Thursday, April 22nd, 1943, Mrs. Josepn Steve, of Detroit, Mich, is spending some time with her par- ents here. Mr, and Mrs. Fred Hoover ann- ounce the birth of a daughter, Nancy Gertrude, on Thursday, April 15. Pvt. Fred Hoover is stationed with the U. | S. Army at Fort Bragg, N. C. Mrs. Hoover was the former Miss Mar- garet Luther of Loretto, | Mr. and Mrs, Vernon Litzinger an- nouce the birth of a son on April 15. Mr. and Mrs. William Blatt, of Mt. Lebanon, Pittsburgh, visited friends in Patton on Sunday. Pvt. Joseph Sottile of Camp Meade, Md., spent the week-end with his par- ents. ! | | | | | Timothy B. O'Leary of the Marine Barracks, Iona Island, N. Y., spent |the week-end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs, Joseph O'Leary. Mr. and Mrs, James Leon announce [the birth of a son on Thursday, April 15th. The Ladies Auxiliary of the Ameri- can Legion will hold a card party in the Community Hall on Monday, Ap- ril 26th at 8 P. M. A lunch will be served. Staff Sergeant Lewis P. Smale, with the U. 8S. Air Forces at Bolling Field, Washington, D. C,, is spending a few days with his parents on West Magee Ave. Sgt. Andrew Senita Jr. a son of Andrew Senita, Sr. of S. Third Ave., graduated from Officers’ Candidate School, Miami Beach, Fla., last week. He hasattained the rank of Second Lieutenant, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Callahan recei- This is How to Economize NOW... Invest in this one fine suit that does the work of three! i AE t Jy N=) — UNION PRESS-COURIER. ved word last week that their son Pfc, John Earl Callahan, has arrived safely in Panama, Pfc. Callahan was inducted into the Army on October 8, 1942 and received his basic train- ing at Fort l.eonard Wood, Missouri. He was then sent to St, Louis, Mo., where he attended a motor mechan- ics School. 43 Students Receive A Reports A total of 43 students of the Pat- ton High School have received A re- ports for this six weeks period of the school term, Sixteen seniors: Geral- dine Little, Marnetta Kutruff. Rober- ta Noel, Dorothy Wery, Augusta Le- grand, Pauline Weakland, Leona Karlheim, William Weakland, Mary Jane Saltsgiver, Grace Bearer, Helen Overberger, Frances Kielbowick, Mel- vin Fregly, Sally Davis, Verna Shee- han and Dugan Zern. Nine Juniors: Dorothy Sheehan, Eleanor Long, Mary Ryan, Viola Link, Barbara Bloom, Rene Beunier, Leo Lesnak, John Cooper, Anthony Bender. Nine Sophomores: Mairian Weak- land, Camilla Kuhnley, Shirley Doug- lass, Mildred Christoff, Grace Leary, Florence Warner, Rose Bearer and Genevieve Buck. Nine Freshmen: Margaret Gresko Grace Falatic, Peggy Pettorini, Ed- ward Solomon, Theresa Maykovich, Virginia Thomas, Laverne Warner, Cecelia Skrodinsky, Helen Marie Weise. Trinity Methodist Church Patton, Pa, Thursday, April 12, 7:30 P. M, Can- dle Light Communion Service. Friday, April 23, 7:30 P. M., Good Friday Services. Easter Sunday —- Sunrise Service at 6:30 A. M, The Methodist Youth will be in charge. 9:45 A. M. “The Church at Study, “Theme: The Ri- sen Lord.” 10:30 A. M., “The Church at Worship.” Theme: “Triumph Over Death.” Reception of new members. 6:30 P. M., Methodist Youth Fellow- ship. 7:30 P. M., Evening Service, “The Easter Story in Word and Song.” Wednesday, April 28, 7:30 P. M., Mid-week Service. Garden Study Club by Alice The April meeting of the Garden : when the members will be able to see Study Club will be held on April 27 | the proper arrangements of flowers shown by Mr. Hugo Erdmann of Johnstown. Flowers being the in- spiration of Victory all members should show plenty of color to their Victory Gardens this year by plant- ing flowers. Arrangement of flowers can be had there as well as on your table. Dig for Victory with flowers and vegetables. REGENT DEATHS From “The Store of SAFE Diamond Buying” HAND PICKED Specrib. Selected for QUALITY Selected for VALUE Selected for BEAUTY Special value in this lovel 14K ensemble. Each ring with brilliant diamond. Both far only... 49° Save on this charming 14K gold ring with brilliant genuine diamond. Splendid new engagement ring in modern design, 14K gold. Quality! Brilliant bridal duo in tailored style with fine diamond. 9 6% 1 Robert Bolsinger Robert J. Bolsinger, 64, widely- known Ebensburg plumber and civic leader, collapsed and died at 7:50 o'clock on Monday night, a few min- utes after arriving at the Twin Rocks School to do some work. Mr. Bolsinger was conversing with | Raymond Braaley, the school janitor, when he siumped to the floor dead. Dr. W. A. Prideaux of Twin Rocks was summoned and said death result- ed from a heart attack. | One of Ebensburg’s best-known { residents, Mr. Bolsinger had been en- gaged in the plumbing business for | 45 years. He was planning to work | on Monday night at the school be- | cause the job could not be done when | the children were attending classes. He had been in the building only a | few minutes when he was stricken | fatally, Coroner Patrick McDermott | was informed. | A native and life-long resident of { Ebensburg, Mr. Bolsinger was born | Oct. 11, 1878, a son of Jesse and | Irene (McCormick) Bolsinger. An ac- | tive member of Ebensburg Presbyter- | ian Church for many years, Mr. Bol- | singer had served as a member of the board of trustees of the congregation. He also served for several terms as a member of Ebensburg Boro Council. He was a member of the Ebensburg See Our Grand Selection of Hamilton, Gruen, Elgin, Bulova Watches LOUIS LUXENBERG Est. 1903 Phone 184 Frank Capp. | PVT. JOHN J. YANUTA OF Marsteller, died Jost Wednesday ar.| COLVER SUFFERS FRAC. a er, as = orado, he said. He was inducted in i ternoon in the Miners’ Hospital at | TURED LEG IN MINING the Army on Mar. 19, 1941. : Spangler, where he had been a pati- — S pr ag past thirteen months. He| Pvt. John J." Yanuta of Colver, a| The man suffered a broken leg on {was a son of Andrew and Marie member of the U. S. Army Reserve, Feb. 9 when he was caught between | (Chovela) Capp and was born in| has returned home to recuperate from |@ mine motor and a tad door. He | Marsteller on November 17th, 1910. injuries sustained while working in a returned home for a six-week furs two | molybdenum mine in Climax, Colo. lough after spending nine weeks in a | brothers and sisters—Sister M. Max- The soldier, who had been in the hospital, : $neia, St. Mary's Academy, Buffalo,|U. S. Army nearly 14 months, was He expects to return to the Climax N. Y.; Michael Capp, with the U. S. released in November to take a vital | Mining operations at the expiration Army in California; Mrs. Agnes! job as a miner in the Colorado opera- | ©f his furlough. | Smego, Marsteller, and John Capp, | tions, The mining of molybdenum is! years for the Ebensburg Coal Co., |at home. Funeral services were con-| considered as a vital war industry | Colver, before entering the service. | ducted on Saturday morning in the | because the alloy is needed badly for Pvt. Yanuta has two brothers in | Marsteller Catholic Church, and in-| war materials. | the - service—-Staff Sergeant George | terment was in St. John’s cemetery| Upon consenting to enter the mines! Yanuta, located at a camp in South | at Barnesboro. | Pvt. Yanuta was placed in the U. S. Dakota and Sgt. Charles Yanuta, sta« | Army Reserve. He is an experienced | tioned at Ft. Sheridan, Ill, and whe | coal miner, having worked for seven | is now home on furlough. Barnesboro, Pa. | Because of his coal mining experience he was offered the mining job in Cole | Surviving are his parents and Miss Jane Noon do extra work—and you can make your aa suits do extra work, too . . . by choos- : ing a lustrous deep-sheened Clipper Craft Gabardine. It’s comfortable in any weather— smart for every occasion. You can use the jacket as a sport coat, the trousers as slacks. And—it’s easy to afford, because you get the savings created when we combine our purchasing power with 673 stores coast to coast, under the great Clipper Craft Plan. Council of Defense. Mr. Bolsinger,| Miss Jane Noon, 80, died on Mon-| = rr who was an active member of the |day afternoon at her home in Ebens- | Ebensburg Dauntless Fire Company burg after an extended illness. A dau- | Women for War Work for many years, had served as presi- | 8hter of Michael and Ellen (Noon) | (18-35—Married or Single—No Experience Necessary) dent of the organization for the last Noon, she was born in East Taylor | 16 years. Twp. on Oct. 25, 1862. Surviving is a | Surviving are his widow, the for- brother, C. J. Noon, Ebensburg. { mer Mary Grace Blair, whom he mar- Funeral services were conducted | ried Jan. 20, 1920; two brothers, | at 9 o'clock on Wednesday morning | Harry Bolsinger, Mt. Vernon, N. Y.,|in the Holy Name Catholic Church, | and Milton Bolsinger, Johnstown, and | Ebensburg. Interment was Choose your Clipper Craft Gabardine from popular JI in St.| i X the in. Ty 3 a sister, Mrs. Sarah Jones, Baltimore, | Michael's Catholic Church Cemetery, | FROM single and double breasted models, in True Blue, , S, ly rch Sandune and Malacca Brown Md. He was preceded in death by Loretto, under the direction of the =a es hs doh three brothers, Edward, Walter and, Stevens Funeral Home. | PATTON AND VICINITY Raymond Bolsinger. | | - Francis M, Dumm, BY Jay Beattie Francis M. Dumm, 72, a retired | Jay Beattie, 12-year-old son of Ed- employe of the Pennsylvania Railroad | ward W. and Helen (Campbell) Bea-| died at 6:45 o'clock last Saturday | ttie, died on Monday afternoon at the i morning at the home of his brother, | Sylvania Electric Products, Inc. ALTOONA PLANT parental home in Ebensburg, after an |G. H. Dumm, of East Carroll town- | FOR illness of acute lymphatic leukemia, | ship. A son of Daniel and Ella| He was taken ill last November and | (Short) Dumm, he was born on Sep- | : . " had been a patient in Mercy Hoapi- | tember 7, 1870, in East Carroll town- Second Shift - 4:00 to 12:30 P. M. tal in Johnstown on four different oc- | ship. Mr. Dumm was unmarried. Sur- REGISTER AT WU . £ casions and had submitted to seven | viving are two sisters and three bro- | blood transfusions. Surviving are his | thers: Mrs, W. B. Bender, Pittsburgh, | parents and a brother and two sis- | Mrs. S. I. Milier, Carrolltown; G. H.| ters—Pvt. Edwin T. Beattie, station-| Dumm, mentioned above; D. G.| ed at Miami Beach, Fla.; Miss Ruth |Dumm, Washington, D. C., and Earl L. Beattie, Harrisburg, and Carol Dumm, Ebensburg. June Beattie, at home. He was a tad Funeral services were conducted at | PATTON FIRE HALL Friday, April 23, 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. — LIGHT CLEAN SMALL ASSEMBLY WORK LUXENBERG MENS’ and BOYS’ SHOP BARNESBORO dent in the seventh grade of the Holy | Name Parochial School. | Funeral services were conducted at| 10 o'clock Wednesday morning in the nine o'clock on Tuesday morning in | ths Yr os St. Benedict's Catholic church, Carr- | — MUSIC WHILE YOU WORK olltown, of which the deceased was a | RE I NT 2 i ’ ; XAT | — 15 GIRLS FROM PATTON NOW W ORKING member. Rev. Father Thomas Wolf, | AT SYLVANIA’S ALTOONA PLANT O. 8. B,, rector, was celebrant of the Holy Name Catholic Church, the re-! in quiem high mass was sung by the | requiem mass, interment being school choir. Interment was in the the church cemetery. church cemetery under the direction V. of the Rosensteel Funeral Home. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers