Union press-courier. (Patton, Pa.) 1936-current, September 14, 1939, Image 2

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

    PAGE Two.
THE UNION PRESS-COURIER.
Thursday, September 14th, 1939.
PINE TWP. NOTES
HEILWOUDD, MENTCLE, ALVERDA,
AND VICINITY, FROM PEN OF
Dorot!} rnton, ten year old dau
ghter of and Mrs. Wesley Thorn-
ton of Mentcle, died at 3:40 P. M, on
Sunday, in the Indiana hospital, where
she became a medical patient on Au-
gust 28th. Besides the parents, the
child leaves a brother, Ronald and two
sisters: Thelma Jean and Winnie, both
at home. Funeral services were con-
ducted at ten o'clock on Wednesday
morning at the Thornton home by the
Rev. Reed Bennett. Interment was in
the Oakland cemetery in Indiana.
Mrs. Mary Burkhamer, Mr. and Mrs
Raymond Burkhamer and son, Ray-
mond, Jr., of Johnstown, were Sunday
dinner guests at the Frank Trinkley
home near Heilwood.
John Mance, Sr., of Mentcle and
John Sally of Heilwood, acted as
I t aid meet held at
air Grounds last Sat-
urday.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Belchick of Bar-
rnesboro, R. D., were recent callers at
the Andrew Vanish home in Mentcle
Mr. Joe Henry of Alverda and Miss
Evelyn Lechorchick motored to Erie
on Friday evening. Mr. Henry return-
home on Sunday.
Mr. and Mr tt Baer of Heil-
eq
wood sk ay afternoon at the
home of Mrs. H. C. Lansberry of Pat-
ton.
Mrs. William Connor = of
, were recent guests at the
hornton home in Mentcle.
Mr. i Mrs. Link Adams and fam-
ily spent Sunday afternoon in Pine
Flats.
Charles Saltsgiver of Glen Camp-
bell, Lawrence and John Wilson and
Miss Florence Chapelli of Mentcle mo- |
tored to Pittsburgh early on Sunday
morning to witness the baseball game
between Pittsburgh and St. Louis at
Forbes Field.
Mr. Kenneth Trinkley of Heilwood
and Miss Verna Jenkins of Washing-
ton, D. C., motored to New York early
on Sunday morning. While there they
will visit Miss Jenkins’ brother, Rus-
sell, and also the World's Fair {
Miss Jean Henry of Indiana spent
the week end at the home of her par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Pat Henry in Al-
verda.
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
HE Sealtest-APPROVED
FLAVOR OF THE MONTH
Ripe, luscious bananas,
and delicious almond
macaroons frozen 1ato
a delicious ice cream.
g x 5
Ras Fe
MINT jul
© SHERBET
Sensational new fla-
vor! Made of pure
citrus fruit juices
blended with refresh-
ing mint. Don’tmissit.
-
CAKE ROLL [§
Our Deluxe
vanilla Ice
“ream Sure
ad with
delicious choc-
olate cake—all
ready to serve.
DRUMSTICK
THE BIGGEST 5¢ WORTH
OF GOODNESS IN TOWN
jainty sugar-coated cone
A with vanilla ice
cream, dipped in chocolate
and rolled in nuts.
Sealtest, Inc. and its member companies
are under one common ownership.
1939
Wall Paper |
Sample Book!|
Contains 60 Different Papers
priced from 5¢ to 25¢ per
Single Roll
WRITE FOR YOUR FREE
BOOK TODAY!
We pay the postage on all
orders. No charge for
trimming.
BUCK'S
WALL PAPER & PAINT
334 Washington Street ||
JOHNSTOWN, PENNA. ||
ding Canada, Ohio,
They will mal
Heilwood was a
Cluroe and Henry h
rec
Johnston and son, B ;
, of Heilwood, and
Arch Williams of Pine Flats.
baseball team nippe
\1d
on the Patton fi
Mentcle on Saturd
“THE WOMEN” COMING TO THE
GRAND ON SUNDAY, MONDAY,
FEMININE CASTING
lind Russell
attraction at the Grand stage play will find that the drama
Patton on Sunday and | lost nothing in being transferred to
Monday next. Unusual in
one of the st
Theatre,
e out of Holly
>t never showing before | po
the most unus
vear. iedlv top e lal io. SE a ’g
year dedly top entertain-| tjine Virginia Weidler, Lucille Wat-
snappy dialog
sets of eye-filling beauty.
“Riptide” has
| Povah, imported from New York
| lywood players
visited
ed non-
and Niagara Falls.
eir home in Patton
ne's work is locat-
at
Mr, and 1
Sunday 1
ld with a score of
M
liss Helen
llers in
Joan Crawford share of the plaudits.
“The Women”
highest plane. I
Incidently, those who witnessed the | of hospitals until
its premise the screen. The broader scope offered
ongest love by the celleloid provides many more
vood in spectacular moments than would be What co
ible on the stage, outstanding am- | has shut off
g these being the bea hop se- | the heart.
quence and the fashion show.
V
I objects 0
affections, “Tt
1 be nominated as
production of any
ling parformances include Joan Fon-
anole with. shapy : : :
angle. with sharp, | son Florence Nash, Muriel Hutchin-
ling situations and | son Esther Dale, Ann Moris,
Hussey, Dennie Moore, Mary Cecil,
Ruth a
as does Rosalind
Do You Know?
to —_—
divided three ways generous share more than a generous and placed medica
« Suporting players who added ster- PRIESTS OF LORET
SEMINARY ANNOUNCE
PLANS FOR REUNION
llege,
or | Rev. Father Philip
Evacuation of London Children
or 1 Scene at a London railroad station as many thousands of children
)L a ba- were being taken from the city to places of more security in the country
in anticipation of German air raids. The total population of the designated
= evacuation areas is about 11,000,000, but enly about 3,900,000 of the resi-
dents fell into the first group that was moved. That group in
children, their teachers, pre-school children and their moth
blind and crippled, and invalids who were in condition to be moved.
The annual reunion of St.
Norma | Mary Beth Hughes, Virginia Grey, Seminary Alumni Assoication w
Shearer appeared in a similar role and | Marjorie Main, Cora Witherspoon, and at St. Francis Cc
her return to drawing room comedy is Hedda Hopper. The production has Tuesday of this week.
many fans. Joan | been given expert direction and sin- celebration was the honoring of those
Crawford portraying a “heavy” for the | cere, sympathetic handling by Direc- members who are observing their 25th
| first time in her screen career, scores | tor George Cukor.
| a decided triumph
| Russell who is proving one of Holly-
| woods’ most versatile actresses, Phylis
anniversary in the priesthood this sea-
son. The celebration opened with a 10
o’clock high mass for deoeased mem-
bers of the association. Officers of the
mass were Rev. I. J. Denny, Altoona
| create her stage role in the picture, is The American Medical Association | president of the association, celebrant;
| a happy addition to the roster of Hol- | has always considered the h
and Mary Boland and | the American people above all else. president, deacon; Rev. Father Owen
Paulette Goddard garner more than a | It led the fight against “diploma mills” | Gallagher, secretary, subdeacon; Rev.
luded school
the adult
10
Lic to, on
Keynote of the
O'Donnell, vice
rathers T
the afternoon
ir
clu
ce after | “Mad
an amateur hour.
You're Sure of Refresh-
ment If You're Sure
You Ask For—
Ht
|
i
{A il i HI
HE | 1 |
For OLD MONARCH AND NEW LIFE is made with
that very idea in mind Carefully watched and checked
throughout the entire process of making, it comes to
vou in all its refreshing excellence.
best ingredients, you can be positive of its quality.
When really thirsty . . chase it quickly with a cold bot-
|
1
OLD
NARCH
LA BEA
LE ERE
LIF
Fr ny
| if
OR
EW
LL | Li
| Fl | {Hi
Li
lit
tle of OLD MONARCH or NEW LIFE BEER.
BUY OLD MONARCH OR NEW LIFE BEER—THE
BEST IN THE LAND—OUR BEER GUARANTEED
TO. PLEASE OR YOUR MONEY BACK.
BEER--A BEVERAGE OF MODERATION
Goenner &¢ Ce
it
i
UNION MADE AND DELIVERED.
JOHNSTOWN, PA,
emonies; chaplains to Most Rev. Bish-| ner. A program of athletics took
op, Richard T. Guilfoyle, Rev
William Ryan and John B
Election of officers took p
the mass. Father Philip O'Donnell ser-
AAA
Made of only the
Father Murtagh Nolan, master of cer-| ved as toastmaster at the reunion din-
up
he evening program
a one-act playlet entitled, the
Monsignor” and was followed by
Lo
New COLD-WALL Frigidaire
with the Meter-Miser!
THE WORLD'S FIRST “COLD-WALL” REFRIGERATOR! Built on an
entirely New Principle that saves food’s vital freshness from drying out
For the first time, you can now store even highly perishable foods —
and prolong their original freshness, retain their nourishing richness and
peak fresh flavor... . days longer than ever before! Come in. Convince
ourself in 5 Minutes. See how this new Frigidaire puts you years ahead
in every way—in beauty, usability, economy as well as food-preserva-
tion. Yet costs no more than ordinary “first-line” refrigerators!
full 6 Cubic Ft. size! Gives
e Simplest Refrigerating
echanism, same Metet-Miser, same one-
Mom steel construction and same Gunes)
otors 5-year Protection Plan 25) Hed
aire’s models costing up tO $10 m
Quality at a Supes-Value price:
ee —————E
Big, roomy,
you the Sam
|
CONVENIENT
TERMS
AS LOW AS
6 /, { 7)
Super- Freezer
freezes ice
and makes
BRAND NEW $ ald ber,
1939 MODEL, .
ONLY ¢ £
==
|
,
4
7 7]
NOW, FOR THE FIRST TIME
1 THE NEW “DEW -FRESH SEAL” —- A
® SOLID GLASS PARTITION — DIVIDES
THE CABINET INTO 2 COMPARTMENTS.
and
2 THE LOWER COMPARTMENT IS RE-
® FRIGERATED DIRECTLY THROUGH
THE WALLS BY CONCEALED REFRIGER-
ATING COILS.
@ This provides all 3 essentials for keeping
foods vitally fresh linger than ever before— 1.
Uniform Low Temperatures. 2. High Humid-
ity. 3. No Moisture-Robbing Air Circulation.
All without adding a single moving part!
AND ONLY FRIGIDAIRE HAS IT!
(1352
SIRT
ALSO A COMPLETE LINE OF FRIGIDAIRE AIR CONDITIONING — BEER COOLING — MILK COOLING AND HO-
TEL, RESTAURANT AND MEAT MARKET COOLING EQUIPMENT,
REVEL SOMERVILLE
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Office in Goud Bldg, Patton
CHARLSON’S STORE -....._... Barneshoro
GEORGE BROS.
HOGUE HARDWARE Cresson
SHETTIG HARDWARE Ebensburg
N. W. MOORE HARDWARE _____ Portage
ere. SOUth Fork
COMMONS’ HARDWARE _....__ Nanty-Glo
HUGHES STORE CO.
BARNES & TUCKER STORE
COMPANY
Lilly
— Barnesboro
BENDER ELECTRIC C
CARROLLTOWN
* & JOHNSTOWN
BARNES STORE CO. —._______ Bakerton
BAKERTON SUPPLY CO. ——____ Elmora
JOHN MARUSKA .._._. ________ Gallitzin
H. J. EASLY FURNITURE
STORE Hastings
—
puni
tenir
ly he
Ar
said
to st
Ge
bute
ill w
thing
stand
An
these
nitel;
der n
one, |
£4