The Evening Times from Sayre, Pennsylvania (2024)

and Waverly, N. Sayre, Athens, South Waverly, LOST IN SHOW and Waverly, N. Y. Mary Muldoon School 8th Graders Put On Puppet Show On Friday, March 28, the three groups in the eighth grade were able to see a wonderful and hilarious puppet show put on by Mrs. Mackie's eighth grade art classes.

The 8 one group presented the "Ted Sullivan and the acts that were featured are as they would have been live stage. Among those taking part were Norman Hugo, who besides working some of the puppets and playing the part of Ted Sullivan. did an excellent impression of a man and woman carrying on a JoAnn conversation. Lockett, Mary, Lake and the script writers, Ransom, who helped with the "theater and all the others who played the characters and worked on the presentations are to be commended. The whole project was very well received.

Many of the puppets are still on display in the glass cabinet near the office. Mrs. Mackie, you did a marvelous job with our students! (Gayle Wilkinson) Term Papers Under Way Term papers are being undertaken by the 9th grade Social Studies classes. The papers consist of 1500 words essays on any country except the United States. Topics include in the rewill be government, history, possessions, products, sports, and other features.

Countries selected so far are: England, Spain, France, Germany, Australia, Sweden, Japan, Switzerland, and China. Good luck on the term papers, kids! (Alice Burke) Religious Exams Early in March, the students attending the religious education classes at St. James Church, had their mid term examinations. The exams were based on questions, "Lives from the of the religious texts Al- on though some passed with flying colors, some could show some improvements. We congratulate those who made the St.

James honor roll! (Mary Nailen) Student Council Projects The Student Council is doing several projects at this time. They have just SKill finished Bower selling tickets for the Post 1563 Veterans of Foreign Wars Fifth Annual Uptown Jubilee Minstrel Show to benefit the Valley Memorial Swimming Pool Bathhouse Fund. This took place 'April 11 and 12 at the High School in Sayre. The Council is also discussing the school dance problems and have set up a plan for the clubs that sponser the dances and a Athens Minstrel Will Feature Dancing Groups On April 18 and 19 at 8 o'clock the Athens High School will sent Days," a minstrel extravaganza in three acts. show features a large variety of dance groups directed by Mrs.

Esther Durgin who is also the accompanist. The entire show is under the direction of Dr. Clyde Bresee. Special dance numbers are: "Top Hat, White Tie, and Tails," Birth of the Blues," "Tip-toe Thru the Tulips," an exhibition waltz, a soft shoe, a routine by John Baker and Donna "Powder Your Face Sunshine," and "Lily Belle." Also featured will be a classical ballet by JoAnn Baker. The first act of the show will be a minstrel at Manor.

In this act the endmen, Charles Olmstead, Norman Fairbanks, Howard Griswold, Norman Thompkins, Ray West, Gary Gilbert, and premier endmen, Jim Bennett and Dan Oakes, will per. form. The interlocutor is Paul White and master of ceremonies is Jer. ry 'Cain. The second act is called "Under the Stars," complete with outdoor cafe, moon, oak trees and Spanish moss.

The last act will be devoted to the crowning of the Queen of Athens High School, and the grand finale. The scenery for this show was painted by Louis Gore of Sayre. Mr. Gore was assisted by Larry Catlin, John Neiley, William Molyneaux, David Chandler and Richard Forrest. The curtains and lights will be managed by John Alger, Gerry Harding, and Dale Bourdette.

Judy Jones and Peggy O'Connor, who are in charge of ticket sales, expect a sell-out. ULSTER Dr. William Beck of the Guthrie Clinic-Robert Packer Hospital, spoke on the work and purpose of cancer and cancer control at the Ulster school house Wednesday evening. showed a film strip entitled "'The Other City" and stressed the importance of periodical and early diagnosis in the campaign against this dread disease. Dr.

Beck is president the Bradford County unit of the American Cancer Society, and explained the division of the funds raised for this purpose. In addition to being a surgeon at the Packer Hospital, Dr. Beck is clinical professor in the Hahneman Medical College and is affiliated with the department of Graduate Medicine at the Uni. versity of Pennsylvania. The Cancer Crusade fund raising campaign got under way yesterday.

BRAND NAMES WEEK APRIL 14th to 19th LOOK FOR OUR ANNUAL BRAND NAMES DIRECTORY ON THE CLASSIFIED PAGE ALL THIS WEEK You'll find it a comprehensive listing of well-known advertised brands of merchandise and dealers who prize your good-will enough to bring these famous brands right to your own home town. Even though you may not at the moment be in the market for these brands, you may want to clip the handy directory and save it for future convenient use. THE FAMOUS MAKERS' NAMES YOU CAN TRUST PRETER 1 BUY BRAND NAMES THE EVENING TIMES (Sayre Council Of Republican Women Meets list of recommendations on how to them. They are also discussing the annual gift to be presented to school. (Peggy Lesneski) Faculty Seminar Our faculty held another in series of seminar study groups March members worked individually on their subject in own schools.

We students were dismissed at 2 2:30. More of these seminars will follow. (Pat Swartwood) Tribune Contest Winners of the Easter contest sponsored by the Tribune, Muldoon School were Joyce Seidel and papers, Shipman, both members of the 6th grade. The girls guessed the nearest number of jelly Easter eggs in a glass jar near hand office. The girls guessed 279 the actual number was 277.

The winners received all the jelly eggs that were in the jar besides two large chocolate Easter eggs apiece; first and last names of girls were inscribed on them. (Denise Bodine) Favorite Song Recently the students of Muldoon Junior High and a poll to decide what their favorite song is. It was found that "Tequilla" came out first with "Skinny Minnie" coming very close behind it. "Are You Sincere?" was third with "You Are My Destiny" being fourth and "Billie" coming last. We next decided to find out what groups of singers made the biggest hits.

Our survey showed us that "'The Platters" were first with "Dickey Do and the Don'ts" second and in third place came "The Four The "Royal Teens" came in fourth and "Danny and the Juniors" came in last. (Pat Dugan and Mary Bottone) Loretta Morrow Funeral Is Held Funeral services for Mrs. Loretta E. Morrow of 412 Cayuta avenue, Waverly were held yesafternoon at 3 o'clock terday, Russell Funeral Home 462 Fulton street, Waverly. Rev.

Arthur Salin, pastor of the Waverly Methodist Church, officiated. Pall bearers were: John Dobberstein, Leon Ward, Howard Green, John Wildrick, Stanley Raub and Harvey Arnold. Members of the Waverly Rebekah Lodge held memorial services Sunday evening at 8 o'clock at the funeral home. RULES SOVIET FROM THIS DESK -Nikita S. Khrushchev fondles a plane model at his desk at headquarters of the Central Committee of the Communist Party in Moscow, Recently named Premier as well as maintaining his title as Communist party boss, Khrushchev still prefers to direct the destiny of the Soviet Union from this office rather than from the Kremlin Mary Haworth's Mail Feeling Ignored by Mate, Matron Is Susceptible to Men Dear Mary Haworth: Everybody likes to get into the act, in giving.

opinions so too, make bold to comment on the subject of marriage. Even though I am a woman, and love innocence and all the finer things in life, I have lived to learn that also, am weak, wayward and unstable at times simply because my husband doesn't listen, care or share life together with me! Datebook Datebook MATRONS CLUB of East Athens will meet Thursday evening at 7:30 at the Community hall downstairs. Mrs. Arthur Dunning will have charge of Chinese auction. WOMAN'S SOCIETY OF CHRIS.

TIAN SERVICE of Sayre First Methodist church will meet Wednesday evening at 7:30 o'clock. Mrs. Bernice Tappan will head devotions. Mrs. Tracy Ault is program chairman.

MILLTOWN P.TA will meet afternoon at 2:30 Wednesday the school, Important meeting all members are asked to attend. LADIES AUXILIARY, Howard Elmer Hose Company, will entertain husbands at a picnic supper this evening at 6:30. Bring table service and covered dish to pass, WAVERLY AUXILIARY to the Robert Packer Hospital will hold a meeting Thursday at 11:30 at the home of Mrs. Slade Palmer. Members will please bring sandwiches.

DELTA ALPHA CLASS of First Methodist Church, Waverly, will meet Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Mary Newland, 217 Clinton avenue. PAST NOBLE GRAND'S Club of Eastern District Bradford County will meet with the Monroeton Rebekah Lodge on Thursday evening at 8 o'clock. ACME GRANGE will meet Wednesday at 8 o'clock. Decorated load cake contest will be held and refreshments will be served after the meeting.

WAVERLY MEDICAL AIDES will meet Thursday evening at 6:30 at the Luckner home, 449 Park Avenue for picnic supper and business meeting. Bring table service and dish to pass. VALLEY WOMEN'S Democrat Club will meet Wednesday, April 16, at 8 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Genevive Slater Athens R. D.

PAST ROYAL MATRONS and Patrons Club of Harmony Court will not meet in April because of the death of Mrs. Fred Pettsley. Members requested to meet at Kolb-Allgeire Funeral Home in Waverly, Wednesday evening at 7:45. CHARLES F. MOORE Auxiliary 94 and Camp 6 U.S.W.V.

will meet Thursday. Picnic dinner at 12:30. Meeting and social hour will follow. UNION LODGE 210 LA to of RT will meet Thursday at 3 o'clock. Picnic supper, at 6.

Bring covered Three 40 and 20 year pins will be year awarded. MARTHA WASHINGTON Social Club meeting has been postfor one week due to illness. Post tonight at 8 o'clock. Bring gift for white elephant sale. BRADFORD COUNTY Council VFW will meet at Sayre VFW WAVERLY FIRE COUNCIL will hold their regular meeting tonight at the village hall, Sayre Council of Republican Women met Monday noon at Trinity Guild Parish Hall in Athens at which time a covered dish luncheon preceded the business meeting conductd by Bertha Haines, council president.

Current legislation in Harrisburg was discussed, followed by a quiz on election laws. It was stated that the time limit for voters in the election booth is three minutes. No voter shall occupy a voting compartment with another person, or speak to anyone while there except in special cases. These cases include a declaration of illiteracy, or physical disability stated on his registration card, and subscribed to under oath, by the judge of elections. It was stressed that only ballots marked in pencil by an shall be counted.

If a voter tears, soils or erroneously marks a bal. lot, he may return it to the precinct election officials and a sec. ond ballot shall be issued to him. Before leaving the voting compartment, the elector shall fold the ballot, exhibit it to one of the election officers, who compares its number officer with the shall record. The election direct.

him to remove the perforated corner and to deposit ballot in the box provided. Any ballot deposited without having the number torn off it shall be void, and not counted. An invitation to a 12:30 luncheon meeting of the Bradford County Council at North Towanda Methodist Church on Monday, April 21 was read. Reservations must be in by April 18 to Mrs. Mildred Fohl or Mrs.

Madeline Egerton. Transportation will also be arranged. The council has been invited to join with Athens Council, Tues. day evening, April 29 at 8 o'clock, when candidates for representative in the General Asbe present. were Mrs.

Bertha Haines, Mrs. for the luncheon Lottie Slayman, Mrs. Katherine Hofford and Mrs. Mildred Fohl. Sayre and Athens Exhibits Shown In Science Fair Attending this years' science fair at the University of Bucknell were 13 students from the Sayre Area Joint High School and 3 from the Athens High School.

Bradford County was represented with 77 projects entered by Bradford County High Schools. Of these, Wyalusing Valley entered 40 exhibits constructed by 68 students. Other schools of the county represented were Canton with three, Troy with one and Towanda Valley with 18. The following Sayre students with entries in the fair were: Lee Diehl, satellite telescope; Miriam Cuthbert, mental health exhibit; David Williamson, model of house using solar energy; Jean Osmun, cloud chamber; Miles Epstein, analysis of co*ke and effect on teeth; Judy Maxim and Sharon Newcomb, Edison telephone set; Katheleen Marshall and Jeannette Smith, project on the eye; Gary Reagan, model of a three stage rocket; Charlene Skinkel, collection of leaves from New York and Pennsylvania States; David Reynolds and Lawrence Brown, electric generator. The Athens students participating were: Charles Olmstead, heart machine; William Molyneaux, transportation of copper by electrolysis; Judy Havens, functions of mathmatical design in fashion.

Wyalusing Valley won the top award for Bradford County with an exhibit entitled "Life or Death." Margene Bennett, a senior, assembled this award-winning exhibit with the importance of, and the typing of blood. She also won second place in the Life Science Division. Other prize winners from the county were Betsy Capwell Dolores Cole of Wyalusing Valley, second place in the Science Division with a project entitled "radioactive Tracers in Analytical Chemical tions," and Thomas E. Crumm of Canton High School, second place in General Classification with an exhibit entitled "Oil That is Cooked From Rock." The purpose of this fair is to develop a wide knowledge for the pupils interested in science. The projects are judged basically on workmanship, orginality, and the use of scientific methods.

These projects were worked on by the students themselves with only the advice from their science teachers. Births Payne Born to Floyd and Marie Casterline Payne of Ulster R.D. 1 a son yesterday at the Robert Packer Hospital, FORGOTTEN DOG -When the Twin Brooks Kennel Club ended its dog show at West Orange, N. "Bozo" found himself alone in the armory. the other 900 contestants had been taken home, and police were wondering what to do about it when they got a call from worried Richard Roentgen, the dog's trainer, who hurried back to pick up the forgotten collie.

Behind the TV Camera 'Wide Wide World' Takes Authentic Look at Washington News Gathering Consequently, if another male shows these qualities of consideration, I am immediately and immensely attracted to him. It seems to me that men haven't much (if any) respect for a woman's feminine powers of son; therefore they don't listen, share and care. I am speaking' of those that fail with women. That's my impression; but am. I wrong? Who knows the answers and understands I don't at all.

But, to quote from The Imitation of Christ: "If thou confidest in the Lord, strength will be given to thee from heaven, and the world and the flesh shall be made subject to thee Neither shalt thou fear thine enemy, the devil, if thou art armed with faith, and signed with the cross of Christ." G. C. Needs Nursery Dear G.C.: The accent of your complaint is upon personal upon craving to receive sympathy, understanding, rather than upon having love to give. In short, your approach to conjugality is "strictly from hunger" not from the heart's abundance. Perhaps that is what's wrong with most rebels in marriage.

the weak, wayward, unstable characters. Namely, immature personality; a crying need for nursery-type nurture. Your conception of love is narcissistic, it seems wanting affirmation of self, in a spotlighted way. You want adulation, attention, approval expressed in terms of a partner's leisurely "listening" interest in all that runs through your head. St.

Francis of Assisi has left us an outline of the mature attitude of love in the following prayer: "Lord, make me an in-, strument of Your peace. Where there is hatred, let sow love. Where there is injury, pardon. Where there is doubt, faith. Where there despair, hope.

Where there is darkness, light. And where there is sadness, joy. "Oh Divine Master, grant that I may not so much seek to be consoled as to console; to be understood as to understand; to 1 be loved as to love. For it in giving that we receive; it is in pardoning that we are pardoned; and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life." M. 1 H.

Voice Crying In The Wilderness? Dear Mary Haworth: It is certainly nice to have even one newspaper columnist mention the word "rights" as well as duties in connection with wives and mothers. According to my husband and some of his friends, the role of woman includes only duties, responsibilities, obedience and work, whereas the male has priv. ileges, prerogatives, pleasures and authority. In our 16 years' marriage, he almost had me convinced, until I read you, that any demands on my part for reasonable sideration as a fellow being, were the absurdities of an balanced woman But now, with even one person recognizing that women have rights in the married state, I may have to revise my thinking. I might even become a crusader to publicize and make known those rights.

So much has been bruited, in the past dozen years, concerning woman's responsibilities and duties, that she seems in danger of becoming a robot, with no other function than to obey male commands. C.S. Textbook on Married State Dear C.S.: Your husband has been giving you a bad time, evidently; and if he is susceptible to learning, he might profit from reading Wingfield Hope's invaluable book "Life Together" (Sheed Ward). It plainly spells out the rules of decency, and the fair division of rights and duties, in the married state. M.H.

New York (UP) It's difficult for me to judge a show like Sunday's "'Wide Wide World" dip into the news gathering business in Washington. I found it pretty fascinating, but I realize my reaction may be prejudiced. However, I prefer to otherwise. I suspect that newspapering is a pretty fascinating barrel of firecrackers to people everywhere whether they're camp mothers, bologna stuffers or human cannonballs. "Wide Wide World," operating under the premise that Washing.

ton is the news center of the world, poked its nose, eyes and ears into most the news gathering corners of the capital. Within its 90 minutes it covered almost as much ground as Mickey Mantle, if the Washington Senators will pardon the expression. The most satisfactory aspect about the show's treatment was that it avoided the "hat on the head, stop the presses, with the long legs sitting on the edge of the desk" bit. Dave Garroway and his merry helpmates instead wheeled through the subject with a minimum of hoke. Working with film clips as well as live cameras, the NBC-TV show peered into the National Press Club, a Presidential news conference, what looked like a hornets' nest of offices in the National Press Building and strangely enough, into a CBS newsroom.

There were chats with and peeks at newsmen who worked papers, syndicates and the wire services including United Press and two other outfits whose names I didn't catch. Space precludes my mentioning the names of all newsmen who appeared on the show, but my natural instinct for survival tells me I should mention Lyle Wilson, United Press vicepresident and Washington bureau chief, who deftly guided viewers through the U.P. offices. As for the individual portions of the show, I would say there were three stickouts: A section devoted to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch's bureau with swift sideswipes at the way each staffer covered his beat.

A portion funneled in from Augusta, where the President was taking a breather and from which point Presidential Press Secretary James Hagerty talked I By WILLIAM EWALD about his trials with the press corps. And third, the trailing of a story as it was born (on film) at a Presidential news conference, spanked alive in the offices of United Press and sprung full-blown in the offices of The Winston-Salem Journal. All in. all, a snap-and-crackle 90 minutes and I hope all you camp mothers, bologna stuffers and human cannonballs have as tasty a session devoted to your craft sometime. The Channel Swim: CBS-TV's "Big Payoff" producer Walt Framer leaves for Europe on April 17 to set up a week of "Big Payoff" filmed telecasts at the Brussels World's Fair.

NBC-TV has acquired the rights to all "People Are Funny" TV and radio programs and signed new long-term pacts with emcee Art Linkletter and producer John Guedel of the show. NBC TV's "Today" will film the San Francisco wedding of Lee Meriwether, the show's former women's editor Lee is getting hitched on April 20 and "Today" will show the films the morning after. Valley Folks You Know Waverly A W. T. Bailey of Clark street, is a patient in the Robert Packer hospital.

A Sam Parent of 120 Elm street is a patient in the Tioga County General hospital, A Archie Guiles of 110 Center street is a patient in the Tioga County General Hospital, A Edward Snell of 428 Loder street is confined to his home by illness. John Erdman of 353 Fulton street, South Waverly has returned to the Robert Packer hospital. Athens A Mrs. Norman H. Macafee, is a patient at the Robert Packer hospital.

A Mrs. Lloyd Vosburgh of 808 North Main street is ill at her home. CROWDS EXPLODE OVER H-BOMB Gathered in Trafalgar Square, London, demonstrators from the British Labor Congress and the Trade Union Congress carry banners demanding a "ban on H-Bombs" and tests in general. (International)..

The Evening Times from Sayre, Pennsylvania (2024)

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