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The Record-Argus from Greenville, Pennsylvania • Page 1

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The Record-Argusi
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Greenville, Pennsylvania
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1
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nrv j-'J EVENING RECORD Stoneboro Citizen HE RECORD-ARGU NINETY-NINTH 2 COMPLETE ASSOCIATED PRESS WIRE SERVICES, FEATURES JAMESTOWN WORLD GREENVILLE, MONDAY, OCTOBER 6,1947 I COMMUNISTS PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY ESTABLISHED 1848 PRICE FOUR COMMUNITY FUND AIDES MEET TODAY Volunteers Will Hear Chest Plan Outlined at 7:30 p. m. Rally. P'irst meeting of volunteer workers in the fund drive of the Greater Greenville Community Chest, Oct. 20 to 27, will be held at 7:30 tonight in the Riverside Park Recreation building.

Those assembling tonight will include approximately 116 volunteers of the commercial and residential divisions for the 1947-48 campaign. Campaign Chairman M. IT. McClure, who will preside, said tonight's meeting will be of an informal nature, providing workers an opportunity to seek answers to questions regarding the forthcoming drive. The meeting will in no way duplicate the kick-off dinner scheduled for Oct.

20, he said. A number of voluntary contributions have already been turned in at the community chest office at South Mercer and Clinton Streets. Four major local industries have subscribed to the payroll deduction plan lor employes it is announced. They are the Greenville Steel Cat- Company, the Chicago Bridge Company, the Hodge Foundry ''and the R. D.

Werner Company. The Bessemer Lake Erie Railroad Company will conduct the campaign within the plant, officials recently announced. SCOPE! BROADENED Scope of the Greater Greenville Community Chest was broadened at a recent meeting of the board of directors when Pymatuning Township and Reynolds Village were included in -the--campaign. Harry Espey was named general chairman for the drive there. Arthur Zuschlag was named chairman for West Salem Township solicitations, with Dr.

L. V. Kriapp chairman for Hempfield Township. Dinner meetings of workers in the campaign are scheduled, the first for Monday evening, Oct. 20, the second, Saturday evening, Oct.

25. Both will be at 6 p. m. in the parish house of Holy Trinity Lutheran Church. The Greenville Business Men's Association, which aided in the formation of the community chest, has offered to pay the cost of one of the dinners.

Industrial and commercial workers are to meet at the opening dinner Oct. 20, and residential workers at the Oct. 25 dinner. PAYROLL DEDUCTION HOPED Chest leaders said that it is hoped that a number of the larger firms of the commerical will subscribe to the i oll deduction plan for payment of contributions of employes. A complete list of workers, captains and chairmen for all areas and for the industrial, commercial and residential divisions in Greenville Is expected to be announced in the near future.

President Asks Food Sacrifices Truman Calls for Meatless, Eggless Days; 60- Day Liquor Industry Shutdown Sought. Oct. unprecedented sell-denial offensive against hunger in Western Europe was touched off today by President Truman call for food sacrifices as an American "contribution to peace." Mr. Truman asked all citizens to go without meat on Tuesdays, without eggs and poultry on Thursdays and to save a slice of bread a dayf He demanded" of the grain exchanges the raising of the down-payment requirement on grain purchases to 33V 3 per cent to thwart what he called the inflationary operations of "gamblers in grain." If the exchanges refuse, he warned in a nationwide broadcast last night, the government may step in and "limit the amount of trading" in wheat and other grains A distiller described as a "bolt from the blue" another White House STEEL CAR EYES PRODUCTION PEAK Fabricating Departm nt On 24-Hour Basis. Striving for a new production record, the Greenville Steel Car Company has inaugurated 24-hour operation in the fabricating department and has increased employment to a peacetime peak of approximately 900 persons, a plant official announced today.

To meet a need for greater production in the car erection department, the plant recently added third trick operation in the fabricating department, marking the first time since the war that any department has operated on a continuous basis. Approximately 35 workers were I added as the result of the starting I of the third shift crew, it was stated. A number of second trick workers were promoted, some were transferred to third trick, and new moment." Two whisky-makers predicted the answer would be yes Going direct to the people by radio and television, Mr. Truman joined his citizens' food committee chairman, Charles Luckman, in a grave and sometimes sharply voiced plea for conservation lest prosperity at home and peace in the world be "needlessly lost" uckman OISPOTE Rural Patrons Protest Suggested Changes in Post Office Delivery. MPERIALISM iry mail route has the citi- of the town and the route patrons in a perturbed itate.

This springs from a report by a postal inspector who recently visited the area and suggested that approximately one-third of the rou te be lopped off and given to the Atlantic office and the remainder be served by the Adamsville carrier. The Adamsville route is a secondary one of about 16 miles ex- and reaches southward to near the Mercer County line. Rural patrons who have been delivery from the Hartstown office for more than 40 years recently sent a protest to the Post Office Department signed by 98 cent of the boxholders. They uuua uegan indicat ed they wanted service to mobilizing an organization, inside continue out of Hartstown, which Louise Overell, Lover Acquittal on Murder Charge Is Followed by Announcement That Marriage Plans Are Off Santa Ana, Oct. 6- (AP) -Passionate lovers of a few months ago, blond, buxom Louise Overell and George (Bud) Gollum are innocent of charges they murdered her parents, a jurv has decided, but their hearts no longer beat as one No sooner had a six-man, six-woman jury de- A proposal to disrupt I £, Iate sterda th the young college sweet- Hartstown's one rural deliv-1 ej rts ere innocent of killing Mr.

and Mrs. Walter moil 4-1 lij. Overfill. WPfllrnv Pacarlono ji 11 iliolUti and outside the government, to wage a campaign of near war-time least one influential Republican legislator grudging endorsement. gave un- ROV, u- Program," said Rep Hope (R-Kan), chairman of the House agriculture committee.

It is something tangible that the people cm understand. It was well presented and should have the support of every American MEETING CALLED And Chairman Bridges (R-NH) before the broadcast, called nate Appropriations commit- on the pres- employes were added tricks. The personnel of the plant now numbers about 900, including 800 shop workers and 100 persons in the office, engineering and supervisory forces. This total compares with a pre-war peak of 600 to 650 I persons. I A goal of 24 cars per day, as compared with the former production record of 20 cars a day, has been set for the order of 1,100 70-ton triple hopper cars which was started recently.

One hundred of the cars are to be built for the Delray Connecting Railroad, while the other 1,000 will go to the Wheeling and Lake Erie Railroad. "1. "2. Thursdays. "3.

day. "4. ROWLEY HOLDS UP WET-DRY VERDICT Arguments in the Mercer local option contest were heard by Judge George H. Rowley at Mercer today, but the situation remained unchanged as decision in the case was deferred. The arguments were in connection with the equity proceedings brought by Joseph and Jennie Pontera, of Mercer, asking that the local option vote be thrown out.

The petitioners claimed that the ballots used in Mercer were illegal because they had been prepared by precincts instead of for the borough as a whole. Martin Cusick appeared as attorney for the petitioners, while Solicitor Leo H. McKay represented the county commissioners. Supreme court rulings and other de- were cited. Arguments fltoere concluded and briefs filed shortly before noon, and the court took up other matters when it reconvened at 1 o'clock this afternoon.

Judge Rowley informed The Record-Argus this afternoon that he would file his opinion during the present week. TAFT'S REPLY IS EXPECTED OCT. 24 Washington, Oct. 6 Ohio Republicans were reported ready today to raise $750,000 for a "home grown" sampaign to get Senator Robert A. Taft the Republican presidential nomination.

His announcement that he will be a candidate is expected at a meeting of the state GOP central committee Oct. 24 in Columbus. As soon as Taft agrees to become the state's favorite son at the national convention next June in Philadelphia, his campaign backers will signal for action all along the political front. They say their efforts will be financed almost exclusively with Ohio money. The Ohio Senator himself is said to be reluctant to accept contributions from outsiders.

He also has stipulated that nobody will be $580,000,000 proposal for on both "7 aid to Western Europe. Ihis is the money which Mr Truman says France and Italy must have to assure that they will survive the winter as free and independent countries. The president asked housewives to memorize this "simple and straightforward Use no meat on Tuesdays. Use no poultry or eggs on lays. Save a slice of bread every Public eating places will serve bread and butter only on request." Mr Truman revealed that the first lady has Issued those instructions to the White House staff and he has ordered the Army, the Navy and all government-run eating places to follo-v suit "The battle save food in the United States," he said, "is the battle to save own prosperity and to save the free countries of Western Europe.

self-denial will serve us in good stead in the years to come." FIRST Secretary of Marshall underscored that tho'ieht. Pood today 5s foreign policy, he said adding: "The connection between the individual American and world affairs is unmistakably clear our foreign policy has entered the American home and taken a seat at the family table." Secretary of Agriculture An- to put up more than $500. Taft's decision to run, on the basis of a six-state Western tour he ended Sunday with his return to Cincinnati, was regarded as such a foregone conclusion that plans are said to be well advanced for an active drive on his behalf The Ohio senator goes on the radio tonight (9:30 EST) in a long range debate with Senator O'- Mahonoy (D-Wyo) about which political party is to blame for high prices. Taft will be at the microphone in Cincinnati, O'Mahonev in Denver. Youth Kills Rattler Beaver Falls Man Heads Automotive Association Atlantic City, N.

Oct. 6 A. oahli, of Beaver Falls, was named president of the Pennsylvania Automotive Association at the group's annual meeting here. Vice presidents elected yesterday included Leigh Schadt, Allentown; R. C.

Jones, Reading; R. w. Frantz, Wilkes-Barre; Guy Woodward, Wash ing tori, and S. H. Parker, Pittsburgh Paul Rueh, f'learfield was chnpen secretary, end W.

Golden, Reading, treasurer A three-foot rattlesnake was unsuccessful in its efforts to interfere with the delivery of The Record-Argus Saturday afternoon, but it provided a thrill for Raymond Leohnard, 13, of 4 Spring Street, Penn High School seventh grader who delivers papers in a portion of the East End and the Mapleton district. While stopped near the water works to fix a flat tire oh the bicycle he uses to deliver. Ray noticed a snake coiled a few feet away. He threw a spare tire at the snake, and It struck at the tire. Ray then killed the snake with a stick, finding it to be a three-foot rattler with one rattle and a button.

1.0 vvii, they claimed is the logical center of the area. The situation has developed since the death last July 9 of Lloyd Christie, veteran carrier who had delivered themail for 29 years. Since that time the service has been continued by his son, Emerson Christie, an ex-service man who is seeking appointment as the regular carrier. The route covers about 48 miles. Last week Mrs Eleanor Patterson, Hartstown postmistress, T71 11 CIJ.1V.I JLr.LJ.C5.

cUlCl. Overell, wea thy Pasadena socialite leaders, than the resolute Louise declared she was through with Bud. "I can assure you there will be no marriage," she said Her statement, given to reporters without hesitation came after the weary jurors returned their verdict of acquittal; a verdict that climaxed two days of deliberation and 19 weeks of trial and brought a wild demonstration of cheering and whistling from the jam-packed courtroom and thousands of others in the streets below. Sheriff's deputies and trial judge Kenneth E. Morrison unable to keep order when spectators milled around, and pounded each other on the back in the courtroom as the longest criminal trial in American court history came to an end.

HEIR TO $500,000 The prosecution had charged that the 18-year-old Louise and 21- year-old Bud were responsible for the deaths of Mr. and Mrs. Overell, whose bodies were found aboard THIEL'S VICTORY PARADUS ENDED Grid Tomcats Stopped After 15th Triumph. re- derson and Secretary of Commerce Harriman added their voices, and their serious faces, to the four-network, half-hour broadcast. The microphones and cameras were plan-id in the basement oval room at the White House where President Rooseveltt once delivered his fireside chats.

It was the first television broadcast in history from the executive mansion. of Synod Sleets in Sharon First Synod of the West United Presbyterian Church in North America opened its 90th annual conference at Sharon United Presbyterian Church Sunday afternoon. Sessions will be held tonight and Tuesday morning, afternoon and evening 1C" ceived a letter from L. E. Quinn Erie district post office inspector' in which he recommended that the Hartstown route patrons be divided, those living east of Crooked Creek and the Bessemer Railroad to be served from the Atlantic office, the remainder of the route to be servd by the Adamsville carrier, PC iy Dodds.

Hartstown people declare there is no rational reason for the proposed route change. They deny that there is any economy involved and assert that it will work a hardship on the patrons. They have offered a counter-proposal that the Adamsville route be consolidated with Hartstown and the patrons all served from Hartstown as the nearest geographical center. Hartstown earlier had two routes, but they were consolidated ea rs ago upon retirement a long-time carrier, and the service was continued bv Lloyd Christie until his sudden death last summer. The presently proposed change would mean a definite loss of revenue to the Hartstown office and might place it in a lower classification.

Congressman Carroll D. Kearns has taken an active interest in the matter and has recommended to the O. Department that the Hartstown route be continued as at present constituted. A record of football victories which gained state and nationwide attention for Thiel College was broken here Saturday as Thiel gridders dropped a 8-7 decision to Hiram College. The defeat was the first suffered by Thiel since 1940 and ended the longest winning streak in collegiate circle in Pennsylvania recent years, and one of the in longest among colleges throughout the nation.

Coach John B. Stoeber's pigskin toters won every game in 1941 and 1946, giving the college a six- year undefeated record, inasmuch as Thiel did not sponsor a team on the gridiron during the years, 1942 to 45, inclusive, because of the war. The full account of Thiel's downfall appears on today's sport page. Youth Hurt in Fall Charles Hittle, seven-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs.

Glenn Hittle of 44 Wilbur Street, was given emergency treatment at Buhl Hospital, Sharon, Sunday afternoon for a severe scalp laceration suffered in a fall on a walk at the home of his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Stainbrook, of the New Virginia-Bethel Road.

The lad was discharged after receiving treatment. His condition today was reported as good. Pay Increase Sanctioned Harrisburg, Oct. 6 Chairman Frederick T. Gelder of the Liquor Control Board said today that Governor James H.

Duff has approved a cost-of-living salary increase for the 3,500 board employes, retroactive to Sept. 1. Gelder said the increase averaged slightly "under 10 per cent" and was "pretty uniform" for all em- ployes. MASKED QUARTET GETS RICH HAUL Ambler, Oct. UP) masked gunmen terrorized and robbed 10 residents at the Oak Terrace Country Club today, fleeing with a loot of at least $7,700.

Using telephone wires, neckties and bathrobe cords, they trussed up seven men and three women after rounding them up in a room-to-room tour of the old-style mansion clubhouse. State police at Collegeville said two of the four robbers had descriptions similar to those of David Almeida and James Smith, sought for the Jan. 30 slaying of Philadelphia patrolman Cecil ing- ling. Clarence Grieb, 50-year-old manager of the country club, told police he was forced at gunpoint to open the club safe and that he then was tied up along with the others as the robbers fled. State police declared the robbery had the same pattern as the holdup ofthe Harrisburg Country Club a week ago today when four armed men tied up a husband and wife and fled with $300.

Treat Trio at Buhl Hospital for Burns James Coff, 18, of 505 Clin- Marre Avenue, New Castle, was admitted to Buhl Hospital for burns received to his back when gasoline caught fire following an automobile accident. the yacht Mary which aa blasted by dynamite on the murkv night of last March 15. Now Louise and Bud are free to go their ways, and they apparently will be separate. She is the sole heir to the half million dollar estate left by her father, who was head of a Los Angeles loan company, and her mother. Bud can start out soon, as he plans to do, on a leisurely auto tour of the United States.

The two had professed undving love for each other in letters they exchanged in jail after their arrest. They had planned a wedding for last April 30, her 18th birthday. Louise was asked by a reporter why she had changed her mind about the romance. She replied: "Well, I'll let you decide that for yourself." GALLANT IN ACQU1TAL Bud was gallant in acquittal. He said he was going on a lone- auto trip.

With Louise? Well, he would go with her if she wanted to go along, but if she didn't he was going anyhow. An estimated persons, almost one-third of the population of Santa Ana, capital of Southern California's fabulously rich orange empire, was within shouting distance of the magnolia tree-lined block surrounding the sandstone courthouse when the jury returned its verdict. Two of the six women on the jury wept unashamedly as trial judge Morrison complimented the jurors for their service. Some had forfeited more than four months wages to discharge their public obligation. They received S12 a week as jurors.

"Red" Affidavits, Hollywood Issue Enliven Union's 66th Session Patrick Pugliess, 26, of 610 Beechwoocl Avenue, Farrell received burns to the left hand when oxygen exploded while he was at work. Stellie Ford, 37, of 302 French Street, Farrell, was treated for burns suffered to both hands as gasoline exploded at her home. Firemen Are Called to Motorcycle Blaze Firemen were called to the Marsteller home of Fourth Avenue near South Main Street, at 5:20 p. m. Saturday after a motorcycle had caught fire.

The home was believed to be endangered by flames from the machine close to exterior wall, but th motorcycle was moved away from the house and covered with sand and earth to extinguish the blaze. The machine was said to be owned by Samuel Baer and was being started by L. A. Marsteller when the motor caught fire. Marsteller escaped injury.

Two Injured by Autos Elmer Campman, 74, of 419 Fruit Avenue, Farrell, is in Buhl Hospital with head injuries- received Sunday when he was struck by an automobile. John Matthews five-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. William Matthews of 925 Fruit Avenue was able to leave the hospital after being treated for leg injuries suffered when he was struck by a car. LOSES JEWELS IN Mrs.

Sari Gabor Hilton (above) blonde "Miss Hungary of 1930" told New York City police she was robbed of jewelry valued by police between $600,000 and $700 000 by a man who threatened to shoot her and her six-months-old daughter in their penthouse home She is the former wife of multimillionaire hotel owner Conrad Hilton and sister of Hungarian Actress Eva Gabor. GHSCELiBRATES FRIDAYCONQUEST Grid Victory Results in Holiday, Parade. Thirteen long years in quest of a triumph over their traditional Mercer County rival was finally climaxed this morning following a 24-0 victory by the Penn High football Trojans over Grove City last Friday a tumultuous student assembly. For the first time in the 30-year history of the two rivals, the decisive victory was never greater Friday's triumph was scored by an underdog Penn High team over a power-house Grover grid machine that had steam-rolled four opponents into submission on the gridiron. Coach Edgar Snyder was unstinting in his praise for his Trojans gridders who displayed an invincible offensive against the previously undefeated Grovers.

The Trojan mentor expressed keen satisfaction with the performance by his varsity, stating that the team as a whole was outstanding with no particular player singled out. The students were dismissed following the assembly and participated in a mass parade down Main Street which was preceded by the Penn High band, team and cheer leaders. Penn High administrative officials dismissed school activities at 2:30 to permit the pupils to attend the Penn High-Farrell Junior Varsity football game this afternoon. ZIONJSTSAWAIT MARSHALL REPLY BLOC SEEKS TO DESTROY AFL CONVENTION OPENS WITH LEWIS AGAIN THREATENING DRAMATIC SPLIT San Francisco, Oct. 6 Start of the AFL's 66th convention today was enlivened by the unspoken threat that John Lews and William L.

Hutcheson might team up to lead more than 1,200,000 miners and carpenters in a "walk" out of the federation Both have critical differences with their colleagues in the AFL which throws them together on the defensive in a new dispute endangering the federation's unity. However, the fight may or may not reach the convention floor before the final two weeks hence. was so tense as the 750 delegates gathered that extra pains were being exerted by President William Green to settle the differences in advance. The federation has about 7,600,000 members. Lewis blocked the use of National Labor Relations Board facilities for all 105 AFL unions when he alone among the 15 executive council members refused to sign a Taft-Hartley affidavit disavowing Communism.

His own United Mine Workers bars Communists from membership, wants to fight the act in every provision. Others on the council are willing to swear they are loyal Americans in order to protect weak locals requiring protective features of the act. Hutchison is locked in a bitter controversy with several AFL unions over job judisdictions in Hollywood movie studios. The convention, after listening to speeches today, will be recessed until Wednesday to permit the executive council to devote all day Tuesday to the Hollywood issue. The council will not take up the 'Red" affidavits again until Thursday.

Hutcheson was willing to sign the non-Communist statement as a member of the executive board of the building and construction trades department, but 'he quickly agreed that Lewis' argument for not signing them had merit. The UMW chief, who can use a powerful friend in the AFL right now, is depending on Hutcheson to support him in any floor battles with Daniel J. Tobin of the teamsters or John, P. Frey of the metal trades department, leaders in the move to force Lewis to sign affidavits if they are required by the NLRB. The board may take Lewis off the spot if it decides that the interpretation of the act by General Counsel Robert N.

Denham of the NLRB is wrprig. Delegates were confident the board parly this week would reverse in an' appeal from Uie counsel's stand. Lake Success, N. Oct. circles were reported confident today that the United States would endorse an 11-member United Nations commission majority report calling for partition of Palestine into sovereign Jewish and Arab countries.

There still was no official U. S. comment. Partition is bitterly opposed by the Arabs and has been accepted by the Jewish Agency for Palestine "in sadness and most reluctantly." Most Zionists hope for partition in the knowledge that they cannot have all of Palestine. The Arabs have threatened to use force in the event of defeat of their proposal for immediate independence of Palestine with its 2- to-1 population majority intact.

American sources maintained a strict silence on Secretary of State Marshall's plans and would not even confirm the date of the forthcoming U. S. speech. It was understood from a member of tht. Assembly's 57-nation Palestine committee that the U.

S. declaration of policy would be made on Thursday. Whether Marshall himself, delegate Hsrschel V. Johnson or deputy delegate John Hilldring, ex-assistant secretary of state and major-general, would actually give the speech still was not announced. Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Andrei Y.

Vishinsky has been equally tight-lipped on when the Russian reaction will come or what it will be. Those in Zionist circles expressing optimism said the United States has been holding up its major speech, hoping for prior assurances from small nations that they support partition. However, the little countries generally have kept silent waiting for the U. S. This condition has led to repeated pleas from Dr Herbert V.

Evatt of Australia, committee chairman, for the big powers to state their views so the debate might proceed. Amvets In Session Columbus, Oct. 6 Paul Mabady, Latrobe, was named juige advocate of the American of World War TI at the organization's third nat- xionul convention. Red Leaders in Nine Nations Have Organized New Moscow, Oct. 6 UP) Leaders of a new Communist international organiz a i linking the Communist parties of nine European nations rallied their followers today for a no compromise fight against what they described as United States "imperialism." Formation of the new first such group to 3e supported by the Russians since declared the Comintern dead in disclosed yesterday in a statement issued in its name.

In effect, the statement served notice of the Communists' intention to wreck, if possible, the Marshall plan for European aid and the Truman doctrine to combat totalitarianism. It proclaimed that the world had been divided into two by the Soviet Union and the United called upon European Cimmunists to defend the "national sovereignty of their peoples against U. S. aggression." Pravda, Communist organ, said that formation of the new interna- tional organization was completed at a hitherto unheralded meeting in Warsaw last month, attended by Communist leaders from Russia, France, Italy, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Romania, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia and Hungary. To implement the work of the organization, an "information to be established in the Yugoslav capital at Belgrade.

To it will be assigned, the announcement said, the task of "exchanging experiences" and, if necessary; of "coordinating the activities of the Communist parties on a basis of mutual agreement" Russia was represented at the Warsaw conference by two of its top Politburo Gen. Andreu Zhdanov and Georegi M. Malenkov. (The Politburo is the political bureau of the central committee of the all-union Communist party.) Zhdanov was among the Communist who signed the resolution Moscow in May, 1943, calling 'or dissolution of the he international organization, founded by Lenin in 1919 to organize the working class parties of the world. (Dissolution of the Comintern vas acclaimed at the time in many Allied countries as signaling a greater cooperation between Russia and the Western world.

Premier Stalin himself said the move would clear the way for "future organization of a companionship of nations based upon their The published text of a declaration issued by the Warsaw conference said that formation of the new Communist organization was necessitated by international developments which had resulted in a split between the Western and Eastern worlds. The declaration blamed the split upon "imperialist politicians" in the United States, whom it accused of trying to provoke a new war. The Marshall plan and Ttuman doctrine were described as tools of the United States in a campaign for world domination Sharpsville Sisters Injured in Collision Two Sharpsville sisters were injured when their automobile went out of control Sunday on the Sharon Hull Street'hill, and crashed an iron fence in front of the Westinghouse Electric Corporation plant. Miss Jessie Rice 70, and her sister, Frances, 67, of 1328 Ridge Avenue, Sharpsville, were treated at Buhl Hospital for bruises and cuts. The former, operator of the car, told police the brakes failed to hold.

William Nasser, 31, of 371 School Street, narrowly missed being carried into the Shenango River when the steering mechanism of his automobile broke and the car struck a guard rail at Budd Street Bridge, Sharon. Western Pennsylvania Fair and slightly warmer tonight. Tuesday fair south and central portions. Considerable, cloudiness with a few showers and cooler in north portion. OFFICIAL GREEN RECORD Temperature for 24-hour ending at 6 p.

in. yesterday; muni. 79; minimum, 47. Precipitation for 24-flOMr ending at 6 p. ui.

yesterday;.

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About The Record-Argus Archive

Pages Available:
130,779
Years Available:
1874-1973