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Tyrone Daily Herald from Tyrone, Pennsylvania • Page 3

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Tyrone, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
3
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Tyrone Doily Herold, Sotufdoy, October 12, 1968 Page Thrift Strles On- Know Your Policemen Three Area Alen End RR Service Three Tyrone area men were among the 44 employee of the Penn Centre! railroad Who recently concluded their retirement requirements and have ended their railroad service careers. Oeorfe C. FranU of 1810 umbla ave. retired as laborer at Juniata Shops. He was born In Scoit CZCtlS Airliner Church Offers Dinner Oct.

22, Sptoktr Named Crash Kills 8 David R. Maneval, director of research and aylvanla Department of Mines and vaks for Mineral Industries, will be the muddy field uest speaker at the Recognition Dinner of the Blair Bedford Council', Boys Scouts of America, PRAGUE CUPW Tragedy unit Russians and a few hours In Periods Daily Morning, afternoon and evening Army Private First Class Kenneth E. Gressmyer, 18, son of Patton April 7, 1903 and entered Mrs. Faye Grassmyer, 1400Bald on Tuesday, Oct. 22, at the Jaffa railroad service at Tyrone in Eagle was assigned as a Mosque.

1920. He was rated a rifleman in the 4th Infantry maker in 1941. vision near.Plelku, Vietnam, Sept. Lee R. Wallace, 738 W.

15th 22. st. retired as a machinist at Army Private First Class Juniata. He was born at Union uel D. Vaughn 19, whose Furnace, May 25, 1908 and enter- parents live at 233 E.

llth the Silver Beaver; has earned the ed the service of the was assigned as a member of the Scouter Training Award and Wood 173rd Airborne Brigade In Maneval has an extensive ground in Scouting. He had been registered with the Boys Scouts of America for 26 years; he Is an Eagle Scout; has been awarded vania Railroad as a laborer in the machine shops in 1922. He nam, Sept. 29. was rated a machinist helper in Alice Richards, 106 E.

13thst. 1923 and a machinist in 1936. has been discharged from Mercy Matthew J. Caldwell, Tyrone Hospital, Altoona. Birthdays will be observed day, Oct.

13 by Tim Mogle, Janice Donald E. Hand Donald E. Hand has served as patrolman on the Tyrone police force for four months. A high school graduate, he holds an associate degree In applied science from Spokane Community College, Spokane, Washington. He has had four years previous police experience as deputy sheriff and patrolman in Idaho and Washington.

He has completed training courses in juvenile work, traffic and apprehension of criminals. The 40-year-old father of five children, he lives at 1401 Pennsylvania ave. RD 2, a machinist at Juniata. Mr. Caldwell was born In wood April 12, 1903, and ed railroad employment as a laborer In 1918.

He was rated a machnlst helper at Cresson in 1920, and a machinist In 1923. Badge. He has served as a faculty member for nine Wood Badge courses and two National Camp- Ing Schools. He has been a Jamboree Troop leader in 1957 and served as Phllmont Expiditlon leader In 1956 and 1958. He has Hamer, Mrs.

W. L. Bathurst, two Eagle Scout sons, and two Mary Elizabeth Shelly, Karl Price, Kenneth Price, and Mrs. James Strachan. Bonnie Cherry and Infant, Tyrone RD 2, have been discharged from the AUoona Hospital.

Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Ross and AMERICAN EXPRESS Money Orders Tyrone News Agency 20 22 W. 10th Street Musical Evangelists At Salvation Army A pair of musical evangelists with a feeling of urgency about their mission are making a nightly plea in the Salvation Army Citadel for Christians to stop coasting and start working for the Lord. Miss Marjorle Hurst and Miss Monday, Oct.

14. Louise Smith sing and play music and talk about an Importance for Christians to rededlcate themselves to the winning of other Christians. The Hurst team has carried its non-demonlnatlonal Christian message to churches and Salvation Army citadels throughout central and eastern United States. Besides recording several radio programs a week and making appearance on television, they have traveled for campaigns to Scotland and Jamaica. Girl Scout daughters.

He is rently serving as an Executive Board member in the Juniata Valley Council with headquarters In Lewlstown. Mr. Maneval Is a graduate of Penns State University and re- two sons, Petersburg, are ceived his Ph.D. degree from the spending the weekend with his same University in 1961. He has parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Karl A. served as Instructor and Re- Ross, 1051 Logan ave. search Analytical Chemist at Mr. and Mrs.

James C. Davis, Penn State from 1958 to 1963 1059 Lincoln ave. will observe when he became Director of their wedding anniversary Mon- search and Development for day Oct. 14. sylvanla Department of Mines and Claude E.

Smith, David Sum- Mineral Industries, mers and Joseph Greene will The Blair-Bedford Council will observe birthday anniversaries award the Silver Beaver award, District Outstanding Scouter Certificates, and recognize all Cub- masters, Scoutmasters, Post Advisors, Webelos Leader and Den Mothers for their work with boys. Tickets for the dinner may be obtained at the Council Center, 600 Central Trust a prayer at the Trinity KptocopeJ Church are proving to The Russians whc Invaded be an attraction to workers and and the Czechoslovaks who persons passing through the were Invaded rushed out to the community. field, four miles from Prague According to the Rev. J. Barry Airport, where a Czechoslovak Kramer, the service offered at airliner crashed Friday night.

p.m. has attracted a number Soviet troops go to the scene of workers traveling home first, dragging survivors from and has attracted persons driving the flaming wreckage of the by Just before the service. Soviet-built nyushln 14 plane The daily schedule contains that carried 37 persons. First minute prayer services at 9 a reports said eight persons were 12:15 pan. and 5:30 pjn.

killed. Father Kramer comments, "It was horrible, horrible," a "One of our big problems today young Russian soldier told UPl is the fact that we allow very correspondent David Mazel. little time to to God. When "We heard the plane at our we do allow a few minutes, most camp, which Is in those woods of us have no idea how to start yonder," another Russian said, listening. puffing on a cigarette and "In the Book of Common Pray- pulling up his thick collar er, we are given dally morning against the Icy wind.

"It circled and evening prayer, which are twice over the field and short services that help to set crashed. The motors sounded 'he frame of our minds so that strange." can then listen to God." A third Russian said, "We An invitation has been extended tried to get out as many as we to the public to attend any of these could. But everywhere It brief services. seemed there were broken He added that the church is open hands and legs and bodies." at all times for meditation and A Czechoslovak television prayer. crew stepped among the slans who moved 'inside.

Two burly Soviet officers In long JUIHflfd rOCIIIdlly green coats talked quietly with Czechoslovak police. SCOTS rr6Sld0llt In the capital, the government HUNTINGDON John N.Stau* Issued a communique about the ffer was officially Installed today crash of the plane, which had a the seventh president of Jun- GOOD PUPIL WINCHESTER, England (UP Hesteth, tt who wms given a course to navigation while hi a refcrm school five years ago, received a suspended sentence to court Friday tor stealing a yacht and other offenses. A thought for the Oliver Wendell Holmes once said: "Life is an end to ttself, and the only question Is to whether tt is worth living is whether you have enough of taken off for the Slovak resort of Kosice with a planeload of iata College in a simple ceremony which contrasted sharply IN MONTANA Gary E. "Chip" Waite II, 7, holds his sister Rebecca Ann, 5-months old at their home in Montana. They are the children of S.

Sgt. and Mrs. Gary E. Walte of 621 Lincoln Drive, Mai- strom Air Force Base, Great Falls, Mont. Their mother is the former Ethel E.

Hodgson. Their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. William W. Hodgson, are deceased, as is the paternal grandfather, Leonard F.

Walte. Their maternal grandmother, Mrs. Edna R. Walte, resides in Birmingham. SALAZAR IMPROVES LISBON (UP said former Premier Antonio Salazar showed continued slight provement Friday from the effects of a stroke Sept.

16. A medical bulletin said the prognonls was "reserved." 14 oz. Instant Maxwell Coffee $1.99 JAY'S FOODLAND ELEANOR H. HARNISH The services for the week get Mrs. Eleanor H.

Harnlsh, 94, ing, Altoona. The members of the of 108 Calder Harrlsburg, dinner committee are: John died Thursday. man, Chairman, Baker, She was the widow of the Rev. Charles Dillen, Paul Rltchey, Walter K. Harnlsh, onetime pas.

Samuel Schulman, G. William tor of the Arch Springs Church. Ward, and Vaughn Whisker. Surviving are two sons, John M. and Charles both at home.

Funeral service will be held Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Neumyer Funeral Home, 1334 N. Czechoslovaks. troops, with traditional Inaugurations, local citizens and Czechoslovak The new chief executive of an soldiers took part In the rescue academic community of 1,180 work," It said. students and 110 faculty had stated his preference (or simplicity and artrued tha "we will also have the benefit of saving least the Russians did one good thing today." BANDIT SENTENCED LANCASTER, Pa.

(UPl) underway Sunday morning Inthe Second Harrisburg. Friends Frank W. Lucas, 27, Marys. 9:30 Sunday School followed by will be received at the funeral ville, received a 5to. 10year pris.

home on Sunday until time of service. Committal service will be held at Presbyterian Cemetery, Alexandria on Monday at Aufos Collide East Of Boro the morning service, which will be broadcast. These special services will continue nightly, Sunday through Thursday of this week, 7:30 p.m. Each service will 11 a.m. be preceded with an organ recital by Miss Hurst.

She closed the recital by playing requests of sons in the audience. Captain Walter J. Thompson, local officer In command extends an Invitation for everyone to attend the services at 'the local citadel, 9 West 10th st. on term Friday after pleading guilty to the holdup of the Clifford Basset Service Station here last Aug. 20.

The holdup netted $5. A 'City of Misery' In Heart of Djakarta Tyrone Hospital TONITE THRU SUNDAY! SHOW STARTS 7:15 ULTRA- MOD MYSTERY GREBORY SOPHIA PECK LOREN A SIANIEY OONEN PRODDON ARABESQUE TECHNICOLOR" -ALSO- ROBEKTSHAW, ADMITTED Ayres, 1659 Madison William ave. DISCHARGED Venus Morrissey, RD 1 Pearl Ramsey, 303 W. 21st st. Ralph Thomas, 468 Park ave.

DISPENSARY Bryan Fink, RD 3 Peggy Hamilton, Bellwood Lindi Lee Hampton, RD 3 William Mattern, RD 1 Harry Phillips, 405 Clay ave. Victor Stonebraker, 1014 Logan ave. David Jones, Mechanlcsburg Joseph Shultz, 1256 Blair ave. LATE CLASSIFIEDS WANTED Young man for downtown re- tall store. Steady work.

Write Box 2522 c-o of Herald. 12t3 PHONE 61 EJ -A. EJ 0 BOX OfflCE OPfNS DAILY 6 JO -NOW SHOWING THRU COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents A DE lAjRENT'lS PRODUCTION ROBERT MDTGHUM -2nd 1st RUN HIT1- COlUMBIA HCTURSS MEHMAN COHtN PRODUCTION Of The shocker that will drive Berserk'" HMP'i TECHNICOLOR' 1 Showing of Eoeh Feature: Regular DJAKARTA the shadow of Djakarta's buildings, along the city's canals and abandoned railroad tracks, and on the green of its squares, another city has grown. It is the city of underprivileged, a community of 25,000 people who form an island amid Djakarta's 4 million residents. The men and women from this city of underprivileged scrape rubbish dumps for paper and bottles to sell.

Their children spend their days in shacks, the family home, or under trees to escape the tropical sun. These people are the drifters of Java. Dignified Djakarta shuns them. But their problems are one of the burdens Indonesia carries as it tries to find its way out of the economic chaos left by the Republic's first president. Engineer Sukarno.

I tried to interview some of these drifters. But they are suspicious of outsiders and draw away. Eavesdropping brought me better results. Most of Djakarta's drifters came from central and east Java, most populous of Indonesia's 3,000 green islands, emeralds strung along the blue, pink and white coral waters of the equator. Those people left an area of Java about the size of Denmark, a piece of Indonesia which contains 40 million people compared with Denmark's 4.8 million residents.

I strolled through a slum along an abandoned railway track near one of Djakarta's busiest districts and stopped by a shack the size of a doghouse. Its roof was made from tin sheets cut from kerosene cans. Its walls were metal sheets and cardboard. One side still carried the printed warning from the packing case: "Fragile. Handle With Care." People around the shack talked with the accent of Te- gal, spoken on central Java's northern coast.

I listened. "We are not complaining. We can survive. Anything can be a living, even selling scraps of paper." it is bad. The children can not go to school." "My brother died.

All during his sickness, he refused to let our mother and father back home know our fate. They thought we were doing well in the city." Most of the drifters from rural Java came to Djakarta with hopes of finding good- paying jobs. Some of them came to the city when Sukarno was president, responding to his promise that Indonesia would become a beacon for other developing nations. They thought they could start from the bottom and be- wealthy businessmen. They found jobs in such Su- karno projects as constructing a building for his new United Nations of ing Forces.

But Indonesia never started a new United Nations. Sukar- no's dreams of national glory and prosperity vanished, leaving the homeless in their cardboard shacks. The rity of Djakarta wapes a continuing battle against the spread of slums. Shacks are burned, their occupants moved into camps, but the drifters come back to the public squares and the city's canals. "There can be no solution until other regions of Indonesia cooperate in keeping thesr people at home," Governor Ah Sadikin of Djakarta said.

But money and jobs are needed to keep them at home It said one Russian was seriously Injured In the rescue work. "Well," said a Czechoslovak time and funds which can be used rescue worker at the scent, "at elsewhere." Serving notice where he believed the emphasis should be placed, Dr. Stauffer told the special convocation of students, faculty, trustees and alumni In Oiler Auditorium, there Is a need for mutual and a Two Tyrone women complained return to teaching. of leg Injuries but declined At a time when the academic ment following a three-car chain world is disturbed by riots and reaction collision at 3 pun. sit-ins, the new Juniata president Thursday.

said "the climate for effective Injured were Alpha Ramsey, teaching Includes understanding 51, of Tyrone RD 1 and Patricia and appreciation of the re spec- Hall, of Tyrone RD 4. tlve roles played by admlnlstra- They were passengers Jn an tlon, faculty, students and alu- auto driven by Helen L. Miles, mnl." 41, of 211 Hancock st. The 52 year old educator, a Police report that the Miles native of Palmyra, and until rec- vehicle and an auto driven by ently president of Wittenberg Uni- Jacob Levlnson, 56, of Mount versity, declared tha students Lebanon, were stopped west on need direct encounters with tea- Pleasant Valley Boulevard for cher-scholars "who arethemsel- traffic at 27th st. ves liberally educated and motl- A hit-run auto skidded on the vated by a sense of urgency, wet pavement, collided with the and Indeed adventure, In guiding Levlnson auto and forced It Into students on the road to learning." the Miles car.

Damage was estimated at $600 to the Miles sedan and $300 to the Levinson auto. ASK EXTRADITION PARK has asked West Germany to dlte former Nazi SS Gen. Heinz B. Lammerdmg to face charges of hanging French hostages June 9, 1944. Deputy Foreign Minister Jean de Llpkowskl said Friday Lammerding Is now living In Dusseldorf.

Introducing the king size homeowners policy This is his hot line.tolGod. "Watch and Pray" Church Of The Brethren I8th AND ADAMS AVE. TYRONE. PA. Credit card coverage and more contents protection for home owners at no extra cost Only at State number one In homeowners Insurance, with rates'lower thin most.

I can give you king size homeowners coverage and probably save you money. Cali'me. 1127 PA. AVE. DIAL 484-0501 Chain Collision In Pleasant Valley A local woman suffered whiplash of the neck but declined the Newly Emerg- hosp jtai treatment, according to state police, following a two-car accident near Tyrone last night.

The accident occurred shortly after 6 p.m. on Route 350, onje- half mile east of Tyrone In Snyder Township. An auto operated by Mrs. Verna E. Nearhoof, 41, of 1308 Pennsylvania was struck from behind by an auto operated by Lois N.

McFarland, 29, of Warriors Mark. According to police, the Nearhoof vehicle was stopped In the westbound lane while watting to make a left turn into private property. Damage to the McFarland auto was set at $225 and, to the For these opportunities, Indo- Nearhoof auto, $150. nesia still searches. Tyrone Elks Club SATURDAY OCT.

12 Country Store Prizes! Prizes! 9 P.M. "FUN FOR ALL" ELKS THEV LADIES IN THE NAME AND BY AUTHORITY OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA OOVCRNOR'S orriCE HARRISBURO PROCLAMATION SAVINGS AND LOAN WEEK OCTOBER 13-19, 1968 WHEREAS, Savings and Loan numbering approximately 700 throughout the Comr contribute greatly to Pennsylvania's econurnic stability and progress by serving more than 3 000,000 savers and home buyers; and WHEREAS, Thrifty Pennsylvanians now entrust $6 billion in savings to these mutually-owned financial institutions and, in return, receive earnings of almost $250 million annually on their accounts; and WHEREAS, Pennsylvania's Savings and Loan Associations with current assets totaling $7 billion, finance one out of every two homes sold in the Commonwealth, lending as much as $1 billion a year for the construction, purchase and improvement of real property, largely residential; and WHEREAS, The general welfare of all Pennsylvania citizens is enhanced by the associationsi encouragement of thrift and home ownership, the basic concept upon which the first building society in America was founded in 1831 in this Commonwealth; NOW, THEREFORE, Raymond P. Shafer, Governor of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, do hereby proclaim the week of October 13-19, 1968 as SAVINGS AND LOAN WEEK in Pennsylvania, and request the appropriate observance of the period. GIVEN under my hand and the Great Seal of the State, at the City of Harrisburg, this thirteenth day of September, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and sixty-eight, and of the Commonwealth the one hundred and ninety-third. RAYMOND P.

SHAFER GOVERNOR IMPROVEMENT SAYINGS LOAN ASSOCIATION The INSURED Association TO W. llth St. Phone 684-3980.

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About Tyrone Daily Herald Archive

Pages Available:
180,699
Years Available:
1885-2007