Press and Sun-Bulletin from Binghamton, New York (2024)

6B Press Sun-Bulletin Sunday, March 20, 1988 Iraqi jets hit Iran's oil terminal; attacks on cities continue yesterday its troops killed or wounded 400 Iraqis in the sector but denied launching an offensive there. The Iraqi News Agency quoted military communiques as saying "a very large number" of Iraqi war-planes penetrated Iranian air defenses around Kharg in a major attack on the oil terminal. The report, monitored in Nicosia, said the jets bombed a tanker assembly zone east of the island. "Our planes penetrated the intensive enemy air defenses dropped their bombs on many tankers of various types and size, destroyed their targets, set them ablaze, and left columns of smoke billowing over the area," a commu nique said. Gulf-based shipping officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, reported that at least two tankers owned by the National Iranian Tanker Co.

were "burning fiercely" after the raid. They identified the ships as the Avaj and the Sanandaj. The officials said an Iranian supply boat also was hit and there were casualties, but they had no other details. Ships in the area reported pillars of black smoke over Kharg. The Iranian news agency reported that Iranian interceptors shot down an Iraqi jet in a dogfight over the gulf.

It said naval gunners of Iraqi fighter-bombers pounded Iran's biggest oil terminal yester day, leaving at least two tankers ab-laze in the northern Persian Gulf. said it shot down three Iraqi warplanes. Both sides fired missiles into each other's capitals and bom-. barded population centers with artillery for the seventh straight day, resulting in civilian casualties. i lit An Iraqi military spokesman, announcing that two long-range mis-Psiles were fired into Tehran, de-; clared: "We will make the Iranians live in hell until they accept I peace." attack on the Kharg Island "mil terminal, through which 90 per flRITIIAQIE The 0bituaries Memoriams, and Cards of Thanks that appear below are paid announcements.

The list of I I Mil Ifcw' deaths that appears elsewhere in this section is provided free of charge by the Press Sun-Bulletin. Polish police disrupt health-care activists WARSAW, Poland (AP) Police yesterday broke up a small gathering of activists discussing the state of the country's health care system, a spokesman for the banned Solidarity trade union federation said. Police knocked at the door of a private apartment in Warsaw, asked the 10 activists to show their identification papers and then ordered everyone to leave, said union spokesman Janusz Onyszkiewicz. Zofia Kuratowska, a physician and Solidarity activist who was one of those attending, denied the meeting was an organized one and contended that it did not require permission from authorities. She said it was an informal gathering of friends working in medicine to talk about problems in the health care system.

She said many health care work Salvadorans go to the polls tinued, with Iran firing one long-range missile into Baghdad, the Iraqi capital, another into the northern border city of Khanaqin and 12 short-range rockets into the Iraqi naval base of Umm Qasr in the south. Another missile was fired into Al-Amarah, 200 miles southeast of Baghdad, Iranian communiques reported. The Islamic Republic News Agency said the missile that hit Baghdad was aimed at a "military headquarters" in the city of 5 million. But Iraq said it exploded in a "purely residential" area, killing several civilians. It said it responded by firing two missiles into Tehran.

Samuel KadlecikJr. of Vestal Samuel Kadlecik 68, of Vestal went to be with the Lord Thursday, March 17, 1988 at Our lady of Lourdes Hospital. He is survived by his loving wife, Edith M. Kadlecik, Vestal; three daughters and sons-in-law, Samuella and Albert Cadwell, Windsor, Rose Marie and Donald Elliott, Whitney Point, Suzanne and Joseph David, Great Falls, Montana; six grandsons; four granddaughters, Michael and Megan David, Philip and Daniel Elliott, Suzette (Elliott) and husband Robert Vandeburg, Jennifer, Ingrid, Hamilton, Alvin and Paul Cadwell and wife Kris; two great-grandchildren, Danielle and Jason Cadwell; six sisters and brothers-in-law, Olga Kabanek, Binghamton, Wilma and Duane Coney, Binghamton, Anna and Wenzel Sty-gles, Scottsdale, Arizona, Edith and Michael Pydish, Beverly Hills, Florida, Irene and Pierre Hoyt Binghamton, Lottie and Joseph Brofcak, Conklin; his dear mother-in-law, Frances Lawrence, Oroville, Cali. also several aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews and cousins.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Anna and Samuel Kadlecik. He was a lifetime member of the Slovak Evangelical Lutheran Church of the Ascension and taught Sunday school for many years. He retired from Consolidated Plastics Incorporated and was an army veteran of WWII. He was a loving and caring man and will be missed by his family and friends. Funeral services will be held Monday at 12 noon from the Bednarsky Funeral Home 96 Glenwood and at 12:30 p.m.

at the Slovak Evangelical Lutheran Church of the Ascension with the Rev. Carl Roemer offi ciating. Burial will be in Vestal Hills (Memorial Park. The family wflrt-J-2 ceive friends Sunday 2 to 4 and 7 to9f p.m. at the Funeral Home.

An Evening Devotional Service will be held Sunday at 7:30 p.m.. In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations in his memory be made to the Slovak Lutheran Church or the American Cancer Society. Julia Eileen Solyan of Johnson City Julia Eileen Solyan, 18 North passed away Saturday morning, March 19, 1988 at Wilson Memorial. Hospital. She is survived by her hus band, Walter Solyan, Johnson two daughters, Mrs.

Mitchell (Kathie); Rzodski, Castle Creek, Paulette So--lyan, Bayshore, Long Island; two Mark and Timothy Solyan, both of Johnson City; four brothers, Walter Malinich, Florida, William Johnson City, Frank and George Malinich, both of Binghamton; two sisters, Mrs. Paul (Olga) Belchyk, Virginia, Mrs. John (Vera) Spadaro, Kirkwood; also many nieces and nephews. A memorial Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated Monday at 10:30 a.m. at St.

James Church in Johnson City. There will be no calling hours. James L. Rexford Formerly of Johnson City James L. Rexford, 81, died Thursday morning at the Albany VA Hospital after a lengthy illness.

He is survived by four sisters, Mary Rexford, Mrs. Reed (Helen) Archer, both of Binghamton, Mrs. Frederick (Lucy) Savercool, Vestal, Dorothy Rexford Parenteau, Johnson City; a brother, William Rexford, Johnson City; also several nieces and nephews. He was a Veteran of WWII, serving in the U.S. Army in the South Pacific.

He was a member of the American Legion Post 1019 in Albany. Funeral services will be held at the J.F. Rice Funeral Home 150 Main Johnson City, Monday at 9 a.m and 9:30 a.m. at St. James Church where a Mass of Christian Burial will be offered.

Burial will be in Calvary Cemetery. The family will receive friends at the Funeral Home, Sunday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.. There will be a prayer service at the Funeral Home Sunday afternoon. In Memoriam amid soldiers, SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) Surrounded by soldiers, harassed by a guerrilla ban on road travel and wary of violence, Salvadorans vote today for a new national legislature and municipal officers nationwide. At stake are all 60 seats in the National Assembly, the unicameral legislature.

Voters are also electing mayors and municipal councils in 262 cities and towns. The guerrillas, waging an 8-year-old war against the U.S.-backed government, reject the elections as "a farce." They contend that, during wartime, popular will cannot be expressed at the polls. The rebels have been urging people to boycott the voting and declared a ban on all road transportation in an effort to disrupt the elections. The armed forces said 95 percent of the country's 56,000 troops have been deployed to deliver ballots and ballot boxes and to provide security at the 341 polling places set downed two other Iraqi jets, one a Soviet-made MiG-23 jet, with surface-to-air missiles minutes later. All the pilots were reported killed.

Iraq made no mention of any aircraft losses yesterday. But the communique on the Kharg raid did not contain the usual claim that all the Iraqi jets returned to their bases. The Iraqis have attacked Kharg only three times since November, apparently because the Iranians have intensified their air defenses there. Iraqis bombed the terminal scores of times between August 1985 and last fall in their campaign to choke off Iran's crucial oil exports, its economic lifeline. The "war of the cities" also con John J.

Smith of Binghamton John J. Smith, 70, of 120 Pennsylvania Binghamton, died at 11:52 p.m. Thursday, March 17, 1988 at his residence. He was predeceased by his first wife, Rosina Coleman Smith. He is survived by his wife, Mrs.

Louise Smith, Binghamton; three daughters and sons-in-law, Maureen and Lawrence Limburg, Elmira, Denise and Joseph Capitummino, Fairport, Joel-len and David Peters, Utica; three sons and daughters-in-law, John J. and Yvonne Smith, Asheville, N.C., Jerard A. and Margaret Smith, Endicott, Martin E. and Mary Smith, Binghamton; three step-children, Mrs. Roderick (Michelle) Wallace, Webster, Mitchell J.

Smith, New York City, Mrs. Ronald (Monica) Talbott, Camp Hill, 14 grandchildren; a brother, Joseph E. Smith, Landisville, two sisters, Mrs. James (Rose-ann) Mahon, Montrose, Mrs. Conrad (Mary) Becker, Plainfield, N.J.; several nieces and nephews.

He was a member of St. John The Evangelist Church, Binghamton; It's Holy Name Society; a member of the Nocturnal Adoration Society; a retired 41 year employee of Singer Link; and a founding member of the 327 Hunting Club Inc. Funeral services will be held at the J.A. McCormack Sons Funeral Home, 141 Main Binghamton, Monday at 8:30 a.m. and at 9:00 a.m.

at St. John The Evangelist Church, where a Mass of Christian burial will be offered. Burial will be in St. Patrick's Cemetery, Middletown, Penn. The family will receive friends at the funeral home Sunday, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

Expressions of sympathy in his memory may be made to St. John's C.Y.O. Athletic Fund, 1263 Vestal Bingham-ton. John Kuzma Sr. of Endicott John Kuzma, of Endicott, passed away Saturday morning, March 19, 1988 after a long illness.

He was predeceased by his wife, Mrs. Theresa (Kapral) Kuzma, in 1973; his son, John Kuzma, in 1975. He is survived by two sons, Michael Kuzma and George Kuzma; one daughter, Mrs. Leon (Anne) Zalenski; one stepdaughter, Mrs. Joseph (Mary) Kuraci-na; also several grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

He was a retired Endicott Johnson Employee and a member of SS. Peter and Paul Byzantine Catholic Church of Endicott. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 8:30 a.m. from the Leon Pucedo Funeral Home, 1905 Watson Endicott and at 9 a.m. at SS.

Peter and Paul Byzantine Catholic Church. Burial will be in Calvary Cemetery. Visitations at the funeral home will be Monday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. The Rev. George C.

Powell will hold a Parastas (prayer service) Monday at 7 p.m. at the funeral home. Paul McBride of Binghamton Paul McBride, 87, of 1964 Park died March 18, 1988 at Heritage Nursing Home, Athens, He is survived by one daughter and son-in-law, Millie and Robert McNeish, Binghamton; one son and daughter-in-law, Donald and Dorothy McBride. Binghamton; eight grandchildren, Robert and Barbara McNeish. Lennox, Bonnie and Joel Fosmire, Apalachin.

N.Y., Connie McNeish. Albany, Kenneth McNeish, Binghamton, David McBride, Japan, Daniel McBride, Deanna McBride, Devon McBride, all of Binghamton; three great-grandsons. Robert McNeish, Lennox, Josuha Fosmire, Apalachin, N.Y., Eric McNeish, Lennox also one aunt; several nieces, nephews and cousins. He was predeceased by one son, Paul McBride He was a retired engineer of the Railroad. He came from the Cats-kill Region to Binghamton in 1917 and loved the Binghamton area.

Funeral and committal services will be held Sunday at 2:30 p.m., at the Fischer-Scholder Funeral Home 269 Chenango with Robert McNeish of the North Congregation of Jehovah Witnesses officiating. Burial will be in Chenango Valley Cemetery at the convenience the family. The family will receive friends at the Funeral Home Saturday 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. William G. Clark of Newark Vallev Funeral services for William G.

Clark will be held on Monday at 1 p.m. from the MacPherson Funeral Home, Newark Valley, with Rev. Joseph Timlin officiating. Interment will follow in Hope Cemetery, Newark Valley. Expressions of sympathy in his memory may be directed to the American Cancer Society.

The family will receive their friends Sunday afternoon from 2 to 4 p.m., at the MacPherson Funeral Home. WORLD cent of Iran's oil exports flow, was the first in six weeks and came during one of the heaviest Iraqi air offensives against Iran in several months. The official Iraqi News Agency, monitored in Nicosia, said Iraqi warplanes and helicopter gunships flew 270 combat missions yesterday, including attacks on Iranian cities. Iraq also claimed that its forces killed or wounded 800 Iranians during an "abortive attack" by Iran in the central sector of the 730-mile front line on Friday. Iran claimed ers around the country are rejecting recently offered wage increases, saying they are inadequate compared to government price increases expected to raise the overall cost of living in 1988 by about 45 percent.

Hundreds of health care workers in Gdansk demonstrated Feb. 24 outside the city's main hospital against low salaries and poor working conditions. At that time, Solidarity's national health service workers' committee said it had collected more than 4,000 signatures nationwide demanding reforms in the health care system. The committee also warned that nurses and technical staff are abandoning hospital work because of low pay, and that young doctors try to emigrate because they feel that they have a poor future in Poland. rebel strikers up throughout the country.

The Defense Ministry said it could guarantee secure voting conditions in 244 of the 262 municipalities. Voters in the other 18 provincial communities, located in areas under the virtual control of the guerrillas, are being allowed to cast ballots in the nearest town they can. More than 100 observers from 45 countries and several international organizations are on hand, including a 19-person delegation from the United States. The guerrillas have burned about 10 vehicles since they declared their ban on travel at dawn Friday. In the elections, the governing Christian Democratic Party of President Jose Napoleon Duarte is expected to lose its majority in the assembly.

The rightist Republican Nationalist Alliance, commonly known by its Spanish acronym of Arena, is expected to make significant gains, but is unlikely to get a majority of its own. NATION penalty of $4.02," she said. "He just refused to pay it." Wilson said he didn't pay the penalty because he didn't feel it was justified. The city didn't buv that. On Thursday, city tax collector John Kramer showed up at Wilson's business for the $4.02.

"I told him he was being ridiculous and to get out of my office," Wilson said. "He kept saying, 'I'm just doing my I said, '1 know, and that doesn't require you to think, does That probably didn't win me any points. "He was back in a little while with two police officers. They actually forced us to leave and lock up the office," said Wilson. Wilson gave up his fight Friday and paid the $4.02.

In addition, he paid $248.85 for his estimated 1988 property taxes after Porritt invoked an ordinance saying advance collections may be made on businesses when there is a reason to doubt that they will pay what's due. em States Power Co. A partial evacuation began when officials learned that two of the tank cars carrying methanol, a type of alcohol, were leaking. The decision to evacuate the entire town was made at 11 a.m., after it was determined another tank car carrying sulfur dioxide was damaged, The overturned cars were righted and the leaking cars plugged by early afternoon, said officials for the Minneapolis-based Soo Line. Residents were allowed back in their homes shortly after 6 p.m.

Beatrice Merrilees ofApalachin Beatrice Merrilees, 88, of Hilton Apalachin died early Monday morning, March 14, 1988 at the home of her son and daughter-in-law, David and Virginia Merrilees, Creve Coeur, Missouri. Besides her son, she is survived by one granddaughter, Jenny Merrilees Burt, St. Louis; one grandson, Robert David Merrilees, St. Louis; two sisters, Altana Sykes, Johnson City, Jessie Jones, Las Vegas, Nevada; one sister-in-law, Gertrude Gay, Binghamton; two brothers-in-law, Leo Benson, Susquehanna, Albert Goldswor-thy, Binghamton; five nieces, Erla Storer, Milton, Claire Anderson, Las Vegas, Nevada, Virginia Benson, Almond, N.Y., Mary Elizabeth Fielder, Montrose, Gertrude Alice Butler, Syracuse; one nephew, Loren Jones, Las Vegas, Nevada; also several great nieces and nephews. Mrs.

Merrillees was predeceased by her husband, William Donald in 1986. She was a member of the First Presbyterian Union Church of Owego. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Estey Munroe Funeral. Home, 15 Park Owego, with Rev.

John Mahler officiating. Burial will be at a later time in the Tioga Cemetery. The family will receive friends Tuesday from 1 p.m., until the time of the Funeral. John D. Dexheimer of Upper Saddle River, N.J.

John D- Dexheimer, 33, formerly of Binghamton, N.Y., died Wednesday, March 16, 1988, of complications associated with leukemia at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Wash. He is survived by his wife, Marabeth Robbins Dexheimer; and his daughter, Julie Elizabeth Dex-: heimer, Upper Saddle River, N.J. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. A.

Robert (Irene Martinichio) Dexheimer, Conk-lin; two brothers and sisters-in-law, William R. and Lisa (Paul) Dexheimer, Birmingham. Richard M. and Linda (Davis) Dexheimer, Buffalo. N.Y.

He is also survived by several aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews, and cousins. He was a 1972 graduate of Binghamton North High School and graduated Magna Cum Laude from Harvard University in 1976. Mr. Dexheimer was Vice-President of Amer-cian Technologies Allendale, N.J. Funeral services will be conducted Monday at 10 a.m.

from the James V. DeMarco Son Funeral Home, 199 Court and at 10:30 a.m. at St. Mary of the Assumption Church where a Mass of Christian Burial will be offered. Burial will be in Calvary Cemetery.

Friends are invited to call at the funeral home Sunday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. In lieu of flowers, the family request that donations be made in his name to the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, 1124 Columbia Seattle, Washington 98104. Kenneth Duane English of Augusta, Maine Kenneth Duane English, 54, of 18 Green Augusta, Maine, died Wednesday, March 16, 1988 at his home in Augusta. He is survived by three sisters, Joyce Knapp, Maine, N.Y. Lillian Taylor, Maine, N.Y., Betty Ford, West Corners; a brother, Raymond English, -Endicott; three nephews, Mark Ford, West Corners, Joseph Taylor, Maine, N.Y., Thomas Taylor, Durham, North Carolina.

He was a veteran of the Korean War, serving with the U.S. Army. The funeral service will be held at 2 p.m. Monday at the Coleman Daniels Funeral Home, 300 East Main Endicott. The Rev.

Homer Smith officiating. Burial will be in Vestal Hills Memorial Park. There will be no calling hours. Nester Thomas Holbert of Rome, Penn. Nester Thomas Holbert, 27, of Rome, died Friday, March 18, 1988 at the VA Hospital in Wilkes Bar-re, Penn.

after an extended illness. He is survived by his parents, Nester and Mary Holbert, Rome; a sister, Melin-da Carrington, Light House, Tennessee; a brother. Timothy Holbert, Binghamton; his grandmother. Sodonia Holbert, Athens. his grandparents, Mr.

and Mrs. Spencer Harding. Sayre. He served with the U.S. Navy.

Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. at the Allgeier and Blauvelt Funeral Home, 126 North Elmer Sayre, Penn. with the Rev. Joseph Sammons officiating. Calling hours will be Monday from 7 to 9 p.m.

at the funeral home. Burial will be in Tioga Point Cemetery, Athens. Penn. Mrs. Catherine Anne (Bulger) Stake of Port Crane Mrs.

Catherine Anne (Bulger) Stake, 35, Pine Port Crane, went to be with the Lord Saturday, March 19, 1988 at Dover Memorial Hospital, Dover, New Jersey as the result of an automobile accident. She is survived by her husband, Robert Stake one daughter, Anne Sheak; three sons, James Sheak, John Sheak and Jeremy Stake; all of Port Crane; her mother, Evelyn Bulger, Harpursville; four sisters, Patricia Chretien, Kirkwood, Margaret Hendrickson, Harpursville, Sherry Elmore, Kirkwood, Joyce Wil-lmott, four brothers, James Bulger, Harpursville, John Rochester, William Bulger U.S.N., Philadelphia, Timothy Bulger, U.S.N., Maryland; also several aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews and cousins. She was predeceased by her father, James P. Bulger, and her brother, Robert Bulger. She was a member of St.

Mary of the Assumption Church and owned and operated the CAS Escort Service of Port Crane. Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 8:45 a.m. at the Thomas J. Shea Funeral Home, 137 Robinson Binghamton and at 9:30 a.m. at St.

Mary of the Assumption Church. Burial will be in Calvary Cemetery. Friends are invited to call Tuesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. at the funeral home. BerriiceO.Bush of Windsor -Bernice O.

Bush, 89, formerly of Windsor, died Friday, March 18, 1988 at Barnes-Kasson Hospital, Susquehanna, Pa. She was predeceased by her husband, Lawrence A. Bush in 1979. She is survived by two daughters, Mrs. John (Lucille) McConnell, Rochester, N.Y., Mrs.

Donald (Josephine) Benedict, Belchertown, two sons, C. Douglas Bush, Susquehanna, and Donald N. Bush, Aft on; eight grandchildren: and several great-grandchildren. She was a member of the Windsor Bible Baptist Church. Funeral and committal services will be held Tuesday at 1 p.m.

from the Wm. R. Chase Son, Funeral Home, 2 Chapel Windsor. Rev. David Smith, pastor of her church will officiate.

Burial will be in Glenwood Cemetery, Afton. Friends may call at the funeral home, Monday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. In lieu of flowers, kindly consider expressions of sympathy to the Memorial Fund of the Windsor Bible Baptist Church in memory of Mrs. Bush. Wanda E.

Friedel of Mount Upton Wanda E. Friedel, 66, of RD 1, Mount Upton, went to be with the Lord March 18 at Wilson Memorial Hospital, Johnson City, i She is survived by her husband, Stuart Friedel of Mount Upton; two sons and a daughter-in-law, Douglas Friedel of South New Berlin and Harold and Beth Friedel of Norwich; two daughters and sons-in-law, Duke and Diane Hoag of New Berlin and Rick and Brenda Doty of Bainbridge; five sisters and four brothers-in-law, Helen Sweet of Whitney Point, Kenneth and Dorothy Hendricks of Afton, earl and Jean Briggs of Port Charlotte, Lynn and Thelma Teelon of Bainbridge and Marvin and Elsie Wintjen of Nowata, Okla. two brothers and a sister-in-law, Millard Fleming of Bainbridge and Dewitt and Alura Fleming of Guilford; nine grandchildren; a great-granddaughter and several nieces, nephews and cousins. Funeral services will be held Tuesday, March 22, at the C.H. Landers Chapel, 21 Main Sidney.

Burial will be in Greenlawn Cemetery, Bainbridge. Friends may call at the C.H. Landers Chapel Monday afternoon and evening at their convenience. The family will be in attendance 7 to 9 p.m. Memorial contributions may be made to the hemodialysis unit of Wilson Memorial Hospital, Johnson City.

Paul W. Dalton of Zephyr Hills, Fla. Paul W. Dalton, 67, of Zephyr Hills, died Saturday, March 19, in Zephyr Hills-. He is survived by his wife, Eunice (Beebe) Dalton of Zephyr Hills; a son and daughter-in-law, Timothy and Ann Dalton of Newark Valley; daughters and sons-in-law Sharon and James Weed of Newark Valley, Sally and Jim Metzger of Chicago, 111., Christine and Michael Smith of Zephyr Hills; sisters Lenora Monahan of Brackney, Mary Ferrow of Binghamton and Kath-' erine Jones of Durham, N.C.; and six grandchildren.

Memorial services will be announced at a later date. Local arrangements are by the Candor Funeral Parlour Inc. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to the Newark Valley Fire Department in Paul's memory. Day late, $4.02 short leaves man shut out of business WYOMING, Mich. (AP) Roger Wilson was a day late and $4.02 short so the town tax collector and two police officers shut down his cash register company.

A day later, he was back in business, but out $27 for new locks. Wilson called the whole thing "ridiculous," and Mayor Charles Huizenga called it "unfortunate." Wilson's short-lived tax protest began last month. He mailed his $160 in winter business taxes on the due date, Sunday, Feb. 14, figuring the Postal Service would get it to city offices on the next business day. 1 He figured wrong.

The federal government this year observed Feb. 15 as the Presidents' Day holiday, and that meant no mail delivery. But the city of Wyom-: ing didn't observe the holiday, so the 15th was a normal working day. That meant that Wilson's taxes didn't arrive by the deadline, and that meant a penalty. "We sent a letter requesting a $3.02 late-fee penalty payable in February," said Treasurer Anne Porritt.

"We contacted him again in March and it ended up being a total Train derails, town evacuated ANNANDALE, Minn. (AP) Twenty railroad cars, including nine hauling chemicals, derailed yesterday, forcing authorities to evacuate an entire town of 1,700 people for seven hours, officials said. The derailment also led to a fire that destroyed an empty building, said police. No injuries were report-I ed, however. Some of the cars struck power poles as they derailed, knocking out -electricity to the town for two hours, said a spokesman for North- 1 IN LOVING MEMORY Of Neil MacKemie Weep not in sorrow from memory Get joy from your heart Though our time has been brief Our love shall be eternal.

With such abundance I cannnot forget This much in life which you have meant. To comfort my sorrow and stand in faithfulness, To assure my happiness These things you have done Knowing our love is eternal! Love always, Your wife.

Press and Sun-Bulletin from Binghamton, New York (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Van Hayes

Last Updated:

Views: 6222

Rating: 4.6 / 5 (66 voted)

Reviews: 89% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Van Hayes

Birthday: 1994-06-07

Address: 2004 Kling Rapid, New Destiny, MT 64658-2367

Phone: +512425013758

Job: National Farming Director

Hobby: Reading, Polo, Genealogy, amateur radio, Scouting, Stand-up comedy, Cryptography

Introduction: My name is Van Hayes, I am a thankful, friendly, smiling, calm, powerful, fine, enthusiastic person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.