BIST OF THE | “Teddy” Tetzlaff, the racing driver, | drove his car to a new world’s record iat Salt Lake. He covered a mile over ADVANCE FASHIONS. Velvet Wraps and Hats—Sets and Spangles— Juniors criminating buyers. ’ | a straight-away track in 26% seconds. on, the cloth and aie guaranteed | At the closing of the annual con- Modes. sunproof and tub-proot. | vention of the International Typo- BELTS AND SHOES. | graphical Union in Providence, dele- oo -— . igates voted to hold the 1915 meeting = Leathea belts are still important ieront Page Stories Retold in |in Los Angeles a's items in school outfits, the older . | The battleships Illinois and Missouri girls delighting in the wide vest Paragraphic Form. {arrived at Norfolk, Va., with midship- . : hhaped styles that have pockets for ; men back from their annual cruise. =, i Jersey have been ordered to Guan { tanamo to replacs { Texas. | The United States battleship Louis JNTERESTING MINOR EVENTS By Telegraph and Cable Roll in the Important and the Inconsequen- tial, but to Each Is Given Its Proper Space. { Vera Cruz. : Canneries in Delaware and Mary: | of the absence of tin. { have to use glass jars, Franklin D. Roosevelt, RRC IE RE ET A TS € War Bulletins TH The Dutch Government officially ! : Gn Tov or a red | &uve the French Government renewed | ate, from New York. BESurances of iis: neutrality in thel™ gp. ‘eect Tarte on has Eilled : 4 3 a : 3 ou : § Present conflict and of its firm inten and six other persons injured when 3 5 A ale it Jospevad. 5 |a Southern Railway excursion train ousana. Jutch troops are on | was derailed at Tuxedo, N. ¢ =08 jf the frontier. Large areas of land! ’ 5982 / * State bankers met at Raleigh, N. C. have been flooded to a depth of three | t 2 feet as a preca’ionsry measure. Beiween 200,000 and 250,000 Swiss | Carolina curpency association. #roops are mc:ilized on the frontiers | 488 a precautionary measure. The passes of the are all heid by The British Admiralty sent orders | #o the Mediterrancza fleet to attack the Austrian fieet at once. Great Britain severed diplomatic welations with Austria, as did her ally Hf rance, without a declaration of war. The American Red Cross Hospital <ship which is to be sent to Europe on war relief work will be commanded by Rear Admiral Aaron Ward, U. S. MN. retired. The United States naval auxiliary "Wulcan is preparing to get away for Xurope with supplies for the Ameri- «an cruisers Tennessee and North arolina, recently dispatched with Funds for stranded Americans on the “Continent. Official announcements now in- «fiicate that fighting has become gen- ral all along the frontier between {the French and German troops. Copenhagen, which is getting more aoturate. German news than any | mould ‘runners 36 potteries in West meighboring statc. hears that the Jirgin'a are at a standstill. “German casualties in the battle of Philadelphia bakers predict that Liege were 4,500 killed, 12,000 wound- | , Wii go as high as $9.50 a barrel. «ed, 3,700 prisoners. : The Fif'h Regiment, United States England is row well on with. her Marie mobilization, and has between 500,000 self. turalization ° papers more than 30 per cent. the list. ond year. a majority decision in the United States District Court at St. Paul. prices for meats. A conference was held in Washing- ton to scheme to meet the $100,000,000 ieficit which is expected in customs revenues. Taxing beer, cigars and to- bacco would yield $70,000,000. As a result of the strike of 600 Corps, will sail to San’ Do- mingo on the transport Hancock. and 600,000 men under RIMS, not Majtr-General William 8. MeCas: @ounting the nativnal reserve. key, U. S. A, retired, died at his “amy =| aome in Pacific Grove, Cal, aged 71 i Washington | years on # Td Pclice Commissioner Woods of New York, svanted a permit for a women’s parade on August 29 as a protest President Wilson, acting as presi- dent of the American Red Cross, is- : sued a nation-wide appeal for funds. | against the European war. - Secretary Bryan's peace treaties | Harrisburg (Pa.) sufiragists sent ;wwith Holland and Norway were rati- | fifteen pounds of gold and silver ar- ‘fied by the Senate. They are the | ticles for the suffrage “Mazlting Pot” first of the’ 20 treaties pending. at Chicago. President Wilson returned to Wash- Secretary Daniels announeed that ington from his journey to Rome, Ga, | all the large warships of the Atlantic with the body of Mrs. Wilson. The | fleet will be withdrawn from Vera President appeared to have been! Crnz. : @aged by his sorrow and strain. Hans Bumbe of New York, 19 years ai u ited States Senate has | old, committed suicide affer being dis- jpasied the Merchant Marine bill, | appointed in his efforts to return to =which is expected to put the Ameri-| Gérmany to fight. «an flag on the as. | Cincinnati’s Postmaster instructed Washington declares that rural mail carriers to report addresses the | United States will protest against the | of darmers having butter, eggs and ase of automatic mines in the North | vegetables for sale, thus enlarging the Bea by Germany and Great Britain. | scope of the parcel post. . The Department of Labor he in- | structed all immigration officials’ on | = . x a inetd fhe Atlantic Coast that seamen must | be examined for admission into the | | { Sporting Anited States, the same as cther ap- | President Farrell of the New York plicants. Americans announced the purchase Leaders of the largest indusirial en- | of Pitcher Martin of the New London #erprises in the United States have de- | Club of the Eastern Asociation. smanded an American trade fleet to | Manager Staliings of Boston, be- waise the shipping blockade and ask | lieves that every ome of the first #he government to insure war risks on | division clubs has an.excellent chance Wessels. for the National League pennant and ) | that the fight will be close right to £ { the very last. MIT General Tyrus Cobb, centre fielder of ‘he Detroit Tigers, signed a new three year contract with the club. The new contract does not contain the ten cay clause, and Cobb’s signing it silences i the boasts of the Federal League that he will jump. His salary is $15,000, it is said. Road trips as successful as the last A Xawald 2. Amory of Chicago, a pat- «ent attorney and secretary of the | "Western Railroad Association, was smurdered and his body locked in 1is «office. At Washington a census has been issued giving estimates of Ainericans stranded in various places in Europe, { the total being nearly thirty-nine one of the Athletics are few and far thousand | between. The world’s champions won postoffices from civil service. | fourteen games and lost two. Cincinnati. bakers announce that | all five-cent loaves of bread would be waised to 10 cents. Two of the American navy’'s four | mew dreadnoughts were nearly three- sguarters completed on August 1. Sewall C. Strout, associate justice of the Supreme Court of Maine, re- tired, died in Portland, aged 86 years. The twelfth annual convention of LE Foreign SHE The police began an investigation of the fire which destroyed the Inter- colonial Railway grain elevator at St. John, New Brunswick, at a loss of | $1,000,000. Alfred G. Vanderbilt has presented { The battleships Virginia and New the Louisiana and | jana broke her port propellor shaft ! while en rcute for Guantanamo from 4 | 1ana will be forced to ~lese because Canners will Assistant | Secretary of the Navy, announced his { candidacy for the United States Sen- o devise a plan for protecting he : cotton crop by formation of a North : © John Rolf, a farmer, shot his wife as she was about to undergo a sur- gical operation in a Kansas City hos- pital. He then shot and killed him- Applications in New York for na- have increased Germans lead John Phillip Holland, inventor of the submarine boat, died in his homa in Newark, N. J.,, in his seventy-sec- The Intermational Harvester Com- pany was declared to be a monopoly In restraint of interstate and foreign trade, and was ordered dissolved by Chicago packers predict record war #hs National Rural Letter Carriers’ .Asgociation was held in Washington. Respecting Presrdent Wilson's wish dor simplicity the Georgia Legislature «decided not to attend Mrs. Wilson’s “funeral at Rome. James Moran, said to be the oldest aman in Illinois, celebrated his 111th Jbirthday near Bloomington. Mrs, J. J. Wilder, mother-in-law of J. Randolph Anderson, president of the Georgia Senate, was killed when ser automobile was struck by a train smear Atlanta. * Harold Witherapoon walked from “Whiting, Ind., to Chicago, a distance af 28 miles, to enlist in the army. Jt is estimated that 20,000 longshore- =men are idle on both sides of the North River in Ne ‘ork harbor. Thomas G. P a retired "olfbero, N. H., was costs for beati 0 take pictur manufacturer of fined one cent a: xeporter who tried is estate. — coast, province of . { to quell an uprising. | Charlerol, Belgium caused by a small fire. his stable of 60 valuable horses to the British Government for use in the army. President Carbajal, his Cabinet, and the Federal army have left the City of Mexico when arrangements had been made for the peaceable occupation of the city by the tri- umphant Constitutionalists under Car- ranza. : Pol Plancon, one of the most popu- lar opera and concert singers in the world, died in Paris, aged 60. He had been ill since June. Brazil has ordered ten freight steamships to ply between Brazilian ports and New York. Two deaths from bubonic plague occurred in Liverpool. Troops have been sent Manabi, into the Ecuador, Fourteen persons 50 injured in a | were killed and in a church at 4 McCall Design New York, August 14, mountains, or at the shore, people haye time to plan ahead for autumn outfit, and few indeed are the women not interested in knowing how the sands are running in the glass of fashion. They are running backward with ‘a yengeance just now, as the arrival of the basque and redingote prove, and the leading’ mode,’ for next season will be a rather close copy of the ‘‘Moyen Age’ styles that were with us so many years back that it Is not wise to remember them if one is sensitive as to the passage of time. LIKE BUT DIFFERENT. All these revivals ‘are like the originals, but with a difference that brings them in line with present tastes and requirements, and as of- ten remarked they come in gradually so that to the initiated they are seldom altogether novel or unex- pected. Fitted basques are revived, but their hard lines are made grace- ful by small side gathers, and they ‘‘fit”’ loosely not after the old sau- sage type, while the loose straight front line that has been with us so long continues under all the frills and fripperies of this fussy period. VELVET WRAPS AND HATS. The velvet capes, with their smart striped linings that haye been spar- ingly worn this season, will be more generally adopted in the Au- tumn and the same thing will be true of the velvet hats now reckon- ed advanced. These will be in the line with the capes and with the general trend toward velvet and satin.” The combinations of odd ma- terials bids fair to continue with us for some time to come, and clever dressers who know how valuable this trend of style is to the woman who likes to stretch her dress allowance, are not mourning its continuance. LATE WRINKLES. A late wrinkle is the use of filmy material for tunies over drop skirts of velvet and of the velvet cape and basque worn with flounced skirts of tulle or lace. This ss so new that it will surely last for some time and affords a valuable suggestion for fu- ture planning. The hem stitching that caught on so this summer is reproduced in waists of silk and satin for fall wear, while the picot edge finish is to con- tinue as popular as ever for the collars of lace, organdie and lawn which are too pretty to be discarded. JUNIOB CLOTHES. Children’s outfits are especially in- teresting as school days approach. These reflect the trend in adult fash- ions in their picturesque quaintness. Dutch types and the quaint dress familiar in Dickens’ illustrations, rival Kate Greenaway styles. But- tons haye ceased to hide behind flaps and come out as important points in decoration especially on the small boys suits. WASH DRESSES FOR SCHOCL USE. Fashion ana hygiene unite in en- dorsing wash dresses for school use. At the best schools one sees a pre- ponderance of well-made, freshly laundered frocks worn by pupils ;of all ages, many eyen of the teachers adopting this pretty and sensible fashicn. Topped by one of the smart warm long coats now so well endor- sed, these wash dresses are complete- ly concealed outdoors in cold weath- er and emerge fresh and attractiye in appearance and exactly right in weight for the usnal rather over- heated rooms. . It is advisable in making®up school frocks to secure material not only good looking, but good wearing, and ine The panic was Lr While disporting themselves in the the watch at one side or both. sensible heels or not all, juniors. Fannie Field. Citrolax! CITROLAX! CITROL AX! 1t’s a laxative, of course—and the nicest hot weather drink you ever tasted. Flushes thoroughly, and pleas- antly, too, F. O. Orysler, Syracuse, N.Y. “Bays: ‘“‘Have used laxative for 15 years but this citrolax has got everything else beat a mile. Try it. Sold by all Dealers Eyzrywhere. ad DEAD J.ETTER LIST. Miss Elizabeth Grayes, Shedrick Jenniugs, 2; Mrs. Maggie Black, 2. Cards—J. E. Miller, Miss M. Pan- glar, Mrs. Wm. Flatter, Mrs. Ida Rice, Mrs. W. J. Schrock, Mrs. Joe. Shenic, Mrs. 1. Wagner. August 15,1914. J. F. NAUGLE, P. M. WEAK WEARY WOMEN. Learn the Cause of Daily Woes and End Them. When the back aches and throbs, When housework is§torture. When night’ brings no rest nor sleep. ‘When urinary disorders set in. Women’s lot is a weary one. Doan’s Kidney Pills are for] weak kidneys. Have proyed their worth in thous- ands of cases.§ Read this Ber:in Woman's testi- mony. Mrs. G. L. Brant, Comberland St., Berlin, Pa., says: ‘‘I was troubled for a long time by dull, nagging back- aches and kidney secretions caused me annoyance by their irregularity in passage. Doan’s Kidney pills drove away the aches and pains and behe- fited me in every way. Others of my family haye taken this remedy and benefit has always been had’’. Price 50c¢, at all} deaters. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills the same Mrs. W. ©. Burkett recommends.: Foster- Milburn Co. Prop:, Buffalo, N. Y. ad. eee ee eee Meat Ea ing Eyer since man lost she instinct that the lower animals have which enables them to select the foodstuffs’ that best agree with them, questions, of diet have given rise to innumer- able arguments. Historians and po litical economists have discussed the bearing of thfs important factor in the life of nations. The medical profession has devoted profound re- search work to determining what foodstuffs are best suited to nourish m-n in various yocations in different cl. mates. The question of what to eat and how to get it has occupied a large proportion of the thought and effort of mankind and will undoubt- edly continue to do so. The increase in the price of meat during the past few years, nob to mention the past few weeks has set thousands of housewives seeking information as to the rela- tive yalue of meat as a food stuff compared with other available como- dities. Albumen or nitrogen is to be found in meat, beans and other vegetables. It can be obtained from meat more easily than from vegetables. This form of nutrition is in greater de- mand by the growing chiid of youth than the developed adult. An allow- ance of two or three ounces of red meat a day according to the amount of physical exercise is all that an adult should eat. With this they should have from one to one and a half ounces of fats and 5 1-2t0 9 1-2 Shoes are broad soled with wide in the sport type of shoe popular with the throat and stops irritating coughs and summer colds. Sold by all Dealers Everywhere. cloth is a leading fayorits with dis = A little heavier : thana gingham this outwears Galatea. The colors are woven in, not printed contains neither Opin, substance. and allays Feverishness. has been in constant use Flatulency, Wind Colic, Diarrhoea. It regulates o mA, rm oS a, CHURCH SERVICES. Methodist Episcopal church ser- vice, Rev. G. A. Neeld pastor—Ser- vices at10:30 a. m. Sunday school 9:30 a. m. Epworth League at 6:45 Pp- m, Evening service at 7:30. S88. Philip and James Catholic church, Rev. J. J. Brady, pastor.— Mass next Sunday at 8:30 and 10 a. m. Church of the Brethren=-Preaching 10:30 a.m. and 7:30 p. m. Sunday School, 9:30 a: m. Christian Workers Meeting at 6:30 p, m. Saturday evening, 7:30 p. m. Teacher Training elasses meet Monday evening 7 and 8 o’clock, respectively. Sunday School Workers Meeting, Friday evening, 30th inst.. at 7:30. Hog Diseases Diseases caused the swine breeders of Pennsylvania to lose 47,500 hogs, valued abt $655,000 last year, acecord- ing to a report which has just been issued by the Department of Agri- culture. This is an average death rate of 42 per thousand head. During 1913 the ratio was 43 per 1000 head and a total of 48,600 head were lost. Census Reports, which are dated Jan- uary 1, 1914, show that there 1,130,000 head of hogs in Pennsylvania and they are valued at $15,594,000 or $13.80 per head. . The farmers of the entire nation last year lost 7,004,800 head of thogs from disease. Their total value {was $75,000,000 and the death rate 119. per 1000. - “Stay-at-Home” Sufferers of Hay . Fever and Asthma, Get a Bottle of Foley's Hon- ey and Tar Compound: Restful sleep, relief and comfort from choking, gasping asthma, and tormenting hay feyer for those who takes Foley’s Honey and Tar. It spreads a healing soothing coating as it glides downiZa raw tickling ad Pennsylvania Horses Worth:$139.00 Each. Children Cry for Fletcher for the relief of Constipation, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAY Bears the Signature of Bible Class, | Phe latest | meat for those who can digest them but require as a rule about twice the quantity in weight. ete., can be eaten in moderation ac- cording to the degree with which the individual can digest them. the liver, kidneys and other organs are overworked in burning it up and getting rid of the ashes. too much meat, particularly #& hot The Pennsylvania horse is now worth $139.00 per head, according to a report just issued by the United States Department of Agriculture, while a year ago his ayerage value was $133.00. There are 584,000 horses on the farms of this State and they are valued at $81,176,000. This State ranks six. teenth in number of horses compared with other States and sixth in aver- age price per head, ounces of mixed vegetable diet, such as potatoes, white bread, oatmeal, hominy, ete. Meat once a day isenough for those taking moderate exercise, with egg, vegetables, bread, and a little sugar and butter or other fats. Beans make a good substitute for Squash, turnips, spicach, lettuce, State was 550,000 and had an aggre- gate value of $72,600,000. In the entire United States there are 20,962,000 horses and they are worth $2,291,638,000 or $109.32 each. When an excess of meat is eaten ‘‘Doan’s Ointment cured me of As a people Americans eat entirely | eczema”that had annoyed me [for a In 1910 the number of horses in this |' \ ht NN The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his per=- sonal supervision since its infancy. XL Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and ¢¢ Just-as-good >’ are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare=] goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It | Morphine nor other Narcotic Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms For more than thirty years it all Teething Troubles and the Stomach and Bowels, i natural sleep, | : — Ee i Pla | In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought * THE CENTAUR ce AY cind YORK CITY, A TAIN TATA AN PROFESSIONAL CARDS, A. HOLBERT, . ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, MERSET, PBN®R So a"fMoe tn ook Beerits’ Block. up stair® VIRGIL KR. 5A YLOUR, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, : SOMERSET » WL. 20-0¥ G G ROPE, JUSTIUS OFTHE PEACE. CONFLUENCE, PA Dseds. fortages, Agreenents and all Lega Papers promptly executed Vv. -6ma’m & DIAMOND BRAND of Re 0t© 4s. a, eters" Subsge ary LADIES { ; GoLD metallic boxes, sealed with Blu Ribbon, TARE NO OTHER. Buy of Four Drugeist and melt for CHI.OHES.TERS DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, for twent -ive years regarded as Best, Safest, Always Reliable, ‘SOLD BY ALL DRUGGIST sk your Druggist for CHI-CHES-TER S BAITED BRAND PILLS in HO IRE EVERYWHERE Moms | | { { 51EY KIDNEY PILLS | 4 wd 8 Lie Nise Yi BACKACHE KIDWEYS AND BLADDER Don’t endure the needless pain and torment of rheumatism, aggravated as it is by the hot weather; W. T. Hutchens, Nicholson, Ga., says:— ‘‘I suffered the ‘aches and pains of rheumatism, swollen feet, irregular painful bladder action, but Foley Kidney Pills fixed me up so quickly.”’ Foley’s are the best. Sold by all Dealers Everywhere. ad eee emma W. H. Halfacre, Dexter, Mo., bought Foley Kidney Pills for Mrs. Halfacre, who was down on -her back with kidneys so sore he had to help her moye. He says, ‘‘She would I joy with pain across her kidneys but after she took the second bottle of Foley Kidney Pills, she was as well and strong as ever.” ‘Sold by all Dealers Everywhere. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA Had the Laugh on Stephens, i The story is told of Alexander Stephens that at a political mee ‘he vigorously decried his oppo: (charge, exclaiming, “I deny the ; “Yes,” promptly replied his antag6 (nist, “that is what I expected you. do. For twenty years you have been; {going around denying facts.” Th audience roared with delight and Mr. (Stephens left the hall, having learn ‘a valuable lesson in the use of a wo: ad =p Prehistoric Skeletons, : , Three skeletons apparently of pre- ‘historic folk, one of whom must have, Istood about ten feet high were uns earthed by laborers digging founda: tions .for cottages at Dysart county, {Louth, Ireland. The skull of the skeleton was entire, and measgy” { eighteen inches from the croy /the chin, and the leg bones ans ® long time. The result was lasting’’— because of its fine clear colors, and nice texture weather, land waste Renfrew gt Devonshire and health thereby. much money Hon. 8. W. Matthews, Commissioner, | ~~ u2x’3 Labor Statistics, Augusta, Me. ad ‘were abnormally large. The gs) were in’ seperate graves, ; EE —— 1 | FOLEY Lh J ILLS GHICHESTER S PILLS 4 &\ Wh a Dropping and A Franl wrote to! face, Hoar just finishe as many a under one heard yot increase tl "and let © Would yo there or ° do you a for rot? what shou To thes: ticultural replied a: let apples trees droj to rob the move the ' they are time the trees. Ii or Codlix germs in diseases to Bere healthy a undergoir cay, not eases thi commen However. consider | fed daily fruit is | Prove we them for better w and dise them to , commen and feed Av diseases | yi ter, unde of thinn and carr; Replyi = . would re for the recomimne mencing depends ~ trees as ground i if there | orchard, well op pruning, much ri were. de full of orchardi dt isnot as the ( rots bad and esp this tim my pea ripe rot boiled li 4 pounds ¢ : of sulfw { spray a need of * other pc ‘Breth: pastor— day Aug mit Mil and in aus Christia All are WHEN his Their T La Najot s x § ! Anott that pi howeve " their di presenc ' without dead is dead a only of survivo ‘workin; ly place of the the onl; tives i quickly white = an effo perforn mot, th pends 1 If the I built o burned ne t Sem th mp with jane 3 ithe ev
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers