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 28, 1914, at the postoffice at Indiana, Pennsylvania, under the Act of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION ONE YEAR . . $1.50 | SIX MONTHS . $l.OO The Aim ofithe Fwelgn Language Papers of America To HELP PRESERVE THE IDEALB AND SACRED TRAD ITIONS OF THIS, OUR ADOPTED COUNTRY, THE UNITED STATES OP AMERICA; TO REVERE ITS LAWS AND IN SPIRE OTHERS TO OBEY THEM; To STRIVE UNCEASING LY TO QUICKEN THE PUBLIC 8 SENSE OF CIVIC DUTY; IN ALL WAYS TO AID IN MAKING THIS COUNTRY GREAT ER AND BETTER THAN WE FOUND IT. J CHARTER NOTICE Notice is hereby given that an application will be made by D. E. Thompson, J. E. Stewart and D. R. Tomb to the Governor of Pennsylvania, on Monday, the 23rd day of April, 1917, at ten o'clock, a. m., under the provis ions of an Act of Assembly, en titled "An Act to provide for the incorporation and regulation of certain corporations," approved the 29th day of April, 1874, and the supplements thereto, for a charter for a certain corporation to be called FOUR STATES SUPPLY COMPANY, the char acter and object of which is for the purpose of conducting a store or stores for the purpose of buying and selling at whole sale and retail dry goods, cloth ing, millinery, furnishings goods hardware, groceries, confection- ery, stationery, and all other kinds of goods, wares and mer chandise usually bought and sold in general stores, and for these purposes to have, possess and enjoy all the rights, benefits and privileges by said Act of Assem bly and the supplements thereto conferred. D. R. TOMB, Solicitor. Indiana, Pa., March 31, 1917. CHARTER NOTICE Notice is hereby given that an application will be made by D. E. Thompson, J. E. Stewart and D. R. Tomb to the Governor of Pennsylvania, on Monday, the 23rd day of April, 1917, at ten o'clock, a. m., under the provis ions of an Act of Assembly, en titled "An Act to provide for the incorporation and regulation of certain corporations," approved ti c 29th day of April, 1874, and the supplements thereto, for a charter for a certain corporation to be called JEWEL COAL COM PANY, the character and ob ject of which is for the purpose of mining, producing and pre paring coal and other minerals for market; of manufacturing coke and other products from said coal and other minerals; of buying, selling, shipping and transporting to market said coal and other minerals and the man ufactured products thereof; of acquiring, holding, and dispos ing of coal and mineral lands and other real estate incident to the conduct of its business by sale, lease, mortgage or other wise, and for these purposes to have, possess and enjoy all the rights, benefits and privileges by said Act of Assembly and the supplements thereto conferred. D. R. TOMB, Solicitor. Indiana, Pa., March 31, 1917. Enduranoa. Ths pilgrim fathers were undoubted ly hsroic 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. Napoleon's First Lova. The little French town of Auxonne is not in the popular mind with Napoleon; but, as Miss Betham- Edwards reminds us in "Unfrequented France," he spent some years of his cadetship tl.vire. "In the Saone he twice narrowly escaped drowning, and here, too, i;s narrowly, so the story runs, marriage with a bourgeoise maid en called Manesca. Two ivory counter? bearing this romantic name in Napo leon's handwriting enrich the little mu *eum." Be It ever so homely, there's no face like your own. Man Is mortgaged up to hit neck In the past.—Life. Even the smallest pieces of finely broken glass can be easily picked np with a little wad of wet absorbent cotton, which can then be destroyed by burning. | Poverty, Crime and Insanity | I Spring From Many Causes | | | It is fair to presume that when a "Commission on Temperance," of an association of laymen 5 under the title of Federal Council of Churches, shall have been misled into making a report E of FALLACIES through the press, that it would not be unwelcome if substantiated FACTS and figures were submitted to show the misinformation that had been given the public. This Commission was quoted declaring: (i) That men who work too many hours spend the most time in saloons, where they go for stimulants for fatigue. This is still a moot question, and no convincing testimony has yet been produced. (2) That alcoholism is the chief cause of poverty ?The FALLACY of this allegation was sufficiently answered in the recent annual re port of the Philadelphia Society for Organizing Charity, which investigated 30,000 individual cases of poverty last year and found more than 50 per cent, the result of sickness. Only = 918 of the 30,00 c came to want from misuse of liquors—a trifle over 3 per cent. (3) That drink is the chief cause of crime? This FALLACY was exposed in the annual report of Comptroller Prendergast, of New York, who stated that only 8 per cent, of every $lOO of that city's taxes goes to support the police (only in small part serving against criminality) and less than 1 per cent, used to maintain penitentiaries and other prisons. (4) Tha' alco- I holism is the chief cause of insanity? The FALLACY of this may be learned in Bc'^tin 119 of the U. S. Census, which shows that 24 States in the Union had a lower ratio of in- 5 | sane than Prohibition Kansas; that in alcoholic psychosis the insane record of "dry" Kansas was worse than that of 19 other States, 14 of which had licensed saloons. (5) That if cap ital now invested in liquor industries were exploited in other business enterprises the money = WGJ.IZ jive employment to four times as many wage earners. This is reckless allegation, E tor Census statistics show many industries with less labor employed, in ratio to capital in- # § vested, than liquor enterprises. When it is considered that National Prohibition would ccn- E £scate and destroy properties in which $771,516,000 has been invested through Government E encouragement; that Prohibition would throw out of employment an estimated 1,200,000 i wage earners trained to that work only and just as helpless in other pursuits as carpenter.-, E§ or printers would be if their trades were taken from them; that $325,000,000 paid for Fed- if; 'erai and Municipal support by alcoholic industries would necessarily have to be iropoo: 1 . 5 upon other taxpayers; that the wiping out of drink (even if possible) would not transfer .ill moneys thus spent to increase purchases of other commodities, then the FALLACY and JV.I, E = of Prohibition becomes clear to people who appreciate the FACTS.—PENNSYLVA = NIA STATE BREWERS' ASSOCIATION. E = 113 E nIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIir Don't Wrfta Pbelry. "Don't write poetry unless you can't help it," says the St. Louis Globe-Dem ocrat And often when you think you can't hslp It 'tis well to consult a doctor. — Toledo Blade. WANTED A farmer for a large farm; will have to furnish his own team, etc. 150 acres or over of cleared land, good and easy to work, plenty of fruit, 3 1-2 miles from Marion Center. J. H. Rochester, Marion Center, Pa. £ / T I'' ' i ? . - t * • ? I - 4 ? , i 4* ST /■ >«>-""«—a p 4 ' .. ; -L* v * * Li 0110 MARCA ** e' Garantito di essere di ;; I l Buona Qualità' e contiene t LCI OlUlldild un Gallone preciso a Misu -1 or —4 ra Esatta. - I . —. La suddetta marca e* sul mercato ; ; I MI I da un lungo tempo ed e' ricono- X r * " m * " sciuto di essere qualità'eccellente ;; T v Wffl « » X 111 Acquistatelo alla vostra grosseria oppure J» I W scrivete alla DITTA »» PASQUALE GIUNTA SONS X x Mi ' i 1 ! Wi U Gran le Grosseria all'lngrosso I $ X I M I X 1030 SO. 9th STREET | | \ 0 . ®.O D PHILADELPHIA, PA. f 2 ' t _ii i _ _■ _ _ | _ « I. i r I _. , i»_l _ ' N 3» 4» . X + 1 ? I , X I ì T 4» 4» X W-t-H' 'H"frfr1 1 1-1f *■t