PAGE FOUR UNION PRESS.COURIER DON'T FAIL TO DO YOUR PART mixed the death and the brawl to- | Patton Courier, Estab. 189 class mail matter May 7, 1636, under the Act of March 3, 1879. FRANK P. CAMMARATA.... THOS. A. OWENS THOS. A. OWENS, JR. Largest General Weekly Newspaper Circulation in the Area, THE UNION PRESS-COURIER 3. Union Press, Estab. 1935. Published every Thursday by Thos. A. Owens, Press-Courier Building, 452 Magee Avenue, Patton, Pa., and entered as second at the postofrice at Patton, Pa., Business Manager itor Associate Kditor in the current Victory Loan gether, and that's one time, in- Drive, The government needs the deed, we were glad that we were money. You can benefit well by the not the boss. investment. That this is the last of le fe oe ok ole the war-time loans should be all THERE ARE TIMES THAT THE the more reason why you partici- editor has to take a lot of kid- pate in it! There still would not be | ging for a long time because of any “final” loan n sight if the Japs |gome typographical error. Par- hadn't capitulated. ticularly was this the case a num- a TRE RANT i . + Der of years back, when a local NEXT SUNDAY IS ARMISTICE rch was gutted by fire. In our | Day. It has been a national holi- | headline we stated the “Church day since World War I. It is pri- had beer on fire,” instead of “had RESOLUTIONS OF RESPECT Last Man’s Club of Patton and Vicinity Whereas, It has been the Will of God to remove from our ranks by death, our Comrade, Rudolph Huber, Whereas, only the highest tri- hute can be paid him as a member of our armed forces and his per- formance of duty to our country in its perilous time of strife in World. War 1, Resolved, that through his death LICENSE SERVICE BEING GIVEN VETS The Bureau of State Motor Ve- hicles is making it easier for World War II veterans to renew their drivers’ licenses. Announcement has been made by the department that a special service has been in- augurated at the Indiantown Gap Military Separation Center which | | following a lapse of three years or | more without a learner's permit {and reexamination, must attach to his application for renewal a no- tarized certification as to the date | of entering service and date dis- charged, To simplify the procedure the Bureau of Motor Vehicles NL Visit Your Friendly gsco Store Today has for every $3 invested. Loni 0} 0 ,\ MD halted de Bd Thursday, November 8, 1945 had printed on the back of the re- newal application blank the certi- ficate blank the veteran must have completed, —Hold your Victory Bond until tomorrow. Later it will pay you $4 SO0000000 Prices Effective Until Closing Nov. 10, 1945 AN marily a day of thanks for our|paen on fire” But such things : 2 5 4 fod this club has lost a very good |will advise vets on license renewal nation. This year it should have happen to all newspapers, and the y 8 ! Subscription, $2 Yearly in Advance, Advertising Rates member, and our beloved country ) procedure and assist in the prepar- Furnished on Application. Help Your Family's Vitamin Intake With a The endeavor of the Union Press-Courier is to sincerely repre- sent Organized Labor in their efforts to obtain economic freedom. We solicit the support of all Unions. Material for publication must be authorized by the organization it represents, i the President and Secretary of the Local, together wit bear signatures of the Local eal. The Union Press-Courier gives its advertisers the advantage of the combined circulations of two largely circulated weeklies and has a reader coverage that blankets Patton and the major mining towns in Northern Cambria County. ge all the more significance inasmuch | agijies are no exception. In fact, as the year of 1945 has brought an | some of them are the rule when | t comes to typographical errors. end to hostilities to a world so |; | war-torn that barely any living |® ERE h the globe ha PS AY el Ne | [SOMETIMES SOMETHING OF importance happens, and lo and | missed it entirely. Whether we'll behold, when the paper comes out he getting another national holiday there isn't a word about it. Any to commemorate the ending of | World War II or whether it will ) d - 4 { newspaper office is not infallible. a very good citizen. Be it further resolved that these the minutes, and the usual minute of silence in honor of such mem- bers be maintained at such meet- ing and a copy printed in the local newspaper. |ation of the necessary forms and | | notarizing the mwithout cost to] resolutions be read at our next|the former servicemen. regular meeting and placed upon | More than 50,000 veterans from | this state have renewed their op- FOOD SUPPLEMENT a We Suggest! rr LL Lr | be incorporated with the present | Armistice Day, remains to be seen. | This year it should be a day of EDITORIAL VIEWS AND COMMENT |smcton mass oe THERE'S ANOTHER ELECTION STRIP MINING STILL MUST the great wars. passed and over, and though the | pay dividends. We note that Things can actually happen that we don't learn about. That's why | most all newspapers urge their readers to report the nevss to them. Folks doing that never have rea-| son to condemn the editor for om-| mission. | | erators’ privileges since last Aug. 1, and they are now being served i ” at the rate of over 200 a day at the | RN Bureau of Motor Vehicles, Office =" Committee on Resolutions, | Delivery Headquarters, Finance | J o | % Last Man's Club of Building, Harrisburg. - - 9-Vitamin Capsules Patton and Vicinity The veteran, to renew a licens Check up and Pep up with Vita-Link, today's best vitamin value. Our only brand, and always election of Tuesday was one of the some new operations are in| dullest in many years in both the evidence in Northern Cambria. We | county and the state, the man and have no fault to find with folks | woman who went to the polls and who want to strip coal. We can, | sokkokk | ASIDE FROM POLITICS, WE'VE | fresh. voted can have the feeling of a duty performed, even though not a single one of the candidates that he voted for were winners. There may have been a few mean things happened at spots on Tuesday, but like other elections, they soon will be forgotten. Next year there will be new issues, new candidates, and some of the very fellows who bat- tled Tuesday may be found united in some way at next year's elec- tion. solkoskokok NEXT YEAR THERE WILL BE an important election. Topping the list will be a new Governor for Pennsylvania, and there will also be chosen a United States Senator. Joe Guffey's term expires at the end of next year. Uprited States Senators are elected for six-year terms. A State Secretary of Inter- nal Affairs also will be chosen. And Harve Tibbott’s term as Con. gressman in the 26th District ex- pires next year. There will be three Representatves in the General As- sembly frecm the county district, and two from the City of Johns- town, to be chosen. Congressmen and Assemblymen have but two- year terms. State Senators are chosen for four-year terms. Sena- ter Haluska's term will have two more years to run. shook kook NEXT YEAR THERE WILL BE no municipal offices to be filled, but there will be committeemen from both parties chosen at the Primary Election which will be held in the Spring. These in turn | will later elect a county chairman. County chairmen in both major | parties in Cambria County serve for two years. kk kk% HUNTERS APPEARED MORE numerous on the opening days of the small game season last week | than has been the case for the] past several years. And the bags | were small, according to reports. | Probably the severe winter season | of last year had something to do | with the scarcity of game in this | section. We've seen years when the | however, tell our grandchildren some day how beautiful such and such a pile of clay once looked. kok ok ok PELIEVE IT OR NOT, THERE are even now a good many ex- | servicemen right here in our own community who have been home fur some weeks and unable to find employment. The problem is going to get bigger, too. The smaller | communities have something con- fronting them to take up the slack that is ahead. An ex-soldier told us on the street the other day thas he came home to hunt a new joh and a suit of clothes. He found the suit O. K., but still seeks the job. ok okok AS A BIT OF APPRECIATION to the Patton Garden Study Club may we voice the thanks of the | community for the appearance of the Palmer House corner lat. Last week some of the ladies were “on the job” again making things a bit more attractive before the snows begin to fall. soko ok ok HAS IT EVER STRUCK YOU that the newspapers and the in- dividuals who are doing all the talk about “getting tough with Russia” and of “watching Russia” aren't doing a service either to themselves or to anyone else. Ap- parently Russia and the United States are at the moment the only two remaining nations that have sufficient punch to wage war. And there surely is no reason whatso- ever why either the United States or Russia should want to fight one another. Neither would have any- thing at all to gain. It is far better [that we try to understand Russia | and treat her as a friendly nation, | even though our way of life is far | different than that of the Soviets. dokkokk JUST NOW AN IMPORTANT matter that hits right into the homes is the matter of peacetime conscription, which will be thresh- ed out in Congress before the year ends. Arguments, pro and con, ars 3 : | street corner gossip all over the rabbits were running the Highways | ration. And there surely must be at night throughout the late sum- | mer. We haven't spotted one of the bunnies on the highway in this past year. sok kkk BUT SCARCITY OF GAME doesn’t take the thrill out of the sportsman'’s heart. In fact, if game is scarce the thrill is all the more when a bag'is made. Like the fish- erman, the hunter gives himself a terrific build-up in advance, and gets more enjoyment out of the flat result. shook sk kok THERE'S LOTS OF VITAL news going on over the earth, but people have lost the extreme interest they held in news broad- casts during the period of hostili- ties. If one reads just the headlines alone in the morning newspapers, it can easily be ascertained that the world is far from being at a complete peace, and that the prob- lems of the United Nations and the United States, in particular, are manifold. The most vital period of «ll is with us. What comes out of it may well be the governing fac- tor of another war in a few years cr the peace we have hoped and prayed for. some method of military training employed. Our own safety demands that. The United States of Am- | | erica has found itself unprepared at the beginning of three wars— 1898, 1917 and 1941. If another blow comes, and it surely will sooner or later if we only have wishful thinking, we'll not have an opportunity to prepare. Any enemy agressor will make sure of that. 3k kok ok WE ARE NOT GOING TO GET into the method to be employed in the forthcoming military train- ing program. That's up to Con- cress. However, since the recent Navy Day speech of President Tru- man there has been a lot more favorable comment on the thought that maybe it would be all right for the chaps out of high school to train a bit. Surely it can do them no harm physically—and maybe it will keep them from ever having to go to war. And if peacetime con- scription is the rule, it shouldn't be too much “close order” drill— but things the boys can use. The present-day U. S. Army, needs some streamlining in its organiza- tion. | Thoughts That May or May Not | Interest You Discussed from | Week to Week. exception. When the newspaper- | man does his political writing he | surely knows what he is doing, and | if he gets a bit personal that’s his | hard luck. It's funny the way the CONDUCTING A NEWSPAPER printed word has such far-reaching is an endless task—even though effects sometimes. We could, if we | it be a weekly. No sooner is one wished, publish deliberate false- issue off the press until we are hoods and many readers would ac- starting on the next, and that con- cept them as truth. One can hear tinual grind keeps up week in and 2 current scandal discussed and week out throughout the year. It magnified by word of mouth on the is a good bit like a “woman's street and in the homes, but if work.” It is never done. Yet there one word of it appeared in the] is a fascination to it—if there news columns the editor would be weren't there would be no weekly | a heel. Yet editorial gossip is noth- newspapers. ing more than the thoughts of the fe ok ok ok | writer put into the printed word. [IN THE CONTINUAL R US H If a reader agrees with the opinion and grind things do not always all is lovely, but if he disagrees, move smoothly. Hardly a week | that’s bad. passes when there isn't something or other to mar the serenity of the THERE HAVE BEEN TIMES IN scene. A weekly editor can commit our past when we accepted paid sins of Omission as well as Com- advertising that we later had lots mision. Irate readers and others of reason to regret. In late years result. However, no sane news- We reserve the right to determine paperman invites trouble. Good- for ourselvs what we shall print, ness knows, it comes easily enough and reject what we feel to be un- without doing that! true and malicious. During the * 3 past two Presidential campaigns SOMETIMES EVEN THE MOST | this newspaper refused advertising Vy " ” . because we knew it to be false and innocent news item packs a wal- lici Spin ralici lop on someone’s jaw, and some- malcious. times in a manner unlooked for. Some years ago we ran a depart- | SOMETIMES TYPOGRAPHICAL ment of “News of Former Years” | errors can make a story not only in this newspaper, taking items foolish, but a bit obscene. There from our files of 40, 25 and 10 are so many words in the English years back. We endeavored to use language that with just one small discretion in the items published, letter substituted, will make a and we think that generally speak. noun an unprintable word. And ing the department was enjoyed by | this, too, happens in the newspaper the “old timers” about Patton. |business. There have been some However, an innocent reprint of a glaring examples of this in the birthday party in honor of a cer- | past, not only in the weeklies, but | tain young lady back in 1893 was in the dailies as well. | the cause of bringing about a tem- | kok kok { pest upon us, because the general THEN, TOO, THERE ARE THE | public was able to determine the | folks who want articles printed | lady’s age. So, we decided to quit | that they would be glaid to have the column. the editor take the blame for, but | koko | which they are opposed to having | AND THEN THERE WILL BE |the credit given themselves. These | the man whose wife has left his | chaps don’t get very far. There is | bed and board, and he inserts a |another segment that is poetically} legal notice to the effect that he { minded. You'd be surprised how} will not be responsible for any many of them there are right here | debts she may contract. We are |in Patton. A good many years ago duty bound to accept legal adver- | we decided to ban all poetry. Some i tising of this nature, and can’t re- of it submitted was pretty good, | Fk kok ok | ject it. But there has been mora [but by far the most of it was than one occasion when we have | lousy. | had the condemnation of the errant {wife and her relatives upon us. | Hokokkk oR kkk {MAYBE YOU THINK IF YOU | | were the Editor you'd do a lot {AND OTHER HEADACHES, TOO | differently. Perhaps you would. | numerous to mention, come up But the editor who is least likely {from time to time. We have even | to get into trouble is the chap whe had complaints because we pub- | has been through the mill of ex- lished a wedding notice, and per- | perience. And he's not entirely im- haps had a medicine ad of some | mune. One just can’t please every- kind or other running directly be- | ce. We suppose that goes in any neath it. And, in our haste from |line of business, but there are a week to week, perchance we'll get | great many more opportunities to a correction line in an article in displease folks when you conduct the wrong place and make things | a newspaper. | ridiculous. ® | ~ REEkE BUT LIKE ALL THE REST OF |WE REMEMBER SOME GOOD the craft, we stick with it week I many years ago when we were in and week out. We cuss it and still an apprentice when a good | wish we were in some other bus- citizen of the town expired, and the |iness, or that we were out fishing boss went to some pains to make | or wintering in Florida, but we his obituary a flowery one. At the | still are on the job. Maybe the reel same time there was a bar room | truth of it is, that like all of us, brawl took place of more than the | we have to eat, too, and in order to ordinary magnitude, and a few |eat we must do our job. The chap skulls were cracked, and in our {we envy at some other job prob- haste in making up the paper we | ably is envying us. Life's like that! MEN’S SHOP SE § SANTA CLAUS IS ON HIS WAY ~- OYLAND OPENS SATURDAY! — SEE THE NEW TOYS AT MURPHY'S $1.05 to $5.98 N TIEN LUXENBERG’S never deliberately “written up” | h : : $ : Fa anyone. 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