The patriot. (Indiana, Pa.) 1914-1955, October 14, 1916, The Patriot, Image 3

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    Agli uomini soli! * Agli uomini soli!
Oggi principiera' la seconda settimana della nostra vendita di apertura a questi
prezzi di vera occasione $lB 20, $22 50, $25 00
Voi vi compiacerete di voi stesso quando indosserete uno dei nostri. VESTITI FATTI Sii MISURA Oramai famosi per la loro stoffa, taglio e prezzo.
GOLDBERG'S
" . Sarti di miglior classe
566 Philadelphia St. (Tre porte sotto l'lndiana Hotel) Indiana, Pa.
I Scacciate il Fumo Dalla I
I Vostra Casa I
Riscaldate la stanza da letto o il camerino
da bagno, la mattina in cinque minuti ed
abbiate una casa piacevole e calda per
l'intera giornata e durante la notte senza
accendere il gran fuoco di carbone.
I PERFÉCTJON I
! SM OKELE HEATERS 11
Pulite—Pronte—Convenienti-—lnodore
I Sempre pronte per l'uso e facilmente il
portabili da un punto all'altro della casa.
La compra e l'uso della "The Perfection" I
Venduta in parecchi stili e dimensioni. I
La Perfection Smokeless Oil Heater I
No. 125 e' popolare esi vende per $3.50. I
•Le ultime innovazioni rendono partico- I ,
larmente desiderabile la riscaldfltrice No. I *
325; essa si vende per $4.00 presso il vo
stro .chincagliere e presso tutti i negozi.
Guardate per la marca di fabbrica a triangolo.
Per i migliori risultati delle stufe ad olio, ri- I
scaldatori e lampade, bruciate. I
ATLANTI C
I RaygMffht I
I THE ATLANTIC REFINING CO: I
Dovunque in Pennsylvania e Delaware Party moving away owes us $ll9 on handsome Upright Grand
Piano used 3 months. It is yours for balance.
Write The Gibbs Piano Co.
% 71-73 Main St.,
(31 years in one location.) Springfield, Mass.
—4lx
When a defective crane dropped a
load of iron on Thomas E. Luckens, in
the Reading shop at St. Clair, he was
thought to have been killed, but was
rescued and may recover.
Unless the pure food authorities of
the state can prove that glazes are
deleterious to health, prosecuti ns
should not be started, Peputy Attorney
General Hargest has ruled.
Having had trouble in getting water
through the feed pipe of a Jersey Cen
tral engine, a diver went down into
the tank and found a large sized eal!
at the mouth of the feed pipe.
:
In a writ of habeas corpus action at
Easton, Mrs. Viola Juryea, Reading,
alleges-Mr. and Mrs. William Leiben
good refuse to give up her daughter,
Victoria, aged six, who arrived in July
to spend two weeks with the Leiben
goods.
.The American Steel & Wire com
pany, of P" isburgh, completed a dea'
for ?20 ( i by which its entire fleet
of steel riv< r barges were sold to the j
Aluminum Company of America for j
use at its St. Louis plant. The barges
will be replaced by seventy-five small
er boats.
PENNSYLVANIA
NEWS IN BRIEF
Interesting Items From All Sec
tions Gt the State.
GULLED FOB QUICK READING
y
News of All Kinds Gathered From
Various Points Throughout the
Keystone State.
Electric lighting is being installed
at Alburtis.
Lancaster policemen will demand
more salary.
Berks county farm bureau will start
an anti-weed campaign.
Fifteen cases of typhoid fever have
developed at Port Royal.
Westmoreland bakers and milkmen
have raised their prices.
Reading tobacconists have stopped
the free distribution of matches.
Mrs. Walter Swick, of Easton, was
bitten in the face by a dog.
Spring City milkmen increased the
price from seven to eight cents a quart.
Howard J. Calderwood has been ap
pointed justice of the peace at Tyrone.
Pollution of the Schuylkill river
above Pottstown is killing hundreds of
fish.
Leroy E. Chapman has been appoint
ed coroner of Warren county, to fill a
vacancy.
Pittsburgh hotels will add ten cents
to all checks, to cover cost of bread
and butter.
The Wyoming Valley Water Supply
company is restocking the streams on
its watershed.
E. N. Burnett, Stroudsburg, has been
named state road superintendent for
Berks county.
The revenue receipts of the ninth
district, at Lancaster, show a falling
off of $45,000.
Carlisle has such a large school en
rollment, a new $20,000 building is be
ing discussed. ' #
A twenty per cent increase in the
price of pies and cakee became effec
tive at Altoona.
In an automobile collision near Big
lerville, Dennis Aspers, of Aspers Sta
tion, was injured..
Hurled from his carriage in a run
away, William Graboy, Pottsville, was
seriously injured.
Elmer Eppley, of Lancaster, has
sued Barr Spangler for $lO,OOO dam
ages for false arrest.
With an enrollment of 150 students,
the Bethlehem Prep school has begun
its fall and winter term.
S. Makawags, of the imperial bureau
of mines, of Japan, visited the anthra
cite coal mines at Pottsville.
Following a fall, Mrs. George Leon
ard, aged sixty-five, Sunbtiry, died after
being unconscious three days.
Battery A has opened a recruiting
station at Hazleton to obtain thirty
five recruits to fill its ranks.
While working in a cornfield on his
farm in Upper Merion, James Hayes
fell dead with heart disease.
To study for the priesthood, John j
Krusko left Hazleton for his parents' !
old home in Eperes, Hungary.
Grieving over the death of his wif3 i
thirteen days ago, Levi P. Miller, died 1
at Pottsville, aged seventy-five.
A five per cent bonus will hereafter
be paid the workers of Jacob Gerharit
& Co.'s shirt factory, Hazleton.
S. Francis Bolton, of Schuylkill Ha
ven, was arrested in Bridgeport, seri
ously charged by his daughter.
New miners' certificates have been
demanded of the men by the Lehigh
Coal and Navigation company.
Rabbits are so plentiful around Haz
leton that many have been killei in
the roads by automobiles at night.
Drs. F. B. Kami, Harrisburg, and
B. W. Sweet, Erie, have been reap
pointed state osteopathic examiners.
Palmerton dairymen advanced the
price of milk from seven and eigiu ;
cents a quart to eight and nine cents 1
Berks forest fires since sp-lng. caus
ed a loss of $4600, burned over 1575
acres and cost $303.53 to extinguish.
Lehighton Lodge, Xo. 975, Loyal Or
der of Moose, has been institute! at
Lehighton, with 115 charter members
The first woman to take out a hunt 1
er's license in Cumber"and county for
I Facts Versus If
Fallacies f
FACT is a real state of things. FALLACY & dti tippa*
•%ntly genuine but really illogical statement or argument.
i TN a previous article a series of FACTS were given showing the great antiquity of the saloon, or
inn, as it was known in the early days. Merely as a matter of historical interest here are some
j-! J FACTS showing the growth of the inn, tavern or saloon.
; I* IFE was very simple when the race was young. People traveled
. - 111 l
little. They lived and died within a few miles of where they -jS** 'f J
were born. There were no saloons or taverns then because there iftwf *.. _ |
was no demand for them. As time ran on the people multiplied,
spread out discovered new territory. Travelers became more
frequent At this stage hospitality was a sacred duty. As an ex- 'ft"V I~*
ample of the spirit of the age Abraham, In Genesis 14:18 says that I
in nis travels he was entertained by Melchizedik, king of Salem, VH \ (
who "brought forth bread and wine." , , !y» • »Ui
MEN soon began to make a business of selling to travelers. The
next 6tep was to establish taverns where wine and food as well
as lodging 4 were on tap. These inns were common in Biblical j
§ times. Paul met the brethren from Rome at the Three Taverns, a pj
. A i cross roads where three hotels were needed to handle the traffic. |~l
carl y Greeks and Romans had inns, but only the poorest class I—J
sought solace .there/ 4 The accommodations were very indifferent; W
1 Jftv j k ut they improved yrith time and eventually became popular*
vTTjJ k "IAyHEN the Romans conquered northern Europe they failed to fa
YV transplant the tavern. Even in the middle ages there were -
XVymm •- no Inns there. Hospitality was still regarded as a duty, however, |
(UgßL* jflr A/wM i! \\ I and provision 'JOT travelers was made at the monasteries. The
Vlf P oor wcr ® to stay there, but the great middle class demanded
Vjl ' ra 1 fill bed and board equal in quantity and quality to their purses. This
j „ demand was met by the developmeijj of the ale-house or inn. In
these taverns provisions, beer, ale and wine were served in a largo ifxri
room, which corresponds to the bar in modern hotels and inns. WTiißp'liSWl^i
During the 15th century local people began to recognize the value |l|. JJ j
I of a tavern or saloon and the patronage was no longer culled only uj r^.
from the travellers. a - ..... ,
TIHE taverns and post-houses, as they were also called, became ■ V TPJ ■
places of much importance. Lord and Commoner, Cavalier and v .
I Round-head, Tradesman and Soldier all frequented the great room nTf*"Ti
| of the inn and jnade merry while they could. Social differences
were forgotten.. The saloon was, thingjofj
the past. 4
IN the time immediately preceeding the railroads the taverns and innsibecame very popular. The
effect of railways was "to multiply the hotels in great centers. These were increased in size until
! they could accommodate thousands of guests. The present-day bar or saloon was the result of
this congestion. The inns could not take care of the trade, local and transient Saloons sprang j
up and gradually began to handle the bulk of the business in beer and wine, spirits and cordials;
With the advent of the automobile the inns came back into their own and now in the picturesque) I I
and cultured sections of the country they have assumed their former importance. * I I
i TS it not a FALLACY toJbpld that the saloon has no part in the world's work when FACTS J !
JLtthow from the time-Of antiquity taverns,tons and saloons have
o ionhc life and happiness of different L
= ® Pmnwlumi&JiilLte Bzzwertf Association, t
* 'mflhnHg l 'mi" -i.llLJl iifßC
1916 was Mrs. E. O. Hatfield, of \Vest
Fairview.
Despondent because of ill health,
John Cassidy, aged sixty, committed
suicide by banging in his barn, near
Williamsport.
To serve papers on him, Deputy
Sheriff Geller had to club Frank Wash
nock, a Hazleton six-footer, into insen
sibility abed.
The opening of the extension course
at Lehigh University has been post
poned two weeks, the time now set be
ing October 14.
A Buch Sons Company, of Elizabeth
town, a $250,000 corporation manufac
turing machinery, has gone into re
ceivers' hands.
A public subscription to aid the
families of guardsmen on the border
will be taken by Hazleton National
Security League.
Pleading guilty to burning the Lyric
Theatre, Butler, Albert J. Sieger was
sentenced to ten months in jail and
pay $lOOO fine.
Reading has an Italian population
of 4000, one-half of them American
citizens and many of them owning i
their own homes.
Fifty cases of typhoid in Cumber
land county, traceable to using Harris
burg milk or ice cream, have alarmed
the health authorities.
For the forty-eighth consecutive
year Christian G. Bair was installed
as treasurer of Madison Lodge of Odd
Fellows, Potts town.
Hazing at Hazleton High school has
been nipped in the bud by Principal
J. D. Thomas, as an attempt to ape i
foolish college customs.
While playing with matches, a seven
year-old son of Amos J. Stoltzfus, of
Morgantown, fired a straw stack, but
neighbors saved the barn.
The state fire insurance fund does
not cover the theft of the common
wealth's automobiles, Deputy Attorney
General Keller has ruled.
The New Jersey Zinc company has
declared another dividend of ten per
cent, bringing the total so far this
year up to sixty-two per cent.
Addresses eulogistic of the late Sam
uel W. Pennsypacker were made at
the first luncheon of the Pennsylvania
State society, at Harrisburg.
Getting a bean In his throat while
his mother was shelling them, a little
son of David Davidheiser, of near
Birdsboro, strangled to death.
A strike of street workers was set
tled at Hazleton when council raised
■ the men from eighteen cents to twenty
and paying them back wages.
With his neck broken by a fall from
; a ladder, Daniel Shoemaker, ag.d six
ty. lies at the point of death at his
home near Jacobus, York county.
Citizens of Lansford and Summit j
Hill are. advocating the lighting of the
mile hill road between the towns and
the constructing of a sidewalk.
When Dickinson students stole the
red flags from a street excavation at
Carlisle, they caused an automobile of
a Mrs. Miller, Harrisburg, to be ditch
ed.
John Gurtzak pleaded guilty in court
to robbing a freight car at Lansford
of goods valued at $75 and was sen
tenced to two years in the penitenti
ary.
j Arrested for a robbery at Carlisle,
, St. Clair Jefferson confessed he and
a band of boy bandits were responsi
ble for a series of mystifying burglar
ries.
Burglars who entered the Pennsyl
vania railroad station at Dew art stole
a rifle and a suitcase of clothes be
longing to C. L. Eyster, substitute
agent.
Henry J. Fisher, inspector of weights
an measures, discovered that one
Reading coal dealer gave seventy-five
pounds of coal In excess every time he
sold a ton.
Oaugrht with missing brass valves
in his pocket, Anthony Kioris, Beaver
Brook, confessed he had been raiding
the Beaver Brook mines of C. M. Dod '
son Coal company.
The bondholders of the Vindex Fort-;
land Cement company sold its farm ,
tracts, Molliown, to F. M. Hummel, for
$4000; Daniel Dries, $4OO, and Rev.
M. H. Brensinser, %-i >l.
R. 3. Scliulfz, Upper Salford, wa
given a divorce because his wife pu i
him out an'l threw his personal ef-1
fects after him, after twenty-three
years of married Sife.
Joseph Smith, an army deserter,
pleaded guilty at- Mauch Chunk to
highway robbery at Palmerton, and
was sentenced to serve two years in
the eastern penitentiary.
SHERRIFS SALES
as?, S'eViu fj,ss
tv and !n mTr P J e i as of Indiana oouri
™ 5 i 0 me directed, there will hp »>*.
posed to public vendue or out Try at thl
Court House. Indiana. PennsywLti 22
Friday, Oct. 27, 1916
, « I*oo O'CLOCK, P. M.,
the following described real estAte, to
o/the'Sefendant,'""' a«a claim
of, in and to all that certain piece narcel
of W™°H f f^° Und s * tuate In the township
2vi^nlo lngton ' £ ou n<y of Indiana, Penn
borough of Creekalde.
Beginning at a post in the towmhin
road; thence by lands of A Howard'S
f-TLtr a, °ng' the said road south 27
1-4 degrees east 10.1 perches to stones'
thence by land of same north 50 Got
fa a n" if 7 5° * 'LVSw
SS; h th , e s nC6 I'Jt
Trtd furStfifS 11 ? c,aimant erected, built
workmanlike J * * ood * and
worKmanllke manner a one-atorr fmmm
"SJ'Sf e B te, n K"
feet hi B h, ilth Voof! partttlori's
rxf^om cb,mn^- " i
Taken in execution at suit of M T*
Carnahan, Lev. Fa. No rJL.filv'
Term, I9i«. °" >4 ' December
Oettr,
—"4 ny P ef Bon purchasing at
the above sale will please take notif*
that at least JlOO.OO (if the bid be
much) will be required as soon as the
?haser is unless the pur-
y Judgment creditor, in
ii case an amount sufficient to rovf-r
Sf the tS r,u ch^ requlred & bXJS
• /,? purcnase nionoy must ntiri
'"r/dl!'or or r ? elr :' V tSS judg^i?
realtor. No deed will tu* off<*r*A tr\*>
fulTi e & n V^ n,e l 8 moneT
riVht /o ?etin his 6 4?it ri Vo e plrt7 S Jot
so.or non-payment of purchase mon-
H - A- BOGGS, Sheriff.
_ff * ce » Indiana, Pa., Oct 4, 1916.
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