ONLY BI LINGUAL i-AFKK BETWEEN NEW YORK AND CHICAGO VOLUME II —No. 26 300 WILL 1 GRADUATE Largest Class in History of Indiana Normal School PROGRAM FOR WEEK Commencement week plans at the Indiana Normal school have been completed and new features added to the ciosing festivities. The utatc board began its work Wednesday with hundreds of seniors and juniors taking the annual tests. Commencement ceremonies proper start Siturday evening'with a free concert in the Chapel by the mem bers of the Madrigal club and the graduates from the Conservatory of Music. Dr. Hinitt, president of Washing ton arid Jefferson college will deliver tho baccalaureate sermon to the sen iors in the Presbyterian church to morrow at 11 o'clock. There will be vesper services on the campus in the evening at ' 30. The annual baseball game between the faculty and the seniors will be played on the athletic field Monday afternoon at 3:30 and the commence ment concert will be given in the school chapel that evening at 6 o'clock. Tuesday will be a busy day. The meeting of the Alumni association will be held in the morning at 10 o'clock; and in the afternoon at 4 o'clock the senior pageant will Fie given on the east campus. This will be one of the most interesting fea tures of the week and as more than 300 persons will take part in it. Following a procession, events in local history will be portrayed in costume, and following that there will .be a series of forest scenes which will prove interesting. The members of the class and other students who take part in this part of the cere monies have been working hard for several weeks to perfect the enter tainment. The annual alumni banquet and \ dance will be held Tuesday evening. Wednesday morning a class of 300 the largest in the history of the school, will be graduated. The cer emonies of the week close with the commencement dinner at 12:30 o'clock. Members of the classes of '9O, 95 aud 05 will hold reunions next week. J. Lytle Smith Honored J. Lytle Smith, of Leonard, N. D. a brother of the late Samuel A. and Frank M. Smith, editors of the Messenger, has been elected Com mander of the Department of North Dakota, Grand army of the Repub lic, with headquarters at Jamestown. N. D. In his salutatory he says, ••'ihe great honor coming to me un expectedly and unsolicited, 1 hold in higher appreciation than any other recognization that could have been bestowed. It is an expression ihat cannot be mistaken and there can be nothing added and I sincerely trust that I may be able during my occu pancy of this high office to justify tke confidence you have reposed in me." RIOTS IN LONDON FOLLOW ZEPPELIN ATTACK. Photo by American Press Association. There were numerous anti-Teuton riots in London after the Lusitania disaster and tiie more recent Zeppelin at tack over the capital. Women and children are seen here wrecking property of a German shopkeeper. Thieves Use Brags !• Blacklick Robbery! I Cutting a pane of glass from a j window in the home of John Kokon. of Blacklick last Saturday night, thieves entered the building, drug ged the members of the family and ! rifled the house and the Kokon store | which adjoins the dwelling. They; secured $lOO in cash and a quantity ! of clothing, escaping before the: members of the family recovered' fiom the effects of the drug admin- j istered to them. There is no clue. I This is the second bold robbery in the Blacklick region in the past week and the residents of that vici nity declare they should have police protection. The heads of families are arming themselves and night prowling in that neighborhood lias | become an unsafe diversion. KILLED BY A FALLING TRIE ; Henry Frank, oi Green Township Met Death Monday Henry Fronk, aged about 21 years unmarried was struck on the head by a falliug limb of a tree about 4 o'- clock Monday afternoon. His skull 1 was crushed and he is believed to have died instantly. The body was found a short time after the accident j occurred. Fronk lived in Lovejoy. but had been employed for some time in the lumber camp of Harvey Engel near this place. He was cutting away a rather large tree and many of the limbs were loose. No one saw the accident. Coroner Buterbaugh was summon- i ed and examined the body. Death was due to a fractured skull he said. The remains were shipped to Love joy late Monday and the funeral was! held on Wednesday. Name Camo In Honor . oi Gecaased Colons! The memory a Pittsburg man prominent in national guard circus of the state is to be honored in the selection of the name for the coming encampment of the second brig. -de. N. G. P., to be held here in August. The camp will be called Camp Col. Rutledge in honor of Col. Frank Rutledge, a veteran of the Spanish- American war and late commander of the Eighteenth regiment of Pitts burg. | SEVEN GO IS I SciieMers start on ew Sentence Harry WH! Complete Parole Seven prisoners were taken to the! ! penitentiary and workhouse last Tues- 1 j day morning by Deputy Sheriff Wil-i ! liani> and his assistants. Harry i Schetiier was sentenced to two years tin the Western penitentiary, lie has sx years yet to serve for break ing his parole on a 10 year sentence for larceny in Allegheny county. Be fore sentence both he and his wife pleaded guilty to a charge of jail breaking. When Mrs. Shettier was sentenced she was frenzied and raved like a mad woman, heaping curses upon Judge Telford and saying that she would "get'" him when she got out. Those taken to the workhouse were: Mrs. Harry Scheffler, 4 years; Samuel Galbreath, assault with in-; tent to commit rape, costs, $lOO fine and one year in work house Pete Stanich, carrying concealed weapons; costs. $25 fine and six mo. ! I to the workhouse. F. Marino charged with selling liquor without a license. Costs, and fine of $5OO and three months in the workhouse. Ceo. Bee and George Mulkosky selling liquor without a license. Esch ;to pay the cost of prosecution, fine i of $5OO and six mouths in the work house. On a charge of assault aud ! battery Bee was sentenced to three months in the workhouse: costs and a fine of $25. Joe Bennett sold liquor without a license and was fined $5OO and costs . and a side trip to the workhouse for 90 days. Annual Report of Y. G. A. The annual report of the Y'oung Men's Christian Association for th° year just closed shows that it has a membership of 380. The total at tendance at all religious meetings wis 4.790, while 752 persons attend ed the educational classes and 9.-->2 were present at the various entertain ments and social functions. The gymnasium classes were attended by 3.745 persons. Nearly 3,000 per sons used the swimming pool during the year, while the total attendance of the physical activities within the building was 12,214. <> INDIANA, PA. SATURDAY, JUNE 26 1915 . rochHSibf Mills r.oupfo M rtied 56 Ys*rs. Ago Mr. ami Mrs. Samuel Calderwood, residing near Rochester Mills, celc j brated the s('lh anniversary of their 1 marriage at their home Wednesday. ! A large number of relatives and friends took part in the event. Mr. Calderwood is one of the best j known farmers in the' county. He ; was a soil of Andrew Calderwood. deceased and was born in County (Ty rone. Ireland, Jan. 15, 1834. The I family came to America in 1848, and ma e their way to the forests of this county a few years later. The par ents were healthy and industrious and soon had a fertile plot cleared from the woods in Canoe township. ; Samuel, the youngest son remained under the parental roof until his j marriage June 23, 1809, with Eliza- ; beth Shields, daughter of George j I Shields. She is a native of the j I , I county and was born in Canoe town ship April 2ti, 1842. They are the j < parents of eight children, three of! whom are living and were at the cel . ebration Wednesday. They are Wil- j liam W.. Robert Timeon and Walter j ! Scott Calderwood. Mr. and Mrs. Calderwood are j members of the Rockbridge Presby-1 : rerian church and have worshipped j with that congregation for many I vears. * No Pardon for Helen Boyle I I The board of pardons has refused to grant a pardon for Helen Boyle, who assisted in the kidnapping of Willie Whitla from his home in Sharon in 1908 and is serving a 25- year sentence in the Western peni- ! tentiarv, her husband getting a life I sentence. Lieutennaut Gov. Frank B. Mc- Clain said that the board was weary of being burdened with criminal | * cases involving more points of law than reason for invoking the high power of clemency invested iu that tribunal. • -We are not going to be a board of general delivery for con firmed criminals. That may as well be understood here and now." he de clared. Fire Near Marian Center Eire totally destroped the dwelling' of J. Scott Lightc-ap, near Marion ( enter on Friday. The building was insured for $BOO in the Patrons' Mu tual. Lemberg Conquerers Begin Warsaw Drive Berlin Clamors for Another Dash on the French Capital Warsaw First; Then Paris LONDON. June 24. —The Russians are still retreat ing in the east; the Austro-Gennans are firmly established at Lemberg and have shown no sign of ceasing their offen sive. The battle of the Dniester, to the south of the city, is not yet over, but, according to Berlin, Gen. Linsingen has crossed the river, a fact which presages another Rus sian defeat. c No liquor Allowod in tiie N. G. P. Camps Captains of the various companies of the N. G. P. have received copies of the general camp orders from Adjt. Gen. Thomas J. Stewart, liar risburg.in which it is announced that the use or sale ir camp of in toxicating and malt liquors is prohib ited except for medicinal purposes, and "the fullest co-operation on the part of all officers is expected in the enforcement of the camp regula , tion." I The anti- saloon order applies to every camp in the state. Arrange- ; ments for the Second brigade camp which will be held litre Aug. 7 to 14 , are also given in detail. Nineteen Graduate from Model A class of nineteen was graduated from the Model School Friday after • noon. The exercises were held in ! the Normal Chapel, all of the grades | participating. The first part of the program by j | the primary department consisted of j attractive songs,, dances and an in teresting dramatization, "Mistress Mary s Rosebush." I Later the Ninth grade, assisted by | the Intermediate department present- 1 |ed - The Golden Goose," a folk lore tale in dramatic form. This very at tractive little play wan given with ex cellent effect. The program ended with the presentation of diplomas and several groups of Fieautiful songs. One of the interested spectators was Mrs. Horace Carmalt, a member of the Board.of Education. Pittsburg and a former instructor at the Noi ' mal. Tbe Fourth at Heilwood The fourth of July will be celebra ted at Heilwood with a big picnic on the 3d and sth in the Penn Man park. Dancing, baseball, lawn ten nis. merry-go-round and other games and amusements will be provided for both young and old. and the us ual good time will be enjoyed by all who attend. Governor Cots Indiana Hospital Appropriation The appropriation for the Indiana hospital which was recommended by the joint legislative committee at $14,000 has has lieen cut $l,OOO by Governor Brumbaugh in his effort to keep within the limits. ALL THE NEWS FOB ALL THE PEOPLE HAVE VOL SUBSCRIBED? " A dispatch to the Central News says that the German*, following tin ir victory in Gain a have already made preparations for another at tempt to capture Warsaw, Wild rejoicing is going on in Ber lin over the victory and the people are asking for another campaign to the City of Paris. Britain Predicts Fall or Paris NEW YORK, June 24.—Wade Chance, a British hanker arrived to day on the Adriatic to purchase war supplies lor the British aruiv. "Paris will he heseiged by mid summer," said Mr. Chance, "and 1 ; would not he surprised to see it fall before winter is on. The United States should wake up before the Kaiser is be vend control and ham mering at the gates here. Germany has maintained a reserve of 4,000,000 ! cannon shells all during the war." Going to Central America Andrew Stewart, son of Mr. and Mrs. George R. Stewart, of Pasadena iCal., who recently completed his senior year at Princeton University, is a guest at the Harry Wilson home on Church street. He leaves short ly for New York City," from which place he will sail with a friend for points in Central America. Killed in Ernest Mine Sam Marisco was struck by a motor in the Ernest mine Monday morning and fatally injured. The man was brought to Indiana but died before he reached the hospital. He was crushed between a motor and a mine car about 11 o'clock. Coroner H. B. Buterbaugh conducted an in vestigation, the verdict l>eing that he came to his death by accident. He leaves his parents and seven brothers land sisters. He was 18 years old. Indiana's New Industry The new local industry, the Mc- Creary Tire and Rubber Company is ready for business, and their product is already beirg marketed and bids fair to take its place with the big tire producers. Samples of the product are being shown m the windows of the Indiana Hardware Co. and are attracting much attention. FOR SALE—Corner lot in Chevy Chase, 65x150, for further informa tion, apply at tkk office. FTVK CENT?