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Times Herald from Olean, New York • Page 3

Publication:
Times Heraldi
Location:
Olean, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Civic Music Series Opens Here Oct. 5 The Ojcan Civic Music Association will open its fifteenth sec- ton Thursday night, October 5, It wan announced by Cheater E. Klec, president of the association. The coming season again will combine the best in musicaiiship with wide audience appeal, opening- with Ana Maria's Spanish Ballet. Following the Spanish ballet will be Isaac Btern, violinist; Blanche Thcbom, mezzo-soprano, and Ferrante and Teicher, duo-pianists.

The Internationally famous ball company of Aha Maria brings the authentic, firey dances of Spain to exciting: life, guided by the genius of Ana Maria, who was a star In her native Spain at the ag of ten. Isaac Stern world-renoun- ed violinist and a star of concert hall, radio and the movies. An Incomparable aitist, his concerts are Invariably pleasing and memorable. Blanche Thebom. mezzo soprano, is a recitalist of major calibre.

A leading singer of the Metropolitan Opera Company, this young star hag been a resounding success in her many radio appearances, and has just returned from a very successful trip abroad. Her triumph in Sweden rated nationwide mention over major XT. S. newspaper wire services. Ferrante and Teicher.

duo pianists, are the artists scheduled for the remaining- concert of the coming season. Young musicians bf exceptional talent, they present an appealing program of classics and moderns. Concerts will be held at eight- fifteen o'clock, in the auditorium of Olean High School. Mrs. Gertrude Saussier, secretary of the association, said membership cards will be mailed shortly befnrp the first concert.

The schedule is as follows: Ana Maria's Spanish Ballet, Thursday, October Isaac Stern, violinist, Wednesday, November 29; Blanche Thebom, mezzo-soprano, Monday, February 26; Ferrante and Teicher, duo-pianists, Saturday, March 31. Awarded Title Of Boy Of The Month HONORED BT OPTIMISTS. Gene Eyler, one of the area's best known young golfers, honored Monday night at a dinner given by the Olean Optimist Club at the Castle. He is shown here receiving a certificate designating him as "Boy of the Month From the left, Kenneth G. Optimist president; Howard E.

Eyler, father of Gene; Gene Eyler; the Rev. Jay M. Reichenbach; and Thomas Mooney. Two Boys Held In Truck Theft Two teen-age Olean boys were arrested this morning on second degree grand larceny charges in connection with the theft of a truck from the Bero Construction Company, now at woik on Clean's dike system. The lads drove the truck two or three blocks when they were stopped and arrested by Patrolmen Milton Newton and Haroid Jones.

At a hearing in Police Court, the boys were ordered held for the Grand Jury. Personal Miss Gladys Finger and Miss Frances Benson. Couderspcrt, left Sunday to spend their vacations in Washington. D. C.

Miss Finger will spend a few days in Olean with her parents. Police Captain and Mrs. George E. Finger, upon her teturn from Washington, before lesuming her duties as chief x-ray and laboratory tecnnician in the Potter County Memorial Hospital. 9 Staff Sergeant Fred M.

Bartlett, Army Air Force Reserves, who was recalled to active duty August 10, is station at Andrews Air Field. Washington. D. C. Sergeant and Mrs.

Bartlett and son are residing at 4722 Bromley Bradbury Park, Washington 20, D. C. Harry R. Rarey Dies Monday Harry R. Rarey, Belviciore, N.

died at Ins home Mondn (September 11, 1950) following a long illness. He was born in Ponville, March 20. 1881 and was a resident of Belvidere for the past Mrs. Howaid E. 9101 seventeen years.

Mr. Rarei Front Street, was chosen by the was a stone mason by trade Eyler Is Boy Of Month Gene Eyler, son of Mr. and Olean Civic Committee as the "Boy of the Month" for August. He was guest of honor at the monthly dinner meeting of the Optimist Club at the Castle Mon day night. He is a graduate of Olean High School and is at present attending prep school prior to entering college.

While in high school, he held many school offices, including president of his senior class. He won letters in three sports, golf, basketball, and baseball, and he has become nationally famous as a golfer. Since entering prep school, he has taken an active pan in school affairs and is a member of the golf, baseball, basketball, and football varsity teams. He was a member of the Olean Amateur Baseball League six years, and he takes an active part in teen-age activities in Olean. PASTOR SPEAKS The president of tue Optimists, Kenneth G.

Crandall, was in charge of the meeting, while Paul- Ganoung served as toastmaster. Mr. Ganoung introduced both Gene and his father to the club members and their wives. The Rev. Jay M.

Reichenbach, pastor of the Showers Memorial Evangelical United Brethren Church, was the principal speaker. He presented young Eyler with a certificate from the Olean Civic Association and praised him, as well as the many boys who have their part preceded him, for in activities among Glamour Wear Olean youth. Mr. Reichenbach reminded the group thai young America has inherited a troublesome and badly battered world, but he expressed the belief that the new generation will meet its problems with the same strength and willingness of all Americans. QUARTET SINGS The Clark Angles were also guests of the Optimist Club and provided a half hour of entertainment.

Hugh Lafferty, a member of the quartet, is a former "Boy of the Month." and the club paid particular honor to him. The quartet, finalists in the international tournament of barbershop quartets of America this spring, is composed of Charles Keller. James Thompson, Joe Lee and Mr. Lafferty. The quar- Set extended an invitation to the Optimists to attend the annual "Parade of Quartets" at Olean High School October 7.

Monday night was ''Ladies Night'' for the club. Following the dinner, a surprise party was held in honor of Mr. and" Mrs. Crandall who were reccntiv married. A gift presented to- the couple by the members of the club.

Eldred Girl Scouts Will Sponsor Dance The Girl Scouts of Eldred sponsor a round square dance Saturday. Dancing will continue from nine until one o'clock. The dance be bcJd in Grange Hall. The girl scoals are sponsorins the dunce in an effort to raise money to purchase siniforms. Surviving are one da-ighter.

Mrs. Katherine Monroe, Du-troit, two sisteis. Mrs. Gertrude Peterson -nd Mrs. JETICS Ward, Miliport, Pu.

He was a member of Assembly of God Church, Friendship; the Allen K. Kapron Camp No. 60, Spanish-American Vets; and the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Olean Post No. 1619. Military funeral services will be held at the Halwig Funeral Home Thursday afternoon (September 14, 1950) at one thirty o'clock.

Rev. Robert D. Campbell will officiate. Burial will be in Cemetery. Mt.

View Training School For Home Bureau Heads Wellsville, Sept 19 A Home Bureau officers' training school has been arranged for chairmen, vice chairmen, secretaries and treasurers of units, to be held at one-thirty o'clock, Tuesday, September 19, in the auditorium of David A. Howe Library in Wellsville, by County Home Demonstration Agent Miss Loretta Schelble. She states that Home Bureau handbooks and the note books of secretaries will be brought to the meeting. Miss Hazel Reed, assistant state leader of home demonstration agents, will attend the school and will help officers in their efforts to better conduct the business of their units, answering' any they may have. Executive committee sponsors can also be met at this meeting.

Alma Home Bureau Will Hold Tea The Alma Koine Bureau will hold its annual membership tea at two o'clock in the, afternoon. Thursday. September 14. at the home of Vera Coats. All ladies' interested in joining or ing more about the program are invited to attend.

1 Engineers, Oil Producers To Meet Friday Discussion On Kichburg And Bradford Sand Will Be Feature Of Program. A joint fall meeting of the Engineers' Society of Western Pennsylvania and the Pennsylvania Grade Crude Oil Association will be held at the Emery Hotel, Bradford, Friday, September 15 and advance indications point to a large attendance. Three papers will be given at- a technical session beginning at two o'clock. G. H.

Neilson, of the Equitable Gas Company, Pittsbu gh, will preside as chairman of the Engineers' Society oil and gas section. Richard W. Harding of Bradford, geologist for Quaker State Oil Refining Corporation, will discuss, "Stratigraphy and Correlation of the Bradford a Richburg Oil Sands." Two representatives of the Texas Eastern Transmission Corporation explain "Operation and Operating -Problems of Long Distance Transmission They are E. R. Cunningham, company vice president, and E.

T. Robinson, assistant pipe line superintendent. John W. Hendrickson of the Peoples Gas Company, Pittsburgh, will speak a "Natural Gas Development in North Central Pennsylvania." A dinner at seven o'clock In the Emery Hotel will conclude the meeting. Program feature at the dinner will be a motion picture in color telling the story of natural fias, beginning with the geologists' studies of earth structures and extending to distribution of gas to ultimate consumers.

The Peoples Natural a Company will present the movie. Producer members of the Pennsylvania Grade Crude Oil Association have been invited to take part in the meeting with the Engineers' Society. NEW SIIIPMBSl PANTIES Ladies and Standard Stores OLEAN CUBA lip. Car Stolen From Door-Less Garage 8574 12-20 Ry SUE BURXETT Here a stunning irock jwir JTHre dai-ce Simple sewing. tea.

wiUi soil drnpmc lo accent the bodies jcnd Injure molding sltirl. Try A in cr-tpc or velvet in rich solid Vsnes. Xo. t't is if.v-j j1e palttm an 12. 3-S.

Ifi. J8. mS 20. 14. A car stolen from a WcM Kivcr Rpad sjaraijc Mon- fl.iT iiighl was recovered by police She Hirer Road shorlly afterward.

of 3950 m-de1 car. I renrncd trotn 'lit- CATiifx "jclwecn atjiJ eleven-thirty Assembly Held F-or this pattern, serd 25 cents, Jn CO3XS. tame, arMrcss. we dcMrcd. AH (9 1he PATTEKM ICUMBFR to Sue Kwnc'11 (Olean Branch? 115" Ave.

Americas. New Ynrk Jfl. X. V. SrJ.n 1rfi r.

fir t'Hc sud Winter FASHION. This Isitf'i 3W- 3- Jjlled u-jlb smart A assrmMy f-c frwr wss held in Ihr Em- jvrmm Hjch JstJinnl Xonday rnnm- inc. ilh Kmrjcis iiipr-riiMTiR pnnnpaX 3'ilkmiTiC. Miss i dn. tnif1' Si r.

Ifd tin Mr. O'Ma31-y 1n Thr -flailv wf 1fi" inside JJic rr.nltd THK MWSfAPKR Rampart Knnirn was published in IfW. Tr. grrmp of failing in hs3 a If- ic Jl ton jrt: to pc3e vp the YI.I.WJ i KJ-. rr.

TWO WHI Quuda Dry Ginger Afe Dry Water--two sparkling beverages for mixing or drinking refreshment. "Pin-Point Carbooatioa" gives them the tang-toting lifeli that gives CINCER AU TEMPERATURE tmmHf Vwnt man 80 72 MOON 74 A YMf Ago LOW 59 4G Btrwmtrr FALLING WMM ud CiMettled HwnMlty Driver Must Replace Pole A local motorist, identified as Alex Kelly, 118 Front Street, was. fined twenty-five dollars on a speeding charge by Justice of the Peace Fay R. Newbury Monday night. Mr.

Kelly was also ordered to make restitution, estimated at from $350 to $400, to the Niagara Mohawk Power Corporation for a transformer and pole demolished by his car when it left the Olean-Portville Road Saturday night. Residents near the scene where the Kelly car crashed into the pole, were without electric power nearly two hours after the accident. Mr. Kelly received severe head and lip lacerations. Draft Registration Resumes At Two County Schools With the opening of county schools, draft registration will resume immediately at the offices of the Mt.

Jewett and Smethport High Schools, according to an announcement from McKean County Board 101. These offices had been closed during the summer months. Monday through Friday registration may be made at-Smethport, Port Allegany, Eldred, Otto Township, Mt. Jewett and Kane schools. The board reminded all men reaching their eighteenth birthdays and all men discharged from the armed forces who were between the ages of eighteen and twenty five inclusive on Sept.

1, 1948, that they must register. Emphasis was again placed on the importance of notifying the board immediately of any change in address or change in status which might affect the registrant's classification. Complete Plans For Convocation At St. Bona October 4 hut been as the; date for a convocation at which St. Bonaventure University will receive its charter from the State Board of Regents, Rev.

Vincent E. Devine, OFM University Dean, announced today. Father Vincent invited the general public to attend the affair, which will be held in Forness Stadium starting at two- thirty o'clock. Dignitaries of church and state, as well ns representatives of colleges and universities from throughout the U. S.

and from Europe, will be present. The day -will also mark the presentation of the Catholic Action Medal to an outstanding U. S. Catholic layman, who will receive the award at a solemn mass to be celebrated in the stadium at 10 a. m.

This also is open to the public. The names of the recipient of the medal, as well as of those who will receive honorary degrees at the convocation, will be announced within a few days. Father Vincent, who is chairman of the group arranging the function, also announced today the appointment to the committee of Rev. Jerome A. Kelly, OFM, chairman of the Division of Arts and Letters.

St. Bonaventure's elevation to university status was announced jointly on July 21 by the N. Y. State Board of Regents and by Very Rev. Juvenal Lalor, OFM, President.

Hearing Is Begun In Trespass Case, Smethport Court Testimony was continued today in Smethport in McKean County Argument Court with Judge Charles G. Hubbard pre- fciding in the trespass action of Edward G. Flaherty of Bradford, in his own right and as administrator of the estate of his wife, Mary S. Flaherty, deceased, vs. City of Bradford, K.

of C. Home Association and K. of C. Council. A greater portion of Monday was used by attorneys for the plaintiff and defendant in selecting a jury to hear the evidence in the case which is the outcome of injuries received by the late Mrs.

Flaherty in a fall in front of the K. ot C. hall in Bradford, November 4, 1947. It, 1159 PftftS Portville Man's Song Will Be Church Council's Theme Floyd Newburj's "Hymn To Peace" To Be For Firat Time September 22. Floyd Newburg, Portville dairy owner, has received word that a song he wrote the words and music to about five years ago, "Hymn To Peace," has been accepted as the theme song of the New Jersey United Council of Church Women.

The number will be sung for the first time September 22 when the New Jersey council gathers at Teaneck, N. for its annual meeting. Mr. Newburg has been extended an invitation to sing the hymn before the group, but he does not know as yet whether he will be able to attend. His sister, Mrs.

William Kenney, formerly of Olean and now living in Teaneck, is the pianist for the church council and she inteiested her group in her brother's hymn. She also told Mr. Newburg that she expects to get an appointment with Warren Austin, United States delegate to the United Nations to discuss the possibility ot using the hymn as the theme song for the Security Council. New Route Out Of Whitesville In N. Y.

State System The state has added five new routes to its far-flung highway system, the public works department announced today. The newly-marked routes include Route 248A from the Pennsylvania line to Whitesville in Allegany County. The department also announced Route 17 is located over new location from Goshen to Fair Oaks. The department also announced it has deleted Routes 232 and 432 in Steuben County from the state system. Abandons Drilling In Leidy Township The Sairman Drilling Company, Greensburg.

is abandoning operations after striking salf water when down 5,855 feet In drilling for natural gas In the Leidy Township field near Renovn. The Sairman well it located about two and one-half miles from the first big well which came last January. Since that time, six other drilling attempts have met with success. Dog Killed By Car Dudley B. Phillips," Portville, told police Monday that his car, going west on East State near Stoweli Avenue, struck and killed a small tan dog.

The dog'a owner was listed as Al Maleskl. Groceries Suftdria Ready to WemM SHEETS AND PILLOW CASES MWEYEWIBirs" CoBBtry Dept. 6ton KMi (tUte Bowl "Do You Know My Three Sons?" "I'm very proud of my three sons as any mother has a right to he. They're just typical American boys but naturally extra special to me and I can't resist talking about them once in a while. I honestly don't know vhy but John, my oldest boy is really my favorite.

Perhaps it's because he was my first son or maybe it's becausf he's the first one to be away from home. John is starting his second year at Carnegie Tech, you know, studying to be a civil engineer. Phillip was sixteen last July and he's in his junior year at high school Phillip seers to be very interested in music and his father and I encourage him all can, Billy, my youngest son is in the fourth grade this fall. Of course, he's still a little younir to have any definite ideas about his future. His biggest interest, right now.

is those Roy Roger's cowboy outfits at Carnahan's. Speaking of Caroahan's reminds me of an important factor in putting three sons like mine through school. Keeping three boys of such different ages well clothed is a comparilively simple problem when can get even-thing we need at one store. I think any mother will agree to Store for Men and Boys ONE OF TWO Rl; STORES OF FASHION FOR MEN, WOMEN AND BOYS.

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About Times Herald Archive

Pages Available:
154,894
Years Available:
1909-1951