CENTRE HALL, PA. ATTORNEY Ss. H. B. SPANGLER Attorney-at-Law Bellefonte, Pa, Practices in all the courts, Consultations in English and German, ce, Crider's Exchange Building. Penns Vatley Banking Company CENTRE HALL, PA. Davald K. Keller, Cashier Receives Deposits & Discounts Notes H. G. STROHMEIER CENTRE HALL, : : Manufacturer of and Dealer in HIGH GRADE Monumental Work in all kinds of Marble and Granite Don't Fail To Get Cur Prices | Br ————— Jno. F. Gray & Son (Successors to GRANT HOOVER) Control Sixteen of the Largest Fire and Life Insurance Com- panies in the World. THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST No Mutuals No Assessments Before insuring your life gat the contract of THE MOME which in case of death between and twentieth years returns all pre- miums paid in addition to the face of the policy. MONEY TO LOAN ON FIRST MORTGAGE Office In Crider's Stone Building BELLEFONTE, - PA. Telephone Connection the tenth Save Pennies— Waste Dollars q save pennies by get ting inferior work and lose eh: through lack of ad- vertising value in the work they get. Printersasa rule charge very reasonable prices, for none of them get rich akhough nearly all of them work hard. Moral: Give your printing to a good printer and save money. Some users of printing Our Printing Is Unexcelled Got Something You Want to Sell? Most people have a piece of furniture, a farm imple- ment, or something else which they have discard- ed and which they no lon- ger want, These things are put in the attic, or stored away want advertisement CLOTHES NEVER Go Down Into History as Age of Gold. EXPENSE GIVEN NO THOUGHT Gowns Designed for American Women Command Prices Which a Few Years Ago Would Have Been Considered’ Fabulous w= Brief Descriptions. New York.—It tion to say that clothes bullion. That why {| go down into dress history of gold. Possibly, when the reigned In Italy, and when the gorgeous trousseau In world was prepared for the young Catherine, Princess of Florence, as to mar ry a French king, the son | Premier, there might ha | gowns included as France fea today. is not an exaggera- are made this season wil as the a is Medicis de HIOS the who w of Francois ve been such offers Amer | the dressmakers fo rgot to Place on ry ' | gowns of today was precious jewels, There is a feeling on the part of many women who pay for these new clothes { that there must be a diamond hidder | somewhere in the folds. Everything that could be | create expense wn thought of | used, Every anima | up its hide; i could be prod ural and artificial, | gether and facetted work uen and raised 40 per nt of their inal price bullion in the it I gold was spun les long and devised to : : i Pt killed the up American ore sumpti Where thi to the nrics Sprinkled With Semi.Precious Gems, loop them on a brill » cut to exactly A conspicuous frock brought to of the fifteenth century, the cloth-of-gold gowns and ded in the Catherine de of Scots, The old method of using flat gold threads was brought back into the pro- cess of gown-bullding, Its old name Lame was kept. The name was taken from the method by which this gold thread was pounded and beaten until were stomachers of Elizabeth, Medici and Mary, Queen could be run in and out of the net in any design attempted, Marvelous Needlework. Needleworkers were called up from the furthermost recesses of French art work, and Belgian refugees who had crowded the Institutions of Paris were given work to do in which they were skilled and superior. Whole surfaces of gowns were so closely embroidered with bullion threads that they resembled a fife teenth-century coat of mail. When the French designers began to fash- fon all these magnificent materials into gowns for American women, they painted the lily and gilded refined gold; In other words, they heaped precious peltry on some precious gems, held them together with bul. lion, worked rare ace into the spaces and provided a foundation of metal tissue that was revived from twelfth century. The High Price of Dressing. And now do you this pe. riod will go down into history as the Age of Gold? Everything will that women will wear this winter, it will be gold, silver, and gorgeous fabrics. It is ble, to buy such I price. Paris did not and yet, to do her full bhelleve that out see why steel, not clothes possi however, nt usun done, Justice, she does not she Ww I ro , If as much, than sh » has received in recent years, Why? Because all and dyeing ha glory of her cloths of the ceive more profit work WOrsK, ve become and rhinestones wide girdle is embroidered in id. go wont Gown for Actress. visit and to the ¢ heavily embr an ecgis His Heleriad h century, s+] to be ti fourteent Supp it lace drapery ng of clothes, wther gown made by Ballo This is will wear Yael Garden. and she » title it FASHION TAKES UP PONCHO As. a Departure From the Usual Frill and Ribbons They Have Been Declared Interesting. # os #1 eves The first poncho sts post lag 1 an impre { g ton Ww era in An It modernized painted-skin gn ¥ 1 . Hus Aas niaintie pointin ean dress, i= n the rment wort to sul Bote f the twentieth cent The original por in the Amerienn Museum of Na Histor in New York, an painted ragged edged skin with a hole for the neck, in block design of rich red, blac and yellow. The modern adaptation ury, who is na tfiral leather color, with mottled Batik work in red, simple V, following out the model, middle of the garment is with a broad band of red with an In. pattern. Around the V of the neck and draping the waist is a bronze The decorated Of course, the cord Is not Indian fashion, but ig the concession to grace and charm of line that the present day American woman demands. The of the skirt Is very uneven Unusual Effect. A tip from the dressmaker at home i8 to line the pointed overskirts and the shorter tunic skirts, and even the skirts themselves, with a bright contrasting color of satin, Revers are also lined, flaring culls likewise, The effect of a dark blue or a black satin dress lined with crimson, bright blue, pearl gray or white, Is so attractive thac one stops to admire the ensemble, ————————— Second Hand Bargains We have a large of ef Steinway. . $175.00 Knabe.... 165.00 Emerson .. 100.00 Kimbail... 70.00 Starck. . 195.00 ris ot List We requir 3 re co On acl r expectatior it both ways The Sweet Ton >d Starck inag THAD peatif plan duo that each so parnie part of ¢ 8 pweets ne ne of marvel matches Lone gualily o ) Bi & TERN neh Me prs 7 Payments ; - me 2 sans . irs sad tow ob 4 Gus Every 8tarck Piano ranteed 25 Saves $160. oe © STATE NEWS BRIEFLY TOLD = | i Over the State. The bor i i i increase Mi: City to 270.000 to equip the fire , carried by a } By a vote of 4 against to 1 for, the voters of Topton opposed a loan bill calling for $22, cting a new town hall, electric light plants 000 for ere and witler Miller, a retired at Packer He was in Carbon Reuben BE drover, is dead at his home ton, after a lingering {liness one of the wealthiest men county. 78 vears, While Mrs. Rudolph Granzow was cleaning the stairway of her husband's ghoe store, at Ashland, she tripped and stairs. She was killed outright. With the lighting of the fires nat nine blast furnaces in Lebanon county, was put in operation. North Cornwall | stack was virtually abandoned fifteen years ago, when the Lackawanna Iron husband Out of A! in the woods hunting game, was about to elimb over the trunk of a tree when a squirrel appeared in front of him. Before he could bring his gun to rederick, while Amos F near Dalmatia most of the shot He was removed to the State fire on the squirrel, striking Frederick in a eritical condition { The turkey crop in Berks county is normal few during the last week at prices dottet Commonwoea The put out of ropean competition, bul owing demand hag grown ings from $3 to $3 gorves,