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Shamokin News-Dispatch from Shamokin, Pennsylvania • Page 2

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Shamokin, Pennsylvania
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SHAMOKIN NEWS-DISPATCH. SHAMOKIN. PA, TUESDAY, JULY 14, 1953 PAGE TS'O Kulpmont Section West Berliners Join In 'Battle of Butter' Phon J-33 Themis O. Brennaa Mine Subsidence Cracks Highway Near Hazleton HAZLETON (liftTraffic was rerouted from Route 309 in the vicinity of nearby Beaver Meadows today as a result of a mine subsidence which cracked the heavy highway concrete and raised seme slabs as much as a foot. Frame houses creaked, and the highway cracked in the area yesterday following the subsidence of an abandoned Anthracite mine.

About 20 homes in a six-block area were affected. Funeral Planned For Area Woman Kulpmont Couple Married in Church BERLIN (U.P Patriotic West Berliner in a border sector seized the initiative in the battle of butter" today and sold fresh fruit and mi to thousands of hungry Communist zone residents at cut-rate Shamokin School Office Stenographer Resigns The Sh2tnokin City board of education last night accepted the resignation of Mrs. Louise R. Boos, stenographer in the superintendent's office. Mrs.

Boos, in a letter to the directors, said she relinquished the post after 11 years of service to move with her husband to Morrisville. where he has obtained employment. The resignation was accepted by all directors "with regret" on a motion by Mrs. Madeleine Vastine, vice president, and Robert Thomas. Others voting include George Edwards, president; Robert Dockey.

treasurer; Robert Maue, Robert Thomas and John Wary. munist makers denied them i RotarV ClUD Members Hear Financial Report Miss Genevieve Augustine and nera' 10S iary Wydra, 50, of 137 North Quince John Williams. both of Kulpmont, street Mount CSiTmel sister of mm. were married Saturday afternoon in Stella Gekcsky, 963 Scott Street, St. Mary Church.

The double ring i Kulpmont, will be conducted tomor- food offered by President Eisenhower, rushed across the border in such numbers that the special mobile stores sold out in the first hour and new supplies had to be rushed to them. Communist police did not inter- Shamokin Rotary Club met last evening in Auman's Restaurant. Paxinos. where members heard a report on club finances presented by members of the auditing committee. fprp snnarpntiv out Of fear of Transit Systems Lose Money Despite Big Rise in Fares By UNITED PRESS A majority of metropolitan transit systems are losing money or pocketing only slim profits despite the fact that fares have zoomed twofold since World War a survey showed today.

Saturday, July 25, New York's subway system, which once offered 36 miles of fast transportation for a nickel will raise its fares from a dime to 15 cents. The subway is op-eratine under th crushing burden of a $50,000,000 annual deficit. The New York transit problem only reflected a general trend that has seen major transportation companies stubbornly boost fares despite consilerable protest from the riding public. Cities that now charge 20 cents a ride for bus and streetcar transportation include Chicago, St. Louis, Detroit.

Seattle, and Minneapolis. Minn. In almost all of them the fare was 10 cents at the end oJ World War II. The Pittsburgh Railway Company, recently reorganized after lengthy bankruptcy proceedings, has boosted its basic street car fare from 2 Freighters Crash In Thick Fog, I Sunk SAN FRANCISCO (U.R) Two freighters collided in a dense fog Yugoslav Troops, Albanians Clash LONDON (U.R) Yugoslav troops and Albanian frontier guards skirmished with machine guns and hand gr nades just over the Albanian border yesterday. Albania charged today in a protest note.

The Albanian legation in Budapest. Hungary, delivered the note to the Yugoslav legation there, inasmuch as the two nations have no direct diplomatic contact. It charged two groups of Yugoslav soldiers crossed the frontiers early yesterday and opened fire on border guards with machine guns, killing the Albanian frontier post commander while helping a group of "diversionists" to escape. The text of the note was monitored here from a Tirana dispatch of the Albanian Telegraph Agency. It said that shortly after midnight Albanian frontier guards in the Derem village district exchanged shots with a "group of diversionists" trying to escape in to Yugoslavia.

"Meanwhile, two groups of Yugoslav soldiers that had crossed the frontier and taken up positions 200 meters inside Albanian territory opened fire with machine guns and threw hand grenades at the back of Albanian frontier guards with a view to helping the group of diversionists pass over to Yugoslavia," the note said. row morning at 9:00 in Our Mother of Consolation Church, Mount Car-mel. Burial will be in the parish cemetery. Viewing will continue in the Lucas Funeral Home, Mount Carmel, until time of services. Mrs.

Wydra died on the weekend in her home. Bern in Poland, the late matron lived in Kulpmont for three years. Mrs. Wydra's husband, Edward Wydra. was killed in an accident at Alaska Colliery in 1942.

Survivors include one son, Edward, at home, and the following brothers and sisters: Anthony, Bernard and Walter Robaczewski, Mount Carmel, and Mrs. Stella Gekosky, Kulpmont. The committee consists of Michael E. Simmonds. Leicester Horam and Thomas Pratt.

President Nicholas Shebelsky presided during the business meeting. Members of the service club participated in quoit matches after the meeting. Members of the board of directors held a short meeting following the dinner. John Carter, was a guest of his father John H. Carter.

11 miles outside the Golden Gate early today, and one was reported sunk within two hours. The Hawaiian Pilot, hich radioed earlier that it had struck the Jacob Luckenbach, messaged at 9:15 a. m. ceremony was performed by Dr. Joseph J.

C. Petrovits, pastor. Given in marriage by her brother, John Augustine, the bride was attired in a white taffeta, street length dress with fitted jacket and matching headpiece. She carried a bouquet of stephanotis. Miss Veronica Hyduk, Marion Heights, maid of honor, wore a peach colored dress and carried a bouquet of white daisies and stephanotis.

Best man was Peter Bu-ehinski, Chester. Men of the wedding party wore white dinner jackets, dark trousers and white rose boutonnieres. Mrs. Emma Augustine, mother of the bride, wore a sheer, navy blue dress. The bridegroom's mother, Mrs.

Fred Williams, was attired in a white print nylon dress. They wore corsages of pink roses, also. Mrs. Williams, daughter of Mrs. Emma Augustine.

851 Spruce Street, and the late John Augustine, was graduated from Kulpmont High School in 1946. She is employed at Kanmak Mills, Inc. The bridegroom, Weigh Scales Man Dies in Hospital Charles W. Raudenbush, 76, Weigh Scales, died yesterday afternoon at 3:50 in Shamokin Hospital, where he was a patient since last Friday morning. Mr.

Raudenbush was seized with a stroke last Tuesday. A resident of Weigh Scales for four years, Mr. Raudenbush formerly lived in Shamokin and Sunbury. He was born in Schuylkill Haven on May 4, 1877, and was a son of Charles and Katherine (Speicher) Raudenbush. Mr.

Raudenbush was employed as a fireman at the Sunbury car shops for many years. He attended a Shamokin Methodist church. Luckenbach sunk, no casualties and no serious injuries, their crew aboard Hawaiian Pilot. The Coast Guard confirmed it had Former Resident Of Shamokin Dies received the late report and said one of its cutters was nearing the scene. Visibility in the area was down to Robert D.

Culton, 48. of Buffalo, N. native of Shamokin, died ves- 500 yards. The weather bureau aid an unusually heavy fog and low clouds were "right down on Lions Club Holds Indoor Clambake Members of Kulpmont Lions Club last night attended an indoor clambake in the social hall of Jan Sobi-eiki Club. The affair was originally sched-1 uled to be held in Zarlinski's Grove, west of Kulpmont.

However, rain necessitated transferring the clambake indoors. Newly elected officers of the civic touching off another June 17 revolt. The sale, in the American sector of Kreusbere on the very edge of the East-West border, was designed to show the United States at least one way food could be gotten to East Germany. East Berliners lined up for hundreds of yards at each stand. Some drank their milk and ate their fruit in the streets.

Others carried the food across the border to share with their families. East Berliners were offered their choice of cither five oranges or two pounds of cherries. In addition, they could buy two pints of milk each. The food was sold for East marks at the rate of one for one West mark. The West mark on the free market is worth five East marks.

Oranges went to the East Berliners for less than one cent apiece; two pounds of cherries cost them six cents; a pint of milk cost about 10 cents. One old German woman fondled her five oranges and counted them over and over. -This is unbelievable," she said. "I haven't had an orange in years." The decision to help their brethren under Communist domination was made by the mayor of Kreuzberg. Willie kressmann, and municipal officials acting on their own.

Even before the Bloody June 17 workers rebellion Germans in the Soviet Zone were ordered not to purchase food or other goods in western Germany. However, Communist police along the sector borders mainly checked cars only and many East Berliners were able to cross with their purchases. 10 cents to 17 since World War II, but still contends its earnings are insufficient. A request for a further the water." Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Eliz A Luckenbach Steamship Com to 20 cets is now pending abeth Raudenbush, Sunbury; one daughter, Mrs.

F. J. Klinger, Sun before the state Public Utility pany pier attendant said the Jacob Luckenbach, a freighter, was not listed in the firm's ship movement's list. He said it probably had been chartered out to either Pacific Far East Lines, or States Marine Philadelnhia Transportation Com- panv is askine an increase from 15 bury; one son, Charles. Williamsport; three grandchildren, and three sisters, Mrs.

Mary Hodge, Chester; Mrs. Iva Day, Woodhaven, N. and Mrs. Minnie Teller, Seven Points. son of Mr.

and Mrs. Fred Williams. S20 Chestnut Street, is a graduate of Kulpmont High School, also. He is employed in New Jersey. A reception was held in the home of the bride's mother after the ceremony for members of the immediate families.

The couple is spending a honeymoon in the Pocono Mountains. They will live in organization conducted the meeting. Funeral services will be held to 18 cents, despite the fact that a three-cent1 charge for the first transfer and a one-cent price for each additional transfer has turned last year's deficit info a tiny profit. The Luckenbach and Michael Wanzie, president, terday afternoon in Memorial Hospital. Buffalo, where he was a patient for six weeks.

Death of the former local man, who is a son of Willaim D. Culton. 57 East Independence Street, former local justice of the peace, was attributed to a complication resulting from an illness of the last eight Robert D. Culton was born July 15. 19C5, in Shamokin, a son of William D.

Culton and the late Maria (Waters) Culton. He attended Shamokin schools and moved to Buffalo, N. eight years ago, where he was employed as a chief timekeeper for an automobile distributing plant. The former local man made frequent trips to South America as a buyer for the concern. While living in Shamokin, Culton was employed Thursday morning at 10:30 in Wirt Funeral Home, Burial will A highlight of the session was a the Matson Line freighter Hawaiian Pilot were built in the f.ame wartime year 1944 in the same Pascagoula, shipyard.

be in Miller's Cross Roads Cemetery. The Capita' Transit Companyi of Washington, D. C. charges 17 cents. Rev.

Leon Adams, Sunbury Evan Boston's transit system plans, to report on the recent convention of Lions International in Philadelphia. The report was made by Joseph Waraksa, retiring president. Warak-sa, Wanzie, Anthony Nestico and At boost its rates from 15 to 20 cents gelical minister, will officiate. Viewing will be in the funeral home tomorrow evening. Driver Killed as Former Shamokin Resident Expires Sigmond Gubinski, 55, former resident of Shamokin, died yesterday in a New York City hospital after an illness of one year.

Death was due to a complication. Born in Shamokin, November 26, 1898, Mr. Gubinski was a son of the late John and Louisa Gubinski. He attended St. Stanislaus Schools.

When a young man, Gubinski traveled extensively through the West and South. Returning to Shamokin 12 years ago, he opened a pool room at 1514 Pulaski Avenue, which he operated for two years. He moved to York City later. Mr. Gubinski was employed as a bartender in New York.

Surviving are two brothers, John and Edward Gubinski, New York City; six sisters, Mrs. Alex Kaschock, Shamokin; Mrs. Michael Peek, Kulp July 19,. if the state Public Utilities Department aporoves the move. torney Eugene G.

Mirarchi attended the convention. Almost all of the cities surveyed, sell tokens at slightly reduced rates. Convoy Overturns Members of the civic organization but Philadelphia, Cleveland, Indlan- authorized the purchase of two pairs acolis and some, other cities make an extra charge for transfers. Jacob M. Craig, 43, Belfast, N.

of eyeglasses for needy residents of Kulpmont. A social period followed Children Receive Tests for School A special examination for children who are below the required school age, was administered today to four prospective students in Kulpmont. Miss Ethel N. Hartzler, supervisor of special education in Northumberland County, administered the tests to four Kulpmont children. Children enrolling in the first at Shamokin Dye and Print Works, Inc.

Survivors include the father, four formerly of Bloomsburg R. D. 1, was Although almost all of the 20-cent the business meeting. cities are now making a profit, they killed when an empty convoy unit which he was driving left Route 442, Fine Signs Bill (Continued from Page One) FEPC was a pledge in the 1950 Republican platform. The House passed and sent to the governor a Senate-approved bill to scrap Pennsylvania's 89 year old executive mansion along the Susquehanna River here.

During a two-hour session yesterday the Senate sent back to com Moscow's rejection, echoed by the Red German regime, of Mr. Eisenhower's offer to send $15,000,000 worth of food to feed hungry workers caused widespread resentment in the Soviet Zone. two miles west of Muncy, and could not keep in the black at lower rates, officials said. However. Cleveland.

San Francis children. Mrs. Dwight Johnson and Gary, Shamokin: Marilyn, Philadelphia, and Mrs. Richard Malick, Honolulu, Hawaii; three brothers, Wil Craig was traveling west on the Police Arrest Two Mount Carmel Men co and Portland systems make mod- erotp npt nrnfits with 15-epnt. fares.V highway when the accident occurred.

liam and Roland. Shamokin, and Edward. Detroit. five sisters, Montoursville state police said Mrs. Gladys Hendricks, Mrs.

Ra- and Los Angeles transit lines netted $1,229,468 last year "with that price. Another million-dollar firm is the National City Lines of St. Louis. mona Richards and Mrs. Ray Kase-man.

Shamokin, and Mrs. Carrie Craig's body was inside the cab, but that the car was resting on his neck, with his head and one arm outside. The unit was destroyed. mont, and Mrs. Mary Morrison.

Mrs. Victoria Rsese, Mrs. Frances Mihelewicz and Mrs. Helen Persing, New York City. grade must be six years old by February 1, 1954.

However, state law provides for special tests to be given Yoder and Mrs. Margie Reidinger, Detroit, and three grand Two Mount Carmel young men last evening were committed to Northumberland County jail in Sunbury after their arrest in Kulpmont on disorderly conduct charges. Police said Craig apparently fell mittee a House-approved bill which called for a constitutional amendment to permit imposition of -a graduated income tax. At the rame time, the Senate returned to committee a bill which would have enabled the state to put children who are not six years old by that date. Children passing the Funeral services will be held morning in New York City.

children. asleep while driving. Surviving are President Eisenhower offered American flour, lard, dried milk and beans to the Soviet government as the occupying power of hunger-racked East Germany last Friday. The offer was summarily rejected as a "propaganda maneuver" by Soviet Foreign Minister V. M.

Molo-tov the following day. Despite the opposition of the Kremlin and the German Communist leaders, the United States went ahead with plans to make the supplies available. Funeral services will be conduct examinations win be enrolled as three sisters and two brothers. He first grade students. ed Thursday afternoon at 3:30 in was a son of the late Jacob ana The men, Stephen A.

Prezkok and Albert Miller, were arrested by Chief the Farrow Funeral Home, Sixth Martha (Stine) Craig. Funeral serv Ministers Agree service charge on wine sold at state stores. ices will be held tomorrow afternoon at 2:00 in Billig Funeral Home, and Chestnut Streets. Rev. Josephine Richards, pastor of Welsh Congregational Church, will offici (Continued from Page One) Senate Minority Leader John H.

of Police Gerard Veach. They were given a hearing before Justice of the Peace James Avellino and committed to the county jail in default Numidia. The French are alarmed over the Marion Heights 9 Wins Section Title ate. Burial will be in Odd Fellows Dent, Westmoreland, co-sponsor of the legislation, said the State prospects that Red China may United States government officials Truck Operated by Local mount a new military offensive against Indo-China after an end of In Washington said the first ship Budget Bureau estimated the additional charges which ranged from Cemetery. Viewing will be in the funeral home Wednesday evening, from 7:00 to 9:00, and Thursday until time of the services.

Man Involved in Crash the Korean war, which appears near. five to 50 cents per gallon depending Local Man Elected to District Moose Post Joseph Scicchitano, Shamokin, past governor of Shamokin Lodge. Loyal Order of Moose, was elected second vice president of the Fifth District, Pennsylvania Moose Association, during a meeting of district officials In the Pittston Lodge No. 1207 home. The fifth district Is composed of 13 lodges.

Stanley Matalowski. Shenandoah, was elected president of the district. Other officers named are Robert Delaney, Mahanoy City, first vice president; Thomas Dalton, Hazleton, third vice president; Ted Fetch. West Pittston. fourth vice president: Edward Morris, Mount Carmel, fifth vice president; Eugene Charles, Hazleton.

secretary-treasurer, and John J. Drucis, Mount Carmel, executive vice president. 3. Pledae their determination to A tractor-trailer truck operated by on whether the wine was bottled in of paying fines and costs. Veach arrested the men at Seventh and Scott Streets after receiving complaints from residents in the 900 block on Scott Street, who said Prezkok and Miller were loitering in that area during the major portion of the day.

a local man was involved in a motor strive for peace by taking advantage the state and by whom it was bot accident last night on the Lincoln of any Communist efforts to call on tledwould have yielded an addi the East-West cold war. tional $7,200,000. The move for recommittal was Highway, one-half mile east of Ash-ton. The driver. Joseph Marinari, 23 ments already were on the way.

One State Department official said the East Germans "are going to get the food one way or another." The Voice of America told Germans behind the Iron Curtain that the United States had not accepted the Soviet's rejection as the final answer. The State Department's propaganda agency made it clear that the United States would gladly accept a Communist change of heart. made by Majority Leader Rowland The agreement on talks with the Russians represented a concession for the United States, which had consistently opposed any four-power of 341 South Diamond Street, escaped B. Mahany, Crawford, who said National Slovak Society Sixth, Marion Heights, won the first half championship of Section in Kulpmont Junior Boys' Baseball League by swamping West End Fire Association. 20-3, last evening at the hish school stadium.

Home runs were clouted by Benedetto and Bindos with the bases loaded for the winning team. Benedetto was the winning pitcher, "lar-koskl was on the mound for West End. League officials reported this evening's game will be St. Michael Club vs. Kutchen's.

injury when his truck ripped through a churchyard fence and there was a question whether the bill should have originated in the discussions until Moscow demonstrated its willingness to settle out landing issues. The mounting pressure for unifi House as a tax measure. Mahany was the other sponsor. Up for discussion in the House cation In Western Germany, stimu Republican caucus today are the lated by the unrest in the Soviet questions of what to do about legis School Directors To Meet Tomorrow A special meeting of the Kulpmont board of education will be conducted tomorrow evening in the high school. Tax Collector Frank Scalet will submit the final report of the 1952 duplicate for approval by board members.

Directors said other business will be conducted during the meeting, also. Zone, was believed to have been latlve re-apportionment and revision Chinese Smash (Continued from Page One) said two to three infiltrated South Korean divisions east of Sniper RidgeVithdrew to a position below the Kumsong River on 8th Army orders. "We have had three serious penetrations," the officer told United Press Correspondent Al Kaff at the front. "We have found it advantageous to withdraw below the Kumsong River." The Reds paid heavily lor their advance in the carefully-planned offensive, believed to be a political maneuver to persuade the South Korean government to honor the forthcoming truce. They surged like robots Into the face of heavy Allied tank fire and the anti-personnel air bursts known as "daLsy cutters" because they explode at low levels.

The Chinese concentrated the.r Major Jabara, Jet Ace, Cautious Auto Driver AT AN ADVANCED AMERICAN overturned, tumbling 12 steel drums on top of an automobile driven by Nicholas Chirichello, 38, of Passaic, N. J. Each drum contained 535 pounds of paint pigment. Chirichello and his wife, Mrs. Mary Chirichello, were seriously in-injured.

They were taken to Chester County Hospital. Mrs. Chirichellos left arm was amputated and her husband sustained a fracture ot the pelvis. major factor in the American de of the constitution. The re-ap portionment bill went down to de cision.

With important elections coming up September 6, Adenauer has felt an approach to Moscow is 1 DrtCCi lU.r. lilt itvuua Jet acc. Major James Jabara. thinkjQ feat in the House July 9. but there Attorney Addresses Air Force Reserve Unit Attorney Peter Krehel.

Mount Carmel. formerly of Kulpmont. last nisht addressed members of the necessary. 1j fome sentiment to revive it. Republican leaders are debating Irish Valley Man Expires Suddenly Earl George Persing.

47. of Irish Valley, died last evening in Shamokin, Hospital 10 minutes after he was' admitted to the institution. Death was attributed to a heart attack. Born June 11. 1906.

in Irish Valley. Earl Per.sing- a life long resident of that area, was a son of the late and Hannah Templim Persing. He attended Shamokin Township schools and was employed by whether to accept Senate amend Local Optimist Club Will Meet in Sokol Hall menu on the constitutional revision nothing oi iiying iasier man sounu but driving an automobile worries him. 'Ever since I started flying jets I've been driving cars slower and slower." the Wichita. destroyer of 14 Migs said.

"I can't explain why Just bill that left only a provision for letting the voters decide in a refer The Newg-Dispatch Extends Birthday Greetings to John J. Shingara, local coal flealer. Prior to the meeting of the Kulpmont board, members of the Kulpmont Area Joint School Board will hold a caucus session and review the proposed budget for 1953-54. which must first be approved by the State Department of Public Instruction. Members of the Joint board in endum next November.

The bill as passed by the House also set up machinery for holding a constuu tlonal convention next January. Shamokin Optimist Club will meet this evening at 6:30 at Sokol Hall, Fifth Street, near Pine. Members will apply the finishing touches to a project designed to place the hall in readiness for establishment of a club sponsored youth recreational project. Volunteer Air Reserve Training Unit. Flight D.

during the group's regular meeting in Sunbury. Attorney Krehel. a reserve Air Force captain assigned to the unit, spoke on "Observations Brhind the Iron Curtain." The speaker said he spent most of 1947 and 1948 in Czechoslovakia, Poland. Hungary and East Germany while studying for a doctor of philosophy degree at Charles University In Prague. He outlined The 'House reconvened today at clude Kulpmont and Marlon Heights directors.

The caucus will begin at 1:00 p. m. EDT and the Senate at 3:00 p. m. 7:00.

mammoth assault on four ROK divisions, including erne which had been chewed up in earlier fighting in this blazing sector. South Korea's crack Capitol Di-L-ion absorbed the brunt cl the Red attack with Uo divisions hitting it. Kessler Construction Company. Persine and the former M.ss Isa-belle Trevorton Road were married September 26. 1925 He was a member cf Clark Grove Evanacll-cal United Brethren Church.

Fire Company and the Patriotic Order Sons of America. S-rvivors include the widow, three Mm John Martin. Overlook: Mrs. Wnyr.e Grow. Shamokin, and Mirv J.u.e.

at home; one son. life 1p Communist countries and said emphasis is placed on police and military units, which control the population. L-mar. three alters. An American general estimated between four and six other Red divisions digging in on a new 'defense line some distance south ot their old line late today.

An American faid he thought "this is about as as the Chinese will go. Front tiiie olf.cer Said the Ked.s ad planned their attack met.cu-lously While some uni's engaged the ROK.S in frontal assaults, others freaked around the sides. Major Ralph Cowan, of Elm.ra. Y. t'jld the Chinese atruk ih Caprol DiVji.on in wave." 'Every company in thu oaltion Second Anniversary Sale Tomorrow, Wednesday, July IS, 12 Noon 12 Midnight Kuomont Briefs Mr and Mrs.

Thomas Reppe and sons. Thomas. and Robert. Baltl- more. Md are spending a week with Reppe's parent.

Mr. and Mrs. Jul- lus Reppe. 816 Scott Street. C.

Thomas M.rolll. cashier of D.me Bank end Trust Com-panv. today is observing the anniversary of his bir'h. Mrs. Harold Dither.

Weigh Scales; Mrs. Ar'hur Lehman. Overlook, and Mabel. Irish Valley, and f.ve broth-en. Ouv.

Charlr and Homer. Irlh Valley; Fred. Shamrock, and Forrest. mm at hit. a.d Cowan, an advisory Shamok.n: and three erandchildrrn.

Funeral nervier will be conducted Friday afternoon 2 00 In the Sam- lly home. Rrv Zimmciman. P.tor Grove Evar.sc'.. rl United Birthrrn Church. officiate 15 irlal will be in Notthumyr- 'and M-morial Park.

Ww.t.c w.SI in the him? TJVirstay i fternoon n1 continue t.me it the wn.ccs I attached to the division Navy Lists All Almost tne me t.rr,e the Chi r- nP other iroup. of; frm Pt. Or.o had ir.I.Itra'.td the Ur.m. howrd evlder.re of fln r.d were i.r.:r,s our reerve burns. This would ir.4-.cve the tKhL-4 the 1 exploded when it th water.

Cswar. M.d ftnc full t.t the ruoner life rafs Ch.r.' of 3.C03 rr.cn tttt'rt ab'urd the pUne were fund ki ROIC comnar.v. hu rtr.nv in the rfn area Regional Mines Scheduled to Work to r.T.Snttlcd t. tisff Tfc'y ere wi'h bss them mr thrown cu of the plane. Ti a.a.-.t.r.s cf a utter fe r.e to hpf t.vre were the t'cft re: Bjt vh-n t-irnetl up.

r.f.'.e.sj the were srr.bj-t high." ir.t Rrd 7 4 EDT. r.l D.vj po j.er 4nha. thot city on 'he fiont in vicinity of R.rigr and Tf.r.'. ir.av rv cirr.e rn of 'he Pli' The con'of artfrt of f.CCC'-'GCif 1 t. A It.

A. I (n. Alakt l'i't 3 ifr.rr,.- B.rnT h.J' 1 it or Mr Buy any delicious Tastce Frcez sundaes, shakes, banana splits, or root beer floats and receive another one free. Buy a Kwiki dipped dog and receive an ice cold Hire's root beer free. ''OW' this i rrnr.v fining botu io tne M.e ROK wrre triroin r.

iv bv 'n The p.wr.e plu mule 20 bank ot i Pit ft 10 a rre r.f e.g!,t hn it Ouatn Saturday n.th Mur.y tne p-ernns -ie tfiMliiic'i ti wotsera tr.a inmA rn route Ui homes in the UiV'd Sta'e at the MARTIN-SENOUR NU-HUE COLOR BAR lOOO COLONS IN IMIXT Now you can find the potterl reJnt hle to match, contmt hsrmnnife with rtMrtv any rolor iMftipte and it take nnly few irnnute at aNu Hue rotor Oaf Awe tbr 10O0mW are acieniifically arranged tfanrirent chart. Ynur aeWttn re then marhine-mised with rfefripti.na'ur(c-.lrvnihw'J to eiiftly (he right shade. Vieit the Nu Hue Color iWe'i iaet f't to ty THE COLORCENTER ROUSH WALLPAPER and PAINTS lit NVhoia BrrstT or.e Oak HUI fhTidan Wnshrry R'adinr IViiuri Co. Vxv.t'. Clm irn Nr 1 Ni 3 i i This Week's Emergency Physician t)f.

J. Robert YtMine f.f Ch.n -e fir.ri bh.nd It I Kfftr, nr frg r- Wr tf ii pv 'hrfl in o.r rvw an stiver 1 ftH bjj'M Chinee 1. 1931 mrk; treiv.if if rpf', t'yi fir ev.l p-'r 1 rA mi a.M',tr,i r.rt fin'or fit em- ic ar en wtrtnetdtt sna s.r,-jT ihniii cult tfie Sf.tJ.titn iv.gncl in emert'iM- 42 KCTM VMutT SUUT Hutu Run nal Im, A. 6l 4 if ir retell and in rr.rt'.r.i tr.d.

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About Shamokin News-Dispatch Archive

Pages Available:
181,120
Years Available:
1923-1968