VOL. CVII. CE NTRE HALL. PA. DIEGO, ROCKING, BUSHMANS, IN SAN BEYOND A BRISK FELT NO ILL earthquake We, t friends of Of YO +H sections, Beach was pecially those ir the Long Compton damage great. inceraly The BUSHMANS FUNKS SAFE, BUT SHAKEN, AT COMPTON, CALIF. 1 14 f¢ form r lestts » broken dish, iine of furni- » the sOvVere furnitures nes room found itg rom Dro wis The Way sine ——————————— SCHOOL B. B. SCHEDULE. County High Schoo Belle HIGH ie Ath- entre { A ition t E. S§ SHUCK'S EULOGY OF MODERN HOTELS Has Greatly Prohibition, of the Foremost Busnesses In Says the Industry Im- proved Under One the Country. Belng 1ounger m BFS PETS ‘11 v e generally becausa they since the bar { the rom ved members hotel this industr Shu we Clearfield Mr Dimeling great ; wu of Kiv Shuck at a 1» dinner Hotel is proprietor of tearfleld; Hotel hotel the 1 outdistanced hotel manag ‘good old to hotels and of 85 the days” prosperity ing fortunes, Mr. Shuck Since the of hotel industry has advanced from the seventeenth to the seventh place In the Industrial world, being sone of the foremost businesses in thls country. Investments in hotels lg larger for! many instances than in the bigger n- dostries, Hr. Bhuck sald, mentioning the Waldorf-Astoria with {ta invest. ment of 66 millions, Hotels not only lead In the business world today but they have become arbiters of fashion for the country. The newest modes In furnishings and decorations appear first in hotels and then gradually are taken into homes of the nation. As in all other business fields today. | hotel operations is a specialized and highly competitive field, Mr. Shuck ex- plained. The hotel manager must have a wide knowledge of business affairs | ty deal with the complex problems that | wonfront him. Managed on a strictly | business basis, and catering to the traveling public which it serves, the hotel has achieved prestige and favor in the past decade which It never knew to their sald. advent prohibition the the | i i § i “ All’s Well” WwW. WwW. BoOB CAPE AND WIFE ES- EFFECTS OF "QUAKE; “BUSINESS VERY GOOD” On the from over a Mrs, side him h wppened to and Ww ulte MCe If tha hat it di instead this is God's could yur would th With in you building t wers that many 140 to live Hving of about country not think of PRY ce © Y )t t all 3 heaver ar of people in thi § bgt EM MANAGEMENT MEETINGS, # ’ ry " farm conditions carried th of the county thelr -bBustheas had the hoon information on 14 0 the farmers of who management E. McCord, survey J charge he will present fi tho gures E. L Moffett will discuss the findings and as given by cooperators, make recommendations as to ocd a farm man These to the tices beheld hedule agement prac meetings will fi yrdd ing lowing April Bhi Vocational % COMM. CHRISTIAN MET IN REFORMED EDUCATION CHURCH The Education { Of committee of West the Reformed States Christian Susquehanng Church 1" on Classis the United session In one day y among oth the in day HLE met ¥ io Dr yminati THIRTEEN APPLICANTS ARE LACK OF KNOWLEDGE OF SAFE (CONSTRUCTION PROVES safe Inckeod 1ttenatad ying lo i 18 of 5A PE safe, 1 je yg inexperienced in FARMERS' FIELD DAY WILL BE ON JUNE ha 15 Farmers’ ad for Pennsylva Field contests, Field Day Thursday Btale 8 been ached at the ie 15, Tune in College talks the Iaborator. trips, demonstrations, and visits to experiments colleges herda and flocks included the program the agricultural and home mica ataffa of the and ea will be in of Members COT college will ap- Boalsburg. 8 pn hm ro Santi Lagles’ hall April 6 2 > ¥ assembly room bool building at How m. April ht “riday, Court room in the Hlefonte, 8 p m The meetings have been arranged for the benefit of all farmers in the coun ty and the information to be present. ed will be valuable, particularly daring ! the next year ury House be se —— Will the Legislature permit the sale the two-mile limit of High School,” which a 1868 prohibited, fs a the “Farmers’ passed in residents. The sale of intox ants was wel] controlled in this two-mile area under the various loense laws but since Volsteadism, violations have and serious. Will the new law be better? Can it be worse? A AAAI IA. Thank God for Rev. Charles ¥ Coughlin, He is spreading the gospel of truth via the radio, and in last Sunday's talk ‘ook a fling at the mon- €y changers, mentioning names and pointing the accusing finger In n6 un- certain manner. The officers of sev. eral of the Detroit banks came In for special denunciation, and if you heard the pear on a — CONCRETE RIBBON HIGHWAY WILL IT BE BUILT! and in VEER Bellefonte inter effort Department united to Induce State an Highway to construct ia ribbon road di- rect from Bellefonte State (ilege Bellefonte much desires this shbry cut road, for many reasons aside from the fact that present roads divert much traffic from the county seat, which to some extent would be recovered by building this link. It would run all traffic north and northeast through Bellefonte, whereas at present the in. tersoction with route No. 220 js most. ly at Zion State Belle fenite increta to Collage has had a long lead on in securing modern roads, the post important of which is the link of the Lakes-to-Sen highway pasdng directly through that town, The traffMo went west and to the northwest sections of the State wlich heretofore was through Belle forte, kas practically all been diverted from the county seat to State College over the new concrete road opened last fall The short cut from State College to Bellefonte would be beneficial to the hospital, would ald jn bringing the of: fioinl business center near State Col the Rev. Mr. Coughlin, you no doubt sald, “Amen.” lege devilop closer business and social relations between the two towns. ELLIS D, REARICK CASE CLOSED--NOT of the Rearick, GUILTY Cine i Commonwenlty with inv definit \ 01 ol charged in manslaughter, closd Thedefendant | relieved responsibility The { © a————— COLLEGE MAN AS AUTO GOES STATE INJURED INTO SPIN ec - MEETING OF TRICOUNTY ASSOC'N PAST TEMPLARS Contre A ———————————— LANDS OF THE BIBLE” ILLUSTRATED LECTURE “THI 1 rate § 13s le Bible , Altoona hie be dwell trave Th auspices of the Young Society of the The silver offering divided society Jedd lecture wil through 1 Te Ym places i en under the Missionary church equally Woman's Lutheran I between the Ww Toe 1 $yy 3 lecture and the Er ———— A Mp TRI-HI-Y MEETING, Tri-Hi-Y held night in the This was SMON ny ¥ » kk High ceremony High school bulid- firet Induction the club has organ in January Tha to the grganisstion were Bilagier, Freda is Packer, Doris Moltz Sara Odenk Smith, Treaster, During the ceremony Aa mposed of Miss Geary, Mrs. Weizel, Mra Kerlin and Mre. Goodhart, the club's home and church advisors, sang, “Lead On, Kindly Light” After the ceremony, the club had a social hour, followed by refreshments. Ts 1 ne PAG 5 school { the f its induction on Friday ng the Cer - since been 3 $4» 1, eleven taken In. Laura Breon, Burkholder new members Dorothy ' Miriam Mit- Gladys Smith, and Mar. | teriing, iri Roberta Hazel Smith fan guartette VIEWERS PLACE VALUE oF P. 0. SITE AT 837,000 The report ,f the three viewers who appraised the properties taken by the government as the site for Bellefonte's new post-office has finally been made public, The total “appraisement was $37,000 divided as follows: Krader prop- erty, $19,000; Hibler home, $10,000, and Montgomery home, $8,000, The appraisers were Edward R. Ow. ens, Col. W. Fred Reynolds and Wil: son I. Fleming. At the time of the hearing, on December 29th, to deter mine a fair valuation of the proper: ties, attorneys for the owners placed the figures a¢ $25,000 for the Krader property; $12,500 to $15000 for the Hibler property, and 39.500 to $10,000 for the Montgomery, orf a range of from $47.000 to $50,000. As the rece ommendation of the viewers Is $10, 000 less than the lowest price asked, litigation may follow to determine how much the government will have to pay. 5 1933. FIVE IN ‘HOLY COMPACT KEEP DEATH SECRET FOUR YEARS Selinsgrove Constable's Memory Youths After Idle Talk Killed While Inauguration. Traps to to Turns Hiking Veteran, Hoover COUNTY B. B, LEAGUE ORGANIZED AT HOWARD 4 Howard last reorganised ball The but it Friday Centre the the County Coming for feam Loague not or Milesburg ir eighth either Bellefonte the constitution t oad with severa)] revisions of minor tm. The will include forty-two games, on May 6th Wi reproser tod will The adopt. 5% Woe sremaining anchine ned Year wis portance schedule opening Labor Day. the ensuing year a P Holter, President, R and closing on Officers 1 re id « Howard Mii. President. Vice heim Soc. «Treas, Hall Board of Control ersburg Kyler Rimmey Hall Pleasant Charles Harry Howard 8. Stover, RHR. 8B - Jamison Centre E. E. Hubler Orviston ; Wilbur Baxion, | Lamar; Rob Rex Georg Centre Gap D'Arment, Cried, Es an More Big Hogs Killed. 1 week weight are commented on by neighbors, Mik Decker and Charles Durst killed two straight hoge weighing respectively 400 pounds and 375 pounds, while John W. Zerby, the Penns Cave that teing Three hogs were kill if of their boca use of district killed one that tipped the beam at 600 pounds. HOUSE RESENTS TEACHERS WARNING ON SCHOOL BILLS A flood of telegrams urging meme bere to vote against legislation af- fecting schoo) teachers drew the fire of the House of Representatives at Harrisburg. The House adopted a resolution of Representative H. A. Surface, Snyder attacking the telegrams as “unethical, objectionable and offensive” “I consider this an insult to Intell gence of the members.” Burface assert. ed In placing a telegram on the rec. ord. The message sald that 62.500 school teachers In Pennsylvania will keep a record of the ayes and nayes of the members voling on the school bill and that “teachers in your legislative dis. tricts will be strongly organized before next year's primaries to vote for friends nt the polls. Each block of TS, NO. 13, FOWN AND COUNTY NEWS. 5 HAPPENINGS OF LOCAL INTEREST FROMALL PARTS Thurg« and oy wol teacher, Robb and were recent and ana tysburg, has Latheran the place to a¥f- an Matter, noW dwell- Spring 11 eoccus dwelle 1%: lex a clear- be in of lerbrush, to 2 y Fairnmsount 1 back of May. wintey, Mrs. form- r 1 director for seven opened the of the on the evel Pennsy ivan. “The udges speak , Apri] 4, at the 11 14d +» College on subject, Corridor.” f founded that 1 suction properiy recently Emery The are well. rumors has Jeased Arney Albert time apparently a Beatrice =i Lase M by atl this in Sir has hecome the benedict in Mies Brown Potter my, to Martz and 1 tho Vie now returning Reporter Mr. Martz has employe ten days Rumor it. he will begiven longer ment in the near future. A number wilore yar f or fow rk VE employe getting a WH week has 8 workmen of the former of the Robert E. Lassiter & Cone tractors for the construction of the Potters Millse Boalsburg road, are bask to Centre Hall They came here to complete the birms of the road, but the work was interfered with by he freee and snow fall of the latter past of the week. Mr. Fuller, superintends ent, is also here Mr. and Mrs. 3. L. Ebright and daughter, Miss Bettie, visited the RB F. Faller family at Scranton on Suge day, and drove on through the Pocone Mountains to Delaware Water Gap The scenery through the mountaing was found to be beautiful, the young timber and large tree branches bending with a heavy load of snow adding the otherwise grand views. Mre, C. J. Shaeffer and Mrs. Lizsie Wherly, both of Altoona, arrived hens Friday morning to be among relatives and friends. The former came mote particularly to comfort her sister, Mes, Clara Liester, whoh as been a suf fever from a paralytic stroke for nears ly three weeks Mrs. Wherly fe with her brother, Samuel Shoop, and fam” employes Co. 100 teacters count for 1000 votes" ily. w
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers