INCOME TAX RECLAMO PER IL RIOUPERO DEL/I;A SOMMA PAGATA EVENTUALr- MENTE IX ECCEDENZA QUESTIONARIO COMPLETO y .1 —Qual'6 il vostro nome e cognome, e quale l'indirizzo al tempo in cui pagaste l'lncome Tax? 2.—Dove e quando fu pagata la tassa? (Dare la data esatta). ft • * 3. —La tassa fu pagata direttamente al Collettoro delle Tasse? 4. —Qual'6 il nome del Collettore? I 5. —(La tassa fu ritirata dalla vostra paga, dal vostro padrone? C.—Qual'S il nome del vostro padrone? 7. — a quanto ammonto la tassa pagata, ein base a quale somma fu cal- j colta la tassa stessa? ! B.—Avete la ricevuta delld tassa pagata? Se l'avete. chi l'ha firmata? j 9.—'Siete voi ammogliato O maritata? Avete figli? Quanti? JO. —La vostra famiglia risiede negli Stati Uniti o in Italia? I 11.—Quanti dei vostri figli risiedono negli Stati Uniti? j 12. —Vostro moglie lavora? Vostro marito lavora? 13. —Quanti dei vostri figli lavorano? 14. —Siete cittadino americano? . % 15. —Qual'6 il vostro mestiero? 16. —In quale anno siete arrivato negli Stati Uniti? I*7.—Avete voi firmato la dichiarazione con la quale affermate di aver in tenzione di risiedere negli Stati Uniti? (Nota: questa dichiarazione non ha alcun effetto sulla cittadinanza deH'immigrato, e non impediscp di andare liberamente in Italia, quan do se ne presenti il bisogno.—'Modulo 1078.) ,18. —Quale somma nel 1914 I 19. —Quanto guadagnaste nel 1915? 20.—Quanto guadagnaste nel 191G? 21. —Quanto guadagnaste nel 1917? 22.—Altri chiarimenti che voi ritenete necessari • " j TOO WILD IN CELEBRATION Americans in Paris, Released From the Horrors of Trenches, Somewhat Astonish tha French. Not the least of our p*:de in the ex peditionary force was its good behav ior. For general morals we. were the prize winners. But, of course, soldiers in a nonprohibition country will get drunk now and then. One reason for our prohibition wave is the fact that many Americans have no moderation in their use of alcohol, and that they sometimes tend, when drunk, to tear up the sidewalks, writes Will Irwin, in the Saturday Evening Post. Your French poilu, who, in his reac tion from the trenches took to liquor, got a blissful and genial jag, which ex pressed itself in talkativeness and in flirtation./ The American whooped it up. As two coyotes on a moonlight night can give the impression of a whole wolf pack, so two drunken Americans could give the appearance of a drunk en army. They might be surrounded by fifty poilus, all half seas over; it was the Americans whom one noticed. This tendency brought its most de plorable effects in Paris. The capital qf the world was not a leave center. Nevertheless all sorts of commissions and activities centered there; soldiers were constantly coming and going on military errands; moreover, though Paris was officially barred, men never theless got Paris leave by pull or ca jolery. In spite of the provost marshal 1 and the military police we always had the American drunk with us; and when present he always announced himself. The French, who, as I have said, grow merely genially exp;:i».si*e with liquor, did not like this. LEARNED MUCH IN FRANCE Doughboys, Back in America, \re Not Quite the. Same as Wnen They Left. "The boy just hnek from Frnnce Is a mighty different chap from the lad who went over there," says William i Howard Taft, adding, with a laugh: "He's learned a lot he didn't know be fore. Take two instances that came to my notice recently. "One was the case of a doughboy who before the war had been a hotel clerk. On his return to America he applied in New York for a place. " 'What references have you?' de manded the manager. " 'Been over in France a year, and before that —' "Never mind the 'before that,"* said the manager. 'lf you've been in France a year you know nil about do mestic work. I'll make you head chambermaid.' "The other one," continued Mr. Taft, i "was quite different. He, too, had come back from France, and he, too, had learned a lot. " 'Do you tliijik you could ever learn to love me?' he asked the girl of his choice, and she answered: " *1 don't know. Anyhow, you might j continue your course of instruction. Gee! it's so different!'" . Cause cf the Querry. As soon as women have' the vote and the league of nations becomes a reality, says Dr. Anna Howard Shaw, she is going to be a "gay young girl." As it is, no one would suspect her of being past seventy. And she likes to tell stories on herself. This is one she told in Indianapolis to a group of friends: <► "When I was in California recently, folks kept coming Up to me and say ing. 'How young you look,' in most surprised tones. Well, it began to wear on me. Why shouldn't I look young? So when a young girl came up and said it for the 'steenth time, I said, 'So do you look young.' "And then I learned the reason for all the surprise. The newspapers had been told that I was in California in '9O with Miss Anthony. It had some how got twisted to read: 'Dr. Shaw was ninety-six when she was here with Miss Anthony.' That would have made me about 120 years old." Caught at Last. A father said to his pretty daugh ter one morning: "What time did you send that young Simpson home last night?" "Oh," replied the girl. "I don't think It was very late." "It must have been close to mid night !" "Why, father?" "Didn't you send him out the back door and hurry off to bed when you heard me coming in?" •Why, father, I had been in bed for hours." j "You heard me, then?" "Yes, you woke me up." "And you hajj been in bed for hours?" i "Ur huh!" "Thar certainly is funny!" "Why?" "Because when I went to light the | lamp I nearly burned my hands off on the hot chimney." —Youngstown Tele gram. No More Insects or Plant Diseases. Now that plant quarantine No. 37 of the Agricultural department Is in ef fect. prohibiting the importation of plants without a permit, there wftll be no more garden insects or plant dis eases. If thare are ft will the fault of the federal horticultural board, for no insects or diseases can enter now except with the permission of the board. Do not discard the sprayers I and insecticides, however, as they will I still be useful to combat the old and ' new troubles that are bound to ap*>ear. FAR FROM VICTORIAN AGE Present Period Would Be One of Be wilderment to Man Who Lived in That Era. i Suppose some placid gentleman of the Victorian era. who went caliply to his eternal sleep certain that the world had settled at last into final and accepted form, should he awak ened nnd permitted to gaze upon the world today. What would be his reflections? * He would see the world wiping a tear from its eye oecause of what it supposed was the tragic fate of two young British flyers who had essayed to fly across the Atlantic —and had almost achieved the Icarian feat. He would see the world, in the same mo ment. applauding furiously the feats of Yankee flyers engaged in th«* sain* effort in a surer way. He would see Russia, w!;2t*h he had pictured °.s an enduring fabric with an everlasting czar at the top, a chaos of ruins with whiskered proletarians conducting a new and deadlier tyranny.* He would see Ger many, which he had remembertAl as a smug rnd promising little empire, on its knees supplicating mercy that is less than justice from an out raged world. would see the Unit ed Stages, which !<<* had pictured as about a million miles removed from the affairs of Europe, a towering fig ure in the great peace conference as it has been the deciding figure in the great war. He would see these and other marvels, and he would hear of an unbelievably horrible war that had wrought its deadliness with weapons strange and terrible like poison gas and airplanes and submarines. What a whirling, aching head that Victorian relic would have iffter Jie had looked over this new world of ours for half an lipur! —Duluth Her ald. REFUSED TO BE CHiLDISH t Chief Reason Why Elderly Lady Was Pronounced by All to Be Grand Success. * ' She is the dearest little old lady of seventy-three any one ever paw. She is very happy and always immensely | busy. She knitted a great many sweat ers and pairs of socks for the soldier , boys. And now, when we're no longer needing socks for our boys she is em broidering an exquisite dress for the tiny baby of the girl who used to be her maid. "Why are you so very happy?" she was asked one day. "I'm happy because I'm not child ish," she said > very emphatically. "Now, I'm not, am I? Did you ever hear any one say fiat I was childish? "And I am seventy-three years old,", she boasted. "Now, the woman next door is only sixty and she is very, very childish. Why, 1 have to comfort and pet her often when I'm longing to laugh at her. She isn't wise enough to keep from being childish. "When I was young I used to watch the people in my family get childish." she continued. "It amused me at first, and then when I saw how people out side of our family regarded them as nuisances I determined then that I never would be childish and a—nuis ance. I watched and watched and then 1 discovered the secret. If you don't want to get the least bit childish you don't ever dare pity yourself. Ton have to think, think, think of other people and ways in which you cat help them. The worst thing people j can do is to think of themselves." Outside the visitor met the grocer boy. "Do you hear her?" he asked. "Isn't she a dear arid not a bit child ish, either." , r "She's a grand success," she re. turned. "You bet!"he agreed.—lndianapolis News. Noted. Sunday morning. The congregation j in its go-to-meeting best filed into the pews of the village church and sat rig idly at attention as was the custom among God-fearing Americans of that day. All was serenity and stillness. Then the pastor arose. "Let us pray," he said. The government inspector in the last pew reached hurriedly ,for his notebook. "Ah, ha !" he muttered. "Establish ing secret" communication with the Almighty without a federal permit. Burleson shaft hear of this." Oily Customer. Robert Henri. the eminent New York painter, was talking about the men who buy, merely to show off, doubtful -old masters* at fabulous prices. "Their knowledge of art/' Mr. Henri said, "is about tqual to that of the Chicago sausaire manufacturer who said to Whistler: 41 'What would you charge to do me in oil?' " 'Ten thousand dollars,' said Whist-- ler promptly. "'But suppose I furnished the oil?' said the millionaire." —Success. He Had a Reason. A Terre Haute doctor met a friend In Main street the other day and was j telling him how busy he was. "But I j took off enough time to go to a ball I game the other day," he boasted. "Well, did you enjoy it?" asked his i friend. | "Yes." returned the doctor very en | thusiastically inde d. "I made .<25 off j one of the players. He broke his leg and I got to st it." —Indianapolis i Xews. !» \ f S ? Both Phor.es P. 0. Box E > PIETRO SMORTO | . BARNESBORO, PA. !; Agente di tutte le linee di navigazione v ' j| ]! Trasmissione di moneta, a mezzo vaglia \ jì Postali e Telegrafici \ !; IN otti io Pubblico " |j jì Se volete andare subito in Italia rivolgetevi v a questa agenzia. > SI VENDE /Casa e lotto ad Aultman sulla strada d'lndiana e Homer City—Buona occasione per uno da mettere « negozio; si vende per ragioni che il proprietario vuole andarsene in Italia. Scrivere o rivolgersi a DOMENICO SCARCELLI P. O. Box 62 - - AULTMAN, PA. ' ' AUTOMOBILE USAIEdaVENDERE | OVERLAND—a 5 posti Ì BUICK-a 4 cilindri, 5 posti MAXWELL-a 5 posti MAXWELL—modello 191 8 a 3 posti Queste automobili sono in buonis sime condizioni, apparentemente nuove. Noi possiamo favorirvi con termini ragionevoli. • * Con un po di pagamento anticipato potete essere padroni di un automobile. \ J. WETTLING & SON \ Indiana, Pa. \ DIRETTORIO DI PROFESSIONISTI E COMMERCIANTI DI INDIANA E DINTORNI CHE IL GIORNALE RACCOMANDA CHARLES J. MARGIOTTI | E - E - CREPS. Avvocato Italiano Avvocato in Legeo Cor. Mahoning & Jefferson St. j Farmers Bank Buiìiìiiig Punxsutawney, Pa. Indiana. Pa. JOSEPH C. MAGRO, Dott Dentista Citizens National Bank Uffieio opposto alla Banoa Indiana, Pa. Ore d'ufficio : Dalle 8 a. m. ali 5 p. Avvocato Italiano. m., 7 p. m. 8 p. m. PAUL D. SHARRETTS ALTEMUS AUTO SERATCE Automobile da nolo per' dentro a fuo- |jjH # j|3 3 Hetrick Bldg., di fronte la corte, Indiana, Pa. Noi carichiamo le vostre PER I MIGLIORI ROMANZI RI batterie pel vostro automo ! VOLGETEVI ALLA LIBRERIA bile. DEL "PATRIOTA", 15 Carpeu- .Elettricisti d'Automobile ter Ave., Indiana, Pa. Grande assortinento di acces sori elettrici. JAMES A OROSSMAN j E LE QR IC C O. Giudice di Pace Stazione autorizzata del indiana, Pa. servizio "Willard** PFFI OR er WTT Quando dovete trasportare la vostra. L LLLUK & rEIT . Mobilia, chiamate a me. Avvocati in eause civile e cri- jj MAL'K minali . r , .. .... T _ Telefono Locale 21.'» Phila. Street Marshall Bldg., Indiana, Pa. :ìs; .> Y , indiana. Pa. I •• I TEATRO STRATO» II più' grande Cinematografo in Indiana ' L'unico posto per passare - un'ora allegra Locale igienico Musica ottima Capacita' 400 Sedie / | GEO. D. LEYDIC 1 Mercanzia musicale I Direttore di Pompe Funebri Pianoforti e Pianole « Fonografi PATHE' 630 PHILADELPHIA STREET, !»S >< / Dischi INDIANA, PA. $ i AUTOMOBILI A BUON MERCATO . Ci sono State inviate Fords nuovissime Si Vendono a pronta . cassa per ; . SSBO 10 per cento di riduzione su gomme e camere d'aria marca Firestone. , Raggi per Ford* da $3.50 ora $2.75 Springs " " 4. hO " 4 3.50 Spark Plugs 11 75c 41 45c | Radi tori per Fords " 30.00 " 525.00 Parafanghi 22.00 44 16.00 Si riparono aratri della marca Wiard. Riduzione sugli attrezzi di agricoltura. 1 II luogo piti" a buon mercato per fornimenti di cavallo. J. S. HILEMAN successore di Wilmer Stewart , i Dietro la corte INDIANA, PA. *m\\ mn *■■ ** 11 m « ini Mi 11 w
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers