PAGE EIGHT SOISSON AND ZUGATES IN CLEAN SWEEP, WEST PENN SKEET MEET ! FRED L. SOISSON. Tony Zugates of Indiana and Fred Fred L. Soisson will be one of the Soisson of Hastings, the latter the | feature attractions at the annual pic- well known marksman of this section, { 2i¢ of the Patton Aerie Fraternal Or- Ww P der of Eagles to be held at the St. shot a clean slate at the Western Penn- | p,1i¢206 picnic grounds next Sunday, sylvania. Skeet Shoot held at Taren- | and he will have some new and diffi- tum last Sunday, winning in the five | cult shots, as well as many novelties man team with a score of 473x500. Zu- | to offer his audience. His fame as a gates won the 410 gauge and Soisson | marksman has reached far and wide, as winner of the 20 gauge. Winning | and he is called upon, far and wide. in the two man team on Sunday mark- | To the folks who know him best, and ed the second consecutive year for the | see his ability frequently, he has the pair with a score of 198x200. Zugates | the faculty of ever attracting and of shot high gun over all with 100 | holding interest, because his unerring straight and Soisson was runner up | aim has wen him national fame, and with 98x100. The last two matches the | and his programs are so varied, that champs participated in recorded the | he is always “pulling” some new score of 397x400. | marksmanship stunt. DEATH NOTICES n Baan WH sms at 2:30 o'clock on Monday afternoon enjamin Wilshire, age years, | at the Wilshire home by the Rev. died last Friday at his home in East | Thomas McQuillen, pastor of the First Carroll Township, near Patton, after | Baptist church of Patton, and inter- an extended illness. He was a retired ment was made in Fairview cemetery. miner, having worked in the coal | en Fire mines of Cambria County for more | FRANCIS X. BAUMAN. than 30 years. Mr. Wilshire was born| ®rancis X. Bauman, 77, member of in England, a son of Thomas and Mary | an early Cambria County family, died Jennies) Pens a li | on Monday evening at the home of his 4 ago 1¢€ | son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. been located in East Carroll Town- | A. Dietrick, of Nanty-Glo. He had been | so surviving is his second wife, Mrs. ‘Maude (Martin) Wilshire, and the following children: Benjamin Wilshire, Jr., Mary, Alfred, Helen and William Wilshire, all at home. ship. |'in ill health for the last several years. Mr. Wilshire was twice married, his | Mr. Bauman formerly lived at Car- first wife passing away many years | rolltown, and at one time at Patton. ago, and to which union two sons, Al- | He went to Nanty-Glo two years ago bert Wilshire of this place, and Earl | a short time after the death of his Wilshire, of Barnesboro, survive. Al-' wife. He retired in 1935 after having | erate — A —— ES — mre BILL (wuss) GETS HIS GAL | | THE UNION PRESS-COURIER. Nes Thursday, August 3, 1939. ( WHy SOGLUM, |) WORSE THAN 3 i CH, YEAH ? NEW DUDS, NEW SHOES. BILL? DIDN'T THAT, JIM. MY HE LOOKS NEAT, EH? GRAND THEATRE PATTON, Friday, One Night Only MURDER RIDES IN GHOST TOWN! 7" CETUS CN RC RV LR CTT ET —against a one-hoss posse with f lightning hoofs and thundering uns who blew the dayli ghts ut of moonlight murderers in Directed by DAVID HOWARD. Fro 2 ced by BERT GILROY, Screen Ploy by Oliver Drake, Dorrell McGowan and Stuart McGowan. Double Feature, Saturday Baby Sandy, Mischa Auer, in UNEXPECTED FATHER also THE SUN NEVER SETS J: SONJA RUDY MAR LYLE Directed Darryl F. Zan Matinee Sunday at 2:30 Sunday and Monday HENIE- POWER pb VALLEE - OLIVER ALAN DINEHART A 20th Century-Fox Picture TYRONE th EDNA MAY Y HEALY TALBOT by Sidney Lanfield uck in Charge of Production 2 PENNA. Tuesday, Bargain Night PICTURE Here's A, New- And: Better Picture With A Couldn’t=Be- Better TT 8 Walter Winchell says: , superior to ‘Four Daughters’’ Claude Rains Jeffrey Lynn Fay Bainter Donald Crisp May Robson Frank McHugh Dick Foran Directed by MICHAEL CURTIZ Presented by WARNER BROS. THE “FOUR D (55 Priscilla Lane - Rosemary Lane Lola Lane-Gale Page iH Original Screen Play by Julius J. and Phillip G. Epstein » Suggested by a Play by a W Dorothy Bennett and Irving White » Music by Max Steiner « A First National Picture GET LET OFF, |) GAL'S GOT WHAT ) DID YOU? SHE CALLS A || “GOOD DRESSER" MYOUTFITS 4 ALLRIGHT, | | 4 GUESS, IF | @ couLD AFFORD 3 ANEW PAIR been engaged in the building and con- | ; : | tracting business for many years. at the Callahan and interment was in Forest Tuesday afternoon | home A native of Chest Township, he was | Lawn Memorial Park. | born June 26, 1862, a son of Joseph and | ———r »! Louise (Glosser) Bauman. | Mr. Bauman was married twice, his | first wife, Mary Lilly, having passed | died at her home in Hoguetown, near Mary | MISS MYRTLE RILEY. Miss Myrtle Riley, aged 28 years, Cresson, on Sunday afternoon, follow- {number of brothers and sister. The this time, however, a faithful—and | funeral services were held on Sunday | outspoken—old servant who has been afternoon with interment in the Phil- | with them for years. ipsburg cemetery. And this time the girls have a i a mother, in the person of Fay Bainter— MATHIAS MATCHICK. the mother in “Yes, My Darling Daugh- Mathias Matchick, aged 80 years, of | tera newcomer to the cast, and their | | | | HEY, YOU! GO DOWN TO THE FORTUNE DEALERS. THE BEST SHOES YOU'VE EVER SEEN... f FOR ONLY $4 BILL, I'M YOURS NOW AND...FROM \{ THE FORTUNE ? i VVE GoTIT. FORTUNE You like Bill's style? Maybeyes,maybeno. What you rieed ...1n shoes... may be different. But we’ll wager youdowantstyleand comfort and super-value. Come in today and we’ll prove we have it...in SHORES *4 most styies SHARBAUGH & LIEB “YALUE. FIRST CLOTHES” BARNESBORO, PENNA. away in 1907. His second wife, Spangler, died at the Miners’ hospital mother has a suitor, in the person of Kane, died two years ago at Carroll- | ing a lengthy illness of a complication town. | of ailments. She was born February Surviving are two sons, Charles and | 24th, 1911, and graduated from the Philip Bauman, both of Altoona, and | Cresson high school in 1929. Her fa- two daughters, Mrs, Edward Link of | ther, Francis Riley, died several years Trafford City, and Mrs. Dietrick with | 280. She leaves her mother, Mrs. Em- whom he resided, all born to the first|™a Bender Riley and these brothers | and sisters: Mrs, Raymond Conrad, of | on Sunday. afternoon. He was admit- | another newcomer in the cast, Donald | ted to the hospital five hours before, Crisp. | suffering from a stroke. Matchick, a The girl's errant father returns on | widower, was said to have made his | the eve of the wedding and he soon | home with a son, Louis, of Spangler. has it within his power to upset the { ——————— ar eer nice future which loomed for his little | FOUR “DAUGHTERS COURA- | family until he suddenly appeared on the scene. The working out of this sit- also survive, Funeral services will be held this Thursday morning at 9:30 o'clock with a solemn high mass in St. Benedict's Catholic Church at Carrollfown and interment will be made in the church cemetery. LOT B. CALLAHAN. Lot B. Callahan, manager of Koppers Store for the Koppers interests at Sonman, near Portage, died of a heart attack on Saturday evening at his res- idence at Sonman where he was stric- ken a short time before. Mr. Callahan, associated with the company store at Sonman for thirty years, had been in ill health more than a year. Born at Philipsburg, November 23, 1887, Mr. Callahan was the son of Wharton and Mary (Bauder) Calla- han. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Sophia (Sandberg) Callahan; a dau- ghter, Miss Mary Elizabeth Callahan, at home, and two brothers, William Callahan, Sonman, and C. B. Callahan, Portage. Mr. Callahan was a member of the Philipsburg Blue Lodge, Masons, Will- iamsport Consistory; Jaffa Temple, Al- arriage. ber of half brothers | I 1s \ n Y Nn marriage. A number o | Fallen Timber; Walter and Bernard of | GEOUS” COME TO GRAND Cresson; and John and Dorothy, both | Ea at home. Funeral services were con-| “Daughters Courageous” the Warner ducted on Wednesday morning it St. | Bros. comedy of domestic life which | Francis Xavier's Catholic church at|shows at the Grand, Paton, on Wed- | Cresson, and interment was made in |nesday and Thursday, August 9 and 10, | St. Aloysius’ Church cemetery at Sum- | could be termed a first cousin to the | mit. | same studio‘s highly successful “Four | i | Daughters,” but is not a sequel to that CHARLES R. BODEN. | picture. | Funeral services for Charles Ross | day at his home, were conducted on | it had the same director, and besides it Sunday afternoon in the United Bre- | was written by a writing team one of | thren Church at Hyndman, Bedford | whose members was also co-author of | County, and interment was made in [then it had the same director, and be- [ the church cemetery there. Mr. Bo- | sides it was written by a writing team den’s death was attributed to cerebral | one of whose members was also co- embolism. He worked as usual Wed- | author of the screenplay which was nesday of last week. A native of Bed- |1ast year’s hit. ford county, Mr. Boden was born in| While the plot concerns different Hyndman in 1901. Surviving are his | people than those in “Four Daughters,” mother, his widow, and a number of | there is a basic similarity in that the brothers and sisters. new picture is also about the joys, the sorrows, the laughs, the tears in the lives of a genuinely “folksy” family. There are the same four daughters in MRS. ELLA RICHARDS. Mrs. Ella (McCulley) Richards, 78, Friday last near Ebensburg. She was|by Pricilla, Rosemary and Lola Lane a daughter of Thomas and Jane (Wil- | and Gale Page. Their father again is liams) McCulley, both deceased, and | Claude Rains, and their suitors again toona and Philipsburg Lodge, B. P. O: Elks. 9 Funeral services were conducted on was born ‘in’ Centre county in 1861.) are John Garfield, Jeffrey Lynn, Frank Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. | McHugh and Dick Foran. May Robson Stanley Slogoki of Bakerton, and a again is a member of the household, The similarity starts with the cast, | | Boden, 38, of Barnesboro, whose dea- | for every important player in the for- | [th occurred unexpectedly last Thurs- | mer picture is also in the new one; | a former resident of Bakerton, died on | this family and again they are played | uation makes a sentimentally amusing | tale with a moving denouement. The director, as indicated above, was Michael Curtiz, and the screen play, suggested by a stage play of Dorothy | Bennett and Irving White, was written by Julius J. and Philip G. Epstein, JOBLESS BENEFITS DECLINE SLIGHTLY Harrisburg. — Unemployment com- pensation benefits totalling $1,152,266 were distributed to the state’s indem- nified idle workers during the week ending July 21, Lewis G. Hines, sec- retary of labor and industry, reveals. “Disbursements dropped slightly | from the previous week's level,” he | said, “and original claims filed during the period showed a sharp decrease.” | At the same time Hines warned em- | ployers subject to the unemployment | compensation law that the dead line | for contributions to the job insurance | pool is midnight, August 31, after which penalties will be added for delinquen- Damage amounting to $600 resulted from a collision of cars near Colver on ‘Saturday afternoon. Ebensburg sub- station officers said the drivers were Clifton Shadden of Colver and John R. Murphy, near Colver. The cars were traveling in opposite directions. Ra as In