Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Tampa Tribune from Tampa, Florida • 49

Publication:
The Tampa Tribunei
Location:
Tampa, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
49
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

4 Obituaries TAMPA TRIBUNE, Thursday, October 20, 1977 ft- Beat!) Notice SiAiti i 1 mnnm i. 1 1 i'iujw (- I a Ililillii 'S I 1 "VI rr Body Identified As Missing Indiana Coed MARTINSVILLE, InA (AP) A decomposed body found in a cornfield was positively identified yesterday as that of Indiana University coed Ann Louise Harmeier, whose disappearance last month inspired the people of her hometown to undertake a nationwide search. Dr. Josefino Afuilar said positive identification was made through dental records. Miss Harmeier, 20, of Cambridge City, apparently died from strangulation, he said.

Estate Police Maj. Stan Kenny said detectives had few leads in the case but were continuing their investigation. THE REMAINS were found by a farmer harvesting corn five miles from where Miss Harmeier disappeared along a state highway while she was driving to school in Bloomington on Sept 12. Her car, its parking lights blinking, was found along the highway two miles north of here. State police had said they found a shoe string and a hairbrush around the young woman's neck, leading them to believe she might have been strangled.

At the scene police found a red shirt, jeans and tennis shoes which they said matched the description of what Miss Harmeier was wearing when last seen. State troopers also said a purse found next to the body contained a paper with Miss Harmeier's name on it and jewelry Not Your Ordinary Pet, Not In A Pig's Eye play together down on the farm. Amy, who is housebroken, once went with Lance on a Florida vacation. (UPI) Lance Warwick, five-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs.

Dan Warwick of Gainesville, has his ear nuzzled by his pet porker, Amy, as the two and other items known to Belong to ine coed. pieope American Families Take On New Look Hillsborough CHERRY, Marjorie, 77, of Tampa. Died Tuesday. A resident of Tampa 25 years. Duval Funeral Home, Tampa.

CHAITE, Irene Berger, of Tampa. A native of Atlanta, and a resident of Tampa 45 years. J. L. Reed and Son Funeral Home, Tampa.

DEAL, Viola, of Tampa. Died yesterday in Tampa. Haynes Funeral Home, Plant City. FAIOLA, Ivonne L. "Bunny," 23, of Tampa.

A native of New York and a nurse at Tampa General Hospital. Stowers Funeral Home, Brandon. GAYLORD, Mrs. Anne Cary, 64, of Tampa. Died yesterday.

Retired supervisor of Secondary School Libraries for Hillsborough County. F. T. Blount Funeral Home, Tampa. GREENE, Lucy 88, of Tampa.

Died Tuesday. A retired school teacher in New York. Duval Funeral Home, Tampa. GULLO, Mrs. Fi-lomena, 76, of Tampa.

A. P. Boza Funeral Home, Tampa. HARTLEY, Dale Lon-nie, 56, of Tampa. A native of West Virginia and a resident of Tampa 15 years.

Marsicano Funeral Home, Tampa. RANSOM, Mrs. Jessie M. Hall, 70, a native of Tampa, and a resident of Mobile, Ala. Died Oct.

7 in Tennessee. SIMPSON, Mrs. Mary Elizabeth "Lizzie," 84, of Dover. Died in Missouri yesterday. Haynes Funeral Home, Plant City.

VANN, John 47, of Tampa. Died yesterday. A resident of Tampa seven months. Curry's Funeral Home, Tampa. Hardee ROSS, Rosalie 88, of Wauchula.

Died yesterday. Coker Funeral Home, Wauchula. Pasco MacPHERSON, George 74, of Port Richey. Died Monday. A retired employe of Eastman Kodak in Rochester, N.Y.

North Funeral Home, Hudson chapel. Polk MILLIGAN, Geore 76, of Auburndale. Died Tuesday. A former employe of General Foods and a resident of Auburn-dale 51 years. Kersey Funeral Home.

CHAITE Irene Berger Chaite, cf 475 Lucerne, died yesterday in a local hospital. She was born and raised in Atlanta, Georgia. She resided in Tampa 45 years, she was a member of the Rodeph Shoiom Congregation and Sisterhood. She was a life member of Hadassah and Council of Jewish Women. She was the widow of Samuel J.

Chaite. She is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Frank (Deris) Rosenblatt, of Tampa, and Mrs. Hal (Bobbie) Lurie, of Springfield, Missouri, also by Grandchildren Nancy R. Linsky and Robert Rosenblatt of Tampa, Beverly R.

Levin-son of Houston, Texas, Loretta Lurie and David Lurie of Kansas City, Missouri, and by two Great Grandchildren. Funeral Services will be held Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock at J.L. Reed Son Funer.il Home, 3410 Henderson at De-Leon with Rabbi San-ford H. Hahn, of Rodeph Shoiom Synagogue, officiating. Interment will follow at Rodeph Shoiom Cemetery.

Preparation was by the Chevra Kadis-ha. The pallbearers will be Al Latter, Leslie J. Bar-nett, Harold Feinberg, Nathen Rosenblatt, Walter Kessler, and Manuel Buchman. The Family requests that in lieu of flowers, a contribution be made to the Rodeph Shalom Memorial Fund. J.L.

REED SON 3410 HENDERSON BLVD. CHERRY Funeral services for Mrs. Marjorie Cherry, age 77, 1902 E. 142nd who passed away Tuesday, will be conducted Friday morning at 10:00 a.m. from Corpus Christi Catholic Church with The Rev.

Fr. Nicholas Mc-Loughlin, Celebrant Interment in Sunset Memory Gardens. Mrs. Cherry was a member of Corpus Christi Catholic Church and a resident of the Tampa area for 25 years. Survivors include her son and daughter-in-law; Ellsworth Jay Buck and Vicki Buck, Tampa; sister, Evelyn M.

Hotchkiss, Tampa; Nephew, Edward Hotchkiss, Tampa; Niece, Betty Hotchkiss, Tampa. Friends may call at the Northside ChapeL Duval Funeral Home, 10520 N. Florida from 7-9 p.m. this evening. mounted a community euon iu uuu IllVIUIktoW her, spreading bumper stickers, posters ried) couples were older women "with a young man as a the researchers said.

"Nowadays, the majority are young men sharing living quarters with a young woman." At the same time, Glick and Norton wrote that about two out of three of the first marriages taking place today are expected to last "until death do them part," and young women say they expect to have an average of two children. THE REPORT, called "Marrying, Divorcing and Living Together in the United States Today," was published by the Population Reference Bureau Inc. Glick and Norton wrote that in recent years the United States has had among the highest marriage rates and the highest divorce rate in the industrialized world. America's divorce rate has consistently far exceeded that of any other country, they wrote, noting that the gap has been narrowing. Between 1965 and 1976, the country's divorce rate doubled from 2 per 1,000 population to five per 1,000 population.

The reason the marriage rate is so high is that almost one out of three marriages today end in divorce, they WASHINGTON (AP) Marriage and child bearing are here to stay, but the new American style of living together is giving families a different look, says a new government report Dr. Paul C. Glick and Arthur J. Norton, who specialize in marriage and family statistics at the U.S. Census Bureau, said in a report released yesterday that new living patterns reflect significant changes in basic American attitudes about conforming with aditional behavior.

They said both marriage and divorce rates are high and the number of unmarrieds who live together is jn-creasings. CHANGES in attitudes "permit a greater choice in lifestyles and more flexibility in the development of individual potentialities," the census report said. As of March 1977, almost 2 million persons were living with an unrelated adult of the opposite sex, the authors said. That's 80 per cent more than in 1970, but accounts for only 2 per cent of the country's 48 million "couple households." "Back in 1960 most such (unmar and bislDoaras across souuiern inuiaim. Truckers distributed thousands of posters with her picture throughout the nation and a citizens' committee collected more than $10,000 in pledges and $5,000 in cash to pay for the advertising and a reward fund.

Methodist Women Join Abortion Suit WASHINGTON (UPI) For the first time in its history, the Women's Division of the 10-million-member United' Methodist Church said yesterday it would join a court suit fighting for abortion rights. "The Women's Division said it would become a plaintiff in the nationwide class, action suit known as MacRae v. Califano, which is challenging restrictions on the federal funding of abortions for poor women. In addition, the Women's Divison said it would seek to "identify individual United Methodist women to become individual plaintiffs." The Almanac By United Press International TODAY IS THURSDAY, OCT. 29, the 293rd day of 1977 with 72 to follow.

The moon is between its first quarter and full phase. The, morning stars are Jupiter, Mars, Venus and Saturn. The evening star is Mercury. Those born on this day are under the sign of Libra. American educator John Dewey was born Oct.

20, 1859. ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY: In 1918, Germany accepted American President Woodrow Wilson's terms to end World War I. In' 1944, American troops began a campaign to recapture the island of Leyte in the Philippines. In 1964, Herbert Hoover, 31st president of the United States, died at the age of 90. In 1973, President Nixon fired special' Watergate Prosecutor Archibald Cox Attorney General Elliott Richardson and deputy William Ruckelshaus, refusing to dismiss Cox, resigned their posts.

A THOUGHT FOR THE DAY: In a speech in 1932, Herbert Hoover said. The grass will grow in the streets of a hundred cities." said, and four out of five divorced persons remarry. THEY ADDED, however, that a growing number of divorced persons are not remarrying and the proportion may soon fall to three but of four. 'To some extent such a development may mean that more persons who lack the inclination and requirements for living as happily married persons are choosing to remain unmarried," they wrote. Glick and Norton said close to 40 per cent of all marriages of young adults are likely to end in divorce.

Here is how they figure it: "If women who were ages 25 to 29 in 197S add to the divorces they already had as many more divorces as older women added in the previous five years, the following events will take place during their lifetime: Of each 100 first marriages, 38 will end in divorce. Of the 38 divorcees, three-fourths or 29 will remarry. Of the 29 who remarry, 44 per cent or 13 will become redivorced. Therefore, the original 100 women who entered first marriage will have 51 divorces after their 129 marriages." CLICK AND NORTON said some of the reasons for the high divorce rate, which has been climbing since the late 1950s, include the prolonged Vietnam war, "followed by an often difficult readjustment to a peace-time economy and postwar family living." Also, they wrote that other social changes, such as the women's movement, more liberal attitudes about behavior by many religious groups and an increasing toleance of divorce may have contributed to the rising rate. Other highlights of the report include: In two out of three married couples in which both spouses work, the husband made at least $2,000 more than his wife in 1975.

However, in one-third of these two-earner couples, the wife made about as much as her husband. Less than a fifth of working wives made more. Also, half of all wives had no earnings at all. One third of all first births in the first half of the 1970s were premaritally conceived, and one-tenth of children born to remarried women were born between marriages. Persons living alone accounted for 21 per cent of the nation's 73 million households as of 1976.

Of Record terment to follow in LUnione Italiana. Rev. Fr. J. Bolger, Pastor, Good Shepherd Catholic Church will officiate.

Survivors include a daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Gullo Hopkins; a granddaughter, Jeanette Ludwig; and one great grandson David Ludwig. The Catholic Wake Service for Family Members Only will be recited at 8:30 p.m. Thursday. Please Omit Flowers.

AP. Boza RIVERSIDE CHAPEL 3809 N. Armenia Ave. HARTLEY Funeral services for Mr. Dale Lonnie Hartley, 56, 3115 Santiago native of W.

Va. and a resident of Tampa for 15 years, who passed away in Tampa Veterans Hospital Tuesday, will be held Friday morning at Ten O'clock at Marsicano Funeral Home, 4040 Henderson Blvd. with Rev. Paul R. Neal, Minister of West-shore Christian Church officiating.

He is survived by his wife Mrs. Frances Kathleen Hartley, sons James Dale Hartley and Francis Martin Hartley and a daughter Miss Diana Lynn Hartley all of Tampa, five brothers and two sisters. Interment will be in Hillsboro Memorial Gardens. HOOTEN Mr. Charles Taylor Hooten, 89, of Spring Lake died Tuesday.

A native of Alabama, he came to Center Hill, Fla. in 1906. He was a retired law enforcement officer, member of Bushnell Masonic Lodge No. 30 and a member of the First Baptist Church of Groveland where he had lived for 16 years. Survivors are his wife, Mrs.

Edna Hooten, Spring Lake; 3 daughters, Mrs. Lucille Hurst, Jacksonville, Mrs. Allene Graves, Wildwood, Mrs. Bette Broward, Tampa; sons, Maxwell, Lake Panasoffkee, Ralph, Ft Lauderdale, John, Miami; sister Mrs. Jevie Whidden, Orlando; 16 grandchildren; 14 great grandchildren.

Services will be at 3 p.m. Friday, October 21st at the Center Hill Baptist Church. Interment in Center Hill Cemetery. Pureed Funeral Home, Bushnell. RANSOM Mrs.

Jessie M. Hall Ransom, 70, died Oct 7th in Chattanooga, Term. Former native of Tampa, lived the past 30 years in Mobile, Ala. Survived by 4 sisters 5 brothers. Graveside services were held in Chattanooga, Tenn.

SIMPSON PLANT CITY Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Elizabeth "Lizzie" Simpson, 84, of the Jess Walden Dover, who passed away in Lebanon, Missouri Wednesday, will be held Saturday afternoon at 2 p.m. at the Dover First Baptist Church, with Elder Cromer Crawford, and Elder Johnny Bowen, officiating. Interment will follow in the Dover Cemetery. Those selected to serve as pallbearers are asked to meet at the church at 1:45 p.m.

She is survived by 4 daughters, Mrs. Mary Oakes, Dover, Mrs. Nona Mae Tuggle, Mango, Mrs. Joyce Kromer, Tampa, Mrs. Betty Montgomery, Conway, Missouri; 3 sons, Leonard Simpson, Nebraska, Raymond and Fred Simpson, both of Dover; 2 sisters, Mrs.

Mabel Simpson, Dover, Mrs. Cecil Self, Bradenton; 2 brothers, Marvin Haynes, Seffner, and John Haynes, Dover; also 18 grandchildren; and 25 great grandchildren. Mrs. Simpson was a life long resident of Dover; and a member of the Primitive Baptist Church. The family will receive friends at the Funeral Home from 7 until 9 p.m.

Friday evening. Arrangements by: HAYNES FUNERAL HOME PLANT CITY IN MEMORIAM of Aurelio (Lilin) Fernandez. 5 years have past since you went away, but you are in our thoughts. Gloria, Cuco, Vonda IN MEMORIAM In Loving Memory of Suzanne Marie Sherrill. Three years ago today, since you went away.

Time has not eased the pain of losing you. Tears we hide, deep inside, sadly missed. Loved too. From, Dad, Mom, Brother and Sister. Deborah L.

and Orlando C. Reyes. Bradley Scott and Cathy Aon Keenan. Gary M. and Terry L.

Yoshihara. Howard Reaves and Mary Alice Hamll. Earl Wayne and Barbara Jean Pinero. David KiplyiM and Kim Vania Rodenberry. Ralph Joseph and Shirley Louise White.

James Doran and Martens Eugenia Went- CTATt onsumers th. lollo and Alvereie Bolden. Kathy A. and William Nixon Ballonce. Donald PhHIip and Debra Ann Coeles.

Howard P. and Pauline L. Dorn. Mary D. and Earl Clifford West.

Roy Larry and Sandra Kay Teston. Benny Mack and Susan Lynn Pittman. Jose J. and Donna Kaye Maortua. Joseph Allen and Catherine Camaioni.

Mary Josephine and Thomas Wym Stevens. William H. and Myrtle Mae Smith. Serge Jean and Martha H. Treton.

CIRCUIT COURT DiisotutiM 01 Morrioai Ptfftiont FiKd Rusted and Revo RMovt. Maria N. and Ronald E. Mentation. Richard John and Constonci S.

Gada. Celesta A. and Frank Perez. Diane O. and Charlet Raymond Stantield.

William R. and Jenna L. Mullins. Judy C. and Jospeh L.

Dial. Otit F. and Barbara L. Shlle. Ben F.

and Ann R. Knotts. Allen and Sandra K. Savers Starr. Steven M.

and Leanp Conerly. Cynthia and Harold St wenson. Cora A. and Joseph F. Mavton.

William I. and Kattilt A A. Poterna. Louis H. and Chriitl.ie A.

Vecsev. John K. and Joan O. Cross. John H.

and Doyle Hiasinbofham. Rita and Edwin T. McQulllen. James H. and Catherine Oianne Lucas Lyle.

Daren M. and Paul B. Smith. Barbara Ouffey and Brace Alton Boiemon. Final Judgments Bobble Lea and Janice Carol Mooter.

Jesus Felipe and Susan Lynn DeArmat. Vincent and Patricia G. Flotr. Lavina R. and Danny D.

Neal. Dennis Dvane and Sally Jane Klftf. William Adam and Susan Fernaa Gingerly. Keith E. and Carol Jean Soli.

Edward Eugene and Dorothy Mae Heslea. Anita J. and A (on Lawrence Booty. Andrew G. and Theresa Ann Lyle.

Charles G. and JIN A. Pearson. John Charles and Cheryl Elaine Rabm. Patsy R.

and George E. Victors. Alterted To Liver Paste WASHINGTON (AP) The Agriculture Department issued a warning yesterday that consumers should be alert to harmful" imported liver paste products from France. Assistant Secretary Carol Tucker Foreman said preliminary laboratory tests indicate that the suspected shipments "are underprocessed and may cause food poisoning." Foreman said that consumers can identify the products by the numbers 6707-C and 6707-D stamped on the cans or glass containers. In addition, the words "product of France" are printed on the labels.

Officials said the containers range in size from Vi ounces to 2 lb, Zy2 ounces. The imported items, produced by Feyel, a meat and poultry processing plant in Strasbourg, France, are sold under various names such as "Smoked Goose Pate," "Bloc de Foie Gras with Truffles," "Wild Boar Filets with Foie Gras and Truffles," and "Liver Pate." MMWim Flower Fair, Inc. Complete Floral Service "hOM Cor. N. Blvd.

Buffalo Opea 0 H.M. MMnwrW 1633 Snow Ave. IH-S4II rtoMtetjMt I Juneral Monte, Jnc. 6900 NEBRASKA PH. 237-3345 InowrtsHor.MC -3304 5922 N.

Florida Ava. Support your firefighter Cnrrfi3s Snipes-Hamilton Other Suits Filed Rita Cornea vs. Agnes Rile. Douglas L. Sampson vs.

Frank Ernest Sollvan. R. Lewis Construction Co. Inc. vs.

U.S. Homes of Florida. Albert M. Pedona vs. Keys of the Coast Inc.

OdeM Hall vs. James F. Taylor. Estelto Perei vs. J.

E. Hodgklnso. Davidson Road Associates LTD. vs. David T.

Edwards. Fodders Distributors Corp. vs. ABC Wosh and Dry Machine Corp. Fodders Oistribetors Cora.

vs. Envh-ic Cora. Foster Classic Homes Inc. vs. Florida Federal Savings Lean Association.

Modern Globe Inc. vs. Harrison P. Cronic Knight and Wall Co. vs.

Harry Hiers. Merrlaee License Applications Michael Joseph Elklns. IS, Tompa, anrl Pamela Ann Custard. 12. Tampa.

Dennis Ray Chambers. I). Brandon, and Debra Lynn Ellis, I. Brandon. Michael Patrick Shane.

St. Dover, and Lorraine Ann Leonard, 34, Tampa. Francis Patrick Sonne, 1J, Gibson ton, and Ethel Margaret Eaton, It, Gibsonton. Robert EHe Harris. SO.

Tampa, and Alma Jane Feimster, 45, Tampa. Joseph Daniel Chaves. 17. Latz, and Dana Rochelle Hayes, Is, Tampa. Gams Hugh Bailey, U.

Tampa, and Deborah Susan Barker, 14, Tampa. Bruce Raymond Martin, 1. Tampa, and Josephine Priscllla McLeed. Tampa. Ernest Raymond Thompson, 74, Tampa, and Laura Rebecca Jursek, 71, Tampa.

John Edward Milam. 34, Tampa, and Mar Lee Milam, 13, Lakeland. WiHie Edward Ray, It, Lett, and Cheryl A. Oodd, 37, Lett. Wayne Larry Roberts, It, Tampa, and Roberta Kim Dawson, 21, Tampa.

Bruce Curtis Bryant, 22. Tampa, and Irene Marie Pittman, 22, Temple Terrace. Marty Lee Barnes. It, New York, N.Y and Virginia Marie Waters, 17, Plant City. Jeffrey Bryan Smith, It, Tampa, and Laura Jean Hadiema, 17, Tompa.

James Avery Cunningham, 45, Tampa, and Catherine Ann Camaioni, 34, Tampa. Vincenia CiccareUo, 33. Tampa, and Gloria Joy Sierra. 27. Tampa.

Augusta Leoiia. 54. Brandon, and Martha Loeiio, Jacksonville. Herbert Thomas Taylor. 40, Laketawd, and Joan EHea French, 2.

Plant City. IRTHS Tampa General Hospital October 11 Mr. and Mrs. Pool 6. Farmer.

girl; Mr. and Mrs. Michael O. Bass, boy; Mr. and Mrs.Cliartes F.

WMson. girl; Mr. and Mrs. Jose A. Munoi, girl; Mr.

and Mrs. Richord Smith, girL Funeral Home 6718 North Armenia Tel: 932-5308 llWFPAl HOMES FUNERAL HOMES FUNERAL HOME 60S $. MocDill, Tompq SERVICES DAWSON, William 10:00 A.M. Thursday BARTMESS, G. W.

"Bar 2:00 P.M. Thursday Christ Comm. Ch. JONES, Elsie Chspol GAYLORD, Anne Cary Memorial Services 2P Sat St Paul 1:00 P.M. Friday Lutheran Church FAIOLA Requiem Mass for the repose of the soul of Ivonne "Bunny" L.

Faiola, 23, of Tampa, will be celebrated Saturday morning at 10:00 a.m. at the Church of the Nativity in Brandon by Reverend Father Bruno Szymusiak, Associate Pastor. Interment will follow. A native of New York, Mrs. Faiola graduated from Wethersfield High School in Wethersfield, Conn, and from the New Britain Gen.

Hospital School of Nursing. A registered nurse at Tampa General Hospital, she attended St Mary's Catholic Church in Tampa. She is survived by her husband, Armando Faiola, Tampa; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Quido Faiola; brother, Anthony Faiola, all of Seffner; 2 sisters, Maria Castillo, Gramby, and Christine Faiola, Seffner; grandparents, Mr.

and Mrs. Pedro Castillo, Puerto Rico. The Rosary will be recited Friday evening at 7:00 p.m. by Father Michael Finnegan, Associate Pastor, Church of the Nativity, at the Brandon Chapel of Stowers Funeral Homes, 401 W. Brandon af-terwhich time, the family will receive friends until 9:00 p.m.

Arrangements by: STOWERS OF BRANDON GULLO Private Funeral services (Family Members Only) for Mrs. Filomena Gullo 76, of 111 So. Bradford will be held Friday at 2 p.m. from the A.P. Boza Riverside Chapel with in- HOSPITAL BEDS FOR SALE USED RENTALS $100.00 UP aoKAiuusi 5 HIT At! 228-741 -9 Shower Of Meteors To Peak Tomorrow CHAPEL HILL, N.C.

(UPI) One of the year's most spectacular annual meteor showers will reach its peak tomorrow, according to a Morehead Planetarium official. James G. Manning, assistant plane-terium director, said yesterday that large numbers of meteors are visible several days before and several days after the peak as Earth passes through the tail of Halley's Comet The meteors are known as Orionide meteors because they orginate in the sky near the constellation Orion. THE METEORS will be visible anywhere on Earth when it is dark, but the best viewing will come in the early morning in areas where there is no Moon. Two other highly visible meteor showers will occur this fall and winter, Manning said.

The Leonide shower will peak Nov. 17, and the Gemonide shower will peak Dec. 13 or 14. The fall is a good time for meteor showers," Manning said. "Probably four of the most spectacular meteor showers occur in this time." The Perseids meteor shower occurred in August Meteors, popularly called shooting or falling stars, are tiny particles of the comets that orbit around the Sun.

The showers occur when the Earth passes through the tail of the comet The meteors enter the Earth's atmosphere and are vaporized and the heated gasses glow with a characteristic eclor. a FUNERAL HOME 4730 N. ARMENIA SI ASIA SPAN 01 877-7676 cooooooooooooooooo STOWERS uneral Homes Cremator) Chicago Gets Rash Of Gang Killings CHICAGO (UPI) The week of July 22 saw the biggest rash of gangland killings in Chicago since the clays of Al Capone and Bugs Moran, the Chicago Crime Commission said in its latest newsletter. At least six gang-style killings were committed during that week, including the shotgun slaying of former Austin District police commander Mark Thanasaurus. Junior League of Tampa, Inc.

77 THRIFT SALE with a new time: Sat, Oct. 22, 9 a.m.-9 1 great day night!) Place: Curtis Hixon Hall FURNITURE APPUANOS aOTWNG PLANTS I ANTIQUES RIC0RSS ft BOCKS T.V.I RADIOS TOTS ft INFANT EQUIPJKXXT HOUSEWARES ft IMXS free parking Courtesy of Jr. Leoguo Women's Hospital October Mr. and Mrs. KeiM Carpenter, boy.

October 12 Mr. and Mrs. William Wattle Wolcott. girL October 15 Mr. and Mrs.

Gene Odom, girl; Mr. and Mrs. Regis F. Hampton, girL October 17 Mr. end Mrs.

Thomas R. Bee, girl; Mr. and Mrs. Lester W. Brannmo.

key; Mr. and Mrs. James E. Tasker, boy; Mr. and Mrs.

Raymond A. Clifford, gin; Mr. and Mrs. Laareat S. SAPP, Lommie Thurs.

10A, Brandon FAIOLA, Ivonne "Bunny" Sat 10A, Ch. of Nativity gM; Mr. and Mrs. James D. nay; Mr.

and Mrs. Pool A. Davis, St. Joseph's TRIBUNE-TIMES CLASSIFIED WANT AOS CaN Tampa 272-7500 October It Mr. and Mrs.

imhJ ArtofcvtfiaV C300000000000000CO girL STATE.

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

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Tampa Tribune
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Tampa Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
4,474,263
Years Available:
1895-2016