Candyland for the Best. \ Jury List for May Term of Court. Following is the list of jurors drawn for the May term of court which will begin on the third Monday, May 17th, 1915. LIST OF GRAND JURORS. H.R. Auman, laborer, ..........cceceeeerenesane Millheim John R. Barr, carpenter,... = John Deitrich, plasterer,..... John Edwards, merchant,.... M. S. Feidler, gentleman,... R. G. Goheen, butcher,.... L. E. Gearhart, carpenter, John Grove, farmer,... L. N.” Horn, minister,.... Elmer Johnson, laborer L. M. Kelley, foreman,..... . William Loder, laborer,...........cccoennnneenns Howard J. W. Mayes, marble dealer,.........c......... Howard Thomas Morgan, janitor,........ Ogden B. Malin, clerk,.... Howard McCloskey, miner,. Lester McClellan, clerk,........c.ccoceeniene Bellefonte James H. Rine, carpenter,.. - Perry Resides, butcher,.... J. O. Reed, merchant,...... D. R. Thomas, farmer,..... Geo. J. Weaver, laborer,.........cccccoevnuirinee Haines Geo. C. Woomer, laborer, ....Philipsburg Roy Witmer, laborer,.............ccccevunnene Bellefonte LIST OF TRAVERSE JURORS, FIRST WEEK. Russell Ayers, merchant,............c..... Philipsburg Joseph W. Beezer, butcher,. ...Bellefonte Frank Beezer, farmer,............ccoocueeeninnanenss Spring D. H. Bartley, laborer,... ...Bellefonte F. P. Blair, jeweler,...... Bellefonte John Conley, foreman,........ Bellefonte Wm. H. Cummings, farmer, .--«.........cc.cceet Potter H. J. Cohen, clerk................ Chester Gearhart, carpenter. H. H. Houser, farmer,.. ......... Thomas M. Huey, farmer. John Hurst, agent,.............. Clay Hall, operator,..... Geo. W. Hazel, laborer, . . Thomas Hazel, engineer, ............cooocvneenneens Spring W. H. Jones, gentleman,.............cceuuen Philipsburg John Jacobs, farmer,...... William Kerrin, farmer,.. Frank Krebs, farmer, ........cccccceeeieiiniiin Charles A. Krape, merchant,. John A. Maize, gentleman, George Miller, farmer,.. H. A. Moore, druggist,..... Miles Mechtley, farmer,..... Charles M. Miller, farmer,.............cceeeennees Miles George Mallory, blacksmith,.... Charles McClenahan, laborer... i: Henry McWilliams, farmer,.................. Ferguson Harvey Nearhoof, farmer,... C. B. Neff, farmer, ......... . I. M. Orndorf, farmer, ...........ccc.cooeeiiiinene Haines J. R. Pheasant, gentleman,. Philipsburg a sstntrern Rush Robert Roan, mechanic,.... ....Bellefonte H. C. Rothrock, teacher,..........coammmeeeceeens Harris Christ Reese, machinist,..... .Philipsburg George Rhule, salesman,................... Philipsburg Floyd Sanderson, farmer,...... Thomas B. Shope, laborer, Albert Schenck, farmer,..........c.cceveiiiiennees Liberty J. L. Tressler, farmer. ....... i Merrill Weaver, farmer,.... William Weber, merchant,.... James H. Weaver, farmer,..... J. W. Winkleblech, farmer,............c...oceeeene Haines W. F. Way, farmer,........... Halfmoon Orvis Yarnell, laborer,..........ccccovn eens Walker Israel Young, merchant,............... .......Harris Wm. Zimmerman, painter,...... ........oee Walker LIST OF TRAVERSE JURORS, SECOND WEEK. W. J. Beezer, butcher,...........ccoeuvinins Bellefonte Fred Booth, manager,.... “ S. C. Bathgate, farmer,..........c.cocoverueiunenns College A. Bergner, merchant,.., 4 J. B. Crawford, farmer...... ... Emanuel Eisenhuth, farmer,..............ceeusine Penn Geo. N. Fisher, salesman,...... ....Harris Lucian Fulton, laborer,..... .Milesburg Edward Green, miller,........ ....ccccooviininnnns Howard William E. Garner, blacksmith Wesley Goss, merchant,.............cceninnieniiinns Rush William Glenn, farmer,..... ...Ferguson Henry Gingerich, farmer,...... ...cccccoinnnnes Harris * P.L. Gulich, clerk,.............. Philipsburg Edward Hepburn, contractor,........ ...... Bellefonte W. S. Heath, ODPerator,............cc.ccvensinissrasanee Rush R. A. Haag, baker,......... George Hartsock, salesman,. Fred Humphrey, laborer,...... Jacob Keller, justice,........ .- John A. Lucas, farmer,..............cccoeieiiiee Boggs Daniel Moore, laborer,........ ...ccccvvvnvns ween. Rush Jacob McCloskey, laborer,............c...ooneens Curtin W. H. On, carpenter,...................oeenn- Bellefonte W. E. Smith, clerk,......ccccceeeennnnnni State College Creighton Showalter, gentleman,......Philipsburg Bruce Stover, salesman,..............ccceceunee Millheim Peter Stout, laborer,...... Peter Smith, farmer,... Musser Sones, Jaborer,...............coeeninenns Huston Hamilton Smith, painter, .. .State College Jacob Shirk, laborer,..... .......... Bellefonte Clay Shope, laborer,..........ccccceiviinnene Milesburg W. C. Thompson, farmer,... .Howard Twp John Walters, mechanic,.................. Philipsburg D. W. Woodring, agent,.... do Aquilla Williams, farmer,. “is Jacob Williams, farmer, ............cooeieiiienns Worth F. H. Yocum, laborer;........ N. H. Yearick, merchant,........c...cc.... oe ....Marion ——Robert Yeager, the fourteen year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Willis Yeager, of Yeagertown, Mifflin county, walked into Bellefonte on Wednesday morning and ap- pealed to policeman Harry Dukeman to get him something to eat. The lad con- fessed to running away from home Tues- day morning in search of work. He walked over the Seven mountains, across Pennsvalley, Nittany mountains and to Bellefonte, and claimed he had had noth- ing to eat from the time he left home. The policeman got him a good square meal then communicated with his par- ents. The County Commissioners fur- nished the money to buy him a ticket and the lad was sent home the same afternoon. | : ——William Billett, foreman of the Bellefonte Central railroad carpenter shops, and- John L. Dunlap are now among the list of injured. On Wedn=s- morning Norman R. Wright took tae men up to Morris’ siding on the com- pany’s gasoline motor car to repair a bridge. On the way back they ran into an open switch and ditched the car. Wright escaped injury but Billett had his head cut and shoulders sprained while Dunlap had two fingers of his left hand hurt. Both will be off duty afew days. er ate ——Elsworth Niggel, a student at the Bellefonte Academy, is critically ill with pneumonia, in the Academy infirmary. Dr. Thompson, of Butler, the boy’s home physician, has been here in consultation and is in constant communication with the physicians in charge. ——For high class Job Work come to the WaTcaMAN Office. trict, which the Austrians had consid- ered to be impregnable, now is in the ! INVADERS ARE NEAR UZSOK Attacks and Counter Attacks Are So Frequent That Both Sides Appear to Be on the Offensive. Dispatches from Lemberg say that in a desperate attack by the Russians on the right flank of the Austrian posi- tion at Mezolaborecz, on the Hungarian side of the East Beskin mountains and about fifty miles south of Przemysl, the Austrians were forced, after a bat- tle lasting twelve hours to make a precipitate retreat. The whole main crest in this dis- hands of the Russians. The main body of the Austrian army then moved on Rostoka, where they found the Russians prepared in a strong defensive position, and they again were repulsed. Another attack made by the Austrians in the south- ern district of Uzsok and Veretzkim met with a similar check, the Rus- sians occupying a position three miles from Uzsok. The left flank of this Austrian army, under command of Archduke oseph Ferdinand, is being gradually exposed by the Russian advances toward Bart- feld and Gummino. Teuton Allies Fighting Stubbornly. The Austro-German forces which are still holding some of the isolated summits of the Carpathians are con- | testing stubbornly every foot of the! Russian advances along the front from Bartfeld to Stry. This front runs al- most due east and west for 115 miles. Bartfeld is in northern Hungary and Stry is eastern Galicia, to the south of Lemberg. i Attacks and counter attacks follow | with such rapidity tbat both sides may be said to be taking the offen- sive simultaneously. The shocks are’ resulting in unusually heavy casual ties, with only a slight change in the! compartive positions of the opposing | forces. Uzsok, near the pass of that name, still remains in the possession of the Austrians, but the Russians have cap- tured the heights to the northward, coming within three miles of the rail road station, and their occupation of | the town itself is expected. The Aus- | trians are vigorously repeating their | efforts to penetrate from Bukowina in- | to Russian territory in the direction of Chotin, : ! The Russians charcterize this move as a device on the part of the Aus: trians for drawing Russian troops from the Carpathians. They assert that the Austrians have been unable to bring up sufficient reinforcements to check the Russian advance, and that the only alternative for the Aus trians is to divert part of the Russian forces. in other directions. ADDITIONAL COUNTY CORRESPOND- ENCE. * REBERSBURG. Mrs. L. B. Frank has had her mansion newly roofed. Miss Ruth Douty left on Tuesday last io spend the summer with her sister at vis. Rev. Kessler, the new minister of the United Evangelical church, preached an able sermon to his congregation on Sun- day evening. . Fount Brown, who with his wife, have been visiting Mrs. John Breon for sev- eral weeks, left last Friday for his home in Lock Haven. Fount claims that it is a good deal more than twenty-two miles from “Here to There.” Miss Mabel Brungart was the recipient of a large three pound Easter egg, and on Monday evening she invited her Sunday school pupils to help devour the goodies therein contained. After everyone had their fill of sweetmeats they were taken for a ride in Clarence Long's big auto. The class of ’15, whose graduation will occur on April 23rd, has chosen for the honors, twins, Miss Lucille Bright, for the salutatory, and Miss Florence Bright, for the valedictory. The members of this class have worked sedulously and vanced bevond the requirements in atin. On Tuesday Thomas A. Auman com- pleted the fourteenth year as teacher of our first grade pupils. Tom says that this has been his most pleasant year, as his pupils have been model. little ones from start to finish. We will remark in passing that fourteen years of service in one room is surely a mark of competence. Let us wish you many more years of valuable service, Tom. On Monday the body of Mrs. Louisa Hanselman was laid to rest in the Evan- gelical cemetery at Forest Hill. Services were held at the home of her daughter, Mrs. C. E. Byers, north of Rockville, at 5 a. m., funeral director Smith, of Spring Mills, having charge as far as Coburn. At Mifflinburg the remains were placed in an auto-hearse and taken to Forest Hill where services were again held in the Evangelical church. The relatives, Mr. and Mrs. Byers, two daughters, three sons and the bereaved husband were conveyed by Victor Walker and wife in automobiles to the place of interment. Mrs. Hanselman was in her 59th year and had been a rheumatic invalid for the past twenty-one years. PINE GROVE MENTION. [Concluded from page three.] _ Paul Tate and Mr. Kenyon, of Phil- ipsburg, and George Tate, of Pittsburgh, are here for a few days visit. Mr. and Mrs, E. C. Musser and Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Cronover took a spin to Bellefonte on Wednesday in the former’s new Cadillac car. After an all winter sojourn with friends in Lock Haven Samuel Markle is back at his old home in College township. Though eighty-five years old he is hale and hearty and ascribes his good health to the fact that he never used tobacco. ’ ‘The New Grocery. . To Each Customer on Both Phones 4.144 A Free Carnation REAL ICE CREAM—Vanilla and Chocolate. Home-Made Vanilla and Chocolate Cream 3 5 1b Walnut Caramels 40c Ib. Special this week C .__CARNATIONS 3 CENTS PER DOZEN AND UP. Fresh Cut Flowers :—§&\E "ROSES 72 CENTS PER DOZEN AND UP ~