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Mount Carmel Item from Mount Carmel, Pennsylvania • Page 8

Publication:
Mount Carmel Itemi
Location:
Mount Carmel, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

MOUNT CARMEL, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1946. MOUNT CARMEL ITEM, Guinan's Edge Fashion They're new! They're hemming See? No at the top of the They're lovelier! Headed- Ruffle Fashion- Edge Ruffled the only Curtains in America with the special Double-Fold Headed -Ruffle Crisp, white dainty fluffiness designed to last! Exclusive construction double-folds the fabric at the headed -ruffle to give sturdier wear, easier laundering, more graceful draping. In extra long, wide cushion-dot and plain The our extravagantly pindot, DOUBLE with the FOLD HEADED. marquisette. $5:99 pr.

This Look Label For A Great Stock of Fine Tailored, Cottage and Tailored Cottage and 1.99 Priscilla Curtains To $6.99 Dept Store Lakes Naval. Nolting put the squad to work on an offense fashioned 75 per cent on the Chicago Bears' attack, To help him he brought along Carl Brumbaugh, the Bears' pre-war quarterback coach. Nolting, a great believer in psychology without arm waving or fancy dressing room speeches, talked individually to the boys and told them they had a great opportunity ahead. He doesn't think that it will be easy sailing in the games to come, however. In fact he is worried plenty about this week's engagement with Kentucky.

"From now on they'll all be laying for us," he said. "We're right back to work on drills and we'll have to bear down now, harder than ever." Holland Files Entry For Bloomsburg Race BLOOMSBURG, Sept. 25 Another top-notch speed king has turned in his entry for Saturday's AAA big car auto race on the halfmile Bloomsburg Fairgrounds Speedway, it was announced today by Sam Nunis, director of the program. He is Bill Holland of Bridgeport, nolder of the AAA Eastern dirt track championship for 1941 and considered one of the favorites for the races which will be held under the direction of the Sam Nunis Speedways. Holland is one of the few men in auto racing who also enjoys the distinction of being a champion in another field.

A champion roller skating artist as well, Holland is the owner and manager of several roller skating rings throughout the New England states. Tommy Hinnershitz of Reading, another outstanding star of the speedways and a veteran of the Indianapolis classic, has already turned in his entry for the Bloomsburg race and is expected to furnish Holland with some of 'his stiffest competition. Pirates-Guild Case Indefinitely Put Off PITTSBURGH, Sept. 25. KU.P.)Hearing before the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board of unfair labor practice charges brought against the Pittsburgh Pirates by the American Baseball Guild was postponed indefnitely yesterday.

Guild President Robert Murphy of Boston was unable to appear because of transportation difficulties and his attorney, Herman Lipsitz, was engaged in a court hearing on the injunction against striking workers of the Duquesne Light Co. The board will set a new date for hearing. GOLDEN BEARS TO 'BEAT GUN' (Continued from Sport Page) left halfback of the Rams, who was taken out in the early going of the Friday night fray on account of a leg injury, is coming along all right, it was added, and he is expected to go against York. When Mount Carmel Township High tangles with Frackville High at 8:00 o'clock tomorrow night at Frackville, Captain Billy Williams will do the quarterbacking for the Bears. Williams, right halfback for two years, played left halfback in the Kulpmont, Mahanoy City and Shamokin skirmishes but in yesterday's drill Head Coach Al Masciantonio shifted him to the field general's spot.

Johnny Hogarty, hitherto the first string quarterback, has been shifted to halfback. The Bruin backfleld tomorrow If you're trying to track down the man who sells this, that, or the other thing in your locality, you'll probably find him listed in the yellow pages of the Telephone Directory. The YOUR MAN! nearby. complete Classified Consult directory Telephone it of who whenever Directory sells you're is in the what-and-where doubt. most GET YELLOW in the Telephone the PAGES Directory THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF PENNSYLVANIA PERSON GUY LOMBARDO and his Royal Canadians.

"The Sweetest Music This Side of Heaven Presented by MCA LAKEWOOD Friday, Sept. 27 Admission, $1.67 (plus tax) BUS SERVICE LEAVES: Third and Oak, 8 P. M. Centralia, 8:10 P. M.

night, therefore, will find Williams at quarterback, Len Corona at full, Johnny Hutko and either Hogarty or Bobby Cress, halfbacks. Don Dallatore, who started a at right half in the Shamokin game, has a wrist injury and may not see action against the Mountaineers, Coach Masciantonio said. Masciantonio decided to juggle his ball-toting department when the Bruin backs "threw the ball away" twice in the third quarter of the Shamokin game, once on Bruin 24 and the second time on the Bruin 26. Shamokin recovered both throwaways, not fumbles. The man for whom the lateral was intended was not there on both occasions, yet the ball was lateraled anyway, it was pointed out.

The Bears held the first time and regained possession but Shamokin capitalized on the second break and tallied a touchdown. With Corona and Williams doing most of the backfield blocking, Masciantonio added that he figures Hutko, Hogarty and Cress, three speedsters, may get rolling and going places. Williams also can pass and kick and Masciantonio believes the quarterback slot will enable him to show his real worth. With two wins to their credit this football season and 24 straight wins since their last game in 1943, Kulpmont High's Wildcats, defending Eastern Pennsylvania Conference champs, take on their third straight league opponent Saturday afternoon when they meet Ashland's Black Diamonds in Kulpmont High School Stadium. The game was originally scheduled for Thursday night under portable lights but due to the failure of the arcs a week ago and the possibility of future failures, officials decided to change the time of the contest to Saturday afternoon.

Two other home games on the Blue and White card slated for Thursday nights have also been changed to Saturday afternoon. Minersville scheduled for Thursday night, October 17, has been changed to Saturday, October 19, and Shenandoah from Thursday, October 24, to Saturday, October 26. Mike Terry's proteges opened their 1945 campaign by defeating Mount Carmel Township's Golden Bears, 7-0, and followed up by trim-. ming West Hazleton, 12-0, in the replay of their interrupted contest Monday night. Coach Stan Hino's Ashland Black Diamonds have also played two games.

They lost the lid-lifter, a conference tiff against Tamaqua, 21-0, and won the second, a nonconference tussle against Gilberton last week, 13-7. BATTING LEADERS BY UNITED PRESS NATIONAL LEAGUE G. AB Musial, St. 150 600 Mize, New York 101 377 Hopp, 125 435 Walker, Brklyn. 144 552 Holmes, Boston 144 547 AMERICAN LEAGUE G.

AB Vernon, Wash. .142 559 Williams, 146 503 Pesky, 149 503 Kell, Detroit 129 512 DiMaggio, 138 523 HOME RUNS Greenberg, Tigers Williams, Red Sox Keller, Yankees DiMaggio, Yankees Seerey, Indians RUNS BATTED IN Slaughter, Cardinals Williams, Red Sox Greenberg, Tigers York, Red Sox Doerr, Red Sox Walker, Dodgers RUNS Williams, Red Sox Musial, Cardinals Pesky, Red Sox Lake, Tigers Slaughter, Cardinals HITS Musial, Cardinals Pesky, Red Sox Vernon, Senators Walker, Dodgers Slaughter, Cards PITCHING Pet. 118 221 .368 70 127 .337 73 146 .336 78 180 .326 80 173 .316 Pct. 84 199 .356 141 172 .342 114 203 .336 66 164 .320 83 167 .319 38 30 25 24 126 121 120 118 115 115 141 118 114 107 98 221 203 199 180 177 41 L. Pet .806 .786 00.0 .765 4 .765 5 .737 Forte, 136, Philadelphia, decisioned Dusty Brown, Philadelphia, (8); Jimmy Simms, Philadelphia, knocked out Clyde Diggs, 140, Chester (3).

SLIPS UNDER TRAIN W. Ferriss, Red Sox. 25 Gumpert, 11 Newhouser, Tigers ..26 Caldwell, White Sox 13 Dickson, Cardinals ..14 FIGHT RESULTS BY UNITED PRESS Sept. 25. (U.P)-The left foot of a Brooklyn woman was severed and the other badly mangled today when she slipped and fell under train wheels at a Broad Street station platform.

Hahnemann Hospital physicians said that the right foot of the woman. Mrs. Lillian Kline, 38, was so crushed that they might have to amputate above the ankle. Mrs. Kline said she was visiting here and planned to return to Brooklyn, first arranging to meet a friend on the New York-bound train.

She boarded the train, was unable to find her friend and stepped down to the platform, planning to take a later train. The momentum of the train, plus the slippery platform, caused her to fall. CLOSED THURSDAY AND FRIDAY On Account of Religious Holiday. OPEN SATURDAY 9 A.M. HE Fourth Street Woman Dies Mrs.

Josephine Brodowski, of 643 east Fourth street, died yesterday afternoon at 520 o'clock at her home from complications. Mrs. Brodowski was born in Poland and came to this country many years ago. She lived in Shamokin for one year and then moved to this city where she resided until her death. She was a member of Our Mother of Consolation Church and Rosary Society.

Her husband, Vincent, preceded her in death 12 years ago. Survivors are the following children: Mrs. Albert Kaminski, Detroit, Mrs. Stephen Warsavage, Mrs. Catherine Lukanski and Mrs.

Joseph Domulewicz, all of Mount Carmel, and Mrs. John Zeniuch, Natalie. She also leaves 14 grandchildren. The funeral will be held from the home on Saturday morning, with requiem mass in Our Mother of Consolation Church at nine o'clock. Burial will be made in the parish cemetery.

$2,500 Bail Posted In Faith-Healing Death BETHLEHEM, Sept. 25, (U.P) -Mr. and Mrs. William Focht of nearby Seiderville were free in $2,500 bail on involuntary manslaughter charges today after a coroner's jury held that their twoyear-old son, Edwin, had died of burns due to their negligence. Northampton County District Attorney Stanley J.

Fehr charged at a hearing yesterday that the parents relied on prayer to heal the boy's burns instead of calling A physician when he fell into a can of hot water in which his mother was cleaning chickens. The only treatment given the child, Fehr charged, was oil applied to his head by the Rev. Henry Clark, pastor of the First Century Gospel Church of Bethlehem who led the family in prayer. Dr. Ivan Brown, who performed an autopsy, testified that 90 per cent of the boy's body showed second degree burns and that he would have had an even chance of recovering if given medical aid.

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See it in our exclusive Jaunty Junior collection of suits and coats. $49.75 BROOKLYN FEELS MORE PRESSURE (Continued from Sport Page) to Thursday, an 0. tr date for both teams. If today's ame is rained out, it will 1 be played as part of a double-header Thursday. "And we'll play Thursday, come hell or high water," Durocher said.

"That would be our only chance to get the games in." Nevertheless, the possibility arose that a two or three-day siege of rain might wash out one or more of the remaining Dodger games. And there is no provision in the National League rules for replaying them. In such a case the Cards might win or lose the flag while the Dodgers listened to them do it on the radio. Durocher said he would use Riflin' Ralph Branca, who has a string of 20 scoreless innings and two straight shutouts, against Phils today. Branca blanked the Cardinals with three hits and the Pirates with five in his most recent outings.

More decisive were the results in other major league games yesterday. The Detroit Tigers clinched second place in the American League by beating St. Louis twice, 4 to 3 and 10 to 1, while the Champion Red Sox nipped the Yankees. 5 to 4. Hank Greenburg hit three homers for the Tigers to take the major Lakewood Big Party TONIGHT FREE BUS LEAVES THIRD OAK, 7 P.M.

PRESS league lead at 41 to 38 for Ted Williams. Greenberg's first homer came in the ninth inning of the opener and won the game. Mickey Harris pitched and batted the Bosox to victory. His third single enabled him to get on base and score the winning run. In the National League, Chicago and Pittsburgh divided lopsided games.

The Cubs won the opener, 13 to 3, and the Pirates regained their honor with a 13 to 0 triumph in the second game behind Rip Sewell. JOLTIN' NOLTING COACH OF WEEK (Continued from Sport Page) brushoff in this year's pre-season ratings. But Nolting knew better. Exservicemen flooded the campus long before school started and it seemed every husky knew a lot about football. Captain Elbie Nickel, a great end from the 1942 squad, was back and among the other talent on hand were End Max Wharton, who played two years at Temple, Al Richards, who was a halfback for two years at Penn State as a Marine trainee, and Lowell Storm a guard from Great Three Little Girls in TECHNICOLOR 20.

Blue CENTURY -FOR Directed by BRUCE NUMBERSTONE Produced by MACK GORDON VICTORIA SOON!.

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About Mount Carmel Item Archive

Pages Available:
94,068
Years Available:
1888-1946