VOL. C11. DECRMBER COURT JURORS, Called Jurors 10th CENTRE 1928, HALL. PA SHEFFIELD MILK PRICES UP. | BARN AND 81 CATTLE BURN: HOND IMONTHLY REPORT OF (OW LOSS MORE THAN BY TESTING ASSOCIATION y ny y ¢ y 1 — i viroft . 3 . . { v i ! : STATE COLLEGE LOSES ISSU} VOTES [TOWN AND COUNTY NEWS | £5,000 15.000 rd | $2825 the Price for October Grade B| tor i Milk, £3.025 3.5 Cent. T Butterfat Basis, December for Weeks 17th. Grand Jurors for = ‘ Cor or on Per Fe Mitterling Sales Barn, 1 wenty-One Ten Hf Burn Wed- Midnight—¥h Nat Dis- Cals Traverse ol HAPPENINGS OF LOCAL INTEREST FROM ALL PARTS, Cows and nlves December nad nesday af the for Helease Attempt Madd —N 0 covered In ime to tleFutlle to hy Rev. 1 for Keener Do So fnsurnanee, GRAND JURORS Fred Calvh it Carl Han Henry Stewart Rev, Homer By JY. J Mar) Yiarvey Ed Yames Edward 1.. A. Schaeffer Herbert Wilbur BE. Snyder Clyde Struble, Clay Witmer, Fred Yorks, TRAVERSE Drawn to for December Cou Alfred Albrig! Wm, Brown DENTAL HYGIENIST TO BE John Burd I HERF DECEMBER OTH Cyrus 8S lower nl ; | : ; le ; ; : > i J R. Coover, t "= 1 C. RB. Close KC Thomas Charles Charl B J xu fer the named to B0w The this and Lue dealer hricklayer, Phil laborer Dove 410 ' ’ ho ’ ' Yi4R6S ¢ § ¢ fr) “hor 11 a foaatiires widol y ED ga t . G§ 49 £1 ¢ | Holt mem 3 Le ¥ Fiend #05 0 fa Tah t i ———— JURORS ‘ame the first was thie recent Thirty- hem~ Not Diseouraged Over Fature of Dem- | | Party STrve oeratle In County. ltl from _ Ph far: ! Aenta lahore Ave frea STAM Cherrington PRON tls Yoted Have at Random. - ———— ON THE FUTURE OF THE DEMO CRATIC PARTY. ust y ’ v / TRAVERSE JI RORS s (GGuerne rm where SWRDADeTra Franels ! So raditiony of this cout os ; ohn Cos vy ta he “ Bellef . hE . \ 3] 1rite » § 134 n a > Jun v Corman ¥ We know of no episode ‘ar D an} than sustain Carl Dietrick, pal : Aan 3 PB. E. Demi, plumber struggle conducted by Ordie Eboch, laborer ‘ of the Edmund Eberhart, clerk fanaticdem. They Blend Frankemberger, would John Fishburn, farmer and most G. W. Frazier, laberer Eugene Foltz, « ork “os George W_ Fisher, laborer... : John B. Foreman, laborer Howard Thomas Gennick, chauffear Philipsburg Mre W. C. Gramley, hskpr reassess were buried in American srl hrili dry {i gainst fared] odds all able men The World for ita part does not know mow to pay them adequate trib ute politics Turkey Dinner, Thanksgiving Day. | The { Hall i ner the jefonte's used last w. J purchasad the Jack Rhinee for more t a popula ome for the traveling public. Mr. Eme erick im Owner the plant. The new manager is Benjamin J. Groctko of Scranton. Hel Philipasbur Philipshn Bellefont Millhed Benner Philipshurg flipsbharg irnaide od i t— rt ————— Figuring Away Facets, the a Ant Centre greetings din the Our Mitterling Restaurant the Protestants and which bravest $14 $ Ct an yy 5 1 sus] Laie re Sout a will serve —————— Bush «¢ e by 22.000 Acres Added to State Forests of forests and wa- approximately 2 lands in portion Shrewsbury a complete turkey on Thanksgiving Day, fi 11:30 A. M. to 2:30 P efforts will be put forth well bigotry Some one has gone to weak. - 2180 make calculations Mr. Hoover would more votes geographically in the rigit way he would have oar- ried every State in the Union. Now, 4 this argument fa turned to the ben efit of Governor Smith, m M to serve a el $s rouble to concluding that if} had 275.000 | distributed laborer hed 1 have daunted Se nterior furnishings from 0 1a Runtes tours of department taking acres of van county, t in Forks Laporte townships. These t he : . but the honor . usta smith whe hicted the hots have pra ters is over ‘ . ahreha ain than three years and made yOu O00 su mountain ——————————— y © grestost lying and ands now absolute of Gas dropped a cent a gallon in price on Monday ————— have all been Miles Walter Hackman, farmer Maleolm Hall, operator Harry Houtz, farmer Harvey A. Hoy, farmer Wm. Hopkine, miner . Millard Hancock, teacher Ralph Haag, laborer... Bellefonte Clyde C. Lucas, merchant .... Howard Harry Lorain, mining eng... . .Philipsharg H. B Lykens, merchant Port Matilda Wm. McFarland, Iaborer.. Philipsburg Harry Meyer, ins agl Bellefonte OG Morgan, coal dealer, Bellefonte Charles McClellan, clerk Bellefonte George Mayes, ice dealer Philipsburg E. CC. Nau, clerk tush J 8 Osman, farmer Fergnson Merrill Poorman, farmer. . . College ¢ M Parrish, druggist. .... Bellefonte Clarence Rinne laborer. ... Bellefonte Paul Redes, farmer Penner 8 1. Reber, laborer... iis ae Howard Howard Richards, meat cutter, Philipsburg Wallace 8 Runkle, garage... Gregg Jacob Sharer, laborer Greg A. 8 Stover gentleman.. Millen Witmer Smith, farmer Boggs K J Wagner, farmer Harris ¢ 8 Woomer, foreman ‘ Harris Clarence B. Wililams, clerk... Bellefonte Charles Whitehill, farmer .. , College C H Willams, RR... , . Rush John 1. Watson, farmer Boggs A. 8 Walker, retired Ferguson ——— A OD SAAN Th ‘voters turned down the county Hbrary proposition, but it will only re- quire the permiasion of two county commissioners and the act fs done. It appears that the board of commission- ers has the power to lay a tax of two mills for such a project. The overs whelming negative vote will have a tendency to cause hesitation, but wom en are wonderfully persuasive and it wns’ women who Are responsible for the library program on the ballot Boggs College Spring Rash .Philipshurg The recent victory of the Republican party, in the South especially, was not due to change of political heart, it was the result of Republican National Chair man Work's “hot stuff” sent by him to the South to fan religious hatred to a greater flame. A party that must rely on religious Intolerance to win rather than political accomplishments i« hard pressed and can point to nn real glory. ———— A A After Mr ed president Hoover becomes inaugurat- we will have a chief ex ean smile. That will anyway. ecutive who that much, be tt Now tliat the $8.000000 bond for Penn State College failed to pass, the Hon. J. 1. Holmes will be given the honor for getting the great insti tution of learning the $5,000,000 appro- priation Governor Fisher promised the people of the State ¥f they defeated tie amendment, That act of Governor Fisher's ought to put J. L. H. in line for a fourth term. {sere C—O ————— The rumor that but eighteen of the twenty-one oarcasses of cows were found afer the disastrous fire which destroyed the Mitterling barn, js rumor and that fe all. The story got out timt three cows ha d been driven from the barn and then it was fired to hide the dead, Saturday at noon snow flakes filled the alr, but as soon as they reached the warm earth they melted, A AINA MP FP Hi 50s The cost of the U, 8 Government for next year is paced at $3,700,000, 000. it provea that had the Democratic candidate receiv: ed 350.000 more votes geographically distributed in the right way, he not Mr. Hoover would be the president elect. Thess additional would have give en him 180 additional Electoral votes. Calculations of this sort are not tak- en seriously, yet they may oarry grain of truth. They show, for ex ample, often needed to alter completely the po- fitical complexion of the National Gov- ernment. a commas AMA INS. 535 The Jodon Stock Sale. The sale of horses, mules, horse and mule colts. and cows, held on Monday at the Jodon sales stable at Pleasant Gap by T. BE. Jodon, was one of the most largely attended of any held at tile new barn. Fourteen horses and mules sold at an average of $176. A pair of mules and a palr of horses each sold for $460.00, The thirty-seven horse and mule colts averaged $20.00. The highest price pad for a single animal was $50. THe cows sold for an average price of $122.50. The best price pald for a cow was $177.50, E. M. Smith was the auctioneer and C.D. Bartholomew clerk. Oysters for Thanksgiving, Parties desiring oysters for the Thanksgiving season should place thelr order by the latter part of this week, in order to assure delivery Wilbur H Bland, Centre Hall ML AAPA STATE FORESTRY PURCHASING PROGRAM — Aeres In 54 Tracts—Average Cost per Acre, $2.78-Taxes Pald to Counties and Towniiulps, At the meeting of the State Commission on November 6, Charles E. Dorworth reported on the finances of the Department and out lined the progress made in the land purchase program. He announced tisat 111,747 acres of forest land, compris ing 54 tracts, have been purchased at a cost of $305,300.60. The average price paid was $2.93 an acre In Centre county 2.088 acres were purchased at a total price of $5,742.00. The State pays a tax to each town- ship containing State land of two cents an acre for roads and two cents an acre for school purposes. In addi- tion, a tax of one cent an acre is paid to the county in which State land is located Title work is now in progress on 46.192 acres, all of which will be com pleted by December 1, at which time practically all purchases under the $600,000 appropriation made avallable by the last Legislature will be con- summated. Becretary Dorworth reported that during the past summer 52 of the land purchase areas have been surveyed comprising 115.768 acres. Six survey crews are now at work and by Deoem- ber 1 will have completed the survey of 39,000 additional acres. Forest Secretary fumbered over, but the greatest portion in covered with second growth timber of various uizhs The lands ar being purchased from tite Central Pennsylvania Lamber Co. with offices fn Williamsport: Senator Charles W. Sones, of Williamsport and Mrs. F. Videau Thompson, of Dushore cnn AS. Student Grange Conferemce. Pennsylvania State College students are taking a prominent part in the National Student Grange Conference at Washington, D, C.. this week. Walter ¢. Gumbel. Elwood City. a senior n agriculture and past master of the Penn State Grange, js chairman of tie conference. Kenneth Hood, New Castle and Annette Kryder, Mill Halll, are delegates from the Penn State stu- dent grange. At a banquet Tuesday night spon- sord by the student Grange reprasen- tatives in Washington, L. J. Tabor, na- tional master, and all of the State masters attended the National Grange Convention were the guests of honor Jumbel was one of the speakers ———— ANAT Progress Grange Food Sale, Progress Grange wm hold a food sale, Tuesday, November 28th, in Grange Arcadian. Coming so close to Thanksgivind Day, you may expect to find a variety of choice articles of food suftable for the Thanksgiving Day meal, From the proceeds derived from the sale, the Grange members expect to re- model the basement of the hall and convert it into a dining room. Edward Thompson, of Pittsburgh, was A guest of Mr. and Mm 8S W. Smith over the week end. Mr. Thomp~* son has long been in the services of the Pennsyivania Railroad Company and is now in the offices of that come pany. He will be eligible for retires ment fn seven years. Mr. Thompso® is a native of Milroy and a close rele ative of the Thompsons who for years were prominent in business at Potters Mille, Wallington E Yeariok, vears tenant on the Daup farm near Potters Mills. will make sale of hie farm and implements on March 19th and quit the farm. He will move to Nittany Valley, about three miles east of Lamar, along the State high way, and be employed by iis sons, HL O. and L. F. Yearick, who are operating for twenty stock a milk plant at Knechts Mill on the Jacksonville road. The milk i= retafled in Took Haven and points nearby. Although defeated, A. C. Thompson, the Democratic nominee for the logiee ature in Centre county, is just as ap” preciative of the support he received from loyal Democrats as he woud have been Had he heen elected. He will not agaln be a candidate for the office he sought, but he assures us that he had not lost faith in the party of bie cholo#$ and is hopeful of party success in the future. Mr. Thompson's defeal was not due to any popularity of the Ree publican candidate or as a reward for services rendered by him during hig two terms