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The Evening Times from Sayre, Pennsylvania • Page 8

Publication:
The Evening Timesi
Location:
Sayre, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE EIGHT THE EVENING TIMES, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1964 Sayre, Athens, South Waverly, and Waverfy, N.Y. Salvation Army One of the Agencies Waverly State Police Investigate 4 Accidents, Direct Traffic 2 Hours 7 i Community Chest Cullen Upheld By Superior Court In Pittsburgh Case The Superior Court of Pennsylvania Bush Is Named Chief Engineer By E-L Railroad CLEVELAND, Robert F. Bush has been appointed chief engineer of the Erie Lackawanna Railroad and Willard A. Swartz had been named engineer maintenance of way, effective Oct. 1, G.

W. Maxwell, vice president, announced today. A native of Elmira, Mr. Bush was employed by the former Lackawanna Railroad in i945 and advanced to assistant engineer in 1946. Subsequently, he became supervisor of east side of Waverly Hill when the rig quit on him.

A safety device in case of emergency locked the brakes and they could not be released. The trailer had to be lowered, the tractor towed away and another brought from Elmira before the rig could continue on its way. Troopers had to direct traffic-around the rig until 1:45 this morning. An Athens man was arrested shortly after an accident at 3:15 this morning for leaving the scene of an accident. Waverly state police reported that a tractor- trailer, driven east on Route 17 by John W.

Morris, 33, of Hudson, N.Y., RD 1, had the left turn signal on to turn into Jane's Diner, east of Waverly on Route 17. As the rig was making the turn, a car attempted to pass on the right and struck the right rear of the trailer with the left front of the car. Arrested at a ncarbv restaurant LBJ WITH A BEDSIDE MANNER President Johnson pauses in his whirlwind New England campaign tour to visit Sen. Ted Kennedy ui Boston. The senator's wife Joan seems pleased with Lha visit, too.

Kennedy suffered a broken back in an has sustained Judge James W. Cullen of Bradford County in the sentencing of an Allegheny County youth to six months in the Allegheny County Workhouse following a trial last spring while Judge Cullen was pre siding in Allegheny County Court. The defendant, Stephen J. Dulacey, was indicted on charges of statutory rape and corrupting the morals of a minor, a 15-year-old girl. At the trial before Judge Cullen, the jury found Dulacey, aged 20, guilty of immoral act and corrupting the morals of a minor.

The defendant filed a motion for an arrest of judgment and motion for a new trial. Argument on the motion was heard by court en banc (Judge Cullen, Judge Richard C. Sny der and Judge J. Frank Graff.) The motion was denied and the next day xn'ence was imposed. Defense counsel took an appeal to the Superior Court of Pennsylvania which has denied it, sustaining the Bradford County jurist.

The opinion dismissing (he appeal is written by Justice Watkins. Cadette Scouts To Register Cadet Girl Scouts and Junior Fly-ups will meet at the Sayre Central Grade School next Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock, for registration. All girls who vill become Cadettes or remain Cadettes must register at this meeting. Scouts must be accompanied by a parent. Leaders are Mrs.

Alma Waltman and Mrs. Esther Jones. Wysox Mrs. Roy Williams Correspondent rhone 265-3907 Miss Marion Wells and some friends were visiting in Watkins Glen and Irelandville recently. Mr.

and Mrs. Roy Williams and daughter were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. David Wiggins and famiy at Waterloo, N.Y. Mr.

Wiggins is a history teacher at the high school there and was formerly of Monroeton. Mrs. Sara Schafer of East To-wanda is a patient at Towanda Memorial Hospital. The Towanda High School Marching Band has been invited to Peln State University Oct. 3.

Garn Campbell, Jr. and family of Avon, N.Y. was calling on relatives in this vicinity Saturday, Mr. Campbell was a former resident of Wysox township. Directors of French Azilium, met Tuesday evening at the muse um-.

James Glenn of Towanda, has enrolled as a freshman at Allegheny College at Meadville, Pa. Mr. and Mrs. Harod Crowford of Myersburg were calling recently in LcRaysville and Pottorville. The Wysox Presbyterian church is sponsoring weekday religious classes for the 4th, 5th, and 6th grades of the Wysox School on Wednesdays from 11 to 12.

This program was carried out last year and was well received by parents and children alike. The classes are taught by Mrs. Irving Waltman, Mrs. Andrew Springer for 4th grade, Mrs. Leon Wizelman and Rev.

William Watson for 5th grade and sixth grade by Rev. Harry Ferguson, pastor of the church. The engagement of Miss Shirley Bruce, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Randolph Bruce of Black, to Rob ert Bixby, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Harold Bixby of Kingsbury Towanda, has been announced. A summer wedding is being planned. That Benefit from The Salvation Army Is one of the agencies which benefits from the Community Chest. The house-to-house campaign will start in Waverly on Monday.

Salvation Army services during the past year covered practically every human need. Hundreds of unfortunate citizens were extended the help ing hand of the Salvation Army, which provided grocery orders, fuel orders, clothing and shoes, dental and optical care, temporary hous ing, transient assistance with meals and clothing, as well as local fam ilies provided with Christmas dinner and their children with toys. Fifteen local underprivileged chil dren were given a 12-day vacation at the Salvation Army Camp in Up land, Pa. Hundreds of local children took ad vantage of the character building program of the Salvation Army and hundreds of shut-ins were visited by the Army workers and given gifts at Christmas. Emergency workers in the area, such as firemen and police, know Charge Canton Man in Accident An Elmira woman was injured in a car-pedestrian accident Friday night at 8:33 at Lake and E.

Water Sts. and the driver of the car was charged with failing to yield the right of way to a pedestrian. Treated at St. Joseph's Hospital and discharged was Mrs. Joyce Baker, 24, who sustained a possible left knee injury.

The driver, David P. Wynne, 62, of Canton, was arrested. He was released on $20 bail for appearance in court next Friday. Wynne is street superintendent of the borough of Canton. Police said Wynne was driving east on E.

Water St. and turning north on Lake St. when the bumper of his car brushed Mrs. Baker, who was crossing Lake St. in the crosswalk area.

None Injured in Two Accidents The Tioga County Sheriff's Department investigated two accidents Friday night with no injuries reported in either one. At 8:30 Walter K. Lynn, 33, of Kalamazoo, was driving west on Devil's Elbow Hill and pulled into the eastbound lane to pass a tractor-trailer when he saw oncoming cars. He stepped on the gas, but his car shifted into a lower gear causing the car to skid off the south side of the highway, striking and breaking six guard rails, and traveling 90 feet. The driver was arrested for changing lanes unsafely and appeared be fore Justice of the Peace Roy Tred- eau of the Town of Tioga where he pleaded guilty and was fined $10.

At 11:10, George R. Avery, 17, of Apalachin RD 1, was driving east on Route 17 near Apalachin and had on his right turn signal ready to swing into his driveway. A car driven by Paul Miner of Binghamton, directly behind the Avery car, could not pass on the left because of oncoming traffic and applied his brakes, skidding into the rear of the Avery car. At Least 20 (Continued from Page 1) higher would extend as far eastward as Mobile, by late tonight. The twister that struck Larose skipped across the Inter-coastal canal and hit the center of the community.

One house was split in two and the roofs were ripped off at least four houses. Household goods were scattered nearly a mile as the tornado cut a path some 200 yards wide in the town of 5,000. A Navy doctor airlifted to Larose by a Coast Guard helicopter pronounced 12 persons dead at the scene. A Coast Guard spokesman said civil authorities removed "an undetermined number of bodies" before the helicopter arrived. Lafourche Parish Coroner Dr.

Philip Robichaux said 35 persons injured at Larose had been rushed to Raceland "and more are on the way." Gov. John McKeithen ordered an emergency 200-bed Civil Defense hospital opened up at Raceland to treat the injured. Hurricane winds battered Larose, making rescue work difficult. Civil Defense and National Guardsmen rushed to the area. An emergency call for additional heavy equipment bulldozers and draglines-was made so debris could be removed from the town of 5,000.

Olher tornadoes were reported at Golden Meadow and Galliano In the same general vicinity. More than 150 persons fled coast al Louisiana to the safety of inland shelters in an exodus unmatched in the history of this Deep South state. A Waverly state police were kept busy investigating four accidents and directing traffic for two hours last night and early this morning when a tractor-trailer broke down. There were no injuries reported in any of the accidents. They were as follows, police said: At 10.05 Friday night on Route 17 on Waverly Hill, a taxi driven by John R.

Morris, 35, of 154 Desmond Sayre, was traveling east on Route 17 when a westbound car entered the east bound lane of traf fic and struck the taxi in the left front and side. The car then kept driving west without stopping. Trooper T. J. Wido is continuing the investigation.

A young Nichols man miraculous ly escaped injury in a scooter-car accident at 10:45 Friday night on Route 17, east of Ellis Curve. Police reported that a car, driven by Mrs. Hazel Mullen of 508 Stev enson Sayre, had backed from a driveway onto Route 17 and was halfway around when Gary R. Rolfe, 17, of 35 W. River Drive, Nichols, driving east on Route 17, struck the Mullen car in the left front fender.

Rolfe said he did not see the car as it backed from the drive. Rolfe was thrown from the motor scooter and, apparently because he was dressed heavily for the weather, was uninjured. Troopers J. E. Cleveland and J.

B. Williams investigated. At 11:50 Friday evening a tractor-trailer driven by Alva Crumpler, 360 W. Third Elmira, was on the University (Continued from Page 1) dents erupted Wednesday when eight students were expelled for ignoring the campus ban on political activities involving off-campus causes. Several hundred students staged a sit-in outside the dean of students' office Wednesday to protest the expulsions.

On Thursday morning Weinberg was arrested. As campus police attempted to drive Weinberg away from the Administration Building in front of which he had been soliciting funds thousands of students gathered. Some threw themselves in fronnt and behind the patrol car, preventing it from moving. Others mounted the roof and hood of the captive car to make anti-administration speeches. Later Thursday several hundred students stormed Into the Administration Building.

They at first repelled police efforts to evict them but later left of their own accord. Burdick (Continued from Page 1) moted to the position of district manager at Corry, in 1957. Two years later he became Sayre Division Manager. A native of Waterford, Burdick attended high school there and subsequenuy attended Purdue University. In Sayre, he has been active in civic affairs and activities in Chamber of Commerce, which he served as president and director, the Valley Economic Development Association, which he served as president and director.

At the present time he is president of the Sayre Rotary Club. He has served other organizations including Fire Engine Company No. 1, Valley Chamber of Commerce, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Sayre Ambulance Corps, EBcs, Bradford and Sullivan Council 779, Boy Scouts of America. He is a member of the Shepard Hills Country Club. With his wife, Patricia, and their four children, he will become a resi dent of the Johnstown area in his new position.

Secret (Continued from Pagt 1) journed last Wednesday without issuing any indictments. The state grand jury, which could return murder indictments, complained that the FBI had not cooperated. The victims James Chaney, 21, a Negro from Meridian, and two white men, Andrew Goodman, 20, and Michael Schwerner, 24, both of New York vanished June 21 while investigating the burning of a Negro church near this central Mississippi town. The dead were found Aug. 4 when an informer pinpointed the location.

Then the FBI moved in with a tractor and a dragline. The bodies were dug out of a new watershed dam. Spy Trial (Continued from Page 1) government as a double agent, and bis identity was treated with top secrecy until the trial began in court. The defense succeeded in obtaining his name and "tome address from the government, despite bitter objections, along with the names of 75 FBI agents. Brodsky said he alone had seen the list, which he turned back to the fovernmenL the value of a hot cup of coffee, a sandwich or a bowl of soup on a cold, winter's night when out pro tecting life and property.

The Salva tion Army has been at the scene dispensing these services. Several local unwed mothers were cared for at the Booth Memorial Hospital in Philadelphia. It can be said that the Salvation Army is so versatile that no problem is too great for the Army be it spiritual, physical or material needs and the Salvation Army is on call 24 hours a day, ready and willing to assist those in need. 4H Sheep Unit To Hold Meeting Tioga County 4-H Sheep group will hold its annual meeting next Thurs day evening from 8 until 9 o'clock at the 4-H Office, 175 Front Owe go. Persons interested In learning more about sheep or would like to try raising sheep are welcome to at tend.

It was announced that the unit will again order sheep for those interest ed in starting a sheep project this fall. The cost of requirements for this project and the facilities needed to raise sheep will be outlined at this meeting. Past years 4-H activities and the summarizing of 4-H sheep records will be reviewed at the meeting. Announcements concerning ar rangements for having ewes bred will be made at this time. Valley Folks You Know Athens Mrs.

Howard Hunsinger of Athens is a patient at the Tioga General Hospital and not Howard Hunsinger as was reported. Lt. and Mrs. Gary Tiffany and son Mark, are visiting their parents Mr. and Mrs.

Earl Tiffany, 753 S. Main Athens and Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Craig of Big Pond before leaving for Biloxi, Miss, where Lt. Tiffany will enter school.

Youth Killed in Kirkwood Crash KIRKWQOD, N. Y. (AP) Charles Williams, 21, of Kingsley, was killed early today when the automobile in which he was riding skidded on wet pavement on Route 11 and crashed into a tree in this community south of Binghamton. Sheriff's deputies said two other persons in the car were injured, neither Datebook MAR-SING CLASS of the Athens Methodist Church will meet this evening at 6:30 o'clock for a covered dish supper. Dr.

Jose Gutierrez will be the guest speaker. A nursery will be provided. WAVERLY BAND BOOSTERS will meet Monday evening at 8 o'clock in the Muldoon Junior High School Home Economics room; BRADFORD COUNTY Regents Club of the Daughters of the American Revolution will meet Tuesday, Oct. 13, at the Towanda Motel. Luncheon at 12:30.

Births Ford Born to SP4 John C. and Judith Havens Ford of Camp Drum Army Base, Watertown, N.Y.. a son, Stephen John, Thursday, Oct. 1 at the Watertown Hospital. Both parents are former Athens residents.

Tioga General Dougherty Born to Clyde and Lena Chrysler Dougherty of Candor, N.Y., RD 1, a daughter this morning. Geese Flying South James K. Stone of 426 S. Keystone Sayre, reported this morning that he saw a large flock of geese going south about 10 o'clock. They were flying in a southeasterly direction.

BUS SCHEDULE TRI-BORO TRANSPORTATION INCORPORATED MAIN LINE HOUWL1 SERVICE First bus leaves Athene 0:30 A.M.: first bus leaves Sayre for Waverly 6:45 first bus leaves Waverly tor Sayre and Athens 7 A.M.; first bus leaves Sayre lor wntni A.M.; nourly service remainder of day. Route Buses g9 West on Chemung street at 7, 8. 9. 10. 12.

2, 4, and i o'clock and East on Chemung street II. 1, 3 and i o'clock. A Extension Meetings TIOGA COUNTY October 6 Bornt Hill, 7 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Howard Curkendall.

Town Country, 8 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Anne Noble, 31 Adaline Owego. Lesson on early adolescence. October 7 Candor Evening, 8 p.m.

at the home of Mrs. Margaret Manzer, 118 McMaster Owego. Lesson on five figure types by the County Home Demonstration Agent, Miss Engel-brecht. Lovely Vale, 8 p.m. at the home of Julia Kern.

Lesson on Pressing Equipment. G. L. 8 p.m. at the home of Eudora Shuler.

Lesson on early adolescence. Barton Day, 12 noon at the home of Mary Horvath. Lesson on early adolescence. October 8 South Candor, 1:00 p.m. at the home of Marian Anderson.

Lesson on early adolescence. Lounsberry, dinner meeting at noon at the home of Mrs. Raymond Berry. Lesson, early adolescence. Bucknam, 1 o'clock at the home of Mrs.

Thomas Chaffee. Lincolnshire Leaneis, 8 p.m. at the home of Muriel Burky. Lesson on early adolescence. South Newark, noon at the home of Mrs.

Roger Snapp. Lesson on fabric finishes. Effie Bracken, Former Waverly Resident, Dies Mrs. Effie Bracken, 87, of 20 Bay-less Yorkville, N. formerly of Waverly, died Thursday at St.

Luke's Hospital in Utica following an illness of several Mrs. Bracken had been residing at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Eleanor Ingersoll of Yorkville. Born at Interlaken, June 23, 1877, the daughter of George and Eliza Wilson Stout, she had resided in Waverly for over 30 years before leaving for Yorkville. Surviving are a son, Francis of Waverly; four daughters, Mrs.

Anna Banfield of Wraverly; Mrs. Effie Dutcher of Cortland; Mrs. Josephine Rippard of New York City and Mrs. Ingersoll of Yorkville, with whom she was residing; 18 grandchiHren; several great grandchildren and several great great grandchildren. The body is at the Heintz Funeral Home in Utica whe.e funeral serv-ifes w'U be held Monday morning at 10 o'clock.

Burial will be in Utica. track in 1948; inspector maintenance of way, 1950; engineer maintenance of way, 1953, and was promoted to chief engineer at Hoboken. N. J. in 1959.

In 1960 when the Erie and Lackawanna railroads merged, he was appointed a-sistant chief en- gineer-staff, Cleveland, Ohio. In 1963 he was placed in charge of maintenance of tracks and Bush is a graduate of Pennsyl vania State College with a degree in civil engineering. Swartz started his railroad career with the Lackawanna in 1953 at Scranton. Subsequently he was advanced to supervisor of track, 1954; engineer maintenance of way, 1955, and engineer of track in 1956 at Scranton. In I960 when the two railroads merged he was appointed asst.

engineer maintenance of wav. Youngstown, Ohio. In 1961 he was promoted to engineer maintenance of way, Youngstown, Ohio, and to engi neer maintenance of way-system in 1963 at Cleveland. Lois Sampson Feted at Shower Miss Lois Sampson was the guest of honor at a variety shower held ecently at Windham Center. The event was given by Miss Sha- on Bennett, her honor attendant.

and Mrs. Leon Cook. Attending were Mrs. Donald Samp son, Miss Ruth Sampson, Miss Linda Sampson, Mrs. Walter Brown, Mrs.

Mavia Brown, Mrs. Jason Babocck, Mrs. Walter Smith, Mrs. Ernest Mee ker, Mrs. Clara Sykora, Mrs.

Betty Merrill, Mrs. Paul Clark, Mrs. Archie Cook, daughter, Vickie, Mrs. Ernest Wilbur, Mrs. Olive Cook, Mrs.

Es- tella Harford, Mrs. George Robinson, Miss Gail Robinson, Mrs. Michael Payne, Mrs. Esley Boardman, Mrs. Charles Bennett, Miss Patty Payne, Mrs.

Donald Boardman, Miss Sharon Bennett, Mrs. Leon Cook and Miss Linda Brainard. Miss Sampson will become the bride of Larry W. Brown today. 5he received many gifts.

Hurt Playinq Ball Robert Engand, Jr. of 407 N. Main Athens, injured his left big toe playing football. He was treated and released from the Robert Packer Hospital dispensary. Announcements DONALD DAVIS, D.C.

Chiropractor 565-2731 NEVV Fail Jeweiry, Pins, NecKiaces, Bracelets and Novelties at BOYLE'S BOOK STORE THANKSGIVING issue of Ideals is now on sala at MEAD'S NEWS, 423 S. Main Street, Athens. Where The Sick Get Well Painless Col. 2:19 Or. E.

M. BRENNAN, PH. C. 883-5561 8x10 COPIES of the World's Largest Locomotive "Big Boy," which ran in a recent edition, can be ordered at The Evening Times $1 PLUS TAX NOTICE We still have some copies of the Kennedy book The Torch Is Passed AVAILABLE THE EVENING TIMES At the Sayre Office. Lost and Pound FOUND hound.

Owner may have by identifying and paying for ad. Call after 6 p.m. Elmer W. Gorton, RD 1, Barton Transportation WANTED ride to Del Kader School in Elmira, starting November 2. 8:30 a m.

to 4:30 p.m. Call 883-1293. Personals A Call Sayre 883 8172. Writ P. O.

Box No. 335. Sayre. Pa. Auctions Convert your property Into cash A few articles or all you own Q.

R. CHAFFEE SON AUCTIONEERS Phone 265-5085 Towanda. Pa. Automotive Accessories, Parts, Tires EARLY BIRD SALE! Firestone. Town and Country Tires.

50 off at ROLFE'S ATLANTIC. North Main Street. Athens. a short time later was Earl K. Dill, 58.

of 311 N. Main Athnnc for leaving the scene of an accident. He was arraigned before Justice of the Peace George Porter of Waver ly where he pleaded guiltv and was fined $30. Four New Jersevites. enroute to the Watkins Glen races, escaped un injured in a one-car accident at 5 o'clock this morning on Route 17 on tne west side of Waverly Hill.

Police reported that Rolland E. Member II. 19, of 18 Lewis Lane. Sparta, N.J., was driving a station wagon west on Route 17 and as he was going downhill, he became confused as to the roadway, applied the brakes which pulled the car to the right. Member jerked the steer ing wheel to the left and the car crossed the highway, making a half turn as it travelled, and struck and took out five guard rails with the right side.

There was heavy damace to the car, but it will be ready to drive (with a caved-in side) to the races. Troopers Williams and Cleveland investigated. Fire Ruins Businesses Near Pittsburgh PLATTSBURGH, N. Y. (AP) Investigators probed today for the cause of a fire and explosion that in jured seven firemen, wrecked three businesses and caused damage estimated at more than $200,000 in nearby Morrisonville.

Plattsburgh fire chief Richard Kings estimated the damage and said that six of the men under his command suffered minor cuts or burns. A fireman from Plattsburgh Air Force Base also suffered minor injuries. The fire Friday ripped through the Payson Furniture Store, a dry clean ing business and a loan office. All of the firms were housed in a one-story, cinder-block building owned by Charles Payson of Plattsburgh. King said the flames apparently started in boxes on a loading dock.

The explosions, King said, were caused by material in the dry-cleaning plant. Approximately 100 firemen, from five fire companies including the one from Plattsburgh AFB, fought the fire for nearly three hours. All employes escaped without injury. SPORTS NEWS Chuvalo Stops Doug Jones on NEW YORK (AP)-George Chuvalo, the 27-year-old Canadian from Toronto, may fight former cham pion Floyd Patterson at Madi son Square Garden Nov. 27 in an other heavyweight elimination bout.

"We plan to offer Patterson $25, 000 Monday for the bout," said Har ry Markson, head of the Garden Boxing Club. "We'll see what hs pens then. Chuvalo said it was okay with him. Anyone who didn't know Cassius Clay is the heavyweight champion might have thought Chuvalo won the title Friday night at the Garden when he stopped Doug Jones in 1:28 of the 11th round. Chuvalo.

who had a 27-pound pull in the weights. 211 to 184, now has won 28, lost eight with two draws. Jones, also 27 years old, has won 24, lost six with one draw. He had been ranked fourth by the World Boxing Association, Chuvalo eighth. COLLEGE FOOTBLL VM Geo.

Washn. 34, Furman 14 Tex. Southern 33, Lakeland 7 Cincinnati 19, Detroit 0 Central Conn. 42, Bridgewater 0 New Mex. 26, Brigham Young 14 M000 Mary Ann Gabriel, Jon Crandall Are Married SS.

Peter and Paul's Church in To-wanda was the scene of the Sept. 5 wedding of Miss Mary Ann Gabriel to Jon Michael Crandall, both of Rochester. Msgr. Joseph A. Griffin officiated at Vm double ring ceremony.

The bride is the daughter of Mr. 3 Mrs. Gene Gabriel of Ulster RD 1. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs.

Wallace Crandall of Rochester. Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a floor length brocaded gown with long sleeves and impressed pleats which formed a chapel train. She wore a satin pillbox to which was attached a fingertip silk illusion veil. She carried a cascade bouquet of white Easter lillies and ivy. Mrs.

Mary Ellen Gabriel, sister-in law of the bride, was matron of hon or. She was attired in a blue peau de soie floor length gown and carried a bouquet of pale pink aster. Mrs. James Lenox was soloist and Charles Driscoll was organist for the occasion. Ringbearer for the ceremony was Paul Joseph Gabriel, nephew of the bride.

Terrance Burke of Toronto, Ontario, cousin of the bridegroom, was best man. Jeffrey Crandall of Boston, brother of the bridegroom, and Paul Gabriel of Friendship, N.Y., brother of the bride, were ushers. Following the ceremony, a reception was held at Cories in Wysox after which the couple left for a trip to Washington, D. C. For traveling the bride chose a blue wool suit which she accented with green accessories and a corsage of coral rosebuds.

The couple will reside in Rochester where the bride is employed at Rochester General Hospital and the bridegroom is employed by Stromberg- Carlson. Out-of-town guests were from Bos ton, Cornwall and Toronto, Ontario, Harrisburg, Honesdale, Elmira and Rochester. The former Miss Gabriel was hon ored prenuptially at a shower given by Miss Kathy Arnold and Miss Con nie Ann Green in Rochester and a shower given by Mrs. Mary Ellen Gabriel and Mrs. Mary Shippen, at the latters home in Sayre.

Harriet Corneby Of Athens Dies At Age of 88 Mrs. Harriet K. Corneby, 88, of 501 Second Athens, died this morning in Milan after an extended illness. A native of Smithfield Township she had lived in the Valley most of her life. Mrs.

Corneby was the widow of Frank G. Corneby who died in 1949. and was a member of the Athens Methodist Church. She is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Hazel Wilson of West Warren, Mrs.

Marian Eason of San Jose, Mrs. Esther Storelli of Athens; a son, Frank E. of Athens; two sisters, Mrs. Dan Taylor of Sayre, and Mrs. Howard Petty of Chemung, N.

five grandchildren, three greatgrandchildren, and several nieces and nephews. Friends may call at the Lowery Funeral Home, 225 S. Main Athens, Sunday evening from 7 to 9. Funeral services will be held there Monday at 2 o'clock, with Rev. Paul L.

Hulslander. Dastor of the Athens Methodist Church, officiating. Burial will be in Tioga Point Ceme tery at a later time. fV ik a I 45 YEARS IN THE MOVIES Richard Arlen (left) Is congratulated in Hollywood by producer A. C.

Lyles on his 45th year in motion pictures. When Arlen began film work, Lyles worked in the Paramount mail room. Holding the picture is Linda Darnell, currently co-starring with Arlen in "Black Spurs," which Lylea is producing. A WANT AD WILL SELL IT!.

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About The Evening Times Archive

Pages Available:
187,139
Years Available:
1891-1986