The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, October 26, 1916, Image 2

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    ATTORNEYS.
H. 8 SPANGLER
. Attorney-at-Law
Bellefonte, Pa
Practives in all the courts,
Consultations in English and German,
Office, Crider's Exchange Building.
Penns Va'ley Banking Company
CENTRE HALL, PA.
Davaid K. Keller, Cashier
Receives Deposits & Discounts Notes
H. G. STROHMEIER
CENTRE HALL, : : PA.
Manufacturer of
and Dealer in
HIGH GRADE
Monumental Work
In all kinds of
Marble and Granite
Don't Fall Te Get Cur Prices
Jno. F. Gray & Son
(Successors to GRANT HOOVER)
Control Sixteen of the Largest
Fire and Life Insurance Com-
panies in the World.
THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST
No Mutuals No Assessments
Before insuring your life get the
contract of THE HOME which in
case of death betwsen tenth
and twentieth years returns all pre-
miums paid in addition to the face
of the pelicy.
MONEY TO LOAN ON FIRST
MORTGAGE
Office la Crider’'s Stone Building
BELLEFONTE, - PA.
Telephone Connection
the
Save Pennies—
Waste Dollars
Some users of printing
save pennies by get
ting inferior work and lose
dollars through lack of ad-
vertising value in the work
they get. Printersasa rule
charge very reasonable
prices, for none’ of them
get rich although nearly
all of them work hard.
Morat: Give your printing fe
a good printer and save money.
Our Printing Is
Unexcelled
LOCI 0000000 4900
Got Something
You
Want to Sell?
Moat people have a piece
of furniture, a farm imple-
ment, or something else
which they have discard-
ed and which they no lon-
ger want,
These things are put in
the attic, or stored away
in the barn, or left lying
about, getting of less and
less value each year.
WHY NOT
SELL. THEM?
Somebody wants those
very things which have
become of no use to you.
Why not try to find that
somebody by putting a
want advertisement in
THIS NEWSPAPER?
SE SUCESS SURE
Democratic Leaders Confident of
Landslide.
Splendid Record of the President Has
Won the Confidence of the People
of Three Important West.
ern States.
President Wilson's western campaign
managers gave him an agreeable sur-
prise upon his arrival in Chicago on
his way to Omaha when they
formed him that a landslide
told him that the Democrats will gain
Washington and Oregon.
At the close of a day's fatiguing jour
ney his first visit the middie
on to
Walsh, western campaign
gressman Ferris and Mrs, George Bass,
head of the woman's bureau of the
Democratic National committee, They
reported that a “big Democratic drive”
is being made in every state west of
the Allegheny mountains.
As the president's train backed into
the station, Mr. Wilson hurried to the
railway trainmen, whose enthusiastic
cheering and noisy tooting of locomo-
tive whistles greeted his arrival.
“We're with Woody," yelled the
fireman of switch
you,
a passing engine,
given with lusty will.
his
the
greeted
about,
acknowledgments.
platformn of
the workers
and for
From his car
crowded more than a
the grimy hands that were held aloft
“If one-half of the reports coming
{remend
sald Senator
Democratic
Walsh,
landslide
“i
is nhead of us
Utah, one of
by Taft
and
two states carried
and Oregon
umn in the rep
Republican Leader for Wilson.
Former an seElian
Republic
Pearr of
the
Congr
Maryland has re
2 Of a group of
in indorsing
i US Div hl
Mr.
FOUL
tion to heartily s t Wilson
Pearr has been ider In the
President Wilson's Sclemn Warning of
What a Republican Victory
Would Mean,
President Wilson, king before
the Young Men's League of Democrat
ic Clubs at Shadow Lawn, Long
Branch, N. J.. September 80, told the
American people that the nation faces
the parting of the ways at the election,
November 7. The choice lect
Wilson and continue the policy of
-peace—or, elect Hughes and plunge
America Into war,
“There is only one choice as against
Epen
is:
dent.
that
the
Republican)
“Some
(the
of supporters
party, a very
declare that
thie
of
they
80 that
Success
WHT,
the
another, into the embroilments
the European war, that to
south of us the the
States will be used to produce in Mex-
ico the kind of law
some of the investors in
most
“I do not
and
forces of
Mexico con
to their advantage,
find that anybody
icy that this should
with regard to Mexico, except those
country
ico,
with the gentlemen who have been con
by
are,
themselves, whose attorneys
They have talked to me.
exactly what they want. I have
are going where they think they
it. And there 8 every indieat
+ surface, at any
oan
ion,
rate, tha
well
‘ulation Is n
I'he conference which Is being held
in affairs Is em
app
regard to Mexieg
barrassed every day by the
to
DF one
hese gent
hostility Mexico Is being traded
f 1h rr ft wall ves |
he grea
Win of
1
+3
fig
Kentucky Safely Democratic.
Hughes’ fitiig
paign chalrmman
WR 11 rn ht 3d it by
Wilcox, started out by i
of North
essce and Kentue
«tin
Ky In the doubt
He soon gave up the fir
i give
I give
he might as we ip Ken
supported
fuential Pre i
“We were led 14
i Mr P
an i
tered
regret that
of the Philistine
“If Theodore Roosevelt was right
ought to have been right in
1016 were the militants
tune of ‘Onward
ie
1916, In we
to
Soldiers’ ; We
ttle of
were lighting
Arm
leaders of the Republic
112 the I
publican party in 1916
igeddon,
an par
are anders of the Re
that these gentiemen have re
annon any different?
Wills d
els of the Hepublican
Is Joe
gi is
nounced
in the coun
party. The burglars whom Roosevelt
the saddle
«till in
Nlinois, Mr. Lorimer came within 2.
igressional
Indiana in Democratic Column.
Senator Thomas
the
state hy 0.000
Democrats will carry
These figures
nt by the
gers
the
the state lke a
that Indinna senator
book.
prophecy
Republican
Knows
de the famou
Harrison the
for’ the presidency: “We
will beat him In the nation. we will
beat him In the state, we will beat him
in Marion county, In the city of In-
dianapolis, and in fact clear down to
his front gate.” And the election fig-
ures showed that Taggart was right.
wns
A Wilson Advantage.
One of Mr. Wilson's chief advan-
tages has been given him by his crit-
fess. In answer to the deluge of eriti-
clsm, verging into captiousness and
abuse, that has been poured upon his
head, he maintains an attitude of dig-
nity and reserve, of self-confidence
and discrimination in expression,
which adds more power to his words
than sheer logie,
President Eliot's Testimony,
President Emeritus Eliot of Harvard
says the Democrats, guided by a pow.
erful leader, have done more since
1013 than Republican administrations
in five times that period. Harvard's
emeritus president has now arrived
at a position and at an age when to
find the truth and ald it constitute the
chief charm of living to a right-think-
ing man. There could not be a better
campaign document than Mr. Eliot's
article in the Atlantic Monthly an “The
Achievements of the Democratie Party
aud Its Leader Bince March 4, 1013."
OE # PpeCiaily
gmen of the
not in the class with
he matter of pub
workin Coun
thie
in HONE nu
wide
Republican Sheet Pessimistic,
Ihe Terre Haute (Ind) Star
publican) warns the party
that it “will have to get busy.” in these
‘The most foolish thing the
Republicans ean do in the present cam
will be to underestin the
of the they have on
Their hopes for Nove rr
realized, but not
wisely
applied
{Re
vords
PpEIEN {e
magnitude Job
unless
considered
ways an
are
in
popular
Wilson as
a long way from wide
cepiance,
“Vast numbers continue to look
an, humanly Imperfect
in full sympathy with the progressive
reforms of
voted to the causes of democras y and
liberty, zealous for peace, firmly sot
greed and oppression In high
Some of numbers
over or the battle is lost
places,
won
these must
be
Which Policy Do Voters Prefer?
The Merrill (Wis) Herald {Repub
lican) says: “Mr. Wilson, in a nota-
ble speech, declares that If Roosevelt
or even Hughes followed out what they
Aare contending during the last four
years, this country would have been
plunged into war; that he has se
cured peace and prosperity with honor
to the United States, : It in
up to the voters of the United States
to determine which policy they desire
to have carried out during the next
four years, and who shail be the presi
dent to direct the affairs of our na-
tional government and to protect our
interests."
Secret of Hughes’ Philosophy.
At Inst we belleve we begin to get
Candidate Hughes’ idea. It is that
everything that has been done, no mat-
ter how warmly we may have ap
proved of it at the time, Is wrong, evil
and spurious If It was not done by
Aldrich, Cannon, Taft, Smoot, Gal
linger, Ballinger, Crane and Penrose
under the aegis of the GQ. O. P.
Voice Troubles.
Mr. Hughes' volee trouble proves
that a man can get as hoarse saying
nothing worth while as any other Way.
for it!
cool and
smokeappetite
R. J. REYNOLD
Prince Albert gives
smokers such
delight, because
— its flavor is so different and so
delightfully good;
—it can’t bite your tongue;
~it can’t parch your throat;
~=you can smoke it as long and
as hard as you like without any
comeback but real tobacco hap.
piness!
On the reverse side of every
Albert package you will read :
“PROCESS PATENTED
JULY 30vu, 1807"
That means to you a lot of tobacco en.
joyment. Prince Albert has always been
sold without coupons or premiums, We
prefer to give quality !
the national joy smoke
Prince
OULL find a cheery howdy.de on fap no
matter how much of a etrenger you are in the
neck of the woods you dro oo Fer, Prince
Albert ie right there af the first plece you
pens thet sells tobwceo ! The toppy red
bag salle for 8 racked and the tidy red
fin for a dime then there's the hand
oorrm pound end hall pound tin
bamudors and the pound
erynial-flave bhurmdor with
sponge -moistener (0g
thet keeps the te
such
TTR ATE
is NER (AND, Sa
i TOBACCO IS PREPARED |
| 1 FUR SMOKERS UNDER THE
| |} PROCESS DISCOVERED IN
{| MAKING EXPERIMENTS TO
++ PRODUCE THE MOST DE-
§ LIGHTFUL AND WHOLE-
| SOME TOBACCO FOR CIG
1S so
appealing to your ©
LASA
that vou will get chummy with ie :
: uf E : Hay BOLE BOT BITE THE iGHEUE
a ——.._”
A SAS.
= of the
Posd
may
This is the revere
Prince Albert tidy red tin,
th Patented Proce
oem vou and res
=’
ae what it »
oe Albert o
ans
kn mekimg Princ web
to your Eking
>» TOBACCO Cn. W
Inston.
;
t No Money Down
raven
1 Pla
a
Second Hand
Bargains
We bare a large eloek
of second band and slight
ly used plance of all stan.
dard makes. Here are a
fow sample bargaing,
re
-
Our Big Free Trial Offer
We require no payment in advance
on a Starck piano. You are not asked to
tie xp your money in any way. All you do is to let
us slip you the plano for 30 dave free trial in »
ar
home where you test it and try it in your own way
At the end of 30 lust the one
you want. If it ng our low Instery-to-home pric
in payments to out you
up to your expectations in every way and the Sneek pane vou have
ever goen for the money, you may send it beck sad (in that event we
will pay the freight both wars.
days you decile whether the plano i
it. pa
If for any reasom it does mot preve to be
is. you kesp ~
The Sweet Toned Starck
The first requirement ia a good plans is tone quality,
are not only besutiful planoe-but mare thas this
oumsiruciod #0 Ut enol separate part of fhe plane performs 119 own work te
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The Celebrated Starck Player-Plano
Lovers of mosis who are not meticlans can render the Marek Mayer paws soy
Bivoertte selortion with Jus 88 000d er preulon a8 Lhe con power Nimes?
Lwin understand. ras? to operate, and duralie tn ohnetruc on
the “Plans meeeis the demand for a reliable, high grade
Player-pano ki 8 Tessouabie price
wil be arranged to sult yom. The tm
Easy Payments Tent is met due untll you have tried (he
plane 20 Saye and found It ssUsteciary Then you osm pay seach
pees il ob Leunia #0 small You wil not piss the money
Starck pianos
they mre » ally
simphe tr
Every Starck Piano Guaranteed 20 Years
ee Fiano Book Free
Our big new besutifulty i.
fostrated eatalog containe
plano Information 1 allkinda
it tolls you how planes are
mate, how 0 take emre of
Your plane and other valuable
i" and Interesting information.
id Bend for i today.
oo
Wok BR
"® i
*
WE
Steinway . . $175.00
Knabe.. 165.00
Emerson 100.00
Kimball... 70.00
Starck.... 195.00
Bend today for our Iatest list
of second hand bargains snd our
complete new illustrated catalog of
Starck pianos.
LL
*.s
Load na : Ax en
Direct From This Factory to You—
Saves $160.00
Selling as we do, dirt from our factory to your home, we
are able to offer you low prices that will save you upwards
of $150.00 in the purchase price of your piano. You should
take advantage of these money-saving prices and send to-day
| P. A Starek Piano
| 1967 Starck Didg.,
rat
information en
farsory-
full particulars concerning our factory offer.
60 Free Music Lessons
Every puyer of & Bustek Is entitind to ro
eefve 50 © fuse lessons through one of the
Den known schools In Chioagn i a.
aay paymest terms,
res Nats .oonensrsnsnes
i"
S76 10 be RoE In YRUr owD home AL Four com
Burst Ne. se RF. I.
dd EE rT