Thursday, January 8, 1942, UNION PRESS-COURIER PAGE FIVE —— = A a— Privates John Morgan and Delosse | on the Patton floor. It was the first ——— Elms, of Fort Lee, Va. spent Xmas | contest of the season for Patton and in PAT TON BRIEFS with their parents here. was a Northern Cambria League |f| Misses Marie and Lillian Marvin | game. a Ae - of Altoona, and Private Boyd Marvin WANTED TO BUY-—Used medium | oo o £M d of Belvoir, Va., were Christmas vis- | size or large size hot water radiator. | Emery A. Dietrick, son of Mr. and | = 0" Fi their parents, | Must be in good condition, reasona- Mrs. Matthias Dietrick of 118 Mellon | = Hs : | bly priced. Inquire at Press-Courier : Mr. and Mrs. William Marvin of Her | . Avenue, Patton, has arrived at Good- | rian, avemre office. fellow Field,, Texas, from the Pine | beable Mr. and Mrs. Albert Mitchell and n , ab Hel 1 fense Fund. y y Bluff, Ark, School of Aviation, elp tue Civilian De ON Ee Frederick Mitchell, all of Lewistown, : .. |Buy a ticket to the Dance at Eagles . , Y @& where he took primary flight train- |p 5. © Friday night. spent Christmas with Mrs. Fred Mit- ing. From here he will go on to ad- Mr. and Mrs. Norman Swisher of | ¢heil of Patton. vanced training in larger, more pow- Herriman avenue, announce the mar- Word has been received here that || é erful ships and pesos & flying sec- riage of their daughter, Louisa, to |Lewis P. Smale of Washington, D. C., | ond Ncutensut. Pelox kh Seong = Corporal Robert Gers, on August 13, | has enlisted in the U. S. Air Service aviation cadet Dietrick he € TANK | 1641, at Hagerstown, Md. Corporal |and is stationed at Boiling Field, D. C. || of sergeant. Gers is with the U. 8S. Air Corps and | Don’t forget to attend the Civilian Edward J. Burkey was elected pres- | js stationed at Langley Field, Va. He | Defense Dance in the Eagles’ Ball ® ident of th ation. Volunteer ire 13 son of Me snd. is. Phi | oun on Friday nights oor © rade-In and Odd-Piece Company at the annual reorganiza-|Gers of Lewistown, Pa. Patton Branch of the I. C. B. U. |} tion meeting. He succeeds August M.| Holiday guests at the home of Mrs. | will hold its installation of officers || a» - Quevy, Jr. Other officers are William | pyiza Lee, Lang jag he were Mr. and | al a meeting to be held in the Com- [| Merchandise Priced for J. Leary, vice president; Elmer Crow- | Mrs, Jess Wilkinson and son, of Eh- | munity Building next Tuesday even- |]! ell, secretary, reelected; Theodore! enfeld. ing at 7:30. A social hour will follow - ¢ Ott, treasurer; James Blake, chief;| Mr, and Mrs. Paul Schwab of this |the business meeting and the mem- uie a e: William Burkey, foreman; Gerald |place announce the birth of a daugh- | bership is requested to attend. Gooderham, assistant foreman; H. J. |ter in Miners Hospital January 5. Mr. and Mrs. Al Selkow and son, Mulligan, chief engineer; William Misses Iva, Maggie and Betty { Murray, returned last Friday from [j! " Burkey, trustee for three years, and | Swisher, and Mrs. Robert Gers of | Philadelphia, where they visited am- | 1 r . s t . 2 9 5 0 Milton Stoltz, trustee for one year. |Lewistown, spent Christmas week at |ong relatives and friends over the |{| G unow Refri er d - $ Members of Patton Aerie No. 1244, | the home 'of Mr. and Mrs. Norman | holidays. geratlor, trade-in . Fraternal Order of Eagles, have vot- | Swisher of this place. Mrs. Stella Little of Chest Springs G . ° ed to purchase an additional $1,480 Private George Tinick of Fort Dix, has retired as Postmistress, having |{| 1 runow Ref rigerator 9 trade-in $15.00 worth of defense bonds to bring the | n; J., spent the Christmas holiday served for the past 261% years. Mrs. |} a total bought during 1941 to $12,340. | 4) ‘his mother, Mrs. Mary Tinnick. | Little received her appointment under ||| d : R $ d ° 5 More than 100 children attended the ie di righing NE O’Brien, | Postmaster General Robert S. Burl- | 1 Frigi aire efrigerator, tra e-ln 2 00 aerie’s annual Christmas treat held and brother, Leo, of Binghampton N. son, and served until December 31. i 3 . in the aerie home. Y spent Christmas with their mo- | She has been succeeded by Mrs. Ophe- | § | WwW h d $ $ 5 $ Mr. and Mrs. Charles Westrick an- |; P , - [lia C. McCoy, also of Chest Springs. |§| as ers, tra e-1ns, 19.00, 1 00, 10.00 ther, Mrs. Mary O'Brien of Ross ave gs. [1] nounce the birth of a daughter in the |... Mr. and Mrs. Paul Tinnick of |}| . ¢“ o . Miners Hospital, January 2. Miss Leona Feigh is recuperating | Palmer Avenue proudly announce the | l Three-Piece Living Room Suite $100.00 Holiday guests at the home of Mr. lat the home of her parents after un- | Pirth of twin sons on December 29. | 200 0 Vv ’ and Mrs. C. L. Cochrane of Lang ave- | dergoing a major operation at the | Frank Dietrick, stationed with the |} . 0 alue, A Real Buy! nue were: Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Yeske | Spangler hospital. bs Army i Mj esisinoh 2 Sheniing | . and family; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dre-| Robert Weaver, of this place, who [2 10-day furlough here w is par- C 1 s H V 1 : her and daughter, of Pittsburgh; Mr. has been a patient at the Spangler ents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Die- 1 Ircu ating eater, 90 alue $69.00 and Mrs. Jess Cochran and family, of | hospital, is improving. trick. : ; y Ebensburg; Mr. and Mrs. John Coch-| Earl J. Long, son of Mr. and Mrs. | Walter Craver, stationed with the | 1 Vanity $40 00 value $25 00 ran and family of Johnstown, and Mr. | George Long, student at Penn State | U- S. Army in Virginia, spent several ’ . * and Mrs. Ralph Dishart of Patton. |College, spent the holiday vacation gaye in his Paro Mr. and Mrs. | 1 d 1 1 39 8 9 5 0 Mr. and Mrs. Isadore Linglet of [With his parents. Aislin LTayer of Ratton, : use Coa Ran € $ value $ 656 Donnelly Avenue, announce the iss Buin Mon h N, on gdty lr. a id Anirew ex oo ge . marriage of their daughter, Isobel, to at the Pittsburgh hospital, was a hol- | FOUN , : : Ee : C bi d s Sergeant Fred Swisher, on October |iday visitor with her parents, Mr. and | en, in Miners Hospital January 3. 1 Kitchen a Inet, tra e“in $15.00 14, 1940, at Cumberland, Md. Staff Mrs. Geo. Long. Da. 2 eke, 10 Cilih Defenss | : Sergeant Swisher, who is with the U. Private John E. Maus, stationed Danes yriday evening in the Eagles 6 C B Cabinet Radios ea $3 00 8. Air Corps, is stationed at Borin- | With the U. S. Army at Camp Bark- M a . Bak { * . quen Field, Puerto Rico, and is a son | ¢ley, Texas, visited among friends in r. and Mrs. Clarence Baker an . . : ! : Patt tl nounce the birth of a daughter in the | of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Swisher of Pation recently. Miners Hospital January 2. tu 10 oucnes ea. $15.00 this place. The couple were attended | Apartment for rent—Kushner Bldg. Dr. William Ratowsky, son of Mrs by Miss Betty Swisher, sister of the| Mr. and Mrs. Clem Hartzog and Fane Ratowsky and the ate Alex) 1 D k groom, and Private Luke Davis of [children of Houston, Texas, have re- 5 towshy. well-ky Patt Yesi- es $8.00 St. Augustine, who is now serving in [turned home after spending the holi- | 5 YY 20 1S3LI0N Tost ey haw Senving I y a A Seung us, dents, and Miss Bella Ullanof of Pitts- | . - e U. S. Army a ort Jackson, S. |ds y ar’ er and mo- 3 : v a y Spgs wi oe 1 gh i oan O° | burgh were united in marriage Sun- | 1 GCG. E. Refrigerator, rebuilt $39 95 . ; ’ and Jers. : day, December 21 in the Beth Israel | s Norman Swisher, Jr., was a recent Patton High’s cage team was de- Synagogue, Pittsburgh. After the | 1 G R b ] d 69 5 visitor with Pittsburgh relatives. |feated Tuesday night, 39-27, in a re : hi ; | t | . rn ceremony a wedding dinner was ser- as an e 0 € as Apartment for rent—Kushner Bldg. | basketball game with Gallitzin played ved at the Ratowsky home there. Dr. | g ’ g . and Mrs. Ratowsky will make their | G : d * I rr ———————————————— ers | home in Pittsburgh. Dr. Ratowsky is | 1 Gasoline Range, trade-in $5.00 a graduate of Patton High School, | Penn State College and Dental School | $ DAIRY.DINE [“susamaia=s] 1 Rug, 9x12CB 10.0 FERRER - | ‘ Iq | COUNCIL REORGANIZES { 1 Ru 9x12 Used $ | Patton Borough Council reorganized { 4) ’ 15.00 PATTON, PA. |§| Monday night with the new Burgess, (}| |} | Louis Haluska, taking the oath of of- || | § | fice, Theodore Ott being elected the «> President of Council, and all present B® BP BREAKFAST LUNCHEONS DINNERS borough employes being retained. Wo i Fue nitu §& Co | New Council members are Messrs. @ | Ott, William McLaughlin and Albert “FOOD SERVED AS YOU LIKE IT" | Yahner. Other members are Messrs. Phone 278 BARNESBORO William Blatt, Harry Nehrig and | Russell Little, Under New Management: Bill and Edith Mitchell Steele | Complete minutes of the meeting | |are to be published next week. —— You are always welcome at the Dairy-Dine. . : NOTICE {duce forty Ifiiion eggs Gi year, on [properly syalunte Jappentge, Byer {must give to the children are peace, ATCH this paper for our Penny Seranade Dinners! The American Red Cross has open- the basis of pro uction igures as- | when 1€y do not show any immediate | j,ye d h : : w CH ¢ Pay . y ed a drive to secure funds to carry on |sembeld at the Chicago Mercantile effect, fears, inhibitions and hatreds | wl, : Appa at home. This Te a its work of war relief. The quota in Exchange. _|can be started which may well scar j quires rigid selt- iscipling—~jt is not the new drive is a small amount to Defense buying and sales promotion | young minds permanently. Remember | dependent upon material things. It pay for what President Roosevelt, in |cativities were prime reasons for the that Hitler's first followers were the | takes so little to make a child happy opening this drive, described as ‘“bind- higher price. Chain stores, which last warped children of the last war. And |—and a home where there is peace, ing up the wounds of the injured; |year purchased more than a third of | those who faltered and hampered and uiet. and cheerful voices and f iL sheltering, feeding and clothing the |the eggs produced in Pennsylvania, | hindered in other lands were children | 3%! Sov ial i olces BE on a \ { homeless; succoring the distressed; report consumer demand holding ra-|when the guns roared before. eis wi immunize a child ag- rebuilding broken lives and rehabili- | ther weil, aided by higher national in- | It is up to the women to guard the . : & 3 tating the victims of catastrophies of come an dmass distribution methods | mings of the children of Sung in We may be anxious, we may be nature of of war.” which reduce the spread between Pro- | not by shutting them away from the Bieid Ye oy be sad—but we can The Red Cross Roll Call has just [ducer and consumer prices. | truth but by teaching and training oop A ourSalvey 201 or shal been completed and Patton and the The favorable price situation is il- | them to see clearly and without fear. ones for whom we ATC os and surrounding communities have con- lustrated by the fact that, as an av- | The women must keep the light of sacrificing. They are the ones who tributed $352.00 which is an excellent | erage this season, ony 988 SnZeR | ceith burning. They must never be |i) rule that better world of tomore response. eggs have been require 0 buy | too occupied to scotch the first of the { i § The Patton Clay Mfg. Co. and em- (pounds of poultry ration, compared signs of subversive, schismatic prop- re ars a Bi i og x, ployes have already contributed $133 |with 7.51 dozen last year. |2ganda. They must educate themsel- future with strong, healthy bodies toward this new drive for war relief. The equivalent of more than 200,- | Ves in understanding—must keep the we must send them with strong, heal No regular canvas will be conducted | 000,000 dozen eggs in shell, frozen | children from hatred—make them un- (thy minds unscarred and unafraid in this drive but every one of us must lor powdered form has been purchased | derstand to shun evil because it is | and able to think clearly and with do his part in order that our soldiers | since the lease lend bill passed. jo not because it is against them. understanding. This is the war job of y and Sher ar lo De prope Quality campaigns, resulting in piThey mis Sse be or as > olation the women of America! er'y cared. for-=30 11 you have better grade of eggs in Pennsylvania ) on of noble ideals contributed to war relief, please leave |, brought about increased pir. | and high standards of neighborliness. | __ap advertisement in this paper your contribution, at your earliest chasing by the mass distributors. One | But the three principal gifts they | will sell that article for you. convenience, at. either the First Na-/ yap, “the A & P, bought 6,173,000 | =e oe [F757 | 77 P97 FRR Amor yn, tional Bank or with Mrs. Helen Mur- | 3... ~' Pennsylvania eggs in 1940. . = ray, Magee Ave. Patton, Pa. Production in Pennsylvania is ex- pected to exceed 177,310,000 in 1941, |§ Don Jones, Colver, Elected with Cambria county contributing | ) 9 . - Head of 4-H Ciub Unit |more than 1,390,000 of this total. e e em in Snes KiLowase renee - — | € ro Don Jones, Colver, has been elected IT’S UP TO THE WOMEN | president of Ebensburg-Colver 4-H | pala | YOU BET THERE’S SOMETHING Club. Other officers named at Friday By Ruth Taylor. We h ENLIS night's meeting in South Ebensbug’s | This is just for the women of the | ave a 0 our T0 CELEBRATE ELECTRICITY Community Hall were Dick Griffith, |, try But it is a call to arms! Ehensburg R. D, 2 iD premdent: | Our men are going out to fight— | § Evelyn Jones, Ebensburg R. D. 2, the |p ther they go into the armed for- | . iS YGUR BIGGEST BARGAIN! secretary; Ned Makin, Portage R. D., | oq into the factories busy turning |g resources for the duration treasurer; Woods Thomas, Ebensburg out the weapons for defense, or into | oo Says Reddy Kilowatt |B Dy Levy Peporisr) Nancy Hughes civilian defense work, giving whole- | [Bouir Iibenshurg, Song leader, and yeartedly of their time and energy NOW that we are at war, the production of new « 3 is. o |hes 3 . Gab 18 ar, w cars will b : ; 3 ; : i | Edgar Grito, Ebensburg R. D. 2, {nat none of us, the people of their practically eliminated. ‘It is the patriotic duty of the ror ~ Speaking from a budget standpoint, the New [gone Jadder, ; the Slabs wr | community may be unprepared or un- | every car or truck to keep it at its maximum operating efficiency to Year may not look so rosy to some of us. But | Spy SR00D has | SF fhe Slabs pro. | protected. conserve gas, oil and tires, all of which are vital to National Defense. 8 {noi here’ big | . progr: 5 | We women have work to do, too. | Nain & . from that same budget standpoint there’s one big | beef cattle, pigs, lambs and capons. | pose of us who are free enough can | Main Street Garage has the organization and facilities to keep cause for cheers and horn tooting. That’s the fact ALY bap Sy sl wing 0 Jon shoud take over many of fhe Osferss sass Jour sutomalile Sqpmeni 2 its RENN sifinioney, Our service : + 4 . . ~ ’., 9: Contac arn 8 and can work actively side by side ts ze ; > ¢ largest and best equipped in northern that electricity is still cheap. That’s one thing | the Ebensburg Courthouse. | with the men. We can be hot-house | Cambria. Our expert knowledge and experience gained through many you can count on. No robbing Peter to pay Paul I Ed | plants no longer. There is plenty we | years of successful operation is your assurance of securing the type — as far as electric service is concerned. Electric | CAMBRIA COUNTY HENS |can do, ranging all the way from of service that this emergency will require, " > : > LP FA IN NCO work in factories to part-time home is Cite agua : . er service has been a bargain for years, right now | HE FARMING INCOT TERY nso works. ; Make is your sory k e hesdqpaniens Jor the duration. Qur body, n. oy . ard y : { ol - Ci eae mink i enera aimtenance, motor rebuilding, lubrication and state inspec- p- it’s the biggest bargain you buy. |, Hens of Cambria County have con-| But there 15 one job Whic } 18 peat tion departments rank among the best, and our mechanics Fon, | tributed materially this year is as- |liarly our own and which we can do thorough knowledge of their business J Mayo a 1y | sisting farm income to the highest |no matter how tied down we are— | " iis °y | level since 1929. Estimates indicate |and no matter how Iittle money or is | that the farm gross income-in 1941 [time we have. ud | will exceed eleven billion dollars for The most serious effect of war is n - / t 8 | the first time in 12 years, two bill- [never on the generation fighting it al (ree ara Cc ie | ion higher than in 1940. but on the generation following. The 1- Heavy production, coupled with a |tension, excitement, disruption of reg- C . | favorable market, means that income (ular living falls hardest on them—for arro town | from eggs should exceed $600,000,000. | they have not had the background, | The nation’s hens are expected to pro- the bitter knowledge with which to