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The Express from Lock Haven, Pennsylvania • Page 2

Publication:
The Expressi
Location:
Lock Haven, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Page 2-Tuesday, November 28, 1972-The Express, Lock Haven, Pa. hospital reports lock Haven Albert Brawand, 104 S. was admitted to the hospital after he cut his left foot and injured his left shoulder at work. The following were treated and discharged: Mrs. Charles H.

Chaplain and Charles Chaplain IV, 2. both of 118 Bcllcfontc were treated for smoke inhalation and discharged. Samuel Gingerich 7. son of Samuel Farrandsville. cut (he bridge of his nose.

Michael Brickley. son of Catherine Brickley, 220 Youngs injured his left ankle. Daniel Kinley 10 Elm had a nail puncture wound on his left foot. Wayne D. Young.

17. son of Wilbur Young. H84 E. Park cut his left index finger. Steven Sunday.

7. son of James Sunday. 320 James Flemington. fell at home, causing a cut over his left eye. Theresa Stukel, 13.

daughter of Nadine Stukel. 227 W. Main injured her right elbow. David Richner. 7.

son of Donald Richner. 129 Woodward had a nail puncture wound on his left hand. Miss Barbara Watkins, Lock Haven R.D. 1, injured her back. Mrs.

Clarence Brubaker. Mill Hall R.D. 1, had a puncture wound on her left hand. Medical admissions: Rudolph D. Krape.

Fallen Hotel: George Taylor 2. son of Mr. and Mrs. George E. Taylor.

929 W. Fourth Mrs. Mary Hamm. Camelot Estates. Mill Hall: William M.

Myers. 17 S. Water Mill Hall: Mrs. Donald Nyman. Mill Hall R.D.

Helen Mills. Loganton R.D. 2: Randy Boone. 4. son of Mr.

and Mrs. Ronald Boone. Howard R.D. 2. Surgical admissions: Albert Brawand.

104 S. Hampton Pauline Streck. 12, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Streck.

721 Woods Cynthia Kemmerer. 4. and Randy Kemmerer. 5. children of Mr.

and Mrs. Richard Kemmerer. 360 Third Mrs. Robert Grossman. Sunset Pines: Mrs.

Annie Kryder. Susque-Vievv: Mrs. Robert Barrett. Lock Haven R.D. 1: Stacey JoStrouse, 6.

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry S. Strouse. Mill Hall R.D.

1: Connie Tressler. 8, daughter of Bertha Tressler, Mill Hall R.D. 2: Dorothy DeCorsey. 17. daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Burdette DeCoursey. Howard R.D. 2: Harold Spicer. Howard R.D.

2: Teresa Weight. 3. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Weight.

Bellefonte R.D. 2: Mrs. David H. Houtz. 345 Elm Jersey Shore.

Discharged: Franklin Page. 13. son of Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Page 122 Jessamine Roger Shaffer.

217 S. High Ricki Watson. 17. son of Mr. and Mrs.

James Watson. Mill Hall R.D. 1: Infant boy. son of Mr. and Mrs.

Charles Simmons. Mill Hall R.D. 1: Mrs. Mary Ellen Schwab. Lamar: Steven Shilling.

13. son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Shilling. Liberty Blanchard.

Admitted to EC unit: Mrs. Wesley Wolfe. 456 S. High Arthur J. Heaton.

Bellefonte R.D. 3. Discharged from EC unit: Mrs. Emma Wood. 103 W.

Main St. Jersey Shore Admitted: Ernest L. Miller. Jersey Mills: Paul E. Bower.

Wylie Jersey Shore: Harrison Yarnell. Pleasant Gap: Mark L. Copenhaver, Lock Haven Star Route: Mrs. Rhoda Powers, 111 Glover Jersey Shore: Vern Van Order Jersey Shore R.D. 1: Ida Laubach, Jersey Shore R.D.

Mrs. Janetta Hammer. Park Avis. Discharged: Dale Hazel. Woolrich: James Laubach.

Jersey Shore R.D. 2. Renovo Admitted: North Bend. Erie Ave. Discharged: Mrs.

McCombie and Emporium. R.D. 2: Bradney. Hyner. Henry Norris.

Maude Mills. 1024 Linda baby, Ethelda Centre Community Admitted: Mountainview Ronald Dyke, Milesburg. Discharged: Mountainview RoyCoxey. Millheim. Local skies Tuesday Sunset today 4:44 p.m.

Sunrise tomorrow 7:15 a.m. Moon rise tomorrow 1:19 a.m. New moon Dec. 5. Prominent stars: Aldebaran rises 5:34 p.m.

Regulus high above the moon. Visible planets: Jupiter in southwest at sunset. Saturn north of Aldebaran. Venus rises 4:50 a.m. Mars follows Venus.

Births Cryder Mr. and Mrs. Ronald H. Cryder. 438 Pine Mill Hall, are the parents of a son born today at 12:30 a.m.

in the Lock Haven Hospital. Mrs. Cryder is the former Judith Shope. Dunn Mr. and Mrs.

Dennis Dunn. Milesburg. are the parents of a son born yesterday in the Centre Community Hospital. Mrs. Dunn is the former Rebecca Mann.

Bloodmobile at Nittany Mall on December 11 BELLEFONTE The Bellefonte chapter of the American Red Cross will sponsor a visit of the Bloodmobile on Monday. Dec. 11 in the Community Room of the Nittany Mall during the hours of 10a.m. to 4 p.m. The Nittany Mall Association has agreed to support the bloodmobile visit as part of its community program.

A quota of at least 100 pints of blood has been set. The regional bloodbank at Johnstown has indicated to the Bellefonte chapter that it is now in Priority II because of not meeting quotas. Priority II means that only family members of donors are eligible for unlimited amounts of blood as required. All persons between the ages of 18 and 65 are eligible to become donors. Centre Co.

nurse in 'Who's Who of American Women' BELLEFONTE Mrs. Dorothy M. Waselefsky. assistant director of nursing services at Centre Community Hospital, has been selected for inclusion in the eighth edition of "Who's Who of American Women." Mrs. Waselefsky is married to Peter R.

Waselefsky. They reside in Pine Glen. Karthaus. Nationalist China envoy quits Japan TOKYO (AP) The Nationalist Chinese ambassador to Japan, Peng Meng-chi, flew home to Taipei today, formally ending his government's diplomatic representation in Japan. The Japanese and Communist Chinese governments established diplomatic relations on Sept.

29. Atsushi Uyama. Japan's ambassador to the Nationalist government, will return Thursday, officials said. Peng was seen off by about 300 Chinese and Japanese well- wishers who waved small Nationalist and Japanese flags and shouted the traditional "Banzai! Banzai!" Japanese for "long life." Hirosti Hashimoto, chief of the Foreign Ministry's China section, also was present despite the break in diplomatic- relations. Air conditioning protects telephone cables from excessive humidity.

uiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiMiiiMiiiiiiiiiMiHiuiiiiiiMiimiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiniiMiiiiiiiiitiMiiiiiiiu I Younger set Divine Providence Admitted: Mrs. Rose Bianchi, 400 E. Walnut Lock Haven: Mrs. Eleanora Goodman. 505 Central Renovo.

Discharged: Mrs. Alva McKlnney. Avis. Geisinger Admitted: Mrs. Elnoru Bodle.

123 Beech Creek Mill Hall. Williamsport Admitted: none from area. Discharged: Mrs. Orva Ziegler. 114 N.

Chestnut Mill Hall: Mrs. Rose Henry, 314 N. Vesper Lock Haven; Ivan Riggle. Hyner. These three a as is evident by this will soon be living in Flemington.

They are the children of very proud parents, Mr. and Mrs Robert Peters, now residing at Mill Hall R.I). 1. Timothy will be four years old on Jan: 27, and he thinks quite a lot of the twin babies, John, center, and Jennifer, right, who celebrated their first birthday with a party on Oct. 7.

They love to visit their grandparents in Flemington, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Counsil and Mr. and Mis. John J.

Peters. They are also blessed with two great-grandfathers. Howard Pickering, of Lock Haven, and John Wolstencroft. of Beech Creek, and also a great-great grandmother, Mrs. Sara Crider, of Swissdale.

calendar League, Mayors of events divided on gun controls Able-bodied in leave relief for work SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) California's able-bodied welfare recipients are beginning to trade welfare grants for pay checks under a mandatory work program, state officials say. One-time recipients are working as auto mechanics, busboys, sheet metal workers, barbers, warehousemen and in other fields, says Bill Lawson of the Department of Human Resources Development. In the six counties where the 4- month-old program is operating. 2.707 welfare recipients have been classified as employable, Lawson said.

Of that total! 1.127 or 42 per cent are on regular jobs in private industry, 230 others are in training and 184 have been given "work experience assignments." he reported. An additional 371 have been kicked off welfare rolls for refusing to take a job or training. Lawson added Monday. Those for whom the state's unemployment office can't find a job immediately in the private sector are working for local governments in various jobs such as school crossing guards and parking lot attendants. Lawson said.

Their only pay is their welfare checks. "They're not just raking leaves." Lawson said. "It's work that needs to be done but otherwise wouldn't be done without raising taxes. And it gives them work experience, don't forget that." The department claims more than 50 per cent of the recipients have moved into private jobs or job training and only about 7 per cent are in public service work. Mandatory work assignments are limited to 80 hours monthly in the public service sector.

Recipients who fail to accept "suitable" job offers or quit looking for private employment lose their welfare benefits. Lawson said. Gov. Ronald Reagan's administration estimates some 30.000 persons will eventually be included in the program as it is expanded to other counties. The job-finding program is run jointly by the state's employment office, state welfare office and county welfare offices.

The program exempts persons under 16 years of age and those over 65. Mothers who take care of children aged 6 or under also exempted. AM A trouble' due to defections CINCINNATI, Ohio (APi The American Medical Association is in trouble because of "far too much defection from our ranks' 4 by disillusioned members, a doctor says. Dr. Jack Schreiber of Canfield.

Ohio, a delegate to the organization's biannual national convention, declared in an address Monday to the AMA's Council on Long-Range Planning (CLRP): "An alarming number of our (AMAi members are turning to unionism, foundations, special societies, other organizations, or just folding up their tents and saying. The hell with "The sadness of it all is that too many of us here today are more worried about our own little power structures and our personal ambitions and the American Medical Association grows a little less effective." He led up to these statements PHILADELPHIA (AP) Trustees of the Penn Central Transportation Co. have reported a net loss of $7,195,079 for October. That compared with a net loss of $25.377.398 for October 1971. The month's results were adversely affected by an increase of $3.8 million in labor costs, the trustees reported Monday.

The labor expenses resulted from a five per cent wage increase that went into effect Oct. 1 under current labor contracts. The trustees said increases in freight rates that went into effect Oct. 23 only slightly offset the higher costs. The net loss figures for October included a credit of $1,355,557 in extraordinary items, representing an adjustment of amounts required to repair damage caused by tropical Agnes last June, the report said.

The report also cited ordinary loss for the first 10 months of 1972 at $165,210,334. That compared to a net loss of $220,915,005 for the first 10 months of 1971. The trustees also reported that freight revenues rose to $148.629,958 for October 1972 which was $27,749,261 more than for October 1971. Total revenues for October were reported at $169.324.943 compared to $134,662,479 for the same month in 1971. WILL BE OPEN TILL 9 P.M.

ON WEDNESDAY And Every Nite Till 9, Now Until Christmas Nov. 30 American Red Cross, Eastern Clinton County Chapter, board of directors meeting, 7 p.m., in rooms at 20(i K. Water St. Dec. 2 Rosary-Altar Society.

St. Agnes Church, reception for now members at 7 p.m. Muss. West Va. selling moonshine CHARLESTON.

W. Va. (APi The State of West Virginia has gone into the business of selling moonshine. The slate Alcohol Beverage Control Commission has stocked several of its stores with two brands of old-fashioned white corn whiskey, "guaranteed to be less than 30 days old." "One of the main reasons we decided to put it on the shelves," said ABC Commissioner Richard Barber, "is that many people just like the taste of moonshine. We had quite a bit of demand for it." The twr brands sold in about 60 ABC stores are Booneshine.

a 100-proof whiskey manufactured in Cincinnati, and Georgia Moon, an 86-proof variety produced in the Peach State. Booneshine. sold in pints, retails at $2.66. while a fifth of Georiga Moon sells for $4.41. "It's distilled just like regular whiskey." Barber said.

"The big difference is that white whiskey isn't put in charred barrels to age. Supposedly the longer whiskey ages, the smoother it gets." Barber reported that sales are brisk, averaging 70 cases a month of both brands. "We're having a problem keeping a good stock on it. because of the suppliers not having enough." he said. Although the state's product costs about twice as much as illegal "white lightning." Barber noted that it has one advantage over homebrew.

"That stuff can make you blind or kill you." INDIANAPOLIS (AIM The nation's two largest organizations of city officials (he National League of Cities and the U.S. Conference of Mayors are divided on the issue of gun control legislation, putting their joint lobbying staff in a delicate position. The Public Safety Committee of the League created the difficulty Monday, the first day of the league's four-day annual meeting here. Ry a voice vote, the committee not only rejected the stiff gun control resolution passed by the Conference of Mayors last June, but also deleted the weak resolution passed by the League last year. That one had called for federal laws against interstate sale of all firearms and mandatory minimum sentences of 10 years for use of a firearm in any crime.

As it stands now, the League's policy statement does no! mention gun control legislation. The Conference of Mayors, however, called in June for national legislation against the manufacture, importation, sale and private possession of handguns except by law enforcement personnel, military and sportsmen's clubs, a national handgun registration law, state registration for all firearms and state licensing for persons who carry guns. The difference stems from the nature of the two organizations. The League represents 15.000 cities, with no limit on their size, so that even small (owns are presented. U.S.

Conference of Mayors is open only to chief executives of cities over 30.000 persons. The mayors and other city officials divide on this issue largely along big city and small town lines. Unless a change is made in the League's Resolutions Committee meeting late today or the final general session on Thursday, the division will force Washington lobbyists for the League and the Conference to tread a narrow line. The staffs of the two organizations were merged in for economy and greater clout. Allen E.

Pritchard executive vice president of the National League of Cities, said, "It's unusual, but it's not the first time one group has had a policy and the other has had none on the same issue. "If we were diametrically opposed, if the League went to some sort-of pro-gun ownership resolution, then we'd have a real problem. As it is. the League will just have to remain silent on this while the Conference does lobbying." Crashed pilot lived short time LIGONIER, Pa. (AP)-Thc wreckage of a missing helicopter and the body of the pilot who authorities say apparently was alive several hours after the aircraft crashed have been found in the Laurel Mountains near here.

A state Game Commission patrol found the helicopter Monday, about a half mile from the Pennsylvania Turnpike in the rugged and densely wooded mountain area. The body of Heinz Zeiger. 42. of Clifton. N.J., and a native of Clearfield County in west-central Pennsylvania, was found in a small compartment toward the rear of the big twin-engine Bell 121, where he had apparently huddled against the biting cold.

Zeiger took off last Tuesday from the nearby Latrobe Airport en route to Teterboro. N.J., with a scheduled stopover at Harrisburg. He didn't file a flight plan, but told airport authorities he planned to follow the Turnpike through to the state capitol. That was the last time contact was made with Zeiger. An extensive ground and air search was massed Wednesday, but no trace of the craft was found until Monday morning.

Recovery teams had to use four-wheel drive vehicles to get to the wreckage. The crash site was just off a fire road and about half an air mile from a fire tower atop one of the ridges of the mountain. Police said (he main reason the helicopter wasn't spotted earlier was because it was painted white, and the color blended with patches of snow which dot the mountains. Rte. Corrugated METAL PIPE ALL SIZES AVAILABLE Construction Equipment Renta R.L.

HINAMAN ic Phone 32215, S. Williamsport or 322-36 1 7301 39 Kellam football award made by LBJ by charging that the AMA's top command and its policy-making House of Delegates are not paying enough attention to. or communicating adequately with, the everyday practicing physician. "I am very proud to be a member of the AMA," said Schreiber. "but I am fearful that, unless we.

all of us. especially those of us who sit in the House of Delegates, place the private practice of medicine above everything else, then the AMA could well become nothing more than a social club, and we will have lost our last chance." But a top AMA official, while conceding that the AMA has launched a virtually unprecedented membership drive in the face of an approximate 12.000 dropouts since 1970. when membership peaked at 168,214. says a substantial increase already appears in prospect. SAN MARCOS.

Tex. (AP) Former President Lyndon B. Johnson has presented the first J. C. Kellam football award to 1.80-pound corner-back Jim Stienke of Southwest Texas State University.

The presentation was made Mondav night when Johnson and his wife Lady Bird attended a football banquet at the school, the former president's alma mater. Johnson presented Stienke. a senior business administration major from Johnson Citv. a plaque and a $1.000 check. Johnson initiated the award at last year's sports banquet with a $25.000 fund named in honor of Kellam.

his longtime friend and business associate PC Transportation Co. reports loss of $7 million to move? be sure to call RUTH WOLFE Avis Phone 753-3 171 MARIAN LUDLOW Renovo Phone 923-0571 Give him a HOMELITE CHAIN SAW If he enjoys the out-of- doors, he'll enjoy it even more cutting his own firewood or maintaining his property with a new Home- lite Chain Saw. Prices start at 5 1 19" GLOSSNER SALES SERVICE Beech Creek R.D. PH: 962-2564 or 962-2271 i i HAVE YOUR DEER Frozen We Will Make Dry Bologna Out Of Your Venison If You Prefer WE BUY DEER HIDES! We Will Take In Deer UNTIL 9 P.M. EVERY NIGHT MEAT MARKET LOCKER PLANT S.

Pine Just Around The Comer of East Walnut St. WINNER'S I ATTENTION! OWNERS OF CITY FLOOD DAMAGED PROPERTIES The City Code Enforcement Officer has on file a list of buildings that are presently scheduled for demolition. This list must be verified, consent forms must be signed and titles searched, and any necessary releases obtained. If your building is listed or if an "Unsafe" sign has been posted, and if you have not already done so, you MUST report in person to the Code Enforcement Officer, City Hall, 20 East Church Street, Lock Haven, Pennsylvania, between 9:00 A.M. and 4:00 P.M.

Monday through Friday. Please respond to this notice no later than December 15, 1972, or your property will be excluded for the demolition. Frank L. Taggart City Manager LIMITED NUMBER A truly automatic keyboard instrument. With just 2 fingers you can sound like a pro! Finger plays melody Finger plays chords strumming guitar bass pedals and rhythm automatically IT'S SO EASY HAMMOND ORGAN STUDIOS Downtown Lock Haven wmmmmmmmmmi.

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About The Express Archive

Pages Available:
95,440
Years Available:
1931-1973