139. Thursday, August 24, 1939, . THE UNION PRESS-COURIER. PAGE SEVEN. : : - — er sens wwe sees —— ——————————————————— - wi __— _ I S—— \ 4 DIGEST OF NEWER Regitsration Shows ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTIUE Ee . In the Estate of Onuter Sciranko, | : SOCIAL SECU RITY Parties Balanced | late of Elder Township, Cambria Coun- | « ! ha | : . | ey, Pennsylvania, deceased. { 2 | ( nue v) | PROGRAM GIVEN IE Tg Pags 123 Notice is hereby given that Letters | | Lilly Bor, First Ward 121 310 of administration in the estate of the | c Taha : | Lilly Bor. Second Wd. .... 187 371 | said decedent have been granted to | y ! Continued. fron Page 1) | Lorain Bor, os 24 268 | the undersigned. All persons indebted | E gets benefits for herself and the chil- B ps 257 e u sig Loretto Bor. oo Suni to said estate are requested to make | dren until the youngest is 18. If a fully insured worker dies leaving neither widow nor children but leaves depen- Lower Yoder Twp., No. 1 66 122 : . | 28g | payment and those having claims or | Lower Yoder Twp., No. 2 267 + : P demands against the same will make Lower Yoder Twp., No. 3 47 280 dent parents, the parents are entitled : them. known without delay to | : 5 ide wv ara | Middle Taylor Twp. ...... 177 159 ’ | to receive benefits, provided they are Munster TWD. -..or 68 155 RAYMOND D. BUCK, | $5 or over, | Nanty-Glo, 1st Wd,, No. 1 263 396 Administrator, Patton, Pa | A currently insured worker is en- | nantyv Glo, 1st Wd, No. 2 214 289 | Reuel Somerville, Attorney, Nanty-Glo, 2nd Wd. No. 1 110 319 | Patton, Pa. ot | Nanty-Glo, 2nd Wd., No. 2 203 371 S—————————————— Patton Bor., First Ward ... 397 535 : titled to survivors’ benefits for chil- enn : dren less than 18 and for a wiaow, vided she is left with young ehildren. LEGAL NOTICE i Where no survivors exist who can | patton Bor, 2nd Ward... 212 453 . qualify for monthly benefits a single | pyrtage Bor, First Ward 575 387 —— . cash payment is left to the estate. This Parise Bor., Second Ward 432 345 COURT PROCLAMATION. . + 2 that combines. self-contained is true for both fully and currently in- | portage Twp., North 130 593 Whereas, the Honorable John H. Mc- | Loop Aerial. vostiv R. F. Stage ond sured workers. Portage Twp., South 207 743 Cann, President Judge of the Court of sr-effici oy Y.ok al Tul Three other major departures from | Reade Twp., East . J 181 92 Comman Pleas of the Forty-Seventh super-efficient Lokta ubes. the original law are included in the | Reade Twp. North No. 1 44 62 Judicial District, consisting of : the NoBeriiWires overhead. Noground rmam— amended act. One, the stop date for | Reade Twp., North No. 2 104 84 County of Cambria, has issued his pre 1 ® wires underfoot. No mess, no bother, sini wage taxation has been removed sO Reade Twp. South . . 236 267 cept bearing date the 20th day of July, no fuss. 30000 that men or women of 65 or over whe | Reade Twp., West 14 26 | to me directed for holding a COURT : wish to continue working and building | Richland Twp., No. 1 113 289 OF OYER AND TERMINER and GEN- 2 No Installation] Just plug in and play. up benefits for themselves and their Richland Twp., No. 2 . 533 107 | ERAL JAIL DELIVERY; AND QU AR- e Carry jsble models fram Youn) 19 dependents can now do so. Two, ben- Richland Twp., No. 3 61 95 TER SESSIONS OF THE PEACE, in | Foom, Pipes consoles whereve ey efits are computed on the average wa- | Sankertown Bor. 04 262 Ebensburg, for the County of Cambria, 00 Dest. ges of a worker instead of total wages. Scalp Level Bor. . 239 355 and to commence on the first Tuesday | 3 Clear Tone in Noisy Locations! Annoy- Three, the tax rate on wages, which South Fork, 1st Wd., No. 1 194 181 of September next, being the fifth day e ance of man-made static and noise was scheduled to go up to 1% per cent | South Fork, 1st Wd., No. 2 138 158 ' of said month of the year 1939 and to | conquered ! in 1940, has been frozen at 1 per cent | South Fork, 2nd Wd. No.1 317 143 continue for two weeks. Undreamed-of Power in every 1940 until 1943, at which time it goes up 10 South Fork, 2nd Wd., No. 2 201 68 Notice is hereby gtven to the Coro- | 4, Philco, even at lowest price! 2 per cent. Southmont Bor., No. 1 ... 801 102 | ner, Justices of the Peace, Aldermen | To workers and employers alike the Southmont Bor., No. 2 ... 244 548 ' and the Constables of said County of | amended law spells constructive Spangler Bor. North ...... 174 282| Cambria, that they be then and there | change. Examples of how the law will | Spangler Bor., South .._. 248 559 | in their proper persons, at 10 o'clock in | PHILCO 180 XF operate for fully and currently insured | Stonycreek Twp., No. 1 479 114 | the forenoon of said day, with their | workers will illustrate its significance | Stonycreek Twp., No. 2 .... 232 134 records, inquisitions, examinations, and | $ for employees. Summerhill Bor. .. N.... 146 278 | their other remembrances, to do those | ee] OR Mr. A, let us say, is fully insured. | Summerhill Twp., North __. 154 92 | things which to their offices appertain | - His wage record entitles him to le Summerhill Twp., South... 417 709 | to be done and to those who are bound vidual benefits of $36 a month. If he | Susquehanna Twp., North 68 84 | in recognizances to prosecute against | i . has a wife, 65 or over, when he retires | Susquehanna Twp., N. W. 226 236 | the prisoners that are or shall be in | Finest console ever offered at this price! she is entitled to $18 a month supple- | Susquehanna Twp., South 54 483 | the Jail of Cambria County, that they | Built-in Super Aerial System with Twin mentary benefits; a child under 18 is Susquehanna Twp. West 112 132 | be then and there to prosecute against | Loop Aerial gives finer American and For- entitled to an equal amount. If hé Tunnelhill Bor. ............. 85 164 | them as shall be just. eign reception. Cathedral Speaker, Bass should die, his widow upon reaching Upper Yoder Twp., No. 1 189 49 Given under my hand at Ebens- Compensation, Variable Tone Control. 65, would be entitled io $27 a month | Upper Yoder Twp, No. 2 603 148 burg the 7th day of August, in the year | Electric Push-Button Tuning, including for life; his children to $18 a month Upper Yoder Twp, No. 3 149 35 of our Lord one thousand nine hun- | button for Television Sound reception. until they reach the age of 18; if he Vintondale Bor... 141 356 | dred and thirty-nine, and the one hun- | Gorgeous Walnut cabinet. Conse} Pe leaves neither wife nor children but | Washington Twp. . 83 373 4 : : i | | dred and sixty-third year of the inde- | leaves dependent parents over 65, each | West Carroll Twp., North 129 240 : : t - | pendence of the United States. parent is entitled to $18 a month for West Carroll Twp., South 144 395 | CYRUS W. DAVIS. Sheriff I 5 R ; R om f life. If no survivor is left, then the | Westmont Bor., No. 1 ... 552 202 thers : ? : 3 5 nearest relative gets six times his Westmont Bor.,, No. 2 ... 587 103 | Sheriff's Office, Ebensburg, Pa. 4t. Carry t rom xoom 9 oi monthly benefit or $216. If no relative Westmont Bor., No. 3 ... 560 91 | ” ) 4 Plug in anywhere and play . . . en- PHILCO is left Hn the person paying his fu- | West Taylor Twp. ......... 353 215, FOR SALE—$85 Airway Sweeper, EAS joy finer, clearer reception, thanks : i i j y S | this year's model, used one month, for to the Bailt-in Super Aerial System. neral expenses is reimbursed to the | White Twp., East enti 38 | : Bails to recive Por oa $ extent of its cost up to $216 White Twp., West . - 98 103 | $30; 1934 Plymouth Two door car 2 RM. AC-DC operation. Handsome Wal- Mr. B. is currently insured when he | Wilmore Bor. .................. 91 92 | A-1 condition, all new rubber, price 1 nut cabinet with carrying handle. ' dies at the age of $50. His wage rec- — | $235—Mrs. Adolph Hofer, 415 Palmer | Tremendous value! ord at his death entitled him to indi- Ttoals ....ou. 27,078 31,133 | Avenue, Patton. vidual benefits of $24 a month. If he Johnstown City 16,393 11,734 ji | leaves a widow with no children she et FOR SALE—Modern white enamel- | gets a single cash payment of six times Grand Total 43,471 42,3867 ed Cook Stove. Inquire of Sue Gill, at | his individual benefit, or $144; if he | St. Lawrence. 3t 3 i leaves a widow with children less than NINE ADDITIONAL ms —————. . - rm rs _- & 18, she gets $18 a month, plus $12 a aey ee 5 | i month Ys each child up to a maximum FRANCISCANS WILL | . 3 of $48 a month for the family. Monthly GO TO INDIA MISSION | ’ benefits cease when the youngest child —_— { e a a oO a ome a e ral er ® reaches 18. If the insured leaves neith- A second group of Franciscans will | 9 » er widow or children the single cash jo ve St. Francis College at Loretto in | 3 ® payment is made to a relative or to the fall on a 13,000 mile journey to the | the person paying funeral expenses. ., Bhagalpur mission field in India, ac- | exas O e ew or or S alr . For employers, the greatest benefit cording to an announcement made this | oy the rd ey Spent fon we week by the Very Rev. John P. M. | ery real psychological advantage o iy A inind | bi Raed . and women working Dove: 100 New roy ER Fran: | A Texas journalist built himself a the trailer camp; a few cents for milk with the knowledge that they are ciscan priests who nd Locells fast! trailer, loaded in his wife and 11- and whatever other groceries you IO0 building security for themselves and September and now are established in| Y47-old son and started on a 2,000 need for eating at the camp; 25 cents —— their dependents, lies in financial sav- the Triseion Teld of th dose oe vor | mile trek for the New York World's toll over Whitestone Bridge for your - ings. The freezing of the tax rate at nia India Fair with $50.00 in his pockets. His car (leave the trailer at camp) and 1 per cent for three additional years — . > experiences are recounted in the fol- 25 cents toll back again (or ride a bus, will mean a total saving of about $825, Very Rev. Father Eugene T. George,| lowing story: fare ten cents each); 50 cents to park 000,000 on taxes, half of which is made 1: O- R. provincial of the Sacred | By TOM CAUFIELD in the parking grounds at the Fair; up of employer contributions. Heart Province of St. Francis of Pen- | 7 75 cents admission for adults, 25 cents The task of administering a social 2RCe Will return from India in Octo-| (who covers police, fire alarms, boll for children; 25 cents each for the security program of these dimensions ber in time to complete Frrangementt) weevils and all news in and about the Perisphere, which is a must because is a tremendous one. But the social IF the departure of the new mission | Brazos Bottoms of Central Texas for it is the Fair's symbol; 10 cents for security board has at its head an ex- LY group. Father Eugene accompani-| the Waco Times-Herald). the Town of Tomorrow, which alse pert who is undaunted. ed the initial group to India last Sep- WORLD'S FAIR, New York—Fran- ought to be a must for any house- Arthur J. Altmeyer, chairman of the | tember. ces and the eleven-year-old and I holder, and gas and oil. board ,has been with the agency since Nine memoers or the Third Order| have seen the Fair and all the folks We ate dinner at one of many res- its birth and helped frame the legisla- | Regular of St. Francis will make up| pack in Waco told us it couldn’t be taurants in the Fair grounds. My wife tion which created it. Before that he |the group going to India in the fall.| Gone on the Caufield bankroll. The had chicken and mushrooms with cof- was administratively active in labor They are: speedometer on Ancient History II fee for 60 cents. I ate a salisbury steak 3 legislation in Wisconsin, his home state. Rev. Father Edmund Joyce TOR,| reads 2,000 miles from Fifth and Aus- with coffee for 60 cents, and lamb ¥ Offers of other posts have been made | formerly of New York City; Rev. Fa- tin; the wallet is out $50, and we've chops for the boy cost 75 cents. For 4 to him but he prefers to stay at the | ther Mark Santucci, TOR, of Palmer, | got $10 left. I've just wired the boss lunch we had hamburgers and pie, ¥ helm of the Social Security Board. Mass; and Rev. Fraters Patrick Bo-| for the $25 he promised me to get which ran us 20 cents each. It costs a i land, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Maurice Buck- nickel for pop or root beer at any of a This month the President reappointed him as chairman of the board for a term of six years. His appointment was unanimously approved by the senate. While Mr. Altmeyer recognizes the complexity of the job of paying a va- riety of benefit claims on the accounts of the 45,000,000 men and women wor- kers, who with their families may be- come beneficlaries of the system, he is not overwhelmed by it. At present there are over three hun- dred offices, scattered over the United States, Alaska and Hawaii, concerned with this job. It is expected that addi- tional offices will be opened soon. There will be problems of determining claims of annuitants, widows, children, parents and others, but these present no challenging difficulties. The spade work to simplify getting information essential for the adjucation of claims is already under way. 1939 Wall Paper Sample Book! Contains 60 Different Papers priced from 5c to 25¢ per Single Roll WRITE FOR YOUR FREE BOOK TODAY! We pay the postage on all orders. No charge for ley, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Martin Broad- head, East Orange, N. J.; Robert Her- zer, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Urban McGarry, | Warren, Pa.; William Frank, Beaver Falls; and Hugh Schelief, Columbia, Pa. The new missionaries are now at their respective home parishes. They will return to the province at Loretto next month in preparation for the journey. He’s Just Bluffing him by a participant. home on, and if the chewing gum and bailing wire on the trailer and jalop- py don’t relax their holds during the homeward 2,000 miles, we shall have made the whole junket on $85. We spent a little over $1.50 each per Here is Tom Caufield’s homemade trailer in which he, his wife and son day on the Fair itself, counting admis- sion at the gates. Thomas, the eleven- year-old and Frances, the woman who tells me how to drive, and I walked and walked and looked and stared, finally becoming convinced that the best parts of the Fair are free. We could while away two weeks here looking at the free shows, and never repeat and rever suffer from what the slick paper writers call ennui. We are leaving only because a wolf is howl- ing at a door bearing the coat of arms of a certain small town newspaper- man in Texas. Nothing Like the Brazos We stood and gulped when we saw the illumination at the lagoon of na- tions last night. Nothing like that along the Brazos, nor anywhere else. A lightning bolt hit a telephone post as our car-trailer combination passed it on the road to Knoxville, coming up. It smashed the post, splattered our car with splinters, made an outra- geous noise, scared us stiff. We saw it ill over again, free, at the General Electric show here. They made 10 mil- lion volts for us — BANG! and we thought we were back on the Tennes- | see highway in the storm. We fought good roads and bad com- ing up. General Motors showed us all good in a panorama that 27,000 people a day look at. GM parked us in up- man was fixing to leave the ground for good; but GM gave us hope for the highways. We could hardly get the boy away from the aviation display. Instead of wanting to ride on the car- nival gadgets, he wanted to go back and look at the model wind tunnels, the cross section of the Yankee clip- per, and things like that. Need for Adjectives We heard the Voder. That's a con- of talking typewriter. Pretty girl punches keys and make a combina- tion of hisses and grunts that sounds like Charlie McCarthy at his worst, but is understandable. I never was much on adjectives. The one adjective needed around here is “marvelous.” Give me enough syn- onyms for that, insert them as needed, and that’s the Fair. There’s a moving mural in the Ford building. Pistons, cogs, things like | that fixed in the wall, all moving. Time for one of the synonyms. In the same building, walls hung all round with a one-piece yellow curtain made of spun and woven glass. More free stuff; the City of Light, with 100,000 individual bulbs; the Forward March of America, showing how lighting has changed. They've got a fountain running over the exit pond by the New England building. traveled all the way from Waco, Texas, to see the New York World's Fair. traption we had read about, a sort | They've got life-sized toy monkeys climbing trees in a toy exhibit and real monkeys climbing on a rock in- side the Frank Buck enclosure. The rock is higher than the bamboo walls, so you can see the monkeys without going in. Escalators and Ramps About transportation; this fair is great on saving shoe leather. It has to be, it is so big that unless there were a lot of escalators and moving belts the cobblers would have a field day at every exit. You go up into the Per- isphere on an escalator, and ride around it on a moving belt; and there’s the moving belt at the GM building. Everywhere you find ramps instead of steps, and the ramps are exactly calculated to ease your legs as you go up or down. Streets and walks are asphalt, and the buildings gener- | ally have rubber composition flooring. | And if you want to ride, it costs a dime | i for a bus from any point on the | grounds to any other point. If your feet do get tired (and they oughtn’t to often if you've got the right kind of shoes, which is impor- | tant, especially to the women) you | can stop in at any of the first aid sta- | tions and get a free foot treatment to | way for a trailer; 75 cents a night at! dozen stands. We got to the Fair for lunch one day and had dinner there that night. We had breakfast in camp next day, lunch at the Fair and pulled out late that afternoon for home. Seeing New York You can see something of New York while you're at the Fair, for the mere cost of gasoline. The night we arrived, we took a 50-mile drive across town, along the Hendrik Hudson Parkway and back from the Battery up Broad- way to Times Square, then back to camp. We had a volunteer guide—one of the officials at the camp. The policemen go out of their way to help a visitor. One of them talked to us for a half hour about things in general while we waited for an open- top bus next morning for a sightsee- ing trip in Manhattan, In fact, any New Yorker goes out of his way to help a Fair visitor. We felt so much at home that when we parked our car to catch a bus to the Fair on our first day’s visit, we forgot to make a note of where we left it; just walked away from it like we would have done in our own home n. And believe it or not, we found hen we came back in the rain— 1 the help of some of the passen- s on the bus Bear in mind that the cost of coming to New York depends on how you are willing to come. We had a camp trail- er, slept in it. a trailer camp once, a cabin one night during a pour- ing rain, using school grounds twice with the permission of rural neigh- V c yo € o trimming. f : | holstered chairs, started a public ad- | of that building, and when I lost | €ase them. bors, and parking three times at fill- K'S | Little Scotty Chadwick, dressed | dress explanation from the chair |Frances and Thomas, by getting Now for the Tariff ing stations. It took us six days to get BUC | for goggle-fishing, shows how to mab | arms, and showed us the highway | mixed up on a rendezvous, they wait- here WALL PAPER & PAINT la sheepshead with a spear at the system of 1960. ed an hour for me there, perfectly | Let's count the cost, after you get| That $85 is an education worth Fi annual tournament at Beaufort, If it hadn’t been for that roads | satisfied, while the fountain splashed | to New York. Figure you're in a trail- thousands, for a boy of 11, and worth 334 Washingten Street N. C. Scotty, however, can’t claim | system display, we might have | outside. er—that’s $1 to get over the George | plenty Hore for his father sand JOHNSTOWN, PENNA. || the credit. The fish was given to | thought. in the aviation building, that| They’ve got a real ship parked in a Washington Bridge, which is the best | nother. — reprinted from the New York Herald-Tribune.