THE PATRIOT Published Weekly By THE PATRIOT PUBLISHING COMPANY. Office: No. 15 Carpenter Avenue Marshall Building. INDIANA. PENNA Local Phone 250-Z F. BIAMONTE, Editor and Manager V. ACETI, Italian Editor. Entered as second-class matter September 26, 1914, at the postoffice at Indiana, Pennsylvania, under the Act of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION ONE YEAR . . $l.OO | SIX MONTHS. . $75 Tbe Aim of the Foreign Langoage Papers of America TO HELP PRESERVE THE IDEALS AND SACRED TRAD-> ITIONB~OF THIS, OUR ADOPTED COUNTRY, THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; TO REVERE ITS LAWS AND IN SPIRE OTHERS TO OBEY THEM; To STRIVE UNCEASING LY TO QUICKEN THE PUBLIC'S SENSE OF CIVIC DUTY; IN ALL WAYS TO AID IN MAKING THIS COUNTRY GREAT ER AND BETTER THAN WE FOUND IT. | EDITORIAL | GEORGIA LYNCHERS HALTED People of the North who were horrified bv the report of five more negroes lynched last week in Worth county, Georgia, following the publication that Georgia held the banner for American atrocities during 1915, with eighteen persons lynched out of 69 for the South as a whole, will be relieved at the efforts now making in that state to check the lynching spirit. The Georgia press is aroused, The Pub lic Ledger's Atlanta correspondent reports that the demand is insistent to make the biutal killing of negroes an issue in the next gubernatorial campaign. It is proposed that of ficers be bonded for the safeguarding of the prisoners, and that the family of the lynched man be paid a heavy indem nity from the tax fund. But thus far during the twentieth century Georgia and the South have measurably curbed the mob impulses of lynchers. We have received from Major Morton, who will shortly be installed in the late Booker T. Washington's at Tuskegee, statistics showing that last year's total of lynchings in the South was much less than half for the decade preceding 1900. Now the press and public of Georgia are exerting their repressive influence up on the lynchers more heavily. And will it control. —Philadelphia Public Ledger FOR RAFF id WANT IDS. Advertisements under this head lc a word eapfi insertion. FOR SALE— Corner lot in Chevy Chase, 65x150, for further informa tion, apply at this office. # • * i i — - WANTED—Slavish or Polish men, well acquainted in Indiana and mine camps. Can make $25 to $3O per week. Call 15 Carpen ter avenue, Indiana, Pa. FOR SALE—Good automobile, 1914 Vulcan Roadster. A-l run ning condition. Will demonstrate. Sacrifice, $250. Need money. Call or write J. M., care "Patriot." 15 Carpenter avenue, Indiana, Pa. Wanted— Girl for general housework. Small family, no chil dren. Foreign girl preferred. In quire at Patriot office. B on patentability. Bank reference*. K PATENTS BUILD FORTUNSB for | Ej you. Our free booklets tell how, what to invent H| kj and save you money. Write today. ID. SWIFT &CG.S PATENT LAWYERS, 8L303 Seventh St., Vv'ashington. D. C. r NtC lUM ■ WW ' j w TOPICS IN BRIEF * Austria's reply was a promissory note. 1 It's cold in Russia and England is also feeling a draft. It's funny how much prettiei a girl always is in her photograph. The Kaiser got it in the neck at last, but it took his surgeon to do it. Perhaps Doc Cook wants to go through Germany to get to the poles. The Sahara shown in "The Garden of Allah" hasn't much on South Carolina today. From all the reports from the Ford party, Mme. Rosika Schwimmer will soon be in position to rally heroically around : herself. Many a time and oft we sit and wonder in our idle way if there are any real Irishmen who say "yez" und "oi" and 1 -beclad" the way they do in magazine stories. Possibly Doo Cook went over there to take charge of the official press bureaux. Tis said that Ford will build a peace palace in Copen hagen. The Hague has one. Another pathetic little thing-abont human nature is the way a man who had a bad cold always"wants to tell you ! about it at great length. Disliking the hyphen as much as we do, we do not re call that we have ever said anything in this here calumn a bout Anheuser-Busch. - ' i At his birthday dinner it is said the president partook of a cake baked by his bride, this proving at once his De mocracy and his heroism. HIS ANNUAL CROSS COUNTRY RUN. ! —Donelan in Providence Journal. Eveay New Year comes in with a whoop like a Coman che and expires with a gasp like that of the water running out of the bathtub. Thanks to the modern progress, it is the Stenographer who must now worry about writing 1916 instead of 1915. Ours is an altruistic weather bureau. It frequently delivers better goods than it off reed in its prospectus. Summed up the political situation is this : President Wilson will succeed himself becausejhe is the least unpopu lar of our policemen. As a phrase-maker Lloyd George refuses to take a back seat even for our own versatile colonel and our own scholar ly president. T, R's. notion of reckless magnanimity is to concede that perhaps after all. President Wilson means well. United we stand for a whole lot. Every tailor knows a whole lot of promising men. Lloyd George is Welsh but you'll notice he never does. The water wagon is becoming more the band wagon. A Hoboken astrologer predicts that 1916 will see more fighting in Mexico. Marvelous. II you want to know Henry's sentiments read the well known remark of the raven. Somehow the Balkan situation reminds us of two out in the ninth and the score tied. PENNSYLVANIA NEWS IN BRIEF Interesting Items From All Sec tions ot the State. GULLED FOR QUICK READING News of Ail Kinds Gathered From Various Points Throughout the i State. Altoona doctors have raised their fees fifty per cent. A branch of the Peace society was organized in Harrisburg. A Penrisy train killed a doe that ran across the railroad near Hunting don. Gunning on the Lehigh mountain, Captain Schmick, of Emaus, shot two large gray foxes. The first and only optical g'ass fac tory in the United States has started at Washington, Pa. Hazleton blacksmiths are selling old scrap ircn at $l4 a ton, though it was only $4 last summer. The Columbia county court granted thirty-one of the eighty-four applica tions for liquor licenses. E. J. Lynet-t, of the Scranton times, announces lie will not be a candidate for United States senator. The Consolidated Telephone com pany, of Allentown, has inaugurated a bonus system for its employes. Two bronze cannon will be sent to Middletown from Watervliet arsenal, N. Y., and placed in the public square. A lawsuit in the Lancaster court resulted in a division of the farm of 115 acres of Abraham Weir, into 225 parts. Three hundred employes of the Fort Pitt Bridge company, Canonsburg, en joy an increase of ten per cent in wages. The Eastern Perry Telephone com pany has sold its line to the Cumber land Valley Telephone company fo' $10,025. An association is being formed bj the Johnstown chamber of commerce to boost the proposed WilliamPPern r highway. The state water, supply commission at its reorganization meeting elected Robert A. Zentnieyer, Tyronne, as chairman. Wives of officials and employes o' the Pennsylvania railroad in Pitts burgh organized a body to advocate national defence. The Empire Steel and iron companj in Catasauqua has recharged its No. 2 furnace, giving employment to a score of men. Drinking a bottle of cattle medi cine, two-year-c\ld Joseph E. Harnley died in great agony two hours later, at Lancaster. Bishop Thomas Bowers, head of the Evangelical association, is laid up in Allentown with a sprained ankle, the result of a fall. ■ The big banks of anthracite coal stored at the Roan yards of the Lehigh Valley Coal company, are being slowly destroyed by fire. The East Pennsylvania conference of the Evangelical church has sold its Bethany church in Bethlehem to the Apostolic church. Christmas holidays proved the ruin of Hazleton night school, so few stu dents coming back that the Institu tion may be closed. Mary Brennan, of Lost Creek, broke down after nursing her two sisters, and followed them in death, the third one in three weeks. Mayor Meals has appointed an "offi cial chiropodist" for the Harrisburg police force, many of whom have corns and bunions. Temperance forces from Wormleys burg are planning to go to Carlisle to protest against a license kr i < hotel in that town. The annual license court opens at Ebensburg in February with 364 ap plicants. There are only three re monstrances filed. A movement for annexation of fou: villages to Steelton has been started because of high water rates charge! by private companies. Waynesboro may place talking ma chines in its public schools, one hav ing proved a success in furnishing mu sic for marches and drills. As a result of a membership cam paign the Young Women's Christian association of Coatesville now has en rolled 1171 members, a gain of 721. Dr. Francis D. Patterson, of Phila delphia, has assumed the duties of chief of the bureau of industrial hy giene of the department of labor. Almost all of the fifteen new saloon license seekers in Hazleton are ask ing the right to revive old stands wiped out by revocation proceedings. Joseph K. Shultz, a Lancaster coun ty tobacco farmer, has sold his crop at twenty and four cents, the higres: prices paid for any of the 1915 ral3- ing. Charles Olsen, who was arrested in Cumberland, charged with assault on twelve-year-old Ruth Huber, made a confession of his crime at Chambers burg. Hoping to end the practice of send ing petty cases to court, the Bradford county grand jury placed the coats on the committing justices in three cases. After staying in Jail twelve days, George Getz, of Emaus, imprisoned lor refusal to pay $2 taxes, changed his mind, paid the money, and was released. The state health department has displaced an agent to D.ißcL, where it is reported a case of smallpox had developed which was not properly diagnosed. Employes of the Eagan Rogers Steel Casting company at I.eipcrsvil e will have their wages increased. Workmen getting $3 a day will re ceive $3.50. The St. Charles Hotel, Lewistown. has been sold to Henry Kreutzman for $15,000, less than half the price paid for the property under the li cense regime. Complaint has been made to the public service commission that the Consumers' Light company, of Ply mouth, has suspended work at its plant for a year. Phoenixville and Royersford boards of trade will co-operate in appeals against an increase in the price ot 100-trip tickets between those townj and Philadelphia. Andrew Carnegie has agreed to con tribute $5OOO toward a new organ at St. Patrick's Catholic church in Nor ristown, If the members of the church raise a similar sum. Because of injuries received while being initiated into Manifold Nest. Order of Owls, Joseph I.aust, of Wash ington, brought suit against the lodge for $2OOO damages. All schools, churches, moving pic ture shows and oilier places of amuse ment and public gathering have been closed at Conneautville because of an epidemic of small-pox. , ' 1 James Johnson for murder, was sentenced at Bedford to nine years in the Western Peniten tiary, and George Jones, for man slaughter, to six years. Despite a shortage of dyestuffs ou account of the European war, the silk industry throughout the anthracite fields is prosperous, and all plants are operated on Steady time. A corps of twenty-five engineers has begun surveys near Connellsviile for a line to connect the Baltimore & Ohio line at Fayette Station with the Western Maryland railroad. Uniontown business men went to Pittsburgh and asked President Wil son to caill off the Federal probe of Josiah V. Thompson's lailure, as pre judicial to creditors' claims. Mrs. Anna Flamm, thirty years old, of Pittsburgh, was shot th e times at he>' home. The olioothig i.s al.eged to have been done by Mrs. ELa'jeth Wuehner, of North Eraddock. After having been d ped, lured away from home, robbml and held prisoner at a Middletown house, Harry Hill, twenty-eight years old, was brought back to Harrisburg. Julius J. Seibert, of Clairton, has appealed to the courts in Pittsburgh to restore his bride, fourteen years old, who, it is alleged, has been kid napped by her father, Abraham Decht. James Gordon Reilly, a New York architect, has sued Lebanon county for $12,246.95, claimed for profession al services and expenses incident to his preparation of plans for a new courthouse. Heury De Huff, of Mifflin, the old est engineer, in point of service on the Middle division of the Pennsylvania railroad, will retire on a pension Mon day; after forty-seven years of active service, i .r **■, i ~ The McDowell administration in Chester is putting all slot machines out of business. Dominac Grant, pro prietor of a cigar store, was held un der $2OO bail for having a nickel-in the-slot machine in his store. Evidence that the farmers of the state have commenced to use tractors on an extensive scale is shown by a sixty per cent increase in the regis tration at the state capitoi. The num ber of tractors registered thus far is 325. The Pennsylvania State Poultry as sociation has decided to reorgan ze and secure a new charter to cover a more extended flejd. The plan Is to establish a representative in each county and to build up a new organi zation. Nine Harrisburg master barbers have been prosecuted for shaving 0:1 Sunday. The owners are retaliating on the journeymen behind the move ment by having them arrested for working up cases against them on Sunday. Five hundred more persons were given employment at the Remington Arms company, at Eddystone, near Chester. Among the number were nine young women. The concern will employ about 500 women in the pol ishing department. Immense orders for glassware, ma chines to draw gold, silver and cop per machinery for equipping glass fac tories in France and India were turn ed down in Pittsburgh last week ow ing to manufacturers being unable to fill before next year. Delegates from the chambers of commerce of Quakertown, Perkasie, Sellersville, Telford, Souderton, Lans dale, North Wales and Ambler will meet on February 8 at Harrisburg In the interest of freeing the turnpike from Quakertown to Springhouse £r m toll A committee representing the Luth eran church has been looking over several farms in Horsham township, near Horsham, with a view to pur chasing a site for a Lutheran home, to be built from a $300,000 fund be queathed three years ago by a wealthy Lutheran. St. Cassimer's church and other properties in Pottsviile representing a total investment of $1,0)0,000 are in danger of being ruined by the removal of coal pillars underneath the t-wn, and suit has been brought against the Thomas Colliery company to stop fur ther mining. TLA PIÙ' GRANDE DITTA DI Liquori nello Stato di Pennsylvania Noi vendiamo la più' grande quantità' di Liquori di qualsiasi altra Ditta In Pennsylvania. Per la qua nta' della nostra merce, possiamo vantarci di es sere i primi. Massima correttezza e onesta'. BROTJDY & CO. SOUTH FORK, PA. U p> C-LI UOMINI D'AFFARI D'OGGI Pagano buon salario ai ' loro datillografi, contabili ed assisten ti di ufficio, ma loro debbon essere competenti. Nella nostra scuola si da' istruzione individuale tutti i giortii e quando il graduato e' competente riceverà' un buon sa lario. Corso completo in Inglese tutti i rami commerciali. Catalogo gra tis dietro richiesta. 6o—Piano—Lincoln Bldg. Telefoni—Bell 269. J. City 1352. Johnstown, Pa.