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  • Back In 1924...

    Back In 1924...

    Report
    Published: 04-01-2011

    - On April Fool's Day, winter came back with a vengeance. After some
    spring-like weather, 9 inches of snow had fallen in the Shamokin area,
    meaning March had gone out like a lamb, which didn't impress the month
    of April at all.

    - There was a plumbers-electrical workers' strike in Shamokin. The
    master plumbers wanted a raise from 90 cents to $1.15 an hour - big
    money for the year 1924.

    - The Susquehanna Collieries announced the appointment of one of
    Shamokin's best-known doctors as chief surgeon. He was Dr. Clay Wiemer.

    - Ann Hewitt of Franklin Street, Shamokin, heard from her brother,
    Clark, a member of an orphan's relief agency in Armenia, 7,000 miles
    from Shamokin, that people in the Near East listened every night to
    radio broadcasts from Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. Radio was pretty new
    and the Armenian government did not allow citizens to listen to it in
    fear that they might get revolutionary ideas, but, Clark said, everyone
    listened anyway.

    - There was a burglary at the Marshall Building Apartments at Sunbury
    and Washington streets. The story made front-page headlines, not for the
    amount stolen, even though $300 was substantial in these times, but
    because the break-in had occurred between 3 and 5 p.m. in broad
    daylight. The townsfolk couldn't believe it.

    - At the Hotel Graemar in Shamokin, a large and angry crowd gathered in
    the evening to formulate a protest. They were protesting the deplorable
    conditions, they said, of the road between Shamokin and Mount Carmel.




    From: A. Papazian
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