NEW PRESSES S I wAiA I VntAiA.l/1 Only Skilled Printers NEW TYPES Employed. NEW EQUIPMENT || JpL j9j THROUGHOUT j All Work Guaranteed PRINT FOR YOU I pi —I THE PATRIOT PRINTING and PUBLISHING CO. I 1 ""teto, cards is now FULLY and EFFICIENTY equipped to do every | 1 strsMut kind of JOB PRINTING know to the art. Its PRESSES, 1 I In,elopes TYPE and EVERY EQUIPMENT being NEW and 1 I sale mils MODERN, makes it just as easy for us to do GOOD i ■I cataipgußs g WORK, as it would be to turn out the inferior class, | 1 I 'hviwion cards | with less modern facilities; hence the COST IS NO i jl I Visiting l ards I GREATER. Then we employ only high class, skilled 6 I S pamnhiets S workmen, who are paid to do GOOD WORK. let us quoreyou 1 I § Books 1 prices and submit samples of the work YOU NEED, | OCDO I < 9 I Color Work ■ mi imiwii n i |B m H = a = i i You cannot catch fish with a rifle, neither can you shoot game with a rod and reel, and if you obtain good g Ui Speciality 1 resu^s from POOR PRINTING, it is simply an ACCIDENT. Better be on the safe side, have vonr printing RIGHT - COSTS I | I I |NO KOKE- p v-| 1 • THE PATRIOT PRINTING and PUBLISHING CO. (S> I WATCH the OPENING DAY The store room formerly occupied by the "Indiana Dye Works,, will be thoroughly remodeled and put into first class condition, by WILLIAM ROSS Opening day SATURDAY, APRIL, 10 tH . Fresh fruits of all kinds , -a / ; „.:tF,\'< 0? BABYLONIAN A, - 1 ■ ————mw i ii , . ■nun 1 1 " ■ ' 1 " 1 * 1 T i ii i 111 i wmarnmmmmmmmmtmmm Ancient cylinder found by Arabs in which Nebuchadnezzar describes the walls of Babylon in GO4 to 561 B. G. He also tells of irrigation canals. The stone is eighteen inches in diameter and contain 1,000 words. It is owned by the Toledo (O.) Art museum. I Very Polite. Bill—You say he Is polite? Jill—Oh, very. "Always gives up his seat in a car to a lady?" "Always, and the other night at the theater he even got up and offered his seat to one of the lady ushers."—Yonk- j ers Statesman. Quite Homelike. "Does your married life seem home like, my boy?" "Oh, yes. My wife's quarrels are ex actly like the rows mother used to make."—Chicago News. THIEF TOOK COAT AND FEVER Police Watch Health Reports to Find the Criminal. A good mackintosh and a million, more or less, full sized scarlet fever gepma was the extent of booty ob ; tamed by a sneak thief who entered the home of Dr. Preston Steele of Greenville, Pa., and took the coat from a bag hanging on the back porch. The garment was used by the physi cian exclusively In entering the 6ick rooms ef patients suffering from scar let fever. The police are watching the board of health's reports. TWINS BORN FAR APART. Oddly Enough They Also Have Differ j ent Birthdays. A boy and a girl, twins, were born in Alliance, 0., on different days and at different places. | They are healthy, and their mother. Mrs. Rosina Folgia, thirty-two, 1s do ing well. The girl was born shortly before midnight in the Folgia home The neat morning Mrs. Folgia was taken to a hospital, where she gave btvth to her SOIL He weighs ten pounds. His alster weighs six tnd THE PATRIOT WILL SEARCH ARCTIC FOR CREW OF KARLUK. Steam Trader Belvedere Makes Dash For Polar Regions. Making a daring dash on a ban cliance that eight men of the ill fatec Stefansson exploring steamship Kar luk, last seen by rescued companions on ice packs in the midarctic, are still alive, the steam trader "Belvedere left Seattle to push into the heart of the arctic to Herald island. This island is believed to be the only possible refuge for the party, that has not been seen or heard from since the loss of the Karluk, a year ago last January. The Belvedere is in command of Cap tain A. P. Jochimsen, master of the fa mous schooner King and Wing on her memorable dash to Wrangel Island ; last year. Upon the story of the eleven survivors found on Wrangel island is based the faint hope that some of the eight missing may still be alive. With the Karluk crushed between grinding bergs nothing was left for her crew but to strike out over the solid ice ; for land. Led by Captain Bartfett, one group reached Wrangel Island, and Bartlett accomplished the almost anperhuman feat of "mushing" from there to the Siberian coast with direc tions that later brought rescue for those remaining behind. The Belvedere will head from Seat : tie for Petropavlovsk. She will carry a crew of seventeen men. At Petropavlovsk a crew of about twenty-two Eskimo hunters will be shipped. Then the famous old ship will push on up the Siberian coast There Ain't No Such Animlle. "Why don't you engage her aa •ookr "She signed her letter of application. Tour obedient servant'" PbUadei- J: pkia Ledger. ; NEW FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION. Photo by American Press Association. Top row. left to right, William H. Parry and George Rublee; bottom row. left to right, Edward N. Hurley, Chairman Joseph E. Da vies and j William J. Harris. STOVE WRECKED BY BEANS. Forgotten In Oven, They Explode and Bombard Kitchen Walls. An explosion shook the Sixth ward in Auburn. N. Y.. and brought scores of persons to the home of William E Bills, G2 Lansing street. Members oi the family were gathering up the scrap : iron that represented the family range and the walls and furnishings of the kitchen looked as if they h&d been the target for hundreds of small bullets. Mrs. Bills explained that she had placed a quart can of beans in the oven and had forgotten them. She was re minded of it by the explosion and tbe bean bombardment that came with it Once Laborer, New a President. At a meeting of the directors of tbc Tale & Towne company, a large hard ware manufacturing company of Stan ford. Conn., Walter C. Allen, who has been employed by the company for . the past twenty-three years and who has advanced himself by stages, was elected president in the place of Hetiry R. Towne, who retires after forty-six years in that position. Mr. Towne was made chairman of the board ef director*. Take* a 81p of Tacks. While she attempted to take a drink from what she thought was a glass of water while in the dark at her home In point township. Northumberland coun ty, Pa., Miss Alice Rhoedes, eighteen years old, swallowed several hundred tacks and pins. She was takes to the * NEW FIREBALL PISTOLS. British at Front. Furnished With Them; Also With New Grenades. A letter from n officer of the Hump ■hire regiment published in the Morn ing Post of London contains the fol lowing passages: "I have been served ont with a won derful pistol that fires fireballs. The other night I fired several, and they showed tip the ground in front in a wonderful manner. * * * We fired a new kind of Lomb at the Germans a couple of days ago. and last night 0110 of our patrols reported twenty or thin ty bodies in the place where it felL • • * The Germans, they say. hove now got a land torpedo that burrows under the earth and catches one just about the knee when it explodes. I don't know if it's true, but they are a remarkably ingenious people. "Two of our men who had gone out to repair barbed wire last night noticed a German sniper digging himself in. So they stalked him and suddenly Jumped on him and brought him la praying for mercy. When asked why they did not bayonet hm on the spot the captor explained that be thought It was too cold blooded a proceeding; but added that he 'pifigged him oue oa the Jaw,' as he was *l*outLug mercy!* too loud. • • * "Thia is a most extraordinary war* fellows every day is the ordinary course of their duties do things that i coy other war they would get V. C.*e tmr _ 3