hn wd rm rd ’ 1 i i baw LY THE PATTON COURIER ‘By GENE BYRNES os —————————— scription for OVEN Seeing The World From An Easy Chair | WHENEVER [EADACHES | y remedy known, NOBODY Tablets. SAA . | Y O U N E E D A RESTS FOR Ee REA Pam oe AND LET US EXPLAIN HOW AND CONVENIENTLY WE habit ferming. by many doctoss i Bets Sudiniss - { CAN ARRANGE A LOAN FOR YOU! Sale at A { ¢ E G CO, INC. *10 12.2300 ih ‘ \ : = @ . me K \iMCS5T ARS TO REPAY 11 NRT |cmene- ! ER n mer V 1 e | American News Features, Inc. Pyeran . x Rit Th YOUR INCOME # AT-LAW t——— I —e dg. Patton, Pa. WIND UP OF THE : | mis shreich of vou is aRRroYed and F 5 RM cA LEND AR [sows S should receive approximately one- | extends for a distance of about 1,000 half a pound of grain a day during the HEALTH TALK Timely Reminders from | gestation period. About 10 days or MERICAN LOAN COMPANY ROOM 308 — GRANT BLDG. mv feet on the hillside about Crystal | on dn 88 Eotore t ig \ The Pennsylvania State College two weeks before farrowing time corn - A e in The Patton DECEMBER COURT [Beas School of Agriculture, should be replaced by bran and oil i 41 2 1 1 th ve. | This was a test case and the facts | The closed season for garages is the | — | meal. PH ONE: 2-6946°2 | admitted were that the road in ques-|open one for carbon monxide deaths" BUTCHER BEATS AT HOMZE—In- Sn * ALTOON | p | ) ny . | tion was the part of a turnpike laid From the number of reports each week | torost in the slaugh g, cutting and | LEPER DISCOVERED A, PA. x t ik tin reaching health authorities at this|.,ring of pork, beef and mutton at| A oh out by a turnpike company opera 8|time of the year, carelessness and |pome is increasing : 2 Pennsylva- | LIVING IN ALTOONA | under a law passed in 1851, but it had | thoughtlessness regarding this menace nia farmers and ers. De-| oe . : |been abandoned by the owners many [appear to be more widespread than | monstrations cond Wel on Kalama. 24 tive of Hawaii | Dl mins 775 3en. Yo wank nail aves seo cote LO a fr El esting cas e : : HY. £2 animal for slaughter and 1 Wi as lived 1n Al I ast | |on this road by the Upper Yoder TOWN- {no "oue of the average man and woman | gle carcass after has been isolated in Altoona sicians say, with leprosy. | Criminal Court at Ebensburg, last| a ¢ | ship Supervisors. The Commonwealth | for many years,” said Doctor Theodore | Es a rT Rapid Work of Judges and Juries Clears Calendar for Last Session of Year five years week: ) . { contended that the road has been used | . A H I Milton W. Graham, of Johnstown hy the general public and has been B. Appel, Secretary of Health, __ |ing the 10-year the | Hos thorities said Kalama Would charged with fraudlent conversion, |fo. some time in dangerous condition| “There appears to be an ostrich-|numbers of farm tractors in this state | yo sent to the leper colony in Louisial was found guilty by a jury.in Judge | que to lack of repairs. After hearing like attitude toward this cold weather |jncreased from 50 y 35000. Poor) 22 Sent to the leper colony In Lowsiana hazard. The fact that carbon mon-|farming methods h immediately. oxide is colorless, odorless and taste- | ability to improve | less seems to satisfy many persons that | ing to agricultural no risk is involved, despite the direct State College. | statements to the contrary; that this| progr PLANTS FOR EFFECT—Sinc: Evans’ court. The defendant was di-|the Commonwealth's testimony Judge rected to pay one-half of the costs |myans sustained the defense counsel's and the prosecutor, Gus Pfeffer, the|gemyurrer for the discharge of the de- other half. This prosecution involved | fandants. sed man LIMA CA CONTINUED 10ut previ arnouncement, the rvice—but shoulders. '" through rious re- ntion, Mo- parts and 1, the alleged theft of a brief case, photo- graph kit, receipt books and a Cross- section radiator, atotal value of $28. John Casuba and Annie Casuba, of Nanty-Glo, convicted by a jury in Judge Ivan J. McKenrick’s court Thu- rsday afternoon on a charge of cruelty to minors, were sentenced Friday mor- ning to jointly pay the costs and a fine of $50. John Casuba was sentenced to serve not less than five nor more than 30 days and his wife was sentenced to serve not less than 10 nor more than 30 days in the county jail. Andy O’Lear, of Portage, charged with aggravated assault and battery was found guilty to simple assault and recommended to the mercy of the court. Frank Gillish, of Park Hill, charged with larceny and receiving stolen goods was discharged upon direction of Judge McKenrick and the costs were placed upon the county. The defendant was alleged to have stolen a calf. Frank Mardis, of Morrellville, Johns- town, charged with uttering, was found not guilty and the costs were equally divided between the defendant and the prosecutor, David Schwartz, of Johns- town. Herbert Freeburn, of Johnstown charged with assault and battery, was found guilty and recommended to the mercy of the Court by a jury in Judge Reed's court Friday morning. The de- fendant was sentenced to pay the costs The case grew out of a fight between Freeburn and another boy by the name of Cobaugh, both student at the Johns- town High School. Joseph Lucasabde and Basil Godicz, both of Portage, charged with assault and battery, were found not guilty but directed to py one-half of the costs the other half being asesssed against Henry Seidlicki, also of Portage. The Commonwealth alleged the defendants had attacked the defendant. Adam Keafer, Scott Beam and D. H. Weimer, Road Supervisors of Upper Yoder Township ,charged with nuis- ance on information of Constable J. A. Delozier, of the same township, were found not guilty by direction of Presi- dent Judge John E. Evans in Criminal Court Thursday afternoon. The costs were placed on the county. The road in question is a connecting link between the brick road leading up to Roxburg and the concrete highway at the old Roundhouse in Benscreek. ENDS MONTHS OF “INDIGESTION” IN SURPRISING WAY There’s good news for all stomach sufferers in the sensation being created by a simple discovery, due to the quick, easy way it relieves so- Joe Gordenofi a Mexican, of Cam- bria City, Johnstown, charged with a serious offense against morality, was found guilty Thursday afternoon by a jury in Judge John H. McCann's court. The defendant was remanded to the county jail pending further investiga- tion. John Kozar, a 12-year-old Vinton- dale youth, charged with larceny and receiving stolen goods, was found guilty but recommended to the mercy of the court by a jury in President Judge Evans’ courtroom Thursday afternoon. The defendant was remanded to the county jail and the Judge intimated that he would send the youth to oMr- gana. The Kozar boy had been ar- rested for the theft of a chewing gum vending mchine on information by John Rosocha. A jury in Judge Ivan J. McKenrick's court Thursday afternoon returned a verdict of guilty against I. J. Davis, of Lower Yoder Township ,on a charge of assault and battery and acquitted the defendant of a charge of larceny and receiving stolen goods. The defendant was convicted of having made an as- sault on George Mauthe, of Upper Yo- der Township, who brought the prose- cution. W. C. Morris, of Vintondale, tried be- fore Judge Samuel Lemmon Reed Thursday afternoon, was found not guilty of a charge of attempting to operate a motor vehicle while intoxi- cated. The jury directed that the de- | fendant pay four-fifths of the costs |and the prosecutor, Robert Rutledge, Constable of Twin Rocks, to pay the other one-fifth. Arthur Clement, Johnstown negro, was found guilty of murder in the second degree by a jury in Judge Evans’ court on Saturday night. The defendant heard the verdict without displaying visible emotion and quiet- ly accompanied deputy sheriffs on the return trip to the county jail from which he had been taken to hear the jury’s decision, which was reached at 11:30 Saturday night, after delibera- tions lasting about two and one-half hours. Clement is acused of the murder, Dec. 2, of Scott Tomes, a negro fel- low worker in the wire mill of the Bethlehem Steel Corporation plant at Johnstown. The commonwealth con- tention, ‘which was Kirst presented during the first day of the trial which started Friday was that Clement and Tomes had an argument regarding jalleged statements made to their su- perior officer regarding their work- ing but Clement, testifying in his own behalf, asserted that he stabbed Tomes only in self defense. According to Clement's story, Tom- es struck him and knocked him from a seat as the men were waiting to start to work the evening of Decem- ber 2. Clement said that he defend- ed himself with a nice pick, which he was using as an awl in making an ap- ron of a piece of carpet, but that he was unaware that he had stabbed viewpoint may be the immediate fore- | runner of death never seems to enter their heads until the carban monoxide does. Then it is quite too late. “Just the other day a well known | | citizen who prided himself upon his! sensible living habits, ‘went west’ via | plant materials a: | manent effect, con given when the p | the, possible height : GIVE COWS VARIETY OF GRAINS —It is advisable of Tony Lima and John C. Bonda t out for per- : 1 ith : hi) for pe: 1stown, charged with count Talon 2 government revenue stamps for are ) use on bottle of illicit liquor was con- matu : tinued in federal court in Pittsburgh Nednesday of last week. The date to the carbon monoxide route. Only 24 hours before he had stopped a friend strain : on the street and became eloquent on | clished by the con his careful manner of living. ‘I eat of protein and provides a feed that i : € ve a goe i h it was continued was not an- | iety of feeds in grain unced by court officials, nor was the | Such a mixture gives a better qu ( the continuance given. Se- | Johnstowners, who had been sum- med as witnesses in the case, made moderately, sleep eight hours each night, walk three miles every day or in lieu thereof play golf, and I avoid excesses of all kinds. In deed,’ he con- cluded, ‘I don’t even use coffee or tea. I'm going to live to be a hundred, if I can!’ “It seems a shame that a man like this so sold to health and life should have exchanged his earthly existence for a few moments of physical com-) fort in a closed garage. But he did just that very thing. “It must be understood that this insinuating gas becomes powerful enough to kill a person in five min- utes time, provided the exhaust is com- ing from a six cylinder car and the garage is of average one-car capacity. Which suggests a lethal potency that brooks no foolishness. “In the nature of things, there will be a comparatively large number of carbon monoxide automobile victims in the United States during the win- ter months, not to mention the hun- dreds who will die from carbon mon- oxide by the careless or worn-out cou- plings of gas stoves, etc. And unfor- tunately Pennsylvania will get its share of these deaths. “Persons should therefore make it very strictly their business to stay out of this accidental death class by stay- ing out of closed garages with run- ning engines. Better suffer a little frigid weather with the garage doors wipe open, as they should be, than | not to be able to suffer at all. Beware | of carbon monoxide, recognize and res- pect its power to slay. And live!” FAST TRAIN ON P. R. R. STRIKES BIG BOULDER The fast westbound New York-Cleve- land expres had a narrow escape from being wrecked at Cassandra early last Thursday, when a large boulder, loosen- ed by recent rains and thaws, rolled! down an embankment onto the tracks of the Pennsylvania Railroad. The locomotive struck the boulder, but for- tunately the train was not derailed The train was brought to a sudden stop | by application of emergency brakes. Considerable excitement among the passengers resulted. | Virgin Diamond Dealer Tozer Jewelry Co. M. H. GARDNER, Prop. ZL Cito i. aa), Lhe Chritonares lo come A VIRGIN DIAMOND, never before worn or individually-owned, increasing in value through the years—is an incomparable gift. Of established quality, of guaranteed color and brilliance, in mountings of dis- tinctive craftsmanship, Certified VIRGIN DIAMONDS can be secured in a wide range of stand- ard prices. : Penna. VIRGIN BiAMONDS Valuable Premiums WITH EVERY PURCHASE OF $1.00 AND WITH EACH $1.00 PAID ON ACCOUNT, WE ARE GIVING A FREE CHANCE ON THE FOLLOWING VALUA- BLE ARTICLES TO BE GIVEN AWAY ON DECEM- BER 31st, 1930, AT 9 P.M. FIRST—RADIO, WITH BATTERIES AND TUBES. SECOND—EIGHT DAY MANTEL CLOCK. THIRD—STEVENS’ ..22 CAL. RIFLE. FOURTH—DOVER ELECTRIC IRON. FIFTH—SET KNIVES AND FORKS, SIXTH—ENAMEL ALARM CLOCK. Huber's Hardware PATTON, PA. The Path to Plenty I Tomes in such a manner as to cause ) called “‘indigestion,” and its effects, J . ) such as gas, bloating, belching, |death until after his arrest about 2 headaches, nausea, heartburn, etc. [hours later. He also declared, and produced several witnessesto substan- | “ se TY: A . “Pape SDispepsia, as itis called, |tjate his assertions, that Tomes had | : De : all | sions and that he lived in mortal fear killers in it. Nothing habit-forming. [sions and viet he ’ No sooner swallowed than pain stops; normal digestion is restored. Thousands are so enthusiastic over Subscribe for the Courier, $2 a year. the results they are securing that they simply have to tell their ex- periences to help others. Here’s what attractive Mrs. Grace Hall, No. 1 Dean Way, So. Boston, Mass., says: Is Via This Bank PO OE OSD SE SA OO of Tomes. Bring Your Car Here For Expert Mechanical Service. Ol 75 EES SRL RESCIND In the Morning! Just take a pleasant-tasting candy Cascaret tonight and see how fine , 5) o ing. Yc rak 1 1 e f you feel next morning. Yo] wake We pride ourselves on the production of all. Follow the leader by making a deposit today. 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CRD) TO-DO AS CTD SO-O0 Try A Tankful of SUNOCO THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK The motor Gas with all the PATTON, PENNSYLVANIA advantages of Ethyl Gas. $200,000.00 SURPLUS $200,000.60 TOTAL RESOURCES OVER $3,240,000.00 Gee. E. Prindib]e, President; F. E. Farabaugh, Reuel Somer- ville, James Westrick, P. J. Kelly, Vice Presidents, Frank L. Brown, Cashier; Francis X. Young, Assistant Cashier. A BOLL 9¥ HONOR BANK “I tried a lot of medicines but nothing helped until I heard about Pape’s Diapepsin and got some. It en ed my trouble in a surprising Products. way. All druggists sell Pape’s Diapepsin; PRICES REASONABLE. bo AH Ald Narr doz or i Ee on Sms GIVE ME A TRIAL thorough action rales So ideal REE sa for elderly people. love ing W. Va. Tora FREE sample box, their delicious candy flavr. . PAPE'S Wilfred Anna ») ) / MN Licensed Taxidermist 191FN 0 PATTON, R. D. 1, PA. CAPITAL Patton Auto Co. Patton, Pa. . CANDY CTHARTIC 4 NTA \) PSL =o WORK wHiLE YOU