Ribassi Speciali da Buchhtìt Brothers ! Su tutta la nostra fornitura, Letti, I Springs, Materazzi, Cuscini, tappeti ecc. I Noi vi facciamo economizzare danaro se venite a comprare da noi. Recatevi a vede- _ re la nostra mostra. Noi non pretendiamo che compriate la nostra mercanzia. | Buchtieit Brothers | Di prospetto all'Hotel Mooré | Indiana, Pennsylvania. hi ifiwwiiti 1 fumi i *1 in iii'i rar ♦ ♦ x • * JÉ # - 'T^r ! UNA DELLA PIÙ' VECCHIE E PIÙ' FORTE BANCHE DELLA CONTEA D'INDIANA f f FONDATA NEL 1870 £ V 1 ♦ ♦j . . X | Paga il 4 per 100 sui depositi. Rilascia libretti o checks. Si ac- | | cetta qualsiasi ammonto da Sl.oo in sopra. Se volete deposi- | | tare il frutto del vostro lavoro in luogo sicuro, venite fìdu- * 4% V % ciosi da noi e subito sarete ben serviti. t ❖ ? ❖ X $ . . ~ ♦!♦ | Noi vendiamo biglietti da e per tutte le parti del mondo. Si | | spedisce danaro col miglior cambio del giorno. % ❖ *:* X '■ ♦!♦ ♦,♦ •. yr ♦ ♦> ó ';.• V ♦J '. •• '; >v j Y v Potete lare i vostri affari Parlando la vostra ling-ua | ♦L %v A.j " v • • ♦*♦ ♦ > V < • iw Monumenti di Marmo e di Granito 72tt Pbiladelphi.i St. Entrata W nyne Higg.t Co. Indiana, Pa. I BEVETE LA BIRRA DI ELK RUN | LA BRAMiA "Ground Boy' e' air. a purissima e yustosa | j ELK RUN BREWÌNS, CO. | {PTJN XSUTA W N EY, PA. I Wonderful Memories. We are told that Pascal never for got anything he had seen, heard or thought. Avlcenna could repeat by rote the entire Koran when he was j ten years old, and Francis Suarez had j the whole of St. Augustine in his mem ory. In three weeks Scaliger, the fa mous scholar, committed to memory every line of the "Iliad" and the "Odyssey." Another scholar, Justus Lipsius, offered to repeat the "Histo ries" of Tacitus without a mistake on forfeit of his life. Aluminium. Since the Centennial exposition an entirely new industry in mining and metallurgy has been developed through the production of aluminium. No alu- i minium was produced on a commercial scale in 187(5. Wanted, a Carver. "You say your son belongs to a corn j club?" "Yes; raised a fine crop last year." "That ain't the kind of com expert I want to consult 1 want to know ! what to do for the pesky things."— Pittsburgh Post. Willing to Do That. "So your grocer refuses to give you credit for another thing." "Not exactly; ho says he'll give me credit for any cash I pay on account" —Boston Transcript The Evolution of the Hog. The time honored razor backed hog is giving place to the sleek porker, on whose broad back a square meal could be displayed without a drop of coffee being spilled and with no danger of even one of the dishes sliding to the ground. The rooter is being shouldered out of the way in Georgia by the hog that doesn't have to root for a living and is so fat that its efforts to root would be ludicrous. Scientists say that when any part of an animal is lon*- unused it tends gradually to disappear. Does that mean that pig culture will cause the final disappearance of the nasal protuberance of the hog with which it formerly was accustomed to root for its liviug?—Savannah News. The Language. "I have it in for Sniith." "I heard you were out with him." — Baltimore American. Fight Fi'm Ordered Destroyed. New Yort-, June 18. —The 3,542 feet | of movie film depicting the Ritchie i Welsh fight in London in July, 1914. i is to be destroyed by the federal au- j thorities in accordance with an order j I issued by Judge Hough in the United j States district court. Danish House Records Its Neutrality j London, June 18. —A Reuter dis patch from Copenhagen says the Dan ish Folkething, or lower house of par liament, unanimously resolved to sup port the ministry in its policy of abso lute neutrality. Reading History. He who reads history learns to dis tinguish what is local from what is universal, what is transitory from what is eternal; to discriminate be tween exceptions and rules, to trace the operation of disturbing causes, to separate the general principles which are always true and everywhere ap plicable from the accidental circum stances with which in every commu nity they are blended and with which, In an isolated community, they are confounded by the most philosophical mind. Hence It is that in generalization the writers of modern times have far surpassed those of antiquity.—Macau lay. How to Throw the Spitball. A spitball is thrown just opposite to an ordinary curve. Instead of giving the rotary motion with the lingers, it Is given with the thumb. The thumb is placed firmly against a seam, and the saliva is applied to the ball be neath the fingers. The ball is thrown overhanded, and slipping easily from beneath the moistened fingers, but gripped firmly by the thumb against the seam, a sharp rotary motion is giv en to the ball. When properly thrown a sharp break is secured, the direction of the break depending upon the angle at which the ball is released. The ball is controlled by the thumb. —American Boy. LIFE'S PURPOSES. | Life's purposes are the attainment of personal perfection and to help in the whole life of the world. Men are given their lives and the possi bility of dying natural deaths only on condition that they serve the life of the whole world, whereas the suicide exploits life as long as it is agreeable and refuses to serve the life of the world as soon as it be- I comes unpleasant, ignoring the likely fact that his service began only at that moment when his life became burdensome. Every work is at first unpleasant.—Tolstoy. Nicely Graded. It is still a tradition that the people t of Manchester, England, should gibe at Liverpool with the proverb. "A Manchester man. a Liverpool gentle man;" but, it is said, classification is not so strongly marked in Lancashire as in the old days. When stagecoach es were running a guard was once ask ed, "Who has tha' getten inside, Billy?" Billy consulted his list and ' replied, "A gentlemon fra Liverpool, a mon fra Manchester, a chap fra , Owdham and a fellow fra Wigan." Ciever Scheme. "Blink's wife seems to be quite a mu sician." "Yes, she is a fine pianist." "How does she keep in practice when she Is away from home?" "She carries a large muff." "What for?" "Just to keep her hand in! n—Pear son's Weekly. frapping Baboons. Hagenbeck in his book says that bab oons are caught in traps made much like the huts of savages. Food is put Into the huts, and once the baboons go Inside a trapdoor closes behind them. Outside baboons make a great to do and urge the prisoners to escape. When the trappers come the captured baboons are terror stricken and try to force their heads through the walls j of the huts. One baboon was caught three times in the same trap, and sev eral when turned loose got back into the same trap a second time. When the baboons are carried away all their comrades thereabout climb into trees and scream out to the prisoners, who answer in sad, mournful voices. On one occasion some big Arabian baboons were trapped, when 2.000 or 3,000 bab oons hurled themselves upon the trap | pers, who had hard work to save them selves with firearms and clubs. As the trappers were forced back the victori ous baboons tore up the trap and turn ed loose the captured baboons.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers