The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, April 13, 1916, Image 2

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    THE EUROPEAN WAR A
YEAR AGO THIS WEEK
April 10, 1915.
French gained in the Woevre
and on the St. MihielPont-a-Mous-
son front,
Germans beat French between
the Orne and the Meuse, In Le
Pretre forest, and at Bezange la
Grande.
Russians began attack on Ger
mans between Uzasok and Beskid
passes.
Austro-Germans repulsed strong
Russian attack In Opor valley.
British relief steamer Harpalyce
torpedoed in North sea.
Premier Borden called for second
Canadian expeditionary force.
April 11, 1915,
Germans made some recoveries
against the French and tock three
towns from Belgians.
Germans In infantry advance
lost heavily by artillery attack of
French,
Russians held all the main rikiges
of the Carpathians and approached
the Uzsok valley.
German cruiser Kronprinz Wii
helm arrived at Newport News,
Allied fleet bombarded Darda-
nelles forts from gulf of Saros.
Austro-Hungary accused allies of
atrocities and breaches of inter
national law.
Great recruiting
gan in London.
Germany protested the shipment
of arms from America to allies.
campaign be-
April 12, 1915,
Fierce fighting in France, Ger
mans being repulsed at Les Epar
ges, but gaining In Ailly and Le
Pretre forests,
Russians badly beaten near Kazi
ouwka and repuised east of Uzsok
pass,
German attack on Szafranki
pulsed,
French battleship and aeroplanes
bombard Turk camp at Gaza.
German dirigible dropped bombs
on Nancy.
British defeated Turks and Kurds
in Mesopotamia.
re-
April 13, 1918,
French made gains near Berry
au-Bac, but were repulsed at other
points.
Germans near Thionville and
Metx heavily re-enforced.
Austro-Germans violently
tacked Russian left wing.
Russians gained in Uzsok region,
near Koziouwka and on the Nie
men.
Ossowetz
mans,
French aviators bombarded mili
tary hangars at Vigneulies.
Many killed by explosion at naval
reserve Shet.
land.
German shelis fall on
ritory
at
bombarded by Ger
station In Lerwick,
Swiss ter
April 14, 1915.
penetrated German
but were driven
French line
at Marchevilie,
out,
French artillery checked German
attack at Les Eparges.
Russians drove Austrians
Medzo Laborcz, Hungary,
Germans attacked
near Ostrolenka.
Dutch and Swedish
blown up in North sea.
Zeppelin made night raid over
Tyne district of England; another
was wrecked by gunfire in Bel
gium,
from
Szafranki
steamers
April 15, 1915.
French carried with bayenet spur
northeast of Notre Dame de Lo
rette and gained in the Argonne,
Germans repulsed French
Marcheville and elsewhere,
Russians crushed Bavarians at.
tacking their left wing, and defeat
ed Austrians on extreme east
Austrians defeated Russians near
Oiezkowice on the Biala.
Allied battleships destroy Turk
camp at Enos,
Russian squadron
Kara-Bornu,
German submarine sank British
steamer Ptarmigan,
French airmen made
raids on German positions,
April 18, 1915,
French repulsed German attacks
near Arras and St. Mihiel,
Operations in Carpathians
checked by flooded rivers.
Great defeat of Turks at Shalba,
Mesopotamia, by British reported,
French cruiser bombarded EI.
Arish, Palestine, and Russians
shelled Asia Minor ports.
Zeppelins raided East Kent, Es
sex and Suffolk.
Rhine towns raided by silied
aeroplanes,
Two allied hydroplanes shot
down by Turks at Dardanelles.
at
bombarded
several
THINGS YOU MAY NOT KNOW
A Bwiss aviator rose to the height
of 10.800 feet, overtopping the best
previous ascent,
The United States produced 66.26
per cent of the 400,423,489 barrels of
petroleum that entered the markets
of the world in 1914,
A lightning bolt at Laurel, Del.
struck a halfgrown chicken and
stripped it as “lean of feathers as a
new-laid egg, leaving the bird none the
worse for the experience except for
Jock of covering
ON AMUSEMENTS
————— os n——
Church People Denounced for
Their Apathy.
LAZY CHRISTIANS GET IT
Sermon Hotly Bans Pastimes-—The-
atre, Cords and Dancing De
nounced As Lures Of
the Devil
BTATISTICS OF THIRTY.FIRST
DAY OF CAMPAIGN,
Attend
14,000
15,000
12,000
1,600
600
Morning
Afternoon ,,
Evening
Lyric
Brantly Baptist Church. .
43,100
899,000
Total
Former Days
Totals $42,100
Morning
Afternoon
Evening
Lvric
Total
Former
Total
Baltimore Caught off their
expectant of
the 27.000 in
Sunday afternoon and night were
something
men the taber
nacle
moved at times to laughter, more fre
ire, by the old-fashioned
the shoulder, out-and
etraight from
Stole March On Them.
‘For men only”
thie meetings
was the announce
men
most of them,
ment of and only
were there, They came,
expecling to hear a “for
heard
With
their minds of
rank treatment of
i os
the bo
They
different
hin
fre the
f the social
ze business and of other things
on previous alter
¥ came expecting
al ws od Sunday
noons, the Sunday to
tell them son
to know with
plainness of speech
the case
& more facts they ough
£4
Lile
v 1
uiund
But such
Slldayesqus
ht them
& Bern
have heard
Cau;
preached
a blush. He tugz
ngs of :
heir the
» ang ul
born of
a upon LI
ugh the countryside
eas for righteousness
extraordinary
not
sven the verbiage
fresh
en, nor all the repetition of 1900 3
Billy Sunday may embellish or
Sars
ancy or appeal
no
rob of their pot
Sunday's lips uttered new cry.
ver the moral, the economic
the practical, the physical
evil, phases which
nestly on
Apacs
former Bundays
the basis
of repentance and redemp
The “sweet
"
He did his best
intellectuality, not
to prove
physical
meant
It Takes Manhood.
don’t hit the
manhood.
“You trail because
and I believed him. It takes
to be a Christian, and you
can't be a man unless you are one.”
He told the story of the prodigal
son, but clothed it in such modern
garments that it was almost unrecog-
nizable. At one time, if the truth is
to be told, he sacrificed the emotional
effect he was creating over the big
audience by a very unessential jest.
“This boy went from bad to worse,”
he sald, “and then from worse, he
went to Chicago.”
There was considerable laughter at
this bright remark, but afterward the
punch of the story was done, and the
point of it dulled. Sunday apparently
realized this, for he omitted the re
mark at night.
There was but one disappointment
in the day, so far as Sunday was con-
cerned. This was the size of the night
erowd of men. It was the first Sun.
day that all of the 14,000 seats in the
building were not taken-there were
probably 2,000 vacant in the rear part
of the shed.
That Sunday noticed this was ap
parent from the manner in which he
remarked that he had practically de
eided to grant the requests of the
women to make next Sunday night's
meeting open to everyone, giving only
the afternoon over to the men.
tian,
Baltimore.~~The church of Baltl
more-~clergy, lay officials and the rank
aud flle—was subjected by Rev. Wik
trouncing
which made the 20,000 people who at-
tended his services wince.
It was a bitter reproof that caused
thousands to open their eyes and their
mouths in wonder—and it brought up
the sawdust trails at the tabernacle
521 men and women and vouths to
pledge themselves to reconsecrated
lives, to promise to forego forever
dancing, cardplaying, the theatre and
drinking of intoxicants, the things that
Sunday had placed beyond the pale
for Christians, in his twice preached
sermon on “Amusements.”
To his audience of 9,000 in the after.
noon he declared that something was
the matter with Baltimore; that the
church here was more entangled with
the vices of the world than that of
any city in which he had ever con-
ducted a campaign. He issued a
significant warning that unless condi.
tions changed speedily a new denomi
nation would spring up, and made up
of real Christians, willing to re
nounce literally “the world, the flesh
and the devil”
Done Calling On Church,
At night, when calling upon hig con
members up the
selves to lead better Hves, he viewed
with a cloud on his face, that Increased
with the passing minutes, the rcores
who trod the trail--when he was ex
pecting many hundreds And fir
he leaped to his chair, lifted his hand
and hurled forth this ultimatum
“3 ask
forward another night, not
Baltimore §0,000,000 years
called upon you elders, you
i deacor
the church to eome
f 1 stay
neves
gemen,
ke ff
“If you cin
lead, how can 3
women
n done!”
Women Take it Coidly.
"Au :
st that Sunday has
sermon on JRE LE
The
in Baitimore and one of the
It was a sermgn directed
at ch and m
urch people,
arly at those who, having
of the }
things that Puritanisn
While he
lowing from drink
ides of denuncis
2OTrVICH Master, yet
touche
the theatres, gami
tion, S
, traced the
“If vou've got any to put what
I've got to say you'll see what | mean
nobody" know
Mimic's Woman Preparing
At ix of one of his
perora
¥ that the
hell”
congregation gasped. It broke
when, with a
oul
£ Fd 3 olin
0 AR En ater
criticism of pre
ur ailin ballroom
¥
t for women, he wen! through
a costume
ball
“Full dress,
eparatory {oo setting
is £7 Undreas I eal]
of the the
who waa
She
and
gtory of
girl
to go to a dance
old negro servant
orn
turned
sald: "Well,
and I'll start Do 1
The old woman gazed at
and exclaimed: ‘Lord a’massy.
yo' ain't goin’ out wid all dat
meat showin’, is yo'?"™
And the women In the
shrieked with merriment
No Dancing Christians.
“Dancing Christians? You might as
wall talk about heavenly devils. Don't
feather boa
hall
ry
Hao
Bah!"
expatiatexl upon the mental
state, disposed to vice, caused by the
huried anathemas upon the
young men who took advantage of such
a state of mind to*lead astray young
girls, and said:
“If there are variations In the tem
perature of hell you Godforsaken,
low-down men will be detailed to crack
brimstone in the hottest spot—'praise
God from whom all blessings flow." ™
Cards vs. Bibles.
Card playing he consigned to the
nethermost pit of perdition and told
his hearers that cards were so anta-
gonistic to religion that they might
as well make up thelr minds either to
throw away thelr ecards or else their
Bibles, All except a negligible per
centage of professional gamblers first
learned to play eards in private homes,
he sald, and most of these homes were
thote of persons calling themselves
Chrjstians.
The theatre, he sald, he condemned
not as an Institution (the saloon, he
interpolated, he condemned ag an In
stitution, root and branch), but for
ita abuses. It had fallen, he declared,
from ita once high estate and he re
called that it was created as a part of
religious warship.
dance;
hd
Re natin fra a.
RINCE ALBERT
mits men to smoke all
a sore
Prince Albert is made
will do for you what i
est of your pleasures!
Prince Albert is to be had
sverywhere tobacco és sold (a
toppy red bags, Bey tidy red
tine, 0c; handsome pound
ond hall-pound tin humiders
~and—in that clavey poand ~
cryetal-glose humidor with 13 VO
rponge-moistener top (hat hind oF
beeps the tobacco in such
fine ehope— always |
was made to create fobacoo
they want without getting
any comeback but real
(and controlled exclusively
And it
t has done for thoosands of
you about Prince
ct that will prove out
~
u lay in a stock and fire-up|
0 CO., Winston. Salem, K.C.
SIATE NEWS
The Latest Gleanings From All
Over the State.
TOLD IN SHORT PARAGRAPHS
hed a new high rec
the
bec
in
iniegion
nnot be gecur
£ 4}
5 . bo ’
eferee Jacob Snuyvder., of the
Sixth
tment of |
of
killed in|
» ai Robinsdale, |
» amount of the |
$25,000, |
from |
» the compensation
y adius
Distriet, completed
the compensation laims the |
eight
ion in & m
widows of the
SX Pos
Somerset county
approximately
is the largest resuiting
single disaster sine
award was
law became operative
Born blind, Ida Friend. daughter of
Mrs. George Friend, of Lehighton, now
can She has pasged her twenty
fifth Restoration came by an
at the Wille Eve
Mrs. Eckley B
see
Year
the expense. Surgeons ashe
nliimately will have excellent vigion
say
Willlam HH. Ball, Secretary to the
Governor, delivered a lecture at Im-
manuel! Presbyterian Church Men's
Club, Harrisburg, on the trips of the
Mr
Ball, as Chief of City had
charge of the bell
Property,
State Highway Commiessioner Cun
ningham left for hia home in Sewick-
ley for a rest of several weeks to
recuperate from a severe attack of
acute indigestion. All Lis engagements
for the next month have been can-
celled.
The Berwind, White Coal Mining
Company has announced an advance of
three cents a ton on pick and machine
mining and a five per cent. increase on
day labor to its employes. About 20,
000 men are affected.
James Flanagan, a miner, has just
received $1,000 from the Carnegie
Hero Fund Commiselon for valor dis
played in carrying two men through a
mine fire to safely. Five yoars ago he
received a gold medal for hin act.
William Sutters, of Lehighton, had
William Honts, arrested on the charge
of assault and battery, but the grand
Jury failed to believe Sulters’ test)
mony and directed him to pay the
costs, Not baing able to do ro, he
went to jail.
Edward Mewes:
armer des
crip
con Ty
himself to
ie was |
died
npointed Over
R ew M
the
Commerce on
should
orestry Desaris
40.000 pine
ted througho
of the Susot
State ¥
Harrisburg
The
given
which will
parks and is
bolonging 10 th
be pla
in ie
iano
Northumberland
e W
damage "
icy pavement
A jury
Court awarded Walla
Shamokin, $100
suffered in fall on
He asked $10,000
an
William J lLaidlay, a farmer of
Carmichacis, filed a voluntary petition
in bankrupiey at Pltisburgh. His
aseele were
liabilities as $208,738.
Thieves robbed the homes of Dr. D
1. Rutherford and his sisters, Misses
June and Keziah Rutherford, at Pax-
fang, taking silverware, canned fruit
and preserves. They entered the lat
ter house by a door adjoining the cel
Inre of the twin dwellings.
The borough of Mont Alte fs build
ing a water line from the “Pearl
the Park" to town for {ls new water
gysiem. The "Pearl of the Park" is
the mos! famous gpring in the South
Mountain and permission bas been
given to use it by the State,
were injured seriously, If not fatally,
atl Sioux No. 3 colliery, a Lehigh Val
ley Coal Company operation at Mt.
Carmel. They had fired a shot in a
breast when their naked lamps ignited
a pocket of gas,
Darid Geddea, three years old, son
of William Ceddes, fell into a mine
cave hole in the rear of his home at
Avoca, and was drowned in three feet
of water. The ecavedn occurred some
time ago, and during the recent rains
bocame filled with water.
The Millersburg Light Company has
been purchased and will be operated
by Farley Gannet, consulting engineer
of Harrisburg. Mr. Gannet formerly
was engineer with the State Water
Suoply Commission.
GRADE CROSSINGS
TOLL 94 KILLED
Kk"
ra
Tr Bre
i pind
injure
ires show ar
fatalfties an
injured
half of 1514
Hed om trolley
*E injured or
ompared wit}
preceding
185 en
ree passa:
latter class includ
igs. Twe hun
POErEOms were
The grade
increase of 2
led and ¢ ired, over the figure
for the i914 hirty
eight of the d al crossings were
and 2 or
uded
<39
same OQ in
pedestrians 0 in
motoreycles
Fourteen automobiles
were killed in grade crossing acei
dents on highspeed electric lines,
Wagons
occupants of
Board To Probe Anthracite Rise
ExJudge Robert 8 Gawthrop, of
West Chester, was elected chairmar
of the commission provided by the last
Legislature to probe the Increase in
the price of anthracite coal after en
| actment of the anthracite tax
The commission, which is ocomponed
| of Mr. Gewthorp, C. Tyson Kratz. Nor
i ristown, and John H. Langdon, Hunt
ingdon, organized in the Governor's
office after Governor Brumbaugh bad
outiined the purpose of the legislative
| resolution. District Attorney Genera!
W. H. Keller met with the commission
(and Chief of Mines Roderick offerad
{ the assistance of his department.
Immediately after the organisation
| the members of the commission left
| for Philadelphia, where they will con
sult with Attorney General Brown
who was designated as counsel! for
the commissioners, The office of the
commission probably will be estab
lished in Philadelphia.
“l told the commissioners to go
ahead at once and to find owt all that
could be ascertained about the In
crease. I told them to be thorough
about IL” sald the Governor.
Harrisburg City Forester Named.
O. B. Gipple was appointed City
Forester to succeed HH. J. Mueller
Gipple is a graduate of the Pennsy!
vania State College Forestry Schoo!
George A. Bhreiner was reappointed «
member of the City Planning Commis
sion.