The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 22, 1917, Image 5

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    LODALS,
Guy Brooks was one of the fortunate
bunters to kill a wild turkey on the
first day.
Mre. Kate Conley returned bome on
Wednesday after spending several
weeks in Lancaster,
John D. Lucas will move his family
to Lewistown, next week, where he
has found steady employment,
A daughter was born to Mr. and
Mre. J. Reuben Garis, at Luxor, on
Monday, It is the second child in the
family,
Mifflinburg lost a good citizen inthe
death of John T. Cox, at the age of
seventy years, He was a veteran of
the Clvil War,
Rev, and Mrs, R. R. Jones and Mrs.
8. W. Bmith attended the mid-year
Bunday-echool conference, held at
Bellefonte last Friday,
Rev. W. H. Williams, of Spring
Mille, was a epeaker in the Methodist
church at Warriorsmark, last week,
where ‘' Win-My-Chum-Week!” was
observed.
Earl Lambert, who is with the hos-
pital corps of Troop L, at Camp Han-
cock, Augusta, Ga., has been given an
benorable discharge owing to physical
disability and is expected home with-
in the next few weeks.
The fuperal of Elias Breon, who
died near Rebersburg Monday of last
week, was postponed from last Friday
until Monday, in order that a son,
George Breon, of Balt Lake City,
Utab, might be present.
The real estate of the late J. Will-
iam Mitterling will be sold by the ad-
ministrators at poetponed public sale,
at the late home of the deceased, in
Centre Hall, on Tuesday, November
27th, in connection with the sale of
personal property.
Undertaker F. V, Goodhart went to
Inartiveburg on Tuesday to take
charge of the funeral of Mrs. Mary
Rearick. The body was brought here
in the auto hearse of the deceased’s
sop, J. Paul Rearick, who is in the un-
dertaking business in Martinsburg,
Ina family of Isaso Z. Bnook, of
Lewistown, is to be found a large de-
gree of patriotism. Two sons are in
the war, two more are soon to go, the
mother is active in Red Cross work
and a little daughter raises cash for
the Red Croes through her ability as a
musical gepivs,
Louis Dammers, the eyesight spec-
ialiet, of Philadelphis, wiil be in Cen-
ire Hall on Saturday of this week.
Mr. Dammers Las regular appoint
ments io all paris of the State and has
established an enviabe reputation
88 8D eye specialist, If troubled with
your eyes, don’t fail to see him. His
ad, appears in this issue,
The big fashion plate chorus of the
cartoon wusieal comedy made from
the original “Kstzepjsmmer Kids’
comic supplement pictures fs & beauti-
ful brigade of bewitching Broadway
blondes and brunettes. No muisesl
show can bosst of a prettier bunch of
chorus girle. At, Garman's opera
bouse, Tuesday, November 27. Prices
25 cents to $1.00,
Messre. William Bubb, Ammon
Bubb, and Edward Horner, all Potter
township young men who are e-
tloyed at Burnham, took off a few
days from work to do a bit of rabbit
hunting on the south side of the val-
ley. They were joined by Edward,
Walter and John Bubb. The party
killed sixteen cottontails on Baturd ay
and Monday. On Tuesday the hunt-
ers bagged fifteen rabbits and three
pheasants,
The Reporter has been dilatory in
acknowledging the receipt of a copy of
Col. Henry W. Bhoemaker's lstest
work, “ Eldorado Found”, which
came to our desk several weeks ago,
It isa 150-psge volume, profusely il-
lustrated, and full of interest, mostly
of purely local interest, from cover to
cover, Ii is quite natural that Col.
Bhoemeker did not ecek for Eldorado
out of the confines of Central Penneyl-
vania’s Highlande, that territory
about which he has written so much,
acd which seems to make a greater
appeal to him than other spot on the
globe, After you read the book you
will agree that the suthor has truly
found Eldorado, and that it lies not at
fome remote section of the earth but
right at your door. The volume in
highly prized Swong the collection of
Bhoemsker books,
The Centre Hall Auxiliary to the
Red Cirosr, in canvassing the town for
contributions of $1.00 for membership
in the loeal society, Is meeting with
a slight trouble, due to a misander-
standing on the part of some well-
meaning people, The trouble centers
about the giving of money in the
early part of the Summer, which
was for the benefit of a relief fund for
the soldiers who were sent across to
France. It was a nation-wide came
paigo, the object of which was to raise
several milliora of dollars for a specific
purpose. Xi bad nothing whatever to
/ th membership to t he Red Cross
'y aud wae collected at the time
to the organizing of the county
Red Croes Chepter. Inasmuch na
many people contributed one dollar to
this fund, and sre now called upon to
again give a dollar for membership,
it Is more than possible that the like~
ness of the sums ls the cause of the
Inlsundintebding, Every dollar con
tributed to ¢ Cross will be ace
oounted oredit given,
for and due
LOOALS
Forester Leonard GQ, Barnes, of
Pleasant Gap, was a visitor in town on
Monday.
$74.20 le what Farmer Frank Gfrerer
realized on a hog which hesold to A.
M. Riegel last week.
Mrs. Robert F. Williams, of Le.
mont, spent a few days last week at
the home of her parents, Mr, and Mrs,
Thomas Grove,
The Odd Fellows’ orphanage near
Sunbury raised 1240 bushels of pota~
toes, enough to last them until the
next crop arrives,
C. E. Boob recently sold seven acres
of farm land in the northwestern sec-
tion of Millheim borough to Ezra
Keen. The consideration was $800.
Frank Kent, of Brooklyn, Buique-
banoa county, visited his brother, Dr,
E. A, Kent, west of Centre Hall, for a
few days last week, Dr. Kent's cone
dition remains serious,
Because of an embargo which the
express company has in force at the
present time, Chas. D. Bartholomew
shipped two full crates of eggs to Pitts-
burgh, on Monday, by parcel post,
J. W. Yelsley, state organizer of the
P. O.B. of A,, was a caller at this of
fice on Tuesday, in company with
Mre, Yelsley. Mr, Yelsley is working
to establish new camps at Hublers-
burg, Coburn, Rebersburg, and Boale-
burg.
The local Btate road crew finished
doing considerable repair work on the
roads about Asronsburg and Wood-
ward last week. The large trucks of
OC. M. Arney and Jesse McClenakan
played a prominent part in hustling
through the work.
William Bubb, son of Mr, and Mre.
Edward Bubb, of near Colyer, was a
caller at this office on Monday to have
the Reporter sent to his soldier-broth-
er, Charles H. Bubb, who is in train-
ing at Camp Meade, Md., #3 a member
of Co. M, 314th Infantry.
The liquor license applications for
1918, for Centre county, have been filed
with the prothonotary, and are adver-
tised in another columan of this paper.
There are seven less applicants this
year, the total being twenty-nine this
year instead of thirty-six.
The Btate-Centre Electric Company
began the latter part of last week to
erect poles, starting at Centre Hall,
and ruoning down the Brush Valley
road. The poles are immense in size
and will carry the current for lighting
the borough of Millheim.
Rev. L. N, Horn, of State College,
has notified the consistory of Trinity
Reformed church of L-wistown that
be accepts the call as pastor of the con
gregation. His eslary will be $1800
per year, he to provide a house for his
family at his own expense. He
presched his first sermon on Sanday,
John E. Rishel, of near Tusseyville,
is the first Reporter subscriber this
season to have the Reporter sent as a
Christmas gift, the recipient of the
paper being his aunt, Mra, Ross E.
Smith, of Freeport, Illinois, Buch a
&Ift is sure to be appreciated, the recip-
lent being reminded fifty times a year
of the giver's kiud ness,
Persons who claim that the wild eat
is extinct in the Beven mountains are
slightly in error, says the Milroy cor-
respondent to the Lewistown Sentinel,
Howard Ramsey of Locks Mills cap-
tured a large wild cat and a coon on
Wedneadsy night, and not satisfled,
went back and shot another wild cat
Thursday morning in the New Lancas-
ter Valley.
Earnest Hewitt, of Mifflinburg, who
enlisted in the Aviation Corps months
ago, and was in the training camp at
Texas, and later in New York, has ad-
vanced rapidly in thie branch of ser-
vice and with others was sent to
France to further his knowledge in
this line at the schools of instruction
for his floasl work, when he will re-
ceive his two silver wings on his cole
lar, demonstrating the fact that he is
now a fall-fladged aviator, His moth
er, Mrs, P. C. Linderman, of MifMin-
burg, last week received a cablegram of
his safe arrival abroad,
Provided that sufficient enthusissm
can be aroused within the various P.
0. B, of A, camps in Centre county, a
meeting of the War Board of that or-
der will be ¢ lied to be held at Belle
fonte some time in the near future, J.
W. Yeisley, state organizer, is now in
the connty to spur on the eflort to
euch sn end. The War Board is made
up of the best men in the state con-
nected with the P. O, 8B. of A. and
have been holding monthly meetings
in the big cities and towns in the
state. A big public demonstration fe
planned, together with putting on the
degree by a uniformed team from ope
of the best camps in the state,
Gazzolo, Gatts and Clifford, the pre-
ducers of “Kalzenjammer Kids,” the
newest song, dance, fun and girl
show made from the original comio
supplement cartoons, were fortunate
in locating the right players to pore
tray the animal characters that appear
in their big spectacular productign,
The actors who portray the bear, the
goat, the dog and the tiger in “Katser-
Jammer Kids” are considered the
most valued members of the company
because pantomime players who can
give correct impersonations of the so.
tions of animals are very hard to find.
AL Garman's operas house, Tuesday,
| November 47, Price 250 to $1.00,
.
Spring Mills.
Mre. H. M, Allison entered the
Bellefonte hospital on Friday. Bhe
was operated on for a growth on the
breast, on Saturday moroing, and fs
improving at this writing.
Mrs, Bones spent a fow days in Mifl-
lin county helping her sister, Mrs,
Robert Maybin, to butcher,
Alice Heckman of Mifflin county, is
epending some tinge with her sister,
Mrs. Thomas Decker,
Mrs, Andrew Rote is
slowly.
Miriam Long is visiting friends in
Williamsport,
improving
a ET
“Katzenjammer,” the newest ocar-
toon musical comedy, is said to be a
distinct departure from any cartoon
play ever staged. It is a big song,
dance, fun and girl show, magnifi-
cently and massively staged and cos-
tumed with the Iatest! creations of
feminine fashions, At Garman’s
opera house, Tuesday, November 27.
GIVES THEM THE WILD FLAVOR
Housekeeper Has Thought Out Pars
ticularly Clever Way of Cooking
the Domestic Duck.
“lI ean cook the domestic duck so
that you would think it was mallard!”
declared a clever little housekeeper
‘the other day.
“At any rate, you would think it
was mallard if you knew the delicious
and peculiar flavor of that particular
bird well enough to recognize it.
“People say that this characteristic
flavor Is due to the fact that mallard
feeds on wild celery. Well, naturally,
when I buy ducks in the market it is
too late to put them on a diet in the
ordinary sense,
“But if I can’t feed them celery
while they're alive, I can do it after
they're dead. Oh, yes, I can! And
this Is the way I manage it. Instead
of stuffing them in the ordinary way, I
take stalks of celery which I cut the
length of the bird's inside measure
ment.
“I put these stalks in ‘w tha
dressing ought to grow. and then
place the duck in the sting pan. In
stead of putting water the pan, |
pour a pint bottle of moderata
priced Sauterne. Maybe I put a little
water in the Sauterne, but not much
Then I baste the duck with this while
it is roasting. And if I can’t deceive
you with the result—well, your palate
must have a pretty intimate acquaint
ance with the flavor of mallard.”
5 eh
hore
Here
r
1
rot
in
in
in
More Kiss Doctrine.
One Mrs. Minnie Slentz promulgat
ed this unorthodox doctrine in the di
vorce court a while ago:
“Some couples may kiss each other
right up until they are sixty, in an
attempt to fool themselves into think.
ing that thelr kisses have the gen-
uine heart glow of the first month of
marriage, but it is all bosh. Real
kissing becomes monotonous during
the second year, intermittent from the
fourth to the sixth, and stops entirely
before the eighth year of married
life,
Can this be true? At the risk of
infringing on the provines of another
department of this paper, we invite
the opinions of our readers on this
important theme. Let your answers
or criticisms be brief, either in verse
or prose. In the words of Wallace
Irwin:
“Enough of kissing—can there be
enough?”
Our Fairy Godmothers.
The world, out of fairy books, hh
chary in furnishing its fairy godmoth-
ers, yet most of us have friends at
whose touch we become more truly
and happily ourselves than at other
times. They seem able to endow us,
through some magic of thelr own.
with the beauteous vestments and the
glass slippers that free the spirit
These are our fairy godmothers. We
do well to love them and pay them
good heed, for through them we may
enter into such possession of the pre.
clous gifts that we need have no dread
of the striking hour. This, we must
suppose, is what Cophetua did for his
beggar-maid. At his glance the queen
in hersblossomed, which later all the
|world could see—~From the Atlantic.
A Frontier of Peace.
With its row of crumbling forts and
musty guns the frontier between Can
ada and the United States stands as
an object lesson to all nations. While
it is the longest, it is the safest and
securest frontier in the world. Three
thousand miles and more of it lie be
tween Passamaquoddy bay and Puget
sound, and in all that distance not a
shotted gun points menacingly from
either country toward the other. A
few small and comparatively ineffec-
‘tive fishery cruisers guard the water
front, none of which would be of much
juse in time of war.—8t John Tele
Tap. eae asin
Guard Against Accidents,
The effects of explosions in the
surrounding area have been studied by
Col. B. W. Dunn in preparing his
§
i
:
§
.
= 3
AE pl i le
’ he
a tas str aati idl ste eli
BOARDS ARE MORE EFFICIENT
This Is Explanation Given by British
Officer of Acceptance for Service
of Men Once Rejected.
In a recent Investigation by a com-
mittee from the house of commons,
iGen. Sir Alfred Keogh, director general
lof the British army medical service, de-
clared that while the department had
been laboring under difficulties im-
posed by the lack of experienced army
examiners, he was aware of no frregu-
larities in the examination of men un-
der the military service (review of
exceptions) act,
“When the war broke out men were
taken for medical examination to lo+
cal practitioners, who could not pos-
sibly know the requirements of the
service,” he sald, “and the consequence
was that a large number of men wag
recruited whom the authorities would
not have thought of considering in
peace times,”
With such a corps of examiners,
Sir Alfred declared, it was Impossible
to attain a common standard, and this
explained the fact that frequently men
by another. “Many men were pass
ed who ought not to have been pass-
ed,” he admitted, “but, on the other
hand, a great number of men were
rejected who ought to have been pass-
ed under the category system, ‘It was
very difficult to get the medical practi-
tioners to understand that a man who
could do anything In civil life could
do that thing in the army.”
The fact that the proportion of men
passed by Inter boards, after having
been rejected by examiners at the be-
ginning of the war, steadily has in-
creased during the war, Sir Alfred at-
tributed to the Increased efficiency of
the boards, but vehemently denfed that
there had been any lowering of the
standard for acceptance,
RUSSIA CLOSE TO ENGLAND
Foundation for Intimate Relationship
Lald by Royal Marriage in the
Eleventh Century,
Does Elihu Root know Russian? By
no means: But the knowledge of Eng-
lish 18 so widespread among the edu-
cated classes of Russia that we begin to
understand the reports about the en-
thuslastic reception of our ambassa-
dor's eloquent address by his audiences
in Petrograd and Moscow, says an ex-
change,
There {8 not a notable play or novel
produced in London which is not acted
or read In Russia. The Russian in-
tellegenzia knows not only French and
German, but also English history and
literature thoroughly.
Glytha, the daughter of King Har-
old who wes slain at Hastings (1068),
through her marriage with the Rus-
sian Prince of Tchernigoff laid the
first foundation to the close relation.
ship between Great Britain and the em-
pire of the czars. The real English
“discoverer” of Russia 1s, of course,
tichard Chancellor, who, through his
voyage to Moscow In 1583, established
solid commercial connections between
the two countries,
And why should we not be remind-
ed, on this occasion, of the Interesting
fact that Peter the Great's mother was
brought up in a Scottish household?
“For every soldier that we land In
France,” says the Scientific American,
“25 tons of shipping must plow back
and forth at a steady ten knots to
supply his needs alone. For 25.000
men this means 100 ships—a number
that we would be hard pressed to find,
‘And thls means curtailment of the
{vital supplies to our allies.
“Now, could the average speed of
ithis fleet be raised to 11 knots and
could the time in port be reduced 10
per cent, we could release for other
service some 60,000 tons of shipping.
In other words, we could create im-
[mediately that amount of extra ton-
nage and add it to our merchant ma-
irine, not in 1918 but today. And to-
iday may be the day, the real ‘Day,’ the
day the balance will spring.”
Argentine’'s Wheat Crop.
Reports from the Argentine state
that weather conditions are ideal for
the growth of wheat. The official pre-
liminary estimate is for a crop of 240,
000,000 bushels. The large crop of
1015-16 was 178,000,000 bushels, and
the average for the five preceding
years was 140,000,000 bushels, Domes
tic requirements are about 70,000,000
bushels, The large crop now growing
will be available some time after Jann«
ary 1 if transportation is furnished.
The Argentine oats crops is estimats
ed at 88,000,000 bushels, or 12,000,000
bushels more than the crop of 1015, of
which 57,000,000 bushels wero exported,
Airing Their French.
“We are all airing our French, now
we are France's ally,” sald Robert W.
Chambers, the New York novellst.
“A man and his wife were seeing a
friend off for France the other wi
“ ‘Bon voyage!" sald the lady. |
voyage!’
“Yes, sald her husband, bon voy«
age, old fellow, and let me add, a
pleasant journey to you” /
“Why do you nag your ilustrions
husband, all the time?" they asked
Bir John Kirk, who recently cele-
brated his fiftieth anniversary of work
He Picked Up a Living. |
union, tells an amusing anecdove of |
how he once questioned a London walf |
whom he had befriended as to his |
method of earning a living. !
The young fellow's reply was typical |
of the London street arab, |
“Well, guv'nor,” he sald, “it's like |
this, 1 picks strawberries in the sum- |
mer, I picks 'ops in the sutumn,
rule, I'm pickin’ oakum for the rest of |
the year,” |
i
|
Koreans are great rumor mongers, |
Some stories they spread are fantas- |
tically absurd. One recently prevall- |
ing among the country people, because |
no rain fell for many days, was to the |
effect that the long drought was due
to German influence with the gods, in
revenge for the part Japan has taken
in the war, says East and West News.
Predictions of famine were current
among the Korean farmers and recent
heavy rainfall has not altogether re<
3
Juvenile Court Doctors, 1
The medical profession is practical
ly of one voice in approving an ad-
vance in Chicago, the attaching of an
experienced physician to the juvenile
courts of that city, whose business it
is to make proper medical examina-
tion of youthful delinquents before
they are improperly branded as crime-
inals, The new it is be-
Heved, will be the means of saving
these young offenders fr m lives of
crime and will make them to count
in the community for future
ness. Medical observation and
tion should, it is held by some,
given to children while in
Many of the delinquents who come be-
fore the juvenile courts have special
physical or mental which
might be remedied if properly treat.
ed at the proper time.
————————
FOR BALE-The Geiss property. located im.
medistely opposite the Eeporter office 8,
WW, Emith, Centre Hall
method,
useful.
atten-
be
school,
defects
BEEF COW FOR BALR.—~Good cow suitable
for bee, is offered for sale ~MRS. BADIE NEFF
Tusseyvilie, Pa.
THE MARKEE»,
PRODUCE AT BTORER
BUMBE soniiries rons sissermicsiinia
There Is more Cuatars
the country than
together, and un
Was supponcd
[££]
Cheney & Co., Toledo,
Constitutional cure on
taken internally, It
blood and mucous s
They offer one h
case it falls to cure
and testimonials
Address F.J. CHENEY & CO
Bold by Drugeists. 7!
Toke Hall's Family Plils to
\ JAMES W, SWABB
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE
LINDEN HALL, CENTR} . PA
Deeds, Mortgages, Wills, &c, written ar
| ecuted with care. All legs
| attended 10. Bpecinl attent
| ting of slates, ¥arriage LJ
bile licenses, and alli oth
| Blanks kept on hand.
qf
J
Q
Laundry
Leaves the Reporter office
THURSDAY A. M., NOV. 29
THURSDAY A.M. DEC, 13
“A
and every OTHER Wi
until further notice
Returns Saturday following
date of outgoing
CYRUS BRUNGART
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE
CENTRE HALL, PA.
Bpecial attention given wu
writings of all classes (1
Egresments, ele
roll at
Area. &
ecting,
SORNMEE hiv
office sitend
Store in the
BUY! BUY!
no where else in the entire
We take pride in the
tractive lines :
Big Line
dress--we have the right
Valley.
That's all we have
which
valley.
quality and quantity of
shoe.
Penns Valleys's Big Store
. CENTRE HALL