4 TIPOGRAFIA DEL "PATRIOTA,, Marshall Bldg. Indiana, Pa. arwflvar || * ■¥■ * * * jj !! * ★ ★ ★ ★ 1! !! _ mt-mm ■■ mmn \ l SI FSEGIiISCBNO IAVORI DI STAMPA CON LA MASSIMA SOLLECITUDINE ED FSATTfZZA * CIRCOLARI - STATUTI - CARTE INTESTATE * é MANIFESTI - BUSTE - STATEMENTS f J PARTECIPAZIONI DI NOZZE i BIGLIETTI DA VISITA - BILL HEAOS \ | BUSINESS CAROS - PROGRAMMI, ed altro + jj $ jj ]i ì§ j: jj !; li $ il i| $ i| ;Ì $ lj |i & $ !• Caratteri moderni nuovissimi gsroggcffifigsaseìgag^^ The Patriot Publishing Co. INDIANA, PA. QUESTIONS THAT A GOOD CITIZEN SHOULD KNOW. D. Have you read the Constitution of the United States? R. Yes. D. What form of Government is this? R. Republican. D. What is the Constitution of the United States? R. It is the fundamental law of this country. D. Who makes the laws of the United States? R. The Congress. D. What does Congress consist of? R. Senate and House of Representa tives. D. Who is the chief executive of the United States? R. President. D. For how long is the President of Ihe United States elected? R. 4 years. D. Who takes the place of the Presi dent in case he dies? R. The Vice President. D. What is his name ? R. Thomas R. Marshall. D. By whom is the President of the United States elected? R. By the electors. D. By whom are the electors elected ? R. By the people. D. Who makes the k.ws for the State of Pennsylvania? R. The Legislature. D. What does the Legislature con sist of? R. Senate and Assemblv. D. How many States in the Union? R. 48. D. When was the Declaration of Independence signed? R. July 4, 1776. D. By whom was it written? R. Thomas Jefferson. D. Which is the capital of the United States? R. Washington. D. Which is the Capital of the State of Pennsylvania? R. Harrisburg. D. How many Senators has each State in the United States Senate? R. Two. D. By whom are they elected? R. By the people. D. For how long ? R. 6 years. D. How many representatives are Ihere ? * R. According to the population one to every 30,000. D. For how long are they elected? R. 2 years. D. How many electoral votes has the State of Pennsylvania? R. 34. D. Who is the chief executive of the State of Pennsylvania? R. The Governor. D. For how long is he elected? R. 4 years. D. Who is the Governor? R. Tener. D. Do you believe in organized gov ernment ? k. Yes. D. Are you opposed to organized government ? R. No. D. Are you an anarchist? R. No. D. What is an anarchist? R. A person who does not believe in organized government. D. Are you a bigamist or poliga mist ? R. No. D. What is a bigamist or poliga iwist? R. One who believes in having more than one wife. D. Do you belong to any secret So ciety who teach to disbelieve in or ganized government? R. No. D. Have you ever violated any laws of the United States ? R. No. D. Who makes the ordinances for the City? R. The Board of Aldermen. D. Do you intend to remain per manently in the U. S.? R. Yes. "A Sound Box." Take an ordinary rubber band and stretch it between the thumb and fore finger of your left hand. If you pick It with the fingers of the right hand and let go suddenly it will make a sound which you can hear distinctly enough yourself, but which will not be audible to any one a few feet away. But if you were to fasten the elastic, with a pin at each end, to an empty wooden box, only not so as to touch the wood, and then twang it the sound would be much louder than before. That box is the sound box, or sound board, and ali stringed instruments have one in some shape or other.—St. Nicholas. The Greek Chureh. What is known as the Greek church is the church of the old eastern em pire, which prior to the Turkish con quest had its metropolis of Constanti nople. whereas the West church had Its capltol at Rome. The first dispute between the two arose in the second century regarding the lime of keeping Saster. -1 r.d ia:? 2 poiU .News. MAP SHOWING LOCATION OF GREATEST BATTLES. In the great battle to the north east of Paris the French have ad vanced their front on their left wing about twenty-five miles. This ad vance is indicated in the map by the shadings from the original lines of the allies to the present positions which they are occupying. o A urr&t V i&S&cko "** | THE MARNEi MALCM - \ft •"' GERMANS GCRMAW I r —{Sf/Xfo STRENGTH I /#jwz/ PARiiy r~^^6fe , \ IALUES ADVANCE 25 MlLCapsJsvS!>*y * /v c DRIVING SACK GERMANS \ \rtf #7//ve[ 7 \ KECE. J 3 WAR PARAGRAPHS The Russian cavalry is before Poser, and Breslau. The German and Aus trian reinforcements are f an inferior quality. Servian troops are advancing rapidly tbroMgli Austria to form a junction with the Russians. The British government states that the cruiser Pathfinder, supposed to have been blown up by a mine, was destroyed by a torpedo. What agency fired the torpedo is not stated, but it is assumed that it must have been fired by a Gerrian submarine or th.-it a spent torpedo, previously fired, was struck by the vessel. A dipatch from Falmouth says the captured German ships Coldbeck an- ; Orlando are or their way to that port. At Aershot Belgian sharpshooters dislodged the Germans, took posses sion of the town and hoisted the Bel gian flag. Thirty-three thousand quarters of fresh beef —approximately 3,500 tons —were loaded at New Vork for British troops in Europe. The second foreign regiment, wliict Includes the American volunteers, after a week at Rouen, has moved t Toulouse, where it is drilling hard. The French government has issued a formal denial of the charge made by the kaiser in his telegram to Pres:- l3nt Wilson as to the use of dumdum mllets by the allies. A Swiss woman living at Basel mar ried a German. Two sons were born to them. Afterward she married a Frenchman and had two more sons. All four of her sons were called to arms, two on each side, and all four have fallen in bat'.le. Abbe Rinn, a professor in the seminary at Perpignan, is the first priest wounded in the war. A ball passed through his head. It is possible that he may be saved. The Hamberg-Amerlcan steamsh p Berthania, captured by a British crui ser two da>s out from Charleston, 3 C., had 500 German reservists abo&u and 6,000 tons of Welsh coal. Among the subscribers to the Ger man war loan are the Krupp firm and family, who have taken $7,500,000 o* the bonds. The floods around Tsingtau aVe spreading inland and the fortress can be reached only by boats. The Japan ese investment of the German port probably will be delayed for months. Prince Joachim of Prussia, youngest son of the kriser, was struck ir tt thigh by five bullets from a burst shrapnel. The prince is now in an irmy hospital. A German paper announces that a! Belgian clocks have been changed to conform to German time. The Bank of France has transferred to safety all its bullion reserves. The gold weighed 1,32.1 tons and the silver 3,000 tons. It was transported i. barrels of 80 pounds each, which filled 132 railway cars, divided into seven trains. They reached their destination without a hitch. A prominent Berliner admits that while the nation as a whole is op timistic there is a growing feeling in responsible circles that Germany can not win against so mamy countries. The Guerre Sociale now says that General Pe/cin has been deprived if appointme- s. having shorn himself TieSlcicnt a: Lille. ADDING MACHINES. They Are Not New, as Pascal Invented One In the Year 1642. The adding machine is of modern de >vlopment, but not a modern Invention, a passable one having been invented in 1642 by Pascal (1623-1062), a cele brated French geometrician, philoso fther and writer. Later, in 1671, the •jading machine was modified to facili jate multiplication by Gottfried Wil helm Leibnitz, a German matbemati cian of great achievement, and his in vention was followed by many im provements. A notable experimenter in this line was Charles Babbage (1792-1871), an English mathematician, many years professor of mathematics at Cambridge university. In order to secure accu racy in tables of logarithms he con celved the idea of doing the work by machinery and was commissioned by the British government to superintend the constrlie'ion of a machine for the purpose. Fe spent much time and money in experimenting and attained some remarkable results, but ded be fore perfecting his machine. All calculating machines contain cer tain features devised by special refer ence to the work to be done, including circular metallic disks, wheels with teeth, etc., ifigenious, but not more complicated and no more responsive to human intelligence than many othei machines. The thinking is all done If y tha operator.—Philadelphia Press.. NAVAL FIGHT SMALL ACTION Believed That Baltic Affair Was of Little Importance. London, Sept. 17. —Although it Is ac cepted in official circles that a naval battle has been fought in the Baltic between fifteen units of the German Heet and the Russian Baltic fleet, nt 4 particle of information concerning tlie outcome is obtainable. Dispatches from Petrograd vaguely rjfer to the presence of the Germans in the Gulf of Finland and to their bombardment of "unprotected posi tions," but they are so badly mutilated by the censor that their information c.oes not enlighten. Naval experts declare that they do ;iot believe the main Russian fleet has been in action. They declare that whatever fighting has taken place lias undoubtedly been between the smaller units of the because the main German fleet \vou!c hardly attempt to force the entrance of the Gulf of Finland, which not only has been mined, but is well protected from the land with cross-fire fort resses. French Prisoners on Exhibition. Paris, Sept. 17. —A Munich paper is quoted as saying that French prison ers at that city are enclosed in an encampment, where the public is ad mitted for a twenty pfennigs entrance fee. It adds that the visitors are numerous and delighted to see the well born French obliged to consort with lew born Apaches, all eating at the st me tables. Peace Plan Accepted by Miners. Trinidad, Col., Sept. 17. —The min eis' convention voted to accept the proposal indorsed by President Wil son for a three-year truce in the Colo rado sJrike. Bryans Go South. Washington, Sept. 17. —Secretary of State Bryan and Mrs. Bryan left Washington for Asheville, N. C., where the secretary will rest for a few days. BRINGS SURVIVORS HOME Revenue Cutter Bear Rescues Portion of Stefansson Expedition. R dispatch received by the revenue (Utter service from Captain Cochrau of the revenue cutter Bear brings the news that the cutter has rescued night members of the SR.ansson ex pedition, a part of which was cauglv in the ice floes of the far northwest about a year ago. Since tben the members of the party who have sur vived held out on Wrangell island. The names of two members of tlio party who died are given and another was accidentally killed. Eight others sre missing. Stefansson himself be. came separated from part of his expe dition who were on the steamship. Stefansson is still in the far north con ducting his explorations on behalf oi the Canadian government. Messages have been received from him which show that he and others of the orig inal party are alive. The following telegram was re ceived last night from Captain Coch ran of the revenue cutter Bear: "Bear returning to Nome with fol lowing members of Canadian explora tion party: Munro, Williamson, Me- Kinley, Hadley, Chaf, Templeman, Wil liams, Maurer and Eskimo family. All doing well and under care of surgeon. Expect to arrive on Sunday. Party was rescued by schooner King and Wing Sept. 7. Transferred to the Bear Sept. 8 in latitude 69.55; long! tude 175.30. Malloch and Manen die' of nephritis. Brady accidentlly sh. Eight missing men who never reached Wrangell i&'and. Bear reached with in twelve miles of Herald island. Clear weather and heavy ice. Unable to land on island. No signs of life." A Comparison. "Why is a clock like a pretty and rain young lady?" "I fail to see any resemblance. Why?" "Because It is all face and figure, has no bead to speak of, is hard to stop when once it is wound up and has a striking way of calling atten tion to Itself every hour of the day."— Bondon Tit-Bits. THE PATRIOT WAR IN ALL ITS ; WORSTHORRORS Moments When No Man Ma) Boast of His Courage. ~ FIGHTING FOE EYE TO EYE, Charging Over Heaps of Bodies, Goin. Almost Mad From Thirst After Giv ing Horses Last Drop of Water — "A Gentleman Has to Do That," Say* Zouave Hero Wounded at Meaux. "That is the story, without any re touching of my pen. of a young lieu tenant of zouaves whom 1 mot aftet the battle of Meaux, with blood stih splashed upou his uniform." says Philip Gibbs of the New York Times Lpndou Chronicle war service in a dis patch from Creil. Said this zouave, who was put out ol action by a piece of shell: "They did good things, those zouaves of mine, but it wasn't pleasant work. Yv'e fought from village to village, very close fighting, so that sometimes wc could look into our enemy's eyes. The Moroccans were with us. The uativc troops are unlike my boys, who are Frenchmen, and they were like demons with their bayonet work. " "Our gunners were shelling Germans from pillar to post, as it were, and strewing the ground with their dead. It was across and among these dead bodies that we infantry hud to charge Quick Firers' Clover Style "The enemy's quick tirers were mar velous. They always maneuver them in the same style, and a very clever style it is. First of all, the} mask them with infantry. Then when the French charge they reveal them and put us to the test under the most with ering fire. It is almost impossible to i stand against it. and in this case we had to retire after each rush for about 250 meters. Then quick as lightning the Germans got their mitrailleuses across the ground which we had yield ed to them and waited for us to come on again, when they repeated the same operation. "It is quite untrue to say that the Germans have a greater number of mi trailleuses than the French. I believe that the proportion is exactly the same to each division, but they handle them more cleverly, and their fire is much more effective than ours. "The German aeroplanes are really wonderful in the way they search out the positions of our guns. We always know that within half an hour of oh , serration by aeroplane shells will begin to fall above gunners unless they have altered their position. "For four days this hunting among the villages on the left bank of the Ourcq went on all the time, and we were not very happy with ourselves. The truth was we had no water and were four days thirsty. The heat was terrific during the day, and some of us were almost mad with thirst. Our tongues were blistered and swollen, our eyes had a silly kind of look In them and at night we had horrid dreams. It was intolerable agony. Thirsted That Horses Might Drink. "I have said we were four days with out drink, and that was because we used our last water for our horses. A gentleman has to do that. 3*oll will agree. Even then the horses had to go without a drop of water for two days, and I'm not ashamed to say. I wept salt tears to see the sufferings of those poor innocent creatures who did not understand the meaning of all this bloodj- business ;md who wondered at our cruelty. "The nights were dreadful. All around us wore burning villages and at ever 3' faint puff of wind sparks floated about them like falling stars. "But other fires wore burning. Un der the cover of darkness the Germans had piled the dead into great heaps and had covered them with straw and paraffin, then the 3* had set a torch to these funeral pyres. "Carrion crows were about in the dawn that followed. One of my own comrades lay very badly wounded, and when he wakened out of his uncon sciousness one of these beastly birds was sitting on his chest waiting for him to die. That is war. "When Every Man Is a Coward." "The German shells were terrifying. I confess to you that there were times when my nerves were absolutely gone. I crouched down with my men (we were In open formation) and ducked my head at the sound of the bursting shell, and 1 trembled in every limb as though I had a flt of ague. ( "It is true that in reality the Ger- i man shells are not very effective. Only about one in four explodes nicely, but it is a bad thing when, as happened to me, the shells popped around in a diameter of fifty meters. One hears the zip-zip of bullets, the boom of the great guns, the ste-tang of cur French artillery, and in all this infernal ex- ! perience of noise and stench the screams at times of dying horses and men joined with the fury of gun t ; .ro and rising shrill above it, no men may boast of his courage. There were mo ments when I was a coward with all of them. "Bat one gets used to it. as to ail things. My ague did not last long. Soon I was shouting and cheering. Again we cleared the enemy out of j the village of Bregy. and that was | where I fell, wounded in the arm pret- d ty badly by a bit of fsba!!.''