I “nat rifty here eagt ence eco- bouts Pa. INTERESTING INDENTATIONS. —-Barney Rice, of DuBois, was in town Thursday, ~-J. J. Donnelly was in Pittsburg this week on business, —Frank H. Kinkead has a new ad- vertisement of interest in this issue. —Rev, M. E. Swartz will lecture in the Methodist church at Barnesboro this evening. . —Mr, and Mrs, Adolph Kirk, of Car- rolltown, were visiting relatives in town Sunday. —L. M. Harris, of Reynoldsville, is the new clerk in the store of the Key- stone Clothing Co. —QOhief Burgess Donnelly has re- tarned from a three weeks’ visit with friends in Williamsport. —The work of tearing up the paved streets for the new trolley line was commenced this morning. —Rev. John Tilley, of Barnesboro, will conduct service at Trinity Episco- pal church Sunday evening. —(. 0. Greninger is building a large addition to his furniture store, necessi- tated by a rapidly increasing trade. —A pig roast attended by about half a hundred people was held at the | justable aibum at Kinkead’s Stationery | spring near Firemen’s Park Sunday. —“Sane, Safe and Sound” is the ap- propriate caption of the new advertise- ment of Ed A. Mellon in another col- umn. —A plethora of low prices are con- tained in the new advertisement of Brady’s Bazaar on the eighth page of this issue. —Miss Mary Fryberger has returned to her home in Philipsburg after a two weeks’ visit at the residence of W. I Sandford. Shoes and fall clothing form the subject matter of the new advertise ment of the Keystone Clothing Co. in this issue. —Young & Yeager have made a noticeable improvement to their prop- erty by laying a brick sidewalk on Ma- gee avenue. —Patton bar tenders defeated the mixologists of Barnesboro at base ball at Athletic Park Friday afternoon by a score of 14 to 5. —James Murphy Gilliece was visiting the scenes of his childhood and taking in the fair and other good things at Milton this week. —J. Wm. Scheid is in Scranton this week attending the state firemen’s convention as, the representative of Patton Fire Co. No. 1. —The first washing that the paved streets have enjoyed for a long time was administered by Jupiter Pluvius Monday. They look better for it, too. —Fred Kinkead started Monday as mail carrier on Rural Route No. 2 out of Patton. The route is 22.3 miles long and he receives a salary of $684 per annum, including horse hire. —Saturday will be pay day’ for the Patton Courier, CLIPPED AND CONTRIBUTED, Read your own COURIER. Music at Kinkead’s Stationery Store. The secret of beauty is simply to be born pretty. Wait for the opening of the Luxen- berg Jewelry Co. The sea naturally gets wild when the wind blows it up. It goes without saying—a phono- graph with a record. If turn about is fair play the merry- go-round must be it. ' Black bass and trout every Friday at the City Restaurant. Some people can’t even lay down a rule without breaking it. You can’t convince the oldest inhab- itant that the good die youg. A large variety of comic post cards at Kinkead’s Stationery Store. The chestnut crop is reported to be an unusually large one this year. Nature is full of paradoxes. Even the cross roads may look pleasant. Ink! Ink! By gross, quart or bottle, all colors, at Kinkead’s Stationery | Store. | When it comes to the Atlantic ocean | there's a great deal to be said on both | sides. | For kodac pictures get a Gibson ad- | Store. | 1t is sometimes difficult to distinguish | between dignified silence and down- | right ignorance. No soap bubbles on Duquesne beer. | The *‘collar”?’ is pure cream. Ask for it at the bars and get the best. | If you want the best call for Du- | quesne Beer. Not a headache in a car- |load of it. Cool, sparkling and re- freshing. *| Doaman a good turn and he will [forget it in a week. Do him a bad | turn and he will remember it to his | dying day. | Even the most conflrmed old maid | must admit that a man is a handy { thing to have around to do her swear- ling for her when things don’t go right. | Dr. Morrison, dentist, Room 2 and 3 lin Brady building, nitrous oxide gas | and Odontunder used for the painless | extraction of teeth. Twenty years’ ex- | perience. H. & C. phone. Lost—A red cow with white spots on | back and belly, short, straight horns, | about four years old, strayed from the | Peter Swope farm on or about Sanday, | Oct. 1st. Reward will be paid for re- | turn of cow to John Petrunic, Patton, | Pa. bs Ordinance No. 81. | An ordinance authorizing the con- | struction of a sewer on Fourth avenue | in the borough of Patton and provid- | ing for the cost of the same: | Beit enacted and ordained by the | burgess and town council of the bor- | ongh of Patton,and it is hereby enacted | by authority of the same. That, whereas | two-thirds of the property owners in | interest and number on Fourth avenue employes of the Beech Creek Coal and |}, ve petitioned for a public sewer on Coke company, and a three weeks’ |g,iq greet, it is therefore enacted and pay. P.8, Don’t forget the printer | ,.qained that a public sewer be con- and that overdue subscription account. | structed on said street, beginning at —Rey. Garrett A. Walsh, late pastor of St. Michael’s Catholic church ab West Salisbury, Somerset county, has | been appointed to the pastorate of the | church at St. Augustine and entered upon his new duties Sunday. —Tom Mullen and Joe Hubbard were out bright and early Monday morning in quest of squirrels. The word *‘quest’ | is used advisedly. The law forbidding | the killing of more than six squirrels in | one day was not violated” by these nimrods. —The Pennsylvania railroad in order to make its service complete in every particular on the Pennsylvania Special, the fastest train in the world, an- nounces that it will have the passen- gers’ clothes pressed during the night while traveling. Michael McTaggart, the former president of this sub-district of the United Mine Workers, whose illness at his home in Barnesboro was noted in a previous issue of this paper, isin a very precarious condition and but little hope is entertained of his recovery. —The belongings of Charles M. Schwab at his summer home at Lo- retto, such as horses, ponies, some | household effects, ete., were shipped to New York last week. Mr. Schwab's new palatial residence in New York is almost completed and the family will occupy it during the coming winter. —Rev. Alex. Dudinsky.who has been pastor of SS. Peter and Paul Greek Qatholic church for the past ten months, bas accepted the pastorate of a new Greek Catholic church at South Sharon and left for that place with his | wife on Tuesday. They were accom- panied by their nephew, Kaleman | Demko. — Charles Brainard, formerly a clerk | in the postoffice at Curwensyille, has | been arrested in Cheyenne, Wyo, | charged with fraud, It is claimed that | Brainard securéd in the neighborhood | of $500 by altering the amounts of ap- | plications for money orders. Certified | copies of extradition papers have been sent West and the prisoner will be! M brought East for trial. the north-east corner of land of Cole 3rothers and extending south and in- tersecting with Palmer avenue sewer at Flannagan run. That the same be t constructed of eight-inch terra cotta | pipe, and that the cost of constructing the same be taxed to the property own- ers adjacent to the same according to the foot front rule according to law. Enacted and ordained this, the 18th { day of September, A. D. 1905. { H. S."LINGLE, President of Council. Attest: — ED S. MOORE, Secretary of Council. Approved by the burgess of Patton borough this 22nd day of September, | A. D. 1905. Ww, J. DONNELLY, Burgess. <7 deposited with this 8 -ank will earn for you just ONE 4 THIRD more than if placed with # vour local bank at THREE per cent. This bank has continuously paid interest on Time Deposits since its organization in 1862 never less thar J its present rate FOUR PER CENT. Your money o Our system of Banking By Mail is # as simpleas it is safe. This strong old bank is within reach wo~-cent Write to-day y Mail booklet—tells about our bank pay FOUR per cent It is free for why it can ;ood Investments, etc. the asking. PITTSBURGH BANK FOR SAVINGS, of PITTSBURGH, PA. ASSETS $15,000,000.00 f LL WANT Fo0D For reflection about t The his time and we're here to supply it. cool fall weather is upon us and everyone will have to be getting into Fall Under- wear, Hose, Shirts, Overcoats, Rain Coats, Etc., and we want you who have not already done so to visit our stores, look our stocks over, buy it you so desire. will not be talked to death to do so, like some sorts of storekeepers do, but be treated courteously and shown our goods. You We have new customers every day who come in, look at our big complete stocks and then buy because our store is a big market for buyers. We are not going to say but a word or two about Suits and Overcoats this week, but we want vou to know that clothing is really the BACK BONE of our business. nearly as many Ov ercoats to show vou. It will suffice here to say that we have 500 Men's and Boys’ Suits, and The price runs from $2.50 boy's all wool knee pants suits to $20.00 in men’s finest dress suits. $20.00 in men’s fine dress coats. Does the Range and Scope Suit You VR XT SEED a em Then the overcoats start at $1.50 tor boys’ reefers and run to ? - wr Attention of mothers called to the following items below, as it concerns her boy or girl. TRIPLE KNEE LEATHER STOCKING sof {OSHA Ken i : BLACK CAT BRAND Chicago- Rockford Hosiery Co. KENOSHA, WIS, The Black Cat Stockings for boys | Friend blouses and and girls are the best in the world. 290. We carry complete stocks of any of the goods and the exclusive sale. a The Mother's shirts for boys A : IH | fitters and wearers /4 f r Had of any of them. 50 and 75¢. It Is time for all of you men to get a pair of the justly celebrated “Saranac” buckskin gloves made away back They are guaranteed to be Indian tanning process. east. The price -50¢, 75¢, $1.00, $1.25, $1.50. Talking about underwear for a moment let us say that we show better values than elsewhere. r we show is a dandy. 50c a garment is strictly all right. The 50c fleece lined underw The blue, brown and cream ribs we have here . . Switz Conde ribbed all wool at $2.00 a suit. Natural Wool all wool at $2.00 and better, finer all wool goods at $2.50, $3.00, $3.50, $4.00 suit. NOW ABOUT OUR NEW SHOE STORE. It has been in operation now three weeks and we are gratified, yea, more than that, to say it is a SUCCESS. Some merchants thought we made a mistake to open a new store separate from our store here for shoes exclusively, but we know our business all the time. The store has demonstated that there is plenty of business for all shoe stocks in Patton, more especially the one keeping just what the poeple are it’s needed. loo me king for. The little shoes for children 3 years to r. Did yousee it? Look in the shoe Our Ladies’, Misses’, boys’ and Men’s We have an experienced shoe salesman to wait on you. knows how to treat you. Come and see our two stores. The Keystone Clothing Bank is Directly Opposite Us, PATTON, - I k i windows and see them. and prices right if you take into consideration the quality. Yes, 14 years called “The Educator’ is a hum- All kinds of leather shoe stocks are complete in every way. He knows shoes. He and Shoe Stores, - PENNA. THE SECRET OF SUCCESS “No, Sir! You cannot palm off any substitutes on me. I'vebeen using August Flower since I was a boy, and I'll have no other.” Forty million bottles of August Flower sold in the United States alone since its introduction! And the demand for it is still growing. Isn't that a fine showing of success? Don’t it prove that August Flower has had unfailing success in the cure of indigestion and dyspepsia—the worst enemies of health and happiness? [Does it not afford the best evidence that A flower is a sure specific for all 1 intestinal disorders P—that it all liver regulators? An Flower has a matchless record of over 35 years in curing the ailing mil- 1 of these distressing complaints. s All druggists, wo sizes, 25¢ and 73c. For sale by GUNN'S PHARMACY. Old papers for sale at this office— only 5c a bundle. 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. A Tender Point with many people is their writing ma- terials, Pen, ink and paper must be just so or it isn’t up to their standard. Stationery sold here is just so and it would be hard to find any better. Of course we carry a great variety. Dif- ferent grades and different styles to suit different requirements, but in every case the quality is very good and prices reasonable. Box paper 10c to $2 per box. Tablets bc to 35¢. Pens 50¢ to $1.50 per gross. Inks, mucilage, paste, ete., ete. KINKEAD’S STATIONERY STORE. DR: H. W. BHILEY, Dentist! Paiton, 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, Fatton, - - Pernn’a. We are making a specialty of extra trousers. Reuel Somerville, 'F. R. MELLON, Dentist. Office in Good Building, formerly occupied by H. A. Seitz. { Office hours:—8 a. m. to 12 m. 1 p. m. to 5:30 p. m. 7 p.m, to 8 p. m. SR Read your own paper. { Attorney-at-Law, Patron, PA. Office in the Good Building, 01d papers for sale a 5c a bundle.