0dd and The Most Widely Read Newspaper In Centre County. A Visitor In Seven Thousand Homes Each Weck. | an | CURIOUS | secono he Cenfre Democraf NEWS, . SECTION FEATURES in the BELLEFONTE, PA., THURSDAY, AUGUST 21, 1941. .. = NEWS = LOTS OF TROUBLE Paul Eichelberger, of Clays burg, Blair County, is beginning to think his automobile, or rath- er what's left of it, was cut out for accidents, Shortly after midnight Thursday, he was dri- ving on route 220 at Leamers- ville when another car, he told state police later, crowded him off the road. His car upset, Passersby stopped and assisted him in righting the machine. But he forgot to pull on the handbrake and the auto drifted backwards down a 40-foot em- bankment, crashing into several trees. But it stayed on its wheels this time, Eichelberger said, as though a consolation. He said he wasn't hurt. BOBBED FOR DEFENSE Eight-year-old Mary Jo Me- Cubbins, of Kilgore, Texas, is wearing her golden tresses bob- bed these days—and it's all for national defense. Mary Jo out off her braids and turned them over to the Red Cross after she heard that blond hair was need- ed by the Government for nat- ional defense purposes. The Red Cross forwarded them to College Park, Md., where Government scientists will use them in mak- ing precision instruments for gauging humidity and atmos- pheric pressure for aviation and long-range artillery. Random [tems VOLUME 60. Philipsburg Community Playground To Be Sold For Taxes And Liens Recreation Grounds Which Once Furnished Enjoyment for Thousands of Children Has i | CLACK HELPER: Thousands Brave Heavy |“... 0: | Frank Mayes’ car out of its metered Downpour of Rain to See |i izi boo Legion Parade at Altoona mond. As the photographer finish- ed his work, Mr, Mayes appeared and was about to put a nickel In ‘Bellefonte Junior Legion Band Wins Class D Championship With Score of 94; Receive ‘ o criginal stall. “Oh rig! Prize of Fifty Dollars Prank said, “wel let some clack 1s? the meter of the stall into which hi car had been - . | S Lost All Means of Financial Support \ ! that!” A “clack” remember It was equipped] ] : \ Thoroughly soaked by a sudden| Johnstown Bons of Legion band " motor st who Uses UI the time rs Vv 5 ABA “wv Jay vii torrential shower, over 100 musical | y ’ and many marching units appeared | in the Saturday afternoon four-hour | 975 parade which was the closing The Oldtimers | CAN REMEMBER WMEN | WAS A POY AND OED 10 ORVE TO THE CITY WITH A LOAD OF FRODIXE {0 GO TO ABURLESQUE SHO PCCASIONALLY, BUT | NEVER SAW ANVTHING FUNNIER THAN a Bi SEE & Vv ON OR STRE, AE wir; moved temporariy when a fireman halted him and in formed h that had nearly 4 minutes’ time on meter of hs am he Ths we that’s all YES From the Philipsburg Daily Jour- aids nal comes this announcement: The Philipsburg Community Play- | ground, which once echoed with tho | joyous shouts of thousands of happy | | children, will go on the block and be sold at a Sheriffs Sale at 9 oclock | EST on Saturday, September 6. When the gavel falls in thre | weeks after “going once, twice and sold to the highest bidder,” the | land, and neighboring lots, will be sold to satisfy paving liens and taxes. The Philipsburg Community Lea- gue was organized in 1920 when a | group of public spirited men pur- | chased the lots, organized the Com- munity League Corporation, and turned the ground over to be used as a playground | with all kinds of playground equip- | ment Among the founders of this youth | recreational movement were Harry Scott, Lawsihe Baird, Ross Wynn | Edward Horne, Robert Stauffer George Holden, Harry Ratowsky John Fryberger, and Thomas Lee. | \ : ¢ Not only did these men give the : 60 000 area children a playground, but a sidewalk: swimming pool as well. A total of over $3000 was spent to evacuate Ny for this 80x100 foot pool which t ranged in depth from 2 to 7% feet {8 — It was opened 20 years ago re short] The playground and pool were ading the the hub of loca] children's activities Altoona's shout 10 sears ws 1 erssonty SIX CHILDREN BURNED TO DEATH ic diega out The memes abused and the ranging in age from! The largely lost interest for this years, perished Monday Another factor was that [sllowing their farm- and Letha, 2 the business crash, the communit) Punxsu- | 7p he Gap . Brakeman Dies In Fall From Cars was unable to support a paid super- | *% hey through the itchen o the two ime to fall in line visor. Playgrounds, it was i Bush. father of t child tory frame cut the Bons of Legion drun - pointed yi "Or: i} : y worker COOLS talrway to the r AOFOR Of ha rie Low! | Body of Raymond R. Bathurst out ren and a WPA worker, reported stalrwa Lhe corps of Charles R. Row cannot exist without proper su- : " pervision from eight child 228, Altoona, last mus Found Lying Along Track al siove \ the line of march, retained at Altoona No. 204, retained its class C championship with a point winning a prize of $100. Close | behind was the junior band of Mur- SNAKE REPORT: of the three-day State Leg- (ray-Appieman post, No. 147, Roar- Mrs. Harold Penn at Altoona ing Spring, with a score of 87. It won be TYORPEEA they that a i850. Third Fountain Hill a from 50.000 to No. 406 of 80. It to line the a cup windows (Conti banc BOOT SOMeone else for on a parking meter pays long activily on 8o rovd convention colorful estimated continued watch from the roule districts had passed were drenched the downpour which o'clock divisions infantry of were WHA post nt with a score won Kind CTrsOns | J d ’ + day last week Mrs and nur on "age 5 3 and " age Siz) summer bh was sitting or remarked cas- employed at a Park porch when “1 smell a snake 1 revealed a water snake with its several inches out of the water small nearby along until 3 Men Held For Theft of Wheat Suspect, Arrested, Said to Have Named Two Ac- complices dings of 36 of them 1 skin ghe Loo Investiga- by after four three 110th command Wicker "ig thon 4 whey were units Ma jor Federaliznd came back time nee it Cars rt truck: in siream pass A shot was fired at the bullet missed jour th th for eorg 4 oe ds thud jater Mr broken and sarked pretty Was neers SUpporis 3 } early Bix children 11 as flames des house al nearby Mort for arriving in score of huge trans reservalion t the reason Wo to ny three SCO troved Tyrone men were remanded jail last Thurs- Peace Grange explosior BAD BEDFELLOW Turning back the hed covers, of! and room where ne awail trial preferred by the result ishels of w ald « Oscar B. Smith on Page Five) 0 Lis township Harvey thy the an explosicn WW which he fire started rally be oot In a ¢ though was firing prom- gther children Siz) 4, escaped from f ¢ Aen ‘win . n the ¥ i) ake us ! ici: FAIR HAIRED LADS? How moved the preparatory to retiring after a The community didn't go hard day's work in the fields, hind this playground and Bush, his wife and two kitch rh Donecy Cobb, Hancock, Ga., ne- it started with a great deal of Elva, 14, and Cloy ip the stairway to the gro farmer, received the shock mm ow the home Believed to have fallen from a ntinyed om Page SSromi of his life when he found a big " d to have fallen from & L parking oome empio) meter re draft of three cars to which he was rattlesnake coiled in the bed, aha To . ready to strike. After recovering | Aesigned, 40-year-old Raymond R from the shock, Cobb killed the reptile. It was a full-grown snake, with 25 rattles. HARD ON CARS When his father’s car collided with another car, Johnny Snod- grass, 10, of Kansas City, pop- ped out through the top of his father’s car and sailed through the windshield of the other car. Johnny's head was scratched a bit, but otherwise he was unhurt, Both cars were badly damaged, SURPRISE EGG The family lost its appetite for eggs for a day or two when Mrs. C. A. Duvall, of Blytheville, Ark., while preparing breakfast, broke an egg and out popped a five- inch snake, the size of a lead- pencil. nis MP mo — Drops Schools, Teachers On the basis of a compromise agreement which followed orders by the State Department of Public In- siruction for wholesale closing of schools and dismissal of teachers the Coal Township school board near Shamokin, last week took ac- tion to abandon five schools and dis- pense with the services of 11 teach- ers. The State Department, unde: threat of discontinuing special aid grants to the district had demanded the closing of 11 schools and the dismissal of 20 teachers. The dis- trict has been impoverished since coal companies ceased regular pay- ment of taxes a decade ago and has been the scene of strikes by teach ers and Janitors due to non-pay- ment of salaries, simi a— Home Burns, Big Los When the ten-room brick home of Ernest Stiner, at Martzville, near Berwick, was destroyed by fire members of the family escaped with only the clothing they were able to snatch hurriedly. Mrs. Stiner and a son, Emmest, aged 4 whom she carried through the flames, were burned painfully. Four other chil- dren escaped through second story windows. The loss was $12,000. a Airport Site Sought A committee will attempt this week to pick a loeation in the cen- ter of McKean county for the pro- posed Bradford-Kane Alrport for which the Civil Aeronautics Auth- ority has allocated $560,000 | widow, | these brothers and | Bathurst of Greenwood, Rex Bath- | urst of Tyrone, Mrs. Norman Houser | at home, and Mrs. Opal Ramage of 1 Greenwood He was a member of the Calvary | Bathurst, Greenwood, a brakeman was instantly killed about mid- night Monday night inthe PR. R classification yards just west of WH tower, East Altoona His body was found lying along the track by a crew member at 12:05 o'clock after he received an assign- ment at 11 p. m. to brake on the Cars, Born Mr. Bath- at Greenwood, t urst was the son of Joseph M. and Blanche (Gibson) Bathurst, now | living at Greenwood parents; his (Dibert) Ray- and and Clair Surviving are his Mrs Margaret Bathurst: and these children mond, Maxine, Dale, Joyce, Harry Bathurst, all at home; sisters: Baptist church, the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen and the P. R R. relief. Bonnet String Strangles Baby Child of Lock Haven Parents Meets Accidental Death Mary Catherine Myers, three- month-old daughter of Mr and Mrs Edward Myers Jones street, Lock Haven Saturday morning. shen a bonnet string caught in a spoke of the carriage in which the child had been placed The child's of South strangled death mother ill and was the father was caring for the other! children of the family at the time Thinking the infant safe in its bed in the carriage, Mr. Myers left it to attend to other household duties Upon his return he found the infant hanging from the carriage, dead The bonnet string had caught in the wheel, choking the baby tc death Suffers Finger Injury Albert W._ Bartges of East Harts- wick avenue State College, suffered a painful laceration of his left in- dex finger while working with a small portable saw Friday. He was brought to the Centre County hos- pital for treatment and is now al home, Don’t Pick It Up If It Wriggles When “clothes props” turn inte rattlesnakes, then wash days be- come eventful days. So discovered Mrs. Sidney Kennedy, of Driftwond Cameron county last week. As she stooped to pick up a “clothes prop’ in her back yard, it moved. It wa: a rattlesnake. Earlier that day her daughter, Betty, and Grace Copper- smith, a playmate from Emporium were frightened by another rattle ip the same yard. A neighbor killed both snakes. Mrs. Kennedy is vice president of the Cameron County Library Board and is active in civic and educational work in the county -_——re After two cars locked bumpers near Bloomsburg one day last week 850 easily that the driver of neither Woman Dies After Car Bumpers Lock Miss Letha Buck school teacher of Tyrone who has been attending ses- sions at the Bloomsburg State SO-THATS THE LAW . The Human Interest Side of Legal Oddities By Elliott H. Marrus Animals on Trial--It was not long ago that animals were various crimes in the same court as human beings. The courts wel conducted by judges, and attorney: were appointed to represent the beasts on trial. The which we know took place in viers, Belgium in 1929. A was tried and acquitted for the murder of a 4 year old boy. The defense was animal had been provoked bY chiidren t victim the river In ich he was drowned... Several s were tried in Nigeria in 1924 a charge of “creating a distur- bance.” They were found not guilty. In this case the Court Mes | senger was appointed as the asttor- for the frogs In 1457 a sow was convicted at Montcarnet France {or the murder of a five year boy and was sentenced to be hung by its hing feet from a tree | In 1530, pig was tried, convicted and seine far rica I latest case Ver- shee] that the >¥ the into ney ney ola Receive Huntingdon Fair Court House Officers and Bur- gess in County Asked to Attend August 29. 1s Centre Coun- ty Day at the Huntingdon County Fair, and from all indications it will undoubtedly be the big day at this year's neighboring county fair The burgess of the various Cen- tre county boroughs have been in- vited by the fair management at Huntingdon to be special guests on this big day, and the fair officials look forward to large delegations of Centre countians from the various boroughs accompanying their chief executive, Invitations have been ex- tended to the following burgesses Hardman P. Harris, Bellefonte: J H Wallin, Philipsburg: Ernest Frank, Centre Hall: Kline Wolf, Howard; Lloyd F. Boob, Miliheim; O. E. Henritzy, Port Matilda: kial Gilham, South Philipsburg: D R. Thomas, Snow 8hoe: Wilbur F Leitzell, State College: and C. W Bauder, Unionville. | As a neighborly gesture the Hunt- ingdon county fair officials have also invited the Centre county of- i ficial family. including: Judge Ivan Walker; Prothonotary Bond C Friday White; Recorder Leamer Woodring: | i Treasurer Harry C. Jones: Register| lof Wills Harry A. Corman; Sheriff} Edward Miller; Commissioners Charles FP. Hipple, Fred C. Mensch and Harry W. Keeler; District At- torney Musser W. Gettig: Karl Kusse, secretary of the Business Men's Association of Bellefonte, and H. A. Corman, president of Gregg Township Civic Group, Spring Mills Friday will also be thrill day at the fair and Jimmy Lynch and his | {troupe of twenty dare-devil auto- Eze | Belgium for killing 1 1499, in France, a bu sntenced to death by hangin for killing a farmer Stopper—A Los has a face Lhat stop a clock-—al jeast s what bh wife has often told | to the man tree Angeles would Time electrician aims his Once, according even tried him in He is charged broke one Joy! Diserimination—In seeking a div that her nose offspring-—a 1608, Connec ticut limited the number of lawyers] About in that provinee {o eleven the same time Rhode laland did n ! be elected tn i Ww lawyers © Deputies house of Capt. Arch member of the Half Cent Verdict bald H M_ Ramaey, Spurned Suitor Commits Suicide Clearfield Man Wrests Wea- pon From Woman and Shoots Self of Rockton, resident Donaid Merrifield, 32 Clearfield county, a former of Newtown, Centre county Osceols Mills, ghot and Killed him- self last Thursday in the rear of the home of a woman who spurned his attentions, Coroner E. 8. Erhard sald The shooting is reported to have taken piace after the woman, Miss Violet A. Sheeder, of Rockion Bta- tion, returned from a visit to police to complain of Merrifield’s atten- tions, When they returned home Miss Sheeder and members of her family found Merrifield in bed at side of the S8heeder home, and Miss Sheeder ordered him from the house at gun's point Merrifield wrested the pistol from; the woman and went to the rear of | the house where he shot himself The victim, according to police records, ago on a drunken driving charge. and slashed his wrists while in jail {He failed to appear for a hearing after his discharge from the Du- Bois hospital. Commends Drivers Motor Police Commisisoner Lynn G. Adams has issued a report show- ing “greatly improved” headlight and dimming courtesy in Pennsyi- | vania, The report showed that only one car in 20 had glaring lights Adams sald better inspection meth- |ods and education were responsible | for the improvement, 80 far as we are conctrned we | are willing to forget the social ideas mobile drivers will provide a three-| or he Russians if their military hour program during the afternoon, featuring high jumping, upsets, | jdeas prove successful. British Parl JAY 1A licewoman cost her a Rit Dearing a | in It looked a3 Bg locked up iD a hotel Our lady appealed Us the i batch of wash soakin hich we was arrested three weeks) a century, won Times’ arrested | » New York defense 1 Times aim American Wash Day Mr NOouUse NL na Wash ft mont ng oh a jury in N vaived case Jury would the night though the fou because she had a { her go Home a 10 io take care Driver Injured As He Warns Cars Victim Struck by Passing Auto While Brandishing Flashlight While John Lesko, Hawk Run, was standing near his stalind car Thurs- day night on the Drifling-Grassfiat road him, tumed over injured him, motor police said a car which attempiead to pass struck Lesko and Lesko, who was the only one in- jured m the crash, received bruises and cuts on his knees. He was treat ed by a Orassflat physician Police said Lesko, who was using a flashlight to warn passing motor. ists, when a Beightol and wag about to pull around Les. | ko's car. Lawrence LeGrande, Lanse, following Beightol, stop his car and rammed into the rear end of the machine. Beightol's | CAr { Lesko standing near his car car driven by William Grassflat, came to a stop Was Was then turned over and struck Springs Going Dry Postpone Lutheran Convention The Luther League of the Cen. tral Pennsylvania 8ynod Tuesday postponed indefinitely its third an- nual convention at York, of an outbreak of infantile paraly- sis which has stricken several score persons and taken at least six lives. because —— Use our Classified Ad columns fudge 0° Social Security | Bocial Security Act unable to} Laws-In ETC Le Serewy s Tut HA Manhattan, Kansas law which specifically r one {rom escaping from J Makers mostly did a much mor In 1804 Napo! four Wis UT 20S Law known tories and lasting work the Cx laws which he changed th jaws to make greater justice for the common people. The laws of ihe state of slang are based on the . ha an on to mulaled niet rope Yd picte sel Of Lo Code Napoleon, rather in common aw of Englang on which | the laws of the other slates are founded Blackstone the English judge who lived about 1750 wrote a book cal the “Commentaries on he Law of England” In which he ad ‘ontlisged on Pepe Siz) Payments Higher Many Centre County Citizens Receiving Retirement Benefits In the frst 15 months of on a monthly payment basis tions the annual rate of Federal family} insurance payments n Centre County rose to $23,124.00 This figure was computed by Welland J. Michasl, manager of the Williamsport office of the Social Security Board, on the basis of sta- | tistics Just received from the office of Regional Director William L. Dill, in Philadelphia. The sum reflected insurance in force as of March 31 1941, under the oid age and sur- vivors insurance p of the It did not in- | clude any of the public assistance allowances under Federal-State pro- | grams. In Centre County, 128 men, wo- men and children were receiving monthly checks amounting to $1. | 92700 at the end of March. The figures are growing daily as more | workers retire or die, Mr, Michael Springs, which have been produc | ing large supplies of water for half | are going dry, reports | from farmers in the Lovailsock area {have indicated. Several families in | ithe area already have indicated they jare without thelr usual water sup-) ‘ply. and one line which heretofore! supplied five families has dried up at its source, a mountain spring. said. Monthly payments were distribut- ed as follows: to 51 retired workers SMB 00; to 23 aged wives of retired workers, $243.00; to 16 widows of insured workers, $302.00; and to 38 dependent children of insured work- ers who have died or retired Mr. Michael urged all widows who have not already done s to inquire concerning possible benefits for themselves ang their children pro-’ vided their husbands died after the jast day of 1839 and had worked In employment covered by the old-age ang survivors insurance provisions of the Social Security Act. He pointed out that, in some instances widows have 10st some of their pay- ments by falling to file claims prompily. Continued on Pape Siz) | about opera | was suspected by 8 in the bur t disappeared he harves wihieTe mn the tivo Truck Upsets Against House Driver Escapes Injury as Ma- chine Crashes Grazier- ville Home Driver of a Hoffman cream truck escaped injuries Friday night at 8:45 o'clock when the machine overturned against the front porch of 3 Grazierville residence after swerving across the highway try to miss colliding with a car moved onto the highway The truck reported to have been driven by Eugene A Bryan, 32 ol Hollidaysburg, R. D. 2, upset against ¥ al the home of Martha Richardson, about 15 feet off the highway. Porch damage was list- ed at $100, while the truck suffered $800, police said —— BD ts— THREE SELECTEES ARE SENT TO INDIANTOWN foe th * hy Wie POICh Three Centre County selectees who were inducted in the U 8 Army April 24 and were stationed at Camp Croft, 8, C., have been transferred to Indiantown Gap, Pa Donald Clark of State College and William E. Woomer of Pleasant Gap were shifted to the 112th Infantry while William Relish of State Coi- lege was attached to the 111th In- {antry. The three were included in the first group to be transfirred to In- diantown Gap. Albert Homan ol State Oollege, R. D., who also was inducted April 24, remained al Camp Croft. The three were given 10-day furloughs prior to the change, Engagement Announced Announcement has been made of the engagement of Miss Marie Noll, daughter of Paul Noll, of Spring Mills, to Claude L. Stitzer, of Mill heim. The wedding will take place in the near future Miss Noll is employed at present at the Comer Room in State Col- lege Mr. Stitzer, who was drafted into the U. 8. Army, leaving here the second day of June, received an; honorable discharge from the ser- vice and returned to Millheim on Sunday. He had spent the past seven weeks in the hospital at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, from where he re- ceived the discharge with a certi-| filed disability clause in the docu- ment The young man will return to the employ of the Hosterman & Stover! (Company after vacation for a brief [time among relatives and friends, '! crop | granaries, ahd with the 181 Crop om irantie (Bn front ace direcly in ro sllefonte’s wEDA per avoritism wn to th THOUGHT: Py a ta Brome rts prope] BREAD UP 1 CENT: We'd to explanation of one-cent a anyone starts to explain, we want it understood that the war is no ex- cuse. With most of the 1940 wheal bursting out of Hear an why bread h loaf. And belore like the nation? now being harvested it will take someone with a powerful sales talk {0 convince corner that the public isn't being taken for a ride joaf of bread this CHURCHILL: The historic meeting of President Roosevelt and Winston Churchil last week convinced this department Mr. Churchill ¢ to wear sailor clothes. The naval unif seemed the back, and his cap nimpressively about his ~hurchil] makes, we think more Prepossessing ap] his rough tweeds 8 bit churlish this corner issue with Shy mt Will Mis of the clothing ngland 8 great Prime N this time of stress but, after all English for many years have sel the clothing styles for mankind in nation and we fee] that under more kindly conditions in the ritist Empire, Mr, Churchill's tailor wouic have blushed to outfit him in that naval uniform. CONVENTION: As this is being writien, the men’s convention week is just be- ginning. We expect that during in® week a few incidents may happen 10 provide grist {or this mill, but since we're not prophets we can’t report them before hand Anyhow maybe its Just as well TSK, TSK! Wonder who the two “well known Bellefonte men” were who were seen going into an Alloona beer garden one night last week The gals with them were not their wives an Altoona friend reports. ARGUMENT RE-OPENED: Last week we claimed to have se.- tiled the argument about the com- parative width of parking stalls in Bellefonte and State College by re- porting that at State Coilege the lines are 11 feet apart on the curb while in Bellefonte theyre only 10% feet apart. As is too often the case it seems we put our head under the knife. Borough Manager George Carpenets patiently explained to us that it isn't only the width along the curd. but the angle at which the lines extend out into the street, that govern the width of spaces In other words, {t was pointeg out, a Continged on Pape Siz) fire- ‘KEEPING UP WITH THE JONESES’ gi car was aware of it, Mrs, Margaret C. Betz, 59, was fatally injured. Following the locking of the bumpers of the cars of Mr. Betz and | Teachers’ College, the Betz car went headon crashes, dashes through fire, | off the highway into a telephone in fact anything that goes in with | pole, and Mrs. Betz was thrown ou’, | recklessness in automobile driving. | suffering a fractured skull, | - By POP MOMAND —= The Trials of the Eavesdropper Homes Stoned 2 {| State and Kane borough police] In Father's Milk Vat |'c.2uchine for a band which T_T. _ sss Er _™— SSSR = en ——— sic mt sit Daysy, my Love -- DAISY, I'v CRALY ABOUT TOU =»: ER AW GEE IVE, SOT SUMEPIN I'D LIKE TO TELL YOU BUT XL - LISTEN PET. HELLO = HELLO =** Ive wot A BIG WHAT 7? YES THIS 15 ALOYSIUS PP MEGS! WHO POM GEE I DIDNT RECOGNIZE YOUR VOICE «+++ Tot Drowns Mark Willlam Lahr, infant son of {into the two-foot deep vat. The James City, by throwing stones Mr. and Mrs, William Lahr, of body was discovered by the father through the windows, At one home Point Township, near Northumber- when he noticed the door to the the stones narrowly missed an oc-| land, drowned in milk in a milk milk house open and went to close cupant, Members of all seven house- | house on the family farm, when he it, as he was returning from his| holds are employed at the Holgate- | wandered into the building and fell| evening chores at the barn, | Strothers Company, where a strike = —. |18 underway, : RS EE an i i. Water and Gas From Same Well | wou Wal wal Weakened by * heavy rains the) {walls of an unused building of the F. E, Scanlin, well driller of Dus- lons of water could be pumped by Dewart Milk Products Company at | hore, Lycoming county, just com-| placing the water pipe below the Milton caved in, breaking steam pleted an unusual well at Bugar gas. The water is cold and very and water pipes that ran to other Run. At 50 to 60 feet a Pocket of good. By reducinig the casing at the | parts of the plant, and holding up| gas was struck and at 70 feet 25 gal- top, a flame of gas will burn, {Tien Wi: We pla, i |
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers