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A Remarkable Woman’s Amazing Story On the cover: Araxi Hubbard Dutton Palmer (right) shares a festive moment with her daughter, Joyce Cooper. (photo by Courtney Katherine Photography)
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We are the only Punxsutawney-owned media! Punxsy Proud — Boosting our Hometown! Publisher Mary L. Roberts Advertising Mary L. Roberts & Tracey Young Contributing Writers S. Thomas Curry Shirley Sharp Mary Ellen Pollock-Raneri Jennifer Skarbek Marty Armstrong
By Jennifer Skarbek for Hometown magazine ehind every smile, tear, laugh, or sigh, there is a story waiting to be told. Words that, once spoken, can be heard and then echoed over the ages, which create for themselves a type of immortal legacy. It could be a whimsical anecdote from days of old bringing pleasure to the ear of the listener, or a tale full of gall and glory serving as a motivational force, or even an unforgettable moment in time, testing the endurance of the human spirit and proving that the soul has strength beyond measure. Such is the story of Araxi Hubbard Dutton Palmer, a remarkable woman who, in her near-century-long existence, has overcome the greatest of odds to survive, thrive, and bear witness to the value of compassion in a world of disdain and to the ability of a loving heart to conquer the enemy and find “triumph” in the face of “tragedy.” Born Arpenia Karagosian in the midst of the Armenian Genocide and World War I, Araxi was rescued and then adopted by Mary Hubbard, a young American missionary for the Near East Relief who served in the dangerous atmosphere of Sivas, Turkey, during the first genocide of the twentieth century. Having been brought to America as a tod-
B
dler and then raised in New York state where she worked, married, and had her own family, Araxi has recently relocated to Punxsutawney to be near to her daughter, Joyce Cooper, so that she may share her story with others, if not add to its breadth. Araxi initially told the true story of her adoptive family, the Hubbards, in the 1997 publication that she penned, Triumph from Tragedy, and, in light of the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide this past September, Araxi has once again opened up about a chapter of history that has all too often been forgotten or intentionally neglected. “It’s a part of history that everyone does not know about,” declared Araxi, “one that needs to be Araxi Hubbard Dutton Palmer smiles and holds her book, Triheard.” umph from Tragedy, published in 1997, which tells her story – the Araxi explained that al- tale of a newborn given little chance to survive whose long life is testament to her will to live, to thrive, and to share not only her most fifty years ago, she aremarkable story, but that of her homeland. (photo by Courtney came across nearly a dozen Katherine Photography) boxes of letters, documents, and photographs in the eaves of her house had been the homestead of her White Plains, New York, home. The mother’s family, the Hubbards, and the - Continued on page 4
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The Christmas Waltz By Mary Ellen Pollock-Raneri for Hometown magazine
He puzzled and puzzled till his puzzler was sore. Then the Grinch thought of something he hadn’t before. Maybe Christmas, he thought ... doesn’t come from a store. Maybe Christmas, perhaps ... means a little bit more! — Dr. Seuss, from How the Grinch Stole Christmas! hristmas Eve was the best day of the year for me, a kid growing up in the ’60s in Punxsutawney! I’ll never forget driving back to our house in Fairview after doing a few last-minute holiday errands. Dressed in winter coats with their woolly scarves and hats covering most of their frosted faces, the townsfolk still bustled about the sidewalks in front of G.C. Murphy’s and McCrory’s. Twilight had stolen the last moments of dull light from a grey, blustery afternoon; little time remained to purchase last-minute gifts. My hometown looked like a huge, sparkling Christmas tree with simple strands of multicolored lights draped from pole to pole across Mahoning Street. Anxious to get home for dinner, my father’s tires crunched on the packed-down snow as he parked our station wagon near Mr.
Infantino’s little Italian store. Holding my hand, Dad opened the shop’s wooden door, stood in front of the glass-case near the entrance, and selected the perfect pasta for our
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evening meal on December 24: cappellini. After we got back to Fairview, my mom permitted me to turn on the television until dinner time. Content that I could watch Adventure Time, I sat cross-legged on the floor in front of our old RCA console television and enjoyed episodes of Popeye, The Little Rascals, and The Three Stooges. Excited for the arrival of Santa later that evening, Paul Shannon stoked my dreams of new toys and presents as he read some letters to Santa from his television viewers. He even gave us kids a “sneak peak” at the missile that was headed to - Continued on page 18
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ists abound during the Christmas and holiday season. For generations, parents have encouraged children to compile lists of gifts that they hope to find under their Christmas trees. For adults of a certain age, making their childhood lists involved evaluating page after page of Christmas catalogs that major retail stores mailed, usually in early November. Unlike their parents and grandparents, today’s youngsters don’t have to deal with torn and dog-eared catalog pages. Using a mobile device of one sort or another, they browse electronic pages, adding gifts to virtual want lists – lists available not only to the jolly elf, but also to friends and family members who know their usernames. Of course, for making a list and checking it twice, nothing beats visiting local shops – and Hometown advertisers! – and talking with the friends, the family, and the neighbors who own them or work in them. Adults, too, are prone to holiday listmaking – grocery lists, card lists, guest lists, gift-giving lists, to-do lists, alreadydone lists – seemingly a list for everything and every activity under the sun. To adapt a saying of an Old Testament sage (with apologies): “Of the making of many lists there is no end.” The compiling of lists, for many, is a tried-and-true tactic to get a handle on the often overwhelming “busyness” that has come to characterize the Christmas season – the intense flurries of activity that
threaten to undermine the true meaning and spirit of the holiday. As we approach Christmas and the upcoming New Year, let us step back from our list-making, from our myriad of activities. Let us pause to reflect, perhaps in a comfortable chair in a room lit only by twinkling lights, on what Christmas truly means to us. May our musings be sprinkled with thankfulness. As we consider the bounty of our lives, let us be grateful for our blessings. During this season of giving, may we always be cheerful, generous givers and gracious, grateful recipients – remembering, each according to his or her belief, the example of the Christ child and his humble manger. Sure, we have much to do during the holiday season, and our lists, no doubt, help us along our ways. However, as our Christmas lights dim for another year, and the start of a new year begins, may we pause in gratitude and look ahead with both anticipation and resolve. May we vow never to take one another for granted! The publisher, the staff, and the writers of Hometown magazine wish you the merriest of Christmases and the healthiest of New Years. We thank you for your support in 2015 and look forward to serving our Hometown readers and community in 2016. “May all your days be merry and bright! •••
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Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183 – 3
With her daughter’s hand on her arm, Araxi Hubbard Dutton Palmer browses the pages of her book, Triumph from Tragedy – the book in which she shares the amazing story of her life. (photo by Courtney Katherine Photography)
May Our Divine Redeemer bestow His Peace on you and your home, and may His Blessings be with you always.
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Continued from page 2 boxes of papers were the tangible proof of all that the family had experienced as missionaries serving abroad in Turkey. The artifacts were records of the stories that Araxi had grown up hearing from her mother and grandmother about the terrible injustices and atrocities that were sanctioned against the Christian Armenian population by the Muslim Turks in an effort to eradicate the race from Turkey. Araxi said that these accounts were ones about which her mother wanted the world to know, ones that she was not able to formally document before her passing in 1965. Araxi stated that her mother would often utter the following statement: “My soul will not rest until I have put into words all that I have experienced and seen with my own eyes.” Thus, in an attempt to honor Mary’s request and to provide contemporary society with a reminder of the senseless slaughter of millions of innocent Armenian men, women, and children, Araxi spent five years organizing the plethora of information, before spending an equal amount of time writing the history into a solid chronicle of events. Once completed, Araxi self-published the book, which includes the history of her grandparents, Albert and Emma Hubbard, who married August 25, 1873, and departed the same day for a life of missionary work in Sivas, sponsored by the American Board of Foreign Missions. According to Araxi, her grandfather, a Presbyterian minister, and her grandmother, the eldest daughter of a county judge, both heard the call to a life of service as well as the plea from other mis-
- Continued on page 6
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HAPPY HOLIDAYS! 4 – Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183
sionaries already in place in war-torn Turkey asking for “courageous and dedicated workers” to assist with thousands of homeless orphans and starving men, women, and children. They settled into their new home far from America and commenced their new duties. Araxi commented that her grandparents had a beautiful and profound love that could be witnessed by all, and that her grandfather was particularly devoted to his wife. In fact, when the couple’s firstborn arrived on December 3, 1875, Albert was at Emma’s side for the entire delivery. “She read a medical book that they had brought with them from America,” Araxi said of her grandparents, “in order to tell him how to deliver the baby.” During their twenty-eight years in Turkey, the Hubbards founded a large church and primary school, as well as a girls’ school. Their main effort though was tending to the overwhelming amount of children who were left without parents or even a chance of survival. The couple also welcomed eight of their own children into the world, including a set of twins. On May 22, 1890, Albert and Emma welcomed their seventh child and second girl, Mary – Araxi’s mom – into their family. As stated in Araxi’s book, Mary was “different from any of the other offspring … small, pretty, frail, yet healthy, with soft golden curls.” From her birth, Mary held a special place in her father’s heart. She spent much time with him and cherished every moment, especially looking forward to trips to the outcountry where her father would minister to those in need. As a young child who learned altruistic actions from her loving parents, Mary also loved to help others and particularly enjoyed reading to the children at church or the orphanage. From Mary’s personal accounts, life in
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Continued from page 4 Turkey seemed to follow a typical schedule for a child from most regions of the world, with school, lessons, and play; however, with the Great Massacres in Samsun and Erzerum between 1894 and 1899, the atmosphere of daily life changed dramatically. One instance that rendered the young Mary “motionless and paralyzed” and remained vivid in her memory through all of her years was the day a wealthy merchant, Mr. Malcomian, visited the home of the Hubbards bearing horrendous news about the massacre. He said: “Turkish soldiers have entered the city and pounced upon innocent, unarmed Armenian Christians like an army of parasites, butchering their prey with scythes and sabers.” Although Mary did not fully comprehend the heinous nature of the crimes committed that day, she did know that her parents were forever affected by the tragic event, with her father admitting that the day was “the saddest in his whole lifetime.” Despite the Hubbards’ fear of remaining with their children in such a dangerous atmosphere, they relied on the protection of God to keep them safe while they did His work. Albert and Emma nursed the refugees, the wounded, and the disease-ridden Armenians, declaring that their mission was to “alleviate human misery.” The family survived these five years of hard and cruel times in Sivas, staying on until after Albert’s passing in April of 1899, when Emma decided to move Mary and the other children back to the safety of America. The family settled into a home in White Plains, and Mary set about her acclimation to American life. Araxi said that her mother found it hard to transition, but she successfully finished her formal schooling and became a teacher in the heart of New York City and likewise helped immigrant families as a settlement worker. Even though this type of work satiated Mary’s passion for helping humanity, the young woman had a deep desire to return to the country of her birth and childhood, in a sense following in her parents’ footsteps, and to lend a hand where needed. The flame of this desire flickered and was set into a full blaze when Turkey entered World War I in 1914 and the Turkish genocide of Armenians began. To facilitate her return to Turkey as a volunteer relief worker, Mary made application with the Near East Relief, a national organization started through American philanthropy that, through its efforts, saved more than two million Ar-
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Images of the three-year-old Araxi Hubbard dressed in traditional Armenian garb helped to raise awareness of the Armenian Holocaust and more than $3 million in support of the relief effort for Armenian children. (photo by Courtney Katherine Photography)
her text: “The Turks stoned and abused little girls under seven, then pulled their arms and legs off before killing them; halfdead men were dragged through the streets; little babies were gathered, put into bags, and burned alive; and many families were locked in their homes and burned to death.” These ghastly stories sickened Mary while simultaneously validating her choice to offer her service to the Armenians, knowing that she would be comforting God’s people who were living in fear and hopelessness. Mary was most overjoyed to learn that she would be placed in Sivas as head of a girls’ orphanage, a place of her past and, in her eyes, a gift for her from her Savior. While there, Mary cared for thousands of emaciated men, women, and children and also supervised other relief departments, earning her the name “Angel Mary.” She dealt on a daily basis with cases of scabies, trachoma, malaria, typhoid, small- Continued on page 8
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pox, and dysentery, to name a few, all diseases that affected people throughout the entire city. As Mary helped these people, as well as a huge influx of refugees who filed into Sivas by the thousands, she listened to each as he or she told a personal story of torture or mistreatment. Despite all the pain that Mary witnessed in Turkey, she was blessed by a certain happiness. Araxi reported that her mother had met the love of her life, Charles Van Farnham, while she was serving in Sivas. Charles was the head of the organization’s motor transportation and supply transport, and he and Mary would travel to the boys’ orphanage together to offer their service. Over time, the couple’s interests drew them together and Mary was ecstatic to write home to her mother to tell the family of her and Charles’s engagement. According to Araxi, it was around this same time that another life-altering event happened for Mary. One morning as the young woman was traveling to the monastery to visit with a close friend, she was startled by the cries of a baby. As Mary approached a nearby ditch from where she had heard the noise, she slowly parted the tall grasses to find a sight for which she never could have been ready to encounter. There before her was a “ragged, emaciated, miserable body of a woman. Her head was covered with long, filthymatted hair and in her arms she held a skeleton-like baby deformed from starvation. The child had no hair on its head, and lice and vermin fed from oozing head sores.” The startled woman shook with dread upon being discovered; however, Mary soon put her fears to rest by telling the mother that she was an American there to help. The woman, Aznive Karagosian, retold to Mary the horrible story of how the Turks had raided her village and killed her entire family. Then, the woman was forced to wander for months searching for food and safety, neither of which was readily available. Aznive gave birth to a little girl while alone in the woods. Knowing that her baby would not survive without proper nourishment and in hopes of sparing her undue suffering, Aznive admitted that she tried to drown her baby on three occasions but was unable to do so. Now, with both mother and child almost in death’s grip, Aznive held her baby, Arpenia, up for Mary, asking the stranger to care for her. No sooner than Mary had welcomed the frail life into her arms did Aznive take her last breath. Mary immediately took the baby to the compound hospital where the doctor,
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shocked by the absolutely pathetic sight of skin and bones, declared that the poor thing would not live for more than three days. Regardless of this prognosis, Mary dedicated herself to nurturing the infant to health. She fed the baby milk from a medicine dropper and rubbed salve on her wounds. When the baby survived past the three-day marker that the doctor had predicted would be her death sentence, Mary was sure that the baby’s existence was a miracle. With each passing month, Arpenia grew stronger and more precious to both Mary and Charles, who likewise developed a deep love for the orphan. As Mary became more attached to Arpenia, she decided to give her a new name for her new life. She chose Araxi, as both a tribute to the infant’s native culture and in honor of the Arax River which flows below the sacred mountain of Mount Ararat in Armenia. Mary officially adopted the baby as her daughter February 3, 1921, becoming the legal parent by the Armenian Bishop of Araxi Mary Hubbard. After the adoption and when conditions in Turkey were improving for the surviving Armenian population, Mary made the decision to return to America with her daughter in hopes of Charles’s planning to join them in a short time. However, the joy of the new family’s reunion with the Hubbards in White Plains was cut short when Mary received word that Charles had been killed in Constantinople by a stray bullet. Mary was rendered heartbroken by the news; but, her faith in God and dedication to her daughter gave her the strength that she needed to move forward. Instead of giving in to her despair, Mary decided to devote herself to telling Araxi’s amazing story to many groups and organizations so that she could raise money for the hungry children still in Armenia. She told her family that she wanted people to know “the tragedy and joy in the life of this beautiful little girl” and so help the children like Araxi who were still suffering. Astoundingly, Mary spent two years traveling and speaking to groups about the plight of the Armenian orphans, telling the story of her daughter. Araxi’s image appeared on envelopes and posters asking for contributions to the cause. In fact, Araxi was even photographed for the New York Times in traditional clothes from her birth country in order to educate the public on the conditions left behind from the Armenian Holocaust. The face of this three-year-old little girl, who was not expected to live for even a few days after she was rescued, was responsible for raising more than $3 million in a relief effort for starving Armenian children. Mary had been successful, earning her personal contentment as well as the Near - Continued on page 10
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Company houses sit on the hill at Walston Mine (above) and Adrian Mine (below), where, during the 1889 strike, miners and their families were evicted from their homes. Note the smoke from the Adrian coke ovens. (photos courtesy of the Punxsutawney Area Historical & Genealogical Society)
The Christmas Strike of 1889
By the Coal Memorial Committee for Hometown magazine t the July 1889 joint conference of miners’ delegates and representatives of mine operators, the miners’ issues were: 1. They had been averaging a dollar a day in wages for the past two months, which made it difficult to feed their families. 2. They were required to do “dead work” – working one day a week for nothing – because they were not paid for cutting clay veins, bailing water, or other tasks that did not produce coal. 3. The mines were overstaffed, resulting in half-time work for the miners. The miners’ delegates returned from the conference and organized local meetings to approve actions regarding these issues. Under the law, labor was required to present its requests to their company fourteen days before taking any action. If their requests were unanswered or denied, miners were permitted to strike. On July 31, 1889, a committee of miners from the Clearfield region visited Punxsutawney for the purpose of encouraging the Berwind-White Company miners at Horatio to request the district scale, to have a check weighman on the tipple, and to be paid for dead work. On August 12th, more than four hundred miners attended a meeting with Mine Su-
A
Amy Peace Gigliotti, DMD ronald j. walker III, DMD
perintendent Fisher, who explained why the company could not pay the requested wage. The miners’ representatives asked Mr. Fisher to show why the company could not afford to pay the reasonable and just wage. Not being satisfied, the miners went on strike. Their past experience with Mr. Fisher was that he had promised to grant a wage increase as soon as the price of coal increased, but even though the price of coal had ad-
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vanced twice, miners saw no wage increase. It was a quiet, orderly strike. Twelve days later on Friday, August 24, 1889, the Horatio strike was settled and the men went back to work on Saturday morning. Then in October some problems with the agreement at Horatio were identified. A committee of miners met with H.A. Berwind and Hon. H.G. Fisher at their office in Horatio and reached another agreement. Meanwhile on September 4, 1889, the Punxsutawney Spirit reported that the - Continued on page 14
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10 – Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183
East Relief Service Medal in recognition of humanitarian service. Of the fame she received when a toddler as the face of the Armenian Relief Fund and her appearances at gatherings, Araxi nostalgically recalled, “When I thought I was a big shot, my mother stopped taking me around.” When looking back on these early years of her life, Araxi is certain that her survival and Mary’s intervention were miracles. She said, “Nobody has had an experience like this. She (Mary) put me into a shoebox and kept me warm on the oven.” After the busy schedule of the relief campaign had ended, daily life slowed down for Araxi and her mother. Araxi attended primary and high school in White Plains where she fit in well with her American peers. However, Araxi always showed a great patriotism for the United States, perhaps greater than other children, for she knew that this nation had saved her life. Then, upon graduation, the teenage girl enrolled in The Normal School at Cortland State where she pursued a degree in elementary education. Araxi was excited to begin her career and accepted a position at Middleburgh Central School where she went on to teach full-time for thirty-four years in the third and sixth grades. “I loved it,” said Araxi of her job. “I loved every day.” Even though Araxi enjoyed teaching every subject to her students, she had a special passion for social studies, especially the history of Europe and Asia. “I could teach the students from experience,” Araxi said. “There would be times when some of the high school girls would cry when they heard my story.” Another activity that Araxi relished doing with her students was teaching them to dance. In fact, she said that when her students had good behavior, their treat would be to learn the waltz or the foxtrot when Fridays rolled around. In retrospect, Araxi feels that she was successful as an educator because she always possessed a compassion for her students. “I was always for the underdog,” Araxi professed. “I always made sure that my students had lunch and I even clothed many of them.” With beginnings such as Araxi had experienced, it was apparent that she un-
derstood the plight of the unfortunate and was thankful that she could lend a hand. While employed at Middleburgh, Araxi made the acquaintance of H. Charles Dutton, the man who eventually became her husband. “I can still remember the night that I met him,” Araxi added. The couple became the parents of two children, Joyce and John; Araxi truly adored her role as a mother. She instilled solid values into her son and daughter, admitting that sometimes this required strict parenting. Joyce commented about growing up as Araxi’s daughter, that when other children were told to clean their plates because there were starving Armenian children, she and her brother actually knew all about that. Araxi and Charles also ran a small antique shop that they named The Golden Rooster because of the gold-leafed rooster that was perched upon the barn roof nearby. And inside the barn, they had several sheep and chickens. Tragically, John was killed in an automobile accident at a young age, and Araxi and her family experienced a deep sense of grief. However, Araxi was very pleased when Joyce decided to honor her brother’s memory by using his name if her firstborn were a boy. Araxi said, “Joyce called and asked if she could name the baby after her brother, John.” As Araxi entered her fourth decade of teaching, a time when most individuals would consider retirement, she instead chose to be a regular substitute in her district. She welcomed this position with open arms, for she then got to spend time teaching students at the secondary level. “I really like teenagers,” Araxi said. This experience also served to open Araxi’s eyes even more about the fact that many students had never even been taught the history of Turkey and the Armenia Genocide. This shocked Araxi, prompting her to write in the preface of her book: “There are many who are trying to eradicate from print, especially school textbooks, the atrocities committed during World War I and World War II in an effort to indoctrinate future generations with the belief that such inhuman acts never occurred. THEY DID! And they must never be erased from the printed page – Never, NEVER, NEVER!” Therefore, Araxi thought it crucial to tell her story to as many children as she - Continued on page 12
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Punxsutawney Artists’ Legacy: Part IV - Functional
By Marty Armstrong for Hometown magazine ifts from heart and hand. Our ancestors came with little and made their lives here, making what they needed to live on as well. Was something needed to wear? Someone in the family generally made it. Did the home need a table and a chair? Someone in the family would make them. Table linens, bedding, hunting accessories, crockery – all were made locally for one’s own family, sometimes made so well that items were made for exchange or sale. Even when artisans began to specialize, the things people made for their own fam-
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ilies became things of beauty as well as function. Quilts, such as the Civil War-era peony quilt passed down in the Reitz family, were designed with colorful scraps of fabric; linens were embroidered or edged with handmade crocheted, tatted, or knitted lace. Functional leather bags were fringed, and powder horns etched with delicate scrimshaw designs. Furniture was made with hand-carved ornamentation in meticulous detail. In Gallery 2 of the Gaylord L. Griffiths Galleries, we have a range of items whose reason for being is functional. The bonus is that they are also pleasing to look at; they are pieces of art. An additional bonus
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is that the majority of pieces were likely created as gifts for loved ones. This functional art rounds out the Galleries’ “Punxsutawney Area Legacy of Artists & Artisans” exhibit, and is one more way the Punxsutawney Area Historical & Genealogical Society is able to tell the history of our region. In most cases, the makers were local persons; in some, it is the creation itself which has a local emphasis. Included are bird’s-eye view drawings of Punxsutawney and Lindsey made in 1895 when the two communities were separate. The maps, drawn by T.M. Fowler, are hanging side by side just as the communities developed and grew closer and
closer to one another. Homes and businesses of 1895 are drawn in recognizable detail. The Lattimer House, built in 1868 by Judge James E. Mitchell, is shown; the Bennis House, built in 1904 by E.C. McKibbon, is not. In the background, one can see Columbus and Walston. Lines of coke ovens are clearly drawn as are railways and bridges. Newspaper articles of the time announced the works in progress and, later, the availability of prints for purchase. That they hang now in the Lattimer House, built on land between Punxsutawney and Lindsey, is appropriate. And in the Bennis House across the street, we have the proclamation signed by Governor Stuart of Pennsylvania, recognizing the joining of the two. Other drawings in Gallery 2 are blueprints of the well-remembered Crissman greenhouse and family home on Pine Street and an architectural drawing by John Zeedick of the Chevra Aquidas Achim Hebrew Congregation’s synagogue - Continued on next page
from GT Thompson - U.S. CongreSSMAn paT Toomey - U.S. SenAtor Joe scarnaTi - SenAtor paul corbin - CoMMiSSioner Jim mcinTyre - CoMMiSSioner herb bullers – CoMMiSSioner eleCt Jack maTson – CoMMiSSioner eleCt bernard snyder - Coroner maxine Zimmerman - CoUnty AUditor roGer richards - CoUnty AUditor mabel dunkle - CoUnty AUditor eleCt diane maihle kiehl - regiSter & reCorder carl GoTwald, sr. - Sheriff Jim “moon” VansTeenberG - treASUrer
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Rescued
Continued from page 10 could through her role as a teacher, over 3,000 to be precise. She even got to spread her word to the other side of the country. For, after the passing of her first husband, Araxi married John Palmer and the two relocated to Arizona. While in this state, Araxi substituted and taught at an Indian reservation for six years, eventually returning to New York State in 1994, when she taught for the last time. Along with the stories about her family that Araxi has heard and shared, she has a wealth of heirlooms and mementos that were brought back from Turkey to America by the Hubbard family. These include an Armenian doll, jewelry, a wedding band, and needlework done by her mother, most of which she has since donated to the Armenian Museum in Boston. Proudly, Joyce and her husband, Bill, were able to travel to the museum last summer and view the display. It is a fitting tribute to her family and the Armenian people. Joyce is likewise delighted with her mother’s longevity. In fact, she said that Araxi is always on the go, whether eating lunch with friends and former students or thrifting, her energy level is amazing for a woman who is 97 years of age. However, Araxi contributes her health to the fact that she has eaten homemade yogurt just about every day of her life. She comically added about the food, “It must be good, Jesus ate it.” In July of 2014, at the request of her family, Araxi made the decision to leave her home of 74 years in Middleburgh and move to Punxsutawney to spend time with her daughter, son-in-law, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren. In keeping with her independent and strong nature, Araxi joked with her daughter saying, “I made the decision to move near you, not with you.” These days, Araxi spends her time at AM/PM Personal Care Home where she can be found reading or, in good weather, spending hours sitting on the porch appreciating the beauty of nature. She often contemplates the tragic history of her biological ancestors, the manner by which she entered the world, and the reason by which she was saved by an “Angel” to be able to live for so many blessed years and share her story with so many people. Although Araxi never had an opportunity to know her own mother who loved her so much that she hung onto her last shred of life until she knew that her baby was safe, she is thankful for her. She is equally appreciative of the woman who pulled her disfigured body from the weeds, nursed her back to health, and
gave her a safe home and tons of love. In acknowledging the role that each of these women had in her existence, Araxi attributes all of her accomplishments and successes to “the Mother who gave her birth and the Mother who gave her life.” •••
Artists’ Series
Continued from previous page on Church Street, now used as an office building. That the drawings were appreciated by their original owners as art is evidenced by their careful framing for hanging. Gallery 2 also contains a shawl, made in the mid-1800s of sheep’s wool yarn from the Worthville area that could be worn and enjoyed by anyone today, and a beautiful silk gown, inherited by Jan Harrold, made in the 1870s and now too fragile for casual handling. The daughters of Thomas E. Bennis, hotelman, became proficient in painting on china when, as young ladies, they were students in Pittsburgh. They and others created lovely pieces for friends and family. Displayed elsewhere in Gallery 2 is a tatted lace edging that their mother, Susie Quigley Bennis, was working on when word came in 1937 of Mr. Bennis’s death. The edging was never finished. In more modern times, an industrial lathe made for business use enabled my sixty-year-old machinist father to create for me stainless steel candleholders of his own design. He also made, as a boy in the 1920s, a woodshop project of a rocking chair sewing caddy for his mother. It was the first in my collection of such rockers, no two yet alike. When members of the Griffiths family attended an October 31 reception in recognition of their contribution to the Society and to mark the public opening of the Galleries, a special visitor, an unnamed Victorian seamstress, was on hand in Gallery 2. She and other artist spirits will be on hand again at both the Lattimer and Bennis Houses for our “Night at the Museum” scheduled for February 1. In the meantime, plan to stop in. The Artists’ Legacy exhibition is the inspiration for this year’s holiday decorating in which we are featuring current local artists. The Griffiths Galleries exhibits are free and open to the public, from 1 to 4 p.m. Thursday through Sunday; we want people to see and know about these treasured legacies. Marty Armstrong is president of the Punxsutawney Area Historical & Genealogical Society. •••
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Christmas Strike
agreement, and that a strike would be averted. When the miners had not received an invitation to discuss their concerns with management, they appointed a committee to meet with company President Merchant at Rochester, New York, the first week of December 1889. At this meeting, the miners were informed that their request was being submitted to the company’s Board of Directors. The miners returned home believing their differences could be satisfactorily addressed before the required fourteen days’ notice expired. Their hopes were dashed on December 15, 1889, when the B.R.&P. Coal and
Continued from page 9
miners of Walston and Adrian had made a request to the Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsburg Coal and Iron Company for an increase of five cents per ton, a check weighman on every tipple, and pay for dead work. A committee met with Superintendent McLeavy on Friday, September 1, but without definite results. The miners suspended their work until noon on Wednesday to wait for the Company’s decision. They hoped that their request would be answered positively, or that the company would negotiate an
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Iron Company discharged all miners in the No. 2 and 3 drifts at Walston. The Punxsutawney News reported on December 18, 1889: “As was previously stated in these columns the miners of Adrian and Walston met in the opera house on December 2 and decided to ask the company for extra pay for ‘clay veins,’ ‘horse backs,’ and all dead work, and gave notice that if these demands were not granted within fourteen days a strike would follow. The Company gave no reply and the miners worked on expectantly. The coke was drawn and everything made ready as was supposed for the coming crisis. The time of which notice had been given would have been
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From the Editor’s Desk
Issachar and the Meaning of Christmas By Jim Lauffer of Hometown magazine y name is Issachar. I am an innkeeper in Bethlehem.” Forty-nine years ago, these words lodged themselves in my consciousness and never left. During the intervening decades, I have looked high and low for the sentences and paragraphs that followed them with no success – until recently. In November 1966, I was ten years old and a fourth grader. One day, shortly after my classmates and I had settled ourselves after an invigorating recess, someone knocked on our classroom door. My teacher answered the knock and stepped into the hallway. A few minutes later, she poked her head into the room and called my name. Fighting to keep my heart from leaping into my throat, I stepped away from my desk and walked across the front of the room – knowing for certain that the eyes of all my classmates followed me to the door. My teacher held the door – it was already wearing its Christmas decorations – open for me as I stepped into the hall and was greeted by my music teacher. The
“M
three of us – two educators and a nervous student – took half-a-dozen steps and entered the library, just down the hall from my classroom. Being in the presence of books – shelf after shelf of books – calmed me, as it has for as long as I can remember. My teachers said that they wanted to try something different for the school’s upcoming holiday program. They wanted to build the program around a long soliloquy that told the Christmas story from a nontraditional perspective. My fourth-grade teacher then dropped the bombshell. She wanted me to memorize the monologue that would be the centerpiece of the program. She handed me a sheet of paper filled front and back with typed words. I read the first ten: “My name is Issachar. I am an innkeeper in Bethlehem.” I scanned the remaining words on the front before turning the sheet over and skimming the words on the back. I looked up, speechless and afraid. Now, I attended elementary school – for me, this meant grades one through eight (no kindergarten back then) – during a time when teachers required students to memorize verses from the Bible, paragraphs from historical documents, and portions of poetry – and not only to memorize them, but also to rise, to stand by your desk, and to recite them to your classmates. In first grade, I learned the Pledge
of Allegiance and the Lord’s Prayer, and in second grade, I memorized the forever handy-dandy “Thirty days hath September, April, June, and November. All the rest have thirty-one, except February, which has twenty-eight, except in a Leap Year when it has twenty-nine.” (Has ever a more useful ditty ever been penned?) And, of course, I learned numerous rhyming lines for a variety of church and school programs. Nothing, however, had prepared me for what my teachers now wanted me to do – memorize two pages of typed text, text that seemed to grow smaller each time I looked down at it. “You can do it,” my fourth-grade teacher said. “We know you can do this.” Even though my music teacher said the decision was mine, I knew my fate was sealed when I’d been called into the hall. I gulped, and probably sighed, and shook my head – yes, I would do it. The Christmas program was a month away, so memorizing my lines carried more than a bit of urgency. Every morning, I’d recite lines to my teachers and make note of their suggestions not only for reciting them, but also for performing them. Every afternoon, before students were excused to get their coats and boots and prepare to go to their buses, I stood beside my desk and recited my lines. “My name is Issachar. I am an innkeeper in
Bethlehem.” A few classmates knew my lines nearly as well as I did. All of them grew as tired of hearing them as I was of saying them. I’d folded the typed sheet into quadrants and carried it with me wherever I went. Memorizing so many lines was uncharted territory. I had no proven strategy for the undertaking. I read the lines, and then reread them again and again. The Christmas program remains a blur. I don’t remember walking onto the stage. I don’t remember reciting my lines. I remember my costume – a turban and a colorful bath robe. I remember the three spotlights that focused their collective glare on me. I remember how bright (and hot) the lights were and how dark the rest of the auditorium seemed. I also remember that I needed two prompts to get through the soliloquy and that the applause surprised me, since I’d made two “mistakes.” I remember feeling as though I’d let my teachers down. By Christmas 1967, I remembered only the first two lines of Issachar’s story. I knew the gist of his tale, but could not have recited it again if my life depended on it. I lost my original typed sheet and never bothered trying to replace it. As I grew older, then old, I thought more and more about my younger self – the fourth grader who played the part of Is- Continued on page 20
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Christmas Strike Continued from page 14
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to write an account of a peaceable adjustment of the difficulties between the miners and the operators.” The Company’s action was met with a strike by the miners in No. 1 drift at Walston and at Adrian. The Company retaliated, issuing eviction notices to miners living in company housing. The miners immediately requested a stay of the eviction notices. The Punxsutawney News, on December 25, 1889, reported that the situation at the Walston and Adrian mines looked very much as though they were going to be a shut down for the winter. The outlook was gloomy. The Company, however, could fill their contracts from their Beechtree and Eleanora mines. Not all miners were waiting for better times. Many were leaving the area in search of work, and some were returning to their native countries. A Pittsburgh Post headline on December 31, 1889, declared: “PREPARE FOR EMERGENCY. BIG FORCE OF PINKERTON MEN AT PUNXSUTAWNEY. Many Strikers To Be Evicted From Their Homes To-Day.” The article went on to say that 106 Pinkerton men were arriving that night, brought in by the Buffalo, Rochester & Pittsburg Coal Company on the presumption of trouble. The miners’ eviction notices would be up on January 1, and it was supposed that the Pinkerton men would help vacate the houses. Six hundred Hungarians and Italians were being imported by the company to work in place of the striking miners. The article pointed out that the company had made no attempt to effect a compromise. The miners’ committee had been ignored by the company, and their proposal to submit the matter to arbitration was rejected. The Eleanora miners were working under a guard of about thirty Pinkerton men. On January 7, 1890, the locked-out miners received a ruling from Judge Wilson at Brookville. The Court determined that there was no law to justify an injunction – the Supreme Court having several times pronounced the ten-day leases valid – and that evictions could take place. On January 9, 1890, a dozen company officials and members of the clerical force were sworn in as Coal and Iron Police, additional Pinkertons were hired, and miners from other parts of the state began to arrive. On January 10, three families of striking miners were evicted. The sheriff, accompanied by thirty-three armed Pinkertons, removed a family at Walston
and was greeted by a crowd of about 300 yelling and firing shots into the air. Union representative Master Workman Wilson arrived in time to calm the crowd and to assist with relocating the evicted family. By January 29, fifty families had been evicted, and quite a number of others had moved out of their houses. All was calm and quiet in the area. Some of the evicted families secured houses, others were taken in by their friends, and a large number occupied the fairground and merry-go-round buildings. Miners’ representative John Quinlisk gave shelter to a number of women and children at his hotel in Clayville. John Kuptz provided sleeping arrangements for seventeen men in his small house on 3rd Avenue. And, the Knights of Labor provided miners with $1.50 to $3.50 per week, according to the size of their families. The Punxsutawney News on February 19, 1890, summed up the situation: “The attitude of the strike at the Walston and Adrian is gloomy as far as an amicable settlement being near at hand is concerned. J.B. Rae, President of the United Miners’ Association said it looked as though the R. & P. Coal and Iron Company’s objective was to rid itself of the organization, and if that was really the design it would be suicidal for the K. of L.’s to tamely submit to defeat. On the other hand the Company President Adrian Iselin said that it was a question of who was going to run the business. And he was prepared to fight it out on that line if it took all summer and all his interests here. No sane man disputes the fact that the owner of a business has the right to run it to suit himself so long as he does not conflict with the laws of the country. But then there is a selfish way of running one’s business to suit one’s self, and again there is a better way of conducting a business which will benefit employer and employes alike, each working for the other’s interest and for the good of all concerned. “The struggle now in progress is a vital one to the men. It is not merely the wages of the miners in the Buffalo, Rochester & Pittsburg mines that are at issue. Labor and capital of all Pennsylvania are fighting a pitch battle here, to determine the power of the Knights of Labor and the right of a capitalist to run his own business, and run it as he pleases. It is a despairing prospect for the miner. He has been hungry for weeks; he has trusted through it all and has hoped for ultimate victory that would give him day’s work and his family square meals. “If the Knights of Labor are defeated here what effect the defeat would have elsewhere would be hard to tell, but one - Continued on page 20
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tomization options that allow you to personalize everything from the label design to embellishments in the wrapping. Their lineup of fragrances includes Buttercream, Lilac Blossoms, and Sparkling Cinnamon, conjuring fond memories of everything from a walk through flowery fields to a favorite holiday dessert. Personalized candles, which are easy to design, also make thoughtful hostess gifts for all your holiday festivities this season. DIY Gift Basket A standard-issue gift basket will be appreciated, but to show you truly care, consider customizing each gift for every recipient. You can make unique creations by taking favorites into consideration. Is your gift recipient a dog lover? Does she have a sweet tooth? After stocking baskets with goodies customized to their tastes, adorn each one with unique garlands, ribbons and bows. This holiday season is the perfect opportunity to take advantage of all the easy, customizable options available to make each gift thoughtful and unforgettable. (StatePoint) •••
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Christmas Waltz
Continued from page 3 the North Pole. You see, Channel 4, WTAE, had its very own rocket ship that would deliver the mail straight to Santa’s home! Generally, we ate just after Adventure Time was over; I recall that the short black-and-white animations of Suzie Snowflake, Frosty the Snowman, or Hardrock, Coco and Joe aired at the end of Paul Shannon’s show and signaled the start of our meal. Christmas Eve supper was always meatless, with some kind of spaghetti, fish, salad, and bread. Simmering on our white gas stove all afternoon, the aroma of celery, onions, and tomatoes drifted through the rooms of the house, and the delicious holiday concoction fogged up the windows in the kitchen. Later, my mother usually added a few mushrooms to the sauce, put on a big white apron, and started to fry some fish. Even though I didn’t think I would like a meal without meat, I stuffed myself with the slender strands of spaghetti in red sauce and munched on the golden, crusted pieces of haddock. Then, after helping my mom clear the kitchen and wash the dishes, my father and I had another Christmas tradition. Daddy always proved to be a more-than-charming dance partner and deejay on that special night. “Dance with Daddy,” Mom smiled as she encouraged my father and me to “cut the rug,” right there in the living room! Only too happy to oblige, my father put one of four old records on our big wood-encased RCA stereo. Lifting the hinged lid, Dad always checked the needle on the arm of the stereo to make sure it wouldn’t scratch the big black LPs he prepared to play. One album was a record that Dad got as a freebie when he bought something at Goodrich Tires or maybe when he purchased gasoline at Lee Gamble’s service station. It had a collection of songs performed by Ella Fitzgerald, Johnny Mathis, and some other singers from the ’50s and ’60s. I remember staring at the cardboard cover that featured pictures of all the contributing artists, trying to pick out the singers I recognized like Johnny Mathis and Dean Martin. Another album included a couple of my favorite Christmas songs. One of them was a Mitch Miller tune entitled Season’s Greetings. Another one in that collection was a littleknown carol Bing Crosby called, The Secret of Christmas, and the words of which he crooned, “It’s not the little things you do at
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Christmas time, but the little things you do all year through.” To this day, I can’t listen to that song without thinking about my dad and without shedding a few tears. The third record was housed in a big orange jacket with a cartoon-drawing of a chubby Italian woman on the front tossing strands of spaghetti with a big pasta fork for three guys: the Gaylords (an Italian Kingston Trio-like group in the ’60s). How I adored that record and one song in particular! The tune was about a shoemaker who made some magic dancing shoes and the girl who wore them danced all day. I insisted that my father play “Lei Scarpini de Ballare” (“The Shoemaker Song”) over and over; he dropped the stereo’s arm just on that song, and I sang loudly with my seven-year-old voice and a bad Italian accent. Lastly, my parents had an album of Johann Strauss waltzes. The cover showed a beautiful girl in an elegant fairy tale princess dress and a gentleman dressed in military regalia. I adored those songs so much that my mom bought me a pair of plastic sparkly shoes just like the ones on the pretty girl on the cover. Donning my mom’s big long silk, cranberrycolor bathrobe, and the glittery little heels, I spun around the room in front of our big picture window that looked out on the little street illuminated by a solitary street light. Waltz music boomed from the stereo. Yes, I can still remember tripping on the hem of my adultsize “ball gown,” but I would pop right back up again and continue to twirl and spin. Best of all, slipping off my tiny shoes, I would climb on my dad’s feet, and he would guide me around the living room, whirling about on the swirly green carpeting. I can still remember Daddy telling me that he would lead as he guided me past the furniture. Giggling and trying not to fall, I waltzed with Dad until he decided the dance studio would close for the evening. I guess that Santa had a lot of work to do that night, and he didn’t want to be too tired out from our dance lesson. I suppose that some kids remember a special doll or a bicycle or maybe a Red Ryder BB Gun as a treasured Christmas memory. Those kinds of presents under the tree still get some pretty good press. But, for me, it was the little things – the simple strings of Christmas lights that glowed across Punxsutawney’s main street, Adventure Time Theatre, a humble meal, the funny songs, our old stereo blasting music, and dancing with my dad. You’re right, Bing, it’s not the Christmas cards you send each year – or the presents. So, I think this Christmas Eve, I just might listen to a Strauss waltz as I count my blessings and eat my meatless meal. I will remember that I was so lucky to have had such a wonderful father for so many years, and I will count my blessings because I am still able to share the holidays with my mom and my family. That’s the secret of Christmas. •••
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ing, try this recipe for Grilled Leg of Lamb over Zucchini Ribbons with Mustard Sauce, from the food and wine experts at Sequoia Grove. Ingredients: • 2 pound boneless leg of lamb, butterflied • 2 teaspoons chopped rosemary • 1 teaspoon coarsely ground pepper • 1 teaspoon kosher salt • 2 cloves garlic, chopped fine • 3 tablespoons olive oil • 3 large zucchini • 1 tablespoon butter • Pinch crushed red pepper • 1/4 cup white wine • 2 teaspoons Dijon mustard • 2 tablespoons chopped flat-leaf parsley
Directions: • Preheat a gas grill to high heat. • Arrange lamb on a flat surface. • Combine rosemary, pepper, salt, and half the garlic in a small bowl. Stir in 1 tablespoon of olive oil. Spread over the nonfatty side of the lamb. • Cut the tops and bottoms off the zucchini. Use a vegetable peeler to cut the zucchini into thin ribbon-like strips. Stop and reserve the cores for another use. • Put the lamb on the grill, fatty-side up, cover and reduce heat to medium. Cook for seven minutes. Turn, reduce heat to low and cook for five minutes for medium rare or until the temperature of the thickest part reaches 130 degrees. Transfer to a cutting board and let rest five to 10 minutes. • Heat 2 tablespoons of olive oil and butter in a large skillet. Add remaining chopped garlic, crushed red pepper and the zucchini ribbons. Cook for about three minutes, then transfer to a bowl. • Return the skillet to medium-high heat and add the wine. Bring to a boil. Whisk in the mustard and remove from the heat. Add parsley and zucchini and toss to coat. • Cut lamb against the grain into thin slices. Arrange over zucchini. Sprinkle with salt and serve. More information on Sequoia Grove can be found at www.sequoiagrove.com. With the right wine and food pairings, you can give guests a reason to cheer this holiday season. (StatePoint) •••
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Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183 – 19
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“Behold a virgin shall conceive and shall bring forth a son and shall call his name Immanuel.” Isaiah the prophet 750 years before Jesus’ birth “For unto you is born this day in the city of David - a Savior which is Christ the Lord.” “But they cried...’Crucify Him, Crucify Him’.” “Jesus cried with a loud voice... and gave up His Spirit.” Why seek ye the living among the dead? He is not here, but is Risen!” Luke the physician recounting eyewitnesses shortly after Jesus’ birth, death and resurrection
He was born to live. He lived to die. He died to live again. He lives again so we may also.
Christmas Strike
From the Desk
could conjecture that it would not be for the welfare of the organization. “The struggling miners here are not living on the fat of the land just now. Potatoes and beefsteak with them is so far above par to be out of reach altogether, and what little help they do get from abroad is judiciously expended as best suit the circumstances. “To a certain extent the mines are running, and the Company claim that they now have enough men to do all the work necessary to fill their orders, but the coke that is drawn and the coal that is dug is worked by men known as ‘blacklegs’ and ‘scabs,’ names not as euphonious as one might wish applied to him. “General Superintendent Haskell, who, for all his determination, is personally popular with the miners, denies that any men are brought here under false pretenses. The rule Mr. Iselin has made is, he says, that every man shall be told before he is brought here that a strike is in progress. “A Miners’ Committee from Beechtree met General Manager Haskell and Superintendent Bell one day last week, but no agreement favoring the miners who are out resulted from the conference. A meeting was afterward held in the Mahoning Street Opera House, which was enthusiastic and largely attended, and by a unanimous vote it was decided to continue to stay out.” The strike continued into the summer of 1890. The company continued to refuse to meet with the miners, and the miners, who believed in their cause, continued to affirm the strike. In the end it was very costly to both capital and labor. Resources used in the preparation of this article are available at the Punxsutawney Memorial Library, the Punxsutawney Area Historical and Genealogical Society, and the Library of Congress. This article has been prepared by the Coal Memorial Committee of PAHGS. Persons interested in purchasing a memorial tile for a worker in the coal industry, including mining, coking, railroading, or other coal-related work, may request a form from the Punxsutawney Area Historical & Genealogical Society by sending an e-mail to punxsyhistory@verizon.net or pick up one in person at the Lattimer House of the Society, 400 West Mahoning Street, Punxsutawney. Comments about this article may be directed to PAHGS, P.O. Box 286, Punxsutawney, PA 15767. •••
sachar, the innkeeper who told Joseph and Mary that he had no room for them in his inn; the innkeeper whose stable was the birthplace of Immanuel, the Christ child; the innkeeper who told the Christmas story from the hill where Jesus was crucified. For years, I searched for a copy of Issachar’s story. My fourth-grade teacher was a fan of the various Ideals magazines, and I assumed that she’d typed the story from a Christmas edition of the publication. So at flea markets, I’d look through every Ideals Christmas that I found – year after year, page after page of holiday images and poems, but no Issachar. Nearly twenty years ago, as I grew familiar with the World Wide Web, I believed that I might finally find Issachar’s story. Everything ends up on the internet, right? Alas, multiple searches over many years returned nothing – until late November 2015. Last month, when my holiday musings turned toward my fourth-grade Christmas program, I turned to the keyboard, navigated to the search engine, and typed: “My name is Issachar. I am an innkeeper in Bethlehem.” After years of hope deferred, I expected no relevant search results. But I was surprised. A short story, titled “No Room” and approximately two pages long, was buried in the decades-old archive of a religious journal. I had found Issachar’s story, the tale that I’d memorized as a schoolboy. As I read the story for the first time in nearly fifty years, I was excited, but saddened – excited because I’d found a longlost story and was able read it again, but saddened because I realized that no public school fourth grader, in this day and age, could stand at center stage and recite such an overtly religious story. For fear of lawsuits, no teacher would ask a student to memorize and recite Issachar’s story – the story of one man’s belated discovery of the true meaning of Christmas. Like all holidays, Christmas has roots – religious roots. Issachar’s story – a work of fiction firmly grounded in tenets of Christianity – is ultimately a lament. As he views Jesus at the end of his life, Issachar regrets not having found room for Joseph and Mary, and the Christ child, in his inn. Three decades later, as he stands on Golgotha, Issachar finally understands the meaning of the Christmas story – the celebration of Jesus’ birth in a humble stable. He understands that the babe in the manger was Immanuel – God with us. As we, each in our own way, commemorate Christmas, let us pause and recall the roots of the year’s most important holiday. Let us then celebrate the day’s true meaning. •••
Continued from page 16
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20 – Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183
Continued from page 15
22 – Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183
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www.hueybrothers.com
814-938-0800
hueybrothersinc@gmail.com
Acme mAchine
& Welding co. 46 Anchor Inn Rd., Punxsy
938-6702
Let’s Go Chucks!
JV GIRLS BASKETBALL
Dr. Nathan Stebbins FULL SErvICE OPTICAL & COMPLETE LINE OF CONTACT LENSES
W e We LC O M e AL L Ag es
VARSITY GIRLS BASKETBALL
(front row, l. to r.) Ivy Ferko, Kylee Lingenfelter, Kate Horner; (middle row) Emma White, Elyse White, Morgan VanLeer, Morgan Doverspike; (back row) Leah Miller, Hope Bridge, Kaitlyn Ray and Alli Lunger.
(front row, l. to r.) Mia Lingenfelter, Kaitlin Doverspike, Kylee Lingenfelter, Emily Griebel; (middle row) Morgan Adamson, Toya Jones, Jordyn Powell, Bailey Jones, (back row) Alyse Whitman, Cassidy Reed, Kaitlyn Ray, Kylee Shoemaker and Elyse White.
Something to Smile About
Family Dentistry
200 SOUTH FINDLEy ST. PUNXSUTAwNEy
Amy Peace Gigliotti, DMD ronald j. walker III, DMD
Mon., Tues., wed. & Fri. 8 to 5; Thur. 8 to Noon wed. Evening & Sat. by Appt.
814-938-5920
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MOST INSUrANCES ACCEPTED
203 Clearfield Avenue Punx’y
www.marioncenterbank.com
9TH GRADE ETBALL BOYS BASK n Barrick, Cameron Smith, Cade Advanced Disposal
) (front row, l. to r.) on Dyson; (middle row Andrew Britten, Daym Blose, Evan Humble; an tt, Matt Hooftallen, Eth eenawalt, Jeff Barne (back row) Daniel Gr x Gianvito. Ale Carter Newcome and
JUNIOR HIGH WRESTLING
(front row, l. to r.) Larissa Herndon, Jabob Good, Garrett Fischer, Jonathan Herndon, Ben Skarbek; (middle row) Graham McFarland, Kyler LaJudice, Blade Aerie, Owen Bartlebaugh; (back row) Josh Miller, Jacob Schuckers, Coach D.J. Gould, Garrett Eddy and Ashton Rotsch. Missing from the photo is Coach Greg Skarbek.
TH
or 814-265-1975 800-338-8971 $
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A hometown bank you can count on . . . both today and in the future!
8 GRADE BOYS BASKETBALL
(front row, l. to r.) Jakob Catarouche, Andrew Wehrle, Timmy Simmons, Zack VanLeer, Sam Shepler; (middle row) Daren Byers, Ethan Lainey, Sean Deeley, Isaac Knarr, Micah Kriebel, Aidan Johnston; (back row): Ryan Roberts, Alec Greenblatt, Coach Glenn Good, Max London and Jackson Fezell. Missing from the photo is Donnie Babyak.
Big Run 814.427.2051
PunxsuTAWney 814.938.0271
MEMBER FDIC
Good Luck to all Teams! James “Moon” VanSteenberg Jefferson County Treasurer
Senior Citizen Discounts Saluting our Local Teams . . . GOOD LUCK THIS SEASON!
Walston Club Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183 – 23
Proud to be a Booster Supporting Our Local Athletes 2509 Walston Rd., Punx’y
938-5368
Personal Care at Christ The King Manor is always personal! For more information, call 814-371-3180 and request more information on PERSONAL CARE as performed by the professionals at Christ The King Manor.
Christ The King Manor
H&H
www.christthekingmanor.org
SuPPly, Inc. 3 Plumbing 3 Heating 3 Electrical 3 Hardware Supplies
Schedule subject to change. Not responsible for typographical errors.
Rt. 36, Punx’y
938-4489
814-371-3180
1100 West Long Ave., DuBois
Fresh Homemade Dough & Sauce Made Onsite Daily For All Our Dinners & Pizza!
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W. Mahoning St., Punxsy Plaza
938-2380
coal P&n 240 W. Mahoning St. Punxsutawney
427-2821
Best of Luck to all our Local Athletes!
with five pharmacists ready to serve you: • Michael Horner, R. Ph. • kim Horner, R. Ph. • Jennifer Moore, R. Ph. • Joe Presloid, R. Ph. • Matt kunselman, R. Ph.
2 punXsutawney 200 Prushnok Dr. Locations: 618-5957
132 West Mahoning St.
938-3077
Mon.- Fri 9 to 7, Sat. 9 to 2 Visit our website:
drive up window to Better serve you Mon.- Thur 8 to 6, Fri 8-4
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Winslow
Nicholas Gianvito
Lawn & Garden, llc.
Attorney at Law
Sales & Service
GOOD LUCK CHUCKS!
814-618-5696
14253 Rt. 36 S., Punxsutawney
clOE luMbER & SuPPly cO.
314 West Mahoning Street, Punxsutawney
814-938-1776
Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183 – 21
welcome to the pharmacy that’s still close By.
nickg@nglawoffice.com www.nglawoffice.com
Cloe-Rossiter Rd., Punx’y
938-5220
Good Luck chucks! wingstreet® wings
Walmart Plaza Rt. 119 North Punx’y
938-2400 JV BOYS BASKETBALL
VARSITY CHEERLEADING
(front row, l. to r.) Willie Hoover, Chase Lorelli, Tyler Getch; (back row) Elijah Goodbreed, Triston Bair, Mack Hanley and Matt Wehrle.
(front row, l. to r.) Tabi Windsor, Taylor Medsger, Amberly Spicher, Libby Anderson; (second row) Tiffany Oosta, Caitlyn Rodgers, Courtney Ohler, Nicole McAfee; (third row) Chande Scott, Riley McLaughlin, Kristen Lowmaster; (fourth row) Emily Cavallo, Hailee Myers, Sammy Dyson, Skylar Brooks, Morgan Brothers.
Reagle's NOTARY See Us for Your Registration Needs - Auto, Boat & ATV
INCOME TAX PREPARATION We now issue over the counter registration cards and stickers. 203 E. Main St., Big Run 814-427-2361
KATHY D. WYMER
VARSITY BOYS BASKETBALL
(front row, l. to r.) Nathan Lingenfelter, Ethan Riley, Patrick Fedigan, Jacob Horner, Jacob Weaver, Tyler Richardson; (second row) Brock Wymer, John Matthews, Nick Brothers, Kevin Constant, Tanner Zimmerman; (third row) Brandon Matthews, Dylan Huey, Devin Kelly and Nathan Ray.
Mahoning Physical Therapy Twolick Valley P.T. • Medicare Certified • Aquatic Therapy • Office Hours by Appointment
Casteel Chiropractic To restore function you need to restore posture.
DR. IaN CaSteel Our job is to keep your spine in line for a better, healthier you!
410 East Mahoning St.
938-4400
"We address the cause, not the symptom"
NoW AccEPtiNg NEW PAtiENtS X-Rays (on your first visit) Accepts Most insurance
nEw HOuRS: MOn., wED. & FRI. 9-1 & 3-8 clOSED tuE. & tHuR.
nicholas
(724) 397-9100
LorenZo
(724) 254-1010
Over 40 Years Experience
Mahoning Physical Therapy Medical Center, Marion Center, PA
Attorney at Law
405 Franklin St., Clymer, PA
• Accidents • Wills & Estates • Real Estate 410 W. Mahoning St. Punxsutawney
938-6390
200 East Mahoning St. Punxsutawney
don Powell
Broker, Appraiser, MBA 938-3031
VARSITY WRESTLING
(front row, l. to r.) Elijah Lambiotte, Jake Skarbek, Conner Giavedoni, Zoie Smith, Stone Smith, Zack May; (back row) Kaleb Young, Cody Smith, Caleb Harvey, Garrett Bennett, Shaun Herndon and Alexander Neal.
Go get ‘em Teams!
Photos by LIFETOUCH
DING EERLEA JUNIO, Rl. toHr.)IGHoHllyCH Brooks; on dis Ma , Hartman
Amber (front row ndon, Crystal Couser, (second row) Brooke Lo an Brooks; (third row) Faith Little, Ivy Fisher, Megh i Peffer, Jorinne Anderson; r, Tor t, MakHuey, Kristina Beichne Reiter, Madison Wolfer zie ken Ma ) row h (fourt ler. ep Sh ra Cia nebark, ena Nesbitt, Shania Wi
hoovers
The long wait is over. It’s time for
Mondays ONLY
wHOLe jUMbO wiNgS
ALL DAY BREAKFAST.
wiNg NigHT SPeciaL 4-7 pm
HOOVER’S IS PROUD TO USE ONLY THE BEST OPEN TIL MIDNIGHT EVERYDAY
DOWNTOWN PUNXSUTAWNEY
Kyle Lingenfelter, MD FACS
814-938-4158 (FAX)
81 Hillcrest Drive, Suite 2600, Punxsutawney OFFICE HOuRS: WEEKDAYS 8-5
“We Serve As We Would Be Served. . . Because We Care” 117 N. Jefferson St., Punx’y • 938-8200
www.faitfuneralhome.com
Supporting our local athletes...
The Punxsutawney Booster Club Good Luck Chucks!!!
call about Our
Punxsy boro business delivery for lunch 11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. & Home Delivery after 5 p.m. (5 mi. radius)
PaRTY TRaYS 1056 Valier Dr., Valier aND fUNDRaiSeRS Fresh Dough Pizza, Toasted Subs and Oven Baked Hoagies featuring top quality products made fresh for you, with a hometown touch!
814-938-4349
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PunxSutAwnEy AREA cOMMunIty cEntER
FItnESS cEntER CYCLING CLASSES AvAILABLE CALL fOR INfO
TREADMILLS BICYCLES•ELLIPTICALS KICK PUNCH BAG•LEG PRESS ROWING MACHINE BODY BUILDING EQUIPMENT rEGULAr HOUrS: Monday-Thursday 7am-9pm Friday 7am-8pm Saturday 7am-5pm Sunday 11am-5pm
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www.punxsutawneycommunitycenter.org
• Custom Tattoos • Piercings
952-6944
97 North Gilpin St., Punxsutawney Open Tues. - Sat. 2 - 8 p.m. facebook.com/darkstartattoo-punxsy
24 – Punxsutawney Hometown – Holiday 2015 - Issue #182
2/ 2
814-938-4121
Funeral Home
carry Out & DeLiVeRY
$
Please call for details
899
HOT, BBQ, Plain, Butter Garlic, Sweet & Spicy BBQ, Turn and Burn, and Hoover’s Gold
Sausage Burritos
Providing all aspects of generAL & VASCuLAr SurgiCAL CAre.
$
per half doz.
Richard L. Fait
Check Your Punxsy Brochure & Hometown Magazine!
B
e sure to carefully check your “Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania: Weather Capital of the World” brochure (contained in this holiday edition of Hometown magazine) and the pages of the magazine itself for a special holiday sticker. You might want to check them twice! Three random magazines and three random trifold brochures contain stickers – for a total of six chances to win. If your brochure or magazine is “stickered,” you are a winner! Six winners will each receive a $20 gift certificate. If the sticker is in the magazine, the gift certificate must be redeemed from an advertiser in Hometown magazine, if the sticker is in the Punxsy brochure, the gift certificate must be redeemed at one of the advertisers in the brochure. If you find a sticker in your magazine or brochure, please call Hometown publisher Mary Roberts at (814) 938-0312 or send her an e-mail at hometownmary@mail.com. •••
BOB’S Army & NAvy Downtown Clearfield, Pa Case Knives $
Fixed Blade #00385
Twin Finn 2 Piece Set #00372
6499
11499
$
NEW FALL HOURS THRU CHRISTMAS:
R.D. Brown Memorials All Cemetery Needs
314 N. Findley St.,Punxsy • 938-2100 Daily 9 to 5; Sat 9-12 • Sun & Evenings by Appt.
Mon.-Thur. 9-7, Fri. 9-9, Sat. 9-5, sun 11 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Large Indoor & Outdoor Display “Carved in Stone”
814-765-4652 or 800-838-2627
www.bobsarmynavy.com (BOBS)
Milk Can Jam Raises Funds for Food Banks
The band, Down to the Wire, is one of four local groups that donate their time to this event.
to donate their time and talents to help to feed the hungry. This year’s lineup includes Down the Wire, Against the Grain, Miles From Nowhere, and the Frostburg Lounge
Lizards. Clint Reed Productions will provide sound and lighting. “In the festivities of the holiday season, it is possible to forget that there are children and families in our community who sometimes struggle to get enough nourishing food on a regular basis,” explained event coordinator Matt Taladay. “We started this event as an informal jam session in the old Murdock’s in the late ’90s as a way for local musicians to get together to have some fun and do some good. Since then it has morphed into a showcase for local bands and an opportunity for folks to get out, listen, dance, and contribute to a great cause.” Taladay added: “Many venues have hosted the event in the past, and this year we are thankful that the Eagles Club is opening their doors to us.” A suggested $10 donation at the door benefits local food banks and world hunger relief. •••
Merry Christmas! for supporting me in the election!
110 Pickering Street BrookviLLe
Subject to terms, conditions and availability. Savings vary. Allstate Property and Casualty Insurance Co., Allstate Fire and Casualty Insurance Co., Allstate Indemnity Co., Allstate Vehicle and Property Insurance Co. © 2015 Allstate Insurance Co.
HORNER WILDLIFE Taxidermy studio Live bAiT OpeN 24 HOUrs 418 Wishaw Road, Reynoldsville
Great Daily Specials! Route 36 N. Stanton
phone 814-653-8620 Cell 814-541-8309 hornerswildlife@comcast.net
849-6396
PA Taxidermy Assoc. Member
PA8019
roducts… LocaL P People! LocaL
Financing Available
WE SELL FUN
www.brookvillemotorsports.com sun closed mon. closed tue. 10-7 Wed. 10-5 thur. 10-7 fri. 10-7 sat. 9-3
LeSLie MaLBurg (814) 715-7319
Mon, Tues 6:30 a.m. - 3 p.m. Wed, Thurs & Fri 6:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday 7:30 a.m. - 8 p.m. Sunday 7:30 a.m. - 3 p.m.
THANK YOU
paid for by the committee to elect Jack matson
Bundle & Save up to 30%
135275
T
he annual Milk Can Jam food bank fundraiser will begin at 7 p.m. Saturday, December 26, at the Punxsy Eagles. Since 1999, local musicians have united
Merry Christmas
Grace Place senior aPartments
814-938-3008
Dale Bundy Lisa Bundy
814-849-0004 Fax: 814-849-0152 1167 RT. 36, BRookville 1.3 Miles NoRTH oF i-80
Vacancies
FRee estimates 938-7303
• Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts • For those 62 Years & older • Your Own Temperature Controls • Community Family Feeling • Sitting Room • Community Room • Utilities included • Refrigerator, Stove, Dishwasher, Disposal • Elevator • Close to Shopping, Drug Stores & Salons • Yard
110 gaskill ave., Punxsy
graceplace@ndcrealestate.com
Quality Window & Door Products …with Installation Done RIGHT!
www.burke-sons.com
Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183 – 25
Mahoning Valley Milling Is Your Muzzleloader Headquarters! Fresh Cut Christmas Trees 20% off All Remaining
Treestands
- In Stock Only
Wooden Sleds, Toboggans & Boot Dryers Full Line of
Minnetonka Slippers and Boots
Great Stocking Stuffers • Buck & Case Knives • LED Flashlights • Trail Cams Area’s Largest Gun Shop
over 1,000 Guns in stock rifles, shotguns, Handguns, Muzzleloaders, Par Military
BuY • sell • trade
Area's largest gun shop with the biggest selection and the best prices!
Mahoning Valley Milling Co938-8850 . inC.
Since 1909
328 Indiana St., Punxsy •
mahoningvalleymilling.com
aBC
heating, Cooling & PluMBing, inC. Alway the Best Choice
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abcheatingCooling.com 26 – Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183
Punxsy Weather Discovery Center Offers Slate of Events Center Seeks Contestants for Little Mr. & Miss Groundhog 2016
By Marlene Lellock for Hometown magazine s 2015 winds down, the Punxsutawney Weather Discovery Center is preparing for 2016. Already the new year is shaping up to be an exciting one! Soon, we’ll announce new technology in our theater – technology that will not only enhance our programming, but will also engage our visitors in a whole new way. Then, in mid-January, we’ll debut our new exhibit! And in the next few weeks, as you drive by the Weather Discovery Center on North Findley Street, look for a colorful change to the front of our building. Please make note of the following upcoming events, and from the Board of Directors and staff at the Weather Discovery Center – Merry Christmas and Happy New Year! Super Science Saturdays. December 19 and 26 and January 2. Stop by to learn and have fun with simple science activities in our classroom from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. each Saturday. Regular admission is $5 per person, and there is no need to preregister. Also, with admission, take advantage of 10 percent off science toys in the Center’s gift shop. Winter Wonders. December 28-30. This three-part program will explore why winter is cold, why it snows, and why some winters are more wintery than others! Choose from two sessions – from 10 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 3 p.m. – on Monday and Tuesday or participate in the single session from 10 a.m. to noon on Wednesday. The program is ideal for kindergarten through middle school ages. Take one session or all three: the cost is $7 per person for one session, $13 per person for two sessions, or $19 per person for all three sessions. Reservations are appreciated, but walk-ins will be welcome. For
A
additional information, please call the Center at (814) 938-1000 or send an email to info@weatherdiscovery.org. Little Mr. & Miss Groundhog 2016. Calling all kindergarteners in the Punxsutawney School District, S.S.C.D., and the Punxsutawney Christian School! Entries for Little Mr. & Miss Groundhog
2016 will be accepted until Saturday, January 16, at the Weather Discovery Center. Winners of the contest will be crowned at 10 a.m. Saturday, January 30, 2016, in the Lobby of the Punxsutawney Weather Discovery Center. Each winner will receive a $50 Walmart card and a gift bag. Winners will appear in the Punxsutawney Spirit and are invited to the Firemen’s Parade in July and the Home for the Holidays Parade in November. Popular voting will take place January 18-28. For entry details, please visit the Center’s website (www.weatherdiscovery.org), call the Center at 938-1000, or send an e-mail to info@weatherdiscovery.org. Proceeds from the event benefit the Weather Discovery Center’s educational programs. If you’d like to stay up to date with what’s happening at the Center, visit either our website (www.weatherdiscovery.org) or our Facebook page (www.facebook.com/weatherdiscovery) to sign up for our e-newsletter! Or you can call us with your e-mail address, and we’ll add you to our list. Marlene Lellock is the director of the Punxsutawney Weather Discovery Center. •••
Holiday Dessert Tips to Please All Your Party Guests
W
ant to really flex your hosting muscles this holiday season? The best way to show you are the host with the most is by ensuring that dessert time is sweet for every guest. That means making sure all party goers have a delicious note to end their meal on. Here are a few easy tips for hosts to make sure everyone at the table, regardless of his or her dietary restrictions, enjoys dessert together.
Gluten-Free Guests One in 133 Americans suffers from Celiac disease and another 18 million have gluten sensitivity. For these celebrants, occasions where lavish sweets are served can be frustrating. But you can make your guests’ day happy if you shop smart. For instance, you can check out the gluten-free cakes of Inspired by Happiness. Certified gluten-free by the National Foundation for Celiac Awareness, they are made using only natural flavors, with no artificial colors or trans-fat. Flavors include “Dreamin’ of Chocolate Dark & White Chocolate Layer Cake,” “Dreamin’ of Strawberries White Chocolate Shortcake” and the new “Cravin’ for Cookies & Cream Layered Cake,” and can be found in the in-store bakery of retail grocery chains and supermarkets including Kroger and Target. More information can be
Shadow Vineyard and and Winery Winery
found at inspired-by-happiness.com. Give your gluten-free guests the decadence they deserve with irresistible flavors and a homemade taste. If you shop right, these may become the most popular desserts you serve this season. Vegan Visitors For those who don’t eat eggs, milk and butter, dessert can seem tricky at first, but there are plenty of ways to create desserts that avoid these ingredients. Serve vegan guests a homemade sorbet topped with a mint garnish. Or, stick to your regular recipes and make some substitutions. Tofu, cornstarch and apple sauce can replace egg in pies and pudding. And a range of milk substitutes are available, including rice milk, soy milk and almond milk Fruit Only Fans Whether you have guests who avoid dessert because of a specific health concern or simply are fans of fruit only, a fruit side will be a welcome addition to your dessert spread, especially after an indulgent meal. Provide guests with a fresh fruit salad side. This option will be enjoyed right alongside any and all of the other options in your spread. The holiday feast should be a joyous, festive occasion for all your guests throughout every course. Ensure you have dessert options that everyone can enjoy. (StatePoint) •••
DECEmBER HouRS & SPECIALS 2015
fuLL CASE of WINE 20% off Gift Boxes, or Wreaths – Customized to Your Liking
Gift Certificates Available
Stock Wreaths 40% off Hosting Accessories 25% off Wine racks 30% off
www.shadowvineyard.com 1681 Airport Rd.
Just 1 mile past the Punxsy Airport
814-938-9463 (WINE)
REGuLAR HouRS: Thur. & fri. 4-8 pm Sat. 10 am - 6 pm
Holiday Extended Hours Dec. 20th 12 – 4 Dec. 22nd 4–8 Dec. 23rd 4–8 Dec. 24-25-26 Closed Dec. 31st 12 – 5 Jan. 1-2 Closed
Healing Touch Massage
Give the Gift of
Relaxation Gift Certificates available for 1/2 Hour and 1 Hour Sessions
MSG001137 Mahoning St. 938-7515 217 W.PunxSy
from
Mayor richard alexander
BURKETT’S P.A.W.S. All Breeds dog & Cat Grooming
During this season of joy let's celebrate our pets and the love they bring into our lives. HAPPY HOLIDAYS! We look forward to serving you in the New Year!
814-938-3974 (Dixie & Cholley)
242 N. FiNdley St., PuNxSy Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183 – 27
The Man Behind the Beard
Wishing You The Best This Holiday Season!
E
very Christmas Eve, children go to bed eagerly anticipating a visit from Santa Claus. This merry gentleman is purported to visit the home of every good girl and boy, delivering gifts and cheer along the way. Before the modern evolution of Santa
ScReeN PRiNt embRoideRy PRomotioNal PRoductS 109 main St., big Run
1-800-527-2066 814-427-2066
www.standardpennant.com “2015 Business of the Year Award Recipient”
Wishing All A Holiday Season Filled With Peace & Happiness
Jefferson County Housing Authority
Accepting applications PunxSutAwney for developments in: ReynoldSville
Claus lived a very real and generous individual named Nicholas. In the third century, Nicholas served as the Bishop of Myrna in present-day Turkey. He had a reputation for secret gift-giving, believing that giving should be done secretly and sacrificially in Jesus Christ’s name rather than one’s own. Stories tell of Nicholas paying the dowry for poor daughters to enable them to get married. He reportedly put coins in the shoes of those who left them out for him. It is believed Nicholas helped to restore the hope of hundreds of people in his community, making him a beloved and revered Bishop. Throughout his ministry, Nicholas fervently shared his life and fortune with others. Nicholas continued to be revered and
SykeSville BRookville
1-800-585-5303 TTY/TDD #711
www.jeffcoha.com
PunxSutAwney oFFiCe • 938-7140 ReynoldSville oFFiCe • 653-7804 Efficiency to 4 Bedroom Apartments Rent is affordable & includes utility allowances
EvEn “You Know who” SToPS hErE!
s Holiday GreetinG & Happy eatinG from Walmart Plaza Rt. 119 North Punxsy
commemorated by many Christians even after his death. His charity and unselfish works helped inspire generations of the faithful, and he eventually was named the patron saint of everyone from merchants to sailors to pawnbrokers. No one really knows what St. Nicholas looked like. But in 2005, a forensic laboratory in England reviewed historical data and photographs of the remains taken from St. Nicholas’ grave in the 1950s. Researchers concluded that he was a small man, perhaps no more than five feet in height, with a broken nose. This image certainly does not fit with the robust frame and other imagery awarded St. Nicholas in more modern years. St. Nicholas is believed to be the inspiration for Santa Claus, which was a name taken from the Dutch Sinterklaas, a contracted form of Sint Nicolass, or St. Nicholas. Tales of the real St. Nicholas’ giving spirit were blended with a fictional personification by New York-based newspaper writers who blended the St. Nicholas name with the appearance of a Dutch town citizen. The goal was to reach out to the primarily Dutch immigrants living in New York at the time. This jolly elf image was given a boost by the publication of “A Visit From St. Nicholas,” which was published around the same time. Eventually, the merry Santa Claus portrayal began to outshine the more accurate St. Nicholas version as a religious man, fostered by political drawings and caricatures that depicted Santa as a chubby sort in a red suit. That image prevails to this day. Beneath the Christmas symbolism, the beard and the presents associated with Santa Claus lies a tale of generosity that originated with St. Nicholas. •••
Welcome To The Pharmacy That’s Still Close By. With five pharmacists ready to serve you: • Michael Horner, R. Ph. • Kim Horner, R. Ph. • Jennifer Moore, R. Ph. • Joe Presloid, R. Ph. • Matt Kunselman, R. Ph.
2 PUNXSUTAWNEY LOCATIONS:
200 Prushnok Dr.
132 West Mahoning St.
DRIvE UP WINDOW TO BETTER SERvE YOU Mon.- Thur 8 to 6, Fri 8-4
938-3077
938-2400 WingStreet Wings ®
Mon.- Fri 9 to 7, Sat. 9 to 2 Visit our website:
618-5957
www.medicineshoppe.com/1094
Happy Holidays
Gimmicks Ridge Ave. • 938-7100
WISE
Dr. Bill Wise, VMD Dr. Ben Wise, VMD VEtErInary ClInIC
3460 rt. 410 troutville rd.
427-2424
28 – Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183
Ridge Ave. • 938-0200 Extending Warm Wishes to Everyone for a Merry Christmas & Happy New Year
Quality Roofing Since 1896.
Greetings of the Season
Ingham & Sons Automotive Services
(Editor’s Note: “From Our Past,” researched by S. Thomas Curry, features items of interest from past editions of Punxsutawney and area newspapers.) December 8, 1886 — George Washington Jose, who is building the big hotel at Newburg, on the Bell’s Gap railroad, was in town last Thursday. (Punxsutawney Spirit) [The “big hotel at Newburg” is what was known as “The LaJose Hotel.” Newburg, located along PA Route 36 South toward Altoona, is more familiarly known as “LaJose.”] December 9, 1869 — HO, FOR THE RAILROAD! – On Thursday last, some eighteen railroad carts, and attendant Hibernians, passed through town enroute for the Butler Branch of the West Penn Road, now in course of construction. They attracted considerable attention while passing along our street, and we wondered how long it would be until similar vehicles would be in use in Jefferson county. We hope to note that occurrence ere long. (Punxsutawney Plaindealer) [“Hibernians” are defined as people native to Ireland.] December 13, 1899 — The Lindsey Press moved to Punxsutawney last week, according to promise, and appeared last Wednesday in a greatly enlarged form, under the caption of the “Punxsutawney Republican.” A number of Punxsutawney gentlemen have gone in with Messrs. Clark Rodgers & Son and formed a company
known as the Punxsutawney Publishing Company. While from a business standpoint the SPIRIT does not court competition, finding the struggle for existence quite lively enough, it welcomes everybody to Punxsutawney, in whose future it has abundant faith, and wished them all success. (Punxsutawney Spirit) December 14, 1906 — That Big Run is a live and progressive town is evidenced by the united efforts of its citizens to bring about the prosperity of the town and the good results with which their efforts have been meeting. Towns, like individuals, generally do not get more out of the world than they go after, and the people of Big Run have commenced to realize this. A new private company, the Irvington Real Estate and Improvement Company has decided to build five new houses. There has never been a time in the history of Big Run when the outlook was as bright for the town as it is now. (Big Run Tribune) December 15, 1886 — Owen Murphy, the contractor who built the new coke ovens at Walston, is not highly pleased at the Indiana Messenger’s report to the effect that fifty of the ovens had caved in. He thinks such a story will not assist him materially in getting other ovens to build. Mr. Murphy‘s ovens are all solid, and will not fall in for years to come. In fact no more substantial masonry could be found anywhere. (Punxsutawney Spirit) •••
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Make a Child’s First Holiday Special
A
• Personalized framed print: Commembaby’s life is filled with mileorate the first holiday season with your stones. First smiles, first steps and child by getting a print made with his or her first words are just a few of the moname and age. Leave a space on the print ments parents will treasure. so that the child’s parents can customize it A baby’s first holiday season is another even further with their son or daughter’s special time to cherish. Shoppers seeking footprints. Include a matted frame and gifts to make a baby’s first holiday special child-safe ink or paint to complete the gift. have many clever, cute and functional • Keepsake ornament: Some families items to choose from. Several of these embrace the tradigifts can become tion of adding a keepsakes to be new ornament to tucked into memtheir Christmas ory boxes for trees each year. growing kids to Purchase an ornalook at later in life. ment for the new • Christmas pababy with the year jamas: What better so he or she can way to await for join in the tradithe arrival of tion. Christmas than in a • Crochet or pair of snuggly paknit blanket: jamas? Send pajaCrafty individuals mas ahead of can make a blanChristmas Day so ket that the newest that new parents addition to the will have plenty of family can enjoy adorable photo opduring the chilly portunities as their days of winter. baby boy or girl These blankets tears open the gifts. often become Stores stock sevtreasured keeperal different fun sakes that may be and festive prints, passed down or look into pajathroughout the mas that can be family or kept personalized. tucked away for • Photo print Thoughtful gifts can make this first holiday season one of joy for new children in the family. kids so they can package: Photogragive them to their phy packages can own children once they start their own faminvolve the entire expanding family and ilies. will catalog special moments in time. Pur• Rocking horse: Babies don’t wait long chase studio or on-location time with a before they start to run around and climb. A private photographer, or use one of the classic rocking horse makes for a fun baby popular photography chains found in gift, and rocking horses come in many difmalls and department stores. ferent styles. If you are the family carpenter, you can even purchase some unfinished wood from a craft store and then make this into a homemade gift your favorite little “Complete guy or gal will always cherish. Gunsmith • Piggy bank: Foster good saving habits Service” Farm Supply LLC by gifting a personalized piggy bank. Get kids off on the right foot by depositing a few dollars into the bank before giving the gift. A new baby brings many changes and fun experiences. Gift-givers can make a baby’s first holiday season one filled with 1798 St. Jacobs Church Rd., Punxsy joy and whimsy with creative gift ideas. 814-938-7831 Fax 814-938-1074 •••
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30 – Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183
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Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183 – 31
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By the staff of Hometown magazine rom the staff of Hometown magazine and the Community Calendar at Punxsutawney.com, here is a list of events coming up in our area: n Dec. 14-18: 25th Annual Light Up A Child’s Life® Campaign, 7 a.m. to 4 p.m., on WPXZ for Make-A-Wish®. Auction on Friday. For information, call 938-8888. n Dec. 16: PAHS Band Holiday Concert, 7 p.m., at PAHS auditorium. n Dec. 22: First Day of Winter. n Dec. 24: Christmas Eve, worship services at many churches around town. n Dec. 25: Christmas Day! n Dec. 26: Super Science Saturday at Punxsy Weather Discovery Center. Call 9381000 for information. n Dec. 26: Milk Can Jam food bank fundraiser, 7 p.m., at the Punxsy Eagles. Benefits local food banks and world hunger relief. n Dec. 28, 29 & 30: Winter Wonders at Punxsy Weather Discovery Center. 9381000. n Jan. 1: New Year’s Day! Welcome 2016! n Jan. 2: Super Science Saturday at Punxsy Weather Discovery Center. 9381000. n Jan. 5: First Tuesday Community Dinner, 5 to 7 p.m., at Punxsy Presbyterian Church. Free & open to the public.
F
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Around Town
Happy
Holidays!
I
n Jan. 8: Free Community Dinner, 5 to 6 p.m., at the First United Methodist Church. n Jan. 16: An Afternoon of Music, at the Punxsy Memorial Library. Contact the library for more information. n Jan. 16: Snow Day Saturday at Punxsy Weather Discovery Center. 9381000. n Jan. 18: Blood Drive, 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., at Punxsy Area Hospital, sponsored by the American Red Cross. n The Red Kettle Campaign by the Salvation Army continues through the holiday season at various locations around town. n Tiny Inspirations, a local cat foster near Valier, would appreciate donations of scoopable litter, paper plates, paper towels and 4 Health brand dry cat food, which is sold at Tractor Supply. Please contact Sydney at 938-8581 or find Tiny Inspirations on Facebook for more information or to donate. n The Punxsutawney Area Community Center offers cycling, batting cage, Fifty & Fit, SilverSneakers, AM men’s basketball, Pilates/yoga, and gymnastics. Call 938-1008 for more information. n The Punxsutawney Memorial Library offers several programs for readers of all ages. Visit the library website, www.punxsutawneylibrary.org or the library Facebook page for more information.. •••
Groundhog Day Birthdays!
f you or someone you know was born on February 2 – Groundhog Day (also known as Phil’s favorite day of the year) – please send the following infor-
mation, along with your (or his or her) picture, to Punxsutawney Hometown Magazine, PO Box 197, Punxsutawney, PA 15767: 1. First and last name. 2. Year of birth. 3. Hometown. 4. Contact information (to confirm information). 5. Interesting biographical information (for example, job, hobbies, facts that make you unique). 6. How do you feel about your special connection to Punxsutawney Phil’s special day? If you prefer to use e-mail, please send the information and the picture to Hometown magazine at hometown@punxsutawneymagazine.com. For more information, please call the magazine at (814) 938-0312. •••
Hometown photo by jessica Uptegraph.
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32 – Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183
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Punxsutawney Community Medical Building Services Opening Soon
T
he long-awaited project to provide access to Penn Highlands Healthcare patients in the Punxsutawney region is complete, and services will soon be offered. The Punxsutawney Community Medical Building, located at 551 W. Mahoning Street in downtown Punxsutawney, will begin to welcome patients on specific dates, beginning at 9 a.m. December 2 with the opening of the relocated pediatrics office. “We’re excited to provide these new and expanded services to our patients from the Punxsutawney area,” said Raymond Graeca, Penn Highlands Healthcare CEO. “Thousands of people from this region choose Penn Highlands as their healthcare provider each year, and this is our way of bringing the same quality that they have received at Penn Highlands Brookville and Penn Highlands DuBois to their hometown.” Penn Highlands Pediatrics, the offices of Dr. George Fatula and Dr. James Fugate, Jr., will relocate to the new facility and will welcome patients at 9 a.m. December 2. They were formerly located at 81 Hillcrest Drive. In addition to the physicians, physician assistants Emily Bish and Nicole Grunthaner will also see patients at the new location. Opening at 8 a.m. December 7 is the new QCare Punxsutawney, a walk-in, urgent care clinic that will serve patients who need immediate care for minor illnesses and health issues such as flu-like symptoms, fever, vomiting, coughs, sinus problems, earaches, sprains, rashes, minor cuts and abrasions, minor aches and pains, bladder infections, tick and insect bites, animal bites, etc. No appointments are necessary to see a provider at QCare. Patients suffering from a life-threatening injury or illness should go directly to the nearest hospital emergency room. This is sometimes best accomplished by calling 91-1. QCare is not the appropriate facility for those suffering from things like chest pain, severe abdominal pain, major head injuries and other trauma, visibly broken bones, shortness of breath, ingestion of poisons, seizures, dizziness, severe burns, shock, snake bites, and uncontrollable bleeding. QCare is also not appropriate for children under the age of one-year-old. Additional services available at QCare include sports and Department of Transporta-
tion physicals, tetanus shots, and suture removal. QCare allows Penn Highlands Healthcare to provide fast, convenient care for patients in a private setting and is the choice over the emergency department for shorter wait times and co-pays similar to a primary care visit. Most major insurance programs are accepted at QCare. Those who are unsure about their insurance coverage should ask their insurance provider about specific coverage at QCare. “QCare is a service that helps patients get the care that they want, when they need it,” Graeca said. “There are many times when your primary care physician is unable to immediately see you. QCare is convenient, has expanded hours – seven days a week – and has local providers who you know and trust.” Providers at the new QCare include Darlene Brink, Certified Registered Nurse Practitioner; Heather Griffith, Certified Family Nurse Practitioner; and Ashlee Spack, Physician Assistant. Brink is a resident of Punxsutawney and is a fixture in the healthcare community, having worked more than thirty years of her career as a staff nurse and nurse manager in the local emergency department. Griffith is a resident of Worthville and a graduate of the Punxsutawney Area High School. She has spent time working as a nurse and a nurse practitioner at Penn Highlands DuBois in both the hospitalist program and in the Hahne Regional Cancer Center. Spack is a lifelong resident of Rossiter and also a graduate of the Punxsutawney Area High School. She has been a physician assistant at a large physician practice in Clarion for the last year. QCare Punxsutawney is open seven days a week with hours from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., Monday through Saturday and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday. The office is closed only three days per year: Easter Sunday, Thanksgiving, and Christmas Day. In addition to the QCare walk-in services, patients will also be able to complete outpatient testing at the Punxsutawney Community Medical Building. These services will also open on December 7. Patients with physician orders will be able to walk in and have X-rays taken seven days a week with hours from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. - Continued on next page
DarLene STuCHeLL
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Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183 – 33
F
Light Up A Child’s Life® Marks 25 Years in Punxsy
or twenty-five years, the Make-AWish® Foundation has been lighting up children’s lives in Punxsutawney. The 2015 Light Up A Child’s Life campaign began on Monday, December 14, and will conclude on Friday, December 18. Make-A-Wish invites area residents to find WPXZ on their radio dials and help make wishes come true for local children with life-threatening medical conditions. During the week, Make-A-Wish will broadcast live from 7 to 9 a.m. at Ragley’s True Value Hardware, Punxsy Pizza, Caterina’s, the Punxsutawney middle and high school, and County Market.
Each day, the broadcast will resume at 10 a.m. and continue to 4 p.m. at the MakeA-Wish office at 109 N. Findley Street in the old Spirit building. On Wednesday, December 16, from 3 to 4 p.m. Make-AWish will broadcast from Mulberry Square, where the SSCD choir will perform. A new venue has been added to this year’s schedule: from 5 to 7 p.m. Thursday, December 17, Make-A-Wish will broadcast from The Burrow. Throughout the campaign, wish kids and donors will share their stories, and supporters will have multiple opportunities to make donations. The campaign wraps up on Friday, December 18, with
the annual auction, held from 3 to 4 p.m., at the Make-A-Wish office. Please call 938-8888 to place a bid throughout the campaign week. Make-A-Wish Greater Pennsylvania and West Virginia is a nonprofit organization that grants wishes to children, aged 2 ½ to 18, with life-threatening medical conditions. Currently, the local chapter is one of the most active in the country, having fulfilled more than 15,000 wishes. For more information, please call Make-A-Wish at (800) 6769474 or visit its website at www.greaterpawv.wish.org. •••
Punxsy Community Medical
Continued from previous page Monday through Saturday and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday. X-ray services will also be closed only three days per year: Easter Sunday, Thanksgiving, and Christmas Day. Laboratory testing will also be available five days per week with hours from 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. The building also includes additional space to add primary care and specialty physician offices in the future. Penn Highlands will announce those physicians in the near future. “We have a large number of Punxsutawney area patients who use Penn Highlands Healthcare for their primary care, pediatric care, cardiac care, cancer care, and much more,” Graeca said. “The Punxsutawney Community Medical Building is a way for us to show our commitment to our loyal patients and expand access to everyone in the Punxsutawney region.” •••
from your neighborhood Reynoldsville Businesses
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34 – Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183
Dr. Harry E. KunsElman
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Holiday Living Made Easy
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ith so much on our plates between Thanksgiving and New Year’s Day, the holiday season can be hectic. Fortunately, there are many ways to save time and make the holiday season more manageable. • If you don’t have plastic clips to hang lights around windows and to the eaves of your home, inexpensive clothespins will work just as well. If you’re concerned about the color of the wooden clips, paint them holiday hues before stringing the lights. • Put a bath mat, rug-side down and rubberside up, beneath your Christmas tree stand. This allows you to spin the tree as you hang lights and ornaments without damaging the floor underneath. It also makes it simple to undress the tree once the season is over. Use a tree skirt to hide the mat. • Use empty squirt bottles to make baking and cooking easier. Pancake and cookie batters can be squirted from the containers for less mess. • Store one or two strings of lights in a plastic shopping bag to keep the strands from getting tangled. Hang the bags from a hook in a garage or stack them in a storage bin. • Use plastic zip ties to attach garland and lights to bannisters. They’re easy to assemble and will not damage the bannisters. • A paper towel holder can be screwed to the wall in a craft room to neatly hold spools of ribbon. Simply pull the length you need from the spool and cut for easy decorating. • Mount a tree stand to a piece of wood with screws or glue. This prevents spills from reaching the floor while stabilizing the tree. • Old maps make interesting gift wrap and are a nice change of pace from commercially
produced paper or newsprint. • Wrap duct tape or another type of sticky tape around your hand. Pat over fallen pine needles that accumulate around the tree. In hard-to-reach areas, wrap the tape around a broom or a floor sweeper. • When traveling for the holidays, use a brightly colored suitcase or flashy tape to make your suitcase stand out from others at the airport. • Place hardened brown sugar in a baking dish, cover it with a moist paper towel and either microwave it on high for 20-second intervals or place it in a 300 F oven for five minutes. This will soften the sugar, making it easier to use the sugar to prepare your favorite holiday cookie recipes. • Save plastic bread ties, which can be used to make tags for the wires on certain devices. Such ties also can be used to organize decorating components and to keep your place on a roll of tape. • Measure the inside of your picture window and construct a wooden frame to its dimensions. Staple holiday lights to the frame and then easily slip the frame in and out of place each year. • Hang a live wreath or some boughs of evergreen in your home to give it that fresh pine scent if you have an artificial tree. • Pack for a holiday excursion using a collapsible clothing storage hanger for closets. Fold clothes on each fabric shelf and then collapse it into your suitcase. When you get to your destination, unfold and hang it in a closet so all of your clothes will be at the ready. Make the holidays even more enjoyable with a variety of timesavers and clever tips. ••• † Manufacturer’s suggested retail price is shown. Prices may vary due to supply, freight, etc. Actual prices set by the dealer. Product and specifications subject to change without notice. Availability subject to production, stocking, and demand. *1.99%, 5.99%, 6.99%, or 12.99% APR with Minimum Payments of 2.87%, 3.05%, 3.10%, or 3.39% of the purchase amount, based on your creditworthiness, are effective until the purchase is paid in full. Offer available on approved purchases of new 20142016 select models made on the Yamaha Card issued by Capital One, N.A. Offer valid through 12/28/15. Your account must be open and current to be eligible for this offer. Some options may not be available and other terms may apply. Your Standard APR is either 12.99%-22.99% or variable 14.99%-22.99%. Variable APRs as of 9/1/15 and apply to accounts opened on or after 11/6/09. Minimum Interest Charge $1. Offer good only in the U.S., excluding the state of Hawaii. Dealer remains responsible for complying with all local and state advertising regulations and laws. Shown with optional accessories. Always protect the environment and wear your seat belt, helmet, eye protection and protective clothing. Read the owner’s manual and the product warning labels before operation. Professional riders depicted on closed courses. ©2015 Yamaha Motor Corporation, U.S.A. All rights reserved. • YamahaWolverine.com
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Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183 – 35
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Signs of the season are in the air, With lights and tinsel everywhere -And a blanket of white covers the ground, Spreading joy and glad tidings all around -So at this most special time of year, We'd like to thank all of you for stopping here!
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The History Behind Some Beloved Christmas Songs
H
oliday traditions vary from family to family, but one component of the holidays that seems to be universally enjoyed is a good Christmas song. Music is piped throughout malls and stores to entertain shoppers, and favorite tunes may be on the radio or streamed through a digital music service as families decorate their homes. Many people may love Christmas songs and carols, but not everyone shares the same favorites. Thankfully, there’s no shortage of material when it comes to Christmas songs, ensuring there’s something for everyone. In 2014, Time magazine researched records at the U.S. Copyright Office to determine the most popular and most recorded Christmas songs since 1978. when copyright registrations were digitized. The following are some of the more beloved holiday tunes and a bit of history about each song. • “Silent Night”: One of the most rerecorded songs in history (733 versions since 1978), “Silent Night,” was composed in 1818 by Franz Xaver Gruber and put to lyrics by Joseph Mohr. It was first performed on Christmas Eve at St. Nicholas parish church in Oberndorf, a village in Austria. Today’s version is a slow lullaby, but it’s believed the original was a dance-like tune in 6/8 time. • “O Holy Night”: This popular song was composed by Adolphe Adam in 1847 to a French poem titled, “Minuit, chrétiens (Midnight, Christians).” Many notable performers, including Perry Como, Céline Dion, Josh Groban, Michael Crawford, and Lea Michele, have performed “O Holy Night.” • “Silver Bells”: Now a Christmas classic, “Silver Bells” originally was written for the Bob Hope film, “The Lemon Drop Kid.” Songwriter Jay Livingston wanted to title the song “Tinkle Bell,” but his wife dissuaded him from using the word “tinkle.” • “White Christmas”: Irving Berlin believed his song “White Christmas” would be an instant hit. His prediction was correct, especially after singer Bing Crosby recorded it. • “Jingle Bells”: Although it has become one of the more popular Christmas songs, “Jingle Bells” really was written for Thanksgiving. It’s also one of the oldest holiday songs of American origin. James
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after being performed at the famed Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. • “The Christmas Song”: This classic Christmas song was written in 1944 by Bob Wells and Mel Tormé. It’s usually subtitled “Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire.” The song was written during a heat wave as a way to think cool thoughts. It only took 40 minutes to write the music and some of the lyrics. Nat King Cole’s rendition of the song is among the more popular versions. Christmas songs are enjoyed and performed year after year. Popular songs continue to endure and attract new fans. •••
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Lord Pierpont, the song’s author, was inspired by the famous sleigh races of Medford, Massachusetts. • “Do You Hear What I Hear”: Noel Regney wrote this song as a call to peace during the Cuban Missile Crisis. The original context has long been forgotten, and “Do You Hear What I Hear” is now a staple of holiday celebrations. • “Santa Claus is Coming to Town”: James Gillespie wrote this tune while riding a subway and reminiscing about his childhood with his brother. It became a hit
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36 – Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183
From Our Our From Distinguished Past Past Distinguished
There’s More To Life at Christ The King Manor Comes An Even Brighter Future! Christ The
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The high detail to medical One of the fastest growingstandards needs amongofseniors today is the desireand to health care will continue to always improve the caring maintain mobility and involvement in activities. Ouras specialists in phys-staff and management seek better and more efficient ways of servicing all those who icalOnetherapy work to improve daily living mobility and lessen pain. Indigrowing needs among seniors today the come through its isdoors. The high standards of detail to medical and health care will of the fastest vidualized programs and specialist teamwork help to return patients to desire to maintain mobility and involvement in activities. Our continue to always improve as the caring staff and management Christ The King Manoras in physical therapy work Some of the treatments are: seek better and more efficient ways of servicing allactive those wholifestyles quickly as possible. Seespecialists for yourself how Christ the King is preparing for diligently to improve daily living mobility and lessen pain. come through its doors. the future and• building on the past. • Neurological Rehab Daily Living Activities Individualized programs and specialist teamwork pays See for yourself how Christ the King is preparing for in rehabilitation and returns the patient to active dividends • Chronic Pulmonary Rehab for • Home Evaluations Call 814-371-3180 a guided tour of the future and building on the past. lifestyles as quickly as possible. Some of the treatments are: • Cardiac Rehab • and Orthopedic the past, present futureRehab at Christ the King. • Neurological Rehab • Daily Living Activities Call 814-371-3180 for a guided tour of • Comprehensive Wound Care • Balance & Fall Prevention the past, present and future at Christ the King. • Chronic Pulmonary Rehab • Home Evaluations For almost a half-century, Christ The King Manor has set the standard for professional caring in DuBois. What has been the “past" is merely a "prologue" for the future at Christ The King.
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Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183 – 37
F.O. Eagles 1231
Merry Christmas
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We wish you peace, joy and enlightenment throughout this holy season and beyond.
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Merry Christmas and Happy New Year From the Staff of
Law Office
Nicholas Gianvito, Attorney at Law Kaeley Haag, Legal/Administrative Assistant
Please note that our office will be closed from December 24, 2015 through January 3, 2016. effective January 4, 2016, the office will be at the same location, but located in the main house fronting West Mahoning street. We will experience a brief interruption in phone and internet service during this period. We apologize for any inconvenience that this may cause.
Christmas Tree Varieties and Care
A
n evergreen tree decked out in lights and ornaments is one of the universal symbols of the holiday season. The Christmas tree tradition is believed to have originated in Germany in the 15th or 16th centuries, when trees were decorated with edibles, such as nuts and fruits. They were later decorated with candles and eventually lights. Through the centuries, people have trekked to forests, Christmas tree farms and commercial lots to pick the perfect trees for their holiday displays. The National Christmas Tree Association says more than 33 million real trees are purchased each year, making the tree business a billion-dollar industry. While there are scores of evergreen varieties, certain tree types are more popular than others and thus more available for purchase. The following are some of the more popular trees come Christmastime. • Eastern Redcedar: Branches of the tree are compact and form a pyramidshaped crown. The trees should be a dark, shiny green color. The eastern redcedar is not a true cedar tree, but a member of the juniper family. This tree can make a great cut tree with a homespun look and a pungent fragrance. • Leyland Cypress: This cypress is one of the more popular Christmas trees in the southeastern United States. The tree will be very dark green to almost gray in color. It has little aroma. Some people choose the Leyland because it does not produce
On the birthday of the Lord, May his blessings and peace stay with you, May his Love descends on you, Stay blessed this Christmas,
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sap, which is great for those with sap allergies. • Colorado Blue Spruce: An attractive blue-green foliage and a good symmetrical form is what attracts many people to the blue spruce. The Colorado Blue Spruce has an excellent natural shape and requires little pruning to look like the perfect Christmas tree. It’s not very fragrant, but the tree needles may give off an unpleasant odor when crushed. • Scotch Pine: A classic conical shape and very good needle retention help make the Scotch pine a popular tree to cut for the holidays. Scotch pines also are quite prevalent thanks to the tree’s adaptability to a wide range of climates. • Eastern White Pine: A delicate green color and long needles are found on this tree. Another popular pine, the rich fragrance of the white pine may make it preferable to those who like their homes to smell of evergreen. • Douglas Fir: The Douglas fir is one of the foremost Christmas tree species in the United States. It has soft needles that are dark green in color. Those needles radiate in all directions from the branches to give the tree a full look. The needles, when crushed, have a sweet fragrance. Douglas firs tend to live long when cut. • Fraser Fir: Another popular fir for Christmas is the Fraser fir. The needles are bicolored, with dark green on top and silver on the bottom. More fragrant than its cousin, the Douglas, the Fraser also boasts a slender profile, which makes it suitable for smaller rooms. Christmas tree maintenance Nothing can guarantee the health and appearance of a tree after it is brought into a home. But choosing a recently cut tree that has good needle retention can help. Here are other tips for a long-lasting tree. • Use a sharp saw to cut an inch off of the trunk base to remove the sappy covering that forms from cutting. This will improve water intake. • Fill a tree stand reservoir with warm water. Expect the tree to drink heavily in the beginning. • Keep the reservoir filled every day and check to see how much water the tree is using. • Place the tree far from heaters or other drying sources. •••
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MERRY CHRISTMAS! 38 – Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183
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Hanging Stockings with Care
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antles adorned with garland and other holiday trinkets make fireplaces come alive for Christmas. That magic is only enhanced by hanging Christmas stockings, which are just waiting to be filled with goodies for good girls and boys. Those without a fireplace often hang stockings from windowsills and stairway banisters. No written record exists to explain the origin of hanging stockings on fireplace mantles. Despite this, many people link the tradition to a tale about St. Nicholas. As that story goes, St. Nicholas was traveling through a village when he overheard the plight of three women. They were poor, and their father could not afford an
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ample dowry to marry them off. Rather than have them end up spinsters, St. Nicholas secretly tossed bags of coins through a window (or down the chimney, depending on which version of the story you read or hear), and they were captured in the girls’ stockings hanging to dry by the fire. The family was overjoyed to have received such riches. Soon news traveled about the mysterious money in stockings, and other children left out stockings for St. Nicholas to capture their own gifts. The tradition has transformed over the years, and now many children hang stockings by the chimney with the expectation that the stockings will be filled with gifts from Santa. Traditions once suggested that only gifts from Santa were left in stockings, while gifts placed beneath the tree were from family, but that has since changed. Stockings are now meant to hold small gifts while larger items are placed under the tree. Stockings should be hung away from the flames of the fire as a safety precaution. Some children even like to hang individual stockings on their bedposts instead of on a fireplace mantle. ••• A true feeling of home... • New Chapel • Beautiful countryside location • Continuing Care Retirement Community • Personal Care • Two Dementia Care Units Private rooms/suites • Adult Day Care Home Support Services
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Merry
Christmas
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May the closeness of friends, the comfort of home, and the unity of our nation, renew your spirits this Holiday Season.
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Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183 – 39
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Let’s Rethink High School
LET’S BUILD A SUPER SCHOOL XQ The Super School Project is an open call to America’s students, parents, educators, civic leaders, businesses, inventors, entrepreneurs, artists and designers to meet the challenge of preparing our students for the future by designing the next American high school. Our public high schools were built for a different era—when we were preparing our workforce for factory life in an industrial economy. Today, we need new skills—and an agile and flexible intelligence for a rapidly changing future—yet, our high schools have not changed. They remain frozen in time. That’s why the XQ Institute is launching XQ: The Super School Project to design the next American high school. Our hope is that collaboration across communities and industries will spark the best new thinking to truly transform how we approach public education.
A DESIGN COMPETITION UNLIKE ANY OTHER America is a country that has long thrived on ingenuity to solve the challenges of our times. XQ: The Super School Project will once again tap into that innovative spirit by uniting teams in cities and towns across the United States around one goal— to find and celebrate the models for high schools that will truly prepare all our students for today and tomorrow. Teams will compete to design the best and most innovative new schools. The most promising ideas will be selected, and those teams will receive additional resources, ac-
cess to unmatched talent and funding to realize their vision. The winning designs will inspire newhigh school models for every student in America worthy of the future.
JOIN THE XQ MOVEMENT We need your help. Encourage your school or community to join or apply to XQ: The Super School Project. Sign up on our website to get updates and shareable content to tell your friends about XQ, or even become an XQ Partner. If you have an idea, we can give you a voice. Together, we can do this. This is the movement to create a better future for every student across America. For more information on how you can be a part of XQ, please visit xqsuperschool.org. Let’s build a super school. •••
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40 – Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183
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Did You Know?
eaving cookies and milk for Santa Claus is a Christmas Eve tradition. Children regularly place a dish of cookies and a glass of milk by the tree on Christmas Eve so that Santa has enough energy to complete all of his gift-giving
history of the Christmas tree and the edible decorations that adorn it. Santa would snack on the ornaments. Even after edible decorations gave way to inedible ornaments, the tradition of leaving a snack for Santa remained. Whatever the origins behind the tradition, millions of children dutifully leave milk and cookies for Santa on Christmas Eve. •••
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before kids wake up on Christmas morning. The tradition of leaving cookies out on Christmas Eve may trace its origins to Saint Nicholas. On the feast of St. Nicholas on December 6, children would leave food and drink for the saint and any attendants. The treats would be exchanged for gifts. While that’s one theory behind the tradition, others think it is linked to the
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Christ The King Manor 1100 West Long Ave • DuBois, Pennsylvania
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• DEvElOpErS aND prODuCErS Of NaTural gaS Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183 – 41
Traditions Behind Holiday Gifts
T
he holiday season is a time to celebrate with friends and family. Several holidays are celebrated in this relatively short time period, making this one of the most festive times of the year. Many holiday celebrations focus on the exchange of presents, which may be exchanged with relatives, friends and even coworkers. But are you familiar with the origins of exchanging gifts? Gift exchanges trace their origins to both
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religious and secular traditions, each of which has helped shape the holidays into what they are today. Christmas People exchange gifts on Christmas Eve or Christmas Day all over the world. For Christians, Christmas celebrates the birth of Jesus Christ, who Christians believe was a gift from the Creator. From a religious standpoint, gifting others around Christmastime can be traced back to the stories of the Three Kings (also referred to as the “Three Wise Men”) who visited Jesus after his birth. Frankincense, a fragrance involved in worship; gold; and myrrh, an incense associated with funerals,
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42 – Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183
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was presented. These gifts symbolized worship in Christ, that He would be the King of Kings, and that suffering and death would come to Him. Another giver of gifts is part of many Christmas celebrations. St. Nicholas, a fourth century saint, is a beloved figure across the globe who has a reputation for giving gifts in secret and helping the needy. The figure of “Santa Claus” is based on St. Nicholas, and the blending of the two has evolved as history has mixed with folklore and personal traditions. Hanukkah Hanukkah is an eight-day Jewish celebration that commemorates the rededication of the Temple in Jerusalem. The word “hanukkah” actually means “dedication” in Hebrew. The Jews, including Judah Maccabee, helped drive the Syrians out of Jerusalem. In one of Judaism’s most central texts, Maccabee and others witnessed a miracle at the temple. Even though there was only enough oil to keep a menorah’s candles burning for one day, the flames continued for eight nights. Traditionally, gelt, or money, was given as a Hanukkah gift. Many Hanukkah gift givers aim to give gifts that are thoughtful and sweet. Money is not exchanged as much today, with other gifts taking its place. Kwanzaa Kwanzaa is an American holiday that pays homage to traditions and cultural influences from Africa. The holiday was developed in 1966 by Maulana Ndabezitha Karenga. The focus of Kwanzaa is on family and the harvest as well as certain principles, such as unity and faith. Gifts make up one of the seven symbols of Kwanzaa celebrations. However, giftsharing is not the central part of this special holiday. Gifts are symbolic of the labor and love of parents and the commitments made and kept by their children. Gifts are exchanged in abundance this time of year. The traditions behind the giving of presents is far-reaching and based in religious, secular and cultural traditions. •••
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44 – Punxsutawney Hometown – Christmas 2015 - Issue #183