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The Times Record from Troy, New York • Page 28

Publication:
The Times Recordi
Location:
Troy, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
28
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THB TIMES RECORD, TROY, N. THURSDAY EVENING, JANUARY 6, 1966 AMARANTHS INSTALL--Ella C. Perry Court, order of the Amaranth, conducted a public installation ceremony at Masonic Temple. Left to right, Hooper Van Vorst the new patron; Mrs. Mabel Jones, the new matron; Mrs.

Rose LaPierre, retiring matron, Melvin Wagner, retiring patron. Jlr. Van Vorst is past master of Greenbush Lodge, KAM, of Renssclaer. Rensselaer Mn. Betty McCullough GR 7-4261 William R.

Browne 2 8 6 3 8 5 5 Nassau Acts To Prevent Dump Fires Nassau Fire Chief Richard Becker, who also is a deputy county fire coordinator, will direct his fire officers in visitin; businessmen and others in Village, seeking Jo discourage unguarded burning of use and other material. The Village Board and the new mayor, Donald Strevell, requested Chief Becker to rid the area of obnoxious odors from i dumps. Chief of Police C. Lowell Avery also has pledged his support. The board, at its meeting last i welcomed Oscar a a new trustee.

Mr. a a chiropractor, will until April I when he will seek reelection. He succeeds Mayor Strevell who had been appointed to succeed Sylvester Currier. Currier is the town's Democratic supervisor. Ernest LcC'lair.

another trustee, was renamed police commissioner, and Clayton Miller assessor. Leonard Gorzynski, former street commissioner, was named deputy mayor. Daniel Klingcr. village's confuid'n? engineer, lias been instructed to fo ahead with the first phase of a master plan a some lime ago to develop and improve the village a system. The board is working on plans In purchase the former Nassau Fairground property for a a i assistance from the Slate P'-'rirlmcni which i pay a 5 per cent of acquisition coils.

Aniline Names W. W. Wolfe Wolfe of has been appointed i i a Coeymans. a i a a in production a the Renssc- lacr plant of General Aniline Gfy Will Pay Port's Share A public hearing held at Rensselaer City Hall last night was sparsely attended--fay the mayor, the corporation counsel, James S. Millca, and newsmen.

With no opposition, Mayor John H. Warden then declared that the city would go ahead with discharge of its financial obligations to pay the A a Port Commission 510,500 as the city's pro-rated share for Port facilities which extend over the Hudson River into Rcnssclacr. Mrs. Davenport Suffers Injury In Fall At Home Mrs. Raymond Davenport, 55, of 1011 3rd was injured yesterday in a fall down a flight of rear porch at her homr.

She wa.s a In Memorial Hospital by Albany Motor Ambulance summoned by Sgt. Vincent Higgins and Officer Howard Boniface. After a she was released. Police said Mrs, Davenport had a box in her a to take outdoor, 1 for burning when the occurred. Joseph Beeke Found Dead In Trailer Joseph Bccbe.

89. was found dead last i in his a i in he rear of 737 Second where he lived alone. Dr. Edw a C. Quinlar.

pronounced lim dead. Coronrr A PI a a said death was due to a a cau'es. Joseph Well. 1 who operates a card at 737 Second told police he had not seen man recently. S-jt.

j.Masclli and Patrolmen Thomas Blake and Daniel Dolan of dio patrols went to the a i i Corporation, it pounced yesterday was by Dr Charles 11. Mratlon, plant man- Wolfe i i GAF in February of 1953. i i he has hcW various jobs in the production a hi.s most recent job beinj group operator. Mr. Wolfe attended Hope College.

and forced a to Mr. Heche's home. Police received the call at 6:33 p.m. He was the a of the late a a Bcebc. He i a a retired employe of a Rensselaer Girl Reported Missing A a Kclipsc.

He is surv by a brother, Frederick Bccbe of Or leans, La The a i be held from the .1. W. Burn. 1 SOILS. Filth A Funeral Chapcr Saturday at 10 a.m.

I will be i Elmwood Hill Cemetery. A a i a A 13-slatc a a has been Cambodian troops attacked a out the State Police Cub Pack 28 Thai border i a last i System from F-ast i -i for the second lime in four days, r.reenby-r for a missing 15- iklt, government officials said today. Rcnsselaer girl. Gets a No casualties were reported. Chief Police Charles A.

One a was reported killed Cub Pack 28 met recently at Sunday when Cambodian forces Stewart said the i- a i a OMl( nkj) 3 npon attacked Hard Lek Flecker oi 806 3rd St. She is a m( cl a opened village in Trad Province with and has been i i the presentation of colors mortars and a i Mnce Dec. 23 a i to conducted by Den 1. family. S)- i describe!) as A skit entitled "Frosty 2 inches tall, i i Man" was prcsenlcd by i and has brown eyes, i Den 3 under Ihc direction of Mrs.

Material Witness Released Held as a material witness in connection with the death of Troy woman which the Rensselaer County grand jury termed manslaughter, Wesley J. Reed, 22, of 355 Monroe was released today and paid S147 as compensation for 49 days of detention in jail. When a "John Doe" indictment for first degree manslaughter was called in Rons- selaer County Court, Dist. Atty. M.

Andrew Dwyer Jr. told the court it related to a death "unexplained as to the perpetrator." But he said investigation is still being conducted by Troy police. He was referring to the case of Mrs. Ruby Dixon, 43, of 1601 7th who died Nov. 9 in Samaritan Hospital, where she was admitted five days before but where she had also been treated in September after allegedly being beaten.

Reed was arrested Nov. 17 on a vagrancy charge and after his appearance in Troy Police Court was ordered held as a material witnes.s in the investigation of Mrs. Dixon's death. The district attorney said he had no further use for Reed as a material witness and submitted an order that he be discharged from jail. County Judge John T.

Casey signed the order, which also provided that Reed be paid $147, or S3 for each day of his detention a material witness, as provided by the Code of Criminal roccdurc. Trojan Arrested In Theft Of TV; Case Adjourned Daniel Mc.Neal, 32, whose address police listed as 564 River was arrested on a a charging grand larceny yesterday by Plainclothes- mcn Charles F. i and John A. Comitale of the Detective Bureau. The arrest, police said, was made in conncclion with the theft of a television set from Cordon L.

Hayes store, 291 River several months ago. McXcal was arraigned in Po- Dorp Chief, Troy Native, Will Retire The chief of police of Schc ncctady, a native Trojan, ap plied for a pension this afternoon, his retirement to become effective i i the next 30 days. Chief Stanley A. DuCharme has been head of the city's police force for almost eight years. He has been a policc- man, however, for 30 years.

He was born in Troy, son of the late John Andrew and Cecelia Tessier and he and his a i lived in Lans- ingburgb. He has resided in Schencctady, however, for about 60 years. Chief DuCharmc has 150 patrolmen and other officers under his command with 60 civilian personnel. He said, strangely enough, the force was stronger 30 years ago a it Is today. He said in the intervening years the department had progressed rapidly through the of scientific equipment.

He joined the force in j935. He was named a sergeant, 1943; detective sergeant, 1947; lieutenant, 3951, and captain, 1955. He became chief of department in 1958. He is married to the former Julia JlcCabe who was born in Troy's South End. four children and children.

They have six grand- am going to lake it easy," the chief said, "and enjoy my family." Chief a said a civil service e.vam was held in ist from will be of this not yet ven.bcr to create a which a new chief named. The results list, he added, have been made public. Chief DuCharmc's mother's family was well known in Cohoes, her native city and conducted a bakery fo TONIGHT'S WEATHER--Rain is expected tonight from the middle Atlantic states northward changing to snow in northern New England. Snow is forecast for the Great Lakes region, upper Ohio valley, northern plains and northern Rockies. Showers are predicted from northern California into the Pacific Northwest.

(AP Wircphoto Lists Leaders Of Workshops Workshop leaders have been announced for the VISTA meeting Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the Niskayuna Be- formcd Church. The special meeting is sponsored by United i Services of the Mo- lawk-Hudson Area, A a Area Council of Community Services and Schenectady Community Welfare Council. Four workshops relating to arious phases of VISTA (Volunteers in Service to America) vill be conducted by the fol- owing area community leaders: Thomas S. Davis, principal of Hoosic Valley High School, Education and Recreation; Dr.

Richardson C. Rice, dean of the School of Social Welfare, State University College at Albany, Community Action; James W. Ryan, coordinator for the Al- any Regional Inderdepartmen- al Rehabilitation of the New 'ork State Interdepartmental lealth and Hospital Council, lental Health and liehabilita- ion, and Prof. Sherwood Fox Schenectady, a i a of he Department of Sociology of Jnion College, Recruitment, a years, Invitations to the meeting have been extended to all member agencies of UCS and the Albany and Schenectady Councils as well as representatives of the local colleges, churches, labor and senior ciiieens groups. The workshops will follow talks by Dr.

Maurice L. Sill of Cornell University, consultant for VISTA, and Bruno Rantane, director of community recruitment for VISTA in Washington, who will explain the need for volunteers and the VISTA program, which was established under the Economic Opportunity Act of 1944 as a major antipoverty program. The area campaign for volunteers will begin the day after Niskayuna meeting, for which Miss Nancy Sinkin of VISTA in is liaison representative. Other guests wil! include Edward W. Pattison of the UCS board of directors and chairman of the Commission on Economic Opportunity for the Rensselaer County Area, Mrs.

Donald Mochon, staff aid for the Rensselaer County Community Action Program; Richard H. Hamlen, Schenectady president of the Community Welfare Council, and William P. McGlone, deputy director of the New York State Office of Economic Opportunity. Governor Will Not Seek Changes In Divorce Law Gov. Rockefeller will not make any recommendation! en amending the state's divorce laws during the 1966 session of Legislature.

Interviewed yesterday on a radio program, the governor said he would take no public position, pending action by the legislature. He also told interviewers on Albany Dateline, (WGY) that he ad no intention of intervening in the New York City subway strike. But he did not preclude i intervention in the future if tihe situation warrants. He said that at the moment the negotiations were "so delicate" he did not believe he should interfere. Asked about specific minimum TABORTON Rev.

Ralph W. Heller OK 4-3196 Worship services will be held Zion's Evangelical and Reformed Church at 10:30 a.m. Sunday. The Church School wil convene at 11:30 a.m. Zion's Women's Guild will meet Saturday in the Parish Hall at 2 p.m.

The Church Board will meet next Thursday evening in the Parish Hall. The Women's Auxiliary of the Taborton Fire Department meets this evening in the Fire Hall. Officers will be elected lor 1966. The president currently is Mrs. Joyal Dingman.

The Taborton Home Bureau unit will meet Wednesday evening in Zion's Church Hall for the monthly meeting and to elect officers for 1966. Mrs. Charles II. Connolly was president in 1965. Mrs.

Ross Ayotte will cx- libit seed pictures and give a lesson on how to make them. Brussels Auto Show BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) The 45th Brussels auto show opening next Wednesday will exhibit 92 makes of cars from 13 countries not including Belgium, vhich assembles cars but makes none. Japan will show hree makes Britain leads with 26 makes, followed by the United States with 20 and West Germany and Italy 13 each. salaries the stale might establish for local police departments, Rockefeller said it was possible Lhe minimunis reflect regional economic differences, and that the scale might be similar to that on which teachers' salaries are based. Rockefeller also said it was likely the state would have lo sell additional bonds next fiscal year to finance the 1966-67 judget, which has been estimated at about $4,000,000,000.

His stand on the divorce laws, IB indicated, would be similar that displayed last session on the abolition of capital punishment. Rockefeller made no recommendations, but did sign, vithout comment, the bill which virtually abolished the death chair in the state. The governor was divorced in 1962 by his former wife, who obtained the decree in Reno, Nev. His present wife was also divorced from her first husband. The joint legislative commit- established to conduct i itudy on the state's divorce to recommend everal additional grounds for divorce.

At present the only ground in New York Stale is adultery. 2 Price Special DESERT'FLOWER Cream or Roll On with anti perspirant i REG. $1.00 Now Mmilcrf Time Only! GOLDEN DRUGS KELLY DRUG CO. Goo. P.

Golden, Ph Prop. Pork Ave. MO 4-7329 MECHANICVILLE lice Court this morning before Justice Timothy J. Fogarty and pleaded innocent. His case was adjourned i Monday.

No bail was set and he was remanded lo Rcnsselaer Jail. Cambodians Attack Thailand Village SHOP RKO SUPER MARKET WYNANTSKILL OPEN DAILY 9 to 9 U.S. Choice BONELESS BOSTON ROAST pOUI'i blonde hair and a i i a a and Mrs. Rob- picxion. last seen a in a length Kcnm-th For-rsler received gold coat, slacks and ftd and Mlver a I Ah.sistan District Seoul Com- Sef Hearing On Schools Jan.

II A brochure summary school nerds in Kensselacr has been mailed to all residents o( Ihr eilj, Supl. of School), Joseph V. Hcilly said last night. The residents i be asked to study (his brochure and attend a public hearing set for Tuesday at 8 p.m. at Van Renssciacr fiihoo' a i torium.

The report is survey made hy Knslehardt I.eggett, a i a school nerds consultant from Wcstehfsier County. Dr. Nirtiolaiis KnRlehiirrft i br (o answer questions. missioncr Daniel K. Sckcllick prc.scnttd thn pack a which was received by Mr.

John on of the sponsorinfi I i PTA. Cuhmastcr i i a I'. Hayes closed the meeting with the announcement thai Ihc next meeting would be held out-of-doors and will inclurle. weather per i i ice A a i and coasting- Brazilian Range Yields Antimony BKl.O HOIUXONTK, a i antimony dis Thi.s a i fi rovf-ry v.a Mi noraloi'i on Ihf i np lo 50 ton .30 lo p'T NASSAU Mrs. Harold 'arkcr The Democratic Cluh wil hold their firit Victory i ner dance in more a 50 at the Cordial Greens Country Club Friday at 7:30 p.m.

vofttcr Currier, will be honored guest. Atty. M. Andrew Dwyor Jr. will be guc.Vi speaker i Clarence Visscher as toast master, officers will installed, arc Charles president; Cieon Lind.say, vice idem; Lindsay, secretary, and Morty Andre.

1 treasurer, Reservations may be made i Mr. 1 John a a 2nd Iicut. and John A. Danncr have a the i of a on, David i i phir, i i 3 Ibs. 2 i Patterson A Hospital Fort eported recently in, Dec.

15. are Mr. a Mr; Patrick a of a a anrl paternal a a arc Mr. and Mrs. Josf-pii a of Red i Road, Ren-- selaor The couple aho have a soo John, 7.

Sid thr or" IA i i Ofks v. and a a Tnc- i a ii UifJ chiefly i Lean Tender U.S. Choice CHUCK ROAST NEW LOW PRICE Campbell's VOOIHJ; CHICK KTAHS STEW BEEF NEW LOW PRICE POTATOES 1 0 79 12-Oz. i Afi COTTAGE CHEESE 19 Juicy GRAPEFRUIT 10 ro trrth Crisp Cukes 3 25' LOW, LOW PRICES, PLUS FREE TOP VALUE STAMPS.

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About The Times Record Archive

Pages Available:
303,950
Years Available:
1943-1977