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The Daily Courier from Connellsville, Pennsylvania • Page 5

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The Daily Courieri
Location:
Connellsville, Pennsylvania
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Page:
5
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fiatlg (llaumr THE COURIER COMPANY Publiihtn JAMXS DRISCOLL President md General A. DONEQAN Secretary and Treasure; WALTER S. STIMMEL Editor JAMES M. DRISCOLL Associate Editor MISS LYNNE B. KNCELL Society Editor J.

WYLIE DR1SCOLL Advertising and Buslnew TACT. V. DRISCOLL Mechanical Supt. Memoer Audit Bureau of Circulation! Pennsylvania Newspaper Publisher! Association Bureau of Adveraslni A. N.

P. Served by United Press and International News Service SUBSCRIPTION RATES Tour cents per copy. 24 centa per week by carrier; mall per month. 13.50 for itx months: per year; payable In advance. Entered aa second class matter at Poitofflce.

Connellsville. Pa. MONDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 25. 1946. J.

Buell Snyder Seldom are Fayette countians shocked as they were Sunday afternoon when news -was spread of the sudden death of Repre- aentative J. Buell Snyder, coming as it did within two days after his announced intention to retire from public office at the end of his seventh term in January. Not until after his death did it become fully apparent that his physical condition prompted his determination not to be a candidate for reelection next November. It will probably be said of Buell Snyder that he died a martyr to a cause--one in he believed implicitly. His loyalty to the Administration of which he was a part was never in doubt, never questioned.

This was particularly true of President Roosevelt, whose close friend and confidant he was. The war imposed a heavy burden on him. He was entrusted with the chairmanship of a sub-committee on the hundreds of billions of appropriations for the war program. It is now evident that he was worn down by the strain of the onerous duties thereunto pertaining. But it was not only to his chief, President Roosevelt, and later Mr.

Truman, that Buell Snyder was loyal. He was ever alert to the appeals of the folks back home. None can say he ever turned a deaf ear. His, supporters were always aware of this. His recognized it.

Earlier in life Mr. Snyder evidenced more than the ordinary ability. Before being elected to Congress, as a salesman for school supplies, he was said to have earned as'much as the salary of a member of Congress later assured him. He had the knack of getting ahead. He had that rare quality of being a good mixer, something which worked to his advantage in public life.

Buell Snydei was ambitious. The Roosevelt landslide of 1932 gave him his big opportunity. He was swept into Congress on the New Deal wave. Six times in turif he was reelected. without a great deal of difficulty.

In Congress he soon gained recognition. He continued to hold it during all of his seven terms. He was among the in the know on the atomic bomb project. It was through his committee that billions for the great experiment were set up. He fathered the proposed system of trans-continental super-highways, which dream has failed as yet to materialize.

In all that he did he won the approbation of his superiors. In retrospect it will be agreed that Mr. Snyder was wholly sincere in what he said in his retirement announcement: "I have faithfully practiced the motto--'He profits' most who serves the That might well be his epitaph. Big Problem Before House Is Housing By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN WASHINGTON, Feb.

jroblem before the house today, and I don't mean the House of Representatives, is finding a louse. Everybody's worrying about his own house, from President Truman to Wilson Wyatt, the housing expediter. The bigwigs also are worrying about other people's houses; lack of same. Numerous congressmen still want, but probably won't get, a $3,000,000 apartment house of own. In the lobby of their Office Building is a prefabricated aouse, handsome enough to make lick their chops, but sample- s.zed for midgets.

Having been slapped down by 30th the Senate and the House, President Truman has given up nope of building a lean-to to the White This put the President in a hole, as I will show in a minute. Wyatt, who had his own troubles finding himself a house here, claims the housing shortage is worse and rapidly will get wors- er. He intends to stop the build- Jig of theaters, bowling alleys and not dog stands all over the land and use the bricks for houses. He also figures he'll need about 300 more helpers here in Washington and the question arises: Where, Wilson, do you think they're going to sleep? Certainly not at the Statler Hotel. That's where Honest Harold Ickes, who used to work for the Government, himself, put four beds out of business by renting a suite for an office.

Honest Harold said he hated to do it, but offices were even scarcer in Washington than bedrooms. The real estate experts went on record with word that low-cost housing for veterans is an ele- idea, but where can you auild a house for $8,000, as suggested by the Government? They said a house at that price could not be erected in most cities. They claimed it would cost nearer $10,000 and how many ex-soldiers could afford that? Congress still is worrying about the housing bill, and whether Government ought to slip the 3'jilders a little something on the side (that's known as a subsidy, 3ub) for putting up houses at that people- could afford. Representative Wright Patman of Texas, who wrote the bill, NEWS BEHIND THE NEWS By PAUL MALLON WASHINGTON, Feb. 25.

In complete official privacy, the State Department has spent some weeks getting up a new statement of American foreign policy. The only great question of policy, of course, is how to treat Russia. On this, the paper was not illuminating in its original form. The Byrnes policy established at Moscow and London since mid- December has been substantially this: Press no i which would be often- Russian Retreat i as Mallon much as possible and accept Russian contentions. apparent but not professed purpose has been to entice Russia out of her nationalistic isolation into dealing in the world of affairs.

This has kept world news rather calm but events behind jthe news, particularly from Europe, are working up boldly and may break sensationally. Do not, I for instance, let yourself be currently misled into believing the domination of the French government by Communists and- Socialists is a permanent arrangement, or that the name of De Gaulle will remain forever in retirement from tinued to press, keeping Britain on the defensive. The common current belief that Bevin may have iound a way of treating with Moscow therefore is unjustified. He twice passed "the lie 1 Human Interest Angle Sidelights and Comments on Happeningi Out of the Ordinary. Fayette Bar Membership ie" to them and they backed I Oldd" of Seniority lown, true enough.

But when you THE DAILY COURIER. CONNELLSVILLE, 5. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 25, 1946. KNOW YOUR STATE Prepared for The Courier by State Planning Board.

do' add up the results, you will see Who is the oldest member of the Fayette Many organizations are now Russia won the action she wanted i County Bar Association in point of service and memorials to the war from UNO, while Bevin won GRAB BAG nothing except the red herring. Emulation of by us, who is the most recent admission? This question oftentimes has been dis- would not answer the question of cussed. To settle all arguments Joe Matuschak, how to deal with Moscow. one of the chief clerks in the office of Pro- President Truman, meanwhile, thonotary John j. BradV( has comp iied the fol- is recognizing that the army seems to know how to get along lowln llst whlch sets forth the seniority stand- with the Soviets, without losing their shirts, better than our timid and confused diplomats.

He chose General Marshall to go to China to get Chiang into a peace with the Communists; and now he selected General Eisenhower's chief of staff to be ambassadpr to Moscow, instead of a diplomat or a politician. Army men, by nature, should be more interested in results than in the political ideas of justice for this and that, which have so confused our diplomats in recent years. (Latest example: Joe Davies, who thinks Russian spying on Canada justified, but no doubt would cry out against any Canadian spying on Russi: any realist knows all nf always spied on all othi ways will.) This new reliance or whereas have srs and al- army re- French politics. Give greater no- a i ism is the most hopeful develop- tice than has been given to in American foreign policy, victory of the Belgian Catholic i contrast to lhese childish but party over both Communists and pompous accumulations of vapor- Socialists. Belgium is a 1 i ous generalities the State Depart- French, with all the same element plans to out under the ments of French politics in mini-, clalm that they are great state tactical rather The Russians than had formidable, raised the question of British influence In Greece, primarily to cover their own-tracks in Poland, the Balkans, Iran, Turkey and other places where they are attempting to ex-, tend their influence.

They forced Britain to the defensive by raising this question. After accom- Matter of Friendship Senator Robert A. Taft of Ohio struck at the heart of Truman Administration policy with regard to filling high offices in the Government by his declaration in the Senate that "none of these men knows anything about the job to which he is appointed." To this rhe senator added: "Apparently they are appointed only because they are personal or political friends of the President." Senator Taft, as chairman of the Republican Steering Committee in the upper house, took the floor during consideration of the President's choice of George E. Allen, former Democratic National Committee secretary, for a place on the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. He opposed the nomination because of lack of knowledge on the part of the nominee.

Yet Allen was confirmed by the Democratic membership. Senator Taft said he regarded with "no more approval" the choices of Edwin W. Pauley, former Democratic National Committee treasurer, for Undersecretary of the Navy and Commodore James K. Vardman, the President's naval aide, for a 14-year term on the Federal Reserve Board. In other words, flipping him from the Navy into banking.

The evidence points to the truth of the senator's charge--that the President is naming personal friends or paying political debts without regard the qualifications of the persons selected. It is -not good for government nor clean politics. claims his law-making brethren pushing, this purpose, and suc- will be making a mistake if they ceeding in getting UNO to allow persist in ignoring the price of Moscow to deal separately with a pro-communism Iranian prime minister installed at Teheran for the purpose Russia withdrew her Greek charges against Bevin. The Indonesian charges she con- jouses 'already built. He means jit's crooked to sell for $15,000 a house that cost $5,000 five years ago and there ought to be a law.

This would call for ceilings on houses, as on shirts. As for the presidential housing hole, I was not talking figuratively. During all the weeks that Congress argued, Lorenzo S. "Win slow, the White House architect, kept digging a hole in the back of the White House offices. He also kept knocking out windows so he couli add the annex President Truman wanted.

He said he- wasn't going to stop until the President told him. Mr. Truman, didn't tell him until Congress flatly refused to put out the $1,600,000 to enlarge the executive offices. Then Lorenzo quit digging. He filled up the hole (this wasn't much of a job) but he'd made a mess of the walls.

It costs money to repair walls and install new window frames, as any householder knows. The President now has got to ask Congress for cash to repair the damage done by Lorenzo's wrecking department while he still thought he would get the money to do the job complete. I tell you, friends, this housing problem is tough. Strength for Your Daily Task By EARL DOUGLASS. DP.

Abe Fortas developed a case of lack of memory in testimony before the Senate Naval Committee in the Ickes-Pauley case. Fortas, former Undersecretary of the Interior, was third man in the confeijence of Pauley and Ickes at which Democratic campaign funds and the Government oil suit were discussed, but he could not remember whether the two were linked "on a contingent basis." He did remember that Ickes expressed "annoyance or irritation," but could not say whether it was over the tidewater oil lands suit or "something else." Loss of memory is a rather common affliction--under certain conditions. RELIGION IS HUMAN- NATURE. We often hear people say, they hear of a case of faithlessness or disloyalty, "Well, that's human nature." But they never call it human nature when a Chrisian does a noble deed of sacrifice, or when some act of true altruism indicates our faith in mankind. Yet the goodness in man is just as much human nature as ihe badness.

No graver mistake can be made about humanity as a whole than to imagine that it is motivated exclusively by selfish interests. History abounds with instances of selfish actions which exhibit the real spiritual nobility of which mankind is capable. Various philosophies have been built up through the ages which either attempt to label mankind as an intelligent animal pursuing his own interest, mean it is a recent pronouncement by Mrs. Roosevelt does not outmeasure it. Mrs.

Roosevelt has been recognized as a spokesman for the class-thought I which pressured Byrnes into the I Indeed throughout pronou ncements. I even Yugoslavia, the resistance most impor tant, if to communism is taking the-only effective form yet evidenced in the gathering together of Catholic elements. I have heard American statesmen say these Christian groups are the only ones in 1he world today who know how to resist communism, ideologically or politically. These groups have a firm ideology themselves. Britain was the first nation to talk up to the Soviets, but the diplomatic resistance of Bevin at the London UNO conference was J.

M. Core, J. G. Carroll, W. N.

Carr, Thomas H. Hudson, R. D. Warman, Davis W. Henderson, Edward D.

Brown, Frank M. Lardin, S. Ray Shelby, F. C. Newcomer, D.

E. Bane, C. C. Carter, H. D.

Leonard, Chad L. John, J. Kirk Renner, Linn V. Phillips, William R. Johnson, Charles L.

Lewellyn, Thomas L. Morgan, Jesse K. Spurgeon, Joseph J. Baer, Elias Goodstein, J. Espey Sherrard, Arthur L.

Byrne, Joseph W. Ray; William J. Sangston, J. Benton Crow, J. R.

Smiley, Max J. Laponsky, W. P. Schenck, E. J.

McDaniel, Jacob H. Sherrard, Robert C. Hagan, W. Frank Lane, J. Glassburn, Dean D.

Sturgis, Buell B. Whitehall, William A. Boring, M. B. McDonald, Ben F.

Bortz, John J. Humes, Clark W. Martin, J. E. Horewitz, Wade K.

Newell, D. W. McDonald, Daniel S. Robinson, Alex Z. Goodstein, Anthony Cavalcante, Donald M.

Higbee, Nicholas Comfort, William J. Crow, James A. Reilly, W. B. Parshall, Robert B.

Stauft, I. Burdette Coldren, J. B. Adams, Arthur A. Brown, E.

C. Sloan, W. Brown Higbee, Maxwell E. Lizza, Thomas A. Waggoner, Lewis M.

D'Auria, Frank R. Crow, Fred L. Brothers, James Carroll, Harold C. Marshall, Oscar B. Gooditein, Eustace H.

Bane, Samuel Feigns, Samuel D. Braemer, A. E. Jones, Herman M. Buck, William H.

Soisson, George W. Tanner, Jesse E. Hutson, T. H. Hjdson, Bernard T.

John, Paul V. Mahoney, appeasement policy, causing him I chad A John Lee Smith Milton Margolis, to retreat from his resistance es- Ewing K. Newcomer, John R. Hoye, Henry tablished at the London council Beeson, Joseph E. Kovach, Joseph P.

Matuschak, of foreign ministers last summer. phili a John L- Spur eon Da vid Mor- She has counseled a giving policy and believed realism to be red-baiting. But to the American soldier in Germany, after a little experience in dealing with Russia herself at UNO, she gave this formula for treating the Communists: Have convictions. Be friendly. Stick to your beliefs as they stick to theirs.

Work as hard as they do. This is substantially the counsel you have read in this spot for a couple of yeais. It comes closer to answering the great question of policy than State Department pronouncements will come. But if it also represents a change of front by the class of Americans for whom Mrs. Roosevelt usually speaks, it is the most significant recent development In foreign affairs.

FOUR FRONTS FOR PEACE gan Bane, Richard James Farrell and David Ezra Cohen, CORNWALL RETIRES AS B. O. CHIEF COUNSEL AFTER 24 YEARS' SERVICE A veteran has retired from active service of the Baltimore Ohio Railroad Company in the person of John J. Cornwall, general counsel, according to announcement by President Hoy B. White.

However, he will continue his connec- One-Mlnutc Test. 1. What is (he legislative body in China's government called? 2. In body did the government 01 Janan formerly resit 3. What sland severed its con, with a European country dead that will be fitting monu-1 a ind menu to te ideals for which fought.

could oe more fit-i ting to offset the total destruction of war than a Community Workshop dedicated to constructive, creative Work--a real recreation center for all the family! We all what has happened to American family life-the division of interest that often makes members of the same family strangers to each other. From kindergarten through college, in church and in clubs we are se- Hints on Etiquette. Small biscuits may be entirely buttered immediately instead of being broken into little pieces. Get Your Share? About 150 pounds of fresh vegetables are used annually by the average person in the U. S.

One-Minute Test Answers. 1. The Yuan. 2. The Imperial Diet.

3. Iceland severed ties with gregated according to age, with special interests and that have little or no relat'on to, Denmark the family as a whole. It is our belief that a Community Workshop for creative arts is as necessary to the cultural growth, well-being and happiness of the family and community as are its schools and libraries--a place where veterans will have ar. opportunity to continue skills learned while in service, and to develop new fields of interest; where a man can try his hand at some fine cabinet work that he Brcail cast on the waters re- has always had a hankering to The Sages Say: A man of integrity will never listen to any plea against Bible Thought do, and a woman can learn weave those lovely textiles that are so priceless today. Jewelry and pottery-making appeal to all ages.

Metal-work, printing, pho- oookbinding, the list of things to do for fun and profit 's endless. And usually these activities will have a direct relation to making home a better place in which to live. Aside from the recreational of a Community Workshop, its economic values also are limitless. Most people would use facilities for the pleasure of making useful and beautiful articles for themselves, but many would find that skills in the handcrafts offer a means of income as well. Many types of lome industry could develop from such a project, and the community profit greatly by increasing its employment opportunities and its cash income.

We believe that no other enterprise can serve so well to cut across all lines of age, race or Editor's Note: The Commission on Just Durable Peace instituted in 1M1 by the Federal Council the Churches of Christ in America to study the bases of a lasting world order. This is the third o( a series of articles appearing in The Courier that deals with Christian Action on Four Fronts for Peace, the commission's outline of general strategy for the postwar period. THE CHURCH FRONT By RT. REV. HENRY ST.

GEORGE TUCKER Presiding Bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church. This past week the first worldwide gathering of Protestant and Eastern Orthodox Christian leaders since 1939 has been meeting in Geneva, Switzerland. Men from the prisons and concentration camps, like Norway's Bishop Berggrav and Germany's Pastor Niemoeller, have been able to meet with their brethren from America, Britain and other lands around the world for the first me since before the war. During the long years of conflict, the Christian "underground," a heroic band of men and women, managed to maintain some contacts across the barriers of war. Xow the unbroken fellowship can be openly expressed.

A major purpose of this conference has been to plan the first full meeting of the World Council of Churches, scheduled for next year. The World Council, to which 91 communions from. 32 countries have already adhered, reflects the determination ol churchmen throughout tlhe world to work together effectively in seeking the Kingdom of God and His righteousness. Another problem dealt with at the Geneva conference has been the setting up of improved procedures to help the churches of the world to act more adequately on problems of world order. "Combined operations" are required if the churches are to exert a constructive influence on international institutions like the United Nations Organization.

As tht Statement on the Four Fronts points out, Christians are a minority in the world. If they are to offer effective leadership and server as child and comrade of ice, they need to be a well-oigan- Almightly God filled with potential good. Both are over simplifications which cannot fathom the secrets of human 1 nature. If you are cynical about your fellow man, ask yourself wheth- I the affection of your mother and father for you is based on self-interest, or whether your feeling for your best friend has a dollar and cents value. Or further, whether your business associates honestly want to ruin you.

ized minority. This requires not only united efforts on the part of the churches belonging to the World Council of Churches but cooperation on moral by all men of good will. The Catnolic, Jewish and Protestant Declaration on World Peace, issued in October, 1943, and known as the "Pattern for Peace," helped to make clear the moral requirements of a just and dur- Four Fronts." Unless men of good will can cooperate, we can hardly the nations to do so. Action In the temporal sphere, important as it is, provides no substitute for the major responsibility of the Churdh. A righteous world order cannot be organized and maintained by individuals who are themselves unrighteous.

The Church's first contribution to the attainment of our postwar aims is to make an organized and united effort to bring the multitudes who wander as sheep having no shepherd into such contact with Christ that He may effect in them that radical change which is described as a new birth. Unity of effort on the Church Front is no less important than on the political front. St. Paul speaks' of the many members of the one' tion with the road as consulting counsel. His re i ous differences and to ce- advice will be sought in important cases.

ment together the family and the Mr. successor is Edwin H. Bur- community into a working whole gess, chairman of the Traffic Executive Associa- Iwhat hope can thera possibly be tion, eastern territory, and of the Trunk Line world unitv uJm we find Association. He is also vice-president. some unity within ourselves and Mr.

Cornwall, retiring general counsel, is a in our immediate circle of resident of Romney, West Virginia. He is presi- deavor? dent of the Bank of Romney and is'one of the publishers of the Hampshire Review, which he has owned in whole or in part since 1890. He was governor of West Virginia from 1917 to 1921. Mr. Burgess was born at Columbus, Kansas, September 1, 1888, and was awarded his A.

B. degree by Pacific College, Oregon, in 1909, his B. S. by Washington State College in 1910 and his LL. B.

by the University of Pennsylvania Law School in 1914. He entered railroad service in June, 1914, as assistant to general solicitor of the Lehigh Valley, and was appointed general solicitor in February, 1927, holding this position until May 1, 1942, when he was appointed to his present position as chairman of the Traffic Executive Association and of the Trunk Line Association. Just Folks By EDGAR A. GUEST SEED CATALOGS 'Twill not be long before they come: The tales of tall delphinium And every growing lovely thing Out of the Past Local History From Courier FORTY YEARS AGO Redman Newton, 27, colored, employed as a driver by Isaac Wilkey, is drowned in the Youghiogheny River at the foot of Sixth street, New Haven, when he drives his team into the river to wash the horses. The animals strike a deep hole and start swimming but Newton, becoming frightened, jumps from the wagon and drowns.

One hundred dollars is realized from body. This presupposes unity Colonial tea held in chapel of First Presbyterian effort in the achievement of the I Church by the Ladies Aid Society. Chicken and purpose committed to us by! waffles are served. Christ. Mrs.

Maria C. Galasso, 57, dies at her home If the branches of the Christian'. in West Connell avenue of heart failure. She Church can measure up to this i is survived by her husband and one sou, ideal they will make a contribu- tion of inestimable value to the solution of the problem of world unity. The loyalty of men to the group which we call nations often stands in the way of a sense of THIRTY YEARS AGO The anniversary the birth of George Washington is quietly observed in Connellsville.

Squire W. P. Clark displays a flag from his office in the Weihe building; Superintendent B. L. responsibility towards She whole Berg of the Seco nd National Bank building dis- of mankind.

The Church can show that its branches through plays a large flag from the edge of the building and James Perrus, a native of Greece, shows his their union in Christ have found patriotism by SU p' por ting a flag in front of his a solution of the problem of I achieving unity without destroy- shoe-shining parlor. The llth annual Washington's Birthday ing diversity That is the type banquet in Masoric Hall is success. A leadership the world needs so turfcey dinner js servd by women Tl nity desperately. Christian men and women can help mightily to further advance Lutheran Church, in charge of Mrs. E.

B. Burgess. Casparis Stone Company of Columbus, on the Church Front by taking a hio, opens a quarry at Bluestone, between responsible part in their own i Connellsville and Indian Creek. J. H.

King, su- church and by helping it to be- i perintendent. is in charge. corne an active participant in the united effort of world-wide Church. What Noted People Are Saying By International News Service. WASHINGTON President Truman announces new pay-price policy: 'This is not a new line.

It is a bulge in the old line. You've heard of a bulge in the military sense. If everybody cooperates there will be no break-through." CHICAGO--Bishop Bernard J. Shiel following a tour of Europe: "Peace is a tantalizing mirage to those who do not have enough to abfe peace, and provided an ex- eat. Where there is the looming of cooperation by men of I good will.

is also interesting to You will soon see that in spite note that at the same time leaders of the non-Roman churches urged "Christian Action on Four Fronts of notorious and frequent aberrations, human relations are based on love, trust, and good faith. These qualities are the" dominant forces of human nature. spectre of hunger, there can be no peace." TWENTY YEARS AGO James Ross, 54, well-known grocer oZ the West Side, dies at his home after suffering a stroke. J. Harold Dull resumes his studies at University of Pittsburgh, after visiting his parents here over the week-end.

Rev. Albert R. Seaman, 84, retired Methodist Protestant minister, dies at his home in Painter street, South Connellsville, after extended illness. The "Snappy Six," a chorus of Capstan girls, sings at second meeting of Connellsville Safety School held in High School auditorium. The 21st annual Washington's Birthday banquet of Connellsville Masonic Association is held at Pleasant Valley Country Club.

TEN YEARS AGO Sportsmen of Indian Creek Valley meet at Melcroft Community Hall to form Valley organization. Among those present are James Banning, flbh warden, and Kenneth A. Reid member of Slate Fish Commission, both of Con- neUsville. Thelma Hixenbaagh and Eleanor Centmal, both of Star Junction, are injured when a bob- WASHINGTON i sled crashes into them as they walk along the Stabilizer Chester Bowles: "Our highway on Newtown hill. That marks the spring.

magic of the Beside the blazing fire we'll read The miracles of root and seed And what new bit of beauty grows Of pansy, peony and rose. A thousand times have growers told Of zinnia and marigold, But still men read their pages through As though the oldest charms were new. 'Tis good in fancy's realm to dwell With phlox and Canterbury bell, And roam, away from storms and fogs, Among the garden catalogs. Since 1910, the size of the average American winter wheat farm has doubled. turns again.

In the long: run you are being kind to yourself, Prov. 3:27: Withhold not good from hem to whom it is due, when it in the power of thine hand to lo it. NED'S ELECTRIC SHOP WE REPAIR AND REWIND MOTORS Motors Bought and Sold. Phone 1286. We Sell and Install Auto Window Connelisville Paint Glass Co.

Paul Hosfelt, Owner. 501 W. Crawford Avenue. 2397-J Phone 2397-M The THOMAS STUDIOS 109 E. Patterson Avenue.

Violin and Wind instruments Everett Thomas Piano Virginia Thomas Phone 2595-R for Appointment TODAY--TUESDAY CAXBADIHC WANDX McSAT IODISE CDBRIE plus 'SWINGES' ON A RAINBOW" JANE FRAZEE BRAD TAYLOR HARRY LANGDOX MINNA GOMFBELL WAIL-SIZE Hs MARLITE GENUINE WOOD-VENEERS AND PAUL C. SANDUSKY SONS Rear Davidson Union Supply Co. Store. Phone School We have found that many teachers in this community are not acquainted with the personal loan service of this bank. It is for your convenience.

Use it when you need money. I NATIONAL BANK A Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. QUICK RESPONSE! Isn't that what you want in the gasoline you use? Next time your tank is low--try FIRE CHIF.F. At its price you can't get a better gasoline TEXACO FIRE CHIEF for quicker starts. TOMORROWS SPECIAL: Edison Spark I'liics, reir.

for Peace," a Roman Catholic common task is to preserve a stable Rev. B. C. Newman, rector of Trinity Epis- group. acting independently, urged -economy--to help protect i'opal Church, St.

John's Church of the Wila comparable set objectives, security of your job. your biLSineas derness, Dunbar, and a Charleroi church, re- "Preserving Peace on and the income from your signs to become pastor at Kittanning, TEXACO PRODUCTS W. Crawford at 9th St. Phone 2648.

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