ATTORNEYS. H. B. SPANGLER Attorney-at-Law Practices in all the courts. Consultations in English and German, Office, Crider's Exchange Building. Penns Valley Banking Company CENTRE HALL, PA. Davaid K. Keller, Cashier Receives Deposits & Discounts Notes H. G. STROHMEIER CENTRE HALL, . . PA. Manufacturer of and Dealer in Jno. F. Gray & Son Successors to GRANT HOOVER Control Sixteen of the Lar Fire and Life Insurance Com- panies in the World THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST No Mutuals Before ins gest No Assessments ring vour life get the THE HOME which in of death the tenth urns all pre- contract of case between and twentieth years ret miums paid in addition to the face of the policy MONEY TO LOAN ON FIRST MORTGAGE Office in Crider's Stone Buil BELLEFONTE, Telephone Connectio Save Pennies— Waste Dollars q Some users of printing save pennies by get ting inferior work and lose dollars through lack of ad- vertising value in the work they get. Printersasa rule charge very reasonable prices, for none of them get rich although nearly all of them work hard. Moral: Give your printing to a good prmter and save money. Our Printing Is Unexcelled Got Something You Want to Sell? Most people have a piece of furniture, a farm imple- ment, or something clse which they have discard- ed and which they no lon- ger want. These things are put in the attic, or stored away in the barn, or left lying about, getting of less and less value each year. WHY NOT SELL THEM? Somebody wants those very things which have become of no use to you. Why not try to find that somebody by putting a want advertisement in “THIS NEWSPAPER? THE EUROPEAN WAR A YEAR AGO THIS WEEK August 21, Germans wetz. 18135. advanced on Osso. Russian ficet defeated German fleet in Gulf of Riga. British submarine F-13, aground on Danish island, shelled by German torpedo boat Great Britain and France de- clared cotton absolute contra. band. Venizelos premiership accepted arcex August 22, 101w, Severe artillery fighting in Ar. ras region Italians gained grouud in the Carso front, French sank German destroye. off tend. Russians retired frem the men and Bobr line. Two torperdo boats Os. Nie August 23, 1915, Ossowetz captured by the Ger mans. Italians evacuated Monfalcone. heights of Austrians repulsed Italians east of Polazzo. British fleet of shelled Zeebrugge 30 vessels August 24, 1915, Germans crossed the Narew river Germans planned Bulgaria. attacks to rbia via Austrians Austr eroplane bomba Be ~im orescia. Sixty-two French aviators Rhenish acked sia Dillingen, Sixty allied areoplar Mont Huest forest in Belgit es she August 26, 1915 Brest-Litovsk cap tro-Germans. ured by Aus Germans took Bialystok Reims Germans. British sank bomb again shelled the by aviator Bigsworth German submarine with a August 27, 1915 German advance northeast of Brest.-Litovsk nearly to Kobryn drove Russians Austro-Germans broke throug the Zicta Lipa line in Galicia Italians developed great move ment against Trent and Trieste THE WORLD OVER nnmerons hntlit from KHOwW ave been at points to hold the has mperature of esired degree has b on ntor irk ping with two gap nrodne. the ¢ oon p in Inve A sp ’ arks at and is sure y is finding fm idea being that work even if Once vor in Engl the one gap other becon By a ments th chickens, beginning he they age hatched, a Paris demonstrated that tmeilll essary to the life Willis A inrge to the ws clogged by of wit series interesting experi fore scientist has fire not of vertebrates Calkins of Abington, a chicken raiser, hired an expert to come from to pick chicl The man about 10:30 in the morning dinner, and at five o'clock had 100 birds picked, The efforts being made to educate the public to the necessity of care In the matter of fire prevention are hear ing fruit as shown by recently com piled figures. Fire losses in 1915 de creased $52,755,000, as compared with the 1914 record for the United States and Canada.” The total losses by fire inst year were only $182.836,000, as compared with $235.581,000 the previ ous year, Dr. N. P. Crooks, a ship surgeon em- ployed by the Pacific-Japan Steamship company, has crossed the Pacific oconn 128 times, covering in that time more than 1.000000 miles, The telegraph and telephone systems of the United States and Canada re quire about 4.000000 poles a year for renewnls along old lines and the erect ing of new ones, Commercial houses are urged by the government to save their old corre spondence as material for the paper mills, One large house that formerly burned about 500, tons of old letters each year Is now “selling them, nee loston ene arrived stopped fo eat of the State. PREPAREDFORQUICKREADBING * PAY Wage | woman $4: th 1 1 trie on a basis of twels $46.8 per woman, whi verage income per man is vonth and $36.25 neiderably lower than the sustave A. Link, taxidermist Carnegie Museum, who was fatally ten by a rattlesnake, lost |} of his course employvmg widow i= entitled ation, @ Christley {0 compen cording to Referee CC. E Pittsburgh Wor tion Board He said receive forty per cent for 00 weeks, under sixteen ional five “The fact that of the museum would entitle him Act,” the referes kmen's Mrs the Compensa Link would for of age would be paid. he was in the employ and doing his to the benefits sald and years per cent saiary child addit every work Connellaville coke 400.000-ton shipment mark during the week, the shipment of 200,000 tons of coal to new by prod. uct coke ovens Mm other parts of the country indicated that the trend of the industry was changing Of this amount, 80,000 tons weekly to Youngs. town alone will displace former coke shipments of 64,000 tons, withdrawing that amount of coke from the market. Connellsville operators are quoting coal at $1.49 and $1.60 a ton at the mine, which they contend is equal to $2.66 and $2.70 a ton for coke. Car supply for coke was abundant, but there was a shortage in coal cars. Although the trade pasced the & nt in advan it as i 3 40 is IS pia Second Hand Bargains We have a 5.00} Stoinnds «4 $17 75.00 Knabe.... } 65.00 | Emerson .. 100.00 Kimball... 70.00 Starck. . . 95. ot 0 wn o- Lo oa Lr lat ge =. Fores wive I are | yor lew cata A P. A. Starck Pian r The Sweet Toned Starck irement in a good plana i ful plar t hb sparuts part of the rERrTE te A oa sree Lone qraalliy of th ark The Celebrated are not musteians can rend . : 2 * rranes to sult you Saves $150.00 direct fro sary faede w Ig our fact Lecsons ano je er Uitied tn re pecs ANE OUR we 057 (he - ach in hirage one lessons e Aken lo Pour own bone si Four oh * a Flare Pp FreeCatal ogueCou P. A Starck § i867 ¢ Kk i pon Flegse sond » Hi TRANSFERRED 0 THE ARTILLERY Will Be Third Pennsylvania Field Artillery. THE SUPERNUMERARY LIST Colone mander Asher Miner Becomes Com Of New Regiment—0Offi cers’ Roster——Medical Corps Changes becomes regiment J Ames and © I nf 1 Dewey Harvey, Jr. are to be The head Wilkes Company, The other gd as follows AOE te rein Barre, along with the supply and Batteries DE =» be locate arieion BH Pitts will Battery A. Hi Nanticoke and P Fhe following fon Er yYymou'lh office wore appointed George W. (Coxe, nea William 1 A, Field Artillery Wm. Ho Zk Benjamin signed Robt Jacob Ruvert Alexander A. Mitchell, tery E Gilbert GO tery ¥ Stephen * Elliott, signed, William 8 Mclean, Jr, assigned. Samuel J Battery B. Thomas J. Kniff, first Battery C. Ernest RB. Winters, first lHeutenant, Battery B. Adnah G, tenant, Battery C. George H. Rheinbart, firs! lisuten- ant, not aseigned. John WW, Coaver, first lieutenant, Bat. | tery 1° Jacobosky, captain, Bat capiain, not As captain, lieutenant, Traber, first lieutenant, fie ¢ : r, frecond lieuter racond lieuter : secona Hatters Thomas tenant, Bat Harold R ant David R Battery The following have I'roxwell, second tery | Mahoney, second lieuten Battery F Paimer, second lieutenant officers of the relieved from assign Ninth Infantry and the artillery under meqgical corps been ment to the to are assigned date of today Major Lawrence M. Thompson, Fire! Lieutenant Edward B. Bixby, and First Lieutenant Raymond 1. Wadhamas. First Lieutenant Charles 1. Shafer aseistant surgeon medical corps, of the Ninth Infantry, is reli and unassigned James M. Farr {2 appointed chaplain with rank from February 20, 1911, with the pay and grade of a fire! Heuntenant and aseigned to new artil lery regiment, The following are transferred list: Capinin fermasier Captain Bary. Captain | pany KE, First Lieutenant John T. Jeter, Jr, | battalion adjutant ved will remain Captain officers of the Ninth to the supernumerary Andrew C. Overpeck, quar | Atherton Bowen, John L Fehlinger, Com | Company Q. First Lieutenant Patrick J. Gibbons, | Le ompany H. | Second Lieutenant Conrad PP. Smith, | gh Record Hay Crop For 1816 f Vare-lirumbau the large bay crojg in One vesf{ed Pennsy [Liat ivania is reported ate riment of Apricul the 1816 crop at production 1.1% tons to the acre and harvested. This eased great. was much age is 1.30 inties, two tons ures will : 1.5 by the I {ure which e na Pa tes WG tons 1 he last averaged i0nE were acreage ) the vield larger The ten fone Ww lhe the present and it is expected ti was ine per acre aver some of Year arre in average iz nearly 1 fig : an averas rey » Close 10 tens. J. A Herr Gels New Fa I. Aldus Herr, of Lanca rm Post. gler, orp assigned 'o was ape of Rtate ad- visory market gar ning work. This is a new branch of service inaugurated by the Department of Agriculigre. Deputy Secretary of ill have charge, and his assistant will be E. B. Dorsett, of Mansfield, Tioga county Efforts will be made to better farm marketing The pointed a member of 11 Farm Adviser iat C. BE Carothers, Agriculture, w service will be free to farmers. Appeal Unlom Station Cace. The city of Scranton has notified the { Public Service Commission that it will appeal from Lhe decision of that body ‘declining to order the railroad panies centering in thatg} to NW The fission held | that under the law it no power to | make such an order. The city will ithe case to the Superior Court {in an effort to bave it decided that Bary. Second Lieutenant | Womelsdorf, Company L. One of its moons circle Mars very seven hours,