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The Daily Courier from Connellsville, Pennsylvania • Page 2

Publication:
The Daily Courieri
Location:
Connellsville, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PACK TWO. THE DAILY COURIER. CONN5LLSVTLLSS. PA. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1949.

PERSONAL MENTION Mrs. Anna -McCormick of Connellsville, R. D. 2, was admitted to Mercy Hospital, Pittsburgh, Monday afternoon. She is a patient -on the fifth room 505, Rummage Sale in Trinity Lutheran Church basement, E.

Fairview Friday and Saturday, November 25th and Second Chiaraluna, David and- son, Mrs. Mirilyn- Hiles and -son, Samel Mrs. Jane Mrs. Elennp.C Ash and Muriel Harr.JSi discharged "Ir'om ConnellS- ville State Hospital "Tuesday wool suits, $29.50. Guaranteed fit.

Sam 'Simonay--Tailqr Mrs. Floyd Kessler oI'501'TNorth Prospect street returned homo Sunday Gary, where she was -discharged from; St. Mary's Mercy underwent a major that hospital November recuperating she remained 1 'aC respective homes hsi Mrs. George "Calriburi" Woodrovv Hopleri $40, $29.50. wool 'topcoats, value Sam Simons, Tailor Captain Albert J.

Wi'dmor, Mrs'. Widmer und their three children, Patty, Christy and John, oC Fort ADNT HET By ROBERT QU1LLEN 3 Bill and Amy Lou "have settled down to normal. He's KO.T forgets 1o shave, and. she's got. so she don't'care.

Grim Reaper WILLIAM D. HAGEKJCT MOUNT Nov. 23. --William D. Hagerty, 25,.

of United, died in Aspinwall Veteran's Hospital at o'clock Monday night. He was the con of Paul and the late Sara Barr Hagerty. Mr. Hagerty a member of St. Paul's Reformed of Trauger, the V.

F. W. Post 8643, Pleasant i a World War ment at Columbia Hospital. Mechanical Kidney Saves Man's Life After Three Hours By HELEN BURROWS Milwaukee Sentinel Staff Writer. (Distributed by International News Service).

Nov. mechanical kidney has saved the life of a dying man in a dramatic three-hour treat- II veteran. He graduated from Hurst High School-and Waynesburg College and was a member The 'machine, being used for the first time on.a human patient, was 'attached at 9 P. M. Monday LATEST NEWS BULLETINS of the Brotherhood of St.

Paul's to a 55-year old man near death from uremic poisoning. cou) When the treatment ended ati H-VRRISBURG, Nov. Stat; Justice Department a i today that a Pennsylvania Su- prer je Court decision disallowing stati- taxation of corporation in- eomi from U. S. securities may be appt-aled to the Nation's highest tribi inal.

Slate Attorney General T. Mc- Keei Chidsey said, he was studying the decision "to determine whether there is any basis for an appeal to the U. S. supreme Tarr's Election Not Affected By Machines' Check UNIONTOWN, Nov. additional action is taken to question the vote in North Union township, Senator Burton E.

Tarr officially as -the new tax collector in that district. The senator was nominated "by a small margin. He was elected by 31 on the unofficial returns, by Reforme.d Church. In addition to his father, leaves a brother, P. Duane i rriidnight the mechanical, kidney- mother 'ad 'drained o'ff more than half died January 4, 1949.

funeral service will be held at 2:30 o'clock Friday in St. Paul's Reformed' Church, Trauger, with H. K. Hoshauer' officiating. The body will lie in state in the church from 1:30 o'clock until time of service.

Interment will follow in St. Paul's Baldwin Park, Cal. Miss Humbert 'is employed as -a stenographer the Ambassador Hotel in Los Reformed Cemetery, with full military rites. Trauger, of the poison his blood. By Tuesday morning the Datient's kidneys had begun to function normally, and by Tuesday afternoon, it seemed likely they would recover in time to remove the remaining poison and to prevent further accumulation.

The intense 'pain suffered by the patient has vanished and he MRS. MARY.McFAKLAXB Mrs. Mary Yohe McFarland, 63, died at .6.:30 o'clock, this morning Angeles. The Humberts were her home, at Vanderbilt after a six weeks. i lingering illness.

Bake sale, Saturday, Nov. Mrs. McFarland was -born-Oc- at Fox Wallpaper Store, by Degree of Honor, Protective Assp- Knox. are spending Thanksgiving holidays witlv Cap-! Rummage sale, Saturday, Nov. 26th, in' former Music Mart room, by Christian Mothers, St.

John's Church. Advertisement. 23- tain Widmor's parents, Mr-, and -Mrs. Carl J. Widmer, of 1206 -Sycamore captain -is provost marshal "of The Third I npy-2t.

Armored Division. i gabardine pants, all returned home Monday, from a visit with 1hcir daughter, Miss Doris Humbert, at Los -Angeles-, and two nieces, Mrs. Lloyd Mason and Mrs. Sara tober 21, 188.6, -at- Dickerson "Run, a daughter- of. the late Joseph and Mary Elizabeth Yohe, arid lived in that vicinity -air her life.

She was a -member of the Vanderbilt Nazarene Church. Preceding is reported. on the road to complete recovery. This was the first clinical use of the Intricate medical machine which the ''Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Company built and presented to Columbia Hospital' for service 'in the community. The value of the" hew invention to Milwaukee was' first suggested to LONDON, Nov.

Daily Mai. reported from Western Union Military Headquarters at Fon France, today that the United States had developed a "baby" atom bomb for tactical use in close support of troops, WASHINGTON, Nov. 23. -Maj, Gen. Herman Feldman, whtse wings were signed in the Sen rte "five per cent" investigation, today faced another congressional inquiry on alleged "bic.

rigging" by a branch of the Army Quartermaster Corps. Chairman Emanuel Celler, N. of House Judiciary sub- said he has "invited" the quartermaster general to ap- pea- at his convenience. He has- New Drug Jamming Dilicate Trigger Continued from Page One mine, a mysterious and potent chemical found in the body, seems to be linked to the three or four sieges ot wheezing, sneezing and running nose that annually beset the average American. Histamine is stored in the body tissue and when, for some unknown reason, it is released causes allergies of various kinds.

the same figure in the official it is known, for example, that count and after a. re-canvass of the I the ragweed pollen is the 13 voting "machines still stands as that releases it for Home the new tax collector, with Jacob fever sufferers. Springer, Republican as the loser. After the various machines were opened on petitions from the five precincts to the County Election Board and no change was discovered, reports were current that the court would be asked to interfere but such action apparently faded today. Counsel for Springer said he had not been approached as to a court contest.

Official certification of the senator is expected under the present The election of the other officers as shown in the official tally was unchanged by the re-can- Jeweler Dies. PITTSBURGH, Nov. 23. J. Laughrey Roberts, vice-president of John M.

Roberts Softs, pioneer Pittsburgh jewelry firm, died in Allegheny General Hospital todny. He had been associated with the firm for 49 years and was a grandson of the founder. Local Man Fined. Nov. 23.

-James R. Jones, South Connells- villo, was fined $100 and costs today after he pleaded guilty to her in death was her husband, a nur nan patient was termed Walter Giest, Allis Chalmers ienA to add there is "no Milwaukee Sen- evitlence linking Feldman dl- The way in which the mechanical kidney met its first' test with Louis, in 1936. success beyond greatest Surviving are two children, Miss i hopes by Physicians who super- Martha McFarland of Vanderbilt'. the treatment. IrllSldMOn and Charles at home; two sisters, Vonicnn Talroe Mrs EIiza Grim of Giassport IBIIIdUlli) lallUd and iss Gulah Yohe of Vander- RnfrtrA Rniirf bilt one ra ndcmia.

uease oeiore uoun The funera i serv i ce beheld at 2:30 o'clock Friday afternoon Special to The Courier. ial the Frank B. Galley funeral Nov. Dawson; 'Burial will be A Tomorrow Night POLISH HALL South Arch Street Jolly Travelers Orchestra Hours 8 till 12, Admission 75c Benefit Trotter Citizens Club was mistaken for venisori in the arrest of Joseph Shimko and the imposition by Alder- a James H. Hoover of a $100 fine and costs of $12.50, according to an appeal filed by the hunter.

Shimko was arrested for jumping the gun and killing a deer out of season. 'fiie defendant claims that he I was prosecuted by L. V. Welch, protector of Somerset a county. the jar found in the cellar of Shimko's mother was.

pork and made in Dickerson Run Union Cemetery. BENJAMIN COHEN Benjamin Cohan, 56, prominent Brownsville business man, died suddenly 'at 3:30 o'clock Tuesday afternoon at his home at Brownsville. Surviving are his widow, rfe. Irene Cohen; one daughter, Selma Z. Cohen; one DANCE Tonight to the music of JACKIE MASON and His Orchestra No Covor.

'o Minimum Stag- Every Night Kussell llcvctta, Prop. He further'contends that; Cohen; one Lillian Lusthaus, and two brothers, George of New York. not deer meat. The court granted th'e appeal with hearing; -Chi- have Round and Square TONIGHT North Bend Tavern -and every Thursday and Friday Nights For Your Listening: Pleasure Johnny Roberts At the Piano 711 CLUB Yz Mile Off Route 711, On Connellsyille- Vanderbilt Road Chinese Reds Take ftwangsi Capital HO10 KONG," Nov. nese '''Communist troops taken kweilin, Kwangsi iiii capital 375- miles Chungking, authoritative sources in Chungking reported today.

Communist advances Nationalist southeast defenses sent Gen. Pai Chung- Hsi rushing back: to his home province from Chungking, where he had; been conferring with Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek, the report said. It was also reported that Communist: Gen. Fo-C had launched a new "peace offensive" aimed at undermining Nationalist resistance; in Szechwan, Kwei- chow, Yunnan -and Sikang vinces. Liu issued a statement from his Hankow headquarters calling on all Nationalist forces in the provinces to.

halt their resistance scorched- tactics a funeral Brownsville with Rabbi Roeder of Temple Israel officiating. Interment was Cemetery. JOHN BRUBAKER John a. retired steelworker' of Allehport, died Monday at his Home. -He leaves three daughters, two sons, soven sister three brothers, including of Prlcedale.

await -peacefully the arrival. Communist The story behind this first use of the machine began last Friday when the man whose life it saved was brought to Milwaukee from He was suffering -from acute -allergic- reaction. Last Wednesday his kidneys For six --lays --until" the mechanical kidney took over--the' uremic -poisons normally removed by the kidneys mounted in his bloodstream. By Monday his condition was so bad that the machine which never had been tried on a human seemed to be the only hope. Preparation of the mechanical kidney for the treatment began at 5 P.

M. For four hours two Allis- Graham and William -Allis-Chalmers engineers Richard worked with the hospital staff physicians setting in place the yards of cellophane tubing which reef ly to the charges. FLUSHING MEADOW, N. Nov. and the United will have a final 1949 showdown on the atom bomb in the United Nations today with no sign of retreat by either side.

Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Vis linsky has served notice that he will define Hussia position on atomic controls in an hour- Ion speech to the assembly. CHICAGO, Nov. 23. The Arrerican Veterinary Medical Assoc ation's Journal reported today that a new drug being used in Argentina temporaritly takes the flgl out of a bull. WILLIAM H.

GINGERY William H. Gingery, father-, of delicate parts which would normal conditions for it on its revolutionary course outside the patient's body and back again. The large drum about which the tubing was wound revolved silently in a bath filled with special rinsing solution. The only sound was a soft clicking made by the instrument which drew the patient's blood into the tubing. All through the three hours in which the mechanical kidney was in operation, the patient's blood pressure was taken every -few minutes.

Samples of the blood were removed from the tubing LONDON, Nov. tabloid Daily Graphic reported today thst there were four Soviet trial explosions of atomic bombs between July 10 and October 1. It gai-e no source for the report. Tiger Hunt HOLLYWOOD, Nov. Caxit is planning a tiger hunt in In ia next January.

The actor wi'l film his travels with the inter tion of marketing the finished in American treatres. At Latrobe Hospital. Stephen Nemetz of Trauger has admitted to Latrobe Hospital for treatment. drum the patient's blood began.to fol it, flowing into the tubing thiough a hollow glass cylinder attuched to a vein in his forearm. circuit of his blood through A retired railroad engineer, --he was a resident of-- Brownsville until-the past year.

JOHN F. SHAVER John F. Shaver, 80, a retired farmer and father of Roy Shaver of Oliver-'No. 1, died -Tuesday morning in; his home in Gassway, -A- brother, Harry, of Brownsville, survives. Sees Labor Discord Unless Unions Curb Hot-Heads in Ranks PITTSBURGH, Nov.

in labor relations is forthcoming next year unless unions "curb the hot-heads in their ranks," a Detroit industrialist said Tuesday night. "I believe that we have not seen the worst-of our postwar labor troubles, but I am optimistic about the ability of America eventually to pull out of the mess we are' in," said 'Frank Rising, general manager of the Automotive and Aviation Parts Manufacturers, Ing, "We are facing tough times in labor relations next year, and I look for a great deal of turbulence, unless the union leaders themselves reorganize the power of public opinion and take some steps to curb the hot-heads in their ranks." In 1940 histamine was found present in the noses of people suffering from colds. Doctors speculated that probably either a virus or allergy stimulant was the 'trigger" that released it and caused the common cold. Naval Captain J. M.

Brewster, working with allergy sufferers at the Great discovered drugs seemed to prevent the onset of the common cold. However, the trouble was that these drugs were toxic, and caused drowsiness and dizzy spells, Drs. Sweet and Armino reported that using doses of 100 milligrams per day, they found that "toxic manifestations of neohetramine are essentially nonexistent." At Brownsville Hospital. Mrs. Samuel Hunter and Paul Guerrieri of Republic, Mrs.

Paul Winwood of Hiller and Donald Jobes of Grindstone have been admitted to Brownsville General Hospital for treatment. discharged include Steve Simon of Maxwell, Joseph Yagle of Dunbar, Harold Whetzel and Harold Philip Campbell of Allison, Steve Noga, of Isabella, Steva Oze- nich of Republic, Mrs. Ann Pincheck of Cardale and Thomas Dowling of East Millsboro. operating an automobile after his had been suspended. The ia offense occurred in East Hunting- Lakes that Naval Station, anti-histamine don township November 7.

Trout Mecca. DIAMOND LAKE, Nov. Richard Webb, caught the trout limit every day during his vacation at Diamond Lake in Southern Oregon. The actor owns considerable property at the fishing mecca and now plans to open a dude ranch. Danish Rabbit.

COPENHAGAN, Nov. Scandinavian version of "Harvey," starring Max Hansen, has opened in Copenhagen at the Folketea- tret. After its run in the Danish capital, it will make a tour of all the Scandinavian countries. No Political Interest. CINCINNATI, Ohio, Nov.

Dwight D. Eisenhower says he has absolutely no political aspirations, much less hopes for a spot on the 1952 Presidential ticket. Double Attraction A NITE Thanksgiving DANCE TONIGHT STAS' JAWORSKI and WALTER ZIEMBA Dancing 9 to 1 Admission $1.25 (Plus Tax) MELODY RINK Uniontown, Pa. drained Mrs. Theodore Knisley'of machine and back into his hospital laboratory for analysis to' bo ''y was completed through a make sure that none of its glass cylinder connecting other end of the tubing to a vein in his leg.

drum whirled slowly in tlu bath of rising solution which cohered it half-way. Into this solution the uremic poison in the blcod seped through the cello- ph That meant that each time the blcod made a circuit through the michanical kidney it returned to the body containing less poison. GEORGE DOYLE George Doyle, 78, died suddenly night at his home at Belle Vefnon. retired coal' miner. ingredients were being jaway with the poison.

i The patient was conscious throughout the treatment which is painless. Two pints of blood matching the patient's own were fed intq tubing. This "extra" blood was used to provide a transfusion and cushion any shock which might be caused if the normal blood stream were diverted into empty tubing. As the "extra" blood ran into the cellophane wound around. the Injured at Work.

Charles of 106 Locust street, an employe of Rack Engineering Company, suffered an injury to his right thumb at 11:15 o'clock Tuesday morning while on duty. He was given emergency treatment at Connellsville Hospital and discharged. MRS. LENA MTJRPJHY Mrs. Lena Murphy, formerly of Republic, -died- Sunday morning at Oceanside, Long Island, N.

Y. State Perryopolls Square Dance. Youth committee oJC'the'Perryc- polis Grange is sponsoring a round and square dance from 8:30 o'clock to midnight Friday in the Sok.01.. Hall, Perryopolis, located orf Route 51. The public is invited to- attend.

Farm Income Down. HARRISBURG, Nov. -23--Pennsylvania farmers' cash income dropped $2,868,000 this year as compared to. the same 1948 period, (he State'-'Agriculture Department said" Department officials said seven: per 'cent led by livestock'and 'livestock products, due chiefly, to the costs of farming. Thanksgiving A I 8:80 to 12:30 EAGLES HAUL Featuring WALLY GINGERS and His Orchestra Sponsored by Eagles.

Bowling Team Prize: 12 llj. Turkey WHITE HOUSE INN LOUNGE BAH Eoute 119. Near Scottdale Presents for Your Listening Pleasure HENRY RULLi At the Console of 4he Hammond Electric Organ TONIGHT and Erery Night WE CATER TO PABTIES AND BANQUETS WE -TUANK-XOU. LORD, FOfc ALiC. Throughout-the nation, bright I ires glow in open hearths children sing as they eagerly set the- taiblo'lfor- theTMh'oliday feast 'the family- is'united on the occasSbrV-' of--- traditional Thanksgiving Day.

This Thanksgiving let us give thanks for all our blessings. FUNERAL HOME "11TE. Green Street, PHONE 1300. DINNER I Thanksgiving Night i Benefit Vanderbilt Moose Softball Team ROUND AND SQUARE DANCE I JAN GARBER'S ORCHESTRA 9 to 1 O'clock. Admission I6c.

VANDERBILT MOOSE HALL McCORMICK FUNERAL SERVICE 306 South Pittsburg Street will continue to be at your service with the same dignified and sympathetic attention that has always characterized McCormick service. GEORGE W. INGRAM Directdr-in-Charge 85-J--PHONE--85-M CONNELLSVILLi: AMVETS Post 157 A A SONS OF ITALY HALL I FREE Drinks, Food, Movies Hours: 8 P. M. Till Donation $1.00 Pretty, isn 't she? her clothes are cleaned regularly at Swimmer's how about you? CLEANERS 103 South Pittsburg Sf.

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About The Daily Courier Archive

Pages Available:
290,588
Years Available:
1902-1977