Politica 1 A< l vertisement I" Per SHPRTFF 1 f -/ I ,4- J||jFp f i T j Al H Ì l: ■ ■ :.. Ir: Votate per I HARRY A. BOGGS J INDIANA, PENNA. | ! Soggetto alla decisione degli elettori Rejm hlicani Martedì, 21 Settembre 1915 è J | Fornitori per l'intiera famiglia 5 1 "The Hub" ras* t 0 Teume T 1 avvisi i X II primo in Indiana per prezzi bassi W $ Pronti per indossare ] "" i 0 generi diversi. E ben noto che II 4 'The Hub e' il negozio più a buon J 0 mercato nella contea d'lndiana- 0 0 Noi siamo dietro a chiudere l'intieso 4 'stock" di robe d'Estate, in 0 molti casi SOTTO PREZZO in maniera di fare posto alla roba per l'Autunno che giù comincia ad arrivarci. 5 # W Ricordatevi che voi potete sempre fare meglio dal 0 t i 1ì HE HUB, - - Indiana, Pa. \ Seeking and Finding. Two Scots with ali the thrift of their race met on the way home from mar ket. "Why are ye lukin' sae pleased wi' yersel'?" asked Sandy. "Weel, 111011." replied MacPherson, "I dropped a saxpence in the market place, an'. hunt as I might, I couldua flud it" 1 hat s naught to be lukin' sae gay aboot," said Sandy. "Aye, but ye dinna ken," explained MacPherson. "I found a shilling."— : , Ladies' Home Journal. IBMii—i '■'"■ni. lllllillllllllH 111 il II li nulli II MI iMIiIIM 111 II 111 I|l| Il llllllllllill |l| W—■■■ ■■■ 11 Q Tutti [ regolari prezzi r\ r Tela incerata figurata 4r| ! perdonila .10 discount per cent da 25c ora .Ifco Union Suits 7II per uomo ./ H ' na qUa " Uta ,]i vestt ' I'"' . 101 donne da SI.OO "7ft 25c Crcpes . Ifcs> ' adesso per ./u ________________ Union Suits m Q per uomo ,4u 7 1 15c Crepes # •> ———————— Ina qualità' da 4 aa Camicetta per fiOl #3.50 adesso I.UU donna UO> "Organdies" colorati j £ __ " (la - : > c, ora „| J Camicetta per Af| ''"'altra da *5.0(1 OQO j donna ■IU ' fa. 00 I Calze nere e colorate ria AF _ sOc ora ,Z3 | Copribusto .19 a ldai ben fatti QQ _ & Traudì . J J . KM J Calze li set% ria sl. ora .0U Giaconetta ricamata alta 45 * cent, prezzo regolare f\ f% 1 50 >r-, Mr il 69 quantità ti. scarpe stro I basamento è pieno di diversi generi alimentari di ottime qualità migliori di tutti gli altri in vendita. Comprate da noi. conteggiate le spese sostenute durante un mese e facendo la differenza troverete una grande economia a vostro tornaconto.' •* • vi lì A \l\ Tratta tutti bene QK ff&ÙQ uLU/lnU E'quello che vende giusto UtuflPl U Matter of Course. Poet —Dkl you send back my last six batches of poems? Editor—Of course —lf I received them.—New York Globe. A Hurricane. When wind travels a hundred miles an hour or over it is called a hurri cane. A Sure Proof. "The new family who have just moved in have something in their lives they want to hide." "Why do you think so?" "Because their hired girl is deaf and dumb." —Baltimore American. The Check - Went Back. Not long ago a woman wrote her first j story and sent it to a magazine. To her i surprise and delight it was accepted. ; The story was duly published and a % check for payment forwarded. With the check was a printed slip reading, "No more checks will be sent until this one has been returned." Back by re turn mail went the check, with a note j from the lady to the effect that she was very sorry the magazine had had the | trouble of sending it, and please to send ; the others immediately.—New York i Sun. I _ ; INVISIBLE ICEBERGS. ! Conditions Under Which They Cannot Be Seen .on Clear Nights. In a recent communication to the New York Tribune Abbott H. Thayer, the artist. asserts that many vessels have been lost by collisions with iee | bents because under certain conditions ft of sky and light they are invisible, lie y j cites the fact that on the occasion of 1 the Titanic disaster, although the black 4 ship was clearly visible to survivors at 7 a distance of several miles, they could not see the white bergs against which A they actually heard the wash of the i sea. Mr. Thayer claims that on a clear. A starry night the be no war while he was secretary of state and that he would never have accepted the portfolio of the premiership if he had thought for one moment that there would be war during his incumbency of the office. In his speech Mr. Bryan said: "I made up my tuiud before I accepted the offer of the secre taryship of state that 1 would not take the office if I thought there was to be a war during my tenure. "When I say this I am confi dent that I shall have no cause to change my -view, for we know no cause today that cannot be setUed better by reason than by war" "J believe there will be no war while 1 am secretary of state, ntul I believe there will be no war so long as I live. I hope we have seen the last great war." The Simple Life. Many persons trying to live the sim ple life find a lot of fault with the bill of fare.—Judge. FLAG FOR VICE PRESIDENT. American Eagle on a White Square. Exposition Trip the Cause. The vice president of the United States is to have an official flag. When ever he visits an American warship his flag will flutter from the masthead The flag will be a snow white square of bunting, on the field of which will be a blue bird representing the eagle in the coat of arms of the United Stales. The president's flag consists of the coat of arms of the nation on a blue field. This is the first time that there has been prescribed for the vice president a distinctive flag to ho displayed on naval vessels while he is on board. The president, the secretaries and the assistant secretaries of the depart- j ments of war and the navy nil have distinctive flags. The admirals, vice admirals and rear admirals have dis tinctive flags. It remained for Secretary Daniels to provide the vice president with a flag Tlis action growo out of the fact that Mr. Marshall is going to San Francisco to represent President Wilson at the ex position. lie is to he received on board the cruiser Colorado, the flagship of Admiral Howard, commander in chief of the Atlantic fleet; hence the new flag, which will be a permanent institu tion of honor to vVa president. IT rademarks. A trademark is a registration of a word or design attached to goods of a certain trader making it clear to the public that they are his manufacture and that nolmdy but he can use that same, trademark. Its use is almost in dispensable in the commercial world, and this can be realized better when one knows what its functions are in respect to the trader and his customers. In the tirst place, being a certificate of genuineness, it protects the public. Secondly, being an identifying mark, the trader Is protected by the law against any competitor who endeavors to trade on another's name or goods. Trademarks were issued as far back as the time of James I.— Ixmdon Mail. Child of His Own Brain. "Johnson needn't be mad because the teacher criticised bis boy's composition. The boy will improve." "You don't appear to understand. Johnson wrote the composition him self."—Kansas Citv Star. : i i ! - [ Popular Poverty. , Katie, aged seven, was the only child I of Mr. and Mrs. Jones. One day. wfcen I the new minister called, Katie, upon her own invitation, went into the lor to entertain him until her mother came down stairs. As she approached the parlor door, Mrs. Jones heard the minister ask Katie how many children her mother had, and was very much surprised to hear her little daughter reply "six." Her mother wisely made no comment upon the startling reply of the child, but sent her out to play, and when the minister's visit was over she asked Katie why she had told him that her mother had six children, and was more dumfounded than ever when Katie I said. "Because. 1 did not want the strange gentleman to know that you were so poor that you didn't have but one child."—National Monthly. An Efficiency Recipe. Be earnest, but he calm, no matter what happens. A man may learn to treble Ills day's work by systematically shutting out all feeling during otfice hours. What fatigues and annoys us is not our work, but the mental fric tion. nervous strain, muscular tension, emotional wear and tear which we al low' to accompany our work. A real man is always a machine while on ttic Job, never a machine at any other time. Recipe for efficiency: Be n plodder by day and a poet by night I>o your planning, your dreaming, your resolv ing, when silence and solitude open the mind fur great thoughts and purposes; VJOU appear to the world just as an or- Jinary business man. with nothing unique about you to rouse the neigh bors' suspicions.—New York independ ent