aad, The Most Widely Read Newspaper In Centre County “* A Visitor In Seven Thousand Homes Each Week Jesse ADLER Looks at the NEWS SECOND SECTION dhe Centre Democrat c———— NEWS, FEATURES MUSSOLINI must feel like the kid VOLUME 62. who dug a hole in the yard and then | cried beesuise his mother wouldn't | let him bring it into the house! BUT the item I liked most was the | one Lenny Lyons reported about the | Little King having the rail on Il! Duce's old balcony lowered so his| face could be seen . Which wasn't | the only way the King lost face | LT. COL. Cass 8. Hough just got | a Distinguished Flying Cross for diving a plane 780 miles per hous The previous record for a fast dive was held by Wall Street in 1929 THE GOVT is urging women to do home cooking of fruits and veget-| ables. “Can All You Can and Sell] All You Can't—Eat.” A SEVEN year old lad applied for a Job at the IL. B. Evans Shoe fac- tory in Wakefield (Mass) so he could send his mother through Welding School SIX Pasadena (California) youtly bored with things staged a make- believe killing and kidnapping jusi for excitement Eight passersby swore to police they saw a man shot down and carried off by car. Whicn reminds us of the time the N.Y Police sent out the left and right profile and full face picture of a wanted criminal--and received a wire from a police chief in Iowa saying he had captured two of the men already and was tracking down | the third! FAVORITE Gag of the Week Baldhead: You ought to cut my hai: a little cheaper, there's so very little of it to cut. Barber: No siree, in youl | case we don't charge for cutting the hair, we charge for having to sea.ch for it! THEN there's the one about the little boy who told the barber to cut his hair just like his pop's—with a little round hole at the op where the head comes through! ADD to Definitions: Heredity-—if your grandfather didn’t have envy children and if your father didn’t have any children heredity means you won't have any children INCIDENTALLY, my cousin says he isn't worried about going into the gammy when they start drafting Dad; they'll undoubtedly train “Pop-guns.” ‘NOW that coffee no longer is tioned all the old panhandler gre being revived. Like the pan- Dale wh 4 or He is survived by his wife, parents coffee. “But coffee’s only 5 nickie ~ and these brothers and sisters Paul replied the soldier. “Yeh 1 know «| Walker and Fred Walker, Tyrone, admitted the moocher. “but I lke 8nd Mrs. Harry Trostle, Williams- to drink my coffee at the Loon Lake POT! House in the Adirondacks.” | A. P. DISPATCH from Stockboin:: | : “The city of Hamburg Was in ain ‘Man Who Robbed Many pérsong were as good as naked Many persons ete ds Ko Snes StOre Sentenced we're getting to the bottom of things, Mr. Hitler MARK WOODS, who's running for the Mississippi State Legislature ran | a paid add saying he thought his| ponent had better qualifications | ap——— than fie and he was going to vote for| Charles W. Hoff of Pittsburgh, For On William Cummings, a 14-year-old Castanes, Clinton county boy, is be- ing held in the Lock Haven Jall without bail, pending an examina- tion by a sanity commission after he confessed slaying a 77-year-old | neighbor with whom he had quar- reled over one dollar. The youth was formally arraigned yesterday at a hearing held in Lock Haven and was scheduled to be taken to State College today for ans examination by Dr. B. V. Moore, head of the College psychology department The Lock Haven Express gives the Former Resident of Tyrone Killed Clarence R. Walker Struck by Automobile at Bal- timore Clarence Robert Walker, former well known Tyrone young man, and employed in Baltimore for a number of years, was fatally injured when struck by an automobile in Baltj- | more Wednesday night of last week at 11 o'clock Mr. Walker, accompanied by his wife, were returning home from a moving picture and when near their home an automobile ran up over the curb and struck Mr. Walker, causing {fatal Injuries. Mrs. Walker was un- injured He was a son of Jesse Walker Mr. and Mrs 608 West Fourteenth street, Tyrone, and was barn in Ty- rone January 1. 1904. On September 15. 1942, at Baltimore, he was mar- ried to Miss Eva Morrow, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Morrow, of Tyrone ila ra- gags ———————— ; Pittsburgh Man Pleads Guilty to Robbery in Lock Haven him_ That's the first honest cam- | Who plead gulity to robbing the E paign promise I ever belleved |D. Myers feed store in Lock Haven, piri ————— where he had been employed for six M weeks, was sentenced Friday morn-| Shingletown Couple ling at a special session of Clinton |county court to serve from 8 to 20 Wedded 25 Years years in the Western Penitentiary | The theft occurred early in the Mr. and Mrs. George B. Jordan, morning of Sunday. July 25, when of Shingletown, near State College, petween $900 and $1,000 were miss- celebrated their 25th anniversary ing according to Mr. Myers, the pro- August Tth with a family mass, con- | yrietor. He could not say definitely ducted by Pather Owen M. Galla- |}, @ much was taken from the mon- gher in Our Lady of Victory Chap- |.y pag in the safe, and Hoff later eh: State Cdllege. oH ro College told police that he took less than 4 "$300. That amount in cash has been! and Sarah Rose Albert, of Wilkes-| . roy from his clothing apd his! Barre, were married by Pather Mul- | om at 317 East Main street The | boliand im 2 Domini S areE, money bag, containing only checks) union was blessed with 13 children made out to the store, wag found and two grandchildren, all of whom about 9 o'clock the morning of the, except one son, Sgt. Lee Jordan, of | theft lying along the Rinella rail- Camp Blanding, Pla. {road siding. about a block from the for the day. The couple receiv pve iy ngrtalations AG, Fite ot Has told the court, has a police bors and relatives. The children are: | record dating back to 1923, when he Sgt. Leo Jordan, Camp Blanding; Was arrested on burglary and lar- Mrs. Marie Tate, of Bellefonte: Rita, (ceny charges in Hutchison, Kans Fred, Earl, Charles, Elsie, Evelyn, Since that time he has been arrested Edward, George, Jr. Theresa, .Dav- [ten times for various offenses from | id, and Frances, all at home. {suspicion of larceny to burglary and me {larceny and has served time in vars EXPLOSION KILLS TWO {lous penal institutions in the coun-| Explosion of a can of gasoline in try. In passing sentence, Judge Hip-| @ home-made mining operation Pri- | ple remarked: “We could impose day killed two independent miners, |life imprisonment on you They were Peter Bartlinski, 29, and record like that.” In addition to the | his brother-in-law, John Shebelskie, | penitentiary term he will be required | Clinton County Youth Confesses Killing Man e Dollar Debt } ‘Aged Castanea Resident Shot by 14-Year-Old Boy While Sitting Outside His Home; Claimed Victim Owed Him Money following version of the crime Early Saturday evening, about 6 o'clock, Tl-year-old Frederick Ray- mond Buckingham went outside his home along the mountain road be- tween Cactanea and Mill Hall to sit on a bench and cool off william Cummings 14-year-old son of a neighbor, Henry Cummings, saw the aged man come outside and sit down. Without any warning or preliminary, the boy took a 410 gage shotgun and killed Mr. Buckingham because he “was mad at him." This is the story he told authorities Sun- day, District Attorney Burritt L Haag reports, after first insisting that he had accidentally killed the man while shooting mark According to Mr. Haag, young Cummings told authorities that Mr Buckingham still owed him a dol- lar for picking berries a year ago and that many disputes had arisen over the debt since then. Just be- fore the shooting, however, no con- flict had arisen. He simply saw the old man sitting on the bench, de cided to shoot him and did so. This statement was made before Mr Haag, Sheriff Grenoble, Corp. Galla- gher and Pvt. G. BR. Wagonseller of the local State police detall and Pvt. William Pink of the Montours- Sin, cov sent Wem ————— Six From County Reach Great Lakes (Continued on Page Begin Seamanship Course at Naval Training Center The number of Bellefonte area residents serving in the U. 8. Navy was Increased by six last week when that many reported to the Naval Training Station, Great Lakes, IH for recrull training They are: Arnold M. Confer, 21, husband of Mrs. Grace Confer: Jo- seph P. Boldin, 25. husband of Mrs, Helen Boldin, BR. D. 3; Kenneth H Summer, 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. B RR. Summer; Freq P. Bouchd¥k, 19, son of Mrs. Mary Bonchack, R. D3, all of Bellefonte, Melvin IL. Con- nelly. 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. George F. Connelly, Fieming: Charles L Walk. husband of Mrs. A H. Walk R. D. 1, Julian, There they will be physically hard- ened, learn the fundamentals of sea- | manship, be indoctrinated into Nav-| al customs and procedures, and take | a series of aptitude tests to deter-| mine the type of work to which they will be assigned upon completing training ! Upon graduation they will be giv- en a nine-day leave, after which they will be assigned to a Service | School for special training, or be sent directly to active duty, depend- ing upon their respective scores in the aptitude tests iss MP Countians Graduate at Penn State College President Ralph Dorn Hetzel ten- dered diplomas to 116 men and wom- | en, six of them Pennsylvanians, in the presence of faulty and: friends as the Pennsylvania State College conducted its annual Summer Ses- sion Commencement in Schwab Auditorium last week. Seven doctorate degrees, 41 mas- ter's degrees, and 68 bachelor’s de- grees were awarded, Many of the re- | cipients were elementary school tachers who attended summer ses-| sions for many years in order to qualify for their degrees. ! Doctor of Education—8tate Col-! lege: John J. Ulcker, mechanical en- | gineering; previous education B. 8. | Bachelor of Mary M. Noll, education; Arts Bellefonte: | State! iterian church, Altoona, BELLEFONTE, PA., THUR SDAY, AUGUST. 12, 1943, NUMBER 32, A “V* for Victory— EE and Vegetables peavtibn/ 7 VEGETABLE POUTON NIE Reb Kom VICTORY GARDENERS - Do VEGE TABLE ARRANGE ME Lwny beoviend - . Clinton County Boy Has Eye Cut Injured When Struck in Face By Piece of Broken Bottle Chenn Fisher, aged 7 son of Mr and Mrs. Elmer Plsher, of Westport Clinton county, is in the Willlams- port Hospital receiving treatment for serious Injuries Wo both eyes sul- fered last Thursday noon near his home while playing with some other boys The children were throwing glass bottles against stones, breaking them, when several pieces of the bro- ken glass struck the child In the face, severely cutting the lid and cheek about his left eye and cutting the carnea of the right eve, with pos. sible loss Of the entire eye The accident happened Just as Mrs. Edith Smith of Renovo, proba- tion officer for Western Clinton county, was driving along making routine calls in that vicinity in cone. nection with her job. She saw the boy holding his eves ang stumbiisg about and she took him to a Besovo iphysiclan, who made arrangements for his Immediate transferral by ambulance to the Williamsport hos. Mate nurse, gecompanied him, nis mothe pital. Miss Mary Burkhart, going to Williamsport later in the aay Tragedy Disrupts Altoona Wedding Bride's Grandmother Col lapses During Church Ceremony Tragedy and a state-wide alr raid drill interfered at noon last Friday with the wedding of Kathryn Elaine Delogier, daughter of Mr. and Mrs Dean Baird Delozier, Altoona, and Marion Mitchell Richards son of Mr and Mrs. QC. Richards, of Erie During the ceremony which was held at the Broad Avenue Presby- the bride's Mrs, Kate Delozie;, 8he was rushed to the grandmother, collapsed | Mercy Hospital in an ambulance and is reported to be In a serious condi tion The wedding was high noon and the scheduled alr rald drill (broke in upon the ceremony, caus- ing many guests to be stopped in street cars they were riding Church-Goers More Interested in Housing| Church-goers as a group are more interested in good housing than people who do not go to church reg- ularly This finding was only one of many with aM. E.. University of New Hampshire. | interesting conclusions reached by Howard R. Cottam, assistant profes sor of rural sociology at the Fenn- 28, both of Shamokin. A third min- [to pay a fine of $1 and the costs of | College, Arnold J. Currier, Jr, com- |gylvania State College, in a study he er, Bernard Shuckoskie, 26, also of prosecution. i Shamokin, was seriously injured * es ! | BOTH HANDS INJURED | Roy Weller, nine-year-old son of {Mr. and Mrs. Roy Weller, of Lewis.’ tburg, R. D. 2, received cuts on fingers ‘of both hands in the binding ma- chine at his father's farm. On three fingers of the left hand the leaders; were slashed and two fingers of the! other hand were cut. What kind of world would we have | if the white races abdicate? A AN ODD AND |. CURIOUS ESSENTIAL—AND HOW! against the knife blades. New PUC Commissioner Henry Houck, of Pottsville, form- appointed to a $10,000 post as public utility commissioner by Governor Martin. The appointment for a term ending April 1, 1953, fills a va- cency on the five-man commission caused by the expiration of the term on March 31, of Richard J. Beamish, Democrat. It is subject to confirma- tion by the state senate. Dr. Harkins Reappeointed Governor Martin last week reap- pointed Dr. Cloyd 8. Harkins, of Osceola Mills, Clearfield county, as a member of the state dental council “M-i-n-o-r W-h-i-i-0” and examining board. | er Schuylkill county judge has been | merce and finance. Bachelor of Emily E McCloskey, education; | Spring Mills, Spurgeon W. Hennigh, | agricultural education; 8tate Col- lege, Clara E. Day, medical technol- ogy; Henry A. Lasch, health and physical education. BITTEN BY COPPERHEAD Dean Proctor, 17, is in a Serious ta : : i : ministered anti-venom and numerous incisions on the stricken arm. WILLS CHURCH COAL FUND {| 8t. John's Methodist church, of Sunbury, receives a $3,000 fund buy coal in the will of Mrs, Kutz Speece, which was probate last week. Mrs. Speece ga the fund in memory of her husband Franklin K. Bpesce, Sunbury | Dealer, who died 25 years ago, {fund is to be as K. Speece Coal Pund of Bt. John conducted of housing and attitudes vania Members of religious bodies were more frequently dissatisfied with housing than were non-members, according to Professor Cottam, who also reported in his study that smaller proportions of church-goers preferred thelr present houses to others of which they had knowledge. KILLED BY LIVE WIRE for {nomical Storages” VEGETABLE (ORAG B Former Pastor's Mother Burned Dies in Hospital After Fatal Accident at Home in Hazelton A personal letter received last week by Centre county friends of Rev, G A. Frederick Oriesing, former pastor of the Aaronsburg Evangelical and Reformed charge, revealed ad death of the Rev. Mr. Griesing's mother which otcurred Sunday August Ist. in a Hamelton hospital Mrs. OGriesing died from third degree burns received the Sunday when her clothes Was empiving ashe chen range at the Hazelton Rev, Mr Was ust about rededication pleton farmed the previous caught fire as she her Kit. hohe from family in learned . it is participate In ceremony of the Tem Union Sunday school and Re- church at Rexmont news { the accident was communi cated to him. He the bed- side of his mother at once in the Hazelton hospital, leaving his part ofi the dedication program to be filled by another pastor Her death occurred just one week after the ac- - ent. The funeral “was held Wed- allernoon, August 4th to Hw went to Hing now reside at Avon, Lebanon county - Potato Growers Annual Production Conference to Be Held at Coud- ersport The annual production conference Cooperative | the Pennsylvania Potato Growers Association will be held at “Camp Potato,” Couders- port, Potter county, August 14 with OPA regulations, marketing, labor, (seed development and other subjects ‘slated for discussion Potato growers and buyers from all sections of the state will attend the conference which is expected to be ane of the most important in the history of the association due to the many problems arising from the war Stephen Westrick of Coatesville will lead a discussion on “Assemb- ling, Packaging and Marketing the ‘43 Crop.” William Stanton, OPA |official from Washington, D. C., will ‘talk on “Price Regulations and the Potato Movement.” BEd Fisher of i Coudersport will take “Efficient Eco- as his subject, and Dr. EL. Nixon of State College, agricultural counsellor of the Penn- sylvania Chain Store Council, will talk on “Beed Development, Var- ieties, Sources and Possibilities.” Dr. ‘of ment of more than 100,000 varieties of potato seedlings at “Camp Pota- to.” EL SERIOUS EYE INJURY ! Elwyn Avery. of Blossburg, is a Sclence—Loganton: {toward housing in rural Pennsyl. Datient at the Geisinger Hospital at’ Danville suffering from serious in- juries to his left eye. Avery who is employed by Bubacz and Bogaceyk, | (distributors, had gone to Shamokin for supplies and while truck a bottle exploded, striking him in the eye LARGE RATTLER KILLED George B. Archer and M. L. Arch- while picking | when Kev. Mr. Oriesing and Mrs. Gries. To Meet Aug. 18 | State College, | from their Nixon has supervised the develop-| a. It's Christmas Shopping Time for Gifts to Service Men, Women Overseas Parcels to be Sent Abroad Must Be Plainly Lobeled “Christmas Gift Parcel.” Must Be Confined to 5-Pound Weight Wipe the from your dog-day perspiration brow and think about Christmas—if you plen to send any Yule packages to soldiers overseas For now's the time 0 do your A E F. Christmas shopping The War Department has desig- September 15 tw October 15 as the period wherein Christmas parcels for overseas shipment will be accepted. During this time it hat ited the usual restrictions quiring an approved request the soldier, for malling Gift packages lor overseas must be plainly labeled "Christmas Gift Parcel Only one such packag:? will be accepted for malling by on behalf of the same person un concern to, or for, the same addres see in one week, Perishable merch andise will not be accepted for mail- made WO fraglle ar nated res from abroad Or ing and every effort will bx discourage the sending of ticles Owing Ww the great distance mall must be transported and the handling and storage it must under- go. it is absolutely necessary that ali articles be packed in metal, woode: or solid fiberboard, or strong ble faced corrugated Dberboard, strong fully telescoping cardboard BO Xe he boxes must be Morrisdale Man Injured in Crash the aou- 4 eC urely Driver Hurt When Station Wagon Upsets Between Houtzdale-Madera dele resident, was nn asl weg { Off Lhe 11 rent tu The BRoCiGens 20 o'clock tween Houtzdale oLthér car wis Nv Ueved that the from one of the which the viclim {pect to He w State pany ambulance ports that he | and Is suffering the about 6 On this Maoera dved and It is be- accident resulted spells of dizziness is sometimes sub- road ana rushed to the Philipsburg ospital In the Hope fire com- The hospital re- resting fairly well from lacerations of bead and thigh and contusions the body. He was treated by a Houtzdale physician al the scene of the accident Mr Hill was alone when the acci- dent octurted. The entire Op was sheared from the Ford station wag- on in the accident He wus headed home from work at the time of - THREE BADLY BURNED Three persons were seriously burn- ed at Bloomsburg when jars of corn, being canned in an electric oven, ex- ploded. Mrs Martin Wendel, In whose apartment the accident hap- pened, was burned about the neck, face, chest, arms and thighs, and suffered shock: Mrs. Gilbert Long was burned on the face, neck, chest and arms was lacerated at the mouth and suffered shock. Theodore Long, 23-months old, was the most | {seriously hurt, receiving second de-| gree burns of the face, neck, chest, abdomen and arms, and he also suf. fered from shock a———————— Witnesses Crash of Glider at St. Louis Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Maelhorn of daughter, Mrs. Victor Onachilla of St. Louis Mo. that she jand her husband, who have been re- (siding in that city for the past year and a half, were spectators at the | Municipal Airport last Sunday and witnessed the disastrous glider crash | {in which 10 people were killed. Ac- hive received word | {wrapped in strong paper and t with twine Futhermore, as each parcel is subject ww censorship, dela in handling may be minimized by securing the covering of a parcel so as Ww permit ready of the contents Many probably be mu wd inspection combination packages will * MP, NCIUGINE mas cellaneous tol articles, hard die The oor such oud packed, in order: BOBS ‘ PRCEagesr articles ma Kit , parcel Gamaging {tal Itself thie covering County Schools Get $117,030.89 : Auditor General Announces State's Semi-Annual Payment 3-1 isthered yu; $3610.00 iege * 7 $810.58 Ferguson $4944.21: Grege $6 825.51 < 83 983 BO Half Moon, 81.1230 i £4,300 04 Howard $2858 72 Tw $1946.08. Huston, $2.185.1 $3574.04: Mar | 929 64 1 0K Curtin, Iw Liberty Miles ue $1.50] eg. 8 LY Fh whale 48 # - DOK $848 04. Walker $4.558.33 i Checks will be received gust 15 {Walker Twp. Schools To Open September 7 The Wiaker Township schopls will convene for tl 1943-44 sessions Tuesday morning, September 7, af i# ockwk Bn m The elementary i teaching staff is expected to be the same as last year. However, by pre- {cedent of the boa these teachers have been moved to other locations than where they previously taught The high school teaching staff will | have two new members, Miss Joann | Sheasley, of Flemington, will fill the | Domestic Science position. The for. {mer teacher, Miss Marjorie Brum- | baugh, resigned to take another pos- {ition near her home town. Teacher elect Kenneth Frantz will fill the { mathematics and social science pos- ition. Mr. Frantz succeeds the for- | mer teacher, Mrs. Sara Kelley The township schools will again be directed by the Supervising prin. { cipal, Harry F. Bailey about Au- if on H Pop Still a Nickel Pop, the OPA wants it known, still is a nickel a bottle, or a dime for a big bottle. The District OPA office issued the reminder after being in- formed that some dealers, disregard. ing an order that soft drink prices must be maintained at March, 1942, levels, have raised the price to 7 and 15 cents, respectively i 234-1 0 Random [tems A | EIGHTEEN YEARS: Eighteen years ago when Mallory Knisely was recovering from g ser« ous Ulness with pneumonia st his parents’ home on Penn street, the Kulsely's next door neighbors, Mr and Mrs. Thomas Z. Miller, were re- Joicing over he birth of thelr first born, Thomas Wayne Miller Last week funeral services were held here for Mallory Knisely and for Thomas Wayne Miller, Knisely died sudden al his home In Kentucky Beaman Miller as killed Jomobilie wetit in Cal WE'RE IN A WHIRL This gelling is neck In plac ili 8h W t fornia Corner Ve 4 Way | iniimited people ng at Week) i cieaver Foy N eral otnething wo LOU minist nant ke winning One of lasek Mr. C 10 be WOOK HI Ww WI seu Ohaus man anc { Lhe min ung {eras lens OO ~ #5 for iblica~ uncer } § w OU Pp nd WAR DEFT Lie Bunday Bellefont DaCK road y CRIDera an five rove slong irk, parked Waelr car io Wn ang crawieg over a fend pil ii course That t have bees Lap Nesi- berber tine be- night. He had him iY the razor oonver- earned that of 25 iff the citizen daughter 10 ardered during when sation » of iElead 1% SMOKER But ooking Omelhing worse t fresh. bay DANEINg arouang * YMCA with a « ede In h the davilghts Keep the record clear tended as an indictment YMCA. We can’t help it if the boy is in front of the Y every time we see him smoking GROWING BETTER: in spite of var war WHYS and the horrors of the world grows better in some when used to a shart, how you'd have 10 spend fi Or on on taking pins out of places that didn’t need any pins, and that nine times out of ten you'd miss one and get scratched? Well there's a war on now and pins are scarce. 850 shirt makers are using gummed cloth to hold shirts togeth- And what an Improvement! er Ime ber YOu Duy ¥ x Vie BEST PEOPLE: Do you know that in the County Commissioners’ office in the School Board offices are lists of Bellefonte persons who have not paid their county occupation tax and who have failed to pay their school per capita tax for 19042? The lists are open to the public, In most cases both a man ang his wife are listed, and the total tax both of them owe on the two lists ranges from about 50 cents up to not more than about $12. The lists read like a Who's Who of the town. It's amaz- ing the number of supposedly solid, substantial citizens whose names ap- pear on the sheets as delinquent in their taxes. The total amount owed jon both Hsts is less than $2,000, and {we'll bet, ¥ a person wished 10 be : Continued on pape Siz) and SS ——————— {FARM QU cording to thelr statement the bal- | ESTION BOX | ED W. MITCHELL loading the! {ance of the program was cancelled | after the accident Mr. Onachilla is engaged in civil iy, » Perm Adviser General Hectric Station wer service work at the radio school in |{ Bt. louis Q—Can 3-8-7 victory fertilizer be {used as a liquid? A Use one pound to one gallon of water and keep it well agitated Put about one pint per plant as a transplanting liquid or five gallons ito 30 feet of row as a side-dressing. There will be some sediment left; spread that evenly over the land, NURSES COMMISSIONED t Two Danville nurses have been | commissioned as second lieutenants in the Army Nursing Corps and will ibe called to duty soon. Josephine | Pritchard, who has been a super- {visor at the Geisinger Memorial | Hospital, will report to the Station Hospital, Drew Field, Tampa, Fla, Aug. 26. Jean 1. Bidler, who has ree others injured when a plece | cently The Batelay ouialh of pipe they were removing from a hes in length and had a long well near Bloomsburg came in con- ging of rattles, some of which were tact with a live overhead wire car- pnooked off while the men were | making the kill, | been school nurse at Danville five | years, will report to the Station Hos- pital, Indiantown Gap, Aug. 15. Sg ————— AN UNUSUAL ACCIDENT You can do this with any com- mercial fertilizer. Q~What is wrong with an old apricot tree that blooms but never has fruit? A ~Cross-pollination is probably the answer, Another apricot of a were taken to B Hospital, loomsburg shoulder. Hospital attendants ad- gwaier Robbins, of Orangeville, did | Methodist Church, H 7.0 LINDEN WOMAN HURT i Miss Mabel Rebson of Linden, was {admitted to the Lock Haven Private Hospital for treatment of injuries suffered in an automobile accident between Lock Haven and Woolrich, {She has severe lacerations of the different variety or perhaps some peach bloom brought in at blossom. ing time may solve the problem, Set the bloom in a pall of water hung in the tree. Q-~May I have a bulletin on homemade brooders? A~Yes. Along with it is another on the care of chickens after brood- ing. Q-~Is there a cheap white paint that would cover unplaned, weath- er-beaten lumber? A ~The nearest | can come to that is to give you a formula for white- wish that is inexpensive and sticks Q—1 in having trouble raising calf. It does not geem hungry. What lean you suggest? { A-~If the calf has scours, § pint ‘of mineral oil and a 12-hour fast will ‘clean it out and get it empty and (hungry. Then start in on two light {feedings a day using boiled milk iwith a raw egg In it. Do not try {give dry feed till a calf is five or six {weeks old. Keep calves hungry all the time. | Q~What can be dose to save ree that seem to have a fungus disease? spreads diseases and does a lot of | damage. Dust or spray with bor- desux.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers