The Daily Courier from Connellsville, Pennsylvania (2024)

PACK TWO. THE DAILY COURIER, CONNELLSVILLE, PA. MONDAY, JANUARY 23, 1956. PERSONAL MENTION Mrs. Dora Clark, Barbara Pfei- ier, Diane Wilson, Sally Garletts, "William Burke, John R.

Mitchell, J. Thorpe, Thomas Gregg, Norma Newill, Mrs. Laverne McNatt. Mrs. Norma Brooks and son, Mrs.

Bessie Thompson and sen, Mrs. Marlene Marsinek, Mrs.j sRhoda Hertzler, Mrs. Elizabeth Krepps, Mrs. Nellie McBeth and son, Mrs. Ellen Machina and Airs.

Harriet Harshman a daughter, Thomas Tnorpe, James Smith, Walter Miller, William James, Stephen Hidock, Mrs. Ju- "dith Luce and Mrs. Edna Hitchco*ck have been discharged from Connellsville State Hospital. The condition of Mrs. Paul Wetherell of North Pmsburg a patient in the West Penn Hospital, Pittsburgh, is reported about the same.

Her room number as 3. Oscar G. Schultz of Mount Pleasant, R. D. 2, who underwent major surgery ar Frick Memorial Hospital, is reported much improved.

T. E. Walker of the Aaron Company has returned from 111., where he visited the American Furniture Mart. Mrs. Ralph Kingsbury of Lakewood, Ohio, has returned home after her mother, Mary A.

Lightburn of North! Sixth West Side. Mrs. Kingsbury is the former Mary Marcella Lightburn. Sabatine Piccione of 145 West Firview Ave. was admitted to the Veterans Hospital at Aspin- vrall Friday for treatment.

He will I be there for several weeks. AUNT HET By ROBERT QUILLEN The dog on the end of a leash leads nothin' but a man's life. GRIM REAPER MRS. JOHN SWINK Mrs. Bertha Mae Swink, 69, of Dawson, R.

died at 10:30 a.m. Sunday in Connellsville State Hospital. Born at Dawson Dec. 5, 1886, she was a daughter of the late Thomas and Sarah Katherine Lint I Newell. She lived in Dawson vir- tually all of her life.

Mrs. Swink was a member of the Bryan Methodist Church. She leaves her husband, John; ,11 children, Mrs. Mildred Lohr 'and Charles of Dawson, Mrs. Leona Foster of Baltimore, Md Ada Smith of Leisenring No.

3. Mrs. Betty Means and Mrs. Stephens of Connellsville, R. D.

2, Leroy and Thomas of Akron, Ohio, Robert of Clairton, Walter of Finleyville and Bruce of Vanderbilt; a brother, Leroy Newell of South Connellsville; 27 grandchildren and 14 great-grand- Dhildren. Four Children Die At Parents' Hands Apartment Blaze Leaves Family Of Eight Homeless i of undetermined origin Sunday night left a family, of eight homeless when it swept an apartment building and bottling works at 55 East Penn Uniontown, doing 1 $5,000 damage. Mrs. Margaret Kane and seven "Unless the practice at', oi of her eight children were routed once," Earnesty warned, "an In California, a former airline blaze rest will be made and the pub-'stewardess was found dead with! 3 7 5 when a rear bedroom licity in such cases is never good the bodies of two chUdren of lhe apartment was discovered for the offending party." a car parked near a church. Police' lf Burgess Huntley Cross and said she had spread deadly ex-l hr other officials of the borough are haust fumes into the car thr rnsvine en 1 SC ye serious about having this practice a vacuum cleaner hose.

discontinued as calling in a One tragedy took place in tiny! al rivpn smoke alarms occupies valuable time and Brooklyn, located 20 miles jor were also driven out Warn False Alarms At Dunbar Will Be Dealt With Slemly A person who has been calling Dunbar Volunteer Fire Department and hanging up as soon as the ring is answered is known to both police and firemen. Chief ofj sons as they frolicked to the bath Fire Police Charles Earnesty said! tub He also killed his wife and By UNITED PRESS Two children in Indiana, and two children in California died at the hands of their distraught parents Sunday. An Indiana Sunday school teach- his two young this morning. I then told officials he was the "Son WINTER SERVES UP STRANGE MIXTURE Three visitors, a daughter, Mrs. Little MOVE TO TOSS DM TRADE EMBARGO INTO LOCAL TALKS could also result in bad fire loss south Indianapolis, by keeping the line busy when a Rob ert Heckman, 31-year-old real fire was in progress.

truck driver was re to The body will be at the homej Punishment to the offender Sunday school at a local of her daughter. Mrs. Means, ofiwill be to the full extent of he! Method st church His ohlldren Connellsville, R. D. 2, until a.m.

Wednesday, at which time it will be removed to the Bryan Methodist Church near Dawson. The funeral service will be held there at 2 p.m. with the Rev. E. J.

Hatchner of Connellsville officiating, assisted by the Rev. Richard D. Wright of Dawson. Interment will be made in the Cochran Cemetery in charge of Gal- By WILLIAM C. SEXTON cy funeral ser vice.

United Press Staff Correspondent Fear Trojan Horse Operations to Be Started by Soviets WASHINGTON (UP)--The Eisenhower administration today war- fly watched Russia's new five-yearjquestions in the House of Commons plan for signs some of the in- for Eden to answer' when it re- creased production will go for convenes Tuesday only a few hours LONDON (UP) The British Labor Party sought today to thrust the United Nations trade embargo on Communist China into Prime Minister Anthony Eden's Washington talks with President Eisenhower. It was a hot political bon voyage for Eden who leaves Tuesday evening, with the resurgent Socialists demanding he commit himself in advance on a number of touchy points before he boards the Queen Elizabeth for New York. The Socialists introduced formal jan horse operations in under-developed countries. The Russians already are beginning to compete in world markets with "loss leader" items. The new production would enable them greatly to increase the competition.

Officials fear a flood of low cost machinery and weapons--will be used to undermine underdeveloped nations. The Soviet five year plan aims at higher production of steel, coal, oil-, and other commodities than even the late Premier Josef Stalin dreamed of ten years ago. New Mental Health Survey Committee To Hold Hearings (UP)--Pennsylvania's new'Mental Health Survey Committee will open two days of public hearings next Wednesday to obtain an appraisal of mental health needs and resources from almost 50 representatives of statewide organizations'. Spokesmen for religious, welfare, business, labor, veterans, public private mental health agencies will appear before the 27-member committee, which was appointed recently by Welfare Secretary Harry Shapiro. Co! chairme of the committee are the RevI Herbert W.

Stroup, Camp Hill, and Dr. Daniel Blain, medical director of the American Psychiatric Association. The report of the -group is tentatively scheduled for completion next June. before Eden's departure. It was an all out attempt to embarrass him politically.

Eden summoned his cabinet to a final meeting today to frame the answers. Laborite Harold Wilson said he will ask Eden, "if, in his discussions with the will raise the questions of the embargo on trade with China; and whether he will propose that restrictions on trade with China be put on the same basis as those on trade with Eastern Europe." Left-wing Laborite Konni Zillia- cus demanded that Eden raise the question of Secretary of State John Foster Dulles' "brink of war statements when he talks with Mr. Eisenhower. Zilliacus' question was: "What reply was made to the proposal of the United States of America for the employment of threats ol force and the use of force against China in 1953 and 1954..." Other Socialists demanded information on Britain's latest moves in the Middle East, including an explanation of the sudden transport of 2.000 of 2,000 paratroopers to Cyprus as a "fire brigade" following the anti-Western riots in Jordan. Civil War Yet Won't Celebrate 109th 'DULUTH, Minn.

(UP)-Albert Woolson, the last of the Civil War's "boys in blue," is feeling but there wiH celebration" bf'fili IWth birthday this year, his daughter said today. Seven Babies Born At Local Hospital Seven babies were born in Connellsville State Hospital over the weekend. They were: Son, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Harshman, Connellsville, R.

D. 3 12:10 p. m. Saturday. Son, Mr.

-and Mrs. Donald Shroyer, Mill Run, 5:35 p. m. Saturday. Daughter, Mr.

and Mrs. Arnold Kalp, Jones Mills, 9 p. m. Saturday. Daughter, Mr.

and Mrs. Homer Younkin, Connellsville, R. D. 3 9:50 p. m.

Saturday. MRS. MARGARET DUBARR Mrs. Margaret Dubarr, 82 years old of Mount Pleasant, R. D.

1, died Saturday at Charleroi, R. D. She was born Dec. 13, 1873, at Ohio. Mrs.

Dubarr was a member of the EUB ihurch of Monessen. Her husband, Morris Dubarr preceded her in death 11 months ago. Surviving are two sons, John, Dundalk, Alfred, Belle Vsrnon; two daughters, Mrs. David Madigan, Weirton, W. and Mrs.

Oscar Wilkins, Mount Pleasant, R. D. 1. Also surviving are 14 grandchildren; 14 great-grand- ihildren; two sisters, Mrs. Alice Pugh and Mrs.

Lyla Patterson, both of Wellsville, Ohio; and two persons who were raised by Mrs. Dubarr, Mrs. Arch Beaumarriage, of Charleroi, with whom Mrs. Dubarr was living at the time of her death, and Clifford Learnard, of Monessen. The body is at the Melenyzer funeral home, Monessen, where a funeral service will be held at 2 o'clock Tuesday afternoon In charge of the Rev.

Ijester Crum. Interment will in Grandview cemetery Monessen. ALFRED E. ROSSI Alfred Rossi, 78, of Bryson Hill, Dunbar, died Saturday afternoon at his home after a prolonged illness. He was born in Castel Di Sangro, Italy, on 19, 1877, a son of the late Dominic and Catherine Rossi.

He was a member of St. Aloysius R. C. Church and a charter member of Dunbar Lodge No. 833, Sons of Italy.

He had resided in Dunbar for over 50 years. Surviving are his widow. Mrs Emilia Rossi; five daughters Edith and Mrs. Jane Yourich Harrisburg and Catherine, Evelyn and Viola home; two 'sons Dominic of Middletown and Edmund of Harrisburg; and five grandchildren. The body is at the Burhans funeral home at Dunbar where the funeral cortege will meet ai 8:30 o'clock Wednesday morning Requiem high mass will be sung at 9 o'clock Wednesday morning at St.

Aloysi-js R. C. Church with the Rev. Patrick A. Kiernan as celebrant.

Members of the Altar and Rosary Society of St. Aloysius R. Church will meet at the funem home this evening after devotions to recite the rosary. Supreme Court May Hand Down Opinions WASHINGTON (UP) The Supreme Court meets today to hand down opinions. Racial segregation and national security issues were uppermost on its docket.

The segregation issue before the court is one of the last still undecided the right of a state to compel separate seating in interstate travel. National security cases include constitutional tests of the 1950 In- ernal Security Act and the 1954 Compulsory Immunity Law. Others deal with the validity of state sedi- ion laws and the authority of a city to fire an employe without learing after he has invoked the Amendment privilege against possible self incrimination. JOSEPH D. GERMAN JR.

Joseph D. German, printer Will Reside In Harrisburg were in the bath, getting ready for church. Heckman took a 12-gauge shotgun and shot his wife, Jane, in the hallway of his home. Then he entered the bathroom and sent single blasts into both his sons, Rick, 11, and Chad, 10. The Sunday school teacher drove to the home of his father, where he confessed.

He told authorities in a sincere voice that he was the "Son of G-oa." Tne bodies of his boys and wife would go to heaven and he would join them, he said. It was near a church that two children and their mother died at Palos Vercles Estates, Calif. A clergyman called police and said a car had been parked near his church for several hours. Investigating officers found the bodies of Mrs. Betty Lou Brewer, 32, a former airline stewardess, and her two children, Terry, 4, and usan, 3.

She left a note which did not explain her action except to say hat it was not her husband's fault. The husband, an unemployed air me pilot, said he had not seen his 'amily since his wife took the children to visit a doctor in Los Angeles Saturday. nd flames. About 50 Uniontown firemen nswered the general alarm and vere successful in confining the laze to the rear of the apartment building. Mrs.

"Virginia Anderson announces the marriage of her sister, Rosetta Brown Graves, to Thomas Cyrus of Steelton. The bride is a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. William Geater of Swaugectown road. The marriage took place at 8 p.m.

Sunday, January 15, at the home of the bride's sister, Mrs. Lillian B. Lewis, in Harris-burg. Officiating was the Rev. M.

J. Birge. The bride was graduated from the Ella-Rene School of Beauty Culture in Pittsburgh and attended Connellsville i schools. The bridegroom is employed by the Middletown Technical Air Service Command at Middletown. The couple will reside in Harrisburg.

At tJnlontown Hospital. Joseph Goshura of Uniontown, R. D. 2, Jean Crable, Verna Yurechko and Agnes King of D. 4, Alice Barr of Hopwood and Lenora Benline of Oliver have been admitted to Uniontown Hospital for treatment.

B. and Harold A. Hutchison. The funeral service was helc at 10 a.m. today at the Brandt funeral home at Perrysville.

Interment was private. MRS. FRANK LUKACS Mrs. Rose Lukacs, 83, of Perryopolis, died at 6:30 a.m. Sunday at Brownsville.

Surviving are her husband Frank Lukacs; a daughter, Mrs Alex Hersbold of Perryopolis; five grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren. The funeral service will be and partner in the firm of at the Blair funeral home at Daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Donald German, died Saturday in his Perryopolis at 2 pjn. Wednes- 1U lv -j A E.

Pox, 1131 South Pittsburg Uniontown home. He Mrs. John Kobus her father will probably be released from a hospital here next week, after treatment for fatigue and lung congestion. He has been in the hospital since Jan. 11.

9:50 a. m. Sunday. iyears in busi-'Wreath officiating. Interment Daughter, Mr, and Mrs.

Lester ness more than 26 years. Coldren, McClellandtown, R. D. ij Deceased was a member of Cemetery, I will be in- Mount Washington 10:30 a. m.

Sunday. Presbyterian Daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Adams Sunday School Class and She said her father says he's Laws, Normalville, R. D.

1, 5:27 Fayette Gun Club. "ready to go home." But, she put thumbs down on any festivities when his birthday rolls around Feb. 11, because he tires easily. Patrick MeGinnis New Railroid President BOSTON (UP) Patrick B. McGinnis today assumed his new post as president of the Boston Maine Railroad.

MeGinnis, who resigned as president and a director of the trouble- wracked New Haven Railroad only Friday, was named president of the BAM Friday night at a special meeting of the line's directors. The BAM appointment came only seven after resignation frtnn the New Haven. o'clock this morning. The body is at the Gleason funeral home where the service will be held at 2 p. m.

Tuesday with the Rev. C. Edwin Houk officiating. Burial will be made in Syl- Mother of Banker Dies in Ireland 'van Heights Cemetery. The Adams iuulu a Mrs.

Sarah Ann McConkey, will meet in the funeral tjC banC ai ine ag 80 years died Sunday morning in Belfast, ihome at 9:30 o'clock tonight. Ireland. She was the mother of HAYS RITUAL B. P. 0.

Elks Lodge 503 wiU meet at 9:30 o'clock tonight at the lodge to travel in a body to the Munk funeral home where a for H. Claude Hays will be conducted. A former Connellsville resident, Hays died Friday in Mt CONTINUE MARATHON EFFORTS TO SETTLE LONG WEC WALKOUT PITTSBURGH (UP)--Marathon efforts to settle a 99-day nation wide strike against Westinghouse Corp. continued here to day. Secrecy surrounded the negotia lions but it was learned that top negotiators met in a side caucus to discuss the bargaining Reports said the, meeting be tween Westinghouse Vice Presi dent R.

and James presfdent of" the Interna tional Union of Electrical Workers was conducted by Federal Media tor John R. Murray. Murray declined to comment on the report of the momentary breal in full-scale negotiations. Murray said he called a meeting Sunday in order to "clear up somi things that have backlogged." HI also killed rumors of an impend ing settlement with a terse com ment that there have been no ma jor developments towards a settle ment. The 1 talks have been deadlocke since the IUE launched the strik last Oct.

17 in a demand for 15-cent hourly wage increase un der a one-year contract. Tile union, whose 44,000 mem bers averaged $2.10 an hour prio to the walkout, turned down a com pany five-year proposal calling for a minimum of cents in pay increases over the duration of the proposed pact. In Washington a group of nonpartisan observers formed "National Citizens Committee" to help find a settlement of the crippling walkout. Chairman John M. Carmody said the committee was formed "to find a fair and equitable way to solve the dispute." He said he believed the committee would be "helpful in-bringing public attention to the' need for prompt 1 settlement." iailor Uncertain Collie Pup Will Also Get Into Navy RICHMOND, Va.

(UP)--A youth- ul sailor to be headed off for boot amp today was uncertain wheth- his inseparable collie pup wil ie allowed to join him as a blue acket. "Where I go. Brownie goes, ewis Jackson, 18, of Gladys, Va. old Navy recruiters Thursday But he was forced into a compromise when his request to take iis dog into the Navy got enmeshed in red tape reaching all he way to Washington. Jackson showed up with Brownie at the Navy recruiting station for swearing-in ceremonies.

recruit ng officer called Washington to ind out whether Jackson could the pup with him in the Navy The Office of Naval Personne said with reservations that he could. The catch was that Jackson would have to get permission from future commanding officer. The recruiting officer called th Baiobridge, naval a where Jackson will take his boo and learned that he woulc lave to come there to make a 'ormal application to bring the dog with him. Navy Recruiter Gilliam S. Dunn who enlisted Jackson at Lynch Durg, came up witih an an swer.

The recruiter will keep Brownie until Jackson gets an an swer from his application at Bain Bridge. With this much of the problem worked out, Jackson joined some 80 other recruits on the capita steps and was sworn in as a sailor From a nearby automobile Brownie watched through a win Winter served up a strange mix- ure of dense fog in the South apped by zero cold in the North oday. The gulf-spawned fog a jrouded all of the nation's south- ast corner. Ceilings and visibility ell to near-minimums at many air- orts and to zero at Cross City, 'la. More fog spread across the outhern plains as far west as olorado.

In contrast, it was bright, clear, nd icy cold in the northern Mid- est. The temperature was 21 de- rees below zero at Bemidji, Minn. arly today. Elsewhere, it was be- ow zero across Minnesota, north- rn Iowa, and central and western Visconsin. Both kinds of weather made riving hazardous.

Near Brownsburg, five per- ons were killed and two were ritically injured when a 'truck hit a snowbank, careened out of con- rol, and smashed into a car. Two the dead were children and two more youngsters were in serious ondition. Several serious accidents were Blamed on Oklahoma's combina- ion of freezing rain, sleet, and now. The heavy weather closed U.S. 66 west of Clinton after many rucks stalled on the ice.

The Southland's fog was blamed Mrs. Hornack Speaks To Large Gathering At Borough PTA Meet a "typical winter storm condi- ion." Warm air surged into a blanket of chilly weather, touch- ng off thunderstorms along the low fogs from the Missis- ippi River to the Atlantic Coast and rain and snow farther north The snow line, stretched across Tennessee, Kentucky, and Northern Nebraska. There was more now in the East, mounting up to one jnch in parts of New York and Pennsylvania. In the ice-bound Midwest, temperatures early today included 1' elow zero at Waterloo, Iowa, nine below at Minneapolis, and six above at Chicago. Forecasters blamed the deep reeze on a mass of arctic air centered over Minnesota.

They saw no warmup in sight for the nex two days. Fractures Leg in Fall. A fracture of the lower leg was suffered by Charles S. Bowman Jr. Saturday night after he had parked-his automobile at the Un- ontown Country Club.

The insur ance agent had the fracture reduced in Uniontown Hospital and was able to return home. Auto Safety Tip VIOLENT RIOTING FLARES IN INDIA NEW DELHI (UP) Violent rioting as bitter as that directed against Britain in he 1930s broke out today in eastern Indian state of Orissa and he army was ordered to send roops to the scene. Mobs surged through the streets the cities of Cuttack and Puri some 200 miles southwest of Calcutta, burned railway stations, at- acked the government-owned radio station in Cuttack, and beat government and police officials. The new rioting which started a week ago today in Bombay -came as Prime Minister Jawa- larlal Nehru's ruling Congress 3 arty prepared to set out an ironfisted policy to meet the government crisis. Most of the attacks in Orissa state today were directed, at local officials for their inability to persuade Nehru to change his mind about transferring part of Orissa to the state of Bihar under an unpopular government plan of redis- ricting Indiana states.

The injured included Mrs. Malati Chowdhury, wife of the chief minister. She was hit by a tear shell while making an unsuccessful attempt to pacify the unruly crowd. The brunt of the attack was directed at the Cuttack radio station where the crowd believed police had hidden many of the victims killed in earlier rioting in the state. But today the mob attacked everything smelling of government control.

The district police chief was mong government officials injured. Opposition members of the state legislature resigned en masse in protest against the government decision and appealed to the people of Orissa to "rise to the occasion." Until troops were called out today to guard government buildings in Orissa the mobs had been handled by police under orders to shoot to kill. Slain by Officer As He Flees Stolen Car Here's a safety tip from the American Automobile Association: A car that's in good condition is a safer car to drive. Check your brakes, windshield wiper, electrical equipment including headlights, tail lights, brake lights, and turn signals. Check your steering equipment and tires.

Drive a safe car and drive it safely. PHILADELPHIA (UP) James TUgman, 22, of Cambridge near 30th, died in Graduate Hospital Saturday of a wound inflicted by a policeman as he fled from a stolen automobile. Patrolmen George Mariner and Emil Buceroni reported they trapped Tilgman in the automobile on Rodman Street, near 24th Friday night but he bit Mariner's finger, opened the car door and fled. Mariner fired a warning shot into the air but Tilgman refused to stop. The second bullet struck TOgman in the Daughter Born MK--and-Mrs.

Joseph Wiltrout of Uniontown, R. D. 2, are the parents of a daughter born at 1:54 a. m. Monday in Uniontown Hospital.

South Connellsville Parent Teacher Association "Father. Night" program was made a sue cess Monday jby the large tendance of the male member of the organization. Each fathe was given a "Ben Franklin" ta which was to fee worn' to school the next day by his child stating: "My Father Attended PTA." Mrs. Norma Hornack of the Fayette County Society for Crippled Childrens and Adults at Uniontown spoke concerning the work of that organization. Mrs.

Hornack used movies, a manniken, and other devices to demonstrate how afflicted children arc taught to take care of themselves. President Mrs. John Duggan announced a book fair to be held in the Gibson School gym on Monday, Feb. 6, from 6 to 9 p.m. A bake sale and social hour followed the meeting.

David McConkey, Gallatin National Bank official who learned of her illness last Thursday. He had visited her last August and September. Lions Meet Tonight. Lions Club will meet at 6:15 o'clock this evening at the Greenwood Methodist Church. MRS.

MARY HUTCHISON Mrs. Mary Bigger Hutchison, widow of Rev. James E. Hutchison, former pastor of the Scottdale Presbyter-San Churth for many years, died Friday. She resided at 742 Jefferson Drive, North Hills Estates, Pittsburgh.

Surviving are two sons, James Girls' SQUARE DANCE Ntfht, Jon. 25 CLUB tmi Off fct. Ill East Conntllsvilli Griinhousts fOFLAR 0ROTE PH05E PETER SOLONINKA SCOTTDALE--Peter Sotoninka, 79, died at 10:45 a.m. Sunday at home after a short illness. The body has 'been removed to the Kapr funeral home.

Held for Gas Theft. GREENSBURG--Richard Peterson, 24, and George Sheetz, 30, of New Stanton, R. D. 1, were charged with the theft of gasoline from a car owned by Perna Miller of Stork at Hospital. Mr.

and Mrs. Joseph Brundage ot Republic became the parents of a daughter born a. m. Wednesday in Uniontown Hospital. Cub Pack Tuesday.

Cub Pack No. 3, Boy Scouts, will meet at 7:30 o'clock' Tuesday evening in the Immaculate Conception R. Church social hall NEW HOURS for the GHAT CHEW RESTAURANT WEEKDAYS SUNDAY Open '111 SATURDAYS Open 'HI Sun. A.M. ended our worries.

1 Illl ttitnrtd ui Aow to clein up our bills and reduce monthly payments that were too high. And then in a single visit us the cash to get a Fresh Start!" You, too, can get a cash loan Jn 1 visit-- just phone first, then com. in, upon approval, to pick up your' cash. BtMfttM said "yet" to nearly 2 million people last year, proof we like to to employed men and women-- mafried or single! Phone for I-visit loan, or if more convenient, write or come in vp I. $1000 llftwtvre, Fvrnlfwr.

CaV loans oter $600 mode Iff Beneficial Consumer OiKOunl Co. CAfffftLLfVILLt. 1NW. Cnwfertf 2tM BfffWt OrtN tVlfflNGS BT AFFOINTMFMT PHONE EVtNINO imfc ivtMnfi ef ad nrrmwffnf Mm OfJBJT SATURUAIS TO 1 O'CLOCK "SpOt-to" AMAZING PAINT OFFER 1 GA1LON SEMI-GLOSS or FLAT WALL PAINT (Discontinued Colors) With Purchase of 1 Gallon PAINT VARNISH ENAMEL Buy 1 Gallon of Regular Paint, Get 1 Gallon of Discontinued Colors Included Are Paints by Sherwin-Williams and Dutch Standard WALLPAPER BARGAIN SALE! 150,000 Rolls 50 Jlcg. 15C Beg.

30c Beg. 68c OFF 8c 15c 34c roll roll roll Select Trom Top lines-- for 1956 A A ISCnp 4, 6, 8 10 Rolls SPOT TO A A I I I I I A TH.

The Daily Courier from Connellsville, Pennsylvania (2024)

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