PATTON ruBLINING co. Proprietary. THURSDAY, JULY 18, 1895. NEWSPAPER LAW DECISIONS. Subscribers who do not give express notice to the contrary are considered ax wish. i w Jenew thelr st Prion bscribem Agscontinuanee order the wer are the blishe¢r may con- BL “ send. thew until all pc Bi are pal 3 If subcribers from he or refuse 10 periodicals their they are 4 , they a have settled: "their bills and ordesd them a Tt subscribers BIOYE 10 vther Ja with- ou nform a mine former address, ig are hela 1d oie PO ris have decided that refust to 4 Ou icals from the office or a Ph nke to which respons We until hem uneatled Jor, is prima ols : evidence of intentional fra 6. If subscribers pa _. Avanos they are bound to give notice al the end of the time if they do not wish to continue taking it; other. wise the publishers is authoriized to send It and the the sutmeriber will be responsible until an ice, with ment of all arrear- ages. biel sre sent to the pub met en on cHuReH NOTICES. Carsovric—Father Marceilius, tor. every other Bunday at Sand 10a. m. Na | day school at 2 p. m, and vespers at 3 p. mn. METHODIST ErmscoralL—Rev. C. W. Wasson, pastor. Services ut 10:30 a. mw. and 7:30 p. m. nday school at 2p. m. Epworth League | at 6:9 p. m. Prayer meeting ¢ every Wednes | al at at 7:45 Local Time Table. May) Closes, 700 AM 0 2AM 310 PM v A A r P P. M. Train numbers marked “N” are Weorthbound and “8” southbound. Maripows Park. If you wish to spend a very cbjovilic day go to Mariposa Park, Berwinds- dale, Pa., and you will be satisfied. Every convenience possible are on the grounds. Hotel Atlantis, under the management of Jas. P. Roscoe, form: erly of DuBois, and a beautiful lake, a place for health and pleasure. Write for particulars. : ‘A. La PIERCE, Prop’r, Berwindsdale, Pa. Deacon and Hat. There onee was a good deacon fat, Whose poverty genius begat; He had a queer way : Mf wearing, Lord's day, Son fiy-paper up in his hat. And so, "twas not singular that This good deacon, solemn and fat, Found a dollar or more, © When collection was o'er, - Sticking ap in the crown of his hat. _—(Colambus Dispateh. s3tf Soda water At Hodgkin’s Try Truman’s coal.-87tf Say, have you tried Hodgkin's soda. water? Drink the ‘now summer y drink, Am: : ~ brosia. Lerch, the tailor, ‘Mahaffey, guaran- % fees a perfect fit.-68tf - Simon Lantzy of Garman’s Mills, spent Sundsy in Patton. } Jas. Allport came over from Hast- ings on business Monday. $0 OC. H Perry, of Chest Spiings, was | a visitor to Patton Tuesday. ng T. A. Unkefer, of Pittsburg, stopped | at the Palmer house Monday. . 4G. Ewing, of Pittsburg, registered 8 $e Commercial hotel Sutarday. - L. B. Drake, of Elmira, N. Y., was a guest at the Central hotel Monday. For binder twine go to The Cambria + Hardware company’s store, Patton.-4tf A. Bowman, of Salamanca, N. Y., “stopped st the Central hotel Tuesday. * If you wish to get cooled off stop in to Hodgkins drug store and get a drink of soda. J Burgess Anthony Anna, of Hastings, was a pleasant caller at the COURIER office Tuesday. / W. CO. Lingle, of Philipsburg, was in town the firet of the week looking ee ere. . Mrs. Steiner, of Philipsburg, is vis- iting her daughter, Mrs. W. H. Sand- ford on Paimer avenue. Before leaving your order for a spring suit of clothes call on Lerch, the tailor, Mahaffey, Pa.-68t{ Mrs. LL. Brown and daughter, - ghiizabeth, of Hastings, Were the guests of Mrs. E. C. Brown last y. Mr. Wm. Cramer and son" Patton, who have been visiting her parents at Pennville, returned home Tuesday, Annie Lambourn, who has vis: iting Miss Jennie Buck for the past " week, returned to her home at Nick- town Monday. At the last regular meeting of the ‘Cambria County Medical Society Dr. V. A. Murray, of this Place, was . elected a member. : Harvey Pyles is going about on ~ crutches having his right foot crushed in a log job on Curry run last week.— ** . Curwensville Review. Mrs. Robt. Larimer, who has been visiting at the home of R. McPherson the past week, returned to ber home | at Clearfield Saturday. Do not fail to see Dr. Elder's Museum of Anatomy to-day and to-morrow in the Arlington—grand display of life- | size figures—only two days. De Witt’s Colic and Cholera Cure - never disappoints, never fails to give | jrmediate relief. It cures just as sure ryote 4. C. WwW. Hoagie, ii | : a 3a PM Poston hours rom 7 A. A fo 3 Barmesboro, { hotel Friday. + Patton Monday. | one day this week. of Commercial hotel Saturday. and to-morrow in Arlington building. Admission 10 cents. 'urday from an extended visit to Fhila- : delphia and other points east. ‘man of New York, registered at the ! Palmer house the first of the week. ‘who have been visitingrelatives at |. | Philipsburg, returned home Saturday. | field Republican, accompanie ‘friends in Patton Saturday. | stop at the Blair house and yon will be | used all right. Accommodations ex- | : will go into retreat. ‘Brown, of Hastings, visited Superin. ‘ circus.” ‘recently from Atlantic City and says zen of Sylvis, Clearfield county was a : ww. w. | friends at week. While there Mr. : Pstton “Courier.” eg Bugs and other pests of the insect | | home quite a number of the speckled creation are supposed to have had s | | beauties. : Lt sorry time of it during the past severe ; : Rev. Pather Kittel, of Livetun, 30d winter, bat it will be the better part of tn ; | his brother, M. D. Kittel, Esq., of this wisdom to ) an out for the O. B. Straw is visiting his parents at | 51500 will take a trip to a A Tn The Ansonville this week. | summer taking their departure from bug crop never fails. Get your note heads and envelopes | New York about the 1st of August on. The apple trees in many sections are | at the COURIER office. ‘one of the ocean flyers. Cambria loaded down with fruit this season. To The Evening Gossip, of DuBois, has | Freeman. insure a salable crop the fruit should suspended publication, | The forty-second annual convention be thinned out. As the apples become M. Eckenrode, of Carrolitown, had of the grand lodge of the Independent larger there is a liability of the limbs | business in Patton Monday. | Order of Good Templars of Pennsyl- of the trees being broken if the fruit is Miss Olars Mears, ‘of Ebensburg, ousin was held in Johnstown, July 16, ' not reduced by trimming. visited Patton friends Monday. 7 and 18. About two hundred dele- Pawnee Bill's wild west show exhib. ates were present. ited at Philipsburg last Thursday. | The Pennsylvania railroad agency at Geo. L. Myerk, of Lewistown, Pa., it | herryaee Ho bests Sande om pas- | stopping in Patton for a few days. | senger and first-class gh pas- | 5 Drink Ambros. Bee the Museum. The trout season lias ended. Great weat her for gardens to get u there is in feeding them. It coste double the amount to put a pound of - gain on a pig one year old that it does to make the same increase on the one six months old. Thus the more rapidly Wm. Usher, of Philadelphia, stopped ya g mam they can be forced forward from the Ee | agent, vice I. G. Gorsuch, transferred. Sart fo Srosies 2 1 Se pros, H. Logan Weaver, of Free was | 4, een Oo 8 success in raising a guest at the Palmer Abin nbn E, Last week the Ebensburg steam taf | iy calves will depend upon good ery owned by the heirs of the late well. wat i and farnished | Sam’ Addleman came from Cur- Thomas Griffith. w id pastures 14 up h, was soll to James with dense shade for the protection of wensville to visit his family Monday. Darragh, of Pittsburg. It will not be the youn rd om nsecie. I. may County Superintendent J. W. Leech put in operation for some weeks as Mr. be necessary to Puild a dark shod into ‘and Herman Jones were here Monday. A Darragh will make some improvements : . ” which the calves may retreat. Build | D. W. Wise, of Mahaffey, visited his before starting up. Cambria Herald. |, mature stock will not molest the | son, B, F. Wise, of this place, on Mon. : : inmates. A curious behavior of crimson clover CLEARPTELD, Pa., July 16, 1895. 1.0 co was that it did well on some The Buffalo, Rochester and Pitts plots and refused to make a stand on burg Railway company will give two others. This is due to the time of low-priced excursions the latter part planting. Some sowed the seed as late of the present month, which no doubt ag September, which did not allow the ' will be taken advantage of by a great young plants a sufficent length of time many people from this section. On'to grow before winter. Those who | Saturday, July 27, the first excursion did not sucoeed should try the experi- will leave Clearfield, for Rochester and ment this year of getting the seed in Ontario Beach, at 6: 10 p. m., and will pot later than ‘August 10. : arrive at Rochester at 6 a. m. and Ontario Beach at 7a m. Sunday morn- ing. The price for the round trip is $3. The next excursion will leave Clearfield Tuesday, July 30, at 11:20 a. m., arriving at Buffalo at 8 p. m., and Niagara Falls 9 p. m. Round. trip 84. These mid-summer excarsions over the : Buffalo, Rochester and . Pittsburg Rail- way have always been very pleasant affairs, well patronized, and at ex- tremely low figures. Mr. A. F. Rav- eret, excursion agent for that com- pany, usually accompanies these ex- cursions and looks after the safety and welfare of the excursion party. Further information may be had at any station between Clearfield and the Falls by ‘addressing a postal to the agent. The “R. & G.” club, Rod and Gan club, now camping at Goldenrcd, has developed into a ‘Rochester and Gen- | esee’’ ¢lub, judging from the amount of wood-covered goods used there during the week past. The Clearfield Cadets will give a bail in their Armory Thursday, July 25. It | is said fifteen hundred invitations have | been issued. The plumber who blew up the public fountain during the night of July 3 has not yet repaired that water producing convenience. It is quite likely the ‘county commissioners and borough council will not prosecute him as he has promised to make the necessary cellent and rates modérate.—69-tf. repairs. The Catholic clergymen of the Pitte- | Fred McPherson, of Patton, is visit- burg Diocese are in annual retreat this ing friends here. week at the Loretto Monastery, and Goldenrod farm, Lock Haven, owned next week the curates of the diocese ‘by Geo. 8. Good, furnishes Clearfield J with large quantities of fine fruit. Just Hon. J. J. Thomas, Alex.” Strittmat- How 4 guoily nuhber of erates off sor and w A Baver. i enthusiast raspberries are coming to town over ? i ’ : ' the Beech Creek from Mr. Good’s farm. workers of the Cambria County Po-' Se 4 mona (Grange, were welcome calles at the COURIER office Saturday. 8. T. Brown, of Huntingdon, . Robt. E. Brown, of Philadelphia, W. H. Sweet, of Saxton, and Lawrence L. CLEARFIELD.. ' Miss Laura Whitehead, of ‘Houtz- | dale, is visiting Mrs. J. R. Cornelius this week. H. McAnulty an M. Donshey, of at the Central J.T. Evans, of ohnstown, mite in- spector of this ct, was a visitor to Hugh Wayland of Reynoldsville, visited his cousin, Mrs. John Scheid, Don’ts for Bicyelists. Don’t “spurt” blocks ahead and away from the lady whom you are supposed to be escorting. Don’t be afraid to wear ** bloomers.” Jos. Snyder has just completed a new picket fence in front of his prop- erty on Fourth avenue. J. W. Hasson, ¢f Philipsburg, is making his daughter, Mrs. C. C. Holter, a visit this week. ‘Lon J. Carter, a traveling salesman McKeesport, was a guest at the wheeling costume. Don’t forget to remove the chain lock from your wheel before attempt- ing to resume your journey. . Don’t put your trust in the seller's guarantee of the inextinguishabie nature of your new bicycle lamp. Don't carry your baby in a riding basket. a decoration to your bicycle. Don’t try to raise your hat to a pass- ing ‘bloomer’ until you become an expert in guiding your wheel. Don’t buy a bicycle with down-curve. handles. It is impossible to sit erect and hold that kind of a handle. Don’t go out on a bicyle wearing a tail coat unless you enjoy making a rediculous show of yourself. Don't store your bicycle at a depot the proprietor of which is likely to rent it out during your absence. To be continued? Last June Dick Crawford brought his twelve-monthe-oid child, suffering | from infantile diarrhoea, to me. It had been weaned at four months old | and bad always bees sickly. I gave it. the usual treatment in such cases but without benefit. The child kept grow- ing thinner until it weighed but littie more than when born, or perhaps ten pounds. I then started the father to giving Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. Before one bottle of the 25 cent size had been need a marked improvement was seen and its continued use cured the child. Its weakness and puny constitution disap- peared and its futher and myself be- lieve the child’s life was saved by this remedy. J. T. Marlow, M. D., Ta- maroa, Ill. For sale by C. E. Belcher's City Drug Store. Misses Alice A. Ashcroft and Laura Waite visited Miss Susie Wentz at St. Lawrence one day last week. See the Museum of Anatomy to-day hotel Dr. V. A. Murray returned, oo Sat- | John W. Fields, a commercial sales- Misses Ions and Rachael Sandford, | Editor J. 1. Goodlander, of Clear- | "by his | wife and daoghter, Arline, | visited When you take a trip to Ebensburg The most pleasant little pills for reg- ulating the bowels are De Witt’s Little ! Early Risers. Cure sick headache and constipation. Small pill. Small dose. +C. W. Hodgkins. : EBENSBURG. EBENSBURG, Pa Pa., July 16, 1895, “The Orly” for 1885. The COURIER is pleased to announce’ Jacoby Thomas, of Thomas’ Mills, its clubbing arrangements with The spent a few hours in Ehensburg on Pittsburg Post, the great home news- Wednesday. . paper of Pennsylvania, and to persons Mart Schroth, of. Catioliows, was a who want the best daily or semi- weekly guest at the Mountain house Sunday. paper published in the city, we recom- The new store room of E. C. Parish mend The Post. which is being erected on Julian street. : The Daily Post, a large eight-page is nearing completion. paper, and The COURIER one year each - O. Griffith, of Johnstown, registered for $3.00. The price of The Post alone at the Blair house Monday. is $3.00. Send us your order at once the . Casino Sherman Clement will erect a hand- and get seven papers a week for the agerated. some residence on Julian street this price you formerly paid for one. ; ; : ... summer. The Sunday Post, twenty pages H. Lawman, a highly respected eiti- A game of ball was played here on every Sanday, containing as much ° Saturday between the home team and reading az any of’ the monthly maga- Ashville team which resulted in a score of 9 to 15 in favor of Ebensburg. We understand that Dr. T. M. Rich- ards has leased the Shenkle dam and proposes forming a stock company and . fitting the place for a summer resort. We think the step taken is just the thing as Ebensburg is in need of a re- sort of this kind. The funeral of Mra. Jonathan Jones, - of Cambria township, who died Satur- day took place to-day at ten o'clock. Services were held in the Congrega- tional church after which interment was made in the Lloyd cemetery. - Master Willie Craver, accompanied by his sisters, Jennie, Ida and Minnie, and Miss Julia Connell, attended the oi Swope, who live north of Pat- f1era) of Miss Mary Strittmaztter, of ton, took a pleasant drive on Sunday Cgrroll township, which took place at to the home of John Swope, near West- | Cqrrolitown 10 o'clock Saturday morn- | over, where they partook of dinner jpg : | which was prepared especially for Se ; | them in the best of style. Cooling re- There is great danger in neglecting | freshments were also served. In the | oolic, cholera and similar complaints. . An absolutely prompt and safe cure is | afternoon they took a drive to West- | Ivar Whats they passed 2 very enjoy- | found in De Witt's Colic and Cholera : | Care. C. W. Hodgkins. i tendent E. C. Brown one day last week. : “It seems funny,’’ says the Philoso- pher, “that a boy can go wo Sunday school alone, but it usually takes father an¢ mother, a grand-mother and a couple of aunts to take him to the Campbell Robinson, of Johnstown, who is a delegate to the state conven- tion from Cambria county, returner disaster there was ex- visitor to Patton on Tuesday. Mr, Lawman was a veteran of the late war. He made the COURIER a pleasant call while here, Hays Wilson, Son of S. M. Wilson, of the Commercial hotel, Patton, came over Saturday to spend Sunday with DuBois friends. He was accompanied by Tim Leary, also of Patton.— DuBois Morning Courier. for only $2.2 : The Semi-weekly Post and The Cou- RIER one year each for only $1.50. Just think of it, The Post twice a week, and your county paper for the price of one. Ww rite us for sample copies. Freemyer house, Middlevurg, N. Y., on the knee, which laid him up in bed and caused the knee joint to become stiff. A friend recommended him to use Chamberlain's Pain Balm, which he did, and in two days was able to be ‘around. Mr. Shafer has recommended. it to many others and says it is excel- lent for any kind of a bruise or sprain. This same remedy is also famous for its cure of rheumatism. For sale by C. E. Belcher’s City Drug Store. We rcommend De’ Witt’s Colic and Cholera Cure because we believe it a safe and reliable remedy. It's good | effects are shown at once in case of cholera morbus and similar complaints. C. W. Hodgiine Travelers find a safe companion in De Witt’s Colic and Cholera Cure. A ‘change in drinking water and in diet | often causes severe and dangerous , complaints. This medicine always cures them. , C. W. Hodgkins. The familive of Joseph Wentz aod | able time. The yonger pigs are the more profit They have come to stay as part of the SERGES, . terns alsa just opened. tines, and The COURIER one year each A horse kicked H. 8. Shafer, of the Try Lerch, the tailor, Mahaffey. Pa. | Take off the old put on the new. . That neatly fitting. easy shoe. When run as now they do, Who would deny himself the new? We keep a complete line of latest st Fist Sor tlm all vasistiosof funk gas immense trade trade enables us to offer it at rock bottom paices. Such ; oy Sakai, an Cte! Men Russets and Patent leather from lowest to Russet $1 98 to $5 00 | - All Toss, Patent Leather 3 00 to §5 00 ) Ladies Shoes from 96c. up. All Toes : {We will pay car fare both ways for any person making a purchase of $5.00 and over.) Gus Simons, 1400 Eleventh ave. ALTOONA, PA. HEAD - And profit by vour reading when \ you are spending your Good Round Dollars Borrow one if you need such It will interest you to know somothing of the bargains we are offering you daily. REST ASSURED that we handle nothing but First-Class Goods and any- thing that is not as represented ‘bring it back and your money will be refunded. One Word To the Ladies! We have just vioeioed a full and complete line of Summer Dress Goods such as JACKONETS, SERPENTINE CREPE, DIMITIES, DRESS GINGHAMS, SILK ALINE, CASHMERE IMPERIALS, SATEENS, 'PLAIDS, DRESS TIMMINGS, © T Li ~ When in need of suything | in our line give us a trial. Yours’ for a Bargain, ai Supply Co. LADIES of Percales, Shirtings and [llumine Checks ever An assortment of Silk Wast Pat- Finest line opened in the County. INDERWE ildren’s Gauze underwear sc.; Ladies’ Men's balbriggan 25c. any price soc. ities for the money ever offered. and In Shoes I have steel] bargains for the ladies, 99 cents. Hose Good bargains at 10, 12, 15, and ribbed underwear The best qual- > he Chi gC 3 A full line just rorelved 25 cents. Butterick Patterns, Latest Bey les. [Come and See Goods. GEO. S. GOOD.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers