SHURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1930, THE CENTRE REPORTER ISSUED WEEKLY, Ee - —— CENTRE SE— SMITH & BAILEY, Proprietors. $8. W., SMITH, Editor. #DW, E. BAILEY, Associate Editor and Business Manager, HALL, PENNA. Satered at the Post Office in Ceatre Hab 5 scoond class mail matter, SERMSE The terms of subseription to Be BDeperter are $1.50 a year, in advance Déapiay advertising rates made known Mm agpelication, “SUNDAY CHURCH SERVICES PENNS VALLEY LUTHERAN CHARGE (Bev. B, ¥. Greenhoe, Fasior.) Centre Hall—10:30 A. M. Tusseyville, 2:30 P. M. Spring Mills—7:30 P. M. — SENTRE HALL REFORMED CHARGE (Bev, Delas RB, Keener, Pastor) Centre Hall— #:830—Sunday School. 7:80—Churay Service. Spring Mills— _ $:00 —Home Mission Service. M00 SBunday School Farmers Mills— #:30—Sunday School. 10:80—Holy Communion Service EVANGELICAL (Bev, W, KE Smith, Faster.) Centre Hall—10:30 A. M. Lemont—10:30 A. MM. Tusseyville—2:30 P. M. Spring Mills, 7:10 P. MM. {Revival Meetings.) — METHODIST EPISCOPAL Rev. H. A. Pruyn, Pastor, Centre Hall— 9:30—Sunday 7:30—Evening Thurs, 7:45 ing Class. Sprucctown— 9:30—Sunday Tue sday eV Training Class, School. ALD CONGRESS PLEDGE IN DEMOCRATS Leaders, Promise, Cooperation. With Pr sldent, and of House Tend ng Republican and Senate In to Prosperity and Welfare hers Restoration of Measures of Country. Into the confused congressic uation brought about by deadlock of election results, sen oeratic leaders had of non-dbstruction. The executive heads of three former Democratic nomine<s Friday night ment claim'ng dominance of the lative branch of government serting the party welfare country ation of advantage power Ignoring results the “ senate and house, ti oCcrats, to would steer legislation thrown ind presidential the party isstied a would place { the and the wmperity ahead of wind the desire narrowest of the exten * » . # - DEATHS, * * * * w P Amelia P. health home 10 her KING King, who had been Mrs, in delicate died evening, for a year or at her here on Monday moire, at 6: o'clock. She was cared for dur ng last days by Mrs, WwW. Interment a niece, 8 Kerstetter, of Cur- wensville, will take place Services 2:00 the King, {Thursday ) afternoon, held o'clock, and interment of her died pastor, this home nt Milroy a will be at the at by side husband, John thirteen go. of the who about VOLrs Her Milesburg, services, Mrs, Baptist minister be i wiil in charge of funeral Mr. and tre Hall coming King located in Cen- than twenty-five ®years West more ago, here from Grafton, Virginia. The daughter (Hilde- sUur- deceased was Fi 8 of Ww. English. that tev, George and Lay dia brand) She was the last vivor of family, There are no children nophews and nleces wm M. Furey, of FP ttsburgl Furey, Novem William terment was Rew. D. R ormed hers of we congress. “The Vi not be an obstru “It will not President be glad ET wth members of the house an ure that « the country “There S88ary appropriat fit appointees t ly because made by sddent of the opposite! party.” | Their states came on the heels of the only ex t er has permitte n regar to ! electon. It as a single sentence “The job for the intry now is to concentrate I tion for economic r This, he made clear, answer to num written which had newspaper tion with the The Democratic pledge natures of James M Davis, and Alfred B three presidential candidates party: Senator Joe T Representative John HH. party leader in congress Raskob and Jouett tive heads of the Democt committee . “No rash revision of the would be part gram. They goeventyv soe of ti to | ire ' thei on CAsUres O-OUeraR COVErY only was the rous questions him by connects been submitted to correspondents in election. the sig. Ww, bore John the of § m Cox, Smith the and Garner, the and John J the exedu national Fobinac Shouse, atic policiesa,™ tariff of the did no general prom sad, Democratic pro. abandon criti cism of tariff, however, referring in a qualification to "Whatever chang es may be consideged necessary to rid the present act of its outstan@ng en ormities.” ‘ Bubject to recounts the final returns of the election show: The house—Ilepublicans, 218; ocrats, 216; Farmer-Labor, 1. The senate Republican, 48; crates, 47; Farmer-Labor, 1. ———————— AIRS MARRIAGE LICENSES, and they not the Den - Demo- Altoona Penna. Furnace Howard E, Grant Ida May Weaver Charles 0. Gorley....... Auburn, N, Y. Winifred P. Angus Auburn, N. Y. Noman I. Callahan .. Boalsburg Hazel B. Kelier ............Boalsburg LOCAL AND PERSONAL of nd 319 The i rama spring 14 140 x india remaini The and wbout the veigh TE as AVOrs aged in weight about siiryels, Mever, of Pleasant Gap, while an eisctrc holst quarry, had the the right hand. H: and a in the caught the glove and pulled the in operating Rock stone from glov thumb torn wad wearing 08 knot gto] cable hand result the into the machinery with noted, Myr rON, and Mre C. A. of Huntingdon, Mra, Bauer's parents, KE. Bradford, In town. Mr. is connected with the Re at Huntingdon, reports of the institution fluc. wlually increasing. aver and wore over Sur v guests of Mr and Mrs, Bauer, Pe who form School the population 1 t ne. IN Andrew Mark, accompanied by Misa Verna Emerick, was driving hls Chevrolet coufd« enst on Route No. #5, at about Zubler's farm. Saturday evening, a car driven by Mrs. Wing art, of near Paradise church, overtook him in passing caught the fend. er, upsetting the coupe The ovou- pants were but slightly injured, but got a thrill not previously experienced Mrs, DD. Milton Bradford wae to the Celsinger Memorial hospital on Sunday for treatment. Wednesday morning Mr. Bradford received notice that she was In a very serious cond'« tion and that probably a serious opers ation would have to resorted to Im: mediately, Mr, Bradford left for the hospital at once, but up to this writ- ing no report had been received by the famy. but g and axen THE = POMONA GRANGE MEETING HELD AT BOALSBURG Grange No. Victor Inst Pomona 1st and moved there Wis County Pomona at Boalsirury No, 158, on Saturday, THs was the first time held at ,Boalsburg., Until when Victor Grange bought into the Malta Hall Grange at Boalsburg. Centre 13, Girango met with was spring no having been oragnized i ¢ gituted Oak Victor Grange building they in a small Hall, years ago, a stone the Hitle unsafe for near until an Wis which oceupied {ow QUATTY ul, meet op ned it they £). £). of being for Grange h to renting near making them there, the l. hearing Lemont, Last at BP purchased of that proud to have the hoped moved to F. rooms the Malta hall they SPring, sale, The very wlgbhurg it and town in be organizin midst, and will Be moved citizens can great an in thelr mem rs “0 tion as Grange it is many suit, good re the and much In the al or, J. 8. Dale, of guined, Mast {f Spring Mills, gence of Pomona Gross Shook of State College, occupied chalr, for LO. this country. When Costa Riea was menaced by a smallpox epldenmile, the American Red Cross sent fifty thousand tubes of in two alrplane un- saving the from a serious outbreak of the dread disease vaccine, loads, doubtedly country Saving mothers’ lives and better ba- bles were important features during the past year of the Public Health Nursing Servica of the American Red About four-fifths of the 794 in the Cross work made than 100,000 prenatal and mater- in addition to assisting 3 in the examination of 1,300,400 Cross. nur more nity Red OB visits fldren. reveal that vo out of three Americus 8 could be saved medical and 15.000 school ch the lives of women who Statistics die In maternity cas if they received pr care. As more than Ops r ing women die in the United ates each ar from various diseases of the ma- nal state, this means hat more pre yi han 10,000 rentable, a. Comfort Kits Sent 40,000 Service Men by Red Cross Gay patterned cretonne bags, | comfort kits, containing articles ful and amusing, are sent by the Red Cross to 40,000 soldiers, sallors and Marines, on foreign service, as Christ. | mas remembrance, Severs Numerous tv be € More thun uarter persons ar ert] 4 of a to million wear the denots : expert the organiza. d to date 3 or Six Foreign Countries Receive Red Cross Aid | Rellef was given by the American | Red Cross during the year In six for- | eign nations In disasters ranging from | a in Newfoundland, an | earthquake In Persia, floods in France, to help the refugees from Russia and gant in | tidal wave prevention of a smallpox epi demic Costa Rica. The $5,000 Red Cre 1} to Newfoundiand, f contribution the tidal wave, which took twenty-six lives and 88 OWInE and fishing an outside destroyed many boats, was the first country fo reach the distr The sum of $5.000 was given to the fund for the relief Mennonite refugees of German descent, who had determined to Russia for new About passed through Germany, where German Red Cross, aided by Red Cross socletle other nations, helped them. The are being transported to new in western world and the American Red Cross has transmit. ged people. of the leave lands, 13,000 the ma- jority countries the ted contributions from individuals in Fall Buyings in Ab THE SHOP O’ GIFTS PENN’A. \ Decker Chevrolet Co., Bellefonte, Pa. Gos /! ovTY I'VE GOT TO RIDE A WORSE WV THE ARMISTICE THAT OAY OUGHT TO BE A CINCH AFTER R10 1nG TMAY BUCKING: ARonucCuo CAR 1024 1926 1925 1929 1929 1926 1929 Ford Touring Ford Coupe Ford Coupe Ford Coupe Ford Roadster Chevrolet Touring 1927 Chevrolet Coupe 2 1926 Chevrolet Scdan 1980 Chevrolet Coach, 5 © 1927 1026 Chevrolet Touring Chev, Truck, open exp VSED CARS AT DECKE CHEVROLET | DON'T EVEN NOW HOW To PUT A HORSE INTO FIRST IXKNOW 1 T, MARTY, | WAS JUST XKi100ING ~ RUT WHY DON'T vou WANT TO ROE A Q HORSE - // fy 8 15.00 £ 50.00 £ 40.00 $350.00 £325.00 § 60.00 $325.00 | $200.00 ach $150.00 1927 1925 1927 1924 1926 Essex Coach Phone 405 1925 Essex Coupe 1927 Essex Coach 1927 Bulek Sedan, 1925 Buick Sedan 1924 RBulek Roadster 1929 Whippet Coupe 1927 Whippet Sport Roadster 1924 Oldsmobile Coupwn 1924 Oldsmobile Touring # 50.00 1926 Overland 4 Ton Truck, Panel body truck only § 40.00 1924 Stewart Cattle Rack Truck $150.00 1920 Vim 8-Ton Dump( auto (matic) Truck 1927 Pontlae Sport Roadster 1926 Oakland Sport Roadster $200.00 #450.00 $250.00 § 60.00 $290.00 £150.00 § 25.00 Stand, “4” $450.60 #150.00 £125.00 $140.00 § 25.00 $ 10.00 $150.00 225.00 $200.00
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers