Union press-courier. (Patton, Pa.) 1936-current, December 18, 1952, Image 14

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    With Hatch Act,
ey Sure Won't Like It
Handing Out of Jobs
This will be the first time that
& new administration has moved
ints. Washington with a Hatch
And In the opinion of govern.
: ment lwyers it's going to» force
& of traditional
hm handing out of federal
THe Hatch Act, passed in 1838,
makes it fllegal for fedetnl em-
. gage in any kind of |
it activity. There were:
weak civil service reguln-
i on the subject before, which’
n't proved verv effective. i
; geries of scandals involving |
workers engaged in wide- |
activity was the
late famous ghost writer
Bn Roosevelt, Chatles
he Seeders at the time
1 the Republicans
they got back into!
worker with a rederal job they
i are also throwing him out the
window for future political help
The civil service commission es-
timates that there are about one
thousand top-level jobs in the
government exempted from the
act. Included in this group are
‘the president, vice president, cab.
inet heads and assistants, bureau
chiefs, ambassadors and minis
ters.
By various official estimates
of the federal jobs which®*the Re
publicans will be able (c fill, they
can go as high as 200000. Filling |
administers the law. And the . . h | ‘ d began puiMin one of
remies wanmen ve sprees 1 Little Red Jail At Ebensburg Once ws ven oe enmiee’teh tom:
that many jobs with efficient
party workers would do serious
harm to party machinery
: ; § PN
Hatch Act restrictions even g flaw was upheld
beyond federal employes. They
include many state government!
employes whose activities are fi
ipanced in whole or in part by.
‘joans or grants made by the U
8. government or any federal ag-
ency.
They cover such activities an
serving on political commilises,
soliciting political contributions
selling party dinner tickets, any
“work st the polls, the publishing
the passing oul, of pa
| Jobs. It will penalize of.
bon As A its on Un-
ié Sam's payroll Bes prohibited
by law to continue being a poli
they reward a good party
Jewelry of quality is
lasting and conveys your message in
as ere, enduring way. Choose carly.
of any partisan letters or paper
taking part in public party po-
| fitical debates and the distribu
tion of campaign lHterature
The mintrum penalty for any
one found guilty of such action
is suspension from their job
without pay for $0 days. Maxi
mum penalty. is dismissal
The Civil Service Commission
fashioned by
famous
designers
“Na J) a
LEATHER WALLETS
MUGGS AND SKEETER
TE a oi
PF THATE THE WAY YOU WANT J
rT PERB.WEE, TH ALL BST per
i er WITH UB! er
Nii
EE & 7
its one Supreme Court test the
When the Republicin leaders
who pass oul patronage find ont
what political activity is limited
to federal jobholders they prob
ably will get a’ surprise
KEEP FARM ACCOUNTS
A good record of your 1052
farm business can be very help
ful in planning your 1853 opera-
tions. Edward 8mith. Penn Stale
extension farm runagement spe
cialist, explains that the dale ihe
quantity, and dollar and oents
sarin of all cash transactidims
should be set down in the redurd
book
The only waY to achieve last
ing pence ix through daily prayer
—
RELMEVEER '
AAS...
UNION PRESS.COURIER
Boguuod 9 8 Rus
Served As C ambria C 0. Courthouse
houses being
in 1804
VORrs
&.
itiie
and additions
Roberts
Affairs
beaks at Fhenghurg
hy
Lave
core
ome
the
ARON
in what
He improvised
Ward 1d for seme o be freon Od pleces
and played
%1 bk Red Jail in Eb such a | vy on the stove
ensbirg. the present county oon tg wining wih the ceiling
ORT Mn
to
4
pourthouse vard with Fionn wi
of the } Ph i wird
mirtroom above that the
it & 11924 fuder seas forced to adjourn the
The record ix silent on
imposed
the erst.
earned rhiat senten
Jail, ne Wik rama i sobered up
was fii it $ Be Begin 5 the
ted nen ef
be
first FH ani § gi 1 ‘ i v weal Ome of these
POON
of Beula, a place
BI arrest ok existence, Where the
for drunkenness and tae Y “il igen Ar El y of} thelr
y eonduet
©
re
Fs
Was 1
jail on first town vo that they
; # ty ; a oourt.
$70%
ALLY
oni A ro
3
. i
rs BNA A
eniburg, the work on the court.
house at Beula stopped and now
nothing remains to indicate thers
ever wis nich a own
10-YEAR OLD GIRL KILLED
Went Milton (PNB) Ten-
year-old Ruth A. Wirt was fat-
ally injured when struck by a car
as she crossed heavily-traveled
8 Route 15 near Here. Authoritime
said the girl became confumni
and darted into the patch of the
sneoming = intaomobile
VANDALS RAID SCHOOL
Philadelphia -- (PNS) A 13
room elementary school was rane
sacked by vandals who set three
fires before leaving. Causing cos
siderable commotion, the vandals,
among other things smashed sev-
aral cartons of eggs in the home
economics room
Go nbs rd PA LSND MS SAVES A
on)
chimney on Christmas Eve.
out inte the nation's living rooms |
will be the touch of many 3
| lands. 1leside i teddy bear. replies
| of Australia’s massupisl furred
in J
the, world's leading toy maker,
tames. its shiny playtime tracks |
and cars snd earth-moving equip
ment, its small-scale railroads and | 4
i
| sends broad its wild west cos-
arly, the United States, now |
sky scrapers io delight children all
over the globe.
a.
sang. Now U.S buyers go back to
OHH HARES
{ ventors.
| Germany was among the first na | |
tiors in the world to make tin |
horses on wheels, engines that ran, |
animals that walked birds that
cities such ay Nurnberg for the oud |
put of ingevious middle-aged in |
New toys that startle the world |
| often tome from Europe. One such |
is » German duck which, when set |
| on an incline, proudly walks down |
the slope. Another is a recent gady- |
et from Denmark called a “tippe |
top.” # wobbly sphere about the |
| size of a small applé that suddenly |
| files upside down and continues |
i spinning on its stem.
A
a
| down on their hands and knees at
| flip-flop sction.
Winston Churchill was intrigued |
| by the top when he first saw it. In |
| Stockholm, the King of Sweden, a |
cabinet minister and an stom |
| physicist. a Nobel Prine winner, got |
|» banguet io study the mysterious |
| As a mirror of mankind's cul
| ture, toys reflect the progress of |
| chvilination . Yel an smadng shn- |
| arity” can sometimes be seen be- :
| tween the toys of longforgotien |
| eras and the playthings of today.
| of Bethlehem
Jesus Christ is a God whom we
| can upproseh without pride, and |
i
selve) without despair —Pascal.
:
before whom we may share our |
As the print of the seal on the |
wax is the express image of the
i seal itself, so Christ is the express |
| image—thy perfect representation |
il
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