I La Migliore Luce jl I per gli Occhi I I I vostri occhi non soffrono se ■ ■ leggete o lavorate sotto la sof- & I ■ fice e chiara luce di ■ I ATLANTI C ■ I Rayoltoht I I Esso non affumica e non ■ I puzza, dura più' dell'olio or- I ■ dinario, ma non costa di più'. ■ ■ Chiedetelo al vostro nego- J I Noi raccomandiamo le Stufe da Cucina New Perfection, i Caloriferi a Petrolio sen za fumo Perfection, le Lampade Rayo e le H Lanterne Rayo per l'uso del Rayolignt Oil. / THE ATLANTIC REJFIMNG CO. Dovunque in Pennsylvania e Delawiare ■ 1 Ofoiosi. anelli Motriinoteii, Gio ielli tini» di pus elleno. Si rtporono orologi gioielli ed ollro gorenientio il iovoio. » ' Wayneßigg&Co. i Jewelers <fc Engravers 726 Philadelphia Street INDIANA, PA. ______________ John F. Steving S. C. Streams Steving & Streams UNDERTAKERS e BALSAMATQRI Vasta Linea di Mobilia ! Con Telefoni in Ufficio e Residenza 721-23 PhiladelPhia Street Indiana, Pa, gg=—E ■ trade martu and co| -y rights obtained or no 9 fee. Send model, sketches or photos ami do script ion for FREE SEAHCH and roport • fl on patentability. Rank references. S PATENTS BUILD FORTUNES r ■ yon. Our free booklets tell how, what t invent i t 9 and savo you money. Write today. 18. SWIFT k&if PATENT LAWVcJtS, SovenJLh c *' "• " ' OKE COURAGE. . All work of man is as the swimmer's. A waste ocean ~ threatens to devour him. If he front it not bravely it will keep its word. By incessant wise 1 defiance of it, lusty rebuke and ii buffet of it, behold how loyally || it supports him—bears him as its conqueror along. Thomas Carlyle. KEYSTOfIE PAaA9HA?HS j The numerous descendants of tlie Reynolds family in Lawrence countv held their fiftieth annual reunion the .middle of last week at Cascade park, rear New Castle. There were two persons present who were at the firs; reunion fifty years ag>-Mrs. CowdeD ! Eleakley and her son, Harold. Harold was a babe in his mother's arms when he attended the first reunion. They have been at every one since. A hearty response from the 200 per sons attending, who represented a dozen nationalities, was given at a cmoker of the Geneva club, Pittsburgh, when F. C. Christian, chairman ajftJ tcastmaster, rose and said: "Here's to the boy of every flag who fights for its fame at the front." The olub is In ternational in scope and its member ship includes men of every nation at war. Because of the prevalence of typhoid in Altoona the use of water from city mains for drinking purposes or foi cleaning water containers on trains or on railroad property has been prohibit ed unless the water has been dis tilled, boiled for at least twenty miiv utes or subjected to steam pressure. Tramps smoking in an unoccupied house are believed to have caused a fire which destroyed a two-story frame building in Pittsburgh, entail ing a loss of $2,000. The unoccupied house has been a congregating place for tramps for the last three years, ac cording to the police. Milk dealers in Harrison township have opened a fight against the town ship ordinance which requires an an nual tax of $1 for all milk dealers. They declare that the tax is unjust inasmuch as grocers, butchers anl other merchants are not required to pay the tax. The Pennsylvania Grange will op pose a state bond issue for road build ing and urge a 1 mill tax on persona] and corporate property; more money for schools; demand more economy in the state government, and ask that the state pay the cost of primaries. When James Reed of the Farrel baseball team, slammed a three-bag ger to the center field fence in a game against Greenville he won Miss Hazel M. Doty of Canton, 0., his bride. The couple were married by Justice of the Peace Daniel Zuschlag at Farrell. . \ Three cases of typhoid fever neai the top of Altoona's watershed at Kit tanning Point have been discovered, and this is believed to have been the source of the city's epidemic. There are now nearly 100 cases of typhoid in the city and vicinity, Twelve Sharon and Farrell dispen sers of soft drinks were arrested and fined on information made by State Pure Food Agent Guant, charged with selling imitAion strawberry pop. It is charged that the pop was artificially colored and flavored. While one sister lay dead of typhoid fever and his mother and two other sisters were dying of the same disease, David Berge, sixteen yeari old, of Norristown, accidentally shot and killed himself with a shotgun. Dr. Earle Peck, first assistant phy sician at the municipal hospital, Phila delphia, where all of the infantile paralysis victims are quarantined, died of the disease, contracted while at tending afflicted children. Twenty prisoners in the Butler coun ty jail, awaiting the September term cf § court, went on strike, refusing to carry out the regular program of cleaning out their cells and scrubbing the tiers of the jail. ——- j The postoffice at Lewis Run, near Bradford, was robbed. The safe was cracked by the use of nitroglycerin. Two hundred and fifty dollars' worth of postage stamps and $2O in cash was taken. Awakened by pressure on her chest, Mrs. Charles Shaum of near Indiana clutched a four-foot blacksnake which had curled up on her. Her husband killed the reptile. In York all police records for arrests in one month were broken in August, just ended. One hundred and eighty one arrests were made a great ma jority of them for drunkenness. Mrs. Peter Kirk, aged sixty, of Leisenring No. 1, near Connellsville, died at the Cottage State hospital of blood poisoning caused by paring a i corn. Carlisle set 364 boys and girls busy on tag day to raise a fund for its mis sion playgrounds, and the little people, beginning at 6:45 a. m., collected $ll9. Backed by good road enthusiasts. McKean county comii issioners will ask the people in their bailiwick to vote for a road loan of $750,000. R. S. Yeager, aged eighty-two, died near Waynesburg. He was in a wagon when he was stricken with heart trouble. His team ran away. Matthew S. Simpson has been ap pointed postmaster at Manown, Alle gheny county, to succosd Harry C. Gadd, resigned. The annual convention of the Penn sylvania State Association of Letter i Carriers was held in New Castle. 1. • f&cis Versus. I n * F altacies | xs 6 real state of things. FALLACY is art appafc ently genuine but really illogical statement or argument. GEORGIA'S Prohibition law went into effect on May firit So W peculiar is the law governing Georgia's indulgence in alcoholic 'lv stimulants that one of Philadelphia's foremost papers is moved w— editorially to comment on that State's cold water rules, as follows: IROTlth 3 JENTT.F.MEN in -Georgia, hereafter, wilT drink sparingly \^isl(AV rye and Bourbon, whether from their own or their host's P. decanter. Under the prohibition law which went into effect in thatlA - State the first of May, no individual within the State may be possession of .more than two quarts of any -distilled liquor within' any -calendar month, or forty-eight pints of beer or malts, or a, -*■" gallon of wine. German bread and meat cards, issued to -enforce **s^ the economies necessitated by war, are not more rigidly employed - ♦Ha™ will be the xlrink rations in Georgia* according to the promise of the cold-water folks. j jty A N -expert purveyor: to Philadelphia thirsts, from behind the |g| [MM* *a. mahogany, aaysrthereiKre aeTeuty fair drinks to the gallon, pH § months which would make aboofthirty-five for the average Georgian in a Q >1- aL month. *This would supply-the mornin's morn in, and a Sunday night pd 'Deer cap, in the ordinary month, and. make February the month of PI pi ***»»,JiSXkfw' 'I months with its surplus of seven. Highhalls and juleps would have Itwvlllifig .to stand more dilation. J^klTWwfliHiWuof the. scheme of regulation is not apparent Why make allowance for the four or five extra drinks, or why forty-eight-pints .-of beer? '.Possibly we never shall the | .iV rulers of Georgia: may "never tell and may never be asked. No news paper of magazine wHtfWontfng an advertisement of intoxicating liquors of any land may hereafter enter "the sacrosanct jurisdiction of Georgia without having the -corrupting reference to woozy-boozy I'TrijfcT*ATl TTJ T - drinkTeffLed. and m«esexpression of sympathy for the plight of the thirsty Georgian may be considered as contraband expression hil . - . > a . >ll jKf and be ***** by the this paper shall «roaa tha jjj'W "DOOR Georgia—not because it is ;going -dry, but bccaißfi. U, | f A takes such freak legislation so aeriously," NOT only does the above editorial point out that the assumption that Prohibition prohibits is a FALLACY, but the added. FACT is shown that Georgia -embracing "Prnhibitipfl P v"Alv iST ( at all that Georgia—or Gcorginn-. ■willbe^diyl'* 3 Pennsylvania State. 3 1 " . • "" u "*■ | 73 S = ___ J John Runiete, arrested in Carnegie Saturday, suspected of having been cne of the two men who perpetrated a daylight robbery on the oflice force of the Pittsburgh Stopper company, has been identified by two Thornburg residents as one of the two men who entered a poolroom in Thornburg the night of Aug. 8 and robbed eight men it the poiift of revolvers. More than 20,000 officials and mem bers of the Patriotic Order, Sons of America, in convention in Philadel phia; dazzled Broad street in a pa rade that eclipsed all former proces sions. In line were delegations drom Illinois, Ohio, Connecticut, Ten nessee, New York, Maryland, New Jer sey, Delaware and other states. Twenty-five firemen were temporari ly overcome by a mysterious gas while fighting a blaze which caused damage of approximately $2,000 to Sell Broth ers' tailoring establishment in Pitts burgh. They were carried to the street by fellow firemen and given first aid as they lay stretched upon the side walk. Vance Reed, twenty-five, is in the Canonsburg hospital suffering from serious injuries as a result of being at tacked by a horse while he was at work in a hayfield. Reed's left arm was bitten so severely that a large bone in it was broken and he was bruised and otherwise injured. Attacked by two men, who beat him with clubs, Tony Cosff of Turtle Creek, died in the Braddock General hospital from a fractured skull. The attack occurred in a boarding house occupied by Bulgarians and is said to have been the result of a war argu ment. One hundred and seventy cars filled with steel rails and consigned to Vladivostok, Siberia, passed through the East Hallidaysburg yards of the Pennsylvania railroad. There was sufficient building material to construct a railroad 100 miles long. Warren Shaw, aged six, of Altoona, was instantly killed when struck by lightning, and several others were in jured, during a severe storm which swept Blair county. Much damage was done to crops and buildings in the southern part of the county. Oil City council has voted unani mously to pass on third reading the ordinance providing for the annexa tion to the city of West End borough. The borough, adjacent to the Fourth and Ninth wards of the city, has a population of more than 1,000. Wedged in between a trunk and an ironing board, where he had hidden when fire broke out on the porch of the residence of Leonard Kwaterski in Pittsburgh, Teddy Bogacz, aged was suffocated before Fireman Wil liam D. Murray found him. Seven hundred and twenty-gix cases of infantile paralysis have been re ported to the Pennsylvania depart ment of health since July 1. Four hundred and "thirty of these cases oc curred in the rity of Philadelphia. ❖ • % SNo cice to Owners of Dog's 4 ❖ T \ Y The tax on dogs for 1917 has been fixed at $l.OO for Y ❖ < , V males and $2.00 for females. The assessors will call on all ♦> J V owners of dogs within the next few months of 1916 for the 1 >s► J >■% collection of taxes for 1917, which must be paid prior to V ❖ * ♦ December 31st, 1916. Should the assessor not see you, hunt V ♦ ♦% him up and securea tag for your dog, for there will be no V ♦ V extension of time, and dogs not provided with tags are out ❖ x ♦t* lawed and will be killed on and after January Ist, 1917. J ❖ V ♦> COUNTY COMMISSIONERS. Y ❖ V ❖ j| T 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. Captain Lewis Morey of the Carri zal skirmish has been detailed as pro fessor of military science and tactics at the Pennsylvania Military college at Chester. The detail is to take ef feet at once. George Stewart of Boston was unanimously elected supreme grand master of the Loyal Orange Institu tion in Pittsburgh at the annual elec tion held just before the session ad journed. Winifred Chemoski, aged two, daughter of Peter Chemoski of Can onsburg, was found by her mother in Chartiers creek, drowned after falling into the stream while playing on the bank. After a quarrel with his wife, Charles Hill, aged forty-five, of Corry, set fire to his home and committed suicide on the front steps while his wife fled to a neighbor's with their child. Never Hits It. Gadsby—That fellow Noscads Is a regular fortune hunter. Raynor—Well, he's a mighty poor shot.—Judge. Yarmouth'® Naval Hiatory. Yarmouth has never been a naval base, but played a strange part In a sort of civil war with the barona of the Cinqoe ports during the middle aces. The barons attempted to annex the great herring metropolis, bat Yar mouth, with characteristic Independ ence, fiercely and continuously restated their control by force of arms. A des perate sea fight took place off the har bor between a Yarmouth squadron and a fleet from the Cinque porta. In which twenty-five ships were sunk and thir tv-seven damaged.—London MalL Before the Blackboard. Before arithmetic was invented the people multiplied on the face of the earth. A Careful Business Man Is Careful of His Stationery The Stationery That We Turn Out In Our Job Department Is the BEST IN TOWN. We STRIVE TO PLEASE Our Cus tomers. & & & t Before Ordering Your Printing Else= where SEE US
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers