dma Fn A iad ard Bask BE: ; Patton ‘Courier. | PATTON PUBLISHING co., Proprietors. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER b, 1895. RE TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. One copy, one year, in advance, - - . $1.00! &F-Advertising rates made known upon | appifeation. y-No ors discontinued until all ar pape rearages are paid, unless at the option of the publisher. © Entered at the Postotlice at Patton as second- | + | that of last year. The bicycle has destroyed the sale of class mail matter, COUNTY. TIME OF HOLDING COURT. ist Monday of March 1st Monday of Sept. | 1st Monday of June 1st Monday of Dee. oF FIC ERS, PRESIDENT JU Rav Hon A.V. Barker. PROTHONOTARY—J. C. Tmrb REGISTER AND RECORDER i 14 A. MGongty. ! Treasvren—F. H. Barker, SHERIFF--D. W. Coulter. = DEPUTY BEET Artal Davis, Elmer E. Davis. DisTRICT ATTORNEY- -R. 8. Murphy. Commission ers—P, J. Dillon, Geo, M. Wertz. COMMISSIONER'S CLERK —John (. Gates, COUNTY SUPERINTEXDENT—J. W. Leec h. COUNTY SURVEYORS, (3, Fetterman. COUNTY AUDITORS—-Win. J. Jones, Ww. C. Berry, James Daily JURY COMMISSION ERS—Anslem Weakland, | | wa. vgn De. G Martin RO FR_De¢ ; n. erville, Raphiel tel Hite. : © DOROUGH OFFICERS. Buraess—W. J. Donnelly. CouNcii~—Lincoln 8, Bell, prmideon 8. M t bell, B. F. Wise, P. P. | $390. Wilson, Frank amp Young, Ralph 1 Asch i ScHOooL BOARD. C. Gowen, resins GQ. | H. Curfman IY ndford, treas- | uren; Jesse E. Dal : BO #iin PrACE-Jiawe E. Dale, Jas, | TrREASURER—W. H. Sandford. ASSERSOR-J OB. Ricke i Avprrors—F, He Kinkend, H. 0. Winslow, | Harry Gould. JUNG or ELECTION—Sam’ 1 Boyce. IsPECTOR— Walter Weakland. CHisr or PoLicE—John Boyce. : STRERT DURNSSIONER =A. I. Jackson. G. Lioyd, Moore, Tames Som- | . KE. Barton, Samuel | FARMING ING NOTES Patton “Courier. ” - of Interest to the Farmers Who Read the | | Bod orchards are apt to fall sud. | | denly. The honey crop will be light this | yesterday morning for a term of seven | year. | Excellent vinegar may be made from ‘rolled. ' watermelons. Dried raspberry leaves form a fair | substitute for tea. more horses than even the electric road has done. Rations of potatoes and hay have beet found to be excellent food for ' sheep and oxen. : Whitewash is excellent to prevent sunburn in young orchards and as in attendance at court. The acreage of rice is the same as ‘the Brandon at Spangler, shook hands | ; EBENEBURG, Pa., Sept. 3, 1895. | The regular term of court of quarter sessions convened here at 9 clock | | yesterday morning. Ebensburg public schools opened. menths. Over 300 pupils were ~en- Harvey Roland, Esq., of Hastings, is 8. B. King, the popular proprietor of with his many friends here on Monday. Washburne’s circus will exhibit in| Ebensburg on Wednesday, Septem-| ber 11th. A. W. Jones and wife, of C jreensburg, | | drove from that place oan Jigee + on | - Friday last where they e 'a protection against birds and other pests. ' Frosts, ice and drought are responsi- | berries, blackberries and “~reaphereien] during 1895. DICKERS IN IN oT. Record of Property ty Rought and Sold in! Cambria County. . J. F. Goughner et ux. to W. | Rhodes, West Taylor; consideration, Ellsworth Rowland et ux. to Charles | | Strausbaugh, Jackson, $275. Matthew Behe et nx. to Jane Behe, | | Carrolitown, $300. : l George Knowlton et ux. to Henry C. | Hinchman, Stonycreek, $1,000. | len, Summerhill township, $36. | Clara J. Miller et vir. to Anna] | Ferner, Johnstown, $600. main for a few days. Sg are De at the Blair house. Messrs. Chas. Anna and Aaro | Weakland, of Patton, are in atbind. | ble for the diminished crop of straw- ance at court this week as jurors. i J. T. Kebler, of Kane, arrived here on Thursday evening last and with his | wife and two children, who have been | visiting friends and relatives in Ebens- | p, Yesterday on the 3:30 train for their | home. They were former residents of | this place. Miss Belle O’ Neil, of Pittsburg, after | | spending three weeks with her sisters, | Misses Maggie and Mary Ellen O'Neil, | i of Ebensburg, left yesterday morning | | for her home. The Ladies’ Mite society, of the Jacob J. Weaver to W. H. Malhol- | Methodist Episcopal church of this | place, held a festival at the residence of | Mr. Felix Ludwig in the East Ward on | | Satria evening. It was a success | in every particular and the socety | ‘Wines, Phoeni BrewinG Co.'s Beer. Bologna, CUNT, Dealer i in Liquors, Beer, Etc. | 'P.P. Young & Bro, TFirstNation’ iBank i Wholesale and Retall Dealer in ~~ | OF PATTON, % y FRESH M EAT | fe | CAPITAL PAID UP, $50,000.00. ‘SURPLUS, $10,000. Accounts of C OF ALL KINDS. ~ , : i 2. 1 ? La rd y Etc. } ER tickets for stle cle for ail the leadin - had of thes Old Pn Te - FIFTH AVENUE, a cca will RAVE Cus Pramiptan ; Pterest paid on time deposits. ; : Wu H. Bs ; i . Cudiet. Flasks, Corks, Jugs, Ete., Hastings, Penn’ a. I ASSETS of Fire Insurance C Jompanies Represented by the TN NING EY Amount to over $25,000,000.00. Best Kind of Protection. | . is what some people try to do. Such a scheme is not neces- | ALSO THE PREFERRED _'saryfand the low cash prices at which I sell oo will ACCIDENT INSURANCE| enc you to live cheap CO. or NEW YORK, |! | A. E. Parron President. You Wouldn't Patton, Pa. professional men. burg for the past few weeks, departed The best in the world for: vesivm or |: TT os en | | = i = - Harvey Patterson, . tf ; Agent. JAMES QUINN, ~ Johnstown, Pa. DRY GOODS, MILLINERY, ETC. | y : 9 i You will only take advantage of them You Could =" [Not find a more complete stock of Gaiters | Patton, Cambria Co., Pa. 4 Think of getting your goods for nothing, yet hak | Thomas 8. Kirkpatrick et ax. to 'M. h. di 1 | realized a nice little sum of money. : erchandisec in a da 's trave SOUND MONEY PLATFORM ADOPTED. | Simon Link, Carroll, $685. or So Luni. j y oF bined to atéract attention to the Re- i ihe Johnstown, $0. : 50d, Wars aniong Tosaay Svisiom i 2 7: Hy tine you ot s and | priees, every- publican convention held in the state | p Ho et al. to er, | Todd Nagle and Mise | of Pennsylvania during last week. | Portage, $5,000 : | gam, of Patios, attended Rate rk GEO. S. GOOD. f Not the least important of these was: D. W. Luke et al. to John H. Luke, | po ay. i the interest felt in the action to be! taken by the convention in relation to | the monetary question. Owing to the | | South Fork, $5. Citizens’ Cemetery association to. | Henry C. Hinchman, Grand View, $486. | ~ Notwithstanding that we had unfav- | | orable weather for our fair, yet it was | ‘a success. The Aeronauts were with attitade of Senator Cameron in rela- | Blacklick Land & Improvement com- | us and made the balloon ascensions on | tion to silver, there seemed to be some | doubt for a while as to the exact nature | of the position to be taken by his party . in the State in reference to that im- portant subject. The convention has now been held, and has gone on record | with a plank accepting unreservedly the declaration of the national con- vention of 1892, demanding the use of both gold and silver money, with such | restrictions and under such provisions, | to be determined by legislation, as will secure the maintenance of the parity | - of value of the two metals, so that the purchasing and debt-paying power of | the dollar, either silver, gold or paper, |... shall be at all times equal. The plank | - further declares that believing that the | honor of the nation and the interest of | its citizens require the maintenance of a national currency, every dollar of ‘which, whether in gold, silver or notes, | shall be of stable value and of equal ~ purchasing power, the convention de- | clares its opposition to the debasement | pany to Benjamin F. Bennett, Vinton- dale, $150. | Mathiot Reade, trustee, to Ebens- burg and Blacklick Railroad company, Blacklick, $100. Marriage Licenses. Wednesday and Thursday. The Spang- | ler band furnished the music and on | Thursday was assisted by the Gallitzin The following marriage licenses were ished the music for dancing at the fair and South Fork bands. The music throughout the fair was excellent. Maitland’s orchestra of Gallitzin furn- issued by the Clerk of the Orphans’ ground and on Wednesday and Thurs ‘Court for the week ending Thursday day evenings held a dance in the opera August 29, 18985: Andrew Mangold ‘and Josephine | Wirtner, Carrolltown. Sylvester A. Noon and M. Minnie Lamaraux, Morrellville. lena Pohl, Johnstown. Joseph Rhinehart, Johnstown, and who want the best daily or semi-weekly Mary E. McLaughlin, Coopersdale. - | Snyder, Figart. house which was well attended. “The Only” for 1895. The COURIER is pleased to announce | its clubbing arrangements with The Emil M. Frankofsky and Marie He- Pittsburg Post, the great home news- Frank 8S. Dontrich and Rose M. mend The Post. paper of Pennsylvania, and to persons paper published in the city, we recom- The Daily Post, a large eight-page | . Joseph Bmigofsky and Mary Barcha, paper, and The CoURIER one year each | Johnstown. . of the national currency by the admis. | Letts, Patton. sion of silver to free and unlimited | coinage at the arbitrary ratio of sixteen | toone. This declaration is of import- | ance as coming from the State which gave the highest plurality to the Re- | Free! To Niagara Falls and Return. a-n-k-i-n-d end arrange so as to make | 1 as many small words as possible, using Solomon Hofecker and Eliza Barn- is $3.00. Send us your order at once | hart, Upper Yoder township. William Hunter and Arville B.| | price you formerly paid for one. ‘ for $3.00. The price of The Post alone {and get seven papers a week for the ‘The Sunday Post, twenty pages! ‘every Sunday, containing as much: | Take the letters contained in W-o-m- | reading as any of the monthly maga- zines, and The COURIER one year each | for only $2.25. The Semi-weekly Post and The Cou- ‘the New York World has been To our Cook Stove es and Ranges. ‘week. It furnishes 3 papers ~vear. This gives 155 papers ‘them. GOOD BUILDING, Patton, Pa. No Superior and Few Equals Our stock of dry goods and trim- ‘mings for the late sprin Sg A and | early summer season is not eqa drees goods never were so tion as now nor prices so low. Now is the | time to buy. Come down or send to’ JAS, QUINN, Ninton St. ] Johnstown, Pa. | New York World, : TARICE-A-WEEK EDITION. The Twice- 2-W ak edition of All are Guaranteed ‘to be perfect workers. Our shelves are crowded with many desirable pieces of Come in and see converted into the Thrice-a- of 6 pages apiece, or eighteen pages every week, at the old price of ONE DOLLAR a tinware and cooking utensils of all kinds. a year for One Dollar and publican candidates at the last election. the same letter in the construction of It is substantially similar to the decla- | any word no more times than it is con- ration lately adopted by the Democratic | | tained in Womankind. The publishers convention in Ohio, and it seems now | of Ladies’ Every Saturday will glve a clear that the parties will, in their | free trip to Niagara Falls and return national platforms., take substantially | | (from the home of the sender) includ- the same position in relation to free ing one week’s board at a first-class . coinage of silver at the ratio of sixteen hotel, or its equivalent in cash to the to one; that is, both will declare | first person forwarding a list of not against it. | less than 80 words as directed above. EE A first-class bicycle, pneumatic tire, for UNIFORM LEGISLATION. The Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph (sending a list of 25 words as above. A ~ of August 31 contained. the following: beautiful music box playing 10 tunes to either boy or girl, to the first person | 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. rite us for sample copies. New York World. The Twice-a-week edition of the New York World has been converted | into the Thrice-a-week. It furnishes 3 papers of 6 pages apiece, or eighteen pages every week, at the old price of One Dollar a year. This gives 156 a . year for One Dollar and every paper has 6 pages eight columns wide or 48 “The important work of obtaining un- the first person sending list 20 words 88 |. }y;ng in all. The Thrice-a-week iform legislation in the several states | above, and 100 other articles of value World is not only much larger than is moving forward. In the last twelve | a8 favors of rewards in order of merit | | any weekly or semi-weekly newspaper, months six states and one territory as received. Send three two-cent ‘but it furnishes the news with much | have appointed commissioners for the stamps for a copy of thirty-two page greater frequency and promptness. In purpose of recommending changes in | illustrated Newspaper for Women, git combines all the c risp, fresh qual- their laws, to make them harmonize containing full particulars of the Leis- ;.... ¢ o daily with the attractive with statutes of other states, and some ure Hour Circle Word Building . Exer- special features of a weekly. And | of the laws recommended by the com: | cises for bright people. The address of | $1.50 will get the Thrice-a-week World | missioners have been enacted. The: The Ladies’ Every Saturday is 36 South ‘and the PATTON COURIER for one year. special features of a weekly. duty of urging uniform legislation is placed upon a committee of the Amer- | ican Bar association, and ite work goes | _ on all the time. The effort to secure - the appointment of more state com- | riissioners for this purpose will be continued. There is a vast amount of | labor to be performed in this field, and the need of it is growing with every | ‘meeting of the legislatures of the American Union of states. . Why Don't You Pay Up First? It “sounds like a lie’’ when you hear | a newspaper telling about a subscriber | receiving the paper for a year or more | - and then telling the postmaster at his | town to notify the editor that the paper | is not lifted—reasons: unknown, re- fused, not wanted, or moved away, but it is a fact, and Cambria county is “blessed”’ (?) with a few of that speci- | men of humanity. It takes a Rewspaper to learn who the dead beats are. Cholera morbus is a dangerous com- plaint, and often fatal in its results. .. "To avoid this you should use DeWitt's Colic and Cholera Cure as soon as the kins. Drink Ambrosia. ' Seventh street, Philadelphia, Pa. People’ s Party Convention. The COURIER is requested to publish the following call: : The chairman of the People’s party | of Cambria county having removed to | another state I have been authorized ' People’s party for the purpose of nom- ‘inating candidates for the various county offices and therefore call said convention to meet at Gallitzin on | Tuesday, September 10th, at 10 a. m., in the opera house. Each voting pre- THE CAMBRIA HARDWARE C0. every paper has 6 pages eight columns wide or 48 columns ' in all. - The Thrice-a-week World 1s not only much larg- | er than any weekly or semi- Get the weekly newspaper but it furn- ishes the news with much’ greater frequency and prompt- | Freshest and ness. In fact it combines all the crisp, fresh qualities of a daily with the attractive ‘the Purest GROCERIES, ETE. IND | Think of it. Call at the COURIER of- fice and leave your name. J, F- MCKENRICR,— Attorney and Counselor at Law, : EBENSBURG, Pa. Will attend to all business with promptoess | ‘to call a county convention of the .,4 adelity Offioe opposite the Mountain House. CENTRAL - HOTEL, ~ JOHN R. CORDELL, Prop'r. | Accommodations the best. First-class i cinet will be entitled to two delegates, Bar in connection. i and each Knights of Labor Assembly, ' | Local Union of United Mine Workers, | Liberty League and other industrial i and farmer’s organizations in favor of | our principles will be entitled to one representative for each one hundred | members in good standing or faction j thereof All delegates must have | | credentials signed by the officers of | | Office in the Good Building. meeting electing them or the officers. | ANSLEM B. KIRSCH. Pa., August 26, 1895, | There is no doubt, no failure, when | first symptoms appear. OC. W. Hodg- | you take DeWitt's Colic and Cholera | { Care. It is pleasant, acts promptly, | | no bad after effects. C. W. Hodgkins. |W. H. SECHLER, RATES $1.25 PER DAY. wi ‘Reuel Somerville, Attorney-at-Law, PATTON, Pa. | Attorney - at - Law, ~ + EBENSBURG, oe Cambria County, Pa." —AT eo W i get the Thrice: aweek World and the - PATTON SUPPLY Co. Here are a few Specialties mentioned: W hite wine and Pure Cider Vi inegar, Floor and Table Oil Cloths, Crocks and Jugs. Flower Pots, Etc. oe I full line of Flour and Feed. = +: - OBSERVE: —We will pay one cent a-piece for Jiguatures from Arbuckle’s Coffee wrappers, Save them and bring them to our store. Yours for a Bargain, Fie one year. Think! of it. Call at the Cou- en ofice and lve) Day t tom Supply Co.” . 1 A A Sp Sm SI, SEP AE aR A ARS » A t . -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers