The patriot. (Indiana, Pa.) 1914-1955, August 06, 1915, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    | DON'T LOSE YOUR HOLD j
2 j on your trade by making mistakes?. You ft
# ! can't afford to do so. Don't make the mis-
A MI/aAy I
S take °t" sacrificing quality for price.
( You may sell a man a bill of flour once J
Z because your price is low. but what if he
® J is disappointed in the quality? w
# h y° u anf l lie won t bother to ||
Hi g > to tell you why. Det #
| "TIDAL WAVE" •
A H and talk quality. It's the most satisfac- fg
5 ,< < 1
S < Mi&T g tory way ot doing business. j
# H t|.\7ln rIUSSSIIjJ f* Your CURto " ier ® will be l ,lease<l with tlle *f
© INDSANA.PA Hour and they'll be pleased with ycu for
&UM ww I
selling it to them.
$ V; "TIDAL WAVE" 011 a sack means 9
© something. It stands for something defl-
S nite and tangible. It is the standard by which often the value of other 0
brands of Hour are gauged.
| DAVID ELLIS & SON, &
J PENN ROLLER FLOUR MILLS, INDIANA, PA. J
••••©99®9©®#® •••• •—•••••••••—•••••••
Nice Outlook.
"Do you think that if I refuse him
he will do something desperate?"
"Nope; he'll probably live to be glad
of it."
"Then I shall marry him, the brute."
—Houston Post.
1 GODFREY MABSHALLI
Manufacturer of and Dealer in
| Harness, Collars, Saddles | !
I Pads, Blankets and |
| Robes • I
jg 631 Philadelphia St., Indiana, Pa. *j
BEST RIGS |!
For Business
or Pleasure
Also all kinds of New Buggies, Wagons and
Harness for sale at
WILMER STEW'ARTS, THE 810 LIVERY
■will I I i ———
[ The Big Warehouse MCMNG GROUNDS |
We wish our friends to take advantage of this hitching ground at the rear of the
store, which is kept in good order for your comfort and convenience.
J. 1. STEWART 4 COMPANY, Hardware
Foresight.
Chauffeur^—Would you kindly give
me a reference as a careful driver, sir?
Motorist —What! Are you going to
leave me? Chauffeur —Oh, no! I just
want it in case of accident, sir!— New
York Globe.
i
<
Handling Coins.
Coin handling machines have reached
such a degree of perfection that a ma- ;
chine will take a bucketful of coins of
all denominations, sort them out, pick
ut all the mutilated pieces and reject
iern, do all the others up in neat
nndles of standard sizes—such as
venty-five penn s in a bundle —count
jiem, add them all up together, and
hand out a slip of paper on which is
printed the tctal sum in dollars and
cents. An electric motor turns the
crank that does the work.
IF R O IT|
' J The Summer Food 1
PURCHASE IT AT
OUR STORE, AND
YOU WILL KNOW
IT IS ALWAYS
| Fresh and 1
I Luscious I
RUNZO'S
Indiana's Pioneer Fruit
I Dealer
1 I HARDWARE | |
2 :: ___ g:
| Hardware Hardware] s
m — J 1 1 m
w m
w . w
ill J * A NR*RR^" , *RT~RII II 111 I—~T— "*• ISE TGNHSSBIAE£FLRE3 m HI
W I I W
I "if it's I
g! ! $
! HARDWARE, J §
r ... (•)
| jWe Have It" | i
a\ I ft|
A (
. s
ill ill
Indiana Hardware Company fit
(>.'56 Philadelphia Street 1
ft) INDIANA, PA. ft
il! No Branch Stores A
|| s . .
THE HEART OF POLAND.
Cracow, Its Buried Patriots and the
Hill of Kosciusko.
Cracow is the ancient capital ot Po
land, the city around which cluster
I most of the glorious memories of that
lost but not forgotten kingdom. There
for more than 400 years the kings of
Poland were crowned and buried, and 1
for more than 300 years it was their
B.at of government.
There lie buried Jan Sobieski, who
delivered Vienna—and thereby all Eu
rope—from the Turks; Poniatowski,
the famous general who became one of
Napoleon's marshals; Alickiewicz, the
poet of Poland, and Kosciusko, the
patriot hero of the Poles. The tombs
of all four are in the Stanislas cathe
dral, a beautiful Gothic church built in
1359, that crowns the Wavel. a rocky
hill that rises on the edge of the town,
i There are other fine churches in the
city, the Augustinian and Dominicau
among them, and there is also the
great royal castle, which was long the
residence of the kings of Poland, and
fell to the uses of a barracks after the
kingdom was divided and which has
within the last fifty years been re
stored.
The city also contains a very famous
old university, which dates from 1304
and in age is second only to Prague
among the universities of Europe.
Cracow itself was founded about 70U
A- D. More than once it was destroyed
by the Tartars, rebuilt and recolonized
by Polish, German and Bohemian set
tlers. "rorn 1305 to 1010 it was the
capital t * Poland. Later it was part of
the grand duchy of Warsaw, and from
ISIS to 1840 it was, with its immediate
neighborhood, a free and neutral state,
a distinction it lost when internal dis
orders gave Austria an excuse to step
in and take possession of the town.
One of the most interesting things in
Cracow is Kosciusko hill, a mound of
earth on the top of the Borislava hilL
It is made up of handfuls of earth
brought by Poles from every corner of
the kingdom and thrown together to
; form a memorial to the Polish patriot,
composed of the soil of the country he
loved so well. Across the river Vistula
on Krakus hill there is a similar
mound, which is said to be almost 1,200
years old. It was, so tradition says,
raised in the same way to the memory
of Krakus, the Slavic prince who
founded the city.
To tne patriotic Pole Cracow is al
ways the spiritual center of his father
land—the "heart of Poland."—Youth's
Companion
The Day Not Set.
Ethel—Oh, I am so happy! George
and I have made up.
Lena—And what day have you fixed
upon for your marriage?
Ethel—Oh, we haven't quarreled over
that yet!— Judge.
Bandit Wfio Forgets Himself
and Expresses Real Ideas
f p
I / •• \ ,m||
I /••••
I --*** Jt
\y Ar* ;
f #7 j
-Ma VT*
-
> ft . A
' "f\ *
■f
Photo 1914, by American Press Associa
tion.
GENERAL VILLA.
— 1 - -J* *- *- _ ; -a
DO IT NOW.
Decision never becomes easier by
postponement, while habit grows
stronger every day. Common sense
as well as conscience says, "Choose
this day."
The Human Face.
Rosa BonUeur, the great painter of
animals, had a system of mnemonics
which was exceedingly quaint. She
could trace in the faces of those peo
ple who visited her a resemblance to
some sort of animal. For instance, df
some one reminded her of a certain
lady she would probably hesitate for
a moment and thou say, "Oh, yes, the
lady with the camel face!'' or, "Oh, I
remember—she had a cow face!" Thia
memory system was not flattering to
her friends, but it showed how satu
; rated she was with a knowledge of an
imals and their characteristics. On ev
ery human face she found a likeness to
some animal she had studied and de
i lineated.
.
V.'hat He'd Done.
"I've come to see if you can lend me
$25."
"That so? Which way did you
come?"
"Down Griswold street"
"Oh. you did, eh? Did it occur to
you that you had walked right by
eight or nine banks that are in the
business of lending money to get to
I me?"— Detroit Free Press.
Hit Him Both Ways.
A man was charged with picking a
pocket and pleaded guilty.
The case went to the jury, however,
and the verdict was not guilty.
And the court spoke as follows: "You
don't leave' this court without a stain
on your character, By your own con
fession you are a thief. By the verdict
of the jury you are a liar!"— London
Tit-Bits.
His Occupation.
"What does j*our father do 7'
"Whatever mother tells him."
"I mean what's h:* occupation 7'
"Oh, his occupation! Pa's a confla
gration ejector; puts out fires, jam.
know."—Boston Transcript.
Assets and Liabilities.
An asset is something which yon
think belongs to you. A liability is
something of yours which others think
belongs to fhern. Neither one of you
is quite right. An asset without a lia
bility would not le called an asset.
Neither would a liability without an
asset be called a liability. It would
then be debt, while an asset without
liability would i>e wealth or capita! <r
property.
An asset is what you think you own.
A liability is what others think you
owe. What your liabilities are dep d
upon your assets. What your ass ts
are depend upon your liabilities.
Therefore an asset is a liability and a
liability Is an asset.—Life.