ME EE . i, Fete mam oo iss gps ye rr — E ” oe — era mr ep ——————————— sc —_- a —— : 1 platform of purpose and of action, we can ceed only as they sustain and guide me | Williamsport to State College by Trol- | have run. However the project has Second Inauguration as President. stand together. by their confidence and their counsel. The po ley—Not Yet. ge by e ? D nt and Ro a Is Imperative Spa we should thing I shall count upon, the thing with, eet abandoned for the prese stan ogether. Je are being forged into | out WwW ich neither counsel nor action wil : : in i ; 2 ew unity amidst the fires that now | avail, is the unity of America—an Amer- Centre county and State College | whether it will be taken up again In Woodrow Wilson Took Oath of Office at Noon Sunday, aze throughout the world. In their ar- | ica united in feeling, in purpose and in | pissed a good thing when a project | the future remains to be seen. sm——— A e———— dent heat shall, in God’s providence, let us | its vision of duty, of opportunity and of . : : hope, be purged of faction and division, service. We are to beware of all men who | to buil i i m Wil- With Formal Ceremony on Monday. Big Crowd m purified of the errant humors of party and |.would turn the tasks and the necessities | 1. ild an electric railway fro : __- Hear Mrs. Parsels at Pleasant Patri d I 1 Address of Beivate interest, and shall stand Joh of the nation to their own private profit liamsport to State College was aban- Gap Tuesday afternoon March 13th oe in the days to come W th a new dignity of | or use them for the building up © pri- : ’ ’ Attendance. atrio 1C naugura national pride and spirit. Let each man | vate power; beware that no faction or dis- doned. Some time last fall the prop- at two o’clock et see to it that the dedication is in his own loyal intrigue break the harmony or em- | osition was taken up by the Lycom- 7 heart, the high purpose of the nation in | barrass the spirit of our people; beware =} i took the oath of ] our house in order; correct the grosser his own mind, ruler of his own will and | that our government be kept pure and in- | ing Improvement company of Wil- {= = el Eo ean Te resident Wilson i 2t Noon on errors and abuses of our industral life, | desire. | corrupt in all its parts. United alike in |liamsport with other pz oti 7h New Advertisements. office for 18 secon : liberate and quicken the processes of our Pica f Yas 4 | the conception of our duty and in the high amsp wi other parties whose ___________——— -— — Sunday in his room at the capitol and | national genius and energy and lift our ea for Unity of America. | aeoive to perform it in the face of all | names have not been made public. As —— i rated on Moncay | politics to a broader view of the people’s| yj stand here and have taken t + { men, let us dedicate ourselves to the great a LE OR RENT.—Good farm in Spring er not reflecting a essential interests, LLL Jo and “solemn Ty ro eh Sag fhe high | Sor to Shick we must now jet our hand. proposed then the plans provided For | i SA Apply to JOHN ROLL, Belle : y : : ar v y S1 distance . dier ause ) > Tint for myself, Jeg your tolerance, your : ss Q 4 0-1t great national expression of Ameri- | I shall not attempt to Teyigw it. It speaks audios because He io ot Jue United | countenance, and your united aid. The | @ line ‘rom State College to Lock | fone or of | Loti deh BM ty | HES Shen Be RS 2 | Sh i dhplti SELEER wi thence to Jersey Shore and | (~RAPE VINE PRUNING, AND TEMG Before a desk piled with executive | time for retrospect. It is time, rather, to oigus Indginen. RSmed, we the 3 Jeeder in NA is or igh Bony 1 valk | Williamsport. It was proposed to use G —Get your grave vines trimmed Dy ex- business before him in the closing | speak our thoughts and purposes concern- | 1 reglize to the full the esponsibility | true to oursclves—to ourselves as we have | the Bellefonte Cent 1 f Stat pert workmen... jergey Feasopa e. hours of Congress, and surrounded | ing the Diosent aul fhe Imiindinle future. | which it invelves. I pray Cod ORSIDIILY | wished to be known in the counsels of the entral from Slaw. , Ppy Galicfonte, Pa by members of his official family, the Although Wo Lave masunl essunsel Sud | given fhe wisdom wa SHE prod do world and in the thought of ALL Hhorewis | College to Bellefonte, al whilenoth. 018 . : : v F e spir Ss gred y i Justy > . iv President re-affirmed with uplifted | and success, }pon the Jaent problems of | Llople. "1 am their IE Of Tee juited. ing definite has been learned of the Mo WANTED—We have places for is - % : c molders. er- jand_snd Frove a ourselves four years ago, other matters route from Bellefonte to Lock Haven two or three, first cags ise 0 upno onst. ; have more and more forced themselves whatever is may confront the na- | upon BUF attention, matters lying outside : in th ntous four years be- | our own life as a nation and over which tion in the mome 3 : we had no control, but which, despite our fore it. wish to keep free of them, have drawn us After he had repeated solemnly the | more and more irresistibly into their own oath taken first by Washington a cen enrren; 31 Dies i. Affected tury and a quarter ago, he kissed the e of Whale Wor ected. : h reading: “The It has been impossible to avoid them. Bible at the passage 8: They have affected the life of the whole Lord is our refuge; a very present | world. They have shaken men every- 3 3 hid where with a passion and an apprehen- help in time of irouble dministered sion they never knew before. 1t has been Chief Justice ite admi hard to preserve calm counsel while the the oath and was the first to extend thought of our $y¥u Reape guived this his congratulations. Wringing the | way an that under eir influence. e = . : . : are a composite and cosmopolitan people. . . President’s hand, the _chief justice | We are of the blood of all the nations that With the first blush of Spring looked fervently into his face for a|are at war. The currents of our thoughts > ; moment and said brokenly: as well as the currents of our trade run comes the moving season. Don’t quick at all seasons back and forth be- «Myr. President, I am very, very | tween us and them. The war inevitably forget that it’s impossible for the happy.” set its mark from the first alike upon our PPY-" as no President has been | minds. or, MOLT Guy commerce, our telephone company to move every- Tow manent positions and g treatment it is just possible that the projectors | for steady men. No anche Spy. Siiors had in view the Central Railroad of |g.9.3t Crpaurmlp ACH afield, Pa. Pennsylvania. Had the negotiations been carried out it would probably rted heifer. Downington Giddy h . } 3 im I H have meant a big thing for the roads |,» ill be sold with registration fees paid in question as well as the entire sec- | to first applicant. Address or phone i hi i a GEO. R. MEEK, tion through which the line would | 0» 3 Pa. ee rareenes reese — © erermearar smear tor ee S——————— re — UERNSEY BULL CALF.—Promising looking G bull calf, sire ‘Fearless Boy,” dam, the 4 4 ¢ . 2 4 3 The Steel Pen Gives Way ) . 4 before, President Wilson left the poliids and oup foaependencs Wl yw one at once! $ To The Adding Machine ¢ - - oe - ee { 4 4 4 4 ¢ 4 White House shortly after 11 o’clock| And vet, all the while we have been i 3 conscious that we were not part of it. n on Monday 60 9050 the capitol for his that consciousness, despite many divisions, I £ ay 1 = hn 1 S . we have drawn closer together. ve have A hollow square was formed by a been deeply wronged Jen the seas, but yourep anning a ¢ ange, ca : we have not wishe o wrong or injure - squadron of the Second United States in return; have retained throughout the cavalry troop. Within this moving | consciousness of standing in some sort uare was the President’s automo- apart, intent upon an interest that. trans- : . . : _ | cended the immediate issues of the war bile, an automobile immediately be- | jicelf. As some of the injuries done us the Business Office at least two weeks before vacating and let us know your new address. That will Come and see our new system ind carrying secret service men and | have be I lorable, we have still bee : : ‘ . : ; bp fg of Sect service men " and clear hat we wished nothing for Surselves msure your telephone being in of Bookkeeping. Everything guards, together with a chosen few hat We Wore A Sm service there when you arrive. ; nowsparer Ren on foot. ih ¢ dom to live and be at ease against organiz- done by machinery on a Bur- Outside this square was another © ed wrong. ; : pp : ; oR voor police. There were! sind Fish 1n Armed Rowtsalliy. THE RY roughs Adding Machine. W. S. MALLALIEU, Local Mgr., BELLEFONTE. PA. double lines of police from Washing-| 1t is this spirit and with this thought special police that we have grown more and more aware, ton ard New York, and Ds the more and more certain that the part we and plain-clothes men € wished to play was the part of those who crowded pavements and the outer wean Je vindioale snd fortify peace, We i ave been oblige to arm ourselves to spypre of DOI wil had been make good our claim to a certain minimum Presi ent an rs. Wilson ha of right and of freedom of action. We waiting In the great East room of he stand gm in aried neutrality sibee Bi : ’ seems that in no other way can we e- White House, Whee at BS monstrate what it is we insist upon and Vice President an rs. Marshall, the | cannot forego. We may even be drawn on, escorting delegation of Senators and | by circumstances, not by our own pur- i rt N.| rose or desire, to a more active as- SepresenuLives, Colonel Robey dral J tion. of our rights as we see Harper, c¢ airman oO e 1 g them and a more immediate associa- committee, arrived at the White | ation with ihe great struggle itself. But House to form an official escort. nothing will alter our thought or our pure : : pose. They are too clear to be obscured. The official escort accompanied Wil- | Prey are too deeply rooted in the prin- son to his carriage and the procession dries of our Jason! life to be, altered. : : e desire neither conquest nor advantage. left for the capitol. ith M wil We wish nothing that can be had only at As the President, wit rs. Wilson | {he cost of another people. We have al- seated beside him, swung through the | ways professed unselfish purpose and Ww mansion gates, Second cavalry bug- eoyel the opportunity to prove that ou. 4 3 professions are sincere. lers shrilled forth the presidential There are many things still to do atjr=—r—= Tm —— salute. home, to clarify our own politics and give Ar AANAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA VA > 6 : y No Extra Charge for Alterations We want to show you how we keep your account. a a a IAAI RANRAAIAIISGGTTTE . WRIT The First National Bank, 59-1-1y BELLEFONTE, PA. : : new vitality to the industrial processes AAPAAPPPIINPIINININ NVAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAANAANIN . Back of the President swung into of our own life, and we shall do them as p line the carriage bearing Vice Presi- | time and epportunity serve; but we realize dent Marshall. The Black Horse tha the grentess things that Temajn to De ‘ 3 done mus e¢ done with the whole wor troop of Culver academy, Indiana, | {01 4 stage and in co-operation with the $ spirited and precise, escorted Mar- | wide and universal forces of mankind, and S$ » ile trailin behind came | We are making our spirits ready for those shall, whil g things. They will follow in the immediate A . ’ A] “ Chairman Harper's carriage and “the | 1 1a of the war itself, and will set, civili- | 9 President’s own cavalry,’ as escort. zation up again, . We. are provincials no. S At 12.30 o'clock the President ap- ro ‘tragical events of the thirty months ? peared at the front door leading from | ;¢ vital turmoil through Which we have | @ the capitol to the pisizomm. Hele just passed have wade us cltizens of She Q i . ilson an is | world. There can be no turning back. Our assem paaied by Mrs own fortunes as a nation are involved, al os thi 6 breeze Wo whether we would have it so or not. y this time a raw z ; Ta sweeping the crowd in the stand and{ , The Things We Prana Foe an : £ thousands of feet as And yet we are not the less . mericans the stamping © on that account. We shall be the more the people struggled to keep warm, | American if we but remain true to the ; principles in which we have been bred. changed toa Ie of applause. st out They are not the principles of a province Simultaneously e sun burst 0 or a single continent. We have known from an overcast sky. The President | and boasted all along that they were the looked up and smiled. principles of a liberated mankind. These, $ $ $ $ $ 9 ? 9 9 9 «Well, that’s fine » he said Sherefores are the things we stand for, ? y ’ . whether in war or mn eace: The President was preceded to his | That all nations 4 equally interested $ place on the platform by members of | in the peace of the world and in the polit- 2 : $ $ $ ? $ $ ? $ $ $ $ 4 STANDS FOR POWER. EFFICIENCY. DURABILITY. pring Suits, Coats and Dresses. Up-to-date Merchandise. al mn ji un: | rn 3 : Yo ical stability of free peoples, and equally the United States court in their su-| responsible for their maintenance. preme judicial robes. Then followed | That the essential principles of peace is the diplomatic corps, which took seats the RO A in all mat- to the left of the platform. The Sen- That peace cannot securely er justly ate and House marched down in 2a rest, upon an armed balance of power. 4 That governments derive all their just body and sat at the rear of the plat powers from the consent of the governed, form. p d t ang that no other Powers should be sup- resident wore no overcoa porte y the common thought, purpose or a he took his seat outside, but | PORT of the family of nations; When 3 That the seas should be equally free within avery few inifnies, He raw and safe for the use of all peoples, under i ue or him, and | rules set up y common agreement an wind proved 100 mue ) -~ | consent, and that, so far as practicable, Mrs. Wil rdered him to put on his TS. hs hot. Be hd {hey should be accessible to all upon equal overcoa . : CoS] | Then, apparently feeling the crowd That national armaments should be Effective March Ist, Prices Advanced as Follows: FOURS. SIXES. Touring from § 940.00 to $ 985.00 Touring from $1,180 Roadster > 00 “995.00 Roadster 1170, Everyweather | 1,140.00 * 1,185.00 Everyweather © 1380 Chassis - 850.00 “ 885.00 hassis re 1,090 Heaslet Victoria Top 1.450. Exten. © 1,450. 0 to $1,750.00 OQ 2882 Newman's Ladies Shop, AIKEN BLOCK. s 282 ort rd fed fu fond GEORGE A. BEEZER, AGENT, No Extra Charge for Alterations needed a little exercise he stood up yufesd to he nacessittes of national order ) North Water St. 61-tf. BELLEFONTE, PA. and waved his silk hat. hat the community of interest and of AAAAAAAAAAAAAANAANAAAANS AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAI ERTIES “Go on, Woodrow, why wait 7” some Dower upon which Bence Maly Beneoforsh : : epend imposes upon each nation the duty one called out as the President, with of seeing to it that all influences proceed- his hand in overcoat pocket, shifted | ing from its own citizens meant to en from one foot to the other as he tried | courage or assist revolution in other tra states should be sternly and effcetually to keep warm, and looked as anxious | suppressed and prevented. to get into action as the crowd would | I need not argue these principles to you, have him. my fellow-countrymen ; they are your own, 3 a part and parcel of your own thinking and At the conclusion of the formal cer- | your own motive in affairs. They spring emony, there was a brief cheer from | up native amongst us. Upon this as a the thousands, and the President be- a a—— gan the delivery of his address. While = speaking, he kept on his tall silk hat. The wind prevented his words reach- $ ing far into the crowd, but he was in- terrupted at no time before conclud- ® TET. in 2. The President spoke less than fif- ROUND TRIP teen minutes. He ended his address at 1:04 o’clock, and Jo the Noster . immediately, gcing direct to his car- W ashin gt on The National Capital OR ® riage to begin the long parade back Baltimore to his reviewing stand before the The Monumental City White House. SUNDAY, MARCH 11 President Wilson re-named his Special Train Leaves present Cabinet as follows: Secretary of State—Robert Lan- BELLEFONTE Saturday, March 10, at 10.00 P.M. sing, of New York. oo Secretary of the Treasury— William Returning Leaves Washington - - - 4.15 p. m. Gibbs McAdoo, New York. Baltimore (Union Sta.) 5.20 p. m. Secretary of War—Newton Baker, of Ohio. Attorney General—Thomas Watt Gregory, of Ohio. : Postmaster General—Albert Sid- ney Burleson, of Texas. Secretary of the Navy—Josephus Daniels, of North Carolina. _ Secretary of the Interior—Frank- lin Knight Lane, California. : Secretary of Agriculture—David Frances Houston, Missouri. Secretary of Commerce— William C. Redfield, New York. us Secretary of Labor— William Bauchop Wilson, Pennsylvania. The President's Inaugural Address. My fellow citizens: The four years which have elapsed since last I stood in this place have been crowded with counsel and action of the most vital interest and con- sequence, Perhaps no equal period in our history has been sO fruitful of important reforms in our economic and industrial life or so full of significant changes in the spirit and purpose of our political action. We have sought very thoughtfully to set 17~See the New National Museum, Library of Congress, Washington Monument, Botanic Garden, Corco- ran Art Gallery, and the varied sights of Washington, ‘The City Beautiful.” See Flyers Consult Agents. PENNSYLVANIA B. R. 62-8-3t Scene from Victor Herbert's Sparkling Musical Success «THE PRINCESS PAT" OPERA HOUSE, SATURDAY, MARCH 17th.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers