The patriot. (Indiana, Pa.) 1914-1955, July 08, 1916, The Patriot, Image 3

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    Dinsmore Brothers-
VENDITA SEMESTRALE DI
Vestiti, Cappelli, Camicie, ecct.
PER UOMINI E RAGAZZI
La vendita incomincia Lunedi mattina I 0 Luglio. Tutta la nuova merce verrà' venduta
Sotto prezzo di costo. -========
Vestiti da Uomo da Ottimi Pantaloni Vendita di Camicie ij CAPPELLI
$25. ora $16. t0 j da Uomini ] p® i| duri neri 1-2 prezzo
20. ora 14.50 \ $5.00, 6.00 ora $3.75 j SI O i; Soffici 1.00
ora 12.50 > $3.50, 4.00 ora $2.75 s jj Tutte le paglie a 1-2 prezzo
15 ora • 10.50 j $2.50, 3.00 ora $1.75 jy e n( j uto 1.50, 2.00 e 2.50 i; 7*?^"
12.50 ora 9.50 j #2.00 ora fi.so j ~ — ~~~~~~~ j; Camicie da Ragazzi
7T7 I Tutti i Cappelli per ? so c ora 29 C
s Lalzoni f d •
Vestiti da Ragazzi ! per R agazzi «fa ' * a « azzl j *
da SIO.OO ora $6.50 ;! $1.50 ora SI.OO !| I_ / 1' DI r>
$7.00, 7.50, 8.00 ora $7.50 |i SI.OO ora 75c i; ' vZXU j; BloUSe per Ragazzi
$5.00, 6.00 ora 3.75 ji 75 c ora 50c ;i 50c ora 25c i; 50c OTa 35c
$3.50, 4.00 ora 2.75 ij 50c ora 25c j| 1 - 00 ora 50c i; l-oo ora 65c
""DINSMORE BROTHERS
> V
Magazzino di Qualità Sarti, Fornitori—Magazzino di mode
724 Philadelphia Street INDIANA
■■■■■ WM ■ Wm M■MOMMIHBM Continued from page 2
The Lehigh Valley Coal''company
has called for bids for two tunnel?
at Hazleton No. 5 mines, to tap veins
of anthracite to be developed at once,
and for another gangway to be driven
at Derringer to intersect seams.
The recent flood has put the Lehigh
canal out of commission, and as the
towpath was flooded\at many places
and the channel in the dams has flMed
with mud, some time will elapse be
fore navigation can be resumed.
Charging that John Bobersky had
called him a tblef, a robber and a
crook, Father John Zalilensky,
Greek Catholic congregation In West
Berwick, has started a slander action
against him, asking $lO,OOO damages.
Miss Rose Mangel, eighty-seven
years old. walked from her home in
INDIANA'S
Finest Ice
Cream Parlor
IT IS QUALITY THAT
COUNTS
and it is because our, confec
tionery combines the qualit
ies of purity, flavor and fresh
ness that it is perfectly heal
thy, To a lover of fine cand
ies a box of our bonbons;
chocolates or caramel is an un
qualified delight.
The 'Boston'
Where Quality and Purity
Are Paramount
!
Fflfol Ml 1.
Advertisements under this head lc
a word each insertion.
. |
FOR SALE —Farm of 53 acres
in Rayne township, 1-4 mile
from Kimmel station on the 8.,
R. and P. Good house and barn,
fruit and good spring water.
Cheap to quick buyer. Inquire at
Patriot Office.
Penn townsnip to Butler, a distance
of flve miles, 'in order to witness the
parade of Bible classes in connection
with the county Sunday school conven
tion.
Brigadier General George R. Greg
ory, of Reading, head of the military
branch of the Knights of the Golden
| Eagle, says the 1000 men in his com-
I manderies will be ready to flght if
1 President Wilson and the country need
J them.
Harold Bachman, of Northampton,
*ho was summoned to answer a charge
of auto speeding at and
ignored the notice, was brought to
Weatherly by Chief of Police Auchey
and paid a fine of $lO, plus costs of
$18.50.
After four months of business, dur
which it is said to have netted about
$3OO, an alleged fraudulent mail order
house, owned and operated by sixteen
year-old Stewart Helfrich, of Reading,
came to a sudden termination. Detec
tive McGovern, at the instigation of
Postal Inspector R, G. Gibbons, arrest
ed Helfrich. He was held for trial in
the district court, Philadelphia.
ARTHUR'S
WOOING
By ETHEL HOLMES
Jeannette Wild was an Incorrigible
flirt Perhaps It was not her fault;
perhaps It was. There was something
about her that attracted men, whether
it was intentional or not. A pleasant
smile hovered about her lips; there was
a sparkle In her eye. When she said
anything droll she had a way of cock
ing her head on one side, like a bird,
| that was very attractive. Jeannette
was an innocent girl In every respect
and no word of scandal was ever spo
ken against her.
But her flirtations were very annoy
ing to her mother. In the first place, |
her daughter was too young to make
an Intelligent choice of a husband; in
the second, she had not finished her
education. When she was nineteen
years old, having become entangled
with three suitors, her mother resolved
upon drastic measures. The spring
was coming on, and the good lady,
dreading the advantages that summer
possessed for love affairs, resolved to
take her daughter where a man could
not get near enough to fall In love with
her.
Mrs. Wild had no confidence In any
place of abode that was not Isolated.
A land fortress would need a moat
which was Impracticable. No place
would do unless surrounded by wa
ter. So an island It must be.
In Casco bay, on the Maine coast are
a number of islands. In the center of
one of these islands is a cottage. Mrs.
Wlld_rented Jhis with a view 1
to removing her family and servants
there. But, alas, it Is difficult for wom
en to get on without men. Mrs. Wild
dared not live on the Island without
one. Besides, she needed one to run
her motorboat There was another
reason for a man's presence. Mrs. Wild
desired to prevent any of her daugh
ter's suitors from landing on her re
treat, and she needed some one strong
enough to keep them off.
Mrs. Wild advertised for a person to
fill this requirement Several young
men answered her advertisement, but
the lady did not engage any of them.
She \taited till an elderly one applied
for the Job and engaged him.
John Doolan had white hair and a
white beyd. But he seemed to be
quite strong and said that he was per
fectly able to hold the dock against
all comers. He went to the Island a
couple of days before the family to
make preparations. When they arriv
ed all was In order for their reception.
As Mrs. Wild had anticipated, they
had not been at their summer home
long before one of Jeannette's suitors
appeared at the dock. He was refused
a landing by John Doolan. He sailed
around to another part of the island,
but John was there with a gun to re
ceive him. Mrs. Wild was so pleased
with this action of John's that she
gave him a five dollar gold piece. Soon
after this another boat appeared, and
a handsome young fellow in yachting
costume was about to step out on to
the landing when John ordered him
off. He poked a card at op poser,
but John said that if he were the presi
dent himself he could not come ashore.
Argument having failed, the visitor
tried bribery. John proved incorrupti
ble There was nothing for the yachts
man to do but sail away.
Mrs. Wild, to whom John reported
all these noble acts of defense, was de
lighted. On several occasions he
brought the cards that were given him
to his mistress. Some of the men who
had left them she knew, and some
were strangers to her. It made no dif
ference who they were. She had de
termined to keep men away from her
daughter for that summer, and. having
secured the services of a man who was
capable and trustworthy, she gave her
self no concern. She declared that it
was the first summer she had felt easy
about Jeannette since she was fourteen
years old.
But one day a thunderbolt came out
of a clear sky. The fond mother while
taking a stroll over her island, walk
ing through a thick wood heard voices
near her. She listened and recognized
Jeannette's voice. Then came a man's
deeper tones. The latter sounded mnch
like John Doolan.
Could it be that the flirt, deprived of
association with men. had cast her
tolls about the old servitor? The sus
picion brought a shock to the doting
mother.
Advancing toward the sounds, she
peeped through a break in the leaves,
and there, sitting on a log with their
backs to her. were John and Jeannette.
John's aim-around Jeannette's waist.
Mrs. "Wild tore - through the urider
brush like a fury. Hearing the noise
of breaking brush behind them, the
culprits Jumped to their feet, turned
and confronted the angry mother.
While she was delivering a tirade of
reproaches John pulled oif his white
beard and stood as the most
persisted of Jeannette's suitors.
"Woe is me, Mrs. Wild," he said
with head bent low. "I confess myself
a great sinner. Jeannette wrote me
that you were to remove her here, and
I, seeing your de-
F&CtS Versus *■
Fa 11 aci 3 s
FACT is a real state of things . FALLACY is an appar
ently genuine but really illogical statemmt or argument.
difficulties—and the added expense—consequent to seeing that the law is upheld in those
* portions of the country where "dry" laws are in force, is well exemplified in Kentucky. For in
certain portions of that State not only are the United States Revenue officers unable to cope with
the moonshine situation, but can count on no help from the local authorities.
T«*
HE following from the Louisville Times gives the situatior in 1 fXtn ■* ' \
a nutshell, and shows the rapid increase of illicit distilling in
certain portions of Kentucky. Says the Times-.
"M OONSHINING is on the boom in local option territory in |
1 1 Kentucky, particularly in the eastern portion of the State, /
\J where coal development is flourishing. This fact is being reported to —• UI
the Commissioner of Internal Revenue at Washington by B. B. -J
local revenue agent, who said his men informed him that jl
IP l\3! i 'fciif distilling is increasing at such a rapid me all over the State 2J
iJjJ ] |[ ® Xtraordinar y measurcs have to be adopred to meet the 3
£ \2|L» ** * A not believe that the Government -an put enough cj
'1 men in the field to cope with the situation at that,' Mr. pi
Bouldin stated. 'ln order to check this increase in illicit distilling l/fl
u. the people and officers of this State and the counties where the
K i licensed sale of liquor has been voted out will have to co-operate
- Government to check the spread of this particular brand of 111
j 'IN almost every county where local option prevails,' Mr. If
A Bouldin said, 'the county and State officers have shown a ill
lack of vigilance in dealing with illicit distilling and evidently expect *
Government revenue agents to police their territory. We haven't „ _
enough men to do this without the co-operation of all the people, 111
and the sale of moonshine whisky increases as a result. We shall ;
continue, of course, with our limited force of agents to check this >
thing, but it increases in spite of all measures we have taken.'"
ONCE more is proven what has been said, over and over again, in
these articles: that it is a FALLACY to say that Prohibition
prohibits, when it is a FACT that all it does is to prevent the legal- 'r^-
ixed and regulated sale of liquor. j
Pennsylvania State Brewers * Association L - •
fen3erT~ai>plTed lor flle~ place Hi (Tie
uniform of a veteran. I have perform
ed my duties to the best of my ability."
"It's all right. mamma." pleaded
Jeannette. "Your bringing me here
has brought me to a decision. I love
Arthur and will marry no one else.
His wooing hag charmed me."
Since Arthur -was an eligible young
man "with a fortune Mrs. Wild made a
virtue of necessity, forgave them, and
consented to an early marriage.
DoiiiflniTßispflstrper Hi
venire Cillili iron
D. Have you read the Consti
tution of the United States!
R. Yes.
D. "What form of Government
is this!
R. Republic.
D. What is the Constitution of
; the United States!
R. It is the fundamental law of
this country.
D. Who makes the laws of the
United States!
R. The Congress.
D. What does Congress consist
of!
R. Senate and House of Rep
resentatives.
D. Who is our State Senator?
R. Theo. M. Kurtz.
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.
D. Who makes the laws for the
state of Pennsylvania.
R. The Legislature.
D. What does the Legislature
consist of!
R. Senate and Assembly.
D. Who is our Assemblyman!
R. Wilmer H. Wood.
D. How many State in the un
ion!
R. 48.
D. When was the Declaration
of Independence signed!
R. July 4, 1776.
D. By whom was it written!
R. Thomas Jefferson.
D. Which is the capital of the
I nited States?
R. Washington.
D. By whom are they elected t
R. By the people.
D. For how long!
R. 6 years.
D. How many representative®
are there T ..
R. 435. According to the pop
nlation one to every 211,000, (the
fixed by Congress after eack
(•snsudo jßinnaoap
D. Which is the capital of the
state of Pennsylvania.
R. Harrisburg.
D. How many Senators has
each state in the United States
Senate!
R. Two.
D. "Who are our U. S. SenatorsT
R. Boise Penrose and George
T. Oliver.
D. For how long are they elect
ed!
R. 2 years.
D. Who is our Congressman T
R. S. Taylor North.
D. llow many electoral vote®
has the state of Pennsylvania!'
R. 38.
D. W T ho is the chief executive
of the state of Pennsylvania!
R. The Governor.
D. For how long is he elected!
R. 4 years.
D. Who is the Governor!
R. Brumbaugh.
D. Do you believe in organized
government!
R. Yes.
D. Are you opposed to organis*
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 op polif
gamist!
R. No.
D. What is a bigamist or poly*
gamist!
R. One who believes in having
mora than one wife.
D. Do you belong to any secret
Soeioty who teaches to disbelieve
in organized government!
R. No.
D. Have you ever violated any
Continued on page 4