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The Daily Reporter from Dover, Ohio • Page 6

Location:
Dover, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

A ft Thi TIMES-REPORTER Die. 12,1973 OOVtB-NtW PHILADELPHIA, OHIO Mrs. Frank Wagner Obituaries Profiteers cash in on crisis Mrs. Barbara E. Wagner, 53, of 212 Bank In.

SW, New Philadelphia, died this morning in Union Hospital following a two-month illness. A life resident of the area, she was born in Midvale, a daughter of the late Steve Uhose and Barbara Molar Uhose Kalec of New Philadelphia. In addition to her husband, she is survived by three sons, Frank of New Philadelphia and Fred and Terry of the home; three daughters, Mrs. Janet Sweghei- mer of New Philadelphia and Shirley and Marilyn of the home; a brother, Steve Uhose of Canton; a half-brother, George Kalec of Tappan; four sisters, Mrs. Mary DeMattio, Mrs.

Ann Feister, Mrs. Susan Frantz and Mrs. Catherina Cribble, all of New Philadelphia, and three grandchildren. She was preceded in death by a half-brother. Services will be Friday at 1:30 in Kaserman-Naylor Funeral Home with Paul Ladrach officiating.

Calling hours will be Thursday 2 to 4 and 7 to 9. Interment will be in Calvary Cemetery. Philip Amos BEACH CITY Philip Amos, 82, of 529 2nd av. SE died in his home Tuesday after a long illness. Born near Winesburg, he had resided here 51 years.

He was a retired machinist for the former Wheeling and Lake Erie Railroad at Brewster and a member of First Lutheran Church here. Surviving are his widow, Lilly, with whom he celebrated a 50th wedding anniversary Oct. 7, 1972; a daughter and three sons, Mrs. Richard (Gloria) Buxser of Massillon, Rev. James Amos of New York City, Wilson of San Louis Obispo, and Maurice of here; a sister, Mrs.

Forest Sliffe of here; 10 grandchildren, and a great-grandchild. Services will be Friday at 11 a. m. in Lantzer Funeral Home at Beach City with Rev. J.

Peter Pelkonen officiating. Interment will be in Sunset Hills Burial Park. There will be no calling hours and the family requests that memorial contributions be made to the First Lutheran Church Memorial Fund. Clyde Cunningham NEWCOMERSTOWN Clyde Cunningham, 72, a resident of the Tuscarawas County Home, died Tuesday afternoon in Union Hospital at Dover where he had been a patient five days. Born in Salem Township, he was a son of Ezra B.

and Maria Ann Norris Cunningham. Surviving are several cousins, nieces and nephews. Four brothers and a sister are deceased. Services will be Friday at 1 p.m. in Ou- rant Funeral Home, where friends may call Thursday from 7 to 9.

Rev. Ray Hassinger will officiate and burial will be in Mt. Zion Cemetery in Salem Township. John F. Crosley COSHOCTON John F.

Crosley, 87, of 352 Hill st. died Tuesday in Memorial Hospital, where he was admitted Dec. 8. Born in Muskingum County to Frank and Kate Savage Crosley, he was a retired miner and U.S. Army veteran of World War I.

Surviving are a brother and sister, Adam of Pontiac, and Mrs. Alice Bryant of here, and several nieces and nephews. Two sisters and four brothers are deceased. Services will be Friday at 1 p.m. in Dawson Funeral Home, where friends may call Thursday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.

Rev. Ronald L. Rearic will officiate and burial will be in Roscoe Village Cemetery. Frank Banahan CANTON Mass of Christian Burial will be sung Thursday at 9:30 a.m. in St.

John Catholic Church for Frank Banahan, 77, formerly of 614 4th st. NW, who has two sisters in Coshocton. He died Monday in the Convalescent Care Center. Burial will be in South Lawn Cemetery in Coshocton. Don Williams Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Surviving are a son and daughter, Thomas of here and Mrs. Robert (Ruth) Stortz of North Canton, the sisters, Mrs. Pearl Sees and Mrs. W.R. Yingling; five grandchildren, and a great-grandchild.

William Pon grata William Pongratz, 92, of rear 133 ilth st. NE, New Philadelphia, died Tuesday night in Valley Manor Nursing Home. He was born in Austria and was a retired ornamental concrete contractor. He also was a member of Sacred Heart Catholic Church in New Philadelphia and a 50-year member of SNPJ, a lodge. His wife, Theresa Sporar Pongratz, died in 1960.

Surviving are two daughters and three sons, Mrs. James (Angela) Weaver and Edward E. of Dover, Mrs. Charles (Patricia) Hren of Uhrichsville, John R. of Columbus and Rudy C.

of Akron; 18 grandchildren; 19 great-grandchildren and a great-great-grandchild. Two sons, two daughters and a brother are deceased. Fr. L. Robert Shalosky will officiate at services Friday at 10 a.m.

in Sacred Heart Church. Friends may call Thursday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 at Linn-Hert- Geib Funeral Home, where rosary will be prayed Thursday at 8 p.m. Burial will be in Calvary Cemetery. Memorials may be made to the Tuscarawas County Cancer Society. Services Fr.

Charles Conley Thursday at 10:30 in Immaculate Conception Church at Dennison. Calling tonight from 7 to 9 at R. K. Lindsey Funeral Home. Rosary at 8:30.

Mrs. Herbert (Mabel) Sickafoose Thursday at 1:30 in McCreery-Finefrock Funeral Home at Magnolia. Calling today from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9. Mrs. Wilma Buchanan Thursday at 7:30 p.m.

in Sweeney Funeral Home at Carrollton. No calling hours. Mrs. Anna Kauffman Thursday at 2 in Boor-Lindsey Funeral Home at Bowers ton. Calling today from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.

Roy Postel Thursday at 2 in Ourant Funeral Home at Newcomerstown. Calling tonight from 7 to 9 and Thursday until 2. By PHILIP GREEK The Washington Post NEW YORK-At times the senses are astounded by the ways big business can use any national problem for its own benefit. Just give them a little panic, and the big guys will figure out how to cash in on it. Take the developing energy crunch.

There is no denying that the shortage of gas and oil is a very serious problem for a country that needs both in order to function. It is easy to blame the oil companies, the government or the auto makers, but it is not very productive. The problem is to get through the crunch period with as little upset as possible and to develop enough politics- proof energy sources to make sure it never happens again. The positions taken by many industries raise several questions. Is the energy shortage bad enough to warrant wiping out even the small gains that have been made in environmental improvement over the past few years? Power companies, auto companies and other major polluters are latching on to the shortage with big advertising campaigns that call for relaxing, postponing or even abolishing the standards that aim to make the air fit to breathe.

Some slight relaxation may be necessary in cases of dire need, but it took too much sweat to achieve what we have to give it all back now. Is the shortage a reason to let the price of energy soar out of sight? There is no argument that, in a system such as ours, companies need an economic incentive to produce. That does not, however, justify the steady stream of hikes, mostly with government blessing, proclaimed by the oil com- panies since the crunch became the top news item. Those same companies were reporting record earnings even before we started turning down the thermostat. How much good will come out of the frequently mentioned huge tax on gasoline? It simply will mean that the wage-earner will have to leave his car at home while the wealthy and people with access to the corporate expense account, about half of which is charged to the government through tax deductions, will keep tight on driving.

It will not put any more gas in the pumps, and that is the chief need. Gas rationing may be equally unpleasant and unfair, but if drastic measures are needed, at least it would guarantee that everybody gets something. Isn't that what democracy is all about? Whatever short-range course the government takes, the emphasis must be on developing the vast energy sources we have. That is where the fuel companies have to bite the bullet. In many countries Canada is a good example natural resource companies hold mineral rights only if they keep developing them.

That is fair since the resources belong to all the people, and the companies are only intermediaries with the ability to get the stuff out of the ground and put it to work. Fair hike sought COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The price of admission to the Ohio State Fair may be higher next summer, if Fair Manager Vic Lucas has his way. Lucas wants to increase the price of an adult admission from $1.50 to $2 and a child ticket from, 25 cents to 50 cents. That is the kind of approach this country needs. There are vast pools of oil, for instance, out West and offshore.

The argument that oil shale, secondary recovery and other sources are not economic went out the window as the price of crude oil jumped from three dollars a barrel to more than six dollars. Wall Street analysts estimate the cost of extracting oil from shale at about five dollars per barrel. The idea now is to get the companies to develop these sources. According to some reports, there is enough oil in the shale of Colorado, Utah and Wyoming to keep this country lubricated for hundreds of years. These sources wilj not help warm the hearth this winter, but they could assure that it will not be a long-term chill, If the energy companies are going to haul in the profits, it seems reasonable that they put them to work.

Government and industry should think in terms of using what we have instead of back-tracking on what we have achieved. The Living Bible $9.95 Worlds Most Readable Bible 1 The Perfect Christmas Gift Open Daily 9 9 Closed Sunday free Gift Wrapping OFFICE APPLIANCE CO. Downtown Dover UMW defeats Nixon resignation motion PITTSBURGH (AP) A motion calling for President Nixon's resignation has been defeated by delegates to the United Mine Workers convention. While there has been criticism of the administration by both delegates and speakers for the past nine days of the convention, several miners said Tuesday's motion was inappropriate. "It seems to me that the processes of law should run their course," one delegate said.

"I think Nixon -is guilty; I assume he's guilty; but I don't know if he's guilty." "In my lifetime I've never been to a public hanging," another delegate said, "and I think the courts should decide what to do with Richard Nixon." After about five minutes of debate, the miners swiftly rejected the move in a show of hands. There were reports that the UMW's political arm, the Coal Miners Political Action Committee (CMPAC), was considering a similar motion. After the rejection, it was not known if CMPAC would drop its resolution. Meanwhile, the delegates approved increasing monthly dues from $5.25 to $12. The hike affects some 125,000 active members.

The convention also voted to raise the initiation fee from $50 to $100, despite the constitution committee's recommendation that the fee remain the same. The dues issue prompted spirited debate with a few miners adamantly opposed to any increase. Most of the opposition, however, came from delegates who felt the increase was too small. "If the UMW doesn't get more money, we're going to have a bargain basement union," one miner argued. Gov.

Milton Shapp invited the UMW to relocate its headquarters from Washington, D.C., to Rostraven Township. in Westmoreland County. Shapp also told the miners that the nation "must expand the use of coal," to offset the energy crisis. "It was only recently that Washington began reacting as if it finally realized something was seriously wrong and that hard decisions to deal with the situation had to be made," he said. AAONTGOAAER OR YOUR CHOICE: SNOW OR HIGHWAY 23 TO 38 EA FOR THE SNOW GLASS-TRACK BELTED TRACTION GRIP FOR A78-13 TBLS 1.81 F.E.T.

EA. TRADE-IN ON TWIN GUARD ONLY PAIRS COMPARABLY PRICED. WHITEWALLS ONLY $2 MORE EA. FAST FREE MOUNTING FOR THE HIGHWAY GLASS-TRACK BELTED TWIN GUARD HOLIDAY SERVICE SPECIAL In Shop and Home Service on Stereo Component Sets and Color TV includes Check Controls Check Needle and Cartridge Check Head on 8 Track Player and clean if needed. Reg.

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GREAT BUYI 78-SERIES POtY-TRACK SNO-GRIP REG. 4fe A A78 3 TBLS PLUS 1.83 NO TRADE- IN REQUIRED FOR 078-14, 078-15 TBLS. BLK, 2,67 TO 2,73 F.E.T. EA. 1O2I4 FOR STEEL WHEELS AND STUDS LET WARDS PREPARE YOU FOR WINTERI Save the trouble of mounting and remounting tires, We have steel wheels in sizes to fit most U.S.

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About The Daily Reporter Archive

Pages Available:
194,329
Years Available:
1933-1977