4 i-,ywin ■■ 11 ■i " ■ i i■. i ■■ ' j ■ "..ii ~ mJ STfiAPETTES W^Gustate mia Buona Fumata ìtàtà • \J j Niente di meglio in America ' Cuponi Cash in Ogni Scatola K;, ".4: il Essi sono riscattabili contanti I TUTTI LE CONOSCONO ' ; j TUTTI LE LODANO Tutti i rivenditori le vendono V.IMàM iW | f j TIPOGRAFIA j T | 1| = "IL PATRIOTA" F= 1 5 jN. 15 Carpenter ave. INDIANA, PA. j r # | Biglietti da visita Regolamenti ( [Carta intestata # Partecipazioni di matrimonio j J Statuti OPUSCOÌÌ Inviti Manifesti Si eseguisce qualsiasi lavoro dal Più* Piccolo al PÌU* grande formato £ I ===== SPECIALITÀ' IN LAUORI ARTISTICI ED A COLORI ====== 5 2 Eleganza ZIZZH A Precisione > W Sollecitudine I - Puntualità* J ===== PREZZI MITI DA NON TEMERE CONCORRENZA ===== f No! possiamo eseguire qualsiasi lavoro tipografico. Per gli statoti, I libri, gli oposcoli £ J abbiamo ooa speciale accoratezza, polche' essi vengono riletti da on corret< ■+ tore prima di mandarli In macchina. Le Società' possono perciò' < £ 1 | rivolgersi alla nostra tipografia per qoalnnqoe lavoro. £ i THE PATRIOT PTJBLISHING CO. i V No. 15 Carpenter ave. INDIANA, PA. T ■ ! RUNZO'S j Are you looking for fruits and vegetables? Why don't you visit RUNZO'S MARKET on 6th St., Call us by "phone,, and we will deliver promptly to your residence. Both Phones. If it's fruits, we have them. They are fresh, just ; arrived from the market. Give us a Call. w. ROSS STREET CAR CORNER PHILADELPHIA ST. THE PATRIOT The Patriot. Published weekly by THE PATRIOT PUB. COMPANY Office: No. 15 Carpenter ave. Marshall Bldg., Indiana, Pa. F. BIAMONTE, Editor & Manager F. SMITH, English Editor. B. COLETTI, Italian Editor. Entered as second-elass matter September 26, 1914, at the postof fiee at Indiana, Pennsylvania, un der the Act of March 3, 1879. Local Phone 250 Z. Bell Phone 49-W i| Chas. Lambo i !; ELECTRO SHOE REPAIRING; WORK ; !; WORK BONE I !| WHILE YOU WAIT J !; (Opposite the Park) J |! PUNXSTAWNEY, PA. J QUESTIONS THAT A GOOE CITIZEN SHOULD KNOW D. Have you read the Consti tution of the United States? R. Yes. D. "What form of Governmenl is this? R. Republic. D. "YV hat is the Constitution oi the United States? R. It is the fundamental law oi this country. D. Who makes the laws of the United States? R. The Congress. D. V hat does Congress consist of? R. Senate and House of Rep resentatives. D. Who is the chief executive of the United States? R. President. D. How long is the President of the United States elected? R. 4 years. D. Who takes the place of the President 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! elcted ? e R. By the people. I D. Who makes the laws for the state of Pennsylvania. R. The Legislature. D. What does the Legislature consist of? R. Senate and Assembly. I D. How many State in the un ion? R. 48. { D. When was the Declaration af Independence signed! j w r. ww ww ww www v w w w w w w w w wg w: x jCie.T W. M. MAHAN g Avvocato in Cause Civili e Criminali Giudice di Pace M Ufficio al Marshall Building |W STANZA NO. 12 INDIANA. PA.FJ B Telefoni: Bell-Local W jusc* >• xrv Fresh fruits * j of all kinds, at a reasona ble price. V egetable and grocery. ' FELIX & GUIDO r 6th and Water St. R. July 4, 1776. i D. By whom was it written? R. Thomas Jefferson. D. "Which is the capital of the si united States? y R. Washington. < D. Which is the capital of the S state of Pennsylvania. / R. Harrisburg. y 1). How many Senators has / each state in the United States CSenate? i R. Two. < D. By whom are they elected ? y R. By the people. t D. For how long? s R. 6 years. >! D. How many representatives c are there ? .. j R. 435. According to the pop ulation one to every 211,000, (the ratio fixed by Congress after each !. decennial census.) D. For how long are they elect ed? t R. 2 years. D. How many electoral votes has the state of Pennsylvania? f R, 38. D. Who is the chief executive f of the state of Pennsylvania? R. The Governor. 3 D. For how long is he elected? R. 4 years. D. Who is the Governor? t R. Brumbaugh. D. Do you believe in organized _ government ? R. Yes. i D. Are you opposed to organiz ed government? R. No. D. Are you an anarchist ? R. No. D. What is an anarchist? R. A person who does not be ieve in organized government. D. Are you a bigamist or poli- ! gamist? R. No. D. V hat is a bigamist or poly gamist? R. One who believes in having {more than one wife. I D. Do you belong to any secret Society who teaches to disbelieve in organized government? R. No. • D. Have you ever violated any lews 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 1 permanently in the U. S.T R. Yes. Vjftiio i immmm n ' ARTIFICIAL LIMBS. Perfection to Which the Mechanical Arm Has Been Brought. They are making artificial limbs with such perfection today that a technical observer who is also an enthusiastic baseball "fau" declares that he would not be surprised to see in the not far dis tant future some wooden armed pitcher making a good record. What is known as "glass arm" would be effectively su perseded by "wooden arm." Though this is a dariug leap of the imagination, which, however, need not worry the perfectly good armed pitch ers of the big leagues, still some of the things that can be done with artificial arms are simply amazing. Here you see a man lighting a cigar and with a naturalness of action and pose which would deceive the casual observer. The mechanism is controlled by cer tain motions of the stump of the flesh and blood arm. and no little knack is necessary to the successful working of the artificial member, and yet withal it is not very difficult to acquire. It is shid that the man who is light ing his big cigar cau pick a pin from the floor without difficulty, but it is not on record that he can give tho "pep" to a ball so that it will speed by the batter like a projectile from a high powered gun. As a matter of fact, be is thoroughly satisfied the many very necessary things that ; can l>e done with the mechanical arut without venturing afar into the luxu ries and excitement of outdoor sport.— Buffalo News. WOMEN OF EUROPE. An Italian Critic Says Those of Spain Are the Most Beautiful. A celebrated Italian writer of Flor ence has been favoring the world with his opinion of some of the women of , Europe. lie considers only four na tions, and of these he selects Spain as most worthy of the crown for feminine beauty. He says: "The Spanish woman is bewitchingly 5 beautiful. She has small hands and feet and large eyes like the open wiu -1 dows of a sunburnt marble palace, a figure full of grace and life and long, dark, wavy hair. She is very religious, very ignorant, very jealous, very sen sitive and very proud." Of the British woman he says: "4ler hair is like gold. She has heavenly eyes, a peachlike complexion, a delicately formed nose and good teeth. She is reserved, very active and generally a slave to etiquette." 1 As to the Frenchwoman he is less complimentary. It is thus that he de scribes her: "She is a cat and a ser pent, a palm and a violet, and when : she is not pretty she is charming. She Is amiable, a dreadful coquette and 1 generally false." His summary of the Russian woman is that she is "of an oriental type which had been prematurely transported Into Europe. In her are combined the ex traordinary charms of a savage and tho civilized woman."—Pearson's. WILL SEARCH ARCTIC FOR CREW OF KARLUK. Steam Trader Belvedere Makes Dash For Polar Regions. Making a daring dash on a bar* chance that eight men of the 111 fated Stefansson exploring steamship Kar luk, last seen by rescued companions on ice packs in the mldarctic, 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. Jocbimsen, 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 Bartlett, one group reached Wrangel island, and Bartlett accomplished the almost superhuman 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 tle for Petropavlovsk. She will carry a crew of seventeen men. At Petropavlovsk a crew of about twenty-two Eskimo hnnters will be shipped. Then the famous old ship will push on up the Siberian coast. Pure Brd Arab Horses. In Cairo there is a society for pre serving the pure bred Arab horse. It J* said that recent changes in the lives and habits of the Bedouins have re sulted in the deterioration of these horses. A practical horseman of wide experience says that as a rule the Arab horse is now no better treated than our own horses, whatever may have been true of the old days when such poems • "The Arab to His Steed" were writ-