THE CENTRE REPORTER. CENTRE HALL. PA. r << TUESDAY AND THURSDAY NIGHTS JOE PALOOKA Women love him — and so do the men! For he's the greatest guy in the world! He’ll make you laugh—and cry. Don’t miss him! Sent to you by Heinz Rice Flakes—"“One of the §f Varieties.” COLUMBIA COAST-TO-COAST NETWORK BALTIMORE. ........ Station WCAO . (E.8.T)) WASHINGTON. ...... Station WMAL ......1 . (E. 8.7) PHILADELPHIA Station WCAU .. .'(E.8.T.) NORFOLK Station WTAR . (E.8.T) | ran Harry von Zell, pro | " MICROPHONICS gram announcer, once an amateur Jessica Drugonette, NBC'S song- | Ehtwelght boxer of the Pacific bird, returned from a short holiday | C028t. That accounts for all but in Bermuda with a new definition of | 130-pound Frank Readick, a zebra. She says she overheard a | the part of Knobby Wals native describe the black and white | €/88y manager. He'll toss in the striped animals as “sports’ model | FPODZE mules.’ | —— sme { Each member of the cast of “The Anne 8. Sutherland, the NBC dra. | Goldbergs” is Jewish. Gertrude matic actress who plays Ma Betts in | Berg, the originator and author of “Moonshine and Honeysuckle,” as 8 | the sketches, plays Mrs. Goldberg. sideiine operates a tea room in New | James R. York's Greenwich Village, For years | alumnus of “Able's Irish Rose. Miss Sutherland played in Broadway | Rosie Silber und Alfr n play productions under the management | the children. of Charles Frohman and David] Belasco, who plays ii, Palooka's Vaters, the father, is an »” ed Kohn oe & L N Ly v | \YoCharlestan a. : Wilfred Glenn t always called | Bill. He says hi amed him Bill because he can he first of the mouth. He was born In Califor- nia, which mak im one of the sun-kissed singers, : > adda ppp bey Principals In the new WABC-Colum bia comic sketch of the prize ring, “Joe Palooka.” could come to blows in what might be termed the battle of the century. Four of them have a : : . 4 re 43 dh Pl 1 see that whiskers are again In worked out Inside the ropes. There's a nip kad Haw vogue in England remarked Ray Ted Bergman, 200-pound Palooka of | 1 * ae By ’ a , : a bis | Knight, the radio comedian. “Per- i 1¢ RCI, WHO once in >» Fei LRET, i » — New Vork svasnms a gonally, 1. prefer my mutton chéps : anageaq JEN i i gy¥ymnas: I " And heavyweight Ham Fisher, cartoonist-creator of the comic strip T ma SCHIST Nashville ot i" norte CAROLINA 0 50 81 79 varied life on the inside of my face. Population Centers from 1790 to 1930 the act is based, who Magic of a Name Teacher--Now, James, you may on which By ELMO SCOTT WATSON the Civil war, when the advance was 50.6 miles, ECENTLY the name of the town of while the least movement was in the decade from Linton, Ind. appeared in the head- lines of newspapers in every part of the country and the reason was not sparred in school, of latitude of 30 degrees 10 minutes 12 seconds the fighters and still works out with | give me the defi 1010 to 1920 when it was less than 10 miles. In N. them. Ted Husing, ringside] Jimmy—Exercise is work what a the 140 yeais covered by the census records the minutes 20 secs commentator at Palooka bouts, who | fellow like 1 io because it isn't advance has .otaled 580 miles, an average of a time In its history was located In a city took it on the chin while In the | work.—Boston Transcript, because it had been the scene of some little more than three miles annually, or about Bloomington, Ind. From 1800 to 1010 it moved sensational crime, some event of po- 11% miles a decade. That does not sound very J of a mile north and 380 miles west, the west litical significance, sclentifie discov- big, but it means a lot In the development of ward movement being ery or other happening which for a the United States. brief moment throws the limelight on Reference was made previously to the high some little municipality. The reason was that southward advance and the reason for the south. the United States bureau of the census, having ward pull of the last 10 years is chiefly Califor- completed the compilation of certain statistics nla-——south as well as west-—and Florida—south obtained by the 1930 census, announced that as well as east. The Increases in the populations the center of population of the United States of Texas and Oklahoma may appear also to have is near Linton, Ind. had some Influence, but the increases In Pennsyl- Indiana f As a matter of fact, this center is located at vania and New York probably offset that growth it will st & point in Stockton township, Greene county, in the so vest, Ind., which is 29 miles northeast of Linton, 31 If it be od whether the Callfort miles southeast by south of Terre Haute and increase In population was gr 83.6 miles northeast by north of Vincennes. But growth in Michigan and the h Atlantl since It is nearest Linton, that town recelved states, the answer Is the technical definjt whatever distinction there accrues to being center of | lation given above. known as “the center of population™ and it be An increase of 100.000 persons In Logs Angeles, came the successor to another Indi town, more than Whitehall, in holding that honor. For after the census of 1020 the center of population was designated as a point 1.9 miles west of White hall In Owen county and in the ten years from 1920 to 1030 it moved westward 22.3 miles to In 1010 it was at the point where the parallel hobnobs with all tion of exercise, intersects the meridian { longitude 88 de grees 32 nd for the first three times as great ag from 186 to If bu than the westward movement } jes, | Tr E agonizing aches from neuralgia can be quieted in Hilek Bway mk: the’ cantar i not. Niele ta. ae the same way you would end more: than. 25 miles westward: in the wast 3 a headache, Take some Bayer Aspirin. Take enough to bring complete relief. Genuine aspirin can’t burt anybody. Men and women bent with rheumatism will find the same wonderful comfort except between 1800 and 181 In the decade 1010 to 1 miles t being only about one fourt from the smal lest movemer in 1940, for the the eastern years 3 ’ But If Indias " : which It eventus 2.5% miles from the old center of population in Indiana, would counterbalance an r increase of 500,000 in Detroit, only a couple of hundred miles away. is one state which has another “« will never lose, That state Is Kar permanent possession of the “geographical ce of continental United KRtates™ States Coast and CGeodetle survey mined that this center is loc One of the most Interesting results of each decennial census Is the graphie picture which it the point near Linton. Now what is this center of population and how is It computed? Probably most of us have rather vague ideas about that and the chances are that such ideas are erronecons as well. For the thing we have in mind when we say center of population is probably what the census ex- perts call the median point, If you draw a line dividing the population of the United States Into equal parts north and south, and another line dividing It equally east and west, then the point of intersection is the median point. In every one of the four quar ters there will be the same number of people. But the center of population, as used by the census burean, is that point that may be con- gidered the center of human gravity of the United States, The census burean pictures the United States as a rigid level plane, and on it our 123.000000-0dd people each one welghing the same, irrespective of age, sex and other dis tinctions, Then the center of population would be the point at which the plane must pivot in order to balance perfectly. Literally then the center might be described as the decennial pivot of the American population playing seesaw, Obviously this point has no definite relation. ship with the geographical center or the numer feal center of the population—because the lever. age given western sections of the country offsets the weights of larger populations of the eastern sections, on this hypothetical teeter-totter, The westward advance of the center of popu- lation by 22.8 miles since 1020 is the smallest registered in any census except two. In 1000 the advance was only 14.4 miles, and In 1020 it was down to 90.8 miles, On the other hand, the southward advance of 7.6 miles, recorded in 1930, ig far above the average, Indeed, it Is a trifle more than the net southward movement since 1790; that is to say, the excess of southward mileage over northward, The westward advance is a reflection of the development of the nation—the tremendous strides made by agriculture In the states west of the Mississippi; the development of the great oll industries In Texas and Oklahoma and other parts of the West, and the steady growth of in. dustry in general in those areas. All these are in the picture, Oil, eattle, wheat, manufacturing, moving pictures, have all had and still exert an important influence on the steady movement into the West, A remarkable fact in the shifting of the center of population Is the closeness with which through. out its westward path it has clung to the thirty. ninth parallel of latitude. Since 1790 It has progressed almost In a straight line, reaching its furthest point north 23 miles east of Balti more In 1700 and its furthest south point in 1080 in Greene county, Indiana, Yet the span was 214 miles. The greatest movement west was during the decade Immediately preceding paints of Uncle Sam's westward march across the continent. Here, In brief, is that picture over the period of 140 years from 1700, the date of the first census, to 1930, the date of the last one: From the 1700 position In Maryland the center moved In ten years saimost directly west to a point about 18 miles west of Baltimore, and from 1800 it continued its westward swing, dip ping slightly to the south to a point In Virginia 40 miles northwest by west of Washington... In this decade it shifted 40 miles, the movement being due principally to the annexation of the territory of Loulsiana. In the next ten years, 1810 to 1820, it reached a point about 10 miles east of Moorfield in what is now the state of West Virginia. Here again there was a slight southward movement, which was doe mainly to the Increasing population of Georgia, Alabama and Mississippl. From 1820 to 1530 the movement continued west and south to a point aout 19 miles west-southwest of Moor. field, this being the most decided movement to the south In any decade. The reason was the annexation of Florida and Increasing settle. ments in the southwest, notably Alabama, Loulsl- ana, Mississippi and Arkansas, From 1530 to 1840 the center continued west, but slightly changed its course to the north, reaching a point 16 miles south of Clarksburg, W. Va. During this decade population had in- creased rapidly In the prairie states and in the southern parts of Michigan and Wisconsin, From 1840 to 1850 it moved west and slightly south again, reaching & point about 23 miles southeast of ParRersburg, W. Va, the change of direction to the south being largely due to the annexation of Texas, From 1850 to 1860 It moved west and slightly north, reaching a point 20 miles south by east of Chillicothe, Ohlo, while from 18060 to 1870 it moved west and sharply north, reaching a point about 48 miles east by north of Cincinnati, This northward movement was due In part to the waste and destruction In the south consequently upon the Civil war, and In part to the fact that the census of 1870 was defective In its enumer ation of the Southern people, especially of the newly enfranchised negro population, In 1880 the center of population had returned south to nearly the latitude occupied In 1860, being In Kentucky, just south of the Ohlo river, eight miles west by south of Cincinnati; but in 1800, owing to the great increase of population in the cities of the northwest, in the state of Washington, and also La New England, the center moved north to a point 20 miles east of Colum- bus, Ind. During the decade from 1800 to 1900 it moved west fo a point six miles southeast of Colum. bus, Ind, the great increase in the population of Indian Territory, Oklahoma, and Texas being largely offset by an increase in the population of the North Atlantic states. i It I= at a point whic! and ig located In latitude 30 degrees. 0 minutes: longitude 08 degrees, 35 minutes, and a mony ment has been erected there to mark the spot. How this geographical center was determined is described by officials of the survey a= follows: “For a land area bounded by a true circle the center of the clrele is the geographic center also; for an area bounded by a square or a rectangle the Intersection of the diagonals is the true center; but for an irregular area the cen- ter is not so easily found. One method of find ing It, a method sufficiently exact for all prac. tical purposes, 8 to mount a map on the area on a plece of stiff paper or cardboard and then cut this paper or cardboard to the exact outline. The point at which this figure will exactly bal ance on a pencil or pin point, If left free to move, Indicates the location of the geographic center.” It was by this method that the survey not only found the geographical center of the United States as a whole but also that of each state, Kansas also has permanent possession of an- other center which is of even more importance than Its geographic center for it has aptly been called the “hub of the United States” Out in a cow pasture on the Mende ranch in Osborne county, Kansas, Is a three-foot cube of concrete in which is set a metal plate on which a point is engraved. And this Is the “dominant point,” the “primary station,” the “geodetic capital of America” the "king pin” of all United States map-making and surveying and from it is’ eal culated the latitude and longitude of a sixth of the world's land surface, since both Canada and Mexico have adopted this point and its sup- porting system ag the “North American Datum.” It was established by the United States Coast and Geodetic survey In 1001 as the Initial sta. tion for the vast network of surveys that was to be spread not only over the United States but over the entire continent. It was designated as the “primary station” after the coast and geodetic survey had employed intricate mathe. matical calculations In extending its “triangula. tion network” across the country and had shifted the rigid network of its measurements about very slight distances until the errors in longi. tude and latitude of all the various stations were brought to the least possible quantity, When the network was “pegged down” the “mother station” was established on the Meade ranch in north central Kansas, “It would seem from a historic and selen- tific standpoint,” says R. 8. Patton, acting di rector of the coast and geodetic survey, “that the Meade ranch triangulation station ls worthy of a monument at least as conspicuous and artistic as the mero milestone in Washington which marks the beginning of the Lincoln a “vy et dahedin, highway muscular pains. familiar little box: Oils From Orange Trees Four rather distinct types of essen tial oils are secured from the orange tree and its fruit. Orange oil is de rived by pressing the rind of either the sweet or bitter orange; bergamot oll, extracted from the rind of a spe cial variety of orange cultivated al most exclusively in Italy and Corsica for its essential oil content; petti grain oil, produced by distillation of the leaves and twigs of the bitter orange, and orange flower, or neroli oll, distilled or extracted from the fresh flowers of the bitter orange trees. Orange oll is the only one of these products which is made in the United States. What has become of the discour aged restaurant with the magnificent name in the small town? dous difference in their lives, gist for genuine