Cambria Freeman, Ebensburg, Pa. Friday, October 2, 1908 Volume 42, Number 38 Pistol Battle at Iselin Indiana, Pa., Oct. 2 Shot in a pistol battle at Iselin Sunday night, Nunzio Bottiglione was killed while Marliano Mucciante, Tony Lassari and three others wounded. Lassari was later secreted by friends and the extent of his injuries is not known. Mucciante is in the hospital at Punxsutawney where it is feared he will die. Joseph Lantzy Joseph Lantzy, one of the oldest and best known citizens of Cambria County, died at the home of his son, Simon Lantzy, of Garmantown, at four o’clock on Saturday last of paralysis, aged 85 years, 8 months and six days. When he was but four years of age his parents located on the Lantzy homestead near Spangler, and the deceased had resided there during the remainder of his life. About seventeen months ago he suffered a stroke of paralysis and he had since been in poor health, his death resulting as above. He is survived by the following children: Simon of Garmantown; William A.; John; Michael; Mary, wife of Anthony Wyland of Spangler; and Agnes, wife of August Miller of Ashville. Mrs. Henry Gray of Spangler and Mrs. George Lentz of Loretto are sisters of the deceased. The former lady is now in her ninety-second year. Mr. Lantzy is also survived by seventy grandchildren and thirty seven great grandchildren. The funeral services were conducted Tuesday morning with services in the Catholic Church at Spangler, after which the remains were interred in St. Benedict’s cemetery at Carrolltown. Killed First Day He Works on R. R. Wilmore, Pa., Sept. 25 To be killed on his first day in the employ of the PRR company was the fate of John Dogidanni, a young Italian track laborer, on Wednesday morning. Dogidanni was struck by a west bound engine running light a half hour after he had gone to work. Reardon Brown Passes Away Well Known Ebensburg Young Man Succumbs to the Inevitable After Years of Patient Suffering Reardon, son of the late Patrick and Charlotte Brown, who for years conducted the Central Hotel in this place, where the subject of this notice was born twenty-one years ago, and brother of Hugh Brown, the present proprietor of the Hotel named, Mrs. Walter Bolsinger and “Con” and Miss Victoria Brown, died on Friday evening last at 8:30 o’clock. About two years and a half ago the deceased contracted tuberculosis while playing football and despite all that medical skill could do for him, the inevitable result was long since foreseen and the deceased bore his illness with resignation. Besides the relatives already noted, Joseph Brown of Center Street and Henry Brown of Johnstown are uncles and Mrs. Laura Glass of Munster is an aunt of the deceased on his mother’s side. The funeral took place after a High Mass of requiem and an eloquent sermon in the church of the Holy Name in this place on Monday morning last at 9 o’clock, after which interment was made in the old cemetery near the church in the presence of a large assemblage of relatives and friends. Death at Almshouse Mrs. Alice O’Brien, who was admitted to the County Almshouse from Gallitzin on March 4, 1907, was found dead in a chair beside her bed Monday morning about 5:30 o’clock, death being due to her advanced age of eighty-six years. She had no relatives as far as could be learned.