4 wmmmrnr^aB 1 i-" 1 •••' r - W-'------ : ~ 11 "l""M J. ~, cork T - p |§| ~|L? |Ey gigarettes Gustate una Buona Fumata ' \wt Niente di meglio in America < ' Caponi Cash In Ogni Scatola t . ; . i Essi sono riscattabili per contanti 0 TUTTI LE CONOSCONO TUTTI LE LODANO - H Tutti i rivenditori le vendono NUOVO STUDIO FOTOGRAFICO EBEY ANNUNCIO AL PUBBLICO CHE HO INGRANDITO I MIEI LOCALI OCCUPANDO LE STANZE DEL GEM STUDIO,, CAE HO INTERAMENTE RIMODELLATE E MESSE IN SPLENDIDA CONDI ZIONE. SI ESEGUISCONO LAVORI DI PRIMA CLASSE A PREZZI CONVENIENTI. SI RICO PIANO ED INGRANDISCONO FOTOGRAFIE ANCHE VECCHIE. RICORDATEVI CHE I NOSTRI PREZZI NON POSSONO ESSERE UGUAGLIATI IN INDIANA. LAVORO GARANTITO. FOTOGRAFIE FATT DI GIORNO EDI NOTTE. THE EBEY STUDIO Locai Phone 268 678 Phila. St. Di fronte al "Hub Store,, - INDIANA, PA. 4 è Gratis ! OROLOGIO GARANTITO DEL VALORE DI SIOO Si BA GRATIS A CHI AC PTISTA ON VESTITO DA RAGAZZO DA $5.00 IN SU'. I MIGLIORr VESTITI PER RAGAZZI Ultima Moda Mai venduti in Indiana DINSMORE BROTHERS MAGAZZINO ELI QUALITÀ 9 A Detective's Reminiscence By M. QUAD Copyright, 1915. by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate. When i retired from detective work after an experience of sixteen years . e public press and my friends were sased to say that I had done excel it service. On the whole, this praise is deserved, but at the same time. , one case at least. 1 had shown a ptupidity worthy of tbe greenest pa Arelman on London's police force, i fed been at Scotland Yard for three years when I removed my family to yfeeen street It was to an apartment feuse, and w© took the second floor. the floor above were a married feople named Hadan. Tbe man, : • i feme to understand, was a manufac turing jeweler in a small way. The feadans lived very quietly and made W display, and the wife kept very ■such to herself. Not as a detective, felt aa an occupant I learned that the lmsband was home only two nights m week. At about the time of my removal I .Was set to watch in a general way a fertain dealer in bric-a-brac named fennders. His shop was a good three feiles from Queen street He dealt in Ml manner of art goods, secondhand, fed it had been pretty well established •hat he bought goods without asking my questions. In watching him 1 as mined another identity and became a customer. We came to be on quite iriendly terms, and 1 flattered myself •hat he bad not tbe slightest suspicion fe tbe part i was playing. At one feme and another I was the means of enabling a number of householders to •ecover stolen goods Saunders baa feught. but the man always evaded fbo law. I got to know that be lived fe Jane street, only a few blocks away, where be had a wife and one child. €>ne of our men occupied a room in the same house, and in a casual way fe had learned that Saunders was feme only two nights a week. He came and went as did my neighbor Hadan A year after I began watching the kric-a-brae shop there were complaints made about a certain merchant tailor named Davison. He was making suits to order so cheap that other tailors declared the goods must be stolen. As a matter of fact, several bolts of cloth stolen from a tailor in a town fifty miles away were found in his shop, but he proved himself clear of the law by a narrow margin. I became a cus tomer of his, as I had been of Saun ders. There were times wheu we had a glass of ale and a pipe together, and from the very outset 1 used my best ef forts to get on to bis little game. He continued to make bults to order far eheajKT than his rival, but though his •hop was searched again and again no more suspicious goods were found Davison was full of talk and seemed to be without suspicion, but I got no information from him to help my case 1 early ascertained that he lived in Montgomery place and had a wife and two children. By tbe merest aecideni 3 further learned that Mr. Davison ■was at home only three nights a week Now. then, for six years I knew these three men. and two of them were un der espionage. I talked with ate with them, drank with them and never Imbibed the faintest td?a that I was tbe biggest fool In the world. One day a man who was In a machine shop not far from detective headquarters was killed by accident. I happened to be almost the first one on hand. I recog nized him at once as the tailor, and the fedy was taken home. While doing ills work the undertaker found that the black hair and mustache and wart that he wore were all false. This was a revelation even to the wife. The affair was published in the papers, and Is less than two days it was found that Hadan. Saunders and Davison were ©ne and the same man. He had pad ded his body to Increase his size and apparent weight, and a false tooth, whiskers, mustache and a wart had done the rest. You will say I ought to have detected the cheat by the voice. In an ordinary case, yes. but this man bad made a study of disguising his voice. You will say that a good detective ©ught to penetrate such shallow dis guises as false whiskers. In answer to that let me say that whiskers or mus tache can be made to look so genuine j that no living man can detect the fheaL The wart was a new dodge and ©ne J vvaa not up to. It was so well! •one \that I had seen the man pick it with a pin and cringe a tittle as he did it i should have felt bad enough at bein§ fooled even had there been no ( in it but there was a case. The, sf versmitb was a "fence" for thieves, the bric-a-brac man was another, and the tailor was a third. He was mar ried to three different women: he lived in three different prts of the city; he carried on three occupations; he rep resented three different men. All this he did successfully for six or seveu years and but for the fatal accident might have gone on for years more. During his career he had made a for ttiue. and never a person had suspect ed the disguises. It seems as if a wife ahould have detected them, but the three did not. or at least so claimed Yes, 1 was made a fool of, but fortu nately i was the only one who knew ft and I may give the fact away now without my identity being suspected. Tt would have added more glory to my record to have caught up the sly ras cai. but now and then the sharpest of ©or profession are outwitted, and if I made a stupid blunder in the one case I have offset it a dozen times over is making successes of others. THE PATRIOT I Published weekly by THE PATRIOT PUB. COMPANY. Iffice: No. 15 Carpenter ave. ; Marshall Bldg., Indiana, Pa. P. BIAMONTE, Editor & Manager F. SMITH, English Editor. B. COLETTI, Italian Editor. Entered as second-class matter September 26, 1914, at the postof fice at Indiana, Pennsylvania, un der the Act of March 3, 1879. Local Phone 250 Z. Bell Phone 49-" W. Subscribe lor "Tbe Patriot,, SI year QUESTIONS THAT A GOOD CITIZEN SHOULD KNOW D. Have you read the Consti tution of the United States? R. Yes. D. What form of Government *; this? R. Republic. D. What is the Constitution of he United States? R. It is the fundamental law of this country. D. Who makes the laws of the United States? R. The Congress. D. What does Congress consist of? ( i R. Senate and' House of Rep-! eseutatives. D. Who is the chief executive of the United States? R. President. D. llow long is the President )f the United States elected? R. 4 years. D. Who takes the place of the! President in case he dies? R. The Vice President. D. What is his name? R. Thomas R. Marshall. D. By whom is the President of the United States elected? R. By the electors. D. By whom are the electors' elcted? e R. By the people. D. Who makes the laws for the date of Pennsylvania. R. The Legislature. D. What does the Legislature consist of? R. Senate and Assembly. D. How many State in the un- ion? R. 48. D. When was the Declaration of Independence signed? It. July 4, 1776. D. By whom was it written? R. Thomas Jefferson. D. Which is the capital of the United States? . R. Washington. D. Which is the capital of the state of Pennsylvania. R. Harrisburg. D. How many Senators has [each state in the United States Senate? j R. Two. D. By whom are they elected ? I R. By the people. D. For how long? R. 6 years. ! D. How many representatives lare there? .. * R. 435. According to the pop ulation one to every 211,000, (the !ratio fixed by Congress after each decennial census.) D. For how long are they elect ed? R. 2 years. D. How many electoral votes has the state of Pennsylvania ? R. 38. D. Who is the chief executive of the state of Pennsylvania? R. The Governor. D. For how long is he elected? R. 4 years. D. Who is the Governor! i; Chas. Lambo || ELECTRO SHOE || !| REPAIRING WORK!; !; WORK DONE j; WHILE YOU WAIT !; (Opposite the Park) ]> PIJNXSTAWNEY, PA. j R. Brumbaugh. D. Do you believe in organized government ? R. Yes. D. Are you opposed to organiz ed government? R. No. D. Are you an anarchist ? R. No. D. "What is an anarchist? R. A person who does not be ieve in organized government. D. Are you a bigamist or poli gamist? R. No. D. "What is a bigamist or poly gamist ? R. One who believes in having more than one wife, j D. Do you belong to secret THE PATRIOT ► Society who teaches to disbelieve ! [ in organized government? \ R. No. j D. Have you ever violated any 1.-ws of the United States? j R. No. [ D. "Who makes the ordinances I j for the City ? [ R. The board of Aldermen, j D. Do you intend to remain permanently in the U. S. ? R. Yes. ALABAMA OFF FOR ROADS __ Battleship Will Force Respect For Neutrality When Eitel Leaves. Washington, March 29. —It was an nounced at the navy department that , Rear Admiral James Helm, command ing the Atlantic reserve fleet at Phila delphia, was on board the battleship Alabama when she started today tc begin patrol duty in Hampton Roads j [ in connection with the imminent de j parture of the Prinz Eitel Friedrich. { The Alabama's instruction! are to pre vent any violation of the neutrality i of the United States government in connection with the Eitel. While officials are still of the opin ion that the German cruiser wil, •ventually interne rather than face British cruisers waiting for her out aide the Virginia capes every precau tion is bc'Ag taken as if it were a certainty that the Eitei will venture out It is believed also that neither German vessel nor the British war- I •hips will fail to observe all the neu- j trality of the United States, but it was [ felt that precautionary measures ahould be adopted to care for any con- ] ttngency. When the time allowed the Eitel baa expired the vessel must leave Newport News and the jurisdiction of j * the United States within twenty-four feora or else interne for the war. t KiLLED IN BATTLE. Methods of Different Nations For Iden tifying the Dead. When a German soldier falls in bat tle he is identified by a little metal disk which lie carries. This disk bears a number, and this number is tele graphed to Berlin. There the soldier's name is determined. This system ia as effective as everything ele connect ed with the German army. The British use an aluminium disk that contains, besides marks of identi fication, the soldier's church affiliation The Japanese system is similar, each j soldier wearing three disks, one around I his neck, another on his belt and the third in his boot. The Russians wear a numbered badge. The UnPed States army uses a cloth tab woven Into the shoulder strap of the tunic. The French use identifica tion cards stitched inside the tunic. The French once made use of metal identification badges, but these proved an irresistible attraction to the sav ages whom the French faced in Afri ca, so the cards were substituted. Austria still uses a badge of gun metal I in the form of a locket with parchment ! leaves inside. Turkey has no identification badges ; for her soldiers. Edhem Pasha once ; explained this omission as follows: "A dead man is of no use to the sultan, j Why, therefore, trouble with him?"— ; Baltimore American. MOVING PICTURES IN JAPAN. Are Doffed at the Door, and Spectators Sit on the Floor. Many of the motion picture theaters In Japan, particularly in Tokyo, where there are over 100, are quite as elesrant aa some to be found in any America" city. I T ou can secure admission for as low as 5 cents up to as high as 50 cents. In the cheaper portions of most theaters the natives sit crosslegged on the floor in characteristic Japanese fashion. They remove their shoes bV fore entering, and an attendant takes charge of these. Both American and European pic tures are shown, but the principal at traction Ls a long Japanese play, which is presentod ia a very unique fashion. In fact, it may l>e said that the Japa nese have real talking pictures. The film is produced in the same manner as a stage play, with every portion o f dialogue spoken. When the picture is projected an ac tor and actress stand on each side of the screen and repeat the dialogue in fall view of the spectators. The two reciters share the parts played by the different characters. As their spoken words keep strict time with the lip movements of the silent artists, the r<* suit, as may be Imagined, is very effec tiva.—Popular Electricity. Knew Traveling Men. "She's a sensible girl," said the first traveling man. "You bet she is," said the second. "Last night when I took her to dinner before ordering she asked me if I was going to pay the check myself or work it into the expense account"—Detroit I Free Press. A BAIL JUMPER By DONALD CHAMBERUN Horace Mansfield, attorney-at-law, was one night preparing for bed when he received a message summoning him to police headquarters to a client who was waiting for him to advise and as sist him In obtaining ball. Mansfield went to the police office, where he found a muu about twenty five years eld and apparently a gentleman. Lawyer and client were permitted to talk together apart froin the others, and the client •aid: "My name—that given at the desk— la Lambert. William Lambert. 1 am charged with entering a gentleman's residence for the purpose of stealing. Being caught in the act. I was arrest ed. I desire that you secure my liberty on the smallest possible ainouut of ball. It must be not more than &MX)O. for that is ail I can raise." "But surely." replied the lawyer, "you are not guilty of the charge?" "Whether I am or not, if the case comes to trial I shall plead guilty." Mansfield looked at his client in sur prise. He would have as soon believed himself guilty of pilfering as the yuuug man before him. "Any defense would do in your case," he said. "No Juror would believe you to be a thief. What is the value of the articles you are accused of stealing?" "A bracelet, a brooch and a lady'a watch. I doubt If they are worth al together $lOO. 1 shall not make a de fense." "How would you like me to get you off ou a technicality?" "Your services in any such line will not be required. 1 shall forfeit my bail." "Forfeit your bail!" "That is my Intention." Mansfield succeeded in getting the bail bond made $2,000. and his client produced the funds himself. Then he paid his attorney's fee and went forth a free man. When called for trial he did not appear, and his bail was for feited. Au elderly gentleman appear ed to testify against him. and Mans field. who was present as the accused's counsel, asked him something about the case. The only information he re ceived was that the thief had effected an entrance to the old gentleman's dwelling by climbing a lattice near a second story bedroom window. The gentleman said he was not surprised that the bail had been forfeited, for the thief was evidently well connected, and the money for his bail had doubt less been furnished by bis family. Ten years passed. One day Horace Mansfield was at work in bis office when a middle aged man entered and asked for a private interview. When the two wero alone together the man said: "Y'ou don't remember me." "I confess that I cannot place you, though there Is something aliout you that leads mo to think I have seen you before " "I)o you recall a client of yours named William Lambert, who jumped his bail?" "I do." "I am that man. but my name is not Lambert. 1 am about to be married and before the ceremony is performed I wish to know if there are any records Identifying me with Lambert that can be eradicated." The lawyer Informed the gentleman there was nothing worth removing. If recognized as Lambert he might be arrested and tried, but ten years had so changed him that he would likely not be recognized. "There is now," replied the stranger, "no one living to appear against me." "In that case you run no risk what ever." "I am to marry a widow who has in herited some property from ber late husband. There are some papers to be drawn before the wedding, and 1 should like to have you draw them. Can you conveniently call at her house?" "1 can." The gentleman threw a card on a ta ble bearing the name of Mrs. Elizabett Tracy with her address. The next day Mansfield went to tb< address given and was received by a lady under thirty years of age and beautiful. Having executed the papers he was about to withdraw when Mrs. Tracy said to him: "Both myself and my fiance deem it best that you should receive an ex planation of what must seem to you to be a mystery. When 1 was nineteen I left home on a visit While away I met the man I am to marry tomorrow. An attachment sprang up between us, and he begged me to engage himself to me. "I had been brought up from a child to understand that when I married my husband mast be wealthy. I told Ed gar—Edgar Stanfield is his name—that I knew my father would not consent to my marriage with him and he must give me up. He seemed very much broken down by this, and after my re turn I feared that he would do some thing rash. A match bad already been made for me with Mr. Tracy, who was then more than forty years old. Edgar came to this city the night before I was married and. in the hope of per suading me to eiope with him, climbed a lattice under my window and ob tained access to my room. My father came to the room while he was there. 1 slipped into an adjoining room, and Edgar, to save rae from the conse quences of his rash act. seized certain articles of Jewelry from my dressing ease. Too know the rest*