Yankee Trader 12-28-24

12-28-24 Listings

 

Frank                 (Beaver Falls)           724-846-0331

 

Outdoor Christmas Sleigh  & 2 reindeer plus an angel.  About 4’ tall.  All light up.                 PRICE Any offer accepted

 

Red Velvet Drapes, insulated-brand new, still in the package. 2 pieces 48”W X 84”L.        PRICE:$25.00

 

36” bathroom Marble Vanity top with white bowl & brushed stainless faucet included.  Lovely black, brown, yellow & white streaks.  Like brand new.

Pipes included, just hook to your drain & water lines.

PRICE: $70.00 for all

 

3 New Tires all on Standard rims. Make an offer

Good Year 195-75-R15

Remington 205-75-R15

Pred Tech 205-70-R15

 

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Chuck       (Hopewell)       724-375-3284

 

Whole bunch of Charles Dickens type Ceramic Houses.

Beautiful winter scene.  All in good condition.       $10 each OBO

 

24’ aluminum extension ladder             PRICE: $50.00

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VAL          (Beaver)            PHONE:  724-513-9390

 

All kinds of Sports Balls.  Soccer, Basketball, Football, Baseball.  Make an offer.

 

Panasonic Landline Cordless telephones.  5 handsets ( 2 have never been used) , 2 dial pads. Includes answering machine, redial, speakerphone & caller ID.  All literature is included in the original box.   PRICE:  $79.00

 

Lenox Fine Bone China in the Eclipse pattern. 11 5-piece place settings.  Pearl color with small black & gold trim on edges-very elegant.  Noritake China.  12 5-piece place settings with a lovely pattern.

Additional accessory pieces also available.  Make a reasonable offer.

 

 

Vintage Folding Chairs.  Cocso brand.  These are metal with padded tan vinyl seats.  They fold in a unique way.  Very special durable chairs.

Make an offer.

 

Antiques that keep ticking in the Pennsylvania Capitol

File Photo: Source for Photo: Bethany Gill winds a clock in the Pennsylvania Supreme Court chamber, Dec. 13, 2024, in Harrisburg, Pa. It’s one of 273 clocks in Pennsylvania’s ornate state Capitol complex buildings that must be wound by hand. (AP Photo/Marc Levy)

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Capitol buildings are almost always an imposing presence. The seat of government, they tend to be elegant and stately — and frequently capped by a dome.

Visitors to Pennsylvania ‘s Capitol are drawn to its priceless artwork, polished marble and intricate carvings, but hidden behind the doors of some of its most ornate offices and chambers are another treasure: hundreds of antique clocks that were part of its original design.

The 273 working clocks include many that are integrated into fireplace mantels and other building features.

They are not low maintenance, requiring regular oiling and occasional mechanical overhauls.

And every week, in a throwback to a time before wristwatches and cellphones, clock winders roam the halls — ensuring the century-plus-old timekeepers keep ticking.

On a recent morning, Bethany Gill demonstrated how it’s done — going room to room with an array of ladders and custom tools. She opens the glass covers, rotates the mechanisms enough to keep them going for about a week and checks their accuracy before moving on to the next one.

Gill is a former art student who works for Johnson & Griffiths Studio, a Harrisburg firm that just received a five-year, $526,000 winding and maintenance contract renewal from the Capitol Preservation Committee.

She’s also a lifelong clock lover who looks forward to the semiannual transitions between daylight saving time and Eastern Standard Time.

Why?

“My dad was a clock collector growing up,” Gill said. “And every Sunday we would go around the house and wind the clocks. And that was always just a nice thing that I did with my dad.”

Pennsylvania’s Capitol was crafted by architect Joseph M. Huston, who won its design competition in 1901 with a vision for a temple of democracy — a palace of art that would be as fancy as what could then be found in Europe.

Among countless other fine touches, Huston designed at least 180 custom clock cases, including smaller so-called keystone clocks that are shaped to remind people of Pennsylvania’s early and critical role in the formation of the United States, leaving it with the nickname of the Keystone State.

“The clocks are just part of why the building’s so unique and so intricate,” said Capitol Preservation Committee historian Jason Wilson. “The mantels surrounding the clocks are all custom designed.”

Every so often the clocks, most of them built from mahogany or stained mahogany, are carefully removed from their spots around the Capitol and taken to a facility for cleaning, maintenance and repair. They seem to run better when kept wound.

Huston, the architect, achieved his goal. The Capitol is a showpiece that draws thousands of visitors every year to where 253 state lawmakers convene to debate and pass legislation.

While the buildings and the clocks are his lasting legacy, Huston was convicted of a conspiracy to defraud the state during the Capitol construction project and spent several months in another Pennsylvania landmark, Eastern State Penitentiary in Philadelphia.

PennDOT announces continued Commercial Driver’s License tests at their centers

(File Photo of PennDOT logo)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Harrisburg, PA) PennDOT announced that a skills test will continue to be included at their Driver’s License Centers. The tests for for commercial driver’s licenses, thanks to the administration of Governor Josh Shapiro. These tests have been used since August 28th, 2023 until now. The waiving of an extension brought by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration also occurred. This was for those who wanted to achieve an endorsement for school busses. This helped to remove a test for these drivers to identify parts of a vehicle that were beneath the hood, which happened through November 27th, 2024.

Elma L. Buttermore (1924-2024)

Elma L. Buttermore, 100, of Zelienople, formerly of Rochester, passed away on December 24th, 2024 in Passavant Retirement Community of Zelienople. She was born in East Rochester on May 20th, 1924, the daughter of the late Elmer G. and Wilma MacGarvey Emerick. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband George E. Buttermore Sr, two granddaughters, Mary Brigid Buttermore and Ann Obele, and two sisters Patricia Conrad and Mary Ann Lizzi. She is survived by three sons and two daughters-in-law, George E. Buttermore Jr., of Hilton Head, South Carolina, John A. and Jennifer Buttermore of Slippery Rock, and William H. and Judy Buttermore of Ames, Iowa, four grandchildren: Kimberly C. Buttermore, Andrew Buttermore and his wife Kelly, Deborah L. Helgeson and her husband Matthew, Monica Nielsen and her husband Paul, her eleven great grandchildren, one sister Norma Emerick Penburty and one brother Elmer George Emerick, as well as numerous nieces and nephews. Elma was a housewife and homemaker for her own household and former executive secretary to the President of Geneva College. Elma was a member of Grace Evangelical Lutheran Church of Rochester and attended the Seaman Memorial Chapel of Zelienople, then the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints of Cranberry Township. She was a member of the Order of Bayesian of The Knights Templar of Pennsylvania. Elma was a member of the Beaver Valley Flying Club and a graduate of Rochester Area High School. Elma’s wish was to be cremated, however, friends are invited to attend her celebration of life funeral service on Saturday, January 4th, 2025 at 11 a.m., in the Grace Evangelical Lutheran Church, 393 Adams Street, Rochester. Officiating will be her pastor Reverend Greggory S. Clagg. Inurnment will take place at Oak Grove Cemetery of Freedom. All arrangements are entrusted to William Murphy Funeral Home, Inc., 349 Adams Street, Rochester.

Testing whether purchased toys are safe after Christmas in Pennsylvania and around the country is occurring

(File Photo: Caption for photo: Young boy playing with educational toys)

(Reported by Danielle Smith of Keystone News Service)

(Harrisburg, PA) As holiday spending in Pennsylvania and across the nation is expected to reach a record high of nearly nine-hundred and eighty-nine billion, there’s no guarantee that everyone who bought toys for the kids in their lives thought about whether they were safe. Many children’s toys are manufactured in other countries, like China and India. Product liability attorney Don Fountain says in their haste to avoid possible Trump administration tariffs, a few safety steps may have been skipped before sending these products to the United States. He believes consumers’ assumptions about toy reliability are not always accurate. The Consumer Product Safety Commission website lists thousands of unsafe or problematic items. Fountain notes complaints listed on the site are due to public grievances, not government detection. Fountain recommends the commission’s website, Saferproducts.gov, to report or search for information about unsafe products.

 

Angela J. Makoczy (1937-2024)

Angela J. Makoczy, 87, of Beaver Falls, passed away on December 23rd, 2024 at Heritage Valley Beaver.

She was born in Johnstown, Pennsylvania on August 29th, 1937, the daughter of the late John and Angela (Cieslik) Niton. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Frank E. Makoczy and siblings, Eddie, John “Pete”, Stan, Joe, Walter, Mary and Stephanie Niton. She is survived by her children, Dr. Frank J. Makoczy, Gregory M. (Maria) Makoczy and Tina (Mychael) Ritterhoff; two grandchildren, a sister, Julie Horvath, along with numerous nieces, nephews, and friends.

Angela had graduated from UPJ with her associate’s degree and worked as a seamstress, hair stylist, baker and cake decorator, as well as worked for her son’s dental practice. She was a devoted member of St. Monica Church of St. Augustine Parish (the former Divine Teacher Parish).  In her free time, Angie enjoyed cooking, walking her dogs, and traveling.

Friends will be received in the GABAUER-LUTTON FUNERAL HOME & CREMATION SERVICES, INC., 117 Blackhawk Road, Beaver Falls, on Saturday, January 4th from 10:30 A.M. until departing prayers at 11:30 A.M.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated on January 4th at 12:00 (Noon) at St. Monica Church of St. Augustine Parish, 116 Thorndale Drive, Beaver Falls.

Entombment will follow in St. Mary’s Cemetery.

Angie’s family wishes to extend a heartfelt “Thank You” to the staff of Villa St. Joseph, especially Katelyn, Randy and Sheila.

President Biden given fifteen days to decide whether Nippon Steel of Japan acquiring U.S. Steel works for the company

(File Photo: Source for Photo: FILE – A water tower at United States Steel Corp.’s Edgar Thomson Plant in Braddock, Pa., is seen, Thursday, May 7, 2020. On Sunday, Aug. 13, 2023, U.S. Steel said that it rejected a $7.3 billion buyout proposal from rival Cleveland Cliffs and was reviewing “strategic alternatives” after receiving several unsolicited offers. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) Nippon Steel now has just over two weeks to think about acquiring U.S. Steel after the President of the United States processes the addition of U.S. Steel for fifteen billion dollars. President Joe Biden now only has fifteen days to refer this matter to determine whether the purchase will be a true trade for the company. On Thursday, Nippon Steel commented in a statement that the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States decided on Monday to analyze gaining U.S. Steel to their company. Nippon Steel will be closing around the opening quarter of 2025. The third or final fourth of this year was the original date that the company was set to be closed.

Two men from New Castle jailed for operation that involved trafficking cocaine from Puerto Rico

(File Photo of Gavel)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(New Castle, PA) Two men from New Castle are now in jail after trafficking cocaine that originated from Puerto Rico. Seventeen people in total from Lawrence County, Ohio, and Puerto Rico were part of this plan to give the cocaine to residents of Ellwood City and New Castle. However, the New Castle natives, thirty-seven-year-old Luciano Bratini Rivera and thirty-five-year-old Markus Hobel, were given time in prison. Ninety-seven months in jail with a four-year supervised release was given to Rivera. Hobel received seventy-two months in jail, which includes a five-year supervised release.

Car goes off of a road and down a hill in Cranberry Township

(File Photo of Cranberry Township Emergency Medical Service logo)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Cranberry Township, PA) On Thursday afternoon, a car went about one hundred feet down the side of a hill in Cranberry Township. Two people were in the car after traveling away from the road. According to the Cranberry Township Volunteer Fire Company, emergency crews performed a low-angle rescue for both patients and got them to awaiting ambulances. The condition of the two people involved in the incident is currently undetermined.

One million dollar lottery ticket sold at Aliquippa Sunoco gas station

(File Photo of Pennsylvania Lottery logo and past drawing)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Aliquippa, PA) An Aliquippa Sunoco gas station on Pleasant Drive sold a winning lottery ticket worth a million dollars after the Tuesday Mega Millions drawing. On Christmas Eve, the winning ticket featured five numbers that all matched. However, the more than a billion-dollar jackpot was not won as the number three featured on the Yellow Mega Ball was not picked. $5,000 was given to the Aliquippa Sunoco for the lucky ticket sold. The winner has a year to claim their prize after the winning numbers were selected in this order: 11,14,38,45,46.