The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, June 10, 1920, Image 4

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onnenstrany June 30, July 1 & 2 1
THE CENTRE REPORTER
ISSUED WEEKLY.
. PENN’A.
THURSDAY, JU
SMITH &@ BAILEY . . . . . Prepristorn
8. W.BMITH . . « «+ + +. « . . Bditer
Loca! Bditer and
L
EDWARD BE, BAILEY
Entered at the Pos
second Class mall matter,
TERMS, The terms of subscription to the Re-
porter are one and one-half doliars per year.
ADVERTISING RATES—Display advertise
ment of ten or more {unches, for three or wore In
sortions, ten cents ner {noh for each issue . Dis
lay advertising occupying less space than ten
Paohes and for less than three insertions, from
@ftaen to twanty-Ove cents per inch for each
fssus, aceoriing to composition, Minimum
charge seventy-five cents,
Local notices adtompenying display advertis-
ine five cents per line for each insertion ; other-
wise, aight cents per line, minimum charge,
twenty-five cents,
Legal notices, twenty cents per lune for three
tusertions, and ten oceuts per line for each ad.
ditional! insertion.
CHURCH APPOINTMENTS
Reformed —Union, morning ; Spring
Mills, afternoon ; Centre Hall, evening.
U. Ev. — Linden Hall, afternoon ;
Lemont, evening—Children’s Service.
Lutheran.— Spring Mills. 10:30—''The
Crisis in Galilee.” Centre Hall, 2:30—
“The Dream Life.” Tusseyville, 7:30
~**The Crisis in Galilee.” - All welcome.
“GILLBTTISM" IN THE HOUSE.
“Gillettism™ is the Republican
dynasty’s newest fad. It is more up
to date than ‘Canponism,” and goes
farther. It is mot dissimilar to *‘Czar-
ism in the old Russia, or Bismark’s
“blood and iron" policy.
As applied by the Republican Speak-
er, from whom it takes its name, at the
direction of the Republican "millionaire
THE DEATH RECORD.
i—
Sto ver.—Moses CC, Stover
tel property, which Mr, Stover owned
lingering illness due to
He was bedfast for several weeks.
and a son of Samuel Stover, deceased
He was in his sixty-eighth year.
Mills Union cemetery.
her home in Millheim last
twenty-four days.
sisters :
D. W. Lewis, of Philadelphia ;
Claude E., of Akron, Ohio.
met in her home town. Her pastor
were held
Burial was made
funeral services which
Tuesday morning.
Millaeim,
Hariman.—~Mrs. Apna E.
months.
rand-mother, and was a
BE
day morning of last week as the result
of a stroke of paralysis sustained a few
days previous.
She was a daughter of Daniel and El-
len Mothersbaugh and was born on June
sth, 1850, hence was almost seventy
years old. She was married to Samuel
Glenn on November 16th, 1868, and he
survives with six children, Mrs. Samuel
Wasson, of Lemont ; Rev, James Glenn,
of Carlisle ; John, of State College ; Ed.
ward, Ella and Margaret, at home.
Four children preceded her to the grave,
Mrs. Glenn was one of a family of elev-
en children and but one brother and a
sister survive, O, L. Mothersbaugh, of
Boalsburg, and Amanda, of Lemont.
Rev. Harnish had charge of the funeral
which was held last Thursday, burial
being made in the Branch cemetery,
Horrman.—On May 25th, Mr. and
Mrs. J. H. Hoffman, of Millheim, left on
a trip for Pierre, South Dakota, and
while enroute Mrs. Hoffman took
denly ill and died, A telegram to Mill.
heim friends announced her passing
away on Sunday night following their
leaving Millheim. The body was ship-
ped to Millheim, react there
Wednesday, and burial was made
Williamstown, on Saturday.
sud-
in
[843°
last
at
WAGNER. — James B, A.
brother of John Wagner,
Mills, died at his home in Milroy,
Wagner, a
Spring
Tues-
of
day of last week, of heart disease, aged
sixty-three years. Burial was made at
Milroy on Friday.
Children’s Day Service
Church.
Children's Day Service will be held in
the Methodist church, Centre Hall,
Sunday evenin are most
in M. E.
on
gz. to which all
cordially invited.
snr A— ol AAAI
member of the Methodist church ; in her
TOTS LOST 15x WOODS FOUR
DAYS FOUND BY SEARCHERS ;
ONE STARVED TO DEATH.
f LOCAL AND PERSONAL.
Report was current that the M. A
Sankey farm at Pott
sold to Frank T,
. y $ ¢ t late x report was denied | ond decerintio
Miner's Little Girls Went to Hunt $12,250, but later the repor was de and description -
. , by one of good authority, the state
Teaberries, Near Osceola,
ment being made that no sale had been
Found After Long Searching. consummated prior to
This farm has been in the Sankey
ily since 1790, and
MEW ADVERTISEMENTS
ers Mills had been ATTENTION
Royer for the sum of party having fars
248, Champaign
and :
FARM WAN
from owner
Wednesday.
Clutching in her baby fingers a few fam-
teaberries which instinct had prompted
her to gather to fight off starvation, lit-| Why Mr. Sankey hesitates to part
tle Annie Tokarchek, aged four and one | the homestead.
half years, was found in the woods near | Proximately
Osceola late Monday, seated by the life. | 86Tes,
less body of her little sister, Julia, who
had died from starvation. The chil
dren |
is one of the reasons
with
ap-
forty-four
The place contains
one hundred
timbered.
of
§
03
twelve of which are
Robinson
Mrs. Margaret Loyd
the borough.
jellefonte, and Mrs, Elizabeth Kirk, ply to
were located by a searching party after Hall. Ps
having been missing from their home
| Reading, have been stopping at a
| Centre Hall hotel, These ladies, back
near Osceola for over four days. The Cent
little
months, had been dead about
when found,
| in 1871, attended school in
girl, aged two years and | and paturs
been made here since
PWT re ] i . » %
Exposure and tre County Normal school was
R.
lon
had caused her death,
The following
away of the chi
day's William:
wds in type before the ne
| swing th
en, Su
story of the wandering | gee being
Meyer, later hi
perintendent,
The
Was
! or. former
was reported
™ : i A 3
I'wo little girls, barefooted and thir
clad, have been lost
in the woods neat
bs id ry
Thurs
sarche
Searcliers
of
laet
LAT
of
Osceola, this county, since
day morping. and hundreds
~
GEORGES VALLEY.
o
have not been able to find a
them.
tra .
trace -"
Edna Lingle spent
$2 ined 3
The children are Annie and Julia To-
karchek, aged respectively four years
and six months and two years and nine
months, the chi '
hek,
a
Osc
Tt
ii
a Slav mi
headwaters
:
sola.
wursday m
from home, attir
withoul aloes, slo
teaberries in the
Little
timber
yzed in one leg
they did not ret
SPRANG MILLS.
A little son came to the home of Chris-
tie Musser last week.
py ter years, not being able to atten
steering committee,” it is most effective- later years, not being ab > attend
ly used in the House of Representatives
to silence those who would say such
things as Speaker Gillett and the *'steer-
ior them t
church, her Bible was her greatest com-
fort. She leaves to mourn her loss two
daughters, Mrs. John Wilkinson, of Pot-
ners quit work
sd _
iC
i Lacy
MissiBeatrice Lee, who is training for
ing committee” do not wish to have
said, By the application of *Gillett-
ism,” the Speaker, who though he 1s but
one of the 435 members of the House,
may refuse to recognize a gentleman on
the floor, regardless of whether it is the
will of the other 434 members that
gentleman be heard.
“*Cannonism,” *Czarism” and *‘blood
and iron’ have all run their evil course
and are no more, which ought to be a
lesson to the Speaker and the *‘steering
committee,” although, as former Speak-
er Champ Clark says, a Bourbon forgets
pothing—and learns nothing.
the
————— I
U. S. Supreme Court Upholds Pro-
hibition.
Late Monday afternoon the constitut-
ionality of the pronibition amendment to
the constitution was uph eld by the Uni-
ted States Supreme Court,
The court fu de
tutionality of ¢
act limiting the
beverages to 4 of I
The rigid esforcement of the Prohibi-
tion measures is upheld by
rther declared the consti.
be Volstead enforcement
De ent oF
pei Cel OL
alcohol
in
one per cent.
the court
The decision nullified all state laws per-
mitting the sales of high contents of
alcohol in beverages upon the formal
declaration of peace such as were passed
in Wisconsin, New Jersey and Rhode
Island.
————— A ——————
Plan Busy Summer At State College.
With the annual June commencement
at the Pennsylvania State College,
which this year will extend from the
12th to the 16th, one is naturally led to
believe that the work of the college is
completed until the reopening of the reg-
ular courses in September. However
such is not the case, as evidenced by the
following program planned by the col
lege for this summer, the biggest of its
kind ever ugdertaken :
June 19 to 24—~Young Farmers’ Week.
Juve 22. 23 and 24—Annual June
Farmers’ Week,
June 28 to August 6-—-Summer Session
for school teachers, attended each year
by more than ome thousand publi~
school teachers from all parts of the
state,
June 6 to 19—School for boy scout
leaders, with camp and instruction for
boy scouts.
July 12 to 30—A session for county
preachers with conference on rural
church conditions, in cooperation with
the Interchurch World Movement com-
mittee, -
July 19 to 30—~School for supervisors
of agricultural schdols ; a school for su-
perintendence and administration for ex-
ecutives, both in cooperation with the
State Department of Public Instruction,
July 26 to 28—8chool directors session,
according to a resolution adopted by the
State Directors Convention, February s.
State Agricultural Notes.
The value of the commercial grape
crop in Erie County, Pennsylvania, last
year was estimated at $3,000,000.
More than half of the plant food con-
tained in manure is wasted by careless
and ineflicient handling.
All grain, hay, fruit, and animal prod.
ucts scld from the farm carry with them
a certain amount of plant food. This
must be replaced or the farm deterior-
ates in fertility,
ters Mills, and Mrs. T. C.
Latrobe ;
thirteen great graodchildrer, Buria
Monday.
a long-time subscriber of the Reporter
2:53 o'clock Saturday morning at
after an illpess of six days. His
preumonia.
was a shipper for Gately & Fitzerald
the Johustown merchants, since i902
was due to
ill that night. The funeral
from the Griffith home at 2 o'clock Mon
r
day afternoon,
The deceased was born at
{ Shaw) Shires.
brother of Michael Shires, of Scranton
Emery Shires, of Roaring Spring, an
Mrs. Clarles Bollinger, of Altoona, Be
sides these, Mr. Shires
his widow, Mrs, Annie (Rager) Shires
is
the South Side.
N. Griffith. died in Stonycreek Town
ship on February 6. Five graocdchid
ren also survive Mr. Shires, three grand
daughters and two grandsons.
ceased was a member of Vestal Camp
No. 33. Woodmen of the World.
Kgrsg.--Thomas Keen, a native of Pot
ter township, died in the
struck by a vehicle,
Mrs. George Shook, of Penn Hall
Wednesday afternoon,
ing a week ago, at the home of his son
Jobn O, Eisenhuth, near
and seven days.
strokes during the past month,
Mr. Eisenhuth was born
following sons and daughters survive
Thomas, of Milto.
Snyder.
ronsburg.
a nurse at Bethlehem
home for a few days.
Mrs. Sleif
Sunday with her sister, Mrs. Chas Roy-
er.
Ex-Sheriff Arthut
Hulda Meyer,
the west,
Fifty-seven men from Penns Valley
are employed at
State road
Miss R
tress
hospital, was
r. of State College, spent
Lee and aunt, Mrs.
aunt
are visitiog relatives in
Pleasant Gap on the
uth Musser, assistant postmis
is visiting her brother at Cham-
bersburg
Charles Allison and Mon-
treal. Canada, are spending a few weeks
with Mr. Allison's father, Wm. M. All
son.
Quite a number of members
0. 8. of A. attended the sermc
re Hall on
yy Rev. Catherman.
SPRING MILLS NO 2.
. ‘
Gentzell
family, of
of the P,
nt at Cen-
Sunday evening, preached
*
L
3
:
on
Gentzell has two ex-
The garage
full time and Mr.
machinist
clerk, so that he is equipped to handle
ly.
H. B. Mensch and family, of Miiton,
Charles Rossman and family, of Mill-
heim, Mrs and som, of
Akron, Ohio, spent Sunday at the L. E
Rossman home
. Charles
I runmng
: | pert
beipers. xiso an office
all work prompt
Nelson Wert
to
Frankenberger expects
parents at Spring Mills prior to starting
to work again.
The supervisors are busy looking after
the township roads.
H. E. Fye and family, of Centre Hall,
spent Sunday evening at the home of
Harry Fraokenberger.
All crops are growing nicely ; seems
to be prospects for lots of fruit.
REBERSBURG.
E. J. Bair is having the wood work
of his brick dwelling house, on Mis farm
northeast of this place, painted.
Mrs. Edwin Zeigler, of Mount Alto, is
visiting her mother, Mrs. J] K. Meyer,
at this place.
Jacob Gephart is having a concrete
walk built in front of his dwelling
house. $C, C. Smull, of Smullton, is do-
ing the Job,
Mrs. Lester Minnich is nursing ber
sick sister, Mrs. J. D. Houser, who re"
sides on the Meyer farm near Wood.
We bave fine growing weather at
present, the farmers are jubilant over
the good soaking rain of last Friday as
we had a short drought,
The Odd Fellows who contemplated
decorating the graves of their departed
brothers at this place on Saturday, June
12th, Dave postponed the exercises un-
til Sunday, June 13th, at 6 o'clock.
O, F, Stover is building a large reser-
farm with water and in connection he is
taking out the old wooden pipes which
were put in about twenty-five years ago,
and will put down galvenized pipes.
Mrs. C, Mallory, who spent the past
few months at this place in her beautiful
for Pittsburgh where she will spend the
summer with her husband, who is hold-
ing down a lucrative position in the
Westinghouse,
AIM ABA SA
The Centre Reporter, $1.50 a year,
*
search continued {
waler was
the state con
r propert
1 be DOOORTY, ¥
wid corp
Poses 10 have, Possess anc
| benefit ap
| and the suppiem
Vi.
Ht
THERA
A
Printing Brings |
Clients
Not every business has a show |
window. If youwant towin more
clients, use more printing and use
the kind of printing that faithfully
represents your business policy.
You save money and make money
for your patrons. Do the same for
yourself by using sn ecenomical
high grade paper — Hammermill
Bond — and good printing, both of
which we can give you.
If you want printing service and
economy — give use a trial.
T is said concerning the month of June that then, if ever, came
bedutiful days. And June, of 1920, seems to be upholding this
tradition,
We have provided for this month, a beautiful display of Clothes for
Men and Women,
The one thing we wish to call attention to is this,—
A Big Reduction on All Ladies’ Goods for the Month of
These goods are most timely, in every respect, and it is for your bene-
fit to at least visit us and look them over.
Make yourself comfortable during the hot weather, by purchasing your
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