CLOTHING. CLOTHING. | CLOTHING. RR ER Rh THE FAUBLE STORES Mid-Summer Reduction Sale STARTS TOMORROW JULY 3rd. Every Suit—Men’s or Boy's; Every Pair of Trousers, ~~ Every Overcoat and Raincoat in Our Entire Stock will be Sold During this Sale at -4 Off the Regular Price. It’s at Faubles. It’s Honest. Come Early While the Assortment is Good. ’S rams SS A I I Allegheny St. Bellefonte, Pa. Sa eG a GG RS He IB aos RX Sue a Si 2x Dry Goods, Etc. ® CEMNCARSONCE, Em LYON & COMPANY. | Big Clearance Sale ....DURING.... “OLD HOME WEEK” We extend an invitation to all Centre Coun- tians and their friends to.make our store their headquarters for shopping and resting dur- fog this great celebration. Ul-b-glad-u-kum for we have made SPECIAL LOW PRICES ON ALL OUTING REQUISITES All Summer Goods must go to make room for our new Fall Stock. Visit our store and be convinced that this is the greatest Clear- ance Sale ever held in Bellefonte. Lyon & Co. ... Bellefonte Belletonte, Pa., July 2, 1915. i | How Germany Thinks the War Started. In the July American Magazine Edward Lyell Fox, correspondent in Germany for that publication, writes a highly interest- ing article entitled“ God Punish England” in which he reports the intensity of the feeling in Germany against England. In connection with this subject he quotes Major von Herwarth, a German officer, who tells in part as follows what he re- gards as the origin of the trouble: “England is jealous of our commerce. We do not have week-end parties. We work. We become too powerful in trade. We disturb the British peace of mind, therefore Britain must be rid of this dis- turbance. We saw with regret that our relations with England were becoming unsatisfac- tory. There was no rhyme or reason why we should not have come to a good solid understanding. We tried for it hard, but in vain. England turned to France and Russia, and it was a remark- able coincidence that ever since the ! Triple Entente was complete our neigh- bors in the east and in the west adopted an attitude against us that grew more and more hostile. We knew that the strug- gle was coming and we were prepared. But, more than anything, we resent the British hypocrisy over the neutrality of Belgium—this from the nation that made her empire by gobbling up little coun- tries all over the world. You see, we cannot think of such things and remain calm. Germany is only one thousandth’s part of the surface of the globe. (The entire area of the globe, including all oceans, is about one thousand times the area of Germany. The entire area of all the land on the globe, including fertile territory, deserts, steppes and the polar regions, is less than three hundred times the area of Germany—Editor.) “We have worked hard on this soil and we live well. And by our hard work we are rivaling England’s commerce, which means that we must go.” Luck Was With Traveler. The reason that I escaped execu- tion the morning after my arrest hung on an even slenderer thread, writes a recent traveler in China, in the World’s Work. My foreign appear- ance, the regularity of my papers, and my remarks to the effect that he would be made the scapegoat if a mistake had been made had worried the prison superintendent. He decided to consult his superior before carrying out his orders. This gentleman, like most of his kind in Chinese officialdom, was the first thing he received was an urgent telephone inquiry from Admi- ral Tsai as to whether a foreigner had been arrested by the secret police or not, and if he had, where was he. | ——For high class Job Work come to the WATCHMAN Office. Dangerous Bridges. According to the Engineering Ree. ord, many states have a large number of inferior bridges. of both wood and steel. The town anil county officials who have the bhidzes and highways in charge often put off needed repairs to the bridges, because they prefer to spend the money at their disposal in improving the surface of the roads— work that the public is much quicker to notice and praise them for. Merely from the point of view of safety it is wise to improve no road until every bridge on it is put into proper shape, for smooth, metaled roadways and weak, poorly maintained bridges form a dangerous combination. In cases in which the road commissioners have little control over the bridges the con- ditlons are likely to be even more dan- gerous. Putting so much of the money into the bridges rather than into the roads may not be practicable in every case; but in every case enough money should be put into the bridges to make them safe beyond question. — Various Suez Canals. The Suez canal is not the first canal to join the Red sea and the Mediter- ranean, according to a bulletin issued by the National Geographic society. The Egyptians, it is stated, in 1350- 1300 B. C., constructed such a canal. In the course of time it was choked with sand. Another canal was begun by Necho about 600 B. C. and com- pleted a century later. Trajan re- stored this canal. When Napoleon visited Egypt, he planned to reopen the old canal, but was forced to aban- don the project. It remained for De Lesseps to repeat the engineering tri- umph of the ancient Egyptians on a vaster scale. Military Funerals. It is not universally known what is meant by a funeral “with full milis tary honors.” In such a funeral the coffin is bcrne on a gun carriage. If the dead soldier was a cavalryman his sword and helmet are fastened to the saddle of his horse, which is led immediately behind the gun-carriage, and his top-boois, with spurs attached, are fastened in stirrups, with the toes pointing backwards. A firing party, drawn, if possible, from the deceased’s regiment, Gres three volleys over the grave, and the “Last Post” is then sounded by buglers. 1 not an early riser. When he did arise | CASTORIA Bears the signature of Chas. H.Fletcher. In use for over thirty years, and The Kind You Have Always Bought. Shoes. Shoes. REDUCTION SALE of Ladies Low SHOES Now Going On. FOR $248 You can have your choice of any pair of this season’s Low Shoes that I have in my store, Pumps, Oxfords, Colo- nials, in all shapes and all kinds of leather. I guarantee that not one pair of these shoes sold for less than $3.50 and the most of them sold for $4.00 and $4.50. Nothing reserved, all MUST GOAT $2.48 Now is your chance to purchase your Summer Shoes less than the cost to manufacture. Cash Only. No Exchanging Yeager’s Shoe Store, Bush Arcade Bldg, 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA.