Alice A. Parker, 89, of Muncy, died Sunday, May 2, 2021 at Valley View Nursing Home, Montoursville.
Born Aug. 7, 1931 in Wilkes Barre, she was a daughter of the late Peter Kuzminski and Ann (Christie) Kuzminski McHale. She married Robert S. “Bob” Parker, who preceded her in death on March 15, 2019.
Alice worked as a Realtor for many years.
She was a member of St. James Episcopal Church, Muncy.
Alice lived an elegant life, classy and always thoughtful in her actions toward others.
She and her husband enjoyed traveling, antiquing and dancing in their earlier years.
In addition to her parents and husband, she was predeceased by a brother, Danny Kuzminski.
Hong Neok Woo, one of at least 10 Chinese men who served in the Union or Confederate armies during the American Civil War, worked as a pressman for a Lancaster newspaper before returning to Shanghai in 1864 and becoming a priest and medical assistant.
The Scribbler is relating the unusual story of Wooâs life today because on Tuesday, Lancaster Countyâs commissioners are poised to proclaim May as the first-ever Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Month in Lancaster County.
Wooâs personal heritage began Aug. 7, 1834, in a small town near the city of Chang Chow. When Woo turned 13, his father sent him to the Shanghai Mission School, where he apparently did not distinguish himself.
Life at Taylor springs back
Paula Chambers, a plant buff and transplant from Georgia who lives at the Taylor Community, holds her first-ever New Hampshire-grown carrots. Courtesy
The “Taylor Wheelies” are a group of Taylor Community residents who began biking together regularly last summer and, like their counterparts the Taylor walkers, donated money weekly to benefit the Greater Lakes Region Children’s Auction. Courtesy
Published: 4/29/2021 9:25:52 PM Paula Chambers, 74, who came from Georgia, found a calling and nickname during COVID-19 that may spark vines at the Taylor Community’s locations in Laconia and Wolfeboro, with help from others who like to garden. She also hopes to lure newcomers who have uncovered the joys of dabbling in dirt while sheltering at home during the pandemic.
LEWISTOWN, Mont. - Over the weekend, the St. James Episcopal Church in Lewistown held a walk for child abuse prevention awareness.
April is child abuse prevention month and everyone who came out for the walk helped bring attention to child abuse.
According to DoSomething.org, it s estimated that one in seven children have experienced child abuse and or neglect in the past year.
Donations from the event are going to be used to support programs for prevention and ones that work with victims those programs are powered by the Montana Children s Trust Fund at the Department of Public Health and Human Services.
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