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Shamokin News-Dispatch from Shamokin, Pennsylvania • Page 11

Location:
Shamokin, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

NEWS DISPATCH, SHAMOKIN, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1967 PAGE ELEVEN Looking Backward Twenty-Five Years Age 1942 custody of a guardian while Borough police were seeking to parents of the girl left home to Woman Dies From Accident Injuries DARBY, Ta. (AP)-Mrs. Thet-mi Sluvardson, Darby To died Monday night at Fitx- FCC Announces Long Distance Rale Reduction Cattle, Goat Sold to Aid Crippled Children ABILENE. Tex. (AP) More than $50 head of rattle, and one foat which brought a cumulative $1,620, were sold for 47JM.05 Monday in the seventh cattlemen's roundup for crip- WITH THE ARMED FORCES trace burglars who invaded the bid farewell to a son who was Maximum on Fund Spending Without Bids Increased i (Our Harrlsburg Bureau) HARRISBURG The under which NorthumberlaaJ.

Hearing Tests Legality of Ban On Marijuana BOSTON (AP) A pre trial hearing testing the constitutionality ot Massachusetts' laws banning marijuana entered its snam-Airrcy Jiupuai nere oi MilW A. i-iHin thnn on injuries suffered when she was Nortn shamokin Street and car-struck by a car earlier in the: KiUin tun waswTYfiT-rw fp Ymi'ii pM children. sailing from New ork City for service with the U.S. Army. Ten Years Announcement was made that St.

Clair Coal Company, in operation for 62 years in St. Clnir. wtn ahl to make a erosa-l The Texas stockmen chipped Police said the driver was $400 worth ot radios George A. Hagis, 33, of an amplifying system and Mone- other items. Among the loot Mrs.

Shepardson lived at 405 taken was a movie projection Oak Lane. Hagis lives in the 1 machine and eicht reels of a mo- John E. Sodergren. 21 son of country telephone call for "3 in another $23,000 to bring to Mr and Mrs. Carl R.

Sodergren. cents if vou don't mind waiting $70,585.05 the total of the round-102 East Sunburv Street, Sham-' until midnight to dial. I up. Th goes to the non- nfcin unromoteiio Armv soec-i Th, Fedr1 Communications, Vest Rehabilitation 'second week with testimony 1200 block of E. 9th St.

"The Spirit of lion picture, Notre Dame." from a California chemist that the drug has "potential thcra- Priie cattle went on the block would close, idling more than 200 men. Mrs. Jessie E. Smyth, president of the company, in explaining the move, said: "We are closing because the New York-controlled Reading Anthracite Company refuses to reuew our lease." Mrs. Smyth said the with the 1st Armored Division at $ioo million in long-distance Ft 111.

Tex. irate reductions it has ordered But the most surprising sale Merchants were busily engaged in preparing their stock of merchandise for the observance of Shr mokin Days later in and was a nanny goat. enM4.it.t SMrffren. a clerk of tot American Telephone Art Mystifies Park Strollers reingiass ot an rrancisco was called Monday by the defense in the case of two Philadelphia men charged with possession of it Rat. Telegraph Co.

The new rates she was sold and re-sold 31 isi Dai- the week, when ik. ith Imvir i run iB, j. limes, inc iasi bujci, vnom The reduction, include inau- Morris of Abilene, donated the a carnival of, value of the breaker was 092, but it would bring about merchandising I marijuana and possession with 1965 and was last stationed at uraUon of a TS-cent maximum goat to be an Oct FV YORK kP "Tf. 'ere onerea residents ot tne as scrap. NJ.

Milk Prices Far Below Those In Pennsylvania Milk price minimum based upon prices Pennsylvania dairies rf charging for their milk in surroundinR states was offered Governor Shafer today as a solution to his professed confusion over the state's milk problem. Pete Sandfort, president of Louden Hill Farm in Scranton, made the proposal "to help" the sovernor who recently as quoted by newsmen as saying be "had no ultimate solution to the state's milk problem" and that he did not believe in "the abolishment of controls entirely'" Sandfort said that Shafer's concern for the milk industry in Pennsylvania seems not to be shared bv the industry's performance. He said that milk processed, packaged, and bottled in Pennsylvania is being shipped 50 to 100 miles to neigh-boring states and sold at IS cents a gallon below the Pennsylvania fixed minimum price. ConverseV. dairies processing milk out of the state and shipping into Pennsylvania are selling the same milk in their own state for as much as IS cents below the Pennsylvania price.

He said Louden Hill Farm shoppers, crisscrossing boundaries, made these distance calls Placed between midnight and 7 a.m. and dialed wife. Peanne. The specialist a mousetrap It's a oineon rea- merchndlslI8 fete Ten members of Shamokin "Its a Trojan ofh series Planned Woman's Club and two members runs the refrain as mvstified: Shamokin Junior Woman's New Yorkers trv to make sense! "lUiam Morns, of 1103 North club attended the Pennsylvania out of a disp'lav of modem Jl ine was 'nJured a Federation of Women's Clubs sculpture that has sprouted jn 'Trevorton Colliery when a tipple North Central District Confer- parks and plazas I collapsed and he was struck by eace jn Elkland. Local women falling timber.

Morris, a car-uno attended' Mrs Forrest The contemporary 110 il. Sl Radio Station Seeks FM Permit lives in Killeen, Tex. lot present coisi-iu-cwasi maximum is $1 for station- Army Private Paul C. med to Comnany m. nd 4:30 a Monda ill imH tn fomtan' hnvkin in intent to sell.

The defense is seeking to dismiss the charges against Ivan I Weiss. 25, and Joseph I.eis. 26, or the basis that the law is un- 1 constitutional. Another defense witness Monday, Prof. Bmce Jackson.

31. of the State University of New York at Buffalo, called marijuana smoking "a middle class i social experience." But a prosecution witness, Dr. Henry Brill, vice chairman of the New York State Narcotic Addiction Control Commission, called the drug "harmful and anrviv anA HlVl (tK BhiM4t' flIV erertpH tit.K- in riiv .11 Pari- 1 Keen, AITS. l-CSlie LICMC1. MIS Antbracite.

lr.c.wnicn E. 8th Battalion. 3rd Brisade. at ITiJ Radio Fort Knox in the United owns and operates Radio Station Foley Square and Battery Park, among other locations! have as filed an application States Army Training Center, Ar- Vl twk vrwUv nine n.wISL, i i r.HM.,M, stopped thousands of normally wim uie rcaerai iviumum' i uiii tnnA th nvt twn rations Commission in wasn- County commissioners may award contracts for services and personal property without beinu required to request bids has' been raised from $1,000 to under terms of legislation now signed into law by the governor. Contracts for purchases in excess of $1,500 may not be made" unless bids for such work hava5 been requested and awarded to the lowest responsible bidder, following notice in a newspaper, of general circulation.

1 The new law also stipulates' that purchases under $1,500 (previously $1,000) must be" made by note or memorandum in writing, signed by the com1 missioners or their agent. Another new law signed by the governor applicable to fifth class' counties as Northumbet'-J land County now authoriied jury commissioners to organize thcht-" selves into and join a state as- sociatiox with annual expenses' chargeable to the county not M'' exceed $50. (Jury commissioners now become the twelfth such group of county officers author- ized 'aw to organize into associations.) Under terms of pending legiS-' lation pertaining to Northumberland County (this one a House bill in Senate committee) the current $5 filing fee charge for the tax collector's report would" be dropped, but would continue" the $5 filing fee for financial reports (plus $2 per page record1 1 ing fee) providing however that" no charge is to be made for filing township and borough audit reports. These laws also apply to Schuylkill a fourth class count. 1 was wonting on tne structure: Emma Shocner.

Mrs. Emory when it collapsed. The injured Miller. Mrs. S.

H. Miller, Mrs. workman was admitted to Sha- Samuel Yost, Miss Susan mokin Hospital, where doctors Beard. Mrs. Albert Thompson, determined he sustained a frac- Mrs.

John Schrader. Mrs. Dor-ture of the right ankle. otliy Owen and Mrs. Lyman Joan Humes, daughter of Mr.

Weaver Jr Hum" In reply to a request. Northwest Wood Street, received first nwnths learning the fundemental pav juv 4 anj ubor Dav. or operation of an tM skills of the soldier in todays. ffp't' for" the' newlstation on 95.J megacycles, modern, action Army firing rs-cnt rate applies. Announcement of receipt of blase strollers in their tracks and led to a lot of head scratching.

City Hall visitors had a particularly trying time Monday trying to identify something in live ammunition under simulated Other changes will reduce the application was made today combat conditions, learning pro-' charges for most calls bevond by officials of the federal tective measures and first aid 468 miles. But the commission commission. ers ordered a county engineer to iron, in tne steps tnat looua a ignited while she bit like a arse white cube in a check on the holder of mineral for chemical, biological and rad- increased by $15 million rates station WISL operates state of arrested collapse I maicnes. anamoK ri abandoned stripping 1 Hospital surgeons said the child a in Exchanpe. During a iological attacks, as well as being for interstate calls up to 24 as an AM station on 14S0 county board meeting they were asked schooled in the use of modern miles distant.

Costs wiu in-; meCvcles. arms. crease 5 cents for the first tnreej new (requency modulation Following the completion of ba- mmuies. iroinino va-i rk, An additional $20 miluon in dangerous." "Marijuana causes chauges in the psychic state of the user," he said, "and causes swings of emotions and feelings of euphoria and detachment." In response to a query from Superior Court Chief Justice G. Joseph Tauro.

Brill said the of medical opinion" indicates the drug is hazardous to public health and should be banned. casting eompanv, including Henry W. Lark. Isabel Y. Aii.st i-aui 4.

an as- was burned about the back, sistant professor at Queens Col- chfst. neck and arms, but re-lege labeled the work he her condition as satis-pleted at his Greenwich Village, faetorv. The child was in the studio "Cuboid Shift No. 2. I Not even that information was the interpretations, available to passersby Monday I Not all the comments however broadcast station would operate on FM Channel 237 at Shamokin.

A 1 to make the check so as to pave the way for permission to have the stripping pit filled and the area used as a playground. is the son of Mrs. Flossie Weikel rate cuts are to be put into ef of 1300 West Willow Street. Sha- feet next year as part of an kUowltu from transmitter Eighty-seven persons donated as the label for the piece has not were in jest. "It's a new concept blood during an American Red mokin.

and the late Mr. Ronald i a thr 'site 2.5 miles southeast of the Weikel. will receive at least an center of Shamokin and an over-additional eight weeks of either. mD'' V- height above ground tdvanced instruction or on-the-job i- of 193 feeet. The main studio is training to qualify him in a spec ialired military skill.

yet arrived. Most started by and just because we don't un- Cross bloodmobile visit which asking. "What is and ended' derstand and it doesn't mean we was sponsored jointly by St. by supplying their own answers, have to criticize it," said Jack' Edward's Church and Church of "That's going to be Mayor Saltz. the Transfiguration.

Coordinator Lindsay's new platform." "It's The works are all part of New, of the visit was Mrs. Helen Mil-a gift box with go-go girls in-, York City's first outdoor sculp-jlcr, assisted by Oscar Millard, side." "It's a mousetrao a hire show and will be on dis-j co-chairman of the blood donor better mousetrap," were among play through October. recruitment program. Lark and Robert E. Doebler, "-Evening rate.

station-located at Rock and Sunburv lo-station, $1.50 to with Streets. tvtnine rate oeriod beginning at' Application for the permit 5 p.m. instead of 6 p.m. filed by officers, directors p.m. GOOD-BYE, pennj pinching' Hetlu buvert.

good fttlp, dial CU-4641 I.W-4O40 or 87S4J01. Milk processed in Fort Washington for a national chain is sold for $1.08 in Philadelphia and for 90 cents a gallon across the Delaware river in Pennsauken, N.J. An AUentown dairy ships milk to Milford. where it is sold for $1.0 a gallon, and the same milk sent to Trenton. X.

about the same distance away, is sold for 90 cents a On the Western side of the state, the is the same: Milk bottled in Sharjwville. sells for $1.08 a gallon in Meadville. and 94 cents in Hubbard. Ohio. Milk from a Sharon dairy supplying a regional chain sells in firnv for and stocknoiders ot tne oroaa- person-to-person.

Dav rate $3 50 to $3.30. James L. Arnold whose father lives at 1222 Pulaski Avenue was to Army sergeant first class recently near Augsberg. Germany, where he is serving with the 7th Artillery. person-to-per- Night rate, aassmCi son, S3 to Lower prices were also set for some overseas services nu ivi GM uccumea Sergeant Arnold, assigned to wide Area Telephone Service, a the Service Battery of the artil- DjoCk payment system used by lery's 2nd Battalion, entered the some volume callers.

Army in August 1WS. completed his basic tranmg at Ft. Dix. N.J..! Cynert Cites and was last stationed at Ft. Bel British CXpen UIM i ii' $1.08 a gallon and '92 cents voir.

a He arrived overseas in Los Armeies uS rxice His wife. Marg July of this year LOS ANGELES(AP) This re aret, lives at tT6 Princeton orawlin2 metropolis, target of Drive. Alexandria. Ya. barbs from far-away San Fran cisco and even neighboring rtona.a tarano.

wno Springs with itJ clear de uunra ai rurct, Uv Dot J0 Dld Base in Great tain. Mont, has; Rriti.h exoert says. been promoted to airman first Burns, president of Sport Coup th Town Planning Institute of Great Britain, made this obser Mondav after a tour of class. He is serving in the security police squadron. Airman Yarano enlisted in service on January 5.

1966. He and Mrs. Yarano. the former Betty Jane Reed of Shamokin, are residing at the base. 1.05 Anceles with 92 British nlanners.

"Los Angeles is talked about 11 over the world as the city vou shouldn't foDow. but it's something of a surprise. We didn't realize the terrific variety neople can enjoy here the beach, the snow, the climate." IFsisfho)(oisk ir formed. Blast, Fire Cause Black-Out in Idaho BOISE. Idaho (AP) An explosion and fire at an Idaho Power Co.

substation blacked out half of Idahos capital city for nearly two hours Monday niht. Power was restored by 9:30 p.m. Much of the BoLse downtown area was affected as hospitals switched to emergency power. Cause of the blast was undetermined, fire officials said. There were no injuiies.

gallon in North JacKson. unio. The out-of-state dairies like' to cash in on the fat profit, According to Sandfort. a national dairy processing and bottling in Camden, sells milk for 90 cents in its home city, but across the river in Philadelphia the same milk costs $1.08 a gallon. Sandfort said all purchases ire documented with cash regis-( ter receipts from the store of "It is clear and obvious.

Sandfort said, that the dairies don't need the extra profit being handed them by the Milk Commission. I know Louden Hall i Farm doesn't Milk produced by I 500 farmers around Scranton and Wilkes-Barre is sent to New; Jersey and sold at 90 cents a gallon. We must charge $1.06 in our Scranton stores, a few miles from its origin. If the governor is concerned about the abolishment of milk; price controls, then let him use his influence to establish price minimums which Pennsylvania dairies find attractive in neigh- boring states. Let him obtain fair savings for families anxious to nick up their milk at stores, in family-sue.

large containers instead of in quarts and pints, and in reusable instead of costly throw-away containers. This calls for price differentials based on differences in actual costs. It sjrely cannot be a hardship to milk dealers to sell milk at home for the same price it sells for up to a hundred miles away in New Jersey. Ohio and Xew York. The fisht by Sandfort and Louden Hill Farr against high milk prices will start another chapter this week when the State Supreme Court hears arguments Thursday in Pittsburgh on the, i-nn-it-hitinnalitv of the Milk Con- VICTORIA SHAMOKIN t4l-57ll MONDAY and TUESDAYI 7:00 and 9:00 "BAREFOOT IN THE PARK" ollh FREE BUS SERVICE SOCIAL PARTY ST.

STEPHEN'S HALL Ook and West Chestnut Streets TONIGHT-TONIGHT AND EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT Early Bird 7:30 P.M. Proved safety features You get the proved GM-developed energy absorbing steering column, folding seat back latches, and new this year, energy absorbing front seat backs, new safety armrests, and many more. Chevrolet's quietest ride We made the ride still smoother with newly engineered springs and shocks. We utilized computers to place body and engine mounts at just the right spots to keep road vibrations away from you. Even our clocks tick to a quieter beat.

No two Impalas ever looked less alike. By design. Because no two Impaia buyers ever think just alike. Some want the spirited, action-packed fastback look. Others prefer the poised and classic lines of our new Custom Coupe.

How about you? Whichever style you choose, you'll wind up with such new 1968 quality features as: Better Performance There's a new, biggerstandard V8 and a new 250-hp version available that runs on regular fuel. And on most Impalas equipped with an automatic transmission, you get a special heaterfor the carburetor for better cold-weather performance. And with every engine, you get the new GM exhaust emission control. More That's New All Around There are new Hide-A-Way windshield wipers, distinctive side marker lamps, recessed taillights. Inside there's a new, rich look to the Impaia instrument panel, new interior trim, new vinyls, fabrics, colors.

Lever-type door handles are new, too. The Impaia Coupes for 1968. They're worth looking at; they're worth looking into. A' aaaMaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaMaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaMia trol Act. The suit was initiated almost a vear ago by the action of Louden Hill and Lily-Penn Food Stores of Philadelphia in reducing milk prices to 79 cents a gallon in reusable containers out of their dairy stores.

i irtr NICE HOME NICE LOCATION CLOSE TO EVERYTHING 110 East Arch Street Shamokin Home completely renovated, new oil heating system, new kitchen, new modern both, wall-to-wall carpeting through-cut. LOW DOWN PAYMENT For Appointment Call SHOOP AND BURD COMPANY 8 South Market Street Dial 644-0401 1964 FORD PAIRLANE 500 Will Sacrifice DIAL 648-5305 inkik iior Impt't Custom Coup YOUTH MEETING Sponsored by the SHAMOKIN ALLIANCE CHURCH SECOND and ARCH STREETS SHAMOKIN, PA. Miss Ruth Schwenk Childrtn and Youth Worktr Be smart! Be sure! Buy now at your Chevrolet dealers. September 26th thru October 1st at 4:00 and 7:30 p.m. Except Saturday Authorized Chevrolet dealer in Shamokin, Paxinqt and Elysburg 37-7822 FHTE mm Come and Bring Your Friends REV.

PAUL K. SHUIER, Potior ROCK and SPURZHEIM STREETS SHAMOKIN DIAL 648-6824.

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About Shamokin News-Dispatch Archive

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