Centre Democrat. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1848-1989, February 26, 1942, Image 11

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    _—
THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA.
February 26, 1942.
Last Days of th
{Continued from page one)
Page Five
Cleaning Felt Hatg |tlement to RUTH M, EBY, adminis-
| trix, Pleasant , Pa. BR. Paul
| One excellent method of cleaning | fim a x J Paul
| a felt hat is as follows: Add enough | Cy , attorpey for estate.
gasoline to a teacup of flour to make | LEGAL NOTICE.
paste, Rub this paste on with a’ the matter of the Petition of
o— ep v
| Health and Beauty |
e Bismarck
of Swordfish made another sudden
HOUSEHOLD
SCRAPBOOK
|
in
| In
38 knots, faster than any British
or U. 8. Battleship.
On deck she looked much like
any other battleship. But below
she was unique. Beneath the water-
line she had five steel skins, each |
enclosing watertight spaces. The
crew had been told that the Bis-
marek was not only able to defeat!
any British ship but that she could
defeat any combination that could
be brought against her. She was
literally unsinkable. They believed
that, |
There were some on board, older
men who didn't believe it; for in-
stance the commanding office, Cap-
tain Lindemann. He knew that
German ships could be sunk like
any others. He was a quiet and
capable officer, an old-style German
navy man rather than a fervent
party man,
But his superior officer was a Nazi
of the Nazis, Vice-Admiral Gun-
ther Leutjens was slight of build--
but he made up for it by a trucu-
lence of look and violence of spirit
He was an emotional leader who
roused his men to high fervor. That
he had corresponding fits of de-
pression the crew did not know.
Morale had been high despite
cramped living quarters, Besides
the cadets and regular crew there
were several hundred extras on
board, making a total of some 2400.
And the accomodations were none
too large for the regular force
Space that other ships use for liv-
ing quarters was Here devoted to
eXtra protection, elaborate compart-
mentation. The crew slept forward
in hammocks swung so close togeth-
er that they touched. Aft the
junior officers were crowded four to
a tiny room. The mess deck was
dark and airless. But all realized that
these discomforts were the price they
paid for strength. Like giving up
butter for guns.
There had been much speculation
among the crew as to where they
were going. Most of them thought
it was a raiding expedition against
British merchantmen, such as Leut-
jens had conducted so successfully
with the Scharnborst and the Gneis-
enau. The extra men made that
credible; they might be prize crews
for captured vessels. Some had
heard that the Bismarck was going
to capture the Azores for the Reich
Others declared that they were head-
ed for the Pacific to join the Jap-
anese fleet. But that wasn't likely
no tropical kits had been issued
, Now the purpose was clear— they
had been destined to destroy the
Hood.
The exultant mood of victory can
not be maintained indefinitely. The
inevitable reaction came the second
day. The Prince Eugen turned to-
ward home. The weather had grown
cold and overcast, with snow squalls,
sleet and mist. Most of the men of
the Bismarck had little experience
of the vast emptiness of the ocean.
They realized they were alone and
far from home.
Presently they became aware that
A they were being hunted. Off the
~4" sdétthern tip of Greenland, on the!
morning of the 26th a plane was
heard. Soon an American built Cat-
flina appeared through a break in
the clouds, almost overhead. Every
A-A gun began to hammer, putting
a terrific barrage and the plane
ppeared. But a little later ano-
ther one was there watching. The
crew had the feeling of long arms
reaching toward them
Thea a disturbing rumor went
arstnd the ship. There'd been a
quarrel between Luetjens and Cap-
tain Lindemann. Through his clos-
ed doors the Admiral was heard
shouting angrily. Lindemann had
pointed out that the British would
now concentrate every available unit,
that they would never rest until they
had hunted down the Bismarck. He
tirged the Admiral to turn toward
home at once.
Luetjens angrily vetoed this sug-
gestion. He announced to the crew
that he was leading them on to more
victories. They cheered and felt
mich better. Nevertheless they be-
gan to watch the horizon, hoping
for reinforcements
It wasn't help that came next
day. There was a buzzing like a
swarm of bees and a squadron of
planes came over—The Royal Navy's
Swordfish flying boats had found |
thelr quarry. One after the other
they swooped close to the water, re-
leased their torpedoes and banked
away. One torpedo struck full amid- |
shi A column of water leaped
Tr than the masthead, and the
ship was jolted from end to end. |
The damage control crew found that |
a gompartment had been penetrated
and filled with water. |
KH was no crippling damage yet!
it sfemed to have a profound effect
on Admiral Luetjens. Probably at
this point he also received disturb-
ing news by radio, information of
Strong British concentrations mov-
ing’ to intercept him. That. in a
man of his temperament, might, to- |
gether with the plane attack cause
$he ful swing from elation to des- |
He called the crew together and |
made an extraordinary speech. He
sald the Bismarck would be forced |
to do battle, U-boats and planes, |
he hoped, would come to help meet |
the British onslaught. If not, the
Bismarck would take more than one |
of her opponents to the bottom with |
her. “Men, remember your oath; |
be true to the Puhrer to death”
‘The effect of this on the young
‘men was devastating. ‘They had!
been told that they were invincible,
that their ship was unsinkable. Now, |
‘suddenly, there was a talk of dying! |
To repair the Admiral’s blunder, |
a message was circulated among the |
p
men. Help, it said, was on the way.
A flotilla of U-boats was approach-
ing: planes were coming-soon there
would be 200 of them overhead.
Tt is probable that this statement
was made out of whole cloth. Bu
the crew believed it. Their spirits |
went up. All day men peered to-|
ward the horizon. '
Since the encounter with the Hood
the Bismarck had sailed southwest
and then south. Now, three days
. after the battle, she was headed to-
Finisterre, hoping to reach the |
French coast and creep along it to
a safe harbor. But as darkness set-
tied down that evening a squadron
H
| struggling
{ attack, scoring three hits, Two tor- |
| pedoes did little damage, but the |
{ third struck the steering gear, jam-
ming the rudders at an angle. THey
began to turn in circles
There was frantic activity on board.
The knight's Insignia of the Iron |
Cross was promised the man who |
could repair the rudders. Engines
were stopped and a diver went over-
side. He put forth immense efforts,
but when the Bismarck resumed way
she still moved in circles.
Now the organized life of the ship |
was disrupted. There was shouting
and aimless running around. In
the midst of the confusion came an
ironic note, a radio message from
the Fuhrer: “All our thoughts are
'with our victorious comrades.”
They tried desperately to steer
with the engines. But the ship limp-
ed along slowly, yawning from side |
to side like a drunken man.
An hour after midnight a flotilla
of British Destroyers came out of
the dark. They circled the Bis-
marck like a pack of dogs around a
wounded bear, darting in now and
then to discharge torpedoes. More
compartments were hit and flooded
There were increasing casualties
The ship's command tried to give
the crew's morale another shot in
the arm This time the message
was specific: “Early in the morning
tugs will come to our assistance
and fourscore planes.”
crew believed it
He made one grand
“We
Long
the
Some of the
Leutjens didn't
gesture, a message to Hitler:
shall fight to the last shell
live the Fuhrer, the Chief
Fleet.”
After
heard
hysterically
am through.”
The next morning was overcast
and a cold wind whipped the ocean
into whitecaps. On the horizon ap-
peared the heavyweights of Bri-
tain's Grand Fleet, the Rodney and
the George V. They opened with
their 18-inch guns at about 11 miles
then moved in to half that range
A 16-inch shell weighs 2100 pounds,
travels half a mile a second. Every
time one struck, the Bismarck rock-
ed and shuddered. But for a while
back, firing salvo for
of
He was
shouting
like. I
that he cracked
through his door,
“Do what you
she
salvo
The break
wrecked the
fough
a shell
a tiem
station
came when
main control
That ended the Bismarck as a co-
ordinated fighting machine Her
crew still fought the individual tur-
rets by local control, but the shoot-
ing was wild
The Rodney and George V moved
in closer, within two miles. They
sent every shell home with metho-
dical precision The riddled mast
hung like a crazy tangle of vines
until a shell cut it off at the base
and it came crashing down on the
deck. Flames poured out of the
funnel. One turret leaned over, its
guns cocked toward the sky No
vessel had ever taken such punish-
ment before and remained afloat.
Now morale went to pieces. The
crew of one turret mutinied, ran
away. After a moment's hesitation
their officer ran too. In another
turret, when the men refused to
obey the officer shot them down
Soon the ship began to keel slow-
to port and water poured in
through shell holes and sprung the
plates. It flooded deck after deck
sucking and gurgling through the
labyrinth of chambers and passages
Some compartments were shut off
and many men were drowned as
water rose to the ceilings. Others
fought their way up fo the air, jam-
ming the companionways
The top deck became an inferno
Holes opened, men's clothes were
ripped off by explosions. Wounded
men and boys were shrieking and
the dead lay everywhere
The panic-driven mob tried to get
back below decks. But the ladders
were packed with men fighting their
way up from the rising water below
They fought each other and fell off
the ladders in struggling masses.
By now the ship was almost over
on her beam. Many were already
in the water, others
crawling out over the black, glisten-
ing bulge of the hull
1
iy
marck slid beneath the surface
The British ships moved in to res-
cue. About a hundred Germans
caught ropes thrown to them and
were hauled up. Then U-boats were
reported approaching and the Brit.
ish, unwilling to be caught motion-
less, moved away, leaving hundreds
of Germans still struggling hopeless- |
ly in the sea.
The rescued men were haggard
and hollow-eyed, as if they had gone
through months of torture. Days
later, after they had been put to
bed, rested, given restoratives, they
were still dazed. They hardly spoke, |
{even to each other.
one observer of the legend of the
| Zombies, the living-dead of the West |
They reminded
Indies who walk without souls. It
was more than physical shook that
they had suffered. There had been
i shattered the faith on which their
lives had been built—-the belief in
their own invincibility,
Broiled Finnan Haddie
Wash fish thoroughly. Let soak
in cold wafer. skin side up, for 1-2
hour. Pour off water, cover with hot
water and let stand 15 minutes
Drain thoroughly and wipe dry.
Brush with melted butter and broil |
slowly 15 or 20 minutes. Put on a
hot platter, spread with Futter and’
a little cream. Sprinkle with pepper
and garnish with lemon. Serve with
chilled tomatoes, cucumbers and
baked potatoes.
A
WHEN WINDS
GET ROUGH
A Windstorm Policy Protects You
From Financial Lom. See
John F. Gray & Son
General Insurance
Phone 497-J Bellefonte, Pa.
Slowly the!
bow tilted up. Stern first the Bis- |
Dix Run Baptist Church
C, C. Shuey, pastor. 9:30 Sunday
school, Elmer Hosband, supt, fol-
lowed with class meeting: preaching
|at 7:30,
Bellefonte Presbyterian Church
Rev. Willlam ©. Thompson, pas-
tor, March 1, 1042. Sunday school
in the Chapel at 9:41 a. m. Sermon |
by the pastor. Evening service with
Junior Choir at 7:30 p. m,
Advent Church
C. C. Shuey, pastor. 10 a. m. Sun-
day school, Clyde Watson, supt,; |
preaching at 11 o'clock. Glad the |
attendance is Keeping up so well |
folks are always welcome to come |
and share with us in all the services,
Seven Stars Community Church
Near Franklinville, Huntingdon
county.) Sunday, March 1, Bible
School 1:30; preaching service at
2:45 in charge of Rev. W. W. Breck-
bill of the Broad Avenue Methodist
Church of Altoona
.
Milesburg Presbyterian Charge
Port Matilda: Services Sunday,
March 1. Bible school 10:00 a. m.;
morning worship 11 a. m. Unlon-
ville: Evening worship 7:30 p. m.;
Bible study class Monday evening
at home of Miss Eva Rowan at 7:30
Milesburg: Bible school 8:30 a. m.;
Christian Endeavor 6:30 p. m. How-
ard E. Oakwood, minister
The Christian and Missionary
Alliance Church
W. O. Brooks, pastor Sunday
school at 9:45 a. m., J. Clair Hoover,
supt, Morning worship 10:45--sub-
ject: “The Lamp and Trumpet Vic-
tory.” Young Peoples meeting 6:30
p. m. and the evening service at 7:30
Vednesday evening at 7:30 prayer
and Bible study from the Book of
Revelation
Methodist, Bellefonte
Rev. H. C. Stenger, Jr., minister
Church school at 9:30, Harold Wion,
superintendent. morning worship at
10:45 a. m. The Methdist students
of the junior class in high school will
be present in a body. Sermon: Ne-
glected Real Estate. Youth Fellow-
ship 6:30 p. m.; evening worship at
7:30. Sermon: A Clue to the Good
Life. Organ recital by Gatty Seliars
at 3:30 p. m. on Sunday afternoon
4
i
Boalsburg Lutheran Parish
Shiloh: Worship at 98:30; Sunday
school 10:30. Tuesday evening wor-
ship at 7:30. Pleasant Gap: Sunday
school 9:30; worship 10:30. Thursday
evening worship at 7:30. Boalsburg
Sunday school 9:30; Vespers service
7:30, sermon subject: “A Great Path.
Lenten service Wednesday at
0 in the Reformed church. Bring
your friends with you to Lenten ser-
vices and Sunday worship. L. J
Kaufman, pastor
mir
“iil
First Evangelical Church
H. Halbert Jacobs, pastor. 9:30
a. m. Bunday ehurch school, Edward
J. Teaman, supt.; 10:40 a. m., Wor-
ship with sermon, subject "Having
Faith, we Need Not Fear.” 2:00 p
pastors class; 7:30 p. m. Evan-
slistic services. The official board
will meet on Monday evening at 7
o'clock. Wednesday evening Lenten
service at 7:30. The Rev. H. C
Stenger of the Bellefonte Methodist
church will bring the message We
invite you to worship with us, if you
have no other church home
Milesburg-Unionville Methodist
William A. Snyder, minister. Ser-
vices for March 1. Milesburg: 0:30
Church school, Youth fellowship at
6:30; evening worship 7:30. Wed-
nesday, March 4, membership class
at 6:45; prayer service 7:30. Union-
ville: Church school 8:15. morning
worship 10:30; Youth Fellowship at
6:30. Thursday, March 5. member-
ship class 6:46; meeting of Women's
Society at 7:30. Thursday, Febru-
ary 28 in the Milesburg church, the
Fourth Quarterly Conference, Dt. J
Merrill Willlams, superintendent,
presiding.
St, John's Lutheran Church
The Rev. Clarence E. Arnold, pas
{ tor. Second Sunday in Lent, March
lst. 9:30 a. m. Sunday school; 10:45
a. m. the service and sermon: “The
Savior Denied.” 7:30 p. m. Vespers
and sermon: “A warning--Love Tot
the World,” second In a series “This |
Christian Life of Ours.” Lenten ger-
| vice Wednesday night, March 4, at
7:30 o’'¢lock. The address will have
as its subject: “Jesus Reveals His
Mission and Spirit.” The Women's
Missionary Society will hold its reg-
ular monthly meeting after the Len-
| ten service,
H
BN EEE
240 Present at
Annual Banquet
{Continyed from page one)
study. selections by the Victory Oc-
tet, of Bellefonte, and group sing-
ing led by Cecil A. Walker, with Mrs.
E. K. Stock at the piano.
Speakers included J. Kennedy
Johnston, president of the Y board |
of directors, who spoke on the work
the Y is doing in the community, |
{ and L. C, Heineman, secretary of the |
organization, who conducted a brief |
open discussion on questions of im- |
i
|
:
| portance to fathers and sons. A. L.
Francis was toastmaster,
Charles F. Cook, of Bellefonte, was
introduced as the oldest person pre-
sent in the absence of William Tres- |
sler, who will be 100 vears old in
June and who was unable to attend |
because of a slight illness,
Birthday greetings were sung for
Charles E. Martin, general manager
of the Central Pennsylvania Gas
Company, and for Pranklin Schad, |
Jr, and Calvin Troupe, son of Mr. |
and Mrs. Willlam B. Troupe. Young
i
; Bchad and Troupe each celebrated
their 8th birthdays on the date of |
the banquet,
Approximately 30 members of the
Y. M. C A Auxiliary prepared and |
served the roast turkey dinner, |
i
If a high school graduate has heen
| taught to read, and loves % read, |
| the wisdom of the ages is available,
{his cold?”
| germs
| colds
| present time,
| shower,
“Doctor, please come to see the
baby.” he has had a dreadful cold| Once the cold is established many | gore
for several days, and has high fever
now." said a distressed voice over
the phone
“Where did the little one acquire
queried the physician,
saw that six-year-old
when he
Mary's nose wag running and she
was hovering over the helpless in-
fant kissing him
“Oh, I don't know, the rest of the
children had them first, but they
were not so sick as the baby, The |
servant let the
the baby,
cold.”
A cold is always an infection. A
baby has acquired no immunity as
have adults, When children are born
cold wind blow on
they are entirely free from bacteria, |
which are found in the noses and |
throats of sufferer:
they were kept
from colds. If
awny from
they would never develop
The
stron
Eskimos of the
healthy people
know what colds were
white men invaded their
and carried them various infections
including the cold germs, Their phy-
sical resistance was lowered, many
of them died from the effects of
and other diseases carried by
Denmark does not allow
outsiders to enter Greenland, in or-
der fo prevent the entrance of dis-
eases, {rom which the natives are at
present free
Arctics were
who did not
until the
¥
ry
cold:
the trader
1
CHILDREN'S COLDS
and he caught an awful |
these |
territory, |
The cold organism fs so small that
it wil] pass through the finest filter.!
dangerous forms of bacteria can be
| demonstrated by the microscope In
the secretions, Often the apparent
{ ly innocent cold develops dangerous
| symptoms, due to the presence of
| pus and poison forming germs, such
| as the pneumococel and streptococet
(It 15 a common occurrence for the
| child to develop sinys or middle ear
| Infections, which may cause serious |
{ and far-reaching effects, Even pneu-
monia, meningitis and other ills |
tread upon the heels of a cold
Remember the small child catches
| cold very readily through being kiss-
ed, fondled or otherwise exposed at
close range to one who is suffering
from a cold
If your child wakes up in the
morning with a cold, do not bundle
him off to the kindergarten, where
he will infect other children. Keep
him at home and give him proper
treatment; his recovery will be has-
tened and he will avoid complica-
tions
See that your child spends the re-
quisite number of hours in sleep
Give him a well proportioned and
body-bullding diet, Do not keep the
rooms hot and close, Give him a
proper amount of sunshine and fresh
alr. Keep the little ones away from
shows. Then, first and last,
guard against infection
to
picture
aa
For Victory: Buy Bonds
Lessons In English
Words Often Misused
Do not say,
L to the ball team
addition
“Grant will be a val-
unable asst Say, “a
valuable
Do not #
money
a sigh
say,
it
‘Brown makes
al business
large amount of money.’
Do not “I talked to Robert
previous to attending the meeting.’
8 I talked with Robert previous-
to atlending
a)
of tl
ii
BAY
ay
the
meeting
"»
The garage is in back
Bay, "The garage is
FOUN
10S
behind the |
Do not We are pleased
advise you that, ete” Write, “We are
pleased to inform you
Do not gay, "Twenty
up for the team
a
write t
hove
signed Omit up
Words Often Mispronounced
Gangrene. Pro
and not gan-gren
1011
noun
ce
ansl:
t syllable
g-gren
green, acoent
Bambino. Pronounce bam-be-no
in ah. ¢ in be in no, accent
second syilable
Calm. Pronounce
and the | is silent
]
as ur 0 as
Kam, a as in ah
Sacrifice tt
Pronounce
4
ee second |
as in
first
Saga
saga
in ask
lable
ite and not as In miss, accent
syllable
Preferred
first a
unstres
pronunciation
In ah, second a
1, accent firs:
1
WO
to
nave
Parlance. Pronounce par-lans, first
a &s In ah, second a as in an un-
stressed, acoent first syllable
Words Often Misspelled
Intention, tion: tension sion. Sur-
veillance: observe the elll, (Pro-
nounce sur-vale-ans) Regime;
though pronounced ray-zheem, Lat-
tice, ice: letiuce, yce. Wherewhithal;
only one 1. Cayenne (pepper)
Word Study
“Use a word three times and |
yours.” let us increase our voca
by mastering one word ¢
Words for thiz lesson
SENTIENCE, BENTIENCY; the
quality or state of having sensation
"An example of harmonious action
between the Intelligence and the
sentiency of the mind. “Earle
EMASCULATE: to weaken: to de.
stroy the wer of. “These meastires
if not emasculated by amendment,
wiil help restore prosperity.”
TRANQUILIZE: to make calm
and peaceful, “These thoughts will
tranquilize the mind.”
PARAMOUNT; chief
paramount consideration.’
CREDULOUSNESS; readiness to
believe on slight evidence: credulity
Bey i all credulity is the credu-
owmness of atheists "8. Clarke
COMPLEX (adjective); compii-
cated’ Intricate. “Who understands
the compiex phenomena of life?”
x
’
tis
bu
ach
That is
a
Modern Etiquette
1. What type of girl attracts the,
average man of today?
AE
2. Is it considered good form for
the “dummy” in a bridge game to
leave his seat to watch his partner
play the hand?
3
owed
table?
4 Are showers
bridegrooms
5 8 d one thank a person for
sending a posteard while he was out
of the city?
6. Where is the
placed when
much room
each guest
How
fre
$07
should be al.
t a dinner
a
a
ior
appropriate?
prospective
youl
dinner napkin
setting the tabie?
[
In what instances is whistling
rude?
8 Is it proper to fill water glasses
for the dinner table to thelr brims?
2. What should one bear in mind
when giving gifts?
10. When a man and a woman
meet on the street for the first time
rince their introduction, who should
be the first to speak?
11. Is it obligatory to write a note
of thanks for a gift that is received
by mail?
12. Is there any limit to the num-
: ber of knives and forks one places at
each plate when setting the dinner
table?
Answers to Modern Etiquette
1. The average man of today ad-
mires the girl who is cheerful and
intelligent, rather than one who is
merely pretty, He enjoys the com-
pany of a girl who is witty without
being rude and gay, without being
flippy. He may be momentarily at-
tracted by the doll-baby type, but he
will be held by the cheerful. whole
some disposition and the charming
personality
2. No, He should remain quietly in
his seat and without any comments
that might be construed as advice
to his partner.
3. A space of from sixteen to
twenty inches, This is called the
“cover,” and each cover should be
definitely marked with a service
plate.
4. They are very popular at the
mostly humorous in character.
for wear, “dainty”
budget books,
handkerchiefs,
and the lke Of
| course, the shower of useful gifts is
i also appropriate—such as a book)
snower or a “smoking necessities”!
|
5. Yes i
6. It is folded in an oblong and]
placed to the left of the service!
plate or straight upon it. |
REMEMBER
When You Want
ANYTHING IN
Lumber - Millwork
Doors - Sash
Roofing
W. R. SHOPE
i
i
|
{
i
(and “Red
{ 7. Whistling in a street car that is
crowded is rude, because one's breath
Is sure to strike a fellow passenger.
is recoghised is rude, as this dis-
tirbs one’s neighbors. Men of re-
finement do not walk along the
streets whistling
8. No; neither walter nor beverage
glasses should ever be more than
three-fourths full
}
! using a small quantity of cinnamon. |
{ 8. The old Latin proverb, “It is the
giver that makes the gifts precious.”
One should always remember that it
{is not the value of the gift that is
important,
| to its selection, and the kindly sen-
{ iment behind it.
| 10, One good rule to follow in this
{natter is that the first intimation
' of recognition always should come
although they are! from the woman to the man, from
Us- | the higher in rank to the lower, and |
| ually they consist of socks too gaudy! from the older to the younger,
| n
ou Yes, and as promptly as pos.
e.
12. Yes; there should never be any |
PORK PRODUCTS
more than three forks and two
knives at any one plate. If more sil-
ver is needed, it is brought in at the
proper time. The dessert spoon and
i corner of a
Whistling at the movies when a tune |
Speck in the Eve
Never rub the eye when you feel a
ign substance in it. Close the
eye and gently pull the eyelid free
of the ball, Usually the tears will
| wash out the particle of dirt. If not, |
try looking in the mirror with the
other eye and see if you con observe
the speck, If so, remove it with the
clean handkerchief, If
none of these works, apply a cloth
wet with boric acld solution and
consult a doctor at once
Starch
Add a little salt to the starch, and
{it will prevent the starch from be-
ing blown out of the clothes when
drying them on a windy day
Cleaning Black Felt
A teaspoonful of ammonia mixed
with a half-cup of cold tea Is an ex-
cellent cleaner for black felt
Cut Flowers
Long-stemmed flowers will
fresh for many days if the stems are
split with a sharp knife every day
Many people prefer this method to
the cutting off of the as the
long stems can thus be retained for
the life of the flowers
Cleaning Porcelain
for the bath tub
ner poroeialn ar-
lemon 1!
Bread Baking
If the crust brea
come oo har baking
place In an open window
soften
keep
stems
A good cleaner
wash bowl
the
Or t
half of
(
ticle a ind
on hot
be -
4
d hs
grease
and {it i11
and It wiil
3
¢ y
a in
Darning and Mending
Much time can be saved when
damming and mending if a piece of
mosquito netting, cut to the required
size d under the Then
rough ih
Is basted hole
darn in and out tl
of the netting
Starch
Dissolve a lump of borax in boil.
ing water and put in cold starch
The result will be a whiteness and
a stiffness that will be pleasing
Hard-Boiled Eggs
Hard-bolled egps
out breaking the ¥«¢
dipped In cold water
Custard
will not bum
00
can be cut with.
Tks if the knife is
HES A
boil -
nful corn-
other good
while
Custard
] nt
ing if «
tarch
oa it
is AGC .
g£ WW remember is
salt added to the
vent drying
and
i
ty
thin
t
t
will also improv
Cleaning Satin Slippers
Satin slipper: }
ly by puttin
lemon julee
applying to the
white cloth
Flattened Nap
one
an be cleaned ntce-
drops of
nts
‘
niture ar a room finds
that the nag rug besome
flattened in one place by a heavy ar-
a
When has changed tl
und ir
: and
nas
of the
ture resting on 1t for
time mj a chamois
it over several times and place
this over the spot. Allow to remain
for several hours and the mark will
have disappeared
Whitewash Ald
A pound of soap d
gallon of hot w
five gallons of wi
part a glossy finish
wash
Anmnes
wived in a
added
will Im-
white-
cwash
the
Sewing Hint
If a small piece of adh
is applied to the finger it will pre-
vent it from being pricked by the
needle when sewing or embroidering
Treatment of New Book
The new book will wear far better
tf it Is opened correctly. Place the
book with its back on a table and
let down the front cover, then the
back cover. Then a few leaves at the
front and a few at the back, aiter-
nating and pressing them down
gently until the center of the book
is reached. Repeat this a few times
to limber the binding. This will pre.
vent a possible loosening of the
{leaves and binding of the book.
Mending China
Broken china can be mend~d by
stirring plaster of Paris in{ _ the
beaten white of an egg, to the con-
sistency of paste, applying this to
the broken edges, then allowing it to
harden thoroughly.
i Chocolate
An added flavor that is delicious
ican be imparted to the chocolate by
dhesive tape
i Tooth Powder
A fragrant tooth powder can be
‘made by mixing thoroughly five
ounces of areca-nut charcoal, two
but the thought given ounces of cuttie-fish bone, one ounce | pen
{of areca-nuts, raw and powdered.
Strain through a fine sieve.
1
ET. ness
fork are on the dessert plate when
i
§
it is brought to the table.
i
FAREWELL PARTY 18 :
HELD FOR HOWARD YOUTH
A farewell party was given last
weekend in honor of Harold Kline,
of Howard, who has entered the U.
8 Army. “Shorty” Kline served a
delicious oyster supper and the
fruests presented Harold with a mili-
tary set. |
Those present were: H. D. Pletch- |
Pletcher
1 Lyons, Ray Kunes, Clyde
Long, Kling Yearick, Lester Wy-
land, Paul Bhope, Archie Allison”
LOOK FOR THE LITTLE
BLUE PIG. HE'S YOUR
GUIDE TO BETTER QUAL-
ITY PORK PRODUCTS
| brush, and allow it to dry
WINNER=:
Then
brush off with a stiff brush.
Lavender Sachets
Lavender sachets can be made by
mixing sixteen ounces of lavender
flowers, four ounces of gum benzoin,
and two drams oll of lavender
Skin Whitener
An application of equal parts of
rose water and lemon julce acts as a
skin whitene:
Sarah Ann's
Cooking Class
|
A em ——
-
|
More and more fish is being eat-
en as we learn how to market and
cook it: and nowhere is good cook
ery more important than fish
dishes, The right garnish or sauce
or both ! the combination of
foods with wich fish is served have
much to do with the popularity of
fi In the following recipes one
[4
ish
fish may be gubstituted another
74
in
Ii
{or
Fish Chowder
k fillets
pork, diced
sliced
a:
haddo
elices salt
onion
1-2 cups
cups milk
teaspoons
‘per
2 tablespoons hutter
1 tablespoon flour
Cut fillets
too small
rod
4 £
polal
:
salt
in uniform pieces not
Fry pork until crisp, add
onion and cook until a delicate
brown. Strain fat into chowder ket-
te, add fish, potatoes it and pep-
Cover with water, bring
to a bolling point and simmer until
potatoes are tender. Mix flour with
a little water tf] smooth
to the chowder with the milk
to bolling poin and add
ter. Add a few broken crackers
Serve : 4
’ PPT
we
per cold
ard
Bring
but-
add
aga
int again
with
wilh
Ba.
buttered
and a lemon p«
Fae read
1 green ad
Salmon With Celery
Parboil 1 en
gmall pleces in
8 cream sauce
spoons butler
flour, Add
and 1-2 cup
Beason 10 taste
(7 1.2 ounces)
drained celery in
with salmon mixture
je with butlered crumbs and add
few dashes of paprika, Bake about
20 minutes untd brown in an oven
350 degrees Serve With baked po-
and grated raw car-
cul in
salted water. Make
by blending 2 table.
with 2 tablespoons
up of celery water
evaporated milk
Fold in 1 smal] can
of salmon. Put the
a baking dish, cov-
Bprink-
y of celery
”
the
er
a
Fish Omelet
tablespoons milk
alt and pepper
canned
flaked
2 tablespoons fat
Mix eggs slightly enough to
blend yolks and whites, Add milk
sall, pepper and fish. Melt fat In
omelet turn in the egg
Prick up with a fork until
cup
1156
Just
pan and th
mixture
the whole is of a creamy consistency
Yhen brown underneath, fold and
an ol a hot platter Ga
wm od isp
with diced beet
et
on rhish
5
Legal Notices
EXECUTORS NOTICE.
In the matter of the estate of Dora
Cottle, late of Perguson Township
Centre County, Pa. deceased
letters testamentary on the above
estate having been granled 10 ihe
undersigned, all persons indebted to
the sal late are requested to make
immediate payment, and those Lav-
ing claims or demands against sald
estate 10 present the same without
delay, for settlement to MILES
WALKER, State s, Pa. B.D.
or HOMER M. W , Pine Orove
Mills, Pa. executors. R. Paul Camp-
bell, attorney. x13
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.
{ In the matter of the estate of Eva
2. Roan, late of State Coliege Bor-
ough, deceased
Letters of
!
administration
ectate having been granted the un-
dersigned, all persons
to dré requested to make Immedis
payments, and those having ciaims or
demands against the same will pre-
{sent them without aelay for aetile- |
402 E
ment to HARRY H .
Pa, ad
College Ave, State College,
| ministrator, ©. Lt. 8.
EXECUTRIX'S NOTICE.
H
i
T. Spangler, late of Miles
Centre county, deceased.
{ undersigned, all persobs indebted ©
{
ing claims or demands against said
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.
the estate of |
| decree Lo change his name Ww
i
!
|
|
Arthur Cecil Allabach praying for a
Arthur
Cecil Howard
In the Court of Common Pleas of
Centre County, Pennsylvanis
Notice is hereby given that on
January 9, 1042, the petition of Ar
thur Cecil Allsbach wie flied in the
above named Court, praying for a
decree to change hls name % Arthur
Cecil Howard
The Court has fixed Monday,
March 10th, 1042, gt 10 o'clock, 8s
the time and place for the hearing
of said petition, when and where al
persons interested may apoear and
show cause, if any they have, why
the wrayer of the sald petitioner
thall not be granted
i
i
|
on sald
indebted there |
x10 {
In the matter of the estate of John |
township, |
Letters testamentary on the abov |
te having been granted io the
the said estate are requested to mak. |
immediate payment, and those hav- |
THEO. C. JACKBON,
Attorney for Petitioner
LEGAL NOTICE.
In the matter the Peiltion of
Josent, Perez Halmovicz praying for
a decree to change his name 10 Jos-
eph Perez Humer
Notice is hereby wiven that ou the
2st day of January, A 1942, the
petition of Joseph Perez Halmoviez
wie filled the Court of Common
Pieas of Centre County, Pennhsyivan~
in, for a decree 10 change his name
to Jaseth Perez Hamer
The Court has fixed Monday. the
6th day of April, A. D 1942, at 10
o'clock in the Court Rootn st Belle-
fonte, Pa. as the time and piace for
the hearing of sald petition, when
and where all persons terested AY
apoear and show cause, if any they
have, why the prayer of sald petl-
should not be granted
R. PAUL CAMPBELL
Atworney lor Petitioner
of
§
in
tr
in
y
x9
LEGAL NOTICE
In the Court of Common Pleas of
Centre County 179, February
Term, 1942.
Notice hereby given that an
application will be made to the sald
Court on the 2nd day of March, A.
D. 1942. at 10 o'clock A. M., in the
Court House at Bellefonte, Penn-
sylvania,k for the purpose of obtain-
ing a charter for a proposed non-
profit corporation to be organized
under the Non-Profit Corporation
law of the Commonwealth of Penn-
sylvania, approved May 5, 1883.
The name of the proposed corpor-
tion is the CENTRE LINE CEME-
TERY ASSOCIATION
The purpose or purposes for which
it is to be organized are: To acquire
title to such real estate and personal
property as is necessary for the es-
tablishment and maintenance of a
cemetery Hal! Moon township
Centre County, Pennsylvania, to
lay out and omament said real es-
tate, and bulid and maintain road-
weys, and buildings thereon as may
be necessary for burial purposes; to
sell and dispose of burial lots; to
create and manage a fund for per-
petual care of cemetery lots, end to
peform alli other acts necessary and
required to carry out the aforesaid
purposes
It is a corporation which does not
ntemplate pecuniary gain or bene-
incidental or otherwise to its
members
The Articles of Incorporation have
been filed in the Office of the Pro-
thonotary of Centre County.
R. PAUL CAMPBELL, Bolicitor.
x9
No
ig
fon
an
oO
"y
t
KELVINATORS
PHILCO RADIOS
MELROY'’S
Phone $5%9-R-1
Pleasant Gap, Pa.
ABC and VOSS
WASHERS
Bendix Home Laundry
Electric Stoves
C. Y. WAGNER
& COMPANY
WAGNER'S
Quality Flour
A Hard Wheat Pat Flew
WAGNER'S
Qur Best Flour
WAGNER'S
Very Best Flour
Wagner's 832% Dairy Feed
Wagner's 20% Dairy Feed
Wagner's Horse Feed
 ——— TS Ll iy
In the matter of Wagner's Pig Meal
Wagner's Egg Mash
Wagner's Chick Starter
and Grower,
Wagner's Turkey Starter
and a —
Inte of the
deceased.
Wagner's Scratch Feed
Feed.
Wagner's Chick Feed
Wagner's Medium Scratch
Rydes Cream Calf Meal
Eshelman’s Dog Feed
All kinds of high )
fonts ods of hish yrdioln
own feed.
Dealers in All Kinds
of Grains
BELLEFONTE, PA.