i"~ Thursday, June 10th, 1943 memes | White Plains, The new PATTON BRIEFS Miss Helen Grazonich ,daughter of | Mr. and Mrs. George Grazonich, of | Patton, and Pvt. John Dudurish, of | Irvona, were married at eleven o'- clock on Wednesday morning of last week in the Russian Orthodox Chur- ch in Colver. Father Olenick officia- ted. After a reception and dance the edo ort fox Camp, Roslin, 1 gens Roy Johnson. The family will H Bd "| reside in Kansas. Hened Wiih fe SY Heteis of Liars) Pvt. Frank Brown of Camp Polk, . « J Ls XT | avenue announce the birth of twin daughters at the Spangler hospital on Thursday, June 3rd. One of the high-ranking Bluejack- ets in his recruit training company, | Hary E. Deschamps, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Deschamps, this place was selected for special training and as a result is now enrolled in the sch-' ool for Fire Controlmen at the U. S.| Naval Training Station, Great Lakes, | Ill, where he will receive 16 weeks of | instruction. Patton Boy Scouts joined with the other troops of the north of the coun- | ty in a camporee at the Warner farm | near St. Lawrence last week end, and | the meeting was held in conjunction | with other districts of the Admiral | Robert E. Peary Scout Council. The | outing was featured by various out- | door activities including map making, | day after spending several days with signalling, first aid, camp craft, han- | Mrs. Ritter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. diwork and games. The scouts set up | William Whiteford of Mellon avenue. their own tents and did their cooking. About 170 boys from the up- | ied by Miss Gladys Whiteford, per end of the county were in atten-| will spend some time in Baltomire. dance. | Miss Elva Whiteford returned Seaman Second Class Gresko of Camp Peary, Virginia, spending a ten day leave with mother, Mrs. ‘Mary Gresko. the latter's parents. Charles Adams. Miss Bernardine Zern, a student | parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Zern. on Monday for Kansas, where of Beech avenue. sister in Detroit, Mich. day for Baltimore, Md., where has secured employment. Ramey, Pa., relatives here. Second Lieut. of the Army Air Andrew Senita, Jr., Corps, drew Senita. Pvt. George Bobby of Camp Lee, mother, Mrs. Catherine Bobby. Mrs. James Ritter and Billy and Beverly, returned to their | to is | several weeks with her parents. his | | Clure, Pa., spent the week end at the o of 1 . ince | The Ladies’ Auxiiiary of the Patton | home of Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Tho- | Fire Company will hold a cinch party | mas. at the Fire Hall on Tuesday evening | next, June 15th, at 8:30 o'clock. Ad- . mission 25 cents. Lunch and prizes. | relatives. The general public is cordially invit- | ed. Trinity Methodist Church. William Kane Weakland, 17, who | Friday, June 11, 1943, at 7:30 P. was graduated from the Patton High |M. The concluding session of the School, May 26th, has been accepted | Daily Vacation Bible School. A special for enrollment in the Navy -12 col- |p lege training program. Weakland, a |pils of the school. Parents and friends son of Mrs. Mary Weakland, of Pat-|are invited. Refreshments will be ser- ton, qualified for the training on the | veg. basis of examinations conducted in, Sunday, June 18, 9:45 A. M.—“The high schools throughout the nation.! church at Study”. Theme “Our Re- He was sworn into the Navy in Pitts- sponse to God’s Promises.” burgh on May 20th and expects to! 10:30 A. M.—“The Church at Wor- leave for active duty about July 1st.| ship.” This is the annual Methodist While a student in high school Weak- | Student Day. Contributions on this land was a member of Varsity bas- | day make it possible for students in ketball team for three years. He re-| Methodist colleges to receive finan- ceived the $25.00 War Bond given this | cial aid. year by the Walter McCoy Post of | the American Legion of Patton, the most outstanding Senior Boy. His | Martha Dell father, the late Marine Captain Bas-| Williams. il F. Weakland, served for six years! 7:30 P. M.—Evening Worship. during the last World War. For Sev-| per meeting of the Adult Bible Wednesday, June 16, 7:30 PM eral years Capt. Weakland served as Commanding Officer on the Island of Santo Domingo. “Bill” Weakland is| Mid-week Service followed by an employee of the Patton Drug Co.| monthly meeting of the Of Sgt. Ralph Lapenna, of Port My- Board. ers, Fla, is spending a fifteen day furlough at the home of his parents. y Pvt. Hugh Semelsberger of Camp Patton Corporal Weds. : Atterbury, Ind, spent a three day! The marriage of Miss Janet Lucille leave with his parents here recently.) Ifert, daughter of Mr .and Mrs. J. H. Fokkokok Campbell * kk kk Pfc. Angelo Laurito, of San Anto- Ifert of Barnesboro, formerly of Pat- nio, Texas, is spending a fifteen day|ton, to Cpl. Joseph Anthony Leary, furlough with his parents, Mr. and!Son of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Leary of Mrs. A. Laurito. Another son, Pvt.|Patton, took place on May 20th in Ralph Laurito, of Holloran General | the Chapel at Fort Monmouth, N. J. Hospital, N. Y., spent a three day The bride was attired in a dark blue leave at his home. dress suit with white accessories and Mrs. Ruel Burkhart, who has been | Wore a corsage of tiny red rosebuds. critically ill at the Spangler hospi- She was attended by Miss Helen Mon- tal, is much improved. tuth of Red Bank, N. J. Sgt. Andrew Mrs. Matt Dietrick has Kolbask was the groom's best man. home after spending some time The double ring ceremony was used. Philadelphia. The bride is a graduate of the Patton At a meeting of the council a few | High School, class of 1942, as well as weeks ago Harry Owens was reported from the Altoona School of Commerce as being named dog catcher in the this year. Cpl. O'Leary, who is in the borough. Mr. Owens informs us that Signal Corps, is a graduate of Pat- he was not an applicant for such job | ton High School, and has just com- and has not accepted the appoint- pleted a course in advanced teletype ment. maintenance at Fort Monmouth. Miss Eileen Owens, danghter of Mr. | Chik and Mrs. Harry Owens of Mellon ave- nue, and Miss Helen McLaughlin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Me- ! Laughlin, of Fifth avenue, will leave on Saturday for Seton Hill College, | at Greensburg, where they will take | a three-months’ pre-nursing course, after which they will enter the Pitts- burgh Hospital School of Nursing. Both young ladies were graduates of the 1943 class of Patton High School. Miss Mary Fox of White Plains, N. Y., and Fred Zern, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Zern, of Patton, were un- ited in marriage last Saturday in| | I returned in Bender-Farabaugh Nuptials. Miss Othella Bender, daughter of Mr .and Mrs. Dennis Bender of Car- rolltown, R .D., became the bride of Clyde Farabaugh, son of Englebert Farabaugh of Loretto, on Saturday, June 5th, at nine o'clock at a nuptial high mass in St. Benedict’s Church) in Carrolltown. Rev. Father Valerian |O .S. B,, assistant pastor, officiated | at the ceremony. Miss Luella Bender, | twin sister of the bride, and Joseph | Farabaugh, cousin of the bridegroom, { were attendants. The bride was attired in a white Registered U. S. Patent Office THE OLD HOME TOWN By STANLEY ITS TH SAME OLD FIVE ScL == QCK RUSH HOUR, WITHOUT TH GASOLINE FUMES, SCREECH/A” BRAKES 5 “\ AND PROFANITY HOME FRONT D RIC HTS RESERVED lyweds are now spending a few days at the home of Pvt. Ralph Adams of Camp Van | Dorn, Miss., is spending a ten day | furlough at the home of his father, nurse at the Mercy Hospital, Pitts- | burgh, spent the week end with her Mrs. Roy Johnson and children left she will join her husband, Master Ser- Ga., is spending a ten day furlough | with his mother, Mrs. Harriet Brown Mrs. Peter Furlage is visiting her Miss Aldine Feigh left last Satur- she Mr. and Mrs. John Shunkwiler of | are visiting friends and | Nashville, | Tenn, is spending a seven day fur- {lough at the home of his father, An- Va., spent a week end leave with his children, home in Baltimore, Md., on Wednes- own | On their return they were accompan- who Stephen | Baltimore last week after spending | Mrs. Thaddeus J. Thomas of Mec- | Miss Bertha Thomas is spending a | week in McClure with friends and | rogram is being arranged by the pu-| { 6:30 P. M.—Methodist Youth Fel- to | lowship. Leaders for the program are and Robert Tuesday, June 15, 6:30 P. M.—Sup- as. UNION PRESS.COURIER. PAGE FIVE | | | | | | [ | | | | | | | | | Est. 1903 Phone 184 | | | | | | LUXENBERG Barnesboro DIAMONDS for JUNE WEDDINGS Diamond bridal pair. Both for... Re ngagement ring with fine diamond. Fashionable style, ality diamond, 3.diamond ‘ens gagement ring in ~ 14K gold setting,’ $9oe AL Both for og Bridal Ensemble with 3 brilliant 4 diamondsineach | of the matched > 14K settings, 1 4 i | | | | satin gown, finger tip veil, and car- ried an arm bouquet of white lilies and baby-breaths. The bridesmaid | wore a blue chiffon gown, shoulder | length veil, and carried pink carna- tions. A wedding dinner was served | (Contined from first page.) Calvin Blair Hicks, Ebensburg. at the bride’s home. Covers were laid | Kenneth Ray Anderson, Barnesboro. : on Angelo Mondi, Jr., Barnesbord. for about fifty guests. Mr. and Mrs. | ? i toh Farabaugh will reside at Loretto, Mr. | George Henry Krumenacker,; Nick Farabaugh being employed on his fa- town. ther’s dairy farm Anthony John Basile, Barne To. ¥ ry ERE RA | Francis. Eugene Dolney, Barncgore. i : John Swab, Colver. Ranish-Long Wedding. | Richard Gerard Connell, Carr Preceding a nuptial high mass at nine o'clock on Thursday morning of | Leopold Robert Blum, Barnesboro. : | David Michael Pellas, Spangler, this week, in St. Augustine’s Catho- lic Church at St. Augustine, the Rev. | Judah, Kovich, Ebensburg. Albert Lloyd Mills, Barnesboro. Father O'Toole, pastor, pronounced | pay] Ross Shankle, Cherrytrec. the words uniting in mariage: Lieu- Angelo Larri Certo, Barnesboro. tenant Michael Ranish, and Miss Ger- trude Long, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Long. The bride was attired in white, : faille gown with sweetheart neckline [Joseph W. Katchmer, Emeigh. and double finger-tip veil, and car- Maurice J. Bearer, Hastings, R. D. 1. ried white roses and baby’s-breath. | George P. Mougakos, Barnesboro. Her bridesmaid, Miss Elizabeth | Pete Soloninka, Revloc. Ranish, sister of the bridegroom, was | Leroy J. Weber, Carrolltown. attired in pink taffeta, with pink veil | Blair Buchanan, Jr., ‘Barnesboro. of shoulder length and blue tiara| Glenn E. Cook, Hastings, R. D. 1. and carried pink roses and blue del-| Herbert E Rager, Ebensburg. phennium. | John H. Linstrum, Revloc. The best man was a brother of the |John Kuzmich, Spangler. bride, Earl Long. Allen Stiffler, Marsteller. Mrs. Ranish is a graduate of the | Stanford Lloyd, Colver . Patton High School and the Lock Ha- | Charles Hetrick, Spangler. ven Teachers’ College, and has taught! Edward F. Herman, Revloc. in the schools of Chest Township and | Donald G. Bard, Ebensburg. Revloce. | Joseph D. Previte, Barnesboro. Lt. Ranish is a graduate of Patton Wilmer L Chester, Carrolitown. High School and St. Francis College. | Charles W. Homady, Marsteller He taught school in Clearfield Town- | John Galluschan, Barnesboro. | ship and the Prince Gallitzin District | Angelo Mazzarella, Elmora. | before he entered the Army in Feb- ; | ruary of 1942, and being stationed at | Michael Strollo, Barnesboro . Fort McClellan, Ala. Fort Jackson, | David W. Black, Marsteller S. C., and then at officers’ training |LWis M. Holmes, Colver. school for Chemical Warfare at Edge-| Oyu B Stavons, Corvoliogn. wood Arsenal, graduating and being |; Fancis D. Bednar, Barnesboro R. D. ned at Camp Sibert, Lo, | Lewis Csrvenak, _Barneshoro R.D. is now teaching | [-€0 . Peters, Spangler . ee Lido Pete Sisti, Colver. Navy Inductees. | | | | | | | Commissio | last December. He | Civilian Defense at Amherst College, | NANTY-GLO BOY DROWNS IN INDIANA COUNTY DAM ming, William Karnzy, 18 year old | Nanty-Glo youth, was drowned Sun- | a to | | ca’s ee NS Richard H. Krissinger, | in Massachusetts. | | The bride has a sister, Lt. Edith M. | | Long, who is serving in the Army | | Nurse Corps at Camp Hood, Texas | and a brother, Cpl. Joseph Long, is | now on Desert Training in Califor- | nia. A brother of the groom, Dr. John | day afternoon in a small dam in Weh- | Ranish is in the Army Reserve. A rum, Indiana county. | second brother, Sgt. George Ranish, Officials were informed that the j18 stationed with the Army Air Corps | youth was swimming in about five | at Fort Dix, N. 3 | feet of water in an old reservoir in ING t . I the abandoned coal mining village | Dy oD BSTO( R Lane. £ th | when he started to flounder. He plun- | ay ap Dy director el ged to the bottom before companions | Bureau of the Animal Industry of|® a i | the State Department of Agricul. | Ould Peach him. | ture Says that it is extremely vital | The young man was preparing | Saini vo. °lanswer a call to the armed forces. as a war measure to do everything | y | possible to combat diseases in live-| Jn ne: re we . | stock so that there shall be no de- | DEE ARTMENT OF EDUCATION | crease in the nation’s food supply. | PUBLISHES THREE BULLETINS | | “Food,” he said, “is one of Ameri-| —— | [ essential weapons to win the| Dr. Francis B. Haas, Superintend- | | | ent of Public Instruction, has an-| {nounced the publication of Bulletin | | RED CROSS HEAD IN THIS [845-R, titled “Stage Building and | | COUNTY RESIGNS OFFICE | Ship Carpentry” and Bulletin 345-FA | titled “Answer Book Marine Sheet | executive | Metal eVntilation.” | secretary of the Cambria County| The Superintendent also included | Chapter of the Red Cross since Feb-|in his announcement a bulletin pre-| ruary 1st, has submitted his resigna- pared by the Pennsylvania Depart- | tion to the executive committee of | ment of Public Instruction in oo the chapter. He will join the Red operation with the U. S .Office of Ed- Cross National staff for assignment | ucation with the approval of the U.| to insular and foreign iperations. 1S .Army Signal Corps titled “Unit | —_ NV Course Junior Repairman Trainee — —DBusiness failures are at the low- | Radio.” est point in 50 years, according to| The bulletins are available through the OPA. The volume of business |the printer, John Spencer, Inc., Ches- done reflects high levels. ter, Pennsylvania. | CONGRESSMAN PUSHES | gustine B. Kelly, (D.-Pa.), Atown. | Henry Edward Kane, Jr., Ebensburg. | Donald W .Thomas, Ebensburg R. D. |OPA PLANS RATIONING OF COAL NEXT WINTER Au-| Officials at Washington claim that | Saturday | the OPA is working cn a plan to ras | introduced a bill to provide that no |tjon coal next winter. | member of the armed forces could, An OPA spokesman said that such | without his consent, be released from | 4 plan was under consideration before active duty following the war, with- | the mine crists, which has nothing te out having first “secured or had se-| do with the plan. cured” for him ‘gainful employment| If such a program develops, he civilian life. JOB-AFTER-WAR PLAN Washington.—Representative | ous coal, used in war industries, of the various women’s auxiliaries as and anthracite, used for domestic well as men. heating. r———V. cent examination was larger than CHILDREN MUST NOT BE cent examination, was larker than ON STREETS IN AIR RAID DRILLS, S. C. D. ASSERTS previously was believed, and that a rather severe system of control, par- | ticularly for soft coal, seems necesge | ary. | NEW SUB-MACHIN EGUN IN MASS PRODUCTION The War Department has disclosed that a new sub-machine gun, small enough to be carried in an ordinary brief case, is now in mass production. Known officially as the M-3 subs machine gun, the new .45 calibre wes apon weighs less than nine pounds as compared to the 12-pound “Tommy gun”. It is capable of firing 450 shots per minute. | The new gun is of all metal cons struction and has a collapsible metal | stock instead of a wooden stock. When the gun is in a closed position its length is only 22 inches. | | Children who are on the streets [when an air raid warning is sound- |ed should be directed by wardens or ‘auxiliary police to proceed to shelter | immediately, the State Council of | | Defense has emphasized. | | During the “blue” period, children ! | should be sent home if they live near at hand, or to a public shelter if they | are too far from home. If they are found on the street during the “red” alarm, the period when enemy planes are overhead, [ they should be sent to the nearest | shelter and detained there until the all clear, when their parents should | be summoned to take them home. : ov — INDUCTION FURLOUGH PERIOD THREE WEEKS Vv LO INCREASED INTEREST IM RABBIT RAISING Men entering the armed forces dur- ing July and August will receive fur- |loughs of three weeks instead of two immediately after induction, state se- | lective headquarters has announced. | The three week furloughs, designed | | to give married men more time to ar- | range personal affairs, will be inau- | gurated on a staggered schedule, with [that of the Altoona Induction Center | becoming effective on August 16th. | —V | —Radio France at Algiers, reports that because “young German students are getting stirred up,” a Gestapo ag- | ent has been stationed in “every” | German university. | SCOTT'S SCRAP BOOK va HE Most, I VAY Siguature IN AMERICAN History FroM fe AUTOGRAPH COLLECTOR'S \ STANPOINT 15 AHAS oF Add rabbits to chickens for more meat next winter. A lively interest in backyard rabbit raising has led the Pennsylvania Stas te College to offer for the first time a correspondence course in rabbit | breeding, according to Professor W. R. White ,in charge of agricultural | extension corespondence courses. The course covers breeding, house ing, feeding, slaughtering, marketing and treatment of diseases. —Buy war stamps, bonds, weekly, By R.J. SCOTV OF INDEPENDENCE RE 1S Wort $1607,14 ALETIERS SH i His s1anatu COSTUME. INCLUDES A SHorT WHIME MusLIN DRESSING JACKET, WHE SATIN KNEE BREECHES, PUERTO RIC 15 VERY FERTILE, RicHLY EMBROIDERED, o Tore 4 BUT IN SIX YEARS JAY SOCKS , SMALL COUSSAESe | HAD ONLY 17 / : PERPIGNAN, DAYS WITHOUT ® SLIPPERS, AND oN HE. Ra SUNSHINE HEAD A SORT of Fool's CAP WROTE 5100 COVERED WHH A VEN. & WORDS oN A COPYRIGHT. 1043, KINO FBATURBS STNDICATE, Ban wore macarrs nacaarng PICTURE Postcard
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers