Odd and CURIOUS in the + NEWS SECOND SECTION The Most Widely Read Newspaper In Centre County ~~ A Visitor In Seven Thousand Homes Each Week he Cenifre Democral F NEWS, EATURES Hamm ——————— VOLUME 61, ~N BLACKOUT BLUES The office of the Bellwood de- fense police Is telling an amus- ing Incident that occurred dur- ing the blackout. While patrol- ling his beat during the Wednes- amas we—— Huntingdon Reformatory Inmate Near day blackout, officer Wm. Hauth had the unusual experience of arresting himself. Officer Hauth saw a figure approaching and called on him to halt. As Hauth mover formard, the stranger moved toward Hauth. Officer Hauth stopped and the stranger stopped. Hauth yelled at the top of his voice, “You're under arrest.” The stranger did not reply. Officer Hauth called two brother officers to his aid, The stranger was found to be a re- flection of Officer Hauth in a large plate glass window. This is the first record in the annals of police history of an officer ar- resting himself, said Bellwood police officials. SIAMESE TWINS BORN Siamese twins, born at a hos- pital in Dubuque, Ia, to Mrs, Floyd Sabers, 26-year-old farm woman living near New Vienna, | | | | point were said by the mother's phy- sician to “have a goad chance to live.” The girl babies were join- ed at the base of the spine. Normal in every respect, they weighed a total of nine pounds, 10 ounces. WRECKLESS DRIVING Judge E. C. Gober, of Albu- | querque, N, M., heard officers testify about the driver's speed, and fined the man $100 for driv- ing while intoxicated. Nobody, | declared the judge, could be so- | ber and drive at that speed—a | consistent three miles per hour, JUSTICE DRIVES BUGGY | State Supreme Court Justice Marion D. Patterson of Blair County attracted much attention | and applause when he drove a | grey mare and a red buckboard wagon through the Altoona area Friday. Justice Patterson sald he was “saving rubber.” ALMOST UNBELIEVABLE The gasoline rationing order will not affect Guy Johnsen of Wilson, N. C.,, much. He inform- ed local ration board officials that since buying his 1929 car he had driven it only 502 miles in the 13 years. DOUBLE TROUBLE Thieves at Trenton, N. J, stole | had | lehem Steel Company | was | ~ 17, 1918 | mer Knife Attack by Comrades Death From BELLEFONTE, PA. THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1942, - There's a Rubber Shortage at Home, Too! WHATS BECOME OF ALL MY GOLF bas # | ROT A PERIL WITH AM ERASER LEFT OMIT Victim Pounced Upon by Four Other Inmates and Stabbed with Table Knives Filed and Sharpened to a Point One inmate of the PennsylvanialSunday while working on the school industrial school at Huntingdon was reported in a critical condition from four others were placed in solitary con- attacking stab wounds yesterday, and finement charged With | him Commander John D Pennington superintendent of the school which an in- transformed into stitution for defective delinquents declared that Louis Huber, 27, Erie, suffered 17 stab is being The attack occurred rooin At the same time, Pennington dis- | closed that a sixth inmate | Scott, 22. of Waynesburg, escaped Found Dead In Gas-Filled Room | Native of Centre County Dies By Aphyxiation at Jer- sey Shore J. Clair Yothers, 23, Centre coun- {ty native, was found dead Tuesday, his gas- | in Jeresy | Shore, where it is said the gas stove Monday Was July 21. about 5 p filled room at his m. in hcme been turned on since night. Discovery of the body made by an employe of the company, who forced the door Yother an employe of the Beti- Williamsport native of Pine Glen where he wa a s50n of Mr Yothers Survivors include former Mabel Connor a ounty born Mrs. El and wife { of his er. Mrs. Margaret Caulkins, of ris. two sisters, Mrs Lock Haven, and Mrs ron Yothers, Youngdaie; Corning. N. Y.: Robert, Waterville three tires, two wheels and the battery from Francis Murphy's car and drained the gasoline tank dry. He also found a police summons for overtime parking attached to the windshield. IT'S MAJOR MAJOR It was bad enough to get used to calling him “Captain Major.” Now the double talk is more con- fusing because Capt. Bernard P. Major of Camp Livingston, La. has been promoted to Major. CHLOROFORMS CHICKENS A thief entered the chicken house of G. C. Jeter at Terrel, Tex., and sacked forty of his best fryers after chioroforming the biddies. 9 Foster Sons in Army With every one of the nine foster sons he had been supporting in the armed services of the country, a 69- year-old Spanish-American War veteran of Columbus, O. voluntar- ily gave up his old-age pension as his contribution to the war effort He explained that current business conditions enabled him to become | sell-supporting. —————— Pa s——— Frisky Squirrel One little squirrel ran amok at! Pine Bluff, Ark, and, before Leing eaught and kilied, It rap up a man's trouser leg and scratched him, then it bit another man's ear and an- other's finger and, before being cap- | tured, scratched seven other per- eons. The victims ade taking treat- ment against hydrophobia. Went Acourting, Arthur Evans, a youthful Cam-| bria county aviator, started some- thing last week when he decided to inject a novel] scheme into his ro- mance with a Hastings young lady The incident would have been all right had not the plan backfired and given the entire community a bad case of the jitters. Evans flew over the residence of his “one and only” and dropped a small parachute to which he had at- tached a note suggesting the time she should anticipate his next visit. | Bnake-bitten 3,000 feet in the air, | U. 8. Army Lieut. Robert Vaught, | 24, of Johnson City, Tenn, a flyer! located at Melbourne, Australia, | gave his report on the perilious ad- | venture recently aloft and aground. | While flying 75 miles from his base | Vaught noticed a péculiarly-marked | hake near his left foot. He put the | plane into a slip to try to slide the into a corner, but when he | touched the rudder bar the snake struck him twice. Vaught then seized the snake and threw it out. | draft violation, was filed. METRES Started Something and Harry, Jersey Shore Funeral services were day morning with the Rev odist church, officiating made in the Jersey Shore cemetery - CAPTAIN JACK WESKE GRDERED TO WASHINGTON Captain Jack Weske, who ton and will leave August 1 Mrs ters will leave with Captain Weske Captain Weske joined the Army as & private at Fort Sheridan, Ill and rose to captain's rank his stay in State College. He and Auxiliary Junior Drum and Bugle Corps, the Elks, and assisted in junior high school football and basketball coaching. He helped or- ganize safety patrols and the Persh- ing Rifles at the College ———— ———— Dead Man Indicted Melvin H. Allison of Homer's Gap, Blair county, declared last week that | the Paul M. Allison indicted by a! federal grand jury in Wililamsport Wednesday was his 31-year-old son who drowned near Willlamsburg in the summer of 1941. The father said he had notified Selective Service Board officials of the son's drowning in a quarry hole and was unable to explain why the charge, alleging a prompted to spring into action. Even an engineer on a Pennsylvania rail- road train saw the object floating! earthward and stopped the train, fearing that some sort oi sabotage was in the making. Sgt. Vincent Bunch, Ebensburg de- tail of the Pennsylvania motor po- lice, investigated the incident, and disclosed that the dropping of any article from an airplane, even in time of peace, is a violation of the law. r a tourniquet on his badly swollen leg and made a mud pack, which | relieved the pain somewhat. He thought of scarifying the wounds, but decided it was too Jate to do any good. Pa During the afternoon he sighted another plane and radioed for help. That night he had to fire his ma- chine guns to driye off wild buf- faloes that threatened to damage the plane, When rescuers had not located him next day Vaught managed to fit a plece of wood to the left rud- of wounds from | knives that had been filed to a sharp Satur- day afternoon in the large recreation Ralph JAS Centre August the Water- i ville: a daughter, Clarice; his moth- Mor- Ruby Pringle, Mabel Mack, Lancaster, N. Y.; four brothers, My- | John, of | held Fri- J. Frank Stamm, pastor of the Pirst Meth- | Burial was! has been connected with the ROTC de- partment at Penn State College since 1828, has been ordered to Washing- Weske and their two daugh- | during has been active in the American Legion i farm “Apparently mixed up In his escape stabbing,” sald Pennington not elaborate Scott there is something with the He did Pennington sald, escaped in a state-owned car. He had been re- leased several months ago after serving 14 months on a larceny harge and was re-arrested ly on a burglary charge Pennington identified Huber's as- sallants William Clyde, 22, of DuBois, committed for larceny: Jo- Makewski, 17, of Philadelphia, larceny; James Chniccl, 20, of Phila- delphia, armed robbery, and Joseph Oklota, 18. of Pittsburgh delin- quency recent- us sen) seph Stabbed By Four According to pre-arranged plans Clyde srtuck Huber on the head with & brick, knocking him down,” Pen- nington sald. “All four Inmates then tabbed Huber with knives which had been filed and sharpened to a point Pennington added named grudge time.” table that the been nursing a Huber for some He theorized that bad feel- Ing about the war was responsible for the attack Huber, who was committed on a charge of rape, was first treated at the Institution hospital but was moved to the J. C Blalr Hospital, Huntingdon, for ation Upon inmates four he “have against re- Memorial all oper completion originally onfinged of transfer of sentenceq to { On page Siz) MAW. 00 ou) EHOW RE My GALWIE any 7? > JU RATS Funky A swRE THE MOT WATER BOTTLE WAS HERE YESTERDAY YOUNGEST MAJOR AT FT. BRAGG Major William R Mr. and Mrs. W. L heim, is the youngest major at Fort rage. N. C according to a storys in a recent issue of the Susquehanna University Alumni Quarterly The story, in part, follow Swarm of Swarm of Mill- Bon “Captaly Willlam R. Swarm, ‘33, was promoted to the rank of Major on March 25, at which time he was serving as Battalion Commander of the 5th Training Regiment U 8 Army Field Artillery Reserve Corps, Fort Bragg. N. C. Major Swarm (Bill passed his thirtieth birthday only last January the time of his promotion youngest Artillery Fort Bragg training center, whi is the largest camp in u United States present to us) and at Was the Officer of that rank at the military at the we Line Starth Millhelm quehanna military i Tra WAY comm tudent in Bus- early Mill- gE While Hi h Bil] received his training in Citizens ing Camp» was nrst tenant on Reserve i a School and at ahd Lie Officers Passing succ essively 1st Lieuten- in loned a 2nd 8. Army 1933 th in e grades of and Captain first call 0 active service In nt emergency came on No- 1940, when he was assign- three months special arrse at the Officers Field School, Fort Sill Okla- completion of that course igned to the command of C. 14th Battalion, 5th Train- Regiment, FF. A R. C. Alter serv- months in that capacity niinged on Page Siz) the vember | pres ed Wo lake a trainiy Artillery homa. On he was i ing ins “ oT jatiery ten i! First Time How 600 Japs Died in U.S. Raid on Tokyo Writer's Story of Final Hours Before Pearl Har-| bor Declares War Lor ds of Japanese Army Delayed President's Peace Proposal The story of how the United] States Army bombers caught the Japanese napping in thelr raid on| Tokyo April 18; the story of the withholding by Japanese army cen- | sors of President Roosevelt's last appeal to the Emperor peace, and the story of the sinking by a United States submarine of a Jap- anese liner carrying 780 jrreplacable Japanese war technician: ed for the first Ume Bellaire in a recent Baltimore American The of the bombing the writer declares, was obtained from eye-witnesses who saw the rald from the concentration camp in which Americans and other foreigners were held for Is reveal- Robert 1 the of by i sue story UNAergoing a ser ] air-rald defense drills when the United States Army Alr Corps pombers under Brig, General Jame: Doolittle droned in from the Tokyo had been jes of Flying low over a capita] that nev- er heard the crash of a bomb, they concentrated their attack on the war industry center and killed mated 600 war workers t the time, there happened to be no defense drill and for the first time in its 2600 years history Tokyo rocked under the impact of bombs Damage, including that from fires was described as heavy A single plane which flew over the Imperial Palace, in the heart of the city drew fire from the anti-aircraft guns emplaced in the big grounds There were rumors that two high officers, at least committed + an esia- of army SNAKE STORIES OF OLD CANAL DAYS 1 y (By Henry W. Shoemaker in Altoona Tribune) Sealed on his blowy porch, watch- ing midsminrer breeze: in the an- clent buttonwood trees along Sond- joh, or Kettle Creek, H. M. Cranmer {well known sportsman of Hamers. ley's Forks, and friend of many Elair county outdoor people, said “The ‘Comment’ on the two snake charmers that died of rattlesnake bite al a carnival has me puzzled I Know several who have survived ithe bite of rattlesnakes or copper- heads They must have had weak hearts, to die. My cousin was bit In the palm of his hand. He swallowed a teaspoon of powdered slum as & doctor had advised, carried two palls of huckleberries four miles off the mountain to his home, the next day went on an excursion on the rail road. He said the bite pained for exactly 24 hours True, two men have died of rat- tiesnake bite on Kettle Creek, the first settler, Simeon Ploutz, dicd August 26, 1856 (Bammy Pfoutz's grandfather), bit in the wrist, Wil- (liam Dacgherty bit in the forehead Check Forger Gets Three Years | ! Lock Haven Youth Sentenced on Counts of Forgery and Burglary Harry LeRoy Perry, 21. was sen- | tenced to serve three to seven vears in the Western Penitentiary at a special session of Clinton county court Friday morning, after plead- ing guilty to charges of forgery and burglary -| Replying to a plea for leniency on the grounds of Weing the defend- {ant’s first offense, Judge Henry Hip- Bridge Steel Is died in Spanish Was 1860 Daugherty was a veteran of the Civ- i War, Co. K, 200th Pa. Infantry He just drawn his pension the day before and was cleeping in the haymow in the barn when he was: bit by a little rattlesnake. Both thicse men were old and their hearts prob- ably weal: Daugherty ha ald several hours too late. A rattle- snake a rule can strike one-third its length, but I have met one ex- ception a three foot snake that couk! strive four feet the level and froma a heighth of fe could jump six feet: also, triking at me when 1 was fect away Also, if a year had medionl fs on Oh it started 20 feet @ Ol rattler has not Dee: hit, it can be called gut into the cpen by whistling a waltz Strange Lut true, for I have three times o rattlers from under logs to where 1! could kill them. It takes ten or fiteeny minutes, but they come slowls out to where they cen be captured or killed. I always considered it a duty to kill or capture every rattie-! stake or copperhead that [ can as! it may save somebody from oeingi it Due August 15th ? ve A 5 ar . 3 ay i Two Months Will Complete State College Domestic Succumbed to Heart Attack i Span on Howard-Beech Creek Road According to Information jon the great North road, Route 11, which | seems reliable, the steel work for the | in the kitchen range at the Lambda Run, Philipsburg area, me why that cop- Are one bit. Can yo perheads abound where there coal depoeits and only a stray gets more than a mile gway? The pltutmen fault crosses Kettle Creek six and one-half miles from the river South of the fault is coal and copperhead fauit no coal COpperieads are Why? of shakes in as told by WW. 1 roubles old-timers nothing Ww the urrounded pioneers and in the Black Forest. Id of Huckleberry Hill was Forest snake lore tell i Ww above Lhe only stray al- though rattiers Those canal days th were and plenty Orie Ok Derr had | howed i Lut they gers that bark-peelers Mott's stor 8 5 in dan- Black county A. Kline, who has stud- nake jore at her ancestral hotne ga of Potter Miss Sue ded said, “While snakes may have been | more numerous in the old Black Forest, 1 doubt if they would have teen If they had a ‘Daddy’ George snake king like in Perry county. | When ‘Daddy’ worked out his road texes in the old days, he always had | hig eyes open for snokes—and could | Coal Gas Blast Brought to Local Hospital | For Treatment ] When an accumulation of coal gas he see!-—And generally by noon he half dozen tied to his Everybody ‘steered | canal language, would have a cart wheels clear’, © use Daddy's’ cart, At night he would put them in| the empty feed bags and take them home to Kennedy's valley. The other vo ing Canadian eo tist came | along and wanted to set up her eas- el and paint old dry sawmill. “Aren’t vou afraid of snakes? I said to her They are death on artists. ‘1 krlow she replied, and wold me of the great French lrndscape painter Theodore Rousseau, who lost che foot as a from a spider's bite 1 if they had black widows in 50 years viper CARY 8 LOY now those days or hot. Anyway later he was bitten by 2 Barbizon Amputation followed, but he died of shock. Nothing could frighten the Canadian girl, and she sald she would zet up her things and my little friends, Betty and Minnie kept at off the snakes. The girls chatted and ! sang and she painted a nice picture, | which she will sell for British war | relief (Continued on page Six) Cook Burned By Patient Dies In Doctor's Office ing Prescription Walter Stewart, 58, of One Mile don't | hari-kari because the plane flew over the palace of the Emperor. Although the plane made no attempt to drop bombs, the mere fact that the plane flew over the palace, It was report- ed, caused an internal political crisis because the Emperor was endanger- [S Members of of the cabinet led by Gen. Hideki Tojo, the war lord Premier, visited the village Immed- after the Emperor emerged from his alr-raid shelter, and apolo- glzed It was early In May, according to the reports the writer received, that a United Btates Navy submarine sank the liner Talyo Maru, 14.457 Lore With liner he bottom of the per - onnel of a department of the great lately the there went to t sen the entire (Continued on - Flood Maroons Family 7 Hours Fage Siz) Lock Haven Group Caught by Rising Water in Middle of Highway Mr. and Mrs. Ray E. Kuntz daughter, Miss Beryl A. Kuntz, Lock Haven, had a harrowing ex- perience during the recent flood per- lod while enroute to Buffalo, N. Y visit the former's son Kuntz and family Acoompanied by friends, Mr. and Mrs. Kuntz and daughter had reach- ed 8 point on the other side of Eid- red, near the New York state line when the swiftly rising waters caught them in the middle of the highway With water up 0 the seat level, they were pulled from their precarious position by an unidenti- fied oll well driller who happened to have 200 feet of rope in his car Throwing the rope 0 the stranded and Lo the car out to safety. But with water pouring over an- other section of the highway ahead, the group had nothing to do but sit and wait for the waters to go down, which is exactly what they did, while the rain poured in sheets. Be- cause of the heavy rain, they were unable to have the windows open and in this predicament they stayed in the car from about § o'clock in the morning until 4 in the after- noon By that time the water had re- of George Random [tems A JOINS CLUB We're happy to welcome into the membership of the “I've Quit SBmok~ ing Club” Game Warden Thomas Mosier, of North Bpring street. Tom has been off the weed for two weeks and that's something for him, for friends report that he needed only one match a day for his smoking re- | quirements—one to light the first cigarette In the morning. They also say his terrific cough is much im- proved {GOING STRONG: | Bomehow or other we overlooked chronicling before now on the fact that Harold A. Wion, Bellefonte high school teacher, has been a member of the “I've Quit Smoking Club” since December 1, 1941. Bince ab- staining from pipe and cigarette his favorite methods of smoking he's taken on about 25 pounds weight DUST HOWL: Let's not howl wo loud all of a sudden about lime dust, and then just as suddenly forget it. We prefer a less noisy but more continued howl for real results. And let's not be too hard on the American Lime # Stone Company for letting dust get into the alr, After all, Bellefonte isn't the only town suffering from indus- trial growing pains. How would you like to live In Tyrone, with its hor- rendous peper mill odor? There's many another town which has in- du al odors, gas and dust to con- tend with. If everyone is reasonable about the Bellefonte problem we feel that & sound and lasting solution of the dust evil here will be found HULL'S ADDRESS: We would have been much more satisfied with Becretary of State Hull's broadcast the other night if he'd merely have announced: “This day, the United States took posses. sion of Guadeloupe and Martinique, period.” MAX HERR: Although Max Herr, well known Centre Hall scrap dealer, still insists that he's not married, while ad- mitting that he may soon enter the bonds of matrimony, & persistent rumor is afloat that the knot was tied two or three weeks ago today (Thursday) in Philadelphia. Murs. Herr &s a Philadelphia girl, the rume or sets forth. We wish the couple every happiness LETTER: In this corner's opinion Mrs. Mary Isabel Davis Thompson of Holly- | wood, Cal, formerly of Bellefonte, in wt ri wri of motorists from an unfiooded section |is ps as & “letter to the editor” lof the highway, he managed to tow Writer. Mrs. Thompson's letter was | published in last week's issue of this newspaper, and It is as fine a job lof letter writing as we've seen in many a day. Mrs. Thompson's abifl- ity to combine history, praise, news of herself and family, and reminis- censes so interestingly prompts us to Invite as many more jetters from her as she can find time to write, (Joe Parrish, for Mrs. Thompson's information, resides in the former Dr. Dale house on the southeast corner of High and Spring streets) C CARD: ceeded enough that they could tum around and get back to FKidred There they were obliged to stay un- til Tuesday, return trip to Lock Haven - HOLD “OPEN HOUSE” ON TH WEDDING and Mrs W. W Mr | wedding anniversary last home More than 50 names were regis- { tered during the day. H {of age, while Mrs, Kerstetter is 77 | which Mrs Kerstetter is a member { Assisting Mrs. 8. E. Noll, daughter | ‘of the couple, in serving refresh- | when they made the DATE Kerstetter of Pleasant Gap, celebrated their 60th | Wednes- day by holding open house at their Mr. Kerstetter is just past 80 years The largest gift display of flowers was a huge basket of gladioli from While Physician Was Writ. the Pleasant Gap Garden Club of There's 8 C gasoline ration card in Bellefonte that we suspect is car- rying its owner to the golf course; to picnics and on family outings more than it is carrying on the war effort. The bloke who has it has been heard 10 say that he's cut to get sll he can BIRD SEED (7) Outside the apartment of a well known Bellefonte lady hangs a cage containing a life-like figure of a wooden parrot, So realistic is this synthetic pet (we are informed; that a recent visitor at the home while admiring the parrot discovered—of all things—bird litter on the floor of the cage. It is presumed some en- | terprising sparrow contributed the realism to the otherwise still soene. | DUCK BREAD: It is unofficially reported that the | ments were Mrs. R. 8. Melroy, Mrs. | died of a! M 8S Shreffler, Mrs. Ted Harris, Miss | bridge across Bald Eagle Creek at Chi Alpha fraternity in State Col-| heart attack while the doctor was Empden and Norma Kerstetter, and | Howard on Route 64, is due to ar- | lege explodod late last Thursda 5 rive on August 15. Two months will | ternoon, be required to finish the steel and | concrete structure of a total length | ed painful but not serious burns of | shortly after he drove into town. He | hadn't feit well and parked his car | of 385 feet. The concrete pavement! of the highway has been completed | jand traffic is allowed to use it on | Mrs. Marie Pendleton, Negro cook at ithe fraternity, suffer-| the face, right afin and chest, Mrs. Pendleton yas brought to the Centre County Hospital in the Al- iple pointed out that owing to the | either side of the bridge after work- | pha Fire Com»any community am- | seriousness of the charges 'could not be placed on probation. Perry , Ing hours. However, all driving on | bulance, | this new work should be done with | Charged with two counts each of | caution While the finishing process | STRANGE ADVENTURES forgery and burglary, he was ziven 1s going on the detour on the north | a three to seven year sentence on | Side of the creek from the Schenck | leach, to run concurrently, and wag | Cemetery into Howard over a nar- | also ordered to pay the costs. He | TOW country road must be used, but had admitted cashing a check for $32.10, drawn by Robert Angstadt of | Dunnstown to the Rosetto Barry {Co., which Perry changed to read { Rowland Barry before cashing. An- i {other check for $60, payable to | Bowling Club where he had been lemployed as a pip hoy and taking quantities of ice cream, soft drinks, candy, cigarettes and other similar articles. Charles M. Myers, Jr. 18, of Mill { Hall, corapanion of Perry, on two occasions when the latter entered the bowling club, alse pleaded guilty and sentence was suspended pend- {ing his admission to the U. 8. Navy. He was charged with two counts of larceny. Henry M. Hipple, the young {man’s attorney, told the court it was he the [the boy's fi:et offense and that {had been under the influence of {older youth. If Myers is successful {in getting intg the Navy, the icharges against him will be nolle Almost immediately he began to| der pedal so he could operate it by | prossed, the court prothised. feel so ill that he made a forced hand. He made a successful take- | landing in a dry swamp. After faint- | nt. several times he dragged him- | to a water hole, where he put off and returned te his base. After ‘x period in a hospital he now has rejoined his squadron. The art of intelligent writing is to be so plain, in what you say, that no fool can you. it is not bad and only a mile far- ther - Discount Cattle Death Story The report that nine cattle were belleved to have died from eating marihuana weed in Clinton county was branded as false by county au- thorities. One cow died several weeks ago with some symptoms of having eaten the weed, but, it was said, eight other cows had died from other causes over a three month period. This, it was pointed out, is not an unusual death rate when it is considered there are between 2.- wo and 3,000 cattle in that vicin- y. Tanneries Reopen Most departments of the Eagle Tannery at Ridgway, idle since the flood of July 18, have resumed work, as is the case also at the Wilcox Tan- nery. Both are plahts of the Key- stone Tanning & Glue Company. Injured by Car Beven-year-old Leroy Seigert, of Covington, was admitted to the State Hospital at Blossburg, Saturday, af- ter he was struck by an automobile on a street at Covington. He suffer- ed cuts and a fracture of one leg. A i F— IN MENTAL TELEPATHY | An unusual story disclosing some | remarkable tests by a noted writer | who tuned in on a friend's mind | 3,000 miles away and once got a | | mental message: that saved his life. | Look for this feature in the August | 9th issue of Thy American Weekly, | the big magazine distributed with the Baltimore Sunday American. On sale at all newsstiunds, Cooking for Vacation Appetites Timely suggestions to help the housewife lighten her kitchen labors by serving foods and beverages that require little preparation. Look for this helpful feature in the August § issue of The American Weekly, the big magazine distributed with The Baltimore Sunday American. On sale at all newsstands, Car Strikes Deer A sedan driven by Paul 8B. Lentz hit a deer while traveling south on the Susquehanna Trail below ShHham- okin Dam. The deer ran directly in the path of the car and was struck a glancing blow but managed to struggle to the side of the road. M.". Lentz immediately reported the ace cident to the State Motor Police in Selinsgrove. When you run into a chronic worrler, you are wasting time on a loafer; busy people have little tine for worrying out loud. - o {been unable to work | tor, heart condition y af-| writing sevéral prescriptions for his | Mrs. Russell Spicher His death occurred at 10 o'clock | Takes Bees to Mountains {apiarist of Statesville, N. C, Wanting clear sourwood honey, an who near the postoffice and walked out lived where sourwoods didn’t flour- the street to Dr. E. L. Jones’ office ish, solved his problem by taking and was there only a few minutes his bees and sixty hives up into the until he died. Several years ago, Mr was employed In the woods at the! Six Mile Run CCC camp. but he has | three or so years because of his, heart condition. Three children survive him. Mrs. Smith lives at Allport, and two sons are in the service, one in the army and one in the navy. Funeral services were held Tues- day afternoon at 2 o'clock from his father’s home at Allport. The ser- vices were in charge of the Rev. Roy | Bodtorf, Morrisdale Methodist pas- and burial was made in the Allport cemetery. for the last] grows. Neighbors Re joined | mountains, where the sourwood tree Stewart | John W. O'Neal, of Findlay, O, was Inducted into the Army in May. | Mis next-door neighbor for eleven years, Edward Paige, was inducted in June. They are next-door neigh- bors at Camp Crowder, Mo. tents adjoining each other, their | tain a police sub- Tr __., Bequest to Church A bequest of $100 was made to the First Evangelical church at Milton, |
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