The Daily Reporter from Dover, Ohio (2024)

in the 6 1073 Vital service. Calendar 1 There items so are charge as a mercial a will People Nanette: his asked Congress to fend: wear to the deaf. Wearing searing aid herself; and acting on behalf of the Na: tional Advisory Committee on Education of the Deaf, Miss. Fabray pleaded before: a 'Senate subcommittee for expanded aid to handicapped children. Hair isn't deductible after all, according to a decision by Sem.

William Proxmire, He published his 1972 Income tax return in the Congressional Record earlier this week, listing as a medical deduction the $2758 for his hairy transplants. But after a second look, Proxmire said, he's sending federal and state tax agencies an additional $1000. The 1967 Cadillac in which former United Mine Workers presidnt W. A. (Tony) Boyle rode in now.

belongs to Paul Bosak a coal miner from Tarentum, Pa. The union's new which defeated Boyle in an election last December, auctioned off the car along with two others. Bosak paid $2500. A fourth member of Charles Manson's torious family, convicted in a plot to get money and guns to free their cult leader from jail, was sentenced Friday to a prison term of 20 years to life. In imposing the penalty on Lawrence Bailey, 23, Superior Court.

Judge Arthur L. Alarcon called him a "vicious criminal who has declared war against society." Bailey joined Kenneth Como, 32, Mary Brunner, 29, and Catherine Share, 30, in state prison. They were convicted of robbing a beer distributing firm and a surplus store in 1971. The second robbery ended in a gun battle with police. Father of kidnapped girl enraged over 'lax' sentence JACKSONVILLE, Fla.

(AP) A Navy admiral of a courtroom complaining, about after lax a sen- 17- year-old sailor was four-year prison serinentor kidnaping the, admiral's daughter. Lowell D. -Howard of Medway, Ohio, "had pleaded guilty in the case. Rear Adm, J. P.

Moorer left the courtroom and loudly told listeners in the hallway he believes short sentences encourage crime. "President Nixon expresses it much better than I can," Moorer said, referring to the President's recent statement calling for harsher criminal penalties. could very easily have ended in murder," said the admiral, commander of Carrier Division 6 at Mayport Naval Station and brother of Adm. Thomas H. Moorer, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

His daughter, Michelle Marie Moorer, 22, was unharmed in the abduction last $1,062,500 awarded in Plainfield blast suits One of the largest settlements ever to be returned in the U.S. District Court at Columbus, $1,062,500, was awarded this week. It resulted from suits filed after the June 1, 1968, explosion of a gas line near Plainfield in Linton Township in Coshocton County. Three persons died as a result, and original and additional suits filed since the explosion asked for a total of $26,650,000. The explosion took the lives of Mrs.

Edna Brill, wife of Edward Brill, one of the plaintiffs, Benjamin Lahana and Quentin Roahrig. It was alleged that heavy rains had caused a landslide of stripmined soil which shifted and ruptured the gas line. It was further claimed that when the Brill car was driven into the valley community southwest of Plainfield it stalled because the leaking gas cut the supply of oxygen in the atmosphere. A series of explosions resulted when Brill attempted to restart the car as Roahrig and Lahana rushed to warn him not to do so because of the gas. The explosions caused considerable property damage in the area as well as the deaths.

Brill had filed a $2 million law suit on behalf of his wife and his son, Daniel, also injured; and Gerald Roahrig had asked $350,000 for the death of his son. The plaintiffs charged negligence: in design and construction of the pipe line, for permitting mining operations nearby and for failing to introduce an odor into the gas to sufficiently warn of a leak. Defendants in the case were the Texas Transmission Allegheny Pipeline Kennecott Copper Peabody Coal Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Simco Poling and Bacon Construction Co. and Hartford Brothers Co. Phila area man 'poor' after Rt.

259 collision Bruce E. Brokaw, 20, of RD 4, New Philadelphia, was in poor condition this morning in Union Hospital, where he was admitted Friday following an accident at 1:43 p.m. on Rt. 259 and County Rd. 25A.

Brokaw, who received head and back injuries, was cited by the highway patrol for failure to stop at a stop sign. His car was struck by one operated by Raymond 0. Miller, 22, of RD 2, Sugarcreek. Miller was treated for contusions to the chest and knee. Ron L.

Mulheman, 16, of 715 W. High Uhrichsville, was cited for driving while intoxicated Friday at 9:40 p.m., following a crash which triggered another mishap. Mulheman was northbound on Rt. 250 when his car hit a guardrail, went across the medial and into the southbound lane, coming to rest in the passing lane. His vehicle was struck by one driven by Gilbert J.

Heavlin, 61, of RD1, Dennison, whose passengers, Jess L. Heavlin, 90, and Alice T. Heavlin, 60, of RD 1, Dennison, received minor injuries. Richard E. Hindman, 29, of 125 Regent Dover, complained of injury at 5:30 p.m., after the brakes failed on his Gospel sing The Blue Grass Statesmen will have a gospel sing tonight at 7:30 in the Mineral City Pentecostal Church of Christ.

Rev. Gestee Stephens is host pastor. Meetings Services Weathervane YESTERDAY High 49 Low 20 TODAY 7:30 a.m. 27 RAINFALL' Last 24 hours none TOMORROW Sunrise 6:21 Sunset. 6:43 High 50s: Low 40s Forecast: Increasing cloudiness tonight.

Cloudy with a chance of showers Sunday. Dover police charge 2 in auto mishaps Dover police cited two drivers following investigation of traffic accidents. Friday and early this morning. Dean Espenschied. 50, of 816 Crater st.

was cited following an 8:43 a.m. collision at W. 3rd and Broad sts. He attempted to turn onto 3rd from Broad and struck an auto driven by Mrs. Buela A.

Eiler, 67, of Baltic. Following investigation of an accident on Race st. at 12:57 this morning, officers cited Michael A. Reese, 18, of 430 Fair av. NW, New Philadelphia, for improper backing.

He was backing from a parking space at -Penso's Pizza Shop when he struck a parked auto owned by Marilyn Festi of 131 Park av. NW, New Philadelphia. Ship search continues NEW YORK (UPI) An air-sea rescue fleet battled darkness, choppy seas and high winds today in the search for a Norwegian freighter and its 30 crewmen that apparently vanished without a trace in a howling storm two days ago. Pounding seas damaged one of the four rescue ships Friday during rescue efforts. The crew of the Norse Varient radioed Thursday they were abandoning ship in 45-foot waves and 80-mile-an-hour winds.

The ship sailed from Norfolk, Wednesday bound for Hamburg, West Germany. No trace of the crew or ship has been found. Senate panel sees no CIA wrongdoing WASHINGTON (UPI) While the Senate Foreign Relations Committee continues to probe ties between the International Telephone Telegraph Corp. (ITT) and the Central Intelligence Agency, another Senate panel reportedly has found no wrongdoing in the case. An informal group of senators formed several years ago to watch over the CIA met recently in secret with former CIA director Richard Helms and was satisfied for the time being that nothing was amiss, a senator said.

He asked not to be identified. "There is nothing unusual about the CIA exchanging information with representation tives of American corporations abroad," the senator said. He added that there was SEN. PROXMIRE Splitting hairs Oct. 29, except for.

a small cut on her neck. She told newsmen at the time that Howard told her: he didn't intend to harm her and only wanted to get out of the Navy, which he joined three months earlier. Moorer said he expects Howard will get a dishonorable discharge. Officers said Howard gave them three statements about the abduction. Police said he took the girl at knifepoint from her home on the Naval base near here and drove 95 miles south to Daytona Beach.

She jumped from the car a traffic light, and Howard was arrested soon after in Moorer family car as he headed back toward Jacksonville on Interstate 95. The youth wept openly after Circuit Judge John Santora pronounced sentence. Howard pleaded guilty last month to both kidnaping and breaking and entering, each carrying a maximum of 15 years in prison. He was given 10 years probation on the breaking and entering charge. Santora said before sentencing, the psychiatric, resome disorders, among them sexual immaturity.

Miss Moorer was not in court at the sentencing. Her father said she is elsewhere studying to be an airline stewardess. nothing wrong with the CIA attempting to cause changes in a foreign country to the tage of the United States. Testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee on multinational corporations this week disclosed numerous ITT contacts with the CIA prior to and concerning the 1970 presidential elections in Chile in which ITT hopes to defeat the election of Marxist Salvador Allende. Allende won.

There was disputed testimony about the alleged ITT offer of up to $1 million to White House advisor Henry Kissinger. According to one account, this was to back a coaliagainst Allende. According to another it would have been for economic development. Researchers 'starved' infants, newspaper says BOSTON (AP) The Boston Globe says a University of Texas research team deprived 17 infants of a food substance essential for their development in an experiment conducted in 1956- 57. In a story in today's editions, the Globe said the researchers deprived the infants for up to 13 weeks of linoleic acid, a fatty substance contained in mother's milk, even though they knew a diet without this food had produced skin breakdown, "marked emaciation" and possible damage to the brain or spinal chord in animals.

The study, published in 1959, was sent to Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D- by Dr. Alvin F. Poussaint of Harvard Medical School, the Globe said.

Poussaint told Kennedy in a covering letter that he hoped the material would serve as "documentation NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE 0.00 3024 30.001 UPI WEATHER FOTOCAST Your I FORECAST 10 7AM EST 3-25 NEW ORLE AND MIAMI EW YORK RAIN SNOW AIR WIZ SHOWERS FLOW People Are Going To ART EXHIBIT Saturday, 1 to 8:30 p.m., YMCA, sponsored by Tuscarawas County Art Guild. RECEPTION Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., Dennison K. of C. Hall for Gertrude Donahey, state treasurer; sponsored by Twin City Lady Democrats. Benefits Meetings Spring bazaar and bake sale.

Saturday 10. a.m. to 5 p.m., New Philadelphia Spring Electric Store, sponsored by Senior Girl Scout Troop 76. New Philadelphia Rotary Pancake Day, 7 a.m. to 7 p.m..

Elks Lodge auditorium. Book and Attic bazaar, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m., New Philadelphia First United Presbyterian Church basem*nt, sponsored by the Junior United Presbyterian Youth. March 25 March 24 Spaghetti dinner, 11:30 to 2:30 p.m.. Mineral City St.

Patrick's Catholic Church. YMCA Schedule SATURDAY Cub Pack 72 swim. Tuscarawas Valley Tri-HiY. gym: safety patrol of Strasburg swim. Tuscarawas Valley Tri-HiY swim.

Tuscarawas Valley Room 1. MONDAY Adult open gym. East gym. Women's Health Club. Women's volleyball.

gym. 9:30 Golden United. Room 2. Men's Health Club. Adult open swim.

Men's gym. Men's fitness. gym. Junior and senior high open gym, 1 Boys junior and intermediate swim teams. Junior and senior high girls beginners gymnastics.

Snails, Pollywogs and Guppies I swimming classes. Girls grade school beginners gymnastics. Goldfish I swim class. Grade school girls open swim. Senior high, college and men's open gym.

Men's swim. 7:00 Mohican Tribe, Bill Clinton home: Tri-Hi-Y Club, West multi-purpose room: Art Guild, Room 1. Women's Flying Fish. Shark swim classes. Women's Minnow and Fish swim classes.

8:00 Skin diving class. East multi-purpose room. New women's beginners swim class. Adult open swim. Socials March 24 Round and square dance, 9 to 12 p.m., Beach City Grange.

Music by the Dixie Harmonaires. Don Miller, caller. Round and square dance, 8:30 to 11:30 p.m., Rush School. Music by Junior and the Country Echoes. Arnold Clark, caller.

Sponsored by the Rush Township volunteer fire department ladies auxiliary. Public card party, 8 p.m., Mineral City St. Patrick's Catholic Church. New Philadelphia Knights of Columbus Founders Day banquet, 6:30 p.m., Dutch Oven Restaurant. Bookmobile Tuesday New Philadelphia South School 8: Ragersville School 1- 3:15.

Wednesday Baltic School 9-3 and Baltic CRISIS HELP Call 24 Hours 343-1811 Suicide Prevention and Crisis a service of your Mental Health Center service. mercial 1 a formation 1 I la 037, mailed advance New formation number Hospital Union ADMISSIONS Dover Mrs. Zella Lindon, 703 N. Wooster av. Robin Monticelli, 201 Glenview av.

New Philadelphia Bruce Brokaw, RD 4. Elsewhere Thomas Ellis, Royal Haven Nursing Home, Strasburg. Michael Bair, 324 Orchard Uhrichsville. Mrs. Inez Shaw, Sugarcreek.

Henry Miller, RD1, Fresno. Mrs. Eunice Little, 415 Lisbon Waynesburg. Mrs. Delmus Davis, Massillon.

Mrs. Mary Stauffer, Canton. OPERATIONS Dover Elmer Maurer, Mrs. Robert Propp and Mrs. Jerry Dummermuth.

New Philadelphia Mrs. Jefferson Watson, Mrs. Floyd Malone, Patricia Barr and Mrs. Ellsworth Walton. Elsewhere Mrs.

Tim Bowen and Thomas Ellis of, Strasburg; Mrs. Henry Fuller of Stone Creek; Mrs. Barbara Turner of Sugarcreek; Mrs. Glenn Roark of Mineral City, and Alice Huggins of Bolivar. DISMISSALS Dover Mrs.

John Limbacher and Alcide Grafe. New Philadelphia Harold White Anthony Basiletti, Mrs. Joe Steed and son, Mrs. Albert DeMattio, Edna Rutledge, Delbert Walton, Mrs. Hugo Menges, Ralph Collins, Tina Clark, Robert Santrock and Douglas McMillen.

Elsewhere William Caswell of Uhrichsville; Mrs. Richard Elliott of Dundee; Mrs. Cynthia Miller of Somerdale, and Mrs. Harry Sundbye of Carrollton BIRTHS Mr. and Mrs.

Keith Dessecker, 105 Spruce st. New Philadelphia, son. Mr. and Mrs. Mel Miller, Sugarcreek, son.

EMERGENCIES John DeMattio, 36, 1022 Ray av. NW, New Philadelphia, fell down steps at home and fractured arm. Ross Moreland, 56, 1029 Ray av. NW, New Philadelphia, fractured ankle while working at J. and M.

Mining Co. Daniel Harding, 20, 109 Superior Dover, fractured ankle playing basketball. Twin City ADMISSIONS Dennison Charles Cain, 100 S. 3rd st. Uhrichsville Mrs.

Harold Burroway, 310 Oak st. Mrs. George Orr, 233 E. 1st st. Mrs.

Lydia Utter, 227 E. 8th st. Elsewhere Mrs. Lloyd Russell, Sherrodsville. Clyde Bolitho, Main Jewett.

Johnny Newell, RD 1, Jewett. Mrs. Melvin Titus, Leesville. DISMISSALS Mrs. Theodore Toth, RD 3, New Philadelphia, Mrs.

Fred Clum of Gnadenhutten, and James Thomas of Scio. BIRTHS Mr. and Mrs. Harold Burroway, 310 Oak Uhrichsville, son. Mr.

and Mrs. Ernest Dundr, RD1, Uhrichsville, son. Coshocton ADMISSIONS Coshocton Elmer Guilliams, RD1. Deborah Williams. 696 John st.

William Snedeker, Riverview Trailer ct. Susan Wright, 1006 Highland av. for calendars should Palladelphia, ONe 1 of desired date. should same and of writer. News Chris Holder, 117 N.

3rd st. Larry Spinks, RD5. Elsewhere Clell Hammack, 213 Main Warsaw. Walter Gossett, RD 1, New Concord. Mrs.

Robert McMullen, RD 1. Newcomerst stown. Stella Holdsworth, RD 1, Walhonding. Edward Duff, RD2, Fresno. DISMISSALS Coshocton -Douglas Jones, Addie Kaatz, Francis Strasser, Deanna McCloy, and Mrs.

Robert Randles. Elsewhere Mrs. Bradley Stoffer of Newcomerstown and Mrs. Charles Peach and son of West Lafayette. BIRTHS Mr.

and Mrs. Stacy Aronhalt, 535 E. 4th West Lafa- March 25 Judea Shrine, White Shrine of Jerusalem, 2 p.m., Dover Masonic Temple: installation practice. New Philadelphia Knights of Columbus officer and meeting, 7:30 p.m., K. of C.

Hall. Parents Without Partners board meeting. 7 p.m., home of Sam Krempasky, 2716 Mohican Dover. Dennison Knights of Columbus, 7 p.m., K. of C.

Hall. Dover Garden Club, 7:45 p.m., home of Mrs. Leslie Johnson, a 318 S. McKinley av. ST Club, 7:45 p.m., Dover PHC Hall.

New Philadelphia Women of the Moose, executive meeting business meeting 8 p.m., at the lodge; wear formals. March 27 Daughters of the American Colonists, 12:30 p.m., Canton Woman's Club. Garaway Republican Women's Club, 12:45 p.m., Sugarcreek Swiss Hat Restaurant. New Philadelphia Order of Eastern Star, 7:30 p.m., Masonic Temple. NAACP, 7:30 p.m., Dover Reeves Banking Trust Co.

meeting room. Reliable Rebekah Lodge, 7:30 p.m.. Dover IOOF Hall. March 26 St. Therese Study Club, p.m., home of Mrs.

Gary Guimenti, 1519 N. Wooster Dover. New Philadelphia Eagles Auxiliary, 8p.m., lodge room. Tuscarawas County NALC Auxiliary, 7:45 p.m., home of Mrs. Dale Slough, 117 Tell st.

Philadelphia. March 28 Council for Community Needs. 11:30 a.m., Canton YWCA. Tuscarawas County Homemaker's spring luncheon, 11:30 a.m., Dover St. John's United Church of Christ.

COSHOCTON Pink Ladies of Coshocton Memorial Hospital, Monday. 7:30 in hospital cafeteria. Middle school choir will present program. From The Courts rena J. VanSickle, 34, New Philadelphia.

Clarence W. O'Donnell, 23, and Catherine King, 22, both of New Philadelphia. Kevin F. Schmidt, 20, and Cynthia J. Patterson, 17, both of Newcomerstown.

William E. Schaar, 20, of RD 4 and Sally Downing, 20, both of New Philadelphia. Wedding Licenses Leonard Leidig, 58, of RD 2, Fresno, and Artha M. Kenney, 65, Newcomerstown. Joseph B.

Thurin, 35, of Poughkeepsie, N.Y., and Se- Church Calendar March 26 Renner-Edwards Circle. New Philadelphia First United Methodist Church. 1:30 p.m., ladies lounge. March 27 Anderson Class. New Philadelphia First United Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m., church lounge.

(Postponed) March 26 The regular meeting of Judea Shrine. White Shrine of Jerusalem has been Story Hours March 28 Dover Public Library, 10 to 10:45 a.m., four and five-year-olds. "The Runaway Bunny" and "Potato," plus film, Johnny Appleseed." Other Hospitals Mrs. Florence Andrews of Sugarcreek, who recently underwent surgery, is convalescing at the home of Eugene Schafer at 715 Woodrow North Canton, 44720. Mrs.

Dean (Becky) Gerber of Dover Sugarcreek, has returned home from MassilIon City Hospital. Barbara Breckenridge, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Breckenridge and a senior at St. Edward High, returned home Monday from Aultman Hospital in Canton where she had been a patient one week following a fall from a horse.

SCHWINN BICYCLE Sales Service Largest display of bicycles in this Complete parts and service for all makes. SNYDER'S 330 N. Tusc. Dover Farmers Market FARMERSTOWN LIVESTOCK (Quotations from March 20) HOGS Premium, 38.50- 38.60; mixed, 37.75-38.50; butcher sows, boars by weight, 28.25-32; pigs by head, 20-39; shoats by the head, brood sows, 200-205. CATTLE Medium steers and heifers, 41-43; feeder steers, bulls and heifers, 40- 57.50; medium good holsteins, 36-38; medium good beef breeds, 33-36; yellow breeds, 30-33; common or thin cows, 30 and down; medium to good butcher bulls, good to choice calves, 72-76; medium to good 60-72; commons and lights, 60 and down; back to farm bull calves, 57-77; back to farm, heifer calves; dairy holsteins, 430-720; stock bulls, 250-325.

SHEEP AND LAMBS medium to good, 38-40; old sheep, 11-15. car and it struck a concrete building on Warwick Township Rd. 466., three-tenths of a mile west of County Rd. 39. Frost on the windshield of his car impaired the vision of John A.

Wallace of 508 Roanoke Uhrichsville, whose car went off Rt. 250 near Conley's and struck a sign. He complained of injury in the 6:30 a.m. mishap. that will enable you to gain the support for legislation that involves human subjects in research." Kennedy heads a Senate health subcommittee that has been holding hearings on human experimentation.

The Globe said: The study on the infants was conducted at County Hospital in Galveston, Tex. Twelve of the children were black and five were white. Eleven of the black children and two of the white children were listed as being at the hospital for "social reasons." Some of the infants used in the study were children of medical students, according to the published report. The report of the study said 10 of the children developed medical problems. including skin rashes.

diarrhea, respiratory infections and slow weight gain. The researchers reported these problems disappeared when the infants were taken off the nutrientdificient diet. The leader of the research team was Dr. Arild E. Hansen, chairman of the department of pediatrics at University of Texas at the time of the study.

He died in 1962. The Globe said one of the researchers on the team, Dr. Doris J. D. Adam, told the newspaper by telephone from her home in Dallas Friday: cannot substantiate whether this (study) has or has not done any permanent harm to those children.

As far as I know, they were perfectly fine." Asked what the study meant when it said the infants were at the hospital for Dr. Adam said the babies had been abandoned by their mothers. the Globe reported. Town Topics MALVERN Alpha Sorosis Society will meet Wednesday at 8 in the Presbyterian Church social room. SUGARCREEK Cub Scouts of Den 2 should contact Mrs.

Thelma Keffer by today with their entries for the hobby and pet show April 2 at 7 p.m. in the First United Church of Christ. BEACH CITY The Fairless Booster Club will host the annual athletic banquet Monday, April 9, and not this coming Monday as erroneously reported. Fire Runs New Philadelphia Today at 3:55 and 7:11 a.m. to the East High Avenue Nursing Home at 464 E.

High av. where a kitchen range had shorted. On the second run, firemen pulled the fuse and advised them to call an electrician. There was no damage..

The Daily Reporter from Dover, Ohio (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Patricia Veum II

Last Updated:

Views: 5707

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (64 voted)

Reviews: 95% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Patricia Veum II

Birthday: 1994-12-16

Address: 2064 Little Summit, Goldieton, MS 97651-0862

Phone: +6873952696715

Job: Principal Officer

Hobby: Rafting, Cabaret, Candle making, Jigsaw puzzles, Inline skating, Magic, Graffiti

Introduction: My name is Patricia Veum II, I am a vast, combative, smiling, famous, inexpensive, zealous, sparkling person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.