Odd and CURIOUS in the + NEWS LILY PURE The lilies, of Seattle, Wash, have been assured they can be beautiful and productive with- out indulging in beer. In reply to a tavern operator who report- ed she had produced the second crop of blooms on her lily plant by using a diet of diluted stale beer, Mrs. W. E. Elgin replied: “Shucks, that isn't anything. | have an Easter lily with six blooms for its third crop of the year and it's never had a drink, a chew of tobacco or a smoke.” BOTTLE NECK The United States Hydrogra- phic Office at Los Angeles, Cal, received a communique from an American doughboy on a lonely South Pacific Island. He re- turned one of the 200 bottles sent out by the office and tossed from an Australia-bound steam - er to obtain data on ocean cur- rents. The soldier made his re- port and then postscriped: “The next time you float a bottle my way, I would much prefer some- thing else in it.” STRING SAVER Scott Anderson, 73, of Boswell, Ind.. claimant to the world's string saving championship, is dead. He saved string of all kinds for forty-one years before his death, Tuesday. As an achievement for other string- savers to shoot at he wound three balls, the largest of which is eight feet in circumference and weighs 170 pounds. Another ball weighs 160 pounds and the third 100 pounds. PERSEVERANCE Back in 1917 a Lambertville, N. J. man took an examination for a license to drive a car. He failed, but he wasn't discouraged. The State Motor Vehicle Bur- eau says the same man has just taken out another learner's per- mit—his 225th in 25 years. COSTLY KISS A couple, whom motorcycle officer McNally hailed into court at Detroit, were charged with one-armed driving. The officer testified that they kissed and that the “kiss was a half-mile long. 1 clocked it by my speed- ometer.” The driver was fined twenty-five dollars. | WEST PENN OFFICIAL 32 YEARS » i» | The retirement from active service of O. J. Schaefer, Manager of the Municipal Sales Department, West Penn Power Company, was an- nounced Friday by P. H. Powers, Vice President, effective September 30. Mr. Schaefer, who was well known by local civic officials, has given 32 years of service to West Penn, dur- ing the greater part of which tite he was engaged in the promotion and sale of street lighting. Under his direction, progressive street lighting plans were developed and | installed in many Western Pennsyl- vania communities, Local District Managers will now be responsible for street lighting de- velopment and other municipal ne- gotiations, The co-ordination of this work will be under the direction of Charles V. Doherty who has long been associated with Mr. Schaefer. ln Some Pumpkins! Mrs. Frank Swartz, of Milton R. D. ., kept one of the 1840 crop of pumpkins until July 1941, but now she has gone one better and has kept one of last year's crop until the present time, and it looks just the same as when it was picked. Mrs. Swartz advises keeping the pump- kins in a dry place for long preser- vation. > Buy Defense Bonds now! ! reduced speed limit, | for voluntary | and SERVICE | fice of a { inlong the route. | run. | The Most Widely Read Newspaper In Centre County ¥ " "A Visitor In Seven Thousand Homes Each Week SECOND SECTION adhe Centre. Democrat rh NEWS, FEATURES VOLUME 61. BELLEFONTE, PA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1942, — A NUMBER 410, Basic Gasoline Ration May be Lowered; 35-Mile Speed Limit Begin November Now Effective 'Nation-wide Gasoline Rationing Probably will 22; Report Fuel Shortage More Threatening Nation-wide gasoline rationing probably will begin about November 22 with a basic ration of slightly less | than four gallons a week, Price Ad- | ministrator | nounced | office of defense administration had | called for a nationwide speed limit Henderson night after Leon Saturday the In urging the officials called conservation of gas rubber, declaring that every citizen “is a soldier in this rubber war." Under the Eastern rationing plan the average non-essential driver is allowed an “A” coupon book giving him four gallons of gas a week for a total mileage of 2.880 miles a year. of 35 miles per hour More essential drivers are given 2 Girls Injured In Auto Mishap Victims Were Passengers in Car That Crashed in Lock Haven Two young Nittany Valley girls i suffered painful injuries shortly be- fore midnight Saturday at Lock Haven, when an automobile in which they were riding, operated by Boyd { Lucas of Howard. R. D. 2, was in a collision on Church street in front of the City Hall with another ve- hicle driven by Charles J. A. Brun- gard, of Flemington Both cars were proceeding west on Church street. Mr. Brungard had stopped to discharge some passen- gers and was pulling out when the Lucas machine struck his car from the rear. Miss Fay Lucas, 14, of | Howard, R. D., suffered a cut on her {right eyelid that required three {stitches to close, while Miss Lois | { Vonada, 15. of Hublersburg, had the | cartilege in her left knee dislocated. The girls were removed to the of - Lock Haven physician in the police car, were treated and then taken home The automobiles were damaged slightly Peters Fined Marlin Peters on Two Counts 20, of Hammersley Fork, was fined $100 and costs at a special session of Clinton County court at Lock Haven Monday morn- ing after he pleaded guilty to char- ges of failure to stop at the scene of an accident and failure to reveal identity. Peters was charged with having run over the body of Chester Stout, 26, of Renovo, several months ago, and was at liberty under bail ste A ————— Much Railroad Work West of Renovo bridge crews are erecting new bridges at four points ! on the Renovo division of the P. R 'R., and extensive fills are being made Part of the work | {was necessitated by this Summer's | i flash flood; other work includes the | erection of signal stations by the use of which traffic is speeded, and | the installing of new sidings to ac-| commodate the larger trains being | et m——— Flemington Garage Burned The Good Will Hose Company of Lock Haven was called into service Monday afternoon to save adjoin- ing buildings when the Ear] K. Fer- guson garage was destroyed by fire at Flemington. pos e—— FARM ED W. MITCHEL 4 Farm Advisor General Electric Station / QUESTION BOX L wGY Q What will kill maggots that cut down onions? A —8pray with a 3 per cent oil- bordeaux emulsion. This should be applied when the oniong are four inches high, and again one and two | Q-—How soon after spraying with ia mixture of bordeaux (six gallons lof water to one pound of powder) is it safe for humans to eat the spray- ed product? A~The plain bordeaux is only an- | “B” books allowing 5640 miles a year, while essential motorists, such as doctors or nurses are allowed “C" books covering needs over that amount The new gasoline allotment s tem, covering 27,000,000 private ve- hicles, will be patterned after the system now in effect on the Atlantic seaboard and will be merged with the tire rationing into a single pro- gram The speed wavs YS= order making the 35-mile imit effective on all high- 1d streets October 1, is issued for all vehicles except trucks and buses operated by common carriers over regularly-scheduled routes, The latter groups were given an tional 15 days to adjust their se ules } i 1 i a Hi addl- hed - Fuel Shortage Acute In the meantime, the fuel shortage facing rationed areas is reported to be getting more threatening Some of the developments include 1. Deputy OPA Administrator Paul M. O'Leary said that the normal |supply of oll in 30 States covered by the rationing program will be cut by one-third this winter The Office of Defense Trans- portation disclosed that 3500 tank cars, capable of carrying 315000 barrels of oil on every train, have to be diverted from petroleum shipments to moving chemicals, fats and oils and alcohol for munitions manufacture (Continged on Page Siz) 2 spared needed ~=pe\\ | War Harv-st Mtn a wa sy gu " ETN, " a ed Co wd “ H . ol Poe Lo Monday OM WE HE ARD FROM a LAST WEEK lh Hes BEEN PROMOTED] TO A SERGEANT er | Ww \ Your Wartime Problems In the excitement ture of the Man of the Family to war it is possible that some Impor- tant has overlooked! few essential of the depar- until he went Into service? Serial Number? iy } [4 ian na Does his 1 know or Navy serial] number? Does the family keep a record of his Army or Navy career—date of enlistment uction of acvancement parture overseas ord, amount of ignated beneficiaries manding officer, etc? Does tl securit If behind a hands of some in (Continued on Pope Siz) detall been Let's check up on things Did he gather together all legal papers, such as urance icles, deeds, bank books, birth naturalization papers, mar- certificate papers, rv notes, ete. a his pol- coer- ing 1 ranks or dates in in date of de #198 orn ans tificats {re urance and des com- divorce w - and put them NAIK box or, better still, deposit vault where some *t at them In + strong know his social cis family v 1m ee y Dumber ie 4 y {1 life" in nie? il leave the act Owns did he power of Yop rane rts ne Pr periy attorney In yer sted person to 1942 Did he get from his last empl amount of his income for fhe i hospitalization rec. | Find Body of Williamsport Man Strapped to Tree with Own Belt Near Salem, N. J. Samuel Hagenberger, 35, Former J. R. Wat- kins Employee, Victim of Assassins; Co- Worker Held After Reporting Robbery The family of Williamsport pon HH ly tied of was grief-stricken learning Samuel city w Je flagenberger Bouth uth ister of ¥ that a man identified 35, forme: was found ith his own Sunday af ai- ana of that to a tree Mrs Williamsport, victim wy where the fy i1 1 a morgue the r New Jers being held that New Jer are 5 Riso reported ithorities holding 30, who informed the tied to a tree one of 3 robbed him to house there ferred to Elmer z a riod inmarnieq N Detective Albert Peacock Jersey reports Hagenberger Norris, the man being held, work for the same firm and July were involved in a fight were placed der bond at the y keep the peace -~ both last Both ume 'y il ' Police related Norris sald that two Alloway and the woods The tak- the d him near to come into to help their car started Norris, and fleeing men then his other wres sists According grabbed wallet one and » yy Norris in- ang tiing with him to authorities, Norris ALL OUT FOR THE SCRAP PILE For forty years, a Philipsburg man struggled In vain to get valuable papers from a locked safe and then | turned it in for serap—the door fell jopen as salvage officials warmed | (blow torches to dismantle the strongbox This Is just ons of the reports which have filtered into the state defense council's salvage headquar- ters as Pennsylvania stepped up its drive to meet a goal of 3,000,000 tons of scrap metal In West Leesport, two Women gave up their flower beds for the dura- tion and contributed two half-boil- ers where the posies grew. Cambria county residents salvaged Forty-one cannon balls in front be in~ more than six tons of barbed wire and other metal from the water and of the Indiana courthouse were mud of the Little Conemaugh river ducted” into the scrap drive —buried singe the Johnstown flood in Pittsburgh. an attorney con- of 1899. dusting a drive to get public officials Two miirond cars. wrecked and tm in old sesls which weigh as lying in the brush near Granville in much as six pounds each Mifflin county, are now on their Langhorne didn't need its lock-up way to steel furnaces any more and has an BOD- Nine brass chandeliers, weighing pound cell door to the campaign 45 pounds each, were stripped from A medal. made from a German their places In the Washington cannon ball of the first World War county courthouse and won by a Harrisburg woman in a Liberty loan drive, will soon be back in World War 1I scrap An ambitious youngster in Doug- lass township, Montgomery county, jturned in a key in a school drive nd then spent hoi searching the added The courthouse also gave up sev- eral “paddie wheel” ventilator fans which have been stilled for a quar-| ter of a century. A Latrobe hank contributed a 20- ton safety deposit vault irs ‘Tax Collector Held for Court Alleged Tax Law Violation Lodged Against Renovo Official Miss Hazel E. McGuire, Renovo, borough tax collector, wis held last Wednesday night for the October term of court by Alderman T. Mark Brungard after a brief hearing. She furnished $1,000 bail Miss McGuire is charged with failure to make proper monthly tax! returns during the period of Novem- | ber 1940 to June 1942, and with fail-! ure to show the amount of uncol- lected taxes on tax duplicates, a vio- lation of the act of May 4, 1927. as amended by the act of June 24, 1939. 8he made no statement at the | hearing other than to plead not! { guilty. Her legal counse] is Attorney | Henry M. Hipple. ! Attorney A. H. Lipez, Renovo bor- | | ough solicitor, represents the bor- | {ough in the action against Miss Mc- | | Guire, the information being signed | collection so his father could start | his automobile Harry Hagenberger (sald he overpowered the Hagenberger, | A Philadelphia schoolboy had only ofie key to add to the collection in! Philadeipbia but he worked hard to] get it<for four hours he searched | his coal bin where he lost the key. ' - wr B.S A ————— Builds Plywood Bicycle Warren Bauman, of Mill Hall, R D.. bulider of the first airplane in Clinton county, and later builder o several automoblles and a cabin cruiser, has constructed a ply- wood bicycle which is usable and is securing a patent for it ter, Misg Jane Bauman, machine her father built, regular bicycle wheels, sprocket Ld i rides the chain and Couple Observe 30th Anniversary Freight Strikes Car; Man Hurt Jersey Shore Motorist Hit by Train; Has Broken Ribs Mr. and Mrs. Doren Bitner of Mill Hall Enjoy Family Howard Elwood Ryan, 40. of Jer- sey shore. was admitted to the Lock Haven Hospital Priday aftefnoon suffering bruises, three broken ribs and shock, received at 2:30 p. m., when his car was struck by a west. bound New York Central freight train at Reeders crossing east of Lock Haven Ryan's car was dragged approxi. mately 1.350 feet and wrecked FP H. Smith, Avis, conductor, was thrown into the caboose at the sud- den stop and suffered several frac- tured ribs. George Fahringer, Jer- Gathering Mr. and Mrs. Doren Bitner of Mill Hall, have five four-generation groups among their descendants. They marked their golden wedding anniversary recently with 48 per cent for dinner inciuding members of their large family from Avis, Beech Creek. Cherry Tree, Mill Hall and Pittsburgh The couple have one daughter. Mrs. Walter N. Knecht, of Parvin, and three sons, Frank and Dovie Bitner of Mill Hall, and Newton Bitner of Lock Haven, R. D. Both are in good health and Mr. Bitner| | stopped sey Shore, the engineer recognized is employed regularly as janitor of the injured man after the train had the Presbyterian church at Mill { Hall Dr. W. E. Welliver was called and directed Ryan's removal to the | Harvesting Potato Crop hospital. j J. L. Reitz, known as Union coun- | Smith was treated in the Jersey '¥'s “potato king” has started the) ————— —— Methodists Will Meet at College Annual District Arranged For Oc- tober 13th The annual conference for the Williamsport District of the Meth- odist church will be held at State College on Tuesday, Oct. 13, the Rev. ! Elvin Clay Myers, district superin-| tendent, has announced. The one-day session will be mark- | ed by Bishop Adna W. Leonard, DD. LLD. of Washington, presid. ing bishop of this area and presi- dent of the National] Commission on Chaplaincy. and by Dr. Fred Pierce Corson, D.D., LLD. president of Dickinson College Ministers of the preachers, church-school superin- tendents, church officials and lay leaders are to attend the sessions. The Rev. W. E. Watkins, former dis- trict superintendent, is host pastor. district, small | 4, His daugh- |, which has, Conference local | Dr. Corson will speak at the fore. noon program. The afternoon will | by John Boyle, member of the Ren- | Shore Community Hospital and tak. harvesting of his late crop of pota- be devoted to studying the general { ovo Borough Council. P. A. Kinsley, | secretary of the council, was called | {to testify briefly, presenting the | council minutes as evidence. | { In announcing hls decision, Alder- | {| man Brungard stated there was suf-| {ficient evidence to hold Miss Me- | | Guire for violation of the act cover- | jing tax collection. No specific | | amounts are mentiohed in the in- | formation. i | Miss McGuire has been at liberty under $1,000 bond following her ar- weeks later. I will send you a page copper sulphate and lime and 1s not| rest by Constable David L. Probst, |toes, He expects the crop to yield! — about 75,000 bushels. Boys and girls, | {who will be supplied through the| SON NAR DEATH United States Employment Office at | | Sunbury, will assist with the pick-| {ing. The potatoes are dug and shak-| Joseph Burkett, Roaring Springs, | € was held for court under $1,000 bond (¢7 free of dirt by machinery and on a charge of manslaughter by Al-| then flied on ti 2k where the, derman Ira J. Shelley of Tyrone, in| PICKers place them in bags. : connection with an airplane swing i accident last August 6 at Bland] Park in which 17-year-old Evelyn] Edmondson was killed. | en to his home. CONCES | We Hope He's a theme: “Building a District Pro- gram.” There will be presentations covering Christian education, evan- gelism, lay activities, women's work. and missionary education. Bishop Leonard will address the evening rally. Missionary Meeting The district conference is to be fo stitute, bulance second man tied him Balem to rex what he officer to a tree and went nt to the sheriff's of- Te fice An went to f nad qons from the sheriff's the trace day the of the Hagenberge "Teen Age general Plans Made for County Farm Fair To Be Held Four Days Next Week at The Mill Hall Park n Lock Haven Corps manager ment fea definite arrar wheel and merry-go-ro with other entertainme features The Lock Haven Gun Club will stage an exhibition and the Lock Haven Race Association will spon- |80r races Oct. 7 and 8 Ti ANG “ye nt will be done that afternoon Haver of Lock Haven instructor in the will select th Hayes expects a | of exhibitors than OUTS + oour high schools Mr ber fair, and centrally d can be reached easily ly every part of the coun- Works In Australia A State College woman is director of a new American Red Cross Club at Rockhampton, Queensland, to provide recreation for American and United Nations service men on leave in Australia. Miss Thompson re. signed as executive director of the Employment Board of the Pennsyi- vania Department of Public Assis tance in Harrisburg in April of this year, and joined the Red Cross for- eign service unit, She drove an am- in France during World War 1. The Club serves meals to service men and also operates a milk and snack bar sit A ——— Clock Face Falls The large glass face on the clock atop the First Presbyterian church at Jersey Shore, fell at 9:30 o'clock Sunday morning, crashing on the concrete in front of the church's entrance. Luckily no one was stand. ing at the entrance. although Sun- day school was in session at the No explanation for the inci- dent was available, but it was ob- served when the seven-foot square glass face fell the clock stopped. ————— Farmer Hurt in Fall A fracture of the knee cap was time {among injuries suffered by Joseph { Hess, 74, of Orangeville, | followed on Wednesday, Oct. 14, with| rationing of farm machinery, ithe annual district missionary In-| following information is furnished R. D 2 when he fell out of an apple tree at his farm. He was taken to Blooms- burg Hospital where his condition is favorable. ' 0 Orangers will have charge of en- tering the exhibits, which must be the judging J. Rex agriculture Random [tems “. “ WHO'S WAAC-Y NOW? This corner likes the story going the rounds about the Bellefonte Miss who recently went to Harrisburg for examination for entrance into the WAAC: we passed lI the tests with flying colors and returned home Wo await a call to duty. Instead. the story she a polite but firm letter from the WAACs saying Lt she was a pound lighter and an shorter ths the regulations mall ©“ 1 Sb al od al YO wre fv ned RO* received the na ired Nas heroine Bhe to inldom kind of an she asked, which would not permit a girl to serve her country because she was shorter and i lighter than some brass hat uid be? docla rat ic A ceclarati 1 ¥ wnhearted? sugfull nhearied JURIUl eter oy a t ana penned wv Ld na WAAC offic was | dowry army an inch a poun Bhe ended HNOUgi r - that ¥ 0 keep her at home for WAAC: 1s if the reason ne he cared ason she n effect -] et ad rw 14a Report for duty MAGIC TOUCH: Ollie Kohlbecker got a renls gO a repay Okay next week.” reac nrietor of the AE pen Lis The rall- ne P the burg, the hotel R.R hotel i th ; the 8 railroad * and on High 1 the mind them Kohl Cohl 1 next resident of y are crossin the leave few dou ee street of anyor bouncing ross We've becker time SORE & notion to run Ollie f - +» 11 rm , . 1 § for Bellefonte Counci even A township PREMONITION ad n combat with the Japs had who recently acific may have r several attie he wrote 1 that he i to give his pity pi 8 is atl caliber have to die id of ty RADIATORS 1 your radi or ename 1 or bronze paint local hardware Bronze or aluminum may look better, but it cuts down radiation as much as onhe- third, and who wants to fire the furnace any harder than is neces- Bary FALL: Maybe the reason we think we're {having an unusually early fall is | because we're all getting up one hour earlier than we did any previous fall. We never had War Time or Daylight Saving Time this late In the 1 i e¢ Schaeffler year REVERE: Paul Revere, German propaganda artist Berlin, has making much ado over an open letter he claims was written to President Roosevelt by one Joshua Crain, said to be a graduate of Harvard in the of 1880. Crain, said 0 be re- in Italy, attacks the Presi- in much the same manner as did the Roosevelt-haters of this land before War was declared. In other words, Paul, the letter is old stuff and no one believes it anyhow PROOF: There can’t be too much wrong with Bellefonte. Any town this size which can turn out the number of musicians seen in the “Salute to Our Heroes" Concert Sunday night, and which can jam-pack the theatre the way it was for the concert, isn't going too far astray SERVICE MEN: You men in far-off corners of the World—you fellows who read each issue of the home-town paper from front to back page two or three times fore discarding it—we at home here often wonder what you're doing and where you are. Just be. cause you've left your old haunts here. you aren't forgotten. If any of you find a spare moment or two, how about writing a letter to this corner? It's pretty tough writing letters when even the weather is censorable, but anything you say will be interesting to those of us who know you. You are in lands we've never seen, and what with gasoline and tire rationing, a jaunt into the next county is something of an ad- venture for most of us stay-at-homes these days » fen ai 0 CIASS td fryer SGIing Aert ael Lb - Read the Classified aos Data On Farm Machinery Rationi In view of the importance of the the | spreaders, milk coolers, milking ma- chines, pickup balers. potato dig- gers, shredders, tractors (including which is to be conducted] by the Centre County Agricultural garden tractors) ButRet nie of the swing| {in the same church with the Rev. Conservation Association, with of- i To purchase farm machinery in on this subject. | considered a poison. although in ex-| following signing of the information | | cessive amounts it would be harm- | September 10. During the long con- concession. Miss Edmondson and Better Marksman th Mr. Myers in charge. {fices in the Bellefonte Trust Co. | Participating will be delegates | building, Bellefonte. {Group 8, it is necessary only for a Q—My grapes turned gray this gq, ree companions were in the swing | farmer to file with the dealer a oer- The amount of copper or ar-|troversy between her and the Renovo | representing, the women's societies | year, Can you suggest a remedy? {senate of lead, where that is added | council, she stated that she had not A Yes. Rainy weather has fos-|to the spray, that sticks on the fruit| heen able to file returns properly tered the growth of downy mildew and probably black rot. The remedy, although it is late now to apply, is to dust or spray with bordeaux. Q How can 1 teach my chicks to roost on the perches in the hen- house? A.—Lay sticks all over the floor to encourage them to start roosting. Q--My com is yellow from the ground up. The soll is sandy. What does it need? A. Probably nitrogen. The way to tell is to put some nitrate of soda or similar fertilizer on one plece; ELE H ¥ i pt | i is almost negligible. For 30 years my | pickers of all ages have eaten all! the cherries, apples and pears they cared to without any ill effects; so it is reasonably safe to eat all of any sprayed fruit you want to any time you can get it. If one uses ordinary care in washing fruit and vegetables before eatinp or cookinb them, I think the danger of any poisoning from spray residue is very remote. Q-~~What care should fish worms get after they are put in a pan of rich dirt in the cellar to use for winter fishing? AA Hn pan is not so good as a wooden box with a fly screen bot-| tom and top. It should be two feet deep and buried 1% to 2 feet in the ground in a sheltered location. Fill it with rich soll; keep nicely moist; dust a little catmeni over the sur face each week, and. cover with a mulch of straw in winter. because the records were hands of the audi Woman Trick Driver i When Charles Horning, manager | of Emporium Transfer Company, | had to undergo a tonsillectomy no | in the dule, his wife, weighing not much over 100 pounds, assumed the job and took care of the deliveries and plek-Uin by driving a leavy uel Pioneer Teacher Dies Word of the death of Miss Harriet -iand tear gas are received. Sweeny which fell. By This Time State Troopers on Guard | Dr. Michael Bernreither, instruc-| Two state troopers have been tem- tor at the University of Kansas! porarily stationed at the Muncy In- | school of medicine, once threw a 32- | | recent riot In which three matrons and missed. were injured. Secretary E. Arthur| This week he'll join the United | Sweeney, of the Btate Welfare De- States army medical corps as a cap- partment, said the officers were as- tain, still seeking a chance to de- sisting attendants until riot sticks stroy the fuehrer. { | In the first World War he fought ordered protection for attendants three and a half years with the! after 20 inmates smashed dishes German army, he recalled, seeing and damaged a detention cottage in’ action at Verdun, Ypres, Somme and protest against placing another in- many other battlefields. mate in a detention cell. | And in 1922 as a medical student he sat in a Munich beer hall listen Wear Pajamas In Test ing to a thin-volced political speak. Residents of Watsontown were er named Hitler. The speech started completely surprised by an unex- |a riot, into the midst of which Bern- pected 15 minute blackout starting reither threw his heavy stein. at 10:45 p. m. Thursday. Routed “Apparently,” he sighed, “it missed from bed, several alr raid { Hitler.” All ’ ~out war ican home before an theme is to be: "Shaping Tomor- row's World.” Two representatives of the Gene {dustrial Home for Women due to a ounce beer stein at Adolf Hitler— eral Board of Missions will attend the session. Plans for the occasion have been under the direction of the Rev. John F. Stamm, pastor of the First church, Jersey Shore, district mis. sionary secretary; the Rev. G. Cecil Weimer, pastor of Trinity church, Lock Haven, conference missionary secretary and the district superin- Plane Plant in India Since its attack on the Japanese |of Christian service, official boards |, d church«schools. The conference wg. i i i The Centre County Farm Machin- r¥ Rationing Board is composed of Rishel, chairman: A. J. Bur rell, farmer; Hamill Bathgate, farm- er. Alternates, A. C. Hartle, Ross D. Lowder. The Board meets the first and third Tuesday of each month. General Information Temporary order effective Septem. ber 17 to November 1, 1942: To purchase machinery in Group A, a farmer must file an application with rationing committee. If ap- proved, rationing committee will is sue to the applicant certificate auth- orizing him to purchase equipment. If application ig disapproved, ap- plicant has right to appeal. Group A machinery and equip ment includes: {tification (form MR-3A) that ma- {chinery is Decessary for use during ‘remainder of 1042. { Group B includes all machinery ‘not included in Group A and C. There are no restrictions on the {sale or transfer of any farm ma- {chinery or equipment in Group C. {This group Includes: Hand tools, hoes, rakes, forks, scythes, shovels, and all hand-oper- ated and one and two horse-drawn farm machinery and equipment not included in Group A. No restrictions on sale of used machinery or repair parts. Persons who have ordered new farm machinery and equipment prio to September 17, 1942, may re- ve: {
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers