J * jj THE PATRIOT ![ Published Weekly By ;! ' THE PATRIOT PUBLISHING COMPANY, ]! Office: No. 15 Carpenter Avenue Marshall Building, INDIANA, PENNA Local Phone 250-Z FRANCESCO BIAMONTE, Publisher ■*\ Entered as second-class matter September 26, 1914, at the postoffice at Indiana, Pennsylvania, under the 'J, | Act of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION ONE YEAR . . $1.50 | SIX MONTHS . $l.OO «: The Aim ol the Foreign Language Papers of America 'J[ To HELP PRESERVE THE IDEALS AND SACRED TRAD- 3 1 ITIONS or THIS, OUR ADOPTED COUNTRY, THE UNITED ;«! STATES OF AMERICA; To REVERE ITS LAWS AND IN -i\ SPIRE OTHERS TO OBEY THEM; To STRIVE UNCEABING '< 1 LY TO QUICKEN THE PUBLIC'S SENSE OF CIVIC DUTY; IN ALL WAYS TO AID IN MAKING THIS COUNTRY GREAT •V ER AND BETTER THAN WE FOUND IT. A Voter's Catechism. D. Have you read tke Consti tution of the United States? R. Yes. D. What form of Government :s 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. Tkeo. M. Kurtz. D. Who is tke chief executive the United States? R. President. D. For how long is the Pressident of the United States elected? R. 4 years. D. Who takes tke place of the President in case he dies? R. Tke Vice President. D. What is his name? R. Thomas R. Marshall. D. By whom is tke President of tie 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 tke 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. P. By whom was it written? R. Thomas Jefferson. D. Which is the capital of the United States? R. Waskington. D. By wkom are they elected ? R. By the people. D. For how long? 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 each 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. 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 votea has the state of Pennsylvania? R. 38. D. Who is tke ehief executive of the state of Pennsylvania ? R. Tke Governor. D. For how long is ke 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 mors than one wife. D. Do you belong to any se cret Society which teaches to disbelieve in organized govern ment? R No. D. Have you ever violated anj lr Wf of the United States? R. No. D. Who makes the ordinances for the City ? R. The board of Aldermen. D. Do you intend to remain permanently in the U. S.? R. Yes. Broken Peace By F. A. MITCHEL 1 was gittin' on well enough, inde pendent as a wood sawyer's clerk, when that consarned Jim Simpson come along and put an idea Into my head that sp'iled the hull business. I had Jlst done my week's washin' o' the dishes, havln' put 'em on to the wagon and driv 'em Into the crick and mopped 'em, and was takin' out the horses when Jim come along. "What y* been doin'?" he says. "Washin' the dishes. • Next week I got to change the sheets, seein* they hain't been changed in two months. Saturday'll be the last day o' the month, and that's my sweepln' day." "By gum, Enoch," says Jim, "that hain't no kind o' work for a man. Why don't y' git a wife to do it for you?" "I don't see," says I, "how any wo man could do it any better'n I. She'd take a lot more time about it, and mebbe the winders would git washed occasionally, but my opinion is that a woman is always kickin' up a dust for nothln'. My way o' doin' it is to let the dust git settled before disturbin' it again. Y' can't git a woman to do that." Jim and I walked to the house, and he come in. Fact is he wanted to find somepin to find fault with. And he did. He said that it was the dirtiest house he'd ever been in. When he was goin' away he said: "Enoch, I got a wife that when we was first married used to stir up the dust a lot. I complained, and she told me that if I preferred dust in bulk rather than at retail she didn't She said a man's place wasn't in the house anyway when a woman was cleanin'. So I made it a p'int to find somepin to do outside when she was stlrrin' up the dirt, aud when I come back again ev erything looked spick and span, and I got used to havin' it that a-way and couldn't stand it t'other way." "It's all a matter o' habit," I says. Jim went away, but he'd put a flea into my ear. There was a likely gal at Bunker's farm—Bunker's wife's sis ter. I reckoned that I'd go down and see her. Mebbe I might take her in for the house work if she'd come. Nat urally I got to tellin' her how I washed the dishes and the other things. She larfed and said that I was very ingen ious. She'd never thought about doin' dishes thst a-way. And as for sweep in', she thort my way o' leavin' the dust to settle before stirria' it up again was a food idea. Anyway that was all right for a man who didn't know how to do sich things without a lot o' trouble. "Well, I sot up to her for a month or N en Sunday nights, at the end of which time we was married and went to my house to lire. My Aunt Emily says to me afore I was chained, says she, "Enoch, you don't mean to take a wife into that house o' yourn without havin' some woman go into it and cart away the dirt, do you?" And I says: "Aunt Emily, what I'm glttin' married for Is to have some one to keep the house In order. She mought as well begin at the beglnnln'." Aunt Emily says, says she: "Yer beginnin' the wrong way. When a couple starts In to keep house together they ought to have smooth sallln' at the commence ment Instead o' that, you're goin' to begin with a fine inducement for a scrap." I was mighty feared when she said this that I'd better have gone on as I was, but it was too late for that now. So I tuk my wife right inter the house just as it was. "Enoch," she says, "take all the buckets and go out to the well and fill 'em." I did this, and when I came back I found that my bride had taken off her weddln' outfit and put on scrubbin' uni form. That was the beglnnln' of It The first quarter o' the honeymoon was given up to a whirlwind o' dust; then buckets o' soap and water and all sorts o' dirt kill In' contrivances come on. Just as I was hopln' the end was com in' and the furniture would be put where It belonged, another cleanup commenced that took up what remained o' the honeymoon. After the cleanin' had wore me out I said, "I s'pose we kin rest" "No," she says. "I've been a month puttln' the house in order, but while I've been doin' one thing the dust has been accumulatin' elsewhere. The first week I washed the winders. That's three weeks ago. I got to wash 'em again." "How about the sweepin'?" I asked, gloomy like. "The sweepin' 'll come the day after the winders is washed." One day—it was in the last week o' the honeymoon—l was walkin' along the road comin' toward my happy home, over which hung a cloud o' dust, when I met Jim Simpson. "Look a-there," I says, pointin' to the house. "That's what y' done by dis satlsfyin' me about my housekeepin'." "Is yer house afire?" he says. "No," says I, seein' a stream o' wa ter be a tin' agin the upper story. "That's my wife playin' the hose on the winders." "Groo'by," says Jim, and he lit out I'm gittln' used to It now, and it don't trouble me so much as it did, but I often sigh for the happy, quiet times when I used to drive the dishes Into the crick and do my sweepin' when I liked and let the dirt alone and lived in peace. But them days has gone for ever. In my home there's perpetual scrubbin' an£ washin', and every spring I'm transferred for two weeks to the barn while the spring cleanin' is goin' pn. j-HSBS2S2SHSaSEErSHSHSHSZSESHSHSHSHSHSHSESaSHSaSES2SZSHSESSSHSHSHSiSZSZS? IThe Patriot Job Printing Department' | Is prepared to do all kinds of Commercial g Printing promptly and in an up-to-date manner. Call and get our low prices for jjj the best of service and workmanship. 15 CARPENTER AVE. INDIANA, PA. | ?«SinsafiESesa«r2SiS2S2CZ!eSZS2SZSasaEZS2SeS2S2S2S2S3S2S2SZSZSES2j? QUADRI PATRIOTTICI Cartoline mostrate. Libri d'ogni specie dietro ordine Il rinomato DIZIONARIO TASCABILE Italiano-Inglese e viceversa edito dal Fratelli Treves di Milano. La nuovissima GRAMMATICA ACCELERATA del De Gaodenzi Corso completo per imparare a scrivere, parlare e capir bene la lingua inglese in tre mesi senza maestro Agenzia Italiana Indiana Pennsylvania f ® ® $ La caratteristica dello spirito di Natalee sempre nuova. Non conta se uno e' vecchio ® ® lo spirito di dare rimane sempre giovane; ela gioia non aumenta con il valore del regalo. ® ® Quello che piace di più' non e' il sacrifizio che il porgitore fa, ma la sincerità' de' suoi au- è @ guri edi ricordarsi di una buona scelta. Qui diamo una lista apprezzata dagli uomini : $ @ Guanti Paletot g 9 ® ® Cinture Borse da Viaggio ® 1 * @ Fazzoletti Vestiti ' ' § ® • © Spille . Maglie 4* J Impermeabili Cravatte « I © Ombrelli Ciondoli d'orologi ® § Novità' per toilet Giocche da Camera § ® mm ® w © Calze * Camicie di Seta & © ' & $ Bretelle Valigie ' © ® S; @ Bottoni per Polsini Veste da Camera % ' • 2 li § Vi invitiamo a farci una visita per mostrarvi l'emporio di regali che abbiamo e non ® @ © sono mensionati nella lista. ® 2 « || Acquistate i regali per Natale subito, non aspettate all'ultimo momento. 9 ® ® £ I Moorhead Brothers 1 f • ® Il magazzino degli uomini. ® * § • La macchina del business man Macchina unica a caratteri visibili 10 GIORNI DI PROVA GRATIS La macchina Woodstock ha un valore di SIOO e si da per g soli 559.50 a sola titolo di reclame. i L'Unica M acc hi na da Scrivere Negli Stati Uniti Con I Pagamento Facile di Soli 1 0 Soldi al Giorno. I (Agenzia Italiana I 15 N. Carpenter Ave. INDIANA, PA. I 1 DR. C. J. DICKIE DENTISI Room 14, second floor Marshall building INDIANA, PENN'A.