THE COURIER OFFICE IS ADE- QUATELY EQUIPPED TO HANDLE JOB PRINTING OF ALL KINDS AND SOLICITS YOUR PATRONAGE ON THE BASIS OF SATISFACTION, —e 1 VOL. XXXV. NO. 42, PATTON. CAMBRIA COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5th, 1929. HAVE NEWS ITEMS ARE SOLICITED BY THE PATTON COURIER. VISITING, DON'T LET US KNOW ABOUT IT. IF YOU A VISITOR OR HAVE BEEN HESITATE TO (5¢) $2.00 LA ANTHONY DUBULIS FATALLY INJURED ¢ >atton Man Stepped in Front of Car While on Way to Work Early Tuesday. famous Pilot M ay LOCAL AND STATE I NEWS OF INTEREST ome Here to Aid in Search for Lost Flier | Condensed items Gathered from Various Sources for the Busy Reader. Search for Lost Aviator Will Be Made in Patton Section During the | Course of Today. | “SAY IT WITH SONGS’ Al Jolson’s New Picture, It Is His Best All-Talking and All-Singing Picture Miss Hazell Troxell, daughter of Mr. | and Mrs. L. E, Troxell of Glasgow, and | Guy E. Bland, son of Fred Bland, a| | Blandburg merchant were married on | November 21 at Lemont, Pa. A rumor has been traveling about that this year hunters under the law | are allowed to kill both buck and doe deer. This statement is an error as on- | ly one male deer, with two or more | points to each antler may be killed by | each hunter. The county commissioners will set the | millage for the coming year the same as last year it is understood. There | should mot and evidently will not be an increase under present conditions which make it very hard for the peo- ple to live. The contemplated action of the commissioners is to be warmly com- mended. | Viola Berry the two months’ old | daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Ber- | ry, died at the parental home at Gal-| litzin on Friday. She is survived by | her parents and several brothers and SIst Anthony Dubulis, aged about sixty Working upon the information fur- years a well known resident of this| nished by two Patton men, the search place, while on his way to work at 6:20 for Thomas P. Nelson, missing air pi- o'clock on Tuesday morning at the Wil-|lot, will swing into Northern Cambria liams’ mine at Ashcroft, was struck by county early this morning in the hope | an automobile driven by Alphonse of finding the aviator who was report- | Sheridan, also of this place, and was | ed missing over this section of Penn-| 50 badly injured that he died a short|sylvania early on Monday morning. The! time later at the Miners’ hospital at|Cambria county angle has been brought | Spangler. | to the attention of the searchers It is said that Mr. Debulis in attemp- | through the Johnstown Democrat, and ting to cross the road at a point nea: | none other than the famous pilot, Chas. } the Dry Run school house stepped di-|A. Lindbergh may search the wilds of rectly in front of the car and that it| Chest, White and Reade Townships | was’ impossible for the driver to avoid | some time today. { hitting him. Mr. Sheridan hurried the C. W. and C. H. Forsberg, of East man to the Miners’ hospital immedia- Magee avenue left Patton early Monday | tely following the accident. A son of| morning to hunt deer in Chest town- the victim was walking with him at the | ship. About 6:30 o'clock they had ar-| accident. rived at the cross roads near the boun-| Anthony Dubulis was a native of dary line of Chest and White town- Atria, but has been a resident of this | ships avhere the road to the left leads country for many years. His wife pre-|to St. Lawrence. the right road to Fru-| ceded him in death, and he is survived | gality and the road ahead to Flinton. by one son. He has been a resident of [It was heer that the Forsb brothers the Patton community for a number of | reported having first hes a noise years. | similar to the hum of an : lane mo- The funeral services were held at|tor and a few minutes later saw a flare nine o'clock this Thursday morning in| dropped from the sky. Visibility at this St. George's Catholic church. Follow- | hour of the morning was poor and the ing a high mass of requiem over the hunters were unable to see the plane, | | | | Itist Catherine Florence McDonald, of Lilly and Raymend E. Reilly of Van-| dergrift, were married last Thursday | morni in St. Brigid's Catholic church | at Lilly { TUBERCULOSIS kills 1 out of 5 of all who die between ployment, high wages and prosperity. For tuberculo- sis strikes during the most productive years of life, Help us to rout tuberczlosis CHRISTMAS Al Jolson’s new picure, “Say It With Songs"—Warner Bros. latest all-talking | to the Grand Theatre, Monday and i Tuesday next, is the story of a man who, by a trick of fate, loses loved | ones, liberty and opportunity suffers | imprisonment and finds peace through 15 and 45 |is played by Davey Lee. he enemy of steady em- | new songs and several unforgettable | {old ones. { The story concerns Joe Lane a hap- | | Py-go-lucky and improved but gifted | song plugger who, just on the verge, | of success as a recording and broad- |casting artist fights and accidentally | Kills his employer when he learns of the latter's unwelcome attentions to his | wife. For this Joe goes to prison, leav- jing his wife to shift for herself and | their child. [ Believing that she has never been | happy with him and realizing how | his present punishment will punish her | ever after, Joe forces her to divorce [him and she later considers marriage | with a former admirer, now a famous | surgeon. The child is put into a school BUY SEALS The National, State and Local Tuberculosis Associ ations of the United States COMES TO GRAND all-singing Vitaphone special, coming | | his devotion to a child—and the child | “Say It With Songs” is an all-talking, | during the Christmas Holidays. | all-singing Vitaphone picture, and Mr. | Senior | Jolson sings a number of exceptional | people PER YEAR IN ADVANCE. PATTON HIGH SCHOOL NOTES OF THE WEEK |As Reported to the Couirer by | Jim Shannon of the Stu- | dent Body. | Many the students spent the week- end out of town owing to the Thanks- giving vacation. The majority of the teachers also visited with out-of-town friends. Mr. Fleming spent Wilkinsburg. The Senior Class Dance was so suc- the week-end in | cessful that they plan to hold another The Class wishes to thank those who patronized the dance. It is rumored that the classes of the new building are to unite to give a program on the day before Christmas. All the talent of the three classes will be used for this entertainment. The floor of the gymnasium is near- ing completion and the basketball squad are now in full training. The first game of the season will be played in the High School gym, on January 7, with Reed Township. Up to date, seventeen games have been scheduled. A movement on foot to start a High School Orchestra. Mr. Fleming and Dorothy Henneinger are backing up the movement. The idea is a fine one, and since Patton is one of the lar- gest high schools in the county, it should have an orchestra. 1S remains by the Rev. Father Adrian, the pastor, interment was in St. Mary's cemetery. | WEEKLY HEALTH TALK BY STATE PHYSICIAN Dr Theodore B. Appei Gives Some Ad- | vice Regarding Clothing of the Children in Winter, “Fashion is a tyrant. Its mandate: are explicitly obeyed throughout { world even though pain and S fering are connected with them. instance, today in Africa certain tribes slit lips and insert large wooden discs creating monstrosities as viewed by modern civilization and representing beauty for the exponents of this pain- | ful custom,” said Dr, Theodore B. Ap- | pel, secretary of health, this week. { “Not long ago, China, bound the feet | of millions of its aristocratic girl ba-| bies to create the deformed, mis-shap-| pen and crippled extremities which | marked their unfortunate possessor as | of the elect. Again, tatooing of the en- tire body is even yet practiced with ter- | rific suffering to the subject by some of the tribes in the South Sea Islands. And so the story goes. “But the aborigines and races have no monopoly in this busi- | ness. As late as two generations ago in this country woman's dress reached its highest expression of discomfort and inconvenience; and waisé constriction even much later than that frequently caused pain suffering and actual ill- ness—all because fashion dictated it “Fortunately today, in civilized lands | fashion has become more sensible. An alliance has apparantly been made with nature. It follows that instead of dis- regarding natural rules fashion goes al- ong with them to obvious benefit to everyone. But even here there are dis- tinct limitations which for many seem | to have been overlooked. “Take, for example, the exposure at- titude of many parents with respect to their young children during the winter season. They will wrap the child in| furs from the chin down to the knees | at which point protection ends-and bare legs, being fashionable, begin. It is ail right to argue that the children are hardened to such exposure. But where is the sense to it? “On the other hand it is quite safe to say that hundreds of little people | suffer actual discomfort from such a foolish practice and in many cases con- | tract sore throats and colds by this ex- tremely illogical frigid weather cus- tom, “Fashion, so far as winter is concern- ed, will not be operating one hundred per cent efficiently until it orders meu- women and children alike to dress ac- cording to the weather rather than by the mandate of a whim. And a good way to make a first assault against that whim is to put stockings on all the youngsters in winter time.” PF LULL IN MARRIAGE MART. Last Friday was one of the rare days when not a single marriage licen- se was issued in the Cambria county court house. This has not occurred for many months. The marriage license bu reau was quite rushed before Thanks- giving, but there was a reaction after the holiday. Register Charles A. Mac- Intyre said there would not likely be another rush before sprng. T. W. HUGHES. T. W. Hughes, aged 82 years, until | last spring a resident of Munster town- ship, died on Monday at the home of a nenhew and neice, Mr. and Mrs. T. &. Thomas in Radnor, Ohio, where he had gone to make his home. The fun- eral took place on Wednesday afternoon with burial in the Radnor Congreg tional church cemetery. MORE HUNTING LICENSES, | A total of 10,820 hunters’ licenses have been issued, this year, including Sat- urady last, it has been announced by County Treasurer, George W. Reese. This is a new high record for €am- bria county. Last year the licenses to- | talled 9,375. Of the licenses this year | 21 were non resident hunters. { course, be another incentive for search. | Nelson on Vv la backward | I | son, are George Long of Patton, R. D., | ford Ring the liquor laws was sentenced 1 pay the costs and fine of $100. but the flare was readily seen as it dropped from a considerable altitude and dropped some distance away. With scores of pilots scouring Clar- Dr. George D. Fussell, aged about 40, | pathologist at the Clearfield hospital, died there on Saturday. He was the | and being unhappy there, follows his| A number of boys from Gallitzin, | father, who has come to vist him, and| held a party at the home of Betty | is injured by a truck. Only a specialist | Greene on Thursday evening. Games eldest son of the late Dr. M. Howard | Fussell of the chair of applied medi- cine in the University of Pennsylvania. With the theremometer registering degrees below zerc at 6 o'clock last | Saturday morning, the Cresson Volun- | teer Fire Company was called to the | home of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Trexler in that place to extinguish a blaze started by an overheated furnace. Mrs. Margaret Croyle Thomas a na ion and Venango counties since Mon day morning without results and with aviators flying hundr of miles to run down the slightest rumors, the story of the Forsberg brothers wil}, of N 22 Col. Lindbergh is due to arrive in Bellefonte this morning, from where he will traverse the course taken by “Nel” 1at appears to have been his fatal flight westward, and there is possibility that the famous av may include this section in his today. The chances of Nelson’s life are slim. | years of re, A referendum on the use of voting|to machines in Blair county was author-| & WILLIAM PENN HIGHWAY WILL BE OPENED DEC. 15 1€ the Blair county comm date for the vote was set at the spring primary election. Dennis Brady formerly of Spangler, died last week at his home in Wilk Barre. Several weeks ago he underwent | of oners. Concerning the Cresson mountain section of the William Penn Highv the statement was made last week by Charles E. Forbes, chief engineer of] division No. 6, headsuarters at Holli- daysburg, that the pouring of concret for the winter had ceased a th h work would now progres d by December 15th. The new por- tions of the road completed and old pertions included to be rebuilt but yet untouched will be netted er and cindered and ready for traff by e ate noted. f rsp atives in the Spangler vicinity. and Mrs. B. A. Lantzy of Hastings and | Co ugene End son of Mr. and Mrs. | af ried t Hastings. . Kuhn, ing aged 71, died of uremic last Thursday morning at in Mountaindale. He was|ye y | Bu iar cours Vili on ompletec t e work i shape now that the spring de ay will be inconsequental as compared the inconveniences suffered d the summer. ade township. For a per- igateen yars Mr. Kuhn was at Glasgow, his first term under the Cleveland admin- | . The funeral services took one o'clock on Saturday af- 100n and interment was in Pleasant | Hill cemetery at Glasgow. Mrs. Charlotte Ellen Potte died on Saturday afternoon ast EBENSBURG PRINTER IS BROUGHT FROM NEVADA | at her|at G. Herman Smith, former Ebensburg printer, indicted by a Cambria County | grand jury on a morality charge and sertion and non-support, was brought from Reno, Nev. Sunc by County > Detective J. J. McLawish, and is being | ductor for the P. R. R. held in the Cambria County Jail await- during the December term of in this section of the county, having | b¥ resided at Hastings and Coalport. Her |a | of SUCCESSFUL DEER HUNTERS OF THE PATTON COMMUNITY ity. | Some of the hunters of the Patton community, who have landed deer the first few days of the hunting sea- | FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS LOSS IN SOUTH FORK FIRE MONDAY in til Upton Plessinger, Regis Nagle, Tel- Twi small frame buildings on Maple! ha Gill, Dr. J. A. Murray and Earl) street South Fork, one occupied by the | Bearer. { Charles Balenti fruit store and the otl — -r———-_"e3—“,ygm>.”§ ri np er by Frank Aligo’s shoemaker shop, FOUR PLEAS OF GUILTY, | were destroyed by fire which breke out | The following persons appeared be-| about 4:45 o'clock on Monday morning | fore the Court Monday af 100n wal- | in one of the buildings. Two adjoining | ved the findings of bills by the grand |structures, the Union Deposit Bank, a jury and pleaded guilty to the several!|and Henry Rosenberg's Jewelry Store Ju offenses charged against them: were slightly damaged by the blaze. Uilliam Buck of Johnstown The loss amounted to about five thous- and dollars, partly covered by insur- ance. | The Union Deposit Bank owned the store building occupied by Balenti. The cause of the blaze has not been deter- mined. The South Fork Fire Company responded and although unable to save the two smal frame structures mana-| ged to prevent a greater loss to tha! bank and Rosenberger’s jewelry store. riolat- Vio | o pay the costs and a fine of $100. Floyd Laney of Barnesboro failure to stop after accident was sentenced to pay the costs and a fine of $50. James Moore of Ashville, larceny and receiving stolen goods, was sentenced to pay the costs and further sentence was suspended. Dibert Overdorff, of Johnstown, of- fense against morality, was sentenced to| | pr JAMES WESLEY WHITED, James Wesley Whited, aged 91, @ivil War veteran, and father of County De- tective G. E. Whited, died of heart dis- | of ease last Thursday night at his home| in Barnesboro. He was born in Susque- | hanna township and served in the One| Hundred and Thirty-third Regiment of | Pensylvania Volunteer Infantry. His wife died at Barnesboro four years ago, Mr. Whited is survived by the follow- ing children: John, of Garman; G. Ed. Ernest, Harvey and Joseph Mrs. William Sherry and Mrs. A. Bou- i cher, all of Barnesbore; Frank, of Big | Bend, and Mrs. Edward Yost, of Du- | quesne, | The 2 ANTHONY MARCUZZA. Anthony Marcuzza, aged 58 years, died of a complication of diseases at his home in Hastings at ten o'clock last Thursday night. He had been ill for the past six months. The deceased's wife preceded him to the grave three years ago. The fol- lowing children survive: Mrs. Kate Val ent and Louis Marcuzza both of Has- tings; ‘Angelo and Angaline Marcuzza, both of New “York City; Rosie of Bak- erton and Mary, at home. HOUSE COAL FOR SALE: —Ffrom St. Boniface, at $2.50 Per ton, delivered. Patrick McAndrew, St. Boniface, Pa. 3 HOUSE FOR RENT—811 Second av- enue. Inquire of Mrs, S. A. Cooper. 18 fune at o’cloc the Garman Church of God and inter- ment was n Grass Hill cemetery. Mards, 24; and Delmas Hartment, 22, | all of Nanty-Glo, sentenced some time | chasing a | ago by Judge J. N. Langham of Indi-| from the underbrush ana county, to undergo life imprison- tive of Summerhill died at her home| ment for the murder of Frank Car in Johnstown on Friday. She was 87|ney, a Strongstown farmer, last week | Gathorn Bland aged 32 years, of Cres- [were taken to the Western penitentiary The murder of Carney was commit- in a resolution passed last week by|ted on May 5th, The | Campbell pleaded guilty to a murder at May 20th, | charge and testimony was heard by aid could reach him, {Judge Langham to fix the degree |the crime. Hartman, who pleaded not | es-| gullty, was tried at the Decemigf term | gj; And was | an operation from which he failed to|convicted by a jur fully recover. He has a number of rel- | first degree and tir - | life imprisonment. The th Miss Lovell Lantzy, daughter of My. | young men had been prisoners in th d Endler of St. Boniface, were mar- | ney Percy Allen Rose, of Johnstown, last week in St. Bernard's church | was chief counsel for the defendants. Jessie Cook and Clyde the penitentiary at the begin serving their sentences. | ST. PATRICK'S RECTORY IN home at Cresson. She was well known | George Quinn is pastor, was destroyed husband, prior to his death a couple | surance. The fire was discovered about of years ago, was a well known con-|8:45 o'clock and the combined efforts Frederick Smeltzer aged 73, died on|teer firemen were necessary Saturday morning at the home of a| vent the fire spreading to the church sister along the William Penn High- | and other buildings of the church pro- way east of Cresson. Mr. Smeltzer had | Perty. [ been a stone cutter for many years| Wind made the work of the firemen and was well known in that commun- | difficult and for a time it was feared the church could not be saved. Every- thing in the rectory was destroyed and the firemen remained on the scene un- prevent further outbreak of the blaze. | An overheated furnace is helieved to -| CLEARFIELD COUNTY DISTRICT With an important political investi- county Republican political leaders are named, Districa attorney Lee Edwards | his office. | Edward's resignation came as a sur- serve as district attorney. A report has Edwards’ name connected with an ap- | pointment, to a place in the Attorney | General's offce at Harrisburg. | ceed Edwards, has been appointed to | serve the ed 79 years, wdow of John Ragan, died day last at her home in Gallitzin. She had been bedfast for a week previous. ral services were conducted {last Friday to the State Sanatorium k on Sunday afternonn at|the Summi. There are now 7 ——_ ANTY-GLO YOUTHS BEGIN LIFE TERMS | William Campbell, aged 21; Millard | begin their sentences. of | criminal court last of gear gd was med at ¢ Nanty-Gl unty jail at Indiana since a few days ter the crime was committed. Attor- ars for brutally torturi iterbaugh, 70, and her n Buterbaugh, 50, also nephew, Will- | were taken to same time to SPANGLER IS DESTROYED | r, aged 60. | The rectory of St. Patrick’s church Spangler, of which the Rev. Father fire on Saturday night resulting in loss of about $15,000, covered by in- the Spangler and Barnesboro volun- te pre- The lew temperature and the 3:30 o'clock on Sunday morning to ve caused the fire, ATTORNEY RESIGNS HIS POST tion scheduled to go before the grand ry this week in which Clearfield Clearfield county, last week resigned ise as he had only g month more to Cortz Bell, recently elected to suc- unexpired term of the latter. MRS. CATHERYI4E RAGAN. Mrs, Catherine (Carroll) Ragan, ag- a complication of diseases on Thurs- Mrs. Ragen was born at Gallitzin in 50, and was a daughter of the late John and 8ara Carroll. She is survived | by a number of children. The funeral] | services were held in St. Patriok’s chur- | | ch at nine o'clock on Saturday morn- | Whited, | ing and interment was in the church! | cemetery ADMITTED 11 PATIENTS. Eleven new patients were admitted at | 28 patients receiving tratment for tuberculosis at the institution. | CRESSON HUNTER DI ing when |farm between Loretto and Wildwood, | son, a vteran of the World War, and father of three small children, was fa- tally wiunded about | 1928. Mardis and |day morning last. He was shot through | Your Own Back Yard. | the right lung and died before medical | had shot a rabbit but was horrified ol rdey, came before the Cambria Coun- [find Bland lyin gon the ground and | 0 writhing in agony. After giving every € | possible assistance hunter, Cully ran to the Brubaker farm house and telephoned physician. When Dr. M. reached the scene of the accident, Mr. | Carney were | Bland was dead. An examination by the sentenced on Monday of last week by| doctor disclosed Judge Langham to serve from 7 to 14 charge penetr ng Miss Tillie | gym pit and punctured his ri burg, to Miss Grace Sulliv IN. | parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richa also leaves one brother, Jr, at home, and Jerowe, of Knoxville, Tenn. served as corps. For some years he Ridge cemetery. and dancing furnished the chief en- tertainment. At ate hour, a lunch was served by the Those present were the Misses Betty Greene, Jane and Ella Lowes Lorraine Tarr, Grace Shunkweiler, Mildred Smith, Ann Gregg, Marguerite Sharabaugh, Myrtle Way, Esther Beck, Caroline Weakland, Mabel Fitzpatric and Jeanne Blair, and the Messers Ralph Cordell, John Weakland, John Thomas, Jim Huber, Jim Shannon, all of Patton; and Philip Bollen, Bill Davis and Fred Jones, of Gallitzin; Stewart Hertzog, Lenard and Paul Conrad of Cresson. Miss Powell spent the week-end Pitsburgh. Henretta Kelsall spent the week-end in State College. Freshman Notes At a\recent meeting of the Freshman | Class, the following officers were elect- ed. 1 President John Cornelius; Vice Presi- |ty Association of Aldermen and Jus-|dent, Florence Beck Ty, Laura tices of the Peace assembled at noon | Merrill; Treasurer, Ralph Hritz; Class |in the New Ebensburg Inn, and charg- Reporter, Mary Villanova; Class Moth- {ed the members with the responsibility | €rS, Mrs. Westrick, Mrs. Beck, Mrs. [of public office. He emphasized the | Smale; Class Advisor, Miss Overberger. | making and filing of proper returns and | The Freshman Class is preparing for | discussed the technical and a {can help the child and Joe takes him =—=———= [to his former wife’s suitor for help . {All ends happily and a blaze of Jol- | ES | sonesque melody, and everybody leaves | BY OWN GUN WOUND | the theatre in a glow of satisfaction. fo | Others in the cast are Marian Nixon, accidentally discharg- | Holmes Herbert, Keneth Thompson and lipped and fell while |Fred Kohler. which he had routed | The story is by Darryl Frances Za- while hunting in | Duck and Harvey Gates. The talking he woods near the Hudson Brubaker | SS8TIATIS > Gi Moiiig Jackson and | y Bacon directed. | Jolson’s songs include “Little Pal,” | “Why Can’t You” “Used to You,” “I'm {in Seventh Heaven,” “I'm Ka-razy For [ You,” “One Sweet Kiss” and “Back in| His rabb 11 o'clock Thurs- in . | COURT CHARGES GROUP of Sankertown was | WITH OFFICIAL DUTIES Bland on the hunting expe- | Presiding Judge John E. Evans, Sat- Thomas Cully ith Mr, ion and hearing the shot hurried to | is companion, believing that Bland | 5 to the wounded for a Cresson T. Prideaux tedious | & program to be given in the new work of the courts where it involves |building on December 14th. | men who serve in the capacity of mag- Margaret Albert visited friends | istrates. | Johnstown over the week-end. | The dinner was attended by more | than a score of aldermen and justices) MISS MARY GLASS DIES of the peace from all parts of the coun- | G1 TOTTQTTIRTL ty and was followed by a business ses- AT ST. AUGUSTINE |sion at which time by-laws were ad- — opted the organization being a compar-| Miss Mary Glass, aged 76 years, a atively new one, and James T. Young, |descendant of two early Cambria coun- Ebensburg Justice of the Peace, elect-|ty families, died suddenly of a heart ed vice president. A board of directors|attack at 5:30 o'clock last Friday even- and committees were named with Jus-|ng at her home at St. Augustine. Miss tice Young heading the legislative |Glass was born at St. Augustine, a dau- group. ghter of the late James and Elizabeth J. L. Moser of Allentown, secretary of | Adams Gla and spent her entire life in that the shot gun ated beneath Bland’s right ht lung. Philips- in 1921 e Plains, by his 1 Bland; n, 9 Gathorn Bland was born at in 1897 and was marri nof W s d Y. The deceased Vive his widow and three child aged 7; Ella, five, and Robe Ric sister, He ard Bland a Mrs. Ada Mr. Bland | the medical vas employed as a clerk by the Penr ania Coal and Cike Corporation and lately was foreman at Colliery No. 9. He was a member of the Cresson Post of the American Legion, Cambria County Vo- iture, No. 23, “Forty and E ” Cres- son Lodge of Moose, and t Episco- pal church. Washington, Dec. 2.—Indications that The funeral services were held at 2:30 | friends of Senator-elect William 8S. o'clock on Sunday afternaon, and was! Vare, Republican, Pennsyivan:a, have a military funeral in eharge of the Rabandoned any hope that he may be Cresson American Legion Post. Inter- | Seated was seen Saturday when Repub- ment was in Union cemetery at Cress- | lican Floor Leader Watson announced |STATE POLICE TAKE on. | a resolution would be offered from the EVERTS TO DELMONT Republican side declaring Vare's seat do vacant. i : Privates Taylor and Lawler of the _The resolution will be sponsored by Ebensburg detacthment of state police Vare's friends, Watson sald, as a sub- |; saturday took to Delmont Ira G. Ev- stitute for the pending Noris resolution erts of Hancock, Md. who was taken which seeks tq declare Vare unfit for a | into custody at Ebensburg on Friday senate seat, night on the charge of being a sus- i picious person. Word was received from AMBRIDGE GIRL IS CURED AT the Westmoreland county town that a “SHRINE” OF PRIEST'S TOMB man answering Evert’s description had held up and robbed the proprietor of a gasoline station about one-half mile west of Delmont on the William Penn | Highway. Everts was identified by John | Gasbo 0, the owner of the gasoline | station as the man who held him up ciation representative, during the week, | and procured a sum of money. After Cecelia’s legs had been paralyzed by| Peng identified, Everts was turned over an attack of infantile paralysis. Hop-|to the Greensburg detail of state police ing to regain their use the child ac-|&nd a commonwealth charge of robbery companied her father, and went to the | Will be preferred against him in West= graye of the Rev. Father Patrick J |moreland county. ; Power, at Malden, Mass, where many | When interviewed by the state police | cures have been reported. |at Ebensburg Everts stated that he was | “The two returned a day later from OR his way from Milwaukee, Wis., to | the grave, where Cecelia threw away! Dis home in Maryland. He was driving her crutches. |a car with a Wisconsin license plate. “We believe that Cecelia is cured,” | Ne | the father said. During the world a sergeant war n Ol. the State Magistrate's Association, was|in that vicinity. For the past fifty discussion of the work which this asso-|the sacristy in Augustine’s Catho- ciation has in hand. lic church. She is survived by a sister, | brothers, Charles Glass, at home, and ’ | Niagara Falls, N. Y. ~ A HOPE HE’LL BE SEATED| Funeral services were conducted at 9 o'clock on Monday morning in St. Au- high mass being celebrated by the Rev. Pollard W. Farren, pastor. Intermen: one of the speakers. He led in a general | years Miss Glass had been custodian of Miss Veronica Glass, at home, and two VARE’S FRIENDS ABANDON | brothers, Oha gustine’s Catholic church, the requiem was in the church cemetery. BLUE RIBBON FOOD DAINTIES You will be interested, I think, in the Blue Ribbon Food Dainties I am making ‘to order.’ The delicious “home made” texture and flavor of my foods can be obtain- ed only by making and bakng them in small quantities, so my prices must pe- cessarily be higher than for bakery or factory made goods. t My teacher, Miss Alice Bradley, Prin- cipal of Miss Farmer's Boston School of Cookery, requires that my foods all score 100% to be entitled to bear the Blue Ribbon label, and that means use only the best and freshest materia I am filling orders for Layer and Loaf Cakes of all kinds, (Phone for prices) Also Raisin or Date Bran Muffins, made with Graham flour 25 cents a dozen. Sour-cream Doughnuts, 40 cents a dozen. Cinnamon Tea-cakes 35 cents each. Won't you phone me a trial order? RACHEL 8S, DINSMORE Phone 33 M. Her mother’s belief that “some day a miracle would happen” and cure Ce- celia Matzie, nine, of Ambridge, of her lameness, has been fulfilled, the fath- er, Andrew Matzie, told a press asso- SMITH-ADAMS. Miss Camilla Adams, daughter of Mr MRS. MARY HETSKO PATTON and Mrs. C. C. Adams, of Carrolltown, LADY, DIES AT EBENSBURG | and John Smith, of Atlanta, Georgia, | Were united in marriage on Thansgiv- ing day at eight o’'clack p. m., at the home of the bride, by the Rev. Father Herman O. 8. B., of St. Mary's, a. URIAH NAGLE Uriah Nagle, aged 2, died of influen- za and pneumonia Monday afternoon at his. home in Elder township, where he had been ill for two weeks. He was born and spent his entire life on the farm where he died. His wife died a number of years ago. Mr. Nagle is survived by a son, Jacob Nagle, resid- ing on an adjoining farm, and Mrs. Emma Lloyd, at home. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 o'clock this aftetnoon at the late residence. Interment will be in the East | Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Het sko formerly of Patton, aged eighty years, who died of arterio sclerosis on Wednesday morning of last week at the Cambria county home at Ebensburg were held at mine o'clock on Priday| morning in St. George's Catholic chur- ch, this place. Interment was made in| Prices Reduced. Children Hats and St. Mary's eemetery. Tams, 50c, 75¢, and $1.00. Visit our Mrs. Hetsko was admitted to theiDollar Day for Bargains, Saturday. county. home on April 12th last. MARTIN'S MILLINERY. MARTIN'S MILLINERY Closing Out Sale of All Millinery. Winter