——_" The Most Widely Read Newspaper In Centre County Jesse | ADLER Looks at the NEWS HEADLINE in Tribune: Yeah, a ‘Just Peace’ of anything they can lay their hands on! THE Youngstown Times, via Digest, reports: “Corporal Isadore Bradlyn spent the weekend with his wife Selma, He was awarded the good-conduet medal.” Wii: polson- oak clusters? JUST about as many and Canadian girls have married Australian guys as vice-versa, The other fellow's lass Is always greens er! FROM Skine: American Skolsk} Holly - wood column “Greta Garbo has been huddling with banking inter- ests to form an “Independent” com- pans Well, she always been, hasn't she? THE “Smiling Irishman” of radio- commercial fame just won a case forbidding a former employe from trading under the name of “The Happy Irishman.” They'll probably wind up as friends and go In busi- ness together as “The Fighting Irishmen.” THE LITIGATION between a mer Mis. Eug O'Neill and author has been going on so long | practically as drawn-out an Neill pla I READ ¢ Santa Sic have for! SPORTS Headline Voted Flops of Year what Winchell been along? A NEW YORK cop looked piciously at clothing store dow when he three dummic the nude while "ie fourth was com- pletely dressed. Upon investigation he discovered the fourth was a bur- glar, arrested him and now all fou dummies are under glass bar MISTLETOE sales have drop throughout the country. Must be i cause most of the boys fiaven't time to ask “Mav 1 k u? COLUMNIST Leonard yon became { a baby third European began. So hi are calling “The Henry Kaiser of colignnist JOEY ADAMS’ ambition marry a rich too to let “ier husband work! A JUDGE in Vancouver, dered the husband of a wife to spank her. That's a way to leave an impression MAGISTRATE Diserio fined a f dealer Manhattan $15 fo stituting a flounder for a lemon sole after the evidence was Since the latter was three days old, despite justice do you mind if we suggest the evidence stinks NEWEST ingenious devige, pers fected by the army, permits a mov- ing plane to pick up a walking man or woman, Great future for the Wolves Post-War World THE reports England has decided can do just as much work Trouble | I tri prove it PHOTOGRAPH: Po has ene ’ oe » ocen a win an m or 1SS the father o nee 1 the friends girl who's pre B.C drunken pieasant n n of the Owl woman a a ’ i to an man ones ! ney er 5 30" x ol German inderground and complait Which is unlike some | been living years but paying tie privilege lub > Monument Soldier On Duty in France Cpl. Harry W. Levi and Mrs, George Levi of was sent overseas in December A letter received by hi tated that as somewhere France Cpl. Levi enlisted in t August 1940, and was : Carlisle Barracks from the his enlistment til June that time he ent ! Gruber, Okla became member of the 42nd Rainbow Div- Isilon, being in the Medical Detach- ment par HYi e about ericans ground for lous sums joying vy ho've mnder- r fabu- en f | for ’ ( m of Mr Monument 1944 Jarents in in ne w | sta un wa where Qe 1 i fore enlisting he wa by the Harbison-Walker les Co. at Monument EE money employed Reflractor- Making life 5 often Llu of Youthful Nazi Soldiers “Hitler, Hirohito and Mussolini See Victory | At Hand As Well As a ‘Just Peace'” the | ub- submitted | A Visitor In Seven Thousand Homes Each Week | SECOND | SECTION dhe Centre Democ NEWS, FEATURES | VOLUME 68. BELLEFONTE, PA., THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1945. NUMEER 2. Four Persons Are Injured In Three-Truck Collision At Foot Blair Mountain $32,000 Damage Results When Heavily Load- ed Vehicles Crash at Base of Short Mountain at Road Intersection A three-truck collision at the foot of Short Mountain, Blair county, near the intersection of the William Penn highway and the road leading into Willlamsburg at 8 a. m. Friday, caused serious injury to the three drivers of the vehicles and a sallor passenger and did upwards of $32.- 000 damage. The injured were | Arthur 8. Taylor, 41. of Altoona, driver of a Coca Cola truck, who suffered abdominal, chest, shoulder and head injuries Ernest Speicher, 41, of R. D. Johnstown, driver of an American Stores company truck, who suffered a fractured right leg, possible shoul- der and back injuries Lamarr Orwick,, 28, of Dallastown, driver a tractor-trailer owned the Trucking company York uffered possible back jurie an injury to his left of be Wagner who und Of i lc R. DD frac- had James E. Wolfe, Punxsutawney, compound ture of the left leg. having three separate bones broken, numerous lacerations of {1 He erated by Speicher I'me Coco Cola truck driven by Noted Clothing Official Dies Vice President Hickey-Free- man Co. Was Native of Bellefonte Seaman ) ’ . idle the Mr a2 member | genheim | { G e Bellefon Oi ol ri GO families who = at | time prominently identified with the | bu iness interests of the town. went to New York when still a young man obtained employment the mens clothing Industry. Later fe Decame a partner In the M. & W. Naumberg firm and afterward Was vice president of the Stein- Bloch Company, resigning in 1917 to join Hickey-Freeman in the same { and al HTH fs ne He f ¥ ert one and Capacity 0 Lo bec of It a meme } Doarad Gauge of O he orihein Bette met r wa among manuf up of widely known in i turers taller Ww ] re Belle yrge Pra i Deal William and Mr J P Of widow ter, Mi Edwin K He leaves a e. a daugt Cage Frougi ‘dk 1 Williamsport Classes To Open for Census Enumerators' classes enumeralors will make the annual Cen- fag is, will be held the AAA Bellefonte Trust Building January 16 17 and 18, it was announced yester- dat Te cla will begin dally. There are an enumerators for 5 precincts Falning oon county i for who tre m cen mm Ou in ¢ Company on eH aL 9 average of three each the coun- m RB. 3 of - Education a perpetual proce | Are Hard-Boiled Babies If anyone doubts that Hitler has saddled his country and the world with a generation of Dead End Kids, he should have been with a squad of Yank soldiers In the Aachen area the other day, reports a correspondent In The American Weekly The Americans had driven out the Nazi rear guard, but « found themselves being shot at by a nest of snipers. Yard by They got within 50 yards of the hideout and were ready to blast at turned & blond, stocky lad, acy. They had found the arms In a ditch after the retreat of the regular Nazi troops With the help of an interpreter the men who flushed the youngsters found out that they were proud members of the Hitler Youth Move- | ’ ment and that they would like no- thing better than to die for their and | was a passenger in the truck op- | | Hel ini : Altoona man w struck twice, once by the tractor and again the traller and pushed off the road into a guard un by rail Planning for 1945 1 (WE HAD BETTER GET THA LOWER. FORTY READY.THE § POYSs MAY BE BACK § FROM OVERSEAS | Orwick, driver of the tractor-trail- | Hy er aid hy wtkes would not re lease and when he reached the foot of the mountain the machine skid | ded into the intersection. After hitting the Coco Cola truck, the tractor-trailer plowed into the American Stores company which was heavily loaded, and it was difficult later to separate them. The driver and his companion, the sall- or, were jammed back in the cab from which the driver fell after the crash. State police officers, the Carberry wrecker emploves and employes from the Willlamsburg plant of the Penn- sylvania Edison company worked for several hours to extricate sallor from the cab. The truck cab {had to be broken open and It was impossible to use acetylene torches because of the gas scattered the highway The damage was approximately estimated by state police officers at upwards of $32.000. The truck and tractor trailer, which were late mod- els, were completely demolished, and are valued at something | $28,000 and $35.000 and the damage the Coca Cola company truck was estimated at from $800 to $1000 The first person at the scene of the crash was Donald E. Harf of Altoona, who was driving a Nation- Grain Yeast company truck The trucks had already crashed and Har! approached, the driver American Stores company truck fell from the cab. Har! plac- ed Speicher in his truck, then got Taylor and started with the two men for Altoona. Mr. Harf met American Legion way. He flagged the to 1 “i Aas of the the Hollidaysburg ambulance on the it down, transfer over between | truck | Wills Dog $20,000, | Snyder County Son Gets Nothing Girl Is Suicide Fox Terrier to Get Entire Es- OPA Employee Found Dead in tate if Will Is Admitted Gas Filled Apart- to Probate ment HATO All est £20000 red the two men to it, then return-| ed the accident Orwick was removed from the wreckage and placed in the ambu- lance with the other two and they were taken to the Mercy hospital by C. E. Liebegott, driver of the am- | bulance to : the state police sna S——————— Find Aged Man | hospital by Dead in Cabin Victim of Heart Attack Had Probably Been Dead for 10 Days Heese wrone about man Wednesday top of 70 wa night the mountain In we opinjon of the man had probably been dead since December 24. when was last seen; He had died of a t attack and hemorrhages victim found back wrapped in bed clothing and two suils of undsrwear. a and hose. His body was per- it having been Gea cabin Dear the + N coroner hwood the he LeAr a of ir } fet [3 $4 fectly preserved i frozen There { head wh Vise bunk d about the iffered " small gasi the appeared to fiave been en he rolled from his struck the floor Blood floor showed that Qie had hemorrage efore he a on © wh ni died 80 Known urviving relatives ’ iar a there are D rs —— "Receives Word From ‘Uncle Absent 33 Years Shortly before Christmas Mrs Waller Reichert, of Burnside street | Bellefonte, received a letter from ther uncle, 8. H. Orifith, a native of Axemann, who left here 33 years ago and from whom she had not had any word since. Mr. Griffith asked about a num- ber of persons he khew when he lived fiere, many of them now de- ceased, and also asked for other {news of the town and its residents sm — SNYDER NAMED HEAD OF ALPHA FIREMEN J. Cash Snyder was elected pres. ident of the Alpha Pire Company in State College for 1048 al the ane J The sailor was taken to the Mercy | Fuehrer while shooting it out with |,ual ors ’ k ganization meeting last week What they called “the English and | Other officets named include Hor American swine fold Bhirk. vice president: Bruce Cocky and unpleasant as the | Homan. financial secretary ry Heinle kids were, the Yanks didn't | markle treasurer, Robart Jame rough them up. They did have to Albert Kerstetter fire (put them somewhere under guard | ier: Eugene Lee, first assistant 80 that they couldn't get their hands chief; R. K. Dippery, second assist [S08 hilf Thats ph . 4d Smmibition |ant; Joseph Neff, third assistant; tackes. bang Donald Jones, first ald chief; and | When they tossed ten-year-old | Grete Ewine. to LeRoy Winard and "Hubert a GI overcoat to cover his | © ing. trusts. | shivering body, the little Nazi threw Re . i {It Into the face of an American sol- | {dier, clicked his heels smartly and | Claude G. Alkens was re-elecied (helled Hitler with a snappy Nasi | president of the First National Bank salute, : | secretary. Morit ear Frees - Applications for Crop Loans Are Accepted ' is Farmers Conservation Report Due Feb. 15: All farmers enrolled the 144 Agricultural Conservation Program who have complied with such oon servation practices constructing diversion ditches t ALE $i E POE Ler i! SLEIpCTOPIRNg in 0 Pointing the desirability purchasing fertilizer and other sup- plies for 145 crops well in advance the planting season, Fleld Super visor N. Archer Ogden of the Emer- gency Crop ind Feed Loan Office Clearfield, announced that he is now acoepling applications for 1945 crop loans “The War Pood Administr rging the early purciia age farms fertilizer crop production.” Fi cher Ogden sald. "Due labor transportation iimited storage fa- farm. considerable quantities of fertilizer must be pur- chased and delivered to {armers over A six months’ period rather than the usual sixty days’ period In order that farme: tion may cooperate and purchase fertilizer, seed and other sup- this time the Emergency and Feed Loan OfMce pre. io make loans yp to $400 to farmers, either landowners tenants who are eligible” he con- y | tinued Advances hese loans {11 be made as the money is need- ed” Crop loans are Uy a Hen on the crops to be produced anc Feed Loans by chatiel mortgage on { the livestock to be fed The interest rate is 4 per cent per year. Farmers who wish to apply may communi- cale with Field Supervisor N. Archer Ogden, at Box 750, Clearfieki, Pa who will arrange to accept their ap- y ne of tal and on unsequer : es nishing cone » 4) wn log - on their 1 erosion will have to thelr AAA February 15 in order payment under the! Cos ation Pro- 10 control ero Was own land anda m, neighbord report office to qualify 11944 Agri gram Report na io such practices belore f y £ ’ om of fo ai er wr S111 "W viso ww ih eld N. J nort of y <Jiffcuities cilities off 4 age in the Iver Crop compliance ! { winter o ) Lu of : contr winter ow cr and ar age and weight Crops must same time erosion on Te) of harvested acres of legume hay seed be submitted at the report d ALN0O : in 0 Ww he neces- Since it has beer amount impossible f money make pavments Is now necessary to submit State Office actual perform- figures promptly after Pebru- All community commitiee- therefore urged make farm nservatic earliest possible " » timate Lhe thelr plies “. Crop Sar to Lhe for 19044 to N i+ at he i ance Ary men are reports practice moment I pared T re or 2 to g on y of r these t at the 1 Brat MCU HIav ‘ " 4H 4 reason OMImuUniL committeemen are not aoe to visit these farmers they should be con- tacted by mall or telephone for ti completion of the report. The actual thecking of compliance can then be done when visitations are made to secure enlistment of ‘armers an fy! in |St of Family of Five ory of Peter Hauntz And His Magical Touch With a Stradivarius ‘Clinton County Reader Relates Interesting Incident in the Colorful Career of Nittany Valley Entertainer By HENKY W, SHOEMAKER Altoo (4) linton re H Haunt J an th chHool hie in Kolb*'s Gap Chri " 4 } Christing na ITH Alter teacher <1 wonder r Valles Creek OTe ing down, | nalike creatures " Yew 100 the per ou The teacher and {landed 0c room w beautiful na Tribune ints reacer af announced ths wi herry R sof Littl In mothers m e ent i and more com- sim mac whose children ! : tail i= LRG rom formance the pills had gar- 1 ground or pu in trailing pine, sprigs of spruce from bog on the mountein 0p | nnd all Lose Home by Fire Mother Discovers Blaze on Return F rom Neigh- bor's House ¢ member iman family Hill near homeless Friday Eshe ant fire vs uict their home I's ust a short ] when in ana va in wo Were shelman ome home were other Mr. E ident ago ov l Philipsburg firemen Ge alarm but nothing vould be done the home which 5 . ) wp compictely Eshelman ’ tim telephone call from 3 flames chiool at Robertodale ar eft her home 10 make a neighbor's reiurmed Der Two children time from home Killed In an sce une time naa ¢ before -™e 3 the and AWay 8 responaesd to was then a raging inferno Cause of and no atitemt yet to estimate Ginnick, chief he fire of undetermu Deen mace loss, Thomas Pailipsburg i Las we the hy ie Fire Department, reported The Eshelman on Pleasant the Bix Mile Hill school located to the BaX home was road aext IL vas a the 1945 war food and conservation | .i..asions, or Mark WwW. Williams, 25 room frame home which had been programs East High street. Bellefonte Scrap Drive Here sided with brick shingles Native of Kylertown Fifty Scholarships Declared Success’ Dies After Accident For Men and Women Chamber of Commerce officials result of yesterday reported that [townwide scrap drive was quite suc | sember 13. Mrs. Elva D. Rapp, wid- cessful (ow of Alfred C. Rapp, of Kylertown, Scrap gathered by borough trucks (died Sunday afternoon, December during the day totaled 1 ton of pro- 31 cessed tin cans, 15850 pounds of The deceased. a daughter of James scrap paper, and 220 pounds of rags. mM and Dianna Lillian Dillen, was The Universal Match Company born at Kylertown on December 13. last week shipped 60.000 pounds of 1871. Practically all her life was scrap paper, which wili be credited spent in Kylertown and vieinity v Surviving are three daughters and December's scrap paper quota as , sister, Mrs. Efffe Baumgsndner, of been set at 12% pounds per person chester Hill ~a goal which is well within sight |# © 'of G. spokesman aid WOMAN DIES OF BURNS To Feed Wild Life by Air A axon. sTovE | Ald for snow-bound wild turkeys| Mrs. Kate Myers 87, of Lake | whose natural food supply has been | sealed up by heavy snows may come via the airlanes. The DuBols Sports- {men’s Association, taking its cut | from military methods of supplying { Isolated units, Gas contacted avia- tors to work out a way of dropping food from planes, If that does not As the complica tons to Bellefonte's total i ; iF aE g I 38 | i : £ i f ] : HH i * £ The of is begining of & ‘new You " i —— dnstitute A’ Digi school 0 Fifty scholarships in Friday's arising from a fall suffered on De- | Drafting, approximating $375, {men and women, are now being of-| fered by the Williamsport Technical | Mechanical education or exper. the | od for | dst fields is required of applicants, who should apply immediately to Ken- peth E. Carl, Drafting Department Head, wWilllamaport Technical Insti- tute, Williamsport, Pa The 13-week course will give in- tensive tra in tie most modern phases of the fing art and well. paying positions in Pennsylvania, with excellent post-war opportuni. lence in the mechanical or drafting | | the many kind { which Fishing C Thu nportag Hauntz Oia ficdi $ ni otraad wi ing it erfine Continued on page Four cans gy Rural Extension Service To Meet [Co-Operative Extension Lead- ers to Meet Here Fri- day, Jan. 1 9 t held Bellefonte TT | al D 12. The meeting fron nd from 1:3 In the Edith Mortlor tension special i Wil] give an illustrated tal war remodeling of farm homes. In the afternoon dervort, poultry extension specialist Hiro State College, will give an | {lustrated talk on new ideas for {management [that wil] save profit : In umm labor program her session a 0 four Taras of iabor and increase 4 BCI 1 ari ( 0 meron vy) ot a Of } past sel 12 year « cuction | ension ¢ i Service is of veteran nl Caairman of 4 cuss this work Officers will ning Year the | acted “Centre county in the agricultural the county are urged suggests R. C lane {tension agent area, 1 pass | formation along to intere thors who you think might jerted in attending. We | very much your cooperation in hel (ing to make this meeting a sux - organizations peopie or As wv a EA0eT hope il t ted 1 Tye 4 i ir if Ammounce Engagement Mr. and Mi: A Sid: New York Cit) engagement of their daugl Barbara Chesney Morton {LL James Robert Morrow | Ar Foroes Mr | Morrow, formerly of | Btate College. and Dr of Seattle, Wash 4 _ Of al i y tor son of | 1 ! John Van.|@iary Duis ‘filled fs iw {flames our poultry focks MAKING Random [tems ~ HISTORY Onis { of reacer QUIZ; + » neg Vashingtion tomac Riv f reyes . iron an Ww 4% sie ki POPCORN ' TOO BAD 'e i Het wu re 10 Copa ite 1 ore 5 » “yer thelr ow Britis discovered t fire Kas the compartment porrd YOUR Wi 14.2 II, when make out oy you Cc You over Pla * entre County Librars as bY mon REJCICING: Taere is muct ) tre county family this reported missing in turned 3 ) ot} day and was med like one risen from aeac censorship has been placed in authorities upon the of his absence 80 this story landed | mn in sketchy form detall In the regular action una il welo Ago uy hh wie ¢ ¢ ax ne All! SPRING! It has long been this idered opinion that people climate spend a their life paming the to keep themselves warm in iter time. They must buy Continued on page Bix ner win ive arge wherewith he Odi is Unionville Soldier Tells of Deer Hunting In India (Continued) Twelfth Day: This day, we decided to drive some small Islands in » river bed about a mile irom our camp. We had noticed that the deer iwere hanging around on these le lands fairly late in the day and that when chased Off they generally crossed the river bed In the same place. These islands had a dense growth and a large number of fruit bearing shrubs that the deer were being as large as the other | 52 1 pt 8 : Bg i ; : | 1 it § 4H 3% gi i : i i : ; : : : Es i: i i : z sk it ip * drivers didn't give us time ing to beat our stand on the frst drive) Any one ed and saw them and then the works really began. They fired until the deer got out of their sight in » gully and then Joe and I opened up. We saw the larger deer go down and then we fired the remainder of our shots at the other deer which became confused and headed back towards Bass and Grant, final disappearing from our vision, We jater found out that the deer ran back to sbout twenty yards of Grant where he stopped. Grant then shot are feeding on. There was a series of [it through the head (the only bullet three Islands with the first island hole in i) two alright combined. We decided to make two about thirty ghots altogetver It was drives out of them. Bass and Grant just another one of those cases of Well, we had two deer but we must have shot gang shooting where everyone is try. other guy Ww
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers