WiLL Thom Patton Courier. . PATTON roBLISHING co., Proprietors. 2% THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1 1994, aii reams of suBsCRIPTION. One copy, oné year, in advance, | (SR Advertsing tates made known ee] SNo papers discontinued anti all an varages are paid, unless at the option of the pubitsher, Entered it the Postoffice at Patton as second: _ clam mall matter, : TIME GF HOLDING COUNT. S Yet Montiny ce Meri ist Ist Monday of June J. 1st PRESIDENT JUDOE- “Frou. A. v, Barker. OTARY AND RECORDER. r y. A. MeGough. A er; DEPUTY SHERIFF —Sa Be Pavia DISTRICT ATTORXEY—R KE. M "Ph Lioyd; Co Sage Ee P. J. Dillon, wen's CLEex ~Join ©, Gatés. NTY SUPERINTENDENT]. W. Leech. ®TY SURvEYox-— Henry 8 Scanlan. nt AvprroRs-Wm. J. Jones, W, C. fg = Charon CRM J. Kidd, EJ. EEE Martin. Si oe7i2E, Sovse tins Lo 2% Bell, pr presftess |, SN. H. C. Beck P. Ww cmon. Box ro OC. Crowell, POCPMA ner; J.B, a HE Barton, Bemuel | Fdmi neton, JOSTICE oF THY, PEACEJesse E. Dale, Jas, ; M fon | rER—W. H. Sandford. A Patterson. Mellon. % n-Jas Assysmon. J, R. Hi. Rinkead img Jopar or ELECTION A. G. Abbot. TEF OF POLICE—Sam'l Jones Srmnr Cow ER Sami! Addleman, a tne, i. nh by BA TR 7 LARGE REGISTRATION. : In speaking of the registration of | : New York Oty and Chicago the Pitts- theless, it may be permitted to be | skeptical as to the claim which some; of the Chicago papers are building “upon it, of a population now in excess of New York's, “The registration of New York city | was, at latest. secount, a little over : be only 30,338, If this latter item has been figared up correctly, Chicago's x A an _. woted for school purposes in February last. Every voter should carefully asitis a question of vital interest to you as 14x payers and citizens of Pat- Patton, hardly two years old, as a borough, has as Ane a school building president: a. H. Sandford, treas- | 4, H. O. Winslow, Ellen M. Reed to 8. L. Reed, Ebens- burg, $300. W. H. Rosensteel, Jr., to Johnstown {Electric Light Company, Johustown, $8,518. Charles Anna to May Letts, Pion) a. Administrator of Samuel Ring to Lydia Reynolds, Adams, $1,600 Treasurer of Cambria county to John Fulton, Adems, $28. Edward Owens to FEbensburg and Blacklick Railroad Company, Cambria, | $575. Treasurer of Cambria county to John Pulton, Summerhill township, 1 §18. | Executor of Philip Gray to J. L.! | Spangler, trustee, $7,310. ‘Frank Powers to John Powers, ony | on township, $350. : Cambria Iron Company to Englebert Rockstroh, Johnstown, $400. Joseph Friedoff to Angust Weise, Johnstown, $300. Chest Creek IL. & I Company to F. |G Patton, Patton, $250. Milton A. Sherbine to Aron Sherbine, Summerhill borough, $100. da Adam Hammond to George Ham- mond, Allegheny township, $2,800. | Charles E. Troxell to George Hahn, | Reade, $30. | - Viola C. Shomo to Matthias Kovaler, | White, $100. | Matthias Kessler to Viola C. Shomo, Cres- | i ' Treasure of Cambria coonty to John | HH. Brown, Lower Yoder, $5. { John H. Brown to Elias Crissman, | ' Lower Yoder, $75. + J. P. Stattier to Hiram Shaffer, Sealp | Level, $2,100, Simon Murphy to Frederick Ho fock- | Yeager, Franklin, $350. Joseph A. Gray to Ann M. Gardner, i | Barr and Susquehanna, $2,350. Executor of Margaret Maguire to Edward Eberly, Loretto, $350. Edward Eberly to Jane Stephens, Loretto, $50. : The following marriage licenses were 'isstted by the Clerk of the Orphans’ Court for the week ending Thursday, October 35, 1804: ~Andy Hwaizsdos snd Mary Comer, Williash R. Stiffier, Jackson town- | |obip, and Henrietta May Oaks, Croyle. township. Jacob Kosiminakl and Barber Schma- | ; de, Johnstown. Wiliam A. Wissinger township, and Hulda M. Lewis, Dale. ship, Paulena Sernanni, Lilly. John Brown, West Taylor, and Min- Morrellville. . ¢ | nie Bagley, Fred J. Launbmire and Mamie A. Jobnstown. " | Llewellyn, _ Samuel Henry Heloel and Domicilla | Kring, Adams township. ro Richard Wilkson and Lisgle McMul- | sh aug Sou I | those pretty watch case openers, get one from your jeweler, or send to Phil- Jacod Bobak to John Baster, Patton, | Fo - h Stonycreek | Mike Colosum, Washington Aw. i Diarrhoea Remedy > | sufferer. Such cases are not unusual at | give permanent relief. . If you have not yet procured one of ~ and as thoroughly equipped for the proper education, healthfulness and | adelphia. They are furnished frve by comfort of our enildren as any town the Keystone Watch Case Company. in the State, outside of the citien. This | | Besides making a handsome charm for js owing to the cordial support of our | your chain, they save your fingernails school board by the people of Patton and knife-blades. The Keystone Com- in their untiring efforts to make the pany is the largest of ite kind in the Patton schools second to none. We world, and makes all kinds of cases, are proud of the spirit of progress from the low-priced nickle to the most shown by our people and their board expensive solid gold. Its great special- in this substantial evidence of Patton's ty is the Jas. Boss filled case. Jas. enterprise and progress and believe Boss invented and made the first filled the voters of Patton should and will case in 1850, and many of the cases - give the board a unanimous vote on | then made and worn since are still in- the resubmitted loan question on tact. Later the Boss patents passed . Tuesday next as an evidence of their into the bands of the Keystone Watch | ‘appreciation of their efforts in behalf | Case Company, which has the sole : of the education of our children. right to make these cass. Boss cases DOES HIS MEAN YOU? ' are known to all jewelers as the stand- Our local are of vastly more | 2 after which all other filled cases im Re Taig than national or | are patterned. All Keystone cases, ’ port and it is the duty of ‘Boss cases included, have the far aie quasions, to fally fuss Sone pullout bow ve ring. every voit i i i y oo Rites | the only bow that is securely fastened affairs. Do not allow yourselves to be | the case, and can only be had on misled by others in matters of such im- | | pases made by this Company. It pre- . portance to yourself and to your children. There are to be found in| every community persons who aritag- . ~~ onise and are at enmity with of any kind, and instead of using their inlvense tu butld up and advance the linjury 'by dropping. The cases are handled by all jewelers, ss the Com- pany itself does not retail. A full line of blankets and comforts | at P. 8. Co. It is world, whether that be art, cookery, vents loss of the watch by theft and OF Htouit so lie Fursacks Who Resa fa | When a howe is dolsig no work i$! shold receive less gmin and given miore hay. There is’ no time in the year, however, when a horse should | ; not be given exercise in some manner. | Winter is the wet season and at times | water, snow and slush render farm operations at the barn very disagree- able. Ditching is sow in order, and it | dhould be done early, thus escaping’ mud and dampness, as well as colds ‘and disease. The cost of treating pear, plum and! cherry tress, to protect them against disease, is estimated at leas than one- | tenth of a cent per tree, but the profit ; ion a thousand trees resulting from ~ —DEALER IN the loans is estimated at $13. Flour and Peed, Hay, Grain, Lime, | Few eggs need be expected unless Etc., | hens are in a bright, healthy condition. | Vhite ground feed is most convenient- ‘ly kept in a trough, whole seeds should | be nesttered among clean straw or !litter, to compel them to exercise. | This will osoally do away with egg | ig. fouiiel pulling, eb d | kept from frost where they stand by | ' making a rude tent of cotton cloth | over them, and thus prolong the season | ! of this useful vegetable. The old wagon | { enver of heavy cotton duck found on’ ‘er many trock farms will: come in handy here. Cover only at night. : Those who kept young stock alive’ { through the winter on rough fodder for the sake of the growth they will Dealer in make next sunmer should be able to! Musical Instruments ste that the summer’s growth could added just as well a ll os Tie Seis, ay usta with a large the animals had been kept growing ;all winter. You carnot starve a young ‘animal and make it up after wards. All ‘wezsds are hsdy; and some of them are not killed by light frosts. ‘They should be cat down before the seeds are dry, or matured. Within the’ | paxt ten days much of the work of the spring will depend upon how much work has been done on weeds in that time, Srdvery Say Sow puts the weed Wage sot Dealer in FRESH He - OF ALL KINDS, Bologna, Lard, Etc.| FIFTH AVENUE, Patton, Pa. SAM’L BOYCE, ( Successor to John Otto. | Prices the Lowest for CASH. a Anidiese R.R. Pepe JAS. W. HOY, The Popular large variety, and to rotate his crops to the best advan There he vse WATCHES, ‘three crops. The soil will be im-- : WARE, and proved when the same crop is not everything kept in a first-class store | | grown oftener than one year in five. of thiskind. Small fruits should be grown as weil’ VIOLIN, GUITAR and BANJO as grain and vegetables. : Notice of Election. Notice is hereby given that an Election will be held in Patton Bor- | ‘ough on November 8, 1804, for the purpose of obtaining the consent of the Electors of said district to an increase | of debt by the School Board of said | | school district, for the purpose of erect- | ing and farnishing a new school baild- ing in said district and set forth the following statement in compliance with the Acts of Assembly in such case . made and provided. The amount of taxable property in| said district: at last annual assessment, $211,110. The amount of existing indebted- | mem, 100. The of Hie: po in , SHOT GUNS and Some ens SERRE of the increase, 474-100 | A paper, brass per cent. of present valuation. Debt | nickle- shells, wads primers, | to be incurred for the purpose of | a: re crng nd. fering new. whol hun CLOCKS, Harder S Gun Works, NEW GUNS. i i Wo BATHING 8 pars of Sok Wasnt RT Ta 1804 mn ni, | (0, Wikon, we yoni he cured "| ER MACHINE parts ts | 0 Sh diario. of lang sanding 2 Drammen. whet + pest MADER'S oN WORKS, Surpbies That sus have ben So the CLEARFIELD, PA. with this remedy. In many instances only one or two doses are required to It can always be depended upon. When reduced. “with water it is pleasant to take. For ‘sale at C. E. Belcher's City Drug Store. s What Prostrutes. Women. j It is almost impossible to name an age at which every woman is at her | ' best, writes Rebecca Harding Davis in: reply to the question, “At What Age is a woman at Her Best?’ in the November Ladies’ Home Journal. If you examine, indeed, into the ef- | fect of a forced mental growth upon her body, youn may write tomes. iE A witty French woman, who was here last winter, saw one side of that ‘subject. “Ah no!” she sighed. ‘We women in Paris do not grapple with such grave studies aa you do in Amer- ica. We do not cooperate; we have no public virtues. Bat,’ with a shrug, “neither have we nerve prostration?’ The only general assertion which oni: can safely make is that every ‘woman is at her best in body and mind at the age when she is most fully occupied with her true work in the PALMER HOUSE, Corner Magee and Fifth Aves. Headquarters for commer- cial men. The largest and finest hotel in this section. Equipped with all modern conveniences. first-class. Fine bar in nection. Livery, Ete. $2.00 per day. J. M. ROBINSON, Proprietor. | con- Rates PP | ecturing or child-bearing, provided that she goes to it simply and humbly. 1618 Hot, thelr WOE think Jrostztes ihe the | nerves of women or vulgarises their | natures. It is the incessant squab- bling and posing and boasting about ' their work. i : al I | - 4 quality. A few hills of late tomatoes can be’ Store on Beach Avenue, near. EEE OPTICTAN, and I prices. Strings and all kinds of small musi-' = will be kept constantly on Sond cose hats, ‘caps ain ca ogame, beim bag, & Revolvers at §1. Soll aliens | ose. Everything io ~ After a severe trial at the hands of the ‘Merchantile Ww orld, and a more severe trial at the hands of the people in ‘and around Patton where our goods have been measured and | balanced on the most perfect scale of all scales, which is ‘GOOD JUDGEMENT, our prices have been pronounced 'by the best Judges to be of the very LOWEST and in the interest of the purchaser in every instance, and what is more ‘of interest to our patroms, is, that we intend to keep a larger | stock than we ever had and at lower prices. DOW NED by HARD TIMES, but we will always be in FRONT for a complete stock. Just think CANDEE MEN’S | RUBBERS 3 at 535 cents in SANDALS, Self-Acting Sandals land Clog’s TLadies' Rubbers just as cheap according to ’ The most interesting news is about our * ~~ MERCHANT- THOM E stablishment. We have rue for making o with the large firm of WANATIAKER & BROWN, W here you get your Suit or C Jvercoat for from $10 to $15 cheaper for better material than you would get at the WOULD-BE-TAILORS. Come and see our samples and Our work, material, quality and ft are guaranteed. We e have cals fiéreised our Stock of Shoes ‘and the prices are reduced so that you can get a first-class. Shoe for nearly the same as a 3 grade. For a complete stock of all goods and for low prices go to Koller & Co., Patton, Pa. SILVER- | ‘Next Door to Bank. The Cambria Hardware Co. ATTON, PA. After some weeks of hard work we now have the Store fixed up. : New Goods Coming in Daily. We can show you the finest stock of Hardware in the County, : The cold weather will remind you that you peed a new @ ‘We have just put in a fine stack of = HEATING and ‘COOKING STOVES. Come in and look at them even if you do not want to buy. Every person in Northern Cambria ‘county is heading towards the Mam- moth store of ‘Geo. S. Good's mn Patton. where you can buy the finest line of GENERAL -- MERCHANDISE that was ever handled in any one store in the whole county. * DRY GOODS, BOOTS AND SHOES, GROCERS, And everything kept in a first-class general store. We make a specialty of the best grades of FLOUR, - FEED, - HAY, - GRAIN, - A large assortment of Carpets, Oil Cloth, Matting, Etc., kept on hand, also Queenswre, Dishes, Fiuare, and Shelf Hardware No truble to show goods. and look around. GEO. S. cooD, : Patton, Pa. “ETC. Come i in We will not be
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