The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, February 01, 1923, Image 1

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    SIGNS OF THE TIMES—OUR
SAVIOUR'S GREAT PROPHECY
[Written for the “Reporter” by Mrs.
al,
OL. XCVII
_OBNTRE_
"HALL, PA., THURSDAY
PLIGHT OF FAMILY DOCTOR DE.
SCRIBED BY TOWN PHYSICIAN
, FEBRU!
STATE FARM PRODUCTS SHOW,
1923,
£300,000 DORMITORIES FOR F. & M. CENTRE HALL DIRECTOR
By “Ellsworth Camerly,”
President of College Announces Dona
tion of $100,000,
of dormitories at
HAPFENINGS OF LOCAL INTEREST
FROM ALL PARTS.
ike
ik
Centre County Farmers Attend Show— |
Rishel Makes a Sale—Wool Grow. Say, I will try and adve rtise
ers Win Ribbons, | A uttie bit
{But you had
And deal
High Cost of Education Making Pro-
fesslon Less Attractive, With Pub.
lie Agencles Reduelng of
the Work Harder to Make Living
Than Ten Years Ago.
Franklin
Lancaster, at
not to exceed $300,000 has been
by the board of trustees,
to announcement of II.
H. Apple, president of the college.
De. sald the committee
buildings and grounds had been auth-
. . . Erection
Stalin Campbell, of San Francisco, (
who the
friends and relatives in Centre county.]
or all,
it in east and Marshall College, at better get wine
Hall,
present is among Scope all
a cost A
attended
Show, at
number of farmers in Centre
the
Centre county The knock we ail to hear isi
authorized State Farm Products
WwW. PF
the
sale of Berkshire
The
attended
|
Penns Valley Bank is my first
Where I have
k you
!
to
stop, of opportunity.
_— according an Harrisburg Rishel sold always dealt;
ae,” —
Longwell, M. D.,
PART 1.
The of the physician
surgeon is nowhere what it was at i
“Master,
of
»
S¢ sail one, “what man- Mrs. Clyde Dutrow,
Frid
her
HH Centre Han |tWo pure-bred gilts in State con- It helps when you have not got 9 on
ner stones and what , pigs ss
The
thou these great buildings? There shall
buildings ar t 1 ; gt Ye you | t leborst ¥ to visi
Riding Apple on #gnment bred sows Enough A¥e your pelt to Rebersburg to, visit
The National
! And
here. Saviour replied: “Secs oO Mr laymon Iai
i i : and gilts farmers from Centre Mrs. Raymond Bair,
the
prestige Bank
for
and tis a modern
one
: orized to obtaln an architect to prepare he jCOUDtYy who tkks you a trial; Joseph Kelly, of Reedsvillie
not be left one stone upon another, that
shall
As
Mount
Mark
alone
nt be thrown down.”
soon as they were ( ti
n
of Olives overlooking the «
the disciples. came to Jesus, savin
AR
And
coming,
Matt
he
Ces (
the
end of
to
what shall be signs
and
24:
Nl
of the the
Wool
3 Replying this
fo
tok
re a sentence the experie:
f his church through dark ages
follow: then
the
t
described t
The
he he ove
¢
t
« Inst days Saviour
first of the fall of Jerusalem: he
Luke's gospel
“When
passed
ves the fullest
Ye shall see Jerusalem
with armies, then know
the desolation thereof
let
the
nigh
igh. The
L
is
in Judea fle
let
them which are t
mountains; 12
the
them
and thems which
in mids it depart out: and
it
enter
ne in the countrie
there! * these be the @
¥
of vengean
re” written
«1:2 « "ha
lem and Judea
their city, lon
ed of God, could be
0-22
Cily, so &
first
an commander
undermined
sadder decide
“He
Josephus,
pushing
the
for
attack. retired from city
says WUt any reason ir
book
the world (Seo
19.)
Romans
chap
ter
5 “sta
But the
the letter.
the temple afl
8 OC
ruin,
son is one
Oy
admonition m the ends of the
these latter day
wider proclang-
as foretold fhe
%
meerning his see
That
oming no theories of a ge
cret coming a mystic ;
he
shall
comin
might deceive the
"HH man
Lo, here is Christ, or
For
unwary, says in
plain words: any
say
unto
you,
there,
believe it not there ghall
falve Christs, and false prophets,
wt
and
Ere
insomuch
shall show
ders;
ble,
signs
that,
and great won-
Were poss!
‘
&
Where-
Be.
forth
they
I
they
ve the very ele
Jehold, have told
fore if
hold, he
Behold» he iw in the secret chambers:
believe it not. For the lightning
cometh the and shineth
the
Matt
you before
Bik |yY unto you,
i® in the desert, go not
as
off
the 80
coming of the Son of man be.”
24:23-27
Today we see the need of this warn-
ing. of the subtle
tions are found in phe teaching
Christ has already come,
that He comes
out east,
even unto wost, shall also
Some most decep
that
secretly, or
of
A
fore-
in the chamber
death, on in spiritualistic
gainst all these are
warned, as against any
cles that may come showing marvel-
ous signs and wonders. Now the Sav-
four, referring to the days of tribu'a-
tion foretold by the prophet Daniel,
Christ says: Immediately after the
tribulation of those days shall the sun
be darkened, and the stars shall fall
from heaven, and the powers of the
heavens shall be shaken: and thea
shall appear the sign of the Son of
man in heaven.—Matt. 24: 20.30. In
Luke's record of the same prophetic
discourse, additional signs are given,
deseribing conditions in the earth as
Christ's coming draws near. His ace
count reads: There shall be signs in
J the sun, and in the moon, and in the
stars; and upon the earth distress of
nations, with perplexity; the sea and
the waves roaring: men's “hearts fall.
ing them for fear, and for looking after
those things which are coming on the
earth: for the powers of heaven shall
be shaken. And then shall they see
the Son of man coming In a cloud with
power and great glory. And when
these things become Lo pases, then look
up, and lift up your heads, for your
(Continuetl on next column)
»
feance. -
€IrTors we
as well agen
a
plans and proceed with the work, The
a
committee also was authorized
i complete plans for the Blesecker
nasium to be erected largely
the $75,000 gift of Fred W.
Pa.
Mr. Apple in his annual report
the at
st in its history
Blesecknr
Somerset,
Ar
nounced that enrollment
college is the larg
fe wil-
1
i
also reported an endowment of a
llamson medal for character, leadership
and scholarship to be given by Owen
Jr. N. J.
cles amounting to $10,975. The college
through the
date, $108,000,
the
Moon, of Trenton, and lega-
forward
On
has received
to
movement the
of
Board of New York Clty is contribut-
to
basis this General Fducation
*
i
ing he institution $100,000,
Etters Farm Sold.
8 Etters
The
Klinger bridge,
John farm, west of
ve Lemont,
State highway, was sold at
Walker,
owns
the
public
son-in-law
farm
the
farm was
The
was
rere
fe
t1 1
14
tains fifty - id
£5.000,
house
8. and 80
f
A
the
d small barn, sbuth
and
urchased
I £
+
PY or con 5
Klinge: bout
land
2, u
one
by
acre
Mr
nl )
ping i
,
oA was
His
Ww
whose
was attended
Hall,
the Etters
G
of Centre
the prophet
f£
i
ortells these
moon and st
ve ul
ih * e
wa: 1, The
darkening
The
*
N
our
irthquake
£
f ¢
the and moon fall
4
and other signs
The Reformation
cut short the days of
sun ng
f the stars Distress
- oy
1762
te
This
CeEne-
in began
tribulation
hat
shows that by the middle of t
tury the days of
persecution had ceased
of
exact
any great general
In
fry
th
in
nature
to
Fy
the case, we may not nt the
year and say, here the days of
timos,
pages of his
tribulation ended. From
to
these
then, we are scan the
tory to learn if the appointed signs be-
gan to appear. As we look, we find the
events recorded, following on in the or-
ler (1) The Lisbon
quake of 1175 The dark
1780. (3) The 8
(4) General conditions
wedicted : earth-
(2) of
days
of 1833
movements
ghall
are
5
fal Stars,
and
betokening the end. “There
the We
study the record of events,
be
io
watching
signa,” Baviour said.
£
to catch the wigne of
bond. Immediately
the approaching
following these
times, there began an awakening con-
cerning the vital Bible doctrine of the
second coming of Christ, which has
grown the definite advent move-
ment that is earrying the gospel mes
sage of preparation for the coming of
the Lord to every nation and tongue
and people. A bright #ignal of hope
in a suffering world Christ weaid:
"This gospel of the kingdom shall be
preached in all the world for a wit:
ness unt, all natfon®: and then shall
the end come ”—Matt. 24: 14. In 1800
only one-fifth of the human Jamity had
the Bible In languages they could read.
In 1500 nine-tenthe of the people of the
world had the Word of God in langu-
fges and dialects known to them. It
Is estimated that now there are about
23,000 foreign misslonaries In the fields.
with many thousands of trained native
evangdists and helpers.
Another prophecy-—that of Rev, 14:
6-14-—whows that the closing phase of
this world-wide missionary movement
‘8s to be he proclamation of the specs
inl gospel message of preparation for
the coming of the Lord, calling ati men
to worship God and keep His come
mandments, and warning them agninst
following the teaditions of men that
minke vid the Word of God,
into
beginning of the
The year 1900
nineteenth century
was the gold
all Medi
cine lacks the sensational cures, as f
the
wonderful medical
sutgeon’s
en year from standpoints
*iyellow fever, and public, spoil
by Success, has
come more and moso
depths of
ng
standing
exncting
its heart
hex
Progress
physicians
unst
} {
i
oe 3
plo, stil dle as our ancesto
the Dark Ages. What
the
is the physician's
death.
The New York
Health reported in 1921 some 16
it rad
communities there
Depa
ies which } no doctor
wis not
dan who had been out of
five years, Out
4
ions for physician
villages and hamlets
physicians ol
mit. The
were
game situation
other states One
ised a subsidy
fiteen miley
which a few
Years
Many
12
phy Bu
bac
ainable, of good quality
The
rur
ns,
kK med! servi
sonable oost
toy
mitiog
students so
Most
ind
interference
hours in
1811
New York
doctors,
ricts of
off of
although
gain
per City comforts and
idvantages attract the gradustes
medical colleges to the cities
The World
doctors into army
¢ feaving
loserted,
gathered many
oR, |
aar
i
after thet
ity
NAVY service and
the attractions of the « minde
Hospitals Not Adequate,
Hospitals In the las
» return to the countr
ger town and cit
doctor
The
reas
ies dy not take the place of a
for towns of rural communities her
places need resident physicians
to care for minor emergencies, contas
fous and ordinary illnesses. The gener
d practitioner, whether in the city
country, ia the man who must contir
to the of
BOS. specialist and hospital can-
for ordinars
The
not take his place
care majority
Inhabitants of rura
districts do not want an elaborate sya-
State medical id
tem of bureaucratic
auch as has been proposed. Both farm-
er and doctor will protest against any
tendency which means paternalism
A large proportion of the doctors in
rural practice have been out of collage
not less than twenty-five This
means that most of them obtained their
education in the form of a high school
course or less, with two or three years
in a medical high school, an education
nich less expensive than that today
and a start at least five years earlier
in getting an income. To get a med!-
cal education today requires four years
in an ordinary college, four years more
in a medical coffege, usually
two years spent as ‘interne ifr a hospi-
tal, and perhaps post-graduate study.
After this comes the slow upbuliding
of a practice
Such an education has been estimit-
ed to cost $2,000 to $2,500 a year. A-
gainst this must be compared the in-
come of men In other activities of life
who begin earning Immediately after
Jeaving the high school gr college, Fig-
uring the above and counting interest
by the time a physician is really on
his feet with an income in excess of
hes expenses, he has an investment of
from $30,000 to $40,000, This means an
interest charge of about $2,000 a year.
Besides the requirements of the medi.
eal coliege for a degree in medicine,
the addition of p year as interne in a
years,
ono or
tf
named below:
J. M. Campbell, A. C
4. H WpsLor,
i Fu
Pine Gros
kie, J
Port
Prof
Spring Mills.
W. PF. Rishel,
dartges, CO Hall
Harold Brungart
Roy Vonada,
J
Me
Bennet
R
entre
Laster
Dale, State Coll
ge
vin Miller, Hublerst Ure
Important Real Estate De:
handso
al,
of Oddfellows hip
nid BYBT
Branch «
Te
Xam t Lhe 14
Sold Four Race Horses,
Max:
All
delphia
FOnosy
Ph
dog ee
a loense
Hleges and ts
medical colleges
more under
nonemedical men and lay
ganizations there apparently is a moves
¥
required
dogres ol medicin
increase the amount of ulra-
¢
i
ientific education required di-
An
ation
Wa
phoma hor coming step In medi.
al edu in t, the freedom
bic
various
Hmit
Ty of
ant a
1
ph yeicis
prestige the legally enascd
in 10 practice the
branches of modicine and SUrgery un-
the plea thats to properly train
himself as a specialist a physician must
have an additional and special train-
Perhapa here Hes concealed
the
Emit
ing the
hand of present groups
specialists to competition,
of possible education.
In former days the specialist was de.
from the general practitione:
of
aided by
No
exX-
of post-graduate work.
graduate who direct nto
pecially
receive, and it woakens
grasp and outlook. Special
‘ommittees, fargely under the influence
are now studying
goes
and a
iis
the
ler to suggest minimum courses of
phy
be classed as
will mean
«can
“approprinte oer
some seventeen speclalites. OF
" studied
hs
hogpital; a Ofth “yer Is ooining th the
(To be continued next week.)
ire
And
has got business
with
a
you
hum,
greets a smile
meals wi
Ww
86 IY
And
you sure il
pleasing
food both
1
43
io the
have to
Inn,
cold
slop
eman's
Ves you and bot,
fill
you
brim
1 John sell
And
foefilln
And kh
Dauberman will you
Kmokes,
candy
Aino Eweels,
|
- up ail his
peanut
fresh
pokes,
|
|
| Your
#sndies cut ments
} Water
orpora tion
the Water
Ti
company
Americ
an
ru
off
Company,
fice the Iattiey
York
J
Telains
George Kaelber Rochester,
the Key-
remain as
a Jarge Test in
stone Company and is to
president
Arrangements have been made with
the West Penn Power Company, one of
West Penn v
$
the subsidiaries of the
which is also of the
can Water Works and Electric
¥
H
ntrollad hy Ameri.
Com
many, whereby the Keystone Company
will be
West
Carfeul studies of the territory sup-
managed and operated by the
Penn organization
plied by the Keystone Power Corpora-
tion have been made by representatives
of the West Penn System
have expressed themselves as
very optimistic concerning the
Industrial growth of this territory
While definite plans for future enlarge
ment of the local gystems have not
been worked out it is stated that the
first aim of the new management will
be to provide for the best quality of
service to existing consumers and for
increasing source of power as fast as
the market for using it can
veloped.
and they
being
future
be
Cheek Forger Penned.
Peter A. Hitt, of Philipsburg, and
later of Clearfield, and who held po-
sitions on the police force in both
towns, was sent to the Bellefonte jail
last week, on being unable to secure
bafl in the sum of $1000. Hitt was in
the habit of going to capitals of other
counties and passing off as chief of po.
live of Clearfield and at the same time
passing worthless oheckes, This was
done in Lock Haven, Wiilamasport,
Bellefonte, and several other places.
Finally he forged the signature of his
wife and father-in-law, Willlam Pel.
ton, to a pote and got it cashed at the
Moshannon National Bank, Philips.
burg.
Tomorrow is ground hog day. No
matter whether of not the sun shines
on Friday, we may expeot at least six
state of Texas where he
his son Walter and
£ ons
rs D
Mary
week
Hlum the
r daughter,
.s ym wx
snoop and ( WV
inniversary meet
Masons,
University
there. The
sick ness
Auman, who
the
transferred
was
oad statiog Coburn,
rik 3 at
tog Northumber}
1 advanced wages Buccess
the faithful
pment of
Miyire
shits that
Kar
ness
shipments
£444 $yr
100% iy
from
The
ts ice house s
Dewart Products
Booger
Dewart
an
:
Mra
Three robins and a of
a Pa
n
were scan within ten days
of Woodw ard These
end blue 1
the
are
portion of
robins
uways remaln in north
inter. Let us hope they will success.
Ww
fully battle the elements
of Ives L. Har-
and
was damoaecd
residence
Cur-
J
Attorney
Mm a candidate
i Minty for pres-
Elk,
Repub-
Dem -
Sproul,
q
ent judge « the linton. Cam-
He
Baird,
eran county district iw
Bean, Judge Eugene H
a
ocrat appointed by Governor
also be
himself.
will a candidate to succeed
A effort
tizens of Mis
concerted iz being made 1
¥
nn county, the county
commissioners and Granville townshin,
.
© induce the state highway to ald
of
n
the construction road from Lew
1 the Malta
built the Juniata
a
istown to Granville
If
will be bridged
an
home the road
in
ive -
i
Pigs with |
Walker,
Some time ago
is pigs irmer taymond
Hall
Pos.
off -
springs although the same complexion
In order ts
of piggies Mr. Walker concluded
would take them to the houke and
feed them milk through a nipple. This
if
i
ten
who lives west of Centre
¥
a mother Just
{iO
ftively refused own of hor
r
as herself, save the Jitter
he
was done, and at regular intervals the
bottle was brought to the little
and each one given nourishment. When
the feeding was over all was quiet, hut
goon there was a stir again, when the
operation was repeated. The feeding
seems 15 to be highly successful, and
barring the trouble the family is got.
ting along fine. At the end of the
eek one had to be at a considerable
that it
en
was feeding time.
Thursday of last week two silesmen
~ William Johnson and RH Milbourne
from widely separated sections were
in Centre Hall and both gave expres
#lon to finding the climate here much
to their liking. The former was a Chi-
cagoan, on his way to New York, He
stated the first snow encountered wus
on the Aleghenies. The great moun-
talng bedocked with a mantle of white
Were a delight to him. The latter
Milbourne, had just
weeks of rough weather.