al Am Bs 1 0 em em Foout Beide ave svagied, sayy the Engl-| Banton’ Courier. om” PATTON PesLISHING co. Proprietors. | THURSDAY, MAY 2, 1995. | held, by foreigners especially, to pre- | clude the possibility of very cheap coal | in our ports. The extremely low | transportation rates on our railroads have, however, offset the long hauls, TERMS OF susschPTION. One copy, one yenr, in advance, - - Advertising rates made known upon ton f. o. b. Newport News and Nor- apphicauon. folk, Va., for coals coming over the &@ No papers diseontinoed until all ar raarages are paid, unless at the option of the publisher: Fintered at the Postoffice at Patton as second. classy mail matter, TIME OF ROLPING COURT. tat Monday of March | Lit Monday of Sept. Ist Monday of June. | Ist Monday of Taw, Weastern reads with a haal of nearly 400 miles. As the prices paid for the coal at the mines were then about 80 to 90 cents per ton, this left only $1.10 to $1.20 for hauling. These extraordinary figures created much cornment abroad, and brought orders to this country that had formerly gone to England. Equally low prices were taken for B.A. MeGongn Alabama coal f. 0. Mobile, but the haul is a little shorter and the railrond rate a little higher. We confess we considered $2aton f o. b. at our tide witer porte as being a minimum, below which it would be al- most impossible to go, nevertheless, GFFICIRS PresipexT Jv 1H We Hon. AV. Barker HOXOTARY J, Dart REGISTER AND Evora TrEasrRER-F,. H. Barker, Saeniry—-D. W. Coulter. Dervry Serire-Samuel Davis, DrsTRIcr ATTonsx EY -RB. 8 Murphy. Couxmsiesems-P. J. Dition, J. G. Lioyd, Geo, M. Wertz, COMM Re IoN Ei’ % CLERK John C. Gates, COUNTY BUPERINTEX DENY J, W., Leech. LU CnoNry Sepveyor-- Henry Reanlan, COUXTY AUnrrons—-Wm. J. Jones, W. Berry, James Datly.. $1.00 ‘and we have recorded a price of §2 per Chesapeake and Ohio and Norfolk and | b. Pensacola and Jory Commissioners. Anslem Weakland, Wm. Miller. ‘CORONER Dr, George Martin. Poor Drevcrons. it. More, ervilie, Raphiel Hile, BOROUGH OFFICERS, Burress W. J, Donnelly. Cov NeIL—-Lincoln =. Bell, prenent: 8M. Jha, H. CC Beek, RF. Wise. P. P. Youne, J. F. Bonner Bemoor Bonn. , Crowell, prostdent; GG, W. H. Sandford, treas- HH. FE. Barton, ramuel James. Som. - H. Carfman, soretary; arer; Dr. J.B Noonas Edminston, JUSTIOR OF THE PEACE. M . SREASC HER W. H. Sandford. Urner Harvey Patterson, Corrmcren—Jas, Mellon. mJ. R Cornelius a F. H. Kinkead, H. O. Winslow, - Will Li. Thom ps JUDGE OF ON A. Abbot. | ¥sPRrTOR—A braham divers C‘mrey or PorLicr-~Jas. McMullen. srazer C JOM MISHION Ro Sanne] Addie man, | » LAWS AGAINST TRUSTS. The following article which is taken from the New York World in regard to the law against trusts is very pointed and should be adhered to: “Society has no reason or desire to manacle co-operative combinations— whether labor unions or capitalist anions—until they are used as engines | of oppression and for the destruction | of competition. “But when, to ward off the evils of excessive competition in the labor market, labor unions try to monopalize _ that market for their members by acts of violence against non-union labor, the law and the whole power of the State interfere properly and effectively to restore order and protect. the people from any such menopoly. “Why cannot the law and the Gov- ‘ernment interfere as effectively when the capitalists of the dressed-beef combination or the Standard Oil Trast monopolize the markeis bry methods as contrary to law as those of a labor- anion riot, and even more injurious to the people at large? ‘Public sentiment and public inter-. -est are not less opposed to the opera- tions by which a greedy trust gets - control of the food or fael market than to the means by which desperate labor anions are too often tempted to deprive | unorganized labor of ite freedom and | right to work. Why is this opposition | #0 much less potent in curbing the | fortoer than the latter? Jowe E. Imi, Jax this record has recently been lowered. Good steam coals have recently been sold f. 0. b. Newport News at $1.80 per ton of 2,240 Ib., and Clearfield coal has been delivered f. 0. b. Philadelphia at $1.75 if not at $1.70 per ton, the haul being less than 300 miles. With coal delivered in railroad cars at the mines for from 60 to 70 cents a ton and railroad freights at 24 to 3 mills per ton-mile it would seem as if the very bottom had been reached. These rates leave no fair return to cap- ital invested in either mines or roads; it is not surprising, therofore, to find reductions being made in wages at some of the mines. On the other hand ‘this remarkably cheap fuel benefits | manufacturers, who are now quite active and are extending their mark- ets in all directions both abroad and at | home. Statistics of Bituminous Tornage. Week. 195 1804 | Beech Creek, Apri 074 #4124 £990 | Clearfield, via T. aC. Rit iis. 64.004 5 2 Sonim | 101,238 Broad T Top Apri 13,742 Cumberland, Rp 13. 56.98% Drakes Ohio April 5 730,381 STAN wie ee hontas, April 13 62,104 1,117,466 68,154 | Boon C. Coke, Apri} 18 Imp ahem DICKERS in DRT. jaz 64.3% Cambria. Jennie Driscoll et vir to William Reager, Lower Yoder; consideration | $500. 5 paugler Sinphovensent Company to L N. Dodkey, Spangler, $150. ” Cambria Iron company to James Seeley, West Taylor, $1. Anna 8 Haywood et vir to John D. Roberts, South Fork, $100. F. A. Eckenrodé et ux. lo Emma Mec- Reage, Hastings, $400. Sophia Wehn et vir to William ‘wil, Johnstown, $800. = John Stora ¢ to Anna Strits, Hastings, $650. Brigget Will et vir to Joseph J. Weber, Clearfield, $1,600. Henry 8, ‘Fisher to William Fisher, Roxbury, $250. Annie 8. Weaklen et vir to George | M. Baker, carroll, $640. Nancy crosby et vir to ilenry H. ' Keene, Johnstown, $1,000. 2,886 Sts 3 Fane» vores and Mining J a Por the apselal | neering g Journal, Of Interest to the Farmers Who Read the in in the vicinity of Patton the Couriesm | Patton “Courier.” ‘Nothing is gained on the farm by | rushing or fretting, but much is lost when the wear and tear on the system in considered. The man who knows and appreciates jast how and when to use the roller . and harrow for the best good of his farm crops is well abreast of the best thought of the age in the matters of soil tillage. Do not plow ground now if it is not dry. It will pay to wait a few days longer and have the soil fine and in good condition than to plow it too soon only to be compelled to do extra work trying to break the lumps. Geranium slips are easily rooted, and may be placed out of doors it any time after the first week in May. Ge- raniums are very attractive if psed in a bed coleus,in which a canna is grown in the centre, especially if in the form. of a circle. Do not attempt to fatten young pigs, but to develop bone and muscle in them and make them grow. Pigs that are made to grow rapidly when young will make good hogs to fatten. Ground wheat has a large. per cent. of protein for growth. So has wheat bran. The weeds and grass are now in fall sway on land that has not been plowed or properly attended to. A few days work on such flelds at this time will suve several week’s iabor next month. It will pay to cease all other work in order to destroy weeds when they are young. Fill in the vacancies in the rows of last year's strawberry plants with young planta, so as to have them send out runners and fill ap the gaps. The same applies to other varieties of small fruits. The rows should be regular and well filled in order to save space and utilize labor. Farmers should never dispove of | pare-bred stock to the butcher, as long as there aré other markets for them, and should never sell such stock at butcher's prices. A pure-bred animal (will always bring a fair price. As a rule, thorough-bred stock is remark- ably cheap, considering the advantages Record of Property Fought asd Sold 1 BtiDed by the use of such. One bushel of potatoes is very like another, and will sell for about the same, by whomever grown; but one . pound of butter may be worth 30 cents and another go begging at half the {price. There js a difference in the skill, knowledge and care exercised at every step and in every detail of the progress, from the stable to the con- sumer, and no one has his profita more in control than the dairyman. _- Grain in, so far as nutriment goes, quite as cheap as hay, and hay is even ' cheaper in proportion to its nutriment than is straw. But some portion of the less nutritious food has to be given ' with grain as a divisor, lest it should ‘heat in the stomach, and do injury ' rather than good. With. a very con- centrated ration, as with oil meat or cotton seed meal, geod bright straw is better as a divisor than is the best hay. “The Only” for 1896. The Covriza "RIZ& is pleased to annou “In the first place the use of bricks =~ William Miller et ux. to Excelsior ita clubbing srrangements with The and biundgeons to control men is a crime easily proved, and one with ‘building & Loan Association, Ferndale, $1,400 + | Pittsburg Post, the great home news- paper of Pennsylvania, and to persons which the machinery of the law has Herman Baumer, Jr., et ux. to Har- | who want the best daily or semi-weekly long been accustomed to deal vigor- ously and summarily. Bat in the case - of trusts we have to deal with the vey Williams, Johnstown $2 800. Cyrus Gates et ux. to Dessie Shell, Blandsburyg, $35. published in the city, we recom- ; paper | mend The Post. The Daily Post, a large eight-page | viesrious machinery and secret ‘“busi-| Cambria Iron company to Michael | paper, and The COURIER one year each nes” instrumentalities of corporations Tooney, conemaugh borough, §75. for $3.00. The price of The Post alone that have neither sculs to save, human, Charles F. Kress et ux. to Pennsyl- is §3.00. Send us your order at once characters to lose nor buman bodies to Vania Railroad cornpany, Johnstown, and get seven papers a week for the i suffer, no matter what they may do to | secure monopolies for themselves, $3,600. Elizabeth Holdfelder et al. to Penn- price you formerly paid for one. The Sunday Post, twenty pages against public policy and the law of sylvania Railroad Company, Jobns- | ‘every Sunday, containing as much the land. Moreover, the public utility of organized combinations of both labor and capital, within proper bounds, is unquestioned, and the new task of drawing a safe line of statutes between | | town, $2,218. Joshua P. Wissinger et ux. to Sarah | LA. Allenberger, Adamsburg, $1,200. Anton Urban et ux. to Thomas Wil. | | kinson, Portage township, $70. reading as any of the monthly maga- zines, and The COURIER one year each | for only $2.25. The Semi-weekly Post and The Cor- | RIEK one year each for only $1.50. Just i the proper use and the abuse of the, W.G. 8. Robertson et ux to John | think of it, The Post twice a week, and powers of business combinations is Weinzeirl, Summerhill townahip, $350. | yoar county paper for the price of one. . still in the experimental stage. “80 we see our courts aud adminis trations intent only on picking fatal | flaws in our anti-trust statutes, while | through the diversities of State corpo- | ration laws and the wide-open gaps | between Federal and State authority | the trust manipulators are covering all pernicious monopolies unrestrained by | any statute yet enacted or any At-| : Sorney-General yet placed in power. sy will be restrained, however, | by the demand of the pecple through the ballot-box for better laws, or for better administration of the laws we have. ‘Monopolies despoil and op- press all classes and debilitate the state.’ | And when the result incidentally from + the unrestrained power of vast capital in the hands of a grasping few they are as intolerable and as dangerous to our social fabric as when purposely “erented by law. The feudal nobility destroyed itself by abusing powers sind privileges conceded for the public good. We have, for the public good, conceded enormous powers and dan- ‘gerous privileges to corporations more prone than the castled barons of old to abuse them. But they are rhe creatures of the State, servants of the people, and can either be controlled or des- | erty et al.. Dean, $592, troyed ye the power that made them.” c HEAP COAL. - board at which onr chief bituminous | Enoch Short et ux. to Abraham Hutchison, Patton, §75. | Joseph Miller et ux. to John M. Miller, Carroll, $150. Catharine Schroth to Wallace Sher. bine, Wilmore, $5,850. R L. Bowers et al. to i Blandsburg, $38. branches of business. with odius and Mary C. Walters ut Pringle, South Park, Tia'r'et ux. to First "z, $250. ‘eorge Hecker, Thomas J. . M. E. church, Albert Faraba Carroll township, John H. Hess et hme, Coopersdale, § ‘8. A, Weimer ef ‘dward Bre- Nelson Mishler, Upper Yode F H. Kinkead to Vi .i Stinebiser, : Barr, $800. Frank A. Devereaux et al. ta Michael L. Murphy, Cambria township. $764, Urian Gounkin et. ux. to John T. Stuchull, Lower Yoder, : Chauncey Davis et ux to William H Barnhart, Roxbury, $250. Jacob Jacoby to Johnstown Passen- ger Railway Company, Stonycreek, §1. Kezia McCauley to John H. Dough- G. H. Ruck et ux. to Catharine Shar- baugh, Carroll, $100. The great distances from our sea- | i Albert Farabaugh to Catharine Noel, | Carroll, $100. - Cigars and fhoars | Write us for sample copies. For whooping cough Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is excellent. By using it freely the disease is deprived of all . dangerous consequences. There is no danger in giving the Remedy to babies, as it contains nothing injurious. 25 and ° | 50 cent. bottles for sale by City Drug Store, C'. E. Belcher, Prop. Try Truman’s coal. -87tf G. J. FITZPATRICK, RESTAURANT, dealer nn wll Kinde of Confectionery obser Menls served at all And Mager ad g n £1 dar b hria Hard ware Co Ya Stor Who is that man? Mgr. of the Patton Painting Co women TT § “Ww hy!" that’s Warren, . Houses, Signs and Carriages of every discription. ADVERTISING A SPECIALTY. Drop a ( Card To BOX 232, Patton, Pa., if you want a good job of work done Reference on all work right here in Patton and surroundings. Lent Market Report. benefit of the publidhes the the following market report, revised sach week: Batter, > cents pr pound. Cabbage, ‘ om. L A pplim, rsahestm, Turnip, ts, 4 TE, Ort Ww Fent, . Baek wheat, . z= « & Hye : wv ; Hay, HIE 0p “ dopen, whe [Sent LF # iD pervsimesy, Reuel Somerville, Attorney-at-La Patron, Office in the Good Building. J.P MCKENRICK - Attorney and Counselor at Law. EnpxsptrnG, Pa. Will attend 10 all hbosiness with prom ptness In Floss ard Adeiiiy, # the Mounts oe TAdamant Plaster. bushe] © P + Does not ruin woodwork by loading A. HOTEL BECK, H. C. BECK, Pro. wil Pomererniy so Gives a fiswt-class wall A moderate ex- pense. Is the best fire-resisting plaster. Always ready for use in any season. Dees not hold gases or disease germs Is the par excellence for patching. Can be papered as soon as dry. Is reconmended by all the leading | Architects who have used it in this country and England. will give you a solid wall. Of itself will not crack, shrink. Will not cleave off when used as di rected, even in case of leakage. : ‘One of the largest Hotels in Northern Cambria; | Conducted mn swell or Will give you a warm house. it with moisture. Admits of carpenters following plas- terers in a few days Is capable of every variety of finish. | 2 Used on the Palmer House, Good Banding, Hotel Beck, Hotel Patton, L. & 1. Co. office., Patton Opera, HG, ¥. E. church, and on more than one-half of the plastered houses and store rooms of Patton. Good Table and Bar Supplied with Choicest Brands of Liquors. : MODERN STYLE. _ Offiee ofostt : i Alin the Catholic Church St, Aungast- WM. DAVIS, ine Attorney For prices and informations, write A DA MANXT PLASTER CO., Pagon, Pa.. and Counselor at Law, -EBENSBURG, Pa. iprast nee promptly attended te All Ofer in Armory Hall toga AUGUST K. HUBER, I~ P- Young & Bro, STONE MASOY, Mellon Avenue, PATTON, PA, Ww Hioteude 3a) Retail Dealer in | FRESH MEAT OF ALL KINDS. [am prvpared to do all kinds of work in auy Hoe at remeora ble prices Cieitraets talien and ewtimates furnished when desired Satisfaction gonamnteed, Give me a call W. E. Probert, — ARTIRTIC Barber and Hair Dresser, IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. BI NEXT IIR TO PIRTOFVICE Etc. Lard, Bol gna . FIFTH AVENUE, Patton. Pa. | Go To W. H. SECHLER, DANIELSON & ENGBLAD'S Attorn, Y - at SHOE - SHOP ES 4th Ave, near R. R Station. ny Te . Shoes made to order and repairing ‘Lambna Lomnty, Pa. of all kinds done promptly. Prices . moderate. 18tf. [ aw. You Will Find It to Your Advantage to buv at QUINN’S, Clinton St., Oil Cloths, Lace Curtains, Carpet as Johnstown, Carpets, Matt tings, Rugs, low as 20 cts Per yard, a pair. Dr. S. W. Worrell, PATTON, ( seneral Surgery AND - THE EYE A SPECIA PA. kinds. of all IY. Lock Box 35. | | 1 OF PATTON. Tals and Banks received upon The largest assortment of Dress Goods mn the city. Ladies Coats and Wraps. Millinery Good measure, lowest prices. JAMES QUINN, JONG TOWN P The Popular H OUSE of PATTO FirstNation’ Bank Patton, Cambria Co, | CAPITAL PAID UP, $50,000.00. Aencants of ( ‘orporations, Firms, Indi ibe post fn? | key s consistent with safe and conser : cama Rekate for sale for 31} th { Hew, Foewlen Drafts pryovle in i ction of the (3d W Ls ve! i AN SN hi 1ene WEN haveoar promptisnd petsanal ak ention. Intervat pata on time depoutia, Wu. H. Sa tA E. ParTOoN President. |B. L. GEORGE, ATTORNEY - AT - LA Linoleums, Lace Curtains at 50 cts. Room No. 3, GOOD BUILDING. A LANTZ, - Dealer in Wines, Liquors, Beer. Etc. Phoeniy BrewinG (Co.'s Beer. Flasks, Corks, Jugs. Ete. HastingS, Penna. Two Papers For Only$ THE COURIER is pleased to announce its clubbing arange- ments with The Pittsburg Post the great home newspaper of Pennsylvania, and to persons who want the best: Ste or -. semi-weekiy paper published - in the city, we recommend The The DAILY POST, paper; and a large eight. THE COURIER tne year anh for 83.00. The ond of The - ; Poat alone is £3.00. Send us Your « order at on wo and Reed vey en papers a week for the prive OI. : you forme rly paid for or The SUNDAY POST, LT twenty poy PY containing as mu h re Spin as any of the monthly magn- zine, and yas COURIER one year each for only $2.23 The Semi- na Posi, THE OU} R BR -. opened in the County. An ‘terns alsa just opened. 5C.; me just received. 1k ill. Il in per cond : of 1ID1HISEe At Ju st think of Hy Post twice a wee Kk. your county paper + the price of one. | 3 ite us. sample 38 Park Row, : mailed to you, New Y ork C copies “LADIES Finest line of Percales, Shirtings and Illumine Checks “NIE 0 Children’s Gauze underwear 50 Ladies’ ribbed un Men's balbriggan 25c. former price soc. The best q ‘ities for the money ever offered. “and In Shoes I have special argains for the ladies, 99 cents. - HOSE Good bargains at 10, 12, 15 and Burerick Patterns, Latest Styles. Corme and See Goods. SU BSCRIBE NOW We will send to any address ds fy City ) assortment of Silk Wast . GOO D. rive prety GEO. S K WEEKLY PR vesting, up-to-date Republican National « 1cted to instruct, entertain, every member AR eran family And The COURIEI R ONE YEAR FOR ONLY $1.28 Address all orders to The COURIER. Send vour name and address to New York Weekly Press, sample copy will be and a T L- Fg
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers