The Newport Daily Express from Newport, Vermont (2024)

The Nemport Daily Express TWO Published Every Afternoon Except Sundays and 1 Holidays Entered at the Post Office in Newport, as a second class mail matter. SUBSCRIPTION Delivered by Carrier Gne Week .30 Month 1.25 Single Copies Sold by Carriers and News Dealers, Five Cents ESTABLISHED AS A WEEKLY IN 1863 AS A DAILY IN 1936 MEMBER OF THE The Associated Press is entitled exclusively local news printed in this newspaper, as well MEMBER OF AUDIT RATES Delivered by Mail One Month. $1.00 Three Months 2.75 Six Months 5.00 One Year. 9.00 Telephone All Departments 707 TO ADVERTISERS The Daily Express cannot undertake to furnish proofs of advertisem*nts to adverbeers whose copy is not in this office by noon of the day before publication, nor will it held responsible for typographical errors occurring in of any advertisem*nt accepted after noon day preeeding publication. When through error in this office wrong prices appear in print The Daily Express will, upon request, immediately furnish the adverSteer with a letter stating it is responsible for the mistake but it will not be responsible for any loss the advertiser might sustain through such an error.

All advertisem*nts are screpted subject to this understanding. TAXES, PROPERTY APPRAISALS AND PUBLIC ECONOMY The citizens of Newport city feel that their tax rate of $4.50 i is burdensome, and so do the cities of Burlington and Rutland with a smaller rate, but when we look at smaller places and know their tax rates we realize that the larger places are fortunate. Barton Incorporated School District has just raised a tax for schools alone of $3.80 and Orleans has just voted a school tax of $4.00. North Troy incorporated school district tax is equally high and has been even higher. Appraisals of property for tax purposes make a vast difference in the amount of money actually raised against a given piece of property.

That is where a group of Newport home owners of new property went into a huddle, went before the grievance board and received some relief. Their new property valuations set in the list at figures in comparison to older properties of equal present day value, is where the pinch came and where they found justification for a strong protest. In a broader sense the same variations apply to different communities. Valuations for tax purposes in Vermont pursue a patchwork pattern. Some are high, some are low and some are medium.

That makes it necessary to raise widely varying tax rates to raise the money necessary with which to carry on public services. But the local tax paid is what tells the story. When one discovers that his medium-cost house in one place pays twice as much in total taxes as does a similar property in another community, suspicion is aroused. That there ought to be more uniformity of valuations for tax purposes seems certain, but what will bring taxes down more than anything else is rigid economy in operating town and city governments, a search for ways of cutting costs and less public demand for non-essential services. It is encouraging to know that Barton and Orleans incorporated school districts in their recent annual meetings have instructed their trustees to investigate the possibilities of saving money and giving the same educational advantages, or better, By some method of consolidation, and report their findings at special meetings before the first of January, 1950.

They may not find ways and means of saving money and improving their schools, but at least they are making an effort. This matter of consolidation of schools in one way or another is said by educators to be arriving rapidly. Approach to it has been slow in Vermont, but at last we read of three towns in central Vermont which have voted to bring their three towns into a single operating district. Two Orleans county towns are operating their schools with considerable consolidation--Derby and Craftsbury. Now Barton with its two incorporated school districts and a town district are flirting with the idea.

Taxes are becoming a serious matter for rich and poor. Newspapers have just told us of a 57-room mansion built on Long Island 40 years ago at a cost of millions of dollars by J. P. Morgan, being sold for. $5233 for unpaid taxes.

High taxes and the heavy cost of maintaining property is crippling the building of large estates and gradually wiping out those of former glory. We often read of such places being taken over by religious organizations, thus taking them out of taxation and increasing the tax, burden on the smaller fellow. The entire matter of what is happening by our inauguration of the welfare state in nation and lesser units, must be looked upon with an open mind. We cannot have veterans' bonuses, old age assistance, help for all the handicapped, pre-natal care for all who alleged safety from the cradle to the grave, without paying for them. And the pay comes heavily from the poor as well as the rich.

This drain is affecting our entire economy. If school consolidation can save a penny, it is well. At least it is worth investigating everywhere. One of our nationally circulated magazines is authority for the assertion that 50 to 60 per cent of current drug sales are for med. ical products unknown only ten years ago.

Wonderful penicillin is one of the most widely used new products, the foundation of which is vegetable mould. This has inspired a number of other equally marvelous new products springing from the same general source of moulds. Our source of information states that more than one and one-quarter billion doses of penicillin have been sold in the past year. We recall but a few years ago it was so extremely expensive that it was not widely used. Private enterprise now manufactures it at very low cost and its use is universal.

"PASSED A WEARY TIME" (Christian Science Monitor) The Ancient Mariner complained that there was water, water, everywhere, nor any drop to drink. And now will some modern Coleridge write a "rime" for those United States Treasury employees who help to coin money in the San Francisco mint? There they work and wait, surrounded by money, but notified that their June 22 pay checks will be delayed "due to a depletion of funds." ASSOCIATED PRESS to the use for re-publication of all the as all AP news dispatches. BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS "MEN OF DISTINCTION" (Roanoke (Va.) Times) Ever since a well-known brand of whisky started advertising in nationally circulated magazines, with full page photographs depicting "Men of Distinction" hoisting a glass of their favorite beverage (the advertiser's brand of fire water), that great crusader, The Christian Science Monitor, has been firing away almost daily at the implication that there is something elevating in having so-called "men of distinction" bend the elbow with thus-and-so's liquor. Some of the Monitor's "Men of Distinction" offered in rebuttal provide devastating argument. There is nothing like ridicule to wipe out a false impression.

Not even the most consistent of drinkers would presume to say any brand of whisky elevated his character. On the other hand, the Monitor can and does cite scores of cases where drunken husbands beat wives, drunken wives injure children, and drunken juveniles commit crime. In the long run we'd be willing to bet that the Monitor's biting ridicule will toss the "Man of Distinction" right out of advertising. He's been made slightly ridiculous already. THE NEWPORT DAILY EXPRESS, NEWPORT, VERMONT, TUESDAY, "Hey, Wanna Lift, Mister?" I RECESSION BUSINESS NEW I WAGE DEMANDS Leaves From The Things People Do For Money By Hal Boyle NEW YORK (AP) Jimmy never can forget how old man Jaspers conned him.

He told me about it as we sat in his new apartment his latest wife, Rosabelle. "I went to work for him during the war," said Jimmy. "He owned a big independent soft drink business -cherry, grape, lemon, ginger aleanything that fizzed. And he shipped to five states." such "How a big did Mr. business, Jaspers honey?" ever asked get his wife.

"I told you a dozen times!" said Jimmy. "He got it the same way you got me he stole it! Go mix us a drink." Rosabelle tripped out to the kitchen, looking pleased at this version of their marriage. "Well, anyway," said her husband, "good men were hard to get about then, and it didn't take this old joker long to see I knew my way around. So he made me his general manager. "Then he began having these strokes.

They didn't make him goofy. They just kept him in bed. But every day I had to go out to his house after work and tell what was doing at the plant." "What kind of man was this Jaspers, Jimmy?" "Crazy about money. His first wife A Correspondent's divorced him after she caught him snuggling with her maid. "And then when his ex-wife fell in love and married another guy with less money, it made old Jaspers mad.

Just to spite her he built a $100,000 house over in New Jerseystingy as he was -and up and married the maid. But it didn't bother his first wife. By then she didn't care if Jaspers ate $1,000 bills for breakfast. Shemwas Rosabelle with the drinks. "What put me in solid with the old geezer," Jimmy went on, "was the way I could scrounge sugar on black market.

We could sell all the pop we could make. The trouble was in getting the sugar. And I found how to get plenty. "He had no way to check up on me, and for a time I was considering going into business for myself--using his plant. I could've cut a few of the boys in, and we could've run off a thousand or so cases extra at night and sold them ourselves.

But my wife against it." "Yes," Rosabelle said, looking at him fondly. "It was dishonest -and you might have been caught." "About this time I got a better offer," said Jimmy. "I went to the old man, and he told me, 'Stick to me, my boy. I'll take care of you. The business is going to belong to you and a few oldtimers at the plant when I'm "Naturally, I stuck.

Every day I'd Notebook go out and the first thing he'd ask was, 'How many cases I'd tell him, and he'd smile and say 'You'll never regret you stuck by "Tell him how old Jaspers died," prodded Rosabelle. "He got a big stroke one morning. He was real weak when I came to see him. He smiled when I told him business was fine. Then he held my hand and whispered, 'Don't leave Jimmy.

I'll take care of you "That night he died. When his will was filed, I rushed out to the courthouse. Well, there were a lot of pages in the will -but the name 'Jimmy' wasn't on any of them." "No," said Rosabelle "the old skinflint left everything to the maid and their two children. And that was the first time his neighbors knew he had re-married. He'd told everybody his wife was just the housekeeper and the children were Jimmy looked a little smug.

"You know a man has to take care of himself." said. "There weren't any invoices hon that black market sugar, and I managed to make myself enough to furnish this place and put $5,000 in the bank. But what gets me is the way old Jaspers conned me- he conned me with his dying breath." "Yes," said Rosabelle, "the things some people will do for money!" From Here And There About The State give no reason for her action. Police said that she had attempted suicide once before. She will be hospitalized for several days.

Two Elderly Men When queried on Friday she would, payroll savings plan to which the Burned By Gasoline Charles Sunderland, 76, and his brother, Frank Sunderland, 73, Bridport, are recovering from burns, received when the former was putting gasoline into a tractor. The gasoline, in some way ignited and exploded. Frank Sunderland was taken to Porter Hospital in Middlebury with burns on his legs, hands, arms and face. Charles is at home with burns on his face, hands and arms. Harry Pratt and his son, Warren, and William Winch, close neighbors, helped to extinguish the fire.

Dr. Mills Retained As Inspector Burlington Of Meat and Milk It was announced last week at Burlington by the Board of Health commissioners, Dr. H. L. Mills, was meat inspector and milk inspector; and Joseph E.

Moore was renamed inspector of plumbing. The board is now made up of Dr. J. Fred Lynch, who succeeded Dr. George M.

Sabin July Dr. C. E. Bombard and Dr. E.

D. McSweeney. Dr. Eugene H. Luck is health officer.

Automobile Race Costs Drivers Fines of $50 Each Louis Martell, 25, of Montgomery Center and Mitchell H. Demar of the same place, appeared before Judge P. C. Warner at St. Albans recently to answer to a charge of careless and negligent driving.

Each entered a plea of nolo and was adjudged guilty on plea and fined $50 and costs of $8.30. The charge resulted from a race held by them from one town to another. It was reported that Martell won the race but that he ran into the Demar garage door in his haste. Plainfield Woman Hospitalized After Swallowing Lysol Described as a suicide attempt, Mrs. Della Knutson, 52-year-old Plainfield housewife, swallowed the contents of a two and one half ounce bottle of lysol disinfectant Thursday night in the ladies' rest room of Barre's City now patient at the Barre City Hospital, and her physician, Dr.

N. A. Aja, said that she is expected to recover. Mrs. Knutson's husband, Knutson, is an invalid veteran of World War I.

The couple has a grown son and daughter. Relatives said that Mrs. Knutson had not been well lately and had appeared worried. JULY 5, 1949. THE NEWS ANALYZED By James D.

White (For DeWitt Mackenzie) In a way, few Chinese better personify their country's struggle for freedom and reform than Sun Yat-Sen, widow of the of founders the republic. She is above all a product of the impact ideas of democratic ancient and neediestem backward land. These made her a I revolutionary, and set her apart from the rest of her family who have largely ruled China for 22 years. In the end she has wound up in the arms of the Communists. Why? Her story is the answer not only to her personal fate, but is a key to understanding how the biggest single bloc of the human race the Chinese people- are submitting to Communist control.

During the Japanese war, Mme. Sun symbolized the united front against the foreign aggressor by staying in Chungking and doing relief work with her sisters. But when the war ended she again condemned the Kuomintang--and the United States for supporting it. She flatly predicted three years ago that American help to Chiang's government would lead only to civil war and that this would result in certain Communist victory. Why? It appears that Mme.

Sun took literally and very seriously her husband's idea that the two things China needed above all were reform and freedom. The Kuomintang was not meeting these needs, because it was getting more corrupt instead of less, and depended more and more on outside help to survive. In contrast. the Reds had practically no outside help and were getting strong support from the peasants. Anyway, last Friday was the 28th birthday of the Chinese Communist party, and like a lot of other Chinese Mme.

Sun joined in the congratulations. The party hasn't been in power long enough to be corrupted yet, and in any. case Mme. Sun could look at the Whangpoo River and see no foreign warships. Until the Reds came, there was never any time in Mme.

Sun's life that this was possible. "This," she declared, "is landmark in the revolutionary struggle of the Chinese people. We have shaken off the fetters of imperialism and colonialism, we have rooted up feudalism, and the people are traveling toward a new and brighter peak." There you have it reform and freedom. And who can Mme. Sun or any Chinese thank but the Reds? One question is this: Has Mme.

Sun just been taken in by Communist success in a situation where nothing better was presented to the Chinese in terms they found acceptable? There's room to doubt. The lady was not born yesterday, and furthermore she lived in Stalinist Russia from 1927 to 1931. In her speech she said "salute to the Chinese Communist party." But she also said "long live the Chinese peoples revolutionary movement," and thereby told the Reds to keep on leading that movement if they don't want big trouble in that big country of hers. Regular Army Resumes Control of Ft. Devens FORT DEVENS, July 5, (P) The regular Army resumed full control of this base yesterday with the Stars and Stripes raised during firing of a 48-gun "salute to the Union." The post was returned to the Army after University of Massachusetts closed its branch here.

More than 3,000 Bay State veterans attended the branch while it operated for three years. The Seventh Infantry, Tenth Arand Company Tenth tillery, Engineers, will be based at the fort. The post commander is Major General Robert W. Grow, former head of the military mission to Iran. Much Demand for Farrant's Point Cottages Farrant's Point as a tourist place was in great demand over the weekend with every cottage occupied and several parties turned away.

Several parties who have spent vacations there in other season are welcome tenants again. Among those taking cottages for and various periods Edward this Waters season and are: Mr. Mrs. and Mrs. Oscar Gauther of Springfield, Mr.

and Mrs. O. Sullivan son, Jay, of Newport and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Stone and son, Lenny, of Natick, Mr.

and Mrs. Ernest Gault and Mr. and Mrs. Hartley of Lebanon, N. H.

Mr. and Mrs. Everett Coulson and son, Jimmy, and daughter, Betsy, of Morris Plains, N. George Gault of Rochester, Mr. and Mrs.

N. Mr. Vincent DeRussell Humphrey, of Hartford, Carlo and two children of Springfield, Mr. and Mrs. Leon Gilpatrick, Miss Pennie Kipp and Mr.

and Mrs. Albert Routhier and daughter, Francine, from Dover, N. H. WEST CHARLESTON Card Of Thanks We wish to express our sincere thanks to Navy Grange, baseball club, home demonstration club, and to our friends, neighbors and relatives for the gifts we received. Mr.

and Mrs. Paul Gelineau HANco*ck, N. July 5, (AP)John Hanco*ck Grange observed the 75th anniversary of its founding yesterday. Nine past masters of the local Grange and representatives from nearly 30 other Granges were present. Principal speaker was state master Charles Eastman of Kensington.

HORIZONTAL 1,7 Depicted screen star 13 Fruit 14 Form a notion 15 Number 16 Clear space in a forest 18 Make an edging 19 Accomplish 21 Dance step 22 Three-toed sloth 23 Entire 24 African worm 26 Mimicked 27 Unit of length 29 Preposition30 Sainte (ab.) 31 New Zealand parrot 33 Two (Roman) 34 Rational 36 Smell 38 Race course circuit 39 Writing tool 40 Government issue (ab.) 41 2000 pounds 44 Symbol for selenium 45 Indian weight 47 Serai 49 Priority (prefix) 52 Click beetle 54 Cotton fabric 56 He likes to perform before a 57 Traps VERTICAL 1 Witticism 2 Anger Screen 3 Tallow light 4 Kronen (ab.) 5 Hen product 6 Sharp, quick cry 7 Disencumbers 8 Poem 9 Whirlwind 10 Countries 11 Greek letter 12 Still 35 17 Rough lava 36 20 Aged 22 Fourth 37 Arabian caliph 23 Invoke 41 25 Movement 26 Sea birds 42 28 One who inherits 43 32 Word puzzle 45 Star Answer to Previous Puzzle AHMANY BOLL ERIE GAMBLE LEANED RAN LARI TALE STOA ANEW BRAHMANY ORT OM PSI TAP BULL POOR SLAP LONE EBB A SEACADIA CHANCE ARIA RYE SOON ROLL SERTS Roof finial 46 Note in Goddess of the Guido's scale harvest 47 She Having 48 Male greater depth 50 Scottish Ancient sheepfold Irish capital 51 Abstract being Correlative of 53 Symbol for either tellurium Promontory 55 Tantalum Dry, as wine (symbol) 6 dO 10 13 14 15 22 23 25 26 130 32 34 35 36 137 39 40 42 43 44 5 48 149 50 52 54 155 56 57 Locals. Guests yesterday at cottage of Mr. and Mrs. W. J.

Steele at Eagle Point, were: Mr. and Mrs. George Littell, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Goss, Mr.

and Mrs. Natt Rowell, Miss Patty Cook, Mr. and Mrs. James Rowell, Miss Audrey Crowe, Rev. and Mrs.

J. K. Montgomery, Miss Lois Montgomery and Paul Montgomery of Natick, Mass. Cpl. Raymond Lasonde has been a patient for many weeks in the hospital at Fort Knox, Ky.

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Konieczny and daughters, Ann and Louise, of North Hadley, spent the holiday weekend at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bowen.

Mr. and Mrs. Jasper Rudd and family, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Rudd daughter, Elizabeth, and Mr.

and Mrs. William Brouillette, all of St. Johnsbury, were Sunday visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bowen.

Fred Bowen and family visited in Sutton, Friday evening. Miss Flora O'Brien returned to Newport with them. Mr. and Mrs. David Camp of Montreal have moved to their cottage at Cedarville, for the summer.

Mrs. Camp and Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Elder visited Mrs. Tom Camp Monday.

Holiday guests at the home of Rev. and Mrs. E. A. Rockwell were Elbridge Rockwell and family of Danvers, Mrs.

Wendell Corliss and Mrs. Florence Botting, both of Island Falls, and Mrs. Inez Roberts of Orono, Me. Receives Telephone Call From Japan A mother and son exchanged birthday wishes across the miles Saturday evening. From Sendei, Japan, came the clear voice of Pvt.

Richard Ellsworth wishing his mother, Mrs. Clarence Ellsworth, a happy birthday on July 3 and in return he received the same wish from his mother. His birthday was July 4. Pvt. Ellsworth has been stationed in Korea and Japan and this month rounds out three years of service.

His enlistment period is for four years and at the end of that time he plans to re-enlist. His work is in the supply department and life in the Army is proving interesting and beneficial. NORTH TROY Companies Urged to Get Something New Service, St. Albans Carbon Plant Employes Face Big Pay Day Approximately 165 employes of the National Carbon Company plant at St. Albans are sharing in a two-year U.

N. Reports(Continued from Page 1) specifically that Russia's rate of production would continue to increase, but this was the implication of their general prediction for 1949. They said: "The indications are that it will be difficult for general industrial output in Europe as a whole, excluof the Soviet Socialist Republics, to increase as rapidly in 1949 as in 1948." One of the measures the report recommended to help world economy was a resumption of east-west trade in Europe. "Obviously," it said, "an expansion of such trade might at once serve the economic development of eastern Europe and supply western Europe with some of the primary products which would otherwise have to be imported from other continents." CIO Steelworkers(Continued from Page 1) contract termination notice required by the Taft-Hartley Act. In Cleveland, USW district director William F.

Donovan said certain steel companies deliberately slowed production as an excuse to deny workers a wage increase. He said recent drops in operating rates were a "man-made slowdown." Donovan declared some companies want to "make the picture look as dark as they possibly can." TROY Another evening of fun at the Troy Congregational Church vestry, Tuesday, July 12, at 8 P. M. Featuring the Kitchen Ramblers and a short quiz program. Good prizes given.

Admission, adults 50c, children under 12, 35c. A free By Sam Dawson NEW YORK, July 5, (P) -Companies with a busted boom on their hands could take a tip from what some war did when their businesses collapsed V-J day: Try something new. Here and there, firms, finding their present aren't selling so well, are their expensive products, engineering talent to work thinking up new ones. You can always coax money out of an American's pocket for something new. Don't let your company's specialty, or its name, deter you.

Some strange bedfellows are found these days in product lists. Like the company that makes submarines and bowling pins, or the one that makes locomotives and washing machines. The president of Electric Boat Co. says he's egging his engineers on to come up with some nifty new products. The company is pretty diversified already.

It still makes submarines and airplanes. It also makes truck bodies and bowling pins, dynamos and bottle fillers, offset printing presses and structural steel shapes for bridges. The chairman of Curtiss-Wright says his engineering talent 1S scratching its collective head thinking up new products for a corporation that already has quite a list. You probably know it for its airplane engines and propellors. Its subsidiaries also turn out textile spindles, air compressors, film projectors and cameras.

Others in the aircraft industry branched out fast and far in the lean years after the war. One for a time made coffins. Another made kitchen sinks. The granddaddy in this movement may been Aviation Corp. It got so products it changed its haven name to Aveo Manufacturing Co.

It still makes aircraft engines. Its subsidiaries also turn out radios and television sets, auto and farm equipment, refrigerators, kitchen sinks and cabinets, washing machines, gas and electric ranges. It also runs radio stations. So you can't always tell from a company's name just what it's up to. company adds generous percentages depending on length of service, it is announced by Vernon D.

Kleinsmith, general manager. Nearly 100 percent of the eligible employes participated in the plan which pays off today. On a voluntary basis workers were permitted to leave up to seven and a half per cent of their payroll earnings at interest with the company. Beebe-Derby Road(Continued from Page 1) by Vivian Reed, Philip Probert, Andrew and Robert Gosselin. Friends and relatives from Beebe, Newport, Derby, Boston and Billerica, Bristol, North Stratford, N.

and North Uxbridge, were present. Their children who were unable to attend wired best wishes for many more years of happiness. A recitation was given by Miss Rita Gosselin, their granddaughter, expressing the richness and blessings of their 50 years of married life and the courage with which they problems which occur along life's road. "In all of these you both kept smiling through together and I know that one day God will reward you." Card of Thanks We wish in this way to express our gratefulness to all our friends and relatives, who made our golden wedanniversary a happy one. Especially we thank Mr.

and Mrs. Alphee Gosselin for their laborious work in making it a success. May God bless each and every one of you. Thank you. Mr.

and Mrs. Doric Bernard. DERBY My office will be closed from July 3-10. Dr. Frank Adv.

Late News Flashes SANBORNTON, N. July 5, (AP) -Dr. Franklin Nelson Murphy, 73, a retired New York City physician, died suddenly at his summer home here today. The Long Island College of Physicians graduate gave up active practice 18 years ago. He had spent the past 33 summers at Sanbornton Shoals on Lake Winnipesaukee.

We BOSTON, July 5, (P) Forecast DEATH NOTICE New Shaw Play Considers Bomb for Vermont Fair and cooler this Dr. Segal's office will be closed afternoon and tonight. Wednesday July 3rd to July 10th fair and continued cool. Adv. DEATH NOTICE LONDON, (P) Bernard Shaw has written a play about the world after atomic bombing.

It's called "FarFetched Fables" and will be published before August. So the 92-year-old playwright told a reporter who saw the play listed to Shaw's credit in the 1949 edition of "Who's Who" and telephoned him to find out about it. Shaw's biography in the book, supplied by himself, still gives his recreation as "being past 90." WASHINGTON, July 5, (P) The comptroller of the currency today issued a call for a statement of the condition of all National Banks at the close of business Thursday, June 30. DEATH NOTICES BOISVERT- Daniel Gerard, infant of Mr. and Mrs.

Gerard Boisvert, passed away Sunday, July 3, 1949, at the age of 8 days. Committal services were held at Mt. St. Mary's cemetery in Stanstead, Monday, July 4. Converse Funeral Service in charge.

ROLLINS -Lelia Vilette, passed away at her home at 10 North Avenue, Sunday, July 3, 1949, at the age of 79 years. Funeral services will be held this afternoon at 1 P. at the Advent Christian Church, Concord Avenue, with Rev. Craig Wilcox officiating. Burial in the family lot in Pine Grove cemetery.

Converse Funeral Service in charge. CLEVERLEY, George Henry, passed away at the Broadview General Hospital in Newport, on Sunday evening at the a age of 62 years, 8 months, 8 days. Funeral services will be held at the Congregational Church in Barton, Wednesday afternoon at 2 clock with Alden G. Owen officiating. Burial in the Welcome O.

Brown Cemetery. Friends are invited to call at the Funeral Home. Hartwell Funeral Service in charge. CONVERSE FUNERAL SERVICE 30 Years Experience TWO AMBULANCES Tel. Newp't 470-W Orleans 80 Look for this seal.

In's your ROCk Howard A. permanence. Reed OF AGES Newport, Memorials Vt. FAMILY Authorized MONUMENTS Dealer Rushford Funeral Gone North Troy, Vt. 2721 AMBULANCE SERVICE on 62 O.

invited in a A A Ur.

The Newport Daily Express from Newport, Vermont (2024)
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