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Shamokin News-Dispatch from Shamokin, Pennsylvania • Page 4

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PAGE FOUR SHAMOK1N NEWS-DISPATCH, SHAMOKIN, FRIDAY, AUGUST 29, 1958 Ahead The Problem of Re-entry THOUGHT FOR TODAY And I will put my spirit with-' The Smart Set Editorials Features, Columns- in my statutes, and ye shall By Cholly Knickerbocker, and do Keep my judgments, Inside Labor By Victor Riesel Chants of olden picket lines blend with the clatter of these typewriter keys as I pass on reports that Walter Reuther and his Auto Union's high command have AIJA (Tenth of a Series) tnem.Ezekiel 36:27. Paris has long been noted for It's, fascinating women, but even the 18th Hollywood century court, prior to the never boasted a more incredible beau-1 ty than the vivacious siren, the Vicom-n General Motors in September or oy trSKine Johnson Ford In early October. The western her0 ig still the in the pas 10 days Reu her bo8g of the Tv rMge but if 8ome has confided to his closest a des of you dial twisters are bored tesse Jacqueline de Ribes the epitome of the soignee Parisian, she? amalgamated her heritage from one oi with that jazz in Dodge and France' first families, (she was which of the two giant auto mak- hnna 'ranees tirst tamuies sne was points west there is hope today. the Comtesse de Beaumont) with thein bloodlines of another equally old and II famous French family the result is a typical Faubourg St. Germain al- liance that being the last fortress French blue blood In Paris Jacque-ie line married a man as attractive ande-vltal as she is herself her Edouard1" is a French banker they have two lovely children.

In the glittering winter season thatln sets Paris apart as being still the most i formal, most heafttiful and most gant city in the world, Jacqueline de rimes is ukc a commanding comet eyes focus on her wherever she goesle to the opera, the theatre, the ballet 1 or to the innumerable balls she helps10 arrange for charity she is what lh FYonpli term a ummnn "avafi nnlni" tall and slender, she has a terrfo" figure but her sultry femininity isT tempered with the steel endurance and'" balance of the true athlete in summer she is a first-rate water skier in the blue Mediterranean in winter she waxes her skis on the slopes of If the badmen and opposition shows can't kill off the heroic cowpokes, maybe they will get to fighting among themselves and gradually thin out their own ranks. They're already trying to talk each other to death. There have been beefs about who makes the most money, who has the fastest draw and who Is the fastest rider. A special race at Santa Anita this winter, with TV western stars as jockeys, has been suggested to clear up this point as well as raise a lot of money for charity. Latest flare-up in the TV corral started a lot of word-slinging between Tris Coffin, who plays the captain of the Arizona Rangers in the western adventure series, "26 Men," and Robert Sisk, who produces the "Wyatt Earp" shows.

Tris came up with the disillusioning statement that most of the lawmen of the old West were "actually bums In real life." "Like Wyatt Earp. for Instance," Tris told Daily Variety's Dave Kaufman. "Actually he was a g'inman who wore a badge only one year and ran the houses of ill repute in Parker, with the help of Parker's mayor Well, now, those were fighting words to Produce Sisk and also to Hugh O'Brian. who plays Earp. Sisk immediately started shooting.

"Coffin," he said, "doesn't know his elbow from third base. "We've heard those charges Coffin made again and again and checked Earp's life carefully right up the time he died in Los Angeles. But they never document those charges. Coffin should prove it or shut up." There was a nice cue for Sisk to pun the word "coffin" but he didn't take it. He re-loaded, however, and riddled the character Tris plays in "26 "The captain of the Arizona RangTs this fellow Tris plays his job as head of the Rangers after four years for playing politics.

He was fired." Fun. huh1 I can't HI vou who's right and Your Career By Anne Hewood It seems to me that ingrown personalities can fester just as badly as ingrown nails. This seems especially true of the oldsters I encounter. Those who have let themselves become withdrawn seem to age far more rapidly than those who have widened their horizons with the increasing years. My favorite example of young, outgoing oldsters is presented by Mr.

and Mrs. C. E. Pink of St. Catharine's, Ontario.

I heard about Mr. and Mrs. Pink from their daughter-in-law, Dulice, who wrote me about them as follows: "They are both 80 years old. They both belong to the Salvation Army and go to all their meetings, whatever the weather. Not content with this.

Pop goes on speaking dates to the old folks' home, the home for the blind and the prison. "A year ago May, they came from England to establish a new home and new roots in St. Catharine's. What is even more astonishing. Pop has now decided to look for a job not a full-time one, but a part-time one.

"I know if you met them you would never believe they were anywhere near their age." I hope some day that I will get to St. Catharine's to meet Mr. and Mrs. Pink. When I think of them, in the seventy-ninth year, gayly pulling up roots and moving to a new world across the sea, and going out through ice and snow to attend Salvation Army meetings and give talks to people in jails, old folks' homes and all kinds of institutions, then I feel like shaking the readers who write me the self-pitying letters that begin: "Of course, I am 40 years old so it is too late to The difference is not that the Pinks are luckier, richer, healthier or in some way better endowed by nature than these other people.

The secret is that they are honestly concerned with the world outside themselves. They care about all the people in the world and they take steps to go out and call on them and endeavor to help them. That point of view, that mental bent, is by far the most "youthifying" agent I know. This capacity for caring about other people is not something jvith which we are either born or not born. It can be developed by a concentrated effort.

If you are interested in this, send me a long stamped, self-addressed envelope in care of this newspaper and I will send you my pamphlet on Pointers to Better Personal Relations. The Washington Scene St. Moritz she travels constantly!) can do anything she turns her' hand to. Like a kaleidoscope picture, shejj changes her endless costumes and her raven-tressed hair styles she wears great chunks of jewelry is always seen in the super-chic latest trend frequently she goes even further than the latest into extreme startling fash- ions that fit her trim figure as if she were a Paris mannequin she hasn a flair for designing and innovating her own clothes several years ago she worked with Italian designer Emllioj Pucci she is never really casual in appearance even her informal clothes are uniquely chic she wears (-a bit of eyeshadow and mascara which i emphasize her exotic eyes and give her a slightly Oriental look. No party in her jewel-box home on ers he believes should first be paralyzed.

The tipoff will be the summoning of the union's high council to Detroit. UAW Executive Board members are virtually sitting by with packed bags. The word now is that the Auto Union will strike a week or 10 days after its top officials gather. Many in the Auto Union leadership believe that if they are called into emergency conference in September, the picket lines will swing around the scores of GM plants. If the Executive Board does not meet until October, then the target will be Ford.

I report this as a war correspondent would report the strategy of a great army for this will be large scale Industrial warfare not violent, but bitter and exhaustive. The Auto Union's strategy, as some high council members see it, will be to strike the corporation whose executives seem toughest in the current negotiations. This will be done in the hope that the friendlier of the two companies might be willing to make a pact and isolate the other manufacturer. Target date for striking General Motors, according to the union's top strategists, is September 15. On that date the union expects GM to start producing its surprise new Chevrolet which the union people call GM's "breadwinner." There's a story behind this sleek new car.

No one in the industry had expected GM to have so new a "Chevy" model. The 1958 model was new. It was not expected that GM would change its '59 Chevy so completely. Naturally the other companies then had to plan some mighty tough comDetition for the new Chevrolet. Ford, for example, decided to take a few weeks longer and move its proiected 1960 model up to 1959.

This means some re-tooling, but it means a bright new model, too. The new Fords won't be rolling off the lines until early October. So the union strategists will have to wait until then if they want to hit Ford at the critical moment. But which one do they want to hit. Ford or GM? That's the big question Reuther and the men around him ponder out loud these days.

Some union tacticians argue that striking Ford is best because it is smaller than GM. Thus the 300.000 union members at GM could stay at work and help support the' striking 125.000 Ford workers while they are on the bricks. But. other old school brain trusters retort that nothing is won until you win it at GM. Therefore, they want the bigeer corporation hit regardless of the cost which would run some a week.

This would wine out the UAW strike fund in little more than a month. There is. of course, still another possible stratagem. The union could strike the feeder parts plants. This would force the big companies to shut down soon enough.

And the workers would get unemployment insurance, both public and private. Arab Mid-East Plan The Arab sponsored resolution approved unanimously in the United Nations is probably the happiest result that could have been hoped for in the circumstances. But at its heart it is an article of faith. And since that faith rests largely upon the pledged word of the United Arab Republic under President Nasser, it remains to be seen whether this effort will justify itself. The key feature of the resolution is that in which the 10 sponsoring Arab countries agree to avoid interference in each other's domestic affairs and to respect each other's sovereignty and territorial integrity.

This, obviously, is a pointed injunction directed at Nasser's bold and brassy attempts to unite the whole Arab world under his leadership. It strikes also at any effort by the Soviet Union to achieve destructive ends in the Middle East through pressure upon Nasser or by any other device. Up to now the world has had little reason to trust either Nasser or the Kremlin. But it may represent a gain that the Egyptian dictator has gone so far as to make this pledge in the august UN setting. It is promising, too.

that under the resolution UN Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold will visit the Mid-East again to seek practical ways to arrange the departure of United States and British forces from Lebanon and Jordan. There is wide belief these troops may leave on or before September 30, Hammarskjold's scheduled date for reporting on his mission in New York. The Arab proposal accepts the principle of UN responsibility in both Lebanon and Jordan. In the former country, of course, UN observers have been operating for many weeks. Jordan wants neither UN troops nor observers, but is willing to accept a "UN presence" of some sort.

UN focus upon these two lands, especially upon tottering Jordan under King Hussein, may help to stabilize the situation in the Middle East. That, after all, was the purpose of American and British landings. And the endorsed resolution did not demand our immediate withdrawal but implied our right to be there upon request of the governments involved until the two countries gain other assurances of protection. This represents a partial victory for the United States and Britain, as does the Arab call for studies looking toward establishment of an Arab economic development agency as proposed by President Eisenhower. We did not get the standby UN peace force we sought, nor any firm declaration against "indirect aggression." But Russia failed utterly to gain approval of a demand for immediate troop withdrawals, and had to go along in the end.

Any western sponsored resolution like the Norwegian one clearly would have been hampered by either opposition or abstention from the Arab lands. The final verdict gains immeasurably from their authorship. The big question now is whether hopeful pledges will be honored. On that issue hangs the prospect of a new, more stable era for the Middle East. Other Editors Say At the moment the great state of By Peter Edson The Eisenhower administration will be right back before the 86th Congress next January with practically the same requests for the labor legislation it didn't get from the now-adjourned 85th.

There may be some new proposals to curb labor racketeering if anyone can think up anything effective. So far, nobody has produced a good bill for that purpose. For as Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell points out, most of the abuses disclosed by Senator McClellan's rackets investigating committee are violations of state laws. It is lack of vigorous criminal prosecution and lack of local law enforcement that seem to have fallen down.

There are state laws against bribery, gun toting, arson, assault and battery and murder. These are the crimes labor racketeers are accused of. AFL-CIO leadership has been trying to clean up some of the abuses internally. But it is hampered by lack of authority to discipline international and local union officers. That is the labor situation today, as the political campaign starts two months of oratory over who is responsible for killing ef- Rue de la Bienfaisance (it is half great house which she and EdouataL share with his family) is complete un-J til Jacqueline has danced her cha- cha, mambo and samba skills take the breath away from the guests who cheer i her on she is tremendously admired by her circle of friends some say Voice of Broadway she inherited her good looks and her By Dorothy Kilgallen Xavier Cugat, vacationing in Europe, has been conferring with Anita Ekberg and Tony Steele in Rome.

He hopes to book them as headlines at his new Gotham night club, the Casa Cugat, during love of life from her father, the Count de Beaumont, who is a magnetic per- -m tonality, and still cuts a wide swath in Paris society extroverted, gay, witty and always on the go Jacqueline de Ribes, now summering on the Riv- iera at the Gianni Agnelli's "Villa Leopolda," will soon return to Paris to make the City of Light glow even brighter. Tomorrow one of the most elegant women of Paris, a fabulous hostess, a great beauty Mrs. Loel Guinness. i fective labor legislation this year. Senator John F.

Kennedy, co-author of the Kennedy-Ives labor bill which passed the Senate 88 to 1 and was killed in the House 198 to 190, blames the National Association of Manufacturers, the United States Chamber of Commerce, the GOP in general and Labor Secretary Mitchell in particular. Mitchell replies by blaming the House Democratic leadership, whom he accuses of not wanting a good new law. In determining who was responsible for killing the Kennedy-Ives cock robin in the House, it would be difficult to judge whether Republican Floor Leader Charlie Halleck of Indiana or Democratic Labor Committee Chairman Graham Barden of North Carolina was more bitter in denouncing it. What GOP officials point to for proof of Democratic sabotage is the fact that President Eisenhower's proposals for labor law change were before the House for eight months without action. Trying to bring up the weak Senate bill last week was considered a political stall.

Secretary Mitchell's challenge to Senator Kennedy for a public debate on the issue is interesting. Such debates will probably be held between local candidates in every congressional district and in every Senate race. Actually, the Kennedy-Ives bill would have done nothing to regulate secondary boycotts, coercive picketing or federal-state jurisdiction in labor relations cases. The bill would have given the government no real investigative authority to do anything about racketeering. Viewed in this light, passage of the Kennedy-Ives bill might have misled the public into thinking Congress had done something to check crimes exposed by the Mc-Clellan committee.

So mavbe it's just as well the bill was killed. Even the health and welfare fund reporting bill which both houses of Congress finally agreed to is so watered down that it will do little to expose corruption and graft. It would not authorize the Department of Labor to issue tough regulations on fund reporting, with power to check the accuracy and validity of the reports. This authority is vital. There has been considerable discussion among Eisenhower advisers on whether to recommend that the President veto this bill because of its faults.

The alternative is to sign it into law as a first step. Its Inadequacies could be pointed out in an accompanying statement. Then amendments with teeth in them could be requested of Congress next year. Think It Over who's wrong but this word-slinging sure is a lot of fun and I'm going to keep leanin' on the corral fence to see what else may happen. Jim 'Gunsmoke) Ar-ness will take on those Maverick Brothers James Garner and Jack Kelly, Personally.

I'd rather see Bret and Bart tangle with Ward Bond and Bob Horton on the "vVagon Train" trail. Perhaps Dennis Weaver, who plays Chester on CBS' "Gunsmoke." knows something about the Wells Fargo agent Dale Rogertson plays on NBC. And if John Restless Gun) Payne can find time to relax for a minute or two. may-he he can come up with something about somebody. The fellow who can come up with something about everybody of course, wins an Emmy.

So speak up. men. Things are gettin' dull In Dodge. Seein' as how every TV western star claims to be the fastest draw, let's all check our guns to avoid 2P.Y however, and concentrate on talkin' each other to death. It's such a nice clean way to go, really.

No messy bullet holes, no infection, no pain. They're running out of bandages and hot water in the TV west, The Hollywood Shortline: Sterling Havden will fight to his last cent, he says, to block ex-wife Betty's renewed attempts to regain custody of their children. They were awarded to Sterling when thev were divorced Julie London signed a two-pic-ture-a-year deal at MGM. If she doesn't re-marry for 10 years. Phyllis Hudson will collect $130,000 in alimony from Rock Hudson.

ByR.Dieffenbacher Although man has his God given capacity, he also has his human limi tations. What is more, the competition for man's loyalty or i.Vi Dick Kleiner TV and Radio Personalities What do TV players do in the summer? Well, for one thing, a lot of them are gainfully employed in summer stock. One famous summer stock center is Cape Cod, site of two of the most beautiful theatres in America. One is the Cape Playhouse in Dennis, where Celeste Holm broke in her Broadway hope, "Third Best Spurt." This lets Celeste wear gorgeous costumes, act silly and get off some good lines. But the central part is neither fish nor fowl, and it needs a lot of work before it can make the Broadway grade.

Another delightful Cape Cod theatre is the Falmouth Playhouse. There Ger-aldine Page and Basil Rathbone did their best with "Separate Tables," a Broadway hit of a year or so ago. Unfortunately, it's not a summer entertainment, being a bit too heavy and talky for a vacation crowd. For Rath-bone, though, it's a good part for once, he can show himself to be something other than the suavely sinister sort. The casts of both are heavily peopled with faces you'd recognize the TV supporting players who go back to their first love when the rich TV melon is no longer there to be cut.

tions based on his avocation, numerology. Among i current forecasts are a couple to interest politicians: he believes President Eisenhower will resign next year and let Vice President Nixon take over, and that the Democratic presidential nominee ill be elected in 1960. "The Inn of the Sixth Happiness" rates as one of the great emotional experiences of the forthcoming film season, but those who participated in the final days of shooting tell about a real-life bit of drama that rivals even the most poignant scenes in the picture. Robert Donat's touching farewell speech to Ingrid Bergman ends with the line, "I have a feeling we may never meet again" at which point Ingrid bursts into tears. The tears were authentic; she knew as did the rest of the cast that Donat had only a few more days to live.

Jane Morgan has come up with a musical novelty a record with the No. 3 song in France, "La Jour ou la Pluie Viendra," sung in French on one side, and in English las "The Day the Rains on the other Now that she's definitely decided to go through with the divorce, Phil-Iipa Monsarrat intends to return to her first love, a Johannesberg newspaper column she wrote for years before marrying Nicholas Monsarrat, author of "The Cruel Sea." The two are seeing their lawyers about a property settlement, and in all probability Phil-lipa will take their two children back to South Africa with her when she resumes her journalistic career Broadway producer Jim Hammerstein is trying to interest William Holden in an original screen play he owns with agent Charles Norton. It's described as "a taut, exciting gangster story" by Norman Brooks, the Venice Film Festival prizewinner Artie Shaw is three-fourths through his newest book a novel Further literary news: Marlene Dietrich helped with the translation from the German of Eva Gabor's off-Broadway vehicle, "Lulu," which originally was Frank Wedekind's "Eregist." terest is greater than we realize. The Devil's cunning in bidding for our souls is something we are inclined to overlook. Temptation is always portrayed as colorful, satisfying, and easy.

It is always offered on the installment plan. The ultimate cost is always hidden by a backdrop of artificial beauty or temporary relief from boredom or monotony. Man must learn to use his higher spiritual capacities. He must learn to choose between the total picture of sin, and the ultimate satisfaction of God's rewards. He must choose between the ends of the road rather than the momentary vistas of today.

But whichever the Auto Union decides to hit. Reuther will have some powerful support. This support has been generally overlooked by warm weather observers. The support is concentrated in a special committee aonointed the other week bv the AFL-CIO Executive Council to aid the UAW. Its seven members are among the shrewdest tacticians and lead the wealthiest unions in the land.

They are David Dubinsky, James Carey, Al Hayes, Dave McDonald. Joe Keenan and Joe Bierne. They themselves lead a total of 3,500.000 dues payers. These men are powerful national personalities. As a "standby committee" speaking for all labor, they'll make powerful allies for Reuther.

It would be nice if a pact is signed soon after Labor Day and the game called on account of good sense. the Christmas holidays, and the glamorous pair is interested for two reasons the salary offered is $35,000 for two weeks, and the engagement would serve as a warm-up for Las Vegas The writer of Jerry Lee Lewis' big hit, "Whole Lot of Shakin' Goin' On," which is supposed to have sold 3,500,000 copies, claims he hasn't received any of the royalties due him and gets rude treatment when he tries to collect. His next suit will be a heavy lawsuit Princess Grace and Prince Rainier will turn out for Harry Belafonte's debut at the Sporting Club in Monte Carlo Those submarine heroes seem to be fated for no end of honors. A Las Vegas stripper now calls herself Nauti-Liz. "The Naked and the Dead" is being shown at some theatres around the country as if it were a hoochy-kooch show instead of a war picture.

At one Baltimore film house, for instance, the display outside features the word "Naked" in letters about five times as big as any other word in the title, and the huge cut-outs of Lili St. Cyr in the lobby further the Minsky-ish impression Apparently the Barry Sullivan-Gita Hall romance is on again if it was ever off. She was his most recent dinner companion at the Little Club Jazz star Miles Davis is slated for serious throat surgery at Columbia Medical Center Barbara Bel Ged-des has returned from Ireland to enter her 12-year-old daughter, Susan, in an American school. French actress Martine Carol, taking a 10-week vacation on doctor's orders, is traveling to the West Indies under the name of "Mile. Naudet" in an attempt to avoid press conferences and pub- licity.

Her mother is accompanying her. Martine will return to Paris in November when her divorce suit against Christian Jac-que is due to come to trial The lovely Baronees de la Bouil-lerie, formerly Elinor Marcus, will waltz down the aisle with wealthy dress manufacturer Andrew Arkin Item for collectors of bizarre billing: The flicker "Raw Wind in Eden" features this gem, "With the special participation of Eduardo de Filippo" Birdland's big dash for blue-bloods, scheduled for August 26 in honor of the re-naming of the club's bleacher section as "The Duke Box" had to be hastily postponed because Duke Ellington suddenly wired the management saying he'd accepted two weeks of bookings in the Mid-West and would be unable to attend. The event's now slated for late November when he returns from his European tour. When Vincent Lopez performs at Kutsher's Country Cub in Mon- ticello he may startle the guests with a whole new set of predic When the only symoathy you have is for yourself it doesn't amount to much. The worst wreck results when a deluxe automobile runs into a jalopy bank account.

lexas hnds itself facing a situation which in some cases now is and will be duplicated in other states and the nation as a whole in the very near future. The Texas State Tax Study Commission estimates that by 1965 the under-18 age group will have increased by 24 per cent over 1956 and the over-65 group by 25 per cent. But the taxpaying 18-65 group is expected to rise only 15 per cent. To provide necessary government services without adding to the tax burden will require wise and economical handling of tax revenues. West Springfield, Record Looking Backward Questions-Answers Are there any active volcanoes in the United States? A All the volcanoes in the United States except one.

Mount Lassen, are believed to be extinct. Which is the smallest republic in Europe? A San Marino. For how long has Buckingham Palace been the official British royal residence? A since the coronation of Queen Vic- toria in 1837. i i Did Zebulon Pike ever reach the summit of the peak which bears his name? A No, Pike climbed part of the way up the mountain, but lost his way and had to turn back. i How does a scorpion kills its prey? A With a poison sting at the end of its tail.

It will also defend itself with this sting! i Newspapers and bottles of milk often let the neighbors know when you are on vacation. One way for a singer to get a break is to put out her own record. This can be expensive unless as in the case of Marlene Cord a big record company hears the record and issues it. Marlene is a Kenosha. housewife who had done some night club and radio work before she married and had a daughter.

Still itchy for a record career, she got her husband to pay for a recording session in Chicago, hired a few musicians and crooned some soft versions of a bunch of standards. Randy Wood of Dot heard the tape, liked it and issued it in a big album called "Marlene Cord." In certain places including, of course. Kenosha it's selling well. And Marlene and her husband are planning another one. to be called "After Five." for fall release.

Advance tip look for Bob Hope to sign Fernandel for his second Buick show, due in October. They hit it off doing "Paris Holiday" and should make a delightful TV pair. News item: "Mae West plans return to show business as an advice to the lovelorn expert on a Los Angeles TV station." So They Say The taxpayer is wasting his money giving us a weapon, and then asking us to limit its use I'm sure the Russians don't have this problem to get training. It's better to have booms than bombs. Air Force jet ace Lieutenant Colonel James W.

Jabara. on public complaints of sonic "booms" caused by jet planes. Sheep have as much right on the roads as cars. In fact, they have more right, for they have had a right of stray from time immemorial. Whitby, England, magistrate Harold Gallaway.

fining motorist for killing three sheep with his car. The question before us today is: Is the Congress to let an individual, who was obviously getting away with illegal acts, tell the Congress of the United States. "I am going to give you what I want you to have and that's Representative Oren Harris before House cited Boston millionaire Bernard Goldfine for contempt. More people should get mad enough at their government to get out and vote. Tan Years Age 141 More than 900 employes of Shamokin Dye and Print Works, shared in a wage increase granted by the company.

The wage increase cost the corporation $415,000 a year. John E. Dubitsky, 20, Shenandoah, was killed when he was struck by an automobile as he was walking on the highway near Green Ridge. Dubitsky died in Shamokin Hospital. Shamokin firemen were summoned to extinquish a fire in the home of Mrs.

Antoinette Mroz, 1006 East Clay Street. The fire was caused by a short circuit in the electrical system. David Vesnefskie, 8, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo J.

Vesnefskie, 26 North Diamond Street, was treated in Shamokin Hospital for injuries sustained when he was struck by an automobile. Twenty-Five Years Ago 1933 William A. Conway, general, chairman of the NRA committee for the Shamokin area, addressed a number of groups of citizens as the NRA drive officially opened in Shamokin. Shamokin Rotary Club was Informed by its president, Clyde F. Ketner, that the Shamokin-Mount Carmel highway would soon be re-built.

The Rotary head conferred with highway officials in Harrisburg. Charles F. Whary, insurance agent and prominent church worker, died in his home. 522 West Pine Street. Mr.

Whary was a former Shamokin Borough tax collector. Northumberland County Treasurer Albert Landis, Mount Carmel, spoke during a meeting of Shamokin Rotary Club, explaining how taxes are collected in the county Shamokin News-Dispatch Shamoktn Dally News Shamokin Dispatch (Established 1893) i Founded 1886) Combined September 18. 1933 Frank Hoover, Founder Published Everv Evening Except Sunday by NEWS PUBLISHING PRINTING CO, Inc. Cor. Rock and Commerce Streeti, Shamokin.

Pa. Gertrude Hoover Reld, President Robert Mallrk, Publisher William F. Dyer, Managing Editor At newsstands 7o a copy; delivered by carrier In Shamokin and adjacent territory, 35c a week; by mall tn Northumberland Count, II 00 per montb; elsewhere $1.25 per month, in advance Member Audit Bureau or Circulations National Representative Gallagher DeUsser, Inc. Entered as second class mail matter at Shamokin. Pa.

29 About 100 cases a year are recorded in which Red Cross training in first aid or water safety in instrumental in saving life. A good friend Is one who con worch you take it rosy without saying you're lazy. What country divides Pakistan into two zones? A The two zones are separated by a thousand miles of Republic of India territory. iQ.

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About Shamokin News-Dispatch Archive

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Years Available:
1923-1968