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 2(1, 1914, at the postoffice at Indiana, Pennsylvania, under the Act of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION ONE YEAR . . $l.OO | SIX MONTHS. . $75 Tbe Aim ol the Foreign Language Papers (of America TO HELP PRESERVE THE IDEALS AND SACRED TRAD ITIONS OF THIS, OUR ADOPTED COUNTRY, THE UNITED i 7 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 | The IVlme Tragedy —From the Pittsburgh Post THE explosion in the mine at Ernest, Indiana county, this state, which caused the death of 27 men, finds the public as usual at a loss as to what to say concerning the cause but insistent that every means be employed to get at the facts and apply the remedies. As trained investigators 011 the scene have not determined the cause it is idle for the layman at a distance to attempt to point it out. As the officers of the company in this instance, as in similar cases and as is always to be expected of them in line with their duty and their humanity, halted at no expense in the res cue work or in the entering into investigation of the tragedy one naturally finds it impossible to attribute to them any thing like willful carlessness in the conduct of the plant. In the same way it would be preposterous to assume that any of the miners did anything knowingly to cause the death of himself or of his fellow workers. But, as it was known that there was gas in the mine, it seems plain that its being ignited was due to carelessness somewhere. The question to be consideied is, where to draw the line be tween carlessness of any kind under such circumstances and willful carelessness, the effect in either case being the same. Taking a risk of any kind where life is involved is difficult to separate from deliberate carelessness, since risk means to incur danger. Such investigations as this, to be of any value, must be conducted mercilessly and punishment applied to the full est extent where its need is indicated. Carelessness is a menace to be combated with even more vigor than gas or dust in the mines, as it is usually carelessness x that makes the others so terrible. After One Year ! After having been in the "dry" column for a year, the county again joined the ranks, Wednesday morning of those territories which grant the privilege of selling liquors. One year ago Judge Telford refused all but one liquor license applicant, that of Grant Snyder, of Glen Campbell, said license was granted 011 the basis that no remonstrance had been filed. A few weeks ago Judge Langham granted fif teen licehses. The restrictions, the rigid rules and regula tions which Judge Langliam has handed down with the liquor permits should appeal to every good citizen of this e county. The "110 treating" clause which was established by the retiring Judge Telford, has been re-enforced with vim by Judge Langham, he can be depended upon to en force every regulation to the limit. ADVERTISE IN THE PATRIOT TO GET RESULTS The Human Face. Rosa Bonheur, the great painter of animals, had a system of mnemonics which was exceedingly quaint. She oonld trace In the faces of those peo ple who visited her a resemblance to some sort of animaL For Instance. W •ome one reminded her of a certain lady she would probably hesitate for JL moment and then say, "Oh, yes, the lady with the camel face!" or, "Oh, I remember —she had a cow face!" This memory system was not flattering to her friends, bat It showed how satu rated she was with a knowledge of an imals and their characteristics. On ev ery human face she found a likeness to •ome animal she had studied and de lineated. Advice. Let no man persume to give advice to others who has not first given good counsel to himself.—Seneca. London's Windmill. New Zealand, we are Informed, now boasts only a single windmill. In this respect London is equal with the An tipodes. On Brixton hill, just by the waterworks and only a few yards from the main road, stands an old mill Intact with the exception of the sails, and still in use, though now electricity takes the place of wind as motive pow er. The mill was erected by a Quaker about a century ago, and has remained la the family ever since.—London Chronicle. Would Help Him. "I'll try to make you a good husband, my dear." "And I have no doubt that you will succeed. Mother and I will abet your efforts in that direction vigorously."— Louisville Courier-Journal. * TOPICS IN BRIEF Woodrow is not talking he's saying something. And where is the old-fashioned girl who used to knit socks for the Belgains? Those Filipinos are just beginning toj>ee another angle of this "new freedom" business. Bread may be as cheap as Berlin claims, but the bak ers don't seem to have heard of it. No wonder the infuriated 'Mexicans captured two of our soldiers. They saw "em taking a bath. Doc. Cook says there are no wild men in Borneo. Evi dently the Doc didn't deliver this lecture^there. Current "Life" is a John Bull number, thus disposing of the theory that the Teutons had got his number. Wilhelm's western drive began coincidently with Wil son, but it won't end after the same old fashion. Wall Street is unanimous against the appointment of Louis D. Brandies. That settles it. He must Jje a corker. Any summoning of the nation's manhood to arms will probably receive [.the warm co-operation of the eligible spinsters. If Russia is genuinely anxious to know what to do with its surplus stock of vodka, we would suggest a want ad. in the Charleston papers. What has become of the old-fashicned farmer boy who used to rub his head against a 'simmon tree to cure a crick in his neck? Another pathetic little feature of the situation is Japan pondering hard to see if there is anything she forgot to de mand from China the first time. "I DON'T WANT TO DO THIS." ( <, J BUT 1 wiul JBBP / I * there'S 1 ' ~, , , —Chapin in St. Louis Republic. We judge frem the esteemed Congressional Record that the great trouble with some of our rising young statesmen is that they rise entirely too often, # Germany protests against the arming of Italian liners, and it does not seem strange that a nation doesn't want her women and children drowned if she can help it. "Who will be the first to meet Willard," asks a head line. Somebody can have our proxy. Though she won't join in, the Aliies must admit that Hellas is paved with good intentions. We suppose Wilhelm has come to feel that aboil on the stove is worth two on the neck. Charity begins at home and in nine cases out of ten it never gets farther than the front door. We see by the papers, that the Kaiser who is dying in Berlin has returned to the front. However, we are not too much unprepared to lick the socks, ol any of Mexico, should the need arise. We are beginning to appreciate how the Ancient Mari ner felt when he uttered that famous lament. If the New York Tribune is so anxious to know "What is the Gary Plan?" Why doesn't it ask T. R.? It may be as Dr. Woods Hutchinson asserts, "that we live almost twice too long," but Europe is correcting this as quickly as possible. The jingo wants to go in, and wipe up Mexico like sin; but if you ask him to go long, be sure he'll sing you another song. PENNSYLVANIA NEWSJN BRIEF Interesting Wm Frcm All Sec tions ct the State. CULLED FOR QUICK REAOIN6 News of All Kinds Gathered From Various Points Throughout th© Keystone State. A full grbwn deer wandered into Reading. Reading spent $140,000 last year on street paving. George Roskilley has been elected chief of East Bangor fire department. Wages of Easton tinsmiths have been raised from 33cents an hour to forty cents. Governor and Mrs. Brumbaugh re turned to Harrisburg from their honeymoon last week. Livingstone Saylor, of Pottstown, has been appointed factory inspector to specialize on boilers. James Shields, a young Altoonan, has won a wager by eating 157 raw oysters In forty miifUte3. Following a report of fifteen cases of typhoid fever at Dubois, the state will look into the situation. Hazleton school board learns offi cially that young pupils have been drunk on stolen liquor recently. Major William A. Raub, of the Thirteenth infantry, Seranton, has been appointed lieutenant colonel. York county shad fishermen again complain that no adequate fish way has been built over McOall's Ferry dam. The Firemen's Union of Norristown has decided to increase the benefits to disabled firemen from $1 to $2 a day. Steady progress is being made in the installation of telephones in the mines throughout the antracite re gion. There is an unusual rush of com mercial travelers through the anthra cite coal fields, where business is brisk. Mercer county's drink bill for 1915 aggregated nearly $1,300,000, accord ing to figures furnished in license court. Three foreign laborers were killed and one seriously injured by a 75- tonlandalid© in a quarry at Swartara Station. All the 140 boys at the Luzerne County ludustrial school will help I> the erection of a seventh cottage on the grounds. It coet Kosta Petroff of West Home stead st.2o and ten hours in the po lice statin on for using bad language orer a telephone. To jog lazy high school pupils the Pottsville board has decided to pub lish monthly grades as advertisements in the newspapers. An advance in wages of fifteen cents a day has been given to all employes •f the Elk Tanning company at Cou dersport—Booo men. No applications for (liquor license filed within the time limit, Mifflin county is assured of another dry year, its seventh. To break up an epidemic of thlev ing in Cumberland county, Judge Sad ler sentenced three of the gentry to six-year prison terms. Of forty-five liquor licenses grant ed in Washington county, thirty-two were to retailers, eight to breweries and five to distilleries. The Thomas Iron company, of Ho kendauqua, has raised the wages of its employes ten per cent, the second time within six months. Mormons of Buck valley, near Mc- Conneltlsburg, whose whose church was destroyed by dynamite a few weeks ago, will rebuild. Two new veins of anthracite coal have been discovered in the Beaver Brook operations of the C. M. Dodson company, near Hazletcn. *A procer of dipping hides has been instituted at the plant of the Elk Tan ning company, at Coudersport, for dis infection against Anthrax. The American Iron and Steel Man ufacturing company, Lebanon, has given a voluntary five per cent in crease to its mill workers. With sixty-three deaths in January, most of them due to grip and kindred ailments, Hazleton had its highest mortality rate for ten years. James L. Boyle, of Lehigh ton, game warden, has received a consignment of forty-five English pheasants to be liberated throughout the county. E. K. Owens, of Susquehanna, was elected president of the Pennsylvania and Atlantic Seaboard Hardware as sociation, in convention at Pittsburgh. The Salvation Army and the O - nelsville Ministerial association have buried the hatchet. Each has agreed to work for the interests of the otto- Walter Anderson has confessed that be robbed -he St. James Hotel kar In Connellsviiie, to get money to get Jessie Farrell, his sweetheart, out of jar.. With their ice houses partially fill ed, natural ice dealers along the SrkuylkiU! valley are hopeful that a cold spell will give them another chance. Burgess John G. Davis, of Freeland, who issued orders to the police to en force the Sunday closing laws rigidly, declined to give formal notice to sa loonists. A man-trap set by Abraham Scw b!e, near New Freedom, for a grain thief, shot instead James Baublitz, who cl ased a skunk past the trap; and he will sua. me T. M. C. A. of fmisvuie is con ducting a campaign for 800 new mem bers under the direction of H. J. Schmidt, field secretary of the atat organization. Sixty society and club women of York participate J in the organization of a York county chapter of the Penn sylvania Women's division for Nation al Preparedness. The Western Maryland Railroad company will establish extensive yards between Fayette and Watt on land purchased from the John Stevenson heirs of Pittsburgh. By a vote of 919 to 163 the $225,000 bond issue to be expended in replac ing the Central and Park school build ings, both recently condemned, car ried in Uniontown. The woman's Suffrage party of Montgomery county held a rousing convention in N\ rristown, attended by 150 prominent women from various parts of the country. The Otto Eisenlohr company of Philadelphia, has filed at Harrisburg notice of increase of stock from $5,- 000 to $10,000,000 tbe state receiv ing a bonus of $29,988.67. Albert Buchanan Long, twenty-eight years old, who died in Lewistown re cently, willed $5OO each to Lewistown hospital, Burnham Y. M. C. A. and the First Presbyterian church. Robert R. Ringler, of Rending, has been named by the Socialist party as a candidate for state treasurer. Mrs. Robert B. Ringler was elected a mem ber of the state committee. The West Hazleton school board has refused the W. C. T. U. permis sion to hang pictures of Frances Wil lard, the temperance advocate, in the rooms of the various buildings. Daniel T. McKelvey, Hazleton city detective, has announced himself a candidate for delegate to the Demo cratic national convention from the eleventh congressional district. The state department of agriculture has directed its agents throughout the state to prosecute dealers violating the law providing for the protection of meats displayed in stores. Mayor Joseph G. Armstrong, of Pittsburgh, Las issued a statement de claring the city is the cleanest moral ly in the United States, and that com mercialize vi-e no longer exists. • George W. Dersey, of Reading, a let ter carrier has received a message stating that his son, William T.. twen ty-two yea. s old, a sailor on a battle ship at Norfolk, has been drowned. An inveet'gation conducted by Game Protector E. W. Kelly and his cssist ants in Crawford county is said to have produced startling evidence of scalp bounty frauds aggregating $lO,- 000. The Fish and Game Protective as sociation has placed In Montgomery county streams between 4400 and 50 "0 broek treut, about four inekes long, eent by Ike state hatchery *t Beila fente. The Umtontawa board of health has appointed Mloa Elisabeth Havey, a graduate nurse of the Umlontown hos pital, as health oflcer. Ske is the first woman appointed to office In Un ion town. Orders booked by the Drlggi-Ses bury Ordnance corporation, at Sharon, including those of the Savage Arms company, of Utica, N. Y., aggregate close to $40,000,000, most of which la for guns, gun parts and accessories. Mandamus proceedings were started In Dauphin court by James Sweeney, state chief, to compel M\*rray G. Liv ingston, Pittsburgh, measure and weights inspector, to file monthly statements. W. Lee Gllmore, superintendent of schools In Lawrence county, has re signed, and R. G. Leslie, of Nevr Castle, has been appointed In his place, State Superintendent N. C. Schaeffer announced. The smallpox quarantine at Con neautville has been lifted and In cele bration of the event the citizens of the town held a hi? para J e. Pcraders dressed to represent "killed" di ease germs were the feature. Work on the erection cf the taber nacle in Jeanette for the com'ng evangelistic campalen to be c ndurt ed by Rev. L. P. Peacock has begun. The campaign will open February 27 and will continue six weeks. Despite le rapid increase In the number of automobiles in the rural districts, f-rty-four count'es show a rise in the number of farm hcrses over last year. There is also a steady in crease in the number of mu'es. The various lodges of Odd Fellows in Berks county are endeavoring to have the 1916 state session held in Reading. The lodges have appointed committeemen to meet at Odd Fel lows' hall to determine a method. That a lodge must pay sick benefits to a member, even when he is in an insane asyl im, was decided by Judce George W. Wagner, in Reading, in the suit of Charles Bleiler against Fleet wood Castle, Knights of the Golden Eagle. Expert mining engineers testifying before Judge Brumm, in Pottsville, as to the caus- of the subsidence of the surface of the ground at Shenandoah, threatening the safety of some of the principal buildings, are divided as to the danger. The number of policies written frr the state insurance fund passed the 8500 wark, and the number oi applications is said to be holding to about 100 a day. The activity for insurance in companies and associa tions is also said to be continuing. "Speeding up" work in coal mines metal trades and others engaged in filling war orders or pushing along shipments for export or to fill gome of the big demands for previsions or munitions 1 believed to be the cruse of the extraordinarily large n mher of industrial accidents being reported at the capiioL