4 JSoi abbiamo le nuove Macchine Indiali da $l5O a $275 >iù le seguenti motociclette i isate da $4O a $lB5 1 Excelsior, 1914, Twin 1 Excelsior, 1911, Single Indiali, 1911, Twin 1 Arrom, 1913, Single 1 Curtis, 1910, Twin .e suddette motociclette sono | n buone condizioni. Venite a i cederle, catalogo gratis. Indiane) Cycle Co. Vicino lTifficiodel "Patriota"! ' LINEE ITALIANE NAVIGAZIONE GENERALE ITALIANA FLORIO-BUBATTINO LA VELOCE SOCIETÀ' DI NAVIGAZIONE A VAPORE ITALIA NAVIGAZIONE ITALIANA A VAPORE SERVIZIO CELERI per Napoli, Genova, Palermo, Messila VAPORI NUOVI A DOPPIA CLIC* J SPLENDIDI ADATTAMENTI per la la, 2a. e 3a. classe PROSSIME PARTENZE Ps Phliadelohla fa Ne* Ver* NAY. GEN. 'uca .1 Ab. 5 giug. I ITALIANA Vmerica 24 giug. I VELOCE Juropn 23 giugno. I ITALIA ancona 14-15 giugno I I biglietti sono waSbifi da totG {fi i|mß Mtvtaab Hartfield, Solari & Co., Aperti Gemi 1 STATE ST., NEW YORK I Sartorial Synthesis ■■ 4 (."Ybijrffsßted by the report that the Poly society has appointed a cornmitte vu vtofiigi: a gown which shall be equally to the kitchen and the opera.] When Dorothy denudes the spuds And pops them in the pot wears a simple style of duds ""QuJUjc different from the lot L*k rt'bich on same occasions she W*tecks for more formality. t aimply made of denim and k negligible quite cost beside confections grand ihe> wears on opera night; ('tis with sentiments of pity j heact goes out to that committee. S*tcas with sympathy I'm filled .A. unbidden, bold, Cd*>*es all my warmer feelings chilled Aaf makes my blood run cold. tJuftpeoe they work—what fears appall— SKnon) Icfaochen up to opera stall*! —Maurice Morris in New York Sun. a:. S. SUBMARINES UNFIT FOB WAR, DANIELS ADMITS Qfeinw Ones to Be Built at Once as Re suit of War Game. •-"onowing the breakdowns among Sdx. of the twelve submarines during flfee war game of the Atlantic fleel Secretary Daniels practically admitted Cftnt the maneuvers had proved these ftouts unfit for serious service. AJr. Daniels ordered an inquiry. He aiieo at once called for bids for the taeii(y-five new submarines authorized Gsr congress. '*Wifch the growing importance of the swiymurine as an instrument of war- Shnp,," said the secretary, "I feel that tfcss much attention cannot be paid to branch of the service. It is my fttfksnfiou immediately to investigate Tltfcs matter and to spare no effort to sjßjriKKly anything which is possible ot ftabwg remedied. ***iThe submarine Ls still in an experi •mtal stage. The boats of two years a***-* as compared with those now in agdSve service abroad is probably more ePfcnparatively obsolete than an auto sfptbile of three years ago. some cases the breakdowns were o®rjtoAl>ly due to imperfect design. This wr:,2oats, both nearing comple tion' and about, to be begun, are believ the p?ist or future than in the pres- this tendency affects for worry not, according to our viewpoint of "JBfe but other, respects. Worry is mental fcssr of an impending something. Persona afflicted will be less worried their condition than relatives or -HSHfefitds who sympathize with thein. A person may worry In anticipation of . aujffckness or operation, but when they Kbpc the sickness or the operation is " farmed, the worry disappears, aijd, they may fear, they cannot dfcnrry In the present—Boston Herald. ; 'BEST PAYING RAILROAD. IflSi a Little One, Built of Scrap Iron i on Wooden Rails. '• T sfee railroad that pays the biggest 4®bidends on the capital invested is, •warding to the Technical World mag flii&e. the Grand Island railroad, it ls lib northern Alberta. Canada, 200 miles idbtax- any trunk line or feed. MEt Hi only a quarter of a mile long -Qui built of scrap iron on wooden IPCs. Its rolling stock consists of two freight cars, which are push erfl-wtang the road by the men who ship >4lfee freight, no locomotives being used. flThe freight that is handled on this ®pu?uii*tsists;principally of furs, which V>wed ep 'the Athabaska river on iws henled by men, are laden on cerroo pushed down the railroad and ypefi pgpin on other scows, thereby mventing the dangerous Grand Ida, .Beturning, the scows carry all of SSreight for the Hudson Bay ty anyhow. Some time ago I ordered I plate of hash.—Richmond Times-Dis patch. Tight •Doppel hates to spend money." ■TO tell you how much. If it ware possible to take gas every time Jte parts with a dollar he'd take It"— Birmingham Age-Herald. KUEPFERLE, SPY, ENDS LIFE IN CELL New Yorker on Trial In London Admits His Guilt. CLAIMED TO BE U.S. CITIZEN Commits Suicide In Prison, Leaving Message on Slate, Saying He Could Stand Strain No Longer and Dreaded Going to Gallows Instead of Being Shot. The suicide in his cell of Anton Kuepferle, the New Yorker charged In London with being a German spy, was not the only dramatic incident in the man's brief connection with the war. His capture was almost more so. Kuepferle was in England only two days before he was arrested as a spy. Yet In that short time he had succeed ed in discovering the actual where abouts of the British fleet and had ent the information to Germany. Still another dramatic circumstance is that this capable spy was simple •nough to carry with him all his pa pers and letters, showing completely his work and his connections. It is ■aid that letters seized with him are such as would assure an unpleasant welcome for a number of persons were they to visit England. Used His Silk Scarf. Kuepferle was in Brixton jail, Lon don, the same prison as the one in which Mrs. Maybrick served part of her life term. His trial was 011 at the Old Bailey. He committed suicide by hanging himself with his silk necktie from a bar of the ventilator in his cell. Apparently his last act before end ing his life was to write a message on his cell slate confessing his guilt, ad mitting that he had had a fair trial and adding to the mystery of his iden tity. His note was: To "Whom It May Concern —My name ia Kuepferle, and I was born in Rastatt. in Baden. I am a soldier with a rank I do not desire to mention. I can say I have had a fair trial in the United Kingdom, but I am unable longer to stand the strain, and I take the law in my own hands. I have fought many a battle, and death is the only savior for me. I would prefer death by shooting, but I do not wish to ascend the scaffold as there the prisoner drew a Masonic sign), and I hope the Al mighty Architect of this universe will lead me in the unknown land. I am not dying as a spy, but as a soldier. I stood my fate as a man, but I cannot be a liar and perjure myself. I ask you kindly that my uncle, Ambrose Droll of Rastatt, be notified of my death. I desire that all my estate go to him. What I have done was for my country. I express my thanks, and may the Lord bless you all. Yours, etc., KUEPFERLE. Kuepferle arrived in Liverpool on Feb. 14. He showed a passport signed by Secretary of State William J. Bry an, Issued ten days prior to his sailing from New York. In writing the let ter which resulted in his arrest he gave his home address as 1665 De K&lb avenue, Brooklyn. He represent ed himself to be a woolen merchant. From Liverpool he went to Dublin and then to London, where he was arrest ed on Feb. 16. Sent Information to Germany. He was charged with writing a let ter to an address in a neutral country In Europe, giving valuable facts re garding British naval and military dis positions. It was asserted that, while the letter appeared on its face to be en innocent commercial communica tion, it was found to be interlined in Invisible ink with military information written in the German language. Three letters were seized in the mail, ill of them containing, the British at torney general said during the trial, Information which was absolutely ac curate and would have been of the ut most value to Britain's foes. In Kuep ferle's baggage was found the remains I >f the lemons the juice of which he used for invisible ink; also the pen he used. It appears that Kuepferle made ev ery effort to get a trial by court mar tial, knowing that if sentenced to death by a military court he would be shot, whereas a Civil court's .sentence would mean death by hanging. It is said that after a bearing in camera Kuep ferle realized the hopelessness of his position and preferred suicide to the gallows. Was In Observation Cell. Kuepferle was in a special observa tion cell in Brixton prison—that is, a ehamber about sixteen feet by sixteen feet, giving ample air space for the presence of two guards as well as the prisoner and having two doors with peep holes so arranged that the occu pant is practically always in sight of the warden in the corridor outside. The ventilator is high in the wall, but can be reached by means of the small table in the cell. In some interval when Kuepferle happened to be left alone he seized the opportunity to slip his silk scarf round his neck and one of the ven tilator bars. His body was still warm when he was found, but he could not be revived. When the court met in the Old Bailey to continue the trial the lord chief Justice of England and two oth er Justices took their seats on the bench In their scarlet and ermine robes. But the dock was empty. A pasp of sensation passed through the •sort when the attorney general rose and anoo*need that the prisoner had ■one to a greater court THE PATRIOT RUSSIANS FALL BACK ONLEMBERG No Letup For Czar's Galician Army Pressed by Enemy SLAVS EVACUATE PRZEMYS! Austro-Germans Have Regained Much of Lost Territory—Austrians Con tinue to Give Way Before Advanc ing Italians; Five Army Corps Will Defend Trieste From Invaders—Ger man Crown Prince Bombed. London, June 4. —Driven out ol Przsmysl, the former Austrian for tress in Galicia, the Russians will form a new line to the eastward ol their present positions and according to indications this line will begin 6omewhere near the junction of the Vistula and the San and extend south and east of Jaroslaw. It will leave the San at that point and follow the line of the Wisznia river, running southeast and northwest toward the Dniester. It will then be in a position to at tempt the defense of Lemberg and the two lines of railroad leading from the Russian bases. Przemysl was not a formal surren der as was the case March 22 when the Austrian garrison, after six months' defense, hoisted the white flag. The greater part of the Rus sian garrison managed to slip away over the railroad to Lemberg. They were able to take some heavy guns, many machine guns and considerable munitions of war. Much was left, behind, however. Many prisoners have been taken and the enormous guns of the fortresses and some supplies remain behind. The official dispatches from Vienna and Berlin say they have not yet had time to inventory their booty. It will be nothing like the 120,000 men taken by the Russians in March, it is re ported. Military experts in London have foreseen the fall of Przemysl ever sinco it was apparent that the Ger man and Austrian thrust through Galicia was going to strike home. Prz emysl is not a safe salient in a do fense line, however strong it may be as an isolated fortress. The tactics of the new besiegers were exactly opposite to those of the Russians when the positions were re versed. The first siege was conducted with regard to human life; this sec ond siege lias been conducted along lines generally pursued in the east— an absolute disregard of human life —charges in close formation in the face of fire from machine guns and rifles, all covered by the terrific fire of the heavy Austro-German guns. Dispatches say that both Berlin and Vienna are celebrating the victory and some military observers do not blame ihem, regarding the feat as one of the most striking of the entire war. In the celebrations it is said the gov ernment announced the victory with huge hand bills whereupon the capi tals hung out German, Austrian and Turkish flags. Austrians Abandon Positions. Rome, June 4. —The Italian troops which entered the Trentino from its eastern border are exerting such pres sure on the Austrians that the latter are abandoning all their positions in the Val Fiemme, and the Italians are now near Predazzo, twenty-seven miles northeast of Trent. Possession of this town would seri ously threaten Bozzano on the single railroad running south to Trent and serving as a source of supplies to all the Austrian garrisons in southern Tyrol. The Austrians practically destroyed the health resort of San Martino di Astrezza, to the souths; est of the Cima di Vessana, the dominating mountain peak which was captured several days ago by the Italians. While the artillery duels between the Italian guns on the right bank of the Isonzo and the Austrian batteries of Fort Tolnuzio, just to the rear of Gradisca, continue it is reported here that the Austrians have abandoned the town of Gradisca, which is the key to the entire frontier position. The Austrians have concentrated five army corps in this region to resist the Italians marching toward Trieste. Crown Prince's Headquarters Bombed Paris, June 4. —A squadron of twenty-nine French aeroplanes flew over the German lines and raided the headquarters of the German crown prince. The men dropped 178 bombi in all and thousands of arrows were scattered through the air. The raid ers were under a furious fire during their attack, but none of the aero planes was damaged. The war office report does not men tion the locality of the crown prince's headquarters. They were last spoken of, however, at a point northeast of Verdun. Nothing is said about dam age to the headquarters. Fighting continues in the district called the labyrinth southeast of Neu rille-St. Yaast and some gains are re corded. Since May 31 the French have made 800 prisoners in this local ity. The gains here have been slow but of dally occurrence and It Is gen erally felt that important news will soo n be announced regarding the out tome of the battle. NO DISSOLUTION OF UJ. STEEL Court Finds Anti-Trust Law Has Not Been Violated ALL INJUNCTIONS ARE DENIED Justices Are Unanimous In Vindlca tion of Great Corporation, But Holo That Gary Dinners Are Illegal and Order Them Discontinued—Testi mony Showed Independent Com panies Growing Fast. Trenton, N. J., June 4. —The federa: court handed down a decision in the suit of the government for the dissolu tion of the United States Steel cor poration in favor of the company. The company wins at every point. The court refused to issue any in junction. The decision holds that the corporation should not be dissolved. It holds that the foreign trade of the corporation is not a violation of the Sherman anti-trust law. It holds that certain price fixing agreements which followed the Gary dinners, but which stopped before the bill was filed, have been unlawful. It allows the government to move to retain jurisdiction of the bill if such price-fixing practices are re newed, but suggests that such mat ters may now be controlled by the new federal trade commission. The above are the important points in the decision which was handed down by Judge Buffington. The de cision contains 179 pages of typewrit ten matter. The court called the case a proceeding under the Sherman anti trust law, "largely one of business facts." The opinion is largely a discussion of facts 0:1 the question of whether the steel corporation monopolized the steel trade or dealt unfairly with com petitors or purchasers. The opinion declares that all the trust cases that have been determined settle down to this: That only such combinations are within the Sherman law as by reason of the intent of these forming them in the inherent nature of their con templated acts wrong the public by unduly restricting competition or un duly obstructing the course of trade. In answer to the questions which the court was to determine with re spect to whether when the suit was filed the steel company was unduly re stricting competition or obstructing trade in the home market the decision holds that the proofs show that when the bill was filed the company's, com petitors were doing 60 per cent of the country's steel and iron business. On this question the opinion says: "The field of business enterprise in the steel business is as open to and being as fully filled by the competi tors of the steel corporation as it is by that company." Points brought out in the decision were : In the ten years since the steel cor poration was formed if has increased its business about 40 per cent. Nine great competing steel companies have increased theirs more, the lowest on" 63 per cent, the highest 3,709 per cent. With the competition of the Erie canal Lake Superior ores can be brought cheaper to New York harbor than to Pittsburgh. This means blast furnaces on New York harbor waters. On the basis of the actual iron units in ore Cuban ores can be de livered in Philadelphia at half the cost of Lake Superior. Facts and figures show that there is no possibility of Lake Superior ore monopoly. Cambria Steel president shows that United States steel could not put it out of business. James R. Garfield, former secretary of commerce, shows the steel corpora tion got no freight rebates. Case Will Go Higher. Washington, June 4.—The depart ment of justice received the announce ment of the decision in the steel cor poration case with dismay. The case will, of course, be carried up to the United States supreme court. Officials of the department of jus tice did not hesitate to say that in their opinion the Sherman anti-trust law practically will be relegated to category of a dead letter statute if the decision handed down by tht circuit court at Trenton and other recent decisions in big anti-trust cases are sustained by the supreme court. The suit against the steel corpora tion was one of the most important ever brought under the Sherman act. Department of justice officials contend that on the outcome of this and other anti-trust cases which are now pend ing on appeal will depend the future success of the enforcement of the law. They say that if the opinion handed down at Trenton and others recently delivered against the govern ment are sustained the enforcement of the law in the way which the de partment of justice deems necessary in order to obtain practical results will be almost impossible. • WEATHER FORECAST. • • • • For Western Pennsylvania and • • Ohio —Cloudy and warmer to- • • might and Saturday; east winda. THE PATRIOT Published Weekly By HIE PATRIOT PUB. COMPANY Office: No. 15 Carpenter Avenue. Marshall Buiiding, INDIANA. PA. I. BIAMONTE, Editor & Manager JOHN S. LYON. English Editor • A CETI, Italian Editor. Entered as second-class matter ptember 1914, at the postoffice Indiana. Pennsylvt nia. under the \ct of March 3, 1579. Local Phone 250Z - Bell Phone 49-W SUBSCRIPTION ONE YEAR $l.OO. SIX MONTHS $0.50 STOVE WRECKED BY BEANS. Forgotten In Oven, They Explode and Bombard Kitchen Walls. An explosion shook the Sixth ward In Auburn, N. Y., and brought scores of persons to the home of William K. Bills, 62 Lansing street. Members of the family were gathering up the scrap Iron that represented the family range, and the walls and furnishings of the kitchen looked as if they had been the target for hundreds of small bullets. Mrs. Bills explained that she had placed a quart can of beans in the oven and had forgotten them. She was re minded of it by the explosion and the bean bombardment that came with 1L Once Laborer, New a President. At a meeting of the directors of the Yale & Towne company, a large hard ware manufacturing company of Stan ford, Conn., Walter C. Allen, who has been employed by the company for the past twenty-three years and who has advanced himself by stages, was elected p-esldent in the place of Henry R. Towne, who retires after forty-six years in that position. Mr. Towne was made chairman of the board ef directors. tendency of hot air to deposit Its dust on cold surfaces, and the colder the surface the weaker the power of re sistance. 80 where the laths protect the plaster from the cold outside the plaster receives less deposit of dust than where it is between the laths. Wherever a hot steam er water pipe comes through a wall a vertical streak of dust may be seen there It fee to the hot air driving the dost ifdisl Che cold waH. Rooms that are heated by