The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, October 05, 1922, Image 5

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    Er ng 0 oe prin
LOCAL AND PERSONAL.
5 hen | dnt : - . fio ¥ Hq § £ pre er ¢ ET —_———_—— Tee an ’ dia Hp TE
AND PERSONAL. "PUT ONE OVER ON BUTCHER LEGAL ADVERTISEMEXTS, Kg
. Incident Proves That Art of Shopping
Has Not Been Altogether
Thrown in Discard.
prompt payment, and those havine claims |
: against sald estate must present them duly auth- |
. enticated for settiement
ANNA ROSE HARTER, no
Executrix,
Boalsburg, Pe.
LUUAT WANTED—A capable girl or woman
for general houses work; small family;
Et I—— cr —————
XECUTRIX'S KOTICE~
Letters testamentary on the estate of o Keller. AlS
1 8 LAL Y Gre Town. | BRrry kelier, Aly,
MATTHIAS WEAGLRY, late of Gregg To Belicionte. Fi. old
Centre County, Pernsylvania, deceased. :
Latiers testamentary in the above eststs: hav~ |
ing been duly granted to the unGerivnes she |
wollld respectin.dy request any Dolsous Enewing |
themsolves indeblec to the estate (0 make im. |
medinte payment and those haviog olaims |
against the same 10 present Luem duly suthen- | must
ticated, for settlement, Hing
MRS ,
good wages,
Address Mra, Rice,
ville, Pa. a2tt
washing or ironing;
3
i
Daniel secured employs |
ment in the
k Mrs.
complete assortment of fall and winter
Hoom has
Lost-——Elace
{ Bellefonte
Chares A. Floods»
Altoona car shopa,
September
Lucy Henney has on hand
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS, BALE —R
timothy
TI MOTI iY BEED FOR
tested
FOR BALE Hed
be wold this week D.C. Miter la
18, Miltheim, t x '
: i A dignified-looking woman stepped
up to a showease in the meat market,
and after she had bought several
pleces of meat, she asked:
“Have you any shinbone
| could use for soup stock?”
“Just the thing,” responded the i N
, Harry A. McClellan, was a ler | obliging clerk as he took up a long i
] | shinbone and knuckle and balanced it Letters testamentary upon the estate of JAMES
on his left hand, M. ROSS lateof Harris Township, Centre Coun-
“What 1s it unty deceased, having been granted to the under. woeks,
DIN-
lw signed, all persons knowing themselves indebt- | oo png R211
woman, ed 10 the same are hereby requested to make | HES, 4
“Just a half-dollar,” sald he, . s e———— i — ————
“It is such a large plece, would you re
KESSLER’
Pre-Opening For Fall
Shorthorn bull; | cleaned and seed, in
millinery, and invites your inspection. four
Twenty
Hall
and Niagara
small lots, for sale. This ia
ree or
. ; 3 Centre 1 will be as recom-
George Searson, tenant on the Van will be as recom
cholee seed and
mended. WwW. P.Col
yer, Centre Hall. 31it
MARY WEAGLEY, i
Executrix, | % wir pac
odl Bpring Mills, Pa. NOTICE. ~1
Tries farm, one mile east of Lindey Price reasonable,
no Sunday exocur that I am offering a fine lot of
Hall, will hold a
23d of March,
clean-up sale on the Se ig
} isinter apples to private families right ;
T t jovi =
next. hat } FOR q
Wheat,
BALE
re-cleaned on
and make Leaps Prolific ed]
out of the orchard; come
Mr. and
ford,
father; B. D.
Mrs. J. H. Boone, of Hart.
Mrs. Boon
in Centre
your ow pe lection Special sale day a Clipper Mill
. office . . .
Conn, are visiting Monday ir the next three
HARRY
he »
phon
every vield 26% bushels per acre on commo
$1.50 per
Hall, Pa
Brisbin, Prices right ground. Price bushel
Centre Hall Bell
worth?” asked the
The trip was made in a car. Decker, Centre
The
dered his
Rev. Fred K. Stamm has ————————————————
nation as pastox wy
pr
Faith Reformed church, State College, fr—
to accept a call from Cavalry Ref:
After cutting off the large knuckle
of Reading
he again balanced the long, slim shin-
bone on his hand and sald:
“You may have this for 40 cefits.”
The woman looked at the plece for
{ a moment, then at the knuckle and
sald:
“Is that piece you cut off worth only
10 cents?” .
Huyett, was taken Reduced Fares to Lancaster, The clerk hesitatingly replied:
Danville for egates going y the State Sunday “Yes, madam.”
a “All right,” sald the
take that knuckle.”
The clerk waited a moment, looked
at the woman, then actually laughed
aloud. jut he was game and-+ will-
fngly wrapped up the 10-cent soup
bone.
NO WONDER THEY LAUGHED
church,
Mrs. TW M
who has been at
Gramley,
the Gelsinger
Danville for more than a month,
gradually improving. Mr. Gramley and
family visited her on Sunday
daughter
Miss Miriam Huyett,
Mr. and Mrs. EE M
the Geisinger hospital, ’
dink 13 ’ woman, “I'll
treatment. The removal of the
will probably be the extent of
eration.
Rev. M. C.
Valley
John
Drumm, pastor
Penns Lutheran
Wert, of
Newport,
ty, 10 attend the annu
delega Le,
Monday went to
Just to announce to our friends and customers
that we are ready to show Fall merchandise.
astern Pennsylv
Eastern Penns American Soldier in Paris Had Made
a Small Mistake in Copying the
Street Name.
will cover the period to be devoted 1511 Arch st Pl Ieely . et —_—
, During the war, while I was on
leave of absence in Paris, relates a re-
turned soldier, I decided to take a
walk alone, 1 thought it advisable to |
copy down the name of the street in |
which I was staying, so I wrote down
some words printed on the sidewalk.
When I was ready to return I found |
that I could not locate the street |
| where my hotel was, so I approached
a woman, showed her what I had writ-
ten In my book, and tried to learn
from her where the place was. She
laughed and sald something in French,
which, of course, 1 did no* under.
stand, and passed on. A number of |
times I did the safne thing, and every
one I stopped laughed, and passed on |
until a man sald in English, “What is
it you want?”
Delighted to find that I had discov-
ered one person who spoke English, I
ne of the street
where 1 am staying, and I am lost.
Will you please direct me?”
October
big days
| . $y . AAS
A complete line of Ladies’ Coats and Dresses.
The greatest showing of the newest and most exquisite models in the best colors and
materials shown here,
Paige and Lady Duff Hats on Sale Here.
New Line just added to our shelves, right from New York. Any hat shown of the
most individual style. No two alike. Come in and try them on and be convinced.
Complete Line of Men’s Clothing, Overcoats
and Shoes.
We can outfit you in the most up-to-the-minute styles.
The Best Assortment of Shirts, Ties & Hats.
Just what you need for traveling ; greatest assortmznt of nicely fitted luggage.
the dedicat
ors’ monument
Milesbur
MILLHEIM,
Anything you need to outfit thg man, woman or child, can bz found in this
store.
“You haven't written down a street
name,” sald the man, “but ‘post no
bills."
*
DEPARTMENT
STORE
the conv
¥it
and campers
—
SE Ee |e | CR Sr here cxtra Service is Demanded
oi ee | ESL Firestone Cords Predominate
home of Mrs. Homan's ¢
HEREVER the exac- been developed by men whose
le gallon of gaso- he
and Mrs, H. G
Hall, Wedn
will remain here
Strohmeler, forty-five miles
esday of last week nd imehbodi tate 2 po TF an hour and w go seventeen and one
man expects to join
he can induce hi
time
to give him
ture dale,
The
the Lutheran St
Men's Orgar
30 p. m., will again
Penn State student. A soloist has also
been secured, whe ing the
SBunday-school hour apd probably it
the evening service. All class mem
bers are urged by the officers to attend
Anyone who cares to come will be
welcomed.
September remained warm
to the end Farmers are begin
compiain. In the immediate s¢
however, the drought
harm except to retard the germination
of the wheat. In many
pections of the state there was a lack
late sown
of moisture during the past few
months, reducingt he corn crap, brown-
ing the
very difficult
pasture flelds and making it
to prepare a geed bed
Mr. and
Lewistown, their son,
Byracuse, New York, motored from the
Mrs,
and
James CGoodhart. i
Hugh, of
former place, on Baturday, to
Hall, here they visited Mr, and Mrs, F
V. Goodhart and Mrs. Mary Goodhart
The senior Mr. Goddhart, a few
previous, had passed his eightieth
birthday. From Centre Hall the
drove to Lemont where they will viait
Mrs. Charles Thompson, a daughter of
Mr. and Mra. Goofhart.
Centre
daye
party
After a three weeks' visit to various
points in Ohlo, James H. Smetzler re-
turned to his home in Centre Hall. He
was accompanied by Miss Catharine
Bradford, a trained nurse, who came
back with him as far as Pittsburgh
where she stopped to visit an uncle,
Charles Bradford. Among other places
visited by Mr. Smetzler was Clyde,
Ohio, where a brother, David Smetz-
ler, lives, and Cleveland, where he vis
ited Mrs. Carrie Pecht, a sister,
a ———
Transfers of Real Estate.
P. B. Bret i
Buck, tract
Wm. J
neman, et al i
Gramley,
$1.00,
Mra.
Julin® Peterd, et
twp.: $1,500
SG
Anna LL. Billet, war, to Mrs.
bar, tract in Spring
Water
$2,700.
to Oscar
$500
«% bar, to Della
»”
£500,
ote, fl al, to Coburn
Company, tract in Penn twp.
IL. G
A. Knight,
Anna T. H. Henszey,
Staff, tract in
L. E. Kidder, ot ux, to
Davis Boal, tract in Harris twp.;
Gordon Foster, et al,
tract in State College:
College twp.;
Theodore
$16,
300,
fo Wm. M.
$4,000,
Lime and Stone Co. to Al-
Warner, Jr. Belle-
2500,
P. Thomas Zeigler, ot ux, to J. M.
MeKee, twp; $1,
450,
John C. Barnes to J. W
in Spring twp.: $3,000,
John C. Glenn, et ux, to H. FF. Reese,
tract In Btate College: $1.000.
Angelo Genua, et ux, to Peter Mane
gino, ev ux, tract in Bellefonte; $1,600
Charles W. Corl
Kéller, tract
Frederick Reitz, of ux,
Myers, tract in Harris twp.
American
freq D
fonte;
tract In
truct In Ferguson
Davis, tract
in State College; $500,
The Centre Reporter, $1.50 a year.
A racking
nervous headache ?
MENTHOLATUM
chases it away.
For Sale.
Am going out of the
BEE business. Have a-
bout 50 colonies for sale
at my premises located
on the public road be-
tween Potters Mills and
Boalsburg, Centre Coun-
ty, Pa., approximately 3
miles west of Potters
Mills,
PRICE : $10 TO $15 CASH PER
COLONY, INCLUDING
MODERN HIVE and about
40 TO 60 POUNDS HONEY.
Come and take them a-
way before Oct. 15, 1922.
I will not ship them or
answer inquiries by mail
WM. REIBER.
————
tions and tests of tires
are most severe—there
you will find 'Tirestone Cords
in universal us .
The hard jobs seek Fire-
stone. And so well has Fire-
stone responded under difficult
conditions—so consistently has
mileage mounted to totals im-
possible to obtain from ordi-
nary tires that today Most
Miles per Dollar is the buying
slogan of thinking motorists
everywhere.
The blending and tempering
of rubber, gum-dipped cord
construction, air-bag cure—all
these mileage methods have
life work is the production of
constantly increasing tire val-
ues for the public.
Users in this vicinity verify
Firestone reputation, and re-
port almost daily some new
Firestone record of extra dis-
tance travelled.
Don’t be satisfied to buy
tires—buy values—the longest
mileage at the lowest price con-
sistent with such rehable per-
formance.
Make Most Miles per Dollar
your principle of tire economy
— choose your next, tire on
that basis.