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Tampa Bay Times du lieu suivant : St. Petersburg, Florida • 10

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OBITUARIES Tillie Booth, 78, related to pioneers of Pinellas County Miss Tillie Booth, 78, a great -granddaughter of Dr. Odette Philippe and a granddaughter of the Booth and McMullen pioneers, died Saturday (Jan. 11, 1975). A native of Florida, she lived just north of Safety Harbor on the old Booth homestead. She attended Southern College, formerly in Palm Harbor and was a graduate of the Gordon Keller School of Nursing, formerly in Tampa.

Miss Booth retired from the State TB Hospital in Tampa and formerly was a nurse at Morton Plant and at Mease Hospital. She was a member of the Safety Harbor O.E.S. and of the Methodist Church. Survivors include two sisters, Mrs. Arthur P.

McKeown of Brooksville and Mrs. D. E. Wilcox of Safety Harbor. Visitation today until service time at 10:30 a.m.

Tuesday at Moss Fort Harrison Chapel, Clearwater. Burial will be in the McMullen Cemetery. Victorin Moltchanoff, former Russian general Former Russian general Victorin Michailovich Moltchanoff, 88, who fought for Czar Nicholas II against the Communists, died Friday in San Francisco. Mr. Moltchanoff was a member of the Siberian Army and the last commander of the "White Troops." He left Vladivostok for America in 1922.

He became an American citizen and worked as custodial head of a downtown building until his retirement 10 years ago. ALLEN, CURTIS 83, of LEAHY, MILDRED, 2937 4321 22nd Ave. St. Peters- Beach Blvd. Gulfport, burg, retired supervisor for the U.S.

Post Office in Chicago, Saturday (Jan. 11, 1975). Arlington-Rice Funeral Home. APPLEFIELD, MRS. ANNA, 76, of 6960 20th Ave.

St. Petersburg, Saturday (Jan. 11, 1975). R. Lee Williams Funeral Home.

BOGARD, ERNEST 76, of 10200 122nd Largo, retired owner of Bogard Fuel Oil St. Petersburg, Sunday (Jan. 12, 1975). Fred H. Kenfield Funeral Home.

BROWNE, FRANK 91, of 6200 Central St. Petersburg, Saturday (Jan. 11, 1975). Feaster Colonial Chapel. BUBB, HARRY 63, of 12100 Capri Circle Treasure Island, formerly salesman, now associated with Holiday Inn, St.

Petersburg Beach, Saturday (Jan. 11, 1975). National Cremation Society. DARMODY, MRS. CLAIRE, 79, of 4200 62nd Pinellas Park, Saturday (Jan.

11, 1975). R. Lee Williams Funeral Home. DEDERER, FREDERICK 65, of 9975 41st St. Pinellas Park, filing station owner, Sunday (Jan.

12, 1975). Thomas A. Cooksey Funeral Home, Pinellas Park. GODDARD, MRS. MARY 71, of 10550 74th Ave.

Seminole, Saturday (Jan. 11, 1975). Osgood-Cloud Funeral Home. HAMPSTON, ROBERT 92, of 2603 58th St. Gulfport, retired business agent for the Plumbers and Steamfitters Local 105, Saturday (Jan.

11, 1975). Feaster Colonial Chapel. HOSTAD, OLAF 85, of 7414 110th Lane Seminole, retired soil conservationist for the State of Michigan, Muskegon area for 31 years, Saturday (Jan. 11, 1975). Osgood-Cloud Funeral Home.

JURMU, MRS. WINONA 69, of 4450 93rd Ter. Pinellas Park, retired medical technician, Sunday (Jan. 12, 1975). Osgood-Cloud Funeral Home.

KRIVACS, LOUIS 75, of 2560 62nd Ave. St. Petersburg, retired printer for the Long Island Daily Press with 50 years service, Sunday (Jan. 12, 1975). National Cremation Society.

Byline. From 1-B An orange tree doesn't care about the price of money or housing starts or Arab oil. An orange tree cares about water and sun, fertilizer and pruning. There has not been a cold snap to speak of in west central Florida since 1970, and the mild winters have made the trees warm and grateful. WITH NO COLD weather to drive them into dormancy, they have grown the year round, budding and bearing, more each year, and the Florida Citrus Mutual figures that the retail value of this year's record crop will be pretty close to $900-million.

That is not an entirely happy prospect for the grower. If orange trees responded to reason, he would probably tell his groves to cool it a little, because the more oranges there are to market, the lower the price he gets per box. But with the price of frozen, concentrated juice working out to something under a penny an on the grocery store shelves, the demand is still good. The crop will sell, and the crop needs picking. THE SMELL OF all that money and all that work has brought an unaccustomed competition to the hiring of pickers.

Desperation has made the hard and lowly work of the orange picker the envy of the unemployed. That competition has destroyed his job security and made him work the harder to keep his job. It is an employer's market. "We're getting 'em from all walks of life inquiring about picking," Grady Sweat was sayFriday afternoon. "And inflation has set in to where people who were living off food stamps and welfare have had to go to work some." Grady Sweat is one of the biggest growers.

He is president of Balm Grove Services and manages some 1,200 acres of citrus groves clumped around Balm and Riverview and Brooksville and Dade City, Being that big, he doesn't have to worry as much as some about the volume of the crop. Being that big, he knows his industry. IN THE PEAK months of January, February and March and again in June, the citrus industry in Florida needs about 26,000 pickers. There are 18,000 to 20,000 veterans, men and women, in residence and available here. The rest have to be found elsewhere, and most years it is a problem.

And the growers and packers who contract for the picking make their decisions depending on the kind of crews they like, which depends on the kind of service they've had over the years. A crew is usually 20 strong, and there are basically three sorts of crews: black; mixed black and white; and the Mexican Americans from Texas, the migrants who circle the nation each year with the crops in constant search of work. Of the last, a good many have quit making the circle from Virginia apples to Minnesota asparagus and Texas cotton. They have settled here, where the climate keeps them warm, and the tomatoes and the money trees give them work almost the year around. They hire on in season with crew Swanee or Suwannee this is Foster week WHITE SPRINGS (AP) Stephen Foster misspelled the name and, as far as anyone knows, never saw the little North Florida river that comes out of the Okefenokee meanders down to the swamp.

and of Mexico. But his rich heritage of unforgettable melodies such as "Way Down Upon the Swanee River" will be recalled in a series of programs this week at the memorial dedicated to him on the north bank of the Suwannee. Foster died in New York City 111 years ago, Jan. 13, 1864. He was 37.

Musical groups and individuals from Tallahassee, Jacksonville, Madison, Lake City, Orange Park and Green Cove Springs will present programs each afternoon through Sunday. Florida Secretary of State Bruce Smathers, whose agency supervises the 250-acre park and music shrine, will make opening remarks at the program today. Opa-locka crash pilot identified Compiled from AP, UPI Reports OPA-LOCKA The pilot of a twin-engine plane killed in a crash shortly after takeoff from Opa-locka Airport Saturday has been identified as 24- year-old Michael Champion. Champion, a pilot for the Hollywood Flying Service avoided an Opa-locka residential neighborhood by 100 yards, and crashed just inside an airport fence. Noah Slaughter, 44, who was working on his own plane on the ground said Champion "got off all right.

But once he was about a quarter-mile from the airport and a few hundred feet up, one of his engines started skipping it was missing and making noise." Slaughter said the pilot tried to bring the plane back to the runway, swinging around a residential neighborhood, "but he Births BAYFRONT MEDICAL Mr. and Mrs. Danny Nickels, 5500 Fourth St. a girl, 8 pounds ounces, 7:16 p.m. Jan.

11. Mr. and Mrs. Perry Joe Smith, 6700 First Ave. a girl, 4 pounds ounces, 2:35 a.m.

Jan. 12. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Gerhart, 1868 pounds Mississippi Ave.

girl, 6 ounces, 6:31 a.m. Jan. 12. Mr.and Mrs. Durmond Williamson, 4841 83rd Ter.

Pinellas Park, a boy, 5 pounds 13 ounces, 7:34 a.m. Jan. 12. Mr. and Mrs.

Paul Constable, 9180 55th St. Pinellas Park, a boy, 7 pounds 6 ounces, 12:59 p.m. Jan. 12. Cadillac used by city official, policeman to chase 3 'hoods' MIAMI (AP) Miami City Commissioner J.

L. Plummer has joined the drive against crime by chasing three robbery suspects in his Cadillac, rescuing their victim and handcuffing a husky attacker to a telephone pole. Miami policeman Gerald Green, called the nation's top policeman in 1973, was Plummer's chance partner in the drama Saturday afternoon. Plummer was driving in downtown Miami when he sighted Green, in plain clothes, walking along the sidewalk. He invited Green to ride along for awhile, noting that no one would think a Cadillac would be used as a police undercover car.

Rounding a corner, they drove up to the scene of a robbery. "IT WAS UNBELIEVABLE," Green said. "There was this old man on all fours on his hands and knees trying to get away. These three hoods were beating him like a dog. They had knocked his false teeth out of his head, out into the middle of Second Street." St.

Petersburg Times, Monday, January 13, 1975 11-8 Progress in JAMES GOODMAN chiefs like Tony Alvarez and his son Tony who live in Palmetto and hire pickers under contract to men like Grady Sweat Sr. NO MATTER WHAT com- plexion, no matter what sex, it is work that needs a strong back and a strong will, if it is to put bread on the table. Bread today sells for 50 cents and more a loaf, more usually, than a picker gets for filling a box with 90 pounds of oranges. It is no work for newcomers and the uncommitted, even in recession. And it begins early in the morning.

Evelyn Patterson doesn't like to work on weekends, but she was in her husband's white van driving the crew out of Lakeland by 6:45 Saturday morning. She was in the groves south of Riverview by 8, she and James Williams, James Goodman, two couples who had come in their own cars, and two generations of her own progency. There were about 15 of them in all, counting Evelyn Patterson and her daughter Viola Smith and her grandson Regi- I Announcements Dix, Howard A. FOR INFORMATION CALL WILHELm -y THURSTON funeral Home, Inc. 145 8th 5t.

No. 6366 Central Ave. St. Petersburg Phone 896-3141 Phone 896-3141 the field? It depends on point of view 'We're about picking. who were living go to work 'Don't nothing one thing.

When and when you nald Jerome, age 8. It was her husband's crew, but her husband was sick in bed with fluid in his knee, and Evelyn Patterson had brought the crew over to pick up a Saturday morning for Lakeland Packing because her electric bill was so high. "I GOT A $94, almost a $100 light bill," she said. With her washing machine broken for six months and kerosene for heating, Evelyn Patterson didn't understand why it should be so much, but the Lakeland municipal electric system assured her it was right, so it was a bill to be paid. Some packing houses and growers are giving only 40 cents a box for fruit this year because there are so many people who want the work and so many oranges on the trees that the boxes fill up faster.

But Lakeland Packing was giving 50 cents a box and Evelyn Patterson and her crew were in the groves at 8 a.m. Saturday with their gloves on. GOOD WORK gloves cost $4 a pair, and the thorns on an orange tree tear gloves and clothes and picking bags to shreds. But they don't slow you down if you're looking for bread on the table. You take a row, and you throw your ladder against the first tree in the row and start picking from the top down.

You don't pull them straight off the tree, either. You snap your wrist or give a little twist, or some of the orange skin is going Now hear better with Custom Ear. It's all in the ear, the natural way to hear. See it at: Accurate Hearing Aid Service 107 2nd St. St.

Petersburg Phone 822-3376 ANY ONE OF THE 4 FOLLOWING ZENITH QUALITY HEARING AIDS THE QUALITY GOES IN BEFORE THE NAME GOES ON This Week's 8 Special For Only 2. EA. 1. On-the-body Crusader 2. All-in-the-ser Zenette 3.

Behind-tre-ear Emblem 10-DAY Money Back Guarantee 4. -glass model Holiday FREE HOME TEST AND DEMONSTRATION. BAY AREA HEARING AID SERVICE St. Petersburg's Only Authorized Zenith Dealer 2 LOCATIONS 648 Central Ave. TYRONE SQUARE MALL.

822-3335 Near JCPenney 343-3019 PACKING COMPANY, INC. SINCE 1919 ANNOUNCING OUR NEW LOCATION IN DOWNTOWN ST. TO SERVE YOU BETTER 29 5th St. No. Ph.

821-7366 NOW TAKING ORDERS FOR FLORIDA'S RENOWNED FLORIDA ORANGE TEMPLES ON MISSISSIPPI OFF EACH BU. REGULAR GOOD EAST OF THRU PRICE THE JAN. 17 BEACH PLANT CITY CITY GROUND FLOOR TYRONE BLVD. AT 16th St. 29 5th ST.

NO. DON CESAR SEMINOLE BRIDGE 5th Ave. N. ST. PETERSBURG HOTEL PH.

344-3548 STORE PH. 821-7366 ST. PETE BEACH ST. PETERSBURG PH. 360-1237 PH.

894-5521 HOURS: 8:30 to 5:00 SUN. 1:00 to 5:00 getting 'em from all walks And inflation has set in off food stamps and Grady ever change about you start picking you quit you got a raggedy James Goodman, to stay on the stem, and plugged oranges don't count. There are eight 90-pound boxes to the bin, and a good man can pick eight or 10 bins a day and a good woman six. At 50 cents a box, that is $32 or $40 day for a really good man before you take out for shredded gloves and clothes and bags and the crew chief's portion. SUBTRACTING for rainy days and the part of the year when there's no picking to be done, it's a subsistence living, and no one ever said it wasn't.

James Goodman knows that. of life inquiring to where people welfare have had to Sweat, citrus grower fruit picking, only got a new bag, citrus picker He's been picking for 37 years, he says. "Don't nothing ever change about fruit picking, only one thing," he says. "When you start picking you got a new bag, and when you quit you got a raggedy bag." It may be the steadiest work in Florida right now, and the hardest, and there are hungry men trying to get on. But there are only 5,000 or 6,000 extra jobs in the groves this year, and for the rest the new men are going to have to compete with the folks who work for Tony Alvarez and Evelyn Patterson.

That's stiff competition. Thursday (Jan. 9, 1975). Arlington-Rice Funeral Home. MATHEWS, NEIL LAW- TON, 81, of 4301 31st St.

St. Petersburg, retired mail carrier, Sunday (Jan. 12, 1975). Anderson-McQueen Funeral Home. McCARTHY, MRS.

MARGUERITE, 76, of 2645 Fourth St. St. Petersburg, Sunday (Jan. 12, 1975). Simmons Funeral Home.

McCORMACK, CHARLES 58, of 6140 42nd Ave. St. Petersburg, retired supervisor at PrattWhitney Aircraft Co. with 31 years service, Friday (Jan. 10, 1975).

Thomas J. Brett Funeral Home, P.A. METZUNG, MRS. MILDRED 80, of 4540 50th Ave. St.

Petersburg, Saturday (Jan. 11, 1975). R. Lee Williams Funeral Home. NALLY, MRS.

ISABEL 63, of 6000 Second St. St. Petersburg Beach, Sunday (Jan. 12, 1975). BaynardThompson Beach Memorial Chapel.

RENO, OTTO FOREST, 85, of 4000 24th St. St. Petersburg, retired farmer, Saturday (Jan. 11, 1975). AndersonMcQueen Funeral Home.

SCHOCK, ROBERT 64, formerly of St. Petersburg, retired barber at Parson's Barber Shop, St. Petersburg, Sunday (Jan. 12, 1975) in Inverness. Suncoast Funeral Chapels, North Chapel.

SPENCER, JOHN, 83, of 1911 20th Ave. St. Petersburg, retired inspector for Fisher Body Saturday (Jan. 11, 1975). Anderson-McQueen Funeral Home.

STAMBAUGH, ELDON RHEA, 70, of 820 17th St. St. Petersburg, retired tool and die maker for the U.S. Navy, Thursday (Jan. 9, 1975).

Suncoast Funeral Chapels, North Chapel. SWALLEY, MRS. MAGNOLIA GRACE, 88, formerly of St. Petersburg, Friday (Jan. 10, 1975) in Hendersonville, N.C.

Callahon Funeral Home, Terre Haute, Ind. YOUNG, MRS. MARY 78, of 4832 First Ave. St. Petersburg, Friday (Jan.

10, 1975). Thomas J. Brett Funeral Home, P.A. The three youths ran. Gun in hand, Green yelled to the commissioner to swing the car around and cut them off while he chased them on foot.

Plummer roared off. As he rounded a corner, he confronted the biggest of the three suspects. "WE HAD HIM boxed in between J. Cadillac and my gun," Green said. "He had nowhere to go.

He didn't want to be a hood The commissioner manacled the husky, 15 year old youth to a telephone pole with Green's handcuffs while Green took off after the other two. BUT CRUISING police cars joined the chase, and the youths were caught. The three boys are juveniles and their names were not released. Their victim, 78-year-old Humbert Pinola, was being beaten after resisting the youths' demands for his money. He had $2.

Youth kills policeman at St. Augustine Beach ST. AUGUSTINE BEACH (AP) A St. Augustine Beach police officer was shot and killed while attempting to question a man who abandoned a car, officials said Sunday. St.

Johns County Sheriff Dudley Garrett said Deputy Ron Parker, 27, was shot several times by a young man late Saturday. The young man was wounded in a gun battle with another officer, and was in fair condition at a local hospital, Garrett said. THE SHERIFF said officials still were attempting to identify the suspect. He said several aliases were found in the man's car and his wallet. Parker had gone into the lobby of a local hotel looking for a man seen leaving a car on the oceanfront, officials said.

Witnesses told police that Parker and the young man left the lobby and walked toward a squad car, where they were sitting when the officer was shot. Funeral Notices APPLEFIELD Anna, 76, of 6960 20th Ave passed away Saturday, Jan. 11, 1975. Born in New York City, she moved to St. Petersburg 20 years ago from Long Island, New York.

Mrs. Applefield is survived by her husband David; three sons, Alvin and Aaron, both of St. Petersburg, Lawrence, Safety Harbor; five brothers, Joseph, Harry, Hyman, Michael, and Abraham ali of New York City; three sisters, Mrs. Minnie Israel, Mrs. Rose Erlich, Mrs.

Betty Goldstein, all of New York City. Funeral services will be conducted at 1 p.m. today at the R. Lee Williams Funeral Home, 49th St. at 35th Ave with Rabbi Morris Koberinetz officiating.

interment will be in Farmingdale, Long Island, New York. BUTLER Catherine M. Graveside vices will be held today at 10:30 a.m. in Memorial Park Cemetery with Rev. J.

Ralph Burton officiating. A native of Cumberland, Indiana, Mrs. Butler came to St. Petersburg 34 years ago from Miami and resided at 2319 15th Ave. N.

She was of the Protestant faith and a 50-year member of the Order of Eastern Star in Newport, R.I. Survivors include several nieces and nephews. The Palms Memorial is in charge of arrange ments. DAVIDSON Edith Carter, 85, widow of Perry Davidson, passed away Saturday, January 11. She resided at 6909 9th Street coming here nineteen years ago from Los Angeles, Calif.

She is survived by a sister, Mrs. Esther Stark, Temple City, Calif. Friends may call at Rhodes West Chapel, 900 49th St. where services will be conducted by a Christian Science Reader, Tuesday afternoon, January 14, at 2:30 o'clock. Interment will be in Memorial Park Cemetery.

DVORAK Charles, 78 of 10921 91st Ave. Seminole, passed away Saturday January 11, 1975. Born in Vienna, Austria, came here in 1963 from Berwin, Ill. Mr. Dvorak was a retired machinist, Feedway Electric Tool Company of LaGrange Park, I.

He was a member of United Lodge No. 927 Park Ridge, Medinah Temple Shrine, of Chicago, Ridgewood Grove, Barracks No. 2533 Veterans of WW1 USA Seminole. The Czechoslovakian Tourist Club and CSA Club both of St. Petersburg.

Surviving are his wife Mrs. Anna Dvorak; three brothers, Jerry, of Ontario, Edward of Pembrook Pines, Ervin of Montclair, four sisters, Mrs. Silvia Bedrova of Naples, Mrs. Carol Belt, Mrs. Betty Ryder, both of Chino, Mrs.

Hermina Phiel of San Francisco. A Masonic funeral service will be conducted Tuesday afternoon at 2 p.m. from the Lewis W. Mohn Funeral Home, 9700 Seminole by the Gulf Beach Memorial Association of Gulf Beach Lodge No. 291.

Entombment will follow in Serenity Gardens Memorial Park, Largo. Friends will be received at the funeral home Monday from 2 to 4 7 to 9 o'clock where Ridgewood Groves Barracks No. 2533 will conduct services at 3 p.m. and services also conducted by The Czechoslovakian Club the CSA Club at 2 p.m. The family requests expressions of sympathy be made to The Shriner's Crippled Children's Hospital, Oakpark, or the Knights Temple Home for the Aged in Paxton, Ill.

MOHN FUNERAL HOME SEMINOLE HAMPSTON, Robert 92, of 2603-58th St. S. Gulfport, Fla. died Saturday, Jan, 11, 1975. Mr.

Hampton wes born in Philadelphia, Pa. came here 5 years ago from Schenectady, N.Y. Retired business agent for the Plumbers and Steamfitters Local 105, Catholic and a World War I veteran. Member of the Knights of Pythias Truth Lodge and the American Legion, both of Schenectady, N.Y. Member of the Gulfport Shuffleboard Club, Gulfport.

Survived by a daughter, Mrs. Alice Winchester, Gulfport, a son, R. Willis Hampston of Poland, N. four grandchildren; seven great-grandchildren. Mass of the Resurrection will be celebrated at Holy Name Catholic Church, Tuesday morning, January 14, 1975 at 10 o'clock am.

Father Frank Goodman, Celebrant. Interment will be in Williamantic Cemetery, Willimantic, Conn. Casket bearers will be Knights of Columbus, Council 5131. Friends may call at the Feaster Colonial Chapel, 1099-49th St. S.

Monday afternoon and evening, 2-4 and 7-9pm. FEASTER COLONIAL CHAPEL 347-4151 JONES Victor 67, of 5300 28th St. N. Died Friday, Jan. 10, 1975.

Born in Washington County, Ohio. Winter visitor here for seasons from Vincent, Ohio. 40 Year member of 1.0.0.F, Vincent, Ohio. Survived by wife, Nina 2 sons, Gary V. Ramsey, New Jersey, Roger Largo; a daughter, Mrs.

Darrell Knost, Marietta, Ohio; brother Frank, Fairborn, Ohio; 2 sisters, Mrs. Grace Cabendish, Montgomery, West Virginia, Mrs. Helen Burchill, River Isles, 9 grandchildren. Friends may call at the Osgood-Cloud Funeral Home, 4691 Park Blvd. this afternoon, evening from 2-4, 7-9pm, where funeral services will be held Tuesday, Jan.

14th at 2pm with the Rev. Norman F. Brotherton officiating. Interment will follow in Memorial Park Cemertery. KNACHEL Mr.

Leslie 83 of 6190 62nd Ave. Pinellas Park, died Friday, January 10, 1975. Born Ashley, Ohio, here 19 years from Mt. Gilead, Ohio. Retired farmer, member of First United Methodist Church, Pinellas Park.

Survived by wife Cora, 2 daughters, 2 step-daughters, a brother, grandchildren and 6 great-grandchildren. Friends may call at Osgood-Cloud Funeral Home, 4691 Park this evening from 7-9pm. Where funeral services will be held Tuesday, January 14th at with the Reverend Charles Kinder, officiating. Interment will Columbus, Ohio. was flying too long with his wings straight up and down.

I saw the plane go completely over in the air, then nosedive and crash." There were no other injuries as a result of the crash, and no damage to ground installations, airport officials said Sunday. "WITH REGARD TO A CARD OF THANKS" Very often a card of thanks in the St. Petersburg Times and Independent meets a need which can hardly be solved in any other way. Not only is it a gracious expression of gratitude to those who have sent floral tributes or memorials but courteously acknowledges the services and kindness of the many to whom a personal note of thanks cannot be mailed or whose names and addresses are not known, A card of thanks may be arranged by calling Mr. Eugene Weller, 893-8518.

HEARING AIDS LOW, LOW PRICES MOST MAKES AVAILABLE BEHIND Factory EAR New $6950 American Made Factory Service Available For: DAHLBERG, DANAVOX, OTARION, ELECTONE, AUDIOTONE, QUALITONE, SIEMEN'S, REXTON, FIDELITY, OTICON, VICON, AUDIVOX, ETC. Rental Purchase Plan $10.00 $15.00 per month Rent applies to purchase AUTHORIZED DAHLBERG DEALER PROFESSIONAL Hearing Aid Service, St. Pete 360 First Ave. No. 822-4974 COMPLETE CREMATION SERVICE Members Non Members $275 $299 NO MORTICIANS NO ADD-ONS NO EMBALMING NO ADDED FUNERAL HOME COSTS! NATIONAL CREMATION SOCIETY Call 522-6641 2995 44th Ave.

No. St. Petersburg ADVERTISEMENT Flowers: FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS LaSHAN FLORIST CITY WIDE FREE DELIVERY 1149 9th St. S. 821-5773 POSNO FLOWERS 347-1219 Pasadena Ave.

N. Just off Central BUNING THE FLORIST 7120 Central Ave. Ph: 342-8231 7400 4th Street N. Ph: 521-2651 Central Plaza Ph: 896-1194 ARTISTIC FLOWERS DISSTON PLAZA 3525 49th St. N.

521-1883 LINARD Mrs. Agnes, 66, of 10636 Gandy Blvd. passed away Tuesday, Jan, 7, 1975. Born in Wisconsin, she came here several years ago from there. A registered practical nurse, she is survived by five brothers, Walter Hansen of Omalaske, Victor Hansen of Toledo, Ohio, William Hansen of Tomah, Edmond Hansen of Shennington, Wis.

and George Hansen of Carpentersville, and three sisters, Mrs. Mabel Haaf of Omalaske Mrs. Julia Dahle of Oakdale, Wis. and Mrs. Mary Hoffman of Tomah, Wis.

Friends may call at Simmons Funeral Home, 4th St. N. at 35th Ave. Monday from 2-4 and 7-9pm where funeral services will be held, Tuesday, Jan. 14, 1975 at 11am with Rev.

Edward H. Stammel officiating. Interment will be in Crestlawn Cem- etery, Vero Beach, Fla. SIMMONS FUNERAL HOME IN CHARGE OF ARRANGEMENTS Park Cemetery. THOMAS J.

BRETT FUNERAL HOME, P.A. 345-0101 McCORMACK Mr. Charles 58, of 6140 42nd Ave. passed away Friday Jan. 10, 1975.

Mr. McCormack came to St. Petersburg 11 years ago from Springfield, Mass. He was a former employee of Pratt-Whitney Aircraft, Hartford, for 31 years. Mr.

McCormack was a member of Melha Temple, Springfield, and Eden Shrine Lodge, Ware, Mass. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Frances Haley McCormack of St. Petersburg; 2 sons, Lf. Comm.

James E. McCormack of Gales Ferry, Robert P. McCormack of St. Petersburg; 1 daughter, Kathleen F. of Springfield, 1 brother, Vinal, of Agawam, 1 sister, Mrs.

Doris Quinn of St. Petersburg; and 4 grandchildren, Bryan and Raymond of Gales Ferry and Patricia and Linda of St. Petersburg. Friends will be received at the THOMAS J. BRETT, FUNERAL HOME, P.A., 4810 Central Monday Jan.

13, 1975 from 7-9 p.m. Funeral services will be conducted in the Funeral Home chapel Tuesday, Jan. 14, 1975 at 11 a.m. with interment following in Memorial METZUNG Mrs. Mildred 80, of 4540 50th Ave.

passed away Saturday, Jan. 11, 1975. Born in Lima, Ohio, she came to St. Petersburg 15 years ago from Cleveland, Ohio. She was a member of The Trinity United Church of Christ.

Mrs. Metzung is survived by 2 sisters, Mrs. Helen Watkiss, St. Petersburg, Mrs. Minnie Bushfield, Lakeland; and several nieces and nephews.

Funeral services will be conducted 1 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 15, 1975 at R. LEE LIAMS FUNERAL HOME, 49th St. at 35th Ave.

with Rev. Donald W. Hafner officiting. Interment services will follow at Memorial Park Cemetery. Friends will be received from 6-8 p.m.

Tuesday at the R. LEE WILLIAMS FUNERAL HOME. NOTARI Mrs. Ella M. Notari, 89, widow of Joseph J.

Notari, passed away Thursday, December 2. She resided at 841 4th Avenue North coming here 30 years ago from Bethel, New York. Mrs. Notari is survived by a sister, Mrs. Stephen (Marie) Wormuth of Lake Huntington, N.Y., and St.

Petersburg. Friends may call at Rhodes East Chapel, 635 4th Street North, after 1:00 o'clock Monday, where Services will be conducted by Rev. Harleigh M. Rosenberger, Tuesday afternoon January 14 at 1:00 o'clock. Interment will be in Woodlawn Memory Gardens.

393-3481 SWALLEY Mrs. Magnolia Grace, 88, died Friday, January 10, 1975, at her residence, 600 Lakewood Hendersonville, N.C. Services Wednesday, January 15, at the Callahon Funeral Home in Terre Haute, Indiana, with interment in Roselawn Cemetery. Survived by one daughter, Mrs. Mary S.

Tuttle of Asheville, N.C.; three sisters, Mrs. Elizabeth Newport of Terre Haute, Mrs. Ora Stephans of Bowling Green, Mrs. Goldia Frunts of Indianapolis, two grandchildren and 5. great-grandchildren.

Member of First United Methodist Church of St. Petersburg and lived in St. Petersburg for 14 years at The Bond Hotel before coming to Hendersonville in 1974. WALDEN John 79, of 5219 14th Ave. died Saturday, January 11, 1975.

Born in Leroy, moved here 17 years ago from Urbana, Ill. Mr. Walden was retired real estate Broker, a member of Northside United Methodist Church. Survivors include his wife, Mona; three sons, Nelson, Largo, Duane, Champagne, Donald, Chicago, 9 grandchildren, 6 great-grandchildren. FUneral services will be held Tuesday, January 14th, 2 p.m.

at the Gee and Pitts Funeral Home, 3180 30th Ave. with Reverend R. Warren Wasson officiating, Interment will follow in the Memorial Park Cemetery. Family prefers donations to the Methodist Childrens Home. Friends may call today, from 6-8 p.m.

at the Gee and Pitts Funeral Home. YOUNG Mrs. Mary 78, of 4832 1st Ave. passed away Friday, Jan. 10, 1975, in Omaha, Neb.

Mrs. Young had been a St. Petersburg resident for 29 years having come here from New York, New York. She is vived by her step-mother, Mrs. John Opitz of Omaha; two brothers, Mr.

John Opitz of Spearfish, S.D., and Mr. Bernard Opitz of Omaha; and three sisters, Mrs. Frances Horrigan, Mrs. Gertrude Lilla, and Miss Theresa Opitz, all of Omaha. Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated Tuesday, Jan.

14, 1975, in Omaha with interment later in Memorial Park Cemetery, St. Petersburg. The John E. Johnston and Son Funeral Home in Omaha is in charge of arrangements. THOMAS J.

BRETT FUNERAL HOME, P.A. 345-0101 5.

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  • Continuellement mis à jour

À propos de la collection Tampa Bay Times

Pages disponibles:
5 185 605
Années disponibles:
1886-2024