THE CENTRE REPORTER. ISSUED WEEKLY. CENTRE HALL, PENN'A, THURSDAY, AUGUST 9 1923. SMITH & BAILEY, Proprietors, B,.. W, BMITH...coorsisrsansisnser Ridltor EDW, E, BAILEY......Looal Editor and Business Manager, Entered at the Post Office in Centre Hab a8 second class mall matter. TERMS.-—The terms of subscription to the Reporter are $1.50 a year, in advance. ADVERTISING RATES.—Legal notices, twenty cents per line for three insertions, and ten cents per line for each additional insertion, . Loeal notices accompanying display ad- vertisements, five cents per line for each insertion; otherwise, eight cents per line; minimum charge, twenty-five cents. Display advertising rates made known on application. Borough Flre Alarm. In case of fire in the borough Centre Hall, the Bradford & Co. whistle will sound: One long and two-short blasts when fire of Reformed church; One long and five short blasts when fire is south of Reformed church. of mill is north a ———————— CHURCH APPOINTMENTS, P'ine Grove Mills, Hall, Le- Presbyterian Centre afternoon; morning; mont, U. ville evening Ev Hill, morning; Tussey- Centre Hall, Mil afternoon; E88 , afternoon; evening. Met Sprucetown, hodist— Spring Is, morning: Centre Hall, evening. Rev. J. BE. A. will Buch District Super- intendent, preach t all points Reformed entre 30 op Tusseyville, i ring Mills entre AARONSBURG REFORMED Charge (Rev. John 8 Hoilenbach, pastor.) Self-Exaita Reward wil Naw" younger POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS For Sheriff, to announce that E will be a candi- of Centre county, subject of Democratic voters to be held 1923. We are authorized Taylor, of Bellefonte, date for Sheriff to the de as expressed on Tuesday, R ision the at September the primaries 18th, For Sheriff, authorized to BEREON of for the 18 We are ELMER will be a county, | 8 primaries to be held that Townsh Py of Centre na of the expressed at the Tuesday, Sep- announce Beaner candidate Sheriff subject to io mocrat i voters mn tember 15th, For Treasurer, : to announce that of Centre Hall Boro, for Treasurer of Cen- the of the expressed at the on Tuesday, Sep We are authorized LYMAN IL. SMITH, will candidate tre county, be a subject to decision Democratic primaries to 18th, voters as be held tember 1623. For County Commissioner, Wea are authorized to annoonce that JOHN W, YEARICK, of Marion Town- ship, will be a candidate for County Com- missioner, subject the decision of Democratic expressed at primaries en Tuesday tember 18th, to the the Sep as held voters ba 1922 to For County Commissioner, We are JAMES W will be a that of Harris Township for ) he authorized to SWABR, candidate innounee Commis of the expressed at the Tuesday, Sep {County sioner, subject to t decision Democtatie voters as to he held 1923, primaries on tember 1Sth, For Register We are OCKER, Miles the to that formerly of authorized of announce =, 3 lellefonte, will of to Township, be a candidate for of decision Centre of the as expressed at the September 18, 1923, nomination Reglater county, subject the Democratic voters primaries on Tuesday. Higher prices for all commodities ind larger payments of taxes are cited by: Republican the as It argue organs and oracles proofs of the ment. arrivap of prosperity. in Customary The and taxes are Hepublican of living of that the better the condition of the people, say the Republican economists, They must say that because it expresses the phils osophy of a Republican tariff. The tar ifr are greater cost part cost increases prices and bigger prices a stimulus to business try-<thus and indus- reasoning. It falls to answer one question, however, That is, how are the beneficiaries gO ing to get bigger price when the peor. ple are unable to pay the smaller price? goes their ————— A —————— LOW WHEAT AND HIGH COAL. with those Minnesota farmers, and all other farmers as well. We get our In- formation fromm Mr. Frank A. Vandér- lip, former Assistant Secretary of the Treasury and former President of the National City Bank (Rockefellers’) New York. Here it is: “The present depression in agricul- tural prices is due . to too intensive i } MARRIAGE 0. MeCnan, .. M. Coble, LICENSES. Pitealrn Hall Ldnden James Harris . Btate College | Mary Schmidt. ...........8State College BAY. ... 00s: Bellefonte Howard Charles M, Julia M. Long Samuel Patterson . +... Philipsburg | Annie O'Rossey Rush Township R. KE. Jewlistown Forks, N. D. Paul Mary Paul C. Nora M Wililam E Owens, | Allen Orndorf gOrand Woodward Pressier. . Coburn H. Donath Gordon Wayneshoro Emily . Waynesboro John C. Welthaus Mt, Lebanon ’ Charlotte M, Harter. .....State ———————— Automatic Telephone Service toona Soon. College in Al new The Bell building Telephone Company's in Altoona Is progressing rap and upon dts completion automat fe telephone wquipment will be install which obviates the necessity of calling “central” for local connections The not however, will 1925 automatic service, be officers entirely completed until say LINDEN HALL Miller, Miller College, ire visiting friends Miss Helen Wilson motored to Pet Hollidays of State Miss Dorothy of burg, and Elizabeth in town ershurg on Friday and spent the week end at her former home, Mrs childrer H Swartz and Friday Lewis wire yisitors on nt the I oss home who attended the ball those Pit Ross Among week wer M game tsbhurgh das Sam Maurice and (Maude Clintic Mr anid miughter Cudvin U Wieland Jane and Mrs Mrs. Robert Betty pent the weed brother's family her Mrs end with their Gehry ind Mins Professor Francis and Richard Allison® wer dinner and and the Bue ¢ amine Friday on evening ind Mrs rome David ROCOmMpa Akro alin far! in hig: car to fast where ahe will spe Woe K time visiting at the home =n The Edward and family. William H caident of Shuingletown funerat of daughter iy afternod ited snd bus Boalshury ears 2 State went Le there daughters f the with his member o Boalsburg inn church, a good citizen father and one who will he miss th community His wife died VEArs ago ——— A ——— New Fall Millinery. New Fall i ts first The Meth Hat fist millinery in at 15t of the door « MRS. BURD, Millheim, Pa —— A —— . Three Saturday {srange from and Fair will weeks Encampment upon ua Does that make you realiz how near summer ia over and that the empty conl bin is going to be hard or to fill this winter than ever: farming and too many farmers” In view of this statement one would think the depression should have heer 1.200 600 in 1922, to Mir remedy, therefore, relieved when net jeft persons the farms but it seems not, according Vanderlip. The is for the farm only org pot to farm =o intensively and for some millions more of them to aban- don i Mr. Vander the Hagnosis, their farms lip has right A short time ago we were told that the troublé with the coal situation is that ind too many miners, of CARS there are too many coal mines But, in the cas the price and in the of wheat, the price goes Maybe these Republican experts don't know what ia the matier with culture and coal mining, and maybe if they they are afraid to tel] for fear the persohr who find out will the Democratic ticket, however, sega Repub- victory in 1924, despite the low of wheat and the high price of which shows that the extraction in cond, goes up, down agri- do know, vite Mr. Hean Vanderlip, price cond, of sunbeams from cucumbers altogether a Jost art. ———— AM SIDA HIGH COAL NEXT WINTER There ls a pretty definite prospect of another conl miners’ strike: the !it- tle measure of control which the Gov ernment now exercises over the distri- bution and price of coal will end with the expiration of the special statute enacted ast September; the UU. 8 Coal Commesion's recommendations, such as hey are, ean not be translated into law before the end of next winter, since Congress does not convene until Diecorber, It Is only a matter of a few weeks until there in frost In the northern regions of the colintry; “the profiteers and gougers are already turning the consumer's necessity into thelr opportunity, and there seems to be no remedy in any quarter, Kismetls not Miss Archiy Ix it Elizabeth her vacation among friends Pitoaldrn, Our high constable has invested in a Star automobile, Almost showers have farm i dally standstill. put to a Woodman out «door The band of State College an concert on the acad- grounds Sunday evening Elmer Barr, who went to the Gel inger hospital ten days submitted Thurs report = Ago ty the knife on day for stomach trouble, late ering dg. B Campbell M Campbell and family, J. family, J. OO. H. McC Camphboely and and family J. and ters are le Buffalo for { f of gypsy fi aving shi Sunday morning afte; intments Pine Hall bu started for his even Harpsteg of Heady to Sell Gas, ow dy ta Rn Sportsmen Should Become Awake From Pl expresacd wishes At this last part HOEION f Hea permits the killing af the ame depart ssortamen At ton the nnsyivania State held $ tn Council meoting burg In January last in particulag {f the code unanimously « and Mi: Game part « was ip. i i proved Seth Gordon, Secretary to the Commission, was pres i ent when this acti took place, Again, | the mi of our sportsmen op 1i- | in-! vast majority the to of In of the hunter's the incronse $1.25, the both pores Conse and favored Cree to | $1.50. of the the desires granted, bounty on weasels the ignored instances wighes sportsmen were and the Commission of Game ! warned | There | tall other the Game the Jatv | makers, whether they are carrying out the wishes of our sporteamen or not. The Commissioner of Fisheries Bull. er informed the writer one time, that he “was not answerable to the Fish Commission for hig actions, they were serving only In an advisory capacity; that he was answerable to no one but the Governor.” Who j= responsible for the retention of the special devices for taking fish, in the new code. We know not, but we know that a most solemn promise was made to cut this fonture out of the new fish code, To our mind, the question that the sportsmen must meet ds this: Are we to become the servants of these two departments or are we ready tp meet these abuses |n 10257 fn order that we oan secure a far As we have more than once our sportemen. we again do so, “the words, in real menace of having the dog.” In Commission a wag are real (Continued on next column) NARROW MARGIN LOSSES Two Games Taken from the Loeals By One Run Margins~*State” and Bellefonte the Winners, Good baseball, but not good to win. This about baseball 1 wee SUM the local for up the few the that and ball, approaching team's work past #. Games are being lost by closest marging, and It appears the only way to defeat Bellefonte Btute for College is to play erroriess these teams have been amost perfect play in recent games, wis the few costly errors charg that it or and odd {to it down four to the loca club sent ! defeat for the past three Saturday afternoon game on Boelefonte ended 3 to 2 Lhe in favor of iefonte Wis one of the best games of SOO RON WHefonte played wns found Not f.ong for Bellefonte and won hits: Gross ten, by £1 Hnve Ord wig earned opportunities to SCOTe the joenls and i} work wag the il diamond this ore folk CENTRE We HALL HR H BELLEFONTE R HO A E a . i fs the Ix iliiland, rf Holobaugh, 3b Kellerman, ss Spicer 1h Totals 6 10 27 M McoClintic by GillHand & — AAPA B. Schedule for Week. Hall at State College. afternoon—8State Centre Hall: Bellefonte at Miltheim. Three-hase hit, Struck out by Gross 7 B. Thursday Milthem : twilight--Centre at Bellefonte Saturday, College at in the next legislature we must what to have men named the committees who some knowlgdge of sportsmen’s needs, men show we oan on have who can fight for ue. As it now is and few members have axes to grind and the rest of their committee just go along with them, Are the departments of Game and Fish as now constituted, the servants of the people who provide the funds for the carrying on of thelr work? Looks to us, from the results of legie- Jation enacted duripg the last legisia- ture, that they are not. With the ex- ception of lowering the age limit to 18 years from 21 years under the old code, for the right to fish without buy- ing a license, we know of nothing en- ated into law that was not sponsored by either of these two departments The departments of Game and Fish are usurping the prerogatives of the legis. lature. Looks very much ae if now it ix a case of government by a com: mission and now by the people, Ly has been, some ww “ REBERSBU RG, proud | Wagon although FTE Billy Cyrus Moyer is the OWL {wax not seriously hurt w brand new Ford cas —————— SPRING MILLS Myers fami to 10 Monday. ¢ Norman Blerly moved ttors Mills last John and tandall Milig of SHBunbury spent Clearfield » with his Philadelphia Sunday In town parents, Wolf of at this piace Allen Bowersox, of Kansas is visit. ing his aged mother at ths Quite the stork { ‘harley Malloy y Twide spent ol communi few duys with rdatives place recently visited home and left them bouncing baby boy. Clifford Diehl, returned (oOo who spent soma at Pittsburgh, Saturday Minnick Mifflinburg where he the Om on Btover left of Wm Lo Vm. ut horn Sunday erly motored visited thie Quite on nt number attended Baturday Hew the ple the on evening Shannon Laatheran Sunday Wa RON came speeding i ¢ and gassy pain Easy to take, thoroughly cleansing CHAMBERLAIN'S TABLETS Never disappoint or nauseate—25¢ into the wagon and the hing ad over ened NIEMAN’S ST0CK-REDUCING SALE will continue 10 Days longer Sale continued so that everyone ma get the benefit of this Great Reduction. Everybody is talking about this great where event everything is reduced. We are making a-- Complete Clearance ... of every piece of merchandise from Noth- our Spring and Summer Stock. ing reserved. Join the big crowd which is saving money at this store. D. J. NIEMAN Always Reliable MILLHEIM ...530TH ANNUAL... Encampment & Fair Of the Patrons of Hushandry of Central Pennsylvania Grange Park, Centre Hall, Pa. September 1st to 7th, Incl., 1923. Encampment Opens Sept. Ist, Exhibition Opens Sept. (th The largest and best fair In Central Peansylvania; by farmers and for farmers, Grounds Imereased to seventy acres. Beautifully joeated. Shade and pure water. Eleetrie light, Telephones, A large display of Farm Stock and Poultry, Farm Implements, Fruits, Cereals, and every product of farm ang garden. LIBERAL PREMIUMS Large Pageant Tuesday and Wed- nesday Evenings—ruex TO ALL ON GROUNDS ADMISSION FOR ENTIRE WEEK, 50c Fifty cents will be charged for parking awtomobiles. ALL TRAINS STOP AT GRANGE PARK. | RY Excursion rates on railroads within 75 miles. | \ SPECIAL TRAINS WILL BE RUN ON THURSDAY. © JACOB SHARER, Chalrman.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers