| WE DO FINE | BOOK and JOB PRINTING J TRY US! | VOLUME II —No. 46 STEALING WAS GN A | SYSTEMATIC GIBER! Ernert Resident Believe Robbers Used Drug Five homes were robbed in Ernest early yesterday morning. It is re ported that in one house alone over $lOO in cash was taken, in other houses thieves succeeded in securing j jewelry of all kinds. The robberies were reported to the Indiana authori ties at once and .State police are said to be working on the case. The fact that none of these people heard any noise and did not awake uDtil about noon the next day wnich is very unusual for them to do, leads to the belief that drugs were used to keep thein asleep. A similar outrage took place in Ernest nearly six months ago, when out of two houses several trunks were taken away, and later found in the woods near Chambersville with out any contents. Judge Gives lint Sentences in Court Monday Judge S. J.; Telford sentenced John Palmer, who pleaded guilty to a charge of larceny, to an indeterminate stay in the Huntingdon reformatory. Clyde Shields, of Dixonville, who was charged with the larceny of chickens, was paroled. Charles Mortons and Mrs. Shettie Mortons, his wife, of Creekside, were each fined $5OO and sentenced to 90 days in the Allegheny County County Workhouse, for the illegal sale of liquor. The Mortons have three small children, including twins, ten months old, and they will be cared for at the Indiana County Home until the parents are released. Samnel Lucas Was Injured Samuel Lucas, who lives a short distance northeast of Indiana, is a patient in the Indiana hospital, as the result of falling from the roof of his barn to the ground on Monday afternoon. He sustained a compound fracture of the right ankle and it is thought that he is injured internally. Dr. Shaulis was called and later the ambu lance took the injured man to the hospital, where his condition is re ported as somewhat improved. Doctor Shoots An Intruder SOMERSET. Nov. 12 Mistaking an astendant of the county home for a burg lar, Dr. John S. Miller who lives near here, shot the man, whose name could not be learned early this morning as he was about to ascend the stairs in the Miller residence. The bullet entered the right breast. His condition is said to be serious. At the home this morning, i Dr. Henry Wilson would not give out the attendants name. Dr. Miller was unable to as- 1 certain how the man entered : his home. Advertise in the Patriot THE PA TRIOT Blame Employes For Tipple s Destruction | Disgruntled employes are said j to be blamed for the destruction of the big coal tipple at the Fos ter mine, Edri, Saturday evening. A rigid examination is being con ! ducted. An explosion shook the town shortly after dark. This was ' followed by the breaking out of | fire. The tipple was partially de ist roved by the explosion and the debris was soon a mass of flames. About an hour later the office of ! the Apollo company was burned. Miss Laura tlkin Is Bride In New York After twice postponing the uate . j of the wedding on account of the I illness and subsequent death of the bride s father, Justice John P. El- I kin. Miss Laura Elkin and Dr. I John P. Stewart, of Lock Haven. . were married in New York Satur day. The ceremony was performed by the pastor of "The Little Church j Around the Corner", in the S apartments of Mr. and Mrs. Wil liam H. Armstrong, brother-in law and sister of Miss Elkin. Just before his death Justice El-1 kiri purchased a handsome home for his daughter and expressed the wish that the wedding be sol di i-zed on the date which fell last Saturday. L " ' 9 Titta Ruffo and M'Cormick Not On ADGona, Friends Say Chicago, Nov. 10—Reports that Titta Ruffo, the famous baritone, was a passenger on the Ancona, were discredited today by his bro ther, Ettore Ruffo, a teacher at the Chicago Conservatory of Music, who said the singer had not ex pected to sail for America before December. It was also denied that Harold F. McCormick of the Internation al Harvester Company, was a pas senger. "We do not believe Mr. Mc- Cormick has left Europe," one Harvester official said, "because he has invariably on former visits preceded his sailing with a mes sage advising us of the fact, giv ing the name of the ship and the date of its arrival. No such word lias come." I Clerk Admits He Held Up Malls PITTSBURG, Nov. 11.— John M&llery, aged 58, a clerk in the postoffice at Meadville, today pleaded guilty to a charge of delay ing, detaining and embez zling letters sent through the mails, in the LTnited States district court. He was fined $lOO and costs and sentenced to 60 days imprisonment in the Crawford county jail. institute in Indiana WHi Be November 20th The association of principals and high school teachers of Indiana countp will hold an institute in the high school building Saturday morn ing, Nov. 20th. INDIANA, PA. SATURDAY .NOVEMBER 13, 1915 NEVADA HAS THREE-GUN TURRETS. Photo by American Press Association. The latest superdreadnaught to be completed for Uncle Sam is the greatest. It has three big guns in two of its turrets, a new departure for our ships, and anti-air craft guns. It is an oil burner. SCORES ARE KILLED IN TORNADO'S PATH GREAT BEND, Kan., Nov. 10— Between 50 and 60 people are be lieved to have been killed in a tor nado which swept this town this eve ning. The storm passed over the south part of the city, wreckiug the water works and electric light plant. The town is in darkness and confusion reigns. According to reports which reach ed the long-distance telephone office when wire communication was re-es tablished the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway station was de molished and half the houses of the city were wrecked. Three large flour mills and a unmber of gcain elevators were in the path of the storm. List of Letters Remaining uncalled for in the In diana office November 6, 1915: Salvatore Coltonici, Lawyer Bob (Trust Building), Mr. A. Boos | Mr. Thornton Douglas, Miss Clara Hall, James Iladden. Esq , Mrs. Andrew Harwich, John K. Hel rnan. Miss Lizzie B. Henry, Mrs. Annie Landman, Mr. James F. Loeehro. Master Clark McAllister, Mr. Lommasso Millre, Mr. C. Schenkemeyer, J. Q. Smith. Mr. Gard Tyger, Denny Thompson. Van J. Utimobry. When inquiring for letters in this list please state that they were advertised, giving date. HARRY W. FEE, P. M. Restaurant Changes Hands. J Weamer Brothers have purehas j c-d the McAfoos Cafe, formerly j owned by them, and are again I eohducting the business in the same courteous and up-to-date manner which made the place so nopular under their former man pgement. Rev. Clarke Has Resigned May Assist W J. Bryan Rev. .J. Calvitt Clarke, Pastor of the Christian Church, tendered his resignation, to take effect January 1, 191 G. The action on the part of the minister was totally unexpected and caused the greatest sorrow among the members of the congregation. Rev. Clarke is said to )>e among the prominent divines and orators throughout the United States who are being mentioned as members of the peace propaganda, against war, preparedness, and the fight against the liquor interests. Joseph Wehrle Ordained Priest Joseph J. Wehrle, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. N. Wehrle, of Punx sutawney, and a nephew of R. W. Wehrle, of Indiana, who has been a student for the last three years in the American College, Rome Italy, on October 28 was ordained to the holy priesthood in the areh basilica of St. John Latern Rome by his eminence, Cardinal Pom phill. vicar general of Pope Bene dict XY. Father Wehrle's first holy mass was celebrated in St. Peter's, Rome, at the tomb of St. Peter. Gibraltar Admits Parcel Post Goods Postmaster 11. W. Fee has recieved word from Washington that the pos tal administration of Gibraltar has ' agreed that admissable liquids, oils and pastes, salves and other matei ials easily liquidable may be sent by | parcel post from the United States to Gibraltar, providing such articles are packed in accordance with pro visions of paragraph 4, section 474 of the postal laws and regulations, ! as amended by order of the post- I master general No. 7884, March 13, 1914. Best stores advertise in The Patriot. 27 AMERICANS LOST ON TORPEDOED LINER ANCONA 370 Out of 542 On Board Ancona Safe; 4 Die After Landing. WASHINGTON, Nov. 10 —About twenty-seven Ameri cans are believed to have been lost with the torpedoed Italian liner Ancona, according to a cable to the state dtv partment tonight from Ambassador Page, at Rome. The ambassador said the probable victims of the tragedy were Alexader Patattivo, his wife and four children, cf New York, and Mrs. Frances Mascolo Lamura, and about twenty unnamed third-class passengers. Mrs. Cecilc L. Greil (first reported Grey) was named as the one known survivor among the passengers. 270 OUT OF 542 ON ANCONA LANDED IN TUNIS AND MALTA. 800 GUNS DESTROYED AT DEI [OEM PLANT; THE IK BALDWIN SHOP Believed German Agents Start' ed Fire in Eddysfone Pattern House Two great industrial plants sup plying munitions to the allies were damaged by fire yesterday. One of the machine shops of the Bethlehem Steel Company was destroyed at a loss of $1,500,000. Eight hundred guns, many of them ready for shipment, were burned, while hundreds of thous ands of dollars' worth of new ma chinery was ruined. Fire, believed to be of incendi ary origin, destroyed a pattern storehouse at the Eddystone plant of the Baldwin Locomotive works. The loss was estimated at $50,000 last night. M. Bennett & Sons Gets Two Road Contracts State Highway Commissioner Cunningham awarded contracts for state aid construction Thurs day as follows : Brick block pave ment in Marion Center, Indiana county, 4,504 feet, to M. Bennett & Sons, of Indiana, at $16,439.74. Waterbound macadam road, 5,808 feet, in Hickory township, near Eastbrook, Lawrence county, to M. Bennett & Sons, of Indiana, at $14,916.65. Small Fire At Clawson Boose Damages to the extent of $25.00 were caused by a fire at the Claw son House, corner of Sixth and Water streets, Monday morning. | The fire, which supposedly, start ed from an overheated gas stove, began in one of the girls' rooms on the third floor in the northeast wing. The flames went through the partition in a clothes closet, where the application of chemicals by the fire company soon exting uished it. Seepage three for official of the general election, Nov ember 2, 1915. CIRCULATION BOOKS OPEN TO ALL ADVERTISERS P Rome, Nov. 10— According to art official list, the survivors of tho Ancona included Ceclie Grell. 14-5 Italians, 10 Greeks and 1 Russian. It is asserted that 24 of the Anco na s passengers were naturalized Americans. It is not known who* ther they are among the victims. The owners of the Ancona liavo received advices that 220 of those aboard the Ancona have been landed at ports in Tunis and 50 at Malta. The Ancona had on board S3 lirst cabin passengers, 02 second cabin and 339 steerage. The numbered about 60, or a grand to* tal of 542. Survivors of the Ancona to tb<| number of 161 have been brought to Bizerta, Tunis, by a miner sweeper and a torpedo boat, a dis patch from that port says. Tliejj were taken to the hospital where they were aided by the consuls of Italy and France. Four of them died. Prince Cassano Zunica was ooi board the Ancona. He is the head of an old Neapolitan family resi dent in Rome. He is the second prince, and was born in Naples in 1855. The family was established in Italy in the sixteenth century* Barber Shop Robbed. Robbers forced an entrance into the barber shop of George Cost, on Philadelphia street, Sabbath nighty and appropriated all the owners toola* For some unknown reason the tool* of Wm. O'Hara were not touched* ND clue. A Careful Business j Man Is Careful of I His Stationery The Stationery That We Torn Out In Our Job Department Is the BEST IN TOWN. We STRIVE TO PLEASE Our Cus tomers. £ £ £ Before Ordering ! Your Printing Else-! where SEE US I The Patriot Poh. Co. FRVK CENTS