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The Daily Item from Sunbury, Pennsylvania • 8
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The Daily Item from Sunbury, Pennsylvania • 8

Publication:
The Daily Itemi
Location:
Sunbury, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

DAILY ITEM Sunbury, Aug. 23, 1975 Obituaries Mrs. C. McCreary NO THUMBERLAND Mrs. C.

Margaret McCreary, 71, of 428 Wallace St. died Friday afternoon in Sunbury Community Hospital, Mrs. McCreary was a member of St. John's Lutheran Church, Northumberland. Born in Sunbury Dec.

10, 1903, she was a daughter of the late William and Lillian Slear Lyons. Her husband, Aaron McCreary, died before her. Survivors are a son, Aaron McCreary of Sunbury; nine daughters, Mrs. Ruth Clark and Mrs. Doris Betzer, both of Sunbury, Mrs.

Anna Mae Eyster of Northumberland, Mrs. Margaret Hupp, Mrs. Emma Crone and Mrs. Jean Trostle, all of York, Mrs. Dorothy Johnson of Milton, Mrs.

June Byerly of Vienna, and Mrs. Myrtle Rubenstein of Bloomsburg; 31 grandchildren; 15 greatgrandchildren; two sisters, Mrs. Emma Dorman of Northumberland and Mrs. Esther Stepp of Sunbury, The funeral will be conducted at 11 a.m. Monday in the Davis Funeral Home, orthumberland, with the Rev.

Alan Kieffer and the Rev. Christopher Anderson, officiating. Burial will be in Riverview Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home Sunday evening. Mrs.

Ruth Starr DANVILLE A funeral will be conducted at 10 a.m. Monday in the John J. Brady Funeral Home, Danville, for Mrs. Ruth Starr, 74, of Railroad Street who died Thursday in the Char-Mund Nursing Home, Orangeville. Burial will be in Grovania Cemetery.

Friends may call at the funeral home from 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday. James M. Cornell ELMIRA, M. Cornell, 56, of 427 Schuyler a credit budget manager for Firestone Stores, died Friday morning in his home.

Mr. Cornell had been released from the hospital two days ago following heart surgery. He graduated from Sunbury High School in 1938 and was employed by Firestone Stores for the past 23 years. He was credit budget manager of the Elmira store. Mr.

Cornell was a member of the Loyal Order of Moose and Fraternal Order of Eagles, both of Elmira. Born in Sunbury on Feb. 10, 1919, he was a son of the late Chester C. and Irma Jett Cornell. Survivors are his widow, the former Frances Smith; three step-sons, James, John and Joseph Richards, all of Elmira; two daughters, Mrs.

Diana Berry of Daytona beach, Fla. and Mrs. Bonnie Force of Vandenburg Air Force Base, a brother, Charles W. Cornell of McCammon, Idaho; a sister; Mrs. Ernest Long of Sunbury; and 10 grandchildren.

The funeral will be conducted at 11 a.m. Monday in the M. Quay Olley Funeral Home, Sunbury, with President George Satteson of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints, officiating. Burial will be in Pomfret Manor Cemetery, Sunbury, Friends may call at the funeral home Sunday from 7 to 9 p.m. Death notices CORNELL, Elmira, James N.Y., died 56, Aug.

427 22, Schuyler 1975 in his home. Funeral at 11 a.m., Monday, Aug. 25 in M. Quay Olley Funeral Home, Sixth and Race Sunbury. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7 to 9 p.m.

Sunday. Burial in Pomfret Manor Cemetery, Sunbury. Funeral arrangements by M. Quay Olley Funeral Home, Sunbury. HERROLD, Walter J.

69, Bellefonte RD3, died Aug. 22, 1975 in Centre Community Hospital, Bellefonte. Funeral at 2 p.m., Tuesday, Aug. 26 in United Methodist Church, Runville. Friends may call at the Dean K.

Wetzler Funeral Home, Milesburg from 7 to 9 p.m. Monday. Burial in Advent Cemetery, Boggs Township, Centre County. K. Funeral arrangements by Dean Wetzler Funeral Home, Milesburg.

McCREARY, Mrs. C. Margaret, 71, 428 Wallace Northumberland, died Aug. 22, 1975 in Sunbury Community Hospital. Funeral at 11 a.m., Monday, Aug.

25 in Davis Funeral Home, Northumberland. Friends may call at the funeral home Sunday evening. Burial in Riverview Cemetery, Northumberland. Funeral arrangements by Davis Funeral Home, Northumberland, SHEKLETSKI, Leo 66, 555 Mountain View Nazareth, died Aug. 22, 1975 in Easton Hospital.

Funeral at 3 p.m., Monday, Aug. 25 in V. Seeboid Funeral Home, Selinsgrove. At the request of the family there will be no viewing Sunday evening. Friends may call at the funeral home Monday from 9 a.m.

to the hour of the service. Burial in Evergreen Cemetery, Selinsgrove. Funeral arrangements by V. L. Seebold Funeral Home, Selinsgrove.

STARR, Mrs. Ruth, 74, Railroad Danville, died Aug. 21, 1975 in CharMund Nursing Home, Orangeville. Funeral at 10 a.m., Monday, Aug. 25 in John J.

Brody Funeral Home, Danville. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday. Burial in Grovania Cemetery. Funeral arrangements by John J.

Brady Funeral Home, Convilla. Visiting judge to hear Krehel case SUNBURY A criminal complaint in which Atty. Peter Krehel, Sunbury, has charged his former wife. Mrs. Eleanore Krehel, Selinsgrove, will be the first matter to be disposed of by Judge R.

Paul Campbell, Centre County, a visiting judge assigned to hear several legal matters. Scotts say they won't appear before jury HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) Jack and Micki Scott -say they are "very much disappointed" in a federal judge's decision that they must appear before a grand jury investigating the Patty Hearst case. "We will exhaust every legal means to overturn this decision," the Scotts said in a telephone interview late Friday. They stressed that they will stand fast in their refusal to testify on grounds that the grand jury inquiry is illegal.

"Our position of non-collaboration with the FBI and abuses of the grand jury system will not change," said Scott. He and his wife were responding to a ruling earlier Friday by U.S. District Court Judge R. Dixon Herman that the Scotts and their friend Martin Miller must appear "when directed to do so by the government." Legal action limited Herman said the Scotts had not made a sufficient connection in legal briefs between their assertion of FBI wiretapping and harassment and the grand jury investigation. But he left open several avenues of legal action for the Scotts, noting that "a person who is subjected to unbridled and illegal treatment in the course of an FBI investigation is not left without a remedy." Herman said in his 15-page ruling: "We by no means intend denigrate the allegations of FBI misconduct We merely conclude that the present proceeding is not the place to litigate complaints against individual FBI agents." The Scotts, reached at his parents' Las Vegas home, said they believed the judge based his decision "on the fallacious assumption that the FBI, the U.S.

Attorney and the grand jury are somehow separate and unrelated." They said a key point they sought to make was that "the grand jury has become an arm with subpoena power of the FBI." However, they indicated they were encouraged by the judge's acknowledgement that their complaints against the FBI might be legitimate. In his decision, Herman said the Scotts had alleged "outright police state tactics on the part of the FBI agents which, if true, were reprehensible and go far beyond proper Fire destroys camper SUNBURY -Fire destroyed a camper parked along TR 439. in Lower Augusta Township Friday, state police at Shamokin reported. The camper is owned by Earl Horrock, 422 Evans Willow Grove, and was parked on a wooded plot he owns, police said. The camper was unoccupied and no injuries were reported.

District JP court Lewisburg Crow Today Marshall Munnis, Millmont RD1, to appear for hearing Friday at 9:30 a.m. after arraignment early today. Charged with criminal trespassing in a building owned by Bernice M. Dluge, Elysburg RD2, without permission and throwing out property. Arrested this morning by Pennsylvanit State Police.

Committed to Union County jail in default of $1,000 bond. Watsontown council to open roof bids WATSONTOWN The Watsontown Borough Council will open bids for a new roof over the borough building and tree cutting and trimming Tuesday at 7:30 in the municipal building at Fourth and Main streets. Also, the council will consider advertising for bids for curbing and new sidewalks or borough properties. The council's regular meeting will be- held Sept. 8 at 7:30 p.m.

in the municipal building instead of Sept. 1, Labor Day. Pesticides still sold HARRISBURG Two widely used pesticides heptachlor and chlordane can still be sold and used though their manufacture has been suspended, according to Dr. Gerard J. Florentine, pesticide operations coordinator for the State Department of Agriculture.

Florentine said suspension of the two pesticides because of potential cancer links by Russell Train, administrator for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) does not constitute an outright ban. Farmers and gardeners who already have supplies of the pesticides may apply them to crops and lawns, according to labeled usage. Frank Gaskie SHAMOKIN Frank Gaskie, 57, of 214 E. Independence was pronounced dead on arrival at 2:35 p.m. Friday in Sunbury Community Hospital.

Funeral arrangements are incomplete. Arthur R. Bubb HUGHESVILLE Arthur R. Bubb, 91, of 121 S. Main died Friday in the Muncy Valley Hospital, Among his survivors is a daughter, Mrs.

Alice Deckard of Milton. Business Industry Blanche Martin SHAMOKIN Blanche Martin, 64, of 103 N. Oak died at 1:50 a.m. today in Sunbury Community Hospital. Funeral arrangements are incomplete.

Mrs. Golda Harman LYKENS Mrs. Golda Margaret Harman, 65, of Big Run, Lykens RD, died Friday in Polyclinic Hospital, Harrisburg. She was a retired, employe ofthe Puritan Fashions, Millersburg. Mrs.

Harman was a member of the Immanual United Methodist Church, Loyalton; Glen Chapter 425, Order of Eastern Star; and a charter member of the Order of the Amaranth Millersburg Court 134. Her husband William M. Harman died before her. Survivors are a daughter, Mrs. Earl Adams of Lykens RD mother, Mrs.

Edna Hoke Shadle, with whom she lived; three brothers, Paul and Marlin Shadle, both of Lykens RD1, and Elwood Shadle of Wiconisco; and a grandchild. The funeral will be conducted Monday in Lykens. Mrs. Elsie deCallies WICONISCO-Mrs. Elsie Mae deCallies, 84, of 308 Pottsville died Friday in Dauphin County Hospital.

Mrs. deCallies was a member of the Wesley United Methodist Church and American Legion Post 124. She served as a nurse in World War I.co Survivors are a son, Richard N. of Dayton, Ohio; a sister, Mrs. Bessie Umholtz, with whom she lived; two grandchildren; and a great grandchild.

The funeral will be Tuesday in Lykens. Leo Shekletski NAZARETH Leo L. Shekletski, 66, of 555 Mountain View a crane operator, died Friday in the Easton Hospital of cardiac arrest. He had been in ill health for several years. Mr.

Shekletski worked at the Copley Nazareth Cement Nazareth, as a crane operator for 30 years. He retired in 1972. He attended Wanamie public schools and high school; was a veteran of World War I and served with the U.S. Army in the European theatre. Born Nov.

22, 1908 in Wanamie, he was a son of the late Anthony and Mary Pawlowksi Shekletski. In 1947 he married the former Margaret Roush, who survives. In addition to his widow he is survived by three brothers, Adam of Nazareth, Zigmund and Stanley, both of Wanamie; and three sisters, Miss Sophie Shekletski of Wananie, Miss Blanche Shekletski of Elizabeth, N.J. and Mrs. Leonard Mauro of Binghamton, N.Y.

The funeral will be conducted at 3 p.m. Monday in the V. L. Seebold Funeral Home, Selinsgrove, with the Rev. J.

Allen Snyder of the Sharon Lutheran Church, Selinsgrove, officiating. Burial will be in Evergreen Cemetery, Selinsgrove. At the request of the family there will be no viewing Sunday. Friends may call at the funeral home, on Monday from 9 a.m. to the hour of the service.

Walter Herrold BELLEFONTE Walter J. "Doxie" Herrold, of Bellefonte RD3, a journeyman for Sutton Engineers, died Friday at 5:40 p.m. in the Centre Community Hospital, Bellefonte. Mr. Herrold was a member of the United Methodist Church, Runville; Bellefonte Elks Lodge for more than 20 years; and the Moose Lodge 1173, Selinsgrove.

Born in Blair County, Dec. 18, 1905, he was a son of the late J. Albert and Minnie C. Erb Herrold, In 1932 he married the former Esther Bennett, who survives. In addition to his widow he is survived by the following children, Mrs.

Virginia Kerstetter of Liverpool RD1, Marlin Herrold and Mrs. Leah Shaw, both of Bellefonte RD3, Delbert Herrold, at home and Fred Herrold of Sunbury; a brother, and sister, Mrs. Ethel Reider and Merrill Herrold, both of Port Trevorton; 16 grandchildren; and 11 greatgrandchildren. The funeral will be conducted at 2 p.m. Tuesday, in the United Methodist Church, Runville, with the Rev.

H. Merle Saxman of Bellefonte RD3, officiating. Burial will be in Advent Cemetery, Boggs Township, Centre County. Frien's may call at the Dean K. Wetzler Funeral Home, Milesburg, from 7 to 9 p.m.

Monday. Judge Campbell said Thursday, after. conferences in the Northumberland County Courthouse, that the criminal matter will be disposed of first, likely this fall. Two civil suits also must be heard by the visiting judge. Judges Michael Kivko, and, Frank S.

Moser last week disqualified themselves from the cases and the Pennsylvania Supreme Court assigned Judge Campbell. In criminal complaint, Atty. Krehel charges his former wife with the removal of certain items from the couple's former property on Arch Street, Sunbury. He is represented by R. Michael Kaar, Milton, a member of the district attorney's staff.

At a hearing in Sunbury earlier this year, Harry V. Klein district justice of the found sufficient evidence to hold Mrs. Krehel for further court action, In the meantime, her attorney, W. J. Krencewicz, Shenandoah, filed a motion with the court to quash the complaint.

It is this matter that Judge Campbell said he will consider first. He has given Atty. Krencewicz until Sept. 15 to file briefs in support of his contention. Atty.

Kaar has until Sept. 22 to answer the briefs. Argument is likely before the judge some time after that. Two civil actions will be heard by Judge Campbell involving the same litigants. The one suit involves the property of the former couple at 345 and 347 Ar ch Street, divided when the couple divorced Aug.

9, 1974. The second action involves a grandfather's clock. Mrs. Krehel is the plaintiff. Attorneys for the litigants said they understood the civil matters will be considered late this year or early in 1976.

Atty. Steve Cohen, Sunbury, represents Krehel in the civil actions. Hospitals Le: istown ADMITTED: Mrs. Katherine M. Spaid, Beavertown.

DISCHARGED: Mrs. Mary. E. Fowler, McClure RD2; Clair P. Ferster, Richfield RD1.

Shamokin ADMITTED: Sandra Hornberger, 230 W. Sunbury Shamokin; Mary Ann Kessler, 913 E. Chestnut Shamokin; Carrie Belskie, Shamokin RD2; Richard McCracken, 746 Bear Valley Shamokin; Ruth Kaseman, Mountain View Manor; Rachel Glass, Blue Hill Nursing Home. DISCHARGED: Dennis Kosmer, 1452 W. Montgomery Shamokin; Florence Wojciechowski, 1051 W.

Pine Shamokin; Aurelia Vivimo, 154 S. Shamokin Shamokin; Sharon Culton, 934 W. Independence Shamokin; Bernadette Baskin and son, 45 N. Marshall Shamokin. Up down Wall Street Spuds aren't cheaper By Alan Abelson Dow Jones-Ottaway News NEW YORK What this country needs is a good, fivecent anything.

For a spell, earlier this year, a nickel fetched a pound of potatoes in the pits. But alas, the treachery of nature triumphed again, and spud rices since have more than doubled. Potatoes, in other words, no longer are cheaper. Not much else is either, except maybe Argentine pesos, New York City, bonds and similar items of dubious value. Oh yes, and of course, gold.

Not supposed to Darn it, it just wasn't supposed to happen this way. Here we'd all settled comfortably back, waiting for those bountiful harvests to give inflation that final, resounding whack. Food prices would fall and the official cost-of-living indices along with them. Seventy-six would witness recovery without pain (except to the farmer, to be sure). The more reasoned and temperate mood would be evident in industrial commodities, too.

what happened? The Russians came, the rains didn't and the price of most every. thing edible began to rise. Statesmen in steel and aluminum decided to anticipate demand rather than respond to it by lifting prices (to be fair, their wage pacts are tied to the consumer price index, which in turn, is heavily influenced by food costs). All of this, while auto sales and production are decidedly subdued and the recovery in housing seems in danger of sloughing off before it fairly. gets off the ground.

And unless someone has changed the way they make cars and builds homes, these two industries still consume a fair amount of basic materials. Hence, their continued sluggishness logically should provide an effective halter on prices. Labor, of course, despite the highest unemployment since the bald old days of the "Thirties, has been winning some pretty good-sized pay boosts. That with 8.5 per a cent-plus unemployment. What one logically might ask, happens when the figure gets down to, say, 7 per cent? Or, to put.

it another way, the unions have been hailed for their "restraint" this year. With "restraint" like that, who needs license. In the circumstances, it's scarcely a shocker that investors suddenly are looking at bonds with something less than unalloyed affection. Or, that, with memories of last year still fresh, they have been nervously. edging out of equi-3 ties.

It's true that selling has not been ferocious, that the decline has been quite mannerly, that there is no panic in Wall Street. None of those asrects of the retreat entirely comforts us, however, since, that is the way it was in the summer of 1974, just before the market went due south. Some differences There are differences, though, and for ourselves, we find it difficult to think that, prices are about to go through the ceiling again, or more significantly, that all those speculators in commodities who have been bidding up quotes like mad are right. The simple fact that President Ford likes his job and aims to keep it assures more cautious dealings with our partners in detente than in 1972, with less fearsome consequences to the cost of groceries. Rebuck, Hullihen named to sales jobs The cause of the 5 p.m.

fire is unknown, police said, and resulted in up to $1,500 in damages. Williamsport ADMITTED: Gary Holmes, Milton RD1; Miss Gail E. Whitman, Milton RD1. D. Providence ADMITTED: Lawrence G.

Hunt, Lewisburg RD1. Bloomsburg ADMITTED: Mrs. Robert Gotshall, Danville RD3. DISCHARGED: Mrs. Edwin Smith, Danville RD6; Glenn Salsman, Danville.

Evangelical ADMITTED: George Suddath, Winfield: Mrs. Carl J. Geiser, Lewisburg; Mrs. Walter A. Gerken, Milton RD1; Miss Josephine Seabold, Lewisburg Warren Tripp, West Milton; Mrs.

Willie 0. O'Donnell, Mifflinburg RD1; Albert H. Prowant, Milton RD1. DISCHARGED: Andrew DeHart, Milton RD2; Ricky Keister, Penns Creek; Mrs. Gertie M.

Benfer, Mifflinburg RD2; Mrs. Itha A. Cornell, Middleburg; Mrs. Sarah C. Fairchild, Millheim; Mrs.

Meriam Hauck, Milton; Mrs. Mary J. Huff, Milton; Mrs. Anna R. Rice, Lewisburg RD3; Mrs.

Dorothy L. Summers, Milton; Mrs. Irvin E. Gaugler, Watsontown; Mrs. Leo W.

Guffey, Milton; Mrs. Grant Lewisburg RD3; Mrs. William F. Mitchell, Middleburg RD1; Henry Diehl, Lewisburg; Thomas L. Dyer, Lewisburg RD2; George J.

Kehler, Millmont RD1; John M. Lupold, Penns Creek; Mrs. James L. Earnest and son, Lewisburg. Sunbury ADMITTED: Guy Moyer, Freeburg; Saylor MacGregor, Elysburg; Mrs.

Edith Green, 436 Chestnut Mrs. Ruth Bobbit, 117 W. Chestnut St. Shamokin; Kenneth Dunn, Thompsontown RD1; Mrs. Grace Clark, N.

Second Miss Deborah Lindauer, 223 N. Market Selinsgrove. DISCHARGED: Charles Engle, 439 Pine Shamokin; Pierce Walter, 327 Vine Robert Burgess, King Northumberland; Mrs. Katherine Simons, Dornsife RD1; Miss Alba Zerbe, Mansion Nursing Hone; Mrs. Helen Klock, 1108 Edison Kenneth Kazar, Sunbury RD3; Miles Erdly, 608 High Selinsgrove; Clarence Lenker, Sunbury RD1; Miss Sherry Reicher, 153 Lombard Miss Janet Ross, 605 Jefferson Northumberland; Ermel Kroh, 1504 W.

Lynn Shamokin; Mrs. Elizabeth Meiser, Northumberland RD1; Robert Moyer, Florida; Miss Jean Kabler, Selinsgrove RD2. NO THUMBERLAND Charles M. Rebuck, Trevorton, and Steven A. Hullihen, 229 Seventh Northumberland, have been named to positions on the new home sales staff at Broscious Lumber Co.

Rebuck, a 19-year employe of the firm, was in the construction department until named remodeling representative for the Trevorton. area earlier this year. He and his wife Beulah live at 644 Market Trevorton. Hullihen, a 1971 graduate of Shikellamy High School, was transferred from the company's construction department into remodeling sales in 1974 and assigned to the Sunbury branch. Both men will continue to service remodeling needs of the firm's customers along with their added duties as new Charles Rebuck home counselors, according to Alan S.

Hyde, vice president in charge of homes for Broscious Building Steven Hullihen Wohlheiter has 35 years with PP-L ALLENTOWN Vincent D. Wohlheiter of Montoursville, supervisor customer information at Pennsylvania Power Light Company's Susquehanna Division, will mark his 35th year of service with the utility on 1 Aug. 26. He joined in 1 1940 as a messenger clerk in the Sunbury district and in 1945 was made rural service representative. He became a commercial representative the following year and in 1957 was made a cooking specialist at Sunbury.

He was named assistant to the district manager in Sunbury in 1962 and five years later was transferred to Williamsport in the same capacity. He was appointed customer record supervisor in 1969, the position he held until he attained his new post in 1972. Wohlheiter was born in Avon, N.Y., and was graduated from Sunbury High School. Active in civic affairs, Wohlheiter earned Sunbury's Citi- Births Zenith notes sales drop Sunbury A daughter to Mr. and Mrs.

Robert. Dodge, 302 N. Fourth at 10:56 p.m. Friday. The mother is the former Bonnie Snyder.

Bloomsburg A son to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gotshall, Danville RD3, Friday. Evangelical A daughter to Mr. and Mrs.

Maurice H. Page Muncy RD3, at 10:22 a.m. Friday. A daughter to Mr. and Mrs.

Joseph Byler, Winfield RD1, at 6:33 p.m. Friday. A son to Mr. and Mrs. James A.

506 Front New Berlin, at 9:53 p.m. Friday. Geisinger A son to Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Szwast, Keo Mobile Park, Selinsgrove, at 9:05 a.m.

Friday. Two area men attend water works session STATE COLLEGE James E. Lewis, manager of the Sunbury Water Works Facilities, and David L. McDowell, of Buchart-Horn, Lewisburg, attended the 48th Annual Conference of the Water Works Operators' Association of Pennsylvania, held at Penn State University August 4-6. In addition to the business meeting, they attended sessions having particular pertinence to the administration of water supply, storage and distribution.

zen of the Year Award and the Scouting's Silver Beaver Award. He was a director for the Sunbury Youth Community Center, member of Sunbury Rotary Club, and vice president and director of Associated Charities of Sunbury. He is presently a 4th Degree Knight in the Knights of Columbus in Sunbury and was finance officer for 10 years for American Legion Post 201, Sunbury. He is married to the former Kathryn Rall of Sunbury. They are the parents of two children: Vincent III, of Allentown and Susan, wife of Steven Bickhart, of Sunbury.

The Wohlheiters live at 430 Weldon St. CHICAGO, Ill. Zenith Radio Corp. sales for the second quarter of 1975 were down $8 million from $212 million reported during the same period in 1974. The company reported earnings for the second quarter of 1975 up $1.1 million, from $1.2 million last year to $2.3 million this year.

Earnings per share during the same period went from six cents last year to 12 cents last year, according to the company's second quarter report. The report stated the earnings in 1974 have been Perdue appointed to ACF. post ST. CHARLES, Mo. The appointment of Fred S.

Perdue as manager-manufacturing engineering at the Huntington, W. plant of the Amcar Division of ACF Industries, has been announced by ACF Vice President and Amcar general manager James C. O'Hara. Perdue will be responsible for production and tooling engineering, 'ndustrial engineering, welding engineering, and plant engineering and maintenance, reporting to Plant Manager Do- Rogers at session PHILADELPHIA James C. Rogers, CPA, of 602 Broad Street, West Milton, recently attended a two-day continuing professional education program on "Service to Clients" Construction Industry" att h.

Mariott Motor Hotel, Philadelphia, restated to give effect to a change to a new method of inventory valuation. Sales during the first six months of the year declined to $399 million from the $458 million reported in 1974. With the restated earnings taken into account, earnings for the first six months of this year were $5.7 million, down from $10.1 million during the first six months of last year. The drop per share was from 54 cents last year to 30 cents this year. Income for the first six months, excluding the effect of accounting changes, was $2,7 million, or 14 cents per share.

Vincent D. Wohlheiter Heil distributor named MILWAUKEE, Wise. Appointment of a new distributor in the state of Pennsylvania has been announced by Joseph Waite, general sales manager, solid waste syste.is division of The Heil Milwaukee, Wise. Allenwood Equipment, Allenwood, will sell and service Heil Colectomatic refuse collection bodies, front loaders, Load Lug. ger and Huge Haul Container systems, and Huge Pac stationary compaction equipment.

Officers of the firm are Frank Wolyniec, James Wolyniec, vice president, and Frank Wolyniec, secretary- MONUMENTS MEMORIALS "Rock of Ages" Authorized Dealer SUNBURY MONUMENTAL WORKS 1310 East Market St. 286-0781 treasurer. Four salesmen will cover the east central portion of the state. The company has a total of 15,000 square feet of shop and office space. Allenwood also handles the John Deere and Homelite lines.

Jim Piper, district manager, will handle the account out of Cleveland, Ohio office. BARRE GUILD of Monuments the CATAWISSA MONUMENTS RT. 35, FREEBURG, PA. Lester E. Longacre Phone 374-4401.

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