The patriot. (Indiana, Pa.) 1914-1955, January 15, 1916, The Patriot, Image 2

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) FLASHLIGHTS K
i are made in many styles
ii that sell at a wide vari- ||
F ety of prices. Each is B
equipped with agenuine, jg
[.:> long service Tungsten m
■ battery and Mazda ||
; \ lamp. All are guaran- m
teed to give the maxi- §3
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1 ; why it pays to get a real
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We sell them.
LiiMIGCO
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MARKET QUOTATIONS
Pittsburgh, Jan. 1 (.
I liter —Prints, 35%@36c; tubs,
34', '<< 35c. Eggs—Fresh, 37@38c.
( Mile —Choice, $8.50@8.75; prime,
$B.; @8.60; good, $7.75@8.15; tidy
bu, hers, $7.50@8; fair, $6.75@7.25;/
coi non, $. r .50@6.50; choice heifers,
s6.C>@7; common to fair heifers,
$4... @6; common to good fat bulls,
$4(. 7; common to good fat cows, s3@
6.5 . fresh cows and springers, $4O
@B5.
i eep and Lambs —Prime wethers,
$7. '(/ OS; good mixed, $7@7.60; fair
mix ■■>'•, $6@6.75; culls and common,
$4O f.; heavy ewes, $5.50@6.50; lambs,
$7(l/10.85; veal calves, $11@11.50;
her vy and thin calves, $6@8.50.
logs—Prime heavy, $7.05@7.10;
heavy mixed, mediums and heavy
Yoi \ers, $7@7.05; light Yorkers, $6.90
@7. pigs, $6.25@6.85; roughs, s6@
6.15 stags, $5@5.25.
Cleveland, Jan. 11.
Cattle —Choice fat steers,
8.3" ; good to choice butcher steers,
$74 7.50; fair to good butcher steers.
s6(< 7; good to choice heifers, s6@
7.5( good to choice butcher bulls,
$6/1 @6.75; good to choice cows, SSJ >
@6 fair to good cows, s4@s; com
mon cows, s3@4.
gheep and Lambs —Good to chop
lambs, $10@10.25; fair to good, sB.£9
@9 .0; good to choice wethers, $6.50@
6.7t good to choice ewes, $6@6.50;
mix d ewes and wethers, $6.25@6.50;
but , $4.60@5.50; culls and common,
S3JC@P.
C fives —Good to choice, $11.75@12;
fair to gcod, s9@ll; heavy and com
mon, ss@9.
I sgs—Yorkers, mediums, mixed, 1
$7.40; pigs, $7; roughs, $6.40@6.50;
sta s $5.50.
Chicago, Jan. 11. j
1 ;gS'—Bu'k, $6.50@6.85; lights,
$6.1 6.75; mixed, $6.45@6.95; heavy.'
s6.f 6.95; roughs, $6.55@6.65; pigs,
$5/ <16.50.
( a vie—Native beef steers, $6.30@
9.5' cows and heifers, $3.10@8.40;
cal <, $7@10.75.
c ~p —Wethers, $6.75@7.35; lambs,
$7/ ; 10.25.
\ i< at —May, $1.24%. Corn —May.
7S( Oats—May, 48% c.
The Ext rem*.
' "'fits fee business is a nuisance
To 1 nve to give one everywhere to
gel bo least service."
" know it Even if you want to
apt politely to a lady you hare got
to 1 your hat" —Baltimore American.
CONGRESSMAN WHO
DEFENDS GERMANS
Photo by American Press Association.
NICHOLAS LONGWORTH.
A GENERAL SURVEY OF
THEWAR
The British conscription bill has
passed its first reading in the house
of commons, 403 to 105. The labor
congress, representiing the unions,
has passed resolutions condemning
the bill. Three labor members of the
cabinet have resigned, one saying he
will not accept dictation of the unions,
but will support the bill.
The German government has as
sured the United States that her sub
marine operations will be conducted
in strict conformity with international
law, guaranteeing the safety at sea of
noncombatants of either belligerent or
neutral nations.
General Sir lan Hamilton reported
to the house of commons that the
Dardanelles expedition was lost when
in sight of victory through failure of
the war office to supply more men.
A great battle has been raging for
over two weeks in Bukowina, with the
Russians, 800,000 strong, at last re
ports driving in the Teutons' first line
over a long front. The objective seems
to be to relieve pressure on the allies
at Salonika and to postpone or prevent
the drive into Egypt.
A dispatch from Houlon tells of the
interning of the central powers' con
suls arrested at Salonika on board
the French auxiliary cruiser Savoie,
formerly in the New York-Havre serv
ice. This would indicate that the
consuls had not yet been released as
was reported from various sources
late last week.
The British battleship King Edward
VII. has been sunk after striking a
mine. The entire crew was saved.
It is officially announced that the
complete evacuation of the Gallipoli
peninsula has been successfully car
ried out.
The Russians continue to hold the
upper hand in the gigantic battle
which has been raging for more than
a week on the huge battle line stretch
ing from Kovel to the northwestern
corner of Bessarabia. The Petrograd
war office asserts Czartorysk, on the
Kovel-Sarny railway, is firmly held by
the czar's forces, two Austrian at
tempts at its recapture having been
repulsed.
German forces have recaptured the
trenches near Hirzstein, south of
Hartmannsweilerkopf, in upper Al
sace, that were taken by the French
on Dec. 21. Twenty officers, 1,083
chausseurs and 15 machine guns were
captured the French.
Greece has again entered protest
against measures taken by the entente
powers, which, it declares, render dif
ficult the supplying of Greece with
food from Bulgaria, according to an
announcement by the Overseas News
agency.
The Italian government has issued
a decree requisitioning all wheat,
grain and corn for military uses.
The Turco-German expedition
against Egypt is held in abeyance
owing to the refusal of Djemal Pasha
to attack the Suez canal without a
G o ~mjin vanguard of 25,000 picked
troops. * ?' ■ i? *' ' '
A dispatch from Constantinople sav
that in reprisal for the arrests by
the allied staffs in Salonka of the
Turkish consul and other Ottomans in
the Greek port, the Turkish govern
ment has arrested ten British and
French citizens, including the remain
ing embassy officials. Altogether 1,000
subjects of the entente governments
have been interned, the dispatch says.
It is learned from a diplomatic
source that an effort is now being
made by Austria and Germany to limit
the purchases of foodstuffs. This is
said to be the main cause for the
exchange. The only possible remedy
consists in the wholesale requisition
ing of foodstuffs in Bulgaria, the pay
ment for these shipments being made
in paper money.
There are now in Italy 58,000 Aus
trian prisoners besides 62,000 which
have been transferred from Servia.
6 NEW HAVEN MEN ACQUITTED
Jury Disagrees as to Five Defendants
Charged With Conspiracy.
After fifty hours debate the jury in
the New Haven railroad conspiracy
case returned a verdict of acquittal
for six of the defendants/reporting a
disagreement in the cases of five
others.
Dumas, Father and Son.
A story is told about the two Du
mases, father and son, which illus
trates the pleasant relations between
the two. The son had written his first
successful novel, and the father wrote
him a letter of congratulation, which
he began in the formal manner of
"Dear Sir." This letter throughout
read as though addressed to a total
stranger and merely thanked the au
thor for the pleasure the book had
given him. Dumas fils answered in
this manner:
Sir—l thank you most heartily for your
kind letter. Praise from you is especially
appreciated by me, as I have always
heard of you as the most enthusiastic ad
mirer of my father, who also makes some
pretension of being a novelist.
Arms and the Men.
"I see you have your arm in sling,"
said the inquisitive passenger. "Bro
ken, is it?"
"Yes. sir." responded the other pas
senger.
"Meet with an accident?"
"No. Broke it while I was trying
to pat myself on the back."
"Great Scott! What for?"
"For minding my otvn business."
"I see. Never could happen to me,
could it?"
"No."
"And if it did I wouldn't be blame
fool enough to tell It"
Then there was silence in the car.—
Chicago Tribune.
Four Kinds of People.
There are four kinds of people:
(a) Those who are grouchy at home
and pleasant everywhere else.
(b) Those who are pleasant at home
and grouchy everywhere else.
(c) Those who are pleasant both at
home and elsewhere.
(d) Those who are grouchy every
where.
Class (a) are as the sands of the sea.
Class (b) are rare.
Class (c) are rarer.
Class (d) are public and private nui
sances.—Strickland Gillilan, in Judge.
Trap For Quotation Experts.
If any one wants a catch question to
spring on a gathering of self confessed
literary sharps let him ask whence
comes the quotation, "One touch of
nature makes the whole world ktn"
This Is one of the six best sellers In
the world of quotations, yet not one
person in a hundred knows where it
comes from. It is comparatively easy
to gness the author, but almost impos
sible to find a person who can name
the work.
One could build any number of par
lor games around "One touch of nature
makes the whole world kin." Try it-
Spokane Spokesman-Review.
Don't Worry.
Mrs. Wullaby—De agent says if we
ain't got de rent nex' Monday w*s gat
to git out. Sam Wullaby—Nex' Mon
day? Den we doan* need ta worry fa'
de nex' fo' days.—Puck.
There are only two reads by whk'fc
any Important goal can be reached—
sheer strength and persavaranen.-
Ooethe.
I OHIO GOVERNOR SENT .
TROOPS TO YOUNGSTOWN
e Harris & Ewing.
GOVERNOR FRANK B. WILLIS
of Ohio.
FIVE WRECK VICTIMS FOUND
Steamboat Kanawha Being Searched
For More Bodies.
Five bodies, three women, one man
and an infant, have been recovered
from the wreckage of the Pittsburgh-
Charleston packet Kanawha, these
being the first of the seventeen or
twenty missing which have been re
covered since the night of the wreck,
except the body of Hannah Campbell,
a colored chambermaid, which was
recovered the morning of the disaster.
The bodies were identified as fol
lows: Mrs. W. L. Hoblitzell, Sr., Wash
ington; Mrs. Ulysses Beagle, Hobok
en, Pa.; Mrs. E. C. Atkinson, Racine,
O.; W. L. Hoblitzell, Jr., Washing
ton; W. L, Hoblitzell 111., five months
old.
Captain W. E. Rae expressed his be
lief that the twelve other passengers
and members of the crew unaccounted
for are yet in the wreckage.
To prevent the current from carry
ing the bodies down stream an impro
vised net has been stretched in the
river just below the wreck.
Prosecuting Attorney H. O. Hite
shew said no coroner's inquest would
be held over those bodies recovered.
LINER MUST REMOVE GUNS
Giuseppi Verdi Will Be Held Until
Disarmed.
The desire of the United States that
the two 3-inch guns mounted on the
Italian liner Giuseppe Verdi, now at
New York, be removed and the vessel
depart unarmed upon its return, was
expressed informally to the Italian
ambassador, Count Macchi di Cellere,
by Secretary Lansing.
The secretary's views will be trans
mitted to the Italian government, and,
it is said, until a reply is received the
liner will be detained In port.
Books as Carriers or Disease.
The report of the commissioner of
education undertakes to reassure per
sons who are fearful of the spread of
disease through books by recording the
results of recent investigation at Yale
university. During the cleaning of the
library a chemical analysis of the dust
was made. About half of this was
found to be mineral matter, while the
other half was organic, including pa
per fiber, wood fiber and molds. No
mouth bacteria were found, and In
general the analysis showed the harm
lessness of the dust
A sore Proof.
"The new family who have just
moved in have something in their lives
they want to hide."
"Why do you think so?"
"Because their hired girl is deaf and
dumb."—Baltimore American.
toil hi i Mia Should Km.
D. Have you read the Consti
tution of the United States?
R. Yes.
D. What form of Government
is this?
R. Republic.
)
D. What s the Constitution of
the United S ates?
R. It is the fundamental law of
this country.
D. Who makes the laws of the
United States?
R. The Congress.
D. What does Cougress consist
of?
R. Senate and House of Rep
resentatives.
D. Who is our State Senator?
R. Theo. M. Kurtz.
D. Who is the chief executive
of the United States?
R. President.
D. How ong is the President
of the United States elected?
R. 4 years.
D. Who tiikes 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
strte of Pennsylvania.
R. The Legislature.
D. What does the Legislature
consist of?
R. Senate aud Assembly.
D. Who is our Assemblyman?
R. Wilmer H. Wood.
D. How many State in the un
ion?
R. 48.
D. When was the Declaration
of Independence signed?
R. 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
eaeh state i.j the United States
Senate?
..The Indiana Macaroni Company..
OUR MACARONI
Can be Bought at the Following Stores;
I The Troutman Department Store, Steveson &
Myers, Plotzer Meat Market.
They are FRtSH. Made in Indiana
R. Two.
D. Y'lv* are our U. S. Senators?
R. Boise Penrose and George
T. Oliver.
D. By whom are they elected?
R. By the people.
D. For how long?
R. 6 years.
D. How many representatives
are 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. Who is our Congressman?
11. S. Taylor North.
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?
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
gam ist?
R. One who believes in having
more than one wife.
D. Do you belong to any secret
Society who teaches to disbelieve
in organized government?
R. No.
D. Have you ever violated any
l'ws of the United States?
R. No.
D. Who makes the ordinances
for the City ?
R. The board of Aldermen.
D. Do you intend to remain
permanently in the TJ. S.?
R. Yes.
The River Tigris.
The river Tigris appears in the book
of Genesis as Qiddekel, one of the four
"heads" Into which the river of Eden
was parted. The name by which we
know it does not exactly "mean" tiger,
for the correct way of putting it is
that both "tiger" and "Tigris" mean in
Persian swift as an arrow. "Euphrates"
la a Greek version of the Persian Hn
frmt which signifies "the good abound
ing" and represents the old Asiatic Bu
rnt or Purat, akin to our verb "pour."
Long Lrvnd Twinyeone.
The Tennyson family was noted far
Ms longevity. Miss Matilda Tennyson
died in bar ninety-ninth year; Charles
was seventy-one at the time ef ids
dsath; Mary, sevaaty-foar; sev
••ty-eight; Alfred, peat taareats. eigh
ty-three; Frederick, aiaety-eae; Arthur,
HW>tkk and Ce-
LKsrnrjr.
"Oh, I simply sdeee Meredith and
B;wwnlng and Henry Jamas," said the
gushing young person.
"So do I," said Little Binka. "They
are perfect!; delightful. It's like send
ing your mind to a gymnasium. Er—
do you read them hi the originalT"—
New York Times. : iißiduzit ne ula Fortniti li
BUCHHEIT BROTHERS
Siamo cositetti a vendere tutta la nostra fornitura consistente in tappeti, Letti, Springs, Materassi, Guancia.!!, Poltrone, e
tutto cio'clie riflette la Fornitura di una camera,
DOVENDO COSTRUIRE UN NUOVO LOCALE LASCIAMO L'ATIUALF, ABBIAMO CO VENUTO LA SUDDETTA LA VENDITA. SE DOVETE
ACQUISTARE DE6LI 060 HI E'VOSTRA CONVENIENZA COMPRARLI ORA.
I BUCHHEIT Brothers; WDum