[ La I per gli Occhi I I I vostri occhi non soffrono se II ■ . leggete o lavorate sotto la sof- I I fice e chiara luce di |l ■ ATLANTIC II I Ravolidht I MsMMSt I Esso non affumica e non I I puzza, dura più' dell'olio or- I I dinario,ma non costa di più'. I I ' Chiedetelo al vostro nego- - I Noi raccomandiamo le Stufe da Cucina New Perfection, i Caloriferi a Petrolio sen za fumo Perfection, le Lampade Ravo e le Lanterne Rayo per l'uso del Rr yolight on. THE ATLANTIC REFIXING CO. Dovunque in Pennsylvania e Delaware Oiolooi. Anelli Mutriinsiiioli. Gio ielli irei di pi elleno. Si riporoito oroieoi sioielii cu oitfoooremenflo il mio. m Wayneßigg&Co. Jewelert? tfc Engravers 726 Philadelphia Street INDIANA, PA. tiaderaarksaadcoiyrightsobtalned orno E ■ tee. Sk liti model, sketches or photos ami de- re Si seriptìon for FHCC SCAHICH report f E on pateutability. Ikuik ref«r»nv«s. fi PATEMTS EUILD FORTUNES f-<r Sy vou. "Our fii'o bookiets teU how, wliat to invent jgS H und stive you money. "Write todaj*. |B.swiFT&ey PATENT LAWYC.RS, M h |j ' a =ca John F. Steving S. C. Streams Steving & Streams UNDERTAKERS e BALSAMATORI Vasta Linea di Mobilia ! Con Telefoni in Ufficio e Residenza 721-23 Phiiadelphia Street Indiana, Pa. VENANGO OIL & SUPPLT CO. INDIANA, PA. Patronizzate l'industria del vostro paese. Usate Olio, Gasso lina e Gntssi del la rinomata compagnia produttrice Dott. TRUITT. Dpntista Uiiicio (pposto alia Banca Saving and Trust Bldg. INEI4NA, PA Ore d'uitieio: Dalle S a.m alle 5p ID „ 7 p.m. „ 8 p.ai VISITE GRATIS PENNSYLVANIA NEWSJN BRIEF Interesting Items From All Sec tions ot the State. GULLED FOR QUICK READING News of All Kinds Gathered From Various Points Throughout the Keystone State. Adam Sitler, Fowlerville, aged seventy-three, enjoyed his first trollej ride at the family reunion, though liv Ing within three miles of a line. In thirty cars, carrying 125 persons the Carlisle Motor club lleft on a four county sociability run, with supper and a business meeting at Hershey. The training camp of the Fourth Infantry, Sons of Veterans, was open ed at Ligonier, with Colonel F. A. Mc Kelvey, Pittsburgh, in command. Wilbur Morse, a Lancaster insur ance agent, pleaded guilty to operating an automobile while under the influ ence of liquor and was fined $lOO. To give outsiders an idea of the new courses of work at the institution, the Carlisle Indian school will place a dis play at the Carlisle Fair in September. For the first time in years there is a shortage of teachers around Hazle ton and a number of rural districts are obliged to advertise for applicants. Three months in jail and $lOO fine and costs was the penalty imposed on George Roberts, who furnished liquoi to an intemperate person, at Towanda. The G. B. Markle Coal company is anticipating a mine cave-in between Eckley and Foundryville, and has rop ed off the road between the two places State Highway Commissioner Black ; and Chief Engineer Uhler are on a tour of inspection of the state high j ways in the northern tier of counties Drawn into machinery by his feet John Wagner, aged 55, was almost instantly killed at the Lawrence Port land Cement plant at Northampton | Ruth, eight-year-old daughter ol Frank Reinert, of Pottstown, fell intc the Schuylkill canal, but her father heard the splash in time to save her life. B. F. Davis has been advised thai his'nomination as revenue collector in the ninth district, headquarters Lan caster, has been confirmed by the sen ate. Arrests were made at Pittsburgh in the $Bl7 Stopper company hold-up, for mer employes, Alexander Buzzonlie and Frank Riggiero, being held as sus picious persons. The Carpenter Steel company, ol Reading, increased the wages of 600 laborers from 17y 2 to 20 cents an hour, plus a bonus of ten per cent for steady work. Montgomery county commissioner have awarded to Braun & Stewart, bl Philadelphia, the contract to recon struct the Schuylkill bridge at Port Kennedy, for $25,900. Mrs. Edward Evans, Jr., Pittstc-n, has written the Eastori police that her husband deserted her and their foui children and was employed in a mu nitions plant in Easton. FRENCHMEN "SNAPPED" BY PHOTOGRAPHER i\ it ' ' i' PRESS AieOCWJIOW ill This war photograph, one of the most remarkable to reach this country recently from the war zones, shows French sol diers, wearing the new steel helmet, ad vancing through a hail of fire from Ger rPTi'»H' 'i^V'-ypTTTr- - ■ .-ptinrrTiW M , ps I .1- . Facts Versus | , >. Fallacies ■ .1 •<v - TACT is a real state of things. FALLACY is art appar* itntly genuine but really illogical statement or argument * A FAVORITE FALLACY of the Prohibitionist, that the opportunity to indulge in alcoholic beverages is always t followed by excess, is met by the FACTS presented by a Boston VX*' *"N / ) ) * writer, C. B. Smith, in an article in the Boston Herald. Writes ft v \ Mr. Smith: jffJ^tflCTP^lCL <<r PHE cafe is a part of the life cf the French people. It would A be just as strange in France to see a town, no matter how small, without its cafes as it v/ould in this country to sec *7 OfS«2S/r' Y U towns without churches. There no village in France so small but what has one or more -1 "W HEN thc French people want a drink they da not go be- 9 aS*V - - ** hind a screen to take it. There is nothing wrong in ' 5 § drinking there, because drinking is not abused. Everybody drinks _ in France, but all are temperate. There is practically no drunken- r.ess anywhere in France. I have been to Paris and other French many times, and I have yet to see a Frenchman ~ " c, I?RANCE will in all probability never adopt prohibition or I pass any stringent restrictive laws against liquor. Prac- I fjf\ jf&ranr tically all of Southern France and the lower western part of France are planted with vines. A large area of the war in France | ) K k a * present time is in the champagne district, where the wine 1 of that name is made. A very considerable part of all France is given over to the industry of the vine. In France, just before the I war, there were 480,000 families dependent upon the sale of those ,r pHE French people rightly consider themselves the most I temperate people in the woxld. While they are a nation of | universal drinkers, from childhood to old age, no one appears to drink to excess. There are some prohibition agitators there £s elsewhere, but very little was heard of them before the war tr* tnd less will be heard from them after the war." •. — , ,/\ V'\ . 'T* HE FALLACY that the opportunity to drink is invariably J- followed by excess, is here met, according to Mr. Smith's "A M : ffcfrU article, by the significant FACT that, although "a nation of «yp M i jafl universal drinkers," yet "the French people rightly consider £ ' i themselves the most temperate people in the world," £ Pennsylvania State Brewers' Association 7 pn 72 p Another large war order gave 300 men employment when the plant of the Aetna Explosives company at Irvine burg started operations after a shut down of about ten days. Falling down a flight of steps in the Easton National Bank building, John Leidy was hurt about the back and lay helpless an hour before his moans attracted the attention of tenants. The Bethlehem school board has raised the salaries of its school jani tors $5 a month; elected Dr. Warren J. Bieber medical inspector .and Miss Laura Sherman prophylactic nurse. Bethlehem school children grow faster than the schools, and the board, besides building two new buildings, has had to rent,accommodations in the four chapels and churches for half-day sessions. James Meehan, a Freeland ycung man, who died at Mt. Gretna within a week of going with Battery A, of Hazleton , to the mobilization camp, was buried with military honors in his home. man inach: guns shooting through embrasures the crest of the ridge above them. The picture is official, made with the authority of the French government and was taken In the .very midst of re David N. Shrawder, of North Wales, instituted action in Montgomery coun ty court against Daniel Michle, claim ing $lO,OOO for injuries alleged to have been sustained by being struck by Miehle's motorcycle. For the first time in the thirty-eight years since he has worked in the Lans ford shops of the Lehigh C. and N. Co., James J? McLaughlin, of Lansford, met with an accident —to his arm—which will render him idle for several weeks. Haws Avenue Methodist cliurch and Sunday school, Norristcwn, profits to the extent of $lO,OOO or more by the death of aged Margaret Vaughan, be cause of provisions of the will of. her husband, William Vaughan, an ice man. Mrs. Frank Delens, the land lord of the American hotel, Weatherly, is missing, so Js Albert Creadia, a boarder, from Philadelphia, and $3OO of Delens' money, while Chief of Police Achey is seeking both of them and the cash. cent fighting around Verdun, where the French are reported to have made further advances In furious attacks on the Ger man lines. COMING BACK UNITED DOCTORS SPECIALIST WILL AGAIN BE AT INDIANA, Pennsylvania ' New Indiana House % Thursday, September 14 HOURS—IO A. M. to BP, M. Remarkable Success of Talented Phy sician in the Treatment of Chronic Diseases Offer Services Free of Charge The United Doctors Specialist, li censed by the State of Pennsylvania for the treatment of all diseases, in chronic diseases df men, women and children, ofter to all who call on this trip consultation, examination, advice iree, makijig no charge whatever, ex cept the actual cost of treatment All that is asked in return for these valu able services is that every person treated will state the result "obtained to their friends and thus prove to the sick and afflicted In every city and lo cality, that at last treatments have been discovered that are reasonably sure aud certain fn their effect The United Doctors are erperts in the treatment of chronic diseases and .so great and wonderful have been their results that in many cases it i& hard to find the dividing line between skill aad miracle. Diseases of the stomach, intestine*, liver, blood, skin, ner-es, heart, spleen, rheumatism, sciatica, tapeworm, leg olcers, weak lungs and those afflicted with long-standing, deep-seated, chron ic diseases, that have baffled the skill of the family physician, should not fail to c ill Deafness often his been in sixty days. Acco ding to their system no more operation for appendicitis, gall stones, tumors, goiter, piles, etc., as all cases accepted will be treated without oper ation or hypodermic injection, at they were among the fir.it in America t-» earn the name of 'Bloodless Surgeons" by doing away with the knife, with blood and with all pain in the success ful Treatment cf the.se dangerous dis eases. No matter what o"r ailment may te, 11c matter what others may have told >ou, no matter what experience vou may have bad with other physi cians, it will be to your advantage to see them at once. Have it forever set tled in your mind. Jf your case is in curable they will give you such advice e s may relieve and stay the disease. iJo not put off this duty you owe your self or friends or. relatives who are iffenng because of \cur sickness, as isit at t is time may help you. Worn out and run down men or worn en, no matter what your ailment may he, call, it costs you nothing Remember, this free offer is for tills visit only. * Man led ladies come with their hus bands and minors with their parents. : laboratories, Milwaul ee, Wisconsin.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers