S— VOL. CVI. GENEROUS ACTION ON PART OF BOARD TO REDUCE SAVING SCHOO! ADDITIONAL IN ard, mind other mentioned PENNSYLVANIA SWAMPED LEGISLATURE WITH . J » » * \ » * * CENTRE COUNTY NOTES HOSPITAL ts r, of Wednesday. A mn Willard Shultz hospital Wednesday The Misses Helen and nour f Howard, were ety ton ta wu patien born was State Inat or wire} E 2 charged the following Harris F. under die went and discharged Ls medical pat wns ¢ {race me an daughter was wr Holtzapp the spyital Mrs fe wT «hip Mrs ris harles at = was Marcella Fergus township, a medical patient Mrs, Paul E Bohn daughter, of Ferguson discharged Friday. Hoy W. Royer and Gilbert both of Bellefonte, Friday as surgical patients Miss Madeline St. Clair, of Ben- ner township, was admitted Friday a surgical patient. Mr. Isabelle Taylor. College town- ship, wag admitted Friday for treat- ment and discharged the next day. Franklin B. Harpster, of College township, was discharged Saturday after receiving treatment W. C. Smeltzer, Bellefonte, who had been a surgical patient, was discharg- ed on Saturday. Mre, Wm. H. Rimmey of Btate Col lege, has been a patient since Sat. urday. There were 41 patients in the hospi Sai at the beginning of the week. I A HTS Let us do your Job Printing, on, o f Har- admitted Friday as and infant township, were Morgan, were admitted on as POTTER'S TEACHERS ENABLES OF MANOR SCHOOL. MES, JOHN WERT WINS PURE-BRED CALF AT Farmer- Kiwanis Gathering at Hall Well Attended—Lynn Bla Wins Guinea Plegs—Other in attendan visiting, inter MARRIAGE Maroneck Ward, LICESES, N, Bellefonte ww Wanren, Teabe] Y. Eugene Allen, e Fay Harrisburg n State ( ollege R I ru Hoover sant Gap. fx mong Boalsburg i —— EX-CONVICT AIRING PAROLE CASE THIS WEEK charges that forcing paroled stool pigeons” when Harry showdown on poli eo tor for Mon- went been convicts was set day trial Boctteger, a robber on a 10 year parole from Western Penitentiary at lockview charged he was “hounded by police because he refused to Act me an Informer, | He will go on trial before Judge M. | Ward Fleming, of this county, on a charge of highway robbery, | He was accused by police of being implicated In a hold-up June 15 at {11th st. and Erle ave. Philadelphia, {though he has not been identified by | Harry Magee, 4648 N, 5th st, the vic- | tim, | The actual crime Is charged to Ed. (ward Zrelenski, an ex-convict and | former cellmate of Botteger, { Judge Harry 8. MoDevitt fa expect. ied to sit with Judge Fleming to in {quire into the “stool pigeon” charges, {brought last week by E. M, Hackney. | chief probation officer. Assistant Superintendent of Police Joseph Le Strange may be questioned | during the proceedings, It was sald. Botteger on HALL. PA. FREPARING FOR CONSTRUCTION, ROAD ROUTE m + © « ‘ { $y 1 ! s— I CALMLY TO NITTANY MOUNTAIN. HOW |e CHILD SEVERELY HU RY A —- _ WHEN RICKED BY MUL} NO PAPER NEXT WEEK. Next he week of ith be 16d office week per kee The being t July no p will this om n ping with time-honored Casto receive nd take 5 5 A POTTERS MILLS-STATE COLLEGE CONCRETE ROAD TO BE BUILT The onerete road Potters Milla, Highw to State Col will mer, but is let in The contract for 8.74 miles let to Rob ert G. Lassiter Company Raleigh, N C.. for $210,256, carries the road to the Boal Estate Immediately west of Boalw burg. The section between that and Btate College is also about to be fet. The entire road will be concrete and is being built with the ald of the Fed eral Government on the fifty-fifty plan with the State. ————— A — BRANCH OF WwW, C. T. 1. HAVING ENCAMPMENT More than 100 delegates from twen- ty-two counties assembled on Monday at Pennsylvania State College for the twenty-second annual encampment of the Pennsylvania Young People's Branch Federation of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union. “Hold the Line” was the keynote sounded for the convention. Among the officials present was Miss Lena Del} Wiggins, National Buperin- tendent of Scientific Instruction. The delegate In attendance from Centre Hall was Doris Moltz. starting at Niate 260, loge be built this sum being two sections 0; 1932, — A —— ——————————— 0 | Franklin D. Roosevelt FERGUSON TWP SCHOOL BLDG A MONT nention —— a — the field of probable vietor Leading candidates and very in today's bal. lotimg for Demoeratie Nomination for of the United President States, MEMORY HARKS TO BACK #28 CAMPAIGN Man's =, 0. “Not a Poor Party™ FP. In Years Prosperity Claims Page of Adverd sements Four Ago thie i rt y ' y $ written in written in mers written n the ks and bonds prosperity has reduced increased earning silencerd discontse nd werbial “el capaci put every pot and the ilcken in a Car in every backyard to hoot ised lowered the living standards Vine red the thrall of domesti drudgery has Yrovided Guntry in road and knitted the highways of the na- tion into a unified traffic Thanks the Republican admin istration, farmer, dairyman and mer- chant can make deliveries in less time and at less expense, can bor: row cheap money to re-fund exor- bitant mortgages, and stock their pastures, ranges and shelves, The News-Tribune then gays: “When you have read all his, cut it out, paste it in your scrapbook. and compare it with what will be sald on Mr. Hoover's behalf this year. “Above all, compare it with what you are able to put in your pot, in your garage or in your bank account.” i ——— Joseph F. Biddle, editor of the Huntingdon Dally News, is being groomed for the unexpired term of Bd- ward M. Beers (deceased) in Congress, Rev. O, B. Poulson, pastor of the Methodist church, Huntingdon, will be an independent Republican candidate {against Benjamin K. Focht, the reg- ular Republican nominee, Both Fooht county with its concrete system to [EXTENDING STON} | CHEER ROAD IN SEVEN Mot {1dr whodh OMPANY from i paratus while speed Harnish to night The most Royer wil seriously 0 wns County hospital badly shaken turkevs pers destroyed a A A —————— fLIGS VERDICT 1S FOUND FOR WIbOow United States Court verdict 1 Skinner of urned a Tor 27 In favor of Mrs, 0 Skinner, Law against the New York Company. The refused payment aileging suicide against which the policy carried an in: valdiating clause, A short time before the suit was heard in court, the body of Skinner was exhumed and a more complete ox. amination made of the place of entry and course of the bullet which ended his life, of widow Orville is town Life pany in her suit Insurance Come. AP A AS. Rebersburg Boy Scouts Advance, Bix of the Rebersburg Boy Scouts became Second Class Scouts. They fare: Archie ligen, Thomas Musser, Earl Burd, Woodrow Bilerly, Edward Abbot and Mahlon Balley. The test wags given by Mr. Lingle, of Lemont, who is Fleld Commisgdoner of the Juniata Council. It was a vear on June 27 since the Scouts organized under the leadership of Rev. B N. Fry. SA STATON. Bake Sale on Church Lawn, The Woman's Missionary Society of the local Evangelical church will hold a bake male on the church lawn, Sate and Harry Rippman, of Millerstown, the Democratic nominee, are wet, urday, July 2nd, afternocn and even: ing. The patronage of the public is soligited Sr————— NO. 26. —————— } HAPPENINGS OF LOCAL INTEREST FROM ALL PARTS i in State and Son daughter of Rev, week's here for Wayne of a few days Joffe Houpltal, institution Miss Smith posi n SuPer gastroenterology in Jefferson hose Koch after a reson n ut 31 of jeal and Clinic A their former's Fleisher, of to the father, T. FI Mills, for a two «1 with Reporter chat. Mg Fleisher, connection with an bean on of Buf. fs with on Wy Potiers ion, stop) nites his VD Voars payroll me omething ames K. Farner, who Jeft his nie ago to State, . f his youth Inst siting many old friends He was accompanied here by a kindly gentleman, M. ¥, Werner, a rural mail carrier out of Fredericksburg, and a neighbor of Mr. Farner. The latter Is farming in Lebanon county and ape pears in excellent health. He reports, however, that his brother, Thomas Farner, for many years a railway mail clerk, Is in an almost helpless condis tion Wind of high velocity, with low temperature, raced through the valley last Thursday. Here at Centre Hall it was most noticeable at the ball game where play was held up at vari ous times te await the clearing of the atmosphere when great quantities of “diamond dust” was picked up and carried like a cloud over the left fleld bleachers and over the houses on main street. Elmer R. McClellan, who lives near Tusseyville, tells us how he and his son Marcellus were ploking cherries when the wind grew so strong the men, who were on the tree, feared for thelr safety; and went home. Next morning they found the tree nearly stripped of ite fruit, the cherries iy+ tive live bome at OC in the « returned to ver nine mn FOONOS « years yet ¢ @ part of th the week, vi ing thick on the ground so that they could be scooped up with a shovel, wilt