Page 4. THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA. Thursday, Octeber 10th, 1912, Whe Centre Democrat, Editor and Proprietor, A.C DERR, Assoclate Bditor, SWORN CIRCULATION OVER 6500. Ress A TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION : SUBSCRIPTION, . $1.50 Per YEAR Persons who send or bring the money Lo she office and pay in advance, §1 per year ORNTRE DEMOCRAT clubs with N. Y. shrico-a-week Worldfor....ooiaivaiins Masahurg SLoomAn fOr. ov vires seis onns 30 W.J. Bryan's ''Commoner" oe ely fublished weekly every Thursday morning Entered in the postofce at Bellefonte, Pa. as | second-class matter, The date your subscription expires is plainly seinted on the label bearing your name. All sredits are given by a change of label the first {ssue of each month remit. request. Watch date on vour label. ubsoribers changing Josiamce address, and {fying us, are liable for same. BO I will be continued, unlessother- wise directed. We employ no collector. gend or bring the moneyto thisofce EDITORIAL. When Pennsylvania is rid of her po- litical like Penrose and Flinn there will be some reasonabléd hope of fe bosses securing higher ideals in public | last had vears, And have the panic Roosevelt Have forgotten of 1907, after president for people insist third you been seven yet that he a should term. Roose- that had the forgotten Four vears ago we velt panic. Have you period when was scarce money Watch that, after you | We send no receipts unless by special You are expected to | and | It is not consistent If you have any mem- cons banks party of panics, it is not true, ory all easily ditions four ago refused to honor vour checks, and bus- paralyzed, Re- Demos hide thelr refer to Theodore at you oan recall years when wns blather should iness publicans generally who nbhout BO do under cratic panics faces, because they not the last Roosevelt violent pani mu the Pittsburg's corrupt oath Committee he Spring Bin nicipal Flinn before under LORS, stignting last the | Senate Inve | week testi that spent over £144,000 primaries | carry Pennsylvania for Roosevelt | How much other ich men pent the same purpose | is state | known, but it is a stounding influence men to vo { of money | a third | practical man, and Is not Know and term candidate Flinn n gpend money foolishly, naturall) anticipates a reasonable return for is up enormous to such an to the wa) It | whether SOmMme people CHR the Penrose now they his { lay. endorse rule of | Flinn and money poll and Penrose legislation was an for tics our state still evil many years in WOrse, to be for inn | Flinn and his money Is {and yet progressive, we find men who claim claim to stan defending they record. who d Fl are | reforms in public life {and his policies, because | | posed to Penrose's past To th inconsistency ne I say least, this Is | personfied PLEADS IGNORANCE. banks would not allow vou to draw on | have the Yet advocating your deposits? we lican banks Roosevelt? election of knows what par oldier t th Every ty brough in their they through for the las ETess to Ei long increass For favorable it recent allowance, ATS tried i v A bill ut remained ago publican tween T Is no hop« A vote either Penrose would better Foster w ing with politi to state tion reeeset stow wad tron, son a house that something may Patton cord with him so be CONKress wi with nation some Wilson him, Sending to be accomplished 11d man trying health interfering this Gilve onl a good to give legislation, that will expect something A CONEress support then you can years Roosevelt, who now had all the reforms that For seven wants the third portunity to bring he now urges, which he ed. Had he been nominated at cago he would have accepted the plat- form on which Taft now Is running and which he now so vigorously de- nounces. The very idea of choosing a man for the third term is revolting and against the sacred traditions of this country for over a century. What was denied Grant, and what Jefferson would not accept, this man for the sake of revenge now solicits from the people. If the people have no re- gards for thelr country's past achleve- ment and her traditions, and forget all this, then they can vote for the am- bitlous Third-Termer, term, op- ybout Four years ago, after Roosevelt had been In power for seven years, and after over twelve years of uninter- rupted Republican rule and high Re- publican tariffs, we had one of the worst panics known in years. This i$ no falry tale, and every reader can easily recall it, It does seem the height of Impudence for Republican papers and Republican orators to speak of the Democratic party as the lepub- | | of { enough then avoid- | Chi- | | Roosevelt is right now, but four years inf the 1 eit r When 1 last Roosey he was dictat t} time campaign and n¢ erything therewith conned rtant fe st imp ng him : 4 dime also conservative people with hard " } ' “ pre BRYANISMS, presid next and ent who een pres I have what is gv Wie to our made it my business to know ing on in the United States ipplied the pure food newspaper diet, and if a newspaper, It will have on the outside the subscribers t they are nw ust put the have tr to of to read. buys a the 1 abel ison can #0 that paper ma Ing It is a very know wha that a ma out unusual thing man should go into office by jority of over a million, and it by unanimous consent, While Mr. Taft thinks masses of the people have to run Mr. Roosevelt does not other human being who enough to be president Because his judgment failed him when he picked out Mr, Taft, he seems to have renewed confidence in his own judgment when he picked out himself On the Initiative and referendum, in gO that not of any sense know has ago he sent Mr. Taft all the way fo Oklahoma to oppose the iniative and referendum. There Is not an office to Roosevelt has ever been elected (hat he has not been elected to with the ald of Wall street and the predatory interests, never an office to which he has been elevated that the hoses have not helped him, Mr. Roosevelt's position Is now well-known, and I say to you with deliberation, and yet with emphasis, that no man in the history of this nation has ever taken a position on the trust question so hostiia to the safety and welfare of the American people, I remind you that for seven years and a half he was president and he not only 414 not control the trusts, but they controlled him, which ‘Bull Moose’ Means Distressing Dis oases and Signifies Staring. Hebrew scholars in Chicago have discovered a new meaning for “Bull Moose,” the emblem of the Progres- sive party. They have found words in the Hebrew language which have the sound "Bull Moose,” but which mean mn “distressing disease,” and are spelleq “Bulmose.” “Bull Moose” has been recognizeq as the Aramaic name of disease, foupg by Jewish rabbis in. the Responsa Hyman Liderman, editor of ty, Dally Jewish Call, Chicago, sald thy “Bull,” or the Hebrew word answep ing to that sound, means a diseas The Talmud says that “Bull Moose is a peculiar form of craving for fog A literal translation of the passage (x “When one is taken sick with Moose’ he may even at the of Atonement, else he may die must eat until his vision comes hy to him and he can distinguish light." “Bul Day ent to | | ply fori | “that in | out~ | | since | ed, but | | House | | for a {and op= | « | odds the | | | port | burg | were | Rumberger the | pense! their own government, | | daughter | home the and riers 1 blood 1s this which nerves bed of disens Impoverishment result of the blindness, as the blood to the nected “It may in n nr opti Mor | form this passage thi histo parables and ‘Bull M a person who | itarviy food." be," said poke well as WILSON ODDS NOW 4 TO 1, Lengthen in New York—Taft Favored Over Colonel, Broad street in on Monday, for the first time presidential campaign oper bets were registered which pr tically allowed doubt in minds of the bettors a to the « tion of Woodrow Wilson to the Wi in November Odds, which number of varied fron on the Democratic candidate definitely set at 4 of a well-known to wager $4000 hances of a Democ: nm snapped up Taft and Roosevelt od Monday being the curb ity the im York ¢ for no Wie k A] to 1 3 to 1, the were offer ommissioner $1000 on the victory was so Against both still het level nn wt maa J 4 without week To the Voters of Centre County, With the con of the Editor the dress ‘Centre Demoorn ' 1 g friends in Centre ox ity | You Ww rf hin and PP | his behalf, KRIS) WARREN 1 ve } { : y More Straws HUBLERSBURG. Wh ’ Sia git with } M. H aitimonre New % Mr ple ARAN \ Mrs, Celia home in B Wian, of grandparents In hor ther her Hoy Holloway Hoy and to Bellefonte mar friend returned to Miss Ka Hu visiting Mra GG. } Mrs Blanche da Mise Florence Dittmar, of Williams and Miss Naomi Lovell, of Bland nurses who were recently grad at the Williamsport hospita guests at the home B. W Inst week Mrs, Frank Carner has been the re cipient of a fine plano and has had it placed in her home Mrs, Lizzie Bartholomew and daugh Gertrude are visitors at the home of W. H. Decker Miss Margaret McCormick waa over Bunday to see her father who Is improving. Mrs. J. H. Beck has returned home after attending a missionary conven. tion at Miflinburg John Decker has returned from a visit to his daughter, Mrs, J. I. Yarnell of Niagara Falla D. Lloyd Markle, an instructor In State College, was a guest of his father W. H. Markle over Bunday, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Trevillian, of Town, are visiting Mra. Trevillian's brothers, W. H. and BE. J. Markle ine SHONINONINONININININININoNoNONINONONoNoNoHONINONONONe daught were on Sat uated of | or | paired ' arts | erty betting | . Lt BRET our influence inf Respectfully "{’ Q . ® This Is their first visit since they left about fifteen years ago Lew Swartz, a student at State Col. lege, was home Bunday, A box social will be held by the pupils of Walker Township High school, Baturday, Oct, 19th. A cor. dial Invitation is extended to everone J. C. Bergsatrosser oxer Bunday, Miss Lodle and Mr. Orvis Swarts spent Sunday with their sister, Mrs Williama, Mra. Carrie Porter and friend, of near Mill Hall, were visitors Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mra. Harry Weaver, Thomas Evers, our aged veteran, i and Centre county's only “color bear. or” was In town on Friday. Two of our uate nurses are fond of “hiking.” Atlost reports are a ten mile Sonn Hoy, Jr. Is not much better And sooms weaker, although able to up. BOALSBURG, Mr. and and Mrs Mr. and were Mra, 8, Mrs. Ia der, of Centre Hall, spent Tuesday nt home the Murray Mrs, ward Tibbens Mrs. Magoffin this week, Mrs week last jell with Lr few ve i The Lutherin chur Wallace contr Mrs, orado, are visiting at the home of Mr. Charley Corl, Mrs. guests at Stover, Pheobe attended are Emma her Stonecy Mrs iting Jacob Keener, of Col- August | ment of ele “Chas, R the Editor, THE paper | fonte, 24th, the Rote, the of Vicksburg, home of Rev, and the past week, Meyers and Mrs, Alexan- Pa son Ed- | William Meyers the Friday Woods visiting and 27th funeral of : day of (BEAL) and My ft Mrs, Alice | Philadelphia commis (Bigned) Bworn to and subscribed before me this September STATEMENT, In compliance with the Aet of Congress, 1912, requiring a ''Btate Ownership, Management,” , Of newspapers the following is made Kurtz, Publisher, and sole Owner of CENTRE published of Bellefonte, Pa., is DEMOCRAT, every wWeex, in ant newms- Helle CHAB, R. KURTZ 1912 B.D : GETTIG, Notary Public | Jan, 21, 1915 glon expires . | this | Sun- | Fisher son, spending William, at Estate The sLitle of of pher ih of Stoned and wife and pher's moth ereby give it Selins- | J. Kennedy Plerce and children of at i dred relatd 16s. ] } M h Musser of being re the Branch rivate and ent or Bouough of ar State of tener PINE GROVE MILLS. William ited at t week Miss week with to with the at Charter mn and are looking on Howard V after home Mi DuUrg west Mat nent McMann is the Maudella her Everts Philadel Randolph chestnut Oak, Main Mrs. GG visiting after de Manor R. of home of Hill |B) iniap Smith nt spent last State returned last sister (College week from blight spent 8S y Btreeot W. Ward, of y hat a friends In t Orp!l their personal ina y fri the prop Chestnut street right ca + hu pe nding 5 i me Sat months ire in ind brother Sunda wit heir par at Charter Hterary I room ttended © X OT n Frida The next Oret A Log on the Track “x ‘ 111 LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS, EXECUTOR'S NOTICE. Court of Centre ( ORPHANS’ James Caldwell, undersigned James notice John Aargaret | BY sale for Fifty Hel rromw an i@ oy ar eri ORPHANS $ Estate of Emil Josep? COURT SALE, Deceased, Administratrix of the Caldwell, late of the efonte, deceased doesn that she has sold ton, Guardian of Viola Marie Plerce, avid Plerce (edlored) the sum of Fe Dollars hat of gro efonte 10 ot Penns bounded f nning SUrrows street street thence WwW feet to thence n and nt a €} itmer rly direct along san ine of mee along or direction being and extending thereon erecte in a sout} beginning wtreet ame aw irn of Ans COURT SALE Deceased ‘ giver e | | {alley mouth 78 deg {or less, to a post, the north-east of lot now or laie of the sald L. Brown, thence north 12 deg | feet to the place of beginning Purpart No, 3. Situate in the jough of Bellefonte, beginning at 200 feet west from the intersec | Curtin and Ridge strects on the north. {ern mide of sald Curtin street thence westwardly along sald Curtin street and | parallel therewith 20 feet a post; thence northwardly at right angles to sald Curtin street along lot of Emil Joreph et al 200 feet to a powt thence caslwardly along and paralle with Ar- dell alley 30 feet to a post; thence south vardly at right with sald Ardell alley along other I. Bpangler el al 200 place of beginning, being a ning 30 feet on the northern the sald Curtin street and 2 0 northwardly feet ing erected on the tw pl ing west 124 feet, more corner lawrence cast 200 Bor- a post tion of to Angios ands of J feet to the fr ide of ng be urpart 184 and other exten back there i threes it-bul described | } frame dw ings Inte n ough orner hoff beginning thence vy lot of Henr helrs the v feet nort} f on ence Hoffer Logan and lLewistow nortt the place perches street | fronting ir x0 {1 BoNONONINOUONONONONONORONOMONONOEON oT 0NODoNONoMoNoNoNoNoNoNoNoBoMoNOTOTONOTC Getone ofthe $450Upright Pianos WITHOUT COST AT Gilliam’s Store, + Bellefonte, Penna. contest, or cut from this ad. This is open to anyone, and nomination blanks may be obtained at Gilli This will be the most interesting advertising prop sition ever pr sented in Centre County, and everyone has an equal opportunity to secure one o Beautiful Upright Parlor Grand Pianos 168 Silver Prizes ’ 21M “iii will be distributed during t At Centre Democrat With every yearly subscription to The Centre Democrat accompanied by $1.00 in cash, 3000 votes will be given. This applies to back subscrip- tions, and you can pay for as many as you desire. For every New yearly subscription to the Centre Democrat accompanied by $1.00 in cash, 6,000 votes will be given. You can also get votes on job printing—100 votes for each dollar paid on job printing. But the best way to get votes is to get subscriptions to the paper, as the schedule is so much greater for sub” scription than for anything else. You will be surprised how easy it is to get subscriptions to The Centre Democrat if you try. Just a Little Hustling and You Will Win---How To Get Votes COC OOCO0CO0COO0C0CTIOCOOCTO | With every purchase made at Gil. Liam's VOTES Store FOR WORTH PURCHASED, votes will be given—100 EVERY DOLLAR'S or one vote for every penny spent at this store. The earlier you start the more ad” vantage you The date of will be April will have in the final count the closing of the contest Tet, 1913, Start in at once—the earlier the start the more advantage you have. Cut out Coupon below and present or mail to Gilliam's Store, Bellefonte, Pa. Votes must be than 6 p. m. handed in not later Wednesday of each week, No. 1, Name of Contestant will not be known, 2, testant gets 5,000 votes to start with weekly in The Centre Democrat. be written on Rules Governing the Contest. 8, 8, Tie votes In package 4. Every Contestant gets a number All votes must be brought In Wednesday for recording with Contestant’'s number and amount cates will be changed each month and must be recorded before change fore recording. 11. Contestant having the largest number of votes on April SURELY A PRESENT WORTH WORKING FOR. No manes of candicates will be published, 3. Every Con- t, 5, Standing by Number published 7. Votes must NOT on top slip. 8 Color of Certifi- 10, Votes are transferable only be- Ist, 1913, wins Plano. THIS IS The Centre Democrat $2150 in Prizes--FREE! Cut this out and bring it to Gilliam’s Department Btore and it will be ex” changed for 1000 VOTES FREE GOOD UNTIL OCTOBER 18th, 1912, The Centre Democrat NOMINATION BLANK Good For 5,000 Votes, | hereby accept the nomination as a contestant at Gilliam's in the Store. Piano Contest. Please place these 5000 votes to my credit. WEEKLY SILVER PRIZES WILL BE AWARDED TO THOSE WHO PERSONALLY BRING IN THE MOST VOTES,
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