PAGE SIX Phone Carrolitown 2682, 4491 or 5394 Born, a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Bede Bender at the Miners’ Hospital last Saturday, Oct. 23. Mrs. Frank Scrafford of Erie, visited over the week end at the home of Mrs. Zeta Johnson, of this place. chicken dinner was served to the following: Mr. and Mrs. Clair Kirsch and children of Clearfield; Mr. and Mrs. Regis Kline and children of Hastings; Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Weakland and jeg’ children of Hastings; Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Crowell and children of Patton; Mr. and Mrs. Don Mil- Mr. George Bill of Ridgeway, and Mrs. Rosa Houser of Irvona. Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Stevens an- nounce the birth of a son at the Miners’ Hospital, Spangler, on Thursday of last week, Oct. 21. Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. | Archie Lehmier were Mr. ber end all of Pittsburgh. are Lions Plan Ladies’ Night A ladies night party will be|end held by the Carrolltown Lions Club on Monday evening, Nov. 15, at the Central Hotel in Carroll- town. Plans for the affair were |24, A Mr. Pittsburgh spent the week end here at the home of Mr. Mrs. Andrew Peters. m. Mr. Henry Lieb of Washington, | Catholic Church, Spangler. Buria D. C., spent the week end at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. By ROSE MARIE HUBER and Mrs. Louis Peters Mr, Seminary, Baltimore, and Mrs. John Wieland. on Sunday. Ralph Brown visited h and |be held in St. Nicholas’ Hall on Mrs. Earl Wall and son, Jerry, | Thursday of this week, Oct. 28, | . Mrs. Stephen Wall and daughter, [at 9 o'clock. Music will be fur- Church, Hastings. Patty, and granddaughter, Janet, |nished by the Melody Four. All invited to attend. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Baker of Erie visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Al Kline over the week | at 3 p. m. rolltown on Sunday. and | Margaret in St ‘Recent Deaths James Logan of Funeral services for James Lo- {gan, 83, of Spangler, veteran min- 2.20% 4-H Club Member and |ing instructor, were held at 10 a Saturday in St. was in the church cemetery. Miss Helen Farabaugh of Indi- |trice McKullip, Detroit; Mrs. Eliz- ana spent the week end at the home of her parents, Mrs. Rube Farabaugh. Eugene Kirsch Jr. of St. Char- Md. visited recently at the home of | Logan, Colo. {abeth Pearson, Nanty-Glo; McCombie, : |Kansas City, Mo., » Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Huber and |pge ler of Carrolltown; Mr. and Mrs. |family of Juniata Gap visited at Minot M. Stevens Pa.; [the home of Mrs. Genevieve Hu- | is Mr. Logan died last Wednesday Mrs. Bakerton, and Lawrence, Spangler. He was (a brother of Mrs. Clete Lantzy, Latrobe; Mrs. Margaret Riordan, and Thomas Minot Maslon Stevens, 72-year- {old well-known resident of Hast- lings, died at 11:15 a. m. Thurs- son, Luther, at Great Lakes Naval |day of last week at his home. Training Base, Ill, over the week | He had been a mine electrician UNION PRESS COURIER High Angus Calf Bid Goes to Colver Panthers Reach 16-Yd. Stripe in Second Frame The Patton Independants were 1 Peter Fenchak, 18, of Colver, outbid a dozen other buyers last | Friday to buy a Black Angus calf Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Feighner |Ray Lieb. evening at a safety meeting in host to the Portage Bulldogs in were honored at a suprise party| Mr, and Mrs. Stanton Duman |Barnesboro. His wife, Mary Ann, at a sale sponsored by the Sou-|a scoreless game. It was an even- last Sunday in honor of their and family of Ebensburg visited |died in 1943. Surviving are these fwestern Pennsylvania Livestock (ly and hard fought game with 40th wedding anniversary. A here on Sunday. {children: Thomas and Mrs. Bea-|Breeders’ Association in Waynes- | neither team advancing to with- burg. He bought the top feeder calf at a cost of 56 cents per pound. The price was double the top bid received last year. The apimal|there. weighed 450 pounds and will be| The first and third periods end- placed in a beef herd on the farm | ed in kicking duels while the of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jo- Bulldogs made the final quarter seph Fenchak .at Colver, an interesting chapter. They took The Colver youth was awarded |2 Panther punt on their own 35 the reserve championship for his|and three first downs later found steer, “Joe,” in the Cambria Co. |the pigskin on the Panther 22. section of the first annual baby | From here the ball advanced to beef contest last month and also|the 18 but the strong Panther gained the reserve banner in the |line held Portage in their final in the danger zone though the Patton Panthers did succeed in reaching the 16 yard marker in the second quarter, but were held {for the Ebensburg Coal Co. and |six-county contest. He is a grad-|attempt. ig | dance will {Was a member of Colver Local |uate of the Ebensburg-Cambria A found end squals Genes Will NS ANd Tie Rosary So-|High Schopl. |ciety of St. Bernard's Catholic | | 1878, in Stoughton, Mass., | Stevens. | (Luther) Stevens, died in 1945. Surviving are two Hastings. * |also are three grandchildren. Thomas Clarence Miller, four- NEE Cor. Magee & 5th EVERY CAR OUR Winterizing Service HALUSKA MOTORS DIRECT DEALER — CHRYSLER & PLYMOUTH DS Patton {month-old son of Warren and {R. D., died at 5 a. m. last Wed- Spangler. Funeral services were {held at 9 a. m. Friday in St. | Bernard's Catholic Church, Hast- |ings, with burial in St. Joseph's NB Cemtery, near St. Benedict. | In addition to his parents, the {infant is survived by four sisters | and a brother: Mary, Jane, Helen, |Regina and Ronald. | Richard F. Chipman | Richard F. Chapman, 71, Barn- | eshoro, died last Friday, Oct. 22, at the Miners’ Hospital in Spang- |ler. He was born on Jan, 22, 1877 {at Carbon Run, Pa., and was the son of Richard and Ruth (Squir- es) Chapman. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Mary Elizabeth (France) Chapman, and these children: Joseph, of Philadelphia, Barbara at home, and Milbur of Iowa. He was the brother of John Chapman and Mrs. Neel Dalrym- ple. Funeral services were con- ducted at Long's Funeral Home, Barnesboro, at 2 p. m. on Mon- day, by Rev. Walter F. Glenn and burial was in the Odd Fel- lows Cemetery in Burnside. Mrs. Elizabeth Shaw Mrs. Elizabeth Shaw, aged 73, of Barnesboro R. D., died early last Friday morning at her home. | She was born in England, a dau- | ghter of Joseph and Sara Hall, |and came to the United State 66 t NEEDS! Fall cleaning can be as hard a chore as your equ- k ipment makes it. If you have good cleaning aids * your work will go quickly and easily. And LINK’S is the place to get good quality, nationally known brands of the best of ev- erything. Why not stop in today and get all of your cleaning needs? HARDWARE OF Bigler Ave. ole oBoole cdo eDecloolecto ote ote cts Pe Pe Te Be te le be 5.0. 9. 9 9 9 0 9 FALL CLEANING MOPS---BROOMS BRUSHES---PAINTS CLEANERS---WAXES Garbage Receptacles LINK’S HARDWARE (Spangler Auto Exchange Bldg.) WASTE CANS LAWN RAKES ALL KINDS % | Viola | children: Joseph, Pittsburgh; Har- » | vey, Frank and Mrs. Margaret e | Foxall, Barnesboro; Mrs. Sara * | Ankeny, Johnstown; James, Phoe- ® | nix, Arizona; Jack and Lewis, . . | East Pittsburgh; Mrs. Isabel Goa- { Ziou, Los Angeles, Calif.; Mrs. | Jennie Byrnes, North Braddock; . | F.obert, Windham, Ohio; and Mrs. o Modrunic, Turtle * | There are 39 grandchildren and > [20 great-grandchildren., She was * | a sister of Mrs. Catherine Rosner . |of Morrisdale. Funeral services » | were held at the late home on sl was made in North Barnesboro # | cemetery. » % Sarah Noel Sarah Noel, |en years, a native and lifelong | resident of the St. Augustine sec- | tion, | Thursday morning in her home. | ber surviving in her family, and ry B. and Catherine (Dougherty) | | Noel. The remains were viewed by | friends at the Walter A. Gibbons | | Funeral Home in Ashville, and Spangler, Pa. ToeTe storks 3 TERED TD TRDDPDP ‘I USED TO THINK BOR- ROWING WAS SOMETHING TO CONCEAL” rates and loan terms. ‘NOT BANK BOR- ROWING. IT’S DIG- NIFIED AND BUSI- NESS- LIKE" gp A bank loan is something to be proud of. It indicates good character, financial stability. We lend on a business-like basis, with fair Carrolltown, First National Bank Penna. | funeral services were held at 9 | o'clock on Saturday morning in | St. Augustine Catholic Church, | and interment was made in the church cemetery. Mrs. Anna Keradh | Mrs Anna Kurash,75, of Gall- | itzin R. D., died on Monday Oct. | 25;she was born June 25, 1873 in | Poland. She is survived by her | husband, Mr. Bart Kurash, andl these children: Mrs. John Kohan- | ski, Mrs. George Shevenock, Mrs. | Helen Burick, Mrs. Bertha Blaze- vish, Mrs. Anthony Varney and Paul Kurash, all of Gallitzin; | and Mrs. Frank Koza of Sonman. She was the sister of Joseph Bem of Poland and Jacob Bem of | Portage. Funeral services will be | held Friday morning at 9 a. m,, | in St. Mary’s Catholic Church in | Gallitzin and burial will be made | in the Church cemetary. | | | Can of Gas Ignites, Burns Cresson Man | George Sandy Lilly, was burned | 8 slightly about the legs and body [show you how a last Monday afternoon, in a gaso- |reaches down from heaven to [line explosion. The accident oc-|comfort and help the people of curred at the Soisson Electrical |this earth. In the most profitable {hour and a half you will ever Sparks from an electric motor Spend, let “Reaching from Hea- Company shop in Cresson. were believed to have ignited fu- Ven” impress you in a compelling | mes from a nearby can of gaso- Manner with personal evangelism | line. Police Chief R. J. Kenny |il action. You will like the iiae| Se a ith | lonely man whose problems awak- | said Sandy was showered with en a smug congregation to real| | Christian service. {the flaming fuel and his clothes | were burned from his body. The fire spread to the walls of member for years to come. So, the shop. Cresson fireman extin-|ayen though it falls on the even- |ing of election day, don’t miss it. It will challenge you with its romance, with its drama, its ex- citing moments, its heart appeal. guished the blaze. Damage was estimated at $500. —Vote next Tuesday. Mr. Stevens was born Oct. 20, |mier, assistant agent, also at-|ed 2, a Son | tended the sale and bid of Lorenzo and Ann (Wentworth) | head of feeder beef which will be 2, and intercepted one, His wife, Mrs. Harriet | distributed among the 4-H Clubs mary: ; children: | oof will be shown at the Junior | Lg_Rimble Bontage—0| visitors at the Dietrick home. A class of 70 received the Saz- jus NY isan Brookville, and | Livestock show in Pittsburgh. : rament of Confirmation { Nicholas’ Church on Sunday, Oct. There He | y 3 » | . . re huis Stevens | Suspensio n Period | Viola (Lewis) Miller of Hastings | |nesday at the Miners’ Hospital, | | years ago. She was the widow of | | James Shaw. Surviving are these | | Esther Patterson, Carnegie; Mrs. | Creek. | Tuesday afternoon and interment | aged seventy-sev- | died at 9:30 o'clock last | | The deceased was the last mem- | | was a daughter of the late Hen- | |answers to the problem of disap- | | pearing game is providing birds | |Jects of the Youth Fellowship. | H. C. McWilliams, Cambria Co. | 60 in favor of the Bulldogs. Pat- |farm agent, and Edward A, Mint- | ton attempted 7 passes, complet- |of Cambria Co. Next spring the Patton—o0 .Fetcknik | | RG—Sheehan .. Lysinger | | RT—Merriman | | Was modified last Wednesday in| Referee—Conrad. Umpire—Vivdadel- {an order handed down by Judge [li Linesman—Ball. i {John H. McCann. The establish- | | | ment, located in the Barnesboro- | : | | Spangler business district, is own- ‘Hastings Loses : {ed by Peter F. Smorto, Noel F.| : | | Smorto and Pasquale D. oliveri | 10 Greenfield Twp. | | The State Liquor Control Board | | {had ordered the taproom license | 2()=() On Saturday suspended for a period of 20 | |days. Board agents charged the| Hastings High School lost a| | proprietors with making sales to|hard fought game to Greenfield | | minors and visibly intoxicated | Township High School by a Score; persons. of 20-0, last Saturday night on} An appeal was taken against |the Greenfield Twp. field. « | the ruling and Judge McCann re-| In the first quarter Greenfield | duced the suspension to five days. | scored their first TD of the game In his opinion the judge said the [ag quarterback Claar passed to] evidence showed that the viola-|gyurtz in the endzone. A center tions were neither willful nor de- plunge made gdod the extra. liberate and that business men Hastings came fighting back and other residents of the wir] as they reeled up the field only to trict had testified to the good| jose the ball on downs, when they reputation of the Ssiblishiment were within scoring distance ! There was evidence, he pointed the goal line out, that the proprietors had made i o IN a nL In the third quarter Greenfield The five day suspension period | LWP. again scored on the Syme began on Monday morning and combination, as Claar passed to continues until Saturday morning |Kurtz in the endzone. The extra © | point failed as Gordon failed to of this Week, cross the double stripe. Parse | Game Commission |i, erie” fii “hut their final stab as they advanced the ball from their own 30 yard line to within two yards of the goal. On the nevt play Gordon of Greenfield Twp. intercepted the Hastings pass on the one yard line and raced 99 yards for the Seeking Answer to Missing Small Game Food and Cover Said Patton Independents Battle Portage Bulldogs to 0-0 Tie | | The pupils of the Dysart School will hold their annual Halloween | Party on Friday afternoon, Sgt. Lewis Naylor of Philadel- phia, spent the week end at the third and final touchdown of the Portage lead in first downs 7-0, | with yardage standing at 119 to] {to the Spangler Hospital where and intercepted 5; while | in 34 Portage attempted 12, completed |ASthma. ; J The sum- | Present time is considered good. | LT—Forsythe = Pusnak | | LG—Morgan .. Kozark | C—Tinnic ... | ice Children: Rodger, Wayne, Dickie, home of his parents, Mr. and Thursday, October 28, 1948 Mrs. H. L. Naylor, James Zimmerman of Cresson, spent the week end at the Pat- rick Dietrick home here. —Press-Courier Classifieds pay! game. Hastings led the game in first downs, 12-8, The summary: Hastings—0 Greenfield Twp—20 LE—Urich Hl LT—Bobal .. Ondecko | LG—Thomas .. Johnnie C—Hindmarsh . . Ake RG—Weakland Dubree | RTSIOUBRY ...covnnirinriviirarmiin Clay | RE—Born Kurtz OB—Selesto! Claar LH-—Abel .. Gordon RH—Schall cDonal FB—Wolanin .. Dugan Hastings ....... 000 Greenfield Twp. 706 7-20 Touchdowns: Kurtz 2, Gordon, Points after touchdown: Claar [pl- |unge and placement,] Dysart Mrs. Robert Killan of Washing- ton, D. C., spent several days at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Dietrick. Mr. Dietrick has been admitted e is undergoing treatment for His condition at the Mr. and Mrs. Charles Crowell of Pittsburgh, were week end Mrs. Rose Naylor and grand- and Merle and Robert Cuomo, enjoyed an outing at Wipples yeni | RE—Mil i. ency | | made last Monday evening at a| Miss Angela Bell of this place | Stevens, Beverly, Mass. a Layo Dam last Sunday. 1. World peace with honor. meeting of the club. is visiting in Altoona. Funeral services were conduct- | | LH—Dedea .. Skippy | Mr. and Mrs. Kinch of Altoona, 2. Constitutional government. SS eset and M Ward W. 1 of jled with a Requiem High Mass | arnes oro avern | RH—Kelly .. Traming| spent the week end with Mrs. . . . ~~~ NAAAANY “ yor. iad Mis Ce nse o sung by Rev. Father Adelbert | | FB—OCossitor oe Pate Kinch’s son-in-law and daughter, 3. Preservation of American ideals. — HUNTERS! — Mr. Mrs. Clem Kirsch on |Kalsch, OSB, in St. Bernard's | Sf panty 2 = 0080 o| Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Seguin, of 4. Adequate protection for the needy aged. Come to BACHA'’S in Barnesboro | Sunday. |Church at 8 a.m. Saturday. Inter- | 0 | Ie y our | Substitutions: Patton—Selferage, | this place. 5. That a Republican Presi for Shells! All sizes in stock!| Mr, and Mrs. A. P. Kirsch and | Ment was in the church cemetery. | | Noel, Yargo, Bakajza, McConnell, Don-| Mrs. Patty Cuomo and children 2 Lhat a pub.ica : Yes, we have 8 MM Cartridges, | family visited at the home of Mr. | - | A liquor license suspension ag- ahs, Yininms ey of Amsbry were callers in town gress will restore unity to our Nation. too. Come in today! |and Mrs. Zeke Veneskey in Car-| Thomas C. Miller |ainst a North Cambria taproom | SHE, 0 city. ; j¢n_Sunday. | Miss Flora Gregg of Indiana, spent the week end at her home here. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gregg and family motored to Confluence on HARVE TIBBOTT 5. Supported fair social and labor legislation 4. Supported economy in government Believes in... Re-elect Tibbott To Congress (Political Advertisement) An AMERICAN Has... 1. Conscientiously car- ried out the wishes of the people whom he represents. 2. Supported legislation sympathetic to prob- lems of Veterans. 3. Supported a strong national defense. dent and a Republican Con- Monday evening. MOUNT THOSE TROPHIES . . . Our Taxidermy Work Is Positively Mothproof Forever LIFE-LIKE TAXIDERMY AT PRICES YOU CAN AFFORD! TURKEY HUNTERS! The FIRST TURKEY we receive from each county will be mounted at one-half price. We use only the skin and feathers in mounting. Ship to Barnesboro or bring your trophies to our new shop in the Amoco Station at the Bakerton Road in Spangler. EARL T. VOLK TAXIDERMIST Phone 738 BARNESBORO Essential to Wellbeing The State Game Commission is |trying to find the reason why a |large proportion of the game it | distributes never reaches the hun- | ters’ bags. | “It is a very serious problem,” | | declared Thomas D. Frye, the co- | [mmission’s new executive dir-| ector. “We need the cooperation | of everyone in trying to find the | answer.” [ Frye said the commission each | year releases thousands of rabb- | its, quail and pheasants but that between the time they are freed and the small game season starts most of them have disappeared, | apparently into thin air. | “We don’t know where they go {and apparently sportsmen don’t |either,” he said. “Right now we | |are doing research along with | {federal agencies to try to find | | the answers.” | The Game Commission each year, Frye added, releases thous- | ands of quail but when a quail | {census is taken a short time lat- | {er, most of them have disappear- | | ed. | Frye said sportsmen have a| “strong feeling” that one of the and rabbits “with the food and cover so they can exist.” | But he said this poses a tre-| mendous problem that cannot be | solved without the cooperation of sportsmen. | “We have some 858,000 acres | of game lands in Pennsylvania,” he explained. “If we spent $1 an| acre on food and cover that] would take half of what the] commission gets from present re- | sident hunting license fees and | what would we have to show for it?” Church Election Day Film At Beavervalley A new sensational moving picture, “Reaching from | Heaven,” is to be shown at the| Beavervalley Evangelical United Brethern Church on Nov. 2 at| 7:30 p. m. No admission charge | will be made. An appreciation of- fering, however, will be expected, | proceeds of which will go to pro- | The picture is being sponsored by | friends of the Youth Fellowship at a cost of $27. 3 Let this wonderful new film | loving God | al There are scenes you will re- h 1S one essential household item that It’s hard to believe, but it’s true. The cost of making electricity ~fuel, wages, and materials~has risen rapidly since 1940. Fuel alone has gone up 8993. The one factor that has served to offset these rising expenses has been the greatly increased use of electricity. Generating equipment has been pushed to the limit to meet your requirements. Electricity -one essential item in the house- hold budget that hasn’t gone up in price- is providing you with more comfort and more convenience every day. PENNSYLVANIA ELECTRIC COMPANY _ A, P. ISENBERG, District Manager asn’t gone up in price ¢ chee k 5 5 Sas “Ng -, EE, aah ‘ = and atten Mrs. ko, © Maha Mrs. and 1] ty w delici Mr. Mr. the F tion 1 ermer Const at W one e Mr. and f{ to K make Mr. and Kensil they ° Mis: the fi the C meetir Counc; ion or selves. at az Vinton Mr. of Alte Mr. a past w The Assn. Octobe was pr and family Lar Full Nev Mei ® Lock ® Moi ® Met ® 10 «
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers