WE DO FINE BOOK and JOB PRINTING 1 TRY US! | ▼wwWwvl • ▼wwwf ▼www▼www VOLUME IF—NO. 4 7 MllfflO 111 l 8E iiiji Y This evening in the first-aid hall at Lucerne Mines, the first-aid asso ciation will present Joseph Traraon tana, a miner of that place, their aignal service medal for saving Gal lentine Gil'opi, a fellow workman, from being electrocuted on Sept. 26. Gallopi was standing on a proj< c % jection high enough to allow his head to reach the roof of the mine and in the progress of his work his head be came fastened between the roof and the mine trolley wire, carrying SCO volts. He threw his head sideways and when he realized what plight he was in he became confused and tried to pull his head out, as any one might naturally do. The result being that he was shocked by the strong current of electricity. Tramontana, realizing the danger ous situation, pried Gallcpi away from the wire by some means or other and applied artificial respira tion immediately, continuing so for about three-quarters of an hour. This he did all alone, knowing that if he took time to call help, the man would be dead before assistance oould come. The cleer judgment and knowledge of the remedy so thoroughly is all that can be said why Gallopi is still a miner today. The medal the association is about to give Tramontana for his seavice is only given when the circumstances are above the usual run of rescues. This is the fourth medal so far given and the first that a Lucerne Mines First-Aid association has received. ■■■ Local Man is Held in Chicago. Chicago, 111., Nov. 18— J. B.Wil son, who says his home is in Indiana, . Pa., is being held in the central po- I lice station here on serious charges preferred by a girl, who, it is said, hails from the same place. Wilsou was arrested in the Pennsylvania sta tion, just as he descended from an eastern train. The plaintiff, a cotne \ ly young lady of about twenty-five summers, is employed by a big cor poration here and states that Mr. Wilson insulted her with obsc* ne proposals. Wilson is being held in default of bail for a hearing at a later date. Stewart Thompson Hurt by Cartridge Stewart Thompson was painfully but uot seriously injured Tuesday afternoon by the accidental discharge of a cartridge. Mr # Thompson was engaged in burning a quantity of pa per and the cartridge, which in some manner had found its way into the debris, was exploded by the extreme heat. The charge struck one of Mr. Thompson's hands and inflicted an ugly wound. It is not expected that there will be any serious results as he bad his injuries attended to at once by a physician. Man 1 iiie Licenses. Harry reace,Punxsutawney; Ethel J4. Shields, Renova. Charles Witmer. Johnstown; Celia Mardis, Blacklick. Harry M. Munshower, Rayne Carr e E. Beatty, Indiana. Yw Benjam n Hu.hes, Lo hvale; Bi r tha (Death use, Urey. THE PA TRIOT MILITIAMEN HAVE AERO FOR FIRST TIME. Photo by American Fh-esa Association. Hydroaeroplane just presented to nav at militia of New York for practice work. focal Minister Sailed for far-off RnssX Rev. Dr. Sfimuel G. Wilson, rf South Sixth street, sniied " hursday from New York city foi Russia, where he will have charge of the distribution of relief to the Armen ian refugees, uuder the direction cf the Armenian Atrocities Committee of the United States. Rev Wilson will be compelled to travel 8,000 miles by sea and land to reach his destination aud the journey will con sume a month. Having served as a missionary in Persia for a number of years Dr. Wilson is enabled to do effective work for the relief commis sion, as he is acquainted with the country and tne deplorable situation of the stricken people. New Station for Creekside ———— Creekside is to have a modern new railway station as the result of the efforts of the members of the Civic and Literary Club of that place. At a recent meeting it was decided to petition the Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsburgh railway company to pro vide a new station at Creekside. The petition was presented and granted. Assistant Supt, G. W. Bennett, of Indiana appeared before the club women at their last meeting and noti. ued them in person that his company will grant their petition for a new station. Homer City Coal Cim pany Buys Land £JThc Homer City Coal Co. has re cently purchased 30 acres of surface land about cue mile south of Homer City from the Tearing Run Coal Co. ! The land adjoins the Homer City Coal j Com j any's plant and will eventually j be used in building miners homes, j At present, it is announced, the land j may be used for farming by those employees of the company who live ' nearby. 4* Go d for Uniied Males on Minken Ancona Rome, Nov. 17. —lt was announc ed Tuesday by the admiralty that the Italian liner Ancona, which was sunk by a submarine, was carrying $BOO,- 000 in gold, tne ultimate destination ! of which was San Francisco. New Indiana Hnre Ke opens. The New Indiana House of this! dace reopened its doors to tht public n Monday after being olosed since ast Feb* u try. INDIANA, PA. SATURDAY ,NOVEMBER 20, 1915 Ira A. Myers Purchased Pennington Building Ira A. Myers, the Philadelphia street grocer, has purchased the buildng row occupied by E. A. Pen nington. The < onsideraUon is not given. Mr. Pennington expects to retire fr< m active business iu the near future and Mr. Myers will move his grocery store iiom ihe Rowe building to the new location, April 1, 1916. The purchase includes the entire building aud the ground and ! Mr. M yers expects to make extensive . improvements. Mi. Pennington has been in busi ness in Indiana for over 35 years and has been uniformly successful, He is one of Indiana's most substantial citizens; ever ready to talk of the advantages of his home town and to assist in any worthy enterprise. He has not decided on his future plans, following the closing out of his cloth ing and tailoring busianss. Burned in Accident In Mine At Colver Ebensburg, Nov. 16—John Salts. giver, miner, was painfully burned I and several other workmen narrowly escaped injury Saturday, when, it is claimed, they used a mud-cap cover ng for seven stick? of dynamite in attempting to sht down a rock in a room in the Colver mine of the Ebensburg Coal Co. After placing the mud-cap—only a slight covering of mud over the dynamite—th'y withdrew to what they thought a safe distance toward the main heading. The mud-cap was not sufficient to cover the flames. Penrose Ann tunces He Hill .seek Presidency San Antonio, Nov. 18—Boies Pen rose, United States Senator from Pennsplvauia, said here yesterday that he would be a candidate for the - Republican nomination for the presi dency in 1916, but refused to discuss his plans, beyond saying that he would make a formal announcement later. Mr. Penrose was in San An tanio, Texas, as one of the party es cort'ng the Liberty Bell from the Pacific coast to Philadelphia. fifty Gambl.ng Machines Are Destroyed. Greensburg, Pa., Nov. 18—Clerk I i of Courts James B. Gallagh- r de- j stroyed, by order of court, about 50 g mb ing machines confiseat d bur ng the last few weeks. Fatal iniury lor a Rossiter Miner. Andrew Adams, a well known mi ner of Rossiter, received injuries that | will doubtless result fatally, when he i was crushed beneath a fall of rock in the C. B. C. Corporation's mines at Rossiter, about 5 o'clock, Monday evening. He is now in the Adrian hospital, Punxsutawney. His head is badly crushed and death seems ! imminent, says the Punxsutawney I Spirit. Later—Mr. Adams died Wednes j day morning. A fracture of the skull j caused Mr. Adam's death. The de i ceased, about 52 years old. leaves his wife and several children He was one of the most popular and promi nent miners in that section. The funeral services were held yesterday. Hill Increase The Production oi Mines Johnstown, Pa., Nov 18—The output of the mine east of Cone maugh, operated by the Conemaugh Coal Mining company, will be in creased this winter, as there is a big demand for fuel from the new opera tion. All the coal mined there at present is being shipped to the Bos ton market. There are rumors that several new mines will be opened near here next spring. Assames New Position. Walter H. Jackson, of South Sixth street, who had been with the Key stone Printing company in Pittsburg, for the last two years, has entered the Pittsburg offices of the Para mount Pictures corporation. Mr. Jackson will have entire charge of the advertising a.id literary depart ments of the corporation. Next Years' Primary Llection. The ?916 primary election wil be held on Tuesday, May 17. At that time we will nominate delegates to the National Convention, Auditor General, State Treasurer, Judge of j the Superior Court, Congressman at- Large, Congressman, State Senator and Assemblyman. Negro Educator Dead Booker T. Washington, herd of the Tuskegee Institute, is dead at Tuskegee, Ala., aged 56. He had been ill for several months in New ; York and died a few h >uis af;er ar- j riving in Tuskegee. Death was due to ai teiio selerosis. MONASTIR CAPTURED; ALLIES IMPERILED French Claim Big Victory. LONDON, NOV. 18 —The Bulgarians have occupied Mon astic according to a dispatch from Saloniki tonight. Kursumlya. about 30 miles southeast of Nisli and ap proximately the same distance north ol Pristina, has been occupied by the German forces pressing southward in Ser bia, the Berlin war office announced today. The Serbians iu abandoning the place left a number of cannon, while several hundred of them were captured. lei ft linn Bid Train J. M. Turner, aged 87 years, re siding at Turner on the Indiana Branch, one and one-naif miles from Blairsville, was struck by the 9:12 passenger train Wednesday morning and so seriously injured that he died a few minutes later. As was his custom, Mr. Turner left home to make one of his regular business trips to Indiana. The train being late, he decided to take the trolley and was just crossing over the railroad tracks when the train ap peared just a short distance away. The old gentleman was too confused to leave the tracks and before the engineer could bring the train to a stop he was struck and hurled a dis tance of about fifty feet. For many years Mr. Turner was vice president of the First National Bank of Blairsville. He was also engaged as a coal operator and was beloved by all his employees and was greatly esteemed by ail the peo ple of the community. He leaves two daughters, Miss Margaret Turner, at home, and Mrs. Archibald Collins, of Mount Vernon, 0., and one son, William h. Turner, of Blairsville. Creatore Takes Bride of Eighteen Years □ Providence, R. 1., Nov. 18—Giu seppe Cnatore, the famous bandmas ter, was married to Miss Rosini De Marinis, 18 years old, of New York, today. Immediatel}' after the service the party, including the father of the bride, went to Boston, where Crea tore is filling an engagement. Advertise in the Partriot. PRINTING HELP: BUSINESS Every man who made a SUCCESS OF BUSINESS was LAVISH WITH -• s PRINTER'S INK :::: We Do Printing The Patriot Pub. Co. CIRCULATION BOOKS OPEN TO ALL ADVERTISERS 1100 Wiles Into Serbia. | the occupation of Kursumlya marks an advance of nearly 100 miles into Serbia by the Teutonic forces, I ie city being about that distance south of the Danube. With the Bulgarians in possession of the gnater part of Southern Ser bia, all of the national domain that now remains to the Serbians is a com paratively narrow strip of territory along the Montenegrin and Albanian borders and cuiving westward along the Greek frontier. A striking victory of the French over the Bulgarians in one sector of the front in Southern Serbia is unof ficially reported through Paris. Italian Aeroplanes Chase Austro Invader. Rome, Nov. 18—Only one of the live bombs dropped yesterday by an Austrian aviator on Belluno, 51 miles north of Venice, exploded, it was announced Thursday. No ma terial damage was done and only three persons slightly injured. The enemy aeroplane was forced to flee to escape capture by three Italian aeroplanes which rose to attack it Deny that Crtlgfit Trains Are Guarded Nov. 18— Officials of the Baltimore & Ohio railroad deny that freight trains containing horses destined for the allies in the Europe an war have to be guarded. A rumor had been in circulation that many of the animals were being poisoned by German sympathizers, List of Letters Remaining uncalled for in the In diana office November 13, 1975; John Bart lo (two letters); Mr, Joe Buchanan. Miss Margaret Casey, H- L. Griffith, Mrs. S. S. Grumbling, Miss Virginia E. Heckert, C, W- Heath, Mrs. Henry W. Klein, Annie Liptak, Mrs. Nettie Lewis, Mr. Grant Long, Miss Alice Martin (tvyo letters) Mrs. Nan Muckle, Mrs. W. 8. Mc- Clatcbney, Mr. Nick Parreca, J. D. Ramsey, Mr. John Slater, Mr. Ralph Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Wig gins, Mr. William Wilson, H. G. Wilson, Jr., Morosan Demetrin. YV hen inquiring for letters is this list please state that they TN ere advertised, giving date lIARRY W. FEE. P. M, Best stores advertise in The Patriot. FIVE CENTS