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Warren Times Mirror from Warren, Pennsylvania • Page 14

Location:
Warren, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Friday, March 3, 1961 Obituaries Funeral Information Will Be Found Under Another Heading IMOGENE RIWA KOTH Funeral services lor Mrs. Imo gene Riwa Roth, of Nyack, N. were held at 2 p. m. yesterday, the Rev.

J. Edward Lilja, pastor of St. Lutheran Church, officiating. Serving as bearers for interment in Oakland Cemetery were: Lewis Elder, August Keller, James Keller, Boyd Widger, Richard McKillip and Earl Dorrance. Attending from Falconer, N.

was Mrs. O. J. Riwa. Times Topics FATALITY-FREE MONTH State police at the North Warren substation investigated 12 vehicle accidents during February which caused an estimated $7,750 property damage.

There were no fatal accidents. The troopers issued V4 correction orders for faulty equipment. There were 117 traffic and 8 criminal arrests made during February. JUNE J. HADDEN The funeral of June J.

Hadden, 502 Storer Akron, Ohio, will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday in Holy Redeemer Church. Father Joseph Seyboldt will celebrate the requiem mass and interment will follow in St. Cemetery. Mr.

Hadden was bom in Sheffield and resided there until he went to Akron 30 years ago. His death occurred Wednesday night at his home in Akron. NURSE IS CAPPED Marcia Jean Parise, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J.

Parise, 115 Russell street, was Saturday, February 25 at ceremonies held by Temple University Hospital in Philadelphia. The occasion marked the end of six- months pre-clinical training. BOROUGH SCHOOL BOARD Del Henry of Pennsylvania Electric Co. will show a special film on Electric Heating to members of the Warren Borough School Board Monday evening at 7:30. The board, to convene in the conference room at new Warren Area High School, may also consider selection of an architect for proposed local school construction.

WILLIAM R. WILSON, SR. William Flay Wilson, 48-year- old resident of 36 North State North Warren, died at 12:07 a m. today in Warren General Hospital, where he was admitted two days ago. Bom June 20,1912, he was a lifelong resident of North Warren and was employed by New Process Co.

over 25 years. He was a member of North Warren United Presbyterian Church and North Star Lodge 241, F. A. M. In addition to his wife, Evelyn Anderegg Wilson, he is survived by three sons: Wiliam R.

Wilson, Richard John and Mark Adam, all at home; his mother, Mrs. Mary Silzle Wilson, at home; and a sister, Mrs. Mary Shirley, Toppenish, Wash. His father, Mark H. Wilson, preceded him in death December 24, 1957.

Funeral services will be conducted by the Rev. Robert C. Knapp of North Warren United Presbyterian Church Monday at 1:30 p. m. Interment will be in the' Pine Grove Cemetery at Russell.

NEW COMMITTEEMAN Republican County Chairman William E. Rice today announced the appointment of Gerald F. Dorrion as committeeman for Mead township first district. Dorrion, who operates a service staton at the corner of Linwood street and Pennsylvania avenue, succeeds Ida Blanchard who has resigned the position in GOP ranks. Funerals JUNE J.

Friends will be received at Peterson Funeral Home from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p. m. today and the parish rosary will be received there at 8:30 this evening. The funeral will be held at 10 a. m.

Saturday In Holy Redeemer Church, Father Joseph Seyboldt celebrating the requiem mass and interment following in St. Cemetery. WILLIAM R. WILSON, Friends will be received at Peterson Funeral Home at the usual calling hours, starting at 7 p. m.

Saturday, and the service will be held there at 1:30 p. m. Monday. The Rev. Robert C.

Knapp, of North Warren United Presbyterian Church, will officiate and interment will be made in Pine Grove Cemetery at Russell. UNIVERSITY SESSION Forty-eight business executives from many world areas will begin an eight week intensive training course Monday in University of Management Problems for Executives program. The Pitt course is the second of its kind in the country. 22 Are AIDS SCHOLARSHIP A large throng is expected to see the production, sponsored by the Community P. T.

A. Council for the benefit of the WHS Scholarship Fund, to be staged at Beaty Junior High auditorium tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 The picture shows Jill as the daughter and Marlene Mascaro who takes the main role. Another lead in the production is taken by Jeanne Anderson, of Tidioute, who has just been honored with a scholarship to Melody Fair. She teaches dancing in the studio here and has been a leading performer in a number of local offerings. She is the second of the local group to win a Melody Fair award, a similar honor going to Miss Mascaro.

Tickets for offering may be purchased at the B. B. or the United Cigar Store. Timesphoto, Mahan Loan (Continued Prom Page One) tol approvals the bill mush win if the program is to get into operation this year. The full Senate Committee is ecpected to act Monday or Tuesday and the Senate may take up the measure later next week.

Goldberg told the house subcommittee today that during the present decade about 20 per cent more people will be at work, or looking for work, than in the That means a need for jobs for an additional 13.5 million people. Gold berg said hali of these will be new young workers, but the number of those 45 years or older also will increase million more by 1970. Both the bill before the House group the one which advanced in the Senate generally follow the lines of President Recommendations and of legislation previotisly proposed by Sen. Paul H. Douglas, over a period of six years.

(Continued trom Page One) ordered to the surface. What touched off the explosion was not known. There was speculation that the miners broke through into an old shaft in which deadly coal gas had accumulated. As soon as the explosion was discovered, fresh air was poured into the mine, but it had no chance of penetrating the wall of swirling dust, smoke and and, anyway, all 22 men apparently died in the blast. The men were 265 feet below the surface and about three miles back in the sloping shaft.

Birch Brooks, vice president and general manager of the Viking Coal said, will have to check their belt numbers to identify A rescue worker said: "You see anything in there. The smoke was black as The mine has a total of about 200 employes working in shifts around the clock to provide fuel for the nearby Wabash power plant of the Public Service Company of Indiana. Off-duty miners rushed to the shaft to aid the state mine rescue crew, headed by Charles A. cell, Indiana director of mines and mining. The mine is about 200 yards west of the Wabash River in desolate hilly country.

The bleak scene was illuminated only by two or three floodlights. About 200 persons stood in the dark and cold outside the rope barrier manned by State Police- most of them families and friends of the trapped miners. A woman standing next to a reporter asked the time. When he told her, she said: my God, only been here an hour and a half and it seems like all Police Hunt New Castle Bank Robber NEW CASTLE, Pa. (AP) A tall, slender gunman wanted for a $20.000 bank holdup was the object of a police search today.

The bandit, about 40 years of age, entered the South Branch of the Peoples Bank of Lawrence County shortly before closing time Thursday. He pressed the muzzle of a blue- steel revolver against the back of Manager John Kennedy and handed him a note that said: is a holdup. I want all the Giving Kennedy a paper bag, the gunman said quietly: "Okay, start filling it While Kennedy filled the bag with currency and coins from the cages, the gunman ordered three women tellers, two customers and a child to stand in a comer of the bank. He then the money-filled bag and herded everyone into a Thompson To Undergo Psychiatric Tests NEW YORK (AP) Accused child killer Fred J. Thompson today was ordered to undergo psychiatric tests to see if he is sane enough to face trial an a first degree murder indictment.

The tests will be made at New Bellevue Hospital. Meanwhile, his pleading to the indictment was postponed until April 5. A court-assigned attorney asked General Sessions Court Judge Thomas Dickens for the psychiatric examination and the judge approved. ACTRESS ANN McCREA Kin Of Warrenite In Jerry Lewis Picture A Paramount Pictures movie, "The Ladies starring Jerry Lewis, will feature five Pennsylvania starlets, including Ann McCrea, niece of Warren Borough Manager George C. Geracimos.

The movie reportedly will be released in the Keystone State. Miss McCrea is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. North McCreight of DuBois. Mrs.

Martha McCreight is a sister of Geracimos. Miss McCrea has had several "second television roles. Recently Geracimos and his wife, Jean, saw their niece in three TV programs one evening. She has been in Hollywood for five years. Ann, who visits here, was modeling for Powers of New York City where she met movie stars, in eluding Bing Crosby.

The stars encouraged the DuBois girl to go to Hollywood. Geracimos said his niece has strawberry blond hair. Miss father is a cousin of John Ringling North, associated with the Ringling Brothers, Barnum and Bailey circus. Several years ago McCreight participated with the show at Madison Square Garden as a clown. He had several business associates and their wives in box seats to see the act.

McCreight visits the circus' Florida quarters each year. Ann once rode a horse in a show of the famed circus. Faces Federal Court In Stolen CarCase A U. S. marshal was expected here today to take Lawrence H.

Brady, 18, who has been residing at Pennsylvania Ave. east, to Pittsburgh to face charges of inter-state transportation of a stolen motor vehicle. The youth took the car from Saxapahaw, N. Sunday and arrived in Warren Tuesday. He was apprehended Thursday morning by Sgt.

William E. Hewitt and patrolman Donald E. Fitch. Brady is being held in the County Jail, Police Chief Michael E. Evan said.

A warrant for arrest of stealing the car reportedly has been filed by the county sheriff of Saxapahaw. The youth was working in North Carolina, police said. Buy U. 1 Savings Bonds Large Turnout Of Shriners For Party Shriners from Erie, Jamestown Pittsburgh and surrounding towns and cities augmented a large turnout of Warren area members at the annual oyster party of the Warren County Shrine Club, held Wednesday evening at Pleasant Fire Hall. G.

Chester Durst, Erie Illustrious Potentate of Zem Zem Temple, led a group of distinguish ed guests present at the party. Others at the table were Chester W. Rhodes, Erie chief rabban; Carl R. Thomas Union City, high priest and prophet; Clarence F. Toohey, Town ville, past potentate; Park R.

Mor row, Erie, past Rev, Ralph Parkhill, Waterford, president of Chaplain Corps; John Lutz, Warren, president of Warren County Shrine Club. An enjoyable time was reported with the oysters reported never better. Charles Ver- Milyea was general chairman of the event, assisted by Dr. Lawrence Krespan as ticket chairman and William Proukou, chef de cuisine. THE MARKETS NEW YORK stock market plowed ahead early this afternoon on the heaviest trading of the week.

Most gains were moderate. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was up .50 at 241.20 with industrials up .90, rails up .50 and utilities up .10. Concentrated buying of lower and medium-priced issues reflected big public buying. At the same time, gains of selected blue chips showed that investment sources were very much in the picture. Losses in a number of issues indicated profit taking by professionals in stocks which have enjoyed wide advances.

The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was up 1.95 at 671.34. Corporate bonds advanced. U.S. governments showed scant change in dull trading. NEW YORK ACF Ind.

50 12 Allegheny Ludlum Steel American Can American Home Products 189 American Mach Foundry 112 American Metal Products 17 American Motors American Standard Am Tel Tel American Tobacco American Viscose Anaconda Arm co Steel Armour Co 46 Armstrong Cork Atlantic Refining Bethlehem Steel Borg Warn Bucyrus Carpenter Steel Carrier Corp. 42 Case, J.I. Chrysler Cities Service Cluett Peabody 69 Columbia Gas 24 Consolidated Edison Continental Can Continental Oil Corning Glass 178 Crucible Steel Curtiss-Wright DuPont Eastman Kodak 117 Erie-Lack RR Ford Motor General Baking General Dynam General Elee General Foods General Motors General Pub Util General Refractories 24 Gen Tel Tel Glen Alden Greyhound Gulf Oil IBM 675 Inti Harvester Inti Tel Tel 59 Jones Laughlin Kennecott Koppers Lehigh Valley RR 5 Lorillard Madison Fund Merck 87 Montgomery Ward National Biscuit National Dairy National Distillers New York Central Olin Mathieson Chem Penney (JC) Pennsalt Chem Penn Power Light Penna RR Pullman Pure Oil RCA Republic Steel Revlon Reynolds Tobacco Safeway Sts Socony Sperry Rand Square Standard Brand Standard Oil Calif Standard Oil Ind Standard Oil New Jer Texaco Trane Co Union Carbide United Air Lines U.S. Steel Western Union Tel Westinghouse Elee Woolworth Youngstown Sheet Tube American Exchange Aero Supply Electric Bond Share 14 113 109 127 45 24 30 6 p.m., Lady Warren Rebekah Lodge, IOOF Hall. 8 p.m., Kingdom Builders, Sherwood home.

Saturday 1 p.m., Secretarial Chapter installation, Blue and White. 1 to 6 p.m., Warren National Rank Branch oj)en house, Sheffield. 2:30 p.m., PTA Scholarship Fund Benefit, Beaty School. 7 p.m., Electricians No. 2086 (Solar, Interlectric), Labor Temple.

7:30 p.m., UCT elections, IOOF Hall. 8 p.m., Social Science Section, Club. 8 p.m., Homebuilders Class, Baptist parsonage. Sunday 1 p.m., Youth Council Day of Recollection, Holy Redeemer. Report On Recreation To North Warren Club Much interest centers in the North Warren area in a scheduled report on proposed recreational deevlopment in the community expected to be presented at the Community Banquet at the North Warren Community House Monday at 6:30 p.m.

An advance ticket sale presages a large turnout for the stuffed pork chop dinner. Speaker of the evening will be Rev. Herbert Harrison, of Buffalo. BUY U. SAVINGS BONDS ED GREGORY.

HtRD-OF-HEARlNG, TELLS TWO GREATEST EXPERIENCES! DRIVE CAREFULLY! Marriage Licenses Lyman Harry Whipple, 21 S. South and Olga Clara Pierce, 097 Lexington both of War- ittsburgh Ed of-hearing actor, teacher, professional model (address on request) describes what he now names the two most important experiences of his life! Ed says, when I finally admitted to myself that my hearing had become actually harmful to my success, to my family and in my contacts with other people. That was what led me to a good, hearing-aid "My other greatest Ed says, "happened when I realized that my modern, micro-electronic hearing-aid, custom adjusted to my own particular hearing-loss, and costing no more than other good quality instruments, now enabled me to hear with perfect comfort, and actually to hear more clearly than many who think they have no Commends New Free Booklet read, and re-read," Ed says, "a new booklet on this subject. It puts my experience exactly into words better than I can. The called, 'Hearing Loss and Nervous delivered free to anyone interested in hearing You get your copy if you send your name and address, within two days, to Public Service Information-Better Hearing, Boa 955, CLASSIFIED Automobile Dealers 11 Grocers 11 Men's Furnishings The Best in Used Cars Sea Your Friendly Ford MIDTOWN MOTORS Located on the Three-Lane Road Remember INTERNATIONAL LIFE-TIME MUFFLERS Free Installation 40 Minute Service (3) Lifetime Guarantee CARLSON MOTORS Pa.

Ave. E. at Park Phone BA 3-8180 ANDERSON'S SUPER MARKET Home Owned Home Operated Open Thurs. Friday 9 P. M.

1817 Penna. East EMORY J. MAHAN RAMBLER SALES SERVICE 750 Market Street A P's LOW PRICE POLICY ASSURES YOU OF Savings, Savings Every Week! WARREN 239 Penna. West Cleaners Dyers Prompt Service on Repairs Alterations WILLS CLEANERS 327 1517 Pa. W.

Drugs Sundries OGILVIE HOME PERMANENTS EXCLUSIVE AT MULLEN DRUG PRESCRIPTIONS ACCURATELY FILLED We give Green Stamps WIDMANN TEAH RA 3-6880 or RA 3-6210 CANDII! WARREN DRMG STORE 233 LIBERTY ST. near Third Footwear ELMHURST'S NOW OPEN THURS. and FRIDAY UNTIL 9 P. M. PLEASANT TOWNSHIP DON RICHARDS MICHAELS-STERN SUITS-COATS Exclusive at The Style Shop "Best in Men's Wear" LOGANS FLANNEL A SLACKS $10.95 A LOGAN'S Radio TV Repair Now Open till 9 P.M.

LEWIS' See Colored Television In our window every night and RADIO SHOP 1208 Penna. East I Remodeling Repairs I HOME IMPROVEMENT AND Remodeling Headquarters COMPLETE FINANCING MEANS LUMBER CO. 2017 Pa. Warren, Pa. Rugs, Tile, Etc.

Armstrong Vinyl, Asbestos Tile 10c Discount Tile Towne 229 Pa. West NEW GAS RANGES M. Satterlund Inc. 432 Pa. W.

Warren STEEL SHELVING 3'x3'xr 3 Shelves, $5.95 3'x5'xr 4 Shelves, $8.50 SERVICE HARDWARE 414 Penna. W. Phone RA 3-7140 Ladies Apparel NEED CHAINS? Get WEED CHAINS TIMMIS BROS. ESSO Dial RA 3-8060 Sporting Goods COMPLETE LINE OF SPORTING GOODS AT DISCOUNT PRICES ACE STORES 329 Penna. W.

Slipper Socks Colored knit tops, leather feet 1,99 RDAWM'C B00T 342 Pa. Drtutvn shop w. Funeral Baskets, Sprays Wedding Designs Virg-Ann Flower Shop 238 Pa. W. RA3-5760 WE DELIVER SELECT YOUR 1961 MAGEE CARPET Wool Acrllon Nylon Wall-to-Wall, Room Siie Bartsch Furniture Co.

For Fine Furniture and Draperies Waxman's RA 3-1620 NEW SPRING ARRIVALS DAILY Miller Shops QUALITY LADIES APPAREL COLUMBIA THEATRE BLDG. FIRESTONE STORE Tires Batteries Service Philco Appliances STEP INTO STEIN'S and Step Into SPRING Light Power Co. ON-THE-FARM Tractor Tire Service 24-Hour Recapping McMILLAN TIRE RECAPPING 1 MARKET ST. RA 3-6720 General Tires and Batteries McCreary Tires Recapping SUPERIOR RECAPPING CO. 1818 Penna.

W. Dial RA 3-2370 KROEHLER LIVING ROOM FURNITURE DREXEL, SIMMONS. MERCHANDISE Blomquist Furniture Shop North Warren, Pa. We Cater to Your Fur Needs Modern Fur Vault S. K.

TATE FURS 6 Conewango Ave. CM! Your Dollar Doubler Store Foov of Market Street LOCKSMITH SERVICE We Duplicate ALL Keys HANSON'S 213 Pa. E. RA 3-7390 1 Music BALDWIN The Greatest Name in PIANOS MUSIC '400 HOUSE BIEKARCK Dutch Boy PAINTS Any Color Matched To Your Delight SIMONSEN Wallpaper Paint Co. 820 Penna.

East Phone RA 3-2930 Variety Stores Men's Furnishings Vhmtj G. C. MURPHY CO. CORNPLANTER WILD BIRD SEED 5 lb bog y7c.

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About Warren Times Mirror Archive

Pages Available:
127,381
Years Available:
1908-1977