Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Bradford Evening Star and The Bradford Daily Record from Bradford, Pennsylvania • Page 2

Location:
Bradford, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

EVENING STAR AND DAILY RECORD, FRID AY EVENING, JUNE 23, 193 TWO JO. HEALTH A Thought It is better to hear the rebuke of the wise, than for a man to hear the song of. the fools. Ec-clesiastes, 7:5. EW EVENING STAR AND THE DAILY RECORD Merged and published every, evening except Sunday by The Star Publishing Company, (Incorporated) 10-16 ST.

JAMES PLACE Sun Bath Healthful, But Don't Try to Hurry That Coatj INDEPENDENCE DAY'S TOLL On the morning of July 5, unless this year differs from all previous ones, American newspapers will tell their readers al scores of fatal accidents which took place on the Independence Day holiday. A certain number of people will be killed by fireworks; more will be accidentally drowned; a very large number will die under the wheels of automobiles. Today each of those persons is alive, well and unsuspectingly of his fate. Each one knows, if he thinks about it at all, that July Fourth will bring a number of fatalities to the country; hut. not one has the slightest notion of Tan-Dr.

Fishbein Warns Exposure Should Be Gradual Should JNOt Exceed une nour Twice xiacn The Daily Record Established 1890 VOL. XLII. NO. 228. Day.

BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editcr, Journal cf the American Medical Asscciaticn, and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine When the heat cf summer spreads o'3r the nation, physicians and the hospitals begin at once to receive their quota of persons who have been harmed by contact with the hazards of life associated with summer conditions. Many times it has been emphasized in these columns that sunlight is beneficial. It aids the growtn of the bones, tends to destroy bacteria and has certain invigorating qualities. Sun baths are healthful becauro they are associated with life outdoors.

They bring about a certain amount of rest in the open air. However, there are hazards associated with sun baths which should be borne in mind. Exposure to the sun should be gradual. It is well to begin with not more, than five minutes the first day and to increase this to the point where tanning takes place, rathsr than to attempt by two or three hours in the sun on the beach, or elsewhere, to blister the skin on the first exposure, The amount of daily exposure to direct sunlight may be increased until it roaches one hcur in the morning and cne hour in the afternoon. It jhculd net, however, exceed thes3 amounts.

I It is advisable that those who are exposed to sunlight be sheltered frcm the wind and from dust which is blown by the wind. Such dusts often contain bacteria, pollens cf nlants. residue from manure and all sorts of filth. CONFESSES BANK HOLDUP Charlotte, June 23. Arrested here after a nation-wide search-, Charles A.

Hoeflinger, 49, has confessed to the holdup of the Syracuse, state bank, April 19, police said today. QUALITY NATIONAL EVENING STAR Establish td 1879 VOL. LIV. NO. 148.

P. HABGOOD President R. P. HABGOOD Editor and General Manager. GUSTINE CABLE Managing Ec-itor UKACE E.

MARtiTERS OUy Editoi FREDERICK Ft SICA Advertising Solicitor Delivered by carrier witliln the city iUaits at 10 cents per week. By mat! postpaid: Single copies .02 rbree months 125 Six months 2.50 One year 5.00 Note The use of an csterisk () after an Item indicates it to be an advertisement. News items have no tuch marks under them. "international News Sefv'ice has the exclusive right to use for republicatior In any form all news dispatches credr Ited to it of not otherwise credited in this paper. It is also exclusively entitled to use for republication al the Uxttl or undated news published bereln." TELEPHONES Local aad Long Distance Business 5513 News 4522 POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS For County Treasurer Editor, Star-Record: Pieuse announce that I am a candi date tor the nomination to the office of Countv Treasurer of McKean county, subject to the decision of the Republican voters at the primary election to be held Tuesday.

September 19, 1933. Mrs. Marion G. McCann Bradford, Jan. 3, 1933.

Editor Star-Record: Please announce that I am a can didto for thA nomination fnr Countv NO. 5 MECHANIC ST. SATURDAY SPECIALS for2Ibs- BUTTER 2lbs- 43c Fresh Churned if wisdom were conferred with this Kte "gj- would have none of it. seneca. HOW TO COPE HEAT Harrisburg, June 23.

Is it warm enough for you? If not, eat lots of meat and fat foods. Dr. Theodore B. Appel, State Secretary of Health, talking about the weather and how to cope with high temperatures, puts it this way: Drink plenty of water. Eat fruits, salads, and vegetables in preference to meat and fat foods which generate heat.

Wear light, loose, and cool clothing. Advertl.se in the Star Nestor Iverson 139 Clarance St. CONTRACTOR and BUILDER New Modern Homes For Sale We refinish old floors or put in new floors at a moderate cost. No job too big and no job too small. Dial 9430 for estimates.

MILNER 'S 83 MAIN ST. Formerly Lester Shoe Store Specialist for Fine Footwear Most Styles $2, $3.50 to $5 Bradford's Own Cut-Rate Store PARKWAY CUT-RATE 27 W. Washington St. Phone 4715 Complete line of Cosmetics, Patent Medicine, Novelties, etc. CHARLOTTE M.

WARD, Prop. TAXI! TRANSFER! Dial 3111 "The Voice of Service" TITO TAXI TRANSFER CO. REDDY REX Auto Wreckers Come down the hill where business is on the level. 35 N. Kendall Ave.

Dial 5300 For Sound Used Auto Parts VISIT THE Princess Dress Shop 119 Main St. Hooker-Fulton Bldg. For Dresses at St) J) 17 HERE YOU CAN GET When You Need It! LOANS ARRANGED QUICKLY SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENTS Personal Finance Co. 15 Kennedy St. Dial 6613 PERSONAL SPECIAL i Classified advertisements under tnii head, incluling Wanted, For Sale, For Rent, Lost, Found, are ONE CENT WORD FOR EACH INSERTION PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.

No single insertion less than 2i cents. Each figure counts as a word. No discount. FOR RENT FOR RENT One large furnished housekeeping room. 7 North Center street.

21 -4c FOR RENT Cottage and flats, reasonable. Inquire 27 Park. 20-6c 'FOR RENT Two or three furnished I rooms 'across from church at Custer City. 17-6c IFOR RENT New modern apartment. Inquire 11 Osborn street.

22-2c IFOR RENT Garage, and lot for sale. Dial 4725. 17-6c FOR RENT 7-room house in good condition, centrally located, reasonable rent. Inquire Fred Sica, 32 East jMain St. or Dial 7227.

9-6c FOR SALE I FOR SALE Good showing five 5i I gaited saddle horse; reasonable. John Seralen, Chestnut street, West Kane, Pa. 22-6c FOR SALE Small house and lot on B-P trail, at Howard Junction. Phone 2-1504. 22-2c LOST LOST Dark brindle male bull dog; license 873.

Dial 2-1333. 23-lc Auto accidents constitute a major cause of summer hazards. Drivers aro told again and again to keep their brakes, steering gear and lights in perfect condition, to change tires after they have run long encugh to wear off the tread, to drive slowly, particularly on wet streets; never to pass anyone on a hill or cn a curve, and to- make safety rather than speed their primary cbject. Unfortunately, there are vast numbers of reckless drivers, and the number cf injuries frcm this source censtantly increases. Responsibility also rests on the pedestrian.

If pedestrians will walk facing the line cf! traffic instead of with the line of traffic, and if they will wait to cress the read until it is clear cf motor cars, they will avoid many risks. Motorists must remember net to stop too suddenly and always to indicate by holding out the hands that they are to slow down cr stop. Many of th. mcst sericus accidents cccur when a motor car stops too suddenly. Finally, statistics show that more serious accidents cccur to drivers who are fatigued.

Drivers fall asleep at the wheel or else drive for so long a time that they become mentally exhausted in which circumstance their judgments as to distance and pace are disturbed. One-fifth of all accidents are due sudden inattention on the part of a driver who permits his mind to wander because c( the conversation going cn in the car, the sudden view of an illuminated advertisement or a sudden memory of some financial or domestic difficulty. The Syracuse bandit escaped with $8,400. He posed as a bank examiner, Kidnaped the cashier of the bank and then returned to the bank and held the remaining employes. 8TAR ADS BRING RESULTS SERVICE 43c Creamery Butter 25c lb.

VEAL ROAST 10c OF LAMB lb. 21c i ALLIES lb. 19c Dressed MARKET CO. AT OLD PRICES Regardless of the advance in prices we assure you of the low prices that will prevail all during the Greatest Shoe Sale of them all OPPENHEIM SIFF'S Dissolution Sale! CLOSING STOCK QUOTATIONS Furnished by A. J.

Wright Members N. Y. Stock Exchange 45 Main St. New York Curb Last Sale Cities Service 4Tx Electric Bond and Share 35'i GMf Oil of Pa 58li (HunTole Oil 85 Inter. Petroleum Niagara Hudson Power 13 Pennroad '3X Salt Creek Products, new United Light ft Power A 77s Lone Star 11 'i South Penn Col.

Gas, 5 per cent pref 115 Oil Gas I he Stock i Last Sale Anaconda 16' Am. Tel. Tel 127 'i Barnsdall 9si Bethlehem Steel 37 i Chrysler 34'i Col. Gas Electric 24 'i Consolidated Oil 14 'i Cont. Oil, Del 15'it S.

R. Dresser 9'i Dupont 76 Electric 12 General Electric 23 -H General Motors 28 i Mid-Continent Pete 13 '4 N. Y. Central 39'i Ohio Oil 15 Packard 5 Pennsylvania 28 '4 9 shell Union Oil 8li Socony Vacuum 13 Stand. Oil of Calif 35 I XT rw i oluiiu, uh in 11.

ao'a Tidewater Asso 9l Texas Corp 23 V4 United Corp 12'i U. S. Steel 56 WOMAN LEAPS TO DEATH Hcllywocd, June 23. "I'm changing my address Viola." After sending that telegram to Eral Ncrdquist. Oakland musician, her estranged husband, pretty blonde 24-year-old Viola Nordquist leaped from a six-story building to her death, police said today.

As she jumped, she clutched a purse containing two cents all the money she possessed. START FILTRATION' FLANT Ambridge, June 23. Giving work to scores of men, construction ay was under way on the munici- Pal water softening and filtration Plant at Ambridge. A loan panted by the Reconstruc- tion Finance corporation enabled bor- ough officials to immediately begin on the $115,000 structure, When completed the water works is expected to result in great savings for Ambridge water consumers through its purification and distnbu- lion system. Wk PORK LOIN lb10'ic Rib End 15c STEAK lb 15c Treasurer of McKean County, subject election to be held Tuesday, Septem-to the decision of the Republican voters ber 19th, 1933- cm-mM at the primaries on Tuesday, Septem- GhOKUfc, hu i iujn.

ber 19 1933. Smethport, June 5th, 1933. L. Rhone Bradford, Jan. 6, 1933.

C'erk Courts Editor Star-Record: Editor, Star-Record: ease anncunne that I am a candi- Please announce that I am a candi- ate for the nomination for Clerk date for the nomination to the office of Court of Quarter Sessions ana Over of County Treasurer of McKean Coun- and Terminer of McKean County, sub-ty subject to the decision of the Re- Ject to the decision of the Republi-publican voters at the primary elec- 'can voters at the pnmaries to be held that his own- death will be on the list. And because none of us can imagine that these accidents can touch us personally, there isn't much hope that this year's toll will be smaller than usual. That extra bit of caution that prevents accidents won't get used, in a 'certain number of cases; and a certain number of us, as a result, will not see the sun rise on the fifth of July. MONnEY DOESN'T MAKE happy MARRIAGE The storv of the rich girl who mar ries the poor boy is always popular; especially so, no doubt, in these days, when rich girls are comparatively few and poor boys are extremely numerous. And the recent news that the daughter of a rich Minneapolis flour magnate is marrying a young assistant librarian at Yale, and is going to live with him on his $45 a week salary, is one of the most appealing little incidents of the spring.

It is appealing not only because it falls in the old romantic tradition. lit seems, somehow, to point a moral, to underline a lesson, for a whole era. During the boom years a great many young people got the notion that marriage was a thing of be attempted only if the young husband-to-be had laid away a good supply of ready cash. A lot of young women felt that their hnshnnds nuffht to be able to sup- were accustomed; a lot of young men felt that it was perfectly natural and right for the girls to feel this way. That attitude isn't so common, nowadays.

There would be precious few marriages if it were. Young people, with the crash of prosperity, learned how to get back into the old attitude of youth; they re-developed youth's traditional readiness to take a chance. This flour magnate's daughter, going off to begin married life just as one of her father's stenographers would, typifies this change. And it is one of the most whole some things that could happen to us as a nation. To De sure, the girl who marries nowadays, taking a lad who has only a small salary, practically no savings and nothing extra in the way of prospects, is taking a chance.

But what of it? Any marriage is a gamble; and the young couple who gamble that their love will carry them through financial difficulties are probably taking the least chance of any. The very fact that they are gambling, indeed, is one of the things that can help their marriage to be happy. To struggle together, to endure hardships together, to be brave together in the face of a hostile world isn't that of the very esence of young love? The young married couples of 1933 may have fewer automobiles, fewer summer vacations, fewer suburban houses and fewer gay parties than those of 1929 did; but it is a fairly safe bet, too, that they will make fewer trips to Reno. There is no earthly reason why man should not live 100 years and grow in grace and mental power until his body wears out. Prof.

Frederick P. Woleler, University of California. Neither the 100 oer cent man nor the 100 per cent woman is well adant3d either for married life or for life in the world generally. Dr. Havelock El- lis, psychologist.

I Dictatorships are inevitable. Pre- mier Mussolini of Italy. The story cf Pocahontas is one of' the finest pieces of lying ever invented. Dr. A.

S. W. Rosenbach, Philadelphia bibliophile. We may be thankful for the men who will not let things pass. The world needs to be protested against.

Bishop Francis J. McConnell cf New York. -1 Funofalc 1 U11C1 aid Eail Thomas Middlebrough, Jr. 1 i x-uneiai services memory oi lari Thomas Middlebrough, will be held at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Earl T. Middlebrough, at Sawyer City Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Rev. Lincoln of Rew City will officiate. GUNMEN KIDNAP ONE, SHOOT ONE Chicago, June 23.

Francis Lepper of Dayton, suffering from a bullet wound in the neck, today told police that live gunmen had kidnaped his friend, Frank Conner, also of Dayton JumDine aboard his automobile after crowding it to the curb, Lepper said the five men flourished guns and shouted they were going to take Lepper and Conner for "a ride ile was shot, Lepper said, when he left his car and fled. The gang the; drove away with Conner. Physicians at St. Mary's hospital said his wound was not serious. Police began a search for the gang, Lepper said he was a hotel manager in Dayton until three weeks ago.

Our, readers will confer a favor upon us by reporting any irregularity or unnecessary delay in the delivery of their papers. NOTICE Drafts, checks, postofflc orders, hould be addressed to Star Publishing Company at Nos. 10-12-14 Str-James Place, Bradford, Pa. An asterisk after an Item indicates a paia aa Entered as second class matter Peb-uary, 1909 at the postofflce. Bradford.

under the act of March 1, 1897. If G-rapfcK SjSe Tj FRIDAY, JUNE 23, 1933. Partly cloudy tonight and Satur-dav slowly rising temperature Saturday. Editor, Star-Record: Please announce that I am a can didate fnr the nomination to the of flee of Countv Treasurer of McKean i ponnt.v Kiihipct to the decision of the Republican voters at the primary ciccliuu jber 19 1933. J.

SCOTT WALKER. May 25, 1933. Editor, Bradford Star-Record: Please announce that I am a candidate for the nomination to the office of County Treasurer of McKean County subject to the decision of the Republican voters at the primary oe-piiuuei ia, ioo Helen C. Rogers. Smethport, Feb 15, 1933.

Editor, Bradford Evening Star: Please announce that I am a candi- Dr. D. Elva Cooper. Bradford, April 27th. 1933.

Editor, Star-Record: Please announce that I am a candidate for the nomination for Clerk of Court of Quarter Sessions and Oyer and Terminer of McKean countv, subject to the decision of the Republican voters at the primaries t0 be held September 19. 1933. Berle F. Fesenmyer. Bradford, Pa.

May 15. 1933. I 1 1 valuable use DIAL 4141 Emory Hotel Taxi Day and Night Service C. O'Connor Wm. O'Connor Owners FOX BROS.

MARKET 10-12 MECHANIC ST. Fresh Fruits and Vegetables Daily at Lowest Prices in Bradford Free Delivery Dial 6614 Quality Merchandise at Popular Prices H. M. Reich Co. i I i 9C for lbs.

HAMBURG 0 SAUSAGE 0 tion to be held Tuesday, September 19, 1933. Harold K. Lundberg. Mt. Jewett, March 21, 1933.

lb. HAMS Sugar Cured Skinned Hams, Ten to Twelve Pounds Average Editor, Star-Record: I date for the nomination for Clerk of Please announce that I am a candi- Court of Quarter Sessions and Oyer date for the nomination to the office and Terminer of McKean County, of County Treasurer of McKean srWect to the decision of the Repub-County, subject to the decision of the ucan voters at the primaries to be Republican voters at the primary held seDtember 19th. 1933. VEAL Mm, CHOPS jfifljlS) 223c 7P lb. Veal Ground lb.

1 Breast Veal 1 21c lb. LEG SPRING election to be held Tuesday, Septem ber 19, 1933. Raymond Woodrum. Bradford, March 28, 1933. Editor, Star-Record: Please announce that I am a candidate for the nomination to the office of County Treasurer of McKean County, subject to the decision of the rtepuDiican voters ai me primary election to be held Tuesday, Septem ber 19 1933.

J. L. Cunningham. Custer City, April 3, 1933. Editor, Star-Record: Please announce that I am a candidate for the nomination to the office of County Treasurer of McKean County subject to the decision of tne Republican voters at the primary election to be held Tuesday, September 19, 1933.

D. EARL REPINE, April 4, 1933. Kane, Pa. Editor, Star-Record: Please announce that I am a candidate for the nomination for County Treasurer of McKean county, subject to the decision of the Republican voters at the primaries on Tuesday, September 19, 1933. PROF.

GEO. P. LULL. Bradford, May 22, 1933. May 22, 1933 Star-Record Publishing Bradford, Pa.

Dear Editor: Please announce that I am a candidate for the nomination for the office of County Treasurer of McKean county, subject to the decision of the Republican voters at the primaries to be held September 19. 1933. WILLIAM BECK. Bradford, May 24, 1933. Smiles will chase the tears when you LeaveIt2Raymond "THE INSURANCE MAN" 7p lb.

Pork Spare lb. Qf Roast Ribs OO 0 for lbs. WEINERS lbs. for 09f LJl BOLOGNA- LJl 1Ib. Pot Boiling lb.7f ILl Roast Beef 17c lb.

Sliced Bacon 19c ib. Fresh CHICKENS All cuts of Beef, Veal, Pork and Lamb on sale. Plenty of happy, snappy clerks at your service..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Bradford Evening Star and The Bradford Daily Record Archive

Pages Available:
61,467
Years Available:
1928-1946