The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, April 10, 1930, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    member. The
rated by the
pastor. Inter-
cemetery
roovs, all
h heat and
Inquire Kus
ie State Incu~
0. Inquire ot
1,
seven room
llar and gar-
le, all in good
ite, two beds,
binet regan
ire 919 Beech
EGG SALE—
, nine a. m.
e senior class
EE —
. J
-
r
i
= il
i:
“~ i
.
jas
P~
THE COURIER OFFICE IS ADE-
QUATELY EQUIPPED TO HANDLE
JOB PRINTING OF ALL KINDS AND
SOLICITS YOUR PATRONAGE ON
THE BASIS OF SATISFACTION.
NEWS ITEMS ARE SOLICITED BY
THE PATTON COURIER. IF YOU
HAVE A VISITOR OR HAVE BEEN
VISITING,
DON'T HESITATE TO
LET US KNOW ABOUT IT.
VOL. XXXVI. NO. 8.
PATTON, CAMBRIA
COUNTY, PA. THURSDAY,
APRIL 10th, 1930
(5¢)
$2.00 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE.
TRAVEL CLUB CALLING FOR MORE ENTRANTS
SUNSET BECOMES
PENNSYLVANIA'S
FINEST BALL ROOM
Decorations of German Design
Will Be Revelation to All
Dance Patrons.
OPENS ON EAS 'ER MONDAY
The Easter Monday Dance at Sunset
Park auditorium this year, will give
the musically inclined from the Cen-
tral Pennsylvania section a thrill in-
deed. The muise, of course, Mal Hal-
let and his band, will be the best, but
the auditorium will be the feature at-
traction.
Last season, Manager Fred Luther,
of Carrolltown, who also manages the
Auditorium at Johnstown, made exten-
sive permanent decorations to his Sun-
set property, but few people who pa-
tronized the amusement place realized
that the decorations and trimmings
then made were but the foundation for
the finished job.
Sunset, as a place of beauty, is now |
complete. All through the winter mon-
ths a corps of workers have been busy
carrying out the plans for Sunset as
originally planned, only matters have
really been improved upon the original
specifications.
Last year Sunset presented a glitter
of silver beauty, but it was somewl
of the glittering E
nature. On Easter
Mosaday of this year, folks attending the
opening dance will be greeted with the
most dazzling, cozy, harmonious blend
of interior decoration of its kind in
America.
The decorations are of German de-
sign, and were imported to this coun-
try from there. Thousands upon thous-
ands of so-colled German gleamers, re-
splendent with variated colors, hang
from overhead, and the movement of
the dancers cause these gleamers, which
are made of copper, to sway, so that
the result is pleasing and fascinating
to the eye.
One of the finest engineering feats
of subdued lighting has been schemed
in the general plan of things. Thrteen
huge parchment bulbs, in various col-
ors, two feet in diameter, augumented
by subdued flashlights, make up the
major illumination plan. In addition
to this scores of one-foot parchment
shades, globe-like, also add to the beau-
ty of the decoration, and aid in the
lighting arrangement. The scheme for
the moonlight dance lighting is unique,
and is one that will prove pleasing.
A description of the newly decorated
Sunset auditorium in black and white is
difficult to give. A visit to the park on
Easter Monday will convince the most
skeptical.
Incidentally, Mal Hallet, who appears
for the 20th annual opening of Sunset
comes in person with his original band
of nationally famous radio and record
artists. This will be their first Carroll-
town appearance. The Hallett band was
featured for seven consecutive years on|
Broadway. They are WOR broadcasting
stars, and Columbia Okeh, Perfect and
Harmony recording artists. They are
coming direct from the Million Dollar
Arcadia Ball Room on Broadway, to
Sunset—Pennsylvania’s finest ballroom. ,
SEEK VACATION OF
TWO COUNTY ROADS |
Court Appoints Special Board of View-
res Last Friday to Investigate
the Petitions,
Attorny A. M. Shoemaker, Adam Shu-
man and J. D. Ritter were appointed
by the Court as a Board of Viewers to
determine the expediency of vacating a
road in Cresson and Gallitzin Town-
ships extending from the Borough of
Gallitzin to the William Penn highway.
These appointments were made upon
petition of citizens and property own-
ers of the two townships who state that
that since the construction of the new
improved road between Gallitzin and
Cresson the road has fallen into dis-
use and is burdensome to the taxpay-
ers and the township.
The above borad also was appointed
to ascertain as to the propriety of va-
cating an old public road, known as the
Germantown road leading from the
Borough of Gallitzin, through Gallitzin'
township for a distance of approxi-|
mately 3,310 feet. The petitioners state |
that the road sought to be vacated has|
become useless and is inconvenient and |
burdensome to the taxpayers of the |
township. |
|
BARNESBORO YOUNG MAN
IS INJURED IN SMASH-UP
Dr. G. R. Anderson left Barnesboro
on Saturday in response to a telegram |
notifying him of the serious injury of
his son, Joseph C. Anderson, aged 19,
a student at the University of North
Carolina, who suffered a fracture of
the skull last Friday when an automo-
, bile in which he was riding collided
with another car. Dr. Anderson was ac-
ccmpanied by Attorney W. F. Dill of
Barnesboro. |
While details of the accident were |
lacking ,
it is said that the young man |
was unconscious for several hours, but!
that his condition is now fairly good.
{Lady of Victory, Catholic Daughters of |
COUNTY MUST PAY BULK
OF ROAD DIFFERENTIAL
Highway Department Will Assume On-
ly Three Thousand Dollars Over
Any Estimate.
LOCAL AND STATE
| Condensed items Gathered from
Various Sources for the
Busy Reader.
In a communication received from |
the state highway department this]
week, the county commissioners were
notified that the county would be ex-
pected to assume $35,000 of the differ-
ence in the estimated price and the
contract price for the construction of |
Route No. 234 from Ashville to Fru-|
gality, a distance of about six miles in
Dean township.
The estimate on the road as prepar-
ed by the highway department's engin-
eer’s, placed the cost of construction at
$376,000, but the lowest bid and the one
{on which the contract was let, was for
| $414,000, leaving a’ difference of $38,.
{ 000, of which the state will assume $3,-!
{000, making the total of $309,000 allo- |
on 0 She Drojent by fie spe io 12 evening of this week at the Concord
Frain er ro os en Grange hall between Patton and Car-
Sune payment of property damoges ar. | Tolltown. A business meeting was held
| sine tron tie iy A filling of | AF two o'clock in the afternoon, and
| the iad rE gy re the evening session began at 8 o'clock
| ry Both meeting were open to all.
| John Lingle, Civil War veteran, and
FUN DS FOR HIGHWAYS {one of the oldest of Cambria County's
| native residents, died at his home in
! Wilmore last Friday afternoon at 2:30
| NOT AVAILABLE NOW o'clock, death being attributed to the
-~ infirmities of age. He was born at Wil-
{Commissioners of County Turn Down | more in 1841 and with exception of the
Request of Reade Township for |time spent in the Union army, spent all
An Improved Road. his life in that community. He is the
— last of a family of five, and is survived
County aid will not be forthcoming | py two daughters, Mrs. Lyman Sherbine
this year or next for highways because and Miss Sara A. Lingle, both of Wil-
the county is already too far in debtimore, A full military funeral was con-
|accerding to the county commissioners! qucted on Saturday afternoon in the
who, following a conference at Ebens-|wilmore Lutheran church and inter-
burg on Monday, declined to take fa- | ment was in the church cemetery.
vorable action on. a petition bearing| Bail in the sum of $6,000 was ‘posted
signatures of residents of Reade town-|to secure the release last Thurs
ship and Clearfield county in which Hyman Rose of Johnstown on a charge
the completion of the paved highway of abortion. Rose is jointly indictes
from Van Ormer to Allemansville was |with Max Dezin and Mrs. Carrie Clark
sought. {both of whom are serving jail senten-
The petitioners pointed out that ab-|ces following their conviction at the
out three miles of the unimproved por-|jast term of court.
tion of the road, designated as Route| The master’s report, recommedning a
| No. 276, by the state highway depart-| divorce for Carmelo Scaramuzzino of
ment, lies in Cambria county and that|Barnesboro from Jennit Scaramuzzino
it is an important link in a state wide of New Brunswick, N. J., on grounds of
{road system. The commissioners, on |desertion, was filed in the office of the
| the other hand, set forth that approxi-|prothonotary at Ebensburg on Friday.
mately $850,000 aready has been spent| Frank D. Saupp, 57, a Pittsburgh au-
for improved highways in Reade town- | tomobile dealer since 1904, died on Fri.
ship and that no funds, either state Or day at Rochester , Minn. He was born
county, are available for work at this|in Loretto and educated in St. Francis’
time. | college, there. He was unmarried.
Members of the county commission-| Funeral services for William J. Yost
ers, however, did tell members of the|whose death occurred on Monday of
delegation, which included J. T. Glas-| fast week in Altoona, were conducted
gow, and L. E. Troxell of Reade town-| on Friday morning in St. Francis’ Xav-
ship, and M. F. Fern and Clair Alle-|jer's Catholic church at Cresson.
man of Clearfield county, that they terment was in the church cemetery
would be glad to accompany the com-| Miss Mildred N. Jones of Ebensbu
missioners of Clearfield county to Har-|and Peter N. Fields of Loretto were
risburg to urge upon the state highway | married in the Congregational church
department the advisability of build-| at Ebensburg on Monday. :
Ing a road as a state project. William Jones, aged 21, of Cresson,
i — who had been a patient at the Cresson
BEN Iz RE-ELECTED Sanatorium for several weeks, died on
TO HEAD SCHOOL
| Friday night at the Altoona hospital.
{He was removed to that institution on
County Superintendent Is Again Unan.
imously Chosen By Directors
March 28th.
With Salary Boost.
Following a hearing before the Cam-
bria county court last Thursday
| Mordanti, of Cardiff, was admitted to
bail in the sum of $2,000 for his ap.
pearance before the June term of court
to answer a charge of involuntary man-
slaughter. Mordanti is charged with
the death of Virginio Ciscota, who was
fatally injured in an automobile acci-
dent on the highway near T'win Rocks
on Sunday evening, March 30th.
Nicholas Schmitz, agronomy special-
ist of State College, was a speaker on
‘Potato Production,” at the annual
meeting of the Cambria County Potato
Growers’ Association held on Tuesday
rg,
|
| Mrs. Mary Alice Washburn, aged 7,1
died on Monday at her home in Nanty-
Glo. |
rrr |
Dr. Martin S. Bentz, for the last 19}
years superintendent of schools off
Cambria County, was re-elected for]
. Sv tam orn Ee ene
Ant rf re 4A ue Ton [Joseph Cox, Aged 7, Suffers Fracture
ty at Ebensburg on Tuesday. His sal-! of Shull W hen Struck on Head
ary was increased from $6,000 a year to| By Heavy Wrench.
$7000 and the salaries of each of the | ; |
three as ants were increased $500 a! Without regaining consciousness from |
vear to $3,500. the time of his admission to the Altoona |
" The election of Dr. Bentz was unan-| Mercy hospital last Friday, Joseph Cox, |
imous but there was considerable dis-|'3 Of Amsbry, died on Mondaymorning |
cussion as to increasing the salaries of | ab that institution. Death was attributed |
the superintendent and his assistants, |t0 @ fracture of the skull, suffered when |
many of the directors takig the position | Struck on the head with a heavy
that, inasmuch as many of the coal Wrénch.
miners in the county had been forced to| The victim was employed as a care-
accept salary cuts, it would be no more | taker by the State Highway Department
than fair to decrease the salaries of the |and the accident occurred along the
AGED AMSBRY MAN
FATALLY ID
JURED |
on the same level. The increase was |ZD. Shortly before the accident, M.|
carried by a vote of 115 to 94. | Cox was attempting to open the drop
Assistant superintendents are Miss |Pottom of a railroad car loaded with |
Sara Jones of Westmont; M Clara | cinders for use of the highways.
M. Shryock of Wilmore, and George W.|
: om)
Stevens of Barnesboro. In addition to|he hands of a fellow workman, Sirk.
|
|
some manner the wrench slipped from
the salaries paid them, the superintend- ing the victim on the head. : |
The deceased was well known in the
Amsbry and Gallitzin section, havi
| served the highway department for th:
{last 18 years and for a number of year
a -.\, | prior to that he had held the post of
‘ : SEv township road supervisor.
C.D. OF A. TO WITNESS Funeral services will be held at 2:30
ILLUSTRATED LECTURE |oclock this Thursday afternoon in the |
| Amsbry Methodist Church and inter.
The Ladies’ of Barnesboro Court, Our | ment will be in the Amsbry cemetery.
ent and each assistant is allowed $500 |
a year for traveling expenses, the en-
tir
e¢ sum being paid out of the state
fund.
America, at their regular Study Hour GERALD E. SMITH
Meeting on Monday evening next, will 3 2 . y :
have as an extra feature, an illustrated | Tt uneral services for Gerald E. Smith
slide lecteure on “The Oberammergau Of Bakerton, aged 58, whose death oc-
Passio Play,” given by Miss Hattie M. | curred on Wednesday of last week at
Sharbaugh, of Carrolltown, who has im- | 1S home, were conducted Bb 2 o'clock
ported the slides from Germany, and|on Friday afternoon at the M. E
who attended the Passion Play in the Church in Bakerton and interment was
past. Miss Sharbaugh has given semi- |? the church cemetery
private lectures of the play in her home — EE
town, and the lecture is interesting and | MRS. MARY DUGAN.
pleasing to all who hear it. The mem-| Mrs. Mary Dugan, aged 66 years, of
bership of the C. D. of A. is urgently | Wilmore, died last Friday at the Mercy
requesed to attend the gathering at | hospital in Johnstown where she has
Barnesboro on Monday evening next. | been a patient since March 6th. The
Subscribe for The Cougier] SZ. Ly held on Monday mor:
NEWS OF INTEREST
Jesto sessment of 1930 woul
In-t
Br:
‘ASSESSORS TOLD OF
1930 TAXATION LAW
Announcement Is Made of Triennial
Assessment to Start June 1st and
to End By September 1. [
Assessors in every distric
bria county were notified this
necessary supplies f
in Cam-
week that
triennial as-
furnished to
n work of
tart, and
made to
not later than |
them prior to June Ist
making the assessment i
that complete returns mu
the county commissioner
|- September 1st.
Assessors are req
to assess each
property with the imp 5 there-
on, and all personal made
| taxable by the laws . at the
rate or price wh af exam-
ination and considera
the same would sell
and separately at a |
| full public notice.
to solicit the aid of
of councils. No assesor w
any time spent at
first of September,
—
/ believe
1 be paid for
rs after the
‘NORTHERN CAMBRIA
7" TALKS ORDINANGES
Northern Cambria Business Men Had
Council Heads as Guests At
Recent Sessions,
The Northern C
Men’s Association m
| of Borough Council
Solicitors in the L
Business
Presidents
1 Borough
me at Carr- |
ek at which
for the var
|ious towns in thi ion was one of |
| the important matters considered. Uni-|
formity of ordinances oeen a sub-
jeet for argument eral of the,
meetings held by t! rn Cambria
Business Men's Association and at each
session the matter more strongly
whipped into shap argument is
that some present ances are in.
|consitent and conf > whereas a
changing would be benefit to all of
{the peoples in the towns of Northern
| Cambria county, the traffic ordinance
| being particularly among the outstand-
|ing changes owerowaited.
| In attendance at the recent meeting
{olltown one evening I
time “uniform ordinance
1
retary P. O. Holtz, of Hastings, offi-
cers of the Northern Cambria Business
Mer Association; George E. Prindible,
ident of the Patton Borough Coun-
and P. A. Seymore, president of
rolltown Borough Counc
An ‘election of officers for
thern Cambria Business Men’
tion will be held in the near future,
when plans will be formulated to hold
a banquet for the members and guests,
ladies to be included.
A set of new ordinances will be
drawn by a solicitor and these will be
presented for consideration at the next
meeting of the merchants, who will pe-
tition the co-operation of heads of oth-
er organizations of Northern Cambria.
BOY SCOUTS WERE |
KIWANIS GUESTS
Attorney David R. Perry of Alteona
Speaks At Special Meeting of the
Club on Monday.
An excellent meetingof the Northern
Cambria Kiwanis Club was held at the
wandon hotel, Spangler, on Monday
ening, when “Boy Scouts” night was
observed. Quite a number of scouts in
uniform were present, as were many
other boys, all guests of the Kiwanians.
Frank Brown, of Patton, was in
charge of the program, andthe speaker,
/ ey David R. Perry, of Altoona,
pre ted a fine talk on “Young Amer-
ry is district president of
lege, Huntingdon, was a guest singer,
r and William Ellick, a member cf the
the reason for vacating the road is| school officials, or at least keep them |Dighway between Amsbry and Gallit-| organization rendered several vocal se-
lections.
A rep of the Tiny Tim Club was
ven, and there is still room for im-
of
In| provement in some sections.
DAMAGES DISCUSSED.
Members of the Ashville Borough |
Council, accompanied by other taxpay-
rs of that place, called upon the Board
of county commissioners at Ebensburg
on Wednesday morning in regard to
the property damages resulting
the construction of that
from
portion of
Route No. 234 lying within the borough
limits. The delegation desired to learn
who would be responsible for the dam-
ages resulting from the improvements.
The matter has been referred to the
county solicitor for an opinion.
GIRL SCOUT DOINGS.
Our meeti last week was very
short. We v taught the Virginia
reel, which is a dance similar to square
dancing. Dues were collected and in-
spection was made by the patrol lead-
1 he third patrol prepared a game
“Scramble.” Taps were blown and
1 Our camp fund has increased
rapidly and we now have $96. Miss
Montanaro donated us some bjoks for
h we are very grateful.
ng
lons of tree-year-old rye
for the “ale” make
Mammoth Subscription Drive Under Way In
Earnest This Week; More Workers Needed
BREWERY TURNING | If You Are A Real Hister, Get in the Race and Win—Comepeti-
tion Still At A Low Ebb in Many Sections—Dlenty of Room
Left For Live-wires Who Can Win Cash, Automobiles or Tours
OUT GANADIAN
ALE IS RAIDED
One of the Biggest of All Hlicit
Liquor Plants Disposed of
at Barnesboro.
Ale drinkers throughout western
Pennsylvania have bcen smacking their
lips over the “Genuine Imported Cana-
dian Ale,” which has been on sale a
various places during the last year, but
they are due for a couble disappoint-
ment. In the first place the e” was
not im ported from Canada and, sec-
ondly, it will not be available for some
time to come as the brewery at Gar-
man’s Mills, where the ale vas manu-
1 Friday
factured, was demolished last
and the plant demolished. i
Raiders under the direction of Con. |
stable Frank Maser of Johnstown and
Deputy Prohibition Admir ator Aj G.
McDuffie, swooped down upon the place
on Friday, seized about 2,000 Ions of
mash and the machinery in the brew-
ery, and continu on to Barnest
where they r u used for
storage purposes en half bar-
rels of the so-called al 1d 500 gal-
SKEeY.
Both the brewery and ware house
were operated by the same greup and!
the officers arrested Pet P. Anton-|
uccia, 35; Sam Millicia, : Paul Val-
enti, 35; and Joseph Valenti, 34. The
prisoners were taken to Johnstown
where they posted bail in the sum of
$1,000 each for preliminary hearings he-
fore Alderman S. J. McClune.
According to members of the raiding
party both the brewery and the storage
place were among the best equipped
ever discovered in the county. At the
brewery they discovered a bottling ma-
chine capable of botling two cases of
pints a minute, while the storage place
| were President Elmer Routch and Sec. | Was a veritable maze of trap doors and ||
secret hiding places.
Rum runners smuggling ale into the
United States from Canada carry their
product pa
sack. The
ks are known as
in trade es and the raiders discov-
ered numerous “hams” at the I wWery.
Included in the contraband seized at
the storage place, housed in a two
story brick dwelling and store building
in Barnesboro, was a high speed mo-
tor truck, in trasporting the fi
ished product to market. This tr
was geared to make a maxi
of 60 miles perh ic
was equipped
formed secret |
could be conceal
searching the
drove in from
several cases of empty
number of bales of
The brewery, which
members of the raid
in operation for a fe
ed in a two-stor}
the outskirts of
was complete in every
Following the raid
was taken to Johnstown
dumped i
COUNTY GRANGES HOLD
MEETING IN EBENSBURG
The quarterly
granges of Camb
last Saturday aft
the various commi
ate granges were
assignments w
tine busine
business se;
by the
grange.
The afternoon s¢
by a talk on “Dairy
Farabaugh, of 1
and a memo
James A. Ft
tion and Jose
burg. A sketc
ture,” was pre
Price and Har
poisng to Poll
bers of Banner
ladies of
The program f
was in charge of the n
Mt. Hermon gran 1(
was closed with an
square dance
AWARD MATTRESS CONTRACT.
A contract f
es for us t
at Eber
to G
at the
Other bidds
Ebensburg, iC 2
the County Fu re Co. of J
town; John Thomas and Sons of J«
town; the William F. Gable Co., of
| toona and the A. J. Logan Company of
Pittsburgh.
—Do You Want $1,000?—Send in Your Name At Once,
The bar is
The track is clear!
They're off to a flying start!
That's the way
members in the Courier's mammoth | are
tion campaign have taken the| waliting any 1
subscri
| been putting off enter
day to day it is due
“stepped on ti
the ambitious club | Each day coun
in order. No
right of way to the winning of the Jost.
wonderful prizes being offered to the
men, women, boy
ern Cambria C
conversation will be—who is
win that wonderful grand
Prize?
With the announcement Ia
that the Courier is mx
or to increase its s
public has placed i mp of whole
hearted approval on the Travel Club
and it's in popularity has been
unanim up to you—and you—
in this section of the count;
kK us up in
scriptions to the Cot
thousand sub
counting on
the club memb
ed elsewhere on
to be THE winner
ty. From now on the chief topic of | Apnil 26th—take the lead
r start and stay there
If
ts st
ribers—and we are
it to some of
Star
; next Monday,
April
there will be two counts made eact
week. The first account will be pub- |
lished in the window of the Courier
Travel Club’s office in the Grand Thea-
tre Building every Monday
€
and girls of North-| 26th
unty for their, spare | its as those reported after
time in the next seven weeks. It's the It will pay you to pile up as
talk of the town and the whole coun-|as you
to
once a
NO LOSERS. You win
14th, OF a cash commission
or,
morning, | Of
g—you will then be on
one of the val
in other words
that you collect is yours.
the Ci
time
BIG
ions turned in
receive twice as
yssibly can between
you have not alr
mind to
ASK FOr
Blank on
and bring it to
> in the Grar
1able
gain let us re
$1
Leadership Valuable,
The second count will be on Thursday | Members so fortunate as
and it will appear in that issue of The Just now there s but ve
Courier and also on the bulletin board. | tions between the le
are required to report | Place holder. The leac
—on Wednesdays and | & good day's work
All club memb.
twice each wee
Saturdays. that
To Those Who “Haven't Decided”.
If you are one of those who have
EVERYBODY WINS!
>d the names of the
U
1g communit
.. Perhay
and who is az
a five-year
> April 26th.
Sev
couldn
means stiil nor has
“BUD” WINSLOW, Patton
. WERTNER, Patton
HARRY C. WARNER, Patton
/
a
=
7 A
Us GRI
HN SEMELSBERGEI
RS. ANNE JACOBS, Patton
ISS JULIA TOBER, Patton
I
JOSEPH FREGLY, Patton
GEORGE KRUISE, Patton
BUCK, Car
LLY, HASTINGS
3 NOONAN, Patton
] ¢ VA O'NEILL, Patton
THEODORE OTT, Patton, R. D. 2
I ( AINE .MELSBERGER,
STEFANIK, Bakerton
101
what the Fi
tl person be YO
y one candidate any 1
and there is plenty of te:
> be gotten for the asking
MISS LAURA MERRILL, Patton
LOOK AT THIS SMALL LIST OF ENTRANTS—HERE 1
RARE OPPORTUNITY FOR YOU TO WIN A FINE
AUTOMOBILE OR CASH.
entrants to
he most ambitious and live-wire men
s, who are comp {
v this newspaper to the
4 have
value of these awards in
is absurdly small. There
> some r money
w
(An Actual Comparative Standing.)
JANET (BRUNEAU) HARROWER, P:
S MELVIN M. SCOTT, Patton
B.D.
EFF, Carrolltown 10:
, Patton
I
MRS. SYLVIA KUHNLEY, Patton
Those Who Have Not Reported Their First Subscription
of some other
(Continued on last page)
tions Waiting For A Live-wire to Ask for Them.
YOU CAN'T LOSE!
date ir
ng for the
4
1
Hastings
From this time on leadershin w
almost untold value to the
THEY'RE OFF!
But Not Very Fast -- Room
for More Fast Workers
S A
Many Sections Yet Unrepresented, With Hundreds of Subsecrip-
Campaign Just Starting—Now Is the Time to Join—Get in and
Make Some Big Money!
LIST OF ENTRANTS T0 DATE
SA ——