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C1V. - U eo ° - a 5 2 XZ DISTRICTS IN H opurg CENTRE COUNTY Qellefonte, Bellefonte, Bellefonte Centre Howard Milesburg Millheim Ward 8, 3rd Matilda Bor Philipsburg Port South Snow Shoe Stace State Unionville Benner, N Benner, S Boggs, N Boggs, E Ww Boggs, 3 Ff) bet bed bet pt et med bed ed » . v oY YEE PENNSY TO SPEND FIVE MILLIONS ON NEW SEE) Be Construction Furlonghed Called Back to Ald In Work.~Al- toona to Share In Big Order, Men to 0 Pennslvvan! 74 tons e designed for porti of structural ste open shipments of automobiles Construction of 15600 cars wi Quire 93 000 000 pounds of steal Fv vroducts steel Pennsyl near the at new cars hundred of be constructed the Fi riol 8 ord KE : teadrn st district, and 560 toona men. n Count A 3 Sua zuls furlough 3 led MAK the Enola and on Pitetuirn shops continue work i rate WF men wil at full in nection The started) that fabrication within the next Delivery of the cars for service expected to be started at the rate of approximate ly 20 day within the next thirty days. y time on the construct on sched- ule the fabricating shops in con order, is being expected undertaken ir material it is with the new « assembly of at and will once be two weeks is a A ———_ A AA RA. Clock Weight Falls Students, A 3300-1, weight from the class of i memorial clock in the West Col: K Tower of Bucknell University, at Lewisburg, crashed through three of the five floors of the building late Fri. day. The falling mass ripped holes six feet wide in the floors and ceilings and fell through two student rooms. No wne was injured, ————— AIMS, If Col, Woods is going to do all he «laims he will to relieve ment, it's a pity he put it off so long. But for the election on November 4, the President may not have trotted wut hig horse at all, 2300-Lh, Misses State Senator Assembly ‘ase NM ‘somo ‘Higduyy a ‘fxsupn u a EIN Junie m y AL SCHOOLS EMPLOY TEACHER OF MUSH a full-time fvy i + os 3 1 $y $ # Ha day Rebersburg, VO and Smith one day $ + graduate of West r State Teachers’ College, in the several veare to interest of music 3 OOen a subervisos #chools of Coatesville Hall or orward step, 1 of corned, i Cemitre borough is be come this be mended f # its active in and the the other Mi school same may wid school districts cone essential and gic is as a8 any Of hew ie wh OY 7 fille nore abundant fs @iilyient wil m Foung people this decis RECENT BIRTHS, Marcell Edward, Mary Mills, tober 118 J near 16th, son of Samuel Horner, Spring a and {Ehowera) Heckman cemetery; Jean Phyllis, daughter of Mahlon IL and Fay Auman, Centre Hall; October ({ Hovse) 19th. Jean Louise, and Dorothy October 6th, Arlene May, daughter of A. 1. and Minnie R. (Smith) Confer. Spring Mills ~September 20th, IS MIS EAR BOROUGH BCHOOL REPORT. Report of 5th and 6th Grades for second month: Per cent. of attendance ~sboys 99%; girls 98. Pupils making 100 per cent, in monthly tests: Arith- metic: Ralph Arney, Mildred Homan, Spelling: Eugene Emerick, Kathryn Smith, Gene Dinges, Mildred Meyer, lols Ruble, Mildred Homan, Dean Runkle, lois Rees, Theodore Hartley, Robert Gearhart, Bertha Bradford, Visitors: Mary Jane Bitner, Mildred Bitner, Fred Bender, Rev, J. M. Kirk. patrick.~Thos 1. Moore, teacher, A ————— Does Keiser want to buy a dog? daughter of Stir! H. (Fohringer) Stoner; PINCHOT CARRIES BOROUGH! Centre Hall for First Time In Its His- tory Glves a Republican Candidate Office Majority—Miller Holmes Spit Has for State and Even-—Scott Majority, For publican the first time K candidate eu elved Hall Judge of the Supreme Court George Max I Judge of the Superior Court— { | | | | | | ! Secretary rnal Affairs Int tepresentative In General Assembly 11 i) ELECTED HOT GOVERNOR. SCOTT ELECTED SENATOR. in IN ands! de Democrat —————————— ht WwW, R U. 8 in Hdate fo 84 as defeated in a nes Hamilton Lewis, SH. Senate wet agnihlican, w Now —————— A —— fed far as vary th Morrow, Senator Jorwey Viole ttle $s ' 1 Pay 4 3 from will Holmes Miller for majority received It can't be done Motor Injuries Treated By Red Cross First Aid In line with its work for the preser vation of life and prevention of accel dental death, the American Red Cross has adopted a new program of emer gency first ald stations on the high ways of the nation, where victims of automobile injuries will be helped. In the last year 31,000 persons were killed as the result of automobile accel dents and more than 1,000,000 were injured. As Its contribution to the nation wide safety campaigns of other organizations, the Red Cross will aid through the emergency stations. A number already are in operation by Chapters on such Important traflic ar teries as the Westchester County, N. Y., park system, the Valley Forge and Gettysburg highways in Pennayl vania and the White Horse Pike in New Jersey, connecting with Atlantic W. A, MAGEE HIT CAR IN Magee, hit by afternoon “Bifna” from BY Wm Jersey, A Wis Wenonah automobile of an or Saturday at abuot he wis Hou He wag clock, street, while the the in a his way Customs Philadel found by on in hia, to ferry policema gewveral n after he was hit d rushed He mornin tell and no : nn ivanian Hospital $x 1» undany Penns: until 8S «1 sufficiently hit by a 10 Car, mdition Is ¢ and ithioal inmternad injuries nees for recovery inst OMe . morni SMALL GAME NOTES, City Ten More Automobile Drivers. rr # . ” Ten o am py 4 SA Tam pp War Pomona Grange to Meet. Centre County Grange meet in Saturday AM oaldburg regular “th, at gar gession No verber 19:00 H of 1 A Ml NITTANY VALLEY BARN BURNED, in hal Fire, Supposedly of Incend’ary Origin, Similar Conflagration In Year. Fhe bank barn on the f sau Gaunt H wan Fur Cedar of Cedar 1x Springs, and M located Valley, Haven, s ut. of Haven Nittany wk t 37591 Ne 3 a Springs, in pleu six miles from Lock was d of esi roved bry incend®ary fire belicved to have beon origin, about midnight. last Thursday. The structure was rented by Luther C. Stevenson, whose farm is nearby, and was filled with the craps and part of the machinery of the Jessee. Mr, was awakened by the glare of the flames shining in at his bedroom wine. dow, The loss of the crops, hay. wheat and straw, along yith the machinery, is estimated by Mr. Stevenson at $1- 000, and is partly covered by insur: ance. Mr. Stevenson keeps h's stock at the barn on his own farm. The large dam, 46x70 fect, is the sixth or seventh barn in Nittany Val. last year. fires in each case believed to have been started by an incendiary. The barn of Walter Peifer was burn. ed about six months ago. J. Franklin Long and Shuman Furst, both of Flemington, each lost a barn through fire last year, and the barns of J. A. Bager and Clyde Burnell, were also burned recently. i $ i ! i i ~~ JOHN BLAZER, LEWISTOWN, TAKES OWN LIF} on, Ends Life With Shotgun—Wii Children of Rash Act. and Three Nearby Hu Time § i — WEST PENN POWER C0. wird ines of the We gt Penn x at ompany at xing Improve y ¢ Tha « Power ( some extent the wiroush To cco ie) this sey era Arge (Odenicirk is MORI TY o i fv cory wit ough referred to above FAve rise Mills but from rel this that the built at th » information « port Potters line 4 t time band nn i= not Case AS A INN. County Players to Compete In Contest, Plans under way to have Can. tre County represented in the State play contest at the State Farm Prod. ucts Show at Harrisburg in Janusry, County Agent R. C. Blaney announces, Time alloted on the show program limits the presentations to those stag. od by 19 counties. One-act plays will be put’ on by rural adult organizations active in the county represented. Berks county has already selected MMs winner for competition in the State contest, the Geigertown Grange. According to W, R. Gordon, extension rural sociologist of State College. who is in charge of the State vontest, sev. eral counties are planning elimination contests in witch the county repre sentative will be selected. Tioga, Lack: awanna, Juniata, Erde, Luserne and Centre are in this group. It is quite likely that other repre- sentatives will come from counties where projects in traidng for rural play production are now under way, Monroa, Northampton, Chester. Bed ford, Somerset, Westmoreland, Beaver, Mercer, Sullivan, and Dauphin are In this group. are ’ NO. 44 a AND COUNTY NEWS I————— TOWN HAPPENINGS OF LOCAL INTEREST FROM ALL PARTS Hug? who last week, re- Morrow, of A LArons- ion for ap Hospital, P. R George or ing a Ww all but it until Ve hae i Proc and bufid. p ¢ rh 21594 v1 00 ring The penalty fe ing farmer west to the bed dure BOVOre linia Grace has re- 1 Pennie near vi ¥y me round . HB of re she n was wre me wosition veram as a deinhia dle. iT Na- r. SLove first bank and Trust Com- amily from Gov nut ‘ M banker y who Is 8 Contre a two Saturday. pay his have had the World War. Williamsport Ha dur~ at ing he first tion with Pennsy employees " ii toy the ar wilon Con Iror SAW {+n 1. MICK was help, reached the oc: in Laurelton it to tain afterward the fire tank the ox The constructing a State Village. shortly and osion Berwick gasoline curresd company buiding at Radio listeners, on Sunday afternoon, heard a chairman of some publie function in Camden, New Jersey, say "Here comes Reesman: three chests for Reesman; we wish there were more men like him.” Interference of other stations prevented discovering the character of the assemblage being broadcast Mr. Reesman, as many of our readers know, is a nasve of Cen tr Hall who has gotten more than knted deop in New Jersey politicos, The Centre County Conference of Women's Clubs will be held this yeas at the Methodist church at Howard, November 8, beginning at 10 A MM All women organizsafons in the cous ty are urged to send representatives to the conference and furnish brief Pew ports of their outstanding accomplish ments during the past year. An fife teresting program is being prepared which will include discussions of cogn* ty Jail conditions, by Mrs. Dedohs Centre County Place Names, by Prof BEapenshade; Rayon, the New Textile by Mre. Mack; and Centre County Caverng, by Professor Bonine,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers