PAGE BIGHN REGEN Heilwood. The deceased also leaves 29 T DEATHS | grandchildren and eight great-grand- ———— | children. Miss Anna Gresko. | Funeral services were held on Mon- Funeral services for Miss Anna day morning in Holy Cross Catholic Gresko, of Patton, who died Thursday Church, Spangler, with interment in night, were conducted at two o'clock | the church cemetery. on Monday afternoon in SS. Peter and — | Paul's Russian Orthodox Church, in| Mrs. Emma Rhoa. | Patton, and interment was made in| Mrs. Emma (Stultz) Rhoa, aged 80, | the church cemetery. Miss Gresko ex- | died last Thursday afternoon at the | pired at the Spangler hospital where | home of her daughter, Mrs. Martin she had been a patient since Jan. 27. Kibler, of Chest Springs. A lifelong The deceased was born in Beaver- | resident of Cambria county, she wa. | dale on March 19, 1909, a daughter | born at St. Lawrence on Aug. 27th, | of George and Mary (Mayernick)|1864, a daughter of Jacob and Philo | Gresko. Besides her parents, the fol-| mena (Yahner; Stultz. lowing brothers and sisters survive:| The former Emma Stultz and Al- | Mrs. Paul Sauerhofer and Mrs. Fred | bert Rhoa were married on May 1st, Miller, Brooklyn; Mrs. John Kelenish, | 1892, at St. Lawrence, and resided in Potton; Margaret, Virginia and Bar- | that community for many years. Mr. bara, at home; Charles, with the ar-|Rhoa died four years ago. Surviving my in Italy; George, with the army |are these 12 children: Mrs. Kibler, in New Mexico; John, Patton; Paul, | mentioned; Mrs. Edward Weise, and Vancouver, Wash., and Andrew, at|Mrs. Charles Sheehan, Chest Springs; home. | Arthur, Barnesboro; Walter, Harris- wer r— | burg; Oscar, Springfield, Ill.; Orlan- Mrs. Agnes Ropp. | do, York; Mrs. John Douglass, Mrs. Mrs. Agnes Ropp, aged 64 years, | Isadore Yeager, Mrs. Clair Becker, of St. Lawrence, died last Thursday | Dennis and Sarl, all of Altoona. A morning She was a native and a live- | daughter, Mrs. Elsie Burkhart, died long resident of that community, and | several years ago. was born August 12, 1880, a daugh- | Mrs. Rhoa also leaves a brother, ter of the late Joseph and Anna (La-| Frank Stultz of Altoona; 37 grand- mier) Rhiner. She was the wife of Mi- | children and 23 great-grandchildren. chael Ropp. Funeral services were conducted on Although she had been in ill health Monday morning in St. Monica's Ca- for~the ‘past two years, Coroner Pat- | tholic church at Chest Springs, and rick McDermott attributed her death | interment was in the church ceme- to natural causes. tery. Besides her husband she leaves six —— children—Mrs. George Leiden and MRS. VICTORIA ANN VOZAR Othmar Ropp, both of St. Lawrence; | Mrs Victoria Ann Vozar, 77, died Harold, Altoona; Marecellien, Patton, | ,¢ 6 a. m. Monday in her home in and Frances and Celestine, both at | arnesboro. Born in Sept. 1867, in home. a : | Czecho Slovakia, she was the widow | She Yas a sister of George Rhiner, | of Joseph Vozar who died in 1913. Altoona; Jospeh, Beaver Damy ond Surviving are three children—Mrs. Miss Roe sand Max Rhuner, aud Mw, | yy... “irovrilin and Lotils, both of Edwin Nedimyer, all of St. Lawrence. B it Funeral services were held in the arneshoro, and John, Blairsville. : There are 10 grandchildren. The de- St. Lawrnece Catholic church, of g i ceased was a member of National which the deceased was a member. | : Interment was made In the church | Slovak Society, 135, Barnesboro. Fu- | neral services will be conducted at temsiery. [9 a. m. Thursday in St. John’s Cath- lic Church, Barnesboro, by Rev. John Kalakay, Sr. { 2 No a : ot John Kalakay, Sr. aged 80, a re. | Father Joseph Banik. Interment will | tired coal miner, died last Thursday |P¢ in the church cemetery. afternoon at his home in Spangler. He er lived alone. A neighbor noticed him | MRS CLARA OLSEN lying inside his home near a window | Mrs. Clara (Jorgensen) Olsen died and upon investigation discovered-he | at last week at her home in Barr was dead. A physician said he died of | TWp. She was the widow of Andrew a heart attack an hour earlier. | Olsen, who died a number of years Mr. Kalakay had been a resident of | ago. the Spangler community for the past | Sne was born in Norway on March 55 years. He worked as a miner until 12, 1861,but had been a resident of retiring in 1933. He was born in Aus- | this vicinity for the past 50 years. tria. Surviving are these nine chil-| Surviving are these children: Einar, dren: Pfc. Joseph, with the army in| state of California; Siegurd, Detroit, the East Indies; Mrs. Mary Augus- | Mich.; Arthur, Detroit, Mich; Mrs. tine, Canton, Ohio; Frank, Phoenix, | Margaret Lantzy, Spangler; Oscar Arizona; Mrs. Annie Kommes and | and Jennie, at home. Twelve grand- Charles Kalakay, Detroit, Mich.; Mrs. | children and seven great grandchild- Pauline Churella, Patton; John, Jr. | ren also survive. Spangler; Mrs. Helen Shingler, Al} Funeral services were conducted toona; and Mrs. Margaret Sable, of | Wednesday in the Long Funeral a Home in Barnesboro, by Rev. James | to this country 22 years ago. Besides men by approximately 6,000, as com- | born during the four year period al- YOU HAD BETTER GRAB THIS WOLF MATTRESS OFFER! Clearance of All Floor Samples! Pollebbdodedbdddbddiddebddbbbbdbd bid TT TTITITITTITUTRRNY RE, TEPPER PPPPbPPPP PRP bbe YT TYTN CTT TT a TTT rTrirTerrerereTy LARGE SIZE SPECIAL ATTRESSES At this $$ Low Price! 29.50 AND ... YOUGET A BOX SPRING $94.00 for the Sensational Price of You'll Have to Hurry! Limited Number of Samples. Pay on Easy Terms if you wish. Bo oTo ole Boats afe Tales 8. RRs Bo oBo Be cToalocte Be Be fe 8. 0.0 0 8 S008 SRR TTR RE TTNTNI RR RE RR RID Ree opie vjefeciecieciede Phone 278 eats ts eS eatoaoaiondoatie aba ah alk Al um BR RRR TTP | A. Waggoner. Interment in Union| her husband she leaves these child-| pared with 700,000 more males in |though 7,000,000 deaths wee record- | Cemetery, Hastings. | ren: Stephen, with the Army at Camp | 1940. Thirteen million children were ed. | Te | Gordon, Ga.; John, with the Army| JAMES SWOPE | in France; Mrs. Mary Kripnus and f 1 | | | | | James Swope, 68, of Carrolltown | Mrs. Catherine Snyder, Carrolltown |R.D. died at 10:35 o'clock Saturday and Anna and Theresa, at home. night in Miners Hospital, Spangler, | seaee-V a where he had been admitted Satur- HALUSKA TELLS SENATE day morning. Coroner Patrick Mec-| OF COUNTY ROADS! Dermott attributed death to a hoart| See | ailment. [ ; The deceased was born April 15, The Senate heard of some of the 1876, in Broad Top and had been a | difficulties of travel due to snow con- resident of Carolltown for a number | ditions and a demand that the State | | of years. His wife is dead. Highway Dept. do something about it. | I . . . Surviving are two sons, Russell and| Sen. John J. Haluska (D.-Cambria) | t is the extra yield and quality that count | ror both at home, and a sister,|Said on his return from Harrisburg | Mrs. Anna Bell Pitcairn. | after last week's Senate session he| | when you add up the income from your A requiem mass was conducted| traveled 138 miles requiring three | Tuesday at 9 a. m. Tuesday in St.| days, to go 17 miles from Altoona | Carrolltown, by| to his home in Patton and coming to | S. B 111 ‘| NEVER DREAMED BORROW- . € ING COULD BE SO PLEASANT." I'M GOING TO RECOMMEND PERSONAL BANK LOANS TO ALL MY FRIENDS.’ ICICICICIL ICICI II D020 0 IC IEIC ICI ICI III, farm at the end of the year. In many cases | Benedict's Church, ; 20. | Rev. Father Cletus Crawford, O. S. B. i Harrisburg today he traveled a small investment for an additional appli- | Interment was made in the church | miles from Patton to Altoona. : | cemetery. | “Something ought to be done fro | the highways in my county,” Haluska | told the Senate. “I'm not trying to] blame anyone—the Administration or the highway department.” Haluska renewed a demand for ac- | HOMER SAUL WHIPPO Homer Saul Whippo, 79, died Sat- | urday in the home of Mrs. Harold | Wilshire, Barnesboro. | ; S | He was born Dec. 20, 1865, in War- | {lon on a resolution submitted by | rior's Mark, Pa. a on of John and | himself and Sen. John J. Dent (D.-| Rachel (Hamer). Whippo he had re- | Westmoreland) to ask Secretary of | . . sided in Barnesboro for several years, | Highways John U. Schroyer to ap- pastures and as side-dressings for extra Surviving are two children — Mrs, | Pear before the Senate highways : Richard ones Stewat Monor Long committee on the winter's road] feeding of other crops. Consult your official Tolan MN, 1 ard Prt mons | troubles. | , J Md. Also surviving are six grands | Sen. A. H. Letzler (R.-Clearfield) | agricultural advisers on how to apply extra children and two great-grandchildren, | '24lying to Haluska, said, “all the | A brother, Lawrence, resides in Sax- | Senators are experiencing the same | potash to your crops. ton and % sister Mrs “Etta Lewis. | Weather conditions in their counties,” | yesides in Altoona Friends were |and that he had found Shroyer ‘very | ° received in the Long Funeral Home, | operative. oy, said he sol ae Barnesboro, where services were con- | DS royer wou¢ be glad to sit down { ducted Tuesday. Rev. James A. Wag- | With the committee and discuss the | the practical fertilizati of crop oner offciating with interment fo) Mtustion. Vv > on toe practical fertilization of crops irvi P | ~~ — Fairview cemetery, Patton. | CENSUS BUREAU SETS | POP LATION AT 138,100,874 | cation of potash makes that extra yield | | | | | and quality. Increased supplies of potash now make possible the use of more of this 4 | HNN oe i nce to it an agreeable experie at this bank. We ation and give it f you need cash. plant food for top-dressing legumes and EIEIO IEICE III IN AHI IIE III I IIH HHI HII I HII IH Hr HI HI III SC 2c You'll find borrow for personal needs will welcome your applic prompt attention. Come in | — - First National Bank Carrolltown, Pa. Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. Write us for further information and free literature MRS. ANNIE KUZAR | Funeral services for Mrs. Annie : AMERICAN POTASH INSTITUTE Ruzar, 53, wife of Michael Kuzar of (| The Census Bureau at Washington 1155 Sixteenth St., N. W. Washington 6, D. C. St. Benedict, who died on Wednesday | Eo hing ee e RS ep over- Member Companies: American Potash & Chemical Corporation night of last week at her home, were nein Riel 1 per f July 1 £ Potash Company of America United States Potash Company conducted at 9 a. m. on Monday in} Seas, a ’ y y 23 0 £1 Y 51 0 St. Benedict's Catholic church. Inter-|1ast year, an increase of 1,600,000 over the previous year. i THE POT NPOTA ment was in the church cemetery. DIASH J Of ARE USING 1S. AWERICA O1A3H A native of Russia, Mrs. Kuzar came Of the total, women outnumbered