The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, June 04, 1931, Image 8

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    THURSDAY, JUNE 4, 1931,
6 2 6 » 4's 8 a & @
CORRESPONDENTS
DEPARTMENT
ee = 9 oo 8» 8 §
REBERSBURG.
and
of
in
daughter,
wek end
home,
Nor
her
Ray Stover, wife
WihHamsport,
town at the
Mrs. E
near
spent the
William
izabeth Walker
Philadelphia,
brother, Claude Hanes
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Blerly
ar Bimira, N. Y. visitng
Stover
from
wood, visiting
from
Were am
g Triends
ehepnd
Mra,” Hest
dloefonte
turned
Weaver
£11
seriously ill for
recovered so much as t
ind wife from
Comme noeement.
Harry. St
ege, 3 visiting
Stanley
for
Serenes
were here
from
' ita Col-
this
Mrs.
among riends
home for many
Harry
Monongahela
years,
Winkie-
week
DOIng ner
Wilmer
3
blech
and
Bressler
trom
Were
end guests of relatives,
SPRING MILLS
. William EW
of Wilkinsburg
her sist
ing 1
Corman
Er LI
POTTERS MILLS,
Foust. of Camden, N
davs
Mise Lenora
J. is spending a
of her
Foust,
the home
H. E
it
Mrs
few
parents, Mr. and
fo, Mr. Erb. wi
Latrobe. visited
home Mrs, Haney's
Wilkinson,
Thomas Haney, w
daughter, on
urday at the
Mrs,
and of
of
Ellen
iss Orpha Fleisher accompanied
i ard family of Pittsburgh on
to Chicago.
weeks Mrs, D
of Aaror
She wil] bx
8 Wert and
trap
» TWO
a SA
encircles the whole
Un: Health
Cleanliness
disinfeotifrts
plant,
A fil toes
sunlight,
fresh and
important
alr,
are wida In
farm sanitation
Feed Good Cowses
It costs
than a
in
more to feed
The
no good Cow
poor one difference comet
the returns
Beautify the Grounds—
devel
setting
Landscaping
Loy
Grow Profitable Lambs
of Milton
A Surprise Party—
A PHcassh $ "4
on Wedne i
Mrs. Foust's
Laowis
Cramer’,
were
mer, Dora
Mrs, Alice Cramer
of Ye
son John,
MW, Zerby,
James
present
of Burn ison ngey
tow n
Westmoreland inty; E wife
and two childre: § Colyer:
Foust. wife and
Halli; Mrs En
Clvda Walk
Hall; Mrs. E
Alvin Klinger
and wife, H. E
ye children, Cen-
two
SONS, or,
of Centre
and . .
Foust
Homer
Treaster,
Ennist an
Foust
—————
BOALSBURG ITEMS,
Fria
haps, there is one
be disp
of Mi
will
Bitner visited
and
Grand
Harrisburg,
week
Landay
repre
nday this
attending
wilows, at
Spring Mills lodge
SS AI MP PAA.
SCHEDULE OF GAMES IN
CENTRE COUNTY B. B, LEAGUE
followirlr games are
this and next in
County League:
Hall at
Coburn; Pleasant Gap at
scheduled
the Centre
for week
jaseball
{entire Rebersburg
ag
June 4
Bellefonte
Lamar,
Rebersburg |
Pleasant Gap
ellefonte at
at Lamar;
June 6-
Hall
Cobyatrn.
Centre
at
Lamar;
mant Gap
June of SIU fs V
Coburn at
at Bellefonte
Pleasant
Fire
The Millheim Volunteer Fire com-
pany will hold a carnival on the school
grounds at Millheim. on July 23, 3
and 4. adv.
PROBAK-not
a sour blade
in amillion
(Company Carnival,
Holidays
ser AMNIONE
LOE Ammons
son Oeorgs
Theima Mos-
among the
snd
LTE, Were
1 town on Memorial Day
wl Mre. H. M. Hosterman
ensburg to spend Memorial
drove
as
{ Charles, and
home of thelr
Fy Hosterman
Joining his parents for the
Albert Meyer, of Pittsburgh,
Mdyer. of Medina, N, Y., visite
at the of their parents, Mr
Mrs. Jacob Meyer, over the week-
sON
LIEN of Cleveland,
rami.
and C
ors
were
home
wnd
erd
Mra Samuel Wasson, of West Harris
township, is a patient at the Geisinger
hospital and is reported quite seriously
ill.
Mrs.
of
Kuhn
were
with
been
and
in
them
Cute
govs
Mr. and Harry
daughter Williamsport,
town Saturday. bringing
Miss Dmisy has
valescing at home
era] weeks,
Miss Hosella
Mansfield T
Summer
who
Kuhn
Rowe
the for
Meyer
achers’
from
the
home
f .
LOT
in
Colles
vacation.
——— I ML ———
Ad * * »
FARM CALENDAR
TIMELY REMINDERS FROM
PENNSYLVANIA ATATE COLLEGE
SCHOOL OF AGRICULTURE
4 8 8 8 0 8 8 8 ss
Control Root Maggols—
Tha root maggot a serious pest
of carly cabbage, cauliflower, and rad-
ishes. A number of control methods
are used. The one least expensive and
very offective ia the corrosive sublim-
ata mehod. Use one ounce of powder
to eight gallons of water and apply a
half teacupful around each cabbaghn
or catlifiower or saturate the soil along
the radishes,
Cultivate Frequently
The surface jayer of garden soil
should be kept In a loose, fine condi:
tion by frequent shallow cultivation.
This lessens the danger of cutting off
the roots and fs just as effective as
deep cultivation in keeping the weeds
down.
Bulld Range Shelters
If the brooder house ls overcrowded
the summer housing problem can be
solved by building a summer range
shelter.
Stake Large Peonles—
It Is sometimes necessary to stake
up the larger flowering peonles, This
may be done by using a support that
fu
PENNY-A-WORD COLUMN
for an four-lioe vil
These 1
in the of resulis, Adver
anything hore, from a “Help Wanted’
“House and Lot for
| (he pays
| « umn tie
| workers
i tine
to a
way
Sade
NEeBeo
ike
SALE player plano, roll
bench. swondlition: must
1 on a
$100. Apply
Bellefonte
moving. sa
Allegheny
FAEM
dersigned
the vy
WORK W
wishes
ANTED
to have
marrisd man
Wile
John C,
Pa.
ar
€ Xperience,
al once
Altoona
HATCHING
land Red hat
EGOS 8, C,
hing eggs, 70 per
won, Spring Mills,
-.3
Stirper oll stow
condition Apply
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE,
in the Esta of OLAVE GARIS
Potter Townsl
Pa.
Letters of administration on above estate
having been duly granted the undersigned,
ail persons knowing themselves indebted
to the estate are requested to make Im
mediate payment, and those having claims
against the same to present them duly au.
thenticated for settlement,
H I. EBRIGHT,
Hall.
of ip. Centre
deconsed,
" gp
Centre
an you see
both sides of your
face in your
bedroom mirror?
Yes, if you
have plenty of
shaded light on
either side . . .
or a good light
hung directly
over the mirror.
WEST
PENN
POWER CO
co ap oop
{
{
—————————— ————— A ——
clock
the hour,
Less 1 8
eans
the
radio
his
leader
oft
the
to
ticks last
of
closer
orchestra
the raises
hand, and, then,
room, gives the
evening, My
other
air.
- and
in
friends,”
broadcast
fortunate
major
Only
on
the few
the inner
engineer
from
the
cast
where
gits, with
sensitive meters
the other on the performers |
outside the window.
ture was taken
of
The above pic-
recently during a
the Lucky
Just
window may be seen Edward Thor-
| B. A. Rolfe with a few of the musi- |
chestra of over fifty veteran instru-
mentalists, grouped at the micro-|
It is a thrilling experience
watch man at the
e858.
the 4
the control
listens, supercritically,
ic which comes out a
in his control room,
as it comes out of loud epeakers
lion homes. He must main.
right balance of ton
, and guide the fluc
broadcast, while
at his
ad, sees that
pre-arranged
will mar
brings
pulse of the
$y water)
stopwatch
entertainment
t
THOUSAND DISASTERS
REGEIVED RED CROSS
AID IN 50 YEARS
American Society to Celebrate
Its Birth Year With Nation-
wide Observance
Tornadoes, flood
other calamities and upheavals of na-
ture have United EBtates
more than sand times in the
last half century
these were
forest fires and
visited the
one tho
il of f sevére intensity,
loss of life and great property
damage. Minor catastrophes were not
counted in this list of disasters, which
has been made public by the American
Red Cross, in connection with the cele
bration this year of its fiftieth birth.
day.
It was on the of May 21,
1881, in the modest home of Miss Clara
Barton in Washington, D. C., that the
American Association of the Red Cross
was first formed. Before the year was
out, and before, indeed, the United
States Government had officially
moved to approve the Treaty of
Geneva, adding this.n¥tion to the com.
pany of thirty-two others adhering to
the treaty to protect wounded in war
tare, Miss Barton had plunged the small
soclety into a disaster relief task.
First Red Cross Unit
This was in the north woods of
Michigan, where forest fires swept the
homestead farms of pioneering fam.
flies, Miss Barton, as president of the
Red Cross, had organized a branch in
‘Dansville, New York, where she was
ysojourning. This little group imme
diately raised money, food, clothing
and other supplies and sent them to
the forest fire victims. In Rochester
and Syracuse, New York, nearby, word
spread of this charitable enterprise,
and Red Cross auxiliaries were organ.
i {zed there to help. So began the disas.
ter relief work of the Red Cross fifty
iyears ago. In the intervening years,
millions of men, women and children
have been aided. Thousands of homes
;have been restored. Thousands of
persons, overwhelmed by floods, tor
nadoes, and’ fires until all they pos
sessed had been wiped away, have
been rehabilitated and prosperity and
happiness again smiled upon them.
This year has been dedicated by the
Red Crosa and its chapters in 3,500
communities to commemoration of the
events which led to the birth of the
society in the United States.
President Moover Speaks
The celebration of the anniversary
was inaugurated in Washington at a
dinner, attended by many distin.
guished men and women, at which
Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes
presided, and President Hoover, who
is the president of the American Red
Cross, was the chief speaker. Judge
Max Huber of Geneva, Switzerland,
the president of the international Come
mittee of the Red Cross, in which fifty.
seven nations are joined in a Red
Cross brotherhood, also was a speaker,
as were Chairman John Barton Payne
of the American Red Cross, and Miss
Mabel T. Boardman, secretary, and
veteran leader of the society.
The Red Cross standard, which files
all around the world where mercy is
needed, was first introduced as an
ideal in our modern civilization In
Geneva in 1864, when the international
Red Cross convention, afterward to be
#
causing
evening
#
Clara Barton Founder
saw service
war. U her return
launched a3 active campa
treaty, but the
pon
met
as her predecessors
dent Garfield,
fice, recognized
when he came into of
the merits of
nation removed him, his successor,
was consummated a
in 1912 at the age of 90 years.
Dunant, was a Swiss, and the first
treaty to protect wounded in battle
was drafted and signed in Switzerland,
the flag of that Republica white cross
upon a red background—was reversed,
rand the Red Cross came into being.
The Centre Reporter 31.50 a year
Kon Cnjoyment
for Smokers
THE SALVATION
coined this phrase
eternal veritiea it
over—eupi cially at
i= down he
By taking
man
out.
~=Jecping it
bel
te one of those
to
times
ponder
If a
feel he Is
sum
here