PAGE EIGHT Linda Jean Rounsley. Funeral services for Linda Jean Rounsley, of Barnesboro R. D. 1, were conducted on Sunday afternoon at the parental home. Interment was made ih MacDowell cemetery. The child ex_ pired early Friday in the Miners’ hos- pital, Spangler, where she became a patient the day before. Surviving are | the parents, three brothers and a sis- ter. John A. Heist. Funeral services for John A. Heist, 16, of Altoona, were held on Sunday afternoon at the Heist home in that city. Elders L. G. Gorsuch and How- ard Gregg officiated. Interment was made in Fairview cemetery, Patton. The youth died on Thursday. He was a son of Adam and Elizabeth (Lacue) Heist and was born in Pattno Janu- ary 31, 1926. In addition to his par- ents, he leaves a sister, Flora Heist, at home. Henry J. Buck Funeral services for Henry J. Buck, 85, for 16 years an East Carroll Twp. Jutice of the peace, were conducted at © a. m. Saturday in St. Benedict's Catholic Church, Carrolltown. He died at home Wednesday of a heart attack. He and the former Loretta Kaylor ob- served their 61st wedding anniversary last May 10. In addition to his wid- ow, Mr. Buck leaves six children: C. C. Buck, Council Bluffs, Ia.; Miss Ed- ith Buck, George C. Buck and Mrs. Frank Crookston, all of Johnstown; of New Brighton, and Oliver Buck of Cleveland, O. Mrs. Margaret Zimmerman. last Friday night at her home. Funer- MEN AND WOMEN WHO Work for Know the WW alue of | GOOD VISION | ictory | years. Since the death of his wife in| per with 2 fi ni i) % sv} : wl ghting load than can Wilfred Buck, at home; Herbert Buck | 1905, he had been residing with his | the planes of an enemy—from Shan- | children. In recent years he had been | op La to Tokio. {living with his son-in-law and daugh-|~ But they can’t combine all these in | ter, Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Huber, of this | any one plane. | place. | If you build a plane that c tfly Mrs. Margaret Agnes (Piercy) you build a plane that can outfly Zimmerman, 49, wife of S. H. Zim- |and Roy Gallaher, both of Bakerton; expect it to land on the space of a merman of Nanty-Glo, died suddenly Marion, wife of Rudy Huber, Patton; | poat deck. : | Mrs. Naomi Gallaher, Nanty-Glo and| If you build a plane that is so hea- al services were conducted on Mon- | Mrs. Orvetta Chapnaux, Altoona. day afternoon at the Piercy Home in | Ebensburg, and interment was in | Llyod’s cemetery. The deceased was | conducted at nine o'clock Thursday | speed from it. a daughter of John and Mary Jane morning in St. Mary's Catholic] If you build a plane that will out- { Church, Patton, and interment will be | distance all pursuers, you can't ex- | | "SOLDIER EATS A TON OF { | (Lohr) Piercy. Surviving are her hus- band, who is a shop foreman at the Heisley Mine, Nanty-Glo, and these | | Detroit; William Piercy, Youngstown, | - | Ohio; Thomas Piercy, Clearfield, and | Speed and Maneuverability Can't | irace @ Je p iercy, both at : : : : | 3tace and Georgena Plercy, both a Combine with Fortification — on Any New Type Mrs. Hedwig Pawlikowski Mrs. John Pawlikowski, 39, Barnes-| washington Are American pilots | boro, died Wednesday morning of last | peing sent into the air in combat | week in Spangler Hospital, where she | 31055 in planes that are inferior to had been a patient for 10 days. Born| the Japanses Zeros or the German in iid Shoe, site Was 2 Satighter of | Focke-Wulks ? John and Antonette Kolassa. Surviv-| a : + 143 . i The answer is a vital one to the lug in addition fo her husband are 30) American people, and it is therefore { Nn: J , “ . ian . rersy be- s, Navy at Newport, R. L; Stanley | the subject of hot controversy | of Philadelphia; Adeline, Blair, The- | | resa, Eugene, Thaddeus, Joseph, Doro- | thy and Chester Pawlikowski, all at home. She was a sister of John Kol-| | b A | assa, president of Alliance College at | discussed, it will probably be perfect- Cambridge Springs; Jacob Kolassa, [ly clear that everyone is right and, to Hastings; Mra. Mary Hajec, Corry,|duote Gilbert and Sullivan, “all is { and Mrs. Rose Nemitz, Hastings. Ser- right as right can be, vices were conducted Saturday in St.| Here are the facts: : : ! Stanislaus’ Catholic Church at Bar- | American airplane manufacturers nesboro, with interment in the church | ¢an build the fastest planes in the air. | cemetery. | They can make them climb. at Thomas 1. Gallaher. They can arm them with the very : | best of guns. Thomas Irvin Gallaher, aged 88, > . ; os one of Patton's oldest residents, died They can protect the pilot with the {on Monday morning in the Miners | 30% tre glsproo [Hospital at Spangler.of tomplicsuons) They can make them relatively fire jsuperiniced by P| resistant with self-sealing gasoline suffered in a fall at his home on Oc- | tanks. tober 19th. | . : . They can make them carry a heavy Mr. Gallaher was born October 11, | 10ad of guns, fuel and bombs. 1854, and lived in Patton for many | Chey oan hake Uiern cries. 2ar. whole truth, and public officials who are not at liberty to speak it. Surviving are these children: John | any other plane in the air you can’t A | vily fortified that it cannot be suc- The remains were removed to the | cessfully opposed by any enemy fight- Huber home. Funeral services will be |er lane, you cannot expect extreme made in St. Thomas’ cemetery, Ash-|pect that plane to “turn on a dime” ville. and dart in and out of a dogfight like —— —N a mosquito. And, all too often, if you build a FOOD IN COURSE OF YEAR super-duper plane which miraculously = combines an astounding number of The average American soldier eats | these ideal features you cannot bro- more than = ton of food in : | duce it in large numbers in blitz time a year, jt must be mulled over carefully by and of that amount only 24 pounds | hand workers. are benas, according to figures com- | The arguments as to the relative MODERN WARFARE USES| ators, and bromers: re. mend A VARIETY OF AIRPLANES tween writers who do not know the When the facts are, finally, freely | They can make them maneuverable. | | piled by the Agricultural Adjustment |importance of speed, maneuverability | Agency. The average soldier cousnm- and strength of armament, pilot pro- [ Washington, D. C. | DEMOCRACY STREAMLINING If the President and the country | want to get a full realization of how | democracy is streamlining for ac- | tion they should think back to the | summer of 1941, just one year ago, | | when, for what seemed like unend- | | ing weeks, the congress stewed over | extension of the selective service ; | act. | | Senate and house isolationists were haranguing the galleries on the inig- | uities of keeping the boys more than | one year in camp; telling the public | how the navy was already convoy- | | ing ships; revealing in advance that | Roosevelt had sent troops to Ice- | land. | Finally by the thin margin of one | vote, 203 to 202, and thanks to the sage generalship of Speaker Sam | Rayburn, the selective service act was extended. Had it not been for | that narrow victory, we should have had no army to rush to Australia, and the whole war effort would have | received a tragic set-back. | | | | | | I | | But last week, a war-geared house of representatives passed the 18-19 year draft extension act in three days; and it should be passed by the senate and signed by the Presi- dent inside the week. Politically and personally, nobody wanted the 18-19 year draft exten- sion. It was the worst time to pass it, just before elections. But con- gress is doing a much better job than most people realize for stream- lined democracy. * * * ATROCITY PICTURES A strong debate is raging among | propaganda chiefs over the question | of atrocity stories and pictures. The | government has received a lot of | such material from Allied sources, especially the Chinese and Poles, in- cluding such horrible scenes as Jap- anese attacking Chinese women, and pourinig oil. on live bodies before setting the torch to them. | Opponents of publication argue that the atrocity stories of the last war were largely invented, and when so exposed left the public dis- illusioned; thus the people might now react unfavorably and charge | the government with pulling the | i War workers! You need perfect | vision — made possible by the finest possible eyecare and eye- wear, pC 4 —_— DR. J. P. MIT = J. P. MITCHELL | BARNESBORO | has issued a list of 40 books on Rus- | | sia which will be helpful to teachers | dealing with the U. S. S. R. : wham : tection, etc., goes on and on and will | es a greater amount of milk than any continue to 2 so. It is complicated | other food—403 quarts—or well over | by the fact that the pilot, too, has | the quart a day recommended by the | limits of what he can stand without | doctors for health and nourishment. | “blacking out.” C gets 287 pounds of meat, poultry! pjjots seem to lean to the opinion | and fish, and 133 pounds of fats and |that the immediate practical rr] oils, including bacon and salt pork. |is this: We need planes—period. We | He also consumes 215 pounds of flour | need maneuverable planes. We need | and cereals; 142 pounds of leafy quick climbing plans. We need heav- | green and yellow vegetables; 142 Ibs. | ily armed planes. We need long range | of tomatoes and citrus fruits; 312 | planes. We need all sorts of planes. | pounds of other vegetables and fruit; | But above all, we need planes—in | 253 pounds of potatoes; 114 pounds of | quantity and immediately. | sugars, syrups and preserves, and 525 | - y— we moe TO THE UNKNOWN | SOLDIER: A PLEDGE “And thus this man died, leaving -_ — a *, k_ Boys’ Finger Tips ". We're Ready! with Winter Clothing, for Young America, Everywhere! For School, for Play, for Every Day, our “Value First’ Mackin- aws, Finger Tips, Snow Suits, Sweaters, Etc., will keep them warm. - Look_at These Values! poor; not Protestant, Catholic or f Boys’ Mackinaws . . ; i -: I= $8.95 to $13.50] § his death for an example of | a noble courage, and a mem- | orial of virtue, not only unto young men, but unto all this nation.” 2 Mac. VI 31. | Again on this Armistice Day, the | highest dignataries of the land will | gather at a grave in Arlington ceme- tery to pay honor to the unkonwn soldier who represents all who fell in the last World War—symbol of those who have fallen in the renewed strug- gle between tyranny and freedom. No one knows who this soldier is. He may have come from any part of the nation-—from some teeming fac- O tory town or from behind the plow. No one knows or cares who or what his ancestors were, whether he was among the humble or the favored of fortune, or by what path he sought to climb the heights to sit humbly with his God. All that is known that he gave his life for the United States of America. What he was, is not of import. It is what he did and what he has pass- ed on to us the living that is vital. Heroes are an inspiration, not a creed—an altar from which to pro- gress, not a grave by which to mourn. We truly honor our dead not by ma- king their earthly resting place a spot of beauty and of peace, but by completing the task they set out to do. We dishonor them when we leave undone the work for which they gave their lives. oO Unknown means not recognized. But the task that the Unknown Sol- dier left is recognized by all of us. Se ] He was an American—not rich, not Jew; not a German-American, a Rus- sian-American; an Italian-American; not a ‘““‘Son of the American Revolu- tion”, not an immigrant—but just a citizen of the United States—an Am- erican who loved his country and its 5. $7.00 and $8.50 § E Boys’ Snow Suits . . .1 $8.95 and §9.95%= : $1.95 to $3.50 § i Sweaters, =. .. EL ideals of freedom and equality enou- gh to offer his life that these ideals of justice and democracy might not perish. It is for us the living to carry on where he left off—to rededicate our- bes nw B, Value First Clothes ™. v4 su Wasi deE WARE f Sharbaugh & Lieb TR Smear 8 Poor : CT Barnesboro, Pa. selves to those ideals which carved this country from the wilderness, formed it into a confederation, weld- ed it into a nation, and made it and its constitution the hope and the as- piration of the oppressed multitudes | of the old world. Our pledge of the continuance of these ideals is the wre- ath of immortelles we lay on the ETE RRR enn TT ———— - Rn Briain im mand cA grave of the Unknown Soldier this Armistice Day, 1942. It is his right | and our duty. same tricks. | Other officials argue, however, | that the material is authentic, that it is not posters and rumors, but ac- | tual photographs, and the public | should know what sort of enemies we are fighting. | It is appu...uily a pal. ui the Ger- | man psychological warfare to treat | British and Americans with reason- able humaneness in order to keep us | lulled in a state of moderate war- | fare. They save their worst tricks for the conquered nations and the | Russians. i The Poles and Chinese are urging use of the material as a necessary | means of fully arousing the Ameri- can public to the menace. Elmer Davis’ Office of War Infor- mation is set to go, once the debate is settled. * ov x | DAIRY MANPOWER Fortkright Sen. Berkeley Bunker ' of Nevada had a long talk with the | President the other day on the war manpower problem, in which he em- | phasized the need of. swift action to | meet the labor shortage on dairy farms. “I'm from a farm area myself and I know what these dairy people are up against,” said Bunker. ‘“Un- less we move fast we will have a serious shortage next year. Already, many farmers are beginning to slaughter their dairy herds because they can’t get help to tend them.” The President admitted the prob- lem was serious, and assured Bunk- er that the War Manpower commis- sion was aware of it. He added, however, that he doubted any steps | the government might take to re- | lieve the farm labor shortage would | be a complete answer. | ‘““The government can’t solve this alone,” said Roosevelt. “We are going to have to depend on the farm- ers themselves for individual initia- tive. I'll give you an example of what I mean.” The President then told how a neighbor of his in New York state, owning a large dairy farm, had partly solved his labor shortage by employing students from a near-by high school to milk the cows. “Boys did the milking in the morn- ing and a group of girls from the same school took over in the after- rioons,” he said. ‘“That sounds like a good idea, Mr. President,” observed Senator Bunk- er, ‘but it isn’t exactly a new one. When 1 was a boy on a Nevada farm, I used to milk 10 cows every morning before school and 10 at night. And I had to ride eight miles to school on a bus.” * * * MERRY-GO-ROUND Congressman Ed Izac of Califor- nia, who is crusading against army and navy ‘‘cellophane commissions,” is the only sitting member of con- gress to receive the Congressional Medal of Honor in the last war. Tak- en prisoner after his ship was sunk by a U-boat, Izac four times tried to escape, once jumping from a 40- miles-an-hour train. He still bears the scars of German prison camp heatings, Thursday, November 5, 1942. BLATT BROTHERS GRAND THEATRE PATTON Friday and Saturday ROY ROGERS GEORGE “ably” HAYES yp wn ron SEE 7 (hd —ALSO— FI F AMERICA’S THE FIGHTING EPICO FIRST GUERRILLA FIGHTERS! — SESE ag is A 0 ee GORDON & HARRY — 200 MATINEE SUNDAY AT 2:30 ADDED ATTRACTION “PRIVATE SMITH U 8S A’ It’s Real Entertainment. Tuesday—BARGAIN NITE Y ADDED FEATURE TOM BROWN, MARJORIE WOODWORTH, in “NIAGARA FALLS” With ZAZU PITTS and SLIM SUMMERVILLE A Feature Length Stream-Lined Comedy to Make Your Buttons Pop. ADMISSION - - - - - JjlceTOALL Wednesday and Thursday He's got a line that can lead a Conga ... and she's holding on. -. V- TROUBLE with BILLIE BURKE « FRANK CRAVEN ALAN DINEHART « pirected by HAROLD _ SCHUSTER + Produced by ROBERT BASSLER 20+ Screen Play by Ladislas Fodor, Robert Riley Crutcher ALSO THE NEW ‘ ‘MARCH OF TIME’ “MEN IN WASHINGTON.” — Read the Classified Ads! -- tO Na Nt thc wil Ch tivel, tive futur impo tent for t filled ee]
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers