PAGE SIX UNION PRESS.-COURIER Thursday, March 5, 1942 —- 600D NEWS CONES ON CANNED GOODS = PRICES, SUGAR BAD Two kinds of news came out of Washington over the week end for heusewives—good news on canned | fruits and vegetables and bad news on sugar. Instead of the 12 ounce weekly al-| ; Jowance, originaily contemplated for each person, under the rationing sys- | tem, each man, woman and child wiil | be permitted to buy only eight ounce Triple Wreck Near Horseshoe Curve | George and Catherine Dumm, Mrs. A. R. Hoppel, Mrs. Ann Reffner and Mrs. A. A, Lantzy, all of Spangler; Mrs. Margare: Fara- | {baugh, Detroit, and Mrs. Norman 1. Casher Cresson. VINCENT HORTEN, 44, of Westover died Sunday in Spangler Hospital, | where he had been a medical patient since February 20. The deceased was i born in Johnstown in 1897, a son of | Horten. Sur-| | viving are his widow and eight child- | | ren. RICHARD KOLOSA, nine-month-old | son of Mrs. Caroline Kolosa of Bar- | | nesboro, died Sunday morning at his | | home. He was born May 25, 1941, a| | son of Joseph and Caroline (Presloid) | 8 week. | Kolosa. His father died about six | Simultaneous with the order curtail- | months ago. Surviving in addition to ing the sugar was the announcement | | his mother are these sisters and bro- by Price Administrator Henderson | thers: Mrs. Mary Bernard, Spangler, that the OPA had established cem-| and Bernadine, Henrietta, John, Ches. porary wholesale price ceilings for 25) 5 ter, Walter, Stanley and Joseph Kolo- varieties of canned fruits and vege- | sa, all at home, and Frank Roloss, | ee tables. { Erie. Funeral services were conducted | | i i ili | at 2 o'clock Tuesday afternoon in St. Sixty day price ceilings over ten| ; : i 5 Stanislaus’ Catholich Church, Barnes- 1 g d vegeta- , eanned fruits and 15 canned veg i oy ] bles apply only to canners and whole- | : #tders, but Henderson's order warn-| Ee f ed retailers that there is no justifi-| BARNESBORO MINER TAKES i cation for higher prices in the stores OWN LIFE SATURDAY NIGHT and that anything more than the] IN CELL OF TOWN'S LOCKUP 3 slightest advance to cover replace- | Towx | ent Costs will-1nesn a Prompt 4 Shown here are two of three Pennsylvania Railroad company loco- Lodged in Barnesboro jail Saturday |{ : ¥ension of the order lo retailers. | motives which were derailed in a spectacular wreck near the famous | night on a charge of surety of the The ‘freeze’ order on canners and | pore chioe curve at Altoona, Penn. Two coupled engines which were | peace, Joseph Kayden, 47, of Barnes- {| Wholesalers became effective Monday. traveling down the mountain sideswiped an engine pulling a freight train | boro, committed suicide by hanging | The canned fruits involved are ap-| i, the same direction. All three engines were derailed, and the locomo- | himself in his cell. - ples, applesauce, on chsevies tive which was pulling the freight rolled down the embankment. The body of Kayden was found at) 1 fruit cocktail, fruit salad, peaches, about 11 p. m., less than an hour after pears, pineapples and plums. i er _—T yo Ine wns committed to the jail. The) our urcC b The order on canned vegetables co- meni was made in St. Benedict's cem- borough policeman found the body on | » 1t p | vers asparagus, dry beans, lima beans etery at Carrolltown. [his regular check of the jail. smap beans, beets, carrots, corn, peas, | | -— | Coroner McDermott said Kayden |f| pumpkins, sauer kraut, spinach, to-} NORTH OF COUNTY | PATRICK J. MULLIGAN. A solemn | fashioned his shirt into a small noose |§| ee S ou matoes, sweet potatoes, tomato cat-] | high mass of requiem for Patrick |gnq placed it around his neck. The |}! sup and tomato juice. i ne J. Mulligan, 75, one of the county’s| other end of the heavy work shirt |} A EE ! rg : most prominent farmers, was cele-|was tied to the top of the cell. The |f| ~—Buy Defense Bonds and Stamps! MATTHEW WEAKLAND.—Aged 87 brated at 10 o'clock Monday morning | man then leaped from the bunk. He |f| ; . . . : Sa : 2 ee years, former Carrolitown Hotel in St. Augustine's Catholic Churlh,| was dead about an hour when the | What is the Church? It is the friends of Jesus organized tor | proprietor, died last Wednesday af-| with interment in the church ceme- body was found. I! the purpose of life and worship and work. This company of xc | ternoon at the home of his daughter, tery. Mr. Mulligan died Thursday at | Police said Kayden was reported to | the friends of Jesus Jay be locker al from Mires Viewing Mrs. Harry Miller in Barnesboro. He | his home near St. Augustine. He Vas ve drinks Satied ieht 11 every viewpoint flashes a fresh light upon the privilege and duty | have been drinking Saturday night { : PENNSYLVANIA { had resided in Barnesboro for the last | born August 5, 1866, a son of James and was arrested after creating a dis- | J | of church membership. |. | ~ i : x So | | five years. A native of Susquehanna and Catherine Mulligan. Surviving | i : He hid b | er £2 Bs es i payee ay 5s we EDISON COMPANY | Township, he was born January 17th, | are his widow, Mrs. Ellen (Storm) | Sirvanee Se fo ro | ; The Chu h is an ARMY z very Chpigtien is a Soldi r. Jesus [1855, a son of Charles and Julia, Mulligan, and six children: Mary and Patios 12 ine . Christ is a Soldier Jesus Oly is he Supreme wommende: as | (Byrne) Weakland. He resided in| Viola Mulligan, both at home; Mrs. | Lo To : | army 1s engaged in a mighty war. The campaign is long and i to Preferred Shareholders | Bye) for approximately fifty Alice Poin and Mrs. Freda Deloz- | Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Mich- is perilous, and every soldier is needed. In time of war a man who i d | years. For some years Mr. Weakland | ier, both of St. Augustine; Patrick |2elena Kayden, and ‘these children— 1 claims to be a soldier but who rejects the uniform, dislikes the to AL 8 meeting of We Boa i D i- | Irene, Daniel, Valentine, Delores, and | flag, and refuses to Keep in step with his comrades as unitedly of Directors held Thursday | drove a hack from Carrolltown to Eb- Mulligan, at home, and Pollard Mulli- | i io Son ol ot I “ih £, ) p I lis a ¢ tedly February 19, 1942, the regu- |ensburg. He was in the lumber busi- | gan, Carrollitown. He was a brother | Henry and Yrancls Joan, si at ome. 111 they march to the field of blood is a man with a bewildered brain B: lar quarterly dividend of $1.25 I ness for a time and later erected and | of William Mulligan, Chest Springs; | He was a brother of Jack Hayden, and a defective heart. He may lay claim to patriotic sentiments, per share was declared on | operated the old Union Holtel in Car- | James Mulligan, Patton; Gust Mulli- | Barnestoro; Anthony Rayaen, Bu and fire a shot now and then as a bushwacker or a sniper, but it the $5.00 Series Cumulative | rolltown, which in more recent years gan, Dormont; Larry Mulligan, Pat-|City, Mich.; Mrs. Stella Covak, ar- | is not by men like that that military victories are won. Nations t y £ | nesb and Stanley Kayden, Mrs. | Preferred Stock, and the | became the Fairview Hotel. His wife, ton R. D., and Mrs. Elizabeth Mur- | 768 Ope. 28 Bi an yy ey ! os “1 are saved by soldiers who put on the uniform, and march under the regular quarterly dividend | Mrs. Susan (Campbell) Weakland, | phy, Cresson. osephine Benden and Mrs. Magdeline |} flag in obedience to officers who receive orders from one supreme £ t hare was de- | | > McCloskey, all of Patton | I en > Te 5 $2.80 Series | died in 1907. Surviving are five chil- rs Fy yy ! commander. Christians outside the church are not good soldiers. ro e a A an Stock {dren—Mrs. John Carr, Pittsburgh; ALBERT P. WYLAND, 59, a former | Yr C . They are slackers. They retard Christ's victory over falsehood Dividends will be paid on | Mrs. Harry Miller, Barnesboro; Mrs. | burgess of Spangler, was killed on Tunnelhill Man Fatal Victim and wrong. | both classes of stock, April William McLaughlin, Patton; Alvin | Sunday night in Detroit, when he was | of Hit-Run Driver Saturday | 1, 1942, to Stockholders of | We akland, Rossiter, and Norbert struck by an automobile as he was| ee | The Church is a BROTHERHOOD, a band of comrades gath- record at the close of busi- Weakland, Carolltown. There are 31 | crossing the street. Before going to| The body of Francis P. Grimes, 35, ered around the big Brother of all men Jesus Christ. Brother- ness on March 10, 1942. | grandchildren and six great-grand- | Detroit 15 years ago he operated a|of Tunnelhill, was discovered early | liness is of the essence of the Christian life, and true brotherliness ro | children. Mr. Weakland was a brother | furniture and undertaking establish- | Sunday morning on the Sugar Run finds expression in fellowship. A brother instinctively desires and = PENNSYLVANIA |of Mrs. Agnes Rager, Hastings; Wil- iment in Spangler. Funeral services| Roard, near Gallitzin, by a woman | obtains the companionship of his brethern. Christians are brothers. ron liam Weakland, Franklin; Mark We- are to be held Thursday morning in| autoist when her car ran over an ob- They come naturally together. It is when they are together that EDISON COMPANY akland, Marsteller, and Oscar Weak- ' St. Patrick’s Catholic Church, Spang- ject on the road. life mounts to its richest and highest expression. Christians who E. 5. Werner, President Jand, Altoona. He was a member of ler, with interment in St. Benedict's Investigating after her automobile persist in staying outside the Church are not normal ITOVNSTS, The as ! = St. Edward's Church, Barnesboro, Cemetery, Carrolltown. Surviving are passed over a ‘large object” lying in spirit of brotherliness in them is not abundant M. A. Miller, Treasurer. where a requiem high mass was cel- his widow, Mrs. Nellie Wyland, and | {;je middle of the road, Miss Mabel V. . ebrated on Saturday morning by the | seven children, all residing in Detroit. | | eet discovered the body of the man, ; Fhe Church is a CORPORATION organized for the purpose Rev. Father Michael Brett. Inter- He was a brother of Mrs. Mary apparently the victim of a hit-run of doing business. It does business on all the continents and on all driver. the islands. It deals with all races and all nations. Its business is ee — ny | The woman motorist told police of- the biggest business on the planet. Without a clossal corporation ficers that she was unaware of any this business cannot be transacted. The modern business world object on the road until she felt the demands corporations. Without them the world’s commerce would Jar of her car passing over it. She break down. The business of God is too vast to be carried out by Fvoved oe man’s body to the Mercy individuals, each one working by himself. In order to become ; 5 Hospital, toona, where an examina- effective, Christian intelligence and conscience must be vooled. I Make Fr ery Pay Day tion revealed the man died of a frac- is only by group strength that present-day problems can a lly | ture of the skull and internal injuries. Christians who are not members of the Church are not good 6 29 STAT oS PART IN PRESENT Disitesy hen, Fury Ite tot aon their Father's business in the WORLD WAR TO BE RECOR- % a ng mer. For s busine ss is extending the sway of i DED AS IT PROGRESSES ove over all the kingdoms of human life. A work so difficult and : 1! 0 so extensive becomes feasible only through the massing of great 1 HIND THE Harisburg.—Pennsylvania's part in mutiny of Christians into a corporation whose power can be | GE BE the Second World War s being recor- felt around the world. | VOLUNTARY PAY-ROLL ged hy Jostonty 98 8 da) So day ha The Church is a SCHOOL the greatest school on earth. It is Sion the school established by the world’s supreme teachers—Jesus. | Everything from war legislation to The school exists for the purpose of expounding and applying the . SAVINGS PLAN. a | service and combat records of Penn- principles of Jesus. Its teachers all hold up his ideals. It is a | = | sylvania regiments and soldiers will school which teaches the character and will of God as revealed in er | be classified and filed by historians Jesus Christ, His Son, the immeasurable value of the personality | je N N 9 and an expert archivist. | of the one man, the joy of forgiveness, and the certainty of the Tm L Or ® The historians will follow the com- | endless life. Such a school deserves the support of everyone wha { monwealth’s war record with the aid | wishes humanity well. Christians who are not members of the Navy must have to win. are urgently needed. take the matter up in your Brotherhoods. ployer to act as an agent in account. and delivers the Bond to the future at the same time. tary Pay-Roll Savings Plan And much of this money must come from the regular, week-by-week, pay day by pay day, investment of the American workers in U. S. Defense Bonds. i Your cooperation and the cooperation of your union in | backing up our Government’s Pay-Roll Savings Program If you are not already participating in this voluntary plan, is fully endorsed by A. F. of L., C. I. O., and the Railroad And if your company hasn’t yet put such a plan into effect in your plant, go to the management and suggest that it join with your union in installing one. The Pay-Roll Savings Plan provides, simply, for the em- by holding employees’ voluntary allotments in a special As each employee’ cient amount to purchase a Bond, the employer purchases it Help save your country’s future by saving for your own wgms: Get your union behind the Yolun- today, or write Treasury Department, Labor Section P., o 709 Twelfth Street NW., Washington, D. C. union immediately. The Plan the purchase of Defense Bonds s savings accumulate to a suffi- employee. now. Mail the coupon below | | of a series of twenty-six dramatiza- | | minute programs will |of an { drive,” which he said would be sup- of Heaton Shoemaker. Glen Mills, who was for 25 years in charge: of | the “morgue” or reference library of | the now defunct Philadelphia Ledger, | who according to Commission Direc- | | tor Donald A. Cadzow, was hired spe- | cifically for the job. | “We hope to keep sufficiently close to the war so that we can go to press not long after it ends,’ Cadzow said. | not long after it ends,” Cadzow said. | tary of Governor Arthur H. James, | did early work in keeping the record, Cadzow said. Recently the task was turned over to the Commission by the | State Council of Defense, for which | the commission also is doing consider- | able morale work. Virtually all the state's radio sta- | tions this week are carrying the first | tions retelling important incidents in | Pennsylvania’s history. First is a | story of William Penn. Other fifteen | concern the Battles of Lake Erie, Brandywine and Gettysburg. Cadzow described the series as part “intensive morale building Church are truants. Their teacher is Christ, and their place is in Charist’s school. The Church is a FAMILY a society of brothers and sisters whose highest privilege is mutual helpfulness. A good name for it is “The Household of Faith.” The head of the family is God. The family has its traditions, customs, memories, anniversaries, its plans and joys and hopes. Christians who are not confessed members of this family are not acting the part of considerate bro- thers and sisters. They are wanderers. They should come home. They should take their place at the family table. They should do their share of the household work. They should participate in the family celebrations. They should do what they can to make the Church the fitting figure and symbol of ‘“‘the city of the living God, the general assembly and Church of the first born who are enrolled in heaven.” The Church is unconquerable and dealthless and it is the medium of revelation. Through it is made manifest to men and angels the manifold wisdom of God. Charles E. Jefferson You Go To Your Church . .. Pll Go To Mine ... Let's Walk Along Together” (This is the third of a series of advertisements sponsored by this Newspaper in conjunction with the ‘America Goes to Church’ Com- mittee’ of Northern Cambria Co., Catholics, Protestants and Jews) | plemented by issuance of pamphlets | | on historic occasions. Two concerning | Washington and Lincoln, were issued | within the last three weeks. Vor re : = T — » { — |answered. The greater portion of the is believed the government may step { THERE ARE PLENTY OF NEW cars were received by the dealers be- into the picture and purchase man | CARS IN CAMBRIA JUST NOW, [fore January 15th. These cars may {of these machines ” y | BUT JUST TRY TO GET ONE |be disposed of soon, providing the | ’ ree commodity rationing boards certify | Meantime, the cars are still under Stored in buildings at the Ebens- [that the intended purchasers are eli- |guard at the Fair Grounds. They are | burg Fair Grounds are 150 new au-|gible to buy them under the regula- stored in the Steel Building, Arena, | tomiiics, placed in storage by auto [tions of the board. {and Old Heidelberg. Many of them | dealers of Cambria, Blair, Somerset, Cars which were manufactured on |are on Jacks, while others have ex- | Centre and Jefferson county. or after January 15th present a dif-| cess air pressure in their tires so they | When will they be sold? To whom [ferent question. Under government | wil] not be on the rims. will they be sold? These are ques-|regulations these cars cannot be sold ! tions the dealers are anxious to havebefore January 15, 1943. However, it | Get YouriShare of U. S. Defense NDS - STAMPS This is a comiributioniito}Victcry Bose la conte r assees sunstpaeEese sens Address oe esses census ssaenes® suse Buy Defense Bonds and Stamps?
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers