Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutscrapbook pic doris tucker willett (8)I Wcd.diRli gs COTT J• Rut I IBM , N. Y'`—MrFrank GladyS l�l'/!!!!.ti �` ('(A• employe in ill, E(Z dicott organization, recently ren-- - G(301. '(A L. turned to ac- t lv0 service Mien tllndyvl 1, Ilrnlili' Iluuilllrr with the U. S. r 1'I`11v,t. Army. of ATrx. 7,rlln 'I' I h,nni DUl'lntr 1�onlr nn,l I,'r,•,I 11 I,, Iinln l,r 1025 N. �7r• '1`fo,I n m 'i all 1;r,.i 1,., I �. IIII`111011d, RutZ's employ- „f \1 i n u.I Al I \ Il•x i llmnnnd "lent here 110 (II fill; 1 Inn NI tvorr nt,lrrled to 2 won five ,Slig- i\III .11111r I;I, 1!11Q, III the h'IrAI iinp- gestion C o n- tisIl Anil I-11. test prizes and' nw ,Intlhle ring vel eu1011y wan fulfilled t 1l a porr.`I nu,,1 b�_ 1110 Rev. 111% A. It. following* posi- Re1II I\ rll. 'I'hr Orgnniei tVAA MINA Lions; ]2o�I ran Sticiclo. i'nImm, glndloll M a y, 1937, Il n,i .•imaolnhra were lined In - 1- trucker, Dept. char. h decornlions. "r• F_ J. Rutz 73; June, 1937'file hride was given In niarl'lage milling; work' h iu•r (litho. She was nitired in a Dept, 1I, January, 1938, as- 11IIiie Inco gown with a train and mbler, Dept, 88; September, long. sleeves coming' to points over '38, Stock Room employe; April, her wrists. A seed pearl coronet 39, production worker, Dept, held her fingertip veil and aho car- ; Mav, 1940, burr bench work- ried a bouquet of white roses and Dept. 1; September, 1943, sheet peas, ich worker, Dept. 730. Mrs. Charles Mandeville was ma- 9r. Rutz had previously served tron of honor. she wore a floor- h the Army for two years, length gown of blue not. Her bou- 3-1924 and later on served quet was pink roses. ee years with the National Clifford Diemond, brother of the trd. bridegroom, was best man. The ush- ers.e attended the Union -Endicott were Roger Stout, brother-in- h School, law of the bridegroom, and Roger Dennis, brother of the bride, 1 A reception for 100 guests was Ilield in the church parlors. The ,NDICOTT, N. Y.—A winner , Misses Laura and Louise Post BM's 1942 Suggestion Contest served; assisted by Mrs. Raymond. Mr. Robert E. Moore re- Dunlap and Miss Elvira Tailby. cently entered: The couple left for a motor trip i through the Adirondacks. For military s e r - her vice. going -away outfit Mrs. Diemond At the time wore a yellow suit with white ac- his induc- cessories and a corsage of garden- oftion at the ias and rose buds. The bride is a graduate of Ith- Bingham t o e S. Army aca High School, Class of 1939, and U. Center, is employed by the Department' of Moore was a Animal Husbandy at Cornell. Mr. Diemond was graduated from Ith- t u r r e t lathe aca High School in 1938. He was re- o p e r a t o r in cently discharged from the Army Dept. 096. Air Forces after serving 3 years His IBM ca- _ overseas. He is employed by the reer began in. J. C. Penney Company. E. Moore January, 1941, Prenuptial events honoring the when he was bride included showers given by ed as a shear operator in Mrs. C. L. Smith and Mrs. Mau- )ck Room. In August of rice Mix, the Misses Post, and >ur^- ir he became a hand screw Tailby. operator, Dept. 050, and —' tuber, 1942, he was trans- Frank D. Livermore D Dept. 096. Frank D. Livermore, 77, died un- with the company, Mr. expectedly Friday evening, May 31, 1,udied Blueprint Reading 1946, at his home in the village of actory School. Dryden. He was the son of the late a graduate of Bingham- Deforrest F. Livermore and Rose- hside High. itta Pereington Livermore of Ger- 3—Larson Elaine Marie Larson, daugh- ?r. and Mrs. Melvin N, Lar- Gridley, Kan., became the f Charles Edgar Leonard, dr, and Mrs. Fred Leonard iyers St., Ithaca, at 3 p. in. May 5, 1946, in the First yt Church, Emporia, Kan. it lfilton Longberry read „r „bg service following g)vcn In marriage • ,' and wore a white 1(1tr.0-r1 with Irish lace. man. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. arah Allen Livermore of Dryden; hree sons, Ralph Livermore of mithville Flats, Francis P. Liver- -iore of McDonough, and J. R. Liv- rmore of Pitcher; three daugh- ars, Mrs. Cora Falcnore of Sugar 'rove, Pa., Mrs. Ellen May Beck- rith of Norwich, and Mrs. Flor- nce Yager of Pitcher; several randchildren, great-grandchildren, ieces and nephews, Prayer services will be conducted ,y the Rev. Vernon Martin, Dryden Mthodist Church, in the Perkins nehal flome at it a.m. Tuesday. funeral services will be held at 2 . .t*. �1r:�c�lrorlelr and m, Tuesday in the Methodist r,x'lMon of 'Sol[)(,- lihurr•h at German, Burial will be Erh.n new, A10111f t German. Royal Gilkey, I t i (y 11 S`c1100l. (11 aC 11 (--h ta, Di S rri( `co --Vaasa Minn Tione Vn.deA, daughter of Mrn..John Vnnne of 321 Floral Ave., bncamn the bride of Frank G. irlacco, son of Mr. - and Mrs, Louis P'Ineco, of 617 W, Buffalo St, at g;30 n,m. (Saturday, Oct. 13, 1945, In the Church of the Immaculate Conception. The Rev. William Byrne, pastor, performed the cere- mony. Miss Mary Cllne played trar Rllyni dllkny, (Io, ror ninny VAIITA ditlonrl.l wedding music, it Aclonce Innchnr Ill, ilhncn. Tligh The bride's gown was of heavy School and formerly on the faculty white satin, fashioned with a or Cornell University, Bled In Me- sweetheart neckline, long sleeves t n10I,Inl T-IoApital at 5 p.m, Sunday, and a train. She wore a crown of Apr. 14, 1946. He resided at 701 aced pearls from which fell a fin- hlector Fit., where earlier 1n the gertip veil of fine net. Her shower day he had boen stricken ill. bouquet was of white roses, baby Born In Watertown, Mass„ he mums and orange blossoms. came to Ithaca in 1904 to enter The couple was attended by Mr. 4 Cornell, graduating from the Col- , and Mrs. Samuel Deeb of Syracuse. lege of Agriculture in 1908, Four A wedding breakfast was served Inter he returned to Cornell after the ceremony at the home of ,years as nn extension instructor ip the the bridegroom's parents, for the College of Agriculture, later becom- I bridal party and the immediate ing an assistant professor, families. During World War I, he served Mr, and Mrs. Flacco will reside as a member of the Ithaca Home in Syracuse, where Flacco is at - Guard, having turned down an op- tending Syracuse University. He is portunity to, serve overseas as a now on terminal leave from the YMCA secretary. In 1919 he left Army Air Forces and will be dis- Ithaca to become principal of the charged in the near future. Greene High School where he The bride was feated by two served for 2 years, and then taught miscellaneous . showers, given by mathematics and science in the Mrs. Louis Flacco and by Mrs. Binghamton Central High School Lloyd Barnes. for 2 more years before returning in 1924 to join the Ithaca High School faculty. Coached Track TeailA In addition to his work of teach- ing science classes, he was coach of the Ithaca High School track team for a number of years before this job was taken over by Joseph Tatascore. He turned out such high school track stars as Robert J. Kane __ uow, direotDx--o,t_athleties at Cornell; Robert Grover, Paul Ma- lone, George Galbraith, and others. In 1914 he married Miss Eunice Willis Jackson, an Ithaca High School teacher, who survives him, besides one daughter, Miss Eunice W. Gilkey of New York City; three sons, Royal Clarence Gilkey, a stu- dent at Columbia University; Ray- mond W. Gilkey, a teacher at Kingston, and George Johnson Gil- key, a student at Cornell. He is also survived by his mother, Mr9. James H. Gilkey, and a sister, Mrs. J. Birdsall Calkins, formerly of Ithaca and now residing at Ar- lington, Va.; two brothers, the Rev. Charles W. Gilkey of Chicago, Ill., and the Rev. James Gordon Gilkey of Springfield, Mass., and one grandchild, Raymond Douglas Gil- key. Sons Home from Service The three sons, all veterans of V4rorld War II, had just recently re- turned from overseas. Royal served as a combat air intelligence offi- cer with the 15th Air Force, Ray- mond with the Headquarters De- tachment of the Western Base Sec- tion in England, and George with the 13th Air Force in the South, Pacific theater. Mr. Gilkey was a member of the First Baptist Church and for many years he taught the men's Baraca Class. He was also a member of the New York State Teachers' As- sociation and the National Educa- tion Association. Employer's Slayin Admitted by Man Elmira—()P)—Assistant Disti Attorney Ralph Cramer said day Thomas Sloniger, 66, had mitted orally the slaying 'Les afternoon of Fred L. Hagar, year -old filling station propTir He said Sloniger, who 1 part of the time in the tr hack of Hagar's gasoline st, just north of the city, woW