J. R, an at of Wednesday the Reporter.office. Smetzler, early Potters Mills, morning was caller Miss Mary vacation Bingman is taking a brief among friends in Howard, having gone there on Tuesday. Railr ond and crossing signs, mile posts, signals been with the have refreshed paint by Pennsy employes A valuable cow Stoner field David pasture belonging to was found dead in a last week, the latter. part of Miss Watts, a instructor Vik brief caller at in the Gregg iticinal School, office on Township was i this Tuesday somewhers and A. O, Heturn yimabile emnk, Hall yer. Lost —Auti between Centre Detwil- er home, near C to above named party. Ld More than 6,200,000 trees were forest past forest owners of the planted by private land in Pennsylvania during spring. William J. well the and Yen He was i Yeager, a member of known firm of Spankier ger, died in Lewistown m 6S ve old. irs WW. M member Houser, of Harris Hall townshij Linden of the wis a business caller board, office last Saturday Frank A. Ca administr rson publishe tion in the Runkle, in this Union Sunday School at Farm Mille ill held Ber Vice evening, Ju fo wWhaohn wvening resents the Woman's Union, periance The Rebekah ci delegates t mventior Centre Hall Samuel Shoop; from Boalsburg, Frank McoClintio from Missy ind Mins Dredd Ishle: Mills, Wolf Spring Laura jedleville th He is energy of fraternal call on Exbitor the Times, Hepaorter All made a |On, Saturday morning of the on a young man with plenty and since his control of Times years ago, he has modernized a few the newsy plant and is turning out a rea sheet. Call again. Three young people from Centre Hall gaduated fre High school at the ises held by They Jingman, Harvey Filink Smith Daup. All of them from the local three-year High school The Kerlin Poultry Farm of this place Is wifering CHOICE thorobred Day-old Chicks, delivery June 12th, at 10 cents each. All from vigorous one and two-year-old breeders, Here In your opportunity. It will pay you to stock up now. ‘Phone or call In per- son--we have an Interesting proposi- tion~—~A, E. KERLIN & SON, ym the State College recent commences education Mary Danie graduated ment exer that al institution are Miss and of Wil outing Mr. and Mre kinsburg, enjoyed a hereabouts during the past week, and made their hendguarters at the of Mr. and Mes, O, FF. Funk. They traveled In a car and did some trout fishing, with good At pres ent Mrs. 8, P. Bitte, of the Pittsburgh district, Im a guest at the Funk home James Leeper fow days home sUCCeas (aes. Ezra Tressler, with her charm- img little granddaughter, Margaret Mil- ter, of State College, left for a rip through the west. Their first stop will be Kansas City, where Mra. Tressler will meet her twin sister, Mrs, David, of Long Beach, Oalif. They will spend the summer touring the great west and return in time for Margaret to en- ter school, where she is a general fav- orite. ¥ wd FERS emir driving a first Misa Carnibel Emerick is new Foard coupe, this being her experience in car driving. and three Hitle guests of Mrs, Mra, Warren Boston children, of Milton, A. C. Walker, Centro Hall. sister of the former, in Pitts with R. N., of time Lizzie Boozer, after parents in M ias gome Hall, Sunday, burg spending her Centre returned to Pittsburgh on Samuel Gross and family visited his Stormstown, Mr, pneumonia Frank Gross, at The ia with brother, on Sunday. tter Gross 1s Iving very low Weaver, of the Warren stopping at Dir, Philadelphia, Miffiinburg, thelr Mrs, who and ire a day in Mrs. F Inm, spent Hall . Balrfoot. Hopp Centre with cousin, Mary- annual Solt, Frederick, his James E the land, garage man, made to the turn Hall fishing trip Seven Mountains, fafled to Centra Chicks—THOROBRED £10.00 per 100, will pay you or call at the AND SON, but up in his old home town, AND and a BiG farm. Baby VIGROUS—at proposition that MONEY. "Phone A, E. KERLIN Miss led Mr, land, and Helen Bartholomew accompan- # Krader, of Bellefonte will drive back the passenger “hinlmers sedan purchase vy CC. D. Bartholomew L 8 A ther, Mra, W James Sarne Hanon sited nong Mr. Meyer, Touring Notes from and tivorge FE. homa Saturday morning, send-of We spent a Mra had a neighbors ag friends hed Bedford at - Mr. and Mr. visited reds time with Carbrick is Bedford 8 brick postmaster We ed on our prings and start 2 o'clock and landed We surprised Mr Rupp by way at at Pltosdrn about 7 Mrs and Paul appearing at their which is alway fo open door, a open friends from his Centre county We afternoon Fits Republican remained there until Sun- Mr irn—a home day tupp is postmnast- under an He In home is er at Democrat administration well His aul Jr, or © fiked in Pitcairn. made a son, | abby,” old, very came to the Yout, at West View of Miss Ella College, At felt until by 3 years happy near warm; that home of J. H Mrs Sayner, now Sunday even- ng was we Yout is a of hospitable sister State thelr welcome and stay Monday We are feeling good. home we il we quite there morning when again have not got- very tired, and further Information whereabouts started ten as to of For our ad next jasue the Reporter, AM i. Antidote for Boredom. While prime minister of England Lloyd George devised an antidote for boredom. When he was entertaining or being entertained he arranged to have himself called on the telephone at cer tain Intervals, If the company was dull he discovered at the first ring that affairs of state demanded his attention. If the company was passable he waited for the second ring. If he found himself among kindred spirits, the calls were in regard to matters that his sec- retary could bring to a happy conclu- sion. None in Sight Now, Jack-—Tom, I'm in a terrible fix. I'm engaged to three girls, Tom—Well, that's not exactly a crime, Juck--No, that's the worst of It. If It were 1 could go to prison and have some peace~Boston Evening Trane script, SS ————— Sess A —- ONCE LAIR OF SEA WOLVES Isle of Pines Long Known as Rendea- vous of Ferocious Pirates “Slave Fattening” The Isle of Pines, Cuba, has filled an interesting page in history, Las Casas, who chronicled the story of the voyages of Columbus in his “Historia de las Indians” writes that the admiral discovered the island during his second voyage, in June, 1494, on St, John the Evangelist's day, there- fore naming it “Evangelista.” There is every evidence that between the time of Columbus and the earliest set- tiers the island was the headquarters for the most feroclous Sixteenth and early Seventeenth cen- turles, found security on the Isle of Plnes, as a “slave fattening” depot, days when the traders in “black Ivory” found the difficulties of their profes- sion increasing in thd ratio of preju- dice against slave-holding, thelr profits decreased In a like ratio. They at- tempted to rectify this loss by bring- ing a more valuable article to the mar ket, and the Isle of Pines became a haven of rest and contentment for the slaves they brought over In dark holds from Africa, before they “the States."—Detroit News, Properly Directed, It Most Valuable Possessions a Woman Can Have. There are women who let all of thelr conversation, Then there are women enthusiasm settle at the bottom of their personality, like the dregs of lost youth. Absorbed (n the routine of thelr own little lives they lose touch with the lives of others. cle of Interests narrows, thelr euthu- slasm dies. Finally, Inevitably, Join that sad sisterhood of drab, orless women-—-—-woien count, frothy women, who let their col subsides to the really let bottom. Women “themselves go.” They outside of thelr Httle lives, this Interest sparkles Into er These are the women whom “vivid” and these are the women make happy friendships and marriages, even when they are handi- capped by lack of beauty, or lack of or lack of own we cleverness, change. Lost Treasure of Montezuma, According to legend, Montezuma, at the time of his overthrow in 1520 by Cortez and his Spanish followers, had, in addition to the colossal loot which the victors secured in gold and silver, fabulous wealth in gold stored away beneath his secret palace hidden In the plateau region of what Is now the state of Nayarit, Mexico, The loot, which the invaders secured, was stupendous, to be sure. But they the greatest single cache of gold In Mexico by disillusioning Monte- zuma in time for him to recall his mes. sengers sent out to bring in the gold from the chlef treasure house of his gods, Cortez tortured and then murdered hundreds of the leading Aztecs in an effort to get from them the secret of the location of the great treasure place and palace. Falling to gain his Infor mation in that way, he spent several years scouring the western part of Mexico, but in vain, missed Americans at the Telephone, One way to measure the extent of the relative use of the telephone in several countries is to determine the average amount of time per year actu- ally spent by each inhabitant In tel- ephone conversations, Statistics indi cate that in the United States the aver age per capita time consumed in hold- ing telephone conversations Is 16 hours; in the Scandinavian countries, Denmark, Sweden and Norway, 12 hours; In Germany, five hours; in Switzerland, three hours; In Great Britain, two hours; in France, one hour, and In Italy considerably less than one hour, World's Accessible Timber, The accessible timber of the world is inadequate to the requirements of modern civilization, says the forest service, United States Department of Agriculture. We now draw one-third of our paper requirements from Can ada. There is an embargo on the ex- port of pulp wood from the crown lands of Canada, and this is likely to be extended to all forest lands in the Dominion, completely shutting off the supply of raw material for the paper Industry of the United States, This {llustrates the hazard of becoming de- pendent upon foreign supplies of tim- ber, it Is pointed out. Coloring Cotton Goods. There are many different systems of producing high-grade colored cot- ton goods. Each system has its spe cial advantage over other systems for the production of a certain line of goods. Each class of goods has a cer. tain line of buyers which creates an increasing demand for this particular class. The various systems under which cotton colored goods are pro- duced may be covered under the fol. lowing list: Bleached goods, dyed goods, painted goods, stained goods, embossed goods, enameled goods, print. od goods. ~Dyestuffs, ania — wn —— — Your 100 Ibs, FOOD, will develop rapidly Here are the Feed, Corn Meal, seed OH Meal, HERE ARE THE into EVERY STATE FIRST-GRADE ING U NIVERSAL One customer from this ecockerel's has pullets laying —— — Chicks What are the them Nest Starting When raste, they Dried Buttermilk, Wheat Heneta Bone Seed Meal, Wheat Middlings, (phosphiorons, Ground Hime, ICES ds you are juandering | THE UNION, Iowa had a Cockerel crowing when 2 here In our office, A months, 4 days old. Ingredients—ALL FOOD ou get will supply Y our ck HCKS and ready for Mash Gluten Wheat, Lin- {orn Shredded silicia) hard earned money. They are made from RAISE YOUR CHIX! "Phone 52. SAVE MONEY! Center Hall Penn. Magnificént Pletorial History of Angeles, Am erica at Los isands and sur that sting vestigatiom of primitive rongly suggesta that dancing imary art, became §t the first impulse to be expressed And In addition to « dramatic © wan human ex ternally DHveying ideas In wm, {tis in its es riiost this con- that nature expresses rhythm in interesting to stages rhythmic nection it ds note evervhing in The des the and the heavenly tides and waves manifest it, as of harmonious vibrat Oe Meght and soun 1 movement of the} Therefore when ha io rhythmical they universal orm their of become part man beings set out portray movements simply feedings by their bodies, of the pointed dance, as has been out, Read the NMustrated story in Sunday's New York next adv CONQUERED THE WART HOG “Flivver” Proved Too Much for Pugs nacious South African Animal Who Objected to Its Presence, The wild animals of South Africa do not take kindly to such newfangled Ideas as “flivvers” as the following Incident, related by William MeStay, historian of H. A. Snow's expedition, which has been hunting big game from a motor car, will show: “The wart hog, whose name fairly well describes his appearance, fought Snow's machine to a standstill; to the beast, the ‘ily’ was a new form of ene my. Snow encountered the wart hog one (ay in driving a path across the American, she lunged again vi mal In broad beam. The she retreated like a pgasol wart hog Anew, again and again billygont up the lunged ine Finally the struggle and off, watching the not conquer, 8150 gave new enemy The beat's attitude of ter™ The Centre Reporter, $160 a yaar. DR. LOUIS DAMMERS Philadelphia Eyesight Specialist ONE DAY ONLY CENTRE HALL Centre Hall Hotel Parlors 53 FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1928 Sam todp m. MY SPECIAL OFFER I offer you a cid fitting Er A LOUIS DAMMERS 1017 Walnut St. Phila. CHINESE MINISTER AS CUPID Jesting Ramark Made by Wu Ting Fang lL.ed to the Union of Two Loving Hearts, Wu Ting Fang at Washin ot r of the ft that dawgchter of time. At d one of the brideam be modestly know, as she had not yet fer. Turning to a group of you nen Doctor Wa jocularly re: arked to one of them, “This is a bean tiful lady, would you not like to marry her? He replied, “I should be most delight- ed to” “Will you accept his offer?” sald Doct Wu bridesmaid. She seemed slightly embarrassed and sald something to the effect that as the did not know the gentleman she could not give a definite Meeting the Chinese minister an “at home” a few days later, she 1d- ed him for his bluntness, and he ex- cused hinewlf by sagging that he was bell of motives, A few months afterward Wa ceived an vitation from the lady's paremts to attend her marriage. The bridegroom was the young man who had figured in the unconventional To Wu's agreeable surprise the mother of the bride Informed him that It was he who had first brought the young couple together, and both bride and bridegroom heartily thanked him for his good offices, aske would her turn to She sald tha or {o the answer. at ROO re- young
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers