PAGE EIGHT UNION PRESS-COURIER Thursday, April 23, 1942 | SPANGLER LADIES {| ARE HOSTS TOLEGION | ~~ AUKILIARY COUNCIL School Essay Winner Announced | at Quarterly Meeting of the County Organization Is your lucky charm A WISH BONE? | | Robert Hinks, a student in the Johnstown High School, last Thurs- day was announced as the winner of the essay contest sponsored by the YOUR LUCKY 673 Bl Cambria County Council of the Am- | #i erican Legion Auxibary of the Am-| NUMBER 1S 5 erican Legion Auxilary. The an- | El nouncement was made at the regu- | | lar quarterly meeting of the Council | ! held in the American Legion Home, | | Spangler, by Mrs. Thomas A. Owens | | of Carrolltown, president of the body. | | The youth's essay will be entered in| | a state wide contest being sponsored! py the body. Guest speaker at the dinner, held | | at the Brandon hotel in conjunction | | with the meeting was William ¥. | Smith, Punxsutawney, past comman- der of the Pennsylvania Department | of the American Legion. He discuss- ed the present war and outlined the | part the Legion and its auxiliary must play in the home defense ef- fort. The Council by unanimous vote indorsed Mrs. George Beisinger of South Fork as a candidate for the office of Western Director of the auxiliary. The election will take place at the state convention next August in Pittsburgh. Mrs. Beisinger, a past president of the county council, will | IN | be a candidate to succeed Mrs. Oscar | Sutliffe of Somerset. Mrs, Sutliffe, western director, an- We unite with 673 lead- ing stores, under the Clipper Craft Plan, to create these values. CLIPPER CRAFT CLOTHES UXENBERG BARNESBORO A Timely Tip! To Persons Who Need | | * of (N ENGLAND... and | can take it!" vg He's here from “Over There”! The “How Green Was My Valley” boy...in a picture all his own! RODDY McDOWALL | ow 7wE saw sror Jane Darwell - Stanley Clements Katharine Alexander - Don Douglas Freddie Mercer + Ann Todd - Jill Esmond Directed by Harold Schuster Screen Play by lillie Hayward and George Templeton A TWENTIETH _CENTURY-FOX PICTURE Nas A Small Loan Barnesboro Budget Plan, Inc., is prepared to lend sums from $30.00 to $300.00 for home repairs, refinancing, re- duction of payments, consolidation of debts and for many other purposes. Barnesboro Budget Service is prompt, courteous and convenient . . . No embarassing questions asked of clients. Barneshoro Budget invites you to come to them with your financial problems. Complete privacy in your affairs is maintained at all times. Hours: 9 to 5:00 Daily, Except Wednesday Afternoon BARNESBORO BUDGET PLAN, INC. Telephone 467 BARNESBORO BUY DEFENSE BONDS AND STAMPS It's hilarious when the Bumsteads, your favorite film family, | barge inoneducation ...to learn new ways of making you laugh! Based upon the comic strip created by ————— Se EARLY SPRING CHECK-UP | To Be Sure Your Car is in Perfect Condition for the Long Drive Ahead News Reels TIRES Check and inflate to proper pressure Balance and align the wheels. ELECTRICAL SYSTEM Penny SINGLETON * Arthur LAKE * Larry SIMMS Janet Blair « Jonatban Hate + Danny Mummert « Adele Mara Produced by ROBERT SPARKS*A COLUMBIA PICTURE CHIC YOUNG with Selected Short Subject’s Serials Comedy | Always A Good Show At The Grand ant SERRE § 7 TT TTR Jia fy Matinee Sunday, z:sw SONGS BY DOTTY! SWING BY DORSEY! > (ERA In I BNN170 041 [44] Tuesday, Bargain Night BEWARE THIS : CITED RR Or of Death! Gestapo enemies in AT TEER EH TT for thrills! LLCS] VEIDT-AYARS Screen Play by Paul Gangelin & John Meehan, Jr Directed by Jules Dassin Produced by Irving Asher ———— P— Wednesday, Elizabeth BERGNER Randolph SCOTT @@{elNie §:1:8 . Basil RATHBONE Gale SONDERGAARD ~~ Edward CIANNELLI Charles ARNT Lee J.COBB Original Screen Play, Benjamin Glozer » Charles S. Koulman Original story collaborator, John $. Toldy Directed by EDWIN L MARIN « Produced Every day you can hear it calling on the front page of your own newspaper! A Charles K. Feldman Group Production starring Thursdav 1 iin non uae WRONGED A UNIVERSAL PICTURE by BENJAMIN GLAZER Test, focus and align headlights—Test and adjust charging { rate of generator;Clean, tighten and lubricate battery terminals— je Check water and electrolyte in battery—Check high tension wires nounced that six units in the county Clean and adjust breaker points—Set ignition timing—Clean, will receive citations for reaching adjust and test spark plugs. their membership quotas prior to the deadline. The units are Spangler, FUEL SYSTEM Pans Clean and adjust carburetor, clean screens—Blow-out fuel lines and pump. TIGHTEN Tighten all body, chassis and motor bolts. COOLING SYSTEM Reverse flush cooling system—Tighten all hose connections— Tighten fan belt tension. LUBRICATION Complete lubrication—Drain, flush and refill crankcase—Fill transmission and differential to proper level. CHECK Inspect brake lining and adjust brakes—Test the windshield wiper, insert new blades. Lilly. Keystone State Girls Camp will be dispensed with for the duration of the present emergency. She also call- ed upon every unit to contribute to Red Cross mobile unit. national presidents’ luncheon recently in Pittsburgh; Mrs. Helen Kline, the president of the Past Presidents’ Par- ley; Mrs. David Madden, Hollidays- burg, subchairman of juniors, and by Mrs. T. Leroy Bidelman, Johnstown. Beaverdale, Carolltown, Dunlo and) Mrs. Hary Piper, Altoona, western | vice president, announced that the | the state fund for the purchase of a | leports were submitted by the the | Council President, Mrs. Thomas A. | Owens, who attended the state and | NATION CONSIDERS USING OF COAL IN MAKING GASOLINE | — | But the Product Is Very Likely to Be Expensive According to Experts’ Reports Washington.—Don’t be surprised if the man at the filling station puts some gasoline made from coal instead of petroleum in the family car one of these days. It isn’t, the experts say, becausc ment—it’s a transportation problem. the country doesn’t have sufficient] quantities of petroleum for refine-| WASH AND POLISH Wash and polish the car—Vacuum clean the interior—Polish all external chromium fittings. Lubricants and Replacement Parts, if Necessary, Extra $16.00 Libor On Main Street Garage Phone 2181 Carrolltown Special Price And coal is to be found in quantity | along the East Coast, where the gas- i The Bureau of Mines has been ex- perimenting along the same line, and its experts think that the same pro- cess could well be developed in this country. They believe that coal also may be used in making of plastics. Gasoline made from coal would be more expensive, the cost of refine- ment per gallon running around six- teen cents. By the time the various taxes were paid the cost would he considerably more. Experts estimate that four or five tons of coal-—either bituminous or | anthracite—would be used to make one ton of gasoline. The primary interest of the House sub-committee is in averting a situa- tion comparable to that of the rub-| ber shortage. { TAX REDUCTION ON ESTATE OF MRS. SCHWAB AT LORETTO SOUGHT BY THE EXECUTORS property known as ‘‘Seeds,” Loretto, appraised at $3,800, should be re- duced to $2,000, and personal proper- ty consisting of livestock, farm equ- ipment and household furnishings, appraised at $25,000, should be elim- inated because it belonged to the late steel magnate himself. The petition says that “Immer- grun” was erected by Schwab ‘out of sentiment for his childhood home” and that persons of wealth who could purchase the place are not interest- ed in the property because of its lo- cation. The petition adds that the estate pays out $12,000 a year for taxes, maintenance, fire insurance and oth- er items on the properties. * ans 1s { CAMBRIA COUNTY PAYS PLENTY FOR ITS LIQUOR Cambria Countians laid $2,474,- 881.77 on the line for their liquor and wine last year to rank eighth abong the state’s 67 counties, it was announ- ced last week by the Liquor Control Board at Harrisburg. wine last year to rank eighth among whistles well wetted, to help the state shatter all records since the state liquor stores were established eight years ago. In 1941 the state's stores did a business of $107,709,018, with Philadelphia county heading the | now is producing more that a million | grun” at Loretto, appraised at $150,- | list, oline shortage threatens to become the most critical. A House sub-committee headed by Representative Jennings Randolph, (D., W. Va.), plans to explore the matter, probably opening hearings in 10 days. The first witness may be Secretary of Interior Harold L. Ickes. Gasoline now is being produced from coal by the hydrogenation pro- cess on a large scale in Germany, Ja- pan, Italy, France and Great Britain. Germany has a number of large plants and experts believe that she | tons of gasoline yearly from coal. y | Harrisburg.—Appeal from the ap- | praisement of the state for inheri- | tance tax purposes of the real estate | and personal property of the estate | of Mrs. E. Eurana Schwab, widow of Steel Magnate Charles M. Schwab | was filed in the Dauphin County | Court on Friday. | The executors and trustees, Willard | [A Mitchell and the Empire Trust Company of New York, ask that the appraisement be lowered from $185,- | 800 to $52,000 in three items. 1 | They say the property, “Immer-| OO0T YOUR OWN HORN IN (Qu AD COLUMNS 000, should be cut to $50,000; the als. ix 1 t