The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, October 17, 1895, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    io a
$0
a
en nS NS 5 A A US Sy Ng “
Rpt
Hr mage
Y
i
Cai
the commission,
Patton Courier.
PATTON PUBLISHING C 0., Proprietors.
THU RSDAY, 0c TOBER 17, 1895.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
One copy, one year, in advanee, -- = F1.00
Sa Advertising rates made known apou
application. . :
g¥ No papers discon tinued until! all ar
rearages are paid, urstess at. the option of the
publisher,
: Entere d at the Postoffice at Patton as seconds
class mail matter
COUNTY.
TIME OF HOLDING COURT.
{1st Monday of Dee.
OFFICERS.
PrE<IDENT JUDGE—-Hon. A. V. Barker.
PROTHONOTARY J, {. Darby.
REGISTER AND RECORDER-D), A. MeGougzh. |
TREASURER Ne H. Barker.
SHERIFF-1. WW. Coulter.
DEPUTY Ci Pe-Samuel Davis, Elmer
E. Davis,
IsTRICT AY Tong -R. 8. Murphy.
COMMISSION ERS
Geo. M. Werts.,
CoMMISSIONER'S CLERK —John C. Gates
COUNTY SUPERINTENDENT J. W. Leech.
COUNTY SURVEYOR-=, (7. Eelterman.
{Cov NY AUDITORS Wm. J. Jones, W. C.
Berry, James Dally. :
JURY COMMISSIONERS — Anslem Weakland,
Wm. Miller,
CORONER Ir. George Martin,
Poor DIRECTORS -R. Moore, James Som-
erville, Raphiel Hite, :
BOROUGH OFFICERS.
BUurGEss:—W. J. Donnelly.
Covrscerr—Iincoin 8, Bell. president; 8. M.
| Wilson, Frank Campbell, B. F. Wise, P. P|
Young, Ralph Leisch.
Kepoorn Boarp—C,
H. Curfman, secretary,
urer; Jesse FE. Dale, i. Yi Barton, Samuel
Edminston. :
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE--Jesse FE. Dale, Jas
6 rowel, president; G.
: : Mellon.
TREASURER—W. H. Sandford.
CLERK — Harvey Patterson,
Conngcror-~Jas. Mellon.
AssEssor-—Jos. H. Ricker. 2
AvniTors—F, H. Kinkead, H. 0. Winslow,
Harry Gould, :
JUDGE oF ELECTION —Sam’l Boyce.
. IwsprRCTOR-- Walter Weakland.
Cur oF PoLice—John Boyce.
RTREET COMMISSIONER—AL J. Jackson.
PENNSYLV ANIA DAY.
November 14 will be Pennsylvania |
day at the Atlanta exposition. The
arrangements have not been quite
completed but there will be nothing
lacking when the day arrives to make
it an occasion worthy of the Keystone
State's relative position in the Union.
It has been announced that the Penn-.
sylvania Railroad company will furnish
a vestibuled train, and there will be
about (50 on the trip, including the
governor, his staff, members of the su-
preme court, heads of departments,
ladies’ Auxiliary and
some invited guests. They will leave
November 11, be at Chattanooga on
the'12th to participate in the dedica-
tion of monuments there, and arrive
at Atlanta on the 13th. The Pennsyl-
vania visitors will be welcomed by the
governor of Georgia and Governor
Hastings and Lieutenant Governor
Lyon. In the evening a public re-
ception will be held at the Pennsylva-
nia building. On the same day the
Women’s Auxiliary commission will
hold a meeting au the Women's build-
ing, where addresses will be made by |
Miss Harding, of Washington, chair-.
man of the Auxiliary; Miss Mary S.
Garrett, of Philadelphia, and Miss
Mercur, of Pittsburg.
PATTON 18 and always will be the
North Star of Cambria. .
EVERY PERSON who visits Patton
soon learn that its business men are.
all hustlers,
Too Bap Corbett and Fitzsimmons
. : ¥ ie ig 3 ¢ a ro
can’t. scare up a scrap. It takes
Uncle Sam to knock both out.
GATHERING hickorynuts and playing
«occupations of the season
be equally hazardous.
} hind our
e invited into our
y
id
name familiar
} truct a
Fo construe
NeCHR[ATY to resort t
Gear.
A good advertisement 18 not an end
in iteelf. It is simply a means to an
end--more business, Many advertise.
+
ments {nat appear ¢ xcellent are found
wanting when ighed by this
standard.
J. Di} om, J. 13. Lloyd,
H. sandford, treas-
FARMING NOTES
Of Interest to the Farmers Who Read the
Patton “Courier.”
Next month the Thanksgiving turkey
will be in demand, and now is the time
to begin to feed the turkeys liberally
and make them fat and plump.
The damp days, when the wind is in
the northeast, are more severely felt
by the cattle than when the weather is
dry and cold. There is nothing to be
gained by keeping the cows on the
: pasture at such times.
A cornstalk may remain in the
ground a year without being decom-
: . 1 posed, but cut it up and add it to the
1st Monday of March {| Ist Monday of Sept.
1st. Monday of June
manure heap and it becomes an excel-
lent absorbent, prevents loss of ma-
nure and soon decomposes. .
Black walnut is some less abund-
ant every wear. A large tree near
Washington, D. C., was recently sold
for $200 and the products of the tree
used for furniture, ete. brought
$1,000. Even the roots were valuable.
‘It takes many years to realize from
young walnut trees, but those who
will plant them will leave fortunes for |
the next generations.
Potatoes should be dug, well dried
' and stored in a cool, dark place that is
free from moisture. If exposed to
dampness, or allowed to become too
warm, they will sprout. They have
‘been stored in layers in dry oats or
sand with advantage, and it would not
be amiss if those having crops of
potatoes would make some experi-|
ments in that direction.
When a young animal is growing it
is increasing its frame, which is com-
posed of bone. Bone being phosphate
of lime. The food of young animals,
therefore, grain contains but a small
proportion of lime, and does not sup-
ply the animal in that respect. Clover
hay contains thirty times as much lime
as corn, and bran is also a substance
abounding in limé. The food of young
animals, therefore, should not consist
entirely of grain, but of a variety,
clover hay being almost an ‘dasential
gubstance,
Not a few who read what Mr. Robert
Rowls, of Hollands, Vi., has to say
below, will remember their own ex-
perience under like circumstances:
‘Last winter I had la grippe which left
me in a low state of health. I tried
numerous remedies, none of which did
me any good, until I was induced to
try a bottle of Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy. The first bottle of it so far
relieved me that I was enabled to at-
tend to my work, and the second bottle
effected a cure.” For sule at 25 and 50
cents per bottle by Patton Pharmacy,
C.W. Hodgkins.
EBENSBURG.
EBENSBURG, Pa., Oct. 15, 1895.
Augustine Craver, of Susquehanna
township, was the guest of his brother
L. A. Craver, of this place, on Thurs-
day.
Messrs. J. D. Ritter, Al. Hopple and
Frank McNulty, of Barnesboro, were
among the visitors to Ebensburg on
Thursday. ; Sa
The Rt. Rev. R. Phelon, of Pitts-
burg, will confer confirmation on about
one hundred persons this morning at
the church of the Holy Name.
A chapel is being erected at Twin
Rocks for the accommodation of the
Catholics in that vicinity. At present
mass is said the second Sunday in each
month at one of the residences there.
tev. J. J. Deasy, the pastor of the
Catholic church in this place, will have
charge of the new chapel.
Burgess Donnelly, of Patton, and
Attorney Reiley, of Will SHspost, made
business trip to Ebeusburg on Fri-
’ vahrire Branch
he nsouryg oranch,
“The Only” for 1895,
The COURIER is pléased to announce
its clubbing arrangements with The
Pittsburg Post, the great home news-
paper of Pennsylvania, “and to persons
who want the best daily or semi-weekly
paper published in the city, we recom-
mend The Post.
The Daily Post, a large eight. -page
paper, and The CoURIER one year each
for $3.00. The price of The Post alone
id £3.00. Send us your order at once
and get seven papers a week for the
price vou formerly” paid for one.
‘The Sunday Post, twenty pages
every Sunday, containing as much
reading as any of the monthly maga-
zines, and The COURIER one year each
for only $2.2
The Semi- roskly 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.
Write us for sample copies. :
It’s just as easy to try One Minute
Cough Cure as anything else. It's
easier to cure a severe cough or cold
with it. Let your next purchase for a
cough be One Minute Cough Cure.
Better medicine; better results; bet-
ter try it. C. W. Hodgkins.
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 8 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
columns in all. The Thrice-a-week |
World is not only much larger than
| any weekly or semi-weekly newspaper,
but it furnishes the news with much
greater frequency and promptness. In
fact it combines all the crisp, fresh qual-
ities of a daily with the id
special features of a weekly. And
$1.50 will get the Thrice-a-week World |
and the PATTON COURIER for one year.
Think of it. Call at the COURIER of-
fice and leave your name.
There are many good reasons why
you should use One Minute Cough
Cure. There are no reasons why you
should not, if in need of help. The
‘only harmless remedy that produces
immediate results. C. W. Hodgkins.
A Big Undertaking. !
J. E. Harder, of Clearfield, will
start on Thursday morning of this
week on his bicycle for Williamsport,
with the intention of reaching that
city the same day by dark, a distance
of about 110 miles. Lew Ciearhart, L.
! A. Gearhart and Ira Waite, of that
place, expect to accompany Mr.
' Harder. All wheelmen have been in-
vited, through the papers, to go.
, along.
: : Money lo Loan.
In sums of $200 to $10,000 on. ap-
proved real estate security. For par-
ticulars address J. C. Patrick, Patton,
Pa, -94tf en
Mischievous Mme. Malibran.
No prima donna was ever more de-
' lightfully capricious, more full of mis-
chief than the famous Mme. Malibran.
At the rehearsals of ‘‘Romeo and Jua-
liet’’ she could never make up ber mind
where she was to ‘‘die’’ at night. It was
important for Romeo to know, but all
he could get was ‘‘not sure,’’ ‘‘don’t
know, ’’ “‘can’t tell,’’ or *‘it will be just
as it happens, according to my humor;
sdfmetimes in one place, sometimes in
another.’ On one occasion she chose
to “‘die’’ close to the footlights, her com-
panion, of course, being compelled to
‘‘die'’ beside her, and thus, when the
curtain fell, a couple of foctmen had to
carry the pair off, one at a time, to the
{ntense amusement of the andience.
John Tempieten, the fine old Scottish
tenor, was probably never so miserable
as when he was cast to sing with Mali
bran. Very often she was displeased
with his performance, and one evening
she whispered to- him, “You are not
acting properly; make love to me bet-
ter,’ to whieh, so it is said, Templeton
innocently replied, ‘Don’t you *n wow 1
am a married man?’ Evidently the
lady did not think there was anything
serious in the circumstance, for not 1 DR
afterward, when in ‘‘Sompambula”
she was on ber knees to Templeton as
Elvino, she succeeded in making the
tenor scream with suppressed laughter
when he should have been singing by
tickling him vigorously under the arms.
—Cornhill Magazine.
Women Wino In Sonth Jlustralla.
Word has come from the president of
the W. C. T. U., Ms. Nichols of Pros-.
pect, that in Adelaide, Sonth Australia,
adult sciivage has been carried, giving
the women a right to vote on the same’
terms as. men. and with no barrier to
aseat in parliament. The bill now only
awaits the queen's consent
Mrs Nichols says, "lt 1s a grand vie-
tory for a bard and well fought battle
wl mr WEE WG
FALL
An nounceme nt!
crnrnsqd from the cities
i tt oi: 3 ¢
eat {ine 1 if
FALL and WINTER
“Millinery
ken
MISS HM. SHARBAUGH,
Sharbaugh Building,
Carrolitown, Pa.
of
‘Order four] coal from Truman. It I
gives the best! satisfaction of iny.-67tf.
When you want a good job ¢f House, |
Sign or Ornamental
PRINTING and GRRINING
~~ done, go and see
WARREN, the Painter,
PATTON, PA.
89 Advertising p Npecialty Lam
Go To
JOHN DANIELSON'S
“4th Ave.| near R. R. Station.
Shoes nade to order and repairing
of all kinds Jone promptly. Prices
moderats. 18tf.
CENTRAL - HOTEL,
JOHN R! CORDELL, Prop’r.
Accommodations the best. 1%rst-class
Bar in connegtion.
RATES| $1.25 PER DAY.
I have now opened the shop on Magee |
avenue near iron bridge, Pat-
ton, [Pa., where I am
prepared to do all
kinds of prac-
tical
BLAGKSMITING IND
'HORSE-SHOEING.
Your patronage is respect-
fu lly solicited.
Robt. A. Hunter.
.
A change] of
Seasons
requires a change of :
NEEDS.
This is the season to pre-
IF YOU MISS ONE TRAIN
pare for [cold weather, The
less you worry the more per-
fect your happiness, hence get
something that will give you
‘comfort and pleasure and keep
Cinderella stoves
you warnj.
will do this. Come and ex-
‘amine them, both
Cook and
Heating Stoves
Air tight|soft coal heater will,
keep fire 24 hours, fit for a
! from fireciay, and for these Pros to have, |
SHOP
Notice of Appiiintion for Charter.
Notice is here hy given that an applicat ton | a Fips PSIT
wii) Je ane to the (FOV elas of Penhuyivania, |
on Friday, the 23th day of October, A. DD, I
by F. E. McElfresh, A. E. Patton, James Koo r OF PATTO
George 5. Good, W. H. Sandford and E, C.
Brown, ander the Aet of Assembly, entitled, Patton, Cambria Co. Ps.
HAN act to provide for the ineorpomtion and
- regulation of certain sorations,” ap; roved | i ——
the Zh day of April, A. D.. 1574, and the sup-
plements thereto, he the charter of an in- |
tknded corpomtion to | Hed “The Patt ¢ rraLP 000. 0.00.
vr Ewe alle “ > on i
Clay Manufacturing Company,” the ¢ Marner! 8 LUS, $10, 00.
and ohjeet of which is the mintng, quarrying, :
and denling in fireclay, nnd | Wo oon Bar of Corporations, Firms, Individa-
and selling brick, finviay building material ble te in ut with pon a cervative
firebricks, and other articles ea § irl bog eons. stent an
possess; and « enjoy all the rights, benefits, ant Steamship tickets for sale for all thie
privileges of the said Aet of Assetnbly and the | cities Foreien Diafis pasable in the Princip
suppiements thereto, i eR Of Lhe pin haveour mptand
Ro AND D. RBwoorE, Solicitor, All corres
Curwensvitle, Re e po attention.
iy pt. Mth, 146. #15 | | Interest paid on time deposits. -
A. E. PATTON Wu H. SaxpomD,
President.
GATE 0
“The true University of these days is a collections of
| books.”
If he were alive to-day he would add,
Store.”
Try Lerch, the tailor, Mahaffey. Pa. |
“and a General
WE ARE
opening wp FALL GOODS. Comte To aud se helt
‘Shoes, Rubbers, New Yarns, in fact everything you ‘want.
SEE TR
Our Prices on Grocefies and Feed, so low they advertise
‘themselves and hurt the printer Come in and profit by
them.
GEO. S. GOOD,
Patton, Pa.
GOOD BUILDING,
You CAN TAKE THE NEXT...
But if You Miss
ONE
OPPORTUNITY wees
To insure for Men Boys and Children the best suits at the
lowest prices, you may never get the opportunity fgein
palace, also almost a full line
of heavy and shelf hardware,
tinware, jamps, lamp globes,
glass, Co sash, paints, oils,
and mirers’
cages.
Come and see and ask
A. M. THOMAS,
PATTON, PA.
ROW RBOUT THAT
BOY OF YOORS?
you got him all ready
slush and snow and
er? Heavy Cloth-
, strong Shoes warm Caps?
Bovs don’t stand much on
ceremony when SNOW comes.
1s of wint
ds of wint
Q
+
- rush right out-of doors,
» first thing vou know
re sick.
1 1 ZO d thing to be ready
‘wintry weather, Better
11 sending for the doctor.
We sell the best of every-
to keep out the cold and
cep in the warm.
And how about vou your-
}f ? vou well supplied
‘n changes in iter npera-
of ours 18
but the
with
any. kind of a
ange can laugh at it.
Ll. 5. BELL,
The Clothier. |
supplies, bird |
AA Cali will Convince You
That we ive the finest stock of Clothing, Gents Furnish
ings, Boots and Shoes, and everything tb fit out the
‘Wardrobe of a Man or Boy and at the low-
est of low prices. mbrace this
opportunity and call
on
WOLF & THOMPSON
And See tne Elegant Fall Dis-
play and You Will be
Sure to Buy. |
—
Get the
Freshest and
the Purest
‘GROCERIES, mm.
PATTON SUPPLY CO.
Here are a few Specialties mentioned:
‘White wine and Pure Cider Vinegar,
Floor and Table
Onl Cloths,
Crocks and Jugs, Flower Pots, Etc.
All k ne of I lour and Feed.
OBSERV E:—We will pay one cent a-piece for
signatures from Arbuckle’s Coffee wrappers. Save them and
bring them to our store.
Yours for a Bargain,
Patton Suppl