■ TTohner Accorrlion Diaraor.d Ring in I 500 coupons Case, 44 100 kt. ■ 11300 coupon 1 Cominciate a conser vare i Cuponi "Nebo" | ° " Zira " ed Lato Su P eriore dell e Scatole I I "&"'' d Trml edaCqUÌßtate questi Meravigliosi Regali iPri I GRATIS || Scriveteci per il Catalogo nel quale sono | enumerati tanti altri bellissimi Regali. fi il ' Lato superiore delle Scatole "Zira" e I Nebo vale ognuno mezzo soldo in con- 11 liZ iti il 1 tar| te ovvero puossi far contare come u'in- | jfl ' Kivois Cigarette Case, German Silver Ì H Collapsibìc. (Jo-'.'art ' 200 coupon Mandate : Cuponi per posia (e non a mezzo "Parcei | ; ! °P" r "Express" pagato anticipatamente ai _ff. f ■ ■ lOCigareifesS: NEBO 3^^£^™ ENT Francesco Biamonte Interprete ufficiale per la Contea d'lndiana Marshall Bl<L Iniiana, Fa. iSaSaSHSESH£rHSaSHSHSZS2SZSESZSHSV 3 "HS"dSH J The Eye of the Army j Oh, I clamber up high to the vault of the sky, Far above all the muck of the trenches; Far above the quick Ire of the maxim gunfire, Far above all the reek and th% stenches. There's a puff from below in the lines of the foe. Where a gunner is seeking to harm me, Jtut I drop and I rise from his bombs in the skies And I still am the eye of the army! For it's my job to learn every sally and turi: Of the enemy right when they make it. I'm a sentry whose care is a post high in air. And it isn't for me to forsake it. Ho I duck and I dip and I dodge and I skip From the aeroplane shells that would mar me. While the gunner with zest does his Sun day school best To put out the eye of the army. Now. there isn't much chance for the an cient romance In these days of mecha-nlcal slaughter. When we shed human blood in a horrible flood On the face of the land and the water, Put I am not bound by the soldiers' dull round, Tor in war's mighty drama they star me, And it's still a great game full of glory and fame— To the venturesome eye of the army! Braley in New York Times. A Stormy Trip. "Good gracious! How in the world 41d you happen to get lost?" "Oh, after we had been on the road About five hours we found that the chauffeur was trying to find his way With a weather map."—Fuck. ..™ ■ ■■ - ■ v Barefoot Boy Barefoot boy in the far green land, Bearing a fishing pole in your hand; Barefoot boy in the old and still End gate pool at the back of the mill; Barefoot boy, with that careless swing. Owner of Aready, summer's king. Tyrannous monarch of valley and hill. You we welcome and you we sing. Thanking the Lord that there's boyhood still That smiles oblivious to everything! Barefoot boy—who are makiix" 72S® earth A place of joy and a place dk mirth; A nTv domain for the vision "We, Softening and sweetening ti . sHirden te st rile. Bringing the sunshine to hea.'- 'J Jhat ache* Lifting the souls that are in "hn rife Mad struggle and conflict sin and truth; Up to a service for all men's sake In the deathless combat life makes for truth, When there's so much more than the truth at stake! Barefoot boy, In the sunbright lane. You are creating us over again; You. with your whistle, your freckled face. Your wild abandon to native grace Of movement and action and song and glee- Child of the blossom and bird and tree. King of the woodland, and friend of th# stream. God of the morning of vision to be. Knowing your power and keeping your place For the sake of the song aC". <Jto smile and the dream And the hope of the spirit TiOt set free! Woman Is Very Thorough. "A man when he Is angry will teil you what he thinks of you." "Tea, and a woman when she la an gry will tell you what she and every body else thinks of you." Boston Transcript. Where Was Wales? Spencer Leigh Hughes. M. P., tells of the following amusing experience. He was once passing the war office i building in Whitehall when his com panion. a Scotchman, pointing to thr emblematic devices engraved over the door, indicated the Scotch thistle, the English lion and the Irish harp "Where is the emblem of Wales?" ask ed his friend "Oh." Mr. Hughes re plied. "1 expect there is. a leak Ic the roof."—London Express. LURiNG WILD GEESE. J Live Decoys Are Often Used and Mads to Play the Traitor. American wild geese each spring mi grate from waters of the southern ! states to the shores of the Arctic in northern Canada. The two great com moil varieties of the bird are the honk ers and the wavy, or white, goose. Both of these are extensively hunt ed. Covering, as they do. about 5.000 miles oil their annual migration, these s birds rest at various places eu route ! and are thus shot by sportsmen almost across the length of the continent. The birds have a peculiar trait of always leaving one of their number on look out while the rest feed. To aid in the shooting wild geese live wild ones, captured young and raised in captivity, are often placed in feeding grounds in likely territory on : the line of flight of the migrating flocks. These decoys are ternote trai tors and by their calling often bring ! the flying ones within shooting dis s tance of the sportsmen, who lie in hid den pits near at hand. Painted decoys, shaped like geese and made of steel, are also used by the j hunters. In the latter ease the men, from their hiding place in the pits, cal! i the birds by using a goose call, a metal instrument like a flute, which mimics ; the sound of the goose with remarks ble realism.—Philadelphia North Amer ican. A Risky Study. "Why hare you dropped your popu i lar astronomy ?" asked the visitor. " 'Cause I got too many lickings," confided Tommy. "The other night I told pa that Mars' face was ever ehang lm t. and ma beard me and thought I meant her face. Next thing I didn't 1 get any supper and got a licking be- I toflen."—Chicago New#. SWING OF THE WIND. On the Atlantic Coast, as a Rule, It Is From Left to Right. Thirty-five years ago, while making a four months' voyage, I was ire j quently impressed bv the unerring ac curacy with which Captain Crosby. ! one of the best known captains sail ing from New York, forecast the state of the weather. In reply to my ques tion be answered: "Doctor, as a result of fifty years of seagoing life. I can I assure you that almost invariably, I might say without exception, the wind i in its shifting follows the course of the hands of a clock— that is, from left to right "Of course." he added, "one cannot say how long the wind will remain in any one quarter, but when it changes It will, almost without exception, take the course I have stated. For instance, if the wind is in the northeast, in stead of going to the north and then to the northwest, it will on the con ; trary go over to the east, southeast. I south, southwest, west, and finally reach the northwest." When 1 asked him why rbat should be, he said he had never been able to obtain an answer to that, but that it was au absolute rule as far as the ex perience of his life went. One other observation I have made ! Through all these years, although it i ■ not by any means as exact as the fh ji | is that the winds have a fairly accurate length of time in which thev remain in their various quarters. For instance, northeast and east winds are generally two or three days in duration, grad ually shifting to southeast and south then after a day's interval, or less, reaching west and northwest. These ! remarks apply only to the Aflanfh j coast and contiguous state : and n\ t ! inapplicable to the Pacific, where the conditions, in some respects even more j remarkable, arc entirely different.—Dr. Frank Abbott In New York Times. Wills In Ancient Greece. Wills were introduced Into Athens by Solon, though in many other parts of Greece they were discountenanced Diogenes Laertkis gives copies of the wills of several celebrated men. sncb as Plato. Aristotle and others. Before Solon's law no man was. allowed to make a will, the wealth of the de ceased belonging in certain proportion to the members of his family and even after Solon only au Athenian citizen had the privilege of bequest, the es tates of both slaves and foreigners be ing confiscated for the use of the put) lie. j r!\l-3LA?vD'S KifM VISITS WubhiDED IN HOSPITAL J .L. , . • '!. ' . -A '" * . : .v.:,-. -• -A--- - : # •< ' .. • - t v- ■ ■' . ; • : ■ j*- vfe! I ; £ -| - v ' Ij i T , . " N , 4 ' . js> > ->> N • £ £.• -•f; v - . -' | |j|p " - Photo bv American Press Association A CRUSH OF WORLDS. How Our Solar System May C-! and a New One Be Bern. The whole of the present solar sys (em is ultimately to fall into the sun, causing an explosion that may resail! in a new solar system. Such is the theory put forward by Professor Philip ! Fauth, a well known astronomer. ; whose reputation has rested principally j upon his researches into the conditions i on the moon. ' The novel feature of Dr. Eauth's the I ory is that it is based upon the suppo ! sition that a great part of the known . solar system, including especially the ' planets Jupiter, Uranus and Saturn, are : not composed of mineral matter at all, but are tremendous masses of ice or balls of ice surrounding a mineral ker nel. Furthermore, he declares, a part, of what is now known as the Milky way is not mineral or gaseous, but "a ring of ice dust," masses of particles j of ice suspended in space, the other planets receiving a constant addition , to their ice mass from this source. Professor Fauth declares that the world already at some remote periods i has had a similar experience, resulting in the death of nearly all animate na ture, and that all species of life as we know it have arisen since then. Even tually the planets swinging through their narrow orbits will fall into the ! sun, causing a new explosion and per haps the birth of a new solar system, but for thousands of years before that time, all life, either on earth or else where, will have disappeared.—Kansas City Journal. ACROSS THE PACIFIC. Influence of the "Great Circle" on the Journey to Manila. If you wanted to go from the Pana ma canal to Yokohama which of these two would be the shorter route? hirst, across the ocean to Hawaii and from there to Yokohama, or, second, up along the coast to San Francisco and then directly across the Pacific to Asia ? Nearly everybody would answer in favor of the Hawaiian route. But the uavigators tell us the journey is 2G6 miles shorter byway of San Francisco. ; The "great circle" does it Its influ ! ence on distance sends ships from San Francisco to Manila byway of the i Aleutian islands. Actually our vessels would go much farther north than they | do but for the discouragement of the I United States hydrographic bureau at i Washington, which advises a central route, more than 200 miles longer than ! the great circle, in order to escape the ! fogs and ice of the far north. The Hawaiian Islands are frequently described as "the crossroads of the Pa cific." Their people are naturally look ing forward to wonderful commercial : development. They will doubtless en- I joy substantial progress as a cominer i rial center because many conditions in i ocean currents and in prevailing winds i and in fuel costs favor liouolulu as a way station route. Rut it is well to re member that these islands were plant ed a little too near the equator to be a I crossroads of the north Pacific.—P.os ton Herald. Wonderful Names The seventeenth iputur.v juryman had one disadvantage to contend with from which hi* successor is happily free. He was frequently burdened with an intolerable name. James Broome in his "Travels Over England Scotland and Wales." a work publish ed In tThO. rives a cop- c "a Jo-v Return made n Rye. Suv-ex in fil iate Rebellious. Tr"V.bVs<>i. .e Times' Heic are the iriires "S'nii'l on high Stringer of Crowhurst. liarth Ad ams of Wa.bleton, Killsin !'imple of Wit ham. Graceful Uaiulng of Lc-'e- Weep not Rifling of the same. Be Fai'bfu! .Joiner of Britllng. Ely Debate Roberts .f the su;.:e. Eight the go "J Fight of Faith White of Ernes, Return Sjelinaii <f Watting. ?*eek Brewer >f Oakham. More Fruit Eov/ler of East Hodley. Hope for Bending of ih.- san e." London Chronicle. An Insinuation. They teli me. Mrs. Couaeup, your daughter went through that reception te her honor without any faux pas." "No such thing! She had aa much •f it as anybody that was there."—Ex change. WAR MUST BE WON SAYS ASQUITH Premier Praises British Navy for fciiioient Work f AfJSiAL SITUATION BftO Fell Agrecricr.t Exists Between Allies as S?rvia—Dardanelles At tack 'a CrJ!;d failure—Almost I,CT.C.C- ...a Now In France and Flar.. . - 0: L' iUco Include 377.C:e. .. i, Wounded, Missing. I. T String that he would . .j. ,t he refused to apj. : i. • a "crirn ir. ! r.. . ... .-. .. ■ e sheet" ar.d i..;' ;. \a. . - confident as ever that the would carry thoir i ri^c.ous i... v <.„• :i is I suri . l-l rl p. ceo aiiu iU .... v i ; v a .. ..> riu.il 6ta*. r i ; . • re;-, ot the war Tuesday a .r 00-i ,u the U tt*e of common:. "The v ur.t b \v.m." said the prime ir.ir.isfor, Wh!> exnre r.n:x the beic f tha- .... v, oitld not be nov ;:y. tie added that the government would not hesitate to en force what* r i;. asuros might be re quired ii v uatnry recruiting proved inadequate. The prime minister revealed that 4 ! Eleutiicrios Ycnizrlos, while he was prime n;.u aor of Greece, on Sept. 21. pre::; i ibo mobilization of the j Greek ar: if France and Great Brit ain wouM send 150.000 men to the Near East. An "express understand ing" exited to this efl'ect, he said, before Mr. Ycnizelos went out of of fic. The premier paid a warm tribute to the Brhi.h navy for its great achievement in sweeping German com merce and German warships from the •mlas and in Convoying two aivd one half millions of troops whom Great i Britain had transported by water. The British public was warned by | the head of the cabinet that the na tion's financial situation was. serious, j and that far greater sacrifices mu ' be made to support the government | in its task ,of suppl: ipg the r.nnh t with their needs so that triumph ! might be won. The offieA! statement was made !' Mr. Asqui 'i that n fub agreement ex ists between Great Britain and France for the maintenance of To independ ence of Servla and not to let her he come "tin prey of the sinister and nefarious combination of Austria, Germany and Bulgaria." Concerning Greece, the premier said that on Sept. 21 Ir.st Mr. Venizelos. then prime minister of Greece, asked Great Britain and France to send 150,000 men to the Near East, with the express understanding that Greece would mobilize. The premier expressed the strong belief that the recruiting program of the Earl of Derby would succeed and that compulsion would not be neces sary. Mr. Asquith declared he had sane tioned the firs, naval attack at the Dardanelles. He said that this project, which is referred to as having proved a failure, had been entered into in spite of the mi. giving.- of the cabinet's chief naval adviser. Mr. Asquith told the home th"' Field Marshal Sir John French now has almost a million men under his command ir. France ard Flanders. The British casualties in those regions he placed at 377,00J officers and men killed, wounded or missing. The prime minister made the for mal statement that the Germans had not gained one foot of ground prev iously held by the British since Apr;!. Reviewing the work of British sub marine* in the Turkish campaign Mr Asquith said thai in the sea of Mar mora they had sunk or damaged twt battleships, five gunboats, one torpeaf boat, eight transports and 197 suppi; ships. There were few absentees from tk*. house of commons when the premier began his address which was expeel ed to be the most important govern nient announcement of the world wat since it began in August, 1914. Mr. Asquith prefaced his remark; concerning the war by saying that his statement had been delayed by cir cr ir tances over which he had no con trol bti that the delay had the ad vantage of enabling him to receiv-* warnings and counsels 'om every quarter. "ft is true that today some part ■ of the horizon are over.;? t. This, like other wars, has been frulu'ul or -urprises and disappointments. Th > moment calls for fnree A proper sense of perspective, a limi'- less stock of patience ard nn ever flowing re ervoir of coir age, both active and passive." Mr. Asquith rcferrt-d to the "sma" coterie of professional '.v' -.. nerer which kept our enemies supplied dab with a diH of falsehoods." The gov ernment, he said, had no interest i j concealing anything, subject to th one overriding consideration that its disclosures would not assist Great Britain's enemies. McCall Wins In Massachusetts. Boston, Nov. 3. —The entire Republi can state tLket was elected. Samuel W. McCall defeating Governor Wclpfe *v 15.000.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers