The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 04, 1915, Image 6

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    UNITED UPON THE
BALKAN HEIGHTS
snsnm——
Historical Meeting of the East
and West.
SERBS STILL FIGHTING
Historical Event In Serbia Celebrated |
By Teuton and Bulgarian Allies
With Parade In Fortress Taken
From Their Enemy.
Berlin. —The Austro-Hungarian, Bul
garian and German comrades have met
on the Balkan heights. In the twilight
of October 26, in the rugged Dobra.
voda mountains, where the patrol of |
the allied powers were looking out for |
each other, there suddenly appeared |
two Bulgarian officers and 25 men i
According to the Cologne
all were splendid soldiers and well |
equipped. A majority of them were!
veterans who had fought in the Balxan
War against Serbia. They were
by Lieutenant Gateyev. They
given an enthusiastic reception b)
soldiers of the Central Powers
The military 8 and the
Duke of Mecklenburg hastened to the |
place, northeast of Brza Palanka, near |
the town of Milutinoviteh, the |
historical meeting of and |
West place. Later
brilliant parade in the
Serbian fortress of Kladovo
Gazette, |
led !
Were
the
commande
where
East
Was a |
took there
conquered |
tesounding cheering and the
tional anthems were h
opposite bank of the I
the Roumanian population listened to
na
eard from the |
)yanube, where
the celebration of the inauguration of
the new :
through Austria-Hungary ar
into Turkey, which touches
ritory of the
I'he Frankfurter
menting on the
eclares
Pas from
ange
passage
allied powers
Zeitung, i
{Or
Balkan situat de- |
that the campaign against
essential
“Serbian troops are still
the
newspaper,
fighting in |
northeastern
“but t
our
corner.’ HAYS
heir country
Sf00Nn viel 10
when the
armies united
date in the
pressure The
German and julgarian
will be an important |
”
world's history
19 YEARS IN FEAR OF ARREST.
Man Gives Himself Up To Find He 's
Not Wanted
Chicago —For 19 years Joseph Cun
ningham wandered in
oppressed with the fear
officers were pursuing him
theft of $50 in 1896
Alexandria (Ind.) Postoffice,
brother Will was postmaster and he a |
glerk. Tired of haunting fear of |
detectives, Joseph Wednesday sur
rendered to the Hammond (Ind.) po |
lice and discovered that no officer had |
ever searched for him
Postmaster Will Ci
shortage
variou citie
¥ederal
for the}
from the!
where his |
that
taken
the
inningham had
and has wel
to the old town
made good the
comed the lost brothe:
NOT ALL PROSPERITY WAR-MADE
Much Of it Due To Domestic Revival, |
Says Big Canner.
Chicago
dent of the Asso |
ciation is in session here, ex
pressed the opinion that considerable
of the prosperity of the country at]
present credited to war orders should |
be charged to a domestic
“Take industry as an instance,” |
he said. “We are canners of fruit!
nd vegetables. Little of the product
goes abroad, yet we did $100,000,000 |
worth of business last year, and that's |
a lot more than we did the
fore.”
George E. Stocki
Weatern
which
ng, presi
Canners’
revival
our
vear be
CAPTURED BY WARSHIP,
Six German Officers Who Escaped
From Norfolk Caught At Sea.
~The
German
who
New York six officers of the
interned raider Kronprinz
Wilhelm escaped from Norfolk,
Va., October 10, on the yacht Eclipse,
were captured at sea by a British war.
ship, according to information in a
letter received here. The letter was
sent William Wolff, a New York
manufacturer, by his motherdin-law,
who was a passenger on the steamer
Bermudian, which let New York for
Hamilton last Wednesday.
to
RUSSIA BUYS CLOTH IN U. 8.
Gives Contract For 85,000,000 Yards
For Uniforms.
Boston. Contracts have been signed
by William M. Wood, president of the
American Woolen Company, for the
delivery of 5,000,000 yards of uniform
cioth to the Russian Government, it
was anounced here. The order is said
to be the largest ever placed at one
time in the history of the trade.
TYPHOON
KILLS 170.
Eight Hundred Injured In Southern
Luzon, In the Philippines.
Manila.-~The typhoon in Southern
fazon killed at least 170 persons and
injured 800. Damage to property and
to the hemp and rice crops is esti
mated at $1,000,000. A heavy land.
plide involved a portion of the voleano
of Mayon.
THE CENTRE REPORT
DOCTOR
KILL JOY
KIN | HAVE
‘woTHER Pet
IN SCHOOL FIRE
Exit From Burning Building
Blocked By Cripple.
i
MOST OF THE VICTIMS GIRLS |
To
Chil
Crippled Child Believed Have
Fallen and Tripped Other
dren Pressing On Be
hind Her
‘sabody, Mass Twent:
of them giris
nto l7 vears, |
which destroyed
Another
regarded
1
hial School
h are
while
juries whic
fatal,
everely hurt
others were
had
classrooms for the morning ses
n the fir ed an
them
The 800 children entered
Ai oF Es
liscove
of
Riaters
© Was
ITILY
safety by
Dame,
seized a
the front door, and
escape
Ta J
of
were
who their
teachers large number
paaic
ax they neared
rush to they lost
blocked
front
thelr th
footing and thelr bod
in
all the
es
It was the vest]
nearly bodies were found
Mother Superior Burned.
of the
but
elite was |
i
gistera escaped,
Marie (
At the
that her injutis
prove fatal
by the
her
LTT
net convent
} sald
would
hough she
Ouse if was
al
di
charges
never
probably not
iu
he suffering of
Ae TIiNEg
prostrated
aster and t
How the fire started may be
An early theory that a holler
caused it having been dis
state officials are
in the |
*
was io
missed. the police
th that 4 storeroom
A Bas
source,
& opinion
i where meter
i v
but investiga-|
difficult
theory the
where
entirely
was AR
place the storeroom had been!
burned
Alarm Follows Prayer.
first word of the fire is be
to have con from a tardy
pil who smelled amoke and reported
it to the Mother Superior. The chil
dren had just finished morning prayer
the gong sounded for fire drill
Mother Marie hurried to tell the sis
of the actual danger, and the
movements of the fire drill were quick
A few days ago, in a prac
the building was emptied
minutes. It would have
been cleared in almost the same time
in the opinion of Rev. Nicholas
J. Murphy, pastor of 8t. John's Roman
Catholic Church, but for the falling of
a child believed to be a eripple, in the |
vestibule. Over her body child!
child, fearful of the flames, and
pressed on by the crowd behind,
stumbled and fell. The opening was
choked and further escape was in this |
way stopped.
The
ie
ters
lv started
drill,
within
tice
two
today,
RUSSIA SEEKING LOAN.
Wants $50,000,000 To $100,000,000, To |
Be Spent For Supplies,
New York.--Agents of the Russian |
Government, it was reliably reported |
here, are seeking to establish a credit
loan in this country somewhat similar |
to the recent $500,000,000 Anglo |
French credit loan, although no bond |
issue is contemplated, of from $50, |
000,000 to $100,000,000 and more, if}
it ean be obtained. Details of the!
proposed loan were lacking, but in one |
quarter it was reported that the Rus.
sian Government was willing to pay
as high as 9 per cent. interest for a
loan of this size.
EDISON GOES ON EXHIBITION.
Lets School Childden “See Mim” and
Spends 14 Hours In Bed.
lox Angeles Thomas A. Edison
answered an invitation to let school
children “see him.” At a high school
Mr. Edison smilingly placed himself
on exhibition in the auditorium, but
refused to make a speech. Mr. Edi
son also broke a record by spending
14 hours in bed and appearing at
breakfast at 8.30 A. M.
NATION'S DEFENSE
FUND PROBLE
President to Discuss It With
Chairman Kitchin.
WILL NEED NEW REVENUES
Issue Of Bonds, In.
Waool
Panama Canal
crease in War Tax, In
and Income Rates
Proposed
ropriatios
yv $500 000 O06 for
} rease of upward
the normal
a two
Means
money 1
A Ris0 expres
14
Will
Hepresentative Kit
oppos
Arge and
Not Agreed On Revenue Plan
SO far as be lsarned the Ad
ministration l=ader Bave not agreed
raising the
Any aet 1
needed for incre
UDOT
pon
lit
the
ad
ONAL 'avenus aring
Army and navy As matters now
all umnpression aeeams to prevail
that the plan will embrace the foll
Panama Canal
amount of $100 060.000
Congress
yw
bonds to
already author
will be
by jase the
inued and
000. 000 or $50 0
the tariff on sugar will be main
about $15,000 0006
increased about $25,
tained, yielding an
on wool and to
rate
stiffen the income tax
There also considerable discus
of imposing an inheritance tax
Representative Cordell Hull, of Tenn
essee, father of the income tax act
sion
working out
side, while Senator George W
of Nebraska, is behind
this kind on the of
Capitol. [It declared that a 5
cent. inheritance tax would yield from
$50,000,000 to $100.000.000 a it
is stated that there would be iim
culty about collecting this all
wills must be probated courts
and the obstacles in
reaching incomes for taxation would
be experienced. Experts here
estimate that something like £3.000,
000,000 changes hands through death
and that at least half of
this amount would be in sums which
would fall within the scope of the pro
Norris
iagisiation
Senate aide
is per
Vout
no
tax, as
in the
encountered
All the indications are that the coun
squarely behind the President
and navy so that
prepared to resist
foreign foe. This sentiment, which
reaches the White House thiough
many different channels, is taken to
mean that the nation is prepared for
extraordinary methods of raising reve.
nue in order to provide money for na
tional defense,
this nation can be
an invasion by a
TYPHOID FEVER “ACCIDENT.”
Wisconsin Court Admits Claim For
Compensation.
Madison, Wis. The Supreme Court
of Wisconsin, in an opinion given in
the case of the New Dalle Lumber
Company vs. Venner, held that ty.
phoid fever contracted through drink.
ing water furnished by the smployer
and resulting in the death of the em:
ploye is an accident and within the
meaning of the Workmen's Compen
NEW YORK. Wheat-—-8pot rreg-
ular; No. 1 Northern Duluth, $1.06%
and No. 1 Northern Manitoba, $1.08
c if Buffalo.
Corn-—No. 2 yellow, 7T7%e¢ prompt.
Butter—Creamery, extras (92 score),
28c; creamery (higher scoring), 28Q
20c¢; firsts, 26% @ 27% ec; seconds, 24%
@ 26¢,
Eggs
Fresh gathered, extra 360
firsts, 33@36c; firsts, 289
24@27¢c. Nearby hen
fine to 52@56e;
browns, 38@ 40c
State, whole milk,
and colored,
do average fancy, 16c
Firm:
fowls, 14% @10c; turkeys,
dull, Western fresh
14@23c; fresh fowls, iced,
turkeys, 18@22%¢c
37c; extra
seconds,
whites,
32¢;
fancy,
hennery
Cheese
white
16 “ ©
Live Poultry
18¢ Dressed
FHILADELPHIA Wheat Carlota,
No. 2, red, Western
$1.14@1.18;
No. 2 Southern red, $1,101.12; steam
er, No. 2 red, $1.11@1.13; No
3 red, $1.00@1.12; rejected A, 31.07% D
do do, rejected B, $1.06@ 1.08
Western, No. 2 vellow, 740
Western steamer, yellow,
Western, No. 3 yel
Delaware, vellow, 7.
in export eloy ator,
pot and October,
do do,
1.08%
Corn
do do
,
standard
{1@ 4c;
1@36e;
2 white, i5Q $6
He No. 3 white,
P39¢; sample, 3
oats, graded, 42@ 44«
Western I packed cream
fancy,
yurified
Butter soli
fel 201
# 1 }
PeCIain, ol
firsts, 27%e;
{
¢ exira
266
Luh
2
extra firsts,
h
econds, 24@2
thirds,
ladle-packed, 21@22¢; nearby
0 ari £
NEATDY eXiras
«, 36.90 per
current
36e per doze
tandard cas
ease: do d Drats $8.31
fled
Icy sele
per
.
0
CER §
ING 40 dozen
New
15%
York, full
@ 16¢
15¢: do
new, do do
skim G12
Live Poultry Fe
ording t » and quality
11€812¢c; spr
according to quality: duc)
u
iw ls
1A
old rox
141
ers, ing chickens,
and qualit large si;
ferred;
pis eons
Wheat
112%¢«
red Western
BALTIMORE
and
No
October,
No
115
rn--Year, 82%. ¢; 1
Oats--No. 3 white, 41% @ 42
vhite, 36@37, as to
Rye-—No. 1 rye, Western, $1.09% @ i
1.10; No do, 1.05@ 1.06; No. 4
LM@1.05; bag lots, as to quality
ondition, 95c¢@ $1.05
Hay No. 1 timothy,
2 do, 18@19; No. 3
clover mixed, 1550618:
1750@18; No. 2
choice clover, 17@G 17.50
1 clover, 15@17
13@G15 nominal;
nal
Straw-—-No. 1
1450; No. 2 do, 13€13.50;
tangled rye, 1111.50; No. 2 do. 10:
No. 11 wheat, 850; No. 2 do, 7@7.50;
No. 1 oat, 10@10.50, No. 2 do, $@9.50
Butter Creamery, fancy,
hoice, 28: do, good, 28:
20@32; do, blocks, 20031;
@23; Maryviand and
rolls, 20@21; Ohio
West Virginia rolls, 19% @20; store. |
packed, 19: Maryland, Virginia and |
Pennsylvania dairy prints, 19% G20;
process butter, 24g 26
Eggs Maryland, Pennsyvivania and |
nearby firsts, 29¢: Western first, 29; |
Weat Virginia firsts, 28: Southern |
firsts, 20027 Recrated and
handled eggs, % to lc higher i
Live Poultrry.—Chickens—Old hens, |
4 Ibs. and over, 16¢c; do, old hens, |
small to medium, 15; do, old roosters, |
10; do, spring, large, fat, 16; do, do,
small to medium, 15@ 16; do, do, white
Ducks Young Pekins,
3 Iba. and over, 14@15¢; do, do, pud- |
dle, do, 13@14; do, do, Muscovy, do,
id; do, do, smaller, do, 12. Geese
Nearby, 14@16c. Turkeys--Young, 7
ibs. and over, 20¢; do, old, 18. Pigeons
Young, per pair, 156@20c; do, old,
do, 15@20.
location
do, |
and
$20@20.50: No
15@17; light
No. 1 clover
do, 14@17;
nominal; No
nominal; No. 2 do,
No. 3 do, 12613 nom- |
do
mixed,
straight $140
No. 11
ry *
0c:
do, prints
ladles, 22 |
Pennsylvania
rolls, 18% @20;
do, |
re
Live Stock
CHICAGO, Hoge Bulk, $7.05@
7.60; light, 6.85@ 7.80; mixed, 7@7.85;
heavies, 685@7.80;: rough, 685@7.
pigs, 4@7
Cattle-~Native beef cattle, $6@10.50;
cows and heifers, 2805@R8.35; calves,
1.26@11.
Sheep Wethere, $6.26 6.685;
1@6; lambs, 6.5008.78.
KANSAS CITY, MO.-Hogs-Bulk,
$6.90@ 7.25; heavy, 6.75@7.25; packers
and butchers, 6.90@ 7.40; light, 6.75G
1.36; pigs, 6@7.
Cattle—~Prime fed steers, 3065@
10.30; dressed beef steers, 8.26@9.50;
southern steers, 5.50@7.50; cows, 40
6.75; heifers, 6@9.26; astockers and
feeders, 5.50@8.25; bulls, 5.266.256;
calves, 6@10.50.
Sheep--Lamba, $8.35@865, year
lings, 6.50@7.26; wethers, 5.76@6.50,;
swer, 5.40@6.
ewes
Table Dainties from Sunny
Climes
’
Hawaiian Pineapple
From tropical Hawaii, home of the sweetest,
most luscious pineapple, comes the one: and
California, where the tenderest asparagus grows, supplies the other. The Lib
care and cleanliness back of both is a warrant of a product that will pl
Insist on Libby's at your grocers.
case you,
Libby, M®Neill & Libby, Chicago
of Those Friends. He Lived There.
“Wombat, I'm a friend of yours, and | >. Ferguson
I must tell you that today Flubdub | -
was saying some very means thing
about
‘If
did
him?
wr .
vv 11, a
by
of
when
governor
the other
suhiect
you :
friend
there
of mine
and
are a
stand
you
you
-
friend of his, too
The Profits.
think it is
man to be a chauffeur?
“Do you profitable
TT nll ’
Well, it is a business in which
can
dust.’
Many Children Suffer |. :
From Kidney Trouble “+
certainly manage to raise
NEVER HAD A CHILI
After Taking ELIXIR BARBER
“My little daughter. 10 years old, =
iy a year with chilis ar
we jer the doctor's
3 8 friend
legaveinrt
Tered
of the
I was discour
ined me to wry Elixir
r and abe has never had
Mra
1 fever, mont
care
aged ar
Babek.
3 oh since. Jt ¢
# Helms, 52 KE 81
Flizxir Babek
Parcels 1 "lg gu from
Wash
The Household Boss
i intend to put
aw on her bh os L& | ¢ v4 }
dase
i her
Klocsewski
: a
pur
statement made
right,
BYRNI]
William; yo
carpet
MEE. MARY
bseribed to before me th it down on &
. A.D. 1908
ARET P. O'DONNELL
Notary Public
new
Worth Looking Into.
That Hawkins
MARG
Noitt
fellow
iB as
Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co, what's
Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size bot- !
tle. It will convince anyone. You will
of valuable infor
mation, telling about the kidneys and blad
When wnt ng. be sure and mention
this paper. Regular fiftycent and
llar size bottles for sale at all
Askitt
ord
:
Hut his night rec
Not Gray Falrs but Tired Eyes
Keep your
ung apd rou will look young. After
always Murine Your Eyes
I rour age
; of youth
{ age. the payments of
{ perative
make ur look older than we are.
one onl x
drug ' Movies
The candidate elected by a large ma Follies are
jority is apt become a chesty offi
drafts on oid
to which are im-
i - —
{ The pocret of success
‘ that women never tell
10c Worth of @UPIND
Will Clear $1.00 Worth of Land
Qe
\ St
The trouble hunting season is still is a secret
Get rid of the stumps and grow Pe
big crops on cleared land. Now
is the time to clean up your farm
while products bring high prices. Blasting is
quickest, cheapest and easiest with Low Freez-
ing Du Pont Pd—- They work in cold
weather.
Write for Free Handbook of Explosives No. 69F,
and name of nearest dealer.
DU PONT POWDER COMPANY
«
LR
.
yD)
P Ea A ’
LL IW ELT
ha nko Bw
Hair Color Restorer
Never fails. Gives color and beauty to gray
hair. More than half a century of success. If
Jour dealer hasn't it, send $1.00 and a large
will be sent you by parcel post.
MRS. S. A. ALLEN, 55 Barclay St., New York