THE PATRIOT Published Weekly Bj THE PATRIOT PUBLISHING COMPANY, S. Office: No. 15 Carpenter Avenue Marshall Building, INDIANA, PENNA Local Phone 250-Z FRANCESCO BIAMONTK, Publisher Entered m second-class matter September 26, 1914, at the postoffloe at Lndiana, Pennsylvr.nia, under the Act of Marck 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION ONE YEAR . . $1.50 | SIX MONTHB . $l.OO Tie Ala if tie firthii iwgiaji Papers ol America TO HILP PRESERVE THE IDEALS AND SACRKD TRAD ITIONS OF THIS, OUR ADOPTED COUNTRY, THE UNITED STATER OR AMERICA; To REVERE ITS LAWS AND IN SPIRE OTHERS TO OBEY THEM; To BTRIVE UNCEASING LY TO QUICKEN THE PUBLIC'S SENSE OP CIVIC DUTY; IN ALL WAYB TO AID IN MAKING THIS COUNTRY GREAT ER AND BETTER THAN WE POUND IT. KINDNESS. When we consider the rwuH> ; | It bring* I wonder why It la we : •re net all kinder than we are. : ill How eaeily it ie done! How to- ii HI etantaneouely It acta! Hew In- ii HI fallibly It la reniemberedl— i! 11l Drummond. Cwrleuo Ceurtehip. In the strange land of the Tumcad Indiana la Mexico the vialsar, after at tslstsg something of a friendly foot ing, dm j a till witneaa aome ef the equally etrange practlcee which the first Spaa lards observed. In coasting the lever goee to the well where hie be loved Is accustomed tr fill her water Jar. He holds her ahawt until ahe ac cepts him, and then with a stick he bseaks the jar which ehe holds am her bead sad fivea her s betroth ■! hapHsm ef water. Watofi Yew Pap. Pap is a slang word invented is eas* vey the Idea of thoee who are aiwa/a up and shout, who are fall ef "finger," who never go to eleep at the switch. When 70a are full of pep yea can go a long way toward doing almoet any thing. Bat pep rune out If your stomach goes back on you because you don't know how to take care of it; if you consort with weak minded people, taking on the color of their weak mindedness; if you burn the candle at both ends, then your pep runs low. Watch your pep.—Life. Heard on tne mgnway. We ought to be mighty glad when heaven comes down to see us, but that's the time some folks run away. Folks miss happiness by sittin' still an' waltin' for It to come an' pay the rent an' cancel the mortgage. But happiness is no free gift, an* it ain't on the bargain counter.—Atlanta Con stitution. Hie Ordeal. fhe a ympathetic neighbor asked: "Is yeur little brother £ll this iarn hotg, Johnnie? I heard him orylag In the moet heartrending way." "He, net exactly," Johnnie explain ed, "hut Willie pulled down a Jar of sis leasee on himself in the pantry, and mother haa been trying fee comb hie hair."—New York Qlohe. Things er the Past. Batty had been punished. Her aunt did not know that, and whan ahe esme late the room and found Betty Bitting disconsolately before the window she aaid: "Why, look at our little Betty. She looks ready to cry. What la go ing to happen, I wonder?" Betty looked up and then aaid eol stnnly, "It has happened."—Exchange Enduranoe. The pilgrim fathers were undoubted ly heroic men. facing, as they did, with dauntless courage, fire, frost, famine and the red menace of Indian ruthless ness. But the pilgrim mothers were more heroic still, for they endured also all these things and had in addition to stand the pilgrim fathers as well.— Life. Modern Version. The Amazon forces were about to charge. "Wait until you can see the powder on their noses," directed the lady mili tary genius who commanded the other feminine troops.—Kansas City Journal. (Jurying the Hatchet. This expression, meaning "let by gones be bygones," is derived from a custom once in vogue among the North American Indians. According to a command of the "great spirit," they were obliged, when they smoked the pipe of peace, to bury in the ground their tomahawks, scalping knives and war clubs in token that all enmity was at an end. Tee tore te Shake. "Did you take the mixture I gave your "To tell you the truth, I did not, doc tor." "Why not?" "Well, I fancy you made a little mis take. You gave me ague mixture. It sajs, 'Shake before taking/ and my complaint la rheumatism."—Pall Mall Oaaette. Don't Write Poetry. "Don't write poetry unleaa you can't help it," saya the 8t Louis Globe-Dem ocrat. And often when you think you can't help it 'tie well to consult a doctor.— Toledo Blade. Orln lelaoe. "Is m«ggin« an optimist?" "Yea. He'a one of the ldad who con vince you that everything la going to the bowwows and then tell you there is bo use worrying about It"—Wssfc- QeMing Areund IV. "What would happen if an irresistible force should meet an immovable body 7' "It is not necessary for anything to happen. I maintain that arbitration la always feasible."—Louisville Courier- Journal. Some Resemblance. "Lightning rods in one respect are like waiters." "What's that?" "They won't give good service unless they are well tipped." Baltimore American. Hugo'a Slip. Victor Hugo puts into the mouth of Charlemagne, In "Aymaillot" the words, "You dream like a scholar of Sorbonne." That famous institution was founded in 1254, 450 years after the days of Charlemagne. Mrs. STddbne. After she had retired from the stage Mrs. Siddons was found studying Lady Macbeth and aaid, '*l am amazed to discover some new points in the char acter which I never found out while acting it" Peaallng. Millions—Do ye« think you will learn to like your titled aon-in-law? Bill lone —I don't know. I can't toll where to place him In my expense account He Is neither s recreation nor an inveot ■ven che amallest pieces of Cnely hiokan glaaa can he eaally picked up with s little wad of wet absorbent cotton, which can then he destroyed hj burning. Be it ever so homely, there's no face tike your own. Man la mortgaged up to his neck in the paat.- T The thiiu to er on the left hand, on which the engagement and wedding rings are worn, is anatomically the weakest of lteui ot a onarK. A shark's teeth are movable at will and become erect at the moment the nnimal is If you wouui mi the mart you must aim a little above it. Every arrow that flies feels the attraction of the earth. No ci vu'Mjicn, You will have to get ahead of the hustler before you can get in his way. —Judge. "Dear Papa—l got all your letters, and you have put some munny in each one of them. Please write oftener. Your lovinrr «on v.'lWam."—Exchange. "Bein" contented wif yob lot" said Uncle Eben, "sin' no excuse foh not hustlin' to git de mortgage oflTn it"— Washington Star. An Impossible Undertaking. **l hear that you have been laid up with nervous prostration. What'a the cause—overwork or worry T' "Both. I tried to have a photograph taken that suited my wife." New York Times. to £ Honors to £ £ Washington £ to to totototototototototototoj* tototototototototototototo Wednesday last tbe mortal A Part of Washington tie fer great—the Father of His Coon try and tfce friend ef asaa—was consigned te tho tomb with solemn honors and funeral poasp.** This Is the opening paragraph in the newspaper story of the burial of George Washington as told bj the Ul ster County Gazette, published at Kingston. X. T., Jan. 4, 1800. Al though the column rulea of the news paper are inverted, the story appears to have been only secondary in impor tance in the minds of the editors, as it is published on the third page and without any unusual display. It is dated at Georgetown, Dec. 20, 1799, and bears the modest head "Washington Entombed." Genuine copies of the paper are rare and valua ble, but it has been reprinted in fac simile many times. The paper says: "A multitude of persons assembled from miles around at Mount Vernon, the choice abode and last residence of the illustrious chief. There were the groves—the spacious avenues, the beautiful and sublime scenes, the noble mansion—but, alas, the august inhab itant was now no morel That great soul was gone. His mortal part was there indeed; but, ah, how affecting, how awful the spectacle of such worth and greatness, thus, to mortal eyes, fallen—yes, fallen, fallen! "In the long and lofty portico, where oft the hero walked In all his glory, now lay the shrouded corpse. The countenance, still composed and serene, seemed to express the dignity of the spirit which lately dwelled in the life less form. There those who paid the last sad honors to the benefactor of his country took an impressive—a faro well—view. "On the ornament at the head of the coffin was inscribed 'Surge ad Judi eum;' about the middle of the coffin, 'Gloria Deo,* and on the silver plate, 'General George Washington, departed this life oa the 14th of December. 1799, let 68.' "Between 3 and 4 o'clock the sound of artillery from the'vessel In the river ftrlng minute guns swedes afresh our solemn sorrow—the corpse was remov ed—a band of music with mournful melody melted the soul into ah the tenderness of wee. "The process 100 was formed and moved on in the following order with arms reversed: "Cavalry, infantry, guard, music and clergy. "The general's horse with his saddle, holster and pistols. "Colonels Simms, Ramsey, Payne, Gilpin, Marsteller and Little, pallbear ers; corpse, mourners, Masonic breth ren, citizens. "When the procession had arrived at the bottom of the elevated lawn, on the banks of the Potomac, where the family vault is placed, the cavalry halted, the infantry marched toward the mount and formed their lines, the clergy, the Masonic brethren and the citizens descended to the vault, and the funeral service of the church was performed. "The firing was repeated from the vessel in the river and the sounds ech oed from the woods and hills around. "Three general discharges by the in fantry, the cavalry and eleven pieces ef artillery, which lined the banks of the Potomac back of the vault, paid the last tribute to the entombed com mander in chief of the armies of the United States and to the departed hero. "The sun was now setting. Alas, the son of glory was set forever! No. the name of Washington, the Ameri can president and general, will triumph over death! The unclouded brightness of his glory will illuminate the future ages!" Washington Eebel and patriot, he led the way When shackled manhood cried for championing, He of the breed that long had learned to bring The low bowed, pliant neck to scep tered sway— The breed that worshiped the anointed clay And right divine attached to any thing- Empurpled and enthroned and chris tened << king." His foe was Privilege; he won the day. His fathers' idols, old, unique, su preme, These were his targets when he took his stand To cleanse his native country's deed and dream, To make sweet Freedom bloom throughout the land— Eebel and patriot and partisan, Lover of Justice and his fellow man. —James C. McNally. SMOKE MSLAIN-ENQ, On and After MARCH Ist, 1917 All pasHenger trains of this railroad will arrive and depart from LACKAWANNA TERMINAL FOOT OF MAIN STREET BUFFALO, N. Y. BUFFALO, ROCHESTER & PITTSBURGH RAILWAY | Facts Versus I Fallacies 1 FACT is a real state of things. FALLACY is an ajrpar* II J. • ently genuine but really illogical statement or argument. MORE than 4000 years ago the Emperor of China, by edict, prohibited the drinking of alcohol in his kingdom. And it is Mj; W* an indisputable FACT that the Chinese, like the Mohammedans, ~-fK j> Turks and ?. few other virtually effete nations under Prohibition '-rj v I (j®** .-I f : iaw, have existed in a sort of dead-alive and non-progressive way. | ] CEVENTY years ago the first Prohibition law in this country ■ : |kj I J | adopted in Maine, and 86 years ago in Kansas. Yet jj&Sm V Police Reports concede much more drunkenness in the cities of HjWI * jfa"". ; those two Scales than in the cities of nearly all States in which the jA i sale of liquors is licensed and regulated by law. Census Reports, nU/&] \ \ 1 • [ too, bear witness that there are less church members in the States A/ TII 1 \ of Maine and Kansas than in nearly all States of the Union, in i r proportion to population. [J \ "> "jTN OTHER words, > although there is evil attendant on the misuse . jEt '"« - of alcoholic beverages, just as there is ill result from abuse in [3 <-j a* pursuits of life, it is a FACT that Prohibition law does no Q fVr% I Ti«A?rmrT!A\t succeed in stopping nor lessening the consumption of liquors (as 13 ; I r JvUiimx IION statistics verify), but to the contrary increases lawlessness by thou- gj j H Q \n?TTum CTYYDO sands of citizens who resent and defy a "dry"' law as unjust, and f(J| rlJbi X rlliJvolvro i who determinedly exercise what they regard as their right to drink, ~ j■ I ®NOR LESSENS I re g «di«. of Uw. I rnvciTMDTWH A RECENT editorial in the "St. Louis Post-DispctcH" should |; ;* 1 gn l\ i mpreM itself on the of all Prohibitionists of today who, ili'4 (IT? T Trumps cSLin their illusory and FALLACIOUS course grope blindly after I'l "Sil By^ dry" folly. This editorial pungently observes: : yftS i ,-w —'SgrALSt "THE verdict of science on alcohol has not yet been rendered. ; H t 1 But the verdict of humanity as to its use in moderation is jj |j *7 ■> still to the effect that such use is not necessarily harmful There i'i crc coiib.icss, as with tobacco and other stimulants, persons whose ■■■_,_ 1 ■ j : J and idiosyncrasies make even the moderate use of rin i n n r% I J rJcchol injurious. They should avoid it, but they should not expect ! to make their weakness an excuse for the creation of legislation ' I ij which, a* Mr. Taft (former President) says, demoralizes law I K\J[Udl 1 KJNIdIO • j because it canno! be enforced. ' ' j ADIT NF KKI Ml" ' '■ "ORCITIBITTONISTS make the mistake of going to extremea-in Ty,, £ seeking the unattainable. The FALLACIES they preached iIJJ THF i \ throughout ages, have blinded for a time misinformed and unthink- jU J j . l XIIA-I ? ] ing people. But FACTS show that education alone can prove J133,[ llttlTTinj ATJTP (5 ! efficacious in making derelicts better in the use of liquor*—or in the Ijjjj v/H/ii lt\lSil\DLLr U.] use of any other product. olffli!" ■ ■1 s Pennsylvania State Brewers' Association [fl r. ' PI £•- 103 B RECIPROCITY. Thare rs mm word which may ; ::: serve aa a rwle af praatlee for all ;;; i; ene'a life that ward (• raciproc | Ky. What yu 4m not wish dsns i: to yauraalf da nat 4m to ethere*—- ; ' 1 C»nf^»cfy#. wiimMinmiiiiiximiwwiiiimHmmtfl Tka Orohltf. A» «tMI Is a pacmttar plaat, te, itfip as It m; naa, flan ti aa tfctteetfrsty ate. Om mwUb Ska tka Ttaiat, etkers ttka tka pan, tka kjradtstk, fla 4a£To4lL OnMi aaa fka tka akin of tka t— alikti world, ta ate aa wsH aa ftam t»4 ttat Ho atkar iawar wmmMm mm* chid, kat areklda ara tema apAa# trattorfiiet, panalaa, roots, apidera, pttok plants, bird* and wkat net And tkaj ara not absolutely cartaia ta Voak jaat tha earns twice la succession. A Curiosity In Nomenclature. The negroes In the British West In dian Island of Grenada find it very dif ficult to keep track of their descent and their relatives because of a curious custom they follow in naming childrea. The father's Christian name Is given to the son for his surname. Thus if a man Is named John Jones his son may be called James John and that son's son Robert James, and so on to the end of the chapter. Naturally in a few generations families get into a hope less muddle, and nobody knows exact ly to whom he is related. What Hs Advised. A young man unhappily married and practically penniless took his tale of woe to a prominent divorce attorney in Chicago and concluded with this: "I'm too poor to pay much for a di vorce, but my wife makes my life mis arable. After I get home at 6 o'clock In the evening I get no peace until I go to sleep. What would you adrlse?" "After considering all the facts in your case," said the lawyer, "I would suggest that you get a job which re quires you to work all night."—Ex change. If there Is anywhere on j*roe tiorttou a spot of light, fix your eyes npon it and turn your thoughts away from tk» clouds which may cover the r mat mt sky. Wash the glass with water to which a little ammonia has been added and polish with a chamois which has been dipped in water and wrung as dry as possible.