+ 3 \ . 4 { » wv / rrr g a. THE PATTON COURIER | forfortestunontiedontesgongesloniints a : Hi re —— xy —— p——— es ’ ol Th C CAMBRIA COUNTY LABOR 24, with morning and afternoon ses- [table in Pennsylvania ; polities, its UNION DRIVE HITS 3 PARTY TO HOLD CONVENTION {sions strength made up of railroad work- NON.UNION MINES ; fo Pe ——— All labor unions in county and all | €rs, mine workers and farmers to a 5 Chairman George Cowan and Secres | grange organizations are entitled to large extent and its political action Clearfield, July 12—The campaign FOR YEAR 5 BLACK 5 tary. MeCabe of the Labor party of | representation in the convention. Oth. resulting in some endorsement of |launched by leaders of the United o Cambria county are issuing a call for fer are invited to attend. For a num- | candidates of other parties who were (Mine ‘Workers of America to union- es de fieanuial party convention to be held | ber of years the Labor party move- prepared Lo sive. Sleancut Rledges On lize non-union fields has crippled many Noted Authority Says That + in Miner’s hall Portage Sunday, July lment in’ Cambria county has been no- | issues ouflined in the Labor party operations in District No. 2, according This Year Will Dupl 5 gn mer platforms. : roy to a statement Saturday by one f the § lem ] uplicate o By the time the convention is held | district officials from the union head- That of 1816. & is Helo Of séndidaies for sony, of quarters here. It is claimed by these 4 ices shoulc e pretty well definec Ficials the linsbure. Hawk: R od and many issues clearly drawn. How- officials that Philipsburg, Hawk Run, Oceanis ‘changes have a material ) 1an) ues ! Morrisdale Curwensville, Hyde City | offact on future weathe titi HE 3 x ever, it is a September primary year, |and Karchus have been hit by the |g Snot cody, BY BE —_— i so that ‘the ‘party piiniarics Will sabi oy. S | 1 Db) demonstrated by the recent change ls pa $ a party p les Ol} drive of the union representatives, and | ip temperatures in the great ‘ocean th #0 + yet have been held at the time of the | that work in these places is practi- currents of warm and cold wi ater, in 2 x f Portage convention. This obstacle is cally at a standstill. A dozen or more {tho onin f Herbe 2 z not a new one. It has been surmunt- i ins. he s pinion of Herbert Janvrin Brown. go non-union peratins have been shut| qua¢ 4 } ; | 3 = ed in other years, the Labor party uo ! ane : z ese changes caused by the % , ¥ ldown as the results of walkouts, the | o,, reaching the maxin t x platform being adopted and used to [union claim. geriod. Fave hoo ayy i Si spe + ED measure candidates, instead of candi- | A Jarge delegation of union min- atic oy oe or ect on the cil- 3 \ dates making their own platform and sid B: 3 : 3 > . conditions for the past six x ih date 2 ! ers in the Barnesboro and St. Bene- months throughout the northern hem- wn having the parties adopt or accept | ict section of Cambria County Fri- isphere, is shown in the serious wea } ; %* To the. I ; is them. This policy has effectively in- | day marched to the operations of the ther, Fach ay 2 8e By WOR RA 0 the Demoreratic Voters of Jected a number of issues into cam- | Emmons Coal Company, at Green “Flood hihi] 1 ht, hail | ole \ - 1 y at Bar . S, rnadoes, r o ail- i x Cambria County : baigns. : wich, near Barnesboro, and succeeded | j¢, A ce my oi Ap J oo As there are no state or national | in getting a number of non-union old a our Savy 2 0 ar : 3 I hereby announce myself as a candidate for the candidates to ‘be nominated, the at-|miners to join the union. The com- the ultimate effects fro , t) Bf me 5 office: of County Commissioner. «thi cl as tention of the convention will be giv- pany announced Tuesday the mine is CLs, from, these, con- & IH : missioner, subject to the de- en largely to county affairs an coun- |workice 100 nor cent ditions of the ocean cannot yet be 3 cision of the Democratic Primaries johns 20) tv icines, especially thse’ havine 161 (ohne -Mipen cent. : accurately forecast,” Brown said. | % 1007 y <b, y 1ssues, especially ase having to Picketing at non-union mines that The influence. of t i = Jaq, do with the assessment and collection | aye still operating is being carried : Ocean; qurrant on &* of tdzes Bhs 5 4 : the winds, which in turn have their % All Hi : : out on a large scale by the union ero. 0)" climat | 10s¢ entitled to vote should 6 tothe polls representatives in an effort to get La clima 8; eon ions, are re- oo ] sponsi > sua & and register their approval of the candidates they A new boy scout troop has formed | the non-union men to join the union Fonsi in Dar Hi, ils usual ) % be lieve to be the most dependable and best quali- at Ebenshurg. workers in their strike. 1927, which is comparable to have of = fied for the office, 1816, known as the year without a > ) , he belives. i i am in faver of extending modern improved ° & highways to all sections of the county; these high- ¢ 2 ways to be properly built at the Tow est possible ALWAYS ‘A’ PROFITABLE DAY rience Fri- 3% cost to the taxpayers; free from any political, per- ¢ ; + sonal, or private influences. T0 SHOP IN ALT J : ent and the 3 a : : Jia vl ) > 1 I am in favor of the reconstruction of all brid- roduction— % ges that are a menace to public travel, the eli- All Alt B S 46 do's t & mination of dangerous curves, crossings and oona ooster tores 18 to. grades’ where it is possible to do so. C . S b b s : t ’ ] , Rr x g thimtisis : - ith untried i I am in favor of a fair distribution of taxpayers’ o opera € in uburpan < money in making improvements, giving due con- D i= 1 sideration to the properly assessed valuation of ay es 3 the districts wherein the improvements are to be i made: and thereby the humidities of the con- 4 AND INVITE YOU TO VISIT THEM AND SHARE IN 5 doits ! ath tinental areas. 3 ! THE GOOD VALUES THAT ARE FEATURED EVERY & I am in’ favor of a fair living wage and in- . The jritereness gre fone win- WEDNESDAY. 5 creased efficiency for all employees. Dw noo Winie: fies CR y 3 : : : rg fotossiuthels North LOOK FOR THE ADVERTISEMENTS FEATURING i I believe that my fitness for the office warrants Ho oi ost ro hao, SUBURBAN. DAY OPPORTUNITIES, % the solicitation of your vote and influence. waves, before the beginning of fall, NOTE & DL A 8 31 although the intensity or exact loca- oN N % Respectfully yours, Clonltanaat vet bet determined All Altoona Booster Stores Will Be Closed Thursday vil To 5 , Presistence of inshore cold water Aftern S 7 Augt 5 i PATRICK F. CAMPBELL, Portage, Pa. Ic f S at ons aia ternoons, ging July and August, and S$ 1st % e 00 ] O Ongs ther, he points out. These will cause dry weather along the northern and * Perhaps you never realized that a Bank Book brim Corral sea Honeds, j ae 3 3 ver the seas the weakening o 3 is a book of songs. the warm water areas points toward SURG, PA. + Every depositor who has one of those high- fl resin in the force aad number ~ NT AIN fe ATT | & 7 wading Ri A] ’ ed i . of 'stormicarryving cyclonie-low pres- adie a i 7 ly prized books in his possession can tell you that sure areas, which Brown says, enter “Tub, 1 Dr. S. Bentz, county superin- Bed ftsgungn . ; just to leaf it thru and see colum after column of the’ United Stutod-Toth the martes ) | 00 IEUI0S in BEE most instances | tendent of wgel a atarned to Tum TT 77 rr dollars saved makes the heart sing with Joy. west and Europe through the Ice- fore, BE Bom Rr] Dr He {2 hisshome imi HIA we ato foving 2 Z 7% : dX andic areas. a 3 ¢ attended IE: 3 Pootifir the ses A A iil. nm A dollar starts a saving account and gets you Liisi en: of barometrical eradic | today. “If those suffering from it ap- | Nati Teachers association in. Sea preciated that fact and took: the wel cessary precautions, undoubtedly 24 fit marked reduction’in this malady wot! ld soon be noticed. Butsin: some cases just the opposite occurs. “The prportion ofgthgse suffering | frm tuberculosis who ake begdwridden ls is small: The Jmajori re quife apley to be around and cary on to Some extent their duties. Again, many of the afflicted: dnes pefuse to believe one of these books of happiness. Every dollar sav- ed and entered in it will add another note to your hymn of happiness. between cold and warm water areas will inevitably see a slacken- ing of the winds rotaing clockwise around the North Atlantic cold water which are never very strong. This in turn will cause a their moiste-carrying according to ents = lyis ——— Dry Bentz left or S Rock Normal school, fs where he willi¥ivk a series of lectures, * + MARL | : Great Soil od - * ope THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK PATTON, PENNSYLVANIA areas, ’. +! FOR COUNTY COMMISSION redu- func- this calcu- a edes te results at re. Fine, dry ory quickly t economical oo. tion in tion, bo. a") * which * + 0 Toe! lations, Brown predicts will mean a 2. es I hereby announce myself as a candidate for reduction in rainfall in Central and e Announces, Candidacy. for *. faeges: Southern Europe and in the Atlantic | me you can 4 RY 7 issioner. Ss lec ) 2 \ ics NF indi x y 3 Q 1 | ne you e % County Commissioner, subject to the Republican G. E. Prindible, Pres. F.E. Froghmamy Y Eres Seaboard and Fiend on Saag, they ee SE RECORDER.OE-BEEDS s oo : . ‘ i ‘ g H pr P “It; follows rinevidably 1a here or — SN US crops with & Primaries, September 20, 1927. F. L. Brown, Cashier Reuel Somerville, V, Pres will be percids in which southerly | selves. Cases of tuberculosis, find their | wn J Total Resources... $2,000,000.00 winds slow moving, during July and | Way to the trains, street cars and au- . TR Your. ‘support a nd influence. will be appre- Capital Paid Up $100,000.00 August, will bring high temapur- |t0 buses. And many use,the glass at) Jo prices & . . tures and dry weather in to the Mis- | the Soda fountain and the .common |, nation. 3 ciated. Surplus Earned... $100,000.00 sissippi Valley, which may hove to drinking cup. While the Tdtter {8 E-MARL- CO, v A BOLL OF HONOR BANK -depend for its principal precipitation | illegal in Pennsylvania, it is still to be ‘ VA = on casual thunderstorms,” Brown pro. | found frequently eriguifh to mstify & $ os H : 3 nt of debt or oth- 0 ® ecretary-Treasurer, M. Ebensburg, Pa. o warning against its use. + ) “There iso dedire'to develop.as Fil bereulosis scare, as there are no facts known as [to ustify such an approach tothe was | auestion. The tuberculgsis rate® Is been reduced consis stent] f@ divine the last fifteen years. On theiother aut], the most re- |the public should realize that tubercu- its | losis” and other contagious diseases are always 'in’ their’ ‘midst, and: ‘that resonable care dt all tives: should! bel exercised against them. | “For example, the soda fountain glass is fréquently urder-cleaned! Not! alone its disease spreading, possibil- phesies. How 1927, which so far has been a year marked with violent weather con- trasts, has duplicated 1816, the year without a summer, pointed out. Comparing weather year 1816, was one of markable in history, notable for severe cold waves and heavy snows. It started early in the fall of 1815 and lasted late into the following Spring, Weather, according to Brown, comes in cycles of so many years. He moints 3 summer Brown points out that “with the retreat from the North and East of the warm water area of the Eastern Artie will be a southerly advance of Arctic water. “In the South Atlantic the cold water area already has shown a marked expansion, while Antarctic water encircling the globe will ex- ercise influence in the southern hemi- sphere,” he said. The temperate zone cold water areas, he said, still remain dominant in their zones, leaving the tropical waters and those of the semi-en- closed bordering seas to bear the brunt of maintaining the warm winds records, the Tn nn out that what is known as the ‘b.8" | ties but ‘from thé standpbint: of ‘mioré GEO. E. PRINDIBLE . PRESIDENT Nl | cycle which occured in the severe SApaton, Svar yusis should ST fe g winter of 1816, became apparent agin | being served: an jpuper: ups any LESTER LARIMER, ...V. PRES AND CASHIER inl the winter of 1926-1927. soda dispensers use them regularly | a JAMES WESTRICE ......... ... VICE PRESIDENT I As early as January 1 of this year, lhe Vil id dite thetn pen request. | Will have turned back to the tax- : 2 sracast a retor p » OVE And avold direct contract gas much |= tt > " DR. P. J. KELLY VICE PRESIDENT Brown forecast a return of the cycle ssible With. bereulosis. If | PAVErs of “the county, atthe end of with its subsequent severe = weather | as Possible with, the tuberculosis, If) 4: veay almost 7 $40,000/~over and MYON 5. FAREGE J. ASSIeTaNy CASHILE conditions, He prediction at that time Squitiony require! association,’ ‘then | AM. 3 A th ! sid: follow strictly the doctor’s orders re. | 3P0OVe ine entire salary list of those said: emploved in: this office, ihcluding the garding precautin. Especially help the little children to be unaffected by, tubereulous patie in the house- J They ats bely D thenelvgsit “The famous year 1816,'the year without a summer,” fell in that cycle. The years 1871 and 1872 are includ= | a ed in the cycle, and it will be seen hold. salary of the Recorder. ud to..recei¥e your ‘Sup- asSumpfice, that if re- - I hereby announce myself for County. Com- THE missioner, subject to the Democratic primaries, that the winter of 1926-27 and the Nautre its ie hvonder fully proteets fi) sim | wit sive the Office the same y 9 C GRANGE NATIONAL BANK crop season of 1927 are included in all of us against the onslaughters of personal Sf ontios that broucht about September 20, 1927, the period of its return. disease germs that daily beset. , us. thei above, large: returns for the But nature wil] not frown at ‘a Tittle *The present winter and its suc- counts Your s 't and influence will be greatly : PATTON, P4. ceeding year also comes into the re- | reasonable cautiofl. Pavan it! Itimay PS’ Yu Wpportand infuence Mi besgreatly. ah markable cycle, developed by Abbe |save a life.” ROSS SANNER. reciate Gabriel, the lunar-solar eycle of 186 preSaten, 4 PCT. PAID ON SAVINGS DEPOSITS se miipdhen refers to the famous 3 PCT. PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS winter of 1740 and its still more fam- LER ng ous prototype of 1553. iy = = il » “Demonstrating the effect of the |= s J able; | s " DIRECTORS “weather cycle,” Browd da ot E ” 5 = iprera that navigation on the Great Lakes |= ¢ E = JAMES WESTRIOR UE. PF J, BELLY this winter was practically closed at |= a ax nt \ Je = ~hassis T. M. SHEEHAN P. C. BSTRITTMATTER the Soo Canal November 30. The an = | = vc r liest closing date on record was No-|= = open ® 3: NOON 3. 4, OYERBERGZR vember 24, 1872, which date was in- E E Opera: BARTH YOUNG LESTER LARIMER cluded in the eycle. The average date = E werful G. E. PRINDIBLE B. BLANKFELD of closing has been December 15. |Z I HEREBY. ANNOUNCE. MY. CANDIDACY E rover: au : Forecasting that the periods from |= hein fr sac rs AJL s Sane, June 28 to July 2 and July 7 to July | = = % 0% Z 11 would bring forsts over certain | = ” E d Vi \ TIT sections of the country, Brown said |Z ~EOR— s ckst \ \ “these determinations are the result |= = ic R, A Y 1 0 N D D. B U © K of long carful calculation. = 2 \ \ “June and July dates are compar- |= | REGISTER OF{ WILLS | Es $610 \ \ able with phenomena of the same or- | = = ab der in the year 1816. n that me- |= E pa \ Ri \ morable year a violent snowstorm |= 5 ¥ ; E Fam \ N\ with low temperatures raged north |= z 5 i = le. \ FUNERAL DIRECTOR \ of the Ohio and the Potomac From = I k of he - 1 = CARI) June 17 to 19. It was accompanies = C id £ \ Nb bt bi Bg LT Fo 10 IE vas secomiaied | 2 erk of the vp ans’ - Court : \ IDE \ 4 3 south not visited by the storm. E = 0 N LY iii Huth \ & J. ED TE] ENS | “In that year the last week of June | = Subject to "Republican Prt: September 20) 11 E . \ Phone; Oltice, and Rosldence, \ 4 + | saw’ al killing frost across the north, | = : $ : = \ \ 3 4: while the night of July 4 witnessed |= | will thank you for your vote and efforts in my behalf = N v \ i FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER freezing temperatures and the forma, 5 kl % E PATTON, PA. o tion of ice morth from the Ohio and |= among your friends. = ) j \ x Rhone Otfise and Beslan TABEOLLTOWX. PENNA #)the Potomac and from the Atlantic E % E > 8 YY » % Seaboard west to Fort Dearborn, now! = E T Ws 0, tetiieto ie ett AoA deere fiids the site of the city of Chicago. FELLER ERE TERRE ECAR RETR ETE Ry
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers