¢ Cenfre Democral SAVING IN WAR BONDS VOLUME 62. NUMBER 14. BELLEFONTE, PA.,, THURSDAY, APRIL 8, 1943. SUBSC RIPTION-—$1.50 PER YEAR Army Caravan Visits Ti Men in Battle Un/¢arms Strip Glamour from War—Show Vit Peak of Industria: Employes of the Titan Metal Com- pany saw and heard what their la- bors are producing for the war effort Tuesday, when a fully equipped mechanized cavalry unit, jointly sponsored by the U. 8. Arm; nd Nevy, visited the plant QUARRY OWNER HURT IN BLAST Martin Miller Escapes Ser- ious Injury in Prema- ture Explosion Martin J. Miller, East Linn street, Bellefonte, owner of the Mil- ler limestone quarries near Jad flered painful but not seriou injur about the face chest early Monday morning one of a series of “pot shots” igniting at quUaITy ex maturel Miller wa showe } of small stones and his face and chest were a mass of lacerations and bruises. He also had a number of similar injuries about the hands. His eyeglasses were shattered into Of kson- ville, su les hands, and wien ie wa i Lie noCied red wild { splinters, but fortunately no stones’ Cr none the glass entered eyes. The injured man was taken to the offices of Dr. H. L. Ishler, at How- ard, where treatment was given, ter which he returned to his home He is able to be about, but has not resumed hi du at the quarry “Pot shots” are light charges placed in large stones to break them into convenient sizes for handling ms Bellefonte Youth Receives Degree Of nis sun] tin Philip D. Con » from Sy y sity of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia,’ on April 3 at a Convocation of Uni- versity Council which was held in the Irvine Auditorium on the camp- us. He received the degree of doc- tor of medicine. Cronemiller, whose home js al West Howard street, formerly at- tended Juniata College and holds the degree of bachelor of science from there. Following his . graduation from the University of Pennsylvania he will serve his Internship at the Naval Hospital, Brooklyn, New York The Convocation at Pennsylvania on April 3 marked the formal close of the academic year in the School of Medicine, School of Dentistry and the School of Veterinary Medi- cine of the University - Institutions Endorse War Loan Campaign WB The second War Loan campaign begins Monday, April 12, with a na- tional goal of 13 billion dollars Various Centre eounty institutions have patriotically endorsed the War loan drive and in their advertise. ments appearing in this issue the reason for the loans and the various types of bonds offered clearly ovtlined One advertisement i8 sponsored by the Bellefonte Elks, Veterans of Fore elon Wars, Undine Fire Company, American Legion, Logan Fire Com- pany and Loyal Order of Moose, all of Bellefonte, and the other is snon- sored by the Centre County Bank- ors’ Association. Read the advertisements carefully They carry a vital message -~ Passenger Train Delayed by Wreck The evening westbound train out of Bellefonte last Thursday night was delayed more than three hours because of a wreck at Undenville at 6:30 p. m. when the cabin car of a freight train from Barre turned a te somersault after it struck a billet of steel which dropped from a freight car. Another car was involved in the wreck, but did not overturn. No one was injured. A wrecking crew from Altoona worked more than three hours to clear the tracks. The even. ing passenger train, which left here at 7:55 p. m. was held at Milesburg until after 11 p. m. are Rockview Fugitives’ %’roduction. D.- Cronemiller, of Belle- | anughter of Mt. and Mrs, Fred Sol Univer- | 13 B tan Plant WAR PEN MONDAY County Co-Chairmen Ask For Special Effort by Every Person and the et | PRESENT BUYING LION Need for Constant | > ugh the display of equipment neluding trucks and Ommunications rifles, revolvers, Knives many other accouterments through a sober speech by a soldier! wounded in the invasion of Africa through a narrative of two years of op battle by a gunner’'s mate on a through an ugly and un- varnished oral picture of war paint- | Navy lleutenant-—through | [these means as well as through the | grim and businesslike appearance of the entire unit, garbed in battle we people of Centre of outfits—Titan workers learned that | P¢ | lo ecid test war is no has little romance, Second War Loan, be and thet fighters on the battlefronts | 12. It was announced tod: wonder constantly if those on the Alkens, of home front will send them enough K. Robt pment, enough supnlies t Hurmed ¢ Unie Nn We jeeps, radio equipment, cestrover:; Huge Expenditures, Of- ficials Explain orl by n le Inty ring inning April y by Cla State College, and Belle! te « Es ion he t pretty, de 10n 0 O 9 (24) : ‘ 4 the final victory u Keynote of the vis! public ing weed Tuesday morning on the k the Titan|' plant, by Lt. B. F. Schwartz, of the Navy, cored absenteeism, loaf. | Wal ob ’ y meet iwn at you and 1 th { obviol to man and woman that Nations take dictator of ir ODM on increas woportion “It i LW who n the as have CArecssness enele ana decd thinking United " v wre! ADONS OLY | the w the offen the in » a day off wl lke working Vv ( I" WOrs just Deca se you to putter wit in the in the quality product you turn out 1 exactly ur enemies want you to do Schwartz declared iting to the equipment he speakers’ platform, the said Many of the ti (Continued on Page Four) to to be careless not only necessary and right ume this addition wrticipation In the war ello wonor to do We who are 1 the home front can do than attempt to wh the sacrifices of those brave it should as al 0 + ranged 1% is an | 0 left here o fy 1" 1g gyre i Ho =x am men « on the fighting | rnc MP Sm r— ast great measure « ncrifice is but r dally offering The give tl - Lves. We lend our mone While it js true-—and this to the ¢ everinsting credit of the Americar people-~that there are more peopl today who own Government seeur- fies than at any time in the hic- y Osceola Mills Child in Ser- the world—the simple facts of | . . pa . matter are, it is pot enougn ious Condition at Phil- If the people of Centre county ipsburg Hospital and every county and town in the Little v of the nation-—or the history of the ‘nation, gre fo meet their full meas. jure of responsibility, they must Joan d-year-old Louise Boltis.[, .. Government every cent not tis, of Osceola Mills, is battling grimly for her life at the Philipsburg State Hospital in what attending physicians believe is a losing fight She was accidentally shot through the brain and eve Monday afternoon by her 5-year-old brother, Michael Hospital attaches Iate yesterday afternoon described her condition “serious.” ! The 23-caliber idlet pierced the be went through the frontal area, and eame out through an eve The little girl was not feeling well Monday and was put to bed by her mother. 8he had pneumonia earlier y the winter and was described delicate child. Michael and she had been playing together and their mother Jeft them {for a briff minuts to go downstair She was on the way up when the shot rang the house {he ran up daughter shot The girl was unconscious until the mother doused cold water on her and she started crying Michael. | i badly frightened. scemed as though | {Le couldn't talk The father and the John, were working Both drive trucks for the Dushan Coal Company. The youngest child, y year-old girl named Frances, slept through the commotion, The other children, Minnie, Joseph, Steve and | petty Ann, were school The gun belonged to the oldest boy. John, who is 18 years old, Mich- ael was sald to have located a shell and loaded the gun | $105.85 War Stamps Sold at Store Booth A total of $105.85 in War Stamps was sold Saturday at the War Stamp and we have to revise downward our ideas about what gre essentials In other words, sou, and you and I must go on an sil-out war bafis “There are at the time many billions in liquid funds—cash and commercial bank deposits—in the hands of the American peopl and above taxes, debt repay- insurance, and their present om pepe Four) MP ——— LOCAL SOLDIER present | As over ment ain Continued as back out through the stairs t Victim of Accident at Nevada Base Pvt. Robert Rightnour, 33 son of | Mrs. Emma Rightnour, of Mt. Eagle, boy, | formerly of Bellefonte, was seriously time. | injured in an accident at the Army Lair base at Tanapah, Nevada, nc- {eording to word received during the weekend by his wife, the forger Isa- be! Knofisinger, of Pleasant Gap | The soldier's wife and his sister, i Mrs. Paul R. Emerick. of Bellefonte, departed for Tanapsgh by rail, Fri- (day night, and were acheduled to ar- irive at their destination Tuesday night or Wednesday morning, but vesterday afternoon no word had been received from them. Relatives got a telegram yesterday morning from the hospital stating that ‘Rightnour is “coming along nicely.” Although no detalls of the acei- dent were revealed, It was learned oldest at the in RATE INADEQUATE , ‘Huge War Effort Entails © nected for the essentials of Hving-- | SERIOUSLY HURT Pvt. Robert Rightnour, 33, na to Wilkes | booth being operated this month in the Murphy store, Bellefonte, by the Legion and V. F. W. Auxiliaries and the Girl Scouts, according to an announcement by Mrs, Harrison G. Kline, chairman of the war activi- ties commitiee of the Legion Auxili- ary From 9:30 a. m. to 1 p. m. while the booth was in charge of Legion : : and VFW Auxiliary members, sales the man received a severe ¢ut above one éye and an injury to the right leg. Pvt. Rightnour, former mechanic at the County Chevivlet garage, Bellefonte, enlisted in the Air Corps last fall. He wis a mechanic in a bomber squadron at McClelland Field, Californigy, before being sent to Nevada — {were $4650. From 1 to 9 p. m.| while Girl Scouts were in charge,| |6 Complete Home sales totaled $190.75. In addition, | . Abraham Lincoln Hite, State Col- Nursing Course Here lege’s one-man War Stamp sales- | ‘man, disposed of $3960 in stamps; Sixteen women from Bellefonte while at the booth from 6 to 9 p. m. | and vicinity completed a home nurs. { The booth will be open every Sat-| ing course taught by Miss Bertha | urday during April, and will be open | Rimmey, Bellefonte Red Cross nurse, ‘every day during the last weok of In the Bush Arcade building, Belle- {this month, | fonte, Tuesday night of last week. Bupervisors of the booth, in ad- Chances Are Slim Fewer than five out of every hun- dred prisoners wha have escaped from Rockview penitentiary since the institution was established here in 1013, really regained their liberty, officials said yesterday. Of the 354 prisoners who have es caped since 1913, only 16 of them remained uncaptured to date. It is believed that some of the 18 may now be deceased or may have left this country. In other words, escapes from Rockview has only one chance in twenty of staying out. evety man who | j dition to Mrs. Kline, are Mrs, Roy (Jones, of Milesburg, and Mrs, Eliza- beth Marshall, of Bellefonte. 3 Suspeeted Delinquent John Charles Whaley, formerly of ‘a CCC camp near Philipsburg and whose last address was 644 Broad Street, Harrisburg, has been listed as a suspected delinquent by Local! Draft Board No. 2, of Bellefonte, Board officials said Whaley had fall- ed to notify them of a change of ad- Cress, Whaley has until 5:30 p.m today, April 8 to got in touch with | the board and if he fails to do 50 he will become a delinquent. | A social hour was held and Miss Rimmey was presented with a cor- sage of Defense Btamps and roses. Mrs. B. J. Beezer, chairman of Red Cross home nursing was present. The following persons completed the course: Mrs. Hazel Emenhizer, Mrz. John Lucas, Mrs. Earl Cart- wright, Mrs. Joseph Rine, Mrs, Vie- | tor Pifer, Mrs. Miller Shawley, Mrs, Sarah Benner, Mrs. James Gunsal- lus, Mrs. Harry Ulrich, Mrs. Thomas O'Hara, Mrs, Harry Shope, Mrs, Ar- thur Thomas, Mrs. John Mong, Mrs. William Shope and Mrs. Joseph Forrest Eckley of Valley View. Re- freshments were served. ! | Announce New [0ANT) Blood Bank Plan DEDICATION County Hospital Agrees to Adopt Statewide System; Blood From Local Donors to Be Processed into Plasma at Central Lab- oratory. A period ol wd malnienance of a blood oulred for the ing plant at the Centre which the pl Hospital were given up last {to the hospital of the relatively high stitution will b ich an undertaking, officials per vacul titution yesterday an-lof blood) adoption of a plan| Th blood will he received from tem is nl donors. will be processed nto leauipped ma, and will be returned toh supply elicfonte for use at the hospital mediate 1 tment Ihe ponsored by he | panying hemorrhage tment of Health In " fractures, with the Med 3 State Pennsviy for Clinical and Sur. igned primar- his of Altho plang for the establish- 141 ment am gh O00 County ' 1) nu Ww in need the chael ntag« ol that for ‘ ig ini pital plasma 1 for Dy Ho the vstem Dope iatoration mad onditions Cif the Of ania the Foundation ch, is desigy I operate Blood dos wriodically i ¥ ThE Surgical ance , ne v vid Ie ted, or Clinical earch will send a; technicians to assist the blood. Blood will x the central laboratory perature refrigerating t especially {on an amen designed for the purpose. In the ah quire lu aratory i il be centriluged m= |.4 mediately and the plasma processed (Continued on Page Four) SENTENCE CUBAN JURORS DRAWN FOR 1930 ESCAPES: FOR MAY COURT Fled Rockview, Was Cap-| Grand Ju v Mes ry Meets May 3; tured, Then Escaped ' Criminal Court May 17 From County Jail we Four smal the Biood, held which ug ambuls dation will mount of We per which will from which tributing when thes: nod ma (not more from each 0 inl oon of 13 i #51 ad B8 Re- with collecting etlirned in a ow tem - hos! f for pl ont) than tion hospital tral bank in any hospitals cone for supply is exhausted ency which might re monint explain DioOd can call plasma or VY | wit { Colle Civil May 21 i‘, Jurors for the regular May court A 51-year-old native of Cuba who escaped from Rockview prison here | Were drawn this week by the Centre | on August 31, 1830, who was cap- County Jury Commissioners, The tured near Spring Mills Septemier Grand Jury meets Monday, May 3; | 5. 1939, and who escaped from ‘he Criminal Oowt opens Monday, May | Centre County jail on September 20. 19. and Civil Court will open Mon- | appesyed at a special session of fav, May 24. court here Tuesday afternoon (0 6n-' The jury. lists follow ter plea of guilty to the escape GRAND JURORS charges The iMert Monday. May 3) of genteel manner for Deans Allison, Philipsburg: Frank years behind Baldridee, Milesburg: Chas. Bright Joseph Chali who wa brought to Aarotisburg: Richard Brooks, Centre Bellefonte early this week when he Hall: Carl C. Casher, Clarence; received a parole from a life sentence | Adam Cingel, Clarence; Mary W at New York State Prison at Auburn, Craig, Bellefonte; Fearon Eckley N. ¥. He was paroled on the condi-| Bellefonte, R. D. 1; Sarah M. Goad- tion that he come to Pennsylvania to hart, Centre Hall, R. D.; Florence E answer the charges against him IniHaupt. Bellefonte; George E. Holt Centre county Julian For the escape from Rockview Francis “hali was sentenced to serve 4 to 10 Allred G Penjamin years In the Western State Peniten- tiary—his original sentence from Do Daniel Pancoast. Philipsburg: Allegheny county when he fled Rock. Thomas Schmoke, Moshannon ; : Charles M. Scott, Beliefonte; H. E Shawiey. Boalsburg; Philip B. Bhuey Bellefonte, R. D. 3: Ray B. Stover Rebersburg; James T. Uzzell, Snow Shoe: Harrison Tressier, Bellefonte, R. D. 2: Willlam Roger, Julian CRIMINAL COURT JURORS (Meet Monday, May 17) Charles Ammerman, Philipsburg: Pearl F. Barger, Spring Mills; Roy A. Baughman, State College: George Bean. Sr. Philipsburg: Benton P Continued on pape Sir) 'B TO HOLD COOKING SCHOOL - defendant, haired and all his man prison bars, Was Bray spent A. Miller, State College; McDonald, Osceola Mills; F. Neff, State College, R view. He received a sentence of {| to 2 years in prison for the jall break while Sheriff H. E. Dunlap wag in office, but this term is to run cone currently with the prison sentence Judge Ivan Walker stipulated Chali who turned down the) court's offer to provide an attornes to represent him, asked to be given a chance to live a normal life. He sald he's a good vorker, has come to respect the laws, and that during iis time in prison he devised several inventions which he turned over to the National Inventors® Council Upon receiving sentence, the mild. mannered man respectfully said, Thank you, Your Honor." i Chali and another jail inmate eof fected their escape from the county kastille by sawing their way out of their cells with table knives fash iohed into saws. They got over the wall by knotting bedding together to form a rope. Local Red "Cross WOMAN'S CLL Housewives of Bellefonte and sur- rountiing communities are urged to stiend the cooking school to be held Thursday afternoon, April 15 at 2 p. m. in the Bellefonte High School puditorium. Wartime rationing and {the searcity of a number of foods make it necessary for homemakers {te use many substitutes and food | textenders. The purpose of the { cooking school is to demonstrate the Exceeds War Quota preparation of such food extenders ond sugeest substitutes Fred Warner, chairman of the available. | Bellefonte Chapter, American Red; The cooking school is being spon- | Cross, yesterday announced that the sored by the American Home Sec- Bellefonte district has exceeded by tion of the Bellefonte Woman's $118 its War Fund quota of 80.200. | Club for the Local Defense Council Contributions to date tolal 88.318, | 1t will be conducted by Miss Janet Mr. Warner reported. He commend- | Boisson, Home Economics Represen- ed the various sections of the dis- | tative of West Pern Power Company, trict for their splendid efforts, and who is an experienced demonstrator especially mentioned the Central, in this area. Labor Union for its campaign con-| According to Mrs. R. C. Blaney, ' ducted in the Titan, Universal and chairman of the American Home| American Lime plants, Mrs. Schaef« Section, this will be the only cooking fer, of Zion, and Mrs. Garbrick, of school to be held in this area this] near the Airport, also were com- spring. mended for their exceptional work. Because several sections have not | {made final reports, Mr, Warner esti. | mated that when those reports are in. the War Pund goal will have been exceeded by $400. | Lack of space prevents publication | jof a list of donors in this issue. The! {list will appear in our next issue. - i | that are | Pleads Guilty To Theft of Shoestrings Pleading guilty to a charge of stealing nine pairs of shoestrings, | valued at 45 cents, Dewey A. Hoare, | of DuBois, at a special session of | ‘court here Monday morning was i placed on probation for two years. ‘Jefferson Day Dinner |" man was arrested in Philipe- { burg March 20 by officer Edwin Gus- At College, April 15 tation, after he stole the shosstrings | {from the MeCrory store there. The | A county-wide Jefferson Day din smeer told the court Hoare visited | her sponsored by the State College philipsburg every three months and | Women's Democratic Club will be made a public nuisance of himself (held in the State College Methodist | as a panhandler, ichurch at 7 o'clock Thursday eve- Hoare told Judge Ivan Walker he ining, April 15. had been drinking the night before | i : the building, | i op | contribution ‘his “speech coach” be " | NEW BUILDING Hartranft Sees School Auditorium as Com- munity Center HOLD FORMA ADULT EDUCATION TO BE BROADENED Dickinson President Sees Education as Bulwark of World Peace massive new | i h School was for- cated to “our Dos y the service of the com- impressive ious auditorium last the concludi ceremonies The words of dedic on were nounced by Horace J. Hartru president of the Bchool Board envisioned the new n institution of broad Audent Bellefon rrounding alu community center, where adult edu- cation will play an ey DULGIng {O01 { . 10) irom ' ; UuLY Hu er- increasing rtranit outlined the aim ihe board of education In plannin as follows school plant adequat the district fo; vears: to provide edie ithes also ‘our ye ’ it y ¢ To provid the nex next ational neigh L of the for good Lt and rounded oa cannot cation continue other instit anda courses in music, subjects, home mies hysical education The Board of Education the auditorium to become a comgmai- nity center” Mr, Hartranft clared, dispelling any misgivings thot the auditorium would be reserved exclusively for school activities, “Manbers of the board have work- studie higl more Of tions of 3 eT MWININE oY 4 le compete ject AgTicuiture commercial to provide vocational 1H dramatic econ - and nt wi Of - ‘od dally for four years ai this job of "pwoviding » new bDuliiing” the speaker continued, “but we are am- riv repaid in the knowledge of our to the community” (Continued om Pape Pour) FIRE THREATENS BELLEFONTE HOTEL Prompt Action by Fire- men Prevents Serious Blaze at Brockerhoff Fire of threatened the rocker here about 4:30 o'clock Monday af ternoon when flames were discovers ed on the roof of "he tower at the northwest comer of the structure facing the Diamond Both companies, ment, answered undetermined hoft with all equip- a general alarm turned in BY Mis. Samuel MeGinley who discovered the fire McGinley Brothers wall paper on West High Street Two booster lines were used to extinguish the blaze, and damage was confined to some rafters and a from the store temall part of the roof of the tower i is the blaze it is believed While the cause-of somewhat a mystery, that nearby chimney Monday morming may have been blown under the slate | roof by high winds that prevailed during the day. Wins Speech Contest, Kisses His Fiancee Francis E. Zabkar, 20-year-old senjor at Penn State College, will represent Western Pennsylvania col- ieges In the midwest zone finals of the Thomas Jefferson Bicentennial Oratorical Contest Zabkar, wiiher of Bonds in the Western Pennsylvania regional contest in Pittaburgh during the weekend, left for Chicago Satur. Cay to compete in the midwest fin. als, After receiving the prise, Zabkar | rushed to kiss his fiancee, Love Au- man, of Bellefonte. He called her and said that with the help of the bonds “we're getting married as soon as the war's over.” Zabkar lives in Mt. Pleasant, Westmoreland county. Miss Auman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Herbert Auman, of North Spring street, is omployed in the of+ fices of Local Draft Board No. 2. in the postoffice. | “Paradise” To Open On May 14th Fishermen's Paradise, along Spring Creek southwest of Bellefonte, will open for ite tenth annual season on Friday, May 14, it was announced yesterday bY the Fish Commission. Rules and hours will be the same _ | House. The n Is antage a spark from a flue fire in a! Ceremonies to Be He i “Honor Roll to be I Dedicated Friday id at 7 P. M. on Dia- mond. Judge Ivan Walker to Speak. Ap- proximately 700 Names Posted to Date. | Formal dedication of forte Honor Roll from Bellefonte ; routes—will Diamond here at ever Tura; tn ee | ing of wuneed Commerce | the roll, The oeremoni of bot Tel nr Vest of from hw ’ i flank monument f "ne iron a anes of al cnteres ervics 5 year, will be posted or time for names of those since that time will near future. Official nit 700 names wi the fel ic Cos ‘ OF IYI ” i frog be 1 nn the on 1 T0 CLOSE HOWARD OBECTORS CAWP Dairy Farmers Released to Take Farm Jobs in State Experienced dalr rmers at conscientions objectors’ camp in Howard, Centre county, will be re. [leased to take facm jobs and camP itself will be closed by May | Rinte Kelantive Servine heafguarten | disclosed yosterdas | The men willbe assigned to Yarm iabor shortage areas In York Sus quehanna and Allegheny oo The number to be tricted information H. Raymond Mason, Pennsylvar girector of the U. 8. Emp nt Service, sald a field repres ve is determining where the objection be given job the best ne enployment rvio poriatio {ary nite: leased i= ree A ray VO will supervise tran placement County RETIC will determine farmers toward the pian wil] be aban | reaction is lalso wil] w a monthly { workers’ will be held in mtil after the war the atl LON wh UnIavOorabu wage 130 » ¢ { LHowance of Li rates a about §2.50 pax CECTOW The agriculturai labor that several hundred additional dairy farmers now in camps for con. scientious objectors will be allowed to work on dairy farms located with. nn 15 miles of camps Officials said these wirk on farms at day and return to camps each night. The same pian will be used to make general farm- ers avalleble for farm work - __- Clarence Soldier Becomes Lieutenant Edward Ralph Drapcho of Clar- ence was commissioned a second lieu- tenant in the Army upon successful i completion of the Officer Candidate { Course in | Fort Benning, Ga. Lt. Drapcho is a {son of Mr. and Mrs. Emro G. Drap- { cho of Clarence men would Will Be the apene earthquake of the Infantry School at) SARA STEVENSON BECOMES MAIR Waddle Native Is i Known Major in Army Nurses’ Corps my Nu erved in W Jor in less ot a1 In wall ¢ W I'he rari appointn 1 {ror } A wa . | y N Army Nu wal Higl » in st vic Ma) CVERsoL Was duty for six weeks curing the Jap- 1823 and served Hawaii V1 oF in the Philippines for BOVETRI ORS. . | She wae born oi Waddie, Buffalo Run Valley, and her parents, and Nrs. George i She has 1c ‘ere em Music Pupils Hold Recital at Chape large crowd attended a Cit members of which Peter Smith Dale are copes Clarissa Mosely, Margaret Fisher, Janet Noll Cynthia Scott, Lucy Ann Cham- pagne, Ann Robh, Ann Sieg. Susa: | Wagner, Virginia Mensch, Jolm J Warner, Robert Thompson. Richa Thompson, Jean Thompson, Shirle;s Martin, Philip Houser, Keith Cham pagne and William Sieg Others who played in piano am violin solos, or in duets and trio included. Keith Champagne, Virgin. Mensch, Clarissa Mos Joh Warner, Margaret Fisher, Sherr Kofman, Robert Thompson, Willian Sieg. Richard Thompson Jeas Thompson, Janet Noll, Shirley Mar. tin, Robert Dunn, Peter Smith, Cyn. {thia Scott, Prances Dale, Patric Blaney. Lacy Ann Champagne, Su isan Wagner and Ann Robb ia $5] i—— RE [RED CROSS CHAIRMAN THANKS LOYAL WORKERS $250 in War | The new lieutenant was inducted | August 31, 1942, and served at Camp | Wheeler, Ga., before going to Officer | Candidate School three months ago { He held the rank of corporal before i being commissioned. Lt. Drapcho is a graduate of the Snow Shoe High School where he was prominent as an athlete. He | has three brothers in the service and {a sister who will become a member lof the WAAC soon. The production chairman of Belle. fonte Chapter, Red Cross, takes this means of expressing her thanks to | the ladies of Zion, Snow Shoe, How - ard, Pleasant Gap. Milesburg, and { Unionville for their splendid work in making it possible to send a ship- ment of 511 articles to the National Red Crest. The shipment was not due until July 1. Another lot of articles will be HOWARD GRANGE TO HOLD BANQUET, SATURDAY NIGHT The Howard Grange will hold its annual banquet Saturday evening, April 10 at 7 o'clock, inthe 1. O. 0 F. Hall. All members of the Grange and the Juvenile Grange are urged to be present. The entertainment committee ready for shipment May 1. Anyone having girls’ dresses, or womens’ or girls’ blouses to contribute to the shipment is asked to return them as soon as possible. In addition to the shipment sent and the one scheduled for May 1. another shipment consist ing of 350 articles is to be sent to Army and Navy Hospitals in the near future, a—_ SALVATION ARMY TO has made a special effort in securs ing the following speakers for the evening: Pomona Master V. A. Au-| (man; State Deputy 1. E. Biddle; | County Juvenile Matron Mm I E | Biddle, and Pennsylvania State Mas. ter, Zenzie Bagshaw, of Hollidays. burg. ; VISIT CENTRE HALL Representatives of the Salvation Army will visit Centre Hall, Mon- day. April 12. to collect old rags, newspapers, magazines Residents ave asked to pile such items along the street in front of their homes or business places : Knapper Cabin Burned | The William G. Knapper cabin at Bleck Moshannon state park caught Card Party at Centre Hall A card party for the benefit of the {fire before noon Tuesday {rom a de Red Cross, sponsored by the Centre | Mrs. E. M. Grove, of State College, [the theft. His record revealed a |a¢ last year. Fishing will be permit. | fective flue, but was saved from to- Hall Woman's Club, will be held on Thomas, all of Bellefonte, and Mrs. | chairman of the dinner committee, previous 15-day sentence in Centre | tod from 8 & m. until whenever the tal destruction tv Philipsburg fire-| Wednesday evening, April 14 ot 8 {is arranging for several prominent {County on a {Py for the occasion. charge. § disorderly conduct | closing whistle sounds, usually about men. The cabin was purchased a o'clock, in the high school building. 28pm i short time ago from Harry Weber. Admission will be 35 cents.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers