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 Act of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION ONE YEAR . . $1.50 | SIX MONTHS . $l.OO OUR FLAG I I The Aim ot the Foreign Language Papers of America f* To HELPJPRESERVE 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 POUND IT. DOUBLES WITH OWN MOTHER "They only do It In the movies," is the caustic comment of the high brow, when a screen actress is forced by the exigencies of the scri Pt aQ d the a ? encies of "double exposure" wBmK to play herself Jsnm ; ant * her 9^' n moth ; erin the same pic f < ture. Ella Hall has y done plenty of ' / ' dual characteriza- Ht?r IUSt BlUobird < Redhead." was a f|f 7 /}J <y J film of this kind; |f V,- / 1 but her next will ■Pk 'S* / show a departure p.| '% • from the usual thing. Her own Ella Hall. really, truly moth er will play the role of her screen parent, and even if you miss the in troduction of the characters, you will know it at once, for there never was a stronger likeness between two wom en. Ella Hall is just her mother over again, only twenty years younger. In the next Bluebird photoplay in which Miss Hall is starred, and which is called "A Jewel in Pawn," Mrs. Hall plays the mother who leaves her little daughter as a pledge in a pawn shop. When she makes her first ap pearance on the screen the majority of the audience will think that she is Ella, playing a double role, and later they will imagine that they are looking at the most wonderful double exposure work ever taken for the films. As a matter of fact, the resemblance be tween the mother and daughter is un usually striking, and it adds great real ism to a picture which is absolutely charming from the first scene to the last. Walter Belasco, a brother of the great producer, gives a lifelike por trayal of the old pawnbroker, and An trim Short is excellent as the newsboy champion of Nora, the little girl played by Miss Hall. PRECIOUS AS JEWELS." "It might be a good idea to place a cordon of police around those vege table stands," said P. A. Powers, treas urer of the Universal company, to the general manager of Universal City the other day, at the same time pointing to three stands filled with garden i truck, all of which was being used in the . street scene. "Why the minions of the law?" asked the Universal City chief. "Well, you know, automobiles are being offered for onions and potatoes nowadays and somebody might start a raid," replied the custodian of the Big U's strong box, with ft meesy lit tltf twiotle in his eye. / \ Can I Afford Not to Buy A Liberty Loan Bond ? I Ask yourself this question: Can I afford not to do my * 1 part in showing our govern ment, our army, our navy, and our allies that every person in the United States is solidly supporting them? Apply at Any Bank or Trust Company :: • i ' ! '"«. ''- | « » T S—w-M T | f [.'Olio im V e' Garantito di essere di I j :; «I « QfAÌjiAMA Buona Qualità' e contiene | Ld OlUlidlld,, un Gallone preciso a Misu- | :■ , ~.. „ ra Esatta - ì « » t La suddetta marca e* sul mercato J •\ M da un lungo tempo ed e* ricono- Il «» r " jjjj sciuto di essere qualita'eccellente '* I > scrivete alla DITTA PASQUALE GIUNTA SONS :: U U ÜBJJ U L Grande Grosseria all'lngrosso | : ; I I m I I • 1030 so. 9th street • | :i U Q 0 PHILADELPHIA, PA. | - Ì « a « » « » « » ; ; , ' Si * i t"t i M"l"li'>- i fc i l i . i M"Ì"l I MMM | 1 iti l'i !••>■•>» t-H-f I i >lllll H t 111I 1 1 |f »U >| »
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers