lor uamill minatey who eon f «on the er untif ieren flag loss they ill eave 057 p wm 100 * 028 123% 1.7 032 038 * 03% * 044 046 * 048 = 050 = 088 040 * 042 * 04k 050 * 051 ** 052 * R. truis: + Supt. ERISA HOLL er. 0 OO 0 OF 0 OO 0 OF H. J. ment. all ox t wilh iS. . Ons. and fo salty ig in shares . essrs. e bes officer ourse Patton Courier. INTERESTING INDENTATIONS. ~This is Arbor Day. ~Don’t forget the base ball meeting to-night. ~Born—To Mr. and Mrs, B, Kusner -a daughter. ~Next Friday will be a legal holi- day- Good Friday. — Aaron Weakland, the Arcadia liv- eryman, was in town Tuesday. —Mr. and Mrs. H. 8. Lingle were visiting in Windber over Sunday. —Miss Agnes Hunter hag resigned her position as clerk in Wolf’s drug store. ~The Prohibition county convention will be held at Ebengburg Saturday, May 12. . —F. H. Wirtner, the photographer, has a new advertisement in this issue. Read it. —Mrs. Geo. B. Howe and daughter, Esther, were visiting in Philipsburg this week. ~—Miss Mildred Brown was taken to Philadelphia Tuesday to receive medi- cal treatment, --There are a namber of cases of diphtheria in town and the disease is increasing daily. —John H. Parnell, who is engaged in the insurance business at Windber, was in town this week. —Rev. Maurice E. Swartz will preach his fareweil sermon at the M. E. church Sunday night. —The Bell telephone exchange has been moved from the Good Build ing to the Brady block. —Frank Campbell was in Ebensburg Tuesday attending the hearing of the Portage murder suspects. —R. Emerson Good, of New York, is in town, having come to attend the base ball meeting to-night. —Attention is directed to the new adyertisement of Charles Welty, the plumber, in another column. —Hon. W. C. Lingle attended the joint conference of the miners and the operators at Clearfield this week. —The near approach of Easter is heralded in the new advertisement of the Keystone Clothing Co. in this issue. —Jesse E. Dale and E. Will Greene attended the funeral of the late Valen- tine S. Barker at Ebensburg on Wed- nesday. —The Pomona grange meeting will be held here Monday. Three sessions will be held, morning, afternoon and evening. —“Shopping by Telephone” is the appropriate caption of the new adver- tisement of O. F. Wolf, the druggist, in this issue. —8. J. Wirtner is making prepara- tions to build an addition to his meat market and case the entire building with brick. —James A. Gleason, the well-kuown Houtzdale attorney, has decided to lo- cate in DuBois for the practice of his profession. —The miners’ delegates returned from Clearfleld this afternoon, the joins conference having adjourned un- til Tuesday. —Three brass bands, all playing at once, enlivened the town and helped celebrate the success of the eight hour movement Monday. — Wesley Merriman, the former land- lord of the Monitor House at Arcadia, has moved his household goods here and is again a resident of Patton. —John Trueman, James Spence, Thomas Powell and John N. Watkins represented the Patton local union of United Mine Workers at the Clearfield convention this week. —-A festival will be held in the church at St. Augustine Monday afternoon and evening, April 16. Dancing in the afternoon and euchre in the evening. Supper will be served by the ladies of the congregation. —James A. Farabaugh, of Bradley Junetion, the vice president of the new Grange National Bank of Patton, was here Monday and collected from the stockholders 50 ‘per cent of the sub- seribed capital stock of the organiza- tion. —-Joseph Rager, who was arrested recently for the murder of ‘Cap’? Don- ahue at Barnesboro, has been released a8 the result of habeas corpus pro- ceedings. He will be tried on the charge of manslaughter at the June sessions of the Cambria county crim- painter left it. CLIPPED AND CONTRIBUTED. He finds no weal who flees all woe, The wariest may be the least wise. It’s mighty easy to mistake venom for virtue, Righteousness is never better for taking a rest, Black bass anid trout every Friday at | the City Restaurant, There can be no finality to truth that comes to fallible men. For paper hanging and decorating | call on A, C, Fisher, Patton Pa, The man who is too good for | thing is often good for nothing. any- Spring suitings in all the latest de- signs just received at Dinsmore Bros | ' o : 1 |" A successful candidacy for heaven is than learning to like a more look corpse, There's a good deal of difference be- | tween social prominence and personal | eminence. | For Sale—A white bed room suit will | [be sold cheap for cash, For particu- {lars call at this office, | Sue Wentz, teacher of music and representative of 8. Hamilton Piano | company, Pittsburg Pa. For Sale Good bed room suit | bed springs will be sold cheap for cash. Inquire at this office. aad | | No soap bubbles on Duquesne beer. | The “collar”? is pure cream. Ask for | it at the bars and get the best. | Seo our new line of gray and blue | spring suitings just received. DINSMORE BROS. Wanted—3,000 shares Consolidated | Gold, Copper & Coal Co. stock. Ad- dress Box 507, Bloomsburg, Pa. It you want the best call for Du- quesne Beer. Not a headache in a car- load of it. Cool, sparkling and re- freshing. . It is a good deal easier to pray for men’s souls than to pour balm into their wounds, not to mention that it costs less. For Sale—A good Cornish organ. Will sell cheap for cash or will trade for a good cow. Call on or address A. C. Fisher, Patton, Pa. From an intellectual point of view that time of one’s life is most wasted when he tries, in a spirit of dumb loy- alty, to admire all those things that are popularly considered admirable. { If you appreciate anything clean, attractive and a variety of anything prepared in a first-class way, try the City Cafe at Barnesboro, north from the Corner Drug store. It is the best place of its kind in the north of the county and is a very desirable place for ladies as well as gentlemen for meals, lunch and all kinds of soft drinks. Strawberry, vanilla and choc- olate ice cream every day. Also fruit, candy, nuts and fresh roasted Jumbo peanuts. Letter to I. Goldstein, Patton, Pa. Dear Sir: When you see a well dressed man you like to say: ‘‘There’s a sample of my clothes. That man is worth two of himself as he was when he came to me.” We have the same feeling. Our paint on a house is worth twice as much as old fashion painter’s paint, lead and oil. It looks the same when first put on. In three months it don’t. In three years it decidedly don’t. Lead and oil |. chalks off in three years; it is consid- ered a first rate job that lasts three years, Devoe lead and zink is about as good in three years as it was the day the D CISTI IS. THE PATTON COU IIIS SE ES EEIEEIEEL 05 885.8555808 88855888 RIKK, APRIL 6 1906. Why Not Be a Leader in the Easter Fashion Parade? [t doesn't require mu l. 'e . , M . Knowing where to get high-quality materials i Coats at moderate prices. that, and there's nothing to equal “Clothes of Quality” Clothes which we have in an assortment that is remarkably comprehensive and div In Fashionabl Young Men, we show single and double-breasted designs—semi-extreme and conserva- tive models—correct to the beautiful fabrics of tested from . uaa, oi In Fashionable Top Coats For Men and Young len, you will find Covert Top Coats, long, short and medium cuts, in the swellist fabrics of the season, from Teach Your Boys How While They're Young, by getting them clothes that are right in style and thoroughly refined in pattern that fit correctly. No other garments made for Boys and Juv- eniles have the reputation of SNELLENBERG CLOTHES at the prices we are quoting, and there's such a broad assortment of smart models here that every taste can be suited. All the Up-to-Date in Spring Suitsand Spring Top rersified. ch money—it all depends on smart and distinctive styles and 8 Q ay S S This store is the place for by iy ) & on Hy by ta by oy & a ny - e Suits For Men and last detail, in exclusive and unusually "7 $10 to $20. 5 & 8 COPYRIFWT 1906 THE SKELLENSURG CLOTIIS 0. Paddocks Chesterfields and Rain Coats— $10 to $20. Stylish Suits and Top Coats For Boys, to Dress Well in “mannish” models ; made of fabrics refined in and materials and “ ne . : appearance, but “tough” in wearing quality, from . $5 to $12. Spring Suits and Overgarments For Juveniles, in the newest effects in Sailor Suits, Norfolks and plain and fancy blouses,bright and pretty materials of latest weave and coloring, from $3 to $7.50. Fashions in Spring Hats and Haberdashery, , at Prices That Will Save You Money. PHVA NNN NWI AVYLD WE HAVE A DIS- $ $ TINCTIVE SHOE STORE. WOOTEN I NTI IINITITNITINIFS, THE KEYSTONE, Opp. Bank, Patton, Pa. LAIMA VLMARMMAN NIRA SHOES IN ALL STYLES, SHAPES AND @ $ | $ KINDS. WV WIHT TSTTOI 00S Zink is the secret of it; no secret at all. A good many painters know zink; some mix it in with their lead. We grind it in; not a little; good deal. It’s the zink and the grinding that does it. You can’t mix zink by hand. We grind it in by machinery. Painters are finding us out, though some painters are slow. You know that it pays a good man to wear good clothes. How many cus- tomers have you that know it ? Yours truly, F. W. DEVOE & Co. P. S. Binder & Starrett sell our paint. Officers Were Installed. District Great Pocahontas Sara Esel- man, of Tippecanoe Council of Coal- port, installed the chiefs of Chippewa Council, No. 154, at an open installa- tion Tuesday night as follows: Proph- etess, Mildred Stere; Pocohontas, Em- ma Shunkwiler; Wenona, Janet Heist; Powhatan, Emma Emigh; Collector of Wampum, Rosa Beckwith; Keeper of | inal court. —Orders were issued Saturday from the office of R. N. Durborrow, superin- | tendent of motive power, reducing the | working time in the Altoona machine | shops and all other shops along the | Pennsylvania division to twenty-five | hours a week, which means five hours | each day and Saturday off duty, —There is a rumor abroad at the yresent time, which has yet to be veri- fed, that the Pennsylvania Railroad | gym ompany will once more open the fa- mpus Mountain House,at Cresson. The ecanpany is at present improving the stition at Cresson. It is said that dur- | ing the past couple of y®ars many re- hoselry reopened to the public. \ \ | Sara Chapman, turn out commercial printing of all quests have been made to have the ol | kinds and at prices that can’t be dupli- | cated for good work. Wampum, Rebecca Nashwinter; Keep- | er of Records, Maude Richards; First | Scout, Sarah Chapman; Second Scout, ! Harriet Stresser; First Runner, Elsie | Sandin; Second Runner; Mary Johns- | ton; First Warrior, Sara Rounsley; | Second Warrior, Mrs. LaComte; Third | Warrior, « Elizabeth. Wilkie; Fourth | Warrior, Mary Heist; First Counsellor, | COME ONE and all to see our of Sailors and Children's Hats: Laces, Etc. Give us a call. MELLON MILLINERY STORE, also fine Lawns, Dotted Swiss, All Over EASTER SUITINGS. Now is the time to leave your order tor that Easter Suit. Qur of the new grays and blues is complete. Have you seen the new sack coat for this line line Everything new and up to date. s€asen. DINSMORE BROS, THE TAILORS, Patton, - - - Pennmn’a. Sarah Jenkins; Second Counsellor, | Margaret Heist; Guard of Forest, | Lydia Crowell; Guardian a Gradwell; Trustee for 18 Moons, Patronize the home print id We are better prepared than ever to tar and Banjo of Tepe, Violin, Mandolin, Gui- DR: H. W. BHILEY, Dentist! TAUGHT, WM. M. SIMPSON, Fifth Avenue, PATTON, PA. | office Hours—S to 12 a. m., 1 to p., m. 6 to 8 p. 1, tog Opposite M. E. Churh. !'p.m. Parnell, Cowher& Co F. R. MELLON, Ty Dentist. IVSURMREE cn. , i occupied by H. A. S¢ FIRE, LIFE AND ACCIDENT Room 16, Good Building. REAL ESTATE AGENTS. Otfios Haare: SoG ice hours om, to 12m. 0 p.m LOCAL PHONE. Good Building, Patton, Pa.— Phone No, 9, yi CEOS pom