" . \d * » ITEMS OF JLOCAL INTEREST Helen He sister, Mrs Dy. Franklin ton. 1. at the W \ xt Vaca Mrs. Wetz for on Friday Mr. anl Mrs Ar Mrs hart, Am n Beaver, George ge and son, of ¥ Indiana he Elkhart Pennsylvania residen as are and touring joining states Mrs. J. BE. advance aunt, Mr. Carrie Nationa] Home for the Aged, ington, D. C. Mrs. Ruhl is well on in the eighties and is termed as quite well. 8ha longs to dee old friends and was gratified on Labor Day when her nephew and niece, Mr. and Mrs. J. 8. Getchell of Uniontown made their annual visit to Washington. Mr. and Mrs. F. BB. daughter on Saturday motored to Cleveland to witness the air races, returning home While in Cleveland of the former's Priest and Royer called on to the of in Wash- suber ription Ruhl, living Priest and Janet Monday evening. they were guests brother, Alfred J. The Army, Navy and Marines were represented in the alr races and mid-air performances. On their return home they brought with them William Priest, of Will- famsport, who had been with his son in Clevelanq for 5 week. family. CENTRE HALL HAS ONLY A CHINAMAN'S CHANCE TO WIN TRI-VALLEY The C Hall the entre baseball team ha back to wall. The fi champlonshiy sf the Tri-Villes LOCAL AND PERSONAL Juliane and daughter, man and Were Strohmeter, | 1 Mr children, Euests of for a Mr. and former is a ring last week Homan. The the late H. G engaged ering business whils Mra. C. H of Strohm- in upholst - Mr. Shuman is a salesman employed by the Standard Brands corporation. Mrs. Shuman will be recalled Anna Strohmeler. the elder of two girls who came here to spend the summer months when they wera children, eler and is the as Jean Musser, daughter of Mr. and Mrg Stuart Musser, on the H. E. Fye farm along State highway route No. 85, east of Centre Hall, was taken to the Huntingdon hospital by hey pars ents on Tuesday evening. Since early spring she has been having trouble with her right eve and a recent x-ray examination revealed a growth be- tween the ball and the nose. She will submit to a surgical operation during the latter part of this week. Jean is a sophomora in Gregg Township Vooa- tiona] school and was on roll for nearly every last term. the honor month of the LOCALS. Laughing Around the World With IRVIN S. COBB of Grange Mr, and Mi Reesman Camden alr ind Enough for Wilkins By IRVIN S. COBB ¢ [FROM the lowlands SPP PPP OPPPOPE OPPOSITE PEI PIOPOONd FOR INSURANCE SEE C. D. Bartholomew Helen the need of a shave. He had no razor and there was no rem ber in the town; but he learned from the hotelkeeper that th an old cobbler living a few doors aways who nt en ometimes shaved Wilkins went to look for the cobbler. In a tinv ghop he { ) elderly native with straggly chin whiskers and a mild blue eve. old chap got out an ancient razor from somewhere, stropped iberately and was soon scrapping away on the jowls. + 3 fr a little conversation patron’ stealing over him. country up here, ain't it? conversation. 3 opening up I don’t know,” said the old chap mildly. “Ti ome Estate Bartholomew, fer. CENTRE HALI « STRANGE * SUPERSTITIONS By Edwin Finch Sr oOReOOeL IVE A WAY WITH BEARDS! tazor hurt you “The razor's all ri y are the facts about the killi The cobbler let the edge of the ra le eof the inquiring ry done 0," he There was where the ee ranger for a f 1 or mntliv AG BF y. nversation (American News Features, Inc.) a THE WORLD'S GOOD NEWS THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR An International Daily Newspaper § \ Keener, longer-lasting, kind to the skin, Treet Single-edge Blades are FOR uniformly good! 4 superb blades for 10e, 10¢ Treel BLADES FIT GEM AND EVER-READY RAZORS 4 the = 1 ext t erime r sensst 4's clean eo , ve gr The Monit — Plone AFRICAN NEGRO TRIBES WORSHIP THE BLUE SHARK ,CALUNG fT ‘You-Jou™ INORDER TO BRING GooD FORTUNE. To THE TRIBE , AT CERTAINTIMES ATEN YEAR OLD CHILD, DECORATED WITH FLOWERS 1S BOUND TO A LOG AND PLACED AT THE W ATERS EDGE, AT LOW TOE AND LEFT TO BE DEVOURED BY THE SHARKS ~ THE CRIES OF THE \: IT WITH nett wit them Pe y he Weekly WM Si ww ww a a a aN a A A a a ~ Ar RF Ln po a TS a oa a a a Lo TET I TIN NT, I IT OS, BE SURE TO GET AN Freq CLIO ——— AMERICA’S IRATE IVINS: wo ler Ba, NY — Get trustworthy time in a smart Ingersoll wdich. Yankee the smallest and thinnest po ket watch at 81.50. Chrome plated case, clear numerals, unbreak- able crystal your subscription due? THE AWFUL PRICE YOU PAY FOR BEING NERVOUS POOR LIGHT is dangerous for young eyas—it is the common cause of defective vision. For their home- work this fall—and throughout all the school years ahead—give your children good ‘light—it will help protect eyesight! Give them the benefit of an ILE. S. table-style reading and study lamp. LE.S. lamps are beautiful as well as sight-saving —and they cost much less than you'd think. Quivering nerves ean make you old haggard looking, eranky and hard to with-wecan keep oa awake pights fob you of good th, good 0) hy What you may need is a particulary good woman's fowie-—and could you as or i f and live and and thing whose benefits are better than famous Lydia E. Pinkham's Jegetable Compound? Let its whole. gome herbs and roots help Nature build up more phytical resistance and thus help ealm your shrieking ner ive more energy and make life worth living again. More than a million women have re- ried benefit.— why not let Pinkham's ‘ompound help YOU, too, to go “smil- ing thru” trying times like it teful ot EGOS Fre: Hons? IT MUST BE GOOD!
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers