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The Indiana Gazette from Indiana, Pennsylvania • Page 49

Location:
Indiana, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
49
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Illllllllllllllllllll District Hospital Register INDIANA HOSPITAL Births for June 30 Mr. and Mrs. James Emerson, Indiana RD 5, girl; Mr and Mrs. Robert Harmon, RD 2, boy. Admissions for June 30 Marco J.

Andrie, Homer City; Kathy Jo Davis, 501 Church Indiana; Jean I. Olechoveski, Josephine; 'Phyllis L. Skapura, Indiana RD Mary Obllnsky, Ernest' Lisa K. Olllver, Indiana RD 3 Ethel V. Hilliard, Indiana Nancy M.

Ellis, Clymer Discharges for June 30 Sharon Jean Gamble and in- Indiana RD Roberta Montgomery and infant, Commodore RD Jill Geneva and Infant, Clymer; L. Za' gUrskie and infant, Homer City 'RD Nellie Coursin, R. 332 Oak Indiana. Grace L. McQuiston, 56 S.

4th Indiana; Margaret R. Johns, Elderton; Jean R. Speicher. Indiana RD Timothy L. Sturgeon, Clymw; Antoinette B.

DeHaven, Plumville; Mary Louise Cooke, Indiana RD4. James McGary, Strongstown RD Charlotte I. Clawson, Black Lick; Phyllis J. Capitosti. Homer City; Mary A.

Nichol. Commodore; Mark Eric McNabb, Indiana RD Leo G. Buterbaugh Commodore RD 1. Arnold Blair Widdowson, 659 S. Sixth Indiana; William B.

Christian III, Indiana RD Mary C. Butler, Punxsutawney RD Wendy Abrams, Barnesboro RD Deanna Elder, Kittanning RD Marlin Troy Laney. Barnesboro RD 2. PUNXSUTAWNEY Admitted Nora Lendyak, Punxsutawney RD George Lesko, Punxsutawney RD Mrs. Larry Kauffman, Punxsutawney RD 6.

Mrs. George Betts, Thomas Seibert, both of Punxsutawney. Discharged Mabel Ritchey, Pearl Kuntz, Christina Scheel, all of Punxsutawney. Jennie Dixon, Punxsutawney RD Alvin McCully, Smicksburg; Margaret Ansel, Timblin. Birth Mrs.

Anthony DeFelice, daughter, Punxsutawney RD 1. KITTANNING Admitted Patricia A. Orr, Shelocta RD; Margaret Rosenberger, Kittanning RD 5. Discharged Ida E. Fulton, Sagamore; Ray C.

Hayes, NuMine; Rev. J. Samuel Johns, Rural Valley RD 1. Keith L. Peterman, Elderton; Arnold E.

Slee Home RD1. JOHNSTOWN Birth Eugene and Sally Farabaugh, son, Nicktown (Mercy Hospital). LATROBE Admitted Emma Jean Ball, Clarksburg RD Walter Johnston, diana RD Ilene Moore, Saltsburg MR 1. Discharged Paul C. LaMantia, Charles A.

Hasychak, fUckville; Clarence E. Shaffer, IfJlack Lick; Rose Ann Olson, 5 Blairsville. EVi MRS. LU BERG CAMPBELL HAMILTON, 87, of Black Lick died Thursday, June 30, 1977 In Indiana. A daughter of the late August and Ida May Brubaker Berg, she was born Feb.

15, 1890 in Blairsville. Mrs. Hamilton was a member of Black Lick United Presbyterian Church and the Annie Bell Missionary Society of the church. She was a retired teacher and taught in Indiana and Westmoreland Counties for 35 years. She was a member of the county, state and national education associations.

Surviving are a brother, Riley W. Berg, two sisters, Mrs. Charles (Ruth) Repine, Mrs. Augustus (Catherine) Reed, all of Blairsville; several nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by two husbands, Arthur W.

Campbell in 1929 and Joseph Ross Hamilton in 1973. The family is receiving friends from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today in the Ferguson-Helm Funeral Home, Blairsville, where services will be held at 1:30 p.m. Saturday with the Rev. Donald Van Dyke officiating.

Interment will follow in Blairsville Cemetery. RAYMOND G. FLEMING, 85, of Blairsville died Thursday, June 30, 1977 in Latrobe Area Hospital. A son of the late William E. and Zetta Cribbs Fleming, he was born July 12, 1891 in Blairsville.

Mr. Fleming was a lifelong resident of the Blairsville area. He was a veteran of WW I serving in the U.S. Army and prior to his retirement in 1956, he was employed at Federal Laboratories. Suiviving are a son, William Menlo Park, a daughter, Mrs.

Boyd (Rosemary) Bell, Sligo; 11 grandchildren; two great-grandchildren: a sister, Mrs. Cleo St. Petersburg, Fla. He was preceded in death by his wife, Mary Rose in 1968, and three sisters, Mildred, Rose, and Twila. The family is receiving friends from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

today in the Richard L. Shoemaker Funeral Home. Blairsville. where services will be held in the chapel at 2 p.m. Saturday with the Rev.

George Krupp officiating. Interment will be in Ebenezer Cemetery, Lewisville. The family suggests that memorial contributions be made to the Blairsville Public Library or Ebenezer Cemetery in lieu of flowers. FRANK S. ADAMS, 83, of Elizabeth, N.J.

died Thursday, June 30, 1977 in General Hospital, Elizabeth, N.J. Complete funeral arrangements will be announced in Saturday's Gazette by the Joseph R. Hunter Funeral Home, Saltsburg. Extended Care Frank R. Lange, Saltsburg 3 DuBOIS Admitted Deborah Campbell, ter Mills; Mrs.

Brenda Pape, Anita. Discharged 1 Joseph Fetterman, Punxsu- tawney. I Maple Avenue Discharged Twila Merieely, Mrs. Karen Shoop, both of Punxsutawney. Irvis No Longer Recommends HARRISBURG (AP) House speaker K.

Leroy Irvis says he will no longer write letters of recommendations for persons applying to colleges and professinal schools. Irvis' decision comes six weeks after former speaker Herbert Fineman was convicted of blocking a federal probe of alleged payoffs by parents to get their children into professional schools. "I feel that this is a necessary decision to begin restoring the confidence and trust of the people of Pennsylvania," Irvis told House members in a letter i Thursday. The House Ethics Committee will develop guidelines this Bummer on how a legislator should handle recommert- dations to colleges. Irvis said he will review his' decision after he sees the guidelines.

"The simple fact is, the legis- Jature controls certain educa- fional funding," Irvis said. FLEMING, Raymond, 2 p.m., Shoemaker Funeral Home, Blairsville. HAMILTON, Lu, 1:30 p.m., Ferguson-Helm Funeral Home, Blairsville. Attorneys Disqualified By Judge PITTSBURGH (AP) A federal judge here has disqualified two attorneys from representing a witness before a federal-grand jury investigating interstate distribution of pornographic materials. U.S.

District Judge Hubert I. Teitelbaum issued the order Wednesday barring Burton Sandier of Baltimore and Carl M. Janavitz of Pittsburgh from serving as counsel to Phyllis Johns, bookkeeper for Majestic News Co. Sandier and Janavitz had aready withdrawn as lawyers for four other witnesses. The court order stopped them from representing the only witness who has been granted immunity.

The government asked in May that the attorneys be dis- qualifed from representing 11 persons subpoenaed to appear before the secret panel probing Majestic activities. Asst. U.S. Atty. Henry Ban alleged the multiple representation constituted a violation of American Bar Association Canons of Ethics and had resulted in frustrating the inquiry.

The government produced evidence at a hearing June 20 and 21 showing that all 11 witnesses had exercised their Fifth Amendment right, often despite offers of immunity in exchange for cooperation. The government also showed that Majestic News was assisting witnesses with their legal fees. Jobless Compensation Bill Approved HARRISBURG (AP) A bill that provides unemployment compensation for local government, agriculture and domestic workers has been approved by the House. The House voted 187-5 Thursday to send the bill to Gov. Shapp for his approval.

If Shapp approves it, there will be two options for cities, townships, school boards, certain farmers and persona who employ maids and maintenance workers. They can either pay 2 per cent of their employes' wages into the state compensation fund; or they can reimburse the state for the exact amount of unemployment compensation paid to their lald-off workers. It will cost local goverments and their taxpayers $48 million, according to the Pennsylvania School Boards Association. Here are the persons affected: who have 20 or more employes working in at least 20 weeks. Two thousand farmers and 15,000 workers are affected.

government and school employes, but not elected officials or department heads. About 400,000 employes in 5.000 local government bodies are affected. workers, including maids, cooks, maintenance people and chauffers for private homes, clubs and fraternity houses. They must have salaries of at least $4,000 a year. From 'Hostile Indiano Evtning Oaitlti, frldny, July 1, Ethiopia's Government Under New Pressures CHESS KNOWS NO BOUNDARIES, they say, not even that of light.

Metal knobs hold pieces In place and squares are defined by indentations on chessboard designed for the blind displayed by Mrs. Deloris Largent of Marion, at the National Braille Convention at Southfield, Mich. Actors Added To 'King' Cost LOS ANGELES (AP) Ossie Davis, Dick Anthony Williams and Terry Alexander have been added to the cast of "King." the five-hour NBC movie based on the life of Martin Luther King, Jr. Davis will portray King Alexander will play a close as- sociate of the civil rights leader. Bernard Lee.

Williams takes the role of Malcolm after the withdrawal of Harry Belafonte, who had conflicting commitments, Paul Winfieid is portraying the younger King, with Cicely Tyson as his wife Coretta. NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) Ethiopia's Marxist government was reported under new pressure today from "hostile elements" occupying a town in the western part of the country and 15.000 Somali troops massed on the southeast frontier. Kenya charged Thursday that 10.000 Somali troops invaded northeast Kenya last weekend near its convergence with Somalia and Ethiopia, and 5,000 more were poised on the border. Foreign Minister Munyua Waiyaki told a meeting of the Organization of African Unity in Gabon that the invaders told the local population they were going to use the area as a base for attacks on Ethiopia. Somalia's ambassador to Kenya.

Hussein Ali'Dualeh, denied that any Somali soldiers had crossed into Kenya. He suggested the invaders were Ethiopian soldiers or guerrillas fighting the Ethiopian military government headed by Lt. Col. Mengistu Haile Mariam. Meanwhile.

Western diplomats in Addis Ababa said missionaries along Ethiopia's western border with Sudan reported "people in uniform" occupied the town of Beica two or three days ago. Beica. in Worrega province, is 23 miles from the Sudanese border and 300 miles due west of Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital. The Norwegian foreign ministry said Norwegian missionaries in Beica reported the town had been taken over by Sudanese troops But the diplomats in Addis Ababa told a telephone caller from Nairobi they had not learned whether they were Sudanese or Ethiopian rebels Guerrillas of the rightist Ethiopian Democratic Union have neon active the Gondar region of western Ethiopia and have the open support of the Sudanese government. But there have been no previous reports of guerrilla activity in Worrega province.

There was no comment from either the Sudanese or the Ethiopian governments The Ethiopian government has accused the Sudanese government of trying to undermine it. and last Friday it charged that Somalia was sending uniformed soldiers into the Ogaden area of eastern Ethiopia to aid local guerrillas fighting to unite the area with Somalia. Guerrilla movements are operating in at least seven of Ethiopia's 13 provinces. Government control is most seriously threatened by the Eritrean liberation movements in the northern province of Eritrea, where an estimated 30.000 guerrillas control much of the countryside, and the estimated 3.000 rebels in Ogaden. who have cut the Addis Ababa- Djibouti railroad, the normal route for 60 per cent of Ethiopia's foreign trade.

The OAU opens a summit meeting in Gabon Saturday, and Kenya asked the organization for help in its dispute with Somalia. Hut it was not known whether the Ethiopian government would bring up its I roubles Steelworkers Plan Lecture, Honor Molony PITTSBURGH (APi The United Steelworkers and the I 'niversity of Notre Dame have jointly announced the establishment of an annual lecture in honor of the union's late vice president. Joseph P. Molony. Molony died April 7 after re- (iring from the union in 1973.

Me served years as president of District 4. which embraces New York State, and two terms as international vice president. Molony also served for two decades as chairman of the Bethlehem Steel Corp. negotiating team and in 1967-68 led 15 unions in an in- dustrywide strike against North American copper producers. The lecture in his honor will be funded by a grant from the union's international executive board.

The speaker will "be in the.tradition of industrial unionism as articulated by Molony." and will be chosen in cooperation with Notre Dame's economics department. IM NOT MYSELF TODAYl WHO ARE YOU? Want Users Re ver Suffer Crisis Want ad users know they are the wise people who take advantage of the many buying and selling opportunities offered in Classified. They know Classified is the place for bargains in such things as household furnishings, appliances, PEOPLE IN THE KNOW KNOW ADZ toys, musical instruments and all kinds of merchandise. They identify with good deals in automobiles and recognize the selection and convenience offered in the Real Estate listings. Want Ad users also are aware of the many helpful Business Services available to those who have renovation, repairs, yard and garden work, and any of the other tasks which can be performed at "reasonable cost by qualified workmen.

Most important, perhaps, is Classified readers' know-how in the money-making department. They find it is so easy to dispose of their useful but no-longer-used items in the Articles for Sale columns. And at so little cost per ad. So watch Classified and you. too.

can be identified with the people who know how to save money and pocket extra cash. BUSINESS.PEOPLE Need more business? Would you like to find an advertising medium that really produces results? Results that you can see and verily? Take a tip from your friends your customers. They use the Want Ads when they want to SELL! You can too! Real selling power at low cost. Call Classified now and ask about the commercial rate. Want Advertising Department Bean.

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About The Indiana Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
396,923
Years Available:
1868-2006