Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Press Enterprise from Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania • A5

Publication:
Press Enterprisei
Location:
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
A5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Press Enterprise Monday, January 15, 2018 5 OBITUARIES Keith A. Lanning Clint and Vonda (Briggs)Lanning of Wapwallopen are the parents of a son, Keith Audric, born Dec. 26, 2017, in Hazleton. Maternal grandparents are Bob and Sandy Briggs, Nescopeck. Paternal grandparents are Ed and Colleen Lanning of Shickshinny.

The baby joins a sibling, Layne. BABY Betty Carr will celebrate her 90th birthday on Thursday, Jan. 25. Cards and well-wishes may be sent to her at 332 Dahl Road, Bloomsburg, PA 17815. NOTE: If you know someone in need of cheer, call in a card-shower request to Linda Dancho, 570-387-1234, ext.

1303, or email: CARD SHOWER Zicam recall was voluntary WASHINGTON (AP) In a story published Dec. 19 about a U.S. crackdown on homeopathic medicines, the Associated Press reported erroneously that the Food and Drug Administration ordered the maker of Zicam to stop marketing several nasal products in 2009. The company voluntarily recalled the products after the FDA issued it a warning letter. CORRECTION Complete obituary to be published Tuesday Larry L.

Krum Larry L. Krum, age 68, of Bloomsburg died Sunday, Jan. 14, 2018, at his home. A complete obituary will be available in edition of the Press Enterprise. The Allen Funeral Home 745 Market at Eighth Street in Bloomsburg is honored to be serving the Krum family.

Florence M. Enterline Enjoyed traveling, puzzles, reading, singing Florence M. Enterline, 93, formerly of Turbotville passed away peacefully Saturday, Jan. 13, 2018, at Geisinger-Bloomsburg Hospital, with family members close by. She was born April 15, 1924, in Northumberland County.

On Dec. 25, 1943, she married William P. Enterline and they celebrated 61 years of marriage until his passing on Nov. 2, 2005. She was a 1942 graduate of Milton High School.

She and her husband raised their family of six children in the Turbotville area. As a working mother, employment included Turbotville and Montgomery mills, Sears in Milton, and self-employment as a Sarah Coventry district director. She was a member of the Milton Moose Auxiliary and a volunteer at Evangelical Community Hospital. Florence was a past member of the VFW-Auxiliary Post 8206, Post, Turbotville. She enjoyed her life and was interested in everything you did or had to say.

She liked traveling, playing board games, completing crossword and word puzzles, reading, singing and yodeling, and especially enjoyed winters in her Florida home. She is survived by her children: William R. (Susie) Enterline, of Atlanta, James F. (Elissa) Enterline, of Weyers Cave, Sharon E. Becker (Rupert), of State College, Ronald W.

(Joyce) Enterline, of Bloomsburg, Robert J. Enterline Kathleen Jacobs Snyder), of Turbotville, and Gary S. Enterline, of Turbotville; 10 grandchildren and four great- grandchildren. Services and burial will be held at the convenience of the family. Arrangements have been entrusted to Brooks Funeral Home Cremation Svc PC, 207 Broadway Turbotville.

www.wfbrooksfuneralhome.com Ray E. Hoffman Centenarian had longtime career in farming Ray E. Hoffman, age 101, of Numidia and lifelong resident of Roaring Creek Valley, left us peacefully on Friday, Jan. 12, 2018. Ray was born to the late Jacob Henry and Estelle Edith (Long) Hoffman on the family homestead in Millgrove on May 24, 1916, where he would spend the half of his life.

Ray graduated from Locust High School as class president in 1935. He married his classmate, Nina (Knorr) Hoffman, in 1936 and the two spent the next 71 years together until passing in 2007. In 1936, Ray and his brother, Earl, took full responsibility for the family farm, following the untimely death of their father. The brothers ran the farm together for 15 years, then continued to operate farms on either side of Turkey Farm Road. work focused on dairy and produce, ultimately transforming the operation into a hatchery before leaving farming in 1969.

He remained in agriculture for the rest of his career, working at Agway and Hanover Foods during summers until he retired full-time in 1978. life was dedicated to family and community. He is survived by three children and their spouses: Penelope (Richard) Warters, of Pinehurst, N.C., Ray (Patricia) Hoffman of Millgrove, and Connie (James) Binns, of Phoenix, Ariz. Ray was a deacon and elder of Grace United Church of Christ in Millgrove, and a founding member of the Roaring Creek Valley Grange. He served as Southern Area School Authority treasurer; Roaring Creek Township tax assessor, and director of the Columbia County Extension Service.

For three decades, Ray and Nina wintered in Bradenton, where he entertained friends in Citrus Grove Estates with his humor, and doughnut-making skills. In addition to his children, Ray is survived by seven grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. Along with his parents and his wife, Ray was predeceased by his brother, Earl E. Hoffman, and sister, Elsie E. Hoffman Wagner.

Services will be held at 1 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 17, 2018, at Grace United Church of Christ in Millgrove, with Pastor David Adams and the Rev. Edmund Minnich assisting. Burial will follow at Grace United Church of Christ Cemetery.

There will also be a celebration of his life at a lunch near birthday in the spring announced at a later date. Family and friends may send online condolences to allen rhornefuneralhome.com. The Allen R. Horne Funeral Home and Cremation Services, 193 McIntyre Road, Catawissa, is handling arrangements. Army veteran enjoyed and hunting Dale W.

Blue Sr. Dale W. Blue Sr. of White Hall passed away peacefully Friday, Jan. 12, 2018, at Berwick Retirement Village II.

He was born Dec. 7, 1936, in Bloomsburg, a son of the late Woodrow W. Blue and Alice Merea (Whitmoyer) Evans. He attended Millville High School and then joined the United States Army. Dale then worked as a tree foreman for Asplundh.

Dale enjoyed ing, hunting, sitting on his porch, and spending time with his dogs. Dale is survived by three sons: Dennis Blue and his companion, Melanie Knox, of White Hall, Dale W. Blue Jr. and his wife, Sharon, of Lightstreet, Dan Blue and his wife, Laura, of Gray Court, S.C.; three daughters: Audrey and her husband, Norman Andy, of Denver, Diane Latranyi of Elysburg, and Tina and her husband, Mel Baylor, of Bloomsburg; 13 grandchildren: Beth Blue and her boyfriend, Donald Densberger, Adam Blue, Kolby, Easton, Hunter Latranyi, Justin Blue and his wife, Cheryl, Amber Shultz, Nathan Blue and wife, Roxanne, Charles Blue, Shawna and her husband, Gene Minnick, Ashley Blue, Sandy Bothell, Emily Moore; several great-grandchildren; as well as three brothers: Don Blue of Millville, Dean Blue and wife, Eleanor, of Orangeville, and Tim Blue, of Hughesville; two sisters: Kaye Blue, of Orangeville, Vivian Brown and husband, Larry, of Unityville; and sister-in-law, Dona Blue, of Millville. Dale was preceded in death by his parents, as well as his brother, Doug Blue.

Services will be Friday, Jan. 19, 2018, at 12 p.m., at Bunnell Funeral Home 179 E. Main Millville, with the Rev. Jack Kyttle Burial will be at Cemetery. The family will receive friends Friday from 11 a.m.

until the time of service. Friends unable to attend may send condolences at bunnellfuneralhome.com. In lieu of contributions to help defray funeral expenses may be sent to Bunnell Funeral Home P.O. Box 150, Millville, PA 17846. Some time ago there was a front page article about a local auto dealer and a local charity that worked together to provide a car for a couple that were to get back on their Their situation was a result of their own poor decision making in life.

I recall any negative feedback in 30 sec. But just let the local airport provide a courtesy car for pilots passing through the area, and there are all kinds of negative comments. If a man has his own airplane, you can bet he has probably contributed a lot more in taxes than the former jailbird that got a car from the local charity. Danville man, email Without HARB in place in the Town of Bloomsburg, Matt Zoppetti would have leveled the entire downtown for student housing. Bloomsburg woman, email Bloomsburg HS girls basketball coach please do us all a favor and give it up! Your running the program into the ground.

You have stripped the passion for the game out of so many girls past and present. Bloomsburg woman, email The New York Daily News has reported that Laura Williams Ray of Louisiana was killed by a pit bull at a pet boarding facility on Tuesday night The facility had been told the dog had never been aggressive when interacting with people. Pit bulls can become aggressive at any time for unknown reasons and these incidents often end with someone badly injured or even dead. Why anyone would want to expose themselves or their loved ones to such unstable dogs is beyond my comprehension. Millville man, email Bloomsburg man you never bought Lobster your Access Card but did you ever buy soda, cookies, chips, ice cream etc? Yes there are people who scam the system but many more depend on ACs to feed their families.

hope they use them to buy a well balanced diet but that preclude them from buying an occasional I have found people who gripe about one thing, stop there, they usually gripe about EVERYTHING. Instead of complaining about people ACs; complain that in one of the most Countries in the world we still have people here going hungry! Thankful for what I have Berwick woman, email A Republican, a Democrat, and an Independent walked into a bar. You think one of them would have seen it. Ted Retallack, Locust Gap Thank you to the lady that replied and told me about the results of the Fair Share raf Unfortunately, I see it in the paper because this paper consistently caters to Southern Columbia football and the bad news that goes around the area with meth heads and everything else. So some important article like that important to a person like me important to anyone else.

They should change the name of the Press Enter prise to the Southern Colum newspaper. Bloomsburg man (It was in the paper, you see it, but somehow our fault. Pretty lame.) Jim, today is Jan. 8. I would recommend you read and stretching a little obscenity in the cartoon.

I appreciate it and sure there are other people that Thank you and have a good day. Bob Brandon, Berwick (Can you imagine the pressure faced by these cartoonists to come up with a funny idea 365 days per year? It must be relentless. So when they come up with a clunker, as that certainly was, I tend to cut them a little slack.) To the Ralpho Township supervisors, you are charging rates for the youth basketball organization, but yet there is no heat for these kids who are from Kindergarten to grade. Could you please resolve this matter? Elysburg man Today is Monday, Jan. 8, and I just read the headline of the paper and I am so angry.

Judge Thomas James should be ashamed of himself for putting a 74-year-old man in jail for poisoning a feral cat that come onto his property. He go out and shoot cats in the woods. This cat came on his property and if it it have been poisoned. If that man dies in jail, the blood is on Judge hands. Berwick woman I could not be more disgusted as I read the Dec.

22 front page headline about Dr. Layon (allegedly) assaulting a teenage girl. This doctor had a program at Geisinger Medical Center involving high school students, unsupervised, no parental consent needed. They were allowed to participate in patient care in an intensive care unit, all violations of Geisinger guidelines. So who allowed this to happen? Very concerned Danville mother a question a lot of us would like to see answered.

Geisinger has multiple layers of management. Someone either minding the store or chose to look the other way.) Our opinion line is on duty 24 hours a day. If you have a touchtone phone, call 570-387-1234. When you hear the greeting, press 5967. If you have a rotary phone, call our switchboard, 570-784-2121, between 8 a.m.

and 5 p.m. on weekdays. Comments also may be submitted via computer; go to pressent erpriseonline.com and click the link under the stopwatch icon. DHA-Depo Photos via AP LANE ANGLES OFF LIFF ABOVE EA A Boeing 737-800 from Pegasus Airlines dangles perilously on a muddy cliff above the Black Sea after skidding off a runway at the airport in Trabzon, Turkey, late Saturday. Trabzon Gov.

Yucel Yavuz said all 168 passengers and crew on board were evacuated and safe early Sunday. The cause of the accident was not yet known. Passenger Yuksel Gordu told Anadolu news agency that words enough to describe the fear on the aircraft. a miracle we escaped. We could have burned, exploded, into the Gordu said.

God for this. I feel like going crazy when I think about Another passenger, Fatma Gordu, told private Dogan news agency that there was a loud sound after landing. swerved all of a she said. front of the plane crashed and the back was in the air. Everyone NEWS TIP? Call Pete Kendron at 570-387-1234, ext.

1305 Missile-alert mistake feeds doubts about a real emergency HONOLULU (AP) A blunder that caused more than a million people in Hawaii to fear that they were about to be struck by a nuclear missile fed skepticism Sunday about the ability to keep them informed in a real emergency. Residents and tourists alike remained rattled a day after the mistaken alert was blasted out to cellphones across the islands with a warning to seek immediate shelter and the ominous statement is not a in our so-called ability to disseminate this vital information has certainly been said Patrick Day, who sprang from bed when the alert was issued Saturday morning. would have to think twice before acting on any future The erroneous warning was sent during a shift change at the Emergency Management Agency when someone doing a routine test hit the live alert button, state said. They tried to assure residents there would be no repeat false alarms. The agency changed protocols to require that two people send an alert and made it easier to cancel a false alarm a process that took nearly 40 minutes.

In Loving Memory of Charles S. Kitchen On ang el wings You were taken Two years ago today But in our hearts You will stay And in light You will rest Until we meet again someday Love you orever, Edith, Alice, Kermit families.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Press Enterprise
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Press Enterprise Archive

Pages Available:
535,047
Years Available:
1983-2024