Bs doing will be prosecuts a. the ow directs. We are getting tired of having our property destroyed and our pers dischmtinned anti all Arrear | Jat, unless at the option of ihe the Counten could write a tear, t a sob, phrase a groan or put a : language it would do it. There are times when the average man's vooabulary is inadequate to ex- press sentiments of sorrow and denun- ciation deep enough meet for the emotions that stir the heart. The das. tardly crime whereby the first citizen of the Republic has been called upon. to relinquish the work to which he had chosen by the Almighty is ao in- stance before which words fail to relieve ihe mind or ordinary sentiments to set forth the grief and indignation felt by all good Americans, Wm. McKinley was a man among men, and it is not sacrilege to assert that in many respect we will never | A foremost American among his co temporaries and the wise ruler of the greatest Nation extant, his deeds, both ~ private and public, will live in song and story so long as men admire and wenerate all thut is great and true in 2 ; this transitory life, His services to bis country many and varied from the time he ~ shouldered a musket at the age of eighteen years and went forth to fight | the battles of the Itepublic until the sad moment when the nesasin’s bullet fata him low in the dust. His fame is inperishable and io- creased as the yours went by. Through | ¢ thie heat and strife of political conflict | he always bore himself with dignity, and while partizans differed with him, no one questioned his motives or in. pugned his honesty of purpose. His victories of statesmansbip and politics were many and productive of well de nd admiration, bat now that he been laid low in death they well nigh forgotten in the thought of the other admirable qualities which shine forth as a beacon light to guide sorrow stricken constituents bo better and holier lives. He was a good, pure and simple man, with no thought of guile in his mind hatred in his heart. He was un sal American citizen, whose private 3 life was as spotless as his public one WED devotion to his Invalid wife, his stian fortitude and bearing and Sally walk and conversation God and kept his command. He was a typical American ‘who gloried in bis heritage and 6 to keep it pure and unsullied. reverent and devout Nation to- stands at his bier and through the ars that dim the eye and the sorrow t wells np io the heart reverently ank God that he was lifted up from common people, the safety and ngth of the Republic, to an exalted place in the world’s history and that never failed in his devotion to his measure or expression, they all with ‘one accord ean repeat the words of an- other martyred president at the time he first martyred chief executive was shot: “God reigns and the govern: ent at Washington still lives.” | William McKinley is dead, and alas ! all that is left for us to say is hail and} ™ farewell. | “Fis virtues will plead like angels trumpet tongaed; Against the deep damnation of his L Saking o off." How. RoBRRT G. COUBING, a con: | gressman from Towa, has & very level bers. The Methodists of Patton stand | lin the front rank for progressiveness | { newspapers of | Hshod fairer, clearer or more complete ence in in session in Wesley chapel (the gates, representing a membership of | are from the United States and Can- {ng the hope that some day the Metho- | i palians. arrhoea and thought | was past being | John 8S. Halloway, of ent leathers today, reduesd wo 85 that a bottle of Chamberlain's culic, cholera | ' and diarrhoea remedy, and after tak-| so i do Ling several bottles 1 am entirely cured the result that I am anxious that it bey | | seoarnia locriminntiog agaliet town? Please answer, Mr. nl 'M. E. church on Sunday will mark the real beginning of the erection of that | structure. When completed it will be alike a credit to the town and the mem. and they are ably seconded by their efficient pastor, PATTON enjoys a _ distinetion to-day | that is probably not equalled by any town in the country. Every bosiness place is closed within the borough piled he b f on tos chate 1 does Ean no diferent oh physicians but pee lips of a, bottles of Yenner s x Kidney ‘an w Fort / Fenners hoe snd Narvs Tondo ant sedans ASK BARKMAN. TOHE EON wo Ky 1. on, wits has suffernd long ith dyspepsia. 14rd all of the > and wh ire And i inp fo Ber similar enses ih 3 yg { growl hy Ris NE Lease I~ Fredonia, N. Y, limits and will remain closed ALL DAY. This includes the bar rooms as well as] other places. Where is there a town that can equal it? Verily, we are patriotic and law abiding people Tre burglaries committed at Chest Springs and Cresson and the recent at- - MH FENKER, Fredo N.Y. “Wn Pawn anid many | Gamer a Goiden Relief for Spe wed mos ke dl have fount it so sing for it prossang Lidr ROD 28 Earn. . Burns, Tes, 16 i | fences thrown down. and mean 0 have Lin this line as good as the best and cheaper than the cheapest. Trroa ;, tt is anfatiing. Aron, Oh, Jan. 3 19. Aompps of your BL fons Teen sured 3.7 x Ho JR Sut aces | ALS ; DR iy £93 tempt at the City Restaurant is a warning to merchants and all citizens : i 1901 containing desor iptiona of cures aver Achy generally to guard against these noc- taurnal marauders. Bee that the win- dows are barred and the doors locked at night, and more especially, have a trusty shooting iron within easy reach. ———————— {¥ that Barnesboro station agent is really guilty of the remarks and inten- tions attributed to kim he should be 3 . ; : 9 arti £4 xfs Tr summarily dismissed from the employ MX months hence. Jack's forefather : : thie day 100 years ago had the ssioe of the Pennsylvania railroad COMPANY | menu and made the sae anesmpli- and drummed out of town withoul | inentary remarks about the dishes, aud 2s : Co | 300 years hence on this day Jack's © wremony. If, however, he is unjustly | ) +8) bere 3 : ! ! i ; y i ren wi il growl over their salt horse accased his traducers owe hit an apol- | gad plomlexs duff.” The author aise ogy and a chance to pat himself right JACK TAR S GROWL. Habit of Grambling. The sathoer of “From Edinburgh to the Antarctic’ habit of grambiing gays TEhe it Ht fire all the same that x to pay. Mon day's dinners are all alike, and what we have today we shall have this day sik tells this “yarn” to astrate that dack’s habit of grumbling can't Ie [tured and minst he én Tiivdd . . POmee upon a How there Hivedl a skip AMONG all the great metropolitan 43 2 - I | por whose wife sald to him that If she a of | weit to weg the podr Ben WwW auld never whom have covered fhaniselves With before the peuple. this country, Fle fault with thelr foes). Her hus Band took her with Blin of & VOFREE, nd the gel wiranan sttersied to the ik ir the galley horswell s thick with freak tp pod with goes, and plums, but credit in giving to the world the fatent | news relative to the assassination of | President McKinley, none have pub | oo BOOTRE WR egabilosn the hreoad sas wins : weevils, the peat was | the siranst half Patil nen growiead LC Then the skihper's rot emt reports than the Pittsbarg Post. The Post, always reliable and enterprising, outdid itself on this sad pecasion. ———— ————————————————— duff was the 3 wife thought of : : r a § . fiat *E A 1 3 THE editor of the {13 si es i her ht shine hreaktast. 3 4% LAr £373 ¥ a figs dosen't take much stock in the fellow their necks with ber own fair hands who boasts that be never hugged a plucked them, roasted them and : them ob he foreeastle of Ee girl. Here is what he says: “It may be | Voom ” Ys . the remembered that some time 8g0 a “Now the men” she sald to herself, Chicago professor stated that be never : "will know bow mach we think of thelr . polar” hugged a girl, Again he is bragging ha % about the fact. One of two things is certain. The professor is either an her skill as a cook. 1 : : {the hatch and saw a big hiack Oat : wonder or else he ia a brain- ; plunge a fork into the hen god heard a lems chump. n hoarse voloe growl “1 say, d'ye think this ‘ere bloody fowl died of?” Altoona Times aut ATH mat £R/INN the farecastie to listen to the praise af THE Methodist Begmenieal confer: ASO HH Bn SA AA A cathedral of Methodism, City Road, A DOMESTIC JAR. London. Tt is composed of 500 dele- Proceedings Were Enlivened, Here's a little dolly dialogue wae overheard In a tol hill mansion one evening last week; over 10,000,000. 300 of these delegates ada, and 58 of them are negroes The | opening session wus notable in many things, among which were messages of Sfhe—You are becoming posits ads ; coarse. blessings and congratulations from the | He. Association. Archbishop of Canterbury and She | Ehe- You pay no attention whatever Bishop of London, the lattter express. to my little wishes i fle What's the use of chasing a car after you've caught it? She] believe you have been drink. conference does tng again. not have legislative and administra | He No such lock. Shem in rags. Hive power over the churches repre- | He Well, we'll do a sketch. So'm L you? He Because | was a good thing. viely dists will be reunited with the Episco- : Though the sented, their policy will probably be. S8he-I haven't been to the theater for affected both directly and indirectly | two weeks by the discussions on the religious and | FHe—Yours ls a sad story. social 1 i Shi Brute! it. problems that will come before, He—Ours is a peaceful home. ees Khe Are you going down town to night? Fe—If 1 can swing yon for ear fare. She1 have only £3 in my purse. He Hetty Green! Rhee] saw a patr of high Cored of Chrome Diarrhoea After Thiny | Yoars of Snoring. : “] suffered for thirty years with di- howled pat cured,’’ says French Camp, Miss. ‘I had speat so. much time and money and suffered so | 41.307 much that I had given up all hopes of © RB Fen yan On ge » recovery. | was so feeble from the | he Why don't yon get slaved A, *f the diarrh bat 1 1d do | HHe-Waiting for pay day. effects of the diarrhoea that | COU! #0 | ghe.- Don't you know the rent and no kind of labor, could not even travel, | ¢he pas will be due this pay day? bat by accident 1 was permitted to find | I must and shall have Ho Then 1'11 ont out the shave, Rhee | wish | had never left mamma, athers! aownl tu Flootithers, Bho ] have n bok te Ber this minute tin 0 ay pEorlr we oF of that trouble. Iam so pleased with bypellng ¥ head, In discassing the proper disposi- tion of anarchists he says: “Iam op, ; posed to the admission of anarchists to | : any place except one, snd, without topping to look the matter up, I have grave doubts about their eligi- He Haze yon got an um Rhewidh, yo — ec-olerk £ {Tears ton Post ‘in reach of all who suffer as I have.” | For sale by C. W. Hodgkins, Patten, Land Hastings Pharmacy. RET I ne ¥asiung Yom Ean Curtain) ~The COURIER office has just ro Xye's Introduction. tionary of every description, which goin entertainment, the humorist bad will be printed in the most approved | great fun with the poet, Once, in in | style and at the lowest possible figure. | troducing Riley and himself to an au- | | dience, Nye remarked, “1 will appear | | first and speak until 1 get tired, then | Advertise where you are sure of | Mr Riley will succeed me and read | results. ‘The COURIER is soch a me- from his own works until you get Send in your job work. oa Spe no de ag So diam. | tired.” A Stery Niusteating the Enilors writing of the sailor's. fhe hong ahe had brought on board to At eight bells she stole forward to Hho fooled Gown | tle brother what a yau have yoor- | 2ili. what The Little Dinlogne With Which the : that | £24 a month Caph | fhe Why, ob, why, did | ever marry He -D'je see any men's brogans for When James Whitcomb Riley and | ceived a handsome and full line of sta- pu woo traveled together giving a Made Up For Lost Time. . Bagland years ago, he was the | abfeet of muck concern to his fellow |, paston zor Ian the Cape Town many friraedd with © write ity £5 when thee for the arat four dng % oat. ¥en Inge 1 srl that the dives : : j the dinner hour len : Chop, Feed and Meal. Taide 3 fol Transvaal pn deck wliers he ate Biltong and Dis eults When seid tity replied, V1 lave Bo axnengive eating ie Tomson, ha ise 151 so hi Tolle the Mary the time Ai We hy RL wis bad bps Yi thie {x a 2 5 fg trying io 355d WEE RUE A i vi ; whe poy HE WR a AERge OW By hoard” % extn bneinded AEE Yaw $aalE vi Faint The ox aries in orien in thie Tarr thal a = thier Wate Forth ef her nnbappiorse, tno five him eYETy i ssh} to to bis Pr, wink on to ha fy same Diem, Gi £385 foley PR th OF POD it when she caey Fake Dar fn oR a fi) sinid « fre have mo toouldes Lin the wa whet hon ner buuiness oth ein prigtes ; “Madam, I try to keep my troubles to : COE LYary I an I Ly my nad to Rus Why WAR 4 fia rival thon. § ean be happy Tr ial nist ! tis wkd Think pertle 4 eto you, iis Disgnosin sthipla to pth to yer Hie of candy awl ove tus Hite sleter and one-fon self? Sohoiar - Well, metseled Or something ws 1 wonldo't mark lke eating - Puek Bt we fel a by Boasding House Hemor. Landiady (threateningly: — 111 give days If you Te aut careful, yon gave me.~ Detroit Free Pross. Crowing Matehes, | The Belgian artisan spends his led sure In a cere enrlous manper He keeps a special cock for crowing, and | the bird which ean outerow its fellows | | has reached the highest pinnacle of | perfection. The mode of operation 18 | ts place the cages containing the roost- | ora in long rows for It sppedes that | ane Bird sets the aother off crowing. A | marker ars spelnted by the organizers of ; the show is told off for ear h hird. his ‘ duty being to note carefully the num | ber of rrows for which it ts respo snaihle tn the same fashion as the laps are re (corded In a bicyele race. The custom Cary duration of the match Is one haar, | the winner being the bird which scores | i the highest number of crows in the al A great number of these | lotted tine, competitions have taken place i the : Liege distriet, an A in wore cases heaty : bets have heen made on the result Fadisbon. Radishes originated in China where they have heen cultivated fur many conturies nrl sometiznes grow 88 a. As B oAn's Be ad In Germany the he fashioned others | ness and th radinh fries od with sopar famly. Theo today have aver. no . Formerly thelr sharp, Biting taste maade them palatable. Penny u % eure b songh W ¥ 11 ol araeter A Jary Roam Oem A gern from enurt, William HE, Paeld vord aE the tury. lmpaneled, sworn wl En inginee | Trikes Hezokinh Jo ative” given ; is the rllowing case: Wa, and charg. allaep, ¥ fnnnaey Twn Nad Nites, : Hopes, edd "What is that beast whieh in the most dancerous™ replied, “Df wild beasts the bite of a planderer and of tame beasts that of the flatterer” If the sverage man could read the story of his life he wonlin’t believe it. —Obicago News. you a piecy of my mind one of these Poarter—1 goes 1 can stand it if it fan't any bigger thao the piece of ple Vives Dapee Fi rstNation’ [Bank i Patton, Cambria Co., Pa. Lai mrad 1 When Frosident Kroger sailed for) Hiner from (ait v of whory ware fone i fo tics? Bis alience Croan the dinner table A FE Parvo, i money to fool Fost Teacher Bappose yi had one poand | Fong : sili Ff Mi gwrvort CE Winter Wheat Flour. FP Mbkdiings, Sivan, Can] Brraw whefidam : Patton Feed & have ita | Sra : Bat imnved ¥iu ROGTHP sows | ¥ Wi B® At last fhe ther Tonnd a woman who senied fuld 20 FIRY, it stopped. CHARLES ANNA, Jade MELLON, Patton Pa, August 26. 1901. ~How is pr stock of printed sta tionary? The (oumiEr is better pre pared than ever before to do all work | Hed Mm your job printing. _EBENSBURG and 4. j FAIR, Oct. 1, 2, 3 Notive. The late ir. J. B, Noonan's books | have been loft with me for settlement, | All persons knowing themselves in. debited will jave costa by makiog im. mediate payment. Gro Boose, J.P. OF PATTON, CAPITAL PAID UP, $100,000.00, | SURPLUS, $16,000.00, | Aveonnis oll Corporations, Firnon, bredivida. | iE Peas eet spvmsrs Ths Sr fava : Hie terran spiletent with fe srl comervative : TE LE { ah tiekets far sein for al Vhs Sesadiny i Foreign Piola oy Pebee ay Lhe am E ipa f th 10 World, i Aa Sorase 1 Bash dnr peapt and | Tata red yi ¢ ‘ox Vighon dungeglty Wa H. SANDFORD, President. Cahir, Best, e¢puipped Mill in Northe ern Cminbria Couasy. BUCKWHEAT FLOUR RPECIALTY. af Fan oy Sering and Whole Lyrnin, i Meal Haed i fay | ] All Rial HL Buckwheat Mills, W.JIF > Propricior. Parnell, Cowher & Co. ~ Aietnie fire. are INSUBINGE. ACCIDENT LEAL BRTATE AGENTS Hine. Patiaon, Plas Ria & Cheant Bus i CH. A. SEITZ Office npwiairs in Good Building. Of: | fice Hours Fa mm wim, adlp mW P mm. § { pess Ud Lave the Or. V.A. Murray, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON. few in ay Hea, next Be Prato, | 2 3 ne emilee repel Go | Hmm Se Flue pane ilu a ER rows | ei LOA. >a % wd f frie a i i Pla te Anat TEL 2 phon Ei Worry PHYSICIAN AND BT RGEDN, x No. EgGeneeal Surgury and the Ee A ah Atl sgl wll me vi aa pt wires ting, Patton Courier, = ; Promoter of Publicity. Advertising Hates appliontion. Offiee jar Clo Bul : mate Roown on If you get a sample copy of the ' CoerrER consider it an invitation to , subscribe. Reuel Somerville, Attornev-at-Law, Parroxn, Pa. Offices in the Good Building. GEO. BOONE, JUSTICR OF THE PEACE y anier of Lang and Fifth | Collections promptly ate tended to, Properties to sell and real | eco to $18.00 i gran | PR 15 tellignnt WD OY Wi 2 ET 32 3 Muna: alain: i hnrter Noth : Spe | : Hed ead tl idee chaser of an ad bent The Hebron usr tee anad ohieet of 3 rpose of Be Mpuly, stomge | waptaetionn of wade ane we gaye peed id, wmannfcinring and domestie PUrpOoRes, 5 CeTSONS, partnerships, eorpota. Thosns and Basin ciations in he distin of © Sresson | i Cambria Coney, Penasvivania, Cand for these purposes to Tuive, possess ain euior all te benefitsand privieges of We mid C Act of Assembly, and is sapplementa. i Township, ; Jos W. Karn ass, Seileiior. If we do it, you know that it is done in the best style and the most artistic workmanship. You also know that the noney expended re- raains in Patton and that yon are helpin to fill your own coi fers. Per contra, if vour job printing is done cut of town yon hke- wise know, or ought , that yon are help- ing rob yourself, and in nine times ont of tenn you are getting interior stock and five times out of ten inferior work at the game price or more than it can be done for at the home of fice. The CoURIER can print anything and everything from a milk ticket to a multicolored full sheet poster or a cir- cus program, Envelopes, State- ments, Cards, Ship- ping Tags, Sale Bills, Dodgers, Posters, Of- fice and Mine Sta- tionery, and in fact Everthing and Any- thing that can be procured this side of the Rocky Montains. Mail, Telegraph and Telephone Or- ders will receive our prompt attention.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers