Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The News-Herald from Franklin, Pennsylvania • Page 7

Publication:
The News-Heraldi
Location:
Franklin, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE NEWS-HERALD, MONDAY, JUNE 25, 1934. Personals Qubs socniEiry Women's Netf rocky ecovE MILDRED KINCH LUSHER 11 GUfiUan Street 1366-L Summer Dresses 'GMISIBMPS STOP White Slips, sizes 36 to 48 2.25 Flesh Color Slips lace trim 51.00, 31.25, 31.50 Chiffon and Service Weight Hose 89c Combination Organdie Voile Dresses. 89c A. J. GMHIBBISKI i FOOT HEALTH FOR HOT WEATHER Bad fitting shoes and weak feet cause more trouble due to irritation in hot, sultry weather.

Most all Budget Shop on Main Floor SflOO $p8 0 8598 SHEER BATISTESVOILES. I cases of aches and pains from the feet to the hips are caused by pressure on nerves of the feet. The reason of trouble is easy for us to find due to our training in our particular work and each morning our Foot Health Clinic is busy correcting those troubles, FREE. Come any morning. OHQAOILD BROWNBILT SHOE ST EYELET BATISTES.

SUN BACK MODELS. GINGHAM SUITS. LINEN SUITS. WASHABLE SILKS. TWINE KNITS.

You can use a dress or two from these smartly styled, well made inexpensive things that will be featured on the main floor tomorrow. There are just dozens of them to select from and you can wait on yourself if you prefer. Waffle Cloth White Coats Fresh Coconut Bon Bons 29c lb. FILMS-BATHING CAPS BATHING SHOES RUBBER BATHING SUITS 9pS I WHITMAN'S CANDY Fresh Salted Peanuts, Pecans and Mixed Nuts For a Cool Drink Visit Our Fountain WE ARE CLOSED TOMORROW Dague-Bartholomew Co. Now here is a value that we would just like to see you beat anywhere.

Heavy quality white Cotton Waffle Cloth Summer Coats. swagger model, just the thing to wear with summer dresses. Sizes 14 to 20. On sale tomorrow for first time. They will just walk out of here, so come early.

OtficeKl EELEN F. DECK, SOCIAL EVENTS. Wonderful Collection of Antiques To be on Display Tuesday. An antique display and tea will be held in the parlors of the First Baptist Church on Tuesday afternoon and evening, sponsored toy the Susan T. Freas Guild.

There will (be articles from Mrs. O. D. Bleakley, consisting of a table, wine cellerete and china which are 150 years old a collection of articles from England, the ancestral home of Horace E. Home, now of this city and numerous articles from other residents consisting of old silver, hand-made furniture, chests, china, cradle, and many other articles.

There will be a collection of articles during the Civil War period and the World War. The hours will be from 2:30 to 5 o'clock and from 7 on. Mrs. V. C.

CamQbell and Miss Cora Reading are chairmen. 4 Dr. and Mrs. O. C.

McCandles Hosts at Bridge Party Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. G. C.

McCandless were hosts at an attractively appointed (bridge party on Saturday evening at their home, 1046 Liberty Street, honoring Miss Catherina Eagan, of Oil City, and Dr. C. C. McMlnn, of Coch-ranton, whose marriage will be an event of June 28. There were four tables in play and honors were awarded to Mrs.

Howard Moore, of Cochranton Miss Eagan and Dr. C. H. Diem, of Oil City. The honor guests were presented with a lovely gift.

Among the guests were: Mr. and Mrs. Howard Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Ed.

Fleming, of Cochranton Dr. and Mrs. Diem, Miss Mary Elizabeth Nugent and Miss Elizabeth McBrlde, and John Reid, of Oil City. Regular Meeting of Ease Grove Ladies' Aid Held. The regular meeting of the Ladies' Aid of the East Grove Methodist Church met on Thursday at the home of Mrs.

John Pyle for an all-day meeting. There were IB members, 13 children and seven visitors from Franklin present. The day was spent quilting and a delicious tureen dinner was served at noon. A short business meeting was held in the afternoon and the 01st Psalm was read by Mrs. Ada Elwinger and the Lord's prayer was repeated in unison.

The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Clyde Heasley in July. Picnic Held by Members of Light Bearers of M. E. Church.

The annual picnic of the Little Light Bearers of the First Methodist Eplscopalu Church was held on Satur day afternoon at the church with 38 members and mothers present. Mrs. D. E. Shaffer, superintendent, was in charge of the games.

Dainty re freshments were served at tables decorated with spring flowers. Parish House Guild to bs Hostesses at Party Tuesday. The members of the Parish House Guild of St. John's Episcopal Church will be hostesses at a party on Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock honoring Mrs. Lelioy Rett) who leaves July 1 with her family to make their home in Tulsa, Okla.

MATRIMONIAL BOWEN GOI GHLER. Miss Mildred Goughler, daughter of Mrs. J. H. Goughler, and Tracy Bow-en, son of Mr.

and Mrs. E. S. Bowen, both of this city, were united in marriage on Monday morning at 11 o'clock at the parsonage of the First Evangelical Church iby Rev. B.

E. Coleman, the ring ceremony being used. They were attended toy their mothers. After a short wedding trip they will ibe at home at 1337 Buffalo Street. Both are well known young people of this city and have a host of friends who extend best wishes.

The bridegroom is employed toy the State Highway Department. HEFFERNAN-JONES. Miss Suzanne Jones, daughter of Mrs. Sadie McCllmans, of this city, and Luther La Van Heffernan. son of Mr.

and Mrs. J. T. Heffernan, of Sugar-creek, were united in marriage at 1 o'clock on Saturday afternoon at the parsonage of the First Evangelical Church by Rev. B.

E. Coleman. They were accompanied by 1 the bride's mother and parents of the groom. A THOUGHT Blessed Is the man that endureth temptation: for when he Is tried he shall receive the crown of life. James 1:12.

Temptations, like misfortunes, are sent to test our moral strength.Mar-guerite de Valols. Washable Gloves $1.00 Xevelty Jewebjr- Me Society Editor. Bom 728 2. CARD BASKET. Mr.

and Mrs. Allan Slprella; of Cleveland, were week-end guests ot Dr. and Mrs. D. C.

Blanchard. Mrs. Rose DeWoody and Mrs. Catherine McCann have returned from Hanover, where they attended the Veterans of Foreign Wars Auxiliary Convention. ft Miss Ruth Higbee and Miss Betty Carew Bacon have returned from Butler, where they were guests of Miss Alice Tack who accompanied them home for a visit.

ft ft Mrs. Sarah Ritts Foster, Park Hotel, has returned from Pittsburgh, where she has been the guest for the past week of her sisters, Mrs. M. C. West and Mrs.

A. C. Anderson, ft ft ft Miss Josephine E. Rayne, of Boston, is the guest of Dr. and Mrs.

John Irwin Zerbe. Miss Rayne is head of the New England Historic and Genealogical Society, of Boston. ft ft ft Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Miller and son, Richard, of Bradford, were guests Son-day of Mr.

Miller's mother, Mrs. Rose Miller. Mrs. Miller has been seriously ill for the past five weeks but her condition shows improvement. ft ft ft Captain and Mrs.

A. H. Luce and sons, Arthur and William, of Fort Benning, are guests of Capt. Luce's parents, Mr. and Mrs.

A. L. Luce. They will sail August 9 for Panama to make their home. ft ft Mrs.

Frank H. Hitchcock has gone to Pittsburgh for a visit with her sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. H. C.

Loudenfoeck, and to witness the graduation of her daughter, Miss Christine Hitchcock, from Miss Conley's School. Mr. and Mrs. William C. Bean, of Bradford have returned to their home, after spending a week with the latter'i parents, Mr.

and Mrs. John A. Pyle, and other relatives. They were accompanied home toy their daughters, Mary and Joan, who spent the past two weeks here with relatives. ft ft ft (Mrs.

John Bennett, of East Grove, returned Sunday evening from Youngs-town, where she spent the past week with her son, Frederick W. Bennett. Mrs. Bennett, formerly Miss Ida High-field, has been seriously ill for the past two weeks and is a patient in the Northside Hospital, Toungstowa. RECENT DEATHS.

Mrs. Mary Wege, Mrs. Mary Wege died very suddenly at her home in Sunville Saturday evening at 10 o'clock, from a heart attack. Surviving aTe her husband and seven daughters: Mrs. Susan Reyimore of Mead-vlUe; (Mrs.

Elsie May, of Franklin Mrs. Florence Howes, of Franklin; Mrs. Ethel Ewing, of the Pittsburgh Road Mrs. Pearl Kots, of Wal la ceville Mrs. Alice Wygant of Hanna-ville, and Mrs.

George Seeley, of Akron, O. Also 13 grandchildren, and two brothers, William Fish, of Rouseville, and Arthur Fish, of Cranberry. The (body will remain at the G. L. Deeter funeral home, Cooperstown, where the funeral services will toe held at 2 :30 o'clock Tuesday afternoon, with Interment fallowing in the Franklin Cemetery.

Mrs. Rosetta McGlynn. Mrs. Rosetta McGlynn died on Sunday evening at midnight at the home of Mrs. A.

F. Man8berger, Grant Street, where she had been a patient for the past IS months. She is survived by her husband, John McGlynn, of Cooperstown; one eon, Hurley McGlynn, of Falrvlew, and a brother, A. George, of Freemont, O. Funeral services will be held at the Deeter Funeral Home, Cooperstown, on Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock and will be in charge of Rev.

H. R. Reagle. Interment will follow in the Cooperstown Cemetery. MARRIAGE LICENSES.

Fred Wright, Tltusvllle, and Frances Drown, of Pleasantvllle. Louis Harry Kistler, Oil City, and Grace Elizabeth Wallace, Erie. Clarence Charles McMlnn, Cochranton, and Catherine Mary Egan, Oil City. Louis James Karg, Oil City, and Rose Marie MoMahon, Oil City. Tracy S.

Bower, Franklin, and Mildred I. Goughler, Franklin. Lloyd Elmer Davis, Sugarcreek Township, and Mary Edith Cross, Sngarcreek. Roy Charles Alsbaugh, Oil City, and Helpn Lee Dowlen, Oil City. Richard M.

Cubitt, Bradford, and Geneva Davis, Bullion. Earl W. Baker, Greenville, and Mary Harakal, Greenville. Each. OPPOSE PURCHASE OF CAMP SITE AT PRESENT The Albright Brotherhood of the Grace Evangelical Church has voted unanimously' against the purchase of an Evangelical camp site at Denapsey-town.

The financial condition of the Pittsburgh conference, of which this area is a part, and ateo the cost of adequately equiplng and establishing the camp caused this action. The Brotherhood is heartily in favor of camps for Evangelical youth but feels that renting a camp site or Beading the young people to one of the camps already established will be the best procedure for this year. The Brotherhood pledged its loyal support to Camp Albright at Camp Coffman. ON WESTERN TRIP. Mrs.

Walter Bullers, teacher In the local schools, Miss Blance Dunlap, of Harrlsvllle, teacher at Xarentum and a schoolmate at Grove City College, Kiss Pearl Aunsbaugh, of Conneant Lake, Misses Elsie Hollobaugh and Edna Walters, are motoring to El Segundo, Calif. They expected to spend the week-end at Tulsa, will visit the Grand Canyon and other points of Interest en route and on the return trip will spend two days at the World's Fair. COMMUNITY BRIEFS. Mrs. Ralph Weaver and Miss Weaver are here from Scranton.

for a week's visit with relatives friends. The O. U. R. Class of the Rocky Grove Avenue Presbyterian Church meets Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs, Glenn Heffernan, Prospect Avenue, Prospect Park.

The young people of the Prestoyter-ian Church, assisted by the Sunday school orchestra, presented the religi ous drama, 'iSlmon the Leper," at the county home at Sugarcreek on Sunday afternoon. The men of the Presbylerian Church are working each evening this week, exept Wednesday, on the excavation for the new class rooms. The biggest crowds are expected Tuesday and Thursday, when the trucks will be in use. Services preparatory for communion on Sunday will be held Wednesday evening in the Presbyterian Church. No evening services will be held during July and August, the congregation joining in the union meetings in Franklin.

The Presbyterian Ladies' Society will hold Che weekly quilting Thurs day, with tureen dinner at noon. A "pot tack" supper as a house-warming for Mr. and (Mrs. Ralph Webber, and family, of Oil City and Lima, 0 was held Saturday night at their home on Rocky Grove Avenue. The occasion also celebrated the birthday anniversary of Mrs.

Webber's uncle, Frank Shaffer, of Franklin. The junior choir is to meet at 7 p. m. Tuesday in the Presbyterian Church for rehearsal. MH PHILIP PRATT Services for Philip Bradley Pratt, who died Wednesday evening were conducted at his home, 1141 Otter Street Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock.

The Odd Fellows, of which he was a member, called in a body Thursday evening to pay their respects. Services were In charge of Rev. B. E. Coleman of the First Evangelical Church.

Mrs. Lester Rosenberry and Mrs. E. Coleman sang, "Whispering Hope" and "Saved By Interment was in the Franklin Cemetery wtth the following pall-bearers: John Foster, Claude Whltmer, James Emery, Clyde Shoune, W. L.

Gillis and Bert Ferringer. The following were admitted to the Franklin Hospital on Saturday Mrs. Harley Lenney, of Reno. Mrs. Howard Atkins, Oak Hill.

Miss Virginia Quinn, 214 Eleventh Street, tonsil operation. Those discharged Saturday were: George McCnne, 417 Eleventh Street. Miss Agnes Cain, 1228 Elk Street. Mrs. Elizabeth Beatty, Uniontown Hill.

Miss Madeline Buchanan, Cooperstown. Miss Agnes Williams, 553 Grant Street. Those admitted Monday were Mrs. John Cramer, 221 Grant Street. Mrs.

Donald Reed, 746 Liberty Street, tonsil operation. Mrs. R. A. Ludwig, 425 Elk Street, returned to her home on Monday afternoon, following an operation two weeks ago.

She is getting along nicely. COUNTY RADIO OPERATORS ATTEND AMATEUR MEETING Eleven short wave radio operators and station owners from Franklin and Oil City attended the meeting of the Atlantic Division of the Amateur Radio Relay League held at the Schen-ley Hotel, Pittsburgh Friday and Saturday. George Moyer, of Rocky Grove, won a filter condenser, one of several prizes awarded durinf the interesting session. About 400 fans attended the convention and banquet, enjoying the speakers and Instructors and a visit to the research laboratory in Pittsburgh. The convention will be held nest year at Syracuse, N.

T. Anyone Interested In short wave radio work is welcome at the homes any of the local operators at any time. ALL BULOVA WATCHES AT REDUCED PRICES $24.7515 Jewel Wrist Watches $29.7515 Jewel Wrist Watches $37.50 Baguette and Sport Watches $29.75 All Other Models at the Same Reductions, Trade In Your Old Watch. Highest Prices Paid for Old Gold. GENERAL TRUCKDNG AT REASONABLE RATES With Service and Reliability We haul anything at any time by the pound, cubic yard, or hour.

No job is too large or too small for us. S. T. Karns Sons Co. Phone 87 Established 1867 Franklin, Pa.

AAA to E-4 to 10 0 STORE Wedding Rings. Rising Star Charming, redheaded Clnnle Barnes, daughter of a London "bobble," has Just got to Hollywood, and already predictions re made for her success in American Aims. She's had experience on the stage and is scheduled to take the feminine lead In a new movie here. GRANT OF 310,431 18 MADE TO PENNSYLVANIA WASHINGOTON, June 23. UP Relief grants of 110,401 to Pennsylvania pr authorised by the Federal Emergency Relief Administration.

The grant to Pennsylvania was for financing resident schools for women In June. The census of 1030 gave Alaska a population of 58,738, an increase of 64 per cent, over the figure for 1020. teiiiif 1 Jordan's Engagement Rings, Patronize Tour CLOVER FARM STORES Shawkey Mook Co Polk. Walter Antoske, Oil City. Try OsrlleitszxdGreceries National Market lttl Libert? Street FraokUa, Pa.

JOE PASTOR SPECIALS Fresh Plums, lb. 10c Watermelons, large she We Fresh Asparagus, big bunch Leaf Lettuce, lb 15 Tomatoes, 3 lbs 3c Post Toasties or Jersey Cornflakes, pkg. Me Pork and Beans, 3 big 25c Our Quality Coffee, lb. Me JOCPAOTOO St Phone 232 Smart 1934 PERMANENT WAVES Styled to please you. Reflecting the present mode of elegance and guaranteed not to injure the most delicate textures of hair.

Large, Small or Medium Waves $5.00 and $7.50 LULU P. SHAW BEAUTY SALON Phone 1013 TONIGHT Sugarcreek Jack Miles and His Band of Bands Admission 55c each BARGAIN NIGHT THURSDAY Gents JOr Ladles 15c MRS. BRAKE'S MM Services In memory of Mrs. Emma McDaniel Drake were held at the late home in Wayne Township, near Deck-ard at 2 p. m.

Sunday, with Rev. Ira Oass. pastor of the Deckards Reformed Church, officiating. The attendance was the largest ever known on a similar occasion in that commnnlty. attesting to the high esteem In which she was held.

Those in atendance from a distance were Mrs. Milton Peck, of Ford City Mrs. Harry Welsh, of Natrona, and Mr. and Mrs. William Sherls, of Templeton.

The minister read the hymn, "Abide With Me." Interment was made In the Cochranton Cemetery, Elmer Relslnger, Jason Kllppel. Olenn Hoffman, Arthur lloutt, Lester Hollataogh and Rnlph Amos assisting as tearer QUAKE Ct'T OFT POOL WATER. ELKO. Nev. UP The local muni cipal awlmming pool la having its troubles.

An earthquake apparently caused the flow from a hot water spring, which led the pool, to stop. Efforts are being made to tap the spring nt a lower level. CAN YOU IMAGINE" the qrotitude of the mon in Kankokee.lll., who oftcr suffering for 15 upon frnm fomnrh tmiiM wos positively relieved by BISMA-REXf Before he used this product the press4 ure of qas against his heart made I it necessary for his wife to turn hist in bed so he could breathe. I BATHING CAPS 19c 10 49c FILMS-GOLF BALLS Gaamnteed to peel callomses off eatMly Asaior Juryi LlcGURE Ml REXALL DRUG STOKE Franklin, Pa. Phone 25.

We Deliver. Fes Fri rd Grccro THE 7TOTE COSS Car. lk Ct smt Av A WINDOWFVL OF LARGE SILVER PIECES and SETS At $2.95 if Bacon Squares lb. 12c 14 inch Meat Platter with Serving Fork. 9 inch round Bowl with Serving Spoon.

Set of 4 Dessert Dishes to go in refrigerator ice drawer. Many other marvelous values, you must see them. FEILMvlAEPO -1.

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 News-Herald Archive

Pages Available:
271,493
Years Available:
1886-1972