The Most Widely Read Newspaper In Centre County. A Visitor In Seven Thousand Homes Each Week. i Odd and CURIOUS in the SECOND SECTION dhe Centre Democrat NEWS, FEATURES VOLUME 60, BELLEFONTE, PA., THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1941. NUMBER 35. = NEWS ~ POLITICAL ERROR Here's a hard one to match, John Tracenski, a grocer, and his opponent, Ben Rosenberg, both hit on the same Idea of having matchbook folders ad- vertise their candidacy for city council. They ordered the fold- ers from the same salesman and when Tracznski's 20,000 folders arrived, he lost no time in dis- tributing them. On the outside cover appeared his name and appeal for election. Later he opened one of the matchbooks and to his horror read: “Vote the man, not the name.” Below was the picture of Rosenberg. Rosenberg cancelled his order as | soon as the mix-up was discov | ered, and Tracznski is trying to gather up the faulty match- books. Police Probe | Juniata Girl, Grace Thompson, 22, of Juniata, is still described in serious condi- | tion at the Altoona Hospital with | a possible skull fracture and other injuries suffered Saturday night | under circumstances that city police | are now prooing Police who launched an investi- | gation into the circumstances sur- | rounding her injuries, learned that | she had been brought home by un- named persons and put to bed | while her mother was absent from | the home Her torn-clothed body was wrapped in a blanket Miss Thompson's body was re- | ported smeared with grease, in ad- THERE IT WAS Eugene Lederer of State Col- lege may know the secret of moving his car by remote con- trol, but he isn't telling how it is done. Last week one day he parked his car a quarter of a block from the borough hall where he was going. Coming out of the hall the astonished Mr. Lederer found his car all set for him in front of the building. The car, parked on a slight slope, had coasted luckily, miss- ing other cars parked along the same side of the street. CAUGHT THE CASH Eddie, young son of Rev. and Mrs. Charles W, Maclay of Phil- ipsburg, didn't catch any bass while the family vacationed for two weeks at Hillside Cabins, at Pine Creek, but he was suc- cessful in pulling a pocketbook from the briny deep. It contain- ed $1.50 and a lot of Boy Scout cards. Eddie hunted up the own- er, a boy from Muncy, who was camping across the river, and returned his catch. Conductor Found Dead In Cabin | Native of Centre County Dies of Heart Attack at East Altoona morning in his cabin in the Altoona yard by members of the crew. A heart attack was be- to have caused his death | Mr. Heaton had come east Tuesday | night with a train and [dlowing its | delivery in cabin. Born in Milesburg, Centre Coun- y il 19, 1879, Mr. Heaton enter- ed the service of the P, R. R. at Al- toona as a brakeman September 11 Later was transferred Pittsburgh division and some rs ago became a conductor, Fou » past several years he had been resident of Pitcairn nesday ! East lieved EXTRACTION Answering a knock on the door of a dentist offce in Philadel- phia, Technician Henry Pettit invited inside a man who held a handkerchief over his jaw and complained of a toothache. The visitor soon lost his misery, how- ever. Drawing a pistol, he tied and gaged Pettit with towels, took $15 from a cash drawer and fled. ne Ww the family enn Mrs Coliins, Edward st Murray, Louls all Pitcairn; | tioned Hawall = army, Blair, Sarah and R all at home { Two brothers and one sister also | sur Edward and Jacob and Mrs. Jerry Confer ali of Bellefonte and five grandchiidren Mr. Heaton was a member of the First Reformed church of Pitcairn, ; the United lodge, B. of R. T. No. 174, i of Altoona and the Altoona aerie of | Eagles. The body was taken to the home in Pittsburgh, and on Saturday re- turned to Altoona for servi and interment 2 Hurt In Crash Mrs n of POCKET NEST Henry Risius, of Peoria, 11, Inst his trousers to a wren. The bird started building a nest in the right back pocket while the trousers were drying on a clothesline and Henry didn't have the heart to disturb her. in tha in We oe CYCLIST INJURED IN COLLISION WITH CAR A motorcycle operated by Nick! ces Vosniak, Snow Shoe, and a car driven by Andy J. Botson, Jr, Clar- ence, collided on the road one mile east of Snow Shoe last Wednesday afternoon. Voszniak suffered lacera- tions and abrasions of the arms. | N (0) | legs and face and was treated at! ear sCeo a the office of a Snow Shoe physic- | ER mm Resident Said hs eit & Cw ‘el Powelton € accident happened when the | . . y. 3 - Face Charge of Driving on Left Side to motorcycle driver was pulling onto | the road from a service station. The ‘cycle traveled for a distance of | about 60 yards without its rider af- | ter the collision. Total damage to | the two machines was about $80 William Flick, Powelton, faces a | charge of driving on t was found dead last Wed- | he left side of | | the highway, state motor police said | njury of Reported to Have Fallen From Auto 'Said to Have Been Brought Home by Unnamed | | Persons and Put to Bed; In Serious Con- dition with Possible Skull Fracture dition to bearing multiple brush burns and scalp laceration It was disclosed that she had been given medical attention Saturday night, fater her mother came home and called a physician. An ambu lance was summoned Sunday after- noon when her condition was ob- served as serious, and she was taken to the hospital Police reported her semi-conscious condition made it difficult to obtain her version of what had happened Several men reported with her Sat- urday night were said to have been questioned with the replies that she fell from an automobile near Gallitzin while enroute to Altoona bninsmtd—— Stork Wins Race In a race from New Alban: the Robert Packer Hospital in Sayre the stork once again beat the man- made automobile. A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Car- penter of New Albany. R D 2. In a car which got as far as Athens. The and daughter were taken hospital, Mrs. Carpenter former Miss Helen Hibbard - " - - Dies in Garage A Morris Plains, N. J. dentist diec suddenly in McMichael’s Garage a! Berwick, while repairs being made to his car. The victim, Dr. R V. D. Toten, 67, was accompanied only by his wife with wi tao Avis to spond Lhe © with {fo mother the to the were om | wa te enrou end {friends All In Step | SPORTSMEN TO HOLD PICNIC The BSBouthern Sportsmen's Association ing a sportsmen’s val at the grounds on 1st The principal events will follows: Pistol regulation shoot ; 22 trap shoot blue rock moving deer obstacle 22 disc ny event Clinton County 5 Sponsors and festis Hatchery eptember picnic Lamar Fish Labor Day, & be as shoot: 22 shoot: shoot Ca fe are for women shoot All trap shoot; ing and racoon ( open and NASe pecial boy shoe i ball Other quoits, archery games and and old 11rIeY UNE There will bx af- the thre ternoon vening Valley Vocational Sct Mr. and Mrs. A M Federal Cartridge Ingram of Marlin expert blue that and by nol Sugar band De F Co. and Bovd Arms Co. all h re in shooter will the west of Lie rock day di invited to » - — Girl Athlete Injured Wenner, daughter of Mr Kenneth Wenner, near will have to take things ime. The girl a Louise Mir Bloomsburg easy for at tumbling star of. the ool art home and who is a fracture wheel [ Philadelphia Inquirer Camper at Black Moshanon Park Tells of Escape from Falling Meteor ‘Heard Missle Descanding Like Swarm of Bees and Land Exactly Four Feet From Where Son Was Sleeping In Tent Last month The Centre Democrat published the story falling at Black Moshannon Park which narrowly escaped hitting the | tent Reed were and Mrs. Robert H son, of Philadelphia In where Mr and their camping last Mr on when Reed de- the mo- he heard close by his article follows Although It has been estimated that more than 20000000 meteors fallen to earth in a single day, Mt one of the rarest of hu- man experiences to be present when lands. whirring down through air to shake the ground with the crash of its impact “Such ribes his morning descending experience mentous the missile side. Mr. Reed's leg have onhe the however, Was awe-in- spiriy experience of myself and family during the early hours of Thursday, July 10 of this year OD our annual vacation my wife, my 12-year-old son Robert, and 1 were camping out in Black Moshannon Blate Park, Centre county, 224 miles by road from Philadelphia Shortly after 6 m. 1 out of the tent to what weather would be the As 1 stood there, looking over lake. 1 heard a strange wh noise as if a million bumble suddenly had been turbed seconds the in intensity, suddenly thud behind me » platform and tent the a stepped PT the like for aay mere SO—-THAT'S THE LAW . The Human Interest Side of Legal Oddities By Elliott H. Marrus Religion and the Constitution— | The Federal Constitution does not in sp what most people think guarantee the American freedom of religion state make a law establishing a Church and tax all reside support of that church (unless State laws themselves {orbig it). In other words, Catholics, Protestants (all sects’ and Jews can all be tax- oo of peopl may Stat for the “yy “wr tu nis the led to support a single church, for] example a Protestant one. In fact, that was the situation in New Hampshire until 1817, in Connecti- cut i] 1818, and In Massachu- setts until 1833-28 29 and 44 year respectively after the adoption of the Federal] Constitution uation exists because the United States Constitution says nothing about freedom of religion, except in the Bill of Rights (First Amend- i ment) where it fs provided that there shall be no federal Nis ait- law af-| the right There Constitu proiubiting from freedom “gon. to worship as we iasise In Lhe the Slates fecting please of re- Wanted—One Eleciric Chalr- South Dakota wants to electrocute a killer, but hasn't an cle chair with which to do the job Clifford Hayes, the confessed killer a tir of he be the The death condition that death pemaity wed the th Dakota in 25 years has no electric chair said if iid borrow one Pilgrims—In New Amsterdam (now New York City) in 1647, there was a law which provided {or pun- ishment of any person who started an argument on the subjec ligion. I! convicted given fy JU first i wial that NeCesSAry et of re- of ¢ Assistance In County Lower Marked Decrease Shown in (General Assistance Cases | after they investigated an accident] Child's Throat Paralyzed {in which two persons were injured One of the cases of infantile par- | Sunday night three miles south of alysis at the Geisinger Memorial | Osceola Mills Hospital, Danville, is very unusual. Motor police sald cars operated by Bix-year-old Ronald Jeffrey, of | Flick and Elmer C. Sharpless, Sandy Mount Carmel, is affected by the | Ridge, approaching in opposite di- disease only in the throat, whereas | rections. crashed after Flick's car usually the arms and legs are af-| allegedly crossed over the center fected first. Unable to swallow, he | line of the highway receives nourishment through a tube | pPrancis Sharpless, 12, and Mrs inserted down his throat | Margaret Sharpless, were injured In s————— | the accident. The youngster received 12t us bear in the mind the pre- | a lacerated chin while Mrs. Bharp- diction that when nations speed up less received bruises of the chest production for war they must face | and left leg the necessity of keeping it moving for higher standards of living when | peace arrives. | or Arc —————— ——————— Good times at school may be re- corded for all time with a camera Predict Marriage for Governor Although Gov end Mrs. Emily Radcliffe Case, of ing to be married. Then, laughing, Doylestown, former house-mother at! she hinted that she may have “some | a Cornell University sorority, laugh- | news for the papers a little later” ed and sidestepped all questions, Gaily, she sidestepped other ques- close friends of the couple are con-| tions by saying, simply: “No state- vinced that they will be married! ment—not now.” soon. Equally evasive, One intimate acquaintance said commented: he expected them to be wed within) Governor James Case—a tall, slender and comely ing about for some time, Why, they brunette of about 45—and Covern- have had my daughter, Dorothy, or James are house guests of the engaged 14 times at least” Later, former's sister, Mrs. Charles A. he added: Rowe. The Governor is 57 Blushing, Mrs. Case sald "no hesitantly, when asked if she and do the announcing.” Boy Displays Unusual Bravery When the left arm of 7-year-old | Physicians said that he was one of Lawrence Neldigh was drawn into the bravest patients they had ever seen, and his first comment was the mechanism of a tractor, near oo sorry 1 won't be able fo go to Sunbury, as the sleeve of his jacket! o.p051 when the new term opens, caught in a gear shift the arm was but I'm glad it wasn't my right so badly crushed that amputation arm. above the elbow was necessitated. other things.” —-_ Presence of Bear Frightens Horses When his team of horses started ' vestigated to discover what had suddenly .to snort and rear, Carter frightened them, and noticed tracks Bache, of Mishingcreek Township. of a large bear. Evidently the near Bloomsburg, had difficulty horses spied the bear, which he had calming them down. Then he in-| failed to see. | shown a marked decrease Arthur H. James| the state's chief executive were go- | program is in effect. At the present “As far as the talk about my get-! ten days at Doylestown, where Mrs. | ting married: well, it has been go-| | “It would not be for me to make | an Announcement. A man doesn't Shown a comparable decline with | - i'll be able to write and do The number of cases | assistance In receiving Centre county has in the past ten months according to an announcement made by Thomas C Williams, Exeuctive Director of the Centre County Board of Assistance The high point in the caseload during this period was reached on April 25, 1941. when 751 Old Age Assistance, 67 Pension for the Blind 352 Aid to Dependent Children and 465 General Assistance cases, or a total of 1635 cases were on assist ance The low point to date was reach- ed August 15, 19041 when the case. load contained 728 Old Age Assist. | ance, 65 Pension for the Blind, 334 | Ald to Dependent Children and 314 i General Assistance cases, or a total | of 1466 cases on assistance The greatest decrease is noted in the General Assistance cases which has dropped from 485 to 341. The {| employables on assistance are car- { riled in this category and the de- cline is indicated in increased em- ty and in areas where the defense time 143 are classified as employ- able and 198 General Assistance cases are classed ag unemployable fcaps. | The number of applications for assistance in the same period has {the low point of 22 applicants for | the week ending August 15, 1041 | The WPA reduction in Centre coun- | ty had little effect on the caseload | or applications which indicated the | increase in employment opportun- | ities, Farmer Falls Dead Fatally stricken with a heart at- tack while assisting with threshing Sunbury, R. D., was found dead in the granary. He had been carrying sacks of grain from the machinery to the granary, and when he did not return after a considerable ab- sence, investigation was made and he was found dead on the floor. ‘When France signed the armistice with Germany, some French lead- er sald that all was lost, “save hon- or.” Now, that's gone, { allowed to run i because of physical or mental hand | at his farm, Levi Dallas Stuck, of Dog Training Season Opens ulations Under Which Hunt- ers May Operate The legal period for training hunting dogs opened Aug. 20, and continues untill March 31 1943 Seth Gordon. executive director of the Pennsylvania Game Com- mission, sald dogs may be trained on several small game species, in- cluding cottontail rabbits, pheas- ants, quail, grouse, and squirrels, but only when accompanied and con- trolied by the handler. He empha- sized that all dogs must be oon- trolled by the handler, since viola. tion of the regulation is a $10 fine. To acquaint the dog with the sound of a gun, blank cartridges may be shot from a pistol, but rifles or shot guns with “live” am- munition will not be allowed, Gor- don sald. Raccoon hunters will be their dogs until | midnight ———— i Railroad's Effective Service | Bince the opening of the present | year, the Pennsylvania Railroad has | 9) | ployment opportunities in the coun. | ieanisported = over | service men from their home cities iand towns to various training camps, it was announced today. In carrying these men, 882 special | traing were operated, beside large {numbers of extra cars on regular | traing where the numbers of select | ees were not sufficient to require ithe operation of an entire special. 388.622 selective in a ship" bread and Af man could be nisced galiey for three days on water Another crdinance forbid in boats, caris amusements.” . ned the sale before 4 p. Mm New Amsterdam ‘rides for pleasure wagons and all othe; Sull another ban- liquor Sunday of on Teachers tas a chi a teacher the right 5 punish id by hitting him? sheriff, pleaded guilty to murder on, Thal is a question which has often come bifore the courts. And the judges have ¥ ruleg that a chooimaster has the right quire obedience {rom Johnny I he doesn’t obey, to punish | Case arose Chicago Mn a sacher punished an over. groxn 15 year old boy for misbe- havior by striking him across the hs with a paper tube. The boy he teacher damages, but ort sald that as long as the punishment was not excessive, and by general to re- and un recent in sued 3 for the motivaled WAS | Republican leral ’ a [| malice the! teacher had a right did In Indians, 889. a teacher had punished bordinate conduct on the part 16 year old pupil by with a switch--ieaving ma 1s legs. The teacher, who was only 18 years old herself was arrested and convicted for assault and batiery The conviction was reversed bj higher court which upheld the right of a teacher to inflict punishment on a pupil Politicians This is the open sea- son on politicians. The atest one of the breed 10 go to jail is "Nucky™ Johnson, antic County N. J leader. He was sent- enced 10 a maximum sentence of ten years and fined $20.000 for fed- income fax evasion This one of the longest seniences on re- cord for such a crime Hush-—The blessings of being an iContinged is Ws on Pape Siz) Truck Driver Is | Struck by Car Game Commission Fixes Reg- Victim Has Leg Broken While Mrs. Truck Was Parked on Berm John Vanreede, Jr. driver of the of Chicago, Cooper-Jarrett trailer truck, is a patient In the Renovo Hospital, being treated for a fracture of the right leg and deep puncture wound of the lower left leg. suffered in an accident shortly before 1 o'clock Bunday morning on the Bucktail Trail at the Ritchie Cut. Vanreede told the investigating officer that he was traveling toward Lock Haven, driving the large ve- hicle in which his brother, Norvert, was relief driver, when he thought one of the tires went flat, He drove off the highway onto the left berm. He says he does not remember any- thing after getting out of the truck to look at a rear tire and does not recall whether or not the door went 1 i shut when he slammed it The other automobile involved, a passeriger car, was being driven by Robert J. Market of Renovo, toward that borough. Market told the Motor Police that as he approached the truck it appeared to be moving and cutting to the left. He tried to pass ting the guard rail and then the truck. After he stopped, he saw Vanreede lying on the berm, in- jured Vanreede was taken to the Renovo Hospital {Continued on Page Siz) ficer P at the truck on the left side, first hit. | Viously sworn out Two Are Held In Morals Case Gladys Fisher Claims Man Who Beat Up Compan- ion is Her Husband Harry R. Bollinger of Lockport, and Mrs. Gladys Fisher of Lock Ha- ven, are beihg held by Clinton coun- ty authorities after pleading guilty before 8 Lock Haven alderman to charges of sodomy Both made statements regarding their activities at Mra. Fisher's home on Thursday night when a man en- tered the house, they said. turning on the light and proceeded to beat up Bollinger. It was alleged that the man took a pocketbook from Bollinger's trousers and that it con. tained a sum of money, $25 to $30, | Bollinger said. Mrs was her Fisher said that the man husband who lives at Belle- fonte. Bollinger sald he did not know the man. Officers Harry OG. Clark and Ray E. Merrits Were at the Fisher home Sunday night making an investiga tion when a man knocked at the door and asked for Mrs. Fisher's daughter, Lena, 19. Officer Merrits asked the man into the house Of- william T. Deviing had pre- a Turley, having picked up a tip that he was the man wanted The man was placed in jail for immed- | drunkenness and was not intely questioned. Later he was iden- (Continned on Pepe Siz) L] of a meteorite | Sunday's {went to the back of the tent reasonable ’ warrant for Son’s Narrow lowed by the fluttering of leaves twigs floating down from Lree “Mrs. Reed, awakened sleep, called out What in the world wa: “I don't know 1 someone is blasting a rock falling" an [ irom that?" sald It sounds Solving a Mystery “But there had been no explos) This increased our curiosity, an from the oak lay ground, The: base of the ironlike Page Three) the twigs broken, upon the noticed a hole at t tree, and 1 dug (Continued on ae out an rms ca MP —————— Lamar Man Held After Liquor Raid = According to Agents, 24 Gal- lons of Beer and Bar Equip- ment Confiscated ter Blate conducted and liquor laws: Released with him at day were held hi larry CGuinzar, both arunk i agent men Deen among | the esta Was were were placed inty jail after leased Bunda ! hed ball $100 each Officers quantity in cases, beer mon Far for the said they of bottled and two al the scene, beer, loose along with a quantity of whiskey The enforcement officers {rom Al- toons and wWhlameport ere fs. sisted by Constable David 1. Probst of Lock Haven They took a truck along with them to bring back the confiscated goods which are stored at the jail Farrington is with selling alcoholic beverages without a license. Aungst and Guiz- Ar were among a group of about twenty men and women on the premises Escape Thwarted At Blair Co. Jail Pair Charged With Series of Thefts, Planned Bold Get-Away The adventurous pair of youths {who made a heavy haul in burglar- (izing an Allegheny Furnace home August 1 after a near 300-mile wake of thefts from Philadelphia, were thwarted Sunday in a try at break- ing Blair county prison Hollidays- burg, where they are now awaiting court trial The one, John H. Ward, 18, of Atlanta, Ga, managed an almost miraculous escape from city prison August 10, before commonwealth charges were filed, but was captured later in the day at Blairsville Both Ward and his confederate in crime, Bailey Thomas Stewart, 24. of Haverford, Pa. tried hiding themselves in the boiler room build- ing within the prison yard Sunday, after their forenoon recreational period, but Warden Henry H. De- lozier and a deputy found them in the building after they were missed at the close of the prisoners’ two- hour exercise period The warden said they were dis- maybe | lke | i 1 and | half barrels of | two | coll boxes and taps for a bar and! ! ra ron mi wiz 11 | charged specifically | gon 40] project, and we're Random [tems ORDERLY FIREMEN: Never having had any knowledge of firemen's conventions except for Ny u we tales we heard from other towns, this corner fel that if the Statute of Governor Curtin remained intact by Saturday the 46th Diamond night convention of the on the annual Central District Firemen here would Te pected do we hear? aid whal a Nice | men | are and | onk > {| Was her Y was willfully broken } + port den somewhat less wild than we €x- The week passed and what Businessmen and nice ladies alike remarking about lot of orderly gentle Central District Firemen tenders in Bell declared the Bar ougher spots hat not a salt sLoien; efonie’s oriny eo an . grinned and shaker or ash tray a botile or chal: The worst re {rom a aes not we heard proprielor Was beer gar who iarec on Wednesday night { man It calmed right . | keeper said | NOT THAT NICE: i + Lown iI ¥ distress gency ‘Big WirE were Bellefonte deeper firemen the anytime TAIL LIGHTS: highway { read the loenize of one out oF ten cars that pass, you're better than we are {| ale the Day ound it who was a he should of the oony necessary to speak tlie have more been JA down’ Seriously, the firemen al meek, but taken all in all 14d a log of fun wit We significant years fir wut apart avior Is eVeral ng 0 schoo) properiy m smoke and 0 save no male We Delieve Ir exihimi We believe ! we're speaking fo anle people we say thal S38 a hew and a much appreciacion of volt because of their behavior : nvention. Theyre when inteer welcome Dig you ever realize that one of the important functions of the tall on your car license tag? any iE to Hiluminate But stand along a night, and if you can The lights age Srent § . Just dont iHumin- | WORRIED: i cally oompiete, i ton | commercial enterprise. It ratiirn 4 revurn Ww investment in the future of This corner is worried over the the practi founda- yout O06 only one. The building is insofar a but structural steel necessary beliore operations proceed much further favor of a committee t if necessary, to obtain nex priorities on After C Et ™ $3 ry onslruction SCHOO] dons go steel of a apart- monetar A school & an the na- tion, and as such it seems that the project here deserves some priority erecting an office building o ment house-—which vestor nels a fry in | oonsideration, i 1 | i | church property LUTHERANS: The good brethren of St. John's | Lutheran church are having quite a Ume of it with the plot of ground between the sidewalk and curb on the Allegheny Street side of the Time and again { the congregation has graded and | grass begins | comes a heavy rain which washes | away fill, grass and all | i | i i i | water to be carried away | they'll have to give up the grass planted the tract in 0 grow grass. The and along The sewer nearby has been revamped time and again, but there's just tno much Maybe idea and fill the piot with concrete | GRANGE WEATHER: No matter what king of weather | we've been having before Grange | Picnic week, it always gets worse just after the Patrons of Husbandry pitch their tents at Centre Hall and | it always gets better as soon as the covered Liiiing behind soap barrels | after gaining entry to the Jocked building by climbing to the roof and forcing a window. It was learned the pair had thrown a 10-foot length of cloth over a wall at the | prison as a later means of escape - What Bellefonte needs is more thorough development of its young | by several young people tified as Pearl B, Turley or Paul people—and we dont care how I! | comes about. i Grangers return home hoping against hope that next year the weather man will give them a break GRIM REVIEW: The phantom purse snatcher who has been active in Bellefonte, How- ard, State College and perhaps Lock Haven since last December. is no longer a joke. A review of his at tacks reveals that they are getting worse, progressively. The last three victims have been sent to hospitals (Continued on Pape Siz) | i | | i i KEEPING UP WITH THE JONESES’ — SA | §97% | | WHO | ARE You | S US --- ALL THESE YEARS -.7.. ITS POP MOMAND, TH’ FELLOW WHO DRAWS WHAT 5 THAT POP ? NO KIDDING «+ DO You REALLY meas IT? I'M GONNA RETIRE AFTER COULD TAKE (T EASY AND RETIRE FROM PUBLIC LIFE «Om, YEAH HE SAID TO SAY GOOD-BYE TO Neu, EDDIE -- Well, of All Things! By POP MOMAND AND TO ALL YOU READERS WHO HAVE FOLLOWED Twi STRIP iy THE PAST TWENTY-SIX YEARS, I WOULD LIKE © . JOIN WITH THE MEGINISES IN SAYING Thani You, GOODBYE, @OOD LUCK
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers