The patriot. (Indiana, Pa.) 1914-1955, August 12, 1916, The Patriot, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Dais Riwit pert l
nie mil lificflni
D. Have you read the Consti
tution of the United States?
R. Yes.
D. What form of Government
i* this?
R. Republic.
D. What is the Constitution of
the United States?
R. It is the fundamental law of j
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. W T ho makes the laws for the
fltete of Pennsylvania.
R, The Legislature.
D. What does the Legislature
%
consist of?
R. Senate and A^embly.
D. Who is 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
United States?
R. Washington.
D. By whom are they elected ?
R. By the people.
D. For how long?
ff __ g
GREAT —— .
Inter-State Fair
~
1856 INDIANA, PA. 1916
!' "SIXTY YEARS YOUWG"
•■• '
Bigger and Grander Than Ever
Spectacular Free Attractions
Matsuda Imperial Japanese Troupe
5 Aeroplane Flights 5 2 Bands 2
17~ 7"; ;
Finest Grounds and Accommodations in the State-Special
Excursion Rates on All Railroads
RACING PROGRAM $4,000 IN PURSES
September 5, 6, 7 and 8 I
R. 6 years.
D. How many representatives
are there ? ..
R. 435. According to the pop
| ulation one to every 211.000, (the
ratio fixed by Congress after eack
decennial census.)
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.
I
i D. Who are our U. S. Senators?
R. Boise Penrose and George
; T. Oliver.
D. For how long are they elect
ed?
R. 2 years.
D. Who is our Congressman?
R. S. Taylor North.
D. How many electoral votet»
has the state of Pennsylvania ?
R. 38.
D. Who 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 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. What is a bigamist or poly
gamist?
R. One who believes in having
more than one wife.
D. Do you belong to any secret
Society who teaches to disbelieve
;R organized government?
R. No.
D. Have you ever violated any
Lws of the United States?
R. No.
D. Who makes the ordinances
for the City ?
R. The board of Aldermen.
D. Do you intend to remaiD
permanently in the U. S.?
R. Yes.
PENNSYLVANIA
NEWSJN BRIEF
Interesting Items From All Sec
tions ot the State.
GULLED FOR QUICK READING 1
|
News of All Kinds Gathered From
Various Points Throughout tha
Keystone State. «
Counterfeit quarter dollars are in
general circulation at Berwick.
Scarcity of labor is holding up pub
lic improvements in Pottstown.
Pottstowners are complaining of the
appearance of many monster flies.
Carlisle aims to raise S3OO a month
for local guardsmen's needy families.
Lehighton citizens raised $lB6 to
supply their new park with benches.
Recruiting has started at Hazleton
for Battery A, Second Pennsylvania
Artillery.
Melvin H. Neiffer, of Altoona, has
been appointed a diary and food in
spector.
One vagrant Pittsburgh dog sur
vived three municipal attempts to as
phyxiate it.
Severe bumping of his right thumb
gave William George, <Jf Catawissa,
blood poison.
Caught under a fall of top rock at
the Locust Spring colliery, Paul Mont
cavage was killed.
Shells made in the Jeanesville Iron
Works munitions plant are in use on
the Russian front.
Complaint has been made by resi
dents of Coaldale that four speak
easies exist in that town.
Pittsburgh's striking city laborers
and teamsters have voted to continue
their strike for higher pay.
The Reformed church, Butler Val
ley, has just held jollification and
mortgage-burning exercises.
Young Louis Grover, of White Ha
ven, met death by striking a rock as
he dived in the Lehigh river.
A bolt of lightning stunned Mrs.
Louis Ginter and her two children, at
Oneida, and damaged the house.
A six-foot copperhead hidden under
a log bit and almost killed six-year
old Merle Stambaugh, near Carlisle.
A black bear chased Frank Sickler
and berrying companions, near Ber
wick, after ripping his shirt from him.
Ambrose Levan's runaway horses
dashed across Penn's 300-foot trestle
at Catawissa and only skinned one
leg.
Seven Altoona refreshment dealers
ignored the mayor's request for a
strict observance of the Sunday blue
law.
Anthony Kelley, a well-known ath
lete, was squeezed between cars at In
dian Ridge colliery and seriously In
jured.
For failing to provide proper bed
ding for his horse, John Bulaski, an
Easton storekeeper, was* filled $lO an*d
costs-
— 1
I | PaCtTversw* 11
!1 F.II.OSac •••
i I JL CH? « C*?
HI * * I
: j:j —— -
lj FACT is a real state of things, FALLACY is an appa?- ,
cntly genuine but really illogical statement or argument.
■t ( ~ . :
! TRACTS reflected from news in the daily are
r proving most embarrassing to Prohibition
FALLACIES. For instance, where a dispatch from San
Francisco, Cal., states that exactly 18,756,148 persons
passed the turnstiles at the Panama-Pacific Exposition, a-JF
and of this great nuAber only 33 were arrested or ejected JI
for intemperate use of alcoholic beverages. Practically jjjjtjy i^f
! perfect order prevailed during the ten months ci the £r||s&
jT rpKIS temperance record of the Exposition, at which j i J li jfT j ; L Ml
IX drinks of every kind were easily obtainable, seems 11
more remarkable when comparison is made with the gl
arrest records of several conspicuous Prohibition citi?s in
which the sale of liquors is forbidden. The daily transient p-j
population at the Exposition, for example, was about E
/^ or \ 60,000, nearly equal to the resident population of Port- *|
/ land, the largest city in the oldest Prohibition State—
r J*\ Maine. Comparison gives the following official figures of
V- arrests for drunkenness and disorderly conduct within a , ■
s?' period of 10 months, viz.:
1 Total arrests at the Exposition for intoxication, 83
j Arrests £cr into: . ication : n » c v y " Portland, Me., 3067
IN
' '3OGI H/ number of arrests for intoxication at the Exposition
j] v an d the number jailed for the same offense in "Prohibi
tion" Banger, Maine. That city has only 26,000 popula
j ] tion, less than half the daily attendance at the Exposition,
|| and while there were only £3 arrests for intoxication dur- ,/ X^ v
i J ing 10 months at the Exposition, 2G30 persons were /
locked up for similar offenses in the city of Banger. ( \
WHEN the salient FACTS of o facially-authenticated - 1 \
figures are brought into bold relief, the ARKESv FOR
FALLACIES of Prohibitionists become all the more f* , s
apparent. * H aBAN9oR
\ f I
[oj Pennsylvania State Brewers' Association \
l 3 63 S
p 1
While picking huckleberries at Glen
Onoko, George Kanouse, of East
Mauch Chunk, killed a six-foot • black
snake.
The governor has reappointed Mrs.
E. C. Niver, of Charleroi, a member
of the board of censors for moving
pictures.
Officers of the Aillentown War Relief
Fund mailed checks for S7OO to de
pendents of their soldiers who went
to Texas.
C. I. Fuller, of Mt. Union, has been
; appointed Pennsylvania railroad ticket
agent at Altoona, vice H. L. Hesser,
deceased.
Enough foodstuffs will be raised on
the farm at the Berks county home to
feed that institution's inmates for the
next year.
Reading Elks have arranged for fifty
j bands and 5000 paraders when their
state convention is held in Reading,
August 28.
. Falling from a wagon while loading
hay on his farm at Nuremberg, Jacob
Turbach sustained a broken neck, dy
ing instantly.
The wages of the puddlers at the
A. M. Byers company's mills, Colum
bia, have been raised to $7 a ton, an
increase of sl.
Scranton has had fourteen deaths
from cholera njorbus in fourteen days,
and attributes them all to the eating
of cucumbers.
Camp Hill, Cumberland county, has
organized a vigilance committee of a
dozen armed men against raids of six
robbers in an auto.
Eighteen automobilists were arrest
ed and fined by Mayor Harvey, at
Hazleton, for failure to blow their
horns at crossings.
For the first time in their history,
Coaldale, Summit Hill and Lansfcrd
are supplied by gas for lighting and
illuminating purposes.
The superior court has abolished the
Williamßport district and attached all
counties heretofore in that district to
the Harrisburg district.
All the bids received by the Palmer
j ton school board for the erection V
a new $35,000 school building have
j been rejected—too high.
Running in front of Dr. L. G. Mul-
I lahry's automobile, four-year-old Jo
j seph Krosendinski, Girardville, had to
have a foot amputated.
Miss Catharine Stauffer fell back
ward fifteen feet through a skylight
' at a Shenandoah hotel into a bathroom
and was badly injured.
While chopping kindling wood in the
back yard of his Ashland home, Jo
seph Dillman, eighty-two, fell over
dead from heart trouble.
R. M. Williamson, of Huntingdon,
has withdrawn as a candidate for con
gress in the seventeenth district on
the Washington party ticket.
William Schiusen, a carpenter at
Bast colliery, near Shenandoah, fell
twenty-eight feet from the breaker
roof, and his condition is critical.
Because the tall steeple of St.
Paul's Catholic church, Reading, has
been struck several times by lightning,
it is to be removed from the church.
.Daniel D'Brien. x»f -Lost Creek* in
|
HOUSEHOLD NECESSITIES
For sewing machines, Vacu
um cleaners, mops, etc., see J.
K. Carney, White building, In
.diana, Pa.
an attempt to _ cross"ihe LehigTTYalley
tracks in front of his home was run
over by an excursion train and killed.
John Dougherty, eight years old,
died at Centralia of a fractured skull,
as John Condiles, eight, accidentally
struck him on the head with a glass
bottle.
That the sun and the hot nights
have hatched out a setting of guinea
egg ß for him is the statement of Jo
seph Varnar, of Briar Creek, Colum
bia county.
Two hundred and fifty Virginia
farmers and business men visited the
vicinity of Harrisburg and Lancaster
on their tour of the farming counties
of Pennsylvania.
By buying his 243 shares, the Wyo--
ming Valley Water company got rid
of the suit of Matthew Long, Hazleton,
against the purchase of the Diamond
Water company.
Craig Williams, pantomining a high
dive for the amusement of boyish com
panions, lost his balance and fell from
the roof of a shanty, fracturing both
wrists, at Ashland.
Backing into a crossing gate closed
behind him, S. W. Drexler, Carlisle,
saved his automobile and a party by
three feet from being struck by an
engine, at Lancaster.
Paul Nlehoff, a Lehighton florist,
has just received word of the death of
his mother in Wuertemburg, Germany,
March 26, the censor having held up
the letter as suspicious.
Edward Warring Ls unable to be at
work at the Plymouth magnesia plant
because of injuries received when he
and Daniel O'Brien argued over the
sailing of the Deutschland.
Charged with interfering with vot
ers in Ihfl Oilberton -ioan election,
Continued on page 3
| "To the Heart of Leisureland
where woods are cool, streams
alluring, vacations ideal. Be
tween New York City (with
Albany and Troy the gate
ways) and
LAKE GEORGE
THE ADIRONDACK®
LAKE CHAPLAIN'
THE NORTH AND WEST
The logical route is "The Luxurious Way"
Largest and most magnificent river
steamships in the world
DAILY SERVICE
Send for free copy of beautiful "Searchlight
Magazine"
Hudson Navigation Com y.
Pier 32, Worth River New York
" THE SEARCHLIGHT ROUTE " <
I trade marks find copyrights obtained or no I
■ fee. Stud model, sketches or photos and de- H
B scrlption for FREE S£ARCH and report I
■ on patentability. Dank referancea,
PATENTS BUILD FORTUNES for I
B you. Our free booklets toll how, wliat to Invent ■
I and save you money. Write today.
D. SWIFT CO. I
PATENT LAWYERS,
Seventh St., Washington, D. C. ifl
%—BWHiiJil I' ll—li *
FOR SALE ON WANT mm.
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.
,u,v .Jim
Local Phone, Office, 263-z,
Residence, 246-y.
DR. C. J. DICKIE
DENTIST
Room 14, second floor
Marshall building
INDIANA, PENN'A.