Odd and CURIOUS in the + NEWS “+ The Most Widely Read Newspaper In Centre County ‘A Visitor In Seven Thousand Homes Each Week | SECOND SECTION dhe Cenire Democraf F NEWS, EATURES | | VOLUME 61. BELLEFONTE, PA. THURS DAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1942, NUMBER 45. ep — Random Items < he —— NOT PATENTED A mouse trap gives Joe Al- bertson, owner of a small coal mine at Orrick, Mo. another hour's sleep each morning. A string runs from an alarm clock to the mouse trap. When the alarm goes off, the vibration of the string springs the trap. The trap throws a switch that staris an electric pump. By the time Albertson and his helpers arrive all the water which has seeped in overnight has been pumped out of the mine—and they can start work immediately, NO HORSE SENSE Thinking they would be very patriotic and save gasoline and tires, the Delta Sigma Delta girls at Superior State Teachers Col- Isge. Wisconsin, borrowed a horse from a farmer to pull their float in a home-coming parade. Their idea was good, but the horse's idea wasn't. He bolted and headed for home just as the parade lined up and it took the farmer half an hour to catch him and bring him back. The float won second prize, anyway. JAPS DON'T SPARKLE Joe V. Godfrey, radioman sec- ond class, of Spokane, Wash- ington, came home from the Solomons with a story of a mar- ine who forgot the password. He was challenged when he ap- proached the sentry. “Don’t shoot,” he cried, “I'm a marine 00.” And then remembering that Japanese have trouble pro- nouncing the letter “1.” he quick- proved his point by saying, “Sparkle, sparkle, sparkle.” PRESERVED TREASURE “What am I bid for these glass jars?” Mayor O. E. Ross was about to ask at an auction sale in Winchester, Ind. Instead he hesitated for a second look. Could that be money he saw? Yes, it was $1,890 in bills and quarters and half dollars. The auctioneer ordered the jars turn- ed over to the administrator of the estate of Sylvester Pearson, whose effects he had been sell- ing. SOME PICKLEMENT How's this report of the har- TRANSFORMATION When Augustine Mirabel, 30, Toas Indian from New Mexico, arrived at Ft. Bliss, Texas, to enter the army, he had never had a haircut. Unimpressed by Mirabol's three feet of heavy black hair, a sergeant ordered the young buck transformed in- to a buck private with the aid of a pair of sharp scissors. SAME NUMBER When Sylvester E. Nichols, American Legion Post Comman- der at West Haven, Conn., en- listed in the army recently, he received the same Serial Num- ber he had in the World War 1382981. ss — i ———— Tyrone Child, 2, Master John Futrick, Jr, 2 years of age, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Putrick, of Tyrone, is afflicted with the rare malady of celiac, for which bananas are the only cure. The child has been supplied with the needed bananas by Anthony Man. nino, local wholesaler, who has also been kind to supply for cases in Port Royal, Altoona and Lewistown. As it is almost impossible to get banan- as these days, Mr. Mannino is per- forming a noble act in providing this needed fruit. The boy is getting along nicely, with his allotment of approximately five bananas per day, but it will re- quire between two and three years to entirely bring the ¢hild back to normal. —Hunt Safely—Return Safely. Sn RE ——— am TR SE FATHER LOST ON WASP, Jury Acquits Driver of Truck Involved in Death ! Jury Deliberated Less Than Hour After deliberating an hour last|the brain and internal injuries, Her- Thursday afternoon, the jury re- turned a verdict of innocent in the case of George F. Faudie, DuBols, tried in the Clinton county court with manslaughter as the driver of a trailer-truck which struck another car fatally injuring Donald Mc Closkey, 19, of Howard R, D. 1 McCloskey died at the Lock Hav- en hospital, Saturday morning, June 27, less than an hour after a coupe in which he was riding was struck head-on by a large trailer-truck dri- ven by Faudlie, in front of the barbecue stand between Flemington and Mill Hall. He had suffered a fracture of the ribs. concussion of stone Car Demolishes Resident's Porch of Brakes Given as Cause of Peculiar Failure Accident When the brakes of a sedan driven by Charles Kuhn, of Sunnyside, fail- ed to hold as he was turni near the Pleasant View sche north of Bellefonte, 11 o'clock Friday night, the machine plowed into a he v1 by G. Edward Haupt by Mrs | Shaffer injured Approx damage sulted $30 damage } ng around An 1 n wlhouse, about whed and tenante No one ately the car house included the tru to the d wa $150 whil Le re- to peaking a porch foundation the of a window, de and damage + QL tion of s————— Fatally Injured Francis Maurer, 58, former North- umberland county jury commission er and active churchman, died in Shamokin Hospital from injuries re- { celved when he was run down by a f loaded coal truck at an independent | coal breaker owned by his son, : Charles Maurer, of Bear Valley ave- Inut, He was walking up the ramp to the breaker, with his back to the! Pvt. Raymond Paul Nunley, of marines let down { leg: started to go ashore, Without wamn-| F (truck, the approach of which he {evidently failed to hear, due to noise {from the breaker machine > Fire Damages Home Fire apparently starting in a mat- tress broke out in the bedroom at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leon Wil- son, Wellsboro, destroying the furnj- ture and damaging the floors and walls. Mr. and Mrs. Wilson and one of their two children were asleep in the room at the time, and were awakened by the smoke. They had the blaze under control before the fire department arrived —- Belt Injures Worker William H. Steinhart, 54, Trever ton Road, near Shamokin, employed as a brakeman for the North Line Coal Company, near Shamokin, suf. fered a fractured right arm and se- vere head and facial injuries when a heavy belt jumped from its track. hit him and hurled him across the engine room. He is a patient at the Shamokin State Hospital — a ——— Twins, 84, Celebrate The Misses Hannah and McClure, Pennsylvania's oldest liv- ing twins, celebrated the 84th anni- versary of their births at their home near Dubois, where they were born in a log cabin half a dozen years be- fore the War of the Rebellion was ended. They regularly do many of the chores incident to the work on their 80-acre farm. - Trains 17,000 War training officials at the Penn- rylvania State College have submit- ted an interim report to the United States Office of Education, showing that in the six months from March | to September the college trained more than 17.000 men and women for technical jobs in war industries Saena—— ENCOURAGED YOUNG SON “Jackie” Shea, five-years-old, who lives with his mother at Arlington, Mass, has a letter he never will part with—a letter that said “If 1 don't get back if It's from his dad, Commander John J. Shea, 43, last seen fighting flames aboard the U. 8. aireraft car- rier Wasp, shortly before the vessel went down under a torpedo attack near the Solomons on Sept. 15. He is listed as “missing in action.” The letter, written June 29, reads in part: fever know. It Is too bad this war could not have been delayed a few more years so that I could grow up again with you and do all the things I planned to do when you were old enough to go to school. “I thought how nice it would be for me to come home early in the {afternoon and play ball with you and go mountain climbing and see the trees and brooks and learn all about woodcraft, hunting, fishing, (swimming and other things like i that. : | bert K. Haines, a friend of the young man, also of Howard R. D., was dri- ving the coupe towards Lock Haven when the collision occurred. Haines escaped with minor injuries The State Motor Police furnished the following description of the ac- cident M. Faudie was op- erating an International traller- truck toward Mill Hall, following im mediately behind a large Cooper- Jarret truck and trailer and a bus the Susquehanna Traction Com- pany When Albert W. Rudy, Lock Haven stopped the bus in front of the barbecue stand to discharge pas- Faudie went around the he bus in front of him path of coupe collision resulted Faudie was held under a charge involuntary manslaughter Faudie, who Is married of 15-year-old of accident the court trial. He sald he ahead noticed ths im wa down but he did not Know why denied the coupe and al denied traveling between 40 and 45 miles per hour when he approached the curve. He testified that he ap- plied airbrakes on the traller- [truck he was driving as he came up behind the other truck. Joseph Shaw, DuBois, who was riding with Faudie and whose father | owner of the truck traveling ahead offered testimony George of Sengers truck and t getting in the and head-on the a f Of and the father related ni i“ s0nN Version the auring the the aw al Lt OW bu and Frick ahead ol Hig He Seing QO the of the corroborative cf {Continued om Page Five) ir American Family Album J Dr. Geo. Gobbl of Howard, R. D. Youth % eorge Faudie, DuBois, Found Not Guilty of Manslaughter in Clinton County Court; EXTRA TIRE REGULATIONS e, Historian, Revives Memories Of Old fonte and Zion; Men (By Henry W. Shoemaker in the Altoona Tribune) The report that Central Pennsylvania iron ores of the higher grades will do a lot towards hurrving the four freedoms, has started groups of alert geologists to to which helped between th news on many work relocate veins war ¢ states ir bd viva nis p syivanian and Dr interested able George the reminisced the BOVer- five Nistorian keenly in recent development on by-gone of and 10] tfulls delightfully GARY: the ir p n iron regions Centre, where f [4 chief executives of falr common mining county on iy wealth were born for part of their Ives resided ————— ——— reat } will be nied with Aq t of wonderful Bellef court - campaign “who and magnificent thelr heritage Dr. Gobble I number of letters of late re LDemocra mine nire County, and the in preparing the ore and it to the forges some to Howa to Washing- ton Furnace, south of Lamar The 1 mines fonte and Zion were still vy boyhood day mind's eye a number ¢ husky men from Lamar and vicinity up the pike through Sn t} week's ie in men,” Gov Hs oT more than fiv James house f left ‘ the 1938 records ¢ ies ach sald at mite {or However trailers, FF € pas- } if they in the 1 ciean senger automobile NAVE Dassenger they mal ie tire Io ach running public service a wire, Have ' 4 foitir +} v4 nterecting withou orieiung ne nieresting ¢ read a Cent iron ore ago In Ce operations ling others UY Ba Hie Hav inn the LI. regarding the Year: methods opened many of hat na rd between ire Belle - curing AVS Be " " trampin ouse. 1 owner will I» dertown (Continued on Page Five) ne 1 a provisions 28 DIE FOR HONORIN Stories of Jap treachery, one tell- ing 28 out of 30 marines paid with their lives for honoring a Jap flag of truce, were reported by Solo- imons islands casualties evacuated ito the navy mobile base hospital | somewhere in the Pacific how Lancaster, Ohio, nursing a {wound received in the early Sow- {mons fighting, told of the massacre {of the marine truce mission A Jap officer carrying a white flag came riding into 4 marine camp eA Nunley said, 1 “ in ‘and told the commanding officer a bunch of Japs a nearby inlet were isolated and wanted to surrender. Our C. O took him at his word and 30 marine and men piled into a tank lighter and crossed about five miles of water to the point where the Japs one day.’ Acros officer: ‘burst from several A © INarines are ¥. A tank lighter ap- proached the beach, a few Japs were observed, and sure enough, one of them was waving a white flag. As the boat scaped onto the beach, the the ramp and alive today hie met with a terrific machine guns underbrigh. They like stalks of y Wi ing they were hidden In the were mowed down f except lor Uw Wi ese capped and swam to two men Ait to make the Jat got within TRUCE fake order: and English had been warned 10 ex- pect tactics and after a few missteps we got the feel of things and their funny business backfired on them.” Sergt snipers bullet while going to the resene of a wounded comrade, told ‘ sr re Tieters tried vba wa Tener rea Oo give anda wid of the Jap Nunley Platoon Sergt. Harry of Napa, Calif., who is recovering from a khee wound, was himself a near-victim of the white flag trick He was In one of several marine landing boats entering a oove on island when & large white | from a tree ir during nieht ; in QUINnDgE nNiEn vt wr i We these 3 ack 8Schu or el Ww flag wax Son Saving on shore “We decided to investigate.” 8chu- We got in to about 150 xl and they opened ately we were read) hem Hill up this way in setting booby traps. The Usual form of booby trap Is a Weapon, pocket book, cooking utensil or sim- ilar article apparently discarded, but a grenade object ler relates from 5. Fort blasted Yar Ore reality attached to La in aad which picked tott hack ght Hace jodes when the is Bartony 8 of Mineola or moved summed it treachery decided bat. would have They worked th traps up — -— - out Jape hands down dog K ticked Do without ou dead put pulled stamps something every week savings defense or bongs the u } . t o and the into " a bye ri wt DOODS Man Convicted of Wall Topples at Stoltz Returned Plane Spotters Assaulting Girl Apple Warehouse To Penitentiary Given Priority Clinton County Jury Finds Thousands of Bushels in Stor- Altoona Man Convicted in Rules Aircraft Warning Ser- Defendant Guilty on Three Counts Malcolm A. Yamell, charged with assault with intent to ravish and | rape a 16-year-old Loganton R. D j Birt was convicted on three counts in Clinton county court last Thurs- Martha [day by a jury which supplemented damaging | its verdict for leniency Miss Betty Jane Karchner 16, of Loganton R. D., victim of the al- leged assault, was the principal com- monwealth withess and was first to testify when court convened Thurs- day afternoon Visibly upset during the entire | proceeding, Miss Karchner burst |into tears after she took the stand {and sobbed uncontrolled for several minutes. Finally regaining compos- jure, she testified in a straightfor- | ward manner as follows: After attending the Sugar Valley i Vocational School at Loganton, she quit last year as a sophomore and had been working at another home in Lock Haven before she was hired iby Mrs. Yarnell on Sunday, August 30. She identified Yarnell as the man whom she asserted attacked her while she was in bed at the home on the second night she spent there. | After she had been assaulted, she testified, she crept barefooted down the stairs and ran to the Sohmer home 1'% blocks away, where she aroused Mr. and Mrs. Sohmer who i contacted the police. She said she {smelled alcohol on Yarnell’s breath during the encounter. Recognizing her, Mr. Sohmer roused his wife and | they let her in. She was sobbing and told them something terrible had | happened, She sald Yarnell had at- tacked her while she was in bed, so | Mr. Sohmer went to police head- with a recommendation age at Chambersburg Damaged » southern warehouse A large wall of of the Storage sllar | collapsed storage at Chambersburg morning t 10,000 and 25.000 Free b ye ls Tons th fell them frame dwell- » ) ff Ii the roof of some of in fouble ing balcony Wig a ti vas de. the bullding was esti- No estimate the value of the fruit but is doubtful if damaged apples can be salvaged In the third floor there were 60. 000 bushels of apples, loose and in boxes, belonging to Musselman Come pany, and in the fourth and fifth | floor were 90.000 bushels of apples, i all unpacked, belonging to Krouse | Corporation. Most of the damaged apples were unpacked to the $10,000 Damage mated made stroyed at of it —— s———— Two Hours to Free Fool Robert E. Chronister, 27, Tyrone a freight brakeman on the Middle Division of the Pennsylvania Rail- | | road, suffered a possible fracture of i the right ankle, Friday morning, when | tween an engine and its tender as the locomotive jumped the tracks at the Marysville yards. Railroad workers and hospital attaches work- ed for two hours to free the man's foot, using. acetylene torches to cut the hinges from a steel plate which grow their own coffee, or something | The following volunteers served as | per cwt of ground feed. Corn is the, his foot became caught be-| vice Comes First in CD Organization Blair County of Crim- inal Assault The Ground Observer Corps of the Aircraft Warning Service has been Stoltz. courts sentenced by {0 serve seven Eugene W Biair County criminal assault, was returned to the (all the Citizens Defense Corps, sce Western Penitentiary Priday in the cording to a recent statement by custody of Sheriff John E. Harvey General U. 8. Grant. 3rd, Chief, Pro- and deputies tection Branch of the Office of Civ- Stoltz was twice convicted of lian Defense in Washington, D. C criminally assaulting an Altoona The statement was made to settle girl. The evidence at the trial re- a long conflict of duty between the vealed that Stoltz picked up the various volunteer services of the girl in his car while she was on her | Citizens’ Defense Corps and the vol- way home from a movie theatre unteers who are serving in the Convicted at the first trial and [Ground Observer Corps of the Air- sentenced by Judge Patterson, he craft Warning Service appealed for a new trial which was General Grant declared, in part: granted. Judge Ivan Walker of | “Priority should be given in every Bellefonte presided at the second instance to the needs of the Aircraft trial. Stoltz was again found guilty | Warning Service, since without it and re-sentenced. His piea for a the blackout and other measures of third trial was refused. civilian defense cannot be initiated - There is no demand for a second | Citizens’ Defense Corps wishes to be front in Siberia against Japan: at released for service with the Air. {least, no public pronouncements (raft Warning Service, he should be upon the subject. released without question.” - At the Bellefonte observation post, {in charge of Robert R. Hill, dial 2260, or C. M. Thompson, dial 3235, additional volunteers are needed. . The post is in operation 24 hours a Here's a Way to | Beat the Coffee Shortage-Raise It a large number of observers is need- ed. Anyone wishing to serve in this | all-important branch of civilian de- | | Mr. and Mrs. Gaylord Truxal, of |fense is requested to get in touch Mentor, Ohio, believed they have | with either Mr. Hill or Mr. Thomp- the coffee situation licked. They son to make arrangements t ning for Hill, who was hit by a Jap | how the enemy used thelr own dead | {keep each watch as short as possible, | Centre County Mining Days Recalls Operation of Ore Mines Between Belle- Worked for $1.10 to $2.00 per Day; Boys Got 50 Cents their backs, and living in small cab- ins near the ore mines even smaller than those clustered about Allegheny Furnace, Altoona, years ago ing back Saturday afternoon a short visit with their fam- and another Vege - Com - Or eve. ilies, supply of tables and what not Their w and valed gardens and corn and potatoes chickens, maybe fed a the winter's meat a Cow two. The ives children Kins or cu 141 Eept a ( ' f hoo Coupe ol Dog flelds re { % for and some kept or wages good old da for boys picking flint out ¢ as it passed from the was bin, to the magnificent ; to $2 for men, which a ten-hour were from 50 war fav Gay 1 Worker Killed; Second Injured Accident Friday Ordnance Works Project, Occurs al Williamsport eddent att) 1ocigent a FLAG Wounded By Guns No Fatal Casualties But Sev- eral Painful Wounds as Season Opens Blair county small game season scored four minor casualties on the opening day Saturday The first report of a wounded hun- ter came from Altoona Hospital at 10:35 o'clock Saturday morning James Meyers, 22, came to the hos- pital suffering from a gunshot wound below the left knee received when another hunter fired through the brush at an escaping rabbit. “I do not know who shot me,” Meyers re- ported At 3:45 o'clock Saturday afternoon 18-year-old John Snyder, Hollidays- burg R. D was taken to the Al- toona hospital by the hunter who fi the shot that wounded the lad He was treated in the dispensary for gunshot wounds of the forehead. left cheek and neck The young {Continued on Pape Five) - y Killed in Plunge Mrs. Walburg Reilly Stackpole, 40, a 15-story plunge from her mother's thotel suite in Philadelphia. Mrs Stackpole had one daughter, the former Miss Julia K. Paine, who was married to Grant Hubley, Louisville, Ky. last Pebruary 6 pg PASS THE AMMUNITION: The nation is going slightly tlap- happy over the new war Praise the Lord and Pass munition.” Newspapers Anes are having a UUme wives trying find the phrase, well as Mong Am- anc maga- them - Just who but to this cor- Bellefonte A familiar ring when [riend Jack now of Rochester, » Tax Collector of Lhe lor Lo out coined ner as to other residents Bom Monitg« Ya running Beliefonte borough Praise Montgomery Pearl some thunder Has year: mer apo N ¢ fer Wis siogan Lhe fra fo the Harbor of thou er nough chiapiain Montgomery's as stole campaign GREAT AID: One of the finest we've seen anytime ti u adverusements Anywhere, i one A Boy on a Hill-Top,” pub- lished In magazines last week by the New York Central Rallroad. It would while Lo J0OOk it th t 9 BOGEY MAN: Huw Pittsbur fork 1 Lhe wor y OAL up dreds of thousands of gh Phil iphia face actual starvation next year,” a Penn Btate wid the Btate College Ro- last week, according tw a Tr acoount of the club meet- be speaker was ng home vital need but we imagine anyone to get h stories only nosrcing prone ana may 850. The bri tr worker: inducing ng Ww Ww farm piteh nay suc more pers £ PESTAPO? 8. R. Richardson w State Po- reports the name Ger. an Becret Police “Gestapo” is de- follows: “Ge” for German for State, and “Po,” for Police ¢ token you could call Pennsylvania Motor Police the which is a very glam. h is the least § ( i Ji ba { the of he the sam ee Ree Lhe name not OTs to say PICTURE TOWN: Oak Hall gets 1 the mast his column's vole 5 One picturesque Owns 1 Centre county-—or anywhere else, that matter. Attractive at any he community at its best when its quaint winding stream ¢ scenery take on the qual- Christmas greeting card “ £ nd 1#) winter v H f ing FAVORITES: People newspaper reporters Hke {best are those who, when something thappens, get on the telephone and tell their newspaper friends about IL. You have 10 De a newspDRper re- porter to really appreciate such acts. NOTE TO RATION BOARDS: | 1s a clerk, who lives practically on top of the place of business in which he is employed, entitled 10 2 B gas- oline card because he makes occs- sional trips t0 a neighboring town for medical treatment (and, inciden- tally, of course, visits the home folks while there)? Is an industrial em- plove who lives well within walking d we of his place of employment and who tills a piece of ground across the road from his home en- titled to a C card and all the tires he wants on the grounds that he is a “farmer?” Are all these guys who have bought old cars recently trying to save thelr good cars—or is it merely so they can have two A cards and consequently get twice as much gasoline as if they had only one car? How about the tires and gaso- line being given to so-called “farm- who in reality aren't farmers at all? A ot of them have regular jobs and run gardens or small farms as sidelines. They aren't farmers in yalini ok av Wslal ers’ Ice and Cold! and one-half to fifteen years for BiVen a priority on manpower over of 8t. Mary's, was killed Friday in the sense that they earn their living in farming. These are some Of the complaints you hear on the streets, and many of them seem justified. We all realize the ration boards are understaffed and have a gigantic job (Continued on Pape Five) FARM QUESTION BOX by ED W. MITCHELL Form Advisor / General Electric Station WGY | Therefore, where any member of the | Q What is a good priming coat of paint to use on a concrete floor before painting it? A. I think the cheapest way that is at all satisfactory is to whitewash {the floor with clear cement. When {that is dry, apply undiluted water [glass to close the pores, and then day, 7 days a week, and in order to | apply ordinary porch and deck paint. { | | Q. Is ground raw bone suitable to | mix with ground corn for hog feed? {| A. Ground bone either raw or | dried is a good addition to any ra- [tion because it provides lime and | phosphorus. Use about 5 to 10 Ibs had wedged the foot between the | pretty close to it, and if it hadn't [spotters at the local observation post (standard hog feed, but should not | locomotive and the tender. in Women Ald Farmer Women have come to the relief been for a bad summer for coffee {during the week October 18 to 24 ine i they might have had enough to last | clusive: until next year when their second | From 1. O. O. F.* Paul Gordon, crop will go out. | Nelson Billett, Nevi agne i \ " n Jodon, W pr The Truxals, both 61, answered an | Gejss, A. Barraclough and R. L. jcomprise over 50 per cent of the | mation; the rest should be other grains with higher protein content tein like fish meal, meat scrap and | and 10 to 20 per cent of animal pro- ; Job plate and skim off any scum or mould that forms on the top. Use about one pond of salt to 10 pounds of fish; and if necessary to cover the fish, add a little salt brine using two cups of salt to one gallon of boiled water. Q Can I meke a compost of weeds, faded flowers and leaves for my flower and vegetable gardens? | A. Yes Keep adding vegetable matter, all you can get; add some {manure or rich soil to inoculate the bacteria cultures then Keep the head damp. And last, but not Jeast, fork it over every two or three weeks-—that is where most people fall down on the | quarters on a bicycle to report the of William Smith, of Berwick R. D. | | “Dear Jackie: | “When you are a little bigger you | ...rrence. When he returned home, 1, who was in a quandry as to how advertisement In a seed catalogue | gievens: from Boy Scout Troop 6, “This is the first letter 1 have will know why your daddy is not! ymeers Clark and Wenker were al- | to pick the 15,000 bushels of apples in | anvil this fall picked three pounds of | polert Bonnell, Gerald Tierney, ever written ‘direetly to my little son | home so much any more. You know | ..q. there, having been called at| his orchard, with no male help avail- coffee from six-foot plants that p.,,.rq Levine and Peter Sheffer; and I am thrilled to know you can we have a big country, and we have 1:05 a. m. Arrangeménts were made able. Four of the women proved yielded pods as large as bananas. |r. Logan Fire Co. Ken Barnhart, read it all by yourself. I you miss ideals as to how people should live | 0 take her to the Lock Haven Hos- particularly adept in the work, in| The pair put out their curiosity | wagner Geiss, Ben Rosenblatt, M some of the words, 1 am sure it will and enjoy the riches of it. and how | ja] where Dr. Hoberman made an climbing trees and ladders daily for plant on Memorial Day, but incli- | Goldman, B. Goldman, and Robert be because 1 do not write plianly. each is born with equal rights to. mination. seven weeks, The women are now mate weather retarded growth al- | waite. Mother will help you in that case, I| life, freedom and the pursuit of hap- | yr. and Mrs. Karchner told of a assisting in husking a large crop of though the plants that did mature | From ©. D. A. Helen Begaer, Mary am sure. | piness. Unfortunately, there are .i i, their home two days later by Corn. the work being done in the netted pods containing 300 to 400 | peldin and Sarah Moerschbacher “1 was ¢ertainly glad to hear your some countries in the world where |." 4 Mrs. 7arnell. At that time | field. : {berries that were a little smaller voice over the long distance tele- | they don't have these ideals, where |... garchner asked Yarnell to ex- | ——— [than peas, . It sounded as though I were a boy cannot grow up to be what he | Slain his treatment of Betty at his, The Centre Democrat has always| After roasting and grinding in A Wolf, F. O. Beldin, A. Riglin, George right there in the living room with| wants to be with no limits on his | one varnell sald, “I don't have a opened its columns to the religious borrowed hand grinder, Mrs. Truxal Teaman and Joe Hazel; from Wom- you. You sounded as though you opportunities to be a great man, such | pote ot to explain. I did it but Ijnews of the country; if your church said it tasted “Just like store coffee,” | an’s Club, Mrs. Russell Weston, Mrs. missed your daddy very much. I miss ag a great priest, statesman, doctor, | don't know why. I'm guilty. 1 had is not represented in our news col- but added that “it's a little betler | neal Kohler and Mrs. Lee Davies; you, too, mere than any one will (Continued on page Siz) (Continued on page Siz) | umns, it is not our fault. when mixed with real coffee.” (Continued from page milk. Q. I want information on curing and painting gourds, A. All you do is pick the gourds, jet them dry slowly in a cool place {from Undine Pire Co, Sammy Rhinesmith, Jack Woods, C. W. - hd - § E i i g ! » -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers