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Akin Davis Funeral Homes

560 East Hickpoochee Avenue
Labelle, FL 33935
(863) 675-2125
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Labelle FL Obituaries and Death Notices

$20 (Two $10 Vouchers) of Award Winning Hot Wings & More for $10 at Kelly's Pub & Eatery in Scranton - Scranton Times-Tribune

Monday, August 01, 2016

Manor United Methodist Church. Donations: Fisher Center for Alzheimer’s Research Foundation, 110 East 42nd St., 16th floor, New York, NY 10017.BLANCO, JOHN “JIM,” Dunmore, today, 11 a.m., Morell-LaBelle Funeral Home, 301 Chestnut St., Dunmore. Inurnment, Cathedral Cemetery, Scranton. Calling hours, today, 9 to service. Contributions: donor’s favorite charity.BREESE, RICHARD N. “DICK,” Springville, Pa., calling hours, today, 5 to 8 p.m., Daniel K. Regan Funeral Home, Montrose. Service, later date. Donations: Springville Fire Company, P.O. Box 107, Springville, PA 18844, or True Friends Animal Welfare Center, 16332 State Route 706, Montrose, PA 18801.CORCORAN, LEWIS F. JR., Honesdale, Mass, Friday, 10 a.m., St. Mary Magdalen Church, Honesdale. Calling hours, today, 4 to 7 p.m., Hessling Funeral Home Inc., 428 Main St., Honesdale. Use the Fifth Street entrance. Interment, St. Mary’s Cemetery, Honesdale. Contributions: Alzheimer’s Association, 2595 Interstate Drive, Suite 100, Harrisburg, PA 17110, or Wayne Memorial Hospice, 600 Park St. Honesdale, PA 18431.COSTANZO, SAMUEL M., Carbondale, Wednesday, Lawrence A. Gabriel Funeral Home and Cremation Services Inc., Carbondale. Mass, Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church, Carbondale, by the Rev. Andrew Kurovsky. Pallbearers: David and Fred Costanzo, Gary Cotroneo, Jack Sudlesky and Tim Bucklaw.

'It's just a horrible time to put on a uniform:' NJ police grapple with latest shooting - New Jersey 101.5 FM Radio

Monday, July 18, 2016

There’s no appreciation for their sacrifice and commitment. So many good people in uniform are being labelled.”Colligan and said the landscape has changed dramatically in law enforcement since the 2014 fatal police shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri in 2014. Brown’s death was followed by protests and riots, escalating tensions between police and the communities they serve.“We know a lot of the rhetoric that came out of Ferguson never occurred and that’s sad because it changed our profession forever,” Colligan said adding that it has impacted recruiting of future police officers, including in his own home.Colligan said his son wants to become a police officer, but he’s pushing him in another direction because of the unrest. “I’ve been begging him to be a fireman,” he said.“Most communities appreciate us. We saw that throughout New Jersey since the Dallas shooting,” Colligan said. “Virtually every police department in the state had people stopping by, writing notes, dropping off food just showing signs of appreciation.”Chief Hayducka – Out thoughts and prayers go out to the family and friends of the #BatonRouge officers' lost today pic.twitter.com/a3KMZtMixo— So Brunswick PD (@SoBrunswickPD) July 17, 2016Colligan dismissed the idea that all police departments are targeting minorities.“I know overwhelmingly people appreciate what we do and they understand that we have a difficult job. I think that’s 99.9 percent of our communities throughout the country,” he said. “There’s just a few who are holding us to this almost racist standard because they’re accusing us of targeting the minority community as police officers and it’s just not true.”Mastronardy said he’s hopefully the country can move past these difficult times.“It’s been a tough year for law enforcement and we just hope that it comes to an end and we can move on, come together and protect our officers better,” he said.Police departments across the state have been expressing condolences on social media.Our thoughts and prayers are with the officers of @BRPD and their families this evening. #lesm #NeverForgotten #ThinBlueLine— Harvey Cedars Police (@HCPolice) July 17, 2016Thoughts & prayers with #BatonRouge Police Department. @BRPD #Heroes #BlueFamily #GoneButNeverForgotten pic.twitter.com/MZ89yzpwpU— NJSP – State Police (@NJSP) July 17, 2016...

Arnold W. Hoschar - Parkersburg News

Monday, July 18, 2016

Arnold W. Hoschar, 97, of Parkersburg, passed on to heaven Sunday, July 10, 2016.He was born Oct. 28, 1918, in Evans, W.Va., a son of the late William and Lullabelle Casto Hoschar.He retired from Eazor Express after 30 years driving semi-trucks. He enjoyed WVU football and Cincinnati Reds baseball. He was a World War II veteran serving in the Air Force. He was a member of Long Hollow Baptist Church in Jackson County and belong to the United Methodist Church of Medina, W.Va. He was a member of American Legion Post 15, VFW, and the Eagles, all of Parkersburg.Article PhotosArnold W. HoscharHe was preceded in death by his wife of 27 years, Erma Jean Rhodes Hoschar; three brothers; three sisters; and several aunts, uncles and cousins.Special thanks to Amedysis Hospice; and nieces, Mandy Keith of Davisville and Joyce McMullen of Parkersburg who were his care givers. Also thanks to Lulu Bush.Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Friday, July 15, 2016, at Lambert-Tatman Funeral Home, 2333 Pike St., south Parkersburg, with Pastor Raymond Tanner and Basil Barr officiating. Burial will follow at Evergreen Cemetery South with full military rites by American...

Imogene Church

Monday, July 11, 2016

Smith, Jesse Smith, Ezra Smith, Havah Smith, Jacob Gingerich, Scout Gingerich, great-great grandchildren, Kenley Brown, Grayson McCoy, brother, Jimmy D. Centers, Columbus, OH, sisters, Inez Graf, Labelle, FL, and Shelia Patterson, OH.The funeral service will be at 10:30 am Wednesday, July 6, 2016 at Anglin Funeral Home with Rev. Scott Patty, Rev. Byron Benson, and Rev. James Kahler officiating. Burial will follow in the Stewart County Memorial Gardens. Visitation will be from 9:00 am until the time of service Wednesday. Pallbearers will be Paul Smith, James Wallace, Paul E. Smith, Matthew Maynard, Brad Mullins, Eli Smith, Jonathan Wiley, and Loren Altizer. Arrangements have been entrusted to Anglin Funeral Home, Dover, TN.

The Mystery Behind Emily Davison's Death - New Historian

Monday, July 04, 2016

Great Britain. For some, Davison’s harrowing death highlighted the increasingly dangerous and irrational tactics being carried out by the suffragette movement. Many newspapers labelled her actions those of a madwoman or dangerous anarchist, but in the suffragette press she was hailed a martyr, her death a symbol of the long, exhausting fight for gender equality in the United Kingdom.Supporters of the Votes for Women Campaign turned out in their thousands for Davison’s funeral procession. She was laid to rest in Morpeth, Northumberland, her gravestone read “Deeds not words”, the motto of the Women’s Social and Political Union.A long term, militant suffragette, it is still far from clear if Davison’s death was truly an act of conscious self sacrifice for the cause. Did she intend to commit suicide, or was it a tragic accident?Emmeline Pankhurst wrote in her autobiography that she believed Davison intended to martyr herself. “Emily Davison clung to her conviction that one great tragedy, the deliberate throwing into the breach of a human life, would put an end to the intolerable torture of women. And so she threw herself at the King’s horse, in full view of the King and Queen and a great multitude of their Majesties’ subjects.”Others point out that during one of several incarcerations at Holloway women’s prison, Davison had hurled herself over a balcony designed specifically to stop inmate suicides. Previously she had jumped down an iron staircase, suffering severe spinal injuries in an attempt to draw attention to the suffragette movement. These events in her life lead some historians to conclude that she had intended to provide the suffragettes a martyr in June 1913.Born in 1872, Davison studied at Royal Holloway College and Oxford University, although institutionalised sexism meant women were banned from taking degrees at the time. She was a member of Pankhurst’s Women’s Social and Political Union from 1906, and gave up her job as a teacher in 1909 to devote herself full time to the suffragette movement.In the early twentieth century growing frustration at the British government’s continued refusal to listen ...

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$20 (Two $10 Vouchers) of Award Winning Hot Wings & More for $10 at Kelly's Pub & Eatery in Scranton - Scranton Times-Tribune

Monday, August 01, 2016

Manor United Methodist Church. Donations: Fisher Center for Alzheimer’s Research Foundation, 110 East 42nd St., 16th floor, New York, NY 10017.BLANCO, JOHN “JIM,” Dunmore, today, 11 a.m., Morell-LaBelle Funeral Home, 301 Chestnut St., Dunmore. Inurnment, Cathedral Cemetery, Scranton. Calling hours, today, 9 to service. Contributions: donor’s favorite charity.BREESE, RICHARD N. “DICK,” Springville, Pa., calling hours, today, 5 to 8 p.m., Daniel K. Regan Funeral Home, Montrose. Service, later date. Donations: Springville Fire Company, P.O. Box 107, Springville, PA 18844, or True Friends Animal Welfare Center, 16332 State Route 706, Montrose, PA 18801.CORCORAN, LEWIS F. JR., Honesdale, Mass, Friday, 10 a.m., St. Mary Magdalen Church, Honesdale. Calling hours, today, 4 to 7 p.m., Hessling Funeral Home Inc., 428 Main St., Honesdale. Use the Fifth Street entrance. Interment, St. Mary’s Cemetery, Honesdale. Contributions: Alzheimer’s Association, 2595 Interstate Drive, Suite 100, Harrisburg, PA 17110, or Wayne Memorial Hospice, 600 Park St. Honesdale, PA 18431.COSTANZO, SAMUEL M., Carbondale, Wednesday, Lawrence A. Gabriel Funeral Home and Cremation Services Inc., Carbondale. Mass, Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church, Carbondale, by the Rev. Andrew Kurovsky. Pallbearers: David and Fred Costanzo, Gary Cotroneo, Jack Sudlesky and Tim Bucklaw.

'It's just a horrible time to put on a uniform:' NJ police grapple with latest shooting - New Jersey 101.5 FM Radio

Monday, July 18, 2016

There’s no appreciation for their sacrifice and commitment. So many good people in uniform are being labelled.”Colligan and said the landscape has changed dramatically in law enforcement since the 2014 fatal police shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri in 2014. Brown’s death was followed by protests and riots, escalating tensions between police and the communities they serve.“We know a lot of the rhetoric that came out of Ferguson never occurred and that’s sad because it changed our profession forever,” Colligan said adding that it has impacted recruiting of future police officers, including in his own home.Colligan said his son wants to become a police officer, but he’s pushing him in another direction because of the unrest. “I’ve been begging him to be a fireman,” he said.“Most communities appreciate us. We saw that throughout New Jersey since the Dallas shooting,” Colligan said. “Virtually every police department in the state had people stopping by, writing notes, dropping off food just showing signs of appreciation.”Chief Hayducka – Out thoughts and prayers go out to the family and friends of the #BatonRouge officers' lost today pic.twitter.com/a3KMZtMixo— So Brunswick PD (@SoBrunswickPD) July 17, 2016Colligan dismissed the idea that all police departments are targeting minorities.“I know overwhelmingly people appreciate what we do and they understand that we have a difficult job. I think that’s 99.9 percent of our communities throughout the country,” he said. “There’s just a few who are holding us to this almost racist standard because they’re accusing us of targeting the minority community as police officers and it’s just not true.”Mastronardy said he’s hopefully the country can move past these difficult times.“It’s been a tough year for law enforcement and we just hope that it comes to an end and we can move on, come together and protect our officers better,” he said.Police departments across the state have been expressing condolences on social media.Our thoughts and prayers are with the officers of @BRPD and their families this evening. #lesm #NeverForgotten #ThinBlueLine— Harvey Cedars Police (@HCPolice) July 17, 2016Thoughts & prayers with #BatonRouge Police Department. @BRPD #Heroes #BlueFamily #GoneButNeverForgotten pic.twitter.com/MZ89yzpwpU— NJSP – State Police (@NJSP) July 17, 2016...

Arnold W. Hoschar - Parkersburg News

Monday, July 18, 2016

Arnold W. Hoschar, 97, of Parkersburg, passed on to heaven Sunday, July 10, 2016.He was born Oct. 28, 1918, in Evans, W.Va., a son of the late William and Lullabelle Casto Hoschar.He retired from Eazor Express after 30 years driving semi-trucks. He enjoyed WVU football and Cincinnati Reds baseball. He was a World War II veteran serving in the Air Force. He was a member of Long Hollow Baptist Church in Jackson County and belong to the United Methodist Church of Medina, W.Va. He was a member of American Legion Post 15, VFW, and the Eagles, all of Parkersburg.Article PhotosArnold W. HoscharHe was preceded in death by his wife of 27 years, Erma Jean Rhodes Hoschar; three brothers; three sisters; and several aunts, uncles and cousins.Special thanks to Amedysis Hospice; and nieces, Mandy Keith of Davisville and Joyce McMullen of Parkersburg who were his care givers. Also thanks to Lulu Bush.Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Friday, July 15, 2016, at Lambert-Tatman Funeral Home, 2333 Pike St., south Parkersburg, with Pastor Raymond Tanner and Basil Barr officiating. Burial will follow at Evergreen Cemetery South with full military rites by American...

Imogene Church

Monday, July 11, 2016

Smith, Jesse Smith, Ezra Smith, Havah Smith, Jacob Gingerich, Scout Gingerich, great-great grandchildren, Kenley Brown, Grayson McCoy, brother, Jimmy D. Centers, Columbus, OH, sisters, Inez Graf, Labelle, FL, and Shelia Patterson, OH.The funeral service will be at 10:30 am Wednesday, July 6, 2016 at Anglin Funeral Home with Rev. Scott Patty, Rev. Byron Benson, and Rev. James Kahler officiating. Burial will follow in the Stewart County Memorial Gardens. Visitation will be from 9:00 am until the time of service Wednesday. Pallbearers will be Paul Smith, James Wallace, Paul E. Smith, Matthew Maynard, Brad Mullins, Eli Smith, Jonathan Wiley, and Loren Altizer. Arrangements have been entrusted to Anglin Funeral Home, Dover, TN.

The Mystery Behind Emily Davison's Death - New Historian

Monday, July 04, 2016

Great Britain. For some, Davison’s harrowing death highlighted the increasingly dangerous and irrational tactics being carried out by the suffragette movement. Many newspapers labelled her actions those of a madwoman or dangerous anarchist, but in the suffragette press she was hailed a martyr, her death a symbol of the long, exhausting fight for gender equality in the United Kingdom.Supporters of the Votes for Women Campaign turned out in their thousands for Davison’s funeral procession. She was laid to rest in Morpeth, Northumberland, her gravestone read “Deeds not words”, the motto of the Women’s Social and Political Union.A long term, militant suffragette, it is still far from clear if Davison’s death was truly an act of conscious self sacrifice for the cause. Did she intend to commit suicide, or was it a tragic accident?Emmeline Pankhurst wrote in her autobiography that she believed Davison intended to martyr herself. “Emily Davison clung to her conviction that one great tragedy, the deliberate throwing into the breach of a human life, would put an end to the intolerable torture of women. And so she threw herself at the King’s horse, in full view of the King and Queen and a great multitude of their Majesties’ subjects.”Others point out that during one of several incarcerations at Holloway women’s prison, Davison had hurled herself over a balcony designed specifically to stop inmate suicides. Previously she had jumped down an iron staircase, suffering severe spinal injuries in an attempt to draw attention to the suffragette movement. These events in her life lead some historians to conclude that she had intended to provide the suffragettes a martyr in June 1913.Born in 1872, Davison studied at Royal Holloway College and Oxford University, although institutionalised sexism meant women were banned from taking degrees at the time. She was a member of Pankhurst’s Women’s Social and Political Union from 1906, and gave up her job as a teacher in 1909 to devote herself full time to the suffragette movement.In the early twentieth century growing frustration at the British government’s continued refusal to listen ...