THE EUROPEAN WAR A YEAR AGO THIS WEEK Sept. 20, 1914, Allies captured Souain. Belgians retook Lanaeken. Germans brought big siege guns up to Antwerp. Russians took Jaroslav and be- gan bombardment of fortress of Przemysl. General Hindenburg began move- ment against Grodno, Russian Po- land, Germans defeated by Russians near Sandomierz. Serbs defeated Austrians near Novi-Bazar. German cruiser Koenigsberg dis- abled British cruiser Pegasus in Zanzibar harbor. Six British ships taken by Ger- man cruiser Emden. Austrian torpedo boat sunk at Pola. German merchant cruiser Cap Trafalgar sunk by the Carmania. Sept. 21, 1914, Germans bombarded forts. Antwerp Allies took Massiges and Mesnil between Reims and Argonne. Serbs defeated Austrians Kroupani, but evacuated Semiin. at Russians took Dubiecko and sur rounded General Dankl's army. German cruiser Emden sank Brit. ish steamer Clan Matheson. Japanese aviators wrecked two forts at Tsingtau. German official statement of de- struction of Louvain issued. French foreign office protested to neutrals on bombardment of Reims cathedral. Russia issued its Orange Book. Sept. 22, 1914. Germans captured Craonne, German right turned between Peronne and St. Quentin. Austrians defeated on the Drina. Australians seized German wire less station on island of Nauru, Germans repulsed in attack on fort in Voi district, Africa. German submarines sank British cruisers Aboukir, Cressy and Hogue in North sea. Sept. 23, 1914, Germans bombarded Verdun, Allies advanced Lassigny. Russians took Wislok, Cossacks raided Czenstochowa. Russian cruiser Boyar sank Ger. man cruiser and two torpedo boats. left wing near British aviators dropped bombs on Zeppelin plant at Dusseldorf. Sept. 24, French took Peronne. 1914, Varennes captured by Germans. Russians again occupied Soldau. Russian advanced guard arrived before Cracow. Germans defeated at Subin. British troops landed near Lae shan, China, Germans at Schuckmannsberg, Africa, surrender, Two Austrian torpedo boats and ond destroyer sunk by mines in Adriatic, German cruiser barded Madras. Anglo-French fleet bombarded Cattaro. Canada’s contingent men sailed, German aviators dropped bombs on Ostend. Emden bom. of 32,000 nn Sept. 25, 1914, Allies attacked Germans at St Quentin, but were repulsed, Germans advanced southeast of Verdun. Snow halted campaign in Alsace, Russians occupied Czyschky and Felstyn. Population of Cracow fled. Serbs and Austrians fought bat. tle near Zvorkni. Australian force tock German New Guinea, Kronprinz Wilhelm sank British steamer Indian Prince. Belgian and German aviators in duel over Brussels, Germans again shelled Reims cathedral, Formal complaint of German atrocities filed in Washington. There are over 2.500 women mercial “drummers” in States, com the United The Library. From that waste welter of endless space and time, the dome of a library shuts us in to the warm little world of literature, charged with human thought and feeling. . . . The good, the true and the beautiful are some thing real and ascertainable Paul Shorey. Daily Thought. Nothing but the harmony of friend ship soothes our sorrows; without its sympathy there is no happiness on earth. Mozart. 18 FUSES FOUND ON THE SANT" ANNA U. S. Consul Reports Many Ex- plosions Occurred on Ship. CARRIED NO MUNITIONS Fabre Liner Ocean—Vessel Was On Fire Had 1,700 Reservists Aboard, But ried No Munitions. in Mid. italian Car. Washington, in hold No. 2 Anna were that veasel, New York High expolsives founa of the Fabre liner the of the fire which was bound fr to Mars with 1, mostly Italian reservists Walter H. Schulz, Azores Islands, cabl on the matter to the He that Anna arrived at Pon Thursday cause ro ellles 76 3 Consul at St ed a re State De BAYS the Sant’ to Garda of del evening Officers the reported to him that ember 12, at in hold No assorted of the with baggage ship's were officers $181 found and tha explosions Passengers Transferred At Mr Sea. Schulz reports that 60 , Most ly women, ch men, were tras vessel Ancons The Consuls dispatch Anna as 1,100 miles the 1 on Septem when fire w fighting AMme 1 Cane i Crew wis Ancona extinguishing from the dispatch Explosives Smuggled Aboard. Navy Department that Officials of the the opi were nion guise of uld easily identi they aboard as legitin It is understood tha Schul of agents and those z will be Jas tice of th case at New York Carried No Munitions. The Sant’ Anna on and Septem Marseill i class, 44 second« ngers J cans were |RMOons With few exceptions w wer ered from United States Qhe stuffs cargo, but No munitions BRYAN MAY GO ABROAD. Takes Under Consideration Proposal That He Act As Peace Envoy. Washington. William J. Bryan an nounced that he had taken under ad- visement a suggestion from editors of foreign-language newspapers publish ed In the United States that he make a trip to Europe as a private peace envoy to the warring powers In & statement to a the editors, who, headed by Dr. Wil liam Fargo, had urged him to under take the task, Mr. Bryan indicated that he might at least visit European countries in the hope of finding there information to aid Amer. fca in “the maintaining of neutrality that war.” provokes rather spokesman of any special group, as “a representative of the peace sen- cludes the vast majority ple.” F.BOATS OUT OF SERVICE. Orders Submarines On the Shelf For Examination, Daniels Washington. —8ecretary Daniels or dered all submarines of the F-4 type out of commission until a thorough examination of them can be of the board of inquiry investigating the sinking of the F-4 at Honolulu on March 25, which ascribes the disaster to a battery explosion. and F-2 will probably be sbrought under convoy to the Mare Island Navy Yard for examination, BUBONIC PLAGUE IN u. 8. — Experts On Hand To Prevent Spread At New Orleans. Washington. Confirmation of re. ports that a case of true bubonic plague had been discovered at New Orlrans was announced by the Public Health Service officials here do not once to the service experts to take every preeaution to prevent its spread. Halth Service officiale here do not fear an epidemiz will result at New Orleans, tILopyright LINER HESPERIA GLOSED INGID Mine Sank Ship. The Outlook For Of 2 Friendly Settle. With Ger. many Now Deemed Most ment Difference Favorable. Fragments Not Preserved. has Heape nts of been officers HAW frag No one rian a torpedo” subn as is known the fragments Had the fragmenta it ascertain on deck however, Saw a arine, were not preserved officers the poss ible part of a torpedo presery ed would have been to whether they a mine In the case of the Nebraskan, frag ments metal preserved and were submitted to an expert commis. of the Navy Department here. of that board has never been made public, but it is known that the board decided the fragments were The question did important as Germany admitted that the Ne braskan had been torpedoed. It is likely. therefore, that the theory of the Hesperian having struck a mine will be accepted unless some positive not now in were or of were sion not become subsequently nee to the contrary, i= obtained evide sight, Differences Disappearing. The friendly settlement by United States and Germany of of the Hesperian and the the the that Officials do not discount the state. attributed to Count the German Ambassador, New York, to the effect This expectation is sup- the statement of officials two weeks ported by tion of an ultimatum between the United States and Germany in the dis. pute over the Arabic. tided over a break in the case of the Lasitania, and it is expected that in Germany's next note on the Arabie she will clear the way for a settle ment of that issue. CE PROF. THAYER A SUICIDE. Body Of the Dean Of Marvard Law School Found In River. Boston.—The body of Prof. Ezra Ripley Thayer, dean of the Harvard Law School, was found floating in the Charles River. He had been missing two days. Medical Examiner Me Grath said it was a case of suicide, Dean Thayer, who was born at Mil ton, N. H.,, In 1866, had been under the care of a physician for some time, AMERIGAN CONSULS MAY LEAVE MEXIGD State Department Notifies Them fo Be Ready. AMERICAN CITIZENS WARHED Secretary Lansing lssues ary Precaution instructions—Villa's Repre sentative Announces His Surprise. sent.” Consuls May Leave. AR BOOD As withdrawn th in the opinion for the consuls ere will be of h officials to remain, but it igh here, Was leave, discretion being consuls The vested in the hemselves, notifications have extended consuls in Torreon, Chihuahua, Her mosillo, Guayamas, Nogales and Ju arez, all of which are in the territory controlled by Villa. It is expected that before another week or two most of the Americans will have withdrawn, as latest telegrams to the department tonight indicated a general exodus At the Villa Washington agency new: of the department's action was ceived with unconcealed surprise and | resentment Enrique CC. Llorente, Villa's representative, announced that re the State Department prise and inquiring of the United States expressing sur 75,867 BRITISH KILLED. Total Army Losses In War To August 21, 381,983. London. Official announcement was made in the House of Commons that {the total of British war casualties up ito August 21 was 381,983 officers and ‘men killed, wounded or missing. | Detailed figures of the casualties are announced as follows: i Killed and died of wounds Officers, 4,966; other ranks, 70,992 Wounded -- Officers, 9.973; ranks, 241,086, Missing Officers, 1,501; other ranks, 53.466. These figures refer to the army other POTATO IS 30 YEARS OLD. Grocery Dealer Carries It In Pocket As Rheumatism Cure. Alton, 1l.--A potato, hard and dry as wood, and shrunken to the ize of a walnut, is the treasured pocket plece of Patrick Downes, a grocer, of Belle street, Alton, who carried it for 30 years and believes it has kept rheu. matism away. He was a sufferer from rheumatism when, at a friend's advice, he began to carry the potato, which was then a good-sized one. RS MONEY y fant © whore gro 05 i reckl ve and sppro ve your ies KE. without a eent depois you wisi, Eva Doe cpl « We furnis Whi the highest grade bieyels bicycle. DO NOT irersgusrantes behd Ap cle or & pair of tires frown angor unheard UY a bicy above factory out, OW GENE SECOND it prow at prices ran ho. BRAKES, = ' g= The regular vetail price of these fhres io BIG 00 poy pod, but Lo Enlro Buca swe weill sell you a » mole » fur BBY {cash With order 84 ps pu Malte, Yachs or Glsss will not let the alr out, A hundred thousas year. very ridin Yew How n ; cash discount of you sot d FULL CASH WITH ‘ORDER % sending i% al i if “ INKS ' snlisfariory 4 S pair { those 13 7ew. 3 Shams oa ire ¥ IF YOU NEED TIRES write for o Ji > 2 NOT WAIT 50 when yor ive our hesutife jog ue ans 8 ie 19 OUT Spe Wendl the high Ve are satisfied with ORE sell OUT Bley cles U the day resvived DEALERS, y« ou trade by on free #, repairs 80 pods A SAMPLE PAIR Motice the thick rubber tread “A' and puncture strips‘ ‘8’ and “D7 slso rim strip "MH" to prevent rim cutting. This tire will outiast any other make -SOFT, ELASTIC and EASY RIDING. cycle or poly w Lhe new and wonder! JIATE NEWS BRIEFLY TOLD The Latest Gleanings From All Over the State. FOLD IN SHORT PARAGRAPHS Youth Swings On Rope Into Creek and ~Child's Saves Family Killed Under Drowns Warning Cough in Fire—Man Train their brothe the bani bu he was The » and Gordor swim body recovered t steps towards the hting an ordinan revocation o Reading wer there when was council authorizing ire of the Metropolitan Elec Light Company's franchise street conduits aggregating $1. 000,000 he franchise was granted in 1911, and but sixty per cent. of the city the forfeitu to tie franchise would mean a to the com- to light Reading perpetuaily Mrs. Milton aM. Buss and Mrs James other in in coming down Mijton Buss made a misstep and In the fall fractured a Precisely at the same time mrs. Watters fell down the cellar steps The coughing of a child saved Mrs. McCoy and her four children the secondstory aflame, with barely time to get the family out. Thomas Patrick, thirty-eight old. while attempting to jump a fast freight near the Lehigh Valley depot, fell under the wheels and was killed, Scores of passengers witnessed the ac cident. Women fainted and children screamed, Gertrude Brennan, of Bridgeport, died of typhoid fever, just seventeen hours after her brother, Thomas Bren. nan, married Miss Mary Kelley, who, because of the girl's lliness postponed their wedding trip. One of the most startiing grafts in revolutionary grafting has been accom. plished by Prof. Henry G. Walters, of Langhorne, is a combination of roses, privet, biackberry, cedar and Iliac grafted to a young peach tree, which are showing a healthy growth, Walking In her bare feet through a field near her home Theresa Eckered, eleven, of Nanticoke, was bitten by a snake and physicians who are attend. ing the child report that her condition is eritical, The girl's left leg is swollen to twice its natural size, FOR COMPENSATION New State Board Will Consider Work. men's System Soon—Name Referees Early ANIAE®! examine funds for applica schedul of drawn up and Colun the workings of The lovers I8 the forms and now being States for vy Or emjy miume are Leads Details of the manner in which the State is protecting the cattle feeds d within Pennsylvania from frauds, i= shown by the report just made Secretary of Agriculture N. B. Critch field by James W. Kellogg, chief chemist of the Department. Pennsyl | vania is leading the States in this work and the frauds which were so extensive a few years ago are being { gradually driven out. It iz estimated that 600,000 tons of feeding stuffs are being sold in the To check up on this immense quantity the agents of the Department, who are under George G. Hutchison, collected 1,300 samples in 327 cities and bor. oughs in sixtyvone counties during 11914. In addition 236 special samples were analyzed for citizens under the i fee system. All of analyses were for {a carefully prepared method of deter mining values. Peanut hulls, weed {seeds and excessive amounts of oat {hulls were found, while some guar | antees were discovered be worth less. Arrests were made in these cases. However, the report states, The number of deficiencies was less ithan ever before noted, which shows ! more care in guaranteeing and label ing.” There ig room for improvement in some of the socalled molasses feeds, some of the seeds not having been carefully cleaned. The poultry feeds were also discovered not to {have been as clean as desirable, al. i though they showed an improvement, Of the 12300 samples 1.220 samples were found with guaranteed analyses, a larger proportion guaranteed than before. The number of deficiencies ran small and in some cases the guar antees were exceeded. ———— Farmer Congress Delegates. Announcement was made at the Executive Department, that Governor Brumbaugh had selected a delegate from each of the counties of the State to attend the Farmers’ National Con. gress at Omaha, the last week of this month. The delegates will make re porte on advancement of agriculture in this State and made observations on the statements of what other in Feed Protection. a0} 10 State every vear LE States are doing.