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The Express from Lock Haven, Pennsylvania • Page 2

Publication:
The Expressi
Location:
Lock Haven, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

fcifw November 18, Express, loch Haven, Pa HOSPITALS LOCK HAVEN we allowecl "absolutely Fred K. Walker. Canal noovisi removal of a splinter in his right Hewasdischarged. Ave. admissions: Mrs.

Samuelson. 663 Belle- ven State College, injured his left ankleplaving basketball. Allen G. Sharp. 26 Pineview Drive.

Flemington. fell down steps at home injuring his left hand. Paul E. Andrus. Mill Hall.

R.D. 2. scratched his right wrist. -------Gerald R. Glunt.

Mt. Union dau 8 hl er. E. Clinton was injured when a hose Holl Miller. 9.

daughter of Mr. exploded, injuring his left arm and Mrs. Earl Miller, R.D. 1. Howard.

Discharged Gray. 2, son of Mr. Mrs. James R. Gray.

25 Hickory Park. Beech Creek. Discharged: Miss Viola Hartzell. Susquehanna Mrs. Charles C.

Colucci. and infant 1 and hand. David W. Peters. Blanchard.

cut his head when he was struck by a tree. Mrs. Robert Hendricks. 348 Linden Circle, cut her left index finger with a knife. Hubert Parker, acting city engineer, who had been a patient in the Intensive Coronary Care Unit at the Lock Haven Hospital from EC Unit: Mrs.

Mary J. Masden. Howard. CENTRE COUNTY Discharged: Carl Snook. Milesburg.

JERSEY SHORE Admitted: Melvin Fiedler, Mill Hall R.D.: Laura Woodhouse. Slate Run: Peggy Clark. Waterville: Susan Soderlund, Lock Haven Island Oscar since he suffered a massive attack several weeks Wurs ter. 338 Thompson Jer- coronarv ago. has been transferred from the unit to the medical floor of the hospital.

However, although his family reports he is doing Births Bromberg Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Bromberg, 75 Second are the parents of a son born today at 2:40 a.m. in the Lock Haven Hospital.

Mrs. Bromberg is the former Cynthia Gaff in. Rossman Mr. and Mrs. Ira C.

Rossman, Loganton, R.D. 2, are the parents of a daughter born today at 1:33 a.m. in the Lock Haven Hospital. Mrs. Rossman is the former Martha Tressler.

Fry A daughter, their first child, was born at 5 a.m. today sey Shore: Hamilton Nichols, Avis: Michael Johnson, Lock R.D. 1: Theresa Lucas, Jersey Shore Star Rt. Discharged: Edna Engel, Williamsport R.D. 3: Harry Willits.

1549Vz Allegheny Jersey Shore: Emma Whitton, Watervine: Lloyd Bremigen, 339 Poplar Jersey Shore; Alice Jameson, Lock Haven Star Mary Hettinger, 427 Maple Jersey Shore: Wayne Carson, Avis: Cathy Fleisher, 105 Locust Jersey Shore: Eleanor Kerns. Antes Fort. DIVINE PROVIDENCE Admitted: Lawrence Stout, Renovo Star Clarence Bissman, Rocco Apts, Seventh Renovo: John Earner, 114 S. Main Jersey Shore. Discharged: Mrs.

Ruth Harvey, 401 Mackey Castanea. GEISINGER Admitted: Robert J. Klewans, 46 W. Water Lock Haven. Jack Halstead, formerly ot Lock Haven now caster, to Mr.

and Mrs. Robert lives in Raleigh, N.C. is a patient Fry 1544 Euclid Drive Lan- in the Wake Memoria caster. The mother is the former Linda Miller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

J. Willard Miller of Lock Haven. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Norman Fry, Lock Haven.

Long A son was born 4:50 this morning in Jersey Shore Hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Long, 122 Fountain Jersey Shore. The mother is the former Judith Beach. there.

He is in 2 9. WILLIAMSPORT Admitted: Arthur Rinker, 810 Flemington. Discharged: Mrs. Carrie Grugan, 401 Allegheny Jersey Shore: Richard Geraty, 337 S. Washington Lock Haven: Theodore Rote, Avis; Miss Amy Young, 343 Thompson Jersey Shore: Ralph Yearick, Mill Hall R.D.

Mrs. Grace Stabner and baby, 420 S. Fairview Lock Haven. Jacobs A daughter, who has been named Jody Lynne, was born Saturday genaurach, Germany, cialist 5 and Mrs Jacobs. The mother mer Judy Quigg of Flemington, daughter of Mrs.

Lee R. Quigg. Noy ARe Schoo Paternal grandparents are Mr. 8 a to and Mrs. Paul E.

Jacobs of arents re rt dren's classrooms for a "Mim- Castanea, for whom this is a first essnn grandchild. Mrs. Paul Jacobs NOV. 18 Community Service who flew to Germany for the Association Board of Directors birth of the baby, has returned meeting 7:30 p.m. at the office, home, after extending her stay to 123 Bellefonte Ave.

Nov. 18 Women of the Moose m. TWO ART SHOWS AT COLLEGE Two art exhibits are currently on view at the Lock Haven State College, one at Raub Hall, the other in the Stevenson Library. At left bottom, Paula Haag of the class of 1970 is looking at part of the exhibit of etchings by the Lock Haven-born artist, John Sloan, whose etchings and oils are now to be seen at the Ross Library and the college library, in Lock Haven, and at the library of the Williamsport Area Community College and the Lycoming County Historical Museum in Williamsport. Above, a painting entitled "Self Portrait" is examined by a visitor to the one- man show of work by Stanislaus Wisniewski, who is spending next semester at the college filling a post in the art department during the sabbatical leave of Dr.

Myrrl Kreiger. await Jody's late arrival. GOP women for disarming talks HARRISBURG (AP) A call for disarmament discussions with world powers topped a list of resolutions announced today by the Pennsylvania Council of Republican Women. The appearance of the resolu- SlOdll onore fl N.Y., here on Friday executive meeting 7 p.m. regular Mrs.

John Sloan, who was the of the publication of John Sloan's meeting 8 p.m. nonored guest Tuesday evening Nov. 19 Cub Pack No. 64 at he Kraushaar Galleries in meeting 7 p.m. in Parish House, New York, at a reception by the Great Island Presbyterian Kraushaar Galleries and the Church.

Yale University Press, in honor Nov. 20 Alpine Star Lodge meeting Sons of Italy 8 p.m. Bring tureen. Nov. 20 American Red 20 Cross, board of directors meeting 7 p.m.

Nov. 20 AAUW meeting 7:30 p.m. in Head Start room Soviet denounced for silence on UN seat tions marked the group's here. the f.nal TOKYO (AP) China denounced the Soviet Un- Prints, by the Yale Press, will also a special guest this week in Williamsport and Lock Haven. Thursday evening she will be honored at a reception at the Lycoming county Historical Society in Williamsport, where a special showing of John Sloan's oil landscapes and portraits is on view.

Friday evening she will be at the Stevenson Library at the Communist Lock Haven State College where a selection of Sloan etchings is i OHIIM UCIJUUIJLtU UlC OUVJCU UIl- UJ a day of at Penn School "A Sensitivity ion today for not speaking out in being exhi bited. Awaronocc Koccinn annual conven- Awareness Session." Nov. 20 WSCS, First United Methodist Church meeting in a so lounge of Christian Education asked that ''the United States building 7:30 p.m. Clair Reeder, never again be involved in mill- probation officer will discuss tary action by decision of the The ris0 ner, the Individual, The peace resolution -j A 1I1C iiauiici, me individual. President alone and called for the Meeting open of collaborating with ITS a a i Nationalist China and the United States to get the world ho accept the existence of two Chinas.

The comment by Hsinhua, the New China News Agency, was its behalf during the U.N. debate A selection of early oil land- which once again failed to get scapes by Sloan is on exhibit at Peking an invitation to join the United Nations. The Red Chinese accused the U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam "as outlined in the proposal of President Nixon." "We cannot have peace and continue to multiply the tools of war," the resolution said. "We believe war to be totally immoral." to public.

Nov. 20 American Cancel Society, executive board meeting 7:30 p.m. Nov. 21 Veterans of World War I meeting at V.F.W. post home 2 p.m.

installation of officers. Peking's first official expression on its rejection this year. lobby gallery at the Ross Library in addition to the permanent collection in the Sloan room there. Mrs. Sloan has made long term loans or to the college library, the Annie Halenbake Ross Library, and Williamsport Community College Library, of examples of her husband's work.

Born in Lock Haven in 1871, John Sloan achieved great emin- Nov. 26, United Fund's new 'get-it-done day' A rapid wrap-up is the goal of the lock Haven Area United Fund. Next Wednesday at 10 a.m. has been set as a new deadline for final tabulations, so a goal- shattering performance can be related in that night's paper. General campaign chairman Dale O.

Stahl has urged has division chairman to this concerted pre-Thanksgiving effort. Statistics at a meeting of division chairmen Monday, ence as an etcher and painter, and the centennial of his birth will be widely marked next year. The publication of John Sloan's Prints, a catalogue of etchings, lithographs and posters, compiled by Peter Morse of the Smithsonian Institution staff in Washington, D.C., is one of several special publications related to his work which have 1970 a PPeared this year. Take fire to station THOMASVILLE, Ga. (AP) goal pledged or collected.

That's more are nearing their 57 percent of the target. quotas. First division to go over Industrial Division chairman the top was State Employees, Peter J. Chomyn, said headed by Harry F. Boring Jr.

of campaigning is nearly the Lock Haven office of the completed at Hammermil) Bureau of Employment Security. Paper Piper Aircraft Also turning in a record Corporation, and Clinton Paper, performance was the Clubs and This city's fire department His estimates indicate the new Organization Division directed didn't have to go to one fire re- year's performance will top a by P. Robert Moriarty. cently. The fire came to it.

year ago in each of the Those attending the United A city garbage truck, flames industries. Final returns from Fund meeting Monday were Mr. pouring from the rear, pulled up each are expected appreciably Stahl, Mr. Chomyn, Mr. to the fire station.

Firemen boost the effort. Moriarty, Robert J. Grossman, dashed from the station and James K. Connor, Glenn R. extinguished the blaze The gar, vlslons have surpassed Tweed, Chester P.

McMinn, and bage truck continued on its GOP seeks replacement for Cross as Justice Read Express Republican committeemen and committeewomen and members of the GOP Advisory Committee have been asked to make recommendations of someone to take the post of Study jail reform bills HARRISBURG (AP) A package of prison reform bills, including a measure to allow temporary release of prisoners to go to school or college, is now before the Senate Judiciary Committee. Sen. Richard A. Snyder, R- Lancaster, author of the measures and head of the Senate prisons task force, found bi-partisan support for the legislation, which he introduced Monday. Snyder said the education-release measure would parallel the present system of work-release for prisoners who were convicted of non-violent crimes.

He said the measure "holds great promise for rehabilitation of prisoners." Another measure in the package would remove the court's right to order work-release for longer-term convicts. Two others would end the State Welfare Department's practice of confining hard-core juvenile delinquents with convicted criminals at Camp Hill Correctional Institution. Seek action on pesticides HARRISBURG (AP) LEgis- lation restricting the use of DDT and other harmful pesticides was moved Monday into position for floor action later this month. The two-bill package, introduced only last Friday by Rep. Brady Hetrick, D-Mifflin, was reported out of the House Agriculture Committee Monday after minor amendments.

The swift action comes only one week after reports that the Nixon administration is moving toward an outright ban on the sale of DDT. Rather than bar sale of DDT or any other pesticide, Hetrick's legislation would prohibit sale or use of the chemical or any other determined by the state to be "highly toxic" without a license from the state secretary of agriculture. The bills would establish a Pesticide Advisory Board to determine which chemicals are to be considered dangerous. The licenses would not be required for farmers applying DDT to their own land, landscape gardeners working on private gardens or homeowners applying pesticides to their own lawns or gardens. John F.

Laudadio, chairman of the House Conservation Committee, said he also would support the legislation. "Perhaps these bills are not as strict as some conservationists believe necessary," said Laudadio. "But this legislation takes a long step forward. If, after we have some experience with these bills, we find they are not adequate, we can always strengthen the measures." The state itself, once one of the biggest users of DDT, has discontinued use of it indefinitely because of fears over its residual effects on animals and people. magistrate in the second magisterial district of the county.

An appointment will be necessary since E.J. Cross of Mill Hall, who was unopposed at the recent election, has now indicated that he does not intend to serve. Dr. Earl L. Lentz county Republican chairman, in a letter to officials of the oarty in the second district, said that Gov.

Shafer will make an appointment to the justice post. Since the governor's appointment will likely follow the recommendation of the county committee, Dr. Lentz has asked the committemen and committewomen and members of the Advisory Committee to suggest names. Vo-Tech dedication held Sunday PLEASANT GAP The Centre County Vocational-Technical School here was dedicated Sunday afternoon to the 600 former school directors in the County's four districts as a living monument. The school, financed with $3,117,000 of federal, state, and Appalachia funds, has been in use one year, and cost about $4.5 million.

Fred L. Hoffman, president of the Centre County Board of Education, said the dedication "marked a dream realized for the cooperation of the four county school districts on such a project." Other speakers included William T. Schmidt, deputy secretary of commerce; Rep. Albert T. Johnson; T.

Elwood Sones, Centre County Superintendent of Schools, and John C. Henry, chairman of the Vocational- Technical School Authority. Taxaction unit in Washington WASHINGTON (AP) The formation of National Taxac- tion, was announced today as a non-profit organization of taxpayers and taxpayer organizations with the declared aim of providing a voice in Washington for "the guy who pays the bill." Elected president was Col. L. Robert Castorr, retired army officer and former executive of the United States Chamber of Commerce and regional supervisor of the National Federation of Independent Business.

Castorr said the so-called revolt of the taxpayers is "the greatest grassroots movement of our times." Taxpayer pressure cannot bring instant tax relief, he said in a statement, but "can slow the spending spree and over a period of time can restore fiscal responsibility." Taxaction's 18-member board of governors includes Dr. Emerson P. Schmidt, former chief economist of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce; E. Edward Stephens, tax lawyer and columnist; Arthur B.

Brandt Bloomfield Hill, Dr. William Steuart McBirnie, Glendale, and Dr. Hans Senn- holz, economist at Grove City College, Pa. PARTY NIGHT wl5 45 DUNNSTOWN FIRE CO of the $123,736 goals of a year ago, while several Violet Walker. rounds.

easy RIDER is me one HELD OVER! "ONE OF THE MOST MEMORABLE EVER PRODUCED IN THE U.S.!"-^ -VOGUE "ONE OF THE MOST IMPORTANT EVER MADE IN AMERICA!" -GANNETT NEWS SERVICE "ONE OF THE YEAR'S BEST!" -BOSTON AFTER DARK "ONE OF THE MOST POWERFUL EVER -VILLAGE VOICE "ONE OF THE SURPRISE HITS OF THE YEAR!" -ESQUIRE RMHI 111 PHOOUCIlONS p.f FONDA GARDEN Time: 7 A9P.M. Restricted Mting RATINO ROXY 74B-S606 DOUBLE FEATURE SHOW TIME 7:15 Dl II I ITT FIRST FEATURE 7 40 DULL I I I A Hard Tough Detective Drama Starring STEVE McQUEBN BONNIE and CLYDE STARRING FAYE DUNWAY and WARREN BEATTY PUASl NQTlflATUKt TIMt BODY SHOP Just Off Old Route 220 At The Pine Creek Ex it COMPLETE BODY PAINT SERVICE FREE ESTIMATES AT ALL TIMES ALL WORK GUARANTEED PHONE 753-3773 "Your Satisfaction Is Our Reputation" ANNUAL THANKSGIVING DAY DINNER SUPPER At The Walker Twp. Fire Hall of Hublersburg, Pa. Sponsored by fhe Trinity United Church of Christ Serving 11 A.M. To 7 P.M.

Adults: 2.00 Children: 1.00 Under 4: Free TURKEY ALL TRIMMINGS Served Family Style BEN Players present "HARVEY" Comedy In 3 Acts November 21-22 at 8 P.M. erf BEN HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM General Admission 1.00 Elementary 50c BUCKTAIL TRAIL INN "OLD COUNTRY CLUB" North, off Rt. 120 up Young Woman's Crook Thanksgiving Dinner in "THE DINING ROOM ABOVE IT ALL" We will terve a full course turkey dinner at 12 noon and again at 2 p.m. We will seat only 48 at each serving are a must. Pleate call before 6 p.m.

Monday, Nov. 24. Complete dinner $2.75. There will be no charge for children under S. Col's Bar will open at 1 1 A.M.

and Close of 5 p.m., Thanksgiving Day. tall Alice 923-1 119 Cal' STARTING THANKSGIVING through DEC. 23 tht BAR will op.n at 11 A.M. We Will Be Closed Iron Dtc. 24th (EXCEPT Ntw Evt) until February 1st.

Call about Now YMrtEvo 923-1119.

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About The Express Archive

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