WEATHER FORECAST FOR FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6TH, 2019
TODAY – OVERCAST. HIGH – 46.
TONIGHT – PARTLY CLOUDY. LOW – 26.
SATURDAY – MOSTLY SUNNY. HIGH – 38.
SUNDAY – MOSTLY CLOUDY. HIGH NEAR 50.
WEATHER FORECAST FOR FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6TH, 2019
TODAY – OVERCAST. HIGH – 46.
TONIGHT – PARTLY CLOUDY. LOW – 26.
SATURDAY – MOSTLY SUNNY. HIGH – 38.
SUNDAY – MOSTLY CLOUDY. HIGH NEAR 50.
Update: The US Navy is confirming that an active shooter and two victims are dead after gunfire at the Naval Air Station in Pensacola. Area hospital representatives tell The Associated Press that at least 11 people were hospitalized. The base remains locked down amid a huge law enforcement response.
Shooter kills 2, wounds others, is dead at Florida Navy base
The US Navy is confirming that an active shooter and two victims are dead after gunfire at the Naval Air Station in Pensacola. Area hospital representatives tell The Associated Press that at least 11 people were hospitalized. The base remains locked down amid a huge law enforcement response. Stay tuned to Beaver County Radio as this story continues to develop.
‘Tis the season to shop, and in this edition of Beaver County Memories, we will take a stroll down a few more of the aisles of the stores of Christmas past, the department and discount stores that once dotted the landscape in Beaver County in this second edition of the look back of some classic retailers in the area. Beaver County Memories is presented by St. Barnabas and heard every day on WBVP, WMBA and 99.3 F.M.
The next retailer that we are going to visit in our tour was founded in nineteen fifty seven and headquartered in Canton, Massachusetts. The chain operated two stores in Beaver County that closed in nineteen ninety nine when the company was sold. In the late eighties they ran television commercials around this time of year boasting that this store was “where the toys are”. Can you guess it yet? Well, let’s cut the suspense, grab a cart and head into Hills Department Store. One of the marks of a popular destination, that created a great deal of fond memories, is the phenomenon of former customers and employees who create and maintain social media pages to share photos, stories and memories long after the place has been closed. Such is the case with Hills Departments Stores. The two local Hills Department Stores were located Green Garden Plaza in Hopewell Township and Northern Lights Shopping Center in Baden. Even though those two stores closed twenty years ago, there are flourishing social media pages with ongoing, current activity and fairly large fan bases of people sharing memories of their visits to the stores in Beaver County. Hills was so popular, that it wasn’t uncommon to see people wearing tee shirts and other apparel blazoned with the very recognizable Hills script logo. Hills Department Stores featured a snack bar with buttered popcorn and hot dogs that made such a positive impression on shoppers that even today, people discuss their visits to Hill’s and the snack counter in the rear of the store like a cherished family vacation, or a trip to a national monument.
Another store that was known for their lunch counter was Woolworth’s. The F.W. Woolworth Company is one of the older stores that was still around and thriving during the big department and discount store heydey that began in the nineteen fifties. The store that we came to know as Woolworth’s originally started as Woolworth’s Great Five Cents Store in Utica, New York in eighteen seventy nine. Even though the original store failed, the concept proved to be a good one, and soon other stores were opened by Frank Winfield Woolworth, along with his brother, Charles Sumner Woolworth. The duo of brothers made a fortune selling five and ten cent items. They did so well, as a matter of fact, that by nineteen ten, Frank Woolworth began plans to build a skyscraper in New York City to serve as the company headquarters. The iconic structure is still a common well known landmark. Upon completion, The Woolworth Building was also the tallest building in the world at that time. Much like Hills Department stores, Woolworth Five and Ten was well known for their in store eateries. In fact, the Woolworth lunch counter became a symbol of the civil rights movement in 1960 when a group of African American students held sit ins and boycotts for a period of six months after initially being refused service at a store in Greensboro, North Carolina. That location is now a civil rights museum, and a section of the now famous lunch counter from those historic days is on display in the Smithsonian Institution. In 1962, F.W. Woolworth opened up a group of single floor large discount stores known by the name of Woolworth’s. Locally, towns like Beaver Falls and Aliquippa had Woolworth Five and Ten stores on their main streets in the nineteen sixties. In 1970, with the opening of the Beaver Valley Mall, a large Woolworth’s discount department store was located near the center of the concourse not far from where its current corporate manifestation, Foot Locker, operates even to this day. Some of those initial stores went by the name of Woolco. The switch to footwear started in the eighties when Woolworth’s began to experience declining sales in general, but their sporting goods departments seemed to buck the trend and continued to perform well. Woolworth’s had already diversified and began operating Kinney Shoes along with Foot Locker stores in the mid nineteen seventies, so the conversion over to focus on the sporting goods and apparel division was a natural transition. Woolworth’s closed its discount and department stores in 1997.

The five and dime concept started by Frank Woolworth in upstate New York was a popular one and as with many great ideas, began to be imitated by others. George Clinton Murphy opened a similar type of store in nearby McKeesport, Pennsylvania in nineteen oh six called G.C. Murphy Company. The popular five and dime and variety stores were common in the main streets all over America and at their peak in nineteen seventy six, the company operated over five hundred stores. Locally, G.C. Murphy Co. stores could be found in Ambridge, Aliquippa, Beaver, Beaver Falls and Rochester. The stores were affectionately known as “The five and Ten” or “Murphy’s Five and Ten”. They were located in old fashioned main street storefronts that conjure up fond memories of days gone by. G.C. Murphy Company was bought by Ames Department Stores in nineteen eighty five, and many of the stores were closed at that stage of the game. In New Brighton, an independent five and ten variety store operated with great success for many years by Paul and Mary Jane Pisano. Brighton Five and Ten took up two storefront spaces along third Avenue in New Brighton. In addition to the typical variety, convenience items and household supplies, Brighton Five and Ten was also a True Value Hardware store. Much like Murphy’s, Brighton Five and Ten was part store, and part community gathering place. Brighton Five and Ten closed its doors around two thousand, but the positive memories linger on.
In the modern day, one of the most highly visited retail locations in Beaver County would probably be Wal Mart in Center Township. Thousands of people continue to go there daily, but the tradition of shopping on the hillside along route eighteen heading up out of downtown Monaca began many decades ago when Glosser Brothers from Johnstown, Pennsylvania opened a Gee Bee discount store at that location. The plaza was even known back then as Gee Bee plaza. Gee Bee’s was a department store that featured heavily discounted clothing and accessories and at one point in time, operated around thirty stores throughout the Tri-state area. Most of the locations were in suburban shopping plazas. Up through it’s closing in the late eighties, Gee Bee’s was a favorite shopping destination and created many holiday shopping memories for Beaver County residents.
The stores might be gone, but unlike their merchandise, you cannot discount the special place that they occupy in our hearts and in our memories. This has been part two of a look back on the department and discount stores as part of the Beaver County Memories Series. Tune in every day for another edition of Beaver County Memories presented by St. Barnabas on Beaver County Radio, WBVP, WMBA and 99.3 F.M.
(Beaver Falls, Pa.) The Best of Beaver County is easy to discover; it’s right on your radio! Tune in this and every Thursday from 11 to 11:30 A.M. for “The Best of Beaver County”, an innovative radio program on WBVP and WMBA presented by St. Barnabas. The show is hosted by Jim Roddey and is dedicated to shining light on the great things going on right here in local neighborhoods, and the people that are making it happen. Find out what all the buzz is about by joining “The Best Of Beaver County”. This weeks editon was all about memory loss and Jim’s guest was retiring Beaver County Treasurer Connie Javens.


Mr. Roddey and Javens talked about her career in politics from being elected to the Monaca School Board to being elected the Beaver County Treasurer in 1992. Connie told the listeners about some of the award winning things that she brought to the treasurers office to keep up with technology and make the office more efficient. She also talked about coming up with the idea to charge for verification of taxes and that way before a property closing they had a verified copy that the taxes are paid to date on the property. Javens said that since her office started doing this they have taken in over $200,00.00 for the county. Javens finished the interview by thanking everyone over the years for allowing her to be your treasurer and also for helping to raise money for the Beaver County Humane Society via dog licensing and donations that totaled over $230,000.00.
Jim Roddey finished the show by thanking Javens for her many years of service and told her the county will miss her.
If you would like to watch today’s episode of “The Best Of Beaver County” press the play button below……..
The radio broadcast will be replayed each Sunday from 11:30 am to Noon from the St. Barnabas Studio on Beaver County Radio.
Click on the logo below if you would like more info on St. Barnabas….
WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. House is taking a big, new step toward impeaching President Donald Trump. Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced Thursday that the House will draft formal articles of impeachment accusing Trump of abusing the powers of his office to advance his own political gain. A vote in the full House could come before Christmas, sending the issue to the Senate. Trump tweeted that if the House Democrats are going to impeach him, he wants them to “do it now, fast”‘ so he can get on to the Senate trial. Pelosi declared that the case is all about Russia, which benefited most from Trump’s actions toward Ukraine.
KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — President Donald Trump’s personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani has paid a visit to the Ukrainian capital to hold meetings and film a documentary. The visit is meant to revive the efforts that landed him and Trump in the impeachment inquiry now roiling Washington. It comes as Democratic lawmakers moved a step closer Thursday to drawing up articles of impeachment. The probe was triggered by a phone call in which Trump pressured Ukraine’s president to investigate a Trump rival. Trump denies wrongdoing.
Town by town, Beaver County is getting into the full swing of Christmas spirit, and through the help of the School District and the Beaver Valley Choral Society, Rochester takes its big step into the holiday snow on December 8.
The 3rd Annual Rochester Carol Sing & Light Up Night will take place at the Rochester Area High School on Sunday afternoon, and it is full of activities for kids and adults alike. Activities such as craft making, writing letters to the troops, the Beaver Valley Flute Choir, and the arrival of the “Big Man” himself at 3 PM! Beaver County Radio will also be there, as Frank Sparks and Matt Drzik will be spinnin’ the Personality Prize Wheel from 2:30 to 4:30, with your chance to win some great prizes for the holiday season.
Matt spoke with Rochester School Buildings Director Lou Campisi, BVCS President Lee Pfeifer, and BVCS conductor Ray Rotuna to talk about the Carol Sing & Light Up Night, including the charities and sponsors involved with the event, the Choral Society’s blend of spiritual and secular Christmas tunes, and the lights that will be lit up at the end of the evening’s festivities.
To listen back to the interview, click on the player below.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department has unsealed charges against two Russian men in what authorities say is one of the worst computer hacking and bank fraud schemes of the past decade. The men are charged in a 10-count indictment filed in federal court in Pittsburgh. The charges relate to the creation of malware made to automate the theft of personal and banking information. The charges include conspiracy, computer hacking, wire fraud, and bank fraud. The men are accused of targeting two banks, a school district and four companies in Pennsylvania. The men haven’t been arrested and their whereabouts are unknown.
Hillary Clinton says she offered to help President Donald Trump’s presidency after her 2016 election loss. Clinton told Howard Stern on his satellite radio show Wednesday that when she talked to Trump during her late election-night concession and congratulatory call, she vowed to do everything she could to help him: “I said, ‘Look, Donald, I want you to be a good president”. When pressed on what Trump said to the offer of her help, Clinton claimed the president-elect was too “shocked” about actually winning to even consider her offer. She said he was literally speechless. She said…quote…”he was more shocked than me”. Clinton said she did not even consider writing a concession speech because she was so sure she would win.