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The Daily Courier from Connellsville, Pennsylvania • Page 13

Publication:
The Daily Courieri
Location:
Connellsville, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

MONDAY, JULY 12, 1971 THE DAILY CONNELLSVILLE, PA. PAGE THIRTEEN PERSONAL MENTION Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Roberts and their son and daughter-in-law, Mr and Mrs Richard L.

Roberts, and the latters' daughter, Robin, all of Normalville, have returned from a vacation at Aqua Marine Lodge, Avon Lake, Ohio. Mrs. Theresa Ranker and son, Mrs. Pamela Baysinger and daughter, Mrs. Arlene Wettgen end daughter, Baby Girl Suter, Mrs.

Lucille Collier, Mrs. Goldie Ronk, John Pockstalier, Mrs. Marie Forejt, George Mrs. Patricia Irwin, James Calhoun, Mrs. Thelma Porter, Mrs.

Mary Snyder, Mrs. June Bungard, Mrs. Charlotte Fant and Mrs. Virginia Quert- inmont have been discharged from Connellsville State General Hospital. Miss Connie Nedley of Juniata and her aunt, Mrs.

Grace Hankins of Pittsburgh, are maidng a three-week tour of nine countries in western Europe. Miss Nedley is employed by the Tippecanoe Insurance Agency, Pittsburgh. James Meyers son of Mr. and Mrs. James Meyers of Normalville, underwent ankle surgery Saturday in Somerset Community Hospital, Somerset, where he is in room No.

403. He is reported in good condition. ignoring Danger Sign Above Falls Costs Two Lives I NATIONAL PARK, Calif. (UPD--A young couple ignored the "danger" WORD-A-DAY By BACH HERE, CARLSON-SEE YOU CAN CATCH ONE WITH reproach TO REBUKE; CENSUREfAS, TO CA6T REPROACH UPON REPUTE; ABILITY, ETC.) Weekend Storms Cool Off North As South Broils By United Press International A high pressure system brought comparatively cool weather to the North today, but in the South, stagnating tropical air kept things warm and muggy. Thunderstorm activity, which drenched an area stretching from the Middle Atlantic states to the Central Plains Sunday, settled down and slowly diminished during the night.

However, sporadic activity was reported in the Northern New Training Service Opens in Fayelle County September, 1970, However, a tour St. ghetto area gives a much more powerful picture of the frustration and hopelessness rea mining from those nights ol terror. A Nearo taxi driver is sign and climbed over a waist-(Plains, along the southeastern Harold E. Williams, Uniontown businessman, has been named area director and enrollment agent for American Training Services Inc. ATS is a leading pnblicly- owned vocational educations company, spec alizing in training truck and heavy equipment operators and hotel and motel management personnel.

President and treasurer of Reliable a Williams has had 40 years bus- ness experience in transpor- A resident of 133 Nassau he is a past vice president and now secretary-treasurer of the Fayette County Chapter of the Pennsylvania Motor vice president and a past president of the Mid-Atlantic District of the Mayflower Ware- lousemen's and a member of the policy setting board of the assoc'ation. He was 'Warehouseman of the Year" 1959 for Mayflower Warehousemen of the Middle Atlantic. He is past state director and a member of the State Board of i iiiue money 10 pay vaxe Directors of the.Peim^lvaiua^^^tte^io^town^ Un ontown director of the i nem High School, Williams was o-i Chamber of Commerce, chairman in 1958 with Mrs. Davis Ricks of the school's first party. He is active in Masonic Orders, being a member of the T.HUCUHOI Laurel Lodge 651; Uniontown Agency brings to 18 the number enrollment DUt ll 1S uoseu HAROLD WILLIAMS Scars Still Continued From Page 1 million is needed fa- urban renewal alone.

There are many disputes over the use of needed funds anc many warnings of a hot summer riot danger ahead. The memory is sfill vivid of the 1968 riots over the assassination of Martin Luther King and the riots, of the 14th cautious about a trip up 14th St. "Are you sure you want go up there?" he asks. The area around 16th and streets seems normal enough as he starts out, but arrival at Thomas i and Massachusetts Ave. gives the first evidence of what he is cautious about.

One of bhe first beyond this point 'Tax Returns" but businesses advertises its shattered windows are warded up. make Adults; chairman of the Red Cross drive in Uniontown; past member of the Uniontown lf ll as creation Commission; past! a savs cause there little money to pay taxes and pay He is any the The people on the street, mcstly black, move slowly and a member a elder i a su len looks at ttie of the Third i a Addition of the Williams i to agencies now and a Out" few men loiter on the curb in front. One bright spot the rubble Lodge of Perfection; of Accepted Scottish Rite, Valley in the ATS network. of Pittsburgh; Pennsylvania The new aeencv. to be known ui i Williams Fnrnll and the wreckage sports a sign Consistory; Caravan No.

9 of as tne n. t. wmiams enroll- Wbl rn Tt Commanded ment Aeency, will be located, a Blk TM Go has No. 49, Knights Templar, and at 100 W. Peter St, which TM TM a Syria Temple of Pittsburgh.

also the locatjon of Reliable bn polished deep red hie "He is a member of the board Transfer, Inc. i of directors of the Fayette ATS uses a combination of i County Mental Health study and field training', oast director and board member to prepare candidates for em- front and it appears to be doing business as usual. One of the few white men in the area is an ambulance attendant and he is assisting an elderly Negro man into his vehicle after an a a accident. The ambulance siren wails as it heads for a hospital and a few heads arc raised to see what it is all about. What was once a possibly flourishing dime store is a wreck windows broken front door smashed, with a brightly panted young man stretched across broken glass in a display window, sleeping off a drunk, a drug or just plain sleeping.

There is a Chinese laundry but it is closed, too, and a packing meter nearby is bent over into the rubbish littering bhe street. There are burned store fronts and a wrecked club that once boasted as having 'Blackie's Jazz Band." An apartment building has a barricade extending all the way to the street. 'It's been burned out four or f.ve times," the cabbie volunteers. A drugstore is open but patrolling inside is a uniformed hopefully protection against those desperate enough Obituaries MRS. ARTHUR W.

GROAH Mrs. Arthur W. A a Groah, 73, of'116 East Painter South Connellsville, died Saturday afternoon in Connellsville Slate General Hospital. Born Jan. 29, 1898, Plaidt, Germany, she was the daughter of the late Anton and Matilde Huth Esser.

She was a member of the Immaculate Conception R. C. Church, the Ladies Auxiliary VFW Post 21 and the Ladies Auxiliary of the a i a Emnloves. Car Rams Tree: Killing Three Penn Teenagers LANDiSVJLLE, N.J. (UPI) Three i a i a young people, two of them brothers, were killed and a fourth seriously injured iwar this South when their car control on rain- Jersey town went out of slicked roads Sunday night amd slammed into a tree.

The victims, all pronounced dead of massive injuries at She is survived by her hus- Neweomb Hospital, Vineland, band, Arthur W. Groah, with were identified by State Police whom she celebrated their 50th: as Kenneth Delores, 17, the weddine anniversary in drivw nf RWK one anniversary daughter, Mrs. 'driver, of 6916 Keystone A I rw 11 hjs brotn er Craig, 4, and Mary (Matilde) Jacobs of Connells-j Maher 16 of lg ville. R. D.

two sons, C-WO Albert Groah of the Pensacola I Admitted in serious condition Naval Station and William S. was Delores, 23, another Groah of Lebanon. N. six Drotn of the Delores address, grandchildren, and one great He was suffering from two grandchild. I broken legs, a fractured pelvis, She was by three, a broken left shoulder and la- brothers, Franc, Wilhelm and' a injuries.

Yohaim, and two sisters, Mrs.j The accident came less than Gertrude Sneider and Mrs i24 hours after three tecn-aeers Matilde Thomas. She was the. were killed and a 51-year-old surviving member of hen man lva fam'ly. JOHN LEO SOISSON John Leo Soisson, 64, of 29 man was critically injured in a head-on crash in Madison, Mori ns County, at the other end of 1 the state. to attempt a holdup in search McCoy Road, died Sunday at, Trooper Doug Van ant of of money or drugs.

As our cafe' me He born in Conriells-1 the Malaga barracks said the in Delores' car was heading northbound on Tuckahoe Road about four miles west of here during Sunday's rainstorm when the turns west into Park Rd a ville Auff. 19, 1906, the son of theater, still open, advertises thp a 60 and Edith Whipkey 'Biother John." However, there'Soisson. seems little evidence brotherhood on 14th St. Within seconds, there is an A member of the Immaculate Conception R. C.

Church and i driver apparently lost control. Holy Name Society, he also The car skidded across the amazing contrast. The western belongs to the Retired Army and crashed nnrtion of Park Rri. Assn. JUIUU am Crashed --o-- fo-f- i i L' i fji vctiiviLuauto lui 1 high fence atop the 37a-foot coastal section, and along the of the Faye tte County 0 vment as tractor trailer! waterfall.

Virginia coast. an inch for Crippled Children a a drivprs and as on-rataTM- 1 Smiling arad clowning around, UllLl.LUl Victor Vega, 21, and Kathy I a 2 a.m Alvarez, 16, posed as friends' of rain bad fallen at Newport, Rebels Continued From Page 1 drivers and as operators. construction although he was held for two snapped their photograph. They were standing in knee-deep, swirling water. Vega suddenly lost his balance on the slippery rocks and made a desperate a for Kathy.

As their horrified friends looked on helplessly, they were swept to then- deaths. Vega, of Torrance, and 'Miss Alvarez, of Compton, were members of a youth group, Upward sponsored by Loyola Univesrity 1 in Los Angeles. The group was on a weekend outing. Two Collisions At Same Place es Three Injur Pittsburgh, Pa. set a new record for 24-hour rainfall eariy Sunday with 2.93 inches.

By afternoon another 2.92 inches had fallen, bhe rain was still coming down and forecasters were predicting another new record. At Rich Hill, 3.55 inches had fallen by midday Sunday. At Kearney, Mo. 2.10 inches were recorded in one six-hour period. Sparta, 111., was soaked with 1.8 inches.

For the South and Southwest, Sunday was just another dry hot day. Temperatures were in the 90s in fche South ar.d above Several Treated At Connellsville Those treated in emergency room at Connellsville State General Hospital sustained dog bites, cat bites, ami insect bite and lacerations from broken glass. Bitten By Dogs Michael Martin 14, son of Michael Martin of LeiseniMig was treated at 4:30 p.m. Satur- throueh special courses of study of the areas. "The reason ATS courses are such great demand," said jWill'ams, "is that they meet a critical need for trained personnel in acute labor-short areas." Scouting Speech Contest Planned Older members of the Boy 100 in the Southwest with i als of by a dog owned by Mr.

Shultz, Phoenix, scoring the nation's midday high of 107. Early morning temperatures around the nation today ranged from 44 at Massena, New York to 98 at Needles, Calif. MOUNT PLEASANT Damage totaled $1,800 and three persons suffered minor injuries in two accidents at the same location within a period of two- and-one-half hours on Sunday. present The accidents occurred on Nearest Program Subject Miss Virginia A. Phelps wil day for puncture wounds of of America in this area tower right leg.

He was bitten will have the opportunity to compete in a national public speaking contest which could lead to designation as a National Youth Representative in 1972. The contest requires an original speech of 5 to 7 minutes on Youth's Responsible Involvement, according to George W. Also bitten by a doig was Stewart Van Nosdeln 13, of Ohiopyle, son of Stewart Van Nosdeln. He was treated Saturday. The dog is owned by Paul Fear, assistant scout executive Reader's Digest Association and 'Shenandoah National Park" Ou Rte.

31, at the intersection of Western Pennsylvania Conser Rte. 64225 Donegal Township, vancy's Bear Run a Four cars piled up in a chain'Reserve at 8 m. Friday, July reaction type accident at 3:30116. The Reserve is located on p.m. and two other cars collided)Route 331 between Ohiopyle and at the same place at 6 p.m.

Involved in the first mishap Mill Run. Miss Phelps is a graduate ill t-U A-ll -were the vehicles operated by) 1berl CoIIe and a been Ronald Pelissero, 24, 0 as an industrial che- Venetia; William Miller, 20 mist ff or man arts She is nf nnU 629 Joseph Arhe Sneed, 51, of Pittsburgh and i Shaffer, 18, of Boswedl, R. D. 1. State Policfc from Troop A Headquarters in Greensburg said all four cams were eastbound on Route SI.

Damage totaled $1,400. Pelissero's wife, Bambara, 21, and Ann Barnes, 50, also of Venetia, were both injured but refused treatment according to the police report. The second accident involved cars operated by Betty King, 42, of Greensburg, R. D. 2, and Michael Fazekas, 24, of United.

State Police said both cars were eastbound on Route 31 and the Greensburg woman ran into the rear of the Faxekas car when he stopped, resulting in $400 total damage. The woman motorist sustained slight injuries but was not treated. a native of Rochester, New York, and has had extensive experience with color slide Dihoto5raT)hy. She is currently a member of the Botanical Society of Western Pennsylvania, the Natural Camera Club of Pittsburgh, and Photographic i oi America. Miss Phelps has an unusual knowledge of the Shenandoah National Park, having; spent many days photographing the nlants and animals" of the park.

She is a Nat'iralist collaborator to the Staff and a contributed photographs "Wildflowers in Color" which was i for the Appalachian Nat onal Parks. program is open to the public at a small fee. Western Pennsylvania a members are admitted without charge. Assistant Secretary Sisco to Try Hand at Ending Mideast Talks Impasse By United Press International Joseph J. Sisco, U.S.

aissistant secretary of state, will visit 'Israel soon in another attempt to break the Middle East impasse on peace negotiations, Jerusalem political sources said Sunday. The sources said the Israeli cabinet discussed the trip at its regular weekly meeting Sunday and that it was expected to take place within the next few days. Israel advised against Sisco's visit when the Untied States first proposed it last week, saying it would be useless UJiless he brought word that Egypt was willing to compromise on its stance regarding the reopening of the Suez Canal. In Cairo, an Egyptian government spokesman said Donald C. Rergus, chief U.S.

representative in Egypt, and Michael Sterner, head of the State Department's Egyptian Affairs Section, proposed nothing new when they met with Egyptian officials last week. Provanee of Ohaopyle. Two Girls Bitten Two girls were bitten by cats, of the Westmoreland-Fayette Stacey Nicholson, 13, daughter Council, of James Nicholson of Mill Run, For the second year, the con- R. D. 1, was given emergency treatment for injuries of left hand.

She was bitten be Scouts the cat of Mrs. Myra Leapline, also of Mill Run. Hope Durbin, 5, daughter of George Durbin of US 1 South Pittsburg St. was treated at 3:35 p.m. Sunday for puncture wounds of fJhe left lower leg inflicted by her own pet cat.

hours by the rebels. There was a brief outburst of fresh fightng Sunday night, but it was quelled. Officials said the army had crushed the last pockets of resistance in the city center. Rebel soldiers, most of them young cadets, were marched to prison camps with their heads shaved and their hands tied. They had seized the radio station Saturday nf'ght, broadcasting felse reports of the king's death.

Hassan told the news conference "It was a Libyan-style coup d'etat with everything that goes along with it, like childishness and imperfection." He said several officers had tricked their soldiers into rushing the palace in the belief the king's life was in danger. The troops dashed into the banquet hall and for two hours held everyone prisoner, including the king, and fired at anything that moved. "Their stacoato gestures, that they were drugged," said. He said portion of Park Rd. reflects, care in tending shrubs and He was a retired machine i into a tree.

homes. Magnolia trees are in 1 mera or bloom, as are horse chestnuts Glass Corp. The elms are healthy and the! atmosphere is cailm. Then, asi Elizabeth Kelle Soisson; two we turn south on 16th the C(ins John Leo Solsscm of Los full tranquility of this and Dennis Joseph the Anchor Hocking! Police said the accident took i place at 9:20 p.m. They said arc his wife, Mrs.

the group was returning from nearby Minotola, where they were visiting the Delores' aunt. Police identified Miss Alaher world" so close to desperation' of Sesttle Wash three Kenneth Delores' girl friend, and destruction is clear. well-l da uffhters Miss Betty June' dressed young women are 0 Mrs headed downtown to business TR bert (Maureen) Dougerty of and government offices. The ancl Mrs street is clean and the flowers are beautiful. There are no scars on 16th as Middlelown, one brother, David Soisson of! St.

but those of 14th St. "Yes sir HIP ies, su, me are A Tl 111.: three sisters, Mrs. Douserty of Detroit, Mrs. William Cox of Red something done over there. Killer Most FRANK B.

ANGLE 19 Passesigers Drown as Bus Falls Info Bant DURANGO, Mexico (UPI)-A' crowded city bus spun off a curve Saturday and plunged" into a reservoir, dromin 0 at Frank B. Angle, 67, of 601 least 19 passengers, federal Gibson died Sundayj high today in the Connellsville a General Hospital. For Murder DonaW D. Davis, He was born April 8, i at Connellsville, and of the late J. E.

i Margaret Bittner Angle. He was a member of 1904, the of First Christian Church, former Brownsville, was lodged in and deacon, and a ette County jail and held for member of the Bethany Sunday a hearing on an open charge School Class, of murder. He is being heldj A former employe of the in connection with the fatal Columbia Gas he had 46 shooting of Carey Freeman of service when he re- Hiller. The shooting took place tired in 1969. in Brownsville.

Police said they arrested Davis at the scene. The victim was shot once in the chest with a .38 caliber revolver. Residents Surviving Zella Nye are his Angle; i a son, Robert F. Angle of Harrison City: one daughter, Lois Jean, at home; two grandchildren. a a found on bhe oa tured I the victim dead at the scene.

of the area said they heard I and two sisters, Mrs. Larry three shots. McNamara Deputy Coroner Andrew Skir-; Washington, D. and Miss of Brownsville pronounced;" Suravors said most of fche 32 ard the Mexico Juarez bus were i sleeping when the driver apparently lost control outside Durango Sunday night. LOS ANGELES oe i E.

Dickens, 26, drowned in a backyard swimming pool after he told friends he was going to' show them how long he could stay under water, authorities reported. The Mends pulled him from the water Saturday when he did not surface in three minutes. NEW DELHI (UPI)-Twenty-one Stung By Bee ceived the Eagle Award or members of the Exploring Division BSA who have received the Eagle Award or rendered outstanding service to religious institution, school, or community. They must also be active members of their religious in- Edward Selinger, 5, of Mill stitution and of their troop or Run, R. 1, was treated at pogt Age limits noon Saturday for an insect bite of his p.

He was stung i a ona i 15 and 20 as of February 1, 1972. by a bee. Cut By Glass John White, 2, son of Paul White of 107 West Peach St. was treated ait 3:30 p.m. Saturday for a laceration of the left wrist.

He put it through a storm door. Also treated for a similar injury was Armand Brienza, 21, of 503 West Gibson Ave. He sustained cuts of his left forearm. He said tHe incident occurred when he was putting g'ass in a window. He was treated at 1:10 a.m.

Saturday. Cuts Foot Barbara Lansberry, 13, daughter of Russell Lansberry, of Connellsville, R. D. 2, cut ler left great toe when she itepped on a piece of glass at winners i scholarships, and the first-place winner will take part in the additional Anniversary Celebra- t'on of the Boy Scouts of America during February. troops.

The attack ended when some cadets realized what was happening, recognized the king and pledged their allegiance to him. The leader of the coup, Gen, Ahmed Medbouh, head of the Morrocan Military School and a close adviser to Hassan, accidentally was killed by one of his own soldiers. Hassan said the attempt would not affect the visit of Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, scheduled for July 25. Agnew is on a 10-nation world Angle of Connellsville.

He was predeceased by brother, Belford, in 1968. a No Speeches Three-Day Visit in Kenya Starts With Agnew Landing By STEVE GERSTEL NAffi-OB 1 (UPD--Vice President Spiro T. Agnew arrived from Ethiopia today for a treated and released. Two Weekend Calls Firemen were called out twice Saturday, the first time on a 'alse alarm and the second to world leaders he had met on talks with President Jomo Kenyatta. Agnew landed at Nairobi's Emoakasi Airport at 11:25 a.m.

(4:25 a.m. EDT). Before leaving Addis Ababa, Agnew told newsmen that the quell a carburetor fire. his current tour were appalled The false alarm was sounded' by the release of the Pentagon rom Box 322, Lincoln Ave. and Vine St.

at 4 p.m. Saturday, At 11:04 p.m. Saturday, the carburetor of a car owned by ilay Bryner of 415 North Pitts- urg St. caught fire in the 400 Jlock of Johnson Ave. and was sxtinguished by firemen.

12 Persons Killed BANGKOK (UPI) Twelve persons were killed Saturday flight 'when a bus collided with a truck in the northeastern province of Roi-El, according to i delayed report reaching here Seventeen of the 60 jassengers were admitted to a wspital at Khon Kaen in serious condition. papers on U.S. involvement in Vietnam. He was welcomed at the airport in Nairobi by Kenyan Vice President Daniel Arap Moi and Foreign Minister Njoroge Mungai. Agnew said "on behalf of President Nixon and the people of America, I bring our most sincere hopes for Kenya's continued success and growing prosperity." In Kenya, his second African state visited on a month-long, ll-nation journey, the vice- president was scheduled to repeat his basic time-table: visit the Amerioam community and hold talks with head of state.

He will make no public speeches. Tuesday he wiH lunch with President Kenyatta at the baronial, white-walled State House. Later Agnew will travel 130 miles north of the capital to rest at fche secluded Mount Kenya Safari Club, where Sir Winston Churchill once was a member. The club lies in the a of snow-capped Mount Kenya, on the equator. Agnew's program leaves all Wednesday open but American sources said he would probably watch wildlife.

On Thursday he was scheduled to return to Nairobi before leaving for the Congo, Kinshasa, the third and last African nation on has circuit. Agnew was asked at a news conference in Addis Ababa whether he had received any reaction to fche Pentagon papers on his tour. "You bet I have," was his reply. The reaction, he said, was "very strong from nearly everyone, appalled Every that leader is a private businessman can assume the right to declassify confidential information," Continued From Page One persons were feared when a bus fell into a i district near border, according reaching here today. The Press Trust of India reported that 11 bodies RONALD R.

I been recovered from the lake I Ronald R. Bitner, 28, of by late Sunday night Seven Igress Hill Road, a including the driver said. "The drop in pressure resulted from a loss of the ships sealing, and an inspection of the descent vehicle showed that there are no failures (ruptures) in its structure." The report, circulated by the Tass News Agency, concluded that the reason for the fatal leak had not yet been pinned down from "a number of probable causes." It said the study was continuing. The official report essentially confirmed information circulated earlier by non-Soviet Communist sources, who said that jhe leak came through the seal around a hatch which had become an external door to space at the moment the ship began its descent. That was when the descent ship separated from its orbital compartment, making the inner connecting door an outside door.

Although the report did not say so, the sudden loss of a 1 jressure means the lives of the spacemen were snuffed out in a vacuum--robbed of oxygen, and their bloodstreams suffused suddenly with similar to the air fatal bubbles "bends" iiat deep sea divers suffer. The cosmonauts were not a i pressurized space Funeral Notices the ev Robert Tuesday at the Joan J. Funeral Home, 1340 Elk St the They had set an endurance of 23 days, 17 hours, 40 minutes and had' ushered in the new era of manned Soviet space laboratories by linking their Soyuz with the Salyut stations. The three men lived aboard the 65-fcot-long, 25-ton Salyut for more than three weeks, estirog the ability of man's heart and respiratory systenvto withstand weightlessness more thoroughly than any spacemen jefore them. The i hailed the achievement as the first in what would become a "vSpace City" of pci-manently manned laboratories.

native of Mount Pleasant, died and conductor, were rescued Sunday morning in Franklin Hospital. He had been in failing' health for several years. He was born July 26. 1942 in Mount Pleasant, the son of Rockwell and the late Mabel Hodge Bitner. He was raised in the Mount Pleasant-Connellsville area.

In 1964 he moved to Franklin where he was a biology teacher the Franklin Area School District. He and the former Nancy Echard were married in Connellsville in June, 1965. He was a member of the Galloway United i Church of Franklin. Surviving are his wife; his father, Rockwell of Connellsville. and a sister, Mrs.

William (Beverly) Quinn of nellsville. MRS. WILLIAM L. SCANELL Mrs. William L.

(Catherine Curtin) Scanell, 71, of 615 Highland died Sunday in the Connellsville State General Hospital, A member of the Immaculate Conception R. C. Church, she served as mission chairman of the Ladies Auxiliary of the A.O.H. Division 3 and was second vice president of the American Legion Auxiliary Post 301. Surviving are her husband, William L.

Scanell; two daughters, Miss Rita Scanell, at home, said Mrs. i Caringola of Connellsville; one son, William L. Soanell of the state of California; a sister, Mrs. Anne Daivy, and a brother, Edward F. Curtin, both of Pittsburgh.

Throe grandchildren a survive. MISS MARY SHARP Miss Mary Sharp, of Farmington, died Sunday in Frick Community Hospital, Mount Pleasant. Wrecked Armada Sir Francis Drake destroyed 1 the Spanish Armada in 1588. I at a Wednesday with the Rev. William McCrav charge.

Burial at Sunset Hill Memonal Gardens. The family" requests memorial gifts be given to a favonte charity. GROAH Friends Mrs. Arthur (Anna) Groah of 116 East Painter South Conncllsville died Saturday, July 10," 1971. are being received s't the" Paul G.

Fink Funeral Home, 418 North Pittsburg St orayer seivice will be held at 5 a.m. Tuesday followed by mdss Immaculate Conception C. Church with Mssr. John Garred as celebrant. Interment in Green Ridge Memonal Pan-h rosary at p.m.

today. Conneilsville Volunteer Firemen are to assemble at 7:20 m. today at the fire station to' RO a body to the funeral home. SCANEI.L Friends of Mrs. liam L.

(Cathenne Curtm) Scanell of 615 Highland who'. died Sunday, July 11, 1971, will. be icceived at the Paul G. Fink Funeral Home, 418 North Pittsburg today and Tuesday. They may call at the William O'Brien Funeral Home, 3724" California North Pittsburgh on Wednesday.

Fune- ral ma'NS will be celebrated in the." Immaculate Conception R.C.- Church Thursday morninff. In-- terment in St. Joseph's Cemetery. SOISSON Friends of John Leo Soisson 29 McCoy Boad, Con-, nellsville, who died Sunday, July 11, 1B71, are being received at the Munk-Kucera Funeral Home, 127 East Fairview from-- 7 to 10 p.m. today and 3 to 5 p.m.^ and 7 to 10 p.m.

Tuesday. Re-" quiom mass will be celebrated the Immaculate Conception R.C.' Chureli at 0:30 a.rn. Wednesday' by Msgr. John L. Garred.

Tnter- jnent In St. Joseph's Cemetery..

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About The Daily Courier Archive

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