Ve ure ed our SO ey ne, ad’ its the der, It ects ms ps, der ne ck- O11 in er, VOL. XII1.—NO. 38. i to Kane Wednesday by taking the WN THR , | initial game from: the boys of the | mountain top town. The game was : . won by the locals in the eighth inning, Two Straight From the City | : 1g or g | when Keefe made a home run and Wil- of Natural Advantages. [son and Flory each a three bagger | which netted three runs. Score: THE RESULT AT KANE. |pwon......0 00100035 08358 | Kane, wd 0000201 0-8 723 Batteries—Moore and Edgar; Fox and Urqu- | hart. Umpire—Collins. Mountain Top Town—Lost a Hard Game | A genuine swatfest was the second Both teams had 10 hits, but Patton had but | one error, while Kane is credited with Winning two straight from Olean, | three. The score by innings: being beaten at DuBois and splitting | (00 even at Kane is the record of the Pat- | Kan 20301002 *8103 ton base ball team in the Inter-State Bat s—Howard and Marnin; Jarrett and | Urquhart. Umpire—Steinberg. league since the last issue of the COUR- | : IER. Three out of five games isn’t a | The Patton base ball team will play bad record, especially when each of the at Punxsutawney to-day and to-mor- contests lost were only secured by the | "OW and at Bradford on Sunday. On winners by one run. | Monday the locals play two games at The first game at Olean Friday was Oil City. Wendesday and Thursday An Even Break With the Team of the at Dubois When Only Two Hits Were contest with Kane Thursday. Made From Cavanaugh’s Delivery, RHE 10021-7101 | : : 17. 5 won by the locals in a Garrison finish, | Kane will play at Athletic Park and | $175 the score at the end of the eighth in- | Friday and Saturday Punxsutawney ning being 4 to 2 in favor of Olean. | will be here. The Diggers donned their batting garb in the ninth and secured four runs and | kalsomined their opponents. MORTUARY. Chest Springs, score: . ‘ PATTON. | Jesse Dale Fox, one of the best known Wilson, 3b RK HO A Blyoung men in the north of the county, Griflith, 2t 1 1 1 2 0 diedsuddenly at his home in Chest 1 0 3 1 0 Springs Sunday morning about 4 01130 0 grein Mack, of... 2.20 10° clock. : Richardson, 2 2 6 0} Mr. Fox, who was a tinner by trade, Marnin, c. 0 51 i Howard, p.. 2 0 1 o had been working at Loretto during Rotate. i. 3% 5 olthe day and falling from a roof hurt his | arm quite severely. Notwithstanding i R 3 0 A i this, he went home and continued Baar ‘0 3 2 0 o| working in his tin shop until about 11 Spratt, | 0} 3 1 1isalon ] i o 3 Kennedy, 1 ‘0 01 3 0° clock that night, when he retired. O’Conno »0 0 3 1 0 Hisinjured arm commenced to pain him Tyler, ele ¥ 1 00 Dwyer 1-2 O'Neil, 2 1:1 0 Urbach, 18 1 —| a couple of times. SCORE BY INNINGS. The | The Untimely Demise of Jesse Dale Fox at | $1,200. iam, lot in Carroll township, $500. Dixon, Jr., lot in Elder township, $350. et ux, lot in Barr township, $50. tion to Francis O. Luther, 106 acres in Carroll township, $3,819. A Splendid Speed Program for the Carroll- | 0 | considerably,and to alleviate his suffer- | County Agriculture Association will be | throughout this section. Large sums | ing morphine was administered to him | held at Carrolltown Tuesday, Wednes- | will be spent in erecting mine proper- It is supposed that | day, Thursday and Friday. The races | ties in this vicinity, Recently a new "| the amount given him was more than | will be the principal attraction and the | town was surveyed about midway be- | HE PATTON COURI PATTON, CAMBRIA CO, PA,, FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 1906. TRANSACTIONS IN REALTY. Changed Hands Recently, Condron, 282.817 acres in Olearfield township, $1. Thomas Ott et ux to Sylvester Strit- matter, lot in Hastings, $175. Harry N. Price et ux to John Cuartio, lot in Susquehanna township, $200. Jacob Thomas et ux to school district of Elder township, one half acre in El- der township, $1. James M. Brickley et ux to Nicholson Russell, lot in Barnesboro, $625. ; Henry McAnulty et ux et al to John D. Long, lot in Barnesboro, $75. D. J. Bougher et ux to John Long, lot in Barnesboro, $80. Execuators of William W. Tupper to John H. Tupper, two tracts of land in White township, $100. Andrew Repcick et ux to Joseph Sally, lot in Susquehanna township, Lots of Money. NEW TOWNS PLANNED. Creek and Eastern Coal & Coke Co. It is stated that the new big soft coal combine which is officially known as the Pennsylvania, Beech Creek & East- ern Coal and Coke company, and which absorbed the Beech Creek Coal & Coke among other com- panies, will inaugurate important de- velopments and that fully $2,000,000 will be expended within the next tew months. The company has an author- ized capitalization of $8,000,000. Through the bond house of W. J. Hayes, of New York and Boston, a bond issue of $1,200,000 has been issued | out of an authorized issue of $3,00,0000. The proceeds of this bond issue are to be used for the immediate devel- opment of the virgin coal properties north from Wilmore to Patton and west from Vintondale to Ashville. Mines in the vicinity of Cherrytree and Clymer, Indiana county, will also be extended. The entire field is said to have an erea of almost 100,000 acres. {In many cases the coal controlled by | these companies is the best in the bi- | tuminous field and many new towns Hastings B. & L. Association to Vin- cent Link, lot in Hastings, $450. Joseph Haid et ux to Jacob Bru- baker, 40 acres in Allegheny township, Frank Urbain et ux to Frank Cutur- Hortense Dondois et ux to John R. Charles Nelson et ux to Ivor Colson Standard Building & Loan Associa- GOOD RACING. are said to be projected by the concern. { It is expected that an additional The annual fair of the Cambria |number of new openings will be made town Fair Next Week, Charles A. Hughes et ux to Delia C. Big Coal Combine to Invest Extensive Preparations Being Made for New Openings and Improvements in all the Holdings of the Pennsylvania, Beech «0 0002000 4-6] “00002020 0-4 {S000 ned runs, Patton 4, Olean 1. | Patton 3, Olean 6. Sacrifice hits, Flory, Mar- nin. Struck out, by Howard 3, by Urbach 1. | son of Louis and Mrs. Mary E Fox Base on balls, off Howard 1. Passed ball, Mar- | ii 8. Mary bi. hy nin, Umbire, Collins, i who survive. He spent his boyhood The game Saturday was a close one, {days in DuBois and when about 18 but the fellows representing the “oity | Years of age came to Patton, where he of natural advantages” again went | Vas employed in the hardware store of down to defeat. Cavanaugh was on | D. C. Dale for three years. After that the hill for the Diggers and held the | he went to work in the mines here and Oleanders down to two hits. The de- continued at that occupation until the time of his demise. tails: | about two years ago. PATTON. About nine years ago he was married RH O A Eto Miss Bertha Krause, who survives, Wilson, 8b......... 03 11 5 3 3 2|with two sisters, Mrs. W. C. Baum, of 3 o ¢/DnBois, and Mrs. Malissa Wood, of 0| Grampion. Jesse Fox was an honor- 3 3 able, upright, industrious young man, 3 9] whose untimely death is sincerely de- -| plored by a large circle of friends. The funeral was held at the residence A g|8t Chest Springs Monday morning at 1 0 2 4 1/11 o’clock, conducted by Rev. Joseph wuriflith eel SoO~oo ~ wl OLEAN, Colligan, 8 oland 0 0 0 0 0 2 a) 0 0 2 0 oF. Anderson, the pastor of the Patton Kennedy, 1b «O00 10-0 011 2 ah A IMR TA ir O'Connor, 3 "oy oa M. E. church, The remains were taken rf. «0 1 2 0 0/to DuBois and interred in the Rumber- A ON Neil, 1| ger cemetery at that place Tuesday Zeigler, 2 0 6 2 1lmorning. 2% 9 ¢f = Totals............... RA : Pointers for Voters. | SCORE BY INNINGS. | «00002000 0-2] If voters have not paid a state or Olean... forge 000000 2 1 oh | county tax within two years preceding Summary—First base on errors, Patton 4, | fx Olean 2. Left on bases, Patton 6, Olean 6. Two | the sixth day of November next they base hit, Flory. Sacrifice hits, Griftith, Bacnac, | Should call upon the assessor of their Edgar, Colligan. Stolen bases, Colligan, 0’Con- | proper ward and have themselves as- : prop oo Dw yon oN Struck ou, by Dovanangh | sessed on their occupation so that they 2, by Zeigler 2. ases on balls, off Cavanaugh . a: 2. Passed ball, Edgar. Double play, Griffith, | may qualify themselves to vote. They (unassisted.) {should do this not later than Wednes- Rain prevented the game at DuBois | 42¥> September 5—two months before Monday, but on Tuesday Patton was election, The payment of a tax to defeated in one of the best games ever | 4921ify as a voter must be made one played on the DuBois grounds. It was month before the election, or not later anybody’s contest up to the ninth in- | than Saturday, October 6. Under the ning, the score being a tie, when. the | ‘'COrrupt Practices Act,” no tax can be DuBoisites secured a run and goose- | paid for the voter by a political party, egged their opponents, thereby win- | candidate, or any individual, not can a ning the game by the following score: | “3% receipt be given the voter as a gift, 2 | T} lty for violation of this law i 1e penalty for violation of this law is R H o A pg fine and imprisonment. Patton.. PATTON, Wilson, 3b 0.20.1 0} - 9 : 2 Li The Pennsy’s New Books, 0 0. 0] 3 a 9 a The new $20 mileage books issued by 1 1 0 ofthe Pennsylvania Railroad company 1 2.4 o| are now on sale and are all that the 2 0 1 Olmost exacting could demand. There 2|is absolutely no restriction placed on | the users, except that they must be “| used within a year from the time of| 0 \ : 0 purchase. Nobody signs their name land anybody can use them. Further, Totals... DUBOIS. 5 I Moran, If. Snowden, Larkin, 1b.. Burton, 2! ol ney’s end a rate of two and a half | 5 Neiman, 0 8 |if the amount of miles in a book is not Martel, c. 1 i|sufficient to carry you to your jour- urtin, 2 ‘White, p. Totals i {Sous a mile will be charged for that SCORE BY INNINGS. | distance, instead of three as heretofore. Patton. 000100 02 0-3 The company, however, assumes no re- DuBois. 000000271 1-4 | sponsibility for the books, will not no- *One out wh winning run was made, m= Summary—Earned runs, DuBois 2, Patton 2. tify conductors of their loss or any- Left on bases, DuBois 6, Patton 6. Two base | thing of the kind. hit, Collins, Three base hit, McLean. Struck A out, by White 8, by Collins 5. First base on balls, ofl’ White 2, oft Collins 1, Sacrifice hits, | Snowden, Weimer, Newham, Martel, McLean. | Your Eyes. Time of game, one hour and 40 minutes. Um- Tuesday of each week. Mr. Fox was a native of Clearfield First base on errors, Patton 1. Left on bases, | county and was about 31 years old at Are they weak and do they trouble {seen by their advertisement in this Stolen base, Collins. Double plays, Newham i you? i it so, see H. A. Hunter, doctor issue, to Burton, Burton to Newham to Larkin. of optics, at room 7, Good Building, on partner, wholesale business in the city. { his system would stand and death en- [speed program is of unusual merit, as | tween Ebensburg and Wilmore and it | the following will show. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4. Farmers’ Race, for horses used for He was the | farming purposes only, (no entrance fee, ) purse $25. Road Race, purse $75. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5. 2:20 pace, purse $300. 2:12 pace, purse $300. 2:24 trot, purse $300. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6. 2:25 pace, purse $300. 2:28 pace, purse $300. 2:20 trot, purse $300. 2:35 trot or pace, purse $300. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7. 2:45 trot or pace, purse $300. Free for all, purse $300. 2:17 pace, purse $300. In Good Shape Financially. The county commissioners have re- ceived a communication from the state department at Harrisburg giving the amount of personal property subject to tax under the Act of June 8, 1891. The total amount of personal property sub- ject to tax under this act is given at $5,035,154.08. This consists of mort- gages, judgments, and personal prop- erty. The tax is given at four mills, | making $20,140.62, less the county treasurer’s commission of one per cent, or $201.41, leaving $19,939.21 the net amount to be paid the state by Cam- bria county. After the county has paid this amount to the state, seventy- five per cent is returned to the county to be used for county purposes. A Free Stove, Do you want a good heating stove free? If so, you can get it if you are lucky enough. Binder & Starrett are giving aavay souvenir coupons to every purchaser and some one is going to get a heating stove of superior make with- out the expenditure of a cent of money. Why not you? Itis worth trying for at any rate. Goin and see the stove and you will be more anxious than ever. Advertised Letters, The following letters remain uncalled for in the Patton post office for the two weeks ending Saturday, Aug. 25, 1906: J. F. Fry, Patrick Whalen, Miss Julia Ross, Miss Wilma Watsen, Mikelaj Ohar. Persons calling for the above letters will please say that they are ‘““‘Adver- tised.” E. WiLL GREENE, Postmaster. Going Out of Business. The Luxenberg Jewelry company, who have been in business here for some time past, have decided to give up their Patton store and will dispose of their big stock at auction, as will be Louis Luxenberg, the resident expects to engage in the pire, Hanley, | _ The Diggers featured their first visit | Is this your paper ? is stated that mines will be located $1.00 PER YEAR INDEPENDENT — NOT NEUTRAL — RUN BY THE PUBLISHER. vere ers INLLONS TO BE SPENT! Fall and Winter Wear = Coming in every day. Suits for men-good as, tailor made. For boys, as stylish as can be made, Children’s Suits in many different styles. All at the lowest figure. Call in and see and price them. SHOES. The largest shoe stock in Patton. That is why this store sells more than any store in Northern Cambria. Satisfaction guaranteed. LADIES’ SKIRTS. For Misses also. Extra Large Sizes. TRUNKS AND VALISES. We always have a large stock on hand to select from, HATS AND CAPS. Fall line now complete in all lines. Stein-Bloch Clothing. B. KUSNER, Next Door to Bank. PATTON, PA. Rar Bargn! We are seling the selebrated Paul Jones Whisky for a limitd perod for 73c cents a botel. This whisky is one of the very best in the markt, fielow with age and of exkwesite flavr. It usully retales for one dolar, but we have to big a stock on hand and it must | there. Itis possible that this projected town will be the center of operations | |in this section. In addition to bringing | | hundreds of desireable persons to this | section thousand of dollars will be ex- | pended among our people. The con- | tracts have already been let for mining machinery and ‘boom’ towns may be expected in more than one township. In order to send coal to tidewater and the lakes the black diamonds will | be shipped out over the Pittsburg, | Rochester & Binghamton railroad, This road has already been constructed to the northern part of Clearfield county and traffic agreement will be { made so that coal may be shipped both | east and north. The most prominent capitalists in New York and Philadel- phia are in the merged companies. IMBESI ARRESTED. Alleged Assailant of Patrick Campbell has Been Captured in Italy. District Attorney J. W. Leech has received a message from Benjamin F. Chase, United States consul at Scala, providence of Messina, Sicily, stating that Francesco Imbesi, wanted here for alleged complicity in the famous Port- age hold up of two years ago, has been arrested by the Italian authorities and will be held for trial. Imbesi cannot be extradited, but will be tried in Italy on evidence furnished from here, as was the case some time since when Carmine Grillo was con- victed of dynamiting a house near Por- age. Watch Them When They Come Here, When the Oil City team was here last week some of the Derrick Dodgers amused themselves while on the field by spiking the balls full of holes. No less than four balls were put out of commission in that manner, two Fri- day and two during Saturday’s games. To spike a ball reduces largely its sus- ceptibility for curves and shoots and those put in use last week always made their appearance when the Punx’y pitcher was on the slab. The Oil City team also carried a bat with a steel screw in it which they used until Third Baseman Allen put up a vigorous ob- jection.—Punxs’y Spirit. NOTICE, Notice is hereby given that all ac- counts due CO. W. Hodgkins’ Patton Pharmacy have been left in my hands for collection. All parties indebted are requested to pay same within 30 days If not they will be collected by law. Mgrs. J. F. MARKS. But They Didn't, The Patton base ball team, thirteen in number, are registered at the Im- perial. Any aggregation of ball play- ers which is so superstitious as to travel with thirteen men deserve to lose.— Olean Times, Saturday. Subscribe for and advertise in this Whose paper are you reading ¥ paper. be disposd of. Come in and secure a botel befor it is al gon. BD. A. MELON, PATIN, Local fone. Pencilvania. The New City Meat Market. The Most Reliable, the Most Modern, the Most Sanitary, the Most Up to Date Meat Market in this Section. Come and inspect our Slaughtering, Cold Storage and Man- ufacturing Plant. No Fear of Government or Public Inspection . . .. . . Compare our meats and prices with those elsewhere. Buy here and get full value every time. | We have one price to all and that the lowest cash price. Courteous treatment to all. Best prices paid for calves and spring lambs. We Solicit a Share of Your Patronge. Satisfaction Guaranteed. THE CITY TEAT MARKET, Bazaar Building. WOLFF'S PHARMACY, PATTON, PA, Headquarters for Pure Drugs, Drug- gists’ Sundries and everything usually carried in a first-class drug store. Courteous Treatment and Right "Prices. Hoffman's Celebrated Ice Cream by the Dish, Quart or Gallon. iy
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers