... I Utile a sapersi! I a | NESSUNA BANCA HA MIGLIORE FACILITA' J- MP^ .J di servi-vi come la nostra ? 3 Qualunque operazione che vi può' l'are un'altra £ Banca anche noi possiamo farla ugualmente e for- p" JS se meglio perche' i nostri impiegati sono provetti e capacissimi In qualunque affare bancario. gf J| Noi PAGHIAMO IL 4 PER 100 SUI DEPOSITI j| | First National Bank | Indiana, l'a. >à4Al toltogli I Winters' Restaurant i i La casa delle ostriche | 4 Specialità 1 di ostriche in guscio. Si cucinano in f p i tutte le maniere. Si mandano alle famiglie in mi- sure di "pints,, o "quarts,,. Pranzi all'ordine in f: 4 4 tutte le ore. Pesci freschi di mare Prezzi miti È p (Entrata davanti e di dietro) fr 3 TBI.KFONO 308-Z INDIANA, PA. \ f ALBERTO P. WYLÀND DIRETTORE DI POMPI- FUNEBRI P. IMBALSAMATORE Aperto giorno e notte. Servizio rapido a prezzi miti TELEFONI LOCAI, - BELL Spangier, Pa. R. W. Wehrle & Co. I | Gioiellieri ed Ottici Casa fondata nel 1847 Vendita di orologi Si eseguiscono Riparazioni i L'accuratezza dei mgliori Sarti j IR scontrata nei nostri vestiti. Ogni parte di essi viene ese guita con maestria da persone specializzate in dette parti. Per questa ragione un vestito o paletot comprato Ala noi egua glia in eleganza il vestito su misura fatto dal più' abile sarto con la sola differenza che il nostro prezzo e' una meta* dell'altro. Un vestito male andato puoi sembrare nuovo mediante il nostro sistema di l 'dry cleaning." Conservate sempre i vostri abiti in perfetta condizione median te l'uso de nostri servizi. Chiamateci per telefono e noi manderemo il nostro carro alla vostra porta o speditelo per *• Parcel Post' a nostre spese. E. H. HESS, Tailor and Dry Cleaner PUNXSUTAWNEY, PA. ini rwjrsritrsrsr g rsr g jnr g: g jr jgjf% W. M. MAHAN <, A Avvocato in Cause Civili e Criminali Giudice di Pace Ufficio al Marshall Building : JÌ NO. 12 INDIANA, PA.^ Ir Telefoni: Bell-Local rj'; STUFt per cucina n riscaldamento Ferri di Riparazione A T TAYLOR & SOX N. *2l.'.Hth Street Indiana, Fa. ì (Xuniyl<Y siete a Indiana non di- i < • , < ' -Tir E' AIcA7OOS CAPE ! 5 JjSiti -¥. ■ MCAFOOS, I'ROP J 5 65G pili *s. st. Indiana. Fa | giorno e notte. j WHITE ERONT CAFE & Macelleria di Prima Gasse Quando venite in Bameshcro recate-i ai rostro i'ostau ì rant dava sarete ben trattati. Si cucina ciò' che si tìoman ' da. Abbiamo splendidi iocali per le grandi occasioni. Musica curante il pranzo. I! Restaurant da tutti preti rito. PREZZI MODICISSIMI AZZA HA BUILDING Harnesboro, Pa. J : Garage di Automobili | WILLIAM A. DUMM, PROPRIETARIO BOX 72 Spangler, Pa. Automobili delle famose fabbriche REO A HUD SON. Si eseguiscono qualsiasi riparazioni. Servi zio diretto e celere per tutte le località. TELEFONI - BELL LOCAL. Macelleria di prima J | CLASSE ] Carne fresca, galline, burro, uova, formaggi, lardo 3 fcj ecc. a prezzi da non concorrenza. Noi 3 £ pesiamo sulle famose bilancie DAYTON ELECTRIC* 9 Modicità*. Pulizia. Prontezza. • Frank Bonanno, PROPRIETARIO, BOXSES. | Barnesboro, Pa. | j SANITARY DAIRY ICE CREAI*! 1 \ The Velvet Kind i; < Pura ed igienica Ice Cream. H' da tutti ri- j; > cercata per il sapore gustosissimo. Qualità* i finissima a ouon prezzo. Dateci un ordine e !; s vi convincerete. j| TELEFONI - Bell 59R - Locai 390W Ì| I" INDIANA, PA. | Capano & Vaienti Creekside, Pa. General Mercliandise, Notaio Pubblico e Banca. Per richieste di ; matrimonio, per esigere denaro da qualunque parte d'America, per Atti, Contratti, Procure spciali e Generali, Atti di Espa tri. Permute. Consensi di Matrimonio, Procure alle liti, Spedizio i ne di moneta ed altro. Sedici anni di professione, praticati tia i . Yatesboro e Creekside. attraverso tanti panici e senza dare ra gioni a lamenti sia per la prontezza che per lo sconto accordato li ai clienti. L'ufficio e' posto di fronte la sala 4 'CANE VA". I MIKE STABILE I 5 UNICO NEGOZIO DI GENERI ALIMENTARI IMPORTATI E DOMESTICI ♦ PASTA IH GRAGNAXO OLIO DI OLIVA DI • LUCCA—FORMAGGI —SALSA DI POMID0 0 ' ! J PASTA DI GENOVA ALICI SALATE TOX f • NO ALL'OLIO GIARDINIERA ALL'ACETO - • i FRUTTA VERDURA SIGARI TABACCO è | CANDYS ICE CREAM. ECC. | i Prezzi da non temere concorrenza i 1 343 - 4th St. JEANNETTE $ —.—- —• \ ..The Indiana Macaroni Company.. OL;R MACARONI Can be Bought at the Following Stores: The Cunningham Department Store, Steveson A: Mvers, Plotzer Meat Market. They are FRISH. Made in Indiana I OBSERVATION. It is the close observation of little things which is the secret of success in business, in art, m science and in every pursuit in life. Human knowledge is but an accumulation of small facts made by successive generations of men —the little bits of knowledge and experience care fully treasured up by them growing at length into a mighty pyramid. — Samuel Smiles. CONFER ON EFFECTS OF WAR ON RACE. ] ii iy ■/ - ,/j Just what effect this European war will have on the advance toward hu man perfection through eugenics and euthenics will be discussed at the na | tional conference on race betterment to be held in San Francisco Aug. 6. The i photo shows the race betterment exhibit at the Panama-Pacific exposition. Some Measures. The length of the foot was used for distances long before it was fixed at twelve inches. A "furlong" is only a furrow long. The breadth of the hand became the standard because the eas- | iest way of measuring the height of the horse. The length of the arm gave j the length of the "ell," and from the 1 elbow to the tip of the middle finger ! was the "cubit." By stretching out I both arms as if on a cross man invent- j ed the measure of the "fathom." j Cloth measure still decrees that two and one-half inches make a "nail." j and this is the width of four fingers I held together and measured across the ; nails. The apothecary's "dram" origi- ! nally signified "only as much raw spir- j it as can be held in the mouth." j On the Moon. The question "Could a man live on j the moon?" has been put to an emi nent astronomer, who replied: "I am afraid not. A man transplanted to the moon would find himself the lone in habitant of a perfectly lifeless orb in which eternal silence reigns. He would have to manage without air, water or fire. He would not need to put windows in his house, for there is no wind, no rain, no dust, upon the moon. It has been truly and practical ly observed that the moon is apparent ly abandoned to death, nourishing no Inhabitants, producing nothing resem bling trees, flowers or beautiful things of any kind—useless, in short, except as a mass of extinct volcanic rubbish. 1 which drags the sea into tides and re- i fleets the sunbeams in moonlight." Baked Men. Workers in porcelain factories are 1 literally baked, but by some miracle ! they remain sufficiently undone to live. At least if they are not quite baked they endure a stronger heat than that which browns the Sunday sirloin. The furnctes wherein procelain is finished , are kept at the fiercest heat used in any industry. A chain of workmen, their heads and bodies swathed in fire proof garments, take the finished pieces i from the fire one at a time and pass them to the cooling room. The man at the head of this chain—he who stands nearest the furnace —can only work in five minute shifts. In his interims of ■ rest he lies on a mattress, drinking : glass after glass of ice water from the hands of a small boy. Dean Swift's Complaint. It is no new thing, this complaint which one hears of the high cost of living. Writing to Stella from Lou don in the year 1710, Dean Swift re marks: "1 lodge in Bun* street. St. James, where I removed a week ago. I have the first floor, the dining room and bedchamber at S shillings a week: plaguy deep, but I spend nothing for eating, never go to a tavern and very seldom in a coach, yet. after all. it will be expensive." Making Him Pay. Lawyer (to kicking client) Well, have you at last decided to take my advice and pay this bill of mine? Client—Yes. Lawyer—Very well. (To clerki "William, add $5 to Mr. Smith's bill for further advice." —Boston Tran script. _ Opportunity Calls. "Opportunity is at your door." "What is it?" inquired the pessimis tic citizen. "Opportunity to subscribe to some worthy cause, or a chance to Invest?" —Louisville Courier-Journal. How They Do It. Steve —They say that waiters can al ways size a man up. Lillian—l sup pose they measure him from tip to tip. —Judge. Wealth is not his that has it, but hi* that enjoys it Clever. Fond Mother—lmprovise? Why, mj daughter can improvise any piece ol music put before her!— Judge. Ypres in England. We have the name of Ypres in Eng land—in that of the Ypres tower at Rye, in Sussex, though local talk knows nothing of its proper pronunci ation and broadly calls It the "Wipers tower." It is a twelfth century build ing, the oldest secular building of all the Cinque ports, and was at one time the only stronghold of the town, though later walls and gates were built. The reason for its name is to be fouud in the commonly accepted statement that it was built by William des Ypres. i earl of Kent.—Loudon Globe. "Is It Possible?" Prince George of Denmark was nick named Est-il-possible by James 11. It is said that when the startling events of the revolution of HISS succeeded one another with breathless rapidity the emotions of Prince George found vent in the repeated exclamation. "Est-il possible?" King James, enumerating those who had forsaken him. said. "And Est-il-possible has gone too!" A Lamblike Lion. "Well, did you have that social lion at your reception that you were tell ing me about?" "Ob. yes. He was there." "And did he roar?" "No. His wife was also present, and he could only bleat. ""—Birmingham Age-Herald. Meek Reproach. Lady (who has given tramp a plate of scraps)— You must feel the humilia tion of begging for food. Tramp—lt's not that so much. mem. What hurts uie Is that I'm depriving the pore in nereent fowls of a feed.—London Tele graph. CHASING THE RAINBOW. Curious Legends That Are Told In Different Countries. We have all of us heard stories of the treasure at the end of the rain-1 bow. There is a pot of gold there, you know. And if we could only walk far J enough, run fast enough, we might find it and be ever thereafter happy. That is what our nurses tell us when we are children, isn't it? And sometimes we learn that the rainbow is a bridge, and the thunder Is the roar of the beavy wheels going over it. These are the stories that we hear in childhood about the rainbow. Chil-! dren of other lands hear many other stories. In Greece nurses tell the children that if any one by chance stumbles over the end of the rainbow bis or her sex is changed. A fine story that to tell a child! The little Greeks must run away from the ends of the rain bow instead of seeking them to find ' our pot of gold. The little Turk hears from his nurse j that if he can but touch the band of orange that spans the hdavens in the rainbow his head will turn to silver, with rubies for eyes and teeth of gold. In many parts of Russia the rain bow is called a pump, and in Hungary it is called "God's pump" and "Noah's pump." In Russia, in some provinces, the wells are covered with strong plat forms. so that the water cannot be drawn from them by the rainbow, and in other provinces it is said that three angels have charge of the rainbow one to draw water through it from the earth, another to give water from it to the clouds and another to return the 4 water to the earth in the form of raJo —Boston Herald. j
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers