Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Express from Lock Haven, Pennsylvania • Page 4

Publication:
The Expressi
Location:
Lock Haven, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Page January 24, Express, Lock Haven, Pa Deaths Funerals Civilian Gl Mrs. Landis Grenlngw TYLERSVILLE Mrs. Sarah E. Greninger, 72, widow of Landis Greninger, died at 11 p.m. yesterday in the Poorman Nursing Home at Jacksonville where she had been a guest since December 26, 1968.

Mrs. Greninger was a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Heltman. She was born Sept.

1, 1896, in Nittany Valley, and had lived in Tylersville most of her life. Her husband, who was an employe of Piper Aircraft died in 1966. Her health had been failing the past three years. Surviving are two sons and three daughters, Roland Greninger, Loganton R.D. Hale, Mill Hall R.D.

Mrs. Paul Tressler, Mill Hall R.D. Mrs. Robert Hazel, Garner, N. and Mrs.

Michael Marchyhsum, Buckport, Maine; also 15 grandchildren, two great-grandchil dren, two brothers and a sister, Boyd Heltman, Bellview, Ohio; Clifford Heltman, Loganton R.D. 2, and Mrs. Mary Heckman, Hublersburg. Mrs. Greninger was a mem- WREN Services for Harvey 0.

Wren, 83, of Indianapolis, formerly of Loganton, who died at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, Jan. 22, 1969, will be conducted by the Rev. Carl E. Hollinger, at the Ramm Funeral Home, Loganton on Saturday at 2 p.m.

Burial will be dn Fairview Cemetery, Loganton. Visitation after p.m. Friday. Ramm Funeral Home, Logan, ton. her of Christ.

the United Church of George P. Gamble JERSEY George P. Gamble, 70, of 219 Glover Jersey Shore, died yesterday afternoon in Jersey Shore Hospital. He was born at Jersey Shore, Nov. 21, 1898, a son of John A.

and Cordelia Bardo Gamble. Mr. Gamble was a former employe of the Susquehanna Silk Mills of Jersey Snore, located at the present site of Alcan Cable Washington Ave. Surviving ae his wife, HMa Rinehart Gamble; two daughters, Mrs. Robert Myers and Mrs.

Pad Green, both of Jersey Shore; a brother, J. Otto Gamble, British Columbia, Canada; two asters, Mrs. William Robe and Mrs. Edda KeJler, of Jersey Shore, and two grandchildren. Miss Nellie M.

Smith WILLIAMSPORT Miss Nellie M. Smith, 72, of 520 Pine Williamsport, a guest in the Williamsport Home for the past year, died yesterday in Williamsport Hospital. She was born May 3, 1896, in Nippenose Valley, a daughter of Hairy T. and Carrie Showers Smith. Miss Smith was retired from the Vogue Lingerie Wil liamsport She was a member of First United Methodist Church of Williamsport.

Surviving are three brothers, Lee A. Smith and Kenneth E. Smith, both of Jersey Shore, and Clyde Smith, McKean County; two sisters, Mrs. Grace Yarrison, Rauchtown, and Mrs. Henry Dorwart, Antes Fort.

GRAW Services will be Saturday at 2 p.m. at the Moriarty Funeral Home for Edwin Tyler Graw, 92, of 504 First Point Breeze, who died at 12:05 a.m. Wednesday, Jan. 22,1969, in Re novo Hospital. The Rev.

J. E. Ranck will officiate. Interment, North Bend Cemetery. Friends will be received at the funeral home after 7 p.m.

Friday. Moriarty Funeral Home, Renovo. STONE Services will be Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Moriarty Funeral Home, Renovo, for Mrs. Eleanor H.

Stone, 62 widow of Harry J. Stone 01 North Bend, who died at 6:35 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 22, 1969 at Divine Providence Hospital Williamsport. The Rev.

James Davis will officiatae. Interment, North Bend Cemetery. Friends will be received at the funera" home after 7 p.m. Saturday. Moriarty Funeral Home, Renovo.

WAGNER Services will be Monday at 2 p.m. at the Moriarty Funeral Home for Chester Wagner, 67, of East Renovo who died at his home on Thurs day, Jan. 23, 1969. The Rev David Hovies will officiate. In terment, Fairview Cemetery Friends will be received at the funeral home after 7 p.m.

Sun day. Masonic services at 8 p.m Moriarty Funeral Home, Renovo. mass will be celebrated on Saturday at 9:30 a.m. in the Immaculate Conception Catholic Church the Rev. Eugene C.

Parrish fo Mrs. Rita Rodrigues, 61, of 7 N. Fairview Lock Haven widow of Eurico Rodrigues, wh died at 9:45 p.m. Wednesday Jan. 22,1969, at the Lock Haven Hospital.

Interment, St. Mary 1 Cemetery. Friends will be received at the Kelt Funera Home after 7 p.m. Friday. Kelt Funeral Home, Lock Ha ven.

GURTTZ Services will be Saturday at 10 a.m. at the Yos Funeral Home for Miss Rike Guritz, 81, of Susque View, wbx died at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 21 1969, at the Lock Haven Hospi tal. The Rer.

Blake C. Ander son will officiate. Intermenl Cedar Hill Cemetery. Friends will be received at the funera Coming Would Enable Needy to Study WASHINGTON (AP) A pro- for a "civilian GI bill" to nable needy students to attend wffl be introduced in the 1st Congress. Rep.

Ogden R. Reid, aid he would draft the new leg- slation, which would implement report by the Carnegie Commission on Higher Education. "Any qualified student ought have die chance for a higher education, including masters and doctors degrees if he decides to pursue them," Red said in an interview. The report, released last Dec 2. contains 22 recommenda- ions, including a massive program of direct grants to needy students, with federal matching grants, student deans, work tudy programs and doctoral eMowships.

Extensive aid for medical training also is includ- Calvin Coolidge never owned a car till be became President. Members of the Immaculate Conception Parish are requested to meet tonight at 8 o'clock at the Helt Funeral Home to recite the rosary for the repose of the soul of the late Mrs. Rita Rodrigues. home after 7 p.m. Friday.

Yost Funeral Home, Lock Ha ven. SMITH Services will be a 1 p.m. Monday at the Kelchne Funeral Home, 125 N. Main St Jersey Shore, for Miss Nelli M. Smith, 72, of 520 Pine St Williamsport, who died Thurs day, Jan.

23, 1969, in Williams port Hospital. The Rev. Rober Kerchoff, pastor of St. James Lutheran Church, Rauchtown will officiate. Burial, Lime stone Cemetery.

Friends ma call at the funeral home Sun day, from 7 to 9 p.m. Kelchner Funeral Home, Je sey Shore. ed. Although the report is viewed avorably by most congressmen, the chances of formal enactment this year are almost nonexistent. A key member of the House Subcommittee on Education, Albert Quie, said, "I doubt if we're gong to do any- about tins year." hgher educaton Funerals HOSPITALS EXTENSION OF COLLEGE UTILITIES Two 48-inch sewer lines are tied together at this bricked-in manhole on the campus of the Lock Haven State College, where the underground utilities network is being expanded to meet the needs of the new buildings now under construction or scheduled for construction in the near future.

The photograph, on the contract of G. M. McCrossin of Bellefonte, which has been in progress for some months and is scheduled for completion during the current year, shows a section of storm sewer, with an eliptical 48-inch pipe in the foreground and a round one of the same diameter to the right. Lock Haven Tina Earner, 3, daughter of Park Earner, Mill Hall R.D., sustained a possible fracture of the left arm when she fell at her home. She was treated at the Lock Haven Hospital emergency room.

Two others were treated after Scanlan, 9, son of Edward Scanlan, 418 S. Highland who cut the top of his head, and Miss Violet Hockenberry who injured her left ankle. Five others were treated. Jerome M. Ryan, 16, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Thomas A. Ryan, 122 Irwin hurt his right shoulder while wrestling. Michael E. Coront, Lock Haven State College student from DuBois, injured his head while playing basketball.

Donald Smith, 11, son of Donald Smith, 164 Myrtle cut the top of his head while laying. Wilbur L. Young, 5 Canal njured his right hand in a gar- ge door. Leroy Walker, 215 Fifth urt his back. Medical admissions: Mrs.

GRENINGER Services will Sunday at 2 p.m. at the lamm Funeral Home, Loganton, for Mrs. Sarah E. Gren- nger, 72, widow of Landis Gren- nger, who died at 11 p.m. Thursday, Jan.

23, 1969, at the Poorman Nursing Home, Jacksonville. The Rev. Reynold K. "iegler will officiate. Interment, Union Cemetery, Tylersville.

Friends will be recevied at the funeral home after 4 p.m. Saturday. Ramm Funeral Home, Loganton. NELEN A high requiem Mass for Edward A. Nelen, 44, of North Bend, who was dead on arrival at the Renovo Hospital at 10:40 p.m.

Wednesday, Jan. 22, 1969, will be said by the Rev. Gerard J. Oeler in St. Joseph's Catholic Church in Renovo at 9:30 Monday.

Burial will be in St. Joseph's Cemetery, Hyner. Visitation at Maxwell Funeral Home after 7 p.m. Sunday. Rosary at 8.

Memorial services at grave by Renovo American Legion. Maxwell Funeral Home, Renovo. Andrus to Retire at Bloomsburg BLOOMSBURG Dr. Harvey A. Andruss, president of the Bloomsburg State College for 30 years, will retire Sept.

1, he has announced. He plans to travel, starting with Africa. In educational work for 43 years, he came here as head of the busines; department in 1930. He became president in 1939. Calendar of Events er (Continued from Page 1) proximately 1,639,675 are outstanding.

The last proxy statement of the company showed 189,000 owned by William T. Piper and holdings of approximately 38,000 to 52,000 by the three Piper sons. Altogether, it is estimated that the Piper family and the Piper Foundation own between 400,000 and 500,000 shares. About 15 per cent is supposedly held by four or five mutual funds, and there are a few other large stockholders. The rest is widely held by individual stock-owners.

According to the terms of the stock offer made by Chris-Craft, if they can get 300,000 shares or less, they will buy all that is offered at $65. If more shares are offered, the company said it would buy the excess, above the 300,000, or any part of it, on a pro rata basis, at their option. Chris-Craft apparently has embarked on a program of expansion, through the diversification of interests and development of the "conglomerate" pattern of industry. They have purchased a chemical firm, a mobile home manufacturer and other firms in recent years. They took over a boat building enterprise, Argonaut, in Taipei, Taiwan (Formosa), and have gone into the hotel, resort and real estate business, including a hotel company in Nassau.

Quoted in The Wall St. Journal, Chris-Craft has indicated that, if the offer to acquire Piper stock is successful, "We will consider some form of combination" with Piper. No interest in such a proposition has been shown by the Piper management. Quoted by financial reporters yesterday and today, William T. Piper president of the company said the firm "has no interest in a merger, in any tender offer, or other changes or associations, or anything like this." He said the Piper family would not sell Surprise Witness in Krugle Case Is Returned to Jail their holdings in response the take-over proposal.

A surprise commonwealth witness in the Krugle case was returned to the Western Correctional Institute in Pittsburgh yesterday morning without being called to testify. Thomas Lindenmuth, 27, of Linden R.D. 1, was an inmate in the Clinton County Jail last Mate Killer Seeks Release Has Served Enough of Life Sentence PHILADELPHIA D. Updegrove, Robinson Township, Reading, applied today for freedom after serving some eight years of a life sentence for murdering her husband. warden and other officials at the Berks County prison feel she has made complete recovery and can go back out into society," said her lawyer, John E.

Ruth. He is seeking commutation of his client's life term before the State Pardon Board. It was Ruth's second application in as many years. Mrs. Updegrove is a native of Birdsboro.

She was found guilty of first degree muder in the Oct. 14, 1960 slaying of her husband, Samuel. She was sentenced Feb. 3, 1963 to life imprisonment, the term to be computed from Oct. 15, 1960.

"At the time of the killing she was a very sick physically and mental'y," Ruth told the five-man board. Ruth testified Dr. Wilbur Lutz, former clinical director and now to superintendent at the Wernersville State Hospital, indicated in Jan. County Chapter, American 7:30 p.m. War Mothers A- Chris-Craft spokesman told writing in September that Mrs hfi Ct ol ardw tiroe The Wall St.

Journal yesterday that the stock offer was made "for investment, with a view to Jan. 24 The Lock Haven thc conrol of Piper but it (Chris Wood Butcher 4-H Club will iCraft) does not have meet at Bellefonte Ave. at; cific plan or proposal to iqui 7p.m. James Turner will super-, date it or merge with ot heri average is seven years. Updegrove was "ready for release." "She has served more than the national average term for women on a life Ruth said, explaining that the The term "funeral service" can have many meanings.

To us however, we believe we must go beyond that which is required to make complete arrangements. We like to feel that our Service is synonymous with a "personal helpfulness." Service is Self; it is effort and also time. To us, it is a way of life. Patrick R. Moriarfy Home PATRICK M.

MOMIAKTV BmCCTOft 1T2 EAST CHURCH STREET LOCK HAVEN, PA. vise. Jan. 27 A. C.

E. at First United Methodist Church (former E.U.B.) p.m donald. Jan. 27 Temple Club Auxiliary 7:30 p.m. Jan.

27 PTA meeting at BEN, 8 p.m. in library. Jan. Orches- i companies or make other major i It is unusual that someone meeting i cnanges in the )usmess jscntenced to life would be im ethodistj Chris-Craft said funds of in a county jail. How- rcn ormer fc.y.B.) o.l5 lmjl jon to the pj snares ever, exception was made be- Speaker, Miss Joanne Me- would drawn fmm Chrjs cause of Mrs Updegrove's so- Craft general funds, accordingicial backwardness, Ruth said, to an article in The Journal! He said tne 52-year-old pris- today.

i oner has been permitted to Chris-Craft was also men-i leave tne ail to to Warden tioned yesterday on Wall as I Lewis Stitzel's house a few a potential buyer of Warner biocks awa to do domestic work. The Rev. Nevin Kershner, former pastor at St. John's Church Gibraltar, who has kept contact with the innthmme, also testified lin her behalf October 23, when John Vincent Krugle, 30, of 1018 Memorial Williamsport, was alleged to have brought hack saw blades into the jail enabling two inmates to escape. Lindenmuth had been transferred from Pittsburgh to the Lycoming County Prison January 16 by Sheriff John F.

Boyle Krugle, charged by Sheriff Boyle with furnishing weapons to convicts, in a surprise move last Wednesday changed his plea from "not guilty" to "guil ty" making Lindenmuth's appearance in Clinton County Court unnecessary. While jury members impaneled to hear the Krugle case sat in their seats in the large courtroom waiting for the trial to start, Krugle and Allan W. Lugg, his court-appointed attorney, appeared in the small courtroom and petitioned Judge A. H. Lipez to permit the change of plea.

Lindenmuth is serving one to ten years at Western after pleading guilty to sodomy. College (Continued from Page 1) Joseph L. Lecce, Williamsport, electrical, $85,000. The total bids for these contractors, two of whom, Mastriani and Lecce, have been contractors for other recent pro- at the college, were $285.986 above the original GSA allocation. The five-story building will contain 100 double occupancy student rooms, project room, recreation room, television area, public lounge, laundry facilities, study rooms, student lounges, counselors' rooms, manager's apartment, and a guest room.

The dormitory will DC constructed with a precast concrete deck, reinforced concrete beams and concrete foundations with masonry walls and partitions. It will be faced on the exterior with brick and will have aluminum windows and a built-up roof. The work plans also call for a new gravel access road, a parking area, and walks. Designed by Good, Long and Associates, Harrisburg, building is scheduled for completion by July 15, 1970. John Herrs Mark 45th Wedding Day on January 25 Mr.

and Mrs. John C. Herr, 11 E. Bald Eagle will be quietly celebrating their 45th wedding anniversary tomorrow They were married in Flem ington by the Rev. James Bettens, and have lived most their married life in Lock, Ha ven.

Mr. Herr is a native Lock Haven. Mrs. Herr is the former Meriam Confer of Flem ington. Mr.

Herr has retired from Hammermill Paper Co. after 3C years of -service in the high speed paper cutting department Their family includes twc daughters, Mrs. Betty Wads worth, and Mrs. Esafl Powel both of Lock Haven, five grandchildren and one great grandchild. Injured in Car-Bus Collision at State College STATE COLLEGE Twelv passengers were injured in car-bus collision here at 5:3 p.m.

Wednesday at Easterl Parkway and University Drive Borough police who invest gated the accident said the 1 were part of a group of 24 re turning to Pennsylvania Stat University after a trip to Har risburg where they met wit State legislators. The 24 passengers were' in bus owned by the Bellefont Charter Bus Service and drive by Gary C. Richards, Belle fonte. It collided with a ca operated by Alan H. Bierlein Pennsylvania Furnace, whe Bierlein pulled from a stop sign onto University Drive.

No complaints of injurie were noted by the police fo lowing the accident, but an hou later the Bellefonte Charter Bu Service notified police that 1 passengers said they had ceived injuries in the collision Damage was placed at $60 to the bus and $1,600 to the ca tra meeting at Lock Catholic School, 7 p.m. Haven i Bros. An Chris-Craft official who saidj was interested ini Stock Market ithe Warner acquisition, refused i to elaborate. TV Channel Change NEW YORK (AP)-The stock rn il rarfcet continued to advance at rr ose Wmspt. YoU market the opening today.

Trading was WASHINGTON (AP) heavy. Federal Communications 0011 Quotations rr 0 i 06 ephtha' mission has proposed substitut- Alleg Pwr 24 IBM 300 ing television channel 20 for 66 Amer Can Koppers Williamsport, Pa. Maremont The FCC said Thursday the Marco would free several Newberry 2 channels in the 60s for trans-1 21V4 Penney 45 lator use in north central Penn-j 54V4 sylvania. 32V4 PC Piper 62 A translator station, for which i RCA 45 applications are on file I Sears for the Williamsport area and Std NJ 78 north central Pennsylvania, US Steel retransmits the signals from Weis regular for use in other 34 ATT AmTob Atl Ref B. Brooks Chrysler Con Gas Dupont Ford Gen Mot Grant Gulf Ham'mili MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS AND RELATED DISEASES AFFLICT AN ESTIMATED 500,000 AMERICANS Woolwortii 34 I places.

Students Honor Palach PRAGUE (AP)-Student delegations began arriving in Prague today for memorial ceremonies honoring Jan Palach and his suicide by fire to protest the Soviet occupation. Fearing violent demonstra- intervention by the Russians, the Czech government warned the students to be on guard against "irresponsible elements" that could case trouble. Student leaders said unrest wag widespread among the young, but they stressed that the memorial ceremonies would be orderly and dignified. They reported demonstrations in Bratislava, the capital of Slovakia, were suppressed by the authorities and others in Brno and Osrava were interfered with. Plach, who set himself afire Jan.

16, died Sunday. vember some time. 'incent DeManno 349V 2 E. Hinton Michell Corcelius, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

'harles Corcelius, Lock Haven l.D. Mrs. John T. McGill, Haven R.D. 1 Celley, Mill Hall R.D.

George Bowmaster Mill Hall R. Samuel Bowman, Blanchard; Wendy J. Andrews, 1, laughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robrt Andrews, Salona.

Surgical admissions: Mrs. Lewis Sohmer, 277 Susquehanna Tracy Jo Brown, 6, daugh- er of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Brown, 205 N. Jay Mrs.

Raymond Aikeley, Lock Haven R.D. Mrs. Flosse B. Reefer, Haven R.D. Mrs.

Betty Stover, 244 Furst Flem- ngton; Mrs. Walter B. Weaver, 175 Arch Mill Hall; Raymond Wagner, Loganton R.D. 1. Discharged, Mrs.

James L. Moore and infant daughter, 911 Weather (Continued from Page 1) said the numbing cold of the northern Rockies and plains the past few days would be modified somewhat by the time it reached Pennsylvania. Temperatures in northern Montana have averaged around 40 below zero minimums since early this week. Deacon explained the frigid air has been traveling over hundreds of miles of ground which is not only free of snow but which has been warmed by moist Gulf air. "This will tend to moderate the air mass a bit," he said.

Rainfall for the 24 hours ending at this morning was about a third of an inch at the Williamsport Airport, but generally less than a tenth of an inch upstream on the West Branch of the Susquehanna River. Lock Haven had .01 of an inch. A look ahead to Sunday inoi- cated continued cold weather and partly cloudy conditions. Bellefonte Floyd Dick, tt N. Fairview Mrs.

Murray H. Thompson, 332 W. Walnut Mrs. Ray Peters and infant son, Lock Haven R.D Larry Allen, 335 Clinton infant son of Mr. and Ronald M.

Brungard, 332 W. Walnut Charles A. Cruse Mill Hall R.D. Charles W. Conklin, Mill Hall R.D.

Miss Vicki M. Wankfeman, Highland Avis; Mrs. Randy Brickley 1215 Allegheny Jersey Shore; Mrs. William Dyroff 259 Yost Spring City. Discharged from Extended Care Unit: Richard Max Gatsche, 1904 Newberry Wil- lismsport.

Renovo Admitted, Miss Sara Mazzulla, 721 St. Clair Renovo, and Carmella O'Toole, two-week old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John O'Toole, 916 Ontario Renovo. Discharged, Arthur Russell, Farwell, and William C.

Snyder, Shintown. Centre County Admitted: Mrs. Ray E. Smith, Centre Hall, and Michael Kauffman, Millheim Discharged, Miss Ruth Nolan Howard R.D. Mrs.

William Eminhizer, Milesburg, and Mrs. Christopher Lucas, Milesburg. Jersey Shore Admitted: David Confair, Jer. sey Shore R.D. Miss Connie Bone, 328 S.

Main Jersey Shore, and Russel Mayes, SOB Railroad Jersey Shore. Discharged, Hobert McCracken, 207 N. Broad Jersey Shore; Mrs. Audrey Mohn, 148 Mt. Pleasant Jersey Shore, and Mrs.

Ethel Bennett, 1306 Allegheny Jersey Shore Transferred: Mrs. Jennie Hale 442 Wilson Jersey Shore, to Divine Providence Hospital Williamsport. Williamsport Admitted: Earl Bay, Woodward Lock Haven; Haiv oldine Edward, 232 Young Lock Haven; Mrs. Anna Reed, 411 Eden Jersey Shore; Mrs. Irene Miller, 110 Maple Jersey Shore, and Mrs.

Florence Welshans, Jersey Shore R.D. 2. Discharged: Lewis Shoemaker, Lock Haven Star Route; Fred Sorgen, Renovo R. D. Mrs.

Clara Nicholas, Linden; Mrs. Mary Weigle, Lock Haven R.D. 1, and Mrs. Pauline Wier, 342 S. Fairview Lock Haven.

Divine Providence Admitted: Howard Holmes, Williamsport R.D. Lawrence Messner, 206 Allegheny Jersey Shore; Mrs. Jenny Hale, 442 Wilson Jersey Shore, and Mrs. Marjorie Mayes, Jersey Shore R.D. 3.

Discharged: Roy Brungard, 111 W. Highland Avis; Mrs. Ruth Peters, Jersey Shore R.D. 1, and Harry Wilt, 974 W. Third Lock Haven.

Geisinger Admitted: Bruce I. Smith, 354 E. Main Lock Haven 5-Day Forecast Eastern Pennsylvania, southeastern New York and New Jersey Temperatures are expected to average near normal, with daytime highs in the 30s north to 40s south and nighttime lows from the teens north to the upper 20s south. Precipitation may total greater than one-half inch, with a chance of showers Saturday and rain likely around Tuesday or Wednesday, with possible snow over northern portions. Western Pennsylvania Below normal the homeless.

sissippi I chairman. their length. Deration ued from Page 1) supervisor said he rility pension last No- ter 12 or 14 year a window clerk at the office. He reported- heart condition for h's first transplant last Aug. 31 at Pres- UnivpfNifv UrtCTiitfli Ben Anoli, a 46- brmer boxing promo- making a sal- ecovery.

Storm tued from Page 1) lehuret hospital alone persons. Many oth- taken to hospitals in nd Brookhaven. 00 homeless persons light at an emergency up at the National lory in Hazelhurst. icntal and private uickly moved into the re for the hungry and ess. ready to feed, clothe all of lhcm, said lefficld, central Misted Cross disaster as can leap 20 times h.

expected, with daytime highs in the mid 20s and lows from ten to 20 degrees. Precipitation will be heavier than normal, averaging over one-half inch melted, occurring as snow flurries over the weekend and a period of snow Tuesday or Wednesday. Births Kissell A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs John C. Kissell 216 W.

Third at 5:10 this morning at the Lock Haven Hospital. Mrs. Kissell is the former Grace Dugan. Bressler A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs.

Kenneth N. Bressler, of Loganton, at 10:15 a.m. Thursday at the Lock Haven Hospital. Mrs. Bressler was formerly Nikki Verrier.

Brumgurd A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Willard C. Brumgard, 14 S. Grove at 7:25 a.m.

Thursday at the Lock Haven Hospital. Mrs. Brumgard is the former Linnie Caprio. A son was born at 2:34 p.m. Thursday in Jersey Shore Hospital, to Mr.

and Mrs. James Lauer, 544 Wilson Shore. The mother is the former Lcota Smerkar. Election (Continued from Page 1) As superintendent of garment manufacturing at 1 i Mill, Mr. Pribble also is assistant buyer and heads a staff of more than 300 supervisors, technicians and employes.

He has been a member of the board of directors for 10 years. He is active in the Woolrich United Methodist Community Church, serves on various committees and the board of trustees, and represents his church in the annual Central Pennsylvania Conference. Mr. Pribble is a member of Lafayette Lodge 199, F. A.M., Lock Haven, presently serving on the Temple Club board of directors.

He is a member of the Valley of Williamsport Scottish Rite bodies and is chairman of the valley's Woolrich area welfare committee. Since affiliating with Jaffa Temple in 1957, Noble Prible lias served as first and second ceremonial masters in the appointive divan. He is a member of the Legion of Honor and a past president of the Clinton County Shrine Club, currently serving on the membership committee and board of directors. He was general chairman of the Clinton County Jaffa caravan committee in 1968. The new oriental guide's grandfather was a Master Mason and his father is a Jaffa Temple master.

In civic activities, Mr. Pribble is president of the Lock Haven Rotary Club, of which he has been a member for 13 years; director of the Lock Haven Y.M.C.A., member of the Pine Creek Planning Commission, Cub Scout committeeman and member of the Lock Haven Area United Fund advance gifts committee. The foaW eagle mates for life and returns each year to its huge ihome in a tall tfcreetop..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Express Archive

Pages Available:
95,440
Years Available:
1931-1973