View allAll Photos Tagged pa_29

"While The Rest Of Philly Sleeps Like a Kitten".....Something bad is most likely happening somewhere.

A tight squeeze for the full image.

Afternoon lighting is the best! Chambersburg, PA - 29 JAN 22

Reactivated in may 2018

I've never seen this one before

  

Other views of Space Invader PA_029 HERE

Rue des Archives | Rue Pastourelle 25/02/2023 25/02/2023 10h21

A sunny morning in the Marais on the corner of the Rue des Archives and Rue Pastourelle. Behind the wall Hôtel Tallard.

Don't forget to spot PA_29 (invasion date 06/05/1998, 20 points, re-activated 2018)

 

Rue des Archives

Rue des Archives is a 900 meters long street in the 3ème and 4ème arrondissement of Paris in the quartiers Enfants-Rouges, Archives, Sainte-Avoye, Saint-Merri and Saint-Gervais.

The street starts a rue de Rivoli and ends at rue de Bretagne.

It's named after the Archives nationales located in this street.

[ Source and more information: Wikipedia - Rue des Archives ]

A twin sister of the CP 1500 class (ALCO RS-2 model) of the Portuguese Railways.

 

Uma irmã gémea da série 1500 da CP (modelo ALCO RS-2).

 

flic.kr/p/259zJhQ

 

flic.kr/p/22q7Z9G

 

(reproduction prohibited, private collection)

  

Septa 205 in het Rockhill Trolley Museum. Rockhill Furnace, PA, 29 mei 2004.

Nanticoke, PA. March 2018.

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If you would like to use THIS picture in any sort of media elsewhere (such as newspaper or article), please send me a Flickrmail or send me an email at natehenderson6@gmail.com

PA_29 [20 points]

A blue Pac Man in the 3ème arrondissement of Paris. I have never seen the original of this videogame invader, we are looking towards a successful re-activation of the 29th space invader in Paris.

Dogs and space invaders, will they ever respect eachother?

Onscreen FlashInvader message: "QUE BUENO!"

 

All my photos of PA_29:

PA_29 (Close-up, June 2018)

PA_29 (Wide shot 1, June 2018)

PA_29 (Wide shot 2, June 2018)

PA_29 (Wide shot 3, July 2020)

 

Date of invasion: 06/05/1998

 

DELETED ?

 

RE-ACTIVATED May 2018

Reactivated in may 2018

I've never seen this one before

  

Other views of Space Invader PA_029 HERE

Other views of Space Invader PA_029 HERE

Rue des Archives 17/07/2020 20h05

Boy, girl, PA_29 and a mosaïc of Mr. Djoul on the corner of the Rue des Archives and Rue Pastourelle in the 3ème arrondissement (Marais).

 

More photos on the Flickr page of the artist himself:

Flickr - Mr Djoul

 

Mr. Djoul on Instagram

 

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PA_29 [20 points]

All my photos of PA_29:

PA_29 (Close-up, June 2018)

PA_29 (Wide shot 1, June 2018)

PA_29 (Wide shot 2, June 2018)

PA_29 (Wide shot 3, July 2020)

 

Date of invasion: 06/05/1998

 

DELETED ?

 

RE-ACTIVATED May 2018

c. 1713. Oli sobre tela. 160 x 210,8 cm. The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles. 72.PA.29. Obra exposada: Galeria E103.

Other views of Space Invader PA_029 HERE

Other views of Space Invader PA_029 HERE

Sociedade de Transportes Colectivos do Porto 249 en Septa 205 in het Rockhill Trolley Museum. Rockhill Furnace, PA, 29 mei 2004.

Companhia de Transportes Coletivos (Rio de Janeiro) 1875 in het Rockhill Trolley Museum. Rockhill Furnace, PA, 29 mei 2004.

On this Holiday it is not allowed to work in the fields, but to slaughter a Cow ...

To: Miss Anna M. Ramsey

Richborough P.D.

Bucks County

Pennsylvania

C/O Mr. Ed Ramsey

Please forward

  

High Point

April 27th ‘84

 

Dear Cousin Anna,

 

Yours of April 4 received. Was so glad to hear from you. I had looked for a letter for some time from Aunty. But have treasured up my last one from her. Anna, I sympathize deeply with your in your affliction. Your loss is her gain. But it is so hard to part with those we love so dearly but aunty has only passed from this wicked world to a brighter and better one beyond. But oh the loneliness and sadness in the home without a mother or father. My heart aches for you, well I do remember the bitter pangs of suffering I passed through when I had to give up my dear mother. It seemed as though all the sunshine had gone out of the world. To this day I grieve for her. But time changes all things and we must be reconciled.

 

I was not surprised when we received the notice of Aunty’s death. From what you had written to me I was expecting it. But felt very sad indeed. I wanted to come east last fall to see you all once more but Jeff was sick so long and so bad that we could not leave him. I think from what you tell me about Aunty she must have been (in her sickness) very much like cos (?) Kate Hume (McNair). She did not suffer pain but had that distress feeling and sick at her stomach. She had a cancerous tumor.

 

Dear Anna, we are so lonely. We miss Jeff so much. He was so good and kind to all. I had often read of happy deaths but never witnessed such a one in my life. He was sick only five days. In the afternoon of the day he died, Rosie was sitting on his bed crying. He said to her “I would so much rather you would go to the piano and play and sing for me ‘Nearer my God to Thee’ then to sit here and cry.” She went to the piano and played and tried to sing with the help of some friends. Poor child. It seemed as if it would kill her almost.

 

He bid all goodbye and talked to each one separately and was perfectly willing to go. Said he did not dread death and was ready to die, only his worldly affairs were not just as he would have them. He thought he lingered longer toward the last then he ought to, so asked a friend to read and sing with the friends that time might pass faster. There was about 50 persons in to bid him farewell. He shook hands and had some good word for all. It hurt him very much to talk but when he found he could not live he talked the most of the time until about half an hour before his death.

 

He had a great many friends. There was between 1,000 and 1,500 persons at his funeral. He requested to have one of our old preachers to preach at his funeral. The sermon was very good. He was buried with Masonic honors. We sent a notice to Aunty. Did you get it? Anna, I would like you to write to me soon and tell me about Aunty’s death. All join one with much love to all friends. Accept a very large share for yourself.

 

From your cousin,

 

Harriet S. Hart

  

This poignant letter was written by Harriet Shepard Vanartsdalen Hart (22 February, 1830, Philadelphia, PA – 11 December, 1900, High Point, MO), wife of Thomas Jefferson Hart (9 February, 1826, Bucks Co., PA – 29 February, 1884, High Point, MO), who—according to his obituary—struggled for years with “an enfeebling lung disease,” his “exhausted nature at last yielded to an attack of acute pneumonia after five days’ illness,” leaving a Harriet a widow with eight surviving children of the at least 13 she had born.

 

Many years later, his then-middle-aged son Lewis filed an application to join the Sons of the American Revolution. It contains a substantial amount of genealogical evidence about the Hart family, naming Jeff Hart’s father as Lewis Folwell Hart, (17 March, 1792, Bucks County, PA – 1841, Belleview, Illinois). His mother was Sidney Gill (1796 – 1854). He was the grandson of Joseph Folwell Hart, born 7 December, 1758, and Ann Folwell (1758, Warminster, PA – 11 March, 1843, Southampton, PA), who was the daughter of Colonel William Thomas Folwell (1737 – 1813). That Joseph was the son of Warminster, Pennsylvania, native Joseph Hart (1 September, 1715 – 25 February 1788) and his wife Elizabeth Collet (14 May, 1744, Philadelphia, PA – 19 February, 1788, Warminster, PA). Joseph, Sr., took part in the Revolution as a “colonel, Second Battalion.” He commanded a regiment of Bucks County militia, serving in Amboy, New Jersey, during the latter part of the summer of 1776. Joseph, Sr., the application notes, was a great-grandson of Christopher and Mary Hart of Oxfordshire, England, who came to America with William Penn and settled in Warminster Township, Bucks County, where the family lived until 1855, when Jeff Hart moved his brach to Missouri. (It is almost a certainty that Christopher and Mary Hart knew my great-great-great-great-great-great-great grandfather, the Quaker Richard Hough—who drowned in the Delware River in July 1705 and was eulogized by William Penn.)

 

Harriet was the daughter of John Vanartsdalen (b. abt. 1800 – aft. 1870) and his wife Maria S. Davis (1807, PA – 7 November, 1854, Philadelphia, PA). Harriet’s family was descended from early Dutch settlers Simon Jansz Van Arsdalen and his wife Jannetje Romeyn.

 

Jeff Hart married Harriet Vanartsdalen on 16 March, 1848. On the 1850 census of Philadelphia, the young couple and their second-born son John Byron (b. 1849, PA – 1886) (the first, also named John Byron, died either at birth or in early infancy), were living with—or possibly visiting—Harriet’s mother Maria, the woman of whom her daughter wrote: “Well I do remember the pangs of suffering I passed through when I had to give up my own dear mother. It seemed as though all the sunshine had gone out of the world.” Also in the household was Harriet’s younger brother, John (b. 1835). Jeff Hart’s occupation at that time was as a carpenter.

Harriet lost her beloved mother in November 1854. Maria was laid to rest in the Odd Fellows Burial Ground, a historic cemetery at 24th and Diamond Streets that was established in 1849. The cemetery property was acquired by the Philadelphia Housing Authority in 1950 for construction of a housing project. The bodies that had been interred there, including Maria’s, were relocated to two other Odd Fellows cemeteries: Mount Peace and Lawnview.

By 1860, the family had been in Missouri for about five years. They dwelt in “Township 43, Range 15” of Moniteau County. Today, that place is called High Point. It is less a town than a crossroads placed amidst a deeply agrarian landscape. At High Point, the census reveals that Jeff Hart had made the leap from carpenter to merchant, and Harriet managed four children who ranged in age from 11 to six months: Byron; Frank H. (1858 - 1905) Laura Louisa (b. 1859); and Lillie Josephine (1856 – 1863).

 

Jeff Hart served in the U.S. Civil War in Company B of the 48th Missouri Infantry as a captain. His registration record of the summer of 1863 enumerates him as a 37-year-old merchant with three months of previous experience serving in a militia. He did not see battle. According to the regimental history, “Service: Duty at Rolla. Mo., until December 9, 1864. Defense of Rolla against Price. Moved to Nashville, Tenn., December 9-19. Assigned to post duty at Columbia, Tenn., and garrison blockhouses on Tennessee & Alabama Railroad from Franklin to Talioka until February, 1865. Moved to Chicago, Ill., February 18-22. Guard duty at Camp Douglas and escort Confederate prisoners to City Point, Va., for exchange until June 16. Ordered to Benton Barracks, Mo., June 16. Mustered out June 22, 1865. Regiment lost during service by disease 120.”

 

After the war, on 27 March, 1867, Jeff Hart was appointed postmaster for High Point—it was a position that made practical sense, as he operated what was on one of few storefronts. In fact, looking at High point on Google Street View, it becomes clear that the U.S. Post office may yet be operating out of Jeff Hart’s former store, just as it has been since before the Civil War. Hart held the post master position until his death.

 

The 1870 census of Moniteau County, Missouri, lists Jeff Hart as a dry goods merchant. The children living at home at that time were sons Byron, Frank; Laura; Lewis Folwell (1862 - 1929); Emma Rosealie (b. 1866)—the “Rosie” who is mentioned in the letter; and Alberta S. (b. 1869). All the children, with the exception of the first, were born in Missouri. Also living with the family was a nonrelated servant, dry goods clerk, and laborer, as well as a man, age 70, who is simply called “Van Archdalen,”—a farmer born in Pennsylvania. This was almost certainly Harriet’s father, John.

 

The 1880 census of the same place shows Jeff Hart then had no occupation, as he was presumably struggling with his chronic lung disease, which could have been Tuberculosis, lung cancer, severe asthma, or any number of other issues affecting the airways that could lead to fatal pneumonia. The children living at home at that time were Laura; Lewis; Rosie; Alberta; Elmer E. (1870 - 1930); and Carlos Brumhawk (b. 1875). The eldest son, Lewis, was the only member of the family with work—he was listed a clerk in a store.

 

(Other Hart children who died young were the first John Byron (1849-1849); Annie Louisa (1850-1852); two babies named Howell Dorman—the first lived from 1852 to 1853, the second from 1853 - 1854; Maria Louisa (1854 – 1854); U. S. Grant (1863 – 1864); and Lillie Bell (1865 - 1865).)

 

You can read Jeff Hart’s obituary here: www.flickr.com/photos/60861613@N00/8606535144/in/photostream. It supplies many of the details of his life, character, and religion. Both he and Harriet are buried at High Point Cemetery, Moniteau County, Missouri.

 

Within a fortnight of her husband’s death and about five weeks before writing this letter, on 13 March, 1884, Harriet became the post mistress for High Point and appears to have retained the role until October 1891, when a replacement was named. That man, Robert Reynolds, may also have taken over the Harts’ mercantile business at the same time.

 

Because the 1890 census burned, we cannot glimpse of Harriet’s life at the beginning of that decade. Harriet did not die until 11 December, 1900, and so she ought to appear on the census of that year, but sadly, I cannot find her.

 

The recipient of the letter Harriet wrote in April 1884 was Anna Mary Ramsey (b. 21 October, 1847, Bucks Co., PA), the daughter of farmer Robert Ramsey (b. 1814, PA) and his wife Elizabeth Vanartsdalen (b. 1817, PA)—the “Aunty” of whom this letter speaks. Elizabeth was, it appears, the great-aunt of Harriet Vanartsdalen Hart—her paternal grandfather’s sister.

 

The Ramsey family was large, with eight children who all made it to adulthood. The 1850 census saw the family living in Northampton, Bucks County, where Robert Ramsey was a farmer. The children listed on the 1850 census were Jeanette V. (b. 1842); Amelia G. (b. 1844); Henry K. (1845 - 1910); Anna; and John V. (12 January, 1850 – 5 May, 1890). The 1860 census includes all of these children, as well as William Augustus (b. 1852) and Edward (b. 1855), the latter of whom this letter was sent in the Care Of.

 

Anna’s brother Henry may have fought in the Civil War. A Henry Ramsey enlisted as private on 17 February, 1865, in Company I, 61st Pennsylvania Infantry and was mustered out on 28 June, 1865 in Washington, D.C. However, there are multiple Pennsylvania Henry Ramseys who enlisted during the war. Some can be ruled out as Henry K., but none who remain supply the recorded evidence to make a certain identification.

 

Strangely, ten years later in 1870, the Robert and Elizabeth appear alone on the 1870 census of Northampton. All of their offspring had flown. Their sons Henry and Edward are enumerated in Abingdon, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, working as laborers on the farm of material kin Amos and Lottie Vanartsdalen. The rest of the children were nearby, still in Northampton. Son John was working as a laborer on the farm of Jesse and Hannah Twining. Eldest daughter Jeanette was living with another Vanartsdalen relation, 64-year-old Jane. Jeanette may have been with Jane Vanartsdalen as early as May 1864, when both their names were entered as members of the Dutch Reformed Church of North and Southampton. Amelia was living on the farm of Marshall and Sarah Cummings, working as a seamstress. Anna was with farmer Charles Torbert and his 21-year-old daughter Emma, keeping house. William went to Philadelphia, where he married a much older woman named Jeannette V. (b. 10 October, 1840) and bore him two sons, Horace Augustus (b. 29 September, 1872,) and Byron Vanartsdalen (b. 20 August 1874). She died 13 January, 1876, in Philadelphia, and was buried on 17 January, 1886, in North Ceder Hill Cemetery. Her two little boys were baptized together at the Dutch Reformed Church on 13 May, 1876, exactly four months after their mother’s death.

 

It does seem a strange state of affairs that although Robert and Elizabeth Ramsey were above the age of 50 and still engaged in farming, all of their children were to be found at the farms and houses of other people—relatives or no. One can only conclude that either the Ramseys were desperate for money and had sent their children out to earn it, or that the Ramsey children did not want to be with either one, or both, of their parents.

 

Anna’s father, Robert, died 5 May, 1878, and was buried in Union Cemetery, Richboro, Bucks County, “aged 64 years, 6 months, and 8 days,” according to his tombstone. Anna and William returned to live with 62-year old widow Elizabeth and were enumerated on the 1880 census as such. Also noted on the cenus were the two grandchildren, William’s sons eight-year-old Horace and five-year-old Byron. Anna’s brother John was living nearby, enumerated in the 1880 census as a laborer, had married a woman named Emma and had two children of his own: Mary (b. 1875) and Robert (b. 1877).

 

On 18 January, 1882, at the Dutch Reformed Church, widowed William married Adelaide B. Addis (1859 – 1896) and became the father of more children: Anna Maud (1886 – 1906), Harry A. (1887 – 1954), and Charles H. (1888 – 1964.) William died on 21 December, 1910, age 58, in Philadelphia, where he was possibly visiting his son Horace. He was buried on 23 December in Union Cemetery.

 

Byron Ramsey grew up to be a barber. His World War I registration form says he was of medium height, slender, and with brown eyes and dark hair. He married Emma E. Yerkes (b. 1882) and had three children: Elizabeth L. (b. 1906), Elaine H. (b. 1908), and Byron Lee (b. 1910). Marital discord resulting in separation, or perhaps something less fraught, happened in 1910 that caused Byron to be enumerated on the census without his family—instead he was with his then 52-year-old aunt, Anna, in Warmister. However, by 1920, he was back with his wife and children in Hatboro, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania.

 

On both the 1920 and 1930 censuses, Anna was enumerated with her bachelor nephew Horace in Philadelphia. Horace had the job of “timekeeper” (perhaps not literally in charge of clocks, but of employee time cards) at Wanamaker’s, the first department store in the city, and one of the first department stores in the United States. His World War I draft registration tells us that was of medium height, slender, and had blue eyes and brown hair. We also know from a later census that he had an 8th grade education. It can be extrapolated that the majority of the Vanartsdalen/Hart/Ramsey clan were similarly educated.

 

Anna Ramsey died on 7 December, 1933, and was buried on 12 December in Union Cemetery between her mother, “Aunty” Elizabeth and her brother Henry. It had been nearly 50 years since she had received the solemn letter I now own from a cousin then dead for more than three decades. Anna’s nephew Horace was alive as of 1940, living in Newtown, Bucks County, with his half-brother Charles. Byron died in 1949 and is buried at St. Johns Episcopal Churchyard, Huntingdon Valley, Pennsylvania.

  

Envelope Front: www.flickr.com/photos/60861613@N00/8606590430/in/photostr...

Envelope Back: www.flickr.com/photos/60861613@N00/8605484979/in/photostr...

Page One: www.flickr.com/photos/60861613@N00/8605484017/in/photostr...

Pages 2-3: www.flickr.com/photos/60861613@N00/8605448141/in/photostr...

Page 4: www.flickr.com/photos/60861613@N00/8605432745/in/photostr...

Thomas Jefferson Hart Obituary:

www.flickr.com/photos/60861613@N00/8606535144/in/photostr...

Graves of the Ramsey family: www.flickr.com/photos/60861613@N00/8607878546/in/photostr...

  

PA_29 [20 points]

A blue Pac Man in the 3ème arrondissement of Paris. I have never seen the original of this videogame invader, we are looking towards a successful re-activation of the 29th space invader in Paris.

Onscreen FlashInvader message: "QUE BUENO!"

 

All my photos of PA_29:

PA_29 (Close-up, June 2018)

PA_29 (Wide shot 1, June 2018)

PA_29 (Wide shot 2, June 2018)

PA_29 (Wide shot 3, July 2020)

 

Date of invasion: 06/05/1998

 

DELETED ?

 

RE-ACTIVATED May 2018

The KOM League

Flash Report

for week of

June 18, 2017

 

The latest Flash Report is posted at: www.flickr.com/photos/60428361@N07/34960728500/

 

***

 

It is now down to just a few names of fellows who played in the KOM league or signed contracts and never played in an official game, who I never located or determined their fate. Some leads look promising and turn out well. Others not so much. This edition features two men who fit the “well and not so well” categories.

 

***

The Iola Register (Iola, Kansas), Tuesday, May 29, 1951, Page 8. ... Bartlesville acquired the services of Oghi de Guisti (sp), 17, Putnam City (Oklahoma City) high. That blurb grabbed my attention when the initial efforts were made to locate former KOM leaguers. Over the years of research I never found where the aforementioned appeared in a game.

 

In the Iola Register article it mentioned the May 28th game between Carthage and Bartlesville where every Bartlesville player got at least one hit. Whether DeGiusti got into that game or not is a mystery to me since I have yet to find he entered any game. However, I’m convinced he was sitting on the bench in that contest. Many years ago Ronnie Kline, who made it to the big leagues, shared all his material from the 1950-51 seasons spent at Bartlesville. In one of those photos was DeGiusti.

 

A lot of time was spent looking through box scores for the slender teenager just out of high school but nothing was found. At one KOM league reunion, Brandy Davis, another member of that 1951 team, who also played big league ball, spent a lot of time going over names of guys with whom he played. He never heard of DiGiusti. That would fit the timeline for Davis started the season at Hutchinson, KS, in the Western Association, before reporting to Bartlesville in June. By the time Davis got there DiGiusti was gone.

 

There is a “thing” among baseball researchers that don’t give players any credit for being with a team unless they enter at least one game. Thus, I have never, knowingly, placed a fellow on the list of a team roster unless he made a game appearance, albeit brief, such as a pinch runner being picked off first base and then released the next day. Can anyone say Ernie Chastain of Iola in 1952?

 

Oghi DiGiusti’s name was in a scrapbook I received this week from the wife of a former Miami Eagles pitcher in 1951. It prompted me to recheck the name of a former Bartlesville Pirate and here is the result.

 

Oghi Antonio DeGiusti Sr.

newsok.com/article/2726836

 

Memorial service for Oghi Antonio DeGiusti Sr., 68, of Tuttle, Oklahoma, will be held at 11:00 a.m., Tuesday, January 16, 2001, at the St. Joseph's Catholic Church in Union City.

Oghi Antonio DeGiusti Sr. was born December 27, 1932, in a small town outside of Venice, Italy, and died Friday, January 12, 2001, in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

 

At the age of 3, he came to America with his family, eventually settling in Oklahoma City. After graduating from Putnam City High School, he played for the Pittsburg Pirates. He then joined his father in establishing Southwest Terrazzo in Wheatland, Oklahoma. Under Oghi's expertise and master craftsmanship, the company flourished for 45 years until his retirement in 1997. His award-winning marble flooring is a testament to his hard work and dedication. His legacy can be enjoyed by future generations in numerous hospitals, schools, banks, museums, and other buildings across Oklahoma and other states.

 

He loved the outdoors, and when not working could be found hunting or fishing with his many life-long friends. He passed on his love of the great outdoors to his children and grandchildren.

 

He was preceded in death by: his parents; 1 son: David; 3 brothers.

Survivors include: wife: Barbara DeGiusti of the home; 1 son: Tony DeGiusti and wife, Pat; 3 daughters: Patricia Marlow and husband, Larry, Donna DeGiusti, Susan Orr and husband, Jimmy; 5 grandsons, 7 granddaughters, 1 great grandson. Also dear to Oghi were his brothers-in-law, sisters-in-law and numerous nieces and nephews.

 

Services are under the direction of Sevier Funeral Home.

Memorial contributions may be made to the charity of your choice.

 

Ed note:

 

There are a number of references to the DiGiusti family on the Internet and by doing some independent research you might find some items of interest.

 

Putnam City sure brought back some memories for me. When I entered college at Bethany, Oklahoma, in 1958, there was a large high school just a few blocks east on old Route 66. The school butted up to the village of Warr Acres and I could never figure out why it was called Putnam City High School. Anyway, at that time Putnam City was the largest consolidated high school in Oklahoma.

 

One Friday night I was invited by a young lady, who attended Putnam City High to a football game. The team they were playing was from metropolitan Oklahoma City known then as Northwest Classen. No offense to the young lady who sat next to me at that game, but the most lasting memory I have of that night, was of the halfback for the Classen eleven who ran over and around the Putnam City defense. Before I got out of the nearby Oklahoma college I was reading about the Classen halfback as he was running all over every defense that the Oklahoma Sooner’s played.

 

Soon I was hearing about this Classen running back being a high draft pick of the Dallas Cowboys and catching the eye of many young ladies. It soon became the stuff of soap operas. Since this is a family report I’ll leave it up to the readers to view the life and times of Lance Rentzel. www.google.com/search?rls=aso&client=gmail&q=Lanc... It turned out to be a sad life. However, I will say Lance Rentzel was the greatest football player I ever saw in a high school game. I must admit I didn’t see all that many over the years and most likely will never see another.

And yes, there is a link to Joey Hetherington in that global URL on Rentzel.

***

Will the real Paul Binkley—stand up?

In the many years of researching the KOM league the fate of a short term member of the 1947 Bartlesville, OK Pirates has never been determined. Tracking his current status or fate has not been conclusive. While on the disabled list, this week, I had plenty of time to access the Internet and ponder what I located. The following was the hottest lead so far.

www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=104699...

Birth: Sep. 28, 1921

Lancaster County

Pennsylvania, USA

Death: Aug. 27, 1998

Lancaster

Lancaster County

Pennsylvania, USA

 

Paul G. Binkley, 76, of 2680 River Road, Creswell, died Thursday evening at ManorCare Health Services after a brief illness.

 

Binkley was a carpenter and construction foreman for Wickersham Construction and Engineering Inc., Lancaster, for 39 years, retiring in 1987.

 

An avid hunter, he was a lifetime member of Pequea Valley Sportsman's Association, Willow Street, and Mountville Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 8757.

 

He was a member of the Pequea Boat Club.

 

From 1956 to 1964, he coached Creswell and Conestoga Little League baseball teams.

 

An Army Air Forces veteran, he served in Europe during World War II.

 

Born in Manor Township, he was the son of the late Harry G. and Elizabeth Benedict Binkley.

 

He was married to Mildred M. Frey Binkley for 52 years on June 16.

 

Surviving in addition to his wife are a son, Dennis E., husband of Patti A. Binkley of Lancaster; a daughter, Brenda E., wife of Robert G. Newswanger of Washington Boro; four grandchildren; a great-grandson; two brothers, Donald, husband of Helen Binkley of Conestoga, and Gerald, husband of Loretta Binkley of Willow Street; and three sisters, Susan, wife of Albert Eshleman, and Bertha Murry, both of Millersville, and Erica Frost of Willow Street.

 

Intelligencer Journal [Lancaster, Pa] 29 Aug 1998: B-3.

The foregoing seemed like something that demanded further research. My first inclination was that the son of the deceased might know if his father was ever signed by the Pittsburgh Pirates. A call placed to that family was answered by a very nice lady who said she was the widow of the deceased. I asked if her husband ever signed a contract to play professional baseball and she answered in the negative. We had a very nice conversation and she seemed to be very in touch with the events over her 92 years as a resident of Pennsylvania.

 

Thus, based on that conversation, I can’t say I have determined the fate of another KOM leaguer. However, I’m holding on to this information for I have come across quite a number of family members, of former players, who didn’t know or don’t recall that a loved one had a very short encounter with professional baseball.

 

The epilogue:

 

In the initial comments of this report it was mentioned I found the reference to Oghi DiGiusti in a scrapbook sent by the wife of a former Miami, OK Eagle’s pitcher. She has spent countless hours in reproducing that document. Like her husband she has reached the “Three Score and Ten” a number of years ago. With her advancement in life she has maintained her mental faculties. She commented “I’ve shed a lot of tears during this work—can’t trust his memory at all anymore...It’s so sad to see him now, physically healthy but with few memories of the good old days…Wish I’d met you and Mrs. Hall many years ago.”

 

There are many items from ‘the good old days,” in this former player’s yearbook that I recall better than most things that have happened to me as late as yesterday. I saw him pitch both at Carthage, when the Miami team came to town, and when the Carthage team took me with them to Miami. There are box scores in that scrapbook of games I recall attending and photos of guys I vividly remember such as: Gaspar del Toro, Tommy Warren and Pedro Serpa.

 

It must be said that when work was first started to write about the KOM, I really didn’t recall very many names of guys on opposing teams. They were remembered because of a personal incident I had with them or that they were “characters.” The Miami trio of del Toro, Warren and Serpa were not only characters but guys with whom I had personal contact. I won’t go into many details here except for Serpa, for I have written about the other two, many times. He was a native of Havana, Cuba and the second he’d hop off the Miami bus, at the Carthage park, he’d find me and ask “Batboy know girls?” I always answered in the negative since I knew the Carthage players wouldn’t want me to share the names of “their girls.”

 

At that time in history I was probably not even 5 feet tall and weighed less than two duffle bags of baseball bats I had to lug around on road trips. I wasn’t awed by the physical stature of Serpa like I was of another KOM pitcher at the time, Ronnie Kline. When reading the scrapbook, from the wife of the former Miami pitcher, there was mention of the height of Serpa. He was 5’ 4”. That would put him in a tie with another guy who played for Miami a couple of years earlier, Tom Tarascio. The late, Tom Tarascio was a good friend and a big man, in every other aspect. Serpa and his buddies were featured in another Flash Report, back in 2011, that was appended to this photo. www.flickr.com/photos/60428361@N07/18465479505/ Serpa, del Toro and Warren were also in this photo, in 2015, that was appended to this site: www.flickr.com/photos/60428361@N07/17913806974/

There isn’t much more I’m going to share regarding the scrapbook from the lady who lives either on Oklahoma street in a Michigan city or a Michigan street in an Oklahoma city. I’ll let readers guess about that. However, in that scrapbook is a great photo of her and Dick Wakefield. www.google.com/search?q=Dick+Wakefield&oq=Dick+Wakefi...

Why the bonus baby of the Detroit Tigers, from the 1940’s, wound up in Lawton, OK, is a story I’ve told in a previous Flash Report. If you missed it, and would like to see one, send your request on the back of a $20 gold, silver or Federal Reserve Note and it will be sent your way, faster than a speeding something or another.

***

This Flash Report was prepared due to the fact that more hits were on the Flickr site this past week than usual. I’m not saying that more people went there than normal for that isn’t possible. It could be that only one person read the report and then went back a few hundred times in an attempt to understand it.

 

PA_29 [20 points]

A blue Pac Man in the 3ème arrondissement of Paris. I have never seen the original of this videogame invader, we are looking towards a successful re-activation of the 29th space invader in Paris.

Onscreen FlashInvader message: "QUE BUENO!"

 

All my photos of PA_29:

PA_29 (Close-up, June 2018)

PA_29 (Wide shot 1, June 2018)

PA_29 (Wide shot 2, June 2018)

PA_29 (Wide shot 3, July 2020)

 

Date of invasion: 06/05/1998

 

DELETED ?

 

RE-ACTIVATED May 2018

Sociedade de Transportes Colectivos do Porto 249 in het Rockhill Trolley Museum. Rockhill Furnace, PA, 29 mei 2004.

PRR 1361 viewed in perfect rods down position on the transfer tracks at Tyrone PA between the Nittany & Bald Eagle Railroad and Conrail. April 11 1987

Wrecked school buses in a junk yard, 3/4 miles south of the intersection of Routes 164 and 26. Saxton, Pa. 29 November 2014

Septa 205 in het Rockhill Trolley Museum. Rockhill Furnace, PA, 29 mei 2004.

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(Parauapebas-PA, 29/09/2020) Vice-Presidente da República, Hamilton Mourão durante Viagem a Carajás.

 

Foto: Romério Cunha/ VPR

S.A.S.S. 2010 Year End Recital

 

School Alliance of Student Song Writers

 

Art & photos by

Ron Sombilon Gallery & PacBlue Printing

 

www.SASS-BC.com

www.PacBluePrinting.com

www.RonSombilonGallery.com

 

Proud Sponsors of S.A.S.S.

 

www.TomLeeMusic.ca

www.TheLatency.com

www.ArmouryStudios.com

www.Vancouver.VirginRadio.ca

www.Shore104.com

www.EdieHatsVancouver.ca

www.MusicBC.org

www.TimHortons.com

www.BestBuy.ca

www.Staples.ca

www.ElixirVancouver.ca

www.MorganGuitars.com

www.Roland.ca

www.WBgear.com

www.Socan.ca

www.ScrapBookWarehouse.com

 

ABOUT S.A.S.S.

 

In the summer of 2005, Don McLeod brought SASS to Vancouver and other schools throughout British Columbia including Burnaby, New Westminster, Port Moody, Coquitlam, Langley and Maple Ridge.

 

The Goals of SASS are to:

 

To offer a safe and supportive space in which young people can express their true selves through songwriting and music.

 

To enable young musicians to meet and collaberate with other artists, both professional and their own peers.

To connect young songwriters with professional knowledgeable mentors, as well as organize field trips to professional recording studios.

 

To help students learn together, stand together, forming a new generation of artists willing to make their world a better place through love and music.

 

Past Guest Speakers @ SASS:

 

Jim Vallance (Bryan Adams, Aerosmith, Ozzy)

Kevin "Chief" Zaruk (NickelBack, Hinder)

Vincent Degiorgio (NSYNC)

Kyprios (Sweatshop Union)

Mike Reno (LoverBoy)

Faber (FaberDrive)

Danny Craig (Default)

Trevor Guthrie (Soul Descision)

Bob D?eith (Music BC)

Dane Deviller (Kelly Rowland, The Corrs, Jessica Simpson)

Paul Silveira (The Armoury Studios)

Sean Maestri (Tour Manager)

Dave Benedict (Default)

Tom McDonald (Hedley)

Sherry St. Germain (EMI)

Rob Darch (Hipposonic Studios)

Scotty McCargar (Bif Naked, Strapping Young Lads)

Terry O'Brien (SOCAN)

Aileen De La Cruz (Chapter 2 Productions)

Sean Hosein (Kelly Rowland, The Corrs, Jessica Simpson)

Union Supply Company Store No. 29, Lemont Furnace, Fayette Co., PA. This was a Union Supply Company store, which was the retail arm of H.C. Frick Coke Co. The company store was where many people congregated everyday except Sunday. Each miner had a charge account at the company store, and the account was monitored through the mine office by chief clerk who made sure the miner had enough money coming in his next pay to cover any heavy charges. Thus there was a great deal of communication between the store office and the mine office regarding money matters for the miners and their families." Likely why very few Western Pennsylvania mines used scrip, at least after around 1900. I think a credit account was more common especially for Frick Coke Co. This store is now the Fire Dept Building in Lemont Furnace.

Conrail 7577 hustles through the Harrisburg passenger terminal with its work train in tow. Having spent the day distributing ties, soon it will be Miller time for the crew.

Mycket nära att Danmark inför resesrestriktioner mot Skåne – 12 svenska regioner i karantän

 

www.newsoresund.se/skane-nara-dansk-karantan/

 

Photo: News Øresund - Johan Wessman

© News Øresund - Johan Wessman (CC BY 3.0).

 

När danska Statens Serum Institut på torsdagen meddelade att smittspridningen i Sverige ökat så att tolv svenska regioner nu förklarats i karantän var det mycket nära att reserestriktioner även infördes mot Skåne. Den danska gränsnivån för att förklara ett land eller en nordisk region i karantän går vid 30 nya smittade med covid-19 per 100000 invånare i genomsnitt per vecka under de två senaste veckorna. I Skåne ligger siffran på 29,8. Att flera svensk regioner förklarats i karantän av Danmark medför att danska Udenrigsministeriet avråder från icke nödvändiga resor dit samt att boende i de aktuella regionerna inte längre fritt kan resa in i Danmark. Trots att tolv svenska regioner nu har förklarats i karantän har Danmark ännu inte återinfört den fasta gränskontrollen utan arbetar med utökade stickprovskontroller av inresande i landet.

 

Förra veckan meddelade danska myndigheter att spridningen av covid-19 ökat i Sverige så att antalet nya konstaterade fall uppgick till i genomsnitt 32,4 per 100 000 invånare i genomsnitt per vecka under mätperioden 23 september till 6 oktober. Eftersom den danska gränsnivån går vid 30,0 smittade innebar det att Danmark åter förklarade Sverige i karantän och att man införde en så kallad nordisk mekanism som innebär att det är smittspridningen i varje enskild svensk region som avgör om den ska vara öppen eller försatt i karantän. Åtta svenska regioner förklarades då i karantän av Danmark. Nu en vecka senare har smittspridningen i Sverige ökat till 39,6 fall per 100 000 invånare och vecka samtidigt som antalet regioner som förklarats i karantän på grund av hög smittspridning ökat till tolv. Det var mycket nära att även Skåne förklarades karantän då antalet nya smittade per 100 000 invånare uppgick till 29,8 personer per vecka.

 

Beskedet om länder och regioner klassas som öppnas eller i karantän lämnas på torsdagar och börjar gälla på lördagar. När ett land eller region förklarats i karantän behöver smittspridningen minska till under 20 nya fall per 100 000 invånare i genomsnitt per vecka under de senaste två veckorna för att åter betecknas som öppen av Danmark. Först då tas reserestriktioner bort.

 

För personer bosatta i Danmark avråder nu Udenrigsminsteriet från icke nödvändiga resor till de tolv svenska regioner som förklarats i karantän på grund av att smittspridningen där överstiger den danska gränsnivån för covid-19. Undantag gäller för transitresor och besök i egna ödegårdar. Affärsresor betecknas vanligen som nödvändiga resor. Danskar som inte följer Udenrigsministeriets avrådan rekommenderas att gå i självisolering under 14 dagars efter återkomsten till Danmark.

 

Den som reser in i Danmark från Skåne eller några av de övriga öppna svenska regionerna bör nu utöver pass även ha med sig ett personbevis där det framgår var man är bosatt. Enligt politi.dk kan nordiska medborgare även identifiera sig med körkort eller nationellt id-kort.

 

För personer som bor i de tolv svenska regioner som nu åter förklarats i karantän gäller att de fortsatt kan göra en transitresa genom Danmark om de ska på semester i annat land eller har annat så kallat “anerkendelsesværdigt formål” med transitresan. Det är även tillåtet att resa in i Danmark från ett karantänslän om man uppfyller de “anerkendelsesværdigt formål” som listas på politi.dk såsom: arbete i Danmark – även som au pair, anställningsintervju, studier eller praktik i Danmark, affärsresa, varuleverans, om man är diplomat, sjöman eller besättningsman på flygplan. Även den som är gift, “kæreste” eller förälder till bosatta i Danmark, har umgängesrätt med minderårigt barn eller ska besöka allvarligt sjuka personer eller gå på begravning släpps in. För boende i gränsregion som är i karantän, för närvarande Halland och Blekinge, finns även en möjlighet att komma in i Danmark och man har med sig en ifylld särskild blankett där läkare intygar att man under de senaste 72 timmarna genomfört ett negativt covid-19-test. (News Øresund)

 

Fakta: Endast 16 länder i värden öppna att resa till enligt Danmarks Udenrigsministerium

 

Cypern, Estland, Finland, Grekland, Lettland, Norge, Tyskland är de enda öppna länderna inom EU, Schengen och Storbritannien dit danskar tilltråds att göra icke nödvändiga resor i dagsläget. Det visar den veckovisa sammanställningen från Statens Serum Institut. Ytterligare nio länder i övriga världen betecknas som öppna: Australien, Kanada, Georgien, Japan, Nya Zeeland, Sydkorea, Thailand, Tunisien och Uruguay. Källa: coronasmitte.dk

 

Photo: News Øresund - Johan Wessman

© News Øresund - Johan Wessman (CC BY 3.0).

 

Detta verk av News Øresund är licensierat under en Creative Commons Erkännande 3.0 Unported-licens (CC BY 3.0). Bilden får fritt publiceras under förutsättning att källa anges. .The picture can be used freely under the prerequisite that the source is given. News Øresund, Malmö, Sweden

News Øresund är en oberoende regional nyhetsbyrå som är en del av det oberoende dansk-svenska kunskapscentrat Øresundsinstituttet..

www.newsoresund.org.

www.oresundsinstituttet.org

(Parauapebas-PA, 29/09/2020) Vice-Presidente da República, Hamilton Mourão durante Viagem a Carajás.

 

Foto: Romério Cunha/ VPR

(Parauapebas-PA, 29/09/2020) Vice-Presidente da República, Hamilton Mourão durante Viagem a Carajás.

 

Foto: Romério Cunha/ VPR

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