NEWS: Hollidaysburg News, Altoona Times, July 15, 1903, Blair County, PA Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by Judy Banja and Phyllis Edwards Copyright 2005. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/blair/ _______________________________________________ HOLLIDAYSBURG Professor Frank Morrow, of Harrisburg, is a guest at the home of his brother, Mr. George Cunkle. Rev. Patrick Vereker and Thomas Lawly paid a visit yesterday to Father Cornelius Sheehan, of Ashville. Mr. Lawrence Diamond, of Youngstown, O., a former resident of this place, is visiting old friends here. Mr. Andrew Long, after an absence of several years, is renewing old acquaintances in the county capital. Mr. William H. Gardner has finished cataloguing the library of the late Dr. David H. Baron. It contains 560 books, many of them being of great value. Miss Nora, daughter of John Wesley Wiseman, of Canal street, a Fourth of July toy pistol victim, went to the Altoona hospital yesterday to have a wound in her hand treated. At the Masonic banquet at Caterer Moses Brown's on Monday evening, Richard Roeloffs inadvertently took an umbrella belonging to some other person in mistake for his own. W. S. Hammond, esq., auditor, appointed to distribute the funds in the hands of John Cree, assignee of Gardner, Morrow & Co., late Hollidaysburg bankers, will sit at the court house tomorrow to attend to the duties of his office. Martin L. Rhodes and the other heirs of George W. Rhodes, deceased, late of Hollidaysburg, instituted injunction proceedings in court yesterday morning against the Pennsylvania Railroad company, Roydhouse Ayer & Co., Reilley & Webber and the Vipond Construction company, to restrain the defendants from trespassing on the plaintiff's lands in East Hollidaysburg, or from doing any work or making any surveys or changes on said lands by diverting the course of the river or otherwise, except that defendants shall be allowed to proceed with the construction of the round house or any other building which is now in actual course of construction. Judge Bell granted a preliminary injunction and fixed the hearing for Friday, July 17, at 9 a.m. The plaintiffs are the owners of a farm in Blair township, containing 250 acres of land. The Pennsylvania Railroad company was given the option last winter to purchase sixty acres of said land at $200 per acre, on which the new railroad yard and shops in East Hollidaysburg were to be constructed. For some reason the purchase money has not been paid over, although the railroad company has taken possession of the land and has begun making the contemplated improvements. Altoona Times, Wednesday, July 15, 1903