4 2525 W Avvocato in Cause Civili e Criminali Giudice di Pace y Ufficio al Marshall Building jJ STANZA NO. 12 INDIANA. PA.vj Telefoni: Bell-Local PROVATE I i Marca "Giuseppe Garibaldi" Qualità' Garentita * Prezzo speciale per ordine di 25 casse in su. I Scrivete subito al Sig. PASQUALE GIUNTA, GRANDE GROSSERIA ALL'INGROSSO I Prezzi ristretti per generi garentita. j Pasquale Giunta 1030 S. 9th Street, Philadelphia. Penna. || | * S TIPOGRAFIA | f ? Ii = "IL PATRIOTA" Fi I 5 JL I N. 15 Carpenter ave. INDIANA, PA. 2 r |P Biglietti da visita J Regolamenti 1 , Carta intestata ) Partecipazioni di matrimonio | J l Statuti Opuscoli , Inviti | Manifesti 6 Si eseguisce qualsiasi lavoro dal PÌU* Piccolo al Più* grande formato # SPECIALITÀ* IN LAVORI ARTISTICI ED A COLORI ===== Jj I- I é Eleganza Precisione 5 Sollecitudine 5 1 = PREZZI MITI DA NON TEMERE CONCORRENZA ------ £ £ Noi possiamo eseguire qualsiasi lavoro tipografico. Per gli statuti, i libri, gli opuscoli £ £ abbiamo una speciale accuratezza, polche' essi vengono riietti da un corret- £ tore prima di mandarli in macchina. Le Società' possono perciò' # ' rivolgersi alla nostra tipografia per qualunque lavoro. r 1 THE PATRIOT PUBLISHING- CO. I No. 15 Carpenter ave." INDIANA, PÀ. £ * LA grande offerta * I Bitagliate questo j3 Questa vi- . L'U* .. * - T , ————v la parte i v 'v .A ariteriui-a • r Lorihard Co., NewYorkCiiy $ 1 I/. , ouAAAimriD turschbaum Gothes. WAND T4UQBID A. 8. Co.. Venendo a visi tarci ogni tanto e' una buona cosa per voi cosisaretesem pre al corrente della MODA. Noi non aspettiamo che ogni persona che il nostro store sia un compratore tutte le volte. Noi calcoliamo un fav ore se lasero te mostrare da noi la nostra mer canzia. Stando voi al corrente della moda e divenen do un conoscitore di abiti apprezzerete di più 1 la nostra mercan zia e ne farete acqui sto. Perciò onorateci di una costra visita: noi sia mo pronti a dare tutte le soddi sfazioni senza obligo da parte vostra. E' state sempre nostra ambizione di essere conosciuti quali forni tori di vestiti eleganti, e fini ad ora la nostra ambizione e state esau rita perciò noi siamo desiderosi di mostrare ad ogni persona che viene a visitarci il per chè, "ci siamo arriva ti 1 ' Kirscbbaum Clotbes $lO sls S2O $25 Guarantee per la garenzia ed il prezzo su vestito. MOORHEAD BROS. 11 Magazzino degli nomini Head Quarters For FLOWERS and VEGETABLE PLANTS j Cut Flowers and Decoration Plants for all occasions. Funeral Designs, Table Decorations, Weddings a Specialty. All work t guaranteed. We now have on hand a large stock of vegetable plants fcr wholesale and retail, consisting of best varieties of j Cabbage, Tomatoes, Egg Plants, Celery, Peppers (sweet and hot) j Caula flower and Astor plants. Potted plants of all standard J kinds. I Indiana Floral Co. The Patriot. Published weekly by THE PATRIOT PUB. COMPANY. Office: No. 15 Carpenter ave.. Marshall Bldg., Indiana, Pa. I F. BIAMONTE, Editor & Manager F. SMITH, English Editor. B. C'OLETTI, Italian Editor. Entered as second-class 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. Chas. Lambo i> ' |ELECTRO SHOE J; I REPAIRING WORK!; > WORK DONE I; | WHILE YOU WAIT >(Opposite the Park) 5 J PUNXSTAWNEY, PA. 5 > < /VVVNAAAAAA/XAAA/VVVVAAAfVVVy^j THE PATRIOT | . GORGAS TO FIGHT SERVIAN TYPHUS. | [ | Photo copyright by American Press Association. Surgeon General Gorgas of the United States army, who cleaned up Fana [ ma canal zone, asked to join Rockefeller foundation to save stricken Servia. ■ GOT THE TRAIN STOPPED. Two Attempts Were Dismal Failures, but the Third Won. When the late Robert Bonner pur chased Maud S. he seut her to Charter Oak park to be trained. One day a friend of Mr. Bonner left New York to visit him at the park, but fouud that the train did not stop at that sta tion. The conductor was polite, but said that he could not go against or ders. At New Haven a halt was made and Mr. Bonner's friend tried to bribe the engineer with a ten dollar bill, bu ilt vain. He was then told that Charle. P. Clark, the president of the road, was on the train, and he went to him and politely requested that the stop be made. "Why don't you see the conductor?" asked Mr. Clark. "1 have, but he will not disobey or j ders." "Why not then go forward and bribe the engineer?" "I tried bribery at New Haven, but it would not work." The absence of evasion was the best policy. Mr. Clark not only gave orders to have the train stopped at Charter Oak, but promised some day to see i Maud S. He had witnessed the attempt I at bribery, and the frank confession of the offense seemed to please him. BIG NAVAL GUNS. Death at Times Comes From Merely Serving Them In Battle. Modern naval engagements demon | strate that the gunners sometimes die after the battle, even when they have not been wounded or injured in any way. Death is caused by disturbance of the circulation due to the strain placed upon the nervous system by the excitement and the tremendous vibra tions of modern guns. Curiously enough, this collapse is j quite as likely to affect the most ro- 1 bust members of the gun crew as the ones with poorer physiques and bears no relation to the individual's courage. I It is due to a lack of sufficient reserve power of the heart which is dependent upon the quality of the heart muscles, and there is no known means of esti mating this Inherent quality exactly, it is possible, of course, to determine the force and strength of the heart in an individual, but only some test such as that of actual battle, will determine the quality of the heart muscles. Thus the veteran gunner who has proved his heart quality in actual bat tle has become a peculiarly valuable factor in modern naval warfare.— Los Angeles Times. They Like Fat Girls In Tunis. A Tunisian girl has no chance of marriage unless she tips the scale at 200 pounds, and to that end she com mences to fatten when she Is fifteen years old. She takes medicine and eats a great deal of sweet stuff and leads a sedentary life to hasten the process. Up to fifteen she is very handsome, but at twenty what an im mense. unwieldy mass of fat she be comes! She waddles, or, rather, undu lates, along the street. Her costume is very picturesque, especially if she be of the richer class. She is clothed in fine silks of resplendent hues of a bright red, yellow or green and wears a sort of conical shaped headdress, from which depends a loose white drapery. Turkish trousers and dainty slippers, the heels of which barely reach the middle of the feet, complete the costume. "> Takes a Sip of Tacka. 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 conn ty, Pa.. Miss Alice Rhoades, elghteer years old, swallowed several hundred tacks and pins. She was taken to the liarr M. Packer hospital. Sunbury. Spanish Surnames. In addition to three or four Christian names the Spanish child bears the con. bined family names of his father and mother. When the surnames are dou bled or connected by the y, meaning "and," the first is the more importaui one and the only one that may be tak en alone, for it is in the father's name while the last is in the name of the mother. In Spain they know no "sen lor" and "junior." Father and son may bear the same Christian name, but each takes his own mother's name as a distinction, the father being, for instance. Fedro Diaz y Castillo and the son Pedro Diaz y Blanco. Cause Found at Last. The teacher was having an interest lng half hour with the children, asking ■ them questions, any one having the privilege to answer. It was a great time to show off. The teacher asked about various things, and one question was about locusts. Several hands were raised, and finally one boy was select ed to speak. "A locust is a bug that gives people tuberculocusts," was his answer.—lndianapolis News. Joy of Obliviousness. "How did you like my turning off the gas at 10 while you and that young fool were in the parlor last night?" asked her father. "Did you?" she responded Innocent ly, and father knew the true meaningl of the word failure. Philadelphia Ledger. A Hard Task. "Miss May certainly has the male contingent at # her feet. But she is rather a capricious belle, isn't she?" "Yes: a bell who is going to be very hard to ring."—Baltimore American. Try a Big Ad. "I lay wide awake last night think-! lng of my business." "Bad plan, old chap. Better keep wide awake daytimes."—Boston Tran script God grants liberty only to those who love It and are always ready to guard and defend it.—Webster. , Real Joy of Farm Owning. I am not a gentleman farmer, with a great estate over which I ride osce in awhile and leave all the real work to my underlings. I cannot think there would be great fun in this. No; I like to take hold with my Portuguese man *nd plant and spray and trim and prune. To be sure, he does more than his share of the rough work, and unuct of the year I must be cultivating other kinds of fields than those that grow cabbages and turnips, but the fun of farming comes from being a real farm- j er while you are one, getting close to the soil, becoming intimate with every living thing, whether it be a plant 01 animal; loving your tomato vines and raspberry bushes, taking a real pride In your eggplants and your brussels sprouts, whether you get a prize for them at the county fair or not.—Rev Dr. Francis E. Clark in Countryside i Magazine and Suburban Life. A Recipe For Ghosts. It is generally understood that "see ing ghosts" is the result of indigestion The following notes may be useful tc amateurs anxious to investigate psy chological phenomena: Lobster salad eaten after midnight one ordinary ghost with chains. Two Welsh rabbits and a mince pie. one mysterious gray lady emitting groans. Cold roast pork, mixed pickles and strong tea taken immediately before; retiring, a genuine family specter car rying his head under his arm. A portion of cake, result of daugh ter's first lesson at cookery school, a troup of fearsome blood stained hob goblins with blue lights shining out oi empty eye sockets.—New York Jour nal. ■ I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers