LYNN, COOK, MULLIGAN, NANGLE, CROSS, FORINGER, MALOOLY, SHARP George LYNN, 14 month old son of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. LYNN, died Monday evening after an illness of three days. Funeral services will be held Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Robert Henry COOK died Sunday, September 5, 1920 at 1:45 p.m. Mr. COOK formerly resided in Bridgeville, but his present home was in Pittsburgh. Funeral services were held Tuesday at the Bethany Presbyterian church at 2:30 o'clock. Interment was at Bridgeville. James MULLIGAN, aged 53 years, died Tuesday evening, September 1 in the Mercy hospital. He leaves two sisters, Mrs. J. B. LAWLER and Mrs. Catherine MONAHAN of Homewood and five brothers, William and Martin of Detroit, John of Bulger and Thomas and Patrick of McDonald. Funeral service was held in St. Alphonsus' church Saturday morning and interment was made in the Noblestown cemetery. Margaret Grace NANGLE, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Winfield NANGLE, of Fifth street died at the home of Mrs. NANGLE's parents in Wellsburg, W. Va., on Friday evening. She was eight years old. Mr. and Mrs. NANGLE and two children, Margaret Grace and Winfield had been visiting at Wellsburg when both children took sick. Winfield, it was thought, would not recover, but at present is doing nicely. The body of Margaret Grace was brought to McDonald Tuesday afternoon and services were held at the grave in Robinson's Run cemetery at 2 o'clock in charge of Rev. B. B. HARRISON. The death of Mrs. Mary CROSS occurred at six o'clock Sunday morning, September 5, 1920, at the home of her daughter, Mrs. George HAMMERLY, in Third street. Death was due to heart trouble, from which she had been suffering the past two months. Had she lived another month, Mrs. CROSS would have completed her 72d year. She was born in Airdrie, Scotland, October 6, 1848. Her maiden name was MILLER. She was united in marriage with James WEIR, who died in 1878. Mrs. WEIR came to America about a year later with three children and located in McKean county, Pa. In 1883 she married Cornell CROSS, who died about twenty-seven years ago. Mrs. CROSS is survived by one daughter, Mrs. George HAMMERLY, of McDonald, two sons, John WEIR, of Ponca City, Okla., and Clarence CROSS, of McDonald; by twenty grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren; also tow sisters, Misses Jessie and Helen MILLER in Airdrie, Scotland, and one brother, Jackson MILLER in Glasgow, Scotland. Funeral services were held at the HAMMERLY home Wednesday afternoon, in charge of the Rev. B. B. HARRISON of the First Presbyterian church, assisted by the Rev. W. D. IRONS, D. D., pastor of the First U. P. church. Interment was in Robinson's Run cemetery. Andrew C. FORINGER died at his home in Fourth street, McDonald, Pa., Thursday, September 3, 1920. He was born December 6, 1860 at Kaylor, Armstrong County, Pa. Mr. FORINGER was a widely known oil man. Previous to his coming to McDonald in 1891 he operated in the Bradford and McKean Co. oil fields and in Canonsburg and Washington, Pa. He was a charter member of Garfield Lodge No. 604, F. & A. M., Darius R. A. Chapter No. 294 of McDonald, a member of Syria Temple, A. A. O. N. M. S. of Pittsburgh, Pa. He was also a member of the firm, Douglass & Co., Druggists; was vice president of the Citizens Water Company. Funeral services were held at the home Sunday evening at eight o'clock in charge of Rev. J. H. DEBOLT, pastor of the M. E. church of this place, assisted by Rev. W. D. IRONS, D. D., pastor of the U. P. church. Interment took place at 2 o'clock Monday at East Brady in charge of the Masonic order. He leaves two sisters, Mrs. A. C. STEELE of New Brighton, Pa. and Mrs. Mary DAVENPORT of McDonald and two brothers, William B. of Steubenville, Ohio and James A. of McDonald. Mr. John MALOOLY of Primrose was buried last week in the Catholic cemetery in Noblestown. *Noblestown column Mrs. Mary Jane HOFFMAN SHARP, of North Side Pittsburgh, sister of G. W. HOFFMAN, Sr., of Noblestown, died suddenly at her home September 1st. Mrs. SHARP was ill only about five hours, having been engaged in her customary occupation of doing some of the family sewing in the early evening. Two physicians, who were called were undecided as to the cause of her sudden death, but were of the opinion that it was due to acute indigestion. Mrs. SHARP was born in Noblestown and lived here until her marriage to Richard SHARP of Allegheny City, and had made her home there since that time. At the time of her death she was in her seventy-ninth year. Previous to her marriage to Mr. SHARP she was a member of the Noblestown M. E. church, afterward transferring her membership to the North Avenue M. E. church of Allegheny, of which she was a member at the time of her death. Rev. WHITFIELD, of the Crafton M. E. church, a former pastor of the deceased, conducted the funeral services at her former home at 2 o'clock September 3rd. Interment was in the Uniondale cemetery, North Side. *Noblestown column