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The Warren County Observer from Warren, Pennsylvania • Page 27

Location:
Warren, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
27
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

WARREN, PA. WARREN COUNTY OBSERVER, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1961PAGE TWENTY-SEVEN Obituaries Pa. Education Warren General Hospital ADMISSIONS Donna Moore, 18 Allison Warren. Mr. Ross Ruhlman, 4 Ruhlman Warren.

Miss Cecela Smith, Bauer Warren. Mrs. Violet Samuelson, 309 West Warren. Mst. William McFarland, R.D.

1, Russell. Mr. Francis Craker, R.r. 1, Sugar Grove. Mrs.

Gertrude Hanson, 15 Willow Sheffield. Mr. Robert Van Guilder, Grand Valley. Sandra McKillip, 458 Conewango Warren. Mr.

Ross Miller, 909 Jackson st. Warren. Miss Candace Larson, 225 Church Sheffield. Douglas Phanco, 135 W. Main Youngsville.

DISCHARGES Mr. Everett Abramson Sr. 403 W. Main Sheffield. Mrs.

Gudrun Baehre and baby boy, 125 Jackson No. Warren. Mrs. Cleo Barney, 605 Lincoln Warren. Mrs.

Margerite Donaldson, 203 Cayuga Warren. Miss Wendy Fritz, 7 Warren. Miss Diane Kuppertz, Box 1027 Clarendon. Baby Boy Lemeur, 101 Fourth Warren. Mrs.

Patricia Tubbs and baby girl, 41 Sixth Warren. Mrs. Lillian Turner, 16 W. Third Warren. Births Warren General BOYS Mr.

and Mrs. Ronald Hendrickson, Box 322, Youngsville; Mr. and Mrs. John C. Davis, Grand Valley; Mr.

and Mrs. Theodore Snyder, 24 Wetmore Sheffield. GIRL Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Peterson, 105 Fifth Youngsville.

Jamestown W.C.A. BOYS Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Stevens, N. Clymer; Mrs.

and Mrs. Clifford Holcomb, 130 W. Main Frewsburg; Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Johnson, 15 Water Frewsburg; Mr.

and Mrs. Milton Lipzinger, 211 W. Eighth Jamestown. GIRLS Mr. and Mrs.

Alton Lindstrom, R. D. 1, Frewsburg; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dean, R.

D. 1, Ashville; Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Moore, 552 W. Fourteenth Jamestown; Mr.

and Mrs. Petrus Peterson, 11 Prospect Frewsburg; Mr. and Mrs. James Wagner, R. D.

2, Sinclairville. Marriage Applications Gerald David Brooks, R. D. 3, Union City, and Carol Eileen Will iams, Warren. Military Escort Bringing Sgt, Studer Body Home The body of Master Sergeant Floyd Studer of the regular United States Air Force will arrive Saturday morning in Warren, accompanied by military escort Sergeant James McGaw.

The Leo D. Gibson Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Studer was a resident of Weldbank, R.D. 1, He died on a Thailand training mission, August 15, 1961, at the age of 34. He was bom in Port Allegany on March 10, 1927, the son of Floyd and Iva Studer, both of whom preceded him in death.

He attended schools in Port Allegany. In 1944, he enlisted in the United States Navy, and in 1946, following a brief separation from military service, Sgt. Studer enlisted in the United States Army Air Corps, the year before the department of the Air Force was established. He received a transfer into this military branch of the service and served in Korea and France. He was a technical instructor at Keesler Air Force Base at Mississippi prior to his last' assignment with the 1173rd U.S.A.F.

Foreign Mission Group. His death on August 15, was the result of an aircraft accident approximately 60 miles from Majhon Ralchasima (Korat Air Base in Thailand. Master Sergeant Studer is survived by his wife, Beverly Mesler Studer, and three children, Wayne Gary and Linda R. Studer, all at home. Also two brothers and six sisters: FemleyA.

Studer, Joseph A. Studer of Port Allegany; Mrs. Virginia D. Heany of Erie, Mrs. Mildred L.

Ludwig of Skinner Creek, Mrs. Donna M. Weeks of Port Allegany, Mrs. Esther M. Ross of Rantoul, Mrs.

Rena Blyiss of Eldred and Mrs. Joan Wade of Burtville. Funeral services will be conducted Sunday afternoon at 4 by the Rev. Meredith Swift of the E.U.B. Church of Clarendon, at the Gibson Funeral Home.

Burial will be in Oakland Cemetery. Friends will be received Saturday afternoon at 2 and at the usual visiting hours Saturday evening and Sunday, at the funeral home. Military services will be held by V.F.W. Post 314 of Clarendon. THOMAS EARL MAHAFFEY Thomas E.

Mahaffey, 78, of 501 Park Warren, died in Warren General Hospital Wednesday morning at 9:15, after a long illness. Mr. Mahaffey was born in Reno, August 2, 1883, but had lived in Warren for the greater part of his life. He was a storekeeper for many years intheGotto Block on Pennsylvania and later custodian in Warren Public Schools. He was a charter member of the Epworth Methodist Church.

Mr. Mahaffey is survived by one daughter, Mrs. William Brooks of Cheshire, one brother and sister, Richard Mahaffey and Mrs. Lyman Truby of Russell; four grandchildren, Jeffrey, William, Roxanne and Scott Brooks. He was preceded in death by his wife, Frances, Dec.

10, 1949, and a daughter, June Mahaffey in 1936. Funeral services will be conducted by the Rev. James Allen at the Peterson Funeral Home, 1:30 tomorrow afternoon. Burial will be in the Oakland Cemetery. Regular calling hours are being observed at the funeral home.

FLOYD STUDER MRS. W. HASKINS Mrs. Nell E. Haskins, 78, wife of the Rev.

Harry W. Haskins, retired Free Methodist minister, died at her home at Tidioute RD 1 early Thursday morning. She had suffered a stroke on Wednesday of last week. Mrs. Haskins was born July 28, 1883, at Cherrytree, Indiana county, the daughter of Anson and Maggie Black Brickley.

She was a member of the Tidioute Free Methodist Church. Survivors include her husband; one daughter, Mrs. MargaretMin- ninger, Erie; a son, Capt. Harold Haskins, Korea; and a brother, Alva Brickley, Cresson, Pa. Arrangements are in charge of the Rhodes Funeral Home in Tionesta, with visiting hours beginning Saturday evening.

The funeral service will be held there Monday at 2:30 p. m. Interment will be in Zuendel Cemetery at Starr. Funeral Services DONALD TERRY HOLMES The Rev. Marion McOoy, assistant pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, officiated at services in memory of Terry Holmes at two yesterday afternoon in the Lutz VerMilyea Funeral Home.

The body of the Pennsylvania Military Institute cadet, who died in an automobile accident last Sunday evening, was accompanied here by a Guard of Honor comprised of cadets from P.M.L, John W. Karkosky, James Rowland, Raymond McGrath, Stephen Machowiak, Gerald Enverso, William Thomas, under 2nd Lt. Robert Saunders Officer in Charge. Also present was Colonel William Coltee, director of student per sonnel at P.M.L The above cadets also were the pallbearers for the burial in Warren County Memorial Park. An additional Guard of Honor composed of John Cox and Clyde D.

Baker, represented the Boy Scouts at the services and burial. WILLIAM A. MAGUIRE Services for William Allison Maguire, were held yesterday at 2:30 p.m. at the Templeton Funeral Home, with the Rev. Harold G.

Powell, pastor of the Church of God, officiating. Bearers for interment in Oakland Cemetery were Howard Hulings, Lawrence Kabelin, Knude Knudsen, Carl Lindquist, Harry Keller and George Olson. Tax BiU Again Community Colleg es Plan Hurt Workshop Session For PTA Chairmen The chamber followed by dumping salary boosts for state college faculty members and a proposed system of two-year community colleges together with a $400,000 appropriation for financing the schools. All these proposals had been passed by the House and were recommendations of Gov. David L.

bipartisan committee which had conducted a year-long study of Pennsylvania education. In its final move following defeat of the tax bill, the Senate scaled down a proposed $20 million appropriation for Pennsylvania State University by $1.5 million. The $18.5 million sum had been proposed in the Lawrence budget for 1961-62. The destruction of the program left only one successful proposal as a monument to the work of the committee. This is the bill calling for a compulsory reorganization of Pennsylvania school districts which cleared the General Assembly last week and is awaiting signature.

All officers and chairman of local and county PTA units have been invited to attend a workshop session scheduled at 7 p.m. Sept. 12 in Youngsville High School. The workshops will be sponsored by the Warren Community Council and the Warren County Council of Pa rent-Teacher ciations. Personnel from the state PTA office will be in charge of the workshops.

Mrs. Robert Knupp, president of the Warren Community Council said that parents and friends of PTA groups are also invited to attend. More Than 300,000 Receive Sahin Oral Polio Vaccine in Syracuse SYRACUSE, N.Y. (UPI) Health officials said yesterday they had reached more than 300,000 persons in the first two days of their Sabin orval vaccine drive against polio outbreaks in three central New York counties. The mass immunization in Onondaga, Oneida and Madison counties was scheduled to end last night.

Another 100,000 doses of Sabin type I vaccine was ready for distribution in the final eight-hour period at special centers set up to handle the program. The State Health Department originally asked the U.S. Public Health Service for 350,000 doses of the newly licensed vaccine. However, the federal agency has since made a total of 450,000 doses available, with still another 100,000 being held in reserve, officials said. HARRISBURG (UPI) The Senate yesterday shattered any hopes for an expanded aid to education program this year by administering a second straight defeat to a $23 million tax bill which would have financed the start of the program.

The bill went down by a 25-24 vote, exactly the same tally which was recorded on the initial go- round. Republicans again put up a solid 24-man front of opposition. Twenty six votes were required to clear the House-passed proposal which would have clamped a two per cent tax on income from royalties, capital gains and dividends. Immediately after the vote, Senate Democrats moved to kill a series of bills in the program which would require additional money. As the General Assembly neared the close of its last day of the 1961 session, the Senate jettisoned over GOP objections a proposed $18.6 million boost in state subsidies for instruction.

The bulk of the tax revenues would have been earmarked for this aid. TRAIL DREAMS Hubert P. Burke, leader at the U.S. Forest Service Research Center at Irvine leads little Pammie McGary over this in the Buckaloons camping area where every bend may reveal the activities of the wild inhabitants of Allegheny Natural Forest..

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About The Warren County Observer Archive

Pages Available:
18,944
Years Available:
1954-1962