The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, September 15, 1905, Image 7

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

    atton Courier.
Roy Eaton Decker,
ESTABLISHED - - 1868
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
One copy, une year, in advance, - - = $1.00
AarAdvertising rates made Known upon ap-
plication.
#aNo papers discontinued until all arrear-
ages are paid, unless at the option of the
publisher.
| Entered at the Postoffice at Patton as second:
ee class mail matter.
— — — —
ADVERTISING RATES,
‘Legal notices $1 per inch for three insertions.
Card of thanks 5¢ per line,
Resolutions 5¢ per line.
Poetry 5c per line,
Business locals 5c per line,
Display ads 10c per inch flat.
Foreign advertising must be paid for invar-
ably in advance. No commission paid to
advertising agents.
These are “best” rates—no others go.
INTERESTING INDENTATIONS.
—Additional local news on the gth
pige.
/ /—~Born—To Mr. and Mrs. William
/ Blms—a daughter.
—Mrs. W. L. Thompson was visiting
in Ourwensville this week.
—Wonder if Packerpenny wanted to
send the troops here again ?
—George E. Prindible was in New
York dity this week on business.
—Miss Katharine Frank is spending
her vacation at her home in Curwens-
ville.
| —Mr. and Mrs. John T. Cline, of
Latrobe, were visiting in town this
eek.
—The gross receipts of the Labor
Day picnic at Highland Grove were
or .
An effort is being made to institute
lodge of the Fraternal Order of
gles in Patton.
The Keystone Olothing Co. has
me ‘Fall Clothing Talk” in this is-
he that is pertinent and timely.
—A moonlight picnic at St. Lawrence
hesday night was attended by quite a
mber of Patton young people.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Hubbard
turned home last Thurday from a
sit with relatives and friends at Lock
aven and Beech Creek.
The piece of land owned by Wil-
m T. Robinson, known as lot No. 6
Patton, was sold at sheriff's sale last
eek to Hugh Gilmore for $76.
Miss Eva M. Crain left for Phil-
Iphia this morning, where she will
fain be employed as a trimmer in a
holesale millinery establishment.
. P. Carroll, an experienced shoe
n of New York city, bas been en-
ged as manager of the new shoe de-
artment of the Keystone Clothing Co.
~The annual souvenir sale at the
lon Ton store will commence Monday
ind last a week. Full particulars are
ven in the new page advertisement
his issue.
The Altoona foot ball team would
le to arrange a game to be played at
ton Nov. 4. Information can be
nined by writing to the manager,
ID. Langdon, Altoona, Pa.
Deputy Sheriff Bearer levied upon
personal property in the hotel con-
ted by G. B. Lyons at Loretto last
k on a execution issued by she
Bois Brewing Co. for the sum of
Mrs. Thomas Barnes, of Barnes-
0, has ordered a 500-pound bell from
le Meneely Bell Co., of Troy, N. Y.,
be presented to the directors and
laced in the new school building in
hat place.
—The post office department has ap-
pointed Fred H. Kinkead a regular car-
fer and Mahlon S8hunkwiler a substi-
te on rural delivery route No. 2 out
Patton. The service will start the
bh of next month.
V. King Pifer, of Clearfield, is the
y editor and publisher of the Our-
gville Review. Mr. Pifer is an old
Wspaper man of ability and has the
hstling propensities necessary to get
ut a live and interesting sheet.
~In reply to a challenge issued some
lime ago by the Ebensburg Gun Club
or a shoot of $200 a side, the DuBois
Gun Club has accepted, 500 birds to be
he event and ten men on a side. The
shoot will take place on the 29th inst.
—Rev. M. E. Swartz was in Gallitzin
hursday as one of the representatives
of the Central Pennsylvania conference
who met with clergymen representing
(J Pittsburg conference for the purpose of
adjusting the boundary line between
the two conferences.
—James McCaulley, of Patton, a
brakeman on the Cambria & Olearfleld
sion, was thrown from his train at
G: Y. tower last Thursday evening and
sustained a laceration of the scalp. He
algo badly stunned and was ad-
mitted to the Altoona hospital for
trpatment. .
The event of the season at the
Barnesboro opera house will be the
opening attraction, ‘Miss Bob White.”
The management has been at a big ex-
to secure this attraction and it is
likely that it will be greeted with a
crowded house. See advertisement in
another column.
—Barnesboro and St. Boniface are
again to try conclusions at base ball at
, | Athletic Park Saturday afternoon.
This time the wager has been raised
and a purse of $200is at stake. The
whole countryside will be in Patton
Saturday to see the contest. Game
called at 3:30 o’clock. '
—President John Mitchell, of the
United Mine Workers, has promised to
deliver two addresses in Central Penn-
sylvania early in October. One of the
meetings will be held at some point in
the Beech Creek region and the other
on the main line. Why not make an
effort to get him at Patton ?
—Farmers should select a pleasant
expressive name for their farm and
have it neatly posted at the roadside.
The name is an advantage in more
ways than one. It is an incentive to
keep the farm in good condition be-
cause it establishes a sort of reputa-
tion that must be maintained.—Elk
County Gazette.
—Mike Sherry, of Cherrytree, is the
new yard master for the New York
Central railroad at this place, succeed-
ing James McFarland, who has been
transferred to Cherrytree. The change
was made Monday morning. Mr.
Sherry will move his family to Patton,
occupying the house to be vacated by
Mr. McFarland.
—The second trial of Dr. E. 8.
Cooper, of New Castle, charged with
having performed a criminal operation
upon Miss Mabel Williams, of Cone-
maugh, who died as the result, at the
solicitation of Albert Itell, the former
Patton drug clerk and the girl’s lover,
was held this week and the physician
again found guilty.
A DISINTERESTED OPINION.
What the Editor of the Punx'y Spirit
Says of the Ball Game,
The CoURIER has refrained from
commenting on the base ball game at
DuBois last Friday for the reason that
it did not have a representative there,
but the following from a paper pub-
lished in another town, whose editor
has no axe to grind and publishes the
news as he sees it, is so near to what
has been told the COURIER by different
spectators that it is appended:
“About a dozen base ball enthusiasts
went to DuBois last Friday to see the
game between the tail-enders of the
Interstate league and the Patton nine.
Garvey was on the slab for Patton and
Wisotsky for DuBois. The two twirlers
were evenly matched and the game,
as conducted from the center of the
diamond, was a good one until the
eighth inning. When DuBois went to
the bat at that stage the visitors had
two runs and DuBois one. The local
gamblers realized that unless some-
thing was done soon their money
would be gone, as the DuBois team
had been unable to hit safely for four
innings.
Something was done. Some of the
DuBois players, assisted by citizens of
DuBois, who had bet every cent they
had or could borrow, charged up and
down in front of the bleachers and
called upon the fans to root. And root
they did. The visiting pitcher was
called all the vile names that had ever
been coined, the visiting team was sub-
jected to the most infamous indigni-
ties, fists were shaken and curses were
heaped a mile high on the heads of the
Cambria county aggregation. A meek-
looking policeman had the temerity to
ask the crowd to sit down and he was
summarily kicked away from the front
of the bleachers. The bleacherives were
cursed for not howling loud enough.
The local players cursed one another,
the umpire was openly charged with
selling the game and in the pandemon-
ium Garyey went up in the air long
enough to allow three runs to come in.
No sane pitcher could have kept his
nerve through that bedlam of curses
and Billingsgate. It was strictly a
bleacher’s game.
Manager Brown, of the home team,
who witnessed the game, found abun-
dand evidence to vindicate his judg-
ment in refasing to play independent
bail with a team whose backers will
resort to such cheap and degrading
tactics to win a game of ball.
Ear] Hewitt umpired the game fear-
lessly, but the cursing he received when
it appeared to be all up with DuBois he
will not soon forget.”
Triple Wedding at Ashville.
St. Thomas Catholic church at Ash-
ville was the scene of a triple wedding
Tuesday morning at 8 o’clock. The
first wedding was that of Lawrence
Ivory, of Altoona, and Miss Katharine
Hamlin, of Ashville. They were at-
tended by Michael Tomlinson and Miss
Edna Callahan. This wedding was fol
lowed by the celebrating of the nuptial
banns of Arthur Litzinger, of Patton,
and Miss Gertrude McConnell, of Ash-
ville. This couple was attended by
Alfonsa Sheridan and Miss Susan Fitz-
patrick. The third couple were Wm.
Lumadue and Miss Ellen Delozier.
Charles Nagle and Miss Susan Bender
were the attendants.
Bids for Coal,
Bids will be received until Sept. 18
1905, for furnishing coal for Patton
Public Schools. All coal must be
weighed and weighbill furnished for
same. W. O. HUBBARD,
Secretary.
Whose paper are you reading ?
FALL
JING TALK
These cool evenings remind us all that
it’s time to shed our
get into a warmer outfit.
finds us more ready
to fit you out than we ever were.
novel and dependable fabrics represented
in the best market can be found here.
summer clothes and
This season g .
and better prepared est for wear anywhere
DERBY
$2350
The swell double-breasted Suits in Cheviots, Thibets, Cassimers and Worsteds
are gathered here for your inspection.
The prices range from $10.00 to 18.00 to
$20.00 in Men's Suits and $6.50 to 14.00 in Boys’ single, double-breasted and lon
pants.
stock at 2.50 to 5.50. Ages 3 to 16 years, short pants.
Our piece goods are on display in windows and we can make a sit to your measure,
and made by actually the best tailors in the business
had—$18.00 to $40.00.
The little chaps’ Suits are correct also in good, well-made and all wool
.
guaranteeing everything
,'B. Stern & Son, New York. Their label on the best to be
We carry another line of suits made to measure at $12.50 to $25.00, made to fit you as well as any one can do
it.
Every fit actually guaranteed.
We are showing new fall Derbys and soft hats.
$2.50.
One of special mention is called the “Lenco” and sells fi
Another hat showing is the 534 deep high crown and a swell hat called the “Bulwer,” a hat that le
fully as well as a Dunlap or a Knox and at almost half the price, $3.00.
Every conceivable shape of soft hats from $1.00 to $2.50.
All the new fall caps found here, 25¢c to $1.00.
NOW ABOUT OUR NEW SHOE DEPARTTIIENT!
As stated before, we have leased the old reliable shoe stand, The White Shoe
Store, and will open it with a bang up stock of footwear for the men, women, boys,
children—all prices—all shapes®—and at living prices.
~~ We have secured the services of Mr. J. P. Carroll, formerly of Lock Haven, Pa., a shoe man of large exper-
ience, who shall have charge of this stock. He will fit you correctly and treat you courteously.
We trust you will accept this as an introduction and get aquainted with him.
We want to say that if any pair of shoes does not give satisfaction this shall be adjusted with you. Some-
times we sell a-shoe that don’t come up to standard, but as no one is infallible, we trust you will allow us to correct
any deficiency.
We desire to add also that we are selling-agents for all shoes we sell. No other house can buy them here.
At this time allow us to say that all Shoes will be sold for strictly One Price and for Cash.
leave the house that are not paid for at the time of purchase.
Again asking you to pay this stock a visit and see what a neat up-to-date store looks like.
tions made.
No shoes shall
This rule will be strictly adhered to and no devia-
If there is
anything called for that we have not got we shall be glad to order it for you at once.
Soliciting a share of your trade we are as ever,
Respectfully yours,
The Keystone Clothing & Shoe House,
Directly Opposite the Bank,
PATTON,
PENNA.
*Tis a joy to eat—I welcome m
Because I rout indigestion with
Constipation is the result of indigestion,
biliousness, flatulency, loss of appetite,
self-poisoning, anemia, emaciation, uric
acid, neuralgia in various parts of the
system, catarrhal inflammation of the in-
testinal canal and numerous other ail-
ments that rob life of its pleasures if they
do not finally rob you of life itself.
q‘'‘I'm bound in the bowels,’ is a com-
mon expression of people who look mis-
erable and are miserable—yet who persist
in ‘‘ letting nature take its course.’
qWhat a foolish plan, when nature could
be aided by the use of Green's August
Flower, which is nature’sown remedy for
constipation and all stomach ills.
QAugust Flower gives new life to the
liver and insures healthy stools. s
qTwo sizes, 25c and 75¢. All druggists.
For sale by
GUNN’S PHARMACY.
dinner hour;
August Flower!
Old papers for sale at this office—
only 5c a bandle.
Patronize the home print shop
We are better prepared than ever to
turn out commercial printing of all
kinds and at prices that can’t be dupli-
cated for good work.
eoryol oF
of information can be crowded
into a limited space sometimes, but it
is impossible to tell here half what
should be told about our
BOOKS and
STATIONERY.
Come in and delve through our
stock.
There’s good reading for little
money.
KINKEAD’S
STATIONERY
STORE.
DR: H. W. BHILEY,
Dentist]
Patton, Pa.
Office in Good Building, Office Hours
—8 a. m. to 12 m., and 1 to 6 p. m.
Subscribe for and advertise in this
paper.
ITH the opening ot the fall
season we beg to call your at-
tention to our display of suitings and over-
coatings. We have a collection of fine
woolens to please everybody, and it will
certainly be to your advantage to see us.
Dont get into a ready-made suit this fall.
We can make you feel comfortable, present
a good appearance to your friends and save
you money.
Suits and Overcoats $18.00 up.
DINSMORE BROS,
THE TAILORS,
Patton, - i. - Penr’a.
We are making a specialty of extra trousers.
F.R. MELLON, |Reuel Somerville,
Dentist.
.Office in Good Building, formerly
occupied by H. A. Seitz.
Office hours:-$ 2. m, to 12 m.
p. :
Attorney-at-Law,
PATTON, PA.
Office in the Good Building.
Old papers for sale at this office for
5c a bundle. a
Read your own paper.