fj You can afford to ride a Motorcycle as the cost of "gas" and oil is less than one fourth cent per mile cheaper than walking any speed or distance you wish to go. CJ Come in and learn why the Motorcycle is the cheapest known way to travel. {J We have one to suit your pocket-book. INDIANACYCLE CO. PENNSYLVANIA NEWSJ BRIEF interesting Items From All Sec tions ot the State. A roiling log killed Lawrence Deib ler, near Curtin. Mrs. James Arter killed a snake in her kitchen at Sunbury. Altoona will take a referendum vote on more stringent Sunday closing. Accused of deserting the navy, Ray mond jiuuiffec. j>i Enola. was arrested. of Eleven Counties To Celebrate Plank Victories and Dedicate New State Flag \ » . .•, «. TO-'CELEBRATE the Insertion of woman suffrage planks in the national party platforms, to dedicate and raise the- new suffrage state flag for the first time and to feast and make joyous generally, 800 suffragists from 11 -counties will gather July 7. at "Suanlindar," the farm of Mrs. E. E. Kiernan, fourth vice president of the Pennsyl vania Woman Suffrage Association, in an all-day rally. Among Mrs. Kiernan's guests will be the most widely known suffragists of the state and scores of the most ardent workers in the suffrage cause. En route to and irom "Suanlindar" numerous automobile parties will stop at towns and villages, make speeches and distribute literature specially prepared for their itineraries. The following counties will be represented by large delegations: Somerset, Bedford, Blair, Cambria, Indiana, Jefferson, Clearfield, Huntingdon, Westmoreland. Fayette, and Franklin. Shown herewith are - Upper left —"Suanlindar." the rally center. Upper right—Mrs. George B. Orlady, state suffrage president Middle left—Mrs. J. O. Miller, Allegheny county leader. Middle right—Mrs. J. E. Du- Bois. Clearfield county president, and her children. Lower left —Mrs. R. E. Umbel, head of Fayette county suf iffagists. Lower center —Mrs. Kiernan. rally hostess. Lower right—Miss Jane E. Leonard, preceptress of Indiana "State Normal, and head of Indiana county suffragists. Frank Templine, Shamokin, a satety inspector, was killed in a mine at Sha mokin. Many Pennsy shopmen at Altoona have volunteered for train service in I case of a strike. Mount Holly, Cumberland county, is planning old home week for this, its centennial year. George Thomas was run down by a jitney bus at Shenandoah and prob ably fatally injured. Flag decorations on the Carlisle court house blew into the clock and tied up the works. The South Bethlehem school board has raised the salaries of all its school teachers and janitors. At a sale of cows held by Colonel David Mac Feat, of Spring City, prices ranged from $7O to $ll6. John Francis, aged thirty, was kill ed by a fall of coal at the Pennsylva nia. colliery, .Mt. Carmel 'Professor Harvey O. Dietrich, or Kutztown, has been appointed superin tendent of schools at Kane. The rural free delivery men at Pennsburg and Red Hill are delivering the mail with automobiles. While automobile riding, John Hall, sixty-four years old, of Ickesburg, fell dead in the car of heart failure. Lancaster county commissioners at last have decided to accept the pro visions of the mothers' pension act. Reading contributed $3544 on tuber culosis day for the benefit of patients at the Neversink Mountain sanitarium. John Fry, of Kutztown, was sent to jail at Allentown for four years and five months for abusing his daughter. Trackmen on the Catawissa division of the Reading railway have been granted an increase of one cent an hour. John Stout, arrested ten days ago at Allentown for selling base ball pool tickets, pleaded guilty and got a year in jail. Willis Baker and Ira Wise, mere boys, were arrested for trying to hold up and rob Abram Line in his store at Huntsdale. There is a movement among the 1200 Sons of Veterans in the Lehigh Valley to enlist as a body for service in Mexico. Samuel Quarrels, of Virginia, was killed in. a stationary engine accident in the Blllmeyer stone quarries, near Bainbridge. Governor Brumbaugh has Issued a death warrant for the electrocution of Jacob Miller, Philadelphia, in the week of July 17. Berks county constables have shot over 300 dogs thte month because their owners failed to pay license tax for the canines. Mrs. Mary Lawson, fifty years old, of Tamaqua, while on a visit to Shen andoah, died suddenly from a stroke of paralysis. Joseph Ugard, of yVarren, is missing. His motorboat, in which he was last seen, was found near Glade, on the Allegheny river. On account of the scarcity of labor, the Thomas Iron company has been compelled to bank one of its furnaces at Hokendauqua. Word reached his father at Hereford that James A. Rausch, a private in the United States army, had been wounded along the Mexican border. Constable William O'Gorman, of Summit Hill, already announces his Democratic candidacy for sheriff of Carbon year. "Mrs. Frank" Smith,* or Hazieton, SSK ed the Hazieton police to find her hus band, who is missing, leaving her and eight children without support. The Potts town school board decided by a rote of four to three to discon ' tinue half sessions the first two and last two weeks of the school term. Michael Klbachubis' auto 'bus went over the bank along the State road near Nesquehoning, and, jumping from the machine, the owner broke a leg. . Thomas Kennedy, prominent among United Mine Workers erf the Haxle lon district, has been appointed a trus tee of the State hospital at Hazieton. The Berks county farm bureau will devote its greatest attention this sum mer to the organization of cow-testing associations and young farmers' clubs. Petitions are in circulation in But ler asking the borough council to sub mit the matter of applying for a third class charter to a vote of the people. Despondent, it is said, because of domestic troubles, W. L. Held, aged thirty-eight, chief of the Vandegrift Heights fire department, killed him self. Palmerton is contemplating the pur chasing of a new up-to-date fire engine, to cost $9OOO. Lacsford, too, has plac ed an order for such a modern ma chine. BettUng of the Lehigh & wIIRes- Barre Coal company workings under the borough of McAdoo affected many houses so that doors could not be closed. School chiddren of Reading and Berks county have sent through E. H. Knerr, a Reading banker, another con tribution of $lOO to the Belgian relief fund. Conductor Peter J. McConnell, sixty years ofld, of Mahanoy Plane, died while sitting chatting on the front porch of his home, a victim of heart failure. Brooding over a love affair at Car lisle, Marporie McGee, seventeen years old, attempted suicide by shooting with a revolver, but the bullet only grazed her head. John Brennan, of Farmertown, was felled by a highwayman with a black jack, but he quickly gained his feet and beat his assailant uptll he called for mercy. Hazieton council has given Patrol man Albert Koch three days in which to apologize to Chief of Police E. R. Crittenden for an insult or else get off the force. Rev. E. H. Reewan, pastor of the Unitarian Church of Our Father, Lan caster, has resigned to accept a call to i a newly organized Unitarian church at \ Trenton, N. J. j Leslie Jones, of Montrose, who en- i listed in the navy in January and de- \ serted from the battleship Arkansas at Brooklyn, June 7, has surrendered to j Hazieton police. i Six hundred men and bovs returned j B H The Woodstock VISIBLE Silent TYPEWIRTER No Money in Advance $lOO Machines for Only SIMPLE DURABLE EEEICIEMT ARTISTIC * 10 DAYS FREE TRIAL; EXPRESS PREPAID; PAYABLE $3 A MONTH BRANCH OFFICE OR THE Woodstock Typewriter COMPANY; IS IN. CARPENTER AVENUE Indiana, Pa. # To the Heart of Leisureland where woods are cool, streams alluring, vacations ideal. Be tween New York City (with Albany and Troy the gate ways) and LAKE GEORGE THE ADIRONDACKS LAKE CHAPLAIN THE NORTE AND WEST \ The logical route is "The Luxurious Way" Largest and most magnificent river steamships in the world DAILY SERVICE Send for free copy of beautiful "Searchlight Magazine" Hudson Navigation Com'y. Pier 32, North River New York " THE SEARCHLIGHT ROUTE^ to work at William Penn colliery, near Mahanoy City, after being on strike a week over an interpretation of the new eight-hour day. Half barrels of beer brought fifty cents and bottled beer went for ten cents a box, at Hazleton, when Con stable William Campbell sold the ef fects of the Hotel Majestic. Easton officers are trying to run down a man who poisoned twenty-five fancy chickens belonging to J. Martin Rausch and then, several days later, poisoned Mr. Rausch's three cows. Damage estimated at $lOO,OOO has already been done to property in West Scranton bv the surface disturbances over the Oxford mine workings, and twenty-five families had to move out. A Carbon county jury awarded Mrs. Elizabeth Farley, near Bowmanstown, $17.73 in her suit against Moses Straup, a neighbor, for half the ex penses of a fence between their farms. In a long message to council, Con troller Horn, of Easton, states that the city's tax rate, which 1b the lowest in Pennsylvania, should be increased to meet improvements demanded by the public. Catasauqua has been choeen as the place for holding the next annual con vention of the Pour-County Firemen's association. Robert -Montgomery, .of Catasauqua, as elected president ot tne association. The commissioners of Northampton county have decided to present to the Bucks County Historical society the gallows used in Northampton county for a number of years and loaned to other counties. The Carpenter Steel works, Reading Iron company, Consumers' Gas com pany and Curtis & Jones company, Reading, will pay the salaries of em ployes while they are serving at the front. Dr. Walter J. Cathrall, of South Bethlehem, a former surgeon in the United States army, after service in the Philippines, has been asked by the government to respond to a call for service in Mexico. Convicted of firing four shots at fifteen-year-old Mary Castronorto be cause she refused to marry him, Ml* chael Astono, of Easton, was sentenc ed by Judge McKeen to serve two and a half years in prison. H. B. Hagy, of Reading, haa return ed from Kansas City, Mo., where he disposed of the Kansas City Bolt and Nut works for $500,000. This proper ty belonged to the estate of the late J. .H._Sternb§rglLJ2f Reading. f " Continued on page 3