m— Jesse ADLER Looks at the NEWS I SEE where Herbert Hoover 1s back én the news telling us there's! going to be a food shortage Well he once warned us unless we elected him there wouldn't be a chicken in every pot HE ALSO sald "Grass would grow in the streets” Well he was right only we call 'em “Victory Gardens.” MILTON LIPPER of Beverly Hills, Cal. found his cook worried Sunday because the local cab com- pany refused to send a taxi to take her to church. He called back and sald it was an emergency. “What kind of an emergency?” he was ask- ed. “A very vital one.” he replied, “if my cook can't go to church she'll quit her job!” The cab arrived in five minutes HARRY JAMES says a distant rel ative is a guy who's glad gas ration- | vou a distant relative use this recent ing keeps AND DID scription during strike days-—John 1 the Underminers? de- coal anybody the [ewis IF YOU make a tour of the 52nd street nightclubs and see elephants on the corner—don't take the oath there's a circus tented right in the backyard of the Roxy Theatre HEY Ed Sullivan--you'll like this one from the Congressional Record Page 4161: via. Cong. McWilliams Seems the distinguished gentleman had a friend in his home town who became a grandfather and who took it upon himself to visit the OPA to obtain ration book No. 2 for the week-old infant. He was told to give the child's name and address and a| couple of weeks later the infant got | a letter from the OPA asking this| question Where were you at the time ration hook No MILTON BERLE wonders wheth- er. because milk deliveries are being made on alternate days, will cows be milked every “udder” day AS Variety might describe that Los Angeles fight between zoot-suit- ed hoodlums and service men: “Zoot Suiters Wardrobe Changed By Shoot Buiters.” ITEM in Duncan (Okla) C. F. Sikes was standing near his home when flood waters river close by swept it away house hit him, knocked him into the creek, passed over him and went down the river” And didn't even wave good-bye? ARNOLD LICTIG of New York is developing 2-horsepower automo- bile. He's attaching a shaft to his Cadillge V-18. hitching up two horses and riding without worrying about gas JERRY BLANCHARD tells about | the selectee who was brought before] n 2 draft doctor, with a visible case of the shakes. “And what” asked the doctor of the shaking character, “do you do for a living?” “1” the chap replied as he trembled like a T-mod- el Ford. “fix watches.” A NEWS item says that a boy of five has the brain of a columnist. It doesn’t mention which columnist THE $20.000.000 fortune of the late Henrietta Garrett was finally dis- posed of by the State of Pennsyl- vania 26000000 (yes twenty-six million) claimants had turned up, mostly citizens of Germany. So the State decided nobody could have that many relatives—-and kept BO for itself THE snuggest town I was ever in was so small it had the words "Come Again” painted on the back “Welcome” sign. CLEARFIELD MEN HURT IN FIGHT; ONE DIES Two Clearfield brothers were in- jured. one fatally, during which made an uncomplimentary remark regarding a girl they were escorting. Coroner E. 8. Erhard reported James Hetrick, 32, died of a frac- | and Robert | Hetrick, 26. suffered a fractured jaw. | The coroner said the fight began | in Clearfield and contifiued at Hyde | tured skull last Sunday. bridge, south of town, when the Het. ricks alighted from a bus there He | said that after the fight, the assall- | sant and others left the scene and Robert Hetrick walked to Clearfield | to summon assistance for his bro- ther A coroner's jury that Tony Parlavecchio. 27. be held for grand jury action in the death of James Hetrick. Witnesses testified at an inquest that Parlavecchio struck Hetrick after knocking down his brother Robert Hetrick, break- ing the latter's jaw —~Are you investing in War Bonds? : one | Chief of | 2 Was issued?” | paper from the | The of the, a fight | started when another man recommended | mn The Most Widely Read Newspaper In Centre County SECOND SECTION I VOLUME 62. / A Visitor In Seven Thousand Homes Each Week Zhe Contre Democrat * Rand om NEWS, FEATURES | Items State College | | | | | i Carrying State Col Wrecks at One soldier was killed, two more slightly injured and three others | escaped unhurt when a 1940 sedan they were riding in at Greenwood, Blair county, went over the bank, { turned over twice, hit a telephone and knocked it down, a few min- utes after midnight Saturday. The car then landed on its back The party of six were aviation ca- dets of the 330th army air force training division at State College and they had gone to Altoona early Saturday night for some fun High Speed Reported. Because had to be back In barracks at a. m., the driver of the car, Aviation Cadet Clarence I Platt, of Gates, N. Y.., was driving the car at a high rate of speed after leaving Altoona about 1 o'clock in the morning. State police who in- vestigated the accident said that the young driver apparently unfamil- jar with the sharp curve to the left {and the descending grade. The car going around the curve at high speed left the road as it started down the grade. The crash followed they n det Stanley Hicks, Jr. 20, Stanley Hicks, Sr. of Warren road Brimfield Mass Cadet Hicks recelv- ed a fracture at ness. He was rushed to the Altoona hospital where he died at 12:03 Sun- day Slightly Injured. Cadets Alex Theodorkas, 22 of Al- ODD AND CURIOUS HOT RECIPE The cooking expert of the Fort Sheridan Tower, has concocted this “recipe of the year: “Take one draftee, slightly green. Stir from bed at early hour. Soak in shower or tub . Press in olive drab, Mix others of his kind. Toughen with manes- vers, Grate on sergeant’s nerves Add liberal portions of baked beans and corned beef. Season with wind, rain, sun or snow, Sweeten from time to time with chocolate bars. Let smoke ocea- sionally. Bake in 110 degrees summer and let cool in below zero weather. Serves 140,000,000 people.” DIVORCES ‘RIP’ Thomas I. Bonner, of Oakland, Calif, went to bed on Sept 18, 1942, and refused to get up until Christmas, Mrs. Ruth Bonner told the divorce court. Further, she asserted, he did it on pur- pose because she had urged him to get up and return to his job, at which he ordinarily earns $78 weekly . The court held that Rip Van Winkles should not be mar- ried, granted the divorce and awarded Mrs. Bonner commun- ity property consisting of 23 rab- bits and 150 chickens. WELL QUALIFIED Judge George G. Patterson, of Blair county, is no stickler for technicalities in naturalization cases. Anyway, not when the ap- plicant can prove patriotism as Harry Andros did. Andros, a res- ident of Altoona and a native of Greece, told the judge he had five sons in the United States Army—three in North Africa and two in camps in Alabama. “That is sufficient qualification,” Judge Patterson said and the application was approved. EXAGGERATED Sgt. Donald Zelinsky, 23, of Ta- coma, Wash. crossing the Atl. | lantic last year, heard a Nazi news flash announce an Ameri- can ship had been sunk. He was mildly surprised, because it was the ship he was aboard. t i i The dead soldier was Aviation Ca- | son of | | Buranovsky, Ramey Air Cadet Killed, Two Hurt in Auto Crash In Blair County ‘Massachusetts Youth Fatally Injured as Car | \; RA Wid % lege Army Students Greenwood bion, N. Y.. and Edwin Goldwasser, 20, of the Bronx, New York, were [treated at the Altoona hospital for glsiht lacerations. They left immed. lately after treatment Other occupants of the {ll fated ‘ear but who escaped Cadets Francis CGillday, N. J Mass Ciates and Clarence I. Platt N. Y.. the driver of the car State police from the Holidaysburg barracks Coroner Chester C rock of Altoona and Capt. Murkius D. Campbell, commander of the State College aviation training corps, are continuing their investi. gation The state police said Sunday night | their investigation showed the cadets had not been hitting the high spots while in around an unfamiliar curve ————.y 5 Many Students Begin Courses Nineteen From Centre County Start 3-Week Session at Penn State the base of the | skull and never regained conscious | Among 168 students from Pennsyl. vania, 16 other states and two for- {eign countries, who began work last week at the three-week Inter-Ses- i sion of the Pennsylvania State Col- lege, were 18 from Centre county, as follows Centre County: Eugene T. McDon ald, Bellefonte, R. D. 2; Mary E Shope, Bellefonte; Ernest Wagner, Centre Hall william G., Hummel, Philipsburg, R. D; Philip W. Legal jand John E. Manner, Philipsburg. Wayne R. Bechdel, Maloise 8. Dixon, Robert T. Grazier, Pearl H. Guest, Ruth M. Harter, Chester H. Jensen, Evelyn K. Jones, Lawrence E. Me- | Knight, Eleanor L. Robinson, Loula | C. South, Harry Stump and Ruth B | Warner, State College. Mildred A Lacey. State College, R. D. Clearfield County: James H. Black well, Hose MM. Marino and Cyrvs A. Welsherger, Clearfield; Mie E. Korb, Orampian, RB. D. 1; COenevieve M { Clinton County: Dorothy B. Feit, Beech Creek. RD. 1; Emily E. Me- | Closkey, Loganton, R. D. 1. Colum- bia County: Grace H. Brandon, Ber- leick, and Letha L. Buck, Stillwater ik County: Nicholas E. Feront{ and i Mary K Schrieber Johnsonburg; Helen L. Flynn, Kersey The twn foreign students are from | Panama and Peurto Rico : — ——_ YOUR RATIONING CALENDAR | GASOLINE ‘A” hook coupons No | 5. good for three gallons each, must | last through July 21. “B” and "C" oupons cut to 2% gallons in short. ages area SUGAR--Coupon No. 13 good for § pounds through August 15. Coupons No. 15 and 18 are good through Oc- { tober 31 for 5 pounds each for home canning purposes. Housewives may apply to their local ration boards if NeCOSSary COFFEE—Stamp No. 24 is good "for one pound through June 30 FUEL O1L—Period 5 coupons valid in all zones until] September 30 SHOES Stamp No. 18 became | valid for one pair June 18 |, MEATS, ETC.—Red Stamps. J. K, 1. M, good through June 30. N be- comes valid June 20. PROCESSED FOODS--Bilue K. L, and M stampa continue good until | July y LOWER MEAT PRICES—Effec- tive June 31. meat prices at retail {will be lowered from 3 cents to 7 i cents a pound by order of the OPA, New prices for cured and pork will go into effect on July 5. | Reductions in price are smaller on | cheaper cuts and larger on the more expensive. As in the case of the roll- | Altoona and the accident | was due to the driver high speeding | H 1lby Lock Haven BELLEFONTE, PA.,, THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1943, NUMBER 24. | | | | | | | injury were: | 10, Passaic, | Rene Beaudry, 25, of Holyoke, | 23, of | Roth- | HOW PAY-AS-YOU-GO TAX WORKS The Lax bill finally passed by Congress provides for withholding of the following amounts from weekly wages and salaries beginning with the first pay oeriod that starts after July 1 WEEKLY EARNINGS But Lass Thar $10 15 20 25 an 40 50 60 70 BO #0 on 1:0 120 130 140 150 160 170 180 1890 200 er At Least $ 0 10 15 20 52 an 40 50 60 70 Nl] on 100 110 120 130 140 150 160 170 180 180 $200 or Married 1. Dep Married 2 Dep Married No. Dep Single Person M20 33.00 20 per cent of the excess over $200 plus $37 60 $35.20 £34.00 $3280 (Additional dependents would decrease the amount of tax) Theses deductions are not an additic tax. but will be applied 10 pay - | ment of the regular federal income and We tax on a current basis Parollee Held on Former Hospital Assault Charge, Head Succum i —— ‘Kenneth Leathers in Custody Mary L. Whitney Supt. Mercy; Hospital, Altoona, For Nine Years | Kenneth Leathers, aged about 32, Miss Mary L. Whitney, former 'is being held in the Lock Haven jail, | Superintendent of Mercy Hospital, awaiting the arrival of a parole of. |And resident of Altoona until last ficer from the Western Penitentiary | August when she went to Philips- at Pittsburgh to return him to that DUM. residing at the Philips Hotel, institution, alter he broke his pa- | gied Sunday morning at the Philips- {burg hospital after a brief illness For Attacking Lock Haven Woman i : Leathers was taken into custody authorities on a charge of assault and battery, sulting from an attack on Mrs, Mar- |. i) y guerite Kyler, as she was walking | foroder Ne lk {along o Lock Haven street. The man |gymoeon Methodist church In struck her in the face, she told pPo- |i nna [lice, cutting her lip and breaking | pickinson seminary, thereafter tak- a denture. She was able to furnish | (ne yp the profession of nursing and {a complete description of her assall- | nursyed the course and was gradu- ant and a search led to Leathers’ " aporehension at Renovo | During the first World War, Miss He was brought back to Lock Hav- | Whitney was chief nurse at the base en, and at a hearing was sentenced hospital at New Haven, Conn. and to serve a nine-day jail term in lieu for a period was superintendent of { Hospital for nine years Miss Whitney was the daughter of the costs imposed by an alder- the War Demonstration hospital of | man [the Rockefeller institute. Leathers admitted the charge of| She is survived by two brothers passant, saying he was too intoxi- and four sisters as follows: Briga- eated to realize what he was doing. | dier General Fred H. Whitney of Pi ithe U. 8, army, retired, now residing {in New York: Mrs, Charles H. Win- Penn State Chemist Homored | 400 of Chattanooga, Tenn; John A. | Dean Frank C. Witmore, of the] Whitney of Tucson, Ariz. Mrs. Dav- | 8chool of Chemistry and Physics atid D. Good of Osceola Mills; Mrs. ithe Pennsylvania State College, bas | John ¥. Townes of Lexington, Va. | been elected a member of the Amer- and Mrs. Harold Bedford- Atkins, of lfean Philosophical Society, oldest of | New York. | scientific honorary societies and one! Interment was made at Todd, in of the top three professional organ-| Huntingdon county. izations in this country. It was founded by Benjamin Pranklin in| 1743. Only two chemists were admit. ted to membership this year, Dean i i | pro Livestock and Barn Burn Fire late Thursday afternoon of ‘Pay-as-You-G Withholding of Wages, President Roosevelt Si Per Cent or All of Year's Income Levy. Effective July 1 | [come taxpayers were put on a pay- [As-you-go basis Friday, as President | Roosevelt signed into law legislation abating 75-t0-100 per cent of one iyear's taxes and Imposing a 20 per |eent withholding levy against wages {and salaries, effective July 1 The enacted bill provides 1. A 20 per cent withholding tax against the taxable part of wages and salaries, eflective July 1 2. Porgiveness of full year's tax for persons owing $50 or less in 1942 or 1943. whichever year income is low- er 3 A fiat $50 forgiveness for per- " [sons owing between $50 and $66.67 in the lower of the years 1042 and 1943 4. Forgiveness of 156 per cent of the {tax for persons owing more than $66.67 in the lower year Lock Haven Man Is Aviator Hero Captain Weaver Thrice Decor- ated For Bravery in Action A crash landing in [aircraft by his outfit in 10 minutes, land a dud bomb, product of Euro. | pean sabotage. are just three of the imany experiences of Capt Edwin i Rodney Weaver, Lock Haven fight. ing plane pliot, who arrived in that icity last week on a 15-day furlough {Capt Weaver is the son of Mrs. Mir- {iam Shaffer Weaver, 127% Main | street { With four German planes, two | Messerschmitts and two Junker transports—to his credit, Captain i Weaver, who & keen about flying, {just smiles when he thinks of his having been graduated from Al- bright College where he majored in {business administration. He just has {not had Ume to put that e [knowledge 10 work. training » " ed Aug 17 A lat Tulsa, Okla. Randolph Field, { Texas, Kelly Field, Texas, won his iwings, instructed a while at Kelly [ Field, was married, switched around {the country a bit and then on July 1942. was ordered to North Af- irica | Beat Back Romanel { It was then that Romme] and his Afrika Korps had things much their way. Captain Weaver was part of (the 57th Fighter Group of P-40%s iwhich worked under and with the | RAP in softening up the desert fox | : § {across the desert to the to pave the way for the march back glorious cii- {She was superintendent of Mercy TAX and conguering of North Africa | | just last month. | The Lock Haven flier and his bud- re- lof Rev. Walter R. and Eliza (Ke-|dies went first to Cypress where ex- | Auxiliary Alma Mae O'Connor, Her father was! perienced RAF fighter pilots patient. | daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence pastor of the ly set Amerigan airmen straight on| Moser, of Blossburg, who was grad- Al- | just what they would be up against, | usted last week She was graduated from then on to North Africa for the real Transport School | Captain Weaver has about 90 com- Ibat missions of an hour or more to {ated from Johns Hopkins hospital. |p. credit and while in battle re- | : ceived his from shoond lieutenant to first lieutenant and then to captain. lands in Flaming Plane His closest eall wag during an en- gagement with German Messer. schmitts, one of which got on his tail | and with 20 m. m. cannon and ma- | chine gun fire set his ship ablaze, disabled the motor and Captain Weaver was foreed to make a crash in on the desert from his base ficld America’s 44,000,000 individual In- a burning | fihter plane, downing of 78 enemy! | L o Tax Bill, = I | Nature is a queer thing Three 20 Per Cent weeks ago today we set out our tom- Becomes Law { ato plants in what passes for a Vie. gns Bill to Forgive 75 tory Garden. We watered them, hoed them, and cared for them like a long lost child. The plan's are rugged and green, but the darned things haven't grown one iota gince they were set in the ground NOTE: To John L. Lewis. When your pie. ture appeared on the screen in the theatre here Baturday night y were roundly hissed and boo-ed Our theawe-goers ordinarily demonstrative. They usually his and boos Hitler and his pal You sho proud of self IST ANNIVERSARY: J f of of ar off Plaza youu 5. Payment of all uncanceled tax by March 15, 1045, either In two equal annual instalments or in full next March 15 6. Payment of the regular June 15, 1943, Instalment as usual Togeth- er with the March 15, 1043, payment it will be shifted to apply an the first half of 1943 obligations, The with- holding levy will apply on 1943 lia- bilities in the last six months Thus, theoretically the taxpayer hasn't touched any since then Give has paid none of his 1942 tax under him ninety-nine more years and he'll {provisions of the new blll. How much pe toughest tL of the will pay if any depends on {level of his income and the opera- ition of the forgiveness features 7. A special flat $1500 exemption are not reserve 2 for 114 be Your - Carl Lancaster, for. who for pipe smoker May 1942 and Gray Bellefonte inveterate merrily was swore Years tobacco ir i over the par the job the All this dither over the morals of the WAAC gives us & pain in the neck. You'd think the WAAC was a group of teensters fresh of a strict boarding school know ledge of the big, bad world. In any group of girls you'll find good ones and bad ones, and we don any girl will go sour more quickly because she is a WAAC than if she stayed at home. In fact we believe the opposite will be the case SCHOOL BUDGET: The school budget for 1043-44 is not an encouraging bit of work. It shows estimated receipts and expen- ditures of about $163.250.00, but the joker is that slightly over $4,150 of the estimated receipts are “tempor. ary which means short that board is 0 go to the bank and borrow a little money on a note to pay some of the anticipated bills It isn't a sound way to round out a budget over a period of years sooner or later the “temporary loans” get to be a heavy milistone. But the board hopes through economies dur- NE the year to eliminate the neoes- of borrowing the $4,150 Maybe it is better to start the year a little the “short” side for it tends to curb unnecessary expenditures QUESTION: This comer doesn't know whether or not the Army is right In teaching {soldiers to really hate our enemies {Hate always impressed us os fa foolish wi {you ha hate going at i [| {for service men in addition to the regular personal exeiaptions of $624 {for a single person without depen- dents, S128 Jor a married person and $312 for each dependent. Totals are annual 8. The withholding tax is figured ito equal approximately the present {8 per cent normal tax and 13 per leent first bracket surtax plus a re- duced victory tax #. Exemptions from the withhold. ing tax: Members of the armed ser- vices, farm labor, domestic servants, casual labor, clergymen, professional men and others who receive non- {wage and non-salary income, includ- ing investment income 10. Por those exempt from the] withholding levy or whose taxes {would be only partially collected by | that means, quarterly payments will ibe required on the basis of current estimated income (Continued on pope Siz) 761 Soldiers Are ~ Training at State Current Army Specialized Training Program Now out with nr 1 believe ioans,’ the for sity on | substitute for hate, we thorough knowledge of his habits of life. of his treatment of prisoners, of his administration of captive popuntries, and of his out- look on life in general would be a more effective means of promoting the good fight, and less dangerous to our men. For the enemy's ideas of the way things should be done are sO Opposed to our ways and so abhorrent 0 us, that jt becomes clear that utter destruction of such beliefs is necessary. When that fact is established. a soldier can fight with cool and wholehearted effic- iency without having to fight, also, the turmoil] that a hate has built up in himself, Note: After reading this paragraph over we're about half convinoed if may be easier to hate, after all ISN'T IT AWFUL? Severs] local punsters were heard alt work on High street, yesterday The heat must have been at them Said one: “Well, we certainly Lam- pedusa out of that Italian island, didn't we?” Responded the other, “Yep, we knocked the Pantelleria right off them.” The thind punster, who should have been wearing a zoot suit, chimed in: “I'm afraid Sardinia won't be taken Sicily” We didn’t Continued on Pope Siz) Monday Having completed their basic mil- itary training. the men have been selected by the army for courses made available by Pennsyivania State College. They will remain in ischoal for varying periods acoord- ing previous educational back- ground Penn State's contract with the ar- my provided for the assignment of from 575 to 775 men for the stipu- lated period Additional military personnel will be sent to colleges throughout the countsry in future periods | WAAC Is Driver | A place behind the wheel of an {| Army vehicle is the job ahead for a the Motor the Second from of | WAAC Training Center Training in Maryland Roy N. Punk, of 322 E. Bishop ‘street, Bellefonte, who was recently | taken into the service, has been sent {to the Ordnance Replacement train. {ing center, at the Aberdeen Proving {Ground, Maryland, where he will | receive his basic training as an Ord. i nance soldier | -— — FARM QUESTION BOX ° ED W. MITCHELL | Whitmore and Dean 8. C the School of Chemistry at the Uni- versity of Minnesota, os | | last week destroyed the J. V. Taylor of barn which was located above the [Taylor farm home on the Camp {town road near Dushore. Consumed with the barn were much grain and Q What spray can I use on po-| Q-—How ean I control snails and tatoes after the vines are growing? [slugs in my garden? ‘Atlee 3-3-50 bordeaux spray or! A Remove all boards, stones and «20 lime-copper dust every week or rubbish under which they can hides On Life Raft 8 Days hay, considerable valuable machin- two. Add poison if bugs appear. E 2 {Then use 8 poisoned bait or bran or Veteran Worker With Lepers Dies | Word has come to America of the] Without telling her family, she | back of prices on butter. the lowering | Auhough John Bell of Emporium, | of meat prices will not directly affect |. oor assigned to a gun crew on the farm producer. Subsidies, which |» cargo ship, enlisted in the Navy filled silo also was destroyed, ia carload of fertilwer., The is Hl ery. 12 head of calves and pigs. A was 2 223 4 HH begin June 7, will be paid to anyone death at Chandag Heights, India, high in the Himalayas Mountains, of a woman who was perhaps the most noted minister to lepers in the world | ~Miss Mary Reed, 88. Born in Lowell, Ohio, Miss Reed went to India in 1884 as a mission- ary of the Methodist church. She began to preach to lepers and to gather them into a small colony. On | tained because of the prayers of her | her first furlough to America it was | hosts of friends—and she was able | hastily returned to India and wrote that she wouid probably never zee them again. She gave Ner life to lepers at colonies she developed at Chandag Heights introducing mod- ern treatment, teaching them to be- | who slaughters 4,000 pounds of meat {or more per month. | COFFEE BY MAIL: Coffee drink- {ers who order their blends by mail {may now “pay” for the purchase by come self supporting, and eventually | enclosing detached ration stamps | seeing many of them pronounced With the order rather than the en- | cured In a few years her own lep- i rosy was arrested--she always main {tire ration book, OPA has an- nounced. Formerly, consumers were required to forward their War Ra. tion Book to the retailer or whole i i 1 discovered that she herself had con- to pay two mare short visits to her saler for removal of stamps. tracted leprosy. . | Parents before their death. | TO SUBSTITUTE ‘TIRES: Farm- | ers needing farm implement or front — et - —— * Assassination Hitler Claimed Near | wheel tractor tires will be permitted ‘to purchase suitable when they are unable to find a deal- In the opinion of Emil Ludwig, cause the junkers have always been German biographer, “Hitler will be trai assassinated soon, by his own men.” with, probably hy the junkers, be - tors to their kings.” L » v “Thenss he contiiued, “the junk- | ers, the generals, will kowtow to you: for the Appearing before the House For- ang say, ‘we love the Americans, We by eign Affairs Committee, Ludwig said do not hate the jews, We don't ask “1 feel sure Hitler will be done away for colonies. Come, let us be friends again senger a slightly different gise than is called rationing certificate. en you is time to down time off. gov ———— J substitutes have a heart attack, it and take some {partly covered by insurance. Fire- only six months ago, he veteran Y pis 20 aa men were able to save the house. in experience. After several safe] crossings to Europe and Africa, his ship was torpedoed in the Atlantic. | fishing boat and landed on the Can- | number of garden plants and fruit ary Islands. Later, he was transfer. jore. red to Gibraltar. He is now at rere | During the storm. {with his mother, Mrs. Flossie Cole. North Fairview lon a 21-day furlough. an electric ligh -. Wins Decoration The Silver Star deporation has been awarded to Alden D. Habein, U. 8. Navy, husband of the former Miss Doris Bartholomew, of y, for “successful action” against the Jap- anese, including the sinking of con- siderable enemy shipping. The dec oration was made by Rear Admiral C. A. Lookwood, Jr, commander of je Paeifie Submarine Fleet at Pearl a : Pew industrialists believe that i i 5 iy i iH ie 8 i H z= : is : ole HER : Ei £ : 2 H Hi {oatmeal and arsenate of jead mois. |tened with molasses and water. The Q~~Can foods be successfully de- hydrated st home? A~~Yes Now that we are learning thelr concerns have made excessive profits, : hs — *
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers