for President of the United States. In 1884, Tiiden made a will in which he tried lo set up a fund of two mil- lion dollars for library in New York City. His al estate when he died was $5000 000. The rela- part of the will tives contested ! and the Court set it aside because ding was indefinite its wording Later, however, the heirs settled the FPage Five) teeth ished people 40 no cal doc a tot his 2.0%) Conlinged on Mrs. J. S. Fearon Dies of Old Age Widow of Beech Creek LLum- berman Succumbs to Brief Iliness Mary Saylor Fearon died at in Beech Creek Priday Mrs her home | evening at 6:30 o'clock after an {li- | ness of ten days due to the infirmi- ties of age. She was born at Easton, the daughter of the late Samuel Baylor and Mary Hess Saylor, com- ents when her father shifted his lumber operations from the Lehigh River at Hickory Run to the Beech Creek region as a member of the firm of Shouse, Baylor & Company in 1854 Shortly after the firm became Day and Morey, bringing of employees, most of whom were permanently located there, develop- | ing one of the largest steam saw mills in central Pennsylvania, first! | shipping by canal and after 1861 by | railroad also. After the lumber industry declin- ed her father developed coal mining | on some of the lands from which the | lumber had been cut, and in 1800 organized the Kato Coal Company | at Kato, on the Beech Creek rail- road. He died in 1913 at the age of | 94, preceded in death by his wife in | Her nearest surviving relatives brother and sister of her deceased | | husband. Funeral services were held Sunday | afternoon at 4 o'clock at the Bech-! del Puneral home, Beech Creek, in | charge of the Rev. John H. Stiffler, | | rector of the Jersey Shore Episcopal | Church. Interment was made in the : Baylor plot in the Easton cemetery, | | Easton, at noon, Monday. mer vacation, said a woman found | without a reward,” Kaufman sald. | Second Time Struck lightning is said not | Even though Pgh, twice in the same piace, John M. Bender, owner of the Mon- tour House, Danville, knows that it | {the fatal accident {lost control due to speed, Speed Blamed For Accident Coroner's Jury Reports on Fatal Crash Near Bell wood, May 22 The cause of the automobile ac- cident near Bellwood on May 26. in which Frank Harpster of Juniata. and Mrs. Pearl Coleman of Grand- view, were fatally injured. was de- termined by a coroner's jury last Thursday to have been the result of excessive speeding on ti part of the drivers and loss of control by the operator of the Cornmesser car The jurors, impaneled at city hall. Altoona, by Blair County Coroner Chester C. Rothrock, wrote a ver- dict placing no direct responsibility on either driver, but stressed that was caused by ‘excessive speed.” The fatal mishap occurred Mon- May 26, on the new triple-lane | wk Tomy about a mile and a half | north of the Bellwood intersection | ‘shortly after 6:15 p. m. when the two autoes collided nearly headon Frank Harpster was killed instant. | ly. and Mrs. Coleman who was rid- ing in the same car died hospital William Cornmesser, 20, of Bell. {wood. driver of the other car, who was blamed by the jury for having likewise was severely injured in the crash, but recovered after treatment at the! since there were| | no known witnesses to the crash shortly iafter her admission to the Altoona Altoona Police Nab Two Bandits Pair Admit ‘Staging Series of Burglaries While Driving From Arémore Altoona police are holding two men whom it is said have admitted staging a series of burglaries while driving from Ardmore to Altoona last week. Formal charges are ex- pected to be filed against the pair The men accused of the thefts at Ardmore, Wilkes Barre, Scranton. Lewistown, Huntingdon, and Al. toona. A map on which the men marked out their trip showed they also visited Bethlehem, Allentown, Berwick and Bloomsburg, he said Two Ardmore detectives came to Altoona to file a detainer against them on burglary charges The men are said to have admit- {ted they were “out for easy money” {and broke into homes in wealthy | the old way of steam shovels load- They gave the following | ing trucks. Por certain type of work, | districts i mccount of their activities: They stole an automobile New Howard Road Is Progressing Battery of Machines Working failing at Various Points on Route The Beech Creek correspondent of the Lock Haven Express states that much progress is being made jon the grading operations at sev. eral points on the new Beech Creek | to Howard concrete section of Route 64. The H L Williams Construc- tion Company has put into service two new powerful digging and truck - (ing machines that dig up and load {twenty tons of earth. haul it away and then unloads it as it moves {along over the grading point for the 'bull-dozers to level off. The ma- chine is pulled by a tractor and pre- sents an interesting sight Eight such machines are working {at several points and they avoid the | | however, steain shovels are employed | in {on the job. The work on the several | Jumped from the freight and ran ahead In a futile effort w halt the oncoming train. Victims ned under the wrecked locomotive None of the passenger car Washington-Buffalo train were ralled and occupants were reported to have escaped injury. Three bag- gage and mall cars, immediately be- hind the locomotive and coal ten- der, left the rails but remained right Three freight were pin- of the de. up- cars near the of the buckled after (Continued on Page ¢ 4 iron wit} 1 wilh Youth Confesses To Taking 9 Cars Took Joy Riding Jaunts With Girl Companion of Same Age Night-time pleas year-old Lock Has en 3 gir] companio } turned out io of city of series during Giminis liam D father Barner at A description of | ¢ me of the C her George pearance juvenil a yom ars lake the ar- t of the twr At th apprehension by Patroln Merritls they were thelr possession a flashlight and first from a car owned by or LU bd res e time of their sald suitcase 4 case Gordon one of the se taker Giminiani taking nine of the cars reported missing al Lambert Case Stands Alone Blair County Violator Convicted Draft Evasion Officials of the investigation field burgh have announced vestigating Clive western “Minister Only of federal b office at ureau Pitts- they are in- 775 violations of the se- service act in Pennsylvania 25 counties of y one conviction ax been list- ny to date. The Rev al C Lambert, resigned minist Sinking Valley parish of the United Latheran church (Blair county) was i sentenced to a year and a day for to register. Rev. Lambert appealed to the circuit oourt In Philadelphia. No ruling has been handed down by the higher court In Washington, FBI Director John Edgar Hoover, had revealed that more than 20000 violations have been discovered in the United States nN av or of the land its possessions and that all were being investigated. He said 226 in- dividuals have been convicted and that 3685 are sought as fugitives from justice - BEEKEEPERS PLAN STATE PICNIC AND FIELD DAY Pennsylvania beekeepers will gather at Gaiman's Park, four miles north of Gettysburg, on Roule 34 for their annual picnic and field day, Saturday, August 23. Time of convening is set at 9:30 | m. standard me. Speakers will be John H. Light, department of Agriculture, and Jas. I. Hambleton, of the Bee Culture Wynnewood and after wrecking it. | bridges also is moving along rapidly | Laboratory at Washington, D. C took another owned by Mrs. Eliza- | and with the progress being made it | beth McKeon, of Ardmore, in which | {begins to look as though the job they continued their trip | might be completed by the end of Arriving in Altoona last Friday |the year if steel for the bridges is they stole a safe from the home of | given priority because this highway | William Rogers, distributor for a has been designated by the U. 8. | paint manufacturer. Forcing open the safe on Frankstown mountain four miles from the city, they ob- tained jewelry, stocks and bonds and insurance policies. While in the Rogers home they took a bath, shav- ed and cooked a meal. (Continwed on Page Five) , Government as a military road run- | [ning north and south. The fact that Governor James has A program of games is planned in addition to the other features of the picnic and field day. Queen Elizabeth is 41 Queen Elizabeth marked her 4ist birthday anniversary quietly Sunday in the country kith King George V1 and their two children, Princess signed the aot of the Legislature gligabeth and Princess Margaret which retains on the State High- Rose. Among messages from the way system that part of Route 64 United States was one from Presi (Continued on Page Three) [dent and Mrs. Roosevelt | _— J Circe ‘board early Random [tems SYR PREACHER'S MOTTO: To the fonte, we ing jingle Worry Ride Rev. C. C. Bhuesy are obliged for of Belle. follow - the lens, work more walk more Frown more Eat 88, chew more Preach less ” tice prac more Coming from a veleran minister last line intrigues CANDIDATES This more office that ong gota ru we'y corner nas persons Lately We nos people time, There § of this views hould run fo BErecabie interested in 3 street chat with hi fellow 1s that if he could be as and m. A more ur We to agrecab yf hard to find feel sure pleasant wher office as he eonuld isnt he wir oh he when nf ir any or ing yp thes them ap- that there wwives have from ® to 11 { many learned Hous anvwhere OZen gested remedy: before pas dump corn d count TANGLED CORDS: Your telepho on absolu fxr The rece hones phone rendered the receiver hook the SPEED y gain a world font in : we heartily recom visit or : A racing automobiles midoet miGRe almost chored travel] at An wire which is fastened urrel in the center of a build- with large floor space, the tiny Ms Po flash arou a giant speeds of more than 60 hour. The gasoline tanks eyedrof pers, and the wergized by Most cars the sPeeds ine 4 ig md at miles An are filled with gs are er ht batterie dies, and are real differential an with d compiele BOOK REVIEW: Hex Marks The Hark was a disappointment department, which hoped the ume would be a more thor- ough idy of hexeral I the book is devoled largely io Pennsyl- vania Dutch menus and foods—in- teresting enough in themselves—but having nothing io do wit} of hexing Much of the fac terial is brought out in the form of conversation beiween author and her unidentified chauffeur. Too much space Is devoted to descrip- tions of how chauffeurs on car accelerator under various conditions of (1) the weather, (2) the roads and (3) traffic, and other filler-dillers. In the beginning of the volume the author arouses great curiosity over the strange markings and symbols to be seen on barns and other buildings in Pennsylvania Dutch country. After much ramb- ling. she decides the markings either have some meaning, or are simple decorations without significance—a conclusion practically any of us eould reach without reading a book here's a good chapter on Baron Steigel. of Steigel Glassware fame But all told, “Hex Marks the Spot” left this commer unsatisfied QUESTION: It remains fo be seen whether Bellefonte Oounecil. which may have at least three new faces the first of next year, will develop a complex such as afflicted the local school last year Retirement of Councilmen Emerick, Brocker- hoff and Beaver removes three of Council's stronger members, By stronger, We mean men who would shed their coals and take definite and outspoken stands on quesiions, if necessary MISCELLANEOUS It costs more to run the borough these days than it did last year. From January to August 1940, the borough had 8874 man-hours of re- lief Jabor-at no cost to the borough (Continued on Pope Fowr) Spot by tr Ann thin this vol- or less sl nstead the art tual ma- % the fool acted KEEPING UP WITH THE JONESES' — Stormy Weather Ahead! By POP MOMAND YES, AL - CRIMLY ABOUT DAY SY + THIS Ting 178 Tie’ REAL Thang \ R ow DOES a) FEEL Do You KaOW ? ABOUT re vd YUP! TW’ SAME SWAY «= IT WAS A CABER OF OVE AT FIRST ny hn 0 EIGHT a La hi I'M SURPRISED! you DON'T ALT I'm HAT Doss T COT Any ICE WiTha ME ~~ DausY 1B TES TW LAST Trim I GONNA MARRY hospital with a bullet wound in her | body after she gave birth to a pre- mature stillborn baby during the morning ** Holding him on an open charge, police said they were not satisfied | with the youth's story of what hap- | . | pened. Blair County Coroner Ches- Police sald her stepson, aticls | tor C. Rothrock entered into the Pedesco, 16, who sald he shot h les {probe with the death of Mrs, Fe- accidentally with a .22-calibre rifle desco’s baby. (0 by The Associated Newspapers)
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers