Union press-courier. (Patton, Pa.) 1936-current, August 10, 1939, Image 1

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    [°
on
on:
the
itle
5it—
’”
Recognized and Endors-
ed by More Than Fifty
Local Uniens and Cen-
tral Bodies Over Cam-
bria County and Ad-
jacent Mining Areas.
A GENERAL NEWSPAPER DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS
OF ORGANIZED LABOR IN CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA.
UNION
Union Press, Established May, 1935.
VOL. 45.
NO. a5,
REGULATIONS
FOR HUNTING
SEASON GIVEN &trin:
JOfficial Open Seasons and Bag | "Some
Limits Are Set Forth By the | °itices have
Game Commission,
The current issue of the Pe
nia Game News contains compl
formation of 1939 Spend hunting n
and bag limits, listing, in addition, th
PORTAGE LOC AL, vu MWA,
WILL HEAR CANDIDATES
SATURDAY,
nion, No. 498, United M
Press-Courier, as follows:
written
permission
our local. So we have
Saturday, August 19th, 1939, at
o'clock in the afternoon for any or al
candidates wishing to come to the Mi
ers Hall, Local 498, Portage. All
welcome.”
S
e
counties where or species of game
may not be killed or method of killing
in season
is limited. The only game
g
967 WPA WORKERS
* now is the woodchuck open from July
1to Septem 30, this year, with 4
a day’s bag limit, but unlimited season T0 BE DISMISSED
bag.
as been cus
game of ¢
ng for
on the ope
from 7 a.
Shoot
win m., e
xcept fo
woodchuck, the hours are from fice This Wi eek.
6a. m to 7:3 op. m. a
The regulations announced by the The dlininal of - certified work-
board follow, dates being inclusive.
Upland Game,
Ruffed grouse, 2 a day, 10 a
November 1 to November 21.
Nov. 1 to Nov. 21.
nual, bob white, 5 a day,
on will open
IN THE COUNTY
ly
ed before 9 a. m.
hours are
season
15 season;
Orders for First Dismissals
i
ers in Cambria county who have
continuously
the present week, and
1st of September,
the law.
Hungarian partridge, 3 counties, 2
a day, 6 a season; Nov. 1 to November
21.
Wild turkeys,
a day, 1 a season, Nov. 1 to Nov. 30.
Ringneck pheasants, male only, 2 a | months.
day, 12 a season, Nov. 1 to Nov. 30
Grackel, commonly called
birds, unlimited, Nov. 1 to Nov. 30.
Squirrels, grey,
1 to Nov. 30.
Red squirrel,
Sept. 30, 1940.
Raccoons, all counties, by individual |
or hunting party, 2 a day, 12 a season,
Nov. 1 to Dec. 31.
Raccoons, by traps in certain. coun-
ties, 12 in season, Nov. 10, to Jan. 31,
1940. |
Bear, Deer and Coon.
Bear, over 1 year old, by individual |
a season, Nov. 15 to Nov. 18.
Bear, over 1 year old, by hunting
a day, 2 in sea- |
1 a day, 1
party of five or more, 2
son, Nov. 15 to Nov. 18.
Deer, male, with two or more points,
to one antler. Dec. 1 to Dec. 15. On De-
cember 24 and 15, only antlerless deer
may be hunted for and killed in For-
est and Warren Counties, that part of
Potter county lying north of U. S.
Highway 6, and that part of Jefferson
county being northwest of U. S. High-
way 119, by persons who have not
killed a deer or aided in killing the
hunting party limit.
No raccoon wrapping will be permit-
ted in these counties: Berks, Bucks,
Cambria, Carbon, Chester, Delaware,
Lawrence, Mercer, Montgomery and
Schuykill counties, except by certain
landowners. There will be no open sea-
son on bear in Adams, Bedford, Blair,
Cumberland, Franklin, Fulton, Hunt- |
ingdon, Juniata, Mifflin
Counties.
Other trapping will be permitted on- |
ly in Monroe, Pike Susquehanna and
Wayne counties.
Beaver trapping wilt be permissible
in Allegheny, Bradford, Clarion, Col-
ubbia, Crawford, Elk, Forest, Jefferson,
Lackawanna, Lycoming, Monroe, Mon-
tour, Northumberland, Schuykill, Sus-
quehanna, Synder, Tioga, Union, Ve-
nango, Wayne and Warren Counties.
Snares without springpoles may be
used for taking predators only in Cam-
eron, Clarion, Elk, Forest, McKean,
Potter and Warren counties,
Owl Bounty Removed.
The game commission announces the
been removed, payments on
predators ceasing May 31st last.
The state does not establish seasons
on migratory birds, including rails,
gallinules, woodcock, snipe, wild ducks
wild geese and coots, these being un-
der federal regulation. However, when
hunting licenses are issued they will
contain a separate summary of legisla-
tion and regulations. |
Trapping seasons on fur bearing an- |
imals are set as follows: Minks, 0pos- |
sums, skunks, number unlimited, No- |
vember 10th to Jan 31, 1940; muskrats,
unlimited, Dec. 1 to Jan. 31, 1940; ot-
ters, in four counties, 3 in season, Dec.
1 to Jan. 31st, 1940; beavers in 21 coun-
ties, 3 in season, Jan. 12 to Jan. 31,
1940. J
Hungarian partridges may be killed
only in Lycoming, Montuor and North-
umberland counties.
No open season will be held on wild
turkeys in Cameron, Elk, Forest, eff-
erson, McKean, Potter, Sullivan and
Warren counties. There will be no op-
en season anywhere on reeves, pheas-
ants, chukar partridges, doves, varying
hares (snowshoe rabbits), elk or cub
bears.
these
in certain counties, 1
black |
black and fox, cim-
bined kinds, 6 a day, 20 a season, Nov.
unlimited, Nov. 1 to |
and Perry | {
| next, August 13th ,according to an an-
accordance with statutory
iting continuous
for veterans,
resent the
| fected by the 18 month provision.
thorized the replacement—as
ty who have been certified ahd
charge,
ty Assistance Board.
It was pointed out that recertifica-
tion after the lapse of 30 days, does
not entitle a person to immediate re-
assignment, but merely entitles him |
to have his name placed in the file of
persons waiting reassignment New
assignments from this file are to be
made on a basis of relative need.
| JOHNSTOWN FIRM TO
PRINT THE BALLOTS
| Weigel and Barber, Johnstown prin-
| ters, were awarded the contract Tues-
| day by the county commissioners, to
print the primary ballots, their bid
| being $6.60 per thousand. Only other
bidder was the Carrolltown News, who
quoted $690 per thousand. Contract for
election supplies was given the Will-
iam G. Johnston Company of Pitts-
burgh, the only bidder.
Eighth Grade Test.
Eighth grade students who were ill
when the spring examinations were
given, will be permitted to take a test
on Friday, August 18th, in the Ebens-
burg grade school. This announcement
was made by Dr. Arthur M. Stull, the
county superintendent the other day.
various’ grade schools to forward to
him by Thursday of this week a list
of the pupils who were unable to take
the tests in the spring.
Frugality Jubilee.
| The golden jubilee celebration of
| St. Mary Magdalen’s Catholic church
at Frugality will be held on Sunday
nouncement by Rev. Father
Hanlon, pastor.
The celebration will be marked by
a solemn high mass at 11 a. m., fol-
lowed by an afternoon program of
games and amusements. Lunches and
dinners will be served from 2:30 to 3
p. m. and from 5 to 7 p. m.
James
NOTICE.
The Public Schools of Patton Bor-
ough will open August 28, 1939, for a
nine month term. Pupils who will be-
come 6 years of age on or before Feb-
ruary 1, 1940, will be admitted on the
opening date of the term, and must ap-
ply for admission during the first two
weeks of the term Beginners must pre-
AUGUST 19
1 J. Ks pal, Secretary of Lo-
ne Work-
a, of Portage, writes the
“Some of the candidates for county
to me asking for
to speak to the miners of
set the date of
2:00
are
Are
Received By Area Eleven Of-
been
employed by the WPA
for eighteen moths or more started in
will continue
daily on a balanced schedule until the
the deadline set by
The separations are being made in
require-
ments in the relief act of 1939 prohib- |
employment except |
dr more than eighteen
| Since the review of the employment
records has not been completed at
| this time, the number of those whose
dismissals are to begin does not rep-
total number in Cambria
county whose employment will be af-
far as |
this provision in the law will be eli-
| gible for reassignment until the expir-
ation of 30 days from the date of dis-
and will eligible at such time |
only upon recertification by the Coun- |
| Dr. Stull has requested principals of |
bounty on the great horned owl has | |
CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA AREA. _ THURSDAY, AUGUST 10, 1939 sp men a
BUSINESS HAS
ITS CUE - WHAT
All Eyes Are Watching.
The following
Pittsburgh Pr
Those who have spoken critic
nt session in Washington ¢
“do nothing” Congress
have lebelled it the “let bt
something” Congress.
editorial
1
For when the legislators
eir hc me- bound trai
given a cu
1e fc
in. Its coz
> guided to a c
conduct of busi
long and per
deliver th
it N
said that
Ines ss everyt fing it asked,
it went way 1
pum
certainly
t direction.
a long
The tide of
onl
bring. But if business responds to t
challenge of a friendly Congress, if
begins taking advantage of the
employment
will have
that undeniably
kind of treatment.
True,
than any peacetime
voted before.
velt favored, especially
|
possible and current quotas permit—of | gether, some 13 billion dollars.
those persons who are to be dismissed |
| with others from the lists of the coun- |
But in the end it drew a line and | CATHOLIC DAY WILL BE
e
WILL DEVELOP?
Congress Has giv en Industry A
Chance to Do Its “Stufi”, and
from the
s is worthy of thought:
boarded
5, they had un-
ped har-
Congress
but
that
y knows what the next session will
im-
munse oportunities for investment and
exist, it
justified the new attitude of
Congress and earned more of the same
Congress voted more money
session had ever
t appropriated hundreds
| of millions more than President Roose-
The dismissals are not expected to |
affect materially the present emplov-
for the farm- | ker
ers. It gave all the money the Presi-
| ment total in the county. Col. Philip | dent asked for the national defense,
| Matthews, state administrator, has au- | and even more. It raised the silver sub-
sidy for the West. It ladled out, alto-|
made a stand. It turned down the too- |
W v are | click, spending-lending program and |
waiting assignment. | the housing program, with a resound- |
| No person discharged because of | ing decisiveness. It lifted from business |
hundreds of millions of dollars in, so-
| cial security costs. It excised the last |
| vestige of the undistributed profits tax,
an, especially
stituted relief.
It voted down the
irritating thorn in the
side of business It reduced and recon-
| Townsend plan. It placed public salar-
| i :
| vate salaries, and, in
ordered public servants to concentrate
| on public service and stop ward-heel-
ing.
applauded. The question remains, will
business be content, after applauding,
to sit on its hands?
The future of orthodox capitalism
in America seems to depend on busi-
ness’ answer to that question.
JUDGE McCANN FREES
STINEBISER OF SHEETS’
LABOR TILT CHARGE
Without hearing any testimony,
| President Judge John H. McCann on
| Monday found Rupert Stinebiser, Un-
ited Mine Workers official, not guilty
of a charge of disorderly
brought against him by E. E. Sheets
Johnstown house coal operator. It was
alleged that Stinebiser had called vile
names at employees of Sheets during
a labor dispute.
ger in Johnstown. He appealed to the
believed himself disqualified to hear
ing it It was agreed, however, by At-|
torney Bruce Sciotto, representing |
| hart, counsel for Stinebiser, for Judge |
Stinebiser and placed the costs on the
county.
JOHNSTOWN LOSES WPA
Johnstown lost its Works Progress
Administration office to Altoona last
week in a statewide reshuffling which
saw the 16 WPA areas reduced to 10
and seven branch office managers dis-
missed.
Among those retained is John S.
Ginter, head of the Johnstown office
for the past year, who will become
branch manager of the newly created
Area 7 headquarters in Altoona. Area
7 will include Huntingdon and Fulton
counties as well as the four counties
sent a birth certificate and a certifi.
cate of successful vaccination,
which compised the former Area 11—
Cambria, Somerset, Bedford and Blair,
Nearly all tnese things business has
county court. When the case was call- |
ed Monday Judge McCann said that he |
Sheets, and Attorney Frank P. Barn- | p
McCann to rule. Without hearing any | |
testimony the jurist ruled in favor of |
|
OFFICE TO ALTOONA |
| FIREMEN OF CENTRAL
ies on the same taxable basis as pri- |
the Hatch Act,
conduct |
»| three legged race.
| sions will be under the care of various |
Stinebiser was tined $5 and costs)
amounting to $20.55 when given a hear- !
ing before Alderman Joseph Hornber- |
it as Sheets had talked to him regard- |
| ced the entire 1,700 workers under the
Fifth
23 South Ave.
AN ATTAINMENT OF THE LARGEST GENERAL WEEKLY
NEWSPAPER CIRCULATION IN CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA.
Our Shop Is Equipped
to Do Job Printing of
All Kinds. Nothing Too
Large or Too Small,
We Cater Especially to
Local Union Printing.
{ atton Courier, Established Oet., 1893.
SUBSCRPTION $2.00 PER YEAR
FIRST PLACE WON BY
CLEARFIELD BITUMIN-
WAGE CREDITS
AVAILABLE FROM | ov meu Extmasss
ituminous
copped the
in competition
t-aid meet at
inds last Satur-
SECURITY BODY
rs
Any Wage Earner Can Find Out
ld
Amount Credited io His teams. Were
Age Insurance Account. on on
sarijel d corporation units
ds, including
fth places.
t the ev-
Thi rty-two fi
in the
Any wage earner wh
know the am
to his old age
January 1,
i939,
ig a feat
walked a
REGISTRATIONS
STILL SHOW A
DEMOCRAT LEAD
Republicans Enroll A Few More
New Ones in the County. To-
tals Not Yet Available.
ion in Cambria
914 during the
atic regi
and of innovati was definit 1paign of the
rudely, chec ked. while the Re-
| If business misses its cue, the Lord
wed a gain of
tics compiled on
commission
registration in
nd in the dis-
612. In Johns-
h ade an increa-
in the districts outside
reported his earnings.
“amination of the 1
hat the
cause,
worker 1}
In other
nave
between the wag
empoly I
ny of
due to mi
accounts
ures of the total regis-
not be & lable until all
in the commissioners’ office
have been checked and compiled. It is
expected the complete totals will be
available in two w
ports.
Wiestli
lained
2 that all a
needs to do
get a wage s
r the
ment is to obtain from any field offic The re tion ior November
of the board a post card form, fill ;: 1938 ele n showed 17,842 enrolled as
out, and send it to the Baltimore offices | Rept s in Johnstown and 13,795
registered as Democrats. However,
of the Social Security Board.
| r——
| since that time, 2,235 have been elim- |
inated in the city from the Republican |
enrollment and 1,852 from the Dem-
cratic for failure to vote within
successive years. Hov Tr, ii is De-
lieved that many have removed to the |
will be held at the Eb- | boroughs and townships and that an
Grounds on August 10. increase will be shown in those dis-
day has been held since tricts.
he picnic was om The total registrati
> renovations were in| vember elect
the Cambria County Fair
HELD AT EBENSBURG
FAIR GROUNDS AUG. 10
| Catholic Day
ensburg Fair
No Catholic
1937. Last yea
because extens
progress at
Grounds.
In 1937, Rev.
on at the last No-
ion was Democrat, 45,170
and Republican, 43,607.
dead
The
Commi
ne for registering at the
ers’ office to be eligible to
Fulton Sheen
was the
feature speaking attraction. This - | vote in the primary of Tuesday, Sept.
plans have been radically changed. 12th, is noon, Saturday of this week.
There will be no speaking. It its place | That will also be the deadline for
we have endeavored to expand our change of address notices to be receiv-
ers and also the
party enroll-
entertainment features in the hope of ©d by the commission
creating a wider interest. The enter- final day for cha
is free of charge. ment.
tainment, of course,
The following is a list of the at-
tractions:
Roller skating, dancing, amateur
boxing show, band concert, base ball
game, bingo, ponies for children, bus
service, free admission to the grounds,
sepcial athletic act by midgets—the
Birk twins; Novelty booths ete.
Theer will be lunch counters with
hot coffee, first aid booths, with nur-
ses in attendance; choral numbers to
be rendered by two choral groups
combined, namely the Polish Youth smashing a window out of the cabin |
Singing Circle and St. Casimir’s male |
in the‘craft and crawling through as |
chorus, folk dances, potato race and 2 the vessel was sinking. He suffered se- |
| vere lacerations of the left hand when
he shattered the window glass and was |
treated at New Haven Hospital after
his rescue.
Mr. Bone had been working in New |
| York or several months. In a letter to
{ | his parents he gives a graphic descrip-
| tion of the events following the cap-
sizing of the pleasure craft and the
subsequent rescue of 33 persons on |
board by the Cayuga, a vessel towing |
an oil-laden barge to Hartford, Conn.
As the cruiser craft rolled over,
many dived or were thrown clear, but
several were caught underneath. Mr. |
Bone was trapped in the forward paif
next to the cabin door. He tried sever-
al times to swim under the railing, but
each time a powerful wave knocked
him back. In desperation he said he
smashed his fist through the square
glass window on the port side and
squirmed through.
YOUNG AUTOIST
ASSAULTS BOY
Said to have been criminally as-
saulted by an unknown man, Oliver
Miller, 14, of St. Benedict, is a pa-
tent at the Miners’ hospital, Spangler.
The lad told Corp. F. J. Hanley of
the state motor police, and County De-
tective Charles Cowan, that he was
assaulted by a man who said he would
drive him from Spangler to his home.
The lad was hitch-hiking, and was
picked up, driven to Nicktown, and
An advertisement in the Union| itis alleged the crime took place when
Press-Courier brings best results, the man had stopped the car
BARNESBORO MAN ONE
Or THIRTY-THREE SAVED
IN RESCUE ON ATLANTIC
A Barnesboro young man was am-
ong the 33 persons rescued recently |
when the “Starlite,” a pleasure craft,
| capsized in the Atlantic Ocean. James
Bone, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bone,
of Park avenue, Barnesboro, saved
himself from a watery grave by |
The Knights of Columbus will be in|
charge of bingo and several other fea- |
tures. Aside from this, all the conces- |
churches in Johnstown.
C.L O. IS VICTOR
AT GREENSBURG |
The American Federation of Labor |
last week lost its attempt to carve out
a separate craft bargaining unit at the
| Walworth Compnay plant at South
Greensburg, where a rival CIO group
holds the exclusive bargaining con-
tract.
The National Labor Relations Board
announced a tie vote among 40 pat-
tern makers who cast their ballots a
year ago.
The board said the outcomp now pla-
SWOC agreement.
DISTRICT PLAN FOR
ANNUAL CONVENTION
Arrangements have been completed
for the forty-seventh annual conven-
tion of the Central District Volunteer
Firemen’s Association to the held on
August 14th to 19th at Houtzdale.
Scores of fire companies trom the
district are expected to participate in
the convention activities.
WAGE-HOUR ACT
ESCAPES CHANGE
BY THE CONGRESS
Its
Law Runs Gantlet Over
Funds and Various Restrictive
Proposals, But Still Intact.
Washington. —Dest te Congressional
bing at some its provisions and
threat s to limit arply the funds for
its enforcement, the Wages and Hours
, passed by
pears to have run the
present session without any
objectives.
The only important threats against
the law came to a head last week. One
when the House Appropriation
Committee turned “thumbs down” on
$2,000,000 deficiency appropriation
ed by the president for more ade-
( te enforcement. The other, which
would have been
largely a gesture, be-
cause of the almost certain lack of sen-
concurrence
0 me when the tables
appeared set to e the House a chan-
ce to accept as rnative to minor
clarifying amenc offered by its
labor committe a proposal which
| would have excluded 1,500,000 work-
ers from its rotection.
However, the House agreed to give
+
the law's enforcement agency, the Wa-
crippling
arose
ments
ges and Hours Division of the Labor
Department, half of the additional
sum the President asked. This would
provide it with $4,176,000 for the cur-
rent fiscal year, compared with the
$1,200,000 it had in the first eight mon-
ths of its functioning. Then House
leaders announced that the Labor
Committee’s amendments would not be
considered at this session, removing
the second remote chance of emascu-
lating changes.
While the added funds are $1,394.
000 less than was asked in regular and
deficiency appropriations, wages and
hours afficials have indicated that,
with the total grants now proposed,
they can add about 250 inspectors and
attorneys to the staff of 100 or so now
on the rolls and thus at least check the
asserted threat to the law's continuance
through the spectacle of non-enforce-
ment.
two |
PHIL MURRAY DAY IS
PLANNED BY S. W. 0. C.
The Steel Workers Organizing Com-
mittee plans to mobilize its Western
Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia
members on Saturday of this week for
a mass demonstration in honor of its
chairman, Philip Murray.
The rally will mark the first annual
observance of “Phil Murray day” —in
token of Mr. Murray's leadership in
the CIO campaign to organize the
steel industry. In future the annivar-
sary will be observed on June 17th,
{ the birthday of the SWOC.
Since Mr. Murray, vice president of
the United Mine Workers, assumed the
leadership of the steel union, some 1 100
lodges have been chartered with an
estimated membership of more than
500,000 and wage-hour contracts
signed with 595 steel companies.
The demonstration, to be stagel in
| Cycler park, McKeesport, is intended
| to recognize this achievement.
| union estimated 100 or more
The
lodges
will participate.
WALKER RESIGNS AS
AID TO CONTROLLER
Appointed recently as a special de-
| puty attorney general attached to the
| State Liquor Control Board, Attorney
| Ernest F. Walker of Johnstown
last
week resigned as solicitor for County
Controller Henry L. Cannon. Mr.
Walker's letter of resignation fololws:
“It is with deepest regret that I
| submit herewith my resignation as
your solicitor, due to my state appoint-
ment.
‘In all the years of my practice I
| have had no more pleasant profesSion-
al remembrances than my work with
| you in the controller's office. Person-
ally and as a taxpayer, I regret very
much that you did not see fit to again
be a candidate to succeed yourself in
this very important office.”
Kd
ANNUAL LANTZY
REUNION AUG. 19TH
The twelfth annual Lantzy reunion,
celebrateing the 112th anniversary of
the Lantzy’s arrival in Cambria coun-
ty, will be held in the Grove at Nick-
town on Saturday, August 19th. The
clan is asked to bring baskets and ser-
ing dishes.
The amusement committee has ar-
ranged for games. Round dancing will
be a feature from 8:30 to 12. Good mu-
sic will be provided. Come and bring
your friends.
An anniversary mass for the living
and deceased relatives and friends will
be held on Saturday, August 19th at
8 o'clock in the morning at St. Pat-
rick’s church, Spangler,