LUCAL AND PERSONAL. Willinm Musser, of near Penns Cave, is driving a new Ford touring car. Miss Margaret of Winfield, is staying with her sister, Mrs. Albert C. Walker, Hall. teigle, in Centre The Thursday evening of next week, and local fire company will meet on a good attendance {8 desired. H. housed abott for the after Weeks John Knarr is again heing up several with a bealing in face Thothas Buck, of guest of his brothre-in-law Mr. and Mrs, F ial Day. Yerwick, was the and sister, P. Geary, on Memor- Roland Zettle, owned by at the farm Emerick, tenant on Coeorge H located Potters Mills, had die for him within two weeks. the second horse Otto Bailey, of Philadelphia, a for the Plate Company, visited his brother sales man Pittsburgh Glass and sis- ter in Centre Hall from Saturday until Monday. 4 Rév, oJ. J, of Mrs, Goadhiart, on and Mrs, Carlisle, four rived at the brother, FV where Glenn and children, Glenn's Tuesday, entertained. home of they are heling Thursday last week a Mrs, William This is No. 1. that afternoon of to Mr Hall is declared on was born and Cinels, Centre and in every in he to be numbe: the father. particular by Mra, Israel Valentine gnd d wughter Blanche, of of Mr, Centre Millmont, and Mrs, Hall, brought were MoClenah guests in, in Mr. Val and A rughter Jesse for a few days. entine his wife ip, but returned home immediately. Margaret Rudy, daughter of Mr Edith ind also a Mrs. John Rudy, and Potter cousin of the former mem for several day: Mi: Bellefonte er ‘of the Rudy home, uncle and visited Mrs I. an aunt, Kellerman, near Miss Maude intermediate Stover, teacher In room, amd Mises Margare Mensch, Ppeaxers at the and banquet in the Grange Métis, on Monday PP M “nn in ater Issue Further Mrs. Susan farm h Housman ane, near Colyer Frank Hennigh, fall. from shoulder had the misfortune a bench, dislocating her right and tearing several She was brought to Mra T. A Centre Hall, and ia getting along the home daughter, Hoeterman, although seventy-six years of age Elmer Breon, of near Bellefonte Whe last Hub has a Reporter caller on Thursday of Harry F Mi: Breon for sheriff of Centre ty, subject to week, of announced accompanied by ler, Haven, Look coun the rules to be of the held September 18th, and his forfnal annoucement ap the Demo- cratic primaries pears In proper place in this issue Carl A Ohlo, arrived in Auman, of Stevhenville town the later part of last week and Was a guest at the home Mi: Mrs. V. A. Au- (Thursday) morning of his parents, and man, until this He ia wholesaling meats ind mak- Mr Sunday also en- and Mra, RH, E. Sweets Mr..and Mm W P. Lingle, afl of near Spring Mills. in ing nm sucevss in the Auman tertained Mr wood business and Mrs on and son, and A drive up to Linden Hall by either | the way of Earlystown or Pine Stump that the roads will convince you people liv. are most able, for no other temperament ple would tolerate such roads ing along those ami- of peo- passing by or through their fertile farms. If they have protested, they have not talked loudsgnough or else failed usa sufficiently strong Jectives like that that You pound your finger, to Innguage—ads follow when Roy Smith 1s putting so much pep into the balls he Is pitching for the Viscoe team in Lewistown that he has been dubbed “Bmoky” Smith, He is making a fine record. A Bentinel comment on him says ¥ he can get away with the free transportation first, he will make a wonder in the pitcher's box. Eugene Gramley, pitch- er for the Sentinel team, lost the game to “Smoky.” James Sweetwood is one of the Viscoe catchers und is also do- ing good work. i to \ TOCAY, AND PERSONAL. ieee Cannel Will- adv, in~—a car of screened et MoeClenahan, Just Coal am order dn ely, Hall, your Centre thousand baby chix the Monday Kerlin Grand Nearly were fifteen enst the morn- View sent on ing train Poultry by Farm, driving an Ford Fetterolf are employed Motter is purchased from J. I. Garman “bug” He and Daniel Daup, Jr, the garage, in Homan The man Is doing a rushing Fetterolf garage business in Stay and Durant he Cars on cars. Last week made several deals that will put the road 'n Y, tha near future. new uff Reds, White, Chicks, week Brown and Leghorn also Rocka and each now. Poultry Feeds and 8 Both D. Bartholomew, Centre up- Order Hall, Pa. ies, ‘phones. early. —C i 022 Mrs Mra. were in Krape and daughter Edna, now of a day or the Day. McKinney, Hall for ta Fugene Sunbury, Centre two, having come decorate Braves of friends prior to Memorial Prof. 1. O. with Pittsburgh « Packer, connected schools, who Hall will the ity public home with his family in Centre iis lntter Saturday and Sunday school not lose until the of June part The Department of Public Informa tion has procured a number of road signs which indicate the way to State and at definite “ut ap Coliege it is planned to place them ints on the main high- * s whys within a seventy-five-mile radius of the college “Thi prepared by of the place A very pretty entitled of Life” cantata, Morning is being the soung people and children Methodist Sunday-school of this Children's service will Ix Sunday given evening, June 3, at 7:30 Methodist church Ev- ited in the dy « ordially inv Eimer Ripka, « employed wn the me of the Nittany be Company office now Ix workmen Printing me erected at College, verely Wis Si injured morning when one ol a short J. BR. Keller nixvitie the Jatt last Friday wa Hall vis friends and relative For a week, and on Centre fow of iting dnys previous | his aunt, Mrs Milroy, and Mifflinburg In C. Rossman family the home Rossman the fohn Hagen Mila Miss Verna 1" ill, the Rtter to Shamokin on Sunday were guests of Charles Hagen, » RON Oo the former The fatter onducting a barb and Hagen ie « Shamokin is making good g witions of recent date, Park y fhe Grange has led about forty acres added t« now Centre County in 1s possession seventy for Enc purposes. The Park on the ne fleal location Fair the in an ind adjoin facing Hoffe: mpieting a amp yehli- wth mons street, and on the west, gradual slope to 3 I main entrance Philip A last week liester, of Potters Mills went to Willlamsport to un- lergo an An X«may skull examination by a physician of his aived a picture was taken to examine an injury re when he was The skull had considerable time igo horse the thrown {rom on picture shows pladndy that Yeon fractured and that of the now there a no por- the for has skull bone which much of the tion ssing on pre brain, no doubt accounts Mr the suffering Lientor gone through The during past few years made the ex- that Lester, surgeon who amination is confident My. and will be performed as soon as The exhausted in opera- tion will relieve this opgration tonditions become favorable iO Mr. Lilester to such an extent that he was obliged to take trip and from Williamsport his bed, but he is expected to recover from this in a few days Corn planting having farmers are now been complet performing the many odd jobs that present themselves at this season. Next comes cultivating the corn crop, and then baymaking amd harvest will be here. The outlook for help in unpromising. Help ongthe farm is more difficult to secure today than at any previous time. The spring crops were planted with little or no additional farm help, except the farmer himself, but the handling of the hay crop and harvesting the wheat is another proposition—one greatly dreaded by nearly every farmer in the valley because of the extreme soarcity of labor. Not long ago the harvest time was looked forward to by the farmer as a time Muring which he was ale to make a bit of extra cash, but today the same laborer 1x shunning the hay and wheat field because the day wage is unattractive, and’ vet the farmer is offering more than his busi ness affords. ed, very is a Ss One of the Best Known-—Con. cerning Angel of Deatn, A well-known Mohammedan myth is | about King Solomon and a magle car | pet. The legend is to the effect that Solomon, In his Intense pride in his | horses blous and half-forbidden Innovation among the adjuncts of Jewlsh royalty, had once been surprised in the midst | of a review by the voice of the muez- | zin (Eastern legends are indifferent | about anachronisms) and the sum- | nions to the evening prayer. Not knowing how to attend in time to this | religious duty, Solomon magnificently | consecrated all his 40,000 horses to | Allah and his service. In reward for | this sacrifice, Allah presented Solomon | with a magle carpet, which would at | a wish, transport to any distance the person who sat upon it. { Once, as Solomon was consulting | with his grand vizier, Azrael, the An- gel of Death, passed by and gazed cu- riously at the vizier, who, in alarm, entreated the king to lend him the magle carpet, and bade it transport him to the center of the desert of Arabia, No sooner had he gone than Azrnel sald to the king, “llooked at that man so closely because, having been forbidden to summon his soul from the center of the great desert, I | saw him, to my surprise, standing here with you.” The legend 1s supposed to illustrate two truths—that no man can ever eb | cape his destiny, and that often he | fuMilis it the more certalnly by the | very endeavor to escape it, i GENIUS FINDS MANY OUTLETS | Interesting to Note What a Perusal | of the Patent Office Gazette Will Disclose. i Mouse traps were selected by a | phliosopher as the subject for his Il | lustration of the esteem inventive genius. If he were allve today he would probably be a coastant and | thoughtful reader of the Patent Office Gazette, one of the most matter-of-fact publications of our time, remarks the Nation's Business, In a single issue he would observe, not only mouse traps, but contrivances for pretty much the whole range of modern activity. “Fishing tools” to use in oll wells appear next to live-balt boxes for the real disciples of Isank Walton. “Apparatus for making pe troleum Increase its’ yield in gasoline stands next to a new powder puff. A shoe heel and a dish washer go to gether. A car dumper which laughs at 50 tons and a sure means of catching cockroaches face each other. Out of the great collection of developments of Ingenulty appearing week by week In the severe type of the Patent Office Gazette Is likely to come much of the progress of the future, fs of Social Classification, A Kentucky negro who had been In the city only about two months got a Job as hall boy In an apartment house that has seen better days: a cholce bullding once, but one that went the way with many others during the housing shortage and was cut up Into sleeping cublcles by absentee land. ladies with an eye to fat weekly In take, A caller stopped the other day to 8% a man living in the house. The hall boy responded that the person sought was not in, “Well, take me up to his place, any how,” sald the caller. “Dey ain't no use takin’ you up” expostulated the hall boy. “I done tole you, mister, dat gentleman 1s gone out.” . “Take me up,” persisted the visitor. “I'll leave a message with his folks” “Mister,” replied the youth with an alr that dismissed the question for all time, “it won't do no good. Dey ain't no folks lives here at all, jes’ room- ers.” Where Up Is Down, A couple of young Englishmen were trying to write a southern song to fit a vaudeville act for America “Now we mustn't foozle like Algy” declared one. “He wrote a song en titled ‘Away Down South in Oregon,’ and Oregon isn't down south at all” The next day one of them met an American In the grill and asked him what state he halled from. “I came from down in Maine” “Down In Maine? was asked, “Down In Maine” the other insisted. Immediately the youngster bawled to his partner in the lobby : “HI, there, Percy, I've got our location for a southern song.” The Silver Penny. Honor is due the penny for its an tiquity, The first emperor of the Franks used as the basis of his coin age the pfennig of which 240 were coined from one pound of silver. The sliver penny was the first sliver coin struck In England, At first it was made with a cross cut In so deeply that it could easily be broken In halves (halfpence) and fourths (farthings). Copper pennles were first coined In 1797. At one time there was a gold penny in England. It was introduced by Henry III, and was worth 20 silver pennles, Diffused Energies. “Do you think we have great ora. tors In politics?” “Yes,” replied Senator Sorghum. “The trouble Is that most of us are doing so much for the lecture bureaus and the magazines we don't get time Your 100 Ibs. FOOD, Here are the Dried Milk HERE ARE ING UNIVERSAL this ecockerel's Chicks? What are the with BUTTERMILK chick Dried Buttermilk, Wheat Ground UNION. In our office, Ingredients—ALL FOOD wv supply Your chicks Gluten Wheat, Lin- Corn They are made from and are GIV- RAISE YOUR CHIX! 40 put our best work in our speeches.” En | "Phone 52, SAVE MONEY! Center Hall Penn. & r Under the direction of the Treas ury Department; strong efforts are be. Ing made to develop plans for bring. the opportunities which this govern- ment provides for those forward-look- lug Individuals who desire to fortify themselves against the turns of for tune. To that effect an Interesting booklet on the subject, “How Other People Get Ahead,” has been prepared and issued by the Government Savings System. It Is designed particularly to help peo- pie with moderate Incomes, and it con- tains practical suggestions on meth ods of expenditure and saving that ought to be of value to many. It points out how to differentiate between good and bad Investments, how to recognize the danger signs of fraudulent schemes, and it shows the essentials of sound investment. Getting ahead, making money bring its high return In the safest way-— this Is the keynote of thé Treasury's message to the tens of thousands who are interested In these practical mat- ters, ' . This little book Is full of wise coun A sshd sel on saving, spending and investing, for the question it asks and answers— “Why am I not so prosperous as my neighbor, whose Income is Jess than mine?’—is a question of every consci- entious breadwinner and homebuilder, “Simultaneously with the issue and distribution of this helpful booklet, the Treasury Depagtment has an- nounced that the sale of Treasury Savings Certificates has been made as permanent part of its financing pro- gram,” states Savings Director George E. Lloyd, who represented the Third Federal Reserve District at the Wash- ington conference. “Already more than $127.800,000 worth of these Cer year. These Certificates are populam from the fact that they are absolutely” safe and yield a good rate of interest. ‘How Other People Get Ahead’ book- let gives many valuable facts in this " This little book mmy be obtained freo of charge upon request from local postmasters, Savings Diviglon, Third Federal Reserve Bank, Philadelphia, or from the Treasury Department, Washington, D, €, “— —t } - Shone in a Circle and Age No toriously imn.oral. mp per tainted Inanners manently corruptes hav *» alway COarseness, pHoeblian born in but her she a oom cella la er 1 iS No. ent id te over the warward Il. Her stantial and mu the vears passed o tunities for Wros and her beauty i increased, her bedinvic and more prudent ; more and more clreumsap Pepys’ diary describe ered qaere « as 0 good actress charming wit, and universally She pleased every one, {ron to the charcoal Songs wei written about her, styles of dress were named for her, and her portraits wile painted. seller ———— GREEK PERFECTION IN ART Infinite Labor and Patience Expenc:d on Even the Most Insignificant Coins and Gems. ————— in, The deNeacy and minuteness of Greek work Is gf course most obvious in the reliefs of coins and gems, The colns were pot primarily meant to please the eyd, but to circulate in the fish-mnarket; yet a multitude of the dies are so exquisitely finished that they lose little when magnified to many diameters, ands will bear the most critical examination. The in- taglio gems were meant for the seals ing of documents, the seal taking the place of the modern signature; but the figures upon seals are in their way as finished as great works of sculpture, Seals even more usually than coins gain rather than lose if they are enla Yet they were ex- ecuted without the help of magnifying glasser, Their subjects are from the widest field, the figures ‘of deities, tales from mythology, portraits, ani mal forms; like the coins they intro. undercurrent to the pro- The beast's attitude of
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers