f VWWVWfVitVVVi%\Vii | JAMES COLANGELO * T Italian interpreter J £ and Labor Information Bureau £ 4) Hotel Montgomery Indiana, Pa. A4A4A4#4#4i4A4A4A4A4A4i4A4 ai A44AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA | INDIAN EXCELSIOR 1 I 1 I SOLD BY f I INDIANA CYCLE CO. { I CARPENTER AVE. INDIANA. PA.|; RESERVED SPACE FOR THE INDIANA MACARONI CO. " !■ :,i # ..• -ft - •-? ■ ' 1 y t I 'if^^u^anT^^Truite 1 go to*RoSy STORE P I corner Sixth and Water st. or call Local a § 'phone. | | We get fresh fruits of all kinds twice a | I We specialize on California fruits. s rii Jh 2k2k *>il 2i aifli t art 2i'2k 2at -H 2$ .■> 2 Slli 2 3ti 2a> y 'a*.' 2tZ CANAL THROWN OPEN TO WORLD Uncle Sam liries Commsrce of Nations to Its Use GOETHALS ON FIRST VESSEL Steamship Ancon, of 10.000 Tons Reg istry, With Full Cargo, Bears Chief Engineer and Guests Through Ditcn. The Panama canal is open. Colonel Goethals, its chief engineer, journeyed through it Saturday on the steamship Ancon, and it was officially declared open to the commerce of the world. Colonel Goethals had as his guests on board the vessel the digni taries of the Panama republic and their ladies. During the day he re ceived numerous messages of congrat ulation from the United States, the most notabie being that from Presi den Wilson. The opening of the canal Saturday was followed Sunday by four mer chant vessels entering the canal at the same time, two of them making the trip from the Atlantic and two from the Pacific end. The Ancon, 10,000 tons register, owned by the United States war de partment and leased to the Panama railroad for the New York to Colon trade, did not discharge her cargo as it was planned to have her make tfie voyage fully loaded. Entering the Gatun locks at 9 ©'clock the nine-hour run brought the Ancon to the end of the deep water channel in the Pacific at ') o'clock in the evening. The passage of the Cucaracha slide in Culebra cut was made shortly before noon. The canal regulations provide a speed limit of fifteen knots in the wider and deeper channels of Gatun lake, but in the Culebra cut not more than six knots an hour will be allowed. Every move which a ship makes will be re- corded on plotting charts in the port captain's offices at either end of the waterway. The ship's location will be reported at every turn by telegraph. Those aboard included Governor Goethals, the canal builder, and nu merous other high officials and Presi dent Belisario Porras of the republic of Panama and members of his cabi net. BANDITS SLAIN BY DYNAMITE West Virginia Desperadoes Meet Vio- lent End In Cave. Five Italians, after having killed six persons in blood, took refuge in a cave in m untains near Bluefleld, W. Va., and were only conquered when they were blown to bits with dynamite thrown into the cave by the sheriff. During the two days' fight Detectives Burrell, Tiller and Belcher were shot and killed. The men had robbed the Glen Alum (W. Va.) mine paymaster of $10,500, the payroll. After holding up and slaying Dr. Amick, the paymaster of the companv and company physician, and his as sistants the bandits took to the moun tains. Sheriff Hatfield and a posse came up with them five miles west of War Eagle and a fight ensued during which Deputy Sheriffs Mounts and Groves were injured probably fatally. The bandits retreated to a cave in the mountainside and barricaded the entrance. The posse, joined by volun teers, kept up a steady? fire at the entrance. They held their own until dynamite was thrown into the entrance of the cave. The tragedy is one of the blackest in the history of the state, a toll of eleven lives having been taken in the two days' fighting between determined avengers and the bandits. The valise containing the payroll was found with the entire amount intact, excep $5OO which the bandits had taken out. DECLARED A MONOPOLY International Harvester Company Or dered by Court to Dissolve. The International Harvester com pany has been declared to be a mo nopoly in restraint of interstate and foreign trade and has been ordered dissolved by a majority decision filed in St. Paul by Judges Smith and Hook in the United States court. Judge San born dissented. Unless the $140,000,000 corporation submits a plan for the dissolution of the combination into at least three independent concerns within ninety days, or ia case of appeal, within ninety days of the issuance of an ap peal mandate from the United States supreme court, the decision announ ces that the court will entertain an application for the appointment of a receiver for all the properties of the corporation. The majority opinion held that the International Harvester company was from its organization in 1902 in viola tion of the Sherman law. The opinion declares that there was no excuse for the advertising of the products of the D. M. Osborne and company as inde pendents for two years after they had entered the International Harvester company. They Prefer Peace and Quiet. Since orders were issued for mobil ization of the reserves of the foreign countries the applications for naturaii zation papers have Increased more than 30 per cent in New York. THE PATRIOT GOAL PROBLEM BIGjjANDICAP GE rrp 3i Cruisers Obliged to 12X8 Fuel cm High Seas nmm nearly caos;.t H. M. S. Suffolk Comes Up When kaider's Snip Is Taking Coal From Kronprinz Wilheim Off Our Coatt. An officer of the British crurser Suf folk, which is taking coal in Ilal.. rx, tells a story of how ihe German c.us er Karlsruhe escaped capture decently by the Suffolk and the Berwick of the British navy. The Karlsruhe ex changed shots with the Berwick, but was too fast for the latter and made her escape. The incident is sign ill cant of the difficulty the Germans are having in coaling their ships on ihls side of the Atlantic. The story is that on Friday last the British cruiser Berwick was in en gagement with the German cruiser Karlsruhe off the The cruisers exchanged shots. The B t ish escaped injury, and it is thou :t the German ship did as well. The Suf folk came upon the Karlsruhe just in the act of beginning to take in cral on tfie high seas trom tiie German liner Kronprinz Wilheim. The two German ships separated and took flight, leaving some of their boats in the water. The Suffolk fol lowed the Karlsruhe from 11 in the morning until 4 in the afternoon, when she lost the German's smoke beyond the skyline. Meanwhile the Suffolk wirelessed the Berwick. The Berwick, coming in f he opposite direction to the chase, headed off the Karlsruhe and the engagement ensued. The officer who told the story went on to say that this "coaling on the fly" by the Germans cannot keep up forever. "They are bottled up over nere till the war is over. Sooner or later we will get them." "There are two German cruisers in these waters," he added, "so far as we know —the Karlsruhe and the Dresden." On Saturday the Suffolk captured as a prize the German tank steamer Leda worth on a conservative esti mate $30,000. The Germans did not know that war had been declared. FOOD DEALERS ON CARPET Called Up to Explain Increase In the Prices of Foodstuffs. Mayor Mitchel of New York con ferred with a committee of 134 mem bers whom he has appointed to in vestigate the increase in the prices of food. The object of this committee, the mayor says, is to determine how much of this increase is attributable to legitimately greater demands, how much is due to a selfish hoarding of provisions nd how much is ascribable to the rapacity of unscrupulous deal ers. The campaign against the increase of prices got underway with the ap pointment of Mayor Mitchel's com mittee, the summoning of the board of estimates committee on open mar kets and the announcement from the district attorney's office that produce dealers and meat packers are to be invited to come forward and tell what they know of market conditions. A conference with members of the Produce exchange has been arranged. Mrs. Julian Heath, president of the Housewives' league, conferred with Mr. Whitman. Letters have come from many sources offering suggestions and assistance. The committee named bv Mayor Mitchel is composed of 134 citi zens in various walks of life. They have been asked to come to the city hall today. MAY BUY FLEET OF SHIPS American Capitalists Make Offer For Hamburg-American Liners. Fifteen of the steamships of the Hamburg-American line that are now in American waters may be sold with in a short time for $20,000,000 in cash to a company which will transfer them to American register and oper ate them in transatlantic and South American trade under the American flag. Included in he list is the Vater land of 54,282 tons, the largest steam ship in the world. Officials of the Hamburg-American line issued a statement admitting that an offer of $20,000,000 for the ships in American waters had been received and was under consideration. Thirteen of the vessels are tied up at the docks at Hoboken and the other two are in Boston. Carbolic Acid Did the Work. William F. Nelson, fifty-three years of age, of Monessen, Pa., took his life by swallowing a dose of carbolic acid. Previous to drinking the acid he at tempted to cut his throat with a razor but was prevented by his son, Her bert A note which he left gave direc tions for his funer&L German Savings to Go First. It was officially announced in Ber lin that Germany's financial difficul ties have been overcome, but that a i war loan must be raised. The savings i of the German people, exceeding |7,- j 600,000, will be taken first. A morato rium will not be declared. HOSTS GATHER FOB DECISIVE ENGAGEMENT Gsrios Sli'l PrsssiiiFcrwiJ TcWdjsl Frails PREPARE FOR GBEAT FlG.ii Location of Probable Conflict Care fully Guarded by Censors—Ceilevcd Full German Strength Will Be Con centrated at One Point For Test of Strength—Aiiies Are Confidently Awaiting the Onslaught. . Fragmentary reprts which hav reached London from Paris and Brus sels indicate thai the advance mu\ e ment of the German army against the lines of the allies in Belgium and Lux emburg is proceeding slowly but steadily despite numerous unii. p;>r tant repulses between advance guards. The checks administered to the Gor man scouting detachments at Eglizee, Halen, Noville-Taviers, Diest, Tougres and other Belgian towns are not re garded by military experts here as of great account except iu their possible moral effect upon the defenders. It seems certain that the German battle line is closing in and that the beginning of a general engagement that may last for weeks cannot be long deferred. Namur, the fortilied city south of Brussels, is preparing for assault, and formidable defenses in addition to the forts have been erected. In anticipa tion that the city will be taken by tin Germans, even though the forts do not yield, all the inhabitants have been disarmed to save them from German reprisals. Suspending the bcmbardment of the forts on the right bank of the river at Liege, the Germans concentrated their guns upon those west of the town, attacking forts Pontisse, Liers. Lantin, Loncin, Hollogne and Flo malle, all of which vigorously replied The German cavalry advance re newed the raids on the Belgian lines at half a dozen points, but the war office officials claim that in every in stance they failed to penetrate the advanced Belgium position. The raids have been for the purpose of feeling out the Belgian front, but the enemy was unable to locate any weak spots. The Belgian aero corps Is proving of inestimable value to the field forces. Every German move is anticipated, and because of the excellent transport arrangements it is possible for the Belgian field commanders to meet the Germans more than half way in every attack. The German losses at Tirlemont, No ville-Taviers and Eghezee are declared by the Belgian war office to have ex ceeded 10,000 in killed and wounded, along with more than 5,000 taken pris oners. Three German aviators were shot down at Diest, two being killed and the third seriously wounded while their aeroplanes were wrecked. The German airmen were flying across the Belgian lines in an effort to ascertain the strength of the Belgian column which was in the shelter of its trenches. In order to get an ac curate view the aviators were forced to fly low and were greeted with a volley from the guns mounted in the trenches. Two aviators were literally shot from tfieir seats and their ma chines fell in crumpled masses. The third tried vainly to reach the German lines, but just when it seemed that he might do so a shot hit his engine, wrecking it. He was flying very low at the time, but was badly hurt, and is now in the field hospital at Diest, a prisoner. Ever since the fighting on Belgian soil began the efforts of the German aviators to reconnoiter the Belgian positions have been baffled by the ac curacy of the Belgian fire. The guns that were especially designed to de stroy aeroplanes have more than ful filled their mission and the marksman ship of the Belgians has been wonder ful. On the other hand, the Kruop aero guns Used by the Germans have all but proven useless. They were used against the Belgians at Liege, but in nearly every instance it developed that their range was too limited. A correspondent give the following description of scenes in the battle torn district: Over the country between Tirlemont and St. Trond, but yesterday rich in corn fields and carefully tended gar dens, the withering breath of war has passed. Approaching the village of Dormael unmistakable tokens of desolation meet the view; Shattered window panes and domestic utensils are flung among the cabbages in the gardens or before the wretched doors. Here a fcuple of children prattling in subdued tones. There a mother leading three orphaned little girls from the still smoking ruins. Belgians, who dealt with them at close quarters at Dormael, declare the Uhlans fought with the bitterness of personal fury. Many corpses have their hands raised and their elbows on a level with their shoulders. Horrible wounds were inflicted with weapons flred from a distance of a couple of inches from the mouth or breast. Kaiser Wifhelm as He Looks Lending His A: my , k *' * Photo by American Press Association WAR PARAGRAPHS The German foreign office has noii fied United States Ambassador Ger ard that all German ports have been mined. The ambassador also report ed that the English channel had been mined, but he did not say by whom. Walter Runciman, secretary of ag riculture, introduced a bill in the house of commons giving the British government power to seize all food ; stuffs. The bill passed through ail its stages. Earl Kitchener, British secretary of j state for war, notified the press that any newspaper publishing news of na val or military movements except that issued by the official bureau would be suspended. Queen Amelie of Portugal has vol unteered as a nurse. She will be at tached to the staff at Devonshire house. Lord Dunraven of England has of | fered his yacht to the American citi j zens' committee to aid in bringing stranded Americans from the eonti i nent. A dispatch from Cettlnje, Montene gro, officially denies the occupation of Scutari by Montengrin troops and also all other reports of hostile inten tions against Albania. Rome hears that Russia has mobil ized 2,000,000 men on the German and Austrian frontiers, 500,000 on the Ru manian frontier and had 3,000,000 more j held in reserve, a total army of 5,500,- 000 men. If correct, it would seem to indicate that Russia has completed her mobilization quickly. Great Britain, France and Russia have sent a sharp communication to Turkey regarding the reported pur chase by that country of the German cruisers Goeben and Breslau. Greece and Italy are concerned over this re ported acquisition by the Turks be cause of its bearing on the possession of islands in the Aegean sea. A large German aeroplane making observations of Russian troops at Su walki, Poland, was brought to earth and the four officers aboard her were killed. MARKET QUOTATIONS Chicago, Aug. 18. Hogs—Receipts, 30,000. Light, $8."3 @9.25; mixed, $8,606x9.25; hear*', $8.30@ 9.15; rough, $8.30@8.50; pigs, $7@8.50. Cattle—Receipts, 20,000. Steer*, $6.30@9.20; stockers and feeders, $5.50@8.15; cows and heifers, $5.60@ 9.20; calves, $8.25@11.60. Sheep—Receipts, 30,000. Sheep, $5.15(h 6; yearlings, $6.10@7; iambs, $6.50@8.40. Wheat —Sept., 88. Corn —Sept., 76%. Oats —Sept., 41%. Pittsburgh, Aug. 18. Cattle —Choice, $9.40@9.60; prime, $9.25@9.40; good, $8.40@8.76; com mon, s6@ 7; common to good fat bulls, $3.50@7.25; common to good fat cows, $3.50@7.25; fresh cows and springers, s4o@Bo. Sheep and Lambs—Prime wethers, $5.70@5.85; good mixed, $5.25@5.65; culls and common, $2@3.50; lambs, ss@B; veal calves, $10.50@11; heavy and thin calves, s7@B. Hogs—Prime heavy, $9.30; mixed, $9.35; mediums, heavy yorkers, light yorkers, pigs, $9.40; roughs, $8@8.15; •tags, s7® 7.50. Cleveland, Aug. 18. Hogs Yorkers, lights and pigs, $9.50; heavies, $9.40; roughs, $8.30; stags, $7.25@7.50. Cattle —Choice fat steer*, $8.25@9; good to choice, $7.10@8; good to choice heifers, $7.25@8. Sheep and Lambs —Good to choice lambs, $8.50@8.60; fair to good, $6.50 @7.50; good to choice wethers, $5.25 @ 5.50. I __ I 1 Il 9 H Vendita speciale || Rendiamo noto al pubblico di venire Il II a visitare il nostro negozio, durante que sta vendita eccezionale. Tutti gli articoli sono ridotti per ! il . i 1 occasione a prezzi bassi. Noi siamo i soli rivenditori delle fa- j mose scarpe WALK OVER. Il II Visitate il nostro grande negozio. | H. KLEINSTUB jj CREEKSIDE. PA. ===Z^___ — H S 1 : GEORGE D.LEYDlC,direttore di pompe funebri Rappresentante j APERTO NOTTE E GIORNO della Compagnia !| Telefoni: Local-Beli di Pianoforti || : 23-25 North Sixt St. INDIANA, PA. W. F. FREDRICK 5 3