PA great net •/ mercy drawn through aa tcean of unspeakabU pam" , t ' ,•% * * V -/<% m Facts About the American Red Cross ; Did you know that— It has established and is operating twenty dis pensaries in the American Army Zone in France to care for the needy families there and to improve health conditions in that section ready for our troops? It is housing- and feeding thousands of children in the War Zone to" keep them away from the danger of gas and shell fire? It has divided the entire War Zone into six main districts, with Red Cross workers at each point to distribute cooking utensils, agricultural implements, beds, bedding, food and clothing ? It provides builders and ready-to-put-up build . ings to house the homeless in the devastated regions, often before the walls of the destroyed homes have cooled? It is bringing over two hundred tons of supplies every day into Paris, from which one hundred and twenty-five tons are reshipped to branch warehouses over France? It is providing an artificial limb factory outside of Paris, in addition to special plants for the making of splints ? What will you give to keep this Hand of Mercy at its work? Every cent of every dollar received for the Red Cross War Fund goes for War Relief. The American Red CroBS is the largest and most efficient organization for the relief of suffering that the World has ever seen. It is made up almost entirely of volunteer workers, the higher executives being without exception men ac oustomed to large affairs, who are In almost all cases giving their services without pay. It is supported entirely by Its membership fees and by voluntary contributions. It is today bringing relief to suffering humanity, both military and civil, in every War torn allied country. It plans tomorrow to help in the work of restora tion throughout the world. An Old-Time Plow. An old-time plow, probably used by ithe early Spaniards around San An- Itonio, Tex., was upturned by workmen of a construction company. The plow 'has a three-foot turning blade capable of making a three-foot furrow, and al though the wooden handles have rot ted away the size of the iron supports Indicates the plow must have been about twelve feet in length. It is be lieved the old instrument was used by the early Spaniards with several yoke of oxen. - Gourd Family Is Important The gourd family furnishes the hu man families with many edible fruits, and it is believed that pumpkins and squashes are of American origin, though in nowise certain. On the oth er hand, it Is known that watermelons, muskmelons, cucumbers and all that branch of the family are of Asiatic ori gin. Yet all countries have native spe cies of this great family. Left-Handedness. No attempt should be made to teach naturally left-handed children to use their right hands, according to P. B. Ballard, inspector of schools of Lon don, as it is likely to make them stam merers. Mr. Ballard supplies the fol lowing statistics: Out of one group of 545 left-handed children 1 per cent of pure left-handers stammered, against 4.8 per cent of 899 being taught to use the right hand. In another group of 207 the figures was 4.2 per cent and 21.8 per cent, respectively. A Mutual Pleasure. Mother—"Were you glad to get back to school and see your dear teacher?" little Son —"Well, I—l was Just about as glad as dear teacher was to get back and see me I" Jtaofc .. .. Make Gems of Them. Nearly all artificial gems—that is to say, stones that are really made by ar tificial means —are compounds of alum crystallized under special conditions. The metallic salts that are added dur ing fusion determine whether the stones produced shall be sapphires, ru bles or Oriental topazes, amethysts or emeralds. Work. There is nothing but what's bearable, as long as a man can work. The nature of things don't change, though It seems as if one's life was nothing but change. That the square of four is sixteen, and you must lengthen your lever in pro portion to your weight, is as true when a man's miserable as when he's happy; and the best of working is, it i gives you a good grip-hold of things outside your own lot. —George Eliot. Understanding. More hate would be mellowed to love by intimate knowledge than would regard to disfavor. A smatter ing information is a treacherous pos session. All it requires to effect better relations between nations as , well as individuals is knowledge, and more knowledge. f Ground Squirrels. More than 50 species and races of ground squirrels inhabit the United States and Canada. Watch Winding Machine. In a New York watch repairing es tablishment, where more than 700 watches have to be wound every day, an electrical apparatus has been in stalled to do the winding. It does the work more efficiently than human hands can, and takes the place of sev eral men formerly required for this work. It feeds and clothes entire populations in times of great calamity. It is there to help your soldier boy in his tlm« of need. With its thousands ot workers, ita tremendous stores and smooth running transportation facilities, it is serving as America's advance guard—and thufl helping to win the war. Congress authorizes It. President Wilson heads it. The War Department audits its accounts. Your Army, your Navy and your Allies enthusi astically endorse it. Twenty-two million Americans hr.v« joined it The Largest Diamond. The largest diamond that has yet been found is the Culllnan, which was discovered in the Premier mine in the I Transvaal In 1907 and weighed 3,025% carats, or one and one-third pounds, in the rough, and at that it was ap parently only a fragment of a larger stone. In cutting this immense gem it was divided into nine large stones and a number of brilliants, the largest finished stone being only carats, Handy Scrapbook. Have you a little blank book which you keep full of household sugges tions, in alphabetical form? Much can be gained when reading the papers and magazines if you clip out some of the suggestions which are worth while. Paste them in the proper place in your little book. It is more than worth the trouble. —Exchange. No Time for Debate. "Jlbbes is the kind of fellow who never makes a move without first ask ing himself whether or not it will be good for his health." "I saw him Jump six feet in the air yesterday to dodge an automobile. Instinct probably told him what was good for his health, i without his stopping to debate the mat ter.** Production of Leghorns. The average production of eggs by hens of all kinds and ages in the United States is 85. Unselected White Leghorns, however, produce an aver age of 130 eggs for the first year, 120 for the second, 110 for the third, 85 for the fourth, and fall off about ten a year up to the eighth. These fig ures are from a bulletin of the Utah experiment station. If the first year production be low, the second will be high and vice versa, the total produc tion for three years being about the same. -•<— =ae..-ji: jsr-zismi , I ALL HAD TRAGIC HISTORY Carolina the Last of a Quartet of Ships That Seemed to Be Doomed to Misfortune. "The sinking of the Carolina by a German U-boat removed the last of a quartet of ships that have had a tragic history," remarked Brooks Amiss of Baltimore, a former resident of Wash ington, at the Willard. according to the Washington Post "The Carolina was formerly the Grand Duchess, built for the Plant line in 1896. She made her first trip from Boston to Halifax and two years later she was taken over by the government to be used as trans port in the Spanish-American war. Her maiden voyage in the transport service was from Charleston, S. C., carrying a regiment of Wisconsin troops and high army officers to Porto Rico. "General Miles a short time before had been placed in command of the American army and he left Washing ton with members of his stafT early in July. At Charleston General Miles 1 went on board the Yale, which had been the City of Paris of the Ameri can line. He left Gen. Roy Stone of his staff at Charleston to recruit a gang of laborers for the army in Porto Rico. General Miles proceeded to Cuba on the Yale and after staying there a few days went to Guanica on the southern coast of Porto Rico. It was while he was lying in the wonder ful little harbor of Guanica on board the Cherokee, the Yale being too large to enter the harbor, that he was joined by members of his staff who had sailed on the Grand Duchess. The Cherokee, another Plant liner, took the staff to Ponce, and among others on that ves sel was the late Richard Harding Da vis, who had sailed from Cuba on a dispatch boat. The Cherokee arrived off Ponce the next morning to find that the city had been taken the previous day by an ensign of the navy in a dis patch yacht. "A few days later the protocol end ing the war was declared and most of .he members of the Miles party sailed itack for the States on the Obdam, a , transport that had been purchased | from the Holland-American line. "The curious part of the thing is : *:hat the Yale was sunk in some inan i ner; the Obdam ran ashore off the j coast of Cuba while in the transport | service; the Cherokee foundered some- I where in the Atlantic and now the I Grand Duchess, rechristened the Caro lina, has been sent to the bottom by a German U-boat." ) f Jupiter's Belts. It has been suggested by Lau that the reason Jupiter has belts instead • * zones of spots is to be found in its rapid rotation. The material forced upward from the lower strata of the planet, bringing with It a smaller lin ear velocity than that of the surface, streams eastward, assuming the look of elongated streaks. If the centers of eruption are sufficiently numerous, belts are formed; and It Is suggested that, were the sun's rotation much more rapid than it is, the solar sur face at spot maximum would also pre sent dark streaks. Dolly Dillon. Dolly Dillon, denouncing dawdlers, disdained dashing Dick Dereritt, deb onair dancer. Dick, despairing, defied decorum, dug ditches daily, duly dem onstrating devotion. Dolly, delighted, discarded derision, discontinued dis paragements. Dick's diamond deco rates Dolly's dainty digit—Christian Register. Stops Flag Wrapping. The wind will not play pranks -with j your flag if a soft piece of feather bone, as used by dressmakers, is run through a casing of narrow navy blue ribbon along the upper edge of the field. The casing will never be noticed if carefully done. Improved Soldering Process. A form of the Sehoop metal-spraying i process Is claimed to be effective in \ soldering. The soldering pistol does j not require the compressed air jet, as I the fuel-gas used is under pressure ' and gives the flame sufficient driving ; force to spread the solder over the surfaces to be soldered. A small driv- i ing mechanism feeds the wire solder j continuously into the flame. The j ! method is convenient, rapid and inex- I pensive and is free from the tedious j and disagreeable features of soldering by hand. Want Technical Training for Women. At a joint meeting of the Rirming- t ham and Atlanta sections of the Amer ican Society of Mechanical Engineers j resolutions were adopted requesting j the colleges and technical schools of | the country to provide special courses | of technical instruction for women j and girls In order that they may be able to take the places of men who have been or may be called into the service of the country during the war. —Birmingham Age-Herald. t rkLi>U »<4VW_ Qood-by Leather Shoes. The leather shoe is becoming so ex pensive that It will soon be out of the reach of all but the rich; therefore, according to Andrew H. King, writinf In Metallurgical and Chemical Engi neering, its place is to be taken bjr shoes with soles of rubber and uppers of canvas. The properly made rubb«r sole, Into which ground cotton wast# and leather dust are incorporated, will outwear two or three leather soles and will not slip on wet pavement. , A Break. Member S. P. C. A. (to brutal driver) —"No, my friend. I won't shut up. Your poor horse, unfortunately, cannot speak like Baalam's ass. but I would have you know, sir, that I can.—Bos ton Transcript. Why the Weather Bureau? Why the weather bureau? This question is likely to be asked, in more or less querulous tones, whenever the local weather prediction fails, as It often does, says the Popular Science Monthly. The Inquirer overlooks the fact that the weather bureau has much more important things to foretell than ordinary changes of weather. It pre dicts with certainty great windstorms, destructive floods, severe freezes and other atmospheric visitations that en danger life and property on a large scale and collects climatic statistics for scientific agriculture. Flowers. Flowers are perhaps the most effec tive of the many little "finishing toucnes" necessary to aa attractive home. There are thousauds of persons with beautiful houses, costly furnish ings. perhaps, artistically and skillfully arranged by the hands of a clever dec orator, but it takes the little finishing touches, the seemingly unimportant tiny things, done by the woman who loves and exists for her home and ex presses her soul In her surroundings to make the house lovable.—Exchange. Knife Superstitions. The various knife superstitions are easily explained. It is unlucky to give a knife to a friend, because knives sever things, and might sever friend ship; but if he gives you a halfpenny in return the danger is avoided, for his gift Is a token of continued affec tion. It Is unlucky to place one's knife and fork crosswise on an empty plate, because it Invites crosses and misfor tune, also recalling the Christian sym bol of suffering. I A prezzi fatti prima della guerra, I prezzi dei Pianoforti e delle Pianole sono stati aumentati durante gli ultimi 6 mesi, e fra altri 6 mesi vi sara' un nuovo aumento su questi . strumenti. La ragione che noi possiamo vendere a prezzo più basso degli altri, e' che ci troviamo negli affari da più' tempo, e compriamo a prezzi bassi: Fra non molto saremo costretti aumentare i prezzi anche noi. Se volete comprare un pianoforte vi conviene far presto e non aspettare. Pianole da $450 a S7OO Grande varietà' di Pianoforti da SIOO a $750 di qualsiasi stile o legno. PAGAMENTI FACILI s. R. POLLOCK Di RISPETTO LA CORTE - - * INDIANA, PA.,