be made ‘er urns. 1 and is centuate the bun- his is a rs at its nced by growing ant fo- S meant ily, and mirably g living 1er out rin a and in- um of ‘he din- y pleas- chen a ymplete h bed- lequate d than ient to all con- sirable mpara- ild and attrac- homes : . Leafied wf 3 3 TRE re hl abit pe; The Merchandise Mart of Chicago, Twice the Size of the World's Largest Business Building, to Cost $30,000,000. GIGANTIC MERCHANDISE MART 10 BE TWICE SIZE OF WORLD'S LARGEST BUSINESS BUILDING New Project for Chicago’s Great Central Market to Cost $30,000,000—Involves the Greatest Single Development of Air Rights in the West. Foremost Manufacturers, Wholesalers and Importers Will Be Housed Under One Roof in New Whole- sale District; Inbound and Outbound Freight Station on Ground Floor of Building; Club in Tower for Nation’s Merchants. Chicago, (Special},—Chicago is to nave a gigantic Merchandise Mart housed In its own building, which Ten Largest Business will be twice the size of the largest business building in the world. hi mammoth structure, two city blocks In length, 18 to 23 storles high, is planned for the service and conven- lence of merchandise buyers of the United States and to achieve for Chi- cago a still greater prestige as a Great Central Market, it was de- ing ever constructed. Here are the clared today. It will cost $30,000,000. figures in cubic feet: Construction will begin immediately. 1. The Merchandise Mart, 53,000,000. The project will be the largest 2. Chicago Furniture Mart, 25,370, single development of air rights. The | .000. property of the new building except | 3. Equitable for caissons begins 23 feet above | City, 24,000,000. “datum.” 4. General Motors, Detroit, 20,411, The big business of the country | 000. Is now done mainly in concentrated 5. Union Trust, Cleveland, 20,000, market places, as evidenced by the 000. Garment Center and Cotton Goods 6. Railway Exchange, St. Louis, 18, Center in New York City, automobile 93,000. rows In all leading cities, financial 7. lllinois Merchants’ Bank, Chica- buildings, and the Furniture Mart in go, 17,850,000. Chicago, where more than 700 furni- 8. Continental & Commercial Bank, ture manufacturers show their prod Chicago, 13,200,000. ucts side by side, in the most modern 9. Woolworth Building, New York manner and under ideal conditions. City, 13,200,000. Business men have learned that the 10. Straus Building, nearer they are to the centers of these 000,000. market places, the greater is their i Buildings in the World Comparison of the cubage of the largest buildings in the world shows the Merchandise Mart, to be erected in Chicago, will be more than twice the size of the largest business bulld- Bullding, New York Chicago, 10,- | ments of engineering science, includ- ing fast elevators, freight conveyors of both the gravity and endless chain type and quick horizontal distribution on every floor. Probably no building in the world will have such facilities for receiving and shipping merchandise as the new Merchandise Mart. The entire ground level below the street floor will be a modern freight station, Private tracks for incoming carload freight will ex- | tend under the center of the building. The Chicago and North Western Rail- way will operate an inbound freight station for less than carload lots, as well as an outbound station, which will connect with all other roads through Its new Proviso yards. The merchandise as it comes into this big freight station will he loaded into high- speed conveyors and transported im- mediately to the exact floor and alsle of the merchant for whom it {s in tended. Connection will be made with the Illinois Tunnel Company's system of freight transportation, which has more than sixty miles of tracks beneath the streets and buildings of the city, reaching all other railroad terminals. A river dock for vessels will connect with the south freight elevators of the building. Club Planned for Tower. One of the (interesting features planned for the Mart will be a Mer- chants’ Club In the tower of the huild- ing, with lounging rooms, reading and smoking rooms, where the retiiler may relax and meet his friends. The Mart will provide the retailer with everything but a place to sleep. He can go direct from the train to the Mart with his baggage. Here his hotel reservations will be taken care of, his baggage transported to his hotel and placed in his room. Restaurants, lunch rooms and grills in the Mart will further economize his time. He will - have the facilities of a barber shop, and a branch postoffice, tele- graph office and public stenographers will afford him the opportunity to handle his correspondence without leaving the bu®ding. One of the big gest telephone exchanges in the world will, be installed in the Mart. Many other unique features are be- ing considered for the Mart, including an Assembly Hall, where trade meet- ings, business conferences and fashion opportunity for volume and profit The establishment of the Merchan dise Mart is a dramatic development In the program to make Chicago the Great Central Market, ‘a movement which the Chicago Association of Com- merce started a number of years ago and a goal toward which it has been devoting its energies continuously ever since, under the leadership of its Foreign and Domestic Commerce committee, Located on River Front. This great Mart, which will house sales quarters and plays of several hundred of the coun- try’s foremost manufacturers, whole salers and importers, will be located in the rapidly developing new river district, and will occupy a distinctly’ conspicuous position just across the river from Wacker Drive at Wells street, where the southern facade of the structure will be ‘visible for blocks. The site was formerly that of the Chicago and North Western Rail- way Company's passenger station. The building will extend 724 feet on Kin- merchandise dis zie street, 577 feet on the river front and 324 feet on Wells street, with a diagonal frontage facing Orleans and Franklin streets. It will be set back from the river about 80 feet to ac- commodate a broad upper level drive extending from Wells to Franklin. The main entrance of the building will face the river and the drive, The Merchandise Mart will have a total floor space of about 4,000,000 square feet as compared with slight- ly less than 2,000,000 square feet, : which is the floor area of the Furnl- | doing in a few hours what ordinarily ture Mart, the next largest building. | would take him days to accomplish Each of the eighteen main floors will On all floors of the Mart will be have an area of more than 200.000 | great corridors, with all the appear- square feet. ance of boulevards, more than 650 Within the walls of this huge | feet in length, on elther side of which edifice the retail merchants of the | will be the shops displaying their var- United States, Canada and foreign | fed lines—veritable “business streets.” countries will be able to see, under | These great corridors will be impres- one roof, hundreds: of lines of the | sively treated architecturally and with world’s best merchandise. The manu- | the large space available it will be facturers’ exhibits will include tex. | possible to house the selling activi- tiles, ready-to-wear, toys, laces, gloves, | ties and warehousing of many allied corsets, millinery, silverware, glass, | concerns on one floor, thus attaining rugs, knit goods, hosiery, shoes, men's | the advantages of concentrated group- wear, fancy goods, sport goods, art and | ings. antiques, jewelry, trunks, toilet articles, | The facilities for handling merchan- house furnishings, office equipment and | dise within the building will embody Among the largest tenants will be the wholesale and manufacturing sales de- bartments of Marshall Pteld & Com- pany. Time Saver for Merchants. * Every possible facility will be pro- vided for the comfort and convenience of the retail merchant, who under one roof will be able to see hundreds of lines, thus saving time and money by a ar, scores of other merchandise displays. the best and most modern achieve | three blocks south, SE Bird's-eye View of Chicago's New Business District Carrying Out the City Beautiful Theme In Which the Mercantile Mart Will Be a Dominant Factor shows may be held from time to time. As the plans are worked out, magy other features may be decided upon. Within recent years Chicago’s cen- tral business district has been devel- oping northward across the Chicago river, East of State street, along north Michigan avenue, Cass, Rush and other streets, this development has reached impressive proportions, evidenced by more than twenty larga buildings, To the west of State street, a comparable development is under way. The site of the new Merchan- dise Mart Is in the direct path of this new northward movement, In the new river district where the Merchandise Mart is to be located, many great buildings have been erect- ed, and others soon will be begun. The Builders’ Building, the Engineers’ Building, the Chicago Evening Post Building, have been completed oppo- site the new Mart on Wacker Drive. The new Chicago Dally News Build- ing and the great new opera house of the Chicago Civic Opera Company are being constructed on the river er mrs ny THE PATTON COURIER SOME FACTS ON THE AUTOMOBILE MISHAPS The kililng and maiming power of the automobile is spoken of from time to time but the effect of this eloquence up to date seems to be ex- tremely slight. The newspapers re- cently hav been giving much space to automobile accidents; a careful sur_ vey of this unfortunate news seems to indicate that a majority of the cas- ualties refer to children, said Dr, T. B. Appel, secretary of health, during the week. Too many people behind the auto- mobile wheel are checking up on the manufacturer’s claim for speed, and thus having discovered the thrill of power, habitually exercise it. Race track velocity is dangerous even on a race traek, but on the street of a city, it is eriminal, for it is un- der these circumstances that the au- tomobile asserts an independance which results in accident or “death. City highways are not speedways and the sooner the average driver re- alizes this fact, and cuts down his ex- terme driving, just that soon will fa- talties to pedestrians show a marked decrease. “On the other hand, it is not al ways the motorist’s fault. Grown-ups and children, especially are prone to dash out into a street in an utterly careless manner. It is at a time like this, that even machines under con- trol get in their deadly work, for they are not given a chance to do oth erwise. “The safety idea, while primarily involving the automobile driver, has a close second in the pedestrian’s personal concern for his welfore. This talk, however, is especi~''- directed to parents. An automobile danger conscience must be developed in the children. Safety of life and limb should be em- phasized to the point that youngs- ters will be on guard against the reck- less driver and even against the au- tomobile that is entirely under con- trol. If the deliberate production of a fear complex is ever justified it be- comes so with the automobile’s unfor- tunate ability to hurt and slay. Health officials have made remark- able strides within the past twenty vears regarding conservation of the child life. But no amount of inform- ation or scientific prevention can ar- gue with a car going fifty miles an hour on a city street when a child thoughtlessly runs into its path. Doctors are doing much to favor the prolongation of the life of the voung. But motorists and parents have their important part to play in this program. Will they do it? WORLD’S GREATEST SHOW POSITIVELY COMING Ringling Bros. and Barnum and Bail- ey to Bring Monster Sea Ele. phant and Other Features Yep, youngsters, its really true! Meaning that a rumor heard some- time ago, is now confirmed by the of- ficial announcement that the Ring- ling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Com- bined shows will positively exhibit at ALTOONA, WED., MAY 30. At that time the world’s first and only five ring circus will be within easy reach of local sawdust fans. With it will come Goliath, the Monster Sea Elephant, the only one of his kind ever to be captured and exhibited al- ive and who will be the foremost fea- ture of a menagerie composed of more than a thousand animals. | will be sentenced at 10 o'clock this The big show is now a third larger than it was when it last visited this locality, Enormous new displays have been introduced such as ninety ze- bras, camels and horses performing at one time on a mammoth pedestal, On a similar series of circular raised platforms thirty-two of the show’s forty-three elephants dance, run and perform in unison with the topmost of the ponderous actors twenty feet above the ground. Prior to this gi- gantic display five herds of elephants appear in the five seperate rings. At another time the rings are given over to five companies of liberty horses. At still another juncture of the pro- gram two hundred of the shows 900 horses each ridden by an expert, are seen in brilliant maneuvers. Of the sixteen hundred people car- ried on tour this year more than 800 are the world’s foremost aerialists, bare back riders, ground and lofty gymnasts, high wire artists and super athletes. These are now seen in ex- tensive groups and troupes, each dis- play led by its particular champion, a new method of presentation that is in keeping with the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey 1927 plan of extending acts in equal number all over the entire length of the entire mammoth main tent. Little folks will be delighted to learn that the bring- ing of a score of European clowns to America has increased the funmakers to more than a hundred. FALCHINI AND DAUGHTER PLEAD GUILTY IN COURT Antonio Falchini and his daughter, Miss Josephine Falchini, formerly of Ebensburg, pleaded guilty of charges of conspiracy to violate the National Bankruptey act in the federal district court in Pittsburg on Monday. They Thursday morning. According to the indictments Fal- chini and his daughter, left $40,000 in indebtedness when they fled from Ebensburg to the Pacific coast in an effort to defraud creditors. Attorney J. F. Burton of Los Angeles, Cal., counsel for the defense presented written pleas of guilty on Monday, The case came up May 9, but was continued until Monday due to the ill- ness of Attorney Burton. VINTONDALE LADS HELD. Peter Harkas and John Celaws, 17 year old each ,of Vintondale, have been sent to the Cambria County jail to await trial in court on charges of breaking and entering and larceny. The two young men were arrested oy P. R. R. police officers after the Vintondale passenger and freight sta tion had been burglarized. The tool station of the Pennsylvania Railroad at, Vintondale had been broken into and the necessary tools were taken to gain entrace to the station. The arrest of the young men was made a short time following the rob- bery. Uuable to secure bail they were committed to jail. CANCER IS SUBJECT OF SPECIAL STUDY Following a policy recently adopt- ed by the state department of health, Dr. Harold B, Wood, of the communi- cable disease division, is making a state wide surxey of the cancer pro- blem. The hospitals in the common- wealth are co-operating in this move- ment. The investigation involves a statistical study wit ha view to de- termining the factors leading to the production of cancer and methods for its control. Grebbedesiedesfodrodedefodsofodonted ARR J. EDWARD STEVENS FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER home Office and Resldemce CARROLLTOWN, PENAS OOO 000000 Oe ’. Tees Zu ales ee ro eoTe ol eTe ete ok CACC IS : ALLTEL TREE ERT ER re ve WA od orto deel ios Ja, si le le oo oe mo fo oon fo rn oo oniols : oe » oe T _- TT _e fo kg - + ; 1 + 4 3 “ * - k - q - kK - v - 4 o o 4 9 Kc E 4 4 “ CARTERS eer re re iene BoodesBeeBeoote ole cte te toile ts 2. A ATR RRO op pp fei fo fer fosfecfondend SerdooleelssdoetradoadiiBooleodoctecBoctococtocts Be 8. 5.8 0 3 3 2 3 , 5 b 3 . ES , obo pb 3 z : 5 1 i CONTRIBUTING TO A jo - 5 3 ¥ TOWN’S GROWTH 5 bo BY » oo . of The courageous merchant or manufacturer who builds up a big . tt business in any community contributes to that community more than p > he ever persomally takes out. The bigger the business or the fmdus- : oo trial units, the bigger the town or city, and citizens should never A oe fail to show appreciation for increased values all down the line. bo sige Back of all business activities is the service rendered by bamks > * and financial institutions. Thisbank has always taken a keen de- r x light ‘In contributing in its small way to the upbulldimg of Patton. L oo It stands ready and willing at all times to lend its facilities to any " ogo worthy enterprise which ultimately is for a bigger Patton, » +» MAKE THIS BANK YOUR BANK. p oe p ¥ Aevlreieeleodseiesiociosioslodosdunfesdeedunlocdenludoctoofooducenfuofontoctosfoefrafoctsofs fe ofoedootecfoogeofeete : bE b THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK PATTON, PENNSYLVANIA x. E. Prindible, Pres. F. E. Farabaugh, V. Pres &. L. Brown, Cashier Reuel Somerville. V. Pres Joofoefeeforfororte Jo Total Resources $2,000,000.00 Capital Paid Up ee. $100,000.00 Surplus Earned _. A BROLL OF $100,000.00 HONOR BANK Socloaeedeboobredoots Berdoade Bode dodadeBealoitade datecode d 2 2 2 2. 2 2 0 2 5 2.9 2 8 5.0 0 8 8 Bs ERR TTT TIT PR PENT Serr iso Sette fliity ested teityuteg te cba stectectoubietodts teutoateste sta chi dee oct ht Err re rene nn ee te ee te te te te tt et eet ve eeieeieeled ee ee se lenle 2. Juedusesteedos ofesduafuetootuetostietontesdueteatietosfeatontosduete ii HT Josfefeeteiged LLLLTTLE s CE TE—— WALL PAPER and PAINT STORE 1021 Chestnut Avenue ALTOONA, PA. EE] We go anyplace to do work in paper hanging, painting and Decorating. Wall Paper from 4c up to $6.00 per double roll. We solicit your patronage. Wall Paper Catalogue mail. ed on request. NRE RRR ERE, GEO. E. PRINDIBLE ..................... PRESIDENT JAMES WESTRICK ............ VICE PRESIDENT DB. P. J. KELLY coo. VICE PRESIDENT z MYRON S. LARIMER ..............ccoouu....... CASHIER S : FRANK X. YOUNG .... . ASS'T CASHIER 2 THE B = {GRANGE NATIONAL BANK : - ® -— : } PATTON, PA. : EB gE | | E s ¢ $ = — ¢ ¢ -— : 4 PCT. PAID ON SAVINGS DEPOSITS : = = 4 - © = : 3 3 PCT. PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS : E E DIRECTOKXKS : = Z| I. M. SHEEHAN P. 0. STRITTMATTER ¢ S =| JAMFS WESTRICK DR. P. J. KELLY ¢ E -— * — gS €. J. NOON B. J. OVERBERGER } = 5 BARTH YOUNG B. BLANKFELD } E = G. BE. PRINDIBLE $ s =| $ = = t = - + = E AR nn { =