THE CENTRE REPORTER, CENTRE HALL. PA Secretary Hurley Inspects the Wilson Dam Pg Flowered Evening Frock ugo, enjoyed a rather unusual reputation as a marksman. it iy | 5 J Worried Husbands sald that hls fame De UR : oq wis 80 consider > YO own % Ear ess, your wile's bi ‘hor unhappiness and “nerves”, leave you . » £ - $ abie throughout no peace of mind? Be sth of you are los the state of Ver ing ‘the JOY you oug ht to find in life and mont that even the 2. © in ¢ ach other. animals were ; A : You can recover the forgotten glow | 4 i ath * " aware of it. : ] of you fn. Take Fell J supplies yourbody w He went out one i often mi ing. Ina morning, so the i : a § 3 be cager and fit for work, story goes, with | ’ and sleep, his rifle, and, see- ; : ; Begin now-—don't m a raccoon on the branches of 4 high Tat of happiness and heal tree, he brought his gun up to his ) it doses will begin to tr: shoulder. The coon raised his paw as 3 low the prescription d a flag of truce jor years, and get the " . : ; . i» : h p frc oO ruggist General view of the great Wilson dam, at Florence, Ala, as Secretary of War Patrick J. Hurley made an in- “I beg your pardon, mister,” sald yTup from your druggin today gpection tour of the project. With the secretary were members of the new commission from Alabama and : h ' the raccoon politely; “but may I usk ; SE ’ Tennessee who are co-operating with the War department in the construction and operation of the project. if your name Is Scott? “Yes" re 'e 3 : ; the i “Martin Scott?” ; plied captain, J g! in three miles of the stranded party | still continued the animal. “Yes” re- - wT fe ma 3 I PDE H 3 / ) F : hi a ’ : ; or . 0 I'he application of big bold Bowers Set en J€ pers ave N arrow uscape and saw their signals, Kaillma swam plied the _eaptain. { aplain Martin on dainty net is a new fashion In eve out to the sampan and a member of Reds “Yes” Oh, then,” says the . . . . - ~ Ine go & Le de hown here, F J De I Ww I le / ol o > raw " al. “0 may ll’ o ing gowns. 1n the model h rom )e at 1 tie . Ing mg at Sea the crew accompanied him back to | animal, “I may Just as we ili come bright red popples are fastened to the beach, with lines in their teeth. | down, for I'm a gone coon! black net, . The Immediate Audi Pu They bullt a raft to convey the non- I have been acqualnted with Mor. . ience swimmers and the six men reached | ton for forty years or more. He is | = — Phe EW ry Kalaupapa by the sampan, a most enthusiastic hunter of all | goris of 1 welal and buziness coons. rt Honolulu, Hawail.—From the leper Willlam Kallima and Kanekoa settlement at Kalaupapa, Island of nee, in the outboard motor boat, ar- Molokal, comes a tale of heroism In- rived about sunset and anchored about volving seven men in peril at sea, the | 50 yards off shore, fearing to come He was telling me just the other desperate rescue of one who fell over- closer in the pounding surf. Wheelin ” Across the Continent aay of an sulerprise \ which he has un- board, and the sealing of a precipitous Kallima, realizing that one of the ’ 8 ; Oh 4 der way which Is going to make him cliff 2,000 feet high by one of thelr stranded party could not swim, ran § small fortune, He is raising peaches number in search of ald, after the boat ashore himself through the surf car = RA 4 Michiga + figs in Texas or pe- had been beached in an almost inac- rying a small line, intending to fasten a \ ; rans | lorida, or something of th cessible spot on the rocky shore of it to driftwood to help the party a : rt, and | » verge of a great Molokai. aboard. a ir aap inancia lean-up. heard him tell Tis was going on while air and sar- On this lifeline the entire party ge? vi Moved 3 hy the same story ten years ago, 1 believe face vessels of the United States navy reached the rescue boat, and Kailima, To ’ J . p ‘ at that . | and ships and planes of the Inter- with all aboard, attempted to return ke & a 30 nesses sland St eam Navigation company and j to Kalan apa The overloaded boat | lg » \ Led ] ; ore is a young fellow under thirty, | M . Inte d Airways were searching for filled with water and began to sink. A ‘ Po y ; hould gu but he i8 a8 sure mark oO 5 q uU ? tf Oo the ml men. Punee also was unable to swim, | : Eo A ; m . ¢ Cal clung to the sinking of vhil ‘au f Lid y : p ; 3 ‘ re r the worl i ow h | * Five men left Kalaupapa to go fish- ung to th inking { hil at ai fo 2 4 wr ir i rt rk of il i § S ing In an 1S8-foot sloop, mporarily Kaeuiall and Kailim: ipe ha, the es i a | he was not particularly well epure e @ rigged and without a keel. After they other nonswimmer, hore. Kallima had been missing a few hours Jet then administered artificial respiration hension was felt at the settlement, to Kiha whi Lh thers returned to and two other men set out in a 14 rescue Punee. foot rowboat equipped with a 12-horse 1 party remained all night on the power outboard motor to search for i them. The sloop proved when it encountered strong east wind was washed overboard by a heavy and was rescued by Henry Kawewehi, ment to report who leaped Into the sea from the drifi- Meanwhil ! » J 1 : : | i } of i ing boat and placed a line around Maru, Capt. K. Fujimoto, passes the . ¥ - a . } age wou att mpt, but his aim Is Kalama. wr ; or " " i on e; ] roug y hard or} he ge hat The sloop began to leak badly. They | . y ae Rot . Rl nen he p also nz ;n ! made no hesdway toward Kalaupapa. | Landing Plane on Lawn : ; 4 : a up the Hee the « on nig A Just as well | Largest Seller tn 121 Conntrs Kalama, at the helm, finally steered for Costs Pilot $25 Fine | ®ay. I will con e lown, for 1 know } — the beach at Kamanawanu, and by . : iin With New York city as the goal, Walter Hofer, twenty-one, of Mercedes, | #0 a gone coon Tucson, Ariz.—Landing his airplane | » 1 $1 $ ¥ § i oh + ! 9% ; FE ¥ crit iE Fier ¥ iharr : i 1231. Western Newspaper Unlon. ) combined luck and skill struck an in- ' vd of . tv hose B oXas, I8 maxin is way slowly across the continent pusiing a wheelbarrow | We C E ¢ ie Yar ¥ Ororily nouse 3 g + Ty ital ak > i a { lot through the reef about 20 feet wide R the ya A Sororily hous containing his nineteen-yearold sister Margaret. The youthful Texans left | L OM o making a date wit} through which the boat was beached Aizen A “itn & . ’ girls their home recently in an effort to capture a £1,000 prize offered for the sue Go od at All Sports NEW YORK and in a heavy surf : ad ceasful compietion of the stunt They are averaging twenty miles dally, and IE4VYy . ator. $25. ' ¥ ff a¥ 4 $ Ne vp oy os whem. Mepals ' expect to eat thelr Christmas dinner ln New York. The flve men, ong of whom could Hudgin insisted it was a forted i $ w lry were af niled Lot weer § . . : a —————————— not swim, Wt e stranded bhelween the landing. but John Dwyer, clilef of po raging sea and the precipitous clifT, lice. 1} nh ¢ . r . ice, heard about the date and ‘ S ll “ N S lo. . D ol which had never been scaled. ks wih 2 Di Smallest Nation Smiles at DeDls clared the stunt was prearranged ! i : caused Hy y ree inder a city | Washington. —T smallest Euro- jin Europe to report a 1 antia § CR 3) ST am 7 AVE ordinance shibiting the operation yf | nean principality overiooked In all treasury surplus—and thi in in ) - a pean principality, | i opposite PENNA.RR. STATION Best of Soldiers motor vehicles without mufflers, and debt negotiations because It hag no | the fact that it has no taxes : sn 4 b nie N the flyer was fined 525. debt, and omitted from all arms con Lichtenstein, five squ ; The aviator wante« ak Th ferences because it has no standing | er than the District the sorority house yard, In ie chi army, is practically the only country | piece of Austria made him have the plane haule . east from Lake Constance, on the side the city limits, banks of 1! thine, The 12000 In. a———————— . habitants pass most of their time In : ; agricultural work, although there is af 1200 Rooms Petty Fraud Is Worked Xa 4 : i ‘ : : he considerable weaving done, much of it each with : : a) with Imported American cotton. . in the Name of Charity | pore cotton. Lr Both, Servidor Ranta Barbar a tif —T , Lichtenstein has been singularly : Santa Barbara, Cailf, [he country : : eR $ lat- has been overrun with rackets, but free from wars. Right in the way 2 ; and Circulat 1s . 18 ¥ 8, : . » 25 ? still another one came to light here of heavy troop Movement in Sue Ww oid ing ice Water } p } ined C4 . » when 200 people discovered they had i RE natal vel - been bilked out of a dollar apiece, with tempt 5 ca war was no prospect of a refund. 1866, when the Lichtenstein army of < J J / ROOM ~= BATH 3° UP According to police, a young woman ) men joined the wisn Army In and a man, posing as charity workers, hr , selling 8 difficu ies with russia, ks ik 3 4 48 Page Rabbit Book Prepaid 25c. Pedi- went about the city selling tickets at ; / But the Lichtensteiners arrived too -: Nits” edi ord Proiific, Healthy New weeiand Whites, $1 each for a musical concert which Iate for the battle and returned with 12 x on heh DA a on they said would be presented for char out having fired a gun, The helmets Mildred (“Babe” ) Didrikson, eighteen " YORI i »W Ne X or Ch - Hy Dy 5 Group of Musicians ahd arms from the “war are among | Yearcld Texas girl. who ls regarded =. ANIMAL TRAP 3 rots g the most prized possessions in the an. | 28 one of the greatest all-around wom- . . v athle ; 1 Sagi and kills without bail or y cient castle of Vaduz en athletes in the world. She has without injury to pelt; 6 has by GPP Pe Pree Pete LOLI eY For those who wish to evade taxes , equaled the accepted record for the actual tests eansht S0% more « 'B - 5 & wha 33 he a axl : n ente and oloer fur-bearing an POTPOURRI Lichtenstein Is a paradise, because | 100 yard dash and shattered the mark Ts Thin ST Miler tran os the ; they have no taxes. Once In the last | for the Z20-yard event. She holds more market; hak your dealer or wili (§ . ’ 50 years Were they assessed & small | than 40 records in all, and stars as | Shipdisect, 75 cents each Orlin ru. Jiu 2 i J ’ dozen. Free catalogue, Other t's ; sum to pay for a dyke to hold back | well in baseball, basketball, golf and | WALTER CLAYTON, Belmar, New Jersey "o-iies the waters of the Rhine, but the rest | other sports. She competed in the : i of the cost of their government Is paid | National A, A, U. track and field cham- | by the princes of Lichtenstein, who | pionships at Newark, N. J. i Phdd | BELLE PEE LILI L ELLIE LEE Not a Rose Sergt, David (“Spike”) Malonee, of Battery E of the coast artillery on duty at Fort Winfield Scott, who was recently spoken of by General Sum- merall as being the best soldier he has ever seen in the United States army. extensively for perfumes. Its In all the fifteen years that the ser- long slender stem comes from a geant has been soldiering he has nev- tuberous rootstick., It is a na er heen known by any other name than tive of tropical America and “Spike,” and when his name was need- Asia, but Is also grown in this ed for dispatches the writers had to country. refer to the official files, for no one (@. 1931, Western Newnoaner Union.) knew his real name. Veter rrr ras Iootete SUCH 15 Lre—A Boy’s s Idea By Charles Sughroe POP, WHAT DYA THINK 2 SEs mm MOM HAS PACKED MY Ad ITS FU O' SOAP N Gisvntae | 2 | RRR) YR HERE | THOUGHT THIS VAS TO 6 PLEASURE TRIP The tuberose is not related to the rose at all, Its name came from misuse of the adjective tuberous. Because of its ex- o> & | ob 3 & & tremely sweet odor it Is used | + are among the largest property hold: ers in Europe. As a matter of fact, their property holdings In the rest of Europe are greater than the size of RES tom] for use in little Lichtenstein, or's Hair Balsam. Makes the PPD Pdbdbdidd - When a woman Buffalo Survive calls her husband a “If you cross a superstitious porter's _ Kansas City.—Eight buffalo In the fool he is likely to palm with silver he will give you a | [AnSas state game preserve survived plead guilty on the wide berth” the spring blizzard which killed thou ; grout that he mar (WNU Service) sands of cattle in the vicinity, ried her, A sey { TT \ ily i ne W. N, U, BALTIMORE, NO. 34.1031.