4 Z J. M. RISINOER, Presidente S. C. STEELE. Cassiere A Z F. C. BETTS, Vice Presidente W. P. RisiNGERr Ass.Cassiere Z ! MI UHI IS Si fi. 1 HOMER CITY. PA. 5 9 Interessi del 4 per cento sui depositi di risparmio® ®®e@e®see@®se*##e*#s©®e#ee® PROSSIME PARTENZE direttamente per Napoli e Palermo "SAN GUGLIELMO,, 20 Ottobre 1914 "SAN GIORGIO, 5 Novembre 1914 Adattamenti e servizi di terza classe insoperabili HZI Eleganti e comode cabine di prima e seconda classe - Cabine di lusso Per l'acquisto di biglietti rirolgersi a FRANCESCO ELUIONTE-Mursliall Building, Stanza n. 12 - INDIANA, PA. Ai nostri lettori e abbonati Richiamiamo l'attenzione di tutti i nostri lettori ed abbonati sull'avviso che pubblichiamo in ottava pagina dei Magazzini del "Bon Ton,,. E' una vera occasione che si presenta a tutti coloro che desiderano far spesa di og getti di vestiario, scarpe ecc. poiché' presentandosi con i cuponi ai détti Magazzini godranno di un notevole © © ribasso. Avvertiamo perciò' tutti co loro che ne hanno interesse, di ta gliare i cuponi perche' senza di essi non potranno usufruire dello speciale sconto che i magazzini del 1 Bon Ton., fanno per speciale concessione ai let tori del "Patriota,,. Approfittatene dunque: questa vendita speciale dura per tutto il mese di ottobre Simili occasioni capitano di rade. Assicurazioni al fuoco su forniture e fabbricati con le migliori compagnie. Prezzi bossi. N. N. SWENK Vicino la Corte Indiana, Pa. ASSICURATEVI Con pochi soldi mensili proteggete voi e le vostre famiglie. Acquistate una polizza che vi garentisce la pag hi '"iso di infortuni, malattia e morte compagnie ameiicane forti e con trollate dallo Stato. Si assicurano uo mini, donne dai 16 ai 60 anni, do vunque. Scrivere o rivolgerai a Francesco Biamonte, Marshall Bldg. Indiana, Pa TIPOGRAFIA DEL . "PATRIOTA,, Marshall Bidè;. Indiana, Pa. jj-I_==-============:===jj * ¥ ¥ * * il ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ I! !! a \ R HÉGUISCONO Ì AVORI PI STAMPA cnx LA MASSIMA SOLLECITUDINE ED ESATTEZZA t CIRCOLARI - STATUTI - CARTE INTESTATE * \ MANIFESTI - BUSTE - RTATFIVIFWTC, F t ' $ PARTECIPAZIONI DI NOZZE $ t CICLiETTI DA UISITA ■ BILL HEADS t t BUSINESS CARDS - PROGRAMMI, ed altro * j| $ $5 || |i $3 i| || $ j: || $3 |: i| & $ || si| |i & s|| Caratteri moderni nuovissimi I l The Patriot Publishing Co. INDIANA, PA. i 1 Both Alike. "This letter from your son in college jfe short." "So's my son. That's why ke wrote it." Smothered His Joy. Cheerful Husband (entering the kitchen singing "My love is like the *ed, red rose!") Wife (looking up from the stove)— You'd look red, too, if you'd been bending over a frying pan for twenty minutes! Her Foul Accent. "Her French pronunciation is fear ful and wonderful." "Yes; at the breakfast table this morning she gazed soulfully a£ her poached egg and murmured, 'lsn't it chick!' "—lippincott's. Diet of the Bluebird. The bluebird, one of the most fa miliar tenants of the farm and barn yard, pays amply for its rent and board by destroying insects, and takes no toll from the farm crop. Its diet consists •f 08 per cent of insects and 32 per sent of vegetable matter., The largest Items of insect food are grasshoppers, beetles and caterpillars. Every Kind In Stock. "Will you direct me to your range (departmentV" asked the lady in the big department store. "Certainly, madam," replied the po lite floorwalker; "rifle, kitchen or mountain?"—Youkers Statesman. Mother as an Accelerator. Registry Clerk—lt Is necessary for one to ask the mother of the bride if ahe has nothing to say before I proceed with the ceremony. Voice of Mother fin background)— All I have to say is that If I hadn't had a good deal to say llready they never would have landed lere.—Meggendorfer Blatter. The Greek Church. 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 capitol at Rome. The first dispute between the two arose in the second century regarding the time of keeping Raster.— *"100118 News. "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 lingers of the right hand and let go suddenly it will make a .sound which you can hear distinctly onough yourself, but which will not be audible to auy 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 all stringed instruments Have one in some shape or other.— St Nicholas. Just to Oblige. When a certain jurist made his first appearance at the bar as a young law yer he was given charge by the stato oolicitor of the prosecution of a man ■who was accused of some misde meanor. Although there was practically no evidence against the man. the youthful attorney did his best, but was aston ished when the jury brought in a ver dict of "guilty." After the trial one of *he jurors tapped the young lawyer on the shoulder. "We didn't think the man was guilty," he explained, "but •t the same time didn't like to discour age a young lawyer by acquitting Him."—Harper's Magazine. THE PRESENT. We should be blessed if we | lived in the present always and took advantage of every accident that befell us, like the grass which confesses the influence of the slight est dew that falls on it, and did not spend our time in atoning for neglect of past opportunities, which we call doing our duty.—Thoreau. The Letter X. The letter "x" appears but once In English for every six times it occurs in French. Getting Things Shipshape. "Dearest." said the sentimental bridegroom after the wedding mony, "do you think that I'll prove to be a satisfactory mate?" "Oh, 1 guess you'll do all right," re sponded the practical bride, "and now look me over and tell me what you think of your captain."—Ladies' Home Journal. Stevenson's Whimsical Attire. Here is a picturesque glimpse of Stevenson's whimsical 4jlre as given In the "Collected Essay* of Edmund Gosse:" "Stevenson was not without a good deal of innocent oddity in his dress. When I try to conjure up his figure I can only see a slight, lean lad in a suit of blue sea cloth, a black shirt and a wisp of yellow carpet that did duty for a necktie. This was long his at tire, persevered in to the anguish of his more conventional acquaintances. I have a ludicrous memory of going In 1878 to buy him a new hat, in com pany with Mr. Lang, the thing then upon his head having lost the sem blance of a human article of dress." The Waste In Storms. Mnny scientists and captains of in dustry must sigh during a thunder storm at the vast power running to waste in the heavens, and at sundry times attempts have been made to en trap and utilize the energy of light ning. So far, however, all these have had Insignificant results. Byway of experiment huge rocks have been split asunder by attracting the lightning to them, and in a few isolated cases it has been claimed that paralysis has been cured by shocks administered by lightning, but as yet man's ingenuity has not devised the harness that will turn the wild, free agent of the heav ens into tractable "horsepower."—Lon don Spectator. Pretty Unhappy. Sillous—What's the matter, old man? You look unhappy. Cynicus—l am. I'm almost as unhappy as a woman with a secret that nobody wants to know.—Club Fellow. Not Quite the Thing. Matrimonial Agent—l have found for you. my friend, a veritable pearl—a wealthy widow of seventy-five. The Count—l like the pearl, but I'm afraid I shan't care for the shell!— Philadelphia Inquirer. Spoiled Her Trip. "Then your wife didn't enjoy her trip to Niagara?" "No. The minute she saw that rush ing water she began to wonder if she hadn't come away from home and left a faucet running."—Pittsburgh Post A Dictionary Pillow. I once knew a woman who wrote books, a woman who was very learned in the matter of French and Latin and German and Greek. Often when her nights were dark and dreadful and sleepless, she would lie awake and think of words—what language they were derived from and what the if original meanings had been. She told me that it was a greet source ci pleas ure to her and k-p* her from nervous when a>v felt wide awake Often tlirough the chill gray dawn I too, lie awake and think about words :o keep myself from the unpleasant maginlugs that sometimes lyaunt me n the nighttime.—Christian Herald. THE TURNING POINT. In all lives, the highest and hum blest, there is a crisis in the forma tion of character and in the bent of disposition. It comes from many sources and from some which on the surface are apparently trivial. It may be a book, a speech, a ser mon, a great misfortune or a burst of prosperity. But the result is the same —a sudden revelation to our selves of our secret purpose and a recognition of our perhaps long shadowed but now masterful con victions. Selfish. "Bliggias says he can't write on a typewriter because the noise disturbs him." "Yes. If there is any noise going on Bliggius wants to make it himself."— Washington Star. New Hampshire. New Hampshire was first called La conia, or Lacedaemon. a scholar among the New Englanders remembering that the Peloponnesus, the home of the Spartans and Argives. was mountain ous; so was a portion of New Hamp shire, hence the propriety of the name. John Mason, however, who held a pat- ! ent for the district, called it New Hampshire after his native country in England, and then the name Laconia ; was transferred to the hilly district , near Lake Champlain. A Proud Boast. A teachers' meeting was in progress, and it was decided that the more difficult subjects should come in the morning and those that required less application later in the day. History was last on the list, and Miss heeler, j the young teacher, protested. "But it certainly is easier than science or mathematics." the principal insisted. "As I teach it." replied the young teacher, "no subject could be more difficult and confusing."—Lippincott's. When a Hedgehog Awakes. When a hibernating hedgehog awak ens it rapidly warms itself up. Wheth er this is done automatically or wheth er it is due to the awakening animal "pulling itself together" seems to be a moot point. The fact is that the animal rapidly warms itself up. The chemistry of this is a rapid combus tion of glycogen along with a small or moderate quantity of fat. There seems uo doubt that the important fuel which | so rapidly makes the fire of life burn I up is glycogen; the fat is ouly sub sidiary. It must be noticed that in I the hedgehog the awakening and the warming up are two distinct though associated processes, for the animal may he awake at a lower temperature Always Leap Year. A most extraordinary custom pr. ; vails among the Vizrees. n powert'n tribe occupying an extensive districi in Cahul. among the mountains he tween Persia and India—a female pre Jogative that has no pa'ailel among lny other people of the earth. The romen, in fact, choose their husbands jnd not the husbands their wives, il i woman be pleased with a man she sends the drummer of the camp to pin a handkerchief to his cap with a pin she has used to fasten her hair. The drummer watches his opportunity and does this in public, naming the wo man, and the man is obliged to marry if he can pay the price to her father. . THE PATRIOT THE PATRIOT published weekly by THE PATRIOT PUBLISHING CO. : Office; Marshall Bldg. Indiana. Pa. F BIAMONTE, Manager & Editor F. SMITH, English Editor B. COLETTI, Italian Editor. Entered as second-class matter Sep tember 26, 1914 at the post office at Indiana, Pennsylvania, under the act of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES One year $2.00 Six months . . . . $1.25 One Copy 5c 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 1 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 Eepresenta- rives. D. Who is the chief executive of the United States? R. President. D. For how long is the President of the 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 I'resident of the United States elected? R. By the electors. D. By whom are the electors elected ? R. By the people. D. Who makes the hws 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? i R. By the people. D. For how long ? R. 6 years. D. How many representatives are there ? R. According to the population one to every 30,000. D. For how long are tl.ey elected? R. 2 years. D. How many electoi-al 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 ? R. 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 mist? 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 tiic U. S.? a