AND 3. 1 ! i EDY. 5 RENT i I | | a bucket ifty Girl” 4 AND 8. crete 24.4. cents m-—33.8 cent bound Macad wre yard ccording reet car the test S concrete rete ot ic, hence ble after record of ition the he end of 1927, per square ents; bitumin- Portland ts; Bituminous to the track road anda most of COSLUS that cost dif- ‘es ce- Surface Treat- um, . Brick {eep cost even dditional wear | in the high re. nderneath the WW cement con- present day no deteriox the protect face course, in- rick surface, a tT necessary lassified under were includ nents with as nder “Surface [acadam’ we rs; two > covered with ee experiments tland cenment IL was carired . The figures untenance for of Report ppearance iment jor portion rface has the rrace eg orig- a slaid certain that the am- letermined. Of meet present st showed the 1e rate ot of one ts from your 0 other paper THE TING, KNOW ABOUT IT. NEWS ITEMS ARE SOLICITED BY PATTON COURIER, HAVE A VISITOR, OR HAVE BEEN DON’T HESITATE TO LET IF YOU THE COURIER OFFICE IS ADE- QUATELY EQUIPPED TO TAKE CARE OF JOB PRINTING OF ALL KINDS, AND SOLICITS YOUR PATRONAGE ON THE BASIS OF SATISFACTION. Courier VOL. XXXIV. NO. 36. LOCAL AND STATE NEWS OF INTEREST Condensed Items Gathered from Various Sources for the Busy Reader. —Badly crushed when ne fell form a trip of mine cars and tqueezed between two cars, James J. McConnell, aged 38 years, was instan- tly killed in a mine at Puritan on Tuesday afternoon. He leaves a wife and three small children. —Henry Montgomery, one year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Montgom- ery, of Cresson died of pneumonia at the parental home on Tuesday. —The state game commission Tues- day ordered treasurers in 54 counties to cease issuing hunting licenses until after they have been furnished special plates which will permit the holders to kill doe during the open deer season next fall. —A poverty dance is scheduled to be held at the Chetremon Country Club | on August 17th. Prizes will be given for the best costumes. —Forty-seven new patients were ad- mitted last Thursday, the regular ad- mission day, to the State Sanatorium at the Summit. There are now 691 pa- tients receiving treatment for tubercu- losis at the institution. —The laying of the concrete on the new improved highway betwen Chest Springs and Loretto is now completed and the contractor is busying his for- ces with the construction of berms, ditches, guard posts, etc. It is said that the road will be officially opened for travel some time during this month. —Opening of a section of 18 foot concrete highway in Bedford county, providing a short cut from Johnstown to the Lincoln Highway, was announ- ced during the week by the state high- way department. The new road re- duces the distance from Johnstown to Bedford by 15 miles. —Mrs. Bertha Hollman Nelson, aged 60, widow of Alfred Nelson, died at 3 o'clock on Sunday afternoon at her home in Croyle township, near Sum- merhill. She is survived by a number of children. —The Carrolltown Fire Company was called out last Thursday after- noon to extinguish a fire on the for- mer Mike Dishart farm in East Car- roll township, where the frame house on the homestead was ablaze. Before the arrival of the firemen, howe'ver, the flames were beyond control and the structure was completely destroy- ed. —John Kenneth Rhine, aged 22 years, died last Saturday evening at the Spangler hospital, where he re- cently underwent an operation for glandular trouble. His home was at Brushvalley, Indiana county. —One man, John Fickes, of Clays- burg, is in a ‘hospital a® dtvoaring Springs, suffering of a broken back which he sustained when his autjmo- bile turned over three times when it left the highway. Ten other persons were hurt in automobile accidents in the Altoona section over the week end. —Harry Kauffman, poultry specialist from State College, was in Cambria county two days this week and gave several demonstrations of feeding and management problems confronting the poultry raisers. He was at the farm of R. J. Nedimyer, of between St. Law- rence and Flinton, on Tuesday, and al- so was at several other farms in var- ious parts of the county during his visit in Cambria. —John Stahlstrom, aged 62 years, of | Barnesboro, died at the Somerset hos- pital on Monday, where he was a men- | tal paitent. He was taken to that in- stitution on Saturday. —Fire on Tuesday night of last week destroyed the two story frame dwelling owned by Clarence Weakland at Lan- tzy’s Mill, below Hastings. The building was totally destroyed. Mr. Weakland and his family were not occupying the | building at the time, but a large part of their household goods was destroy- ed. It is not known how the blaze was started. —James A. McClain, of Spangler, who has been ill for some months, and who had been improving for some time, suffered a relapse last week and is again confined to his bed. —With portions of Blair county in- fested with the European corn borer, that section is under quarantine. Dur- ing the quarantine period farmers will | not be permitted to transport corn into unquaranitned sections. They may, however, take corn into sections al- ready quarantined. —State Treasurer Samuel S. Lewis has mailed checks totalling $5,406,068 to 2224 fourth class school districts in the state as the third reimbursement of the biennium. —Children whose physical develop- ment is below normal should not be sent to summer camps, where no pro- vision is made for the schedules ad- apted to their endurance the state de- partment of health warns. FREDERICK THOMAS, Funeral services for the late Fred- erick Thomas, aged 53 years, whose death occurred on Monday morning of apoplexy at Summerhill, were held on Wednesday afternoon in the Summer- hill German Lutheran Church. Inter- ment was in the Lutheran cemetery. Mr. Thomas is survived by a sister, Theresa Thomas ,and the following children: Rudolph, Frederick, Arthur and Albert Thomas, at home; the Rev. Ernest Thomas, pastor of a Lutheran charge at Gretna, Neb.; and Mis, J W. Nevarr of Summerhill. accidently | PATTON, CAMBRIA COUNTY, PA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 9, 1928. | PROF. BOSSERMAN AND SHOOTS HIS WIFE | CARROLLTOWN FAIR | MISS FORSBERG WEDDED AND SEVEN OTHERS IS COMING SHORTLY ero wisn se srs, se | vising principal of the Patton Public RE . ce ! Schools, was united in marriage | Claude Lauver, Aged 30, in the Will Open on August 22nd and | ay of last week at in | Toils, Following Drinking Last for Last Four Days Md., to Miss Ida Forsberg, daughter Bout and A Gun. of the Week. | of Mrs. Augusta Forsberg, of East Ma- | | gee avenue, the ceremony being per- formed by the Rev. G. Ellis Williams at the parsonage of the Calvary Meth- odist Episcopal Church, in the Mary- Two women and a small girl are in| The board of directors of the Cam- Miners’ hospital at Spangler as pa-|bria County Agricultural Association, tients, and Claude Lauver, aged about | met Wednesday evening last at Carr- 30, is under arrest and in the Ebens- | olltown, to further the arrangements land City. : . , burg jail as the result of a shooting af- | for the 41st annual fair to be held on| . The groom 4s ong of the foremost fray, which is said to have been the cli- | the Carrolltown grounds August 22, 23, citizens of the Patton community. He max of a drinking party early Sunday |24 and 25. The public will observe g |Das for the past many years been the : > s arvicine ine n > 3 morning at the home of Jack Murphy | change of days from the days from the |SUPCIVISInG prifieipel of She Patton in East Carroll township, near here. | fair days of other years which never a 300 Sysem, he Oster; Lorman Lauver, it is alleged, procured a 12- included a Saturday. This week the|~, Was a teacher in the local high school, but for the past several years has been engaged at her profession in | the Wilkinsburg high school. The Courier joins with Mr. and Mrs. | Bosserman'’s host of friends in wishing them a happy, prosperous wedded life. CAMP SHAFFER 1S WONDERFUL PLACE And the Patton Boy Scouts No Doubt Are Having the One Time of Their Lives. gauge shot gun when the party devel- | fair will not start until Wednesday and oped into a general fight and fired in- | Will continue one day later as stated. to the crowd from a distance of fifty | The races will feature the exhibition | yards. this year and among the equine sports { In addition to the three victims in| Will be a troop of cavalry from the | the Spangler hospital, four other per- | Clearfield National Guard, the horses | sons in the crowd were slightly injured. | from there to perform tricks equal to Among the hospital victim’s is Lauv- | €quinal skill. The men and their train- er's wife, Mrs. Bay Lauver, aged 25|(€d animals will entertain on the track years, who was shot through the right | daily the last three days of the fair. | eye, destroying the sight. The others An elimination tournament of base- | in the hospital are Mrs. Clara Peters, | Pall will be held at the fair grounds aged 38, wounded in the abdomen, and | during the days of the fair and the June Smith, aged 8, wounded in the |Cchampionship game for a premium will head and right shoulder. The three |P€e contested on Saturday afternoon. victims are all reported in a favorable | Northern Cambria county will enter the condition. | play for superiority in the bat and Three other victims, John Murphy, Pall sports. | his wife and eight year old son, Harry, Registered stock from Ohio and West all suffering minor injuries when hit | Virginia will be shown in the stalls of by some of the shot, are recovering the cattle section. Approximately 100 nicely at their home. ~ | fancy fowls from the state of New Jer- Following the shooting affray Lauv- | SeY are promised for the poultry dis- It is a thousand pities that the fa- ther and mother of every boy under 16 in Patton and vicinity could not be conveyed to Camp Shaffer in Hunting- don county to look over the place where er was placed under arrest by Con- play. the Patton Boy Scouts are spending | stable W. J. Gill, and lodged in the mrt —eir tener their vacation this year, leaving Tues- borough lock-up. Information against day of this week, and returning next Tuesday. There would never again be need for a campaign to finance the Boy Scout Movement. The only drawback connected with a visit to Camp Shaffer which is located | on part of an abandoned farm along the banks of the Penn Central Light & Power Company's Saxton dam, is its inaccessibility. On the other hand, it is no drawback at all, but rather an asset. No use to describe the highways to Huntingdon; words cannot describe the roads from Huntingdon to the camp. To gain admittance to the camp IL Is necessary to cross the dam by | boat. These are provided. A dozen fine boats and canoes belong to the scouts | of Blair and Bedford counties with whom our Patton boys are merged for the outing. There has also been pro- vided a heavy freight boat, capable of { hauling five tons, with attachable mo- tor for cars, trucks, visitors and what not. Once at the camp all that trip through that valley, down around Hun- tingdon’s famous shelving rocks, up al- jong the Raystown branch of the Jun- lata, past farms the owners could not glve away and then emerging from that into the midst of one of the most | beautiful panoramic views in the en- tire world with a number of beautiful private cottages nicely nestled, noth- ing but the beautiful is remembered. | The scout camp site is wonderful. It Lauver was made before Justice of the Peace James Mellon, and the man en- tered a plea of guilty. He was com- mitted to the Ebensburg jail for fur- ther custody until the outcome of the shooting is determined. MRS. ELIZABETH DODSON IS CALLED BY DEATH | FAIRBANKS DARING GAUCHO ON SCREEN [Doug Is Coming to the Grand, Patton, Next Week, for Three Days. In Douglas Fairbanks’ new picture, Douglas Fairbanks as The Gaucho, to |be screened at the Grand theatre on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of next week, he has the most dashing | part he ever played. A gaucho is a : the best picturesque nineteenth century charac- known residents of Patton and had ter little known to the States, and ap- been a resident here for the past 38 ,1antly destined to atract more than years. She is survived by one son, Al-| na antly destined to attract more than fred, mentioned above; a sister in En- South America. gland; and two grandchildren. Her The scenes of Doug's plays have been husband, Alfred Dodson, preceded her | veering southward; France, England, | to the grave. J | Arabia, Spain, the Antilles—and now The funeral services were held on|ihe pampas. The story has no definite Monday afternoon in the local Meth- locality but is laid in the Pampas re- geist Swen. Intsment was made in gions at large, making no pretense at . historical accuracy, but using the pic- EN rR er TE TARITAG TYE vein turesque environment as a background TU] EY-HE ENEY FIGHT for romance. PICTURES AT GRAND | Douglas Fairbanks as The Gaucho is a tale of treasure, combat, intrigue, of the and love, concerning the adventures of a bandit who crosses the Cordilleras with his riders to sieze a city grown rich from the offerings of pilgrims to Mrs. Elizabeth Dodson, aged seven- | ty years, died of a complication of dis- ses on Friday afternoon last at the home of her son, Alfred Dodson, of Mellon avenue. The deceased was one of The motion picture version Tunney-Heeney Prize Fight, staged re- cently at the Yankee Stadium will be shown at the Grand Theatre, Patton, ies as » whic : igi a LHC wi ie aml its sacred shrine. For the first time the | 16S On 2 slope which ends at the edge next Saturday. It depicts the cham- star has two leading women, one oii the Saxton dam, eight ‘milks lone § Ss e : s § pionship fight blow for blow and gives ; 2 ..|and filled with pure water. Here the w adcap, the rr a saintly char- the ild madcap, the other a s tly char a close-up, slow motion view of acter. The production has a conflict boy scouts can swim, or boat, or fish. ter and eloventh rounds of love interests, said to be much stron- Si the buildings overlook the dam. sx. Soouemien News sores [Ee San tn any mins Busan Lor, 8,18 oe wes Sail, GATHERED DURING THE WEEK Under the instruction of real gauchos With a craft shop in the basement. The building was erected on the foundation -— from Argentina, Fairbanks has hbe- Mr. C. J. Warner, of Altoona, was a | come an adept with the boledoras, | Walls of a bank barn which once stood visitor with friends here recently. which he uses in the picture as one of there and could not have been more Mr. B. B. Kruise of Cresson, was a [pis many striking feats of prawess ideally located. Within conevnient dis- caller among friends here over the nln tance of it is a headquarters building | week end. MRS. MARY HELENA used for offices for all the men in O. P. Conrad of Wilmore, spent a" le Ce ; . 3 charge of camp life, dispensary, radio few days here with friends and rela-| GLASSER, SPANGLER, DIES [and general utility. Then there is a tives. ren building for the camp director and Helena Glasser, aged 66 Augustine Glasser, of their assistants. A dozen cottages with sleeping capacity of eight each, estab- Mrs. John Spory and son and dau- Mrs. Mary ghter, Jack and Phyllis, of Johnstown, | years, widow of are spending some time with friends | Spangler, died at her home there at lished in colonies of stockades of three. and relatives in this section. 1 o'clock Monday afternoon, following The cottages are located up-grade Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hammil of an illness of about seven weeks of par-| from the other buildings. They are surrounded with young pines that have | been trimmed. The shade is dense and |the scent from the pine is healthful. The sanitary condition of the camp { has been well cared for and water is | provided from a mountain stream, pi- {bed in, augumented by a well, recently Cresson, were week end callers here |alysis. among friends. Mrs. Glasser was a daughter of the Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hollen of Dean |late Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Fongheiser, attended the Krise-Trexler reunion and was born in East Carroll township. here on Saturday. Her husband expired about five years Leo Hammons of Greensburg, was a ago. Surviving her are one daughter, guest of his mother, Mrs. Frances Hen- | Elizabeth, wife of Jospeh Gray, of nessey, several days this week. Spangler, eight grand-children, two sis- | dug. J. Grove of Ashville spent the week ters, Mrs. Margaret Owens and Mrs.| All in all, we'll bet the Patton Boy end here with friends. Anna Mary Farabaugh, both of Carr-|Scouts are having the time of their Mrs. Joseph Stahl and family of Al- |{olltown, and one brother, John Py | lives this week. The scoutmaster, F. L. toona, were Sunday guests o frelatives | Fongheiser, of Spangler, { Brown, cannot be at the amp all of here. The funeral services were held at|the period, but will make an effort to Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kline of Brad- nine o'clock on Wednesday morning in [be there as much as possible. Both the dock have concluded a visit here with | St. Patrick’s Catholic church, Spangler, | assistant scoutmasters, H. W. Flemm- friends and relatives. when a high mass of requiem was read [ing and Thos. Quinn, Jr., are there. Mr. and Mrs. David Krise and fam- [over the remains by the Rev. Father |The Patton boys who went down to {camp on Tuesday are Herbert Kusner, Harold Blankfeld, Roy Morgan, How- ard Brown, John Blankenhorn, Rich- ard Murray, Robert Green, James Cor- ily of Fallen Timber, spent the week |F. P. Corcoran, the pastor. Interment end here with friends. was made in Holy Cross cemetery. Clem McNulty of Braddock, was a recent guest of his father, William Mc- DON'T FORGET THE Nulty. LAWRENCE PICNIC SATURDAY ntelius, Fred Blankenhorn, Roy Gregg, Mrs. Maitlda Krise of Altoona at- iden John Bennett, Andrew Choby, Albert tended the Krise reunion he§z Satur-! As noted in a previous edition of the Crooks, Joe Tirpak, Albert Maycovich, day. Courier the annual St. Lawrence pic-| Louis Simale, William Ratowsky, C. Mr. and Mrs. Cletus Nagle of Al-| nic will be held in the grove at that Dubilis, Earl Stoltz, Noel Coutereaux. toona spent Saturday here with rela- | place on Saturday of this week, Aug- | Robert Miller, Floyd Grant, Wesley Wilson, James Shannon, George Som- erville, Earl Sunseri, Jack Fornadley, G. Kruise, William Gwynn and Frank Depto. The visiting days are Wednesday, and Saturday afternoons, and all day on Sunday. Better go down to visit the boys and the camp next Sunday. You will enjoy it. The boys promise the Courier quite a letter next week. tives and friends. ust 11th, and the members of the con- Mr. and Mrs. E. Kirk of Braddock | gregation of St. Lawrence's Church were the recent guests of Mrs. Kirk's are leaving no stone unturned to make parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. Nagle. this year’s outing the most enjoyable Charles Thomas of Patton attended |of any heretofore held. A chicken din- the dance here last Saturday evening. ner and supper will be one of the fea- Mr. and Mrs. George Hollen of Ju- | tures of the day, and most everyone of niata were recent visitors here. our readers know what good cooks they Mr. and Mrs. Harry Adams of Al- have in the neighboring village. There toona, were Sunday guests of relatives | will be games and amusements of all gustine, kinds, and a special orchestra has been —— engaged to furnish round dance music TO REPAIR D {both afternoon and evening. en The committee in charge has arran- | five years, unmarried, died on Monday As the result of considerable dam- | ged for free parking of automobiles, | afternoon at the home of his mothe, age done to the large reservoir of the (and a cordial invitation is extended | Mrs. Mary McCloskey, in South Fork, Cherrytree Water Company by heavy | to all to attend. Death was atributed to a complica- rains recently, the company has found creme tion of diseases. The funeral services it necessary to do some reconstruc- —Total receipts of the Department | were held this Thursday morning in tion work and repairs. The heavy rains | of Highways for the fiscal year end- |St. James’ Church at South Fork “and washed about four feet off the top of |ing May 31, 1929, have been estimated | interment was made in St Patrick's "the breast of the dam. “at $52,050,000. ‘cemetery at Gallitzin, 2 : G. W. McCLOSKEY. George W. McCloskey, aged fifty- | Judge McCann and John D. Wal. | Just About Every Amusement | be served on the grounds. (5¢) $2.00 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE. COUNTY FAIR PLANS GAMES PLAYED IN _ CHURCH LEAGUE A Summary of What Transpired in Local Baseball Circles During the Week. SCOTTISH CLUB TO ~ HOLD ANNUAL MEET PROMISE VARIETIES and Diversion That Any. one Could Desire, ker to Be Speakers on Sat- urday of This Week The sixteenth annual reunion and A rollick midway picnic of the Northern Cambria Scot- | half of any county tish club will be held on the Carroll-|bria county fair town Fair Grounds on Saturday, Au- ens on L: gust 11th, with Judge John H. McCann | the most of Ebensburg and John D. Walker of | midways Presbyterians vs. SS. Peter and Paul Presbyte 1s emerged from the streak Friday night in defeating and Paul by a score of 3 to 1e Presbyterians tallied twice t both sides remajned score- that ha L 1 the {irs Johnstown, to be the pirncipal speak- iamou Stree of Cairo ers. The afternoon program will start! the Chicago Exposition’s re until the fifth when SS. Peter and at 2 o'clock, Judge McCann speaking | years ago. But this mid Paul tied things up. The winning run at that time. Two band concerts will | Cambira cot fair will without came in the last half of the seventh be given by the Kiltie Band of Pitts- |the oriental or that marked the | when Paterson's drive to deep right burgh and its program will also in-|great fair of west The scored Whiteford from second. Patter- clude folk dances. backbone of Eben on featured by pitching himself out A comprehensive program of athletic | will be supplied by Har Coppin of several deep holes events has been announced with a soc- | nationally wn outdoor exposition I'he batteries: Presbyterians—Patter- cer football game, races, contests and |which travels in its own train « 15 | son and Brochi. SS. Peter and Paul— quoit pitching included. A number of railway cars, every h I'inic and Falatic SS. Peter and Paul vs. St. George's. prizes will be given to the winners of | which is crammed w the athletic contests. Refreshments will and performer rides of the latest, whi hotly contested game SS. Peter ul and St. George's fought to a » before darkness ended the fray the The committee in charge is composed | ry Mix-up of the officers of the club as follows: |ziest, funnic rting and yet | George's took an early lead. and William McPherson, honorary presi- | safest “ride” yet de There are in winning form until Tinec’s dent; William Leadbetter, president; ! giant merry go r wheels drove in two runs in the sixth in- and James Scollon, secretary-treasurer. | and other rides galore the In the seventh their opponents John Leadbetter, of Barnesboro, will | most modern of them a the score, but were kept from be in charge of races; Archie Gall of An unusual exhibition at- by several close ons call- Patton, and Walter Whiteford of Bar- |tract much attention nst them , the reg- nesboro, will be in charge of the soc-|by deep sea diver who pitcher for SS. Peter and Paul cer football game, and William Lead- | in water, t 1 the past year is back with the better will conduct the quoit pitching | used recen am, so clubs meeting them in the fu- contests. the U. S ture will find the stiffest kind of op- rene. WO! g On PC to overcome. | Submarine S 3S. Peter and Paul—Skor- PAUL WHITEMAN Just how de atic. St. George's—Stas- bottom of Hudak with them fi Methodists vs. Presbyterians. hitti the Metho- SOON AT SUNSET or giant sqt dre In free game all divers opus feated the Presbyterians 10-6, Kino Yep? . | great fish w 1 that he > winners’ big inning being the first King of Jazz s Announced for often killed before they conis hen they scored five runs. The Pres- Friday Evening, of Next get loose terians rallied in the sixth with the Week, August 17. Another mid way attraction is score 7-2, and scored 4 runs, Bailey's ——s group of monkey tomobile ra triple with the bases full featuring. The Paul Whiteman and his orchestra | drivers. These anim: Methodists came back to score three has been engaged to play a De Luxe ed to run in a spe in the seventh to put the game on ice. one night dance engagement at Sunset | cars, with real g: Batteries: Methodists: Wertz and Park on Friday evening of next week, get as much or mo: umegart Presbyterians — Patterson August 17th, when the “King of Jazz” own performa and Brochi will be detained long enough on his tors. It is to er com e———————— ——— limited tour to give the patrons a laughable ENJOYABLE PARTY AT 151s laug treat in the way of up to the minute cyclone of rht popular dance music arrarqed cand ish. A dog rendered in his own inimitable style. |the features Confident that they have secured the | and the finest music of its kind in the warld, animals are the management of the Sunset Park |to look at Auditorium is preparing to entertain a | there the * capacity attendence of dancers and of | sO much hilax music lovers. that it is hard The current tour of the Whiteman | In” before ther organization through Pennsylvania has Fun is fi been arranged to give the band’s per-|who often w THE KLONDIKE SCHOOL A group of merry makers recently 1 near the Klondike School and enjoyed a marshmallow and roast. The members of the 1ed themselves by play- us popular games, and dan- music of a portable phono- i Pauline Dvorchak and Senita acted as chaperons is 1 36S sonnel ample time to rest, bathe, shave ing on his t Those attending were: and tog out in fresh clothes between | Into so many : L Dumm, Bernetta Jenkins, engagements, thus asuring an aggre-|out getting ore Beck, Margaret Jenkins, El- gation always fit. Making long jumps|letin gou lams, Alice Kuhnley, Mildred by motor bus has been tried and then |a score of Ire Margaret Senita and Paul- ) Dvorchak. Messrs. Wesley Wilson, found wanting, and this form of trans- portation is being used only on short QURPRISE aronson, Richard and John Sottile, Gre Isidor Samuel, Ton; PARTY AT trips in New England. ! ies > ; ue 2 hn 2 “What is the future of jazz?” asks HORNAUER RESIDENCE ence Williams, Floyd Grant, Ja- Paul Whiteman. “I wish I could tell mm Gorn lius, John Berett, and Rich- ard Murray you, but who can foretell the future of| A very pleas: anything. So many people have asked ! held recen the same question and I have always | Curtis H found it necessary to offer the same wedding reply—the future of jazz depends en- home on Brewer STAPLE SWALLOWED BY A CRESSON CHILD FOUND silver tirely upon the American public. Just | was s) ( One of the most difficult operations as long as they take it seriously, jazz A musical prc wa for the removal of foreign objectq will live. A very delicious lunche I from the throat that speci: ts at the “Jazz is distinctly American, and I'hose present were M1 Memorial hospital, Johnstown, have while still an infant, is growing into an | William Lowes Michael | been called upon to handle, stamps an energetic and healthy child. But like O’'Donohue, Pete rt and Mrs. unusual case of Margaret McConnell any other child it needs help and mo- | Thoma Doug Mi Margaret | three year old daughter of Mr. and therly attention. What other American Dumm, Mr 3 ind Mr. | Mrs. Englebert McConnell, of Cresson form of music have we? You surely and Mrs 1 sreported as resting well after could not consider opera American and The out of town gi were Mis had a staple such as is used while our symphony music is absolu- | Anna Dumm of Clevel W fences, ete, removed Frid tely immortal, there is nothing really and Mrs. Moliney and a of the larynx structure American about that either and to go | Helen, Joh Hob. wursday, while playing a step farther, there is nothing new | Miss Grace nau ental home, the child s in the way of music in either the op- Bloom, of a; Wil taple, cording to the records, eratic or symphony fields. We have ab- | man Hon Norman when 1 to the hosy immedi ken to ove, all of er solutely no quarrel with opera or sym- | Miss phony music, but if America is to have - - tes strictly American music, that music RAYMOND CONRAD must be jazz. I perosnally think that x NS Nar = we have done a great work in further- COMMITS SUI( IDE ing the cause of Jazz. I prevent “During one of our one night stand | With a bullet wound Is head in- | was dispe tours throughout the country we play- | flicted by his own 1 raymond That ed at an average of three hundred cit- | Conrad, aged 50 years, dead ies in a year. When we decided to tour about 10:30 o'clock on 11 the country in the interest of Jazz, no | Pehind the b good Samaritan offered us any finan- | kertown. Discovery of cial assistance so we had to finance the | Was made by a tour ourselves which I am pleased to |2anized when Cor say proved very profitable. That in it- | to his home for suj the lifeles ay n group of searchers or- failed Alor per self was quite consoling when you con- | body was found a .38 calibre revolver i vledge t ¢ sider that every symphony orchestra is| NO motive for the suicide could be | the of t 1 u TD sponsored financially and that the given. bh je reg 1 by great majority finish their seasons at| Mr. Conrad is survive his wi le ( e me Mrs. Jennie (Brandt) children. Stella, Delrose The funeral service Thursday morning at Conrad, and a deficit ELIZABETH WENTZ CARROLLTOWN MRS OF EXPIRES GATHER AT CRESSON burial will be made [ Members of the Cambria County | there. M , 1 Ww ace fiftv- Medical Auxiliary and their: Ladies’) __ . = rm 1 ) I ) Vent i 5 EBENSBURG GETS CONVENTION auxilliary, will meet this Thursday at the Cresson Sanatorium. The program | Delegates at Clearfield last Wed: Satu y : ¢ ie Mel includes dinner at 1 P. M. day attending the 36th annu Johi n, whe he } The session of the medical society |tion of the Central Di V ( will be the annual “north of the coun- | Firemen’s Asoci 1 ( ( ’ y 1¢ ty” meeting. Dr. H. J. Somner of Hol- |1929 sessions 1 r lidaysburg and Dr. S. B. Meyers, of| Charles W if Eb W Johnstown, will be in charge of the |elected president nix meeting, which will be conducted on |John E. Johnson of DuB 3enedic Ca the subject, of ‘“Malarial Treatment of Charles M. S ( 1 n ti Poresis.” board of dire Nomination an delection of officers! Steel Corporation I n will be the principal business at the |the convention to Eb meeting of the auxiliary. son. It )¢ R —————— a—— — — ours ra u \ MARRIED / EBENSBURG. the Indust: I I I | Miss Alberta Page and Antone Bas- MARY E. KELLER tine, both residing near St. Michael, Mary I < V J S were united in marriage at the court old daughter houes in Ebensburg on Monday after- |Keller, of near Porta 1- | Ful S | noon by Justice of the Peace James T |monia at t l X t M Nelson Young. ‘day evening S I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers