Punxsutawney Spirit, 1906-08-29 |
Previous | 1 of 8 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
Large
Extra Large
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
All (PDF)
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
>h *![ '' f m VOL. XXXIV. PUNXSUTAWNEY, PA., AUGUST 29, 1006. NO. 13. IXTKHHTATE IHSKHAI.I.. KAIIl OX JKWKI.KK. WEBER'S New Fall Hats at Krii- Bradford I'unxsuta wtiey Kane I'attim DuBois Olean Oil City ........ We have seleeted over one hun- rcd and fifty suits that sold for $8.00, $10.00 and $12.00, placcd them on tables and will place same on sale from Friday, August 24 until Saturday, Sep- $6.66 tcmber 1st, for Fall styles in hats are now ready for your inspection. Our stock comprises a wide range of styles, and prices to suit all tastes and purses. "Nifty" hats for young men in either soft or stiff; also, the more sedate kinds for medium aged men. Prices $1.00, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50, $3.00 and the Knox at $5.00. We are agents for the "world renowned" Knox hats. Fall styles in Silk Hats. Any straw hat in the store now at half price. A Lot of Age 3 to 7 Years, Half Price Boys' Blouse Suits The r. Ai r. n. it. No All alterations charged for. 4.00 3.00 " $5.00 Blouse Suits $2.50 2.00 1.50 Great bargains in Men's Suits. A lot of Men's Suits that sold for $13.50 and $15* dj 1 Your choice of the lot for *P * v/.v/V/ reductions All two piece suits at great J. A. WEBER Mrs. H. \\ . < 'jimplx-ll. ONE PRICE CLOTHIER Preservin Season Is Here The End you Will Want HI B ACQ Men's and Boy's . J. LULD Furnisher black suits in this lot. FARMERS' BANK BUILDING StumliiiK <>' •!»«* Tennis. The f< \V. L. Pet. bery whl . :.4 .C.2S McMill at 4(1 .."itil Punxautuw .4:; :!8 .5S1 Newark. Obli ".I 4"> yoii will p 11 44 .4S2 Mr. ana ::t: 17 .4:14 to this oil :: s 5| .427 Punxsutaw '.7 54 .4(17 according been a bi Since the last issue of the Spirit natives s he Punx'y team has played eight unlocked sanies, winning five and losing three, ;,,t. ginios and landing in third place from the ,,f value top. During the week the umpires takers nl the Interstate l.cague have, by \„t s< M( Millet their manifestly unfair decisions tin- Mtated u me re <ler certain circumstances, made it porter Til,. , ,„ai when plain that I'unx v i:- due for a sea- he left home after dinner to no to soil ot hard sledding at the hands of hjs office he left the front door standuie man who handles the indicator, open to let some fresh air in. and Mr. Rindernec-ht, president of .\|rs. McMillen was engaged In tacktile league, ot Hrudtord. the anl- inn down some matting in the kitch 111118 ot 'hese individuals cropped out en and heard no one. Tile noise > enterda} at Krle when Allen, who from the laundrv near t>\ also helped had iken exceptions to a manifestly to ,iniwn n„. Moise ,hat may have unfair decision b\ I lupin Mc\a- been made b\ the uold thief mar:', was lined »S In the umpire Mr. Mc.Mil'len states that he was and suspended for a week by Pres- totally unaccustomed to such high ident Itindernecht. I he president handed procedure and that the in no!it\ ins 'he Punxsutawney As change from the Pennsylvania town social run of Allen's suspension, went to this city was something like so fai as to decree that the i'unx > stepping over the line froni line tropthlrd base man would not even be al- |tai zone Into a bath of ice water lowed on the home grounds Friday He savs thai he placed Ills case of and Saturday whether in uniform or optician's goods on the street in In (Wizen s clothes. front of his office and that lie mere' 'u' members of the l'unxsutawney ly laughed at the warning given him A-oi iation, leallzing that such an i>\ tin» police, but that now he was assumption of authority cannot be rather inclined to bellevi that tliex fxerolst'd by any c»Hit ial of any or- wort* sanitation 111 the I nited Slates will Mr. Mc.Uillen is an optician and lake 111) notice of it until a meeting has an office on tho South Side lie of the directors of the Association is the eit> about iwo weeks aifo called, I'unxsutawm > tans will an,i moved his lainilv here last week want to know why. if Mr. Rindei necht is anxious to enforce discipline. he has not. exercised delegated authority in the case of Captain O'llara. Civil engineers wnc at the Tmof the I'rie team, Captain Lark in. of perial hotel, on. Monday evening of !li« DuBois team, Collopy and Moss, 'his week, and will In in town off of tin4 Kane team, especially when and on for the next three weeks, the latter railed Umpire Steinberg a They will survey ;i line from Brookhook-nosed, what-you-may-eall-him villi* for the franklin & Clearfield R. .lew and the many other instances of K. Co. Tnat eoini*m> has already a like character which have occurred surveyed other lines, hut this is now heretofore. Is it. may we suggest, the only one remaining to survey because I'unx'y is only a few points and it •will, in all probability, be the below second place? one accepted. It 'is further hinted Lost Two at laie. ,!H *«>«>" •'<* the road is complet- (Ml to Reynoldsv 1 Mi» that the tracks The Punxftutawney team-began th«* of the Rev noldsville A: Falls Cre««k week at lOrle where they dropped R. Iv.. will ibe used by ihein from here two games, one on Monda\ and one to Falls Creek, and that the trucks on Tuesday. Of Monday's game of 'lie Buffalo, Rochester and Pitts*- the BJrie Dispatch said, in part: burs R. R. will be used from Pitts "The winning streak of the Pnnx- burg; to Clearfield. In the meantime sutawney base ball team came to an a continuation of a permanent line abrupt stop yesteiday. Brie ap- will be projected and constructed plied the emergency brake to the from Reynoldsville to Cleartledrl visitors and outclassed them in ev- through R a t h 111 el . Rey noldsville cry department of the gamr\ winning Volunteer. out by a score of f> to 1. The visitors had a fine display of I'unxsutawnev Spirit injected into them before the game started, and up to the Mrs. ( amphell. wile of (1. \\ fifth Inning were real scrappv Thev Campbell, ol Undsey. died of i nn They were transformed into lamblike ''''' sll,n>"eh >•' ">>' home of her creatines all anxious to get home 10 'l»"Khlor. Sunday. August 111. aged supper and each dreading the or- ' > "ars and was buried In the Olive deal of facing the niightv speed of b,ll'K ('emetcry Tuesday or last week. Pitcher Strom, who was steadily R,'v' S' T of this place, at mowing: them down in relentless sue- listed b\ Ke\. l. \\ English, ol cession. Lindaey, officiating. Mrs. Campbell Tuesday's game was a slugging ll!<(1 ,)pel1 <ontlned lo llpl' bed mD»1 match in which the Punx'v team "r the l)i,sl vettr' slu> sulTeretd should have been the victors in a wllho'" eomplaint and died trusting large majority had not a biased urn- 'I>li.i11y in Hie promises of her plre with his eve on Bradford and ,Jlbl'- " was luM' dvinR «eque«t Kane, roasted Campbell's Colts ,hat 1 Uh ''h«J'ter of John he shamefully. The tabulated score 1'e'"' al funeral. for vesterdav's contest Is not avail- Besides her bus-band sin- Is sur able for this issue Kollowiii" is vlved b.v four children, namely: John. the result of the Krle games: ' of Kossltfr, Mrs. ISlmer Hoover and Miss Ada Campbell, of Lindsey. ami Mrs. Thomas Phillips, of Walston. Punx'y Tram OrcupUfi Tliinl Place In Hare for IViiiituit. a robipon A .dent of rom thv writer, cuss: len conx* from 11 when* as never mil tin behind t hieve* articles vith no blowing account />f *h was perpetrated en, a former /r« wney, is take/ t i'io, Trlibumy The ote, is a facetious Mrs. A .l/.MeMii ny last Ahursda\ vney. I'a 1 a tov to repouf, there 1 glarr /ommitted imber / p» ;u efull> doors./Iti that town t unjfeard of am' are «aily expom »' in lvewark. Mr. an American Trib irfcday morning th Sr $6.66 Sir Former l*inix«utaM n«\v Cttixen Fell Aiiioiik Tlilcvi'H. Died in St. Louis. Of Our Cleaning-Up Sale All.n. :) Early. 1 Caiupbi-ll, 1 Rouch, s . Calhoun, i 'Pray nor. 2 M(.'l)onaId, <• ! ioliKon. p •|')rt»8F«T .. Crocks, Copper Kettles, 18 to 35 gallon. 14 to 20 gallon Totals Relll»\v, in ('rant'. 1 . . t Ma rk. I Cranston, s lMiilliln, Col»*. r ... Sherman, :> Imnn, 2 . . Strom. |» Everything in Preserving and Canning line. Enameled Preserving Kettles. Hand-made Fruit Cans— Every can guaranteed. Jar Rubbers and Glass Jar Caps. We still have about 350 men's suits on our tables and wish to dispose of every one. To carry out our principal firmly established, every suit designed for the season's service must find service that season. To that end we subjected the following suits to extraordinary price reductions. Men's suits ranging in price from $7.50, $10.00, $12.00 and $15.00, Your Choice YourChoice See Our Window. Sale begins Saturday, August 25, 1906. Torrence | J| 1 I B 1 \ I Punxsutawney Block |\ L vJ ll 11 Penna. THE ONE PRICE CLOTHIER Home of Reliable Hardware. Punxsutawney Hardware Co. I:KI !•* Moiulny. \ iikiint '27. IM'NXSI "I'AWNKV. . K II l» A I! . o ii ] j a . 0 I 1 .» .i 1 !> 1 0 Saturday morlng \V. A. Dick, a 1, ][ 2 " member of the Arm of J. B. Eber " ii u ii (i Iwtrt Co., Ltd., received a telegram [j '' 'J ;; |J announcing: the .sudden death Fri i | /, 5 day night of his brother, RobeiM •» o .i ii o Dick, manager of and a stockholder ~~~ -7 (in tlni Western Corset Company, of ' ' ' St. Louis, Missouri. Mr. Dick left •i 2 i o ii Saturda;. on the :i:02 p. ni. flyer .1 j 11 i) n over tin4 H., K. & P. railroad to at" 'I 1 I1 " tend the funeral. He was accom„ jII panied by Walter Dick. father of . .) i i ii 0 Kobert B. Dick, superintendent of • 0 " " •; » mines, and W. W. Dick, of Flor ' J | j r! ence, Mrs. Homer (Jroves, of Brock 1 — wayville. and Mrs. Reose Williams. ;• r\ iJ 1 of Keynoldsville, daughter and sis- Hatted for Hob on in the ninth. ..... t..lutw,..» ,,r tu. ,i, ,i Punxsuta wney . i> I <> o » o n • • I • sI>C(tI\t In , ot the dceastd. Erie I 1 0 0 :i 0 0 0 r. ♦ Earned runs Erie 2. Two-base hit , Cole. Struck out My Hiroin t»: by Kim <■«'!* liMlUstry. Hobson s. liases on balls- -Hy Strom :j. by iiobson t. Left on basis Erie The citizens of Big Run are re c.uni"i.nii.l>" w'lw V,V;& ]"ipinR over, i»'<»»i>ohs "f ;,0'",p: Hit by pitch. I Clark. Calhoun. Mr- in* a new in'dlistry. / the DeoboM Donald. Sacrifice bit----Crane. stolen Manufacturing Confpanv of Fills- S°ni>lr"--ai"- bMr*' whlc,« wl" y>n move its plant Namara a11eiidunee—too. 4 to that town. yfiv company, which TueNdn.v, \uKHMt as. became in the Big Run o ,) i .>_$ " 5 "lte "'rough /e efforts of Frank P. lOrie l o I ii 4 0 1 1 I t» il» 4 Brown, manufacturers the Gulick Batteries iMinxsut twtiey. (j.-n vey and Hot Water Boiler, a machine for Dool.w; Ki-I.. M,'Donald and ivmnnK. whloll (hero Ik said to lie a large and Oil City OameN. growing demand. Among the directors of tihe company are the fol- The Ptinx'y team made a Oarriso» IowIuk »ig Run cltixmis: 0. II. Ir finish last week. taking three v|n, John McC'lure, It. A. Hamilton straight from Oil City, one on Friday and (1. M. Oourley. and a double-header Saturday, there- . by boosting Campbell's Colls Into I'ulilic Snle third place. Friday Garvey and McDonald were Maria Zeitler, administratrix for in the points for Ptinx'y and Jutxt the estate of Lee Zeitler, deceased, and Johnson for the Drillers. Oar- of l'linxsutawney, will offer at pnlivey was all to the good until the lie sale at the Washington Hotol sixth inning when three hits, 2 bases barn, Saturday, September S, boon balK-t an<l an error allowed the ginning at 1 o'clock, p. in., a large visitors to score four runs to which amount of personal property, Inclndthey added another in the ninth in- Ing live stock, as follows: ning. The Punx'y sluggers had Susie Bond, dark bay (illy, sired by their batting clothes on and expert- the Bondsman, trotter, foaled 1 <• 0r>; onced little difficulty In keeping a King Joe. chestnut stallion trotter, safe lead, although Steinburg, by foaled, 1904, sired by the Bondsman; his decisions, kept the fans In bad Coupon, brown mare, six years old, humor. The climax In the umpire's 15 hands high, foaled by Atlantic (Continued on page 2) King, record 2:11. ■
Object Description
Title | Punxsutawney Spirit, 1906-08-29 |
Volume | XXXIV |
Issue | 13 |
Subject | Jefferson County -- Newspapers; Punxsutawney Spirit -- Newspapers; Indiana University of Pennsylvania -- Newspapers: |
Description | An archive of the Punxsutawney Spirit weekly newspaper (-1911) from Jefferson County, Pennsylvania. |
Publisher | Smith & Wilson; Spirit Pub. Co. |
Date | 1906-08-29 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Jefferson County (Pa.); Punxsutawney (Pa.) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | ps_19060829_vol_XXXIV_issue_13 |
Source | Microfilm |
Language | English |
Relation | Property of The Punxsutawney Spirit. Use of the microfilm Courtesy of the Indiana University of Pennsylvania Special Collections & University Archives. |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For further information contact mengle@cust.usachoice.net or call 814-265-8245 . |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Contributing Institution | Mengle Memorial Library |
Description
Title | Punxsutawney Spirit, 1906-08-29 |
Volume | XXXIV |
Issue | 13 |
Subject | Jefferson County -- Newspapers; Punxsutawney Spirit -- Newspapers; Indiana University of Pennsylvania -- Newspapers: |
Description | An archive of the Punxsutawney Spirit weekly newspaper (-1911) from Jefferson County, Pennsylvania. |
Publisher | Smith & Wilson; Spirit Pub. Co. |
Date | 1906-08-29 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Jefferson County (Pa.); Punxsutawney (Pa.) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | ps_19060829_001.tif |
Digital Specifications | Archival image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from 35mm microfilm at 300 dpi using a Nextscan Eclipse film scanner. The original file size was 2504.78 kilobytes. |
Source | Microfilm |
Language | English |
Relation | Property of The Punxsutawney Spirit. Use of the microfilm Courtesy of the Indiana University of Pennsylvania Special Collections & University Archives. |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For further information contact mengle@cust.usachoice.net or call 814-265-8245 . |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Contributing Institution | Mengle Memorial Library |
Full Text |
>h *![ '' f m VOL. XXXIV. PUNXSUTAWNEY, PA., AUGUST 29, 1006. NO. 13. IXTKHHTATE IHSKHAI.I.. KAIIl OX JKWKI.KK. WEBER'S New Fall Hats at Krii- Bradford I'unxsuta wtiey Kane I'attim DuBois Olean Oil City ........ We have seleeted over one hun- rcd and fifty suits that sold for $8.00, $10.00 and $12.00, placcd them on tables and will place same on sale from Friday, August 24 until Saturday, Sep- $6.66 tcmber 1st, for Fall styles in hats are now ready for your inspection. Our stock comprises a wide range of styles, and prices to suit all tastes and purses. "Nifty" hats for young men in either soft or stiff; also, the more sedate kinds for medium aged men. Prices $1.00, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50, $3.00 and the Knox at $5.00. We are agents for the "world renowned" Knox hats. Fall styles in Silk Hats. Any straw hat in the store now at half price. A Lot of Age 3 to 7 Years, Half Price Boys' Blouse Suits The r. Ai r. n. it. No All alterations charged for. 4.00 3.00 " $5.00 Blouse Suits $2.50 2.00 1.50 Great bargains in Men's Suits. A lot of Men's Suits that sold for $13.50 and $15* dj 1 Your choice of the lot for *P * v/.v/V/ reductions All two piece suits at great J. A. WEBER Mrs. H. \\ . < 'jimplx-ll. ONE PRICE CLOTHIER Preservin Season Is Here The End you Will Want HI B ACQ Men's and Boy's . J. LULD Furnisher black suits in this lot. FARMERS' BANK BUILDING StumliiiK <>' •!»«* Tennis. The f< \V. L. Pet. bery whl . :.4 .C.2S McMill at 4(1 .."itil Punxautuw .4:; :!8 .5S1 Newark. Obli ".I 4"> yoii will p 11 44 .4S2 Mr. ana ::t: 17 .4:14 to this oil :: s 5| .427 Punxsutaw '.7 54 .4(17 according been a bi Since the last issue of the Spirit natives s he Punx'y team has played eight unlocked sanies, winning five and losing three, ;,,t. ginios and landing in third place from the ,,f value top. During the week the umpires takers nl the Interstate l.cague have, by \„t s< M( Millet their manifestly unfair decisions tin- Mtated u me re |
Tags
Comments
Post a Comment for Punxsutawney Spirit, 1906-08-29