Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Indiana Gazette from Indiana, Pennsylvania • Page 55

Location:
Indiana, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
55
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

OB ITU ARIES Ia 9l9ter Of Of- A. R. Saltiburg, two brothers: 1111 Bftrotii Drive, WilHam, LiBo, and Clyde, Welrton, W. died Tuesday, Clarksburg, two grandchildren 30, im, In Mercy and three great-grandchildren Hospital, Pittsburgh. Friends will be received from Born (it Montgomery In- 1-9 p.m.

Saturday and 10 a dlnna County, on July 26, 1891, to 9 p.m. Sunday at the Hunter ahe wii a daughter of Isaac D. a 1 Home, Saltsburg Ella M. toukln Smith. where services will be She had ffrst married Edgar ed at 1:30 p.m.

Monday, Rev. 3. Getty, who preceded her In Richard Adams, officiating. In orment will be in Greenwood death on July 1012. Later mm uc ureonwooa married Rev, A.

R. Mans-Memorial Park, Lower Burrell bergar of Huntingdon. (Maniberger was an ac- LOUISE EMILY YARD BALL, member of the United of Jacksonville, former- Methodist Church. ly of Starford, died at the Mc- Survlvlng are her husband, Leod Hospital, Florence, S.C., mentioned above; the following Wednesday, Oct. 8, 1969.

children: Dr. Arlie Mansberger, Friends are being received ut Jr, Baltimore, Mrs. Wil- tn Bence Funeral Home, Cly- Ham (Betty) Shaw, Weirton, W. after 2 p.m. today where Mrs.

Richard (Ruth) services will be held Saturday Shearer, Philippl, Mrs. ot 2 p.m. with the Rev. Pruitt Floyd (Vivian) Farr, Weirton, Duncan, officiating. Interment W.

two sisters: Mrs. will be made in the Oakland Grace and Mrs. Arthur Cemetery, Indiana. Crosmun, both of Hillsdale; 11 grandchildren. LEMMON BIRD DISHONG, Services were held from the 8 of Commodore R.D, 1, died Pleasant Valley United Metho- Wednesday, Oct.

8, 1969, at the dist Church on Oct. 3 with Rev. Indiana Hospital. G. Wayne Burwell and Rev.

J. Friends are being received Herbert Parks, officiating. In- from 2 and 7 '10 P-m- today at torment was in the Chestnut tne Ra'righ Funeral Home, Ridge Cemetery. Hillsdale. Friends will be received Saturday, at the Hillsdale MARY FLEECER -MAT- esleyan Methodist Church THEWS'SINCLAIR; 66, of 202 noon until 2 P- the hour Railroad Avonmore, died service, where the Rev.

John Wednesday, October, 8, 1969, at Dur fe Frederick Sat- Latrobe Area Hospital, following will officiate. Interment a short illness. wil1 be made Montgomery Born Dec. 16, 1912 in Salts- Cemeter near Hillsdale. burg, she was a daughter of Lewis and Maude Fleeger and was a member of Avonmore Free Methodist Church.

She, Js, survived by her husband T. of Avonmore, and the sons: Samuel t7 Long Island City, N.Y., James T. Sinclair, at home; three daughters: Mrs. James (Jane) Storey, Hopewell, Mrs. James' (Alda) Smith, 1 Greens burg, Mrs.

Andrew (Elsie) Bennardo, Saltsburg, one brother, ger, a of Indiana; six sisters: Mrs. Joseph (Lillian) Lin senberger, New Kensington, Mrs. Joseph (Frances). Musick, and Mrs. Harold (Clara) Alt man, both of Avonmore, Mrs William (Gladis), Lambing, Mansfield, Ohio, Mrs.

William (Rose) Holllnbaugh, Oakfield, N.Y., and Mrs. Beryl (Alice) Yingling, Johnstown; also six grandchildren. Friends will be received after 1 p.m. "today at the Yockey Funeral Home, Avonmore, where funeral services will be conducted on Sunday at 2 p.m., Rev. Daniel officiating.

Interment will be in Avonmore. I I flclS PHILADELPHIA 'emple University lomecomlng queen MRS. CLARA JANE WILEY of! 127 E. Brown Blairsville, died October 10, 1969 at the home of her Caugherty' in more Blairsville. Born Sept.

22, 1882 in Blairsville, she was 'a daughter of Marlin P. -and Annie Stitt Wil ey. Mrs, Shaffer was a member he; is the sports director, of Hebron Lutheran Church, because I'm a ham." Blairsville, and was preceded in Frantz said he hopes football gatne Qct. '18 will death by her husband Luther Ralph, in February 1962. She is survived by one daugh- the stadium and thereby ter, Mrs.

Elmer (Laura) Caugh- our image in the city." erty, Blairsville, one son, James Shaffer, Associate professor oi music at Lycoming College, Wiiliamsport; also five grandsons. One srfster also survives, Mrs. M. J. (Ada) Rising, Vandergrift, and one brother James A.

Wiley, New Brighton. Friends will be received at the Ferguson Funeral Home BlalrsvUle, from 7-9 p.m. this evening, end from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Saturday, where funeral cervices will be conducted at 1:30 Sunday, Pastor Eu gene Ketterer, officiating. Interment will be In Blairsville In lieu of flowers, the family making a contribution to the Indiana County Chapter, American Cancer Society.

MRS. SARAH ELDA GRIN. DLE HAGGERTY, of Creekside, died unexpectedly at her Creek- tide R.D, home today. Friends may pay their respect at the Bowser Funeral Home, Plumville, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Saturday.

Complete arrangements will appear in Saturday's edition of the Indiana Evening Gazette, PAUL LQWMAN, 74, of Clarksburg, died Thursday, October 9, 1969 in Indiana Hospital. Born April 12, 1895 In Conemaugh Tqwnship, he was a son of Hugh and Ella Coleman Lowman. Mr. Lpwman was a veteran of World War and been a member of the Clarksburg School Board and Saltsburg Joint School 5oard a cumber of years, Ha wai member of Cluto- burg UnltadPraiby tar Ian Church, WUlianmon Lodge and AM No. 491, SalUburg, and served as.

Master ki 1W6, William P. Daugherty Royal Arch Chapter, 313, Indim, aim the Woodman of Miuda fci wife, lownian; ona cUufh- tar, Mra. Fora Ohav- Wait Covtiu, QM son, Robart Htwy, Chlldrtn't To Odd 8 King Syndicate, 1969. truro Thursday, 0 fg StateHealth Revampinq A Necessity head of the state's health anc welfare programs said today that a redistribution of healtl llization in general and its health in particular." Dr. William A.

Barrett, Pitts aurgh, was chosen Thursday as of the society aut will serve only two days. He fills the vacancy created when Dr. Carl B. Lechner, Erie, resigned for reasons of th health Saturday, the society will be Funeral the Home The Shi (AP) elected a Thursday Ba services is necessary if healtl Octl Scare "is to be the right, not jus the privilege" of every Penn sylvanian. Dr.

Thomas W. Georges welfare secretary and acting secretary of health, said the vauey, wnere mends will be changes will come through com received Saturday from 2-4 and prehensive health planning, al 7-9 p.m. and services will be though, he did not detail the pro conducted Sunday at 3 p.m. spective changes, with Rev. William J.

Malanow- His remarks were preparec ski, officiating. Iriterment will for the 120th annual meeting the "Pennsylvania Medical Socie ty which opened a meeting Thursday. The sooietj has more than 11,000 members 'We know that there are child ren who never see a doctor women who have their babie without any prenatal care ani aged who must live out thei lives in a cycle of noverty anc sickness," Georges said. He said the present system providing health care is stagger ing under the burden of ing the increasing expectation of a growing population. "The general public is be coming very interested in healt matters," he noted.

"They don' like rising costs and they apprciate the difficulty of try ing to find a physician in time if illness. GeoEges was the principa speaker at; a seminar sponsore by. the society's Council on Med ical Services designed to inform doctors on ways they can and should participate in comprehensive health planning. A call for increased nationa health care, especially in th. slums, was sounded Thursday Dr.

George E. Farrar of Phila delphia, who heads the society He told the society's rulin body, the House of Delegates that the society should take ap propriate action to prepare fo any' system of national healt care so that the interests of hot patients and physicians can bes be Farrar presented 12 recom mendations "to improve our civ with these statistics: 45-34-42, green-eyes and a goatee. called his victory "a successful battle against apathy on the campus, in the city and in the nation" that was "making people aware of Temple." Frantz got 65 per cent of the vote, with the refct spread tmong 11 distaff opponents. Fpanti, 19-year-old Bbpho- communlcations major rom suburban Huntingdon Valey, said he was drafted to run or homecoming queen of the university by the chool's radio station, for which 'prob- the crowning at the Temple-Hofstra help The U. S.

mint frequently makes coins for other countries, notably those of South and Central America. GHiCK OUR PRICE MM vrtitrt oteUditf for MABON BROS. HARDWARE HN.MSt. name officers for next year and make policy decisions. Miners Face Damage Suit hed led fed Business Mirror- Indiana Evening Friday, Oet, 10, In World rade? Less Competitive i i Steel triking miners JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyit NEW YORK (AP) Is the United States becoming less competitive In world business? You can't prove It right now, but signs do abound that Indicate Americans no longer dominate In technological, management and marketing skills as they did during the two decades following World War II.

The trend, if It Is that, may be more of a compliment to the vigor of other Industrial nations than a suggestion that Americans are losing their zest and skills. The United States continues to advance In most areas of busl ness. But the growing number of foreign products available In American markets demonstrates clearly the growing degree of foreign competition. The automotive market is a clear example. Against the vaunted power of some of the world's large corporations, the Detroit automotive companies, foreign carmakers now sell a million units a year in the United States.

Despite the continued pre-em inence of America In some technologies, there is growing evidence that American goods are not snapped up as eagerly by foreigners as they were a decade ago. Reflecting this, the U.S. foreign payments condition remains in deficit, meaning that A Americans continue to spend hear- mor abroad than is earned from foreigners. In the most six-month period, in fact Corp. against 600 the deficit deepened.

atlon, some of them to a great- degree than In the United tates. A more likely explanation is mt the United States no longer as a near monopoly on modern echnology and management, ot because it has lost its abiii- es but because others have ac- uired them. One great Irony of the U.S. ituation Is that for a long time most exportable items were echnology and management now-how. To a very great de- ree it was the teacher, and the upils learned well.

Using echniques, American-developed and in many in- tances benefitting from much ower wage scales, foreign com- antes now can export many terns into the United States and ell them at a lower price than omestic manufacturers Moreover, foreign-made prod- cts competing in American markets usually have an American-made" look Foreign automobiles, for example, have developed styling with a definite Detroit look. Although some critics contend hat Americans have lost some thedr Initiative, competitive- less and spirit, the facts so far ndicate that, instead, foreign manufacturers have devejope heirs. at its Maple Creek coal mine to Washington County. U.S. Steel says It's seeking $1 million in punitive damages against the miners and $67,000 for each day the strike continues.

The miners walked out Thursday in a dispute over job assignments. Birthday Gift COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) The package bore the cryptic message: "Happy Forgive the slopinness. All hail the orange." When police opened the package Wednesday they found inside a large red candle containing 300 wrapped orange pills, identified as a form of LSD known as "orange'swirl." Officers confiscated the package at the University of South Carolina post office after it was picked up by a young woman and passed to a young man. The two', students at the university, were arrested on a charge of'possessing LSD and were placed under $2,000 bond.

Although official figures won't be available until next month indications are that in the six months to Sept. 30 the total out flow will be close to $6 billion. Some of this outflow, such as military spending, has little to do with trade. Some of the loss results from foreigners selling their stock in American corporations. But the trade figures too, are poor.

As recently as 1964 the United States $6.6 billion more goods than it imported. Last year exports outpaced imports by only $626 million. And in the first six months of this year a $132 million deficit was runup. A breakdown of the figures reveals that exports of manufactured declined to 23 per cent of the world total from 28 per cent during the past dec ade. Machinery exports fell to 28 per cent from 34 per cent in the same period.

The reasons are varied. Artifi cial restraints such as import restrictions, especially on American agricultural products have contributed to some loss oi trade. Inflation very likely has done part, for It puts rice tag on American goods, ut other nations also have Inf- (AP) veadershlp In the Episcopal Dlocese of Pennsylvania Is sup- Tortlng a proposal to ap- iroprlate funds to blacks and referred It to next week's Xocesan Convention. The Diocesan Thursday after Council acted considering committee proposal that a $5 million donation be made by the diocese for work among black people at the discretion of Negro clergymen in the diocese. The council, however, did not men any specific sum.

The council asked only that he convention consider the re port next week then return it to council for further work and 'inal details. It then should be presented for consideration by a special diocesan convention, the council said. The $5 million donation was proposed by a committee named after an Aug. 6 meeting of the council. At that meeting the council declared its Intention to "determine how best to marshal and use the monetary and other resources of this diocese" to help slacks.

The committee recommended the money be distributed in par eels of $1 million annually through the 15 black clergymen in the diocese. A 200-year-old Arizona saguarc may lift Its flngerllke arms as tall as a four-story building anc weigh 10 tons. COMPLETE WINTER AUTO SERVICE TUNE-UP MOTOR Prevent car stalling during the rough weather ahead. Our engine expert has the latest electronic equipment to pep up your car. Drive in now WE SERVICE ALL MAKES INC.

HOJDJIS OPEN MON. THRU 8iOO AJA. TO PAIR SALE WINTER NEW TREADS retreads on sound tire bodies For Compacts simi 6.00xU 6.50x13 7.00x13 7.00X14 735x14 6.50x15 Tw two ot sizt. METAL STUDS AVAILABLE IN ALL SIZES OTHER SIZES ALSO SALE PRICED Pick Tour Go Goodyear USE OUR EASY PAY PLAN FREE MOUNTING! mm LIAS Tire Recapping North 5th Street Extension, Indiana, Pa, Phone 465-3506 DISCOUNT 1 Lb. Can 435 So.

7th St. INDIANA Hills Bros. COFFEE 59 All Grinds Sunshine KRISPY CRACKERS 3 lLb. Boxes Waldorf TOILET TISSUE 4 Roll Pkg. 35 Jane Parfctr WHITE BREAD 4 41 6-ox.

Loaves Made With Buttermilk Jane Parker Peach or RAISIN PIES ILb. 6-oz. Size Ann Page Macaroni DINNERS Pkg. 23 With Cheese Big CHEERIOS 15-oz. Box 39' AU EeUlU Uwmi la Tbli Ad Thru Oot Utb Dboount WE TUB B1OBT TO UM1T i.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Indiana Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
396,923
Years Available:
1868-2006