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From Page I Obituaries 4 Sheboygan Press, Tuesdoy, June 9, 1981 4 People Injured In Chain Collision Howard A. Holz Mrs. Graham Tells Of Life In Evangelism CHARLOTTE. N.C. (AP) -Ruth Bell Graham says if she'd known what her life as Mrs.

Billy Graham would be like, "I would have been scared to death." Life with Graham has meant marriage to a frequently absent husband whose life revolves, not around home, but around worldwide evangelical ministry, she says. It also has meant surrendering privacy to tourists and the media, she says. "They're both very strong personalities with strong opinions," Jeanie Ford said of her sister and brother-in-law. Mrs. Ford is he wife of Leighton Ford, vice president of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, based in Minneapolis.

"Often," Mrs. Ford said, "if you find two great people together, there's competitiveness. But she is so in love with him, I think she'd rather see him get the attention." Mrs. Graham raised five children, has 15 grandchildren and runs her own ministry, which includes vi Henry A. Mesch Henry A.

Mesch, 70, of 318 Paine Kiel, died unexpectedly at his home Monday morning. He was born June 7, 1911, in Saukville, the son of the late Albert Mesch and Mathilda Krieg Mesch Stephany. Mr. Mesch attended school in Milwaukee and graduated from Port Washington High School. He attended Carroll College and was a graduate of Spencerian Business College in Milwaukee.

He served in the Navy during World War II. Mr. Mesch married the former Mary Adam of Port Washington on Aug. 31, 1935, in Port Washington. They settled in Kiel, where he was manager of Kiel Woodenware Co.

for 40 years until his retirement in 1979. He was a member of First Presbyterian Church in Kiel and the Kiel Masonic Lodge, and AM Lodge 336. He is survived by his wife; two daughters; Mrs. Ronald (Nancy) Sievert of Irvine, and Mrs. Charles (Betty) Hartmann of Racine; and four grandchildren.

Funeral services will be at 1:30 p.m., Thursday at Meiselwitz Funeral Home in Kiel. The Rev. Joe V. Anderson, pastor of First Presbyterian Church in Kiel will offici to avoid a truck that was merging onto 1-43 at Highway 42 about 7 p.m. Both vehicles were southbound.

Senn suffered cuts on his left leg and an abrasion on his right arm. He was taken to Sheboygan Memorial Hospital by state police. Two 2-year-old boys, Adam Kaeder and Sherman Smith, both of Route 4, Sheboygan Falls, sustained cuts and bruises when the car in which they were riding struck an embankment at County Trunks and about 11:45 a.m. No charges were filed against the driver. Holly M.

Smith, Route 4, Sheboygan Falls, whose eastbound vehicle struck a mailbox and railing before going into the ditch. Train Wreck NEW DELHI, India (AP) -The passenger train that plunged into the Bagmati River three days ago was so crowded that the death toll could run as high as 3.000, an Indian news agency reported today. The United News of India said 215 bodies had been recovered from the flooded river in northeast India. Railway officials said there were 83 survivors. The 10-car train jumped the tracks Saturday and plunged off a bridge.

Henry Klauser Henry Klauser, 83, of 520 Washington Square, Kohler, died this morning at his home. He was born April 29, 1898 in Russia, a son of Geroge and Marie Klauser. He came to Sheboygan at the age of 17. On Dec. 15, 1923, he married Emily Markgraf of Sheboygan.

The couple moved to Kohler in 1930. He was employed at Kohler Co. for over 25 years, retiring June 1, 1965. He was a member of Bethany Lutheran Church and was a former member of the men's choir of the church. He was also a member of the Kohler Quarter Century Club.

Survivors are his wife; one daughter, Mrs. Wilbur (Virginia) Ludwig of Sarasota, two grandchildren; two great-grandchildren; four brothers, David of Sun Prairie, George of Kohler, Alex of Sheboygan and Carl of Sheboygan Falls; and three sisters, Mrs. Anro Hasson and Mrs. John Knaub, both of Cheboygan and Mrs. Carl Berlin of Kohler.

He was preceded in death by a son, three brothers and two sisters. Funeral services will be at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at Ball-horn Funeral Chapels. The Rev. Herbert A.

Baker, pastor of Bethany Lutheran Church, will officiate. Burial will be in Kohler Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral chapel from 4 to 9 p.m. Wednesday and until time of services Thursday. A memorial fund has been established in Mr.

Klauser's name for Bethany Lutheran Church, Kohler. Howard A. Holz 65, of 629 Arthur Place, West Bend, died Monday at a West Bend Hospital after he was injured earlier that day in a fall at his home. He was born July 10, 1915, in Batavia, a son of Herman and Adelia Leifer Holz. On June 11, 1955, he married Rose Marie Yearling at Random Lake.

Mr. Holz was a resident of Batava, Kewaskum and West Bend. He was a veteran of World War II and a member of the Regal Ware 25-Year Club. Survivors are his wife; two sons, Howard H. Jr.

of Milwaukee and William H. of West Bend; a daughter, Paula M. Holz of West Bend; five grandchildren and two greatgrandchildren; and a sister, Mrs: Althea Keller of Kewaskum. Funeral services will be at 8 p.m. Thursday at Techt-man-Myrhum Funeral Home, 1315 W.

Washington West Bend. The Rev. Larry Kocha will officiate. Burial will be in Union Cemetery, Boltonville. Friends may call at the funeral home after 4 p.m.

Thursday and until the time of services. Fred Sanders Fred Sanders, 83, of 2209 N. 6th died Monday evening at Memorial Hopsital after ing a brief illness. Mr. Sanders was born Nov.

3, 1897, in Rhineland, Germany, the son of Josef and Johanna Sanders. He came to the U.S. in 1937 and became a Sheboygan resident in 1940. He wjas self-employed. Mr.

Sanders was a member of the Beth El congregation. Surviving are his wife. Else; a son, William of Milwaukee; a "daughter, Mrs. Gisela Hamm of Wisconsin Dells; and three grandchildren. Funeral services will be Wednesday at 1 p.m.

at Ball-horn Funeral Chapels. Rabbi Nathan Barack of Beth El Synagogue will officiate? Burial will be in Sheboygan Hebrew Cemetery. Friend.s may call at Ball-horn Funeral Chapels at the time of services. From Page 1 Atlanta Meanwhile, Fulton County District Attorney Lewis Slaton met behind closed doors Monday with top police officials investigating the killings. Afterwards, he said "an arrest is not imminent.

We're looking toward discovering the truth, whatever it might be. At this point the evidence has not been shored up enough to where we can make an arrest." The 23-year-old man, whose northwest Atlanta home has been staked out by police and journalists for the past five days, came to police attention on May 22 when, according to police sources, he was stopped on a bridge over the, Chattahoochee River in the early morning hours. Officers watching the river, where the bodies of six of the victims have been dumped, stopped the man after they heard a splash-, the sources said. Several days later, the body of the 28th victim Nathaniel Cater, 27 was found in the river. Emma Abraham Mrs.

Emma Abraham, 85, formerly of 1328 South 9th died Monday at 1243 Fond du Lac Sheboygan Falls, the home of her daughter, where she resided the past five years. The former Emma Versch was born May 1896, in the Town of Greenbush, a daughter of Julius and Wilhelmina Abraham Versch. She attended Plymouth schools. On April 9, 1914, she was married to Otto Abraham at Bethlehem Lutheran Church, Sheboygan. He died in 1959.

She was employed by The Sheboygan Press for a number of years until her retirement Mrs. Abraham was a member of Bethlehem Lutheran Church. Survivors include a daughter, Mrs. Arthur (Lucille) Littmann of Sheboygan Falls; four grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. A son and a brother preceded her in death.

"Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Wednesday at Bethlehem Lutheran Church. The Rev. Edmund Aho, pastor, will officiate. Burial will be in Lutheran Cemetery.

Friends may call at Ramm-Ziegier Funeral Home after 4 p.m. today and on Wednesday at the church from 9 a.m. until the time of the service. A memorial fund has been established in Mrs. Abraham's name for Bethlehem Lutheran Church and Dial To Pray.

Renoma Plngel Mrs. Renoma Pingel, 65, of Route 1, Mountain, Oconto County, and formerly of Chilton, died Monday at home after an apparent heart at-' tack. She was born Jan. 6, 1916, in the Town of New Holstein, daughter of Andrew and Nola Shell Bosma. She was married to Melvin Pingel Oct.

28, 1939, at Chilton. Survivors are her husband; a daughter, Mrs. James (Linda) Steege of Chilton; two sons, Raymond and James, both of Chilton; 10 grandchildren; two sisters, Mrs. Leo Dorn of New Holstein and Mrs. Patrick Mac-Mahon of St.

Louis, a half-brother, Jack Bosma of Chilton. Three half sisters and a half-brother preceded him in death. Funeral services will be at 11:30 a.m. Thursday at Wiet-ing Funeral Home, Chilton. The Rev.

Quentin M. Moesch-berger will officiate. Burial will in Charlestown Union Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home after 4 p.m. Wednesday and until the time of service on Thursday.

Oil Bonds WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Pete V. Domenici has asked the Senate Energy Committee to hold hearings on his plan for the nation's strategic petroleum reserve to be financed by selling special oil bonds to private investors. The New Mexico Republican offered the plan Monday as an alternative to the committee-approved approach of buying the 750 million barrels of oil for the reserve through the sale of regular treasury bonds and notes, although the debt wouldn't appear on federal budget books. Lawmakers began seeking a way to pay for the purchase after Congress, as part of its1 budget-cutting, slashed $3 billion from the program to build up the reserve intended to cushion the nation in case of an oil embargo.

Lebanon eral of the Arab League met for the past three days with the foreign minister of Syria and leaders of Lebanese Christian and Moslem fac- tions in the mountain resort of Beiteddin, 19 miles southeast of Beirut, in an attempt to work out a comprehensive peace agreement for Lebanoni A communique said "all parties involved have pledged to abide by a cease-fire on Lebanon's entire territory." But it indicated there was no agreement on arrangements to end the fighting that has erupted periodically in Lebanon since the 1975-76 civil war. The communique said the three foreign ministers Prince Saud al-Faisal of Saudi Arabia, Abdul-Halim Khaddam of Syria and Sheik Sabah al-Sabah of Kuwait would meet in Saudi Arabia on June 23 to prepare for another conference on July 4 with Lebanese President Elias Sarkis, a Christian, and Prime Minister Shafik Waz-zan, a Moslem. Informed sources said Syria's insistence that the Chris- tians renounce Israels support blocked a comprehensive truce. The sources said the Christian leaders agreed only to acknowledge "a unity of destiny between Lebanon and the rest of the Arab world," without specific reference to Israel. U.S.

presidential envoy Philip C. Habib, who has been trying for the past month to ease the Syrian-Israeli standoff over Syrian missiles in eastern Lebanon, left Paris on Monday to resume his shuttle between capitals in the Middle East. His itinerary was not announced, but Arab reports said he was going first to Saudi Arabia. U.S. officials in Washington said Arab anger at the Israeli attack on the Iraqi nuclear reactor Sunday could compli--cate Habib's work.

Syria moved Soviet-made anti-aircraft missiles into Lebanon's Bekaa Valley near Zahle on April 29 after Israeli planes shot down two Syrian helicopters operating against the Christians. Israel said its air force will blow up the missiles if the Syrians don't remove them, but the Syrians refuse to pull them out. Syria has kept 22,000 troops in Lebanon since the civil war to police the armistice between the Christians and the Moslems. The Christians contend that the Syrian troops are an army of occupation and Syria wants to annex Lebanon. Weapons Sales PEKING (AP) The Chinese government said today it would rather not buy U.S' weapons than agree to the continuance of American arms sales to the Chinese Nationalists on Taiwan.

A Foreign Ministry statement said if the U.S. sales to Taiwan continue, China will make "a strong response." It was China's first official response to a report from Washington last Friday that the Reagan administration will consider selling American weapons to China for the first time. The United States has continued its arms sales to Taiwan despite breaking diplomatic relations in 1979 as a condition for establishing relations with China. Twtlfth Sr. Phone A Sheboygan man was charged with inattentive driving as a result of a three-car chain collision that injured four people about 4 p.m.

Monday in the 500 block of South 14th Street. Betty J. Wieland. 53, of 2517 Georgia was taken to Sheboygan Memorial Hospital for treatment of cuts on her head. Police said she was a passenger in a car driven by Harvey E.

Wieland, of 2517 Georgia who was ticketed for inattentive driving. The Wieland auto struck a vehicle driven by Allen K. Klug, 19, of 2113 N. 28th St. Klug and a passenger, Betty A.

Klug, 48, of the same address, both complained of neck pain, but refused medical attention, as did the driver of the third car involved. Arno W. Franzen, 66, of 1440 S. 20th St. Three persons were injured in county traffic mishaps Monday.

James P. Winter, 34, of West Bend, was taken to St. Joseph Hospital in that city with bruises on his head and chest, sustained when when his vehicle struck a dirt embankment. The driver told officers the mishap occurred when he he swerved to avoid an oncoming car that was in his traffic lane along Highway 28, about 300 feet north of County Trunk SS, at 6:40 p.m. Thomas S.

Senn, 25, of Green Bay, lost control of his motorcvele when he swerved From Page 1 Israel purposes only. But observers Washington said a retaliatory cutoff in U.S. arms sales to Israel was unlikely. French Premier Pierre Mauroy said there was no danger the reactor would produce bombs because Iraq signed the nuclear non-proliferation treaty and let experts of the International Atomic Energy Agency inspect the facility recently. State Department spokesman Dean Fischer said the United States "had no evidence that Iraq has violated its commitments under the treaty." Shimon Peres, the leader of the opposition Labor Party, declined to comment.

Begin said Peres had been informed pf plans for the attack months ago and wrote him three ago that he considered it "undesirable." Many other political leaders complained because they had not been consulted There were oblique suggestions from some that Begin ordered the attack with one eye on the June 30 election. A random sampling of public opinion found Israelis elated, confused and worried, but generally in favor of the action. "It's great, just great," said a 30-year-old economist who didn't want his name used. Batia Hendelsman, a 28-yearold social worker, said: "We can't allow nuclear weapons in the area, and haps we've scared the Syrians a bit, shown them what we can do when we set our minds to it." Senior government officials (Che Sheboyqan press (USPS9J-240) JUNE 9. MM, VOL.

74. NO. 147 Second Class Postage Paid At Sheboygan. Wisconsin 53081 Missed Delivery? Subscribers who fall to receive their Sheboygan Press please call 5 to 30 0 Weekdays 4 to 5:30 Saturdays SHEBOYGAN Press Office 4577711 SUBURBAN AREAS In TIM ClttM CM: Chilton 849 J886 Kiel 894-389 Kohler 45M555 New HolSteln 898-4838 Plymouth 89J-6985 Port Washington Sheboygan Foils MOTOR TUBS DELIVERY Coll Prtu OHKt during reeulor office hours. Subscription Rates MOMS CIShlFI AND MOTOH TUlf DALIVISV 1 Year 149 40 6 Months 125 00 .1 Months $13.00 Weekly (1.05 MAIL DIUVIIV Moll Is Shsboysan, OraukM, SonO Su Lsc, MowHoi Washntes SAtf Columst csushst: 1 Year $38.00 6 Months ....20 00 3 Months 11.00 mom An onwr eswtttes IS Wisconsin: 1 Year $44 00 6 Months 23 00 3 Months 12.00 MOD IS JMtM ouwe SlWIlcwnM: 1 Year $49 40 6 Months 25 00 3 Month 13.00 Mall subscription rates oo-ply only to areas where carrier service Is not available and require payment lit advance.

for new subscriptions, cancellations (temporary or permanent), change -of -address, or vocation-oak deadline 4 p.m. dolly for changes to be made for the following day. Saturday deadline hi em. Thursday. Changes will not be made for less than one week.

Marlene Borgenhagen Marlene Borgenhagen, 44, of 1985 Port Washington Road, Grafton, died Monday at St. Alphonsus Hospital in Port Washington. She was born Oct. 3, 1936, to Earl and Blossom Bodens-tein Borgenhagen. Miss Borgenhagen worked for Milwaukee Insurance Co.

and was a member of the Civil Air Patrol. She is survived by her parents, Earl Borgenhagen of Grafton, and Mrs. George Sheehan of Port a grandmother, Ida Stieg of Port Washington; and three sisters, Kathlene Haultmari of Milwaukee, Dawn Wendt of West Bend, and Jan Borgenhagen of Cedar Grove. Funeral services will be at 8 p.m. Wednesday at Frie-dens United Church of Christ, Port Washington.

The Rev. Philip Schowalter, pastor, will officiate. Friends may call at the church after 5 p.m. The body will be cremated and the remains buried at Union Cemetery, Port Washington. Memorials may be given to Friedens Church Memorial Fund.

Poole Funeral Home in Port Washington is handling arrangements. Obituary In The News CrowduH Baker CHICAGO (AP) Crowdus Baker, a former president and vice chairman of Sears, Roebuck died Saturday at the age of 75. ate. Burial will be in Kiel Cemetery. Friends may call at Meiselwitz Funeral Home after 4 p.m.

-Wednesday and from 9 a.m. Thursday until the time of services. The Masonic Lodge will hold a memorial service at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the funeral home. A memorial fund has been established in his name for the First Presbyterian Church, Kiel.

Bernetta L. Hammer' Bernetta L. Hammer, 68, of Forest Junction and formerly of Charlesburg, died Monday at St. Elizabeth Hospital, Appleton. She was born April 6, 1913, in Fond du Lac County, a daughter of Michael and Mary Ann Tuepper Loehr.

On June 6, 1939, she was married to Arthur Hammer at Fond du Lac. The couple" farmed in the Charlesburg area until 1974 when they moved to Forest Junction. She was a member of St. Mary Catholic Church, Bril-lion. Survivors are her husband; two daughters, Mrs.

Paul (Irene) Mayer of Green Bay and Mary Kay Abler of Hil-bert; two sons, Francis of Hubert and John of Forest Junction; five grandchildren; and a sister, Mrs. Edward Sch-mitz of Fond du Lac. Two brothers preceded her in death. Funeral Mass will be at 10:30 a.m. Thursday at St.

Mary Catholic Church, preceded by family rites at 9:45 a.m. at Wieting Funeral Home, Chilton. The Rev. John O'Brien, pastor, will be celebrant of the Mass. Burial will be in the parish cemetery.

Friends may call at the funeral home after 4 p.m. Wednesday and until the time of service on Thursday. Treasury Notes WASHINGTON (AP) -Yields on short-term -Treasury securities are down for the second straight week. The Treasury sold some $4 billion in six-month bills Monday at an average discount rate of 14 percent, down from 14.491 a week earlier. About $4 billion in three-month notes brought an average yield of 14.982 percent, down from 15.456 percent June 1.

Id sits to Michigan's Jackson State Prison to visit inmates. Journal Wins Temporary Meeting Order MILWAUKEE (AP) A circuit judge issued a temporary restraining order Monday forcing a Common Council committee to keep open a segment of a meeting involving Milwaukee's contract with a refuse-recycling plant. The order was requested by the Milwaukee Journal, which had asked that all sessions of the committee on renegotiation of the Americology plant be open. In granting the injunction, however, Judge Gary Gerlach said the committee could go into closed session to discuss future negotiating strategy. He said a report the committee was to receive on the negotiation positions already taken by the city and Americology must be received in open session.

Gerlach said the original notice that the meeting would be closed to discuss bargaining strategy was misleading. From Page 1 Reagan White House, accompanied by Vice President George Bush, and resumed their talks in the Cabinet Room before attending a formal lunctieon. Any agreements they make will be announced afterward. Leaving their wives at home, Reagan and Lopez Por-tillo arrived here Monday morning with an entourage that filled five helicopters. Wearing dark blue jackets bearing the presidential seal and the flags of the United States and Mexico, the two leaders and 12 aides ate lunch on a terrace outside Reagan's lodge overlooking a meadow and discussed his plan to spur economic development in the Caribbean basin.

An interpreter sat between them. A senior U.S. official, briefing reporters on the condition that he not be identified, glossed over the discussion of the two leaders' divergent policies toward the turmoil in Central America. The U.S. official said the subject was broached, but "each side just described its own view of the situation as opposed to coming to any agreement or any more than a declaration of each side's point of view." While the Reagan administration has provided military aid and advisers to the civilianmilitary junta in El Salvador to counter what it says Is Cubanled aggression, Mexico opposes that aid and has called for a political solution.

Trade and energy questions also were on Monday's agenda, as was the Issue of Mexicans who reside illegally in the United States. However, no details were provided of the discussions on those topics. COMVMMT MMUMO Eighth anJ St. Clair Mai 437U45S SANDERS, Fred Wednesday 1 p.m. chapel, Friends call time of service.

KLAUSER, Henry Thursday 1:30 p.m. chapel. Friends call 4 to 9 p.m. Wednesday, and to time of service Thursday. "Ovr 98 Vdon of Conscientious Servlcd" Iraq said the raid also was designed to signal Israel's fighting mood to Syria, which is rejecting Israel's demand that it withdraw the anti-aircraft missiles it moved into east central Lebanon recently.

Israel has been agitating for more than two years for suspension of work on the 75-megawatt, $275-milllon Os'irak reactor which France was building on the Tigris River 12 miles east of the Iraqi capital. The United States also tried to get France to cancel the sale of the reactor because it could produce enriched uranium for atomic bombs. The reactor was bombed but no destroyed last Sept. 30 early in the Iraq-Iran war. The bombers were identified as Iranian, but there were some unconfirmed reports they were Israeli.

Iraq on Monday accused Israel of the September attack and said it had not made the charge at the time "for military, political and morale reasons." Israeli sources said a small team of cabinet ministers had been studying ways to attack the plant for 18 months. A decision to attack was taken last October, the sources continued, but was repeatedly delayed. But after American pressure failed to get the French to suspend the project, it was decided to go ahead, the sources said. U.S. intelligence sources said the reactor might have been operational within two weeks.

The Israeli government said if the attack had been delayed until after the reactor was fueled, there would have been "a massive radioactive fallout over the city of Baghdad, and tens of thousands of innocent residents would have been hurt." The Iraqi government said nine planes made the attack at dusk Sunday. U.S. intelligence sources said either F-4 Phantoms or the newer F-15s and F16s were used. All are supplied to Israel by the United States. The intelligence sources said the raiders took a 600-mlle route along the northern rim of Saudi Arabia.

All of the planes returned safely, Israel said. The Israeli government said Sunday evening was chosen as the time for the raid because the 100 to 150 French and Italian technicians working on the reactor would not be on the job. But one French technician was reported killed. He was the only casualty reported. U.S.

Intelligence sources said the reactor was demolished but a small Soviet-built test reactor nearby was not damaged. Iraq said Its nuclear program would recover from the setback. GAHAGAN, Lloyd Wednesday 1:30 p.m. Hingham Reformed Church. Friends call at funeral home 3 p.m.

today to 11 a.m. Wednesday; at church noon to time of service. PLYMOUTH, WISCONSIN "Stoed 1910" Dial 191-2626 or IW-43J4 JtmrraL HEBOYN, WIS? m. THE CHINESE HAD A GOOD IDEA '535 S. Dear friends, A recent study in found that manydlsablL In ancient China, people paid their Doctors to keep them well.

Any time someone got sick, their Doctor was not paid. This could be possible here, providing your Doctors are given the opportunity to properly take care of you. It is a fact now, that too many people are constantly taking home remedies which give only a temporary relief till the next dose. Too often, when they finally consult a physician the damage has become serious and the body has been ravaged so that a cure becomes difficult. Some self-treatments are good, but if the condition for which they are taken keeps returning, you need a physician.

YOUR' DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a medicine. Pick up your prescription If shopping nearby, or we will deliver promptly without extra charge. A great many people en-v trust us with their prescriptions. May we compound and dispense yours? ROENITZ ORUO DOWNTOWN SUN. 8th St.

Ph. 4J7-J633 ROCNITZ CLINIC PHARMACY 101 1 N. 8th St. Ph. 457-450 ROENITZ MEDICAL ARTS PHARMACY 121 IN.

StfeSt. Ph. 458.2811 ROtNITZ'FESSUR ORUO 509 Superior Avo. Ph. 457-3644 ROENITZ DRUG SOUTH 1 227 WIImmi Avo.

Ph. 458-438 1 -r oyments are soru off, Respectfully, f. D. ZIE4U.

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