B——IMIIIMI in a—— N , ! I^ m ■■■*■■■■■■■■■■■ tm I I nostri avventori e tutte le persone che hanno visto la nostra reclame di que sta vendita oeini- Annuale, ricorderanno che il certificato del nostro magazzino on e mai stato esteso con parole attirare il popolo a prezzi inverosimili. \oi crediamo che i nostri avventori si aspettano questa promessa. Noi siamo sempre la confidenza del compratore col dirgli: ' Prendete il nostro Consiglio". Vi saranno molti che ricordano i nostri bassi prezzi nella vendita scorsa. Noi garentiamo un risparmio genuino che sarà a vostro rendiconto. La Roba Comprata a Questa Vendita non si può' Ritornare. Tutti f Vestiti da umo ridotti Camicie da uomo e per rag- Pantaloni per lavoro a righe buo da $25 00 ora $18.75 gazzo 1-2 Prezzo. nissimi vendutia 65c ora 40cal 20.00 " 15 00 Camicie da lavoro per UO- paro. Pantaloni da lavoro ridotti aoc j 4 15.00 " 7.50 mo 39c all'una. al P aro Ribasso nell'intiero magazzino di [ MOOREHEAD BROS. Il magazzino di Qualità' e servizio. -DNA GRANDE OFFERTA- Le coperte Nebo valgono He cont. L'intera cedola Nebo vale He cont. Itobbo 1 ijl/lm L c4l intere e le freoti dfi (tacchetti hanno ugnale rotore. Eni pow>oo eoacre prenentate wmortlt* pel premi in contanto od in oggetti di al ore. Quest'offerta spira 11 SI dicembre ISIS). Co., tic.. New Tark - Est. 170 j Monumenti di Marmo ! e di Granito MARMO | CIMITERO ROBERT E. YOUNG 72 0 FIIILADELPIIIA STREET Indiana, Pa. j j THE PATRIOT Published Weekly By THE PATRIOT PUB. COMPANY Oliiee: No. 15 Carpenter Avenue. Marshall Building, INDIANA, PA. F. BIAMONTE, Editor & Manager V. ACETI, Italian Editor. Entered ,as seeqnd-class matter September 26, 1014, at the posloftiee at Indiana. Pennsylvania, under the Act of March 3, 1870. Local Phone 250Z - Bell Phone 40-W SUBSCRIPTION ONE YEAR $l.OO SIX MONTHS' $.50 INDIANA MARKETS Butter, 20c Eggs, 18c Pott; es, (new) per bu.. .75c FOP RENT, September 1, —New Brit k Store Building 25 x 80, good cellar 25 x 25 by 7 feet deep, located in the heart of the business section, large display window. Inquire of R< sa I Jevacqua, Johnsonburg, Pa. FOR SALE—Corner lot in Chevy % Chase, 65x150, for further informa tion, apply at this office. •t di SALE —Automobile in' good condition, at a reasonable | !'i e. Sam Alaruea Alclntvre. Pa. Seeking and Finding. Two Scots with all the thrift of their race met on the way home from mar ket. "Wiiy are ye lukin' sae pleased wi' yersel'?" asked Sandy. "Weel, mon." replied MacFherson. "I dropped a saxpeuce in the market place, an', hunt as 1 might, I couidna find it." "That's naught to be lukin' sae gay a boot." said Sandy. "Aye, but ye dinna ken," explained MacPherson. "1 found a shilling."— Ladies' Home Journal. BELIEVED HOLT HAD ASSISTANCE : U. S. Secret Service at Work on Strange Case : CONSPIRACY IS SUSPECTED Suicide of Morgan's Assailant Handi caps Efforts to Solve Mystery. Strange Features Attend Holt's Death—Jail Attendants Say Prison er Cracked Skull In Dive; Examina tion Shows Hole Not Unlike Bullet. New York, July B.—Believing that Frank Holt, who destroyed himself in the Mineola (L. I.) jail, where he was placed following an unsuccessful at tempt to kill J. P. Morgan, was the agent of a conspiracy, the whole or ganization of the United States secret service has been brought into the case in an effort to run down Holt's fellow conspirators. The police departments of New York and Washington are also actively at work. His facility in getting wherever he pleased until last Saturday morning without detection and his ability to move large parcels of dynamite and bomb making materials from place to place all soem to show, so the police say, that Holt was not operating all alone, but that he had the active and passive help of others. So much has been disclosed within the past twenty-four hours of the cun ning scheming, the elaborate prepara tions for violence and the destructive plans of the extraordinary person who called himself Holt that the authori ties needed a living man to question. The singular carelessness of a jail keeper at Mineola, which made it per j fectly simple for Holt to end his lif<\ lias interposed what may prove to be an insurmountable obstacle to an ab solute revealment of Holt's doings and connections and the identity of the plotters with whom it is now believed he must have worked. The body of Holt, or Muenter, lav today in an undertaking establish ment in Hempstead awaiting the in i structions of Holt's family in Dallas. How that body came there with the head marked by one wound at least such as is not ordinarily produced b ' . a fall together with the mass of con tradictions given out by the jail au thorities makes a story of peculiar interest. No newspaper man or independent investigator was permitted to see Holt's body on the night of his death. Within two hours the body had been hurried to a morgue and an autopsy had been performed by Dr. Cleghorn. The brain was removed. When the autopsy was finished the body and es pecially the battered head was so treated bv the undertaker as to par tially disguise the injuries that had caused Holt's death. When the newspaper men inspected the body on Wednesday it was ob served that the skull had undoubtedly been fractured. The break ran from the base of the nose to the center of the top of the head, inclining slightly to the right. It was indeed just such a fracture as might have been caused by a hard fall. But there was another new injury which provoked commen*, It was a small, elliptical hole just above the right eye brow, something of the sort of hole that a bullet fired at an angle could have made. The edges of this wound were clean. The hole itself~nacTbeen fnTeff with pufty. In fact, the undertaker said that he had placed putty in it to improve the appearance of the head. With all of these things in mind to gether with the persistent story that there had been an explosion at the moment of Holt's death, newspaper men asked District Attorney Smith frankly if he believed that Holt had committed suicide by jumping from the roof of the steel cell block or had killed himself by means of a pistol or fulminating cap. Did 'he believe the story told by the jail guards and was he willing to accept it without further investigation. The district attorney said unreservedly that he believed the story and that he saw no reason for further investigation of the circum stance of he death. Holt's body was positively identified by four persons familiar with the ap pearance of Professor Erich Muentqr. Silas P. Smith, head of the state po lice of Massachusetts; Theodore W Hillier, a liveryman of Cambridge; Arthur T. Brown of Cambridge and John R. Whitman, a Boston reporter, said they were certain that he was Muenter. Mr. Smith's opinion was supported by Bertillon measurements of Muenter, which corresponded ac curately with similar measurements taken of the body. J. P. Morgan, convalescing at his home in Glen Cove, was in communi cation for some time with his offices in this city transacting business over the telephone. He said he felt much better and word from the physicians in attendance at his home was that his condition continued to improve. Sets Haystack Afire. Wheeling. W. Va., July B.—A farm er's boy, too poor to buy a balloon, tied waste to a crow's foot and lighted the waste at Short creek, near here. The crow alighted on a haystack on the Jacob Nause farm and set the hay afire, destroying it and causing $65 oss. Heroic efforts saved the adjacent iarn. What He'd Done. "I've come to see if you can lend me $25." "That so: Which way did you come?" "Down Griswold street." "Oh, you did, eh? Did it occur to you that you had walked right by eight or nine banks that are in the business of lending money to get to me?"— Detroit Free Press. morning. A perfume of flowers is wafted gent ly from the mountains. The sun is new risen, and the dew still glistens on the leaves of trees and the petals of flowers. A road like a gray ribbon thrusts into the quiet mountain gorge —a stone paved road which yet looks as soft as velvet, so that one almost has a desire to stroke it. Maxim Gorky. The Evolution of the Hog. The time honored razor backed hog is giving place to the sleek porker, on whose broad back a square meal could be displayed without a drop of coffee being spilled and with no danger of even one of the dishes sliding to the ground. The rooter is being shouldered out of the way in Georgia by the hog that doesn't have to root for a living and is so fat that its efforts to root would be ludicrous. Scientists say that when any part of an animal la long ucnsed it tends gradually to disappear. Does that mean that pig culture will cause the final disappearance of the nasal protuberance of the hog with which it formerly was accustomed to *©ot for its living?— Savannah News. ' ? On the Moon. The question "Could a man live on the moon?" has been put to an emi nent astronomer, who replied: "I am afraid not. A man transplanted to the moon would find himself the lone in habitant of a perfectly lifeless orb in which eternal silence reigns. He would have to manage without air, water or fire. He would not need to put windows in his house, for there is no wind, no rain, no dust, upon the moon. It has been truly and practical ly observed that the moon is apparent ly abandoned to death, nourishing no inhabitants, producing nothing resem bling trees, flowers or beautiful things of any kind—useless, in short, except as a mass of extinct volcanic rubbish, which drags the sea into tides and re flects the sunbeams in moonlight." Baked Men. Workers in porcelain factories are literally baked, but by some miracle they remain sufficiently undone to live. At least if they are not quite baked they endure a stronger heat than that which browns the Sunday sirloin. The furnaces wherein procelain is finished are kept at the fiercest heat used in any industry. A chain of workmen, their heads and bodies swathed in fire proof garments, take the finished pieces from the fire one at a time and pass them to the cooling room. The man at the head of this chain—he who stands nearest the furnace —can only work in five minute shifts. In his interims of rest he lies on a mattress, drinking glass after glass of ice water from the hands of a small boy. Dean Swift's Complaint. It is no new thing, this complaint •which one hears of the high cost of living. Writing to Stella from Lon don in the year 3710, Dean Swift re marks: "I lodge in Bury street, St. James, where I removed a week ago. I have the first floor, the dining room and bedchamber at 8 shillings a week; plaguy deep, but I spend nothing for eating, never go to a tavern and very seldom in a coach, yet, after all. it will be expensive." Making Him Pay. Lawyer (to kicking client) Well, have you at last decided to take my advice and pay this bill of mine? Client—Yes. Lawyer—Very well. (To clerk) "William, add $5 to Mr. Smith's bill for further advice."—Boston Tran script. Opportunity Calls. "Opportunity is at your door." "What is it?" inquired the pessimis tic citizen. "Opportunity to subscribe to some worthy cause, or a chance to Invest?" —Louisville Courier-Journal How They Do it. Steve —They say that waiters can al ways size a man up. Lillian —I sup pose they measure him from tip to tip. —Judge. Wealth is not his that has it. but hi that enjoys It. The Family Pet. "You have no children?" "None." "Home doesn't mean much to a m:.- without children." "Oh. we have a family pet. It's on motor car. I am going to present is with new tires throughout, and ni wife is going to buy it a new win shield." —Chicago Herald. Some Reputation. Binx—What kind of a reputation has Jones got? Jinx—So good that he can wear cuff buttons with other people's initials and get away with it—St. lamls Poet-Dis patch. Hit Him Both Ways. A man was charged with picking a pocket and pleaded guilty. The case went to the jury, however, and the verdict was not guilty. And the court spoke as follows: "You don't leave this court without a stain on your character, lly your own con fession you are a thief. By the verdict of the jury you are a liar!"— London Tit-Bits. Unnecessary Advice. "Don't question my veracity, sir." "I won't. It wouldn't answer."—Bai timore American. He Took It. "I'll not take 'No' for an answer. Miss Bunker—Priscilla." he declared brave ly as he persistently pressed his suit "Then, sir," replied the cold and cul tured Boston girl, rising proudly to the occasion, "will you in lieu of that much hackneyed negative assertion accept my positive declination to respond con currently to the query projiounded?" And he did. —St. I.ouis I'ost-Dispatcb. Harmony of Diet. He—Why do you always have pickled beets when I bring any friends home to dinner? She —To match the kind of friends you generally bring.—Baltimore Amer ican. „ Foresight. Chauffeur—Would you kindly give me a reference as a careful driver, sir? Motorist—What! Are you going to leave me? Chauffeur —Oh. no! I just want It in case of accident, sir!— New York Globe. Two Kinds. "Pa," said Johnny, "what Is a book worm?" "A bookworm," said pa, "is a persor. who would rather read than eat, or E worm that would rather eat than read." I :
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers