The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, March 22, 1917, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE CENTRE REPORTER, CENTRE HALL. PA.
ATTORNEYS.
B SPANGLER the gtvoes and municipalities, pre.
Att ney-at-Law NETHRONE ZAR hE 2 over by President Rodzianko, of
the Duma. This body met with five
Bellefonte, Pa.
Cabinet Ministers attending, and sent
in all the courts. . ag
In English and German,
3 » Exchanges Buldné | His Brother, the Grand Duke
| to Emperor Nicholas a request for the
[ER ——————
establishment of a parliamentary gov
Penns Valley ‘Banking Company
CENTRE HALL, PA.
Davald K. Keller, Cashier
orders from the
Receives Deposits & Discounts Notes
[a
Jo
Petrograd Is taking
and is
is quiet,
milit
committee pa-
trolling the which The
{ fighting which occurred wag in the
barracks, and a number of officers
ORDER ESTABLISHED QUICK were killed.
The chief of the Council of the Em.
pire was Imprisoned with M. Sturme:
The report that Mr»
imprisoned is
acked his
The committee is
buildings
Michael, Appointed Regent.
No MoneyDown
city,
Protopopoft Was
The people
seeking him
The Empress a Former German Prin.
3 incorrect
cess, Believed To Have Exercised
house and are
Great Political Influence Over in control of all Gov
the Emperor. ernment
Our Big Preo Trial Offer
We require no payment in advance
on & Btarck piano. You are not asked to
tie up you ney in sony way, All you do fs to led
us ship you the plano for 80 days free trial in your
o where you test it and try it in your own way
At the end of 30 days you
you want. If it ls, you keep it
in payments to suit you
up 0 your expectatl
NEW RULERS RECOGNIZED.
NICHOLAS’ TURBULENT
REIGN. Envoys Of Allies Enter Into Relation
With Duma Committee,
r mo
December 2, 1895—Bomb thrown
at the Czar in St. Petersburg
September 23 1896-—Nihilists
planned a explosion
Czar drove thre
street
Jctober 8, 18596
be. ind Czar's
Place de la Concorde, Pari
May 26, 1897—Young artisan at
tempted to shoot and stab Czar a
Official action
ritain, France
london decide whether the plano is ust the one
ing our low factory-to-b
If for suy reason it doss not 3
ud the finest pisso you have
ever son for the money, may send it back and in that event we
will pay the freight both ways.
me prices
ve to be
cordite sus in every way a:
wigh a London
you
Bomb exploded
in the The dispatch says that the executive | (ERT ved 1 The Sweet Toned Starck
The first requirement in a good plans is tons quality
ot hee ero but m
ecnmiructed 80 that each spars! part of the plano performs fis ¢
producing a lone of mar : eines, purily and power.
fghted with the match 51 the Blark
The Celebrated Starck Player-Piano
Lovers of © muse who are not mudcians ean render the Star ok Piayer- pian ny
selection with just as good expres Aa th Sop
SREY LO OprTRile, ana Aursb
sels Lhe Gemand for & rediabie,
ie pros,
1 be srranged
carriage
Etarck plancs
re than Lthis—~they ares yti foal)
H. G. STROHMEIER
CENTRE HALL, : : PA. || 2 ret
Manufacturer of is My Jue .
and Dealer In
HIGH GRADE |
Monumental Work || i."
In all kinds of September
tempted to kill Czar
Marble and Granite a,
Don't Fail To Get Our Prices |
he drove in h Tearskoe-S«
ndersiand
rer -Plano rm
& reasons
Selo ( d hare mg
ark Pia
Payer plane a
Easy Payments =’ ment 1m oA ae
plano 30 days snd foun satisfactory. Then ye
Ruonil oh SMOUBLS 80 small you wil net des Whe
Every Starck Piano Guaranteed 25 Years
athedral :
2 : Trade
cration
June
ROrvice
The Pout
#tll you have tried the
9 oan pay sach
InOney .
0 eunit you,
to Vienn
7, 1898
visit
in Mos
Nihilists
Warsaw
to pass
November 23 Anarchists
built a barricad LOT a
railway cutting
undermined a street in
over which the
Jno. F. Gray & Son
(Successors to GRANT HOOVER)
Control Sixteen of the Largest
Fire and Life Insurance Com-
panies In the World.
deep
Piano Book Free
Cur big new besutifully §-
i bostrated catalog eontalng
Plano informa!
It tells you how planes are
made, how 10 lake owe of
7 your plane an’ other valuable
5: and ug iiormetion.,
Czar’'s train
Novemt
covered in
at ni
Second Hand
Bargains
We have a large stock
of seeond hand and slight
ly used plancs of all
2 13m
”
nate Nicholas 1]
December 1
red to min
nel between
Le
ols
Cove
wlan interer
Here are a
dard makes
through wh
THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST [pe Sus
No Mutuals No Assessments Mare!
up the gr
few sazple bargains
Steinway. . $175.00
Knabe.... 165.00
Emerson .. 100.00
Kimball... 70.00
Starck.... 195.00
FréeCatalopmeCoupon
ing as we do, direct from our factory to your home, we | P. A Btarck Piano Co,
are able to offer you low prices thet will save you upwards 1387 Biasck Bidg., Chioays
of $150.00 in the purchase price of your piano. You should hae gan tao oan in
take advantage of these money-saving prices and send to-day 3 Et. aleo
full particulars concerning our factoryto-home offer, information copoerning
1 rii0re oes aR ¥
Direct From This s Fortory to You
Saves $150.00
AIN YOUTH BETRAYED
V. P. IL. Pro Sell
Statement
fessor Issues
Before uring your life gat 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 : yin ; rou Vest i Se Jase oi
of the policy. vs aT, uh a y ha! by Y — . gent Eaton Line fact Bur indin $a arn new i
MONEY TO LOAN ON FIRST rroption and incompetence. has) 1FRE%4Y. the evidence will d ‘ Frc, yan
MORTGAGE betrayal o' Jriendshl) SonTune
Office in Crider's Stone Buliding
BELLEFONTE, - PA.
Telephone Connection
50 Free Music Lessons
ver of a Plarck plano is enyll
eatve free muse lessons through
bert known sehosis in Chioags. These lesmons
gre to be taken ia FOUr FE home Al FOU SOR
veudanoe
ay for
'
ad bs i bargains az Every?
ow RFD
Street Ne
P. A. Starck Piano Co., Manufacturers Chicago Town and
Flats
$509
$6609
| THE ers) MYR Se 5 Li
BAL
Wheat
TIMORE
MISSOURI TO VOTE ON LIQUOR
$12.25
orn—8ales of small bag lots, bs; Sheep ‘ 10.90@12.25;
$1.15 for mixed, del 3
sheep,
for bag Jots of vellow, de
$149
Save Pennies— is
Waste Dollars | |:
Some users of
ample, at livered
Adopts Senate Constitutiona!
and at $1.17
rn y Amendment. NEW YORK -—-Wheat—No. 2 ivered
riots ant hot ’ hia es rh cones | Dard $2183: No. 1 Northern Dulutl
ks , . . 4 227%; No. 1 Northern Mani toba,
y b New York
ats Stand
white, 74%
No. 2
white, 75¢ No
food reach {og igh's, $14.75;
and on¢ Western, $1 65@ roughs, $13
export.
| hearts of the
save pennies et
| the
Sng inferier worl: iv)
through lack of ad
vertising value in the work
they get. Printers asa rule
charge very reasonable
prices, for none of them
get rich although
all of them work
Moral: Give your printing to
a good printer and save money.
Our Printing Is
Unexcelled
Got Something
You
Want to Sell?
Most 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?
those troops r atime s
took up t
ranks
and marched into the
revolutionists
Arms
the
The Hour Had Struck
The of the Duma, Michael
V. Rodzianko, the leading figure
deputies who unanimously
order
House. They
and M. Rod:
then at
struck
president
was
to oppose the imperial
dissolution of the
their sessions
the front, that
when the will
prevail Even
the gravity the situation
added its appeal that of
that the Emperor should
stepe to give the people a policy
in accordance with
the
of
the
hour had
the people
imperial
of
to
muat
council
the
take
and
their
and
with carrying
the war to a victorious ending
The Emperor hastened back
the front, only to find that th
lution had been successful,
A new government was in control
The Empress, who before her mar
riage to the Emperor In 1804, was the
German Princess Alex of Heas
stadt, it is alleged has been
tial in the councils opposed
wishes of the people, is reported
have fled or to be in hiding. Another
report is that she been placed
under guard
on
from
revo
ar d that
e-Darm
influen
the
to
to
has
Reactionaries Locked Up.
The revolution was comparatively
bloodless Some fighting took place
on the first day, during which bridges
in Petrograd were blown up in order
to isolate certain sections of the city
As far as is known here no prominent
persons were killed
Virtually all the so-called proGer-
man reactionaries are In custody
it was sudden.
control of the government of Russia |
to the Duma, backed by the army, and
what is termed the “push-the-war
party” is now in power.
taneously in Petrograd and Moscow.
structions of the revolutionaries,
mediately took, possession of these
cities,
YyoOters
Unde:
wid
e-wide
1918
posed amendment Stat
tion would effective Nov
1, 1819
become
TON OF POWDER BLOWS UP,
Workman Killed In Du Pont Yard and
Country Shaken.
Wilmington, Del
pounds of black
blew up in the Hagley
Pont Powder Company
workman. The city
teritory for miles
The
glass in scores of houses
diate vicinity of the
thousand
pow der
Two
commercial
vards of the Du
and kills
and surrounding
was tremendously
concussion
4 one
shattered
in the imme
explosion
shaken
U.BOAT SCORES NEAR PATROL
Two Americans In Crew Of East
Point, Sunk Without Warning.
Washington Torpedoing without
warning on March § of ‘the British
steamer Eaat Point, London, for Phila
delphia, with two Americans in
was reported in dispatches to
the State Department All on
were The steamer was
off thé Eaglish Coast
her
crew,
saved sunk
PARDONS ASKED OF WILSON.
Formal Applications Submitted By
Diggs and Caminetti.
Washington President Wilson
received applications for pardons
Maury I. Diggs and F, Drew Caminetti,
convicted in California of violation of
! the “white slave” law after a long and
sensational legal fight, which ended in
| their conviction being sustained by the
| Supreme Court,
has
TO GO ON ARMED LINERS.
| American Diplomats Will Thus Return
To Posts.
Washington. — American diplomats
at home waiting an opportunity to re
turn to posts in Europe will travel on
{armed American liners. Among them
are Hugh Gibson, first secretary of the
{embassy at London, who expects to
isaill on the first American liner that
| starts across the Atlantic.
If New York
Creamery,
extras, 41@ 41%¢
score), 40% @10% ee;
seconds, gare
Eggs Frea
higher than
, Creamery extras (92
firsts, 37% @40¢;
gathered extra firsts,
83c; firsts 22 @321 4c: nearby hennery,
whites, fine to fancy, 36@37c; nearby
hennery, browns, 34g 3%6¢
held specials, 27@
average fancy, 264 @26%¢
Average fowls, at 22
chickens, 18
18@33c
Cheese-—State
27%;
Live Poultry
€23%ec. Dressed
fowls, 18@ 23 %¢;
do,
turkeys
PHILADELPHIA Wheat -— No, 2
ed, $1 986203; No. 2 Southern, $1.90
2.01; steamer, No. 2 red, $1.84G199;
No. 3 red, $1.94@1.99; rejected A, $1.90
@186; rejected B, $1.86@1.91
Rye-—No, 2 Western, in export
vator, $1.58@162 per bushel; small
lots of nearby rye, in bags, quoted at
Corn—Westarn, No. 2 yellow, $1.22
@1.23; No. 8 yellow, $1.21@1.22; do
No. 4 vellow, $1.18@1.20; do, No. 6
yellow, $1.17@1.18; Southern No. 3 yel-
low, $1.18@1.19
Oats—No. 2 white,
ard white, 73@74c;
73¢c; No. 4 while,
5c: stand
white, 72@
oats, 68Q
eT
No. 3
719 72¢;
Butter—Western, fresh, solid-packed
creamery, fancy specials, 43¢; extra,
41942¢c; do, extra firsts, 40c; do,
firsts, 28¢c; do, seconds, 36c; nearby
fancy, 44c; do, average extra,
40@42¢c; do, firsts, 38@3%c; do, sec
onds, 35@36¢;
current receipts,
do,
firsts, $8.66 per case. Fancy selected
fresh eggs were jobbed out at 83@36¢c
per dozen.
Cheese — New York, full cream,
fancy held, 27% @27%ec; specials,
higher; do, fair to good held, 20% @
27c; part skims, 14@22¢.
Live Poultry-~Fowls, as to quality,
22@2%¢; staggy roosters, 18@20¢; old
roosters, 16@17¢;
22@24¢; pigeons, old, per
do do, young, per pair,
and quality,
pair, 28@20¢;
00 25¢
$162@
1.61@
to quality and condi-
No 3 Western export,
No. 4 Western export,
bag lots, as
, $1.25@1.40
Hay-—-Timothy--Ne. 1, $18; No. 2
No. 3, $13@15 Clover
mixed-—lLight, $16; No. 1, $15@15.50
No. 2. $13@14. Choice clover--No. 1,
No. 2, $13@14: No. 3, $8@9
Strgw-—-No. 1
15.50 2. do, $1350@14: No. 1
tangled, $10.50@11: No. 2, do. $9560@
No. 1 wheat, $309.50; No 2. do,
$2@GR.60; No. 1 oat. $950; No. 2,
50@9
Eggs
nearby
30c
Live
4 Ibs
$15 @
straight rye
No
do
Maryland Pennsylvania, |
and Western firsts steady at
keene
do,
Poultry
and over,
21
{hic “Old hens,
23¢; do, small to
do, do, white leghorne, 19
@20: old 12; winter, 2 Ibs
and under, 25@26; young, large,
smooth, fat, 22@ 23: do, do, poor, rough
and stagegy, 19@20. Ducks--Young
Pekings, 3% Ibs and over, 22¢; do,
puddle, do, do, do, 20@21; do; Mus
covy, do, 20021; do, smaller, do,
do, do, 19@20 Nearby, 189@Q
20c: Western and Southern 17@18;
Kent Island, 21@22. Turkeys—Hens,
28¢c; young gobblers, 26; old toms, 21;
poor and crooked breast, 20@21
Pigeons—Young, per pair, 30@35; old,
do, 30@35. Guinea fowl as to size,
each, 35@45
Dressed
Maryland
roosters,
do,
Geone
Hogs Choice Western |
and Pennsylvania, light
156@15%ec; Southern Mary.
land and Virginia, lights, 144% @15:
choice medium weights, 14Q14%:
heavyweights, smooth, 12@12%; stags
Live Stock
PITTSBURGH. ~ Cattle — Choice, |
$9.76@10.35; prime, $10.50@11.
Sheep-—Prime wethers, $11.50@12;
culls and common, $5@6.50; lambs, $11
@14.75; veal calves, $13@14.
Hogs—Prime heavies, mediums and
heavy Yorkers, $16@16.15; light York.
ers, $14@1450; pigs, $13@13.50;
roughs, $13@13.75.
CHICAGO. ~~ Hogs - Bulk, $1450
14.80; light, $1410@1480; mixed,
heavy, $1430@14.90;
rough, $143001445; pigs, $11.26@
13.65.
CITY, MO
$14 50@ 14.80 heavy,
packers and butchers’, $14.60Q1488;
light, $14 20@14.60; pigs, $11@13
Sheep — Lambs, $12Q1485; year
$13@13.95;. wethers, $11.50@
ewes, $10.50@12.25
Cattle—Prime-fed steers, 311.409
12; dressed beef steers, $0.26@11.25;
Southern $7.50@1050; cown
$5.50@10; $8@11; stockers
and feeders, $7.50@10; bulls, $6 50@
9.25; calves, $7@11
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
From mines in Japan and South
fanchuria the Japanese are mining
20,000,000 tons of coal annualin
KANSAS Hogs—Bulk,
$1475@14.85;
slieors,
heifers
The King of Denmark confines his
commercial ventures to the stock ex-
change, and has made many consides
able “deals.”
Practically indestructible steel ship
ping cases have been invented that
when empty and
used indefinitely.
Smart button shoes of regalation
height are displayed alongside the still
popular lace boot of extreme ankle
height
For motorcycies there has been in
vented a pump that automatically fills
a tire with air as a machine is run
ning. ?
The Mennonites of Western Canada,
being forbidden by their faith, have
sent no volunteers, but are aiding the
The use of muslin windows instead
of glass in dairy construction is safe
to help materially in the fight against
tuberculosis,
Bean ofl to the value of $3,057 370
was involoed at the American consul
ate at Dairen, Manchuria, for the
United States during 1916, compared
with $404,170 worth for 1916.
War among her neighbors has
brought such a wealth to Denmark
that the number of millionaires in that
Hea kingdom was increased last year
¥ 150.