The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, January 18, 1917, Image 2

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    THE CENTRE REPORTER, CENTRE HALL, PA.
for selfish Interests, but above all to!
safeguard the independence of peo
ples, of right and of aumanity.
| The Allles are fully aware of the
logses and suffering which the war
causes to neutrals as well as te the
belligerents, and they deplore them;
ut they do not hold themselves re
| by Sey for them, having in no way
| either willed or provoked this war
i and they strive to reduce these dam
ages in the measure compatible wit
| the inexorable exigencies of their de
- ——— | fens the violence and the
{ wiles of the enem)
BLOW GIVEN HOPE OF PEACE It is with satisfaction,
that they take note
that the American
in nowise associated in its origi
that of the Central Powers, rans
mitted on the 18h of December by the
United States
moreover, Le
_ ATTORNEYS.
R B. SPANGLER
Attorney-at-Law
Bellefonte, Pa.
Practices in all the courts.
ultations In English and German,
ce, Orider’s Exchanges Building.
bei
Penns Valley Banking Company |
CENTRE HALL, PA.
Davald K. Keller, Cashier
Receives Deposits & Discounts Notes
ENTENTE ALLIES
REPLY T0 WILSON
Will Fight Till Aims in War Are
Achieved.
Easy LRN ©
against
be ih
therefore, .
of the declaration A
Ee
Our Big Free Trial Offer
We require no payment in advance
onatf Btarek piano. You are not asked to
tie up your mone; All you do Is to let
) duyw free trial in your
ou fest it and try itin
communication |
n with
Moves.
Be
Door Left Open For Further
Wilson To Study Note
fore Determining Upon
Next Step.
{ Government 16
hey 1 not doubt,
resgiution of Governmen
aven of a sup even
moral, of the authors responeible
the war
The Allie
| they must protest in the n
tbut in the most
tha
Lt to avoid
ne appearance port
THE RESULT OF PRESIDENT'S
INQUIRIES.
President Wilson has now heard
from all fourteen of the belliger-
ents. Here is the result
First—Both sides say they
associate themselves wilh Pre
dent Wilson, after this war end
in an effort to insure fulure peacs
Sacond-—Germany and her thres
allies proposed a method for
ing conditions of peace, na
through a conferend
of the belligerents meeting or
fOr
in soy way
I Governments believe that oa al
» f 14 .
L friendly | ho
againgt |
ip you the piano for
ae where y
At the end of 50 days you deei
you want. IH it is you paying o
in payments to sult you 1 re rexson
up to yo
your own wuy
gpecific manne ie whether the plano is Just the one
keep it. ar low factory
re,
Lo-borme wrk
it Cons not pr
& Luness 1
snd in that
it expectations in every way snd ¢
ever goer for the money, you may send it beck event we
; Pravin will pay the freight both ways.
Be an
The Sweet Toned Starck
fn & good plans is Sone quality
but ture than this—13 i .
plano perfuriay its own work
and power You
The fir ot requ
are not or
tod eo §
rement | Btarek plancs
y of delegate iy bes if | panos aah:
H. G. STROHMEIER
ous
pod TR
at cach separate part of the
o Of mArvelous peeeiness, purity
CENTRE HALL, : © PA,
Manufacturer of
and Dealer In
HIGH GRADE
Monumental Work
In all kinds of
Marble and Granite
Don't Fail To 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 between the tenth
and twentieth years returns all pre-
miums paid in addition to the face
of the policy.
MONEY TO LOAN ON FIRST
MORTGAGE
Office in Crider’s Stone Building
BELLEFONTE, - PA.
Telephone Connection
Save Pennies—
Waste Dollars
Some users of
save pennies get
fig infetion vith and lose
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.
Moral: Give your printing to
a good prinier and save money.
Our Printing Is
Unexcelled
tral soll
Third
allies state the
by continuing the war
England and
objects tue)
THE ALLIES PEACE TERMS
Here are t! Entente term
peace
1. Restoration
Serbian and Mon
demnities.
2. Evacuation
France, Russia and R
reparation
3. The re
rope with
regime secured aga’
attack
4 Rest {1itie n
wrested from the
itheration of
Roumanians fron
(This may b
return of
IrRAnIZAlIon
guarantee
past,
and
domination
ed to mean the
Loraine.)
Enfranchisement
tions from
Turks.
6. The expulsion
from Europe.
7. The freedom o
8 Liberation of
Prusian militarism
termination of the Gerry ]
or their political 4 ppea
foreign
intend
bloods
Wael
quarter
an early peace prac!
for ti
forts
German diplomat
even more severs
They
enemies ©
declared i
f Ger:
The
pever would agree 1
her German
clared,
TEXT OF ENTENTE ALLIES
REPLY.
Washington The
reply of the
President W
to the
Entents
recent
belligerent nations
“UERestied
ich they
+]
isons
note
»
the President
state the object for wi
ing
The Allied
ceived the which was
to them in the name of the
ment of the United States on
1916
hey
By
Governments re
ave
delivered
Govern
the nine
They have
note
them
whieh
hour
which
people
In general way they
that they pay tribute
of the sentiment
American note is Inspired and that
they associate themselves with all
their hopes with the project for the
ereation of ‘a league of nations to in
sure peace and justice throughout the
world. They recognize all the ad
vantages for the cause of humanity
and civilization which the institution
of international agreements destined
to avoid violent conflicts between
nations would prevent: agreéaments
which must imply the sanctions neces.
sary to insure their execution and thus
to prevent an apparent security from
only facilitating new aggressions. But
realization
gravity of the
sincere friendship
fo the American
both by the exact
they have of the
and by the
attaches them
wish to declare
to the elevation
with which the
deatined to insure an enduring peace
of the actual conflict;
as profound a desire as the Govern
and which inflicts such cruel suffer.
ing? upon humanity.
that it is imposeible at the present
moment to attain a peace which will
sesure them reparation, restitution and
such guarantees to which they are en.
titled by the aggression for whieh the
responsibility rests with the Central
Powers and of which the principle it
self tended to ruln the security of Eu.
rope; a peace which would on the
other hand permit the establishment
of the future of European nations on a
solid basis. The Allied nations are
conscious that they are not fighting
the invaded territ
Ruseia and of Rou:
reparation; the reo:
rope guaranteed by
and founded a
nationalitie
erty of economic
all nations, great or small,
territorial convention
national agreements
antee territorial and maritin
tiers unjustified attack
m of provinces or territorie
wrested in the past from the Allies by
force or against the will of thei
lations: the liberation of Italians, of
Slavs, of Roumanians and of
Slovaques from foreign domination
the enfranchisement of populations
subject to the bloody tyranny of the
Turks; the expulsion from Europe of
the Ottoman Empire decidedly (* * *)
to western civilization. The inten.
tions of His Majesty the Emperor of
Russia regarding Poland have been
clearly indicated in the proclamation
which he has just addressed to his
armies. It goes without saying that if
the Allles wish to liberate Europe
from the brutal covetousness of Pris
sian militarism, it never hae been their
design, as has been alleged to encom-
pass the extermination of the German
peoples and their political disappear.
ance. That which they desire above
| all is to Insure a peace upon the prin.
ciples of liberty and justice, upon the
inviolable fidelity to international
obligation with which the Government
of the United States has never ceased
to be Inspired.
United in the pursuits of this su-
preme object the Allles are deter
mined, individually and collectively,
to act with all their power and to eon-
sent to all sacrifices to bring to a vie.
torious ciose a conflict upon which
they are convinced not only their own
safety and prosperity depends, but
also the future of civilization itself,
developm
upon
suitable
against
restituti
popu
Teheco
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FIGTONE STE =
I SHORT ORDER ~~~
Latest Doings in Various Parts
of the State.
PREPAREDFORQUICKREADING
y Harrisburg
mpaign 1«
for i breclion of a Y
lege of Get
burg College Lea
pians were outlined {
Taise money
George Bretz, of PANALGOY
two years father of five chil
had bot!
LWeen cars
legs severed
on the Reading lin
half hour,
wae being rushed to the hospital
of the Young Men's Chr dren
Norristow? fell be
Death
followed
George Drete, fc
Shenandoah, a
After lying aver five on a cot
in the State Hospital at Fountain
Springs, Anthony Valentine, aged
fifty-four, is He had his back
broken at the lost Creek Mine
1812
eare, fell year
and was crushed to d
Mildred EI dead
years
when
herself
th Rud aged
ed fro
zabe
1 scalds
of Harrisburg, d
she spilled boiling water over nuary 1
Auto
skid
Ervin
Aftenipting to jump from an
truck thought would
over aseventy-foot embankment,
Yoder, thirty years old,
Springs, was « aught
and crushed to death. Seven children
are made orphans by his death
The Harrisburg Firemen's Union has which be
asked the
for two firehouses which will
to make itol
to reimburse the city
be raged
Extension
State
way for Ca}
Mre. Jane A. Kern, of Slatington,
dropped dead just after reaching home
from attending the funeral of a friend Harry Seipe, of Lehighton,
at Neffaville lected $88 for the firemen’s parade Jast
summer, and failed to turn it over,
was sentenced by Judge Barber to six
months’ imprisonment. The jail sen-
tence was later suspended to give him
an opportunity to pay the money back.
Mizpah. Lerch, aged twenty-two, of
Penbrook, was found guilty of malle
fous injury to railroads hy a Dauphin
{| county jury, after eighteen hours’ de-
| liberation,
who col
John Palermo was sentenced to pay
costs, $50 fine and fo undergo six!
months in jail for illegal liquor selling
in Ambler.
Two horses belonging to Joseph Tag
gart, of Norristown, were killed by a |
Btate veterinarian because suffering
with glandere. They came from § car
load of Western horses,
Alexander Comfort died in the Car. | the Harrisburg Railway Company dur.
lisle Hospital, following a short iliness | Ing the trolley strike at Harrisburg.
of pneumonia. He was one of the |
earliest members of the Empire Hook |
and Ladder Company.
Harrisburg retail milk dealers de-
cided to sell milk at eight cents a
quart despite the fact that the whole
salers are planning to increase the
price from 18 to 20 cents a gallo. The
retatloare hope for a 20.cent rale in
winter and 16-cent fate in cammer
»
Lewis Oxley, of Pottsville, a veteran
| of the Civil War, who escaped death on
| many battlefields, died from the effect
of a fall down &* flight of stairs, in
| which he broke an arm and was sev.
erely brulsed. Oxley was a member of
the Pighty-first Regiment of Pennsyl-
vania: Volunteers, and was wounded
many mes, He lost his Jeft hand
| when nn exploding shell ripped it off
' hun
qua has been
Commis
establish
lectrie light
voted at a
do
ram
ten thou-
1L8E8 1)
Serviced
eslants
a piant
timated af
estimated a
a4 vear,
could b«
at a loss
sand dol
jars
e. of Mt
the plant
Bixier
uch the
Roy Hixle aged
Holly Spr wae injured at
of the Valley Sand Company
operating a rolie to cr
tried to push some stohes
with A forked stick. His hand
caught in the fork of the stick and was
drawn into the machine, his arm being
mangled and torn off at the shoulder
the mach! be shut
twentyv-fi
fo erm
INE
was
i Ey i
sAnG and
before
down
nery could
Timko, a member of the Clover
Hose Company, Mahanoy City, is dying
at the State Hospital at Fountain
Springs of injuries received, when a
test of 4 new lifesaving net was be
ing made Several members had
jumped from the second story of the
hose house into the net successfully.
Several firemen moved the net and
Timko, failing to notice this, made »
jeap, striking on his back on the pave
The historic old Presbyterian church
include the removal of the pews on
which the dots, bearing the wounded,
were plazzd for days after the fight of
July, 1863. It was in this church that
Abraham Lincoln atiended service
after the dedication of the Soldiers’
National Cemetery and the pew he oo
cupied is the only one being preserved
in the main auditorium.
An explosion of gas wrecked the
Ward apartment block at Altoona and
perhaps fatally burned Mrs. George
Sleemasn, aged twenty-six, who was the
innocent cause of the accident. She
had gone into a second floor room
which had not been piped Yor gas and
#truck a match. Instantly there was &
terrific explosion and the entire corner
of the building, three tiers of brick
Sleeman’s clothing was ignited, but
rescuers saved her from burning te
death,