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The Indiana Gazette from Indiana, Pennsylvania • 1

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Indiana, Pennsylvania
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n--mIi ti-itt iinnrMgiTraTTr-aerTiss in umnn www ST- WEATHER emu Mil fimt ll.5 1 tlnn Mi )h. falf continued warmer toddy, Friday, ienerally lilt, and nof much change in, temperature, It of-: fleial W6rd ot the vealhetmetr for the first day of autumn. of the merchants, who ire present lug toftM splendid offerlnRt fit jour perusal end weekend offering! COVERING THE WORLD PROM THE COMMERCI AL CENTER OF WEST CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA -3 VOLUME 34. NO 28. TWELVE PAGES IND1AMA, FEN KSYiVANIA THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1937 TWO SECTIONS TWOCENTSi.

rn iw i-. i -m -i ssssai asaw 1tU snEi MTDSlnl raws TO mm iliiionrn nv CLEAR ELEVEN Legionnaire "Forget Me Not!" JAPANESE RAIN ahaim RETURN BOARD FACES PROBLEM IN VARIATIONS Many Winners May Lose Due to Name Differences 4 I Seal OH PORT BY JOSEPH E. Associated Press GKNEVA, Sept. 23. Great CITIES SHARKEY Staff Writer CriS' Britain was understood rwiair if "-tr" i to be planning; to invoke the Washinirton uaet fftiaranterinir China territorial integrity as a conference to stop last resort to bring Japan to the Smo-Japaneae war tt- Mjch a move would have the additional advantage of bring- mg the United States into-full cooperation on measures to halt zJ tne rr abi.erii conmcc a step consmerea essential the neace.w.Eas1 efforts are to meet with success.

Geneva circles considered LiRHKue ot canons initiatives, pwr consultation under the treaty she signed in tfiJ that Japan, would scarcely refuaft a' nine States, Great Britain, and Belgium. Pago Two) 2,000 Chinese Victims of Air RaidjnCanton SHANGHAI, Sept. Although the task of counting the votes has been completed by the Official Return Board, cert ill cation of the results of the Primary election Is being held tin bar. problems arising from return of votes in different names from different districts appar ently for the same persons. The problems which may lead to court cases, the opening of ballot boxes and possible recounts for decisions were revealed today by the County Board of Elections, composed of the ounty commissioners.

Clerks, checking the return sheets the 77. districts In the county, declared there are scores of cases votes were. cast for apparently the same persons but in different pre-: sentation of the names, tome using middle Initials and others omitting them. Technical application ot the law, they said, requires that votes cast In such cases be recorded sep arately and the recipients petition Common Pleas Court to have them consolidated. The Return Board clerks cited two of the many cases where although the names were printed similarly on all ballots In the subdivisions, returns from the districts varied.

In Blacklick Township, the returns in the Republican battle for school director, with two to be nominated, chow "Albert Thompson" to have re ceived 69 votes in one district and "Albert J. Thompson" 43 votes in the other, Henry Graff a total of 70 votes in both districts and "George S. Clawson" 26 votes in one district and 'George Clawson" 50 votes In the other. Being determined purely on the face of the returns, the Return Board clerks pointed out, the nom inees would be Gruff and Thompson, with 70 and 69 votes respectively. Thus Clawson, with his vote not be- la atneiMHrlaiMl nlfh(MIh hlkt nam thousand Chinese, most of them ref u-: gees, or estimated to have bnfr killed or injured In two day's Japa-; nese aerial bombardments of Canton.

South China city. Holdt Nanking 47 In charge of the United States embassy at Nankins as the "roost lr attack In history was expected from Japanese air raiders, was J. nail Paxton. above, second secretary. Ambassador Nelson Johnson, with other officials, left vndcr governateni orders.

Paxton, a veteran in the Far East, was on the consulate staff in 1927 wben Chinese attacked foreigners. BACK TO SCHOOL FOR LOCAL MAN Orange Attends R.u a 1 Electnficatipn Course of Instruction WASHINGTON, Sept 43. It's back to school for J. juperlnT. tendent ot the.

Southwest Central Rural Electric Co-operative, Associa tion ol 4 at Rural Electrificatiom Administra lion headquarters 'here to brush up on the flne points of how to operate his 400 miles of line serving 1,432 rural co-operative customers in Arm strong, Indiana, and Cambria counties. Already under construction, the lines are financed by an REA loan of $400,000. Orange's school bell rings at 8:30 a. m. and keeps him in class until 10 p.

The courses include first aid, line repair, law, and operation of the electric refrigerators and other appliances it is expected the line will make possible for the co-op members, We want to get as well acquainted as we can with Mr. Orange and the other 23 co-op superintendents attending the course, as well as teach them all we know about giving the best service possible to their memberships," John M. Carmody, REA administrator, explained. ARE YOU GOING TO ALTOONA SEPT. 25? Any Republicans wishing to go to the meeting of the State Republican Commitee at Jaffa Temple, Altoons, baturday, Sept 3ath.

will report at Ihe Court House not later than 7:30 a. m. as the- meeting convenes at 9 a. m. (EST).

There will be room in some cars, but if you can take your car, get a load or voters, men and women, from your oyrn community or precinct Let us have a good representation from Republican Indiana County at this meeting. An Indiana banner In the temple will be the rallying center, A. H. STEWART, 'Chairman Rep. Co; Com.

Urges More if a Si 3 Thft raids, today and yesterday. weeping women, and weilmx dren searching the ruins of ocnsslyrj packed dwelling-ureas -of the" poorerj. i classes. Thousands roam the streets. and almost deranged with guieih.and terror.

The Japanese bombing of non batants throughout the nation was printed the same on b0la, d.wv board provinces ana nonnernYareuvi extended capital -iofi fiJ Stentuflfcipsifhalojiejia ar4wiOvetsubiuana3oeU7iJ bomb, wounding nine civmanitTTpCi The United States Embassy atrd its urgings that Americans evac- KJv uate to Tsingtao, Shantung port, anax thence to Manila. Germans were urged to hoist their national prominently on all their properties, Thirty Japanese bom tiers munuciVD. SCIENCE" SAID -irst Issue of Fortean Magazine Tells Grave Facts LOS ANGELES, Sept. 23. P) Ame-ia Earhart and Fred Noonan were urdered by dogmatic Tiffany Thayer charged in the first issue of the Fortean Society magazine today.

"Unless by some miracle they found land and food and fresh water they were sent to their death by the smug complacency of authority, of the schoolmen and the physicists and tne astronomers," wrota Thayer, Etec-teiary of the Society, a national group 6t scientific agnostics, including several prominent writers. Thayer contended science is ignor ant 01 me true nature ana aimensiuiis pf the earth and therefore la to blame for the tragic failure of the Earhart-Noonan "round-the-world flight. The Fortean Society was organizes In 1931 by J. David Stern, newspaper publisher, Thayer, Ben Hecht, Booth Tarkincton, Burton Rascoe, Alexan der Wollcott, writers, and others, to perpetuate the- Ideas of Charles Fort, a scientific inconoclast who suggested, among other things, the stars might not be so far away and the earth might, be "nearly" stationary if all evidence were considered. In his treatment of the Earhart- I Noonan flight, Thayer declared "the lctest and most detailed charts of the South Pacific Ocean, prepared by the U.

S. Navy, are a crazy-quilt of guess work 'He pointed out a chart of the New Gulenea-Howland Island route of Miss Earhart and her navigator shows 13 islands and reefs marked "position doubtful." 'The magnetic compass Is erratic in this district, its increasing 2 minutes said a novelist, and former Hollywood movie now New York; earth measurements of "incredible' accuracy. 'AH the observations all the as tronomers of -the world were able to make in more than 1,200 years," he said, "were insufficient to time accu rately the eclipse of the sun (June S) which almost paralleled the path of Earhart's flight "Totality lasted ten seconds longer than it 'should and an error of ten seconds means an error ot a good many miles in the width of an ocean." LEWOYNE MINISTER ARRESTED IN DRIVING Rev. John C. Glenn, aged 57, min ister of Lemoyne, Cumberland Coun ty, ifavo baa yesterday before Jus- tics of the Pence Walter H.

Jackson fur a hcRring later before a Blalrsville justice on a charge of operating hi automobile while under the influence of liquor. Rev, Glenn was arrested Tuesday night In BlairsvillD by Police Chief A. B. Wntson after his car, police said, had sides wiped twn other machines as he was attempting to pull out of parking space after leaving a Blalrs ville restaurant Police a Blalrs ville physician pronounced him under the inllfiuence of liquor. Chief Watson said he learned that Rev.

Glenn was a Christian Alllanco minister and was en route to a Pittsburgh confer ence at the time. Police said informa tion was mode against the minister before Justice of the Feaoe It, Clawson, ot Blalrsville. Democracy rapidly approaching the time when we must think of a common education for practically all youth under 2 21. Thw is a wholly new concept of secondary education." Because youths now usually must wait until they have "become of age or later before they can find productive jobs, Dr. Jlalney predicted the nme "wnen practically an youth oz high school age are going to be asking fof a secondary education at public expense." Dr.

Floyd W. Reeves, professor of education at the University of Chicago, laid strong "tocial and economic forces selecting the individual" are maklojg aduit education "socally com puiw in many cases. Tb Cjaj of sduli education, he as-3e'd4, i sUcniuation of "social illil. eracy. MLmomXc illiteracy, political 11- WyTifttlc iUitjeracy and sjnpog those who ca Kiangyin, first strong fortifications be- va-so OF JUDGEMENTS Notes -for Reorganization of Citizens Bank.

Settled Eleven local business and profes sional men were cleared of judgments today in Common Pleas Court here before Visiting Judge J. Long, of Jefferson County, after settlements had been reached on notes given by tltem fur the purchase of stock in a proposed, but never consummated, reorganization of th! Citizens National Indiana, Pa. Judgments against them had been entered by Thomas N. Robinson, for- mer cashier of the bank which, has been in the hands of a lecelver. for several years.

The cievcn business and profession al- men petitioned the court to open Judgment, contending the -notes had been 'given as payment for etcck in the reorganized bank but that the bank had not been reorganized. Some the defendants, however, had accepted stock in the old bank as security for their notes, it was said. with the cases reaoy to be present ed before a jury. District Attorney Edwin M. Clark, representing the de fendants, and Attorneys James w.

Mack, and counsel for Mr. Robinson, conferred and-' arrived at settlements through which the busi- ne. and professional men paid minor portions of the claims against mem and the costsin the cases. "AH parties concerned in these cases ere to be congratulated," Judge Long told the jurors, "fcr their fair attitude in arriving at settlements and thus saving the time of the court and jurors. Verdicts were then drawn in accordance with tha amicable settle ments and these were returned, by the jury.

7 The eleven men cleared -of judg ments by the settlements are John W. "Warner, Beryl seanor, n. w. mc-Cfinhl a. j.

stahura, Gejvge D. Lydic, Earl Gray, James C. orr. Morns Stern, T. B.

Streams, B. Dwlght Ray and J. Arthur Robinson. 80,000. GALLONS OF OIL DESTROYED SAN FRANCISCO, Sept Fed by explosions of hugs oil drums and streams of flaming liquid; a spec tacular oil Are In the industrial section defied efforts- of almost the en tire San Are department for more than Ave hours last night and early today.

Zt was the city's most disastrous blaze since the earthquake ot 1906. Thirtv-eieht of the city's 49 enainv companies fought the 'roaring flames in the Standard Oil uompany storage plant while explosions shook tho ground like a series ot eartnquaxes, before the blaze was brought under control. Blazing oil gushers and flying sparks endangered Industrial plants and business structures over wide area. Approximately 60,000 gallons of oil and a large loading station were destroyed. Company officials said dam-ate probably would not exceed MANN, MODERN NOAH, COMING FROM ASIA WASHINGTON.

Sept 23. Wl The National Geographic Society's modern Noah Dr. W. M. Mann will dock in New York Saturday with a cargo ot 2,000 beasts and birds from tropical Asia.

The expedition stan." said a soci etv announcement "has reported from its floating zoo that bringing them back alive requires more work than capturing them." Particularly perplexing passengers ere: The Sumetran Hornbill. who won't eat unless you throw his food at nim The monkeys, who sulk unless tn. chef seasons everything with onions. The latest food bulletin from the ship says the Birds of paradise da mar.d of all things boiled eggs. OFFICER GALLED IN BEDDING THEFT A.

Cravener. operator of a tour ist camp near Elderton, complained to the Pennsylvania Motor Police here today that three women touring from Chicago to New York had stolen bed clothing worth $20 from a cabin which they occupied last nignt. Policeman H. A. Stenhens answer ed the call, laid he took the women in custody but released them upon making restitution to Mr.

"Cravener and alter the litter refused to make In-tormaUop against them. SAFETY HARBISBVBG, gent, mstofist Wto Mian bis old taslfpeda) trtnsalsjfea automobile Ui a gearshift car mutt bl 4rivrt tost again, ft 0twfwtfl( of fctysau rules. Vm maw la iht interest pf 4ity, ttetto jv 4. oimsb low Chingkiang between and Nanking. Official, reports stated that 55 anese air raiders departed Shanghai in midafternoon.

They ap- parently pointed their attack toward Kiangyin. A portion of the raiders Tv 'VfJW localities on me lower xhukizc Japanese uuncaca a wiiuicmw a aerial raid on Chinese positions i-otung, dciow onciiiguai. bombers reported V.if-V Pootung's second air raid today. Stop! Look and Listen! Snre thing! Ymill buy a Forgei-Me-Not, from a pretty Miss, to "help the disabled to help each uther." Indiana County Chapter No. 40, Disabled American Veterans of the World War, a congressional -char tered organization, composed only of those who were wounded, gassed or disabled by reason of their World War military service, is conducting its annual Forget-Me-Not Day In this city Saturday, September 25.

It gives to all civic-minded citizens an opportunity to assist in a worthy program ot lurmsmng emergency relief, employment opportunities and much- needed rehabilitation to less fortunate ouddtes. It is to be remembered that about 03 per cent of the compensated, disabled veterans of the World War re ceive less than $30 per month, less than the amount of monthly service and necessitates by the relief aaminisirauon. Nineteen years aao Mart. ed the last big offensive of the World War in the Meuse-Argonne forest which engagement after the loss of many Jives led to visitory for the Allies, The nineteenth anniversary of that 'offensive will be commemorated acre Saturday. Forget-Me-Nots will be offered by young and your contribution may ne, in any.

amount HaKer is. commander of 'White ffou Endorses "it is with Measure tht I aain dorse the annual Forget-Me-Not drive conducted by the Disabled Veterans of the World War eacn year," said rresiaent franklin Roosevelt. ntl motive which actuates these drives the raising of funds for the support of the rehabilitation of your organization reflects an attitude of real helpfulness and concern for those who stand in need of assistance. Thru uie medium of these drives it is nos- sible to extend that assistance ti those who serve their country and to meir uepenaencs. It is evident from nast exnerlence that these Forget-Me-Not drives in stituted by the Disabled Veterans not only provide material aid to your disabled comrades, but they help these comrades 'to face life with courage and a spirit of optimism in the knowledge that they are being remembered.

And so this year, as tn nast years. it is my earnest hope that the Forget-Me-Not Drive will be most successful." JOHNSTOWN BAND LOSES JOHNSTOWN. Sent. 23. (Pi Johnstown's 40 and fl band won't bring noma a national cnampionship tomorrow, but there will be a celebration anyhow.

Undismayed by a ruling that Johns town's entry was ineligible for the title it won at the American Legion convention in New York, Mayor Daniel Shields said plans tor a reception and banquet remain unchanged. Commenting on the decision that the band could not receive the prize oecause was not composed or 40 and a members, tne mayor said: "In my opinion, the band still Is a champion even if the prize was taken away from them. are Johnstown products and reflect great credit to the citizens." The title will go to Rockford, 111. STATION HIKED UP TYVO FEET HARR1SBURG. Sept.

23. P) While passengers used a 188-foot long, steel-and-concrete pe destrian "bridge" in the Pennsylvania Railroad station workmen raised the massive structure two feet yesterday. Fifty-four Jacks boosted the "bridge" to make room for the over head wires of the railroad electrifv cation The job was done without even oreaiung a window. The structure connects the lobby of me Pennsylvania station with tne Reading company terminal. FLOWERS PHILADELPHIA, Sept.

23. CJ Send the girl friend flowers to whet her appetite. The bunch of posies also will aid digestion. Miss Alice Flick, of Fort Wayne, newly elected director-at-lsrge of the Florists Telegraph Delivery Association, tald today. Jananese naval authorities declared Daniel J.

Doherty of Webnrn, Mass. NEW YORK, Sept. 23. (P) The American Legion's national defense program -report, calling for the big gest navy in the world and big in creases in the standing army, was tdopted amid whoops and shouts to day at the final session of the 19th annual convention. The report recommended continu ation of the citizens military training camps and the reserve officers train ing camps, recommended a navy sec ond to none and increases in the standing army to bring its strength to 160,000 at once.

The report also recommended additional guard of 210,000 with 48 paid, armory drills a year, bigger air service and a naval auxiliary of merchant ships. Still another point in the report adopted was the recommendation that not one cubic foot of helium gas be sold to any foreign nation nor be al lowed to be exported for any reason. The committee recommended that control of helium gas be placed charge of the war department Helium gas is non-inflammable and is used In army and navy diriginii The German ship Hindenburg, which was destroyedby nre-fttxaxemirston fKUUet 1 Tlie export oi nenum tor commercial uses only was legalized recently Continued on page Two BU1RSVILLE AND INDIANA PROJECTS Three WPA projects are under way in the county. Two of them are in Blalrsville and the other in Indiana. The lairs vine projects: Sidewalk and curb construction on various streets In the First, Second and Third Wards.

The estimated cost of this project is $27,287.80 of wh.cn the sponsor. Blalrsville Borough Council, Is contributing 295.80 and the balance, $18,072.00 will be ex- nended from federal funds. The other Biairsvnie project iar the construction of a sewer on souin Spring street and Second avenue. In this section, at the present time, there is no provision for draining surface water. This will oe maae possiote ay the completion of this sewer project.

The project started in Indiana is xor street and curb construction on Oak, Fifth, Tenth and Chestnut streets, Tho streets are to be constructed of stone base, and two-course bituminous surface with combination curb and gutter. The Indiana Council is spon soring the project and will cost ap proximately $27,719.55, the sponsor furnishing $7,811.55 and federal funds 919,908.00. TECHNOLOGY OF SOFT COAL FIRES STATE COLLEGE, Sept 23. MP) Two simple rules to keep softcoal furnaces from smoking and at the same time get a maximum of heat, were laid down today by Dr. J.

A. Taylor of the Pennsylvania State Col lego. Here they are: Rake hot coals to the front of the firebox and pile fresh coal in the back. Never allow clinkers to form, or fl they form, remove them from the firebox as soon as possible. Taylor research assistant In fuel technology.

APOLLO MAN'S LEG FRACTURED Ira J. Wray, Apollo real estate dealer and treasurer of the Pennsylr vania, Ta Justin league, was reported improving today from a broken leg suffered in an accident on big larm In Klskt township. Mr, Wray. who will be 78 years old Sunday, is in his borne, 515 North Fourth street. He was helping build a barn on the township farm when plank fell on bis left leg, inflicting simple rc ture.

NOTICE Friday, Oct, 1st to to day to pay 4u4 Court? tu at face. Js added thgrgaltsr, My offu wjii be jttsb eveuutt eV of tne Japanese air corce miena in vrita unina, tne united Itfc.iv, the Netherlands; Portugal tconunuea on U.S. Awaits Reply To Protests on ShjeHing WASHINGTON, Sept. 23-W) The United States adopted a plainspoken stand in the Sino-Japanese conflict today by challenging Japan's right to bomb Chinese cities Indiscriminately. Frankly resentful also of wtjat it regarded as a Japanese- attempt to in terfere with American diplomatic activities in China, the state depart ment awaited a reply to a strongly worded protest dispatched yesterday to Tckyu after the bombing of Nan king.

The note, marking the most vigorous stand assumed by this government since the outbreak ot the undeclared war in the far, condemned any genera. DomoinE ot larecciviuon nan. Ulatlons as unwarranteti'ftnrl enntrarv Specifically, the note' expressed lo cautious diplomatic terms the Ameri- i can government's "earnest hope that Nanking be subjected' to -no more aerial raids. v. It warned Japan that the United States will expect an accounting for any damage: suffered by Americans.

Of ficials declined to speculate on what, further the state department might take if it considers the Japanese' response unsatisfactory. Whether' it might deem advisable the invocation of the Ketlogg-Briand pact and the ninerpower treaty was a question to which no official -answer was forthcoming. (The Kellog-Briand Pact, signed by most nations of the world, obligates the signatories not to resort to war as en instrument of national policy. The nine-power treaty, subscribed to by the United States, Japan, China and six other governments, guarantees the territorial and administrative in tegrity of China and the maintenance of the commercial "open door" there. Neither compact provides machinery to inflict penalties on violators.) SLAYER FAILS IN SUICIDE TRY DEDHAM, Sept 23.

WV- Oscar Bartolini, former Qulncy chef, death in the electric chair for ihe dismemberment murder ot pretty Mrs. urayce Asquith, Weymouth widow, today failed in a sudden attemol to commit -suicme in a 30-foot plunge irom a gruieo jail window. Twenty minutes after the nlunse. Bartolini regained consciousness and Dr. Ularence K.

Benson, jail nhysi cian, said his chances of recovering wares uannA TRUCKMEN TOLD TO GET PERMITS All operators ot trucks and buses. used as common carriers or under contract In the hauling of passengers nr iveigni, must obtain permits from tut? funic utility Com miss' on by Sept. 29, Corporal C. E. Loughner, of me Pennsylvania Motor Policu nouueed again today.

The officer said that the period for registration in this county has passed but that operators who have not yet seemed their permits may do so by applying at the courthouses in Brook-vi lie, Greensburg or KoUidaysburg, "THUMBS DOWN" FOR MISSJERKINS WASHINGTON, Sept. 23-W) For the first time in history the Ameri can Federation of Labor has failed to invite the Secretary of Labor to ad' dress its annual convention. Secretary Perkins, who has spoken at the last tour A. F. of L.

meetings, indicated last week she was willing to attend we one next month, mqox men regarded the dropping of hex name from the list of invited speakers as evidence of F. of L. displeasure over ner attitude in tne Federations dispute with the Coinmittee tor in- auslriaJ urganuauoo. iinue (juiiiuihbs wins vtai an earlv conclusion and make it im-ri; possible for China to continue Us ift anti-Japanese policies." They aittrfe only military establishments wouldr- be bombarded. A Japanese Embassy spokesman nounced.that a "peace preservationii in Peiping, Tientsin, Kalgan, and.V commission.

similar to tnose cruted', Paoshan, had been established at T-v' Continued on page Two Jx tricts, according to the clerks, ICS, WOUld lose the nomination despite the fact that he received a total of 76 votes under he two names. Thompson would receive a' total of 112 votes If the figures in his case were consoli dated. Then Graff would be third with 70 votes, the clerks said. In Center Township, the returns in the Demoratie battle for supervisor (Continued on Page 12) MOTOR POLICEMAN HAS "FAIR" NIGHT Pennsylvania Motor Policeman Sam uel R. Davidson, aged 25, of Indiana, was reported to have spent a "fairly good night" last night at Indiana Hos pital where net was taken Monday after suffering compound fractures of the leg in motorcycle accident.

The condition of the officer was re. ported "unchanged." He was injured when his cycle struck the rear of si automobile which he was following, because of traffic In the opposite di rection, ai he pursued a traffic law breaker. Officers said the crash oc curred as the automobile made sharp left turn of which the policeman was not aware. The motorist said be had given the proper signal. TRAFFIC DEATH TOLL NOW 1,844 Figure! received by the Revenue Department today: Killed 10 Injured 38 Killed J.844 Injured 41.919 Autumn She Slipped In At 6:13 The moon shines through the cobwebs on shriveling corn stalks.

1 Everybody's sniflliiig. The tang in the air carfies the cent ot purning JOgB. York has had. its first frost; Kune reported snow. Well, why not? That we autumn that slipped In this morning.

So there) can be i.o argument, the Weather Bureau announced that summer passed from the Pennsylvania scene et exactly a. Eastern Standard Time. That means Bauer kraut is in season. Buckwheat cakes and sau sage and scrapple will replace the summer's greens and fruits on the table. Farmhousf shelves are lined with preserves for pies and good ies, enough to last until long alter Christinas.

The next few weeks will bring the World Series, "crucial" loot-ball games, extra blankets, pumpkin pie, sneezing, the first high, school debates, "weenie" fnd iurna.ee troubles. It was a great summer. Iter. chants resort they had gtod business, summer resorts and parks ted unusually large attend' Health Experts Relieved KARRISBUHG, Sept 2 -VPh A The trailer tourist is pulling up, J'sf stakes at hi, roadside camp heading homeward or toward warmer climates and state health -J? 'jsjfW authorities today heaved a lective sigh of relief. thesBfc-Rti regulate sanitation at these, at In Schools of State Educatori Advised to Throw Acm Authority Out of nunp, Mia 1,1 i.uvci ri'j'-v ehiet ot the division of restaurant hygiene who could inspect the camps it the had eating a lishments, "If the trailers park within municipality's borders they caa be hradled by local but the state must provide any i.fj the Closroom Too Much Domination Everywhere, Sttyi Speaker supervision xor mgnways vs- ly Many of the tourist camps hat for sleeping quarters.

If there. were tourist cabins or other ec.iKt; HARR1SBURG, Sept -Pennsylvania educators were urged today to throw excess authority- out of the classroom and bring in a little mor, democracy. Dr. Alonsa f. Myers, professor of education at New York University, in a prepared speech told schoolmen attending final cessions of the State E-ucatlon Congress that "Our schools a operate against democracy rather than for It." "Our' teachers are dominated by superintendents, principals and supervisors," he said.

"The children are dominated by the teachers. "Ptett vidaie ot the authoritatian naive of uu asbaels is found in the almttit Ifivitlj faUince unan the text-bok TT to -W Ifc Homer P. Kein- ey, Wto jtiiii4 si president of WMWU Viwiviiix. twa jut' 10 tabiished sleeping accommoMn, Uons outside ot the trailem them. selves, the sites could be unaer the scrutiny oi toe of environment hygiene, headed -by John N.

Garner, sewer tary engineer. .11 th ivn Fennsylvania trailers on Uaf roads, but some are cnmmerctaX -0 The possibtUty ot taias law by next summer ew tti mute, however. Tnjs ifHUsnJjg would not be a major laws ta. b. ixwluded in the Gyverwj.

ali'. zoi' special session eas early neat ywfA tfrr-regular sesuoo 4k UBl Ifflkg'- swim wk H9 If mm.

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Years Available:
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