THE PATRIOT Published Weekly By THE PATRIOT PUBLISHING COMPANY, Office: No. 15 Carpenter Avenue Marshall Building. INDIANA, PENNA J Local Phone 250-Z FRANCESCO .BIAMONTE, Publisher Entered as second-class matter September 26, 1914, at the postoffice at Indiana, Pennsylvania, under the Act of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION ONE YEAR . . $1.50 | SIX MONTHS . $l.OO OUR FLAG V $ The Aim of the Foreign Langoage Papers of America To HELP PRESERVE THE IDEALS 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'S SENSE OP CIVIC DUTY; IN ALL WAYS TO AID IN MAKING THIS COUNTRY GREAT ER AND BETTER THAN WE FOUND IT. • • BOARD FOR WAR METALS. Members to Deal With Supply of Brass and Aluminum. Washington.—To deal with problems of brass and aluminum supply for the army and navy the Council of National Defense created two committees to act In conjunction with the raw materials committee of the Civilian Advisory Commission. The two new committees are expected to bring highly valuable technical information to the army and navy. Committees to deal with othei raw materials vital to the conduct of the war are being formed and will be announced later. The two committees announced fol low: Brass—Charles F. Brooker and C. D. Goss, Waterbury, Conn.; Lewis H. Jones, Detroit; Barton Hazelton, Rome, N. Y. f and F. J. Kingsbury, Bridgeport. Conn. Aluminum—Arthur F. Davis, New York; E. E. Allyne, Cleveland, and Jo seph A. Janney, Philadelphia. JAIL DE LUXE, BUT EMPTY. Westchester Offers Marble Baths, Etc., but Can't Get Convicts. New York.—V. Everit Macy, multi millionaire commissioner of correction of Westchester county, has taken over the new penitentiary de luxe at East View, but he cannot get any prisoners to fill It There are plenty of Westchester men serving sentences —200, In fact—but they were committed to Blackwell's Is land for their full terms, and there seems no legal way to transfer them. New York would, like to let go of them, but can't. Mr. Macy needs at least forty at once or there will be no gar den truck in the summer, there being no one to plant the garden. The prison has marble shower baths, writing desks, real linen for the tables and pretty much all the comforts of home except freedom. ""V A Low Down Swindle. "My wife," said Mr. Clark, "sent $2 in answer to an advertisement of a simple method of getting rid of super fluous fat" "Was the Information what she wanted?" asked Mr. Simmons. "Well, she got a reply telling her tc sell it to the soap man."—Pittsburgh Chronicle. Not Too Blind. Passerby—l thought you were blind. Mendicant—Well, sir, times Is so hard and competition is so great that even a blind man has to keep his eyes open nowadays if he wants to do any busi ness at aIL Effect of Plant Foods. Potash aids in the formation of starch in the grain. strengthens the stalk ami encourages healthy growth. Nitrogen hastens stalk and leal growth, lengthens the season of growth and gives the plant a quick start- Phosphoric acid helps till the grain, improves the quality and hastens ma turity.—New York Sun. The factory output of sausage in the United States is worth $60,000,000 an nually. Winged Creatures. M ls your wife trying to make a so cial butterfly or you?" "No," replied .Mr. Cumrox. "1 don t stand any chance of being a winged creature of airy grace. If you want to classify me you'll have to get away from the insects and try the birds. I'm the goose that lays the golden eggs."— "Washington Star\ One of the native tribes In the Philip pines produces tire by rapidly com pressing air in a sort of syringe. Buttermilk For Erysipelas. A communication by Arnold in the Practitioner recommends buttermilk highly as an application for erysipelas. Whatever tbe stage of the disease, he says, the spread of the infection is im mediately checked, the pain disappears and the whole morbid process is im mediately checked when buttermilk is used locally Singapore motion picture theaters have cheaper seats behind the screens for poorer class natives. ì - X «» V » . ' "l ì* 1 . v - *. .• v jc ... • •* - «* ' •»-*y • . . V « » • •* 2 ! 4» • » s ' « ;#* 9 m m 4* • - .» . • . ir « * \ • «• f . \ J U * « ir. * tj B mj | , « • :: L 0110 MARCA V e' Garantito di essere di O CSnSlioni" Buona Qualità' e contiene :: Ld Oli# il Idi iCI un Gallone preciso a Misu- 1 l j " —■—rn Esatta. 1 • /—% La suddetta marca e 1 sul mercato l I » Mn da un lungo tempo ed e* ricono- x ii n ci HI n ri ' • f 3» •j " " H k " sciuto di essere qualità'eccellente X !" . IM Acquistatelo alla vostra grosseria oppure T II I scrivete alla DITTA ' I PASQUALE GIUNTA SONS . • # * «» T i: Ij II IMI II II Grande Grosseria all'lngrosso I $ • MB 1030 SO. 9th STREET $ ! 0 0 PHILADELPHIA, PA. ì «J* 4» « » O T e * k X «» 2 «ziiminnli» i»»§i n 11 mi mi- v ?wiì if i .g.g'f ?• j;inmin ni fu i r 1111111111 mll ni t n 1111 > i ni; "Dalla Fronte" SI, questo vestito sembra tanto JW buono "dalla fronte" come dal di \ dietro. Ma questa non e' l'idea principale della nostra intestazione; molti dei nostri imponenti ed eie- MU jp JSSf ma ganti abiti hanno qualche cosa che ; ? »Y mi fanno ricorrere ali 'idea militare jK "dalla fronte." Notate le linee ben definite, il libero e facile effetto ■BSp IB f delle spalle. ' WM Hi hart, Schaffner & Marx rÉLo il 1 hanno prodotto per noi i viventi disegni che Jt voi cercate. Quello che noi chiediamo è sol- .ttflÉl w tanto un'occasione per mostrarveli. MTxv. Straw Hats, Panamas, e Leghorns • vià ì| da $1.50 in sopra. wm \\> y Il più' grande assortimento in Indiana. fi: . Moorhead Bros, Copyright Hart Schaffner Se Mai* la casa degli abiti di IJart, Schaffner & Marx »
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers