TRIES PAGE EIGHT R— tet and the group singing was led by W. J. Nicholas, supervisor of music in the Patton schools. Charles Snyder served as toastmaster. The affair was largely attended. Members of the Pat- | ton Fire Company Auxiliary catered. "| Miss Verna Elizabeth Jlnes, daugh- Miss Dorothy Nehrig, student of the ter of Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Jones of University of Pittsburgh, and Miss Cresson, became the bride of Clair J. Betty Nehrig, student of Carnegie Conrad, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Tech, Pittsburgh, spent their semes- Conrad of Ashville at a nuptial mass in ter vacation with their parents, Mr. St, Francis Xavier's Church, Cresson, and Mrs. H. H. Nehrig of Magee Ave. | recently. Miss Ruth Benfield, a student of Car-| oi on even terms throughout the negie Tech, also spent her semester first half, the Gallitzin High Schoo: vacation at the Nehrig home. | basketball team put on a big second Misses Caroline and Goldie Squires half drive to turn the tables on the spent the week end with friends and Futton high outfit to the tune of 28 relatives in Johnstown. [to 14, on the Zolion foe lay Satur- i i ity | aay evening. In the girls’ preliminary Miss Louise Good of New York Cuy | Patton ne Gallitzin 27 to 20. was the week end guest of her aunt, ; inn i | Telford C. Gill, of Patton, has been Miss Minnie Good of North Fifth Ave. | evpainted by Stile Audis. Gener Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Link of East | Warren R. Roberts to be assistant mer- Carroll Township announce the com- | cantile appariser to Patrick H. Farrell ing marriage of their daughter, Edna, of Johnstown. The appointment is for to Gerald Feighner, son of Mr. and "0 ooo monthly salary of Mrs. Joseph Feighner, also of East $150. Mr. Gill is the democratic coun- Carroll Township. Their marriage will ty chairman. Mrs. Catherine S. Casey take place in St. Benedict's Catholic of Johnstown has been appointed by Church in Carrolltown next week. | nn." poyerts to be Mr. Farrell's clerk Mrs. John McCloskey was the win- for a period of three months at a mon- ner of the quilt chanced off by St. | thiy salary of $72. George's church on Sunday evening at All over the nation on Monday of this the card party in the St. George church | week, the President's Birthday Balls hall. Prizes in cards were awarded as! were held, for the benefit of the in- follows: Cinch: Michael Lacava, first; | fantile paralysis fund. In Northern John McCloskey, second; Pinochle: | Cambria County, the benefit affair will Mrs. Catherine Hudak, first; Matthew | pe held on Friday evening of this week Kollar, second. in the Eagles’ Home, Patton, Pa. and Mrs. W. S. Lybarger of Blacklick | is being sponsored by the Patton Ae- was a week end guest of her brother- | rie, No. 1244, Fraternal Order of Ea- in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. H. H. | gles and the Northern Cambria Ki- Nehrig. wanis Club. Jerry Mann’s ten piece A birthday party was held at the | Swing Band, of Indiana, will furnish home of Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Yeckley of | the music for the affair. Not only will East Carroll township on Tuesday ev- | you be assured a good time by attend- ening, January 31, in honor of their | ing the affair, but you will likewise daughter, Hazel, who celebrated her | be contributing to a worthy cause. In 17th birthday. The evening was spent the past, there have been scores of in playing games, which was followea | northern Cambria’s Crippled Children by lunch. who have been materially benefitted A cinch party will be held in the | as a result of funds such as these. The Y. M. L hall at St. Boniface at8:30on | Kiwanis Club has been at it for years. Sunday evening for the benefit of the | Do your part. Attend the ball. If you church. Door prize. Admission thirty-| can’t do that, buy a ticket anyway. five cents. | Make the affair a financial success. Songs and instrumental music from| More than five hundred members DeKoven’s “Robinhood” will feature | of the Fraternal Order of Eagles and the program of the Patton Music club | their friends enjoyed a banquet and to be presented in their club rooms on dance in the Eagles’ Home on Tues- Tuesday evening, February 7th, in | day evening of tRis week, and they the Bank building. The program, in | came from all points in Northern Cam- charge of Miss V. Marie Garrity and | bria and surrounding areas. This an- Mrs. Louise Winsdow, will include a | nual banquet is one of the outstand- short biographical sketch of Derovel ing events in local Eagledom. This by the Patton high school brass quar- | en by Miss Garrity and the following | year’s event was the most successful numbers, “Happy Days” by the Mu-| of them all. The affair was followed sic Club chorus, directed by Mrs. Clif- | by dancing and entertainment. Credit ton Derirnger, Mrs. Fred Arble as ac- | for the affair goes to the untiring ef- companist; “When A Maiden Weds,” | forts of Worthy President L. Clair and “O Promise Me,” by Miss Mildred | Smale and his commitee of energetic Montieth; “Armaurer’s Song,” by Clar- | aides. ence Williams; “Finale” by Frank! THE UNION PRESS-COURIER, - pan A — Thursday, February 2, 1939. Would Abolish “Raider” Clause. | Miss Mary Torallo, of the Johnstown | Assemblyman H. G. Andrews of | i Mercy hospital, spent the week end at | Johnstown has introduced a bill in| | her home here. | the lower house at Harrisburg which | iss Vinle Ta iq | would permit office seekers in state | of ow Vide, De)roeey We £3 eriploys or county elections to be candidates | » 1 "HASTINGS NEWS NEWS OF INTEREST I as many parties as they could secure over the week end. : : : : or nominations. Andrews described it as | Mrs. P. O. Holtz and Mrs. Edward | Cassidy, assisted at the installation of the Patton I. C. B. U. officers in Pat- on Tuesday evening of last week. Mr. Eugene Weakland of Johnstown | — spent Monday at the J. M. Bearer res- | Wilson College Alumnae Note. idence here. : : { . | The seventieth anniversary of the | Mrs. Wm. McCoy returned to her! sounding of Wilson College will be cel. | home on Friday from the Spangler | : | ebrated by the alumnae of that college | hospital Where she had been undergo- | who live in this community, and their | ing medical treatment. . . | friends, at a dinner in the New Eb- Joe Castronova, proprietor of the ensburg Inn on the evening of Febru- City Restaurant Beer Garden, annuon- ary 3rd, at 6:30. All over the world ces that a popular orchestra from Bar-| where there are Wilson graduates they | nesboro will provide music for danc- | will meet in groups to hear a broad- | Ing every Saturday night. No advance | gqq over the Blue network of N. B. In price and no cover charge. The pub- | C., at 8:30. The speeches of Dr. Hav- | lic is cordially invited to attend and { ens, president of Wilson, and Dr. An- | join in the fun and good times. 1 | “a step in the direction of non-politi- | cal action”, and said “sound adminis- | tration doesn’t have to wear a party name.” { : : , { gell, former President of Yale, who | Miss Doris Nehrig of Patton, SPent | win be in New York, addressing the Saturday at the A. J. Dillon home on | group there in honor of the day and Hepvey Shree ‘th K dl a launching of a fund raising cam- 1s Lantzy spen € week end| paign will feature. The object of the with friends in Pittsburgh. | peign ! : mpaign is to provide a Student Al- Miss Margaret Geus of Jeanette, is, or ba 2 P : umnae building to be erected on the spending the week at the Geus home | gollose campus In Chambersburg, at on Spangler street. | a cost of $350,000.000. The Ebensburg Miss Mildred Gallagher of Johns- | Unit Anniversary Dinner Committee, town was at her home here over the headed by Miss Bernice Jones, has week end. | prepared a program during which the | : ‘ . | Rev. Mr. John Thomas and several | An Italian archeologist reports find- | Wilson Alumnae will speak. ing a fragment of a poem by Sappho | | among 12,000 papyrus writing discov- | ered in Egypt. “Ax Is Swinging. eee soft or medium. 1 cludes Cambria, Blair, Huntingdon, us to sound a warning to all dog own- Bedford and Fulton counties. None of | ers that the 1938 dog licenses expired the 21 discharged will be replaced, I on January 15th, and that new licenses is announced. must be procured for canines at once, w—— { or fines and imprisonment can follow. Dog Licenses Due. Every dog, six months’ or older, must John Risconson, in charge of the dog | have a license. No exceptions are made, law enforcement in the state, in a| and the licenses can be secured at the message to the Press-Courier, wishes | county treasurer's office in Ebensburg. Burns Volume Guarded in Transport Poet Robert Burns received $80 for this edition of his work. When the securely wrapped single volume was transferred from the Morgan library in New York to Kearny, N. J., it was transported in an armored The ax of the James administration | truck and insured for $30,000. Reverend Richard D. Jones (third from A new idea for hotel rooms: a lever | swung on Tuesday to eliminate twen- | left) borrowed the book from J. P. Morgan for the eelebration of the that can be turned to make a bed hard | ty-one employees of District No. 9, | Scottish bard’s 180th birthday. It is a first edition volume, published | State Highway Department, which in- | in 1786 in Kilmarnock, Scotland. Friday Only GEORGE O’BRIEN in ‘Renegade Ranger Bullets Bring Law to the Badlands. GRAND THEATRE PATTON, PA. Tuesday, Bargain Night Young, violin, and W. J. Nicholas, pi- | ano. A short business session will el Old Tree Used to Hang held before the program. The regular meeting of the Ladies’ Three Persons Cut Down Auxiliary of the Walter McCoy Post | LAS CRUCES, N. M.—The hang- of the American Legion will be held | man’s tree gives way to the school- on Monday, February 6th in the Legion | house. : Home to discuss plans for the attend- After standing for half a century ance at a Valentine Party to be given | at the back entrance of the old Dona by the Spangler Auxiliary. All mem- | Anna county courthouse here, the bers are urged to attend this meeting. | historic tree was cut down to make The Alpha Beta Science Club met | room for workmen who are salvag- on Tuesday in the General Science | ing from the old building materials room of the high school. The newly | for construction of a junior high elected officers were installed. The | school. new members heard the reading of the| Three of its branches were miss- club constitution, and they pledged al- | ing—each strangely having withered legiance to it. An interesting experi- | and died following the hanging of a ment on air pressure was performed | lawbreaker. The tree was last used by Arthur Gobert, Michael Brunzo and | in 1901, and the limbs long since Agnes Buck have charge of the pro- | have been cut off. gram for the next peeting and Sarah Two men and one woman paid Dunbar will report on current science | with their lives on the tree—the Saturday, Double Feature LA ET she double- crosses the king cf double- crossers...it’s excitement with the silencers off! events, woman, a Mexican, was hanged in Patton high school’s 1938 football | 1897 by Sherif Pat Garrett, whose squad were the guests of the Patton gun ended the career of Billy the Chamber of Commerce at a testimon- Kid. ial banquet given in their honor in . the Municipal building here last Wed- nesday night. Thirty-two footballers were in attendance. Vincent Chimente, producer of the highly successful Hol- lidaysburg High School football and | basketball teams was the principal speaker. He was introduced by Frank (Duteh) Schwab of Patton, who won recognition as one of the all-time all- Seven Trips to Altar Equal Only 5 Husbands BERKELEY, CALIF.—Mrs. Mur- iel Eldridge-Barringer-Burg-Hoppe has made her seventh trip to the altar here. Her matrimonial log reads something as follows: 0] TAT EFL ‘ Directed by TET Ig A WARNER BROS. Americans while playing a guard po- sition for Lafayette under Jock Suth- erland about 20 years ago. Talks were given by W. M. Bosserman, supervis- ing principal; Coach Tom Hughes; Frank Cossitor, 1938 captain, and Ted Resko, 1939 captain-elect. The enter- tainment program included selections First married to aviation lieuten- ant who was killed in a crash; mar- ried Hollywood scenario writer; di- vorced him and married third time —marriage annulled because hus- band’s divorce decree was not final when married; remarried the sce- nario writer; divorced him and mar- ried fourth husband; discovered this marriage was not legal because her own divorce decree was not MID WINTER SALE final; straightened out this compli- - cation and remarried this husband; finally divorced latter and married STILL GOING ON AT fifth husband. THE OUTLET STORE Here Are A Few Prices! Ball Band and Goodrich Miners’ Booils at .......... Mexican Town Fears Evil Spell, Burns Conjurer MEXICO CITY.—A conjurer ac- cused of bringing evil to the towns- rns. $1.98 people of Huatla village was burned Peter's Work Shoes .. - $1.89 }| to death in the town’s main square. Men’s Work Pants ___ ... 98¢ The newspaper Universal report- Men's Dress Hose, 7c, or 4 prs. 25c ed the citizenry, led by village au- Ladies’ Full Fashion Hose at __ 49¢ thorities, went to the home of San : Juan Salvador, who has mystified Eagle and Arrow Dress Shirts...89¢ || his neighbors with conjuring tricks. Men's Overalls .. ine 490 Amid great ceremony, Salvador Children’s Shoes at ..........._.. 98¢ was paraded to the public square, | Ladies’ Arectics, first quality __ 79¢ | where his body was soaked in gaso- | Children’s Arctics, first quality 79¢ || 1P€ and set afire. Men’s Dress Shoes ....__. $1.00, $1.79 Back fo Old Order (?) Men’s Work Gloves, pair ..__.__ 9¢ Assemblyman Al O’Connor of the SPECIAL— Brooms, only ...____1ic Second Cambria District, has intro- | duced a bill in the lower house at | Harrisburg, calling for a return to the Brooks High License law for liquor | regulation in Pennsylvania. This was | the system that was in effect before These Prices Represent Real Savings to You. Don’t Miss This Great Bargain Festival! Se a 013 Screen Play by George Bricker and Vincent Sherman From a Story by W. R. Burnett Also RAY MILLAND in SAY IT IN FRENCH Sunday and Monday ENVIED BY EVERY WOMAN! Zaza—crygp, under hep 18 men’s hegpys twinkling toes herself helpless before the Passion of gq all. Consuming [oyer | the prohibition era, and gives the con- trol and licensing of all wholesale and liquor licensing to the county judges. Naturally it would abolish the State! Liquor Stores. O’Connor’s bill calls for high licensing fees, but it would give the profits from sales to individuals instead of the state as is now the case OUTLET STORE PATTON, PA. in wholesale distribution. | Matinee Sunday at 2:30 Don’t Miss ‘ZAZA’ FATHER-Big Shot Racketeer “Don’t make my kid a jailbird—- because his old man’s got a past!” SON-Most popular boy in town “] don’t care what Hg¥ they say about my dad -1 won't let him down!" Jackie COOPER. EN 7 [3]. EH lo) AEE BOLL TGR TY JR [TINT 4 % # 3 A AR CITT RY TY TTI TRE Story by. KARL: BROWN ond ROBERT 0. ANDREWS Djreceed by WILLIAM NIGH i rE TITTY RTT 0 Due to this outstanding feature Show will start PI Wednesday and Thursday THEY'RE GOING ON A HONEYMOON" ..BUT NOT TOGETHER! veo And He's the Reason of | Pat didn’t mind adopting Bais dirty-faced angel ...but Wich Joan wanted to take him 0 9 honeymoon... well, would you: goBBY JORDAN JOAN BLONDEL - Remember “Douglas Fairbanks Rosenbloom £ show Pu martied [iGo the roar, ; (0 y : Wr = 4 LS A; ~ TET RELL TTT ET LT TT re : FTN SETA a N55. Nad stu sho am by bor for ism £ ges are cus fed Tex offe hf san T tent tion ing pan by U pan; tem] afid four met hun Prov It tion: patic whe! desi jorit; De ed t for « sible files ced 1 ploy paid trial ploy point Big | Th sougt argul the i posec howe porte as pl their and t REE J. } ship, Camb sion meeti Thurs house. Oth rer, H I. Mil and 1 D., se The execu abaug] bine of Wil R.-D, Mrs, 1] D.; rence | R. D, A re farm + by Mr econon ious ot cluding county Cit Prel uraliza in the Februr 18th, it John L will ta will be
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers