'W W1 I JAMES COLANGELO \ g Italian interpreter g g and Labor Information Bureau Hotel Montgomery Indiana, Pa. pinMronig 9 I INDIAN" EXCELSIUkI I ♦ | SOLD BY I | INDIANA CYCLE CO. j $ CARPENTER AVE. INDIANA. PA.| RESERVED SPACE FOR THE INDIANA MACARONI CO. ! I .f *T RT y? if JT JT .T lt if FT ~iff3 | If you want good fruits go to ROSS' STORE P. tj corner Sixth and Water st. or call Local i gj 'phone. | We get fresh fruits 'of all kinds twice a 3 w O m -J '3 t: week. 2 i We specialize "on California fruits. | L " La" —Ja L oil* *'-1 A~A L.B. —''la ACa" |( ' |M| || , 2* -M German Artillery Train on tin March v- f ; V- t JbP :. p&rp f§|l| IIMHr'-- © 1914, by American Press Association GLIMPSES OF THE WAR Vienna, Aug. 26. —It is reported here today that war was declared against Japan by the imperial government of Austria. Rome, Aug. 26. —A dispatch to the Corriere d'Atalia from Antivari, Mon tenegro, says the fortifications of Ca taro, the Austrian seaport in Dal matia on the Adriatic, have been de stroyed and that the Austrian com mander is now parleying for terms of surrender. Paris, Aug. 26.—The Journal says it has obtained the news that in a bat tle fought yesterday an uncle of Em peror William, commanding the im perial guard, was killed. Ottawa, Aug. 26.—A war gift is being offered by the Ontario govern ment in the form of a donation to the value of $500,000, this sum to be tendered through the Dominion gov ernment to the imperial government to be used in whatever way is thought best. Nish, Servia. Aug. 26. —Servian troops reoccupied Scbac (Shabats) Monday. Washington, Aug. 26. President Wilson issued a proclamation declar ing the Uni.ed States neutral in the war between Germany and Japan. Several senators received protests from the German-American Alliance of Holyoke, Mass., against the report ed sale of arms and ammunition by the Colts Arms company of Hartford, Conn., to the Canadian government. London, Aug. 26.—The creative genius of the London tailors will be put to test this fall as no models may be looked for from Paris while the war lasts. Falmouth, England, Aug. 26. —The Holland-American line steamer Pots- j dam arriveu here with 400 Germans and some Austrian reservists on board. The reservists were immedi ately made prisoners of war. JAPS READY TO HELP Would Send Force to Europe If Eng land Requested. Washington, Aug. 26. —Japan may he drawn outside of the far east into a more distant theater of war, an official of the Japanese embassy declared. Despite Japan's assurances that sha intended to confine her war activities to the Orient, the Japanese diplomat said the scope of Japan's action de pends largely upon Great Britian. If war exigencies of England should require assistance by Japan in Europe, the Japanese official said, Nippon, by her treaty obligations, would be forced seriously to give assistance outside of Asia. Train Kills Constable. Elizabeth. Pa., Aug. 26. —Albert E. Hendershot, a constable, was killed by a train near West Elizabeth. ► WEATHER EVERYWHERE. * • * * Observations at United States * * weather 'mreau taken at Sp. m. * * yesterday follow: * * Temp. Weather. * * Pittsburgh 6S Cloudy * * New York 66 Cloudy * * Boston 70 Clear * * Buffalo 62 Cloudy ♦ * Chicago 68 Cloudy * * St. Louis 72 Cloudy * * New Orleans.. 78 Cloudy * * Washington.... 60 Rain * * Phßadelr Ma... 68 Cloudy ♦ * . * The WeatTier * * Unsettled tonight; Thursday, * * cloudy; moderate east winds. * TIE PAIRIOT Hans at !N git. To a traveiei air|\;ir_ if u Lid !'.-i repeals a sbUtKilu a lot ••• i i bp* tH V t!l' e\ • I ><. _ -Ji ui.u r!i < •••■! I!o i • - • !mi. !> ;!. Wcff r !•> • • L . <1 gel to -. ilii'iii i > a • riant • of ll ?! iit: -In-d i :i : MIL :it ' ears it : straiicc 'MI,:'; r U >|r;u.L IMliiatiiL'f ninl |.l§* \\ i l;i unKit n -ir* <|> *! *•; eis aiiioir ' \ w j... i: •■ . li-_* ii! - of I Sit* ''••• l - it; ||. '!> crt>|s Hal M< Jlo- l>ti-iil t.l '... . • I tetmur.g *vt : ha ■ra *- t ... v\ liw like lo itiMi'O" I *t:lt t*ver\ a holiday, bin there ,> tuyMeri m n. si.oi.t hy stieels. Hied wirli U:l)< wan walls and darkened windows, where , footstep echoes disinally and the i.e:' of a horse's hoofs resounds dke inus ketry. and there i> mystery, too in ih stretches ot fragvan! card* n- c * their treetops reaentng up dark mn>. es into the gulden gnv\ thai lianas I;k a halo above the City inii waves meet an opposing surface a. a wai: they are reflected like light waxes The .sound so heard as if originating behind toe retleetini! pek ot rhat iD toe past tense." rep icq ner husband meekly Philadelphia Ledger Jealousy is the tear or apprehensioi of superiority; envy is our onexsinest under it. Africer ;ji s' . An extraortiiii.il> juiguu. which Is claimed to lie (lie Eng -h language. is spoken t\ iiian> of the names on tile All '•.MI Jtietll Mrs M.;:\ GnUilt ill iiel" !HMI., "Aiolie* !ti V\ est Alriel! * "Listening v ef> en set ttily. it took a great 10.-l of" persuasion to make me lio'iev. tin- v> -rls v\ it Mug : speei ij he knew 'Give Ule In* money "Some of the vvuids. ot course. be eotne commonplaces of everyday lite and I am sure the next time I call on a friend who is rich enough to have a manservant assoeiatiou of ideas will take me back, and i shall a-k quite naturally, '.Maissa ib?' instead of the customary 'ls Mrs Joues at home?'" Bush Negroes of Guiana. The boscli tipyers tbush negroesi of French Guiana are magnificent speci mens of }>|i -ica! n.anliood To the numerous cuts of their braided hair are often attached nickel bicycle clips and u> their ears rings of gold. Gaudy colored breechejoths "made iu Gertna ay' are practically their only clothing They are pagans and worship the cot ton tree to propitiate a bad spirit Obeuh is the name they give to auv thing about which they may be super stitious. applying it to all evil intiu ences. to their fetishes or charms in general Matty resented a camera as a bail obeah Their language, called taki-taki (talk talk; is a most remarkable linguistic compound of their original ITomnnti coast dialects, with a good measure of pidgin English and I bitch aud spiced with a few derivatives from French and Spanish Dilemmas of Welsh Postmen. The postal departments of certain districts in Wales are in a well nigh chaotic condition owing to the pre ponderance of families hearing the name of Jones For example, the pool unfortunate Swansea Valley postman is to be pitied when he finds that lit has to deliver correctly seventeen let ters. all addressed confidentially to "Mr Jones." where there are nine different families of the name within a radius of 500 yards in a district where the bouses are erratically numbered and most of the streets are nameless. So numerous arc the Joneses in this part of the principality and so rapid is the growth of the places in the valley that it is now almost impossible for a post man—probably a Jones himself—to give the right letters to the right Joneses every time —London Washington Post A Thundering Yarn. A year or two ago, in a North of Eng land city, writes Mr. J. LI. Elgir, F. H A. S., in tiie Yorkshire Weekly Post, a man told me that during a very vio lent thunderstorm all the windows of his club were thrown wide open. "To let the lightning in!" 1 remarked "Not exactly," lit* replied, "but to let it out again if it did get in." As a fact, it accepted the invitation to enter the club with alacrity, and though it mng naminously spared the foolhardy peo pie responsible for the invitation, it wrecked a large safe in an adjoining room. The person who related this to me said be would ever after look upon lightning as the "'cutest thing iu cre ation." It is the (lash that murders; the poor thunder never harin'd head. Brazil Found by Accident. Amerigo Vespucci made the first map of Brazil, although only of the coast line, and it was the publication of this map that led to the fixing of the name of the new world Brazil itself was revealed to Europeans in 1500 by an accident—tiie drifting out of its course of a Portuguese expedition. The eoun try indirectly owes its modern ad vancement to Napoleon. To escape from the conqueror King John of Por tugal fled to his dominions in America and. believing Portugal lost to the roy al family, set about putting Brazil upon a civilized basis by throwing open its ports to the whole world. Stevenson's Whimsical Attire. Here is a picturesque glimpse of Stevenson's whimsical attire as given in the "Collected Essays of Edmund Gosse:" "Stevenson was not without a good deal of innocent oddity in his dress. When I try to conjure up his figure 1 can only see a slight, lean lad in a suit of blue sea cloth, a black shirt and a wisp of yellow carpet that did duty for a necktie This was long his at tire. persevered in to the anguish of his more conventional acquaintances I have a ludicrous memory of going in 1878 to buy him a new hat, in com pany with Mr. Lang, the thing then upon bis head having lost the sem blance of a human article of dress " "A Sound Box." Take an ordinary rubber band and stretch it between the thumb and fore finger of your left band. If you pick it with the fingers of the right hand and let go suddenly it will make a sound which you can hear distinctly enough yourself, but which will not be audible to any one a few feet away. But if you were to fasten tbe elastic, with a pin at each end. to an empty wooden box. only not so as to touch the wood, and then twang it the sound would be much louder than before. That box is the sound box. or sound board, anu all stringed instruments have one in some shape or other. —St- Niehoias. i - THE NEW LEAF. The improvement !D CO me in any life Irorn ' turn ng a new leaf" is nor to be based upon turn ng the leaf so much a.* upon the constant and resolute fid ng of the new page by c nt of ur.retiming and often stren uous effort. An evil habit is not changed iy a moment, but is sup planted by the good winch is culti vated into a habit. Curious Golf Priz&. There is a curious prize awaiting a claimant at the Royal Ashdowu Golf club. Sussex. On the club links there is a hole, called the island hole, of such a difficult character that a member hit 011 the unique iiKa of endowing it with the sum 01 to, the accumulated interest of which sum shou d go to the competitor who does the hole in one stroke at either the Easter. Whitsun tide or autumn meetings. That was some years ago, and the interest is still accumulating. Loudon Spectator. "One £ye Open." Some years ago in Loudon a French man stepped into a hansom and was asked: "Where do you wish to go?" "One eye open, he replied. "Right." said cabby, who understood nothing and drove oft After a time, same question, same reply. Finally the driver descended and demanded further information. "One eye open." still was the an swer. Cabby furious. A crowd assem bled. a policeman appeared on the scene and demanded the whole story. Then the mystery was solved. The fare wanted to be driven to 1 High Holboru. Illustrious Barbers. William Winstauley. to whom we are indebted for the "Lives of the English Poets." began his career by soaping faces. Parr, who introduced coffee into England; Ir. John Taylor, whose eloquent voice so often sounded in St. Paul's; Jean Raptiste Belzoni. giuut and explorer; James Craggs, secretary of the south sea bubble; Herbert In gram of the Illustrated London News; Allan Ramsay, the "Gentle Shepherd;" Lord Chancellor Sugdeu, Lord Tenter den. Jeremy Taylor and Bizet, the com poser of the opera "Carmen," were born and bred and were trained in bar bers' shops.—Loudon Notes and Que ries. A Phil May Anecdote. One winter night an old hawker en tered the bar of the Old Bell tavern. Fleet street, and offered the customers sets of three studs for a penny. Phil May said to hi 111: "You are just the man 1 want!" He took only one stud and gave the hawker a live shilling piece. The bar maid said to Phil May; "I believe. Phil, you would give your coat to the first beggar who asked for it!" "Well, miss." replied the artist, "there would be no harm in that. St. Martin gave his coat to a beggar, and he was a better man than Phil May. I am only a wicked sinner!" —London Tatler. Not Since the Flood. Sir Henry Irving once received what he at the time considered a very pal pable snub, delivered him by a high lander. While touring in Scotland the actor visited some of the notable tradi tionary scenes associated with Shake spearean drama As a matter of course one of the tirst pilgrimages was to the blasted heath where Macbeth met the witches. In an agreeable mood Sir Henry as they drove along turned smil ingly to his driver. "Are there any witches about now?" he asked. The driver whipped up his horses. "Not since the flood," he replied In his curt Scots way. Early Oxford Coffee Drinking. Curiously enough, coffee was first drunk with us not in London, but at Ballioi college, Oxford. John Evelyn writes in his diary: "There came in my tyme to the college one Nathaniel Co ! nopios out of Greece from Cyril the patriarcli of Constantinople, who, re turning many years after, was made bishop of Smyrna. He was the first I ever saw drink coffee, which custom came not into England till thirty years after." Evelyn apparently considered the coming of coffee to have been the most important event of his university career—next to the quarrels between his tutor and the master.—London Ex press. The Pessimist. The pessimist stands beneath the tree of prosperity and growls when the fruit falls on fits head. Lincoln's Religion. I have never uuited myself to any church because I have found difficulty in giving my assent without mental reservation to the long, complicated statements of Christian doctrine which characterize their articles of belief and confessions of faith. Whenever any church will inscribe tver its altar as its sole qualification for member ship the Saviour's condensed statement of the substance of loth law and tr'K pel. "Thou slut It love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with ail thy soul, and with all thy mind, and thy neighbor as thyself," that church will I join with all ray heart and all my soul.—Abraham Lincoln. X"""" _ "~""T 8 Il !! || Vendita speciale || Rendiamo noto al pubblico di venire a visitare il nostro negozio, durante que II 4 J *4- , U |j sta vendita eccezionale, ìj Il II || Tutti gli articoli sono ridotti per |j Il ... Il || 1 occasione a prezzi bassi. jj Noi siamo i soli rivenditori delle fa mose scarpe WALOVER. il H || Visitate il nostro grande negozio. || H. KLEINSTUB ! || CREEKSIDE. PA. ■ IL IL IL IL IL II IQEOROF D.I.EYOI 1 -, Direttore rii pompo funebri J | APERTO NOTTE E GIORNO Golia Compagnia < | Telefoni: Locai-Eell GÌ l'ianoforti j I 23-25 North Sixt St. INDIANA, PA. W. 1 : . FREDRICK ì 3