AND LUUAL PERSONAL. Paul Bradford, Old Fort, com the Bradford of the best this section on farm at has one fiedds of in As condition of At is only the Reaporter D, J the grave goes to Mever but press is very times he the hack rallies, COMe- brief. GG. W. tivedd in Centre Hall on ing SP Kimble, of Williamsport, ar- Monday of his morn- and is a guest niece, Mrs Hennigh, A Children’s Day by Farmers service will be ren- the Un Mills, June 24, at dered fon Sunday -s on Sunday evening, "9 0 arc) all OCIOCK, . Me little Mrs Mra daughter, HE of '® sister, Hall, for and Bressler visited Pach - days, Sunbury, Bressler Mrs 1. O er, in Centre a few BR. UI. WwW kiminetas Kis Indi 822-1923 asson, principal of the school at Saya ys ana county, after closing the term, Is back to Coburn for the sum mer, Mr. and Mrs Chester A. Spyker 3 have been entertaining the latter's two sisters, Mrs. S. LL. Shultz and Richard Donels: #ONS, Samuel, and Miss Sarah Creek and in, all of James M: from their Monday with Meyer, 1 Mrs. J. W Columbian, MeO South CC an wmick came irolina morn spend Mrs home on ing to Moet who has been se- time wmick's D. J sone father, several weeks, Alkens, of Eliza beth, Now week was Neff, west tineving Seems Mitte who Teveland Aumber hing + schools rip to Dal- Shrec carpen- "Hilam Ken- engaged as o She Mf was ac rompanied and Ed- friends, ases Rozedla . I, of Greensburg The the al committee having charge of arrangements for Presbyterian Da) found it date fr to making this change will be the lew F 5 the Park, have ad- Lakemont visable to the Wednesday, June change In June 27th, Tuesday, 26th, since by fn the date it poasible to have speaker for Rev Moderator of as the meots D. D Assembly. afternoon Wis General ing, Char shart, Mr glarted from South Dake and expect Mrs thedr and Henry hie me Mitterling in Madison, 10th to reach here by sta, on the instant, Sunday Of course, have been the boat, they stopping along the way, route over juf- Wil- Mr the being Falls, through New York the lakes in Niagara falo, down to Jianmsmport. For a Mitteriing Fuller year or more has been traveling for Brush Compagy Rev, Mrs two daughters, at the gister, Mrs. F. of inst week, Rev. Buck ment exercises Myerstown, his alma mater, and took part in the vardity-alumnd baseball game, he having been a star player on the college team a dvenile ago. and Harry W. Duck and of Minneapolis, Minn, Buck's the latter short mrrived home of lev. P. Geary, for an part vacation, attended the commence- ut Albright College, On July 1st, Lee W. Frazier will en- {er the flaw office of Harry Nolan, in Iresville, Ollo, near Cleveland. Mr, Piiizier is a son of Mr, and Mrs. Fos- {er Frazier, of near Centre Hall, He graduated from Penn State, and later entered the Western Reserve Umiver- sity, at Cleveland, Ohio, graduating from the law department. He is now fully equipped to practice hefore the courts of Ohlo, and it js here predicted he wili be heard from as an attorney. { weds AND PERSONAL, Fee mon. Mrs. Ebon the Geisinger Bellefonte, is for of hospital, Bower, at Danville, treatment. The to have been Saturday WwW. CC TT 1. held evening, which was hall, cancelled social, in the Grange has been The organizations has some other plan in mind. A Nash-8 Mis. F. 0H COU pas purchased Hall. The Frank- ix was QQ. Buairfoot type the heretofore used. recently by in Centre It COUP a beauty. of the is and willl take place ln roadster While we were having but a sprinkle in Centre Hall, Mills, hard This on Tuesday afternoon, five miles away, Was rain, with plenty of of was im- Mce- information Ww, PF. bit the forest to by the parted Reporter Kinney, ranger. Miss Mildred Swald, stu- dent in the her {riend, returning to who ia a Sunbury High school, paid Freda school on McKinney, a visit, Weadnesdny She entertained at the in the Mills morning was MceKinney gouth «f otters home State house on Tussey wns Gis Were and W F. McoKinne Vv crew of men to Mr. Mc once pul a Kinns We fighting the flames ported to the Heporter morning that the fire was unde with but ten burned home He had WORD MAKES A DIFFERENC Centroversy at Phila Point, delphia Is a Case and There Have Been Many Others, in In the « whi . Frat ; passed away, the government eline tax pa ate, on the in #ihoe has de t of $7, ground merely V ii ALENT) France, Much depends on «ingle word; and the « : thie P'hilade pt ia There troversy Smith sald on a point of should be “the United St nited States are” in the Middle ag were rent ‘assunder” over the “fitioque” in the creed, are similar divergences other terms. “In the beginning was the Word”-—and that word, the Greek “logos,” has itself been the theme of interminable discussion, The speaker who has the malady which in the Thaw trial was termed “logorrhea” has no underdtanding of the art of one who makes every word count for Its value and do its work, I to ref Vien Public Ledge are many Gaver H the Civil r SAYS, historic Instances of idwin fought hether it or Charch coun “Ly se word. war w cot as Eran fen ates is" ‘the cila schisms of the there i's and over word Your Telephone Can Sing. Did you know it 1s possible to play a tune on an ordinary telephone re ceiver? asks Lomdon Tit-Bits, The musical telephone works In the same way as the usual speaking In- strument. When you talk into a tele phone your volce moves a little disk which alters the power of an electric current, thus moving a duplicate disk at the other end of the line. This sec ond disk translates the electric wave back Into human language, In the musical telephone, Instead of talking into a mouthpiece, various buttons are pressed which alter the electric current In the game way that your volce does, This causes the disk in the receiver to move up and down, In this way various notes are pro duced, and If the apparatus can be varled sufficiently, whole tunes may be played, Experiments have shown that elec tric lights can be played ln the same way. A big arc lamp has been made to play “God Saye the King" - in * SUPERSTITION AN Modern Belief Concerning Groundhog Day Has Come to Us From Early German Folklore, We owe our superstition of ground- hog day to the Germans, who hold the idea in regard to the badger. They have a saying) “The shepherd would rather see the wolf enter his stable on Candlemass day than the sun.” As the badger Is little known east of thé Mis- sissippt river, the German bellef as to the little creature's abilities as a weather prophet was transferred to the groundhog. Pope Gelasius, in the Fifth century, instituted Candlemas day as a church festival. Pope Innocent XII, in a ser- mon, sald, “Why do we in this feast carry candles? Because at the begin- ning of the pagan feast of Februalla the people walked about the city with lighted candles in memory of Ceres’ search for her daughter Proserpine, stolen by Pluto. The holy fathers could not extirpate this custom, s0 they ordained that what was formerly now in honor of the Virgin" As this was the last month of the pagan year and its name comes from the Latin “februare,” to explate, prob- ably the people of those days were afraid Ceres, the goddess of the grain, might punish them for thelr sins by light crops. REWARDED FOR HIS HONESTY Affluent Patron of Newsboy Richer by the Nickel Hé Had Offered to Return. It was just at dusk and the late aft- ernoon rush for the street cars had begun, The little newsboy on the cor- ner was crying his papers fdst as he could handle them. the corner came a large, fur-coated, fluent rman, perity. “Here, called, “Yes, sir; sponded the newsboy. sonny; give me a paper,” hurried to make another sale The pened to notice that he did not have the correct change “Here, bud,” he chested yourself out of a nickel gave me too much change.” “Is that right?’ the boy “Well, people would-a off with the money! I like to encourage ho sas City Star, called. most y ¥ nesty | Men of Remarkable Memories It is impossible not to wonder w overpowering floods of memories arose from return in the minds of men celebrated for their memory. Cyrus, founder of the Persian empire, knew ery sald every Soldier) hima. Them smells the name of ey who served und ler stocles, the Athenian gen- one of the 2000 citizens Hortensius, the Roman spoke In the Forum at nineteen, could sit all day at an aue- tion sale, and at evening give an ac count from memory of everything sold, the purchaser and the price, A young Corsican who was sald to have lived at Padua could repeat without hesitation 30,000 names in the order in which he heard them, and then reverse the order and proceed backward the first, name each of Athens orator, who to Feasting. He that feasts his body with ban- quets and delleate fare, and starves his soul for want of spiritual food, is like him th feasts his slave and starves his wile When I behold a fashionable table get out #n all its magnificence, I fancy that I see gouts and dropsies, fevers and lethargies, with other innumerable distempers, lying In ambuscade among the dishes. Nature delights in the most plain and simple diet. Every animal, but man, keeps to one dish. Herbs are the food of this species, fish of that, and flesh of a third. Man falls upon everything that comes in his way; not the smallest fruit or excrescence of the earth, scarce a berry or a mushroom can escape him.-—Addison, Really Simple Recipe. An old colored mammy was asked by a white neighbor just how she made such a wonderful gingerbread, and gave the following recipe: “Oh, 1 jest puts a few handfuls o flour In a bowl, then add a pinch o' salt, plenty o° algs, little bit o’ bakin' powder, some sugar, a lot o' ginger an’ spices, fairsized pitcher o rich cream, lump o butter and four glups 0’ molasses.” “Glups?’ was the surprised retort. “What in the world Is a glup?” “Why, you know, when you pours molasses outen a jug it goes ‘glup, glup’ Well In makin’ this ginger bread you lets it glup four tlmes.” Proverbs of Primitive Peoples, Proverbs of savage people are us ually shrewd and pithy, as the follow ing examples show. The Basutos say, “The thief catches himself”; the Wo lofs, “Before healing others heal your self.” In Accra they'say, “Nobody is twice a fool”; among the OI, “The moon does not grow full In a day”; “The poor man has no friends” A not stick without gum.” Others say: “A crab does not bring forth a bird," “Cross the river before you abuse the crocodile,” “Truth is only spoken by # strong man or a fool.” What Are You Feeding Your Chicks? Did you ever consider’ that the BEST Poultry What are the ingredients in the feed you are now using 7 Feeds do not necessarily cost the most 7 Look them over, then recall the price you paid for that last bag ! ALLENS Fuli-Nest Starting & Growing Foods with BUTTERMILK It is a Life Insurance Policy for your Chicks. When you buy 100 Ibs. you get 100 Ibs. FOOD, — no filler nor waste. an Feed these Mashes and your chick death rate will be reduced to a cypher. This wonderful Starting Mash will supply the vitamines nec ess sary to ward off all common chick diseases. Your chicks will develop rapidly and have solid bones ; they will be healthier and ready for the laying pens earlier than ever before, if you will follow the Starting Mash with Allen’s Growing Food. Here are the Ingredients: Dried Buttermilk, Wheat Bran, Corn Feed, Corn Meal, Ground Oats, Wheat Middiings, Ground Shredded Dried MK Albumen, Henela Bone (phosphorons, lime, sodium, silela) seed Ol Meal, Cotton Seed Menl, Meat and Bone Serap, Salt, Gluten Wheat, Lin- HERE ARE THE PRICES : {00 Lbs., $3.00 ; Hall Ton, $34.50 : Ton, $68.00 If you pay more for Chick Feeds you are squandering hard earned money. During the past two seasons we have sold over 12 CAR LOADS of these Foods into EVERY STATE IN THE UNION. We have the distinction of having the first complaint t to receive regarding these Foods. They are made from FIR Pk ADE ingre vi nts, compounded over our own formulae and are GIV- ING UNIVERSAL SATISF ACTION. yay ane ye One customer from lowa had a Cockerel crowing when 21 days old. We have this cockerel's photo here In our office, A customer from Northern Penna. has pullets laying when 4 months, 4 days old, ALLENS FULL-NEST-LAYING MASH, $3.40 per 100 Lbs. Seventeen FOoob ALLEN'S CHICK GRAINS, $3.00 per 100 Lbs~PAY NO MORE YOUR CHIX! Ingredients—ALL RAISE GET ° ‘BUSHELS" OF EGGS! SAVE MONEY ! » Bell ‘Phone 2. KERLINS Order Your Sapply NOW, ’ Poultry Farm “ge Penn. More Royal Clinch for 1923 United States Tires are Good Tires E U. 8 Tire pcople took plenty of time in developing the Roval Clincher Cord. Whenitwasfinally placed on sale there were no mis- takes in it. Last vear we couldn't make Royal Clinchers fast enough. Production for 1923 has been more than doubled. But whenever and wher- ever you can get a Royal Clincher—take it. Letterheads . Envelopes Dill ob: Give Us Your Orders for Printing TE TT TTT NOTICE —P% dump med not | the | wntain, on | reson. Pe Caulk material al Nittany Mu suitable reward in ing me of the hated refuse future —8 W. | whale ighway over iY premises A be paid anyone in persons who in the post the form there, or does #80 In EMITH ${4% Round Trip CENTRE 16-DAY EXCURSION HALL Atlantic City Wildwood, Ocean City, Cape May, Sea Isle City, Anglesea, Avalon, Peermont, Stone Harbor THURSDAYS CENTRE HALL,PA. duly 12, 26 ; Aug. 9, 23 ; Sept. 6 TICKETS GOOD RETURNING WITHIN 16 DAYS. Valid in parlor or sleeping cars on usual charges for space occupied, Including surcharge. Tickets gpod via Delaware River Bridge Route cents extra, round trip. s¥Stopovers allowed at phia in either direction. NEW BOX STATIONERY Philadel SEE FLYERS, Consult Ticket Agents Proportionate fares ftom other points Ocean Grove Excursion August 23 Pennsylvania R. R. System The Standard Raliroad of the World At the Office of THE CENTRE REPORTER