The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 22, 1917, Image 8

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    THE CENTRE REPORTER.|
THURBDAY, NOVEMBER 22 1017
ye
Thirty-five Years Ago.
EsDecember 14, 1882. ~The Y. M, C, A,
of Centre Hall, on last Friday evening
gave a reception to the business men
of the town iu the association hall,
Voeal and instrumental musie, social
chat, ete, were engaged in for an hour,
after which a table was spread and
stewed oysters with extras wereserved,
D. J. Meyer has purchased Bherifl
Rpangler’s balf interest in the Centre
Hall hotel.
December 21st.—~James Treaster shot
a large wild cat on the Miffiin county
glide of the seven mountains,
"Wesley Henney and Samuel Shoop
have become guccessorato J. O, Dein-
inger in the manufacture of carriages,
etc., in this place,
i fp fA ——
STATE AGHRI(CULTUBRAL NOTES,
More tractors were purchased by
Pevneylvania farmers during the pres-
ent year, records showing & substan-
tial increase in nearly every county.
Incressed interest throughout the
Btste in the sheep industry promiges
to show another increase in the pum.
ber of sheep this year.
Thesverage potato yield for the Blale
will be considerably higher than last
year when the poor erop showed bud
seventy bushels to the acre.
An incresee in the number of silos
in the State is shown by reports of the
Department of Agriculture statisti-
cians at Harrisburg,
——
Bheep growers claim that Is possible
to establish a flock at present high
prices and realizs from 50 to 70 per
cent, profit on the! investment durisg
the first year.
It js estimated that Pennpaylvanis's
8,660,000 people annually coneume 48,-
012,000 bushels of wheat while the pro-
duction this year ia but 26,364,721 bush-
els,
A———
FRUITTOWN.
Charles Fye, of State Colleg-, spent
a few days last week with his family
at this place.
Mre, T. J. Fleisher i= speniiog this
week with her daughter, Mrs. D. PB.
Wer!, at Aaronsburg,
Mre, William Barson and childrer,
of Btate College, spent last week at the
Edward Babb home,
Clayton Ripks, of State College,
epent a few days last week at the
home of his uncle, 8, E. Jordan.
Ammon Bubb, of Heedsville, epent
a few daye this week at the home of
his parents in this place.
Mr, and Mre. Clyde Wert, of Lewis
towr, and Lillian Fleisher, of Yeager-
town, took dinner on Funday at the
home of their grandparents at thie
place,
A A ——
Boys Aitempt Bobbary ; Shoot 10 Kil,
Two boys—Qeorge Conrad and
GeorgaiMoorchousc—both 18 years of
age, and of Altoous, palled c ff a wild
West scene in the grocory store of Da-
vid Parish, aged sevent;-two years, in
Altuone, last Trorsday night, when
‘hey attemped to rob the caeh drawer
io the stcre. A daughter of the groe-
eryman surprised the boys and when
the sged man went to her rescue they
opened fire with revelvers and hit
the man and his daughter. The boys
then beat both into unconsciousness,
It is believed that both will recover,
although there is some doubt about
the aged man,
Moorehouse was arrested ehortly al-
terwards at his home where he was
found sleeping with a 08 calibre revol.
ver under bis pillow. He was prev-
jously im plicated by Conrad ina con-
fession to the chief of police.
Be —
Penn State Ambulances Men Drill Stadents
at College,
One of Penn Btate’s ambulance see-
tions bas come from Allentown camp
to assict the army officers detailed here
by the War Department with their ig-
struction of State College students in
modern tactice. Bince early last May,
when the Penn State men went into
the “‘UssAcs” camp, they have devot-
ed many hours every day to military
drill. They are now regarded as the
crack ambulance section in the cape
tonment, and they have been fur.
loughed indefinitely eo that they may
remain here to train the State College
regiment of 1500 uniformed men dare
log the winter. Home of the ambu-
lance men are helping drill the recent
ly organized Officers’ Reserve Train-
log Corps contingent of 140 students,
@thers are handling the freshman
and sophomore battalions,
a —————— A a —
New Artificial Eyes.
A new artificial eye has been perfects
ed sud patented by John ©. Rosser
of Mill Hall, that promises to revolu-
tionizs the manufacture of artifiolsl
eyes.
The inventor claims his invention
has a number of advantr ges over the
present day srtific.al eye, being made
of valeanized rubber and non<bresk-
abe. It is said to look more natural
than tbe regular gines eye now in us,
Ri A soul oa
|
Women Possess This Faculty More
Than Men and Usually Get What
They Decide They Want.
» s—
“The main difference between men
and women is nowhere so marked as
It is in the distinction between chare
peter and ability.
A man's ability is entirely separate
from his character. A many may have
genius and no character at all. He
may have small abilities and large
character. In a man the two things
appear to be entirely independent of
one another,
But a woman's character is detere
mined by her ability, and her ability is
determined by her character, writes
TT, I. M. in Life, In reality, therefore,
women are much more simple than
men, although they do not appear to
Women are more complicated
outwardly than men, They offer more
superficial variety. But closer obser«
vation and association among them
tend to make them more alike,
Men, on the other hand, grow more
complicated #8 you come to know them
better. This {#2 because thelr abilities
and charactefs being unrelated and
the proportionate measure of each sube
Jeet to variations, new combinations
are constantly being presented. The
varie things which go to make up
the power of woman, on the
hand, are more closely related.
n, therefore, more
n, although they do not seem
being uncone
he so.
nus
motive
other
Wore
than
{no
concentrate
do so, the process
scious,
why, If a woman
ts a thing and a man doesn't want
to have it,
ins
ys gets it.
When a man wants a thing he plans
to get it nuch he can
throuzh the processes of his
I and will woman wants
ing she ian at all—but
y than the
wer whole
nsclous, 1s
her she alwa
just as
ordinary
» ets it much more of
, because
keup,
the
ated
work
Lid
machi nan
wat she
Little Acorns.”
v clerks in the old post
id, Joined
(dig.
r did
were
in's-le-Grar
1 208
riter In
fact, they
re
Ceres
ital of
veen the
nplast form
ness, The
sful that
operations,
soon two or
re bought at a
1 grocers
ives did not want
them with
also was
both tea and
ard, which
irst of the Civil Service
bled.
Ft roth
Her Pride Hum
Miss Sydney Fairl
nerennato
3 1 r. the Ime
once had doubts
mid her, *“I had been
to the loeal military ho
“and
a
but he gailed
leave, and I
day, a few
of the
up to me,
and I recognized fy friend, who had
returned from Canada.
“*You remember me? he said,
Ginger from the hospital.
“Of course’ I replied. *Yon saw
my name in the program. For my
make-up as Mah Hubah converts me
into a hag of about seventy years, and
I thought It was a complete disguise,
“ *Oh, no, I never saw the program,’
Ginger replied. ‘I recognized you di-
rectly you came on the stage.
“It was the biggest blow I ever re
celved” .
rather a
ful compliment 1
pt
pay fe
pital,” recalls Miss Fairbrother,
Se
I became
g Can
for Canada on long sick
lost of One
hs later, enme
te good friends with
youn ian officer,
sight im,
ns 1
+ door. an officer ename
out
‘I'm
Choosing Employees by Test.
During recent years much has been
heard on the sclentific use of human
imaterial, including the careful selec.
tion of men best suited for various
classes of manual labor. An important
point is the discrimination between
strength and manual dexterity. A
number of devices are proposed for
testing the latter quality, such as the
time to transfer a number of matches
fromm a pan into a series of holes pre.
pared for them, For other classes of
work strength of fingers and forearm
may be tested with the ergograph, or,
again, grip may be tested with a dyna
mometer., As regards manual dexter
ity, the shape of the hand and fingers
often offers a'good guide. It is said
that the very finest typists have exe
ceptionally small fingers and that gen.
erally small dimensions tend to quick
ness and deftness of movement.
Desperate Remedy.
“1 don’t know how to rid myself of
Mr. Grewsky's attentions,” said Mrs.
Twoddle, “He has proposed to me
half a dozen times and simply won't
take ‘no’ for an answer,”
“I understand he is a great stickler
for correct English” sald her friend,
thoughtfully,
“Well, what has that to do with
me?”
him with ‘nix’ The shock
. 5 him wo dnd
Si ST
PRISONERS WENT ON STRIKE
Refused to Go Back to Jail Until One
of Their Number Was “Fired” By
Workhouse Superintendent.
Perhaps the queerest strike on recs
ord was that of workhouse prisoners
in Delaware county, Indiana, recently,
when they refused to return to jail un
less one of their number recelved his
freedom. And it was not that they de-
sired him to be free, either, but be
cause they wished to be freed of his
presence,
“I had my gang of prisoners way out
by Yorktown, working on a country
road that needed repairing” sald
Jumes Cole, workhouse superintendent,
nccording to the Indianapolis News,
“when I noticed, about time to load
them into the automobile and bring
them back, that the prisoners were
hanging back and talking among them-
gelves, Finally one of them cnme to
me with the story and his demands,
““The boys here won't go back to
jail with you unless you fire Danny,
there,’ sald the spokesman. “They won't
ride back in the machine with him be-
he has vermin In his halr and
on his bady, You elther let him go or
no more jall for us. We've agreed to
make a run for it if you don’t, and
you can’t catch all of us’
“Of course, I had no right to allow
the man his freedom,” Cole continued,
“hut the fellow jumped up
nway just then and I'm bound to admit
{n't try very hard to eatch him,
Anyway, that broke the strike.”
cause
“TOMMIES” CALL IT “WIPERS”
British Soldiers Haye Given Their Own
Pronunciation to the Little
Belgian Town of Ypres.
The little Belginn town of Ypres is
sure enough a place in history; but,
in England, at any rate, #t will always
be specially sure of It under a name
vhich no eloth worker of Flanders ever
heard, and would certainly never rec
ognize, The British “Tommy,” who
for over two years has held up the
' around the famous
insists on calling it
I and the name has “taken
* as he would say. It traveled over
o England, and “Wipers” began some-
w to be associated with “hot con
mn forces
|
salient,
a »"
ipers,
course of one of his
fously enough, it is not the first
this, or at any rate a
+ for it was in the looms of
was made, in the middle
' table linen, or diapers.
Testing the Eye.
ing Degrees of Bri
t" before the Hiuminating En.
society recently,
avis
nd horizontal lines in red
headache,
when
either black or red. Doctor Kerr ques.
tions whether a target is more distinet
when a brilliantly llluminated disk ap.
pears on a jet black background than
when the surroundings were diffusely
illuminated.
wo spr wi
: rnin —
i Joker Dressed as Bear.
| Representing himself as a bear which)
is sald to have annoyed the residents
'of Reddon, Del, a young man of that
village was shot at and badly beaten
‘before his identity was discovered.
| For several weeks residents of Red:
\den declared that they had seen a bear
in sections of the village. Taking ad
vantage of the fright in the little town,
lone young man dressed himself up td
represent a bear and’ started out to
igtartle the villagers. His practical
oke took the wrong turn when a num
er of men with guns and clubs started
chase him, Before he could tell wha
the was he was badly pounded with
ubs and came very near being shot,
Movie Film as Evidence.
A moving-picture film is to be Intro
duced into court in Paris as evidence
in a divorce case,
The plaintiff in the action saw on a
sereen on the boulevards pictures of
the procession of Italian delegates
through the boulevards to the Place de
la Concorde to lay a wreath upon the
Strasbourg monument,
The procession was followed by a
taxicab in which, to his astonishment,
ithe spectator saw his wife, seated with
ia stranger. He bought the film, to be
d as the basis of his action for di.
voree.,
King Has Many Namesakes Now.
His majesty has sundry namesakes
in London now that he has adopted his
inew surname, says the London Globe.
"There is a solicitor in Bishopsgate and
a cabinetmaker in Dalston, to name
two. There is also a Miss Windsor,
who has a respectable business in
South Kensington, Likewise a Mr.
Cornelius Windsor lives in North Lon-
don, and another Windsor has a gro-
cery shop in Lewisham. A firm of
fronmongers at Roehampton and some
clothiers at Finsbury Park can also
claim the same surname as the royal
family.
i
&o Bonin -
ag F
Louis Dammers
Philadelphia EYESIGHT Specialist
SPECIAL NOTICE
I personally will be One Day Only
in Centre Hall
Centre Hall Hotel Parlors
Saturday, Nov. 24, 1917
Office Hours, 8a. m, 102 p. m. sharp
I offer you a fine pair of glasses,
including Dammer's eye examina-
tion, clear crystal lenses, gold filed frame
and clegant case, as low as
$1.00
Special ground lenses at lowest prides,
Invisible Bilocals~Two pair In one. No
ines, No cement. Last for years,
Eye examination by the Dammer's
i Bolentific Method, without saking ques
i tions. without drops, test cards or charts,
i abnolutely free of charge,
i Soy Chestnut Street, Phila... Pa,
i Fehi Bldg, Lancaster : Eckert Bidg, Allen.
i town ; Goldschmidt Bldg, Allentown
Rayolight Oil. You'll a
sign:
2 good
ableregard!
rad
ELE 3 ty
f you use
Rayolight Oil is
ly purified that it always
Results like
Insist on getting
al ¥
about.
That store is
ie gANTIE :
Rayolioht
ry
beat at the
a maich,
NY sR
1:
{| 25
Little is seen of this army.
thirty million calls a day.
activity of the nation and
*Peuvre000000 000000000 S000
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CENTRE HALL, PA,
The Gasoline That Yields
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Because of its uniform High Qual-
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gas and note the difference.
Also High Grade Oils,
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WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTOR
Well over a hundred
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Sweaters
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HEAVY HOSE, in wool
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