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The Indiana Gazette from Indiana, Pennsylvania • Page 31

Location:
Indiana, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
31
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

District Hospital Register INDIANA HOSPITAL Births for July Mr. and Mrs. George S. Swan- Ernest, girl; Mr. and Mrs.

Frank C. K'nter, 953 Wayne Indiana, girl. Admissions for July 29 Mrs. Helen Kubecka, Shelocta: M'ss Helen R.D. 1, Saltsburg; Henry M.

Potzinper, 460 E. pike, Indiana; Joe Sevchik, Bqx 50, Graceton: Miss F.ilene Andrie, R.D. 1, Homer City. Mrs. Maude Ylngling, R.D.

1. SHtsburg; John L. Taylor, Box 93. Clarksburg; Deborah Jones, 51 Greenville Homer City; Miss Mary Clark, Box 321. Black Lick; Robert Wilson, 26 Dixon Clymer.

Discharges for July 29 Joseph Lesrieskie, Clune; Arthur C. Gertson, 145 E. Elm Homer Mike Hanna, Olsen Rest Home, CVeekslde; Mrs. Florence Kitchen, R.D. 1, Clymer; Mrs.

Dorothy Airgood, 610 Rustic Lodge Indiana. Hazel Hoch, Bor 75, Creek- Bide; Mrs. Harriet Simpson, Creekside; Louis Neeley, Lee Clymer; Estey E. Langham, 127 Douglas Commodore; Mrs. Pearl Schaffer, R.D.

2, Blairsville. Mrs. Paula Lorraine Diem, 87 Morris Clymer; Mrs. Goldie Cerosky, 1327 S. High Akron, Ohio; Mrs.

Donna Jean Fleming, R.D. 2, Indiana; Mrs. Hazel Holby, R.D. 3, Blairsville. Frank F.

Fulton, R.D. 2, Marion Center; Mrs. Martene V. Wilden, 1198 Oakland Indiana; Gary Lynn Goehrenback, R.D. 3, Indiana; Clifford Jay Buttkevitz, R.D.

1, Clarksburg. Births for July 30 Mr. and Mrs. Dominic E. Pompelia, 'Sagamore, boy; Mr.

and Mrs. Donald F. CipoUini, Waterman, girl. Mr. and Mrs.

Larry Decker, R.D. 2, Blairsville, boy; Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. Ruffner, R.D.

1, Clymer, boy. Admissions for July 30 Sam J. Miconi, Box 67. Ernest; Robert H. Darr, 1438 Phila.

Indiana; Mrs. Margaret L. Wy- rner, Creekside; Mary S. Milner, 311 S. 5th.

Indiana; John E. Stumpf, Creekside. William H. George, R.D. 2, Homer City; Valentine Andrie, Box 311, Homer City; Thomas Maus, 295 Elm Indiana; David Maus, 295 Elm Indiana; Mrs.

Pauline Hilty, Box 231, Josephine. Discharges for July 30 Mrs. Ida Buratti, Mclntyre; Bernice Grube, 240 Church In-j diana; Mrs. Hattie Hancock, 68i Morris Clymer; Mrs. Theda Carney, 145 S.

13th. Indiana; Mrs. Celestina Paniale, 523 S. Spring Blairsville. Earl Mardis, Black Lick; Sandra Marlene Shedlock, 22 Franklin Clymer; Mrs.

Rita Lawson, R.D. 3, Blairsville; Mrs. Imelda Riddle, 380 Grant Indiana; Mrs. Dorothy Hillard, R.D. 2, Honier City.

Barbara Lynn McElwee, R.D. 1, Homer City; Harold Deroy Learner, R.D., Commodore; Mrs. Margaret Warden, 220 Rice Indiana; Donald A. Patterson, 865 Eiselman Indiana; Mrs. Gertrude Bruno, Ernest.

Mrs. Mary Gill, 168 S. Spring Blairsville; Mrs. Glenna Taylor, Box 15, Lucernemines; Mrs Anna Mae Peles, 57 Sherman Clymer; Mrs. Margaret Federinko, 33 Morris Street, Clymer; Walter Twin Pines Motel, Indiana (15 pints of Red Cross Blood wore administered during the past week.) JOHNSTOWN Births Mr.

and Mrs. Richard W. Weimer, New Florence R.D. 2, son, July 29 (Lee Hospital) Mr and Mrs. Charles Overdorff Homer City R.D.

1, son, July '30 (Lee Hospital) SPANGLER Births Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Williams, Clymer R.D. 1, daughter, July 20 Mr. and Mrs.

Ernest Russell, Westover R.D., daughter, July 30 LATROBE Birth Mr. and Mrs. George Ringler, Blairsville, son, July 28 Admitted William Barclay, Blairsville Mrs. Minnie Pierce, Edmon Discharged Mrs. Anna Claw.son, Blairsville Baby Girl Morganti, Indiana Richard Smith Ends Training i Army Pvt.

Richard C. Smith, whose wife, Jane, and parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clay Smith, live on Route 2, Indiana, completed the final phase of six months active military training under the Reserve Forces Act program at The Air Defense Center, Fort Bliss, Texas, July 15. During this final phase, Smith was trained in the duties of an automatic weapons crewman.

He is Scheduled to spend remainder of bis military service with the 137th an Army National Guard unit in Warren, Ohio. Smith, 23, is a 1955 graduate of Indiana High School and before going on active duty he was employed by United States Gypsum, Wwran, Ohio. Reds Stage Incident In Saigon Area SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) Cong Communists staged preannounced hand grenade in cident in Saigon Sunday night to demonstrate their ability to cause trouble in the stronghold of Presi dent Ngo Dinh Diem. One soldier was killed and two others injured when the grenade was thrown at a military patrol truck in front of a theater. The incident appeared to be part of a reported new Viet Cong campaign of stepped-up terrorism and sabotage around and even inside Saigon.

This was seen as an attempt to offset the effect of the rebels' heavy losses in recent battles. Informed sources said the Viet Cong distributed leaflets in Saigon Saturday morning warning there would be incidents against the government. The last major incident in Saigon was July 8 when a man In An Air Of Uncertainty About Boffi Houses Come To Grips Wiffi JFK Legislative Program By JACK BELL dispose of two major money $4,762,500,000 in economic fund's operations by the ap- (AP) Con- WIIs I(: nas agreed to begin vot- military aid for underdeveloped gress comes to grips this week tnis afternoon on the first of countries in the fiteal year which two nouses propriations committees of the with some of the major issues of a series of amendments to a began July 1. The Senate Foreign 1 President Kennedy's legislative program. ,098,614,000 bill to finance oper- 1 Relations Committee approved ations of the National Aeronautics ciH of $436 mil- in air nf ntirorraintv ahm.t and ace Administration, Veter- lion.

The House Foreign Affairs ave ne comi Administration and other bu- Committee approved $4,355,500,000 phrey ld The provision would be so drawn that no loan commitments could be made which did not have the committees' approval, threw a homemade grenade at U.S. Ambassador Frederick P. Nolting Jr. as he rode home for lunch. The grenade missed the car and failed to explode.

the results, the Senate will begin debating the President's foreign aid program which carries the five year authority Kennedy reaus. cut of $407 million. When work on this measure is! On the five-year pro- This would eliminate the necessity of getting formal Senate and concluded it will take up a gram, about $7.3 billion would asked for an appropriations bill come from treasury borrowing. of economic development loans. The House takes with speedy approval Senate-passed measure authorizing for the Welfare and Labor remainder wduld come from ments.

(repayment of postwar loans. With the prospect of a week of Administration hopes for ap- debate ahead on the foreign aid proval of the long-range loan fund House approval yearly for ury borrowings to finance loan operations, but it would retain congressional supervision of the program. Indiana Evening Gazette, Monday, July 31, Instead of Retired Admiral Urges Dirigible Astronaut Pickup the President to hold Senate Democratic were pinned on a compromise men and units on duty an extra Leader Mike Mansfield of Mon-; Democratic leaders believed year and to call up to 250,000 a na said the Senate may undermine the case of op-i. reserves ot active duty to coun-ltime out for passage of a $47-'ponents who have attacked ckp a ame ent Sen. ter the Soviet threat to squeeze billion defense appropriations bill, "backdoor spending" through 3 T' WASHINGTON (AP) An expert on dirigibles proposed today they be used instead of helicopters to fish Mercury astronauts and their capsules from the water.

Vice Adm. T. G. W. Settle former head of naval air- snip tra 'n' and experimenta- Bndges of New jti said that had fe I- Grissom's'space ate Republican Policy Committee, said GOP members, will continue the West out of Berlin.

A subcommittee already has borrowing. Critics havel annual a PP ri ations for the fi- flight the capsule and Us valuable films and other data could have been recovered safely. Also, Settle said, Grissom would have been spared the har- (j yy (Jgi wl DtJ I 1111, IT ivi TT LI 1C I let The House expects to get creased this measure $1 billion contended that Congress would be!" ancin of ans conceded rowing fight against wave action AHA cnn nnn tnat me auminiStratlOn L-n The Gazette Classified Ads vice an economical, quick market for anything you may be wanting to sell. (Read Gazette Classified Ads) around by midweek to passing. beyond the extra $3,454,600,000 giving vip its responsibility for ex- another Senate bill authorizing a Kennedy asked for the military penditures by a five-year grant new outlay for i buildup to cope with the Berlin of loaning authority to the Presi- speeding the delivery of new mis- crisis.

jdent. siles, ships and pJanes. It will The House, which previously! Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey of sandwich in, probably voted $42,711,000,000 in defense'Minnesota, the assistant Demo- approval of a bill to continue fed- funds, is expected to concur in cratic leader, sttid that with that the administration compromise proposal "is likely to take some votes away from us." of helicopter prop wash.

Two years ago, Settle said in eral airport aid. Before the Senate can launch be made by the Senate. cast that provision would be retained in the bill by a margin of from 5 to 10 votes. Administration nose counts A vutca. auuii uustr uuuuia most of the additions certain to President Kennedy's approval the indica ted a slimmer marain oer- JKiiiv (inuii.ai.ea a summer margin, per supporters Will offer a pro- its foreign aid debate, it will have Kennedy originally asked for posal for annual review of the Richard Fulton In 3-Day Tests PENN RUN Pfc Richard L.

Fulton, whose wife Ruth Ann, lives in Indiana, recently partici-'said the administration may have pated with other personnel fromjto settle in the end for a three- the 8th Division's 504th Infantry injyear program. But Sen. Thomas annual Army training tests near Wiesbaden, Germany. haps only three votes. Sen.

George D. Aiken, said he might favor a five-year program of planning long-term development projects abroad "but I certainly would expect the executive branch to come back to Congress each year for an appropriation to meet their expenses." Sen. John Sparkman, H. Kuchel of California, the assistant Republican leader, insisted The three-day tests, which were'that Congress must have a yearly designed to determine individual check on the expenditures. and unit efficiency under simulated combat conditions, included both day and night maneuvers and stressed the role of Fulton's unit Jin both the attack and in defense.

the conclusion of the tests, members of the 504th were air- i lifted by helicopter to Maniz where they are regularly stationed. i The 20-year-old soldier, son of and Mrs. Iryin L. Fulton, Penn Run, is a machine gunner in the infantry's Company B. He en- the Army in August 1959 and 'completed basic training at Fort I Jackson, S.

C. The Gazette Classified Ads pro- vice an economical, quick market for anything you may be wanting I to sell. SUBSONIC vehicle, foreground, above, is a mobile filling station for servicing autos going to and from overseas points at the Army Terminal, Oakland, Calif. Dubbed the "X-100" from work order which inspired it, it's made from a 500-gallon gas tank, three-horse-power engine, compressor and air pump mounted on a stripped 1956 auto chassis. It can empty gas tanks for cars being shipped, and supply autos off the transports with gas, oil, water and air.

X-100 is a product of ingenuity used by Armed Services personnel in following a "make-do" program. SILENT will have smooth sailing if it follows the silent suggestions of the traffic pacer. The pacer will advise motorists along four miles of Mound Road in Warren, what speed to drive to make the next green traffic signal. Pacers in this photo (which, due to lens, makes distances appear Shorter) are 921 feet apart. New $7,800.00 Hospital Plan Pays so much a day at rate of $150.00 a week when hospitalized because of sickness or injury.

$7,800.00 maximum for 52 weeks. Family members one month thru 69 years, may be added to plan. Each receives full benefits. YOU HANDLE THE MONEY! Pay it on hospital and doctor bills or living expenses as you see fit. Paid regardless of hospital charges, and in addition! to other plans you may have.

Modest cost. Ronald McCox At U. of Maine Ronald E. McCox of Indiana Is attending the final six-week summer session at the University of Maine. All enrollment records for the University of Maine's annual summer session have been broken this year, with about 2,546 having signed for courses.

The Summer Session will end on August 18 with commencement exercises scheduled on that date. Over 200 courses ranging from art Navy be considered as recovery vehicles for the Mercury astronauts. He said the fleet turned down the idea on the ground no airship could be spared from operational assignments. In June, however, the Navy announced the end of its lighter than aic program and the planned deflation and storage of its fleet of about 15 blimps. The former Navy officer said that Mercury Redstone shots are fairly straightforward, with land- ing areas accurately predictable.

Howevejr, the landing of an orbital Mercury vehicle off Puerto Rico will be much more complicated, involving a large possible landing area. This may involve costly and extensive surface and air search and recovery operations. Settle said the assignment of two or more of the larger blimps would greatly simplify the search and recovery problem and would provide these special advantages: 1. The airships would be able to hoist the recovered capsule directly to the gondola and bring it aboard. 2.

The blimp's 'roominess would provide a flying hospital for immediate examination or treatment of the astronaut. 3. The airship's ability to remain aloft two "days without refueling, and to; stay on station for long periods with refueling from surface vessels in the area, would provide search facilities for extended periods. 4. The airship could carry a small powered, specially equipped boat that could be lowered to the surface to give immediate assistance on the spot if astronaut needed it.

DEATHS CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP)-William J. Corrigan, 75, at one time one of Cleveland's leading labor lawyers and chief defense counsel in the Dr. Sam Sheppard murder trial, died Sunday. NASHVILLE, Tenn. He was born in Burnet County, liman Evans 36, publisher ofi Tex the Nashville Tennessean, died GREENVILLE, Va.

(AP)-Dr. ant governor on the Republican ticket in 1932 and 1936. CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. J. Fox, 81, widely known composer and arranger, died Saturday.

He was best known for his composition "The Hills of Home" and other Western and folk songs. Saturday of a heart attack. He became publisher of the Tennes- sean after the death of his father Earl Leberne Crum, 70, head of the department of classical languages at Washington Lee Uni- in 1955. Previously he had served versity, died Saturday. He was as publisher of the Lake Worth'former head of the classical lan- (Fla.) Leader and president ofjguages department at Lehigh the Morristown (Tenn.) Sun.

WEST SPRING LAKE, Mich. University at Bethlehem, Pa. PALOS VERDES, Calif. Borden, 78, retired Edward J. Doyle, 81, of North- financier and explorer and for-jfield.

111., president of Common- mer father-in-law of Adlai E.i wealth Edison Co. in Chicago are are Orono and Portland campuses. 11 IO 1X60311 offered to the stevenson died Saturday after 1930 to 1953, died Saturday, long illness. He was the father of Doyle began work in 1896 as an Ellen Borden Stevenson, divorced'office boy for the late Samuel wife of the U. S.

ambassador tollnsull, who was head of General the United Nations and twice Electric Co. in Chicago. Democratic nominee for president. Another daughter, Mary Elizabeth Borden Hines, 52, ow of Ralph J. Hines, former lumber company president, died' "'9 in New York ATHENS, Greece BALTIMORE (AP) E.

Paul eign Nlinistry sources sav Greeca Flaherty 72, treasurer of the ill recall its envoy to'Commu. A. S. Abell publisher of the nist Bulgaria to protest an and- Sunpapers, died Saturday. Fla- Greek speech by Bulgarian Pre- herty, who had been associated trn er Anton Yugov.

with the Sunpapers 43 years, was Greek officials said Yugov. at born in Baltimore. a Polish Embassy reception in DURHAM, N. C. Sofia marking the'Polish "national Sprunt Hill, 92, millionaire bank-jholiday, made a sharp attack on er and philanthropist, died Satur-jthe domestic and foreign policies day.

Hill, a lawyer and founderjof Premier Constantino Caraman- of the Durham Bank Trust lis' Greek government. was born in Faison, N. C. INDIANAPOLIS B. Kyle 71, former national grand exalted ruler of the Elks Lodge, died Saturday.

Kyle, former sheriff at Gary, ran un- The sources did not disclose what Yugov said. successfully for Indiana lieuten-Mow, low prices. Looking for real bargains? Read the Gazette Classified Ads. They're loaded with many things to buy at THERMONUCLEAR of this porcu. pine-like object are heat exchangers which cool the device, a nuclear-powered generator.

Intended to operate for as long as a year with one loading of a radioactive isotope, it would supply power for such things as unmanned weather stations and radio beacons for the armed forces. The erator has undergone tests at the Air force Special Weapons Center in New Mexico. PREHISTORIC bald cypress was excavated right in the back yard of the National Geographic Society in Washington, D. C. Ironically, the society sends people all over the world to photograph such oddities.

Martha 'Block looks at the log, which during the ice age, 100,000 to 500,000 years ago. Town and Country 706 ANNOUNCES Your New Headquarters For PHOENIX HOSIERY So Elegantly Costume Colors Your Legs Watch, Your Newspaper For Tremendous On This Fine Hosiery SAY, WALDO, WHY DONT YOU CONVERT TO AUTOMATIC GAS HEAT. NO MORE COAL TO 8HOVELI HAMPTON AGENCY National Casualty Company 650 Maple St. Pennsylvania 'Telephone HO 5-6585 Furnish me all the faftts ok National new 8055 plan, without obligation. Address City Zone State Age I NEED THE EXERCISE! Public Auction Sale Friday, Eve.

Aug. 4,6:30 P. M. Located at 765 South Indiana, Pa. LOOK FOR SALE SIGN AUTOMATIC heat takes a lot of work put of winter.

No more coal to shovel. No more ashes to haul. Convert your present furnace to clean, economical gas heat Get 1 a free gat heating estimate now. Call The peoples Natural Gas Company. IP THE PEOPLES NATURAL 6AS COMPANY HOPKINS 5-5585 3 bedrooms on 2nd floor and 2 room apartment on 3rd floor.

1st floor has 3 rooms and reception room, full bath and extra commode. Full basement with coal-fired hot air heat. You are invited to look through Tuesday evening, Aug. I from 7 to 9 P. M.

Sam Lyons Agency will be there to show you through. TERMS: $500 at time of sale, balance on delivery of deed. OWNER: J. H. Gibson, Gowanda, New York AUCTIONEERS: Sam Lyons Agency 52 N.

6th Indiana, Pa. HO 5-5655 I.

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About The Indiana Gazette Archive

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