The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, November 09, 1906, Image 4

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    "THE
a"
PATTON LOURIER, NOVEMBER 6 1906
FOR ASSEMBLY.
SECOND DISTRICT.
(All of the County Outside of Johnstown City.)
I —————————— —————————————— — cn m—
BEERS
5 ® o> ow —
n = or a 2 g
a g eo g » 5
3 g £ g .
DISTRIOTS, wx p , a 4 9
. - m . .
Poa oe
w : 0 - i
el . ’ rt
eer n— p——— ° Ns
Adams Township, No. 1 . . 139 140 52 52 1
Adams Township, Dunlo 84 80 14 89 53 50
Adams Township, Gramlingtown. 36 35 14 16 1 1
Allegheny Township ....i.o00eees 30 33 128 146 20 1
Ashville Borough ..............:. 11 2 27 29 22 19
Barnesboro, North ...... Serie + 28 26 18 15 110 102
Barnesboro, South .,..... “eran res 84 89 18 26 92 84
Barr Township, North ..... dedees 56 56 15 17 18 17
Barr Township, South ........... 16 15 19 19 1 .
Sackick, NO. 1 +.ovvesinsinnee 110 94 38 69 15 ‘un
Blacklick, Na. 2 .......cccco0i0.s 35 31 5 8 26 20
Cambria Township ......e... wees 17D 170 33 66 3 1
Carroll Township, Bast ........ vs 18 18 37 42 29 28
Carroll Township, North ......... 17 16 26 26 “ein Pn
Carroll Township, Northeast ..... 18 18 37 42 29 2
Carroll Township, West ......... 67 70 67 80 47 30
Carralitown ..................... 21 24 115 136 26 19
Chest Springs ..........c.c..iu 16 15 19 19 ‘e 1
Chest Township ................. 10 9 42 62 25 3
Clearfield Township .. A. v0vu.n. 23 23 104 110 1
Conemaugh Township, Lower .... 43 b7 27 35 3 .e
Conemaugh Township, Upper .... 20 20 4 4 “e
Cresson Borough ...........ce ce. 72 71 83 89 1 9
Cresson Township ............ 20 20 54 62 8 5
Croyle Township, No.1 .......... 72 75 27 34 T Yuu
Croyle Township, No. 2 .......... 30 28 12 8 19 20
Croyle Township, No. 3 .......... 43 45 19 21 soe ‘ew
Daisytown Borough .... 20 27 2 22 3 2
Dale Borough ..... 167 170 98 96 5 4
Dean Township . rarer a 30 27 14 15 3 7
; East Conemaugh, No. 1 .. HO 174 24 48 3 4
; East Conemaugh, No. 2 146 166 23 33 8 5
{ East Taylor, No.1 ............... 44 49 2 6 3 3
: East Taylor, No. 2 ............... 26 28 9 8 1 vee
Ebensburg, Center Ward ...... .. 106 100 62 66 10 2
Ebensburg, Bast Ward ........ . 131. 132 22 34 1 1
Ebensburg, West Ward ........:. 65 62 24 30
ww 31 34 78 118 94 66
Elder Township ...............
Ferndale Borough .. .s
Franklin Borough ..
Gallitzin Borough ............... 105 106 173 176 16 10
Gallitzin Township ..... eersveves: 38 31’ 35 32 56 56
Hastings Borough ........... wee 57 79 139 136 45
Jackson Township, No. 1 ........ 104 100 36 34 10 9
Jackson Township, Nant-y-Glo .. 36 6... 3 b9 56
Jackson Township, Vintondale ... 50 51 11 11 8 3
Lilly Borough ............. OE, 93 92 % 98 66 41
Loretto Borough ...........evi.. 7 7 37 36 ve ve
Lower Yoder Township ......... 57 56 122 119 4 3
Munster Township .............. 11 16 50 54 '
Patton Borough, First Ward ..... 59 53 176 143 116 87
Patton Borough, Second Ward ... 40 42 139 127 93 72
: Portage Borough ................ 55 58 39 45 51 39
i Portage Township, North ..... vee 28 28 40 54 21 19
iV
Portage Township, South ........ 16 17 12 18 106
Reade Township, East ........... 97 98 21 19 3
: Reade Township, North .......... 52 b1 6 8 18 15
Reade Township, South ...
| Reade Township, West . 15 12 5 3 83 81
: Richland Township .. 106 119 40 48 2
} Rosedale Borough ... 32 35 6 11 oe
i Sankertown Borough 16 20 50 56 4 2
: Scalp Level Borough ... DE 58 19 26 2
£ South Fork, First Ward ......... 129 139 30 49 33 36
3 South Fork, Second Ward ....... 142 117 19 nn
! Spangler Borough ........... sees 10 79 86 102 167 144
} ‘
f Stonycreek Township ........... 154 164 50 68 4 1
Summerhill Borough ............ 45 50 42 45 13 16
| Summerhill Township, North .... 37 55 27 47 2 1
i Summerhill Township, South .... 64 68 28 35 11 7
i Susquehanna Township, North ... 59 66 26 40 11 9
. 33 21 41 53 76 67
Susquehanna Township, South ..
} Susquehanna Township, West ... 30 41 11 20 20 19
; Tunnelhill Borough ............. 11 11 30 30 11 11
5 Upper Yoder Township .......... 62 61 15 mn ... se
i Washington Township .......... 19 21 46 B84 52 51
t Westmont Borough .............. 125 120 34 39 3 b
3 ‘West Taylor Township, No. 1 .... 41 46 6 12 2 os
|
i ‘West Taylor Township, No. 2 .... 177 66 8 4 8 wp
i ‘White Township ...... rsninvisnee 41 47 19 338 7 6
i Wilmore Borough ........cc0000. 29 46 12 25 1 1
Totals ...... sieicieis sions veeees...4695 4785 3200 3751 1926 1439
Pluralities .................0 084-9034... nL... hous
FE, - — - = —
WILL GET AN INCREASE. A RAILROADER INJURED.
Employees of the Pennsylvania Railroad to | Squeezed Between Two Cars at Avis While
Receive Better Wages, Making a Coupling.
The wages of all employees of the| While coupling cars in the railroad
Pennsylvania railroad system on lines yards at Avis Thursday afternoon Bren
east and west of Pittsburg are to be Antes, a well known New York Central
increased. Nearly 150,000 men will be | hrakeman who resides in Jersey Shore,
affected.
It is probable the increase will be | two coal cars and the internal injuries
effective December 1st, but on account | received in the accident will likely re-
of the detail work to be done before a | guilt in the young railroader’s death.
sweeping order is issued it may be later. | 1t is not known just how Antes was
The management is considering a |caught, but he was badly squeezed be-
proposition to grant an increase of 10 | tween the bumpers of the two cars
per cent to all employees whose salary | which caught him before he could es.
per month is less than $50. cape from his dangerous position be-
The monthly pay roll of this system | tween the drawheads. Jersey Shore
averages about $10,000,000 and an in- | Physicians announced his injuries as
crease would mean the additional pay-, Serious and he was ordered taken to a
ment of $1,000,000. The total number | hospital.
of employees on the combined systems| A special train was ordered up and
.aftected is about 133,565. the trip to Williamspoet made in rec-
\ A high official of the Pennsylvania ord time. His lefo arm. was broken
company in Pittsburg stated Tuesday and the internal injuries sustained
evening that be had received no official about the hips make his condition
word of the increase, but said that! Critical
sho 1d it be true it would mean an in- DANGER FROM DYSPEPSIA.
~ oremge for more than 10,000 men in this
finn He also said that the prop- | Imperfect Digestion Most Prolific Cause ot
ion has been under consideration Serious Disease,
for some time.
.
HAVE YOU CATARRH?
Sold Under Guarantee, ceptible to serious illness.
If you have Catarrh with its many| If you have distress after eating, a
to use the healing Hyamei at once. nervousness, dizziness, nausea, head-
Hyomei is made from nature’s sooth- : + TRE
ing oils and balsams, and contains the | tion, begin the use of Miona at once and |
germ killing properties of the pine for- | Bet well, : ;
ests. Its medication is taken in with Miona will Jive such strength and
the air your breathe, so that it reaches tone to the whole digestive system that
the most remote cells of the respiratory | ror Gf diate ae :
organs, killing all catarrhal germs and out fear of distress or indigestion.
soothing any irritation there may be in| O- F. Wolf hasso much faith in its su-
the mucus membrane. | perior merits, that he gives a guarantee
A compiete Hyomei outfits cost but | With every 50-cent box of Miona that | Other fellow does it, it may be right. |
$1, extra bottles, if needed, 50 cents, |the remedy will cost nothing unless it | I he COURIER does it, you know it is
right.
and O. F. Wolf gives his personal guar- | cures.
antee with every package that money
will be refunded unless the treatment
cures.
Patronize the home print
We are better prepared than ever to
Subscribe for and advertise in this | kinds and at prices that can’t be dupli-
paper. cated for good work.
A Fact Well Stated,
During the last five years the price of |
everything that has to do with the |
making of a newspaper has advanced, |
Type, ink, paper, labor, machinery —
all have gone upward in price, and |
| indications are that the price of white i
paper will further advance owing to |
| the scarcity of raw waterial. During
[all this advance in prices the printers
[have been compelled to maintain the
|same prices for their product. The
[price of subscription has remained the
| same,: advertising rates have not ad-
| vanced, and many of the standard forms
| of commercial job printing are still done
[at the same old prices. It is the only
| trade of which we have knowledge that
[ has not been benefitted by the advance
in prices. —Maunsfleld Advertiser.
|
| Ldvertised Letters,
The following letters remain uncalled |
{ for in the. Patton post office for the two
| weeks ending Satarday, Nov, 3, 1906:
| Eni Bujnoveky, Hary Davius, A. G.
| Dibble, H. A. Hunter, John George |
{ Makepeace, Lawrence McDonald, F, E,
Whitney,Jas. Corliuse, Conrad Dedrich,
| Miss Bertha Hoover, Mrs. Frank Lit- |
| zinger, Joseph Smith, Miss Emma |
| Yahner, John Paules, Maryanna Sie- |
| reta. |
Persons calling for the above letters |
| will please say timt they are ‘“Adver-
|
| tised.”’
|
|
BE. WILL GREENE, Postmaster. |
| - - — |
| It‘s the Same in Patton, |
|
Lock Haven boys complain thatthe |
school girls—from the primary to the |
high school—are wearing the white |
felt hats that boys especially Pile)
themselves upon possessing. The boys |
| look upon these hats as purely boyish |
regalias, and they talk of *‘cutting’’ the
acquaintances of girls who persist in
wearing the chapeaus after receiving a
hint of the boy’s displeasure,
‘The Housekeeper.
The Prizer stoves and ranges rep-
resent the best of everything in stove
making. They please the housekeeper,
because they are what they want at
prices they can afford to pay. Sold,
guaranteed and recommended by
Binder & Starrett.
Notice.
If the parties who took my ladders
away from John Lilly’s house will re-
turn same at once no questions will be
asked, otherwise accept the conse-
quences. ELLSWORTH KRITZER.
—After being closed for nearly three
weeks on aceount of the number of
scarlet fever casesin the borough the
public school was again opened last
Monday with a large attendance. Of
the eleven cases reported at the time
the school was closed not a single case
now exists in the borough and only one |
in the township, which is very mild, is |
reported. The strict quarantine main- |
tained by Health Officer Dr. J. A.
Lunch soon checked the spread of the |
disease and he is deserving of much |
was probably fatally squeezed between |
praise for his diligence. — Cresson
Record. |
Estate of Jesse D, Fox, Deceased.
Letters of administration on the estate of |
Jesse D. Fox, late of Chest Springs borough, |
deceased, having been granted to the under- |
signed, all persons indebted to the said estate
are requested to make payment, and those |
having claims to present the same without |
delay to LEwIs Fox,
Administrator,
Chest Springs, Pa.
Sept. 22, 1906.
Lumber
Manufacturers.
Schenk |
& Perry. |
Saw and Lh Mill at
While health reports do not givein- | St. Augustine, Pa.
digestion as a cause of death, yet it so
weakens the stomach and the whole |
Breathe Hyomei and Get Relief and Cure— | 8ystem that it makes one readily sus- |
' Post Office & "Phone A 274,
unpleasant symptoms, yon should begin feeling of heaviness in the stomach, |
ache or any other symptoms of indiges- |
| you can eat anything at any time with- | Stationery and get it at the best office | |
that does the best printing. Of course |
that’s the COURIER.
shop only 5c a bundle.
Old papers for sale at this office for | di
turn out commercial printing of all 5c a bundle.
{ 920 150ar Patton Iv 16 10 $2 40
| 900 129 Westover 636 300
| 70Lar Arcadia 2 8 14
- | 830 100ar Mahaffey Iv 700 327
| 757128 1v Kerrmoor ar729 352
Gazzam
6
600 10 24 ar Munson
Winburne
Peale
Gillintown 10 04
Snow Shoe 1009 650
Beech Creek 1057 74
Chest Springs,
Pa. a Hh
The best business men use the best
Who does yonr printing? If the |
|
1
Old papers for sale at this office— |
E
When you need
| Read u
Exp M
624 1049
615 10 39
6051029 1v
5382 1000 Iv)
5 10 50 ar |
555 1019
| pm
| 280 650ar Williamsy
8 36%11 30 lv Philadelphia ar. 7 3
a pm pm am
4 00
430 900 Iv
am
*Daily. Week days, 27 pm Sunday.
a m Sunday
hilipsburg with Penns;
Y and P CR R; at Cle
f
he
<i t
haffey with (hb
y
western railway.
anything in the | J. ¥. Fairlamb, W. H. Northrup,
y g Gen’l Pass, Agt.,
printing line come here.
Advertising
consists simply in pre.
senting before the people
the goods you have to sell
in an intelligent manner,
whether it is a house and
lot or a pair of shoes. It
is too late at this day to
expatiate on the merits of
advertising. That has
been demonstrated so of-
ten that itera s futile.
Everybody days
knows that udverti.ing
pays. The main question
1s, what medium to use?
Advertising experts long
ago settled it by declar-
ing that newspaper adver-
tising was by far the most
effective and brings better
returns than any other
extant. The merchants
of this section long ago
declared that better re-
sults were obtained by
using the COURIER than
by any other means. It
is read every week by
hundreds of families and
goes into the homes of the
majority of the people of
Northern Cambria county.
The rates are low, just
and eduitable—one price
to all, and the small ad-
vertiser gets just as good
a rate as the large one.
If your business needs
a tonic, come in and let
us talk the matter over
with you or send us word
and we will have a repre-
sentative call on you and
explain everything about
our plan. You may do
business without adver-
tising, but you are certain
to do more by advertising.
Tt is an investment that
will repay you an hun-
dred fold.
We will prepare your
copy and take complete
charge of your advertis-
ing campaign, however
large or small, without,
extra cost.
The Courier,
(Pennsylvania Division.)
Beech Creek District.
Condensed Time Table.
ail [n effect June 17,°05
Kerrmoor Ir729
New Millport
Olanta
Mitchells
Clearfield
Woodland
Wallaceton
Morrisdale Mines
Munson
Philipsburg
Mill Hall
1
133
145
ar
1
1
1
1
p
am Phil’a,& Reading R R
lv. NY via Tamaqua ar "1040
ons—At Williamsport with Phila
ding Railway: at Jersey Show
Brook District; at Mill Hz
Central Railroad of Pennsylvania:
Pennsyvania re
Pennsylvania
gent,
New York, Williamsport, Pa.
JUST A BIT OF LIFE,
A Pathetle Inmecldent of the Paws
shops In the Metropolis,
Sneaking into a small shop In an ob
secure and poverty ridden locality, the
of Jewelry. A woman so poor and
pinched in feature, so marked with
feel sick to look at her,
something under her shawl and wait
ished his transaction.
“Wait on her.
hurry,” he sa¥
i
|
| & carpenter's ple was produced from
| the shelter of the shawl.
| “How much do yon want?’ queried
| the unmoved paw unbroker monotonous
| ly.
“ITifty cents,” replicd the woman
| with a gulping io her throat and an
| eager i0ok in her eyes. She elutched
| the money tightly and ran into another
| ereature, poor as herself, but bearing
her troubles In duller fashion. She
| had a baby’s cloak, never costly and
| much worn, on which she wanted to
| borrow money, the same sum as the
| other woman had asked for.
The man who had been offering a
| diamond felt uncomfortable. “There
| glve me $50. The stone’s wort gahir
| times as much.” And, seizing t on-
| ey, he hurried after the woman who |
| had just left the shop. He was not
| given to acts of charity. and he felt
| awkward, the more so as the woman
«| shrank from bim as he accosted her.
“I beg your pardon,” he began, “but
| here's $5 I have mo use for. Perhaps
i you’—
| “No, no!” she cried, drawing further
| from him.
“For your child,” he said gently.
“My child is dead!” cried the woman,
| with a queer sob, and fled into the
labyrinth of alleys and byways that
| shelters so much wretchedness.—New
| Fant TWanas
The Story of a Hoodoo Hat.
| Mr. John Cooper, one of Dooly coun-
ty’s most prominent citizens, is in the
| elty on his way to Augusta to attend
[the old veterans’ reunion. When he
got off the train, he looked up Captain
Warren Moseley, one of the bravest of
the boys who went out in the sixties,
and they immediately began swapping
Virginia. Finally Mr. Cooper asked
Captain Moseley if he remembered the
Yankee hat. A reporter who was stand-
Ing there heard the following story,
which both men vouch for as being ab-
solutely true:
On the first day of the battle of Win-
chester a Yankee was killed so near
the line of battle that a soldier of the
name of McLendon, Company I, Fourth
Georgia, picked up the hat and put it
on and wore it. He had not had it on
his head for more than two hours when
he was shot through the head, the bul-
let piercing the hat in almost the same
hole that the bullet had entered that
killed the Yankee.
Another soldier of the name of Woo-
ten of Company H, Fourth Georgia,
picked up the hat and put it on, and In
less than an hour he, too, was killed.
man who “went broke” at the races
was realizing on a superfluous article
care and desperation that it made hin |
was holding |
Ing nervously until he should have fin.
She seems to be in a |
to the man behind the |
counter, and at the word of permission |
SILUER (REAM, (%
reminiscences about their army life in |
THE piece of Silver
ware which you
received on Christmas
wiil lose its lustre and
turn to a brown color if
you do not keep it wrap-
ped in tissue paper away
from the light: You will
had better get a jar of
the finest silver polish
made. 25c at
TOZER'S,
Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Ko:
dacks and Supplies.
|
|
|
|
NEW BlG
| LINE OF WALL
PAPER JUST
RECEIVED.
All the latest patterns
and designs and at the mini-
mum of price.
| Picture frames, room mould-
ling, etc.
| JOS. FLICK,
Patton, Pa.
ours.
house.
Little Bros.,
Fresh and Smoked Meats.
not care to do that so you
Home Killed Mear
No embalmed business in
We deal strictly in
meat killed at our slaughter
Everything in season.
Butchers and Dealers in All Kinds of
° |
Patton, Pa. any civilized persons on the face of the |
b Read down
Exp Mail
No 30 No 36
Lumber Cut to Order |¥o# Nos i UE
| pm
1109 757
16 805
220 91
m pun
N Y via Phila ar 1010 1902
Pm Pm am
11 00
ania railroad and
ri the Buf-
at Ma-
oad; at Ma-
and North-
the bullet striking him in the head near PATTON, PA.
the place where the other two bullets
had entered.
The next day another soldier of the T.R.MORRISON
name of Kilpatrick of Company H,
Fourth Georgia, was wearing the hat .
when he, too, was struck in the head Dentist,
and killed. PATTON, PA.
Although the hat was a fine one, It
was left lying on the field, as there |
was no one who would wear it, as four
men who had worn it were then cold
| and stiff, ard each one had been shot
through the hat in almost the same
wre ou Al rmrne Vases
Mirror Maa,
“What!” axclaims the astonished
| reader, “is it possible that there are |
Office in Brady Building.
F. R. MELLON,
Dentist.
Office in Good Building, formerly
earth who are not in the habit of be |Occupied by H. A. Seitz.
| holding their visages reflected from |
| time to time in a mirror cf some kind? |
| Surely this cannot ne so.” Wrong, |
quite wrong, gentle reader, for at the o : Eel a
present time, strange as it may ap | : . i :
pear, there are hundreds of men and | Violin, Mandolin, Gui
women in the United Kiwgdom whe
have not gazed into a mirror for years. ‘ta ra nd Ba njo
The convicts confined in British pris- | TAUG HT.
7
ons form members of this community.
| ; WM. M. SIMPSON,
Office hours:—8 a. m. to 12 m.
1p. m. to 5:30 p. m.
7p.m. to8p. m.
From the moment of a convict's en.
trance to a jail to the moment of his |
exit he is not permitted to have the | Fifth Avenue, PATTON, PA,
use of & mirror of any kind, the small- | Opposite M. E. Churh,
est piece of glass being rigidly denied | ___ _ Sea A
him. To the women convicts this ab- CHARTER NOTICE.
sence of a mirror forms one of the | En 3 pS
chief hardships of confinement, and | Notice is hereby given that an application
many a female warder can tell piteous | will be made to the Governor of the State of
Pennsylvania on Monday, the 15th day of
wiles of women who have actually fall- | October, 1906, by J. G. Lloyd, Alvin W. Evans
en upon their knees and sobbed ont | ana John L. Elder, Jr., under the Act of As
entreaties for the loan of a worsel of | sembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylva-
mirror-—+just for a second.” All these | nia, entitled “An Act to provide for the In-
entreaties have perforce to be disre- | corporation and Regulation of Certain Corpos
garded, and it therefore comes about | rations,” approved April 20th, 1574, and the
that wa 27 a fl ale convict passes supplements thereto, for the charter of am
three or four years without being ore] intended corporation to be called “The Knox
9 hd 1 | Water Company,” the character and object of’
mitted to gaze upon her own features which is the supply of water to the public in
—London Tit-Bits. | the district of Adams township, Cambria.
nr map — roe | county, Pennsylvania, and for that purpose to
Ne vo.Give 4 Car Nedielne | have and possess and enjoy all Mhe rights,
v -y sive a 'y |
of As-
x > | benefits and privileges of the sai
A New York geumtleman has a very | sembly and its supplements.
fine Angora cat, and so fine a specimen F. J. HARTMAN, Solicitor,
of her kind that she is famous in a September 18th, 1906,—4t
large circle of fashionable folk. She iy | ———— ~~ .
not rugged in health, yet she cannot be NOTICE,
persuaded to take physic. It has beer
put in her milk, it has been mixed with |: = °° , . tol a
her meat, it has even been rudely and | purchased, from Joseph Flick and left
violently rubbed in her mouth, but nev- | the same in his possession subject to
er has she been deluded or forced inte | My removal the following property:
swallowing any of it. Last week a | To horses, one buggy,one buckboard,
green Irish girl appeared among the |one set single harness, one robe and
household servants. She heard about one blanket. All persons are warned
the failure to treat the cat. “Sure” {not to molest same in any manner.
So He: oa ine Tie eden and A. C. FISHER,
ome lard. and warrant she we
ating all 1 give her!” She mixed the Patton, Pay et. 14th, 1008,
powder and the grease and smeared it | The Courier is better prepared
on the cat's sides. Pussy at once licked [than ever to do first class job printing
both sides clean and swallowed all the [= right prices. Competent workmen
physic. Faith,” said the servant girl | g 5
{and superior stock are the things we
Notice is hereby given that I have
“everybody in Ireland does know how ! wi Sd
to eive medicine to a nat!” | brag of. Send or bring in your work,
—
oa No
Ages are
publish
fintered
—
Legal
Card o
Resolu
Poetry
Busine
Displa,
Foreig
jably in
advertis
These
De ta
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tives in
—Jot
renewil
week.
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taking
this we
—8yl
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Patton
—Mr,
and sor
relative
—If
week w
you wil
— Abc
auction
ton Thu
$35t0 §
—Pat
for con;
ately tl
the dist
~— Mrs
Qarrie,
for an
in Pittsl
—Mai
"will
their ha
evening
—Joh:
to agai
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from Vi
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tire stoc
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open for
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at the r
Matter:
Philipshb
—Rev
entertai
Trinity
the Palrn
8 o’clocl
—Frar
1 on Pe
Seward,
purpose
franchis
—Wm
urer of
Americs
Lycomi
trict by
—Mat
Hotel N
were un
R. Cc
o'clock |
—The
of the Ci
conferer
Rt. Rev.
bishop «¢
Qity.
—8. K
for the
Telegra
in Phtto
been tr
will mo
week.
-—~The
addition
at priva
manage:
be seen
Pp. m. ev
at the (
9p. m.
—Mac
Gilliece,
young pe
~_ on their
by being
R.C. par
The Cot
and best
—The
Cambria
plant at.
the shea
blooming
set fire t
in a mint
blazing |
several t
—Wha
list of
curred n
ing whe
thall, wa
knife dt
Brunette
a half do
but is bei