November 25, 1943. i THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA. I —— | cart ‘v ont the family tradition of at! least one minister in every gener-) ation of this long established family The U. 8. Naval Training Station at Sampson, N. Y. is second in size only to the Naval Training Station at Great Lakes IH. There are 30 chaplains assigned bere under the of Divinity deg ee from leadership of Chaplain Edel, Cap g'cal Seminary in Lancast tain, USN. The religious activities May 11. 1943 \ rdained a ®t Sampson have a scope and vital- minister of the Eva Heal and Rew | Wty that are nationally recognized formed chu On Worldwi Communion Sunday, fa almost Oct. 3, 1943, of the mammoth the time drill halls Lation, 8000 of- country ig men shared with other all over the world in par- least one Christin last two if taking of the Lord's Supper, It is were the R believed that this 1s largest the Rev Z Protestant Communion service of Ls known min kind ever held. Chaplain Edel, senior in bygone haplain on the station, anned the ce. Over 40 chaplains and participated in Com- Holy County Mah is Naval Chaplain Continued from page his Bachelor of Art Catawba College Sali and in. 1843 received hi one) degree Ire bury. Bachelor I'heolo- r, Pa On nm th { de in one on the ficer § 0 fet niu the ymen tration of the s a keen im and relgious ac- 1 of the Navy with contact report the t Pa- men made to 1350 men be we the fenomina- Protestant. pals min- Chaplain AUXILIARY 10 SERVICE MEN JUNIOR VFW SEND BOXES “Wetory RITE KIT 1 95 Victory Rite Kit is a favorite of Ser. vicemen on land, at home and Combines a plus a marvelously c desk top. Besides ti Kit mcludes 75 mans } 60 envelopes, 24 Buddy P folder, name and address Goder calendar, hand blotter, utility compart ment with 3 pencils. Available Insignia for all bran Service. Ready -to-mail n BOB DAVIS BELLEFONTE LEWISTOWN Begins Cadet Training Howard M. Watson ester Fiald, my Air For to begin 4 He Howare has Miss, a s Train- Liming , the Wats Command viat adet j¢ i i MLS Rn with hes of Read the Clasdfiag ads | J. M. KEICHLINE INSURANCE AGENCY One of the Oldest Agencies in Centre County EDW. L. KEICHLINE Temple Court Phone 2521 Next Year Will Be Different IN EXT year wilt: Not only the weather, and markets, ntry. Our jobs will be different, too. 3 do those jobs differently —and we ing goods and services, have been making And we've been keeping them! For in keep on finding better ways of doing rd! And if enough peog do that, the s down, ers keep on trying new seed, and fertilizers, and 1m and strains of stock, That's the season industry carries on rescarch— another name for a constant search for new knowledge and better ways to do things Because most of us have been doing this for years, America has had the highest standard of living in the world. And it's , too, that American production is doing so much today to bring “ribo ¥e After the war, Aner =a is going to need more than ever men with the courage antl enterprise to invest time, money, and bard work in the search for better things. And if America’s producers undesstand each other, and each other's problems, we'll be able to do these ail. important jobs better, General Electric Co., Schenectady, N.Y 4 He RChnes, Ie feasor Hear the General Electric radio programs: “The G-E All-girl Orchestra” Sunday 10 pom. EWT, NBC—"The World Today news, every weekday 6:45 p.m. EWT, CBS o BUY WAR BONDS GENERAL @ ELECTRIC Harold C. Pletcher, HA. 2c. brothers, shown Mr Ars Howard, Cpl and Cpl Nathaniel W. Pletcher the ‘Desert w at Forte Bennitg, Gas Nathaniel nuked on the fanin before enter- BROTHERS ARE SERVING OVERSEAS Jie. Marvin Fanning Fann ing Bhannon, re- the Purple merit and the reoeived in been 1 ¥ Maxin of I Nas TE. Mr me time direct 18 before any word {rom Marvin, activitieg during ; received by his fame tg Mrs, Filasimmons Max Caner, of Snow that time was serving al unit in /North Af- told of courageous the part of the soldierigur- ing the Tunisian campaign. Part of the letter follows: “1 found a fellow from Marvia's outfit and who knows him well. He Is O K. The bays from his outfit seem to think g lot of him, : “They say he has plenty of Sits. They t2l] me a story that happened when the Germans knocked oul is machine gun and Marvin wenb aller them with a pistol. So, you can feel proud of him gs your broiher when he comes back.” ‘fie latest word from Marvin states he is now out of ithe hospital got out some time In August-and is serving with a Depot Guard Co. He states in his letter his leg is stiff and causes him. some disco - fort if he has to do much walking. | Marvin Fanning ds the son of Thomas Fanning. He Joined the army January 22 1941, at fhe age! of 16 and was in the 1st Bivision | under Gen. Patton, Jr. The 181 Dig | ision && well-remembered for its] famous fighting in 1917. Members of | the division wear a special decora=! J tion won by the original group which wag the first unit to land In France during World War L Pie. Marvin Fanning was station- | ed at Ft. Jay. N. Y.! Ft. Devens, Mass Ft. Bragg. N. €.; Camp Blanding, Fla.;: in Georgia, Louis jana and at Indiantown Gap. before being sent to England in June, 1942, He was a member of the first units to land in Africa last November. ra Dl Ee — —————— Promoted to Sergeant William Alexander, son of and Mrs. Pele Alexander, of Gin a cousin Shoe, who at with a hospit rica. Tt acts on w letter Put Mr, Pvl, Gaylenn Fanping Pvi. Panndng was one of { Wiree boys from Moshangon to Join He enlisted June 28, 1940 £ Artiliery at the age of Wins 5 0 Fort Pendleton. Va go Fredericksburg, Va. Fart George G. Meade pass avienn Gayienn Mi rismo ry and then Md home oK Va; Va Wo his last weckend March, he said he yon inti] j brother, Marvin, in Afriza“He was sent from Mary land some time in April 1943 to Al- rica. The latest word from Gaylenn stated Le had seep action Pvt. Gayleon Panning is son of Thomas Fanning mansions WF so inst also the With Seabees Joseph Ailioon. 28. of Howard, | ‘entered training with the Seabees. | [July 13, 1843, and is now located at {Camp Endicott. Rhode Island. He is the son. Of Mr. and Mrs Ray Al- lison, of Howard and is married to the former Bertha Wolf. Mr. Alli«| son is a graduates of Howard High! School and spent four years in the iNavy. {he was employed {Casting Corp. Eddystone, Pa. prior to entering the servige by General Steel ape OY Bome Americans are handling the Clarence, has been promoted to ger- | War for political advan geant, it was announced by his com- | manding officer, Capt. Arthur 4 Erdman, of Camp Polk, La Sgt Alexander is a member of Co. D,] 136th Tank Battalion 8th Armored | Division. AT FIRST SION OF A om w Wo ux 06 | ke fife roung--don’t know what first Bd s Qn «« t be satisfied + Yo Ask | eK this Janu Pp Shelly he Sutton i i We iu ’ d Cpl, tember n Engla Corpor m 4 na * Wo fired Add BA rom the empl - | aa {family the A a and Win SOew hier Damo Thro - Spends Leave at Home, Jack E. Zimmerman, who 40 Stabilizer Drive, Md. 8 2-¢, | just completed a 72-hour furlough at | the home of his parents, | mt re { Jack has been doing destroyer Ww. Grorge 1942 nd. In ovYed A whitecral je Liles home before ¢ Ley ¢ member of th Ei esr rr liner Kilmer, ; (0 A BOY IN SERVICE Tanks fore and war. Yau is missing you. Just “wh oud Gog, Gueen Her are surely they eal? getiir ried away sat rely Jou re Care each puppies nigh are well and | to tell thet they Wong gre prowitig so fat Wity ae oown-upe big Not jong BRO YOU Wee i arpung Jus your ge olden ad fd loved 10 Suck Ho You used 0 go ihe cutest hh funny sGnNgs yOu Used think of the UUme al the wien you @ 8 Pong and ciear. 1 hope Ee cheery BONE a bove siong. 1 pray dear son Dat youll be true $0 our Own dear od and white And hiue Now, be gure © Say YOUr prayen at night and sek the lord 10 guide you rghi Tell your sergeant Wo tuck YOu in and put Lhe covers une der your chin Care Of you, ssskit Widnes Lang » Bor orner the way that mamiia it sont Le cheering the Tell him to take good | used 0 do. If he pegiccta you snd | vou gel gick, IU be sure and tend to im pretly quick And Joust gs SOOD EE you got time write 0 mei just # Lipe With lols of Jove and a tender kiss to my goldier boy—4he boy 1 miss, YOUR MA —doretia Borger GOING AWAY Send him away with a smile re ww! hith Remember, he was glad to be home for tile day. Pont spoil (1 just as he's going Away Gh. yes, dts hard for him S00, For he aloo ls Lying to be brave and rue Eves though his heart bine After he's gone a a. day or two ull go Back fp your work like you vu to do nd he-why. hell go back to camp they think you are carefree and is sad and {And think of that short furlough he spent with you. | Parting does not always mean good- bye Other mothers send their sons, so xh Jhotilin 1? QUICK RELIEF FROM Symptoms of Distress Arising from STOMACH ULCERS bu To EXCESS ACID EreeBookTells of Home Must Help or it Will Cast You N . ow Hh. TECHIE A paren sh ple A i Bundenel theo Eat: on 1 Juels ate ton Meer v3) Widmann and Teah, Ine WHEN WINDS GET ROUGH ’ In the Mise Lottie Bellefonte Additional Survivor. obituary of Aaron W. Tres- gler of Pennsyvivania Purnace, pub- lished last week, the name of a hall brother, College frotn the of State omitted Curtis Tressier was inadvertently Yat of sxirv . ist Of Survivors, receiving NY the River Navy The cort duty training at Sampson, formerly employed by Martin Co. at Middle fore enlisting in the more, May 21, 1943 is in Howard 3 ./ since his He Cle In Md. t at Balti. has side Baltimore, He is stationed at Norfolk Enlists In Navy, Vard Ww Drive listed in the U. § 1 Oclobr Ronald nof M t ser Baltim Va “ . boot Was family Zimme Zimmerman, rman, A-8, altd dal 2 Biles for only $2. 451 C See our bie i play of Pyrex | a pre Di; J CS CLASTER'S High Street Bellefonte, ¥ DONT MISS OUR WREX WARE | SET-OF-THE-MONTH Pa. _— # Sav 1t with DE EDS ot words da IN AMERICA have a lot to be thankful for this year. This is the one waste by war. great nation that has not been laid Our boys are fighting in the jungles of the South Seas and in the villages of Italy that our own Main Streets may not become battle fields. By their sacrifices they have held the warfront thousands of miles beyond our shoreline. They deserve our deepest gratitude —a gratitude we should express in work rather than in words. Let's back up these fighting men in a very practical way. Today there is a great shortage of pulpwood. Pulp- wood has a thousand-and-one war uses—from explosives to shipping containers. And since this is a pulpwood-cutting community, we have been asked to cut an extra cord of pulpwood in honor of every local boy in service. This is a small thing to ask of us—small in comparison with what our boys are doing. One extra cord for every boy who went to war from the pulp- wood areas will be enough to meet the present shortage. + So let’s resolve to meet our quota ~and make sure that no boy dies be- i ssi cause we failed. —— EG *
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers